Illuminating Cinema
By Jed McKenna
"Let me tell you why you're here. You're here because you know something. What is known, one can not explain. But you feel it. You have heard all my life. What's something wrong with the world. You do not You know what, but it's there. Like a splinter in your mind - driving you mad. "-Morpheus, The Matrix
This is a list of movie reviews and not complete. It 's just a few notes on some movies I think are relevant to the awakening and why, or who are not and why. With the tools of understanding, bad is often better than good.
main themes represented in this list seem to be these:
- Heresy
- Captive / Captor
- Teacher / Student
- Nature of auto / man.
- The death / rebirth. Cataclysm / epiphany.
- Unreliability of the mind / memories.
The only thing I can recommend for movies and books is to bring the material up to the level where it becomes of value to you. Orwell could have written an anti-communist manifesto, but Nineteen Eighty-Four is much more interesting viewed as the struggle between man and his confinement. Apocalypse Now is about something more than Viet Nam, how to move forward in advertising is more than rampant consumerism, etc.
::: American Beauty
"I feel like I was in a coma for the last twenty years. And I'm just now waking up."
I have included American Beauty mainly for what is wrong. Lester's main death / rebirth transition shows promise, but what does he transition? Back to teenage crap, not forward in every way. A regression based on fear. Stupid car, stupid drugs, stupid vanity, stupid skirt chasing. Not at all redeemed when Lester sees his own folly in late or Sappy / unctuous voice-over guy died.
The movie is slightly redeemed by the presence of almost mystical boy next door and his video of a windblown bag:
"This is the day I realized that there was this entire life behind things, and this incredibly benevolent force that wanted me to know that there was no reason to be afraid, ever."
::: Apocalypse Now
"In a war there are many moments for compassion and tender action. There are many moments for ruthless action - what is often called ruthless - what may in many circumstances be only clarity, seeing Clearly you need to do and do it directly, quickly, awake, looking at her. "
One might think that Apocalypse Now Redux, the director's cut, would be the version to watch, but all the material that was rightly cut from the original has been replaced incorrectly. (Turn up the interesting point that directors and authors often do not understand the questions that are telling tall stories). Stick with the original on both Redux and Conrad's Heart of Darkness.
Apocalypse Now is all about horror. A journey of discovery in heart of darkness, arriving at this horror. What is the horror? How to get there? Why would someone do such a trip? If such a trip? Why or why not?
Note the powerful epiphanies that drive the film. The first letter of murderess home (sell house, sell the car, sell the kids ..."), Dennis Hopper's youthful exuberance, Kurtz's diamond point, "Willard ... was not even in their army more .
::: Being There
"Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter ... Spring again."
A good film ruined by a crazy walk-on-water stunt stuck to the end. Without that nonsense the viewer is free to think, decide, to wonder. Instead, the film is fitted with a zipper close with his clever twist just stupid-it-down. Press the stop button when Chauncey is straightening the sapling, before the ruinous denouement, and is a fun, beautiful film.
::: Blade Runner
"I've seen things you people would not believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched c-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate. All those moments will be lost in time like tears in rain. Time to die. "
He was born five minutes ago? Of course not, and you have the memory to prove it. Would you know if they were artificial implants, because, uh ...
::: Cast Away
"I could not even kill myself the way I wanted. I had power over nothing."
If a man screaming on a desert island and there is nobody to hear him, he makes a sound? It is sufficient that he hear himself? What if? What's left when you remove everything?
Self laid bare.
This film poses many intriguing questions about the substance of self, or lack thereof, and includes a very Zen praise.
::: Dead Poets Society
Heresy.
::: Harold and Maude
"Vice, virtue. And 'better not be too moral ... Aim above morality."
American Zen master and disciple.
::: Harvey
"For years I was smart ... I recommend pleasant."
Elwood P. Dowd, wisefool. A sweet representation of a higher order of being misinterpreted as a lower order of being. Man would know more when we saw him?
::: How to get ahead in advertising
"Everything I do now makes perfect sense."
A foiled attempt for freedom. A failed attempt to overthrow Maya. Enjoy the madness of the Epiphany.
::: Joe Versus the Volcano
"Nobody knows anything, Joe. We take this leap, and we'll see. We'll jump, and we'll see. That's life, right?"
Death and rebirth. Unlike American Beauty, this is all moving forward, "away from the things of man."
::: Man in Southeast (Hombre Mirando Al Sudeste)
Watch especially for visual poetry of a man crumbling a human brain in a sink while looking for the soul.
::: The Matrix
"Like everyone else, you were born into bondage, born inside a prison that you can not smell, taste or touch. A prison for your mind."
Plato's Cave for the people. How allegorically lucid as Joe vs Vocano, Pleasantville and Star Wars.
::: Monty Python's Life of Brian
"No, no! It 's a sign that, like him, we should not think about the things of the body but the face and head!"
Sacred Cow-tipping at its best.
"Meaning of Life" also belongs on this list.
::: Nineteen Eighty-Four
"If you want a vision of the future, Winston, imagine a boot stamping on a human face forever."
This film is unique in that it is as good as the book, which is a very intimate portrait of the captor / captive, Maya / man relationship. Compare this to Moby Dick or One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, which are books, but superb film useless.
::: One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
As with Moby-Dick, Hollywood castrated the book. They stripped of its archetypal dimensions and reduced to a meaningless match between McMurphy and Nurse Ratched piss. Great show, but for meaningful insight, read the book.
::: Pleasantville
"There are some places where the road does not go in circles. There are some places where it continues to move forward."
A cheerful tale of heresy, in which no one is burned at the stake and the new paradigm is eventually embraced by all.
::: The Razor's Edge
"The dead look so terribly dead."
The Razor's Edge is what makes it interesting to see Larry trembling balance on the thin line between what was and what is becoming. He is walking the line between two lives. Version of Bill Murray is a bit 'fuzzy ... stick with Tyrone Power or read the book.
Ramana Maharshi Maugham supposedly used as a model for the holy man of the novel.
::: Star Wars
"The force will be with you forever."
The first, in which Luke makes the transition from flesh to spirit.
The Hero's Journey.
::: The Thin Red Line
"Maybe all men got one big soul everybody a part of all the faces are the same man."
A survey in the sublime spiritual nature of man. More sad / sweet song of a narrative film.
::: The Thirteenth Floor
"So what are you saying? You telling me that there is another world, on top of this?"
Layer after layer. Turtles turtles on top.
::: Vanilla Sky / Abre Los Ojos
"Open your eyes."
If you like Vanilla Sky, check out the original Spanish film Abre Los Ojos (Open Your Eyes). These two films may be the best group for our purposes, the closest to enlightenment allegory.
Of course, the interesting thing about enlightenment is always there, not being there, and that's what these films are about, awakening from a false reality, opening my eyes. Not so much about what is real as what is not.
It 's the story of the journey you take to reach the place where everything, even jumping off a tall building, would be better to live a lie, even a beautiful lie blessed.
Note the presence of the true guru, explaining in clear terms why jump off the building is the best thing to do, and waiting patiently to be made.
::: Waking Life
"They say dreams are real only as long as they last. You could say the same about life?"
Broad philosophical research. Provocative. Funny. Potentially hazardous.
::: Wings of Desire
"When the child was a child, was the time of these questions: Why am I me and why not? Why am I here and why not here? When did time begin and end where space?"
A beautiful, intelligent, challenging film. Can return to the dreamstate awakened? Would want to?
::: Other
Some other films that reward thoughtful viewing are The Wizard of Oz, About Schmidt, What Dreams May Come, Total Recall, every morning of the World (Tous les Matins du Monde), and of course many others.
McKenna, Jed