Right. But I can picture the sheer glee in his expression, when the bay doors open. He was making the ultimate sacrifice for his country.
The correct phrase is “bomb door circuits negative function”.
Spoken by James Earl Jones, who I didn’t recognize the first few times I saw the movie.
I always refer to Strangelove as “a former Nazi whose right arm is still fighting the war.”
General Ripper, in close-up, clenching a huge cigar between his teeth: “Looks like it’s pretty hairy.”
There are other examples. The way Ripper holds the machine gun, for instance (and the fact that he sent the bombers off because of his own impotence).
Silly me. “Scroll wheel? I don’t need no stinkin’ scroll wheel!”
I just caught the tail end of Ghost Stories (awesome movie) and it occurred to me that there are instances of characters using Yiddish words. Pretty jarring when heard in a British accent, so you’d think I’d have realized before now that it’s another clue to what his actual existence is, i.e. in Locked In state in a hospital.
I wouldn’t normally use spoiler blur for an eight year old film, but I hope people who have never heard of it check it out. I really can’t recall any buzz about it or if it even made the theaters here, but it’s a goodie.
I can’t count how many times I’ve seen “The Sting”, but just yesterday I realized that there was somewhat of a problem with the poker game scene, shown in the segment labeled “The Hook”. Newman’s character Henry Gondorf was preparing to take on Robert Shaw’s Doyle Lonnigan. Lonnigan was basically taunted into cheating Gondorf, not knowing that Gondorf has prepared a cheat of his own. Lonnigan prepared a stacked deck, to give Gondorf a great hand of 4 threes, but to give himself 4 nines. Gondorf slips that hand out for one consisting of 4 jacks, much to the chagrin of Lonnigan. But here’s the issue. A poker hand consists of 5 cards. If Lonnigan’s stacked deck had had a jack as its’ fifth card or Gondorf’s ringer hand had had a nine as its’ fifth card it would have been obvious that someone was cheating and the whole scam might have exploded.
I just rewatched this scene and I agree with you that if Lonnigan’s 5th card, or any of the other player’s cards were Jacks, the jig is up.
Gondorf’s 5th card was the same 6 of hearts that he had in the hand with 4 threes.
This just happened again. I’m at work, the song currently on the radio is There Must Be An Angel by the Eurythmics. This might not really work for this thread since, to be honest, I’m not sure I’ve ever heard the song in the first place. But I could hear Annie’s voice and my brain just registered it as a Eurythmics or Annie Lennox song and I didn’t give it much more thought. But then, cutting through the background noise of the store, I heard what I was pretty sure was Stevie Wonder playing harmonica, which it was.
I watched a Wizard of Oz reaction video today which made me realize an obvious thing about O Brother Where Art Thou.
While I’d noticed the klansmen marching to the same song-chant as the castle guards of the Wicked Witch, it didn’t register that Clooney & company infiltrated the enemy in the same manner — overcoming three men and using their costumes. (A common trope)
When Lonnigan prepared his stacked deck, he would have been sure not to put a fifth three in the hand he was giving Gondorf. So no risk for him.
But you’re right that Gondorf was taking a risk that he might produce a fifth copy of whatever four-of-a-kind Lonnigan had set himself up for.
It’s been a long time since I watched this movie and I’ve forgotten the details. Did Gondorf know what specific hand Lonnigan was giving himself? Because what if Gondorf substituted his four jacks for the four threes Lonnigan gave him and then found out Lonnigan had set himself up with four queens instead of four nines?
I vaguely recall seeing a scene (I think if might have been in Mad magazine) where there was a poker game where everyone was cheating and in the big hand, every player revealed they had a hand of four aces.
Or then there’s Granny Weatherwax’s method of cheating DEATH. She gave herself a hand of four queens, at which DEATH stared at his cards for several minutes before announcing “You win. I only have four ones”.
Actually, it’s better than that.
She dealt herself four aces, and DEATH four kings. But DEATH swapped hands with her.
But she knew that he would do it. She fully intended for her to end up with the hand she did-- That’s why it was specifically four queens.
“He likes to cold-deck low — eights or nines.”
That’s not the impression I got. Still, I suppose it’s open to interpretation.
Lonnigan wouldn’t have given himself a fifth three, but he might have given himself a jack, obviously not knowing that Gondorf was going to swap out the stacked threes for jacks.
That’s the part I thought was unrealistic, that Lonnigan would win big hands like that often enough that people noticed the pattern, but no one figured out that he was cheating.
Yeah, from what you see of it in popular culture, you’d think most rounds of poker were won with the likes of full houses or straight flushes. In reality, though, it’s a lot more common for someone to win with a high pair.