![superfly 1972 superfly 1972](https://prod-images.tcm.com/v5cache/TCM/Images/Dynamic/i422/superfly_littlechildrunninwild_FC_470x264_100720160458.jpg)
The only rubber bands were a couple of grimy green ones that probably used to hold newspapers together and they were in the top drawer. I’d been in there almost three weeks and my roots were starting to show, which looked really weird because I’m a redhead and my hair was dyed purple, so I was looking kind of Halloween-y, but not in a good way. I knew they’d be the crappy kind that pull and tear your hair, but Kaley and I were bored and we didn’t care about split ends anymore.
![superfly 1972 superfly 1972](https://images.static-bluray.com/reviews/17184_4.jpg)
I snuck into the nurse’s office for some rubber bands. I’d be lying there in bed in the early hours when it was still dark and through the wall I’d hear the first few seconds of, “Move on Up,” so zippy and energized, like the sound waves were yellow and orange, which must be why moms chose it, but she’d hit snooze at least two times so I’d hear those same opening chords over and over again and hardly ever heard the whole song until I found that CD. I also knew “Move on Up” because my mom used it as her alarm song in the morning. I’d never actually heard that album except in the movie, which is a trip if you never saw it and kind of got me interested in being the drug queen of Lakeview Middle School that I thought I was before I wound up here. Most of it was crap, like techno ‘80s stuff and a bunch of grandpa music, but Superfly was there, by Curtis Mayfield. They were all piled up in the bottom of a metal file cabinet drawer with no files in it.
SUPERFLY 1972 FULL
Me and Kaley knew we’d got lucky when I found a drawer full of old CDs in the nurse’s office.