Janet, Moiya,
Bonnie and I saw A Late Quartet last night, thanks to the TIFF’s Film Circuit
who cosponsor with the 38th Season of Shuswap Film Society to bring
art films to this community. Volunteers
sell the tickets, take the tickets and have complimentary coffee and cake ready
for the patrons before hand. The
background music of the film is Beethoven’s String Quartet #14, so many of
those melodies there are written on my musical soul for the first time. There was a little Ogden Nash poem thrown in,
a little T.S. Elliot description of time past, present and future; mostly the
film was a good chance to see what happens when musicians who have played
together for years have to re-evaluate their entire lives when one of them is
diagnosed with Parkinson’s. We were at
the 5 pm show. Half way through the
movie, Bonnie leaned over and said, “Let’s stay for the 7:30 pm showing and see
this again.”
She forgot that
wasn’t possible because she had arranged a hot-tub party for 8 pm in the
evening. Women who can get their babies
in bed and asleep can gather in a hot tub and update each other on a whole week
of happenings. These are women who only
pass each other in the halls of the workplace and eat their lunches at their
computers. I go along to the hot tub
party – their topics move from Downton Abbey, to books they are reading, to the
latest antics of their children and sometimes a workplace story or two is
thrown in.
When I was leaving
the theatre I counted back to see which row I had been sitting in. Fourth from the back on the left hand side of
the theatre, and two in. Well into the
film, I felt something wet splash on my knee.
I looked over to see if Janet was having trouble with her drink, but it
was safe in the cup holder. Then I
wondered if she was crying in the film, but then why wouldn’t gravity take the
tears straight to the ground in front of her and not send them at a 45 degree
angle over onto my knee. Through my mind flashed the possibility someone having
a water gun and I was their target but any of my friends who might do that were
not with us last night. Now my mind was
90 % on the movie and 10% trying to figure out why a huge drop of water would
fall in the same place on my right knee at regular intervals. On the way home Janet told me that the
Salamar Classic Theatre has a government grant to do some renovations. Fixing the
roof to that it doesn’t’ leak could be written into that grant.
Mystery drops of
water, a terrific movie and a relaxing hot tub -- a lovely Saturday night.
Arta
No comments:
Post a Comment
If you are using a Mac, you cannot comment using Safari. Google Chrome, Explorer or Foxfire seem to work.