S (continued) |
Title Screen
|
Movie Title/Year and Scene
Descriptions |
Screenshots
|
|
Silver Streak (1976)
- the politically incorrect scene in a train-station
bathroom in which fast-talking professional criminal Grover Muldoon
(Richard Pryor) taught book editor George Caldwell (Gene Wilder)
how to 'walk and act black' (with a radio boom box up to his
ear), in order to get onto the train, with a terrible blackface
disguise: ("We got to make them cops think you're black")
- although both were unsure (George: "I can't pass for black",
and Grover: "Why you whiteys got such a tight ass, man?")
- also, a black man's critique of George's act
when he be-bopped to a radio held to his ear: "You must
be in pretty big trouble, fella. But for God's sake, learn to
keep time,"
and Grover's second assessment: "We'll make it past the cops.
I just hope we don't see no Muslims"
- and the numerous times in a running gag of George
being thrown off (or pushed off) the
"Silver Streak" train - each time yelling: "Son
of a bitch!"
- the scene when George turned the tables on Sheriff
Chauncey (Clifton James) with a gun: ("You stupid, ignorant
son of a bitch, dumb bastard. Jesus Christ. I've met some dumb
bastards in my time, but you outdo them all")
|
|
|
The Simpsons Movie (2007)
-
the sequence of a naked Bart Simpson riding
around the town of Springfield naked on his skateboard, with conveniently-placed
objects (trees, shrubs, birds, etc.) often (but not always) blocking
his genital area
- at one point, the animators
- for fun - reversed things; Bart skated behind a large hedge
fence with a small strip where ONLY his penis was visible - mocking
the convention of cleverly hiding a character's privates behind
objects
- after
being startled as a naked Bart was catapulted toward the window
of the local Krusty Burger fast food restaurant where devoutly
religious Ned Flanders was giving thanks, he told his kids Rod
and Todd to repeat after him: "Don't forget
to thank the Lord for this bountiful -- PENIS"; everyone
dutifully repeated: "Bountiful penis"
|
|
|
Singin'
in the Rain (1952)
- the sequence of Cosmo Brown's (Donald O'Connor)
acrobatic, slapstick musical number Make 'Em Laugh
- and the playfully subversive song Moses by Cosmo
and Don Lockwood (Gene Kelly) in which they rebelled against
their diction coach (Bobby Watson) - culminating in them holding
up a diction placard to sing sarcastically "Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay!"
- Lina Lamont's (Jean Hagen)
grating voice and one-liners, such as:
"Well, of course we talk, don't everybody?", and "Why,
I make more money than, than Calvin Coolidge! Put together!"
- the final sequence revealing that ingenue Kathy
Selden's (Debbie Reynolds) voice was substituted for Lina's
|
|
|
Slap Shot (1977)
- director George Roy Hill's irreverently funny, R-rated,
brutal, raunchy and bloody sports film - and comedy (with a screenplay
by Nancy Dowd) - one of the best ever made
- the film's rampant profanity, adolescent behavior,
and nudity
- the character of aging, hockey star Reggie
Dunlop (Paul Newman) who was appointed player/coach of The Charlestown
Chiefs of the Federal Hockey League, a failing minor league team
in a Pennsylvania steel-mill town
- the scene of the Chiefs' fashion show for publicity's
sake, when Johnny Upton (Allan Nicholls) threatened team manager
Joe McGrath (Strother Martin) that he would show everything: "I'm
gonna flash' em, Joe!...I'm gonna walk down that stinkin' aisle,
I'm gonna open this faggot robe and wiggle my dick at 'em!...Yes,
I am Joe, and you know why? Because I want you to have a heart
attack and die so that we never have to do this s--t again! You
and your f--kin' fashion shows!...I'm gonna wiggle it at 'em, you
cheap bastard. I'm tellin' ya. You'd better be prepared, because
when I yank it out, everybody in that audience, with the exception
of my wife, is gonna be runnin' for the exits."
- the train station scene of Reggie meeting up with
new team recruits from the Iron League - the Hanson Bros (Jeff,
Steve, and Jack, played by Jeff & Steve Carlson and David Hanson),
cheaply acquired by team manager Joe McGrath; the boys were caught
in the act of loudly vandalizing a Coke machine: ("F--kin'
machine took my quarter...It took my quarter"); shortly later,
Dunlop complained to McGrath that the boys were
infantile (with toy model cars in their luggage) - "You cheap
son of a bitch. Are you crazy? Those guys are retards!...They brought
their f--kin' toys with 'em!...They're too dumb to play with themselves";
McGrath recalled a memory from his coaching past: ("I was
coachin' in Omaha in 1948 and Eddie Shore sends me this guy that's
a terrible masturbator. You know, couldn't control himself, but
he would get deliberate penalties so he could get into the penalty
box all by himself, and damned if he wouldn't, you know...")
- the hockey action with the ruthless Hanson Brothers
trio who wore black-framed coke-bottle glasses, tapied
foil to their knuckles, and frequently beat up and brawled with
their opponents, even during pre-game warm-ups; during the playing
of the National Anthem in one game after one such brawl, the Peterboro
Referee skated up to a bloodied Steve Hanson and threatened: "I
got my eye on the three of you guys. You pull one thing, you're
out of this game. I run a clean game here. I have any trouble,
I'll suspend ya" - Steve shouted back: "I'm listening
to the f--kin' song!"
- the scene of Jim Carr's (Andrew Duncan) live-TV
interview about the "finer points of hockey" with player
Denis Lemieux (Yvon Barrette) who was asked: "What is high-sticking?"
and the player demonstrated by almost choking the questioner: ("High-sticking
happen when the guy take the stick, you know, and he go like that");
he also demonstrated slashing, tripping, hooking, and spearing:
("All bad. You do that, you go to the box, you know. Two minutes,
by yourself, and you feel shame, you know. And then you get free")
- the teams' mooning out the windows of a school bus
- the many dirty, rough-house violent tactics on
the ice by the Hansons to save the franchise ("These guys are a
f--kin' disgrace!"), including Dunlop's taunting of the opposing
Long Island goalie Tommy Hanrahan (Christopher Murney) about his
wife Suzanne (Melinda Dillon): "Hanrahan
- Suzanne sucks pussy! Hey, Hanrahan, she's a dyke! I know, I know!
She's a lesbian, a lesbian, a lesbian!"; the tactic won the
game, but afterwards, Dunlop was beaten up; later in the locker
room, he told his teammates: "I told him his wife was a dyke...His
wife is a dyke!"
- Dunlop's insult after disinterested team owner Anita
McCambridge (Kathryn Walker), a wealthy widow, told him that she
was not going to sell the team, but would end everything for a
tax write-off:
"You know, your son looks like a fag to me. You'd better get
married again, 'cause he's gonna wind up with somebody's cock in
his mouth before you can say Jack Robinson"
- the sequence of straight-playing, top-scoring team
member Ned Braden's (Michael Ontkean) on-ice strip tease (broadcaster
Carr called it "a lascivious display") to distract the
crowd and players from their brawling, when he lowered his uniform,
and the arena's band began playing "The Stripper"; this
culminated in the team's championship league victory (via a forfeiture
penalty against the opposing team) and a parade on the ice (with
Braden wearing only a jock-strap) (and one reaction: "He's
gonna catch his death out there")
|
|
|
Sleeper
(1973)
- the many slapstick sequences and sight gags
- the scene of Greenwich Village health food store
owner and ex-clarinet player Miles Monroe (Woody Allen) - now
waking up 200 years later - transported into the future year
of 2173 - his quips upon hearing he'd been frozen for 200 years:
("Like spending a weekend in Beverly Hills" and "I
haven't seen my analyst in 200 years. He was a strict Freudian.
If I'd been going all this time, I'd probably almost be cured
by now")
- his attempts to hide from the government, first
by impersonating a personal domestic servant-robot (with comedy
slapstick reminiscent of Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton)
- his servanthood in the house of eccentric, vain,
and talentless poetess Luna Schlosser (Diane Keaton) during a
party
- his creation of a giant-sized pudding that attacked
and must be beaten down with a broom
- the scene of the passing of the silver metal
orgasm-inducing "Orb" from guest to guest
- the riotous scene at the robot factory where
Miles was threatened with having his head screwed off
- the reprogramming-brainwashing scene in which
Miles was given new clothes, an apartment, and an electronic
robotic pet dog named Rags
- the contented look on Miles' face as he exited
the cylindrical Orgasmatron
- the shot of a 22nd-century McDonalds sign (with
795 trillions of hamburgers sold)
- the scene that was a parody of A
Streetcar Named Desire
- the scene of the kidnapping of the Great Leader's
giant disembodied nose, which was flattened by a
steamroller
- the classic closing line by Miles when Luna asked
what he believed in: "Sex and death. Two things that come
once in a lifetime -- but at least after death you're not nauseous" -
followed by a passionate kiss
|
|
|
Some
Like It Hot (1959)
- the funniest and often regarded as the best-loved
comedy of all time
- the first shocking glimpse of drag-dressed musicians
joining an all-girl band: Jerry/Daphne (Oscar-nominated Jack
Lemmon) and saxophone-playing cad Joe/Josephine (Tony Curtis),
as they walked toward the train to flee from gangsters to Florida
- the first view of a voluptuous band singer Sugar
Kane (Marilyn Monroe) ("a whole different sex") walking
to the Florida-bound train and moving "just like Jell-O
on springs" when she was squirted by a jet of steam
- Sugar's sneaking of a drink and her depression:
("I always get the fuzzy end of the lollipop")
- the hilarious wild upper berth train party scene
in the close-quarters train bunk when boozy yet soft-hearted
singer Sugar Kane (Marilyn Monroe), in her seductive black nightgown,
cuddled affectionately next to cross-dressed Jerry; when she
noticed: "You've got cold feet" she suggested rubbing
them: "Here,
let me warm them up a little...There, isn't that better?";
Jerry kept repeating to himself: "I'm a girl, I'm a girl!"
- all of Sugar's songs (particularly 'Runnin' Wild')
- Josephine's impersonation of a Cary Grant-like,
impotent Shell Oil heir
- the yacht seduction scene aboard lustful and eccentric
old tycoon Osgood Fielding III's (Joe E. Brown) yacht between
Joe and Sugar -- cross cut with Jerry and Osgood dancing the
tango all-night long
- Jerry's joyful squeal: "I'm engaged"
- he explained: "Osgood proposed to me, we're planning a June wedding";
and his reason for getting hitched was accompanied by shaking
maracas: ("Why
would a guy want to marry a guy?" -- "Security")
- the famous closing line in which nothing could
diminish millionaire Osgood's love for the cross-dressed Jerry
who tactfully attempted to break their engagement, even when
he ripped off his wig and admitted: "I'm a man!", to
which love-struck Osgood blithely and unflappably replied with
the film's memorable last line: "Well, nobody's perfect!"
|
|
|
Something Wild (1986)
- the character of free-spirited, kooky, black-wigged
Audrey Hankel (Melanie Griffith), nicknamed Lulu after actress
Louise Brooks' femme fatale (from Pandora's Box (1929)),
who took off with staid and married, yuppie, NYC tax consultant
and bond trader Charles Driggs (Jeff Daniels) from a Manhattan
diner (where he had skipped out on the check) to New Jersey
- the scene in a motel where she engaged in kinky
sex with him - handcuffing him to a motel bed and making love
to him while forcing him to call in sick to his boss
- their attendance at her 10 year high school reunion
in Pennsylvania and introducing him as her husband to her square
mother Peaches (Dana Preu) - and Peaches' warning to Charlie: "That
girl's got some strange ideas about life", and as Audrey
(now a blonde) and Charlie were dancing and kissing, another
couple suddenly slid behind them, and Ray leaned over to speak
to her: "Hi, baby. Surprise!"
- the crowd-pleasing conclusion when Audrey reappeared
in Charlie's life after he had quit his job, and told him: "I
never wanted to say goodbye"
|
|
|
Something's Gotta Give (2003)
- the scene in which 63 year-old Viagra-taking
record-company mogul Harry Sanborn (Jack Nicholson) - who dated
younger women as girlfriends (including young daughter Marin
Barry (Amanda Peet)), announced to her mother Erica (57 year-old
Oscar-nominated Diane Keaton): "I'm dating your daughter,
Marin"
- Harry's sudden entrance into a room in a Hamptons
beach house when he came upon a naked and embarrassed Erica,
Marin's mother - a sexy, mid-50s, divorced, successful playwright,
and his half-hearted apology after partially covering his eyes:
("I'm sorry! I didn't see anything. Except maybe a few tits!")
- his ensuing interest in the more age-appropriate
woman after suffering a mild heart attack
- the sex scene between Erica and Harry (three days
after he suffered a heart attack), when he cut off her white "damn
turtleneck" with a pair of scissors and then offered oral
sex, when she became overwhelmed and exclaimed: ("I think
we should take your blood pressure...I think it's irresponsible
not to...120/80...Oh, my God, I do like sex!...Wow, oh, God!
So this is what you're supposed to do on a rainy afternoon, huh?");
she was amazed by her own responsiveness: ("I really thought
I was sort of closed up for business. I never expected this")
|
|
|
Sons
of the Desert (1933)
- Laurel (Stan Laurel) and Hardy's (Oliver Hardy)
great sight gags and childish innocence
- the scene of thin, dim-witted, and shy Stan consuming
an ornamental waxed apple in the Hardy living room with gusto
- and being scolded by Oliver: "What
are you eating?...Where did you get it?...Why that's not real
fruit! It's imitation. It's made of wax!";
Mrs. Hardy (Mae Busch) also added when she heard what was happening
to her phony fruit: "Oh,
so that's where it's been going. That's the third apple I've
missed this week"
- the madcap sequence with the scalding hot water
iron tub - when fat and short-tempered Oliver feigned illness
so that the doctor (a veterinarian) would prescribe a short ocean
cruise to Honolulu (they would thereby fool their wives by faking
a trip to Hawaii, and instead attend the annual 'Sons of the Desert'
enclave lodge meeting in Chicago)
- the sequence of their return home (after being
in Chicago) from "Hawaii" (wearing leis and carrying
pineapples and ukeleles, and singing "Honolulu Baby")
- and their reading of newspaper headlines: "HONOLULU LINER
SINKING! FLOUNDERING IN TYPHOON"; when they learned about
their cruise ship disaster, Stan delivered an hilarious line
about being thankful that they didn't go to Honolulu: ("Can
you beat that? I'm sure glad we didn't go. If we'd have... ")
- the scene of the two hiding out in the attic,
awaiting the proper time to return home, due to the reported
ship disaster, but caught out in the rain and accosted by a police
officer who brought them back inside, as Oliver reprimanded Stan: "Well,
here's another nice mess you've gotten me into"
- the shocking discovery by the grieving wives during
a movie newsreel that their two husbands had deceived them -
and had gone to Chicago to attend a Sons of the Desert lodge
meeting
- after being confronted by their wives, Oliver
told lies to Lottie, and was forced to wear a pot on his head
to protect himself from the barrage of dishes thrown by her,
while a bawling and wimpering Stan received forgiveness and rewards
from his wife Betty (Dorothy Christy) for ultimately confessing
the truth about what had really happened
- in the conclusion, Stan affirmed to Oliver:
"Betty said that honesty was the best politics. Look! (he
held up a cigarette and took a deep drag, then coughed) (singing)
Honolulu baby, won't you close those eyes" - as Oliver hurled
a pot at his head
|
|
|
South Park: Bigger, Longer
and Uncut (1999)
- in the tale, four young boys (Stan Marsh, Kyle
Broflovski, Eric Cartman, and Kenny McCormick) were able to sneak
into the showing of an R-rated Canadian feature movie; it was
the viewing of a film within a film ("Asses of Fire")
by the group of third-grade boys from the sleepy town of South
Park, Colorado - featuring Canadians Terrance (voice of Matt
Stone)
& Phillip (voice of Trey Parker), about lighting farts on fire.
The duo also performed the vulgar song "Uncle F--ka"
on-screen in "Asses of Fire."
- in school the next day,
the boys were profusely swearing at their teacher - corruptive
after-effects of the film; parents (mothers) were summoned and
the school counselor Mr. Mackey (Trey Parker) led the anti-profanity
sing-along song: "It's Easy, M'Kay," stressing through
rehabilitation that one had to get "back in touch" and
stop cursing or using bad words
- later after watching the forbidden film a second
time, the scene of muffled-voiced, parka-clad third-grader Kenny
(voice of Matt Stone) lighting his flatulence on fire during
a $100 bet with Eric (voice of Trey Parker), dying (as usual)
in the hospital, and being sent to Heaven (with lots of nude
females awaiting entry), where he was rejected, and then to Hell
where Satan was portrayed as the homosexual lover of recently-deceased
Saddam Hussein
|
|
|
Kenny's Flatulence Lit on Fire
|
Females Awaiting Entry Into Heaven
|
Dead Kenny Denied Access to Heaven
|
|
|
|
Kenny Entering Hell
|
Saddam Hussein with Satan in Hell
|
- the declaration of war against Canada by the South
Park PTA (led by Kyle's mother Sheila Broflovski) formed "Mothers
Against Canada" (M.A.C.). They pushed for censorship efforts
against Terrance and Phillip, as well as the whole nation of
Canada - to blame it for the ensuing corruption and misbehavior
of the children - with the song "Blame Canada"
- the scene of Terrance and Phillip appearing on
TV - on the Conan O'Brien Show (Brent Spiner), a talk show, where
they were arrested and jailed as war criminals after being set
up by M.A.C., while Conan committed suicide (although later revived).
When the US refused to release the duo, the US was ultimately
pressured into waging war against Canada.
- to retaliate against corpulent foul-mouthed Eric,
Sheila (now appointed U.S. Secretary of Offense) compelled Dr.
Vosknocker (voice of Eric Idle) to implant a V-chip into Eric's
brain to stop him from uttering profanities by delivering an
electric shock: ("Now I want you to say 'big floppy donkey
dick'")
|
|
|
The Conan O'Brien Show
|
Demonstration of V-Chip Implantation
|
"What Would Brian Boitano Do?"
|
- the boys attempted to save their two Canadian
idols from being executed by electrocution (in an electric chair)
during a USO show, by forming a children's underground resistance
force, known as La Resistance, after singing: "What Would
Brian Boitano Do?", and offering punch and pie to those
who joined their effort
- during the chaos of the USO show, the boys freed
Terrance and Phillip. Ultimately, a war against Satan and Saddam
(who planned to rule the Earth) ended with their defeat and return
to Hell, as everything returned to normal, and self-sacrificing
Kenny entered Heaven, where he was greeted by two nude angels
|
(l to r): Kenny, Eric, Kyle, and Stan
Film Within a Film ("Asses of Fire")
"Uncle F--ka"
"It's Easy, M'Kay"
"Blame Canada"
USO Show
La Resistance
Kenny Entering Heaven, With Nude Angels
|
|
Spaceballs (1987)
- the many sight gags, wisecracks, anachronisms,
and science-fiction genre spoofs and parodies in this uneven
film about a "galaxy far away" (the planet Spaceballs),
i.e.: the opening Star Wars type
scrawl: "If you can read this, you don't need glasses" and the massive
rumbling space ship Spaceball One with a minute and a
half of screen time (and its bumper sticker: "WE BRAKE FOR
NOBODY")
- the Alien (1979) spoof
in which John Hurt reprised his famous scene - he appeared in
an inter-galactic diner and muttered annoyedly: "Oh, no.
Not again!" when a chestburster popped out of his chest
- and then sang: Hello, My Baby - recreating Michigan
J. Frog's performance in the classic animated short "One
Froggy Evening"
- the sidekick character of half-dog and half-man
Barf the Mawg (John Candy), mercenary Lone Starr's (Bill Pullman)
co-pilot
- the character of robot chaperone and Droid of
Honor Dot Matrix (voice of Joan Rivers) who accompanied Druidia
Princess Vespa (Daphne Zuniga)
- the two villains: evil and vile Lord Dark Helmet
(Rick Moranis) (a Darth Vader-like wannabe who often fantasy-played
with dolls of the film's characters, and complained about his
helmeted costume: "I can't breathe in this thing")
and Colonel Sandurz (George Wyner), who foolishly ordered their
spacecraft to go to "Ludicrous
Speed"
- the "I'm Surrounded by Assholes" scene, when Dark
Helmet realized that his entire crew was composed of men with
the surname of Asshole, and that they were all cross-eyed idiots:
"How many assholes do we have on this ship, anyway?...I knew
it. I'm surrounded by assholes! Keep firing, assholes!"
- the viewing of a real-time
home videocassette (VHS) version of Spaceballs (breaking
the 'fourth wall') by Dark Helmet and Colonel Sandurz, to ingeniously
locate the good-guy heroes and Princess Vespa; after fast-forwarding
through the FBI warning and other parts, they watched themselves
in real-time, with funny word-play: ("You're
looking at 'now', sir. Everything that happens 'now' is happening
'now.'" "What
happened to 'then'?" "We passed 'then'" "When?" "Just
now. We're at 'now' now!" "Go back to 'then'" "'When'?"
"'Now'" "Now?" "'Now'" "I can't" "Why?" "We
missed it" "When?"
"Just now" "When will 'then' be 'now'?",
"Soon" etc.)
- wise old man Yogurt's (Brooks again, who identified
himself: "I'm just plain Yogurt") boasting: "I am the keeper
of a greater magic, a power known throughout the universe as
the..." - and his repeated phrase about a metaphysical
power known as the Schwartz (not the Force): "May
the Schwartz be with you"
- Yogurt's demonstration of the lucrative merchandising
campaign and tie-in products for the film (including a squeezable
mini-Yogurt doll that spoke his catchphrase): "We
put the picture's name on everything! Merchandising! Merchandising!
Where the real money from the movie is made. 'Spaceballs' - the
T-shirt. 'Spaceballs' - the coloring book. 'Spaceballs' - the
lunchbox. 'Spaceballs' - the breakfast cereal. 'Spaceballs' -
the flame thrower! The kids love this one. Last, but not least.
'Spaceballs' - the doll. Me. Adorable"; there was also a
quick view of 'Spaceballs' toilet paper!
- the sight gag of "combing the desert" in
the sands of Vega to locate the Princess: ("We're following orders.
We were told to comb the desert, so we're combing it")
- the great visual gag of the creature Pizza the
Hutt (Dom DeLuise)
- also the Planet of the Apes (1968) 'money
shot' spoof in which two apes came riding up on horseback to
view the crashed head of the Mega Maid, a giant robotic maid
(and their comment about Spaceballs): ("Dear me, what are
those things coming out of her nose?" "Spaceballs?"
"Oh s--t, there goes the planet")
|
|
|
Spider-Man 3 (2007)
- the "Dark Peter" sequences in which Peter Parker/Spider-Man
(Tobey Maguire) was transformed (after coming into contact and
becoming influenced by a strange, extraterrestrial spidery-black
symbiote entity) into a detestable
character with a dark side personality; he had been told that the
symbiote "amplifies characteristics of its host, especially aggression
- this could be dangerous"
- Peter
performed an unusual, 'evil' strutting street dance-walk before entering
a clothing store to buy a new outfit; also in the offices of the
Daily Bugle, he had a sexy conversation with co-worker-receptionist
Miss Betty Brant (Elizabeth Banks) who complimented him on his
photography: "Your shots are so good" - he replied: "I'd love to
shoot you sometime"; in the presence of his boss J. Jonah Jameson
(J.K. Simmons), Peter brashly put his feet up on the desk and demanded
higher pay
- later, in the Jazz Room nightclub display of obnoxious
behavior, Peter realized that his despicable, show-offy moves
to impress ex-girlfriend Mary Jane Watson (Kirsten Dunst) (as a
singing waitress) in front of his pretty blonde lab partner Gwen
Stacy (Bryce Dallas Howard) were not sustainable when Mary Jane
was knocked down and she asked him: "What's wrong with you?...Who
are you?"
|
|
|
Spring Time Saps (1929) (short)
- in this silent short comedy, the suggestive image
of a taxi with a pair of female legs extended out each of the
cab's rear windows; a young lady selling womens' stockings (with
two false-prosthetic legs for display purposes) had stuck the two
artificial legs out the two opposite windows, giving the impression
of a woman with her legs wide open (a vulgar yet clever joke for
the time)
|
|
|
Step Brothers (2008)
- the scene of two middle-aged, unemployed slacker-losers,
Brennan Huff (Will Ferrell) and Dale Doback (John C. Reilly), still
living at home in Los Angeles, who were forced against their will
to become roommates when Brennan's mom Nancy (Mary Steenburgen)
and Dale's dad Robert (Richard Jenkins) were married, making them
step brothers; they decided to turn their twin beds into bunkbeds
- a disaster when the top bunk collapsed onto the bottom bunk, with
Brennan underneath
- the tense dinner scene of the foursome eating
together, and Brennan's reluctant sharing of his "fancy sauce" (made
especially by his mother with catsup and mayonnaise)
with a confrontational Dale
- the "Nuts on a Tom" scene between the
two step brothers when Dale accused Brennan of touching his drums
(because there was a chip in the left one); although he denied
it, Brennan became enraged and threatened to really go and violate
the drum set: "I'm goin'
upstairs 'cause I'm gonna put my nutsack on your drumset! Okay?";
Dale became equally furious: "If you do that - I am warning
you, right now! If you touch my drums, I will stab you in the neck
with a knife! If you even go in the room, I will go ape-s--t,
do you hear me?"; meanwhile Brennan was at the drum set where
he had whipped out his testicles and was rubbing them on the top
of a snare drum ("Don't wanna miss a spot. John Bonham's playing
'Moby Dick' for real!"); they both attacked each other and
got into a major brawl that destroyed the drums and part of the
house, as Dale yelled back:
"There's one rule in the house and you broke it...You f--king
f--ker! I'm gonna rub my balls on your mom's face"; the two
emerged onto the front lawn where they continued to wrestle as
Brennan taunted:
"Your drum set's a whore! I teabagged your f--kin' drum set!";
Dale quipped: "Well, my drum set's a guy, so that makes you
gay, you f--ker!"; the fight ended when they simultaneously
knocked each other out with a baseball bat and a golf club; Nancy
exclaimed: "What the f--kin' f--k?"
|
|
|
Stripes (1981)
- the enlistment scene in the Army's recruiting
office when quick-witted misfit recruit John Winger (Bill Murray)
and his buddy Russell Ziskey (Harold Ramis) were asked a series
of supposedly "standard" questions by the Recruiter (William Lucking):
- "Have you ever been convicted of a felony or a misdemeanor? That's
robbery, rape, car theft, that sort of" - John answered:
"Convicted?...No," and Russell said: "Never convicted"
-
"Now, are either of you homosexuals?";
John responded first: "You mean, like, flaming, or...", with Russell
adding: "No, we are not homosexual, but we are willing to learn"; John
noted: "Yeah, would they send us someplace special?" - a response
that caused some discomfort in the questioner; the two offered
their momentous autographs
|
|
|
Sullivan's
Travels (1941)
- writer/director Preston Sturges' brilliant satire
about movie-making, starring Joel McCrea as Hollywood
comedy director John L. Sullivan, who felt he must experience
first-hand what it was like to be poor and downtrodden before
making his next film
- butler Burrows' (Robert Greig) speech
to Sullivan about
poverty: ("Poverty
is not the lack of anything, but a positive plague, virulent
in itself, contagious as cholera, with filth, criminality, vice
and despair as only a few of its symptoms. It is to be stayed
away from, even for purposes of study. It is to be shunned")
- the classic chase scene of the studio's entourage
trailing Sullivan
- Sullivan's first meeting and pairing with The Girl
(Veronica Lake) in a diner
- The Girl dressed as a male hobo and their wanderings
as hoboes traveling across America to experience poverty for themselves:
("I don't know where I'm going, but I'm not coming back until I
know what trouble is")
- the scene of a presumed-dead and incarcerated Sullivan
in a prison farm watching a screening of a Pluto/Mickey Mouse cartoon
- and laughing along with his fellow, hardened Georgia chain-gang
prisoners
- Sullivan's inspired return to making film comedies:
("There's a lot to be said for making people laugh! Did you
know that's all some people have? It isn't much but it's better
than nothing in this cockeyed caravan! Boy!")
|
|
|
The Sunshine Boys (1975)
- a Neil Simon stage comedy adapted for the screen
- the two leads who had been together for 43 years:
aging vaudevillian Al Lewis (George Burns) and his grumpy comedy
act partner Willie Clark (Walter Matthau) ("73 year-old
putz") - who were now reunited after 11 years for a nostalgic
ABC-TV special variety show, and still despising each other
- the "Doctor Sketch" scene that instigated
the comedy team's long-standing feuding over a single line: ("What's
wrong with saying "enter" instead of "come in?")
- the character of the buxom Nurse in the Sketch
(Miss McIntosh) (Lee Meredith), who described her name: "Miss
McIntosh, you know, like the apple"; the Doctor (Willie)
responded while looking down at her bounteous cleavage: "I
forgot the name, but the apples I remember. Look in my appointment
book and see who's next"; and then when he leaned over her,
she cautioned: "Please doctor, you're standing too close" -
he replied: "With you, it's not possible"; and when
she coughed and complained of a chest cold, he quipped: "Looks
more like an epidemic to me"
|
|
|
Superbad (2007)
- a raunchy, low-budget teen comedy (from producer
Judd Apatow, and with a semi-autobiographical script written by
Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg when they were teens themselves), about
male teen anxieties and sexual obsessions, including
being genitalia-focused, vulgar and sex-crazed about getting laid
before leaving for college ("You know when you hear
girls saying, like: 'Ah, I was so s--tfaced last night, I shouldn't
have f--ked that guy?' We could be that mistake!")
- the main characters: two nerdy,
sex-obsessed, best-friend high-school seniors who were still awkwardly
growing-up: chubby Seth (Jonah Hill) and Evan (Michael Cera):
"Just imagine if girls weren't wierded out by our boners
and stuff, and just like wanted to see them. That's the world I
one day want to live in"; the two were interested in
female students: Jules (Emma Stone) and Becca (Martha MacIsaac)
- the scene of Seth and Evan speaking to Evan's mother
Jane (Stacy Edwards), who was leaning down and revealing her chest
to them through the car window, after which Seth noted to Evan: "I
am truly jealous you got to suck on those tits when you were a
baby"
- Seth had been obsessed with drawing pictures
of male genitalia ("Here it comes. When I was a little
kid, I kinda had this problem. And it's not even that big of a
deal. Something like 8 percent of kids do it, but whatever. For
some reason, I don't know why, I would just kinda sit around all
day and draw pictures of dicks"); Seth described, in flashback,
how as a young boy (Casey Margolis) in 4th grade, he hid his pictures
in his Ghostbusters lunchbox;
one day while finishing up one drawing, it was knocked on the floor
next to his young classmate Becca (Laura Marano): (Evan: "You
hit Becca's foot with your dick?"); she screamed and ran out
of the classroom; disciplined by the school, Seth recalled: "They
literally made me stop eating food that was shaped like dicks. No
hot dogs, no popsicles. Do you know how many foods are shaped like
dicks? The best kinds"
- the sequence of their quest to give up their virginity
to Becca and Jules,
by providing the booze at an underaged graduation party
- a third character was
their friend Fogell (Christopher Mintz-Plasse) who acquired a fake
ID (for Hawaii) to purchase alcohol, and explained why he changed
his name to "McLovin":
"It was between that or Muhammed.... Muhammed is the most
commonly used name on Earth"; Seth vehemently complained: "You
look like a future pedophile in this picture, number 1. Number
2: it doesn't even have a first name, it just says McLovin!...Fogell,
this ID says that you're 25 years old. Why wouldn't you just put
21, man?...No one's McLovin. McLovin's never existed because that's
a made up dumb F--KIN' FAIRY TALE NAME, YOU F--K!"
- the discussion between Seth and Evan about the breasts
of classmate Carey Hutchins, who reportedly had breast reduction
surgery, to Seth's amazement: "What?! Making her tits smaller?
That's like slapping God across the face for giving you a gorgeous
gift"; Evan explained: "She had back problems, man. And it's not
just making them smaller. They completely reshape them. They make
'em more supple and symmetrical... now that she can jog comfortably,
she's in the best shape she's ever..."
- Fogell spent much of the film
suffering the consequences of being involved in a store holdup
while illegally purchasing alcohol with his fake ID; he was punched
in the face by the robber, and soon joined up with a pair of humorous
but inept cops: Officer Slater (Bill Hader) and Officer Michaels
(Seth Rogen)
|
|
|
Swingers (1996)
- the many quotable lines ("You're so money
and you don't even know it!" - using money as an adjective
meaning 'to be indisputably correct' or 'utterly gorgeous')
- the lounge-hopping and pick-up efforts of five
party-animal, show business wannabes in the singles scene - both
in LA and Vegas
- the use of the Jaws theme
music to identify the predatory 'sharks' at a bar picking up
on women
- the discussion about their most favorite moments
in movies like GoodFellas (1990) and Reservoir
Dogs (1992)
- the in-jokes about how: "Everybody steals
from everybody, thats Hollywood"
- Trent Walker's (Vince Vaughn) advice on how to
pick up women: ("All I do is stare at their mouths and wrinkle
my nose, and I turn out to be a sweetheart")
- the excruciatingly funny, but agonizing strike-out
scene of aspiring, wanna-be NY stand-up comedian Mike Peter's
(screenwriter-actor Jon Favreau) repeated phone calls to new
LA acquaintance Nikki's (Brooke Langton) answering machine: ("This
is Nikki. Leave a message") whom he had just met in a bar,
when it cut him off as he left his phone number, and how he excused
himself for his repeated phone calls and messages by stating: "I
don't want you to think I was weird or desperate..." - and
her live retort to his calls: "Don't ever call me again";
the scene covered all the various emotions that come to play
in a male/female relationship
|
|