Cool Hand Skywalker: Difference between revisions
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File:One Flew Over the Cool Hand's Nest.jpg|link=One Flew Over the Cool Hand's Nest|'''''[[One Flew Over the Cool Hand's Nest]]''''' is an American psychological prison drama film directed by Miloš Forman and Stuart Rosenberg and starring Jack Nicholson and Paul Newman. | |||
File:Cool Hand Lube.jpg|link=Cool Hand Lube|'''''[[Cool Hand Lube]]''''' is a 1967 psychological crime thriller film about Luke Jackson, a decorated World War II veteran who wages a one-man war on corrupt parking meters. | File:Cool Hand Lube.jpg|link=Cool Hand Lube|'''''[[Cool Hand Lube]]''''' is a 1967 psychological crime thriller film about Luke Jackson, a decorated World War II veteran who wages a one-man war on corrupt parking meters. | ||
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* [[Gnomon Chronicles]] | * [[Gnomon Chronicles]] | ||
* ''[[I, Rivet]]'' | * ''[[I, Rivet]]'' | ||
* ''[[One Flew Over the Cool Hand's Nest]]'' | |||
* ''[[Return of the Eraserhead]]'' | * ''[[Return of the Eraserhead]]'' | ||
Revision as of 09:01, 15 August 2023
Cool Hand Skywalker is a 1967 science fiction drama film about Obi-Wan Kenobi (Paul Newman), a prisoner in an Imperial labor camp who refuses to submit to the system, and his friendship with a young draftee moisture farmer (Mark Hamill).
In the News
One Flew Over the Cool Hand's Nest is an American psychological prison drama film directed by Miloš Forman and Stuart Rosenberg and starring Jack Nicholson and Paul Newman.
Cool Hand Lube is a 1967 psychological crime thriller film about Luke Jackson, a decorated World War II veteran who wages a one-man war on corrupt parking meters.
I, Rivet is a 2004 American industrial manufacture training film about a highly intelligent robot (Will Smith) who investigates the alleged failure of substandard fasteners.
Return of the Eraserhead is a 1983 surrealist science fiction horror allegory film about a Jedi Knight (Luke Skywalker) who struggles to rescue his father (Darth Vader) from a grossly deformed child in a desolate industrial light and magic landscape.
Baby Sarlacc is a trade name for a juvenile sarlacc, popular as a novelty pet.
Fiction cross-reference
- Baby Sarlacc
- Cool Hand Lube
- Gnomon algorithm
- Gnomon Chronicles
- I, Rivet
- One Flew Over the Cool Hand's Nest
- Return of the Eraserhead
Nonfiction cross-reference
External links
- Return of the Jedi @ Wikipedia
- The Sarlacc pit @ YouTube
- Cool Hand Luke @ Wikipedia
- Cool Hand Luke - trailer @ YouTube
- Parking meter scene @ YouTube
- Cool Hand Luke (1967) - I Can Eat 50 Eggs Scene @ YouTube
- Cool Hand Luke (1967) - Eating the Eggs Scene @ YouTube
- Failure to communicate scene @ YouTube
Social media
- Post @ Twitter (20 July 2023) - Both
- Post @ Twitter (11 July 2023)
- Post @ Twitter (26 January 2023) - Sarlacc
- Post @ Twitter (1 March 2022) - "Fifty Sarlacc eggs"
- Post @ Twitter (7 November 2021)
- Fiction (nonfiction)
- Films
- Science fiction (nonfiction)
- Luke Skywalker (nonfiction)
- Star Wars (nonfiction)
- 1960s (nonfiction)
- 1967 (nonfiction)
- Lou Antonio (nonfiction)
- J. D. Cannon (nonfiction)
- Gordon Carroll (nonfiction)
- Robert Drivas (nonfiction)
- Eggs (nonfiction)
- Films (nonfiction)
- George Kennedy (nonfiction)
- Cool Hand Luke (nonfiction)
- Strother Martin (nonfiction)
- Paul Newman (nonfiction)
- Parking meters (nonfiction)
- Donn Pearce (nonfiction)
- Frank R. Pierson (nonfiction)
- Prison films (nonfiction)
- Stuart Rosenberg (nonfiction)
- Lalo Schifrin (nonfiction)
- Jo Van Fleet (nonfiction)
- Morgan Woodward (nonfiction)
- Anthony Zerbe (nonfiction)
- 1980s (nonfiction)
- 1983 (nonfiction)
- Kenny Baker (nonfiction)
- Anthony Daniels (nonfiction)
- Carrie Fisher (nonfiction)
- Harrison Ford (nonfiction)
- Mark Hamill (nonfiction)
- Lawrence Kasdan (nonfiction)
- George Lucas (nonfiction)
- Richard Marquand (nonfiction)
- Peter Mayhew (nonfiction)
- Frank Oz (nonfiction)
- David Prowse (nonfiction)
- Return of the Jedi (nonfiction)
- Star Wars: Return of the Jedi (nonfiction)
- Billy Dee Williams (nonfiction)
- John Williams (nonfiction)