|

The Other
Side of Heaven:
A Dream Realized
by Jonathan
S. Walker
As the press
wandered into the plush Bombay room of the Hotel Monaco in downtown
Salt Lake, the powerhouse players of the new movie The Other
Side of Heaven sat quietly-and uneasily. Hard as it is to believe,
the five people on the panel actually looked apprehensive, as though
they were awaiting the verdict from an unfriendly jury.
The judgement
won't come for another two months.
 |
|
Mitch
Davis, Director
|
In December,
The Other Side of Heaven will begin it's platform release.
The film will be released in two or three cities and expand slowly
until it has penetrated even the smallest markets. Only then will
the five at the table know the fate of the film that has taken so
much of their sleep in recent years. The five included the producers,
Gerald R. Molen and John Garbett; the writer-director Mitch Davis;
Elder John H. Groberg of the Seventy from whose memoir came the
story; and, Jeff Simpson from the Salt Lake-based Excel Entertainment,
the film's distributor.
The Other
Side of Heaven is based on Elder Groberg's missionary experience
in Tonga in the 1950s. He admits that the story is much more about
what he learned from them than his preaching to them. It is a coming
of age story, an "odyssey" as many of the panelists describe it-and
definitely an adventure.
Writer-director
Mitch Davis exudes hope. The Other Side of Heaven is the
realization of a "personal and outrageous dream" he had back in
the early 1980s. Returning from his mission to Argentina, he enjoyed
watching Chariots of Fire and decided he wanted to make
a film "about a Mormon for the world." He wanted it to be bold and
adventure-filled. He found that story in Elder Groberg's memoir.
"It's one thing
to have a dream," Davis says. "It's [another] thing to have people
put their arms around you and make it possible." He refers to the
veteran Hollywood producers Gerald R. Molen and John Garbett.
Molen is best
known for producing many of Steven Spielberg's films including Schindler's
List and Jurassic Park. He does admit that it is the
lowest budgeted film he has been a part of in years. In fact, Davis
recounts Molen giving him a tour of the set of Spielberg's next
film. Molen pointed to some lights, "See that lighting apparatus?
That cost more than your movie." Humbling himself to produce the
$7 million Heaven may seem to be a letdown for Molen, but
he feels just the opposite. After 44 years in the film industry,
this is his highlight, the "exclamation point" on his career.
Davis, Molen
and Garbett all are quick to point out that the film is "purely
a commercial venture," and that the LDS church had no part in it
whatever. In fact, Davis points out that during the audience previews
they intentionally excluded members of the church and tailored the
film's final edit to comments made by non-members.
 |
|
Actor
playing role of
Elder John Groberg
|
Although Elder
John H. Groberg tows that party line, it's also apparent that he
sees things a bit differently. His great desire for the film is
that it will help people see "that there really is a God out there"
A God who knows us and is involved in our lives.
Elder Groberg
wasn't always convinced that a movie was the best medium for his
story. He only agreed to allow the film rights to be purchased and
the movie to be made when he felt confident Davis, Molen, and Garbett
would do the story justice. "This is for real," he said. They are
"real people who have done real things." He feels that they have
maintained the spirit and essence of the book. "I trusted them,
and they responded well to that trust."
That trust now
moves to Jeff Simpson of Excel Entertainment. While Excel distributed
God's Army and Brigham City, Simpson admits that
it is "graduation time" for his staff. Their previous forays into
film distribution was directed to members of the church and consequently
was much less ambitious than The Other Side of Heaven.
They must reach a much wider audience on a much wider scale.
Evidently, there
were larger companies willing to distribute the film, but the producers
decided that Excel was the best option. When dealing with the "league
of the big boys," Molen warned. They make "demands, creatively."
None of them wanted to pay that price.
Now they must
sit back and hope that others will be as taken in by the Elder Groberg's
mission story as they were.

Scene
from The Other Side of Heaven
For
more information about The Other Side of Heaven go to www.othersideofheaven.com
OR eyeofthestormthemovie.com.
Click
here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.
© 2001 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
|