THE MOVIE MYSTIC
After Life
by Stephen Simon
Many years ago, a noted
observer referred to television programming as a “vast wasteland,” a
description that most of us would, I believe, also apply to the January
through May distribution pattern of theatrical movies.
Every year, the pickings
get slimmer and slimmer during this time, don’t they? Hollywood seems to
have decided a few years ago that there’s only so much “quality” that we
as an audience can stand so they telescope most of those films first
into the summer and then into the October-December period so as to
qualify for Academy Awards. Then they abandon us completely for at least
5 or 6 months until the summer rolls around again when, for those of us
who grew up with and love movies, we are so starved for films that
almost anything will do.
At least, in 2004, we had
the brilliant Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind in February but –
this year? Hollywood and even the major independents seem to drag every
shallow comedy and cheap thriller from their vaults and dump them into
this period of time each year. That decision really provides no problem
for mainstream critics. They just take out their very sharp-edged pens
and attack the films for being as innocuous and banal as most – if not
all – of them are. For me, however, it provides a different challenge
because it is the focus of this column to discuss only positive film
recommendations and leave negative film reviews to others. In the three
years that I have been writing this column, I only once departed from
that format.
So... what to do? Turn
negative? Write the column only on an irregular basis when there is a
notable film to illuminate? Or make another shift?
I have chosen to pursue
the latter option. When there are no new films to discuss that are
opening on a national basis, I have decided, from time to time, to focus
on more classic films in Spiritual Cinema with which you may not
necessarily be familiar and which you can rent or purchase on DVD.
So, this month, let’s take
a journey into Afterlife, a Japanese film that was released in America
in 2000 that is pure and simple genius.
The premise is simple.
After you die, you must choose one memory from your life and then spend
eternity in that memory.
The film takes place at a
way station in the afterlife where people are given a week to choose
that one memory and then they supervise the recreation of the memory so
that they can live within it.
The choices are all
poignant.
• A man chooses the moment
in which he enjoyed his first taste of salted rice after almost starving
to death in World War Two.
• A woman chooses the
moment of birthing her child.
• A woman chooses the
moment she is reunited with her fiancée after the war.
By the way, no one chooses
a work-related memory. As the old saying goes, no one ever says at the
end of life that they wish they had spent more time at the office.
They are told that they
must choose a memory; however, it is revealed late in the film that all
the people working in the way station are there so that they can help
others remember because they themselves either couldn’t or wouldn’t
choose a memory themselves.
The most moving story in
the film involves an elderly businessman who led such a “so-so” life
that he can’t choose. His was in an arranged marriage and they were
never passionate with each other. She had a fiancé who was killed in the
war and whom was the love of her life. The choice that is made here is
beautiful, poignant and very resonant with the very nature of spiritual
cinema.
If we knew that we would
have but one memory to keep with us for eternity, that awareness would
make each moment of life much more precious.
Spiritual Cinema asks two
eternal questions:
Who are we and why are we
here?
So....which memory would
you choose?

Stephen Simon has produced such films
as Somewhere In Time and What Dreams May Come, produced and directed
Indigo and will next 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. Stephen welcomes your comments by email:
Stephen@spiritualcinemacircle.com.
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