Robert Altman's "M*A*S*H"
Walla is the word they use.
Jurassic Park
No, "Gone With the Wind" was not the first movie to include a curse word. While it is famous for its dramatic dialogue and historical significance, earlier films had already incorporated profanity. The use of curse words in movies began to appear more frequently in the late 1920s and early 1930s, particularly with the advent of sound in cinema.
the use of the n----- word the kkk attacking N lovers
Yes, they did!
the mainstream of American culture.
The Greek word átomos (ἄτομος) was first used by the philosopher Democritus who lived around 450 BCE. The modern use of the word goes back to the beginnings of the science of chemistry in the mid 17th cent. It's first usage (as meaning a very small particle) outside of scientific journals and into the mainstream goes back at least as early as 1796 when the word is found in newspapers of the time. (....and was crufshed to atoms before the eyes of its unhappy mother...)
No, it is not a real word, as the creator of the word simply created it for purpose of use in the movie. The meaning in the movie was Fantastic or Wonderful.
Film plots have become so banal that I can predict how the movie will end within the first five minutes.
It's not generally done, no. Don't start sentences with "and" or "but."
The first movie to use sound dialog is The Jazz Singer (original version from 1927).
That movie is dormitive.
Unpromising is the main meaning of the word inauspicious. A good sentence to use for this word is, it was an inauspicious beginning to the movie.
First, I answer a question.
It is probably American in origin, a shortened form of "Moving Picture", its first recorded use is dated somewhere around 1912.
The art show included works in a number of different media. The mainstream news media have often been accused of a liberal bias.
The scene in the movie was hilarious.