Permission granted to get geeky with full abandonment on this one. There are already tons of these sites online. Many of them use series cross-over theories [[Was Willy Wonka really the surviving Weasley Twin from Harry Potter? http://www.cracked.com/article_22658...-theories.html), while others get way-off-basehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Room_237. Feel free to point out any suspected Easter Eggs in films no one else seems to bring up.

Maybe even if you aren't a big film fan, any theories of what made a movie good or bad [[or could've been better-yes, yes remove the Ewoks and Jar-Jar.) would be appreciated. Even theories of what was left out of some films adapted from books or real events would be prized input.

If one were to go off the deep-end, one can theorize what would happen if certain hypothetical movies were to be made and what would make them ideal [[like a film on the Purple Gang or if a recent Dr. Who film were to be made, who would top Tom Baker's role?).

My own theories include:

Was there a serious plot-hole at the end of Sleepy Hollow when the villain admits faking own death then hoping to be the surviving heir?-maybe I just need to re-watch that one.

Was Detective John Williams really innocent in the Lynch film Blue Velvet? Aside from having a corrupt police partner, he was nonchalant about seeing an ear in a bag. His daughter tells Jeffery it has to do with singer Dorothy. Thus, all the details pertaining to a dire kidnapping situation are laid-out, yet little is being done to handle it by the police. Watch the film and trace the back the epistemology and order of events. Something is off...

I have a theory that the real under-bedding to Zombieland had nothing to do with zombies. They already break major zombie film rules by explaining how the outbreak occurs and by referring to them as zombies. The three major parties of characters introduced are 1.) someone who follows a set of rules. 2.) a sort of Shaolin type who keeps reaching for certain ideals [[Twinkie) while yearning for an idolized child lost, and 3.) an aloof pair that want to retreat to a childlike repose, which lands them on some sort of block-shaped tower. That and a certain bow by a celebrity who has been pursuing spiritual development since a failed movie from the 80's and a decent film set in Japan in the last 15 years, hints to more. Do the three parties represent the three major Asiatic philosophies- Confucianism, Buddhism, and Taoism? Are the Zombies the unenlightened masses guided by base animalistic impulses?

Greaser's Palace by Robert Downey Sr. seems like a parody of Spaghetti Westerns written by Lenny Bruce and put together by drop-outs from Captain Beefheart's Magic Band. Yet, Robert [[who was kind enough to put his own son in a scene as a massacred boy) seems to be parodying the two worst misrepresentations of Christianity that were occurring in the late 60's and early 70's with a lot of the Jesus Freak movements. He takes this American attempt at restorationism [[so close to the Bicentennial celebration) that was happening in America [[an image popular with a lot of conservatives that embodied itself with the whole Little House on the Prairie rustic feeling that permeated many areas) and that would only run so far back retrospectively to this down-homey bold frontier-ism [[when, I guess, America was supposed to be so ideal?!), and then, he'd take the gaudy technicolor hippie bisexual Jesus imagery oozing from Godsend and Jesus Christ Superstar and sort of mash them up together into this hideous synthesis to show how disharmonious they truly are in nature to the truth. What you end up with is an abomination that spurs you to delve and investigate a more credulous version of Christianity deducted from the mutation you see before you. It's still a funny movie with outlandishly surreal moments http://www.tcm.com/mediaroom/video/2...-You-Heal.htmland beautiful landscape scenes [[especially when you get to see a young Toni Basil riding topless on a horse coming over the horizon.). Features Alan "Dr. Sidney" Arbus, Hervé Jean-Pierre Villechaize, and Michael Sullivan of Cloud Studios [[former National Lampoon contributors).

Ever wondered how the James Bond series would've been if the first few were Black & White and had Cary Grant as 007?