American Dreamers - Old Home Movie (Arizona Dream, 1993)
One thing I was sure of... My uncle Leo was definitely the hero of my childhood. The smell of his "Old Spice" cologne carried me back into that lost childhood more than the home movies did. My uncle didn't know it, but it was the sweet cheap smell of car dealers that took me back. And made me dissolve into a dream of the past. Leo was the last dinosaur that smelled of cheap cologne. And he believed in the American dream. I was crazy about him because he believed in miracles. And even though he lived inside of life and sold Cadillacs, he always looked like a 10 year-old boy whose sleeves were too long. When I was 10, Leo gave me this great movie camera and my mother always hoped that I'd become the next Milton Berle. But dreams about houses and cars and fresh cut lawns aren't dreams when they become real. In suma, I understood what my mother meant by "Good morning, Columbus." And even if my mother didn't like what I was doing with my life, I think she'd understand. When I was 11, I got this really weird earache that wouldn't go away. I went to about a hundred doctors but none of them could help me... So what Leo did was, he went into Mexico and brought back this fat lady witch doctor who did some mambo jambo and fixed me right up. I was grateful but somehow I thought I might've been better off mute. All in all I had a very happy childhood. My father was a border guard who spent most of his life trying to keep people from crossing lines. Every night for 15 years he'd go out and smooth down the road between Mexico and Arizona. And every morning he'd be out there looking for footprints in the dirt. But my father always said that work was like a hat you put on your head. And even if you didn't have pants you didn't have to walk down the street ashamed of your ass, as long as you had a hat.
... ...
And if somebody was to ask me why I don't get up right now and catch the next train back to New York, it's because you can't say no to your childhood hero. I decided to be his best man but one thing I was sure of, no matter how much I loved the smell of cheap cologne... I was never going to become my uncle. And I was never gonna sell Cadillacs.