
Being Born In The 80s Famous Quotes & Sayings
List of top 13 famous quotes and sayings about being born in the 80s to read and share with friends on your Facebook, Twitter, blogs.
Top 13 Quotes About Being Born In The 80s
#1. I should be able to pick which applications I use for managing my life, I should be able to pick which content I look at, and I should be able to pick which device I use, which company I use for supplying my internet, and I'd like those to be independent choices. - Author: Tim Berners-Lee
#2. I hope one day I will be able to be completely myself. Maybe I'll be wilder. - Author: Charlotte Gainsbourg
#3. I wish I had met [Francesca] Woodman forty years ago. It would have been great to live with her for a year. She didn't save anything. She played the camera like a new guitar. She murdered herself out taking pictures - Author: Richard Prince
#4. The environmental movement's focus on the Keystone XL pipeline issue really used to baffle me. - Author: Matthew Yglesias
#5. Science is but one form of rationalism, while religion is the most common form of superstition. - Author: Richard Dawkins
#6. I know fuck-all about vampires. It's not like I got an instruction pamphlet when I was bitten. - Author: Rainbow Rowell
#7. In my 20s I was going round seeing agents who were patronising because I was fat and a girl, which was a double whammy. I knew what it was to feel out-of-the-loop. - Author: Victoria Wood
#8. The only thing you have for measuring what's real is your mind so what happens when your mind becomes a pathological liar? - Author: Neal Shusterman
#9. There should be laughter after pain, there should be sunlight after rain, these things have always been the same, so why worry now?
[Why Worry?] - Author: Mark Knopfler
# There is a difference in just attending the temple and having a rich spiritual experience. The real blessings of the temple come as we enhance our temple experience. To do so, we must feel a spirit of reverence for the temple and a spirit of worship. - Author: L. Lionel Kendrick
# Who would ever think of learning to live out of an English novel? - Author: Anthony Trollope
# Most of the confidence which I appear to feel, especially when influenced by noon wine, is only a pretense. - Author: Tennessee Williams
# Once your name becomes well known, politicians come courting. - Author: Charley Pride
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as what the poet has to say, and as a thing which he makes. — C.S. Lewis
30 Movie Quotes Every '80s Kid Knows by Heart
The s were a pivotal decade at the movies. The blockbuster era blossomed and franchises began to flourish. Comedies provoked tears, dramas provoked thought. There were voices in the corn, and absolutely no cats in America. The movies of the '80s were also eminently quotable, from the punchlines to the shocking third-act revelations and beyond. These '80s movie quotes are imprinted on the hearts and souls of '80s kids everywhere.

Faye Dunaway's performance as Joan Crawford, tyrannical movie star and mother in 's Mommie Dearest is one of the most terrifying and indelible screen performances ever. She tiptoes the line between over-the-top brilliance and ghoulish failure throughout. Her explosion of anger at her daughter for using wretchedly common wire hangers is a line that defined the careers of two actresses.
If you think the line is "Luke, I am your father," you need to seek out those Star Wars trilogy DVDs on your shelf and have another look. But no matter what the precise wording was, the revelation that the ultimate villain in the galaxy was the father of its greatest hero sent shockwaves through movie audiences. Every shocking twist at the end of a movie has been chasing Darth Vader's (James Earl Jones) paternity confession ever since.

Picking out just one line from the famously joke-dense Airplane is a nearly impossible task. Or it would be if Leslie Nielsen's immaculate deadpan delivery in response to the prompt "Surely you can't be serious!" didn't make this line stand head and shoulders above the rest.

What makes a line like "E.T. phone home" so great is how many different emotions it conjures up. The first time he says it, there's the wonder of this funny little alien creature talking. The second time he says it—after we all thought he was dead—it's just the most thrilling moment, inspiring equal parts excitement and tears. Steven Spielberg's movie depends on the audience forming a bond with E.T., and that one line truly seals it.

The maternal panic and rage that Shirley MacLaine delivers as she berates the hospital staff to give her daughter (Debra Winger) painkillers while she's dying in the hospital runs counter to the film's reputation as a five-hanky weepie. In the expert hands of MacLaine (who won an Oscar for this performance), the moment is both funny and harrowing at the same time.

Celie (Whoopi Goldberg) finally stands up to the abusive Mister (Danny Glover) at the dinner table, holding a knife to his throat and cursing him. It's a long-awaited moment for Celie, as she takes back her power and promises nothing but ruin to the man who kept her down for so long.

Director James L. Brooks' comedic view of a changing TV news industry—shifting from grubby substance to flashy style—is stuffed with great lines. But this one, which has Holly Hunter responding to a put-down with sincere self pity, is at once delightfully funny and smartly cutting at the same time.

Cher's absolute triumph culminated with an Academy Award, and also with the immortality of her signature line from the film. Cher fans, film fans, and even people who have never seen the movie know the sound of that slap, followed by her iconic "Snap out of it!" The poor, unsuspecting faces of wistful dreamers would never be safe again after Moonstruck.

Animation director Don Bluth was momentarily a rival to Disney in the late '80s with movies like An American Tail, which told the story of Russian Jews immigrating to the United States to escape the pogroms via the allegory of mice immigrating to the United States to escape the cats. On the boat crossing the ocean, Papa Mousekewitz (Nehemiah Persoff) sings of the promise of a golden, welcoming America, where they'll be finally safe from cats, and even the streets are paved with cheese.

Yes, yes, the words you probably think of first when you think of Field of Dreams are, "If you build it, he will come." Those words, spoken by an unseen voice to Ray Kinsella (Kevin Costner), inspire him to plow under his Iowa cornfield and build a baseball field where the spirits of dead (often scandal-plagued) baseball players can return and play again. But the moment of truth for the movie comes at the very end, when Ray spots one player and recognizes him as his father. With the final words of the movie, Ray musters up the courage to ask his dad to play catch. Cue the waterworks.

After Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) completes his adventures back in and does indeed return back to the future, he meets his old pal Doc Brown (Christopher Lloyd) one last time before the closing credits. Doc has been to the future, and when he returns, his trusty DeLorean has undergone some upgrades. Few '80s films sent audiences screaming for the sequel more reliably than Back to the Future—with Doc and Marty and their flying car.

A child's wish made to an (admittedly creepy) isolated carnival game is what sets this Penny Marshall comedy into motion. When young Josh Baskin wakes up the morning after his wish, he's played by Tom Hanks, a kid in an adult's body. So many fun shenanigans follow, but it's that simple, plaintive, oh-so-relatable wish that lingers.

The most famous line in the Nora Ephron-penned, Rob Reiner-directed When Harry Met Sally is delivered not by Billy Crystal's softly chauvinistic Harry nor Meg Ryan's persnickety Sally. Instead, it comes from Reiner's mother, playing a customer in a diner scene who—after Sally gets finished demonstrating an incredibly convincing performance of how a woman might fake pleasure—simply turns to her waiter and requests what Sally's having. And thus one of the great one-liners in all of film comedy was born.

The laugh-a-minute film version of the popular board game Clue featured a pitch-perfect cast—Tim Curry, Lesley Ann Warren, Martin Mull, Eileen Brennan, Michael McKean, Christopher Lloyd—but it was the great Madeline Kahn who sent the film into immortality with her stammering monologue about her white-hot hatred for Yvette the maid (Colleen Camp).

Character actor R. Lee Ermey spends the first half of Stanley Kubrick's nightmare vision of the Vietnam War barking a ludicrous string of orders and profane invective to the soldiers he's training. When he finally pushes one particular private (Vincent D'Onofrio) over the edge to the point where he's threatening armed retaliation, Ermey's recourse isn't to back down but to dial up the abuse. Not a great idea, as it turns out.

Glenn Close plays a woman who carries on an affair with a married Michael Douglas, only to have him back off and get distant on her—which she responds to with violent obsession. Close's performance works hard to balance the "crazy ex-girlfriend" tropes; her delivery on the above quote is as much righteous as it is threatening.

Director Ivan Reitman's film about a quartet of spectral exterminators in s New York culminates in a jailbreak of ghoulies from their containment facility. The result? Chaos, panic, the living communing with the dead, and, as Bill Murray's Peter Venkman hyperbolically sums it up, all laws of nature and reality upended. Dogs and cats! Together!

Odds are long that you'll meet someone who's seen Stanley Kubrick's The Shining and hasn't at least once attempted to pull off Jack Nicholson's signature delivery. The line comes when he's halfway through chopping down the bathroom door, trying to murder his wife and son. Not sure how Johnny Carson must've felt about the association.

The final voiceover monologue from Brian the brain (Anthony Michael Hall) is the perfect encapsulation of aggrieved teenage angst. These five disparate teens spend a Saturday afternoon in the school library and discover they all have common ground (mostly hating their parents!)—and, in a final kiss-off to the principal, the lesson they learn is that adults will never truly understand them.

Pop culture's most famous truant teen takes time away from joy-riding around Chicago in his friend's dad's car and lip-synching in a parade to turn to the audience and offer a nickel's worth of free advice. You can thank Ferris (Matthew Broderick) for every "life comes at you fast" tweet you come across.

Just three little words that don't normally sound like a threat unless they're spoken by a six-foot-two wall of Austrian muscle who's just teleported in from the future on a merciless quest to murder a soon-to-be mom. Arnold Schwarzenegger's flat, emotionless affect was the perfect ominous delivery. And as a bonus, it turns out he was right, if five Terminator sequels and counting is any indication.

Tom Cruise and Anthony Edwards as flyboy pals at their elite Navy training program are the central friendship of one of the biggest hits of the '80s. Together, they gave Top Gun exactly what it needed, besides its massive box-office haul and movie-star appeal: a catchphrase that would soar long past the end of the '80s, right into the danger zone (that's what we call the '90s).

The line has been imitated, duplicated, borrowed, riffed on, and parodied for decades now. Al Pacino as cocaine kingpin Tony Montana introduces his enemies to his "little friend," which is obviously his machine gun. Carnage, plus hundreds of dorm room posters, followed.

The repeated warning to young Ralphie (Peter Billingsley) in the enduring Christmas classic gets funnier every time it's repeated. All the bespectacled young boy wanted was an official Red Ryder, carbine action, two-hundred shot, range model air rifle. Too bad every adult in his life—up to and including a mall Santa—told him it was too dangerous.

With those words, Patrick Swayze rescues Jennifer Grey from her overprotective father and whisks her onto the dance floor to wow those uptight Catskills types with some expertly choreographed moves.

You might find it rather inconceivable that this is the most memorable line from The Princess Bride, a film practically overflowing with hilarious quotables. But Mandy Patinkin as Inigo Montoya is brilliantly committed and ferocious as Inigo confronts the six-fingered man who slew his dad.

A line like this is only memorable if it's delivered in the perfect circumstance by the perfect character. In other words, a little girl (Heather O'Rourke) staring at static on the TV—the only one who knows that the malevolent spirits haunting the house are here to play. It's a supremely creepy moment in one of the decade's signature horror movies.

Jeff Goldblum steadily transforming into a human fly over the course of this David Cronenberg film is both disgusting and terrifying. Thankfully, we don't have to worry about which reaction is the appropriate one, because Ronnie (Geena Davis) says it straight out—be afraid.

Michael Douglas won an Academy Award for playing Gordon Gekko, avatar of s corporate greed. The performance is of the decade's signature creations, and his monstrously simple ethos—often paraphrased as the even simpler "greed is good"—has echoed through the subsequent years.

Ossie Davis speaks the title line of Spike Lee's incendiary film. The line is said as a piece of advice given to pizza-parlor employee Mookie (Lee), though its ironic simplicity only becomes apparent by the end of the movie.
Andrew Trahan
Andrew Trahan is a freelance entertainment writer based in New York City. Read more
Being Born In The 80s Famous Quotes & Sayings
6 Being Born In The 80s Famous Sayings, Quotes and Quotation.
Quotes 80s in born the
And now I abandoned all my friends and I don't get anything from Vovka. Except money: We didn't even have a honeymoon trip. - Did you talk to him.
The Numbers - Born in the 80s feat. Rachel O'NeillI do not understand, lets lay out what happened, where did you walk all night. After Lenya's incoherent story, the brother frowned. He poured himself a full glass of brandy and drank it in one gulp.
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At this moment, my mother literally pinched the top of her overgrown hairs and moaned long. When the feeling of buzz passed, I felt that my penis began to soften and fatigue fell on me. I gradually took out a member of my mother's ass and ran to wash. Mom, meanwhile, lay motionless on the bed and practically did not breathe. MAMA I couldn't believe it happened.