Friday, January 11, 2008

God is Clear

Here's a great story my niece Katie sent to me about a conversation she had with her daughter Sarah on the way to school...

On the way to Sarah's school this morning, we are listening to "Indescribable" by Chris Tomlin, and she is singing as loud as she can. Then I don't hear her anymore, so I turn back and she is staring up at the sun and smiling from ear to ear.

This was our conversation:

KT: "What are you doing Sarah?"
Sarah: "Smiling at God."
KT: "Do you see Him?"
Sarah: "No, he is clear, but he is there. Do you think Grampa is an angel with him now?"
KT: "Oh, I am sure he is."
Sarah: "Hi Grampa!"

When Jesus said we should have the faith of a child, it seems this is the type of the faith he was talking about.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

National Treasure 2: Book of Secrets (2007)

Can you make a good action flick with little gun play, no body count and no sex that is both entertaining and educational? Before the original National Treasure, Hollywood would have said No. Now, they realize the answer is Yes and that Yes equals Money.

So, it is no surprise that Disney created the sequel to National Treasure called Book of Secrets. After stealing the Declaration of Independence to uncover a treasure the first film, this time, Ben Gates (Nicolas Cage) defends his family name against accusations that his ancestor was the architect to Lincoln's assassination.

The original cast returns, in addition to Ed Harris as "Joe Bad Guy" and Helen Mirren as Cage's mother who joins the fight to restore the Gates name. In short order Gates and his team fly to Paris, find entry to Buckingham Palace and the White House, hang with the President of the US, find a secret in the Library of Congress and scour behind the faces behind Mount Rushmore.

A lot happens in a short amount of time and if you suspend your disbelief you will find Book of Secrets a very enjoyable and quick moving family film. Cage, as always, is likable and believable. The rest of the cast funny and solid.

Take the kids, buy the popcorn, shut your brain off and enjoy the ride. Book of Secrets is a fun time at the cinema.

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

I Am Legend (2007)

Can a film about a man and his dog alone in an empty New York City ravaged by a mutated virus work? I Am Legend sure tries, but doesn't quite do it.

The problem isn't with Will Smith's performance as it is with the script. Attaching yourself emotionally to the main character is a critical component to a successful film experience. I never once felt I was in the shoes of Will Smith. Never.

Why not? Why did I feel emotionally attached to the lone-man-survivor Tom Hanks in Castaway and not to Smith in I Am Legend? Simply because Castaway takes you on the journey of figuring out how to survive on your own. I Am Legend skips that and plops you in the world after everyone is gone. Smith runs around in his car with his high-powered rifle hunting wild game. How do I connect with that out of the gate?

The volleyball in Castaway is replaced by a German shepherd in Legend. The hope brought by the picture of his wife in Castaway is replaced in Legend by nightmares about Smith's wife and children during the last days of New York City.

I'm not saying that I Am Legend should be Castaway in NYC, merely stating why the one film worked for me and the other didn't.

Smith's performance was wasted here. The end of the film is anti-climatic, the special effects not very believable and emotional attachment to the main character missing... combined this makes I Am Legend average at best.

Monday, January 07, 2008

The Funeral

Celebrating one's life is much more important than mourning one's death.

In celebrating my father's life, his success in family and in faith was immensely evident at the Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church in Hayesville, NC. The small church was packed with family and fellow parishioners.

We were blessed to have every single child, all but two grandchildren, and all but a few great grand children in attendance. My father's two remaining siblings, his brothers with their wives, also made the trek to the funeral. My father's example, my father's faith, my father's humor was interspersed among the people present to honor him and say a goodbye to the shell we call his body laying at the front of the church.

The night before we celebrated my father's life through stories and memories. My sister's house was overflowing with family, all packed into a few rooms as we shared our numerous and very funny memories of Dad. From dismissing school early far before the end of the school day when he was a cheerleader in high school, to his navy days and numerous, funny nicknames, to his parenting skills that included hitting golf balls at his children. Each story ended with an abrupt and appreciated burst of laughter.

Standing next to my Father.

At the funeral, I stood by my mother next to the opened casket as each family member passed by to say their final goodbye to my father. I was touched to be able to stand in a place of such honor. Tears and hugs were in plentiful supply.

The funeral Mass was wonderful. Almost each of my father's children participated in the Mass via readings, song or prayer of the faithful or other aspects of the Mass. One of my brother's gave a wonderful eulogy and, afterwards white doves were released along with another prayer.

The family-only gathering.

Afterwards the local church offered a lot of food and companionship during this trying time. Later in the evening we had a family-only dinner gathering where we showed a DVD I had created in memory of my father. Not a dry eye in the house. We followed up the DVD with a funny Grampa Trivia Contest. I emceed the contest between the grandchildren boys and grandchildren girls. (BTW - the girls won).

We wrapped up the evening enjoying my father's favorite food... ice cream.

The day after the funeral everyone gathered in a large room in the back of a local Shoney's to enjoy a final meal together before everyone headed back to their homes. In what could only be called a divine serendipity, the female waitress serving us that day? Her name was Charlie, of course.

This entire experience was such a blessing. Wrapped in my father's death and funeral was Christmas, over an inch of snow, New Year's Eve and the local Possum Drop, a visit to a local winery and hours and hours of quality time between our large and growing family.

Above all else, this experience has taught me to embrace, not avoid, the process of death. We are all going to die. Going through this with my parents has shown me the simplicity and the beauty of our last moments on this planet. It has shown me just how hollow our body is without our soul. And it showed me that how we treat each other is far more important than any other achievement we can satisfy on this planet.

It was a life altering, life invigorating experience. Time with my mother. Time with my father. Time with my family. Time with my savior. I've embraced the greatest gift God offers us... time.

Don't waste it.