Invocation (1985)

4 min; English; dir. Lesley Keen

From Lesley Keen’s YouTube page: “Invocation originated as a sequence within the documentary Orpheus Through the Ages made by Pelicula Films to accompany Orpheus and Eurydice [her animated film from 1984]. It was designed to illustrate the Ancient Greek myth of the Creation of the world. It was shot on 16mm and subsequently enlarged onto 35mm for festival screenings. The techniques employed were a test run for those which ultimately were used within Ra; the Path of the Sun God [her feature film from 1990].” This film, like Orpheus and Eurydice, was made as commissions for UK’s Channel 4 in the 1980s.

What she does not mention here, but quickly becomes evident from the narration of the film (click for transcript), is that this is a variation on the Orphic myth of creation from ancient Greece, which differs significantly from the more canonical version of creation in Hesiod’s Theogony, which is known best to us moderns.

The mystery cult of Orphism was an alternative to traditional religion centered on the teachings of Orpheus, who acquired divine knowledge when he went to the underworld. The cult revered the god Dionysus (sometimes known as Zagreus), who, in this belief system, was born of the union of Persephone and Zeus, and who was killed and consumed as a baby by the Titans. Zeus blasted the Titans with a thunderbolt and humans were formed from the resulting soot, which contained a bodily element from the remains of the Titans and a divine element from those of Dionysus. Initiation into the cult allowed humans to transcend this evil, bodily element and break the grievous cycle of reincarnation to which we are subject.

In Orphic belief, there were other, less familiar entities who facilitated the emergence of creation long before Zeus and the Titans came into being. These include Time, Necessity, and Aether, who created the cosmic egg, out of which Phanes (sometimes Eros), a bisexual deity, was born. Phanes’s union with Night gave rise to Heaven and Earth (aka Ouranos and Gaia) who then created the Titans and Zeus. Zeus then consumed Phanes and recreated the world. It was then that the birth of Dionysus outlined above took place.

Impressively, all of this is represented in dynamic terms in Keen’s mesmerizing experimental film, and in less than four minutes. Using simple line drawings on a black background, colors and symbols in motion, and an alien-inspired synth soundscape, she brings to life one of the most mysterious myths of the ancient world.

More: https://greatwomenanimators.com/lesley-keen/

The Pink Panther: “Pinky and the Golden Fleece” (1994)

10 min.; Season 2, Episode 13; English

In 1993, MGM/UA rebooted the Pink Panther franchise with a new TV series that lasted two seasons. In this series, unlike in previous ones, the Panther was a speaking character, which was apparently a controversial change.

This episode blends quintessential elements from the epic stories of Jason, Odysseus, Theseus and Perseus to create a silly adventure for Pinky (the Pink Panther), a shepherd who is tending to two sheep, one white and one gold. A burly soldier who identifies himself as Jason appears when Pinky is grooming the pair. He demands the golden fleece for his wife, but is refused, as the sheep belongs to the king.

The two sheep participate in a fashion show and the queen demands that a stole be made for her from the golden fleece. Jason steals the fleece and flees but a strand of its wool leaves a clue, much like Ariadne’s ball of thread, for Pinky and his sheep sidekick to pursue.

Jason escapes by boat and throws food in the water to rouse a sea serpent who tries and fails to eat the pursuing pair. He then retreats to an island where he order some “babes on a half-shell” to sing and seduce his pursuers. These apparent Sirens do slow the two down, but they themselves are seduced by the false offer or a recording contract by Pinky in disguise. Next Pinky and the sheep are lured to a cave where a doofy Cyclops lives. He places them on a rotisserie, but they escape by distracting him with a Viewfinder (which he can’t figure out how to use). [A Cyclops also appears in the episode “Pinkus Pantherus” from the show’s first season.]

Finally they catch up to Jason as he reaches home, only to find that all of the golden sheep’s fleece has unraveled. Jason’s wife grows enraged at this and reveals herself as Medusa. She transforms various things to stone with her zapping gaze, including her husband. Pinky is able to avoid this fate by quickly weaving a wig from the golden fleece for her, which she welcomes with pleasure. He then returns home and tricks the queen by making her stole from his sidekick’s fleece and painting it gold.

More: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Pink_Panther_(TV_series)

Start a Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑