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  1. #16
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    I remembered seeing Willow 3 times in theaters when i was 6/7 and been one of my fave fantasy films and had some merchandise to it too.

    I saw alot of movies in theaters that year as i recalled seeing from my list with honorable mentions like Die Hard, Bloodsport, Critters 2 (2 times), Killer Klowns from Outer Space (2 times), Serpent and the Rainbow, Roger Rabbit (4 times), Land Before time (4 times), Monkey Shines, Pumpkinhead, Halloween 4, They Live (2 times), Naked Gun (2 times), coming to America, Big, Child's Play, Rambo 3, Lady in White, Short Circuit 2, Big Top Pee-Wee, Twins, The Blob, The Dead Pool, Above the Law, Beetlejuice (4 times), Phantasm 2, Gorillas in the Mist, Scrooged (2 times), Hellbound Hellraiser 2, Night of the Demons, Monkey Shines, Colors, Elm Street 4, Great Outdoors, Quackbusters and Oliver and Company (3 times).

  2. #17
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    1) Action Jackson
    2)Coming to America
    3)Young Guns
    4)Above The Law
    5)Blood Sport
    6)Moon Walker
    7)Rambo 3
    8)Twins
    9)BraveStarr
    10)Deadpool

  3. #18
    Not a Newbie Member JBatmanFan05's Avatar
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    May have to give Dead Pool a rewatch. The first two Dirty Harry films were so great that after that, it was harder for me to like them.
    Things I love: Batman, Superman, AEW, old films, Lovecraft

    Grant Morrison: “Adults...struggle desperately with fiction, demanding constantly that it conform to the rules of everyday life. Adults foolishly demand to know how Superman can possibly fly, or how Batman can possibly run a multibillion-dollar business empire during the day and fight crime at night, when the answer is obvious even to the smallest child: because it's not real.”

  4. #19
    Extraordinary Member Gaastra's Avatar
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    So many great films that year! My first has to be who framed roger rabbit. It brought back the classic toons like looney tunes and droopy and made them cool again.



    Second is die hard. Did you know it was going to be commando 2 and when they couldn't get Arnold they changed it to a sequel to a movie they did years ago called the detective starring frank Sinatra!

    They even asked frank Sinatra to return for die hard but he passed due to his age but due to a contract deal from the first he got profits from die hard anyway! Smart! So yeah die hard is a sequel!

    Blew my mind as well.

    http://www.todayifoundout.com/index....role-die-hard/

    Today I found out that Frank Sinatra was originally offered the main role in the movie that would become Die Hard.
    This 1940s singer might not be the man who comes to mind when you think about the action-packed Die Hard movies. At the start of his movie-making career, Sinatra was cast mostly in singing roles, though he did manage to break away from being a “singer employed as an actor” and made a name for himself as an actor alone, winning a few Academy Awards and Golden Globes for his performances. That said, many people these days can’t shake that image of young Sinatra crooning into a microphone—not exactly something you’d imagine the character of John McClane doing.
    So, how did Frank come to be considered for the role? It all started with an author named Roderick Thorp. You might not know it, but the Die Hard movie was based on a book called Nothing Lasts Forever by Thorp, which was published in 1979. The LA Times reviewed the book, saying it was “A ferocious, bloody, raging book so single-mindedly brilliant in concept and execution that it should be read at a single sitting.” This book is really what made Thorp a big name, but he was on the publishing scene much earlier.
    It turns out that Nothing Lasts Forever is actually a sequel to a book called The Detective, published in 1966 which was made into a movie of the same name in 1968. The movie starred—you guessed it—Frank Sinatra as the main character, Detective Joe Leland. The book was extremely popular, remaining on bestseller lists for a while and making a name for Thorp; the movie also did well in the box office. It was described as “gritty” for its time, dealing with issues like homosexuality, but it was decidedly less action-packed than the Die Hard movies we know today.

    Die Hard itself wasn’t picked up by producers until 1988, nearly 10 years after the book it was based on was published. Because the movie was technically a sequel, they were contractually obligated to offer Frank Sinatra the leading role. He was 73 years old at the time and gracefully turned the offer down.
    After Sinatra turned the offer down, the role was offered to Arnold Schwarzenegger, and the movie was pitched as a sequel to the actor’s 1985 film Commando rather than a sequel to The Detective. Schwarzenegger also turned down the offer, and instead Bruce Willis was cast in the leading role, with the character renamed John McClane instead of Joe Leland.
    Willis was not exactly the kind of person the studio was hoping to cast in the role. At the time, he was mostly only known for comedies, not action movies. But they had been turned down by a variety of other actors since offering the role to Sinatra and Schwarzenegger, and they had to settle.
    The movie, of course, did extremely well, with a budget of just $28 million, the film grossed about $140 million by the time it was out of theatres (about $268 million today), earned four Academy Award nominations, and was generally well-received by critics.
    The franchise of Die Hard is still going strong, though its original writer and main character have since passed away. Sinatra died in 1998 at the age of 82, while Thorp passed away in 1999 at the age of 62. Willis, meanwhile, had his career made by the Die Hard movies and despite now getting up there in years himself (about to turn 59 ) remains involved in the series as well as other action movies.


    My top 5.


    1. Who framed roger rabbit
    2. Die Hard
    3. Beetlejuice
    4. Totoro
    5. Akira
    Last edited by Gaastra; 01-08-2018 at 07:48 PM.

  5. #20
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    I graduated in 1986 so I remember some of the movies from 1988 clearly. Some of my favorites, in no particular order:

    Willow
    Dirty Rotten Scoundrels
    Heathers
    Who Framed Roger Rabbit
    Alien Nation
    A Fish Called Wanda
    Beetlejuice
    Die Hard
    They Live

  6. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by mmurphy1968 View Post
    I graduated in 1986 so I remember some of the movies from 1988 clearly. Some of my favorites, in no particular order:

    Willow
    Dirty Rotten Scoundrels
    Heathers
    Who Framed Roger Rabbit
    Alien Nation
    A Fish Called Wanda
    Beetlejuice
    Die Hard
    They Live
    Heathers is quite a classic and one of the best black comedies ever

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