Monday, May 4, 2015

Pop-Culture Occult: Silent Hill & the Eleusinian Mysteries






If the eye could see the demons that people the universe, existence would be impossible.
-Talmud. Berakhoth, folio 6

Can we say that pop culture in some way reflects esoteric thought? There are certainly subtle indications that the Mysteries are alive and well in Hollywood. One film that not so subtly explores occult mythos is 2006’s Silent Hill. Although based originally on a video-game, Silent Hill is a clear re-presentation of the ancient Grecian Eleusinian Mysteries.

Anybody with even a rudimentary knowledge of mystery religions will recall that the initiatory rituals at Eleusis focused on the Greek myth of Demeter and Persephone. According to the narrative, Persephone was abducted by the god Hades and taken to the underworld. Her mother, Demeter, traveled to Hades and negotiated her release but because Persephone had eaten while there, she is confined to return to the underworld half the year. This myth was meant to explain the seasons and harvest and was extremely important to the ritual of discernment that occurred as part of the Eleusinian Mysteries.

Those familiar with Silent Hill will recognize these themes and motifs as the plot of the film. The Persephone character, Sharon, becomes trapped in Silent Hill and it’s left to her mother, Rose, to find and retrieve her. Silent Hill may be the clearest and most powerful representation of Hades in film history. There is a plethora of horrifying creatures and entities that fill the town as soon as ‘darkness’ comes. It’s made clear that Silent Hill is a liminal space and anybody trapped there exists in a betwixt and between state. It’s as much an exploration of demarcated boundaries as it is a story of separation and reintegration. We journey with Rose as she traverses the liminal and dares the demons of Silent Hill to find her daughter. And although the end of the film strays a bit from the original Eleusinian myth, Silent Hill is an allusion to this powerful narrative of gods and goddesses. 




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