Movie Review: ‘I Am’

It’s one part documentary, one part introspective analysis, a dash of quantum physics, a sprinkle of poetry, and a dollop of New Age explorative.
Movie Review: ‘I Am’
IN GOOD COMPANY: Tom Shadyac (R) on the set of 'Evan Almighty' with Steve Carell and Morgan Freeman. (Courtesy of Shady Acres Entertainment)
3/17/2011
Updated:
9/29/2015

<a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/tom_shadyak_medium.jpg"><img src="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/tom_shadyak_medium.jpg" alt="IN GOOD COMPANY: Tom Shadyac (R) on the set of 'Evan Almighty' with Steve Carell and Morgan Freeman. (Courtesy of Shady Acres Entertainment)" title="IN GOOD COMPANY: Tom Shadyac (R) on the set of 'Evan Almighty' with Steve Carell and Morgan Freeman. (Courtesy of Shady Acres Entertainment)" width="320" class="size-medium wp-image-122485"/></a>
IN GOOD COMPANY: Tom Shadyac (R) on the set of 'Evan Almighty' with Steve Carell and Morgan Freeman. (Courtesy of Shady Acres Entertainment)
I Am is one of the most important films you will ever see, as it compels you to look within and discover your own truth.

Take one part documentary, one part introspective analysis, a dash of quantum physics, a sprinkle of poetry, and a dollop of New Age explorative thought—then bake for 76 minutes. The result is a provocatively savory film about life, the world, and how each one of us constitutes and thereby can contribute to the greater whole that is our civilization.

The film begins with an introduction to Tom Shadyac, by none other than Tom Shadyac. Who is Tom? A highly successful comedy director of Ace Ventura: The Pet Detective, The Nutty Professor, and Bruce Almighty. His latest film, I Am, is an autobiography of sorts, as he writes, directs, and narrates his rise and poetic fall within Hollywood’s social elite and his quest for meaning amid suffering.

In 2007, Tom experienced a hard fall while mountain biking and suffered near fatal wounds, including concussion with symptoms that lasted for months. He went through the gauntlet of medical therapies, including alternatives, to no avail.

Finally he looked inward and discovered an opportunity amid the heartache. Tom wrote on his blog, “Simply put, the accident knocked me from my head to my heart, and gave me the courage to speak publicly about the principles that had inhabited me, and changed me, over the course of a decade.”


Tom came to realize that despite his success at winning the societal game, he was never truly fulfilled. The accident served as his wake-up call. At this point, he questioned how our society came to believe that the things he achieved were important.

The film asks, “What’s wrong with the world, and what can we do about it?” In an effort to find the answers, Tom embarked on a journey toward self-realization and education. I Am captures this experience, and challenges our preconceptions and current notions about what it means to be “human.”

The true beauty of I Am is in its relationship to the audience, for it is unabashedly human and provides scientific arguments for why we are all connected. Rather than talk from a purely theoretical or spiritual podium, Shadyac interviews experts in different fields and splices their answers into a cohesive and rational dialogue that leads the viewers to experience one eye-opening moment after another.

Notable figures include Bishop Desmond Tutu, Howard Zinn, and Noam Chomsky in addition to well-known scientists, authors, poets, free thinkers, and psychologists. The film is interwoven with quotes from Einstein, the Dalai Lama, and Ralph Waldo Emerson.

I Am argues that love is the universal force that binds us. It is in our DNA. It is not on an idealistic level—rather, it is a material substance that can be found within our bodies and in the DNA of all living creatures. We share DNA with the other life forms on this planet and are interconnected with them.

Read More . . .Anthropological Evidence

<a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/I_AM_medium.jpg"><img src="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/I_AM_medium-338x450.jpg" alt="'I Am' poster. (Courtesy of Shady Acres Entertainment)" title="'I Am' poster. (Courtesy of Shady Acres Entertainment)" width="320" class="size-medium wp-image-122486"/></a>
'I Am' poster. (Courtesy of Shady Acres Entertainment)
Human beings are not separate individuals. We are born to be connected and to communicate with one another. We have empathy hardwired into our nerves; for example, the vagus nerve’s purpose is to fill us with anguish and tears when we see suffering in others. Love unites us.

The underlying argument relies on anthropological evidence, anecdotal stories, quantum physics, and “heartmath” science to tell the story of how our Western paradigm is antithetical to our inborn nature—our current ideology is destroying our civilization and the world we live in. The solution to our problems appears to be selflessness and altruism, one person at a time.

The film ends how it all began, with Tom, as he provides us with the fruit of his labors and examples of his personal change. The film’s title thus serves as an expository look at humanity and our role in the world, and also as an autobiographical journey into one man’s personal awakening and actions.

So ultimately, what can we do to make our world better?

If you live your ideal and put it into action, then it will become your new reality. If enough of us do this together, then we can change our reality. Simplicity can lead to joy. Less turns out to be more.

The film ends with a hopeful message that not only can we be the change in the world that we want to see, but also that it’s easier than we think. If we want to change the world, then start small. If we each change a little, then the problems we face will eventually be resolved. The situation will reach a tipping point and our ideal will become the new reality.

I Am points to the underlying problem of our world—humanity’s individualism, selfishness, competition, and lack of cooperation. The fact that the film is able to argue this point on scientific, spiritual, philosophical, and psychological levels simultaneously is what makes it so relatable and human.

If you want to more deeply discover yourself and your role within the world, then see I Am. It is guaranteed to change your perspective or strengthen the one you already have.


[etRating value=“ 4.5”]