Music/Television Do you have any favorite scenes from a movie/TV show?

Haswell

Keep it going.
I've gotten really attached to this part from Das Boot, it makes me happy whenever I watch it. The way the crew's desperation turns to joy, the music in the background, and the humming of the diesel engines all make it perfect to me.

It's also cool since it motivates me, I need to "jumpstart" my life and get things running from my current standpoint of dormancy and endless drifting.
 
The duel in Conan the Barbarian when Conan finally takes down Thulsa Doom’s goons and then personally ends Doom himself. The way he beheads Doom and then silently tosses the head down the steps was brutal.
 
The scene in Full Metal Jacket where Private Pyle is loading a rifle with live ammunition and proceeds to kill his drill sergeant and then himself. It holds a lot of weight in regards to the villainous and outright cruel nature of the United States military and how much it doesn’t care about its soldiers.
 
This is probably my favorite scene in any movie, it's also my favorite film (it's raunchy as shit in the beginning though).

Sets up the biggest memorykino known to man. Noodles is a very well written character and makes the movie truly great. I've been wanting to rewatch it but it's just been a while since I ever watched a movie.
 
also this scene from falling down
There are too many good scenes to pick from.


The boomer on the golf cart rolling around was funny too.
It's been like 5 years since I last watched this. It seems way better than my memory of it. The ending is pretty brutal and the scene I remember the most.


I couldn't find it but I remember more the part where the officer is sitting down and the movie ends.
 
A plentiful number of the war in Vietnam’s effects on those who were caught up in it are displayed through this one scene. One can observe the intense paranoia felt by the American infantrymen as they directly faced guerrilla warfare, the violent deaths of the innocent caused by the plain-clothes tactics of the Vietcong, the fear felt by the natives of the American invaders (in this case, to the extent that the lady ran in desperation to protect a puppy as one of the Americans simply approaches its container, as if she believes he’s going to toss it overboard like a sack of rice) because of the immense destruction brought to Indochina by the American military intervention, and the anguished states expressed by those who had been deployed to active combat there for so long that they’d fight with each other over a chance at witnessing the rarity of something so simply innocent and pure in the midst of constant, horrid brutality.
 
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