bobcat
Well-known Member
- Location
- Northern Calif
I recently watched the movie Paperback Hero with Hugh Jackman where he is a truck driver who secretly writes romance novels. His female publisher comes for a visit and finally discovers that he is the author. Anyway, eventually, there is a scene where she is standing on a balcony with him looking out at the lights of the city and says: "Look at those lights… each one a life, a story, a chance. Out there, you can be anyone you want to be, and no one cares".
What does that line mean to you? Do you just dissolve into the masses there and discover liberating anonymity? Do people care less about you there and keep to themselves rather than in rural locations? Are people just more open-minded there and less judgmental? Does it mean there is suffocation in small towns? It seems some people can't wait to leave a small town, and there are others who feel that way about the city. Maybe both feel they can't be themselves there.
I remembered the Sammy Davis Jr song "I Gotta Be Me". It's about embracing one's real self. It seems that in a city you can try on identities, but the song reminds us that lasting happiness comes from being true to your core. However, what if you're not all that happy with who you are, or you don't feel truly free to be who you are (Which was the situation at the balcony scene). The city lights symbolized the countless lives being lived, each with a possibility. In a strange way, maybe the city gives you less space, but offers you more space (The city doesn't ask questions). Then again, perhaps the price may be too steep for some.
What does that line mean to you? Do you just dissolve into the masses there and discover liberating anonymity? Do people care less about you there and keep to themselves rather than in rural locations? Are people just more open-minded there and less judgmental? Does it mean there is suffocation in small towns? It seems some people can't wait to leave a small town, and there are others who feel that way about the city. Maybe both feel they can't be themselves there.
I remembered the Sammy Davis Jr song "I Gotta Be Me". It's about embracing one's real self. It seems that in a city you can try on identities, but the song reminds us that lasting happiness comes from being true to your core. However, what if you're not all that happy with who you are, or you don't feel truly free to be who you are (Which was the situation at the balcony scene). The city lights symbolized the countless lives being lived, each with a possibility. In a strange way, maybe the city gives you less space, but offers you more space (The city doesn't ask questions). Then again, perhaps the price may be too steep for some.