Aldous Huxley: The Gravity of Light

1996
5.8| 1h10m| en
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A look at the books written by Huxley as well as his drug experimentation.

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Also starring Judy Klassen

Reviews

Gutsycurene Fanciful, disturbing, and wildly original, it announces the arrival of a fresh, bold voice in American cinema.
Janae Milner Easily the biggest piece of Right wing non sense propaganda I ever saw.
Derry Herrera Not sure how, but this is easily one of the best movies all summer. Multiple levels of funny, never takes itself seriously, super colorful, and creative.
Geraldine The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.
mroconnell New Age/Techno soundtracking and pretentious panning across a table covered in melted ice cream scoops do not a documentary make. While Oliver Hockenhull is quick to warn the viewer that this is not going to succeed as a "proper documentary" I'm gonna go ahead and say it's a pretty lousy attempt at demonstrating Huxley's writings.The entire documentary essentially consists of running Huxley quotes over ominous, canned music and effects tracks with an occasional reenactment that cable TV would be ashamed of.Maybe that's an accurate representation of Huxley's work, but I think there might've been a better less artificial/pretentious way to present these ideas.
marthalovelycat This film is an intriguing abstraction and discovery of Huxley's work.Counter to the highly antagonistic review of someone else on IMDb this work is not at all made to exploit the Huxley name...it was actually made with the permission of Laura Huxley - Huxley's last wife and with the approval of Dr. Jean Houston, (who also features prominently in the work) - an important pal of Aldous Huxley and one who supplied him with test material (if you get my drift). How do I know? It says so in the film and I read an interview with the filmmaker.It is a radical work and not for everyone. if you want to see the biography channel version - you might have to wait awhile. Huxley was a radical and only a radical could do justice to his work so radical in fact that this work will probably never get shown on US channels.I completely agree that the computer image work in the film is cheapo looking, I guess what was cool years ago seems pathetic to us. Luckily that stuff is not a major part of the film.The DVD version that is out also includes a half hour interview section with Alexander "Sasha" Shulgin, Ph.D. (Biochemistry from U.C. Berkeley, 1954). Shulgin is pretty famous in the circles of psychopharmacology research. Essential subversive stuff and you're not going to find that at Walmarts.
mmepalkowski This 'documentary' really is awful. It's comprised of terrible mind numbing drivel forged from the inane and nonsensical ramblings of an obviously tortured art-school dropout's LSD-abused mind. You'd have better luck actually _reading_ any of Huxley's works. I honestly cringed at every single interpretation after each Huxley quote, video clip or sound bite was stitched into this sad work of a head case. I really don't care what the filmmaker's ridiculous interpretations might entail; there's no excuse for this piece of garbage. Nothing makes sense other than what comes from Huxley. Don't waste your time. This is a shameful interpretive-dance attempt to exploit Huxley's works.
mzee Aldous Huxley: The Gravity of Light is a mind expanding documentary not only introspectively, but its persuasiveness urges you to go out and read all of Huxley's works. What the man says is true and whether our peers or superiors agree it doesn't matter. There are two parts of life to discover external and internal and it the second that he describes how to reach so well.Hockenhull medleys real time interviews and speeches of Huxley and his peers/colleagues, also with dramatizations reciting exurps from the various writings by Huxley into a touching sensory experience we should all read into. One would also think that it was made earlier than 96 because of it's 70's graphics style looking very primitive to what we are used to now...adding to the psychological age of the discovery of LSD and its immense power.

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