We took last week off to focus on election drama. Now that that’s behind us, let’s move on to the question Kris earned in our last fight:
Which song feels like it's overplayed in movies? i.e. It might be a great song, but Hollywood is making it dull with overuse.
Fight it out.
Subscribe for free to vote. Paid subscribers can submit answers.
The Rules:
Post your answer as a comment. Make it clear that this is your official answer, one per member. Subscribe for free to vote on answers and get new fight notifications. Winner chooses the next question.
Got an answer you’re eager to submit? Upgrade to a paid subscription for only $6 per year (or $0.50 per month)
You can also take advantage of the 7-day trial so your first fight is free.
Additional rules:
No profanity. No pornography.
Defend your answer in the comments and fight it out against other MFC members’ answers for the rest of the week.
You may like (heart, whatever) as many answers as you want.
In the case of a tie, the member who posed the question will decide the winner.
Only movies will qualify (no TV shows, or documentaries); however, films that air on television or streaming (BBC films, a stand-alone mini-series) will qualify.
Want to keep this train running? Consider supporting Movie Fight Club with a one-time (or as often as you’d like) donation through Buy Me A Coffee.
Check out my additional content, about movie nerd stuff and much more, on my website, vinceguerra.com and my other Substacks:
I'm gonna go first on this one. Low Rider by War.
Maybe it was a good song in the day but hear it all the time and now it's just bleh. The only time I think it was used effectively in a movie was in the remake to Gone in 60 Seconds, and it worked because the scene beautifully depicted the older car thieves personalities juxtaposed against the younger ones.
Haven't got an answer yet but your picture is funny, because when I finally saw Easy Rider several years ago I fast forwarded through the riding scene playing that song.