Seemed like a time-nuts-y sort of thing:
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-et-turan-notebook-clock-20110708,0,4924534.story


This is how "The Clock" works. In every city it plays, the screenings are synchronized to local time. At least once in every minute, there is a shot of a timepiece of some type showing that precise minute, both a.m. and p.m. versions. So one way to look at "The Clock" is as the world's most expensive time-telling apparatus, the only movie ever to keep real time 24 hours a day.

-- OK. from a time-nuts perspective.. "how closely synchronized"

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