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Friday Night at the Movies (youngsters:non fiction, 1250 words) | |||
Author: Lou Hill | Added: May 11 2002 | Views/Reads: 4983/2734 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Watching a movie in the days before multiplexes, videos and DVDs. | |||
FRIDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES Over the years my hometown, Enosburg Falls, Vermont, has had many things that made it unique. Surely one of the oddest had to be the Playhouse Theater. Where else could you walk into a movie theater and find yourself facing the entire audience? For a couple of teenagers on their first date, it could be an intimidating experience. All of their friends sitting there, watching them, as they tried to walk nonchalantly up the aisle. So much for secret love affairs. I went to movies at the Playhouse from the time I was six years old until after I graduated from high school. During that time nothing changed. Leslie Thomas sold tickets, Mrs. Vincent was the "enforcer" who could quiet a bunch of rowdy teenagers with a look, and the theater was always cold in winter. The format for the week was always the same too. Sunday and Monday nights featured the new releases with the big name stars, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday nights were "B" romances, dramas and thrillers and Friday and Saturday nights were reserved for westerns. I started going to the Friday night "oaters" when I was six years old. At that time the price of a child's ticket was about 14 cents. At first my mother would accompany me saying that I was too young to go by myself. It took me a while to realize that she enjoyed the old westerns just as much as I did. I don't think she ever missed a Roy Rogers movie. I also remember that she used to call John Wayne, one of my particular favorites, "Old Corkscrew Head." My mother had nicknames for everyone (mine was "Stinky') which is another story in itself. Weekends were special because they always showed the next chapter of a cliffhanger. Those old serials kept people coming back week after week to see how the hero would escape from what ever life-threatening situation he had been left in at the end of last weeks installment. Friday night audiences were usually made up of kids from the village with a scattering of adults. Saturday night was Farmer's night. A lot of farm families would come to the "city" on Saturday evening after chores to do their shopping. In those days it was the only night of the week that the stores stayed open late. Many of them opted to take in a move after completing their grocery shopping. I remember that on the rare Saturday night that I went to the movies there was a distinct aroma of "barn" in the Playhouse. Those cowboy movies were a big part of our early education. The good guys always wore white hats; the bad guys always wore black hats. Nobody's hat would fall off in the middle of a furious fistfight. Gene Autry holds the record for most shots fired from a six-shooter without reloading (28). Western heroes are unbelievable marksmen-you try hitting a moving target when both of you are mounted on a galloping horse. Good always triumphs over evil and the bad guy always got punished. The hero never dies and he only kisses his horse. Maybe that's not such a bad idea today. When I saw "Star Wars" for the first time, I realized that the same formula was used to make that movie that was used for the old westerns. The bad guy (Darth Vader) was dressed in black, the hero Luke was dressed in white, Obi Wan Kanobi's hood never moved when he fought Darth Vader with light sabers, Luke and Han were fantastic shots with their laser cannon even while gyrating all over space, the good guys won and the Death Star was blown up. Han Solo, like the western heroes who only kissed their horses, just exchanged meaningful looks with Princess Leia. As I matured so did my taste in movies. Unfortunately sometimes my actions and those of my friends weren't quite so mature. I remember an impressive documentary film released in the early 50s called "The Fighting Lady". A group of us went to see it and proceeded to disrupt the whole theater adding additional dialog and sound effects to the battle scenes. Even Mrs. Vincent gave up trying to quiet us down. I also vividly remember a movie called "Strangers on a Train", one of Alfred Hitchcock's great thrillers that I saw during my teens. Two things stick in my mind about that film: Robert Walker is asked by his Click here to read the rest of this story (55 more lines)
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