





oooohhhh ... those are really good.The Best Year of Our Lives - Wilma's love for Homer
The Color Purple - when the sisters are reunited
I must be the only person in the world who can't stand either of those scenes.Elentári wrote:The Beacons is truly magnificent...but also the wonderful scene with Billy Boyd singing as Denethor tucks into his supper, juxtaposed with Faramir's "suicide mission"...just superb.
The Beacons scene is generally well-liked, but I've seen plenty of criticism of it, particularly in regards to the believability of beacon-wardens living up in the mountains like that. And some film afficianados seem to think the cinematography is pedestrian, and the music bombastic.Frelga wrote:I must be the only person in the world who can't stand either of those scenes.Elentári wrote:The Beacons is truly magnificent...but also the wonderful scene with Billy Boyd singing as Denethor tucks into his supper, juxtaposed with Faramir's "suicide mission"...just superb.![]()
Back in the day, someone came up with a term to describe this type of point of view, and to bypass the old Purist v. Revisionist wars: "transendentalistist."Elentári wrote:Yes, V - I love the Denethor scene as a powerful and emotional piece of cinematography, even if I agree with comments about the portrayal of Denethor.
Same with the Beacons...if you can suspend believability for an instant and let yourself be carried away in the grandeur and spirit of the moment!
Yeah, I thought that would come up.yovargas wrote:To be fair, it wasn't "just" because Daddy doesn't love him but also because his Daddy was the ruler and he told him to.
No, you're not. I'm with you.Frelga wrote:I must be the only person in the world who can't stand either of those scenes.Elentári wrote:The Beacons is truly magnificent...but also the wonderful scene with Billy Boyd singing as Denethor tucks into his supper, juxtaposed with Faramir's "suicide mission"...just superb.![]()
For my money, one of the most brilliant scenes in LOTR was Of Herbs and Stewed Rabbit. The acting was flawless, the emotional subtext conveyed beautifully - the weary Frodo, Sméagol freshly rid of Gollum and eager to please, Sam suspicious and protective. And then flowing very nicely into the oliphantus sequence, and Faramir's speech over the fallen Southron, and... And then we get Farfromthebookamir, but that a different forum.
For a shorter scene, I'd nominate the hobbit vs. Boromir tussle in FOTR, which managed to compress dozens of pages into a couple minutes, with hardly any dialog.
Also, this thread forced me to go back and rewatch Dog in the Manger, a 70s Soviet movie based on Lopes de Vega's play. It is perfect, start to finish.