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Saturday, August 25, 2012
The Wee Hours
Sometimes I wish I worked nights, like an overnight shift at a hotel desk or something. I'm not unhappy with my job, I just love the wee hours of the night--even though I'm often more content when going to bed early--and my 9-5 job limits my contact with that time.
I love the feeling of being up late at night or early in the morning when everyone else is asleep. I feel like the only person on a post-apocalyptic earth, and peacefully so. And I love the significance of the few human encounters that occur during those hours. There's a profound bond shared by two strangers when they are the only two stirring souls in each others' immediate lives; even if they don't speak, they notice each other in a much more meaningful way.
I also enjoy the peace of those hours. They are great times to reflect. They are also great times to create: my filter as a writer subsides and I am able to producer more interesting products deep into the night.
I think I would also enjoy work that simply allows me to wait in quiet. I could be wrong, it could prove extremely boring. But I think I would like it.
Monday, August 20, 2012
Top 5 Sports Films
My top 5 sports films. I haven't seen every sports movie, but I made a list anyway. Goooo blogs!
Widely regarded as one of the greatest documentaries of all
time, Hoop Dreams remarkably follows
not one but two basketball players from elementary school through their college
careers. It is impressive, fascinating, entertaining (though its 3-hour run
time may test the patience of many viewers) and poignant. It also affords the
world a window into one of the gentlest souls it will ever encounter.
4. Happy Gimore
This is Adam Sandler’s funniest movie (face it, Billy Madison falls apart after Billy
leaves Ms. Vaughn’s class). It features a ludicrous premise, a terrifically
memorable antagonist (Shooter McGavin) and a hilarious use of Bob Barker. Few
films are so entertaining.
3. The Hammer
I was shocked that an R-Rated, Adam Corolla-written film could
be so tame. I was even more shocked that it could be so sweet and earnest.
Rather than relying on crude humor and going for big, cheap laughs, The Hammer takes a less-is-more approach
and goes for pleasant chuckles and moments of genuine human connection that
just make you smile. It all adds up to an underdog story that you can’t help
but root for. The Hammer is a real
diamond in the rough.
2. Goon
Goon begins as an
extremely crude and violent comedy, and it’s hilarious. But in the second act
the humor fades away and it becomes a touching underdog story. The transition
is so well-done that I hit a point when I realized I hadn’t really laughed in
30 minutes and I didn’t care (well OK, I cared a little bit because it was so
funny, but I still liked it!) This film raises important questions about
discerning and responding to your calling. It gave me a lot to think about, it
made me want to be a better person, and it made me smile A LOT. Very, very few
movies have done that. It also has a great “aftertaste.”
1. Sugar
This story of a Dominican baseball player in America isn’t
about a baseball player as much as it is about a foreigner who finds himself in
a strange new environment. Sugar
communicates so much without ever saying it out loud, and it does so not due to
the acting, directing, screenwriting or anything else individually, but rather through
the perfect sum of each of its wonderful parts. Whenever I think of great films
of all genres, Sugar comes to mind
very quickly.
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