CINEMANIA: Guess the movie title
[2359] CINEMANIA: Guess the movie title - See negative of movie scene and guess the title. Length of words in solution: 3,4,2,3,5 - #brainteasers #movie #film #cinemania - Correct Answers: 55 - 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: 3,4,2,3,5
Correct answers: 55
The first user who solved this task is Djordje Timotijevic.
#brainteasers #movie #film #cinemania
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Railroad

A man who had spent his whole life in the desert visited a friend. He'd never seen a train or the tracks they run on. While standing in the middle of the RR tracks, he heard a whistle, but didn't know what it was. Predictably, he's hit and is thrown, ass-over-tea-kettle, to the side of the tracks, with some minor internal injuries, a few broken bones, and some bruises.
After weeks in the hospital recovering, he's at his friend's house attending a party. While in the kitchen, he suddenly hears the teakettle whistling. He grabs a baseball bat from the nearby closet and proceeds to batter and bash the teakettle into an unrecognizable lump of metal. His friend, hearing the ruckus, rushes into the kitchen, sees what's happened and asks the desert man, "Why'd you ruin my good tea kettle?"
The desert man replies, "Man, you gotta kill these things when they're small."

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William Henry Burt

Born 22 Jan 1903; died 4 Dec 1987 at age 84.American zoologist and mammalogist who studied various aspects of mammalogy, including home range, territoriality, morphology, behavior, and evolution. The regions he studied in particular include Michigan (1940-48), the Great Lakes (1956), Sonora (1938-41) and El Salvador (1961). He also examined the effects of the new Mexican volcano Paricutin on the vertebrates in its vicinity (1961). His interest in mammals developed early, from observing activities of prairie dogs on the family farm. As early as 1927, he wrote about A Simple Live Trap for Small Mammals in early article, in the Journal of Mammalogy. This led to development of the live trap, now widely used by mammalogists worldwide. Of his several books, his book, Field Guide to the Mammals (first published 1952), has popularized mammal observation by the layman.
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