THE MOVIE MYSTIC
Imaginary Heroes
by Stephen Simon
Before we discuss Imaginary Heroes, I
want to briefly, humbly and profusely express my gratitude to some
people who have become real heroes to me: the 140,000 of you who came
out the weekend of January 29-30 to support INDIGO. The film played in
all 50 states and 41 countries around the world that day and media
everywhere took notice. In essence, this was the First International
Spiritual Cinema Gathering. The turnout was extraordinary and so was
your response to the film itself. As a result, the film, which cost
$500,000 to produce, is already profitable and that will encourage more
people to invest in these films for other filmmakers. We will all then
get more films with heart and soul. More than anything, it sent a
powerful message around the world that there is an audience for
Spiritual Cinema that can be reached in nontraditional ways. So, thank
you, thank you, thank you! In the words of the late, lamented, wonderful
Johnny Carson: there will be “more to come.”
Now, to our film of the month.
Sometimes a wonderful, little film –
even a studio film- can get completely lost, like a little child
wandering in a crowd of adults. Without proper support, such could
unfortunately be the case with Imaginary Heroes which deserves to draw
an audience because of its breathtaking courage and sensitivity in
bringing a controversial subject matter to the screen and handling it
with grace and, ultimately, hope and inspiration.
For me, Spiritual Cinema has two major
elements. First, it asks questions that relate to who we are and why we
are here and, second, it makes us feel better about being human beings
when the film is finished. Sometimes the film “ride” is light and fun
and sometimes it’s much more challenging. As spiritual beings, we are
not afraid to look into the most emotional issues of our humanity and
Spiritual Cinema, at its best, can illuminate even the most daunting of
those experiences – just as long as there is redemption, hope and
healing at the end of the journey. In fact, filmmakers can have a hugely
positive effect on us when they have the courage to take on challenging
subject matter and then show us a deeply human and resonant pathway to
healing.
Such is the life force of Imaginary
Heroes which focuses on a subject matter that will initially make many
wince and want to look away but will, I believe, promote great healing,
catharsis and hope for those who choose to see the film.
I know many of you will instinctively
want to stop reading and not even consider seeing the film when the
issue itself is revealed in the next paragraph but – please – I beseech
you to read on because this film can be a catalyst for deep
understanding, hope, healing and redemption for anyone who has ever been
touched by such a tragedy – or knows someone who has.
The wonderful actors Sigourney Weaver
and Jeff Daniels portray the parents of three young people, one of which
is a superlative swimmer who has already set several state and national
swimming records as he prepares for the next Olympics. On the outside,
he is the epitome of someone on the brink of major achievement.
Inwardly, however, he is tormented by his own silent demons and, in the
first five minutes of the film, he takes his own life.
The film itself then takes us inside
every parent’s worst nightmare – how do you cope with such a devastating
event? How do you even live from day to day?
Having produced What Dreams May Come, I
know firsthand how difficult this subject matter is for most people. The
devastation of those left behind can often be too much to bear and, as a
result, suicide is one of those taboos in film that very few people ever
approach because of the quite understandable resistance that most people
have to even consider it. When, however, a film such as Imaginary Heroes
can actually transcend that challenge and show us a way through the
grief, then I believe that it deserves a very special place in our
hearts.
Even more amazing is the fact that this
extraordinary journey into healing was written and directed by a
25-year-old first time filmmaker named Dan Harris whose career
trajectory will, I trust, be stratospheric after people see this
hauntingly beautiful film.
Imaginary Heroes is uncompromising in
its depiction of the grief and sorrow for all concerned as it tastefully
and honestly brings us inside the pain of the parents and the siblings
who are left behind. The journey is initially not a pretty one – but it
does lead to something utterly beautiful and completely rewarding. By
the end of the film, a pathway to healing has been illuminated. We are
shown how people can indeed survive such an experience with their
humanity and love for each other intact and, most importantly, with hope
for their own sense of self and dignity.
Many of us know people who have been
touched by this kind of tragedy. I urge you to see this film and then
gently recommend it to those who may be profoundly and positively
affected by its ultimate message of hope.

Stephen Simon produced such films as
Somewhere in Time and What Dreams May Come, produced and directed INDIGO
and will be directing and producing the film version of Neale Donald
Walsch’s Conversations with God. He also wrote The Force is With You:
Mystical Movie Messages That Inspire Our Lives and co-founded The
Spiritual Cinema Circle . Visit
www.spiritualcinemacircle.com or email
Stephen@spiritualcinemacircle.com.
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