#Alexander Salzberger
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onenakedfarmer · 16 days ago
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KNOCKING [KNACKNINGAR] Frida Kempff Sweden, 2021
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awesomefridayca · 3 years ago
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Fantastic Fest Review: 'Knocking' has a great central performance
#FantasticFest Review: 'Knocking' has a great central performance
How do you deal with anything if no one will believe you. How do you proceed with life if everyone tells you that what you are experiencing is all in your head? This is the process of gaslighting, an abuser forcing someone to question their thoughts and beliefs. From this place comes the film Knocking, in which a woman recovering from a devastating emotional trauma who is trying to re-enter…
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cultfaction · 3 years ago
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Knocking trailer released
After suffering a traumatic incident, Molly (Cecilia Milocco) moves into a new apartment to begin her path to recovery, but it’s not long after her arrival that a series of persistent knocks and screams begin to wake her up at night. Molly’s new life begins to unravel as the screams intensify and no one else in the building believes or is willing to help her. KNOCKING, which world premiered to…
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drcalvin · 3 years ago
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Willkommen!
The Royal Dramatic Theatre of Sweden (Dramaten) has opened up again as restrictions lift, and we got tickets to their Cabaret! What a way to return to theater again
There was recently (i.e. recently minus some pandemic years...) a Cabaret set up at the  Stockholm House of Culture & City Theatre (Kulturhuset Stadsteatern), which I caught so it was inevitable to make comparisons.
I am torn on the Emcee, because I felt that there was more energy to Robert Fux’s brilliant performance at Stadsteatern - but some of the costumes and coreography here were so good, that I like specific numbers better than there. I guess my main issue is that Jonas Malmsjö gave us a very good Emcee, but compared to other versions I don’t think I felt he added anything new?
Sally Bowles, however, as performed by Ana Gil de Melo Nascimento was perfect. The voice and energy, the ignorance, the self-realization and destructive choice in the end - bravo, she did great.
Like all the costume choices and I enjoyed the scenography too - there’s a giant “skull head” thing in the back that confused me first, but after a while I saw what they were going for, and they make good use of it from the start. This is a play where Dramaten’s usually minimalist use of props and “forward scenery”, idk what it’s called, works well and they worked more with lights and backdrops than they have on a few other occasions. The inclusion of the orchestra (who were, of course, beautiful!) worked very well and it all sounded super nice. 
Fräulein Schneider (Marie Richardson) and Herr Schultz (Johan Holmberg) were super sweet and believable, and nearly stole the show with some numbers until the Emcee wrestled it back. 
Cliff Bradshaw (Alexander Salzberger) was mostly a bit drippy, sweet, oh-so-very gay like they went all out on that! It was all about the babby potential in Sally for him, which made the end when she finally sees the reality and makes her choice work very well. 
So, yeah, if you can get to it, definitely recommend it!
(all photos from Dramaten’s website. The 2 slightly blurry ones are screencaps from their trailer)
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gbhbl · 3 years ago
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Horror Movie Review: Knocking (2021)
An excellent hidden gem of a thriller/horror movie.
Knocking (Swedish: Knackningar) is directed by Frida Kempff and written by Emma Broström, based on a short story by Johan Theorin. The film stars Cecilia Milocco, Krister Kern, Albin Grenholm, Ville Virtanen and Alexander Salzberger. Cecilia Milocco plays Molly who has spent some time in a psychiatric ward following a traumatic event that changed her life forever. Having left the ward and looking…
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catchmeaneverland · 7 years ago
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There was one day at work last week where the internet was down and I couldn’t do ANYTHING so I made predictions on the Tony nominations tomorrow and here they are.
Best Musical:
Band's Visit
Frozen
Mean Girls
Spongebob Squarepants
Best Musical Revival:
Carousel
My Fair Lady
Once on This Island
Best Leading Actor in a Musical: 
Harry Hadden Paton (My Fair Lady)
Joshua Henry (Carousel)
Paul Alexander Nolan (Escape to Margaritaville)
Tony Shalhoub (Band's Visit)
Ethan Slater (Spongebob Squarepants)
Best Leading Actress in a Musical:
Lauren Ambrose (My Fair Lady)
Hailey Kilgore (Once on This Island)
Katrina Lenk (Band's Visit)
Taylor Louderman (Mean Girls)
Jessie Mueller (Carousel)
*alternate: Patti Murin (Frozen)
Best Featured Actor in a Musical:
Norbert Leo Butz (My Fair Lady)
Gavin Lee (Spongebob Squarepants)
Alex Newell (Once on This Island)
Ari'el Stachel (Band's Visit)
Tony Yazbeck (Prince of Broadway)
*alternate: Grey Henson (Mean Girls)
Best Featured Actress in a Musical:
Lindsay Mendez (Carousel)
Ashley Park (Mean Girls)
Kenita Miller (Once on This Island)
Diana Rigg (My Fair Lady) 
Kate Rockwell (Mean Girls)
Best Direction of a Musical:
Michael Arden (Once on This Island)
David Cromer (Band's Visit)
Casey Nicholaw (Mean Girls)
Tina Landau (Spongebob Squarepants)
Bartlett Sher (My Fair Lady)
Best Book of a Musical:
Tina Fey (Mean Girls)
Jennifer Lee (Frozen)
Kyle Jarrow (Sponegbob Squarepants)
Itamar Moses (Band's Visit)
Best Original Score:
Nell Benjamin & Jeff Richmond (Mean Girls)
The entire planet Earth (Spongebob Squarepants)
Robert Lopez & Kristen Anderson-Lopez (Frozen)
David Yazbeck (Band's Visit)
Best Orchestrations:
Imogen Heap (Harry Potter and the Cursed Child)
Claire von Kampen (Farinelli and the King)
AnnMarie Milazzo & Michael Starobin (Once on this Island)
Jamshied Sharifi (Band's Visit)
Best Choreography:
Justin Peck (Carousel)
Steve Hoggett (Harry Potter and the Cursed Child)
Casey Nicholaw (Mean Girls)
Christopher Gattelli (Spongebob Squarepants)
Camille A. Brown (Once on this Island)
Best Scenic Design in a Musical:
Dane Laffrey (Once on This Island)
Christopher Oram (Frozen)
Michael Yeargan (My Fair Lady)
David Zinn (Spongebob Squarepants)
Best Costumes in a Musical:
Sarah Laux (Band's Visit)
Clint Ramos (Once on this Island)
David Zinn (Spongebob Squarepants)
Catherine Zuber (My Fair Lady)
Best Lighting in a Musical:
Kevin Adams (Spongebob Squarepants)
Jules Fisher & Peggy Eisenhauer (Once on this Island)
Natasha Katz (Frozen)
Kenneth Posner (Mean Girls)
Best Sound Design in a Musical:
Kai Harada (Band's Visit)
Peter Hylenski (Once on this Island)
Marc Salzberg (My Fair Lady)
Walter Trarbach (Spongebob Squarepants)
Best Play:
Farinelli and the King
The Children
Harry Potter and the Cursed Child
Junk
*possible fifth slot: Meteor Shower
Best Revival of a Play:
Angels in America
Iceman Cometh
Three Tall Women
Travesties
*possible fifth slot: Lobby Hero
Best Leading Actor in a Play:
Andrew Garfield (Angels in America)
Tom Hollander (Travesties)
Jamie Park (Harry Potter and the Cursed Child)
Mark Rylance (Farinelli and the King)
Denzel Washington (Iceman Cometh)
Best Leading Actress in a Play:
Glenda Jackson (Three Tall Women)
Lauren Ridloff (Children of a Lesser God)
Condola Rashad (Saint Joan)
Amy Schumer (Meteor Shower)
Elizabeth McGovern (Time and the Conways)
Best Featured Actor in a Play:
Anthony Boyle (Harry Potter and the Cursed Child)
Brian Tyree Henry (Lobby Hero)
Nathan Lane (Angels in America)
James McArdle (Angels in America)
David Morse (Iceman Cometh)
*note: really want Chris Evans (Lobby Hero) to be nominated over Brian Tyree Henry cause I was more impressed with his performance but I don't think it'll happen
Best Featured Actress in a Play:
Laura Benanti (Meteor Shower)
Noma Dumenzweni (Harry Potter and the Cursed Child)
Denise Gough (Angels in America)
Laurie Metcalf (Three Tall Women)
Allison Pill (Three Tall Women)
*alternate option: Susan Brown (Angels in America)
Best Direction of a Play:
Marianne Elliot (Angels in America)
Joe Mantello (Three Tall Women)
Patrick Marber (Travesties)
John Tiffany (Harry Potter and the Cursed Child)
Best Costume Design in a Play:
Nicky Gillibrand (Angels in America)
Katrina Lindsay (Harry Potter and the Cursed Child)
Ann Roth (Three Tall Women)
Paloma Young (Time and the Conways)
Best Scenic Design in a Play:
Miriam Buether (Three Tall Women)
Tim Hatley (Travesties) 
Christine Jones (Harry Potter and the Cursed Child) 
Ian MacNeil (Angels in America)
Best Lighting Design in a Play:
Neil Austin (Harry Potter and the Cursed Child)
Neil Austin (Travesties)
Paule Constable (Angels in America) 
Tim Reid (1984)
Best Sound Design in a Play:
Adam Cork (Travesties)
Ian Dickinson (Angels in America)
Gareth Fry (Harry Potter and the Cursed Child)
Tom Gibbons (1984)
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sachwlang · 4 years ago
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Hamil-Fact Or Hamil-Fiction?
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Meditation expert Sharon Salzberg guesses if Hamilton lyrics are historically accurate. For example: Alexander Hamilton probably didn’t know how to rap.
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rationalsanskar · 5 years ago
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A Conversation With the Director of The Mindfulness Movement Movie
Producer and director Rob Beemer wanted to bring the mindfulness message to a wide audience. He tells Mindful Content Director Anne Alexander that his quest took him from Hollywood to the Harvard Business School to a prison in Rhode Island—and surprising points in between.
Anne Alexander: Congratulations! You’re making a movie about mindfulness. 
Rob Beemer: Thank you, yes, this is a huge passion project. I’ve been practicing mindfulness for more than 10 years and it’s made such an important difference in my life. I felt like there were still misconceptions and people who would benefit but weren’t aware of mindfulness. I wanted to use my skills to help make the world a better place.
Anne Alexander: How did you come to mindfulness?
Rob Beemer: As a teenager I was interested in Buddhism and meditation and then got busy, started working, and drifted away. By the time I was a parent of two young children and working a very stressful job, I was losing my temper way more often than I wanted to.
One day, I was at a grocery store and saw an issue of Shambhala Sun [now Lion’s Roar magazine] and became a subscriber. Then Mindful Magazine—with its focus on secular mindfulness—came out and I thought, this is perfect for me and subscribed to that as well. Seeing the content, learning about the different people through the magazine kind of gave me the idea. I felt like if I could do that on a scale of a film, I could reach more people.
Anne Alexander: Tell me about the movie. It seems like you talked with an incredible all-star list of people who are practicing and using mindfulness.
Rob Beemer: One of the first people I talked to was Diana Winston, since I’m in Los Angeles and she’s at UCLA. We had a nice conversation and she was kind enough to pass along some other contacts and that led to speaking with Sharon Salzberg and on and on. The conversations kept taking me to all kinds of interesting people and places. It does help to be able to say, oh, I’ve worked with Morgan Freeman and Charlton Heston.
Mindfulness is one of those things that you just want to share. Oftentimes you enter it perhaps because you’re in pain or because you want relief from maybe stress or whatever. And then as soon as you start to see the benefits, it’s just so easy to share. And it’s just—it’s utterly transportable. It’s free. Everybody can do it. It’s secular. The fact is that it all just makes a better society. I think that it brings out the good in so many people.
Mindfulness is one of those things that you just want to share. Oftentimes you enter it because you’re in pain or because you want relief from stress. And then as soon as you start to see the benefits, it’s just so easy to share.
I’m grateful that I got to talk with so many experts—Dan Harris, Jon Kabat-Zinn, Daniel Goleman, Richard Davidson, Judson Brewer, Rich Fernandez, Congressman Tim Ryan, and more. We have gotten incredible support from Deepak Chopra and Jewel Kilcher as executive producers (also featured in the film) and we had the chance to talk with regular people from so many different walks of life.
Anne Alexander: Were there particular moments that blew your mind?
Rob Beemer: I think one that comes to mind is the segment inside the prison in Rhode Island with Fleet Maull who is doing great work with the Prison Mindfulness Institute. Just being inside the prison, in that environment, with guards in front of us and guards behind us, and seeing mindfulness being used to help people was intense. As Fleet said, these men have to have a very tough exterior to protect themselves. But if we want them to be good citizens when they get out, we have to give them an opportunity to do some work on themselves: to learn to let down their guard and work on their own emotions and reactions. We also went to Harvard Business School talking to Bill George about how he’s training CEOs and business school students, so it was really fun to go from these extremes where you wouldn’t normally think of mindfulness being used.
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Anne Alexander: And remarkable that it all comes back to the same thing.
Rob Beemer: And how simple it is. And I love it when in the segment with the kids [at the Holistic Life Foundation] in Baltimore hearing a child explain it and being so deeply moved by it. Yet it’s so simple that we all overlook it.
Anne Alexander: If somebody wants to learn more and go see the film, how do they find it?
Rob Beemer: The best thing to do is go to the website to find a screening and buy tickets. It will be in over 50 theaters across the US and Canada this spring. In addition, there are so many great things that we filmed that we didn’t have a chance to use, we’re going to be providing more content on the site. We got so much good stuff, we had to make some tough choices!
Finding a Mindful Balance 
Army Lieutenant General Walt Piatt discusses the role mindfulness plays in conquering fear, avoiding procrastinating, and training for combat.
Anne Alexander
October 31, 2019
Following the Path of Mindfulness 
Mindful editor Anne Alexander invites us on the journey of deepening our sense of wellness through mindful ways of thinking and being.
Anne Alexander
March 4, 2020
The post A Conversation With the Director of The Mindfulness Movement Movie appeared first on Mindful.
The post A Conversation With the Director of The Mindfulness Movement Movie appeared first on METAMORPHOSIS.
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metropolitanhermit · 7 years ago
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Alexander Salzberger.
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scvpubliclib · 4 years ago
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New story on NPR: Hamil-Fact Or Hamil-Fiction? https://ift.tt/3mzXLSM
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cawamedia · 5 years ago
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THE OFFICIAL AWARD CEREMONY NOVEMBER 15, 2019 AT GÖTA LEJON
The doors open, with mingle and drinks. The award ceremony starts After the celebrations we continue with an after party, held in the beautiful lounge of the theatre. 
We are proud to present actor ALEXANDER SALZBERGER as your host for the evening. Join us and celebrate all the fantastic films shown during The 30th Stockholm International Film Festival. 
Winners at Stockholm International Film Festival 2019:  
STOCKHOLM XXX COMPETITION   Best Film: Song Without a Name by Melina León  Best Director: Mark Jenkin for Bait  Best First Film: You Deserve a Lover by Hafsia Herzi  Best Script: Synonyms by Nadav Lapid and Haim Lapid Best Actress: Nina Hoss for The Audition Best Actor: Bartosz Bielenia for Corpus Christi  Best Cinematography: Inti Briones for Song Without a Name
STOCKHOLM XXX DOCUMENTARY COMPETITION   Best Documentary: One Child Nation by Nanfu Wang and Jialing Zhang 
Stockholm Impact Award: Kantemir Balagov for Beanpole  Stockholm Rising Star Award: Celie Sparre 
STOCKHOLM XXX SHORT FILM COMPETITION   Best Short Film: Kingdom Come by Sean Robert Dunn 
1 KM FILM  1 Km Film Scholarship Recipient: Tova Mozard  1 Km Film Honorary Mention: Fanny Rosell 
FIPRESCI Award for Best Film  Best Film: By the Grace of God by François Ozon 
#Sthlmfilmfest Arrangemang: Wonderland Event
Stockholm Film festival – Award ceremony 2019 THE OFFICIAL AWARD CEREMONY NOVEMBER 15, 2019 AT GÖTA LEJON The doors open, with mingle and drinks. 
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yogaadvise · 7 years ago
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Is Meditation the Key to Reducing Racial Bias?
With all that's taking place in our nation as well as around the globe, the have to strengthen our capacity for empathy is much more essential than ever before. A current research from the University of Sussex in the UK discovered that a simple loving-kindness reflection, also called metta meditation, can have a profound impact on perception as well as racial bias, while boosting one's overall sense of wellness as well as positivity.
The study from Sussex shows that the act of loving-kindness reflection not only benefits our physical or psychological health and wellness, yet could likewise permeate culture overall. In the research, a non-meditating group of white people were shown loving-kindness reflection and were asked to guide their method toward a gender-matched black person. Post-practice, examination topics were examined and also scored based upon the Implicit Association Examination, which measures positive and unfavorable association. Normally, individuals job positive organization much more highly to their own ethnic culture, however adhering to the seven-minute loving-kindness meditation, positive organizations and also 'other-regarding' emotions were much more widespread, signifying the reduction of racial predisposition. 'This shows that some reflection techniques have to do with far more compared to feeling great,' clarified Alexander Stell, lead scientist in the research, 'and also could be an important device for enhancing inter-group harmony.'
The technique of loving-kindness reflection contains conscious, contemplative self-compassion that advances to awareness as well as empathy extended to those around you. This process of originating well wants to oneself and also others can promote cozy feelings of love, connection, and also community.
Sharon Salzberg, New York Times very successful author and also world-famous Buddhist instructor, has long promoted the extensive benefits of metta reflection. 'The method of loving-kindness allows us to see the interconnectedness that's really there,' she states. 'We're not trying to make it up-it's just how the globe is in fact. As well as the more we see this, the much more compassion becomes our natural reaction.' Checked out with this lens, loving-kindness, by increasing our ability for compassionate recognition of others, could deeply affect social consciousness.
Noah Levine, author of Dharma Punx: A Memoir and Against the Stream, and a noticeable American Buddhist, teaches loving-kindness reflection around the country. "Loving-kindness assists us recover the inner wounds that result in all forms of predisposition and also oppression,' he states. 'From the in out, we end up being type as well as compassionate.' This technique, based upon selfless notions of generosity and ego-dissolution, could generate a feeling of belonging. This area of interconnectedness is one of recovery, pleasure, and also, ultimately, link. It remains in the connection that we let go of established notions about individuals-judgment, stereotypes, and also clichés-and welcome each other as a part of the whole.
Instructions for Loving-Kindness Meditation
Read on as well as comply with the guidelines listed below or watch the video to experience a 10-minute directed loving-kindness reflection practice
.Sit in a comfortable as well as kicked back way. Take a couple of deep breaths with slow, lengthy breathings and exhalations. Release any issues from the day. Envision the breath relocating with your body, especially brightening the location of your heart.
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It is very important to first practice loving-kindness toward oneself, considering that vanity demands the treatment of others. Resting quietly, emotionally state the following:
May I really feel safe and also secured,
May I feel contented and also delighted,
May my body support me with stamina,
May my life unravel efficiently and with ease.
As you claim these phrases, allow on your own to sink right into the intention. Loving-kindness meditation is about attaching to the purpose of wishing others or ourselves health and also contentment. If sensations of kindness, compassion, or love emerge, connection to these emotions, allowing them to penetrate your consciousness.
During meditation, one could begin to experience pain or sensations of anger, despair, or negativity. This is natural. Don't shed heart. 'See if you could return to the consideration without shame or judgment. The heart of proficient meditation is the capacity to allow go and begin again, over and over,' keeps in mind Salzberg in her publication Loving-Kindness: The Revolutionary Art of Happiness.
After guiding the loving-kindness toward yourself, evoke a friend or somebody in your life who has actually deeply cared for you. After that slowly repeat phrases of loving-kindness towards them:
May you really feel safe and protected,
May you feel pleased and also pleased,
May your body sustain me with toughness,
May your life unravel smoothly and also with ease.
As you claim these phrases, again penetrate the objective and also genuine definition. Attach to the practice to enjoy the complete benefits.
As you proceed the meditation, you can bring to mind various other close friends, associates, unfamiliar people, as well as people with whom you may have trouble. The benefits of this technique will radiate to those around you.
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kristoffercras-blog · 12 years ago
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Ljudbok inläst av Ken Ring, Julia Frändfors och Alexander Salzberger
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lyssna här
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sntclr · 9 years ago
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Alexander Salzberger
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sotarn · 11 years ago
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Actor Alexander Salzberger by Sotarn Otf
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rationalsanskar · 5 years ago
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A Conversation With the Director of The Mindfulness Movement Movie
Producer and director Rob Beemer wanted to bring the mindfulness message to a wide audience. He tells Mindful Content Director Anne Alexander that his quest took him from Hollywood to the Harvard Business School to a prison in Rhode Island—and surprising points in between.
Anne Alexander: Congratulations! You’re making a movie about mindfulness. 
Rob Beemer: Thank you, yes, this is a huge passion project. I’ve been practicing mindfulness for more than 10 years and it’s made such an important difference in my life. I felt like there were still misconceptions and people who would benefit but weren’t aware of mindfulness. I wanted to use my skills to help make the world a better place.
Anne Alexander: How did you come to mindfulness?
Rob Beemer: As a teenager I was interested in Buddhism and meditation and then got busy, started working, and drifted away. By the time I was a parent of two young children and working a very stressful job, I was losing my temper way more often than I wanted to.
One day, I was at a grocery store and saw an issue of Shambhala Sun [now Lion’s Roar magazine] and became a subscriber. Then Mindful Magazine—with its focus on secular mindfulness—came out and I thought, this is perfect for me and subscribed to that as well. Seeing the content, learning about the different people through the magazine kind of gave me the idea. I felt like if I could do that on a scale of a film, I could reach more people.
Anne Alexander: Tell me about the movie. It seems like you talked with an incredible all-star list of people who are practicing and using mindfulness.
Rob Beemer: One of the first people I talked to was Diana Winston, since I’m in Los Angeles and she’s at UCLA. We had a nice conversation and she was kind enough to pass along some other contacts and that led to speaking with Sharon Salzberg and on and on. The conversations kept taking me to all kinds of interesting people and places. It does help to be able to say, oh, I’ve worked with Morgan Freeman and Charlton Heston.
Mindfulness is one of those things that you just want to share. Oftentimes you enter it perhaps because you’re in pain or because you want relief from maybe stress or whatever. And then as soon as you start to see the benefits, it’s just so easy to share. And it’s just—it’s utterly transportable. It’s free. Everybody can do it. It’s secular. The fact is that it all just makes a better society. I think that it brings out the good in so many people.
Mindfulness is one of those things that you just want to share. Oftentimes you enter it because you’re in pain or because you want relief from stress. And then as soon as you start to see the benefits, it’s just so easy to share.
I’m grateful that I got to talk with so many experts—Dan Harris, Jon Kabat-Zinn, Daniel Goleman, Richard Davidson, Judson Brewer, Rich Fernandez, Congressman Tim Ryan, and more. We have gotten incredible support from Deepak Chopra and Jewel Kilcher as executive producers (also featured in the film) and we had the chance to talk with regular people from so many different walks of life.
Anne Alexander: Were there particular moments that blew your mind?
Rob Beemer: I think one that comes to mind is the segment inside the prison in Rhode Island with Fleet Maull who is doing great work with the Prison Mindfulness Institute. Just being inside the prison, in that environment, with guards in front of us and guards behind us, and seeing mindfulness being used to help people was intense. As Fleet said, these men have to have a very tough exterior to protect themselves. But if we want them to be good citizens when they get out, we have to give them an opportunity to do some work on themselves: to learn to let down their guard and work on their own emotions and reactions. We also went to Harvard Business School talking to Bill George about how he’s training CEOs and business school students, so it was really fun to go from these extremes where you wouldn’t normally think of mindfulness being used.
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Anne Alexander: And remarkable that it all comes back to the same thing.
Rob Beemer: And how simple it is. And I love it when in the segment with the kids [at the Holistic Life Foundation] in Baltimore hearing a child explain it and being so deeply moved by it. Yet it’s so simple that we all overlook it.
Anne Alexander: If somebody wants to learn more and go see the film, how do they find it?
Rob Beemer: The best thing to do is go to the website to find a screening and buy tickets. It will be in over 50 theaters across the US and Canada this spring. In addition, there are so many great things that we filmed that we didn’t have a chance to use, we’re going to be providing more content on the site. We got so much good stuff, we had to make some tough choices!
Finding a Mindful Balance 
Army Lieutenant General Walt Piatt discusses the role mindfulness plays in conquering fear, avoiding procrastinating, and training for combat.
Anne Alexander
October 31, 2019
Following the Path of Mindfulness 
Mindful editor Anne Alexander invites us on the journey of deepening our sense of wellness through mindful ways of thinking and being.
Anne Alexander
March 4, 2020
The post A Conversation With the Director of The Mindfulness Movement Movie appeared first on Mindful.
The post A Conversation With the Director of The Mindfulness Movement Movie appeared first on METAMORPHOSIS.
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