Famous Movies You've Never Seen
- avonleastories95
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Bump!
Movies I Haven't Seen (oh, UmberellaFish is going to stone me to death for this post!):
Gone With The Wind
Casablanca
The Godfather
The Star Wars Trilogy (what kind of replies will I get for this?)
The King and I
My Friend Filcka
Any Barbara Striessand Movie
The Clockwork Orange
The Goodfellas
Pulp Fiction
The Original National Lampoon's Vacation
Movies I Haven't Seen (oh, UmberellaFish is going to stone me to death for this post!):
Gone With The Wind
Casablanca
The Godfather
The Star Wars Trilogy (what kind of replies will I get for this?)
The King and I
My Friend Filcka
Any Barbara Striessand Movie
The Clockwork Orange
The Goodfellas
Pulp Fiction
The Original National Lampoon's Vacation
I'm surprised at how many members haven't seen any of the Godfather-films (and some have never seen a Hitchcock film). I think it says a lot about the general taste on UD. The Godfather doesn't go well with the whole Disney/Hannah Montana/Jonas/High School Musical cycle of films, and it doesn't mix well with light-hearted comedies and musicals.
It's 3 hours of intense drama, heavy and shocking action scenes, violent deaths, family matters, beautiful long scenes where its all about the atmosphere, a lot of deep conversation ("it's too talky") and above all it's 3 hours of enjoying the best actors of all time giving their very best.
@ Lazario: I'm very surprised you haven't seen so many films that I thought you would've. From what I gather from your kind of humor, interests and personality on UD, I think you would *really* like the following movies:
@ Escapay: I can't say how much I agree on that 'review' you wrote of The Last Crusade (Indy). I hope you've been catching up on those movies the past two years. There's some movies on your list you should *really* have seen at least once in your life. (But that goes for a *lot* of people's lists in this thread.)
'Famous' movies I've never seen:
- any of the 'Lord of the Rings' movies
- any 'Star Wars' except the original 1977 film, which I thought was ridiculous
- most of the Coen Brothers' films, since I find them boring (*gasp*!)
- Nolan's The Dark Knight (not yet; planning on seeing it!)
- There will be blood
- Avatar
- The curious case of Benjamin Button
- West Side Story
- Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
- Who's afraid of Virginia Woolf
- Fellini's 8 1/2
- Ford's Stagecoach
- Murnau's Nosferatu
- Zinneman's From here to eternity, with Frank Sinatra
- the original Manchurian Candidate (though I have it on dvd now)
It's 3 hours of intense drama, heavy and shocking action scenes, violent deaths, family matters, beautiful long scenes where its all about the atmosphere, a lot of deep conversation ("it's too talky") and above all it's 3 hours of enjoying the best actors of all time giving their very best.
@ Lazario: I'm very surprised you haven't seen so many films that I thought you would've. From what I gather from your kind of humor, interests and personality on UD, I think you would *really* like the following movies:
And besides those, there are a *lot* of titles on that list that somebody with your intellect would definitly appreciate.07. 8.8 12 Angry Men (1957)
19. 8.7 Fight Club (1999)
22. 8.7 The Usual Suspects (1995)
36. 8.6 Léon (1994)
68. 8.4 Requiem for a Dream (2000)
79. 8.4 Modern Times (1936)
85. 8.3 The Apartment (1960)
92. 8.3 The Great Dictator (1940)
133. 8.2 It Happened One Night (1934)
146. 8.2 Platoon (1986)
156. 8.1 Life of Brian (1979)
162. 8.1 Stand by Me (1986)
168. 8.1 Dog Day Afternoon (1975)
201. 8.0 Anatomy of a Murder (1959)
214. 8.0 His Girl Friday (1940)
@ Escapay: I can't say how much I agree on that 'review' you wrote of The Last Crusade (Indy). I hope you've been catching up on those movies the past two years. There's some movies on your list you should *really* have seen at least once in your life. (But that goes for a *lot* of people's lists in this thread.)
'Famous' movies I've never seen:
- any of the 'Lord of the Rings' movies
- any 'Star Wars' except the original 1977 film, which I thought was ridiculous
- most of the Coen Brothers' films, since I find them boring (*gasp*!)
- Nolan's The Dark Knight (not yet; planning on seeing it!)
- There will be blood
- Avatar
- The curious case of Benjamin Button
- West Side Story
- Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
- Who's afraid of Virginia Woolf
- Fellini's 8 1/2
- Ford's Stagecoach
- Murnau's Nosferatu
- Zinneman's From here to eternity, with Frank Sinatra
- the original Manchurian Candidate (though I have it on dvd now)
- Flanger-Hanger
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Since that post years ago I've seen all but the first 3, most by the end of 2008.Flanger-Hanger wrote:I've yet to see:
Pulp Fiction
Goodfellas
Mrs. Doubtfire
Alien (all of it)
Close Encounters of the Third Kind
Psycho
The Birds
North by Northwest
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
Any Harry Potter film after the 4th one (don't care to see the rest)
2nd and 3rd Indiana Jones films
Jaws (all of it)
Last edited by Flanger-Hanger on Fri Sep 03, 2010 7:16 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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I've seen all these and I think you'll like them (with the exception of Star Wars) as most everyone does for good reason.Goliath wrote:'Famous' movies I've never seen:
- any of the 'Lord of the Rings' movies
- any 'Star Wars' except the original 1977 film, which I thought was ridiculous
- Nolan's The Dark Knight (not yet; planning on seeing it!)
- West Side Story
- Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
- Who's afraid of Virginia Woolf
- Ford's Stagecoach
- the original Manchurian Candidate (though I have it on dvd now)
I haven't seen Nosferatu either but I probably will this October.

- Escapay
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Goliath wrote:@ Escapay: I can't say how much I agree on that 'review' you wrote of The Last Crusade (Indy).

Yeah, it's quite an unpopular/uncommon opinion. But I think it has to do more with having seen Raiders & Temple more often than Crusade, so there's a sentimental bias that I've built up, too. It just doesn't excite me the way the other two did.
albert
WIST #60:
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion?
WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion?

WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?
A few that come to mind:
-The Lord of the Rings trilogy(love the books, never had a chance to watch the movies yet. Feels like too commitment for me, but I will find time before The Hobbit)
-La Dolce Vita
-Breathless
-Any Audrey Hepburn movie(Breakfast at Tiffany's is at my house thanks to the magic of Netflix, but I haven't had the time to watch it yet. I will get onto it soon, though)
-Talking Heads: Stop Making Sense(which I REALLY need to watch soon)
-Kiki's Delivery Service(the only Miyazaki flick I haven't seen yet, a couple of minutes on the Disney Channel not withstanding)
-Any non-Miyazaki Ghibli film besides Grave of the Fireflies
-Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid(love The Sting, but I haven't got around to watching this yet)
More should come to mind soon.
-The Lord of the Rings trilogy(love the books, never had a chance to watch the movies yet. Feels like too commitment for me, but I will find time before The Hobbit)
-La Dolce Vita
-Breathless
-Any Audrey Hepburn movie(Breakfast at Tiffany's is at my house thanks to the magic of Netflix, but I haven't had the time to watch it yet. I will get onto it soon, though)
-Talking Heads: Stop Making Sense(which I REALLY need to watch soon)
-Kiki's Delivery Service(the only Miyazaki flick I haven't seen yet, a couple of minutes on the Disney Channel not withstanding)
-Any non-Miyazaki Ghibli film besides Grave of the Fireflies
-Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid(love The Sting, but I haven't got around to watching this yet)
More should come to mind soon.
And cliches.Goliath wrote:I'm surprised at how many members haven't seen any of the Godfather-films (and some have never seen a Hitchcock film). I think it says a lot about the general taste on UD. The Godfather doesn't go well with the whole Disney/Hannah Montana/Jonas/High School Musical cycle of films, and it doesn't mix well with light-hearted comedies and musicals.
It's 3 hours of intense drama, heavy and shocking action scenes, violent deaths, family matters, beautiful long scenes where its all about the atmosphere, a lot of deep conversation ("it's too talky") and above all it's 3 hours of enjoying the best actors of all time giving their very best.

Seriously though, it's not the movies themselves that turn me off. I've never liked a gangster film that wasn't a comedy, but still it's not that. It's the damn straight guys who are so obsessed with this thing, it ceases being a film and becomes a lifestyle accessory (much like the Star Wars revolution with nerds, which I also opt out of a part in). Quoting the dialogue like it's The Bible (healthier than quoting the real thing?) and doing chalkboard-raking impressions of Marlon Brando (Dom DeLuise did one of the best). There is a copy of the first two movies on DVD at my place (roomies) but I refuse to be caught dead with a copy anywhere near me because of the cultural obsession with it. Same goes for Scarface and Goodfellas. But I wear my Innocent Blood-fan badge (soon as they make one) with pride. The stereotypes associated with these films are a joke to me. And thankfully, John Landis and The Nanny feel the same way. So, if I choose to continue down this road, I never have to worry about taking them seriously. Proud ignorance? Or just not wanting to join the creepy club? You decide.
(Wait... I lie; The Untouchables surprised me- given what a silly windbag Kevin Costner can be)
#2 in my Netflix Queue (I promised a guy online, and he promised to put Welcome to the Dollhouse and Ghost World in his).Goliath wrote:@ Lazario: I'm very surprised you haven't seen so many films that I thought you would've. From what I gather from your kind of humor, interests and personality on UD, I think you would *really* like the following movies:
19. 8.7 Fight Club (1999)
Though we are smart, we are also a finnicky race.Goliath wrote:And besides those, there are a *lot* of titles on that list that somebody with your intellect would definitly appreciate.07. 8.8 12 Angry Men (1957)
22. 8.7 The Usual Suspects (1995)
36. 8.6 Léon (1994)
68. 8.4 Requiem for a Dream (2000)
79. 8.4 Modern Times (1936)
85. 8.3 The Apartment (1960)
92. 8.3 The Great Dictator (1940)
133. 8.2 It Happened One Night (1934)
146. 8.2 Platoon (1986)
156. 8.1 Life of Brian (1979)
162. 8.1 Stand by Me (1986)
168. 8.1 Dog Day Afternoon (1975)
201. 8.0 Anatomy of a Murder (1959)
214. 8.0 His Girl Friday (1940)
Real reason? Netflix Queue plugged with horror and Disney titles and I don't watch TV, so I never catch IFC or Turner Classic Movies.
"(*gasp*!)" - I think that's my line, G.Goliath wrote:'Famous' movies I've never seen:
- most of the Coen Brothers' films, since I find them boring (*gasp*!)

Even Fargo?
Maybe you have to be American to love the monotony of the film's characters, but God help me- I love almost every last one of those dodo-headed jerks; although, Wade... that was a mercy killing, he had to go (put him out of our misery!) Too bad Stan couldn't've joined him.
Don't tell anyone but, I haven't seen it either (I refuse to sit through over 2 hours of a PG-13 gritty-styled hatchet job trying to steal Tim Burton's freak-master crown). Just endless clips of Heath Ledger playing the Joker (thank you YouTube, my personal cliffsnotes service), waiting to be as impressed by the film's (and his) portrayal of the character as I was with Jack Nicholson's. Man... 1985-1990 Tim Burton wins, every time. This is no exception. "Why so serious?" Why so... dull?Goliath wrote:- Nolan's The Dark Knight (not yet; planning on seeing it!)
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No, it's other gangster dramas, which tried so hard to imitate The Godfather, that created the clichés. The trilogy by Coppola is a very original piece of art.Lazario wrote:[The Godfather]And cliches.
That's incredibly silly. So you're going to rob yourself of a great movie experience just because some fans are obsessive over it? Well then, don't ever listen to Lady Gaga anymore. She's got her fair share of nut job fans. Don't ever watch horror movies anymore. There's freaks out there who like to re-enact them. I just might as well stop listening to Bob Dylan, because a lot of his admirers see him as some kind of God. But why should I worry about that?Lazario wrote:Seriously though, it's not the movies themselves that turn me off. I've never liked a gangster film that wasn't a comedy, but still it's not that. It's the damn straight guys who are so obsessed with this thing, it ceases being a film and becomes a lifestyle accessory (much like the Star Wars revolution with nerds, which I also opt out of a part in). [...]
Why not watch a film and judge it for yourself?
About the other films I listed: I think you would especially enjoy The Apartment and Monty Python's Life of Brian. When I think of your posts in the 'Religion'-thread, I can't believe you haven't seen it already.
Especially Fargo. I'm going to try The Big Lebowski one of these days, but I won't get my expectations up too much.Lazario wrote:[Coen Brothers] Even Fargo?
I liked Nolan's Batman Begins. I liked the more serious approach to the character. Normally, I don't like superhero films, but I always liked Batman (though I've never read any of the comics). Batman Forever and Batman & Robin were ridiculous, and I'm just glad Nolan brought the focus back to the character of Batman, instead of his sometimes laughable villains.
I'm no Coen fan, but The Big Lebowski is the only one of their movies that I think was close to living up to it's hype. It's super eccentric and will probably work best in repeat viewings, but a lot of the dialogue, even the really overplayed lines, work. It's worth watching just ot say that you have, and you might catch a reference or two in everyday life.
- Duckburger
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Have not seen, if everything goes well, it'll stay that way:
- Avatar
- Titanic
- The Lord of the Rings (for the most part, I have not seen these)
- Passion of the Christ
- Harry Potter 3 --> onwards
- Twilight (+ sequels)
- 2012
- Transformers
- Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen
Have not seen, (may) want to see in the future:
- China Town
- Pulp Fiction
- Lawrence of Arabia
- Gone With the Wind
- The Adventures of Robin Hood
- Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (yeah, don't know about this one, but I saw the first two, so I may want to see this someday)
- Mutiny on the Bounty
- Life of Brian
- Apocalypse Now
- Avatar
- Titanic
- The Lord of the Rings (for the most part, I have not seen these)
- Passion of the Christ
- Harry Potter 3 --> onwards
- Twilight (+ sequels)
- 2012
- Transformers
- Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen
Have not seen, (may) want to see in the future:
- China Town
- Pulp Fiction
- Lawrence of Arabia
- Gone With the Wind
- The Adventures of Robin Hood
- Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (yeah, don't know about this one, but I saw the first two, so I may want to see this someday)
- Mutiny on the Bounty
- Life of Brian
- Apocalypse Now
All of these are incredible movies, and worth seeing at one point in your life. Two of them make my own personal top 10, while the others likely float around my top 50.Duckburger wrote: Have not seen, (may) want to see in the future:
- China Town
- Pulp Fiction
- Lawrence of Arabia
- Gone With the Wind
- Apocalypse Now
Thanks for reminding me about The Adventures of Robin Hood. That's another one to add to my list.
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I personally love the The Godfather (first one). I watched it for the first time driving across state, as the van we took had a TV, and we picked the The Godfather trilogy to watch because of the film's lengths. They were all good films but I really love the first one. The music, the actors, the tension, drama, story, character development, all of it. Some movies have trouble with their endings but this one is just classic, with Michael taking care of the family business. It's really one of the few on IMDB that earns it's place.Goliath wrote:I'm surprised at how many members haven't seen any of the Godfather-films (and some have never seen a Hitchcock film). I think it says a lot about the general taste on UD. The Godfather doesn't go well with the whole Disney/Hannah Montana/Jonas/High School Musical cycle of films, and it doesn't mix well with light-hearted comedies and musicals.
It's 3 hours of intense drama, heavy and shocking action scenes, violent deaths, family matters, beautiful long scenes where its all about the atmosphere, a lot of deep conversation ("it's too talky") and above all it's 3 hours of enjoying the best actors of all time giving their very best.
It does annoy me that it, along with Scareface (which is overrated), are more recognized as fashion symbols then for the film's artistic merits. I have a feeling the majority of those wearing the shirts and misquoting the movies have never actually seen them.
The only movie on that list I haven't seen was Life of Brian. After a quick google search, I found out why, as it's Monty Python (which I don't much care for). Requiem for a Dream and Fight Club I find fairly overrated for sure, but the rest of those movies are great.07. 8.8 12 Angry Men (1957)
19. 8.7 Fight Club (1999)
22. 8.7 The Usual Suspects (1995)
36. 8.6 Léon (1994)
68. 8.4 Requiem for a Dream (2000)
79. 8.4 Modern Times (1936)
85. 8.3 The Apartment (1960)
92. 8.3 The Great Dictator (1940)
133. 8.2 It Happened One Night (1934)
146. 8.2 Platoon (1986)
156. 8.1 Life of Brian (1979)
162. 8.1 Stand by Me (1986)
168. 8.1 Dog Day Afternoon (1975)
201. 8.0 Anatomy of a Murder (1959)
214. 8.0 His Girl Friday (1940)
I've seen all of those movies except 8 1/2. Half of those films I don't like (anyone care to take a guess as to which ones?). As for finding the Coen Brothers' films boring, I can definitely see why, since I've now seen them all. They're really hit or miss for me. I either like them or I HATE them (I don't really love any of them).Goliath wrote:'Famous' movies I've never seen:
- any of the 'Lord of the Rings' movies
- any 'Star Wars' except the original 1977 film, which I thought was ridiculous
- most of the Coen Brothers' films, since I find them boring (*gasp*!)
- Nolan's The Dark Knight (not yet; planning on seeing it!)
- There will be blood
- Avatar
- The curious case of Benjamin Button
- West Side Story
- Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
- Who's afraid of Virginia Woolf
- Fellini's 8 1/2
- Ford's Stagecoach
- Murnau's Nosferatu
- Zinneman's From here to eternity, with Frank Sinatra
- the original Manchurian Candidate (though I have it on dvd now)
Tarzan and A Star is Born, which ones? I personally didn't care for either of the A Star is Born movies. As for Tarzan the Ape Man (1932), it's really a dreadful movie that just reuses animal footage from Trader Horn (another dreadful movie), but it's fun enough that I enjoyed it (not to mention it's classic). It's the sequel, Tarzan and His Mate, that gets all the attention for it's nudity. I've never seen An Officer and a Gentleman, so I can't comment on it one way or the other, but the rest are good movies (although, Apocalypse Now I'm not sure how I felt about, as it was a long time ago I saw it).pap64 wrote:I am still working my way through many of these movies, but here's a few I haven't seen yet:
Patton
The Godfather 1 and 2
Apocalypse Now
An Officer and a Gentleman
A Star is Born
Rear Window
The Birds
Tarzan
The Son of Kong
I love The Lord of the Rings, give it a try. You should know within the first 30 minutes whether you buy into these movies, so you don't have to watch the whole thing. If you buy into it, you're in for some fantastic storytelling. I can also somewhat recommend Titanic, just to see what all the fuss was about in '96 and while I personally like the first Transformers (this isn't exactly a recommendation), you need to know that you'll loose as many brain cells watching it as a one night drinking binge.Duckburger wrote:Have not seen, if everything goes well, it'll stay that way:
- Avatar
- Titanic
- The Lord of the Rings (for the most part, I have not seen these)
- Passion of the Christ
- Harry Potter 3 --> onwards
- Twilight (+ sequels)
- 2012
- Transformers
- Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen
Mutiny on the Bounty, which one? I liked the original 30s version with Charles Laughton (very evil) and Clark Gable but I found the 60s remake with Marlon Brando quite underwhelming. I've never seen the second remake from the 80s called The Bounty, which starred Mel Gibson, Anthony Hopkins, Laurence Olivier, Daniel Day-Lewis and Liam Neeson. I personally recommend Pulp Fiction, it's my favorite Tarantino and a damn fine film. Lawrence of Arabia and Gone With the Wind are good films (both have some of the greatest scores ever written) but not really on my favorites list. You'll definitely need to clear your schedule for those two.Duckburger wrote:Have not seen, (may) want to see in the future:
- China Town
- Pulp Fiction
- Lawrence of Arabia
- Gone With the Wind
- The Adventures of Robin Hood
- Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (yeah, don't know about this one, but I saw the first two, so I may want to see this someday)
- Mutiny on the Bounty
- Life of Brian
- Apocalypse Now

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For me personally, it's not that I'm opposed to films like that. I'm just never excited enough by the genre to take 3+ hours of my life to sit down and watch it.Goliath wrote:I'm surprised at how many members haven't seen any of the Godfather-films (and some have never seen a Hitchcock film). I think it says a lot about the general taste on UD. The Godfather doesn't go well with the whole Disney/Hannah Montana/Jonas/High School Musical cycle of films, and it doesn't mix well with light-hearted comedies and musicals.
I personally only liked if for Lansbury's bits. Similarly, the remake's only interesting for Meryl Streep (in the same role as Lansbury). Still, I loved the last 5 minutes of the original--very powerful for me.- the original Manchurian Candidate (though I have it on dvd now)
Anyway, looked over others' lists to get an idea. I realized I actually a pretty good track record film-wise.


A Clockwork Orange
Casablanca (I was going to watch it one day, but only taped it; haven't watched it yet)
The Star Wars series
The King and I
My Fair Lady
Hello, Dolly!
The Sound of Music (still haven't seen most of the middle; was really boring)
Oklahoma
Fiddler on the Roof (I've seen the first half of this, and I really loved it; hope I get another chance to finish it soon)
The Godfather
Chinatown
2001: A Space Odyssey (this was playing a few weeks ago on Turner Classic Movies channel, but I missed it)
Pulp Fiction
Ben-Hur
Lawrence of Arabia
Old Yeller
The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939 version)
The Indiana Jones films
The James Bond films
The Back to the Future trilogy
The Transformers films
Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit
Grave of the Fireflies
I recently sat down and watched the Alien trilogy a month or so ago. The first one was really the only one I liked--the plot was skimpy, but there was more of an atmosphere to it. The third one was so-so. Second was the worst.

Listening to most often lately:
Taylor Swift ~ ~ "The Fate of Ophelia"
Taylor Swift ~ "Eldest Daughter"
Taylor Swift ~ "CANCELLED!"
- littlefuzzy
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I'm reminded of all those celebrities on that MTV Cribs show. At a time when Scarface was long OOP (or possibly it had never been in print,) almost every celebrity would proudly point out their copy of Scarface, and maybe related paraphenalia like posters, etc. I figure half of the copies shown (or more) were probably bootlegs!Lazario wrote:Same goes for Scarface and Goodfellas.
- ajmrowland
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This. Also:avonleastories95 wrote:Bump!
Movies I Haven't Seen (oh, UmberellaFish is going to stone me to death for this post!):
Casablanca
The Godfather
The King and I
My Friend Filcka
Any Barbara Striessand Movie
The Clockwork Orange
The Goodfellas
Pulp Fiction
The Original National Lampoon's Vacation
Any Alfred Hitchcock movie
2001: A Space Odyssey
Die Hard

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Too bad. They're all very good movies. Lord of the Rings are AMAZING if you have the patience to sit through one(or even half of one) per night. Titanic is an astounding movie. The first two Harry Potter films are the worst in terms of plot and themes, and they get much better.Avatar is overrated, but still handles things well. Even the first Transformers was okay, but merely so.Duckburger wrote:Have not seen, if everything goes well, it'll stay that way:
- Avatar
- Titanic
- The Lord of the Rings (for the most part, I have not seen these)
- Passion of the Christ
- Harry Potter 3 --> onwards
anyway, I havent seen(cont.)
Lawrence of Arabia
The Shining
Any of the "Chuckie" movies
The Rocky Horror Picture Show
The Producers(1969)
Any Errol Flynn movie
Citizen Cane
Goodfellas
The original Star Trek films
Mission: Impossible
Top Gun

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He bumped it up after I provided the original link for him. That way a mod could see it and merge the two.Wonderlicious wrote:avonleastories95 wrote:Bump!
Erm, you do realise that you already created a new thread basically the same as this one, and that there really wasn't much need to bump this? I don't wanna be cheeky, I'm just saying that a mod could have easily joined the old and new together if you wanted.

albert
WIST #60:
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion?
WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion?

WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?