A beautiful, touching, literate, auteur piece made on a shoe-string about some of life's grand mysteries, like our attachment to suffering and synchronicity vs. coincidence. I liked how the director created dramatic tension, despite little on-screen conflict between characters. Viewers familiar with Georges Gurdjieff and Krishnamurti will be delighted by the nods to their favorite spiritual avatars. Non new-agers should be prepared for copious, albeit well-penned and performed, philosophical pas de deuces, falling just on the better side of pretense. (If you loved"My Dinner with Andre" and could stomach "Mindwalk" you won't have a problem.) This reviewer was also reminded of Herman Hesse's "Damian" and "Siddhartha," and Satyagit Ray, but maybe just because he hasn't seen that many indie Indian films. Not to mention, two great Frisbee scenes, and a sly, insinuating soundtrack mixing treacly western pop hits refashioned as profound universal- folk statements, with a delicate, sensuous score of harp and sitar, like master lovers of the east and west, mating in semi-ecstatic miscegenation., If you get a chance to meet the director, you'll find him as endearing, confident and humble as the Boddhisattva that he plays, in his first, remarkably-polished, film. (Never even made a short before, at least that's what he says!) So, see his movie and spread the word, if you like it. Maybe he'll get to make another one.