post_page_cover

Beyond the Grave Featured, Reviews Film Threat

Oct 21, 2023

Serena Dc directs, produces, co-wrote (with Victoria Licon), and hosts Beyond the Grave. The filmmaker opens her documentary by saying she believes there is a soul separate from the body and that it continues without it. This immediately grabs my attention as something to flesh out over the next 90 minutes. Unfortunately, the movie is an uneven package of library footage and interviews. Spoiler: There really isn’t much more to it than closing with the same belief stated in the beginning.
Dc meets Mary Telliano, an end-of-life coach. She provides mysticism and palliative care to the terminally ill. Telliano claims her photos of a dying client show the soul leaving the body and seems to venture that fear of death is a product of patriarchy. Then there’s neurosurgeon Eben Alexander, who was in a coma and came back to write about it in best sellers. He insists his near-death experience proves memories aren’t stored in the brain, which can’t have helped his neurosurgery. Adam Curry talks credibly about the mystery of how these experiences all seem similar, but he’s a web developer, so his inclusion seems odd.

“…claims her photos of a dying client show the soul leaving the body…”
Beyond the Grave gets massively interesting when we reach Max More, Ph.D. The muscular, self-titled “strategic philosopher” is shot with a furtive style that makes you not trust him. The President Emeritus of Alcor, which has a literal head count of 200 people in hopeful cryostasis, is the highlight of this film, casually describing the interesting mechanics of cryogenics to a fascinated Dc. The best bit is when she worries people might be frozen conscious, and More cheerily assures her nothing survives the embalming. He directly counters the director’s prevailing theory, which feels like good journalism, a nice rounding error from the wildness of cryo science, but the other interviewees have too little to say.
My big issue here (I know I am being a blowhard) is that I want rockets to fly and electric bikes not to fry. But Serena Dc’s superstitious spin on everything is off-putting. There is an old expression in computing, GIGO – Garbage In, Garbage Out. None of this is garbage, as the filmmaker stages and shoots her interviews well, but the participants mostly bring little to the table. Of course, interviews are what documentaries thrive or die by. And by offering only baseline platitudes, this look into souls is superficial.
Still, Beyond the Grave is well enough put together, even though it relies heavily on stock footage (fish, clouds, abstract CGI models, etc). It’s beautifully done all the same. The idea of a soul or life after death will always be an interesting topic, but it needs more wrestling into shape than was done here. I like Dc’s style and wouldn’t mind seeing more of her motion pictures, but this one is an empty vessel.

Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by filmibee.
Publisher: Source link

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
Anaconda Review | Flickreel

To some, the original Anaconda is a 90s cult classic. To others, it’s a so bad, it’s good guilty pleasure. To me, it’s just a bad movie. Not awful, but as weird as it sounds, Anaconda wasn’t quite over-the-top enough…

Feb 11, 2026

A Cinematic Marvel Sans Thrill

Starring the ultimate action hero of Bollywood, Sunny Deol, as Lieutenant Colonel Fateh Singh Kaler Jai Hind! A highly anticipated Hindi war epic blasted the big screens on January 23, 2026, marking the weekend of India’s Republic Day. It is…

Feb 11, 2026

Kevin James’ Romantic Comedy Lacks Depth and Sincerity

Kevin James strikes a new, softer chord in Solo Mio, the romantic comedy from the Christian faith-based Angel Studios. It's an Eat Pray Love riff which sees the usually boisterous comedian moping around Rome after his fiancée leaves him at…

Feb 9, 2026

Kingsley Ben-Adir & Rob Morgan Are Solid In An Unremarkable Prison Drama [Sundance]

As if responding to a dare to see if she has the range, Swiss director Pietra Biondina Volpe follows up her heart-stopping emergency room thriller “Late Shift” with about as quiet a film as possible in “Frank & Louis.” This…

Feb 9, 2026