Aaron Moorhead and Justin Benson have wowed audiences with their mind-bending (and genre-bending) films Resolution, Spring, and The Endless. All of these films share the similarity of slyly tackling complex philosophical and/or metaphysical subject matter in an entertaining package. The other commonality they all share is that the less you know about where the film is going, the more fun the journey will be.
Moorhead and Benson's latest film Synchronic has just these same qualities. Therefore, it would be a disservice to go too deep into the plot or reveal any key elements about the destination of this new journey. But it's important to know at least a few facts about the setup.
In Synchronic, Anthony Mackie and Jamie Dornan play best buds and co-workers who spend their days together hanging out and their evenings side by side as EMTs. The pair operate in New Orleans, so as you might expect, they see their fair share of party-related emergency calls and overdoses. But when a new designer drug (the titular Synchronic), hits the streets of the Big Easy, the emergency calls take a turn for the bizarre and our heroes decide to get to the bottom of where this drug came from and what the hell it is.
To mark the world premiere of Synchronic at the Toronto International Film Festival, Screen Anarchy sat down with Moorhead and Benson. But instead of talking about any of the details of their new film, we thought it would be better to talk about other movies that they are free to spoil.
One last thing that is important to know about Synchronic is that the film contains some truly awesome visual effects. Those VFX, at times, are used to represent the perceptual states of the characters. So Moorhead and Benson agreed to dig in on this subject they tend to know a fair amount about.
Without further ado, we present Aaron Moorhead and Justin Benson's list of Best Examples of Visually Communicating Altered States in Cinema.
Moorhead: For me, I actually get the most scared when Kubrick intercuts between the man's vibrating eyes at extreme speeds and the giant baby. That is so terrifying to me -- and not because it's hallucinatory, but because it actually feels like you are being presented with what is really happening. No matter how deep you go and how scary a hallucination is, you always know it's a dream. But when you present the hallucination as real, that's when it you get true terror.
Benson: But also Enter the Void uses it's visual representation for death. In that movie, I think they're taking DMT -- and one interesting thing people talk about with that drug is that highly intelligent, functioning people who are totally sober in their real lives can take that drug and meet things from another dimension, or meet God, or become an electron in the Big Bang. And they have these experiences and really believe in them. And death is another one of those things. So this experiential representation of death could be the same and make people really comfortable with it.
Moorhead: Simply believing in things, as we know as human beings, almost does make them real.
Benson: When we see things in cinema, so are we really bringing the immaterial into the material?
Moorhead: We know that cinema drives culture. Whatever's in movies, is what people are actually responding to, and that's what brings it into fruition.
Benson: And since cinema drives culture, we're changing reality.
Moorhead: We're changing reality by observing and believing in it. So in that sense, cinema literally is bringing the immaterial into the material.
Toronto 2019 Interview: SYNCHRONIC Directors Moorhead & Benson's Favorite Cinematic Representations of Altered States