That's right on the money!
That's right on the money!
Groovy!
Correct on both. Jerry Maguire is the earlier of the two possible answers for Shelter From The Storm, both of which my team and I couldn't figure out, so we just guessed I'm Not There.
Correct on everything. Good job on knowing that Aniston and Bateman were in The Break-Up together (the only male I remember from there was Vince Vaughn) and also good job on remembering This Is Where I Leave You, which my team and I totally forgot about.
I have not, but I figured it had to be that, as Anne Rice would totally write a book about S&M.
Just as I thought, you would indeed get two of the ones we struggled with. You're of course right about City Of Ember, which I had never heard of, and your hunch was right about Stay, which killed my teammate who's a big, big Bob Hoskins fan yet couldn't think of any film with the three of them. I vaguely remember the…
Correct on both. Very good job.
Correct on just about all. Less Than Zero was not recognized by the Academy. And Polanski has a film coming out next year, but the last release one was Venus In Fur.
Correct on all of them. Great job!
Oh, if I ever made it to Jeopardy, I'd be sure to mention how I've organized very successful Movie Trivia teams and we get the ultimate prize: free drinks and a reserved Winner's Booth.
Another fine night of Movie Trivia. As always, my film group made two teams, last week's winners The Beer Hunters: Out Of The Pabst and my team Don't Hate Robert Altman's The Player, Hate David Fincher's The Game. We got an extra jolt of energy from picking who our Secret Santas would be for later in the month. But…
Honestly, that last sentence makes the fact that I'm seeing a Wednesday free screening of this worth it. That, plus the nice 88 minute running time.
It seems like it's primarily BH Tilt, Blumhouses's distribution company, that's handling the main distribution of the film, as it's always listed first and the poster shows no indication that Universal is behind it. My guess is that Universal would only be involved with the DVD/Blu-Ray when it inevitably leaves…
Well, in this case, it's more like the studio is too small to promote.
It becomes even more obvious in the film with Jai Courtney in the post apocalyptic version seeming just a bit off enough that you start to suspect that he might not be real in this reality. Which, yup, that's what happens.
It's not awful, just very, very cliched.
I spoiled it now so you don't have to.
I'll spoil it here since I was at the same screening as Matthew. The whole post apocalyptic future is actually a PTSD induced perspective that Shia's character has and, when he thinks he's trying to save his kid, he's actually abducting him from his wife's home.
It's not strictly speaking a third act, since the film jumps so much back and forth between timelines in a really confusing way.