Raiders of the Lost Ark is more than a Hollywood movie made in the summer blockbuster mold. As Phil says in his intro to this popping Weird Studies episode, the film is "a Trojan horse of the Weird, easy to let in but once inside, apt to take over." This conversation sees him and JF discuss a movie we dismiss at our own risk, a cinematic masterpiece replete with enigmas that reach back to the foundations of Western civilization. What does the Ark of the Covenant signify? What does it contain? What happens if you open that box of god(s)? And whose god is this, anyway? These are questions that have puzzled theologians and mystics for centuries, and Steven Spielberg's great work asks them anew for an age gone nuclear.

Image by arsheffield

REFERENCES

Steven Spielberg, Raiders of the Lost Ark

Steven Soderbergh’s version of Raiders with sound and color removed

Weird Studies Patreon extra, “Weird Genius”

Weird Studies episode 28, “Weird Music Part 2”

Camille Saint-Saëns, Danse Macabre

M. Night Shyamalan, Signs

Buck Rogers, Flash Gordon

Neil Jordan (dir.), The End of the Affair

Weird Studies episode 29, “On Lovecraft”

Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke, The Occult Roots of Nazism

Howard Carter, British archaeologist

Jorge Luis Borges, “The Library of Babel”

Claude Levi Strauss, French anthropologist

Clement Greenberg's concept of medium specificity

D. W. Griffith, Birth of a Nation

David Mamet, On Directing Film

Dumbo (1941 film)

H. P. Lovecraft, “The Strange High House in the Mist”

Jan Fries, Helrunar: A Manual of Rune Magick

Neil Gaiman, American Gods

GIF of the soldier moving funny at the end of Raiders

Weird Studies episode 2, “Garmonbozia”

Aaron Leitch, occultist

Austin Osman Spare, The Book of Pleasure

Gene Wolfe, [Soldier of the Mist](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SoldieroftheMist)_

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