Description
Must Read After My Death follows Allis, her husband Charley and their four children in Hartford, Connecticut. Charley's work takes him to Australia four months each year, so the couple purchases Dictaphone recorders as a way to stay in touch throughout Charlie's extended absences. A modern woman at least a decade ahead of her time, Allis struggles against conformity - against the conventional roles of wife and mother. She finds the recordings cathartic and, with the family's cooperation, incorporates them into their everyday existence. When the family turns to psychologists and psychiatrists, their strife increases and the recordings turn progressively darker - even desperate. All the while, Dews employs the family's many home movies and the seemingly placid, typically American facade that they convey, as visual counterpoint to the raw and sobering tape recordings.