Ok, but step back and realize, so does the church act as one big magic act.
Religion in general is like that. A priest or high order pope says words over things or souls, has its own rituals, creates fear and hooks you in.
The magic is more real because it shows you everyone can create things, is Godlike with the spark of creation inside naturally.
What isn't a big soul trap on earth, its a matrix in 3D, meant to farm your skills and time, there really isn't anything that someone didn't make up to suck you in. Everything you can see, feel, aside from nature is created by someone. Its just your ideas that turn into realities. That is the power of thought and action is all.
(Marriage, Money, Beauty, Fame, Saved Souls, Rock and Roll, Art, etc). The only thing NOT like that is actual wilderness and nature and you can feel the difference in its vibes alone, just go out in a forest and feel what real feels like, a little sunshine and forest restores you because your soul feels alive there).
I think its the only thing you can really trust is the feeling of interacting in natures wilderness away from cities, away from all of its silly constructs like religion, work, etc, the only real thing on the planet and its getting difficult to find now.
But, for people who are not mainstream, the message to you is to go within, the kingdom of God is within. Thats true, you must go way out away from society, or go underground to be real, and find the magic of real.
Does this movie have anything to do with why Rastafarians always seem to reference Babylon in their songs?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rastafari
Rastas place great emphasis on the idea that personal experience and intuitive understanding should be used to determine the truth or validity of a particular belief or practice.
[39] No Rasta, therefore, has the authority to declare which beliefs and practices are
orthodox and which are
heterodox.
[38] The conviction that Rastafari has no dogma "is so strong that it has itself become something of a dogma", according to the sociologist of religion
Peter B. Clarke.
[40]
Rastafari is deeply influenced by
Judeo-Christian religion,
[41] and shares many commonalities with
Christianity.
[42] The scholar Michael Barnett observed that its theology is "essentially Judeo-Christian", representing "an Afrocentralized blend of Christianity and Judaism".
[43] Some followers openly describe themselves as Christians.
[44] Rastafari accords the
Bible a central place in its belief system, regarding it as a holy book,
[45] and adopts a
literalist interpretation of its contents.
[46] According to the anthropologist
Stephen D. Glazier, Rasta approaches to the Bible result in the religion adopting an outlook very similar to that of some forms of
Protestantism.
[47] Rastas regard the Bible as an authentic account of early black African history and of their place as God's favoured people.
[40] They believe the Bible to be key to understanding both the past and the present and for predicting the future,
[40] while also regarding it as a source book from which they can form and justify their beliefs and practices.
[48] Rastas commonly perceive the final book of the Bible, the
Book of Revelation, as the most important part, because they see its contents as having particular significance for the world's present situation.
[49]