Ayurveda: The Art of Being

Ayurveda: The Art of Being
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Format:  DVD
item number:  AY25
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DVD Details

  • Rated: Not Rated
  • Run Time: 1 hours, 42 minutes
  • Video: Color
  • Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
  • Released: July 6, 2004
  • Originally Released: 2001
  • Label: Kino Video

Performers, Cast and Crew:

Featured: , , , , , , , , , , , , &
Directed by
Music by
Screenwriting by
Produced by &
Director of Photography:

Entertainment Reviews:

Rotten57%

TOMATOMETER
Total Count: 14

Upright79%

AUDIENCE SCORE
User Ratings: 389
Unspools like a highbrow, low-key, 102-minute infomercial, blending entrepreneurial zeal with the testimony of satisfied customers. Full Review
Village Voice
Jul 16, 2002
...[The] manufacture of herbal concoctions is fascinating to watch...
Variety
Dec 2, 2002
Rating: 1/5 -- Like all infomercials, Ayurveda: Art of Being is heavy on testimonials and light on statistics. Full Review
eye WEEKLY
Mar 25, 2003
Rating: 3.5/5 -- Reinforces the often forgotten fact of the world's remarkably varying human population and mindset, and its capacity to heal using creative, natural and ancient antidotes. Full Review
Boxoffice Magazine
Aug 18, 2002
Rating: 3/5 -- A film that takes you inside the rhythms of its subject: You experience it as you watch. Full Review
Toronto Star
Mar 7, 2003
Rating: 3/4 -- Director Nalin Pan doesn't do much to weigh any arguments one way or the other. He simply presents his point of view that Ayurveda works. No question. Full Review
Combustible Celluloid
Sep 17, 2002
Pan Nalin's exposition is beautiful and mysterious, and the interviews that follow, with the practitioners of this ancient Indian practice, are as subtle and as enigmatic. Full Review
Film Journal International
Aug 3, 2002

Product Description:

AYURVEDA: THE ART OF BEING, written and directed by Pan Nalin, takes viewers on a documentary journey through the history of this holistic from of health care and natural well-being. Partially based in methods of healing that identify incongruence in the body's energy, Ayurveda has roots in India, Egypt, Greece, Rome, Tibet, China, Russia, and Japan. Brahamand Swamigal is one of the central figures in the film, an Indian practitioner of Ayurveda who explains its basic principles. As he treats a patient by placing three fingers on the patient's wrist, then checking the patient's palm, he talks about the three doshas: Vata, Pitti, and Kapha. These three elements are representative of the body's energy and its balance of Earth, Water, Fire, Air, and Space. Swamigal explains that when one or more of the doshas is imbalanced, the body is not healthy. Later in the film Swamigal reveals the workings of his private medicine-making practice, where he harvests plants from surrounding hills, combines them and cooks them, then has his assistants grind them into brightly colored powders. When the charismatic Swamigal is not on screen, the film introduces other doctors and patients, showing methods of diagnosis and treatment, some of which involve mud baths, head wraps, oil massage, and pouring liquid in the eyes and nose. Ayurvedic doctors explain their cures for cancer, diabetes, blindness, and paralysis, and share stories of sick Westerners who have sought their help after having failed to be cured by Western medicine. Throughout the film the delightfully soothing sounds of Cyril Morin's music plays and the dramatic photography by Serge Guez shows a beautiful natural land where the earth and its magic are considered sacred, united with human health and well-being.

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Product Info

  • Sales Rank: 55,564
  • UPC: 738329035921
  • Shipping Weight: 0.25/lbs (approx)
  • International Shipping: 1 item

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