One of the most
powerful scenes in the movie is when both Craig and Vince debate on who exactly is the biggest loser in life.
It's one of the most
powerful scenes in the movie and you let the entire scene unfold without a cut, it's all one take from over Julia's shoulder.
Not exact matches
Pretty sure we can chalk this up to the
scene during «Let It Go» when the Snow Queen Elsa undergoes what may be the most
powerful makeover
in recent
movie history:
A dream, a wonderful composition of music (the most
powerful language used
in the
movie) and almost surrealistic photographic
scenes.
A laugh - out - loud - bad stinker of a
movie in which * you * know what Eastwood's next «discovery» will be
in the murder case a long time before does, and every potentially
powerful scene is undermined by coarse acting, bad script and cheesy music.
From the nail - biting tavern
scene in which Kruger tries to mediate a tense showdown between the Nazis and the Basterds to the unforgettable climax
in which Laurent's own version of happily ever after is revealed (the
movie begins with «Once upon a time...»), the female characters are unquestionably necessary,
powerful, and unforgettable.
He and del Toro even whip up a
powerful dream sequence
in the vein of classical cinema that incorporates timeless licensed music complete with singing; it's the most arresting
scene of the
movie until the ambiguously enchanting climax.
But for every great
scene in a great
movie, there is often another
scene just as
powerful but perhaps not as famous, or revered.
The unmasked
scenes he has throughout the film are some of the most entertaining and
powerful moments
in the
movie.
Aboard the USS Truxtun last spring, Tom Hanks and director Paul Greengrass were about to shoot what they hoped would be a
powerful scene in their new
movie, «Captain Phillips,» when a Navy captain intervened.
The most
powerful scene in The Untouchables, a
movie with more than a few of them, came courtesy of Sean Connery.