Susie and I were born in the depths of the Great Depression,
a bit less than a generation before the advent of the post-World War II Baby
Boomers, but we have ridden along with the Boomers, senior associates, as it
were, through the doldrums of the Eisenhower years, the excitement of the
Sixties, the trauma of Watergate, the despair of the Reagan revanchement and Bush fiasco, and all the horribles of these
past years. The one certainty in an
uncertain world is that every year we all get one year older.
Advertisers and movie makers, allured by the buying power
and sheer size of the Boomer generation, have crafted their commodities to suit. As the Boomers have aged, Hollywood has
trotted along with them, making Beach
Blanket Bingo when the Boomers were teenagers and Die Hard as they approached middle age.
Now the Boomers, staring their own personal sixties in the
face, crave amusements appropriate to impending Senior Citizen status, and so,
yesterday afternoon, Susie and I took in RED
2, the sequel to the 2010 action comedy, RED. RED stands for
"Retired Extremely Dangerous," which is as perfect a three-word
encapsulation of an aging Boomer's fantasies as one could possibly devise.
RED 2 stars Bruce
Willis [58], John Malkovich [60], Helen Mirren [67], and Anthony Hopkins
[75]. The love interest is two young
hotties, Mary-Louise Parker [48] and Catherine Zeta-Jones [43.] Each one is an old friend whom we recall fondly
from their [and our] salad days. The
action is flamboyant and suitably implausible -- but then, even when Bruce
Willis was young, we knew he was not really
doing all those impossible things in Die
Hard. Hopkins has never been more
delightful, and Mirren is the sexiest sixty-seven year old I have ever seen.
Like the Bourne and
OO7 franchises, the RED films feature
a good deal of tourist footage of world-class cities -- New York, London,
Paris, Moscow. The Paris segment was an
especial treat for Susie and me because much of it was filmed in our quartier. When Willis and Zeta-Jones sit down at a
sidewalk cafe for a drink and chat, we both immediately recognized it as a
familiar bistro on rue La Montagne Ste. Geneviève just down the street from the Place du Panthéon, three blocks from
our apartment.
Do you suppose some evening I will actually run into
Catherine Zeta-Jones and Bruce Willis and John Malkovich and Helen Mirren and
Anthony Parker and Mary-Louise Parker?
One can dream.
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