SYNOPSICS
Inner Worlds, Outer Worlds (2012) is a English,French,Spanish,German,Hindi,Polish movie. Daniel Schmidt has directed this movie. are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2012. Inner Worlds, Outer Worlds (2012) is considered one of the best Documentary,History movie in India and around the world.
There is one vibratory field that connects all things. It has been called Akasha, Logos, the primordial OM, the music of the spheres, the Higgs field, dark energy, and a thousand other names throughout history. The vibratory field is at the root of all true spiritual experience and scientific investigation. It is the same field of energy that saints, Buddhas, yogis, mystics, priests, shamans and seers, have observed by looking within themselves. Many of history's monumental thinkers, such a Pythagoras, Kepler, Leonardo DaVinci, Tesla, and Einstein, have come to the threshold of this great mystery. It is the common link between all religions, all sciences, and the link between our inner worlds and our outer worlds.
Inner Worlds, Outer Worlds (2012) Reviews
A visually stunning, eye opener
Inner Worlds, Outer Worlds creates a space of interconnection with viewers that I have rarely experienced in documentary viewing. Visually flawless and breathtaking, the film captures the threads that underlie all spiritual paths and practise. It is a film to help us as humans grow into the new time that is coming. Dan Schmidt draws from a diverse historical perspective, weaving extraordinary visual imagery that emphasizes the film's message.I cannot compare this film with any other documentary that I have seen, it has a quality of authenticity and power that is often lacking in film making. It seems to have no other goal than to assist the collective consciousness in awakening.
Amazing and Insightful
Inner Worlds is a beautiful and intelligent film about meditation, the nature of existence, and spiritual evolution. It is presented in 4 parts so you can watch it in segments which is good because the information is dense. The music and fractal images make it artistic and the commentary on nature, mythology, science, culture, quantum physics, philosophy and world religion brings the themes together in an educational and enlightening manner. This film is a must see for anyone who is curious about the nature of existence. It is complex yet easy to comprehend so I feel it can be understood by people of all ages and diversities.
Superficial treatment of deeper reality
The basic message of the film (that the patterns of nature from the macrocosmic to the microcosmic and from the gross to the subtle repeat themselves implying an underlying unity of consciousness and we all need to meditate and rediscover that underlying unity) is a good message but the film's finer details, the way the message is conveyed, and the stylistic presentation leave a lot to be desired. The main issue is that everything is presented as objective fact when actually it is just one person's understanding of reality and his interpretation of different spiritual traditions. Instead of being totally upfront and clear about it, the film maker, Daniel Schmidt, hides behind a narrator voice for the whole two hours (which unfortunately sounds uncannily like a trailer voice for Hollywood action movies). Making use of narration in this way makes all that is said sound more believable: the narrator (in any film or documentary) is usually hidden and presents the facts with an all-knowing (God-like) authority which the viewer in general takes on as truth without question. However, a lot of documentaries nowadays (from what I've seen) have moved away from having a narrator at all, and allow the subjects or interviewees themselves present their understanding as they see it which is more in line with a relativistic worldview (i.e. that reality presents itself differently for different individuals). They don't attempt to present the whole picture of a situation or phenomenon but just say that this is one picture, or this is these people's understanding. In so doing they are far more honest than Inner Worlds, Outer Worlds manages to be. This film is presented as giving objective facts of the big picture of reality which is really nothing short of arrogant. Throughout, tidbits of information are thrown out as fact but without any back-up argumentation or further analysis. To take just two (of many) examples, the film states that heaven in Christianity and nirvana in Buddhism are the same thing, and that the symbol of the serpent in ancient Greece, in ancient Egypt, in Hinduism, and in Judaism/Christianity all represent the same kundalini awakening. Now, it may well be right but it may just as well not be. I mean, these are questions that could start long theological/philosophical discussions with many a well-traversed spiritual practitioner but Shmidt just rushes to simple conclusions that support his point of view. In many ways, Inner Worlds, Outer Worlds, gives a superficial impression despite trying to be the complete opposite. It seems to want to take in a little bit of every field of knowledge that has ever existed and show that all of it is pointing toward the same reality, but there is no critical thinking, no difficult questions being asked, no deeper line of reasoning. There is no room for the possibility that not everything that is said may not in fact be true. It is a potpourri of wisdom quotes from sages and philosophers, a dash of theoretical physics and geometry, hintings of mysticism, ancient civilisations and religion, the odd reference to less well-known phenomena such as synaethesia, entheogens, and Higgs Boson particles, all told over entrancing fractal imagery, geometric patterns and nature pics together with an alternating soundtrack of at times relaxation/meditation tones and at times dramatic and emotionally charged music. It is a bit ironic that in the fourth part of the film, Schmidt laments the contemporary overuse of technology, the endless playing of video games and surfing on phones and tablets, and what it does to us as people, while at the same time the whole film seems geared towards someone with an attention span of 30 seconds. The film's subject matter is incredibly interesting but the film does not come close to doing justice to it.
Wonderful Visuals, great story
If you have any interest in the sacred geometry and/or closed and open eyed visuals seen during times of intense meditation you will be seriously impressed by the computer generated fractals and other displays in this film. You might even enjoy the film's message and the quietly authoritative sound of the narrator's voice. Be ready to have some of your viewpoints on what the meaning of Life is challenged. The viewpoint of the film is not hidden if you pay the slightest attention but since the perceived viewpoint may be different for many viewers I won't spoil the party by stating what I took away from it. Watch this several times with friends and see what they think about it. It was worth the 2 hrs plus, actually 4 hrs plus since I've seen it twice now. Will watch again.
And the truth shall set you free...
If you have a scientific mind, and spiritual stuff is kinda mumbo jumbo or just really out there for you.... Then this movie is for you. If you love and know spirit, or are a seeker... Then this movie is for you. Nothing more needs to be said but IMDb requires ten lines to post a review. Well, in that case, I will share that as I went on this masterful journey, every cell in my body quieted down. My minded became soothed, my logic became satiated, my devil's advocate went to take a nap. I felt love stir in my heart, for no reason with no object. I felt a deep desire to go try this at home...