
Suigin Trismegistus
Schizoidcel
★★★
- Joined
- Aug 17, 2024
- Posts
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Anyone watch this movie? I've been thinking about it recently and what meaning, if any, may lie in the message of this movie.
Full film is available on the Web Archive, and it is also a part of The Criterion Collection.
View: https://archive.org/details/cure-1997-kiyoshi-kurosawa
This haunting psychological thriller operates in the realm of occult horror, with Kurosawa deliberately leaving vast interpretive space for viewers. The director's restrained approach allows the film's deeper anxieties to emerge organically, making it a work that lingers and evolves in memory.
I've been contemplating a particular reading of the film. One that frames it as a meditation on cosmic consciousness and existential imprisonment. Consider this interpretation:
Full film is available on the Web Archive, and it is also a part of The Criterion Collection.
View: https://archive.org/details/cure-1997-kiyoshi-kurosawa
This haunting psychological thriller operates in the realm of occult horror, with Kurosawa deliberately leaving vast interpretive space for viewers. The director's restrained approach allows the film's deeper anxieties to emerge organically, making it a work that lingers and evolves in memory.
I've been contemplating a particular reading of the film. One that frames it as a meditation on cosmic consciousness and existential imprisonment. Consider this interpretation:
What if divinity exists not as a singular entity, but as the collective consciousness of all living things? In this reading, God--having set the universe in motion--chose self-induced amnesia to escape the unbearable weight of eternal, monotonous existence. This cosmic being deliberately fragmented and forgot itself, seeking refuge in oblivion. But what happens when that carefully constructed forgetfulness begins to crack? The film's central antagonist (and later at the end--the protagonist) becomes a vessel through which this dormant divine consciousness accidentally reawakens. Yet only this fragment, trapped within human flesh, regains awareness. The rest of the cosmic self remains mercifully asleep.
Now comes the true horror: complete awareness coupled with complete powerlessness. This awakened fragment understands its nature and predicament but lacks the godly abilities it once possessed. Like a dreamer trapped in a nightmare, it cannot simply will itself back to ignorance. The bluepill of forgetting is no longer within reach. In desperation, God, as the antagonist in the film, can only weakly influence other vessels of this scattered divine consciousness, attempting to awaken them to the same terrible knowledge, not as salvation, but as a kind of cosmic misery seeking company. In the end, God transfers his awareness and knowledge to the protagonist, to the detective who had been pursuing him the entire time. There is no cure to this predicament. Only the disease itself.
This is a horror story about the burden of ultimate knowledge and the prison of consciousness itself.
Now comes the true horror: complete awareness coupled with complete powerlessness. This awakened fragment understands its nature and predicament but lacks the godly abilities it once possessed. Like a dreamer trapped in a nightmare, it cannot simply will itself back to ignorance. The bluepill of forgetting is no longer within reach. In desperation, God, as the antagonist in the film, can only weakly influence other vessels of this scattered divine consciousness, attempting to awaken them to the same terrible knowledge, not as salvation, but as a kind of cosmic misery seeking company. In the end, God transfers his awareness and knowledge to the protagonist, to the detective who had been pursuing him the entire time. There is no cure to this predicament. Only the disease itself.
This is a horror story about the burden of ultimate knowledge and the prison of consciousness itself.