|
...

...
Enlightening Cinema
By Jed McKenna
"Let me tell you why
you're here. You're here because you know something. What you know,
you can't explain. But you feel it. You felt it your entire life.
That there's something wrong with the world. You don't know what
it is, but it's there. Like a splinter in your mind driving
you mad." -Morpheus, The Matrix
This
isn't a movie review list and it's not comprehensive. It's just
some notes about a few movies I think are useful for the purposes
of awakening and why, or that aren't and why not. With tools of
understanding, bad is often better than good.
Major themes represented on this list
seem to be these:
- Heresy
- Captive/Captor
- Teacher/Student
- Nature of self/man.
- Death/rebirth.
- Cataclysm/epiphany.
- Untrustworthiness of mind/memories.
The only thing I might advise with
regard to movies and books is to raise the material up to the level
where it becomes of value to you. Orwell might have been writing
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 Get Ahead In Advertising is about something
more than rampant commercialism, etc.
American Beauty
"I feel like I've been
in a coma for the past
twenty years. And I'm just now waking up."
I've included American Beauty
mainly for what's wrong with it. Lester's major death/rebirth transition
shows promise, but what does he transition to? Backward to teenage
crap, not forward in any sense. A fear-based regression. Stupid
car, stupid drugs, stupid vanity, stupid skirt chasing. Not at all
redeemed when Lester sees his own folly near the end or by sappy/smarmy
dead guy voice-over.
The movie is slightly redeemed by
the presence of the quasi-mystical neighbor kid and his video footage
of a windblown bag:
"That's the day I realized
that there was this entire life behind things, and this incredibly
benevolent force that wanted me to know 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 what
there is to be done and doing it, directly, quickly, awake, looking
at it."
You'd think that Apocalypse Now
Redux, the director's cut, would be the version to watch, but
all the stuff that was rightly cut from the original has been wrongly
replaced. (Raising the interesting point that directors and authors
often don't understand the higher applications of the stories
they're telling.) Stick with the original over both Redux
and Conrad's Heart of Darkness.
Apocalypse Now is all about
the Horror. A journey of discovery, into the heart of darkness,
arriving at this horror. What's the horror? How do you get there?
Why would anyone make such a journey? Should you make such
a journey? Why or why not?
Note the powerful epiphanies that
drive the film. The first assassin's letter home, ("Sell
the house, sell the car, sell the kids..."), Dennis Hopper's
youthful exuberance, Kurtz's diamond bullet, Willard's "...I
wasn't even in their army any more."
Being There
"Spring, summer, autumn,
winter... then spring again."
A great film ruined by a foolish
walking-on-water stunt tacked on to the end. Without that nonsense
the viewer would be free to think, to decide, to wonder. Instead,
the movie zips itself up tight with its clever little dumb-it-down
twist. Hit the stop button when Chauncey is straightening the sapling,
before the ruinous denouement, and it's a fun, lovely film.
Blade Runner
"I've seen things you
people wouldn't believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of
Orion. I've 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."
Were you born five minutes ago? Of
course not, and you have the memories to prove it. You'd know if
they were artificial implants, because, uh...
Cast Away
"I couldn't even kill
myself the way I
wanted to. I had power over nothing."
If a man screams on a deserted island
and there's no one to hear him, does he make a sound? Is it enough
that he hears it himself? What if not? What's left when you take
away everything?
Self stripped bare.
This movie raises many intriguing
questions about the substance of self, or lack thereof, and includes
a very Zen eulogy.
Dead Poets Society
Heresy. Poignant moment in the hall
of alumni portraits.
Harold and Maude
"Vice, virtue. It's best
not to 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
depiction of a higher order of being misinterpreted as a lower order
of being. Would we know the Superior Man when we saw him?
How to Get Ahead In Advertising
"Everything I do now makes
perfect sense."
A thwarted bid for freedom. A failed
attempt to overthrow Maya. Enjoy the insanity of the epiphany.
Joe vs the Volcano
"Nobody knows anything,
Joe. We'll 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 about moving forward, "away from the
things of man."
Man Facing Southeast (Hombre
Mirando Al Sudeste)
Watch especially for the visual poem
of a man crumbling a human brain into a sink while looking for the
soul.
The Matrix
"Like everyone else, you
were born into bondage, born inside a prison that you cannot smell,
taste, or touch. A prison for your mind."
Plato's Cave for the people. As allegorically
lucid as Joe vs the Volcano, Pleasantville and Star Wars.
Monty Python's Life of Brian
"No, no! It is a sign
that, like Him, we must think not
of the things of the body, but of 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 movie is unique in the sense
that it's a very good translation of the book, which is an extremely
intimate portrait of the captor/captive, Maya/man relationship.
Compare this to Moby-Dick or One Flew Over the Cuckoo's
Nest which are superb books but useless movies.
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
As with Moby-Dick, Hollywood
castrated the book. They stripped it of its archetypal dimensions
and reduced it to a meaningless pissing match between McMurphy and
Nurse Ratched. Great entertainment, but for meaningful insight,
read the book.
Pleasantville
"There are some places
where the road doesn't go in
a circle. There are some places where it keeps on going."
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 when they're dead."
The razor's edge is what makes it
interesting; seeing Larry shakily balanced on the fine line between
what he was and what he's becoming. He is walking the edge between
two lives. The Bill Murray version is a bit unfocused... stick with
Tyrone Power or read the book.
Maugham supposedly used Ramana Maharshi
as the model for the novel's holy man.
Star Wars
"The force will be with
you, always."
The first one, where Luke makes the
transition from flesh to spirit.
The Hero's Journey.
The Thin Red Line
"Maybe all men got one
big soul everybody's
a part of, all faces are the same man."
A sublime inquiry into the spiritual
nature of man. More a sad/sweet song than a narrative film.
The Thirteenth Floor
"So what're you saying? You're saying
that there's another world on top of this one?"
Layer after layer. Turtles on top of turtles.
Vanilla Sky/Abre Los Ojos
"I wanna wake up! Tech
support! It's a nightmare! Tech support! Tech support! "
If you like Vanilla Sky, check
out the original, the Spanish film Abre Los Ojos (Open
Your Eyes). These
two films may be the best of the bunch for our purposes; the closest
to an enlightenment allegory.
Of course, the interesting thing about
enlightenment is getting there, not being there, and that's what
these films are about; awakening from a false reality, opening your
eyes. They're not so much about what's real as what's not.
It's the story of the journey one
takes to get to the place where anything, even jumping off a tall
building, would be better than continuing to live a lie, even a
beautiful, blissful lie.
Note especially the presence of the
true guru, explaining in clear terms why leaping off the building
is the best thing to do, and waiting patiently for it to be done.
Waking Life
"They say that dreams
are only real as long as
they last. Couldn't you say the same thing about life?"
Wide-ranging philosophical inquiry.
Provocative. Amusing. Potentially disruptive.
Wings of Desire
When the child was a child,
..it was the time of these questions:
Why am I me, and why not you?
Why am I here, and why not there?
When did time begin and where does space end?
A lovely, intelligent, thought-provoking
film. Can the awakened being return to the dreamstate? Would he
want to?
The poem we hear near the beginning
is Peter Handke's Song of Childhood (Lied Vom Kindsein)
and can be found here.
Others
Some
other films that reward thoughtful viewing are About Schmidt,
What Dreams May Come, All the Mornings Of the World
(Tous les Matins du Monde), The Legend of 1900, The
Purple Rose of Cairo, and others.
About the Author:
Jed McKenna is the author of The Enlightenment Trilogy — Spiritual
Enlightenment: The Damnedest Thing, Spiritually Incorrect Enlightenment,
and Spiritual Warfare — published by Wisefool Press. Articles, books
and more at our website: http://www.WisefoolPress.com
The
Enlightenment Trilogy by Jed McKenna
Spiritual
Enlightenment: The Damnedest Thing
Spiritually
Incorrect Enlightenment
Spiritual
Warfare
e-Book
versions with Bonus Content
Audiobook
versions in CD and MP3 format
Publisher-Direct!
Save 20-50%
:
: :.Order
Now.:
: :
|