Mr. Orange filling Mr. Blonde full of lead
The scene near the end of Oh Brother Where Art Thou, when The boys are on stage and sing Man of Constant sorrow. Even though you can see it coming from a mile away, it is still one of the funniest, most poignant scenes ever filmed.
the look on clooney’s face when the crowd erupts gets me every time - so funny
“You talkin’ to me?..You talkin’ to me?.. Well I don’t see anyone else here, so you must be talking to me.”
Usual Suspects when:
Verbal’s leg straigtens out as he’s walking away
That’s my very favorite scene from any movie ever (Also my favorite movie).
Oh, man that was so cool!
I’m terribly old, so I actually saw that in the theater the day after it opened. You young folks should know that sci-fi movies in the old days always had forty minutes of boring dialogue before you actually got to see the monster or the spaceship or whatever it was you came to see.
This movie: Eight seconds, and WHOOSH!! BLAM! BLAM! POW!!!
This pre-teen was in heaven. I saw it twenty-four times that summer. (VCR’s hadn’t been invented yet.)
One of my favorite scenes is in Braveheart, when William Wallace is going to kill the deer and
(spoiler spoiler spoiler spoiler spoiler)
the crazy Irishman shoots the stalker. It’s just beautiful. In writing, it sounds funny, but if you’ve actually seen the movie… the music, the scene, the characters… the whole movie is just stunning. Stunning.
In Fight Club
“You’re Mr. Durden. You’re the man who gave me this.”, and about the next 30 seconds.
Best experienced the first time, of course.
Really? I thought the music beautifully complemented the scene - and I’m a score nerd.
The last ten minutes of Last of the Mohicans
I have to disagree on Jurassic Park - the best scene there is Jeff Goldblum getting his first look at a live dinosaur. He’s out of the jeep, jaw dropped and eyes wide, then the bronto turns to look at him and his knees just buckle with the wonder of it all.
Another I like is the piano-dance in Big, with Tom Hanks and Robert Loggia playing Heart and Soul on the giant floor piano.
It’s been a long time since I’ve seen this film. Was this the scene where Hawkeye and his brother and father are hunting the gang of Mohawks who have Madeline Stowe? That was a great scene. The action was great, but I also recall the music was excellent.
I’ll agree with the speech scene in Independence Day …
Others…
The scene between Carol and her mother in As Good As It Gets , when Carol is writing the thank you letter
The sinking sequence in Titanic
The sailing scene inWhat About Bob?
The hotel scene in Tommy Boy
The entire scene starting when Dave comes back on the ship in 2001: A Space Odyssey until he is finished removing Hal’s memory and he receives the message from earth.
Maybe this goes in the “Identify this movie from vague information” thread, but there’s a final scene in a Hitchcock movie, in an apartment room. As a man is strangling a woman, the camera slowly pans out into the hallway, down the stairs, and to the busy street outside. None of the people walking around are aware of what was happening. It was a poignant way of demonstrating how an act of murder can happen in entirely normal surroundings, right in the middle of everyday life. Very haunting scene.
Good call. I remember seeing the movie when I was a kid and that scene, with the hero revealing himself, was such a rush.
Finest bit of acting Jon’s done, IMHO (“So, you clean that spot, and you clean that spot . . .”), and probably the reason he got nominated for Best Actor that year. Lost to William Hurt in Kiss of the Spider Woman .
DD
Actually, they were chasing down the band of Huron who had Alice (the sister of Cora, who was Madeline Stowe’s character). But yes, that’s the scene. It’s the scene where:
[spoiler]Uncas gets ahead of them, fights his way through to Magua, then is killed by Magua. Alice jumps off the cliff rather than be taken by Magua (and I think she had a thing for Uncas, too). Hawkeye and Chingachgook catch up and tear through the rest of the Huron band – mostly Chingachgook, fueled by rage after seeing Uncas die.
I especially like the way that there is no Desparate Battle[sup]TM[/sup] between Magua and Chingachgook at the end – no back and forth among equal foes. It is quite clear that Chingachgook is the superior warrior, and once he catches up, Magua never has a chance.[/spoiler]
The music throughout the whole movie was excellent. Pick up the soundtrack. You won’t be disappointed.
Thanks for the clarification Monstre.
I also agree with the Titanic sinking scene. If not for the whole scene, then for the one shot of the guy going ping off the propeller blade.
I laughed and laughed…
Two scenes from 2001: Dave’s futile attempt at retrieving his comrade’s body, and Dave disconnecting HAL.