Well, Blondie, goodbye cruel world!
I like that scene where Adam Coffin(Eli Wallach) is in a lighthouse and he blows himself up with explosives! Did that happen in Peter Benchley's novel?
shareI like that scene where Adam Coffin(Eli Wallach) is in a lighthouse and he blows himself up with explosives! Did that happen in Peter Benchley's novel?
shareIn the book the character Robert Shaw is playing here blows himself underwater with the wreck of the sunken ship.
shareIn the book, Coffin is a good guy and gets murdered by Cloche when I he won't say where the treasure is. And then, to sacrifice himself for Gail and David, Treece blows himself, and Cloche up with the rest of the ship.
The woods are mysterious, dark and deep, and I have promises to keep...
-Death Proof
<<And then, to sacrifice himself for Gail and David, Treece blows himself, and Cloche up with the rest of the ship. >>
Makes more sense than the ending in the movie. There's no way Treece could have gotten out of the wreck before it blew up, and there's no way David could have surfaced that quickly without getting an embolism.
Love your thread headline reference to Blondie ala "The Good, The Bad, The Ugly". LOL!
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What you what you see (and have seen) is what you get -- and have!