A movie-within-a-movie line:
Everybody’s left a dog in a hot car at some point.
A movie-within-a-movie line:
Everybody’s left a dog in a hot car at some point.
That’s Jurassic Park, right?
Terminator 2
correct
Love that scene from ‘Snatch’.
What made it for me was the guy saying that was menacing in appearance and mannerisms but he delivered it with a bit of humor, in that strong cockney accent.
Answers to some of mine from yesterday:
A: “Kids, just kids, more kids.”
B: “Stupid kids!”
Peter Falk and Jack Lemmon in The Great Race.
“Enough talk!”
Ahrnold in Conan the Barbarian.
“Ah, what family doesn’t have its little ups and downs?”
Katharine Hepburn in The Lion in Winter.
“Did you ever spend ten nights in a Turkish bath looking for a man?”
T-Men (1947) with Alfred “Dr Crater” Ryder and a smokin’ hot June Lockhart.
[SNAPPING FINGERS] “Hej! Was haben Sie da?
Dresden SS officer in Slaughterhouse-Five.
A: “If you want to know the time, it’s exactly 7:50.”
B: “You are slow, darling. It’s 7:52.”
A: “No, my darling. This watch has never lost a second since the day you gave it to me.”
B: “I didn’t give it to you.”
A Shot in the Dark, with Peter Sellers, Elke Sommer, and the suave and debonnaire George Sanders (A).
I found the following clip for “Muriel, what are you doing up there?” I knew it sounded familiar, but I couldn’t place it without Googling:
Here are a couple more:
A: “What can they do? They’re only people just like us.”
B: “People, my foot! They’re Democrats!”
and
A: “You’re still eating?”
B: “I’m still hungry!”
Almost reminds me of a scene from Goblet of Fire, but slightly different dialog
Sorry, no. A much more famous movie, and it always gets a laugh because of who B is.
You play with your balls a lot.
Citizen Kane
“Non!”
The only spoken word in the entire, otherwise pantomime, movie.
Silent Movie (Mel Brooks, 1976).
Spoken by none other than guest star Marcel Marceau.
“What do you want me to do? Draw you a picture? Spell it out? Don’t ever ask me! Long as you live, don’t ever ask me more.”
John Candy to Steve Martin in Planes Trains and Automobiles
And I thought that was an obscure one!
Correct! A is Joseph Cotton, B is Orson Welles before he became bloated like a whale.
“Non!”
Hint:
The only spoken word in the entire, otherwise pantomime, movie.
Answer:
Silent Movie (Mel Brooks, 1976).
Fun Fact:
Spoken by none other than guest star Marcel Marceau.
Marcel Marceau in Mel Brooks’ Silent Movie.
John Wayne in The Searchers.
Whoever snagged him must be some classy babe.
“Come along, Dexter. I know a formula that’s said to pop the pennies off the eyelids of dead Irishmen.”
and
“When statesmen forsake their own private conscience for the sake of their public duties, they lead their country by a short route to chaos.”