- Forum
- Sanghas
- Dharma Forum Refugees Camp
- Dharma Refugees Forum Topics
- Reading, Listening and Viewing Recommendations
- Viewing recommendations
Viewing recommendations
Coming up short in that category, I settled for "Lost in Translation". But for next time, does anyone have a particularly strong recommendation?
-- tomo
- Posts: 173
- Posts: 6503
- Karma: 2
- Posts: 6503
- Karma: 2
http://www.bl.uk/collections/treasures/sutra/sutra_broadband.htm
The Path of Freedom By Dr. Jeffery Martin
http://vimeo.com/27845874
I'd still like to read an actual research article on these studies. I'm in the process of arranging a Skype call with him sometime soon, so maybe I'll get some more information about it then.
-Jackson
Amongst White Clouds
-- tomo
To answer my original question, I recently watched the following documentary on hermit monks in the mountains of China. Very interesting.
Amongst White Clouds
-tomo
That looks really beautiful! On hotel wireless, so just watched a couple minutes of it. I am looking forward to the rest.
Reminded me Into Great Silence, about a modern (but ancient) monastery of ascetic Carthusian monks in France. I really enjoyed the film. Trailer here:
Or anything, to be honest, the 3 C's are everywhere innit *grins*
The Dhamma Brothers reduces grown men to tears, I'm told.
- Posts: 140
- Karma: 1
The Princess Bride - The quotes! The death-and-rebirth story! The way it is framed, with the grandfather's reading the story, interrupted by his grandchild...
Revolver, or Rock'n'Rolla or probably any other Guy Ritchie film (those are the two I watched)
The Matrix, sort of, yeah, though the premise is so flawed in terms of simple energy bookkeeping I find it jarring. Now if they'd said that the machines use the brains of the pod people for processing power, *that* would have worked, and been truly scary and thought-provoking as well - who are the Agents, really? The blue/red pill thing is a great metaphor, as is "the desert of the real".
I hesitate to recommend "Inception" - I found I was intrigued by the much darker film still visible through the massive plot holes barely covered by the incessant machine-gun wankfest. Still, it was worthwhile to think about the reasons for all that distracting gunfire.
Dead Poet's Society. If only for the Thoreau quotes. The ambiguous heretic teacher figure is great, too.
I've been watching mainly animation films for the past ten years. Being a parent can do that to you

Kung Fu Panda - the bit about the special ingredient, while it sounds trite, is true, you know.
Cheers,
Florian
What do you think? Worth the bother?
As you can tell, I am enormously enthusiastic about this idea, and hope someone will say "oh, that's a really great practice! do it!"

- Posts: 6503
- Karma: 2

I rarely hear of anyone doing either of the above these days (though I think the latter has come up on this very forum actually)...
Even the more difficult metta practice where you wish happiness on people you dislike is recommended.
Are those so different?
- Posts: 2340
http://buddhism-for-vampires.com/disgust-as-buddhist-practice
“It tastes like an embalmed corpse,” announced Ngakpa Trögyal, uncorking the bottle.
Ngakpa Trögyal is a specialist in the wrathful practice of Dorje Phurba —and also a hospital emergency doctor. The bottle was Ardbeg 10-Year —a Scotch whiskey I had never heard of.
'Stuff you don't like' becomes invisible once you categorize it; same is true of 'stuff you like'-- but I think opening your mind to what the latter is all about is probably MORE challenging than the former.
- Posts: 2340
- Posts: 2340
We live our lives so encased in habit as to be almost impervious to the Real; inspiration to do otherwise, even for a moment, in a small way, seems worth a response.
- Posts: 2340
- Posts: 2340

- Posts: 2340
Albeit not until his bardo visions have the viewer by the throat. I have to admit it is not the sort of thing I usually go in for; I'm really a kind of weenie moviegoer.
Sorry, O-- the trailer for the movie was a poor choice. See, the movie makes clear that what is 'happening' are bardo visions-- the skill of the moviemaker makes them perhaps too vivid. And, in this case, he DOES encounter a powerful Taoist sorcerer and that provides the resolution of the story.
Albeit not until his bardo visions have the viewer by the throat. I have to admit it is not the sort of thing I usually go in for; I'm really a kind of weenie moviegoer.
-kategowen
I hold my hands over my eyes during the scary bits in Harry Potter. I'm a shameless weenie.

- Posts: 834
http://wakeupthefilm.com/
- Posts: 6503
- Karma: 2
http://dharmarefugees.lefora.com/2010/12/03/welcome/page7/#post132
That's our Welcome topic. Doing a brief introduction of yourself lets the rest of us know who you are, what you practice and why you're here.
Thanks!
- Posts: 834
Jacob, any chance we can get you to introduce yourself here:
[url]
That's our Welcome topic. Doing a brief introduction of yourself lets the rest of us know who you are, what you practice and why you're here.
Thanks!
-cmarti
I submitted a post to the Welcome thread yesterday evening, but it said it had to be approved first. Was there an error? Should I try again?