Immediately, Johnny pulls a post out of the ground and uses the post to break in a window so that he can open the door.
The following videos demonstrate alternative ways to open a locked car door.
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This blog discusses the movie Dirty Dancing, which was released in 1987 and starred Jennifer Grey and Patrick Swayze. The articles discuss:
* literary aspects, such as characterization, motivation, interactions;
* the music and dances;
* the production of the movie;
* critical reactions.
This overload.
This overload.
I can hear your heels clicking on the sidewalk,
Beating to the rhythm of my heart.
Caught up in you --
You're the only one I want.
I follow you home every night
Just to make sure that you get there alright.
Baby, it's true,
I can't think of anything but you
And what I need, Baby,
Is a little bit of sympathy.
You got me on my knees.
I burn throughout the night.
And I can't live without your love
Won't you help me cure this overload?
Oh, you got to know;
You see me everywhere that you go.
Doesn't that say something?
Obsession's taken hold of me?
All because of you.
You've got to see me through.
I can't take another night alone without you.
Honey, it's true.
I am so hung up on you
What I really need, Baby, is a little of your company.
You got me on my knees.
I burn throughout the night ...
Alfie Zappacosta's 1986 album When I Fall in Love Again |
Alfredo Peter "Alfie" Zappacosta (born 1953 in Sora, Italy), also known by just his surname, is an Italian-born Canadian singer/songwriter.======
Zappacosta's first band was Surrender, a five-piece group that recorded three albums in the late 1970s into the early 1980s. In 1984 he recorded his first self-titled solo album which contained the hit singles "Passion" and "We Should Be Lovers". As a result, he won the Juno Award for "Most Promising Male Vocalist".
The next year he lent his vocals to the Canadian charity production "Tears Are Not Enough", produced by David Foster singing the lines "Maybe we could understand the reasons why" in the fifth stanza with Dalbello.
His second album A-Z was released in 1986 and featured the hit singles "When I Fall (In Love Again)" and "Nothing Can Stand In Your Way". Following this, a Zappacosta song "Overload" was added to the Dirty Dancing soundtrack, one of the biggest selling soundtracks of the 80s.
A third album Quick! .. .Don't Ask Any Questions was released in 1990, before Zappacosta took time off to hone his vocal and guitar skills. He also pursued acting in various stage performances, as well as a role in the 2005 Canadian movie Halo. ....
In December 2008, Zappacosta released the album At the Church at Berkeley which features his versions of classic jazz standards. He has been touring Canada to support this album since the summer of 2009. In 2010 Zappacosta released his last album to date, Blame It On Me
Sometimes in this world,Listed below are other moments when characters see things they don't want to see.
you see things
you don't want to see.
... there are well-documented findings that classrooms of only (or mainly) women students result in those students participating more actively in the classroom, and reporting higher levels of active learning, higher order thinking, and more academic challenge throughout their four years than women in coed settings report.In a coed college, which includes students of both sexes, many female students are impeded by various social factors. Some women feel -- subconsciously or even consciously -- that they should remain subordinate to men, who naturally are the superior sex in society. In this regard, men enjoy social advantages while women suffer social disadvantages, and so society is not fair to women.
Students at women's colleges also report more interaction with faculty. It may simply be that faculty take women more seriously and spend more time nurturing their learning when impressive young men aren't around to dominate the classroom and the faculty members' attention. Just ask the women at Harvard Business School, who've been struggling to break through in classroom discussions and professors' eyes.
In women's colleges, faculty and administrators set high standards for the women students and make clear their expectation that the graduates will achieve great things. This surely leaves a lasting impact on the students.
Studies also show that students at women's colleges ... are dozens of times more likely to stick with math and hard science studies than women who attend coed colleges. Not twice as likely to stick with it but dozens of times more likely. Nobody knows why, but the vast majority of women who enter coed colleges thinking they will major in math or chemistry or some other hard science drop out of those fields (as compared to the "soft sciences" such as sociology and psychology). In contrast, women stick with those studies in women's colleges, and go on to careers in those fields. ...
* women are not disadvantaged in a both-sexes collegeBaby perceives her disadvantage and the unfairness, and she resolves herself to rise above her disadvantaged, unfair situation -- most importantly by attending an all-women college.
* women should reconcile themselves to such disadvantages
* women should enjoy their conventional, subordinate female roles
* men generally excel over women in many activities
* sexual differences should not be considered to be "unfair".
The people in the culture of poverty have a strong feeling of marginality, of helplessness, of dependency, of not belonging. They are like aliens in their own country, convinced that the existing institutions do not serve their interests and needs. Along with this feeling of powerlessness is a widespread feeling of inferiority, of personal unworthiness.Harrington's description of the Culture of Poverty was a major reason why his book The Other America became so influential in the early 1960s. In later decades, this aspect of his book has been criticized as "blaming the victims" of poverty. Those critics should read Lewis's books on the subject.
This is true of the slum dwellers of Mexico City, who do not constitute a distinct ethnic or racial group and do not suffer from racial discrimination. In the United States the culture of poverty that exists in the black community has the additional disadvantage of perceived racial discrimination.
People with a culture of poverty have very little sense of history. They are a marginal people who know only their own troubles, their own local conditions, their own neighborhood, their own way of life. Usually, they have neither the knowledge, the vision nor the ideology to see the similarities between their problems and those of others like themselves elsewhere in the world.
In other words, they are not class-conscious, although they are very sensitive indeed to status distinctions. When the poor become class-conscious or members of trade union organizations, or when they adopt an internationalist outlook on the world they are, in my view, no longer part of the culture of poverty although they may still be desperately poor.
I thought I'd never find a guy as great as my dad.Toward the end of the movie, however, she criticizes some of his attitudes.
You told me everyone was alike and deserved a fair break. But you meant everyone who is like you. You told me you wanted me to change the world, to make it better, but you meant by becoming a lawyer or an economist and marrying someone from Harvard.I have changed my mind about Jake Houseman's politics. I had assumed that he is a liberal Democrat, but now I think that he is a conservative Republican. During the 1950s and early 1960s, medical doctors commonly opposed the Democrats' efforts to interfere in the medical profession.
Free-market economics is the foundation of American prosperity.As Baby grew up, she absorbed these principles from her father.
The government should refrain from meddling in private business.
America is a meritocracy and is the land of opportunity.
People who work intelligently, diligently and honestly should and do prosper.
Successful people should not be taxed excessively.
Society should not be blamed for individuals' faults and failings.
Charity should be done mostly in the private sphere.
Marjorie Houseman======
Look at all this leftover food. Are there still starving children in Europe?
Baby Houseman
Try Southeast Asia, Ma.
Marjorie Houseman
Right.
Jake Houseman
Robbie, Baby wants to send her leftover pot roast to Southeast Asia, so anything you don't finish, wrap up.
Max, our Baby's going to change the world.
You always told me if someone was in trouble, I should help. Could you lend me $250?Jake gives her the money after obtaining only her assurance that the money is not for some illegal purpose. He does not inquire about the recipient of Baby's charity, because he has taught her to donate privately.
You told me everyone was alike and deserved a fair break, but you meant everyone who is like you.======
Superficially, Baby is complaining that her father has not given Johnny Castle a fair break in regard to the abortion. Jake has insinuated, without learning the facts, that Johnny is guilty in the abortion.
More profoundly, however, Baby is complaining that Jake is unconcerned about the 20% of the US population that lives in poverty because they have not received a fair break in their lives. Jake should recognize that all that poverty should not be attribute to laziness and foolishness. Those poor people have not received a fair break!
Baby insinuates that her father is concerned about this social justice because those poor people are not like him. They are racial minorities or are uneducated or are trapped in chaotic living conditions or are suffering from other personal or social disadvantages that are not entirely their own fault.
-----
You told me you wanted me to change the world, to make it better, but you meant by becoming a lawyer or an economist and marrying someone from Harvard.
Superficially, Baby is complaining that her father has prohibited her from socializing with the dancers and the low-class employees who lead unconventional lives -- who drop out of school, work in occasional, itinerant jobs and get involved in pregnancies out of wedlock.
More profoundly, however, Baby is complaining that Jake has been discouraging her from her intention to join the Peace Corps. Jake will try to keep Baby from involving herself dangerously in poverty's squalor -- especially the squalor abroad. He will argue that she can help the world more by working as a professional expert in a powerful institution rather than helping to dig a water well in one Cambodian village.
The program I shall propose will emphasize this cooperative approach to help that one-fifth of all American families with incomes too small to even meet their basic needs.======
Our chief weapons in a more pinpointed attack will be better schools, and better health, and better homes, and better training, and better job opportunities to help more Americans, especially young Americans, escape from squalor and misery and unemployment rolls where other citizens help to carry them.
Very often a lack of jobs and money is not the cause of poverty, but the symptom. The cause may lie deeper in our failure to give our fellow citizens a fair chance to develop their own capacities, in a lack of education and training, in a lack of medical care and housing, in a lack of decent communities in which to live and bring up their children.
But whatever the cause, our joint Federal-local effort must pursue poverty, pursue it wherever it exists -- in city slums and small towns, in sharecropper shacks or in migrant worker camps, on Indian Reservations, among whites as well as Negroes, among the young as well as the aged, in the boom towns and in the depressed areas.
Our aim is not only to relieve the symptom of poverty, but to cure it and, above all, to prevent it. No single piece of legislation, however, is going to suffice.
We will launch a special effort in the chronically distressed areas of Appalachia.
We must expand our small but our successful area redevelopment program.
We must enact youth employment legislation to put jobless, aimless, hopeless youngsters to work on useful projects.
We must distribute more food to the needy through a broader food stamp program.
We must create a National Service Corps to help the economically handicapped of our own country as the Peace Corps now helps those abroad.
We must modernize our unemployment insurance and establish a high-level commission on automation. If we have the brain power to invent these machines, we have the brain power to make certain that they are a boon and not a bane to humanity.
We must extend the coverage of our minimum wage laws to more than 2 million workers now lacking this basic protection of purchasing power.
We must, by including special school aid funds as part of our education program, improve the quality of teaching, training, and counseling in our hardest hit areas.
We must build more libraries in every area and more hospitals and nursing homes under the Hill-Burton Act, and train more nurses to staff them.
We must provide hospital insurance for our older citizens financed by every worker and his employer under Social Security, contributing no more than $1 a month during the employee's working career to protect him in his old age in a dignified manner without cost to the Treasury, against the devastating hardship of prolonged or repeated illness.
We must, as a part of a revised housing and urban renewal program, give more help to those displaced by slum clearance, provide more housing for our poor and our elderly, and seek as our ultimate goal in our free enterprise system a decent home for every American family.
We must help obtain more modern mass transit within our communities as well as low-cost transportation between them.
Above all, we must release $11 billion of tax reduction into the private spending stream to create new jobs and new markets in every area of this land.Unfortunately, many Americans live on the outskirts of hope--some because of their poverty, and some because of their color, and all too many because of both. Our task is to help replace their despair with opportunity.
This administration today, here and now, declares unconditional war on poverty in America. I urge this Congress and all Americans to join with me in that effort.
It will not be a short or easy struggle, no single weapon or strategy will suffice, but we shall not rest until that war is won. The richest Nation on earth can afford to win it. We cannot afford to lose it. One thousand dollars invested in salvaging an unemployable youth today can return $40,000 or more in his lifetime.
Poverty is a national problem, requiring improved national organization and support. But this attack, to be effective, must also be organized at the State and the local level and must be supported and directed by State and local efforts.
For the war against poverty will not be won here in Washington. It must be won in the field, in every private home, in every public office, from the courthouse to the White House.
3:11 - 4:16 = Baby and Johnny practice dancing in front of a mirrorBy the way, I think that the same song is playing in both those scenes.
5:12 - 6:01 = Baby and Lisa primp in front of mirrors in their bedroom
1) That deleted scene (in the above video at 3:11 - 4:16)
2) The first part of the "Wipeout" scenes (in the below video at 0:02 to 0:17)
A woman in the audience looks in a mirror, sees Baby, and imagines herself to be Baby dancing with Johnny in the scene.======
A man in the audience looks in a mirror, sees Johnny, and imagines himself to be Johnny dancing with Baby in the scene.
Baby HousemanThe above dialogue is foreshadowed by dialogue that occurred previously in the movie.
Do you know what I'm scared of, Johnny? I'm scared they'll beat us down and they'll say we have our whole lives ahead of us -- that I'm going into the Peace Corp, and you're going dancing, and we don't know what we feel.
Johnny Castle
[interrupting] think we don't know what we feel
Baby Houseman
And we'll start thinking it wasn't such a big deal, and then everyone will be against us -- even us. What'll we do then, Johnny?
Johnny Castle
We'll fight harder, Frances, that's what we'll do. We'll fight harder.
* Baby had said that she was scaredBecause of those foreshadowings, I think that the above dialogue was in the original script. However, that dialogue was replaced in the movie by the segment from 5:44 to 6:06 in the following video clip.
* Baby had said she would join the Peace Corps
* Baby had said that her real first name was Frances
* Baby had told Johnny to fight harder
5:44 - 6:06======
A close-up of the faces of Baby and Johnny as they continue dancing.
Johnny mouths the song's lyrics. Johnny is communicating to Baby that HE has had the time of his life with her. Baby reacts by looking up and smiling adoringly toward Johnny.
The movie already knows that SHE has had the time of her life, but now sees that HE too has had the time of his life and is even mouthing the long's lyrics to confirm this feeling of his.
Johnny came unexpectedly to the talent show and performed a dance with Baby.That was not enough of a change to justify Johnny and Baby deciding to get together as a couple. They did not even discuss such a decision before they began their "fight harder" dialogue.
Then Baby's father became informed that Johnny had not made Penny pregnant, and so Baby's father apologized to Johnny.
* Teenage Millionaire in 1961I recently was able to watch the fourth movie, because it was broadcast on the Turner Classic Movies (TCM) television channel. The movie's story was lousy, but it did depict popular culture -- dancing, fashions, entertainment and male-female relationships -- in the early 1960s.
* Twist Around the Clock in 1061
* It's Trad, Dad in 1962
* Don't Knock the Twist in 1962
Georgine Darcy dancing in the foreground |
Georgine Darcy |
Georgine Darcy |