NJ is right. snookiepuss somehow lost a ton of weight and doesn't look anything like her old self, had 2 kids and wrote and published 2 books. unreal. in the movie Tin Cup - what was the famous score Roy Mcavoy put up at Cottonwood? Don Johnson retells the story and he says the score in the story...
man, you guys take off for days on here. i'll ask another question... this is a tough one. in the movie Caddyshack, what is the name of Judge Smails' boat? His wife says the name when she breaks the point off the boat with the wine bottle...
I watched a lot of movies last weekend at night on Netflix and never thought of getting a trivia question. I'll see if I can come up with one tomorrow....... *OK*
Heres one I rewatched about a month ago on cable. What was the name of the robot in Short Circuit? ( I really liked that movie )
In Ferris Bueller's Day off in the opening monologue by Ferris he says clammy hands is the key to faking sick how does he suggest you fake clammy hands?
It became Johnny 5 at the very end of the movie, and that was his name throughout the sequel, but I'd say #5 is more accurate for the original since that is what they called him for 99% of the film.
I haven't followed the thread at all, but I guess I'm up for a question...hope I don't repeat one somebody has already asked! How about this...in the movie Tombstone, what is Doc Holliday playing on the piano when he's asked if its "Stephen stinking Foster!"?
I know its Chopin but cannot remember which one and the only reason I can remeber that is because of Docs Reply: You Know Fredrick F'ing Chopin
He actually is asked "is that old dog trey?" "You know Stephen Foster, Old Susannah?" And then he says "you know Stephen stinking Foster!" the answer is a "Nocturne." You know by "Fredrick Fucking Chopan!"
the more I hear about Wyatt Earp, he was as much as a gangster, robber, bad guy as a lawman and his heroic accounts are 95% fiction. He is basically a real life figure whose exploits are grossly and highly fictionalized due to him telling a biographer "his" version of his life story as he was dying in 1929.
back to Tombstone... the real feud with the Clantons was over cattle, money and ownership rights and a supposed promise of money to Ike Clanton for ratting out who robbed a Wells Fargo stagecoach. Half the crap in the movies are all wrong. trivia --- near the end of the movie when Doc Holliday is dying, he looks down at his barefeet and says "it's funny." Why does he say that?
Well, that's not really in the movie, but legend has it that Doc lived his life in a way that he figured he would die a violent death with his boots on, not lying in bed with bare feet.