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Famous trivia from Hollywood movie : Odyssey: The Ultimate Trip (1977) Quiz
Famous trivia from Hollywood movie : Odyssey: The Ultimate Trip (1977) Quiz
This quiz will test your movies knowledge by asking you questions related to the various famous movie trivia from the Hollywood movie: Odyssey: The Ultimate Trip (1977).
About the movie:
Three unrelated stories. The first is about a dissatisfied, hurtful couple clinging together to spite each other rather than take the risk of finding a relationship...
1.
Which of the following famous movie trivia, is related to the Hollywood movie: Odyssey: The Ultimate Trip (1977)?
a.
Producer
Irving Pichel
directed some scenes, uncredited.
b.
The first movie to be given the MPAA tag: "No one under 18 will be admitted unless accompanied by his parent."
c.
The VCA Pictures (VHS) version rip is missing all of the
Samantha Fox
footage. Clips showing the masked faces of
Bobby Astyr
and
Gilbert Palmitier
have been removed. And last but not least, the gun in the final scene is not shown.
d.
The Catamarca Desert is specifically located in Argentina.
2.
Which of the following famous movie trivia, is related to the Hollywood movie: Odyssey: The Ultimate Trip (1977)?
a.
The DVD version is missing a couple of minutes of crucial
Samantha Fox
dialogue explaining her masturbation scene.
b.
The teal blue goddess gown
Juliet Stevenson
(Mrs. Elton) wears to dinner at Hartfield is the same costume
Pauline McLynn
(Mademoiselle Clairwill) wears to see the play in
Quills
.
c.
At one scene in the motel, a smashed watermelon is visible by the bed with no explanation as to why or how it got there. This is because the scene involving the watermelon gag was cut, but the smashed watermelon is still in the shot. The gag was going to be that he was having sex with the watermelon. But shortly before its release, American Pie came out and it no longer seemed appropriate due to using the same joke.
d.
Stephen Hunter
, the author on whose novel the film is based, is a Pulitizer Prize winning film critic for the Washington Post.