CINEMANIA: Guess the movie title
[2144] CINEMANIA: Guess the movie title - See negative of movie scene and guess the title. Length of words in solution: 3,7 - #brainteasers #movie #film #cinemania - Correct Answers: 49 - The first user who solved this task is Djordje Timotijevic
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CINEMANIA: Guess the movie title

See negative of movie scene and guess the title. Length of words in solution: 3,7
Correct answers: 49
The first user who solved this task is Djordje Timotijevic.
#brainteasers #movie #film #cinemania
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A saxophone player was contrac...

A saxophone player was contracted to do a recording session for a movie. Much to his delight, the soundtrack was pretty much a sax solo from beginning to end.
When the session was over the sax player asked the producer what film his music would be in. The producer admitted that it was an adult film and gave him the name of a theatre that would be showing the premiere.
At the premiere, the Saxophone soloist crept into the movie house, embarrassed, and sat in the back next to an elderly couple who were also trying to be anonymous. The movie was disgusting, ending with a scene involving a dog. The sax player finally had enough, and made his exit past the elderly couple, remarking, "I only came to hear the music."
The old lady replied, "We only came to see our dog!"
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Latimer patent

In 1886, a U.S. patent was issued for an “Apparatus for Cooling and Disinfecting” to African-American Lewis H. Latimer. (No. 334,078). It consisted of a suitable fabric stretched between a water reservoir and a drip-pan to saturate it and present “a large evaporating surface to cool air about passing over it.” It could be placed in a window frame so that air passing through it would be cooled by evaporation of the water. In neighborhoods with unpleasant odors, deodorizing or disinfecting liquids could be added to or substitute the water, using “chemical agents - such as carbolic acid, bromochloralum, &c.,” to destroy such odors or germs. His first patented invention was for a water-closet for railroad cars (10 Feb 1874, No. 147,363).«
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