Nope, Looney Tunes Golden Collection, released in lots of 4 DVD's per year for 6 years, starting back in 2003.Christmas specials?
On Showcase right now, Saturday Night Live! - Holiday themed sketches. I remember a very young Norm McDonald introducing Adam Sandler on guitar singing "Happy Hannukah!"Did you just give away the ending?
Yes! The Silent Partner was great!
Weird seeing the Eaton center from back then , also the old Toronto landmarks .
I watch this every year - my favourite sketch from the collection:On Showcase right now, Saturday Night Live! - Holiday themed sketches. I remember a very young Norm McDonald introducing Adam Sandler on guitar singing "Happy Hannukah!"
Bad SantaMy favourite Christmas movies:
1. Die Hard - nuff said
2. Harold & Kumar’s Christmas - Rude & hilarious!
3. The Night Before - Super Rude & hilarious! Seth Rogan at his finest!
Does anyone have any more suggestions?
Yes I am referring to the salacious themes. Although that has been around for ages but probably the first film to put it out there in "A" movies.Scroll up - I did watch it. Again, care to elaborate on your initial post? I'm assuming your hinting/referring to some of the salacious themes / storylines for its' time, but not entirely sure.
John Candy was in it to provide comic relief. He spent most of the film trying to get into Gail Dahms panties. Gail Dahms is unknown today, she was quite famous in the 80's as the Turtles girl (Mmmmm I love Turtles).Yes! The Silent Partner was great!
They've gone big on diversity in the last couple of years ie. gay couples (both men and women) falling in love, lot's of Asian and Black characters, owners of Chinese and Mexican restaurants in trouble and finding salvation in the Christmas season. Plus they've gone overseas to the UK, Norway, Germany etc. I'm replying on behalf of a "friend". I never watch the series.Hallmark has a lot of Christmas movies but some people have complained there are too many white characters in heir movies.
Shows how dumb the Hollywood adjudicators can be, Die Hard was nearly scrapped. They considered it an impending bomb, no way a film featuring a TV Star and a London West End actor could work. It worked magnificently, Bruce Willis and Alan Rickman had perfect chemistry, the film made boatloads of money on audiences repeating the theater experience. The film grossed 140 million, top three for 1988. Rickman talked about the Nakatomi experience, that's real terror on his face. He had to put his faith in the stunt co-ordinators knowing what they were doing...so that he wouldn't look like a burst tomato can at the end of the scene.