A list of puns related to "Parent Trap III"
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how do you have twins, get divorced, and then decide that you each get sole custody of a daughter and never mention to them that they have a twin? and the parents act like the other twin doesnβt exist. how do you voluntarily become a deadbeat parent? what kind of parents are they? they lied to their kids their whole entire life. and how did the girls not know from jump when they met each other that they are twins? they literally have the same face loll. these parents were willing to not see their other child anymore cause they simply donβt like each other. WOW. disney is so dark lol
This might be super niche but Iβm watching parent trap right now and knowing what I know about super yachts because of below deck, itβs insane that the twins rented out a super yacht for their parents
This episode always makes me dislike Jess, when she pouts like an 8 year old and tosses the Turkey in the sink. Those are the moments I hate about her character. The Schmidtβs are hilarious in that episode thoughπ
Aired on either foxkids or jetix I believe. The 2 exterminators were a tall thin one and a short fat one. They try to steal the granny's cash, they lock her into a closet (i believe) after spraying her with foam, at some point she bursts out armed to the teeth going after the 2 and in the end they ally themselves with the granny. Kids at some point call their parents and saying only "dada" and "mama" (in the dub I saw). Near the end there's a hostage negotiation with the kids talking into the megaphone. There's also a subplot about the male babysitter lying about being an astronaut and later him being shown on the TV actually being an astronaut. Boy wore blue, girl wore pink. Parents and babysitters were taken hostage (parents after also being sprayed with foam). The single parents have more kids at the end. There's also a joke said by the tall thin robber that goes something like "but I'm an atheist, swear to god".
edit stuff I remembered after posting:
Boy was probably named Billy
Movie starts with his dad jumping on one foot because he stepped on one of his dinosaur toys (I think) and scolding him for not gathering his toys from the floor.
Kids were young enough to wear diapers.
During grade school, we had a unit within English that focused on understanding poems and short stories symbolism or whatnot, one of which being Roald Dahl's "Lamb to the Slaughter". Similarly, we were also shown a short film (not sure if we were told to read a poem about it) which featured a family of four, a wife, husband, daughter, a son, and a room that could "generate" whatever environment the user would like. I, unfortunately, don't remember much of the happens, but I do recall that at the end of the film, the son traps the wife and husband inside of the room in the middle of a sub-Saharan environment with lions who would eat the wife and husband.
I might be reaching, but the film was titled something like "The Nursery" or "The Oasis", something like that.
I have recently rewatched the original Parent Trap, which was made in 1961 by Walt Disney. The premise of the film is that two twins are separated by their parents shortly after their birth, due to divorce, with one daughter raised by each parent in isolation; they discover one another 14 years later. That puts the timing of the parents' divorce at around 1947 or 1948.
It is my understanding that no-fault divorce did not exist in the United States until 1969. Until then (and, when this movie was released), all divorce was fault-based -- adultery, insanity, abandonment, neglect/cruelty, etc. In the film, we don't get a hint any such thing occurred, just that both parents fell out of love and divorced (the mother simply says they "just [didn't] get on together.")
Was it reasonable to expect that couples would have been able to divorce without cause at this time (or, perhaps, that they lied)? I've heard stories of couples feigning adultery to justify a divorce, though that is from TV and films. Would a couple divorcing in 1948 or so have had to produce evidence of the grounds of divorce--meaning the couple in Parent Trap would've either had to have real grounds to divorce, or fabricated them?
Separately, did moviegoers at the time reacted negatively to this plot because it was based on divorce? And, would moviegoers have accepted the idea that the divorce was amicable, or felt it implied they lied to get a fault-based divorce? This seems like a potentially controversial topic for Disney, and I'm curious if they got any flack for a movie about divorce from conservative viewers.
I've been re-watching Arrested Development over Christmas break, and Jeffrey Tambor plays both George Sr. & Oscar. Obviously this means he has to do more work than his fellow actors on the show... So does that mean that people who play their twin in a film/TV show get paid more... ?
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