Post a memorable scene from a movie, one you never forget...
I start with this conversation from
Before Sunrise:
Mine is from the film
Stranger Than Fiction.
The scene in the moving bus...
And this other one from the same film...
😂
Oh, there could be lots of those, but I'll only post "a few"...
"The Big Lebowski" is full of memorable scenes (but that's just, like, my opinion, man):
"Pulp Fiction" is another one with lots of memorable scenes:
I adore Kill Bill, but the one that stays with me is Oren Ishii's backstory.
Afraid of you? Yeahhh...👌🏻
Harsh, but sometimes you need to be shaken like this at work to get back on track...
Can't forget this scene because of
that laugh, and because it is so well shot, directed and acted, and because the movie changed my views of classical music and who was making it.
QuoteWe shop at home we surf the web.. but at the same time we feel emptier, lonelier, and more cut off from each other than at any other time in human history
Lol MeltingMan, I see the theme here, very clever.
I shall reply with this:
Hahaha! :-) Excellent - first of all for
@MeltingMan, who is so sly and does this quite a bit! :rofl :evil:
And also to
@word_on_a_wing for the perfect repartee! :smth023 :yum: :cool
By the way, we watched
Labyrinth recently and I was most disturbed by that crotch thing going on. The costuming department appeared to have used opaque clingwrap on the male protagonist's crotch. Not sure I needed to see that while eating popcorn... :1f631:
Inspired by Mexico and a mishap (recently walked in front of a glass door). 😆
It's not just the "scene", the music (Ennio Morricone, of course) alone sends shivers down my spine...
Always loved spy moves and watched this one several times. Love this conversation between Catherine McCormack and Brad Pitt. The soundtrack is also pretty good.
This one will be remembered for many years to come...
No video needed for this memorable scene (Casablanca final scenes):
(https://miro.medium.com/max/1838/1*Tt9RsETyQRzKIEEfmio1UQ.png)
Plus the immortal sentence "round up the usual suspects". :cool
You and Brett should get in a TARDIS and watch movies together,
@Ulrich. So much overlap! :)
One of my recent favourites - and any scene from that was memorable:
:heart-eyes
Another one (SPOILER ALERT - do not watch this if you don't know the movie and don't read what I write below)!
There's this guy who never talks the whole time and they all think he's deaf etc. and then:
Not a movie scene, but... "copying" a memorable movie scene! :cool
Donald Sutherland? Al Pacino? Revolution! 😉
Cronenberg made some real gems, esp early on in his career. Oliver Reed had never acted better than in this.
This one will be remembered in years to come... Do not watch if you did not watch "Joker" yet.
When you enter an old castle and aren't sure what's going on (no danger of "spoilers")
From
And The Band Played On, a must-watch movie specially in these times of viruses...
"If you get this disease the chances are about a hundred percent that you are doing to die"
Quote from: O. CrookshankJudas was played by Michael Ansara-Barbara Eden's husband
A famous bit from Guy Maddin's surrealist mocumentary My Winnipeg
An iconic moment from the seminal film that put Canada on the global cultural map
I mean, it was Glenn Gould who actually put Canada on the global cultural map but most people take the view of Vladimir Ashkenazy who said that GG was not from Canada but from outer space. Whereas I beg to differ and think that this wonderful film shows the richness of his relationship to his native city and country.
Edit: since this is the scene thread, I'll go for this one
Al Pacino turning 80 today.
One of the most engrossing and entertaining films I know
The painterly quality, the expressionist detail... simply outstanding.
Tonight on telly, but I own the dvd (and've seen it many times):
"What day is it?" - cracks me up, as currently I often do wonder...
When the Surrealists came to America to collaborate with local talent...
Once again, it's not just the scene, the music (Ennio Morricone of course) gives me goose bumps or tears in my eyes (almost every time I hear it!):
Love this movie and this scene is masterpiece
Amazing opening speech by Denzel Washington in 'Philadelphia'
"Laberst Du mich an? DU laberst mich an?" (German version - English below) :-D
Court scene from "A few good men" (don't watch if you don't know the movie already - spoiler alarm):
From "Indecent Proposal" (1993)
The dude doesn't like the Eagles much, huh? (Neither do I...)
One of the best movies I've ever seen, and probably the most heart-breaking and saddest scene I remember. The acting is terrific. And this is probably the worst news anyone could ever receive in life :(
Quote from: dsanchez on February 06, 2022, 14:46:51The acting is terrific.
Naomi Watts is awesome, here's a scene from "Mulholland Drive", in which she plays an actress doing an audition:
Nice article:
https://www.theringer.com/movies/2021/10/19/22733626/mulholland-drive-20th-anniversary-david-lynch-naomi-watts
Also already thirty years old and absolutely worth seeing. 🤩
Anne Baxter would have turned 100 this year. 🤩
David Lynch plays John Ford in Spielberg's "The Fabelmans":
Here's a scene from "The Wire", so you can see what the t-shirt "Omar Comin'" means:
Quote from: WikipediaThe opening theme is an instrumental version of "Try a Little Tenderness."
Vincent Price in a scene by
The Song of Bernadette.
Quote from: The Complete Films of V. Price(Previewed December 21, 1943, to qualify for the Oscars) Released January 1944