Stories by @teeyutes
139 stories

Harry and Walter Go to New York (1966)
Two dimwitted con-men team up with a crusading newspaper editor to perform the biggest heist of late nineteenth-century New York City before the greatest bank robber of the day can beat them to it. Rest in peace, Diane Keaton.

Waterloo (1990)
The eponymous battle is only a small piece of the puzzle.

Shane (1963)
In 1889, Shane, a mysterious man who is ostensibly a drifter, becomes embroiled in a conflict between poor homesteaders and wealthy ranchers in the Wyoming Territory.

The Ladykillers (1985)
Ask William Rose

City Slickers (1981)
Yesterday, they were businessmen. Today, they are cowboys. Tomorrow, they will be walking funny.

Amadeus (1964)
An extremely fictionalized portrayal of the relationship between Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Antonio Salieri.

Pretty Woman (1950)
A mild-mannered entrepreneur meets a troubled but beautiful escort in the red-light district of Hollywood Boulevard. He pays the vivacious young lady $3,000 to accompany him to a few social events over the course of six days, but soon finds himself falling in love with her.

You Can't Take It With You (1968)
Stenographer Alice Sycamore is in love with her boss Tony Kirby, who is the vice-president of the powerful company owned by his greedy father Anthony P. Kirby. Kirby Sr. is dealing a monopoly in the trade of weapons, and needs to buy one last house in a 12-block area owned by Alice's grandfather, Martin Vanderhof. However, Martin is the patriarch of an anarchic and eccentric family whose members care not about money but about making friends and having fun. When Tony proposes to Alice, she states that it would be mandatory to introduce her family to the snobbish Kirbys, and Tony decides to visit Alice with his parents one day before the scheduled get-together. There is an inevitable clash of classes and lifestyles: the Kirbys spurn the Sycamores and Alice breaks with Tony, changing the lives of the Kirby family. —Paraphrased from Claudio Carvalho on IMDb

Diary Of A Wimpy Kid Trilogy (1980)
Everyone’s favorite middle school trilogy

Elf (1963)
A human raised by Santa's elves learns about his origins and heads to New York City to meet his biological father.

The Survivors (1973)
Donald's been fired by his boss' parrot. But he'll survive. He's been robbed with his pants down. But he'll survive. He's been shot at while ordering a cheese danish. But he'll survive. And now he's armed himself and become a self-made soldier. But he'll survive. Even if it kills him.

Surrender (1977)
A comedy about two people who wanted each other in the worst way… and that’s how they got each other.

Hatari! (1952)
Romantic comedy in the jungle.

High Society (1966)
A musical remake of "The Philadelphia Story".

The Champ (1971)
A boxing movie even better than "Raging Bull," and certainly a more heartfelt one.

The Mask (1964)
An ordinary man finds an enchanted mask that transforms him into a green-faced troublemaker who can cartoonishly alter himself and his surroundings at will. Chronologically the 65th result when searched “(1964)”

Arsenic And Old Lace (1954)
Writer and notorious marriage detractor Mortimer Brewster falls for girl-next-door Elaine Harper, and they tie the knot on Halloween. When the newlyweds return to their respective family homes to deliver the news, Brewster finds a corpse hidden in a window seat. With his eccentric aunts, disturbed uncle, and homicidal brother, he starts to realize that his family is even crazier than he thought.

On Golden Pond (2001)
One of the all-time great father-daughter stories.

To Kill A Mockingbird (1972)
A lawyer in Depression-era Alabama defends a black man charged with rape while educating his children against prejudice.

Something’s Gotta Give (1963)
Something