Awww. , Useless. So much for "Ignored". You fail again. Plus, Useless, you've been busted too many times for anyone to believe you're not reading my posts, anyhow. It's just your excuse for cowering. Awww.
Awww. , Useless. So much for "Ignored". You fail again. Plus, Useless, you've been busted too many times for anyone to believe you're not reading my posts, anyhow. It's just your excuse for cowering. Awww.
Wasn't he (Useless) just recently bragging about having done all the drugs because he hung out on the Haight.
I'm pretty sure that he tried each just one time, very low doses, got his ass kicked like they were hostile neighbors, was too scared to ever try them again and decided that makes him better than everyone normal.
Wasn't he (Useless) just recently bragging about having done all the drugs because he hung out on the Haight.
I'm pretty sure that he tried each just one time, very low doses, got his ass kicked like they were hostile neighbors, was too scared to ever try them again and decided that makes him better than everyone normal.
I didn't know that Wilder wrote the 1st 4 pages and talked a initially reluctant Brooks into writing the whole script, but those 4 pages remain and include many of the one-liners that continue though the film.
Feldman was great. The article says that he started moving his hump to fuck with the other actors.
I didn't know that Wilder wrote the 1st 4 pages and talked a initially reluctant Brooks into writing the whole script, but those 4 pages remain and include many of the one-liners that continue though the film.
Feldman was great. The article says that he started moving his hump to fuck with the other actors.
I didn't know that Wilder wrote the 1st 4 pages and talked a initially reluctant Brooks into writing the whole script, but those 4 pages remain and include many of the one-liners that continue though the film.
Feldman was great. The article says that he started moving his hump to fuck with the other actors.
When Mel Brooks was preparing for this film, he discovered that Ken Strickfaden, who'd made the elaborate electrical machinery for the lab sequences in the Universal Frankenstein films, was still alive and living in the Los Angeles area. Brooks visited Strickfaden, and found that he had stored all the equipment in his garage. Brooks made a deal to rent the equipment, and gave Strickfaden the screen credit he didn't receive for the original films.
Gene Hackman ad-libbed The Blind Man's parting line "I was gonna make espresso." The scene immediately fades to black because the crew erupted into fits of laughter. Hackman was unable to repeat the line without laughing with the rest of the crew, so the first take was used. Hackman was uncredited when the movie was originally released in theaters.
In 1974 Aerosmith took a break from a long night of recording to see this film. Steven Tyler wrote the band's hit "Walk This Way" the morning after seeing the movie, inspired by Marty Feldman's first scene, the "walk this way . . . this way" scene.
I didn't know that Wilder wrote the 1st 4 pages and talked a initially reluctant Brooks into writing the whole script, but those 4 pages remain and include many of the one-liners that continue though the film.
Feldman was great. The article says that he started moving his hump to fuck with the other actors.
When Mel Brooks was preparing for this film, he discovered that Ken Strickfaden, who'd made the elaborate electrical machinery for the lab sequences in the Universal Frankenstein films, was still alive and living in the Los Angeles area. Brooks visited Strickfaden, and found that he had stored all the equipment in his garage. Brooks made a deal to rent the equipment, and gave Strickfaden the screen credit he didn't receive for the original films.
Gene Hackman ad-libbed The Blind Man's parting line "I was gonna make espresso." The scene immediately fades to black because the crew erupted into fits of laughter. Hackman was unable to repeat the line without laughing with the rest of the crew, so the first take was used. Hackman was uncredited when the movie was originally released in theaters.
In 1974 Aerosmith took a break from a long night of recording to see this film. Steven Tyler wrote the band's hit "Walk This Way" the morning after seeing the movie, inspired by Marty Feldman's first scene, the "walk this way . . . this way" scene.