THE MOVIE MYSTIC
The Overture
by Stephen Simon
Opening in theaters
everywhere in November and December, The Overture is a thrilling and
totally engrossing film about both an artist’s passion for his music and
also his unrelenting commitment to protect the human need to express
that passion. Think of a Thai combination of the dedication of Mr.
Holland’s Opus mixed in with the passion of Ray and you get some sense
of the pure joy that music brings to its lead character and to those of
us in the audience.
The Overture is a
fictional biography inspired by events in the life of legendary Thai
musician Luang Pradit Pairoh (called Sorn in the film). Divided in two
parallel stories, The Overture covers two separate epochs in Sorn’s
life: the first story arc is set during the musician’s early years and
the second covers the final moments of his life, when Thailand was under
Japanese occupation.
Born in remote rural Siam
in the late 19th century, Sorn, the youngest son in a family of
musicians, displays a remarkable passion for music – and an astonishing
facility for playing the wooden xylophone known as the ranad. As a young
child, Sorn chases a butterfly which lands on the ranad and begins to
play instinctively. Following a family tragedy, Sorn is forbidden by his
father to play; however, the young prodigy studies in secret, quickly
eclipsing a talented older sibling. This dedication inspires his father,
however reluctantly, to take him on as a formal pupil.
As he matures into a young
man, Sorn’s musical gifts win him great regional acclaim, but his
adolescent pride also leads him to an early defeat when he attempts to
challenge Thailand’s legendary ranad master, Khun In, to a musical duel
during his first visit to the bustling capital city of Bangkok.
Returning home haunted by
his defeat, Sorn redoubles his dedication to his music and develops a
revolutionary new ranad technique that eventually wins him national
respect, appointment as a royal court musician and another shot at his
old nemesis Khun In. Sorn’s greatest challenge, however, comes in the
final years of his career, when political change in Thailand threatens
to outlaw the musical traditions to which he has dedicated his life.
According to the director,
it took quite a long time to cast the actors for The Overture, mainly
because the actor who would play Sorn, the main character of the film,
had to be able to play lead xylophone and other kinds of Thai musical
instruments as well. Initially, he looked at actors who could really
play Thai musical instruments, but couldn’t find anyone appropriate for
the role. Then he began to look at actors who had enough time to devote
to learning and practicing these musical instruments. The role finally
fell to Anuchit Saphanphong, who, although had never played Thai musical
instruments before, had enough skill to get a feel for the music’s
rhythms.
The character of Sorn in
Overture reminds us that some of us are born into lives so that we can
learn, grow and evolve while some others come to life with a particular
mission to accomplish. When one is born with that particular sense of
being here to do something specific, there is no denying it’s
overwhelming dominion in one’s heart. Try as one might at times, that
mission blazes brightly in one’s mind and is indelibly etched upon one’s
soul. Destiny and the universe always find ways to communicate where the
pathway lies that will connect such a soul with its destiny. One can
divert from the path and create whatever obstacles one might wish, but
the mission carries us inexorably forward. As is said, one does not
choose such destiny. It chooses you.
Filled with exhilarating
musical performances and set against a backdrop of sweeping historical
change, The Overture reminds me of a saying that usually applies to
sports: “Never underestimate the heart of a champion.” In this case, I
would add the words “passionate artist” to that sentence. In a time when
it was literally life-threatening to be different and to even express
his music, Sorn refused to bow to the societal pressures all around him.
He heard only the whisperings of the music muse in his heart who
compelled him to defy even his beloved father in search of a new sound
only he could hear.
Artists can, have and
always will have within themselves the opportunity, ability and honor to
deeply affect the society in which their artistic vision is expressed.

Stephen Simon has produced
such films as Somewhere In Time and What Dreams May Come. His first book
The Force Is With You: Mystical Movie Messages That Inspire Our Lives is
now available by Walsch Books/Hampton Roads. For more information, visit
www.MysticalMovies.com or
email
Stephen@spiritualcinemacircle.com.
|