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I thought the same thing. The plane doors opened a second time because he wanted to get off the plane, which led to people rushing the plane. There wouldn't have been any shooting if he'd stayed onboard. Hadn't thought that about the fight in the truck. I agree with all you say. But, I'm glad Ray had those flaws. I wouldn't tolerate a movie about an adult who is never wrong and how he gets a kid/younger guy to roll over and show his belly. I thought it was because wine bottles are often stored sideways. So glad I could help! Holy cannoli, that's it! Thank you so much! But how would they know who to ask? No one in the bar would have known where they lived or their last names. Yeah, and the detective also says "The fingerprints on the car [that Harlan's body was next to] match those of your wife." How could the cops have done a match? The only reasons I can think of for someone's fingerprints to be in a file/database are if they've done a crime, or had a job that required security clearance, neither of which is likely to apply to Thelma. There is no national database of fingerprints (or DNA). What usually happens is, fingerprints are lifted, then the cops set about finding (a) suspect/s. *If* they find anyone who seems likely, *then* they take that persons fingerprints, and see if they match up with any of the recovered prints. (That can sometimes be a heck of a lot of prints. If the crime scene was someplace like a house, there will be prints from every family member, and probably people who visited the house recently. Even if someone lives alone, there's still their prints to deal with, and the perp's prints might overlap with them.) But getting back to my original point, fingerprints are not some instant magic identifier. It's tricky to collect them intact, and then you have to find the person to match the prints; the prints don't necessarily lead you to the person. Ah, I think I have the answer. It was Gita's room, not his, and his teammates didn't know where to find him. Assuming they were looking. Amazing Grace and Chuck? https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0092545/?ref_=nv_sr_1?ref_=nv_sr_1 There was some chemistry. When he comes to from his sixty-third faint, and sits bolt upright into her arms, and she says "Tell me what you dreamt about," that was a very tender moment. And when he says goodbye to her when she's unconscious/supposedly dead, he was about as passionate as that character gets. Besides the age difference when they were filming, there was the age difference when they *met*, when CR was a *little* kid and JD was in his twenties. I'll be! I never noticed that. Thank you. I didn't think he was being Groucho. You might be right and he was, *but*, it was a thing in the 1950s for people to make faces, like sticking one's finger in one's mouth and saying "Madam, please remove your umbrella," or pulling one's hair back tightly and saying "Mommy, you made my braids too tight!" I thought that's what he was doing. Okay, false alarm. Someone unhooked the center channel and didn't tell me. ;) Actually, it was a Netflix disk. Yes. Glad I could help! The first one might be Three For the Road. Charlie Sheen is escorting Kerri Green to a detention center. In the middle of the night, she convinces him to go swimming in a lake. She then handcuffs him to a canoe and steals his car. She has beautiful red hair, but I don't remember her wearing green. It came out in 1987, so it would have been on cable a year after that. I emailed Entertainment Weekly, but still haven't heard back. It probably is Bing Crosby, but I want to hear it from them. They've been wrong a time or two! Okay, thanks!