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Well, they may not be fully happy-go-lucky, but they're not depressing in the same way that the original poster was complaining about social issues documentaries were and the feeling I got coming out of those was a little bit more different than a numbed feeling of depression.

I've been told that you've been bold with Mike, Tom and Crow.

There's a podcast called Surprisingly Awesome which went into Tubthumping and Chumbawumba. From there, it sounds like they meant Tubthumping less as a joke and more of an expression of solidarity for the working class and how they were going to get up and keep on going.

When my teammate though of The Red Violin, he seemed sure enough that I didn't think to try and think of any alternatives. Whether I would've thought of Deep Blue Sea eventually is hard to say. But yeah, definitely one of his most memorable moments, both for that year and beyond.

If you're interested in some really good, non-depressing documentaries, give these titles a shot: 12 O'Clock Boys, Project Nim, Tabloid, and The Imposter.

I wish questions had been asked about those. Honestly, not only do we need you to come to trivia one of these days, we need to sign you up to do a guest round, as I think you'd come up with one that'd be fun and super hard at the same time based on your particular film base.

Great, great job. Our quizmasters didn't have The Red Violin initially, as IMDB lists it as a 1998 film due to both premiering at TIFF that year and opening in Canda. However, it's U.S. release wasn't until the summer of 1999 and, when it was pointed out by my teammate, they gave us credit for it. Also, phenomenal job

Great job, as you got two that my team botched entirely. The first was one that was killing two of my teammates, as they could pinpoint it to Alec Baldwin who said the monologue but not what film or that it was Sorkin. And we thought Michael Clayton was an Elmore Leonard adaption and went with Out Of Sight due to the

Do it! We thought of it after Prince passed away, but I didn't want to change our team names for the season, as I genuinely liked what we had. But, even without tying into Prince's death, it's such an amazing name.

While Jennifer Lawrence is a really good guess, it's not the actual answer. Rules Of Engagement was 2000. As mentioned elsewhere, Goldblum and Davis were actually in three; the two you were likely thinking of, plus Transylvania 6-5000. Cher was in a more recent film than Tea With Mussolini (the year before Zookeeper,

There is never enough Goldblum. But also, the way Movie Trivia works is that, each night, there's a set of four themed questions called Super Chunks that you wager 3, 5, 7, or 10 points based on your level of confidence (you don't lose points if you're wrong, only if you're right, and you can only use each point value

That is very accurate.

Interesting. I never really think of Yoda when writing like that. I just think that it's a more emphatic way of writing what I'm thinking.

Right you are!

It may be a single question, but it is a correct single question. Is the Uninvited worth watching at all, or just the original?

That sounds like the very first film you need to seek out.

Got them all. Good job on All About Eve. That totally stumped my team and we went with My Dinner With Andre. And it seemed like quite a few teams couldn't place that one.

I know, I know. I take down what I'm given and what's easy to transcribe. But yeah, that was particularly easy, given that it came up not too long ago.

You are correct on Cover Girl. Didn't know that about Phil Silvers. That sounds like a really fun cast right there.

Now, here's my teammate's guest round. Here are transcriptions or partial transcriptions of speeches. Name the film where they came from. Two questions have bonuses.
-"The Theatuh, the Theatuh- what book of rules says the Theater exists only within some ugly building crowded into one square mile of New York City? Or