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WordWolf

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Everything posted by WordWolf

  1. "The cats don't bug him 'cause they know better. He's a mean motor-scooter and a bad go-getter." "He sure is hip ain't he? Like, what's happening? He's too much. Ride, Daddy, ride. Hi-yo dinosawruh. Ride, Daddy, ride. Get 'em, man. Like--hipsville." Now do you know this cat's name?
  2. I have to ask. Was it Pink Floyd's "DARK SIDE OF THE MOON"? Happy Birthday to the album, BTW.
  3. I'm astonished that I know this one from here. ANNA KENDRICK played Scott Pilgrim's sister in "Scott Pilgrim" etc (depending on the language, the name changes wildly). She also showed up on either The Daily Show (with Trevor Noah) or The Late Show (with Stephen Colbert) sounding a bit unstable, and describing a character called "the Christmas Witch" at length. I'm thinking that would be "Noelle Kringle" since she was supposedly Santa's sister. I don't know who Jessica Stanley is, but she's probably from that musical movie she was in.
  4. I was going to guess something from overseas- like Marine Boy or Speed Racer- but the clue about the writers means this was written AND voice-acted in the US.
  5. That rang a bell faintly, but I got the reference eventually. Yes, this is what we'd call that. BTW, I found it frustrating that this movie included a character who was misnamed but never included his correct name. "Hi, Jack." "Jack not name- Jack JOB!" However, when not trying to guess this round, it's easy to look up his name.
  6. "The cats don't bug him 'cause they know better. He's a mean motor-scooter and a bad go-getter." "He sure is hip ain't he? Like, what's happening? He's too much. Ride, Daddy, ride."
  7. That's up the the viewer, I think. Personally, I thought it was special and memorable. Then again, at the time, I was in their target audience.
  8. "The cats don't bug him 'cause they know better. He's a mean motor-scooter and a bad go-getter."
  9. That's Butch, the boxer in "Pulp Fiction."
  10. His name is "Butch." I wonder what it means.....
  11. This movie could TECHNICALLY be described as an exploration of the path to stardom, with glimpses of the drawbacks on the way there. One character abruptly abandons the lead at a phone-call from their agent, another expresses the loneliness of the road and having to leave home behind, and the lead must continually face the prospect of selling out rather than following his dream of making millions of people happy. Oddly enough, a different character's dream was totally possible- to go to Bombay India (as it was called) to become a movie star. The other method ( Hollywood) isn't necessarily "the easy way." Despite it being technically possible to sign a contract and then become rich and famous, I highly doubt anyone actually has a boilerplate for a "STANDARD rich and famous" contract. This movie had cameos by a remarkable number of stars including Telly Sevalas, Milton Berle, and Richard Pryor.
  12. "The cats don't bug him 'cause they know better. He's a mean motor-scooter and a bad go-getter."
  13. Wild guess, "DYNASTY" with Susan Lucci unable to get an Emmy?
  14. Steve Harwell is dead? Aw, fudge.
  15. That last line's familiar. "MY HOMETOWN" by Bruce Springsteen?
  16. These are obviously storm chasers talking. However, I'm not aware of any movie CALLED "storm chasers." So, the next most logical choice is they were following an eponymous storm in "TWISTER."
  17. Oberon the Ufgood was in "Dwarves Assemble." Lickspittle was in "Maleficent-Mistress of Evil." Lubdan was the eponymous Leprechaun in the movies of that name. And so on. Most of the time, it's pointless to cast WD as a VOICE actor since he's hired for his height. Well, it's a living.
  18. I'm not sure ANY of those are cartoon characters. I'm certain most of them are not. (This actor is usually a poor choice for voice acting rather than live acting, for reasons obvious in hindsight.) Also not Mel Blanc.
  19. This movie could TECHNICALLY be described as an exploration of the path to stardom, with glimpses of the drawbacks on the way there. One character abruptly abandons the lead at a phone-call from their agent, another expresses the loneliness of the road and having to leave home behind, and the lead must continually face the prospect of selling out rather than following his dream of making millions of people happy.
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