12. "I wanted either an Italian-American or an actor who's so great that he can portray an Italian-American. So, they said, 'Who do you suggest?' I said, 'Lookit, I don't know, but who are the two greatest actors in the world? X and Y. Well, X is English. His face is great.' I said, 'I could see X playing the guy, and putting it on.' [And] Y is my hero of heroes. I'd do anything to just meet him. But he's 47, he's a young, good-looking guy. So, we first inquired about X and they said, ‘X is not taking any jobs. He's very sick. He's gonna die soon and he's not interested.' So, I said, 'Why don't we reach out for Y?'“ The rest, as they say, is history. Identify X and Y. one
13. This film (Y) was initially distributed with X because it was the only way that _______ could have been able to make X. The reason being that the original film pitch for that film was rejected, so they pitched a double feature with Y, and the project was eventually backed financially by the original writer of the book on which Y is based. It often was overlooked as a film because whenever X was screened first, people were left happy and did not wish to be saddened by Y afterward. X and Y please. two
14. When the nominees for the 53rd Annual Academy Awards were announced, many in the industry were appalled that this movie was not going to be honoured for its make-up effects. At the time there was not regular category and winners for make-up were cited with a special award. Feeling that the make-up technicians deserved to be rewarded for the film, a letter of protest was sent to the Academy's Board of Governors to ask them to change their minds and give the film a special award. The Academy refused, but in response to the outcry, they decided a year later to reward make-up artists with their own annual category, and thus the best make-up award was born. Which movie am I talking about? three
15. X was written by lifelong bachelor Herman Hupfeld and debuted in the Broadway show "Everybody's Welcome“. It had been a personal favourite of playwright and high school teacher Murray Burnett. After visiting a cafe in south France where a black pianist had entertained a mixed crowd of Nazis, French and refugees, Burnett was inspired to write the melodrama Y, which was optioned for production by Martin Gabel and Carly Wharton, and later, Warners. After the film's release, X stayed on radio's "Hit Parade" for 21 weeks. Max Steiner, in an interview, admitted that X "must have had something to attract so much attention". four
17. Trust me, Clara Vere de Vere,From yon blue heavens above us bentThe gardener Adam and his wifeSmile at the claims of long descent.Howe’er it be, it seems to me,’Tis only noble to be good.______ are more than ___________,And simple faith than Norman blood. six
18. There have been over 40 recorded instances of people suffering from the X Delusion in the U.S., the U.K. and elsewhere. Joel Gold, a psychiatrist at Bellevue Hospital Center in New York City, and a clinical assistant professor of psychiatry at New York University, and his brother Ian, who holds a research chair in Philosophy and Psychiatry at Montreal's McGill University,are the foremost researchers on the subject. They have met since 2002 with over a dozen individuals, primarily white men between 25 and 34, suffering from the delusion. They have reported that one patient travelled to New York City after 9/11 to make sure that the 2001 terrorist attacks were not a plot twist, while another travelled to a downtown Manhattan Federal building to seek asylum. One of Gold's patients was an upper-middle class Army veteran who wanted to climb the Statue of Liberty in the belief that doing so would release him. seven
19. X has described in the interview how he came up with the idea while driving from _______ to ________, stopping in ________ where he had been born and raised, and driving by outside his grandmother's old house, when he suddenly began to think about how it would be if he could open the door and inside it would be just as it had been during his childhood. "So it struck me - what if you could make a film about this; that you just walk up in a realistic way and open a door, and then you walk into your childhood, and then you open another door and come back to reality, and then you make a turn around a street corner and arrive in some other period of your existence, and everything goes on, lives. That was actually the idea behind the movie.” Which film? eight
20. The movie was banned in the Soviet Union (USSR) after being shown in Poland because of the unrealistic depiction that even the poorest Americans could afford a car. nine
21. X first came up with the idea for his novel Y in 1962, when researching 'The Man in the High Castle' which deals with the Nazis conquering the planet in the 1940s. X had been granted access to archived World War II Gestapo documents in the University of California at Berkley, and had come across diaries written by S.S. men stationed in Poland, which he found almost unreadable in their casual cruelty and lack of human empathy. One sentence in particular troubled him: "We are kept awake at night by the cries of starving children." X was so horrified by this sentence that he reasoned there was obviously something wrong with the man who wrote it. This led him to hypothesize that Nazism in general was a defective group mind, a mind so emotionally flawed that the word human could not be applied to them; their lack of empathy was so pronounced that X reasoned they couldn't be referred to as human beings, even though their outward appearance seemed to indicate that they were human. ten
22. three movie connections 8 questions | 10 points for each correct answer Bonus of +20 if a team gets all correct, +10 if they get 7Each movie is related to the movie in the previous question
24. This scene from “Officer and a Gentleman” is directly referred to in the movie X. Name the movie. two
25. This is a clip from “Wayne’s World”. An actor from the movie X is seen reprising his role of Y in this scene. Name the character or the film. three
26. Paul R. Frommer is an American communications professor at the University of Southern California (USC) and a linguistics consultant. He is the former Vice President, Special Projects Coordinator, Strategic Planner, and Writer-Researcher at Bentley Industries in Los Angeles, California. From 2005 to 2008, he served as Director of the Centre for Management Communication at the USC Marshall School of Business. Frommer was born in New York City. Interested in astronomy from an early age, he changed his college major from astrophysics to math, graduating from the University of Rochester with a bachelor of arts in mathematics in 1965. He soon taught English and math in Malaysia in the Malay language with the Peace Corps. He had studied languages earlier, but this experience switched his focus to linguistics. He began a doctoral program in linguistics at the University of Southern California (USC). During the program, he taught English in Iran for a year in the mid-1970s and studied Persian.He earned his masters degree and doctorate in linguistics at USC in 1981 under Bernard Comrie; his doctorate was on aspects of Persian syntax and entitled "Post-verbal Phenomena in Colloquial Persian Syntax". How is he related to this quiz? four
27. X was invited by Y to appear as an extra in this film (he is the officer who says "Captain, we have visual"). X wrote about the experience, "I got a custom-made ____________ uniform and my own station on the bridge, where I had lots of buttons and controls. I even got a LINE!!!!" After his death, his pay check of $217.06 from working on the film was donated to charity. Identify X and the film. five
28. “The big prize here, however, is the addition of X's Oscar-winning short Harvie Krumpet. This Geoffrey-Rush-narrated tale of the titular Tourrette syndrome sufferer is a wonderful introduction both to X's sensibilities and to Y's specific tone.” Which film (Y)? six
29. All along the film there are references to the Bible's Book of Exodus 8:2 "And if thou refuse to let them go, behold, I will smite all thy borders with {a} _____", some of the props around the characters are shaped to resemble these numbers and also clocks, weather services and other items refer to these numbers, most notably at the beginning of the contest a man is holding a sign with Exodus 8:2 which is taken away by one of the hosts and also some lines of dialogue include these numbers. Which movie am I talking about? seven
39. The band was named by sticking a pin in London listings magazine, Time Out. It landed randomly on an advertisement of the film X. one
40. Alien hand syndrome (also known as anarchic hand or X syndrome) is a neurological disorder in which one of the hands of people who have it appears to take on a mind of its own. Alien hand syndrome is best documented in cases where a person has had the two hemispheres of their brain surgically separated, a procedure sometimes used to relieve the symptoms of extreme cases of epilepsy. It also occurs in some cases after other brain surgery, strokes, or infections. Researchers at the University of Aberdeen who identified it named it X Syndrome. According to Professor Sergio Della Sala, the patients "slam their hand and shout 'My hand does things that I don't want it to do!'" two
41. In 1989, twenty-two-year-old Polish graphic designer Tomasz Sarnecki transformed Marian Stachurski's 1959 Polish variant of the X poster into a Solidarity election poster for the first partially-free elections in communist Poland. The poster which was displayed all over Poland shows Y armed with a folded ballot saying "Wybory" (i.e. election) in his right hand while the Solidarity logo is pinned to his vest above the sheriff's badge. The message at the bottom of the poster reads "W samopołudnie: 4 czerwca 1989" which translates to “X: 4 June 1989." In 2004 former Solidarity leader Lech Wałęsa wrote: “Under the headline "At X" runs the red Solidarity banner and the date—June 4, 1989—of the poll. It was a simple but effective gimmick that, at the time, was misunderstood by the Communists. They, in fact, tried to ridicule the freedom movement in Poland as an invention of the _________, especially the U.S. But the poster had the opposite impact: ___________ had become a powerful symbol for Poles. They fight for justice, fight against evil, and fight for freedom, both physical and spiritual. Solidarity trounced the Communists in that election, paving the way for a democratic government in Poland. It is always so touching when people bring this poster up to me to autograph it. They have cherished it for so many years and it has become the emblem of the battle that we all fought together.” three
42. The idea for X came from the director's (Y) youth. A pig castrator lived there who was known as a womanizer: according to Y, "This man took all the girls in town to bed with him; once he left a poor idiot girl pregnant and everyone said the baby was the devil's child." In 1992, Y told Canadian director Damian Pettigrew: ."I was directing __________, and Tullio had gone to see his family. Along one of the tortuous winding roads, he saw a man pulling a carretta, a sort of cart covered in tarpaulin... A tiny woman was pushing the cart from behind. When he returned to Rome, he told me what he'd seen and his desire to narrate their hard lives on the road. 'It would make the ideal scenario for your next film,' he said. It was the same story I'd imagined but with a crucial difference: mine focused on a little travelling circus with a slow-witted young woman. So we merged my flea-bitten circus characters with his smoky campfire mountain vagabonds. four
43. ”That was an order! ________ assault was an order! Who do you think you are to dare disobey an order I give? So this is what it has come to! They have been lying to me. Everybody has been lying to me! Our ________ are just a bunch of contemptible, disloyal cowards. Not a shred of honour! They call themselves ______. Years at _______just to learn how to hold a knife and fork! For years, ________has hindered my plans! They've put every kind of obstacle in my way! What I should have done... was liquidate all the high-ranking officers! I never went to the academy. Traitors. I've been betrayed and deceived from the start. Such enormous betrayal. But all these traitors will pay. With their own blood. They will drown in their own blood.” What is this? five
45. “The role of X in the film reminds me of Y's in Z. There is a dark side to this character. I think it's very interesting that most of the audience prefers to think that this is a very innocent relationship. I think this happens because the face of X is so sympathetic. Just imagine if it was John Malkovich playing this role. You would think, 'This guy is really weird.' It's the same in Z. Everybody thinks Y is a nice guy, so nobody thinks that his character is actually very sick.“ Identify the two movies. seven
47. Roger Ebert on the movie X: “I went to the movie because it was playing in a campus film series and only cost a quarter. I sat enveloped in the story of ________ for 2 1/2 hours, and wrote about it in a class where the essay topic was Socrates' statement, "the unexamined life is not worth living."' Over the years I have seen it every five years or so, and each time it has moved me, and made me think. And the older I get, the less _________ seems like a pathetic old man, and the more he seems like every one of us.” nine
48. According to author David Thomson, “__________ is the greatest secret in cinema...”. X, explaining the idea behind _________, said, "It's a gimmick, really, a rather tawdry device, a dollar-book Freudian gag.“ According to Louis Pizzitola, _________ was a nickname that Orrin Peck, a friend of Y, gave to his mother, Phoebe. It was said that Phoebe was as close, or even closer, to Orrin than she was to her own son, lending a bitter-sweet element to the word's use in the film. In 1989, essayist Gore Vidal cited contemporary rumours that _________was a nickname Y used for his mistress; a reference to her clitoris, a claim repeated as fact in the 1996 documentary about the movie. Film critic Roger Ebert has been a bit more specific than Vidal about the source, saying on his commentary track for the September 2001 DVD release that "Herman Mankiewicz, the co-author with X of the screenplay, happened to know that _________was Y’s pet name for an intimate part of his mistress’ anatomy." A resultant joke noted, with heavy innuendo, that X and/or Y died "with _______ on his lips." ten