Fight Club
Mahoning Drive-In Theater - Lehighton, PA
One of my favorite movies of the 90's played today at the Mahoning Drive-In Theater. It's a movie that I didn't catch on the big screen during its initial run in theaters, so I'm especially glad to have had the opportunity to see it here.
Mahoning Drive-In Theater - Lehighton, PA
One of my favorite movies of the 90's played today at the Mahoning Drive-In Theater. It's a movie that I didn't catch on the big screen during its initial run in theaters, so I'm especially glad to have had the opportunity to see it here.
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Show banner designed by Andrew Kern |
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Show poster designed by Tom Bifulco |
It drizzled a little bit when I first pulled onto the lot, but it cleared up and ended up being a very pleasant night.
Fight Club has become a controversial movie since it was released in October 1999. It's been cited as a modern example of toxic masculinity that has inspired several real-world fight clubs and acts of terrorism, but that bullshit never appealed to me.
The line that stuck with me the strongest was something that Brad Pitt said to Edward Norton when they met up at Lou's Tavern for the first time: "The things you own end up owning you". I was never inspired to take this philosophy to the extreme ends that take place in the movie, but it did help to open my eyes to the fact that a lot of the things that people buy can control their lives. Buying a new sports car, or a boat, or other expensive luxuries may sound like a good idea, but unless you're wealthy, the hours of labor that you have to put into buying and maintaining them far exceed the hours of enjoyment you'll get from them. These things are mostly used as a status symbol to show off how successful we think we are to others. Personally, I don't give a damn if anyone thinks that I'm successful. I'd rather have the free time to spend however I please than to force myself to grind out every last dollar that I can make to afford the payments on something that I don't care about in the slightest. I spent five dollars on the ticket to this show, and for that, I got to spend three hours playing movie trivia with friends, two more hours watching one of my favorite films on the big screen, and another two hours enjoying a secret feature that I never got to see on the big screen. That works out to about 71 cents an hour to live life on my own terms. Not a bad deal.