Lamentations: A Monument for the Dead World
Lamentations: A Monument for the Dead World

Lamentations: A Monument for the Dead World

Directed by
R. Bruce Elder

Lamentations: A Monument to the Dead World belongs to a 35-hour film cycle, The Book of All the Dead, which comprises the bulk of Toronto-based Bruce Elder’s filmmaking from 1975 to 1994. In ancient Egyptian culture, the Book of the Dead consisted of religious texts intended to help preserve the spirit of the departed in the afterlife — but in Elder’s reading, that comforting idea of continuity takes on a rather darker cast. Lamentations is comprised of a complex audio and visual patchwork: a philosophical meditation superimposed as text throughout the film; vignettes featuring a comical but disturbing Franz Liszt, a debate between Isaac Newton and George Berkeley, an angry, deranged man in an alley, and an arrogant psychiatrist; and a final search for salvation in the forests of British Columbia, the American Southwest, and Mexico’s Yucatan.
Last Updated: 5 days ago

Image Gallery

Gallery image from a4hwMYkXATBlwuWtClWBuB70JQs.jpg
Gallery image from lxu87Vh8MXZ9WrsDKFm4AGah5ML.jpg
Gallery image from ghYnLwnrShXwqtBt10m5kR5Ls70.jpg
Gallery image from ks4mHhMhE3F8NYgJCNlCDNZDDdf.jpg
Gallery image from gQywdxZMayxhnXMIY9Rp4NwHdPt.jpg
Gallery image from 4j1s3cyr9wsDmsBZbzUB4rwgbzA.jpg
Gallery image from vNIQQs8e3AAlOU4RwPQempm3hTC.jpg
Gallery image from vrwukjuaG1xnIqR0xv7HzvgxZcM.jpg
Gallery image from qpSPUNCTEQ7D6R7RiiSuVrBDoK7.jpg
Powered by Powered by TMDB
Built with Build with Nuxt
Install App