Tuesday, 30 July 2024

PART III. FURTHER STILL ON DARIO ARGENTO'S THE THREE MOTHERS' TRILOGY—THE FILM: 'MOTHER OF TEARS: THE THIRD MOTHER, 6 SEPTEMBER 2007, 141:38 MINUTES', DIRECTED BY DARIO ARGENTO; A BLOG, 30 JULY 2024, BY CRAIG STEVEN JOSEPH LACEY.

§1.0 - Points 1.0–1.13: THIS BLOG'S CONTENTS:
1.1 - THIS BLOG'S TITLE:
1.2 - PART III. FURTHER STILL ON DARIO ARGENTO'S THE THREE MOTHERS' TRILOGY—THE FILM: 'MOTHER OF TEARS: THE THIRD MOTHER, 6 SEPTEMBER 2007, 141:38 MINUTES', DIRECTED BY DARIO ARGENTO; A BLOG, 30 JULY 2024, BY CRAIG STEVEN JOSEPH LACEY.
1.3 - THIS BLOG'S LISTED SECTIONS AND NUMBERED POINTS:
1.4 - §2.0: Points 2.0–2.10: THE DISCLAIMER /
1.5 - §3.0: Points 3.0–3.3: THE DATES OF RESEARCH, WRITING AND ON-LINE PUBLICATION /
1.6 - §4.0: Points 4.0–4.15: A GIALLO FILM STRETCHED IN TO THE HORROR AND APOCALYPTIC SUB-GENRES /
1.7 - §5.0: Points 5.0–5.19: THE FILM'S GIALLO OBSESSIONS WITH FEMININE SEXUALITY AND THE TYRANNY OF NO PRIVACY / 
1.8 - §6.0: Points 6.0–6.19: CROSSING-OVER GENRES AND DIMENSIONS OF SPIRITUAL REALITY /
1.9 - §7.0: Points 7.0–7.14: COMMENTS ON THE ÆSTHETICS OF DARIO ARGENTO'S THREE MOTHERS TRILOGY /
1.10 - §8.0: Points 8.0–8.13: MATER LACHRYMARUM AND HER SON THE ANTI-CHRIST /
1.11 - §9.0: Points 9.0–9.17: A CHILDLESS MATER LACHRYMARUM /
1.12 - §10.0: Points 10.0–10.26: REGARDING MATER LACHRYMARUM'S RED TUNIC AND THE FILMS: 'PROFONDO ROSSO, 7 MARCH 1975, 126 MINUTES', 'IN FABRIC, 18 SEPTEMBER 2018, 118 MINUTES', 'CRUELLA, 18 MAY 2021, 134 MINUTES' AND 'MADAME WEB, 12 FEBRUARY 2024, 116 MINUTES' /
1.13 - §11.0: Points 11.0–11.7: AN AFTERWORD //
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§2.0 - THE DISCLAIMER—Refer to the Points 2.0–2.10 /
2.1 - All rights reserved © Craig Steven Joseph Lacey, 4 December 1976–, Australia. 2.2 - Changing the content or re-publishing this blog is strictly prohibited. 2.3 - This blog is protected by the: 2.4 -Privacy Act 1988 of Australia, against unauthorized access to Craig Steven Joseph Lacey's Samsung Galaxy A05s, and Google account; 2.5 - Cybercrime Act 2001 of Australia, against computer fraud or internet fraud; 2.6 - Copyright Act 1968 of Australia, against intellectual property theft; 2.7 - Universal Copyright Convention, circa 1952; 2.8 - Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, 9 September 1886. 2.9 - Fines and/or prosecution will apply according to Australian and International law in reference to unauthorised access and use of this blog published through the Blogger app of Google.com and the author's storage device(s) with the data. 2.10 - There are five composite images in total, including thirteen film stills in-set from: Mother Of Tears: The Third Mother / Mater Lachrymarum: La Terza Madre, 6 September 2007, premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, 141:38 minutes, directed by Dario Argento—acknowledge that the film stills are provided as two images in a composite, vertical format, except for one composite that incorporates three film stills.
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§3.0 - THE DATES OF RESEARCH, WRITING AND ON-LINE PUBLICATION—Refer to the Points 3.0–3.5 /
3.1 - This blog was started 30.07.2024 and completed 30.07.2024. 3.2 - Researched and composed, 24.07.2024 to 30.07.2024, by Craig Steven Joseph Lacey at Brisbane City, Queensland, Australia, 4000. 3.3 - Word count: 6,530 and characters count: 39,555. 3.4 - Last up-dated: 05:05, 18.08.2024, Australian Eastern Standard Time.
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§4.0 - A GIALLO FILM STRETCHED IN TO THE HORROR / APOCALYPTIC SUB-GENRES—Refer to the Points 4.0–4.15, listed directly beneath.
4.1 - The "giallo" film: Mother Of Tears: The Third Mother / Mater Lachrymarum: La Terza Madre, 6 September 2007, premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, 141:38 minutes, directed by Dario Argento, is based on a script by Dario Argento and the contemporary, American film-makers of the horror genre: Jace Anderson and Adam Gierasch. 4.2 - Jace Anderson's and Adam Gierasch's influence on this film of Dario Argento's is palpable, as the last of the Three Mothers Trilogy film stretches the giallo genre towards horror, specifically the sub-genre of the apocalypse, the most horrific yet profound of subjects. 4.3 - To briefly mention an example of the Jace Anderson's and Adam Gierasch's suburban horror / slasher sub-genre script for: 4.4 - Toolbox Murders, 19 March 2004, premiere at Hamburg Nacht der 1000 Schreie, Germany, 95 minutes, directed by Willard Tobe Hooper, that is a re-make of: 4.5The Toolbox Murders, 17 February 1978, El Paso, Texas, 93 minutes, directed by Dennis Donnelly. 4.6 - The two films mentioned above at point 4.4, are reminiscent of the film made at a similar time as Dennis Donnelly's film of 1978, viz.: 4.7 - A Day of Judgment, circa 1981, 92 minutes, directed by Charles Reynolds, in which one man visits a town to unleash "end time", such as the figure of the grim reaper as the agent of The Last Judgment, though "in reality" is a serial killer representative of the slasher sub-genre. 4.8 - There is the American horror film of the 1970s, such as: 4.9 - The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, 11 October 1974, the United States of America, 123 minutes, also directed by Willard Tobe Hooper, which celebrates a type of de-symbolized apocalyptical event rendered in every-day terms; it is the apocalyptic sub-genre rendered in ætheistically minimalised terms: on the door-step of the neighbourhood—at which point the difference emerges to this more recent film: Mater Lachrymarum: The Third Mother, 6 September 2007, with neo-pagan / Satanic symbolism retained. 4.10 - Dario Argento's film of 2007 partially draws upon Judeo-Christian eschatology, possibly most derivative of: The Book Of Daniel of the Christian Old Testament with allusions to "the abomination" as "the desolator", and: The Book Of Jeremiah 20:10: 'For I hear many whispering. Terror is on every side'—in which a bleak vision of terror permits that no hope may be entertained. 4.11 - Further, the Mayan cultural forms of savage violence and barbarism and the celebration of "the end of the world", arguably finds representation in such films as: 4.12 - Apocalypse Now, 19 May 1979, premiere at Cannes, 147 minutes, 70 millimeters, directed by Francis Coppola, or; 4.13 - Apocalypto, 8 December 2006, 138 minutes, directed by Mel Gibson. 4.14 - The narration of: Apocalypse Now, 19 May 1979, 147 minutes, of on-going battle, of war itself, as a type of secular or power-focused 'armageddon'—refer to: 'And they assembled them at the place that in Hebrew is called Armageddon, Revelation 16:16'—that is, historically defined rather than supernaturally, viz. the Vietnam War, 1 November 1955 until the fall of Saigon, 30 April 1975, nonetheless involved something of a modern confrontation of Western World Christianity to Eastern World sun-worship religions and cosmologies. 4.15 - Yet the savagery and horror of the human heart seems to have the greatest correlation to the Mayan jungles of not only Cambodia / Vietnam but Guatamala and generally South America, in which dwell the very symbols of the bestial and wild, such as: the ape, leopard, snake, crocodile, etc., beneath a sky with a moon, stars and sun, as portrayed by: Apocalypto, 8 December 2006, 138 minutes, and further with an archaeologically / anthropologically informed narrative, the gore of Dario Argento's stylistic and imaginary films seem less shocking.
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§5.0 - THE FILM'S GIALLO OBSESSIONS WITH FEMININE SEXUALITY AND THE TYRANNY OF NO PRIVACY—Refer to the Points 5.0–5.19, listed directly beneath.
5.0 - There are moments of the first two giallo films' psychologically claustrophobic atmosphere in this film that is evocative of female sexuality, particularly regarding the anxiety of rape, such as when Sarah Mandy, acted by Asia Argento, becomes invisible at a train station's book-shop, only to be almost pinned-in to a corner of a set of library shelves by the detective, Enzo Marki, acted by Cristian Solimeno. 5.1 - Refer to the two film stills from Mother Of Tears: The Third Mother, 6 September 2007, 141:38 minutes, which involve Sarah Mandy being incidentally pinned in to the corner of book shelves to evoke giallo's claustrophobia.
5.2 - Juxtaposed to the witch, Mater Lachrymarum's often naked and licentious coven, giallo's standard fragility of female sexuality is lost—and the later lesbian sex scene involving the white witch, acted by Marta Colossi, and, Elga, acted by Silvia Rubino, concur something of the expression of female sexuality, rather than repression, though it is symbolically punished. 5.3 - Nonetheless, this film arguably retains Dario Argento's "giallo frisson": primarily through Sarah Mandy's characterisation of naïveté and Catholic puritanism or frigidity as resistant to a type of sexual defilement, viz. the spoiling (not deflowering) of the stereo-typical Christian / virgin, a central complex of Catholicism. 5.4 - The often unsettling content of giallo films are predicated on the attack of the Satanic blasphemers upon Christianity: the virtuous life of the Christian, such as symbolised by the virgin maiden, and the Madonna proper, are shown in states of moral compromise that involve survival situations in which moral debasement is almost impossible to deny. 5.5 - Yet adult sexuality is in expressiveness not necessarily immoral: the main text of the bible, the New Testament, writes of no judgment upon sexual expression—though the inference through Jesus Christ is, it ideally be a matter of love rather than lust and sado-masochism: because love is the central tenet of Jesus Christ's doctrines. 5.6 - On which point, the witches of Lachrymarum's catacomb appear to prolapse from the giallo script, engaged in bizarre sexual acts as rituals imitative of physical sensuality, because they are amongst other things, junkies, whose pleasure is foremost provided through a syringe. 5.7 - Refer to two film stills beneath of Mater Lachrymarum's catacomb, where Sarah Mandy stumbles upon a scene of an opposite sex, sibling couple, tied, naked together, covered in lacerations, and a female couple in which one partner appears to suck through a tube fæces from the other partner's anus.
5.8 - There is then the observation to make, there are matters obvious in the film that require no explanation, that is, to those of the cult of the Anti-Christ who could count as among the majority of the film's audience. 5.9 - A Christian has become something of a spy it would seem—I am classed as something of an outsider who "peers in", after all "peering in" is the great offering of film per se, from voyeurism through to probative insight, though eavesdropping has something further to do with it too. 5.10 - On which point, the subject of the first two films: of a private interiority of space set against a further secret interiority of space is only slightly represented in this final film—there is a brief moment shown in which: 5.11 - A dæmon appears in a camera's lens as photographs are taken for the Catholic church regarding the excavation of the coffins; 5.12 - One of the golems spy through a hole at Giselle Mares, acted by Coralina Cataldi-Tassoni, at the Museo di Roma as she opens the coffins; 5.13 - Mater Lachrymarum's secret catacomb, beneath the desecrated Roman mansion, entered through a stone door with glyphic buttons to press and automate access. 5.14 - Refer to three non-contiguous film stills vertically placed directly beneath that show a dæmon in the camera lens at the excavation site, a dæmon at Museo di Roma's spy hole and Sarah Mandy's hand pressing the stone button marked with a swirling swastika to open the secret passage.
§6.0 - CROSSING-OVER GENRES AND DIMENSIONS OF SPIRITUAL REALITY—Refer to the Points 6.0–6.14, listed directly beneath.
6.1 - During the scenes in which Sarah Mandy's love interest, Michael Pierce, acted by Adam James, pursues her, since he has become the undead, is intercepted by Sarah's deceased mother, Eliza, from the spiritual plane, who wrestles with Michael Pierce, who is aflame, and takes him in to a type of inter-dimensional worm-hole, that could be an allusion to his passing to Heaven, such that it is inferred, a good person made undead retains the acceptance by Heaven. 6.2 - Refer to two film stills directly beneath in which Sarah Mandy witnesses the spirit of Elisa pull the flaming Michael Pierce in to an inter-dimensional hole.
6.3 - The scene is reminiscent of the action of "supernatural crossing-over" in to the real world as portrayed by the earlier film: 6.4 - Constantine, 7 February 2005, premiere at Paris, France, 121 minutes, directed by Francis Lawrence. 6.5 - The character and plight of 'Constantine', acted by Keneau Reeves, are quite separate from biblical accounts—there is an historical association by reference to the name of Emperor Constantine who is claimed to have Christianised the Empire of Rome, and further characterisations of the Devil / Lucifer, the archangel Gabriel, the dæmons: Mammon and Balthazar, and the symbolism of the spear of destiny, but there exists folk-lore realms of hidden, magical dimensions amid the urban-scape, where figures of Haitian voodoo, viz. Baron Samedi as Papa Midnight, manage a bar where can be found dæmons, vampires, witches, etc.—and refer to: "Fairy Tale Sources And Rural Settings In Dario Argento’s Supernatural Horror" by Peter Vorissis in: Literature Volume 3.4, 2023, pages 457–472, for further consideration of folk-lore symbolism in giallo filmic contexts—that is, there is no orthodox expression of the Second Coming in such cultural texts. 6.6 - If it was not for the depth of Christian biblical cultural and historical context from which this film of 2007 draws its narrative, it would be of that B-grade category, that is, the biblical apocalyptic sub-genre's symbolism is profound and aptly suited for sublimity and glorification, such as found in the earlier films: 6.7 - The Seventh Sign, 1 April 1988, 97 minutes, directed by Carl Schultz, or; 6.8 - End Of Days, 24 November 1999, 122 minutes, directed by Peter Hyams. 6.9 - The Book Of Revelation, 7 September 2006, 119 minutes, directed by Ana Kokkinos. 6.10 - The three films mentioned at points 6.7–6.8 pursue a more orthodox line of Christian representation of the apocalypse, specifically relating to Jesus Christ's Second Coming, whereas Dario Argento's films are unorthodox, possibly perverse, particularly in a representation of the Satanic, though ultimately, Mater Lachrymarum and her coven are destroyed within the narrative of the film. 6.11 - The Australian film: The Book Of Revelation, 7 September 2006, 119 minutes, arguably is Satanic: with allusions to the three witches of this Three Mothers Trilogy involved in hexing Daniel to thereafter curse his life. 6.12 - A better representation of a properly Christian interpretation of the Second Coming is evident in the film: 6.13 - Left Behind, 31 October 2000, direct-to-D.V.D. premiere, and 2 February 2001, theatrical release, United States of America, 100 minutes, directed by Vic Sarin; 6.14 - Based on: Left Behind: A Novel Of The Earth's Last Days, circa 1995, by Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins, 28 April 2011, Re-print, Tyndale House Publishers, 496 pages, ISBN: 9781414334905.
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§7.0 - COMMENTS ON THE ÆSTHETICS OF DARIO ARGENTO'S THREE MOTHERS TRILOGY—Refer to the Points 7.0–7.14, listed directly beneath.
7.1 - Arguably, there is an effect of æsthetics to cause for a Baroque style to emerge, viz. a "giallo Baroque" in the grand-scales of the apocalyptic mixed with giallo. 7.2 - I have argued in my previous blog that the apocalyptic revelation is resisted under the "auspices" of: Mater Tenebrarum of: Inferno, 7 February 1980, 107 minutes—the earlier two films of the Three Mothers Trilogy are distinctly confined within domestic and/or school or prisons institutional settings in which anxiety and sexual ambiguities are pervasive. 7.3 - Mater Lachrymarum's inconsolable grief and angst, her beckoning of war and genocide, causes for the apocalypse as a convulsion comparable to: The Book Of Revelation of the Christian New Testament—as something that cannot be known until the Second Coming of Jesus Christ makes all known. 7.4 - The end of everything is not exactly what Mater Lachrymarum, acted by Moran Atias, desires; she seeks for the return of the Age of Magic and in its sacrilegious turning away from the gospel, a decadence or opulence of effect is caused, if not a monstrance. 7.5 - The scenes involving Sarah Mandy's stay with Marta Colussi, the lesbian, white witch, depicts a sex scene between Marta and Elga, of which Sarah Mandy is not part, supposedly leads to Mater Lachrymarum's familiar, the golem as a man, who is partially shown to climb down a rope that is, as in the magic trick, hung in the air, to cross-over the apocalyptical genre as from a magical fantasy genre, to then establish a further cross-over of the giallo-horror genre—that is, by shoving a spear up Marta's vagina and out her mouth—an horrific killing if ever there was one. 7.6 - More to the point, the naturalism of representation of the scenes of magical / supernatural characters walking in on scenes beyond reasonable explanation: for example, Mater Tenebrarum later walks in to Marta's house after she is murdered, is contrasted to the standard conventions of magical fantasy, such as the possibly ironic reference to the magic trick of climbing down a rope hung in mid air, then transformed in to horrific fatalism by an almost ritualistic killing of grotesque carnage. 7.7 - Arguably there is an overly ornate admixture of filmic metaphors and conventions: from giallo, the supernatural thriller, apocalyptic and horror genres, that cause for a summative æsthetical effect of the "Baroque": an extravagant style of art and architecture from 17th-century Rome that uses aspects of contrast; movement; exuberant detail; deep colour; grandeur; surprise; to achieve a sense of the sublime from the banal—a critical observation made by Maitland McDonagh on Dario Argento's films, but mostly in reference to the technical matters of camera angles, transitions, and unusual perspectives: page 3, "Broken Mirrors/Broken Minds: The Dark Dreams of Dario Argento" in: Film Quarterly 41.2, 1987. 7.8 - The decadent contrast and pastiche of stylistic metaphors used to possibly over-come the more clichéd, tired aspects of the genres, particularly the film's premise of the "curse of the mummy" in opening a burial site, and the subsequent series of horror-based subjects, viz. the gory spectacles; witches; familiars; the undead; ghosts; magic; the end of the world, etc., with a recurring symbolic use of the colour of deep red, achieve this Baroque effect. 7.9 - There is, however, a campness to Dario Argento's giallo films which renders them being at risk of becoming comical absurdities, such as of the black comedy of "the dark ride", but a type of art-house flare for innovative re-styling has mostly elevated his films out of the category of travesty, viz. "B-grade schlock", such as in the æsthetic correlation of the trilogy as listed directly beneath: 7.10 - Suspiria, 1 February 1977, 99 minutes: Pop æsthetics mixed with the mediæval village and Neo-Classical styles in giallo form  giallo Baroque. 7.11 - Inferno, 7 February 1980: 107 minutes: the Gothic night-mare and the Victorian-styled city / ghetto in giallo form  giallo Baroque; 7.12 - The Mother Of Tears: The Third Mother, 6 September 2007, 1:41:38 minutesthe supernatural thriller and apocalyptically horrific in giallo form  giallo Baroque. 7.13 - Arguably, giallo Baroque is an equivalence to "the monstrance", the tribute to absolute power as a monolith or the carnivalesque conglomeration, often obscence, that is in an inexplicable way, represented by this film in a very briefly cut and edited moving shot within the subsequent scene to the killing of the white witch, where a pillar of the dead is shown, that is, both a monstrance and conglomeration, is tracked for slightly over a second's duration. 7.14 - Here is the film's apocalyptic prolapse that exudes with the feeling of disturbed frenzy, sado-madochism and bleak chaos: it is supposed to herald the end of the white witch's protectorate and all those within her territory at Rome, but they have been desolated and transformed in to the obscene pillar under the orders of Mater Lachrymarum: alluded to by the monstrous statue.
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§8.0 - MATER LACHRYMARUM AND HER SON THE ANTI-CHRIST—Refer to the Points 8.0–8.13, listed directly beneath.
8.1 - Arguably, a matter of censorship has emerged regarding the legend behind the exhumed coffins, which I will briefly discuss here in this blog. 8.2 - During the film's opening sequence, a cardinal is shown to over-see the excavation of a grave that is peculiarly placed outside the cemetery on a hill over-looking the village Andorno Micca of the region of Piedmont of the Biella province, approximately 70 kilometres north-east of Turin, and two caskets are shown, one an infant's size, the other adult size, peculiarly covered in Aramaic or Occultish glyphs and further chained together. 8.3 - Refer to two film stills beneath that show the site of excavation and the two caskets. 8.4 - After the brutal murder of the art restorer Giselle Mares, acted by Coralina Cataldi-Tassoni, and Sarah Mandy's witnessing of the three golem-type monsters with a baboon, one of the curators, Michael Pierce, also Sarah Mandy's love interest, drives to the village, Andorno Micca, and then to a nearby hospital where Monsignor Brusca, acted by Franco Leo, is dying. 8.5 - The monsignor's acquaintance, Father Milesi—acted by Tommaso Banfi—advises Michael Pierce of a legend regarding a similar discovery of a casket and urn, discovered, circa 1814, at nearby Aosta, when the spirit of devastation rose up to take possession of wolves and rats that killed everyone, even the volunteer nobleman, Oscar De le Vallé, who died after carrying "the urn" to Rome—and that urn allegedly was chained to his coffin. 8.6 - Refer to two film stills in: Mother Of Tears: The Third Mother, 6 September 2007, 102 minutes, hand-rendered illustrated panels, tracked by the camera, from 22:50–23:49 minutes, as Father Milesi conveys the legend. 8.7 - It is a legend and not verified history, and the container with the casket is not really an urn, such as an urn typically is considered: a type of ceramic pot, and further, the so-called urn of the excavation is the perfect size for an infant. 8.8 - Yet there is the further point to make, Mater Lachrymarum could be interpreted as a latter day incarnation of the Egyptian goddess, Isis, whose role was funerary in organising the dead, a role found in Mater Lachrymarum who resides in a catacomb and calls out for death, but the similarity ought to extend to Isis's role as the mother of Horus, and she is depicted with her son almost comparable to the Madonna and Infant Jesus Christ. 8.9 - It is therefore plausible that the exhumed coffins are of Mater Lachrymarum and her son, the infant Anti-Christ, whose coming presages the end of the world, viz. the back-ground subject of the film's narrative. 8.10 - While Mater Lachrymarum's cadaver is found in her casket, the infant's casket is emptied of the body and substituted for the three golem-type / dæmonic statues, an ornate dagger and red tunic: artefacts which are inferred to identify with the Anti-Christ, whose appearance is otherwise suppressed in this narrational version. 8.11 - The absence of either Jesus Christ or the Anti-Christ in this otherwise Day of Judgment legend may be attributed to a symbolic, female desire to break free from the chains of mother-hood—the witch is after all, a radical reversal of the Madonna, who is revered as a constant symbol of the bond between mother and child. 8.12 - There are the scenes within the film of 2007 of mothers killing their children, such as at The Ponte Sant Angelo / Bridge of Saint Michael, a young mother throws her healthy infant, suddenly and violently, over the bridge in to the River Tiber, and then is over-come with tears, such as to indicate she has enacted the curse of Mater Lachrymarum, viz. Mother of Tears. 8.13 - A similar inversion of the role of the mother having a caring, strong bond with her infant is portrayed at the Abbey of Sant'Antonio di Ranverso, the film's only other location shot outside Rone—at Buttigliera Alta, the Metropolitan City of Turin—where a mother uses a meat cleaver to cut her toddler's body in to parts, then, on the steps, cut in to the head of Padre Johannes, acted by Udo Kier, after earlier cutting his throat.
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§9.0 - A CHILDLESS MATER LACHRYMARUM—Refer to the Points 9.0–9.17, listed directly beneath.
9.1 - As has been mentioned in my earlier blogs of: <thoughtsdisjectamembra.blogspot.com>, the Italian film director Dario Argento's Three Mothers Trilogy, made over four decades, involve narratives derived from: 9.2 - Thomas De Quincey's "Suspiria De Profundis, circa Spring 1845", in: Blackwood's Magazine, Edinburgh: Blackwood, ISSN 0006-436X; later published: 5 September 2003, Penguin; first edition, English language, paper-back, 352 pages, ISBN-10 0140439013, ISBN-13 9780140439014. 9.3 - Specifically, the poetic prose chapter: 'Levana And Our Ladies Of Sorrow', refers to Mater Lachrymarum / Mother of Tears as the eldest, most powerful of the three sisters—that she is a Madonna: '...let us honour with the title of “Madonna”, [page 157]', an esteemed woman of great resources, yet who is also: '[she] ... that night and day raves and moans, calling for vanished faces, [page 156]'. 9.4 - Mater Lachrymarum is rich and powerful yet still dissatisfied, because it is inferred she is moved by revenge for: "her children"—'[s]he stood in Rama, where a voice was heard of lamentation—Rachel weeping for her children, [page 156]', and refusing to be comforted, is Thomas De Quincey's reference to: The Book Of Jeremiah 31:15: 9.5 - 'Thus says the Lord: “A voice is heard in Ramah, lamentation and bitter weeping. Rachel is weeping for her children; she refuses to be comforted for her children, because they are no more”'—from: The Book Of Jeremiah 31:15, English Standard Version. 9.6 - The night-time, moon and tears are further associated in: The Book Of Lamentations 1:2, "How Lonely Sits The City", paraphrased beneath, which uses images echoed in Thomas De Quincey's text: 9.7 - 'She weeps aloud in the night, with tears upon her cheeks. Among all her lovers there is no one to comfort her. All her friends have betrayed her; they have become her enemies'—from: The Book Of Lamentations 1:2, English Standard Version9.8 - Yet, while sympathy may be extended to Rachel / Mater Lachrymarum for her loss, there is the point, she will receive no supplication; only revenge may sate her wrath—as Thomas De Quincey writes in reference to Mater Lachrymarum, she inspires in those she hates: '[mourning] forever', and further: '[wakening, particularly in blind people] to a darkness that is now within a second and a deeper darkness, [page 166]'. 9.9 - Lachrymarum is that figure, comparable to Rachel who has lost all her people, but as Lachrymarum is shown the chance to re-start her people by having a child, only to have her hope taken away from her, for the mother and child are indicated as murdered, that is presumably the basis of the unearthed coffins of the first sequences of: Mother Of Tears: The Third Mother, 6 September 2007. 9.10 - Found buried together, their promise to end the Christian Age by Mater Lachrymarum's grief and son the Anti-Christ, to realise her unquenchable dissatisfaction to quell her wrath and seek revenge by genocide, is placed upon whoever breaks the seal of the coffins, that is the apocalyptic curse precipitated by the putative "tomb raider", in a manner reminiscent of the Egyptian pharoah's tombs or the curse of the mummy—an association that further connects her to Isis. 9.11 - The recurring allusion to Isis further exists in reference to the film's presence of an alchemist, Guglielmo De Witt, acted by Philippe Leroy, to whom Sarah Mandy turns for advice and Guglielmo De Witt provides her with a text: the pseudo-biblum discussed in my previous blog: The Three Mothers by E. Valleri. 9.12 - Arguably, the text is an allusion to the Hermetica, viz. a text by Hermes Trismegistus: Prophetess To Her Son Horus, of which fragments only exist, but is referenced by the Greco-Egyptian alchemist Zosimus of Panopolis, flourished 300 A.D, such as: "On The Letter Omega", in: Thrice Greatest Hermes Part 3, 25 July 2002, by G.R.S. Mead of the Theosophical Society, Kessinger Publishing, English Language‎, paper-back‎, 244 pages, ISBN-10‎ 0766126145, ISBN-13‎ 978-0766126145. 9.13 - The aspects of the Anti-Christ are mostly omitted from Dario Argento's film of 2007: the narrational set of the reversed Second Coming of the Anti-Christ has been entertained in various films, such as: 9.14 - Rosemary's Baby, 12 June 1968, 137 minutes, directed by Roman Polanski, or: 9.15 - The Omen, 6 June 6 1976, 111 minutes, Britain, directed by Richard Donald Schwartzberg. 9.16 - Where the yet-born Adrian constructs Rosemary's life for her in: Rosemary's Baby, 12 June 1968, 137 minutes, Mater Lachrymarum has unshackled herself of her son, it would seem, possibly erasing the fact there ever was a chain connecting her to him. 9.17 - Similarly, Damien is something of a changeling being a substitution at birth, and a dream of a standard, healthy family is ruined by a boy who cannot but steal the main focus of attention as everyone around him are subject to his darkness in: The Omen, 6 June 6 1976, 111 minutes
§10.0 - REGARDING MATER LACHRYMARUM'S RED TUNIC: AND THE FILMS 'PROFONDO ROSSO, 7 MARCH 1975, 126 MINUTES', 'IN FABRIC, 18 SEPTEMBER 2018, 118 MINUTES', 'CRUELLA, 18 MAY 2018, 134 MINUTES' AND 'MADAME WEB, 12 FEBRUARY 2024, 116 MINUTES'—Refer to the Points 10.0–10.26, listed directly beneath.
10.1 - Within Mater Lachrymarum's catacomb her red tunic is returned to her from the excavation, further identifying her to the buried figure—it is implied she recurs in cycles of time, similar to a system of reincarnation, yet not reincarnation—and it is the tunic, an under-garment worn by both men and women that appears to reinstate her with her old powers. 10.2 - The red-coloured tunic covers her from the nudity of the de-identified slave—she has been something of a slave to her cause and coven—but the colouring of a distinctive "poppy red" further connects her to sensuality, the blood of violence and war, and a desirousness for and control of opium. 10.3 - The colour of poppy red is reminiscent of Dario Argento's symbolic use of the colour in his earlier film: 10.4 - Profondo Rosso / Profound Red, 7 March 1975, 126 minutes, a film that narrates a legend caused by the perfidious Mater Lachrymarum. 10.5 - One of the distinctive visions of Dario Argento's film of 2007 is the portrayal of Mater Lachrymarum as a vampire—Moran Atias is quite simply "vampy" with her dark hair and eyes and poppy-red lips: there is indicated an Aramaic cultural syncretism of categories of cultural text: biblical / Afro-Asian religions and folk-lore narratives, viz. the witch and vampire, as if to disguise her true affiliation and identity. 10.6 - The aspect of opium use and addiction may be part of the haze through which few may see through; a point of which is typically erased in the films based on the Three Mothers: but to return to Thomas De Quincey's text: Confessions Of An Opium Eater, circa 1824, there exists a lateral connection to opium and the Three Mothers, other than the poppy-red colour coding. 10.7 - Through the mind-altering effects of opium, Mater Lachrymarum presumably is able to cast magic upon her coven, but it remains another aspect to the narratives of the Three Mothers Trilogy, which is censored or submerged in the texts: a similar treatment of the Anti-Christ son regarding the film of 2007. 10.8 - Instead the red colour is registered symbolically as the two faces of lusty seduction and the zeal for victory; something of a marker of the femme fatale as celebrated by film, such as by the American comedy: 10.9 - The Woman In Red, 15 August 1984, 86 minutes, directed by and featuring Gene Wilder, an American romantic comedy film directed by Billy Wilder, that features a billowing red dress and string bikini as points of seduction. 10.10 - On which point compare: The Seven Year Itch 3 June 1955, premiere at New York City, 105 minutes, directed by Billy Wilder, in which Marylin Monroe's white dress exploits the conceit of the virgin / child. 10.11 - The pit-falls of succumbing to seductive beguilement are, in the case of Mater Lachrymarum, avoided when she, as acted by Ania Pieroni, briefly appears at a music lecture and the back of a taxi at Rome, during the film: Inferno, 7 February 1980, 107 minutes, and there she attempts to beguile Mark Elliot, acted by Leigh McCloskey, who leaves for New York, who is able to destroy Mater Tenebrarum. 10.12 - Continuing in the giallo genre's supernatural, film noir treatment of red garments is the quite recent British film: 10.13 - In Fabric, 18 September 2018, premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival, 118 minutes, directed by Peter Strickland. 10.14 - Refer to the theatrical release poster in the hyper-link for the film, in which the red dress reveals not only the skin of the wearer, but the ligaments, bone and muscle tissue. 10.15 - The red dress is the centre of murders and fires, yet remains invincible, seemingly invested with talismanic powers, perhaps, as an approach to constructing feminine identity avec the witch, the fabric is fetishised as endowing clothing with the mystery of identity, often elusive to "opium eaters", but really clothing can be deceptive as disguise and perishable when compared to other substances, such as brick, stone or iron? 10.16 - The mobs of witches that scout round Rome, in search of Sarah Mandy, are all fashioned in 1980s New Wave: witch Katerina, of Mongolian ethnicity, acted by Jun Ichikawa, wears Japanese / Korean facial make-up to further the cultural ambit of reference and involvement. 10.17 - The "yoke of the egg" is the core substance of which the three mothers are made and known, a point of which is played upon in the films as a resistance to real, historical personage, as though the three golems are one and the same as the three mothers, formed yet unformed, inhabit worlds of secrecy and strange conspiracy as half-souls, an unborn state that allows them to slip through hidden doors or use skeleton keys. 10.18 - As Thomas De Quincey wrote of Mater Lachrymarum: 10.19 - 'This Sister, the elder, it is that carries keys more than papal at her girdle, which open every cottage and every palace... By the power of the keys it is that Our Lady of Tears glides, a ghostly intruder, into the chambers of sleepless men, sleepless women, sleepless children, from Ganges to the Nile, from Nile to Mississippi, [page 157]'. 10.20 - Mater Suspiriorum is revealed only to disappear as an apparition within Dario Argento's first film of the Trilogy, and Mater Tenebrarum appears only incognito: now Mater Lachrymarum appears as though she has always been somewhere at the periphery of history, as arguably women have always been with the children. 10.21 - Mater Lachrymarum's lair is beneath the surface, a subterranean setting: plausible as an emptied-out, group-sized, cult-based catacomb, where the cult is possibly of Isis, the Ancient Egyptian funerary goddess, who exist in partial life, as the undead, who are supposed to attain life upon Judgement Day; though the film is equivocal in communicating this central notion, as to remain indulgent in the pleasures of gothic vanity; in the excesses of deep red—worn unapologetically. 10.22 - At the risk of ridiculing what is profound in Dario Argento's Three Mothers Trilogy, there is some resemblance to the Disney-produced film: Cruella, 18 May 2021, premiere at El Capitan Theatre, 134 minutes, directed by Craig Gillespie: witch-craft and slavishness to fashion correlate to an unconscious demand for a whole, intact body. 10.23 - To expound on this point further, there is indicated a threat of dismemberment to the bodies of Mater Lachrymarum / Cruella, that clothing, viz. the red tunic, "magically" sates the desire of the restored image of the mutilated body: the torso, trunk or core of the body, that without limbs and head is yet further suggestive of the form of Dagon's torso, the Ark (Judaism), or Kaaba (Islam)—an image of suffering far from the "civility" of the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. 10.24 - Dario Argento's film of 2007 that metaphorically tints life in red is, however, not communicated as liberating; quite the contrary: by "painting the town red", that is, partaking in blood-baths, liberation is entertained, but true liberation involves the disciplining of the passions of the instinctual, including the sin of wrath. 10.25 - It is a conclusion with which it is believed Dario Argento himself has concurred, because each of the three Mothers are killed, and the most recent film's theatrical release poster uses a still taken from the film, that conflates the metaphors of Lachrymarum's powers: "cob-webbing": mummifying in cyclic rituals, and "cracking porcelain": scarring her victims' face / body and identity. 10.26 - Further, the more recent, dark fantasy, adventure genre of film: Madame Web, 12 February 2024, premiered at Regency Village Theatre, 116 minutes, directed by S.J. Clarkson, comes to mind, in which parallel or concurrent existences are portrayed in a manner that escapes Dario Argento's exaltation of giallo based conventions: the Marvel Comics' stable of comic-book styled heroes and fiends are flexible in their far-fetched, cartoon-type modality, or such films are cartoons rendered "realistically", and are incomparable to the discourses of profound, eternal religion, even when such discourses are possibly blasphemed.
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11.0 - AN AFTERWORD—Refer to the Points 11.0–11.7, listed directly beneath.
11.1 - There is scarcely any research on Dario Argento's Mater Lachrymarum: The Third Witch, 6 September 2007, premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, 141:38 minutes; that is, I have made comments based on my own observations.
11.2 - The absence of film-based criticism regarding Mater Lachrymarum: The Third Witch, 6 September 2007, itself, is peculiar: Dario Argento's films typically draw critical attention. 11.3 - While not especially great films, the Three Mothers' Trilogy of films are culturally significant on an international scale and worth commentary—though, perhaps Mater Lachrymarum does not agree?! 11.4Suspiria, 1 February 1977, Italy, 99 minutes, has garnered the most critical attention and that attention is further reinforced by the re-make: Suspiria, 1 September 2018, Venice, 152 minutes, but it is directed by Luca Guadagnino, not Dario Argento. 11.5 - As previously commented, I was labeled and persecuted as a changeling and that persecution continues here at Brisbane, Queensland, Australia: for I wrote a similar blog on this film approximately five years ago, only to have my phone and data stolen, but I am hoping since that time, with the passing and assent of the Human Rights Act 2019 of Queensland, Australia, I can have my work published on-line without it being unofficially censored. 11.6 - Further, I intend to publish another on-line blog of film and cultural criticism on: Suspiria, 1 September 2018, premiere at Venice, 152 minutes, directed by Luca Guadagnino with a screenplay by David Kajganich. 11.7 - As an ever-compromised Christian, I further comment that my sincerest recommendation is read the Christian bible: <https://www.blueletterbible.org/>.
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Sunday, 7 April 2024

PART II. FURTHER ON DARIO ARGENTO'S THE THREE MOTHERS' TRILOGY—THE FILM: 'INFERNO, 7 FEBRUARY 1980, 107 MINUTES', DIRECTED BY DARIO ARGENTO; A BLOG, 7 APRIL 2024, BY CRAIG STEVEN JOSEPH LACEY.

§1.0 - Points 1.0–1.16: THIS BLOG'S CONTENTS:
1.1 - THIS BLOG'S TITLE:
1.2 - PART II. FURTHER ON DARIO ARGENTO'S THE THREE MOTHERS' TRILOGY—THE FILM: 'INFERNO, 7 FEBRUARY 1980, 107 MINUTES', DIRECTED BY DARIO ARGENTO; A BLOG, 7 APRIL 2024, BY CRAIG STEVEN JOSEPH LACEY.
1.3 - THIS BLOG'S LISTED SECTIONS AND NUMBERED POINTS:
1.4 - §2.0: Points 2.0–2.11: THE 
DISCLAIMER /
1.5 - §3.0: Points 3.0–3.3: THE DATES OF RESEARCH, WRITING AND ON-LINE PUBLICATION /
1.6 - §4.0: Points 4.0–4.8: COMMENTS
REGARDING DARIO ARGENTO'S CINEMATIC VISION /
1.7 - §5.0: Points 5.0–5.10: IS MATER TENEBRARUM: THE IMPOSTOR? /
1.8 - §6.0: Points 6.0–6.15: A CHARACTER ANALYSIS OF ROSE ELLIOT /
1.9 - §7.0: Points 7.0–7.5: COMMENTS ON THE INTER-CHANGE OF MODALITIES /
1.10 - §8.0: Points 8.0–8.15: THE BUILDING OF THE APARTMENT IS BASED ON THE OLD WATCH-TOWER AND PRISON /
1.11 - §9.0: Points 9.0–9.8: ON "THE REAL" VERSUS "THE PSEUDO-REAL" /
1.12 - §10.0: Points 10.0–10.5: 
REVELATION: RESISTED AND DENIED—"TO BE CONTINUED" /
1.13 - §11.0: Points 11.0–11.6: A FEW COMMENTS ADDED BASED ON MY EXPERIENCES OF BEING LABELLED A "CHANGELING" /
1.14 - §12.0: Points 12.0–12.9: BRIEFLY ON THE SUBJECT OF ETHNIC CLEANSING /
1.15 - §13.0: Points 13.0–13.12: THE DAY OF REVELATION, OR THE GREAT OBLIVION OF EVERYTHING, SCIENTIFICALLY SPEAKING /
1.16 - §14.0: Points 14.0–14.5: A FEW COMMENTS REGARDING THE SOUND-TRACK OF: INFERNO, 7 FEBRUARY 1980, 107 MINUTES //
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§2.0 - THE DISCLAIMER—Refer to Points 2.0–2.11, directly beneath.
2.1 - All rights reserved © Craig Steven Joseph Lacey, 4 December 1976–, Australia. 2.2 - Changing the content or re-publishing this blog is strictly prohibited. 2.3 - This blog is protected by the: 2.4 -Privacy Act 1988 of Australia, against unauthorized access to Craig Steven Joseph Lacey's Samsung Galaxy A05s, and Google account; 2.5 - Cybercrime Act 2001 of Australia, against computer fraud or internet fraud; 2.6 - Copyright Act 1968 of Australia, against intellectual property theft; 2.7 - Universal Copyright Convention, circa 1952; 2.8 - Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, 9 September 1886. 2.9 - Fines and/or prosecution will apply according to Australian and International law in reference to unauthorised access and use of this blog published through the Blogger app of Google.com and the author's storage device(s) with the data. 2.10 - There are eight stills from the film: Inferno, 7 February 1980, 107 minutes, directed by Dario Argento, included within this blog. 2.11 - A photographic reproduction of a sketch of the old tower's entrance to Newgate Prison, England, replaced during the 18th-century, is further included.
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§3.0 - THE DATES OF RESEARCH, WRITING AND ON-LINE PUBLICATION—Refer to Points 3.0–3.3, directly beneath.
3.1 - This blog was started 06.04.2024 and completed 07.04.2024, as researched and composed by Craig Steven Joseph Lacey at Brisbane City, Queensland, Australia, 4000. 3.2 - Word count: 5,243 and characters count: 31,304. 3.3 - Last up-dated: 06:47, 27.08.2024, Australian Eastern Standard Time.
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§4.0 - COMMENTS REGARDING DARIO ARGENTO'S CINEMATIC VISION—Refer to Points 4.0–4.8, directly beneath.
4.1 - The sequel to: 4.2Suspiria, circa 1977, 99 minutes, directed by Dario Argento, 4.3 - is the film titled: Inferno, 7 February 1980, 107 minutes, directed by Dario Argento, an Italian film produced by "Produzioni Intersound"; 4.4 - that was filmed at Rome, Italy, but mostly at Manhattan, New York, the United States Of America. 4.5 - Dario Argento further has written the film's script, as he had for: Suspiria, circa 1977, 99 minutes, to indicate the films are his own cinematic vision on the subject of the three mothers: the three Witches, Sorrows, Fates or Harpies, etc., as discussed by Thomas De Quincey in the essay: 'Levana And Our Ladies Of Sorrow' from his novel: 4.6Suspiria De Profundis, circa 1845. 4.7 - The references of Dario Argento's Three Mothers' Trilogy to Thomas De Quincey's Suspiria De Profundis, circa 1845, are made arguably in furtherance of the poetic prose form of Thomas De Quincey's writing and the filmic form of giallo itself that is a peculiar but intriguing mix of exposition integrated with moments of poetic expansion of the narrative, as discussed in the previous blog. 4.8 - Here, the discussion is less concerned with technicalities of cinema, and more concerned with an attempt at comprehending the mysteries of this exceptionally dark and disturbing cinematic vision.
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§5.0 - IS MATER TENEBRARUM: THE IMPOSTOR?—Refer to Points 5.0–5.10, directly beneath.
5.1 - Inferno, 7 February 1980, is based on a narration of association to the second witch, referred to as:  'Mater Tenebrarum' in the Latin—translated as "Mother Of Darkness"—that is of the Western Church, viz. Roman Catholicism; though Latin is really the only allusion to Roman Catholicism except for a few scenes of the Vatican and the city of Rome, Italy, which in an inverted context refers to witch-craft or alchemy through portraying boiling cauldrons within a Roman library's basement. 5.2 - Mater Tenebrarum, acted by Romanian Veronica Lazăr, is portrayed as firstly a nurse, and later a land-lady, rather than a leading witch who operates a coven parallel to a dance school, such as Mater Suspiriorum is shown to be. 5.3 - Mater Tenebrarum is found to be inextricably linked to the building of which she is the land-lady—to the extent, the building is an inter-changeable reference to her and an analysis of the building is discussed later in this blog. 5.4 - The film is recognised as dealing with the notion of the inter-change or substitution, such as is already demonstrated in the classic sense regarding her as the nurse, who is also later revealed to be the land-lady, then, Mater Tenebrarum. 5.5 - Hers is an identity resistant to the moment of revelation, and I make a non-humourous pun on the word 'revelation' here to: The Book Of Revelation, of the: New Testament, as to also refer to the unveiling of the fiend's identity as a staple of the detective genre. 5.6 - Rather Mater Tenebrarum exists always incognito: a disguised relation through which she may perpetually gather intelligence to further administer by stealth the affairs of others. 5.7 - That is, Mater Tenebrarum is something of an impostor and spy: her true identity and belonging is not quite exposed by the film's narrative, and inasmuch the signifiers of the nurse, the land-lady, the apartment building, its basement temple, fire itself, New York City and Rome, are subject to the unstable signs of an identity that forever seeks escape through plurality and disguise. 5.8 - Even at peace-time, Mater Tenebrarum is at war: recognizance being imperative in attaining a strategic advantage. 5.9 - During the film of circa 1980, there are no such moments of insight in to the mysterious identity of Mater Tenebrarum, but as is the case for the impostor, there is no interiority of personal identity as such, only a series of identifications to the places, objects and people in which the impostor dwells, such as is vividly narrated by the protagonist: 5.10 - Mr. Ripley from Patricia Highsmith's The Talented Mr. Ripley, circa 1955; more recently published circa 2024, Vintage Classics, 272 pages, ISBN 9781529940886—such characters exist as imitators of a genuine, who or that is most often obscured.
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§6.0 - A BRIEF CHARACTER ANALYSIS OF ROSE ELLIOT—Refer to Points 6.0–6.15, directly beneath.
6.1 - Instead the film concentrates upon the female protagonist, Rose Elliot, acted by Irene Miracle, who, as a poet, is believed to have interiority of identity—yet that may be a dupe because Rose Elliot only starts to know of the "Three Mothers" and the sub-culture in which she dwells, mid-way through her life, that is possibly a trope as that reference to the structure of art per "in media res / in the middle of things", such as represented by: 6.2 - Alighieri Dante's Divine Commedia, circa 1382, a trilogy in which the first book is of the same title as this film: Inferno6.3 - An old book titled: The Three Mothers by E. Varelli, that is featured during the film's introductory sequences, is shown to be opened—at one point, a letter-opener is used to pry open two joint pages—and then read by Rose, amid her assortment of things: a fine silver bracelet; a bejewelled trinket of a snake-based design that attaches keys; a silver pen; a neck-lace of silver and jewels; fine paper; a Latin-English dictionary. 6.4 - Refer to the film still beneath of Rose Elliot using the envelope opener to cut joint pages in E. Varelli's book, with some of the collection of her artefacts on the desk.
6.5 - Rose Elliot is herself displayed as the investigator as might an historian be considered: involved with the analysis of clues, either documentary or exhibitory evidence, shows her own exteriorisation, her fresh focus for the empirical. 6.6 - May Rose have lost her Christian identity, presumed Christian, because the Rose is traditionally a Christian symbol?—a question that must remain unanswered in Rose's quest to uncover the witch's identity. 6.7 - As is the case for most giallo films, the identity of the fiend is firstly suspended for a generally held acceptance of that character as some-one trusted, to some-one whose motives are brought in to focus by suspicion, is revealed as one whose criminality is an effect of psychological disturbance—that is, giallo and thriller-suspense films tend to embrace psychologism paradoxically while showing magic and pseudo-spirituality. 6.8 - The standard giallo filmic technique is to integrate in to the overall filmic narrative flash-backs of the antagonist's unusual child-hood: when the seeds of disturbance were sown. 6.9 - A psychological understanding is thereby established in the audience so as to curtail or prevent a type of persecution taking place, viz. dæmonization; but in this giallo / horror film, there are no flash-backs to an internal past of Mater Tenebrarum, rather she is revealed as "Death Personified", a type of Grim Reaper, the very cause celebré itself supposedly worthy of dæmonizatiom. 6.10 - While law enforcement officers, such as detectives, do not show up in this film, as they do in the film: 6.11 - Suspiria, circa 2018, 152 minutes, directed by Luca Guadagnino, Rose tentatively acts as a type of private investigator, but she is indicated as dependent on a father-figure: a character known as E. Varelli, the author of the pseudo-text: The Three Mothers—it is his speech as a voice-over that narrates her reading of the text, rather than her own voice be heard as the voice-over. 6.12 - E. Varelli may be as much Kazanian, the miserly, antique dealer next-door to the apartment building, as the aged Professor Arnold who is himself revealed as E. Varelli, such that he is also as an evasive figure as Mater Tenebrarum—but to set aside gender difference for a moment: "might they both be different sexes of the same identity?" 6.13 - E. Varelli is what is often referred in psychoanalysis as: "the anal father", who exists as a shadowy figure: in this film as "Silenus", a satyr of sorts; a consideration only discussed here en passant because it is too horrid to consider, but is nonetheless interpreted in relation to the three mothers by way of inference: ex silentio. 6.14 - Whomever E. Varelli really is, he provides Rose the possibility of augmenting her knowledge by "unlocking doors" through the use of keys, viz. keys of knowledge to ascertain the truth of the world in which she lives. 6.15 - There are, according to E. Varelli, three keys: the second key, the relevant to the unfolding moment of the film exists in reference to revealing Mater Tenebrarum's true name as an image presumably in relation to her face, as evidence in the cellar of the building—the cellar being at the roots of identity, the analogy further refers to wine and spirits, undoubtedly rum, though, this once again, would be read-in to the film's narrative.
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§7.0 - COMMENTS ON THE INTER-CHANGE OF MODALITIES—Refer to Points 7.0–7.5, directly beneath.
7.1 - It ought to be mentioned, to disspell any incredulity caused by the coincidences of the narrative's start, that the vintage book has been bought from an antique store, viz. 'Kazanian Antiques', shown next-door to the apartment complex in which Rose resides, to confer a regional truth of setting and historical positioning to the film's narrative to lend it credibility. 7.2 - During the film's initial scenes, the apartment building of Rose's residence is shown in reference to a sketch within E. Varelli's book to also be the home of Mater Tenebrarum as to indicate a series of points of almost magical synchronicity. 7.3 - There is a movement of the camera from the rough sketch of the apartment building in E. Varelli's text, to a detailed etching of the building in a frame hung on the wall of Rose's apartment—refer to a film still of the sketch in E. Varelli's book, beneath.
7.4 - It is a camera movement ending with a cut to a shot that shows Rose standing, comparatively very small, in front of the towering apartment building—Refer to the film still from: Inferno, 7 February 1980, beneath, that is of the camera shot discussed above at point 7.3, that shows the apartment complex's complete façade at night.
7.5 - Rose's inquiries in to the world of the text, The Three Mothers, is relevant to her home: she must comprehend how her position in her place, neighbourhood and society is dominated by such iniquities without her being aware.
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§8.0 - THE BUILDING OF THE APARTMENT IS BASED ON THE OLD WATCH-TOWER AND PRISON—Refer to Points 8.0–8.15, directly beneath.
8.1 - One of the first impressions of the apartment building is that of its Victorian styled, prison-type architecture. 8.2 - The entrance / gate and core of the building is that of a 'tower' such as of a gatehouse—the name of the traditional "observation centre" of captives who were observed for assessment regarding whether they be executed, sent to a prison proper, or released in to society. 8.3 - There are the mediæval, European-styled tower crenellations to be seen at the top of the central tower and its Northern and Southern flanked sets of apartments, which in a statement of power as of prison architecture, is perfectly symmetrical. 8.4 - Beneath, I have provided a photograph of the etching of the now demolished old gate-way of the notorious Newgate Prison, London, Britain.
8.5 - The similarities are obvious with the gated front entry, the column structures on both sides which rise up to a crenellated top, and further, centre of the building are the trifora windows beneath the unifying arch; that is of a similar triple-based structuration in the apartment building's tower's windows which face Manhattan, West Side, Central Park. 8.6 - There really is only one conclusion to make: the building from the film is a modified structure from prison architecture, that has been used in similar ways to how prison towers were used: to observe and assess its captives, except in this case, residents are assessed, not captives.  8.7 - Later in the film, the third key, which E. Varelli has discussed in terms of a riddle: "it may be found under the soles of one's shoes;" is revealed to refer to the secret, crawl spaces beneath the building's floor boards which are located at each apartment floor, and further, connects to a secret passage way that leads to the apartment of the land-lady, Mater Tenebrarum. 8.8 - Refer to the film still beneath of Mark Elliott, Rose's brother, acted by Leigh McCloskey, discovering the hidden crawl spaces connected to the building's secret passages.
8.9 - Refer to the film still beneath of Mark investigating, in a substitution of Rose's investigative role, the hidden crawl spaces of under the apartment building's floor-boards.
8.10 - Further, refer to the film still beneath of Mark walking from the crawl space, shut closed, in to the passage way leading to Professor Arnold's apartment.
8.11 - Mater Tenebrarum, as has been already mentioned, showed herself to be a nurse, that is, with a stately old man in a wheel-chair, the apartment tenet, Professor Arnold, and he is shown during the film's climatic scenes in his lavish apartment rooms, to be the alchemist and author E. Varelli, but also significantly the architect who supposedly was embroiled in to the Mothers' affairs—being commissioned to design and construct their residences. 8.12 - To that extent it is plausible the building in E. Varelli's text is that construction, similar  to the prison "panopticon", illegally used to observe and assess tenets for the hidden purposes of the building's supposed owner, Mater Tenebrarum. 8.13 - In further reference to Dario Argento's Inferno, 7 February 1980, the woman, the real-life model of the character, who may or may not claim to be Mother Tenebrarum appears associated to the cultures of Western World prisons, or E. Varelli is. 8.14 - The indication is, in that apartment building, modified from a prison tower, that abdominable couple—Mother Tenebrarum and E. Varelli—preside over a darkness that is really known to exist inside such penitential institutions, as prisons or mental asylums, but really as only a symbolic, mysterious absence of knowledge per se; that can only be considered a matter of control and censorship. 8.15 - Otherwise the question is asked: "exactly how many are killed in prison with their deaths going unrecorded?"
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§9.0 - ON "THE REAL" VERSUS "THE PSEUDO-REAL"—Refer to Points 9.0–9.8, directly beneath.
9.1 - Here the notion of the simulacrum of a real thing, viz. a set of a film that imitates a real building, is tested. 9.2 - The apartment building shown in Inferno, 7 February 1980, is not a set-piece, nor is it a computer animation integrated in to the real footage of the film: but the building is real / true—and to add a note of my own experience, was used by the sorts of folk who labelled and persecuted myself for being a changeling. 9.3 - Similarly, the book of the film, a "pseudo-biblium", is shown as a real book, but it is no real book, to further test the internal logic of the film's versimilitude as a piece of fiction as pseudo-history as compared to official, true history. 9.4 - I am reminded of the apartment building in the film: Rosemary's Baby, 12 June 1968, 137 minutes, by Roman Polanski, that involves an apartment building also facing Manhattan's Central Park, where Satanic practices occur, and Roman Polanski's film also includes a narrative with reference to a pseudobiblium, this one titled: All Of Them Witches by J.R. Hanslet, where reality and fantasy are shown to be categories destabilized by degrees of representative representation as determined by modality. 9.5 - When the prefix: 'pseudo-', is used, it denotes that the noun and thing connected to the prefix is false, but it is not simply a matter of falseness to refer to the totally fictitious because the pseudo-document or pseudo-exhibit is in its versimilitude found to be accurately representative; that is, in the thing's likeness of the real and true thing upon which it is modelled, it is representative of the truth of the thing's appearance. 9.6 - This is a similar notion to the aforementioned impostor, "the fake person", regarding who, there is only a presentation of versimilitude that can be assessed under conditions as to its fake or bonà fide status by revealing a lack of quality, or certain vërve, or paradoxical: "je né sais quoi"; a little something, such as genius and originality. 9.7 - The medium of film itself is simulacrum and the genres of giallo and horror are ladden with such standard conventions that the performativity reaches an almost camp aesthetic, in which the horror of the truth is ossified in to an on-going series of such moments of truth that attain the sort of mundaneness of everyday life, bizarrely perceived as non-threatening. 9.8 - How truths of official history can be found in such cultural texts, giallo and horror films, with a self-reflexive artificiality of performance and conceits of narrative constructs, is a problem of interpretative methodology as to evince truth from fiction.
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§10.0 - REVELATION RESISTED AND DENIED, OR "TO BE CONTINUED"—Refer to Points 10.0–10.5, directly beneath.
10.1 - There is the moment of the supposed revelation in the film when Mater Tenebrarum shows herself, no longer as the nurse of the elderly man, but a woman of middle-age and wealthy presentation, the land-lady, who even in her basement temple is partially hidden by her hair. 10.2 - When Mater Tenebrarum is supposed to be revealed, she is seen to walk-out of a large mirror: inasmuch that Mater Tenebrarum is an imitation of that real self, being only ever a reflection / impersonation of another woman (or man)—for in that moment Mark appears to gaze in to the mirror he sees a woman, Mater Tenebrarum.
10.3 - Here Mater Tenebrarum reveals her true identity to Rose's brother, Mark Elliott, who has discovered the secrets of the apartment building; he had opened the locked spaces with the keys to the problems or riddles posed by E. Varelli, that Rose was attempting to solve, until she was made to disappear, at which point her "male twin", Mark, Rose's character's brother, who appears to complete the more action-based sequences of the narrative. 10.4 - Consistent to Dario Argento's films is the inter-play of a scrutiny of perception shared with audience, such as that of the giallo genre's use of the overall detective-based investigation, but with the distinction of being revealed as much as ellided, viz. when the moment of unveiling the truth is performed, typically during the narrative's climatic scenes, a proper revelation is denied, and I now ask: "for what reason?" 10.5 - Mater Tenebrarum says she is one of the three mothers, but that uncovers only that she is one of the feminine forms of death and sorrow regarding which a mythified discourse leads to scarcely any rational explanation.
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§11.0 - A FEW COMMENTS ADDED AS BASED ON MY EXPERIENCES OF BEING LABELLED A "CHANGELING"—Refer to Points 11.0–11.6, directly beneath.
11.1 - As I have mentioned in my previous blog, in a very brief foreword, that I was labelled a changeling during my child-hood years: I was a changeling to the extent I was persecuted for it as part of a culture in Australia and the United States of America, which believes a changeling deserves persecution, and it is a position both real and unreal; true and false—or of a pseudo-history, because official histories in such nations are shown to ignores its ever happening. 11.2 - The question emerges as to what extent both discussed films and the other two films of Dario Argento's "The Mothers Trilogy" really represent an all-encompassing conspiracy considered to be organised by a Satanic cult? 11.3 - By the phrase "Satanic cult", here I refer to the enclaves of organised pseudo-religion that are pivoted against Christianity—that is, a religious sect, or various types of sects, which not only disregard Christian social orders' regulations and the search for truth and justice, but pervert or corrupt the orders to satisfy varying forms of avarice and lust for power. 11.4 - There was the case of the infamous Manson Family of circa 1969, the State of California, but psychologism is found to divert explanation to the asocially individualistic, rather than direct it to the matter of proto-Satanism or Satanism of Asian cultures in the Western World—refer to: 11.5 Jonestown And The Manson Family: Race, Sexuality, And Collective Madness, circa 1993, by Robert Endleman, New York: Psyche Press, xvii, 211 pages; 22 centimeters, ISBN: 096228856X, 0962288551. 11.6 - Whoever they really are, clearly they are many steps ahead: for they flaunt their power in "broad day-light" through the use of modified prison architecture within residential settings; not in some obscure location, but the renowned streets on the borders of Manhattan's Central Park, and further, flaunt such power through the popular medium of film, that is often considered as entertainment for the general Christian-educated audiences of the Western World—Dario Argento's Italian / American films being no exception.
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§12.0 - BRIEFLY ON THE SUBJECT OF ETHNIC CLEANSING—Refer to Points 12.0–12.9, directly beneath.
12.1 - The connections between the "hocus-pocus" elements of the examined film narratives of my blogs through to fascistic styled governments, such as Nazism, has been a point discussed to a brief extent in my earlier blogs on the changeling—refer to: thoughtsdisjectamembra.blogspot.com, circa May 2023, PART III CRAIG STEVEN JOSEPH LACEY'S COMMENTS ON THE EUPHEMISM, CIRCUS ENTERTAINMENTS, MISCHLING, NAZISM, FOLK-LORE AND CHRISTAPHOBIA, at URL: <https://thoughtsdisjectamembra.blogspot.com/2023/05/part-iii-craig-steven-joseph-laceys.html>. 12.2 - Further dilating on this particular point, the untermensch, the half-human or sub-human as the mischling, that is, the Aryan child, with some parts Jewish Semitic or some ethnic other, as the equivalent to the mythified changeling, raises the concern of ethnic cleansing being at the centre of such folk-lorism or pseudo-religion and culture. 12.3 - The persecution of the child labelled a changeling may occur without the use of a politically reflexive language inasmuch to avoid the acknowledgement of the perpetrators acting on a fascistic government's ethnic cleansing regime. 12.4 - That is to note, the magic and mythology disguise the fascistic governance. 12.5 - Satan, the eternal war-lord, for who the world must forever be in his dominion, is also the fürher, the patriarch of the völk; is himself, that shadowy figure at the peripheries of histories, as Mephistopheles was noted to have been in my previous blogs, but in relation to the three mothers, is the Horned God, the counter-part to the three-bodied goddess, referred to as Hecate, Belladonna or Iris. 12.6 - The Horned God exists among his harem, who are his daughters, sisters and mothers; his concubines, slaves and witches, who dwell in the hidden spaces of society and life. 12.7 - But: "what of the children?" 12.8 - The crawl spaces of the apartment building initially is conceived as used by adults crouching beneath the floor boards to spy on the tenets, though such crawl spaces could be used to house small children. 12.9 - The comments of point 12.8 are made with the comments made on Mater Tenebrarum: as her being the mother to whom children destined to die early are sent: the symbol of mother nature in her indifference to pain, suffering and the nothingness of the universe.
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§13.0 - THE DAY OF REVELATION, OR THE GREAT OBLIVION OF EVERYTHING, SCIENTIFICALLY SPEAKING—Refer to Points 13.0–13.12, directly beneath.
13.1 - The so-called democratic government is comparable to that apartment building complex in the film: Inferno, 7 February 1980, that is "safely" lived within, only to be subject to a secret governance from the censored areas of the society, and it can be seen at the film's end; the flames which consume the apartment building is part of that censoring process that leads to the darkness of ignorance, continued. 13.2 - To the traditional Christian mind-set, death is a natural process, but to other cultures it holds an allure; an irresistible pull; such as in reference to the great oblivion of everything, symbolized by "the inferno", the title of this film. 13.3 - It is precisely the threat of the great oblivion of everything that fuels the demand for witnessing emptiness continually and entertaining the notion: one has survived it. 13.4 - Arguably, it is shown in the fires that consume the film's apartment building and possibly in Mater Tenebrarum at the film's ending when, as Death Personified, flames engulf that figure that raises its arms up-wards in triumph: that is, she is of: 13.5The Triumph Of Death, circa 1894, by Gabriel D'Annuzio Italy: Treves—recent publication: 30 November 2018, Forgotten Books, Italian language, hard-cover, ‎512 pages, ISBN-10 026635159X, ISBN-13 ‎978-0266351597—based on the ancient French "Romaunt Of The Rose", where "Rose" is the same character romanticized in that inverted sense of which Ovid's words are evocative: 13.6 - 'Nec sine te nec tecum vivere possum / I can neither live with or without you'—from: 13.7 - Ovid's The Art Of Love, Book III., Elegy XI. 13.8 - I cannot help but think instead of that peculiarly feminine form of darkness, a veritable swollen abdomen of emptiness, that is born unto the world as the first ever hydrogen bomb, "Ivy Mike", portrayed in the recent film: 13.9 - Oppenheimer, 11 July 2023, premiere at Le Grand Rex, 180 minutes, in which "Tenebrarum's children" are gathered round to witness emptiness itself; as though nothingness itself is a notion to be entertained in reality: perhaps, in the reflection of having survived it? 13.10 - Supposedly the reality is as in: Oppenheimer, 11 July 2023: death is a scientifically-determined finality and there is no after-life, nor any such thing as the soul and spirit—and such ætheism is as science itself, "Pythagorean", retained in the narratives of the Three Mothers' Trilogy, only as the inverted science of Occultism or witch-craft, viz. as a triumph of spiritualism in its re-appropriation of science and mathematics. 13.11 - Perhaps, then, it is better to keep the discourse to a commentary on the mystical scenes portrayed by Inferno, 7 February 1980? such as that of the eclipse of the moon portrayed at Manhattan's Central Park where Kazanian is plagued by sewer rats as if an enactment of a curse—refer to the film still beneath of Central Park? 13.12 - Irony aside, the apartment complex of Tenebrarum's / Valleri's management is the captives' temporary abode, the on-going count of heads in exile—for example, refer to: (A) the Book of Jeremiah 39–43; the final section of: (B) the Second Book of Kings; (C) the "Sabbath of the land"—in the Second Book of Chronicles; (D) the opening chapters of the Book of Ezra, that records the end of the exile.
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§14.0 - A FEW COMMENTS REGARDING THE SOUND-TRACK OF: INFERNO, 7 FEBRUARY 1980, 107 MINUTES—Refer to Points 14.0–14.5, directly beneath.
14.1 - Dario Argento commissioned the key-boardist: Keith Emerson, a former member of the progressive rock-band: Emerson, Lake & Palmer, to create a sound-track titled: 14.2Inferno, 47:26 minutes, that was released as a fifteen-track Long-Play vinyl disc, circa 1980, on Atlantic Records K-50753, and circa 1981 by Cinevox, then as a compact disc, circa 2000, with a bonus track of out-takes not included on the original vinyl release. 14.3 - Keith Emerson re-orchestrated "Va, pensiero, sull'ali dorate / Go, thought, on wings of gold" from the 'Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves' in the Italian Giuseppe Verdi's opera of four acts: 14.4Nabucco, circa 1841, a re-staging of the epoch of the Jews' exile and Babylonian captivity. 14.5 - The inference is the Babylonians, or Satanic Chaldeans, in reference to the film of 1980, have resumed a sort of secret tyranny, though how a tyranny can be secret is the mystery itself—with all leads ending up burnt, such Babylonian cultures, known for worship of fire, seem to govern as though it is all "smoke and mirrors".
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Saturday, 23 March 2024

PART I. A COMMENTARY, 23 MARCH 2024, ON THE FILMS: 'SUSPIRIA, 1 FEBRUARY 1977, 99 MINUTES ITALY' AND: 'THE BIRD WITH THE CRYSTAL PLUMAGE, 27 FEBRUARY 1970 ITALY, 96 MINUTES'; BOTH FILMS DIRECTED BY DARIO ARGENTO—REGARDING POST-MODERN USES OF CLASSICISM, BY CRAIG STEVEN JOSEPH LACEY.

§1.0 - Points 1.0–1.16: THIS BLOG'S CONTENTS:
1.1 - THIS BLOG'S TITLE:
1.2 - PART I. A COMMENTARY, 23 MARCH 2024, ON THE FILMS: 'SUSPIRIA, 1 FEBRUARY 1977, 99 MINUTES ITALY' AND: 'THE BIRD WITH THE CRYSTAL PLUMAGE, 27 FEBRUARY 1970 ITALY, 96 MINUTES'; BOTH FILMS DIRECTED BY DARIO ARGENTO—REGARDING POST-MODERN USES OF CLASSICISM, BY CRAIG STEVEN JOSEPH LACEY /
1.3 - THIS BLOG'S LISTED SECTIONS AND NUMBERED POINTS:
1.4 - §2.0: Points 2.0–2.12: DISCLAIMER /
1.5 - §3.0: Points 3.0–3.2: DATES OF RESEARCH / WRITING AND PUBLICATION /
1.6 - §4.0: Points 4.0–4.4: A BRIEF FOREWORD: ON MY HAVING BEEN A "CHANGELING" /
1.7 - §5.0: Points 5.0–5.4: REGARDING "THE TAXI SEQUENCES" OF THE FILM: SUSPIRIA, 1 FEBRUARY 1977, 99 MINUTES, DIRECTED BY DARIO ARGENTO /
1.8 - §6.0: Points 6.0–6.13: (A) PROTRACTED; THE TAXI SEQUENCES OF SUSPIRIA, 1 FEBRUARY 1977, 99 MINUTES /
1.9 - §7.0: Points 7.0 –7.1: (B) OVER-EDITED; THE TAXI SEQUENCE OF SUSPIRIA, 1 FEBRUARY 1977, 99 MINUTES /
1.10 - §8.0: Points 8.0–8.12: "MONSTERS ARE NOT BORN, BUT CREATED" /
1.11 - §9.0: Points 9.0–9.7: A FATAL SUBSTITUTION AND SACRIFICE /
1.12 - §10.0: Points 10.0 –10.10: "TURN THE BLUE IRIS" /
1.13 - §11.0: Points 11.0 –11.9: THE TAXI-DRIVER AS SATYR /
1.14 - §12.0: Points 12.0–12.9: THE BIRD CONNECTION /
1.15 - §13.0: Points 13.0–13.14: PROTO-SATANIC, NEO-PAGAN FOLK-LORISM /
1.16 - §14.0: Points 14.0–14.12: THE POST-MODERN ART DIRECTION OF SUSPIRIA, CIRCA 1977, 99 MINUTES /
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§2.0 - THE DISCLAIMER—Refer to Points 2.0–2.12, directly beneath.
2.1 - All rights reserved © Craig Steven Joseph Lacey, 4 December 1976–, Australia. 2.2 - Changing the content or re-publishing this blog is strictly prohibited. 2.3 - This blog is protected by the: 2.4 -Privacy Act 1988 of Australia, against unauthorized access to Craig Steven Joseph Lacey's Samsung Galaxy A05s, and Google account; 2.5 - Cybercrime Act 2001 of Australia, against computer fraud or internet fraud; 2.6 - Copyright Act 1968 of Australia, against intellectual property theft; 2.7 - Universal Copyright Convention, circa 1952; 2.8 - Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, 9 September 1886. 2.9 - Fines and/or prosecution will apply according to Australian and International law in reference to unauthorised access and use of this blog published through the Blogger app of Google.com and the author's storage device(s) with the data. 2.10 - A total of six film stills from: Suspiria, circa 1977, are included in this blog, specifically directly beneath points: 6.8; 11.7; 12.2; 12.7; 14.8; 14.112.11 - A photograph of the film poster for: The Bird With The Crystal Plumage, circa 1970, is directly beneath point 12.2. 2.12 - A photograph of the "ten virgins" sculptures of Magdeburg Cathedral's Paradise Door is directly beneath point 12.3. 
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§3.0 - DATES OF RESEARCH, WRITING AND PUBLICATION—Refer to Points 3.0–3.4, directly beneath.
3.1 - This blog was started at 19.03.2024 and completed 23.03.2024, as researched and composed by Craig Steven Joseph Lacey at Brisbane City, Queensland, Australia, 4000. 3.3 - Word count: 5,423 and characters count: 32,345. 3.4 - Last up-dated: 09:00, 28.10.2024, Australian Eastern Standard Time.
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§4.0 - A BRIEF FOREWORD: ON MY HAVING BEEN A "CHANGELING"—Refer to Points 4.0–4.4, directly beneath.
4.1 - My writing on the changeling mythos over the past two years in the blogger site: thoughtsdisjecramembra at URL: <http://thoughtsdisjectamembra.blogspot.com>, was done mostly in a vacuum on the topic, apart from the exception of the folk-lorist scholar, Dee L. Ashliman, 1 January 1938–, the changeling exists in folk-tales, books, plays, music, films and visual art—refer to: Dee L. Ashliman's website, accessed 26.03.2024, from URL: <https://sites.pitt.edu/~dash/ashliman.html>4.2 - That is, as far as I am aware: as access to information is made available or unavailable to myself. 4.3 - During my child-hood I was labeled by "proto-Satanists" to be a "changeling" in Australia and other countries owing to a birth-mark above my right ankle and I have mostly drawn on my own experiences as a "changeling" in discussing such matters here in my blogs. 4.4 - The not unrelated topic of the witch—that is: "the hag"—is an old, thoroughly discussed matter per often juvenile folk-lore or mythological narratives; but more significantly the witch / hag symbolism offers a socio-cultural discourse as a key part of recent inter-textual art, such as novels and films, that are specifically connected to a Satanic and Christaphobic sub-text; regarding which is an argument I aver in reference to socio-cultural and political contexts through sociological / film-based theoretical approaches, and insights based on my own experiences.
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§5.0 - REGARDING "THE TAXI SEQUENCES" OF THE FILM: SUSPIRIA, 1 FEBRUARY 1977, 99 MINUTES, DIRECTED BY DARIO ARGENTORefer to Points 5.0–5.4, directly beneath.
5.1 - The start of the film: Suspiria, 1 February 1977 Italy, 99 minutes, directed by Dario Argento, written by Dario Argento and Daria Nicolodi, production company: Seda Spettacoli, involves what I will refer to as "the taxi sequences", which are both: 5.2 - (A) Protracted: with moments which dwell for too long of a time on Susie Bannion's face as a passenger who gazes out at the rain and Black Forest, and— 5.3 - (B) Over-edited: the taxi sequence is without narrational completion; a final sequence is edited out; such that the question begs answering: for what reason? 5.4 - Both (A) and (B) are discussed in detail beneath to arrive at something of an answer to that question, viz. a proto-Satanic, neo-pagan folk-lore / mythos discovered to operate in the filmic narrative upon a Christian setting and culture.
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§6.0 - (A) PROTRACTED; THE TAXI SEQUENCES OF: SUSPIRIA, 1 FEBRUARY 1977, 99 MINUTES—Refer to Points 6.0–6.13, directly beneath.
6.1 - The opening sequences of the protagonist, Susie Bannion, acted by Jessica Harper, riding a taxi to 'The Whale House', viz. the Tanz / Ballet Akademie itself, at Freiburg, Baaden-Würternberg, Germany, occupies about the first ten minutes of the film. 6.2 - Susie is shown to be "the passenger", who, while paying for her ride, remains at the whims of the male driver who may exploit her ignorance of the locality and her female physicality. 6.3 - There could be moments of the taxi-man as the ferry-man on the river Styx—an early reference to Susie as Iris, the bearer of a cup of water of the river Styx, by which Iris poisons those who perjure themselves to induce their sleep. 6.4 - Greek mythology seems distant to such modern, late-1970s contexts, and now to the 2020s, but there are later definite indications the witches are cultural successors of the harpies of the Strophades islands, Greece—and there is then the name and ethnic identity of the character of Helena Markos, a Greek immigrant, who is none other than Mother Suspiriorum, the director of the Akademie and head witch of the coven. 6.5 - Such portentousness in a matter as mundane as catching a taxi to a location requires a shift in cultural perceptions, possibly such as Gothic / Thracian for reasons, later discussed here—suggested as that neo-pagans take such culture to colonize regions of past Christian heritage. 6.6 - The extensive close-ups of Susie in the back of the taxi as she gazes out at the rain and Black Forest—with passing pools of light that bathe her in greens and blues to transform her appearance, are all portentous. 6.7 - The clinking chimes and grumbles of voices of the strange film sound-track of the band: Goblins, are heard to invest a pending significance to the sequences, when such music is reminiscent of the chanting done during ritualistic sacrifice. 6.8 - Refer to the film still beneath of Susie in the taxi.
6.9 - The protagonist, Susie, does later arrive at her intended destination 'The Whale House' at Freiburg, but it is an arrival fraught with distress. 6.10 - Susie encounters a distressed young woman and one of the school's dancers, Patricia, acted by Eva Axén, standing in the academy's door-way where Patricia yells out something unclearly at the time, as though she herself is a sign to the latest dance recruit to heed her next steps of entry in to the Tanz Akademie; or else, she may become as frenzied and wild as Patricia; fed to the forest. 6.11 - Susie is much later able to remember Patricia's lip movements at the door-way, because in the taxi she could not hear Patricia, and deciphers Patricia's peculiar comment: "turn the blue iris." 6.12 - Patricia is seen to stumble away at one point with her hands in her tussled, hazel-coloured hair, when Susie at the portico is told through the intercom to "leave," essentially announcing a rejection of Susie by the academy. 6.13 - Susie gets back in the taxi that drives through the rainy night and Black Forest and, at one point, Patricia is seen to walk crazily through the forest trees, suggestive of Susie's own possible fate of being rejected by the academy and left to the darkness of the Black Forest.
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§7.0 - (B) OVER-EDITED; THE TAXI SEQUENCE OF: SUSPIRIA, 1 FEBRUARY 1977, 99 MINUTES—Refer to Points 7.0–7.10, directly beneath.
7.1 - Susie's induction to the world of the witch: Mother Suspiriorum at Freiburg is never finalized: the latter scenes of the taxi sequences are edited out or not directed. 7.2 - Thus, the taxi sequences are considered over-edited—on which point, compare filmic narration to the not dissimilar "music clip" direction that typically involves a form of heavily, poetically edited narrative as an evocation of dreamy surreality through which suspense is lost to the effect of weïrdness and transformations: in feature films, a balance must be achieved. 7.3 - The audience is left to contemplate the vague possibility of Susie finding accommodation late at night. 7.4 - Doubt creeps in as to whether Susie has befallen a similar fate as the many women who disappeared using taxis during the late 1970s and 1980s in Western Europe, North America and Oceania. 7.5 - Although now there is little available to report of such dark history: one exception is "Ireland's Vanishing Triangle", in which young women since the 1980s have disappeared in a region of Eastern Ireland, attributed to a group of serial killers, but as yet verified: refer to the "Ireland's Vanishing Triangle" website, accessed 22.03.2024, at URL: <https://www.irelandsvanishingtriangle.com/>. 7.6 - Overall, the taxi sequence is left without directly expressed closure, amid a world that is unveiled by the film's introduction as stormy and ominous. 7.7 - It is assumed Susie is driven back in to town to stay at an inn, despite that such assumptions are difficult to make when demonstrations of madness are witnessed of current dance school students, such as Patricia. 7.8 - The explanation that many young women in Susie's place—having traveled far from their homes to attend the prestigious ballet school—were initially driven to 'The Whale House', only to be cruelly rejected and left to the caprices of the Black Forest, may emerge as a type of ritual connected to witch-craft and Satanism. 7.9 - In the contexts of a 1980s audience of Europe, the female contingency's fears are played upon by the film, while presumably the male component of the audience derive complicit amusement. 7.10 - It is questionable how many men would watch this film, and to add to the paradox, the film is directed by a man, Dario Argento, whose efforts to foreground such feminine culture from the shadows could only be considered productive of goodness.
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§8.0 - "MONSTERS ARE NOT BORN, BUT CREATED"—Refer to Points 8.0–8.12, directly beneath.
8.1 - Patricia's narrative is unfolded instead of Susie's, to show Patricia has arrived at a friend's apartment where she advises her friend of her anxiety, after her demonstrations of distress at 'The Whale House', but as to the reasons, no explanation by way of further narration is offered at that moment. 8.2 - In one of the apartment bed-rooms, a quite standard jump-scare of a window blowing open with curtains madly shaking around takes place. 8.3 - That is, the curtains have been blown back to reveal—something of feminine anxiety. 8.4 - There exists a sub-culture of "the window" per se—with or without curtains—and in reference to women, and the spectre of monstrous femininity as the witch; for example, refer to the American film: The Witch In The Window, circa 2018, 77 minutes, directed by Andy Mitton. 8.5 - Women as typically defined by the domestic scene, exist much of their lives inside a house or apartment, specifically the bed-room, and rely on the window as an eye to the outside world. 8.6 - Many women have been imprisoned in a house for some mad reason by their fathers or mothers or family, to become monstrous in rage at the injustices of their domestic imprisonment. 8.7 - As is said: "monsters are not born, but created," as is exemplified by the text: Frankenstein; Or, The Modern Prometheus, circa 1818, by the British, female author: Mary Shelly (a recent edition being: 01 June 2018, Oxford World's Classics, Hard-cover, 304 pages, ISBN: 9780198814047, ISBN-10: 0198814046). 8.8 - The scene of the window blowing furiously open at Patricia could suggest she was imprisoned in her home, but such memories of those horrible times remain repressed to herself. 8.9 - Nonetheless, the character of Patricia and women of the film's audience, feel anxiety because repressed memories of trauma are provoked by signs reminiscent of the traumatic experience. 8.10 - Here the window that may have been curtained to blind the female prisoner of the outside world is blown open to signify the over-whelming nature of the outside world to women, who under Satanic régimes install in women a fear of politics and law-making. 8.11 - The house or school, viz. here, the dance academy, with secret passages and chambers, is itself symbolic of stored memories which may be kept secret by ways of repression despite the fact it is lived or worked in daily for years, thought to be completely familiar to its inhabitants. 8.12 - Might not consciousness be considered comparable; that is, despite the fact that one's own head is lived-in daily, for years, there are secret passages and chambers yet familiar to even herself?
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§9.0 - A FATAL SUBSTITUTION AND SACRIFICE—Refer to Points 9.0–9.7, directly beneath.
9.1 - Minutes after speaking with her friend, Patricia is led to the apartment's roof only to be stabbed with a knife (by a masked man) then hung with a noose that lowers her through the apartment's sky-light. 9.2 - The stabbing is done to Patricia's stomach, such as to suggest she has been condemned for her diet or taste, or she has called her assailant "a stomach", that is, at some earlier point in the pre-narrated history of the text, or for some yet known reason. 9.3 - From a psychoanalytical approach the censored or edited-out scenes of Susie reaching a safe destination suggest the taxi driver took Susie elsewhere for some other purpose, regarding which supposedly requires censorship, that is, in a horror film in which all gruesome truths are meant to be told. 9.4 - Thus, the question is also asked: "exactly, how bad is it then?" 9.5 - The symbolic logic to be accepted is Patricia's death substituted for Susie's death, though Patricia is substituted for Sara as the friend who Susie confides in. 9.6 - Later Sara, acted by Stefania Casini, befalls a similar fate to Patricia, at least, manslaughter (upon whoever set the trap), as she flees from a murderer, steps in to a pit of razor wiring, such that further question is made to the symbolic lore of the filmic text. 9.7 - In the contexts of the taxi sequences, it may be that Sara's death permits for the admission of Susie in to the school which is a fatal substitution and something of a human sacrifice in the ritualistic sense.
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§10.0 - "TURN THE BLUE IRIS"—Refer to Points 10.0–10.10, directly beneath.
10.1 - Imputed is the transgression of the rules of the coven regarding each of the young women. 10.2 - Patricia is thus murdered for giving away the secret to enter the secret passage ways of 'The Whale House', for her comment to: "turn the blue iris". 10.3 - Iris is both a reference to the multi-coloured flower that is a motif above the secret door of Madame Blanc's office, and further, to the Greek goddess: Iris, the personification of the rainbow and similar to Hermés is a messenger of the gods, but is the female counter-part. 10.4 - Iris is the servant to the Olympians, particularly Queen Hera, the goddess of marriage, women and family, and the protector of women during child-birth. 10.5 - The witch, Mother Suspiriorum, is supposedly antagonistic to the domestic scene of Hera, and her coven members are inferred to declare those of Iris to be blue—that is of black, ethnic descent, an ethnicity that is conflated with cultural simplicity—who, in "being turned", convert to Satanic antagonism, gain entry to the coven's lair. 10.6 - Susie, then, is Iris who attempts to prevent the sacrifice, per the Grecian narratives of the 5th-century B.C. which focus on Iris as who is commanded to prevent sacrifice and as an effect, rouses the satyrs' menace—refer to the mythology portrayed in fifteen black-and-red-figure vase painting: refer to: Parody, Politics And The Populace In Greek Old Comedy, circa 2019, by Donald Sells, Bloomsbury Academic; ISBN 978-1-3500-6051-7. 10.7 - Where some of the Iris-based narrative is edited-out of Dario Argento's film, other narrative parts are included, such as, Susie as Iris finds Sara's cadaver, possibly the meat of sacrifice associated to the harpies; while of ancient Grecian myth and fabulous, the witches as cannibalistic harpies is an horrific consideration that seems to disappear when Sara's body vanishes upon Mother Suspiria's death, caused by Susie who thrusts a spear in to the old woman's throat. 10.8 - In reference to another vase, Iris is sister of the harpies named (A) to (C): (A) Aello / stormy; (B) Ocypete / swift-winged; (C) Celæno / the dark, who is included as a third sister by the poet Virgil in: Æneid 3.209. 10.9 - Each of the harpies could be considered proto-typically the three mothers of Argento Dario's filmic Mothers Trilogy, including: Mater Suspiriorum, Mater Tenebrarum in: Inferno, 7 April 1980 Italy, 107 minutes, and Mater Lachrymarum in: Mother Of Tears, 6 September 2007 Toronto International Film Festival, 102 minutes. 10.10 - On the vase's other side, the satyrs attack Hera who stands between Hermès and Heracles: refer to pages 627–628, Reconstructing Satyr Drama, 5 July 2021 by Andreas P. Antonopoulos; Menelaos M. Christopoulos and George W.M. Harrison; De Gruyter; ISBN 9783110725216.
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§11.0 - THE TAXI-DRIVER AS SATYR—Refer to Points 11.0–11.9, directly beneath.
11.1 - In further reference to satyrs as taxi-men, or as the guardians of the sacrificial altar of Dionysius, there is a man-servant, Pavlo, acted by Giuseppe Transocchi, who rouses to kill Susie when Susie discovers the cadaver of Sara, viz. the meat offering, but Pavlo is portrayed more a possessed goon than satyr. 11.2 - Rather it is the cabbie of the initial taxi sequences who may be the humanoid satyr. 11.3 - A satyr with the hind legs of a horse or goat was thought to move quickly, such as a taxi vehicle, but in this film the role of the taxi-man as satyr is avoided an explicit expression due to the actual occurrences of taxi-men abducting and murdering women. 11.4 - Supposedly, there was a cultural problem regarding Eurasian, male taxi drivers in the Western World to take directions or orders, albeit paid, from women—the murders of mostly Christian women by taxi drivers were thought to be religiously motivated, that is, by Christaphobia. 11.5 - The leader of the satyrs "Silenus" works by subtraction: Silenus is only evident by what is removed, viz. subtracted, often to refer to a killing, as opposed to what is added or contributed: his only, most literal "additions" are made by fertilizing women at which point his creativity stops. 11.6 - Silenus appears to be that very taxi-man character, acted by Fulvio Mingozzi, born 6 October 1925 at Lagosanto, Italy, and died 19 September 2000 at Rome, Italy, of the taxi sequences which start the film: Suspiria, 1 February 1977 Italy, 99 minutes11.7 - Refer to the film still beneath showing Fulvio Mingozzi as the taxi-man of Suspiria, 1 February 1977 Italy, 99 minutes.
11.8 - Fulvio Mingozzi's wizened, leathery complexion certainly lends itself to fit the description of a satyr, at least the upper half, and possibly for this reason Dario Argento has placed Fulvio Mingozzi in many of his films. 11.9 - Notably Fulvio Mingozzi is in Dario Argento's filmic debút: The Bird With The Crystal Plumage / Italian: L'uccello dalle piume di cristallo, circa 1970, 96 minutes, that narrates of an American writer who, while visiting Rome, witnesses a murder by a serial killer, acted by Fulvio Mingozzi, targeting young women, and the writer attempts to uncover the murderer's identity before he becomes the next victim: a return of the ancient theme of the satyr attacking Iris or Hera.
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§12.0 - THE BIRD CONNECTION—Refer to Points 12.0–12.9, directly beneath.
12.1 - Acknowledge, the connections between The Bird With The Crystal Plumage, circa 1970, and Suspiria, 1 February 1977 Italy, 99 minutes, include not only Fulvio Mingozzi, but the same "crystal peacock" statue of the circa 1977 film, that is also found in the theatrical release poster for: The Bird With The Crystal Plumage, circa 1970. 12.2 - Beneath, the film still from Suspiria, circa 1977, showing Susie Bannion next to the bird statue that is revealed to her within Mother Suspiria's bed-room.
12.3 - Beneath is the illustration of the crystal-type bird statue in the circa 1970 theatrical release poster.
12.4 - The "bird with the crystal plumage" is referred to in the circa 1970 film as "a rare bird from the South Caucasus", held within the Roman zoo near to the Ranieri couple's apartment, but the species of bird is not identified. 12.5 - The bird may be the Grey Crowned Crane: the emblematic bird of Uganda due to similarities of its appearance to the statue in Suspiria, 1 February 1977 Italy, 99 minutes, and the poster illustration for The Bird With The Crystal Plumage, circa 1970. 12.6 - Further, the reference is to be considered an allusion to the mystical qualities thought to endow the rock: crystal, such that a crystal bird, to configure the semiotics of: bird = flight AND crystal = psychic } both = "flight of the imagination" or "astral projection". 12.7 - The gruesome scene, in which the blind piano player of the Tanz Akademie, viz. Daniel, acted by Flavio Bucci, is bizarrely attacked by his own German Shepherd guide-dog at Konigsplatz Square, Munich, that shows a Phoenix with flame-like carvings in stone relief at the apex of one of the building's tympanums, such as to suggest a correlation between the witches' spells, Konigsplatz Square and the killing of the blind man.
12.8 - Birds have become generally considered symbolic of the feminine, and in that context the films' allusions to birds are to the female witches who have been connected in these notes to the half-human, half-bird harpies, and further related to Iris, who is portrayed herself as winged—albeit Iris, similar to Hermés, is comparable to the form of an angel. 12.9 - Aristophanes's comedy: The Birds, 414 B.C., Athens, involves Iris representing the gods, flying to the sky-city of the birds to greet them, only to be ridiculed and threatened with rape by their leader Pisetærus, an elderly Athenian man—Pisetærus tells her the birds are the gods now, the deities to whom the humans must sacrifice.
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§13.0 - ON THE PROTO-SATANIC, NEO-PAGAN FOLK-LORISM—Refer to Points 13.0–13.14, directly beneath.
13.1 - Witches are mostly evil; only a few are good, "white witches", and Dario Argento's filmic Mother's Trilogy involves the macabre, where macabre is used to evoke allusions of a proto-Satanic, Turkish / Eastern European or Asiatic culture of neo-pagan folk-lore. 13.2 - Iris has a connection to the harpies that are, while of the Grecian / Dacian neo-pagan mythic, invariably Satanic, because of their association with Hell—known as Tatarus—because the harpies were known to carry-off the daughters of King Pandareus to torture them on their way to Tartarus where they were given as servants to the Erinyes: refer to Homer's Odyssey 20.78. 13.3 - The indication is Grecian / Dacian mythological neo-paganism as it may be practiced contemporarily involves different divisions within the neo-pagan, such as the often asinine folk-lorist division to include every-day superstitions, which, in some respects could be interpreted as Satanic, or simply of a different religious focus to Christianity, that is, pending the rituals and symbolism involved. 13.4 - Regarding the some-what muted symbolism of the satyr(s) in Suspiria, 1 February 1977 Italy, 99 minutes, to further apply the psychoanalytical approach, the muted, censored and emptied-out allusions to the satyrs of the Iris narrative, rather than being considered as dimming their significance, magnifies it—particularly in the context of the horror genre text. 13.5 - In ancient Greek culture satyrs were tricksters, hubristic boasters, or debauched revelers, and Dionysian soldiers / legion, not necessarily with goats' hind-legs, but human in form except for a horse's or goat's tail. 13.6 - The iconography of satyrs are said to have gradually become associated with the god of Pan, regularly depicted with the legs and horns of a goat which is used in Christian depictions of Satan. 13.7 - The possibility of a proto-Satanic, Grecian / Dacian neo-paganism as informing the portrayal of the modern in Suspiria, circa 1977, is then open for serious argumentation. 13.8 - One counter-point of possible closure to that argument is the absence of Christian iconography in the film, which would have been prevalent throughout the Baden-Württemberg, German State—that is, because of the rule of symbolic binarism, the Satanic depends on an antagonism to Christianity: without Christianity, Satanism loses its definition and its traditions possibly regress in to cultish forms of neo-paganism. 13.9 - There is particularly relevant Christian iconography at the region of Freiburg, such as Freiburg's impressive, mediæval Minster / Cathedral of circa 1200 A.D., where a Christian parable in the inner portal expressed through sculptures of the ten virgins, viz. of The Parable Of The Wise And Foolish Virgins, which, similar to the film, speaks of traditions associated to girls and women. 13.10 - Regarding the parable—refer to Matthew 25:1–13: of the ten virgins, five were wise; five were foolish—throughout Europe sculptures of The Wise And Foolish Virgins were ubiquitous in church architecture, and continue to be found on many structures, such as: Amiens Cathedral; Auxerre Cathedral; Laon Cathedral; Notre Dame de Paris; Cathedral of Notre-Dame; Reims Strasbourg Cathedral; Erfurt Cathedral; Magdeburg Cathedral; many churches of Switzerland and Scotland; churches of Eastern Europe, viz. the portal leading in to the main church of Hovhannavank (Saint John) of Armenia, circa 1216 – circa 1221, that has carved scenes from the Parable of the Wise and Foolish Virgins. 13.11 - Beneath is a photograph of The Wise And Foolish Virgins at Magdeburg Cathedral's Paradise Door: not shown in the film, but is of the Christian German culture.
13.12 - Further, The Wise And Foolish Virgins formed the basis of a hymn: Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stimme by Philipp Nicolai, which Johann Sebastian Bach used for his chorale cantata: Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stimme, BWV.140, that is used as music for a one-act ballet titled: The Wise Virgins, circa 1941, by William Walton, with choreography by Frederick Ashton, such that there is indicated at least an indirect association to: Suspiria, circa 1977, a film that involves a narrative of ballet dancers in a once-Christian school and in a once singly Christian region of old Christendom, Western Europe. 13.14 - An argument could be averred that the film portrays a post-modern supplanting of the Christian traditions native to the people and lands of Western Germany, in which case the usurpation of Christianity is a Satanic mission itself.
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§14.0 - THE POST-MODERN ART DIRECTION OF SUSPIRIA, CIRCA 1977, 99 MINUTES—Refer to Points 14.0–14.12, directly beneath.
14.1 - 'The Whale House' in the past was made up of 17 separate buildings, now one house complex, opens on to the Franziskanerstraße, with the rear on the Gauchstraße, near Kartoffelmarkt square, that is named as such due to a reference to the biblical narrative of: Jonah And The Whale, Book of Jonah 2, 1:10. 14.2 - Further, the large house, that is the academy, next to its great gate, was residence to the Christian Humanist, Erasmus of Rotterdam, 28 October 1466 – 12 July 1536, as is shown at the start of the film in reference to a plaque near the house's front portico that commemorates Erasmus of Rotterdam, but the reference to the celebrated Christian scholar is arcane. 14.3 - The house contains stained glass windows but without Christian decorations set within them—to indicate the intricate Christian designs' removal, with a plain, single-coloured substitute. 14.4 - The tomato-red colouring of the house makes the building almost alarming during the taxi sequences to add to the filmic suspense, because the colour red may symbolize the redness of blood and be a warning or indicates a place of use of laudanum (alcohol with opium). 14.5 - A further space shown in the film is of Patricia's friend's apartment, of geometric, possibly Arabic patterning: the sky-light glass that breaks and falls in shards to kill Patricia's friend beneath, is of bold, geometric forms. 14.6 - It can be seen that the de-identification of such formerly iconographic Christian architecture is part of the "Pop aesthetic" of modernity, that itself is derivative of the sensational or thrilling of aesthetics associated with the use of opium, viz. the "pop" of the opium poppy—on which point Dario Argento's Mother Trilogy films are noted as partially based on the famed opium-user Thomas de Quincey's Suspiria de profundis / Latin: "sighs from the depths", circa 1845, a collection of several essays in the form of prose poems. 14.7 - Neo-classicism emerges as a type of post-modern triumph such as in reference to Greco-Roman statues which act as pots for plants in the main hall of the academy; arch-ways per se and with classical proportions found in Patricia's friend's apartment that are set against mystical geometry: the esoteric symbolism, presented in the film, needs only be decoded out of the neutrality of neo-classicism. 14.8 - Refer directly beneath to a still from the film: Suspiria, 1 February 1977 Italy, 99 minutes, of Patricia's friend's apartment as seen from the sky-light.
14.9 - The real "trick of the eye" is in reference to a door that is painted as part of the mural with many doors in Madame Blanc's office: the correct door opens when a blue iris, part of the room decoration, is manually turned by hand. 14.10 - The secret entrance is covered by blue velvet curtains behind which there is a passage way of black and gold painted walls inscribed in Latin and Hebrew phrases, that lead to a number of secret rooms, where the coven and its head-witch are kept concealed. 14.11 - Refer beneath to the film still from: Suspiria, 1 February 1977 Italy, 99 minutes, where Susie walks down the decorated secret hall-way of 'The Whale House'.
14.12 - To an extent the openly lived lives of the women are de-identified by modern, simple geometric forms of non-religious significance, which are contrast to the secret lives of the women, whose secret spaces are goldly ornate and evocative of paganism and, or, or the Satanic—which here is deduced as to indicate that the seductions of an absolute power (tyranny) are only expressable per se in such clandestine ways, viz. in the form of the coven; that is, in contrast to organisations such as the Sisters of Mercy, who have been highly influential throughout the world, represent a workable group of women with some power; not radical, maniacally defined power.
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