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Who Leaves an Eight-Year-Old Home Alone?

11/30/2018

 
I do not like holiday movies. Among the annals of our modern holiday classics is nestled the sicko torture film Home Alone. Surprisingly, this movie is easier to sit through than most holiday drivel. But let me assure you, it still has a ton of issues, namely, it takes place around Christmas, grown men are severely maimed—and the violence and injuries are presented in such a way that the audience is encouraged to laugh in glee at these disfigurements—and parents fly across the country and leave their child behind, yet nobody calls child welfare services.

We’re introduced to the McAllister family straight off, which consists of eight-year-old Kevin (Macaulay Culkin, back when he was notorious for being so adorable you’d puke from the cuteness), older brother and obnoxious bully Buzz, some other siblings and cousins you won’t care about—ditto an unnamed aunt and verbally abusive uncle—and Kevin’s parents, played by John Heard and Catherine O’Hara.

Let me take a moment here to discuss something important: I love Catherine O’Hara. Who doesn’t, really? I used to watch SCTV just for her. She’s hilarious. That she was saddled playing the most horrible mother in the history of movie moms—and yes, I’m including Faye Dunaway’s Joan Crawford in that summation, because ol’ Joan never forgot Christina existed when she was beating her with wire hangers—is probably the biggest problem I have with this flick. Seriously, how could the filmmakers do this to our beloved Catherine? Bums.
So, bit of a spoiler in that last paragraph: the McAllisters are heading to Paris for Christmas, and they completely forget Kevin exists, leaving him behind. This is only the first time during the movie that you as the viewer will be asked to open up your cranium and remove all reason, sanity, rationale, and disbelief. Other instances will be when:
 
  • an eight-year-old manages to feed himself regularly, do laundry, find Dad’s aftershave (but not his condoms), and generally run a 5,000-square-foot home singlehandedly with no issues.
  • an eight-year-old outwits a pair of career criminals using cardboard cutouts, toy soldiers, an electric charcoal starter, and a tarantula.
  • an eight-year-old is clever enough to use an electric charcoal starter and a blowtorch against the bad guys, yet still does not burn down the house, even though the living room curtains are inches away from said blowtorch.
  • you realize this family owns a 5,000-square-foot home, plans to be away for two weeks, and yet doesn’t own a security system.
 
But I digress. Kevin is on his own now, and immediately catches the attention of two burglars who are casing the neighborhood. Kevin must be a genius child prodigy with magnificent ESP skills, because he immediately senses these guys are up to no good, and goes home to fool said robbers into thinking there’s a party at his house, thanks to the previously mentioned cardboard cutouts that we all have hanging around our homes, don’t we? (Kevin is also an arts-and-crafts prodigy, methinks.) As a backup plan, he also befriends the neighborhood’s local scary old man/suspected murderer.

On the plane to Paris, our hero Catherine O’Hara realizes she’s left her youngest behind (see world’s worst mom above). As soon as she lands, she immediately tries to get back home. Not so easy—all the flights to Chicago are booked, because everybody knows the Windy City is the perfect place to be for Christmas, because who doesn’t enjoy a little frostbite with their holiday cheer? She manages to get on a plane to Scranton (also full of frostbite in December, but less popular for some mysterious reason) where she hitches a ride with a traveling polka band, headed by John Candy, another SCTV alum—hooray! Their scenes are hands down the best in the movie. I have no complaints here, so let’s move on.

Back at home, Kevin uses his child prodigy super-sensory hearing to learn the bad guys have figured out Kevin truly is home alone. What’s an eight-year-old to do? Call the cops? Call the local murderer, even? Heck no. These burglars are stupid enough to announce when they’ll be hitting the McAllister house, so Kevin can prepare the booby traps.

And what booby traps they turn out to be. By that, I mean this eight-year-old Mensa genius is also one of the most malicious and vicious movie villains in the history of cinema. Kevin sets up such elaborately sadistic scenarios that Hellraiser’s Pinhead is jealous he didn’t think of them. Marv (David Stern) is shot in the forehead with a BB gun, hit in the head with a crowbar, smacked in the face with a heated laundry iron, gets a nail through the foot on tar-covered stairs, steps on shards of glass Christmas ornaments barefoot, takes a hit to the face again, this time with a paint can, and falls from a height of about eight feet while climbing a rope bridge. He also gets a tarantula to the face, but really, he should’ve been relieved at that point, because tarantulas are generally fuzzy and not heated to flesh-burning temperatures.

Marv arguably has it easy. His partner, Harry (Joe Pesci), is shot in the groin with a BB gun, has his hands broiled from a heated-to-flesh-burning-temperatures doorknob while simultaneously being branded with the letter M, has the top of head cooked by a blowtorch, also gets a paint can to the face—so hard it whacks a filling out—is knocked unconscious after tripping on a wire, and falls with Marv from that rope bridge thingy. And these aren’t even all of the booby traps, just the most painful ones. You know who else enjoyed inflicting pain on humans? Literally every serial killer you’ve ever heard of. No wonder Kevin gets chummy with the murderer across the street: it takes one to know one!

For exactly one minute of the movie, Marv and Harry seem to get the upper hand, but Kevin’s new psycho killer friend saves the day and rescues his protégé. The burglars are off to jail, and Kevin’s mom makes it home for Christmas Day (as does the rest of the family, who simply took a later flight and had to put up with exactly zero polka bands). All’s well that ends well, right?

Not so fast: this movie has a sequel.

Because it’s totally believable a mother would forget about her youngest child a second time, right?
I can only wonder what this family’s—and those two burglars’—psychiatric bills must look like.
___________
This review and so much more appears in Longo Looks at . . . CHRISTMAS, available now on Amazon!
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In case you missed it the forty-seven other places I bragged about it, that orange flag there says #1 New Release. Finally, my mockery of religion has paid off!

Thanks

11/23/2018

 
I hope everyone had a great Thanksgiving! I'm writing this as I gear up for back surgery, and I have to tell you, there's nothing quite like scary surgery (and maybe strong pain medication) to make you look seriously at your life and count your blessings. So bear with me, 'cause I have a lot to be thankful for, like . . .
  • my husband. First off, I am no fun to be around these days. Besides being snappish because pain sucks, I need lots of help—help getting up, help cleaning, help cooking . . . every time I drop something, someone's got to pick it up, and it can't be me. Some people (like me) might complain. Jason's been patient and supportive. He even bought me a Grinch T-shirt this week. I'm going to seriously think about being nicer to him.
  • my immediate family. When I hear about other people's dysfunctional relationships with their parents or siblings, I say a silent prayer of thanks for what I wound up with. I can decide Saturday at 10 that I want to drop in on my parents Saturday at 11, and my mother is always, "Sure, come on over!" When I get there, my dad is always cooking up brunch while Mom is putting ten different entrees on the table. (Food is love in our family.) And my sister! We talk every day. I don't want to talk to anyone every day except my sister. Enough said.
  • my extended family. As soon as we found out I needed surgery, my sister-in-law was texting to ask what she could do to help. My cousins were on Facebook cheering me on (one has even had the same surgery, and told me what to expect: smooth sailing). How lucky am I to have such a great support system? Plus, my aunts. I can't tell you how amazing my aunts are: they've shaped much of who I am today. One of my most important roles in life is being an aunt. Thank goodness I've had such fabulous role models.
  • my friends. I've got one from college checking in with me every week to make sure I haven't killed anyone yet while waiting for surgery. I've got another sending me post-surgery cozy sweaters and offering to read my tarot cards over the phone once I'm home recovering. Maybe it sounds silly to you, but this is exactly the kind of fun thing I needed to have planned to look forward to after the big day.
  • my editing partner/best writing friend. My workplace isn't going to let me work from home as I recover, which is going to cripple me financially. So what did my superhero of an editing partner do? Lined up a bunch of editing work so I will have an income despite my employer's best efforts. Thanks, man. You're the best.
  • you. If you're reading this and regularly read this blog, I'm thankful for you. Knowing there's an audience out there for my brain droppings makes it all worth it.

So here's what you can expect as I head off to go under the knife: I have a couple of blog posts set up to run automatically for the next few weeks. I won't be interacting with you right away if you leave a comment, but I will eventually, I promise.

​And I'll see you on the other side.

A Day Off

11/16/2018

 
We had snow in Connecticut on Thursday night. Do I hate living in New England? Yes, but that’s not the point of today’s blog post.
 
Some things probably important to this story: I have an extremely painful back situation going on in which I shouldn’t be driving more than, say, fifteen minutes at a stretch. And the only medication that even touches my pain also makes me loopy, so I’m not driving while taking it . . . or speaking clearly, comprehending books, those sorts of things. On the plus side, I’m much more fun to be around when I do take it.
 
In order to get to and from work, I’ve been commuting with a coworker. Except Thursday night, the commute home was awful in the snow. It took me an hour to make the drive from Malavika’s house to mine, and it should’ve taken twenty minutes, tops. By the time I lurched through my front door, white knuckled and hunchbacked from spasms of pain, I would’ve been okay with never leaving the house again. So Friday morning, when my left wheel spun for a just a millisecond as I pulled out of my driveway, I immediately threw the car in reverse and texted Malavika: I’m taking the day off. Then I took the medication.
 
The thing about this stuff is it doesn’t kick in right away. And I was still in significant pain from Thursday’s drive. Plus I hadn’t had caffeine yet. So I woke Jason up (I will neither confirm nor deny if I did this by dropping an eighteen-pound cat on his face) and snapped, “Are you working today?”
 
He was, but not until later. I was going to have to put up with him for at least three more hours. “Darn it! Why’d you have to get up so early?” I yelled at him.
 
You see, pain makes you extremely unpleasant. Let’s see if you can figure out exactly when my medication kicked in:
 
6:45 AM: Jason is looking at his phone. Me: “That screen is awfully bright! Can you go downstairs or something?” Jason looks around the room, in which every single light is on, and his phone is contributing exactly zero brightness, then sighs: “Fine.” Jason goes downstairs, hides in kitchen for ten minutes, then comes back up. Me: “Were you just in the kitchen?” Jason: “Yes?” Me: “WHY DIDN’T YOU BRING ME COFFEE, YOU INSENSITIVE TOAD?”
 
7:15 AM: I’m on my third cup of coffee. It hasn’t helped my caffeine headache. Also, I hate everyone. Me: “I hate everyone.” Jason: “Gee, you hide it so well.” Me: “I HOPE YOUR NEXT WIFE THINKS YOU’RE FUNNY, YOU CONTEMPTIBLE TURD!”
 
7:22 AM: Jason puts on a trailer for a Christmas movie coming out on Netflix next month. For those of you who are unaware, Christmas is my least favorite holiday. Me: “What. Is. That.” Jason: “Uhhhh . . . Kurt Russell? As Santa?” He practically whispers Santa.
Me: (giggling) “Kurt Russell is funny.”
 
You’ll be happy to know we survived our day together. And I shouldn’t get mad at Jason—he’s been very thoughtful during this ordeal. Why, he even set an alarm on his watch to make sure I take my medication right when I’m supposed to. Isn’t that sweet?

Too Much

11/8/2018

 
Sharp-eyed readers like my mom and my aunts might have noticed I didn’t have a new blog post last week. There’s a good reason for that. I’m having surgery soon, and I need to cram eight to twelve weeks’ worth of work into four.
 
It’s been fun. See, besides my day job, I also have a side business as one half of S&L Editing, plus I’m a publisher, and oh yeah, I’m supposed to be a writer, too. I was feeling pretty good about getting ahead of the game on my day job stuff, plus I’d managed to lay out a book for the press early. I successfully guided a second book to publication (Megan and Riley Share the Joy of Christmas by Ken Keeney, now available for preorder), and was ready to relax in front of my computer and get started on my Christmas shopping (which also needs to be done before surgery).
 
“What’s for dinner?” Jason asked.
 
“What?” I said.
 
You see, with all this other stuff on my plate, I’d forgotten about the basics, like cleaning, or cooking, or laundry. Our house is still decorated for Halloween, for example, and it’s likely going to stay that way until spring. (I suspect with the skull décor we have anyway, nobody will really notice.)
 
Jason has been pretty good about all this. (When I read the last sentence aloud, for example, he did start taking down the Halloween stuff.) Like, it turns out he was asking about dinner not only because he was starving—I hadn’t cooked in a week at least, trying to get that other stuff done—but so he could watch and learn how to cook some of the dishes I make regularly when I do remember to cook. (He has hot dogs, spaghetti, and baked chicken down pat, so the good news is, we won’t starve.) So when he asked me what was for dinner, I thought hard for about ten seconds, then announced, “I think you should practice hot dogs again. I’m not sure you have the boiling time quite right.” (Spoiler: this was a ruse. I just didn’t want to cook.)
 
As Jason heated up the water, I finished up the holiday shopping, plus picked up a birthday gift for my nephew Evan. “These look boiled enough to you, your highness?” Jason asked. (What was his problem?)
 
They did, and I thanked him for the break. I closed my laptop and tried to focus on actually being in the moment, eating a meal with him. I had no idea what to talk about. Our days have been filled with conversation about bone fusions and medications and pain management so much lately that I’d completely forgotten what the heck we had in common that we could discuss.
 
Jason seemed to be in the same pickle. “So, uh . . . when’s your book coming out?” he mumbled.
 
Oh, crap! I have not one but two chapbooks coming out this month. And as God as my witness, I had no idea when.
 
Out came the laptop again. I brought up the book schedule and cross-referenced it with IngramSpark. “November 12? Maybe?”
 
It turns out Longo Looks at  . . . Dieting will be available for preorder on the twelfth, with a release date of Nov. 18. Longo Looks at . . . Christmas will be available for preorder Nov. 19 with a release date of Black Friday, Nov. 23.
 
I think. I’m not even sure anymore. The world, quite frankly, is asking too much of me right now. Here’s what I am sure of: the Jack Skellington Halloween decoration in the dining room looks really cute as a centerpiece. I’m leaving it.

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