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Famous trivia from Hollywood movie : Several Things Not Intended to Hurt You (2004) Quiz
Famous trivia from Hollywood movie : Several Things Not Intended to Hurt You (2004) Quiz
This quiz will test your movies knowledge by asking you questions related to the various famous movie trivia from the Hollywood movie: Several Things Not Intended to Hurt You (2004).
About the movie:
As the regional summer theater season winds down in Evergreen, Colorado, theater actor Colin starts looking for the next job along with actor friends Zack and Nancy...
1.
Which of the following famous movie trivia, is related to the Hollywood movie: Several Things Not Intended to Hurt You (2004)?
a.
The Phantoms makeup was designed to resemble a skull.
Lon Chaney
attached a strip of fish skin (a thin, translucent material) to his nostrils with spirit gum, pulled it back until he got the tilt he wanted, then attached the other end of the fish skin under his bald cap. For some shots, a wire-and-rubber device was used, and according to cameraman
Charles Van Enger
it cut into Chaneys nose and caused a good deal of bleeding. Cheeks were built up using a combination of cotton and collodion. Ears were glued back and the rest was greasepaint shaded in the proper areas of the face. The sight was said to have caused some patrons at the premiere to faint.
b.
Debuted in Denver on 3 May 2004 at the Starz Entertainment Movie Complex at Denvers Tivoli Center, chosen to be one of the films shown that evening as a part of the Denver Film Societys on-going "Colorado Filmmakers Series."
c.
The "100 Monkeys" displayed on the theater marquee refers to
Jackson Rathbone
s band of the same name.
d.
The films release (prior to the launch of Apollo 13) about a space disaster led to a real-life crisis aboard Skylab 3 (c. July -September 1973) where a thruster leak developed on board the Apollo CSM. The depiction of a rescue vehicle was as a lifting body (for a description of what a "lifting body" is, see Wikipedia and search for the term). This lifting body was the basis of the Skylab Rescue space vehicle, which based on a Block II Apollo Command Module (CSM #119) which was modified by North American Rockwell. Memos dating back to December 1970 (from NASA facilities at the Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston, and Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral) confirmed that a rescue spacecraft would be next in line if the main Apollo CSM failed during flight. By November 1971, the modified CSM was phased in with evaluation and testing prior to the final lunar mission, Apollo 17, which launched in December 1972. The real-life thruster leak aboard Skylab 3 was neutralized and fixed. Thus the rescue launch vehicle (piloted by NASA astronauts Vance Brand and Don Lind) was pulled from flight duty. The vehicle was on standby for Skylab 4 and the Apollo-Soyuz mission. Brand would fly on the Apollo-Soyuz mission and Lind on STS-51B in 1985. After the final Apollo flight in 1975 (Apollo-Soyuz), the modified command module, CSM #119, was put on display at the Kennedy Space Centers Visitors Complex. NASA engineers have studied the modified Skylab Rescue CSM for the Orion Spacecraft (part of Project Constellation), which will replace the Space Shuttle Atlantis after her final mission in July 2011.