Bruce Willis will be yippie
ki yay - ing all the way to the bank if he manages to sell his 1920s Los Angeles mansion
It's slow and methodical, not run and gun, yippee
ki yay motherf & # * % $ explosive.
A few good laughs, a yippee
ki yay and some really great action scenes bring back enough nostalgia by the films end to make this mess of a movie still enjoyable.
Not exact matches
Of course, now that we're all grown - ups, there is nothing like following up grandpa's cowboy meal with a «yippee - yo -
ki -
yay» Cowboy Bourbon Sour.
Can he say, «Yippee
ki - yi -
yay?»
Built on shaky and blood - soaked ground, but if towering technique is all you want from an action movie, then yippee -
ki -
yay.
Only the tongue - in - cheek twist here is that Sly and the gang get to deliver each other's catchphrases — «Yippee
ki -
yay,» Arnie sighs after Bruce Willis pauses mid-onslaught to berate him for having been back enough.
Back to Willis: That wry, «yippee -
ki -
yay» edge that he used to bring to action roles?
It even contains the line «yippee
ki -
yay, mother ducker,» which is somehow both objectively terrible and wonderful at the same time.
And it should be noted that the core theme of John McClane's yippee -
ki -
yay jaunts concerns the very Dylan - Thomas notion of not fading away quietly, and shunning, if not outright fearing, the approach of brittle bones and 4:00 dinners.
Then, see him shoot more people before eventually shouting the inevitable line «Yippee -
ki -
yay motherf --».
Much like its global sibling, the Hilux, the Toyota Tacoma is developing a reputation for toughness — a go anywhere die hard attitude that does a better rendition of «yippee -
ki -
yay» than Bruce Willis.