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Yoga at the Movies
By Sherry Roberts
I am just guessing, but there is probably one yoga movie for every
thousand cop flicks. Why aren’t more yoga movies made? Aren’t swamis
sexy? Why do we prefer car chases to karma?
Yoga lacks that dramatic necessity—conflict. (The conflict between
muscles when you're trying to lift your foot behind your head in the
eka pada sirasan or leg-head pose is not the stuff of cinema.)
However, yoga makes good window dressing in The Next Best Thing, a
movie starring Madonna as a yoga teacher who has a baby with her gay
best friend played superbly by Rupert Everett.
Yoga Journal and USA Today have made much of the authenticity of the
yoga scenes in the movie. Madonna, a student of ashtanga yoga,
brought in her own teachers, Kimberly Flynn and Noah Williams, to be
consultants on the film. They advised on decor, class instruction,
and fashion. “This really is the first time yoga has been taken
seriously on a film project,” Flynn told USA Today.
Students of yoga will be able to relate to scenes like Benjamin
Bratt’s first yoga class (he eventually becomes Madonna’s fiancé in
the movie). Toned and muscular Bratt falls over, peeks during
chanting, and quickly realizes yoga brings a whole new dimension to
“being in shape.”
Perhaps the most refreshing scenes in the movie are seeing children
practicing yoga: Madonna’s 7-year-old son (Malcolm Stumpf) leads a
pretend yoga class with his friends in the backyard and later pulls
up a mat and moves into the asanas (poses) right along with the
adults in yoga class.
Still this is not a movie about yoga. It is a story of love and
family — and all the ways we fold, twist, and mutilate those
intertwining concepts. The conflict comes as this nontraditional
family (Madonna, Everett, and Stumpf) finds that inner peace is
always susceptible to outer — and more traditional — forces.
To most of us, the next best thing implies settling, compromising.
The concept of compromise is a big part of yoga. So maybe this movie
is more about yoga than it first appears. The final conflict is
resolved in true yogic fashion — by letting go.
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