Beyond Lemuria

June. 22,2007      
Rating:
5.2
Trailer Synopsis Cast

BEYOND LEMURIA is more than science-fiction. It is a unique spiritual adventure presented in the format of a mystic initiation ritual. The story unfolds as a symbolic morality play involving two groups of people, portrayed by the same actors, but dedicated to different goals. The sinister Draconians search for antediluvian secrets of power in the lava caves north of Mount Shasta while the spiritually minded Lothinians seek enlightenment from the Ancient Masters on the slopes of the Holy Mountain–thus the dark depths and the shining heights of human nature are explored against the awesome metaphor of Nature herself. BEYOND LEMURIA honors and extols the mystical heritage of California’s Sacred Mountain in an artistic and evocative presentation that all of us who revere Mt. Shasta can share with pride.

Sheila Marie as  Lemurian Princess

Reviews

Greenes
2007/06/22

Please don't spend money on this.

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Borserie
2007/06/23

it is finally so absorbing because it plays like a lyrical road odyssey that’s also a detective story.

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Ariella Broughton
2007/06/24

It is neither dumb nor smart enough to be fun, and spends way too much time with its boring human characters.

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Marva
2007/06/25

It is an exhilarating, distressing, funny and profound film, with one of the more memorable film scores in years,

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Sam Panico
2007/06/26

Whoa, this movie.Have you ever listened to Coast to Coast AM when Art Bell hosted it and would do open calls? This is the video version, complete with stories about HP Lovecraft stories being real, UFOs around Mt. Shasta, the Shavers mystery, Jesus, three-eyed aliens, orgasm torture, conspiracy conventions and so much more. There's a ninja, too.This is the kind of movie that will try the patience of normal people's minds and souls. It's all shot on video, so it looks like not completely professional, yet it's fascinating in the way watching YouTube videos about the Mandela effect for hours on end while sitting in a smoke-filled room can be.Oh yeah - and the same cast plays two roles: Satanists and a group of new age folks led by Ascended Master Phylos, who cames from Atlantis, and takes them on a quest similar to The Holy Mountain. Except you know, instead of Alejandro Jodorowsky, you're getting a virtually non-directed mishmash of a film from the Ordo Templi Astartes, a lodge of Hermetic occultists based in Southern California.This reminds me of Tribulation 99: Alien Anomalies Under America, a found footage film that sought to explain Castro, why we attacked Grenada and the end of the world. Tribulation 99 was David Icke and Alex Jones before those guys and their characters became well-known but somehow much stranger.It also makes me fondly remember the Unarius cult, who make their own movies that document their past lives. You can learn more about them in the film Children of the Stars.How does one even get into the Shaver phenomena? I can try.Richard Shaver first encountered Lemuria when the tools at a factory where he worked allowed him to hear other peoples' thoughts, as well as torture sessions going on beneath the Earth. He quit his job and became homeless for some time, but on the other hand, he may have also had paranoid schizophrenia.He disappeared for some time, then began writing to the pulp magazine Amazing Stories and claimed to have discovered an ancient language he called Mantong. Editor Ray Palmer (the namesake of DC Comics' Silver Age version of The Atom) thought that Shaver was onto something.Shaver then wrote "A Warning to Future Man," where he discussed cities within the Earth, populated by the good Teros and the evil Deros. Palmer rewrote Shaver's allegedly true account and created the fictional story "I Remember Lemuria!" which appeared in the March 1945 issue of Amazing Stories. That issue instantly sold out and then something really weird happened: thousands of letters began appearing saying that they'd had the same experiences as Shaver.The Shaver Mystery also boasts Fred Crisman amongst its believers. The real-life inspiration for TV's The Invaders, Crisman is a conspiracy nexus: he was supposedly one of the three hoboes in Dallas during Kennedy's assassination, he was one of the first people in the U.S. to report a UFO and he battled the Demos in a cave during World War 2.Amazing Stories' readership either loved or hated the Shaver stories. According to Wikipedia, "Palmer would later claim the magazine was pressured by sinister outside forces to make the change: science fiction fans would credit their boycott and letter-writing campaigns for the change. The magazine's owners said later that the Shaver Mystery had simply run its course and sales were decreasing." One of the biggest critics of the Shaver stories was a young Harlan Ellison!That didn't end the Shaver stories. Palmer credits these tales with the public fascination with UFOs. John Keel's 1983 Fortean Times piece "The Man Who Invented Flying Saucers" claims that "a considerable number of people - millions - were exposed to the flying saucer concept before the national news media were even aware of it. Anyone who glanced at the magazines on a newsstand and caught a glimpse of the saucer-emblazoned Amazing Stories cover had the image implanted in his subconscious." Indeed, Palmer was quick to defend the Shaver stories and claim that "flying saucers" were their validation.Whew.Beyond Lemuria reminds me of the blind date I once had that led me to a meeting of the OTO somewhere in the hills above Pittsburgh. I expected a Bacchanalian riot in the tradition of Crowley and was instead greeted by skunk weed, blue crab in a can, bad beer and a room full of devotees eating guacamole in mass amounts from Tupperware while praising their Frater while he held a spoon aloft as everyone watched bootlegs of a Blondie concert. Also, everyone went out at midnight and farted at the moon. I learned a really good fact that night: hardcore Crowley devotees are about as annoying as evangelical Christians.To wit: It's all rather fascinating to tell as a quick tale of my life, but the truth is, experiencing it was an excoriable bore.I don't want to hate on this film. I love that it exists, but it's like watching people cosplay. It makes me feel bad for them in their subculture, but then I realize that I can talk about obscure movies and hardly had to look anything up to discuss even more obscure 1940's conspiracies. I read Illuminatus! and Do Androids Dream of Electronic Sheep? before I hit puberty. My Christmas gifts from my parents usually consist of books and DVDs about the Lost Books of the Bible and Michael Aquino. I am of this culture, but I don't feel the need to dress up and film a movie about me and my friends skulking through a cave.You know what? Just watch this yourself and tell me what you think. You'll start to notice elements of weirdness in your life. I really hope so.f

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Rebecca Coleman
2007/06/27

I watched this film expecting innocent low-budget science fiction, only to be proselytized to for what felt like an eternity. I went in not understanding that Lemuria was basically another Atlantis (lost continent full of advanced lost technology) that some people actually believe in, and the film did a poor job explaining the concept to someone uninitiated in this madness.The script is full of long, boring monologues that are trying to sound intelligent but are more like word salad. The characters are flat stereotypes. There is almost no conflict or character development. The pacing is painfully slow. I was tortured not only with long sermons, but with awkward transition scenes where the characters drive or walk wordlessly for uncomfortable lengths of time. Other transitions are sudden and jarring, leaving the viewer wondering what just happened. The acting is bad - the actors smile emptily and recite their lines with less enthusiasm or understanding of how real people converse than children putting on a school play, with the single exception of the televangelist character, who really sells hammy evil villainy. I can almost understand why his monologue is so long. A scene that would have gotten his point across in thirty seconds stretches out for a criminally long time.There is nothing of entertainment value going on here - which made sense only when I realized I was watching a sermon. The plot (if it can be called that) made so little sense I had to later go online to look up what was happening. If that's not failing as a film, I don't know what is.Even better, the writer/producer has vigorously attacked most negative reviews of his film. He is a true believer in magic and a hodgepodge of other conspiracies. I thought these "magick" types were a harmless bunch until I discovered Lemuria and its never ending well of lunacy. Avoid the bad film and have a look at the filmmaker's social media pages and responses to Amazon reviews. I promise you will be more amused that way.

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khristywarch
2007/06/28

Beyond Lemuria is a wonderful campy romp through the esoteric underpinnings of the Magical Western Occult Tradition. This flick is filmed in the style of an old 40's or 50's sci-fi thriller and has the excitement of people who are embarking on a quest for things that are hidden to the average person. The seekers are separated into two camps, like an old-time western we have the good guys that wear white and the bad guys that wear black. The difference is they are not fighting each other, but are developing their own personal power. The good guys have a new-age feel and pursue inner knowledge and enlightenment. The bad guys seek supremacy and dominion over the people of earth.The plot twist is the good/bad guys are played by the same actors, to intimate their stories are reflections of the two paths that can be pursued. The main character is the only one who is presented as someone who is at the crossroads and is in the process of needing to make a choice of which path to blaze. By following both his stories one can pick up many philosophical concepts that are utilize in the modern occult world.I was surprised to see how good of an actor Ed Fitch is. I have seen him at a few Pagan Pride gatherings and was pleased to see what an amazing job he did portraying a fundamentalist TV preacher. While the picture is low-budget and does not have the high-tech film effects that are in current blockbusters, I felt the simplified special effects were fun and got the idea across. They added to the 50's feel of the picture. I give a big "Bravo" to Poke Runyon and Company for taking on this project and I enjoy sharing the movie with my friends.

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Kingsword-1
2007/06/29

Beyond Lemuria is not like any Hollywood film you've ever seen. It is more than simply escapist entertainment. One might say it is "infotainment" because it deals with two important elements of American folklore that Hollywood has completely ignored: the mystic avatars of California's mysterious Mt. Shasta who claimed to derive their wisdom from Atlantis and Lemuria, and the 1940s revelations by Richard S. Shaver of ancient Elder Gods from outer space whose degenerate survivors still inhabit a vast cavern network. These two related themes are woven together in a storyline that uses documentary footage to familiarize the viewer with these forgotten mysteries, leading into a dramatic contrast between two esoteric groups who travel to Mt. Shasta. One group seeks the ancient secrets of super-science from the degenerate Deros deep in the caverns under the mountain, while the other group climbs to the heights to receive spiritual enlightenment. Actual cavern and mountain locations at Mt. Shasta were extensively used, lending authenticity to the strange story. The dramatic story line begins in an occult initiation ceremony where the candidate must choose between good and evil. Beyond Lemuria is best described as a modern medieval morality play. If the viewer keeps this initial scene in mind there will be no difficulty understanding the story -- or the message. Hollywood could not and would not make a film like this, so regardless of it faults, Beyond Lemuria is significant. You've never seen anything like it.

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