Curtis Armstrong

Role: 

Big Bully

Whatta pal! Every time big ol' Rosco Bigger saw David Leary in the schoolyard, he tried to shake hands with the little guy's face. That was decades ago. Since then, career, family and Father Time have tempered youthful hijinks, right? Wrong. For Rosco and David, the past isn't history - it's a running start! Rick Moranis (Davis) and Tom Arnold (Rosco) pick up a feud where it never left off in this comedy written by Mark Steven Johnson.

Risky Business

There's a time for playing it safe and a time for...Risky Business. Meet Joel Goodsen. Industrious, college-bound 17-year-old. Responsible, trustworthy son. But he's been good too long. Joel's parents are away and he's in charge of the house. They trust him. Maybe they shouldn't. "One of the best American comedies of recent years" (Roger Ebert), Risky Business slyly explores the teen dilemma of growing up good-hearted but guilt-ridden. In his starmaking role as Joel, Tom Cruise is a charmer with conscience that foreshadows Jerry McGuire.

Moonlighting: Season Four

Maddie Hayes, a wealthy former model, discovers one morning that her business manager has stolen all the money she has in the bank. However, it turns out that she still owns some nonliquid assets -- money-losing companies which were maintained as tax write-offs -- one of which is a detective agency run by David Addison. Maddie meets with him to inform him that the company is to be shut down, but he persuades her to keep it open by convincing her that the detective agency can make money. Maddie becomes David's new boss and accompanies him on adventure after adventure.

Moonlighting: Season Three

Relive the unforgettable double-talk and witty foreplay as Maddie Hayes (Cybil Shepherd and David Addison (Bruce Willis) unlock the mystery to sidesplitting laughter as TV's sexiest private detectives in the complete third season of Moonlighting. By far, the best season of Moonlighting. From the day waiting at the post office to find a man who's been sending a woman love letters to the trip to New York to Shakespeare... it has it all.

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