Clifford Lee
Clifford Lee's filmography? Yeah, it’s a wild mix, honestly. This guy’s been orbiting the indie scene, dropping into flicks that feel like someone spiked your dreams with a little existential dread. You’ve got The Forbidden Dimensions (2013), which—no joke—leans into sci-fi, time travel, and all sorts of reality-warping shenanigans. It’s not your typical slick blockbuster. Think more lo-fi, gritty, almost like someone filmed it in the back of a thrift shop. Lee’s presence kinda grounds the madness, though. He manages to make you care, or at least wonder what’s going on inside his head.
Then there’s Tioga (2011). That one’s a different flavor: more drama, less acid trip. It’s got this dusty Americana vibe, like you’re stuck in a small town where secrets bubble just under the surface. Lee’s characters always have this worn-out wisdom, like they’ve seen too much, but they’re still standing. There’s a roughness to his delivery, not polished, but that’s the charm. Feels real.
And don’t forget A Day in the Drama of Alexander Hart and the Cabanna Boy (2010). Weird title, right? The movie’s just as quirky. It’s this off-kilter little slice of life, mixing humor and sadness in equal doses. Lee’s roles never feel cookie-cutter; he slips into these oddball stories and somehow makes them relatable. His choices? Definitely not for mainstream tastes, but that’s what makes his filmography worth digging into. You never really know what you’re gonna get, and honestly, that’s half the fun.