Nell'era Heian, lo stregone disinteressato Seimei Abe si unisce a Hiromasa Minamoto per indagare su un inquietante incidente, riaccendendo la sua passione per le arti mistiche.Nell'era Heian, lo stregone disinteressato Seimei Abe si unisce a Hiromasa Minamoto per indagare su un inquietante incidente, riaccendendo la sua passione per le arti mistiche.Nell'era Heian, lo stregone disinteressato Seimei Abe si unisce a Hiromasa Minamoto per indagare su un inquietante incidente, riaccendendo la sua passione per le arti mistiche.
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I was expecting this to be a light-hearted film about magic and sorcery...
It was, but I found it a bit more. Watching with Western eyes, I first saw Faust's Goethe, then a bit of Umberto Eco's Name of the Rose.
But fortunately, I also enjoy Feng Shui...
Wait.. what?
I'll explain, I studied a PhD that looked at cognitive theory, and rather than go down the old NLP the map is not the territory road...
I'll remind those who know that Sigmund Freud, after studying as a neurologist (I am also a rare bookseller and I once sent a copy of Freud's PhD thesis on neurology to a Chinese American in New York... but that's another story, and this film is Japanese, a different country)... but after training as a medical doctor, Sigmund Freud trained with the hypnotist, or mesmerist, Charcot.
And then found that his clients 'recovered' just as well by talking through their symptoms without hypnosis.
But he had to write a book on the Interpretation of Dreams first to get there.
Today, modern athletes train hard to win a 100m race, but at least some get taught visualisation where they run through the race in their minds first.
Therapists who work with veterans and those who have other traumas in the form of PTSD work with both grounding techniques, but also ways of working with imagery to understand their trauma better. The German for 'dream' is Traum!
So, with that, I work with different mind maps, I work with a Hindu Vedic compass sometimes called a Brahma map as well as the Moksha Patam, as well as forms of hand meditation called Mudras.
And so I also use Greek, Norse, and Chinese myths, as well as gods and goddesses from Hindu religion, as ways of contemplating my own mind.
In Japanese myths, I like the spring story of Yazume and. Aretamasu, as she seduces the sun goddess out of her depression every year to bring in the new season.
Not so different to St Antoine's Temptation, except St Antoine (bless him) is terrified.
A story told in of all things Victor Hugo's story Les Miserables, where the two barricades are St. Antoine and the Temple, the former noisy, the latter quiet.
So I use Feng Shui in my home, and I know some of the stories of the five elements, the different dragons (I have a statue of Hestia on my hearth, the home of the Golden Dragon) with the Black Tortoise, Vermilion Dragon, White Tiger and Jade Dragon at each compass point.
So, I came to this film with some knowledge, and whilst the story is very much of a Japanese/ Chinese bent (I couldn't quite tell, but as a child, I watched the Water Margin and Monkey, Chinese myths made by Japanese filmmakers...), although I disappeared to Tarkovsky's Solaris for a 'madeleine' moment after the tale of the water under the Capital
Well, let's just say the film transported me on a fantastic journey through my unconscious, much known to me, but then, well, I was shown parts of the 'room' I didn't always look at.
What else do you want from such a film?
It was, but I found it a bit more. Watching with Western eyes, I first saw Faust's Goethe, then a bit of Umberto Eco's Name of the Rose.
But fortunately, I also enjoy Feng Shui...
Wait.. what?
I'll explain, I studied a PhD that looked at cognitive theory, and rather than go down the old NLP the map is not the territory road...
I'll remind those who know that Sigmund Freud, after studying as a neurologist (I am also a rare bookseller and I once sent a copy of Freud's PhD thesis on neurology to a Chinese American in New York... but that's another story, and this film is Japanese, a different country)... but after training as a medical doctor, Sigmund Freud trained with the hypnotist, or mesmerist, Charcot.
And then found that his clients 'recovered' just as well by talking through their symptoms without hypnosis.
But he had to write a book on the Interpretation of Dreams first to get there.
Today, modern athletes train hard to win a 100m race, but at least some get taught visualisation where they run through the race in their minds first.
Therapists who work with veterans and those who have other traumas in the form of PTSD work with both grounding techniques, but also ways of working with imagery to understand their trauma better. The German for 'dream' is Traum!
So, with that, I work with different mind maps, I work with a Hindu Vedic compass sometimes called a Brahma map as well as the Moksha Patam, as well as forms of hand meditation called Mudras.
And so I also use Greek, Norse, and Chinese myths, as well as gods and goddesses from Hindu religion, as ways of contemplating my own mind.
In Japanese myths, I like the spring story of Yazume and. Aretamasu, as she seduces the sun goddess out of her depression every year to bring in the new season.
Not so different to St Antoine's Temptation, except St Antoine (bless him) is terrified.
A story told in of all things Victor Hugo's story Les Miserables, where the two barricades are St. Antoine and the Temple, the former noisy, the latter quiet.
So I use Feng Shui in my home, and I know some of the stories of the five elements, the different dragons (I have a statue of Hestia on my hearth, the home of the Golden Dragon) with the Black Tortoise, Vermilion Dragon, White Tiger and Jade Dragon at each compass point.
So, I came to this film with some knowledge, and whilst the story is very much of a Japanese/ Chinese bent (I couldn't quite tell, but as a child, I watched the Water Margin and Monkey, Chinese myths made by Japanese filmmakers...), although I disappeared to Tarkovsky's Solaris for a 'madeleine' moment after the tale of the water under the Capital
Well, let's just say the film transported me on a fantastic journey through my unconscious, much known to me, but then, well, I was shown parts of the 'room' I didn't always look at.
What else do you want from such a film?
- alastairkemp
- 28 ott 2024
- Permalink
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