I disagree since both are consistently mentioned and have become part of the movie canon.
The one that comes to mind is Broken Flowers, and if you know which (great) scene is it you know, if you don't you will when you watch it
I've seen Broken Flowers like four times... frick... which scene are you talking about? That's my favorite Bill movie next to Zissou, and it's my favorite Jarmusch movie. Hmmm can I have a hint
when Don runs into his first ex and the ex's daughter is naked in front of him. Girl is underage
anyway.. for reminding me about this very fine movie anon, I wish you nothing but happiness, that you have a fresh warm cup of coffee at your time of choosing, and that you listen to some Mulatu Astatke
>people
You mean anons who keep reposting the webm. Otherwise Bone Tomahawk is consistently mentioned in neowestern lists and is very likely the best western horror of all time.
>people on pretty much any site
That's the elementary mistake called anecdotal fallacy. Look it up and don't make it again because it's not an argument.
Is No Country for Old Men a western horror?
I'd say it's more of a Texas noir rather than horror. A full-on western horror would be Ravenous or Dead Birds for instance
9 months ago
Anonymous
>That's the elementary mistake called anecdotal fallacy
and you're about to encounter something called the anal-dotal phallusy >rips your panties off >rapes you in the ass
nothing personnel kid heheh
99% of people only remember it by the shootout scene
Shut the frick up
>Heat
I remember the assault on the truck, the restaurant conversation, the stupid wife sideplot, the failed night heist, the bromantic but tragic ending.
You're right; I can't even remember one scene from Batman Begins, let alone two. Eh, I remember when Bamham fricking kills Qui-Gon and pretends he's on some moral high ground. That movie so atrocious and unrelated it's hard to even call the series a trilogy. Batman/Bruce is so different by the time of Dark Knight it makes you wonder why they didn't just start there, especially considering how funny-bad Thomas Wayne's death was.
Irreversible.
I disagree since both are consistently mentioned and have become part of the movie canon.
The one that comes to mind is Broken Flowers, and if you know which (great) scene is it you know, if you don't you will when you watch it
I've seen Broken Flowers like four times... frick... which scene are you talking about? That's my favorite Bill movie next to Zissou, and it's my favorite Jarmusch movie. Hmmm can I have a hint
Take a guess. 3 chances.
no wait wait I know.. it has to be
when Don runs into his first ex and the ex's daughter is naked in front of him. Girl is underage
anyway.. for reminding me about this very fine movie anon, I wish you nothing but happiness, that you have a fresh warm cup of coffee at your time of choosing, and that you listen to some Mulatu Astatke
There you go. Alexis Dziena's phone scene. Same to you fren, listening to the track rn
The only thing people ever mention when talking about Bone Tomahawk is the bifurcation scene. The thread title stands. *bangs gavel*
>people
You mean anons who keep reposting the webm. Otherwise Bone Tomahawk is consistently mentioned in neowestern lists and is very likely the best western horror of all time.
Not just anons, people on pretty much any site when that movie comes up. Court is adjourned.
>people on pretty much any site
That's the elementary mistake called anecdotal fallacy. Look it up and don't make it again because it's not an argument.
I'd say it's more of a Texas noir rather than horror. A full-on western horror would be Ravenous or Dead Birds for instance
>That's the elementary mistake called anecdotal fallacy
and you're about to encounter something called the anal-dotal phallusy
>rips your panties off
>rapes you in the ass
nothing personnel kid heheh
Is No Country for Old Men a western horror?
Cabin in the woods
Shame 'cause the whole movie is kino
We need more historical horror
Nah, the dude getting split in half was spoiled for me but the camp scenes were some of the tensest scenes I'd seen in a long while. Great movie.
Watched this again recently. Excellent film. Read all of Zahlers books too they're just as intense. Except for Hug Chickpenny, that was an odd one.
Hug was Zahler's way of writing a family friendly story
Why are you in my underwater basket weaving forum?
Heat for the bank robbery and the shootout scene
True Romance for the italians are Black folk scene
>Heat for the bank robbery and the shootout scene
Being the best sequence in the film doesn't mean that's all it's remembered for.
Nta but that’s all I remember about it
99% of people only remember it by the shootout scene
Shut the frick up
>Heat
I remember the assault on the truck, the restaurant conversation, the stupid wife sideplot, the failed night heist, the bromantic but tragic ending.
All Nolan movies. End of discussion.
the first two batmans aren't that way, only bane's planes and pains
You're right; I can't even remember one scene from Batman Begins, let alone two.
Eh, I remember when Bamham fricking kills Qui-Gon and pretends he's on some moral high ground. That movie so atrocious and unrelated it's hard to even call the series a trilogy. Batman/Bruce is so different by the time of Dark Knight it makes you wonder why they didn't just start there, especially considering how funny-bad Thomas Wayne's death was.
What scene is Memento remembered for?
American Psycho
It is the official opinion of a Cinemaphile incel that jannies are trannies
>Crashing This Plane
>Michael Caine Trying to Act
>Joker's Death/Clash in the Streets
>Miranda's One-Take
>Café Ending
Any movie with a sex scene
I've only seen it once, and while I don't personally think this was the funniest scene, it's the only that ever seems to be noted.
I've heard "he's not the messiah" one too many times for Life of Brian to belong in this thread.
Deliverance
someone post the letterboxd