The Spiritual Cinema Circle films for May:
“What if I could do my life over again?”
The Spiritual Cinema Circle movies for March:
EXPIRATION DATE
Charlie Whitecloud believes he has only 8 days to live because of the family curse that he has inherited: every Whitecloud male is killed by a milk truck on his 25th birthday. Should he face his impending death stoically, wrapping up the details of his life and saying his goodbyes? Or should he live like he’s never lived before and fight for every last minute he has? A wonderfully funny dark comedy filled with love, laughter, dancing — and milk trucks.
Written and directed by Richard Stevenson. 94 minutes, in English.
From Stephen Simon of the Spiritual Cinema Circle:
“What is Cinema? We might as well ask, ‘What is life?’, for film, like life, is made of moments; moments in time, held aloft for our perusal, imprinted on our soul, and then brought back to us from time to time as a memory - by an event, a vision, a sound, an emotion. The separation becomes trivial - cinema is life, and life cinema: around us, beside us, inside us. The cinema, then, is not to be consumed with haste; films are not to be digest simply as they unfold, like some plastic wrapped fast food. Created by light and celluloid, they live only in our minds and in our hearts, savoured both during and after the fact. Projected onto the screen and into our consciousness, where they are replayed over and over - continually re-discovered artefacts which are constantly changing us. What, then, can we say is truly real? A memory? An event? A celluloid image? The answer lies in the cinema. All is real. Nothing is impossible.” Glen Norton, Film Philosopher
The words above from Glen Norton are a great reminder that we can apply to every facet of our lives. We each have the ability to make our activities sacred, savoured.
And the award for Most Deserving goes to … YOU!
Rolling out the Cyres-blue carpet for You now!
And you should see your goodie bag!
(who could refuse the opportunity to frolic in the waves with a “personal surf butler”?)
The feature film Conversations with God is the true story of bestselling author Neale Donald Walsch.
Just a few years before he wrote his first book, Neale Donald Walsch was homeless with a broken neck and dumpster-diving for tin cans to have enough money to eat. He certainly had no intention of writing 22 books or becoming the New York Times best-selling author of the “Conversations with God” series. Neale Donald Walsch was just a man down on his luck, out of answers and in desperate need of help, who cried out to God.
And then God answered.




















