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Your favorite movie memories or comments about movies

m1thousand

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What are some of your favorite movie memories or your comments about specific movies?

The Wizard of Oz
- I will be repeating myself but I thought they invented color movies when Dorothy got to Munchkinland, and they decided to add color to the movie.

- I was baffled by the 'munchkin suicide' in the movie, but I finally realized it was just a bird.

- The Witch's guards terrified me.

Speed
- Its one of my favorite movies.

Basic Instinct
- Its also one of my favorite movies. I love the character, Catherine Tramelle. I thought she was so cool and Sharon Stone did such a good job playing her.

2001: A Space Odyssey
- I hated this movie with a passion!!!!

(I have writer's block and I'm using this list to help jog my memory https://www.imdb.com/chart/top/)

The Godfather
- Ive never seen it. I didn try once to watch it but I was bored by the wedding at the start of the movie

The Silence of the Lambs
- It was a great movie. I'm glad it won all the awards that it did. "They were screaming"

Back to the Future
- I forced myself to watch Back to the Future. I just wasnt into but I was interested into its popularity

Momento
- It was such a genius concept of how the movie played in reverse.

The Dark Knight Rises
- Heath Ledger was brilliant as the Joker. I loved, loved his makeup!!!

The Princess Bride
- I kept hearing about the movie so I finally decided to watch it. But I just kind of lost interest in it halfway through the movie

Fight Club, The Usual Suspects
- I feel like I should watch the movies but I havent

It's a Wonderful Life
- Why is this such a good movie. I just dont get it.

Alfred Hitchcock movies
- I love his movies

James bond movies
- Ditto

A Sixth Sense
- It has to be one of the best twists, along with __________________, in movie history

The Elephant Man
- I connected with the character of John Merrick. I felt like a freak and an outsider. I was very moved by the end of the movie when 'Adagio For Strings' was played when John was going to sleep and let himself die because of his condition. I decided that I wanted 'Adagio For Strings' to be my funeral music.
I was in a day therapy program and the instructor told us he was going to play music and we were to draw how it made us feel. He said it was fairly long and that caught my attention because the song is long. He turned on the music, I heard those opening moments, it was 'Adagio For Strings' so I drew a black tunnel that I felt my life was going back into.
Here is the music . . .

Gone with the Wind
- Another movie I feel like I should watch, but I havent

Whats Up Doc
- One of my all time favorite movies. Im not a Barbara Streisand fan in general, but I absolutely love her in this movie. Madeline Kahn was great in the movie

Saw
- another favorite movie. I was shocked by the ending. Absolutely shocked

Jaws
- loved it. I remember watching it

The Exorcist
- ditto

Paper Moon
- I remember seeing this one too. I loved that Tatum ONeal won an Oscar for the performance

The Piano
- Another favorite movie. When i saw Anna Paquin, I thought she is going to win an Oscar and she did

Carrie
- Another favorite movie of mine
 
Lots of good movies in your list. I believe you many have meant "Memento," btw. The meaning is quite different than the reference to time.

I enjoy offbeat movies that would not be big successes at the theater chains. Let's face it. The chains still target kids, and grown-up kids.

One of my favorites is Envy, which was also released as The New Girlfriend. It makes the case for karma, which is not justice, as is most often misrepresented by lapsed Catholics and others who need a Hell but can't have one due to agnosticism.

Another is Passion in the Desert. The movie is an expanded version of a short story by Balzac. It magically blends the mystical, history, and the border of conflicting cultures.

Plunkett & Macleane remains a treat, a senseless romp all dressed up in period costumes, but fun and touching nonetheless. It also doesn't hurt that Jonny Lee Miller and Robert Carlyle are young and beautiful and set in a platonic love arrangement.

Raise the Red Lantern is a haunting tale of a young Chinese concubine in a feudal estate at the turn of the 20th century. Beautiful, sad, and plausible.

Being There was a satirical farce about the likelihood of kingmakers choosing presidents behind the scenes. Although it was produced in the 70's, starring Shirley Maclaine and Peter Sellers (his last film), it has loomed as more possible with every passing year.

Splendor in the Grass remains an all-time favorite tearjerker. It tells a tale of coming of age in the Roaring 20's and then the Great Depression in America. LIke all great sagas, it remembers to tell the story of the mighty and the meek.

Priscilla, Queen of the Desert. Although it appears in cross-dressing regalia and champions the lives of drag queens in the Outback, it is more than that, a Broadway musical come to town with heartache, humor, and cheek. Stellar performances are turned in by all the leads.

Ragnarok. Norwegian films rarely make a splash in America. This is a little cheesy in the CGI monster mode, yet it draws us in to follow the passion of a scientist, who is excelling in discovery while failing as a parent. Great juxtaposition, and Pal Hagen is ever easy on the eyes. (He also played a stupendous version of Thor Heyerdahl in Kon Tiki.)

Tremors. Kevin Bacon is dishy and it's camp horror at its best.

Elizabeth. Kate Blanchett turns in a great performance, even with the history and timeline being manipulated for cinema. No history is ever true completely, but this one is true in many key aspects of the forces in flux during the Tudor reign.
 
The Stand - too many good moments but after I "met" Mother Abigail I am convinced to this day that GOD is a Black Woman

Tales of the City - every scene - I lived it and it was very true to what SF was like at the time

Francis - When Jessica Lange lost it and they wanted to lock her up

Crimes of the Heart - When Jessica Lange ate half of the chocolates and let the other half in the box

The Color Purple - when Sug sang Miss Celie's Blues

Aliens - When Sigourney Weaver bust in and said "GET AWAY FROM HER YOU BITCH"
 

Pulp Fiction, Cruising, and Taxi Driver; my top three favorite films (in no particular order).
 
I went to see "Alien" opening night with my high school sweetheart, although he wasn't my high school sweetheart yet because it was 1979 and coming out to your friend wasn't as easy as it is now. While waiting in line I mentioned something about a surgical scar I had from a hernia operation when I was 7 and lifted up my shirt to show him. He ran his fingers along it a little too sensually and that was when we both kind of knew. As an added bonus, the movie blew me away (as would he, a few weeks later) and to this day remains my favorite film.

"Meteor". Forgotten film, and with good reason. I have absolutely no recollection at all. I saw it with my friend and that was the night we finally whipped our dicks out.

Seeing "Videodrome", David Cronenberg's hallucinogenic technology thriller and the film that defined the term 'body horror' while tripping my ass off.

Watching an SLP VHS dupe of "Repulsion" on a 13" TV screen one blisteringly hot afternoon and being totally devastated.

The humbling awe I felt after the last 30 seconds of "Melancholia".

The shock I felt when I snuck into a showing of "Dawn of the Dead". I was only 13 and had never seen such violence.

Arriving late and stoned out of my mind to an advance screening of "Silence of the Lambs". We had to sit in the front row. I don't think I've ever been so immersed in a movie.

The moment in the last scene in "A Matter of Size" when Bill Henson climbs on that blond's dick and starts bouncing away.
 
There is a move called ELENI that I watched maybe 20 times - a true story about the Greek civil war - when it first came out it startled me and I felt like I had been there before. It was all very familiar - like something I could see and feel but not touch and it still haunts me a bit to this day. I was also very drawn to Greek Restaurants - used to eat at one for many years every Friday night and again I had the feeling of familiarity.
 
I loved a good Greek restaurant we had in Albuquerque, but I don't find I like much in the way of their cuisine when they are not preparing it. A Greek salad or dolmathes somewhere else just doesn't ring true somehow. And avgolemono is usually awfully nothing if not in an authentic restaurant.
 
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