Sunday, August 06, 2006

August 4th - 10th The Celestine Prophecy

Nightly at 7 & 9pm, Sun Mat at 3pm. PG 99 min. D: Armand Mastroianni.

Based on James Redfield's worldwide best-selling novel, "The Celestine Prophecy" is a spiritual adventure film chronicling the discovery of ancient scrolls in the rainforests of Peru. The prophecy and its nine key insights predict a worldwide awakening, arising within all religious traditions, that moves humanity toward a deeper experience of spirituality. For more info: www.thecelestineprophecymovie.com

The Message of The Celestine Prophecy Movie

James is traveling this month to promote the film. Following is his article from March 2006...

I believe that most everyone who came of age in the last few decades is a movie fan. Why? Because in those decades the art of movie making reached its peak. Certainly lovers of vintage films might argue with me on this, believing that older films are better and that the recent age of blockbusters and visual effects have ruined the art, accounting for what is undeniably a downturn in movie attendance.

But I would retort that in spite of this downturn, what movies do best—sweep an audience into an alternative reality for several hours—film has reached an incredible effectiveness. What has been dished out in the last twenty-five years has been poignant explorations, realistically enough to be believed, of different ways of looking at the world. From the stark world of Blade Runner to the expanded cosmos of Close Encounters of the Third Kind to the way Jaws ruined the beaches for us, movies have had a lasting effect. And it's not just mental, it's our very ethos that's affected.

Everyone knows that going to a film, being exposed to a different reality, leaves us, as we walk out the door afterward, still somehow in that reality. If the film was scary or violent, we warily check the crowd for danger automatically until we shake it off and return to our normal sense of things. On the other hand, if the movie was inspiring or imparted a new way of looking at life that is positive in its effect, then we want to savor the moment.

Have visual effects become bad replacements for good stories here in the 21st century? Of course. But it isn't the fault of the medium itself, because now we have all the ingredients to serve up a platter of alternative reality that can stretch us in the ways that we want.

I believe that the downturn in movie attendance is happening chiefly because just excitement and alternative realities are not what we want any longer. What we desire, at this moment of history, is to explore subjects that touch our own deeper consciousness, meaning we want stories that give us true-to-experience demonstrations of what it feels like to perceive the world in a fuller way—a way that smacks true to our own intimations of where the human world can best evolve.

Such attitudes, I believe, are responsible for the upsurge in spiritual films, some large, some small, and this is certainly what The Celestine Prophecy movie is all about. The plot, the conversation, the hidden connections to the past, are all part of a whole that points to an expanded awareness of life's deeper meaning. It speaks to why evolution has carried us this far, the creation behind this evolution, and how we might plug into this magic flow with our own lives.
And if you believe the test audiences, the movie does indeed last a while, changing the way the world feels and looks in a way that feels destined...as soon as we exit those theater doors.


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