A perfectionist who stands tall in the history of cinema, Stanley Kubrick. The Core God drawn from his birth date is Tsukuyomi, a hidden god rarely seen — the moon deity of pause and reflection. It appears for only about 1 in 30 people.
Tsukuyomi is the god of the moon, the "hidden face" of the sun goddess Amaterasu, depicted as silence itself, the thing that is never spoken. In Kamitype, more than nine in ten people fall under one of the nine principal gods; only on rare occasions does this hidden god appear. The odds are about 3.45%, roughly 1 in 30. That this god dwells in Kubrick — sparing in output, reclusive in life — feels like a quiet inevitability.
A master who withdrew from the world, avoided the crowd, and nurtured his visions where no one was watching. He left only a dozen or so feature films in his lifetime, yet each one was a crystal of perfection that looked ahead of its time. Saying little, paring away explanation, entrusting the audience with pause and empty space — that style is the very light of the moon, which does not blaze talkatively of its own accord but quietly illuminates the world. Letting meaning dwell within silence is precisely Tsukuyomi's pattern.
Because a hidden god is solitary, it sees far. Attempting a single shot dozens of times, spending years on details no one would notice — that obsession resembles the moon's path, taking its form over ages. Standing outside the noise and getting ahead of his era where no one could see, his way of living tells of the special light of this configuration, found in only about 1 in 30.
A Core God usually lands on one of nine deities, but on rare occasions a "hidden god" appears — for only about 3.45% of people, roughly 1 in 30.
月の神。語られない沈黙そのもの。間と内省で場を変える者。
A light, entertainment-style reading based on the Kamitype test (birth date = the Nine Star Ki birth star). Birth dates are from public sources.