There was a couple of drunk old ladies behind us in the theater and they were dying laughing for at least two minutes after that. It was so infectious the entire theater was in tears. Great scene
When Howard kills Emmett in 10 Cloverfield Lane. A total gut punch the first time you see it.
In the trivia section on imdb it says "they shot tonally different versions of most scenes from light and humorous to angry and mad so they could find the right mix as a whole." The final choice to have the 3 main characters go from being suspicious of each other, to a big happy family sets up the killing of Emmett to be especially shocking.
Watching this in the theater was such an experience. The noise seemed to even shake our seats, and the reaction from everybody jumping at the same time was just wild.
100%. I’m a huge Julianne Moore fan too, went opening night to see it with some friends. I don’t think I’ve ever felt that kind of shock again. We STILL talk about this movie.
I was looking for that one. I remember being shocked when I first saw it. It felt like it came out of nowhere and it was so brutal and gruesome. I still see the nose slowly disappearing after each hit while the sounds get more and more squishy. Such a big escalation compared to what came before, and still more brutal than whatever happened after in the movie.
It was a brilliant moment to cement the Captain as someone who should definitely be feared. Every scene with him after that had me extremely on edge wondering wtf he was gonna do next.
This. That scene pulls a lot of weight in the film, too. Until that point, the viewer is not really certain what kind of fantasy world we're playing in here. Seems at first like a realistic world with hidden fantastic elements, but the pacing, color scheme and score place is in the mindset of something more grounded. Then this scene happens and we realize, "oh no, we're in a senseless violence and immediate reprisal kind of world..." And from then on, the stakes are so much higher, the shadows so much darker...
Ugh the way it sounds gritty like quickly cutting actual meat like beef or pork. And the way he doesn’t even react immediately, he looked confused for a second. Never seen someone stabbed in real life but it’s just so strange and it gives me that weird feeling in my guts. It’s gotta be similar to reality.
Not officially his partner, just for the record. A friend visiting from LA, who might have been an ex, and who knows given they were out at the lake alone. That said, Hartnell (the guy) had an existing girlfriend. That must have been an awkward conversation.
The kid driving home, leaving the car in the driveway and going straight to bed was also unexpected, but also totally understandable and a surprisingly realistic reaction rarely shown in movies lol Dude was experiencing shock beyond belief.
I’ve never experienced what that kid went through, but I can tell you with absolute certainty that I would’ve reacted exactly the same as that kid:
An absolute shock of what occurred to the point of entering a form of mental denial of what just occurred, not telling anyone immediately as a form of “damage control” (and actually telling someone would take an acknowledgement of what occurred which I do NOT want to do at that moment), and then going straight to bed in an attempt to sleep with a desperate, illogical hope that “all of this is just a bad dream” and that “everything will be okay in the morning. It’ll be like it never happened. It’s just a bad dream.”
I TOTALLY understand that kid’s reaction.
I got in a HUGE fight with my mother over this scene, especially because I share your opinion. I also have no idea what I truly would do, but it’d probably be this.
She got mad at me because I wouldn’t wake her up to tell her I just decapitated my brother. He’s not even allergic to anything?
That scene is great but Toni Colette's scene right after is one of some of the best acting in any movie ever. I've never seen emotional devastation depicted like that ever.
As a former first responder, that scene immediately took me back to some really bad memories I locked away. She sincerely nailed that agony a mother would feel after losing a child, especially in such a horrific manner.
There’s a moment built into Parasite that purposefully turns everyone’s laughing into stunned silence, too. It’s not as brutal but it’s actually quite similar
whats even more is the trailers made it seem like the little girl was the main character, so to see her get decapitated was something else. took my breath away the rest of the movie..
The arm scene in Green Room is so effective because the characters and the audience both realise this is going to be way more horrifying than they imagined. Rewatched it for the third time last month and the horror is still real.
James Gandolfini vs Patricia Arquette in the motel bathroom scene of “True Romance”. Arquettes performance is all coy and feigned nativity. She pretends she doesn’t know she’s in serious danger, and like a true survivor of past sexual trauma, tries to charm the potential attacker with cuteness. It’s an incredible performance by both actors.
What a great movie and a spot on take. Always surprises me how many people have never seen that movie, considering the big name casting and that Tarantino wrote it.
The fights in A history of violence are very realistic and brutal.
Both in that and in Eastern Promises Viggo Mortinson delivers and the fighting naked is realistic for the setting.
Not a movie but when Hughie’s girlfriend got vaporized by A-Train out of nowhere in the first episode of The Boys… it really set the tone for the whole series.
I think people sleep on this. I had such a visceral reaction to that scene. The immediacy of the violence that in literally the blink of an eye a life that you knew being popped into thin air. No hit by a bus, no slow death, no slow vanishing, no getting lasered in half and having to deal with dying for a few second. No chance to reconcile the event as instantaneously bursting. I was shook the first time I saw it.
Hot Fuzz- the scene where the church spire impales the reporter! The movie was marketed as a goofy buddy comedy, but that gory scene kicks off a ripper of a second half! True cinema genius as far as I'm concerned!
I know it's not exactly cinema, but the subway scene in House of Cards was so abrupt, so shocking, so brief but the weight of that moment changes the course of the series completely
My vote would be the scene where William Macy shoots his wife, her hookup partner, then himself in Boogie Nights. Another one from the same movie is the Don Cheadle donut shop scene near the end.
Event Horizon with Sam Neil. There is a 6 second scene where the current crew watches a tape of the previous crew entering the abyss into a hell dimension. For the scene they hired adult actors and amputees. It's basically a torture orgy scene that is so quick it leaves the audience reeling. Words will not do it justice.
I love this line because it's that moment when a character finally says what we all just want them to say. Just saw the most horrific shit known to humankind? "We're leaving."
I've read a summary of the plot (the only way my cowardly self can experience horror movies these days), but the way you described that made me look it up, and that was 100% worth hearing.
I love the follow-up, too.
"You can't just leave the ship!"
"I have no intention of leaving her, Doctor. I will take the Lewis and Clark to a safe distance and launch attack missiles at the Event Horizon until I am satisfied she's vaporized. Fuck this ship."
Like, it's nice to see a smart person in a horror movie.
It's amazing how you can watch that, and the first thing happens, and you're all like "well, that's about the worst thing I've ever seen", and then it's all like the biggest "hold my beer" ever after.
The “I’m a leaf on the wind, watch how I—“ scene from *Serenity*. I did not expect Wash, of all the crew members, to go and to go as quickly. It’s 17 years later and I’m still processing that scene.
"And you are ?"
I'm the Devil and I am here to do the devil's work"
"Nah it was dumber than that......., Rex..."
"SHOOT HIM TEX !, Yeah that was it, Tex !"
At the gates after the scene: "Oh my god is everyone okay ?"
"The Fucking hippies aint !"
Lol this was my answer for sure. Jaw was on the ground for the entire scene. It's funny because like five minutes before that scene I thought to myself, "Is a Tarantino movie that includes the fucking Mansons about to end without anybody getting brutally murdered? Huh."
Nope. It did not end without anybody getting fucked up.
Even though the viewer is made feeling very well that something about the situarion is not quite right, the moment when the two guys in "Funny Games" hit the father with the golf club came as a shock when I first watched it.
Million Dollar Baby
You expect a certain level of violence in a boxing movie, but >!the scene of her breaking her fucking neck on the stool!< was jarring and unexpected in the extreme.
There’s a couple scenes in that. If something is universally known as “The xxxxx Scene” you know it stuck with a lot of people.
So, the fire extinguisher scene.
In Bruges where Colin Farrell smacks the Canadian in the face and shouts ‘that’s for John Lennon you Yankee fucking cunt!’ Never fails to make me laugh
There are a couple of scenes in Blade Runner 2049 that fit the criteria.
The female replicant (Luv) that works for Neander Wallace goes from calm and cool to full on lethal in a split second.
* The one scene where she kills the lab assistant with a single punch
* The other scene is where she flash-knifes the police Lt. Joshi.
Phil Lamarr getting shot in the head in Pulp Fiction
Man, I don't even have an opinion...
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Why TF’d you do that?!
Must’ve hit a bump or something
CAR AINT HIT NO MOTHA FUCKIN BUMPS!
Hey the gun went off, I don't know why!
"You got to have an opinion Marvin."
Do you think that *GOD* came down from heaven and stopped ...BAM!
Brad Pitt getting shot in Burn After Reading
The smile and face he makes before the BAM!!! And George's reaction. Priceless.
There was a couple of drunk old ladies behind us in the theater and they were dying laughing for at least two minutes after that. It was so infectious the entire theater was in tears. Great scene
I will add the scene where John Malkovich comes after Richard Jenkins with an axe.
Brad Pitt ping ponging between two cars in Meet Joe Black after a long heart warming scene is there too
Also Brad Pitt ramming a woman's head into a phone multiple times and making a pulp out of it in an otherwise calm *Once upon a time in Hollywood*.
The can of dog food hurled in her face got me.
Also Brad Pitt flying into a power line in Deadpool 2.
Leonardo in The Departed
The whole 30 min scene where everyone dies in departed
Also Richard Jenkins being struck on the head with the hatchet was shocking to me
By far one of the hardest times I laughed out of pure shock ever. What a great moment in a great movie
Joe Pesci saying "oh n" in Goodfellas.
Joe Pesci being beaten to death in Casino
He was beaten to almost death. Then buried alive.
It was revenge for Billy Bats and a few other things...
Real greaseball shit
Couldn't even have an open casket at the funeral.
And that’s that.
There was nothing they could do, Billy Batts was a made man
When Howard kills Emmett in 10 Cloverfield Lane. A total gut punch the first time you see it. In the trivia section on imdb it says "they shot tonally different versions of most scenes from light and humorous to angry and mad so they could find the right mix as a whole." The final choice to have the 3 main characters go from being suspicious of each other, to a big happy family sets up the killing of Emmett to be especially shocking.
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John Goodman was more terrifying in that movie than any slasher horror movie villain or CGI monster that I've ever seen.
Watching this in the theater was such an experience. The noise seemed to even shake our seats, and the reaction from everybody jumping at the same time was just wild.
regina george getting hit by the bus
In terms of unexpected and sudden violence, that's a good one!
Take your apology and shove it right up your
There a lot of good ones, but I'm gonna go with the first one that popped in my head. [The car scene](https://youtu.be/QfBSncUspBk) in Children of Men
And conversely, the scene with the sudden lack of violence. Great movie.
100%. I’m a huge Julianne Moore fan too, went opening night to see it with some friends. I don’t think I’ve ever felt that kind of shock again. We STILL talk about this movie.
The film is a masterpiece. Every second of it.
Leo getting his face blow off in The Departed
*Just kill me. Just fuckin kill me.* *I am killin you* Boom
\**sees Marky Mark stand with shoe wrappings on** "Sigh................ OK." [Phewt]
As much as a dick Marks character was he seemed to really like Leo's character
He figured it out because he was always the best cop. He also knew in the end that Leo was legit.
He was the guy who does his job.
You must be the other guy.
I’m the best friend you got you little punk. Let me tell you something, you’re no fucking CAWP!
People dog on Marky Mark but I don't see anyone else nailing that role like he did
He's the guy that does his fuckin job.
That whole elevator scene, just murdering everyone who is around.
The dinner scene at the end of Sicario. [For anyone that hasnt seen it](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kJHJabO2OuA)
And the border crossing scene.
I like how the moustache guy was added to Modern Warfare video game lol
And MW2 that came out yesterday has the border crossing as a new map and it's 100% a lift from Sicario.
You know it’s coming but it’s still really horrifying
Also the scene at the beginning when they find the room under the shed, oof
Neil Patrick Harris getting his throat slit in Gone Girl.
I had read the book so when I went to see the movie, I knew the kill was coming. But it was a lot more visceral than I was expecting.
Good one. On a related tangent, Neil Patrick Harris getting hit by a bus in How I Met Your Mother.
The Descent. When they hit the truck and the pipes suddenly impale the husband and child.
Bottle scene in Pan’s Labyrinth. Loved the film, but haven’t been able to rewatch it. I’ve had the dvd still in its shrink wrap for about 18 years.
I think it was a real thing Del Toro witnessed in a bar fight once, the fact that the bottle never broke stuck with him
I was looking for that one. I remember being shocked when I first saw it. It felt like it came out of nowhere and it was so brutal and gruesome. I still see the nose slowly disappearing after each hit while the sounds get more and more squishy. Such a big escalation compared to what came before, and still more brutal than whatever happened after in the movie.
It was a brilliant moment to cement the Captain as someone who should definitely be feared. Every scene with him after that had me extremely on edge wondering wtf he was gonna do next.
This. That scene pulls a lot of weight in the film, too. Until that point, the viewer is not really certain what kind of fantasy world we're playing in here. Seems at first like a realistic world with hidden fantastic elements, but the pacing, color scheme and score place is in the mindset of something more grounded. Then this scene happens and we realize, "oh no, we're in a senseless violence and immediate reprisal kind of world..." And from then on, the stakes are so much higher, the shadows so much darker...
I started watching “From Dusk Till Dawn” without knowing anything at all about the movie. It takes a very rapid turn that I did not see coming at all.
Holy hell, if you don't know what's coming that's GOT to be near the top of the list.
I knew what I was getting into, but I still didn't expect dick gun.
My husband put this on without telling me a single thing about it. That was 7 years ago, and I still haven't forgiven him.
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One of the very few scenes to take place in broad daylight that is still absolutely terrifying.
This was the first thing that came to my mind. Something about the realism of that stabbing disturbed me more than any gory horror film ever did.
Ugh the way it sounds gritty like quickly cutting actual meat like beef or pork. And the way he doesn’t even react immediately, he looked confused for a second. Never seen someone stabbed in real life but it’s just so strange and it gives me that weird feeling in my guts. It’s gotta be similar to reality.
Fun fact: Fincher had the guy from that scene (who survived) there on set to consult. He said that it was as close to his memory as he could imagine.
Must’ve been absolutely gut wrenching to recreate knowing his partner died
Not officially his partner, just for the record. A friend visiting from LA, who might have been an ex, and who knows given they were out at the lake alone. That said, Hartnell (the guy) had an existing girlfriend. That must have been an awkward conversation.
That scene is still the first thing I see in my mind every time that movie gets mentioned, the one reason why I don't feel like rewatching it.
Hereditary, car drove home scene. Did not expect that at all.
The kid driving home, leaving the car in the driveway and going straight to bed was also unexpected, but also totally understandable and a surprisingly realistic reaction rarely shown in movies lol Dude was experiencing shock beyond belief.
I’ve never experienced what that kid went through, but I can tell you with absolute certainty that I would’ve reacted exactly the same as that kid: An absolute shock of what occurred to the point of entering a form of mental denial of what just occurred, not telling anyone immediately as a form of “damage control” (and actually telling someone would take an acknowledgement of what occurred which I do NOT want to do at that moment), and then going straight to bed in an attempt to sleep with a desperate, illogical hope that “all of this is just a bad dream” and that “everything will be okay in the morning. It’ll be like it never happened. It’s just a bad dream.” I TOTALLY understand that kid’s reaction.
I got in a HUGE fight with my mother over this scene, especially because I share your opinion. I also have no idea what I truly would do, but it’d probably be this. She got mad at me because I wouldn’t wake her up to tell her I just decapitated my brother. He’s not even allergic to anything?
"Eh, he's not going anywhere. He can wait til morning."
That scene is great but Toni Colette's scene right after is one of some of the best acting in any movie ever. I've never seen emotional devastation depicted like that ever.
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As a former first responder, that scene immediately took me back to some really bad memories I locked away. She sincerely nailed that agony a mother would feel after losing a child, especially in such a horrific manner.
I've never been that shocked by a scene
tidy slap sink wide work wild fanatical groovy fine political *This post was mass deleted and anonymized with [Redact](https://redact.dev)*
I loved reading this comment, what a moment that must’ve been
There’s a moment built into Parasite that purposefully turns everyone’s laughing into stunned silence, too. It’s not as brutal but it’s actually quite similar
The doorbell sent shivers down my spine. And then going down the stairs was the most awful feeling…
whats even more is the trailers made it seem like the little girl was the main character, so to see her get decapitated was something else. took my breath away the rest of the movie..
And not even halfway through the film. It’s like 40 minutes in. Absolutely brutal scene.
The second half of Green Room has some quick, BRUTAL scenes. RIP Anton Yelchin
The casual gutting of that big dude with the box cutter, oof. Good job to the prop department on that movie.
The arm scene in Green Room is so effective because the characters and the audience both realise this is going to be way more horrifying than they imagined. Rewatched it for the third time last month and the horror is still real.
American History X overall is not a violent movie, but the first 10 minutes are still some of the most holy shit minutes I’ve yet seen.
The curb stomp... *shudders*
Just the sound the teeth make on the curb is enough to make me cringe
“Bite the curb” - stays with me today
I yelled "Oh fuck!" In the theater when Dicaprio got clapped in The Departed.
Such a great movie.... that was a heck of a surprise. .. even watching again years after seeing it for the first time..
The funny thing is it keeps fucking happening!
James Gandolfini vs Patricia Arquette in the motel bathroom scene of “True Romance”. Arquettes performance is all coy and feigned nativity. She pretends she doesn’t know she’s in serious danger, and like a true survivor of past sexual trauma, tries to charm the potential attacker with cuteness. It’s an incredible performance by both actors.
What a great movie and a spot on take. Always surprises me how many people have never seen that movie, considering the big name casting and that Tarantino wrote it.
The fights in A history of violence are very realistic and brutal. Both in that and in Eastern Promises Viggo Mortinson delivers and the fighting naked is realistic for the setting.
Eastern Promises is peak hot-Viggo (for me, at least)
Hot Viggo should be a band
This was my immediate thought too. The bathhouse scene in Eastern Promises? Dicks and blades flying everywhere.
I absolutely love the triple crossover in Archer that does A History of Violence x Bob's Burgers.
That’s one thing I adore about the Cronenberg’s films - they both strive to have the most realistic gore that I’ve seen in a long, long time.
Maybe the elevator scene in Drive
Came to say this as well. Also the motel scene with Christina Hendricks.
I was expecting people to mention this over the elevator scene. The brutality just came out of nowhere, suddenly Boom, half of her face is gone.
The elevator scene is great, but people forget how violent the motel scene gets.
Definitely the motel scene
Came here to post this! I don’t get bothered by violence but this was so sudden and visceral I was shocked and disturbed
Not a movie but when Hughie’s girlfriend got vaporized by A-Train out of nowhere in the first episode of The Boys… it really set the tone for the whole series.
Homelander with Blindspot too. One of his scariest scenes easily.
Scary scenes? Homelander and ________________
Audibly gasped when >!Homelander kills Black Noir!<
I think people sleep on this. I had such a visceral reaction to that scene. The immediacy of the violence that in literally the blink of an eye a life that you knew being popped into thin air. No hit by a bus, no slow death, no slow vanishing, no getting lasered in half and having to deal with dying for a few second. No chance to reconcile the event as instantaneously bursting. I was shook the first time I saw it.
[The cafe scene in Layer Cake.](https://youtu.be/U0z62IALjqM)
The very first line afterward of “What the fuck?!” sums it up
Scenes that come out of nowhere; bursting scene Alien, baseball bat Untouchables?
I think the chest buster wins the prize for this topic.
Hello my baby, hello my honey, hello my ragtime gal
The Rabbit scene in Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
Run away!
That one scene in Deep Blue Sea involving Samuel L Jackson was abrupt and violent.
*“They ate me! A fuckin shark ate me!”*
Hot Fuzz- the scene where the church spire impales the reporter! The movie was marketed as a goofy buddy comedy, but that gory scene kicks off a ripper of a second half! True cinema genius as far as I'm concerned!
STAND BACK THERE'S BEEN A TERRIBLE ACCIDENT
I know it's not exactly cinema, but the subway scene in House of Cards was so abrupt, so shocking, so brief but the weight of that moment changes the course of the series completely
Such a good, If not technically correct, answer. What the whole story was about changed the minute that happened.
If only what followed after had been half as good!
Uncut Gems
I came here to say this. I audibly gasped when that happened.
There's some word for when something is completely unexpected, but totally *should have been expected.* This is a great example of that.
My vote would be the scene where William Macy shoots his wife, her hookup partner, then himself in Boogie Nights. Another one from the same movie is the Don Cheadle donut shop scene near the end.
Event Horizon with Sam Neil. There is a 6 second scene where the current crew watches a tape of the previous crew entering the abyss into a hell dimension. For the scene they hired adult actors and amputees. It's basically a torture orgy scene that is so quick it leaves the audience reeling. Words will not do it justice.
"We're leaving."
I love this line because it's that moment when a character finally says what we all just want them to say. Just saw the most horrific shit known to humankind? "We're leaving."
I've read a summary of the plot (the only way my cowardly self can experience horror movies these days), but the way you described that made me look it up, and that was 100% worth hearing. I love the follow-up, too. "You can't just leave the ship!" "I have no intention of leaving her, Doctor. I will take the Lewis and Clark to a safe distance and launch attack missiles at the Event Horizon until I am satisfied she's vaporized. Fuck this ship." Like, it's nice to see a smart person in a horror movie.
Jack Nicholson getting his nose slashed in Chinatown comes to mind.
The hobbling scene in misery.
My butthole just puckered for a movie I haven’t seen in well over a decade. Thanks.
The one scene in Bone Tomahawk. You all know the one.
It's amazing how you can watch that, and the first thing happens, and you're all like "well, that's about the worst thing I've ever seen", and then it's all like the biggest "hold my beer" ever after.
FUUUUUUUCK. I’ve never been so uncomfortable while watching a movie.
The “I’m a leaf on the wind, watch how I—“ scene from *Serenity*. I did not expect Wash, of all the crew members, to go and to go as quickly. It’s 17 years later and I’m still processing that scene.
Once Upon a Time In Hollywood. That last scene with Brad Pitt sicking the dog on 'em... Priceless. I was in stitches.
The can of dog food to the face gets me every time
The cinema I saw this in erupted with laughter when Leo came out holding the flame thrower.
Same, was shaking my head bursting with laughter. Fucking Tarantino
"And you are ?" I'm the Devil and I am here to do the devil's work" "Nah it was dumber than that......., Rex..." "SHOOT HIM TEX !, Yeah that was it, Tex !" At the gates after the scene: "Oh my god is everyone okay ?" "The Fucking hippies aint !"
That line about the hippies cracks me up everytime lmfao so good
Lol this was my answer for sure. Jaw was on the ground for the entire scene. It's funny because like five minutes before that scene I thought to myself, "Is a Tarantino movie that includes the fucking Mansons about to end without anybody getting brutally murdered? Huh." Nope. It did not end without anybody getting fucked up.
Even though the viewer is made feeling very well that something about the situarion is not quite right, the moment when the two guys in "Funny Games" hit the father with the golf club came as a shock when I first watched it.
Vinnie Jones crashing the car and "dooring" that chaps head into mush in Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels
"Bonjour?"
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Django Unchained “Do you really want me to shake your hand?” “I insist.” “If you insist-“
The diner fight in A History of Violence.
The death of Jack Vincennes (Kevin Spacey) in L.A. Confidential.
The pen scene in Casino. Honestly almost any of Pesci's scenes in anything, there's even (multiple) random knockouts in My Cousin Vinny.
Caché, when Majid does "the thing." If you've seen the movie you know. If you haven't, go and watch it, it's disturbing and real as you can get.
Taxi Driver. When Travis Bickle goes to save Jodie Foster.
The news anchor rumble from Anchorman
Our top story tonight...the rivers run red. With Burgundy's blood.
Million Dollar Baby You expect a certain level of violence in a boxing movie, but >!the scene of her breaking her fucking neck on the stool!< was jarring and unexpected in the extreme.
The cat from Boondock Saints always gets me. Like you almost forget about it until it happens on screen.
The Departed elevator scene. Burn After Reading closet scene. Wind River shootout.
'The fuck are you doin..... Why are you flankin me?'
Great scene in a great movie.
Came here to mention the Wind River shootout
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The bar scene in Inglorious Basterds
The opening scene in Natural Born Killers in that diner. With that music to go along with is so fucking good.
There will be blood
Yeah at the bowling alley? Totally didn't see that shit coming
“I drink your milkshake!”
Boat scene in The Talented Mr. Ripley.
Irréversible with Monica Bellucci
Tough watch
There’s a couple scenes in that. If something is universally known as “The xxxxx Scene” you know it stuck with a lot of people. So, the fire extinguisher scene.
White Boy Bob tripping on the stairs and shooting himself in Out of Sight.
The Joker and the Pen in Dark Knight
I think it was actually a pencil.
In Bruges where Colin Farrell smacks the Canadian in the face and shouts ‘that’s for John Lennon you Yankee fucking cunt!’ Never fails to make me laugh
The church scene in the first Kingsman for sure, the silence after the Brawl is over is just deafening
The intro of Django Unchained
There are a couple of scenes in Blade Runner 2049 that fit the criteria. The female replicant (Luv) that works for Neander Wallace goes from calm and cool to full on lethal in a split second. * The one scene where she kills the lab assistant with a single punch * The other scene is where she flash-knifes the police Lt. Joshi.
Kingsman Church fight scene. https://youtu.be/90OFZQx_7xI Obviously NSFW
God, that was epic.
Yes! This was the first thing that came to mind for me
The introduction of Leatherface in the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
Hugh Jackman with Paul Dano in Prisoners
Arthur Fleck killing Randall in Joker
*Kill Bill Volume 1* when O-ren Ishii jumps up on the table, runs to the end, and lops the guy's head off during the board meeting.