Why .avi? In the early 2000s, .avi was a container format known for compression artifacts, blocky shadows, and dropped frames. Director (presumably a pseudonymous “R. Meridian”) exploits these limitations. When the Princess speaks of “the kingdom’s fall,” the audio glitches. When Yvonne smiles for the first time, a pixelation artifact obscures her face. The digital decay becomes a metaphor: fairy tales cannot survive digitization without losing their sheen. The Princess is not a symbol of grace but a low-resolution refugee from a story that no one believes anymore. Yvonne, by contrast, exists in sharp, mundane focus—her calloused hands, the ticking clock, the greasy menu. The medium’s crudeness democratizes them: both are equally trapped in a low-bitrate world.
The conjunction “meets” recalls the cheap crossovers of B-movie serials ( Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein ) or children’s cartoons ( Barney Meets the Teletubbies ). Here, it is used ironically. There is no confrontation, no team-up, no transformation. The “meeting” is an anti-event. Yvonne does not rescue the Princess; the Princess does not bestow a title. Instead, the .avi file captures the slow realization that their worlds are not parallel universes but the same exhausted reality viewed through different tax brackets. The Princess’s tiara is cracked plastic; Yvonne’s diner uniform is her real crown. Yvonne Rocco Meats the Princess.avi
Based on scattered forum posts from a now-defunct indie film archive circa 2002, the short runs approximately eleven minutes. Yvonne Rocco, played by an unknown actress in a stained apron, works the night shift at a 24-hour diner on the edge of a city that resembles neither New York nor any fairy-tale kingdom. One evening, a woman in a torn silk gown and a crooked plastic tiara stumbles in—the “Princess.” She claims to have fled a nearby “realm” (a bankrupt Renaissance fair, perhaps, or a delusion). The meeting is not magical. It is awkward, tired, and shot entirely on a handheld digital camcorder. They share cold coffee. The Princess asks Yvonne for directions to a bus station. The film ends with Yvonne wiping a table, alone. Meridian”) exploits these limitations