Without a doubt, one of my most favorite things to do in the WHOLE WIDE WORLD is to go to the movies. It used to be that I went to the movie EVERY SINGLE Friday night. I saw good movies and I watched REALLY BAD movies. It didn't seem to matter. I enjoyed the LARGE tub of popcorn and the company of my gal pals. My movie attending extravaganza went on for years, however, time took it's toll. Friends moved or lost interest and I have found myself wishing every Friday night that I was at the local Cinemark but I'm usually at home in my jammies watching television.
Yesterday Mark took me to the theater and when we got home (not about to let go of our time together) I rummaged through my vast collection of DVD's and pulled out About Time starring Rachel McAdams and Domhnall Gleeson.
I saw this movie in 2013 in the theaters. I don't know exactly what I expected when I went. I do like Rachel McAdams. I had geared up for a sappy, predictable love story that would be "good" but would leave no impression on me.
Wrong.
Again.
This movie has crept into my TOP-VERY-MOST-FAVORITE-MOVIES-IN-THE-HISTORY-OF-EVER list. I mean EVER.
We were watching this witty, heart-warming story last night. I went to bed thinking about it. I had dreams about it. Woke up this morning and decided to write about it.
The storyline is about time travel. When Tim (Domhnall Gleeson) turns 21 his father sits him down and informs him that the men in his family have the gift of time travel. His father, played REALLY WELL by Bill Nighy, asks him what he thinks he wants to accomplish with this gift. Tim throws out that he would probably want more money. After being told that money isn't the answer to life or happiness, Tim decides that he wants to use his gift to find love. REAL love.
Tim sets off on his adventure to find the love of his life (and does so brilliantly). Along the way he learns that his special ability can't shield him and those he loves from the problems of ordinary life.
Tim's dad watches from the sidelines as Tim repeats different scenarios to "better his position" in awkward moments. However, there comes a time when father sits son down to tell him the important stuff he has learned through a lifetime of time travel.
"And so he told me his secret formula for happiness. Part one of the two part plan was that I should just get on with ordinary life, living it day by day, like anyone else.
But then came part two of Dad's plan.
He told me to live every day again almost exactly the same. The first time with all the tensions and worries that stop us noticing how sweet the world can be, but the second time noticing."
And he did.
One of the songs playing in the background of the movies is Gold in Them Hills by Ron Sexsmith:
I know it doesn't seem that way
But maybe it's the perfect day
Even though the bills are piling
And maybe Lady Luck ain't smiling
But if we'd only open our eyes
We'd see the blessings in disguise
That all the rain clouds are fountains
Though our troubles seem like mountains
Every now and then life saysWhere do you think you're going so fast
We're apt to think it cruel but sometimes
It's a case of cruel to be kind
And if we'd get up off our knees
Why then we'd see the forest for the trees
And we'd see the new sun rising
Over the hills on the horizon
There's gold in them hills
There's gold in them hills
So don't lose faith
Give the world a chance to say
A word or two, my friend
There's no telling how the day might end
What would I change if I could travel in time? What life event would never happen and what would be the cost?
I'm glad I did it the way I did. Nope. Hasn't been perfect. I have dodged dirt and mud. I have ripped and torn the hearts of those I love. I'm still learning and trying and at times - failing.
"And in the end I think I've learned the final lesson from my travels in time; and I've even gone one step further than my father did: The truth is now I don't travel back at all, not even for the day. I just try to live every day as if I've deliberately come back to this one day, to enjoy it, as if it was the full final day of my extraordinary, ordinary life."