Contains spoilers for Angel’s Egg and Ghost in the Shell (1995). Associated footnotes can be found here.
The place to start with Mamoru Oshii is that before filmmaking he was studying to be a Christian priest. At some point in his training, however, he had an experience or experiences which changed the course of his faith. We don’t know the details and he has declined to explain them publicly. Probably for the better; little good comes from a man’s deepest convictions becoming trivia for casual consumption. Yet what Oshii has been thinking is less inaccessible than his silence might indicate, for in lieu of a personal biography he has created his art, and for artists I rather think that is the better record anyway.
A Drowned World
One of the most terrifying experiences for a human is to be plunged suddenly underwater and left so disoriented as to be unsure which way is up. Angel’s Egg is to my mind just such a movie. It is strange. It is deeply strange. For thirty five years it has stood as an obscure feature of the anime landscape, like a mesmerizing obelisk that resists being fully decrypted. One can read about interpretations, and they will appear promising at first sight, but they have a way of revealing their inadequacy when pressed to explain the whole. Angel’s Egg doesn’t seem to quite fit together as a single story. Yet despite this, there is a lingering sense that it should fit together if only one can find the correct key.I would propose that its indecipherability is the key.
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What is the purpose of symbolism? While there are a variety of artistic answers, I would like to pursue one near the root, and it begins with an observation: for humans, to identify something is to comprehend it. When we look at objects it is not with an eye for their appearance, it is so we can classify them in relation to other things and ourselves. What they do, our feelings toward them, how they are similar and different, and so forth. This understanding is what makes up our world, and as long as we can accomplish this step we are quite satisfied; indeed, we perform it so effortlessly that we don’t notice it is happening all the time. To use representations of things, symbols, to do the same is natural. We just need to know what the symbol stands for and out can spiral all its myriad associations, cognitive and emotional, personal and collectively shared. This is the elegance of symbolism when employed proficiently: to say a great deal, and to tug on threads we did not know were there, with the merest flash of an image.
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And what of things that do not have a physical corollary, which possess no innate appearance at all? On this I can do no better than to quote Huston Smith:
”Religion begins with experience… [and] because the experience is of things that are invisible, it gives rise to symbols as the mind tries to think about invisible things. Symbols are ambiguous, however, so eventually the mind introduces thoughts to resolve the ambiguities of symbols and systematize their intuitions. Reading this sequence backwards we can define theology as the systematization of thoughts about the symbols that religious experience gives rise to.” [2]
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The result is a chilling work written in a symbolic language Oshii partially inherited from his seminary, but which goes deeper. The imagery that fills Angel’s Egg is so archetypal as to almost be paleolithic; hands, trees, bones, eggs, and above all water… these are so universal in the human imagination that they can hardly be called uniquely Christian or even religious in nature. It gives the sense that he is rummaging around deep in our collective cellar, through long-forgotten mementos that have become memories that have become invisible. What are the fundamental ideas lurking behind these symbols? What is it that familiarity has obscured?
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And all this submerged in the pervading alienness that comes when old meanings die [3]. In the first moment there are the hands, one of the most common of all sights. They flex and move as they do at our bidding, happily recognized for what they are. But then they change, cease to be comforting. Oshii is staring at what was once the most familiar of all things but he now knows not what they mean, and with a sickening crack one is left unnerved that in this surreal movie where everything should mean something, it will be about a state of mind where the meaning of anything is no longer certain and the surface is far, far away.
”Who are you?”
If Angel’s Egg defies a comprehensive interpretation it may seem that there is little else to say; like a connect-the-dots without an final picture there are multiple answers, and no reason to firmly choose one over another. Not quite. Though much about it is mysterious, and many of the symbols may have a meaning inscrutable to all but Oshii, their character and how they are employed says much. Foremost is the nature of the uncertainty itself. This movie is not Oshii explaining what he understands. It is him describing something he does not, and with only his own authority to go on he’s not even sure which parts (if any) are real. All he can do is try to make sense of it. In turn, what I would like to offer is not a detailed exegesis, if simply because I can do no such thing, but rather a story that emphasizes the conundrums which beget the movie:
In her daily meandering she encounters a man. He begins to follow her. Haunt her, really, for she did not ask for this. In time she grows accustomed to his presence and even takes comfort in it, thinking perhaps he has come as a protector. Yet her wariness remains and soon he validates that concern. He disabuses her of her comforting notions and calls to attention that the world experienced does not follow the world expected from stories. Eventually he shatters her egg, forcing on her the truth: whatever ideas she had been harboring, her egg was empty. The desolation is beyond words. She dies. Then the miraculous happens; she is reborn in maturity, produces bounteous new eggs, and ascends, sanctified, from this foreign place. The movie ends.
And none of this makes sense.
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Take for instance the egg. After the hands it is the first image:
“Under a sky where the clouds made sounds as they moved the black horizon swelled and from it grew a huge tree. It sucked life from the ground and its pulsing branches reached up as if to grasp something. The giant bird sleeping within an egg.”
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We believed we were feathered souls once, beings that had a natural affinity to the heavenly sky and would fly away to escape this foreign world in the end; the girl dreams yet that she will do so as well. It is a marvelously elegant tale of spirit sojourning in this body only to return from whence it came. But this is not the evidence that Oshii sees before him, and the contrast is disturbing. Rendered so frankly it is clear that we are not created, we are grown, full of blood and bile, drawing sustenance from a material base. And the grasping the man makes with his hand during his recitation, that claw-like vice, would seem to hurt him as well as wound whatever it latched on to. Nothing about this swelling, sucking, pulsing process appears angelic.
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”What’s in the egg?”
It is the retort to the girl’s question about what the bird dreams. He asks her because that’s what she is, this creature that is both striving and sleeping, inside and without the egg she carries. And the little dreaming chick thinks she knows. She thinks she knows what she is and what she will hatch into. When the man casts doubt on this, telling a story in which God does not fulfill His promise, where the world remains a desolate place and that self-same symbol of her aspirations never even existed, she rallies by showing off her proof - the skeleton in the wall.
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As for the man himself, he represents a second paradox. He is purportedly a Christ figure, with his obvious cross-shaped staff [4], yet his arrival is with a row of… for lack of a better word… tanks. This isn’t how benevolent divinity is supposed to appear on the scene, nor is his manner in line with traditional visions of Christ. He doesn’t guide her; he follows her, shadows her. He questions rather than answers her while admitting his own ignorance. He is certainly a personification of something Greater as Christ is, a sort of unavoidable Truth, hence the retention of the imagery, but more eerie and less certain himself.
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Whatever Oshii is attempting to describe, these are its characteristics. It is a divinity that we do not recognize, do not want, yet which gives us what is needed out of incomprehensible compassion. I wouldn’t elevate this even to an issue of theodicy, of accounting for the purpose of suffering in the cycle. It’s more personal than that. The man stands apart from whatever the God-machine is, related, but watching without adulation, like a weary bodhisattva with the ten thousand Buddhas in the distance. Maybe he is its representative, or maybe he’s another lost being himself like the girl, just further along. Perhaps that is why the girl’s hands changed to his in the beginning.
”Verily, verily, I say unto you, еxcept a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone: but if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit.” - John 12:24
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Water is omnipresent in Angel’s Egg, and sometimes I think that answering what it is is more important, and more impossible, than either the egg or the man. The girl seeks it out, drinking it as a sign of the most basic necessity of life. Looking through it reflects the world in mysterious ways. She finds herself having visions of submersion, reveries of chill serenity that in their sustenance prompt her to continually search for more. Yet when she does finally come into direct contact it not only removes her old, illusory self, it subsumes the “real” one as well. A universal spiritual solvent that when it has done its work all that is left is much fruit and a commemorative statue.
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”I have been both surprised and humbled that I cannot encompass it through my intellect alone. I depart from Angel’s Egg, returning to more familiar seas, with the realization that there exist in the deeps things I cannot take the measure of.”
A New Titanium-Reinforced Wineskin
”Because I had danced, the beautiful lady was enchantedBecause I had danced, the shining moon echoed
Proposing marriage, the god shall descend
The night clears away and the chimera bird will sing”
- Making a Cyborg
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Humans, honestly appraised, are flesh cyborgs. Thinking flesh cyborgs. Feeling flesh cyborgs. Flesh cyborgs with a ghost, perhaps [5]. Of these, the last is especially peculiar, and so important that it occupies pride of place in the title. Oshii never defines for us what a ghost is; it is more soul than consciousness, with the curious property that it can be transferred through wires. This would make it seem no more exceptional than electricity, yet it is not perfectly duplicatable like normal data, treated rather as a quasi-physical object or substance with a location. Then it can transmit insight, as though it were a being itself separate from (greater than?) those who possess one. However, it is not too immaculately spiritual, for it can be hacked. And despite its ultimate importance for demarcating who is “real” and who is not, nobody seems to know where they come from.
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Information, or energy if one prefers, is what makes Ghost in the Shell work. Previous generations had no recourse to such a fantastic idea. They might say that we were spirits dwelling in bodies, connected via mysterious methods to a greater living Reality, one that we can tap into but not fully encompass. Very mystical... and now wholly unpalatable to the modern scientific outlook. But information changes all this, for despite being both invisible and immaterial we nonetheless consider it real. It can affect the world, controlling the machine that is Motoko’s body, while also allowing her to connect to the net, a vast unseen universe that is effectively all around her yet nowhere.
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This is the core narrative of Angel’s Egg in the form of credible science fiction. We have changed venues, but it is still Oshii portraying the same process and asking of it many of the same questions. However, his thought has not remained in the same place. Previously he was working through the wreck of his Christian scheme, and in that movie of partial rejection and partial affirmation he was still struggling to bring to fruition many of his own concepts. Ten years later those nascent ideas have matured, and we can see what solutions they offer.
Pouring in Rice Wine
”To study the Buddha Way is to study the self, and to study the self is to forget the self, and to forget the self is to be enlightened by the ten thousand things.” - Dogen
If the above narrative sounds familiar to some, it is because it is in essence Buddhist. Enlightenment has replaced salvation as the model of transcendence in the intervening decade, and along with it many other assumptions [6] . However, this is still Oshii’s movie and he, so far as I can tell, does not belong to any denomination; he borrows what he needs from all quarters, and while matching Ghost in the Shell to Buddhism is more fruitful than attempting to decipher Angel’s Egg with Christianity, forcing his movies into a particular mold only deforms them. In the end it all comes back to what he is trying to describe from a personal standpoint.
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The first problems arise in the scene with the foreign minister’s interpreter. Up until now it seemed simple enough that Motoko was what she appeared to be, her outer shell somehow reflecting her inner identity. But what is this composite thing in front of her that has had its central processor so clearly removed? Nothing but an empty husk; it cannot be what makes the secretary who she is. It is an unsettling realization and Motoko’s eyes do not stray until she is forced to leave, sparing a last inscrutable glance at the “woman” lying on the table.
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What follows is the plunge. These surface questions are getting her nowhere so she dives into the dream-like depths underneath waking consciousness. Is there something at the core of our being, something that may be directly accessed that will offer a certain answer?
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”Now, it’s like we’re looking through a mirror and what we see is a dim image.” (see 1 Corinthians 13:12)
Though she thought she was searching alone, something has reached out. It isn’t God; it seems that Oshii’s distrust of such a thing, so evident in its previous appearance and lack of interaction, has caused him to do away with it entirely. So who was it that spoke? It sounded as Motoko’s own voice yet it seemed to come from without, a harbinger of Project 2501’s imminent appearance.
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Leaving this quandary for now, Motoko’s first encounter with it in Section 9 only results in bringing her dilemma to a fever pitch. Ghosts were supposed to be special; to have one was to possess a permanent essence which transcended the world. It was to possess an assurance of being real. Yet in front of her is a being who can only have gotten a ghost through mundane means. Does that mean they, too, are merely a product of assembly? What if not only her body and mind are artificial, but her ghost as well? What happens when even souls aren’t real? What can possibly be left? She has to know. She has to make contact with Project 2501 at all costs, to really and truly know what she is.
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And it costs her not less than everything.
There comes a time in the search when even a person’s best efforts are not enough. Motoko has tried to the best of her ability, and now standing between her and her goal is an obstacle which she cannot overcome with the trifling tools that she has. It will be her death... but she wants to know like she wants to breathe and will attempt it nonetheless. There is captured in her straining to tear off the hatch a singular expression of tragic heroism before the inevitable. The music laments in the background as her muscles ripple and tear, her entire body eventually giving out before her passion. She wanted more than was possible for a creature like her to achieve; it was hopeless from the beginning.
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Oshii has always had a fascination with biology. It is more than his obvious fondness for birds, fish, and basset hounds. Even in his earlier movies, there are hints that in evolution’s endless permutations he finds something significant. Genes are a way in which information may be passed on, development the way the lesser can be made the greater, and that despite cycles of life and death there is yet a continuity of process. Of identity even, where though a previous existence ends all is not lost. It offers to him another idea that, although it may rankle with the biologist in its generalization, turns all of life into a progressive organic whole of which individuals are merely a temporary part.
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”When I was a child, my speech was that of a child. My feelings and thoughts too were those of a child. Now that I have become a man, I part with the childlike ways.” (see 1 Corinthians 13:11)
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So there remains a question. Angel’s Egg is entirely abstract; nobody would make the mistake of taking it literally. But what of Ghost in the Shell? It appears more plausible to us with its scientific elements, but is this a depiction of how the world works or just another symbolic representation? Motoko raised many questions along her path but did not answer them. This is because they are not meant to be answered. They were only stepping stones, conundrums that caused her to realize her previous conceptions, the conventional and convenient ideas of what constitute being and identity, were insufficient. Ultimately she demonstrated their limitations by transcending them, and though she was able to escape to a wider world we never did learn what ghosts are.
Conclusion
”Do you think that’s air you’re breathing now?” - Morpheus, The Matrix
If my attitude throughout has not made abundantly clear, it is my conviction that there is something to all this. That Oshii is not just putting on for us a morality play or commenting on the flaws of a technophilic society but attempting to represent something the same way a painter may attempt to represent a landscape. One can comment on how the colors are pleasing, the composition balanced, and the effect gratifying, but until one grasps what the subject is supposed to be there will always be something lacking in the analysis.
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I started this essay with talk of symbols. That we need them to think for they allow us to classify, that they need not resemble in any way their meaning, and that at times we are forced to manually invent them for the unimaginable. They are a powerful tool for navigating the world that we cannot live without. Yet contemplating these steps should give pause, especially when read backward. What if everything is unimaginable until it is pared down to a representation? What does it mean that those representations are not identical with reality? And finally, what are the limits of what we can learn by sorting and rearranging these constructs? I’m not saying the process is pointless; we have to try after all, and Oshii’s attempts in these movies are superb attempts to interpret. But when even they come up short, that may not be reality’s fault but our own, and Rumi’s words are there to remind us:
“Silence is the language of God, all else is poor translation.”