
From the other side of the mirror, the Other often intrudes: the heroine sees the werewolf reflected in her vanity mirror, the vampire betrays itself by having no reflection. In
Dead of Night (1945), a mirror begins to take over the room in which the heroine lives. “A mirror is a latent doppelgänger,” writes Raymond Durgnat in
Films and Feelings (231).
The Dark Mirror (1946) tells the story of identical twins, one good, the other evil. At a critical moment in
Evil Dead 2 (1987), the hero, Ash, stops to inspect himself in the mirror—only to have his evil doppelgänger reach from the other side and grab hold of him, telling him he’s losing his mind. “Mirrors tell the truth, but in a menacing way. . . .,” observes Durgnat (231-32). Hence characters who despise what they are, or what they have become, smash the mirror and hence their own self-image. But mirrors can be also remind us in a positive way of who and what we are, as in the Velvet Underground’s “I’ll Be Your Mirror”: “When you think the night has seen your mind/That inside you’re twisted and unkind/Let me stand to show that you are blind/Please put down your hands/’Cause I see you.” Often a symbol for Narcissistic self-absorption, the mirror nonetheless frequently tells the truth: as Jean Cocteau observed, mirrors are associated with death, because we watch ourselves grow old in mirrors.
Reflections On The Mirror:Blue Öyster Cult –
MirrorsCaptain Beefheart and His Magic Band –
Mirror ManDeath Cab For Cutie –
My Mirror SpeaksThe (English) Beat –
Mirror in the BathroomLefty Frizzell –
I Never Go Around MirrorsChris Isaak –
Shadows In a MirrorMichael Jackson –
Man in the MirrorDave Matthews Band –
True ReflectionsThe Misfits –
Die Monster DieJoni Mitchell –
Moon in the MirrorMott the Hoople –
Through the Looking GlassGraham Nash –
Man in the MirrorRush –
War PaintThe Velvet Underground –
I’ll Be Your MirrorThe Who –
Smash the Mirror
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