Still one of my favorite scenes in the movie. I see this as more like a fun little break from the serious and bizzare and paint-wasting amazing sureal scenes.
@@srbrant5391 i asked specifically for my mother to be cremated but She wasn't. I was taken by the psychologist to an RSA when i came back i tried to find the grave but couldn't.
my favorite part of the film. The bit with the guy ranting about psychedelics and then feeding them to the kid after uttering "is eternity" sinister as fuck feels like the WILDEST cosmic joke when it happens if you watch this movie tripping lol.
He represents Timothy Leary, IIRC. Leary felt the solution to everything was that everybody should indulge in psychedelics/LSD and never shut up about it. Leary didn’t account for the human factor that not everyone wants or needs enlightenment, he was too busy caught up in public pseudophilosphocal masturbation delivered in the form of lectures about his acid trips. Which brings me to my point; you’re absolutely right. It’s incredibly sinister to do this to someone because he’s simply forcing his worldview and addictions onto others seeking answers.
@@MrSoopSA The mountain's summit is literally nothing. There is nothing there, and it turns out to all be an illusion. This is why the Alchemist has the camera pull back and why he says that real life awaits us. Enlightenment itself is an illusion.
once and awhile is okay. and in my opinion, anytime u do psychedelics, u mite as well go all out , just be safe and plan accordingly. also the guy in this scene is what not to do, cus while psychedelics do enhance your consciousness, too much will actually do the opposite.
@Revanalyst The critique is that real life has to be dealt with rather you want to deal with it or not, and no amount of drugs can fully remove you from reality. But I can still try my hardest
They are the last vestiges of materialistic temptation. One can use enlightenment to write poems and make movies, but the protagonists view it as selling out because they are essentially selling a product, not anything truly meaningful. They are betrayers to the path, but it is not their fault either.
To me it represents people who showcase their “enlightenment” for either praise, profit or just to be contrarian. The poet thinks he can enlighten people just with words but since he’s at the bar he makes no actual sacrifices nor does he test himself spiritually. He just tells people things they think they need to hear in order to appear wise and educated. The stoner represents someone who’s so in denial about their addiction to escapism and drugs that he ascribes genuine spiritual moments to mere narcotics fueled trips. He can’t accept the fact that others can achieve spiritual enlightenment without drugging themselves since he himself is so numbed and disconnected from reality and from himself. The mountaineer represents people who do in fact put effort into achieving great things in life, but do so with very superficial goals. Whether it’s working out or developing a professional skill, if your only end goal is glory and physical pleasure than you’re not advancing yourself vertically aka spiritually. He feels immense satisfaction in his accomplishments but only momentarily before he’s reminded of the fact that he’s back where he started.
I am here because a Staten Island man named Vinny was screaming about crossing a holy mountain horizontally. I was not disappointed.
Still one of my favorite scenes in the movie. I see this as more like a fun little break from the serious and bizzare and paint-wasting amazing sureal scenes.
But that in itself makes it the essential and core message of the film.
Definetly. The guy who can only go through the mountain horizontally is hilarious!
I forgot about this scene, but now when I'm watching it, I think this represents the "fake gurus" and fake beliefs in today society
The bartender's words are explicit, "I have found the academy"
I don't know who was more confused: the audience or the spirits at the cemetery when this was filmed.
Audience and souls: what the hell is going on?
This Is what The psychologist Watch, because i Always speak of war. SINCE i had nevera Heard of you.😢
@@PriscillaBarberi Are you feeling alright?
@@srbrant5391 i asked specifically for my mother to be cremated but She wasn't. I was taken by the psychologist to an RSA when i came back i tried to find the grave but couldn't.
@@PriscillaBarberi Erm, okay…
my favorite part of the film. The bit with the guy ranting about psychedelics and then feeding them to the kid after uttering "is eternity" sinister as fuck feels like the WILDEST cosmic joke when it happens if you watch this movie tripping lol.
He represents Timothy Leary, IIRC. Leary felt the solution to everything was that everybody should indulge in psychedelics/LSD and never shut up about it. Leary didn’t account for the human factor that not everyone wants or needs enlightenment, he was too busy caught up in public pseudophilosphocal masturbation delivered in the form of lectures about his acid trips. Which brings me to my point; you’re absolutely right. It’s incredibly sinister to do this to someone because he’s simply forcing his worldview and addictions onto others seeking answers.
Watched this coming down off acid and I found the film so funny
Watched it in five different trips and everytime it's like a puzzle to my soul
I Love this Movie so much I’ve watched this at least 20 times. And everyone I find something new and interesting . Alejandro Jodorowsky The Best❤️🙏🏾
Me too
Alejandro Jodorowsky is the most prescious thing on every planet ever
The 70ies were a wild time for movies.
3:08 - “I am Mexican Heavy Weapons Guy.”
Goated references
Ha, a 90's NYC reggae band called, Dubadelic sampled the pharmacist's speech at 2:00 in one of their tunes.
Which song?
Incredible movie. Terry Gilliam was inspired by this scene for The Holy Grail
Is this teally true?
And we are already forgetting you
The devil takes in forms of temptation
When you get to the end of the movie, the entire meaning becomes something radically different.
I am crying golden tears
Like the cinematography
this movie blew my mind and I wasn't even high
Horizontally!!!
off topic - @3:40 drops of rain appearing on monument behind & to the left of guy
favorite clip
Best just leave those poor souls to their own "enlightenment".
Everyone finds joy and fulfillment in something. The summit of the mountain isn't an absolute.
For some people the concept of enlightenment is merely an excuse for indulgence.
@@MrSoopSA The mountain's summit is literally nothing. There is nothing there, and it turns out to all be an illusion. This is why the Alchemist has the camera pull back and why he says that real life awaits us. Enlightenment itself is an illusion.
2:00 is that actor the same that appeared in ace ventura ?
The music is on point! What genre is it?
Hmm. Big Band / Psychedelic Disco? No idea but the song is called "Pantheon Bar (Bees Make Honey…)"
Sounds a lot like Ennip Marricone
It's just default calm town music.
And in this beautiful young man is Adrenochrome
Scarlett Johansson cameo @2:00 !
Scartlet was born in 1984 this movie was film in 1973.
2:00 Its pauly shore lol
It's also Joe Rogan's entire persona.
@@shaynedouglasfertile nailed it
@@shaynedouglasfertile
Nah the chimp is missing
Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.
Jesus had the best dope
Don't 'get' the turtles @ 0.05 ?
They contradict his promise of excitement and fame, when his flock are really sloths.
Whenever the guy swallows a mouthful of the acid candy, a burning jealousy always rises up within me. One day I'll be able to share that experience
That guy was being critiqued lol
once and awhile is okay. and in my opinion, anytime u do psychedelics, u mite as well go all out , just be safe and plan accordingly. also the guy in this scene is what not to do, cus while psychedelics do enhance your consciousness, too much will actually do the opposite.
You weren't meant to idolise him. He's being critiqued as shallow
@Revanalyst The critique is that real life has to be dealt with rather you want to deal with it or not, and no amount of drugs can fully remove you from reality. But I can still try my hardest
and then it reveals the self righteous quest to the summit of the holy mountain is nothing more than that... a self righteous quest.@@Revanalyst
Frank Zappa
Was he him?
My guess is that the Pantheon Bar means to represent "The Universities"
Nah
They are the last vestiges of materialistic temptation. One can use enlightenment to write poems and make movies, but the protagonists view it as selling out because they are essentially selling a product, not anything truly meaningful. They are betrayers to the path, but it is not their fault either.
@@MrSoopSA yeah something like that, a lot of Young people go to the university expecting they become "Millionaire philosophers"
@@ricardoguanipa8275 I’m back in university at 35 for my MS and this is entirely accurate.
To me it represents people who showcase their “enlightenment” for either praise, profit or just to be contrarian.
The poet thinks he can enlighten people just with words but since he’s at the bar he makes no actual sacrifices nor does he test himself spiritually. He just tells people things they think they need to hear in order to appear wise and educated.
The stoner represents someone who’s so in denial about their addiction to escapism and drugs that he ascribes genuine spiritual moments to mere narcotics fueled trips. He can’t accept the fact that others can achieve spiritual enlightenment without drugging themselves since he himself is so numbed and disconnected from reality and from himself.
The mountaineer represents people who do in fact put effort into achieving great things in life, but do so with very superficial goals.
Whether it’s working out or developing a professional skill, if your only end goal is glory and physical pleasure than you’re not advancing yourself vertically aka spiritually. He feels immense satisfaction in his accomplishments but only momentarily before he’s reminded of the fact that he’s back where he started.
Far out.