In a recent article for National Review, Jonah Goldberg writes on the popularity of viewing the film through spiritual lenses. Here are some quotes:
“One of the best films of the last 40 years. . . . [It] will almost undoubtedly join It’s a Wonderful Life in the pantheon of America’s most uplifting, morally serious, enjoyable, and timeless movies. . . . Brilliant as both comedy and moral philosophy.”—Jonah Goldberg, editor-at-large of National Review Online
Groundhog Day is “a stunning allegory of moral, intellectual, and even religious excellence in the face of postmodern decay, a sort of Christian-Aristotelian Pilgrim’s Progress for those lost in the contemporary cosmos.”—Michael Foley, professor of theology at Notre Dame
““The movie ‘Groundhog Day.’ It is a brilliant moral fable offering an Aristotelian view of the world.”—Charles Murray, author of Human Accomplishment, when asked what things in pop culture he would place in his top-20 list.
According to the New York Times, “Curators of the series [“The Hidden God: Film and Faith,” sponsored by the Musuem of Modern Art in New York], polling some 35 critics in the literary, religious and film worlds to suggest films with religious interpretations, found that “Groundhog Day” came up so many times that there was actually a squabble over who would write about it in the retrospective’s catalog.”
It’s a movie worth rewatching and discussing. For more, see:
- Phil’s Shadow, by Michael P. Foley (Touchstone)
- A Movie for All Time, by Jonah Goldberg (National Review)
- Justin Taylor
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