Delicacies of Molten Horror Synapse (1991) Poster

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6/10
Grotesque infusions
ackstasis14 March 2010
'Delicacies of Molten Horror Synapse (1991)' was described as follows by its creator: "The primary "Molten Horror" is TV - though there are other horrors metaphored in the film. Four superimposed rolls of hand-painted and bi-packed television negative imagery are edited so as to approximate the hypnagogic process whereby the optic nerves resist grotesque infusions of luminescent light." Before you all scramble for a dictionary, the word "hypnagogic" means "of or pertaining to drowsiness." With this in mind, the film does do a fair job of recreating those hazy seconds before one falls asleep before a television, an indistinct garble of flickering lights and shadows, their incomprehensibility an open invitation to surrender to one's fatigue.

However, most overwhelming is the sense that one can feel the radiation emanating from their television screen (similar to the smothering warmth of 'Cat's Cradle (1959)'). The ten-minute film is a succession of "warm" colours, occasionally interrupted by a distorted screen flicker that suggests one is sitting far too close to the television. At one point, Brakhage focuses on a molten red "eye," perhaps a magnified artifact on the screen, which rather disconcertingly blinks in unison with the viewer. Though I later failed to capture it frame-by-frame, there's also a lengthy succession of images that I could swear depicted the shimmering skeletal frame of a human (mostly the pelvic region), as though the radiation is passing straight through skin and flesh.
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2/10
Not a delicacy for movie audiences
Horst_In_Translation11 August 2015
Warning: Spoilers
I have absolutely no clue what the title "Delicacies of Molten Horror Synapse" means and after watching this short film I still don't know. It runs for 8 minutes which is fairly long for Brakhage standards and yet he has made films as well that last 30 minutes. The style is the same here, constant flickering of images that makes it impossible what is going on or what the story is if there is any at all. Brakhage was already older when he made this one, getting closer to 60 and divorced from his wife Jane who starred in some of his earlier works and was mother to all5 of Brakhage's children. Well.. I cannot really write anything else about this film as there was just no story. Only colors, lights and that's it. A great example of style over substance from a very overrated director. Thumbs down.
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