Am I one of the few who liked this movie?
I'm glad to read after all these decades of trashing the 1973 version of LOST HORIZON that people have come on board to defend the movie and express admiration for it.
LOST HORIZON got panned badly by the critics back in its day. It even found a place in the books as one of the worst movie remakes in history. I strenuously disagreed then and now.
LOST HORIZON was a much better and enjoyable film than the criticism it unfairly garnered. I believed much of the sniping and ridicule came from and comes from people who are cynically uncomfortable with anything that depicts human kindness, decency, compassion, courtesy, ettiquette, and living harmoniously with each other. LOST HORIZON in all its movie incarnations portrayed that message. But there are people who don't and never will buy into the message of harmonious and happy co-existence. Such people believe life has no meaning if there is no cut-throat competition that rewards the winners with fortune, high-living, corporate promotion, the biggest house and car, while leaving the losers in the dust with nothing. Many people still believe happiness in life is equated ONLY with material success and triumph over the less capable. Some people cannot envision life where EVERYONE is happy and materialistic successful. In order to be happy in life there always has to be winners and losers. One example is the grade curve in college where there are high grade scorers and low grade scorers. Competitive students become angered if there is no grade curve to ensure there are losers.
Subsequently, LOST HORIZON (1973) was considered sentimental, sappy, wildly unrealistic, a ridiculous fantasy, and an illusion of life in Heaven on Earth. I didn't try to entertain any metaphysical or existential contemplations on LOST HORIZON. I just enjoyed it for the pleasant musical it was and the simple message of humanity at its most capable spiritually. Perhaps the cynics are right. LOST HORIZON requires human evolution to the next spiritual level. Even if this is true, at least LOST HORIZON gives us a strong vision of what it can be. Maybe living in a real Shangrila as portrayed in the movie would drive most of us nuts with boredom after a month. But I loved the message of politeness, friendliness, ettiquette, courtesy, and lack of deceit between human beings. I know there are people who considered this view a sign of weakness and submissiveness. Only the strong and rude prevail. To the strong come the rewards of wealth, women, fame, power, adulation, and vast material rewards. Yet even recent history shows people who've achieved all this are among the most unhappy and live shorter lives. To each his own.