Friday, May 9, 2008
Brock Hughes-Zardoz
However, the movie does show the idea of following an idea of something more than one’s self no matter how silly it is. The people of the Outlands follow Zardoz simply because he has told them that they are called or special people. This shows that people want to feel important to a being that is higher than themselves and fell that they are special. I think this really boils down to one’s insecurities that all humans possess. These insecurities lead to many different things but I think that this movie is a prime example of insecurities forcing one to a certain religion.
Brock Hughes-21
The Bible says that material possessions should not control our actions or thoughts; which I think is a great idea and something that should be followed because if that is your only pursuit in life you are going to get in a lot of trouble with other people that you step on to get to the top!
Karen Schomaker- Motorcycle Culture
After the initial freak out of "oh holy heck this bike is going to fall, I'm going to end up in the hospital, and how the hell am i going to finish up my senior seminar's from bed with a thousand broken bones?" it was amazing. We hoped on the I-64 and rode down to VA Beach. The physical experience is one thing- feeling the full force of the wind on your body, seeing the ground below your feet, and knowing that one wrong move could lead to disaster- but the mental aspect was mind-blowing in its own right. I noticed things I had never noticed, and I have driven along this road numerous times. I noticed the stars in the sky, I paid attention to the trees, and as we grew closer to the water I could smell the salt in the air.
Slowly the worries I felt earlier that night regarding all the work I had been trudging through this semester melted away and I could just think about the present. I thought about the future, I thought about the past. I realized that I like where I am in my life, and while there are things I wish I could change, there are other things that I will never be able to forget. I realized how lucky I am to have my friends and my family, and that with their support I can get through anything that comes my way.
There was something about being on the back of that bike that enabled me to let go of worries, and embrace the present. My mind cleared out and I was able to just have on of those experiences where I was fully in the present- the here and now. Once my mind was clear I was able to give way to the random simple thought slowly sift in. It was an amazing experience in that it was a feeling I had never before experienced, and I gained greater understanding for those who are a part of this biker culture.
Karen Schomaker- Film 1
One thing that I have noticed is that we have watched a whole heck of a lot of war films. Okay, maybe only 2 in class, but I feel like it has been more- especially with my friends this semester. And the more war films I watch, the more I feel they are all the same. America is entrenched in deep horrific warfare against some faceless evil. We are the good, they are the bad, and we must fight to win- we must fight for glory. Blood, guts, sweat, and tears pour forward until I'm not sure I can take the cinematic jumble anymore. But with this comes the underlying internal struggle within the few main characters who question the point of the war, and how their involvement adds to or takes away from the meaning of their life.
I get it- battle is crazy, intense, gory, and emotions are wild and high- but how many movies do we need to watch before we understand this? How much money does Hollywood need to pour into the industry so that we as viewers can get the same message in a different way. Call me a cynic, or overly critical, but I think all these films are the same after a while. Yes, they are done differently, some present the message more artistically than others, but when I walk out of the theater with the same "war is horror, men struggle to find meaning, but in the end the learn more about themselves and become stronger because of it.... unless they die, but they died in peace" message I just stop caring. What I want to see is something different- something spectacular- or perhaps something that shows war as boring, where soldiers sit around a lot, and some never see a battle. I realize this doesn't make for award-winning drama, and wouldn't pull in numbers to the box office, but those messages are just as important aren't they?
Karen Schomaker- Reflection on Existentialism
However, what I found interesting about these two was that despite the fact that they were talking essentially about the same thing, there were large differences. Kierkegaard looks at existentialism in the ideas of the "leap of faith" and individual subjectivity, specifically looking at how this ties in with religion, God, and true faith. Sartre is an atheist who disagrees with Kierkegaard's philosophy regarding it's religious contexts, but takes the philosophy to a more social and political level- looking specifically at the individual and the idea that man is free to create his own essence. As a scene in Easy Rider highlights briefly with a sign in the brothel, "Death only closes a mans reputation and determines it good or bad" which is a reflection on Sartre's argument that it is impossible to define a man until he no longer exists because man is always changing with the context in which he leaves, and arguably the subjectivity he has within his life.
Karen Schomaker- Personal Reflection
I think most of us do this at multiple points in our lives- I know that I do, especially when I hit "turning points" in my life- such as graduation, or the beginning or end to a relationship. A few years ago, when I was just a freshman in college, I was easily influenced by other people's opinions and views- especially my new friends because I desperately wanted to fit in and be thought of as normal. When my roommate talked about how she was an atheist and thought religion was false it made me stop and contemplate about my own views. Although I did not agree with her (there were a lot of things we failed to agree on...) I did start to wonder about why I felt a strong attachment to my Catholic faith.
I am a born and raised Catholic- and growing up I barely questioned it. I went to church with my parents, I went to Sunday school, I learned my prayers and could recite the creed by heart. In middle school, after hitting a rough patch with my family at home, I started questioning religion and God's existence. After some exploration I decided that even if I was wrong, I was better off continuing my faith because of the comfort it provided and the community I was a part of. In high school this commitment continued and I took an active role in my church- specifically by joining a Diocesan Youth Council that met monthly to develop an annual youth convention for the Richmond Diocese. Through this I became part of a unique community, and my peers who were also a part of this council became a strong support in my life.
So why is it when I got to college I was so willing to drop these affiliations? Why did my need for affiliation with my roommate and other friends become a larger priority than the community that I had felt so close to before college? I have no idea, but I do know that I have spent the past four years struggling to recreate a definition for myself and my beliefs. I know what I believe, and I know it's a constant struggle of doubt, but how is this defined? When I get older and am trying to raise kids, what will I tell them? Will they be just as confused as me? Will I return to the Catholic Church for guidance?
Karen Schomaker- The Pope Goes Digital
While this is amusing, I'm also confused. First- how is the Pope supposed to get all these mobile numbers so that he can send them? How is he going to find a phone that will store all of the numbers (I think my phone will only hold a couple hundred, which is way more than I need)? When is he going to find the time to sit down and send these texts? Are they going to be personalized- or a random mass message? Is it really going to be from the Pope? Who is going to show the man how to use the phone? Can those getting the text then save the Pope's number and call him back later for a personal chat? And finally- How the heck can I get on that list? I want a text from the Pope!
This also raises the question of how is it that youth have allowed themselves to become so disconnected with the non-technological world that the Pope has to resort to text messaging in order to reach them? This bothers me on multiple levels, but mainly on the idea that today's youth- myself included- have become to heavily dependent on our technology that we fail to be able to see what is important beyond what we can find on our computers, ipods, and cell phones. Even more so- we try to enforce this idea and dependence onto our elders. When our parents struggle to learn how to use the cell phones beyond the basics of making a phone call, or do not understand how to do more with a computer than turn it on and check email, we laugh at their incapabilities. But what does this say about us? Have we become so disenfranchised with the real world and the ideals we were raised on that we have forced ourselves to turn to technology to be our guide, as opposed to God? What does our example, as the generation between those who do not depend on technology and those who have not known a world without it, say to today's young generation- those who look up to us as an example of what to expect, and what is appropriate?
Should the Pope really have to resort to mass text messaging in order to reach today's youth, or should the youth realize that there is more to life than the machine in their pocket, and turn to our elders to seek information?
http://www.reuters.com/article/technologyNews/idUSSYD19071020080507?feedType=RSS&feedName=technologyNews
Karen Schomaker- Random Musings in the Library
But these are excuses, they aren't reasons. How hard is it to sit down and type up a few lines about religion in a film we watched, or an observation I made one day on the road. Apparently, really hard. Maybe it is that I do not like to think about religion too much. As the father in the film Big Fish said, "It's rude to talk about religion, you never know who you are going to offend. Which I find to be very true. To me, talking about religion becomes a struggle because unless you know the thoughts of your audience, or their basic beliefs, it is very likely that you will offend at least one person. Sometimes even the choice of words used to describe your own views will offend someone.
That bothers me- I think we should have the freedom to express our beliefs in engaged discourse with others without fearing that someone will be offended- and without taking offense to something someone says that we disagree with. While I feel that this class has been a great outlet for discussion in regards to our views in the context of the films we watch, I often fear that what I say in class or in an essay will offend someone. When we watched The Seventh Seal I saw a statement against organized religion, and to an extent those who prescribe to this method of practicing religion. I largely agreed with this because over time I have grown increasingly frustrated with organized religion, but did not want to bring this up in class for fear that someone would be personally offended, or would fail to see what I meant by this.
Perhaps this is why I put off writing these blogs- fear that classmates would read this and fail to understand. But at the same time I limited my expression and ability to see if perchance this was someone in the class who might have agreed with me, and we could have had the opportunity to share our ideology and grow from the shared discourse.
Thursday, May 8, 2008
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
Matthew Evans - What makes a country Religious?
Matthew Evans- Is there a non-religious American Religion ?
There something interesting about
Who's Our new Pope?
When Pope John Paul the II died in April of 2008 it was the end of the era. The man had truly served as the ambassador to the Catholic Church as the most widely traveled pope in history. He’d also single handedly saved the Church from its own conservative ways within the passage of Vatican II. The man was adored around the world and was never out of the news. My question is why after such a string of Pontiff popularity can most non-Catholics not recall the current Pope Benedict the XVI’s name?, despite him being even more modern than his predecessor, the man carries an I pod for heaven’s sake. What does our new pope need to become a great PR person? I don’t know what he needs to do , but his predecessor had it.
Matthew Evans- Has the Cross Become a Fashion Icon?
Is the Cross a sacred symbol anymore or has it become secular. I noticed something the other day, I see the cross a religious symbol in several places where it does not have religious meaning. I thought about it gangster rap music videos with big glittering diamond crosses, German iron-cross belt buckles worn by self proclaimed atheists. I think to myself, how do people not notice t he symbolism and bash the idea of religion while wearing such as symbol. I remember a few female friends who wear crosses around their neck despite being nonreligious to which they simply respond “ I Just like it” or my family gave it to me. It’s even on the flags of several countries. Has the cross leant honor and pride to entirely secular ideas and endeavors? I believe it has. In many situations it is purely religious, aka in front of a church. However, I feel many people overlook items in every day society that are in actuality crucifixes or based upon them at the least.
Matthew Evans - The Bible, A form of Media?
I noticed something at my house one day, we had several different bibles on one shelf in the den along with several other pieces of religious literature. I wondered why we had so many bibles, so I took them down and started to thumb through them The Roman Catholic Bible, The American Revised Standard, and the King James Bible. It suddenly dawned on me, is the Bible a form of media unto itself? I started to read the language, and although it was all written in English, it conveyed very different feelings from the same chapters. The basic Catholic rhetoric meant to be minimalist but with a sense of mystery. Than there’s the modern American translation that breaks things down into plain and understandable terms and sets things in a typical “American” mindset. Then there’s the poetic and flowery King James version which is so beautifully written but riddled with political agendas of the monarchy. I began to realize that a sacred text had been altered, and changed to convey the message of various individuals throughout history. It kind of makes me wonder what it would be like to read it in its original language.
Matthew Evans- Zardoz!!!!!!
The first thing that strikes one about the movie Zardos is how corny it is. One spends most of the movie laughing at the cheesy plot lines, ill made sets, and funny dialogue. Its easy to write this off as just being a bad movie, but might hide something deeper that would be more difficult to handle if brought about in a more serious way. In a humorous way this movie reminds me of the of the book Brave New World, where people are engineered and recreated. Technology replaces God and people become hollow inside due to the lack of a true faith or God. There is something wrong with a society where people can commit suicide and come back grown as a fetus in some chemical bath and have lasting memories. It is disturbing that people have had to put a hold on creation (birth) due to longevity. This is also reflected in the eternally senile, the apathetic who are eternal alive bed mentally dead. Humans have stopped reproducing. The only true humanity is represented by the Renegades who dress gender specifically and act rebelliously and the character of Zed who represents base human instincts. As someone of British decent Zed’s name gave me a chuckle because it literally means the end or Z.
Matthew Evans - The Jacket
Life can be both giving and cruel, sometimes in perverse order. In the opening scene of the jacket we see a snow covered cemetery with a tombstone marked with a death date of Christmas day in a field somewhere. The narrator starts off by saying …..the first time I died……… which confuses the viewer immensely, after all how can someone die twice. We begin to understand this concept as the movie progresses. We discover that the main character is a survivor of Operation Desert Storm, where he receives a head wound. The Army thought he was dead until he blinked his eyes. The movie picks up again several months later in the
Matthew Evans - The Wall
I found the Wall to be extremely eye opening and disturbing at the same time. It truly opened up the possible horrors lurking in the back of the human psyche and the self destructive tendencies associated with it. I was mystified by the abstract structures and what they could be, some of them resonated very clearly with me and I felt as if I was inside the mind of the creator running in a maze away from a night mare. This movie seemed to be an escape from the world and an exercise in torture all rolled into one. In many ways I thought it showed the fear and desire to escape for a generation scared by what happened to their parents (The World War II generation) and of the dangers of their impending future ( a possible Nuclear War). Given this utter terror and struggle for identity in a recently socially liberated world, this movie makes sense in a disturbing way. This movie simply blew my mind, enough said.
Matthew Evans- The Dark Side of OZ
Once I went with a friend to see the Dark Side of Oz at an old 1920’s movie house in
Matthew Evans- Movie 21
The movie 21 was much deeper and better organized than I originally thought. In discussion the idea of the 7 deadly sins was brought up which was very intriguing. However, I was more struck by the idea of Karma. In a movie where money became a God, a way of life, where everyone stole, how you treated people became very important to the outcome of your life. The main character starts out as this kid who’s a qualified, honest, and brilliant student, but doesn’t do anything to take control of his life, doesn’t stray from the rules at all. He’s given a way out of this when his teacher invites him to participate in a rigged black jack game as a member of a team. When he starts he’s very modest and does very well, but as he becomes cocky and greedy he loses, and loses biG and is consequentially beaten by a security guard. He also turns on his friends and looses much of the respect in his academic community. At this point the teacher turns on him and takes him for everything that he’s worth and sets out to ruin his life. Well, the kid manages to get back into his teacher’s good graces, and decides to go to Vegas. He and the teacher run the tables along with the girl, and all seems good till security “catches on” and there’s a chase seen, which turns into a setup where the teacher ends up getting beaten up (we’re not sure what happens to him in the end) by the security guard he caused to loose his job years ago. The security guard takes the money and retires (injustice in the world?), we’re not sure what happens . After all this the kid ends up getting into his graduate program based upon his story. I liked how it all worked out on the basis of karma, but in moderation. The perfect don’t have a good life it seems, but the life lived in moderation seemed to do well.
Matthew Evans - Where are you Axis Mundi?
Matthew Evans- Religion and the Media
As I was flipping through BBC I noticed something, religion plays a big role in the news media today, what is supposed to be a secular realm. Examples of this include Islamic extremists throughout the world, such as in the
Matthew Evans - Wings of Desire/ City of Angels and Culture
In terms of religion in the movies it’s hard to get more blatant than this. Wings of Desire was the German original, while City of
Matthew Evans - Nazi Propaganda and Media
The other day I was flipping through youtube and came across some old Nazi propaganda films, some of them involved Hitler yelling a furious message while others had rallies and book burnings. The entire time these movies preached an Atheist pro state message. I found this to be extremely interesting could this be a secular state religion? I started thinking about it, and what is nationalism, but a state sponsored religion. Great examples of this include endeavors such as Imperialism. Imperialism had a cause, betterment of the mother country and native peoples. Furthermore, it had sacred symbols, government houses, flags, traditions, ways of life, language, literature. Really any emotionally driven secular institution could be labeled as a religion. This got me to thinking, what about the Samurai’s? Sure they were Daoist in most cases but they believed their tyranny had a purpose and needed to be preserved. This can be seen well in the movie the Last Samurai staring Tom Cruise . As he became imbedded in Samurai culture Tom Cruise’s character flourished. This idea has helped me to redefine my personal views on “what religion is”.
Matthew Evans - India
I had a unique opportunity to go to
India
I had a unique opportunity to go to
Sunday, May 4, 2008
Brock Hughes- Nashville
One thing I took out of the weekend was the idea of relating things in the present to those of the past. I have had some awesome times studying the Bible with a lot of the people that were there; that fact I think encouraged the idea that the whole time I could just feel God’s presence. Even at a bar I felt like God was there, my friend is a country singer and he was singing at a bar on Saturday night, so we all went to the bar and just shared in an awesome time of hanging out and singing songs that were about shared times that we had together. A couple summers ago we would always go down to a river and he would sing the same songs; I immediately, every time I hear the songs go back to those times that we shared and I just feel so blessed by God. Is it weird that sometimes there are just those people that you can see Christ in so clearly? And that they seem to bring out Christ in you at the same time?
Brock Hughes- Reading
My only problem with that verse is that I feel like a lot of times people take it completely out of context. I have had friends that have complained about praying for a new car for a long time and never getting one. I feel like a lot of times people are only Christians because they think they can get whatever they want by being one. This verse to me does not mean that at all, I feel like it is important to ask for things important to you in the world, but I also feel like this verse is more about asking for God’s presence and other virtues that one would want to have. Obviously, God is considered our Father, therefore, He wants to give us everything; however, sometimes the things we want are not the things that would be best for our souls. Many times that new car that we want isn’t in God’s plan because it would cause us to covet and become prideful over the car and treasure that more than relationships and God. Therefore, I think that asking for God’s will is the best thing one can do; however, I still make sure that God knows what I would love to have happen just in case it is His will.
Brock Hughes- Reading
I have found more and more than I need to focus on being a student and playing soccer. Next fall I am only taking one class and I am playing soccer. I will have a job that I go to every morning but it is important that I focus on this part of my life instead of jumping ahead to when I could possibly be in Nashville. I need to continue to build a relationship with God and respond to the duties He gives me and then through my obedience and dedication to the tasks He has given me, He will reward me! Life sometimes is way too much for me to handle even though I believe in God and have faith in Him.
Brock Hughes-The Bible
I really realized that in the times where I do pray, I get much better results than I do when I just try to take things in my own hands. Whenever I take things on my own, I normally just end up worrying about it more. For instance, I had a job interview and was crazy worried about it, for a while I just simply sat there and worried about what I was going to say and everything like that. I couldn’t think of a single thing to say, instead I just grew more nervous about that situation. However, I decided a day later that I would just pray about it and let it be. I did that, and the interview went great, I really didn’t have anything prepared but everything worked out perfectly! It was such a good interview that God had to have had a hand in it and been with me to calm me and keep me steady.
Brock Hughes-Nicaragua
The process basically is how God cleans us and get us ready for his work. There was a parallel drawn to gold. Gold is thrown through the fire to purify it before it becomes so valuable. By taking me through a process God is working out my impurities and shaping me into what He wants me to be. The fact that God is with me through the whole process is pretty crazy to me. Sometimes I feel as though I am all by myself and that God is not near me, but throughout everything He is beside me and I need to remember that fact.
Saturday, May 3, 2008
Aaron McLellan--The Beach
In the movie “The Beach”, Leonardo DiCaprio is brought to a secluded island in Thailand. There he begins to live with several others who are mostly tourists who found out about the island. The island is sacred to them as it is their way to get away from the world and finding what they think is perfection. They think because they are away from the corruption of the world, that they will live a better life. But it seems that each person is corrupt in his or her own way. Throughout the film you can see greed, selfishness, envy, jealousy and betrayal. They tried to make a perfect world for them to live in but they did not realize that this would be impossible because they were also imperfect. The Bible states that all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. Paul writes that sin is a law. He said that he does the things he does not want to do. He said that when he sins it is no longer him but the sin living inside him. It seems that we all carry around our earthly, fleshly bodies that are sinful. We cannot attain perfection on our own. We can strive for it, but we will not attain it until we lose our earthly bodies when we die.
Aaron McLellan--Unleashed
The movie “Unleashed” with Jet Li is about a man named Danny (Li) who was trained from a boy by a mob boss to be a hit man. But he is no ordinary hit man. He has been trained to be like a dog and he is treated like one. He wears a collar that when is taken off, he becomes lethal and beats anyone his master tells him to beat. But Danny has been beaten and abused by his master just as bad as he has beaten his adversaries. One day Danny meets a man named Sam. Sam tells Danny “People are like pianos. Sometimes they beaten down to hard and need to be retuned.” Sam is a piano player and tuner who takes Danny in when Danny later gets hurt in a car accident. Sam represents the transcendence that helps retune Danny’s life. Danny turns from his old life and takes on a new life free from the collar and abuse of his old master. Romans 6:16 says “Don't you know that when you offer yourselves to someone to obey him as slaves, you are slaves to the one whom you obey–whether you are slaves to sin, which leads to death, or to obedience, which leads to righteousness?” Danny was a slave to the one he obeyed. When he obeyed his “Uncle Bart”, he lived a life of suffering and pain. When he offered himself to goodness and righteousness, he lived a life of happiness and fulfillment. In the end, Danny chose to live a life of righteousness with his new family.
Aaron McLellan--Sea Biscuit
In the movie “Sea Biscuit” there is a racing horse named Sea Biscuit and a jockey with a bad temper. Both have been written off and no one thinks they could ever win a race. Both are too wild and firey. But when they cross each other’s path, the owners of the horse want the jockey to work with him. It is interesting that the horse is considered too small to race and the jockey was considered too big to race. But they do race and they rise to the top and become the best in America during the Depression. It made me think of the scripture in Romans of the Bible where Paul writes that “the God, who gives life to the dead and calls things that are not as though they were.” Applying this verse to this movie reminds me of how powerful God is. To everyone else, it seemed that these two should not be racing but they did and they won. It seemed that only an act of God could resurrect these to characters’ careers. God is not limited by our boundaries and capabilities. I think everyone has stories where God has called things that are not as though they were.
Aaron McLellan--Boondock Saints
In the movie “Boondock Saints” there are two Irish brothers from South Boston who very religious, performing Catholic rituals and going to church. After a terrible and violent experience with some Russian mobsters the two brothers have somewhat of an experience or union with the transcendent. They are sleeping next to each other in separate beds when they both awake at the same time. They seem to be partially pulled out of there beds and are helpless to the being (which cannot be seen) pulling them upward. It is almost like God is calling them out as he pulls them toward him. Water from the old cement ceiling is dripping down on them as if God is anointing them with oil, which was done in the Old Testament by a prophet to show who God had anointed and called to be the next king of Israel. A voice that they both seem to be able to hear tells them that they must shed the blood of the evil men who shed innocent blood. The mysterium tremendum is evident. When it is over they said to each other “Destroy all that is evil, so that which is good may flourish.” When the moment is over they look at each other and seem to except that God has called them to rid evil from the streets of Boston. Although I don’t agree with this strategy for ridding evil, they had a good idea. If I could slightly change their calling it would be to rid evil through love and not with more evil. This would be a good Old Testament way of solving the problem but Paul writes in Ephesians, “For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.” It seems that we should be ridding the evil from the people and not the people from the world.
Rob Dufour - The Idea of the Holy 3
Rob Dufour - The Idea of the Holy 2
Rob Dufour - The Idea of the Holy
Rob Dufour - Transcendental Style in Film
Elizabeth Rhein-Religion and Doubt-Student's Choosing
Throughout my lifetime I’ve gone to a few Catholic church services, been a Protestant and then Lutheran, never exactly knowing why I chose to be so. The only thing I knew was that it was the church my parents went to. My Junior year in high school, I became extremely religious and went to every church and youth group function that I could go to, hoping to find the answer as to why I believed in God. I presented a sermon at our youth group service in hopes that it may help me understand God. I even took part in an interpretive dance about the seven deadly sins to the song “total eclipse of the heart.” I don’t think I’m ever going to do that again. Sadly enough, I never really found the answer. When I came to CNU, I hoped that after taking a class on the New Testament would change things around and strengthen my beliefs, but in fact, they worsened and I ended up writing a paper about how Jesus might have not actually been our savior instead of insisting that he was. After that class, I chose to become an agnostic rather than Lutheran. I’m still searching for the answer and I don’t think I’m ever going to find it. When we watched “The Seventh Seal” in class, the knight reminded me a lot about myself. I was looking for proof when there wasn’t any to find. I guess I’m just the type of person who can’t just believe without knowing the facts. I lack faith which is sad but it’s just the way I am. Interestingly enough, one of the students in my senior seminar class wrote his paper on doubt. I really liked his paper because I think that the reason why I can’t just put faith in God is because I doubt it too much and even though you can doubt everything, you can turn around and decide that you’re going to believe in that thing or not. I guess I just haven’t doubted it enough to come to a conclusion or maybe I will never even come to a conclusion. Even so, I feel that after having taken up my philosophy major I am more able to understand my feelings better than I was before coming here. I am very grateful for all of my experiences with religion and I love how there is so much more to uncover. I don’t think I’m a cynic and disbeliever, I just don’t know what I want to believe yet.
Elizabeth Rhein-Thoughts about Religion and Film-Student's Choosing
One of my favorite things about movies is the fact that the majority of them teaches morals. There’s always the good guy who gets themselves trapped in a conflicting decision of right and wrong and they typically have to learn that doing the right thing will always be better than the bad. This is the same for television shows. One of my favorite morals that films try to teach are when the main character learns that being themselves is the best thing to do. Recently I watched a movie called “Penelope.” The movie is about a young girl who was born with the curse of having a pig nose and ears. Her whole life has been spent living locked away in a house with her loving protective mother and father. Everything revolves around her finding a proper suitor who will marry her and break the curse because her mother believes that if she found someone who would marry her, then the curse would be broken. Penelope had to be “loved by her own kind.” At one point, Penelope runs away and explores the city she had never been allowed to visit before. She meets friends and soon enough, learns that she can enjoy life without worrying about what people think of her. At the end of the film she finally learns to love herself just as she is, which breaks the curse. The moral of the film is that you need to like yourself and it doesn’t matter what anyone else thinks. I thought it was a really cute movie with a good moral lesson. I like how movies try to teach people to like themselves and not care about what other people think because it’s a good thing to think and many people don’t quite understand that simple concept.
Elizabeth Rhein-Sacrifice and Time-Space-Reading
Since I had written about Aztecs and sacrifice as an example in my senior seminar paper, I thought that maybe it would be good to read more about it. I found a book on sacrifice written by Kay Reed. In one section, she discusses the process of a fire sacrifice. Apparently the Aztecs sacrificed people in order to keep everything in order. Their goal was to keep everything in order and continue on with time-space. At the ceremony, everyone doused their fires, wore masks, and sat on top of their homes. Pregnant women were hidden away because it was thought that if they viewed any of the ceremony, they would turn into man-eating beasts. The ceremony consisted of the removal of one man’s heart with a special knife used by the priests. After his heart was consumed by the fire at the alter, the rest of his body was burned. This fire would then be used to light the rest of the city. I thought this was really interesting because I never really knew what certain things people like the Aztecs would sacrifice a human for. In this case it was fire. I don’t think I read it here, but I wonder what the human going to be sacrificed would think. Maybe he would have agreed to do such a thing and consider it as an honor or maybe he would have been chosen by his people and therefore be completely against having his heart cut out. The book said that four priests held the person down but I would think that this would happen under both mindsets. Anyway, I feel that now I know a little more about human sacrifice after reading this book which is that they use it to keep time-space continuing on.
Elizabeth Rhein- Eliade and the Sacred-Reading
For the paper I needed to write for this class, I got a book written by Mircea Eliade which discusses the profane and sacred in great detail. At the beginning of his description of the sacred, he starts off by saying it is obviously the opposite of the profane. The sacred can be found in all sorts of things such as a rock or tree to something much more religious. It really depends on the person. These earthly items become something more out of this world when considered sacred. These items are called hierophanies, or an object that symbolizes something much more than its face value. As Eliade says, the item stays itself, but is also something else. I really like the sentence that “the sacred is saturated with being” (Eliade 12). From these writings, it seems that the sacred is what people aim for while profane is what they want to experience less of. If everything was profane then there would be no connection to out of this world objects. Obviously thinking about differences between the sacred and profane have become a great interest to me through out the semester and I continue to try and learn more about it. I guess a possible example of sacred time can be how people have turned two simple pieces of wood into a world renowned Christian symbol known as the cross. The cross represents two things at once, something earthy and something sacred.
Rob Dufour - Aesthetics of Film
Elizabeth Rhein- Religion and Star Trek-Reading
I read a book about Star Trek by Jennifer Porter and how it incorporated religion into the show. The section I want to focus on is when the author discusses Roddenberry’s religious views. Apparently because he was primarily agnostic after having been a Baptist for the earlier part of his life, Roddenberry did not want religion in Star Trek. I thought his outlook on religion was interesting in that he viewed religion as hindering human development rather than helping it move forward. He also believed that people have god-like qualities and because of this, god equals consciousness. Apparently the show drew upon a humanistic point of view because of Roddenberry’s beliefs. None of the characters really had any religious opinions themselves or if they did, those opinions were kept private. Personally, I had never really watched any of the Star Trek episodes except for when my brother had asked me to watch them with him. The first thing that pops into my head when I think about the show is that the guy from Reading Rainbow was in it. Even so, I think that after reading this part of the book, it is nice to know that such a popular show was not trying to press any sort of obvious religious aspects onto viewers.
Elizabeth Rhein- Narnia- Reading
Another book I read this semester were the Narnia chronicles. Out of those, the Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe was chosen to be a movie last year. After having read the book and watched the movie, I can see how they relate to religion or Christianity. The main part that stood out to me was when Aslan was taken by the white witch and shaved. Obviously, this section seemed to relate most to when Jesus was crucified on the cross. Just as Jesus had risen after his crucifixion, Aslan risen after his encounter with the witch. As for other relations between this book and Christianity, Aslan symbolizes God and this is shown through his sacrifice for the children as well as his ability to forgive everyone for anything they had done wrong in the past. He also helped guide the children in making mature and powerful decisions that ended up helping everyone in the end. I really enjoyed reading this book. Out of the books in the chronicles, I really enjoyed reading The Horse and His Boy. I also thought Aslan symbolized God in this book because he did help guide Shasta to where he is supposed to be. From these books, it seems that God will always be there in times of hardship as well as he will always know what’s best for you.
Elizabeth Rhein-Destiny and Relationships-Reading
One of the books that I read this semester was called the Four Loves written by C. S. Lewis. I thought that a lot of what Lewis had written about related a lot to religion as well as films. One such thing he discusses is how people are chosen to be with each other by God. For example, friends do not just become friends through chance but rather through God’s will. This statement reminded me of the film Serendipity. In the film, two people meet by “chance” and because the girl wants to know if it’s meant to be, she writes her phone number on the back of a dollar bill and he writes his in a book. Through out the rest of the film, the two keep missing possible chances of seeing each other but in the end, he finds the book and she finds the dollar bill. The film illustrates how if it’s meant to be then it will happen. I thought the film was really cute and it just made me realize that maybe God does have control over who is in our life. I thought it was interesting how Lewis put the idea forward that we don’t just meet people by chance. I never even really considered that maybe I was destined to meet my friends before reading his book. It really makes you have a different viewpoint on life when God is considered.
Elizabeth Rhein-Sliding Doors- Student's Choosing
I watched the movie Sliding Doors tonight and it just reminded me a lot about my previous blogs pertaining to how God will always be the ultimate decider in our futures. I guess it seems like I have a sort of predestination theme maybe. Anyway, the film is kind of about the butterfly effect where one tiny occurrence can change a person’s life completely. In the film, one woman’s life branches when she either makes or misses the subway. In one life, she caught her boyfriend of two and a half years cheating on her and in the other, she misses it. In both lives, she experiences similarities. For example, she finds out that her boyfriend has cheated on her, that she becomes pregnant and due to a misfortunate event, loses the baby. Even though she dies in one, the other ends up taking on aspects of the life she finished living.
I really enjoyed the movie and it just seemed to go on with the theme that God knows what’s already in store for us because he is omnipotent. I think it’s interesting how I have seemed to pick on this theme for a few of my blogs even though I am not very Christian oriented, but rather agnostic. Even so, I really liked the concept and so thought that because it was present in a few films that I should touch on it.
Elizabeth Rhein-The Golden Compass- Student's Choosing
Elizabeth Rhein-Cat Soup-Student's Choosing
I thought that since I did not write my paper on this film, I should at least write a blog about it. Cat Soup is an anime film about two cats, Nyaako and Nyatta, who venture into a bizarre world where basically nothing makes sense. When a critic has described the film as “hello kitty on acid,” he was not far from the truth. Even so, there still seems to be some interesting symbols and themes used through out the film. It begins with Nyaako, the younger of the two cats, playing with a toy boat in a small pool until he clumsily falls too far forward headfirst into the pool. It is unknown here whether Nyaako is saved from death or whether he drowns. Even so, Nyaako is later seen with a very sick Nyatta who witnesses her soul leaving her body. Nyaako follows Nyatta’s soul and discovers that it has come to the god of death in the form of an elephant. Nyaako refuses to let his sister go so easily and fights with the god, ripping Nyatta’s soul in half. Just from describing the first five minutes of the film, it is obvious that no one should view it critically, but rather just sit back and let things happen. The rest of the film is Nyaako searching for a certain flower that will bring back Nyatta from the dead. Even though I was not really sure how most of the scenes fit together, I noticed that a recurring theme was death. At one point there’s a fish who has been sliced up by samurai and in his last minutes of life, it shows him at an in between stage where everything is calm and he is swimming happily. It seems that maybe both Nyatta and Nyaako are in an in between state of life and death, making it possible for such crazy and unusual scenes to mesh with each other. There’s also another scene where a man who supposedly represents God is eating a planet but drops it into these massive gears of time. To retrieve it, he has to make time go forward as well as backwards, and the images that come with his actions are very powerful. He shows images of people right before and after their deaths. Cat Soup is a very interesting film where it seems that someone can probably form a different opinion and interpretation of it than everyone else.
Elizabeth Rhein-Zardoz and Similarity to Blade Runner- Films
I have decided to do a second blog on Zardoz because I really do not have much to say about the film “The Wall” other than it threw me off even more so than “Zardoz” did. It seems like the core message of “Zardoz” was that the more we separate ourselves from nature, the worse we get. Because of this, the film has similar ideas that “Blade Runner” addresses. For example, both offer the genesis story where the two people left are those broken away from society. Zed and Consuella hid away in a cave and had a child together. Neither died but rather started their own little society. As for the other film, the two replicants or possible replicant and human ran away from their society. Both of these societies that had been run away from were tainted by humans and no longer were enriched by nature. The people in “Zardoz” had a crystal that they had created as their god. The people in “Blade Runner” were looking at Tyrell as their man made god. The problem with humans acting as gods is that they soon get bored with repetition and eventually, their creations crumble. These two films helped demonstrate how a man made future is not exactly the brightest one.
Elizabeth Rhein-Zardoz Quote-Films
It was the year 2293 and Zardoz had led his people to destroy those not worthy with guns. Zed, a once uninformed citizen under Zardoz’s rule, had now discovered the secret behind his “God.” This discovery soon brought Zed into an unknown world where people lived forever and longed to die. As for my opinion of the film, I was pretty much confused for about 2/3rds of it, but as for the parts I figured out, it was interesting to say the least. One of the lines I noted while watching the film was, “in hunting you, I have become you.” I thought this was important because when Consuella said it to Zed, she was admitting that she was no better than him and therefore had no more of a right to judge him than he did of her. This quote was also said when everything those people had known was being destroyed and there was complete and utter chaos. It was also at this part where Zed tells Consuella that they will be together. I was also confused at this part because I know he kissed her after confessing that he had killed his maker and she blinded him. I was not exactly sure how they had gone from Consuella blinding him to being his beloved. I guess it seems that Zed was going through a transformation of himself at the time because he was sitting and researching while Consuella was chasing him. It looks as though the two had switched roles. Consuella was now the savage and Zed was the intellect.
Elizabeth Rhein- 21- Films
One of the films the class watched during the semester was 21. Even though I was unable to make it to class the night the film was watched, I had already watched it a week earlier. Even though I really was not sure of how to relate the film back to religion, I had heard that someone compared it to the seven deadly sins. I thought that that comparison was really interesting and fit well with the class. As for the sins and the film themselves, obviously a group of extremely intelligent college students looking for a way to use their mathematical talents and finding “counting” in blackjack as a fitting hobby goes well with the deadly sins. As the infamous phrase states, “what happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas.” As for examples of the sins being shown within the film, I thought greed played a prominent role. The teacher used the students to get wealthy. The main character himself did not stop playing even after getting the necessary amount he needed. At the end, the security guard himself greedily took the money the students won and kept it for himself. Three other sins, wrath, envy, and pride were also seen throughout the film as well as a little bit of lust. One of the boys, the past leader of the group, grew envious of the main character and at one point, sneered at him and called him names. His envy that the main character was better than him finally had gotten the best of him and as that envy grew into wrath, the teacher instantly removed the boy from the group. As for pride, the teacher became a victim of it when the main character rallied up against him and tried to break away and create his own group. The teacher refused for such a thing to happen and so basically destroyed the main character until the main character found a way to use the teacher’s pride against him. Because the teacher thought he was one of the best at blackjack, the offer of playing one last time was too good to pass up. His pride had led to his ultimate downfall. Overall, I really enjoyed watching this film. I had actually watched a film that had almost the exact same plot as this one before 21 had even came out. It was not as good, but there was a teacher and three students who played blackjack and in the end, the teacher had turned against the students, which led to his demise.
Rob Dufour - Northfork
Rob Dufour - Zardoz
Rob Dufour - 21
Honestly, after watching the terribly predictable movie, I wish we had voted for Vantage Point or really anything else. I think that Kevin Spacey is a terrific actor and did a good job in the film, but I felt I could have written the script to this film. I by no means claim to be some movie expert or even someone who knows much at all about cinema, but I do know that when I spend $8 on a movie I hope to see something new or wowing, or at best I hope that I can take something away from the movie such as an enlightening theme or moral. I guess something I saw within the movie is that often times our odds in life to succeed or win are heavily stacked against us. So in order for us to win, we must overcome the system through our own ingenuity; even if it sometimes means we must bend the imposed rules that are set to keep us from excelling.
Rob Dufour - The Mission
Rob Dufour - A River Runs Throught It
Rob Dufour - The Count of Monte Cristo
Rob Dufour - Pan's Labyrinth
One of the unique aspects of the film is how the director allows the viewer to experience the same feelings that the protagonist is experiencing throughout the film. The plot is essentially a little girl trying to decipher between right and wrong, and what is real and what is fake, while living in a confusing and corrupt world. The culmination of these feelings take place through a labyrinth she that she finds, which will eventually test her true self through the twist and turns along her path of realization. The movie allows the viewer to experience the same, as the movie provides multiples stories that branch out and eventually flow back together. All the while, we are shown the juxtaposition of good and evil, reality and fabrication, throughout the film, which often times can make us second guess ourselves and send us in the wrong direction.
In the end, the girl learns not only to follow instructions, and that there are prices to pay for failing to abide by them, but also to trust her own instincts about right and wrong. In order to find her true self, she found the strength to break the rules imposed by authority and stand up for what is ultimately right. After the film, I was thinking about the terribly original idea of someone developing their own consciousness of right and wrong, and how important it is establish a moral code of your own while living in such a tainted and constructed world.
Rob Dufour Into Thin Air
Richard Maurer - Random Blog 5: Virgin Mary Toast
So a piece of bread with Virgin Mary image went for about twenty-eight grand. Impressive… although personally I would never get into any such hype around a pseudo-religious object, it goes to show just how powerful religion is. A simple object that barely resembles a religious figure was not only bought with a fortune but has the hopes of somehow bringing further happiness to the buyer, as well as bringing them closer to the enlightenment they desire. The item also reveals the commercialism of religion as numerous spin offs (t-shirts, plates, etc) seem to have sprouted from this initial encounter with holy bread.
Richard Maurer - Random Blog 4: Alcohol
Yes, it has it negatives but what other substance has brought so many young people together? I believe in the past two years I have met a good deal of my friends over wonderful inebriants. Inhibitions are lost and most people (after consuming reasonable amounts) feel comfortable and secure. The true self is revealed and generally easily accepted. It advances one’s ability to not only be more of their self (in a slightly exaggerated fashion) but to enjoy others at their worst … and yet their best! Truly, this is a substance that when in reasonable and controlled environments should be praised! In fact as I write this now, twenty people are expressing their love to one another over a big margarita.
Richard Maurer - Random Blog 3: Adopted Sister
How can someone, who is not an infant, from the other side of the planet, from a completely different and unknown gene pool, integrate into a family as if she has always been a part of it? The key is what it means to be a part of that particular family.
Richard Maurer - Random Blog 2: SpongeBob Squarepants
SpongeBob has become a global phenomenon exciting and entertaining many children and even many adults. SpongeBob with its simplistic humor masking rather intelligent innuendos allows for many people to transcend their mundane lives after school or after work (because let me tell you, it is on nearly twenty four hours a day), and enter into what could be construed as being almost a religion of laughter. People are able to rise above their daily difficulties and just enjoy the antics of an innocent happy-go-lucky yellow sponge. Having to baby sit the adopted sister every so often, I have come to enjoy this program, as not only a way to keep her settled but also so that I won’t be forced to watch anything similar to Barney. I am also able to better relate with her… or at least I am sure I could if she spoke English.
Richard Maurer Random Blog 1: Disney World
This past Winter break I was dragged by a couple of friends on a road trip to Disney World. I have never been a big fan of theme parks… two hour lines for a two minute ride, overpriced food, and rude foreigners never quite came off as a fun experience. After arriving there, my expectations were more than confirmed! The lines were not as bad as this was the off season, but half the rides were down for maintenance. The food was just as expensive as ever, and the foreigners (mainly Brazilians) seemed quite eager to run over this gringo’s feet with their strollers (of course if you try to confront them they all of sudden forget how to speak English). Nevertheless, while I was suffering my friends enjoyed every minute reliving their childhood. To have not known better and experienced such a place as a child seems to be the only way one can truly “appreciate” theme parks. After that adventure, I now know how my parents must have felt when I dragged them through
Richard Maurer - Reading Blog 5: Martin the Warrior
I read this book when I was much younger. It deals with a stubborn mouse that is captured and enslaved by a stoat tyrant and his legion of sea rats. Most of the book I recall deals more with the various bands of characters coming across many adventures and eating… lots and lots of eating. However, Martin breaks free from the tyrant and eventually gains his revenge over his forced servitude and breaking the nearby land of the despot’s grasp. However, in the final battle his love is slain by the tyrant … the land, although free and now in harmony is tainted by the memories of his lost love. He can never know peace and must seek out new adventures in order not only help others who are “lost” or in peril but to re-find himself.