- Messages
- 12,734
- Location
- Northern California
lol
Don't even bother with Top Gun.
Can'/Won't/Haven't watched "Top Gun."
lol
Don't even bother with Top Gun.
I have a friend who's never seen Joe Dirt. I thought everyone had seen that movie.
My dad and I were discussing with a customer (another car guy) that Dad wants a Milner's Coupe like off American Graffiti. He had never seen the movie. I thought every car guy had!
The Help - My mother was the help, see above.
Worf
Great thread, some surprising admissions. It is time for me as the OP to come clean. I've NEVER seen any of the following:
The Last Picture Show
American Graffitii - Although I was forced to endure MANY of the pale imitations.
The Shoot Horses Don't They - Depressing.
Missisippi Burning - Lived through it don't need to see that.
Driving Miss Daisey - Dad was a chauffer in the depression between the wars. Would only discuss the misery he endured when drunk.
The Help - My mother was the help, see above.
The Big Lebowski - Eh....
Any of Adam Sandler's drivel.
Most of Will Ferrells drivel, only saw ELF
Home Alone - I was a latch key kid, no fascination.
Worf
I have a friend who's never seen Joe Dirt. I thought everyone had seen that movie.
My dad and I were discussing with a customer (another car guy) that Dad wants a Milner's Coupe like off American Graffiti. He had never seen the movie. I thought every car guy had!
You must and shall watch The Big Lebowski.
I have to admit never having seen a frame of a Harry Potter movie.
Doug
I have to admit never having seen a frame of a Harry Potter movie.
Doug
Proud to say I saw Joe Dirt at the theatre. Best moment - seeing Christopher Walken appear on screen.
I've found that the only Will Ferrell movie I like is Anchorman
Quadrophenia. Not sure how much exposure that got outside of the UK though...
"It's A Wonderful Life." Anybody who was alive and functional in the 80s or 90s would have had that one thrust at them from all directions every December.
You'd be surprised how many people over 60 have never seen "Star Wars." They were old enough when it came out that the whole phenomenon smacked of kiddie sci-fi space opera, something they'd long since outgrown. If you mention Star Wars to my mother, her only frame of reference is "all them stupid little dolls your brother had."
My mother has never watched it, because of the scene where Zuzu says "Every time a bell rings an angel gets his wings." She said that scene in the preview makes her gag. Sometimes I wonder how we're related :eusa_doh:
Though I'm a big Stanley Kubrick fan, the one movie I've never seen, or more accurately, never got around to seeing, is A Clockwork Orange.
Me neither. And to this day I've never seen E.T. From all I heard about it at the time and since, E.T. was a reflection of Spielberg's Disney phase when he aspired to be the next Walt Disney.
Any American who was alive and functional in the 80s or 90s would have had that one thrust at them from all directions every December, maybe. It wasn't ever broadcasted here in the 80s or 90s.
I saw it (for the first time) this Christmas so now I don't have to again. I know lots of people love it, but it was most decidedly not my thing.
I'm surprised when people haven't seen Gone With The Wind too. And The Jungle Book. Also, for people my age and younger, the Lord of the Rings trilogy and The Matrix.
I think the advent of home video which gave people the ability to be more selective and give their movie choices a more tailor-made, narrower focus have resulted in a suprisingly large number of people who have never seen many of the movies that most of us thought that everyone had seen. Back in the days when these movies were regularly shown on TV it was, as Flicka said, hard not to see them.
Contrast that with today, where only a self-identified movie buff will seek out and watch anything in black and white, let alone some grade-B Lee Tracy-Glenda Farrell programmer from 1932. Nowadays, most people only watch the films of their own generation, and have little if any awareness of anything that predates them.
There is a great scene in the film Home Alone showing the family has made it to France for their Christmas vacation. The kids are bored to tears watching a dubbed to French version of It's a Wonderful Life. I believe it's the scene where George says no to Potter regarding the job offer. Stunning!
lol
Don't even bother with Top Gun.
To me, it's generational. For someone with 10 years of me on either side, I'd have to say The Wizard of Oz, Star Wars, Jaws (also a huge big deal when it was released, the original Planet of the Apes, Bullitt, Easy Rider, and The Exorcist.
I was discussing epic movies with a Young Person once and "Ten Commandments" came up. "Oh, I wouldn't want to bother with that," she said. "I can't stand those Jesus movies."
Um.
I was discussing epic movies with a Young Person once and "Ten Commandments" came up. "Oh, I wouldn't want to bother with that," she said. "I can't stand those Jesus movies."
Um.
There's no shame in that.