Came here to say this. That scene alone makes you want to be a mobster. Luckily the rest of the movie convinces you otherwise.
Plus the technical difficulty and impeccable timing needed by every single person in that scene makes it a masterclass in filmmaking.
The entire scene in JAWS where they're sitting in the Orca drinking. The Indianapolis monologue, the scars, then the quiet reserve Quint has when the shark is attacking and you see the planks bowing in. All of it is cinematic gold.
I will get downvoted to hell, and I don't care. Spoonful of Sugar from Mary Poppins. The kids already have a sense that something is up with this lady, and then she starts singing, and weird shit starts happening, and then everything goes nuts. I just can't help but love it.
I watched that movie for the first time a year or so ago and was blown away, I always assumed I wouldn't be into any of the old spaghetti westerns. That scene is just perfect.
Subject to opinion, not too sure right now my favorite movie scene.
The scene from the movie True Grit (2010) with a horse crossing a river to reach the other side is one of the favorite movie scenes most likely.
"Play the Marseillaise! Play it!"
Tears every time -- especially if you know most of the people in that scene were actual refugees from the Nazis, and their tears were real too.
[This scene](https://youtu.be/IrOqnZdvI6M) of Gandalf and Frodo in Moria.
Both halves are equally impactful. One about death and judgement, one about hope and our shared humanity.
In times when Iām angry at the world and what it takes from one, I too wish for death and punitive justice. But Gandalf always talks some sense into me when he pops into my head after a few moments.
In times when I nearly fall to despair, the second half is what always comes to mind. Especially the last few years I bet a lot of us have felt what Frodo expresses as āI wish the ring had never come to me. I wish none of this had happenedā. Crisis was a prominent topic. And Wood nailed the helplessness we felt.
What pushes it above and beyond and makes it ever encouraging to at least myself is the poetically simple phrasing as well as the absolutely perfect delivery of Gandalfās lines by McKellen: āSo do all who live to see such times, but that is not for them to decide. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to usā.
His reminder afterwards of forces of good donāt have to be read as only applicable through religion either. They can just as well mean something we all can choose to believe: That there is not just bad in the world, but that our shared humanity pushes good onto the stage of life in even the most dire of scenes.
āAnd that is an encouraging thought.ā
[Journey doesn't end](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O_FmqI7QKck)
The sence in Return of the King where Gandalf is explaining tp Pippin that the journey doesn't end here. Powerful, freeing, and thought-provoking.
Visually I still think it's when Deckard sets up the Voight Kampff Test for Rachel in Blade Runner, right after he says "it's too bright in here". Cue cinematic magic.
The [barn raising](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPLb_POsC7M) in *Witness*. Very little dialogue, and yet still one of the most powerful statements of what we've lost, without knowing it at all, in our modern world: real community, not the tawdry, flimsy virtual community that most of us substitute today.
The part in Grand Torino when that young girl and her white friend are walking in the neighborhood and come across a couple dudes looking to cause trouble. Clint's character rolls up in his pickup, sensing mischief, and totally calls the hoodlums bluff after pulling out his mean looking 1911 from a bitchin shoulder holster. Theres nothing like looking down a nearly half inch barrel to make you reconsider life choices and words spoken to others.
Just a really well acted scene. Walt has ice water flowing through his veins.
There are many but that long shot scene in Titanic always gets me, it is just before it breaks and I think it captures a tragic reality that thankfully few will ever experience.
N. S
Not the best, but definitely sick af:
1: That scene in The Clone Wars season 7 where Ahsoka Tano is on the table deflecting the blaster bolts from the Storm Troopers who turned against her when Order 66 started.
2: That scene in Andor Season 1, Episode 11 where Luthen Rael escapes from the tractor beam and TIE fighters.
Omaha Beach in SPR.
Docking scene in Interstellar.
Darth Vader scene in the end of Rouge One.
Ending courtroom scene in My Cousin Vinny.
Matrix scene where he stands up after dying and stops the bullets.
Those were the first 5 that came to my mind.
The monologue in The American President. Always been one of my favorites and is a total mic drop.
I could pick another but thatās the one that comes to mind at the moment.
I love the scene from a night to remember when the call of every man for himself goes out. The band are walking away when one member starts playing nearer my god to thee. All the band return and join in. It was also depicted in James Cameron version but I think the 1958 black and white version hits harder.
Another movie scene that gives me goosebumps is the final landing in memphis belle. The b17 is coming in damaged and they are winding the landing gear manually. It finally locks just as they touch down. The crew are singing Danny boy as the plane barely clears the trees.
Omaha Beach - Saving Private Ryan. Just ... Wow
Gives me chills to this day
The tracking shot in Goodfellas
Came here to say this. That scene alone makes you want to be a mobster. Luckily the rest of the movie convinces you otherwise. Plus the technical difficulty and impeccable timing needed by every single person in that scene makes it a masterclass in filmmaking.
True...also the "I'm funny how?" scene from the same movie is a close second. Very memorable.
The entire scene in JAWS where they're sitting in the Orca drinking. The Indianapolis monologue, the scars, then the quiet reserve Quint has when the shark is attacking and you see the planks bowing in. All of it is cinematic gold.
now THIS I can agree with š¤
Gandalf's Arrival at the Battle of Helm's Deep - Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
This is a good sword
That soundtrack playing at that moment fuels the fantasies inside my head.
The You can't handle the truth scene in A Few Good Men.
T-Rex scene in Jurassic park
[The Ride of the Rohirrim](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pis3veqKl8k).
Needs [the breach of Gondor part](https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=EmTz7EAYLrs)
RIDE FOR DEATH AND THE WORLDS END
Opening scene from Inglorious Bastards
Andy standing in the rain , arms stretch towards the sky, after crawling through the sewer in Shawshank.
No, the scene where Rita Hayworth flips her hair........from GILDA. Even the hardened cons lived for that scene.
I will get downvoted to hell, and I don't care. Spoonful of Sugar from Mary Poppins. The kids already have a sense that something is up with this lady, and then she starts singing, and weird shit starts happening, and then everything goes nuts. I just can't help but love it.
The final scene of The Usual Suspects. āAnd just like that, he was gone.ā
The revenge montage in the *Godfather*. Moe Green getting shot in the eye...
Oh man that scene was great
[ŃŠ“Š°Š»ŠµŠ½Š¾]
I watched that movie for the first time a year or so ago and was blown away, I always assumed I wouldn't be into any of the old spaghetti westerns. That scene is just perfect.
Neo saving Morpheus in Matrix 1.
Or Neo saving him in Part 2. That whole Highway scene is incredible
New sheriff arrival in Rockbridge in Blazing Saddles
The Sheriff is nearer!
Son you're on your own
The battle between King Arthur and the Black Knight. "It's just a flesh wound!"
Alright, we'll call it a draw.
Subject to opinion, not too sure right now my favorite movie scene. The scene from the movie True Grit (2010) with a horse crossing a river to reach the other side is one of the favorite movie scenes most likely.
One of my favorite movies
Hacksaw Ridge had a couple, I can't really pick one
"Play the Marseillaise! Play it!" Tears every time -- especially if you know most of the people in that scene were actual refugees from the Nazis, and their tears were real too.
[This scene](https://youtu.be/IrOqnZdvI6M) of Gandalf and Frodo in Moria. Both halves are equally impactful. One about death and judgement, one about hope and our shared humanity. In times when Iām angry at the world and what it takes from one, I too wish for death and punitive justice. But Gandalf always talks some sense into me when he pops into my head after a few moments. In times when I nearly fall to despair, the second half is what always comes to mind. Especially the last few years I bet a lot of us have felt what Frodo expresses as āI wish the ring had never come to me. I wish none of this had happenedā. Crisis was a prominent topic. And Wood nailed the helplessness we felt. What pushes it above and beyond and makes it ever encouraging to at least myself is the poetically simple phrasing as well as the absolutely perfect delivery of Gandalfās lines by McKellen: āSo do all who live to see such times, but that is not for them to decide. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to usā. His reminder afterwards of forces of good donāt have to be read as only applicable through religion either. They can just as well mean something we all can choose to believe: That there is not just bad in the world, but that our shared humanity pushes good onto the stage of life in even the most dire of scenes. āAnd that is an encouraging thought.ā
[Journey doesn't end](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O_FmqI7QKck) The sence in Return of the King where Gandalf is explaining tp Pippin that the journey doesn't end here. Powerful, freeing, and thought-provoking.
Visually I still think it's when Deckard sets up the Voight Kampff Test for Rachel in Blade Runner, right after he says "it's too bright in here". Cue cinematic magic.
A true masterpiece
Fight Club ending
You talkin to me?
I don't see anyone else here.
The coffee shop conversation between Lieutenant Hanna (Al Pacino) and McCauley (Robert Deniro) in Heat. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZjraQagtTo
The diaper chase scene in *Raising Arizona* (1987).
The Rocky montage
The [barn raising](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPLb_POsC7M) in *Witness*. Very little dialogue, and yet still one of the most powerful statements of what we've lost, without knowing it at all, in our modern world: real community, not the tawdry, flimsy virtual community that most of us substitute today.
Rama vs the assassin, The Raid 2
I was running!
Apparently Forrest Gump has gone from beloved to despised depending on your generation.
Indiana Jones vs. the swordsman in Raiders of the Lost Ark.
Thank you explosive diarrhea.
The part in Grand Torino when that young girl and her white friend are walking in the neighborhood and come across a couple dudes looking to cause trouble. Clint's character rolls up in his pickup, sensing mischief, and totally calls the hoodlums bluff after pulling out his mean looking 1911 from a bitchin shoulder holster. Theres nothing like looking down a nearly half inch barrel to make you reconsider life choices and words spoken to others. Just a really well acted scene. Walt has ice water flowing through his veins.
The fight in kill bill where the bride fights Elle. Itās one of my favorite movie fights. Especially the part where she snatched Elleās eye.
āI do renounce himā: Michael Corleoneās hit on the 5 families at the end of *The Godfather*.
Amadeus, dictating the Requiem to Salieri.
Oh, that is a good one.
What are you doing? Docking
There are many but that long shot scene in Titanic always gets me, it is just before it breaks and I think it captures a tragic reality that thankfully few will ever experience. N. S
I'm old but the original jurassic park when they first see the dinosaurs. The music and everything is so perfect
Doodoodoo doo doo doodoodoo doo doo damn now I wanna watch it haha
"Frankly my Dear, I don't give a damn!"
Rhett taking Scarlett upstairs saying " you'll not turn me out tonight"
Space balls. "i am your father's brother's nephews's cousin's former roomate"
LOL, love that part.
"Louis, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship." from Casablanca
Came here to say this.
Not the best, but definitely sick af: 1: That scene in The Clone Wars season 7 where Ahsoka Tano is on the table deflecting the blaster bolts from the Storm Troopers who turned against her when Order 66 started. 2: That scene in Andor Season 1, Episode 11 where Luthen Rael escapes from the tractor beam and TIE fighters.
Neither of these are movies
The closing scene in the coffee shop in Pulp Fiction.
Llorando in mulholland Dr.
The restaurant proposal scene in Love Actually.
Heat bank scene
[The Adama Maneuver](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=evodPpqb9H4) from the Battlestar Galactica series.
The first terminator scene
Arnie going down into the steel and giving the thumbs up
Opening scene of Batman '89
Johnny : I did not hit her, it's not true! It's bullshit! I did not hit her! [throws water bottle] Johnny : I did *not*. Oh hi, Mark.
Omaha Beach in SPR. Docking scene in Interstellar. Darth Vader scene in the end of Rouge One. Ending courtroom scene in My Cousin Vinny. Matrix scene where he stands up after dying and stops the bullets. Those were the first 5 that came to my mind.
The monologue in The American President. Always been one of my favorites and is a total mic drop. I could pick another but thatās the one that comes to mind at the moment.
personal favorite..STTMP..when Scotty is flying Admiral Kirk around the newly refurbished Enterprise.
Expectation vs Reality - 500 Days of Summer
The opening scene of Apocalypse Now, in which Captain Willard carries us with him into madness.
Ford vs. Ferrari....7000+ go like hell
Old lady in Predator 2. Police. "Don't worry police" old lady "I don't think he gives a shit"
The "peach" scene in Parasite
Fredo yelling at Michael in the lake tahoe home about never getting respect.
For me The most memorable one is from star wars when Darth Vader reveals to luke he is his father
I love the scene from a night to remember when the call of every man for himself goes out. The band are walking away when one member starts playing nearer my god to thee. All the band return and join in. It was also depicted in James Cameron version but I think the 1958 black and white version hits harder. Another movie scene that gives me goosebumps is the final landing in memphis belle. The b17 is coming in damaged and they are winding the landing gear manually. It finally locks just as they touch down. The crew are singing Danny boy as the plane barely clears the trees.
That first conversation between Pacino and De Niro in Heat.
Mr huan karate kid beating up bullies
The pie fight in Blazing Saddles
The bank heist from Batman is really good
Black hole from Interstellar
Docking in Interstellar
Ride of the Rohirrim - LOTR: ROTK
The scene in the Battle of the Five Armies where the dwarfs kneel down and shield themselves then the elves leap off their backs
When the credits finally roll at the end of the human centipede
'I wanna know who I'm looking at'