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flashback42

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Everything posted by flashback42

  1. *The Girl Most Likely Too...*, written by Joan Rivers???
  2. Gandalf -- voiced by John Huston in *The Hobbit* (1977)
  3. *150* "...but with a pale pink trim around the edges, the female demographic will purchase about 23% more."
  4. Thanks. Next up. The wedding doesn't take place because she didn't show up. He's standing at the altar, and is humiliated. A confusion caused by similar names; she went to the wrong church.
  5. Without looking up any details -- Buck Henry?
  6. The setting, the atmosphere of this story brings to mind works such as *Good Will Hunting*, *A Beautiful Mind*, and even the sitcom *The Big Bang Theory* in its portrayal of the academic environment peopled by mathematics and physics aces. The overlay of standard crime-solving points makes it familiar, and it also contributes to the whodunnit fun. To give away an important point: The children are murdered in order for the busdriver's daughter to get her lung transplant. This is accomplished, but the driver himself loses his own life in the "accident". There is false "evidence" planted at other "crime scenes". Edited by: flashback42 on May 27, 2012 11:57 AM
  7. Yep. The little **** got this thread off page 4, too. You want it, miles.
  8. > {quote:title=flashback42 wrote:}{quote}Thanks, skipper. Next up: > > > > > > > > > > "Do you know what time it is?" > > > > > > > > > > "A watch doesn't really go with this outfit, Daddy." > > > > > > > > > > ??? Retiring my last entry. My taste for the dialogue in *Clueless* doesn't seem to be shared very widely. Another line from an earlier year: "Why do guys always know how to hit a woman -- right across the cheek, wham, where it feels like your eyeball is going to explode? What do they do, do they pull you aside in high school and show you how to do this?" Film? Person speaking? Person addressed?
  9. ♫ Inchworm, Inchworm, measuring the merigolds, You and your arithmatic will probably go far...♪ ♫ Inchworm, Inchworm measuring the merigolds, Seems to me you'd stop and see How beautiful they are! ♪ Film? Vocalist?
  10. Right. Disney was sometimes a critical and abrasive taskmaster. Employees sometimes wanted to avoid him in certain moods. skipper's thread.
  11. Carruthers, Amos -- Denver Pyle in *The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance* (1962)
  12. Whattheatich, I'll try one. A Hollywood studio where the employees had a little byword / ritual. On certain occasions they would pass around the word that "Man is in the forest!" What studio? What event occasioned this behavior?
  13. Dropped the ball on this one; got prompted by PM. Open thread.
  14. (2,627) At some 120 Views. Seeming to fit into the numerical progression, a group of mentally-handicapped children die in a bus crash. Or did they die because the bus driver's beautiful and intelligent daughter needed a lung transplant?
  15. Laura Dern in *Recount* (2008) Herman Tarnauer
  16. Younger, Bob -- Robert Carradine in *The Long Riders* (1980)
  17. *149* "Okay, okay, there's the knife, damnit. Now sharpen your pencil so we can finish the damn test."
  18. ...the obvious... *Rashomon* ??
  19. Role Call Her Ladyship -- Rosy Ryan Chauffeur -- Doyle Lonnegan
  20. Uncas -- Rick Vallin in *Last of the Redmen* (1947)
  21. Jock Mahoney had started as a stunt man. -- He had doubled for the likes of John Wayne, Roy Rogers, etc. X Brands ("Pahoo") was not an Amerind, but he made a living playing such roles (sort of like Iron Eyes Cody). The series was popular, and it was profitable, so the network (CBS) wanted to own it. The owners, Mahoney and the writers, did not want to sell. So they were canceled. Simple as that. I wonder how many times something like that has happened. cujas' thread.
  22. Correct, skipper. Series Creator Joseph Wambaugh did several years in Juvenile Division, and, in this and other stories he focused on the way children are sometimes treated. He also championed the working cops who daily had to deal with these things. mudskipper's thread.
  23. Several days of worrisome bother and search, and then the case is solved. The boy's family have the water in their swimming pool changed. The deceptive impurities in the pool water had masked the fact that the boy had drowned in his family's pool. That was the first place they checked, of course, but the pool seemed to be empty. Final scene: The detective, in his own home, sets a plate and a cup on the table and then sits down. Hesitation; then, safely here with no witnesses, he breaks down weeping loudly. Series? Episode star? Episode title? Edited by: flashback42 on May 25, 2012 12:38 AM
  24. > {quote:title=EugeniaH wrote:}{quote}*149* > > *149* "I don't know what I'm doin' here! I remember I was partyin' after my well came in, and I woke up here!"
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