7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- One of the best films ever made!, 28 September 2000
Author:
dvanhouwelingen from Waterloo, Ontario
GATES OF HEAVEN is one of those fascinating films that no matter how many
times you see, the mysteries contained in it only get deeper. The film is a
documentary about pet cemeteries, but what may have turned into a freak
show- a movie about people who value pets so much they pay thousands of
dollars to bury them- becomes an inspection of the human soul. The film is a
deep, dark chasm of human emotion. Errol Morris starts his famous
documentary style of just letting people talk. Unlike Michael Moore or Nick
Broomfield, who are as much the subject of their own documentaries as their
directors, we never see or even hear Morris' voice. He just lets the people
tell their story their way. The film is haunting and will stay with the
viewer long after it's over. It truly is a landmark film in movie history.
Roger Ebert was not overstating this movies genius when he named it one of
the ten best films of all time.
My Grade: 10/10
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- An all-time favorite. A quirky, poignant, and sometimes hilarious look at man's relationship with his pets., 1 August 2005
Author:
jlancaster-1 from United States
I first saw this movie in a college theater in its initial release. The
movie poster claimed it was "Not quite a movie about pet cemeteries." I
didn't know what to expect, but I have always liked the offbeat. This
movie, which even Roger Ebert calls one of his all-time favorites,
turned out to be offbeat and much, much more.
Without poking fun at his subjects, Morris exposes us to the world of
pet cemeteries--both the owners and caretakers of them and the people
who've placed the remains of a cherished pet in their care. Sometimes
we are moved by empathy; other times we laugh out loud at the
preposterousness of it. (Are they for real?) At no time does Morris
pass judgment. He leaves that up to us.
Along the way we meet the owner of a rendering service, and learn what
happens when the circus comes to town. We learn that "God" is "dog"
spelled backwards, and we meet an aspiring musician. Morris captures on
film the things that make us human: grief, love, self-importance, and
an unabashed silliness. The result is a quirky, poignant, and sometimes
hilarious look at man's relationship with his pets.
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- can't stop watching it, 22 October 2001
Author:
(swatwat@yahoo.com) from NJ, USA
I saw this film for the first time about 2 years ago on IFC and thankfully
I
videotaped it. Since then, I've watched it 10 or 11 times and it always
fascinates me.
I especially like the last third of the film in which we meet the harberts
family who own the Bubbling Well Pet Cemetary in Nappa Valley. They all
seem so sincere and at the same time they crack me up. Errol Morris just
has
a way of letting real life people go on and on about a subject without it
ever becoming boring...
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- Pet Peeve Greives, 7 October 2006
Author:
ThurstonHunger from Palo Alto, CA, USA
Early Errol Morris documentary, pitting the true believers versus the
salesmen of the world. Both trying to fill a need, I got the vibe that
when Floyd McClure talked about that specifically, he was really
talking about the emotional hole left in people's lives by a departed
pet. Rather than a hole in one's wallet, or just the hole in the
ground.
Evidently the first part of this took place darn close to where I live
these days: Los Altos, CA! Indeed there is a "Gates of Heaven" cemetery
up by Rancho San Antonio, but I think that's just for us two-legged
critters.
While this definitely had some clever editing (a couple of times, he
turned on a word beautifully from one interviewee to the next), there
was a lot of strange miscellany left in the film. I call to the witness
stand the lady who loaned her son $400 for a car, but never sees him
any more. Additionally the two squabbling ladies of Los Altos.
Fascinating to watch, and more of a precursor to Morris' "First Person"
show (worth catching if you can!) He just kind of sets the camera down
and let's folks go awhile...like a confessional/diary as much as his
latter day interregatron.
Somehow, whether by coaxing them with a Coors, or just quietly sitting
and filming, Morris gets people to really expound on whatever details
of their life seem to really matter to them. A couple of the pet
couples are placed before tall images of flora? Not sure of the
significance.
The most touching moment is the filming of the little tombstones for a
variety of pets, all with some heartfelt little sententia or sweet
goodbye. Putting it on film in a way makes these even more immortal.
Not sure how people who don't have any pets at all will react to this.
I watched this with our 11-year old Wire Fox Terrier, but he zonked out
(tends to prefer Bollywwod?). But I'm sitting there thinking of his
mortality and the proposed $3K charge for cataract surgery and being a
bit torn between loving my pet deeply, versus calculating the cost of
him.
I guess the rendering man is important; he did all he could to wipe the
smirk off his face having clearly jumped the shark on the pet v. food
debate. And I mean putting food on his table...as much as quasi-food
like bonemeal and by-products. For him, it was just a job *clearly* and
he seemed perplexed how anybody could see it otherwise.
But bottom line, all of these people were making their living
(including Morris as the filmmaker) off the death of pets. We want our
lives to be filled with more than making our rent and paying our bills,
and one way we try to do that is through our relationships with pets.
This film's alright, not up there with some of Morris' other work.
Oddly comic at times. Like jeez, the pet cemetery called "Bubbling
Well", that sounds like a code phrase for a rendering plant. Ick.
"Gates of Heaven" felt at times like a strange good-guy/bad-guy
dramatic film rather than a documentary. By the way, where are the
trophy (Caine?) and guitar (Abel?) brothers today?? Looks like they're
still in business
http://www.bubbling-well.com/
Bottom line, I'd say see this, but only *after* taking the dog out for
a nice walk or a run along the beach.
6/10
PS My dog wants to add
"A cemetery for cats, come on you've got to be kidding!"
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- slow and compelling and a meditation on the human condition, 9 June 2006
Author:
(mszyman@gmail.com) from Lodz & California
The film starts with an man talking about his journey to achieve his
dream of opening a pet cemetery in the south bay of San Francisco. We
meet the people who help him: investors, friends, pet lovers. We also
meet the guy against him, the guy who makes a living out of disposing
of dead animals. This is the first part of the film. The second part of
the film we meet a family that runs a successful pet cemetery, called
the Bubbling Well Pet Cemetery. We meet the father, the head of the
business, his wife, the moral supporter, for a lack of a better
definition, and we meet the two sons involved in assisting in
operations, one is a former insurance worker, the other is a business
admin college grad. This is the basic outline of the film. And this
sounds kind of boring, maybe. But boring it is not. If anything, slow
at times. Thats because the camera is usually completely still and
people are positioned in front of the camera, talking into it. What is
interesting is how when these characters talk they let loose and go on
tangents, exposing their world views, usually in the context of pets,
and what we see is the humanity of these seemingly regular people,
their musings on life and death, companionship, love, filial duty. For
instance, the first man with the pet cemetery idea talks about how you
can't trust people, how if you turn around they might stab you in the
back, but his dog would never do this because you can trust your dog.
The dead pet disposal guy rants about, and is surprised at the
emotional connection people have with pets, as though it was something
he just discovered in his line of work, and his line of work is treated
by him as just a job, not anything controversial. And the sons of the
successful pet cemetery owner, one is a motivational speaker. He talks
about projecting ideas of success and refraining from using negative
words with his little daughter, when she has done something wrong. And
the other son talks about his musical aspirations and how he found out
what love is in college and then found out about the hard break up
afterwards. Erol Morris succeeds at exposing the layers of peoples in a
real light, sometimes showing the contradictory and absurdness of
peoples personalities and yet also showing the genuineness of people
and their intentions. At times the film is comical, at times very
serious, and other times sad. Morris is a keen observer of human
behavior and this film illustrates this very well. For some local
history from the southern SF bay area, for an interesting look at
peoples views on very common human issues we can all relate with and of
course on pets, see this nice movie. 8 out of 10.
4 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- Cried a little, laughed a lot!, 1 July 2003
Author:
semi-buff from USA
As an animal lover I found many poignant moments here. The woman who would
sometimes forget her dog was dead--I went through that myself in my teens
with my beloved childhood dog, so I know how painful it is. And the cemetery
owner's theory that pets are more important now because of the pill makes a
lot of sense. Nevertheless, I feel certain Christopher Guest MUST have had
this film in mind when he made "Best in Show"! Oh my god there is some
unintended hilarity here. On the part of the interviewees, that is; I'm sure
Morris knew what he had. The cemetery family, the rendering plant
manager...hoo boy! The overall feeling, though, is that we love our animals
and they are indeed very special and precious.
The elderly woman talking about her ungrateful bum of a son was very
sad...I'm going to go call my mother right now.
5 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- Painful and unforgettable, like a car wreck, 24 November 1998
Author:
Spearin from Durham, North Carolina
This is the movie over which Werner Herzog ate his footwear.
The story goes that Errol Morris had no money to finance a film and Herzog's
advice to him was to do it anyway. (Herzog is not known for his restraint,
fiscal and otherwise.) Morris hadn't made a film before and had no options
for financing. Herzog promised him that if Morris indeed made a film,
Herzog would come to the premiere and eat his shoe.
As they say, the rest is history. Herzog flew in from Germany for the
California premiere carrying the same shoes he had on when he made the
promise. He boiled them with vegetables and stood in front of the audience
as the film was being readied and, as good as his word, ate one entire shoe,
clipping off bits with metal shears. He did leave the soles and the
eyelets.
Gates of Heaven is a one-camera job, lots of nice stationary shots, some
interminable interview footage with owners of pet cemeteries and developers
looking to make a quick dollar out of lonely-hearts' grief and one too
honest renderer whose willingness to talk casts him in a rather bad light.
About ten minutes in you begin to wish that Morris had earlier discovered
Philip Glass, as he would for The Thin Blue Line, to help this quirky story
along. It shows little of the promise that would be fulfilled in Fast,
Cheap, and Out of Control; but for all that, Morris has a style right from
the outset, and what's lacking in technical expertise is compensated for by
his shrewd eye for human nature. It sticks with you. The Morris catalog
would be incomplete without it. It's a good companion rental to balance out
the emptiness of a Judge Dredd or Last Man Standing.
3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Interesting look into death and dying., 24 March 2003
Author:
faarupj-1 from Detroit, Michigan
At first glance, Gates of Heaven appears to be a
documentary about the lives of people that run pet cemetaries.
On second glance, you realize you are witnessing a visual
essay on the subject of death and dying, and how these
average folk deal with it.
There are esesentially three parts to the film. All deal
with either the struggle to build a pet cemetery or
maintaining a pet cemetery. The most interesting
segment is with a family who runs a successful cemetery
in the desert of California. You see generations of
a family that has done nothing but run this business.
They explain the philosophy behind why they choose
to bury pets, and why pets deserve burial just as
humans do.
Morris lets the camera do all the work. With the exception
of two shots every other one is static. A talking head
documentary that could probably fit the definition
exactly. Morris knows when exactly to inject humor
into the film, just enough to keep you interested.
If you saw this film nowadays, you would expect it to
be on Lifetime or some other obscure cable channel.
With a third glance and possibly a fourth, you can
see the message Morris is trying to get across. Everyone
has a way of dealing with death. It is just how
you deal with it that determines how comfortable
you are with it.
5 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- A documentary about eccentric people that often seems to cast a condescending eye on its subjects, 4 March 2005
Author:
J. Spurlin from Chicago, Illinois
I picked a bad time to watch this movie. I just finished watching
"Napoleon Dynamite," where it's unclear whether we're supposed to
relate to the eccentric characters or pity and despise them. That film
got me to thinking about other movies that seem to cast a condescending
eye on the people involved, specifically "Waiting for Guffman," a fake
documentary about small-town folk who want to take their
community-theater production to Broadway, and "American Movie," a real
documentary about people making a cheap horror film.
And now I watch this documentary, which tells the story of two pet
cemeteries in California. And again it's unclear how the filmmaker
feels about the people we meet, or how we're supposed to feel about
them. Errol Morris, who followed this initial success with several
other well-regarded documentaries like "The Thin Blue Line" and
"Fast, Cheap and Furious" has an unobtrusive style here. He simply
points the camera at people and let's them talk in long, rambling
monologues. We never see or hear him, but of course his attitude is
reflected in what material he chooses, how he edits it and in the
subject of the movie in the first place.
We first meet Floyd McClure, a paraplegic with a dream to create a pet
cemetery. One inspiration is the death of his collie years before; and
the other is the local rendering plant, which turns animals into glue.
He rages against this hellish factory, not seeing the irony in noting
that he couldn't smell the meat on his own table for the stench
emanating from the place. He realizes his dream, only to see it fail.
Then we visit a successful pet cemetery, run by a father and his two
sons. One is a frustrated musician, nursing a broken heart. The other
is joining the family business after selling insurance in Salt Lake
City. Throughout, we also meet the people who have buried their pets.
Morris allows a lot of his subjects to cast themselves in a bad or
ridiculous light. The man who runs the rendering department admits
lying to the public whenever they have a beloved zoo animal. And though
he's very defensive about his line of work, he can't suppress himself
from calling the people who grieve over their dead pets "moaners." The
older son at the successful cemetery is shown in his office, in which
trophies line the desk and the shelves behind him. He claims a job
applicant was impressed and inspired by the trophies. Throughout, he
endlessly spouts clichés from motivational books.
Oddly, I didn't cringe as much at the people who spent thousands of
dollars to bury their pets. Somehow they came off as silly, yet
ennobled by their love for their animals.
Since this movie we've been treated to an endless stream of reality TV
and Christopher Guest mockumentaries and Dave Letterman bits where the
average guy on the street is put in the spotlight only to be made a
fool of. I know a lot of people see this film as beautiful and full of
interesting philosophical questions Roger Ebert, who puts this on his
all-time ten best list, prominently among them. Maybe I was in the
wrong frame of mind, but I didn't enjoy it.
4 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- Too turgid for me, 7 July 2003
Author:
dynaman from camp hill pa
This video has me half- crazed in trying to ascertain just what was the
point of the whole thing. Does anyone need a movie to learn that humans
have
strong and sometimes bizarre pet relationships? Why mix a man"s
dedication
to building the best pet cemetary in the world with the tiresome
motivation
theory of his one son and the aimless meanderings of the other? What is
the
message here and why does this lame documentary deserve a cult following?
Errol Morris is a favorite of mine, but this amateurish attempt of
explaining death ia hardly a harbinger of his later,much greater efforts.
Sorry, Ebert.
Quicklinks
Top Links
trailers and videosfull cast and crewtriviaofficial sitesmemorable quotesOverview
main detailscombined detailsfull cast and crewcompany creditstv scheduleAwards & Reviews
user commentsexternal reviewsnewsgroup reviewsawardsuser ratingsparents guiderecommendationsmessage boardPlot & Quotes
plot summaryplot synopsisplot keywordsAmazon.com summarymemorable quotesFun Stuff
triviagoofssoundtrack listingcrazy creditsalternate versionsmovie connectionsFAQOther Info
merchandising linksbox office/businessrelease datesfilming locationstechnical specslaserdisc detailsDVD detailsliterature listingsNewsDeskPromotional
taglines trailers and videos posters photo galleryExternal Links
showtimesofficial sitesmiscellaneousphotographssound clipsvideo clipsIMDb user comments for
Gates of Heaven (1978)
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

One of the best films ever made!, 28 September 2000
Author: dvanhouwelingen from Waterloo, Ontario
GATES OF HEAVEN is one of those fascinating films that no matter how many times you see, the mysteries contained in it only get deeper. The film is a documentary about pet cemeteries, but what may have turned into a freak show- a movie about people who value pets so much they pay thousands of dollars to bury them- becomes an inspection of the human soul. The film is a deep, dark chasm of human emotion. Errol Morris starts his famous documentary style of just letting people talk. Unlike Michael Moore or Nick Broomfield, who are as much the subject of their own documentaries as their directors, we never see or even hear Morris' voice. He just lets the people tell their story their way. The film is haunting and will stay with the viewer long after it's over. It truly is a landmark film in movie history. Roger Ebert was not overstating this movies genius when he named it one of the ten best films of all time. My Grade: 10/10
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-

An all-time favorite. A quirky, poignant, and sometimes hilarious look at man's relationship with his pets., 1 August 2005
Author: jlancaster-1 from United States
I first saw this movie in a college theater in its initial release. The movie poster claimed it was "Not quite a movie about pet cemeteries." I didn't know what to expect, but I have always liked the offbeat. This movie, which even Roger Ebert calls one of his all-time favorites, turned out to be offbeat and much, much more.
Without poking fun at his subjects, Morris exposes us to the world of pet cemeteries--both the owners and caretakers of them and the people who've placed the remains of a cherished pet in their care. Sometimes we are moved by empathy; other times we laugh out loud at the preposterousness of it. (Are they for real?) At no time does Morris pass judgment. He leaves that up to us.
Along the way we meet the owner of a rendering service, and learn what happens when the circus comes to town. We learn that "God" is "dog" spelled backwards, and we meet an aspiring musician. Morris captures on film the things that make us human: grief, love, self-importance, and an unabashed silliness. The result is a quirky, poignant, and sometimes hilarious look at man's relationship with his pets.
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-
can't stop watching it, 22 October 2001
Author: (swatwat@yahoo.com) from NJ, USA
I saw this film for the first time about 2 years ago on IFC and thankfully I videotaped it. Since then, I've watched it 10 or 11 times and it always fascinates me. I especially like the last third of the film in which we meet the harberts family who own the Bubbling Well Pet Cemetary in Nappa Valley. They all seem so sincere and at the same time they crack me up. Errol Morris just has a way of letting real life people go on and on about a subject without it ever becoming boring...
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-

Pet Peeve Greives, 7 October 2006
Author: ThurstonHunger from Palo Alto, CA, USA
Early Errol Morris documentary, pitting the true believers versus the salesmen of the world. Both trying to fill a need, I got the vibe that when Floyd McClure talked about that specifically, he was really talking about the emotional hole left in people's lives by a departed pet. Rather than a hole in one's wallet, or just the hole in the ground.
Evidently the first part of this took place darn close to where I live these days: Los Altos, CA! Indeed there is a "Gates of Heaven" cemetery up by Rancho San Antonio, but I think that's just for us two-legged critters.
While this definitely had some clever editing (a couple of times, he turned on a word beautifully from one interviewee to the next), there was a lot of strange miscellany left in the film. I call to the witness stand the lady who loaned her son $400 for a car, but never sees him any more. Additionally the two squabbling ladies of Los Altos. Fascinating to watch, and more of a precursor to Morris' "First Person" show (worth catching if you can!) He just kind of sets the camera down and let's folks go awhile...like a confessional/diary as much as his latter day interregatron.
Somehow, whether by coaxing them with a Coors, or just quietly sitting and filming, Morris gets people to really expound on whatever details of their life seem to really matter to them. A couple of the pet couples are placed before tall images of flora? Not sure of the significance.
The most touching moment is the filming of the little tombstones for a variety of pets, all with some heartfelt little sententia or sweet goodbye. Putting it on film in a way makes these even more immortal.
Not sure how people who don't have any pets at all will react to this. I watched this with our 11-year old Wire Fox Terrier, but he zonked out (tends to prefer Bollywwod?). But I'm sitting there thinking of his mortality and the proposed $3K charge for cataract surgery and being a bit torn between loving my pet deeply, versus calculating the cost of him.
I guess the rendering man is important; he did all he could to wipe the smirk off his face having clearly jumped the shark on the pet v. food debate. And I mean putting food on his table...as much as quasi-food like bonemeal and by-products. For him, it was just a job *clearly* and he seemed perplexed how anybody could see it otherwise.
But bottom line, all of these people were making their living (including Morris as the filmmaker) off the death of pets. We want our lives to be filled with more than making our rent and paying our bills, and one way we try to do that is through our relationships with pets.
This film's alright, not up there with some of Morris' other work. Oddly comic at times. Like jeez, the pet cemetery called "Bubbling Well", that sounds like a code phrase for a rendering plant. Ick. "Gates of Heaven" felt at times like a strange good-guy/bad-guy dramatic film rather than a documentary. By the way, where are the trophy (Caine?) and guitar (Abel?) brothers today?? Looks like they're still in business
http://www.bubbling-well.com/
Bottom line, I'd say see this, but only *after* taking the dog out for a nice walk or a run along the beach.
6/10
PS My dog wants to add
"A cemetery for cats, come on you've got to be kidding!"
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-

slow and compelling and a meditation on the human condition, 9 June 2006
Author: (mszyman@gmail.com) from Lodz & California
The film starts with an man talking about his journey to achieve his dream of opening a pet cemetery in the south bay of San Francisco. We meet the people who help him: investors, friends, pet lovers. We also meet the guy against him, the guy who makes a living out of disposing of dead animals. This is the first part of the film. The second part of the film we meet a family that runs a successful pet cemetery, called the Bubbling Well Pet Cemetery. We meet the father, the head of the business, his wife, the moral supporter, for a lack of a better definition, and we meet the two sons involved in assisting in operations, one is a former insurance worker, the other is a business admin college grad. This is the basic outline of the film. And this sounds kind of boring, maybe. But boring it is not. If anything, slow at times. Thats because the camera is usually completely still and people are positioned in front of the camera, talking into it. What is interesting is how when these characters talk they let loose and go on tangents, exposing their world views, usually in the context of pets, and what we see is the humanity of these seemingly regular people, their musings on life and death, companionship, love, filial duty. For instance, the first man with the pet cemetery idea talks about how you can't trust people, how if you turn around they might stab you in the back, but his dog would never do this because you can trust your dog. The dead pet disposal guy rants about, and is surprised at the emotional connection people have with pets, as though it was something he just discovered in his line of work, and his line of work is treated by him as just a job, not anything controversial. And the sons of the successful pet cemetery owner, one is a motivational speaker. He talks about projecting ideas of success and refraining from using negative words with his little daughter, when she has done something wrong. And the other son talks about his musical aspirations and how he found out what love is in college and then found out about the hard break up afterwards. Erol Morris succeeds at exposing the layers of peoples in a real light, sometimes showing the contradictory and absurdness of peoples personalities and yet also showing the genuineness of people and their intentions. At times the film is comical, at times very serious, and other times sad. Morris is a keen observer of human behavior and this film illustrates this very well. For some local history from the southern SF bay area, for an interesting look at peoples views on very common human issues we can all relate with and of course on pets, see this nice movie. 8 out of 10.
4 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-
Cried a little, laughed a lot!, 1 July 2003
Author: semi-buff from USA
As an animal lover I found many poignant moments here. The woman who would sometimes forget her dog was dead--I went through that myself in my teens with my beloved childhood dog, so I know how painful it is. And the cemetery owner's theory that pets are more important now because of the pill makes a lot of sense. Nevertheless, I feel certain Christopher Guest MUST have had this film in mind when he made "Best in Show"! Oh my god there is some unintended hilarity here. On the part of the interviewees, that is; I'm sure Morris knew what he had. The cemetery family, the rendering plant manager...hoo boy! The overall feeling, though, is that we love our animals and they are indeed very special and precious.
The elderly woman talking about her ungrateful bum of a son was very sad...I'm going to go call my mother right now.
5 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-
Painful and unforgettable, like a car wreck, 24 November 1998
Author: Spearin from Durham, North Carolina
This is the movie over which Werner Herzog ate his footwear.
The story goes that Errol Morris had no money to finance a film and Herzog's advice to him was to do it anyway. (Herzog is not known for his restraint, fiscal and otherwise.) Morris hadn't made a film before and had no options for financing. Herzog promised him that if Morris indeed made a film, Herzog would come to the premiere and eat his shoe.
As they say, the rest is history. Herzog flew in from Germany for the California premiere carrying the same shoes he had on when he made the promise. He boiled them with vegetables and stood in front of the audience as the film was being readied and, as good as his word, ate one entire shoe, clipping off bits with metal shears. He did leave the soles and the eyelets.
Gates of Heaven is a one-camera job, lots of nice stationary shots, some interminable interview footage with owners of pet cemeteries and developers looking to make a quick dollar out of lonely-hearts' grief and one too honest renderer whose willingness to talk casts him in a rather bad light. About ten minutes in you begin to wish that Morris had earlier discovered Philip Glass, as he would for The Thin Blue Line, to help this quirky story along. It shows little of the promise that would be fulfilled in Fast, Cheap, and Out of Control; but for all that, Morris has a style right from the outset, and what's lacking in technical expertise is compensated for by his shrewd eye for human nature. It sticks with you. The Morris catalog would be incomplete without it. It's a good companion rental to balance out the emptiness of a Judge Dredd or Last Man Standing.
3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

Interesting look into death and dying., 24 March 2003
Author: faarupj-1 from Detroit, Michigan
At first glance, Gates of Heaven appears to be a documentary about the lives of people that run pet cemetaries. On second glance, you realize you are witnessing a visual essay on the subject of death and dying, and how these average folk deal with it.
There are esesentially three parts to the film. All deal with either the struggle to build a pet cemetery or maintaining a pet cemetery. The most interesting segment is with a family who runs a successful cemetery in the desert of California. You see generations of a family that has done nothing but run this business. They explain the philosophy behind why they choose to bury pets, and why pets deserve burial just as humans do.
Morris lets the camera do all the work. With the exception of two shots every other one is static. A talking head documentary that could probably fit the definition exactly. Morris knows when exactly to inject humor into the film, just enough to keep you interested.
If you saw this film nowadays, you would expect it to be on Lifetime or some other obscure cable channel. With a third glance and possibly a fourth, you can see the message Morris is trying to get across. Everyone has a way of dealing with death. It is just how you deal with it that determines how comfortable you are with it.
5 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

A documentary about eccentric people that often seems to cast a condescending eye on its subjects, 4 March 2005
Author: J. Spurlin from Chicago, Illinois
I picked a bad time to watch this movie. I just finished watching "Napoleon Dynamite," where it's unclear whether we're supposed to relate to the eccentric characters or pity and despise them. That film got me to thinking about other movies that seem to cast a condescending eye on the people involved, specifically "Waiting for Guffman," a fake documentary about small-town folk who want to take their community-theater production to Broadway, and "American Movie," a real documentary about people making a cheap horror film.
And now I watch this documentary, which tells the story of two pet cemeteries in California. And again it's unclear how the filmmaker feels about the people we meet, or how we're supposed to feel about them. Errol Morris, who followed this initial success with several other well-regarded documentaries like "The Thin Blue Line" and "Fast, Cheap and Furious" has an unobtrusive style here. He simply points the camera at people and let's them talk in long, rambling monologues. We never see or hear him, but of course his attitude is reflected in what material he chooses, how he edits it and in the subject of the movie in the first place.
We first meet Floyd McClure, a paraplegic with a dream to create a pet cemetery. One inspiration is the death of his collie years before; and the other is the local rendering plant, which turns animals into glue. He rages against this hellish factory, not seeing the irony in noting that he couldn't smell the meat on his own table for the stench emanating from the place. He realizes his dream, only to see it fail. Then we visit a successful pet cemetery, run by a father and his two sons. One is a frustrated musician, nursing a broken heart. The other is joining the family business after selling insurance in Salt Lake City. Throughout, we also meet the people who have buried their pets.
Morris allows a lot of his subjects to cast themselves in a bad or ridiculous light. The man who runs the rendering department admits lying to the public whenever they have a beloved zoo animal. And though he's very defensive about his line of work, he can't suppress himself from calling the people who grieve over their dead pets "moaners." The older son at the successful cemetery is shown in his office, in which trophies line the desk and the shelves behind him. He claims a job applicant was impressed and inspired by the trophies. Throughout, he endlessly spouts clichés from motivational books.
Oddly, I didn't cringe as much at the people who spent thousands of dollars to bury their pets. Somehow they came off as silly, yet ennobled by their love for their animals.
Since this movie we've been treated to an endless stream of reality TV and Christopher Guest mockumentaries and Dave Letterman bits where the average guy on the street is put in the spotlight only to be made a fool of. I know a lot of people see this film as beautiful and full of interesting philosophical questions Roger Ebert, who puts this on his all-time ten best list, prominently among them. Maybe I was in the wrong frame of mind, but I didn't enjoy it.
4 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-

Too turgid for me, 7 July 2003
Author: dynaman from camp hill pa
This video has me half- crazed in trying to ascertain just what was the point of the whole thing. Does anyone need a movie to learn that humans have strong and sometimes bizarre pet relationships? Why mix a man"s dedication to building the best pet cemetary in the world with the tiresome motivation theory of his one son and the aimless meanderings of the other? What is the message here and why does this lame documentary deserve a cult following? Errol Morris is a favorite of mine, but this amateurish attempt of explaining death ia hardly a harbinger of his later,much greater efforts. Sorry, Ebert.
Add another comment
Related Links