Top Best Movie Moments Start at #100 Get Started! There’s a village under a curse and a heroic young occult student that must face the wrath of a vampire. Perhaps it's the sincerity with which Hanks's dim-witted yet thoroughly decent Gump delivers the line to anyone and everyone who sits down next to him. Do You Feel Lucky, Punk Because he's a lone gun, eternally destined to wander? A touch of self-aware humor also keeps things lively, as when the mastermind behind the death-filled evening says helplessly to Erin, “How were we supposed to know that you were… really good… at killing people? Jake in the Mirror And while many of them paled in comparison to the type of movie that would be doing the rounds upon its re-release in 2001, it still has an uncanny ability to worm its way under your skin from the very start.After a busy night's tramp-beating, gang fighting, and sexual assaulting, Alex and his droogs recline for a 'night-cap' to the Korova Milk Bar. Almost every single part of this movie is so full of devastating win - from Carol Ann's warbled white-noise voice to freakin' angry trees that bust through your window to grab you - that one is almost able to forgive the less-than-warranted sequels. But rather than the standard mad scientist or optimistic hero, Dr. West is in a class all his own: sure of his own brilliance, dry and sarcastic, a nerdy far cry from the typical macho hero types of most zombie or sci-fi horror films. But when Inigo takes his revenge, he returns the blows exactly. Rosemary's Baby Or will his love prove too strong?Suspenseful, unthinkable questions, brought to life by a crowd-pleasing filmmaker and a bombastically frightening score by the great Jerry Goldsmith. Evil Dead II And scary.
(By the way, the dress recently sold for $4.6 million. Empire State Building Attack Lili Taylor, Ron Livingston, Patrick Wilson, Vera Farmiga and a score of talented child actors invite you into their lives before we see them threatened, and that makes the threats unbearably scary. He certainly knew how to make an entrance.Everyone remembers this moment, regardless of whether they know the difference between a Zira or a Zaius.
Yes, he's talking about candy, but so much more -- he pithily sums up the unexpected and endlessly surprising nature of life by talking about two tiers of chocolate.It's homespun wisdom at its most quaint, yet Hanks's endearing performance keeps it on the sweet side of saccharine.Despite a meteoric rise that finds Spartacus (Kirk Douglas) captured as a slave, forced into gladiatorial combat, escape, and then turned leader of an uprising and eventually an entire army, he and his men finally come undone at the hands of three converging armies. Strange music emerges from the radio, a strange man appears in her mirror, and he seems to be following her wherever she goes. After being shown how life in Bedford Falls would have proceeded if he had never existed, Jimmy Stewart's George Bailey decides "I want to live again! It would be nice to say it all makes sense in the end but that’s not what House is all about. Something that can't be shot or stabbed or detonated. It's just so damn nasty all around. From pulse-pounding action sequences to some lovely character touches and one of the most wistfully melancholy conclusions of any zombie film, this is a sort-of remake that has definitely aged well.This film progresses in three distinct, parallel ways: First, the action keeps rising from the ground floor of a sealed apartment building to its tiny attic. The way her world gradually warps to match her haunted perceptions feels disturbingly natural, as though the film is nurturing psychological horror in a greenhouse, and inviting the audience to watch it grow. There are so many other elements that just come together to make this a great film.