| Recommended
Movies
Little
Buddha (with Keanu Reeves) This film
is inspired by the true life stories of several children and their extraordinary
voyage of discovery.
Heart
and Souls (with Alfre Woodard)
There are no accidents in the universe. When "accidents happen"
in the universe of all possibilities, there are creative ways to work
around them. In "Heart and Souls", four people who die in
a bus crash become attached to a boy who grows up to help them complete
their unfinished business before they move to their next life.
Peaceful
Warrior is the well made film version
of Dan Millman's autobiographical-motivational-self help bestseller,
modestly titled "Way of the Peaceful Warrior: A Book that Changes
Lives".
Jonathan
Livingston Seagull is the movie version
of Richard Bach's classic book of the same name. It tells us of our
limitless potential and is one of he most simple and yet most powerfully
inspirational movies ever made.
The
Secret is about the power of intention
and how to use the law of attraction to create whatever you want. Most
people focus their thoughts either on what they don't want or on reinforcing
what they're already getting. The key however, is to keep your thoughts
focused on what you desire, even if it seems to have no presence in
your life yet.
What
the Bleep Do We Know ? (with Marlee Matlin
and Barry Newman) Quantum physics is the missing link between physics
and metaphysics and even science and religion. "What the Bleep
Do We Know?!" shows us that quantum physics can provide the answers
to most of the unanswered questions about the nature of our reality.
Ghost
(with Demi Moore) In "Ghost", a wrongfully murdered man uses
both "poltergeist" energy (to move objects) and "Instrumental
Transcommunication" (to type on a computer) to exact his revenge.
Dead
Again (with Kenneth Brannagh and Emma
Thompson) The past is still present. In "Dead Again", the
movie starts with the execution of an innocent man who says just before
his death that "this is far from over." Revenge for wrongs
done in past lives powerfully directs the future... as when all the
key players in the murder reincarnate, then find one another again,
and strive to "put right what once went wrong".
On
A Clear Day You Can See Forever (with
Barbra Streisand) It is love more than revenge that keeps us coming
back for more as a psychiatrist learns in "On A Clear Day"
when he unexpectedly encounters a past life of a woman patient destined
to be his wife in a future life!
Stir
of Echoes (with Kevin Bacon) Then
again there are times when the dead cannot wait to come back... and
take it upon themselves to intervene in the land of the living by dispensing
instant karma. In "Stir of Echoes", the spirit of a murdered
girl invades the psychic awareness of a neighbor. In a classic case
of "After Life Intervention", she leads him - unwillingly
- to discover her body and bring her murderers to justice.
Heaven
Can Wait (with Warren Beatty) In "Heaven
Can Wait", a soul taken out of his body too early attaches to another
and finds the woman who becomes his reason for living and loving.
Somewhere
in Time (with Jane Seymour and Christopher
Reeve) There are no barriers to love in the universe... not time, not
distance, not death can ever truly separate those love with the passion
of eternity. In "Somewhere in Time", a woman waits her whole
life to convince the man she has already loved to go back to the past
and love her again.
The
Love Letter (with Jennifer Jason Leigh
and Campbell Scott) In "The Love Letter", a window to the
past is opened by an antique desk, which allows lovers parted by war
in the past to find one another in the present and resume their long
denied love.
Guarding
Tess (with Shirley MacLaine) The past
is a nice place to visit... but you do not want to live there. In "Guarding
Tess", the wife of a dead President keeps reliving the glory days
of her past even though it is killing her (which manifests as a brain
tumor).
Dolores
Claiborne (with Kathy Bates) In "Dolores
Claiborne", a wife, -suspected of murdering her husband, must come
to terms with it, while under investigation in the death of her employer.
In both the movies (Guarding Tess and Dolores Claiborne) the main characters
face their pasts and embrace their present by healing their troubled
relationships with those left in their lives now. Both learn that living
in the past... only keeps them trapped there.
Defending
Your Life (with Albert Brooks) "There
is no hell... but Los Angeles is getting pretty close..." is the
explanation given to a man who is about to review - and defend - his
most recent lifetime on Earth. As becomes clear from his lawyer who
vigorously applauds his mundane life and from his prosecutor who has
no trouble finding his faults, this man is no hero. And yet, in the
final moments of the life between lives, this man shows how love can
transform cowards into heroes. Even his prosecutor was moved to tears
by his final act of heroism, which goes to show that we can be supported
by those we least expect and that we can do more than we believe ourselves
able to do.
Titanic
(with Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio) There is a reason that
Titanic sailed into a fortune... it was because it showed what was truest
and best about the human condition as well it's falsity and failures.
At the heart of the movie was a story of past life love... for to transcend
the barriers of class, fortune, and circumstance so quickly and so easily
is only possible where a Soul connection of deep love already existed
from past lives. When Jack says that he lives each day to the fullest
with the goal of "making it count", he shows us what a fully
realized being is. When Rose lives the rest of her long life because
of his courage, she show us how powerfully love can transform us. In
the final hours of Titanic, each was tested in a way they would live
with for the rest of their lives.
Mother
Night (with Nick Nolte) "You are
what you pretend to be... so be very careful about what you pretend
to be" is the life lesson of "Mother Night". An American
born playwright takes on the role of a lifetime when he poses as a Nazi
sympathizer to secretly send coded transmissions as part of his radio
program. When he realizes that his message of hate is taken seriously
by all around him, his life slowly collapses in on him until it finally
destroys him.
Sleuth
(with Michael Caine and Laurence Olivier) In "Sleuth", a mystery
novelist's obsession with murder causes him to commit the real thing.
Deathtrap
(with Michael Caine and Christopher Reeve) A playwright's murder-for-money
scheme in "Deathtrap" snares him in a web of lies that "traps"
him into his own "death".
Patton
(with George C. Scott) "Through a glass and darkly, the age old
strife I see where I fought in many guises, many names but always me"
was how General George S. Patton Jr. paid tribute to the many military
incarnations that made him the very genius of war. Nothing stays with
one more than the sting of personal defeat as General Patton remarked
when he recounted a past life during the sacking of Carthage in an early
scene of the movie.
Gladiator
(with Russell Crowe) There is nothing like personal adversity to sear
one to their soul as Maximus in the movie "Gladiator" learned
when the slaughter of his wife and child propelled him on a tortured
path of revenge. For those that want to know the true experience of
war without having to live through it, watch the opening scenes of "Gladiator"
or the first 30 minutes of "Saving Private Ryan".
Saving
Private Ryan (with Tom Hanks) For those
wanting to know what war really does to someone, watch the deterioration
of the Hanks character closely.
Yesterday's
Children (with Jane Seymour) "Yesterday's
Children" is the movie version of the book by Jenny Cockell entitled
"Across Time and Death: A Mother's Search for Her Past Life Children".
Although "Americanized" and "TV-ish", this movie
remains true to the heart warming account of how a mother's love from
a past life translated into her present day search for her children
to make sure they were "all right". It also shows many of
the following truisms of past life exploration. That emotional issues
(she was an abused wife) are more important than mundane details (like
last names) which could be scientifically verified. That the more the
past is ignored, the more problems it causes in the present (her life
and health were disrupted, forcing her to take action).
Two
Worlds of Jennie Logan (with Lindsay
Wagner) In the "Two Worlds of Jennie Logan", helps us to understand
that past life information comes in it's own order and own good time
and makes us realize that ultimately love is what life is all about.
Staya
Erusa is a Dutch movie. If you are interested
in finding solutions that can help to create 'a better world' we believe
you'll find much to fascinate, provoke, intrigue and challenge you in
this film. Everyone accepts that humanity faces huge challenges. This
film will help us to develop a whole new perspective and, along with
that, new possibilities for solutions.
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