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Published Tuesday, September 30, 2008 by Tatyanavvganqbjkvv.
I really loved the movie The Best of The Dick Van Dyke Show, Vol. 1. I really enjoyed watching Morey Amsterdam in this movie. I also think Rose Marie was great!
I think Morey Amsterdam and Rose Marie worked wonderful in The Best of The Dick Van Dyke Show, Vol. 1. The great supporting cast includes Morey Amsterdam, Rose Marie, Jerry Paris, Dick Van Dyke.
I left some information, immages, and video previews of The Best of The Dick Van Dyke Show, Vol. 1 below.
Summary of The Best of The Dick Van Dyke Show, Vol. 1: Sample some of the greatest comedy ever aired on television with this side-splitting collection of the best episodes from the legendary, Emmy Award-winning Dick Van Dyke Show! Episodes include: The Sick Boy and the Sitter, Big Max Calvada, Coast-to-Coast Big Mouth, Dear Sally Rogers.
Click on images below to see The Best of The Dick Van Dyke Show, Vol. 1 online :
The Big Bus was an incredible movie! Both Ren Auberjonois and Selma Archerd were amazing! Maybe thats what makes the movie so good.The great cast includes Ren Auberjonois, Selma Archerd, Dan Barrows, Ned Beatty, John Beck. The movie moves on like a dream and end leaving you wanting for more.
If you love watching Ren Auberjonois or Selma Archerd, you are deffinetly going to want to watch The Big Bus.
For anyone who's wallowed in the inanities of 1970s disaster movies, The Big Bus is not only witty but downright endearing. Instead of an endangered airliner or a capsized cruise ship, this dippily deadpan parody features a block-long, atomic-powered, luxury super-Greyhound setting off on its first transcontinental run with a garish cross section of humankind programmed for redemption, retribution, or just sublime ridiculousness as they roll toward Doom--or Denver, whichever comes first. Writers Fred Freeman and Lawrence J. Cohen, who penned the daffy historical spoof Start the Revolution Without Me (1970), twist the sententious ironies of disaster-movie dialogue into pretzels (priceless scene: Richard B. Shull, as a "terminal traveler" with six months to live, and Bob Dishy, a discredited veterinarian who fitted a rabbit for an IUD, debating who knows more about bitterness). James Frawley's direction is drolly clich-savvy, but his touch proved too delicate for 1976 audiences; it remained for Airplane! to grab the disaster-spoof brass ring four years later. Still, it's not too late to climb aboard. --Richard T. Jameson