Black Lives Matter has become the social movement of our time, a protest of such power that even presidential candidates can’t side step it. If they insist that all lives matter, as several have, they are booed and pilloried, and ultimately forced to apologize to an outraged nation.
All of which is to say that it’s an awkward time for filmmaker Shaun Monson — and his 100-person cast of A-list celebrity narrators — to debut a new documentary called “Unity.” The film, which opened Aug. 12, goes beyond all black lives or even all human lives. It argues instead that all forms of life matter — and all forms of life deserve our empathy, compassion and love.
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On the website for “Unity the Movement,” a child spells this out on a chalkboard: “Human + Animal + Tree = Unity.” In the film itself, the actress Jennifer Aniston intones the line that Monson hopes will become a new organizing ethos for life on earth: “Not the same, but equal.”
This is “the only way to heaven, or to whatever comes next,” according to an interview Monson posted to promote the film.
He points to the Creation story, arguing that in the beginning “there was no separation between God and human beings, between male and female, or between predator and prey animals.”
In an interview with msnbc, he pined for a return to that halcyon time. “The point of the film is really about perceptions, and why we cultivate compassion and empathy and love for some beings – the inner circle, you might say – while in the same breathe cultivate an attitude of aggression toward others, the outer circle,” Monson said. “This is behavior modification and a hard thing to get across.”
It’s also a pretty far out idea.
Monson is arguing that our focus on inequality related to race, gender, or sexuality is narrow-minded and itself a terrible form of prejudice. The academics call it “speciesism,” the belief that people are worthy of rights but other living things are not. Monson calls it “a separation based on form,” which he wars against when it comes to distinctions based on sex or skin color but also fur, feathers, or leaves.
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That’s his deep-down golden rule: Be kind to everything. Before you discount it as the outer rim of New Age insanity, consider some of the people that Monson has recruited to narrate his film: Dr. Dre, Helen Mirren, Kevin Spacey, Kristen Wiig, Joaquin Phoenix, Marion Cotillard, Martin Sheen, Minnie Driver—and on and on.
It’s a film meant to entertain and inspire, a two hour compilation of some of the most powerful footage of the 20th century, overlaid with a “We are the World” style script. Each narrator reads only a line or two. Although a disclaimer at the beginning of the film protects the talent from the political ideas that follow, Monson says they all support the “spirit” of the project.
None have so far commented on the film or come out to help promote Monson’s work.








