The Most Spiritually Literate Films of 1997Reviewed by Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat
The Top Ten (and Ten More
Recommended Films)
Monday night, March 23, Hollywood honors its own at the annual
Academy Awards presentation. The Oscars are given for the best
performances and production values in the previous year's film
releases. Our choices for the best of 1997 reveal our interest in
"spiritually literate" movies--films that enable us to recognize the
presence of Spirit in our experiences and in the world around us.
The films reviewed below speak
to us about key practices that have
long been affirmed by the world's
religions: beauty, compassion, faith,
love, mystery, transformation,
wonder, and yearnin g. These
practices, included in The Alphabet
of Spiritual Literacy, are cherished
ingredients of the spiritual life.
THE TOP TEN
BEAUTY
Paradise Road (20th
Century Fox Home Entertainment,
1997, R -- prisoner of war brutality
and violence)
Paradise Road is a triumphant
celebration of the human spirit in the
face of suffering. Based on true
incidents, this drama written and
directed by Bruce Beresford recounts
the experiences of a group of
European, Australian, and American
women who are captured by the
Japanese during World War II after
their ship is sunk while fleeing
Singapore. They are put in jungle
prison camps and subjected to a
hellish existence of hard labor, little
food, and a shortage of medical
supplies.
In order to lift the women's
spirits, Margaret Drummond (Pauline
Collins), a kind-hearted former
missionary to China, comes up with
the idea of starting a vocal orchestra
to sing classical compositions. She
writes the scores and chooses
Adrienne Pargiter (Glenn Close), a
flinty survivor, to direct the singers.
The project creates an oasis of
beauty and transcendence amidst
death, pain, and grief. Even the
Japanese guards are awed by the
music.
The top-drawer cast provides
insights into the various paths to
survival. Joanna Ter Steege plays a
nun who is a multitalented
peacemaker; Cate Blanchett is an
Australian nurse who discovers great
inner strength during the ordeal;
Julianna Margulies is an American
who almost joins the women who
choose to service the Japanese
officers for special privileges; and
Frances McDormand is a clever
German Jew who acts as the camp
doctor.
"Paradise Road" is a deeply
spiritual film that shows how
creativity and beauty can soothe the
soul even in the worst situation
imaginable. The film also honors the
driving force that keeps people alive
and thriving -- hope.
COMPASSION
Ulee's Gold (Orion Home
Video, 1997, R -- language)
Ulysses "Ulee" Jackson (Peter
Fonda) is a middle-aged beekeeper
in the tupelo marshes of the Florida
panhandle. Although he finds his
solitary work to be satisfying, Ulee
uses it to keep himself isolated from
the overwhelming sense of pain and
loss he feels as a widower and as a
Vietnam vet.
Jimmy (Tom Wood), his son, is
serving a prison sentence for armed
robbery, and his daughter-in-law
Helen (Christine Dunford) ran off two
years ago. Ulee is the sole caretaker
for teenage Casey (Jessica Biel) and
her younger sister Penny (Vanessa
Zima). Then Jimmy asks his father to
retrieve Helen in Orlando where
she's staying with his two
partners-in-crime, Eddie (Steven
Flynn) and Ferris (Dewey Weber). It
turns out she's in a drug stupor,
unable to take care of herself. Helen
has inadvertently told Eddie and
Ferris that Jimmy has stowed away
$100,000 from the robbery. These
two want the money in exchange for
the safety of Ulee's family.
Bringing Helen home, the
beekeeper realizes that nothing will
ever be the same again. Connie
Hope (Patricia Richardson), a
neighbor and a nurse, helps look
after his daughter-in-law as she
goes through drug withdrawal. At the
same time that he's processing his
prize tupelo honey for his
distributors, Ulee comes up with a
way to keep his family from harm's
way.
In "Ulee's Gold" writer and
director Victor Nunez ("Ruby in
Paradise") shows us how the
spiritual practice of compassion
opens up this troubled man and puts
him on the path of heart. For the first
time, Ulee gets in touch with his
feminine side, acknowledges the
mystery of life, jettisons some of his
rigid ideas, accepts help, and even
begins to see his enemies as
suffering souls similar to
himself.
COMPASSION
Welcome to Sarajevo
(Miramax, 1997, R -- brutal images of
war atrocities, language)
"Welcome To Sarajevo" is set in
that besieged city in the former
Yugoslavia in 1992 as Serbian
forces are shelling it from afar and
shooting civilians in the streets from
sniper posts. British journalist
Michael Henderson (Stephen
Dillane) and his cameraman (James
Nesbitt), producer (Kerry Fox), and
local driver Risto (Goran Visnjic) are
desperately trying to find a fresh hook
for their coverage of this harrowing
war. When Henderson discovers an
orphanage run by a courageous
woman (Gordana Gadzic) near the
front lines, he decides to do a
continuing story on "big guns, little
children, evil men." But he is
unprepared when his heart compels
him to get involved in the illegal
rescue of Emira (Emira Nusevic), a
nine-year-old orphan. In the midst of
devastating chaos, one man decides
that his act of compassion can make
all the difference in the life of a
shell-shocked, terrified, and lonely
little girl.
Michael Winterbottom ("Jude")
directs this ethically powerful film that
explodes with outrage over the
Serbian desolation of a city and the
carnage of its innocent residents. It
is also a film that softens the heart in
the face of such terrible suffering.
Gandhi, who understood this effect of
involvement, said: "I believe in the
essential unity of all people and for
that matter of all lives. Therefore I
believe that if one gains spiritually,
the whole world gains, and if one
person falls the whole world falls to
that extent." "Welcome To Sarajevo"
lifts up compassion as the quivering
of the heart in the presence of true
pain.
FAITH
Ponette (Arrow, 1997, Not
Rated)
"Ponette" is an astonishing film
experience--the kind of intimat e
drama that stops you in your tracks
and leaves you marveling at the
magnificence of the human soul.
Four-year-old Ponette (Victoire
Thivisol, a four-year-old actress who
gives an incredible performance)
has survived an automobile accident
in which her mother was killed. Her
father, who's devastated by the
tragedy, is comforted by his daughter
who says, "I'll make us feel better."
However, he goes away on business
and leaves Ponette with relatives.
Her aunt tells her that her mother is
with Jesus who rose from the dead.
The little girl's young cousin states
that the dead don't come back to life.
Loyal to her mother, Ponette tries to
bring her back with presents,
prayers, and magic words. Then her
atheistic father assures her that "God
is for the dead and not for us."
At a summer camp Ponette
meets a Jewish girl who puts her
through a series of tests in order to
prove herself to God and win his
favor. The worst news comes from a
nasty boy who tells her that she killed
her mother by being a bad girl. All the
while, Ponette endures in her belief
that somehow she will see her
mother again.
Writer and director Jacques
Doillon has created a masterful
study of childhood grief and the ways
in which a sensitive and imaginative
little girl tries to handle her deep
feelings of loss. In the end, it is her
own unique brand of faith that helps
Ponette pull through this period of
mourning. The fi lm also reveals how
important it is for adults to watch
what they say and do in the presence
of little ones because everything has
significance to them. "Ponette"
honors the resiliency and spirituality
of children.
JUSTICE
Amistad (DreamWorks, 1997, R --
scenes of strong, brutal violence and
some related nudity)
"Amistad," set in 1839,
celebrates the holy grail of freedom
and how the quest for justice is
fueled by a yearning for home and
the spirits of ancestors. A group of
Africans take over a Spanish slave
ship bound for America. They are
eventually captured and put in a New
Haven, Connecticut, prison.
Two zealous abolitionists, Lewis
Tappan (Stellan Skarsgard) and
Theodore Joadson (Morgan
Freeman) take up their cause by
hiring a real estate attorney, Roger
Baldwin (Matthew McConaughey),
who is convinced he has the key to
set them free. But powerful forces
are lined up against him including a
judge handpicked by the pro-slavery
President Martin Van Buren (Nigel
Hawthorne). The case eventually
goes all the way to the Supreme
Court where former President John
Quincy Adams (Anthony Hopkins in
an Academy Award-caliber
performance), inspired by the moral
stature of an African named Cinque
(Djimon Hounsou), makes a stirring
defense of freedom as the linchpin of
the American way of life.
Steven Spielberg's direction
compellingly draws out all the moral
nuances in this searing drama about
the invidious evil of racism and the
waywardness of politics tainted by
greed and face-saving. "Amistad"
presents a mesmerizing portrait of
human dignity under fire and salutes
the spiritual firepower of justice.
LOVE
Titanic (Paramount, 1997, PG-13 -- disaster related peril and violence, nudity, sensuality, brief
language)
"A woman's heart is a deep
ocean of secrets," Rose (Gloria
Stuart), a 101-year-old woman, tells
Brock Lovett (Bill Paxton), a fortune
hunter who is using the latest
technology to explore the wreckage
of the Titanic in his search for a
priceless jewel. She then tells the
story of what happened on the fateful
night of April 15, 1902, when the
unsinkable vessel hit an
iceberg.
Rose (Kate Winslet) is an
unhappy 17-year-old American set to
wed Cal Hockley (Billy Zane), a
fabulously rich young man favored by
her social climbing mother (Frances
Fisher). Although Cal is awed by her
beauty, he has no interest in the
yearnings of her soul. Ready to leap
off the deck rather than face a future
of upper class ennui, Rose is
rescued by Jack Dawson (Leonardo
DiCaprio), a free-spirited artist who
is returning to the States after seven
years abroad as a vagabond. She
defies the social barriers that
separate them because he alone
respects the mystery and the
potential of her soul. The young
couple find ways to be together
secretly on the ship and share some
magical days filled with all the risks
which must be taken to fully
experience the present moment.
Writer and director James
Cameron has set the love story of
"Titanic" against the backdrop of the
most spectacular calamity of the
twentieth century. Unlike other
disaster stories, this one focuses all
our attention on Rose and Jack
although there are two other
characters who win our allegiance --
an Irish-American woman, Molly
Brown (Kathy Bates), and the
architect of the ship, Thomas
Andrews (Victor Garber). The finale is
a special effects dazzler but those
scenes pale in comparison to the
dramatic and creative ways Cameron
exalts the salvific power of love.
MYSTERY
Contact (Warner Home Video, 1997,
PG-13--some intense action, mild
language, and a scene of
sensuality)
"Contact" offers an inspired and
inspiring close encounter with the
ineffable mystery that lies at the heart
of each individual and at the core of
the majestic universe. Ellie Arroway
(Jodie Foster) is a driven American
astronomer using highly
sophisticated radio telescopes to
search for extraterrestrial
intelligence. When she picks up a
message from Vega, a star 26 light
years away, scientists from around
the world join her in an effort to
decipher the continuing
communications. Eventually, they
discover instructions for building a
machine for intergalactic travel.
The excellent screenplay by
James V. Hart and Michael
Goldenberg based on the 1985 novel
by Carl Sagan uses a variety of
characters to explore the social,
scientific, and spiritual implications
of contact with extraterrestrials.
Palmer Joss (Matthew
McConaughey), a religious scholar
who's in love with Ellie, believes that
the one person chosen to take the
trip to Vega should be a believer in
God. David Drumlin (Tom Skerritt),
the President's national science
adviser, uses raw power to advance
his ideal of technological progress.
National Security Advisor Michael Kitz
(James Woods) is convinced that
every defensive precaution should be
taken to protect America from the
possible malevolence of aliens. S. R.
Hadden (John Hurt), an eccentric
billionaire, wants to use the trip as a
ticket to insure his fame in history.
And both a terrorist and the leader of
a right-wing religious coalition have
their own agendas for stopping the
flight to Vega. As people jockey for
positions all around her, Ellie holds
on to her dream of participating in the
ultimate adventure for a
scientist.
Robert Zemeckis ("Forrest
Gump") has fashioned a truly
awesome movie that celebrates the
spiritual practices of listening,
wonder, love, and zeal. It affirms that
there are times and places where
reason must yield to mystery.
"Contact" is a lso the only film of
1997 to present its audience with a
mantra tailor-made for what ails our
crazed and time-starved society:
"Small moves."
TRANSFORMATION
Good Will Hunting (Miramax,
1997, R -- strong language,
sex-related dialogue)
We all long for a soul friend,
someone who will cherish the secret
signature of our individuality. The
emotionally troubled protagonist of
"Good Will Hunting" is blessed with
three soul friends who enable him to
find his place in the world. Matt
Damon gives a tour de force
performance as Will, a 20-year-old
townie in Boston who works as a
janitor at M.I.T. After another scrape
with the law, he is taken under the
wings of Professor Lambeau
(Stellan Skarsgard of "Breaking the
Waves"), a professor of mathematics
who has discovered that Will is a
math wiz with a photographic
memory.
As part of his rehabilitation, this
walled-off orphan must see Sean
McGuire (Robin Williams), a
therapist, every week. The
relationship between these two
underachievers is mutually beneficial
as they help heal each other. Luckily
for Will at this critical juncture in his
life, he meets and falls in love with
Skylar (Minnie Driver), a Harvard
pre-med student who is sexy, smart,
and sensitive. Along with Chuckie
(Ben Affleck), his best friend, she
wants him to become all he was
meant to be.
"Good Will Hunting" was written b
y its actors Matt Damon and Ben
Affleck. Gus Van Sant's no-nonsense
direction keeps this multilayered
psychological drama on course as it
probes the complicated themes of
love, work, ambition, self-esteem,
and failure. "You are destined to fly
but that cocoon has to go," Nelle
Morton once wrote about that
important moment in our lives when
we must risk change. In this salutary
film, Will sheds his cocoon with the
help of Sean, Skylar, and Chuckie.
They are true friends of his soul.
WONDER
Le
Huitieme Jour: The Eighth Day
(PolyGram Video, 1997, Not
Rated)
Harry (Daniel Auteuil) is a
workaholic salesman whose wife
has left him, taking their two
daughters with her. Alone and
depressed, he sits in his upscale
apartment disenchanted with life.
Then Harry meets Georges (Pascal
Duquenne), a young man with
Down's syndrome who has just
escaped from a home for the
handicapped. Although people keep
him at a distance, he has two special
angels in his life--one is his
deceased mother and the other is a
Latino singer who sings in his
imagination.
With an exuberant expression of
his feelings and a zest for living in
the present moment, Georges
becomes Harry's spiritual director.
He helps his new friend to slow
down and to enjoy the parade. In one
marvelous scene, the two are in the
country about to return to town.
Georges suggests they take a
minute and lie down in the grass,
just to observe the natural world
around them. Later on a visit to the
seaside, Georges helps Harry
reconnect with one of his daughters
by creating a magical surprise for her
birthday.
Jaco Van Dormael, the Belgian
writer and director of "Le Huitieme
Jour: The Eighth Day," has fashioned
a buoyant spiritual film that
celebrates the mysteries of
friendship and the moments of
wonder when we are graced with an
appreciation for life's bounties.
YEARNING
Shall
We Dance? (Miramax, 1997,
PG-13 -- mild language)
The fourteenth-century Catholic
mystic Catherine of Siena once
observed: "You have nothing infinite
except your soul's love and desire."
In "Shall We Dance?" Shohei is a
middle-aged accountant who lives
with his wife and daughter in a
comfortable suburban area. One day
while riding the train, he notices a
beautiful woman looking out the
window of a rundown building.
Overwhelmed by his desire to find
out more about this woman Shohei
boldly enters the place where he saw
her and discovers it is a dance
school. He signs up for a beginner's
class, approaching this challenge
with the same earnestness he
displays at work.
A wonderful teacher helps him
discover how to enjoy the music and
relax into the movements. Through
consistent practice, Shohei becomes
quite accomplished doing the
waltz—even catching the eye of
the enchanting Mai, the woman in the
window, who helps him prepare for a
national competition. Eventually his
wife and daughter find out about
Shohei's secret hobby, but by then he
has found a new lease on life.
Japanese writer and director
Masayuki Suo shows how desire is a
force field that takes us beyond
ourselves and enables us to
transform our lives. By letting himself
go, Shohei is liberated from his
middle-aged malaise. He learns to
live in the moment, to trust his body,
and to flow with the magic elan of
dance. And best of all, Shohei
enables Mai to see dance
competition afresh with the
enthusiasm of an amateur. This
irresistible Japanese film celebrates
the spiritual uplift of boundless
desire.
TEN MORE RECOMMENDED
FILMS
Although the following films did
not make our Top 10 list, they all are
highly recommended because they
are about key practices of the
spiritual life as defined in The
Alphabet of Spiritual Literacy.
IMAGINATION
Gabbeh (New Yorker, 1997, Not
Rated) is a magical and visually
stunning film set in the countryside of
Iran. This poetic and picturesque
movie celebrates story as a
life-shaping force.
IMAGINATION
The Full Monty (20th Century Fox Home Video, 1997, R -- language,
some nudity) is a funny a nd fetching
film about how some unemployed
men in an English town find a way
out of their helplessness and
hopelessness.
LOVE
Oscar and
Lucinda (Fox Searchlight, 1997,
R -- scene of sexuality, brief violence)
revolves around two oddballs who
are destined to meet and to fill each
other with delight. The drama
delineates what it means to be soul
mates.
NURTURING
Her Majesty, Mrs. Brown (Miramax,
1997, PG -- a beating, language,
brief nudity) explores the unusual
and platonic friendship between the
Queen of the British Empire and her
Scottish servant in the late
nineteenth century.
QUESTING
Molom: A Legend of Mongolia (Norkat Company, 1997, Not Rated) is a
spellbinding film set in Mongolia
about an orphan boy who is adopted
by a shaman and taken on a
spirit-testing journey.
SHADOW
In the
Company of Men (Columbia
Tristar Home Video, 1997, R --
language and emotional abuse) is
the scariest horror film of the year
with its portrait of the dark side of
corporate culture where
gamesmanship, deceit, power, and
ruthless competition turn individuals
into soulless zombies. This riveting
film encourages us to be alert to sin
and evil in the world.
TRANSFORMATION
Seven Years in
Tibet (Columbia Tristar, 1997,
PG-13 -- violent sequences) is about
an egocentric Austrian mountain
climber who turns into a gentler and
more sensitive man after he
becomes friends with the young
Dalai Lama.
TRANSFORMATION
The Apostle (October, 1997,
PG-13 -- thematic element and
related scene of violence) is a highly
engaging drama about the fall and
redemption of a Pentecostal
preacher from Texas.
YEARNING
The
Quiet Room (New Line Home
Video, 1997, PG -- language and
domestic discord) is a flawlessly
acted Australian film about a
seven-year-old girl's emotional
response to the complicated small
world she lives in.
ZEAL
John
Grisham's The Rainmaker
(Paramount, 1997, PG-13 -- strong
beating, domestic abuse) is an
edifying drama about a rookie
Memphis lawyer whose
meat-and-potatoes case is a suit
against a large insurance company
that has refused to pay a
policyholder's claim.
Reviews copyright 1998 - 2007 by Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat, SpiritualityandPractice.com.