Tuesday, September 25, 2007

movie deaths

Top 10 Movie Deaths
according to cnn.com

1. Janet Leigh in Psycho
(Alfred Hitchcock, 1960)
It's Hitchcock's shots and Bernard Herrmann's shrieking score that construct the terror
in this, the ultimate slasher movie. Simple ingredients -- a shadow, a knife, a scream, a
stream of blood -- expertly constructed had to make this our #1 killer.

2. King Kong in King Kong
(Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack, 1933)
The noblest of apes meets his tragic destiny atop the Empire State Building. Plagued by
a swarm of fighter planes, Kong fights until the end, but ultimately tumbles and falls at the
hands of lesser men. Oh, the pathos.

3. James Cagney in White Heat
(Raoul Walsh, 1949)
Following his mission to avenge his mother's death, Oedipal psychopath Cody Jarrett
(James Cagney) sets out on a dangerous heist. Picked out by police snipers, he empties
his gun into a chemical tank, sparking his incandescent exit: "Made it, Ma! Top of the world!"

4. Paul Newman and Robert Redford, Butch Cassidy
and the Sundance Kid

(George Roy Hill, 1959)
It's their last stand: even the quick-draw Sundance Kid can't outshoot a hundred Bolivian
marksmen. Surrounded by police, doomed bank robbers Paul Newman and Robert Redford
go out in one final blaze of glory.

5. Sean Penn in Dead Man Walking
(Tim Robbins, 1995)
"I want the last face you see in this world to be the face of love, so you look at
me when they do this thing. I'll be the face of love for you." Rapist and murderer
Matthew Poncelet (Sean Penn) is executed by lethal injection for his brutal crimes
while death penalty campaigner Sister Helen Prejean (Susan Sarandon) looks on.
A painful, honest and brave acknowledgement.

6. Bambi's mother in Bambi
(David D. Hand, 1942)
Doe-eyed, spindly-legged Bambi, absolutely alone, lost in a dark forest: no film has
communicated the simple grief and terror of an abandoned child like Walt Disney's
classic tearjerker. A vivid exposition on the anguish that death leaves behind.

7. John Hurt in Alien
(Ridley Scott, 1979)
John Hurt gives unnatural birth to a monster. As he convulses on the dinner table,
blood spurting from his stomach, his swollen belly tears open and the alien makes its
escape. An explosive and gory death that's the harbinger of worse to come for Ripley
and co.

8. 'Marvin' in Pulp Fiction
(Quentin Tarantino, 1994)
Tarantino gives us rich pickings when it comes to memorable exits, but there's none
more shocking than Marvin's accidental dispatch in Pulp Fiction. As the contents of his
head splattered the inside of Vincent and Jules's sedan we were speechless, then in
stitches, then shamefaced at what we'd laughed at. And what a cleanup operation...

9. Susan Sarandon and Geena Davies,
Thelma and Louise

(Ridley Scott, 1991)
Swindled by Brad Pitt and chased down by Harvey Keitel, killer girl duo Susan Sarandon
and Geena Davies bow out in style rather than face prison. And what better way to go
than shooting a '66 Thunderbird into the Grand Canyon? Death as the ultimate liberation.

10. Various in Raiders of the Lost Ark
(Steven Spielberg, 1981)
Sometimes you just need a hero. Indy dispatches his foes with inimitable panache:
the guy backed into an airplane propeller, the swashbuckling swordsman dismissed
with a single bullet, or the fabulous face-melting Nazi finale. Take your pick.


*source

2 comments:

Just Dave said...

All good picks. I would add Slim Pickens in "Dr. Strangelove" riding the nuclear weapon to the ground. What a way to go.

SkylersDad said...

Excellent list, I have one other to add... James Caan as Brian Piccolo in Brians song. Breaks down even the toughest of dudes!