One of the two is already done w/Shakespeare in Love.
A second one: Elizabeth.
Since solving half of two is more or less equal to solving one, let’s go back a bit for the next question:
Sydney Greenstreet
Peter Lorre
One of the two is already done w/Shakespeare in Love.
A second one: Elizabeth.
Since solving half of two is more or less equal to solving one, let’s go back a bit for the next question:
Sydney Greenstreet
Peter Lorre
Cradle will Rock
Elizabeth
Both correct, but for different puzzles.
The Maltese Falcon & Casablanca
Lee Marvin & Ernest Borgnine
It’s been quite a few hours since you posted, Astorian. Could you give us any hints?
Well one of them is The Dirty Dozen. Can’t come up with the other one, though.
The first was easy, but I didn’t want to post half an anwer again. I’m totally stumped on the second one, though.
Flailing stab in the dark here, but were they both in *Paint Your Wagon * or Cat Ballou?
I didn’t think my entry was so diffifult! I apologize.
“The Dirty Dozen” is correct. The other movie I was thinking of ended with a violent confrontation on a freight train, between a hobo (Marvin) and a railroad bull (Borgnine) in the Depression era.
I know this one! Emperor of the North Pole. I remember watching this on TV as a kid. There are parts of the movie etched in my brain. Borgnine is such a sadistic SOB. When he used the lead weight and rope on Lee Marvin and Keith Carradine, I just cringe. The shaving scene, the brutal fight at the end. Wow! I don’t believe it’s out on DVD.
Anyhow, since no one got both movies, I’d say it’s Astorian turn again.
I’d never heard of that one. I my first guess was The Wild Bunch (that one’s etched in my brain from my childhood… damn you, Sam Peckinpah!), but only Borgnine was in that.
Okay, how about Jack Nicholson & Scatman Crothers?
Oh, got it, but just because of the other movie game:
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (Crother’s plays an orderly)
The Shining (Crother’s plays the groundskeeper)
New puzzle?
Sorry, I’ve been a bit swamped.
How about Woody Allen and Diane Wiest? I think they’ve been in more than one together, but I don’t have time to double check.
Hannah and Her Sisters
Radio Days
=========
Rob Lowe
Ally Sheedy
Actually, though Wiest appeared in several Woody Allen movies, the only time they both appeared together on screen was in Hannah and Her Sisters. (Allen was narrator of Radio Days, but didn’t appear.) And though Wiest was in The Purple Rose of Cairo, September, and Bullets Over Broadway with Woody as director, he didn’t appear in any of those.
I assumed “appear” includes narration, rather than a literal “saw the face of.”
Well, I think narration is being fairly liberal as a definition as “appearence” in a film. But I can let it slide. It probably won’t factor in very many questions (I hope).
I say it’s still Bicker’s turn with Rob Lowe and Ally Sheedy.
I meant to write:
So sorry
I would have no heartburn using Toy Story as a partial answer to “Tom Hanks and Tim Allen,” nothwithstanding the fact that neither actor’s likeness appears in the film.