You don’t need me to tell you we live in strange times. How often are the conspiracy theories proven conspiracy fact? More often than we want. But what if it’s not always the government and the media deceiving us, but our own perception of reality and unconscious beliefs? We tend to see, or not see, what we expect. The person who can divorce his eyes from his expectations is often the first to identify the truth.
For generations now we’ve been conditioned to “trust the science” and neglect the spiritual.
The Shape of Shadows is the latest documentary from Merkel Media to challenge our perceptions. As host of the popular paranormal podcast The Confessionals, Tony Merkel has heard countless stories that defy explanation, nor does he try. He simply listens with an open mind. Three years ago he recorded one of his most compelling episodes.
Ryan Burns met a skinwalker and lived to tell about it.
When the local law enforcement found him immediately afterwards, unconscious in his truck, they assumed he was drunk. But after he explained that the last thing he remembered was giving a ride to a noncommunicative native, they said without question that he’d met a skinwalker. The experience led him to buy property adjacent to the famous ranch that shall not be named (lest the History Channel sue), to create a safe haven for whatever entities roam the Utah desert. With all this in mind, Tony assembled his team to explore the property for a documentary.
And just before they got there, the paranormal activity increased.
A huge shipping container moved overnight, seemingly levitated. Strange lights flitted through the night sky. And, shortly after arriving, Merkel’s crew found weird footprints and a disturbing native altar. Yet what struck me most was that the descendents of people who have lived in the area for thousands of years can still say with no doubt certain wise men can transform into animals and red-headed cannibal giants once terrorized them.
Have we blinded ourselves to such things with our unyielding faith in empirical science?
Knowing his own biases, Merkel sought out local residents who didn’t share his engrained worldview. As on his podcast, he allows them to take center stage while he and his crew remain in the background as observers. Through the resulting footage, we’re able to do the same. They never milk an event for sensationalism like a certain cable TV show, though the production value isn’t lacking. Once just wishes that they'd had more time to explore and document, as the film is too short and still spread thin.
Will The Shape of Shadows thrill you? Probably not. But it should make you curious.
One area in which Merkel and his team is unshakable is in their Christian faith. Yet they don’t come across as holy warriors bent on defeating demons and leading the pagan natives into the light. Many of the locals are also Christians who clearly believe that whatever is out there, good, evil, or indifferent, is under God’s authority. And while The Shape of Shadows leaves us with more questions than answers, Tony and his team subtly offer a framework for dealing with reality.
Whatever it turns out to be.