Released to near-universal acclaim, Moonrise Kingdom is not merely a film about first love. It is a wry, heartbreaking, and exquisitely composed thesis on the chaos of being human in a world that demands order. It is a film that asks: What happens when two emotionally feral children decide to burn down the village (sometimes literally) to escape the phoniness of the adults who claim to care for them?

: The local police officer who is having a secret affair with Suzy’s mother.

At its heart, the film follows Sam Shakusky (Jared Gilman), an orphaned, bespectacled Khaki Scout, and Suzy Bishop (Kara Hayward), a brooding, bell-eyed girl who reads fantasy novels and paints her nails with record-player accompaniment. They are fellow outcasts who became pen pals and concocted a pact: to flee into the wilderness together. Their “kingdom” is a hidden cove called Moonrise, which they reach after a poetic, rain-soaked trek. For a brief, idyllic moment, they build a life—fishing, dancing to a portable record player (Françoise Hardy’s “Le temps de l’amour”), and exploring their first kiss with a sincerity that is both awkward and profound.