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Santa Baby
Location: Toronto, Canada (Eh?)
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5. OFFICE SPACE (1999)
In Mike Judge's comedy about three disgruntled Dilberts who rebel against cubicle drudgery, Ron Livingston comes off like Network's Howard Beale on Zoloft. Their amateurish efforts to get rich quick will continue to amuse as long as there are still corporate drones who seriously consider torching their workplace.
4. THIS IS SPINAL TAP (1984)
Years ago, we sat next to a middle-aged couple at a screening of Rob Reiner's faux documentary. As the has-been band of the title launched into ''Big Bottom'' (''The looser the waistband, the deeper the quicksand/Or so I have read''), wife turned to hubby in disgust. ''This is dork humor,'' she said. ''I'm leaving.'' She left. Look, lady, the movie may revel in the juvenile (herpes-sore sight gags, resoundingly stoopid lyrics, steady evidence that the band treads water ''in a sea of retarded sexuality and bad poetry''), but stars Christopher Guest, Michael McKean, and Harry Shearer play fools as only wise men can. As antic as the Marx Brothers, more endearingly boneheaded than Homer Simpson, the men of Tap offer the ne plus ultra of the ultraridiculous — and a mother lode of quotable silliness, too.
3. BEVERLY HILLS COP (1984)
Eddie Murphy achieved megastar status with his portrayal of Axel Foley, a Detroit policeman who hilariously wiseacres his way around L.A.'s swankier locales on the trail of baddie Steven Berkoff.
2. NATIONAL LAMPOON'S VACATION (1983)
The Griswolds — dad Clark (Chevy Chase), mom Ellen (Beverly D'Angelo), and kids Rusty (Anthony Michael Hall) and Audrey (Dana Barron) — travel cross-country to the theme park Wally World. Of course, it turns into the road trip from hell: an Aunt dies, a hot blonde (Christie Brinkley) gets Clark in hot water, Clark launches the station wagon through a ''Road Closed'' sign and into the desert, the family runs out of money... Seriously, we could go on for as long as the Griswold summer holiday lasted. The best film Chevy Chase has ever been involved with.
1. GHOSTBUSTERS (1984)
In the summer of 1984, the only pop-culture question more common than ''Where's the beef?'' was ''Who you gonna call?'' The dream trio of Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, and Harold Ramis was the epitome of sarcastic comedy cool, battling slimy ghosts, the nosy Environmental Protection Agency, and a giant Stay-Puft marshmallow man.
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And this above all: to thine ownself be true, and it must follow, as the night the day, thou canst not then be false to any man.
Polonius, Hamlet Act I, sc iii
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