Showing posts with label Movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Movies. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Getting My Feet Wet


          I love to swim.  Back in days of yore I used to ride a surfboard until my daughter, in fourteen year old horror, informed me that, ‘Mother’s do not ride surfboards, Mum!’  Apparently I should have been in the kitchen baking cookies.  So, although I didn’t drag out the Joy of Cooking recipe book, I did hang up my board and my board shorts and settled into plain old swimming as an acceptable alternative, thanking the movies and one lady in particular, for my ability to do so.
          When I was about ten, my little sister and I used to attend the Saturday afternoon offerings at our local cinema.  The special kid’s programs usually consisted of a couple of cartoons followed by a serial with a nail biting cliff-hanger.  Then an MC would appear on stage and encourage us all to ‘follow the bouncing ball’ as he led us in the theme song:
                   Here we are again
                   Happy as can be
                   All good pals and jolly good company
                   Never mind the weather, never mind the rain
                   As long as we’re together
                   Here we go again…
          There would be a brief interval during which the children usually ran amok laughing and screaming, rolling Jaffas sweets down the aisles or throwing them at each other and the ushers who were trying to keep some semblance of control, and then the main feature began.
          The mid to late 50’s was a time of movie musicals and light-hearted comedies.  We fell in love with Jane Powell and Debbie Reynolds, Gene Kelly and Ricardo Montalban as they sang and danced their way around the sound stages of Hollywood.
          But the star who completely mesmerized me was Esther Williams.  Her beautiful smile as she swam so gracefully in crystal waters, flowers in her hair, captivated me and prompted me to want to swim just like she did.
          That presented a problem since neither my sister nor I had ever stepped into a swimming pool or even an ocean.  However, we knew the local community pool was just around the corner from the movie theatre and so our decision was made.
          On the days the theatre showed an Esther Williams movie, we arrived  ready with swimsuits in our bags.  We saved our candy and magazine money and then, after watching Esther on screen and memorizing every move, we raced around to the pool, slapped down our entry fee and prepared to swim by copying everything we had seen.
          Needless to say we learned to swim underwater before we ever learned to swim on top of it.  We thought it was marvelous to start at either side of the shallow end of the pool and swim towards each other, underwater, with our eyes open and big smiles plastered over our faces.
          After we had mastered that, it was time to attempt backstroke, making sure our shoulders came up out of the water just like Esther’s, then turning from backstroke to breast-stroke…we had a wonderful time.
          Even today, I sometimes find myself copying Esther Williams’ moves as I swim around my local pool, smiling at the trees and shrubs, pretending to be just like my idol.  Memories are wonderful things.



         
         
         

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

A Slower, Gentler Time


          Last week, I took myself off to the local cinema complex to enjoy a good movie.  I was nearly knocked over by the countless number of young folk elbowing their way into two separate theatres to see the latest offering in the blood and guts department.  The favorite for the young people that week was a movie featuring children hunting other children while adults looked on and cheered.  The concept made me shudder.  Talk about stepping backwards into history and the days of Rome and the gladiators.
          These days it seems that people attend movies not so much to be transported by their imaginations into beautiful places or to enjoy a tender love story or amusing comedy, but to have their ears bashed with extremely loud noise that passes for music, to have people being shot, stabbed, dismembered or otherwise disposed of, and to watch scene after scene of either car crashes, car chases or car explosions.  This is entertainment for today’s youth.
          And that of course, had me remembering…
          Prior to taking my granddaughter on a long promised vacation to New York and Europe last year, I asked her to watch two movies with me.  I explained that, since we’d be playing tourist while in New York and visiting the Empire State Building, I wanted her to see how it had been featured in so many great movies.  I guess I wanted her to be impressed with actually standing on the same spot as some famous people.  The two movies were: An Affair to Remember and Sleepless in Seattle. 
          Now, An Affair to Remember is one of my all-time favorites.  I’ve watched it so many times I can practically mouth every line of dialogue along with the stars.  For me, it has all the elements a terrific movie needs…wonderful actors, gorgeous scenery, brilliant writing, tender love scenes and a good cry before the end.  And since ‘Affair’ is delightfully referred to in Sleepless in Seattle, and also features the Empire State Building as an important part of the movie, I thought it a perfect follow-up to ‘Affair.’


 Tasha and the Empire State Building

          So there we were in my daughter’s living room, DVR remote on hand... Three generations of movie goers ready to be swept off into celluloid heaven by the debonair charm of Cary Grant and the subtle humor of the beautiful script.  At least that’s what I thought would happen.
          I was stunned therefore, and admittedly a little miffed, when, at a most poignant part in the film…a scene where the two would be lovers are making plans to meet in six months time at the top of the Empire State Building, my daughter sighed and said: ‘Can we fast forward through this Mum?  It’s kinda boring.’
          Huh?  One of the sweetest, most touching scenes in the whole movie was considered boring?  I was not amused.  And, although I insisted we persevere with watching all the movie to the end, it did make me realize that in this hurry, hurry, hurry world we live in today, there is no place for something as gentle, as simple as a cinematic love story.  And that makes me very sad.