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26 Things the Movies have taught us (Thread Two)
a friend | 9-29-2001

Posted on 09/29/2001 10:47:10 AM PDT by Cagey

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To: maxwell
The kicker was not only was she worried about being outed at work but there just happened to be a convenient setup with a brawl at a talk-show and the injured wind up in the E.R. One of the injured happens to find out his lover was really a guy before a sex change and we get to see Weaver hear him use the words faggot and the trans-whatever use the "there's nothing wrong with love" line. That show is just obsessed with homosexuals. First it was the skanky doc that was a lesbian, then the Japanese male nurse is a homosexual, now it is Weaver. That's not even mentioning the patients! There is no telling how many storylines had a homosexual theme on the eps I missed.
101 posted on 09/29/2001 1:23:33 PM PDT by Paul Atreides
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To: Cagey
This is GREAT soo funny. Thank you for the ping. I had not seen this.... LOL

If there is a chain link fence in a scene. A car is going to be driven through it .

Amazing how a bad guy gets hit in the jaw over and over and still has his teeth and the knuckles on the both good guy and bad guy never swell up.

Or how the cars in a scene are always lined up just perfectly so that a chase is always missing people crossing the street and not flying off the hoods of the chasing cars.

HOw when a pewrson flying out of a winodw or off a building and is supposed to live always manages to land on cardboard boxes that just happen to be there. Or a big trash bin to catch the fall.

And why do they let the bad guy live when they keep having a chance to kill him. It is a sure bet he will pop up and do more damage.

102 posted on 09/29/2001 1:32:53 PM PDT by Snow Bunny
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To: Cagey
All women of course in films go to bed all made up, complete makeup. If a person did this in daily life their skin would be a total mess in a short time. LOL
103 posted on 09/29/2001 1:34:20 PM PDT by Snow Bunny
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To: Cagey
Since we have the law now to have to wear seat belts, ever notice how few police in TV sbows and movies put on the seat belt. Then proceed to a car chase taking them over the steep hills in San Francisco with the car flying in the air .
104 posted on 09/29/2001 1:35:36 PM PDT by Snow Bunny
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To: Snow Bunny
...chase taking them over the steep hills in San Francisco with the car flying in the air

Yes! And if you look close you can see all the tire marks where they practiced the scene a hundred times before they shot it.

105 posted on 09/29/2001 1:38:54 PM PDT by Cagey
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To: Paul Atreides
Haha, just fulfilling their Goddess-given charge to go ye out forth and turn all womyn/men unto same-sex love, crushing any hick opposition...

It'd be laughable if it didn't look so much like the truth sometimes.

Well I don't like homos and their agenda, and I'll stand up and say it. And I may smoke and listen to country-western all the time, but I'm not your ordinary uneducated hick and I got advanced degrees to prove it if these pansy-a$$es were worth the trouble to talk to... Waste of skin, the lot of 'em, IMO.

/rant

106 posted on 09/29/2001 1:41:01 PM PDT by maxwell
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To: maxwell
That's an unfortunate trend running rampant in science fiction now: homosexuality. Kirk just thought space was the final frontier!!
107 posted on 09/29/2001 1:57:01 PM PDT by Paul Atreides
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To: Cagey
LOL....you are so right. Good one Cagey!
108 posted on 09/29/2001 3:04:59 PM PDT by Snow Bunny
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To: Cagey
In all movies set in the past, EVERYONE drives a vintage, brand new car of that year. No one drives cars that are at least ten years old, has dents, or dirt on it, etc.
109 posted on 09/29/2001 3:14:10 PM PDT by lowbridge
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To: Cagey
The hero of any movie can always at the spur of the moment find an empty parking space directly in front of any building, restaurant, house, he drives up to, even in a very busy city.
110 posted on 09/29/2001 3:37:31 PM PDT by lowbridge
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To: lowbridge
LOL! How true. And their gabardeen slacks are never wrinkled, unless they are fighting an oil well fire.
111 posted on 09/29/2001 3:40:04 PM PDT by Cagey
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To: Cagey
During each car chase, your car will lose as many as seven or eight hub caps.

During each car chase, you have to make sure to swerve around the old homeless woman with her cart of cans, or the young woman with the baby stroller.

In the warehouse/harbour districts, businesses buy large quantities of cardboard boxes, which they keep stacked up in a large pile out back, unused, until the hero needs to get off the roof, or drive through them.

112 posted on 09/29/2001 5:28:41 PM PDT by Vince Ferrer
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To: Viktra
not only are they handy with all those weapons, but they never have to reload! Hollywood needs to outfit our soldiers with those kinds of guns!

One thing I love about the movie "The Replacement Killers" is that the guns all run out of bullets at realistic intervals. There are lots of scenes of the heros/villains reloading, frequently.

And when the good guy goes marching in to the villain's most heavily guarded lair, he does it with about 14 guns strapped to his body. When one runs out of bullets, he simply drops it and grabs another -- it's faster and more reliable than reloading.

The film also violates another movie cliche: The woman he ends up on the run with (Mira Sorvina) turns out to be just as tough and competent as he is (no more, no less).

113 posted on 09/29/2001 5:40:55 PM PDT by Dan Day
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To: Deb
Not very true-to-life, where's the garter belt?

You must not have looked far enough. Paintings #10 and #12 both show garters:

http://www.lileks.com/institute/frahm/art10.html

http://www.lileks.com/institute/frahm/art12.html

(Maybe it wasn't obvious, but the first page was just an intro -- click on it to proceed through the "celery art gallery")


114 posted on 09/29/2001 5:47:30 PM PDT by Dan Day
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To: maxwell
Hey, you want a great glood-n'-bore movie, check out 3000 Miles to Graceland. I thought it would be cheesy, especially with Courtney "Ohmigawd I chipped a nail!" Cox in it, and it does have alot of the aspects mentioned in the above thread, but when all's said and done there's nothing quite as exhilarating as seeing that much fire and blood plastered all over...

Top gore movie of all time, hands down -- "Dead Alive" (1992), a very early film in the career of director Peter Jackson (yes, the same guy who's doing the upcoming "Lord of the Rings" films).

Shot on what looks like a budget of about fifty bucks, it starts out just being a grade Z cheesy horror flick, but stick with it. The gore and over-the-top, I-can't-believe-they-did-that stuff just keeps reaching higher and higher peaks. By the time you figure they can't top themselves, they do, then do it again another two dozen times.

Make sure you rent (or buy -- I have it on DVD) the Unrated version instead of the R-rated version.

The folks at the Internet Movie Database give it an average 7.3 out of 10. That's clearly for the "oh wow!" factor, since it couldn't possibly be for the acting or the plot. :-)


115 posted on 09/29/2001 6:05:16 PM PDT by Dan Day
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To: Aeronaut
Cars always launch into the air when they hit a car hard enough. Also, the cars are required to roll in the air 360 degrees.

Believe it or not, I actually saw this happen in real life once.

I was driving through an intersection not long after the light had changed, and I heard a loud *CRUNCH* noise to my right. I turned my head to look out the side window just in time to see a mid-sized car pirouette through the air as gracefully as a ballerina, no farther than fifteen feet from my car. At the time I saw it, no part of the car was touching the ground, the lowest part of the car (the rear edge of the trunk) was at least two feet off the ground.

Of course, it quickly made an ungraceful landing... It ended up resting on the roof, and the driver (a middle-aged woman) was left dangling from her seat upside down, since she had her seat belt on. I stuck around to help (okay, and to gawk) as rescue workers quickly arrived and sawed the car apart so they could extract her easily.

The funny thing is that none of the cars involved had been going over 30 miles per hour. The woman's car ran a red light coming out of a convenience store parking lot, right into the path of our oncoming traffic, and managed to get hit just right to flip the car like a tiddly-wink.

116 posted on 09/29/2001 6:15:15 PM PDT by Dan Day
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To: Snow Bunny
Since we have the law now to have to wear seat belts, ever notice how few police in TV sbows and movies put on the seat belt.

If you think that's bad, notice how many of them don't have a rear view mirror...

Whenever a scene is shot such that the camera is looking into the car from over the hood, so that you can see the faces of the driver and passenger, it's common for the rear view mirror to be removed so that it doesn't clutter up the shot.

LOL -- I swear, just as I was typing this, there was a commercial on TV (the one where the guy is letting his dog drive his truck), and sure enough, the rear view mirror was absent.

117 posted on 09/29/2001 6:26:01 PM PDT by Dan Day
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To: Cagey
Yes! And if you look close you can see all the tire marks where they practiced the scene a hundred times before they shot it.

In the film "Vertical Limit", the rescue helicopter lands in the middle of nowhere on a snowy mountainside to ask a crazy hermit-like mountain climber to assist in the rescue -- and the helicopter clearly lands on top of another set of helicopter skid marks in the snow...

118 posted on 09/29/2001 6:28:04 PM PDT by Dan Day
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To: Dan Day
Dead Alive- The only movie that makes you grossed out while your laughing. It's a classic, strong stomach recommended for viewing.
119 posted on 09/29/2001 6:33:52 PM PDT by Brett66
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To: Cagey
Even though all Westerns take place in the 1800s, the female characters always sport hairstyles and makeup reflecting the year the movie was made. In other words, if a Western was filmed in 1968, all of the women, whether schoolmaarms or saloon girls or pioneer settlers, will have long flowing hair that is teased on top, and '60s makeup.
120 posted on 09/29/2001 6:36:15 PM PDT by Nea Wood
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