SOUL
Swimming in the Invisible: Flow, Purpose, and the Sacred Ordinary in Pixar’s Soul There are films that entertain, and then there are films that lean across the threshold of the screen and ask you who you are when the lights come back on. Pixar’s Soul belongs unapologetically to the latter category. It is animation as philosophy, jazz as cosmology, and storytelling as inquiry into the strange miracle of being alive. For those of us who seek meaning in performance, in artistry, in that intoxicating sensation of mastery where time dissolves, Soul arrives not merely as cinema but as meditation. It whispers about purpose, interrogates ambition, and ultimately reframes the question of what it means to matter. At its surface, the plot is elegantly disarming. Joe Gardner, a middle school band teacher whose interior life vibrates with musical yearning, lands the gig of his dreams: playing piano with the formidable Dorothea Williams. Before he can savour triumph, a miss...