MandoMan |
12-06-2020 08:18 AM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by UpNorth
(Post 1870240)
If the movie was completely unbiased and factual, it would be boring and wouldn't sell. Instead it resembles the crap you see on the magazine counters next to the checkout at your local supermarket. It might be fun for residents to watch, but will make outsiders think that everyone here is a bit crazy.
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I would say that if the movie were completely unbiased and factual, it would look more like the sales videos produced by The Villages, and those DO sell houses. Granted, the videos produced by The Villages ARE biased and glamorous and glossy, but really, they are a lot closer to reality than the gripes of cranks or journalists hungry for headlines who sold their souls for a job. This is not a secretly grimy and nasty place to be. It’s a wonderful place to be. I’m continually amazed by the concern taken for beauty and safety. When I told people I was moving to The Villages, the first thing I heard was warnings of rampant sex (at our age?), STDs, and people sloshed on wine at 10 a.m. book clubs. I keep looking! Where ARE they! (Laughing).
The Villages is NOT “The Good Place” (Did you see that TV series? The Good Place is actually a form of hell.) The Villages is a GREAT place. Some people are natural-born gripers and curmudgeons. Others come to it with age. But I think most of us feel we are in something close to Paradise.
That said, I thought the review of the movie linked in the original post was thoughtful, well-written, and useful. The totality of The Villages inevitably includes endless sorrow. I know a lot of widows and some widowers. There are a lot of sad stories. There is a lot of sickness, suffering, loneliness, and we are all getting older and wrinklier and approaching The Long Goodbye, The Big Sleep. That’s one of the definitions of Tragedy: we end up dying. But what a lovely place to do it, and what a safe place to do it. I look forward to seeing the movie. It’s worthwhile being reminded that things are more complicated than they may seem on the surface.
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