SUPERHUMAN
Featuring: Caroline Cory, Rachele Brooke Smith, Naomi Grossman, Major Paul H. Smith, Dr. Mike Weliky, Dr. Jim Gimzewski, Dr. Tom Campbell, Dr. Rudy Schild, Ben Hansen, Dr. Glen Rein and Corey Feldman.
Writer/Director: Caroline Cory.
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Caroline Cory sets herself a lofty goal by opening her third directorial effort with the existential poser, “What makes us truly fulfilled?” But for the next two hours, the scientific researcher, filmmaker and alternative science advocate presents a thrilling case for the power of the mind as a unifying social force in Superhuman, her epic thinkpiece documentary. If some of the otherworldly imagery she utilises will be fuel for the old world naysayers, Cory counters with academic detail and rigorous scientific methodology that she wields like the crusader for expanded consciousness she clearly is.
Taking as its central premise the notion that the properties of every living cell create a ‘unification’ that binds all things, Superhuman posits the human mind and its innate consciousness as the ultimate conductor, the ‘constant communicator’, of all energies. Cory mixes old-school showmanship (actress Rachele Brooke Smith ‘reads the thoughts’ of Cory as she wanders outdoors) with a think-tank of astrophysicists, quantum biologists, neuroscientists and parapsychologists, each of whom present compelling evidence the mind’s ability to dominate matter.
Yes, Cory and her psycho-posse come down heavily for the existence of psychokinesis, a subset of ‘non-physical phenomena’, offering footage of projected energy moving inanimate objects. Equally compelling are the first-person accounts of the U.S. and Russian governments ‘remote viewing’ experiments, in which covert operatives were trained in the art of tapping the global collective consciousness to steal state secrets, and remarkable footage of masked children using projected energy to run obstacle courses, play table tennis and read books.
The depth of the detail means that Superhuman blows out to 115 minutes, filled with a lot of potentially head-spinning science for the uninitiated. Cory provides some balance with cute celebrity asides; in addition to the like-minded Smith, the production employs dancer Karina Smirnoff, actor Corey Feldman (his attire alone lightening the mood; pictured, above) and actress Naomi Grossman (the unforgettable ‘Pepper’ from American Horror Story) to partake in practical experiments that bolster the theorising. Star Trek franchise regulars Robert Picardo and Michael Dorn also weigh in, somewhat randomly.
Superhuman may not ultimately represent the turning point in modern society’s long overdue realignment of energies, but Cory’s fascinating film will strengthen the resolve of those willing it to happen.
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