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| https://theasc.com/articles/personal-hell-the-sacred-iconography-of-jacobs-ladder | 
Jacob’s Ladder opens on a hazy, humid evening in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta,
 1971. A platoon of U.S. Army soldiers linger in the shade of canvas 
tents and grass roof huts, smoking, swatting at flies, napping, passing 
their time in purgatory with grass and childish jokes. Among them is Jacob Singer (Tim Robbins), a private first class his comrades call “Professor” on account of college degrees.
Along
 with their dog tags, some of the soldiers wear pendants around their 
neck: a peace symbol, a Star of David, a lucky horseshoe. Jacob's 
necklace bears the symbol for ahimsa, the Jain Dharma principle of 
nonviolence.
In any other film, these details could be considered
 minor references, but here they are just a few of the many instances in
 which Jacob’s Ladder uses sacred imagery to tell the story of a broken 
man desperately clinging to the shattered fragments of his past life. 
Without
 warning, the camp is attacked by an unknown enemy. All hell breaks 
loose. Some of the soldiers begin to convulse and shake as fire and 
brimstone rain from the sky. Men are eviscerated and dismembered.
Jacob
 escapes into the jungle. In a POV shot, he’s ambushed and bayonetted in
 the gut by an unseen attacker. He falls to the ground, and with a match
 cut, awakens on a New York City subway train three years later. He’d 
fallen asleep reading a paperback copy of Albert Camus’s existentialist 
novella The Stranger and missed his stop. His right hand rests on his 
abdomen, where he'd been stabbed.
Jacob steps off the train and 
finds that the exit from his platform is locked, so he must cross over 
to the other side to get out. As he steps onto the tracks, another train
 suddenly barrels toward him. He dives out of its way, catching a 
glimpse of ghostly faces through the windows as it roars by.
Jacob
 is now a veteran and a postal worker, living in a cozy Brooklyn 
apartment with his girlfriend Jezebel (Elizabeth Peña). It's revealed 
that prior to the war, he’d been a doctor, married to another woman, 
Sarah (Patricia Kalember), and the father of three children, one of 
whom, Gabe (Macaulay Culkin), was killed in a tragic auto accident.
The
 majority of the film’s directly religious references are tied to 
Judeo-Christian beliefs. (The title itself is a nod to the vision of Old
 Testament patriarch Jacob, who saw a ladder leading from the earth up 
to heaven.) Jacob and Jezzie’s apartment is a veritable reliquary of 
spiritual objects d'art: a Christian cross, crossed again with a pair of
 swords hangs on the wall next to the window. A replica of Hugo 
Rheinhold’s Ape with Skull is perched on Jacob’s desk, the open book at 
the primate's feet inscribed with the words "Eritis sicut Deus..." which
 translates to "You will be like God..." The rest of the page is ripped 
away, omitting the last part of the sentence "...scientes bonum et 
malum." Knowing good and evil.
Prayer beads are draped over the 
shelf on the headboard, next to a candlestick base in the image of 
Auguste Rodin’s The Thinker (originally conceived as a likeness of poet 
Dante Alighieri in the sculptor’s masterwork, The Gates of Hell).
Next
 to the bed is a shelf lined with books like Savage God and The Magical 
Philosophy, while elsewhere in the apartment A Witches Bible Volume I: 
The Sabbats, Demonology, The Roots of Evil and Dante's The Divine Comedy
 are interspersed with academic texts on sociology and psychology.
These
 objects provide insight into the psyche and soul of a man concerned 
with the origins of human nature, and it’s this curiosity that drives 
him to investigate the relationship between his demonic visions and the 
revelation that he and his platoon were the subjects of a military 
psy-op gone wrong.
The filmmakers use several effective 
techniques to break down the barriers of Jacob’s reality, in particular,
 editor Tom Rolf’s jump/smash/match cuts between Jacob’s medevac in 
Vietnam, his horrific visions and his post-war life in New York City.
Many
 of the demons are portrayed as half-human ghouls with obscured and 
contorted faces, horns and leathery appendages protruding through broken
 skin, though some all-out monsters do appear. Makeup effects were 
supplied by J. Gordon Smith's Toronto-based FxSmith company. The demons'
 vibrating effect was achieved by under-cranking the camera to 4 fps for
 playback at 24 fps.
"All through the movies you're dealing with 
demons and angels and hell and heaven, and I spent a year, maybe more, 
trying to wrestle with how to do it — how to do a devil with horns and 
not make people laugh," said Lyne in a contemporaneous interview 
(Cinefantastique, Dec '90). "I tried to make it all human-based — sort 
of thalidomidey — fleshy, horns from the bone, a tail that looks a 
little like a schlong. I didn't want these things easily dismissed as 
too familiar. I did a lot of shaking, vibrating, tortured things."
Religious
 symbolism is woven so throughly into the tapestry of the film's 
narrative that one begins to recognize familiar images where they were 
perhaps not intended, such as the scene were Jacob goes into shock after
 witnessing a vision of Jezzie and a demon. His temperature skyrockets, 
and Jezzie rallies the help of two neighbors to lift Jacob into a 
bathtub full of ice water.
The camera is tight on Jacob's 
flushed, passionate expression. His head lolls to one shoulder. His 
outstretched arms are supported by the neighbors as Jezzie looms 
anxiously in the backround. When they lift him into the tub their arms 
fully encircle his body, the way Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus lower
 the body of Christ down from the cross in the popular Christian motif. 
(A similar mood is struck in Caravaggio's The Entombment of Christ.)
Jacob's
 only solace is in his visits with Louis (Danny Aiello), the smiling, 
rotund chiropractor whom Jacob describes as an “overgrown cherub.” 
Louis's office is a sanctuary filled with soft white light streaming in 
through a set of bay windows and Tiffany stained glass.
Jacob's 
inquiries into the possibility that he and the other soldiers were 
unwilling test subjects in a murderous wargame gets the attention of 
U.S. Government agents, who ambush and threaten him. Jacob escapes 
capture by throwing himself from their moving vehicle, but severely 
injures his back. He's taken to a hospital, the bowels of which is 
populated with a host of tortured souls.
"I tried to use images 
from Francis Bacon — tortured, blurred shots, red streaks and sharp 
pieces which, when you freeze frame this stuff, looks just like Bacon's 
drawings," said Lyne (Cinefantastique, Dec '90).
Jacob is 
strapped to a reclining operating table and his head is screwed into a 
medical halo. The operating lamp bathes him with light, which reflects 
off his body and onto the attending doctors lurking at the edge of 
darkness in a macabre twist on Rembrandt's The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. 
Nicolaes Tulp. Jezzie, in a surgical gown, preps a wicked-looking 
syringe then hands it to an eyeless demon, who plunges the giant needle 
into the middle of Jacob’s forehead in an attempt to purge his memories 
and ultimately, his will to live.
Cinematographer Jeffrey L. 
Kimball, ASC's striking photography possesses the tones and textures of a
 Renaissance-era painting. Optically, the film has a deep-focus quality,
 with atmospheric perspective used to achieve a sense of depth by 
contrasting dark foregrounds and light backgrounds filled with steam, 
haze and smoke.
Additionally, light is diffused at the source, 
creating a sfumato effect through which tones and colors gradually shade
 together to produce soft outlines and hazy forms.
Chiaroscuro lighting enhances textural qualities with deep shadows.
Jacob
 awakes in the hospital, doped up and in traction, unsure of what he's 
experiencing is real or a dream. Louis storms in, all righteous fury. 
Untangling Jacob from his harnesses, he cries “Why don’t you just burn 
him at the stake?” Louis transfers him from the hospital bed to a 
wheelchair and whisks him back to the safety of his office. “I was in 
hell,” Jacob murmurs. “I don’t want to die."
Louis cracks a 
knowing smile. “Eckhart saw hell, too,” he says, referring to the 
thirteenth century German Catholic theologian, philosopher and mystic. 
“The way he sees it, if you’re frightened of dying and you’re holding 
on, you’ll see devils tearing your life away. But if you’ve made your 
peace, the devils are really angels freeing you from the earth. It’s 
just a matter of how you look at it.”
Carl G. Jung — a Swiss 
psychiatrist whose ideas the filmmakers (and Jacob) are almost certainly
 aware of — writes in his 1964 essay Approaching the Unconscious that 
symbols point to something working deep in the human unconscious to 
conjure the vast, significant mysteries of existence. When signs, like 
an effigy or image of the human body, are imbued with mystery, they 
become symbols because they now stand for something beyond the object 
itself, though their true meaning remains elusive and subjective.
Back
 at the apartment, Jacob sorts through the contents of an old cigar box,
 a personal collection of sacred objects he's held on to over the years:
 honorable discharge papers, a Master of Arts degree from Brooklyn 
College, dogtags (the religious preference is Jewish) and a letter from 
Gabe.
In one of the film's most visually and thematically darkest
 scenes, Jacob meets with Michael (Matt Craven), a former chemist in the
 Army's "Ladder" program, who reveals the truth of what happened on the 
day Jacob's platoon was attacked: in a drug-induced craze, the soldiers 
turned against each other, their lives sacrificed on the altar of war.
Thus
 enlightened, Jacob gives a taxicab driver all the money in his pocket 
to take him "home," back to the apartment he once shared with Sarah. 
Rosary beads jangle on the dashboard as the cab cuts through the dense 
night fog like Charon on the River Styx.
A doorman at wrought 
iron gates welcomes Jacob as an old friend or St. Peter might. Past 
halls of white marble and crown molding, Jacob finds tableaus of 
unfinished homework and half-eaten dessert, a life in framed photographs
 on the piano.
Jacob sits on the couch in quiet contemplation as 
rain falls outside and a sharp blue light cuts into the room from a low 
angle. In a montage set to a slowly beating heart, the most significant 
memories of Jacob's life come flooding back in grainy 16mm.
The 
heartbeat stops. The rain has ended. Jacob awakens and finds Gabe 
sitting on the steps, bathed in heavenly morning light. The little boy 
takes his father by the hand and leads him upstairs, and the image dips 
to white.
We are back in Vietnam. Having succumbed to his 
injuries, Jacob lies dead on a stretcher in a field hospital, his prone 
body still enough to have been carved from stone, with the faint hint of
 a smile upon his face. “He looks kind of peaceful,” says a medic as he 
removes one of Jacob’s dog tags.
Religion uses iconography to 
tell stories of life, death and redemption where traditional language is
 insufficient and personal experience with a system of belief isn't 
required. Symbols are necessarily universal as well as mysterious, and 
only when coupled with a text or image or transferred to a personal 
object or sign do they become specific. Jacob's Ladder inverts this 
formula by taking the universal experience of dying — in a narrative 
lifted from The Tibetan Book of the Dead — and using specific symbols to
 imbue it with a deeper, more personal meaning.

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