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Jimi-Bigbear
Reviews
Ayurveda: Art of Being (2001)
from the ancient past - the future of health care
It has been awhile since I last watched this film, but I've watched it several times from a standpoint that includes quite a lot of knowledge and direct experience of Ayurveda. Ayus is life and Veda is Knowledge - so Ayurveda is Knowledge or science of life. So called "modern" or "western" medicine is a relative newcomer - having really only been around for the past 150 years or so, while Ayurveda is thousands of years old. Even in the US there is still a LOT of traditional folk medicine, and increasingly Ayurveda is making inroads and being recognized as holistic and preventative and truly a system of health care - as opposed to "modern" medicine's fragmented (just look at the specialties) and disease care approach.
Writer/director, Pan Nalin, did a masterful job of presenting India as the custodian of Ayurveda and covered a lot of ground - both literally and figuratively. Maybe the Indian Errol Morris, Pandya seems to have a good sense of letting the camera roll and his subjects explain what they are doing and why. Like a great shirodhara (warm oil dripped onto one's forehead - very relaxing), Nalin's film is like practical Ayurveda itself - simple, soothing, and economical. The tranquil score evokes another aspect of Vedic knowledge - Ghandharva Veda - the melodies of Nature - maybe the subject of a future Nalin documentary? With "western" medicine - disease care - becoming less affordable everyday, "western" drugs costing so much and having so many harmful side effects, and an epidemic of obesity in the US, this refreshing look at a simpler approach is quietly reassuring and shows us the path to integrating the best of western medicine with the time tested Knowledge of Life - Ayurveda, and hints that the time will come again when the local village doctor - the Vaidya - will be well paid by all the people in the village, but only for keeping them well. In ancient times this was the case. If the people became sick, the Vaidya would not even expect payment - much less ask for it.
Pan Nalin's film is a great introduction to a deep well of knowledge. Help yourself to a refreshing drink of cool, sweet water. - Jimi
The World's Fastest Indian (2005)
The virtue of friendliness
Hopkins was delightful as Burt Munro, a lovable eccentric with a dream, whose mastery of the human virtues of friendliness, one-pointedness, and non-judgmental, open hearted acceptance of everyone he meets on his adventure, wins him the support of Nature that he needs to fulfill his 25 year desire. A wonderful story, masterfully told, and Kiwi Jon Clarke's assessment notwithstanding, we "yanks" loved it here in the states. My wife and I haven't been down under to beautiful New Zealand yet, but I have stood on the salt flats of the once great Lake Bonneville, and feel this is as much an American story as it is a Kiwi's. In fact it's a human feel good movie that can't be contained by any nation's borders.