Tuesday, March 19, AD 2024 4:02am

A Song for Hot Weather

Something for the weekend.  The theme song from The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957).  A combination of the Colonel Bogey March and the River Kwai March, performed by Mitch Miller.

Yesterday, taking a mini-vacation with the family, we were stuck in traffic for forty-five minutes due to bridge repairs south of Joliet on I-55.  Temperatures topped 100 and my faithful Transit Connect Wagon decided this would be a splendid time to give me my first mechanical difficulties in three years by overheating.  It was touch and go but we managed to get off the interstate and stopped at a convenience store.  I let the engine cool down and then put coolant in with the able assistance of the store manager, an Indian immigrant who turned down my offer to pay him for his time.  I gave him my card and asked him to call on me if he ever needed legal assistance gratis.  I try to never forget a favor.  We drove home without further incident and I will have the vehicle checked by my mechanic.  I suspect it is a blown fuse on one of the electrical fans cooling the radiator, but we shall see.

In any event this heat drenched adventure convinced me to post a song where the setting is quite hot and the theme song from the Kwai film fit the bill.  For anyone who hasn’t seen the movie, it is magnificent.  Alec Guinness plays Lieutenant Colonel Nicholson, absolutely indomitable in the face of the most savage treatment from his captors.  Ultimately he wins his war of nerves with his captor, Colonel Saito, over the issue of whether British officers must work in other than an administrative captivity, but fails to understand that by building the bridge he is collaborating with the enemy.  Nicholson is a man of rules and discipline and in many ways he is a heroic figure, willing to die to uphold what he perceives as civilized standards, and is beloved of his men who he also loves.  However, he is a tragic hero in that he fails to see that following what he thinks are the rules in this circumstance will benefit the enemy by building them a strategic rail bridge.   He rectifies his mistake at the cost of his life.  The film is an absolutely riveting character study of both Nicholson and Saito, stunningly portrayed by  Sessue Hayakawa, a Japanese immigrant to the United States, who fought with the French Resistance during World War II, helping downed Allied fliers.

The scene below from the film completely captures both Nicholson and Saito, and their impact on each other:

 

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Pat
Pat
Saturday, July 20, AD 2013 4:53pm

That must have been a great relief to have had the help in the circumstances.

Midafternoon, I made a 25 mile roundtrip for farewells on secondary roads with pockets of shade and watched the digital readout on the dashboard waver between 97 and 101 for outside temps. Dreaded the drive ahead for my cousin and her family, who were heading for I-495 to near Columbus, Ohio. She said they’ve never found a good time of day for the trip.

I remember days when a jug of water for the radiator was a cure-all.

Pat
Pat
Saturday, July 20, AD 2013 11:14pm

Car trouble away from comfort zones is frightening – but then, cooling off overheated automobiles is nothing to what daunted sober men such as Nicholson and Saito.

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