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On Golden Pond (1981)
In director Mark Rydell's warm-hearted Best Picture
nominated family drama based on screenwriter Ernest Thompson's off-Broadway
stage play:
- the opening scene in which adoring wife Ethel Thayer
(Katharine Hepburn in the fourth Oscar-winning role of her career)
excitedly was with her cantankerous "old poop" 80-year-old
husband Norman, Jr. (76 year old Henry Fonda in an Oscar-winning
role and his last film); as they drove up at the start of the summer
to the location of their Golden Pond cabin, their New England lakeside
vacation home in Maine, Ethel joyously announced: "Come here,
Norman. Hurry up. The loons! The loons! They're welcoming us back!";
the curmudgeonly Norman responded: "I don't hear a thing!"
- the brief scene of Norman's reminder that he was growing
old and losing his memory - looking at his fishing rods and a newspaper
clipping announcing his retirement as a University of Pennsylvania
Professor, and noting his elderly reflection in the mirror
- out on the lake during an excursion in their canoe
named Gertrude, when Norman exclaimed with his binoculars: "Yeah,
they're huge. I never saw such big loons in my life" - Ethel
corrected him to not look so far into the distance, and concentrate
on two loons in the foreground: "Those are boats, you poop.
Come in closer. A husband and wife. I think they're looking at us"
- Norman's distress and fear at his failing physical
and mental health when he momentarily lost his way in the woods: "You
want to know why I came back so fast? I got to the end of our lane,
I couldn't remember where the old town road was. I wandered a way
in the woods. There was nothing familiar. Not one damn tree. Scared
me half to death. That's why I came running back here to you to see
your pretty face. I could feel safe. I was still me"; and Ethel's
famous comforting words: "You're safe, you old poop....Listen
to me, mister, you're my knight in shining armor. Don't you forget
it. You're gonna get back on that horse and I'm gonna be right behind
you, holding on tight, and away we're gonna go, go, go!"; Norman
quipped: "I don't like horses! You are a pretty old dame, aren't
you? What are you doin' with a dotty old son of a bitch like me?"
Lost in the Woods
Ethel: "You're my knight in shining armor"
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- the coming visit of Norman's estranged and sole
daughter Chelsea Thayer Wayne (real life daughter Jane Fonda) with
her new fiancee, 45-year-old divorced dentist Bill Ray (Dabney
Coleman), and his 13-year old teenaged son Billy Ray (Doug McKeon)
from Los Angeles, who were on their way to Europe; they would help
celebrate Norman's 80th birthday; Ethel was nervous about the reunion: "Norman,
wouldn't it be nice if we could all get along this time?"
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Arrival of Estranged Daughter Chelsea
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13 Year-Old Billy Ray
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Threesome
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- after their arrival, the scene of Norman's harsh,
cutting and sarcastic response to Bill's request to sleep together
in the same room with Norman's daughter: "...I'd guess I'd
be DELIGHTED to have you abuse my daughter under my own roof. Would
you like the room where I first violated her mother? Or would you
be interested in the master bedroom? Ethel, your boy and I could
sleep out back. You could do it right here on the hearth. Like
that idea?" and Bill's indignant verbal parry: "You're
having a good time, aren't you?...Chelsea told me all about how
you like to have a good time messing with people's heads...I think
you should know I'm pretty good at recognizing crap when I hear
it. You know, it's not, not imperative that you and I become friends....But,
I want you to bear one thing in mind while you're jerking me around
and making me feel like an asshole. I know PRECISELY what you're
up to. And I'll take just so much of it..."; in the long run,
Norman allowed the arrangement
- when left alone with 13 year-old Billy, Norman questioned:
"What does one do for recreation when one is 13 and not in school?";
Billy answered: "We cruise chicks...You know, meet 'em. Girls,
try to pick 'em up"; Norman asked a follow-up question ("What
do you do with 'em when you have 'em?"), Billy responded: "Suck
face!...You know, kiss. Suck face. You kiss"
- during Norman's 80th birthday celebration, he joked
about his age before asking for everyone to help blow out his candles:
"Surprised it got here so fast! But I'm glad I got to spend so
much time with this beautiful woman. What's your name again? I want
to thank all of you for coming all the way here from Disneyland to
witness this historic event. Now that I'm out of hot air, I'm gonna
need a little assistance to get these candles out"
- in a private conversation with Ethel by Golden Pond,
Chelsea complained about her father's condescending treatment: "I
don't think I've ever grown up on Golden Pond....I act like a big
person everywhere else. I'm in charge of Los Angeles, and I come
here, I feel like a little fat girl...My father is a goddamn bastard!...Mother,
do you know, I've been answering to Norman all my life. Makes me
so mad! Even when I'm 3,000 miles away and I don't even see him,
I'm still answering to him. Norman is a goddamn poop"; Ethel
was critical of Chelsea: "Chelsea, you have a great big chip
on your shoulder which is very unattractive...It doesn't have to
ruin your life, darling. You're a big girl now. Aren't you tired
of it all? Bore, bore. Life marches by, Chels. I suggest you get
on with it"
- the scene of a summer fishing adventure when Billy
(with Norman) attempted to catch the legendary 10-pound trout named
'Walter' (Norman called it "a crafty old son of a bitch!"),
and they developed a camaraderie
- Ethel's words of wisdom to Billy after he was yelled
at by crotchety old Norman: "You mustn't let Norman upset you,
Billy....He wasn't yelling at you, you know....He was yelling at
life.... It means he's like an old lion. He has to remind himself
that he can still roar. Billy, sometimes you have to look hard at
a person and remember that he's doing the best he can. He's just
trying to find his way, that's all, just like you"
- while fishing for 'Walter' one evening in rocky Purgatory
Cove, Billy and Norman found a dead loon in the water, prompting
Billy to ask: "Hey, Norman? Are you afraid of dying?";
upset about his own approaching mortality, Norman insisted that they
leave; inexperienced at the wheel, Billy drove the Thayer IV speedboat
at high speed and crashed into a rock instead of reversing; in a
near-fatal accident, Norman was catapulted into the water; Billy
swam with Norman to a rock to hold onto, to keep them from drowning,
where Ethel located and rescued both them - she dove into the cold
water herself [Note: Hepburn did the scene without a wetsuit], and
she called him a "goddamn poop!"
Near-Fatal Boating Accident
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- the scene of Ethel's hard slap of a spiteful Chelsea
when she called her father Norman a "selfish son-of-a-bitch" and
predicted he would be unproud and unhappy about her marriage in
Europe to Bill - Ethel angrily retorted:
"That son-of-a-bitch happens to be my husband"
- the heart-tugging reconciliation scene at the dock
between a teary-eyed Chelsea and her father Norman: (Chelsea: "I
think that maybe you and I should have the kind of relationship that
we're supposed to have....Well, you know, like a father and a daughter....I
don't want anything. It just seems that you and me have been mad
at each other for so long..."
Norman: "I didn't think we were mad; I thought we just didn't
like each other" - ending with Chelsea's suggestion: "I want
to be your friend"; Norman asked: "Oh. This mean you'll come
around more often? Mean a lot to your mother"
- after which she touched his arm, the scene culminated with Chelsea
eagerly showing off by doing
"a real goddamned back-flip" from the diving board for an
appreciative Norman ("She did it!")
Father-Daughter Reconciliation at the Dock
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- the final scene, their last day at Golden Pond,
when packing and loading boxes, when Norman collapsed due to angina
on the front porch while carrying a heavy box of china; Ethel prayed:
("Dear God, don't take him now. You don't want him. He's just
an old poop"), and they discussed the reality of death: ("This
is the first time that I've really felt that we were gonna die....When
I looked at you here on the floor, I could actually see you dead.
I could see you, I could see you in your blue suit and white, starched
shirt in Thomas's funeral parlor on Bradshaw Street....You've been
talking about death ever since we met, but this is the first time
I really felt it...Oh, it feels odd. Cold, I guess. Not that bad,
really. Not so frightening. Almost comforting. Not such a bad place
to go. I don't know!")
- then in a lighter moment as he stood on the porch,
Norman used slang he had learned from 13 year-old Billy - he delivered
a proposal to Ethel: "Want to dance? Or would you rather just
suck face?"
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Norman to Ethel: "Want to dance? Or would
you rather just suck face?"
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"Just the two of them now"
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- the film's final lines of dialogue came as they
walked to the edge of the lake and stood there, when Norman noticed
that the loons had returned - and compared themselves to the last
two remaining loons: "Ethel, listen. The loons, they've come
around to say good-bye. Just the two of them now. Their baby's
all grown up and moved to Los Angeles or somewhere"
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Ethel: "The Loons! The Loons! They're welcoming us
back"
Norman's Retirement as Professor at His Elderly State
Out on Golden Pond
Norman's Cutting Response to Bill About Sleeping Arrangements
Bill's Sharp Answer
Billy's Term for a Kiss: "Suck face!"
Norman's 80th Birthday
Chelsea's Complaints About Her Father to Ethel: "My
father is a goddamned bastard!"
Fishing for "Walter"
Ethel's Words of Wisdom for Billy
Billy to Norman: "Are you afraid of dying?"
Chelsea Startled by Ethel's Hard Slap
Nitroglycerin Pills
Ethel's Fearful Prayer
Calling Doctor
Thoughts About Death
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