updated 5mo ago
Visible Mind: Movies, modernity and the unconscious
Ulysses is for me the prototype of … modern man … (and) the man of the future as well, because he represents the type of the ‘trapped’ voyager. His journey was a voyage toward the centre, toward Ithaca, which is to say, toward himself. He was a fine navigator, but destiny – spoken here in terms of trials of initiation which he had to overcome – for
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‘The movies are far more efficient than the theatre: they are less restricted, they are able to produce amazing symbols to show the collective unconscious, since their methods of presentation are so unlimited’
from Visible Mind: Movies, modernity and the unconscious by Christopher Hauke
I see cinematography as the final and last medium left in this society, artistically speaking, that can be enjoyed by many people. Painting, sculpture etc., have limited audiences … People should make a big effort to keep it as an art medium. I like to paint on the screen. I like to create a mood and treat it as an art form, the last art form. I ha
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‘Consciousness is full of holes, and we use stories to hide them from ourselves’.
from Visible Mind: Movies, modernity and the unconscious by Christopher Hauke
In film, as in no other medium, we can actually see the behavior of the archetype; in life, we know her far more indirectly, as moods, impulses, symptoms, and as a shape-shifting personage in our dreams … In film, we can see the anima figure over time, in a more or less stable guise, at her strange task of mediating the fate of a protagonist. (Beeb
... See morefrom Visible Mind: Movies, modernity and the unconscious by Christopher Hauke
Perhaps transformation into art is one way of dealing with the overstimulation of modern life. Art binds chaotic impressions into form … Perhaps film emerged when it did because it was just the therapy people needed to bind into manageable form the chaos of modern overstimulation.
from Visible Mind: Movies, modernity and the unconscious by Christopher Hauke
What interested you most about the cinema?
from Visible Mind: Movies, modernity and the unconscious by Christopher Hauke
‘Without balance you transgress your limits without noticing
from Visible Mind: Movies, modernity and the unconscious by Christopher Hauke
Berry reckons that, ‘the act of filming creates or perhaps releases the “psyche” of the subject. The scene is no longer simply nature, but art …we are magnetized by it’
from Visible Mind: Movies, modernity and the unconscious by Christopher Hauke
Luis Buñuel is quoted as saying: A film is like an involuntary imitation of a dream … On the screen, as within the human being, the nocturnal voyage into the unconscious begins … The cinema seems to have been invented to express the life of the subconscious, the roots of which penetrate poetry so deeply.
from Visible Mind: Movies, modernity and the unconscious by Christopher Hauke