Good King Wenceslas, look out
- Share via
SHERWOOD KIRALY
The other night Patti Jo and two other mothers took three daughters,
14, 14 and 12, to the movies -- to “Love Actually,” actually. They
knew nothing of the picture beyond what they’d seen in commercials
and newspaper ads.
Oh, they knew it was rated “R,” presumably for language or a
“sexual situation,” but by this time the daughters had heard boys
talking tough at school, and according to the blurbs in the ads --
well, you haven’t seen the words “charming” and “irresistible” so
often since Macaulay Culkin was little. A Christmas comedy with Hugh
Grant singing “Good King Wenceslas” -- how shocking could it be?
Well, not very, evidently, but it seems there was a running gag in
it concerning a soft-porn studio and this recurring bit, which was
progressively vivid, caught the mothers and daughters unprepared. The
daughters reacted silently; one of them put a hand up to block the
glare. The moms turned red and laughed helplessly all the way home.
Patti Jo called it a “parenting disaster.”
I told her hey: It’s not like you took them to “Bad Santa.”
Anyway, I’m no stranger to this business of traumatizing the
children, having taken Keaton to “Ghostbusters” when he was 4. I
thought it was just Bill Murray and the Pillsbury Doughboy, but it
turned out to be legitimately spooky in spots. We spent the last half
of the film in the lobby and I heard about it for years.
Traditionally it’s the father’s job to scar the son and the
mother’s to scar the daughter, so I guess our parenting is sound so
far. My own parents didn’t take little Sherwood to “R”-rated movies
because there weren’t any, but they got a TV when I was 4 and I
thought the badmen were shooting their guns into our living room.
The truth is you don’t have to be a kid to experience screen
shock. Years ago my grandmother went to “Midnight Cowboy” thinking it
was a Western, and when she came out afterward she had to sit down on
the curb for a minute.
We get over these little jolts. At least, we keep going to the
movies. Patti Jo told a 14-year-old classmate of Katie’s who’d missed
the outing about the “‘Love Actually’ fiasco” and the girlfriend
nodded and said, “I’d still like to see it, though.”
Patti Jo hasn’t given up on protective parenting; there’s no
fall-of-Rome in her. Katie thinks it might be fun to go see
“Gothika,” but mom has drawn her line in the sand right in front of
the box office. Of course, you can see a movie like “Gothika” coming.
It’s the charming irresistible ones that fool you.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.