10 February 2025

A BRAVE ODDITY

Golem (Piotr Szulkin) 1979. Second Run. Blu Ray.

My usual complaint about mainstream SF cinema is its dearth of ideas, whether they been politically satiric, philosophical or genuinely scientific. Very few films hit you with the power of their imaginative speculation to make you think and doubt. I propose five benchmark films that have stood the test of time to challenge and shake the viewer and deliver on a metaphysical level: 2001, A Space Odyssey, Solaris, Stalker, Brazil and The Stone Tape.

So now that Golem, an unseen for years, defiantly independent, SF artefact, has surfaced again I find my complaint is not that it has too few ideas but too many. I gratefully applaud Golem’s radical inventiveness but too often this meant a bewildering incoherence. But first a plot outline.

After an atomic war in 1943 a new human race is created. Doctors control the technology. One of these new humans is Pernat (Marek Walczewski) who is only a 60% success. He lives in a semi-derelict part of the city and puzzles his already alienated neighbours. Constantly observed by the doctors and interrogated by the authorities, Pernat becomes the model for a Golem-like figure (The Golem is an artificial human being of Hebrew folklore: a clay person brought to live by being baked in an oven). And Pernat’s identification number assists in animating this creature.

I stress the word animating because director Piotor Szulkin experimented, at the famous Łodz film school, with animation before shooting his first feature, Golem. In fact there are moments in Golem that for me show the influence of Polish animators like Jan Lenica and Jan Svankmajer. This doesn’t mean a cartoonish film but one that today could be adapted as a graphic novel. Yet more remarkably there are visual similarities with Tarkovsky’s Stalker that was released in the same year as Golem. Both use colour filters to create an eerie gold, green and brown palette.

Golem’s lighting (achieved by the acclaimed cinematographer Zygmunt Samosiuk) is compelling; indeed it keeps moving the film forward despite the often disconcerting twists and turns of the script. Marek Walczewski gives a very credible and beautifully understated performance. He’s a man unaware of what’s happening to him and bereft of sufficient mental faculties to do anything about it: existing somewhere between a holy fool and a controlled automaton.

Pernat encounters a series of almost Dickensian characters, especially the female doll maker and the eccentric scholar who wishes to give Pernat a book that will explain his predicament. These odd people, along with a man who looks like a replica of Pernant, keep appearing and reappearing in an arbitrary and plotless manner. What grounds the weird narrative of these lost souls is Szulkin’s funny and disturbing intercutting to scientists and politician’s discussing the Pernat case.

I love the opening sequence, when realising that they have a failed creation on their hands, a doctor announces, as if it’s his childbirth duty, that maybe they ought to give Pernat a spanking like in the good old days. Cut to today’s newspaper, stuck in Pernat’s mouth, that the doctor says he hasn’t got round to reading yet, a darkly comic moment that pulls successfully away from the grim fate of having to cope in this crazy Golem world.

Unfortunately there’s too much that’s annoyingly mystifying in Golem. The episode set in the TV studio when the reality of an audience is doubted; the interruptions of the supposedly happy members of a brass band; the doll woman sitting on the steps championing her dolls and a general confusion other whether we are watching Pernat or a copy of Pernat are paraded throughout the film in an illogical manner. Absurdism is rife and absolutely central to Golem but it never quite digs deep enough to shock but remains in a strange dismembered state. Even on a second viewing I felt an information overload. Where was Golem going?

There is a resolution of sorts but I won’t reveal it. Golem both spurts out ideas and then gnomically hides them. Some work but many don’t. A film to chew over then even though there’s less meat on the bone. A serious and uncompromising fable that risks pretentiousness yet never actually falls flat on its face. All is kept watchable by its technical skill, the central performance and a defiant desire to not be classified. That last intention I don’t mind. I just wish the film had been better scripted and idea-wise reigned in. Golem is a brave oddity: an out to lunch curiosity that equally attracts and repels. It’s great that Second Run have made it available again. Pity it didn’t overwhelm me, though it’s destined to become a cult film of sorts.
  • Alan Price. [First published in London Grip]

31 January 2025

PAGANISM PERSISTING

Robin Douglas and Francis Young. Paganism Persisting. A History of European Paganism Since Antiquity. University of Exeter Press, 2024.


The first question of course, is 'what is Paganism?' The word 'pagan' arose amongst Christians in the fourth century to describe their unconverted neighbours. It was derived from the Latin paganus, which has a number of possible translations, including 'civilian' and 'villager'. It is not clear why this term was used, but it is clear that it was meant to have negative overtones. 
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22 January 2025

STATISTICAL REVIEW

As I wind down Magonia Review, I thought it might be interesting to see what were the reviews that attracted the most readers over the past fifteen years. Of course the older reviews will have had a longer time to attract readers, but some more recent entries feature in the Top Ten as well. I don't really know what it says about the value of the books, the acuity of the reviewers or the tastes of Magonia readers. 
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30 December 2024

THE VERY GREEN PARTY

John Clark. The Green Children of Woolpit: Chronicles, Fairies and Facts in Medieval England. University of Exeter Press, 2023.


The story of the Green Children, a boy and girl, coloured green and in green clothing, who appeared mysteriously in the Suffolk village of Woolpit some time in the mid twelfth century has been around for centuries, hovering between folklore, fairy-tale, Forteanism, and most recently ufology. 
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3 December 2024

"A PLACE TO LINGER IN STRANGENESS"

Greg Eghigian. After the Flying Saucers Came. A Global History of the UFO Phenomenon. Oxford University Press, 2023.


As I sign off from Magonia, this book seems to have arrived just in time. It is the definitive study of ufology from its exciting birth in the craziness of post WWII euphoria, the dreams of space travel, and the hope of encountering new worlds. But also there came the fears of the Cold War and possible nuclear annihilation, which might be avoided by the promise of new societies and new technologies the saucers might bring. 
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30 November 2024

LA VIE PARISIENNE

Tobias Churton. Aleister Crowley In Paris: Sex, Art, And Magick in the City of Light. Inner Traditions, 2023.

Aleister Crowley, ‘the wickedest man in the world’, a label attached to him by his strait-laced God-fearing mother, remains to this day a magnet for readers with an interest in the esoteric or the occult. Such readers will find in this book a mass of detail about Crowley’s life in Paris from his first glimpse of the city in 1883 until his involuntary removal from France by the French immigration authorities in 1929. 

1 November 2024

SET IN STONE

The Stone Tape (1972) Peter Sasdy (Director) 101 Films – Blu Ray (To be released on 9th December 2024)

Nigel Kneale is a master at fusing the genres of horror and science fiction. He often claimed he wasn’t writing genre TV and film drama but simply good drama. At one level he’s right. Although he does employ generic tropes what’s far more interesting is his engagement with speculative ideas (both paranormal and ‘normal’) and the psychological conflict of characters observed with great empathy, satire and irony.
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15 October 2024

HOLD THE BOILING OIL!


James Wright. Historic Building Mythbusting; Uncovering Folklore, History and Archaeology. History Press, 2024

There's always a hidden tunnel, isn't there? Whenever you are being shown round some old mansion, castle, church or even there will be someone who tells you about the hidden tunnel.
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6 October 2024

A CASE OF DEJA VU

Starve Acre (2023) Dir Daniel Kokotajlo BFI Blu Ray.


At the beginning of Starve Acre a young boy named Owen cannot sleep. When his mother speaks to him he says that the whistling has gone now. The next day, when his parents are resting, under a tree, near a cricket pitch, they’re disturbed by a young girl’s scream followed by the cry of a distressed horse that’s just had one of its eyes injured. The attacker is Owen holding a bloodstained twig.
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24 September 2024

LITERARY CRITICISM

Joshua Blu Buhs. Think to New Worlds; the Cultural History of Charles Fort and his Followers. University of Chicago Press, 2024.

In the days of the long forgotten UFO UpDates Internet discussion group, ufologist and Fortean Jerome Clark described much of Magonia's output as 'literary criticism'. He felt that, rather than studying the 'actual existing phenomena', we were more concerned about the manner in which they were described and written about and their influence on society, rather on examining what it is 'up there'.
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