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Posts
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Days Won
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Posts posted by BunnyWhit
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At the Circus (1939)

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Way Down East (1920)

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The Proud and Profane (1956)

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The Devil and Miss Jones (1941)
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The Devil and Miss Jones (1941)

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The Dawn Patrol (1938)

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Why Be Good? (1929) -- Colleen Moore and Neil Hamilton

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Speakeasy (1929)
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Soules, Dale
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Way...Way Out (1966)
next: The Alphabet Murders (1965) -- more Anita Ekberg
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I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang (1932)
next: a contest/competition
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9 to 5 (1980)
Office Space (1999)
Secretary (2002)
Horrible Bosses (2011)
All about getting or keeping that job, or moving up...
The Apartment (1960)
Jerry Maguire (1996)
The Pursuit of Happyness (2006)
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On 5/9/2021 at 11:19 AM, Dargo said:
(...now tell me...who do ya think Calvin Coolidge looks like???)
How about....
Calvin Coolidge William Duell

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George Fawcett -- Nobody Home (1919), The Son of the Sheik (1926)
Natacha Rambova -- The Sheik (1921), Cobra (1925)
Bert Woodruff -- The Delicious Little Devil (1919), Virtuous Sinners (1919)
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The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945)
next: the screenplay was written by the author of the book
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Slim Pickens
next: guest-starred on Kung Fu (1972-1975)
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Joe Versus the Volcano (1990)
Green Card (1990)
Forget Paris (1995)
Party Girl (1995)
The Truth about Cats and Dogs (1996)
Mrs. Winterbourne (1996)
Fools Rush In (1997)
Picture Perfect (1997)
There's Something about Mary (1998)
Never Been Kissed (1999)
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If I am correct on these, I think I might have seen ten of ten here. That doesn't always happen! The first three are completely unmistakeable to me, for sure:
2751. The Divorcee (1930)
2752. Little Lord Fauntleroy (1936)
2753. My Kingdom for a Cook (1943)
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two other Alberts...
Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1960) -- Albert Finney
next: The Wild Bunch (1969) -- Albert Dekker
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7 minutes ago, TopBilled said:
t was like they were afraid to have a kid die from the battle itself, which would be a form of real gang violence and murder. So he has to become increasingly sick, from cold and cough to deep congestion, before he collapses from an acute bronchial infection. This undercuts the value of the last main scene where the mother carries him home from battle, which suggests he died because of the war not because he had a chronic and fatal case of the sniffles.
I see your point here. The way I've always thought we are meant to view this is as an illustration of the futility of war. Though our hero is severely ill, he rises from his sick bed to perform a feat of bravery that matters dearly to him. This burst of self-determination and pride is the sort of thing that often would have provided the Hollywood physical rally and happy ending movie-goers were used to and likely hoped for in the day. Alas, his efforts, not enough to save him, were for naught.
19 minutes ago, TopBilled said:I do think the juvenile performers are very good.
I completely agree!
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A Man for All Seasons (1966)
next: Georgy Girl (1966) -- the other Redgrave kids
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Stack, Robert
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Jackie Chan Adventures (2000-2005)
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The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939)
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ClassiCategories
in Games and Trivia
Posted
Life Stinks (1991) -- Mel Brooks, Ziggity Bing Bam Boom
Sybil (1976, TV) -- this performance would have given me a psychotic break, too