You're thinking of Wrigley Field.
You're thinking of Wrigley Field.
Yes! re William Holden. And you have to add his Oscar-nominated turn in Sunset Blvd. (1950) to his list of great movies.
Loved Joanna Cassidy as the snake-dancing replicant Zhora in Blade Runner (1982).
Mark it 8, Dude.
Um, that would be "McKinnie."
Oh, Margaret . . . we hardly knew ye.
How else can I find out who's buried in Grant's tomb?
If anyone's interested, YouTube has a ton of episodes from You Bet Your Life. I highly recommend taking a look. Also, What's My Line?.
Even Alex had to take a beat searching for an appropriate response to that boneheaded comment.
According to STATS, his 50 shots are the most taken by anyone in an NBA game in the last 30 seasons.
I know, it's hard to explain even to myself. His movies just seem too Hollywood-ish, too glossy maybe. Whenever I'm watching one I'm constantly aware that I'm watching a movie and unable to get lost, in a good way, in the story.
Anything by Spielberg (although I am able to watch Close Encounters).
I missed Malcolm X, too. My bad guess was Elijah Muhammad, who, it turns out, was very much in favor of racial separation. Not exactly MLK's message.
- Emmanuelle Seigner received an Introducing credit in an American film, in spite of being in a Godard film released three years earlier. Name the film with the Introducing credit.
The opening monologue for Late Night with Seth Meyers is always political and consistently good, imo. Check it out.
She was sexy opposite a randy Paul Newman in Hud (1963), as well.
Aside from this, I am sure you have many good qualities.
That would be One Night Big Belly, a superior title, imo. Others I liked were Vaseline for Grease (Argentina), and If You Leave Me I Delete You for Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (Italy). Fun category. Have they done it before? One of the funniest I've seen is He's a Ghost! for The Sixth Sense (China). So…
Go Green! (fellow Spartan alum here).
The "Shared Initials" fiasco bugged me, too. Paul deserved full credit for a correct response. And why Jeff was given $1200 back for a clearly incorrect response is a mystery. The judges screwed the pooch on this one. Also, how did they not anticipate that this category needed additional explanation at the outset?