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exstasie
Hack Attack

Registered: Jun 2006
Location: Toronto/Sauga, Canada
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Nov-27-2007 23:33
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jon jon
viva la clubland

Registered: Jan 2001
Location: Footwork
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taken from Wikipedia:
Themes
Maya civilization in the Central Area reached its full glory in the early eighth century, but it must have contained the seeds of its own destruction, for in the century and a half that followed all its magnificent cities had fallen into decline and ultimately suffered abandonment. This was surely one of the most profound social and demographic catastrophes of all human history.[12]
—Michael Coe, The Maya
As Coe puts it, the precursors to the fall of the Maya civilization, the "seeds of its own destruction," are similar to those found in other past civilizations. Yet Mel Gibson takes this comparison a step forward and claims these same "forces" are "occurring in our society now." Apocalypto is partially intended as a political allegory about civilizations in decline.[13] The movie is an attempt to illustrate the parallels between a great fallen empire of the past and the great empires of today. Gibson states, "People think that modern man is so enlightened, but we're susceptible to the same forces – and we are also capable of the same heroism and transcendence."[14][3]
The filmmakers researched exactly what was the cause behind the Mayan collapse. The problems "faced by the Maya are extraordinarily similar to those faced today by our own civilization" co-writer Safinia stated during production, "especially when it comes to widespread environmental degradation, excessive consumption and political corruption."[3] The peek through time at this culture of the past serves as a looking glass onto our own lives today. The film serves as a cultural critique – in Dr. Hansen's words, a "social statement" – sending the message that it is never a mistake to question our own assumptions about morality.[15]
The corrosive forces of corruption are illustrated in specific scenes throughout the movie. Excessive consumption can be seen in the extravagant lifestyle of the upper-class Maya, their vast wealth contrasted with the sickly, the extremely poor, and the enslaved. Environmental degradation is portrayed both in the exploitation of natural resources such as the over-mining and farming of the land, but also through the treatment of people, families and entire tribes as resources to be harvested and sold to slavery. Political corruption is seen in the leaders' manipulation, the human sacrifice on a large scale, and the mass slave trade. These themes are prevalent throughout the movie and often overlap and blend together, creating an overall sense of sadness, devastation and destruction.
The Ancient Greek verb αποκαλύπτω (apokalýptō means "I uncover," "disclose," or "reveal." Gibson commented about the movie's title: "[It] just expresses so well what I want to convey. I think it's just a universal word. In order for something to begin, something has to end. All of those elements are involved. But it's not a big doomsday picture or anything like that."[16]
___________________
http://www.beatport.com/jonathan-rosa/
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Nov-27-2007 23:34
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jchung52
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Dec 2006
Location:
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| quote: | Originally posted by r5a
way to much man ass for my liking. |
made u a little uncomfortable there?
___________________
"Silly Clubbers, Docks are for Boats"
Soundcloud
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Nov-28-2007 01:55
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