Counting to twelve on fingers (guessed as Ocean’s Eleven or The Dirty Dozen ), then pretending to argue (guessed as Glengarry Glen Ross ). Loss. 4. Eraserhead (1977) Why it’s brutal: Even people who’ve seen David Lynch’s surreal nightmare can’t describe it in words. Now try it without words. Is that a mutant baby? A radiator lady? Cheeks stuffed with miniature chickens? Good luck.
Mime writing on your hand (a key plot point), then repeatedly “forgetting” what you just did. Expect groans. 2. The Seventh Seal (1957) Why it’s brutal: You’re supposed to mime a medieval knight playing chess with Death. On a beach. During the Black Plague. Unless your group is full of film students, this devolves into someone pretending to move chess pieces while dying dramatically. hard movies for damsharas
Actor mimes holding a steering wheel and a phone. Team shouts “Drive!” (no), “Phone Booth!” (no), “Tom Hardy!” (not a movie title). Defeat. 6. My Dinner with Andre (1981) Why it’s brutal: Two men sit at a restaurant table and talk philosophy for two hours. No plot twists. No costumes. No dramatic gestures. Mime “dinner” (they get The Godfather — cannoli scene). Mime “conversation” (they get Before Sunrise ). You lose. 7. Russian Ark (2002) Why it’s brutal: The entire film is one continuous 96-minute Steadicam shot through a Russian palace. No cuts. How do you signal “single take”? Most people mime a camera, which gets guessed as The Blair Witch Project (found footage) or Birdman (also long takes, but more famous). Counting to twelve on fingers (guessed as Ocean’s
Your team shouts “Harry Potter!” (because of Death), then “Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey!” (also Death + chess). No one ever gets it right. 3. 12 Angry Men (1957) Why it’s brutal: Twelve men. One room. They talk. That’s it. There’s no action, no costume change, no iconic prop besides a table and a fan. Mime “deliberation.” Mime “reasonable doubt.” Mime “juror number 8 changing everyone’s mind.” Eraserhead (1977) Why it’s brutal: Even people who’ve