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Friday Night at the Movies (youngsters:non fiction, 1250 words) | |||
Author: Lou Hill | Added: May 11 2002 | Views/Reads: 4988/2737 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Watching a movie in the days before multiplexes, videos and DVDs. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story domineering mother if he has taken his vitamins that day and he answers "Yes mother, a whole pint of them". The other thing I remember about that movie is a very intense scene with Robert Walker prowling around looking for his intended murder victim. There was no dialogue and no loud background music. The theater was deathly quiet; everyone was sitting on the edge of his or her seat waiting for something to happen. Suddenly Richard Bordo, who was sitting next to me, yelled "BANG" as loudly as he could. Of course everyone in the theater jumped out of his or her skins, myself included, then dissolved into nervous laughter. Mrs. Vincent never did discover the culprit even though she patrolled the aisles for the rest of the film. Another movie that I remember vividly was a film starring Spencer Tracy called "Mayflower Adventure" which was, of course, about the Pilgrims. Tracy in his role as Capt. Miles Standish was trying to teach the Pilgrims how to use weapons. As he ran through a drill to load and fire a blunderbuss, he delivered the line "Pour gunpowder into the touchhole*". Total bedlam in the theater! My favorite movies were and still are the musicals of the late 40s and 50s. I remember that I had a tremendous crush on Marge Champion of the dancing team of Marge and Gower Champion. That lasted until I saw Natalie Wood in "The Searchers and fell in love. It was a one-sided affair that continued until her unfortunate death. Many of those old MGM musicals are considered classics today: Easter Parade, Meet Me in St. Louis, The Bandwagon, Showboat, Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, Singing in the Rain etc. They didn't have a "message" for the most part; all they did was entertain. In the last 20 years I have only seen two movies that approach the quality and entertainment value of the old MGM musicals. They are Flashdance and Dirty Dancing, both highly successful movies from a financial viewpoint. There ought to be a message to Hollywood hidden there. The advent of inexpensive TV sets sounded the death knell for the Playhouse and many other small town movie theaters like it. In order to compete with TV, moviemakers have resorted to more sex, more violence and in my opinion, less entertainment value. On a recent Friday night as I waited for my wife to pick up a few items at the IGA that now occupies the building that housed the Playhouse, my thoughts drifted back fifty years. Were Charles Starett and Smiley Burnett going to beat the bad guys to the pass and stop them from stampeding the herd? What new perils would face the hero of the current serial? Most important, would a Tom & Jerry cartoon be shown? *Note to flatlanders: In Vermont only the sophisticated among us use the word rectum in place of touchhole. Oh yes a flatlander is someone who was not born in Vermont. Enosburg Falls, Vermont July 1993 Tweet
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