*audio recording here*
Every November 5th I start off with the intention
of watching V for Vendetta. I’ve seen it maybe a dozen times and it never gets
old. Perhaps that’s because the films central message is that ideas can never
die. That’s a powerful message for sure. It’s true and harsh and beautiful. But
I think I might have found a movie for November 6th: Cloud Atlas.
I went to the theater last night with my dearest friend Kailey Mo Becker.
I hadn’t seen her in almost 9 months and it was so wonderful to see her again. Once
the movie started it took me a while to figure out what was going on exactly,
in fact it took most of the 2 hours and 50 minutes. There are several main plot
lines spanning four hundred years of history, many of them overlapping. But it was
fun trying to fit all the shifting pieces of the puzzle around and put them
together. This movie definitely requires you to use your brain, and for that I
am glad. During the first half I was attempting to find the plot line for each
of the stories while trying to figured out how they are all connected through
time; and ultimately through love.
The acting was superb. Halle Barry plays several prominent
roles as is completely redeemed for that whole Cat Woman thing. Tom Hanks (Castway, Lost in Translation, Larry Crowne)
stars in just as many roles and displays a wide array of talents as an actor. Timothy Broadbent (Mulan Rouge, Harry
Potter), Jim Sturgess (Across the
Universe), Ben Whishaw (Skyfall), and
the lovely and powerful Susan Sarandon (
Alien, Avatar, Political Animals) all performed so well in there many
roles. It was a wonderful experience to see all these amazing actors play so
many uniquely different roles throughout the various plot lines.
It is sort of serendipitous that I had a conversation with
my parents the other night about reincarnation. My stance is (was?) that it
really doesn’t matter. Past lives, eh, you can make that stuff up. You know how
it ended. But if you look at the cyclical nature of things i.e. the water
cycle, the carbon cycle, bird and fish migrations, the turning of the seasons –that
sort of thing- then yes, I’m pretty sure we, our souls if you will, go through
some sort of recycling/reincarnation thing. And that’s cool but there isn’t
much I can do with a past life. I’m here now, doing my work, living this life. I
have different objectives than I did in a previous life, different cells,
different genetics, and different experiences. The only thing that truly matters
in being the best person I can be today.
So what I loved what most about Cloud Atlas was this idea
that those whom we love and those who we hurt get carried with us throughout
our lives. Our circumstances change. The time we live in today is different.
The technology advances but the essence, the souls of those we impact, get
carried with us through time and space. It’s beautiful really. If not real than
profoundly poetic to the point that its message can only aid us in our
understanding of how we relate to each other. I’d like to think of the people
who I’ve met in my 23 years of (this?) life that as people whom I’ve met before
(maybe this is why I say “See you later” instead of “Good-bye”). Maybe my best
friends were past lovers. Maybe they were family members who I had a grudge
against. Bullies I elementary school were once co-workers or bosses. Friends of
today and tomorrow might be my brothers and sisters in some distant future.
“From womb to tomb, our lives are not our own. We are bound
to others, past and present, and by each crime and every kindness, we birth our
future.” Sonmi-451.
-David Mitchell, Cloud Atlas
-David Mitchell, Cloud Atlas
It’s nice to think that with all the chaos life can bring
and all the transformations around us (environmental, political, economic,
temporal and special) that there is a tethering –a bond of love -that we carry with
us as we live and move and have our being. That no matter what happens after we
pass over, if this reincarnation thing is true, if we get recycled and get to experience
the joys and sorrows of an earthly existence once again, that we are still
bound to one another indefinitely. In love, in pain, through it all, we will
find each other time and time again.
This is most profoundly felt when Sonmi-451 (Donna Bea) is
being interviewed by the Archivist, played by James D'Arcy (An American Haunting, Master and Commander) towards the end of the film. This is when all
these plot lines and all the threads from all the different stories finally
come together, Sonmi-451 is asked if she fell in love with Hae-Joo Chang (Jim
Stuggess). She says she is still in love with him, would always love him. We
are shown their love does not transcend time but flows through it, with it. We
see every incarnation of their love through time. It was beautiful and lovely
and yes, I cried a little.
So I think the lesson her is be kind to one another. Love
one another unconditionally. Freed or enslaved. Love with all the open space a
heart can have, which is, as big as whole of time.
1 comment:
having trouble uploading audio to soundcloud. Will continue to work on it.
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