Gadianton wrote: ↑Sat Aug 12, 2023 5:48 pm
I'm sure you could come up with a better Mormon interpretation than I can, but I get it, you have to pretend that it's a stretch to see it because otherwise it will look like you're making fun of Mormonism.
Unfortunately, I'm not known for my memory, and I wouldn't be able to do the topic justice without seeing it again.
From what I remember (spoiler alert), it starts with one or two "Mormon" youth who are attractive and have good social skills, and they invite their friends to "come to this thing". Evasive about what the thing is, and then it's this impressive setting and the whole point is to totalize investigators into the system. Well, that's where it starts.
Of course, everyone will respond differently to the film. My recollection is that the story really centered on a young woman who was in deep emotional trouble because she was the sole survivor her sister's successful suicide that also killed the parents. Then, her boyfriend was on the edge of dumping her, when she worked her way into his research trip to Scandinavia where a traditional society that used entheogens ended up being deadly to the looky-lou students who were there for their own selfish reasons (I will write a killer anthro diss based on this stuff, etc.). The damaged girl, however, becomes the Midsommar Queen, or some such, and totally integrates into the society authentically. The others end up being sacrificial victims, or something very close to it.
The creepiest aspect of all of this, at least to me, is that you are left with the sublime but disturbing feeling that the girl was the one who got it right. She saw that this was an authentic community, and she joined it. The difficult question it leaves one with is this: if this is the price of real community, who is really ready to join it? If the other alternative is isolation, cynicism, selfishness, and even self-destruction, who can afford not to seek it? Naturally, being a fun movie, it doesn't show you any real choices between those extremes.
Mormonism sells itself as the authentic traditional community, but it is, in the end, lacking the very thing it promises. The ward no longer offers authentic community. Transient, ever-changing modern society, coupled with corporate engineering at the core of the organization, has hollowed the whole thing out. And, at the same time, you have to doubt any one of us were ready to sacrifice what was required for the authentic community that existed in the past, saddled with all of its minuses (abusive and manipulative leadership, etc.).
By the way, I don't "have to" do anything here. Making fun of Mormonism is our whistling past the graveyard. We can all do it for our own peace of mind, but I question the longterm value of it for anything more than reaffirming our separation from it. But maybe that's enough for those who choose to be separated.
"I have learned with what evils tyranny infects a state. For it frustrates all the virtues, robs freedom of its lofty mood, and opens a school of fawning and terror, inasmuch as it leaves matters not to the wisdom of the laws, but to the angry whim of those who are in authority.”