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Movie Trivia Quiz: Classic Movies About Easter

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Easter rabbitIf you like religious or animated children’s movies, you’re in luck at Easter-time. If not, it’s slim film pickings. It’s hard to believe that a holiday that combines cute little bunnies, colored eggs and someone rising from the grave doesn’t have more secular movies to commemorate it. But since that’s the case, this Easter movie trivia quiz is going to be mini-sized. It will still be tricky, though, so see how well you can do!

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1. Judy Garland’s husband was slated to direct Easter Parade but her psychiatrist advised them not to work together. What was her husband’s name?

2. A famous hoofer was supposed to play Fred Astaire’s part in Easter Parade but he broke his ankle when he stomped his foot in anger after losing a volleyball game. Who was that famous dancer/actor?

3. For the second time in Judy Garland’s film career, someone spoke the scripted line, “Why didn’t you tell me I was in love with you?” to her in a film. The second time was in Easter Parade. Who asked her that question the first time and in what movie? (Hint: The actor is the same as in question number 2.)

Holiday Inn4. The movie Holiday Inn featured songs dedicated to many holidays, hence the movie’s name. Although the film included a lovely song about Easter, a song about another holiday from the film went on to be the biggest-selling music single of all time, according to 2007 statistics. What is that song?

5. The song mentioned in number 4 won an Oscar for Holiday Inn. The song’s writer was the first artist to ever present himself with an Academy Award. Who was he?

6. The set of Holiday Inn was reused 12 years later to film another movie starring Bing Crosby. What was the movie?

Scroll down to see the answers.

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Answers

Easter Parade1. Vincente Minnelli was Judy Garland’s husband.

2. Gene Kelly was the angry hoofer who lost the Easter Parade role due to a broken ankle.

3. Gene Kelly spoke the line, “Why didn’t you tell me I was in love with you?” to Judy Garland in 1942′s Me and My Gal.

Barbara 6 questions4. The biggest-selling music single of all time is White Christmas.

5. Irving Berlin was the writer of White Christmas and the artist who presented himself with an Oscar.

6. The Holiday Inn set was reused 12 years later by Paramount Studios for White Christmas, which also starred Bing Crosby and had music composed by Irving Berlin.
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We hope you enjoyed this movie trivia quiz about Easter classic movies!

You might also enjoy these other Tricky Movie Trivia holiday-related posts:

Irish Movies for St. Patrick’s Day
Movies About Moms for Mother’s Day
Romantic Movies for Valentine’s Day
Memorial Day War Movies Trivia Quiz
Father’s Day Movie Trivia Quiz

Famous Movie Quotes: Irish Movies for St. Patrick’s Day

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shamrocksThis collection of movies features the Irish in one way or another and is the perfect way to get in the mood for St. Patrick’s Day. The movie quotes below come from films that are a mixture of the dark side of Irish life, the silly and the epic. So get a glass of your favorite beverage and throw in some green food coloring; then put your feet up and take your pick from these Irish movies:

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Darby O’Gill and the Little People
1959

Starring Albert Sharpe and Sean Connery
93 minutes

Memorable quote from the movie:
Oh singin’s no sin, and drinkin’s no crime, if you have one drink only, just one at at a time.

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Angela’s Ashes
1999

Starring Emily Watson and Robert Carlyle
145 minutes

Memorable quote from the movie:
If I were in America I could say “I love you, dad”, the way they do in the films. But in Limerick they’d laugh at you. In Limerick you are only allowed to say you love God, and babies, and horses that win. Anything else is softness in the head.

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Cinderella Man
2005
Starring Russell Crowe, Renee Zellweger and Paul Giamatti
Rated PG-13 for intense boxing violence and some language
144 minutes

Memorable quote from the movie:
They ought to put your mouth in a circus.

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Million Dollar Baby
2004

Starring Clint Eastwood, Hilary Swank
Rated PG-13 for violence, some disturbing images, thematic material and language
132 minutes

Memorable quote from the movie:
Girlie, tough ain’t enough.

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High Spirits
1988

Starring Peter O’Toole, Steve Guttenberg, Beverly D’Angelo, Jennifer Tilly and Peter Gallagher
99 minutes

Memorable quote from the movie:
You’re a ghost, I’m an American. It would never work out.

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Gangs of New York
2002

Starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Daniel Day-Lewis, Cameron Diaz, Jim Broadbent, John C. Reilly and Liam Neeson
Rated R for intense strong violence, sexuality/nudity and language
167 minutes

Memorable quote from the movie:
Burn him; see if his ashes turn green.

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Michael Collins
1996

Starring Liam Neeson, Julia Roberts, Aidan Quinn and Stephen Rea
133 minutes

Memorable quote from the movie:
Kitty Kiernan (Julia Roberts): “Is it true, Mick, that all of the women in America wear trousers?
Michael Collins (Liam Neeson): “Absolutely! Shameless hussies, the lot o’ them.

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Gone With the Wind
1939
Starring Clark Gable, Viven Leigh and Leslie Howard
226 minutes (copyright length), 238 minutes (restored US DVD version)

Memorable quote from the movie:

It will come to you, this love of the land. There’s no gettin’ away from it if you’re Irish._____

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Circle of Friends
1995
Starring Chris O’Donnell and Minnie Driver
Rated PG-13 for sexual content
103 minutes

Memorable quote from the movie:
You mustn’t mess me about. I know I may look like a rhinoceros, but I’ve got quite a thin skin really.

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And because you know we had to:

Leprechaun
1993
Starring Warwick Davis and Jennifer Aniston
Rated R for horror violence and language; Rated PG-13 for terror violence (edited version)
92 minutes

Memorable quote from the movie:
Help. Help. It’s happening. The attack is on. O’Grady farm. Uh, send help. The leprechaun is attacking. Army, navy, guns, marines, and we’re gunna need some medicine.

You might also enjoy these other Tricky Movie Trivia holiday-related posts:

Easter Classic Movies Trivia Quiz
Movies About Moms for Mother’s Day
Romantic Movies for Valentine’s Day
Memorial Day War Movies Trivia Quiz
Father’s Day Movie Trivia Quiz

Classic Movie Review: All About Eve

Source: Wikipedia__
I’d love to say that All About Eve is a great movie. Certainly, anyone who watches the DVD extras would get the impression that it is. And if you believe what you hear in the archival interview footage filmed at the time of All About Eve’s release and even many years after, you would probably expect that it’s one of the best movies of the mid-20th century. I think the word perfect was even mentioned several times in the interviews.

I have to say, though; I don’t get it. My take is that it’s a movie with greatness at its heart with lots of fluffy show-biz-type stuff covering it up. The fluffiness comes mostly from a stellar cast that for some reason thought campy would play better than sincere. Many of the characters vamp instead of speak in a direct manner and whine instead of interact, which grows old after just a few minutes. This came as a surprise to me because Miss Bette Davis (along with everyone else in All About Eve) obviously can act. Just one example of that is Now, Voyager, which features BD at her most subtle best.

The rest of the fluff comes from a script that takes itself just a little too seriously. This was another surprise. According to the archival interviews, Eve was the only script in which Davis — famous for angering writers and producers by rewriting scripts — never changed a word because she felt it couldn’t be improved.

Having said all that, I hope I haven’t completely poisoned you against All About Eve. There is some witty dialog, and the themes in the movie are just as timely and worthwhile today as they were in 1950. In fact, you could even say the character of Eve is a timeless icon. Throughout the movie, she worms her way into everyone’s hearts, smiling while she stealthily scratches and claws her way to the top. Sycophantic and obsessed, Eve brought herself from waiting every night by the stage door of the theater where her idol Margo Channing stars in a hit play to finally eclipsing the object of her affection. It reminded me a lot of the time I spent in corporate America.

Without giving away the ending, I’ll tell you that it all works out as the old “what comes around goes around” kicks in for Dear Eve. The ending is actually where the script comes to life for me. There’s an ominous quality to it because we know justice is at hand. I couldn’t help having a Cheshire cat grin as the film reached its conclusion because I knew Eve was going to get a taste of her own medicine — even if it was only going to be off-camera. Whatever the movie’s flaws, that fact actually made it worth the popcorn to me.

Movie trivia from All About Eve

  • Tallulah Bankhead, Susan Hayward, Marlene Dietrich, Claudette Colbert, Ingrid Bergman and Gertrude Lawrence were all considered for the part of Margo Channing before Darryl F. Zanuck hired Bette Davis.
  • According to the casting director’s list, Ronald Reagan and Nancy Davis (eventually, Mrs. Reagan) were considered for the roles of Bill Sampson and Eve Harrington.
  • Bette Davis was in the process of breaking up with husband William Sherry while she was making All About Eve. Her raspy voice in the film is due a burst blood vessel in her throat from screaming at her soon-to-be-ex-husband. Director Joseph L. Mankiewicz liked the quality it gave her voice so he encouraged Davis not to try to change it.
  • Zsa Zsa Gabor kept coming to the set because she was jealous of her husband George Sanders’ scenes with Marilyn Monroe.
  • Bette Davis fell in love with co-star Gary Merrill while shooting All About Eve. They married in July 1950, which was just a few weeks after filming wrapped. They eventually divorced years later.

Other Tricky Movie Trivia classic movie reviews:

You might also be interested in our trivia quiz about famous movie quotes from Bette Davis movies.

Football Movies Trivia Quiz

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Get geared up for the Super Bowl by seeing if you can answer the following football movie trivia questions!

1. Which of the following actors did NOT have his debut in the 1986 football movie Wildcats?

  • Woody Harrelson
  • LL Cool J
  • Samuel L. Jackson
  • Wesley Snipes

2. One of the semi-pro teams in the 1974 version of The Longest Yard had the same name as a company mentioned in 1987′s Wall Street, starring Michael Douglas. What was the name of that company?

3. In the 1932 Marx Brothers football-related movie Horse Feathers, one of the brothers limped through half the film because in real life his kneecap had been shattered in a car accident. Which brother had the limp?

4. Which 1971 movie that reenacted a real-life relationship between football teammates aired on television before it was released theatrically?

5. Which football movie was inspired by a McDonald’s ad about Pee-Wee Football that ran during the Super Bowl? (Steven Spielberg liked it so much, the day after it aired he called up the ad’s creator and hired him to write the script for it.)

6. There were only two football movies shot on the Notre Dame campus. One was Knute Rockne: All American (1940). What was the other one?

Scroll down to see the answers.

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Answers

Now it’s time to see whether you’re a movie star.

1. Samuel L. Jackson was the only one of the four actors who did not have his debut in Wildcats.

2. The name of the company mentioned in Wall Street and The Longest Yard was Anacott Steel, and it doesn’t exist.

3. Chico was the Marx brother who limped in Horse Feathers.

4. Brian’s Song was shown on television before it was released theatrically.

5. The movie inspired by the McDonald’s ad was 1994′s Little Giants.

6. The other football movie shot on the Notre Dame campus was Rudy (1993).

So how did you do with this test of your football movie trivia knowledge? If you didn’t get most of the answers right, don’t worry; you’re not alone. The questions were hard! If you want to brush up on your general movie knowledge, check out Satellite911 DIRECTV, which gives you access to the latest movies, long before Netflix and Redbox have them available.

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