Let's narrow the focus a bit.

How bout Tremors?
They are under the ground!
I also like Second Hand Lions.
Texas Boys - who was driving the Lion delivery truck?
No Googling!
You Texicans are supposed to know each other!
 
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Forrest Gump for sure. Top of the list has to be Blazing Saddles, Airplane, most anything with Leslie Nielson in it. If it's ridiculous I normally will like it. Naked Gun and 33 and 1/3.
 
I thought I was the only one that liked that movie!:)

"They big. They ugly. And they stink."

"You green?" "Yeah, I'm green."

"Big Bada Boom"

"Multi-pass"

Milla Janvovich That's pretty feel good right there.


Speaking of which, Gary Oldman went right over the top in that flick.
"You want something done, do it yourself!".
 
Rancho Deluxe. It's my personal Rocky Horror Picture Show. It is full of Thomas McGuane's brilliantly quotable lines, and I can quote 'em all. Fuinny thing, nobody I watch it with seems to enjoy it quite as much as I do. Except my buddy Doug. We struck up a friendship over this movie. And our sons, who were raised on it.
 
Okay here are my top five.....

1. Animal House
2.The Blues Brothers
3. Forest Gump
4. Secondhand Lions
5. Hidalgo


The first time I had ever seen Animal House I started laughing at the start of the intro and didn't stop to the very end! :D

:cool: :cool: :cool:
 
...but to feel. Good.

My idea of a 'feel good' movie for a guy is a violent western or war movie. When people die, but it's for a good cause. And gallantly. And sacrifice a love that could be, but won't.

Well, OK:
"We Were Soldiers Once" THE most authentic war movie I've ever seen, and true to the book.
"The Light Horsemen" - some chicky-stuff but excellent action and story.
"The Wild Bunch" nuff said there.
"Gettysburg" though I'm a Southerner, it's hard not to get goose bumps when Jeff Daniels delivers his speech.
 
How bout Tremors?
They are under the ground!

"Underground, gal-darn monsters!" (Edited for G-rating)
Burt Gummer

"Copy that Burt, and congratulations, but be advised there are two more, repeat two more mother-humpers"
 
I greatly enjoyed George Burns and Walter Matthau in "The Sunshine Boys".

Though I'm definitely not a George Hamilton fan, "Love At First Bite" was silly fun,, if only for Arte Johnson as Renfield.

But then there is a true classic: Jimmy Stewart in "Harvey".
 
Guess I haven't felt good at a movie since childhood as my uplifts have come from (feel free to snicker):
Mary Poppins
Singing in the Rain
The Sound of Music
The Music Man
The Unsinkable Molly Brown


Some more recent selections:
City Slickers
Blue Collar Comedy Tour
Savannah Smiles
All the Crocodile Dundee movies
Smokey and the Bandit (Love Eastbound and Down...Burt's not bad, either).
 
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