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  • Anonymous (not verified)
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    & Sammuel Jackson
    Pulp Fiction
  • GRTUD
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    For Ever...
    Hey marye! I miss being here, thanks to you and all the grate folks that make up this "reality". This web site is a wonderful luxury for our scene. "Solitary Man" - Johny Cash > "I don't know" - Lisa Hannigan > "I Lay Down" - John Lee Hooker/Zucchero "The task is, not so much to see what no one has yet seen; but to think what nobody has yet thought, about that which everybody sees." - Erwin Schrödinger
  • marye
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    GR! Where you been?
    seems like we haven't seen you forever!
  • GRTUD
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    The Fountain
    "The Fountain" - Hugh Jackman & Rachel Weisz: Pretty cool movie... full of symbolism that provoked thought about the archetypes western culture take lock-stock and barrel (myself included). The biggest problem with this movie was the "real time" scenes that were preposterous. Sort of a "2001: A Space Odyssey" meets the TV show, "House" kind of movie. "The task is, not so much to see what no one has yet seen; but to think what nobody has yet thought, about that which everybody sees." - Erwin Schrödinger
  • Anonymous (not verified)
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    The Distinguished Gentlemen, 2 votes!
    This movies is a hip primmer on Senate horse trading by big money lobbyist, But it's nice how Eddie Murphy pulls one out for the Girls Of Many Nations
  • c_c
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    The Distinguished Gentleman
    The Distinguished Gentleman available now on youtube for free. if you never seen this Eddie Murphey comedy, it is pretty good.
  • TxJed
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    AKA Tommy Chong
    Favorite quote from the film -> "People ask me what prison was like. I tell them, 'you'll find out'." Good to know you got shoes to wear when you find the floor.
  • krs10
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    JSpringer the Opera
    Hey Lamagonzo, I think you're missing something... Jerry Springer the Opera is a SATIRE - a biting and brilliant one at that. Anyone who is repulsed by the Jerry Springer show would love this great piece of writing. He goes to hell! Just so's you don't get carried away! K
  • Anonymous (not verified)
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    ~Pulp Fiction~
    This movie defined the change of an era. I'm not sure exactly when it came out, some time in the early 90s, I believe. The highly potent message of this movie was that heroin was in, coke was out, just as our favorite "Dark Star" was about to fade from the scene. As well, there were scenes of drug overdose and homosexual rape as well as a recurring theme badly twisted from the bible, righteous words for a black mobster to execute by. Johm Travolta, Bruce Willis, Uma Thurman, Harvey Keitel lit up the big screen for this one. Excellent movie it was, we all could have done without it and the social circumstances it pointed out and/or promoted. --Brother Essau, he's on roller skates again Shadowboxing the apocalypse and wandering the land--
  • Anonymous (not verified)
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    Alas, it's true Lilly
    It is all true, Lilly. JSTO was a big hit in London, was due to go to Broadway and then the religious zealots scared away the production money. The protesters didn't like the scene where Adam & Eve & Satan teamed up against God. Harvey Keitel played Satan in a one night production at Carnegie Hall. Now, they will produce it in Bosotn and hope that many people protest for the publicity. Anything to sell tickets, I guess. Yikes... the truth is stranger than fiction! All I did was open the Arts section of the Boston Globe.
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A movie from the Sundance Channel about an Irish cop named Sgt. Boyle. The opening scene is really good with a bunch of kids partying in a car going down a country road passing around a bottle of whisky.