THE MOVIE MYSTIC
Expiration Date
by Stephen Simon
Comedy is perhaps the
hardest kind of film to make. As the great comic W.C. Fields was about
to make his transition, he is rumored to have said “Dying is easy...
comedy is hard.” Satiric comedy raises that degree of difficulty to
Olympian heights. Add in a sweet romantic story line as well. Blend with
finesse, love and a genuine love of humanity and voila: Expiration Date
magically appears!
The film, produced and
directed with style, elegance, compassion, wit and grace by Seattle
filmmaker Rick Stevenson, is an absolute delight from start to finish.
Expiration Date tells the
wonderfully wacky story of Charlie Silvercloud III, whose father and
grandfather unexpectedly and tragically “expired” on their 25th
birthdays, both times at the hands (tires)? of runaway milk trucks!
Charlie is fast approaching his own 25th and, convinced that his family
is cursed, believes that nothing will protect him from a similar fate.
Accordingly, he runs from even a glimpse of someone carrying a milk
carton and shops very diligently for an appropriate vessel for his body
and for just the right burial plot. As the fates would have it, however,
he keeps running into the same young woman who seems equally determined
to outbid him for everything he sets his sights on. He can’t even seem
to get his life together for his death. Don’t you hate it when that
happens?
What’s a poor, cursed
fellow supposed to do? Just lay down in front of a dairy farm and wait
for the inevitable? Rob a bank so you can at least retain the dignity of
being able to plan for your own demise? After all, by the time the law
gets you, the Silvercloud curse will have eliminated you anyway. Or...
Maybe... In planning for
your death, you find someone who teaches you how wonderful life can
really be.
To say more about the film
itself would deprive you of the sheer fun and warm discovery that the
film reveals as Charlie careens toward that 25th milestone.
As mentioned earlier,
mixing comedy, satire and romance is an amazingly courageous journey for
a filmmaker to embark upon. Stevenson has an obvious love and respect
for his characters and his compassion infuses every scene in the film.
It’s just not possible to encounter these off-the-wall characters and
not be totally enchanted by both them and the increasingly wild and
outrageous situations in which they find themselves.
Expiration Date is opening
in cities around the country and I strongly recommend that you see it
when it opens near you. You can get more details at
www.expirationdatethemovie.com. It’s films like these that remind us
how wonderful movies can be when they show us who we are as humanity
when we function at our very best. I loved this film and I believe that
you will, too.

Stephen Simon has produced
such films as “Somewhere In Time” and “What Dreams May Come” and
recently produced and directed the film version of “Conversations With
God.” He also co-founded
www.Spiritualcinemacircle.com.
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