Watch: Random Movie Lines Cut Together into Rhymes

I have no idea what possessed Vimeo user anton withagen to cut together a bunch of random lines from movies into rhyming poetry. It might have been nothing more than a simple editing exercise, but even though it's nonsensical, I was still mesmerized by it for a minute and forty-five seconds. Maybe you will be, too.

The term supercut was first created by Andy Baio. Also known as supercut video mashups, they focus on the phrases and devices that are repeated in movies and TV and repeat them in a comic effect. The video content adds context to these clichés, and presents them in a new light, or inspire a moratorium on them. The supercut first appeared a year after YouTube was created. In 2006, an audience that would turn out to grow to more than six million watched CSI: Miami’s David Caruso don a pair of sunglasses after making a glib remark about a victim. In the video Caruso keeps doing that same action for seven minutes. The clip was perhaps the most prominent supercut before the term was even invented, and that was not by accident. It was because of the way the creator edited away to the screaming finale of the opening credits in between each iteration, establishing a jokey rhythm and a perennial callback. Details like these are key in the supercut genre.[

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