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TheLonelyOne86 (243)
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Random Elves Everywhere?
Good grief
Ugh. She's sooooooo
Did Moira know
So many tears....
One thing I feel like I'm not understanding..
So careless
A couple of questions
The one thing that doesn't make sense....
What's so wrong with
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Just watched it for this year. I'm 40-some years old and will keep watching it every year. On a side note, I've seen it a gazillion times and JUST realized that Jon got a sweater that's too big for him, just like a kid would, with plans that he'll "grow into it." My favorite parts are when the "boys" say they're worried about Binky saving Christmas, and then them arguing about it being Christmas morning so they should be allowed to open their gifts at 1:30am.
Yeah, I see others. But those are out and about. Sitting in a classroom is kind of different story. I kind of wish I knew the writers' thoughts on this. Too much room for speculation.
Not sure about this one. Why would Wendy convince him he had imagined it when she specifically said, "I tried to tell you so many times..."
So weird. I get that you'd keep it from a 12/13 year-old girl, but don't understand why it wasn't brought up when she was an adult. Or maybe Wendy didn't want to bother when she realized Peter had completely forgotten.
I figured they didn't have the proper sized battery and, like the time machine rebuild to get Marty back to 1885, they had to make do with what was available in 1955.
I assumed this was a "homeroom" class of sorts. Many were done alphabetically, so one room might have all As and Bs, the next Cs, Ds, Es, etc.
BUT.....I'm pretty sure it's implied these were birthday presents. ....So one was her big gift, and the other was his. The mother's talking at the end, though, how if the deal hadn't fallen through she was planning on buying Ferris a car, too. So he gets both things. Yep. He's the favorite.
I was under the impression it was somehow in his bed. Not that it was the one from the game.
I honestly think it's more for the benefit of the audience. We're looking at a grown man. We need something to remind us that he's just a kid, so acting goofier and a bit younger than what we expect helps us remember that he's 12, not 30, or whatever age he's physically supposed to be.
Robin Williams does something similar in Hook. As soon as he becomes "Pan" he starts talking in somewhat of a "baby" voice. I think this is so we remember that he's shifted to "Pan", boy who doesn't want to grow up, from the grumpy, old man the audience has been seeing since the start of the film.
Wilson: The Party Years
Now free from the man who held him captive, Wilson ventures out on his own to see what the world, away from that sh..hole island, holds for him. When he washes up on the beach of a Caribbean island, Wilson learns all of what life has to offer.
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