Game #219 – Film Crew
Posted: Tue Jan 21, 2025 9:13 am
Game #219 – Film Crew
Identify the 90 movies below. (Every other clue is a quotation.) Then, match the movies into 11 pairs, 12 triples, 4 groups of four, 2 groups of five, and 1 group of six, according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. No movie will be used twice and no movie will be matched with itself. Alternate matches are possible, but only on solution will allow you to use each film once.
1. The iconic landmark featured in the most iconic scene of this iconic film – and I don’t use the word ‘iconic’ lightly – was only two years old when the film was released.
2. “And it's really starting to piss me off, Dave! She's my own little daughter, and I can't even cry for her!”
3. It took John Wayne 11 years to pay off the debt he incurred getting this movie made.
4. “What are you doing?”
“I'm tryin' to drive you to the store!”
5. The restoration of this British classic was spearheaded by Martin Scorsese – who owns a large connection of memorabilia associated with the film – and his longtime film editor ¬– who is the widow of its co-director.
6. “We all know most marriages depend on a firm grasp of football trivia.”
7. If you think you’d enjoy watching an assemblage of anti-alcohol crusaders get massacred, this western is surely the movie for you.
8. “I don't go to church. Kneeling bags my nylons.”
9. If you think that lovable old curmudgeon from Cocoon and In and Out couldn’t possibly be menacing, you haven’t seen this movie.
10. “Give yourself over to absolute pleasure. Swim the warm waters of sins of the flesh - erotic nightmares beyond any measure, and sensual daydreams to treasure forever. Can't you just see it? Don't dream it, be it.”
11. This 2004 movie was the fourth film in one franchise and the third film in another.
12. “Joanna! How could you do a thing like that? How could you do a thing like that? How could you do a thing like that? When I was just going to give you coffee. When I was just going to give you coffee! When I was just going to give you coffee! I thought we were friends! I thought we were friends! I was just going to give you coffee! I was just going to give you coffee! I thought we were friends. I thought we were friends. I thought we were friends. How could you do a thing like that? I thought we were friends.”
13. The sequence cut from this film – reportedly at the direct request of President Richard Nixon – has since been restored.
14. “I'm da boss, I'm da boss, I'm da boss, I'm da boss, I'm da boss... I'm da boss, I'm da boss, I'm da boss, I'm da boss, I'm da boss, I'm da boss.”
15. This was the first MGM film to deal with Nazi persecution of the Jews, although the word ‘Jew’ is never used in the film.
16. “Hi, I can't get off the couch. I got fired from my job, I got kicked out of my apartment, I can't pay any of my bills, my car is a piece of sh*t, I don't have any friends....”
“You know what I find interesting about that, Annie? It's interesting to me that you have absolutely no friends. Do you know why that's interesting? Here's a friend standing directly in front of you, trying to talk to you, and you choose to talk about having no friends.”
17. A table at Katz’s Deli in New York now has a plaque commemorating the famous scene from this movie that was shot there.
18. “Don't you ever talk that way to me! 'Pig,' 'Pollack,' 'disgusting,' 'vulgar,' 'greasy!' Those kind of words have been on your tongue and your sister's tongue just too much around here! What do you think you are? A pair of queens? Now just remember what Huey Long said - that every man's a king - and I'm the King around here, and don't you forget it!”
19. This film marks the intersection of the careers of the composer who wrote ‘Eine Kleine Nachtmusik’ and the director whose work inspired A Little Night Music. Got that?
20. “Listen, Alpha. Some men will come here, men who are not good. Pha and B must go.”
“Pha stays with Pa.”
“No. Pha and B go now.”
“Pa not love Pha.”
“Yes. Pa loves Pha, and B. Ma loves Pha and B.”
“Pha loves Ma.”
”Everybody loves everybody! Now for Christ's sake, let's get the hell out of here!”
21. Kirk Douglas said that this modern western was his favorite of all his films.
22. “You make it with some of these chicks, they think you gotta dance with them.”
23. Despite critical acclaim and ten Oscar nominations, this epic set during the Napoleonic Wars was a lackluster performer at the box office, thus ending plans for a proposed franchise.
24. “You can relax for now. I'm not going to murder you in front of your child, okay?”
25. This 8-minute silent film, shot with a Bell and Howell home movie camera, is one of the films selected for preservation by the Library of Congress as being “"culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" – with the emphasis on the middle term.
26. “What's the matter, old timer? Don't you remember this song?”
“Seems to me I do.”
“Well, I don't hear anything.”
27. The eponymous hero of this 1961 biopic founded the first halfway house for men released from prison.
28. “Walter, don't you think we might be better off downstairs in the basement?”
“India, now look here, for 20 years I've been telling you when something will happen and when it will not happen. Now, have I ever, on any significant occasion been proved wrong?”
29. A theatrical prequel to a television series, it was originally intended as the first film in a trilogy, but it bombed at the box office.
30. “They have wings but cannot fly. They're birds that think they're fish. And every year, they embark on a nearly impossible journey to find a mate.”
31. Reviewing this film, Roger Ebert wrote, “ "I was so appalled, watching this kid hurtling down the hill in his pathetic contraption, that I didn't know which ending would be worse. If he fell to his death, that would be unthinkable, but if he soared up to the moon, it would be unforgivable—because you can't escape from child abuse in little red wagons."
32. “That's for if things get really hardcore. Or if you wanna blow up moons.”
“No one's blowing up moons.”
“You just wanna suck the joy out of everything.”
33. This film about a fictional conspiracy at the highest levels of government was the last film made by a director best known for a film about a real-life conspiracy at the highest levels of government.
34. “It's not easy for me to admit that I've been standing in the same place for eighteen years!”
“Well, I've been standing with you! I gave eighteen years of my life to stand in the same spot as you!”
35. This soaper features Margaret Sullavan in a role that had earlier been played by Irene Dunne and would later be played by Susan Hayward.
36. “Do you wanna know what the theatre is? A flea circus. Also opera. Also rodeos, carnivals, ballets, Indian tribal dances, Punch and Judy, a one-man band, all theatre. Wherever there's magic and make-believe and an audience, there's theatre. Donald Duck, Ibsen and The Lone Ranger. Sarah Bernhardt and Poodles Hanneford. Lunt and Fontanne, Betty Grable. Rex the Wild Horse, Eleonora Duse, all theatre. You don't understand them all. You don't like them all. Why should you? The theatre's for everybody, you included, but not exclusively. So, don't approve or disapprove. It may not be your theatre, but it's theatre for somebody, somewhere.”
37. The real-life inspiration for the eponymous character of this horror comedy is currently on display at the Fun Mall in Lexington, Kentucky.
38. “Wait a minute, wait a minute, you ain't heard nothin' yet!”
39. The cast of this film includes actors who would later win Oscars for playing a real-life British novelist, a real-life American novelist, a real-life American singer/actress, and a real-life American physicist.
40. “Would you do me a favor, Harry?”
“What?”
“Drop dead!”
41. One of the Big Three films that ushered in the Golden Age of Porn, its plot was inspired by Jean-Paul Sartre’s existential play No Exit. Really. I’m not kidding.
42. “We have a legend. Anyone who dares to jump from the mountain, God will grant his wish. Long ago, a young man's parents were ill, so he jumped. He didn't die. He wasn't even hurt. He floated away, far away, never to return. He knew his wish had come true. If you believe, it will happen.”
43. After this film wrapped, Elizabeth Taylor was given a very special birthday gift – one of her co-stars.
44. “I don't want to sell anything, buy anything, or process anything as a career. I don't want to sell anything bought or processed, or buy anything sold or processed, or process anything sold, bought, or processed, or repair anything sold, bought, or processed. You know, as a career, I don't want to do that.”
45. The most famous sequence in this musical was accomplished by placing an entire room inside a rotating drum.
46. “Made it, Ma! Top of the world!”
47. The fifth film of Roger Corman’s “Poe cycle,” it probably had less relation to its source material than any of the others.
48. “I know I-ty food when I hear it! It's all them ‘eenie’ foods ... zucchini ... and linguine ... and fettuccine. I want some American food, dammit! I want French Fries!”
49. The large ensemble cast of this 1975 movie includes the son of one great comedian, the daughter of an even greater comedian, and the son of one of the most prolific character actors in Hollywood history.
50. “Hey, neighbor! You sh*t-for-brains, man! You forgot I have a police radio! One well-dressed f**kin' man knows where your f**kin' cute little butt's hidin'! Stupid f**k! F**k with me, man! Here I come, ready or not! You f**k! I can hear your f**kin' radio, you stupid sh*t! You got about one f**kin' second to live, buddy! You're one sorry piece of sh*t, mister. Hey, pretty, pretty! What the f**k? Where are you? Where are you?”
51. This movie was based on a book subtitled “A True Story of Friendship and Espionage.”
52. “The curse of Odin waits on him who kills the slave.”
“Then no man shall kill him. Let the tide of the sea do it. Bind him! Cast him into the slop pool at low tide. Take him out.”
“You'll not kill him, but you throw him into the slop pool to be drowned and eaten by crabs!”
“Then let the crabs be cursed by Odin! That's my decision.”
53. The breakout characters from this comedy were a cop and a cat.
54. “Don't ever try to judge me dude!/You don't know what the f**k I've been through!/But I know something about you/You went to Cranbrook - that's a private school/What's the matter, dog? You're embarrassed?/This guy's a gangster? His real name is Clarence!/Now Clarence lives at home with both parents/And Clarence parents have a real good marriage.”
55. Roy Scheider stated that the Devil himself couldn’t have persuaded him to appear in this movie sequel, while Dennis Quaid claimed that he was high on cocaine in every single frame of the movie.
56. “I like the way I look. Makes me feel good, it does. And women like me, goddammit. Hell, the only one thing I ever been good for is lovin'. Women go crazy for me, that's a really true fact!”
57. One of the most gripping moments of this documentary shows its famed director visibly shaken as he listens to the death screams of the man who was the film’s subject.
58. “We're just supposed to walk out of there with $150,000,000 in cash on us, without getting stopped?”
“Yeah.”
“Oh. Okay.”
59. This 1973 film marked the first Oscar nomination of its female lead, whose three subsequent nominations were all for films written by her famous husband.
60. “What'd I do?”
“You killed the car.”
61. The siege scenes in this 1968 movie were shot at Austria’s Hohenwerfen Castle.
62. “Me? I'm dishonest, and a dishonest man you can always trust to be dishonest. Honestly. It's the honest ones you want to watch out for, because you can never predict when they're going to do something incredibly ... stupid.”
63. Peter Bogdanovich submitted a bowdlerized script to the government of Singapore in order to get permission to make this movie there – a smart move, since once Singaporean officials saw the completed film, they promptly banned it.
64. “A single mom who's working two jobs and still finds time to take her kid to soccer practice, that's a miracle. A teenager who says ‘no’ to drugs and ‘yes’ to an education, that's a miracle. People want me to do everything for them. But what they don't realize is they have the power. You want to see a miracle, son? Be the miracle.”
65. The title character of this musical was later played by Kathy Bates in a very different kind of movie.
66. “A knife! He's got a knife!”
“Of course he has a knife, he always has a knife, we all have knives! It's 1183 and we're barbarians!”
67. This move marked the only feature film appearance of its leading man, who was reportedly so arrogant that cast and crew referred to him as “that masked as*hole.”
68. “When I go home people'll ask me, ‘Hey Hoot, why do you do it man? What, you some kinda war junkie?’ You know what I'll say? I won't say a goddamn word. Why? They won't understand. They won't understand why we do it. They won't understand that it's about the men next to you, and that's it. That's all it is.”
69. For 83 years, this war film had the distinction of being the only movie of its kind to win the Oscar for Best Picture.
70. “Whatever I am, he made me! I was adorable once, young and full of hope. And now look at me! I'm this short, fat, insecure, middle-aged thing!”
“I made you short?”
71. Both the male and female stars of this movie received Oscar nominations – a distinction also shared by two of its remakes.
72. “Purple in the morning, blue in the afternoon, orange in the evening. There's my three meals, Mr. Smartypants. And green at night. Just like that. One, two, three, four.”
73. This movie featured an actor who had previously played an ancient Israelite judge and an Old West gunslinger as a famous Sioux warrior.
74. “Well, gentlemen, we have ways to make men talk.”
75. This movie featured Jason Robards in a role that would later be played by Leonardo Di Caprio.
76. “Tell mama. Tell mama all.”
77. Based on the life of Francis Spellman, this movie marked the final film appearance of Lillian’s sister and earned Walter’s son his only Oscar nomination for acting.
78. “All right people, we got 10 minutes 'till game time, let's all gather 'round. I'm not much for giving inspirational addresses, but I'd just like to point out that every newspaper in the country has picked us to finish last. The local press seems to think that we'd save everyone the time and trouble if we just went out and shot ourselves. Me, I'm for wasting sportswriters' time. So I figured we ought to hang around for a while and see if we can give 'em all a nice big sh*tburger to eat!”
79. This account of a thousand-mile journey across Papua New Guinea won an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.
80. “I thought you were good Paul ... but you're not good. You're just another lying ol' dirty birdy.”
81. This Luis Buñuel film takes place largely in one room – which is kind of the point.
82. “My question is, how did she come to have sex with a dead man?”
“”She thought it was me.”
83. This was the first collaboration between the most popular comedy duo and the most popular singing trio of the 1940s.
84. “You shoulda shot that fella a long time ago. Now he's too rich to kill.”
85. This film marks the intersection of the filmography of Norman Jewison and the discography of Bob Dylan.
86. “The poor dope - he always wanted a pool. Well, in the end, he got himself a pool.”
87. This western completes a list that also includes Winchester ’73, Bend of the River, The Far Country, and The Man from Laramie.
88. “Unguent. I need unguent.”
89. This movie has been variously described as a “whiz-bang slamarama,” a Jewish revenge fantasy, an endorsement of colonialism, and "the worst thing to happen to archaeology."
90. “And remember, my sentimental friend, that a heart is not judged by how much you love, but by how much you are loved by others.”
Identify the 90 movies below. (Every other clue is a quotation.) Then, match the movies into 11 pairs, 12 triples, 4 groups of four, 2 groups of five, and 1 group of six, according to a Tangredi, or principle you must discover for yourself. No movie will be used twice and no movie will be matched with itself. Alternate matches are possible, but only on solution will allow you to use each film once.
1. The iconic landmark featured in the most iconic scene of this iconic film – and I don’t use the word ‘iconic’ lightly – was only two years old when the film was released.
2. “And it's really starting to piss me off, Dave! She's my own little daughter, and I can't even cry for her!”
3. It took John Wayne 11 years to pay off the debt he incurred getting this movie made.
4. “What are you doing?”
“I'm tryin' to drive you to the store!”
5. The restoration of this British classic was spearheaded by Martin Scorsese – who owns a large connection of memorabilia associated with the film – and his longtime film editor ¬– who is the widow of its co-director.
6. “We all know most marriages depend on a firm grasp of football trivia.”
7. If you think you’d enjoy watching an assemblage of anti-alcohol crusaders get massacred, this western is surely the movie for you.
8. “I don't go to church. Kneeling bags my nylons.”
9. If you think that lovable old curmudgeon from Cocoon and In and Out couldn’t possibly be menacing, you haven’t seen this movie.
10. “Give yourself over to absolute pleasure. Swim the warm waters of sins of the flesh - erotic nightmares beyond any measure, and sensual daydreams to treasure forever. Can't you just see it? Don't dream it, be it.”
11. This 2004 movie was the fourth film in one franchise and the third film in another.
12. “Joanna! How could you do a thing like that? How could you do a thing like that? How could you do a thing like that? When I was just going to give you coffee. When I was just going to give you coffee! When I was just going to give you coffee! I thought we were friends! I thought we were friends! I was just going to give you coffee! I was just going to give you coffee! I thought we were friends. I thought we were friends. I thought we were friends. How could you do a thing like that? I thought we were friends.”
13. The sequence cut from this film – reportedly at the direct request of President Richard Nixon – has since been restored.
14. “I'm da boss, I'm da boss, I'm da boss, I'm da boss, I'm da boss... I'm da boss, I'm da boss, I'm da boss, I'm da boss, I'm da boss, I'm da boss.”
15. This was the first MGM film to deal with Nazi persecution of the Jews, although the word ‘Jew’ is never used in the film.
16. “Hi, I can't get off the couch. I got fired from my job, I got kicked out of my apartment, I can't pay any of my bills, my car is a piece of sh*t, I don't have any friends....”
“You know what I find interesting about that, Annie? It's interesting to me that you have absolutely no friends. Do you know why that's interesting? Here's a friend standing directly in front of you, trying to talk to you, and you choose to talk about having no friends.”
17. A table at Katz’s Deli in New York now has a plaque commemorating the famous scene from this movie that was shot there.
18. “Don't you ever talk that way to me! 'Pig,' 'Pollack,' 'disgusting,' 'vulgar,' 'greasy!' Those kind of words have been on your tongue and your sister's tongue just too much around here! What do you think you are? A pair of queens? Now just remember what Huey Long said - that every man's a king - and I'm the King around here, and don't you forget it!”
19. This film marks the intersection of the careers of the composer who wrote ‘Eine Kleine Nachtmusik’ and the director whose work inspired A Little Night Music. Got that?
20. “Listen, Alpha. Some men will come here, men who are not good. Pha and B must go.”
“Pha stays with Pa.”
“No. Pha and B go now.”
“Pa not love Pha.”
“Yes. Pa loves Pha, and B. Ma loves Pha and B.”
“Pha loves Ma.”
”Everybody loves everybody! Now for Christ's sake, let's get the hell out of here!”
21. Kirk Douglas said that this modern western was his favorite of all his films.
22. “You make it with some of these chicks, they think you gotta dance with them.”
23. Despite critical acclaim and ten Oscar nominations, this epic set during the Napoleonic Wars was a lackluster performer at the box office, thus ending plans for a proposed franchise.
24. “You can relax for now. I'm not going to murder you in front of your child, okay?”
25. This 8-minute silent film, shot with a Bell and Howell home movie camera, is one of the films selected for preservation by the Library of Congress as being “"culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" – with the emphasis on the middle term.
26. “What's the matter, old timer? Don't you remember this song?”
“Seems to me I do.”
“Well, I don't hear anything.”
27. The eponymous hero of this 1961 biopic founded the first halfway house for men released from prison.
28. “Walter, don't you think we might be better off downstairs in the basement?”
“India, now look here, for 20 years I've been telling you when something will happen and when it will not happen. Now, have I ever, on any significant occasion been proved wrong?”
29. A theatrical prequel to a television series, it was originally intended as the first film in a trilogy, but it bombed at the box office.
30. “They have wings but cannot fly. They're birds that think they're fish. And every year, they embark on a nearly impossible journey to find a mate.”
31. Reviewing this film, Roger Ebert wrote, “ "I was so appalled, watching this kid hurtling down the hill in his pathetic contraption, that I didn't know which ending would be worse. If he fell to his death, that would be unthinkable, but if he soared up to the moon, it would be unforgivable—because you can't escape from child abuse in little red wagons."
32. “That's for if things get really hardcore. Or if you wanna blow up moons.”
“No one's blowing up moons.”
“You just wanna suck the joy out of everything.”
33. This film about a fictional conspiracy at the highest levels of government was the last film made by a director best known for a film about a real-life conspiracy at the highest levels of government.
34. “It's not easy for me to admit that I've been standing in the same place for eighteen years!”
“Well, I've been standing with you! I gave eighteen years of my life to stand in the same spot as you!”
35. This soaper features Margaret Sullavan in a role that had earlier been played by Irene Dunne and would later be played by Susan Hayward.
36. “Do you wanna know what the theatre is? A flea circus. Also opera. Also rodeos, carnivals, ballets, Indian tribal dances, Punch and Judy, a one-man band, all theatre. Wherever there's magic and make-believe and an audience, there's theatre. Donald Duck, Ibsen and The Lone Ranger. Sarah Bernhardt and Poodles Hanneford. Lunt and Fontanne, Betty Grable. Rex the Wild Horse, Eleonora Duse, all theatre. You don't understand them all. You don't like them all. Why should you? The theatre's for everybody, you included, but not exclusively. So, don't approve or disapprove. It may not be your theatre, but it's theatre for somebody, somewhere.”
37. The real-life inspiration for the eponymous character of this horror comedy is currently on display at the Fun Mall in Lexington, Kentucky.
38. “Wait a minute, wait a minute, you ain't heard nothin' yet!”
39. The cast of this film includes actors who would later win Oscars for playing a real-life British novelist, a real-life American novelist, a real-life American singer/actress, and a real-life American physicist.
40. “Would you do me a favor, Harry?”
“What?”
“Drop dead!”
41. One of the Big Three films that ushered in the Golden Age of Porn, its plot was inspired by Jean-Paul Sartre’s existential play No Exit. Really. I’m not kidding.
42. “We have a legend. Anyone who dares to jump from the mountain, God will grant his wish. Long ago, a young man's parents were ill, so he jumped. He didn't die. He wasn't even hurt. He floated away, far away, never to return. He knew his wish had come true. If you believe, it will happen.”
43. After this film wrapped, Elizabeth Taylor was given a very special birthday gift – one of her co-stars.
44. “I don't want to sell anything, buy anything, or process anything as a career. I don't want to sell anything bought or processed, or buy anything sold or processed, or process anything sold, bought, or processed, or repair anything sold, bought, or processed. You know, as a career, I don't want to do that.”
45. The most famous sequence in this musical was accomplished by placing an entire room inside a rotating drum.
46. “Made it, Ma! Top of the world!”
47. The fifth film of Roger Corman’s “Poe cycle,” it probably had less relation to its source material than any of the others.
48. “I know I-ty food when I hear it! It's all them ‘eenie’ foods ... zucchini ... and linguine ... and fettuccine. I want some American food, dammit! I want French Fries!”
49. The large ensemble cast of this 1975 movie includes the son of one great comedian, the daughter of an even greater comedian, and the son of one of the most prolific character actors in Hollywood history.
50. “Hey, neighbor! You sh*t-for-brains, man! You forgot I have a police radio! One well-dressed f**kin' man knows where your f**kin' cute little butt's hidin'! Stupid f**k! F**k with me, man! Here I come, ready or not! You f**k! I can hear your f**kin' radio, you stupid sh*t! You got about one f**kin' second to live, buddy! You're one sorry piece of sh*t, mister. Hey, pretty, pretty! What the f**k? Where are you? Where are you?”
51. This movie was based on a book subtitled “A True Story of Friendship and Espionage.”
52. “The curse of Odin waits on him who kills the slave.”
“Then no man shall kill him. Let the tide of the sea do it. Bind him! Cast him into the slop pool at low tide. Take him out.”
“You'll not kill him, but you throw him into the slop pool to be drowned and eaten by crabs!”
“Then let the crabs be cursed by Odin! That's my decision.”
53. The breakout characters from this comedy were a cop and a cat.
54. “Don't ever try to judge me dude!/You don't know what the f**k I've been through!/But I know something about you/You went to Cranbrook - that's a private school/What's the matter, dog? You're embarrassed?/This guy's a gangster? His real name is Clarence!/Now Clarence lives at home with both parents/And Clarence parents have a real good marriage.”
55. Roy Scheider stated that the Devil himself couldn’t have persuaded him to appear in this movie sequel, while Dennis Quaid claimed that he was high on cocaine in every single frame of the movie.
56. “I like the way I look. Makes me feel good, it does. And women like me, goddammit. Hell, the only one thing I ever been good for is lovin'. Women go crazy for me, that's a really true fact!”
57. One of the most gripping moments of this documentary shows its famed director visibly shaken as he listens to the death screams of the man who was the film’s subject.
58. “We're just supposed to walk out of there with $150,000,000 in cash on us, without getting stopped?”
“Yeah.”
“Oh. Okay.”
59. This 1973 film marked the first Oscar nomination of its female lead, whose three subsequent nominations were all for films written by her famous husband.
60. “What'd I do?”
“You killed the car.”
61. The siege scenes in this 1968 movie were shot at Austria’s Hohenwerfen Castle.
62. “Me? I'm dishonest, and a dishonest man you can always trust to be dishonest. Honestly. It's the honest ones you want to watch out for, because you can never predict when they're going to do something incredibly ... stupid.”
63. Peter Bogdanovich submitted a bowdlerized script to the government of Singapore in order to get permission to make this movie there – a smart move, since once Singaporean officials saw the completed film, they promptly banned it.
64. “A single mom who's working two jobs and still finds time to take her kid to soccer practice, that's a miracle. A teenager who says ‘no’ to drugs and ‘yes’ to an education, that's a miracle. People want me to do everything for them. But what they don't realize is they have the power. You want to see a miracle, son? Be the miracle.”
65. The title character of this musical was later played by Kathy Bates in a very different kind of movie.
66. “A knife! He's got a knife!”
“Of course he has a knife, he always has a knife, we all have knives! It's 1183 and we're barbarians!”
67. This move marked the only feature film appearance of its leading man, who was reportedly so arrogant that cast and crew referred to him as “that masked as*hole.”
68. “When I go home people'll ask me, ‘Hey Hoot, why do you do it man? What, you some kinda war junkie?’ You know what I'll say? I won't say a goddamn word. Why? They won't understand. They won't understand why we do it. They won't understand that it's about the men next to you, and that's it. That's all it is.”
69. For 83 years, this war film had the distinction of being the only movie of its kind to win the Oscar for Best Picture.
70. “Whatever I am, he made me! I was adorable once, young and full of hope. And now look at me! I'm this short, fat, insecure, middle-aged thing!”
“I made you short?”
71. Both the male and female stars of this movie received Oscar nominations – a distinction also shared by two of its remakes.
72. “Purple in the morning, blue in the afternoon, orange in the evening. There's my three meals, Mr. Smartypants. And green at night. Just like that. One, two, three, four.”
73. This movie featured an actor who had previously played an ancient Israelite judge and an Old West gunslinger as a famous Sioux warrior.
74. “Well, gentlemen, we have ways to make men talk.”
75. This movie featured Jason Robards in a role that would later be played by Leonardo Di Caprio.
76. “Tell mama. Tell mama all.”
77. Based on the life of Francis Spellman, this movie marked the final film appearance of Lillian’s sister and earned Walter’s son his only Oscar nomination for acting.
78. “All right people, we got 10 minutes 'till game time, let's all gather 'round. I'm not much for giving inspirational addresses, but I'd just like to point out that every newspaper in the country has picked us to finish last. The local press seems to think that we'd save everyone the time and trouble if we just went out and shot ourselves. Me, I'm for wasting sportswriters' time. So I figured we ought to hang around for a while and see if we can give 'em all a nice big sh*tburger to eat!”
79. This account of a thousand-mile journey across Papua New Guinea won an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.
80. “I thought you were good Paul ... but you're not good. You're just another lying ol' dirty birdy.”
81. This Luis Buñuel film takes place largely in one room – which is kind of the point.
82. “My question is, how did she come to have sex with a dead man?”
“”She thought it was me.”
83. This was the first collaboration between the most popular comedy duo and the most popular singing trio of the 1940s.
84. “You shoulda shot that fella a long time ago. Now he's too rich to kill.”
85. This film marks the intersection of the filmography of Norman Jewison and the discography of Bob Dylan.
86. “The poor dope - he always wanted a pool. Well, in the end, he got himself a pool.”
87. This western completes a list that also includes Winchester ’73, Bend of the River, The Far Country, and The Man from Laramie.
88. “Unguent. I need unguent.”
89. This movie has been variously described as a “whiz-bang slamarama,” a Jewish revenge fantasy, an endorsement of colonialism, and "the worst thing to happen to archaeology."
90. “And remember, my sentimental friend, that a heart is not judged by how much you love, but by how much you are loved by others.”