- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
re: Okay, favorite movie scenes. Ever.
Posted on 1/5/18 at 8:03 pm to Nix to Twillie
Posted on 1/5/18 at 8:03 pm to Nix to Twillie
The prestige
Borden Is executed and then kills Angere while revealing his lifelong secret.
Borden Is executed and then kills Angere while revealing his lifelong secret.
Posted on 1/5/18 at 8:04 pm to KirkLazarus
Damn...some solid stuff in here.
Will add: Opening Scene in Full Metal Jacket
Too many from Godfather I and II to list
Crappy movie...but Rocky Balboa...where he sets his kid straight about life in general.
Patton...again, opening scene
Will add: Opening Scene in Full Metal Jacket
Too many from Godfather I and II to list
Crappy movie...but Rocky Balboa...where he sets his kid straight about life in general.
Patton...again, opening scene
Posted on 1/5/18 at 8:08 pm to KirkLazarus
quote:
mmm probably my favorite scene in cinema, ever. John Williams score "Man Against Beast" does so much. From that moment when Hooper jumps down the ladder, so much urgency in all three of them for different reasons. Hooper wanting to study and document, Brody losing his shite, Quint intent on finding a way to kill the shark. Just gorgeous.
You and I would get along well. It’s probably my favorite scene too and for all the reasons you mentioned. “Man against beast” definitely sneaks into my iTunes shuffle every now and then.
quote:
TROPIC THUNDER 400 years, that word has kept us down RDJ is so committed in that moment
Love this. My favorite is the “full retard” scene but not just that line, or the explanation afterward. It’s everything leading up to it: “to be a moron...,” “to be moronical,” “an imbecile...” “like the dumbest MF that ever lived.” ...”Jack. Stupid arse Jack.” “Yeah, you’s fartin in bathtubs and laughing y’arse off.”
Comedy gold.
This post was edited on 1/5/18 at 9:04 pm
Posted on 1/5/18 at 9:20 pm to Nix to Twillie
Jaws - Quint's telling of the USS Indianapolis. Word is he showed up drunk before filming that scene, but he friggan nailed it.
Harlem Nights - Chase scene / shooting with Arsenio and Eddie. Machine gun fire... then the pop pop of ol boy with his little revolver.
The Quick vs Vera fight scene was also funny as hell.
Guardians of the Galaxy 2 - Yondu dying. Being adopted when I was 2 it always cuts the onions for me when he says "He may have been your Father boy, but he wasnt your Daddy.I know I didnt do any of it right, but I'm damn lucky you're my boy."
Tombstone - Holiday vs Ringo
Saw - Ending sequence.. just badass when Jigsaw stands up and walks out.. Game Over!!
Dark Knight - Joker's magic trick. Interrogation scene.
Dark Knight Rises - Bane's opening scene. Fight in the sewer with Batman. Ending when Alfred sees Wayne as he dreamed.
Law Abiding Citizen - The set up for the Revenge scene, what any of us would do in that situation.
Harlem Nights - Chase scene / shooting with Arsenio and Eddie. Machine gun fire... then the pop pop of ol boy with his little revolver.
The Quick vs Vera fight scene was also funny as hell.
Guardians of the Galaxy 2 - Yondu dying. Being adopted when I was 2 it always cuts the onions for me when he says "He may have been your Father boy, but he wasnt your Daddy.I know I didnt do any of it right, but I'm damn lucky you're my boy."
Tombstone - Holiday vs Ringo
Saw - Ending sequence.. just badass when Jigsaw stands up and walks out.. Game Over!!
Dark Knight - Joker's magic trick. Interrogation scene.
Dark Knight Rises - Bane's opening scene. Fight in the sewer with Batman. Ending when Alfred sees Wayne as he dreamed.
Law Abiding Citizen - The set up for the Revenge scene, what any of us would do in that situation.
Posted on 1/5/18 at 9:39 pm to JYD
The Sixth Sense: when the ring hits the floor...
ET: flying bikes
Nutty Professor: any scene with the family
LOTR: The ride of the Rohirrim
Titanic: the whole last hour
Moulin Rouge: green fairy
Last of the Mohicans: 1- arrival at Ft William Henry 2- that scene with the carriage going over the bridge
Inception: the top at the end
Casino Royale: the death of Vesper
Mrs. Doubtfire: the face mask meringue
ET: flying bikes
Nutty Professor: any scene with the family
LOTR: The ride of the Rohirrim
Titanic: the whole last hour
Moulin Rouge: green fairy
Last of the Mohicans: 1- arrival at Ft William Henry 2- that scene with the carriage going over the bridge
Inception: the top at the end
Casino Royale: the death of Vesper
Mrs. Doubtfire: the face mask meringue
This post was edited on 1/5/18 at 9:46 pm
Posted on 1/5/18 at 9:39 pm to Nix to Twillie
Not a movie, but a damn good scene is The Punisher Cemetery scene from DD season 2.
Posted on 1/5/18 at 9:41 pm to Nix to Twillie
quote:
Love this. My favorite is the “full retard” scene but not just that line, or the explanation afterward. It’s everything leading up to it: “to be a moron...,” “to be moronical,” “an imbecile...” “like the dumbest MF that ever lived.” ...”Jack. Stupid arse Jack.” “Yeah, you’s fartin in bathtubs and laughing y’arse off.”
Comedy gold..
"when I was playing the character"
I would love to see a clip of the first table read/first takes on set, they were probably in fits of laughter. The smirk on RDJ's face when he says "hot damn" he had to have been about to break or when he screams 'spit that shite out, man!" He was so close to laughing in that cut they used. Everyone showed up to work in that film. One of my favorites.
Had to add one more
ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST
Alright, All I Need is One Vote, Right?
Baseball Game
Close second after Jaws would be from Cuckoo's Nest, specifically with Nicholson's work from the moment of the second vote to the end of the psychiatry meeting in the doctors office after the baseball game. One of my favorite acting performances. Watching McMurphy storm around trying to find the last vote and his interactions with each of the patients, to actually reaching Chief, to his reaction when Nurse Ratched changes the rules, and then finally realizing how he can beat Nurse Ratched. That moment at 1:20 in the second clip. Watching realization wash over him.
This post was edited on 1/5/18 at 9:51 pm
Posted on 1/5/18 at 9:43 pm to Nix to Twillie
There's something about mary
"What the hell is Brett Favre doing here"
"What the hell is Brett Favre doing here"
Posted on 1/5/18 at 9:45 pm to dbuchanon
quote:
Jaws - Quint's telling of the USS Indianapolis. Word is he showed up drunk before filming that scene, but he friggan nailed it.
I mean who really knows but the story (legend) I heard was he wrote the speech himself and then condensed it. Went to set drunk off his arse to the point that they had to shut down filming for the day. He got up the next morning, apologized, and nailed it in one take. Thats an actor.
Posted on 1/5/18 at 9:50 pm to Nix to Twillie
A few of mine:
The Empire Strikes Back - The do or do not scene.
Good Will Hunting - The park bench scene and the it's not your fault scene.
Forrest Gump - When Forrest tells Jenny about Vietnam and running through the desert.
ET - When ET comes back to life.
The Empire Strikes Back - The do or do not scene.
Good Will Hunting - The park bench scene and the it's not your fault scene.
Forrest Gump - When Forrest tells Jenny about Vietnam and running through the desert.
ET - When ET comes back to life.
Posted on 1/5/18 at 9:52 pm to KirkLazarus
It's one of the best ive ever seen. Classic
Posted on 1/5/18 at 9:57 pm to Nix to Twillie
Close Encounters Devil’s Tower music sequence.
John William’s finest hour, imho.
This LINK creds the late, great Phil Dodds, an irl master programmer at ARP and supernerd behind the megasynth.
Upon working with him as a technical advisor, Speilberg saw instantly that he should just be the guy.
John William’s finest hour, imho.
This LINK creds the late, great Phil Dodds, an irl master programmer at ARP and supernerd behind the megasynth.
Upon working with him as a technical advisor, Speilberg saw instantly that he should just be the guy.
Posted on 1/5/18 at 9:59 pm to KirkLazarus
quote:
I mean who really knows but the story (legend) I heard was he wrote the speech himself and then condensed it. Went to set drunk off his arse to the point that they had to shut down filming for the day. He got up the next morning, apologized, and nailed it in one take
Several people deserve credit for that including not only the actor but an uncredited writer and Jon Milius (who wrote a lot of amazing monologues).
Here's the story on that according to Spielberg: LINK
quote:
Steven Spielberg: I owe three people a lot for this speech. You’ve heard all this, but you’ve probably never heard it from me. There’s a lot of apocryphal reporting about who did what on Jaws and I’ve heard it for the last three decades, but the fact is the speech was conceived by Howard Sackler, who was an uncredited writer, didn’t want a credit and didn’t arbitrate for one, but he’s the guy that broke the back of the script before we ever got to Martha’s Vineyard to shoot the movie.
I hired later Carl Gottlieb to come onto the island, who was a friend of mine, to punch up the script, but Howard conceived of the Indianapolis speech. I had never heard of the Indianapolis before Howard, who wrote the script at the Bel Air Hotel and I was with him a couple times a week reading pages and discussing them. Howard one day said, “Quint needs some motivation to show all of us what made him the way he is and I think it’s this Indianapolis incident.” I said, “Howard, what’s that?” And he explained the whole incident of the Indianapolis and the Atomic Bomb being delivered and on its way back it was sunk by a submarine and sharks surrounded the helpless sailors who had been cast adrift and it was just a horrendous piece of World War II history.
Howard didn’t write a long speech, he probably wrote about three-quarters of a page. But then, when I showed the script to my friend John Milius, John said “Can I take a crack at this speech?” and John wrote a 10 page monologue, that was absolutely brilliant, but out-sized for the Jaws I was making! (laughs)
But it was brilliant and then Robert Shaw took the speech and Robert did the cut down. Robert himself was a fine writer, who had written the play The Man in the Glass Booth. Robert took a crack at the speech and he brought it down to five pages. So, that was sort of the evolution just of that speech.
Posted on 1/5/18 at 10:05 pm to Nix to Twillie
True Grit - Fill Your Hands
Rocky - Rocky and Mickey
Dirty Harry - from 1:29 to 2:09 explains the essence of one of cinema's most iconic characters
The Dark Knight - The Joker's Magic Trick
Rocky - Rocky and Mickey
Dirty Harry - from 1:29 to 2:09 explains the essence of one of cinema's most iconic characters
The Dark Knight - The Joker's Magic Trick
Posted on 1/5/18 at 10:09 pm to bluestem75
quote:
LOTR: The ride of the Rohirrim
Damn. Just caught a chill.
Posted on 1/5/18 at 10:16 pm to Nix to Twillie
No country for old men - Call it scene. That guy had no idea how close he was to death.
Posted on 1/5/18 at 10:20 pm to SoFla Tideroller
quote:
True Grit - Fill Your Hands
The best scene in a great movie...
But this is the full scene, it's more powerful when you see Mattie's disappointment and then Wayne coming back to fight:
LINK
Popular
Back to top


0






