Search

Monday, 13 October 2008
Home arrow Archives 2008 arrow Mar/Apr arrow The Movie Mystic: 1998

The Movie Mystic: 1998 PDF  | Print |  E-mail
Written by by Stephen Simon   
Stephen Simon
1978: A High Water
Mark in Movie
Making




I have never received as many responses as I did to last month’s column about the darkness and cynicism in films over the last several years, particularly 2007. Many of you asked me to recommend some movies that would dissipate the bad taste from last year. As I started to look for some of those films, I was intrigued to discover how many amazing films were released in one particular calendar year: 1998.

Why 1998? Perhaps the penultimate year of the last millennium ushered in the promise of our humanity. Whatever the cosmic reason, 1998 may indeed have been the high water mark for a year in which so many films asked the big questions about who we are as humanity and why we are here.

THE TRUMAN SHOW was truly visionary about our obsession today with so-called “reality TV” and is also a beautiful and poignant metaphor for how we choose to live this illusion we call life.

SLIDING DOORS is a clever, romantic, and witty look at what turning the right corner (or descending the right staircase) at the right moment can mean in our lives. The film also has a very hopeful and empowering perspective on how destined soul mates find each other.

CITY OF ANGELS, Ok, yes, it’s sad at the end. I know. Still, it’s a deliriously passionate look at life and a powerful reminder of what a gift being human truly is; moreover, Dennis Franz’s character of Nathaniel rivals the character of Clarence in IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE for most engaging angel ever in a “supporting” role.

MEET JOE BLACK is a beautiful, if at times slow-paced, meditation on the meaning of life and love. Anthony Hopkins’ portrayal of a man who, at sixty-five, meets death head on (in the persona of Brad Pitt) is one of his best performances ever. Maybe it’s because I’m now in my sixties as well, maybe it’s because I so feel his love for his daughters, maybe it’s because I just love a film that is a throwback to the glamour of a bygone era. Whatever the reason, I always cry at the end of the film.

DÉJÀ VU. This independent film (not the Denzel Washington thriller), brilliantly directed by Henry Jaglom, is an engrossing and wildly provocative look at the conflict that can arise between our sense of commitment on the one hand and destiny on the other. When we included DEJA VU in our October, 2007 monthly DVD collection for Spiritual Cinema Circle subscribers, it generated by far the most passionate conversation we have ever had on our message boards.

WHAT DREAMS MAY COME. I produced this film so I certainly can’t be objective, but I would be remiss not to include it.

PRACTICAL MAGIC. I had forgotten how much fun this film is and how much it has to say about the magic in all of us.

SPHERE is a fascinating look at the interaction between meeting an alien race and our human subconscious.
ARMAGEDDON and DEEP IMPACT have the same basic plot point: an asteroid hurtling toward earth, heralding the end of all life on the planet. Both films also illuminate how we came together to avoid extinction. I find these films (more so ARMAGEDDON) to be entertaining action films that also illustrate a commitment I believe we have all made to spare our planet this time from the cataclysms of the past. It’s also fascinating that both films were released in the same year.

PICNIC AT HANGING ROCK. It was directed by Peter Weir and, together with THE LAST WAVE, Weir’s other seminal Australian work, these films are brilliant and absorbing glimpses of our fascination with who we are and why we are here. (Weir also directed THE TRUMAN SHOW).

YOU’VE GOT MAIL. For me, almost ANY love story is spiritual and any teaming between Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan is worth watching again and again. (Well, maybe not JOE VS. THE VOLCANO).

Here’s hoping that maybe these things move in ten-year cycles!


STEPHEN SIMON co-founded www.Spiritualcinemacircle.com and produced Somewhere In Time and
What Dreams May Come. He also directed and produced both Conversations With God and Indigo and is the author of The Force Is With You: Mystical Movies Messages That Inspire Our Lives.

Main Menu
Home
Media Info & Rates
Articles
Contact Us
Newsletter
Book Reviews & CDs
Links
Archives 2005
Archives 2006
Archives 2007
Archives 2008
Doorways
Login Here
Username

Password

Remember me
Forgotten your password?
No account yet? Create one
Sign up now! It's free! Users can add links and have access to other areas.
Newsletter
Keep yourself updated with our FREE newsletters now!

Name:

Email:

Receive HTML mailings?
Subscribe Unsubscribe






Copyright 2000 - 2005 Miro International Pty Ltd. All rights reserved.
Mambo is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.