DECEMBER, 2002
Our Enduring Opinion
by Guy & Jeanne Spiro
Book Excerpt from
Swimming Where Madmen Drown
by Robert Masters
Finding An Herbalist
by Althea Northage-Orr; AHG, L.Ac.
Bridging Personality and Spirit
by Maurie D. Pressman M.D
Sound Healing
by Steven Halpern
From the Heart
by Alan Cohen
The Shared Heart
by Joyce and Barry Vissel
Dear Louise
by Louise Hay
Science Fiction
by Jacqueline Lichtenberg
The Movie Mystic
by Stephen Simon
Inprint
New books of interest

"Far From Heaven"

This is my favorite movie time of the year. November and December mark the months in which the studios and independents release films which they believe have Academy Award potential. Films must have at least opened theatrically by December 31 to qualify for Academy Awards so many films open in very limited engagements (usually New York and Los Angeles) near the end of the year and then get wider exposure in the early months of the next year. To boost these films' chances, the studios also send out DVD's of films that they feel deserve Academy Award attention. As I am a voting member of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences, I get about 50 films at home during these months, many of which have not been released widely in theaters. I've been looking forward to THIS year in particular because it means that I have the opportunity to see some films early that I can share with you.

"Far From Heaven" is a miraculous, beautiful, original, haunting, provocative, and extraordinary film---and that may be the understatement of the year.

Set in 1957, the film is shot as though it was actually MADE in 1957. Gorgeous technicolor techniques have been utilized, the film score is evocative of that decade, and the entire creative team lovingly created a 1950's look that is dazzling to behold. If you've never seen the leaves turn in New England in the Fall, this film is awfully close to being there. The Costume design is exquisite (down to to a mink stoll that seems so perfect for that time and so out of place today), the production design is so acutely accurate that I felt like I was reliving my past (I went from age 4 to age 14 during the fifties), and the social mores are painfully to the point (a pitcherful of daiquiris for a women's lunch, an African-American "maid", and...meat loaf!)

The major impact of the film, however, is that it explores issues that never could have been addressed if the film had actually been made in the 1950's.

The story and characters are dazzling and beautifully orchestrated. Essentially, the film looks at the social and emotional fabric of the "perfect" 1950's family. Julianne Moore plays the dutiful fifties wife of a successful corporate salesman (Dennis Quaid). They have the de rigeur 2 children who call their Dad "pop" and are severely reprimanded for uttering such dreadful epithets as "shucks". Moore's friends are all homemakers and they have lunches and social gatherings that are strictly structured and rife with posturing and pretense. All "looks" normal....until Moore catches Quaid passionately kissing another...man. At that point, it becomes obvious that we are seeing a brilliant filmic convention: a movie set in the fifties, shot in a fifties style, that dares to look at subject matter that never could have been so boldly addressed if the film had actually been made in the fifties. Quaid's homosexuality is, of course, a total taboo at that time and, in one of the most painfullly poignant scenes in the film, he consults a psychiatrist who solemly declares that Quaid's "sickness" is treatable; that is, "5 to 30%" of men with this "disease" can undergo a "heterosexual conversion" through behavioral modification and/or shock therapy!

Moore becomes friendly with her African-American gardener (Dennis Haysbert) who is a cultured, educated single father raising an 11 year old daughter. Their mutual need and desire for physical and emotional attention creates enormous tension for both of them and on screen. This is one of the sexiest movies in a long time and there is absolutely no on-screen sex! Sadly,the ugly face of Northern racial prejudice in that era is also re-enacted with chilling and tragic accuracy.

Overall, the film is a searing portrait of womens' rights, racism, repressive sexuality, and the painful cost of living with societal pretense and without honesty in personal relationships and, for me, is just about as close to perfect film making as a movie can get. I believe that the film is the first real candidate for Best Picture honors next year, along with several other individual nominations for Moore, Quaid, Haysbert, original score, production design, cinematography, costume design, and for the film's brilliant director (Todd Haynes-bravo, maestro, bravo!),

For our Spiritual Cinema Community, it is an extraordinary opportunity for us all to see how far we have come and to take comfort and pride in the breathtaking spiritual, emotional, and societal evolution that has occurred in the last half-century. Yes, we still have a long way to go but those "Happy Days" were indeed "Far From Heaven" ...and, my oh my, look how far we've already come! You can actually see and feel in Julianne Moore's eyes and heart the seeds of the societal revolution that was just around the corner. Courageous women such as her character in the film began to see the world differently and broke away from convention, at great personal risk, with no map of what was ahead. For those of you who have ever wondered how this "New Age" really began--or for those of you who might have let those days slip away to a distant corner of your memory, this film is a treasure from the Universe.

Keep a close eye on your local theaters for "Far From Heaven". When it opens near you, get your friends together (including young teenagers--it's rated PG-13) and go!! I PROMISE you a wonderful 2 hours of Spiritual Cinema in its most beautiful form.


Stephen Simon has produced such films as Somewhere in Time and What Dreams May Come. His new book The Force is With You: Mystical Movie Messages That Inspire Our Lives has just been published by Walsch Books/ Hampton Roads. For more information, and for Stephen's tour schedule, Stephen invites you to visit MysticalMovies.com and also welcomes your comments: Stephen@MysticalMovies.com

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