u/Jabba_108

▲ 27 r/moviequestions+1 crossposts

The 80's had some of the most memorable movies ever.

If you could only keep ONE 80's movie and the rest disappeared, which one are you saving?

Curious to see what people pick.

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u/Jabba_108 — 2 days ago
▲ 5 r/Actors

Charlie Sheen or Emilio Estevez?

Two different careers, same family, but completely different paths.

Charlie had the bigger spotlight, more hits, and a lot more

controversy. Emilio stayed more low-key, but had classics like The Breakfast Club and Young Guns.

If you had to pick one, who you going with?

reddit.com
u/Jabba_108 — 2 days ago
🔥 Hot ▲ 203 r/kungfucinema

Johnny Wang Lung-wei might be one of the most underrated villains in kung fu cinema.

Every time he showed up, you already knew it wasn't going to end well for somebody. He didn't need a long intro or a big speech, his presence alone was enough. Cold, ruthless, and believable.

A lot of villains had flashy styles, but his felt real, like he actually wanted to hurt someone.

Shaw Brothers had some great bad guys, but he's got to be up there with the best.

Where do you rank him?

u/Jabba_108 — 2 days ago

Be honest, did Game of Thrones ruin its legacy with the ending?

For years it felt untouchable, every season had people locked in, talking about it everywhere. Then that last season dropped and split everybody.

Some people say it destroyed the whole show. Others say it was still one of the greatest series ever regardless.

Where you stand on it?

reddit.com
u/Jabba_108 — 3 days ago
🔥 Hot ▲ 156 r/90smovies

The Rock (1996) is one of those movies that just never gets old.

Alcatraz, the green smoke, the tension the whole time... but what really made it was the characters. Sean Connery owned every scene, Nic Cage played that chaos perfectly, and Ed Harris wasn't even a typical villain, you almost understood him.

And that soundtrack? It made everything feel bigger.

They don't make them like this anymore.

Just story, tension, and real acting.

What scene stuck with you the most?

reddit.com
u/Jabba_108 — 3 days ago
▲ 26 r/sitcoms

Three's Company

Simple setup, same apartment, same misunderstandings, but somehow it never got old. John Ritter had that physical comedy down perfect, dude could make anything funny without even saying a word.

And the whole dynamic between

Jack, Janet, and Chrissy just worked.

Every episode felt familiar, but you still watched anyway.

This was back when sitcoms didn't need much, just good timing and characters you liked.

Who remembers watching this?

u/Jabba_108 — 3 days ago
🔥 Hot ▲ 111 r/nostalgia

Tang

I remember this being in the house like it was juice, but it wasn't juice.

Powder, mix it with water, and somehow it tasted good anyway.

Every kid from the 90's had this at some point. That bright orange color alone was enough to make you want a glass.

Looking back now, I still don't even know what it really was, but we all drank it.

Who else grew up on this?

u/Jabba_108 — 3 days ago