Samsara (2006 film)
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Samsara is a large format film currently in production. The film is directed by experimental filmmaker Ron Fricke, and it will pose as a sequel to the highly acclaimed 1992 film Baraka.
In Ron Fricke's own words from the website spiritofbaraka.com:
Dear friends
On the following pages you will find my proposal for "Samsara". It is difficult to express the degree of enthusiasm that I feel for this project. Photographed in 70mm, in many different countries, "Samsara" will be a celebration of world unity, a theme that is exceptionally timely as we approach the year 2000. "Samsara" will be a unique two hour experience and should be presented as a film event. As such, it has potential to play once a night or once a week for years rather than for a brief season. My last film "Baraka", was launch pad for "Samsara", which will delve deeper into my favorite theme: humanity's relationship to the eternal.
PROPOSAL:
1. PROLOGUE: CREATION. This section opens in ambiguous space. The perspective shrinks and expands unpredictably. We see atoms, molecules, cells, amoebas, volcanos, fire, wind etc. Many of these images are in time-lapse sequences. Out of the dark, we perceive gigantic particles falling in slow motion. As the camera moves back, we realize that they are granules of sand. The camera continues to retreat, revealing a pair of delicate fingertips and then a hand releasing the sand a few particles at a time. We find ourselves looking down on the figure of a monk who is putting the finishing touches on a sand painting mandala. As the camera descends toward the mandala, the sand begins to smear out from the center and blown away. The camera goes through the opening as if stepping through the door. We emerge in the interior of a Kiva with a shaft of light rotating slowly as the sun moves. With each revolution, the light reveals an ancestor spirit of a different "tribe"; one Native American, one Asian, one African and one European. These guides reappear throughout the film.
2. ACT 1: SPIRIT TAKING FORM. The spirit or energy behind the camera is seeking form. It journeys through underwater kelp forests, caves, narrow canyons, night skies. There is a sense that we are moving toward something but we don't know what. At the end of this sequence spirit bursts suddenly into form as we allow a baby into the world, preferably an underwater birth. The infant floats weightlessly through the water like a voyager in outer space.
3. ACT 2: MATTER, ONE TURN OF THE WHEEL. From an intimate view of one soul, we expand to encompass humanity. The theme music erupts in a joyous chorus of voices as we see babies being born under all circumstances from high-tech to no-tech, all over the world. There are healthy babies, premies, still births. We follow the cycle of life from birth to death focusing on four people, modern representatives of ancestor spirits, and experiences the diversity of their rituals and routines. Many of these shots are 24 frame and slow motion. At the end of the life cycle we see people of all ages nearing death from many different causes. We follow the last moments of an AIDS patient and the camera spirals up from his dead body like a spirit taking leave from the flesh.
4. ACT 3: SAMSARA, THE WHEEL OF LIFE. We are on the journey of the Spirit after death. The emphasis here is on the impermanence of the material world. We see abandoned landscapes. decaying remnants of the technology of death, such as the skeleton of a WWII bomber under the sea, and archaeological ruins. The absurdity of humankind's quest to accumulate possessions and power becomes obvious. Spirit must confront the consequences of its pass through human life and comes to terms with it. There are time-lapse double passes of night to day and day to night that create a sense of the world spinning continually through space. At the end, the cycles accelerate until they appear to be still. We sense the return of the presence (Spirit) from Act 1.
5. EPILOGUE: REBIRTH. The theme music from Act 2 resurfaces. The film returns to organic imagery as spirit music retunes to matter in manifold forms: plants, animals and human. Finally, we are sucked back through the opening in the mandala, which reassembles, sealing the door behind us.
Sincerely, Ron Fricke