The filmmaker, shown at right, is interested in the subject of aging -- that's for sure -- but he approaches it from a variety of angles, using talking heads (belonging to scientists, businessmen, friends and acquaintances) and exploring the possibilities in ways that are quiet and thoughtful, rather than angry and coercive. The intent here seems to be discovery rather than conversion (as with, and rightly so, "Orwell") and so the ideas he's marshaled about aging, its "necessity," and the possibility of putting it off for years (or decades) is intriguing.
As Dr. Thomas Kirkwood notes in the film, "A lot of people think we're biologically programmed to die, but the truth is that we're biologically programmed for survival. There is no mechanism inside us that turns on to kill us when a certain period of time has elapsed." No, but people do seem to die, finally and often enough, of "old age" -- old age being something that, along with which, necessary bodily functions cease operation. Even so, there is now an entire field of research known as anti-aging, and this film introduces us to a number of its practitioners (like Dr. David Sinclair, above). And when they explain themselves and their approach, they make some sense, too.


As some of the scientists do point out, when this reversal-of-aging begins is rather important. Wait too long, and you'll stop aging, all right, but you'll stop when you are already too old for it to matter. The time to begin, evidently, is when you're middle aged and still healthy: pre-50, I should think. As for the friends that Pappas queries, the results range from "Of course I want to live longer" (the indomitable Madelyn Lynn, above) to the not quite so certain.
In case you haven't noticed by now, this movie is not a "to have a face-lift or not to have a face-lift" cliff-hanger -- though there is one women, pictured with our filmmaker at right, who is concerned with exactly that. (She gets one, too.) No: this film's more about yeast and mice, genes and opossums. In the supermarket, where ideas seems to come more freely, notes Pappas, we begin to think about things like the bigger picture, Big Pharma, and the SIRT2 gene.
Eventually it grows rather moving to hear these people and their attitudes: skeptical, amused, wondering. One scientist becomes a priest and then returns to science via teaching. And of course our current health care system comes under some scrutiny, as well. Overall the documentary is more allusive that you will probably first imagine. And whatever your final estimation of the subject at hand, I think you'll be surprised at the mood -- thoughtful but questioning -- you're left in by the finale.
To Age or Not to Age opens for your delectation this Friday, July 16, at Manhattan's Village East Cinemas. You can find other upcoming screenings here.