Among my goals for this year is to spend less time watching YouTube videos and more time watching movies. YouTube is fine for background noise while I eat lunch. But does a competitive eater's video really need my undivided attention after Mom has gone to bed and the house is quiet? No, not really. I need to accept that it’s okay not finish a movie in one sitting.
You may disagree, but it’s not your life.
Over the past couple of nights I watched John Frankenheimer’s 1998 actioner Ronin. Back in the day I think I taped this when it was on cable and watched it once. While the car chases are still every bit as good as I remembered, now I’m able to appreciate the movie on other levels. It’s a film that accomplishes very much, with very little, and leaves you wondering if anything was actually accomplished at all.
Make sense?
The plot is simple: a group of mysterious men from disparate clandestine backgrounds are hired by a beautiful Irish woman to steal a silver case. What’s in the case? Don’t care. Probably diamond encrusted ice skates. But I digress. Rober De Niro’s Sam is the American in the crew and our main point of view character. He also seems to be the most savvy of the bunch, with a near sixth sense for danger.
“Lady, I never walk into a place I don’t know how to walk out of.”
Of course, no one in any movie ever has followed his own advice. If he did there wouldn’t be any conflict. Sam spends the entire movie walking into situations from which there’s no going back and from which there may be no way forward. The reward for us is watching him think on his feet and work around obstacles (a map and a camera are a spy’s best friends).
Simplicity is a skill.