Sunday, November 11, 2012

Skyfall - 007 Movie: C- Rating


                I watched the new movie Skyfall last night and posted my “C- rating” on FB.  I’ve been astounded by how many young and middle-age adults feel it was the greatest 007 movie ever. 

 

                The Huffington Post (HP) just published an article today that may explain my view point and those posting the opposite view about the new James Bond movie.  Previous 007 Bond movies were amazing with new gadgets, amazing cars, wild women and unbelievable plots with incredible antics like taking over all the gold in Fort Knox, turning all the satellites into weapons of mass destruction and riding a nuclear bomb out of a B-52.  Lately, they have lost their edge.  Skyfall blows up a building and tells us “with the push of a button on a keyboard” they could do all kinds of nasty stuff… but then does nothing.  I found it boring.

 

                According to the HP this explains it, “If you're type A, you may have a hard time with this life transition.”  I have higher expectations because I’ve lived and seen exceptionalism, like a new frontier space program in less than ten years.  Men walking on the moon and miles of freeways built in a year, not decades.  Microwave ovens, computers, zip-lock bags and even disposal dippers.  When I was in college the first time I used a slide-rule, now we just push buttons on a calculator and few understand how these equations get solved. 

 

                Maybe I was, as the HP described it, “So you’re a Type A personality: hard-charging, status-driven and impatient. How do you think that’ll work out for you in retirement?”  It’s not working out well.  HP, “In retirement nobody knows you were a chief executive or a heart surgeon. Out of uniform, a Type A retiree looks just like all the other retirees and is typically viewed no differently by the people he or she encounters.”  It’s not that we want special recognition, but we can offer another viewpoint that is being wasted and ignored.

 

                I’m in college full time and have found this enlightening.  Nobody has much interest in your past successes or how you did it.  They just want to learn how to push the button. Go back just one or two generations and the youth would be clamoring for more knowledge on how to get further ahead in life.  I find today’s students really don’t care; they just want to get through class as fast as possible.  It’s not about learning, it’s about graduating and the instructors are the same way.  Let’s just process these kids through the system. 

 

                                Where is the new crop of Type A people, those with high expectations and deep passion?  We seem to becoming a nation of passive, accepting, system and regulation loving individuals.  Are they the students we see sitting quietly in class from Pakistan, China, Asia and even Mexico?  Are they here because they have passion, dreams and high expectations of a new future? 

 

                Is this what Military people feel when they come home from war?  Is this all just post traumatic stress of a senior citizen… or is there a core change facing America.  Have we lost our expectations and passions and settling for the status quo?  If that’s so, the HP is right.  I am going to have a tough time watching this transition of America. Come-on Young Americans, get some passion we’re better than this.  Today is Veterans Day, they fought and died so life could be safe, easier and give you greater opportunities.  Not so you can “just show up”, sit around and push buttons and have low expectations for tomorrow.  Make their sacrifice worth it, get some passion.  Watch Skyfall, the new James Bond 007 movie with a critical eye, it was, at best, a “C- movie.”  Go do something amazing.  

 

Excerpts from the Huffington Post of 11-11-12, “When Type A Personalities Retire: It Isn't Pretty”