Is as above so below real? And while many of these found-footage horror films claim to be inspired by true stories, As Above/So Below does not, which is weird considering there is a true story just as terrifying. Years ago, ABC Family aired a special on The Catacombs (below), which focused on a camcorder discovered deep within.
An increasingly popular theory is that of denser "Superfluid" water layers that are flat - as above, so below. Not dome shaped. Firmament And Elohim made the expanse and separated the waters which were under the expanse from the waters which were above the expanse. And it came to be so. And Elohim called the expanse 'heavens.' And
Another interpretation of this ending is as the movie is titled "As above, so below". The surface world descends into the catacombs. As Scarlett states that this means there is an inverse for what is above (i.e., when they find the "doorway" in the water puddle). Given that the world descends into catacombs, once the group crosses the (supposed
The film's title is a reference to Hermeticism and alchemy, not Dante's Inferno. It suggests that whatever happens above also happens below, and vice versa. The film follows a team of archaeologists who search for the philosopher's stone in the Paris catacombs, where they encounter the Gnostic Star of David.And while many of these found-footage horror films claim to be inspired by true stories, As Above/So Below does not, which is weird considering there is a true story just as terrifying.
And lo, As Above, So Below became the first production of any kind to be allowed to film in the catacombs. The result is one of the finest found footage movies of the 2010s. The result is one of
The URL's description "so-below" comes from the phrase "As above, so below", which is from the Hermetic text, the Emerald Tablet. "Hey Wally I hope you're cool and not super evil that'd be a real bummer" there is a doodle of a sad crying face. The doodle's file name is "youdontlikemeneighbor.png.""As above, so below" is a phrase from Hermeticism, which is more of an occult tradition than a philosophical one (though it has certain similarities to Neoplatonism, perhaps because both emerged around the same time and place and so drew from a similar set of ideas and intellectual/religious trends
This intertwining of worlds can also be seen as a representation of the Hermetic principle "As above, so below." It references how changes in one world reflect changes in the other. Finally, triangles are commonly used in alchemy to designate the four different elements. The more rarified elements - fire and air - have point-down triangles