Clement Page - "Tiny Pain", 2 mins, single screen, 16mm, mastered to DVD, 2005 .

Loading...

Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Upgrade to the latest Flash Player for improved playback performance. Upgrade now or more info.
990 views
Loading...
Alert icon
Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Ratings have been disabled for this video.

Uploaded by on Dec 10, 2009

Clement Pages 16mm film, entitled Tiny Pain (2005), is a filmic evocation of this naturally occurring uncanny psycho physical state. Based on the reports of a real-life sufferer from Sleep Paralysis, this short film intensely echoes the claustrophobic atmosphere of cloying dread and steadily increasing panic as the paralysis spreads and the hallucinations intensify....

When we are in the REM stage of sleep, 1 that stage associated with the most vivid and visually oriented dreams; there is a complete loss of muscle tone in the major muscle groups of the body. We are effectively paralyzed. The accepted theory behind this natural and universal phenomenon is that a state of paralysis is induced in the body so that we cannot act out the content of our dreams- consequently exposing ourselves to danger and damage. If this physiological mechanism did not exist, everyone would sleepwalk every time they dreamt. The mind, being fully involved in the dreamworld, is not normally aware of the phenomenon of nocturnal paralysis. However, in a small percentage of individuals, perhaps ten to fifteen percent, a disturbing psychophysical syndrome occurs: Isolated Sleep Paralysis (ISP), 2, commonly known as Petit-Mal in the West. In this instance, the sleeper gains consciousness while the body is still in a state of paralysis. Not only is this terrifying because the subject believes themselves to be truly paralysed, generally engaging in desperate but usually futile attempts to move, or awaken, but the brain is still partially dreaming, such that dream imagery and hallucinations, both visual and tactile, are experienced as real. A common hallucination is of a being crouching on the subjects chest, an incubus or succubus, or the subjects arms or legs being pulled or touched by unseen hands, the room filling with daemons and preternatural light. Jorg Conessa has suggested that this terrifying occurrence may be turned into a positive experience by transforming it into a lucid dream that is, a dream where the dreamer is conscious that they are dreaming and can exert a certain degree of control over the content and progress of the dream-however, this requires diligent training and may not work for all sufferers of the condition. 3 Clement Pages 16mm film, entitled Tiny Pain (2005), 4, is a filmic evocation of this naturally occurring uncanny psycho physical state. Based on the reports of a real-life sufferer from Sleep Paralysis, this short film intensely echoes the claustrophobic atmosphere of cloying dread and steadily increasing panic as the paralysis spreads and the hallucinations intensify.
The familiar, the homely Heimlich in Freuds original discourse in this case literally the home of the dreamer, the bedroom, is rendered unfamiliar and distinctly unhomely, unheimlich, by its seemingly real and terrifying daemons and assorted creatures from inner space.

In Tiny Pain, the hallucination is produced by the use of animation rather than the use of a superimposed filmed images of a real object or person- this aids in replicating the other worldliness of the image, in this case an ever increasing vortex of force which increases in size as the subjects paralysis spreads, and seems to be moving ever closer to her....

Category:

Film & Animation

Tags:

License:

Standard YouTube License

All Comments

Adding comments has been disabled for this video.

Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more