The actress Diane Keaton, whose death was announced on Saturday, appeared in over 60 movies and produced about a dozen. She was also a director, with a brief but rangy résumé that includes features, music videos, a TV movie, an after-school special and episodes of the television series “China Beach,” “Pasadena” and “Twin Peaks.” In 1987, she also wrote and directed her sole documentary, “Heaven,” a surreal mix of interviews and archival footage exploring popular ideas of the afterlife.
In 2021, in an interview for the Golden Globe Awards, she described the movie as having clarified her own personal beliefs, beliefs that she described as being very simple. “Why would there be such a place as hell, for any of us?” she told the interviewer, adding, “I just don’t believe that.”
Much of “Heaven” takes place in a white room striped in odd, elegant shadows. Seated at a table, interviewees answer questions such as “Is there sex in heaven?” and “What are the rewards of heaven?”
The interview subjects — ministers, atheists, children, courting couples, several of Keaton’s family members and the boxing promoter Don King among them — variously describe heaven as an open space; as gleaming with diamonds and gold; and as a young boy says, “all white, like marshmallows.” Several people assert, in perfect confidence, that you can’t get fat in heaven.
Between the interviews, Keaton layers a dense collage of archival film clips from movies like “Metropolis,” “Green Pastures” and “Stairway to Heaven.” In 1987, Keaton told an interviewer for Vanity Fair that finding and editing the clips had been a particular pleasure. “Maybe what I’d like to do in heaven is look at images forever and select them,” she said.
Keaton had long been preoccupied with the afterlife. In that same interview, she described herself as having grown up as a morbid child with a fear of death. The oldest child of an Irish Catholic father and a Methodist mother, both of whom abandoned religion in the 1960s, she had an early interest in Christianity out of a desire to get to heaven. As an adult, she identified as an agnostic. “But I understand the longing and the need for more,” she told the interviewer. “For something better, fuller. For love.”
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The post Diane Keaton’s Only Documentary Was About the Afterlife appeared first on New York Times.