When I go
to
the movies it's a religious experience. The theater is my
cathedral,
the ushers are my acolytes and the films themselves, my prayers
answered.
So you can appreciate why I reacted the way I did when my holy mass was
so rudely disrupted.
I was all
geared up to witness a romantic comedy. It started well, but then
the picture cut out and the lights came up. Patience may be a
virtue,
but if I was a saint I wouldn't need to see ten movies a week for
solace.
I twisted around in my chair and glared hard in the direction of the
projection
booth as if that would get the problem fixed sooner. I noticed a
guy in the center section (I sit on the side so that people don't try
to
step over me getting to their seats) who seemed even more uncomfortable
than I. No wonder--he had on a long coat and the air conditioning
wasn't nearly effective enough for it. The crowd started getting
a little antsy, but it wasn't until the manager walked down the aisle
that
things really got hot.
This guy in
the coat jumps up and starts shouting something I couldn't hear towards
the back of the theater and waving a shotgun around. People
weren't
taking him seriously until he fired a shot into the high ceiling.
Finally I could hear what he was shouting: "Watches, Jewelry and
Wallets."
He was nervous and sweaty and started grabbing valuables from the
middle
class patrons and stuffing them into a garbage bag.
He was
walking
down the aisle taking donations like someone collecting for charity
when
he finally came to me. Now it just so happens that I have a job
that
pays me well and I have been known to carry as much as two hundred
dollars
in my pocket at any given time. I don't carry a wallet, I just
keep
loose cash in my pockets so that I don't have to keep going to the bank
machine.
"Watch and
wallet" he says to me. It's the middle of summer, I have on a
short
sleeve shirt making it obvious I have no watch and also that this guy
is
no brain trust. I reach into my pocket and pull out a crumpled up
wad of twenty dollars bills. His eyes popped. Who would
have
thought all that money could come from someone like me? He was
obviously
very surprised, or maybe he thought I was stupid for revealing
how
much I had since he would've been happy with change from the
movie
ticket.
Well, there
was something about his insincere and sloppy portrayal of a bandit that
I didn't like and so I ducked under the gun, grabbed the barrel, rammed
the whole wad of cash right into his stupid gaping mouth, and kneed him
in the groin for good measure, just like they do in the movies.
The
cops picked up his projection booth confederate after a minor hostage
stand
off which ended with the projectionist, appropriately enough, kneeing
him
in the groin.
I received
a great big cheer from the audience, free movie passes for a month from
the management and a royal pain in the ass hassle from every news
reporter
for twelve thousand miles. I had my fifteen minutes, but what
really
bothered me was that they never showed the rest of that damn movie.
G. Bennett
Ulrich
2001
reprinted with permission
Death House Press