Author Topic: Mirror Images  (Read 4383 times)

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Offline BoyScoutKevin

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Re: Mirror Images
« Reply #4 on: October 26, 2014, 09:19:02 PM »
7. Multiple foes.

8. Loser outnumbered by foes.

9. Foes more progressive.

And that's that.

Next time: If we can find any that we have not seen, Ken's films on the world wide web.

Offline BoyScoutKevin

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Re: Mirror Images
« Reply #3 on: October 19, 2014, 07:33:25 PM »
Continuing . . .

4. Loser enjoys what he/she is doing.

5. Loser is sexually free and happy.

6. Foes sexually repressed and unhappy.

To be continued . . .




Offline BoyScoutKevin

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Re: Mirror Images
« Reply #2 on: October 10, 2014, 10:29:07 PM »
Not only do you find mirroring contrasts in the same film by Ken, you find mirroring contrasts across Ken's films. For example: the protagonist Father Urbain Grandier, here played by Oliver Reed, in Ken's "The Devils," and the antagonist Lady Sylvia March, here played by Amanda Donohoe, in Ken's "Lair of the White Worm" mirror each other. Again, for example:

1.Each loses.

2. Each is the most interesting character in the film (IMHO.)

3. Each has ineffectual allies.

To be continued . . .


Offline BoyScoutKevin

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Mirror Images
« Reply #1 on: October 02, 2014, 11:47:53 PM »
Ken is a study in contrasts, or, at least, his films are a study in contrasts, with two types of contrasts or mirror images.

Opposing images in two different films, which we will take up next time, and opposing images in the same film, which we will take up now. And what do I mean by opposing images, just this.

Altered States
light and dark

Lair of the White Worm
paganism and Christianity

Mahler
black and white

Savage Messiah
artistic and philistinism

Women in Love
clean and dirty

To be continued . . .