Cosmic Horror and The Mind’s Defloration
I watched Altered States again a few nights ago and came to
realize that in a way, the movie is a sort of Lovecraftian story, but without
Lovecraft, and is all the better for the absence of monsters. What makes it
Lovecraftian? What defines Lovecraftian?
What is cosmic horror?
To start with, I suppose I should replace the term
“Lovecraftian” with the phrase cosmic horror. Lovecraft had nothing to do with
the movie, so the name cannot rightfully be applied to it, but Lovecraft was a
master of cosmic horror. Very few movies, though, have been able to get it
right. Altered States is definitely a cosmic horror movie, and that is why it is
so thrilling.
What makes cosmic horror work? It’s not the monsters. There
are plenty of stories with monsters that do not present us with the feeling of
cosmic horror. It's the feeling that the story invokes, which Lovecraft could
do so well, but which movie-makers have failed time and again to reproduce on
the screen.
The main element of cosmic horror is the breakdown of the
concept of reality as we understand it. The veil, so to speak, is lifted, and
we discover that the universe is entirely different from how we imagined it.
The startling revelation causes us to think of our prior understanding of the
universe as quaint, or innocent, or naïve compared to the revelations of the
story.
Cosmic horror violates the virgin mind, and after this
mental virginity is lost, we cannot go back to thinking of the world the way we
did before. The mind has been stretched, contaminated, defiled. One contemplates
a life of trying to unsee, trying to unknow what one has been exposed to. This
is the hallmark of cosmic horror. We
seek the thrill of that first experience with a more complex, more complete
reality, and the only way to relive that first time our eyes were seared open
with vast knowledge is to move to a new story, to fresh ground that has never
been trod before. The universe must be expanded in some way that has not been
expanded before. After exposure to the cosmic horror, we slowly come to terms with
it, and then consider ourselves to be somehow more complete, more knowledgeable,
more urbane than the common man. They are like innocent children to us because
they have never been there.
What are the main ingredients of cosmic horror? There are
plenty of opinions out there, so I’ll stick with my own here.
Frontier
The first element is that there is always a frontier of some
kind. It can be the edge of space. It can be the bottom of the ocean. It can be
a lost chain of forgotten islands, forever shrouded by mist. It can be other dimensions
or even the human mind. The frontier can even be the edge of life and death. The
frontier must be remote enough so that we are unlikely to ever go there
ourselves, but close enough so that we feel that it touches us in some way.
Protagonist
The protagonist usually approaches the frontier out of
curiosity, hubris, or desperation. We expect the protagonist to have some
quality that enables him to approach and pierce the frontier that would turn us
away. Sometimes it is extreme bravery, but more often (especially with
Lovecraftian stories) the protagonist is gifted with a slight taint of
insanity: just a little weirdness, a harmless eccentricity, that imbues him
with a sort of power that draws him, like a magnet, inexorably closer to the
truth. Often, the protagonist has a form of genius, and is exploring new areas
of science that were undiscovered. The protagonist also has questionable
morality or judgment that causes him to continue forward when most morally upright,
or down-to-earth types would turn around and leave, saying “This is too weird
for me. I’m out of here!”
Revelation
The crucial moment in a cosmic horror story is the
revelation that things are not what they seem. This revelation might be
revealed in stages or all at once. The critical feature of the revelation is
that there is no return journey. We cannot go back to thinking about things the
way we were. The revelation therefore must somehow affect everyone in the
universe, on a cosmic scale. This is why it is cosmic horror. Our conception of
the universe is altered on a cosmic level. It does not matter how far the
frontier is from our home, once the revelation is opened to us, we realize that
the frontier is not so far, and that the world beyond is closer than we had
previously imagined. A separate dimension might be poised right above our own,
or even simultaneously inhabiting the same space, but for a minor glitch that
keeps the nightmarish universe at bay. Perhaps it is only the strength of the
barriers of the mind that prevent us from slipping into an infinite abyss of
horror that was always there, ever-present, but undetectable to us because of
our ignorance. Once the ignorance is washed away, we find ourselves teetering
on the precipice of the bottomless, yawning pit of insanity. Oh yes: the
revelation is never a pleasant one. It is never a discovery of a paradise
wherein we can all expect to go when we die. The revelation is always sinister,
malevolent, or empty.
Altered States
What makes Altered States a cosmic horror film is that it possesses
all of these characteristics.
Our protagonist, Dr. Jessup, is a scientist who experiments
with altered states of consciousness, with the belief that we possess genetic
memories of our ancestors that can be brought forth into lucidity by the right
concoction of drugs and sensory deprivation.
The frontier in this story is intriguing: this film presents
multiple frontiers, not just one.
The first frontier is the mind. We explore the subconscious,
religious symbolism, and the effects of psychedelic drugs. The mind is one of
the richest environments for exploration, as anything can take place, and
nothing has to mean anything. The subconscious brings forth visions and dreams of
which the conscious mind struggles to make sense. We could spend an eternity
trying to understand ourselves, but by nature of the conundrum of the mind
trying to capture itself, it will always evade us. It is a limitless frontier. Also,
it is a familiar frontier. We have all had dreams, and we have all thus tasted
the boundaries of this land, though we may not have properly explored it. It is
thus remote and familiar: alien, yet tantalizingly close.
There is also a temporal frontier, in which we explore the
ancient past through the mind of the Jessup. He wants to push himself to the very
limit of human existence, the first man, first woman, lost to eternity, but
palpably touchable for someone with the right capabilities. Although he does not travel back in time to
the dawn of human existence, he was able to go there in his mind, through the
magic of genetic memory. The first frontier opened the way to the second one.
The third frontier is the idea that the mind creates physical
phenomena. The Jessup’s body physically changes into something primitive, and
he leaves the isolation tank in a physical form that is totally different from
the being that went in. The concept seems ridiculous in the telling, but the
movie makes it seem real through the build-up. The idea plays upon the atavism
of magical thinking that we all have, deep down, though we deny it in our
waking mind: the idea that our mental states might have an effect on the real
world, or that maybe there is no real world, and that our mental states can
change the layout of our illusory world if we are given the right conditions.
This leads to the underlying conjecture that there is no reality at all, but we
live in a vast illusion, or a simulation. The possibilities then seem endless:
can we bring things about by wanting them? By fearing them? To what extent is
the world just an extension of our biases?
Throughout the journey, we are simultaneously intrigued and
repulsed. We sense there is something to fear in what Jessup is doing. We recognize
that he is pushing boundaries of human existence that should not be pushed.
Yet, we share his curiosity. We want, as Jessup wants, to understand the origin
of humanity. What is the essence of human nature? For eons, human prehistory,
and later human history, have buried ultimate truth under layer after layer of
misunderstanding, misinformation, miscommunication, bad translation. Jessup is
like an archeologist, delving deeper and deeper into a virgin tomb, promising
to get to the ultimate truth: which would allow us to finally understand
ourselves on fundamental level previously impossible: to go back to the origin,
stripping away all the clutter from our self-concept. The origin of the thing
is the only reality that matters. Everything else is obfuscation.
At one point, Jessup describes his time the previous night,
living as one of our primitive ancestors: no thoughts at all except for eating,
sleeping, and surviving. He describes this time as the most gratifying and
fulfilling time of his life. The idea opens up the conundrum of existential
crisis: maybe we think too much, and if
we just had nothing to think about but survival, we would be more content with
our lot. Maybe this is the ultimate truth? That we overthink everything, and
that outside of human contemplation, the world is really much simpler, and this
simpler form of existence is the sublime escape from our own mental prison.
The revelation was one step beyond the third frontier. Jessup
regresses, both physically and mentally, all the way back to the origin of
cellular life. He becomes a single flame, an ember of transient, delicate life,
flickering on the very edge of life and non-life, which his wife pulls from the
black-hole-like vortex of a primordial sea, and guides him back into the realm
of normal existence. He has done it: gone all the way to the beginning of life
itself, and then come back! What did he learn? We have witnessed his journey
from without, but only he knows where his journey took him. He does not reveal what
he discovered until the next evening, after he has had a chance to sleep
through the day after his ordeal. He explains to her, with poignant anguish,
that after all he had been through, his ultimate journey beyond time, to the
origin of life itself, at the source of it all, there was nothing. The ultimate
meaning to all life on our planet is nothing. Life came out of a cold,
indifferent, absolute vacuum of nothingness. This is the quiet and catastrophic
climax of the cosmic horror revelation. It was not the whirlpool or the man-ape
running around the city, or the spontaneous decomposition and recombination of
Jessup or the salvation of his wife. It was Jessup’s own words, where he
traveled to the brink of existence, beyond all human expeditions, to the origin
and true meaning of life itself, and found nothing but a void.
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