so i compiled a list of all the films in this video that i could figure out. sharing in case anyone's interested: Testament of Orpheus - Jean Cocteau Godland - Hlynur Pálmason Come and See - Elem Klimov Au hasard Balthazar - Robert Bresson Le Dormeur - Pascal Aubier Fog Line - Larry Gottheim Martyrs - Bill Viola Dekalog - Krzysztof Kieślowski The Turin Horse - Béla Tarr The Zone of Interest - Jonathan Glazer Stalker - Andrei Tarkovsky The Spirit of the Beehive - Víctor Erice A Hidden Life - Terence Malik Nostalghia - Andrei Tarkovsky Ulysses' Gaze - Theo Angelopoulos After Life - Hirokazu Kore-eda Sculpting in Time - Andrei Tarkovsky Mirror - Andrei Tarkovsky Late Spring - Yasujirō Ozu 24 Frames - Abbas Kiarostami As I Was Moving Ahead Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty - Jonas Mekas Ordet - Carl Theodor Dreyer The Passion of Joan of Arc - Carl Theodor Dreyer Diary of a Country Priest - Robert Bresson Angel’s Egg - Mamoru Oshii Winter Light - Ingmar Bergman Into Great Silence - Philip Gröning The Gospel According to St. Matthew - Pier Paolo Pasolini Teorema - Pier Paolo Pasolini Decasia - Bill Morrison Pastoral: To Die in the Country - Shūji Terayama Koridorius - Sharunas Bartas Sátántangó - Béla Tarr The Color of Pomegranates - Sergei Parajanov From What Is Before - Lav Diaz Intolerance - D.W. Griffith Werckmeister Harmonies - Béla Tarr & Ágnes Hranitzky Metropolis - Fritz Lang
These are some of the most profound video essays on cinema and art in all of the Internet. I'm so glad I found your channel a few years back. Thank you very much for your incredible work! 🎬❤
This video is so important that I downloaded it and turned off my internet so that I can watch it without interruption. After watching it, the only thing I can say is that it is exactly what I expected: a masterpiece of a video.
This video spoke to me in so many profound ways. Your commentary, the reasoning, the logic, the magical, the existence of life, everything. How simple and yet beautiful life can be depending on the perspective which film helps us to focus on in a unique way. I have been studying alot of cinema lately as I aspire to make spiritual content and have not found many examples of the style I want until I came across your video on Transcendental Cinema. It is like the Universe listens and responds to every thought and intention, thank you!
This channel is truly a spark of inspiration, hope and beauty in the darkness that is current manifestation of our collective conscious on the internet. Thank you for that. We are all indebted to you.
@@victor.carrara There seems to be less of it about. I am happy to be contradicted. If you have any contemporary recommendations (Beyond the obvious… Malick et al) …?
@@OUTBOUND184 might be, i tend to see art cinema as always been a niche from the big production, but also an ever going production. And i think a interpretation of the theme of trancendence could be seen in some movies as Oblivion Verses from Khatami, newer Aki Kaurismaki production, Lazzaro Felice from Rohrwarcher, Drive My Car, Perfect Days from Wim Wenders
@@OUTBOUND184it never exactly went away - the issue was that it never got big in the first place. It's very easy to think it died when you don't hear much about it, but across the decades you barely did to begin with.
17:46 instantly started singing over the melody, but it took me like 20 seconds to realize what the song is. Concieved sorrow by Dir en Grey if im not mistaken.
I don’t disagree with anything here, but this video may as well have been titled “slow cinema”. I know the concept of transcendence is personal to everyone, but I think it deserves to be represented more generally. Some of my most transcendent experiences watching film have been during maximalist or wildly absurdist films. The works of Damon Packard, Giuseppe Andrews, David Blair, and Shinya Tsukamoto (to name a few) are great examples of artists with smaller budgets reaching transcendence through intimacy and explosiveness respectively.
The reason us humans make art is, weather we notice or not, is transcendental. We want to become closer to the higher things in life, what I and many others would call God.
@@funkymunky being the reverse is the same as being the obverse. ''That which is below is like that which is above and that which is above is like that which is below to do the miracle of one only thing'' wrote in his emerald tablet Hermes Trismegistus.
Thank you! This is/was EXCELLENT and very captivating! I want to ask you to cite the video directors and the movie names chronologically in Doobliedoo (the More section above the comments). I will rewatch it again to find the directors and movie names and then watch it again because it is worth a 4th or 5th watch!
Cloud Atlas, Blade Runner 2049, A Very Long Engagement; Quite Possibly Enemy, Let the Sunshine In, Monday, and A Ghost Story.. ... maybe 3,000 Years of Longing.. . 💯. ❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥
@TheKingWhoWins Depending on how one looks at it Sharky.. Lol. 🦈 🫶 These are *Not* the same Beasts we're talking about but however with that said this is a Fury Road Furiosa thing we have going on here.. .... They Each make the other Each of one Better. And Visa Versa. 🪆 No Disrespect. But Ridley is no Denis Villeneuve. He Never Will Be. 🫶 This is Insane I know Sweety but 2049 and Enemy are pretty much Better than *All* Scott's Work Put Combined.. 2049 Wipes the Floor with the Original. However it's (equally if not moreso) important to add that where 2049 is the mop made of Ivory. Scott's Vision is a mop bucket made of Gold. . ❤️🔥 ❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥 But if You Would Like to go in and explain where, how, why, and where Ridley's initial is "Obviously" the Superior - -- I'm Genuinely Interested. 👍🫵🙌🫶👐🤲🫶
So many interesting films several of which I never heard of, but it's kinda difficult to always here the title or the name of the director - a list of titles in the show notes would be great.
Here’s all the ones I could recognize in order of appearance in the video: The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928) Testament of Orpheus (1960) Mirror (1975) Come and See (1985) 24 Frames (2017) Angel’s Egg (1985) Godland (2022) The Color of Pomegranates (1969) Diary of a Country Priest (1951) Hour of the Wolf (1968) Stalker (1979) Marketa Lazarova (1967) Pastoral: To Die in the Country (1974) Persona (1966) Bullet Ballet (1998) Leviathan (2014) The Devil, Probably (1977) The Ascent (1977) Love Exposure (2008) Spirited Away (2001) Andrei Rublev (1966) Satantango (1994) Trial of Joan of Arc (1962) An Elephant Sitting Still (2018) Werckmeister Harmonies (2000) Eureka (2000) Au Hasard Balthazar (1966) Le dormer (1974) Fog Line (1970) Martyrs (2014) Decalogue (1990) The Turin Horse (2011) The Zone of Interest (2023) The Spirit of the Beehive (1973) A Hidden Life (2019) Nostalgia (1983) Ulysses’ Gaze (1995) After Life (1998) Late Spring (1949) Ordet (1955) Winter Light (1963) Gospel According to St. Matthew (1964) Teorema (1968) From What is Before (2014) Intolerance (1916) Metropolis (1927)
They do, don’t worry The deep nihilistic symbolism in Birdemic: Shock and Terror really is a continuation of the ideas put forth in Bela Tarr’s The Turin Horse. A lot of similarities between the two masterpieces
You forgot a very important artist, Jodorowsky, but I think you don't agree with his masterpieces or you don't understand & feeling his vibe of existence
Perhaps I should rethink my idea of transcendental cinema. Because I just never included films like Stalker and Come And See. To me it was always films like Solaris, Spring, Summer, Winter, fall, Altered States, The Seventh Seal etc.
It is easy to claim that certain visual experiences "relate directly to the heart" etc. - especially with our still strong religious cultural backdrop - but who actually has had such profound "transcendental experiences" while watching movies? These experiences are rather a) empathetic ones, for example when you see great social or personal tragedies on the screen, or b) just "picturesque sites" like wide shots etc., that is, postcard-like views of nature etc. that we deem to be powerful and compelling. The whole "transcendental experience" discourse is rather vague and keeps us from generating more detailed descriptions on how movies or audio-visual materials in general relate to us and why.
There is more than one film director with the last name of Glazer. It would be helpful if you could put in the description, or in a pinned comment, the first and last names of all the directors whose work is featured. I’m not a film director, so I’m not familiar with every film that suddenly pops up in front of me.
so i compiled a list of all the films in this video that i could figure out. sharing in case anyone's interested:
Testament of Orpheus - Jean Cocteau
Godland - Hlynur Pálmason
Come and See - Elem Klimov
Au hasard Balthazar - Robert Bresson
Le Dormeur - Pascal Aubier
Fog Line - Larry Gottheim
Martyrs - Bill Viola
Dekalog - Krzysztof Kieślowski
The Turin Horse - Béla Tarr
The Zone of Interest - Jonathan Glazer
Stalker - Andrei Tarkovsky
The Spirit of the Beehive - Víctor Erice
A Hidden Life - Terence Malik
Nostalghia - Andrei Tarkovsky
Ulysses' Gaze - Theo Angelopoulos
After Life - Hirokazu Kore-eda
Sculpting in Time - Andrei Tarkovsky
Mirror - Andrei Tarkovsky
Late Spring - Yasujirō Ozu
24 Frames - Abbas Kiarostami
As I Was Moving Ahead Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty - Jonas Mekas
Ordet - Carl Theodor Dreyer
The Passion of Joan of Arc - Carl Theodor Dreyer
Diary of a Country Priest - Robert Bresson
Angel’s Egg - Mamoru Oshii
Winter Light - Ingmar Bergman
Into Great Silence - Philip Gröning
The Gospel According to St. Matthew - Pier Paolo Pasolini
Teorema - Pier Paolo Pasolini
Decasia - Bill Morrison
Pastoral: To Die in the Country - Shūji Terayama
Koridorius - Sharunas Bartas
Sátántangó - Béla Tarr
The Color of Pomegranates - Sergei Parajanov
From What Is Before - Lav Diaz
Intolerance - D.W. Griffith
Werckmeister Harmonies - Béla Tarr & Ágnes Hranitzky
Metropolis - Fritz Lang
What’s the film around 3:36?
@@davidblack4839 just realized i missed a few. that one's Fan Chao's An Elephant Sitting Still
Do you know the movies in 0:47, 1:01, 3:50 and 0:53?
Thanks for this 🎉
Thank you for this list. Can anyone tell me which film appears at 1:29 please?
The essay I've been waiting 3 years for.
Dude, we're in the same boat sailing on the stream of consciousness
Life-changing, consciousness-expanding, enlightenment-enhancing, soul-healing, mind-elevating, transcendental gem
Yes
this but unironically
These are some of the most profound video essays on cinema and art in all of the Internet. I'm so glad I found your channel a few years back. Thank you very much for your incredible work! 🎬❤
This video is so important that I downloaded it and turned off my internet so that I can watch it without interruption.
After watching it, the only thing I can say is that it is exactly what I expected: a masterpiece of a video.
Uh based.
why not use an ad blocker lol
big fan of your channel bro, thanks for the content 🙏
This video is so important that i downloaded it and turned off my internet and computer and my eyes so that i can watch it in my mind.
This video spoke to me in so many profound ways. Your commentary, the reasoning, the logic, the magical, the existence of life, everything. How simple and yet beautiful life can be depending on the perspective which film helps us to focus on in a unique way. I have been studying alot of cinema lately as I aspire to make spiritual content and have not found many examples of the style I want until I came across your video on Transcendental Cinema. It is like the Universe listens and responds to every thought and intention, thank you!
Transcendental Cinema is also the name of a 1979 album by Brazilian artist Caetano Veloso.
Definitely looking for that NOW!
@@marxxthespot Caetano Veloso is really goood! Hope you like it.
Brazil mentioned!!!!
Satyajit Ray's Pather Panchali(1955) Trilogy should also be included.
Cinema cartography is a film school. Please make one video essay on Symbolism in cinema. How Symbols express meaning cinematically.
This channel is truly a spark of inspiration, hope and beauty in the darkness that is current manifestation of our collective conscious on the internet. Thank you for that. We are all indebted to you.
In one of those films is where you can find a meaning of life, or the path to find it. There's not more pure communication than that.
Always nice to hear Luiza's voice, her philosophical analysis are always on point.
The best film, by far, that I have seen in this category is Roberto Rossellini's The Flowers of St. Francis. A VARY moving stone cold masterpiece.
God, this might have changed my life. Thank you.
Never thought I would hear a Dir en grey song in a video by The Cinema Cartography
Cinema is the splendor of thruth
I’m so happy there’s a new video!
There needs to be a revival of this kind of cinema.
But did it died?
@@victor.carrara There seems to be less of it about. I am happy to be contradicted. If you have any contemporary recommendations (Beyond the obvious… Malick et al) …?
@@OUTBOUND184 might be, i tend to see art cinema as always been a niche from the big production, but also an ever going production.
And i think a interpretation of the theme of trancendence could be seen in some movies as Oblivion Verses from Khatami, newer Aki Kaurismaki production, Lazzaro Felice from Rohrwarcher, Drive My Car, Perfect Days from Wim Wenders
@@OUTBOUND184 Also another great one is The History of Eternity, from Camilo Cavalcante
@@OUTBOUND184it never exactly went away - the issue was that it never got big in the first place. It's very easy to think it died when you don't hear much about it, but across the decades you barely did to begin with.
One of the best channels of youtube
I love that after each of your videos I find a lot of movies to watch
Beautiful! Meaningful! Essential!
Hello everyone from Goshen, Indiana USA 🍻
17:46 instantly started singing over the melody, but it took me like 20 seconds to realize what the song is.
Concieved sorrow by Dir en Grey if im not mistaken.
Magical! Keep up the good work! 😍
I don’t disagree with anything here, but this video may as well have been titled “slow cinema”. I know the concept of transcendence is personal to everyone, but I think it deserves to be represented more generally. Some of my most transcendent experiences watching film have been during maximalist or wildly absurdist films. The works of Damon Packard, Giuseppe Andrews, David Blair, and Shinya Tsukamoto (to name a few) are great examples of artists with smaller budgets reaching transcendence through intimacy and explosiveness respectively.
Ohhhh I been waiting on this one
This is beautiful and inspiring thank you
Keeeeeep Going !!! God Bless you
thank you 🙏🙏
New Cinema Cartography? Is it my birthday already?
I would love a deep dive into the works of Kenneth Anger concerning aesthetic and occult symbolism!!!
i fucking love this channel
The reason us humans make art is, weather we notice or not, is transcendental. We want to become closer to the higher things in life, what I and many others would call God.
It's the opposite. À bas le ciel.
@@funkymunky being the reverse is the same as being the obverse. ''That which is below is like that which is above and that which is above is like that which is below to do the miracle of one only thing'' wrote in his emerald tablet Hermes Trismegistus.
It’s a lot of big words to say- art makes you FEEL. You connect emotionally, usually in an instant, for good or bad.
Thank you!
This is/was EXCELLENT and very captivating!
I want to ask you to cite the video directors and the movie names chronologically in Doobliedoo (the More section above the comments).
I will rewatch it again to find the directors and movie names and then watch it again because it is worth a 4th or 5th watch!
Así me gusta el cine, como arte, como medio de buscar la belleza y en sintonía con un sentido en el sin sentido de la vida
Whats the piano version of aint afraid to die used in the finding memory section?
Great video!
Well done
Cloud Atlas, Blade Runner 2049, A Very Long Engagement; Quite Possibly Enemy, Let the Sunshine In, Monday, and A Ghost Story.. ... maybe 3,000 Years of Longing.. . 💯. ❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥
2049.
The original is the best, but it's a great sequel
@TheKingWhoWins
Depending on how one looks at it Sharky.. Lol. 🦈 🫶
These are *Not* the same Beasts we're talking about but however with that said this is a Fury Road Furiosa thing we have going on here.. .... They Each make the other Each of one Better. And Visa Versa. 🪆
No Disrespect. But Ridley is no Denis Villeneuve. He Never Will Be. 🫶
This is Insane I know Sweety but 2049 and Enemy are pretty much Better than *All* Scott's Work Put Combined..
2049 Wipes the Floor with the Original. However it's (equally if not moreso) important to add that where 2049 is the mop made of Ivory. Scott's Vision is a mop bucket made of Gold. . ❤️🔥 ❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥
But if You Would Like to go in and explain where, how, why, and where Ridley's initial is "Obviously" the Superior - -- I'm Genuinely Interested. 👍🫵🙌🫶👐🤲🫶
Thanks!
Thank you for your support!
Any way of finding the names for all of the films shown in this video?
Why do these bomb videos come out when I’m taking my finals!😭
So many interesting films several of which I never heard of, but it's kinda difficult to always here the title or the name of the director - a list of titles in the show notes would be great.
Would anyone be able to list all the films mentioned visually and as part of the discussion?
Here’s all the ones I could recognize in order of appearance in the video:
The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928)
Testament of Orpheus (1960)
Mirror (1975)
Come and See (1985)
24 Frames (2017)
Angel’s Egg (1985)
Godland (2022)
The Color of Pomegranates (1969)
Diary of a Country Priest (1951)
Hour of the Wolf (1968)
Stalker (1979)
Marketa Lazarova (1967)
Pastoral: To Die in the Country (1974)
Persona (1966)
Bullet Ballet (1998)
Leviathan (2014)
The Devil, Probably (1977)
The Ascent (1977)
Love Exposure (2008)
Spirited Away (2001)
Andrei Rublev (1966)
Satantango (1994)
Trial of Joan of Arc (1962)
An Elephant Sitting Still (2018)
Werckmeister Harmonies (2000)
Eureka (2000)
Au Hasard Balthazar (1966)
Le dormer (1974)
Fog Line (1970)
Martyrs (2014)
Decalogue (1990)
The Turin Horse (2011)
The Zone of Interest (2023)
The Spirit of the Beehive (1973)
A Hidden Life (2019)
Nostalgia (1983)
Ulysses’ Gaze (1995)
After Life (1998)
Late Spring (1949)
Ordet (1955)
Winter Light (1963)
Gospel According to St. Matthew (1964)
Teorema (1968)
From What is Before (2014)
Intolerance (1916)
Metropolis (1927)
@@RetroEste Thank you! 🖤
Thank you@@RetroEste
@@RetroEste Hey Thanks for the list. can u pls name which documentary mentioned at 16:18.
@@aarshagrawalfjjyvczjli4257 decades of personal footage one? As i was moving ahead I saw brief glipses of beauty
whats the film at 0:46 between Mirror & Come and See?
What is the greek word she mentions in the moddle of the video ? Does anyone know its meaning?
🖤
I want all the movie in this video pls all of them pls😢
Haven't watched yet but if you don't mention Birdemic: Shock and Terror I'm unsubbing.
They do, don’t worry
The deep nihilistic symbolism in Birdemic: Shock and Terror really is a continuation of the ideas put forth in Bela Tarr’s The Turin Horse. A lot of similarities between the two masterpieces
Thank you. Any chance you can id the one at 3:50?
Yûreka / Eureka (Shinji Aoyama, 2000)
♥
YO can someone put the list films shown here in the comments
I once saw a movie called “ The head of Ulysses”
Tried to find it but until now no result
Transcendental video essay
can you give name of all the films used in the video
Excelente🇧🇷👊
Names of all the movies in description please
1:52, 1:55 and 13:40 movies please? 🐱
Sharknado, Sharknado 3 and Here comes Honey Booboo
13:40 it’s After Life (1998)
@@GianCipo95 Thank you so much ❤
1:52 it's Den-en ni shisu (1974)
@@ZPALMY hey i answered first
I would say video games can also capture the flow and texture of time, etc… 😬
Let's go
3:10 name of the film this shot comes from, please?
Նռան գույնը / The Color of Pomegranates (Sergei Parajanov, 1969)
You forgot a very important artist, Jodorowsky, but I think you don't agree with his masterpieces or you don't understand & feeling his vibe of existence
Mere make-believe.
God has become commodified.
Perhaps I should rethink my idea of transcendental cinema. Because I just never included films like Stalker and Come And See. To me it was always films like Solaris, Spring, Summer, Winter, fall, Altered States, The Seventh Seal etc.
where did you get that version of koyaanisqatsi music in the first segment
Have you guys heard of this one movie? Idk if you’ve heard of it but it’s called pulp fiction and…
The ultimate achievement of moving pictures… is stillness 👏👀
Jodorowsky
It is easy to claim that certain visual experiences "relate directly to the heart" etc. - especially with our still strong religious cultural backdrop - but who actually has had such profound "transcendental experiences" while watching movies? These experiences are rather a) empathetic ones, for example when you see great social or personal tragedies on the screen, or b) just "picturesque sites" like wide shots etc., that is, postcard-like views of nature etc. that we deem to be powerful and compelling. The whole "transcendental experience" discourse is rather vague and keeps us from generating more detailed descriptions on how movies or audio-visual materials in general relate to us and why.
There is more than one film director with the last name of Glazer. It would be helpful if you could put in the description, or in a pinned comment, the first and last names of all the directors whose work is featured. I’m not a film director, so I’m not familiar with every film that suddenly pops up in front of me.
Stalker thumbnail
Good but... I don't like the word "transcendent" for these images, for these films. For example Tarkovsky is not transcendent at all.
Please, tell me, which of Tarkovsky's films mentioned here are "beyond or above the range of normal or merely physical human experience"?
@@zackbard9420 eh..? explain better, please.
I agree. They do not transcend life into some other realm, but immerse us in what was always there
Thanks!
❤