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Synopsis

CREMASTER 3 (2002) is set in New York City and narrates the construction of the Chrysler Building, which is in itself a character – host to inner, antagonistic forces at play for access to the process of (spiritual) transcendence. These factions find form in the struggle between Hiram Abiff or the Architect (played by Richard Serra), and the Entered Apprentice (played by Barney), who are both working on the building. They are reenacting the Masonic myth of Hiram Abiff, purported architect of Solomon’s Temple, who possessed knowledge of the mysteries of the universe. The murder and resurrection of Abiff are reenacted during Masonic initiation rites as the culmination of a three-part process through which a candidate progresses from the first degree of Entered Apprenticeship to the third of Master Mason. —Wikipedia

Director

Original

Matthew Barney

Matthew Barney was born in San Francisco in 1967; at age six, he moved to Idaho with his family. After his parents divorced, Barney continued to live with his father in Idaho, playing football on his high school team, and visiting his mother in New York City, where he was introduced to art and museums. This intermingling of sports and art informs his work as a sculptor and filmmaker. After graduating from Yale in 1991, Barney entered the art world to almost instant controversy and success. He is best known as the producer and creator of the “CREMASTER” films, a series of five visually extravagant works created out of sequence (“CREMASTER 4” began the cycle, followed by “CREMASTER 1,” etc.). The films generally feature Barney in myriad roles, including characters as diverse as a satyr, a magician, a ram, Harry Houdini, and even the infamous murderer Gary Gilmore. The title of the films refers to the muscle that raises and lowers the male reproductive system according to temperature… read more

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Aflwydd

6Apr11

How to spot an idiotic review: 1. The use of pretentious without understanding the word's meaning. 2. Describing a film as boring, a subjective feeling that is usually used objectively by pretentious fools. 3. The use of self-indulgent, a stupid word that can be applied to every work of art ever created as no great artist ever created to appeal to a wide audience. (Such types are usually Kubrick and Coppola lovers)

JuanDiego likes this

  • Picture of Harry Rossi

    Harry Rossi

    30Jul11

    How to spot a pretentious film buff: Someone who doesn't appreciate Kubrick. Btw thanks for the kind words, I was only giving my opinion.

  • Picture of Harry Rossi

    Harry Rossi

    30Jul11

    Perhaps giving your own opinion of the film would be more productive than picking on people with different tastes than you.

Picture of Harry Rossi

Harry Rossi

10Mar11

Complete bullshit. Barney obviously had no idea what he was doing when he made this pretentious "sculpture", as he prefers it to be called. Extremely boring, self-indulgent and all around unpleasant with little to no original content or original ideas. Not to mention, its repetitive nature is not only tedious and boring, but is also incredibly patronizing.

  • Picture of JuanDiego

    JuanDiego

    26Oct11

    Maybe because is not a movie, is video art, and for that, this do not need a narrative.

  • Picture of Harry Rossi

    Harry Rossi

    7Nov11

    Regardless, its still boring... and I don't mind video art.

Picture of mintghost

mintghost

11Feb11

I really liked the music, i wish i could rate different aspects of this film separately...there were things i liked, others i hated.

Picture of lukasbicho

lukasbicho

28Sep10

Aburrida, decepcionante por completo.

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W184

"Two in the Wave," "Cremaster"

By David Hudson on May 19, 2010

"An anniversary present for the new wave — tied to the upcoming 50th-birthday screenings of Breathless — Two in the Wave gives the gift

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