November
13, 2003
permanent
link
Today
is the day to join the flea circus.
PREORDER
MY BOOK!
If you're looking for the Paris Hilton parody and are unhappy
to have stumbled across this page back in action in its regularly schedule
programming, then click here, you
degenerate. If you'd like to learn more about the guys who made the movie,
and I think you should, click here.
Wednesdays, usually, I rank things. Today is Thursday. It's
a topsy turvy world, you know?
Rank: Ways of Crying at the Movies
- Beautiful/Proud Crying. This is something that only happens in the
movies or at the movies, when, of course, nobody is looking at you
to see how pretty you look as the tears roll down your otherwise composed
face. "O Captain, my captain..." it's touching, isn't it? Yes.
Back to business, you gentle rock, you. Downside: You sort of hope that
person you like turns to you and sees you weeping beauteously but then you
realize that they're probably not going to be as impressed as they should
be.
- Sloppy faced sobbing. They killed Ole Yeller and you're a snot nosed,
weeping fool. That's okay, though, get it out, big fella. Downside: When
the lights come up, you feel kind of sheepish.
- Forced crying. Julia Roberts is about to die, with Dolly Parton, Dylan
McDermot and Sally Field by her side and the tears aren't coming. You know
they should be, so you think about sad stuff, like the end of the world
or your lost earring or "Ole Yeller," and you squeeze a few out.
Downside: You feel like a jerk.
- Pretend crying. You really want Leonardo to go ahead and fall off that
raft and slide into the cold Atlantic but your girlfriends are going to
call you a Communist if you do anything less than act like your dog has
been shot, so you sniffle a little bit and maybe emit a small "Bwuh
huh huh." Downside: Not only do you feel like a jerk, you are
a jerk. Who cares if you cry?
- Crying because the person next to you stabbed you in the leg with a sharp
pencil at the movie theater. This time, you have a real reason to cry. Downside:
You need to do a better job picking your seats at the theater.
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All original work on this site is copyright 2002-03, Claire
Zulkey