There
reaches a point in every young boy's life when he goes through physical and
emotional changes; he has reached the apex of childhood and begins the slow,
sometimes awkward transition from into becoming a man. These are formative years; what
happens during this time plays a large role in shaping the type of adult he will
eventually become. No, I'm not talking about puberty and all the embarrassing
baggage that entails. What I am talking about usually occurs around the
same time, though, when a young man wakes up one summer morning with the
compelling urge to blow shit up.
Unlike puberty, this fiery rite of passage is a communal experience, usually including friends of a similar age who are just as bored as you are (or at least have a stash or firecrackers or M-80s). Also unlike puberty, when you suddenly notice how wonderful breasts are but have no idea what to do with them, the average kid knows exactly what to do when the urge to blow shit up finally comes, which is to find some shit to blow up.
Unlike puberty, this fiery rite of passage is a communal experience, usually including friends of a similar age who are just as bored as you are (or at least have a stash or firecrackers or M-80s). Also unlike puberty, when you suddenly notice how wonderful breasts are but have no idea what to do with them, the average kid knows exactly what to do when the urge to blow shit up finally comes, which is to find some shit to blow up.
Some parents
reading this may assume such urges are an indication of potentially psychotic
behavior. Let me reassure you...just about every boy with easy access to
fireworks has engaged in such destructive activity at least once. They can't
help it; it is ingrained in the male psyche. To assume otherwise is living in
denial. If you truly think your son has never blown shit up for the sake
of blowing shit up, it's because he didn't run home to tell you that he
just blew shit up, just like he never emerged from the bathroom and said,
"Hey, Mom, I just masturbated!"
Unless you
birthed a maladjusted freak who gets his kicks by sticking a firecracker up a
cat's ass, the time-honored act of blowing shit up is simply
a normal part of the transition to adulthood.
The most
obvious targets of these urges are the toys they have
outgrown...G.I. Joes, Hot Wheels, train sets, action figures. It
happened to me around the age of 13 or 14. One day, after taking a long hard
look at the hundreds of Hot Wheels and Matchbox cars I'd spent the better part
of my first decade of life collecting but no longer played with, I came to
the decision that their retirement would
be best-realized by going out in a blaze of glory. And I knew just the guy to
help me...my friend, Karl. I may have had the objects for
destruction, but he had the artillery, courtesy of his older brother, who often
drove up north to an Indian reservation in Washington
to get real fireworks, not the glorified sparklers available in Oregon. Hence, Karl's
garage was almost always stocked with packages of firecrackers, Roman candles, cherry
bombs and M-80s.
So, one hot
summer morning in July, me and Karl trucked off to a remote area with my two
cases of race cars and his grocery sack of explosives.
Over the course of the next two hours, we blew up every single car to tiny
metal bits, and when we were done, I was exhausted-yet-satisfied. I'd sated an
urge that had been welling within me for a long time.
I would even
suggest this was an educational experience, though the lesson didn't really
sink in for another twenty years, when my wife dragged me along on another one
of her antiquing excursions. Displayed behind within a glass display case in
one particular store were dozens and dozens of Hot Wheels just like the ones I
blew up as a kid, only now priced at $20-100 each.
What did I
learn? Fucking remorse, that's what!
A word to
the wise, especially to those of you young enough to feel the
same destructive urges that I had...do not blow up your own toys. Blow
up your buddy's Star Wars action figures or your sister's Barbies.
Ignore your instincts, take your old toys and
stash them in the attic. Twenty years down the road, you can laugh your ass
off when some nostalgic boob offers you a hundred times what you paid
for them with your allowance money.
If
you're my age, currently beating yourself for trying to launch your G.I. Joe
into space with a bottle rocket, don't be too hard on yourself. You were only
acting as nature intended. You're normal.
What's abnormal
are the kids who do not outgrow the urge to destroy. Back
in the days before CGI took the fun out of special effects, these folks either
ended up doing time, or took their love of blowing shit up seriously
enough to make a living at it, such as those who created the visual effects for
most of the disaster movies in the 70s.
Today,
anyone with computer smarts can simulate a catastrophic train wreck just by
firing-up a laptop. Back in 1976, if you were lucky, you could work for a
studio that would pay you to blow shit up the same way you once did with Hot Wheels.
Which brings
us to The Cassandra Crossing, a fairly minor entry in the 70s disaster
sweepstakes, but one which appeals to the inherent destructive nature in most
boys.
The movie
itself is actually pretty good, once you get past the terrible dialogue, unbelievably stupid subplots (Martin Sheen has more WTF moments
than every other character combined) and the god-awful music score.
There's a potentially lethal plague onboard a European commuter train, and
only a small handful are immune. That doesn't stop the American government (of
course) from trying to deliberately crash the train in order to keep the virus
at bay. Their plan is to guide the plague-infested train to toward the
Cassandra Crossing, the rickety old bridge practically guaranteed to collapse
if so-much as a moth lands on it.
There isn't a whole lot of action until the train reaches the
Cassandra Crossing. But because this is a disaster movie, and because
there's been no gloriously destructive payoff thus far, it's a given that the
bridge will collapse and the train will meet its end in a fiery crash.
Here is
why The Cassandra Crossing is really awesome: Even back in 1976, it was
obvious we were watching a bunch of guys blowing up models. The special effects
aren't even the least bit convincing, yet the climactic scene is a lot of
fun. We know the
collapsing bridge is a model, we know the train is a model, but it's awesome for the same reason we loved destroying our old toys. We look at the climax
of The Cassandra Crossing and think, "You know, I should have
done that with my old Lionel Train set."
I think whoever was in charge of that scene really got-off on
blowing shit up as a kid. That's what ultimately makes The Cassandra
Crossing so cool...not its realism, but its obvious use of
miniatures and models that get blown up in the process. Those of us
who grew up in the 70s can appreciate the effort involved, just like earlier
generations can still marvel at Ray Harryhausen's stop-motion effects from the 50s and 60s. Sometimes, we kind-of like knowing how things in movies
are accomplished, especially if we are able to figure it out for ourselves.
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