What movies have shown you your spiritual truths? Please share.
I've included comments on the first 11. I'll say more about the others in a subsequent post.
Groundhog Day
Although
mine is not a ranked list, this is first for a reason. What a perfect movie. Don’t be fooled by its
mainstream comedy veneer. That’s just
what got it greenlighted. Harold Ramis has created a modern masterpiece that
takes complex Buddhist theology and explores it in a literal way. With a last line that rivals the one in “Casablanca.”
Jacob’s Ladder
More or
less tied with Groundhog Day for #1, except it’s just harder to take. I can watch
GD any time, but this one I have to gear myself up for. Deeply upsetting much of the time, this movie
may nevertheless have the most hopeful ending ever. Directed by Adrian
Lynne with a flawless script by Bruce Joel Rubin, who later took a similar
concept and wrote a mainstream movie that Hollywood could love (Ghost). Jacob’s Ladder comes as close to describing spiritual
reality as I can bring myself to accept. Danny Aiello wins for best supporting chiropractor/angel.
“Just relax. This is a deep adjustment.”
Stand By Me
Generally
seen as a coming-of-age story, this one is more than that. Essentially it is about following a leading,
and bringing along a support group as you satisfy your need to face death. An
exploration of the tension between beauty and decay, love and cruelty, social circumstance
and personal power. I adore Stephen King, arguably the most spiritual popular storyteller
of our generation.
The Shawshank
Redemption
The
other King-based film on my list. Is
there anyone who has not seen this? It’s on TV every single day, just about. Also
the other Tim Robbins movie. I won’t insult you by outlining the spiritual
metaphor of unjust imprisonment and the liberation that can result from a daily
discipline of chipping away at the barriers, literally. Oh wait, I just did.
I Heart Huckabees
Is
spiritual growth funny? Hells yeah! And wouldn’t it be terrific if all our
teachers could be Lily Tomlin and Dustin Hoffman?
Eternal Sunshine of
the Spotless Mind
Oh *sigh*. I’m not sure this one qualifies as a
spiritual movie exactly, but it certainly touches on themes of timelessness and
the enduring qualities of love. And it stars Jim Carrey, who most people do not
recognize as a modern-day mystic. I know
he seems like a movie star, and God knows I’m baffled by the productions he
chooses to do, but this man is waaay enlightened. And so in Eternal Sunshine,
he gives us the vehicle to follow the thought we’ve all had about ex-lovers: I
wish I could just erase you from memory. What happens when there is no more
story? Who are we then?
The Matrix
What if
I told you… I usually hate this kind of
futuristic, sci-fi genre? I discovered
The Matrix one day when I was sick in bed and surfing for something to watch. Surprise! Waking up to reality can be fun! In spite of predictable plots and characters,
I am not immune to entertaining movie-making. Plus, for all I know, it could
be true.
American Beauty
Unlike
The Matrix, this story was full of surprises the first time I saw it, while at
the same time clearly moving toward an inevitable conclusion. Just like
life as a human. Every time I see a
plastic bag wafting in the wind, I feel connected to everything. And nothing.
Crimes and
Misdemeanors
Woody’s
masterpiece, IMHO. People get away with murder, and worse, every day. Who sees?
If there's no G-d, why behave in a moral way? An attempt to answer the question, "how can you live with yourself?"
It’s A Wonderful Life
Every
single person matters. Nothing we do is meaningless. Corny but true. Also, women who don't get married end up as the town librarian and need glasses.
Jesus of Nazareth /
The Greatest Story Ever Told
Two
totally different movies based on the same myth. I lump them together unfairly, I know. But they air during the same week or month
each year, and they both have a blue-eyed Jesus. Only one, however, has Max von
Sydow asking Michael York to “Bap-tize
me John,” in a Swedish accent. And only one has John Wayne confessing, “Truly
this man was the son-o-God.”
And, for comment later:
Magnolia
The Sixth SenseHarold and Maude
Being There
The Hours
Angels in America
2001: A Space Odyssey
Gandhi
Wings of Desire
My Dinner With Andre
O Brother Where Art Thou?
Pulp Fiction
84 Charing Cross Road
American Beauty, Harold and Maude, and The Hours have all had powerful emotional resonance for me before, but I guess I haven't thought of it as spiritual. Now you mention it, of course it is. Babette's Feast is the movie I have considered the most spiritually significant for me. Thanks for the list!
ReplyDeleteOOH, thanks for reminding me about Babette's Feast! David and I used one of the speeches from that in our wedding ceremony. How could I forget?
DeleteWell, that's why I made this list--to get other recommendations and suggestions.