See You at the Movies
Tonight, finally,
is the Academy Awards. The night when all the speculation ends. We had the
elections, the Super Bowl, and now the Academy Awards. What will the so-called
television news shows talk about after they’ve rehashed tonight’s red carpet
and who’s wearing whom? Oh, yes, there is sequestration.
The Movies. I do enjoy going to the movies.
The screen is big enough to completely fill my field of vision. The sounds
surround me. The scent of popcorn saturates everything, including my clothes
and hair. The lights go down and I am ready to be transported.
Well, after all the trailers and television
show adverts, not to mention the local dry cleaners and pharmacies. Then there
are the admonitions to silence our cell phones and prohibitions against
texting. The requests that we properly dispose of our trash and the entreaties
to not talk. But even public television indulges in ads and requests for
donations. I guess it’s the sign of the times and a reminder that somebody has
to pay for all this. (No, I didn’t forget about the price we just paid for tickets
and refreshments. But, never mind, never mind.)
I have seen three of the nine Academy Award
nominees: Lincoln, Life of Pi, and Les Miserables. All were done very well. Need I add that the
books were better? But then books, by their very nature, have more time to do it
better and bigger and in more dimensions than 3.
“But that’s not what I come here to talk
about. I come to talk about the draft.” Oh, dear. That’s another song and
another time.
What I did come here to talk about is the
last time I went to the movies. A couple of weeks ago.
We went to see the re-release of Top Gun
in 3D. I love this movie. It’s the nearest I’ll ever come to taking off and
landing on an aircraft carrier. Next to lift off from Cape Canaveral, that has
got to be the greatest rush possible.
The lights in the theater dimmed and I was
ready to be transported along with a small crowd of perfect strangers.
The word perfect
turns out to be an imperfect adjective
as applied to that particular audience.
Some man entered with his four-year-old in
tow. A vocal, unhappy, four-year-old, easily frightened by 3D special effects.
Then a group of noisy 20-somethings, male and female, took seats in the back.
I don’t know which was worse. The frightened
child and his insensitive father. Or the young adults who thought they were
sitting in their own living room and could spout intellectually limited witticisms
during the love scenes.
Someday, when I’m rich and famous, I’ll buy
out the theater and invite the public free-of-charge. I will set guards at the
entrance to allow only people who are old enough to enjoy the movie—without regard
to actual age—to enter.
I’ll have a nice cappuccino and sit in the
middle, right up front. And I’ll be transported along with an audience of
perfect strangers.
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