Sunday, November 17, 2013

Gathering Ground

Paula J. Sanders

It's the movies that have really been running things in America ever since they were invented. They show you what to do, how to do it, when to do it, how to feel about it, and how to look how you feel about it.---Andy Warhol

Let’s be artistically and brutally honest; anyone in 2013 can make a movie. Just point and click your way through YouTube…the all-access to technology truth is out there and people are actually impressed. (According to the number of views received anyway). I am simply not convinced that every moving picture out there is actually “art”.

 Friday night, I received an opportunity to have a private viewing of Benjamin Ward’s film The Soul Gatherer written by the extremely versatile actor, director, producer Mark-Brian Sonna (http://www.mbsproductions.net/) . Unlike most of the copycat, “look I have too much throw away cash and time on my hands independent movie”, this was actually a film; a really interesting film. An intriguing film as well. A thinking film.

Religious scholars, psychoanalysts and sociologist could spend hours disseminating the symbolism, metaphor and human condition and reason behind the haunting lens of this film and never come to a defining conclusion of its possible full meaning. That is what makes this such an captivating effort.

his film was rendered from a dream, birthed on the theater floor and finally brought to a passionate climax on screen, the viewer is immediately set a drift into a dark and rainy night of flooding emotion, regret, remorse and the innate human desire to have back what has been lost. Watching this film takes patience and a touch of voyeurism. We want to see the inside of other peoples pain but we don’t want them to know that we are actually enjoying it manifest itself into purposeful destruction right before our eyes. One by one each person trapped inside of the lack luster walls, seemingly safe, from the torrential rain, faces down their own personal pain revealing itself as Gideon, which means “destroyer” in Hebrew. Yet, as the story unfolds, it becomes more of a destructive anti-savior of all fatefully involved.

Aesthetically, The Soul Gatherer is filmed in black and white, which hails back to the days of film as art followed by the commitment to entertain. The sound f/x, the perfected silence between dialog and music cues, provides an uneasy, yet subtle tension, scene by scene, which is what makes the story move effectively forward. It draws you in. You have to know. Finally, the message, well just as in the film itself, you will have to find your own meaning, remember, this is a thinking film. This is subjective art, not spoon fed commercialize story telling. You will either get it or you won’t’ but it will get you.

 For more information about The Soul Gatherer go to www.strangermornings.com.