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Based on Dan Millmans cult classic memoir, Way
of the Peaceful Warrior,
Victor Salvas film offers a shining example of what some have heralded as a new
genre of "spiritual cinema." In the film Dan Millman (Scott Mechlowicz) is a
talented college gymnast who lives only for himself. His quest to win at any cost sets him
apart from the rest of the team. His false belief that he is self-sufficient is about to
take him to whole new realms, where his core belief system will be challenged, and he will
change.
Dans remarkable talent and good fortune are matched only by his
arrogance. At the height of his game, he develops insomnia and is haunted by nightmares,
premonitions of his worst fears coming true. Out walking one fine 3:00 AM, Dan comes upon
a mist-enshrouded gas station near the top of the Berkeley hills (the film is set on UC
Berkeley campus), The bearded old attendant (Nick Nolte) mysteriously pops up on the roof,
exasperating and beguiling Dan.
The old guy begins spouting what sounds like New-Age psycho-babble.
When Dan dismissively nicknames the attendant Socrates, he unknowingly intimates the
truth. Nolte has not looked this fine in film in a long time and he plays this
down-on-the-farm Obi Wan Kenobi with grace, humor and conviction. Dans growing faith
in values greater than himself deepens as a part of his growing relationship with
Socrates. The more Dan learns to trust Socrates, the more the audience senses what is
really going on. The performances of Nolte and Mechlowicz build, harmonizing and moving in
counterpoint, flowing back and forth, like a duet. This alone makes Peaceful Warrior
a film worth seeing.
The softly erotic undertones and the soft-focus look at Ivy-league Animal
House levity typify the warm fuzzy ideology that the direction and cinematography Peaceful
Warrior showcases. Actors were chosen for the parts and then trained as gymnasts. This
becomes telling as the cameras protracted fixation on these young mens bodies
reveals they are definitely not gymnasts, but buffed actors. The medium becomes the
message in Peaceful Warrior, whether Socrates is pointing Dan to higher values,
such as "service to others is the highest purpose of life," or creating a moment
of mindfulness in Dan, and thereby, in the viewing audience. By turns a riveting study of
the world of competitive gymnastics, a parable for an alternative vision for todays
society, and a study in the psychology of mentoring, Peaceful Warrior is a
satisfying movie-going experience, with or without "the message."
- Les Wright