Relative difficulty: the easiest NYTXW puzzle I have ever done
THEME: "DELIVERANCE" (63A: 1972 thriller set in the backwoods of Georgia ... or a plot point in 18-, 29- and 49-Across) — movie titles that end with things that get "delivered":
Theme answers:
- "MYSTIC PIZZA" (18A: 1988 rom-com set in a New England restaurant)
- "BROADCAST NEWS" (29A: 1987 film set in a Washington, D.C. TV station)
- "ROSEMARY'S BABY" (49A: 1968 horror film set in a New York City apartment)
Orzo (Italian for 'barley'; /ˈɔːrzoʊ, ˈɔːrtsoʊ/, Italian: [ˈɔrdzo]; from Latin hordeum), also known as risoni (pronounced [riˈzoːni]; 'large [grains of] rice'), is a form of short-cut pasta, shaped like a large grain of rice. Orzo is traditionally made from flour, but it can also be made of whole grain. It is often made with semolina, a type of flour made from durum wheat.
The name orzo is common for this pasta shape in North America, but less so in Italy, where the word means barley. (wikipedia)
• • •
If you are my age and love movies, then every title is super duper familiar, which is why, once I knew movies were involved, I could drop in answers without even looking at clues. I came up from "DELIVERANCE," looked at the letters "ROSEM--YSB---" and, well, you can see why clues aren't exactly necessary when you've got that much already laid down. Once I was finished, I went back and read the revealer clue carefully. At first it seemed like maybe you were being asked to know something specific about each movie's plot, but no, not really. All you gotta know is that the last words of all the titles are things that get "delivered." Slightly weird / jarring to make your whimsical revealer a movie best known for its infamous sexual assault scene, but otherwise, the theme seems fine, if innocuous. The movie set here definitely favors the old—the most recent movie here came out when I was 18 (I am .... no longer 18). But the movies are (maybe) iconic enough that their oldness doesn't really limit the puzzle's overall accessibility (not drastically, anyway). The outlier here, familiarity-wise, is "MYSTIC PIZZA." I assume that's the movie title most likely to baffle the under-40 crowd today. But it's an early Julia Roberts movie, so it's not exactly obscure. And, as I say, the rest of the grid is so ridiculously easy that you can whiff on a movie title or two here and still solve this thing without working up too much of a sweat.
The theme concept is cute, though it is truly a one-note affair. The movies are all clued in the dullest, most straightforward way possible. And most of the rest of the puzzle is 3s 4s and 5s. I know because I mowed right through. And you can look at the grid yourself and see how thick it is with short stuff—all of it clued as simply as possible. The grid is clean and the longer Downs are solid, but aside from the movie titles, the grid felt bland—and even the movie titles get a fairly lackluster clue treatment. Easy puzzles don't have to be dull. They really don't. The core concept here is nice, but the overall execution lacks the snap oomph and 'zazz that the best early-week puzzles have. This is very professionally made—it's just a bit of a BORE. But a short BORE! And I do like remembering movies, so it's not a total wash. See you tomorrow.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
ReplyDeleteEasy, yes. I don't usually pay much attention to times, but after reading @Rex I checked my stats in the Times app. Not only was today a PR for a Tuesday, my time today was faster than my PR for a Monday.
That said, I really liked the theme. Three iconic movies tied together with a revealer that's another Iconic movie. I smiled all the way through.
Also for me the easiest puzzle I’ve ever done and a personal best time! I knew every movie except DELIVERANCE without a single cross, which is unusual for me with movie titles. And I enjoyed the puzzle too. A zippy breezy start to the day.
ReplyDeleteI had STY before ZOO but otherwise my experience mirrored Rex’s. Thinking of the “Deliverance” in Rosemary’s Baby will always give me chills. Too bad Mr Polanski is a child molestor
ReplyDeleteNow here’s a Tuesday that, well, delivers. Bet these jokes will abound today in the comments. I didn’t allow myself a glance at the revealer, so I was mystified as to what tied these movies together. Finally gave up and looked. Oh, wow! I could have sat with this set and never made the things-you-deliver connection. Well-played, you two! And you’ve got MAIL in there as a volunteer themer!
ReplyDeleteNice to have WINGS crossing SNOW ANGELS. Look. I’ve been honest about my love for crappy sappy Hallmark Christmas movies; they’re like a balm for the soul for someone who eschews a nice little hot toddy. So I’ve seen a ton of perfectly-executed SNOW ANGELS – this part of the movie happens when one lead is trying to show the other lead how magical a time Christmas is, and they still haven’t realized that they’re perfect for each other, but boy don’t We know, we lovers of vapid, formulaic, shallow storylines – we know that the epiphany is coming. Just get past the devastating misunderstanding that her dad’s conglomerate is trying to buy the little family inn but she’s actually working frantically to save the inn but he’s heartbroken and severs all ties blah blah blah. Anyhoo, I’m always deeply impressed with how much those angels really look like angels.
Sure, the AROMA of cookies baking is enticing. But there is an AROMA out there that’s massively deceptive. Mom used to get this stuff called salt-rising bread, and the smell of the kitchen when a couple of pieces are being toasted is beyond off-putting. Don’t let the smell fool you. That sh$# is delicious.
AT my age, I couldn’t clue PORE as “small” opening. Jeez Louise. I’m watching a ton of TikTok large pore fixer testimonials and have ordered several remedies, but not a lot of luck yet.
“Make yawn” – BORE. I’m so afraid that I’ll bore someone with stuff about my health or air-travel woes that I become almost monosyllabic when answering questions about either. How. Ev. Er. . . mention how difficult English is to spell, and I can’t help myself; this force bigger than I am takes over, and I launch into a 20-minute lecture about stressed-timed languages, the schwa, and the Great Vowel Shift. I imagine my unfortunate audience would rather hear the details of my search for a large pore elixir.
Liked the SPANX/SEEP/VEX area. I’ve never had any luck with SPANX. That extra stuff I’ve crammed in there never stays put and SEEPs its way out. Results in a startling silhouette.
I’ve never seen DELIVERANCE, but I could watch this scene every day.
I guess if you are going to have a PPP theme based on movies from two or three decades ago, the smart thing to do is drop it into a Monday-level grid and run it on a Tuesday, so no harm no foul on that one I suppose.
ReplyDeleteOne of the things that the NYT is really good at is trying too hard to be cute until they just come up with groan-worthy mark-missers, and (as with almost every thing they touch), they managed to get there with the juvy humor as well (see the far SE). It’s time for Shortz to act like the adult in the room and tell the troops to cut it out.
But how hard was it, Rex?
ReplyDeleteMy fastest Tuesday ever, but it didn’t beat my fastest Monday. I liked it, but surprised that Rex didn’t comment on the odd form of the word “deliver” as the revealer. I am expecting a pizza deliverance any moment now. The anchor’s news deliverance leaves a lot to be desired. My sister’s baby deliverance went very smoothly. No one would say any of those - I don’t care, the revealer works for me, but I expected a Rexposition on it.
@LMS, thanks for the clip of that classic scene. It led me down a rabbit hole in which I discovered to my deep sadness that the boy was not playing that banjo. He wore a special shirt and was positioned so that a real player behind him actually played it. I do not know if I will recover from this knowledge.
Funny how that whoosh whoosh solve doesn’t thrill anyone on Tuesday, but does on Friday. Must be a weekend thing. If anyone here has Wednesdays and Thursdays off but works weekends, let me know if you got the whooshes today.
ReplyDeleteI knew a guy who thought he was Mr. Cool because he took two months off to travel the whole country eating frozen waffles. He was on a real EGGO trip. Later he got busted for being high and pleaded NOLO.
The Kings Speech was another possible themer. I’m keen on themes and liked this a bunch.
I agree with Rex that the puzzle was very easy, because the fill contained few if any misdirects. I never heard of SNOWANGELS, but got it easily from the crosses.
ReplyDeleteI didn't consider the theme until after I finished. Yes, a baby is delivered (usually), and a pizza is delivered (sometimes), but do we say the news is delivered?
Yes
DeleteAgree that this was too easy. Will Shortz should have made it more difficult. I think that he was asleep at the switch.
ReplyDeletePB for a Tuesday, but I have a faster Monday, the NYT stats tell me. If it hadn't been for one typo--at the bottom of the grid, where the typos always are--it might have been my fastest ever.
ReplyDeleteAs soon as I filled in MYSTIC PIZZA I did something I never do--I went right to the next themer. Got it! Next! Got it--one of my favorite movies ever! The "Dueling Banjos" movie--got it! Then it was just a matter of zipping through the fill. Remembering those great movies was a pleasure, so while I wasn't challenged, I enjoyed the whoosh!
Cute trick - just too much trivia for me. When the theme is trivia based I would try to keep others like ELTON, SHIA, DEFOE etc out. Felt like a TV Guide grid.
ReplyDeleteThe film selection is odd at least. Never saw the first two - ROSEMARY’S was always edgy and DELIVERANCE is flat out uncomfortable. Maybe should have used SPANX with yesterday’s SUCKS.
O.A.R.
Did like the long downs - SNOW ANGELS, EVIL TWIN, SCORPION. Similar to Rex - found the overall fill super slick and smooth.
Enjoyable enough Tuesday solve.
Not a huge COEN brothers fan - but True Grit is definitely worth watching
A smooth-as-silk puzzle, that is, for me, no no-knows or tricky clues, and a junk-free grid. For me, an experienced solver, then, an autofill on jetpack. But I left the last theme answer blank, figuring it was the reveal, so I could try to guess what it was. What did the three theme answers have in common? And this gave me the battle I love in crosswords.
ReplyDeleteI looked at the initials of the two-word phrases. I looked at the first words as a group, and the second words. Nothing. “Things that can be delivered” never entered my mind, and I ended up stumped. The moment I began to fill in the reveal, it hit me with a dang and a wow, and I praised the constructors for getting me good.
A scan of the completed grid brought gifts. The echo of “things that can be delivered” in EMAIL. The lovely butting together of SAUNA and PORE. The celebration of the initial long E: EMU / EMAIL / EGO / ERUPT / ELECT / ERIE / EVIL. And I love @Loren's catch of the cross of WINGS and SNOW ANGELS.
So, this package included glitter with no glue, an enjoyable moment of VEX, and splat-fill splendor. Sweet! Thank you for this, Andrea and Christina!
Best time ever without even trying. And a snooze of a puzzle as well. So by the numbers.
ReplyDeleteI was born in 1983 and haven’t seen a single one of the movies. It would have been nice if they’d thrown in something that wasn’t 40 years old. Yikes. It was still easy enough since I’ve heard OF the movies but definitely wasn’t a record time for me. It was slightly slower than average.
ReplyDeleteCould have used more minutes of entertainment on my morning subway commute!
ReplyDeleteAm I the only one is offended by the "Left coast" clue for LAX? Am I misreading it? Seems like an unnecessary slam, and I don't even live in California any more.
ReplyDelete@LMS I live for your sparkling commentary and today was just the lift I craved. Insipid Hallmark movies have gotten me through sooooooo many stressful days and you captured the plot essence perfectly. Rest assured, your pore size does not come through in your comments. It's your particular viewpoint that shines brilliantly. Thank you! Oh, and what an easy puzzle, sure, but I'd never have figured those connections -- thank you constructors!
ReplyDeleteIt's a DELIVERY, not a DELIVERANCE. This was a stupid puzzle -- even by Tuesday standards.
ReplyDeleteThe Times crossword puzzles and many others treat clues as hints not dictionary definitions. There is a question mark which is another indication that DELIVERANCE is a hint about the theme.
DeleteI thought the hint provided was perfect for a Tuesday clue, but then I have been doing these puzzles on and off for over 50 years. And due to my age I knew the movie well.
I am very confused about the theme is here. I think it is playing on ‘delivery’, but a) I don’t think DELIVERANCE is the same as 'delivery', is it? b) I don’t think delivery was a plot point in MYSTIC PIZZA, was it? c) I really hated BROADCAST NEWS (that’s unrelated to my theme confusion, but I wanted to get it out there).
ReplyDeleteI missed the connection until Rex explained:deliver pizza and news, deliver a baby. Broadcast News maybe doesn't age well. Haven't seen it since it first came out.
Delete
ReplyDeleteVideo of Homer Simpson making a snow angel.
@Julie 7:58 - you are definitely misreading it, although from your post it is not clear in what way. What is it about the clue or answer that appears to be slam?
I galloped through this one also: new Tuesday record but not faster than my best Monday. All the movie title were gimmes, although I’ve only seen two -- BROADCAST NEWS, which is a favorite, and ROSEMARY’S BABY. Loved that MIA was in the grid, would have been great if she’d somehow crossed ROSEMARY. Another themer: The Days of Wine and Roses. Or wait, maybe that’s too confusing, because you don’t usually have wine delivered or deliver wine. Or do you? Hmm, OK, how about The Subject Was Roses.
ReplyDeleteBack in the early ‘80s, several years before the movie came out, I passed through MYSTIC, CT. with my boyfriend-of-the-time. We were on a driving tour of New England. He taught Symbolism, theosophy and other forms of mysticism in nineteenth- and twentieth-century art. On the main street of MYSTIC, there actually was a shop named MYSTIC PIZZA and when he saw the sign, he gave a whoop, stopped the car and jumped out to photograph it. The unexpected conjunction of the otherworldly and the mundane really floated his boat, and I know that image made it into his lectures from there on. At least until the release of the film, whose popularity, he felt, made commonplace what he had found so delightfully astonishing.
UNICLUES:
1. Why you’re seeing me with my ancient Ford Pinto.
2. Directive to all those wand-wielders at airports to be as annoying as possible.
3. Question asked by Canadian detectives investigating a den of thieves.
4. Tristan Tzara and friends gathering nude in a steam bath at 2 a.m. to read aloud absurdist poetry backwards.
5. Melted Cheez Whiz.
1. OUT OF ORDER ALFA
2. DEMANDS TSA VEX
3. WAS LAIR METRIC?
4. NITE SAUNA DADA
5. DIP FEW ESTEEM(S)
[SB: Sun -1, Mon 0. This was my Sun. miss – I wonder if it was one of the words you were stuck on, @okanaganer. On Mon. this was my last word but, in this day and age, it really should have been one of my first.]
@Barbara S. 8:40 AM
Delete#3 LOL. I have an Imperial lair.
Amy: @BobMills, am stunned you have never heard of SNOW ANGELS! Have you never lived where it snows? Or watched a Hallmark Xmas movie? Sincerely hope you have the experience of making one soon. You know, if you are near a beach, you could try a sand angel...not the same, close.
ReplyDeleteZippy puzzle. MYSTIC PIZZA is a fun movie, and watching it would be a fine homage to the NCAA men's champs.
Agree
ReplyDeleteSuper easy
Only disappointed that I didn't set a new Tuesday PR, missing my previous record set on July 5, 2022 by 2 seconds
@Julie -- @hen you look at a standard map, California, where LAX is, on the left side. Also, even if it referred to political slant, why is the use of "left" a slam? The west coast is a more liberal part of the country.
ReplyDeleteI agree that DELIVERANCE and delivery have completely different definitions, so the puzzle doesn't work. It's like having a puzzle with theme answers taking place in a kitchen, and the revealer is KITSCH. Um, no. The puzzle was easy, so I don't think there's going to be too much complaining, but the puzzle should have been sent back and fixed.
ReplyDeleteI struggled with this one, but for dumb reasons. I only knew two of the movies was because of 30 Rock, which is maybe saying more about me than it did about the puzzle. I knew DELIVERANCE was the name of a movie, but nothing about the plot, and I have never heard of BROADCAST NEWS. I also got tripped up by ERUPT and I had STAT instead of ASAP which made the SW corner a bit tricky. I had fun though!
ReplyDeleteI think I need to start solving downs first, I tend to do much better with those
I had STY originally for ‘Animal House?’ And MRI and then CAT for ‘body image of a sort, for short,’ which tripped me up in the NW corner. The downs helped correct the situation, but it slowed me down a bit.
ReplyDeleteWhy is anyone offended by the term, "left coast"?
ReplyDeleteIt's not a political thing, if you look at a map, California's coast is the one on the left. Duh.
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteEasy here, too. Although the Revealer is not a nice movie. Something you wouldn't want to watch with your family.
Never can understand Rex's gripe about too many 3s, 4s, 5s. Every puz has lots of 'em, some may have less, with more longer letter count answers, but it's Tuesday, it should be expected to have a bunch of shorter answers. And puzs have Shorties, it's just the way it is.
Anyway, Tuesday, quick puz, nice to see ACME again.
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Julie, "left coast" just means on the left side of the map when you're looking at the US. Saying "left coast" for California has been done for many decades and has nothing to do with politics.
ReplyDeletekitshef, I agree that I don't think pizza delivery is a big plot point in MYSTICPIZZA (and the clue says the revealer is a plot point). The title business is essentially treated like a restaurant in the movie. The main characters are waitresses there.
Bob Mills, one says that a TV news anchor "delivers" the news.
This was my fastest Tuesday ever, and maybe even my fastest puzzle ever. Why so easy today?
ReplyDeleteEveryone knows Mystic Pizza, you don't need to be over 40. The only movie I hadn't heard of was Deliverance but it was easy enough to get.
While I usually find the path of least resistance a good approach to most things, it's a little disappointing as a crossword construction. A little more pushback would have been appreciated.
ReplyDeleteThen I noticed that it took two people to make this one. I can imagine the process as being one of them saying "No, that's too hard. Better make it easier somehow". Done and done.
The guitar player in DELIVERANCE sums up the whole movie when the Banjo Kid takes off and he has to admit "I'm lost!".
I thought the revealer was clever and the only remotely surprising aspect of this one, so there's that at least.
@LMS--While I sympathize with your pore problem, I find it similar to an issue that women used to have with split ends. Maybe I'm just not looking closely enough.
A real Tuesdecito, ACM and CI. A Couple Moments and Certainly Intelligent in its connections, but just way too easy. Thanks for some fleeting fun.
Yep, a super-quick solve today. I liked the theme and the revealer, but it's fair to point out that DELIVERANCE is not delivery. I can look past that.
ReplyDeleteSeen all four of these films. DELIVERANCE is the only one I would see again, for the atmosphere, music and great performances by all four central actors, especially Reynolds and Voight. Beatty's defiling is exceedingly uncomfortable though. Side note: his attacker was played by Bill McKinney, who played a very different kind of misanthrope the following year in "The Parallax View", one of my favorite films ever.
The other films were fine, but ROSEMARYSBABY is just too creepy for me these days; if I want Polanski, I'll watch "Chinatown", which I like even more than "The Parallax View" (man, 1974 kicked ass). The other two have not aged well, as with many films from the late 1980s -- the hair, the clothes, the music, the over-emotional-ness. However, Albert Brooks profusely sweating while in the anchor chair is an amazing scene.
The phrase "left coast" is sometimes used sarcastically, referring to California liberals (especially in San Francisco and Berkeley).
ReplyDeleteI'm over 40, was at one time very into movies, and MYSTICPIZZA was new to me (looks like it came out when I was otherwise busy with young family). Had the PIZZA first and spent some time wondering if it would somehow be Licorice Pizza...
ReplyDeleteEven downs only (so no clues for themers) this was easy-peasy. See clue, write answer.
Deliverance means the action of being rescued or set free, so does not correspond to “things that are delivered,” like pizza, sorry.
ReplyDeleteFirst of all, the cluing was much too easy. Second, I felt as though I was just filling in random well-known movies from earlier times. The cleverness of the "common bonds" aspect of the theme would not become apparent until I got to the revealer -- at which point my solve was just about over.
ReplyDeleteThis theme is too good to be wasted on a "no thinking required" early week puzzle. If I had had this idea myself -- and realized that all the movies were symmetrical(!) -- I would have created a later-week puzzle that made you, the solver, part of the solve. Here's how I would have clued the first three themers:
18A: 1988 movie about 63A from a restaurant?
29A: 1987 movie about 63A in a TV studio?
49A: 1968 movie about 63A in a NYC bedroom -- though it really should have been in a hospital?
And then I would have made the clues for the fill surrounding the theme answers a LOT harder.
Just think of all the curiosity that might have provoked in you as you were doing the puzzle. And how much more you would have appreciated the clever concept linking the films if you'd been challenged along the way to come up with it yourselves.
1 second off personal best tuesday time
ReplyDeleteMy first thought upon completion: not just Monday-easy, but 12:01 am Monday-easy.
ReplyDelete.
Still likable, though. No complaints.
Loved this puzzle. I think I've seen three of these movies a lifetime ago, but the only scene I can remember is the hand coming out of the water in Deliverance. I know I didn't see Rosemary's Baby because I've only watched one horror movie in my life and I couldn't sleep for weeks. I can't believe people love those things. In my defense, I was 12 years old, but fear lasts a lifetime and there's enough cartoons, and space shoot 'em ups, and movies about pretty people falling in love to keep me busy.
ReplyDeleteYou can DEmand, and REmand, but nobody just MANDS anymore.
Uniclues:
1 The last rep making your arms wiggle.
2 Romeo in the median.
3 Escaped murderer.
4 Man Ray photo of a sweaty nude under neon lights.
5 Where the virtuous one digs a shallow grave for the doppelganger.
6 Those warmed to oblivion.
1 FINAL HEFT
2 OUT OF ORDER ALFA
3 M.I.A. SCORPION
4 "NITE SAUNA" DADA
5 EVIL TWIN BOG
6 COZY SNOW ANGELS
@Bob Mills 9:24
ReplyDeleteBut for those who live in Hawaii, California is just another flyover state.....
But..but...no.
ReplyDeleteDELIVERY is the revealer word you want. It's delivery of a pizza, delivery of the news, delivery of a baby. DELIVERANCE means something quite different: rescue, salvation, "Set my people free!" DELIVERANCE is not a "plot point" in those other movies. And Jeff Chen gave this a Pow!?
I remember reading a quote once from a famous foreign-born person —I can't remember who it was— who said that when he first arrived in America, doing crossword puzzles was a great help to him in learning English vocabulary. I'd warn *anyone* against using the NYTimes puzzle for that purpose nowadays.
My father, Philip Gips designed that iconic Rosemarys Baby poster! ♥️
ReplyDelete@ G Weissman (9:48am)
ReplyDeleteMaybe so...
But try telling that to the delivery boy from Pizza by Alfredo in the season 4 episode of The Office "Launch Party" He'll surely disagree.
Each of the “deliveries” has a meaning different from the other two. . I thought this was impressive. SLIGHT problem is that none of these has anything to do with a DELIVERANCE.
ReplyDeleteYeah, easy -- I started in the NW, which filled itself in (although I had a moment of fun imagining the feathered Australian). I really liked the theme, though; like @Lewis I had no idea until I got to the brilliant revealer. I've never seen it (nor Mystic Pizza nor Broadcast News), but only a month or so ago I advised my daughter to see it before she committed to relocating to the Georgia mountains.
ReplyDeleteYears ago when she used to come here, ACME once commented that clues like 16-A were her favorites; this is a great one, but the need to capitalize Coast kind of gives it away. How about "Coast or tower can follow it."
I'm pretty sure that it was people in LA who started saying "left coast," and that the term referred to geography. It does favor a particular orientation of the map, though. Sort of like flying West for 13 hours to get to the Far East.
Well that WAS a breezy fun little outing after a four-day break. I agree with Rex that it was one of the easiest puzzles I can ever recall and I also think @Joe D has a point about the revealer. Yeah you can stretch it but really? Not that far.
ReplyDeleteTwo of these are among my favorites - DELIVERANCE which turned a young Burt Reynolds (RIP) into a megastar, and BROADCAST NEWS with Holly Hunter and the late great William Hurt. MYSTIC PIZZA kind of had a cult following but I never really got on that bandwagon, and ROSEMARY’S BABY is way too ERIE for me.
Thx, ACME & Christina; nice DELIVERANCE! :)
ReplyDeleteEasy; (under Mon. avg time).
No probs, despite not knowing either of the first two themers. They were both eventually DELIVERed by easy crosses.
DEFOE vs DaFOE is always a '?'.
Fun adventure! :)
___
Easy-med Croce yd time-wise, but felt tougher. On to Natan Last's Mon. New Yorker. 🤞
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🙏
After the recent April 1 puzzle, it's clear some o' y'all have skills unassociated with understanding humor, but we should be able to at least count on suspending your literalism to grok DELIVERY and DELIVERANCE. Sure, different words, but close enough for a puzzle, and everyone still got it in record times. And not unimportantly, the deliverer of a pizza, newspaper, or a baby does in fact achieve deliverance of said item by handing over to the deliveree. C'mon kids, you're not reading a thesaurus. Try to have a little fun. Try.
ReplyDeleteA Po-EEM
The EMU read her EMAIL
and her EGO ERUPTed
They wanted to ELECT her
to the ERIE electric coop
An that's when EVIL entered
Thanks @Lewis 7:38 AM
exactly. thank you! :)
DeleteI didn't look at the theme clues or fills until I came here to read the blog. I just filled in all the Downs from ZETA to SEXY. Ugh!
ReplyDeleteFinally -- Another person who avoids horror movies like the plague, just like me. Thanks you, @Gary J (9:57).
ReplyDeleteI was scarred forever by being taken as a child to both "The Wizard of Oz" and "Snow White." Big mistake. Nightmares. These are not "children's movies".
I also never saw ROSEMARY'S BABY. And while loads of the horror movies I've managed to dodge have been pure slasher-type schlock, I've also ducked many supposedly "good" movies that everyone insisted on talking about. The more they talk about them, though, the more determined I am to avoid them. Some of the major horror films I've never seen (I even close my eyes during the trailers) are:
PSYCHO
JAWS
DIABOLIQUE
THE EXORCIST
THE SHINING
WHATEVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE
Then there are the "why didn't anyone warn me?" flicks -- the ones that I had no idea would have horror scenes and actually went to see. I closed my eyes during what turned out to be 80 percent of "Black Swan" (was it as horrible as I imagined it to be in my imagination?) and closed my eyes during all the ceiling scenes of whatever those hallucinated-under-drugs chess pieces were doing up there: I didn't want to know.
It's visual horror scenes that can give me nightmares. I read the novel "ROSEMARY'S BABY with no untoward after-effects -- and in fact loved it. I think Ira Levin was one of America's top commercial novelists ever. I loved everything he wrote.
This is twice within the past two weeks that I have set a personal record for solving that day of the week's #NYTXW. Not just a few seconds or so, but by like half a minute each time. What the hey is up? Did someone mess with Will Shortz's desktop day planner?
ReplyDelete@Gary Jugert (9:57)
ReplyDeleteI came close to posting a "FINAL HEFT" that was ERIE-ly similar to your #1 -- not sure why I pulled it. And your EVIL TWIN BOG was superb.
Yep, extremely easy. Iconic movies, plus no erasures, no WOEs and only one fat fingered typo.
ReplyDeleteSmooth and tight, liked it and Jeff gave it POW.
@Gary Jugert (10:58). Beautifully said. It's called Joaquin's Dictum. C'mon down for a nice piece of cake.
ReplyDeleteIn agreement with @Gary J. Here is the definition of DELIVERANCE from Merriam-Webster-Webster:
ReplyDeleteThe meaning of DELIVERANCE is the act of delivering someone or something : the state of being delivered; especially : liberation, rescue.
TuesPuz goes to the movies. Knew all the flicks, but maybe the one M&A ain't seen yet was "Mystic Pizza". Will have to check out the bargain DVD bins at Wal-Mart for that one, sometime.
ReplyDeletestaff weeject pick: ZOO. Part of the animal house mini-theme.
other faves: SNOWANGELS. OUTOFORDER. EVILTWIN. SCORPION. SLIGHT. ERUPT. SPANX.
Didn't play much easier than usual for a TuesPuz, at our house. Of course, TuesPuzs are usually gonna play pretty easy, and this was certainly no exception.
Thanx for gangin up on us, ACME & Christina darlins. Nice job. Suddenly, am hungry for pizza … how oddly mystic(al).
Masked & AnonymoUUs
**gruntz**
@Gary Jugert & mathgent – to hell with "Joachim's dictum." This puzzle is relying on a supposedly clever connection between movie titles by using a word in a way that NOBODY uses it.
ReplyDeleteThis is a comments board, where people are entitled to make the comments they see fit to make about the puzzle. I posted what I think. My comment doesn't demand a rebuttal from you.
No one was talking to you, you can stop yelling at clouds now
DeleteSo easy! I never time myself but my app told me I blew through this one in 2:02. Just nothing at all surprising or confusing. Well, the reveal was a stretch. Very awkwardly parsed in the clue. And because of the horrible cause of Rosemary’s need to “be delivered,” I just had a real eeeewwwww reaction, at least to that theme element. Oh well. It’s Tuesday and this was very easy.
ReplyDeleteAy, Dios mío....DELIVERANCE me from evil. Polanski did it for me. My mom, sister and I watched the scariest movies I ever had no pleasure of seeing: "Repulsion." It was in black and white with Catherine Deneuve. I remember two young men sitting in front of us and in one very outré moment, all five us jumped out of our skins screaming.
ReplyDeleteAnd then...do I dare watch ROSEMARY's BABY? I did. It, too gave me the heebie jeebies....sorta like watching DELIVERANCE (twice...I'm a sucker for horror) and wondering why I wanted to be such a masochist.
It happens.
So...we come to the puzzle. Yes, it was a wham bammer. But why these movies and what does it mean? What in the world is a MYSTIC PIZZA? (I had forgotten that this movie existed) doing here. Would it be a PIZZA puzzle? Did ROSEMARY order one for her BABY? Was she BROADCASTING her satanism and PSYCHO-logicl disorder?....Is there an EViL TWIN lurking in some shadows?
Just kidding.... I had fun. Oh look...I even see MIA there.
@Gary Jugert: I also hate horror movies, especially the slasher/zombie/gallons of blood sort. When I was very little, my grandfather, who spoiled me rotten, allowed me to watch the classic "The Wolf Man" on TV, and I swear, I didn't sleep at all that night.
ReplyDeleteBut films like ROSEMARY'S BABY and "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" are more psychological or sociological thrillers than what I think of when I hear "horror movies." ROSEMARY'S BABY is a fantastic movie, it won't keep you awake at night, and one of the stars is the great Ruth Gordon, who has never been better.
@Joe Dipinto. Sorry. I wasn't. trying to hurt your feelings. You're one of my favorites.
ReplyDelete@Joe Dipinto 12:27 PM
ReplyDeleteDefinitely not speaking directly to you Joe. Lots of people shared your opinion.
The only one of these movies that has really aged well is of course DELIVERANCE. There are just so many things right in it; scenes that you enjoy just as much on the 12th viewing. And the ending!!!... the sheriff is played by James Dickey, the author of the book, in a brief but perfect cameo. And then that hand coming out of the water!!
ReplyDelete[Spelling Bee: yd 0. Sun also 0*; the asterisk because it was not achieved until yesterday afternoon. @Barbara S, I did get your word on Sunday; these were the 2 words that took me into extra time.]
The only one of these films I've seen is DELIVERANCE. I had heard of ROSEMARYS BABY but stopped going to horror movies after being horribly traumatized by Hitchcock's "Psycho". I know that the NYTXW has been trying to be bolder and edgier of late (e.g., yesterday's CASUAL SEX) but thought they had overstepped things a bit by saying that DELIVERANCE had a "plot point" in common with the other movies. Per wiki, the film is "notorious for its brutal depiction of a sodomous rape, before which the victim is compelled to 'squeal like a pig' by his attacker". That got me wondering if all those other films had "squeal like a pig" scenes in them.
ReplyDeleteOh, it's things in the movies that get DELIVERed. Should have known since just last night I was getting ready to watch the NEWS DELIVERANCE and hoping that the PIZZA DELIVERANCE person would hurry up when I got a call that our neighbor was about to have a BABY DELIVERANCE next door.
Okay, yes, that's just my smart assery attempt to say that I'm totally on the opposite side of the fence when it comes to "close enough for crosswords" sentiments. Once we start down that slippery slope, where does it stop? How much variance from literal definitions is allowed? Who gets to make that call? I think of crossword puzzles as more of a literary art form that should be held to higher standards than the "sort of, kind of, don't think about it too much, language changes so we can use words however we want to" rationalizations and apologia seen here regularly.
A regular Tuesday time for me, as I haven't seen any of the movies, so needed plenty of crosses, and I hesitated over some of the other PPP, too. I agree with others that the delivery of PIZZA, the NEWS, or a BABY is different from being delivered, say, from EVI;, still, I thought the reveal was a good joke.
ReplyDeleteDo-over: WIlco before WINGS. My word of the day: ELECT - the direction of Wisconsin's Supreme Court will be decided today, an outcome with national implications.
@Gary J and @mathgent – sorry if that sounded snappish, I realize you didn't address your posts to me, but I was one of those who took issue with the theme. I just sometimes sense a tendency here to tell those who quibble about details, in effect, "oh, lighten up, puzzles don't have to be exactly on the mark", etc., which can come across as "well, you *shouldn't* be so concerned with details, you should feel *this* way." To which I say, why? If a person likes accuracy and finesse and thinks the puzzle doesn't have it, why shouldn't they say so without someone responding that they're being too critical. It's just two different opinions.
ReplyDelete(Is this where I'm supposed to put:
tl; dr?
Or was I supposed to put it up top? still not sure how that works.)
Anyway, I enjoy reading you both and your posts were fine, I think it was a sort of cumulative effect of other "rebuttal" posts from the past that triggered my reaction.
Easy, though I have beef with the sauna clue - nothing worse than a dry sauna!
ReplyDelete@Nancy thought it was a tight theme, but a repulsive puzzle for her. @Gary thought you have lost your sense of humor if you object to the usage of DELIVERANCE to indicate the delivery of pizza, babies and news. @joe, who never seems to lack humor, objects to @Gary's criticism when he only was giving his opinion. @anoa, I think, weighs in on @Joe's side with the opinion that CW's use a horseshoe standard too often and this is one such occasion.
ReplyDeleteWhat a mares-nest.
I imagine the doorbell ringing and go answer it and some one yells Who is it? and I yell back DELIVERANCE and return with a pizza in hand and add FROM HUNGER.
DELIVERANCE is primarily and act of delivering something to someone despite its more specialized usage of liberation or salvation.
I do not think that the punning usage is incorrect at all. In fact a punning correlation is an even superior option because it has humor baked in.
Remember that the idea that the pun is the lowest form of humor is claimed by the ones who did not think of it first.
I only got around to the Saturday puzzle yesterday. I was... what the heck...is..going on? And then remembered that it was a First of April puzzle and had a big laugh and finished up with only a pair names cheat with Google.
So sorry @anoa @ joe and others. I'm with @Gary and @whoever else on this one when it comes to this theme. But it's only an opinion.
Hey and John Boorman is a hell of a director. Another opinion.
And acts of delivery were points in the 3 movies. And there was a DELIVERANCE in the 4th.
And shirley, a pun can be an element of a crossword theme.
@Joe
ReplyDeleteJust read your 5:11 post. I was not trying to pile on.
I thought I was doing a TV Guide crossword.
ReplyDeleteWhat Joe D. said.
ReplyDelete@albatross - not sure I agree with you on the usage of DELIVERANCE - but Hope and Glory is on my Mt. Rushmore of films.
ReplyDeleteI applaud the civility on this blog and wish you were all in Congress.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure why so many folks are bothered by the slight differentiation (or is it DIFFERENCE?) between DELIVERANCE and DELIVERY. I'm pretty sure everyone got the theme.
ReplyDeleteI did agree with rex about the puzzle's easiness (or is it EASE?), but . . . .
DELIVERANCE is I think much more well known for the banjo playing on the front porch (indeed, the song was quite a popular hit back in the day) then it is for the sexual assault scene.
It's one of the rare instances where both the book (written by the great James Dickey) and the movie are equally wonderful. I think Dickey was involved in the movie adaptation as well, which might explain why it was so good. To you younger folks who read this blog, find it on Netflix and give it a watch.
Easy and as per usual didn't notice nor care about the theme until I looked at the final product. So the the theme is "things that are delivered- "PIZZA, NEWS, BABY?" I suppose so but why, why?
ReplyDeleteUpon further reflection, I'm looking at myself and saying maybe we all can get too critical sometimes, and this is a hobby we all enjoy and people out there put work into these. People know I'm into crosswords and with good intentions buy me me crossword books as gifts sometimes which are invariably hot garbage.
I know ACM from a lot of puzzles I've enjoyed over the years and I guess I prefer themeless, unless the theme really sparkles, which this one didn't for me, but what do I know....
@DELIVERANCE doesn't mean delivered!!!! people - You're right, to the limited extent that DELIVERANCE means the act of being delivered, not delivered, as in the pizza guy engaged in deliverance when bringing me my pizza. It may have a special implication along the lines of being set free, but that isn't the entirety of what it means.
ReplyDeleteOf course delivered and deliverance aren’t the same. But to conflate—or mistake1–the two during Holy Week ?
ReplyDeleteIck.
When I finished this puzzle, with my fastest Tuesday time ever, I said to my wife “This is the easiest puzzle I have ever done, I wonder what Rex says…”.
ReplyDeleteJust here to say that the reboot of She-Ra is, in fact, awesome. My daughter watched the whole thing more than once I’d say. I am in the kitchen while she is watching her shows in the morning so I hear it. One of my faves that she has watched.
ReplyDeleteI know why @M&A didn't post his usual "favorite moo-cow-easy" entry: he couldn't make up his mind! Clue sets have been hitting extremes lately; one is so obfuscating that the solver has to do hard labor to get through it, the next bends over backward to make sure you get every one. A medium would indeed be happy.
ReplyDeleteThe theme is fine. One of those where I couldn't find the grouping until the revealer: that part's good. The rest...a child could do it. Maybe even ROSEMARYSBABY. Par.
Wordle par, but with TWO repeated letters seems more like a birdie.
Just because it’s beginner-friendly or “easy” doesn’t mean it’s bad. After all, it’s only Tuesday.
ReplyDeleteGLIB DELIVERANCE
ReplyDeleteROSEMARY DEMANDS A trip
OUT at NITE to skinny DIP.
IT’s not RARE she’ll ORDER thanks.
Is she SEXY OUTOF her SPANX?
--- OMAR COEN
Isn't there a translation of the Old Testament, that when Moses climbs to the top of Mt. Sinai, and he's waiting for the tablets with the ten commandments on them to be delivered to him, he spends his time making snow angels???
ReplyDeleteOne of my fave movies - BROADCASTNEWS. Mr. W often acts like the Holly Hunter character when we get in a cab - usually to the airport (where they've gone a thousand times that week). "Now take this turn, and that entrance to the freeway is jammed at this time of day..." Never fails to crack me up. Mr. W never understands why.
ReplyDeleteSo I enjoyed this ACME-offered treat, especially since we had yesterday's "ACME" puzzle offering.
Only someone who compulsively times themselves would care that it was "too" easy. Do they time themselves when eating a good meal? "Ha! Only 40 minutes for that T-bone and potatoes." Sheesh.
Diana, Lady-in-Waiting, and taking her time
Wouldn't say easiest ever but not hard. MIA starred as ROSEMARY, yeah BABY.
ReplyDeleteWordle birdie.