Those Which Are Worth Dying For


                  (Here meet the young Frodo Baggins--er, Huck Finn.)

Tonight, I got the chance to refresh my memory of the film, "The Adventures of Huck Finn" (Walt Disney adventure film) on my TV screen--I've seen it in the wide screen sometimes in May of 1993 in SM Megamall. It is one of those attempts to cater to the later generation Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn. The search of freedom from the conventional society prevails where Huck and his negro friend Jim seek their own way of finding it in their "adventures." The context is the pre-civil war America. The air was parochial. Everywhere, the director (Stephen Sommers) managed to portray scenes of rivers  (Mississippi--not Jal-o, hehe) and swamps, reminiscent of the Twainian panorama.

The search for that which is worth dying for fills the scenes with magic that eludes the understanding of the superficial and the conventional. Huck's passion for adventure would raised eyebrows yet it fills my heart and mind with a sense of awe. Something deep inside asked me: Isn't that what you've wanted to make in your way to the "market place"? Isn't that is what you've always desire to experience, that of being afoot, of being a hiker along the highways of life? If that is so, why not pursue it? Why the reluctance to seek and strive after what you've been dreaming about?

Ah this fear, this rational fear about the possibilities of becoming...


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