Archive for the 'Films' Category

DVD: Science and Nonduality Anthology

January 8, 2010

New DVD:

SCIENCE AND NONDUALITY ANTHOLOGY
Volume 1

What is nonduality? How does the ā€œIā€ arise? Who is the doer? If everything is truly nothing, why do we perceive so much complexity? If everything is unfolding as it should, can we have free will? Is nondual awareness the end point for the evolution of consciousness?

Take twenty one of the finest thinkers in the fields of neuroscience, quantum physics, psychotherapy, art, Vedanta, Sufism, Judaism, and Buddhism and ask them some of the toughest questions known to humankind and this is what you get: A groundbreaking anthology of interviews that illuminate the deepest and most compelling mysteries of the human experience.

This DVD is the first of its kind to explore the convergence between science and nonduality. Rather than being heavily edited to direct the viewer according to a particular opinion, each of the interviews is a stand alone piece that allows us to fully experience the depth of the speaker. Each interview is a unique journey that ultimately brings us back to the source of all, beyond concepts and words. Enjoy!

View clips from the interviews:

3 DVDs, 21 interviews, 600 minutes, 0 All codes (playable worldwide), NTSC Video

The DVDs contain interviews with: Stuart Hameroff, Stephen Wolinksy, Peter Fenner Loibon Le Baaba, Rupert Spira, Jeremy Hayward, Rabbi Hoffman, Amit Goswami, Francis Lucille, Robert Dittler, Henry Stapp, Nahid Angha, Jeff Foster, Kebir Helminski, Peter Russell, John Prendergast, Bernie Baars, Olga Louchakova, Vijai Kapoor, Thomas Ray, Tim Freke

Here are a few clips:

More info here.

Nonduality and The Movie Avatar

January 6, 2010

Jay Michaelson takes the nondualist view of Avatar.

Here’s an excerpt:

By my estimation, approximately 700,000 people will see Avatar for every 1 that reads Everything is God. Admittedly, it has better special effects. But let’s not think that nonduality is something James Cameron, or Hollywood, made up. It’s in the Zohar, the Upanishads, the writings of John of the Cross, Rumi, the Tao te Ching, the Heart Sutra, and many other texts written long before Lumiere’s train arrived at La Ciotat. Of course, these millennia-old traditions do not fit cleanly into our postmodern world, and so contemporary people adapt them to their lived experience. But at its core, Avatar’s philosophy is not new; it is ancient, profound, and liberating.

Read the entire article.

Nonduality in the movie Avatar

December 27, 2009

Marcos Vazquez writes the following in his Live Journal:

Avatar

* Dec. 26th, 2009 at 5:13 PM

I went to the movies yesterday to see Avatar, and while quite predictable at times, it struck a chord with me because it somehow reflects some of my own beliefs. The way the na’vi can bond with animals, with trees, with their ancestors, how they understand that they are simply ‘borrowed’ energy from the same source (Ai’wa), to which they all return in the end… It pretty much aligns with the concept of One-ness, of Non-Duality, understanding that we are not only related to everything else, but that we are one and the same.

The movie also sends a clear message about the way humans treat this earth and all creatures on it, about how everything seems to be justified in the name of ‘progress’, of ‘enrichment’… it reminds me of a native american proverb, “Only when the last tree is cut, only when the last river is polluted, only when the last fish is dead, will they realize that they can’t eat money”.

-Marcos Vazquez

Leap! The movie. A review.

December 31, 2008

Here is a review of the new movie Leap!, by filmmakers Chad Cameron and Isaac Allen, two guy curious about the nature of reality who got together and made a movie about the subject.

Leap! DVD

Order Leap!

Review of Leap! by Jerry Katz

This movie is meatier and more nondually down to earth than What the Bleep. It’s more irreverent, too.

The beautiful thing is that no one has an inkling of what they’re talking about. That’s the great humor and joy. We are so alone and so un-knowing that we can know non-separateness through the unknowing, not through knowing.

The movie proceeds from knowing to not-knowing. “Ultimately we don’t know what anything is,” Dan Millman says in the film.

Wondrous and lucious quotations appear on the screen, supporting the words of the film’s guides.

The speakers don’t talk about their backgrounds. They talk about reality, so these are pared down interviews getting to the essence of the inquiry into the nature of reality.

It’s one thing to read quotations taken from the film and entirely other to watch them spoken with intent and knowing:

“You get out of the illusion by embracing it.” James Twyman.

“You don’t consciously will your experiencing in the current moment.” Gary Crowley

“Happiness is here, where you are, as you are.” Amber Terrell.

“This moment is an astonishing miracle. … This is the moment of bliss.” Joe Vitale.

“The purpose of the world is to show us what’s going on in our mind.” Lyn Corona

“Do you want to be free? Do you want to experience nothing but love? You don’t have to consider whether it’s possible or impossible, you just have to decide whether or not you want it. And that’s a far more difficult decision than you now can recognize. … But if you do, once you make that decision there is nothing that can prevent that from coming to your awareness.” Tom Carpenter.

Puppetji — yes, he’s a puppet — may be the star of this film. He comes out and says he doesn’t know what the heck he’s talking about or what all the questions mean. He just wants to know who where the filmmaker got his carpet from and where to get a good pastrami sandwich.

Suffering, the ego, creating your reality, happiness, reality and the world as illusions, quantum physics, perception, are all themes that are explored to some bottom line depth.

This film is not steeped in traditions. It is somewhat steeped in science, in the beginning, but mostly steeped in seeing what’s true, seeing what is. There’s a freshness, straighforwardness, and simplicity in that.

The last several minutes of outtakes are enjoyable. Including the outtakes in the film was a bold statement by the filmmakers. The outtakes help you realize that everything previously seen was an act for the camera, an effort to say something that can’t be spoken.

By the end of the outtakes, by the end of the film, you are returned to the ordinary, which may now be seen as worldless, as a smile. That is the great leap, the leap to exactly where you are, only to see it absolutely differently. This movie can do that much.

The movie confirms two of my guidelines for navigating the world: Work seriously, but take nothing seriously. And don’t do anything beyond the everyday unless it is a task bestowed upon you by the divine or by the “great intelligence.” In other words, don’t go out and start a spirituality retreat center just because you have the money and you think it would make your life meaningful. The task has to come down on you, bestowed upon you; it has to be a calling.

Leap! is a guide to nonduality, a guide to your true nature, a guide to happiness and effective living. Leap! could easily shift your entire perspective on reality. After watching Leap! you will allow reality to live you instead of you trying to live in reality. The world is ready for Leap!

Order Leap!

–Jerry Katz

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