Baby it’s cold outside – IOTW Report

Baby it’s cold outside

The original from Neptune’s Daughter Neptune’s Daughter is a 1949 musical romantic comedy film released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer starring Esther Williams, Red Skelton, Ricardo Montalbán, Betty Garrett, Keenan Wynn, Xavier Cugat and Mel Blanc. It was directed by Edward Buzzell, and features the Academy Award winning song Baby, It’s Cold Outside by Frank Loesser.

22 Comments on Baby it’s cold outside

  1. SJWs can kiss my a$$.
    This movie was a fun movie. I loved Red Skelton, he had such great comedic timing and comic expression.
    Everytime I hear Montalbàn I expect to hear “Welcome to Fantasy Island!”

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  2. @ geoff the aardvark

    I think it was the autonomous toys that did it for me. That’s not something I wanted to see from my own toys. Probably not the only thing, though. I thought the Wizard of OZ was a scary movie too. I was the only one at home one Saturday evening in 1965 at 8 years old and was not happy about that movie either.

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  3. My daughter is scared silly of Abbot and Costello Meet Frankenstein. And Zero Hour by Ray Bradbury on Suspense on old time radio especially when the Mom screams bloody murder at the end when the Martians use their ray guns on the door to the attic. And the movie Signs when they showed just a faint glimmer of the alien behind the door, she just about jumped into the lap of the guy sitting next to her when she saw that. An implied overactive imagination is scarier than seeing the real thing at times.

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  4. “An implied overactive imagination is scarier than seeing the real thing at times.”

    Kind of like a peek at lingerie under clothing is better than full frontal nekkid?

    I agree.

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  5. And who can forget that some ninny baby boomers were scarred for life with the ending of Old Yeller. Or Bambi, when Bambi’s mom was killed, being ranked as one of the top 25 horror movies of all time according to some stupid list of scary horror movies. Baby boomers are for the most part dumbasses and unfortunately I’m one of them but I’m not Peter Pan who never grew up.

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  6. The movie that creeped me out the most was “The Omen” in 1976. It was a shock to see those images.

    Second to that is “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre”. I had never seen such disturbing images before that.

    Third is a movie called “Susperia” directed by a guy named Dario Argento or something similar. Creepy atmosphere inside a girls school somewhere in Europe.

    These movies are all probably tame by today’s “standards” of creepyness.

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