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Well thats why he could fit 4 asians there.
Just their penises.
Well thats why he could fit 4 asians there.
Oh yeah I'd like to add The Passion of the Christ.
Never seen so many men openly weeping for this film. Never seen it before or since.
Some that come to mind:
- Seeing the Brontosauruses in Jurassic Park.
- Seeing the bullet time scene with Trinity in the opening of The Matrix.
- When Regan (Linda Hamilton's character) begins stabbing herself in the vagina with the cross in The Exorcist. It shocked me in a way I had never been shocked before, or since.
- The movie Kids. I'm pretty desensitized to all the shock films, now, after all these years, although Martyrs managed to get me because I went in blind, and thought I was watching a French indie arthouse drama, but if there was anything that competed with the above, it was this film. DOOM Generation got a lot of buzz from my peers around the same time, but I didn't care about its characters, so I just wasn't as emotionally invested & gut-wrenched as I was by Kids. I was sheltered from such a world, and I grew up in a time when sheltering was still possible. I don't think another film made me feel quite that sick about the human race until I watched the obscure (but highly acclaimed) Japanese film Nobody Knows. Torture porn isn't what upsets me, isn't what haunts me. That gives you a target, an enemy, something to fight. It's humans just being terrible people without any malicious intent that demoralizes me.
- However, I still remember being shown the movie A Long Walk Home in school. In the mountain of films about the history of white racism in the USA, the scene in the diner where a man is stopped barely in time from putting out his cigarette in the eye of Whoopi Goldberg just because she wouldn't get up and leave a diner stays with me. Not even Roots conveyed to me though filmmaking why we still haven't healed.
- Watching the 7-minute trailer they showed for The Lion King in theaters with all of the animal trekking to witness the birth of Simba.
- Witnessing Peter Jackson finally realize the power of an epic fantasy pan-out I'd dreamt of seeing my whole life when he zooms out as the flaming king Denethor throws himself off the great cliff of Gondor. For that matter, pretty much every panoramic shot of New Zealand in that trilogy. It was awe-inspiring. For some reason, I love shots that immediately give us a grander perspective from a distance showing scale. These used to be rare when I was a boy, now they're trite, most likely because drones & CGI made them so economical. A runner-up, I suppose, the one I remember loving most before that, came about a decade earlier when Lady de Winter throws herself off the cliffs of Cornwall in the 1993 version of The Three Musketeers.
- The early scene on the beach in Saving Private Ryan.
- Probably doesn't hold up to what you see today, especially since so much stuff isn't real, but I remember the skiing in Aspen Extreme had everyone's jaws on the floor. Hollywood can't compete with the daredevils who take GoPros to jump off the peak of a mountain in squirrel suit, these days, though, so why even try.
When Bruce Willis', Dr. Malcolm Crowe, in The Sixth Sense, is revealed to be dead.
![dunn [<dunn] [<dunn]](http://i.imgur.com/tNvC16j.png)
Some that come to mind:
- Seeing the Brontosauruses in Jurassic Park.
- Seeing the bullet time scene with Trinity in the opening of The Matrix.
- When Regan (Linda Hamilton's character) begins stabbing herself in the vagina with the cross in The Exorcist. It shocked me in a way I had never been shocked before, or since.
- The movie Kids. I'm pretty desensitized to all the shock films, now, after all these years, although Martyrs managed to get me because I went in blind, and thought I was watching a French indie arthouse drama, but if there was anything that competed with the above, it was this film. DOOM Generation got a lot of buzz from my peers around the same time, but I didn't care about its characters, so I just wasn't as emotionally invested & gut-wrenched as I was by Kids. I was sheltered from such a world, and I grew up in a time when sheltering was still possible. I don't think another film made me feel quite that sick about the human race until I watched the obscure (but highly acclaimed) Japanese film Nobody Knows. Torture porn isn't what upsets me, isn't what haunts me. That gives you a target, something to fight. It's humans just being terrible people without any malicious intent that demoralizes me.
- However, I still remember being shown the movie A Long Walk Home in school. In the mountain of films about the history of white racism in the USA, the scene in the diner where a man is stopped barely in time from putting out his cigarette in the eye of Whoopi Goldberg just because she wouldn't get up and leave stays with me. I understood why we still haven't healed.
- Watching the 7-minute trailer they showed for The Lion King in theaters with all of the animal trekking to witness the birth of Simba.
- Witnessing Peter Jackson finally realize the power of an epic fantasy pan-out I'd dreamt of seeing my whole life when he zooms out as the flaming king Denethor throws himself off the great cliff of Gondor. For that matter, pretty much every panoramic shot of New Zealand in that trilogy. It was awe-inspiring. For some reason, I love shots that immediately give us a grander perspective from a distance showing scale. These used to be rare when I was a boy, now they're trite, most likely because drones & CGI made them so economical. A runner-up, I suppose, the one I remember loving most before that, came about a decade earlier when Lady de Winter throws herself off the cliffs of Cornwall in the 1993 version of The Three Musketeers.
- The early scene on the beach in Saving Private Ryan.
- Probably doesn't hold up to what you see today, especially since so much stuff isn't real, but I remember the skiing in Aspen Extreme had everyone's jaws on the floor. Hollywood can't compete with the daredevils who take GoPros to jump off the peak of a mountain in squirrel suit, these days, though, so why even try.
Wow moments as in the movie itself or wow in the theatre ?
I I guess I’ll just do both .
Getting a ticket to go see a screening of The Mist in NYC and laughing the entire time trying to keep quiet ( I think I had a few in me at the time ) I knew ppl were getting agitated and when the movie was over 2 rows directly behind me was Stephen King himself as ie saw many ppl flocking to him and I heard someone mention after party he looked like he wanted to kill me . Lol
( I actually followed his ppl and limousines but I lost them bc I was on foot and gave up after 30 minutes but I just happened to find the place he was at randomly walking home I lived in mid town but they wouldn’t let me in I tried playing it off . Lol )
In a movie itself ? A wow moment would be I guess Time Bandits when the supreme being first appeared on screen saying return the map it will bring you great danger as an 8 year old .