Lounge of Tomorrow

Lounge of Tomorrow (http://74.208.121.111/LoT/index.php)
-   Beatnik (http://74.208.121.111/LoT/forumdisplay.php?f=9)
-   -   Miscellaneous Movie Musings (http://74.208.121.111/LoT/showthread.php?t=3573)

Strangler Lewis 12-27-2007 10:03 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cadaverous Pallor (Post 180829)
Another great Apatow-related movie. From the previews we realized that he's been busy throwing his money around, and there are many more lined up to come. Yay. :)

I've got to send him my laugh a minute screenplay about my vasectomy. The natural third of a trilogy begun by "Forty Year Old Virgin" and "Knocked Up." When it's finished, of course. The screenplay, that is.

Alex 12-27-2007 10:10 AM

Is there anybody who was 8-15 years old when it was released that isn't familiar with *batteries not included?

Cacoon (1985), Short Circuit (1986), and *batteries not included (1987) were the sci-fi trilogy of my tween years.

Ghoulish Delight 12-27-2007 10:20 AM

Somehow I never saw *bni. I know I wanted to, but it never happened.

Gemini Cricket 12-27-2007 11:12 AM

Films added to the Library of Congress today. Click here.

Quote:

-- "The Naked City," 1948, filmed on actual locations in New York; this movie won Oscars for best photography and editing. It was a gritty crime film combining slices of several stories.
-- "Close Encounters of the Third Kind," 1977, an intelligent sci-fi film directed by Steven Spielberg in which the climactic scene is set at Devil's Tower National Monument in Wyoming.
-- "In a Lonely Place," 1950, a scathing Hollywood satire with Humphrey Bogart playing a screenwriter, brilliant at his craft yet prone to living with his fists.
-- "Oklahoma!" 1955, brought the fun and famous musical to the screen.
-- "Back to the Future," 1985, explored the possibilities of special effects when a man stranded in 1955 by a time machine must not only find a way home, but also teach his father how to become a man, repair the space/time continuum and save his family from being erased from existence. All while fighting off the advances of his then-teenage mother.
-- "12 Angry Men," 1957, a classic filmed in a spare, claustrophobic style -- largely set in one jury room -- relating a single juror's refusal to conform to peer pressure in a murder trial.
-- "The Strong Man," 1926, features Harry Langdon, widely considered one of the great silent comedians, as a meek man in love with a blind woman.
-- "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance," 1962, director John Ford's last great Western. The film shows that the conquest of the West meant the triumph of civilization, embodied in Jimmy Stewart, over wild innocence -- John Wayne -- and evil -- Lee Marvin.
Also being added to the registry:
-- "Bullitt" (1968)
-- "Dance, Girl, Dance" (1940)
-- "Dances With Wolves" (1990)
-- "Days of Heaven" (1978)
-- "Glimpse of the Garden" (1957)
-- "Grand Hotel" (1932)
-- "The House I Live In" (1945)
-- "Mighty Like a Moose" (1926)
-- "Now, Voyager" (1942)
-- "Our Day" (1938)
-- "Peege" (1972)
-- "The Sex Life of the Polyp" (1928)
-- "Three Little Pigs" (1933)
-- "Tol'able David" (1921)
-- "Tom, Tom the Piper's Son" (1969-71)
-- "The Women" (1939)
-- "Wuthering Heights" (1939)
The Women made the list. That makes me smile.
:)

Snowflake 12-27-2007 11:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gemini Cricket (Post 181501)
Films added to the Library of Congress today. Click here.



The Women made the list. That makes me smile.
:)

-- "Now, Voyager" (1942)
-- "Three Little Pigs" (1933)
-- "Tol'able David" (1921)

and The Women!

I'm with GC, a good list!

NA, your favorite made the list too!

Not Afraid 12-27-2007 11:33 AM

A few favorites of mine here!

Grand Hotel
12 Angry Men
Now, Voyager
Three Little Pigs
The Women
Wuthering Heights

Eliza Hodgkins 1812 12-27-2007 11:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Alex (Post 181478)
Is there anybody who was 8-15 years old when it was released that isn't familiar with *batteries not included?

Cacoon (1985), Short Circuit (1986), and *batteries not included (1987) were the sci-fi trilogy of my tween years.

I've heard lots of people talk about the first two, but the third rarely ever comes up in conversation, even if a lot of people remember it.

Not Afraid 12-27-2007 11:56 AM

I haven't seen any of them.

Surprised?

€uroMeinke 12-27-2007 11:58 AM

Me neither - but how many of you have seen the Man who Fell to Earth?

Not Afraid 12-27-2007 11:59 AM

HA! I think we should play it on NYE just to be evil.


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 08:46 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.