Raiders of the Lost Ark may be the best action/adventure
movie of all time. Even with the passage of time (30 years?!) the film is
superb, with great sequences, well developed characters, and special effects
that have lost none of their luster (perhaps because they didn’t rely on
old-tech green screen techniques nor require stop-motion monsters). I was up
till two or 2:20 in the morning last night watching the ol’ DVD and was
astounded by the beauty of the thing: the cinematography, the
writing/directing, the acting. There’s a lot to take away from a movie like
Raiders…I’m sure that much of my interest in “pulp” fiction has to do with my
exposure to this film at a young age.
Why was I watching Raiders at two in the morning? ’Cause
it was going to be a long, sleepless night after yesterday’s Seahawks loss
regardless. Plus I wasn’t done drinking.
I have often thought (and stated to people who cared)
that it’s too bad someone has to lose these games…though generally only when it
comes to games that didn’t involve my team. I mean, I would have had a little sympathy
for Tony Gonzalez had the Seahawks sent him packing with yet another play-off
loss on his resume...but certainly not enough that I would have traded a Seahawk
win and a continuation of the team’s fairy tale season. Unlike a lot of locals
who today were walking around spouting optimism about how great our team is going to
be “next year,” I have no such delusions. Not anymore: I felt the same thing at
the beginning of 2006 (after our Super Bowl loss) only to watch the team crumble
year after year without ever making it back to the NFC Championship game again,
let alone the Big Dance. Optimism for the future is bullshit when it comes to the NFL…ask Dan Marino
about optimism. Or Donovan McNabb. Or even Peyton Manning. This year was
special…surprisingly special due to a conspicuous lack of injuries and
unexpected big plays and quite possibly some underestimation of our ability on the part of
some opponents. Personally, I believe we were set-up well to run the table at
the end…but we couldn’t close the deal in Atlanta. And while the Falcons might
beat the Niners (who are favored by Vegas odds) I don’t think they can beat
either of the teams left in the AFC. Not that they shouldn’t be given the
opportunity to try, mind you…
Ugh. It’s just the unnerving FINALITY of the game that bites.
The game ends and you wish it ended just a little differently. And they play
the highlights on the news and ESPN and you’re watching, knowing what will happen, but
hoping this time the re-play will show something different…and of course, it
doesn’t. And no amount of wishing or venting or second-guessing or wild eyed
gnashing of teeth is going to alter the outcome in the slightest. You’re just
left with a result that comes up just a little short. Like the Titans missing
the end zone by a yard in the Super Bowl.
Oh, and I know there are fans of other teams that will
tell me to quit my bitching, that Seattle has little to complain about compared
to, say, a Chicago Bears fan who watched their team start 7-1 and miss the
play-offs despite ending with double-digit wins. I’m sure Buffalo Bills fans would trade their
lot for ours, having missed the play-offs every year since realignment in 2002
whereas the Seahawks have been to the post-season seven times in the last
eleven years; a veritable embarrassment of riches compared to most NFL teams.
And, hey, it’s only a sporting event…with all the real
tragedy and death that’s happened in this country over the last few months, the
loss of a football game and the end of a season is NOTHING by comparison. Let’s
have a little perspective, here.
But for Yours Truly, who tends to get emotionally
entangled in his passions with embarrassingly little effort, it’s still a tough one to
swallow. I was having a hard time focusing on anything besides football the
last couple weeks…well, apart from my boy, but certainly I was worthless for anything work-related.
Heck, I made it a point to go see The Hobbit Saturday (more on that later)
specifically to turn my football brain OFF for three hours the other day…and it
was a much needed break.
So in a way (though it’s challenging to find a silver lining) I
suppose it’s for the best that the ‘Hawks are going into the off-season. I will almost certainly be more productive with less investment in the outcome of
the next couple weeks’ games. But it’s tough. I’m kind of a putz about these
things.
[and one last Blood Bowl related side note: I ran a mock
match Friday night between the Orkish ‘Hawks team and Skaven Falcons to see who
would win and the game was TIED at the end of regulation…due in part to the rats scoring a last second TD on the final turn of the match that made it 2-2.
The orks actually went into half-time with a 2-0 lead after a dominant first
period (in a strange mirror opposite of the actual game) and kept the skaven
from scoring until the final quarter (last four turns) of the game. However, I
didn’t bother playing out the over-time period to a final end result because
A)
It was super-duper late (and I needed to get
SOME sleep before a 24 hour stint of single-parenthood on Saturday), and
B)
I was a bit disgusted by the skavens’ ability to
get behind the Seahawks secondary and tie it up in three turns and, frankly,
was (superstitiously) afraid that an OT win in my Blood Bowl match might have
some correspondence-voodoo effect on the actual outcome of the game. And I
wasn’t confident in the orks ability to stop the rats if they won the coin toss
and received the ball first.
Okay, that enough of that. I’m sure there’ll be more
Blood Bowl silliness in the future, but right now I’m going to take a break
from all football-related ANYthing. All apologies for my self-indulgence.]
Now, if you'll excuse me I see there's a new episode of Downton Abbey awaiting my attention.
; )
watching team sports = emotion
ReplyDeletei thought you as a fellow scorpio would understand that. ;)
you can't expect to feel the joy you feel when they win without accepting the disappointment when an important game is lost. cherish the pain, it only mirrors your joy. :)
it would be weird if you felt "normal" after such a harsh loss. if you did, why watch anyway...?
ps: i wish i knew why, but i also enjoy downton abbey. :D
No maybe about it. Raiders is the greatest. Sorry Star Wars, it just is.
ReplyDelete(aka Rusty Battle Axe) Could be worse. You could be from Detroit. Like me.
ReplyDeleteNow, at long last, I know why the Seahawks lost.
ReplyDeleteJB jinxed us with his Blood Bowl simulation.