Quote: Alfred J Kipper @ 2nd February 2018, 5:54 AM
I'll try - er...it's a double meaning thing, you know a Routemaster was the classic red London bus seen in the film with them hopping off while still moving, now banned by the PC regulators because it was too much fun. A Routemaster is also a slang term for er, a woman of less than film star looks. Jumping - bonking, Crumpet - a sweet doughy thing with holes in, also a slang term for a sweet doughy thing with holes in. This help?
Oh ok. I dig it, lol. I knew the literal on the crumpet thing but not the slang. They banned the Routemasters (always thought they were called double deckers up until today)? That seemed to be the best transit idea. America has a spinoff version so to speak with MegaBus, but they get into massive amounts of accidents from the lack of qualified but cheap drivers. If not for the roaches they would probably be fun.
Quote: Alfred J Kipper @ 2nd February 2018, 5:54 AM
Er, after he spent the 70s doing soft porn comedies. And I expect the only Shakespeare role he had was as Bottom.
He actually did a Hamlet or two, and a Midsummer Nights Dream thing. His bare ass went into semi-retirement. LMAO.
Quote: Alfred J Kipper @ 2nd February 2018, 6:13 AM
No that would've been an entirely different film. The cautionary tale thing was only a light thread given to it as justification for what is a basically frivolous light soft porn movie but on a common London theme, young adults rushing to London because they thought the streets were paved with gold. He found out they weren't but she found out they were if you have what it takes, and together they made a lot of money, so in a way it was a modern soft porn version of Dick Wittington, complete with pussy.
You really think it was a soft core porn? Outside of the train scene, there weren't that many sex scenes after that. Maybe two. Emanuelle had far more happening than COC (funny how the initial of the movie are Cock, lol).
Honestly, it reminded me a bit of Urban Cowboy (Dustin Hoffman, Jon Voight film). A country buck from the sticks making his way to NYC to live the life, just to become a epic failure as a giggalo and gets his ass handed to him by street slick punks while bonding with one of them. Lots of similarities between the two films, with the latter being definitely darker. I guess America's penchant for the darker ending makes me bias. I'll work on that.
Interesting that even back then London was a tough city to make a go in. At least in the 70s, you could move to any major city and find work this side of the ocean. Housing too. Factories were a flourishing then. Not these days though - these days its looking like Cool it Carol.