That Old Feeling Page #3

Synopsis: Lily and Dan are a couple who have been divorced for years. When their daughter, Molly gets married she invites them. At the reception, Lily and Dan bicker loudly so Molly asks them to leave. It's while they are alone that their banter turns into passion and they get it on. Later while Molly is having her wedding night she discovers her parents together and freaks out. The next day they run off and their partners are wondering where they are. Molly decides to try and find them and she enlists a paparazzi who's been following her mother to help find them.
Genre: Comedy, Romance
Director(s): Carl Reiner
Production: MCA Universal Home Video
  2 nominations.
 
IMDB:
6.1
Rotten Tomatoes:
43%
PG-13
Year:
1997
105 min
215 Views


your hair on my pillow.

That was a classy touch.

I didn't plan that. It was

just spontaneous combustion.

Rowena, did they suck out your

brain cells along with your fat?

I don't think my fat

has ever been an issue, Lilly.

Well, Dan, here we are

at a wedding.

Perfect place for growth,

for healing.

And just think, you and me,

two people...

Shut up, or I'll kill you. Huh.

Hey.

You know the bride's mother,

the one with the big...

I want you to shoot her

only from the left.

No problem.

Who let you in here?

How ya doin'? No, no, no!

Not today!

Why not today?

You look radiant.

Get out! I mean it. Get out!

Don't be shy.

Stop. Just stop.

Tilt your head to the left.

Look at that nuptial blush.

How dare you?

I gotta pay rent too.

Don't you live in a van?

Sanford! You're funny.

Maybe we could do something with the

whole family. Sanford! Gordon!

Pout. Gordon, please. This

is an uninvited guest.

Don't touch the camera!

Hey, Malibu Ken!

That's good. Stand with your wife.

Nice shot.

Hey, let go of me! Tough guys, huh?

You look like Easter eggs!

What was that about?

How did he get in here?

I hired him. What?

His portfolio was great.

He shoots all the stars.

What people really

want in a marriage...

We want what I call

emotional valet parking.

We deserve it, but in order to get

it, you have to be validated.

Have a wonderful day.

Lovely. Bye-bye.

Congratulations.

Our daughter looks beautiful.

Thank you.

So how are you?

Fabulous. How are you?

Never better. Good.

I'm glad you can be civil.

This is not the time nor the

place for anything else, is it?

For once, we agree.

What are you doing in Armani?

Knock over a truck?

It's called prosperity. Really?

Yes, Keep Under The Grass

went into its third printing.

Oh? What's that?

One of my books.

Oh, I wouldn't know. I've

been out of the country.

Tax problems? Shooting a film.

Do you still do that?

You know perfectly well

I still do that.

You've got more hair.

I don't think so.

What is it? Plugs? A rug?

No. No. Look.

Let's not do this, okay?

Please.

I'm just curious. Rogaine?

Hair Club for Men?

I've laid off of your hair.

My hair is perfect.

Yes, it's perfect, if you want to look

like a madame in a saloon in Tombstone.

Oh! A metaphor.

Aren't we literary?

I can't believe that you are still

threatened by people who write books.

My husband writes books. He

doesn't threaten me at all.

You call that self-help

psychobabble that he writes books?

More people read them than

those dime novels of yours.

The Tao of Divorce? Who is

this guy tryin' to kid?

That book has saved thousands of marriages.

None of which was ours.

Ours was beyond saving.

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Leslie Dixon

Leslie Dixon is an American screenwriter and film producer. She began her career as an original screenwriter, writing films such as 1987's Outrageous Fortune and Overboard. She then moved into adaptations and re-writes, developing the screenplays for: Mrs. Doubtfire, The Thomas Crown Affair, Pay It Forward, and Hairspray. She has also produced a variety of films, and the television series Limitless. more…

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Submitted on August 05, 2018

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