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Village Squire, 1980-10, Page 50P.S. BY KITH ROULSTON Nearly everyone has a fantasy about what they would do in the unlikely chance they should win a lottery. Some of us would take trips around the world, some buy expensive cars or jewels. Mine would be a simpler pleasure. Of course my fantasy is even more fantasic than most people's because I never buy lottery tickets. But I can still dream. My winnings would go to supplying my vices: not booze or cigarettes or wild women (although the latter is the more tempting of the three) but books, plays and movies. Those are my addictions. 1 can't walk past a book store without going in. And getting out without buying at least one book is a matter of willpower akin to a drunk passing up a free drink. I've got a bookshelf full of books 1 haven't had time to read already. Plays, of course are part of my business and so I get to indulge myself more frequently than most people. But my lottery loot would most likely go to satisfy my cravings for movies. Movies have been the missing element in my social life in recent years.One of the disadvantages of living in small town Ontario is that getting out to movies can take a lot of concentration. I mean that in the city you can read the reviews in the papers and figure that the movie will be around for a month or two somewhere in the city when you can find time to see it. In small towns where there are often two movies a week at a theatre you have to be on your toes and have a babysitter on standby if you're going to get to all the movies you'd like (and when you've got four monsters . . . er children, it's hard to find a babysitter at all.) WAIT FOR TV? What the heck, you say, you can always wait to see it on television. I suppose. but somehow it's not the same. I mean how would you like it at live theatre if they interrupted the play every ten minutes for three minutes of ads or if people wondered in and out past your seat commenting on the action on stage or on the need tor more toilet paper in the bathroom or that the bulb was burned out in the refrigerator so you couldn't tell if the cake had green icing or was just sitting around too long. No. the movies on television may not cost $3.50 but you pay the price in other ways. I think if I was a movie writer or director I would cry at what happened to my masterpiece when it reached the tiny screen (although my sorrow would be eased by the residuals). And then there's another hazard to watching movies on television, modern PG/ 48 VILLAGE SQUIRE/OCTOBER 1980 movies anyway. A lot of movie people like to use realistic language today. You can argue whether or not this is artistically necessary but you can't argue with the results when a television station decides to protect the ears of the viewing public as one of our local stations sometimes does. The dialogue goes something like: "Listen you Bleep. I've had enough of your BLEEP, BLEEP." If you don't stop that I'm going to BLEEP your BLEEP, BLEEP, BLEEP." And the other guy says "Well BLEEP you too you BLEEP." Now isn't the BLEEP entertaining. Of course there was a time when movies on television were more enjoyable (for one thing they didn't have to bleep so many words). 1 think 1 really got hooked on movies when we got television back in the late 1950's. Back in those days the CBC used to fill the Saturday night gap in the summer vacated by the hockey games with a program on movies and much as I loved hockey ( that was in the days when the Leafs actually won) 1 could hardly wait for the movie to start in the summer. summer. The program was called Great Movies and it went back through the years to some of the classic movies of two or three generations. Fred Davis used to host the movie and the commercial breaks were something more than an excuse to rush to the bathroom or the refrigerator. After the commercials he would re -introduce you to the movie by telling you something of its history, who directed it and wrote it, who starred in it and some anecdotes from the making of the movie. Instead of being an interruption, the commercial breaks actually added something to the enjoyment of the movies. And of course it was a pleasure getting to see the great movies of so many decades. It's something that's missing on today's television schedules. In the early years of television you could catch classic old movies, just about any day of the week. Today they're about as common as finding gold nuggets on main street unless you happen to be lucky enough to be serviced by one of the educational channels which we out in the boondocks aren't privileged enough to get (we just help pay for it with our taxes). STAYING UP I got in the habit of staying up to watch the old movies on the late show before I got married. It almost ruined a promising marriage. 1, from a family that nearly always watched the late show married a girl from a family that collectively started to yawn at 9:30 and was invariably in bed by 10 or on rare occasions of celebrations 10:30 (and they were the city slickers and we the farmers). Anyway it doesn't matter anymore. While I'm still tempted, there's so seldom a late movie worth watching that I haven't seen before.that the marriage is safe. Coming in the November Village Squire Books, books and more books Our area is host to a wide range of bookstores, featuring everything from new to used and children's books. The Squire takes a look at some of the unique ones. Some fiction to start your winter reading The Village Squire introduces a short story by Canadian writer Brock Shoveller. Training with the Pros Angelo Nigro, from near Stratford, was a trainer with the Buffalo Sabres during the '70's. We have a look at one of the people who puts the pros on the ice. A value in children's books Elaine Townshend takes a look at a gentleman south of Clinton whose hobby is collecting children's books. Plus the latest news from the theatre and arts scene, a restaurant review', theatre in Harriston, a day trip and more about the interesting people and places in Western Ontario.