What
Dreams May Come Movie Review:
Many
lovers like to say to each other their loves will be eternal.
You might say, however, that it is idealistic, if touching,
nonsense. But, could you prove such a thing? You don`t know
what happens after death any more than I do. Perhaps "life"
does continue in some form after we leave, and maybe those
relationships can still encounter obstacles. This is the
circumstance involving a married couple, played by Robin
Williams and Annabella Sicorra, in the metaphysical, stunning
love story What Dreams May Come.
The
setup of the movie is very routine. The two meet accidentally
while rowing, and immediately we see simple scenes of courtship,
marriage, and family. Then tragedy strikes. The two children
are killed in a terrible car accident, then only a few scenes
later, Williams himself is killed in a chilling moment.
This is where the true purpose of the film begins. Williams
is now in the afterlife, and you get an luxurious glimpse
of what it might be like for such an individual. The movie
tells and shows not just the heaven itself, but one`s own
personal reaction to that heaven.
While
watching this film, I came under the realization that if
Ingmar Bergman had been a special-effects wizard with a
perverse delight in happy endings, he could`ve been the
director of this movie. And a slower, less knowledgeable
mind than even I might have very well believed Bergman was
that very man in the director`s chair, especially when suddenly
Max Von Sydow shows up, in a severe and stern character
role, and to guide Robin Williams through Hell, no less.
But when you realize that Bergman is now some 80-something
man resting somewhere in the frigid Swedish countryside,
and hasn`t directed a film since the very un-modern setting
of Fanny and Alexander in 1982, you realize Bergman has
not made a staggering comeback, to show that he is indeed
relevant to our Star Wars generation. Besides, this film
makes too much sense (at least for anyone who`s suffered
through Persona, at any rate!) and usually people grow even
more fractured and senile as they age!
Now
why did I mention Bergman? I did because this film also
deals with the major questions of life, especially death
(a pretty common occurrence in Bergman). But, in our special-effects
age, these ideas are expressed mainly in visuals, where
most of the brilliance of the film comes from. When Robin
Williams` character dies, he experiences a series of images
of events occurring after his death, like his funeral, and
assorted periods of grieving. He is accompanied by a man,
played by Cuba Gooding Jr., who appears to Williams as a
blurred, indistinct apparition. The reason for this is explained
as Williams` natural refusal of his own death. He can still
see clearly and distinctly the world of his previous existence,
but cannot fully comprehend, much less accept, figures accompanying
a whole new realm of reality. Of course, just as one eventually
gets used to the light after coming out of a long period
in the dark, Williams eventually is able to be visually
accustomed to the new reality of the afterlife. And what
a reality it is. He suddenly appears in a unique landscape,
a representation of his wife`s painting. And like a painting,
the textures are similar, even to the point where the colors
aren`t even dry, allowing Williams to make sloppy footprints
on the ground.
Back
on earth, Siccora`s character is in crisis. Now that she
is without husband, or children, she is no longer happy,
and slowly but surely develops a suicidal state of mind.
When Williams finds out that she has killed herself, he
believes they will at least finally be reunited. But the
problem is that someone who kills oneself has in effect
denounced the extraordinary gift of life, and so is sent
into hell. One who commits suicide denies the responsibility
inherent in the earthly life; they have taken the easy route
out, and as punishment, they are forever condemned to wallow
in their self-pity and suffering. Williams cannot accept
the eternal fate of his soulmate, and this is the point
where he enlists Sydow to journey with him to Hell and rescue
his wife. (And who wouldn`t want to rescue Annabella Siccora????)
Hell`s landscape is as equally great to look at as the Heaven,
with pale bodies screaming in agony in a cold lake, heads
poking from the ground, and finally, Siccora`s own ragged
appearance when she is finally found.
Another
equally good insight is the notion that people have their
own personal Heaven and Hell. William`s heaven is created
simply for him, for he has a love of art and especially
of his wife`s work. And as well, Siccora`s hell could only
be as grim as it is because she is forced to suffer endlessly
through her own pain. This makes perfect sense; in life
we can only relate to events in a personal, subjective way,
so if we are to go to either the best or worst places when
we die, it only stands to reason that they are the best
or worst because they will give you the most pleasurable
or ugly feelings. Clearly, this vision is secular rather
than Christian, but sense I lean much more to the former
than the latter, this is a more natural vision for me to
understand, even if I don`t necessarily take it seriously.
David
Macdonald
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