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Human without the bean

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Everything posted by Human without the bean

  1. "Most Likely You Go Your Way (And I'll Go Mine) remix ~Bob Dylan~ Try this one WordWolf. I am able to see it. https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/bobdylan
  2. I had forgotten that this was up here. I don't think I will give anymore lyrics to it. I think you guys know about me now, having been trading songs and movies, actors and such between us for a few years that I like Bob Dylan's music. A lot of his music isn't mainstream except for his 60's period and probably some 70's too. This song is from his "Blonde on Blonde" 1967 album titles "Most Likely You Go Your Way and I'll go Mine". Was he thinking about Joan Baez when he wrote it, I don't know? It was released in 2007 as a re-mastered online single and a video of it became quite popular. The video takes you on a journey through the time period when Bob Dylan was writing and performing his best stuff and includes famous scenes in pop-culture where Bob Dylan pops around from one place to another; re- creating the iconic album cover of "The FreeWheelin' Bob Dylan" but never showing the actor portraying Bob Dylan from the front. Only his back side. A scene of the famous Subterranean Homesick Blues with the writing of the lyrics on the cards, his divorce period, that would be "Blood on the Tracks" otherwise known as the divorce album. This period will never get old for me. How about I just post it and you can take a look at it.
  3. Sorry for falling off the radar. Yes, you are correct with Andy Garcia. I saw Internal Affairs for the first time a couple of weeks back, but what I didn't realize was how many terrific actors were in the cast and how dramatic and how intense it was. Andy Garcia out shined Richard Gere with his role. But Gere played a pretty good dark character. Anyway, I've always had a thing for anything detective like, or suspense/dark drama like, and I'm glad I got to watch it. Enjoyed it. You're up George.
  4. Name the actor Internal Affairs Black Rain Night Falls on Manhattan
  5. I'm up here, huh, I'll get back pretty quick. Soon, really, I will.
  6. My guess is that you recall the scene where the bomb is dropped on the house on the hill and some cartel bosses are killed along with some women and children, or you're a fan of the movie or you have read Tom Clancy novels.
  7. Yes, I should have read your post first but I was giving another clue. Good job George.
  8. Another scene where there is a convoy of suburban's and they are attacked with short range missile launchers are used as a training tool for U.S. government agencies.
  9. You say you love me and you're thinkin' of me But you know you could be wrong You say you told me that you want to hold me But you know you're not that strong I just can't do what I've done before I just can't beg you anymore I'm gonna let you pass And I'll go last Well, the judge, he holds a grudge He's gonna call on you But he's badly built and he walks on stilts Watch out he don't fall on you You say you're sorry for tellin' stories That you know I believe are true You say you got some other kind of lover And yes, I believe you do
  10. When the movie producers and cast found themselves working on a movie they realized that they had developed a special bond and decided to shoot another film together, after filming the first, its sequel. The author of the novel (and same name of the movie) got the inspiration from the 1986 Iran Contra affair. The filmmakers bought an actual brick and mortar mansion from a divorcee who had bad memories of the building and it was used In a scene where the cartels hacienda is destroyed by an aircraft missile.
  11. You say you love me and you're thinkin' of me But you know you could be wrong You say you told me that you want to hold me But you know you're not that strong I just can't do what I've done before I just can't beg you anymore I'm gonna pass And I'll go last
  12. I didn't give the artist because I didn't think it was the right song.
  13. Frankly, I thought I finished the clue with my apologies for posting such a weak clue? For the record, I did not say that Goodbye, Columbus was the top grossing movie of 1969. I only said it was # 1 along with other #1 box office movies for the year 1969. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1969_in_film So again, my apologies for such a weak clue and I will try to do better the next time. It was kind of fun digging around a little deeper to provide something else once I had selected a movie without much of a story-line in it. I do like this thread. So next time, (I guess this time, since I'm still up) I will execute a more suitable clue to the thread. [Off the subject] Did you guys know that the Triple Crown race winner Secretariat still holds every record time for each of the triple crown races that he ran winning the Triple Crown in 1973? All three The Derby, The Preakness, and Churchill Downs racing times are still the record today 49 years later. Unbelievable horse, he was. His heart was twice as big as the normal horse and weighed 21 or 22lbs. Secretariat was listed in the 50 Greatest Athletes of the Twentieth Century.
  14. I'm looking at the number one box office movies from 1969 and that was Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. https://www.the-numbers.com/movie/Butch-Cassidy-and-the-Sundance-Kid#tab=box-office Why are you comparing other films from 1968 (Funny Girl) and 1970 (On Her Majesty's Secret Service) with the box office movies of 1969? Is it something that I (or George) posted or said about "Goodbye, Columbus" that you are disputing because George did say he thought that it (Goodbye, Columbus) was the #1 movie of the year, which it was? However, It was only one of several other #1 movies that I posted about in my first or second post. I'm just curious.
  15. I could see that. They are along the same lines. Go if you got one, or I'll go when I can get to it.
  16. It could be "Short People" but I think not.
  17. Name of this movie was "Goodbye, Columbus". Lead actor was Richard Benjamin. So, I was wondering George, if you had seen it? The hiatus was more likely Steve's idea more than it was Ali MacGraw's. What do you think?
  18. Maybe you need a couple more clues George. Laurie Metcalf William Baldwin Andy Garcia William Baldwin Allan Harvey Annabella Sciorra Nancy Travis Richard Gere And now I'm out of clues so I'll reveal it. "Internal Affairs" Anybody who wants to go, then, go ahead.
  19. I just have to say I think this one was doomed from the outset. I didn't think this one through before I presented it. I thought, "This is a cool movie" and went with it. As it goes, I don't know, but probably no one has seen this. Let me recap the (revised) clues again. Just to cover them. The movie in question debuted actress Ali MacGraw. In it, playing her father was Jack Klugman, TV's Odd Couple, Oscar Madison. The aforementioned actress married Steve McQueen in 1973, but before that in 1970 she was in "Love Story" with Ryan O'neal. Then in 1973 "The Getaway" with her soon husband Steve McQueen. One of her last successful pictures was in "Convoy" starring with Kris Kristopherson. I corrected the skyrocketing career thing to having had, a sporadic and short career, when considering that Ali MacGraw was voted "The Top female box office star in the world in 1972. So I was at least in the ballpark on that one. MacGraw took a five year hiatus from her career before divorcing McQueen in 1978. Altogether, I fell short in delivering a good clue. All I really had was Ali MacGraw's debut and starring an "old couple" [that one's just for you George], and the movie paralleled "The Graduate" in some ways. Vague. Name of this movie was "Goodbye, Columbus". Lead actor was Richard Benjamin.
  20. Maybe you need a couple more clues George. Laurie Metcalf William Baldwin Andy Garcia William Baldwin Allan Harvey Annabella Sciorra Nancy Travis Richard Gere
  21. Laurie Metcalf William Baldwin Andy Garcia William Baldwin Allan Harvey Annabella Sciorra
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