O’Hara describes the kids as “embossed by silvery images,” which, when broken down piece by piece means shaped by the silvery or appealing images on the screen (O’Hara). When the kids go to these movies, they are shown things that they may have not yet experienced in life, which appears new and exciting. The events and images in these movies are now embossed in their brain, just as the mothers were afraid might happen. Both the reluctance of mothers to give up their quarters for this cause as well as the embossing of the images from the movie screen make this activity appear rebellious and vain for both the mother and the child. The mothers are afraid to let their children to indulge in these “darker joys,” as O’Hara calls them, while to the children, the act of participating in an activity loathed by their mother makes it appear all the more appealing. The aura around “going to the movies” makes it seem as though it is a stepping stone to adulthood, as the child gets their first look at such silvery images that were once forbidden. Nonetheless, this stepping stone marks the beginning of a liberation of innocence, whether the movie ends with a trip to the “Heaven on Earth Bldg” or simply the dream of it (O’Hara). It is this very liberation that mothers seem to be so afraid of, and why O’Hara urges
O’Hara describes the kids as “embossed by silvery images,” which, when broken down piece by piece means shaped by the silvery or appealing images on the screen (O’Hara). When the kids go to these movies, they are shown things that they may have not yet experienced in life, which appears new and exciting. The events and images in these movies are now embossed in their brain, just as the mothers were afraid might happen. Both the reluctance of mothers to give up their quarters for this cause as well as the embossing of the images from the movie screen make this activity appear rebellious and vain for both the mother and the child. The mothers are afraid to let their children to indulge in these “darker joys,” as O’Hara calls them, while to the children, the act of participating in an activity loathed by their mother makes it appear all the more appealing. The aura around “going to the movies” makes it seem as though it is a stepping stone to adulthood, as the child gets their first look at such silvery images that were once forbidden. Nonetheless, this stepping stone marks the beginning of a liberation of innocence, whether the movie ends with a trip to the “Heaven on Earth Bldg” or simply the dream of it (O’Hara). It is this very liberation that mothers seem to be so afraid of, and why O’Hara urges