Run in.

People tell me that I’m getting more curmudgeonly as I get older, which I take as a compliment. I mean, have you ever met one of those people in their eighties who are upbeat and pleasant all the time?  I look at those people and I can only assume that for eighty years they just haven’t been paying attention.

But sometimes a gesture of human kindness pierces my heart and cuts through all the negativity I’ve accumulated as a result of Darfur, the growing gap between the rich and the poor, global warming, and Adam Sandler.

Such was the case this weekend.  My friend Meredith knows some crazy people, and one of them threw a birthday party for her fiancée. What was the nature of said party? We were given movie cameras and told to write, film, and edit a movie in around six hours.  The Red Vic theater in San Francisco was rented out at midnight to screen all of the movies to a bunch of tired and (by that time) mostly drunk filmmakers.

Needless to say, this was a pretty stressful enterprise; we only had a few hours of light to capture all the footage. And most of our film consisted of exterior shots, as it was decided to do a parody of Run Lola Run (one of my favorite movies, as it happens) full of in-jokes and references to the birthday boy and his fiancée.

So anyway, I was trying to take some shots of Lola (Meredith) running.  We were running out of time, and we were all tired.  I needed a shot of her running down her apartment stairs, but we were in a cramped courtyard and I was having a hard time setting up the tripod.  I backed up against an apartment door and shouted “Okay, give me a second, I’m trying to get you into frame--”

--and suddenly, the door behind me opened.

I turned around, and an elderly lady smiled and gestured to me.

“Come in, come in, shoot here.” She had an accent--I couldn’t quite place it. Swedish?

It was a foggy, chilly day in the city, and I could feel the heat spilling out of her well-warmed apartment.

“Oh!” I said. “Okay, it will just be a second. Thanks!”

And I backed up a few feet.

“Come in more, shoot, shoot,” she said, urging me on.

So I backed up even more and planted my ass in her hallway and set up the camera and got the shot.

I turned around and said to my savior, “You’re very kind.”

“Ah, of course, of course,” she said, and then she shut the door.

Now, admittedly, this was Meredith’s neighbor and probably knew her by sight, so she didn’t think she was opening her door to a psycho killer or anything. But still, this lady was warm and peaceful in her apartment on a cold November day.  She disrupted her tranquility so a bunch of shouting morons could enter her house and finish a ridiculous movie.

So, of all the things I’m thankful for, topping the list is anyone who is willing to open the front door, place trust in humanity, and let people get the shot they need:

(And isn’t Meredith a dead ringer for the real Lola?)

Happy Thanksgiving.

In the spirit of curmudgeons everywhere, I would have opened my front door and taken a swing at you with my broom.

Posted by mia  on  11/20  at  11:31 PM

I liked this post better than I liked the entire season of “On the Lot.”

Posted by kerrianne  on  11/20  at  11:42 PM

Will the result be screened at the Cannes Film Festival also?

Posted by  on  11/21  at  10:11 AM

all the best to you and yours.

Posted by The Dan  on  11/21  at  02:34 PM

She didn’t offer you any elderberry wine, did she?

Posted by bohémienne  on  11/21  at  04:39 PM

Awww!

Posted by Kristine  on  11/21  at  05:38 PM

I don’t know why, but all my mind keeps forming is “Run, Forest, Run!” Odd uh?

Posted by FENICLE  on  11/22  at  07:18 AM

So are we going to get to see the final cut of Meredith Rennt?

Posted by teahouseblossom  on  11/24  at  08:36 PM

Well, it’s kind of incomprehensible due to the amount of in-jokes relating to the individual’s birthday, but if you’re really curious, here.

Posted by Greg  on  11/24  at  10:10 PM

I love when stuff like that happens.  The other day a stranger straightened out a price miscommunication I was having with a coffee shop clerk.  The stranger leaned over to me and said “You know, he actually said $1.00 on that drink,” which made my day.  I thought it was three bucks, and I’d been ready to just get a (sad) water, but this stranger took a minute to clear it up for me, just to be nice. I got what I wanted, the clerk got what he wanted, and the stranger scored big points in the karma department.

It restores my faith in humanity.

Posted by Beth Hayden  on  11/25  at  08:54 PM

now THAT is fabulous.
great shot, monsieur howard.  thanks for sharing.
btw i’d completely forgotten about the nun-scene.
excellent.
smile

Posted by romy  on  12/05  at  10:31 PM

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