rdfs:comment
| - The film won 12 awards, was the official selection in over 40 international film festivals, and played in cinemas in over 100 cities in the U.S., as well as other countries in the world like Germany, Austria, Switzerland. It was also release in theaters in Taiwan in June 2009. After the film received positive front page Chinese language press in Taiwan, the People's Daily (a media arm of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China), wrote an article criticizing the film, in an attempt to discredit it.
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abstract
| - The film won 12 awards, was the official selection in over 40 international film festivals, and played in cinemas in over 100 cities in the U.S., as well as other countries in the world like Germany, Austria, Switzerland. It was also release in theaters in Taiwan in June 2009. After the film received positive front page Chinese language press in Taiwan, the People's Daily (a media arm of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China), wrote an article criticizing the film, in an attempt to discredit it. Among the Western thinkers who meet the Dalai Lama are: quantum physicists Fred Alan Wolf and Amit Goswami (from the documentaries What the Bleep Do We Know and The Secret), social scientist Jean Houston, and founder of Agape International Spiritual Center church in Los Angeles, Dr. Michael Beckwith. Through the film the audience sees the clash of egos that soon developed among the members of the group and their assistants, as each member attempts to mold the meeting to fit their own personal expectations. Ultimately they discover they can't hope to change the world until they undergo a personal transformation. Assisted by the often light-hearted musings of the Dalai Lama, each member comes away uniquely changed by their experience. The film includes original music by Tibetan musicians, as well as master sitarist Roop Verma, who studied under Ravi Shankar and Ali Akbar Khan.
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