Posted on 04/11/2007 4:09:01 PM PDT by blam
GGG Ping.
Next up: the seaside cave of Sawney Bean!
Rob Roy MacGregor was not an outlaw. He was a freedom fighter, and a man deeply concerned with the preservation of his Clan in the face of British tyranny.
His very name was proscribed by the British, and he had to use the name Campbell.
Anyone who writes about Rob Roy MacGregor should first read an accurate history about him. He was an excellent swordsman, aided by his very long arms and reach. Rob Roy Macgregor: His Life and Times, by W.H. Murray
It is clear that the writer of this piece knows very little about the man, who is buried with a marker over his grave which states: "MacGregor despite them." He died a natural death, against all odds, I might add.
I love his memory dearly.
Or the Bahamian mansion of Pina Colada?
The Rob Roy?
"Wait! Let me talk to Edward the Longshanks! I can get him to promise me he won`t hang us from the rafters! He is a nice man! I`ll lie and say the McDonald clan want peace and will give him 23000 acres!"
"Bloody hell! Pelosi, we never said that!"
Interesting find.
"Has anyone got a half and half for my tea?"
Where MacGregor sits, that is the head of the table.
My wife and I can’t watch Tim Roth in anything else without thinking about how rotten his character was in Rob Roy. It almost casts a shadow on any other character he plays when we see him. Hopefully he wasn’t so good at it because he can relate to the character.
1 1/2 ounces Scotch
3/4 ounce Sweet Vermouth
1 dash Bitters
Stir ingredients with ice, strain into a cocktail glass, and serve. Garnish with a cherry.
I know what you mean... You watch him in Rob Roy, he has got that sadistic bastard personality down almost too good, especially in the sword fighting scenes. He makes a move with the sword then steps back and seems to relish in the injury and suffering. That was either incredibly brilliant or a little too close to call ‘acting’. There isn`t a movie I`ve ever seen where someone has played an evil part so convincingly, and unbelieveably he lost the Oscar to Kevin Spacey for “The Usual Suspects”.
According to Wikipedia: "After landing in Normandy on D-Day as one of the first British officers, he met up with Major John Howard on Pegasus Bridge he would later appear in two films in which this scene was recreated: in D-Day the Sixth of June (1956) he played the commanding officer of the unit in which both of them served, and in The Longest Day (1962) he played Major Howard himself."
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No, I haven't.
Monkees fans will understand.
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