Er...I found this and wanted to use it somewhere and I thought...
heck why here.
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Quiz 1
Quiz 2
Quiz 3
Quiz 4
Quiz 5
Quiz 1: 1.) "What are you going to do? Charge me with smoking?" Who says this and I need a complete answer? 2.) What is the connection between Betty Field, Cassie Yates and Sherilyn Fenn? 3.) "Make a wrong turn in the Bronx, then sit back and watch the sparks fly!" Hollywood marketing hype for what movie? 4.) "There was this one girl everybody was rushin'. Her body was just boomin' like a centerfold. so I'm eyeballin' her. She walks right up to me and she says, 'Is this your ride'?" Name the movie. 5.) There have been 77 books written about this Hollywood figure, who is surely the most written about public figure in history. Who? 6.) Which were the three major disapppointments of the summer season of 1992, according to cinema score and their tabulation of 1st night interviews with movie audiences? (hint: all were sequals) 7.) Comptemptuously, Mark Twain referred to one of the main characters as "Chicago." Appropriate, then, that a guy from Chicago got to make the latest movie in which the characte Twain called "Chicago" appears. What film? 8.) The following movie titles are all missing one word: _ in Harlem, _ in Paris and _ Among the Angels, what word? 9.) As one of Hollywoods naughtier legends has it, a key word in one of Hollywood's most honored films (Citizen Kane) si actually a flagrently obscene in-joke, based on the secretly overheard intimate conversations of a famous man and the women he loved. What is the word? 10.) "We are in uncharted territory now, making up history as we went along." What movie is this from? Answers to Quiz 1 Quiz 2: 11.) This is the unsentimental description of a legendary star from a man who saw him close up without illusions: He hid money in mattresses, slept on the floor at various people's houses, was a chronic pothead who forgot rehearsals and stayed out all night before important studio calls. Writers who managed to wangle interviews with him were rewarded with stony silence in response to their question until they would finally leave in embarrassment. Who was he? 12.) Fortunate indeed for this singularly beautiful child that her father ran a chi chi gallery inside the Beverly Hills Hotel, where she was noticed at the tender age of nine, and signed a long term contract the following year. Her name? 13.) It was one of the most memorable scenes in a movie with more than it's share of them. The actor talked in the first take, then the director had an inspired idea: "Do it again," he said, "but this time don't say anything. Do everything, but don't let a word come out." That was how they did it. Set the scene, name the actor and the movie. 14.) She was originaly cast in the Geena Davis part in A League of Their Own. Reportedly she objected to the casting of Madonna, and walked. She still received $2,000,000. Who is she? 15.) What is the significance of this list: Boyz 'n the Hood, Silence of the Lambs, New Jack City, Sleeping With the Enemy and City Slickers? 16.) The whole experience, and the personal scorn he received, left him shattered, and, he admits, he still hasn't recovered. He says, "I hope I survive it. Has it hut? A lot." And he gracefully accepts full blame for the fiasco, a combination of hubris, and his not grasping the material. Who is he and what is he talking about? 17.) One measure of Hollywood's present disgust with extortionate saleries for fading stars is the fact that these two men recently had to agree to zero money up front, with their compensation to come as a percent of the gross (and idea i fully embrace). Who are they? 18.) Charlie Chaplin had a few proteges over his long life and career but none of them ever acheived more independent success then this early associate, close friend, confidant, and reliable understudy. Who was he? 19.) We of it today with a very different function, but it began as the company union at MGM, created to hold off any real labor organizing among actors, writers and directors. What is it? 20.) This movie had been banned in Britain for nearly 20 years. At the insistance of its American director. What movie, and why? more to come so stay tuned! Answers to Quiz 2 Quiz 3: 21.) The following are all fine films, but they also share in one of Hollywood's less noble traditions: Meet John doe, The Magnificent Ambersons and Fatal Attraction. What tradition? 22.) The drunken monologue that the James Dean character delivers to an empty Texas ballroom in the movie Giant has a very special distinction, and I wonder if you know what it is? 23.) What is the connection between Jeremy Irons, Michael O'Shea and Vanessa Redgrave? 24.) Ultra-low-budget, ultra-high-profit, with few if any pretenses at seriousness of message or artistic merit, this film is acknowledged as the commercial model black film of the '90's. What is it? 25.) The story has been told many differnt ways, but this is the way it really hapened, in the words the great star actually used: "I can't do this scene. I can't go on with the picture. I won't be directed by a fairy. I have to work with a real man." Who said it, where and about who? 26.) He was a farmer in the central Wisconsin town of Plainfield, who died seven years ago in a hospital in Waupun, Wisconsin, at the age of 78. Obscure for most of his life and penniless for all, he nevertheless served as the acknowledged inspiration for half a dozen major American films. Who was he, and what were some of the films? 27.) He was one of WWII's most decorated flier, with 89 missions over places like Guadalcanal, Bougainville, and Rabaul. After the war he flew Boeing Stratocrusers for Pan Am. then he left this well- paid job with the airline to become a cop in L.A. that led to writing speeches for the chief, which led to more writing assignments, including TV, and an Emmy for an acclaimed Western serious. Other serious followed and ultimately the movies. Who was he? 28.) Perhaps the most troubled set in recent movie history (The Crow with Brandon Lee is a close second). Hysteria and disease and heart attacks and drug abuse and violent weather and a local civil war all conspired against the making of the film, not to mention the behavior of one of it's stars, who at one point "waddled" off the set, announcing, "I can't think of any more dialogue today." What was the film? 29.) His versatality in the theatrical and cinematic arts has probably never been equalled: stage director, property master, lighting director, makeup artist of international renown (he wrote the entry on movie makeup for the Encyclopedia Britannica), screen- writer, producer, director, and actor. All crammed into a life of only 46 years! who was he? 30.) "Before he came down here, it never snowed, and afterwards, it did. If he weren't up there now, I don't think it would be snowing." Who said this and in what movie? Answers to Quiz 3 How'd you do? Answers: Quiz 1: 1.) Sharon Stone and Michael Douglas in Basic Instinct . 2.) They all played Curly's doomed wife Mae in different versions of Of Mice and Men . 3.) Bonfire of the Vanities. 4.) Boyz 'N the Hood. 5.) Marilyn Monroe 6.) Batman Returns, Aliens III, Honey, I Blew up the Kid. 7.) Michael Mann's The Last of the Mohicans, with Indian activist Russell Means playing Chingachgook. 8.) The word Rage. 9.) Rosebud. Quiz 2: 10.) Terminator 2. 11.) James Dean. 12.) Elizebeth Taylor. 13.) Christopher Walken's being questioned by a doctor in a Shangai hostipal in The Deerhunter. 14.) Debra Winger. 15.) The most successful films of 1991 as measured by box office return on production cost. 16.) Brian De Palma talking about the failure of his screen adaptation of Bonfire of the Vanities. 17.) Robert Redford and Bruce Willis (both of whom earned the right to once again demand upfront money). 18.) Stan Laurel 19.) The Acedemy of Motion Pictures Arts and Science, the Oscar people! 20.) Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange because of past violence. Quiz 3: 21.) Grafting on a "happy" ending after adverse reactions by studio execs or test audiences. 22.) The voice that we hear is not Dean's, but another, uncredited actor, called in for re-dubbing after Dean's death when it was found his lines were unintelligible. 23.) All played real life authors, in Kafka, Jack London, and Agatha, respectively. 24.) New Jack City. 25.) Clark Gable, on the set of Gone With the Wind, about George Cukor. The next day, Gable didn't show up for work. The day after that, Cukor was gone, replaced by Victor Flemming. 26.) The transsexual cannibal and necrophilic serial killer Ed Gein, who inspired the Psycho and Texas Chain Saw films. 27.) Gene Roddenberry, creator of Star Trek. 28.) Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now. (Brando was the one who walked.) 29.) Lon Chaney, Sr. 30.) "Old" Winona Ryder, in Tim Burton's utterly original film, Edward Scissorhands.