The Infinite Wrench is exactly what it sounds like — a rapid-fire, audience-interactive sprint through 30 short plays performed in under an hour. The pieces range from deeply personal monologues to absurdist comedy to genuine attempts to make you feel something before the next number gets called. The audience literally shouts out which play comes next, which means no two shows are alike and the performers are perpetually on the edge of chaos. It's theater for people who think theater is boring.
Here's what we love about it from a pure value standpoint: the Neo-Futurists operate on a pay-what-you-can model. You roll a die at the door and add $10 — that's your ticket price. In San Francisco. In 2025. A scrappy independent theater company running a tight, entertaining operation without relying on massive public subsidies or charging you $175 for a seat behind a pillar? That's the free market doing what it does best.
The Neo-Futurists have been a staple in Chicago for decades, and their SF chapter has carved out a loyal following by keeping things raw, honest, and affordable. No bloated budgets. No six-figure artistic directors writing grant applications instead of actual plays. Just performers, an audience, and a ticking clock.
If you're tired of doom-scrolling through headlines about misspent city funds and $1.7 million public toilets, do yourself a favor: go watch 30 plays for the price of a burrito. It's proof that when people are passionate and resourceful, you don't need a government line item to make something great.
Shows run every Friday and Saturday. Bring cash for the dice roll, and leave your cynicism at the door — you'll get plenty of that back by Monday morning.



