SeizingMyDay

This is my daily journal that captures my life song-the personal experiences, the engaging stories, the humor breaks and the lessons I've learned.

My Thirty Favorite Movies of All Time

As I continue to take time to heal from my Achilles tendon surgery and avoid having to use my crutches, I am watching more movies. Since your movie preferences tell a lot about you, I thought I might take the time to identify my favorite 30 films. I tried to make it 20, but failed. I include the following in alphabetical order. Would any of them be on your list?

The Big Chill
Braveheart
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
Chariots of Fire
Die Hard
Father of the Bride
First Blood (Rambo)
Forest Gump
Gone with the Wind
Great Escape
Groundhog Day
Hoosiers
Indiana Jones Raiders of Lost Ark
Independence Day
It's a Wonderful Life
The Last of the Mohicans
Little Women
The Magnificent Seven
The Mission
Moulin Rouge
My Big Fat Greek Weddings!
My Fair Lady
Oh God
Planes, Trains and Automobiles
Risky Business
Rocky
Roxanne
Sound of Music
Shakespeare in Love
Top Gun

August 01, 2007 in Film | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

Memorial Day Needs to Be a Day of Remembrance

What a Memorial Weekend it has been! It's been a time for movies--Andy Garcia's The Lost City and Universal's United 93. Both in their own way challenge us to remember and to stay vigilant. The freedoms we so easily take for granted can be taken from us and can come under attack.

In Andy Garcia and Cabera Infante's The Lost City, we experience a family's love affair for Cuba and its capital Havana. The memories of what was is contrasted with the unpredictable and tragic impact of revolution and of freedoms lost. One family's struggle and the divisions it created becomes the vehicle to explore how fragile the values of free countries can fall victim to chaos an anarchy. We watch the rise of Che Guevara and Fidel Castro in response to a cruel and abusive Batista government. We watch suppression of demonstrations turn underground into covert plots to overflow tyranny. But the revolution turns as repressive as the government it overthrew. We watch the dismantling of freedom through the experience of Andy Garcia's nonpolitical character, Fico Fellove. Fico is the owner of El Tropico, an upscale Vegas-style nightclub. We see the communists outlaw saxophones and close the nightclub when two musicians are caught playing cards for money. Life as they know it dies a quick death. See the film, and you'll appreciate how blessed we are to have been born American and to have so many who have fought so hard to sustain the freedoms we so easily take for granted.

Memorial Day brought pride and tears. We attended the annual Memorial Day Tribute at the Griffin Cemetery in Westlake Village. The patriotic music, moving reenactments, Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, the fighter flyovers and the moving reactions of so many veterans in attendance is how every Memorial Day barbecue should be forced to start. We have come every year for the last five years. I hope it is a tradition we can continue. Watching parents who have lost children in recent wars put wreaths on the stage and hearing their comments in support of our country and our need to remain strong made for one meaningful morning.

But our day was not done! With an almost full theater, we took time to see the Universal Studios film, United 93, a movie that accurately portrayed the heroic actions of citizens on the hijacked flight that was to crash in Pennsylvania. The plane was on the way to Washington; it's target was the capitol building. Other planes had targeted each of the Twin Towers and the Pentagon. They had been successful. Once the passengers gradually came to realize that they were to die as a terrorist missile, they decided to take the plane or die trying. Their actions resulted in a crash of United Flight 93, but it saved the capital and who knows how many lives. May we never forget. May we always be vigilant. May we be ready to do our duty to fight the fight against terrorism on every front.

Remember. Remember. Remember. Freedom is never secure. It is earned and reearned in every generation. We do not know whether on any given day that we will be the warriors called into action to defend that freedom. May we respond as nobly as the soldiers and the citizens that have gone before us.

May 29, 2006 in Film, Heroes, Politics | Permalink

24's Jack Bauer Takes Logan Down and Ends Up on a Cruise to China

Well, the fifth day of Fox's 24 is over. President Logan is in custody with a good chance of being killed by those who don't want him to squeal. Chloe has rebounded from the loss of Edgar into the arms of Morris. Who is Morris? He is a women's shoe salesman with unparalleled computer skills and a British accent who just happens to be Chloe's ex-husband we have never heard of. Secret Service Agent Aaron survives and is surely willing to help the First Lady get over the loss of her husband.

Thankfully, the story is set for 2007, and the "obvious" enemy is for 24 Day Six is China. That's right, Jack Bauer has been captured by the Chinese special forces for his attack on the Chinese Consulate in 24 Day Four. We see 2006 with Jack asking for death, which with a three-year Fox contract was unlikely, and the Chinese security agent saying, "You are too valuable to Kill."  We close 2006 with Jack on a very low budget cruise to China. It's apparent that it's a room without a balcony and the midnight buffet is probably water and rice.

There are questions that remain. Did President Logan and his gaggle of coconspirators arrange to have the Chinese special forces take out Jack? Did the French agent that was cheated by Jack help the Chinese? Will Audrey ever be able to consummate her love for Jack? Will the enemies of the US finally realize that the only person they have to really worry about is Chloe? Will China's economy survive the ill will generated by 24 fans if anything happens to jack Bauer when in their custody? Should we write President Bush to negotiate the release of Bauer before the 2007 season to avoid damage to fragile diplomatic relations? After all, if President Bush can negotiate Jack's release from China, his poll numbers will obviously rebound!

For now, a true Fox 24 fan signs off for another season with plenty of things to think about until January 2007 when a new season makes Monday nights meaningful again!

May 23, 2006 in Current Affairs, Film, Heroes | Permalink

Sandler's Spanglish Touches on the Power of Love

When you read my journal entries, you are getting a picture--This guy loves movies! I do. I like going to the theater where I can get my popcorn and enjoy the widescreen experience between kernels! I also enjoy my DVD collection of films that I can watch as I fly the friendly skies of America as a professional speaker. On a recent flight, I took the time to view the 2004 movie, Spanglish.

In Spanglish, Adam Sandler plays John Klasky, a promising chef who finally achieves world-class status when Klasky's restaurant receives the coveted four-star rating from the New York Times Food Section. But it is Klasky's home life that is the focus of this surprisingly touching romantic comedy. I expected an Adam Sandler film to be funny; I did not realize how strongly it would touch me. The movie reinforced the importance of live, values and personal dreams!

This chef, labeled by the New York Times as the "best chef in America," can't say the same about his personal life. He is married to a neurotic, controlling, compulsive and insecure woman, Deborah (Tea Leoni). Deborah has a way of spreading her craziness to the entire household with a particularly devastating impact on her daughter.

Into this craziness and tension, comes Flor Moreno (Paz Vega), who has moved herself and her daughter away from Mexico to find a better life in the United States. Flor becomes the Klasky's Spanish-speaking maid. Flor must wrestle with her new surroundings and whether to allow her daughter, Cristina (Shelbie Bruce), to succumb to the wealthy Anglo-culture of Malibu or insist that, despite Cristina’s protestations, she stay true to her own working-class Hispanic heritage. In the process, Flor brings sunshine, love, and goodness into the Klasky home.

John suddenly realizes there is more a woman can give than headaches and criticism. Deborah's coldness is contrasted with Flor's warmth. Deborah's narcissism with Flor's integrity and values.

But why am I including this movie in my journal? I found tears coming to my eyes many times as I watched the story unfold. Somehow I realized how blessed I was to have Lorie as my wife. I realized that Lorie's warmth, her laughter and joy, her faith and goodness were treasures too easily taken for granted. Lorie is the woman I wished I had married first. I'm glad I did not settle, but I do wish I had met Lorie first. I wish I had not put Kathy and Sean through the pain of divorce. I wish I had faced that choice without taking a journey of sin.

I won't spoil the movie for you, but let me share that I am glad my life's story ended with love winning out. May I never forget to tell Lorie how much she truly means to me. I have found a life's mate truly worthy of the name. By the way, if you haven't seen the film, make sure you do!

May 10, 2006 in Family/Home, Film, Love | Permalink

Culture Wars and Victories

What a hectic two days! We arrive home after a resting and emotional trip to Tahoe and Angels Camp. There are piles of mail, a lawn that needs harvesting, a whining dog that needs some loving attention, e-mail to get caught up on, and a business trip to pack for. Somehow all of it gets done, and there is a bit of satsifaction in conquoring the challenge.

Sunday night was a study in contrast for the Paulson family. There was the glitz and glamor of the 78th Academy Awards Ceremony, and there was the homespun satsifaction of attending the Eagle Ceremony for a young man we had watched grow up before our very eyes.

We Tivo'd the Academy Awards and headed off for the Eagle Ceremony for John Francis Murphy IV at Westlake Lutheran Church. The Academy Awards this year was an exercise in obscurity. The movies nominated for Best Picture were not epics, they were niche movies with small budgets and even smaller audiences. Thank goodness they had clips, or people might not have even known what they were about. OK, I confess that I liked Walk the Line and Pride and Prejudice. I even found the Best Picture winner, Crash, a thought-provoking, well-acted movie. But as usual, the Academy and Hollywood are as out of the mainstream of America as you can be. All the buzz was about gay themes and transvestite characters. Still others focused on trashing US covert operatons and the drug industry. Emcee John Stewart said it best: "A lot of people say this town is too liberal, out of touch with mainstream America. An atheistic pleasure dome. A modern day beachfront Sodom and Gomorrah. A moral black hole, where inocence is olbiterated in an endless orgy of sexual gratification and greed. I don't really have a joke here. I just thought you should know a lot of people are saying that. I been to the parties!"

The Academy loves edgy pieces, and their ownly safe targets for antagonists are rich, evil business executives or Republican politicians. They save the best roles for liberal characters that can't win in the real world. As the emcee, John Stewart, said, "The Oscars is really, I guess, the one night you could see all your favorite stars without having to donate money to the Democratic Party. And it's exciting for the stars as well. This is the first time many of you have voted for a winner. No, it's good--enjoy. Enjoy your votes!"

I celebrate the freedom in America we have that allows people to be critical of America's culture, but don't suggest that their statements are courageous. Their "courageous" peices get awards. It would be courageous for a film to show a Republican character making a difference or an executive who actually turned a city around by investing capital to create jobs. Ah, but that would be seen as selling out. Courage is not standing alone in Hollywood; "courage" is saying something all liberals will applaud.

As I sat in John's eagle scout ceremony, the emcee quipped that the best supporting actor award goes to Debbie Murphy, John's mother, for all the work she has done to shepherd John through the scouting maze. This was America at its best. We celebrated values worth valuing! We talked about a young man giving over 300 hours of service, of going above and beyond expectations and leading other younger scouts.

The mayor of Thousand Oaks was there to congratulate John. There were letters from Presidents, a flag that had flown at the US Capital and a brief acceptance speech. This was an event worth televising. Other families had bought their young scouts to see what could happen to them if they work hard.

I congratulated one of the Scout Masters after the event. I told him that we had increased our support of the Boy Scouts ever since the ACLU had made them a target. He was gracious in his reply, "The ACLU has done some good things over the years, but their efforts against the Boy Scouts of America has taken dollars and hours of volunteer time away from being able to invest in the lives of so many young men like John Francis."

This organization has made a difference in my own life. I was a Boy Scout in Atlanta. It was an active troop with frequent outings and the expectation of reaching eagle was strong. I made it to Life Scout and was a member of the Order of the Arrow. It gave me a love of backpacking and a confidence in my ability to handle most survival situations in the wilderness. When I moved to California, I joined a troop that loved to camp and play, but there was no history of excellence. As a Life Scout, I was the most decorated scout they had in the troop. I did not reach eagle. The dogs I laid with were great kids, but they did not aspire to achievement.

Any guess as to which award ceremony means more to me and, I think, to America? Give me more eagle scout ceremonies and young men equipped and ready to be responsible young men. I'd rather support an organization that celebrates what is right with America and tries to perpetuate that than patronize Hollywood liberals eager to bash anything American in pursuit of artistic "excellence." Supporting freedom of expression does not mean we have to enjoy or pay ten dollars to see what they think is worthy of an Academy Award.

March 06, 2006 in Film, Heroes, Television | Permalink

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