: To avoid an NC-17 rating, Warner Bros. digitally inserted robed, hooded figures to block sexually explicit acts during the orgy sequence. : Modern home media releases, such as the Criterion Collection 4K UHD

When Bill visits the costume shop (Rainbow Fashions), the theatrical cut shows a brief, creepy exchange with the owner’s daughter. The deleted patch reveals a five-minute surreal nightmare. Bill tries on multiple masks (a clown, a devil, a skeleton) while the shop’s owner, Milich, essentially pimps out his daughter. This sequence was cut for "tonal inconsistency," but fans argue it is the film’s thesis: Bill is literally trying on identities, unable to find his authentic self.

Enter the digital age. Thanks to a grassroots movement of film preservationists, the search term has become a holy grail for cinephiles. But what does it mean to "patch" a film? And what do these lost scenes actually contain?