More entertaining
“nonfiction” silliness from the folks at Sunn Classic Pictures, The Amazing World of Psychic Phenomena
is a journalistically dubious survey of various mental powers that people have
claimed to possess throughout history. You name it, it’s in here: astral
projection, precognition, spirits, telekinesis, and so on. Actor Raymond Burr,
summoning all of his Ironside-era
gravitas, hosts and narrates the picture, which comprises archival footage,
dramatic re-enactments, interview snippets, and cheesy vignettes of Burr “participating”
in staged experiments. This is the Sunn Classics formula in full bloom, with a
barrage of unsubstantiated facts and figures thrown at the audience alongside
creepy dramatic scenes right out of a low-budget horror movie.
For example, one
early scene features a woman piloting a small plane until she receives a
telepathic “distress call,” at which point she diverts her plane to a highway
70 miles distant and rescues her mother from a flaming car crash. Later in the
movie, a woman and her young child freak out during the seeming visit of an
apparition to their home—the duo watches, terrified, as their front door
appears to undulate in tune with a mysterious breathing sound. Fantastic claims
are presented without skepticism, as are guest stars including famed ’70s
Israeli mentalist Uri Geller (who does his signature routine of bending spoons
with his mind).
It’s hard to differentiate the genuinely unsettling exhibitions
from the outright nonsense, because everything is explored with the same degree
of wide-eyed intensity. At its worst, the movie features laughably loose logic.
“If we continue to exist after our physical bodies die,” Burr asks at one
point, “is it possible to communicate from one world to the another? One way of
communicating between these two worlds is with the help of a medium, at what is
popularly known as a séance.” Notice the quick shift from speculating about
alternate dimensions to treating them as documented reality. Or consider this
howler of a voiceover line: “The best evidence for the existence of spirits is
that presented by the owners of haunted houses.” Because, of course, haunted houses are indisputably real.
Still, as with all
of Sunn Classic Pictures’ wonderfully irresponsible documentaries, the goal of The Amazing World of Psychic Phenomena
is simply to catalog creepy-crawly maybes on the fringes of the known world.
So, by the time the movie barrels through things like Kirlian photographs and
mentalists who “psychometrize” the identities of murderers by studying objects
found at murder scenes, it’s easier to go with the entertaining flow than to
worry about veracity.
The Amazing World of Psychic Phenomena: FUNKY
Eh, I think maybe you're too predisposed to disbelieve in the paranormal.
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