Stupid Movie Lines (14 page)

Read Stupid Movie Lines Online

Authors: Kathryn Petras

BOOK: Stupid Movie Lines
11.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

On Points about Godzilla, Pretty Obvious:

This thing is much too big to be some lost dinosaur.

Dr. Niko Tatopoulus (Matthew Broderick), in
Godzilla,
1998

On Points, Debatable:

It’s better to be dead and cool than alive and uncool.

Said by both Mickey Rourke and Don Johnson as the ultra-cool biker boy and the hip cowboy in
Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man,
1991

On Points, Obvious:

It must be the sulfur in the walls of his cave that has kept this creature alive for all these years.

Mr. Miller, explaining to the teenagers how the monster-man Eegah (Richard Kiel) has survived in the desert since prehistoric times in
Eegah!,
1962

On Points to Ponder, Part 1:

Novice bartender:
The waitresses hate me.

Old-hand bartender:
Wait till you’ve given them crabs—then you’ll really know hatred.

Tom Cruise and Bryan Brown in
Cocktail,
1988

On Points to Ponder, Part 2:

Only the infinity of the depths of a man’s mind can really tell the story.

Bela Lugosi, narrator in
Glen or Glenda?,
1952

On Poison, Problems with:

Louise was feeling good until you gave her that poison.

The detective (Stuart Whitman) making a sinister observation about his sister’s death to the doctor (Martin Landau) in
Strange Shadows in an Empty Room,
1976

On Police Intelligence:

This criminal must be found. Otherwise, these acts will continue!

Very smart cop in
Rock ’n’ Roll Wrestling Women vs. the Aztec Ape,
1962

On Pornography, Succinct Thoughts On:

Pornography. It’s a nasty word for a dirty business.

Detective Kenne Duncan summing up the movie in
The Sinister Urge,
1960

On Post-death Aging:

Man:
You don’t look thirty-seven.

Ghost:
I died when I was twenty and it’s seventeen years ago!

Carry Ng as a snotty ghost in
The Ultimate Vampire,
1987

On Potatoes:

Laurie:
But if this thing is actually killing people, then why is the mayor trying to keep it quiet?

Mort:
Potatoes.

Laurie:
Potatoes?

Mort:
Around here that means big money.

Marianne Gordon and Johnny Commander after toxic waste turned a young Idaho boy into a killer mutant monster, in
The Being,
1983
,

On Prayer, Cloying Moments in:

Dondi (praying to God):
I wish you make them let me stay in America, Mr. Big-Buddy, please.

Patti Page (weeping):
Dondi’s talking to the most influential friend of all!

Dondi (David Kory), the poor little Italian orphan, and Patti Page in
Dondi,
1961

On Prehistoric Man, Little-Known Inventions of:

Strangely enough, the swan dive was invented before the swan.

Narrator explaining a swimming scene in the prehistoric romance
Prehistoric Women,
1950

On Premarital Sex, the Price of:

Poor kid! Maybe this is the price you pay for sleeping together.

Rock Hudson, to the camera, as Jennifer Jones dies in childbirth in
A Farewell to Arms,
1957

On Premarital Sex, the Tragedy of Non–Ivy League:

You want to hear a big joke? They weren’t even Yalies.

Hospital-bed-ridden, social-climbing, suicidal Yvette Mimieux, realizing she had sullied her reputation for nothing, in
Where the Boys Are,
1960

On Pre-nups, Native Style:

Princess Kahlua:
The gods have smiled on us. Now we can be one. You can buy me.

Princeton Student:
Buy you?

Princess Kahlua:
Yes, from my father. It is the custom. I will be very expensive.

Princeton Student:
You will be worth it.

Polynesian Princess Kahlua (Debra Paget) and the young Princeton student she loves (Louis Jourdan), discussing their upcoming marriage in
Bird of Paradise,
1951

On Pretentious Convicted Killers, Statements from:

Mendacity is the great sin that’s destroying America, and I’m a living reproach to you ’cause I’m an honest man.

Mickey Rourke as a convicted killer holding a family hostage in
Desperate Hours,
1990

On a Pretty Bad Morning:

Then, one morning I woke up, the sun was shining … Jack was dead, dead inside me, dead in bed. That must have been when I started to smell bad.

Helena Kallianiotes as Frieda, the demented mining town madam, mourning her lost love in
Eureka,
1981

On Priorities:

Jack:
Listen. There’s a girl out there who might be running for her life from some gigantic turned-on ape!

Fred:
Jack, I know how you feel. I feel the same. But there’s a national energy crisis which demands that we all rise above our private selfish interests.

Fred the expedition leader (Charles Grodin) explaining to Jack the concerned scientist (Jeff Bridges) why he can’t spare the men to go save Jessica Lange as Dwan from King Kong, in
King Kong,
1976

On Problems, Getting to the Heart of:

It’s in a doll. Unfortunately, I can’t find the doll.

Man (Robert Culp) explaining what’s happened to his heart, in
Spectre,
1977

On Problems, Problems:

Mike Brady:
We have a very serious situation on our hands here.

Businessman:
Situation? What kind of situation?

Mike Brady:
This entire area used to be a toxic waste dump. And not only that, we have a mutant form of killer slug in our water system!

Health Inspector Mike Brady (Michael Garfield) explaining some of the problems of doing business in his town to a businessman, in
Slugs,
1988

On Producers, Inside Hollywood View of:

Once in a while you bring me meat like this. It all has different names: prime rib of Gloria, shoulder cut of Johnny. Meat!

Studio mogul Joseph Cotten, talking about his new actor Frankie (Stephen Boyd), in
The Oscar,
1966

On Producers, the Sensitive Other Side:

Mr. Merlin:
I’m a producer of movies. I get my wagonloads of poets and dramatists, but I can’t buy common sense—I cannot buy humanity!

Hazel:
Well, I don’t know why, Mr. Merlin, there’s an awful lot of it.

Mr. Merlin:
Yes, I know, but the moment I buy it, it turns into something else, usually genius, and it isn’t worth a dime. Now, if you could stay just as simple as you are, you’d be invaluable to me.… I’ll put you on my staff.… I’ll give you a title: Miss Humanity. Don’t rush, you can finish your ice-cream soda.

Adolphe Menjou and Andrea Leeds in
The Goldwyn Follies,
1938

On Profundity, Not So Profound:

Forgive me for being profound, but it’s good to be alive.

Troy Donahue falling in love with Suzanne Pleshette over spaghetti and meatballs in
Rome Adventure,
1962

On Promiscuous Sex, Advantages for Smokers and:

Tough girl:
Before you go any further, you should know there are certain initiation requirements.

New girl:
Well, all right. What are these so-called requirements?

Tough girl:
Well, you have to make love to five boys who belong to the club.

New girl:
Oh, well, that’s easy enough.

Tough girl:
Maybe you didn’t quite understand. I mean make love to each one, intimately.

New girl:
You mean … have relations with five boys? Oh, I don’t think I could.

Tough girl:
Well, you’ll have plenty of free smokes from the boys, and you won’t even know it.

Girl Gang,
1954

On Promos, Bad Puns and:

She’s got the biggest six-shooters in the West!

Ad for
The Beautiful Blonde from Bashful Bend,
1949

On Promos, Disturbing:

Please Don’t Disturb Evelyn. She Already Is.

Promo for
Mountain Motel Massacre,
1986

On Protection, Cellulite and:

Resistin’s gonna be a darn sight harder for you than for females protected by the shape of sows.

Preacher (Walter Huston) explaining to gorgeous half-breed (Jennifer Jones) why the boys might have more fun in
Duel in the Sun,
1946

On Proverbs, Well-Known:

A toad is no match for a swan.

Robotrix,
1991

On Psychiatrists, Disapproving:

You believed in these drugs and you rebuilt this man and you did put him back on the street. But now he’s out there killing people, and we can’t have that.

Psychiatrist to a colleague in
Nightmare,
1981

On Psychos, Distinctions About:

You may be a bit psychotic, but I didn’t figure you for stupid.

Policeman chatting with motorcycle gang member in
Savage Dawn,
1985

On Psychos, Problems of:

Why is it I always gotta kill somebody to get them to take me seriously?

Misunderstood psycho Kevin Dillon in
Misbegotten,
1997

On Public Service Announcements We Hope We Never Hear:

The survival command center at the Pentagon has disclosed that a ghoul can be killed by a shot in the head.… Officials are quoted as explaining that since the brain of a ghoul has been activated by the radiation, the plan is: Kill the brain and you kill the ghoul!

TV newsman giving the world some hope in
Night of the Living Dead,
1968

On Publicity Problems, Monsters and:

We can’t let them out into the city. All they would have to do is eat a couple of small children and we would have the most appalling publicity.

Scientist (Christopher Lee) explaining the problem in
Gremlins 2: The New Batch,
1990

On Puns, Large:

You know what they wrote about me in the high school yearbook? The man most likely to reach the top!

The really tall colossal man talking to his fiancée in
The Amazing Colossal Man,
1957

On Puns, Truly Terrible:

You go for deserts while I’m hot for peaks, and not just through doors, either.

Mountain climber Grant Williams to girlfriend Connie Stevens in
Susan Slade,
1961

On Put-downs, Snappy:

Dewey:
How ’bout it? Come on. Let’s hit the high spots.

Girlfriend:
Why don’t you go somewhere and catch yourself, you foul ball!

Conrad Janis (Dewey), the bad boy, and a friend in
That Hagen Girl,
1947, starring Shirley Temple and Ronald Reagan

Q

On Queens, Potentially Fecund:

My breasts are full of love and life. My hips are round and well apart. Such women, they say, have sons.

Cleopatra (Elizabeth Taylor) seducing Caesar (Rex Harrison) in
Cleopatra,
1963

On Questions About the Neighbors, Intriguing:

How many of our neighbors have their girlfriends’ heads in their freezers?

Wife of philandering husband Peter Gallagher in
Virtual Obsession,
1998

On Questions, Good:

We sold our bodies; why can’t we sell some wood?

Interesting question posed by liberated western gal soon-to-be-entrepreneur in
Bad Girls,
1994, starring Andie MacDowell, Drew Barrymore, Madeleine Stowe, and Mary Stuart Masterson

On Questions, Happening:

Holy cow! Are you going to turn into a swinger?

Jeanette Nolan querying
Vogue
editor Mia Farrow when they meet at a ritzy ski lodge in
Avalanche,
1978

On Questions, Hard to Answer:

So you think you can be my tiger, drunken mantis?

Kung fu movie line, quoted in
Mondo Macabo,
1977

On Questions Often Asked by Seminude Native Women:

Kiss? What is kiss?

Scantily clad island woman, getting to know a washed-ashore sailor in
Pagan Island,
1960

On Questions, Oh-So-Cosmic:

Is one happier, do you think, with ten years of happiness than if one has ten minutes or ten days?

Other books

Bomber's Law by George V. Higgins
The Eleventh Commandment by Lutishia Lovely
The Forever Song by Julie Kagawa
Bitter Sweet Harvest by Chan Ling Yap
In Defense of Flogging by Peter Moskos
Fat Off Sex and Violence by McKenzie, Shane
Salt Sugar Fat by Michael Moss
The Ninja's Daughter by Susan Spann
Put Me Back Together by Lola Rooney