franktangredi wrote:One actor with a question mark is wrong and one 'definite' movie is wrong.
mrkelley23 wrote:B-76 appears to be Mission to Moscow.
That means all the other definite movies, and the movies with one question mark, are right.
New consolidation with clues removed from confirmed right answers…
Tangredi: Actor from List A starred in a movie with actors whose last names appear in the titles in List B
A-12 HOWARD KEEL starred in Show Boat with B-12 Joe E BROWN and B-65 Marge and Gower CHAMPION
A-3 BRAD PITT starred in Money Ball with B-77 Jonah HILL, B-32 Stanley BISHOP, and B-11 Reed DIAMOND
A-11 CARY ELWES starred in The Princess Bride with B-41 Billy CRYSTAL and B-52 Fred SAVAGE
A-23 STEVE MARTIN starred in Three Amigos with B-7 Martin SHORT and B-47 Chevy CHASE
A-4 ZERO MOSTEL starred in The Producers with B-72 Gene WILDER and B-35 Kenneth MARS
LIST A: ACTORS
A-1. JOHN WAYNE
A-2. BETTE MIDLER
*A-3. BRAD PITT
*A-4. ZERO MOSTEL
A-5. MAGGIE SMITH
A-6. He originated a screen role that would later be played – more or less – by Jeff Bridges and Adrien Brody.
A-7. “I just want you to know, if you ever need anything, don't be shy, okay? There are no rules in the house. I'm not like a regular mom, I'm a cool mom.”
A-8. Her godparents were Ira Gershwin and Kay Thompson.
LIZA MINNELLI?
A-9. KEVIN KLINE
A-10. GALE SONDERGAARD
*A-11. CARY ELWES
*A-12. HOWARD KEEL
A-13. “You slammed her! You dunked her donut! You gave her dog a Snausage! You stuffed her like a Thanksgiving turkey!”
A-14. This legendary performer played himself in movies starring Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, and James Stewart.
LOUIS ARMSTRONG?
A-15. PETER LORRE
A-16. He is the oldest living recipient of the Mark Twain Prize.
CARL REINER? BOB NEWHART?
A-17. WALTER MATTHAU
A-18. Many people – including Hitchcock himself – thought this actor was far more appealing as a Hitchcock villain than he was three years later as a Hitchcock hero.
A-19. DON AMECHE
A-20. Her real-life film roles included the sister of a great 20th century novelist and the wife of a great 20th century poet and playwright.
A-21. JOEL MCCREA
A-22. JOHN LITHGOW
*A-23. STEVE MARTIN
A-24. JULIE HARRIS
A-25. TOM HANKS
A-26. She often signed autographs “WWW.”
MARGARET HAMILTON?
A-27. JOHNNY DEPP
A-28. MARGARET O’BRIEN
A-29. CHER
A-30. ZACHARY QUINTO
A-31. RENEE ZELLWEGER
A-32. In 2007, he became the first person born in the 1980s to be nominated for a Best Actor Oscar.
RYAN GOSLING
A-33. PAUL NEWMAN
LIST B: MOVIES
B-1. THE WIZARD OF OZ
B-2. LA CAGE AUX FOLLES
B-3. “I mean, anyone comes alongside a Humvee, we're dead. Anybody even looks at you funny, we're dead. Pretty much the bottom line is, if you're in Iraq, you're dead. How's a f**king tank supposed to stop that?”
“Would you shut the f**k up, Owen, please?”
“Sorry. Just tryin' to scare the new guy.
B-4. THE SANDS OF IWO JIMA
B-5. “I'm so Chinese I'm an econ professor with lactose intolerance.”
B-6. The making of this 1978 documentary led directly to an acclaimed German director eating his shoe.
*B-7. THE BIG SHORT
B-8. The director of this western flew to America to persuade its star to take on the villain role, telling him, “"Picture this: the camera shows a gunman from the waist down pulling his gun and shooting a running child. The camera pans up to the gunman's face and...”
THE GOOD THE BAD AND THE UGLY? ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST?
B-9. NIGHT OF THE HUNTER
B-10. THREE SMART GIRLS
*B-11. BLOOD DIAMOND
*B-12. BROWN BUNNY
B-13. “Giant evil gods.”
“ I wish I could've seen them. ”
“ I know. That would have been a fun weekend.”
B-14. THE BUTLER
B-15. THE POWER OF ONE
B-16. THE NIGHT WALKER
B-17. “I'm exhausted! I want to go home! I miss my wife and kids, okay?”
“No, no, no, no, no! Let me explain something to you, okay? If Maggie and Grace find out that we can't get laid on our own, they'll start thinking that we need them to get laid! Do you realize what that'll do to the balance of power in our homes?”
B-18. This film, ranked by the Toronto Film Festival as one of the ten greatest Canadian films of all time, takes its title from T.S. Eliot’s most quotable poem.
B-19. YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN
B-20. The young actress who causes all the trouble in this psychological thriller would, six years later, cause almost as much trouble as the title character of an Oscar-winning movie.
B-21. “I don't, I don't want to kill you! What would I do without you? Go back to ripping off mob dealers? No, no, no! No. You ... you ... complete me.”
B-22. The question of whether or not to kill off the character voiced by Pat Buttram proved a major bone of contention in the making of this film.
ROBIN HOOD? THE FOX AND THE HOUND?
B-23. “This is the one about the babysitter, right? She's getting those scary and harassing phone calls and when she traces them back, they are coming from inside the house. But a**swipe, aren't you forgetting something? I'm not babysitting any kids!”
“Wrong legend! This is the one about the old lady who dries her wet dog in the microwave oven.”
B-24. In this film noir, the actress referenced in Clue B-20 doesn’t make any trouble, but she finds herself in a considerable amount of trouble after drinking six cocktails.
B-25. ROMANCING THE STONE
B-26. BOTTLE ROCKET
B-27. BRIDGES OF MADISON COUNTY
B-28. THE WEDDING MARCH
B-29. “Billy, before I go there's something I want to tell you. You're not quite old enough, but, well ... it's the googly. Your hand is too small to master it, but you can make a start.”
B-30. SHALL WE DANCE
B-31. LAKE PLACID
*B-32. THE BISHOP MISBEHAVES
B-33. THE WEDDING SINGER
B-34. A CONNECTICUT YANKEE IN KING ARTHUR'S COURT
*B-35. MARS ATTACKS
B-36. A shipwreck survivor starts to go mad in the bayou – or does she? – in this 1944 Gothic film noir.
B-37. BAD DAY AT BLACK ROCK
B-38. TORN CURTAIN
B-39. “Running was always a big thing in our family, specially running away from the police. It's hard to understand. All I know is that you've got to run, running without knowing why, through fields and woods. And the winning post's no end, even though the barmy crowds might be cheering themselves daft.”
B-40. THE SHOP ON MAIN STREET
*B-41. THE DARK CRYSTAL
B-42. This movie won the first Oscar for Visual Effects thanks to its earthquake and flood sequences.
B-43. COYOTE UGLY
B-44. Like another film released the same year, this movie deals with lovers whose happiness is threatened by a family feud – but set in Appalachia rather than Verona.
B-45. ROMAN HOLIDAY
B-46. There are only about 25 lines of dialogue in this horror movie, and the first does not occur until 38 minutes into the film.
*B-47. THE PAPER CHASE
B-48. This film marked the first screen appearance of the most popular character created by mystery novelist Leslie Charteris.
A Saint movie
B-49. “You hate me. You hate me, don't you? Answer me! You hate me don't you!”
“Yes, I hate you. Always have.”
“Well, I’ve always loved you.”
B-50. MONTERREY POP
B-51. 10 CLOVERFIELD LANE
*B-52. SAVAGE SAM
B-53. TAXI DRIVER
B-54. Despite its title, this 1935 comedy starred, not Jack Benny, but one of his closest friends.
B-55. AT PLAY IN THE FIELDS OF THE LORD
B-56. The subject of this 1975 documentary reportedly wore a red dress to the premiere –backwards, with the zipper in front.
B-57. “We cannot stop the ship!”
“Then we have to slow it down.”
“What are you gonna do, are you gonna let the air outta our tires?”
B-58. FIVE GRAVES TO CAIRO
B-59. SEVEN DAYS IN MAY
B-60. THE LORDS OF FLATBUSH
B-61. WHAT PRICE GLORY
B-62. This comedy about a hayseed who becomes a Hollywood star marked the screen debut of a veteran vaudevillian who was best known for his stage role as one of the main characters in the movie referenced in Clue B-1. Got that?
B-63. THE FRONT PAGE
B-64. In this comedy, Danny Kaye played a role akin to ones played by Michael Redgrave on the big screen and Cliff Robertson on the small screen.
*B-65. CHAMPION
B-66. This British family drama takes its name from an early 19th century Christmas carol.
B-67. “He's dead. They stuffed him with pages torn from his favorite book. Could you cook him?”
B-68. Despite what the director told the press, the most notorious scene in this movie actually utilized powdered cow’s milk. Lots of it.
ANNIE HALL? THE SIGN OF THE CROSS?
B-69. CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND
B-70. 3000 MILES TO GRACELAND
B-71. CANADIAN BACON
*B-72. THESE WILDER YEARS
B-73. PURPLE ROSE OF CAIRO
B-74. SMALL FRY
B-75. THE HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER
B-76. Made at the request of FDR on behalf of an ally, this wartime drama later became an object of suspicion to HUAC.
MISSION TO MOSCOW
*B-77. NOTTING HILL
B-78. This movie directed by a leading independent filmmaker marked the American debut of the second actor to win an Oscar for a foreign language film. Got that?
B-79. FIELD OF DREAMS
B-80. THE GOLD RUSH