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In Life As A House, i loved the part when Hayden Christensen was in the porsche and was about to agree to the deal (300 for 2 hours). And the music ( i think it was Radiohead's How To Disappear Completely). And he was smoking and the way it just surrounded his face. And then how he ran to the car and when he had to quickly run away. And then when he was done running, he just broke down and cried.

I loved that part...

Something about it was magnificent.

And the very last scene of "9 1/2 Weeks" when Mickey Rourke said

"Elizabeth. Elizabeth.
I love you.
Would you please come back...
...by the time I count to fifty?"

Whoa, i loved that...

Yes i'm a geek, lol.

2006-10-31 11:03:17 · 17 answers · asked by falzalnz 6 in Entertainment & Music Movies

17 answers

The haunting last scene in Kurosawa's Ikiru (To Live). I saw the film in my Japanese film class. Before the screening, the professor told us that his wife's name was Ikiru, and that she - like the main character in the film we were about to see - had died of cancer. The film opens with Mr. Watanabe, a petty bureaucrat working for the city, discovering that he has cancer, with only six months to live. He realizes that his whole life has been essentially meaningless and decides that his last action in life will be something meaningful. He takes it upon himself to get a park made for the local children. The project has been mired in red tape for years and years. The rest of the film is told in flashback, at Watanabe's funeral, as various people at the wake remember their interactions with him during his final months. The last scene in the film is recounted by a police officer... one of the last people to see Mr. Watanabe alive. As the camera pans down through the falling snow we see that the park has finally been built. Mr. Watanabe is sitting in one of the swings, smiling, and singing a song in Japanese called "Life is Short". As sentimental as it sounds when written out, it's a beautiful, moving scene that has stayed with me for my entire life.

Oh! And the last scene in The Shawshank Redemption...

RED (V.O.)
I hope I can make it across the
border. I hope to see my friend
and shake his hand. I hope the
Pacific is as blue as it has been
in my dreams.
(beat)
I hope.

Damn. That was great.

2006-10-31 11:37:15 · answer #1 · answered by opifan64 5 · 5 0

You're not a geek! Now I have to run out and rent 9 1/2 Weeks. One of the most amazing movies I have ever seen is "The Piano", when Anna Paquin tells the Tall Tale about how her Mother became mute and how her Papa was killed takes my breath away. There are many excellent scenes in that particular movie. Another one is in "To Kill A Mockingbird", when after Boo saves Jem that night, he and Scout walk home to his house. This kind of thing for me is the essence of Life's beauty that prevails over all the crap.Finally when Richard Gere as Lancelot grabs the hell out of Julia Ormond (Guinnevere) and kisses her like I'm still waiting to be.Can you tell I am a woman here?

2006-10-31 11:19:39 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Final action scene in the professional - just way too cool

Requiem for a Dream climax scene - amazingly well done, the whole movie left me on edge for a week - crazy powerful film

Rocky final scene - CLASSIC

Opening scene in Narc - sets the pace and tone for the whole film, probably one of the best opening shots you will ever see

Snatch - the denoument after the last boxing match

The Third man - final scene, music is going crazy, super long shot, and then the girl just walks past him - perfect ending, fits in great with the themes and motifs in the film - encapsulates the change of the character throughout the film

2006-10-31 11:09:05 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The Dark Knight, while the Joker is within the health facility dressed as a girl nurse, after which he sits down within the chair subsequent to Harvey and smiles and says "Hi", after which while he is taking his messy inexperienced hair down and is solving it up. Ahhh, excellent scene in that film, good truthfully, each and every scene with the Joker is well, however that one is my individual favourite. I love that film such a lot! I cried final night time while Heath Ledger gained the Golden Globe for his position because the Joker. It was once so unhappy :( !!! Why did he need to die? Man, now I'm getting all depressed.

2016-09-01 05:16:20 · answer #4 · answered by kaufmann 4 · 0 0

Die Hard.
When Bruce Willis falls down the elevator shaft, grabs onto a ledge, then climbs into the ventilation duct. Lights his lighter, and says:
"Come out to the coast, we'll have a few laughs!"

:)

2006-10-31 11:18:22 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Oh my gosh. The scene in Clueless in which Dee and Cher accidently get on the freeway while they're practicing driving and almost get hit by a semi.

2006-10-31 11:29:32 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

My favorite scene from a movie is in Saw when Adam and Dr. Gordon are talking (more like yelling) about how Adam knows Dr. Gordon.

2006-10-31 11:17:57 · answer #7 · answered by viva_bamm 2 · 0 0

the scene in WHAT'S LOVE GOT TO DO WITH IT when tina comes back from the hospital in a cab. she goes in the house and ike says, "the next time you gon' take some time off, give a n***a some notice." it cracks me up every time. and the scene in Beaches where bette midler performs with that crazy mask on.

2006-10-31 11:09:48 · answer #8 · answered by ~it's me~ 4 · 0 0

Napoleon Dynamite- When they go to the store and they get the wig that looks like the hair of a midevil warrior.

2006-10-31 12:24:07 · answer #9 · answered by f1E2l3i4p5E 1 · 0 0

"Sixteen Candles" The scene were Samantha sees Jake waiting for her in front of the church and the scene in Chasing Amy were Holden and Banky are seating in on the discussion panel and the guys goes crazy screaming "Black Rage" I watched that scene 10 times when I first saw it.

2006-10-31 12:05:48 · answer #10 · answered by Merrick 4 · 1 0

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