Mission: Impossible Vault Heist - Art of the Scene

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  • čas přidán 14. 07. 2015
  • This month’s Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation sees Tom Cruise hanging off the side of a plane. A PLANE. As it takes off. But it wasn’t until well into Cruise’s career, with the first Mission: Impossible, that huge stunts were part of his movie star persona. We’ll look at the stunt that defined a career: the heist from CIA headquarters. SUBSCRIBE: goo.gl/9AGRm
    The white room heist in Mission: Impossible was the culmination of studio deals, script re-writes, a lot of homages to movie history, and some exemplary work by the stunt and editing crews.
    What did you think? Did we teach you something you didn’t know about this scene from Mission: Impossible? Are you going to check out Mission: Impossible Rogue Nation? What do you think makes a scene iconic and stand out? Does it have to do with zeitgeist?
    Let us know in the comments!
    Want to know what's going on with Cinefix in the future?
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    Love breaking down and learning about the history, influences that led to your favorite scenes of all time? Want to know what that scene inspired? Art of the Scene will be coming to you once a month here on Cinefix, and we will dissect some of the most iconic scenes in film history. We'll break it down so all you have to do is sit back and enjoy! Make sure to Subscribe for more awesome movie content!
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 300

  • @RajveerDhanak
    @RajveerDhanak Před 7 lety +139

    Actors like Tom Cruise and Keanu Reeves are kicking it in their 50s, doing most of their stunts themselves. #Respect

    • @HelgaCavoli
      @HelgaCavoli Před 5 lety +1

      Mid-life crisis is kicking in.

    • @CMAR872
      @CMAR872 Před 5 lety +1

      Honestly - I thought it was badass and respectable when I first heard they did their own stunts too. I assumed it was a "sacrifice" and a "courageous move" in order to make the stunt scenes look more realistic. But then as I further researched it; I learned that many actors/actresses, producers, and directors find it to be quite arrogant and selfish for stars to demand to do their owns stunts. When the leading role does their own stunts: it puts the entire film production at risk of coming to a complete halt if the actor is significantly injured. In fact, I believe one of the shooting schedules for a Mission Impossible movie was significantly altered and delayed due to a Tom Cruise injury (which affects the schedules and welfare of working actresses, editors, cameramen, etc.) Additionally, it costs significantly more money for the studio to insure the self-stunt actor compared to the typical costs of hiring a stunt-double, and properly editing and/or using CGI to make the scene look realistic with the stunt double.
      There is a reason large-budget films typically use stunt doubles; and it isn't because star-actors are too big of primadonnas or too whimpy to do their own stunts (although that may sometimes be part of the reason). It is because stunt-men and stunt-women are properly trained to do action sequences better than actors and actresses; and due to the reasons listed above. It is actually much more of a primadonna move to demand and threaten to do your own stunts. #selfish

    • @CMAR872
      @CMAR872 Před 5 lety +1

      I am also just playing Devil's Advocate on this subject. I do think it is pretty badass for Tom Cruise to do his own stunts; especially when he is a producer for the movies and he cut his own salary in order to cover the increased insurance and potential risks. The action scenes do look better in my opinion.

    • @meep9231
      @meep9231 Před 4 lety

      There’s also Jackie Chan but we all know he knows what he’s doing

    • @thefanboy2008
      @thefanboy2008 Před 3 lety

      They are the best and my personal favourites!

  • @seanbury4662
    @seanbury4662 Před 9 lety +90

    To the guy asking why there are no cameras in the vault: that would defeat the purpose of the vault! It's a place where highly confidential information is stored -- if they had cameras, the team could've just hacked the cameras and read over the shoulder of the computer operator. People outside the vault (even within the organization) are not supposed to know what goes on inside or even what it looks like.

    • @DavidChipman
      @DavidChipman Před 7 lety +2

      That's assuming that the camera would be pointed at the computer though, doesn't it? You could point it at the door, from over the computer screen.

    • @SB992REBORN
      @SB992REBORN Před 7 lety +1

      Sean Bury not just, but Ethan sells the reasoning in plain statement during the scene where He & Claire first meet Luthur & Krieger....
      "Ethan Hunt: Relax, Luther. It's much worse than you think. [voice-over, the scene goes to William Donloe approaching the door to the computer vault] The terminal is in a black-vault lockdown. The only person allowed in the room has to pass through a series of security checks.CIA Analyst William Donloe: [to keypad microphone] William Donloe.Ethan Hunt: [voice-over] The first is a voiceprint identification and a six-digit access code.[Donloe enters a code; the door opens and he enters an office]Ethan Hunt: [voice-over] This only gets him into the outer room.[Donloe removes his glasses and looks into a retinal scanner]Ethan Hunt: [voice-over] Next he has to pass a retinal scan.[Donloe inserts his ID card into a reader]Ethan Hunt: [voice-over] And finally, the intrusion countermeasures are only deactivated by a double electronic key card...[Cut to Hunt on the train]Ethan Hunt: ...which we don't have.[Donloe then enters the vault and logs in at the terminal]Ethan Hunt: [voice-over] Now, inside the black vault, there are three systems operating whenever the technician is out of the room. The first is sound-sensitive. Anything above a whisper sets it off. The second system detects any increase in temperature. Even the body heat of an unauthorized person in the room will trigger it if the temperature rises just a single degree. Now that temperature is controlled by the air conditioning, coming in through an overhead duct, thirty feet above the floor. That vent is guarded by a laser net.[Stickell and Krieger trade uneasy looks; Donloe leaves the vault and shuts the door, activating the security systems]Ethan Hunt: [voice-over] The third system is on the floor and it's pressure-sensitive. The slightest increase in weight will trigger the alarm. If any one of these systems is set off, it will activate an automatic lockdown. Now, believe me when I tell you, gentlemen, all three systems are state-of-the-art.[A drop of condensation from Donloe's soda cup falls on the floor, triggering the alarm"(*)

    • @gamepapa1211
      @gamepapa1211 Před rokem +1

      @@DavidChipman there's also the consideration that the camera is going to be a security exploit in some way. Perhaps not to read over the shoulder, but to see what the inside of the vault looks like and see where securities can be broken down.
      It's based on reality, honey. Bank vaults don't have cameras in them. Why is this disbelief so hard to suspend?

  • @cas9564
    @cas9564 Před 9 lety +188

    Optional Trope #4: Either a team member messes up or something unexpected happens, changing the mission from a heist into an escape.

    • @VengD
      @VengD Před 9 lety +6

      Dennis Claros
      Weeeell... Escaping is a natural part of ANY kind of activity in places you're not allowed to be.

    • @cas9564
      @cas9564 Před 9 lety

      VengD But the type of escape depends on whether or not it all goes out as planned.

    • @leathery420
      @leathery420 Před 8 lety +13

      +Dennis Claros A plan is just a list of things that will go wrong.

    • @robschneider8310
      @robschneider8310 Před 8 lety +4

      +Dennis Claros It's the fundamental principle of plot. The plan can never go right, or the Hero cannot adapt and the drama stalls.

    • @ashesfrombones
      @ashesfrombones Před 6 lety +4

      Trope #5 if everything went well, somebody needs to double cross the team

  • @WonderbreadSkittles4
    @WonderbreadSkittles4 Před 9 lety +43

    Art of the Scene - The Dark Knight Interrogation

  • @RussianDoll02
    @RussianDoll02 Před 8 lety +3

    A scene is iconic when you feel like you're in it. The cinematography, the music, the acting etc everything combined gives you a visceral sense of being in the moment of the story which is being told.

  • @daniellewisniewski9716
    @daniellewisniewski9716 Před 9 lety +7

    I love it when a scene looks and feels so realistic no matter how crazy the setting, space, middle earth, etc it might be; if it produces a realistic atmosphere to myself it's iconic.

  • @CelticPred1997
    @CelticPred1997 Před 9 lety +1

    The originality of it. The iconicness of the movie as a whole. In fact very much that. If a movie is iconic, for it's originality, shock factor, whatever, the best scene from that is an 'iconic scene'.

  • @JohnSpawn1
    @JohnSpawn1 Před 9 lety +24

    Art of the Scene for "The Good, the bad and the ugly", the graveyard scene with Eli Wallach running in circles plus the epic duel at the end.

  • @Flaming88
    @Flaming88 Před 9 lety +1

    The last scene from Akira Kurosawa's Sanjuro was the most iconic scene.

  • @RowanJColeman
    @RowanJColeman Před 8 lety +73

    I'd say what makes a scene iconic is when you're shown something that could only happen because of the circumstances of the ,movie e.g you couldn't have an upside down kiss in anything else other than Spiderman etc

    • @TheGeorgeD13
      @TheGeorgeD13 Před 8 lety

      +Rowan J Coleman For me, an iconic scene just has to be memorable.

    • @SweetSword
      @SweetSword Před 6 lety +4

      George Daugherty yea but what makes a scene memorable to you lol..

  • @The22boris
    @The22boris Před 9 lety +1

    What i think makes iconic a scene is its technique, its climax, the expretion.

  • @Mephitinae
    @Mephitinae Před 8 lety +206

    If only CIA had the foresight to install a $19 motion detector inside their vault, the heist would have been foiled ;)

    • @jp3813
      @jp3813 Před 7 lety +26

      The plan for the heist would've simply factored in that obstacle.

    • @DavidChipman
      @DavidChipman Před 7 lety +9

      I know you posted this comment 8 months ago, but I would be interested to know how you (or anyone reading this) might get around a motion detector. Assume everything else is the same.

    • @Chidsuey
      @Chidsuey Před 7 lety +3

      Wear a sheet.

    • @DavidChipman
      @DavidChipman Před 7 lety

      Then it would have seen the sheet moving, and the alarm would have been set off. Somehow one would need to prevent the alarm system from detecting changes in the images it was receiving form the camera.

    • @Chidsuey
      @Chidsuey Před 7 lety +5

      Looks up the video "Mythbusters: Holy Sheet"

  • @tripjet999
    @tripjet999 Před 6 lety +11

    This video is a nice example of taking something which should run 2-3 minutes and drawing it out to more than ten.

  • @PeasantOfPerversion
    @PeasantOfPerversion Před 9 lety +4

    It's the intensity of a scene that makes me remember it, among other things like acting, music etc.. Be it action or drama. I will never forget what (still lasting) impression the final chase scene in "The Road Warrior" made on me when I first saw it. Thanks for your channel! :)

  • @matthewhanley9222
    @matthewhanley9222 Před 7 lety +1

    I don't care what movies you do, just do more of them. LOTS more of them.

  • @BEEEELEEEE
    @BEEEELEEEE Před 9 lety

    I just realized that Leverage is the television equivalent of a heist film. It has a team of specialists using fancy tricks to overcome seemingly insurmountable obstacles.

  • @bandfromtheband9445
    @bandfromtheband9445 Před 6 lety

    MOST of the time, the music or the score "sounds" are what pull you through. It's not simply the visuals, it is the sound, and the creepier the better...

  • @thewalri6199
    @thewalri6199 Před 9 lety +37

    What makes a scene iconic? Cinematography. There's no doubt about it. If 2001: a Space Oddsey wasn't so well shot the scenes would have become boring, and just drawn out with nothing to look at, instead of interesting and iconic. Wes Anderson jokes wouldn't leave such a huge impact on you if the camera wasn't framed the way it is in Grand Budapest or Fantastic Mr. Fox using elegant shots to show ultimately un elegant things is what makes them work.

  • @paigemontague6997
    @paigemontague6997 Před 8 lety +2

    I adore these Art of the Scene videos!! Hoping you make more (:

  • @sherribatross1771
    @sherribatross1771 Před 7 lety +1

    To me, what makes a great shot, is when you have someone watching a scene and scratching their head thinking, "how in the heck did they pull that scene off? Like in "Diehard", when Gruber falls to his death from the skyscraper window! How they accomplished that is incredible!

  • @Stage_3
    @Stage_3 Před 9 lety +1

    I, personally, think a scene can be made iconic by creating a sequence that can be remembered for standing out among the rest of the movie. While the bike chase scene from E.T was cool, the scene where the bike fly's across the sky in front of the moon is better remembered for the beauty of the landscape set to John Williams' masterpiece. The release of the spirit-things from the Ark in Raiders of the Lost Ark is awesome and intense, but the opening robbery of the cave and escape from the boulder is better remembered for its clever use of cut-aways and the setup of the traps (As well as, again, John Williams' masterpiece) makes the scene more memorable, as well as the fact that it was one the coolest introductions to a character ever put to film (Yes, that entire opening sequence was one long introduction to Indiana Jones). But an iconic shot or scene can't really be intentionally made... It must be shown to the world and given time to form into something praised for all time. And THAT is what I (Stress on "I") think makes a scene or shot iconic.

  • @3DSage
    @3DSage Před 7 lety

    I'm glad you brought up Topkapi. When I saw it for the first time I immediately saw how much Mission Impossible borrowed from that movie scene.

  • @MrAshleyR
    @MrAshleyR Před 8 lety +14

    As a film student? Long, uninterrupted takes. The Dunkirk scene in Atonement, for me, is the greatest thing ever recorded.

  • @stickershock66
    @stickershock66 Před 8 lety

    Peter Ustinov won an Oscar for Topkapi! Well worth watching.

  • @kuunib7325
    @kuunib7325 Před 7 lety +1

    A scene is made great by extraordinary tension or awesomeness or just extraordinarity

  • @Kujakuseki01
    @Kujakuseki01 Před 7 lety +3

    This is a great series, guys. You haven't done one in a long time. Keep doing them, please.

  • @jorgehenriq
    @jorgehenriq Před 9 lety +1

    If possible (no pun intended) make one video about the fight scenes on Pearl Harbor (2001), the scene of the attack on Pearl Harbor still amazes me and most of my friends big time.
    Keep up the good work, love "Art of the scenes". Cheers

  • @isaiahgomez865
    @isaiahgomez865 Před 9 lety

    Regardless of whatever the scene is about its angles and its music are what make iconic

  • @Sunomis
    @Sunomis Před 9 lety +1

    I'd say it's the quality of the craft that makes a scene iconic.
    It could be
    - an incredible actors' performance like in the Russian roulette scene from the Deer Hunter.
    - fantastic cinematography as in the Unplugging of HAL from 2001
    - a new CGI device like in the Battle at Helm's Deep from Return of the King (I'm thinking of the Orcs' Army)
    - Great practical effects (that spells Jurassic Park to me)
    - An hilarious joke like the stoning scene from The life of Brian.
    Now, you're thinking "what about the death of Jack from the Titanic. Surely, that scene wasn't exceptional ?". Well, firstly don't call me Shirley. And secondly there was! Without James Cameron's great script, Jack's death would be meaningless after the sinking of the Titanic.

  • @riparianlife97701
    @riparianlife97701 Před 6 lety

    Tom Cruise MUST run in his movies. I think it's in his standard contract.

  • @VolvagiasBlaze
    @VolvagiasBlaze Před 9 lety

    What makes a scene iconic can vary in a lot of ways, if you go by Tarantino standards the diploid will make it memorable, if its a Spielberg or Kubrik film it'll be the feeling of awe or shock of the scene, etc, etc

  • @CinemaSeven
    @CinemaSeven Před 9 lety

    Yay! Callout for Rififi. Such a great movie.

  • @mcsz3137
    @mcsz3137 Před 9 lety

    Exactly the one you guys showed from 2001 A Space Odyssey, when disconnecting Hal.....or the one with the waitress or the running one...and to answer your question, the tension, the feelings it produces on the spectator :D

  • @BitcoinMotorist
    @BitcoinMotorist Před 8 lety +2

    I noticed the sweat catch was impossible on first viewing. Still, well edited to make the scene work.

  • @shawnshackelford9149
    @shawnshackelford9149 Před 9 lety

    The shots need to be perfect. Not only that, but it must be something no one has ever really seen before. The editing is most important. It has to fit with the scene and or movie. It has to make the viewer fell something awesome.

  • @danxepha4535
    @danxepha4535 Před 9 lety +75

    I never understood why that vault had sound sensors, pressure sensors etc, but no video cameras.
    My local family run corner shop has like 5 CCTV cameras, but this super high security vault doesn't have a single camera?

    • @EZ-IZZY1995
      @EZ-IZZY1995 Před 7 lety +44

      Dan Xepha too easy to hack and loop the footage

    • @silverblue73
      @silverblue73 Před 7 lety +51

      The reason it didn't have any visual detection equipment is simple; the information accessed in that room is too important to risk being viewed by anyone else. Thus the number of numerous other security measures. The most impossible thing about this film does remain catching the bead of sweat.

    • @WaterCrane
      @WaterCrane Před 6 lety +8

      The one that gets me, given that the computer is completely standalone... what's stopping them from cutting power to it when the vault is locked? If they really want to be THAT secure...

    • @playwme3
      @playwme3 Před 5 lety +4

      WaterCrane . It was 1996 remember. If he had to boot up windows 95 every time he came back into the room he wouldnt get any work done all day.

    • @Seethi_C
      @Seethi_C Před 4 lety +1

      Playwme Surname But how hard would it be to make sure an alarm went off if a single keystroke was made?

  • @Zoze13
    @Zoze13 Před 8 lety +1

    Love this movie. Love this scene. Love this new playlist "art of a scene"

  • @KaosArbitrium
    @KaosArbitrium Před 9 lety +2

    How developed the character is, not only in the script, but too the audience and the other characters in the movie.

  • @Mat.misiunas
    @Mat.misiunas Před 8 lety

    we need this segment back!

  • @Michael_H_Nielsen
    @Michael_H_Nielsen Před 2 lety

    The Plane joke was great :)

  • @DavidDagninoV
    @DavidDagninoV Před 8 lety

    The mirror scene from Contact! It was more breathtaking than any of the space scenes from tham movie.

  • @WillPrather
    @WillPrather Před 9 lety

    I think what makes a scene iconic is when you find yourself giving in to suspension of disbelief no matter how many times you've watched it, or how much you know about how it was made.

  • @dlam2864
    @dlam2864 Před 3 lety +1

    the scene breaks down when you realize they would have had a camera in there

  • @HarrysFiddlesticks
    @HarrysFiddlesticks Před 9 lety

    What makes a scene memorable for me is if you can or can't describe it to someone else.

  • @MrCamoguy101
    @MrCamoguy101 Před 9 lety

    loving the videos! Keep up the good work!

  • @alwaysleftout
    @alwaysleftout Před 9 lety +3

    art of the scene needs to do a video on the implied scene where if someone is attacked or other acts arent shown but are implied to show how hard it is to do a really good implied scene

  • @jamestaylor94b
    @jamestaylor94b Před 8 lety

    This movie analysis was so good I would actually pay for it! Awesome job - thank you!

  • @trevorjones3755
    @trevorjones3755 Před 7 lety

    Iconic Scenes need to
    1. Keep the audience' vision glued to the screen
    2. Be very hard to create
    3. Use little to no cgi if possible
    4. Be in a memorable movie.

  • @noway4879
    @noway4879 Před 9 lety

    These videos are brilliant, the reason why i'm subscribed !

  • @movieace1295
    @movieace1295 Před 9 lety +1

    The scene has to be special in a way. Something never seen before. Or something very suspenseful, very funny etc. But sometime you just don't know why it become famous but it all comes down to editing, direction, music, cinematography and script if all those things are almost perfect in a scene it can become something special but you never know before the audience has reacted to it.

  • @benrandall89
    @benrandall89 Před 9 lety

    What make a scene iconic? Editing! You could have the coolest shots, most badass stunts and perfect score, but if the editing sucks for a scene (or a movie for that matter) "you're not gonna remember it in T-Minus a day."

  • @SteveShaha
    @SteveShaha Před 9 lety

    For me, it's the moment that causes you the viewer to either react with "wow" or "how did they so that?".

  • @andyaquino2586
    @andyaquino2586 Před 9 lety +5

    Can you guys do an Art of the Scene on King Kong where Kong scales the Empire State Building?

  • @jonathanleiner4754
    @jonathanleiner4754 Před 9 lety

    Fantastic analysis of an important high point in film history. I really appreciate your references to forerunners of the particular tropes in the scene.

  • @DanteYewToob
    @DanteYewToob Před 7 lety +16

    Loved that "Tom Cruise... Get down from there.. Get down off that plane" bit lol I laughed so hard because that was my reaction, I love Tom and Rogue Nation was my jam, so when I saw him on that plane I was like "Really Tom Cruise? What in Gods crusty toga are you doing? First that tower named after a rapper and now this!? Ughh" haha But he is a total boss.

  • @MinddKidzag
    @MinddKidzag Před 9 lety +76

    Art of the Scene - Terminator 2 Sarah's Nightmare

    • @wholewheatcracker3561
      @wholewheatcracker3561 Před 9 lety +9

      Or the chase with the truck and the motorcycle. Maybe the part when Arnold has a mini gun

    • @eustacequinlank7418
      @eustacequinlank7418 Před 9 lety +2

      Mindd Kidzag I remember watching a great series called Movie Magic years ago where they did that one. It was a sudden burst of a high powered wind fan and a model of Sarah Conner made in some kind of compacted mould of ash or broken up charchoal with the skeleton remaining underneath. I couldn't find a link for you on CZcams unfortunately. Though I do remember Stan Winston remarking how disturbing he felt the effect was during filming.

    • @ambientmusic8401
      @ambientmusic8401 Před 8 lety +1

      badass scene..

  • @9w96b6
    @9w96b6 Před 6 lety

    When I first watched the movie and this scene, I was also remembering Topkapi. That is still one of my favourite films today. Maximillian Schell and Peter Ustinov rule in the movie. Would love to see Rafifi now. Thanks Cinefix team.

  • @andrewcarter4973
    @andrewcarter4973 Před 5 lety

    lighting cinematography and surprise

  • @gregaj7
    @gregaj7 Před 6 lety

    Most modern for its time. To hear Rhames talk about those computers now is almost funny.

  • @elandres83
    @elandres83 Před 9 lety +1

    Nice job.
    I find that originality makes scenes most memorable. But not just that, it needs to well thought out and take advantage of what our eyes tend to look at to be great.
    In other words, good cinematography, as someone already mentioned. But that is not a simple task, as @everyframeapainting more elaborately demonstrates in his scene deconstructions.
    Also want to point out the intro scene to Return of the Pink Panther, which has a similar suspenseful drop in from the ceiling heist in an otherwise hilarious movie.

  • @ericpittman1991
    @ericpittman1991 Před 8 lety

    Will you do an Art of the Scene on the scene where Ethan Hunt is in the cafe when he breaks the aquarium tank? Btw love Art of the Scene! Would love to see more of them! Great job!

  • @popc5245
    @popc5245 Před 9 lety

    Art of the Scene - Jean Luc Godard's Week End tracking shot

  • @CO2Giger
    @CO2Giger Před 11 měsíci

    Great video!!!

  • @ScottCDanielson
    @ScottCDanielson Před 9 lety

    Iconic scenes, for my money, tend to be images or situations you haven't seen on film before or at least not in that way. And of course they need to be staged and shot well to have an impact or be memorable. Doesn't matter if it's action, comedy, or drama.

  • @sammmcmurray8409
    @sammmcmurray8409 Před 9 lety

    iconic scene is iconic through its use of imaginative and unique style of portraying that part in the movie, this might be from the stylistics of camera technique and sound enhancement. the can also be heightened by creating something that has not be done like it before. and it it truly iconic if it referenced in other forms of media in a positive way far from when it was made.

  • @skinnersweet1263
    @skinnersweet1263 Před 9 lety

    Love the "Ditching A Speed Boat" scene in the remake of "Thomas Crown Affair". The scene that gives an insurance agent the hunch the man is the target, she needs to go after. The polo sequence in the original doesn't quite work for me, but this speed boat scene tells the man willing to sacrifice anything for the thrill.

    • @MichaelTruly
      @MichaelTruly Před 9 lety +1

      Skinner Sweet I love the Thomas Crown Affair remake.

    • @skinnersweet1263
      @skinnersweet1263 Před 9 lety

      Michael Truly That remake is the one of few out there that beats the original buddy ‼️

  • @p5rsona
    @p5rsona Před 6 lety

    Still to this day one of my favorite movies, probably top five.

  • @henryw6100
    @henryw6100 Před 9 lety

    I think there are 3 ways to make a scene iconic. Either an amazing action set piece like the beginning of raiders of the lost ark. An incredible monologue given by a character like the joker in the interrogation scene from the dark knight. Or the built up of suspense like the night vision scene from silence of the lambs.

  • @paulyates2548
    @paulyates2548 Před 8 lety

    what makes a great scene is caught In the moment suspense that makes you Hold your breath for more

  • @Belzediel
    @Belzediel Před 7 lety

    Good to know Days of Thunder and, for the love of mike, Top Gun weren't major action movies starring Tom Cruise.

  • @FilmInsanity
    @FilmInsanity Před 9 lety

    Art of the Scene - Back to the Future: The ending climax of Marty getting the lighting bolt for him to go back to the future. Its one of the greatest Climax in movie history. Giving the audiences the thrill and the rush.

  • @Renzorrilla
    @Renzorrilla Před 9 lety

    excellent show guys

  • @nareshn.2882
    @nareshn.2882 Před 9 lety

    Awesome. Thanks,

  • @maltesharalikatti2818
    @maltesharalikatti2818 Před 5 lety

    The Kremlin scene in Ghost Protocol is also a similar but a key difference is that d plan is foiled by an outsider who has already anticipated what d team had in mind thus giving d antagonist a edge which probably wasn't provided in earlier movies of d series. Thus, changing d heist scene into an escape one.

  • @filmnews2452
    @filmnews2452 Před 9 lety

    I had thought about the incoherence of the sweat shot too. Good point! That was impossible to do due to his posture.

  • @hermanessences
    @hermanessences Před 8 lety +27

    Actually, if you just try it with your own arm and a table, you'll see that he could have caught the sweatdrop like that. The position is a little uncomfortable, but definitely feasible.

    • @redlightmax
      @redlightmax Před 8 lety +9

      +hermanessences Don't you mean that it's definitely... possible?
      [crickets]
      I'll show myself out.

    • @whereDoCarrotsComeFrom
      @whereDoCarrotsComeFrom Před 4 lety

      @@redlightmax pls stay. That was a good one

  • @BBOOOBBBB
    @BBOOOBBBB Před 8 lety

    Cool vid, thx m8

  • @benkata
    @benkata Před 9 lety

    memorability? - any scene that has a popular song running behind it!

  • @Ruud_Brouwer
    @Ruud_Brouwer Před 7 lety

    crazy guy, but one of the best action movie actors ever

  • @Ephisus
    @Ephisus Před 9 lety

    Also, The Saint is wildly underrated.

  • @randomizer5282
    @randomizer5282 Před 9 lety

    2:42 it didn't only shatter box office records it also shattered those poor windows

  • @Locadel2003
    @Locadel2003 Před 3 lety +1

    Can you do “Art of the scene” for:
    -Tank chase in Indiana Jones the last crusade
    -Train fight or stopping the train in Spiderman 2
    -Shootout in Heat
    -Foot chase in Baulieue 13
    -Coin toss in No country for old men
    -First Russian roulette scene in The deer hunter

  • @theundergradanalysis
    @theundergradanalysis Před 9 lety

    Considering this is the kind of scene DePalma was practically orchestrating in his sleep at this point i don't think you've given the director his due credit.

    • @MichaelTruly
      @MichaelTruly Před 9 lety

      Izaak Gray Oh De Palma is a master, certainly no disrespect.

  • @neoasura
    @neoasura Před 5 lety +1

    Dude, The Saint was a great movie!

  • @jonathanhauck1591
    @jonathanhauck1591 Před 7 lety

    unbreakable when he saves the famly

  • @fanfaretloudest
    @fanfaretloudest Před 9 lety +3

    Kill Bill Volume 1: Art of the Scene. Kiddo's one-person fight against O-Ren Ishii and her crazy 88 gang-members.

  • @paulaharrisbaca4851
    @paulaharrisbaca4851 Před 8 lety

    Da Vinci Code had a few cleverly done scenes, like the finding of the body of Sophie's grandfather. (too bad they didn't redo "Get Smart" instead. OH waaaaait......they did. poor Steve Corell. Hey, did they ever do Mr Ed and Gilligan's Island? Oh wait....isn't the TV series "Lost" or "Survivor" or any of those weird things a version of "Gilligan's Island" only without the humor and appealing cast?)

  • @jonathansodacan5769
    @jonathansodacan5769 Před 9 lety

    It really depends on what kind of scene you're talking about, but I think what I remember most when I think of a really really good scene is the cinematography. People like Wes Anderson or Stanley Kubrick or Nicolas Winding Refn can make a mediocre movie very memorable to me just by making it look beautiful with what they do with the camera.

  • @racewiththefalcons1
    @racewiththefalcons1 Před 9 lety +1

    The Asphalt Jungle set up the heist tropes half a decade before Rififi.

  • @lolipoppants
    @lolipoppants Před 9 lety +4

    Do the Untouchables Stairway Scene

  • @christianjuarez7618
    @christianjuarez7618 Před 7 lety +2

    Am I the only one that loves The Saint?

  • @Gianlucaditullio
    @Gianlucaditullio Před 9 lety

    Do the E.T bike moon scene , A scene is Iconic if they tested limits if know one has done that before if it is unique and original no one has seen it done before. +cinefx

  • @The22boris
    @The22boris Před 9 lety

    Love your videos, Cinefix, if you guys could help me, I would like to know how they made the fight scene in kill Bill Beatrix With the crazy 88. I want to know how they made it to spray all that Blood from the heads, or how they make the actors get shot on the shooting shots, like bonnie and clyde or the go de ayer.

  • @TheFilm2001forall
    @TheFilm2001forall Před 7 lety

    Look, you read Roger Ebert's review of the movie. One of the best scenes of the '90s.

  • @CoryDeveney
    @CoryDeveney Před 9 lety

    How about Sarah Connor's nuclear bomb nightmare or the Semi/Motorcycle river chase scene from Terminator 2? Anything from T2 would be great...that's a movie that needs to be explored.

  • @jonathaneby1440
    @jonathaneby1440 Před 9 lety

    I feel like the scene mainly needs to be memorable. That can come from great dialogue and performances, (pulp fiction) great action, (Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon) great set pieces, (Mad Max: Fury Road) or great universe building (Star Wars Cantina scene). I think it has to be creative, and creativity breads memorability, which creates iconic scenes.

  • @jaredw.8553
    @jaredw.8553 Před 7 lety

    Where on earth did you get the image of the heist room without anyone in it!?!??

  • @paulaharrisbaca4851
    @paulaharrisbaca4851 Před 8 lety

    One last....doesn't "The Pink Panther" and "To Catch a Thief" had highly exciting theft scenes?

  • @harrishartman_
    @harrishartman_ Před 5 lety

    Wow.. It has history 🤔

  • @lolomixed6442
    @lolomixed6442 Před 8 lety +1

    I would like to see a video about the helicopter and the TGV´s scene in this movie.