Bring Your Ucipital Mapilary

Suspicion
1941 Nominee

100 Words
Would you believe that I hadn’t seen one Cary Grant movie prior to this blog and now I’m a bona fide fan? That man, he played suspense well and he played a deadbeat husband even better. Lina thought she married the man of her dreams and he came with a string of debts in his wake. The scene where he comments on her ucipital mapilary is almost played the exact same way in the first Mel Brooks movie I ever saw, Dracula: Dead and Loving It, so surely Mel saw this well-played, well-made suspense movie about an increasingly paranoid wife.


One response to “Bring Your Ucipital Mapilary”

  1. Suz Avatar

    I prefer hearing it referred to as the anatomically correct, supra-“sternal notch”, correctly identified in ‘The English Patient’.

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