August 31, 2005




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    The ElectricMovies part of my website, AllThingsMike, is always the one that gets put to the backburner. I haven’t done anything to that part of the AllThingsMike Universe in such a long time. I sitll have a photo of the last Lord of the Rings movie on the main page. At one time, the blog I updated the most was the “ElectricMovies Diary” and I just added a post this week for the first time in ages! The following essay is one I’ve never posted here on the blog. It was written in 2001 and is on the ElectricMovies website here. I really miss the first place I saw filmed entertainment, and regular readers know my passion for movies.



    This essay was inspired by a Siskel & Ebert show a few years ago, where both Roger and Gene reminisced about their first experiences at the movies. 
    I was able to find two photos of the drive in where I saw my first movies. I used one in the composite photo accompanying this article.


    Among my first memories of the town I grew up in, El Monte, California, are of the wonderful El Monte Drive-In, which was located on Lower Azusa Ave. just east of Baldwin in the northern part of town. I understand that this icon has been bulldozed, and a Home Depot now stands on the site where I saw my first large screen entertainment. Besides being a sacrilege and shame, it just proves how much we take for granted here in the Los Angeles area, that even though we are the “birthplace of the movies” we have no sense of history whatsoever, and anything that is more that twenty five years old qualifies as fodder for the bulldozers.



    My family moved to El Monte in 1960, just as I entered the first grade. We moved a lot in those heady early days of my life, first from my birthplace in Nampa, Idaho to Caldwell, Idaho, to the Silver Lake district of Los Angeles, and then to Highland Park, off York Ave. to El Monte. By the time I was five, we had moved once every year, and in Highland Park we’d lived two years. In 1960, with the move to El Monte, my parents finally purchased their first home, and if memory serves, about one or two weeks after we moved, we went to the movies.



    The experience transformed my life forever.



    The El Monte Drive In Theater was an iconic drive in to begin with. The name of the city was lit in neon, and so was the Mexican Hat Dancing girl on the street side of the screen. Much has been said of the loss of the Drive-In movie screen, especially in California, and I really rather think it is fitting that my very first experiences of the movies were at such a place, rather than the old “movie palaces” like Roger and Gene remembered, because as a child of the sixties, rather than the thirties and forties, the drive-in was the fad of the age.



    When we pulled up, I still remember my excitement upon seeing that dancing lady. It’s even hard to bear the thought of her passing. We seem to lose a lot of architecture and cultural history here in L.A. The neighborhood we lived in Highland Park has completely disappeared. It was called Oak Terrace, and was a tree lined dead end which overlooked the Arroyo Parkway. It disappered in the Seventies, because I tried to locate my former home when I was in college, and was thouroughly discomboboulated when I realized that the whole neighborhood had been bulldozed in favor of those famous cinder block apartment buildings that were so prevalent in southern California architecture well into the eighties. (I think they still build them. They just paint them southwestern pink and lime green.)



    I can still remember “Mommy”, bless her soul, asking my brother, sister and I whether we wanted to go to the new Jerry Lewis picture, “Cinderfella”. or her pick, the new Elvis movie. We chose “Cinderfella”. (I’m thinking the Elvis movie must have been
    “G.I Blues” which was released in 1960, but it’s somewhat amazing that I can remember the movie we went to at all, much less the other one, since this was over forty years ago.) I always thought that the other movie playing at the theater (they showed two movies for one admission, really, I’m not kidding.) was a Bobby Darin and Sandra Dee movie called “That Funny Feeling” which came out in 1965. That was when I “graduated” from the sixth grade, and had not only seen lots of films at the El Monte Drive-In, but was enjoying the Saturday matinees at the enclosed El Monte Theater on the “Mall” in downtown. Anyway, even though I can’t remember the second feature, I do know that they showed one, and let me tell you, seeing a movie on a drive in screen from your car, when you’re seven years old, is enough to make anyone harbor a passion for movies.




    Today, at forty-eight, (EDIT: I am now 52)  I have a passion for movies which never leaves me. I usually go to see at least one new film a week, and I have collected movies on all media available since videotape, including 138 movies on CED videodisc, over 350 movies on Beta tape, over 500 movies on VHS videotape, and over 400 movies on laserdisc. Of course now I’m collecting DVD’s and have about 70 or so since 1998. This passion was started at the El Monte Drive-In.



    Young people today probably can’t imagine the impact of a drive-in movie. Imagine being stuck on the 405 (freeway or parkway of your choice), and a movie is playing forty or fifty feet in front of you above the other cars. The sound came from a tinny silver speaker which you hung on your window. (Just like you hung those trays with your burgers at  the A&W drive in restaurants, pre McDonalds.)  We had a 55 Chevy station wagon, the SUV’s of the sixties, and later a 1960 Chevy Brookwood, which was the size of a small tank. and comfortably fit all three of us children in the back with the seat lowered. My brother and sister usually conked out early, but I couldn’t get enough of the movies.



    It was also 1960, when “The Time Machine”  came out, that was a must see film for me, Just like Star Wars was for the kids in the seventies, or The Mummy films are for the kids these days. “Time Machine”, directed by George Pal, was highlighted in Forrest Ackerman’s Famous Monsters magazine, and was part of the second movie double feature our family saw soon after we moved to El Monte. It was playing with a reissue of George Pal’s “War of the Worlds” from 1953. (EDIT: and a much better movie than the “remake” with Tom Cruise) In those days,. the tallest building in Los Angeles was City Hall, and in “War of the Worlds”, the martians destroy it. (much like later Martians in Independence Day destroy the nation’s capital building! ) When I saw that scene, I really believed the martians were destroying Los Angeles. Seems funny to think about it now, but this really upset me, and my mother really had to convince me that what I was seeing was “only a movie”.



    In “The Greatest Show on Earth Cecil B. DeMille’s epic about the circus, the “bad guy”, Lyle Bettger,  is killed when he tries to stop the circus train, carrying his girlfriend,  Gloria Grahame, from being blown up, by driving on the tracks, and subsequently being tossed by the train, in what up to 1952 had been one of the screen’s most intense special effects. (It’s a model train and car).
    This is another instance when I was intensly involved in the proceedings, and got rather emotional about the outcome. (The biggest screen trainwreck up until that time. The movie won Best Picture oscar for 1952.)



    Seeing movies on the big screen, being young and somewhat impressionable, I was certainly impressed. In sixth grade, I was given charge of my sister and brother, and a family friend’s son, aged the same as my younger brother, and we went to the Saturday matinees at the downtown theater. (With the kids throwing popcorn, and cartoons before the feature, another cultural activity that is sadly no longer in existence in American society.) I watched a lot of Elvis movies, and remember the thrill of “Jason and the Argonauts”  and “Jack the Giant Killer.”



    But that seems later. The biggest thrill was seeing the movies on the Drive-In screen. The El Monte Drive-In screen. With the twirling neon senorita welcoming all to the show.



    It is truly a pity that this theater no longer exists. It is truly a pity that Los Angeles can’t seem to find an architetural hold on any of it’s early history. We are known to be “superficial” here in the city of the Angels (la ciudad de los angeles). You would think that given the presence of angels, we would harbor some sort of omnipresent ethereal quality, but that doesn’t exist. All that exist are memories, and we can’t even trust them.



    Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel hosted a program once, which detailed their early movie experiences. All critics usually write at least one column detailing what sparked their love of the movies in the first place.



    For me, it was seeing “Cinderfella” a not too good Jerry Lewis movie, at the El Monte Drive In in 1960. Because of this, I began a love of movies that till this day hasn’t subsided. I used to watch Million Dollar Movie every weekend, which showed the same movie about six times every weekend, after showing the same film each night during the week. I attended film school at USC from 1971 to 1974. I shoot a lot of footage with my camcorder, and make little MikeVideo movies. I love films, and I loved the experience of attending double features as a child at the El Monte Drive In Theater.



    These are memories which shape my present. They are realities which warm my soul.
    Pity, again, that the physical presence of the theater can never be expereienced by anyone.
    But history in Los Angeles does not exist. We can’t even keep the same gas stations on the corners of our intersections for over ten years.
    Now they’re even tearing down the minimalls they just built in the late seventies and eighties.
    The movies still exist, however.
    I can put on a laserdisc of “The Time Machine” on my 60″ bigscreen, dim the lights, smoke a little illegal herb, and reminisce about what wonders laid in store for my naive and malleable soul in 1960 at the El Monte Drive-In Theater.



    Michael F. Nyiri May 30, 2001



    As is usual when writing about the movies, all the links should take you to the Imdb page for that film. I’ve really got to update my ElectricMovies website, but there is just so much time in a day.


    This Just In:


    Iraqi officials see 1,000 dead in stampede


    Besides the looting and total evacuation called for New Orleans, I  read on Yahoo news this morning that 1000 Iraqis or more might have died in a stampede to get away from a suicide bomber in Baghdad. I am devastated by this news. Truly, we are living in “the age of sorrows.” MFN 8/31/05

Comments (26)

  • Mike,

    Firstly, I’d like to apologize for not commenting more. Having two jobs and a very energetic nineteen month old can put a toll on anyone. At least for me anyway. Now on with the commenting. It is a shame that drive-ins get tore down. The one here that has been around since I think the late 60′s early 70′s is being torn down. It makes me sad because I loved going. It was alot of fun on $5 car-load nights. :) It is a real shame… I share a passion for the movies myself. Unfortunely I don’t get to go like I use to.

    Have a good day. :sunny:

    Keeta

  • i loved this one. it generated so many memories for me and maybe i’ll write about my early movie experiences next week! :) glad you’re feeling better! why suffer when you can have meds? the news from iraq hit me hard today too… more lives lost in an instant than in our natural disasater and it got 30 seconds of news times. our self-absorbedness will be the end of us as a country if we’re not careful. lately, it seems all we care about is “me me me”… sorry. didn’t mean to vent here!

  • I will post your link and will come back and read later when I get home – I promised myself I wouldn’t waste too much valuable work time today

  • I love reading your life. 
    I love you.
    Thanks so much for your kind words…they mean more than you know.

  • How well I remember the drive in movies. What fun.I remember little about the movies, I was there for the adventure of the snack shop , popcorn and ice cold coke, the hot dogs, who knows what was in them, but they tasted like heaven and of course so did many kisses in the fron seat of a car with foggy windows lol
    I dont remember how long since our drive in theaters have been bulldozed, but I remember the times there.
    I’m glad you have the movies that impacted you on the big drive in screen.

    ‘I read the news today on boy’.. sadness and devastation abound. I hope this has a solution, a remedy. I hope.

    Thanks for a trip in the time capsule this morning.

    Peace and Love:)

  • I grew up going to the drive in’s. There used to be two near me, both are now long gone, developed into strip malls. The parents took us to see Cheech and Chongs “Up In Smoke”, and the van got so UP IN SMOKE, I had to watch the film from the playground underneath the screen.

    Good times!

  • Ah yes, the movies.  I remember my first time also.  Fortunately for me, the movie theater still exists and is in operation but sections of it are barricaded off because it has never been renovated since long before I was born and “stuff” falls from the ceiling occasionally.  The theaters in that small community in Eastern Washington State are all starving and it isn’t or wasn’t uncommon for the same movie (only 1 screen so only 1 movie) to show for six months or more.  But I loved it anyway.
    Thanks for your lengthy comment on my site!!!  I hope you feel better soon!!!  Also, thanks for being the only person I am aware of that consistently listens to my music.  I really appriciate that very much.  I wanted to send you a copy of my first CD (I’m almost ready to make a second one) as a means of saying thanks.  If you are interested, you would have to email me your mailing address.  Feel free to use any of my songs on your site.  I would be honored but I don’t feel worthy.  I’m still working on Swamp Jazz and have about a half dozen different versions of it where I experimented with different things but I’m not really happy with any of them.  I also think I need to improve the lyrics just a little.  It is a kids song so I’m trying to keep it as simple as possible.  I think most of my stuff is over complicated as it is but I guess that is the way I like it.  Except for the final mix, all the rest of the songs on my current list are done.  I’d like to add one more song to make a total of about 1 hour of music but I’m running out of steam, ideas, energy and time (I’ve got to find a job!!!).  But there is no real hurry.  Maybe I’ll just let it rest for a bit.  At least I’m having a lot of fun with it and a few people are listening.  That was the point of it all.  I think this second set of songs shows quite a bit of improvement over the first set from July so I’m getting better at it also.
    Enough about me.  You get better and get your eyes fixed, ok?  I’ve been thinking about you and worrying a bit too.  So get healthy dammit!  Heck, Maureen is making me do it too.  I’ve been to so many doctors in the last six months I can’t even count them all up.  At least I’ve lost 50 lbs (lots more to go) and only use 1/3 the insulin I did at Christmas time.  Plus, most of my various aches and pains have gone away or been fixed too.  My kidneys are functioning fairly well again and, after a very extensive search, medical science has found my first fully functional, healthy organ: my heart.  Woohoo!  But I’ve always figured that if any two or three functioned somewhat well on any given day, and they all rotate out once in a while, I’d be ok.  Well, there I go, talking about me again.  My thoughts are with you and I hope you get well soon!!!
    Have a great day, Mike!!!

  • I believe 1964 was my last trip to a drive-in movie.  In a Ford Fairlane.  At the time, I was deciding between my true love and the military.  Thank God I chose the military.

  • i wish i had the time and expertise to develop an off-xanga site. i’m just concentrating on making my xanga the best it can be with the limitations that xanga puts on it. also, jerry lewis is one of my idols. when i’m not moping around, i’m a bit of a comic and most of jerry’s work is brilliant, though i will admit that cinderfella was not up to par.

    thank you for your comments on my work. i am trying to dig myself out of a hole, lately, and it hasn’t been working. every once in a while i throw some poetic dirt in the right place down here and am able to step up and see the sun (thus, the last poem).

    i wish i could write on a positive note always, but i’ve got to rid myself of the bad or it’ll all boil up. eventually, the candle will get bigger and hopefully my angsty drama will be few and far between. i will admit that much of what i write is angst, albeit better expressed than most.

    definitely trying to bring more than grey and black and red in my spectrum. and the light and love of my life has a way of shedding that on me.

    thank you for your support of “in the skylight.” i’ve featured writers before, but it was a one-a-day and not too often. i’m a member of the featured grownups with quality content blog, but haven’t had too much time for surfing lately. though i’ll definitely get to it, soon, as i know you have an eye for quality content.

    thank you so much for your comments. and, if okay by you, i will feature you in that column in the near future.

  • RYC:  I knew I could count on you to respond … I know there is a Red Menace in every workplace … there is one at my new job, but she’s nowhere as evil as the Menace.  I know I should avoid the site, but it is a public site (ratemyteachers) and everybody can see it.  I don’t like being defamed and not being able to defend myself.  I was able to get the comment off, but I don’t know how to get my name off.  I shouldn’t be on in the first place, since I’m not a teacher and I haven’t worked there for a year and a half.  I don’t think there should be sites like this where students can say mean things about their teachers … but it’s worse when an adult stoops to that level.  I know I will feel better in a few days … I always got over it before … but right now I’m sick about it.  I just wish I knew what made certain people tick!!  Thanks for your kind words (made me feel a little better …):littlekiss:

  • i did find out some good news today. but nothing about shellie. i am going to try on my next two days off to try and find her if they will let me in.

  • ryc: wow that is cool news!  I never dreamed… hmmmm

    You’ll be there – you will be there for sure!

  • you wanna know an FC trick? i don’t use it bc i have no desire to be featured. but if you go to the edit form and chose the time stamp under the status. if you do that every day as you gather more and more comments, it might get noticed by FC. anyway, i think that works…

  • there’s a long beach mississippi too. i like your poem. it’s very reflective of what is going on right now.

  • Such wonderful memories! I’ll never forget watching “Fantastic Voyage” at the Drive-In when I was younger. It’s a shame my kids will never know what that’s like. As always, excellent post. I LOVE that you put in links! :love:

    RYC: Yes, I ate my Cheerios with milk :lol:

  • Your poem, “Levee Breaking In My Heart” is beautiful. It brought tears to my eyes.

  • Hey Mike as usual, great writing, I am so impressed,, i lived drive in’s as well,,

  • RYC, thanks for stopping by!  I appreciated the poem as well. 

    ~TaunaLen 

  • You’ve done such a wonderful job this week.

    Thanks for helping to make the Hometown week such a success!!  ~D~

  • It just kills me that I can’t come up with any vivid memories regarding El Monte. I know for sure that I’d driven through the area, at least.

    I, too, remember some fond experiences at the drive-in. One double-bill in particular comes to mind: Gremlins followed by Ghostbusters, circa 1984(?). As an eight-year-old, I was in such awe of the whole drive-in experience.

    Your poem on the Levee was dead-on. Words can’t express my grief for those people involved in the South; I’m glad you were able to articulate exactly what a lot of people — myself included — have been feeling.

  • :fun: I used to love drive-ins, but no one seems to have drive-in etiquette any more at the last remaining one in Tucson, the De Anza. So we rarely go.

  • I loved the poem. You said it well, summed it all up.
    I have watched many newscasts, people are saying New Orleans is gone , not coming back. Looking at it through picutres and on TV one would think so, but I feel it will rebuild and continue on as it was and in the same spot.
    A wonderful poem. Sad for sure but says it all.

    Peace and Love:)

  • You’re a featured content whore??  :eek:   Well here’s another comment to add to your collection.  Thanks for visiting.  I started writing a hometown piece but it’s all about how my hometown isn’t my home town.  :lookaround:  The strongest memory that I have of LA is wanting to get out of it.

    Your poem…wow…really speaks to me tonight.  I feel so helpless and disillusioned.  I thought about praying and then wondered if it would do any good.  Anyway, love your writing.

    Lisa

  • The poem about the devastation of Katrina is superb and very moving and heartfelt, the devastation beyond imagining. I haven’t had time to read this entry yet, though… Many thanks for your beautiful, beautiful comment on the beauty of women, that was stunning. *hugs xo

  • Mike,

    Great entry! That definately sounds liek the place to be.

    BE blessed!
    Steve :spinning:

  • Awesome movie memories!!!  Very cool!

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