"The solar winds are hitting the magnetosphere," his father shouted over the wind noise. "It’s the Carrington Event all over again! Look at the sky!"
Consider the acclaimed "A Thousand Clouds of Peace Fence the Sky, Love; Your Being Love Will Never End." Rabioso Sol Rabioso Cielo.avi
For the uninitiated, Rabioso Sol, Rabioso Cielo (Raging Sun, Raging Sky) is the final installment of Julián Hernández’s trilogy of desire, preceded by Broken Sky and Destricted . It is a film that is notoriously difficult to describe. It is a tone poem, a homoerotic fever dream, and a love letter to the history of cinema, ranging from Fassbinder to Almodóvar. But for many of us, our relationship with this film didn't start in a theater. It started with that file. "The solar winds are hitting the magnetosphere," his
One Reddit user (now deleted) claimed to have run the file through a hex editor and found strings of code resembling electroencephalography (EEG) data. This led to speculation that the file was originally a biofeedback art piece: the "sun" pulses to the viewer’s own alpha waves. However, this is unverifiable and likely a hoax. It is a film that is notoriously difficult to describe
He had found it on an old external hard drive that had been gathering dust in his father’s study. His father, a meteorologist obsessed with the violent poetry of the atmosphere, had passed away two years ago, leaving behind a chaos of notes, charts, and this single, cryptically named video.