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Paperback Secret Cinema: Gnostic Vision in Film Book

ISBN: 0826417973

ISBN13: 9780826417978

Secret Cinema: Gnostic Vision in Film

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Book Overview

In the last twenty years or so, numerous mainstream movies have drawn from the ideas and images of ancient thought to address the collapse of appearance and reality. These films have consistently featured the Gnostic currents that emerged from Plato: not only Gnosticism itself but also Cabbala and alchemy. Despite important differences, these traditions have provided filmmakers with ready-made ruminations on the relationship between surface and depth as well as with engaging plot lines and striking scenes. In films like The Matrix (1999) and The Truman Show (1998), Gnostic myths have offered speculations on the real as well as conspiracy theories. The Cabbalistic motif of golem-making has provided such movies as A.I. (2001) and Blade Runner (1982) with mediations on the human and with parables of machines yearning for life. Pictures like Dead Man (1996) and Altered States (1980) have drawn on alchemical symbols to explore the possibilities of transmutation and to feature stories of the dead rising to life.

Recent commercial Gnostic films are meditations on the conundrums of the post-modern age and the timeless soul. These pictures constitute archetypal sites for sacred contemplation. They create spaces akin to the caves of Eleusis or Lascaux, chambers where habits are annihilated and the ego is shattered. Maybe this spiritual attraction is the secret reason behind the recent abundance of Gnostic films. If so, then the dream factory is betraying its purpose. It is negating its deceptions and sales in the name of a bewildering reality that cannot be found.

Secret Cinema explores these possibilities through engaging in three related activities. One, the book establishes the theoretical foundations and implications of the genre of Gnostic cinema. It develops these theoretical elements in the contexts of Gnosticism and the esoteric traditions emerging from it, Cabbala and alchemy. Two, in undertaking this work, Wilson considers several collateral issues. The book discusses the functions of genre, the relationships between cinema and psychology, the connections between the moving image and sacred power, the role of the cinematographic apparatus, and the romance of film. Three, the book is a broad meditation on the seductions of cinema. It is attuned to material attractions of the movies, those gorgeous lights and lurid shadows, but also the film's spiritual invitations, the gaps between the pictures, the empty spaces at the heart of life.

Customer Reviews

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Gnostic Visions in Film

Being a student of historical gnosticism I couldn't resist this title or rather the subtitle when I came across it. I have never been one greatly into movies so I just wanted to see how the ideas I am so greatly interested in would have found expression in contemporary culture. The book was a revelation; it is in fact a study of three distinct but related 'underground' threads in contemporary film - these being gnostic, alchemical and kabbalistic. I am not too knowledgeable about the Kabbala, but the 'kabbalistic' films discussed seem restricted to one particular aspect of this subject - that of golem making - or the creation of artificial life, from the 'Der Golem' film of 1915 through Frankenstein to Blade Runner and beyond. The book looks at some fifty or so films altogether, quite a number in considerable depth - and picks out with great insight the development of these three interrelated motifs throughout 20th century cinema. I read the book in a couple of days, and have as a result been inspired unbelievably to order nearly all the films the author discusses. It was refreshing to dip into the book a second time as an accompaniment and commentary to the films as they were watched. An introduction to the 'alchemical' elements in the films of David Lynch would have been worth the price of the book alone, as my interest in traditional alchemy, mostly approached through Jungian lenses - was as in danger of becoming as moribund as my gnostic studies! These in turn have been transformed from something of a dry academic pursuit into something vibrant, living and moreover with contemporary relevance - not to mention fun. A number of reviewers of some of the author's other books have found his style somewhat heavy going. Not having read these other works yet I couldn't comment, but in this book I found that often an idea, instead of being stated full-on, is as it were pointed or hinted at, actually stimulating me into making my own jumps of intuition and insight. This book has opened my eyes into some of the deeper currents moving through a medium I had long neglected and indeed perhaps arrogantly viewed as 'mere entertainment'. Not so anymore! If there is ever a second edition it would be nice to have it brought up to date, as the last film the book discusses would have been released about the year 2001.
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