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Photo copyright by Andreas M. Gross
The Maya
Myth and Reality
Documentary, 3 x 57 minutes, DigiBeta, 16:9, stereo
Year of production: 1999
Director: Klaus Dexel
Cameraman: Michael Teutsch, Thomas Schwan, Reinhard Köcher
Production: Bechert & Dexel Filmproduktion
Produced for: ARD/BR
Versions: German
This trilogy on the world of
the Maya is the most extensive film project on this topic until now. The Mayan
culture is shown as a continuum stretching over thousands of years and the
course of history is relived by learning about the personal destiny of kings,
shamans and explorers.
Part I is dedicated to the glory of the classic age and its adventure of discovery.
Part II shows the magic world of the Mayas and the war of Conquest.
Part III gives an account of the collapse of the highly advanced Mayan civilisation and the survival of its people to the present day.
In these three films we
experience an exciting archaeological journey through the ages.
We follow the traces of
discoverers up to the present day and reveal the complex, magical,
mystic world of the Maya.
Famous Mayan sites such as COPAN, QUIRIGUA, TIKAL, PALENQUE, YAXCHILAN,
YAXHA/NAKUM, CHICHÉN ITZA and UXMAL are shown in their splendour and
magnificent architecture which is partly overgrown by the jungle, and which
still exerts a fascinating attraction for archaeologists, tourists and grave
robbers alike.
Important Maya secrets like
their scripture, the mysterious ritual ball game, and their death cult are
presented in the light of most recent scientific insights. The „bearers of
secrets,“ the shamans are performing rituals that are still alive today. How
could the Maya built with Stone Age tools complex temple structures and
towering ritual hills to honour their God-Kings? Who were these people
that created works of art of lasting splendour and recorded their calendar in
books? The merging of mysteries about life, death and resurrection, the past and
future created a magic cycle which determined the thoughts and reality of the
Maya .
The view held by previous
generations of researchers that the Maya were romantic esoteric
and peace-loving astronomers
is refuted. The Maya were rather ruled by an elite class that had an
unscrupulous and calculating lust for power and exploited their people, until it
was consumed in dynastic intrigues and ruinous expansionist wars. This probably
explains why the Maya culture spontaneously collapsed after 1200 years.
Through the Spanish Conquest
and colonial domination, the Maya survived. „The people of the corn,“ today
approximately six million strong, have preserved their identity over two
millennia, in spite of all the changes.
For licensing and more information please contact:
Björn Jensen
email: jensen(at)gingerfoot.de
© 1999 by Bechert & Dexel Filmproduktion
Photo copyright by Bechert & Dexel Filmproduktion
