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Title Screen
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Movie Title/Year and Scene
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Screenshots
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Planes, Trains & Automobiles
(1987)
- the comedic pairing of two mismatched individuals
in many scenes during a busy Thanksgiving travel season and snowstorm:
uptight, easily-annoyed Chicago marketing ad executive Neal Page
(Steve Martin), and his boorish and undesirable traveling
companion - buffoonish, shower curtain ring sales rep Del Griffith
(John Candy)
- their reunion at LaGuardia airport after Neal
accused Del of stealing his cab earlier in the day on Park Avenue
in NYC; Del asserted: "I know you, don't I? I'm usually
very good with names, but I'll be damned if I haven't forgotten
yours"; Del made repeated but failed attempts to appease
Neal with offers of "a nice hot dog and a beer... just a
hot dog then... some coffee... milk...soda... some tea...Life
Savers... Slurpee?" - and then Del ended the conversation
with his amused realization: "I knew I knew ya!"
- during their ill-fated flight to Chicago (actually
Wichita due to a weather-related flight diversion), Neal was
forced to sit in coach next to Del, who claimed he wasn't an
annoying talker: ("The last thing I want to be remembered
as is an annoying blabber-mouth. Ya know, nothin' grinds my gears
worse than some chowderhead who doesn't know when to keep his
big trap shut"), but then kept yapping, and took off his
smelly socks and shoes ("My dogs are barkin' today")
- their sharing of a grungy, cramped Wichita hotel
room and sleeping in the same bed (and waking up cuddled and
snuggling together) with Neal asking Del: ("Where's your
other hand?"); Del answered: "Between two pillows" -
Neal angrily told Del his "other hand" was not between
two pillows: ("Those aren't pillows!"), and they both
jumped out of bed freaked out at the thought
- Neal Page's raging monologue about Del's annoying
habit of spouting anecdotes: ("I mean, didn't
you notice on the plane when you started talking, eventually
I started reading the vomit bag? Didn't that give you some sort
of clue, like maybe this guy is not enjoying it? You know everything
is not an anecdote. You have to discriminate. You choose things
that are funny or mildly amusing or interesting. You're a miracle!
Your stories have none of that. They're not even amusing accidentally!
'Honey, I'd like you to meet Del Griffith, he's got some amusing
anecodotes for ya. Oh and here's a gun so you can blow your brains
out. You'll thank me for it.' I could tolerate any insurance
seminar. For days, I could sit there and listen to them go on
and on with a big smile on my face. They'd say: 'How can ya stand
it?' I'd say, ''Cause I've been with Del Griffith. I can take
anything.' You know what they'd say? They'd say, 'I know what
you mean. The shower curtain ring guy. Whoa.' It's like going
on a date with a Chatty Cathy doll. I expect you have a little
string on your chest, you know, that I pull out and have to snap
back. Except I wouldn't pull it out and snap it back - you would.
Agh! Agh! Agh! Agh! And by the way, you know, when you're telling
these little stories? Here's a good idea - have a point. It makes
it so much more interesting for the listener!")
- and then, Del's speech about judging others: ("You
wanna hurt me? Go right ahead if it makes you feel any better.
I'm an easy target. Yeah, you're right, I talk too much. I also
listen too much. I could be a cold-hearted cynic like you but
I don't like to hurt people's feelings. Well, you think what
you want about me; I'm not changing. I like - I like me. My wife
likes me. My customers like me. 'Cause I'm the real article.
What you see is what you get")
Hitching a Ride in a Pick-Up Truck from Wichita,
KS with Owen
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- the next morning, their meeting with Owen (Dylan
Baker), Del's good friend Gus' (Charles Tyner) tobacco-spitting,
redneck son in a broken-down pick-up truck, to drive them to
Wichita to catch a train, although they learned that there was
no passenger train service there: ("Train don't run out
of Wichita, 'lessen you're a hog or cattle. People train runs
out of Stubbville");
they rode a train out of Stubbville that broke down in rural
Missouri, and then suffered a bus ride to St. Louis together
- the scene of Neal's fuming, extended, confrontational,
ill-fated Marathon rental car sequence at the St. Louis airport
terminal with an incompetent rental car clerk-agent (Edie McClurg),
after he had found the rental car lot empty, and had to take
a long perilous walk back to the terminal: ("You can start
by wiping that f---king dumb-ass smile off your rosy f---king
cheeks. Then you can give me a f--king automobile") - it
was a one-minute scene of the exasperated Page spouting off the "F" word
over a dozen times (and ending with the clerk's two-word retort
about how he had thrown away his rental agreement: "You're
f--ked!")
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"Welcome to Marathon. May I help you...How
may I help you?"
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"You can start by wiping that f--king dumb-ass
smile off your rosy f--king cheeks"
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- the two's perilous drive together on the freeway
in Del's rented car, driving in the wrong direction (warned by
another driver) and barely missing crashing into two tractor-trailers
driving in their direction by scraping both sides of their car;
Neal imagined Del as a devil figure in the driver's seat
- and shortly later, Del's discarded cigarette set
the car's interior on fire - and then he admitted he had used
Neal's credit-card (that had been switched earlier) - meaning
that Neal was liable for the damage
- the scene of the two driving in the burned-out
hulk of the car the next morning, and being pulled over by a
police officer for speeding at 78 mph - with a melted speedometer,
and Del's lame excuse: "Our speedometer's melted and as
a result, it's hard to say with any degree of accuracy exactly
how fast we were going"; they were also cited for lacking
an outside mirror or functioning gauges (although the radio still
worked), and the car was impounded for being unsafe
- after finally arriving in Chicago in the back
of a refrigerator truck, the reunion of Del and Neal back at
an elevated train station, where Del was found sitting alone
and admitted that his wife Marie has been dead for 8 years; Neal
invited him to his home for Thanksgiving dinner
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LaGuardia Airport Reunion
Cramped Flight to Chicago (actually Wichita)
"Those aren't pillows"
Neal: "Didn't you notice...?"
Del: "I'm an easy target"
Driving in the Wrong Direction
Burning Car
Pulled Over for Speeding With a Melted Speedometer
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Play
It Again, Sam (1972)
- during the film's opening
credits, Allan Felix (Woody Allen) watched a theatrical screening
of Casablanca (1942) with his mouth agape during the
famed airport farewell conclusion sequence, and then remarked
(in voice-over) as he walked out: "Who am I kidding? I'm
not like that. I never was, I never will be. That's strictly
the movies"; he was a self-professed, depressed "aspirin
junkie" and neurotic individual: ("Next thing, I'll
be boiling the cotton at the top of the bottle to get the extra")
- the
flashbacked scene of the breakup of SF film critic Allan with his
wife Nancy (Susan Anspach) after two years of marriage because she
was an active 'doer' and he was a passive 'watcher', and he was also
sexually inadequate for her - ("I
can't stand the marriage. I don't find you any fun. I feel you
suffocate me. I don't feel any rapport with you and I don't dig
you physically. Oh, for God's sake, Allan, don't take it personal")
and when she said she'd contact his lawyer, he responded: "I
don't have a lawyer. Want to call my doctor?"
- the
cheesy, hard-boiled romantic advice given to recently-divorced,
shy, insecure and neurotic loser Allan by the trench-coated ghost
of Humphrey Bogart (flawlessly impersonated by Jerry Lacy):
("Tell her your life has changed since you
met her"), who counseled Allan about being a desirable and
virile man
- Allan's Bogart-like words to himself,
standing in front of a mirror before his blind date with Sharon
Lake (Jennifer Salt): ("They say that dames are simple. I never met one
who didn't understand a slap in the mouth or a slug from a .45.
Come here, Sharon")
- during a Chinese restaurant
double-date with friends Linda (Diane Keaton) and Dick (Tony Roberts),
the over-anxious Allan tried to impress Sharon by demonstrating
how to shovel rice into his mouth with chopsticks - and then thought
to himself: "She
likes me...I can read women. She wants me to come on with her.
She digs me. She's playing it very cool. I'm gonna come on with
her later," but she soon excused herself from the date due
to a headache
- the physical comedy of all
of nerdy Allan's disastrous and fumbling blind date scenes and
rejections - when he was preparing for the date with Sharon and
splashed on too much Canoe lotion and wrestled with his hair dryer,
and especially how he failed to impress her by attempting to be "cool" by being
pretentious ("I love the rain. It washes memories off the
sidewalk of life"), and then ended up swinging his arm wildly
- gesturing and sending an Oscar Peterson record out of its album
cover to crash against the wall, and as he leaned over a chair,
he clumsily tipped it over
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Wrestling with Hair Dryer
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Nervously Greeting Sharon with a Grunt and a
Wave
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Swinging Arm with Record Album
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- there was another failed pickup at an art gallery
when he asked Museum Girl (Diana Davila) about her interpretation
of a Jackson Pollock painting: ("It restates the negativeness
of the universe. The hideous lonely emptiness of existence. Nothingness.
The predicament of Man forced to live in a barren, Godless eternity
like a tiny flame flickering in an immense void with nothing
but waste, horror and degradation, forming a useless bleak straitjacket
in a black absurd cosmos"), and then when he asked what
she was doing on Saturday night, she responded: "Committing
suicide" - then undeterred, he asked about Friday night
instead!
- the continuing joke of Allan's friend Dick leaving
phone messages about his location (i.e., "This is Mr. Christie,
I'm at The Hong Fat Noodle Company...")
- the scene of a blonde Discotheque Girl (Susanne
Zenor) on the dance floor, who rejected him with: "Get lost,
worm!"
- the love scene of Bogart advising Allan to tell
Linda: "I have met a lot of dames, but you are really something
special" - and then when it worked, Allan cooed happily
to Bogart: "She bought it!"; but suddenly, Allan's
ex-wife appeared and shot Bogart dead, and Allan was left without
anyone to advise him; after he awkwardly tried to further force
himself upon Linda on the couch, she stormed out of the apartment
and rushed home, as he professed that it was only a "platonic
kiss"; he worried to himself after she left:
"I attacked her. I'm a vicious jungle beast. She's panicky.
By the time she gets home, she'll be hysterical. What am I gonna
tell Dick? She'll probably go right to police headquarters. What
did I do? I'm not Bogart, I never will be."
- later, their apres-sex scene when he described
how he felt afterwards ("I think the Pepto-Bismol helped");
during love-making, he claimed he thought about baseball: (Linda: "What
were you thinking about while we were doing it?" Allan: "Willie
Mays...It keeps me going"
Linda: "Yeah, I couldn't figure out why you kept yelling Slide!";
although feeling guilty, he told her that they should probably
reveal their love affair to her husband Dick: "It could happen
and it happened, that's all. It's not your fault. It's not my fault.
You felt like a woman last night and I felt like a man. And that's
what those kind of people do.... As long as I'm mature about it,
you're mature about it, both of us are mature, we can achieve a
certain maturation that guarantees maturiosity....The key to wiseness
is maturiositude."
Allan with Linda, Dick's Wife, Interrupted by
Nancy
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Bogart Providing Advice
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"She bought it"
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Ex-Wife Nancy Appearing with Gun
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- the scene of the over-active imagination of Allan
envisioning how badly Dick would receive the news of Allan's
affair with his wife Linda, and then retaliate against him: "Dick
is an emotional guy. He's liable to - God knows what? Kill himself
or something. Kill himself? Do you ever think of what he might
do to you? You've heard of the unwritten law. You take a guy's
wife, you humiliate him. You've seen enough ltalian movies. And
Dick's got a temper"
- the clever re-enactment and reprise of the airport
scene from Casablanca (between
Rick and Ilsa) in the film's final moments when Allan gave up
his beloved Linda, he was able to spout lines from his favorite
film: ("Inside of us, we both know you belong to Dick. You're
part of his work. The thing that keeps him going. If that plane
leaves the ground and you're not on it with him, you'll regret
it. Maybe not today or tomorrow, but soon and for the rest of
your life...It's from Casablanca. I waited my whole life
to say it"), and his added Bogart-like excuse to Dick for
getting involved with Linda - he claimed he tried to seduce her,
but she rebuffed him: "She came over to babysit with me
because I was lonely. Isn't that right, Linda? Over the past
weeks, I've fallen in love with her. I hoped she felt the same
way. I tried everything, but all she could talk about was you."
- in the film's final moments, Allan bid farewell
to Bogart after realizing he didn't need him anymore; Bogart
complimented Allan for his newly-acquired "style" and
ended the film with a salute and admiring, oft-quoted words: "Here's
looking at you, kid"
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Opening Credits
Allan's Depression and Neurosis
Allan's Breakup with Wife Nancy (Susan Anspach)
Allan Imagining Receiving Advice From Bogart 'Ghost'
Continuous Coaching from Dick (Tony Roberts) Via Phone
Failed Date with Sharon
Conversation with Museum Girl
Apres-Sex Baseball Thoughts with Linda
Contemplating Telling Dick About Their Affair on a SF
Cablecar
Imagining Dick's Reaction to Affair - As in an Italian
Movie
Casablanca-like Ending at Airport
Bogart to Allan: "Here's looking at you, kid!"
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Police Academy (1984)
- the introduction of a prospective 'misfit' held
in a police station before being given a deal to be recruited into
the Police Academy: petty criminal and troublemaker Carey Mahoney
(Steve Guttenberg) met Larvell Jones (Michael Winslow) - who introduced
himself as
"Doctor Monsignor Larvell Jones M.D."; he showed off his
talent by making sound-effects with his mouth; he simulated a machine
gun sound inside the police station, causing everyone to duck for
cover; Mahoney was told how to avoid jail-time: "Police academy
or jail....They can throw you out. But you can't quit. If you quit,
you're back in jail. And that's the deal"
- during a lineup of the cadets applying for the Policy
Academy, Mahoney challenged himself to be kicked out ("Time
to get thrown out") by pretending to intimidate one of the
pretty recruits from behind - Karen Thompson (Kim Cattrall): "What's
your name, cadet?...You live around here?...What's your telephone
number, Thompson? Come on, eyes front. Telephone number....Okay,
let's see the thighs"; he was reprimanded by the academy's
strict instructor Lt. Thaddeus Harris (G.W. Bailey): "What's
your name, dirtbag?...Get back in line, Mahoney!"; Lt. Harris'
main goal was to get the incompetent cadets to quit the force
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Mahoney to Thompson: "Let's see the thighs"
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Lt. Harris: "Get back in line, Mahoney!"
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- the scene of Cmndt. Eric Lassard (George Gaynes)
addressing the recruits ("Some of you will be... Here at the
academy... Here at the academy...You will learn, you will learn..."),
when a dog named Princess began to hump his leg and he quipped: "Princess?
Looks more like a prince to me"; Lt. Harris grabbed the dog
away from its owner: "He's a queer!"
- the various pranks played upon Lieutenant Harris
by Mahoney, including putting brown shoe polish on the mouthpiece
of his megaphone that he used during the cadets' obstacle-course
training, and the embarrassing scene of Harris riding a tricked
out motorcycle, and being propelled into the back end of a horse
(off-screen) in a trailer; Mahoney came upon the scene and yelled
out: "Someone call a veterinarian!"; afterwards, although
Mahoney promised Lt. Harris he had told no one of the embarrassing
incident, all of the cadets were snickering at him, and Larvell
made the sound of a horse-neighing
- the scene of defensive training when busty female
blonde Sgt. Debbie Callahan (Leslie Easterbrook) floored one of
the recruits and sat on his neck with her thighs, and then asked
for the next volunteer: "Who's next?" - and all the other
recruits raised their hands
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Sgt. Callahan's Defensive Maneuver
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"Who's next?"
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- the infamous podium fellatio scene - in which befuddled
Cmndt. Lassard delivered a speech to VIP senior dignitaries, while
a hooker (appropriately cast porn star Georgina Spelvin) and cadet
Carey Mahoney hid inside the podium - during the speech (Lassard: "I
think you'll find the presentation interesting as well as very,
very stimulating!" - followed by the sound of his zipper being
unzipped); Lassard showed facial signs of being pleasured, with
contortions, distorted speech, groans and moans: ("Now, this
first SLIIIDE shows a very, very interesting thing: our main building.
In slide TWO! We see another view of IT! Oh, my God, you wouldn't
believe it!")
- when Lassard finished the delivery, he summarized:
"Well, I hope this was as much fun for you as it was for me,"
as he walked away from the podium, Lassard saw Mahoney, not the
hooker, emerge from beneath the podium: (Mahoney smiled and delivered
the deadpan line: "Good speech")
- the night before a driving test exam, recruit Cadet
Mahoney administered a practice driving lesson-test to giant sized
Moses Hightower (Bubba Smith) - late at night, the two stole Cadet
Chad Copeland's (Scott Thomson) compact car and ripped out the
front seats (to sit in the back), immediately rear-ended another
vehicle (Mahoney: "You didn't hit the brake" Hightower: "You
didn't tell me to"), and then became involved in a chase with
a police cruiser - bringing the car back wrecked, although Hightower's
driving skills had improved immensely
- the concluding rooftop hostage crisis when both
Lt. Harris and Mahoney were kidnapped and held at gunpoint by a
crazed outlaw; they were saved by the actions of Hightower (who
had recently been kicked out of the academy), who appeared in civilian
clothes and knocked out the outlaw with a solid punch, and sent
him spiraling down a flight of stairs
- the short sequence when Cmndt. Lassard mistakenly
thought two of his graduating cadets were homosexual, when he caught
them kissing ("You men stop that!"), but discovered it
was Mahoney and Thompson; he then apologized: ("Oh, That's
more like it. Good man. Keep up the good work")
- in the final scene during the cadets' graduation
ceremony (when Mahoney and Hightower were both being commended
for bravery), it was revealed that Cmndt. Lassard had hired the
prostitute to hide under the podium while Mahoney delivered a speech
- to seek revenge against him
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Larvell Jones and Carey Mahoney
Ducking for Cover in Police Station
Dog-Humping Cmndt. Lassard's Leg
Obstacle Course Training
Shoe-Polish Ring Around the Lieutenant's Mouth
Firing Range Training
Lt. Harris' Tricked-Out Motorcycle Ride into Backend of
Horse - Cadets Snickering at Harris
Two Hostages Held on Rooftop by Gun-wielding Outlaw, Who
Was Punched by Hightower
Mahoney and Thompson Kissing - Reprimanded by Lassard: "You
men stop that!"
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Porky's (1982)
- writer/director Bob Clark's notoriously infantile,
vulgar and distasteful coming-of-age teen sex comedy, attracted
mostly male audiences worried about their virility or the size
of their manhood - and responsible for ushering in a flood of
similar teen-oriented material
- the film's premise: in the year 1954, several
over-sexed boys in a South Florida high school (fictitious Angel
Beach High) sought to lose their virginity - especially aptly-named
gullible basketball player Edward "Pee Wee" Morris
(Dan Monahan) who was always horny and obsessed with getting
'laid'; during the opening title credits, Pee Wee woke up every
morning to check his penile length with a wooden ruler - and
was always disappointed with the results
- the opening scene of students milling around at
Angel Beach High, when co-ed freshman Mindy (Jill Whitlow) was
prompted by one of her girlfriends to strut over to muscle-bound
Anthony Tuperello (aka 'Meat') for a question: "Can I ask
you somethin'?...Why do they call you 'Meat'?...Why do they call
you 'Meat'? Because you're so big?"; he non-chalantly answered
'yes' and suggested showing her to prove it
- the scene of Pee Wee pranked by his pals into
stripping naked at Cherry Forever's (Susan Clark) dilapidated
shack in the swamps - purportedly to prove he was "clean" (of
VD); Pee Wee was the first to be nude and was joyously expectant
("I'm gonna get laid. Yes, Virginia. There is a Santa Claus");
when Cherry checked him out, she asked: "What do you use
for a jockstrap, kid? A peanut shell and a rubber band? You know
we'd better tie a board across his ass, or he's liable to fall
in. Save your energy, needle dick. You're gonna need it"
The Prank with Cherry Forever
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Pee Wee Stripping Down Naked: "OK, I'm
ready"
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Inspections by Cherry Forever (Susan Clark)
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Expectantly Waiting
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- it was all a set-up to make it look like Cherry's
black 'husband' (a drunken stranger who was part of the ploy)
returned and jealously chopped up and bloodied Tommy Turner (Wyatt
Knight) in the back bedroom with a machete; Pee Wee fled from the house and became stranded outdoors naked - totally
embarrassed, when he was spotted running down the road by two
cops in a patrol car
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Attack of Black Man with Machete
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Pee Wee Running Naked Outdoors in Middle of
Night
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- the film's title was derived from a sleazy, legally
questionable, rowdy red-neck strip joint and bar in the Everglades
named Porky's where five of the teens sought action one night;
they negotiated with Porky Wallace (Chuck Mitchell), the owner
of the bar/brothel, to have three prostitutes for half an hour
for $100; they were deceived by being led into a dark room and
dumped into the swamp through a trap door in the floor; when
Porky's brother (corrupt Sheriff Wallace (Alex Karras)) arrived,
the humiliated boys were cited for broken headlights (broken
by the Sheriff himself) and told to never return; the boys soon
plotted their revenge
- the scene of Pee Wee's prank pay-phone call to
Wendy (Kaki Hunter), a waitress at Deadbeat's - a roadside diner
hangout, asking her: "Hello. Hi. I'm lookin' for a friend
of mine. He's s'posed to be there....His name's Michael Hunt...
uh Mike, Mike. Yes, Mike"; the clueless Wendy turned to
the patrons and asked in a loud voice: "Is Mike Hunt here?
Is Mike Hunt here? Has anybody seen Mike Hunt?"; when she
turned and asked the guys at the counter: "Do you know Mike..." -
she suddenly realized how she had been fooled:
"Pee wee! I'm gonna get you! You little prick! And I mean
that literally!"
- the heated, insult-ladden show-down argument in
a stairwell between gym teacher Ms. Lynn Honeywell (Kim Cattrall
in an early role) and head gym coach Ms. Balbricker (Nancy Parsons),
when she caught Honeywell flirting with Coach Brackett (Boyd
Gaines); Ms. Balbricker complained: "Ms. Honeywell. Do you
mind?...The two of you squirming around like a pair of eels in
heat. You're a disgrace," and Ms. Honeywell retorted:
"Yeah? Well I'm certainly not stompin and waddlin' around
like a frilly hippopotamus, Beulah! Beulah Ball-breaker... Well,
if I heard a herty-gerty playing, I'd think I was talkin' to the
fat lady in the circus, but as it is, I guess I'm talkin' to a
ton of bad news named Beulah, Beulah, BEULAH!"; Ms. Balbricker
threatened to have Ms. Honeywell fired for "moral turpitude" but
Honeywell wasn't intimidated: "You can take your moral turpitude
and you can stick it up the old gazoo, Beulah!"
- the infamous scene in the equipment room of horny,
turned-on Ms. Honeywell (nicknamed "Lassie") revealing
the reason for her nickname (Coach Warren: "Just get her
up in the equipment room, you'll find out. But beware of King
Kong") -- after she and randy Coach Brackett both removed
each other's underwear and her skimpy blue skirt was pulled off,
she was in the midst of orgasmic love-making when she let out
a loud, shrill dog-howl ("Yes, yes, yes!"), heard echoing
throughout the entire gymnasium; to stifle her screams, Brackett
stuffed socks into her mouth to gag her; shortly later, Brackett's
excuse was that he had "a case of the runs"
- the "Peeping Tom" scene in the girls'
shower-room, in which one of the teens exclaimed after viewing
through a peep-hole: (Tommy: "Jesus Christ! It's the mother
lode"; Billy (Mark Herrier): "I've never seen so much
wool! You could knit a sweater"; Tommy: "This has gotta
be the biggest beaver shoot in the history of Florida");
the towel-clad girls discovered the boys ogling them after Pee
Wee (with a mostly blocked and obstructed view) yelled out at
obese Nola McNeil: ("Goddammit, will you move it, you lard-ass!"),
revealing their hidden location
- one of the guys - Tommy - announced in a deep
voice: "Don't be alarmed, girls. This is just your health
department. We're here to check out all unlicensed pussies. Please
step forward and spread your legs... Originality, neatness, and
hygiene"; then, he placed his tongue through the spyhole,
and Wendy slapped soap onto it; to play along further, he stuck
his member through the hole: ("I'll give you something to
play with"), and Wendy reacted knowingly: ("Hey, wait
a minute, I know that guy") just as head gym coach Ms. Balbricker
appeared; she charged forward to make a painful two-handed grab;
she cried out in glee: "I've got you *NOW*, TOMMY TURNER!
And I'm taking you to the principal!...Somebody get me the principal!
Mr. Carter! Somebody get me the principal!...You disgusting,
little, filthy, pervert!... (Tommy escaped from her grasp) You
freak! You filthy little pervert. I know you're in there. You
dirty little dickhead!"
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Ms. Balbricker Grabbing Tommy's Member
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- the hilarious scene after the shower room incident
in the principal's office, when Ms. Balbricker implored the school's
prudish principal Mr. Carter (Eric Christmas) to have a penis
line-up to identify the boy who displayed his member through
the peep-hole: ("Now, Mr. Carter. I know this is completely
unorthodox, but I think this is the only way to find that boy.
Now that penis had a mole on it - I'd recognize that penis anywhere.
In spite of the juvenile snickers of some, this is a serious
matter. That seducer and despoiler must be stopped; he's extremely
dangerous...I've got him now, and I'm not going to let him slip
through my fingers again"); she was met with stifled laughter
from the two male coaches in the room; Carter was nervous about
using the word 'penis': ("Five young boys in the nude, a
police line-up so that you can identify his tallywhacker.
Please, please can we call it a 'tallywhacker'? Penis
is so ppp... penis is so personal....Can you imagine what the
Board of Education would say if you were granted a line-up in
order to examine their private pa... their private parts for
an incriminating mole?"); Coach Brackett offered a solution: "We,
uh, call the police, and we have 'em send over one of their sketch
artists. And Miss Balbricker can give a description. We can put
up WANTED posters all over school -- 'Have you seen this prick?
Report immediately to Beulah Balbricker. Do not attempt to apprehend
this prick, as it is armed and dangerous. It was last seen hanging
out in the girls' locker room at Angel Beach High School.'";
even Mr. Carter burst into laughter
- in the film's finale, the boys found revenge on
Porky's, dumping him and some of his men into the swamp, pulling
the entire bar apart with a tow truck, and eventually blowing
it up and collapsing the building
- during the closing credits, Pee Wee finally lost
his virginity to Wendy on a school bus, and pounded his chest
like Tarzan through the window before she pulled him back in
for more
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Pee Wee Measuring His Penile Length
Mindy: "Why do they call you 'Meat'?"
Porky's Bar/Brothel: "Get It at Porky's"
Strip-Joint with Dancers - and Underage Drinking
Negotiating with Porky For Girls in the Backroom
Boys Pranked at Porky's: Dumped Into Swamp Water
Run Off by Local Sheriff Wallace (Alex Karras)
Wendy: "Has anybody seen Mike Hunt?"
Ms. Honeywell vs. Ms. Balbricker
Ms. Honeywell's "Lassie" Howl
Lassie's Howls Heard Everywhere
Flabbergasted Principal Mr. Carter Listening to Ms. Balbricker
("I'd recognize that penis anywhere")
Destruction of Porky's
Pee Wee's Victory Over Virginity
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Postcards From the Edge (1990)
- the many funny wry responses
by cocaine-addicted film actress/daughter Suzanne Vale (Meryl
Streep) - i.e., when told she wanted too much instant gratification,
she muttered: "Instant gratification takes too long"
- Suzanne's dream while having her stomach pumped
of walking down a corridor with large photos of celebrities who
had died of drug abuse - and Nancy Reagan walking towards her
mouthing:
"No!"
- the character of Suzanne's domineering and pushy
stage mother - an aging star and heavy drinker named Doris Mann
(Shirley MacLaine) and her famous show-stopping version of the
Sondheim song "I'm Still Here"at a Christmas party
- also the tragically funny story of Doris ruining
daughter Suzanne's 17th birthday
- the blue-screen image of Suzanne as a uniformed
cop on a movie set, hanging by her fingertips from a building's
edge - and when she released her hands, but didn't fall
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The Princess Bride (1987)
- the film's sly parody of the subgenre of fantasy-adventure
films
- the scenes of the Grandfather (Peter Falk) reading
to sick and bedridden 10 year old Grandson (Fred Savage)
a story (from the S. Morgenstern novel The Princess Bride)
of a heroic noble knight (farm boy Westley played by Cary Elwes)
saving his beautiful fair-haired princess-lover Buttercup (Robin
Wright Penn) from evil fiancee Prince Humperdinck (Chris Sarandon)
- the storyteller's regaling about the swashbuckling,
chatty cliff-top duel between caricatured drunken Spanish master
swordsman Inigo Montoya (Mandy Patinkin) and the mysterious masked
Man in Black named Dread Pirate Roberts (Cary Elwes - Westley
in disguise) - with clever-thinking Inigo's switch of his sword
from his left hand to his better right hand: ("I am not
left-handed") and the Man in Black's reply: "I'm not
left-handed either..."
- the wine-poisoning "battle-of-wits" death
scene in which brilliant Sicilian kidnapper and self-described
'genius' Vizzini (Wallace Shawn) was given a choice between drinking
from two wine goblets by black-masked and garbed Westley/Dread
Pirate Roberts -- one of which contained an odorless
but deadly iocaine powder - in a contest to decide the fate of
kidnapped Princess Bride/Buttercup; although Vizzini cleverly
switched the goblets, thinking he could fool Westley when his
back was turned, it was in vain, however, since the black-garbed
man dosed both drinks (he was immune to the killer powder); while
Vizzini laughed about his cleverness and explained: "You
only think I guessed wrong! That's what's so funny! I switched
glasses when your back was turned! Ha ha! You fool! You fell
victim to one of the classic blunders!" - he fell over dead
in the middle of a boisterous laugh
The "Battle of Wits" Against Vizzini
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- the Grandson's annoyance with the 'kissing' segment
of the story: "Aw, no. No, please...They're kissing again.
Do we have to hear the kissing part?" - and the Grandfather
assured the boy: "Someday, you may not mind so much"
- the dreaded 'Fire Swamp'
(with flame spouts, quicksand, and R.O.U.S.'s - Rodents
of Unusual Size); as they navigated through the swamp, Westley
explained that the Dread Pirate Roberts had taken him on as his
apprentice before bestowing upon him his own name and ship; he
then fought and killed an attacking Rodent
- the irrascible, Jewish couple: exiled, cynical
magician 'Miracle Max' (Billy Crystal) and his screeching wife
Valerie (Carol Kane), and Max's famous lines: ("Have fun
storming the castle!" and "He's only mostly dead!")
- Inigo's repeated vengeful quote to six-fingered
Count Tyrone Rugen (Christopher Guest): ("Hello. My name
is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die")
before killing him
- the scene of despairing Buttercup's attempted
suicide (after her forced marriage with the Prince)
by thrusting a dagger into her chest; he surprised her
with the words:
"There's a shortage of perfect breasts in this world. It would
be a pity to damage yours"; she rushed over to the bed and
profusely kissed him
- the film ended with a romantic kiss between Westley
and Buttercup, described by the Grandfather - this time without
objection by the Grandson: ("They rode to freedom. And as
dawn arose, Westley and Buttercup knew they were safe. A wave
of love swept over them. And as they reached for each other...Since
the invention of the kiss, there have been five kisses that were
rated the most passionate, the most pure. This one left 'em all
behind -- THE END")
The Fairy-Tale Ending
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Grandfather: "As you wish"
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- the Grandson's bedtime request to have the story
read again the next day ("Maybe you could come over and
read it again to me tomorrow") - and the Grandfather's reply:
"As you wish"
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"Do we have to hear the kissing part?"
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Private Benjamin (1980)
-
the film's opening statement: "When Judy
Benjamin was eight years old, she confessed her life's desire
to her best friend. 'All I want,' Judy whispered, 'is a big
house...nice clothes, two closets, a live-in maid, and a
professional man for a husband.' Today, all of Judy’s
dreams come true"
- the opening sequence - a Jewish wedding between
the title character - pampered, sheltered, 28-year old, widowed,
naive socialite 'princess' Judith "Judy" Benjamin
(Goldie Hawn), and lawyer Yale Goodman (Albert Brooks)
- the unfortunate circumstance that Judy's new
husband died on her wedding night during sex (as he was saying "I'm
coming"
on the bathroom's tile floor); after the funeral, Judy sat
solemnly in a room full of wedding presents, clutching onto
one of the gifts - a brand new food processor ("Look what
we got!")
- the exaggerated description of the comforts
of military life (including yachts at Fort Ord's Army Base
in Monterey, California, condos with private rooms, a glamorous
job, possibly in Europe, with paid training, free housing,
free food and medical, and a 30-day paid vacation, etc.)
- all promised by unscrupulous Army recruiter Sgt. First
Class James Ballard (Harry Dean Stanton); everything he claimed
convinced the vulnerable Judy to enlist:
"The Army is the best-kept secret in the world, Judy....You
can forget that old brown boot image of the Army. It's the
Army of the 80's, you'd love it, all the ladies do. All 89,000
of 'em. Here, check out this list of jobs. There's over 300
jobs there, and there's only a couple of 'em not offered to
the ladies. Trained killers, stuff like that..."; when
she asked: "What if I hate it once I get there?",
she was falsely told: "Quit! It's a job like anything
else"
- upon her bus' arrival at the Army's Reception
Station at Fort Biloxi (Mississippi) for six weeks of boot
camp, everyone else was being processed while Judy remained
asleep on the bus, where she was reprimanded by harsh drill
instructor Sergeant L. C. Ross (Hal Williams) ("Get
your ass up and out on the company street!"); she was
punished with a series of 10 push-ups and then she asked:
"What is this? Hell Week?"; when she was lined up
to receive her uniform, she cluelessly asked: "Excuse
me, sir, is green the only color these come in?"
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Asleep on the Bus
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"Is green the only color these come
in?"
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- the scene in the barracks of Judy's hysterically-brash
comments: "I joined up, but I'm not staying. There's
been a mistake. I'll straighten it out when the manager gets
here"
- she made further clueless complaints to her
harsh, strict commanding officer Capt. Doreen Lewis (Oscar-nominated
Eileen Brennan), a 5-year veteran: ("I think they sent
me to the wrong place....See, uh, I did join the Army, but
I joined a different Army. I joined the one with the
condos and the private rooms... Look, to be truthful with
you, I can't sleep in a room with 20 strangers...And I mean
look at this place. The Army couldn't afford drapes? I mean,
I'll be up at the crack of dawn here! And I have to tell
you, I am frankly a little shocked....This place is a sty.
(she picked up a pillow) Look, look at these stains. God
knows where this has been!")
- Pvt. Benjamin also commented on the dirty
bathroom: ("It's disgusting! There are urinals in
there!"), Lewis responded: "That's because this
is the Army, Benjamin. It's not a sorority house" --
Pvt. Benjamin was forced to scrub everything with only her
electric tooth-brush all night long; and when she finally
collapsed early the next morning on her bunk, she was immediately
awakened by the Sgt. - she cried out: "Oh God, you can't
make me. I worked the night shift! Go check out the bathroom,
it's FABULOUS"
- the joke line delivered when Private Benjamin
had enough and attempted to run away, but was caught on the
barbed wire fence; Capt. Lewis drove up and told her: "Benjamin,
you are not fit to wear that uniform," and the Private
agreed very simply: "No S--t!"
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Failed Attempt to Run Away
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Marching in the Rain
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Campfire Sex Stories While Smoking Pot
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- as a result of Pvt. Benjamin's attempt to
run away, her entire troop was punished by a forced march
in circles in the rain - and she tried to apologize to tough
female private Wanda Winter (P.J. Soles): "What do you
want from me? I didn't ask her to punish everybody! Do you
think I like schlepping in the rain all day and all night?...Oh,
okay, I took my life in my own hands, I made a mistake, fine,
I'm sorry! I'll never do it again! I wanna wear my sandals.
And I wanna go out to lunch. I wanna be NORMAL again!"
- during mock war game training exercises in
a swamp between two teams (Red and Blue), Judy's campfire
reflections with her fellow soldiers as they smoked marijuana
and talked about their sexual experiences; Judy confessed
she had only experienced one mediocre orgasm in her entire
life and also told her friends about her newly-wedded husband's
death during sex ("My husband had a heart attack and
died on our wedding night while we were making love");
during the exercise, they discovered Pvt. Winter having sex
with Captain Lewis' lover, Cpt. Wooldridge (Craig T. Nelson)
in a tent; Pvt. Benjamin led her Blue team into fooling rival
soldiers and single-handedly capturing the entire Red team,
and humiliating Capt. Lewis; in retaliation, she became drunk
and took it out on the recruits
- the practical joke revenge against Capt. Lewis
that night - Pvt. Benjamin put blue dye in her showerhead
nozzle; the next day, Capt. Lewis was forced to wear clown-white
makeup during the enlisted soldier parade and graduation
from boot camp
- Pvt. Benjamin's rapid romance with French
gynecologist and suave artist Henri Alan Tremont (Armand
Assante in his first major film role); after love-making,
she told him that she had experienced her first pair of orgasms:
"Now I know what I've been faking all these years";
when he asked: "That was your first?," she replied: "And
second"
- the sequence of elite paratrooper training,
when Pvt. Benjamin was fearful about jumping with a parachute
from an airplane during Thornbird training ("I'm afraid
to die!"); she had to rebuff the unwanted sexual advances
of post commander Colonel Clay Thornbush (Robert Webber)
who approached ominously and forced a kiss: ("You don't
have to jump...There are other ways in which you can serve...Well,
you want it, Benjamin! You know you do...I can smell fear
in any man and passion in any woman!..I'm gonna take you
now, Benjamin...Come to papa"); she was forced to jump
to escape his grasp
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Parachute Jump: "I'm afraid to die"
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Unwanted Sexual Assault:
"Well, you want it, Benjamin!"
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- while serving in Europe with Pvt. Benjamin,
Capt. Lewis' insult one-liner: "If Patton were alive,
he would slap your face!" when she was investigating
the Private's association with Henri - who was suspected
to be a Communist
Leaving the Wedding Altar
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- over the Army's objections, Pvt. Benjamin
decided to marry the chauvinistic French artist Henri; however,
she decided at the last minute to abort the ceremony and
walk away from the altar; she explained why she was leaving: "Not
so fast. Henri, I know this is a very awkward time to do
this, but I want to break up"; Henri tried to convince
her to stay, and apologetically admitted to an unfaithful
one-night stand with his ex-lover Gabrielle (Denise Halma);
she called him a "schmuck"; to make matters worse,
he belittled her: "When I met you, you were in the Army,
for God's sakes. You were nothing, you were picking up strangers
in bars!...I'll give you a future, a home, and a name. For
once in your life, don't be stupid!"; she punched him,
and responded: "Don't call me stupid!"
- in the final few moments of the film, she
marched outside, threw off her veil (that floated away),
and walked down a country road in her wedding dress to a
new life - it was famous closing shot of her liberation
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Jewish Wedding
Honeymoon Sex on the Bathroom Floor
The New Reality - Widowhood Again
Recruitment Sales Pitch
Judy: "I think they sent me to the wrong place...I
joined a different Army"
Punishment: Tooth-brush Scrubbing of Bathroom
Yawning During Line-Up
The Discovery of Pvt. Winter Having Sex with an Officer
During War Games
Practical Joke on Capt. Lewis
White-Faced Cover-up Makeup
Pvt. Benjamin with Henri Tremont
Pvt. Benjamin's First Pair of Orgasms
Insult: "If Patton were alive, he would slap your
face"
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The Producers (1968)
- the high-energy, opening credits sequence of cash-hungry,
has-been producer Max Bialystock (Zero Mostel) entertaining and
romancing rich, love-starved little old ladies for their money
- he seduced "Cash" out of elderly females, with the
film's first line: "Don't forget the check-y! Can't produce
plays without check-y"; one little old lady responded: "You
can count on me-o, you dirty young man"; he also played
ridiculous sex games with a spry Old Lady (85-year-old Estelle
Winwood), who came to his door and requested: "Hold me,
touch me" (other games were: "The Innocent Little
Milkmaid and the Naughty Stable Boy," and "The Countess
and the Chauffeur")
Max's Fleecing of Rich Old Ladies
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- the arrival of Max's timid, meek and neurotic
accountant Leopold "Leo" Bloom (Gene Wilder), and Max's "rhetorical
conversation" about his failed professional life: "You
know who I used to be? Max Bialystock! The King of Broadway.
Six shows running at once! Lunch at Delmonico’s. Two hundred
dollar suits. (Max gestured at his stick pin) You see this? This
once held a pearl as big as your eye. Look at me now. Look at
me now! I’m wearing a cardboard belt! I used to have thousands
of investors begging, pleading, to put their money into a Max
Bialystock production. Look at my investors now. Voila! Hundreds
of little old ladies stopping off at Max Bialystock's office
to grab a last thrill on the way to the cemetery" - he showed
off his cabinet filled with dozens of photos of older women admirers
- then at the window after rubbing it clear with
his drink, he spotted a chauffeured white Rolls Royce parking
outside Kippys restaurant across the street, and gleefully yelled
in admiration and jealousy: "Look
at that. A white Rolls Royce. That's it baby, when you got it,
flaunt it"
- after Leo looked at Max's accounting books, and
realized he had found a $2,000 difference, Leo became extremely
nervous and reached for his little blue security blanket for
comfort; when Max grabbed it away, Leo explained his infantile
need: "I'm sorry. I don't like people touching my blue blanket....It's
a minor compulsion. I can deal with it if I want to. It's just
that I've had it ever since I was a baby and, and I find it very
comforting"
- Max's rascally scheme or plan, after an off-handed
suggestion by Leo who was musing about using 'creative accounting'
techniques: "But under the right circumstances, a producer
could make more money with a flop than he could with a hit...You
simply raise more money than you really need" - Max made
a decision to purposely over-finance a "sure-fire flop" play,
and then pocket the remainder of the investors' money after the
show closed; he fantasized that they would run away with the
stolen money to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- to ease Leo's frazzled nerves, Max threw a cup
of cold water at Leo, and Leo had a further outburst: "I'm
hysterical and I'm wet. (Max slapped him on the face) I'm in
pain and I'm wet, and I'm still hysterical"
- their promenade through the park (riding a carousel
and renting a boat) - with the eruption of Lincoln Center's fountain,
as Leo joyously danced and shouted that he would join Max: "I'm
a nothing. I spend my life counting other people's money. People
I'm smarter than. Better than! I want... I want...I want everything
I've ever seen in the movies!...I'll do it! By God, I'll do it!"
- the hilarious "concierge" sequence:
Max and Leo (seeking a Nazi playwright named Franz Liebkind,
see below) were confronted by an apartment building's self-proclaimed "Concierge" (Madlyn
Cates) who stuck her head out of a ground-floor window and questioned
their entrance: "Who do ya want? Nobody gets in the building
unless I know who they want. I'm the concierge. My husband
used to be the concierge, but he's dead. Now I'm the concierge...Oh,
the Kraut! He's on the top floor, Apartment 23...But ya won't
find him there. He's up on the roof with his boids. He keeps
boids. Dirty, disgusting, filthy, lice-ridden boids. You used
to be able to sit out on the stoop like a person. Not anymore!
No, sir! Boids! Ya get my drift?...I'm not a madam! I'm a concierge!"
- Max and Leo's meeting (over schnapps in his apartment)
with insane, goose-stepping, deranged ex-Nazi "kraut," WWII
helmet-wearing Franz Liebkind (Kenneth Mars), a playwright who
sang German anthems; he was the author of the play Springtime
For Hitler - that Max wanted to produce on Broadway; he had
only scorn for British prime minister Winston Churchill, but
spoke glowingly about his Fuhrer: "Hitler - there was
a painter! He count paint an entire apartment in one afternoon! Two
Coats! Churchill. He couldn't even say 'Nazi'. He would say
'Noooo-zeeehz, Nooooooooooooo-zeeehz!' It wasn't Noses!
It was Nazis! Churchill!...Let me tell you this! And you're
hearing this straight from the horse. Hitler was better looking
than Churchill. He was a better dresser than Churchill. He had
more hair! He told funnier jokes! And he could dance the pants
off of Churchill!...Churchill!"
- Max's hiring of a "toy" -- a blonde,
buxom, hip-swinging, va-va-voom Swedish-speaking, sexpot receptionist-secretary
Ulla (Lee Meredith) whose "work" consisted of go-go
dancing for Max
- their recruitment of pompous, flamboyant, cross-dressing
(transvestite), gay director Roger DeBris (Christopher Hewett)
and his bearded assistant/lover Carmen Ghia (Andreas Voutsinas)
- the extensive auditions for the various roles
(mostly Hitler) in their over-financed play Springtime for
Hitler with deranged, middle-aged hippie actor Lorenzo St.
Du Bois "L.S.D."'s (Dick Shawn) audition featuring
the pathetic flower child love song "Love Power"
- the premiere of the outrageous, outlandish and
distasteful musical at the Playhouse Theatre - with the opening,
satirical title number Springtime for Hitler, complete
with a goose-stepping, black-booted Nazi chorus (a parody of
the Busby Berkeley style in a revolving swastika formation shot
from overhead) that sang and danced (with the lyrics: "Don't
be stupid, be a smarty, Come and join the Nazi party!"),
and accompanied with gunshot sounds!
- the character of Hitler in the play, a role taken
by spaced-out, adult flower child LSD
- the initial joy of Leo and Max (believing that
they had produced their "sure-fire flop" on Broadway)
when they overheard a female patron exiting the play while exclaiming: "Well,
talk about bad taste!", and the slow-panning reaction shots
of the horrified audience members gasping at the Broadway musical
play
- their resultant joy was turned to consternation
when Leo and Max realized that their flop was actually a big
hit when they were toasting the failure in a nearby bar, and
heard theatregoers during the intermission proclaiming the play
a real success: "Well, so far that's about the funniest
thing I've ever seen on Broadway"
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Initial Hopes for Their Failed Play
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Horrified Audience Reaction
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Joy Turned to Consternation
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- after the trio conspired to blow up the theatre
to end their production of Springtime For Hitler, they
were charged with fraud and appeared in court (filled with weeping
old ladies); Leo sat with a bandaged forehead, while Franz was
mummified, and Max had his hand in a cast sporting an upraised
middle finger
- the sequence of Leo's court defense: "Max
Bialystock is the most selfish man I ever met in my life...Not
only is he a liar and a cheat and a scoundrel and a crook, who
has taken money from little old ladies, but he's also talked
people into doing things, especially me, that they would never
in a thousand years have dreamed of doing. But, your Honor, as
I understand it, the law was created to protect people from being
wronged. Your Honor, whom has Max Bialystock wronged?
I mean, whom has he really hurt? Not me. Not me. I was... this
man. No one ever called me Leo before. I mean, I know it's not
a big legal point, but even in kindergarten, they used to call
me Bloom. I never sang a song before. I mean with someone else.
I never sang a song with someone else before. This man, this
man, this is a wonderful man. He made me what I am today. He
did. And what of the dear ladies? What would their lives have
been without Max Bialystock? Max Bialystock who made them feel
young and attractive and wanted again? That's all that I have
to say" (The ladies stood and applauded); Max stood
and tacked on his own final words: "And may I humbly add,
your Honor, that we've learned our lesson and that we'll never
do it again."
Leo's Court Defense of Max and Franz
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- after being proclaimed "incredibly guilty," the
trio was sent to the State Penitentiary after being sentenced
for 2-5 years - but they hadn't learned their lesson; Leo and
Max put on a similarly fraudulent production of Prisoners
of Love in prison; Leo was accepting payments for 'shares'
of the show from other convicts (and even the warden), while
Max was bellowing during dance rehearsal: ("Sing it out,
men! Higher, you animals, higher! We open in Leavenworth Saturday
night!")
- the affectionate tribute to Mostel in the end
credits, listed only as "Zero"
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"Look at me now!"
"That's it, baby, when you got it, flaunt it"
Max's Accountant Leo With His Blue Security Blanket: "You're
making me extremely nervous"
Leo's Proposal of a Creative Financial Scheme
Leo: "I'm hysterical and I'm wet"
Promenade Through Central Park and to Lincoln Center
"I'm the Concierge"
Franz Liebkind (Kenneth Mars) On the Roof with His "Boids"
Max's Swedish-Speaking, Secretary Ulla (Lee Meredith)
Assistant/Lover Carmen Ghia
Gay Director Roger DeBris (Christopher Hewett) - "The
World's Worst Director"
L.S.D.'s "Love Power" Audition to be Hitler
Hitler in Springtime for Hitler
The Trio's Plot to Blow Up the Theatre
"Prisoners in Love" - in Prison
End Credits Tribute to 'Zero'
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Pulp
Fiction (1994)
- the casual conversation between two low-life,
black-clad hit men Vincent Vega (Oscar-nominated John Travolta)
and Jules Winnfield (Samuel L. Jackson) about the strange names
given to Parisian McDonald's menu items such as a Quarter Pounder
with cheese ("a Royale with cheese") and a Big Mac
("Le Big Mac")
- the black comedy of the execution scene, when
Jules - with a .45 automatic weapon - threatened a smart preppy
named Brett (Frank Whaley); he savagely asked questions of the
terrified Brett sitting at the table who couldn't talk his way
out of his dilemma about his betrayal of Jules' business-gangster
partner Marsellus Wallace (Ving Rhames); Jules Winnfield delivered
his oft-repeated Old Testament Bible Ezekiel 25:17 quote before
the inevitable execution
- the absurdist conversation in the early morning
in the Toluca Lake home of Jules' friend Jimmie (director Quentin
Tarantino) after Jules and Vincent had bloodied the towels in
his bathroom while washing their blood-soaked hands; after they
had arrived and parked the car in Jimmie's garage, he was dismayed
by the bloody car and victim Marvin's corpse; in the kitchen,
Jules was deflecting the serious situation by complimenting Jimmie
on his coffee: "This
some serious gourmet s--t. Me and Vincent would have been satisfied
with some freeze-dried Taster's Choice";
whiny and anxious Jimmie didn't want to talk about
the quality of the coffee: "It's
the dead nigger in my garage"; he petulantly added: "When
you came pullin' in here, did you notice the sign on the front
of my house that said, 'Dead Nigger Storage'?"; Jimmie feared that
if his wife Bonnie (working the graveyard shift at the hospital)
found out what they were doing there, he would reluctantly be forced
to get a divorce
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