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Lemony Snicket's a Series of Unfortunate Events Quotations

Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events is a 2004 film directed by Brad Silberling, written by Robert Gordon and starring Jim Carrey based on the series of books by Lemony Snicket (pen name of Daniel Handler).

Don't Say We Didn't Warn You. taglines

Contents

Lemony Snicket

Count Olaf

Violet Baudelaire

Dialogue

Count Olaf: Ah! My dear... [looks at stick figures of the children with their names on his hands] Violet. Enchanté.
Violet: Um... how do you do?
Count Olaf: And this must be Klaus. [grabs at Klaus' face and looks at each side of it] Young Klaus. Your left side is the good one. [begins to mess with Klaus' bottom lip and then notices Sunny] And, uh...what is this?
Sunny: [in baby talk] I'm Sunny.
Count Olaf: I'm sorry. I don't speak... monkey! [mimicking a baby] Banana?
Sunny: [grunts] I'm not a monkey!

Lemony Snicket: [narrating] I don't know if you've ever noticed this, but first impressions are often entirely wrong. For instance: Klaus, when Sunny was born, didn't like her at all; but by the time she was six weeks old, the two of them were as thick as thieves — a phrase which here means "fetching and biting for hours on end." In the case of Count Olaf, however...
Count Olaf: Orphans!
Lemony Snicket: [narrating] They were correct.

Mr. Poe: I'm sorry, Count Olaf. Allowing a child of Sunny's age to drive a car is simply not good parenting.
Klaus: He tried to kill us!
Mr. Poe: Let us not exaggerate, Klaus. The vehicle was not even in gear.
Count Olaf: [to Mr. Poe] May I have a moment alone with the children? [Mr. Poe nods in agreement.] Goodbye, children. It's been fun. [leans farther into car window and whispers angrily] I'm going to get you kids. No matter where you go, no matter what you do, I'll find you! You are so deceased. [turns from car, puts eye drops in eye and turns to Mr. Poe] Take them, Mr. Poe... before I lose it, big time!

Uncle Monty: Do you have any experience with children?
Count Olaf (as Stephano): Ah, well, children are strange and foreign to me. I never really was one. I know that they are an important part of the ecosystem.

Count Olaf (as Captain Sham): [to Violet] Are you jiggin,' me girl? [to Aunt Josephine] Why, perhaps it's just the ramblings of an expert fisherman, but grammar is the number one, most important thing in this here world to me.
Aunt Josephine: It is?
Sunny: [in baby talk] Is she desperate?
Count Olaf: It's the whole ball of wax. The entire kit and caboodle. Why, without your good grammar, the whole darn shootin' match could go arse over tea kettle.
Aunt Josephine: Well, you can certainly turn a phrase.
Count Olaf: I can flip it up and rub it down, too. But of course, that'd be entirely up to you, ma'am.

Violet: Dinner is served.
(Count Olaf rises from his position on the floor and looks at the food)
Violet: Puttanesca.
Olaf: What did you call me?
Klaus: It's pasta. Pasta Puttanesca.
Olaf: Where's the roast beef?
Klaus: Roast beef?
Olaf: Yes, roast beef. It's the Swedish term for beef that is roasted!

Taglines

External links

Wikipedia has an article about: Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events

 

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Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events is a 2004 black comedy film directed by Brad Silberling. It is based on the first three novels, The Bad Beginning, The Reptile Room, and The Wide Window, in Lemony Snicket's book series. The film stars Jim Carrey, Billy Connolly, Meryl Streep, Emily Browning, Liam Aiken, Timothy Spall, Catherine O'Hara and Kara and Shelby Hoffman, with narration by Jude Law. A Series of Unfortunate Events tells the story of Count Olaf, a mysterious theater troupe actor, who attempts to deceive three orphans over their deceased parents' fortune. It is also the film that makes use of the end title sequences that precedes the closing credits of the movie, its movie title appears at the end, rather than a beginning, which shows The Littlest Elf.
from: Wikipedia: lemony snicket's a series of unfortunate events,
Thu Aug 11 11:12:07 2011