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"The Blob" (1958): Featuring an early Steve McQueen performance, this classic B-horror movie includes a famous scene in which the red, gooey creature chases people out of a movie theater. They go running and screaming in terror with the blob still coming after them, oozing through the theater's front doors, growing larger all the time. Cops with rifles try to restore order, but it's in vain. On the marquee, you can see that the blob has inflicted itself upon a midnight showing of a Bela Lugosi movie, sending frightened moviegoers fleeing into the night. "Gremlins 2: The New Batch" (1990): The Gremlins cause a movie print that's playing to snap, pop, bubble and burn. Then they mess around behind the screen making shadow puppets and maniacally laughing before taking over the projector. Patrons come out and complain to the manager, who says: "We just show these movies, we don't make them." Finally it takes Hulk Hogan to stand up to the monsters to get them to behave. "Foul Play" (1978): Goldie Hawn meets up with a mysterious new friend at a movie theater. He's seriously wounded and bleeding and tries to warn her about a murder that's planned. Being adorably clueless, she doesn't comprehend what he's talking about
-- until he whispers in her ear, "Beware of the dwarf" before collapsing on her shoulder, dead. Hawn screams just as a shocking moment happens in the movie, which causes others to scream, too, and drown her out (again, there's the blurring of reality and fiction). Hawn runs out to the lobby to tell the manager what happened but by the time they get back inside the house, the body is gone. "The Purple Rose of Cairo" (1985): Jeff Daniels plays a dashing Depression-era movie character named Tom Baxter who one day recognizes the outside world, walks off the screen and falls in love with a waitress in the audience played by Mia Farrow. The rest of the characters are left standing around wondering what to do
-- they've dropped their performances and are complaining as their regular selves. Some people stay in the theater to see what will happen next; meanwhile, other Tom Baxters in other theaters start trying to leave the movie, too. One of Woody Allen's best. "Bachelor Party" (1984): Tom Hanks and Robert Prescott are duking it out for the love of Tawny Kitaen, whom Hanks is about to marry. During the course of their fistfight, they end up on stage in front of the crowded showing of a 3-D movie, inadvertently acting out the exact fight that's happening on screen. A guy in the audience with his arm around a girl says, "This is the best 3-D I've ever seen." The girl responds, "Eh, I've seen better." Then she takes an errant punch to the face, rubs her nose and goes, "Whoa."
[Associated
Press;
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