I have
seen the movie Throw Stuff at the Screen 199 times – tonight marks my
200th viewing, and it will be extra special because it also is the movie’s
10th anniversary, which means so-called “mainstream” theaters
finally will be screening it. Time to
introduce the uninitiated masses to what watching this film is all about.
As with
every great interactive movie, the plot is negligible: what really hooks the
dedicated fans is the borderline acting, the awkward directing, the random
editing, and the intrusive soundtrack.
Individually, each detail is an isolated abomination, an assault upon
the senses from which there is no true recovery; together, they create a
terrible magic that draws in the observer like a fly to a pitcher plant, and
the destruction is bliss each and every time.
My pal
and I always make sure one of us brings the props, or else the viewing doesn’t
count. By props, I mean the stuff we
throw at the movie screen at appropriate moments (hence the title). The 200th viewing is my turn, and
I fully restocked our supply: tissue packets, paper airplanes, and rubber erasers
are just several of the items in our celluloid arsenal.
It takes
a while for the movie to get there, but at about 30 minutes in is when it’s our
time to demonstrate our devotion. Once
it cuts to the blue sun in the orange sky, my friend and I throw our rubber
balls, aiming for dead center and just missing them bouncing off the screen
(better luck next time). I notice that we’re alone in our participation at this viewing, but no worries: the crowd will warm
up to the festivities if given enough motivation by us. During my musings, I almost miss shouting “Don’t
do it!” when the main character walks into a dark room, without a flashlight,
where the killer is waiting, for the third time – good thing my friend reminds
me with our predetermined signals (we’re each other’s backups in case of such
distractions). I can’t believe it when
someone “Ssh”s us – don’t tell me they’re actually watching this for the story!
After the
fifth launch of our gear, we have to promise the usher that we’ll clean up
afterwards and that we won’t hit anyone else in the back of the head (a rare occurrence,
but unavoidable). It boggles the mind how
everyone is this unaware of the requirements for watching this movie. You cannot sit through it unaided by
projectiles and/or phrases to shout at it – the movie is unviewable
otherwise. Once it finally ends on an
abrupt cut to a peanut and my friend and I start collecting our belongings to
be used at the 201st viewing, I briefly wonder if the filmmakers are
depressed that their passion project has become fodder for people such as
us. I then realize that I need to buy a
new slingshot – I’ve had this one since my 23rd viewing, and it’s
all worn out.