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[...] when I say magical I don't mean illusions, I mean magic in the sense of Crowley magick. I have been meeting and having very informative exchanges with practising magicians in this country and in America. I treat the occult very seriously, in fact more and more seriously, and have found great insight into what I do from these people.

-- Clive Barker
   

Chemical Wedding

Well, we've been looking forward to this one for a long, long time. Bruce Dickinson's intention to produce a movie featuring Crowley in a prominent role was first mentioned on LAShTAL.COM back in 2002 and I'm told by a prominent bookseller that he was discussing it as much as eighteen years ago.

Similarly, Simon Callow has long been linked to Crowley, with suggestions back in the 1990s that he would be performing the role in a movie adaptation of Snoo Wilson's "The Beast" (aka "The Number Of The Beast"). After seeing his performance in "Four Weddings And A Funeral" there was little doubt that he could bring the character to life. After the death of Oliver Reed and the departure of Alan Rickman to Hollywood's major league, there are few actors left with the breadth and charisma that the role would require.

So, these two have managed to achieve what few thought possible: a full-length movie derived from a genuine fascination with the life of Aleister Crowley. It's a labour of love ... and it shows.

Let's get one thing straight, though: in the same way that Monty Python's "Life Of Brian" was not "about" Jesus Christ, "Chemical Wedding" is not "about" Aleister Crowley. Crowley does appear on screen but not as performed by Simon Callow. Callow plays a University Professor possessed by the spirit of Crowley - and that's important for a fair assessment of the movie.

The film's plotline is described in detail elsewhere on this site and I do not plan to repeat it here. It is worth pointing out, though, that the film starts with the arrival at Netherwood House by "Symons" and a fellow student chum. The Crowley they've come to visit is played to absolute perfection by John Shrapnel. Okay, the Crowley he plays is of the Cefalu variety - bald and brooding, debauched and drugged - when he should be old and whispy but you can forgive the filmmakers this indulgence in getting Crowley at his malevolent best onto the screen. And the actor's voice! You really do have to hear it to believe it: redolent with tired menace, it's no surprise that Mr Shrapnel appears to be one of the most employed actors in the UK at the moment.

It's a real shame that Mr Shrapnel isn't given more screen time as Crowley and things move a little too quickly to the modern day (well, to the year 2001) and to a University Campus in Hertfordshire, standing in for the rather more expensive location of Cambridge.

The various characters are introduced competently enough: Victor, Lia, Mathers (see where we're going with this?) and, of course, Simon Callow as Oliver Haddo, a stuttering and ineffectual crusty old professor. A small budget is apparent in the locations and the filming but it looks no worse than your average UK TV detective series and the acting is certainly better than I would have expected. An honourable mention has to go to Lucy Cudden who manages to create a sympathetic and attractive character out of Lia, never lapsing into "distraught stumbling female" mode.

But it's Callow that stands out in the bulk of the movie. His transformation from stuttering fool to arrogant bombast is simply astonishing. The scene where he is first introduced to his students in full Crowley-possessed mode is especially well done: who'd have believed that we'd see a prominent actor in a professionally produced movie reading out loud the whole of Crowley's "To Pe or Not To Pe" from "Snowdrops From A Curate's Garden"? As the movie progresses, Haddo's behaviour becomes increasingly outrageous - often to really excellent comic effect. The visual gags involving the fax machine have to be seen to be believed, as does the sequence where Haddo shaves the pubic hair from a not-very-Scarlet Woman. And it's on this point that I'd like to focus for a moment. This is not a serious film: it's a comedy. It professes to be nothing more than a rollicking ride and that's what it delivers. No-one will leave the cinema with an increased understanding of Thelema, of occultism or even, to be honest, of Crowley. But most will have enjoyed the ride and just might have seen enough of Crowley to want to read a little more. But there's no point in criticising this movie for failing to deliver what it didn't intend to deliver in the first place.

So having declared that the film isn't serious - and it isn't - I feel it's only right to point out that there's actually a couple of quite intelligent sub-plots going on. First, there's cyberspace as astral plane. Not an astoundingly new idea but quite well handled here, although it's hampered by being set in 2001 on this score: a more modern take might add all manner of "Internet as Aethyr" and "code as Angelic script" conjecture, but I guess they wanted the male lead to be attractive to the female members of the audience, despite having been born in 1947 (an essential plot device that I shan't explore here). Lopping seven years from his age certainly would have helped. Secondly, there's the whole issue regarding Haddo's personality. He doesn't become Crowley; rather he becomes an exaggerated pastiche of the man and it's clear that this is done for a reason. I suspect that what it's saying is that Haddo permits himself to become what he perceives Crowley to be...

So, in summary? We have an amusing romp, an effective and fundamentally English comedy made by individuals with a genuine interest in the subject - people who have struggled for years and against all odds and expectation to bring something fresh to the screen. If you see this movie and you're offended by its flippant treatment of Thelema, then just console yourself that you're not a member of the movie's target audience. Just sit back and take it for a ride. You'll be glad you did.


Added:  Monday, May 05, 2008
Reviewer:  LAShTAL
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Posted by zth on Sep 27, 2008 - 08:06 PM
Your rating:
To label this movie as a "comic" I find somewhat odd. IMDB labels it HORROR or THRILLER. In their 50-60 keywords describing the movie, comedy or humor was not mentioned or hinted. My opinion of this movie: it's CRAP! I would easy label it in the same category as "The Da Vinci Code"; fiction with reference to real historical people in order to balance out lack of a creative or decent story. It is pulp fiction in the worst sense, only on film. It is Dr. House, on LSD, with a little bit of Charmed or Buffy the vampire killer (PG13 version) mix. One thing I learned; Crowley's spirit is fond of watersports, golden showers, etc. The whole thing is a moonchild gone REALLY bad! Sad, bacause they could easily done SOOO much better, with several good actors, big budget to hire locations, props, handmade effects, etc. And they spend the money how? Ha-ha! That is the real comedy, how they wasted all this money on making this piece of S (its also in a scene of the movie, a callingcard from C. left on the floor (a little easter egg there)).

Posted by vvv on Oct 08, 2008 - 09:43 PM
Your rating:
I'm afraid I have to agree with the other commentator-this is a pile of shite. Nobody would argue that bringing a film to the screen is an epic endeavour but that is why I am amazed that so much poorly written, badly acted, appallingly directed gloop hits the screen with such regularity. I'm afraid this is a classic example. It is, without question, dire, to the point of embarrassment. Simon Callow could read a menu and make it sound Shakespearean but here he is a rose encircled with thorns. The 'making of' bit indicates the provenance of such scumsucking bollocks-as fine a crew of narcissistic, half-witted, idiot-brained bottom feeders as one is likely to hear attempting to filch some justification for their eye jolting assault on an innocent thelemite. If you watch this and like it I advise you to drown yourself. If like any normal being you despise and detest its very existence then join me in cursing all associated with it to Dante's seventh circle of hell.

Posted by mike93 on Apr 12, 2009 - 05:14 PM
Your rating:
Just bought and watched it yesterday. Completely terrible! I had to see it but would only recommend it as a rental to those thinking of buying it. I really enjoyed In Search of the Great Beast in comparison.

Posted by Rhiannon on May 06, 2009 - 08:05 PM
Your rating:
I totally agree with the writers above me. I saw it yesterday and I was very sorry about wasting my time in such a terrible manner. The film is crap. Nothing more in my opinion.

Posted by Iskandar on Jul 03, 2009 - 04:36 PM
Your rating:
Finally watched the movie the other night. I was surprised how bad it was: not so much because of their total misunderstanding of the Old Man but primarily because of their third-rate execution. "They" are pretty much everybody except Simon Callow, but as the other reviewer mentioned, he would have been great even while reading the dinner menu aloud. "The Making of" was even worse. I was particularly appalled by the atmosphere of the medieval superstitious fear with respect to the 'subject' of the film, the nonsense about his spirit watching them on the set, and Dickinson's insulting remark to the effect that he was mostly concerned, 'in the words of Jim Morrison, to have everyone get out of here alive' (never mind the fact that Morrison said something to the contrary). This being said, the movie is of significant interest as the first feature film about Aleister Crowley and it will serve as a good example of the intellectual and spiritual myopia of contemporary popular culture. The most paradigmatic scene in this respect, in my opinion, is the one with several middle-age women wailing hysterically on the street, "Aleister Crowley is alive, the Beast is back!" Creepy.

Posted by Walterfive on Jul 21, 2009 - 08:31 PM
Your rating:
I have to agree with Iskander when he says concerning the "Making Of" special feature "I was particularly appalled by the atmosphere of the medieval superstitious fear with respect to the 'subject' of the film, the nonsense about his spirit watching them on the set, and Dickinson's insulting remark to the effect that he was mostly concerned, 'in the words of Jim Morrison, to have everyone get out of here alive' (never mind the fact that Morrison said something to the contrary)." Bruce just descended to the Occult understanding level of Ozzy Osbourne as far as I'm concerned. I wanted to like this movie. I wanted to enjoy its wickedness. It was just stupid and it completely jumped the shark in the last 20 minutes. What a sloppy ending. You could drive holes through the holes in the plot. Glad I got it as a gift and didn't spend my own money on it. It will be a guilty trash-fest pleasure for years to come right up there with Harry Nilsson's "Son Of Dracula."



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