Released in 1999, The Mummy has endured as a beloved adventure classic—fast-paced, charming, and drenched in desert mystery. Blending pulp horror with romantic banter and old-school spectacle, the film offers ancient curses, forbidden books, undead priests, and a hero who never quite seems out of his depth. It is energetic, confident, and designed to keep moving forward at all costs.
And yet, beneath its momentum and charisma lies an unusually rich archetypal landscape. The Mummy activates far more mythic structures than it initially appears to, touching nearly the entire Major Arcana sequence. At the same time, it consistently avoids slowing down where those archetypes would demand the greatest transformation. The result is a story that feels mythic on the surface, but evasive at its core.
In the analysis that follows, the film is examined through a slightly reinterpreted Major Arcana framework, informed by the Law of One material and modern understandings of inner development. The archetypes are treated not as occult symbols or fixed character labels, but as psychological and spiritual processes that can appear in individuals, relationships, and systems. This approach allows us to do several things at once: to clarify the meaning of the Major Arcana, to see how The Mummy deploys them effectively, to identify where the story sidesteps key transformational stages, and to reflect on how these same dynamics appear in our own lives.
What quickly becomes apparent is that the film’s central tension is not really between the living and the undead, but between movement and surrender. The protagonist begins the story already highly functional, operating close to the Chariot archetype, which leaves little room for inward growth. Meanwhile, the character who truly embodies the Magician’s power awakens forces she does not fully integrate. As a result, later archetypes—particularly Death, rebirth, and Temperance—remain largely unvisited, even in a story literally centered on death itself.
By tracing the archetypes as they appear—and, just as importantly, as they are avoided—we can see The Mummy as a case study in archetypal energy without archetypal integration. With that framework established, we can now move step by step through the Major Arcana to examine how this lively, entertaining film both reveals and resists the deeper work of transformation.
Major arcana archetypes in the Mummy
The Magician — light, potential, will, and manifestation ✅
From the beginning, Rick O’Connell is portrayed as a resourceful gunslinger who seems capable of getting his way even if his guns were taken from him. The potential is clearly there. However, it is worth noting that before the story even properly begins, Rick is saved twice by sheer luck. This raises the question of whether this is truly Magician alignment or merely narrative convenience. It does not feel like conscious manifestation; rather, it feels accidental.
The clearer Magician figure in the story is Evelyn Carnahan. She is clumsy yet intelligent, curious, and capable—balancing herself atop a ladder in the library, navigating ancient languages, and eventually bringing literal light into the tomb. Her will, curiosity, and ability to bridge worlds position her far more convincingly within the Magician archetype.
The High Priestess — object of inspiration ✅
Evelyn and Rick function as mutual inspirations, but Evelyn is the clearer High Priestess figure early on. She is the keeper of forbidden knowledge, a mediator between the ancient and the modern, and her curiosity consistently reaches beyond the ordinary world.
Her later modest dress is symbolically appropriate, but the deeper High Priestess signal lies in her access to knowledge that should not yet be accessed. She does not merely study the past—she opens it.
The Devil — opposition to the Magician ✅
There is a great deal of Devil energy present in the story, consistently challenging the Magicians.
Evelyn’s intentions are first opposed by her dismissive boss, who instills doubt and limits her agency. Later, the guardians of forbidden knowledge oppose her pursuit of Hamunaptra. Rick, meanwhile, is opposed from the very beginning, imprisoned and facing execution.
None of these forces are overtly evil; rather, they function as constraints on will. The Devil here manifests as limitation, restriction, and resistance to forward movement.
Justice — balancing good and bad, free will ✅
The idea that the Magician’s light and will must be opposed in order for free will to exist aligns with the Justice archetype. Throughout the film, Evelyn and her companions act almost entirely according to their own will.
However, while free will is clearly present, the ethical weight of those choices is rarely acknowledged. Actions have consequences, but responsibility is not meaningfully examined.
The Hermit — isolation, solitude ✅
Rick begins the story already isolated, imprisoned and removed from society. Evelyn, though not imprisoned, is also portrayed as a loner—preferring books, working alone, and retreating into study rather than social connection.
In both cases, isolation exists, but it is not used as a space for inner reflection or transformation. It remains situational rather than introspective.
The Lightning — inspiration, idea ✅
When Jonathan presents Evelyn with the key and map, she is immediately inspired. The idea to return to Hamunaptra—the City of the Dead—strikes suddenly and decisively. This moment clearly functions as the Lightning: an external spark that changes the course of events.
The Star — hope and wayshower ❓
The promise of treasure and discovery guides the first half of the story. Hamunaptra functions as a distant beacon, offering meaning, wealth, and purpose.
However, once Imhotep rises, this Star collapses entirely. The hope that guided the journey is revealed to be external and misaligned, offering motivation but no enduring direction.
The Empress — inflated ego, premature confidence, naivety ✅
Evelyn does not display inflated ego in the traditional sense. However, when she reads from the Book of the Dead, it becomes clear that she does not understand what she is unleashing. This moment reflects premature confidence and naivety—intimacy with power without humility.
In this sense, the Empress appears not as vanity, but as unearned closeness to creation.
The Wheel of Fortune — ups and downs ❓
The collective realization that reading from the Book of the Dead was a grave mistake is a clear Wheel of Fortune moment. The emotional drop is immediate and dramatic.
Yet this fall remains superficial. No one meaningfully reflects on it or learns from it. The Wheel turns, but no integration follows, revealing the film’s preference for spectacle over inner correction.
The Emperor — control, authority, agenda ❓
Although Imhotep might seem like a candidate for the Emperor archetype, he does not seek order, rule, or governance. His obsession is personal rather than authoritative—focused entirely on restoring his lost love.
Rick briefly expresses Emperor-like control when he locks Evelyn in a room for her “own safety.” However, this moment is fleeting and unexamined. As a result, the Emperor archetype never stabilizes in the story.
Strength — aggression, manipulation, gunslinging ✅
Strength is undeniably present throughout the film. Violence, shooting, intimidation, and force dominate the narrative.
However, Strength is never transcended or refined. It remains the primary problem-solving tool from beginning to end, preventing later archetypes from fully activating.
The Moon — twilight and illusion ✅
Fighting the undead with conventional weapons proves futile. Assumptions about reality collapse, revealing that force and control produce only illusory results. This is a clear expression of the Moon archetype, where familiar rules no longer apply.
The Hierophant — truth revealed ✅
Truth is revealed repeatedly through figures of authority and knowledge: the tomb keepers, the museum curator, and later Evelyn herself when she discovers how Imhotep might be stopped using the Book of Life.
However, this truth remains informational rather than moral. Knowledge is shared, but no one is fundamentally changed by it.
The Hanged Man — illusions crash, action suspended ❓
The group eventually realizes that aggression alone cannot defeat Imhotep. Their worldview shifts, and they change tactics.
Yet this is not true surrender. Identity and will are never suspended; they merely pivot strategies. The Hanged Man appears only partially.
The Sun — heart-to-heart, sincerity ❌
Despite moments of charm, banter, and romance, the film contains no genuine heart-to-heart exchanges. No vulnerability is shown, no emotional unburdening occurs, and no truths are spoken from the heart.
The Sun never truly rises.
Death — killing of the ego ❌
There are no ego deaths in the story. No one releases control, accepts responsibility, or apologizes. Evelyn never acknowledges her role in awakening Imhotep, and no character undergoes a meaningful surrender of identity or certainty.
Resurrection / Judgement — rebirth ❌
Because there is no ego death, there can be no rebirth. Rick, in particular, cannot be resurrected into a new self because he begins the story already operating with Chariot-level clarity and determination.
The arc has nowhere to go inward.
The Two Paths (Lovers) — determination ❓
Rick is determined to return to Hamunaptra, rescue Evelyn, defeat the villain, and save the world. However, this determination is heroic rather than transformative. It is about doing, not choosing between inner truths.
The Chariot — clarity, uninhibited action ✅
Rick displays Chariot energy most clearly in the final confrontation, acting with intuition, decisiveness, and momentum. However, these qualities were present from the very start.
In contrast, Imhotep also reaches a form of the Chariot—but through destructive determination, driven by obsession rather than balance.
The World — reconnection with others and the divine ❓
The kiss between Rick and Evelyn, along with Ardeth Bay’s gratitude, signal narrative closure and reward. However, these moments function as confirmations, not integrations. They conclude the story without resolving it archetypally.
Temperance — ordinary life, happier ❓
Riding into the sunset provides visual closure, but not true balance. Nothing suggests a transformed relationship to power, knowledge, or death. Temperance remains implied rather than earned.
Closing Reflection: Movement Without Death
Seen through the archetypal lens, The Mummy ultimately avoids the one archetype that would require true inner change: the Death archetype, symbolizing ego death. Many archetypes appear, but the story consistently chooses momentum over surrender.
Rick O’Connell enters the film already seasoned, operating almost entirely from the Chariot archetype. The opening imprisonment briefly suggests that he is not yet master of his reality, but this gesture is only cosmetic. His competence never meaningfully collapses, and because he begins so close to the Chariot, there is little room for inward growth. As a result, the story has no structural need to explore the later archetypes that normally follow—Sun, Death, Resurrection, or Temperance.
This avoidance is echoed in the treatment of Imhotep. Imhotep himself reaches a form of the Chariot, but through determination severed from truth—driven by obsession, aggression, and illusion rather than integration. Even his fear of cats exposes the film’s reluctance to engage death symbolically. Once this weakness is introduced, one naturally wonders why it is never meaningfully incorporated. The answer is not practical but archetypal: fully honoring that symbol would require the story to accept Death as law rather than something to outmaneuver.
Most telling of all, Evelyn is the true Magician of the film. She bridges worlds, brings light into darkness, and awakens forces she does not fully understand. Yet the tragedy is that the story never requires her to integrate that power responsibly. Her transgression is never followed by apology, humility, or ethical reckoning. Without that moment, Death cannot activate—and without Death, no true rebirth can occur.
Ironically, this is a story centered on a dead man who refuses to stay dead, and yet it is precisely Death that the narrative avoids confronting on an inner level. The mummy is destroyed, but Death is never understood. The film defeats death as an enemy while sidestepping it as a teacher—and that choice, more than any curse or spectacle, defines the limits of its archetypal arc.
Thank you!
Ira