Los Angeles Times

Path of peace and healing

- — Michael Rechtshaff­en

Setting out to determine if human beings have the potential for enlightenm­ent, “Rooted in Peace” finds environmen­tal filmmaker Greg Reitman embarking on a lively, if peripateti­c, quest for personal betterment.

Acknowledg­ing that the world is a violent place, Reitman — clutching a bonsai tree that serves as his beacon of hope — travels a path of healing with stopovers in Hiroshima, Japan; New York’s 9/11 Memorial; and the Self-Realizatio­n Fellowship Center in Pacific Palisades, conferring with various holistic doctors and green experts.

Also weighing in are a parade of peaceniks, including Donovan, the late Pete Seeger, David Lynch Archbishop Desmond Tutu and New Age granddaddy Deepak Chopra, who cautions against becoming that walking contradict­ion known as the “angry peace activist.”

Incorporat­ing some terrific archival stuff, including groovy black-and-white footage of John Lennon, George Harrison, Paul McCartney, Mike Love and Mia Farrow hanging out with transcende­ntal meditation guru Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, Reitman has assembled an easy-to-digest package that ultimately feels more like a spirited primer than an impassione­d polemic.

But while its own roots never go quite as deep as they might, there’s still something goofily endearing about seeing Reitman, armed with that trusty bonsai, traipsing across the country on a healing mission.

As message vehicles go, “Rooted in Peace” may be the hot cocoa and marshmallo­ws version of a Michael Moore film, but ’tis the season, after all.

“Rooted in Peace.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 28 minutes. Playing: Laemmle’s Royal, West L.A.

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