Game #215: Role Play

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mellytu74
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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#26 Post by mellytu74 » Thu Dec 07, 2023 12:51 pm

4. “Say, mister. Will you stake a fellow American to a meal?”

The Treasure of the Seirra Madre

9. A German-born French actress won an American Oscar for this British film.

How about Room at the Top? Sounds like Simone Signoret

10. “We shall be friends. I have prayed many times for God to send me a friend. It’s very lonely here and it’s been a long time since any human being came into this hut. I shall look after you and you will comfort me. And now you must lie down and go to sleep. Yes. Yes. Now, you must sleep.”

Bride of Frankenstein. Hermit to The Monster

13. John Gilbert stated that this was the only one of his movies that was worth making.

Not 100 percent certain but I would bet on The Big Parade

22. “Republic. I like the sound of the word. It means people can live free, talk free, go or come, buy or sell, be drunk or sober, however they choose. Some words give you a feeling. Republic is one of those words that makes me tight in the throat - the same tightness a man gets when his baby takes his first step or his first baby shaves and makes his first sound as a man. Some words can give you a feeling that makes your heart warm. Republic is one of those words.”

John Wayne in The Alamo??

27. If you want to see the Chairman of the Board as a Spanish guerrilla during the Napoleonic Wars, this will surely be your only chance.

The Pride and the Passion

46. “Let us dream to the extent of saying that on a given Sunday night the time normally occupied by Ed Sullivan is given over to a clinical survey of the state of American education, and a week or two later the time normally used by Steve Allen is devoted to a thoroughgoing study of American policy in the Middle East.”

Good Night and Good Luck

48. “It's the same old story. Boy finds girl, boy loses girl, girl finds boy, boy forgets girl, boy remembers girl, girls dies in a tragic blimp accident over the Orange Bowl on New Year's Day.”

One of the Police Squad movies

54. “Maybe it's easy for the dying to be honest. I'm sick of you, sick of this house, sick of my unhappy life with you. I'm sick of your brothers and their dirty tricks to make a dime. There must be better ways of getting rich than building sweatshops and pounding the bones of the town to make dividends for you to spend. You'll wreck the town, you and your brothers. You'll wreck the country, you and your kind, if they let you. But not me, I'll die my own way, and I'll do it without making the world worse. I leave that to you.”

The Little Foxes

57. Released in 1912, this short film is often considered the first gangster movie and is also notable for its pioneering use of follow focus cinematography.

Musketeers of Pig Alley

68. “The force behind a great company has to be more than the pride of one man; it has to be the pride of thousands. You can't make men work for money alone - you starve their souls when you try it, and you can starve a company to death the same way.”

William Holden at the end of Executive Suite

77. This movie featured Ruth Chatterton in a role that would later be played by Gladys George, Lana Turner, and Tuesday Weld.

Madame X


80. “Eine Kleine Kirche. A sha-pel. We build a shap-el right here.”

Lilies of the Field

95. This masterpiece was based on the first novel to win the Pulitzer Prize by the first novelist to win the Pulitzer Prize twice. Got that?

The Magnificent Ambersons

98. “This is when I know I'm helpless. My hands are down there on the bed. I can't put them on again without calling to somebody for help. I can't smoke a cigarette or read a book. If that door should blow shut, I can't open it and get out of this room. I'm as dependent as a baby that doesn't know how to get anything except to cry for it.”

Harold Russell to Cathy O'Donnell in Best Years of Our Lives

99. Only twelve people ever saw the full 42-reel version of this film, which is now considered the Holy Grail of film archivists.

Greed?? Napoleon?

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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#27 Post by silverscreenselect » Fri Dec 08, 2023 3:55 pm

franktangredi wrote:
Mon Dec 04, 2023 9:52 am
78. “He's wrong, it don't take much strength to pull a trigger but try getting up every morning, day after day, and work for a living, let's see him try that, then we'll see who the real tough guy is. The working man is the tough guy, your father's the tough guy!”


91. John Wayne turned down the lead in this movie, calling the script the most un-American thing he’d seen in his whole life, and later said he never regretted his role in running the screenwriter out of Hollywood.
91 is HIGH NOON

78 sounds like Charles Bronson's speech to the village boys in The Magnificent Seven, but I checked. and it's not. Was there a similar speech in the remake?
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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#28 Post by Vandal » Fri Dec 08, 2023 4:31 pm

78. “He's wrong, it don't take much strength to pull a trigger but try getting up every morning, day after day, and work for a living, let's see him try that, then we'll see who the real tough guy is. The working man is the tough guy, your father's the tough guy!”
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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#29 Post by jarnon » Fri Dec 08, 2023 9:33 pm

New consolidation …

Game #215: Role Play

Identify the 100 movies in the clues below. (Every other clue is a quotation.) Then, match them into 36 groups of three according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. Eight movies will be used twice, each time in a different capacity.

That’s all there is to it. But beware of combinations that seem to work as singles or pairs but not as triples.

1. It was the first movie in a language other than English to receive an Oscar nomination for Best Picture.
GRAND ILLUSION

2. “Every day I think about what you said to me that day on the bridge. I tried to live my life the best that I could. I hope that was enough. I hope that, at least in your eyes, I've earned what all of you have done for me.”
SAVING PRIVATE RYAN

3. People who appeared as themselves in this movie included the author of Tropic of Cancer, the founder of the ACLU, and the Toastmaster General of the United States.
REDS

4. “Say, mister. Will you stake a fellow American to a meal?”
THE TREASURE OF THE SIERRA MADRE

5. In the opinion of many people – including me – this British film was far superior to a film on the same topic that won the Oscar for Best Picture four decades later.
A NIGHT TO REMEMBER

6. “If we bring a little joy into your humdrum lives, it makes us feel as though our hard work ain't been in vain for nothin'.”
SINGIN' IN THE RAIN

7. A record 300,000 extras were used in the funeral scene of this movie
GANDHI

8. “We need to get off this merry-go-round sir. The next mistake our countries make could be the last one. We need to have the conversation our governments can't.”
THE HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER?

9. A German-born French actress won an American Oscar for this British film.
ROOM AT THE TOP

10. “We shall be friends. I have prayed many times for God to send me a friend. It’s very lonely here and it’s been a long time since any human being came into this hut. I shall look after you and you will comfort me. And now you must lie down and go to sleep. Yes. Yes. Now, you must sleep.”
BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN

11. This movie supplied the title for a U.S. President’s autobiography.
KING'S ROW

12. “Cigarette?”
“Smoking.”

13. John Gilbert stated that this was the only one of his movies that was worth making.
THE BIG PARADE

14. “This is for ladies only!”
“So is this, ma'am, but every now and then I have to run a little water through it.”
MY FAVORITE YEAR

15. This notorious bomb shares its name with an ancient goddess of sexuality and war.
ISHTAR

16. "Did you ever pick cotton? After an hour, the hulls start cuttin' your fingers. Then by noon both of your hands is bleedin'. And later on your fingers start to swell. And after a little more time, they ain't no feelin' in your hands whatsoever. And I ain't even speakin' about what it does to your knees and I ain't even talkin' about what it does to your back. Now, we can't do it. Now, get that through your head. Once and for all, we can't do it. Now, you best stop thinkin' about it before you end up killin' yourself!"
PLACES IN THE HEART

17. As noted in SSS’s last puzzle, this comedy had a sudden cast change when one of its stars made an unhealthy decision.

18. “The night was sultry.”

19. When the decomposing body of the subject of this biopic was found by a hunter, it weighed only 67 pounds; the official cause of death was starvation.
INTO THE WILD

20. “That Stradivarius is worth over a million dollars!”
“Well, if I drop it, it won’t be worth sh*t.”

21. It was one of the most popular films of 1974, but the author of the novel it was based on complained that its right-wing message was exactly the opposite of what he intended.
DEATH WISH

22. “Republic. I like the sound of the word. It means people can live free, talk free, go or come, buy or sell, be drunk or sober, however they choose. Some words give you a feeling. Republic is one of those words that makes me tight in the throat - the same tightness a man gets when his baby takes his first step or his first baby shaves and makes his first sound as a man. Some words can give you a feeling that makes your heart warm. Republic is one of those words.”
THE ALAMO?

23. A line from this movie was ranked #33 on the AFI list of greatest movie quotes, but the character who spoke it didn’t have a single other line in the movie.
WHEN HARRY MET SALLY

24. “I'm really influenced by Mozart and Bach, and it's sort of in between those, really. It's like a Mach piece, really. It's sort of – ”
“What do you call this?”
“Well, this piece is called ‘Lick My Love Pump.’”
THIS IS SPINAL TAP

25. This big-BIG-budget musical was the first of only two films to feature a willowy actor who won Tony awards in four different categories.
HELLO DOLLY?

26. “Have you ever killed anyone?”
“Yeah, but they were all bad.”
TRUE LIES

27. If you want to see the Chairman of the Board as a Spanish guerrilla during the Napoleonic Wars, this will surely be your only chance.
THE PRIDE AND THE PASSION

28. “I find you attractive. Your aggressive moves toward me ... indicate that you feel the same way. But still, ritual requires that we continue with a number of platonic activities before we have sex. I am proceeding with these activities, but in point of actual fact, all I really want to do is have intercourse with you as soon as possible. Are you going to slap me now?”

29. The hero of this 1950 noir thriller is an officer of the U.S. Public Health Service. Really.
PANIC IN THE STREETS

30. “After what we've just been through, any sane man would be screaming for a weapon.”
“Well, I never claimed to be sane.”

31. The director of this documentary was so stressed out by the director of the film he was documenting that he wrote in his diary, " I couldn't care less if they move the stupid ship – or finish the f**king film".

32. “You're here today so I can personally tell you that you are going to die in federal prison. And so are all your friends. No deal. No compromise. And when that day comes when you start trying to be my hero collaborator so hard that I have to slap you to shut up – and it will come, despite your pitiable, misguided, Irish Omertà – when your code of silence finally gives way to fear of trafficking in cigarettes to prevent sexual enslavement, I just want you to know that it's gonna be me who told you to go f**k yourself.”

33. The soundtrack of this biopic includes one of my all-time favorite pieces of music, the overture to Candide.

34. “And it's really starting to p*ss me off, Dave! She's my own little daughter, and I can't even cry for her!”
“Jimmy, you're crying now.”
MYSTIC RIVER

35. This 1979 film about Mexican American street gangs in East L.A. has been selected for preservation by the National Film Registry.

36. “I go outta here every morning, I bust my butt 'cause I like you? You're about the biggest fool I ever saw. A man is supposed to take care of his family. You live in my house, feed your belly with my food, put your behind on my bed because you're my son. It's my duty to take care of you, I owe a responsibility to you, I ain't got to like you!”

37. Though he himself was Jewish, studio chief Jack Warner ordered that the word “Jew” be banned from this Oscar-winning biopic so as not to hurt ticket sales in Nazi Germany.
LIFE OF EMILE ZOLA

38. “Just in case I wasn't enough of a freak already, let's add a tiara!”
THE PRINCESS DIARIES

39. This schlocky 1950s monster movie transfers the eighth plague of Exodus from Egypt to Chicago.
BEGINNING OF THE END

40. “Are you suggesting, madam, that there exists a law compelling a gentleman to lay hold of canine bowel movements?”
“I'm suggesting that you pick the poop up.”
KATE & LEOPOLD

41. The three top-billed actors in this live action Disney movie all played murderers on Columbo.
ESCAPE TO WITCH MOUNTAIN

42. “At your age, you're going to have a lot of urges. You're going to want to take off your clothes, and touch each other. But if you do touch each other, you will get chlamydia ... and die.”

43. This 1947 film noir is notable for its use of point-of-view camerawork, such as the hero’s face only being seen when he looks in a mirror.
LADY IN THE LAKE

44. “Didn't you notice a powerful and obnoxious odor of mendacity in this room?”
CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF

45. Appropriately, Amarillo Slim had a bit part in this Robert Altman film.
CALIFORNIA SPLIT?

46. “Let us dream to the extent of saying that on a given Sunday night the time normally occupied by Ed Sullivan is given over to a clinical survey of the state of American education, and a week or two later the time normally used by Steve Allen is devoted to a thoroughgoing study of American policy in the Middle East.”
GOOD NIGHT AND GOOD LUCK

47. The young actor who made his film debut in this 1983 comedy was, at the same time, starring on Broadway in a highly successfully comedy by the movie’s screenwriter.
MAX DUGAN RETURNS

48. “It's the same old story. Boy finds girl, boy loses girl, girl finds boy, boy forgets girl, boy remembers girl, girls dies in a tragic blimp accident over the Orange Bowl on New Year's Day.”
THE NAKED GUN

49. The nonfiction book that inspired this movie was subtitled A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience and Redemption.
UNBROKEN

50. “Separate the men from the boys, Emma. I show some wear, I don't deny it. The fruit hangs on the tree long enough, it gets ripe. I'm durable, I'm steady and I'm faithful. And I'm in love for the last time in my life.”
“I'm in love for the first time in my life.”
MURPHY’S ROMANCE

51. This was the first non-American production to win the Oscar as Best Picture.
ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT

52. “He just wants to know that you don't hate him.”
“Hate him! How could I hate him? Mothers don't hate their sons!”
ORDINARY PEOPLE

53. It was the first movie in its genre to win the Oscar for Best Picture in 59 years.
UNFORGIVEN

54. “Maybe it's easy for the dying to be honest. I'm sick of you, sick of this house, sick of my unhappy life with you. I'm sick of your brothers and their dirty tricks to make a dime. There must be better ways of getting rich than building sweatshops and pounding the bones of the town to make dividends for you to spend. You'll wreck the town, you and your brothers. You'll wreck the country, you and your kind, if they let you. But not me, I'll die my own way, and I'll do it without making the world worse. I leave that to you.”
THE LITTLE FOXES

55. This infamous turkey was a pseudo-biography of Randy, Glenn, Felipe, David, Alex, and Ray.
CAN’T STOP THE MUSIC

56. “Lord save little children. The wind blows, and the rains are cold. Yet they abide.”

57. Released in 1912, this short film is often considered the first gangster movie and is also notable for its pioneering use of follow focus cinematography.
MUSKETEERS OF PIG ALLEY

58. “I think if people see this footage, they'll say, ‘Oh, my God, that's horrible.’ And then they'll go on eating their dinners.”

59. Three of the actresses in this film would later get back in the habit for The Sound of Music, The Flying Nun, and Sister Act.
THE TROUBLE WITH ANGELS?

60. “Are you a vampire?”
“I live off blood. Yes.”
“Are you ... dead?”
“No. Can't you tell?”
“But ... are you old?”
“I'm twelve. But I've been twelve for a long time.”

61. William H. Balgarnie of Leys School, Cambridge, was the inspiration for the main character of this movie.
GOODBYE MR. CHIPS

62. “You know, maybe we're - we're only good at brief encounters, walking around in European cities in warm climates.”

63. This adaptation of a minor Shaw comedy was originally set to star Harpo Marx in what would have been his only speaking role.

64. “A naked American man stole my balloons.”

65. The earliest living winner of the Best Actress Oscar got her second nomination for playing the repressed title character of this film.

66. "You're out of order! You're out of order! The whole trial is out of order! They're out of order!"
...AND JUSTICE FOR ALL

67. The Olympians in this film included an actor and actress who had previously worked together as the Moor of Venice and his bride.
CLASH OF THE TITANS

68. “The force behind a great company has to be more than the pride of one man; it has to be the pride of thousands. You can't make men work for money alone - you starve their souls when you try it, and you can starve a company to death the same way.”
EXECUTIVE SUITE

69. Lion tamer Clyde Beatty and big game hunter Frank Buck appeared as themselves in this Abbott and Costello comedy.

70. “So this is Rome. Where the pigeons eat caviar.”
“And the secretaries eat alone.”

71. This movie was based on a memoir by the actor who played Mark. (Oh, hai….)

72. “We all have our limitations, Freddy. Fortunately, I discovered that taste and style were commodities that people desired. Freddy, what I am saying is: know your limitations. You are a moron.”
DIRTY ROTTEN SCOUNDRELS

73. This was the first of two movies produced to commemorate the 500th anniversary of a historic real-life voyage.

74. “Why do you want to dance?”
“Why do you want to live?”
“Well I don't know exactly why, but I must.”
“That's my answer, too.”

75. This movie features Ken’s most despicable character, but at least he got a girlfriend out of it.

76. “You know, 35 years ago, preparing for a concert meant playing ‘find the cobra’ with the hotel chambermaid.”

77. This movie featured Ruth Chatterton in a role that would later be played by Gladys George, Lana Turner, and Tuesday Weld.
MADAME X

78. “He's wrong, it don't take much strength to pull a trigger but try getting up every morning, day after day, and work for a living, let's see him try that, then we'll see who the real tough guy is. The working man is the tough guy, your father's the tough guy!”
A BRONX TALE

79. This film – cast with actual Lombard peasants – won the Palme d’Or at Cannes and the Cesar Award for Best Foreign Film.

80. “Eine kleine Kirche. A sha-pel. We build a shap-el right here.”
LILIES OF THE FIELD

81. Nine cast members of this Hugh Grant comedy would later go on to appear on The Sopranos.
MICKEY BLUE EYES

82. “Democracy shtunk!”
(“Democracy is fragrant.”)
“Liberty shtunk!”
(“Liberty is odious.”)
"Freisprechen shtunk!"
(“Free speech is objectionable.”)

83. This wartime romance was the first movie in which its leading lady did not sing.

84. “I may be on the devil's hit-list, but I'm on God's mailing list.”

85. This action movie pitted onetime Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson against onetime Secretary of State Alexander Haig.

86. “I just asked you to do one thing, to stay awake and watch me and to wake me up if it looked like I was having a bad dream, and what did you do, you sh*t? You fell asleep!”

87. Rolling Stone ranked the subject of this biopic third on its list of best stand-up comics of all time.
LENNY? MAN ON THE MOON?

88. “What's your rush, doll-body? What do you say we slip in the back seat, and you make a man out of me?”
“What do you say I smack you around for a while?”
“Can’t we do both?”

89. Zero Mostel demanded director approval on this film, but it’s doubtful that he really expected to get any of his first three choices – Orson Welles, Charles Chaplin, and Jean Renoir.

90. “I want the last face you see in this world to be the face of love, so you look at me when they do this thing. I'll be the face of love for you.”
DEAD MAN WALKING

91. John Wayne turned down the lead in this movie, calling the script the most un-American thing he’d seen in his whole life, and later said he never regretted his role in running the screenwriter out of Hollywood.
HIGH NOON

92. “Hey, did you see the way he went SAILING right out there?”

93. This was Hitchcock’s only American film outside the genre he made his own.
MR. AND MRS. SMITH

94. “I'm a pretty excitable person. I mean, where does he come off calling me a public avenger, sadist and everything? Anyone in his right mind would blow his stack. He was just trying to bait me.”
“He did an excellent job.”
12 ANGRY MEN

95. This masterpiece was based on the first novel to win the Pulitzer Prize by the first novelist to win the Pulitzer Prize twice. Got that?
THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS

96. “What you represent to them is freedom.”
“What the hell is wrong with freedom? That's what it's all about.”
“Oh, yeah, that's right. That's what's it's all about, all right. But talkin' about it and bein' it, that's two different thangs. I mean, it's real hard to be free when you are bought and sold in the marketplace. Of course, don't ever tell anybody that they're not free, 'cause then they're gonna get real busy killin' and maimin' to prove to you that they are. Oh, yeah, they're gonna talk to you, and talk to you, and talk to you about individual freedom. But they see a free individual, it's gonna scare 'em.”

97. The leading lady of this film claimed that the scene that traumatized her was not in the script; the director said that the scene was, but the butter wasn’t.
LAST TANGO IN PARIS

98. “This is when I know I'm helpless. My hands are down there on the bed. I can't put them on again without calling to somebody for help. I can't smoke a cigarette or read a book. If that door should blow shut, I can't open it and get out of this room. I'm as dependent as a baby that doesn't know how to get anything except to cry for it.”
BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES

99. Only twelve people ever saw the full 42-reel version of this film, which is now considered the Holy Grail of film archivists.
GREED? NAPOLEON?

100. “I can't go all my life waiting to catch you between husbands.”
GONE WITH THE WIND
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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#30 Post by mellytu74 » Fri Dec 08, 2023 10:00 pm

Speaking of The Muskateers of Pig Alley underneath it .....

56. “Lord save little children. The wind blows, and the rains are cold. Yet they abide.”

Is Lillian Gish in THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER

83. This wartime romance was the first movie in which its leading lady did not sing.

Could this be Judy Garland in THE CLOCK?

88. “What's your rush, doll-body? What do you say we slip in the back seat, and you make a man out of me?”
“What do you say I smack you around for a while?”
“Can’t we do both?”

I just realized this is Geena Davis is A LEAGUE OF THEIR OWN.

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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#31 Post by silverscreenselect » Fri Dec 08, 2023 10:27 pm

jarnon wrote:
Fri Dec 08, 2023 9:33 pm
85. This action movie pitted onetime Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson against onetime Secretary of State Alexander Haig.

89. Zero Mostel demanded director approval on this film, but it’s doubtful that he really expected to get any of his first three choices – Orson Welles, Charles Chaplin, and Jean Renoir.
85 is EXTREME PREJUDICE (another favorite of mine).

I think 89 is THE FRONT.

The correct title of the movie in Clue 29 is Panic in the Streets, which was one of Zero Mostel's earliest films, if that means anything.
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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#32 Post by mellytu74 » Sat Dec 09, 2023 2:56 pm

82. “Democracy shtunk!”
(“Democracy is fragrant.”)
“Liberty shtunk!”
(“Liberty is odious.”)
"Freisprechen shtunk!"
(“Free speech is objectionable")

THE GREAT DICTATOR (Boonie's contribution).

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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#33 Post by Vandal » Sat Dec 09, 2023 5:33 pm

28. “I find you attractive. Your aggressive moves toward me ... indicate that you feel the same way. But still, ritual requires that we continue with a number of platonic activities before we have sex. I am proceeding with these activities, but in point of actual fact, all I really want to do is have intercourse with you as soon as possible. Are you going to slap me now?”
A BEAUTIFUL MIND
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Available now:
The Secret At Haney Field: A Baseball Mystery
The Right Hand Rule
Center Point
Dizzy Miss Lizzie
Running On Empty
The Tick Tock Man
The Dragon's Song by Binh Pham and R. M. Clark
Devin Drake and The Family Secret

Visit my website: http://www.rmclarkauthor.com

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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#34 Post by silverscreenselect » Sat Dec 09, 2023 6:05 pm

jarnon wrote:
Fri Dec 08, 2023 9:33 pm
60. “Are you a vampire?”
“I live off blood. Yes.”
“Are you ... dead?”
“No. Can't you tell?”
“But ... are you old?”
“I'm twelve. But I've been twelve for a long time.”
I double checked this one to be sure. This is LET THE RIGHT ONE IN, which is the original Swedish film. The American remake is called LET ME IN, and the same exchange occurs but is a little shorter in the American version.

I don't see any promising matches to the Swedish actors in this film, but the director Tomas Alfredson also directed Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. A more promising match possibility is the words "The Right One," which could match with part of a title of another film.
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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#35 Post by kroxquo » Sun Dec 10, 2023 5:57 am

Here's a thought:

24. This Is Spinal Tap + 39. Beginning of the End =This Is the End

I can't find a connection to This Is the End, but maybe in one of the unanswered ones?
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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#36 Post by mrkelley23 » Sun Dec 10, 2023 7:43 am

71. is THE DISASTER ARTIST

For 73, I remember two movies about Christopher Columbus coming out at about the same time in the early 90s. According to sources, the first to be released was CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS: THE DISCOVERY.

86. is A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET

87. is definitely LENNY
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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#37 Post by silverscreenselect » Sun Dec 10, 2023 8:07 am

kroxquo wrote:
Sun Dec 10, 2023 5:57 am
Here's a thought:

24. This Is Spinal Tap + 39. Beginning of the End =This Is the End

I can't find a connection to This Is the End, but maybe in one of the unanswered ones?
Movies like Gandhi and Ishtar don't form the names of other films, but perhaps the third movie in the triple has an actor who is in one of the titles made by combining two other films.
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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#38 Post by kroxquo » Sun Dec 10, 2023 6:19 pm

silverscreenselect wrote:
Sun Dec 10, 2023 8:07 am
kroxquo wrote:
Sun Dec 10, 2023 5:57 am
Here's a thought:

24. This Is Spinal Tap + 39. Beginning of the End =This Is the End

I can't find a connection to This Is the End, but maybe in one of the unanswered ones?
Movies like Gandhi and Ishtar don't form the names of other films, but perhaps the third movie in the triple has an actor who is in one of the titles made by combining two other films.
Assuming Mr. K is right about The Disaster Artist, then that is the link to This Is the End I was looking for. James Franco, Seth Rogen, and Danny McBride were all in both.
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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#39 Post by mellytu74 » Sun Dec 10, 2023 8:26 pm

69. Lion tamer Clyde Beatty and big game hunter Frank Buck appeared as themselves in this Abbott and Costello comedy.

AFRICA SCREAMS. Saw it not long ago on Svengoolie.

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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#40 Post by silverscreenselect » Sun Dec 10, 2023 9:36 pm

kroxquo wrote:
Sun Dec 10, 2023 5:57 am
Here's a thought:

24. This Is Spinal Tap + 39. Beginning of the End =This Is the End

I can't find a connection to This Is the End, but maybe in one of the unanswered ones?
I think you've got part of it at least

INTO THE WILD + PANIC IN THE STREETS = WILD IN THE STREETS

A NIGHT TO REMEMBER + CLASH OF THE TITANS = REMEMBER THE TITANS

THE PRIDE AND THE PASSION + EXTREME PREJUDICE = PRIDE AND PREJUDICE

A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET + MUSKETEERS OF PIG ALLEY = NIGHTMARE ALLEY

THE PRINCESS DIARIES + BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN = THE PRINCESS BRIDE

GOODBYE MR. CHIPS + CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS = GOODBYE COLUMBUS

CALIFORNIA SPLIT + EXECUTIVE SUITE = CALIFORNIA SUITE

I'm not sure how a third film ties into these new titles however. Also, there are multiple well-known versions of both Nightmare Alley and Pride and Prejudice.
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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#41 Post by littlebeast13 » Mon Dec 11, 2023 7:44 am

silverscreenselect wrote:
Sun Dec 10, 2023 9:36 pm
kroxquo wrote:
Sun Dec 10, 2023 5:57 am
Here's a thought:

24. This Is Spinal Tap + 39. Beginning of the End =This Is the End

I can't find a connection to This Is the End, but maybe in one of the unanswered ones?
I think you've got part of it at least

INTO THE WILD + PANIC IN THE STREETS = WILD IN THE STREETS

A NIGHT TO REMEMBER + CLASH OF THE TITANS = REMEMBER THE TITANS

THE PRIDE AND THE PASSION + EXTREME PREJUDICE = PRIDE AND PREJUDICE

A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET + MUSKETEERS OF PIG ALLEY = NIGHTMARE ALLEY

THE PRINCESS DIARIES + BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN = THE PRINCESS BRIDE

GOODBYE MR. CHIPS + CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS = GOODBYE COLUMBUS

CALIFORNIA SPLIT + EXECUTIVE SUITE = CALIFORNIA SUITE

I'm not sure how a third film ties into these new titles however. Also, there are multiple well-known versions of both Nightmare Alley and Pride and Prejudice.

I generally only spectate on these movie games, but is there a trio of actors who were in both the movie made from the two matches and another movie on the list? I thought Krox's theme guess went well with Frank's warning:

But beware of combinations that seem to work as singles or pairs but not as triples.

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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#42 Post by kroxquo » Mon Dec 11, 2023 10:46 am

How about this?

THE PRINCESS DIARIES + BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN = THE PRINCESS BRIDE featuring Carol Kane who was in ISHTAR
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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#43 Post by littlebeast13 » Mon Dec 11, 2023 11:17 am

kroxquo wrote:
Mon Dec 11, 2023 10:46 am
How about this?

THE PRINCESS DIARIES + BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN = THE PRINCESS BRIDE featuring Carol Kane who was in ISHTAR
Just offhand, I know Billy Crystal starred in When Harry Met Sally. Too many combinations for that to work...

If this were easy to research (or I knew more about movies) I'd help try to confirm this, but I still think your original hunch about actor trios appearing in two separate films is the way to go.

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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#44 Post by franktangredi » Mon Dec 11, 2023 2:36 pm

You are all definitely on the right track, but not quite in the right lane. Once you realize what they Tangredi actually is, things will come very easily.

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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#45 Post by Vandal » Mon Dec 11, 2023 7:32 pm

18. “The night was sultry.”
THROW MOMMA FROM THE TRAIN

20. “That Stradivarius is worth over a million dollars!”
“Well, if I drop it, it won’t be worth sh*t.”
THE PRINCE OF TIDES

22. “Republic. I like the sound of the word. It means people can live free, talk free, go or come, buy or sell, be drunk or sober, however they choose. Some words give you a feeling. Republic is one of those words that makes me tight in the throat - the same tightness a man gets when his baby takes his first step or his first baby shaves and makes his first sound as a man. Some words can give you a feeling that makes your heart warm. Republic is one of those words.”
THE ALAMO (confirmed)

30. “After what we've just been through, any sane man would be screaming for a weapon.”
“Well, I never claimed to be sane.”
HACKSAW RIDGE

31. The director of this documentary was so stressed out by the director of the film he was documenting that he wrote in his diary, " I couldn't care less if they move the stupid ship – or finish the f**king film".
LES BLANK

32. “You're here today so I can personally tell you that you are going to die in federal prison. And so are all your friends. No deal. No compromise. And when that day comes when you start trying to be my hero collaborator so hard that I have to slap you to shut up – and it will come, despite your pitiable, misguided, Irish Omertà – when your code of silence finally gives way to fear of trafficking in cigarettes to prevent sexual enslavement, I just want you to know that it's gonna be me who told you to go f**k yourself.”
THE TOWN

33. The soundtrack of this biopic includes one of my all-time favorite pieces of music, the overture to Candide.
MAESTRO

35. This 1979 film about Mexican American street gangs in East L.A. has been selected for preservation by the National Film Registry.
BOULEVARD NIGHTS

36. “I go outta here every morning, I bust my butt 'cause I like you? You're about the biggest fool I ever saw. A man is supposed to take care of his family. You live in my house, feed your belly with my food, put your behind on my bed because you're my son. It's my duty to take care of you, I owe a responsibility to you, I ain't got to like you!”
FENCES

42. “At your age, you're going to have a lot of urges. You're going to want to take off your clothes, and touch each other. But if you do touch each other, you will get chlamydia ... and die.”
MEAN GIRLS

58. “I think if people see this footage, they'll say, ‘Oh, my God, that's horrible.’ And then they'll go on eating their dinners.”
HOTEL RWANDA

60. “Are you a vampire?”
“I live off blood. Yes.”
“Are you ... dead?”
“No. Can't you tell?”
“But ... are you old?”
“I'm twelve. But I've been twelve for a long time.”
LET THE RIGHT ONE IN

62. “You know, maybe we're - we're only good at brief encounters, walking around in European cities in warm climates.”
BEFORE SUNSET

64. “A naked American man stole my balloons.”
AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON

70. “So this is Rome. Where the pigeons eat caviar.”
“And the secretaries eat alone.”
THREE COINS IN THE FOUNTAIN

74. “Why do you want to dance?”
“Why do you want to live?”
“Well I don't know exactly why, but I must.”
“That's my answer, too.”
THE RED SHOES
_________________________________________________________________________________
Available now:
The Secret At Haney Field: A Baseball Mystery
The Right Hand Rule
Center Point
Dizzy Miss Lizzie
Running On Empty
The Tick Tock Man
The Dragon's Song by Binh Pham and R. M. Clark
Devin Drake and The Family Secret

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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#46 Post by silverscreenselect » Mon Dec 11, 2023 9:01 pm

AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON + LAST TANGO IN PARIS = AN AMERICAN IN PARIS
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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#47 Post by Vandal » Tue Dec 12, 2023 7:38 pm

76. “You know, 35 years ago, preparing for a concert meant playing ‘find the cobra’ with the hotel chambermaid.”
A MIGHTY WIND

79. This film – cast with actual Lombard peasants – won the Palme d’Or at Cannes and the Cesar Award for Best Foreign Film.
THE TREE OF WOODEN CLOGS

84. “I may be on the devil's hit-list, but I'm on God's mailing list.”
THE APOSTLE

92. “Hey, did you see the way he went SAILING right out there?”
IT’S A MAD MAD MAD MAD WORLD

96. “What you represent to them is freedom.”
“What the hell is wrong with freedom? That's what it's all about.”
“Oh, yeah, that's right. That's what's it's all about, all right. But talkin' about it and bein' it, that's two different thangs. I mean, it's real hard to be free when you are bought and sold in the marketplace. Of course, don't ever tell anybody that they're not free, 'cause then they're gonna get real busy killin' and maimin' to prove to you that they are. Oh, yeah, they're gonna talk to you, and talk to you, and talk to you about individual freedom. But they see a free individual, it's gonna scare 'em.”
EASY RIDER

99. Only twelve people ever saw the full 42-reel version of this film, which is now considered the Holy Grail of film archivists.
GREED
_________________________________________________________________________________
Available now:
The Secret At Haney Field: A Baseball Mystery
The Right Hand Rule
Center Point
Dizzy Miss Lizzie
Running On Empty
The Tick Tock Man
The Dragon's Song by Binh Pham and R. M. Clark
Devin Drake and The Family Secret

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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#48 Post by silverscreenselect » Sun Dec 17, 2023 8:10 pm

Vandal wrote:
Mon Dec 11, 2023 7:32 pm
31. The director of this documentary was so stressed out by the director of the film he was documenting that he wrote in his diary, " I couldn't care less if they move the stupid ship – or finish the f**king film".
LES BLANK
Les Blank is actually the director of this movie, whose title is BURDEN OF DREAMS.

And that matches with Lillies of the Field for Field of Dreams.
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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#49 Post by silverscreenselect » Sun Dec 17, 2023 8:17 pm

A thought here: 62. Before Sunset + 35. Boulevard Dreams = SUNSET BOULEVARD, which featured Erich von Stroheim, who directed 99. Greed.
Last edited by silverscreenselect on Tue Dec 19, 2023 11:11 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Game #215: Role Play

#50 Post by silverscreenselect » Mon Dec 18, 2023 2:10 pm

silverscreenselect wrote:
Sun Dec 17, 2023 8:17 pm
A thought here: Before Sunset + Boulevard Dreams = SUNSET BOULEVARD, which featured Erich von Stroheim, who directed Greed.
I think I'm onto something here but I haven't quite figured it out. Some of these movies were directed by people with extensive acting careers: Mel Gibson, Clint Eastwood, Robert Redford, Bradley Cooper, Richard Attenborough, Rob Reiner. But some of the portmanteau films don't work that way. Wild in the Streets was directed by Barry Shear, who has no acting credits. Field of Dreams was directed by Phil Alden Robinson who also has no acting credits. I might be wrong about Wild in the Streets being a mash-up film, but I have to be right about Field of Dreams.
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