There is a hint of an under water circus, and many of the performers are acrobats.
The sea water, if that's what it is, is yellowish brown. A full-faced sun rises from the Sun King's cradle, while a moon of Saturn circles the planet.
The cut-out animation moves airily through a time-distorted world, where dizziness barely maintains a balance, and conventional time-sense disappears.
The music of John Davis, which has been slowed to half speed, reverberates eerily throughout the pulsing series of performances, and one wonders whether in the next scene one can catch one's balance.
The timing throughout is musical, and suggests a barely upheld world of sanity; of course the dream world creeps into the conscious mind's puritanical sense of propriety, rendering a secondary sense of unbalance facing trial at the bar of...whatever comes to mind.
Delirium?
This movie contains 14 potentially triggering events.
Timestamp of 6:45, there is a scene where he dog is shown growling at the protagonist, in which he shakes the vision off. When he opens his eyes, the dog is gone. The protag then asks what happened to his father's dog, in which he is told the dog was put down Thursday (before he got there). No dog death is seen on screen and is only mentioned.
After the main character sees a dog walking through the house around 20 minutes in, when he follows it we can hear the dog eating a body for a little bit. Wet noises and bone crunching.
It's over when he sees the dog disappear
The protag is talking with another one of the characters in an in-depth conversation. She then shows self-harm marks on her arm that are some-what recent.