Movie inside jokes

In the movie “Gremlins” there’s a scene where the father calls his son from an inventors convention. They cut back and forth as the father and son converse. In the background at the convention there’s a device that looks like the Time Machine from the film of the same name. It disappears during one of the cuts. I laughed my rear off and I think I was the only one in the theater that got it. Not the son. the wife.

Robbie the Robot from Forbidden Planet also shows up in that scene.

In the movie version of “Annie,” Albert Finney played Daddy Warbucks. Through the entire movie, he was imitating director John Huston.

And director John Landis.

Speaking of Landis, a lot of his movies have the phrase “See You Next Wednesday”.

From wiki:

And doesn’t Curtis say something like “Oh, yeah. He was in that movie where the men dressed up like women!” Or am I thinking of a different movie?

Also one scene in the graveyard where Cary’s character sits on a headstone for Archie Leach.

*Swordfish *is from the classic Marx Brother’s line “The password is always Swordfish”

Usual Suspects and Play it again Sam both reference Casablanca.

Another TV show: Peanut’s It’s the Great Pumpkin (last image) has Lucy looking at a 1966 TV Guide magazine that has her as the cover story in real life. They must have put that in at the last minute.

Also TV: In one episode of Green Acres, the Douglases go to Washington DC to meet with then congressmen (and see the Eiffel Tower). Lisa asks him “What actor are you?” (This was at a time when a couple of actors went into politics). Lyle Talbot says, “Lyle Talbot.”

Very obscure, but in one Fred Astaire film, Edward Everett Horton says, “This makes me a big hit with the ladies.” Astaire incredulously says, “You?” It was well-known throughout Hollywood at the time that Horton was gay.

The Hope and Crosby Road pictures had various in-jokes. In one case, they went by a mountain that looked exactly like the one used for the Paramount logo.

Roman Polanski’s The Tenant has some parallels to his Rosemary’s Baby, notably a sweet old couple that isn’t what they seem. It’s not done for laughs, though: it sets up the audience for the twist to come.

The barn-raising scene in Witness. Harrison Ford was a carpenter.

Acronym transposition.

Buster Crabbe, who played Flash Gordon, Buck Rogers and Tarzan, appeared on the 1979 tv series “Buck Rogers” as Commander Gordon. He and the Buck Rogers in the show (Gil Gerard) banter about him being from a different time and shooting down alien spacecraft before Rogers was born (one of the characteristics of Buck Rogers is that he is from 20th century Earth in the 25th century).
Gordon: I was doing this before you were born
Rogers: You think so?
Gordon: Young man, I know so.

How is that an inside joke?

According to wikipedia, it still is just an acronym.

"Pronounced as a word, containing non-initial letters

Amphetamine: **a**lpha-**m**ethyl**ph**enethyl**amine**
Gestapo: **Ge**heime **Sta**atsp**o**lizei ('secret state police')
Interpol: **Inter**national Criminal **Pol**ice Organization
Nabisco: N**a**tional **Bi**scuit **Co**mpany"

What’s even cooler, Boris had just been released from the stage role in time to star in House of Frankenstein while Bela Lugosi took over the role, missing out on playing Dracula in the film. Bela played a few tours in the 40s and 50s, to supposedly bigger box office than Boris.

Re The Usual Suspects:

So perhaps it was there in the name all along.

Otherwise, isn’t THX1138 also the call sign of the stormtrooper Luke Skywalker has overcome, and then purloined his armour, after arriving on the Death Star? (The scene is from the first *Star Wars *movie.)

Its not. Discussion about the motion picture in the lead up to its release noted that Ford had no problems in making the scene very believable because of his carpentry career. The script was not altered to accommodate Ford’s prior career as some sort of gag or homage.

The trooper that Luke takes the armor of is TK-421

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G900A using Tapatalk

Ah, apologies. Faulty recollection.

And Hope said something along the lines of, “that mountain’s my bread and butter!”

Because Ford’s character was not a carpenter.

No, Harrison Ford’s character in Witness was not a carpenter, but was shown to have some skills. As I remember, when he tried to drive off at the beginning of the film, he knocked down the elaborate bird feeder and was later shown repairing it.

I do not think that showing his character helping raise the barn was meant as an “inside joke”. (It was a beautiful scene though. And did you notice Viggo Mortensen in the background?)