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The Movie Mystic | by Stephen
Simon
Emperor's Club (2002, PG-13 for some sexual content)
Those of you who have joined me at one of our events know that I've been showing
a clip from Family Man as an example of how I believe that Spiritual Cinema has recently
been looking at our societal value system. In that film, the main character realizes
that love far outweighs all the trappings of material success that he had coveted
so passionately.
Emperor's Club looks at a different kind of value: integrity. And it's a powerful
and beautiful message.
For those of you who have put off seeing the film because you think it's just a rehash
of Dead Poet's Society -- so did I! When you see it, however, you realize that it
explores a very different territory than that wonderful Peter Weir film did.
In Emperor's Club, Kevin Kline is at his very best (which says a lot because even
his "mediocre" is awfully good) playing a career professor at an exclusive
male High School Academy. He teaches the classics -- Rome and Greece -- with a great
passion for that place in time where so many of our modern values were molded.
The film's plot revolves around his encounters with a particularly troublesome student
who just refuses to apply himself. In frustration, Kline pays a visit to the boy's
father, a U.S. senator in Washington, who seems totally unimpressed with the values
that Kline so respects in that Greek/Roman era. Kline is indeed confronted with the
root of his young student's problems: a father who has raised his son with the concept
of expediency as God. Kline then has to try to determine a way to inspire his young
student to break away from the code (or lack thereof) that he has been raised with
his entire life. This desire to help his young student leads Kline himself to bend
the rules of his own moral compass, with unfortunate and surprising results for both
teacher and student.
The denouement of the film is chilling and poignant. Kline's career professor, whose
"only" mark on the world is in the character of the minds he helps mold,
is confronted with the specter of the prevailing values of "the end justifying
the means."
The spiritual center of the film is that conflict of integrity and self-respect as
it is faced with the challenges of "win at any cost." This is a powerful
and perplexing issue that we face in the world today. The desire to win -- to succeed
-- has been so deeply embedded in us that doing the right thing simply because it
is indeed the right thing to do is looked upon by many as the foolish and naïve
practice of "losers."
This wonderful film directs a very bright spotlight on that attitude and exposes
it as a shallow and unfortunate philosophy. I highly recommend Emperor's Club as
an inspiring reminder of who we really are when we operate at our very best.
MovieMystic Chakra Rating for Emperor's Club
Chakra 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Rating 4 4 4 4 4 5 4
A full explanation of this Chakra Rating system is available at MysticalMovies.com.
13 Conversations About One Thing (2001, R for language and brief drug use)
13 Conversations About One Thing, interestingly enough, explores some of the same
region of integrity, but from a very different perspective. The plot weaves several
seemingly unrelated incidents together to create a strong message about integrity
and shows the consequences of crossing that line between integrity and expediency.
In this case, it is notable for the extraordinary sequences in the film that feature
Alan Arkin as an executive in an insurance office who has an employee who always,
and I mean always!, sees the bright side of every situation. Ultimately, this eternal
optimism annoys Arkin so much that he creates a situation wherein he is sure that
he can expose his employee's cheerfulness as just a façade -- and, oh, is
he wrong! Talk about attitude and intention creating reality!! This subplot alone
is worth renting the video.
Stephen Simon has produced such films as Somewhere in Time and What Dreams May
Come and also has served as president of three different film companies. Stephen's
first book, The Force is With You: Mystic Movie Messages that Inspire our Lives,
will be published in October 2002 by Walsch Books/Hampton Roads. For more information,
visit MysticalMovies.com and Stephen welcomes your comments by e-mail at Stephen@MysticalMovies.com.
Copyright ©
2003 Stephen Simon |
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JULY
2003
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