Here's my question.Is the nudity In the movie(Italian muse...) gratuitous...or actually fit into the story?
Nope.ROclockCK said:Beat me to it. Big Night is mine as well.
The Man from La Mancha (1971) is perfect for TT. An MGM/UA, an epic production, the early 70's. Maybe one day, but not today.seangood79 said:My take on the clue is "It All Comes Out in the Wash" means the audience won't know the difference. So you could shoot a movie in Italy (Spaghetti Sauce) with an Italian Muse (Sophia Loren) even though her character is Spanish, and the movie is set in Spain.
Man of La Mancha
Don't know how The Method fits in.
Disney holds their titles close. No.SWFF said:NOISES OFF (1992)
Not a Disney property. Disney sold Miramax in December 2010 to an investment company that is exploring the catalog with titles licensed to Lionsgate and Echo Bridge.BPullen said:Morricone, Miramax, a period piece, what's not to love? This is a Disney property. So no.
True. Thanks for the correction. Still this has no relation, as of yet, to the companies that lease titles to TT.ahollis said:Not a Disney property. Disney sold Miramax in December 2010 to an investment company that is exploring the catalog with titles licensed to Lionsgate and Echo Bridge.
No. But it is part of the clue. "The Method" was Brando, "an Italian muse" was Maganni. The “spaghetti sauce”, “it all comes out in the wash", those are still unknown.Eric Bodnar said:Although I haven't seen the film, I'm thinking it might be The Fugitive Kind. It does have Brando for Method, Magnani for Italian, and it is a United Artists release. I'm not sure about spaghetti sauce however.
Great guess. Sophia Loren, the Spanish shoot, it fits the clue. This is MGM/UA. Sadly no.Hasslein said:The Pride & The Passion (1957)