GungHaggisFatChoy :: The Fountain: spiritual love odyssey through time, space and philosophy
Jill Stone  |  by www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com. All rights reserved. 17.07 | 17:18

Darren Aronofsky has written and directed an incredibly beautiful movie about love, death, spirituality, and eternal life beyond death. This movie ties together metaphysics, ancient Mayan beliefs and juxtaposes them against the physicalities of life and death in the early 21st Century. This movie belongs to the category of spiritual drama that inclu What Dreams May Come, and Many people will not understand this movie, and simply shake their heads and mutter words like "bizarre.

" But life is not linear nor a monoculture. Hugh Jackman and Rachel Weisz star as lovers in the present time. He is a medical research surgeon doing brain tumor research.

Ironically, she is dying of a brain tumor. Ellen Burstyn plays a research colleague or senior advisor. In a past life sequence, Rachel Weisz was Queen Isabella of Spain, during the time of the Spanish Inquisition.

Hugh Jackman was a conquistador who travelled to the New World of America in search of "The Fountain of Life" or in this case...

"The Tree of Life." Queen Isabella says that the bible tells of two trees: The Tree of Knowledge from which Adam and Eve ate the apple, and the Tree of Life. Jackman's conquistador is sent to the Mayan jungles from which he is discover for the glory and savior of Spain.

In a spiritual sequence, Jackman is travelling through space in a small globe containing the Tree of Life. He meditates in the lotus position. This is probably representing his "soul"or eternal being.

Bald, Hugh Jackman looks like Ken Wilber, the prolific transpersonal pscyhology author, whose work I have read since 1990. It is too much of a coincidence that Wilber's wife Treya died of a brain tumor, documented in the book Grace and Grit The Fountain doesn't really go deep into explaining the ancient Mayan beliefs of life and death. The opening scenes are in a jungle as conquistadors are attacked by Mayan warriors.

In present time, Weisz's character Izzy, explains to her husband Tommy (Jackman) that the Mayans believed a specific star constellation was home to the Mayan underworld. Some of the beliefs are explained when Tommy reads Izzy's manuscript that she is writing, titled "The Fountain." This is definitely an art movie.

The editing and sequencing between the three time-lines flow in themes rather than linear story telling. The special effects are wondrous and beautiful, specifically the scenes where the meditating Tommy and the "Tree of Life" are travelling through space to the star constellation. The movie Brainstorm came to mind because of the spiritual aspects of life beyond death combined with special effects that try to translate the unknowing to the audience.

The Fountain is a brave movie that attempts to share spiritual wisdom through the telling of a story. It balances three story lines that challenge the notions of time, or the division of past, present and future. Everything blurs into a "now" as there are many scenes that are repeated later in the movie which give the viewer a more insightful understanding to the actions and context.

While through many different cultures, there are many stories of the after-life and of how we are actually spiritual beings having a physical experience, rather than physical beings in quest of a spiritual experience...

it is difficult to explain to non-believers what lies outside their belief structures. The Dalai Lama was once asked the question about his belief in reincarnation. His reply was a laugh, asking how could one not believe in reincarnation.

It is like air. We breathe it but we cannot see it or touch it. Posted to: Darren Aronofsky has written and directed an incredibly beautiful movie about love, death, spirituality, and eternal life beyond death.

Read more on by www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Rachel Weisz, Darren Aronofsky, Queen Isabella
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