The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
Features  |  Reviews
Best2012Vote-1000x50

Free pilgrimage

The Sacred and Profane , the movie
By MEGAN GRUMBLING  |  September 27, 2006

060929_sacredprofane_main
DUCK IN A ROW: Common holiness

Early in the documentary The Sacred and Profane, a bald man and the camera, manned by director David Camlin, go off to see a man about some goats. In a dim barn, charming horned creatures leap up to greet them, their bleating at once pastoral and obscene. There’s a sweet old nursery rhyme in all this, the bald man thinks, but neither he nor our cameraman can recall it, and soon enough, a spry old farmer drives up on a tractor to discuss how these beasts will best sate the hungers of throngs out on an island.

The scene is a little playful and a little dark — and it’s one to which Pan himself, that immortal debaucher, would surely thrill. It conjures up the part-human, part-beast condition common to the best of us, a state of being that is actively encouraged in the yearly Peaks Island bacchanal of magic and earth, dark and light: the Sacred and Profane. And in anticipation of the event’s 11th anniversary, Camlin’s evocative documentary (a College of the Atlantic student work, and in Camlin’s own estimation still “unfinished”) is now available for gratis rental from Videoport.

The festival of installations, performance, and feasting, enacted in the dark old Battery Steele bunker, maintains a guiding mythology of anonymity, mystery, and near spontaneous generation. In keeping with that spirit, organizers requested that director Camlin (full disclosure: he and I go back to the dark mysteries of Wells High) keep everyone nameless and faceless. His challenge was thus to balance the documentary’s need for structure and exposition with the sensually amorphous nature of the event itself, and his movie — narrated by the bald man and a slew of disembodied founders and organizers — thrives under these restrictions.

If the “sacred” and the “profane” constitute one obvious duality of the festival, another is system and chaos, as Camlin shows us scattered, anonymous glimpses into last year’s rag-tag, rain-drenched preparation: a man in the dark pokes at the skeleton of a teepee. A small, backlit procession sets stepping stones through a long puddle. A skinny guy drags a board a few feet, stops, then looks at it. We hear much more than we see: the shrill surge of a power drill, dense metal being scraped over concrete, the sizzles and spooned plops of cooking. The work, thus shown, seems almost whimsical, as if these random tasks are more rites than causal action, and otherwise ordinary tools and materials are given a sense of both greater banality and greater curiosity.

The result of the work, once the crowd has arrived and entered the Battery’s darkness, is a phenomenon that eerily exceeds the sum of its hodge-podge parts. And Camlin’s swooning handheld camera is utterly susceptible to the strangeness. His fascinated gaze hovers, moth-like, near nests of illuminated eggs, the foggy auras around flames, photos of hands flickering in candlelight, as wails and the resonant tones of struck steel echo. Trusting the event’s currents, Camlin wills us to unlearn what we expect of the behavior of light, sound, raw materials, our human companions, and — most essentially — our own perception.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Neo-hoodoo and street kabuki, Rabbit food, They're coming to America, More more >
  Topics: Reviews , Culture and Lifestyle, Religion, Mammals,  More more >
| More

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
[ 02/16 ]   Boston Conservatory Dance Division  @ Boston Conservatory Theater
[ 02/16 ]   Jim Gaffigan  @ Wilbur Theatre
[ 02/16 ]   "Raw Milk Debate"  @ Harvard Law School
ARTICLES BY MEGAN GRUMBLING
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   PORTLAND STAGE GOES NOIR  |  February 15, 2012
    Dead guys, mysterious dames, mobsters, dirty cops, and a handsome array of handguns are all in a night's work for Philip Marlowe, novelist Raymond Chandler's quintessential LA private eye.
  •   FEMALE POETS STEP UP TO THE MIC  |  February 08, 2012
    While down in Cambridge last August with a team of Portland poets for the semi-finals of the National Poetry Slam, Tricia Henley Pryce says, she never saw more than one woman up on stage at a time.
  •   MAD HORSE’S BECKY SHAW PEERS BEHIND THE LOVE CURTAIN  |  February 08, 2012
    Three months after her father's death, the two people closest to thirty-something Suzanna (Elizabeth Chambers) don't have a lot of patience for her grief, which has her reduced to a weeping mess watching bad TV under a blanket.
  •   GOOD THEATER WRESTLES WITH LOVE AND SIN  |  February 01, 2012
    There's only one major problem in the love between Adam (Rob Cameron), a sarcastic would-be teacher working in retail, and Luke (Joe Bearor), an aspiring young actor.
  •   PUBLIC THEATER TRIES TO SAVE DISAPPEARING COMMUNICATION  |  February 01, 2012
    George (James Hoban) has a knack for languages: He's a polyglot, can lovingly conjugate all tenses of even Esperanto, and has dedicated his life to preserving tongues on the brink of extinction.

 See all articles by: MEGAN GRUMBLING

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed