MovieChat Forums > Eden Log (2007) Discussion > Transcendental In Every Sense!!

Transcendental In Every Sense!!


After reading reviews of Eden Log, and after seeing the movie myself, I agree that you either love it or hate it. There is little room for a middle of the road reaction to this one. As with so many others, it's all about what you expect and appreciate from movies that break the mold of formula and predictability.

I tend to be more in love with the movie for its uniqueness above all else. In a world where everything has already been done, making the newest of movies a clichéd rehash of something seen before, this movie goes all out to avoid those pitfalls, becoming something refreshingly new. Of course, the inescapable and limited themes (man vs. man, man vs. nature, man vs. himself, etc.) are there, but that's where the familiarities end.

I must stress, however, that creating something new these days also involves a large amount of courage to create what can largely be disliked. The director and writer of this movie had some serious courage, for sure. Eden Log is incoherent much of the time, defying most attempts to make any sense of the plot through the better part of its running time. However, any astute viewer will quickly realize and appreciate the fact that this movie is confusing by intention rather than by chance or failure. Of course, I'm not suggesting that a movie can be good merely because it is confusing. There is, I think, in this movie, order and meaning to be discovered, with enough patience and thought, within all the chaos and confusion. Yes, from the very beginning, the viewer is offered a most unique puzzle to be solved.

The viewer is introduced to the main character in the pulsing bright light of an otherwise pitch-black cavern. As for where this dark place is, no one can possibly know at this point. Even whether it's on earth or elsewhere is not to be known. As we watch the character emerge sluggishly from the mud and muck, we are, with flashing lights and confusion, about as disoriented as the character himself. From there, the character attempts to learn who he is, just as we do, clumsily and often incorrectly connecting piecemeal clues found here and there. Yes, this movie puts the viewer in the first person position, with virtually no objective views of anything. All we see, hear, and experience are as subjective as that experienced by the main character. He is pursued by mutant creatures of unknown significance, through endless passageways that mostly lead nowhere of importance. Of course, I won't go on with anything more; I wouldn't want to spoil the charm of this movie for all those who may choose to see it. Certainly that is the way this movie is best-watched anyway--without a single clue revealed by another viewer. Even knowing what others think it all means is too much. Again, the not-knowing is what truly makes this movie so unique and effective. Some of the best movies leave much meaning to the mind of the viewer, instead of revealing everything there is to think and know. Eden Log indeed plants many unique ideas in the mind of every individual who sees it.

Eden Log could have been another monument to mediocrity, easily forgotten and lost amongst everything else of its kind. It could have played it safe and been like a million other movies getting, at least consistently, more so-so reviews. Instead, it dares to be different and transcends the muck of mediocrity.

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I have a movie for you! It's called "Ed's log", and it is apparently everything you like in a low-budget indie film.

The first 20 minutes consist of "Ed" squatting on a toilet straining mightily to take a dump. The entire dialogue consists of Ed grunting.

Later, Ed takes a break to read the morning paper, only it's last Sunday's paper instead. He mouths his way through the week-old sports sections followed by the comics.

For the next 25 minutes, Ed grunts some more, to no avail. The movie ends abruptly and we never learn if Ed was successful in dumping his log.


Ed's Log. Destined to be a classic! If you don't like it, you are an idiot!

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WTF?!?

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I have a movie for you! It's called "Ed's log", and it is apparently everything you like in a low-budget indie film.

The first 20 minutes consist of "Ed" squatting on a toilet straining mightily to take a dump. The entire dialogue consists of Ed grunting.

Later, Ed takes a break to read the morning paper, only it's last Sunday's paper instead. He mouths his way through the week-old sports sections followed by the comics.

For the next 25 minutes, Ed grunts some more, to no avail. The movie ends abruptly and we never learn if Ed was successful in dumping his log.


Ed's Log. Destined to be a classic! If you don't like it, you are an idiot!


I have a post for you! It's called "Post by jerebear-1 on Thu Jun 18 2009 22:55:26", and it's even worse than watching some guy taking a *beep*

You don't like the movie, fine. You don't like originality, fine. Go back to watching something more at your intelligence level - like Transformers 2.

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