I see dead people
Les and I stayed up last night and re-watched Grand Hotel. We really shouldn't have, since she works two 13 hour shifts on the weekends and I think she was regretting it this morning at 5:00 when the alarm went off. But it's a great movie, even if John Barrymore's character, Baron Felix von Geigern, dies in the end (something we both had forgotten - sigh).
We've gotten into the habit of watching old films over the past year or so. Lots of Bogart, with and without Bacall (we're both big Bogie fans). Sunset Boulevard. From Here to Eternity. The Apartment (long a fav of mine). Picnic (ditto). Various film noir classics. We'll be buying more.
Similarly, I posted just today a comment on Facebook, in a thread about two modern Christian pastors/authors/personalities:
But then, with VERY FEW exceptions, I've been making a point the last few years to only buy books on Christianity written by dead people. That way I don't have to worry about their "franchise," theology or finding out anything negative about them after the fact. C.S. Lewis, G.K. Chesterton, C.K. Barrett and R.E. Brown all read just as well as something written lately (actually, they read better) and I know they're not going to come out with a companion DVD series to sell to me, either.
I have always been something of an outsider, but as I get older I realize I am withdrawing more and more from contemporary society. We haven't had "TV," in terms of cable or even an antenna hooked up, for over a decade. I have stopped listening to and reading the news (again – my "news sabbaticals" tend to peak during election years). My reading and movie tastes are decidedly non-mainstream. And while I think I am actually fairly tuned in to some strains of current music, it tends to all be self-produced indie artists.
I don't think I'm special because of this – sometimes I wish I could talk about what's on TV, or sports, or whatnot. It would make social situations a little less awkward. No, what it really comes down to is realizing the old saw that, "The more things change, the more they remain the same." So much so that I no longer seek a lot of new stimulus. Old movies are fine. Their acting may seem a bit contrived, perhaps, but the characters are recognizable, their needs and desires are our needs and desires. There hasn't been a new plot created in what, 50? 500? 2,000? years. Times change. Technologies advance. Kingdoms come and go. Humans stay the same.
Somehow, I find comfort in that.
2 comments:
Didn't C.S. Lewis say something similarly about reading books from dead authors? ... I tend to agree with this sentiment, but a great friend has provided some books recently that *are* quite good (one of them is a fictional dialogue between JFK, Lewis and Huxley... "Between Heaven and Hell")
Chris,
If it wasn't Lewis, is was probably Chesterton. :o)
Post a Comment