|
Kaffeine Buzz
reviews independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
Peaceful Warrior (Victor
Salva)
As with most people who’ve read great books,
I felt a sense of excitement mixed with a lingering,
cringing feeling about what filmmakers were going
to do with "Way of the Peaceful Warrior"
by Dan Millman. Would they do it justice? Would
critical aspects be glossed over or be left out
completely?
The story, based on "true events”
tells Millman’s own tale of his glory days
at UC Berkeley as a promising gymnast. He had
what most people would call a good life. Good
looks, top grades, girls available at his beck
and call, and a daily training regimen that had
brought him to the top of his competitive game.
Or so he thought.
As the book unfolds, you find that Millman is
running the track that many of us are, where things
all seem to be going to plan but there’s
still something missing. Or things are not going
to plan but we can’t figure out why. Basically,
it is one of the most compelling stories of self-discovery
because of the fact that the author’s story
could also be that of any one of us.
Right from the get go, the movie’s opening
scene is powerful. Millman (Scott Mechlowicz)
is a running through his favorite gig, the rings,
at a gymnastic competition. Everything is moving
in slow motion, and when he goes to do his landing,
his right leg completely shatters into hundreds
of flesh colored, plastic bits and pieces, bouncing
and dancing along on the shiny gym floor. This
has to be a nightmare.
Millman is still lying on the ground in shock
at what had just happened as he sees a janitor
of sorts, start to sweep up the pieces while wearing
two different types of shoes.
He awakes, heart pounding, at sees by his clock
that it’s 3:00am (a time in the morning
that seems to come up more and more often as the
time of inspiration, when answers to questions
are delivered and ideas are crafted). After letting
the girl in bed with him that things are fine,
he dresses and decides to go running through the
campus since going back to sleep is out of the
question.
Coming upon a Texaco gas station, he discovers
a place that he will routinely visit over the
course of his training program, one that neither
he, nor many other people, had ever experienced.
It is on the human grounds of this “service
station” where Millman will get to know
his mentor, his guide, a modern day shamen he
calls Socrates (Nick Nolte), who works at this
station in the graveyard hours.
Socrates asks questions of Millman that seem
simple to answer, “Are you happy?”
Using wordplay, the teacher uses the term “take
out the trash” in clear out the mind of
the student, the unending thoughts that keeps
him from discovering who he really is and from
fulfilling his greatest heart’s desire.
As most would, Millman can’t understand
what is happening at the beginning and even fights
the challenges that Socrates throws his way. But
in his search to accomplish the physically impossible
feats that Socrates has performed, including jumping
to the roof of the gas station from the ground
in the blink of an eye, Millman is relentless
in his pursuit.
In a fit of anger, Millman releases his tension
by taking a fast ride on his motorcycle through
the streets of Berkley’s downtown. This
is when the universe intervened to break his cycle
in a painful way (because that is what gets our
attention the most), and by cleaning the slate,
he’s able to start again from the ground
up.
Some aspects of the film, while remembering the
opening line of “true events,” may
be hard to grasp, but stranger things have happened
in this world. Where the film really succeeded
was the presentation of Millman’s story,
with all of its lessons (including, "be here
NOW"), in a way that can easily be absorbed
by even the skeptics. Using the chemistry between
Nolte and Mechlowicz, the wit and comedic repertoire
from the book was kept in tact and used quite
often throughout Peaceful Warrior, which makes
this real life story into something that people
can hopefully take to heart enough to venture
out on their own road of self discovery. The film,
like the book, is one that should be enjoyed many
times over and shared with anyone you care about.
To read a free chapter from the book, go to:
www.peacefulwarriorebook.com/
www.thepeacefulwarriormovie.com
www.danmillman.com
-Kim Owens, June 28, 2006
|