L'homme qui tombe à pic (TV Series 1981–1986)
George dangling from the train signal is in the series opening titles as one of Cole's stunts."L'homme qui tombe à pic" Reluctant Traveling Companion (TV Episode 1982)
Train footage used.Heroes of Black Comedy (TV Mini Series 2002)
Richard Pryor: I Ain't Dead Yet, #*%$#@!! (TV Special 2003)
The N Word (2004)
clip used
- Richard Pryor introduces a clip from his movie
- Clips are shown for the review.
"Lørdagshjørnet" Gene Wilder (TV Episode 1978)
clip shown- Brief rereview for CBS broadcast premiere (November 15, 1979). Clip shown
"At the Movies" Pryor to Murphy (TV Episode 1983)
A clip is shown.
L'Affaire Al Capone (1967)
Clips seen on Sheriff's TV set.
- Advertised on a theater marquee.
"Supertrain" The Queen and the Improbable Knight (TV Episode 1979)
Plot elements.52nd Annual Academy Awards (TV Special 1980)
Les envahisseuses (1980)
Title mentioned by actor John Seeman.Un fauteuil pour deux (1983)
Le chanteur de jazz (1927)
When Grover is disguising George to look black, he says "Al Jolson made a million bucks looking like that."Une femme disparaît (1938)
L'ombre d'un doute (1943)
Death of the main villain has the same cause - hanging out the side of a train with a look of recognition just before being hit by an oncoming train.L'énigme du Chicago Express (1952)
La Mort aux trousses (1959)
- The ground controller that accidentally directs a plane that crashes through the large windows inside the terminal, is a parody of the out-of-control train crashing through the terminal wall in Chicago.
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