Concussion is About Football — and About Faith

Concussion is About Football — and About Faith

Posted on January 4, 2016 at 8:00 am

Copyright Sony 2015
Copyright Sony 2015

The New Yorker has a thoughtful essay by Ian Crouch about the spiritual and religious themes in Will Smith’s fact-based movie, “Concussion.” Smith plays real-life doctor Bennet Omalu, who insisted on pursuing the issue of head trauma in professional football and its long-term impact on players.

he movie’s moral arguments are framed less as matters of medicine than of religious faith. It’s not a sports movie, or a medical thriller, so much as a Christian homily….Omalu is a kind of prophet, an outsider who can see a truth that those around him, blinded by their own cultural prejudices, cannot, and who is punished and shunned for spreading a gospel that those in power do not want to hear. This makes for a heavy-handed, often treacly movie: Will Smith’s version of Omalu is as the lone principled man in a world marred by compromise—and saints, even when they are martyrs, are boring protagonists. But as a polemic, this evangelical argument is interesting and novel, suggesting that football’s dangers are not merely physical, but spiritual as well. This might be the movie’s most subversive message: not that the N.F.L. stood in the way of scientific research about the health of its players but that it occupies a false place within the religious and patriotic beliefs of so many of its fans, whose Sabbath routines are timed perfectly so that Sunday service ends just in time for kickoff.

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Interview: Lawrence Kasanoff on the New Documentary “Mindfulness — Be Happy Now”

Interview: Lawrence Kasanoff on the New Documentary “Mindfulness — Be Happy Now”

Posted on December 19, 2015 at 3:55 pm

Hollywood producer Lawrence Kasanoff makes movies like Mortal Kombat. But his interest in mindfulness and its link to happiness has inspired a documentary called Mindfulness: Be Happy Now. In an interview, he talked about the difference between mindfulness and meditation and what Navy Seals and Buddhist monks have in common.

What’s the difference between mindfulness and meditation?

Meditation, in my opinion, is one of the ways you get to mindfulness. There are lots of ways to get to mindfulness.

At one time I brought Thich Nhat Hanh to Oprah; he was one of the first people she interviewed for her new network. I was sitting with them both. People call Thich Nhat Hanh Thay which means teacher, it’s an affectionate term. And Oprah said to Thay: “How often do you meditate?” And he said: “Everything I do I do mindfully so everything I do is a meditation.” When people think of meditation, they normally think of sitting quietly which is meditation but you can be mindful while taking a walk if you’re just taking a walk. You can be mindful while drinking tea while just drinking tea. You can be mindful while talking to Nell from Beliefnet if I am only talking to Nell from Beliefnet; if I am sending a text at the same time, I am not being mindful. So I think they go hand-in-hand. Mindfulness includes meditation but you can also say every act of mindfulness in itself is a kind of meditation.

Yes, we hear in the film that drinking tea and even washing your hands in the morning can be very mindful.

Yes, they can. When I first met Thay he said: wash dishes mindfully, enjoy the water running on your hands, go slowly, don’t try and finish and it works.

Copyright 2015 Threshhold Entertainment
Copyright 2015 Threshhold Entertainment

It works how? Does it get the dishes cleaner?

You know what? It does get the dishes cleaner because you tend to not be washing the dishes while doing something else, so you focus on the dishes. I think all of this is a way to still your mind. Thay has a great expression and so I had this calligraphy on my wall which says “be still and know.” The analogy is: think of a beautiful mountain lake in Switzerland; if the weather is terrible and cloudy the lake windy, the lake is all choppy and dirty and unclear. If the lake is beautiful and calm on a Sunday spring morning it’s gorgeous and it reflects accurately the sky and the clouds and mountaintops. The first one, the agitated water, does not. So if you can still your mind like that lake, it does reflect and you see clearly. So meditation is not a way of going to sleep. It allows you to wake up and if you wake up you see things clearly, you do do them better. Now in my opinion, meditation is not just the purview of Buddhist monks, anyone can do it. I am doing another movie on the special unit of the special operations of the United States. These guys in my opinion, other than the monks, are the most mindful people I have ever met. They have maybe different philosophies but you’ve got to be pretty mindful standing in a field somewhere with people shooting at you for three days; you’ve got to be calm and still your mind. A boxer is mindful, a golfer is mindful if they are good, a painter is mindful, anyone can be mindful. So I think it’s important to distinguish that even when you are washing dishes mindfully, you do wash your dishes better but more than that, for two minutes you stop your mind, you’ve got nothing else, you’ve cleared your mind and that is a beneficial experience that makes you happier.

How are Special Forces military like Buddhist monks?

I believe the most mindful groups I know, and the two groups I think of the most in common are the Buddhist monks and the special operations soldiers because they both have developed extraordinary mind control to bring their mind to a still level in pursuit of peace. They have completely different tactics on how to find peace but it only diverges there. The Green Berets had a slogan: “slow is smooth and smooth is fast,” which any good athlete understands, too. You just are careful and you move deliberately and you are moving mindfully; It applies to so many many walks of life.

We debated putting Special Forces guys in the movie and putting some supermodel in the movie but we just didn’t want to do anything that would seem a little controversial and take things away from the great message. But the fact that we had an actor and a film director and a doctor and a dog trainer in the movie is just an example of how many walks of life you can apply this to. You can apply it anywhere and that’s what I think is the best thing about it, it works everywhere.

I liked it that throughout the film, the focus is not just going internally but also being mindful as a way of being a better listener or being more aware of what’s going on.

Especially in the world today. Have you been at a dinner or meeting where everyone is talking and texting at the same time? They are not listening. I believe in unitasking; you do one thing at the time. You can do 100 things during the day; just do one thing at a time. If you do that you are being mindful so when you have a meeting, that’s it. When you are walking to the next meeting, you are walking. When you are eating, you’re eating. No one is perfect in all of this, not even the monks but if you take one more deep breath today than you did yesterday that’s great. I think one of the things is this is fun and you don’t have to worry about: did I do it perfectly? Did I do it great every day? I don’t think that’s it. I think whenever you do it’s better than not doing it so that’s great.

Right at the beginning of the film we hear a word that I was not expecting: tenderness. Thay tells us we need to be tender toward our feelings of sorrow or pain.

The monks have this wonderful expression that Thay talks about in the film called the second arrow. So let’s say you stub your toe, now your toe hurts, so that’s one arrow and if you are mindful and you embrace it and you calm down, it won’t hurt as much and it will probably heal faster. But if you say:“Oh my goodness, I am an idiot for stubbing my toe,” boom then you’ve got a second arrow right in the same toe and it hurts more. Now if you say, “Oh my God, I am worried I stubbed my toe, I am going to collapse and die for my stubbed toe,” you’ve got a third arrow.

So if you have a piece of cake and maybe you didn’t want to have piece of cake, okay, then mindfully say: I had a piece of cake, I enjoyed the cake, I did it today. Okay, do I want to do this tomorrow? Let’s think about this; maybe I don’t and then you don’t. But if you then get mad at yourself for having your cake, now two things can happen, you have more calories than you want and you’ve added stress and the opposite of stillness, a kind of disturbance to your mind, you just made it worse. So no one is perfect, everyone makes mistakes and if you see it carefully and mindfully embrace it as they say you can calm it down.

Think about your boss coming to work and saying, “Listen, you should not have sent that memo but don’t worry, I know you didn’t mean it, it’s okay, we will fix it; maybe we should read our memos a little more carefully next time.” You feel much better that if someone comes in screaming to you that you sent off the wrong thing. I think it works with everything. But it doesn’t mean you have to become a wimp and a hippie and hug everybody all the time, you just have to be mindful of what you are doing so you do it with a clarity and a purpose.

Can you be an activist and have the kind of passion that you need to push for change and yet maintain a sense of acceptance?

I was worried about that too. A monk once said to me, “We do not lose sight of our goal. It is just that the anger doesn’t help us.”

I make a lot of martial arts movies. The true fighting Zen master is so incredibly focused that they don’t get angry. It is so hard not to get angry but my goal is my goal and if I get too angry then everyone will start up with their own egos and we will drift from the goal. So being mindful doesn’t mean you have to become a certain way. You can be a mindful Republican or a mindful Democrat or a mindful soldier. You can go to a strip club mindfully. You can play poker mindfully, you can do a lot of things mindfully. Mindfulness is not wimpy, it means doing it with presence and doing it with a clarity of mind. There is no scenario in which being mindful doesn’t help. I make so many fight movies; I own a fight channel. You will win so many more fights if you are not angry.

I think most of this is about eliminating anger, fear and anxiety from your life and if you eliminate anger, fear and anxiety from your life mostly, most people are still left with happiness. It is not antithetical to your goals. It is in fact completely the opposite, it accentuates your goals, it enables you to achieve your goals better. That’s why we love James Bond or old Clint Eastwood movies; we love people who walk in and are calm and present, clear and know exactly what they want and get it.

How did you get involved with mindfulness?

I produced these these big action sci-fi martial arts movies. I read a book by Thich Nhat Hanh about 10, 12 years ago and I thought it was great, I mean I am always interested in new things and I thought, “Hey, maybe we could use him as an inspiration for this character we have in Mortal Kombat.” He is kind of an Obi-Wan Kenobi character in Mortal Kombat called Rayden.

So I called him up and went to meet him really just for inspiration for a “Mortal Kombat” movie. But after spending two hours with him I felt like I had been on vacation for a week. And I said: “What’s your secret?” And he said:“No secret, practice.” And I said: “Wait, I could learn this?” We became good friends and I did start practicing and I did start learning and I got into other mindful things and met some other wonderful people, most of whom are in the film and then eventually he just asked me to make a documentary. Thay’s basic message is peace in yourself, peace in the world. If you find peace in yourself through mindfulness you will be happier. If you are happier, maybe the person you are with will be happier, maybe the guy you get coffee with in the morning will be happier and if everyone does it everyone will be happier.

That is the most simple nondenominational, nonpolitical but helpful message and my hope is that in some small way that the movie promotes that philosophy. So when Thay asked me to do it I just decided to fund the whole thing myself, put it out there and the goal is just to get it into the hands of anyone whom it might benefit.

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Christmas Eve

Posted on December 4, 2015 at 12:00 pm

B-
Lowest Recommended Age: Middle School
MPAA Rating: Rated PG for some peril, thematic elements and language
Profanity: Some strong and crude language
Alcohol/ Drugs: None
Violence/ Scariness: Sad terminal diagnosis, gun, some tense confrontations
Diversity Issues: None
Date Released to Theaters: December 4, 2015

It may be the most wonderful time of the year, but the Christmas season is also the most hectic and the most fraught. Our to-do lists are overwhelming. Our expectations are even more so. And then there are the expectations of others. Everyone who celebrates Christmas expects at least a little magic around December 25th. Everyone, even the most cynical among us, wants to believe. Like Scrooge, we want to wake up as merry as a schoolboy and like the Grinch, we want our heart to grow.

In the gentle dramedy “Christmas Eve,” six very different groups of people get that chance. They deal in the most literal terms with life and death. There is love and loss and reconciliation. And it all happens because a guy runs his repair truck (labeled “Deus ex Machina”) into a power station and knocked out the electricity, so that six elevators get stuck and the people in them are trapped.

Patrick Stewart plays a wealthy man used to barking orders at cowering underlings. He is trapped by himself in a precarious construction elevator. The others are in groups. One is in a hospital elevator with orderlies, a nurse (played by Shawn King, the wife of producer Larry King — yes, that Larry King), a doctor (Gary Cole),a and an unconscious post-surgery patient.

In an apartment building, an outgoing photographer and a shy young woman are stuck together. A classical music ensemble is trapped together on the way to a performance. There is a lot of artistic temperament in a crowded space and one of them (Cheryl Hines) has a gun.

In another elevator, an IT guy who has just been laid off (Jon Heder) is trapped in an elevator with the boss who just gave him the bad news — on Christmas Eve. And in a shopping mall, two silly girls are trapped between brains and brawn. Their elevator includes a guy with a lot of muscles and tattoos who does not say much, a guy with some OCD issues and a lot of hand sanitizer, and a guy who could do very well on Jeopardy.

Before the power station can go back on line, the repair truck guy has to be rescued in a very complicated maneuver. So that gives us time to go back and forth as the temporary (but not as temporary as they intended to be) inhabitants of the elevators worry about everything from bodily functions to existential issues (I suppose bodily functions are a kind of existential issue).

As one might expect from the unwieldy construct, the movie is very uneven, careening back and forth between “Love Boat” level corny situations to a few moments of surprising insight. We are not surprised when the photographer gives the shy young woman a makeover and takes her picture. But we are at what happens next. The doctor was hoping he would be far from the hospital by the time his patient woke up and had to hear some bad news. But they are in the elevator so long that he ends up having to tell her himself, and the moment is sensitively handled. The weakest elements are the slapstick-ish rescue of the man who hit the power station and the interaction between the laid-off employee and his now-former boss, which requires a suspension of disbelief even Christmas cannot excuse. At its worst, it feels like a late-season “Love Boat” episode crossed with a late-night Hallmark Christmas movie, but at its best it reminds us that even in this busy season, we need to stop to smell the pine needles.

Parents should know that this film includes crude bathroom humor, some strong language, peril, gunshots, a sad terminal diagnosis, and tense confrontations.

Family discussion: Which of these people would you most like to be stuck with? What was the most important lesson learned by the characters? Which one surprised you the most?

If you like this, try: “New Year’s Eve” and “Valentine’s Day”

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The Letters

The Letters

Posted on December 3, 2015 at 5:46 pm

Copyright Freestyle Releasing 2015
Copyright Freestyle Releasing 2015

Mother Teresa, the Albanian nun who devoted her life to “the poorest of the poor” in India, is one of the foremost figures of the 20th century, and on the way to being recognized as a saint by the Catholic Church. Some people are disturbed by discovering through her published letters that at times she felt doubts about herself, her work, and even about God. But it was that same resolute honesty that compelled her to follow her calling and it would be more disturbing if she never doubted or if she doubted and did not feel she could express it. Her accomplishments are even more impressive once we learn how fiercely she wrestled with God.

In “The Letters,” Juliet Stevenson plays Mother Teresa, from her early days as a nun to establishing her own order. At first, in the convent in India, she is teaching young girls in starched uniforms who sit quietly and are eager to learn. But she receives “a calling within a calling” and believes she has been called on by God to work with “the poorest of the poor.” Reconciling this determination with her vow of obedience and her dedication to humility is not easy. Persuading the people that she hopes to help that all she wants is to help them, not convert them, is not easy.

The tall actress Juliet Stevenson does a fine job as the tiny nun. Some people may object that the movie caters to those who are already believers. It does not question Mother Teresa’s greatness or her tactics and it elides over some of the controversies concerning the expansion of her operations and whether her faith-based approach was always best for the people she was helping. Some viewers will find the film slow, though for me that was one of its strengths. Writer/director Bill Riead makes sure that its quiet power is more like a prayer than a biographical portrait, a calling inside a calling inside a calling and one that its subject would find most suitable.

Parents should know that this movie’s themes concern work with the “poorest of the poor,” with extreme deprivation and illness.

Family discussion: What is the best way to help the “poorest of the poor?” Why did Mother Teresa want to help people who were not Catholic?

If you like this, try: “The Life Journey of Mother Teresa,” a documentary

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Exclusive Clip and Contest: 90 Minutes in Heaven

Exclusive Clip and Contest: 90 Minutes in Heaven

Posted on December 2, 2015 at 10:35 am

We are pleased to present an exclusive clip from “90 Minutes in Heaven,” starring Hayden Christensen and Kate Bosworth and based on the real-life story of Baptist Minister Don Piper, who says he experienced heaven when he was declared clinically dead after a car accident.

I have 10 copies to give away! Send me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com with 90 in the subject line and tell me what you are most looking forward to over the holiday season. Don’t forget your address!! (US addresses only) I’ll pick winners at random on December 12, 2015. Good luck!

Copyright 2015 Universal
Copyright 2015 Universal
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