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Eeriest Scene
#33426
10/05/05 08:30 PM
10/05/05 08:30 PM
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Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 564
Cristina's Way
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Posts: 564
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What do you consider the eeriest scene from the Godfather Trilogy? You can pick a scene (or scenes) from each of the three films if you prefer, or pick a scene (or scenes) from the Trilogy as a whole. As a guide, here's a partial definition of "eerie" from the Merriam-Webster online dictionary: "so mysterious, strange, or unexpected as to send a chill up the spine (eg., a coyote's eerie howl; the similarities were eerie)" I would add to that: "giving a sense of foreboding, as if something bad or frightening is about to happen; fearfully strange; spooky; haunting"
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Re: Eeriest Scene
#33427
10/05/05 08:37 PM
10/05/05 08:37 PM
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Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,720 AZ
Turnbull
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Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,720
AZ
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Well, now, there's an interesting and unique thread that hasn't been posted before. Congrats, Cristina! Music has an effect on creating an eerie scene. I'll offer an off-the-wall example: In GFII, I think the scene where Michael and his bodyguard (in their car--a red-and-black 1958 Ford Custom 300) are following Johnny Ola (in his or Roth's car--a 1958 Chrysler New Yorker) to Roth's home in Miami, is a legitimately eerie scene. Michael and Kay have narrowly escaped with their lives after the Tahoe shooting. Michael is surrounded by people he can't trust (except for Tom). He's in the hands of some bodyguard we've never seen before (and who looks very menacing). And now, in that scene, he's driving slowly through seemingly alien territory, being directed by the right-hand-man of the guy who we are about to discover directed the hit. Hair-raising enough. But that ominous music is what makes the scene so eerie.
Ntra la porta tua lu sangu � sparsu, E nun me mporta si ce muoru accisu... E s'iddu muoru e vaju mparadisu Si nun ce truovo a ttia, mancu ce trasu.
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Re: Eeriest Scene
#33430
10/05/05 11:22 PM
10/05/05 11:22 PM
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Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 520 toyland
don illuminati
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toyland
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My choice would be when Luca dons the body armor while Christmas music plays and then walks down that long beautiful hall with every sound echoing and pausing at the door of the bar where he will meet his end.
"How's the Italian food in this restaurant?'
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Re: Eeriest Scene
#33439
10/06/05 05:27 PM
10/06/05 05:27 PM
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Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 564
Cristina's Way
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Turnbull and Don Cardi, you mean it? I really came up with an original topic? I'm so proud of myself.  "Original thinking" is not an attribute usually associated with me. (Heck, there are times when "thinking" isn't even associated with me.  ) Before I start getting too smug, I'll contribute mine: Godfather I - the deserted hospital, after Vito's bed has been moved. We hear the amplified echo of footsteps coming up the stairs (and there lots of steps, which draws out the segment even more). Michael is tensely watching behind a door, barely showing his face. The first time I saw this, I held my breath the whole time. didn't know who the heck was coming up those stairs; and it wasn't until Enzo identified himself that I could exhale. Godfather I - My second choice is everything else about the hospital scene. Not only was the hospital devoid of people, which is strange enough, but the scene also suggested that it had been abruptly abandoned, as if workers were so frightened they fled their posts in mid-activity: witness the partially eaten sandwich, the messy paperwork, the skipped record playing the word "tonight" over and over again. It was like The Twilight Zone. Then FFC channels Hitchcock with a shadowy, overhead shot of Michael running down the empty hallway in a panic to reach his father's room. THEN he's still not finished toying with us: the lone nurse abruptly breaks the silence. (And wasn't she scary -- all white and starched like an avenging angel, or a ghost.) And then there's that tense scene outside with Enzo, and we see Enzo's shaking hands. That's one scary hospital. Godfather I - What can I say about the baptism scene? The organ accompaniment, the voiceover intoned in Latin, the dimness of the church all spell foreboding. We just know that the end is near for some blissfully unaware people. That eerie organ music nails it. The cross-cutting between scenes of sacredness and evil give the proceedings a sense of cosmic ritual. Brilliantly conceived and executed from start to finish. Godfather I - The dinner with Sollozzo and McCluskey. Here the tension from anticipation, the relative emptiness of the restaurant, and selective sounds make the scene spooky. FFC almost employs an "echo" effect to ordinarily quiet sounds to emphasize a "pin-drop" atmosphere: the ch*nk of cutlery, the softly spoken dialogue, the tap of shoes on tile... By the time we hear the rumbling of the train, FFC has built it up to a crescendo. We know what Michael plans to do, but will he do it? Until the moment he pulls his gun out, we question our own senses. Are we hearing a train outside? Or is what we're hearing the pounding of blood in Michael's temples? ... and I haven't even started on Godfather II yet. I'll save it for my next post...
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Re: Eeriest Scene
#33440
10/06/05 06:34 PM
10/06/05 06:34 PM
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Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 564
Cristina's Way
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Lots of eerie stuff in GF II also.
GF II - The kiss of death Michael gave Fredo in the Havana ballroom on New Year's Eve. Oh, that sent a chill up my spine. For a second I thought Michael was going to strangle him right there. And maybe Fredo thought so too; his facial expression shows believable fear, and look at how he struggles to pull Michael's hands from around his neck.
GF II - The death of Fredo: the twilight in the sky, the sombre music, the intoning of the Hail Mary and its abrupt cessation by the gun shot. The unsettling finality is cemented by the great shots of the boat silhouetted against the water. At first, we see the profile of two passengers. After the gun shots, we see only one, as Neri stands up in the boat. The effect is much more eerie and disturbing than it would have been had the scene shown the actual act carried out in all its bloody detail.
GF II - The scene where Kay visits the children, and Michael walks in while she is trying to get one last kiss from Anthony. Michael slowly walks toward her and you can see the supressed rage and coldness in his eyes. Kay is frozen on the spot -- and so was I the first time I saw this scene. When the two of them matched stares at the door, I thought Michael was going to hit her again, and this time really hurt her. When he ended up shutting the door in her face, it almost felt like an assault nonetheless. The impact was much greater this way than it would have been had Michael run into the room in a rage. At least rage would have been a human emotion. The eerie part is that we can see Michael practically turning into an heartless automaton -- a monster.
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Re: Eeriest Scene
#33444
10/16/05 06:55 PM
10/16/05 06:55 PM
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Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 103
Don Chater
Made Member
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Made Member
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 103
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Originally posted by Mignon: The scene that sends chills up my spine is Michael's eyes after Kay tells him that she had an abortion. That was awsome. And his jaw begins to shake...awsome
"If anything in this life is certain; If history has taught us anything, it's that you can kill anyone."
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