What's your favorite Jack Nicholson movie? Why do you like it so much?!


Question: One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest. Been there, done that. Just like Jack.

Edit: ahh m s you will be OK. I guarantee it. I'm not kidding you either. We are good people.

Edit: oops! I forgot "A few Good Men" and I was blasting away about how good a movie it was the other night.


Answers: One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest. Been there, done that. Just like Jack.

Edit: ahh m s you will be OK. I guarantee it. I'm not kidding you either. We are good people.

Edit: oops! I forgot "A few Good Men" and I was blasting away about how good a movie it was the other night.

The original Little Shop of Horrors, he was so young and it was before he hit it big, he did a great job of the crazy dental patient that liked pain.

when I was a kid saw the shining scared me so bad 1st jack movie. still to this day I still jump when he comes through ans says here's johnny

The Departed. Very well directed and the cast and crew were great. Jack Nicholson plays a lot of bad guys and is good at it. The Departed had this sense of humor that really topped everything off. Jack Nicholson is a great actor. He actually won an award for it i believe.

Mars Attacks because he played Americas President, I hope this says enough.

OK, OK! but someone had to mention it.

"One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest"

I got my first peek at Jack's 'cheeks' during production, and have been hooked ever since.

I want the people to know that they still have 2 out of 3 branches of the government working for them, and that ain't bad.

Well, I like alot of his movies but I will have to say Batman. Why? Because the y couldn't have picked a better person to play the Joker.

I must agree with The Shining, as much because of Stanley Kubrick as Jack Nicholson.

Definatly "A Few Good Men"
Small part but wonderful acting.

Mars Attacks! No, I think it's got to be one of his earlier ones. Five Easy Pieces. No, As Good As It Gets. No, A Few Good Men. There's so many of them . . .

I liked As Good As It Gets because of the fantastic acting job and character development Nicholson portrays in that movie. That movie was Nicholson at his finest. Nice love story too.

Five Easy Pieces.(1970) When Jack was young and still proving how great he could be!

One Flew Over the Cookoo's Nest with the Shining and Easy Rider coming in close seconds.

Batman 1989. His face just suits the role he played, The Joker.

"What about Bob?"
Oh, yeah, that was Bill Murray, how's about Easy Rider, or maybe China Town.
Yeah, China Town. Great acting, great plot.

Five Easy Pieces

it is just great, good idea, good scenes, good characters

Batman...becuase its batman

As good as it gets.....hillarious

As Good as it Gets, because his character was interesting.

The Shining, no contest. It was suspenseful and frightening.I don't think Jack Nicholson has to do too much acting.LOL

one flew over the cuckoos nest

it was the best movie ive ever seen.
the book is great also

Seen many of his movies (old and new) but I pick A Few Good Men coz in that movie, his stereotyped role (i.e.: eccentric nutcase type that can snap at any moment) is fully maximized portraying an accomplished, respected, feared, and self-righteous military officer close to no less than the US President. The perfect recipe for a character for Jack Nicholson to portray!

Batman. Because he just gets to uncork himself. He was like a kid in a candy shop with a fist full of dollars and no limits on what he could do.

GOIN' SOUTH (1978)
Jack Nicholson is such an over-the-top scoundrel in this! He's teamed up with Mary Steenburgen, whom he discovered (her film debut). And, he's backed by such great character actors as Danny DeVito, Christopher Lloyd, John Belushi (film debut), and Veronica Cartwright. The dialogue is a delight, and the situations are hilarious, from his fainting horse to his desperate attempts to find a woman who will wed him and save him from the gallows; from the chairs that must be hung on the wall to the "What's for supper?" that sends the chickens running and squawking.

I like Jack Nicholson in this because he doesn't seem to be trying to be the lead actor. He's part of an ensemble even if he's supposed to be the star. He's so amazingly scruffy in this role that, when he begins romancing, it seems unbelievable that he ever will win her heart although we know that that's inevitable. He simply pulls out all the stops in this uproarious Western.

The critics hated this, and the public didn't seem to care for it. But, my mom, who is no movie fan, never complains when we watch this again. My sister and brother-in-law also are fans, and we usually end up with a couple of quotes each visit. The Thanksgiving dinner that Mom placed apricot preserves on the table, ALL of us started laughing!

IMDB summary:
Henry Moon is captured for a capital offense by a posse when his horse quits while trying to escape to Mexico. He finds that there is a post-Civil War law in the small town that any single or widowed woman can save him from the gallows by marrying him. Julia Tate needs a man to help her work her mine and marries him. The sheriff makes it very clear to Moon what the consequences of his leaving Julia will be. The two begin to try to form a relationship based on necessity in which they have nothing in common.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0077621/

Here's a review from IMDB that shows that there are other fans out there:
If you've never seen this classic (or haven't seen it in a long time), not only will you laugh- you'll be surprised at all the familiar faces and how many of them have come to be matched in other movies through the years. Nicholson directs himself in this Western comedy. He is the perfect dolt, saved from the gallows by a squeak. His future "wife" (Mary Steenburgen) is the "straight-man" amid a host of wonderfully comic actors. It's a hilarious formula that works!
The connections are: Nicholson, Danny DeVito, and Christopher Lloyd were all in "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest". DeVito directed Nicholson in "Hoffa". Tracy Walter was Bob, one of Nicholson's henchmen in "Batman", was Tyrone Otley with Nicholson in "The Two Jakes", and was Ezra with Lucy Lee Flippen (Diane Haber in "Goin' South") in the Amazing Stories episode "Mummy Daddy". Jeff Morris was the owner of "Bob's Country Bunker", where the Blues Brothers (hence, John Belushi) performed behind chicken wire for a bar full of rowdy rednecks. Christopher Lloyd was with Mary Steenburgen in "Back to the Future III". Veronica Cartwright was Felicia Alden in "The Witches of Eastwick" with Nicholson.

A Few Good Men, because I couldn't handle the truth.
AND

One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest. I love him in that movie, such an awesome and wonderful movie and great performances by all of the actors, especially Jack.



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