Groundhog Day, 2013, M-22 |
Sometime early in the dark,
David looked at his watch and announced, “It’s Groundhog Day,” disturbing my
dreams and nudging my sleepy brain in an entirely new direction. A little
confused? Judge for yourself--
“Groundhog Day” is one of my
favorite movies. I always remember the first time I saw it, and how a few
repetitions into the radio alarm scene that wakes Bill Murray up in the
morning, over and over, I thought, Okay, okay, enough. But then it went on, the day repeating again and
again but never quite the same way, because the visiting TV weatherman
remembers the previous Groundhog Days, learns from his experiences, and
finally—well, either you’ve seen it or you haven’t. If you haven’t, what are
you waiting for? Since that first viewing, every time I’ve seen it again--so
many times I’ve lost count: back when we had television and David would be
channel-surfing and come upon it, he’d try to hurry past before I could
exclaim, “Oh, it’s ‘Groundhog Day!’”--there have been parts I’ve remembered and
anticipated and other parts that surprised me all over again. “Oh, I’d
forgotten that!” I never get tired of it. In my book, “Groundhog Day” rates 5
stars.
A few evenings ago we watched
a very different kind of movie, “Seeking a Friend for the End of the World.”
I’d seen the preview (sorry, can’t call it a “trailer,” no matter how
ubiquitous that term becomes) and thought it looked interesting. Indeed it was.
A quiet, middle-aged insurance agent goes to his office as usual, but nothing
else is as usual: traffic is a worse mess than ever before, many people have
not shown up for work, and the challenge of selling insurance has never been
greater, because—in three weeks an asteroid is due to collide with the earth,
bringing about “the end of the world”! He goes home and finds that his wife has
left him. Also, a neighbor has gotten his mail by mistake for weeks and not
bothered to get it to him until now. In that old mail is a letter from an old
girlfriend that closes with, “You were the love of my life.” What else has he
to do in the three remaining weeks other than try to reconnect with that old
girlfriend? The neighbor, a young Englishwoman, distraught at having missed the
last flights out of the country, wants nothing more than to be back home with
her family in England. Random, senseless rioting and violence break out at
night, friends and strangers engage in orgies, and in one sweet homage scene to
“On the Beach,” another end-of-the-world film, families relax by the seaside.
It is summer, after all, even if the world is about to end.
In my sleepy, only half-awake
state I couldn’t help wondering what kind of movie would result if “Groundhog
Day” were combined with “Seeking a Friend for the End of the World.” First I thought
that the last day of the world should be Groundhog Day, repeated over and over: because earth’s inhabitants had
no hope of another spring, let alone Thanksgiving or Christmas, they would have
to celebrate Groundhog Day, even
knowing that there would not be six more weeks of anything. And then, of course, they must re-live the last day
of the world over and over again. What do you think?
Or else, instead of Groundhog
Day being the last day or even a day three weeks from the end, it could be six
weeks from the end, six weeks before
the asteroid will collide with earth. Would it matter if the six remaining
weeks were winter or if there were hope of an early spring? Neither “On the
Beach” nor “Seeking a Friend for the End of the World” has the world ending on
a snowy winter day, but the last scene of “Seeking a Friend” is one that fits
easily into a cold-weather scenario. See it for yourself.
Can you imagine how you would
want to spend not only your own last days but the last days of the world? Is it
ever too late to learn how to live?
4 comments:
Great post, Pamela.
In someways, the 'end of the world' (as we know it) is something people are facing every single day. Choosing to live intentionally? That's the best.
Thanks, Alexis, for visiting and leaving an important thought.
I think you might have Cabin Fever, Pamela, lol! When we start combining things like this we're usually either on a creative roll or we need to get out more. *grin*
Oddly, perhaps, I have felt no cabin fever at all this winter but am luxuriating in every hour (now and then a whole day!) at home. Feels good to me. But you did say "or," right?
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