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Melvin and Howard (1980)
In Jonathan Demme's quirky comedy-drama of a possibly
true story about the American dream - embodied in the tale of an
alleged encounter between a lowly milkman and eccentric billionaire
'Howard Hughes' in the desert in the early 70's:
- the opening title-credits sequence of an endless
highway lane viewed in a moving car's headlights
- the memorable chance meeting scene of likeable Nevada
milkman Melvin Dummar (Paul LeMat) while driving in his pickup truck
to Las Vegas in the Nevada desert at night, coming upon an injured,
silver-haired, bearded motorcycle-accident victim (Jason Robards)
after a crash
- the shocking revelation when the passenger identified
himself after Melvin briefly mentioned something about his failed
attempt to get apply for a job at McDonnell Douglas, Northrup, Hughes:
("Well, I might have done somethin'...I'm Howard Hughes (thunder
clapped)...I said I'm Howard Hughes"); Melvin didn't believe
him: ("Well, you know, listen, I believe anybody can call themselves
what they really want")
- as they drove to Las Vegas, Melvin sang his own original
Christmas song, "Santa's Souped Up Sleigh" with "dramatic
narration" - and urged his passenger to sing part of it along
with him - "Listen man, you sing this or you walk!": ("Santa
called his elves together to soup up his old sleigh, So Rudolph and
the other reindeer could rest on Christmas day, He's got a million
miles to travel and he'll do it in one day, And that's why Santa
Claus has a souped-up Santa sleigh"), and then the two sang
a duet of the passenger's favorite song: "Bye Bye Blackbird",
before dropping the wounded man off in the back parking lot of the
Dunes Hotel in Vegas; Melvin's last gesture was to give Hughes a
quarter and a thumbs-up
- the scene of Melvin's ditzy go-go stripper/dancer
first wife Lynda West Dummar (Oscar-winning Mary Steenburgen) walking
out on him, when he found her on stage in a Reno strip club to the
Rolling Stones' "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" - and disrupted
the proceedings by getting into a fight with customers, and causing
Lynda to get fired
- another scene of Lynda as a cocktail waitress at another
classier strip club, where she brashly removed her skimpy costume,
told off her boss: ("Aw, never mind, I quit!") and stormed
off completely naked to her dressing room after Melvin presented
her with an "interlocutory decree" of divorce that would
be final in six weeks, and added that their young daughter Darcy
(Elizabeth Cheshire) would be in his custody: ("What do ya think?
I want her bein' around a weird place like this?")
- the scene of Lynda's lead-footed tap-dancing on the "Easy
Street" game show to the Stones' "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction",
and her winning of the top prize of living room furniture, a piano,
and $10,000 in cash
- after spendthrift Melvin unwisely spent his family's
money on a new car and 35-foot boat as an "investment," a
frustrated and financially-sensible Lynda decided to leave him with
their daughter and toddler son and seek their second divorce: (Lynda:
"We are poor, Melvin, we are poor" Melvin: "We're not
poor, broke maybe, we're not poor")
- the courtroom scenes in which Melvin's credibility
about the suspicious claim of a Last Will and Testament was questioned
by skeptical lawyers and Judge Keith Hayes (Dabney Coleman) regarding
his short friendship with Howard Hughes and beneficiary inheritance
of $156 million in Hughes' will: ("Do you swear in the name
of God that this story about how you received this will is true?")
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Judge
(Dabney Coleman)
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Skeptical Lawyer
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"Do you think that Melvin Dummar's gonna
get $156 million dollars or anything like it?"
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- although Melvin admitted that he doubted that he
would ever collect the money, he fondly remembered: ("Do you
think that Melvin Dummar's gonna get $156 million dollars or anything
like it? Nah, I'm not gonna see that money. That's all-right. 'Cause
you know what happened? Howard Hughes sang Melvin Dummar's song.
That's what happened. He sang it. He was funny. Yeah, he sang it.")
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'Howard Hughes' - Accident Victim (Jason Robards)
Melvin Dummar (Paul LeMat)
'Hughes' Dropped Off at Hotel in Las Vegas
Melvin's Stripper Wife Lynda (Mary Steenburgen)
Lynda's "Easy Street" Game Show Tap Dance
Lynda to Melvin: "We are poor, Melvin" - Suing
for a Second Divorce
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