Get me a tarantula.

1. Strangers on a Train (1951): Amateur tennis star Guy Haines wants to divorce his unfaithful wife to be with the woman he really loves. While on a train, he meets a stranger, Bruno Anthony, and as they talk a bit, Bruno introduces his idea of the perfect murder -- Bruno kills Guy's wife, and Guy kills Bruno's father. No motive for the murderer, perfect alibis for those most suspicious, no case for the police. Guy hurriedly leaves the train, disturbed, but it is not the last he has seen of Bruno. Directed by Alfred Hitchcock, starring Farley Granger, Robert Walker and Ruth Roman.

2. 2. The Stepford Wives (1975): Joanna Eberhart moves with her family to a clean-cut Connecticut suburb. However, she quickly grows bored with the neighborhood because every woman in town seems to be concerned only with housework. And the deeper Joanna pries into the town, the more unsettled she becomes with what she finds underneath the surface. Directed by Bryan Forbes, starring Katharine Ross, Paula Prentiss and Peter Masterson.

3. The Quick and the Dead (1995): The Lady is a gunfighter who enters the Old West town of Redemption circa 1881. In an attempt to seek vengeance on her father's death, The Lady enters a single elimination gunfighting contest held by Redemption's ruthless leader, John Herod. Directed by Sam Raimi, starring Sharon Stone, Gene Hackman and Russell Crowe.

4. Arsenic and Old Lace (1944): Drama critic Mortimer Brewster marries his childhood next door neighbor, Elaine Harper, and they visit Mortimer's bizarre aunts, who live with Mortimer's brother, Teddy, who believes he is Teddy Roosevelt. One day Mortimer finds a corpse in the home; his aunts eventually explain that it is their doing -- they've developed the bad habit of ending the suffering of lonely old bachelors by poisoning them. To make matters worse, Mortimer's other brother, Jonathan, arrives with his accomplice, Dr. Herman Einstein ... and they, too, are killers. Directed by Frank Capra, starring Cary Grant, Josephine Hull and Jean Adair.

5. Some Like it Hot (1959): Two struggling musicians, Joe and Terry, witness a murder and run away, fearing for their lives. They take a job that requires them to dress as women and hang out with an all-girl band, with both falling for the band's singer/ukulele player, Sugar Kane, and struggle to hide both their affection for her and their identities. Directed by Billy Wilder, starring Jack Lemmon, Tony Curtis and Marilyn Monroe.

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