Alejandro Jodorowsky La Danza De La Realidad Site
By appearing on screen as an elderly man to comfort his child self, Jodorowsky collapses the boundaries of time. He demonstrates that while we cannot change the past, we possess the absolute power to change our relationship to it. La Danza de la Realidad stands as a triumphant monument to human resilience, proving that through the transmutative power of art, the scars of childhood can be converted into the ultimate source of spiritual wisdom.
reimagines his childhood not through the dry lens of facts, but through the vivid, healing power of the imagination The Narrative: A Surrealist Homecoming alejandro jodorowsky la danza de la realidad
The central premise is that reality is not an objective truth but a "dance" shaped by our imaginations. Jodorowsky uses the term "imaginary autobiography" to describe the work—not because it is fictional, but because he uses his imagination to expand the limits of his memories to achieve therapeutic transformation. Key Themes and Characters By appearing on screen as an elderly man
Jodorowsky cast his own eldest son, Brontis Jodorowsky, to play the role of Jaime (Brontis's own grandfather). This meta-textual casting forced his son to embody the very man who had traumatized Alejandro. Throughout the film, the real, elderly Alejandro frequently appears on screen, literally wrapping his arms around his younger self (played by child actor Jeremias Herskovits) to offer words of comfort. The set becomes a literal space for intergenerational healing, turning cinema into a profound ritual of reconciliation. Critical Legacy and Impact reimagines his childhood not through the dry lens