marcar
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Everything posted by marcar
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Streetcar Named Desire - anxiety, delusions My Left Foot - cerebral palsy Rain Man - autism/savant syndrome The Effect of Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds - epilepsy Madness of King George - royal dementia The Sessions - polio Iris - Alzheimer's Theory of Everything - ALS Synecdoche, New York - OCD Memento - anterograde amnesia Fight Club - dissociative identity disorder Jacob's Ladder - PTSD A Beautiful Mind - paranoid schizophrenia Melancholia - one of Lars Von Trier's "Depression Trilogy" Girl, Interrupted - depression, suicide, variety of mental health issues in psychiatric hospital Eternal Sunshine of Spotless Mind - depression Donnie Darko - schizophrenia With a Friend Like Harry - psychopathic obsession Trouble in Mind - 6-hour doc on mental health disorders REAL AND IMAGINED The Ruling Class - thinking you're Jesus Christ syndrome, delusion A Cure for Wellness - all kinds of imagined ailments, misdiagnoses, real dehydration, death The Lobster - blindness, faked death, turned into an animal if can't find partner I'm a Cyborg But That's OK - technophobia, eating disorder, power to steal people's souls, thinking you are a mouse Mary and Max - social anxiety, imaginary friend named Mr. Ravioli, Asperger's
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That's a happy face...or as close as I can get. That was a tough one. I'm going to open up the thread to the next brave traveler. Too much on my plate right now and I don't want to bog down the game. So, who's next?
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"Hit the Road Jack" by Percy Mayfield; made famous by Ray Charles and featured in movies and tv shows. a holiday song not about Christmas
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"I Believe in You" by Frank Loesser in movie "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying". Loesser wrote words and music. "LSD LBJ/FBI CIA"
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Frances Gifford was in "Our Vines Have Tender Grapes" with Sara Haden.
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Ethel Barrymore was in Hitchcock's "The Paradine Case." She won an Oscar for "None but the Lonely Heart." She was married to stockbroker Russell Griswold Colt, son of Samuel Colt of the great gun manufacturing family. Barrymore was "one of the outstanding actresses of American theatre in the 20th century" starring in Ibsen's "A Doll's House" and "Trelawney of the Wells." She was a hit on the London and Broadway stages. She made her stage debut in 1894. The only thing is: she was nominated for 3 Oscars in supporting roles; won 1. Can this be who you mean?
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One of my all-time favorite anti-war movies. Can't believe I forgot it. I just watched it on Sophia Loren day. Glad you included it.
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THUNDERBOLT NEXT: URO ETBTESR
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Yes, thank you. it's my terrible handwriting when I'm writing out the titles to scramble. So Sorry...
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Lots of foreign films in this category besides the ones I mentioned: Hiroshima Mon Amour (Alain Resnais) Les Carabiniers (Godard) Les Croix de Bois L'Ennemi Intime La Grande Guerra Hotel Terminus (doc) Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind (Hayao Miyazaki anime based on his manga) The Sorrow and the Pity (doc by Max Ophuls, frequently cited in Woody Allen films)
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Catch-22 Johnny Got His Gun Coming Home Deer Hunter Apocalypse Now Full Metal Jacket Paths of Glory Platoon Das Boot Roma, Citta Aperta Grand Illusion Hearts and Minds (doc) The Killing Fields Gallipoli The Great Dictator Oh What a Lovely War Gardens of Stone J'accuse From Here to Eternity
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Three into Two Won't Go
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Including all U.K. Bram Stoker (all those Dracula films thanks to him) Thomas Hardy - Far from the Madding Crowd, Tess of the D'Ubervilles C.S. Lewis - Chronicles of Narnia Douglas Adams - Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy J.B. Priestly - The Old Dark House Colin MacInnes - Absolute Beginners Helen Fielding - all those endless Bridget Jones movies Keith Waterhouse - Billy Liar Dody Smith - 101 Dalmatians (I read Cruella de Vil is based on Tallulah Bankhead) Ian McEwan - Atonement
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good one--I love the book and the movie Is it the same category today?
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Yes, The Passenger. A film I saw when it was released in '75 by one of my favorite directors. His most commercial success, Blow Up was the movie that he painted the grass greener coz it wasn't showing up on camera as he would have liked. Now, that's attention to detail...or craziness..but I do like the look of the movies he makes. Your thread, Arsan..
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5.)The film's penultimate shot is a seven-minute-long tracking shot which begins in Locke's hotel room, looking out onto a dusty, run-down square, pushes out through the bars of the hotel window into the square, rotates 180 degrees, and finally tracks back to a close exterior A system of gyroscopes was fitted on the camera to steady it during the switch from this smooth indoor track to the crane outside. Meanwhile, the bars on the window had been given hinges. This shot was done by cinematographer Luciano Tovoli and the director.
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First movie that comes to mind. --- geography
marcar replied to Cathy or Kenton's topic in Games and Trivia
Secret Agent (1936 Hitchcock) Next: Uruguay -
Inception
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Includes all U.K. Jonathan Swift Irvine Welsh (Trainspotting) Roald Dahl C.S. Forester Anna Sewell (Black Beauty) Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (AKA Lewis Carroll) A.J. Cronin (The Citadel) A.E.W. Mason (The Four Feathers) Margery Sharp (Cluny Brown) Margaret Kennedy (The Constant Nymph) James Hilton Nicholas Shakespeare (The Dancer Upstairs) P.C. Wren (Beau Geste) Rafael Sabatini (of Italian-English citizenry wrote Captain Blood, Scaramouche, The Sea Hawk) Frederick Forsyth (Day of the Jackal, The Odessa File) Tom Stoppard
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Wortzik, Sonny, played by Al Pacino in "Dog Day Afternoon".
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Pascal, Pedro
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First movie that comes to mind. --- geography
marcar replied to Cathy or Kenton's topic in Games and Trivia
Spy Who Came in from the Cold Next: Reno NV -
Sorry, guys. I forgot that I didn't realized "Over the Rainbow" was accepted. Then, lost track of things on this thread. Thanks for stepping in. Answer: "Anatole of Paris" in "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty". Next: a song about sports or soundtrack of sports movie
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4.)He's a journalist who steals the identity of a notorious criminal; she's an architecture student.
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Margaret Leighton? She was nominated for one Oscar; appeared in Hitchcock's "Under Capricorn" (1949); won four Tonys including ones for "Separate Tables" (1957) and "Night of the Iguana" (1962). Married to famous publisher, whose parents owned a successful import/export business, Max Reinhardt. He put their money into his publishing biz.
