Family Time -- Steve Smith
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With the knowledge that the following statement may generate more hate
mail than I’ve ever received, I am going ahead anyway.
The new “Star Wars” movie is a snoozer. In fact, it ranks right up
there with “This Island Earth,” “Gunslinger” and some of the other movies
that are heckled by Mike Nelson and his robots in the “Mystery Science
Theater” series.
I expect that “Star Wars: Episode II Attack of the Clones” will be
front-row fodder for Nelson and the gang in the movie “Mystery Science
Theater 8000” 20 years from now. The “Star Wars” series started going
downhill after the second movie of the first series of three. And
although I thought that the last one, “Phantom Menace,” wasn’t bad, it
still was not the matinee-quality flick I had hoped for.
Clearly, Emperor Lucas has no clothes. And that’s a shame, because our
family had high hopes.
You see, Cay and I don’t get to go to the movies by ourselves that
often. In fact, the year is half over and we haven’t seen even one adult
flick. Not that kind of adult flick, but the kind that may be rated PG-13
or R. We watch movies at home on the VCR, rented from a nearby store.
That store, by the way, gives us five days to watch each movie, not one.
Still somehow, I have spent the kids’ college fund on late fees.
Yes, there I am, week after week, turning them in on day six. When I
walk into the store to rent, the staff gives each other high fives. If
this store were in Las Vegas, I’d be getting a room and dinner comped. As
I write this, “Vanilla Sky” sits in my car ready to go back, the vanilla
getting moldy.
We saw “Star Wars” last weekend at Edwards Big Newport, although we
didn’t see it on the biggest screen. We opted instead for the stadium
seating next door to ensure that our two kids would not have to peek
around a bee hive to get a glimpse of the move. On behalf of all the
little kids in America to the person who invented stadium seating, here’s
a big “thank you” for making the movie experience a thousand times more
enjoyable.
The disappointment of the loser “Star Wars” movie was exceeded only by
the knowledge that one of our rare trips to the movies was wasted on this
bore. Family movies are rare, particularly ones that have a responsible
ending, such as seeing the bad guy get punished for performing his or her
evil deeds.
We took the kids to see “Star Wars” because it has a PG rating. But
movie ratings are not what they used to be, and it’s making it difficult
for parents to know what to let their kids watch. “Star Wars” is rated
PG, even though there is a decapitation, a mother dying in front of her
son (in his arms, actually), a description of Anakin Skywalker (later
Darth Vader) committing genocide and some heavy battle scenes.
The decapitation was the most graphic scene in the movie. It was
lessened by the fact that not a single drop of blood oozed from either
the severed head or the body, a quality I attribute to the light saber
that did the deed. I guess those light sabers cauterize as they cut.
Our daughter, who is almost 12, wanted to see “Lord of the Rings”
badly when it came out a few months ago. The movie is rated PG-13, which
means that it could contain images or dialogue about sex, drugs or
violence that are deemed inappropriate for children younger than 13. It’s
either some of those elements or it contains clips from the last Chicago
Cubs baseball game.
I asked around and found from a few parents that there was enough
content to make us hold off on “Rings” for a while.
Our son, 9, wants to see “Spider-Man,” but that’s rated PG-13, and he
won’t get to go. As faulty as the rating system may be, it does have its
place, and we’ve been using it to determine what the kids should not see.
There was a time when movies, TV shows and CDs did not have ratings
because the content was determined to be free of any objectionable scenes
or language. Today, there just aren’t enough movies for families, despite
the fact that most of them are slurped up and made successful by parents
eager to take their kids to a decent movie together.
So for now, we’ll see the G and PG movies when we can and continue to
rent the family movies from the place that let’s me have them for five
days. All I need now is a loan to pay my late fees.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers
may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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