Hello.
I'm supposed to be in a movie right now, but instead I'm here, talking to you.
Let me back up and explain.
You know how I've always loved the after work double feature? The one where I stay in the city after work, have dinner, and watch two movies, sometime at the same theater and sometimes at different theaters, finally returning home sometime around midnight or a little after?
Well I do. But I don't get to do it that much anymore.
My kids have games or practices on three of the weeknights -- Monday, Tuesday and Thursday -- and on the fourth night, Wednesday, I usually play tennis. Well, lately I haven't been, because my partner has an injured elbow, though we did resume yesterday after a two-month break. But even with Wednesdays nights "off," I haven't utilized any for double features, even though Wednesdays are in fact one of my two days in the office. And it's not like I couldn't go on another night, but then I'd be leaving my wife in the lurch for the games and practices and I feel bad about that.
But this is the second week of school holidays, and -- at least I thought anyway -- there would be no training this week. Turns out my younger son's soccer team came back a week early -- they're mad for soccer, I swear -- but at least my older son wasn't also at basketball practice on Thursday, which is what makes Thursdays so hard, even when I'm at home. Anyway, I didn't even know about the soccer practice when I proposed to my wife last week that I should stay in the city for two movies after work on Thursday -- "like I used to do." She agreed without a second thought.
The only thing was, a double feature wasn't really lining up. I realized that Olivia Wilde's The Invite was opening this week, which was very promising, but then I couldn't find anything that I really wanted to pair it with. I'm still not sure if I'm going to see the live-action Moana, ever, let alone in the theaters, so that wasn't it. At the theaters in the city that had this movie, the best options for double feature partners were things I had already seen, things I had no intention of seeing, or things that were so old that I felt like a real heel trying to use my critics card to see them. (You're supposed to only use it for movies in the first two weeks of their release.)
So I cast the net a bit wider, out to the Sun in Yarraville, which is my regular theater, and would be on my way home from work anyway. Not one of the city theaters, but there was no rule that said I had to go to this double feature at a city theater. It's just that I enjoy it as part of the novelty of the after-work double feature. The bottom line is the two movies and the yummy dinner.
And the Sun, being a bit more independent (and just having more screens than these other places), had a movie I hadn't heard of called Saccharine, which had a sort of discomfiting poster. Here, see?
Aren't you glad I didn't put that at the start of the post? You would have never started reading.
Without even knowing anything about it, I knew that it might be in a similar category to other gross-out movies I've seen and loved in the past few years, including my last two #1 movies, The Substance and Together. And once I did know something about it, the thing I newly knew was that it was directed by Natalie Erika James, the Australian director who made the films Relic and Apartment 7A.
Now I should say my relationship with Natalie Erika James is somewhat complicated. James made a short film called Creswick that played at the ReelGood Film Festival about ten years ago, and I was on the committee of people who voted it to get the top award at the festival that year. I loved it, you should seek it out if you can find it. Unfortunately, the feature-length version of Creswick was Relic, and that movie really didn't work for me. It was enough worse than Creswick that I didn't even prioritize seeing Apartment 7A, though I probably would have seen it in time to rank it that year if it had been a bit more accessible online at the time I needed to watch it.
But James would be a good filmmaker to wrestle with, even if I didn't like her film, especially on an Australian review site that's theoretically slightly more interested than average in Australian content. And the promise was always there.
The only question was, would it be The Invite first or Saccharine first? Both options existed, with gaps in between them that were either too brief or too long, meaning neither option was the hands down choice.
In theory, a movie like The Invite is what you watch first, when the evening is young, when ribald comedy (I don't actually know if this movie is ribald) and zingy dialogue are vastly improved by the drink you had at dinner. Saccharine is more the "midnight movie" selection, when you've added a bong hit to that drink from dinner.
And so I first envisioned a 6:40 The Invite followed by a 9:30 Saccharine. This might leave as much as 50 minutes between the movies, but at least I wouldn't be rushing. I could go get a little something else to eat as a complement to my earlier than usual dinner.
But then I got to thinking, "Do I really want to only be leaving the theater at 11:30?" I also newly knew that Saccarhine was nearly two hours long, and given the uncertain transportation prospects for getting home, I didn't want to leave it too late. (Make note of this. This comes back in to our story shortly.)
So then I more seriously considered the skin-of-my-teeth option of a 6:50 Saccharine and an 8:50 The Invite. That would get me out at more like 10:40, and it would also give me ten more minutes to get there from work.
And though the turnaround would be tight, the movies would probably be showing just down the hallway from each other. This cinema plays only five minutes of combined ads, trailers and short films before a movie, so it would give me about seven minutes to go to the toilet etc. I could probably even pick up both tickets before I went in, even though I again feel like a bit of a heel when I ask a ticket clerk to give me not one but two free tickets. (Side note: It does not actually matter how many minutes of trailers they play before a movie in order to make my point. Assuming the pre-show is consistent across all movies, whatever the length, the difference in relative starting times would be the same whether they played five or 20 minutes worth of trailers.)
So I finished up my ramen dinner in the city by about 5:35, spooning and slurping up all the spicy goodness and then emerging into the coldness of the winter night. This gave me an hour and 15 minutes to walk to the train station at Melbourne Central and ride two stops to North Melbourne, where I would get a bus to Yarraville.
Ah well here is where our story gets interesting. Or maybe really boring. (Maybe it's been boring all this time. If so, don't tell me.)
Conveyed by train only, I should have gotten to Yarraville no later than about 6:20, leaving me a full half-hour to stretch my legs before sitting down for four hours. But I allowed extra time for the buses that were replacing trains along my usual train route, because they are doing track work. My wife had told me yesterday that this was going on, and then I experienced it myself on the way in.
The factor I didn't properly consider: How much extra time to add to that journey for a bus weaving its way through rush-hour traffic. The usual buses replace trains scenario is only later at night, usually after 8, and I'm usually only confronted with it after one of these double features. Although it's pretty tedious relative to a train, at that time of night the buses move at a nice clip and get you where you're going with probably only an extra 25% of the time tacked on.
During rush hour, these buses do not move at a nice clip.
And so I watched the clock steadily tick down as we crawled through the inner and immediately outer city traffic, as the conveyance took something like a full 35 minutes just to get to its first two stops, which would have taken about five minutes on train. It quickly became clear to me that there was no way I would make my 6:50 Saccharine, even with the extra ten minutes. In fact, at a certain point I actually willed the progress to slow down, since it would mean less time I had to kill in Yarraville.
But then suddenly, miraculously, it was like the bus found an opening in the defense. It was like a running back who hit the gap and then had an open sprint to the endzone. Suddenly, I was disgorged in Yarraville at 6:51 p.m. There was still hope.
Until I got there and the line was going out the door. And this is where the five minutes of pre-show material actually finds its relevance.
Usually there are two lines at the Sun, the one on the left for the suckers who have to buy popcorn and drinks, and the one on the right for people like me who just wanted a ticket. The second one is always way shorter than the first one (usually just me, or maybe one person ahead of me). But on this night, when a bus had taken 45 minutes for a 15 minute trip, the right cash register was also out of order, meaning suckers and film critics alike needed to wait in that line going out the door.
Some quick math in my head left only one conclusion: I had to bail on Saccharine and only see The Invite.
In two hours.
Which means the math in my head changed to how many activities I could actually find to fill up two hours and whether any of them would prevent me from prematurely burning out my phone battery, which was already down to about 50% and needed to still have some juice in case of shenanigans trying to get home after the movie.
Which brings you to now, or rather, to the last 45 minutes or so. No, this post has not killed the full two hours, but right now I'm within 45 minutes of the start of The Invite, and I can always figure out a way to kill 45 minutes. (And after proof-reading, that's down to about 25.)
Especially now that I've charged my phone battery up to 66% and counting. For a while there I thought it would be a fully zero sum game between my laptop and my phone in its current symbiotic relationship where the phone is receiving a charge from the laptop and the laptop is receiving internet from the phone. I figured the juice used by the phone's internet would be entirely offset by the power going into the phone, leading it to hover at that 48% of even lose some. But instead it went up nearly 20 percent, and now I'm sure it can withstand whatever shenanigans my night still might have ahead of me.
Other than writing this post, I've also:
1) Done my Duolingo for the day (yes I'm still learning Japanese, working on a streak of 67 straight days);
2) Done my Connections for the day (the streak there is at 28);
3) Updated some fantasy baseball stats, and
4) Sent out an email about a fantasy baseball competition centered around next week's home run derby.
The only thing is, I've been sitting in this little park by the train station and it is ass cold out here, so my little fingers are starting to feel like little icicles. Maybe I need to use those 45 minutes to go find a hot chocolate.
So if it seems like this post was excessively long, shared details you didn't need, and ultimately was nowhere near as profound as such length and details would suggest it was, well, now you know why.
Then again, you always did. I put it right there in the title.