Weird Studies

Episode 92: Glitch in the Matrix: A Conversation with Rodney Ascher

02.17.2021 - By Phil Ford and J. F. MartelPlay

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With his latest film, a meditation on what it means to believe we live in a computer simulation, Rodney Ascher has once again placed himself among the most innovative and visionary filmmakers working in the documentary form today. While the "Simulation Hypothesis" has been a hot topic ever since The Matrix came out in 1997, it is Ascher's ability to suspend judgement, training his camera on the experience of believers rather than the value of their beliefs, that makes A Glitch in the Matrix such a unique and significant exploration, a strange work of "phantom phenomenology."

Weird Studies listeners will recall that Phil and JF devoted an episode to Ascher's films -- most notably Room 237 and The Nightmare -- back in the early days of the podcast. In this episode, Rodney Ascher joins them to discuss his cinematic vision, his take on the weird, and his thoughts on what is real and why it matters.

REFERENCES

[Rodney Ascher](www.rodneyascher.com), American filmmaker

-- [A Glitch in the Matrix](www.aglitchinthematrixfilm.com)

Jay Weidner's theories on Kubrick

Buddhist idea of the the Arising and Passing Away

[Dungeons & Dragons](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dungeons%26_Dragons), tabletop roleplaying game

James Machin, _Weird Fiction in Britain 1880-1939

Magic Eye pictures

Parmenides, Greek philosopher

Wachowskis, The Matrix

Alan Moore, "Superman: For the Man Who Has Everything"

Conway's Game of Life

Joshua Clover, The Matrix (BFI Film Classics)

Jonathan Snipes, American composer

Clipping, experimental hip hop band

"Shining" romantic comedy recut

Michael Curtiz (dir.), Casblanca

John Boorman (dir.), [Point Blank](https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0062138/?ref=fn_al_tt_2)_

Louis Sass, Madness and Modernism: Insanity in the Light of Modern Art, Literature, and Thought Special Guest: Rodney Ascher.

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