(Article is below...)

Duck Soup (1933 film) Quotes

Duck Soup (1933 film) is a TV show that appeared on TV in 1970 . Duck Soup stopped airing in 1970.

It features Herman J. Mankiewicz as producer, Bert Kalmar in charge of musical score, and Henry Sharp as head of cinematography.

Duck Soup (1933 film) is recorded in English and originally aired in United States. Each episode of Duck Soup (1933 film) is 68 minutes long. Duck Soup (1933 film) is distributed by Paramount Pictures.

The cast includes: Groucho Marx as Rufus T. Firefly, Margaret Dumont as Mrs. Teasdale, Louis Calhern as Ambassador Trentino, Chico Marx as Chicolini, Zeppo Marx as Bob Roland, and Raquel Torres as Vera Marcal.

Duck Soup (1933 film) Quotes

Louis Calhern as Ambassador Trentino

  • (Louis Calhern) "Now will you tell me what happened on Saturday?"
  • (Chico Marx) "I'm glad you ask me. We follow this man down to a roadhouse, and at this roadhouse he meet a married lady."
  • (Louis Calhern) "A married lady?"
  • (Chico Marx) "Yeah, I think it was his wife."
  • (Louis Calhern) "Firefly has no wife."
  • (Chico Marx) "No?"
  • (Louis Calhern) "No."
  • (Chico Marx) "Then you know what I think, boss?"
  • (Louis Calhern) "What?"
  • (Chico Marx) "I think-a we follow the wrong man."
  • (Louis Calhern) "I am willing to do anything to prevent this war."
  • (Groucho Marx) "It's too late. I've already paid a month's rent on the battlefield."
  • (Louis Calhern) "Chicolini, your partner's deserted us, but I'm still counting on you. There's a machine gun nest near Hill 28. I want it cleaned out."
  • (Chico Marx) "Alright, I tell the janitor."
  • (Louis Calhern) "Chicolini, your partner has deserted you but I'm still counting on you. There is a machine gun nest near Hill 28. I want it cleaned out."
  • (Chico Marx) "All right, I'll tell the janitor."
  • (Louis Calhern) "But I asked you to dig up something I can use against Firefly. Did you bring me his record?"
  • (Louis Calhern) "No, no."
  • (Chico Marx) "And the boy gets a cigar."
  • (Louis Calhern) "Have we met each other before, sir?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "I don't think so. In fact, I'm not sure I'm seeing you now; it must be something I ate."
  • (Louis Calhern) "Have you been trailing Firefly?"
  • (Chico Marx) "Have we been trailing Firefly? Why, my partner, he's got a nose just like a bloodhound."
  • (Louis Calhern) "Oh really?"
  • (Chico Marx) "Yeah, and the rest of his face don't look so good either."
  • (Louis Calhern) "Now, Chicolini, I want a full detailed report of your investigation."
  • (Chico Marx) "All right, I tell you. Monday we watch-a Firefly's house, but he no come out. He wasn't home. Tuesday we go to the ball game, but he fool us: he no show up. Wednesday he go to the ball game, but we fool him, we no show up. Thursday it was a double-header, nobody show up. Friday it rained all day, there was no ball game, so we stayed home, we listen to it over the radio."
  • (Louis Calhern) "I've said enough, I'm a man of few words."
  • (Groucho Marx) "I'm a man of one word: Scram."
  • (Louis Calhern) "I didn't come here to be insulted."
  • (Groucho Marx) "That's what you think."

Raquel Torres as Vera Marcal

  • (Raquel Torres) "Oh, for heaven's sake, whatever you do, don't make a sound. If you found, you lost."
  • (Chico Marx) "Oh, you craze. How can I be lost if I'm found?"
  • (Raquel Torres) "Oh, your Excellency, isn't there something I can do?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "Yes, but I'll talk to you about that later."

Margaret Dumont as Mrs. Teasdale

  • (Margaret Dumont) "I've sponsored your appointment because I feel you are the most able statesman in all Freedonia."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Well, that covers a lot of ground. Say, you cover a lot of ground yourself. You better beat it; I hear they're going to tear you down and put up an office building where you're standing. You can leave in a taxi. If you can't get a taxi, you can leave in a huff. If that's too soon, you can leave in a minute and a huff. You know, you haven't stopped talking since I came here? You must have been vaccinated with a phonograph needle."
  • (Margaret Dumont) "The future of Freedonia rest on you. Promise me you'll follow in the footsteps of my husband."
  • (Groucho Marx) "How do you like that? I haven't been on the job five minutes and already she's making advances to me."
  • (Margaret Dumont) "Rufus, what are you thinking of?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "Oh, I was just thinking of all the years I wasted collecting stamps."
  • (Margaret Dumont) "What's that?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "Sounds to me like mice."
  • (Margaret Dumont) "Mice? Mice don't play music."
  • (Groucho Marx) "No? How about the old maestro?"
  • (Margaret Dumont) "If it's not asking too much:"
  • (Margaret Dumont) "For your information, just for information, / Tell us how you intend to run the nation --"
  • (Groucho Marx) "These are the laws of my administration: No one's allowed to smoke, or tell a dirty joke, and whistling is forbidden."
  • (Unnamed) "We're not allowed to tell a dirty joke, Hail, hail Freedonia."
  • (Groucho Marx) "If chewing gum is chewed, the chewer is pursued, and in the hoosegow hidden."
  • (Margaret Dumont) "Your Excellency. I thought you'd left."
  • (Chico Marx) "Oh, no, I no leave."
  • (Margaret Dumont) "But I saw you with my own eyes."
  • (Chico Marx) "Well, who you gonna believe? Me or your own eyes?"
  • (Margaret Dumont) "Your excellency, the ambassador's here on a friendly visit. He's had a change of heart."
  • (Groucho Marx) "A lot of good that'll do him: he's still got the same face."
  • (Louis Calhern) "I'm sorry we lost our tempers; I'm willing to forgot if you are."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Forget? You ask me to forget? A Firefly never forgets. Why, my ancestors would rise from their graves, and I'd only have to bury them again. Nothing doing. I'm going back and clean the crackers out of my bed; I'm expecting company."
  • (Margaret Dumont) "I want you to meet a very charming lady."
  • (Groucho Marx) "And it's about time."
  • (Margaret Dumont) "We've been expecting you. As chairwoman of the reception committee, I extend the good wishes of every man, woman, and child of Freedonia."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Never mind that stuff."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Take a card."
  • (Margaret Dumont) "Card? What will I do with the card?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "You can keep it. I've got fifty-one left. Now what were you saying?"
  • (Margaret Dumont) "Notables from every country are gathered here in your honor. This is a gala day for you."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Well, a gal a day is enough for me. I don't think I could handle any more."
  • (Margaret Dumont) "As chairman of the reception committee, I welcome you with open arms."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Is that so? How late do you stay open?"

Groucho Marx as Rufus T. Firefly

  • (Groucho Marx) "Well, maybe I am a little headstrong. But, I come by it honestly. My father was a little headstrong. My mother was a little armstrong. The headstrongs married the armstrongs and that's why darkies were born."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Calling all nations. Calling all nations. This is Rufus T. This is Rufus T. Firefly coming to you through the courtesy of the enemy. We're in a mess folks, we're in a mess. Rush to Freedonia. Three men and one woman are trapped in a building. Send help at once. If you can't send help, send two more women."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Make it three more women."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Don't look now, but there's one man too many in this room, and I think it's you."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Maybe you can suggest something. As a matter of fact, you do suggest something. To me you suggest a baboon."
  • (Louis Calhern) "What?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "I, uh, I'm sorry I said that; it isn't fair to the rest of the baboons."
  • (Groucho Marx) "There goes my gun. Run out and get that like a good girl."
  • (Groucho Marx) "I'd be unworthy of the high trust that's been placed in me if I didn't do everything in my power to keep our beloved Freedonia in peace with the world. I'd be only too happy to meet with Ambassador Trentino, and offer him on behalf of my country the right hand of good fellowship. And I feel sure he will accept this gesture in the spirit of which it is offered. But suppose he doesn't. A fine thing that'll be. I hold out my hand and he refuses to accept. That'll add a lot to my prestige, won't it? Me, the head of a country, snubbed by a foreign ambassador. Who does he think he is, that he can come here, and make a sap of me in front of all my people? Think of it; I hold out my hand and that hyena refuses to accept. Why, the cheap four-flushing swine, he'll never get away with it I tell you, he'll never get away with it."
  • (Groucho Marx) "So, you refuse to shake hands with me, eh?"
  • (Louis Calhern) "Mrs. Teasdale, this is the last straw. There's no turning back now. This means war."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Then it's war. Then it's war. Gather the forces. Harness the horses. Then it's war."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Well, I know one thing; I bet you haven't got a picture of my grandfather."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Uh uh, not now."
  • (Groucho Marx) "How would you like a job in the mint?"
  • (Chico Marx) "Mint? No, no, I no like a mint. Uh, what other flavor you got?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "Gentlemen, Chicolini here may talk like an idiot, and look like an idiot, but don't let that fool you: he really is an idiot. I implore you, send him back to his father and brothers, who are waiting for him with open arms in the penitentiary. I suggest that we give him ten years in Leavenworth, or eleven years in Twelveworth."
  • (Chico Marx) "I'll tell you what I'll do: I'll take five and ten in Woolworth."
  • (Groucho Marx) "If any man should come between a husband and a bride. We find out which one she prefers by letting her decide. If she prefers the other one, the husband steps outside. We line him up against the wall and --"
  • (Groucho Marx) "Pop goes the weasel."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Oh, uh, I suppose you would think me a sentimental old fluff, but, uh, would you mind giving me lock of your hair?"
  • (Margaret Dumont) "A lock of my hair? Wh-why, I had no idea."
  • (Groucho Marx) "I'm letting you off easy: I was going to ask for the whole wig."
  • (Groucho Marx) "What can this mug offer you? Wealth and family? I can't give you wealth, but; uh; we can have a little family of our own."
  • (Margaret Dumont) "Oh, Rufus."
  • (Groucho Marx) "All I can offer you is a roofus over your head."
  • (Groucho Marx) "I danced before Napoleon. No, Napoleon danced before me. As a matter of fact, he danced 200 years before me."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Not that I care, but where is your husband?"
  • (Margaret Dumont) "Why, he's dead."
  • (Groucho Marx) "I bet he's just using that as an excuse."
  • (Margaret Dumont) "I was with him to the very end."
  • (Groucho Marx) "No wonder he passed away."
  • (Margaret Dumont) "I held him in my arms and kissed him."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Oh, I see, then it was murder. Will you marry me? Did he leave you any money? Answer the second question first."
  • (Margaret Dumont) "He left me his entire fortune."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Is that so? Can't you see what I'm trying to tell you? I love you."
  • (Groucho Marx) "I'll see my lawyer about this as soon as he graduates from law school."
  • (Groucho Marx) "You're a brave man. Go and break through the lines. And remember, while you're out there risking your life and limb through shot and shell, we'll be in be in here thinking what a sucker you are."
  • (Freedonia's Secretary of War) "How about taking up the tax?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "How 'bout taking up the carpet?"
  • (Freedonia's Secretary of War) "I still insist we must take up the tax."
  • (Groucho Marx) "He's right, you've gotta take up the tacks before you can take up the carpet."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Why don't you marry me?"
  • (Margaret Dumont) "Why, marry you?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "You take me and I'll take a vacation. I'll need a vacation if we're going to get married."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Let me out of here. Hey, let me out of here or throw me a magazine."
  • (Groucho Marx) "The last time this happened to me I was crawling under a bed."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Chicolini, I need you badly right now. What'll you take to come back and work for me again?"
  • (Chico Marx) "I'll take a vacation."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Good, you're hired."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Remember, you're fighting for this woman's honor; which is probably more than she ever did."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Chicolini, give me a number from one to ten."
  • (Chico Marx) "Eleven."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Right."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Now, what is it that has four pairs of pants, lives in Philadelphia, and it never rains but it pours?"
  • (Chico Marx) "Atsa good one. I give you three guesses."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Now let me see. Has four pair of pants, lives in Philadelphia -- Is it male or female?"
  • (Chico Marx) "No, I no think so."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Is he dead?"
  • (Chico Marx) "Who?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "I don't know. I give up."
  • (Chico Marx) "I give up, too."
  • (Groucho Marx) "I will not stand for anything that's crooked or unfair. I'm strictly on the up-and-up, so everyone beware. If anyone's caught taking graft -- and I don't get my share, we stand him up against the wall and --"
  • (Groucho Marx) "Pop goes the weasel."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Send a messages out to all wires. The enemy has captured Hill 27 and 28 throwing 13 hillbillies out of work. Last night two snipers crept into our machine gun nest and laid an egg. Send reinforcements immediately. Send it on collect."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Awfully decent of you to drop in today. Do you realize our army is facing disastrous defeat? What do you intend to do about it?"
  • (Chico Marx) "I've done it already."
  • (Groucho Marx) "You've done what?"
  • (Chico Marx) "I've changed to the other side."
  • (Groucho Marx) "So you're on the other side, eh? Well, what are you doing over here?"
  • (Chico Marx) "Well, the food is better over here."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Get me headquarters. Not hindquarters, headquarters."
  • (Groucho Marx) "I'll see you at the opera tonight. I'll hold your seat till you get there. After you get there you're on your own."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Take a letter."
  • (Zeppo Marx) "Who to?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "To my dentist."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Uh -- Dear dentist, enclosed find check for $500, yours very truly. Send that off immediately."
  • (Zeppo Marx) "I'll, um, I'll have to enclose a check first."
  • (Groucho Marx) "You do and I'll fire you."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Where's my Stradivarius?"
  • (Unnamed) "Here, sir."
  • (Groucho Marx) "I'll show 'em they can't fiddle around with old Firefly."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Look at 'em run. Now they know they've been in a war."
  • (Zeppo Marx) "Your Excellency."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Hahahahahaha, they're fleeing like rats."
  • (Zeppo Marx) "But sir, I've got to tell you --"
  • (Groucho Marx) "Remind me to give myself the Firefly Medal for this."
  • (Zeppo Marx) "Your Excellency, you're shooting your own men."
  • (Groucho Marx) "What?"
  • (Zeppo Marx) "You're shooting your own men."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Here's $5, keep it under your hat."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Never mind, I'll keep it under my hat."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Any answer to that message?"
  • (Unnamed) "No, sir."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Well, in that case, don't send it."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Now, how about lending this country twenty million dollars, you old skinflint?"
  • (Louis Calhern) "Twenty million dollars is a lot of money. I'd have to take that up with my Minister of Finance."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Well, in the meantime, could you let me have twelve dollars until payday?"
  • (Louis Calhern) "Twelve dollars?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "Don't be scared, you'll get it back. I'll give you my personal note for ninety days. If it isn't paid by then, you can -- keep the note."
  • (Groucho Marx) "This is the only way to travel."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Go, and never darken my towels again."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Dig trenches, with our men being killed off like flies? There isn't time to dig trenches. We'll have to buy them ready made. Here, run out and get some trenches. Wait a minute, get 'em this high --"
  • (Groucho Marx) "and our soldiers won't need any pants. Wait a minute, get 'em this high --"
  • (Groucho Marx) "and we won't need any soldiers."
  • (Groucho Marx) "And now, members of the cabinet --"
  • (Groucho Marx) "we'll take up old business."
  • (Unnamed) "I wish to discuss the tariff."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Sit down, that's new business. No old business? Very well --"
  • (Groucho Marx) "we'll take up new business."
  • (Unnamed) "Now, about that tariff --"
  • (Groucho Marx) "Too late, that's old business already. Sit down."
  • (Groucho Marx) "If any form of pleasure is exhibited, report to me and it will be prohibited. I'll put my foot down, so shall it be -- this is the land of the free. The last man nearly ruined this place he didn't know what to do with it. If you think this country's bad off now, just wait till I get through with it. The country's taxes must be fixed, and I know what to do with it. If you think you're paying too much now, just wait till I get through with it."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Chicolini, I need you badly right now. What'll ya' take to come back and work for me again?"
  • (Chico Marx) "I'll take a vacation."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Good. You're hired --. Now, go out on that battlefield and lead those men to victory. Go on, they're waiting for you."
  • (Chico Marx) "I wouldn't go out there unless I was in one of those big iron things, go up and down like this -- What do you call-a those things?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "Tanks."
  • (Chico Marx) "You're welcome."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Any mail for me while I was gone?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "Remember, you're fighting for this woman's honor, which is probably more than she ever did."
  • (Freedonia's Secretary of War) "I give all my time and energy to my duties, and what do I get?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "You get awfully tiresome after a while."
  • (Freedonia's Secretary of War) "Sir, you try my patience."
  • (Groucho Marx) "I don't mind if I do, you must try mine sometime."
  • (Freedonia's Secretary of War) "That's the last straw, I resign. I wash my hands of the whole business."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Good idea, you can wash your neck, too."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Look at Chicolini. He sits there alone, an abject figure --"
  • (Chico Marx) "I abject."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Now that you're Secretary of War, what kind of an army do you think we ought to have?"
  • (Chico Marx) "Well, I tell you what I think, I think we should have a standing army."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Why should we have a standing army?"
  • (Chico Marx) "Because then we save money on chairs."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Come on up here, I wanna scare the cabinet."
  • (Groucho Marx) "I'm in a hurry. To the House of Representatives. Ride like fury. If you run out of gas, get ethyl. If Ethel runs out, get Mabel. Now step on it."
  • (Groucho Marx) "The man doesn't live who can call a Firefly an upstart. Why, the Mayflower was full of Fireflys, and a few horseflies, too. The Fireflys were on the upper deck and the horseflies were on the Fireflys."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Married. I can see you right now in the kitchen, bending over a hot stove. But I can't see the stove."
  • (Groucho Marx) "I got a good mind to join a club and beat you over the head with it."
  • (Groucho Marx) "His Excellency's car."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Here's one I picked up in a dance hall."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Here's another one I picked up in a dance hall."
  • (Groucho Marx) "More bad news."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Didn't I tell ya."
  • (Margaret Dumont) "Your Excellency."
  • (Groucho Marx) "What's on your mind, babe?"

Chico Marx as Chicolini

  • (Chico Marx) "Mister you no understand. Look, he's a spy and I'm a spy, he work-a for me. I want him to find out-a something, but he no find out what I wanna find out. Now how am I gonna find out what I wanna find out if he no find out what I gotta find out?"
  • (Prosecutor) "Something must be done. War would mean a prohibitive increase in our taxes."
  • (Chico Marx) "Hey, I got an uncle lives in Taxes."
  • (Prosecutor) "No, I'm talking about taxes; money, dollars."
  • (Chico Marx) "Dollars. There's-a where my uncle lives. Dollars, Taxes."
  • (Chico Marx) "Well, you remember you gave us a picture of this man and said, 'Follow him?'"
  • (Louis Calhern) "Oh, yes."
  • (Chico Marx) "Well, we get on-a the job right away and in the one hour; even-a less than one hour --"
  • (Louis Calhern) "Yes?"
  • (Chico Marx) "We lose-a the picture. That's-a pretty quick work, eh?"
  • (Chico Marx) "Now I aska you one. What has a trunk, but no key, weighs 2,000 pounds and lives in a circus?"
  • (Prosecutor) "That's irrelevant."
  • (Chico Marx) "Irrelephant? Hey, that'sa that answer. There's a whole lot of irrelephants in the circus."
  • (Lemonade Vendor) "I'll teach you to kick me."
  • (Chico Marx) "You don't have to teach me, I know how."
  • (First Judge) "That sort of testimony we can eliminate."
  • (Chico Marx) "Atsa fine. I'll take some."
  • (First Judge) "You'll take what?"
  • (Chico Marx) "Eliminate. A nice, cold glass eliminate."
  • (Chico Marx) "Here, have a cigar."
  • (Chico Marx) "That's a good quarter cigar. I smoke the other 3/4 myself."
  • (Chico Marx) "Peanuts to you."
  • (Prosecutor) "Chicolini, you're charged with high treason, and if found guilty, you'll be shot."
  • (Chico Marx) "I object."
  • (Prosecutor) "You object? On what grounds?"
  • (Chico Marx) "I couldn't think of anything else to say."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Objection sustained."
  • (Prosecutor) "Your Excellency, you sustain the objection?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "Sure, I couldn't think of anything else to say either. Why don't you object?"
  • (Chico Marx) "Hey, careful with the water. It's the only water we got."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Well, it's the only woman we've got."
  • (Chico Marx) "Hello? No, not yet. All right, I tell him. Good-a-bye."
  • (Chico Marx) "That was for you again."
  • (Groucho Marx) "I wonder whatever became of me? I should have been back here a long time ago."
  • (Trentino's Blonde Secretary) "A telegram for you, Ambassador."
  • (Chico Marx) "He gets mad because he can't read."

Zeppo Marx as Bob Roland

  • (Zeppo Marx) "Message from the front, sir."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Oh, I'm sick of messages from the front. Don't we ever get a message from the side?; What is it?"
  • (Zeppo Marx) "General Smith reports a gas attack. He wants to know what to do."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Tell him to take a teaspoonful of bicarbonate baking soda and a half a glass of water."
  • (Zeppo Marx) "We've got to get rid of that man at once. Now I've got a plan. You say something to make him mad, and he'll strike you -- and we'll force him to leave the country."
  • (Groucho Marx) "That's a swell plan -- why couldn't you arrange for me to strike him?"
  • (Zeppo Marx) "Ambassador Trentino is a very sensitive man. Perhaps if you insult him. He's very easy to insult. Why, I said something to Vera Marcal in his presence once, and he slapped my face."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Why didn't Vera slap your face?"
  • (Zeppo Marx) "She did."
  • (Groucho Marx) "What'd you say to her?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "You ought to be ashamed of yourself. Where'd you hear that story?"
  • (Zeppo Marx) "Why, you told it to me."
  • (Groucho Marx) "Oh yes, I remember. I should have slapped Mrs. Teasdale's face when she told it to me."
  • (Zeppo Marx) "This letter's the work of Trentino. The man is trying to undermine you. Now what are you going to do about it?"
  • (Groucho Marx) "I've got a good mind to ring his doorbell and run."

Add or Update Quotes

If you have a quote to add or change and want to let us know, please fill in the form below. Include the time in the film/video if possible so we can find it.




Additional Film and TV Quotes

Double Indemnity (film) Quotes | Dont Look Back Quotes | The Docks of New York Quotes | Do the Right Thing Quotes | The Deer Hunter Quotes | The Day the Earth Stood Still Quotes | North by Northwest Quotes | Sullivan's Travels Quotes | City Lights Quotes | The Cheat (1915 film) Quotes | Chan Is Missing Quotes | Broken Blossoms Quotes | Bringing Up Baby Quotes | Bride of Frankenstein Quotes | Last of the Summer Wine Quotes | The Big Parade Quotes | The Band Wagon Quotes | Aladdin (1992 Disney film) Quotes | Signs (film) Quotes | Creature from the Black Lagoon Quotes | Hellraiser Quotes | The Third Man Quotes | Dune (1984 film) Quotes | Guess Who's Coming to Dinner Quotes | Brief Encounter Quotes |