Way
back when I did the first Teargeekers posts, I knew I missed some and planned a
follow up.
As
planning for this blog hovers around random at best…
Fast forward almost eight years to today for a highly delayed second volume.
Fast forward almost eight years to today for a highly delayed second volume.
I
have had an idea for a “Dad Version” of this concept for a long time but never actively
documented the complete list.
Lately,
I’ve been missing my Dad a lot. Whenever the panicked and rational sides of my
brain have a discussion, the rational side is always in his voice.
The panicked side is naturally all me.
Follow the link at the beginning of this post for a full definition of Teargeekers.
The panicked side is naturally all me.
Follow the link at the beginning of this post for a full definition of Teargeekers.
The
quick summary is: “The moments that lay bare specific sections of a nerd’s
soul.”
Although
for the new set's case- "a nerdly father’s soul."
Since
the first list had a member that really belonged on the “Awesome Eighties”
list, this set will start with one that should have been on the original Teargeekers.
Someday,
I’ll catch up.
Men in
Black
1997
Not
strictly a Dad moment, but a definite comparison of youthful idealism slamming into age and experience. Tommy Lee Jones shuts down Will Smith’s
wistfulness with a blast of cold hard reality.
Most geeks know all about this phenomenon, and having the powerful types of memories we do allows us to replay social mistakes regularly in our heads.
J- “You know what
they say.
It's better to have
loved and lost
than never to have
loved at all.”
K- “Try it.”
The
Little Mermaid
1989
The
moments (for there are two) go to King Triton.
He has the voice of Kenneth Mars, who I primarily know from Young Frankenstein’s over the top goofball Inspector
Kemp and the “blah blah” guy on Sha Na
Na. Yet he infuses incredible amounts of Dad emotion in all of his scenes, including two very specific ones.
After
getting enraged, stemming from caring for his daughter’s safety, he is heartbroken
that he traumatized her by being losing his cool in his concern for her well-being:
“Do you think I was
too hard on her?”
This
is followed up at the end by the astounding mix of love, pride, and sadness we all feel
when our little ones are growing up:
“I guess there’s one
problem left,
how much I'm going to
miss her.”
The Lego
Movie
2014
I’m
not a huge fan of Will Ferrell, I like some of his stuff, but I don’t go out of
my way to watch him. He was, however, outstanding as Lord Business and the Dad in the Lego Movie.
Many of us geeks have toys. (Some of us go a bit overboard about it,
in fact.) But in another heartbreaking
moment, his realization can apply to other situations where you’ve accidentally
hurt your child without realizing it.
There are happiness tears in the scenes following, because Dads get chances to make corrections too.
Indiana
Jones and the Last Crusade 1989
There
are many great father and son moments between Sean Connery and his spiritual
successor Harrison Ford in this story. But
the one that always gets me is when Indy is reaching for the Holy Grail. It’s a point showing that when the world is
crashing down around you, even if you didn’t think your Dad understood you or
was paying attention, he was, and he knows what you need to hear. After insisting on annoying his son by calling him, “Junior” the entire film, Henry Senior snaps him out of the same
obsession he suffered from for all of his son’s life:
Conan
the Barbarian 1982
This
film requires a closer look in the coming months because there are multiple reasons it birthed a
slew of imitators in the genre. But for
today we’ll focus on the recently late and always great Max Von Sydow as King
Osric. In his treatment of Arnold and
company, he easily conveys the notion that he was an adventurer just like them
in his youth. Now, though, he’s an old man,
who is only worried about his child. His lesson carried great weight, as did
anything he played:
when the jewels cease
to sparkle,
when the gold loses
its luster,
when the throne room
becomes a prison,
and all that is left
is a father's love for his child.”
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