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  2. Did you ever see a robin weep When leaves begin to die? Like me he's lost the will to live
  3. Last week
  4. Yes, I picked quotes that I felt made it clear we were talking about Norman Bates but also that time had passed since the first movie. Or so I thought. I'm also taking an extended break from games, in case that was not clear.
  5. He was, but he wasn't in ALL of them. The next round will be the giveaway, if no one gets it before then. George
  6. I don't remember the first line ever appearing in "The Honeymooners," but it was always Gleason's introduction to the main show after his preliminary "coffee" cup monologue. Of course, for a few years, TJGS featured Honeymooners skits. George
  7. That is correct. I remember watching it and getting a kick out of some of the tongue-in-cheek humor. As far as I know, it's the only show starring Desi Arnaz, JUNIOR. George
  8. That's the one. We played "Colonel Bogey March" in band a couple of years ago. The director thought it was funny that the program notes still refer to BOTRK, a movie that come out before most of the audience was born. George
  9. Correct. My next quote would have been "Leapin' lizards!" George
  10. Barry came and went while I was sleeping, too. George
  11. I think LEONARDO DI CAPRIO was in at least 2 of those.
  12. The first quote could possibly have been "the Honeymooners". Since the second could not be, that makes this show "THE JACKIE GLEASON SHOW", (or "The Jackie Gleason Hour", or whatever it was.)
  13. Taking a swing, but I have to eliminate this one because I keep thinking of it. "AUTOMAN"?????
  14. Oh, "BRIDGE OVER THE RIVER KWAI", featuring "Colonel Bogey's March!"
  15. Taking an educated guess here.... "ANNIE"???
  16. That explains why I couldn't recognize any of the quotes.
  17. Thanks to everyone for sharing your thoughts on my posts in both the Christian and atheist forums. The challenge I have of respecting the boundary between the two shows how counter-productive it is for me to continue trying to do so. It's time to make a clean break from all things biblical.
  18. I am choosing not to micromanage this thread. If the Christians are ok having their faith questioned outside the questioning faith forum, cool. But for precedent's sake, let's not make a habit of it.
  19. waysider

    Saturday Night

    Our Unwritten Seoul
  20. Vigilante I.C.U. The Wolf of Wall Street Whiskey Tango Foxtrot The Legend of Tarzan I, Tonya Mary Queen of Scots Once upon a Time...in Hollywood Bombshell George
  21. "I guess they're dead. I guess I've known that deep down for a long time." "I'm not giving up. Don't you give up." "I didn't want to be just another orphan. I wanted to believe I was special." "You are special! Never stop believing that!" "You spend your evenings in the shanties." "You had me followed." "Imbibing quarts of bathtub gin." "Bronchitism." "And here you're dancing in your scanties..." "Great gams." "With some old geezer called Little Caeser." "He's an uncle." "Absolutely not! I'm a businessman. I love money, I love power, I love capitalism. I do not now and never will love children." "What are you just standing around here for? You're supposed to clean the bathroom and the kitchen before lunch, my little pig droppings, and if you skip the corners, there will be no lunch. And we're not having hot mush today." "Yay!" "We're having cold mush!" George
  22. Expectations of Allied POWS in this WWII movie were that Japan should have honored the Geneva Convention. Actually, Japan wasn't a signatory to the treaty until 1953. (Interestingly, misdeeds by the Japanese prompted revision of the treaty in 1949.) The commandant of the prison was portrayed as being ruthless. According to many of his prisoners after the war, the actual Japanese officer on whom the role was based was one of the more humane and reasonable ones. To keep costs down, producer Sam Spiegel decided not to hire any extras, using crew members and Ceylon locals instead. This meant that some of the British prisoners were really natives of the region wearing make-up to appear Caucasian. For the scene when he emerges from "the oven" after several days confined there, Sir Alec Guinness based his faltering walk on that of his son Matthew when he was recovering from polio. Guinness regarded this one tiny scene as some of the finest work he did throughout his entire career. Sir Laurence Olivier was offered Guinness's part but turned it down in order to direct The Prince and the Showgirl (1957) instead. In retrospect, Olivier said that it was a sensible decision to go off and do love scenes with Marilyn Monroe rather than tough it out in the jungles of Ceylon with director Sir David Lean. For those who haven't seen the movie, it is best remembered by the whistled march tune it features. George
  23. Bernadette Peters Pink Cadillac Clint Eastwood George
  24. Okay...another exchange from the same movie: "Kill me before the war is over, will you? It appears that you are not the better man." "You're right. My sons were better men." George
  25. I would have thought that one pretty easy (though the show was on decades ago). Maybe this will help: "And awaaayyy we go!" "And now, the June Taylor Dancers!" George
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