Showing posts with label Mountain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mountain. Show all posts

Friday, June 1, 2012

"An all new movie that FINALLY asks the question your mom and dad are too afraid to ask"


Could anything be stranger than Jodorowsky's The Holy Mountain? The monsters of Everything Is Terrible! seem to think so. The DVD's case asks this post's titular question: "Why not remake Alejandro Jodorowsky's 1973 classic The Holy Mountain out of dog movies?" Well, open your eyes, puppies! Because apparently, somebody did. 

Doggie Woggiez! Poochie Woochiez! is one of the strangest fucking films I've experienced, and very much a reflection of 21st century aesthetics. I think it's appropriate that the members of EIT! - those curators of VHS purgatory - have created such an...interesting homage to the creator of the first midnight movie. If anyone on the net could be linked to chaotic cult appeal, I think that EIT! takes the cake. 





"Nothing in your education or experience can have prepared you for this film"


I did it again. 

Before taking stills from Alejandro Jodorowsky's The Holy Mountain, I knew I was about to be in possession of many, many jpegs. Seventy-nine to be exact - and I don't regret saving a single one. 

It seemed to be that The Holy Mountain would be a good follow up to Akira; apparently, Jodorowsky helped Otomo devise an ending for his post-apocalyptic animation (although Jodorowsky doesn't remember doing so. This is, sadly, taken from wikipedia, so don't quote me here). 

To keep it short, Jodorowsky is an extraordinary artist. His work transcends the realm of Buñuelian surrealism by being ruthlessly strange yet somehow coherent. His subversive imagery is almost never appalling; always seeming to activate some hidden curiosity in his viewers - as though the images they witness have been fish-hooked directly out of their subconscious. Best of all, despite the cynicism and satire that occupies this particular film, it has some of the funniest sequences you will ever witness (and perhaps, some of the most confounding). 

Before anyone asks, I'll come right out and say it: yes, Jodorowsky was taking drugs during the making of this film. But thinking solely about this fact will disrupt the dream-like sensations The Holy Mountain seeks to inspire. Unlike many recent films that use drugs as their selling point, Jodorowsky used drugs as an entryway into something grander: a way in which he could visualize such a beautiful film, whose images could not be fully understood, or remotely contained. 

PS: I think it will be a pretty standard affair that these stills contain spoilers. Also, this movie goes beyond the conventional R rating and never looks back, so many of these stills are NSFW. 


Many more photos to see...