In this text, Batchelor describes this idea of falling into a color. This fall into color bringing on a new, heightened reality. He explains that this can take different forms in film. For example, falling into color in the Wizard of Oz is falling into a dream state. On the other hand falling into color in Wings of Desire is "a fall from the disembodied all-observing spirit world into the world of the particular and the contingent, a world of sensuous existence, of hot and cold, of taste"