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Cacator posted:It's supposed to be them, who else would it be? I remember in the Departed thread that people argued incessantly over this. See, it really depressed me that Frank and his crew were not above executing a 14 year old girl. Like in a movie of horrible acts, that one was way beyond anything else in the movie. But as i said, the people shot look quite different. Like the guy has full head of brown hair, and the woman has longer hair. Similar top. Though one of my friends said it was Matt Damons parents. There has always been the murder of teenage girls that has always impacted me more than any other kind of murder in film, tv or real life.
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# ? Nov 12, 2008 02:52 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 15:22 |
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twistedmentat posted:
You must love '80s horror movies.
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# ? Nov 12, 2008 05:33 |
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morestuff posted:You must love '80s horror movies. Its not hard when the "Teenagers" all look about 25. Okay, question for the effects people, when you see in a zombie movie some people chowing down on what looks like guts of some poor sap, what is it? I saw a documentary recently that talked about how they really were eating raw animal guys in the original Night of the Living dead, but I find that hard to believe. Considering how cheap that movie was made, I can't believe they could find extras that were willing to do that for the pittance they were paid.
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# ? Nov 12, 2008 05:51 |
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twistedmentat posted:Its not hard when the "Teenagers" all look about 25. Yeah, they used real intestines. I think from a pig, but I'm not sure. I know they also used real intestines in 'Day of the Dead', and the extras were getting sick from it. And people will do a lot of things, if it means they show up in a movie. It's not about the money. Now, what they use in movies like, say, the new 'Dawn of the Dead', I'm not sure. They might just stick with pig intestines. They'd be cheap enough, and look real enough.
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# ? Nov 12, 2008 06:28 |
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ignore me
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# ? Nov 12, 2008 08:16 |
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Detective Thompson posted:Yeah, they used real intestines. I think from a pig, but I'm not sure. I know they also used real intestines in 'Day of the Dead', and the extras were getting sick from it. And people will do a lot of things, if it means they show up in a movie. It's not about the money. Now, what they use in movies like, say, the new 'Dawn of the Dead', I'm not sure. They might just stick with pig intestines. They'd be cheap enough, and look real enough. Ugh. I can't see anyone wanting to be in a movie so badly that they'll put guts from a pig in their mouth. It isn't fear factor.
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# ? Nov 12, 2008 09:01 |
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DrVenkman posted:For the guy that asked about Christopher McQuarrie earlier in the thread. Basically he spent all that time being a script doctor. It's pretty much a given that he did work on all Bryan Singer's films and was just employed as a general re-writer. They also earn a fortune from it (See also, Frank Darabont and yes it's true, Carrie Fisher). Well, at least he's working. New question: When does Denis Leary appear in the director's cut of Natural Born Killers? I just watched it again the other night and the text on the back of the DVD case that talks about the extra crap in the director's cut mentions something about Denis Leary's part that was put back in as well. I've seen the theatrical cut many times (saw it in the theater and my brother had it on VHS for a while) before I bought a copy of the director's cut on DVD a while back so I recognize a lot of stuff that was added in but I don't remember seeing Denis Leary when I watched it last night. One of those "blink and you'll miss it" scenes?
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# ? Nov 12, 2008 20:47 |
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twistedmentat posted:Ugh. I can't see anyone wanting to be in a movie so badly that they'll put guts from a pig in their mouth. It isn't fear factor. In City of the Living Dead, the actress who pukes up her own intestines had to swallow warm sheep intestines and then vomit them back up. It makes the scene way more disgusting if you know this ahead of time I have a question about There Will Be Blood. Why does Daniel kill Eli? I get the back and forth between them, the taking revenge in public whenever they've denied one another what they've wanted, but the actual bludgeoning seems to come out of nowhere. He's already humiliated Eli, mocked him about taking the oil from the Bandy tract, went on about how wonderful his brother is doing...so why does he kill him? I like that movie but I fear I may be too dumb for it .
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# ? Nov 12, 2008 21:16 |
Women's Rights? posted:In City of the Living Dead, the actress who pukes up her own intestines had to swallow warm sheep intestines and then vomit them back up. It makes the scene way more disgusting if you know this ahead of time Cause the movie isn't called "There will be Ridicule"?
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# ? Nov 12, 2008 21:18 |
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It's the one last thing Daniel could do to him. Hence, the closing line of the film.
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# ? Nov 12, 2008 21:19 |
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Cacator posted:It's supposed to be them, who else would it be? I remember in the Departed thread that people argued incessantly over this. Well, not to argue incessantly, but, um, why do you think it's them? It really looks nothing like them, and as for "who else would it be?" couldn't it be, I dont know, another random man and woman? I'm sure Costello's killed a lot of people.
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# ? Nov 12, 2008 21:22 |
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Women's Rights? posted:In City of the Living Dead, the actress who pukes up her own intestines had to swallow warm sheep intestines and then vomit them back up. It makes the scene way more disgusting if you know this ahead of time Oh god I only jst watched that not to long ago in a "zombie movies i haven't seen before" marathon. Though I did watch Zombie! finally. Zombie vs shark :iamafag:
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# ? Nov 13, 2008 00:32 |
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Encryptic posted:New question: When does Denis Leary appear in the director's cut of Natural Born Killers? One of those "blink and you'll miss it" scenes?
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# ? Nov 13, 2008 01:27 |
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Women's Rights? posted:In City of the Living Dead, the actress who pukes up her own intestines had to swallow warm sheep intestines and then vomit them back up. It makes the scene way more disgusting if you know this ahead of time I took it as Daniel being given one last chance of leading a good life, of being saved, and him just bluntly and utterly turning it down.
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# ? Nov 14, 2008 21:27 |
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SubG posted:Just before the prison interview sequence, I think. It's just him in a cell ranting about Mickey and Mallory. I think it's intercut with a bunch of other talking head clips, like the Steven Wright bits. Ah, that explains why I would've missed it then. Thanks. Since I was reading the "cinematic garbage" thread and somebody admitted to owning all 7 Children of the Corn movies - I just have to wonder: Does this direct-to-video crap actually make any money? Is there really an audience for it, or is it just some kind of tax write-off strategy for some people (invest in lovely movie production, declare a loss on your taxes)?
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# ? Nov 15, 2008 08:33 |
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Encryptic posted:Ah, that explains why I would've missed it then. Thanks. DTV is pretty profitable. Braindead horror sells in every country (like action) because it crosses cultural boundaries just fine. They don't have to waste money on advertising like you'd have to with theatrical releases and can instead rely on rental agreements and television deals. And with the Sci-Fi channel's (and some up and coming competitors) voracious appetite for a new bad film every week, there's a near guaranteed home for lots of them. And there's a near infinite demand for horror. Horror fans will eat nearly anything up in the search for hidden gems. Even when it's bad it can be enjoyable as you can always appreciate the effects. CGI has gotten cheap enough that when you set the bar low enough it isn't a super strain on the budget and can still pass muster.
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# ? Nov 15, 2008 14:29 |
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Women's Rights? posted:I have a question about There Will Be Blood. Why does Daniel kill Eli? I get the back and forth between them, the taking revenge in public whenever they've denied one another what they've wanted, but the actual bludgeoning seems to come out of nowhere. He's already humiliated Eli, mocked him about taking the oil from the Bandy tract, went on about how wonderful his brother is doing...so why does he kill him? I like that movie but I fear I may be too dumb for it . Eli continually tried to dominate Daniel, tried to have him submit to his religious will, Daniel on the other hand wanted that town to pretty much keel over and let him run things his way. It seemed to me at the end, Eli was still trying to somehow impose his will over Daniel and it all came crashing down on him. At least that's how I took it.
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# ? Nov 15, 2008 21:21 |
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I thought Daniel was still bitter about Eli embarrassing him during the baptism, because his guilt really was torturing him. H.W. walking out on him brought those feelings back and Eli arrived just in time for Daniel to take it out on him.
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# ? Nov 15, 2008 23:13 |
Rake Arms posted:I thought Daniel was still bitter about Eli embarrassing him during the baptism, because his guilt really was torturing him. H.W. walking out on him brought those feelings back and Eli arrived just in time for Daniel to take it out on him. Look, Daniel had ALWAYS violently opposed anyone who tried to stand in his way of getting oil. Even his own adopted son. He probably would have tried to kill him if he hadn't felt some small amount of "like" for him. The Sunday kid embarrassed him and forced him to play by ridiculous rules that Daniel abhorred. You knew it was coming once he made Daniel get on his knees in church. "I've abandoned my child!"
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# ? Nov 16, 2008 21:25 |
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Not to drive the "Departed" question into the ground, but I always assumed that the man and the woman in that scene were "Guineas" from Northie or from "down Providence", who were constant targets of not only Costello, but his real-life counterpart Whitey Bulger. The scene also highlights just how early on Frank Costello is losing touch with exactly what he does. Costello: Jeeze.... she fell funny. French: Francis, you really should see somebody. *grabs hatchet to dismember victims* I guess what I'm trying to say is that Frank Costello had become so experienced and notorious for executing his enemies that he could do it in broad daylight in a less than seculded place. It never occured to me that that could be the father and daughter from the diner, especially since Sorcese went out of his way to give the Providence Italians a very distinctive look, which, IIRC, the man in that execution scene had.
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# ? Nov 16, 2008 21:35 |
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^I just assumed they were people who had crossed him. I don't think it matters who they were. It was just to show that Costello is loving crazy.
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# ? Nov 16, 2008 22:20 |
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ZenMaster posted:Look, Daniel had ALWAYS violently opposed anyone who tried to stand in his way of getting oil. Even his own adopted son. He probably would have tried to kill him if he hadn't felt some small amount of "like" for him. I'd argue Plainview wasn't embarrassed. What could make a guy like that feel shame? I'm one of the ones that views Daniel as being not some greedy, oil-grabbing soulless monster, like some do, but as very human with severe emotional issues. He definitely loved H.W., which I think for Daniel was unexpected and kind of confusing. But Plainview was playing along with all the stuff in the church. He's a smart business man. He knew what he had to do, he knew Eli, being the self-righteous person that he is, would try to pull something like that. Daniel was expecting it, and he played along with it, so that way he could carry on with his business. Watch that seen again, at the point he says "I'm ready", that's when he turns off the act and knows he won. What he did to Eli at the end, well, that's because Eli was in a pathetic state, coming to Daniel pretty much on his hands and knees, despite his outward look of success. Daniel just gave him a taste of his own self-righteous medicine. A fairly big taste.
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# ? Nov 16, 2008 22:37 |
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Rake Arms posted:I thought Daniel was still bitter about Eli embarrassing him during the baptism, because his guilt really was torturing him. H.W. walking out on him brought those feelings back and Eli arrived just in time for Daniel to take it out on him. I think it is a bit of all of them. I do believe that Daniel loved HW, and he would hate Eli for making him feel that guilt and that love - and when Eli comes after HW has walked out, Daniel can vent all of his pent-up rage, guilt and frustration on the man who made him face up to it. Eli, while being slimy and avaricious, also represents, in a twisted way, Daniel's conscience.
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# ? Nov 21, 2008 14:35 |
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Ape Agitator posted:DTV is pretty profitable. Braindead horror sells in every country (like action) because it crosses cultural boundaries just fine. They don't have to waste money on advertising like you'd have to with theatrical releases and can instead rely on rental agreements and television deals. And with the Sci-Fi channel's (and some up and coming competitors) voracious appetite for a new bad film every week, there's a near guaranteed home for lots of them. And often times a DTV gets some kind of theater release either in the states or in other parts of the world. So the people who made the movie gets some kind of money, just like multi-million dollar prices.
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# ? Nov 24, 2008 21:30 |
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Ape Agitato posted:DTV is pretty profitable. Braindead horror sells in every country (like action) because it crosses cultural boundaries just fine. They don't have to waste money on advertising like you'd have to with theatrical releases and can instead rely on rental agreements and television deals. And with the Sci-Fi channel's (and some up and coming competitors) voracious appetite for a new bad film every week, there's a near guaranteed home for lots of them. BooDoug187 posted:And often times a DTV gets some kind of theater release either in the states or in other parts of the world. So the people who made the movie gets some kind of money, just like multi-million dollar prices. This is interesting stuff, thanks. I don't watch a lot of horror myself aside from some of the classics like old school Cronenberg, the Evil Dead trilogy, etc. and some of the more well-known movies in the genre, so I didn't realize it was that big of a market. Since we're on the topic though - I've got a dumb question about Cube since I happened to see it the other night. How did Holloway know so much about Quentin? There's a scene where they're arguing and she blurts out something about "liking little girls too much" or something and Quentin says she knew too much about him. Worth reveals that he designed the cube's outer shell and implies that the cube is some kind of government experiment, so I'm wondering what we're to infer from Holloway's comments - is she supposed to be a government plant who knows more than she's telling?
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# ? Nov 24, 2008 22:11 |
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Encryptic posted:Since we're on the topic though - I've got a dumb question about Cube since I happened to see it the other night. How did Holloway know so much about Quentin? There's a scene where they're arguing and she blurts out something about "liking little girls too much" or something and Quentin says she knew too much about him. She's likely been observing how he's been eyeing Leaven. She's a cynic and a conspiracy nut distrustful of people in power. It's probably not a stretch for her to call a cop interested in a teenager a closet pedo.
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# ? Nov 25, 2008 03:53 |
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Ape Agitator posted:She's likely been observing how he's been eyeing Leaven. She's a cynic and a conspiracy nut distrustful of people in power. It's probably not a stretch for her to call a cop interested in a teenager a closet pedo. Good point. And once again you come to the rescue to save me from ignorance.
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# ? Nov 25, 2008 06:45 |
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She also turns out to be correct. After Holloway dies, Quentin tries to screw Leaven. That reminds me, I never quite understood how they mapped the room's movement. They found each room's starting position by adding the digits of each number together, but how did they find the other positions? I know it has something to do with permutations, but I don't get how it works. Rake Arms fucked around with this message at 07:46 on Nov 25, 2008 |
# ? Nov 25, 2008 07:42 |
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Rake Arms posted:That reminds me, I never quite understood how they mapped the room's movement. They found each room's starting position by adding the digits of each number together, but how did they find the other positions? I know it has something to do with permutations, but I don't get how it works. I'm working off memory here but I think the permutations were contained in each of the six doors each room had. Six doors, six three digit number groupings, added together to get six different XYZ coordinates per room. So X1Y1Z1,X2Y2Z2...X6Y6Z6. They were originally obsessed with going in one direction to reach the edge so they only paid attention to the number groupings from one permutation's door. Like they were always reading X3Y3Z3 in each room because they were dedicated to going East.
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# ? Nov 25, 2008 14:44 |
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Rake Arms posted:She also turns out to be correct. After Holloway dies, Quentin tries to screw Leaven. Yeah - I didn't read that much into it when I watched it the other night. I guess I was overthinking it a bit. That explanation makes a lot more sense.
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# ? Nov 25, 2008 16:37 |
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Re: the Frost/Nixon movie: Can anyone explain Nixon's phone call that he later forgot about? Was he just blackout drunk or did Frost imagine it since he needed a bottom-of-the-ninth-2-out pep-talk to get his rear end into gear for the final interview? Answer: http://www.boston.com/ae/movies/articles/2008/12/04/frostnixon_director_howard_voted_for_nixon/ "In another admission, screenwriter Peter Morgan told the same screening audience that Nixon's fictionalized high-tension phone call to Frost one night between interview sessions did not actually happen, but was plausible because Nixon mixed alcohol with mood stabilizers. "We know he made late night phone calls. He didn't remember them," Morgan said, adding "I had what I felt got to the heart of Richard Nixon" including a tendency to "destroy himself."" voltron fucked around with this message at 03:43 on Dec 10, 2008 |
# ? Dec 10, 2008 02:49 |
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What movie is it where a guy has to open a valve to a tube connected to his lungs to relieve pressure every now and then? IIRC, it was an action movie. That's all I remember. I just saw the chest-needle scene in Pulp Fiction and I thought of that movie. Someone please help before I go insane. I remember that the guy with the valve is handcuffed and can't open the valve on his own, so he is begging someone to free him so he can. edit: NVM, Three Kings.
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# ? Dec 10, 2008 06:13 |
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Why is the movie Brazil titled as such? I know that song that he hums at the end is called Brasil or something, but other than that is there any connection with the name of the movie and something else?
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# ? Dec 31, 2008 12:05 |
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Artem posted:Why is the movie Brazil titled as such? I know that song that he hums at the end is called Brasil or something, but other than that is there any connection with the name of the movie and something else? From The Brazil FAQ, here's the explanation from Gilliam himself, along with some other interesting facts about the title, culminating in an incredibly list of alternative titles: quote:What is the title BRAZIL supposed to mean?
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# ? Dec 31, 2008 17:19 |
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Sheinberg posted:If Osmosis, Who Are You? I honestly don't understand what most of these even mean, let alone what they have to do with the movie.
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# ? Dec 31, 2008 18:50 |
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Dreamscape was used for another 80s movie, ironically enough, but I would have gone with: Nude Descending Bathroom Scale wtf
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# ? Dec 31, 2008 19:07 |
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egon_beeblebrox posted:I honestly don't understand what most of these even mean, let alone what they have to do with the movie. I know. I have to wonder if it was one of those things where people just wrote really stupid things on there, like you did when sheets went around in high school.
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# ? Dec 31, 2008 20:56 |
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voltron posted:Re: the Frost/Nixon movie: Spoiler this, chum.
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# ? Dec 31, 2008 21:42 |
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Can anyone recommend me a movie similar to Clue? I love stories about people trapped in a castle-like environment, trying to escape or find a murderer. It doesn't have to be a comedy, but I hate jump shot horror movies.
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# ? Dec 31, 2008 21:46 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 15:22 |
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Agatha Christie-based films like Murder on The Orient Express and Death on the Nile.
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# ? Dec 31, 2008 21:59 |