Guess The Movie From The Closing Line

Boogie Nights

Caddyshack.
Mine:

“So here we go.”

Wow, I took to long to respond.

The Front Page, 1931, though the “bitch” was covered by sound of the character accidently hitting the phone with his elbow.
BE 2: “I’m a coffee pot!

While I’m at it:

BE3: “Well, nobody’s perfect.”
BE4: “What shall it be?”

No idea on the coffee pot, but:

BE3: “Well, nobody’s perfect.”

  • Some Like It Hot (1959)

BE4: “What shall it be?”

  • Things to come. (1936)

Goldfinger?

The last line of Goldfinger was “Do you want them to find us?” or something similar.

Here are the last two lines from the end of a popular movie.

BE5: “A storm is coming.” / “I know.”

And a one-liner:

BE6: “We’ve got all the time in the world.”

Whoosh!

Whoosh, smoosh. I knew you were being facetious, but your answer reminded me of the actual ending of Goldfinger. Sean Connery and Honor Blackman have parachuted out of Goldfinger’s crashing plane and when the rescue helicopter comes looking for them, Blackman waves at them but is yanked under the parachute by Connery, who says something along the lines of “Do you want them to find us?” and proceeds to score some post-movie action.

I didn’t use the line as one of my BE questions because I don’t remember exactly how it goes.

Bugger.

Technically wouldn’t the last line be HAHAHAHAHAHA!(you know the Mozart laugh)

On Her Majesty’s Secret Service

Here’s an easy one:

“I was cured all right!”

SB1) “He’ll be alright”

answers:

Terminator (1)

“The horror, the horror”.

“He’ll be alright” is Star Wars.

Labdad - You’re right, that is easy. “A Clockwork Orange.”

Apocalypse Now

Maybe this one is a little tougher:

“It ain’t like it used to be, but, uh, it’ll do.”

[hijak]
In the screenplay for Apocalypse Now the movie doesn’t end there. In fact it has quite a different ending! I’m not gonna waste posting space here but for fans of the movie I suggest looking it up on any of the various movie script sites. :smiley: I think you’ll see it’s rather amusing… “He was referring to you ma’am.”
[/hijak]

B!1: “Pearline, yor in da way honey. Why dont’cha go in da udd’r room and read ja book?” followed by a book quote