Have you had the test yourself?
You nailed it! Here’s a gift for you: ![]()
“Oh, these Christians. They aren’t afraid. They bore me.”
“You d**k!”
LA Story
Instant gratification takes too long.
Quo Vadis?
Whereas I use that line IRL when I think people are being left coast pretentious.
Fast Times at Ridgemont High
Spicoli to Mr. Hand.
Yep!
Can you name who says it?
I’m hearing it in Peter Ustinov’s voice, but that would be too obvious. I am thinking it was the guy who writes a poison-pen letter to Nero while committing suicide.
I believe it’s Ustinov as Nero, but now I’d have to see the movie again to be 100% sure.
Another one:
“People fall asleep at the opera, but they stay wide awake at the bullfights because there’s one man defying death down in that arena.”
Hint: It’s another one of my heroes, but not Hemingway. (Neither is he a scientist, inventor, explorer, or aviator.)
I’ll give you another hint: 100 years ago, he was one of the most famous men in the world.
Lo Pan, Big Trouble In Little China
“Love means never having to say you’re sorry.”
It was from “Love Story,” of course, but also…“What’s Up, Doc?”
The line has also been criticized or mocked for suggesting that apologies are unnecessary in a loving relationship. Another character played by O’Neal disparages it in the 1972 screwball comedy What’s Up, Doc? : in that film’s final scene, Barbra Streisand’s character says “Love means never having to say you’re sorry.” and bats her eyelashes, and O’Neal’s character responds in a flat deadpan voice, “That’s the dumbest thing I ever heard.” MacGraw has said that she always hated the line and considered it ridiculous.
Another:
“Hello, Cleveland!”
“You dumb, stubborn, stupid Konskazudnice!”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“Back end of horse.”
“Are you calling me a horse’s ass?”
Meatballs Part II came out in 1984, Meatballs III: Summer Job in 1988, and Meatballs 4 in 1992. You’ve never heard of them because, except for the name, none had anything to do with the original, and Bill Murray was nowhere to be seen.
From the James Bond movie The Living Daylights
Maryam d"Abo and Timothy d"Alton
Postcards from the Edge. One of my favorite lines from that film.