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From: 4s00th <4s00th@hushmail.com>
Newsgroups: alt.fan.prettyboy
Subject: Re: The Night Max Wore His Wolf Suit - "WTWTA Poster.jpg" (0/2) 250.6 kBytes yEnc
Date: Tue, 17 Nov 2009 23:11:10 -0500
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On Sat, 14 Nov 2009 16:24:00 -0500, NP-f31 wrote:
>The day after I found out my wife was expecting our first child I went
>out at lunch to a book store and bought a copy of 'Where the Wild
>Things Are' by Maurice Sendak. While I was in the store I noticed that
>they had stuffed versions of some of characters from the book. I got a
>stuffed Max and a stuffed Bison Wild Thing for what turned out to be
>my oldest son. I read that book to each of my children and used a
>scary voice when the Wild Things 'roared their terrible roars'. It was
>alternately frightening and reassuring to them. When the movie came
>out, my oldest son said, 'Dad, we've got to go see that movie
>together'. And so this afternoon, my two oldest kids accompanied me to
>see the movie 'Where the Wild Things Are' directed by Spike Jonze. It
>was a wonderful film and an amazing adaptation of a book I thought
>could never be made into a proper film. The Wild Things were perfect,
>a blend of puppetry, CGI and voice characterizations that brought them
>to life. Big Bird and Elmo never made me tear up, but these Wild
>Things did.
>
>What held the film together was Max Records, the ten year old who
>played Max. He was a delight to behold and well directed. Every frame
>of the film that he graced exuded an exuberant boyishness. Max showed
>us why we love boys. He is fearless and vulnerable at the same time.
>He can go from happy to the verge of tears in an instant. We watched
>him work through the dissolution of his family by watching the coming
>together and breakup of his Wild Thing family. In the end, it is love
>that saves the day.
>
>It's funny, my youngest son thought the film would be too babyfied for
>his too-cool-for-school, he was wrong of course, but his opinion is
>typical for his age. My oldest son viewed the film as a link to his
>childhood and his future. He recited some of the lines from memory and
>told me that when he has kids he's going to read that book to them
>just like I did to him. I'm not surprised. He's pretty sentimental, he
>was the boy who cried when Christopher Robin went off to school at the
>end of 'House at Pooh Corner'.
>
>If you have an opportunity to see the film, I recommend it. You'll
>certainly enjoy gazing at Max if you enjoy nothing else.
>
>Doc
>NP-f31
I often avoid such things -- I fall for boys so quickly and so
completely that by the end of the movie I'm heartbroken. I have pretty
much every episode of The Suite Life and have never actually made it
through a whole episode. And I understand that it's the characters I
fall in love with, not necessarily the actor, but it doesn't matter.
And, of course, the actor is on my mind for a long time after, too!
But it can be rather painful. And I still cry every time I get to the
end of the Pooh books and Christopher Robin goes off to school.
"Come and see me have my bath?"
-- 4s00th@hushmail.com
If you send email, I will reply to it here at asbl
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