VehiclesFashionRecipesBlogsHuntTravelsSportFunHandmadeITEducation
Mini-Games
x

x
zakruti.com » Humor, fun and entertainment » MsMojo
Top 10 Movie Scenes That Will NEVER Get Old

Top 10 Movie Scenes That Will NEVER Get Old

FBTwitterReddit

video description

Rating: 4.0; Vote: 1
Some movie scenes never get old. For this list, well be looking at our favorite big screen scenes with the highest rewatch value. Our countdown includes Raiders of the Lost Ark, The Wizard of Oz, Jaws, and more! Which movie scene will never get old for YOU?
Date: 2023-11-21

Comments and reviews: 30


1. Dracula (1930) Renfield meets the Count I am Dracula
2. The Ten Commandments (1956) Moses parts the Sea
3. The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966) Shootout at the cemetery
4. A Touch of Evil (1958) Opening scene
5. The Godfather (1972) Baptismal scene
6. The Silence of the Lambs (1991) Fava beans scene
7. Gladiator (2000) My name is Maximus
8. Dr. Strangelove (1964) Slim Pickens riding the bomb
9. Taxi Driver (1976) You talking to me?
10. The Phantom of the Opera (1925) the unmasking
11. A Beautiful Mind (2001) Breaking the code
12. Gran Torino (2008) Saving the girl from thugs
13. The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920) Caligari introduces Caesar
14. Nosferatu (1922) The Vampire wakes up
15. Duck Soup (1933) Mirror scene
16. The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1940) Badges scene
17. Sunset Boulevard (1950) Im ready for my close-up
18. Lawrence of Arabia (1962) Attack sequence
19. Young Frankenstein (1974) Scene with Frau Blucher
20. Close Encounters of a Third Kind (1977) Meeting the Mother Ship
21. A Few Good Men (1992) Colonel Jessup in court

reply

Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers in any dance scene but the one I can watch over and over is when she has the feather dress on, it looked like they were defying gravity and were dancing on the wind. Also, the scene in Soul Food when the matriarch of the family has died and they were having this huge argument, in the midst of it the grandson forgot he had left the towel on the stove and there was a huge fire in the kitchen the uncle, who never came out of his room, runs in from upstairs with a case that flies open and money starts to pour out. Yeah, I'd better stop because I'm a film geek and could go on and on.
Side note: The guy who played the uncle was my band teacher in highschool. His name was Mr. Watson and my eyes almost came out of my head when I saw him on screen. He would tell us stories about doing sound work and playing on records with Quincy Jones, Miles Davis, Aretha Franklin and other greats. We thought he was full of it until I saw that movie and started researching his career. Wow!

reply

I miss a lot there. for example:
The Life of the Brain - Romanes eunt domus (This scene will definitely be shown in every Latin class)
Dirty Harry - How he shoots the gangster munching hot dog and asks the last one if he thinks he's lucky and after the gangster asks if there's a bullet left in the barrel, he takes aim and pulls the trigger.
Dude, Where's My Car? - and then scene
Spaceballs - Scour the desert. How Lord Helmet calls out to his subordinates if they've found anything and yells at Colonel Sandurz, who is standing right next to him, with a speakerphone.
V - like Vendetta - The whole movie actually.
and so on.

reply

The plane chase in North By Nortwest
The runaway mine cart in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom
Potato field starvation scene at the end of part 1 of Gone With The Wind
Yes, scene one of Rebel Without A Cause
Stella Stella scene in Streetcar Named Desire
Singing in the rain sequence in Singing in the Rain
Yes, We're not in Kansas anymore scene from Wizard of Oz
Virtually all of The Poseidon Adventure
The tower stairway chase scene in Vertigo
Train arrival scene in High Noon
Michelle Pfieffer's Piano top song in The Fabulous Baker Boys
Many more.

reply

Top 3 (In my opinion):
1. The T-Rex breaks out
2. I am you father
3. Indy and the boulder
The T-Rex scene and the I am your father confession scene are some of the most famous movie scenes of all-time, while they are plenty of other worthy contenders on this list, but I rewatch these scenes the most. They have been parodied many times which shows how much you would see these scenes. Even if you've never seen these movies, you would still know these scenes very well.

reply

I think to do this right, there has to be separate categories, especially since what 20 and 30-something viewers would call scenes they'd never forget might be completely different from a group in their 40s and 50s. or for that matter a group in their 60s and 70s and 80s. Also they should be split up in categories by film genre (drama, action, sci-fi, horror, romance, etc) also by decades to give all the great memorable films from the past a chance
reply

When I said I'd never leave you.
And you never will. But where I'm going, you can't follow. What I'm doing, you can't be any part of. Ilsa, I'm no good at being noble, but it doesn't take much to see that the lives of three little people aren't worth a hill of beans in this crazy world. Maybe someday you'll understand that.
(Ilsa starts crying)
No, no, no. here's looking at you, kid.

reply

Very cool list. It will take me months to come up with my own Top 10! :)
What really struck me was that other than the few which were released before I was born (The Wizard of Oz, Rebel Without a Cause, and Singing in the Rain, I saw every one of those in the theatre, when they were originally released. Weird!
Need to get started on my own list, now. :)

reply

I'm surprised that scene from the first Karate Kid movie where he delivered that one legged kick to Johnny to win the tournament didn't at least make honorable mention. Great scene. I also rewatch that scene from 2012 where the ark is leaving without a lot of the rich people with gold tickets, and hundreds of people rush to the edge while the music plays.
reply

The USS Indianapolis story is my second favorite movie scene, just brilliantly done by Robert Shaw. My first is the scene in Contact when Jodie Foster first hears the radio signal from Vega, the first Contact, it still takes my breath away, so magnificently done and such an underrated performance and movie.
reply

Willy Wonka and the chocolate factory will always be the best movie with Gene Wielder.
I love Johnny Depp but Tim Burtons version is just. creepy and I don't like it as much
Gone with the Wind when Scarlet O'Hara vows to never go hungry again and frankly my dear, I don't give a damn

reply

All good choices! I would add the scene in Casablanca when Victor Laszlo says to the band, Play La Marseillaise and then leads them all in singing it to drown out the Nazi soldiers singing their anthem. It always gives me chills to think what it would have been like to watch that in 1941.
reply

The scene late in Driving Miss Daisy when Mr Freemans character visits Miss Daisy in the nursing home and she is oblivious to he and Dan Akroyd being there. When she yells at Dan and starts talking to Morgan! There wasnt a dry eye in the theater as we were leaving!
reply

Has to be the shower stabbing scene in Psycho for me.
Coupled with that score that is suggestive of the knife thrusts as the shower curtain is pulled open and Janet Leigh has the look of sheer terror on her face.
People instantly know what movie this is.

reply

I think the Jaws clip shouldve been no 1, with Jurassic Park at 2. That scene always gives me chills. I remember watching Jurassic Park in the theater, and being terrified during that scene. I think I was 20 or 21. Such a great movie. Indy shouldve been higher too.
reply

So many favourite moments to pick, but my number one will always be Richard Gere in Officer and a Gentleman wearing his white uniform walking through the factory to pick up Debra Winger and carry her out of her humdrum life to a better life, together.
reply

The audition scene in Flashdance
The fireball in the elevator shaft (among many other scenes) in Die Hard
The opening and the aerial scenes in Out of Africa
The final gun fight in The Quick and the Dead
The fly on the wall in Bedazzled

reply

I always hit rewind when Khan orders the attack on the Enterprise in Star Trek II The Wrath of Khan.
Also when the Enterprise fights back.
And when they destroy the Enterprise in Star Trek III The Search for Spocl, and in Generations

reply

You are so misinformed if you think James Dean died a month before Rebel with a Cause was released. It was right before Giant came out years later. Makes me wonder what other misinformation youre putting out there.
reply

The first Matrix movie, when Neo and Trinity are going back to get Morpheus and they need Guns. Lots of guns. and here comes a shitload of guns. And that line shows up in a John Wick film (3, I think.
reply

The confrontation scene between Maria and the Captain in The Sound of Music - Do you mean to tell me that my children have been roaming about Salzburg dressed up in nothing but some old drapes?
reply

I LOVE the Shawshank Redemption. One of the BEST Movies and books of ALL Time. I think this movie made me understand how INCREDIBLE Stephen King became to me as a writer. Do NOT miss this book.
reply

If you havent yet, you should do a video on the top tear-jerker moments in movies. The final scene of Shawshank Redemption would be at the top. PS: I would have put Shawshank as #1.
reply

The scene from Jaws did it for me. A few years ago, after doing some research, I watch that scene with an added sense ofnot sure how to describe it. But it adds to the horror.
reply

The chase scene in Bullitt from 1968. That's the greatest use of two muscle cars in cinema history. I have forgotten one. The speech delivered by Tony Curtis: I am Spartacus!
reply

No. 5 nonsense! Thats Mel Gibson in Braveheart essentially. Says much for the LORs trilogy you pick a plagiarized scene as its best and no. 5 in cinematic action universe.
reply

Glad to see my suggestion of the boulder chase from Raiders of the Lost Ark made it on this list at #10. Happy to have contributed to this list along with many others.
reply

While the Aragorn speech at the Black Gate is good and all, William Wallace's similar speech before the Battle of Sterling is better. .they'll never take our freedom!
reply

Funny My English teacher from the 1997 ish her son made the CG for the dinosaur in Jurassic Park. Never got to meet him but damn that's pretty impressive still.
reply

Seriously? You chose Aragorn's speech over Braveheart's? Come'on Mojo. Mel Gibson in face paint bellowing They shall never take our freedom! wins every time!
reply
Add a review, comment






Other channel videos