Enough said.
This is for my /games channel pals, rather than trying to keep up with the chat window and follow clues, I'll just put things up here, as well as the list of winners for a grand prize drawing. PM me your answers.
Ready? Question One:
Name this 1964 play about an actress who finds out her character is slated to be killed off and gets a little crazy. It was adapted into a 1968 movie by the same title, with the same main character actress, who won a Tony for the role.
Answer: KoL Miners Daughter (private):the killing of sister george
Question Two:
Name this 1973 horror film produced by the famous pop artist who was born in Pittsburgh, PA and died in New York City.
Answer: MRL (private): Andy Warhols Frankenstein?
Question Three:
Name this 1970 film, originally intended to be a sequel to a 1967 film of a similar name, but instead ended up being a spoof. The author of the book that inspired the original then sued this film's studio and won, despite the fact that this film began with a disclaimer stating the two were not connected, but the $2 million suit was not resolved until after her death.
Answer: KoL Miners Daughter (private):beyond the valley of the dolls
Question Four:
Name this 1972 independently-animated satire that set a box office record.
Answer: HuggySmackBeast (private):Fritz the Cat, dammit.
Question Five:
Name the 1974 film directed by a Charm City native that is dedicated to a member of the Manson Family.
Answer: AuDzLuVzJoE (private): Female Trouble
Question Six:
This 1973 film about the sexual relationship between an older American male and a young Parisian woman was originally planned to be about a homosexual relationship, until the intended young French actor backed out.
Answer: MRL (private): Last Tango In Paris?
Question Seven:
This 1972 film stars the world's filthiest actress.
Answer: Sondrok (private): pink flamingos!
Question Eight:
Name this 1969 Western selected for preservation in the Library of Congress that takes place along the Texas-Mexico border in 1913.
Answer: Sondrok (private): wild bunch!
Question Nine:
This 1971 film uses Cockney Rhyming slang as part of a fictional language within the film.
Answer: HuggySmackBeast (private): A Clockwork Orange.
Question Ten (Bonus Round)
What do all of these films have in common?
Answer: Rummie (private): They all were given X-ratings.
Yes, all of these films were given X or NC-17 ratings at one point in time or another.
Ticket 11: Wruined
Ticker 12: Audz


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