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Orablanco Account

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Everything posted by Orablanco Account

  1. I've been joking all week that this gonna turn into Nightmare on Elm Street 3: The Dream Warriors, and then it actually turned into Dream Warriors. It was a nice change of pace seeing an episode like this in the middle of a season.
  2. Get out of here, Discovery Family. We were having a good time and then you showed up.

    1. Kyoshi Frost Wolf

      Kyoshi Frost Wolf

      I will say that I am not fond of how they are handling the show. They really are not giving it the respect it deserves. Apparently they think it is just another mindless kid's show.

    2. Castle Bleck

      Castle Bleck

      DF's advertising bucking SUUUUUUUUUCKS!!!

  3. I'm not saying Season 5 has the potential to be the Best Season Ever or anything, I'm just saying it might be the Best Season Ever or something.
  4. "We see your dragon sidekicks and Disney Princesses, other toy-based video games, and raise you one crossover between Back to the Future and Doctor Who." -Lego, probably

  5. You are the best friend I ever had.

  6. I remember back in 2012 there was this one guy on a IMDB thread suggesting that the failed test Twilight wasn't prepared for was a pregnancy test. He was serious. Anyway... Celestia: "Maybe I can help." Anyone: "Hello, Derpy. Yes, Derpy, I am talking to you. You are Derpy. Your name is Derpy. Any other suggested name for you is false. The correct pronunciation of your name has, is, and always will be 'dur-pee.'"
  7. California Raisins paid a lot of money to have raisins appear in Back to the Future, hoping the exposure would do for their brand what E.T. the Extra Terrestrial did for Reese's Pieces. They got pissed because the only exposure they got in that movie was a bench poster being slept on by a homeless guy and demanded a refund.
  8. *sees "Is MLP Overated" thread* I am surprised that took as long as it did to exist.

    1. Noei

      Noei

      I'm quite surprised that the moderators locked it. :P

    2. Orablanco Account

      Orablanco Account

      I'm sad I didn't get to post in there. It seems like it would have been oodles of fun.

  9. Man, when will Twist get an episode? Totally underused.

    1. Edgeworth1001

      Edgeworth1001

      Her episode should have a good plot TWIST.

  10. What, 100 episodes and not of them is focused on Celestia? If you ask me, she's way too overexposed. How about more Twist? There's not nearly enough of her. Yeah, she's underused.
  11. The episode felt real, y'know? Like, as real as a bunch of candy colored horses throwing parties can be. Really enjoyed the laid back vibe.
  12. What a great surprise this episode turned out to be. Larson...YOU...are my numbah one...GUUUUUUY...
  13. Of course Batman and Wonder Woman will have sex in Batman v. Superman, because DC/Warner Bros is run by monkeys.

    1. Edgeworth1001

      Edgeworth1001

      They better not unless they want their HQ to be burned to the groun.

  14. What's the episode about tomorrow? Something about friendship?

  15. Forcing children to watch movies you like is good fun.

  16. This year sees the release of the highly anticipated Jaws 19, coinciding with the 40th anniversary of Steven Spielberg's original masterpiece. So what better time to revisit on of the greatest movies of all time, Jaws! Wait, I already did that one. Huh. ... Oh, hey, it's the 30th anniversary of Back to the Future. Which also happens to be the 60th anniversary of Calvin Klein's invention of Rock n' Roll. To honor this beloved saga of incest, Pepsi products, and unfortunately placed manure, I present my biggest factoid post ever. When this baby hits 88 trivia bits...you're gonna see some serious s***. Back to the Future -The idea for Back to the Future came from co-writer/producer Bob Gale wondering if he would have been friends with his father in high school. -Writer/director Robert Zemeckis wanted to make Back to the Future before Romancing the Stone, but his first two movies were flops, and Hollywood was unsure about his prospects as a filmmaker. The script was rejected 40 times, with many studios finding the comedy not risque enough to compete with the lucrative raunchy high school comedies of the time, while Disney was not keen on making a movie about a mother unkowingly having the hots for her son. When Romancing the Stone ended up being a huge hit, Zemeckis ignored all the offers from studios coming his way and went straight to Steven Spielberg, the only producer who had faith in him from the beginning. -Marty McFly was originally written as suicidal, and it almost made it into the movie before Bob Gale and Zemeckis decided it clash with the plot's general zaniness. -The time machine was originally a refrigerator, but Zemeckis was afraid kids would lock themselves in fridges after seeing the movie. A DeLorean was eventually picked because the vertical doors allowed them to do the flying saucer in the barn gag. -Executive Producer Sidney Sheinberg is responsible for “Proffesor Brown” becoming “Doc Brown,” but he's also tried to change the title to “Spaceman From Pluto,” for some reason. Spielberg more or less shamed him into dropping the issue making it seem like he thought the suggestion was a joke. -When asked why Marty hangs out with Doc Brown in the first place, Bob Gale explained that Doc gave Marty a part-time job after he snuck into his lab and was impressed by his crazy inventions. -Biff Tanen is named after Ned Tanen, a studio executive who had given Zemeckis and Bob Gale grief on a previous film. -"It's like I'm kissing my brother” was added to make the Oedipus stuff a little less...disturbing. Doc Brown and Marty were originally gonna sell bootleg videos to fund the time machine, but Universal didn't want to encourage piracy. -Einstein was originally meant to be a chimpanzee. -Christopher Lloyd was offered the role of Doc Brown after John Lithgow, Duddley Moore, Jeff Goldblum, and James Woods were considered. He initially turned it down, but was convinced to change his mind by his wife. -Michael J. Fox was always the first choice to play Marty, but he was committed to Family Ties at the time. This resulted in the role going to Eric Stoltz, who actually got around to shooting four weeks of the production before Zemeckis realized he wasn't right for the part, playing everything a little too straight and dramatic for what was essentially a comedy. In probably the most famous instance of mid-shoot recasting, Stoltz was willingly let go from the production, while Fox found an opening in his schedule and was brought in. The reshoots of scenes already done with Stoltz added $3 million to the budget, and Fox found himself doing Family Ties at day and Back to the Future at night. -Meanwhile, Thomas F. Wilson was cast as Biff because the original actor, J. J. Cohen, wasn't tall enough to be an imposing threat to Eric Stoltz's Marty. He stayed on when Eric Stoltz left. -Before that, Tim Robbins was considered for the role of Biff. Don't worry, he got to do a movie with Lea Thompson later... -Marty's parents were cast based on what their ages in 1955, so Michael J. Fox is three years older than the actor playing his father (Crisper Glover) and 10 days younger than his mother (Lea Thompson). -Johnny Depp had auditioned for the role of Marty, but according to Bob Gale, “he must have not been all that memorable.” -The set for Hill Valley is the same used for Kingston Falls in Gremlins. -The talent show judge who tells Marty his song is “too loud” is played by Huey Lewis, the artist who wrote -A man in a dog costume serves as a stand-in when Einstein is traveling through time for the first time. -Doc Brown hunches because the 6'11” Christopher Lloyd needed to even his height with the 5'5” Michael J. Fox. -Crispin Glover was apparently so nervous during production that he ended up just mouthing many of lines, which had to be dubbed later. -Glover's suggestions for his character were often very strange. At one point, he wanted 1985 George McFly to have Eraserhead hair. -The scenes set in 1955 were filmed first, as it was easier to make the sets looks nice for the 1950s before trashing them for the 1980s. -Doc Brown's amplifier has a CRM114 label, as a reference to Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove. Biff calling everyone a butthead was improvised by Thomas F. Wilson. -Michael J. Fox received Grade-A lessons on how to fake-play the guitar realistically, while his singing was dubbed in by Mark Campbell. He was already a pretty good skateboarder, but still required some help from stunt doubles to pull off some more advanced stuff. -“Gigawatts” is suppose to be pronounced with a hard “G,” but Christopher Lloyd heard the film's science consultant pronounce it “jigawatts,” so it stuck. -The time machine components in the DeLorean made the interior of the car cramped, causing Michael J. Fox to hit his elbow on the time circuits handle every time he shifted gears. You can hear it happening every time he changes shift during the chase in the mall parking lot. -Likewise, Fox didn't mean to keep hitting his head on the DeLorean's door; that thing just became faulty as filming went on. -Billy Zane's first movie, in the immortal role of Matches, that guy in the leather jacket who hangs out with Biff. -Lea Thompson's 1985 makeup took three and a half hours to apply. -The cat statues sitting at the clock tower were originally made for Cat People. -The climax of the film originally took place at a Nevada nuclear testing site, with Doc Brown using a radio dish to gather nuclear energy for the DeLorean, but the studio was unwilling to build another huge set. Instead, the scene was rewritten to take place in the town square, with hints at the significance of the clock tower retroactively placed throughout the movie. -Steven Spielberg went on to borrow both the rejected the ideas of the refrigerator and the nuclear test site for Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. -When Marty first heads to the mall to meet up with Doc Brown, it's called “Twin Pines Mall.” After he goes back in time and accidentally runs over a pine tree in the past, it's called “Lone Pine Mall.” -Subtler detail: a piece of ledge under the clock tower is missing in 1985, the same piece Doc Brown knocked off in 1955. -California Raisins paid thousands of dollars to have raisins appear at the Enchantment Under the Sea Dance, hoping the movie would do for raisins what E.T. the Extra Terrestrial did for Reese's Pieces. Yeah. Unfortunately for them, a bowl of raisins looks like a bowl of dirt when filmed, so the filmmakers instead stuck the product placement somewhere else. Specifically, the bench Red the Homeless Guy sleeps on. -“Johnny B. Goode” was almost cut from the movie because it slowed down the pacing of the climax, but the editor was able to convince Zemeckis to keep it in. -The film's release was delayed until August, but the preview screening was so well received that producer Frank Marshall moved it back up to July. -Oddly, there are only 32 effects shots in the whole movie. Industrial Light & Magic worked right up until the last minute to get the movie done. -Composer Alan Silvestri made as grand as possible just so he could impress Spielberg and convince him he was right for the job. The score doesn't actually begin until the DeLorean is unveiled for the first time. -Ronald Regan was apparently so delighted by the joke about him being the president in the 80s that he asked the projectionist to roll the movie back and play it again. He went on to quote the movie in his 1986 State of the Union address. -A sizable crowd turned out on October 26, 1985 at the mall where they shot the movie to see if Marty would show up. -The top grossing film of 1985. -Thomas F. Wilson always keeps a FAQ card handy wherever he goes so he can hand them out to the fans who constantly approach him about -There was never meant to be a sequel; the cliffhanger at the end of the movie was meant as a joke. But upon the the movie's massive success, the sequel was deemed inevitable, and “TO BE CONTINUED” was added to end of VHS copies. Back to the Future: Part II -The film was originally titled “Paradox.” -Bob Gale's script had Marty head back to the 60s where his parents were hippies, but Zemeckis thought the idea was dumb. -Zemekis's least favorite scenes in the trilogy to shoot was the 2015 segment in Part 2, as he was never satisfied with how movies could never accurately predict future technology. So instead, the filmmakers purposely made 2015 wacky and unrealistic, flying cars and all. -You may not have noticed, but Crispen Glover did not return for either sequel, either due to contract disputes or what he refereed to as disagreeing with the film's moral. Actor Jeffery Weissman donned prosthetics to look like Glover for the few scenes that featured George McFly, while the filmmakers conspired to hide the switcheroo whatever way they could, which explains why George McFly is randomly hanging upside down in 2015 and why he's dead in alternate 1985. Glover went on to sue the producers, as they didn’t have permission to use his likeness. The Screen Actors Guild now has rules for a situation like this. -Claudia Wells, who played Jennfer in the first movie, was unable to return due to her mother's poor health at the time. The recap at the beginning of Part 2 is actually reshot footage with new actress Elisabeth Shue. -The hoverboards were simply planks of wood stuck to the actors' feet. The actors were suspended on cables that were later erased in post production. -Of course, it wasn't enough that the film had convincing effects for the hoverboards. Zemeckis tried to convince people that the hoverboards were real and were supposed to be released to the market by Mattel before parental complaints about safety kept it from hitting stores. This goes beyond doing something for the fun of it; Zemeckis went out of his way to build up the dreams of the children of the world before crushing them himself. Bastard. -The best special effect in the movie, however, was having the actors play several different versions of themselves in the same shot, a trick that becomes more difficult when the camera is still moving dynamically like it does in this movie. The filmmakers developed the vista glide, a motion controlled camera system that allowed them to do multiple passes of a single shot so the different versions of a given actor could be composited together. -For some shots, such as when 2015 Marty is eating dinner with his two kids, all three played by Michael J. Fox, the shot was split into thirds, with each character occupying their third of the shot. This required perfect set and prop continuity, so everything was glued down so they wouldn't move between shots. Fortunately, an earthquake didn't disturb the set when the crew left it overnight. -Elijah Wood's first movie, in the immortal role of One of Those Kids Who Were Messing With the Wild Gunman Machine in Cafe 80s. -Michael J. Fox had to relearn how to skateboard after five years out of practice. -The antique shop Marty gets the sports almanac from has a Roger Rabbit doll in the window, an obvious nod to Zemeckis's other huge movie of the 80s. We'll get to that one later... -Also in the window is the Jaws NES game developed by LJN, who also developed the games for Roger Rabit and Back to the Future. -The 2015 USA Today is dated October 22nd, Christopher Lloyd's birthday. -It cost more to spruce up the town square for the 2015 scenes than it would have to just build it from scratch. -The cowboys and trains pattern on Doc Brown's shirt foreshadows the next movie. -Apparently Jaws 19 is directed by Spielberg's son Max Spielberg. The hologram shark was originally meant to look better, but they decided to go with the horribly fake looking animation test version, because it looked funnier. -One of the officers who escort Jennifer to the McFly residence is played by Mary Ellen Trainor, Zemeckis's wife at the time. -Carl Sagan praised the movie for its handling of time travel and alternate timelines. -When attending the film's premiere in London, Christopher Lloyd recalls Princess Diana laughing the hardest when Biff gets buried under manure a second time. -Nike has hinted that they are working on shoes with self-tying laces as seen in the movie. -Years before Hollywood started splitting two movies into two parts, Part 2 was deemed too massive and convoluted for one movie, so all the western stuff was split off into a third movie. This meant shooting both sequels at once, which created a very hectic schedule for Zemeckis. On the worst days, he would be in Burbank working on Part 2, then he'd fly down to the set of Part 3, then he would travel back to Burbank, getting very little sleep along the way. -Part 2 is one of Zemeckis's favorite movies that he's made. Back to the Future: Part III -The western setting was inspired by a conversation Zemeckis had with Michael J. Fox during the making of the first movie, in which Fox thought it'd be cool if Marty went to the Old West and did cowboy stuff. -Mary Steenburgen took on the role of Clara Clayton by her kids, who were huge fans of the original movie. -Many of western scenes were shot in Monument Valley, which also served as a filming location for Once Upon A Time in the West, Stagecoach, and National Lampoon's Vacation. -Despite the amount of pressure on the crew to make two movies at once, the actors really enjoyed the more laid back feel of the western setting, and the stunt team enjoyed working with horses and doing cowboy stuff. -This movie reveals that at some point, there are four separate DeLoreans in 1955 at one time: the one hidden in the mine, the one Marty firs traveled back to 1955 with, the one Doc Brown and Marty arrive in to get the sports almanac back, and the one Biff stole so he could give the almanac to his younger self. Heavy stuff, man. -When Marty McFly first mentions Clint Eastwood, he's standing next to posters for Revenge of the Creature and Tarantula, two of Eastwood's first movies. Eastwood himself was asked if it was okay if they used his name in the movie, and was more than happy to give permission. -ZZ Top makes a cameo as the band playing at the Hill Valley Festival. Those guys know how to fiddle. -Thomas F. Wilson learned to do most of his own stunts, which involved learning how to ride a horse and how to throw a lasso. -When Mad Dog tries to lynch Marty, the rope was genuinely strangling Michael J. Fox, who passed out for a short time afterward. -This movie features Christopher Lloyd's first onscreen kiss. -Production halted twice: when Michael J Fox's father died, and when his son was born. -The manure wagon that unloads on Mad Dog belongs to “A. Jones,” while the manure truck that buries his descendent in 1955 belongs to “D. Jones.” See, this is why I love these movies. -Several shots during the train climax were actually highly detailed miniatures. Other times, it was a full-sized train that require coordinated technicians and stuntmen. The DeLorean was built to be able to flip off the track at any needed time for safety reasons. -A deleted scene saw Marshall Strickland get shot in the back by Mad Dog, but it was deemed too dark for a family movie. -Spielberg likes Part 3 much more than Part 2. -The town built for the movie ended up being destroyed by lightning in 1996. Spooky. -Bob Gale still has the time circuit display and the Mr. Fusion (now turned into a lamp). -When a poll asked each US state which movie shot locally they would want to represent them, Californians picked Back to the Future. -Zemeckis swears that as long as he lives, there will never be another sequel or a remake. Good. Happy Anniversary, Back to the Future, and thanks for reading, fellow travelers of the space-time continuum. Hope your future is a good one, and don't forget to go easy on your son when he burns the carpet. Now make like a tree and get out of here.
    1. Edgeworth1001

      Edgeworth1001

      2015 wasn't all it was made up to be! Great Scott!

  17. Terminator 5 wasn't very good. Still better than Terminator Salvation

    1. Edgeworth1001

      Edgeworth1001

      >stillbetterthansalvation/10

       

      That's all I needed to know.

  18. My movie trivia post from a few days ago. Next one is gonna be a big one, and quite literally timely, if I do say so myself. https://mlpforums.com/blog/722/entry-17258-summer-of-the-factoids-willy-wonka-and-the-chocolate-factory/

  19. New Equestria Girls trailer. Sigh.

  20. Come with meeeeee, And you'll beeeeee In a wooooooorld Of Useless Information. What you'll reaaad Will require... ...explanatioooooooonnnnnnnnnnnnn... And this blog is certainly not showing ANY SIGNS THAT IT IS SLOWING!!! -The film came about when director Mel Stuart found out his daughter was a fan of Ronald Dahl's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and wanted him to make a movie about it. Producer David L. Wolper convinced Quaker Oats to finance the film to promote their new Wonka Bars, hence the change of title from the book in order to put the word “Wonka” out there. The movie's literally a commercial for candy. -The screenplay was written by Ronald Dahl, with uncredited rewriting from David Seltzer, added Wonka's affinity for literary quotes, Charlie's encounter with Fizzy Lifting Drinks, and the presence of Slugworth, who was only mentioned in the book. -The role of Willy Wonka was first offered to Joel Grey, but it was decided he wasn't imposing enough. After that, the role was offered each member of Monty Python, Spike Milligan, who was Ronald Dahl's preferred choice, Ron Moody, Peter Sellers, and Jon Pertwee, who was too busy playing the Doctor on Doctor Who at the time. Eventually, Gene Wilder auditioned for the part and blew Mel Stuart away, so much so that he promised Wilder the part before the producers could work out a fee. - Most of the movie was filmed in Munich, which was cheaper than filming in the US. - Peter Ostrum, who played Charlie Bucket, hit puberty during filming, resulting a voice that gets noticeably deeper as the movie goes on. - Grandpa George's actor, Ernest Ziegler, was practically blind and required a red light to tell him where to look during filming. -During the Candy Man song at the beginning, you can totally see one girl get walloped in the chin when he lifts up the counter. -It was Gene Wilder who thought up Wonka limping before somersaulting during his big entrance, the idea being that the audience wouldn't be able to trust Wonka from that point forward. -Both Denise Nickerson (Violet Beareguarde) and Julie Dawn Cole (Veruca Salt) had crushes on Peter Ostrum and made a deal where they would each get to hang out with him on specified days. - Most of the chocolate bars in the film were made of wood. Conversely, many of the props in the Chocolate Room were actually edible, though that doesn't include the cup Wonka takes a bite out of (it was actually wax) and, can you believe it, the incredibly fake-looking chocolate river, which was just brown-colored water. The added cocoa powder failed to thicken the liquid, and it went foul fast and stunk up the joint. -That's a dummy shooting up the pipe during Augustus Gloop departure. -Julie Dawn Cole's British accent rubbed off on the the other child actors, and they unknowingly said a couple of their lines in an accent. - Many of the Oompa-Loompa performers didn't know any English. It's noticeable when they appear to be mouthing random words during the songs. Well, a different kind of random than "oompa-loompa doompety doo," anyway. - For Violet Beareguarde's demise via blueberrification, Denise Nickerson was stuck in an inflatable suit, which was switched out for a giant styrofoam ball that had to be rolled around every few minutes to keep her blood circulating. Due to time constraints, she had to be kept in costume and make-up through lunch. During filming, the Oompa-Loompas would accidentally roll Nickerson into walls. Some of the make-up soaked into her pores and resurfaced a few days later, turning Nickerson's face blue during math class. - Veruca Salt's earth-shattering tantrum required the room to be reset after each of the 39 takes. - The Wonkamobile caused some severe skin irritation. It's not a real movie production until somebody is accidentally exposed to substances that cause great discomfort. - Many of the child actors' reactions in the movie are authentic: they didn't know Wonka was gonna come out of the factory hobbling, they had never seen the Chocolate Room before shooting that scene, they actually thought Gene Wilder had gone mad during the Nightmare Boat from Hell sequence, and Peter Ostrum was unprepared for Gene Wilder yelling at him at the end. Wilder wanted to warn Ostrum before shooting, but Mel Stuart forbade it. - There's no real thematic reason everything in Wonka's office is cut in half. Mel Stuart just felt that it would have been weird to go through all that whimsical tom-foolery and to have it end in a normal office. -True to their characters, Peter Ostrum returned the Everlasting Gobstopper prop at the end of filmmaking when he was asked to, while Julie Dawn Cole stole hers as a keepsake. - Denise Nickerson ended up getting 13 cavities from all the gum she had to chew. - Despite appearing pleased when visiting the set, Ronald Dahl hated this movie, angry that it deviated so much from his original script and placed what he perceived to be too much emphasis on Wonka and not enough on Charlie. He denied ever watching it in full (though conflicting reports say otherwise) and wouldn't allow the filming of the original book's sequel, Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator. David Seltzer had an idea for a sequel separate from Dahl's, but he legally couldn't pursue it. - Peter Ostrum never acted again after this movie, and instead became a veterinarian. - The movie did okay at the box office, but it ended up finding success as one of the most rented films of the early era of home video. Thanks for reading, and always remember what happened to the man who suddenly learned a bunch of stuff about a movie at once. He lived happily ever after. I think. Never followed up on him.
  21. How horrifying.

    1. Edgeworth1001

      Edgeworth1001

      I know, Ted 2 wasn't all that great.

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