Showing posts with label Bella. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bella. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Movie Review: The Human Experience

We are so very fortunate to be living in an age when small, independent movie producers can create life-affirming movies which win international acclaim. Movies like Bella, Noelle, The Ultimate Gift , Facing the Giants and Flywheel are amazing examples of this resurgence in well-constructed, meaningful films. These movies, about amazingly different characters and plot-lines, all carry the same theme: the sanctity and redeem-ability of human life.

Last night, we were fortunate to see a pre-screening of another such film. Produced by Grassroots Films of Brooklyn (NY), The Human Experience is a documentary about two brothers ... who carry the weight of their tough upbringing into the world, trying to understand why humans are here, is there meaning to life and how do we know? Now, this sounds a bit heavy-handed and melodramatic ... but the movie makes it.

Why?

The movie follows these two young men (one 18, one 25) on their journey -- from living with the homeless on the streets of New York City, to helping in a "lost children's home" in Peru, to the AIDs camp and leper colony of Ghana. Along the way, these brothers learn about the dignity of the human person:

  • from talking with and eating with the homeless at a Soup Kitchen,
  • getting help from another homeless man as they bed down for the night in cardboard boxes
  • watching a lame child go through his weekly treatments in a hospital in Lima; a treatment so painful the child cries in agony the whole session; a treatment only necessary because this child was abandoned by his parents because he wasn't "perfect"
  • meeting with AIDS victims and seeing their hope in God and love of their caretakers
  • greeting lepers, so crippled with the disease they've lost their sight, their toes, their body disfigured and yet they smile through it all and thank the boys for coming

This is one of those movies that brings home the idea of the dignity of man, the whole "made in the image and likeness of God" regardless of how damaged, broken or disturbed. Interviews are scattered throughout this movie -- interviews with psychologists, sociologists, theologians (including two of my favorites: Fr. Richard Neuhaus and Msgr Lorenzo Albacete), and activists and artists who help explain the phenomenon of the human person.

This is a movie that needs to be seen to be understood. This movie is still in "pre-screening" status as it's hard to get the big theaters to carry a movie of this depth. Try and see it if it's playing anywhere near you (click on the "screenings" link) ... or host a screening by emailing screenings@grassroots.com for further info. You'll be thrilled you did!

We took all our kids -- from 5-1/2 to 17 -- and we had amazing conversations in the van coming back. Discussions of what it means to be homeless, to be forgotten by society but not by God, to be loved regardless. What great talking points!

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Movies: Bella!

The feel good movie of the year!
Two thumbs way up for this one!
If you only see one movie this year, make it this one!

These rather trite movie review phrases can't do justice to the movie we saw last night.
At 8:00 p.m., we bundled the three littles, 16 yo Kotch, granmere and dh and I into the van to drive 45 minutes(!) to see this movie ... we got home 4 hours later much the better for the excursion!

Bella, which is an independent film with limited (or "select") distribution, opened this weekend here in the Front Range. Four theaters around the area are showing it. Check your area and see where it's playing -- you won't regret seeing this movie ... no matter the distance you have to go.

This movie celebrates life; not in the political pro-life vs pro-choice way but rather in embracing all forms of life:
  • life as a gift from birth to death
  • life as lived in a loving family
  • life as lived in a work family
  • life as lived by folks you may pass on the street and ignore
  • life as lived, with all the upsets and changes and disappointments
  • life as lived, yes, even in the heart of New York City by a blind street person
  • life as lived with joy in spite of situations -- whether of our making or not

The film is rated PG-13 for the subject matter and a brief, and well-handled accident scene. It's too bad it has to have a rating at all .... EVERYONE should go see this one! The conversations that this will engender will be useful for all .... the teens at their lockers on Monday morning, the family around the dinner table on Sunday night, the adults at work ... in carpool line ... or blogging this weekend ...

Because, you see, this movie will speak to everyone in the audience differently ... dh saw it as a movie about how to "be a man", I saw it as how best to live with irreversible events, the littles saw it as a beautiful love story, granmere saw it as reality.

Bella, a movie all should watch (and then live the message!).