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Fargo
(1996)
- the Coen Brothers' masterpiece was a self-proclaimed
"homespun murder story"; it defied categorization by being
a conglomerate: a film noir (with stark white vistas and backdrops),
a satirical comedy, a suspenseful crime drama, and a violent mystery
thriller; the film's story could be boiled down to a kidnapping gone
awry, a triple homicide (a highway patrolman and two innocent passersby),
two contrasting families (the male-dominated Lundegaards and the
female-dominated Gundersons), the corruptible effects of fast food,
TV watching and pecuniary greed, and a hapless extortion scheme
- in the opening credits sequence set in January of
1987, images (beautifully filmed by Roger Deakins) were of a frozen,
snow-blanketed Fargo, ND and a car (with a new tan Oldsmobile Cutlass
Ciera in tow) emerging in the white-out blizzard conditions and
making its way along the deserted highway, toward an inn (with
a bar and restaurant)
Car Salesman: Jerry Lundegaard (William H. Macy)
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Two Hired Kidnappers: (l to r): Carl and Gaear
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- the desperate, financially-impotent, disheveled
and indebted Jerry Lundegaard (William H. Macy), executive sales
manager of a car dealership, met up inside with two low-life losers
(and soon-to-be hired killers): Carl Showalter (Steve Buscemi)
- a talkative, slimeball, nervous and embittered individual, and
Gaear Grimsrud (Peter Stormare) - a violent, tall, blonde, psychotic,
quiet and grim man prone to outbursts; he offered them the new
tan Cutlass Ciera and cash ("the new vehicle plus forty thousand
dollars") to kidnap his own wife, Jean Lundegaard (Kristin
Rudrüd) in their home in Minneapolis, MN; she was the daughter
of Wade Gustafson (Harve Presnell) who owned Jerry's car dealership
Gustafson's Motors; the ransom demand was to be for $80,000, to
be split 50% between the kidnappers and Jerry after the
ransom was paid (and the wife was safely returned without bloodshed)
- in reality, Jerry's ill-conceived real-estate plan
was to swindle and extort the funds out of his detested, wealthy,
businessman father-in-law; his idea was to ask for a loan of $750,000
to build a 40-acre parking lot in Wayzata
- Jerry's devious character was illustrated in a scene
where he browbeat and scammed customers at the dealership - husband
and wife (Gary Houston and Sally Wingert) were pressured to pay
$500 more for TruCoat sealant for their new car purchase
- it was also implied that Jerry was embezzling money
from the car dealership and also falsifying car sales documents
in order to fill in the gaps of the depleted dealership bank accounts;
a lucrative real-estate deal with his father-in-law was in jeopardy,
thus motivating and prompting Jerry to hatch the kidnapping scheme
- the two kidnappers stopped for the night at the
Blue Ox Truck Stop and Hotel in Brainerd, MN where they had hired
two prostitutes; after vigorous sex, the two sat up in bed in their
icy blue-tinged room, catatonically watching the Tonight Show
- after hiring the two killers, Jerry learned that
the real-estate deal with his father-in-law was approved, and he
decided to call off his two hired thugs for the unnecessary kidnapping,
but mindlessly, he realized that he had no way to contact them
and abort the scheme; Jerry's original plan of acquiring $750,000
was scratched, and he was promised only a finder's fee of $75,000
dollars, plus Wade announced that he would independently process
the deal without Jerry's involvement; Jerry was so upset by the
news that he expressed his frustrated rage on his frozen windshield
with an ice scraper
- meanwhile, at the Lundegaard residence, masked intruder
Carl with a crowbar and Gaear approached the house and broke in;
Jean fled to the upstairs to try to escape through a second-story
window in the locked bathroom; however, she was found by Gaear
hiding in the bathtub; she screamed and fled down the hallway,
tripped, and ended up unconscious after falling down the flight
of stairs
Triple Murder and Mayhem by Gaear
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State Trooper Who Accosted Them Shot
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Two Witnesses Who Happened to Drive By Also Executed
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- that night, while transporting Jean covered in a
blanket in the back seat of the Oldsmobile Cutlass Ciera to a cabin
by Moose Lake, the kidnappers were stopped by a State Trooper (James
Gaulke) asking for license and registration information; when the
officer became suspicious after hearing whimpering sounds, Gaear
in the passenger seat reached over and grabbed the cop's hair,
slammed his head into the car door, grabbed a gun from the glove
compartment and blew the trooper's brains out; as Carl attempted
to dispose of the body, another car with two passengers drove by
and witnessed the murder scene; after Gaear pursued the car, it
turned over in a ditch; he walked up to the two victims, and saw
the male driver (J. Todd Anderson) running in the snow and shot
him dead, and then returned to the car to execute the injured female
(Michelle Suzanne LeDoux) in the car
- early the next morning, 7 months-pregnant Brainerd
Chief of Police Marge Gunderson (Frances McDormand) was introduced
having breakfast with her loving husband Norm (John Carroll Lynch)
in her home; she was hurrying on her way to a triple homicide crime
scene on the road near Brainerd, MN; at the site of the witness'
deaths, she quickly surveyed everything and correctly surmised
what had happened - and also stated how the perpetrator was a "big
fella"; then, she was seen doubled over and bent down, supporting
herself on her knee as her morning sickness overwhelmed her - instead
of the tragedy of the roadside triple murder - she stated: "I
just think I'm gonna barf...it's just morning sickness"; at
the scene of the trooper's death, she noticed different sized prints
for a second perpetrator; from the dead trooper's citation book
with notes at 2:18 am, she guessed that the car was pulled over
because it had Dealer plates (DLR) that had not been exchanged
- shortly later, in an offbeat scene at the Lakeside
Club in Brainerd, Marge interrogated two dim-witted hookers (Larissa
Kokernot and Melissa Peterman), employed as strippers at the bar
who had been "company" for the two suspects driving a
tan Cutlass Ciera with dealer plates the evening before the two
shootings; when she asked what the suspects looked like, one of
the women described a "funny lookin'" uncircumcised
male: ("The little guy was kinda funny-lookin'...I don't know.
Just funny-Iookin'...I couldn't really say. He wasn't circumcised");
Marge was astonished and asked again: "Was he funny-lookin'
apart from that?"; the second fella was described as "a
little older - he looked like the Marlboro Man" who smoked
alot; they were allegedly on their way to the Twin Cities
- the walls began to close in on Jerry as all of his
planned schemes began to collapse: (1) a distressed Carl called
Jerry and reported three people dead in Brainerd, and demanded
the entire ransom of $80,000 the next day, and (2) the GMAC representative
(voice of Warren Keith) demanded Jerry send proper VIN numbers
for a group of vehicles immediately or he would report him to the
company's legal department, and (3) Jerry told Wade that the ransom
amount was $1 million, and Wade insisted that he personally deliver
the money rather than have Jerry be the go-between, and (4) burly
Native American mechanic Shep Proudfoot (Steve Reevis), who worked
at Jerry's dealership service garage, was suspected of being in
contact with the kidnappers (he was Jerry's middleman with the
killers) and thereby had become an accessory to the Brainerd murders;
realizing he was in deep trouble, he looked up Carl (who was having
sex with a hooker) and mercilessly beat him
- during a deadly money-drop exchange of a briefcase
on the roof of Minneapolis' Radisson Hotel parking garage, the
aggravated kidnapper Carl was surprised to see Wade instead of
Jerry; Wade demanded to see his kidnapped daughter Jean before
handing over the money; surprised by the stringent demands, Carl
shot Wade in the abdomen; as Wade was dying, he shot Carl in his
right jaw and cheek; screaming in pain, Carl put more bullets into
Wade, grabbed the briefcase, and drove toward the garage gate;
passing Carl on his way up to the rooftop was Jerry, who found
Wade's body on the ground; he placed the body in his trunk and
then exited, realizing to his horror that Carl had also shot the
attendant and smashed through the wooden exit gate
Bloody and Deadly Money-Drop Scene Between a Dying
Wade and Carl
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Jerry Realizing to His Horror the Magnitude of
His Botched Schemes
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Injured Carl Hiding Excess Ransom Money in Snowy
Field
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- on the way back to the cabin to rendezvous with
Gaear, Carl realized he had $1 million dollars in the briefcase
rather than the $80,000 dollars promised; he greedily decided to
keep the excess money for himself, and buried it deep in the snow
next to a fence
- after having briefly questioned car salesman Jerry
earlier in the film, Marge returned to interrogate the smarmy and
snippy Jerry in his autosales office, who evasively resisted her
continued line of questioning about a tan Cutlass Ciera stolen
from the lot: ("Ma'am, I answered your question. I answered
the darn... I'm cooperating here, and there's, there's no, uhm...Well,
heck! If you wanna, if you wanna play games here. I'm workin' with
ya on this thing here, but, OK, I'll do a damn lot count...Yah,
right now. You're darned tootin'. If it's so damned important to
ya") - he then fled from the showroom, and she shockingly
realized: "Oh, for Pete's sake, he's fleeing the interview!
He's fleeing the interview!" when she saw suspect Jerry escaping
in a car outside the auto dealership
- once the badly-injured Carl met up with Gaear again
at the remote Moose Lake cabin, he was bleeding profusely; he discovered
that his insane and psychotic partner Gaear had brutally murdered
Jean to keep her quiet; they bickered bitterly over splitting the
$80,000 money and also dividing up the vehicle - the Oldsmobile
Cutlass Ciera; Carl insisted on leaving with the car in his possession,
as extra compensation for his facial injury; as he left, he was
attacked by Gaear from behind, who swung an axe overhead into Carl's
neck, like the proverbial Paul Bunyan
- in the infamous body disposal scene outside the
cabin, Marge happened to spot the tan Ciera vehicle parked in front
of a cabin at Moose Lake; she approached cautiously and slowly
edged her way around the lakeside cabin to discover Grimsrud supplying
his wood chipper with the body of his kidnapping accomplice Carl
with only one shoeless leg/foot left to be shredded; a red swatch
of blood was being propelled from one end of the chipper onto the
white snow; when she called out
"Police!", Gaear fled onto the icy lake; she trained her
gun at him, fired and missed, but then struck him in the right leg;
he fell to the snowy surface, grasping at his wounded thigh
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With Gun Drawn, Marge Approaching Gaear
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Gaear Feeding Accomplice Carl into a Wood Chipper
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- with her mute and motionless captured murderer/kidnapper
Gaear handcuffed in the back of her police car, Marge chastised
the criminal, expressing her weariness, disappointment, and bitterness;
she lectured him and scoffed at the kidnappers' senseless and greedy
motivations ("for a little bit of money"): ("So
that was Mrs. Lundegaard on the floor in there. And I guess that
was your accomplice in the wood chipper. And those three people
in Brainerd. And for what? For a little bit of money. There's more
to life than a little money, you know. Don't you know that? And
here ya are, and it's a beautiful day. Well, I just don't understand
it")
- two days later, Jerry was arrested by two state
policemen in a motel room outside of Bismarck, ND; his effort to
escape out the bathroom window in his underwear failed miserably
as he was apprehended
- in the satisfying epilogue between Marge and her
husband Norm, he calmly told her that he had won a design contest
for the 3 cent stamp; Marge complimented him about how more people
used the three cent stamp rather than the 29 cent stamp; both of
them anticipated a hopeful future: ("We're doing pretty good...Two
more months...")
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Opening Credits
Jerry's Detested Father-in-Law Wade Gustafson (Harve Presnell)
Jerry's Wife Jean Lundegaard (Kristin Rudrüd)
Scammed Customers at Jerry's Car Dealership
The Kidnappers With Two Prostitutes in Blue Ox Hotel in Brainerd, MN
Jean Attempting to Fight Off Masked Kidnappers in Her Home
Jerry's Frustration: Scraping His Car's Frozen Windshield
Brainerd Police Chief Marge's "Morning Sickness"
at the First of Two Crime Scenes
The Two Killers With Their Hooded and Tied-Up Hostage Jean at Moose Lake Cabin
Marge Questioning Two Hookers
Jerry's Schemes All Unraveling
Jerry's Middleman Shep Proudfoot Also Investigated
Jerry Nervously Answering Marge's Questions About the Tan Oldsmobile
Cutlass
Marge: "He's Fleeing the Interview"
At the Cabin, Carl About to Be Axed to Death by Gaear
Marge to Gaear in Her Police Car: "There's more to
life than a little money, you know"
Jerry Apprehended in a Motel Room in His Underwear
Film's Prologue: "Two more months..."
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Father
of the Bride (1950)
- director Vincente Minnelli's
and MGM's satirical domestic comedy was about a wedding ceremony,
including the difficult preparations and rites of matrimony, and the travails and
joys of a harrassed father experiencing his only daughter's expensive wedding:
- in the opening scene, harrassed
and exhausted father, well-to-do lawyer Stanley T. Banks or "Pops" (Oscar-nominated
Spencer Tracy), talked directly to the camera to deliver a voice-over
narration; collapsed in a chair, he looked back at the extravagant
marriage ceremony that had just occurred; he told about all the
stresses before (and after) a lavish June wedding for his beautiful
20 year-old daughter Kay (Elizabeth Taylor), and his recollections
of how she had grown up so fast to become engaged: ("I would
like to say a few words about weddings. I've just been through
one. Not my own, my daughter's. Someday in the far future, I may
be able to remember it with tender indulgence, but not now. I always
used to think that marriage was a simple affair. Boy and girl meet,
they fall in love, get married, they have babies. Eventually the
babies grow up, meet other babies, and they fall in love and get
married, and so on and on and on. Looked at that way, it's not
only simple, it's downright monotonous. But I was wrong. I figured
without the wedding")
- the film's lengthy flashback told the witty and contrived story of the previous three months
leading up to the wedding, as Stanley realized that his 'little girl'
Kay was soon to be leaving in anticipation of her marriage ("All
I could think of was a little girl in brown pigtails and dirty
overalls")
- Stanley desired to "get a peek at this Superman," his
daughter's fiancee, Buckley Dunstan (Don Taylor) from the front
window, and had a pained reaction
- in the middle
of the night, Stanley frantically worried to his wife Ellie (Joan
Bennett) about Kay's choice of a fiancee: "We don't know a thing
about him. Not a darn thing. Not where he comes from, what he makes,
or what he makes making it"
- they had a lengthy, one-sided "man-to-man" financial
talk (three months before the nuptials) to determine if Buckley
could suitably support Kay
- during the required meeting of the Banks to get
to know the wealthy in-laws the Dunstans, Herbert
or "Herbie" (Moroni Olsen) and Doris Dunstan (Billie
Burke), Stanley admitted: "We did more bare-faced lying in
those few minutes than we had done in our entire lives"
- in the scene of the Banks' party to announce the
engagement, Stanley found himself confined to the kitchen and was
unable to deliver his prepared speech
- Stanley became exasperated about the exorbitant costs and how everyone else
was spending his money, but soon realized he would lose the battle
for a small wedding: "From then on, I was a dead duck"
- Stanley was completely flabbergasted by the amount of clothing being purchased
for the event, and all of the other included expenses: ("It's only two syllables from Banks to
bankruptcy...What are people gonna say when I'm in the gutter because
I tried to put on a wedding like a Roman emperor?"); eventually,
Stanley gave in to the entire guest list
- Stanley faced his daughter's overbearing caterers, led by fussy caterer Mr.
Massoula (Leo G. Carroll): ("An experienced caterer can make you
ashamed of your house in 15 minutes")
- once the RSVPs for the invitations began to arrive,
Stanley was dismayed by the many positive responses
- then, Kay abruptly announced that "the wedding's
off" during a sudden explosion of emotion, after Buckley impulsively
proposed that the couple go on a fishing trip in Nova Scotia for
their honeymoon; Buckley arrived to sincerely apologize for his
awful and selfish lack of judgment with Kay; Stanley was forced
to intercede after the couple's fight and make things right between
the feuding couple, and the two quickly reconciled their differences
- during the botched church rehearsal for the wedding
arrived, the groom Buckley and the minister Rev. Galsworthy (Paul
Harvey) were absent from the proceedings, and the rehearsal run
by the minister's assistant Mr. Tringle (Melville Cooper) was totally
disorganized and chaotic
- the night before the wedding, Stanley also
experienced a nightmarish vision of what might happen at a disastrous
wedding (he imagined himself appearing late, in tatters, and not
able to walk down the springy and rubbery aisle, as his daughter
screamed at him from the altar)
- once he awoke from the nightmare during a midnight
snack kitchen scene, he visited with his daughter as they shared
a bottle of milk and sandwiches; she confessed her fears about
the monumental wedding about to occur, and then complimented her
father: "Nothing ever fazes you, does it?"
- the day of the wedding dawned with massive distractions and confusion
over preparations in the house for the reception, including collisions
between caterers setting up and movers taking out the furniture;
however, Stanley then saw his daughter in her wedding gown, reflected
in a triple-paned full-length mirror ("She
looked like the princess in a fairy tale") - it was a wonderfully
visualized moment
- as Stanley played his part to give Kay away, he felt ambiguity and confusion about losing his
only daughter: ("What's it going to be like to come home and not find her. Not to hear
her voice calling 'Hi Pops' as I come in. I suddenly realized what
I was doing. I was giving up Kay. Something inside me was beginning to hurt")
- the film concluded with the chaotic
reception back at the Banks home; missing her throughout the entire
reception in the crowded house, in the midst of the hubbub and catering
staff and the crush of the hordes of guests, Stanley failed to see
the throwing of Kay's bouquet from the front indoor staircase, and
only caught a glimpse of her departing in the newlyweds' car. Crestfallen,
he thought to himself (in voice-over): "She was gone. My Kay
was gone. And I'd been too late to say goodbye to her." Later
after the last guests departed, Stanley surveyed the "wreckage" in
the house with Ellie, and suddenly felt how empty the house had become
- in a concluding tearjerking scene, Kay
made a post-wedding phone call (from the NY train station on her
way to her Nova Scotia honeymoon) to lovingly say 'thank you' to
her father: ("And Pops, you've been just wonderful. I love you. I love you very much.
Bye bye")
- Stanley delivered a memorable last line: ("Nothing's
really changed, has it? You know what they say: 'My son's my son
until he gets him a wife, but my daughter's my daughter all of
her life.' All of our life")
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Stanley's Voice-Over Narrated Flashback
Stanley's "Man-to-Man" Talk with Fiancee Buckley
The Wedding Caterers
Wedding Nightmare
Kay's Post-Wedding Thank You Phone Call to Her Father
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Ferris Bueller's
Day Off (1986)
- director John Hughes' cult comedy hit was about
one high school student's one last day of cutting class (after
faking illness) and enjoying life on the streets of Chicago
- in the opening scene, malingering rich-kid, trouble-making
student Ferris Bueller (Matthew Broderick) described (with graphics)
how to fool parents and skip a day of school at Shermer High: ("The
key to faking out the parents is the clammy hands. It's a good
non-specific symptom. I'm a big believer in it. A lot of people
will tell you that a good phony fever is a dead lock, but, uh,
you get a nervous mother, you could wind up in a doctor's office.
That's worse than school. You fake a stomach cramp, and when you're
bent over, moaning and wailing, you lick your palms. It's a little
childish and stupid, but then, so is high school. Life moves pretty
fast. If you don't stop and look around once in awhile, you could
miss it"); he had cleverly set up his Emulator II+ synthesizer
to deliver convincing fart and vomit sound effects
- after showering (with his hair wrapped inside a
towel spiral on his head), Ferris continued his monologue - breaking
the 4th Wall and speaking to the camera/audience: ("It's not
that I condone fascism or any 'ism' for that matter. Ism's, in
my opinion, are not good. A person should not believe in an 'ism,'
he should believe in himself. I quote John Lennon: 'I don't believe
in Beatles. I just believe in me.' A good point there. After all,
he was the walrus. I could be the walrus. I'd still have to bum
rides off of people")
Economics Teacher: "Bueller? Bueller? Bueller?"
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Bueller's Empty Chair in Classroom
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Economics Student Simone:
"Uhm, he's sick..."
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- Ferris' Economics teacher (Ben Stein) monotonously
called student names alphabetically from his attendance roll, and
repeatedly asked for "Bueller? Bueller? Bueller?...";
there was a view of Ferris' empty chair, and fellow student Simone
Adamley (Kristy Swanson) gave a confused excuse about how Ferris
was sick: ("Uhm, he's sick. My best friend's sister's boyfriend's
brother's girlfriend heard from this guy who knows this kid who's
going with the girl who saw Ferris pass out at 31 Flavours last
night. I guess it's pretty serious"); she responded to his
thank you with the oft-quoted, cheerful: "No problem whatsoever"
- and shortly later, the Economics teacher delivered
a boring lecture to his half-asleep students on the Hawley-Smoot
Tariff Act, when he repeatedly paused for them to fill in the blank
answer: ("Anyone? Anyone?"): "In 1930, the Republican-controlled
House of Representatives, in an effort to alleviate the effects
of the --- Anyone? Anyone? --- the Great Depression, passed the
--- Anyone? Anyone? The tariff bill? The Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act?
Which, anyone? Raised or lowered? --- raised tariffs, in an effort
to collect more revenue for the federal government. Did it work?
Anyone? Anyone know the effects? It did not work, and the United
States sank deeper into the Great Depression. Today we have a similar
debate over this. Anyone know what this is? Class? Anyone? Anyone?
Anyone seen this before? The Laffer Curve. Anyone know what this
says? It says that at this point on the revenue curve, you will
get exactly the same amount of revenue as at this point. This is
very controversial. Does anyone know what Vice President Bush called
this in 1980? Anyone? Something D-O-O economics. Voodoo economics"
- in the office of Dean of Students Ed Rooney (Jeffrey
Jones), he explained how dangerous Ferris was: ("I don't trust
this kid any further than I can throw him...What is so dangerous
about a character like Ferris Bueller is he gives good kids bad
ideas...The last thing I need at this point in my career is 1500
Ferris Bueller disciples running around these halls. He jeopardizes
my ability to effectively govern this student body")
- but then, Dean Rooney's secretary Grace (Edie McClurg)
explained how popular Ferris was: ("He makes you look like
an ass is what he does, Ed...Oh, well, he's very popular, Ed. The
sportos, the motorheads, geeks, sluts, bloods, wasteoids, dweebies,
dickheads - they all adore him. They think he's a righteous dude")
- Ed Rooney received what he believed was a crank
phone call from Ferris, but it was actually made by Ferris' friend
Cameron Frye (Alan Ruck), who was impersonating Ferris' cheerleader
girlfriend Sloane's (Mia Sara) 'father' Mr. Peterson - it was a
fake request to excuse Sloane from school due to the grandmother's
death, so that Sloane could join the two guys for a day off in
downtown Chicago; Rooney was fooled into delivering a sarcastic
and insulting response: ("Tell you what, dips--t, you don't
like my policies you can just come on down and smooch my big ol'
white butt!...Pucker up, buttercup!"); and then, he received
another phone call announced by Grace: ("Ferris Bueller's
on line two...")
- Ferris impersonated Sloane's father when he picked
up his girlfriend Sloane from the front of the school, driving
Cameron's father's 'borrowed' 1961 red Ferrari 250 GT convertible
- while he was suspiciously watched from afar by Rooney standing
on the school steps; Ferris asked Sloane: "Do you have a kiss
for Daddy?" - and engaged in a long, deep and passionate kiss
- to Rooney's consternation
- the foolhardy Rooney attempted to catch Ferris at
home, where he was confronted by the slobbering family Rottweiler
- and then by Ferris' sister Jeanie (Jennifer Grey) who was also
skipping class and had returned home; when Jeanie came face-to-face
with Rooney in the kitchen, thinking he was a prowler, burglar
or rapist, she karate-kicked him in the face three times, and then
ran upstairs to hide in her bedroom and call the police; while
Rooney fled, the police arrived and arrested her for making a prank
call and filing a false report
Police Station Conversation
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Ferris' Resentful Sister Jeanie (Jennifer Grey)
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Garth Volbeck, Boy in Police Station (Charlie
Sheen)
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- after being brought to the police station, Jeanie
reluctantly engaged in a conversation with drugged-up juvenile
delinquent stranger (Charlie Sheen), about her frustrations with
Ferris always getting away with things: ("All right, you want
to know what's wrong?...In a nutshell, I hate my brother. How's
that?...See, I went home to confirm that the s--thead was ditching
school and when I was there, a guy broke into the house. I called
the cops, and they picked me up for making a phony phone call...Why
should he get to ditch when everybody else has to go?"); when
he offered advice: ("Your problem is you...You ought to spend
a little more time dealing with yourself, a little less time worrying
about what your brother does - that's just an opinion"), she
snapped back: ("What are you, a psychiatrist?... Why don't
you keep your opinions to yourself?"); his suggestion that
she speak to someone (possibly Ferris!) brought a threat: ("If
you say Ferris Bueller, you lose a testicle"), and he replied: "Oh,
you know him?" - she clenched her fist; however, when Jeanie's
mother arrived to pick her up, she was making out with Garth
- Ferris' cute, sun-glasses wearing girlfriend Sloane
Peterson (with Ferris and Cameron ducking down to hide) sent a
mouthed Hi and Kiss to Ferris' father Mr. Bueller (Lyman Ward)
who had done a double-take - he was seated in the back seat of
a nearby taxi-cab also caught in traffic; when Ferris asked what
his father was doing, Sloane exaggerated: "He's licking the
glass and making obscene gestures with his hands" - before
she broke into hysterics
- as the film's title stated, Ferris Bueller's
Day Off from high school was spent in downtown Chicago with
his friends Cameron Frye and girlfriend Sloane; they visited
many typical sites, including a Cubs' Wrigley Field baseball
game, the Sears Tower, the Chicago Art Institute, and the Chicago
Mercantile Exchange
- atop a Von Steuben Day parade float, Ferris made
an unexpected announcement: ("Ladies and gentlemen, you're
such a wonderful crowd, we'd like to play a little tune for you.
It's one of my personal favorites and I'd like to dedicate it to
a young man who doesn't think he's seen anything good today - Cameron
Frye, this one's for you"); after the lip-synching of Wayne
Newton's Danke Schoen, Ferris segued into the playing and
lip-synching of The Beatles' Twist and Shout, inspiring
the large crowd to join in dancing; Ferris also deceptively pretended
to be Chicago's Sausage King Abe Froeman in order to dine at a
Rush Street upscale restaurant
- at the end of his day off, Ferris, Jeanie, their
mother, and Rooney all met up at the Bueller household at about
the same time; with a change of heart, Jeanie covered for Ferris
by scolding him for walking home from the hospital; she also reminded
Rooney of his lost wallet and his confrontation with the family
dog before Rooney was again chased off
- the rolling credits were prefaced by Ferris' repeat
statement from his bedroom as he broke the fourth wall: ("Yep,
I said it before and I'll say it again. Life moves pretty fast.
You don't stop and look around once in awhile, you could miss it")
- in the film's rolling credits epilogue, the humiliated
Rooney - completely defeated, dirtied, battered and disheveled
- had to be picked up and ride in the back of a school bus full
of students; he had illegally parked in front of the Buellers'
home near a fire hydrant and his car had been towed
- his bespectacled, nerdy blonde seat-mate asked: "I
bet you never smelled a real school-bus before," and then
reached into her pocket and offered him a warm, melting red gummy
bear:
"A gummy bear? They've been in my pocket. They're real warm
and soft"; he looked up and saw graffiti that read: "ROONEY
EATS IT!!", and a notebook cover with a scrawled: "SAVE
FERRIS"
- Ferris again appeared in his bathroom in the curtain-closing
post-credits telling the audience (fourth wall) to leave: "You're
still here? It's over! Go home. Go!"
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Ferris Bueller's Malingering Lesson
Ferris' Opening Monologue
Dean of Students Ed Rooney (Jeffrey Jones)
Dean Rooney's Secretary Grace (Edie McClurg)
Ferris' Friend Cameron Frye's (Alan Ruck) Crank Phone
Call to Rooney
Ferris Impersonated His Girlfriend Sloane's Father: "Do
you have a kiss for Daddy?"
In Ferris' Home, His Sister Jeanie Karate-Kicked Intruder
Rooney in the Face
Sloane's Flirtatious Hi and Lip-Kiss Toward Ferris' Father
in a Nearby Taxi Cab
Ferris Skipping School in Downtown Chicago (Street Parade
Sequence: Twist and Shout)
Rolling Credits: Rooney on School Bus Offered Red Gummy
Bear
Post Credits: "You're still here? It's over!
Go home. Go!"
|
|
A
Fish Called Wanda (1988, UK/US)
- director Charles Crichton's
funny madcap caper farce told about a London gang of double-crossing
diamond thieves planning a heist of a jewelry store; the film's title
reference to 'Wanda' was the name of a tropical angelfish pet,
and the name of one of the main characters; the film's tagline
was: "A TALE OF MURDER, LUST, GREED, REVENGE, AND SEAFOOD":
- two Americans involved in a diamond store heist
caper were: lunatic ex-CIA hitman and unintelligent, shady "weapons
man" and safecracker Otto West (Kevin Kline), and clever and
seductive con artist and sexy jewel thief Wanda Gershwitz (Jamie
Lee Curtis); the two partners Wanda and Otto claimed that they were
a brother-sister team, but were actually lovers behind the back of
robbery mastermind George Thomason (Tom Georgeson), who thought Wanda
was his girlfriend; George shared an apartment at Kipling Mansions
with his stuttering assistant, animal lover Ken Pile (Michael Palin)
Four Jewelry Heist Plotters
|
Wanda Gershwitz (Jamie Lee Curtis)
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Otto West (Kevin Kline)
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Ken Pile (Michael Palin)
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George Thomason (Tom Georgeson)
|
- the heist sequence in London's Diamond House jewelry
store (in the Hatton Garden commercial zone) was violent and brief;
following the successful jewelry heist of 20 million pounds worth,
the getaway limo driven by Ken nearly ran over an elderly lady while
walking her three pet dogs, and George (not wearing his black ski-mask)
in the front passenger seat was positively identified by her; the
diamond loot was initially hidden in a rundown storeroom safe; the
plan was for the group to rendezvous 72 hours later at Heathrow Airport
to flee the country, but then double-crossing George returned and
absconded with the stolen diamonds and hid them elsewhere (off-screen,
in a locked safe deposit box somewhere), meanwhile, Wanda and Otto
were planning to betray both George and Ken
("Cockney klutzes!"), seize the diamonds, and flee the
country early; Otto was unaware that Wanda was also going to betray him
- after the exhilarating robbery, Wanda and Otto worked
together to report George to the police; as George's apartment door
was being pounded on by authorities, he hid the safe deposit box
key in a plastic container of fish food and tossed it out the kitchen
window into a planter; he was arrested and evidence was found from
the crime scene (splinters of glass) on his pants leg
- the wily and seductive femme fatale Wanda
developed a strategy that might help her cause to find the local
of the hidden diamonds - to befriend George's conservative and stuffy
British barrister Archie Leach (John Cleese), an unhappily-married
lawyer in a loveless marriage to Wendy Leach (Maria Aitken)
- in George's and Ken's apartment, Wanda experienced
complete sexual arousal, especially when she heard foreign languages,
evidenced when Otto began speaking in Italian to her: "E molto
pericoloso, signorina. Molto pericoloso. (she kissed him and he threw
her on the bed) Carissima"; she burst out: "Speak it! Speak
it!"; he continued: "Ossobuco milanese con piselli! Melanzane.
Parmigiana con spinace!..." as he jumped on top of her and spread her legs
- meanwhile, Ken retrieved the fish food container (with
the key) and returned to the apartment; he interrupted Wanda and
Otto frolicking in the bedroom, and Wanda solely witnessed his hiding
of the key in his tropical fish aquarium's 'treasure chest'; afterwards,
when Ken was distracted by Otto pretending to be a homosexual to
mislead him, Wanda snatched the key and put it in her own locket
(engraved with 'W')
- in a line-up, George was
identified by the elderly woman as the driver who nearly ran over her
dogs; to learn more about George's case, and to possibly disrupt it
by improperly speaking to Archie although she was a potential defense
witness in the case, Wanda visited the barrister in his law office,
kissed him, and propositioned him; shortly later, she assured him: "I
don't want you for your conversation"
- in a clever cross-cutting sequence, two bedrooms were
contrasted - the one where Otto was making passionate love to Wanda
(he prefaced love-making by smelling his armpit and blowing up his
boot - a disguised symbol of erection), and in the Leach's bedroom
where Archie and his self-absorbed wife Wendy coldly undressed and
paid no attention to each other
- throughout the remainder of the film, there were many
failed attempts of stammering, animal-loving hitman Ken Pile who
was ordered by George to assassinate old lady witness Mrs. Eileen
Coady (Patricia Hayes); she was a threatening, matronly, key eye-witness
to the diamond robbery; instead, Ken accidentally and cruelly killed
her three cherished Yorkshire Terrier pet dogs instead (the first
was mauled by an attack Doberman, the second was run-over and flattened
by Ken disguised as a taxi driver, and the third was crushed by a falling
safe)
- although Otto was extremely jealous and
threatened the manipulative Wanda on her way to meet clandestinely
with barrister Archie in his house: ("Touch his dick and he's dead!"),
she was determined to get "friendly" with Archie; during
their brief liaison, Archie called her: "the sexiest, most beautiful
girl I have ever seen in my entire life," but Otto was listening
in, interrupted, and again jealously insisted that Wanda not go all
the way with him; Wanda realized that she had dropped her 'W' locket
(with the key inside) on the floor, but then, they both had to sneak
out of the house when Archie's wife Wendy Leach unexpectedly returned
home; with the same first initial on the necklace locket, when Wendy
viewed it, she assumed it was a gift from Archie for her
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|
Archie's "What It's Like Being English" Speech
|
- during another secret rendezvous meeting at the vacant
2B apartment of a legal friend named Patrick Balfour (who was in
Hong Kong), Archie painfully admitted his British stoicism to Wanda
in a speech, explaining how he was cursed, before she agreed to be
seduced, in order to help locate her locket: ("You make me feel
free...Wanda, do you have any idea what it's like being English?
Being so correct all the time, being so stifled by
this dread of, of doing the wrong thing, of saying to someone, 'Are
you married?' and hearing, ' My wife left me this morning,' or saying,
uh, ' Do you have children?' and being told they all burned to death
on Wednesday. You see, Wanda, we're all terrified of embarrassment.
That's why we're so - dead. Most of my friends are dead, you know,
we have these piles of corpses to dinner. But you're alive, God bless
you, and I want to be, I'm so fed up with all this! I wanna make
love with you, Wanda. I'm a good lover - at least, used to be, back
in the early 14th century. Can we go to bed?"); she kissed him
and answered 'Yeah', and they proceeded to the upstairs bedroom
Wanda Allowed Herself to be Seduced in Upstairs
Bedroom
|
|
|
- during Wanda's love-making with Archie - she was spied
upon by a very jealous Otto who was listening in and resented being
called stupid: (Wanda: "He is so dumb...He thought that the
Gettysburg Address was where Lincoln lived!...And when he heard your
daughter's name was Portia, he said, 'Why did they name her after
a car?'"); Otto heard Archie insinuate that he was stupid: (Archie: "How
come a girl as bright as you could have a brother who's so...?")
|
|
Otto's Jealousy Toward Archie and Demand for an
Apology
|
- Otto had heard enough and barged in to break up the
couple, asserting: "Don't call me stupid!"; he demanded
an apology from Archie and resorted to name-calling: "You pompous,
stuck-up, snot-nosed, English, giant twerp scumbag, f--k-face dickhead
asshole!"; Otto threateningly dangled
Archie outside a 5th floor window to force a lengthy apology from
him for calling him stupid: ("I apologize...I'm really, really
sorry. I apologize unreservedly...I offer a complete and utter retraction.
The imputation was totally without basis in fact, and was in no way
fair comment, and was motivated purely by malice, and I deeply regret
any distress that my comments may have caused you, or your family,
and I hereby undertake not to repeat any such slander at any time in the future")
- Wanda objected to Otto's extreme jealousy toward
Archie that she felt would jeopardize their ability to find the diamonds; Wanda
delivered a scathing indictment of Otto's stupidity and continuing
lack of intelligence after he again sensitively asserted: "Don't
call me stupid": (Wanda: "Oh, right! To call you stupid
would be an insult to stupid people! I've known sheep that could
outwit you. I've worn dresses with higher IQs. But you think you're
an intellectual, don't you, ape?...Now let me correct you on a couple
of things, OK? Aristotle was not Belgian. The central message of
Buddhism is not 'every man for himself'. The London Underground is
not a political movement. Those are all mistakes, Otto. I looked
'em up"); she reminded him about Archie: "You have just
assaulted the one man who can keep you out of jail and make you rich";
she was able to get Otto to admit that he should "Apologize!"
- Otto drove to the Leach house to apologize, where
he caught Archie stupidly burglarizing his own home (to acquire the
locket); he responded by binding and knocking Archie out until he
realized what he had done and fled; Wendy returned and untied Archie,
who concealed the locket in his mouth (and then his pocket) and ran
out of the house, not to miss another adulterous tryst opportunity with Wanda
- during another comical scene of lustful Archie with
Wanda at the 2B apartment, Archie returned Wanda's locket (with the
key), and then from the downstairs as he undressed, he spouted foreign
phrases (in Italian and Russian) to an aroused Wanda in the upstairs;
he was caught completely naked by an unsuspecting British family
in what he thought was a perfect hideaway for having sex; he didn't
know that his friend Patrick Balfour had rented out the apartment
during his long absence; he was forced to use a strategically-placed
framed photo to modestly hide himself; as he returned to the outside
of his home, Otto intercepted him, offered a sincere apology, and
gave Archie permission to have sex with Wanda ("Just go ahead.
Pork away, pal. F--k her blue") - not knowing that Wendy was
listening and learned about their adulterous encounters
- ultimately, the distress caused by the deaths of the
elderly lady's pets caused her to have a fatal heart attack; Ken
insanely laughed: "She copped it! I did it!"; sensing his
imminent freedom, in jail, George was visited by Ken and gave him
the go-ahead to purchase four plane tickets to Rio de Janiero that
evening, then back to the flat to pack, pick up George, and get the
diamonds loot in the safety deposit box at the Cathcart Towers Hotel
near the airport before taking off from Heathrow bound for Rio
|
|
|
|
Otto's Torture of Ken: Gulping Down His Fish, Including
His Favorite Tropical Pet Fish Wanda
|
- in a farcical scene inside Ken's and George's apartment
flat, Otto tortured a bound-up and distressed Ken for the whereabouts
of the stolen diamonds, while he was eating chips (with two fries
stuck up Ken's nose) - and then scooping up and gulping down Ken's
aquarium fish to add to his chips, including his favorite and beloved
tropical pet fish (named WANDA) in front of him: ("Where are
the diamonds?... There's plenty of time, Ken. I'll just sit here
and eat my chips till you tell me. The English contribution to world
cuisine - the chip! What do the English usually eat with chips to
make them more interesting? Wait a moment! It's fish, isn't it? Down
the hatch!")
- not knowing that Wanda had the key and still believing
the key was in the aquarium's treasure chest, Ken confessed that
the diamonds were in a safety deposit box at Cathcart Towers Hotel;
Otto phoned Wanda for the safe deposit box key, and forced her to
promise that in exchange for the key, the two of them would escape
together with the loot to Rio de Janiero
- meanwhile, during George's trial, defense witness
Wanda (as George's alleged lover) provided testimony that definitely
incriminated George, and Archie let it slip that he had been unfaithful
with Wanda (he called her "darling"); George attempted
to attack Wanda and Archie, causing pandemonium and chaos in the
courtroom; Archie's already-suspicious wife Wendy who was listening
in the balcony approached, slapped Archie and threatened divorce
("You can stick this marriage right in your bottom!")
- with no other alternative but to go after the diamonds
himself with Wanda, Archie drove off with her in his car to George's
and Ken's flat to question Ken about their location, even though
he knew she was sly and manipulative: "So, you robbed the jeweller's,
turned one lover over to the police, kept one to help you find the
diamonds, and when he does, you commit perjury"; Wanda gave
him a reason to promise to take her to South America with him - she
had the key to the safe deposit box
- Otto intercepted Wanda outside of the flat and took
off with her in Archie's car to the airport, while Archie entered
the flat and found Ken still tied up; as the excitable Ken stuttered
furiously, Archie convinced him to wrote down the name of the airport
hotel -- the Cathcart Towers; then, the two set off on Ken's moped to the airport
- at the airport hotel, Wanda and Otto quickly retrieved
the diamonds from the safe deposit box at the Cathcart and acquired
their British Airways tickets to Rio at the airport counter; on their
way to Terminal 4 and Gate 14, Wanda double-crossed Otto by clubbing
him over the head and locking him in a broom closet; Otto regained
consciousness, shot his way out of the closet, stole a boarding pass
from another passenger, and was about to set off for the plane; behind
him, Archie caught up to Otto and confronted him with his own gun,
although Otto was able to reacquire his own weapon, lead him onto
the tarmac, and have Archie stand in a barrel of waste oil while
humiliating and insulting him (and the British): "You're the
filth of the planet. A bunch of pompous, badly-dressed, poverty-stricken,
sexually-repressed football hooligans"
- the vengeful Ken also arrived after being conveyed
down the luggage chute - he was spotted driving a steamroller toward
them; Otto further taunted Ken ("It's K-k-k-ken c-c-coming to
k-k-k-kill me!") before backing up and accidentally planting
his two feet into fresh cement and becoming stuck; Ken ran over Otto
and flattened him; due to his tremendous joy, Ken realized he had
been cured of his stutter: ("'K-k-k-k-Ken.' You bastard. Hey,
I've lost my stutter. It's gone. I can speak. How much wood could
a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?"), but found
himself about to be arrested; it was revealed
that Archie had run onto the plane to join Wanda, and the miraculously-alive
Otto appeared briefly clinging to their plane window, but was unable to hold on during take-off
- in the film's epilogue, it highlighted the futures
of the cast members: "Archie and Wanda were married in Rio,
had seventeen children, and founded a leper colony. Ken became Master
of Ceremonies at the London Sea World. Otto emigrated to South Africa
and became Minister for Justice"
|
Ken's Pet Tropical Angelfish - Wanda
Getaway Limo Almost Hit Elderly Lady With 3 Dogs - George Positively ID'd
George's Stuffy British Barrister Archie Leach (John Cleese)
Wily and Seductive Wanda Attempting to Befriend Archie
Wanda's Sexual Arousal by Otto's Foreign Phrases
Ken Hiding Key in Aquarium's "Treasure Chest"
Wanda Retrieving Key and Placing it in Her Own Locket
(Engraved with 'W')
Wanda Coming On to Archie in His Law Office (Note Lipstick Smear
on His Face)
Otto with Wanda - Contrasted by Archie with His Cold Wife
Wendy
Seductive Wanda Arriving at Archie's Home
Otto: "Don't call me stupid"
Wanda: "To call you stupid would be an insult to stupid
people"
Archie Caught in a Compromising Position in His Friend's
Rented Apartment
The Last of Ken's Three Murder Attempts on Mrs. Coady
(Her Dog Was Crushed by a Falling Safe)
Heart Attack Death of Mrs. Coady
Wendy to Archie in Courtroom: "You can stick this marriage right in
your bottom!"
Ken Furiously Stuttering the Name of the Hotel to Archie
Vengeful Ken Running Over Otto With Steam Roller, While His Feet
Were Stuck in Cement
|
|
Five
Easy Pieces (1970)
- director Bob Rafelson's intriguing character study
and road film appeared during the New Wave age, and told about
a disaffected, frustrated male seeking his identity
- at a roadside cafe-diner, in the film's most
memorable scene, an impatient Robert Dupea (Jack Nicholson) got into
a frustrating fight with a strict, rude and surly waitress (Lorna
Thayer) (who allowed 'no substitutions') over his initial side
order of wheat toast - to bypass her rules about menu substitutions,
Robert's order quickly became a chicken-salad sandwich order with
toasted wheat bread but without the chicken, lettuce and mayo:
("You make sandwiches, don't you?...You've got bread and a toaster of
some kind?"...OK, I'll make it as
easy for you as I can. I'd like an omelette, plain, and a chicken
salad sandwich on wheat toast. No mayonnaise, no butter, no lettuce,
and a cup of coffee...Yeah. Now all you have to do is hold the chicken,
bring me the toast, give me a check for the chicken salad sandwich,
and you haven't broken any rules"); he also added a further
sneering challenge: "I want you to hold it (the chicken) between
your knees" and then after telling her: "You see this
sign?", he cleared the table with one swipe of his arm - of
all the water glasses, place-mats, cutlery and menus
|
|
|
Forbidden Planet (1956)
- director
Fred Wilcox' influential, classic science-fiction space adventure
included one unique character named Robby the Robot (voice by Marvin
Miller) - the first celebrity robot; although some promotional
materials for the film portrayed Robby as a monstrous creature
who kidnapped the film's sole female, in reality, Robby always
acted benevolently and intelligently - with a sprinkling of humor
- in the 23rd century, upon the arrival of a group
of astronauts on a flying saucer-shaped United Planets space cruiser
C-57D to a distant planet-star named Altair-IV with green skies,
they were greeted by a fast-moving Jeep-like vehicle driven by
a large bi-pedal robot with a round torso, about
7 and a half feet tall; the astronauts met the friendly anthropomorphic
Robby the Robot (who was the influential progenitor of many other
future robotic creations); he functioned as both a house servant
and guard
- Robby had a cone-shaped, clear-domed and jukebox-like
head (with twirling lights and rotating motorized antenna ears),
a lighted chest panel, gripping hands (with thumb and two fingers),
bulbous segmented legs, and a pot-belly stove-shaped body; Robby
stood at 7' 6" tall, and had a charming personality
- in their first confrontation together, he advised
the visitors from Earth: "If you do not speak English, I am at
your disposal with 187 other languages along with their various
dialects and sub-tongues"; the commander asked stupidly, in an
unintentionally hysterical line: "Er, this is of no offense, but
you are a robot, aren't you?"; he
formally introduced himself: "For your convenience, I am monitored
to respond to the name Robby"; when
the commanding astronaut mentioned the planet's high oxygen content
("Nice climate you have here. High oxygen content"), Robby replied
with a smug but witty sense of humor: "I rarely use it myself,
sir. It promotes rust"; Robby also clarified
after a question about his gender: "In my case, sir, the question
is totally without meaning"
- later, in another case of comic
relief, when Robby arrived late, he gave a humorous excuse: ("Sorry miss,
I was giving myself an oil job!"); on another occasion, he
stated: "Quiet please. I am analyzing"
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|
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Forrest Gump (1994)
- Robert Zemeckis' Best Picture-winning, sentimental
tearjerker comedy, with a floating feather motif, told of a
disabled, slow-witted, but kind-hearted and wholesome individual
who had brushes with greatness (by being present at many memorable
and iconic historical moments in the last half of the 20th century)
and became a folk hero, but also felt heartache throughout his
life
- the computerized special-effects of CGI and imaging
put intellectually-challenged Forrest Gump (Tom Hanks) into
comedic situations with vintage historical events seen in archival
film footage:
- Gov. George Wallace's stand-off in Little Rock,
AK at the Univ. of Alabama against school
integration in June of 1963, known as "The Stand in the Schoolhouse
Door" - with Forrest observing in the crowd
- Forrest's meeting with President
JFK in the White House as part of the All-American Univ. of
Alabama football team, when Forrest nervously stated: "I
gotta pee"
- Forrest's reception of the Congressional Medal
of Honor for heroism in the Vietnam War during an awards ceremony
with President LBJ, who stated: "I'd like to see that" when
Forrest mentioned his buttocks-wound, and he obliged by pulling
his pants down
- he appeared on The Dick Cavett Show to
speak about his China experiences with the US ping-pong team,
sharing a guest appearance with Beatles' singer John Lennon,
that purportedly helped to inspire the song "Imagine" (by
repeating quotes from the song's future lyrics)
- as a representative of the US Table Tennis team,
Forrest was also honored to meet President Richard Nixon, who
recommended a stay at the infamous Watergate Hotel - where
Forrest unwittingly reported the break-in that ultimately led
to Nixon's resignation in 1974
On The Dick Cavett Show With John Lennon
|
Forrest's Meeting with President Nixon
|
|
Governor Wallace Against School Integration in Little
Rock, AK
With JFK (Forrest: "I gotta pee")
|
|
Four Weddings and a Funeral
(1994, UK)
In Mike Newell's surprise R-rated British hit, a romantic
comedy with explicit language and content, it told about an on-again/off-again
romance between a British bachelor and an American female - who often
met at weddings (and one funeral):
- in the opening scene set in London on May 1st, witty
and charming 32 year-old bachelor Charles (Hugh Grant) and his
quirky, tone-deaf roommate Scarlett (Charlotte Coleman) woke up
in their shared apartment, and accompanied by a barrage of many
F-words, the two realized that they had overslept and were late
to a wedding - an habitual practice; they raced in Scarlett's slow
40 mph car to St. John's Church in Somerset, England for the wedding,
arriving just in time
Charles (Hugh Grant)
|
American Journalist Caroline "Carrie" (Andie
MacDowell)
|
Matthew (John Hannah)
|
Scarlett (Charlotte Coleman)
|
Fiona (Kristin Scott Thomas)
|
Gareth (Simon Callow)
|
- the film's 'first' wedding was between Angus (Timothy
Walker) and Laura (Sara Crowe), with Charles serving as best man
(but he had forgotten the ring!); two of the attendees were the
highly-energetic, gregarious Gareth (Simon Callow) and Matthew
(John Hannah), two loyal and committed gay partners
- after the service in the church garden, Charles
was warned by his ascerbic, jealous, wealthy, long-time friend
Fiona (Kristin Scott Thomas) about one of the attendees wearing
a very wide-brimmed black hat - an American journalist and fashion
editor named Caroline "Carrie" (Andie MacDowell) - "Slut...Used
to work at Vogue. Lives in America now. Only gets out with
very glamorous people. Quite out of your league"
- under one of the outdoor tents, Fiona spoke with
trainee-vicar Father Gerald (Rowan Atkinson) who was nervous about
conducting services in the future; Fiona observed how the recent
ceremony was like sex: "Rather like the first time one has
sex...Though rather less messy, of course, and far less call for
condoms"
- during the post-ceremony dinner, the bumbling Charles
spoke to the gathered audience and stated how it was his second
time to be best man; during a funny speech, he added that it was
unfortunate that his previous time, the couple divorced after a
disastrous two days; he then drunkenly added for the current couple:
"I am, as ever, in bewildered awe of anyone who makes this kind
of commitment that Angus and Laura have made today. I know I couldn't
do it and I think it's wonderful they can"; he then proposed
a toast for "the adorable couple"; the spirited Gareth
joined the newlyweds on the dance floor for some outrageous moves;
Charles kept staring at the American Carrie, and Matthew questioned
if it was "love at first sight"
- meanwhile, bridesmaid Lydia (Sophie Thompson) was
depressed and upset about the lack of attention she had received: "I
was promised sex. Everybody said it. 'You'll be a bridesmaid, you'll
get sex, you'll be fighting 'em off.' But not so much as a tongue
in sight"; Bernard (David Haig) suggested: "Well, I mean,
if you fancy anything, I could always...," but she declined: "Oh,
don't be ridiculous, Bernard. I'm not that desperate"; however,
as everything was winding down, the couple were seen passionately
kissing as people slowly departed
- afterwards, Charles changed his overnight plans
and met up with the elusive, pretty and unique American Carrie
in her Room 12 accommodations at The Lucky Boatman pub; she invited
him in: "Well, why don't you come in and skulk for a while";
she flirtatiously spoke about how they were faced with deciding
to have sex or not: ("So I noticed the bride and groom didn't
kiss in the church which is kind of strange. Where I come from,
kissing is very big...I always worry I'll go too far, you know,
in the heat of the moment"); Charles asked: "How far
do you think too far would be, then?"; she offered him different
kinds of kisses to measure their intimacy; she gave him an innocent
peck on the cheek, and then a kiss on the lips ("Maybe this
would be better"); Charles remarked: ("I think it would
be dangerous to take it any further"), but then after another
very passionate kiss, he added: ("That might be taking it
a little far")
- as the two removed each other's clothes to have
sex, Charles thought that they were at the "honeymoon" stage:
("This kind of thing is really better suited to the honeymoon
than to the service itself"); then, he answered Carrie's question
about the reason for the term 'honeymoon': "I suppose it's,
uh, 'honey' because it's sweet as honey, and 'moon' because it's
the first time a husband got to see his wife's bottom"; the
two slept together (an uncommitted, one night stand or tryst)
- the next morning, Carrie played a trick on Charles
by asking: ("Just before I go, when were you thinking of announcing
the engagement?...Ours. I assumed since we slept together and everything,
we'd be getting married") - but then he realized that she
was joking - and he expressed profound relief: ("God! For
a moment there, I thought I was in Fatal Attraction. I thought
you were Glenn Close and I was gonna get home and find my pet rabbit
on the stove"); she confided: "I think we both missed
a great opportunity here"; Carrie surprised Charles by telling
him that she was leaving and returning to America
- three months later in London, the 'second' of the
film's four weddings was between Bernard and Lydia; again, Charles
and Scarlett were late and had to run all the way to the church;
the service was officiated by nervous trainee-vicar Father Gerald;
in the film's most hilarious sequence, the confused, inept, fumbling,
malaprop-spouting Father Gerald mixed up their names as he recited
the vows for the "awful-wedded" marital couple, including
saying "Holy Goat" and "Holy Spigot" instead
of "Holy Ghost or Spirit"
The 'Second' Wedding: Bernard and Lydia
|
Hilarious Wedding Vows Scene With Father Gerald
(Rowan Atkinson)
|
- at this 'second' wedding, the charming (and engaged!)
Carrie introduced Charles to her older, snobbish Scottish fiancee
Hamish Banks (Corin Redgrave); immediately depressed, Charles mentioned
to Matthew how he was forever a bachelor: "Why am I always
at, uh, weddings, and never actually getting married, Matt?...Maybe
it's me"; during the post-wedding dinner, Fiona confessed
to a nosy seat mate at her table, that she had always been secretly
in love with Charles: 'The truth is, I have met the right person,
only he's not in love with me. Until I stop loving him, no one
stands a chance"
- the commitment-phobic Charles realized he was in
the midst of a predicament, seated at a wedding table where tales
were told about his ex-girlfriends, and he squirmed and cringed
while listening to their recollections: "I seem to be stuck
in the wedding from hell, ghosts of girlfriends past at every turn.
Next thing you know, I'll bump into Henrietta and the horror will
be complete" - and then Henrietta (Anna Chancellor) appeared;
Charles retreated to one of the nearby rooms, and hid when the
sex-crazed married couple entered; he was tortured by the sounds
of their vigorous sex on a bed
- elsewhere concealed under a table while others danced,
Scarlett spoke to one of the young bridesmaids, and complained
about not having a boyfriend: "Because most of the blokes
I fancy think l'm stupid and pointless - and, so, they just bonk
me and then leave me. And the kind of blokes that do fancy me,
I think are drips. I can't even be bothered to bonk them. Which
does sort of leave me a bit nowhere"; she defined 'bonking'
for the young girl: "Well, it's kind of like table tennis,
only with slightly smaller balls"
- Charles found himself cornered by a very clingy
Henrietta, who labeled him as a commitment-phobe and explained
how he was in "real trouble:" ("You're sort of turning
into a kind of serial monogamist. One girl after another, yet you'll
never love anyone, because you never let them near you")
- although Carrie was engaged and Charles thought
the couple had departed by taxi, Carrie returned explaining that
only her fiancee had departed for Scotland; she asked: "Keep
me company?"; she reluctantly but eagerly agreed to have a
night-cap with Charles at her hotel, and joked: "I think we
can risk it. I'm pretty sure I can resist you. You're not that
cute," but then spent the night with him
- one month later, he awoke and remarked to Scarlett:
"I'm taking advantage of the fact that for the first time in
my entire life, it's Saturday and I don't have a wedding to go to";
to his shock, Charles received an invitation to Carrie's wedding
in Scotland; while gift-shopping at her expensive registry store,
he happened to meet Carrie who suggested: "Just get me an ashtray";
she asked for his advice for an "important decision" she
had to make: "Are you free for about a half-hour?" - the
selection of her wedding dress; she modeled a varied selection of
dresses for him
- afterwards at a cafe-pub, she discussed her prolific
sexual history with Charles, and hilariously recounted her experiences
with a total of 33 sexual partners; her 6th encounter was when
she was 17 years old; partners 12-17 were during her university
years; her 32nd partner ("was lovely") - and then she
revealed that Charles was actually # 32 (one before her fiancee),
after which she summarized her recounting: ("...So there you
go, less than Madonna, more than Princess Di - I hope. And, how
about you? How many have you slept with?")
Modeling Wedding Dresses For Charles
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At a Pub With Charles, Carrie Discussing Her Promiscuous
Sexual History
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Charles' Hesitant "I Think I Love You" Declaration
of Love to Carrie
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- outside, Charles nervously ran after Carrie, and
hesitantly declared his 'romantic' love for the about-to-be-married
female; stuttering, he referenced David Cassidy's song: "I
Think I Love You": ("Uhm, look. Sorry, sorry. Uh, I just,
uhm, well, this is a really stupid question and, uhm, particularly
in view of our recent shopping excursion, but, uh, I just wondered,
if by any chance, uhm, ah, I mean obviously not because I am just
some git who's only slept with nine people, but-but I-I just wondered...uhh.
I really feel, umm...in short, to recap in a slightly clearer version,
uh, in the words of David Cassidy in fact, uhm, while he was still
with the Partridge Family, uh, 'I think I love you,' and uh, I-I,
uh, just wondered by any chance, you wouldn't like to... Umm...Uh...Uh...No,
no, no, of course not...Uhm, I'm an idiot, ha, he's not... Excellent,
excellent, fantastic...lovely to see you, sorry to disturb...Better
get on..."; she responded: "That was very romantic," and
he continued:
"Well, I thought it over a lot, you know, I wanted to get it
just right. Important to have said it, I think...Said, uh, you know,
what I, what I just said about, uh, David Cassidy") - she kissed
him on the cheek: "You're lovely", but then walked off
and left him standing alone
- one month later, the film's 'third' wedding was
set in Perthshire, Scotland (at the Glenthrist Castle's Chapel),
where Carrie married Scotsman Hamish Banks; as usual, Charles arrived
late; after hearing the recitement of vows, Charles muttered to
himself:
"F--k-a-doodle-doo"; after the ceremony, Gareth observed: "It's
Brigadoon! It's Bloody Brigadoon!"; he also encouraged everyone
else: "Tonight, these are your orders: Go forth and conjugate.
Find husbands and wives"; Scarlett met a tall Texan named Chester
(Randall Paul), and Fiona told a stunned Charles of her unrequited
love for him: ("I've been in love with the same bloke for ages....You,
Charlie. It's always been you. Since first we met, oh so many years
ago. I knew the first moment. Across a crowded room. Or lawn, in
fact. Doesn't matter. There's nothing either of us can do. Such is
life. Friends isn't bad, you know? Friends is quite something")
- suddenly, during a toast by Hamish, Gareth collapsed
onto the floor and died of a heart-attack, presumably after some
vigorous dancing, and the wedding celebration ended
- at a moving funeral ceremony - the film's acting
highlight was Matthew's words of remembrance for "jolly" and "splendid
bugger" Gareth, Matthew's gay partner: ("I hope joyful
is how you will remember him. Not stuck in a box in a church"),
followed by his poignant reading of W. H. Auden's Funeral Blues at
the memorial service for: ("Stop all the clocks, cut off the
telephone, Prevent the dog from barking with a juicy bone, Silence
the pianos and with muffled drum, Bring out the coffin, let the
mourners come. Let the aeroplanes circle, moaning overhead, Scribbling
on the sky the message: He is Dead. Put crepe bows 'round the white
necks of the public doves, Let traffic policemen wear black cotton
gloves. He was my North, my South, my East and West. My working
week and my Sunday rest. My noon, my midnight, my talk, my song.
I thought that love would last forever: I was wrong. The stars
are not wanted now, put out every one. Pack up the moon and dismantle
the sun. Pour away the ocean and sweep up the wood, For nothing
now can ever come to any good.")
Matthew's Reading at Funeral For His Gay Partner
Gareth
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- ten months later in the final scene - the film's
'fourth' wedding, Charles had announced he was tying the knot with
Henrietta at St. Julian's in Smithfield (London); Charles was fooled
by his friends into thinking that he was late for his own wedding
with "Duckface" (Henrietta's nickname by Fiona); after
Charles noticed Carrie was in attendance, she informed him that
she had separated from the older Hamish after a brief marriage
of only a few months: ("He wasn't the man for me after all....We
left each other"); they both realized that the timing was
awful, and as he was about to approach the altar, Charles began
swearing ("Bugger, bugger!"), changed his mind and sought
to delay the proceedings
- during the ceremony at the altar when the priest
asked if there were any objections, Charles' deaf younger brother
David (David Bower) expressed, in sign language, that Charles was
in doubt and loved someone else: ("I suspect the groom is
having doubts. I suspect the groom would like to delay. I suspect
the groom loves someone else"); Charles assented to the priest: "I
do"; reacting to the rejection with rage (Get out of my way!
Let me kill him!"), Charles' bride Henrietta punched him in
the face to end the ceremony
- shortly later outside Charles' home,
Carrie arrived in the rain to apologize for causing a disruption
in Charles' marriage; Charles admitted: "Marriage and me -
we're very clearly not meant for one another"; he was finally
able to declare his utter and true love for Carrie in the rain:
(Charles: "There I was,
standing there in the church, and for the first time in my whole
life, I realized I totally and utterly loved one person. And it
wasn't the person standing next to me in the veil. It's the person
standing opposite me now - in the rain"; Carrie: "Is
it still raining? I hadn't noticed"); and then awkwardly,
he did not ask for her hand in marriage: ("But first,
let me ask you one thing. Do you think, after we've dried off,
after we've spent lots more time together, you might agree not to
marry me? And do you think not being married to me might
maybe be something you could consider doing for the rest of your
life? Do you?") - Carrie's response:
"I do," was accompanied by a kiss, and the camera rose
into the air to capture a lightning bolt in the cloudy sky
- in the film's final image (in the ending slide-show
montage of various new marital couplings - future weddings), Fiona
was with a very surprising groom - Prince Charles! - to the tune
of "Going to the Chapel"
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Charles and Scarlett Arriving Late - and Hurriedly Getting
Dressed for Wedding
Fiona Disparaging "Carrie" to Charles
Charles' Funny Comments During "First" Wedding Dinner
Bernard Consoling Bridesmaid Lydia
Carrie Flirting In Her Room With Charles with Various Kisses
Charles and Carrie: "That
might be taking it a little far"
The Next Morning
Charles After The One-Night Stand With Carrie: "I
thought I was in Fatal Attraction..."
Carrie's Fiancee: Hamish Banks (Corin Redgrave)
Charles Caught in Room Where Bernard and Lydia Were Having Sex
Charles' Clingy Ex-Girlfriend Henrietta (Anna Chancellor)
Carrie's Second Overnight Tryst With Charles
Carrie's Wedding to Hamish in Scotland
Fiona Admitting Her Love For Charles at Carrie's Wedding
Gareth's Fatal Heart Attack
Before Charles' Wedding, Carrie Admitted She Was Separated From Hamish
Objections to the Marriage by Charles' Deaf Younger Brother David (David Bower)
Ending Scene in the Rain Between Charles and Carrie
Fiona with Prince 'Charles'
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The Full Monty (1997, UK)
- director Peter Cattaneo's international buddy
film - a British, working-class comedic drama with music and very
quirky characters, was set in the 1990s in the northern British
industrial steel city of Sheffield (South Yorkshire) where the
steel industry and its steel mills were devastated - a far cry
from 25 years earlier seen in a promotional film; in the rags-to-riches
tale, a small group of desperate, bored and poor manual laborers
who lost work six months earlier in closed steel plants reclaimed
their lives by creatively using their bodies to acquire income;
its taglines were: "The year's most revealing comedy" and "Six men.
With nothing to lose. Who dare to go....THE FULL MONTY"
- in the film's opening, two ex-steel workers were
introduced: divorced but determined Gary "Gaz" Schofield
(Robert Carlyle) and his overweight, heavy-set, body self-conscious
best friend Dave Horsfall (Mark Addy) with low self-esteem; both
lost their jobs and were on government assistance (the dole); Gaz's
estranged 12 year-old son Nathan (William Snape) often reluctantly
tagged along with his father; despairing of their financial situations, to earn extra money, they resorted
to robbing a steel girder as scrap metal from the closed mills
Gary "Gaz" Schofield (Robert Carlyle)
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Dave Horsfall (Mark Addy)
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- outside a local men's club
known as the Millthorpe, "Gaz" found
that the establishment had a long line (or queue) of women waiting
outside (for its "females only" night on May 4th) and
paying an expensive cover charge of 10 quid for a one-time striptease
show featuring a touring, exotic male stripper Chippendale-like
group; while Gaz was hiding in the club's GENTS room during the
show, a trio of women charged in (to avoid the queue at the ladies'
room), and Gaz was aghast looking through the toilet stall door
noticing that one female tart had pulled up her skirt and lowered
her pants and was urinating against a wall; he kept it a secret
that Dave's wife Jean (Lesley Sharp) was one of the three
- "Gaz" was faced with losing visitation
rights with his son Nathan if he couldn't afford child support
payments to his ex-wife Mandy (Emily Woof) (and her new boyfriend
Barry (Paul Butterworth)); and Dave feared losing his wife Jean
due to his sexual impotency and severe body-image issues
- Gaz set about to devise his own low-rent group of male strippers
in a profitable, get-rich-quick scheme for his group of unemployed
friends to make money, although he feared their less-than-perfect,
flawed and average bodies would be a turn-off
- there were two other ex-steel worker participants
who were recruited into the crazy plan to join "Gaz" and
Dave - the first individual was depressed
and suicidal mill security guard Lomper (Steve Huison) (who cared
for his elderly mother); he was saved and prevented from killing
himself in his exhaust-filled car, before being chosen
to be a member of the strip act
- the next person to be recruited - the uptight, snobbish,
middle-aged Gerald who had already been introduced at the Job Centre, was
discovered dancing with his wife Linda (Deirdre Costello) in an
amateur ballroom dance evening class; he was
trying to keep his six months' unemployment a secret from his credit-card
obsessed spendthrift wife; he was also highly skeptical
of the dancing skill and talent of his former steel workers:
"Dancers have coordination, skill, timing, fitness, and grace.
Take a long, hard look in the mirror," but reluctantly accepted their
offer to be the group's dance instructor
- a stripper audition was held in an empty warehouse
to add more members; the first auditioner Reg
(Bruce Jones) fumbled removing his pants and was eliminated; next
was elderly Barrington "Horse" Mitchell (Paul Barber) who had a "dodgy
hip," but claimed he was knowledgeable about earlier-era dance
moves (the Bump, the Stomp, the Bus Stop, and the Funky Chicken)
and then added: "Me break dancing days are probably over";
he impressed the judges with his spirited dancing to Wilson Pickett's "Land
of a Thousand Dances"
- when uncoordinated candidate Guy (Hugo Speer)
(who claimed he loved Singin' in the Rain (1952), especially
the scene of Donald O'Connor running up a wall during the song "Make
'Em Laugh") was asked by Gaz in the panel of judges: "You
don't sing....You don't dance....Hope you don't think I'm being nosy,
but, uh, what do you do?"; to answer, he dropped
his pants and Gaz observed: "Gentleman, the lunch box has landed";
Guy was immediately selected for his anatomical large endowment
- during hilarious practice rehearsals, to the tunes
of Donna Summer's "Hot Stuff" and "The Stripper," the clutzy
would-be dancers worked on their bump and grind act with Gerald
as their instructor; they practiced one day inside Gerald's home
- stripping down to their underwear
- believing that his father would pay him back, Nathan
lent his father £100 from his savings in order to reserve
and book the local club for their show
- "Gaz" spread
the news that their show for women only, dubbed "Hot Metal", would
be unique by going "the full monty" (or complete nudity "with
their widges hanging out" - "widges on parade") - "We've
gotta give them more than your average ten-bob stripper"
- in the film's famous short
dole queue scene at the Job Centre - a Chippendales-style, feel-good
moment - the unemployed working-class men from the Sheffield mill
factory heard Donna Summer's 70s disco hit Hot Stuff on
the radio and rhythmically started moving, unable to resist the
beat - they first slowly shifted in place, moving one body part
at a time, until they were fully dancing in unison; Gaz was fully
amused
Job Centre Line-Dancing
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- Dave expressed further concerns about his out-of-shape
figure: ("I mean, what if next Friday, 400 women turn around
and say: 'He's too fat, he's too old, and he's a pigeon-chested
little tosser. What happens then, eh?...Bullocks to your personality.
This is what they're looking at, right?. And I tell you summat,
mates. Anti-wrinkle cream there may be, but anti-fat-bastard cream, there is none")
- Gerald worried privately with Dave about stripping
and having an erection; he recalled his youth at coed swimming
lessons when he acquired a "stiffy" viewing
"the pretty lassies around in bikinis"; due to his own body-image
issues, Dave dropped out briefly and found employment as a security
guard at a British supermarket chain (Asda); plans for the strip show were in jeopardy
- just before their Friday performance, the strip
dancers held a public dress rehearsal on Tuesday for four of Horse's
family members, including his mother who was knitting (and attempted
to stifle her laughter), but were caught and arrested for indecent
exposure; wearing thong underwear, Lomper and Guy escaped to Lomper's
house, and found themselves staring fondly at each other
- as a result of their arrest, the group became front-page
news: ("STEEL STRIPPERS EXPOSED - Child found as police raid
uncovers naked dance gang"), and they also learned that their
show had sold 200 tickets, amounting to "two grand";
the entire group of six dancers was persuaded to perform for one-night only
- in the uplighting finale, the night of their act,
Nathan ordered his reluctant father Gaz to join the five others
on stage - and to perform for the mixed audience; Dave announced
to the cheering crowd: "We may not be young, we may not be
pretty, we may not be right good, but we're here. We're live, and
for one night only, we're going for the full monty!"
- the stripper group restored their dignity and amusingly
stripped on-stage during a rendition of Tom Jones' "You Can
Leave Your Hat On," as they went "the full monty" - they
quickly transitioned from dark blue uniforms to skimpy red-leather
G-string thongs; then they removed their underwear to the
delight of many screaming female fans including Dave's wife Jean
and Gaz's ex-wife Mandy in the audience (who changed from being
vindictive to being accepting), and covered their privates with
their hats - the last remaining article of clothing. They only
displayed their nude cheek bottoms when they were viewed from the
rear. The image froze on the group when they tossed away their
hats - seen from behind as they revealed all.
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The Inspiration: A One-Night Chippendale-like Act
Lomper's Attempted Suicide in His Exhaust Filled Car
Auditions: Guy with Pants Down - Gaz: "The Lunchbox Has Landed"
Hot Metal: "WE DARE TO BE BARE!"
With Body-Image Issues, Dave Worried About His Physical Attributes
Dress Rehearsal for Horse's Family Members
Three Group Members Arrested for Indecent Exposure
The Freeze-Frame Ending of the Full Monty Show
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Funny Girl (1968)
- director William Wyler's highly-fictionalized musical
biography was about the famed, early 20th century Ziegfeld Follies
revue performer Fanny Brice (Best Actress-winning Barbra Streisand)
- she was both a comedienne and film star; the tale was mostly
told in flashback
- at Fanny's opening night
performance in Ziegfeld's "Follies" at the New Amsterdam
Theatre, the dramatic,
lavish wedding-song finale "His Love Makes Me Beautiful" was
marvelously staged with a staircase of beautiful, scantily-clad,
bejewelled Ziegfeld Girls; she unexpectedly
transformed the scene of idealized beauty into a brilliant comedic
performance by appearing on-stage as a pregnant bride ("in
the family way") with a pillow stuffed under her wedding gown
- the audience broke out into unexpected laugher,
and initially there were stunned reactions to her subversion of
the romantic lyrics by the outraged Florenz Ziegfeld (Walter Pidgeon)
himself, but ultimately he accepted her decision when she explained
why she had abruptly changed the mood of the song with a comic
twist: ("They
laughed with me, not at me. Because I wanted them to laugh")
- to her surprise, Ziegfeld congratulated her and
the cast: ("It went
beautifully")
rather than firing her: ("I ought to fire you. But I love
talent. And it's hard to quarrel with five curtain calls...So I
guess I'll have to give you another chance"); he even ordered
her to replicate the opening night's performance: ("You'll
do it exactly as you did tonight and that's an order!") with
the pillow; he even offered her a third number and new song; Fanny's
intuition would prove to bring her lasting attention and fame
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Fanny Brice (Barbra Streisand) Singing and Performing
in "His
Love Makes Me Beautiful"
- Pregnant (and "in the family way")
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