Stupid Movie Lines (18 page)

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Authors: Kathryn Petras

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You know, I want to get back to this participant thing. I didn’t want what they did to me. I didn’t want a rectal probe, Laurie!

Psychiatric group patient Sally (Irene Forrest) explaining to other former abductees why she objected to the aliens’ actions, in
Communion,
1989

On There,
There:

Pilot:
Aw, you’re the only thing I
do
worry about! Forget about the flying saucers. They’re up
there!
But there’s something in that cemetery—and that’s too close for comfort.

Wife:
The saucers are up
there
and the cemetery’s out
there
. But I’ll be locked up in
there
[pointing to bedroom]. Now. Off to your wild blue yonders.

Pilot (Gregory Walcott) saying good-bye to his wife (Mona McKinnon) before heading off to space in
Plan 9 from Outer Space,
1959

On Things Cabdrivers Hear, Weird:

Do you carry a revolver? Because, if you did, you could kill me.

Paranoid Elizabeth Taylor to puzzled cabdriver in
The Driver’s Seat,
1973

On Things Not to Tell Your Local Police Force, Part 1:

I think I saw a flame ball shoot out of that guy’s head and blow up my car.

Bill Paxton to Lindsay Frost, in the paranoid the-government’s-got-an-alien-but-they’re-not-telling-anyone
Monolith,
1993

On Things Not to Tell Your Local Police Force, Part 2:

Excuse me, sir. There’s breathing in my barn.

Elderly farmer, telling police of the Invisible Man’s (Claude Rains’s) whereabouts in
The Invisible Man,
1933

On Things to Remember, Important:

Remember, the difference between “champ” and “chump” is
u.

Jack Palance in
Cyborg 2,
1993

On Things to Say to Your Buddy When You Watch a Man Melt:

And you think we’ve got problems.

One bum to another, while watching a man melt in
The Incredible Melting Man,
1978

On Things to Tell Your Editor:

I’m not a nudie. I’m a writer!

Writer and innocent Ann-Margret when editor Tony Franciosa suggests she pose for pictures rather than write in
The Swinger,
1966

On Things to Worry About After Eating Humans:

Could you just promise if you eat me that you’ll clean your plates?

Worried plane crash survivor stranded in the snow-covered mountains in
Alive,
1992

On Things We Hope We Never Hear on a Date:

If I didn’t really work for the government, if I was just a guy who accidentally killed his parents, would you still love me?

Arsonist Anthony Perkins to schoolgirl Tuesday Weld in
Pretty Poison,
1968

On Things We Never Want to Hear:

The town is infested with man-eating cockroaches! Repeat: man-eating cockroaches!

George Peppard calling Jan-Michael Vincent to tell him about what the nuclear fallout has wrought in
Damnation Alley,
1977

On Things You Don’t Want to Hear Your Sexual Partner Saying:

Erogenous zones responding … sublingual glands secreting.

Kristina Holland as a medical student recording her own sexual responses in
Doctors’ Wives,
1970

On Things You Might Hear at 3
A.M.
on New Year’s Eve:

There is a herd of killer rabbits heading this way!

Panicky sheriff warning teenagers at the drive-in of impending doom in
Night of the Lepus,
1972

On Things You Should
Never, Never
Do:

Producer:
Do you know what you’ve done? You’ve just masturbated in front of all Paris!

Nijinsky:
It wasn’t me. It was the faun.

Alan Bates to George De La Pena playing the famed dancer Nijinsky, after the scandalous performance of “Afternoon of a Faun” in
Nijinsky,
1980

On Those Constantly Returning Volcanic Urges, Aging Socialites and:

When that volcanic urge of yours comes back—and it will—you’ll come to me!

Aging socialite Genevieve Page, losing her young lover (James Franciscus in the title role) in
Youngblood Hawke,
1964

On Those Crazy Scientists:

Man! The doc must have been brewing some of that Jekyll and Hyde joy juice in here.

Deputy inspecting the trashed lab after the two-headed transplant has escaped in
The Incredible Two-Headed Transplant,
1971

On Those Darn Space Kids, Hobbies of:

Teenagers From Outer Space.

Hoodlums from another world!

On a ray-gun rampage.

These strange teen-agers from outer space invade the earth and prepare to possess the women!

They blast the flesh off humans!

A moment before she was a beautiful young woman. Now, she’s a skeleton!

promo from
Teenagers from Outer Space,
1959

On Those Goofy Teens:

The junkies call them goofballs, and Cassandra was about as goofed up as the physical limitations of the human body can stand.

Narrator in
Teenage Devil Dolls,
1952, a “case history” of a teen junkie

On Those Old New Guinea Traditions:

According to New Guinea tradition, the monster Barugon will follow the shimmering of a six-thousand-carat diamond anywhere.

Narrator, in
War of the Monsters,
1966

On Those Ubiquitous Seth-ites:

Over there is the Temple of Seth. Two years ago they were just another snake cult. Now they’re everywhere.

Conan the Barbarian,
1984

On Those Wacked-Out Hippies:

You’re stoned out of your mind, aren’t you? Oh, man! What’s the matter with you guys? Isn’t the real world good enough for you? Love freak!

Waitress to Paul (Peter Fonda) in
The Trip,
1967

On Those Wacky Psychologists:

What’s wrong with you people? They’re dead … and you want to teach them tricks?

Military man to psychologist in
Day of the Dead,
1985

On Threats, Spacy:

Decrucify the angel or I’ll melt your face.

One of Jane Fonda’s better lines as the futuristic space beauty in
Barbarella,
1968

On Throbbing Dix:

YOU HEAR HIM MAKE LOVE!

DIX—the dashing soldier!

DIX—the bold adventurer!

DIX—the throbbing lover!

Ad campaign for
The Wheel of Life,
1929, starring Richard Dix in his first “talkie” role

On Ties, the Martian Fashion World and:

These ties serve no functional purpose. The Red Planet abandoned the use of ties fifty years ago as a useless male vanity.

Martian getting into Earthling disguise and complaining about it in
Mars Needs Women,
1968

JOKES THAT FALL FLAT

A
bad joke is truly a bad thing. Most bad jokes are happily forgotten—the teller quickly moves on to other jokes as he or she surveys the blank faces of an uncomprehending and hostile audience. But flat, stale jokes that are preserved on film are there forever, and remain to annoy or bore countless audiences in the future.

There are many purveyors of bad jokes in film, but the cinematic work in 1960s Dean Martin films perhaps stands out as the exemplar of awful taste in hilarity. One must realize that it takes a special something to produce jokes so awful they produce more than loud groans, an inverse talent happily denied most screenwriters. Here are some of the best of the worst jokes in movie history.

On Double Entendres, Pitiful:

Matt Helm (Dean Martin) to his buxom costar:
Oh, when you say you’re a thirty-eight you ain’t just kidding.

Linda:
It’s not a gun, Mr. Helm. It’s the new weapon they gave me, developed right here in our labs.

Helm:
Developed pretty well, too!

Linda:
May I point out—

Helm:
You already do!

Linda:
—that’s why you’re here. To become familiar with our latest equipment.

Helm:
You’re right. An agent should always keep
abreast
of the times!

The Ambushers,
1967

On Broads, Enlightening:

Matt:
We have a long wait ahead of us so let’s get comfortable.

Sheila:
How comfortable?

Matt:
It’s broad daylight!

Sheila:
What’s the matter with a broad in daylight?

Dean Martin and Janice Rule in
The Ambushers,
1967

On Congressmen, Typical:

Erin:
Hi, I’m Erin Grant.

Congressman:
Uh, I’m Congressman Dil … Dildo. Uh, Dilbeck.

Stripper Erin Grant (Demi Moore) meeting Congressman David Dilbeck (Burt Reynolds) on a yacht where she has come to do a command performance strip show in
Striptease,
1996

On Distinctions, Critical:

Stripper 1:
Look, Steven Spielberg’s shower! Can you imagine me and him in that shower? Oh, that cute little beard!

Stripper 2:
Yours or his?

Israeli stripper (known as “Ariel Sharon”) cooing over a magazine layout of Steven Spielberg’s house in
Striptease,
1996

On Haven’t We Heard This One Before?:

Colleen Sutton:
Nothing disgusts me. At the age of eleven I walked in on my father and the Shetland pony. Does that excite you?

Ford Fairlane:
I don’t know, I never met your father!

Andrew Dice Clay, as Ford Fairlane, and Priscilla Presley in
The Adventures of Ford Fairlane,
1990

On Puns, Pitiful:

Dean:
673 Wongs in the phone book.

Jerry:
Hmm, that’s a helluva lot of Wong numbers.

Michael Kastorin and Scott Eddo in Bruce Willis’s
Hudson Hawk,
1991

 

On Time Travelers, Typical Complaints from:

I’m from another time, another place. I don’t even know what you people have for lunch!

Traveler from the future having a discussion with a twentieth-century woman in
Trancers,
1985, starring Tim Thomerson and Helen Hunt

On the Tingler:

Ladies and Gentlemen, please do not panic, but scream. Scream for your lives!

The Tingler is loose in
this
theater, and if you don’t scream, it may kill you!

Vincent Price narration for
The Tingler,
1959, in which the audience theater seats started “tingling” as though the deadly crab monster “the Tingler”
were loose in the theater. The ads for this “Percepto” technique claimed, “You actually feel real physical sensations as you shiver to its flesh-crawling action!”

On Tiny Eyes, What They Mean:

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