Thursday, March 31, 2011

On the Occasion of Blogiversary #6


and Spring Fundraising Day One, I wondered how I might best go about the business of separating the nice people who come here from their hard-earned cash.

And then, suddenly, a thought rang out.

Well, a memory, actually, heaved up unbidden from the recesses (or after school detentions) of my mind; the remembrance of a charmed ritual from long ago in the age of steam powered Walk-Mans (Men?) and rotary phones; a time when our local "drive-in" (a big, outdoor iPad that wouldn't work until sundown and with worse speakers) would offer all-night runs of horror movies that were, um, awful.

Really. Just awful.

And the deal was, you paid to leave.

In retrospect, it was kind of brilliant in its understanding of the relationship between the sacred space of the drive-in and the mating and drinking habits of the young adults of the surrounding communities.

Because they seemed like relatively safe places to parents (with all the signifies of suburban security; high fences, a business license, snacks, playgrounds, family-friendly features most nights, and drowsy, off-duty cops in case some unsavory elements tried to ruin everyone's wholesome good time), during good weather drive-ins became a unspoken-of refuge for ennuified and/or horny teenagers who did not otherwise have reliable shelter and privacy arrangements, but did have access to, say, a Camero under whose hood one could fit an ample supply of cheap beer and/or fortified wine as a hedge against the drive-in police finding your main stash in the trunk.

It was tricky business, but if you stopped 1/4 mile up the road and secured your booze correctly, it was a good bet that if you drove with care over the gravel lumps and tank-trap-sized pothole on your way up the driveway, you'd slide on in without bursting a bottle of Boone's Farm near the engine and reeking up your ride for a week.

It was also a good bet that if you were, like so many of us, a girlfriendless loser during much of your testosterone-berserk formative years, you were going to make the same trek using the same liquor-muling strategy, but with a carload of your fellow, bored, testosterone-maddened pals because it was something to do and anyway Brad's older brother had said that in some of the movies they actually show some nekkid girls!

Doin it!

Whatever the Hell "it" was supposed to be.

And so, as the sun ran away to the West, in the burnished glow of one of a rapidly dwindling number of pre-Reagan summer evenings, we would stop dandling on the swings while smoking and calling each other "queer" and punching each other in the arm and straggled back to our hulking American cars for the evening's entertainment, determined to hold out until the last credit on the last reel of schlock had rolled, and the eastern sky had given back its star-frosted black ninja peejays and picked up the color of new denim.

And there's the rub.

Because, sure, with enough beer and/or carnal distraction you might be able to laugh or chug or ignore or frottage your way through "Frogs" or "The Boggy Creek Monster".

But by 1:30 in the morning that little pre-hangover/smoke-too-much headache is starting to build real a sizable lead in the primaries. And the beer is warm or gone, and you have seen not one, single bare titty (let alone some nekkid girls doing it! Your brother's a liar, man!) all night , and your companions -- who had all nobly pledged to pass the night by your side in this Gethsemane of Roger Corman and Hammer Film gorestravaganzas -- are passed out or bored out of their minds...and suddenly slogging through "My World Dies Screaming" and "Vampire Circus" just to say you did it seemed like an amazingly dumb idea.

Again.

And so, once again, you all dig up the dough to buy your parole from horror movie hell from the sleepy guy at the exit and, as "Exorcist II: The Heretic" fades to an unlamented black and the opening credits for "Two Thousand Maniacs" flare luridly to life, you join the short line of cars waiting to roll out into the heart of a suburban soul's midnight, towards a bag of sliders and home.

And the "Paying to Make It Stop, Please" model prevails once again.

Now sadly I don't have access to something as perfect for this task as "The Corpse Grinders"...

(Oh wait.

yes I do)

...but I do have a fund-raising goal in mind, and an apparently unlimited supply of Republican political action commercials more chilling and terrifying than "Manos: The Hands of Fate" with a side of "Devil's Rain" (Thanks Koch Brothers!)

One of which will played here each day until my dreams of avarice modest goals are reached.

Or until I get bored with it and go get a bad of sliders.

So won't you please

help stop the horror :-)

Thank you.

Your pal,

driftglass






12 comments:

Capt. Bat Guano said...

Drifty, you sparked a long dormant memory. I had forgotten all about The Corpse Grinder, my cousin and I loved to go see crap like that but I don't remember signing any Certificate of Assurance. Thanks for prodding me into a deep state of sentimentality.

mahakal said...

Happy blogiversary DG. Wish I had some scratch to send.

prof fate said...

FSM help me, but I've seen every one of the movies you mention. Even "Corpsegrinders", though in my case it was on late-night tv.

(I missed it during its week-long at the drive-in, when it was playing at the bottom of a double bill with "Bloodsuckers". I remember thinking at the time that it sounded like a convenient arrangement: "Ok, you guys suck the blood, and then you guys grind up the corpses.")

So what's in your cat food?

I've never been sure whether this familiarity with grade-Z cinema is a fact for which I should be proud, or profoundly ashamed. Or both.

Hef said...

Instead of Roger Corman and Hammer "Filem" you should have stuck with Troma Studios...more T&A production value pound for pound. Sendin' a love offerin' for all those traumatic teen memories flooding back into my brain. (Thanks for yet another display of your Twainian writing skills.)

Cirze said...

You rock and roll, Dg.

Good luck on the drive.

My question revolves around a horrorfest that I attended at a downtown indoor theatre when I was in the 4th grade where an alien took off his dark glasses to attack a woman just returning from a date, which caused her to faint in horror and me to run from the theatre and spend the rest of the afternoon at the candy counter awaiting my Mother to COME PICK ME UP!!!

Anyone know the title of that sweet memory?

Love ya,

S

M. Krebs said...

The one on the far right there... Is that Jon Stewart or Edward James Olmos?

Habitat Vic said...

Oh man, memories.

Summer '72, Dad's car, drive-in in Marshfield, Wisconsin. Cute Candy-Striper girlfriend. Boone's Farm. Dent car on the way out, but got to second base during Dr. Phibes (Vincent Price) movie. Worth all the trouble.

prof fate said...

Suzan:

The movie was Roger Corman's "Not of this Earth" (1957).

I remember it scared me pretty thoroughly, too, when I first saw it on the afternoon movie, back in the mid-60s. (Good thing you didn't stay for the flying head-squisher sequence!) And for a Corman flick, it still holds up surprisingly well.

Rehctaw said...

A 1967 Olds 98 LS(with jump seats, how cool!) to the drive-in on Rt 41 (Thanks John Prine). We avoided the booze breakage by stuffing a couple of broke volunteers into the acre and a half trunk where they could hide beneath the lawn chairs and blankets or behind the cooler full of sodie pop...

We didn't do horror fest though, we were all about the Sci-Fi All nighters. Pretty much everything else you describe? Dead on, solid perfect.

Thanks for the memory.

How Freudian of you to call it a "bad of sliders".

Sorry I can't speed up the fund drive right now, but hopefully tomorrow night's mega jackpot will come through. That's the only missing piece of my retirement plan. Should it happen though, you're on the top of the list.

double nickel said...

Fun fact: the Drive-In theatre of my youth is still functioning in Flin Flon, Manitoba, and will be opening for the summer any day now. Being north of the 54th parallel, the downside is that the shows don't start until after 11PM come mid-summer.

MR Bill said...

The Swan Drive in is still going strong in Scenic Trendy Blue Ridge GA..Some years back they switched from cheesy porn,biker movies, and bad horror to first run flicks..sad, really..
And I hadn't thought of the execrable and inexplicable "Manos, hand of Fate" in years. Damn you.

zombie rotten mcdonald said...

I fear that this plan may backfire on you driftglass.

Seems we have some folks that LIKe terrible movies.