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The Secret Art of Human Flight Review: A Poignant Portrayal of Sorrow’s Depths

When Grief Takes Flight Through Creativity's Prism

Arash Nahandian by Arash Nahandian
9 months ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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We’re introduced to Ben Grady, still reeling from the sudden death of his wife Sarah. Played by Grant Rosenmeyer, Ben sits numbly, having forgotten even basic needs in his grief.

When his concerned sister Gloria suspects the worst, Ben finds purpose through a chance online video. It shows a mysterious man appearing to fly, sparking Ben’s belief this “secret art” could help him.

Directed by H.P. Mendoza, The Secret Art of Human Flight tells the story of Ben’s journey to learn this impossible feat. Partnering with eccentric teacher Mealworm, played compellingly by Paul Raci, Ben undergoes strange training.

As Ben transforms, we glimpse his past through lovingly made home videos with Sarah. Guided by Mendoza’s empathy, Ben works through raw anguish to a richer understanding of life, love, and finding clarity even in mystery. With quirky charm, this film takes us along as one man rediscovers himself through grief’s unseen lessons in humanity’s infinite capacity to heal and dream beneath sorrow’s heaviest clouds.

Finding Purpose in Tragedy

Through home videos, we learn of Ben and Sarah’s chance meeting and creative partnership. A playwright and children’s book author, their collaborative spirit brought joy. But cracks existed, as passions clashed at times. Then sudden loss leaves Ben shattered.

The Secret Art of Human Flight Review

Played superbly by Grant Rosenmeyer, Ben withdraws entirely after Sarah’s passing. He neglects even food and rests in grief. When sister Gloria worries over his withering, Ben sits outside for days apathetically. The hurt consumes him.

Gloria, portrayed warmly by Lucy DeVito, intervenes with care. But Detective Reyes suspects Ben, complicating recovery. Then a strange discovery offers unlikely hope. While online, Ben chances upon a video—a man apparently takes flight.

Intrigued, Ben’s search leads to Mealworm, portrayed mysteriously by Paul Raci. This enigmatic figure teases the “secret art” may aid Ben’s wounded soul. Also connecting with Ben is Wendy, played empathetically by Maggie Grace. Both share the ache of loss, giving Ben new purpose to learn life’s next lessons through Mealworm’s unconventional lessons, however high the clouds of mystery they may soar.

Unfurling Wings: Ben’s Journey of Sorrow’s Flight

This film conveys grief’s complex journey. Ben seeks flight but truly learns sorrow’s heights and depths. Numb at first, his aching later morphs through raw moments realistically rendered.

The Secret Art of Human Flight Review

Ben’s quest proves no mere physical act. By honoring his late wife through discovery, answers emerge. Yet climbing grief’s summit, its switchbacks confound. Light aids surface, though darkness lurks beneath.

Wendy and Mealworm buoy Ben differently in darkness. Where Wendy reflects shared pain gently, Mealworm challenges with unorthodoxy. Their blending beams point pathways, not quick fixes, through grief’s wilderness.

Some criticize Mealworm’s methods as odd. But for Ben, they resonate, awakening questions kindled by loss. Like fledglings first flown, answers felt teach more than answers told. Ben’s film shows life’s lessons unfold lifelong, not always neatly in a lesson’s bell.

This story stirrs for portraying sorrow’s complexity with care. No two mourn the same, yet empathy unites. For Ben and all who’ve known grief, may its wings someday bear them to hope’s height, there to feel life anew beneath skies bright.

Mealworm’s Mystical Motivations

This quirky figure proves a study in contrasts. On one hand, Mealworm—played brilliantly by Paul Raci—seems flights of fanciful absurdity incarnate. He tasks Ben with bizarre regimens like glass-jumping or birdtalk. Yet beneath oddities lies care for Ben’s wellbeing, dedicated to methods beyond reason’s reach.

The Secret Art of Human Flight Review

Mealworm pursues transformation, not through ordinary steps but surreal strides into the unknown. If this bewilders Detective Reyes and others, did Ben not also feel lost in a world reft of logic? In chaos, Mealworm offers roots of redemption through the ritual’s soil, however peculiar the harvest.

Raci lends Mealworm allure that engagement outshines estrangement. Though methods mystify, his smile conveys fellowship, not condescension. Mealworm seems to teach through experience what words cannot—that life embraces more than foreseen, and joy may emerge where least expected, even if paths wind past points of plausibility.

Ultimately, Mealworm inspires not judgment but inquiry. Is a guide helpful solely through straightforward steps, or might detours to dreamlands also liberate? While some view Mealworm as harmful, he sparks Ben to flight and freedom in a season when skies seemed but cruel constraints. His lessons, like life, hold meaning as much in the journey as the destination reached, if ever, upon clouds of mystery we breathlessly soar.

Weaving Truth from Threads of Vision

Within limitations blooms visionary. H.P. Mendoza guides viewers seamlessly through grief’s forest. We share Ben’s journey through Rosenmeyer’s luminous eyes—grief’s drowned sorrows and glints of light find reflection there.

The Secret Art of Human Flight Review

Mendoza crafts vivid, symbolic imagery too. A solitary Ben breathes bare among clouds and speaks volumes where words fail. Frames linger quietly as Ben retrieves calm from memory.

Yet not all scenes flow smoothly. Some drag, woven from disparate scraps, is not all fitting. Transitions between Ben’s past and present feel hastily stitched. Mendoza’s care for authentic emotions exceeds skill with cinema’s technical threads at times.

But can faults in frame diminish truth in characters? Imperfections show these players are human, far from idols. And truth survives our wildest visions, however shaky their frame, if heart guides hand.

Mendoza leads through care, not perfection. His courage to show grief’s rawest scenes, seeking understanding, not acceptance, inspired more than flawless films ever could. Some works loom larger for baring souls, not polish. In humility and empathy, this director gives viewers wings to fly with Ben where he guides—into life’s hardest lessons lovingly lived and learned.

The Threads of a Dream

Orenshein deftly weaves light and dark strands. Ben and Sarah’s bond feels authentic in joy and strife. But fantasy also has place, as Ben’s battered mind seeks solace from bleakest dreams.

The Secret Art of Human Flight Review

Flashing between past and present, the script mirrors a grief that fragments time. Memories torment as much as they transport. Orenshein trusts viewers can follow this winding way, just as Ben must let life lead however it may.

Ben and the film both struggle at the story’s end, unsure if destination matters when the journey heals. Orenshein understands healing comes not in neat plots but in life’s imperfect piecing together again.

Mealworm’s antics could veer too whimsical, remove from realities harsher still. Yet as Ben studies life’s lessons aloft, hope awakens on even imagination’s wildest flight.

Orenshein’s unbounded creativity, much like grief, feels risky but real. Not all will embrace the disarray, but is art’s role to soothe or shake? By watching Ben’s wings shadowed, viewers may also find solace sewn into sorrow’s fraying seams.

Through dreams and shards of truth, this tale triumphs. For capturing grief’s complexity in all its textures and threads that lift even where they deserve the highest praise.

Finding Flight in Life’s Darkest Hours

This film succeeds in sincerely showing grief’s intricate nature. While its quirks won’t please everyone, The Secret Art of Human Flight moves many by honoring sorrow’s depth.

Mendoza guides viewers on Ben’s poignant journey. Through Rosenmeyer’s nuanced acting, we feel each ripple of Ben’s inner remaking. Orenshein’s creative script lends his recovery mystery that mirrors life’s unlikely beauty.

Even in gloom there seems no dawn, wisdom and wonders may emerge. Ben’s story inspires hope where hope feels lost. It affirms that while answers evade, strength comes from living questions authentically.

By the story’s end, Ben soars literally and figuratively. His flight suggests grief’s lessons lift us to new understanding if we embrace life’s lessons with courage like Ben. In showing one man’s transformation, this film gifts all who’ve known sadness wings to fly too in the horizon’s light.

The Review

The Secret Art of Human Flight

8 Score

The Secret Art of Human Flight is a poignant and emotionally resonant film. Though modest in production value, Director Mendoza takes viewers on a profound journey through the transformative process of grief. Anchored by Rosenmeyer's deeply felt performance, the film honors sorrow's complexity with empathy. Orenshein's imaginative script infuses mystery that mirrors life's unlikely beauty in darkness. While its quirks will not appeal to all, for those who connect to its offbeat heart, The Secret Art of Human Flight succeeds admirably in its goal of inspiring hope where none seems possible.

PROS

  • Sensitively portrays the raw emotions and complex stages of grief
  • Rosenmeyer delivers a nuanced and emotionally powerful lead performance.
  • Orenshein's script balances whimsy and heartfelt themes of healing.
  • Directed with empathy and care by Mendoza to feel real yet uplifting

CONS

  • Low production value is somewhat distracting.
  • Some scenes overstay their welcome or have imperfect editing.
  • Quirky elements may not appeal to all viewers' tastes.

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: Benjamin WiessnerComedyFantasyFeaturedGrant RosenmeyerH.P. MendozaJonathan LimLevel 33 EntertainmentLucy DeVitoMaggie GracePaul RaciThe Secret Art of Human FlightTina Carbone
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