Beaver Trilogy
Watch TrailerOur story begins in 1979, with a chance meeting in a Salt Lake City parking lot where filmmaker Trent Harris is approached by an earnest small-town dreamer from Beaver, Utah. Harris jumps at the chance when the young man invites him to come to the small town to film a talent show. At the show, the man dons a blond wig and performs in drag as Olivia Newton John. Harris captures it all on tape: A portrait of a true outsider. Harris shot a dramatic piece, "Beaver Kid 2" based on the documentary; This interpretation of the story, made in 1981 on a home video camera with a budget of $100, features a young Sean Penn as "the Beaver Kid". Still possessed, Harris then rewrote the script, cast up-and-comer Crispin Glover in the lead, and created the final segment, "The Orkly Kid", with funding from the American Film Institute. The trilogy unveils the inner world of a fantastic character in three incarnations.
Watch online
Click to play
📋 Film Details
| Year | 2000 |
| Country | United States of America |
| Genre | Documentary, Music |
| Director | Trent Harris |
| Runtime | 83 min. |
| Rating | TMDB: 6.8/10 (24 votes) |
📺 Where to Watch
Unfortunately, we couldn't find any official platforms or free sites for this title yet.
Try finding similar movies with our AI-powered search
🎬 MovieFinder's Take
Trent Harris constructs a mesmerizing meditation on obsession, performance, and the American outsider. The trilogy evolves from raw documentary to staged reenactment, each layer deepening the myth of its small-town protagonist.
What lingers after viewing is the haunting echo of a singular, strange encounter, and the filmmaker's own compulsion to retell it. A cult artifact about the making of a cult. — MovieFinder Editorial
Director: Trent Harris
Best Watched
Alone or with fellow cinephiles, in a focused setting to appreciate its layered, peculiar construction.
🎭 Cast
🎬 Similar Movies
No streaming sources found
💬 Audience Reviews
Audience Score
Write a Review
Quick rating — tap to vote:
Or write a full review: