What is the true meaning? :do not know.
What is the answer? : That depends on your question.
In "Holy Mountain", Jodorowsky is like a monk sitting cross-legged in a meditation machine with you.
Everything in the floating world will eventually become a stepping stone for the pursuit of deformed desires. The scary thing is that the deformed desire is wrapped in pure white silk, marked with a noble holy light, and then slowly supported by a pair of dirty hands in the ethereal singing. The ultimate should gather all but nothing, and that is how its fragments are so beautiful and so depraved.
But the deformed desire and dirty hands can't feather and transform into the ultimate? The "Holy Mountain" at the end of the world exists in every grain of dust in the floating world, in every fleeting thought, it is everywhere and disappears without a trace.
Was the cross-legged monk himself looking for it? When the camera slowly zoomed out, did he already know what a "holy mountain" was?
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