Joshua Tree and All of Everything (Brad Necyk) is a single-shot, minimalistexperimental film about time, consciousness, and climate change. It is about the sense of time, the movement of time, and the growing sense of being-out-of-time. It is also about a rhythm between waking consciousness and dreaming, where surreal and mystical experiences occur. Further, it is building off of evolving themes of the Anthropocene by directly witnessing landscapes at risk of annihilation, acting as an archive, a memorial. It examines a contribution art could have on shifting and attuning human understanding to something so massive and distributed across time as climate change—that stars no one, that is long in the making, and attritional. All of these ideas were in play when making this work. To view the trailer, see. To view the entire video, see.