The 30 Best Movie Inspirational Speeches
Cinema's most stirring oratories and spirit-raising team talks.
In times of trouble, you need a little help getting up and going, and film can often provide just that. Cinema has a long and storied history of providing great words of motivation and encouragement, sometimes for the characters' own benefit and occasionally to the audience. Here, we've chosen 30 of the best that should fit almost any occasion - but if you're really pressed for time, here are 40 condensed into a two-minute span { =nofollow}. If you have a little longer, read on!
Also: The 25 Best Movie Bollockings
The Great Dictator
Made at a time when the shadow of World War II was looming over Europe, Charlie Chaplin’s speech here – he’s playing a poor Jewish barber in disguise as a preening dictator and forced to address a Nuremberg-style rally – is a heartfelt plea for sanity and compassion in a time of madness. It’s the perfect antidote to extremism, and uses fiery rhetoric for good. If only we’d be able to pull this switcheroo in real life.
Buy The Great Dictator
Independence Day
Sure, there are cheesemongers with less cheese on offer than you see here and OK, the American jingoism doesn’t work at all for those of us not of a Yank disposition. But Bill Pullman’s slightly sheepish style blends here with steely determination, and he delivers the American St Crispin’s Day speech with conviction. Then, like any US President, he leaps into his fighter jet and flies off to battle aliens.
Buy Independence Day
For those who prefer a little humour in their motivational speeches, try the pitch-black streak in this opener, establishing Russell Crowe’s Maximus Decimus Meridius as a leader of men and a helluva guy. Galloping around the Legions in his cool armour and fur-lined cloak, you might question whether he really needs an entire army to back him up, but you’ll never doubt for a moment that they’d choose to follow him as he unleashes hell.
Buy Gladiator
Any Given Sunday
There’s a lot to be said for a little personal touch to leaven your high-flung rhetoric, and it’s a trick that Al Pacino uses well here, in the first of three American football speeches we’re going to include (hey, we can’t help it if the heavily-padded sport produces some great pep talks). Pacino’s troubled Tony D’Amato unveils his own problems with brutal honesty before using his own failures as a spur to rev on his team to greatness, speaking of team spirit and commitment as someone who has been known to suck at both.
Buy Any Given Sunday
Friday Night Lights
The film has been somewhat overshadowed nowadays by the equally good TV show that followed it, but watch Billy Bob Thornton here and be reminded that Kyle Chandler isn’t the only fundamentally decent man who can inspire a team of small-town boys to great efforts in pursuit of perfection. It’s also worth noting that he puts his emphasis here on excelling and not winning, making it clear that victory isn’t only measured by the scoreboard. Clear eyes, full hearts, can’t lose.
Buy Friday Night Lights
It is, and will probably always be, the greatest inspirational speech ever made. It’s endlessly flexible, and works even when not declaimed by the classically trained (see this Renaissance Man version for proof). And it’s by Shakespeare, still the best writer in Hollywood. We have, controversially perhaps, chosen Branagh’s version over Olivier’s because the latter sounds a little shrill to the modern ear, while Branagh convinces us that he could convince his men. This speech, given by the titular monarch to a vastly outnumbered force about to fight the French, obviously works especially well for English people, but by God, Harry and St George, it’s universal in its rousing effect.
Buy Henry V
This is a little-known film in the UK but it’s revered in certain communities in the US. Sean Astin’s Rudy has overcome dyslexia, poor grades and his relatively small stature to win a place on Notre Dame’s famous Fighting Irish American football team. Only problem is that he’s never been off the bench, and with his final game approaching he threatens to quit the team if he isn’t allowed to play – prompting this inspirational speech / telling off from a friend who points out that he’s being whiny and entitled and needs to grow a pair. Soon he’s back on the bench and given a starting position when his entire team threatens not to play unless he’s given a shot.
An honourable mention for Hector’s pep talk but Achilles wins the battle of the inspirational speeches just as he wins their duel (c’mon, that’s not a spoiler; it’s in the 2000 year-old Iliad). This is a short snippet, but then godlike Achilles, the man-killer, is a man of action rather than words. And what he does say – focusing on lions, glory and the manifold abilities of his small, hand-picked group of Myrmidons – would convince a rock to fight any Trojan who dared oppose it.
Animal House
Not every inspirational speech is about trying to inspire his cohorts to kill people or batter them up and down the length of a football field. Some aspire to a higher goal. Some aspire to debauchery, drinking and probably nudity. Some aspire to party like 1999 might have done had it tried harder. Some aspire to a particular kind of grubby, deranged greatness. One such is John Belushi’s Bluto, and this is the greatest night of his life.
Buy Animal House
The Goonies
Come the hour, cometh the man – and in this case the man is a small, asthmatic Sean Astin, inspiring his fellow Goonies to never say die and to keep going in their quest to find treasure and save their community. In his yellow rain slicker and with his voice on the edge of breaking he may not look like a modern Napoleon, but he has the same effect on his exhausted and discouraged troopers. He’s so good you’ll almost forget to laugh at his mentions of One-Eyed Willy. snigger
Buy The Goonies
The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King
Death comes to us all, and Aragorn ain’t going to lie about it. But he still gees up his troops with the assurance that their civilisation will survive the onslaught of the forces of Mordor. Sure, they’re vastly outnumbered and sure, it seems likely that Frodo has failed in his quest to destroy the Ring in Mount Doom (especially if you’re watching the Extended Edition) but Viggo Mortensen’s Aragorn ensures that no one will be quitting any time soon. Not this day!
Buy The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King
Bill Murray isn’t usually the guy you turn to for sincere, inspiring words of comfort. He’s more the type to puncture any attempt at same, and probably to fast-talk his opponents into giving up and going for a karaoke session while he’s about it. But after his heart grows two sizes during the course of Scrooged, he makes a plea for kindness and niceness from all mankind. He still does it in a recognisably Murray, manic and scattershot way, but that just makes him all the more compelling. Someone hire this man to play Santa Claus.
Buy Scrooged
Stirring sports speeches are limited to American Football. Miracle On Ice chronicles the based-on-truth tale of how the US Olympic hockey team triumphed over their Russian rivals. Kurt Russell's the speech-giver here, playing coach Herb Brooks. "Tonight, we are the greatest hockey team in the world," he tells them. You'll feel a swell of pride and inspiration too.
Rent Miracle
Deep Blue Sea
“You think water’s fast? You should see ice.” Samuel L. Jackson’s been around the block more than once, and he’s seen the worst of mankind. It’s with the weight of that history behind him that he takes charge and orders his fellow survivors of a marine disaster to start pulling together and quit arguing. His speech also has what is, unquestionably, the greatest punchline on this list. Still, it achieves the desired effect once everyone has quit screaming.
Buy Deep Blue Sea
If in doubt, steal from classical history, something that David Wenham’s Dilios demonstrates with aplomb here. In actual history, the one survivor of the 300 was so shamed by his survival that he executed a suicidal one-man attack on the Persians at this Battle of Plataea, but Wenham seems more in control and also like he has quite a bit of back-up. “The enemy outnumber us a paltry three-to-one,” notes Dilios triumphantly. Why, it was hardly worth the Persians turning up.
Good Will Hunting
Here’s an inspirational speech well-suited to highly-paid sports teams and the enormously talented. Ben Affleck’s argument is, basically, that if you’re lucky enough to get extraordinary chances in your life, it’s your duty to the rest of us schmoes to actually take those chances and run with them as far as you can. If you can get past the shellsuit and the hair, he’s basically Yoda-like in his wisdom.
Buy Good Will Hunting
Most people only remember the last word – “Freedom!” – but the rest of the speech is pretty killer too. Mel Gibson’s William Wallace starts off by puncturing his own legend, and acknowledges the urge to cut and run in the face of a far superior English force. But then he reminds his men what they’d be missing if they do, and soon they’re all back on side and facing down the hated English. By the end of this speech, you’ll all hate the English with them – even if you are one.
Buy Braveheart
Coach Carter
You’d expect the inspiration in this basketball film to come from the titular no-nonsense coach, played by a fiery Samuel L. Jackson. But in fact it’s one of his players who nabs the best lines, as he and the team sit studying to keep their grades as high as their scores. There is a little cheating here: Rick Gonzalez’ Timo actually steals his inspirational speech from Marianne Williamson (it’s sometimes wrongly attributed to Nelson Mandela) but he delivers it well so we’re going to allow it.
Buy Coach Carter
While it’s his skills in the ring that he is most lauded for, Rocky Balboa is something of a poet to boot. An incoherent one, certainly; a poet who says “I guess” a lot more often than Wordsworth might like, but a poet nevertheless. His moving words here, as he single-handedly ends the Cold War and ushers in a new era of East-West relations, are just one example. Another is…
Buy Rocky IV
Rocky Balboa
If his last speech was incoherent – in fairness, his rhythm may have been thrown off by the translator – this one verges on incomprehensible when he really gets going. Still, there’s real passion in Rocky’s plea for one last shot and an argument that’s applicable to all sorts of situations of institutional injustice or unfeeling bureaucracy.
Buy Rocky Balboa
Stand And Deliver
Those who've watched him on the modern Battlestar Galactica know that Edward James Olmos is a past master at giving speeches. This is him from a little earlier in his career, playing Jaime Escalante, a real-life teacher who inspired his students to stop dropping out and start taking calculus seriously. Here, he's handing out as pop quiz, so anyone having to home school their kids can take note.
Rent Stand And Deliver
Good Night, And Good Luck
This one is couched particularly at media moguls, but there’s a call for excellence and the highest moral standards here that we would all do well to live by. David Strathairn’s Edward R. Murrow, in a speech lifted directly from Murrow’s actual address to the Radio and Television News Directors Association in 1958, pleads for TV to inform as well as entertain. We feel that if more people saw this speech, Made In Chelsea would be cancelled immediately and reality TV would be banned, so spread the word!
Buy Good Night, And Good Luck
Anyone who has ever flirted with a romantic interest knows the risk of being knocked back, and Jon Favreau's Mike is experiencing a crisis of confidence. Luckily for him, he has Vince Vaughn's Trent to talk him back into the game, and Alex Désert's Charles to remind him that he's so money. He's a bear! And she's a bunny! Everything is going to be fine.
Buy Swingers
Charles Dutton’s second appearance on this list, after Rudy, sees him once again reminding lesser men (and women) to get with the programme, pull the finger out and generally stand up and be counted. But this time they’re facing unstoppable acid-blooded xenomorphs rather than American football players, so he has to be extra-emphatic.
Buy Alien 3
Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World’s End
Remarkably few women get to deliver inspirational speeches in movies – apparently they’re relegated to clapping admiringly from the sidelines. Thank goodness for Elizabeth Swan (Keira Knightley) who is elected King of the Pirates and rouses her troops into action for a last-ditch fight against the Lord Beckett’s overwhelming forces, led by the Flying Dutchman. She may not have quite the lungs of others on the list, but there’s no doubting her conviction as she calls for them to “Hoist the colours!” – the Jolly Roger – and sail out one last time.
Buy Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World’s End
The Replacements
One doesn’t expect lengthy speeches from Keanu “Woah” Reeves (although he’s done his share of Shakespeare actually) but he’s rarely more succinct and to the point than in this chat with his fellow Replacements. And in fact there are few speeches more likely to be effective in motivating an exhausted team for one last effort. “Chicks dig scars” could be used by virtually every example here to drive on the listeners.
Buy The Replacements
Bill Murray at it again, and once more an unconventional speech. This time out, he's John Winger, a loser who decides that he and best pal Russell Ziskey (Harold Ramis) will join the Army. Stuck with a group of oddballs, and, after a night of partying, decides to rally his fellow troops. It works... Sort of. But Murray's typically laconic style works well for the speech itself.
Rent or buy Stripes
The Lord Of The Rings: Return Of The King
All seems lost for Samwise Gamgee (Sean Astin again) and Frodo Baggins (Elijah Wood) as they lie, exhausted, on the slopes of Mount Doom. Frodo’s beyond endurance and raving as the influence of the Ring grows ever stronger on him, and his desperate straits drive Sam to one last push. It’s barely a speech, really – he uses his words better here – but there are few moments more inspirational.
Buy The Lord Of The Rings: Return of The King
The Shawshank Redemption
A quiet moment between Tim Robbins' Andy Dufresne and Morgan Freeman's Red became one of the more memorable moments in Shawshank , a movie with no shortage of them. And for those who are spending more time inside than perhaps they might be used to, Andy's musing on what he would do if he got out of prison are inspirational in themselves, even before he gets to that iconic line.
Rent The Shawshank Redemption
Avengers: Endgame
Steve Rogers, AKA Captain America, is not shy of breaking out speech mode when the moment calls for it. And inspiring the Avengers as they're about to embark on a trip through space and time to retrieve the Infinity Stones certainly seems like that moment. "Whatever it takes," indeed.
Rent Avengers: Endgame
32 Most Inspiring Speeches In Film History
There's nothing better to fire you up than an inspiring speech.
A lot of great speeches come from sports movies, but that's not the only genre that can make us want to run through walls. Some speeches are so good it has us rooting for the bad guys. Most are by the good guys though, and we'll follow those good guys anywhere. Here is our list of the most inspiring speeches in film history.
Independence Day - President Witmore
President Thomas J. Whitmore's ( Bill Pullman ) speech in Independence Day has become one of the most iconic film moments of the last 50 years. While the movie can be polarizing, some people can't get enough of it, others hope to never see it again. Still, it's hard to find anyone who truly hates the speech and that moment in the film. If you ever find yourself fighting against annihilation by a bunch of E.T.s, this is the speech for you.
The Hunt For Red October - Captain Ramius
If you thought you could never get fired up about the Soviet Union picking a fight on the United States during the Cold War, check it out. When Captain Marko Ramius ( Sean Connery ) tells his crew that the salad days of the Cold War are not behind them, and the United States will "tremble again - at the sound of our silence," it makes you want to stand up and fight for communism. At least for a brief moment.
Any Given Sunday (Coach D'Amato)
It's used at almost every professional football game in America, almost every Sunday, because in Any Given Sunday , Coach D'Amato implores his team and the rest of us to claw for every inch we can. It might not be Pacino's most award-winning role, but that scene... that scene is some of his finest and most enduring work.
Gladiator (Maximus)
"My name is Maximus Decimus Meridius." If those words don't immediately fire you up, it's time to check for a pulse. Audiences spend most of Gladiator waiting for Maximus ( Russell Crowe ) to finally get his revenge on that conniving Commodus ( Joaquin Phoenix ) and finally we get it. Maximus will have his vengeance, in this life or the next.
Friday Night Lights (Coach Gaines)
In Friday Night Lights , Coach Gaines ( Billy Bob Thornton ) tells us how to be perfect. It has nothing to do with the final score, or winning. It's about how we treat each other and ourselves. It's about telling the truth and not letting anyone down. Live in the moment, "with joy in your heart." That's what makes us perfect. The swelling music by Explosions in the Sky only adds to the drama of the moment.
While he doesn't say "Clear Eyes, Full Hearts, Can't Lose," (that comes from the TV show), he does mention his clear eyes and his full heart and afterward, none of us lose.
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Henry V (Henry V)
It's not just one of the most inspiring speeches in film history, it's one of the most famous speeches in human history. When William Shakespeare wrote the words to the famous St. Crispin's Day Speech in Henry V , he could not have known that it would be used for centuries afterward to inspire men. For we few, we lucky few, we can watch the speech brilliantly delivered by Kenneth Branagh in one of his finest roles , in his film version from 1989.
Animal House (Bluto)
"Was it over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor?" Of course it wasn't! Bluto (John Belushi) does a lot to inspire the brothers of the Delta house in Animal House but nothing more so than his speech after "Wormer dropped the big one" and suspended the fraternity. Instead of wallowing in self-pity, the men of Delta are inspired to have the best time of their lives, and Wormer? He's a dead man! Marmalard? Dead! Niedermeyer...
Gone With The Wind (Scarlett O'Hara)
Scarlett O'Hara (Vivien Leigh) is not the most sympathetic movie character of all time. In fact, she ranks close to the bottom in that category, but you can't deny the power of her speech just before the end of the first part of the movie. Her family's plantation, Tara, is in shambles, her mother is dead, and her father has lost his mind. When all hope is lost, she promises herself she will fix it, and she will "never be hungry again."
Barbie (Gloria)
It's truly a show-stopping moment in Barbie when Gloria ( America Ferrera ) lays out what it's like to be a woman in today's world. The entire essence of the movie's message is summed up in that brilliant speech. It makes everyone want to jump up on their feet and applaud. It's a moment that will forever live in cinema history.
Good Will Hunting (Sean Maguire)
It's not just the words that matter. It takes a special actor to deliver a speech like Sean Maguire's in Good Will Hunting . Thankfully there was the great Robin Williams. In a speech that is meant to devastate and inspire Will (Matt Damon), Williams tells him everything he is doing wrong but manages to show him how he can fix it, and open up an entirely new world for himself. It's cutting and loving. And brilliant. "Your move, chief."
Lord Of The Rings: Return Of The King (Aragorn)
Like so many other battle scenes in movies, Aragorn's (Viggo Mortensen) speech at the Black Gates in Lord Of The Rings: Return Of The King has us willing to fight to the death with our fellow soldiers. There is nothing like a leader riding back and forth on horse inspiring his troops.
Braveheart (William Wallace)
Always remember, that no matter how badly you are treated by a tyrannical English king, he can never take your freedom! William Wallace (Mel Gibson) brilliantly reminds us of that in Braveheart . While it's easy to mock the poor history telling in the movie (and we argue if it was really one of the best movies of 1995 ), you can never say that the speech Wallace gives before the biggest battle in the movie won't have you ready to take on the entire British Empire.
Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End (Elizabeth)
Speeches made by leaders to inspire men in battle aren't unique in movies. What makes the speech unique in Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End is that the speech is made by a woman. Elizabeth's (Keira Knightly) speech isn't a lot different than a lot of its ilk, but it's more inspiring to hear it from a woman because we've never heard that before. So hoist the colors!
Stripes (John Winger)
John Winger (Bill Murray) is the biggest misfit in a platoon filled with them in Stripes . He's the least likely to inspire the rest with a razzle-dazzle speech firing them up, yet that's exactly what he does before their graduation from boot camp. Bill Murray has some of the best lines in movie history, and this speech is near the top of them.
Miracle (Herb Brooks)
"Great moments are born from great opportunity." That is something we can all stand to remember. In Miracle , Herb Brooks inspires his rag-tag team of college kids to defeat maybe the greatest hockey team ever assembled in the Soviet National Team at the 1980 Winter Olympics. The movie is based on a true story and while it's impossible to know exactly with the real Brooks said, if it was anywhere close to what Russell delivers, it's no surprise we all believe in miracles today.
Rocky IV (Rocky Balboa)
The Cold War inspired a lot of movies, even sports movies like Rocky IV . Early in the Rocky series, Rocky Balboa (Sylvester Stallone) wasn't a man of many words, but at the end of Rocky IV , he finds some of the most inspiring words of the whole series, imploring all of us to get along, despite our differences.
Swingers (Trent)
What's a good friend if not someone to pep you up when you're feeling low? That's exactly who Trent (Vince Vaughn) is to Mike (Jon Favreau) in Swingers . Not only does he take him to Vegas for a night of fun, on the way home, after the trip doesn't pep Mike up as much as it should, Trent explains exactly why Mike is so money, and he doesn't even know it.
Network (Howard Beale)
It's scary just how much a movie like Network , released almost 50 years ago is still so relevant. We don't need Howard Beale (Peter Finch) to tell us just how bad things are, we just need to him to inspire us to go to the window, open the window and yell to the world that we're not going to take it anymore!
The Goonies (Mikey)
"The Goonies never say die!" When all seems lost in the Goonies quest to rescue their neighborhood from developers, Mikey (Sean Astin) reminds them all exactly how far they've come in the quest for One-Eyed Willie's gold. We don't get a lot of inspirational speeches from kids, but when we do, we love them.
Clueless (Cher)
When Cher (Alicia Silverstone) compares her garden party to a refugee crisis, your inclination is to think she's an airhead. But like so many before and after her, there is kind of a subtle brilliance to her thought process. She takes what she knows and uses that to find the emotion we should all feel for her side of the argument.
Milk (Harvey Milk)
Milk , based on the true story of Harvey Milk (Sean Penn), is inspiring in and of itself, but Milk's speech on the steps of San Fransisco City Hall at the Gay Pride Rally is a masterpiece.
Troy (Achilles)
In another classic example of a military leader inspiring his troops, Achilles' (Brad Pitt) speech reminding his men that they are lions, is enough to get anyone to storm the beaches of Troy. There's a reason the story has been told for thousands of years.
Norma Rae (Norma Rae)
The best thing about Norma Rae's (Sally Field, in one of her best roles ) speech in Norma Rae is that the most important word isn't spoken at all. She simply holds up a sign that says "Union" in the middle of her sweatshop. That's all she needs to "say" to get everyone in the textile mill to agree. It's brilliant.
We Are Marshall (Jack Lengyel)
We Are Marshall tells the tragic and heroic story of the 1971 Marshall University football team. At the end of the 1970 season, a plane carrying most of the team and its coaches crashed in North Carolina. Before the start of the next season, the new coach, Jack Lengyel (Matthew McConaughey) makes a speech at a memorial for some of the lost players and what he says about never forgetting the past but looking to the future will bring a tear to anyone's eyes.
Legally Blonde (Elle Woods)
More than 20 years after the first Legally Blonde movie was released Elle Woods (Reese Witherspoon) continues to inspire us. With an address like the one she makes at the end of the movie, as she's graduating, it's easy to see why. "You must always have faith in people. And most importantly, you must always have faith in yourself."
Avengers: Endgame (Captain America)
In a room full of superheroes, leave it to Captain America to make the hype speech. In Avengers: Endgame , that's exactly when Cap (Chris Evans) psyches the cadre up for their mission to reverse the Snap. "Whatever it takes."
Hoosiers (Norman Dale)
When tiny Hickman High School makes it to the Indiana State Basketball Finals, they are facing a huge school, in a huge arena. Coach Norman Dale (Gene Hackman) takes only a minute or so to lay out what will make them successful, and a minute is all he needs. It's why Hoosiers one of the best sports movies ever made.
Rudy (Rudy)
The speech in Rudy is a little different. Rudy really has no audience, save for one person, but that doesn't stop him from delivering a first-rate speech that any Notre Dame alum gets goosebumps when they hear it, including the parts he lifted from the great Knute Rockne.
Juno (Mac MacGuff)
When Juno MacGuff (Elliot Page) is wondering what her future holds, her father Mac MacGuff (J.K. Simmons) explains simply and succinctly, "The best thing you can do is find a person who loves you for exactly what you are." We couldn't have said it better ourselves.
Stand And Deliver (Jaime Escalante)
Jaime Escalante (Edward James Olmos) is a no-nonsense math teacher who is determined to get the most from his students. He decides he needs to raise the level of expectations inside and outside of the classroom and he starts by breaking down when he is going to be so hard on his students, to get the most out of them. All they need is ganas – motivation.
Rocky Balboa (Rocky)
Leave it to Rocky to make a speech in 2006's Rocky Balboa meant to inspire his son to inspire all of us together. It's pure Rocky, leave it all out, don't accept things you don't like, and never make excuses, no matter how hard it is. And it seems like this was advice he took to heart when it became a struggle to make the film .
300 (Dilios)
Dilios (David Wenham) fires up the Spartans like no other person could. It's truly one of the great hype speeches in film history. It's exactly what you would expect from a civilization of warriors. Whether it really happened or not is irrelevant. The message is the same, "Remember us."
From sports to war, love to education, and beyond, a great speech raises goosebumps like nothing else in film can. These examples are some of the best speeches we've used to inspire us.
Hugh Scott is the Syndication Editor for CinemaBlend. Before CinemaBlend, he was the managing editor for Suggest.com and Gossipcop.com, covering celebrity news and debunking false gossip. He has been in the publishing industry for almost two decades, covering pop culture – movies and TV shows, especially – with a keen interest and love for Gen X culture, the older influences on it, and what it has since inspired. He graduated from Boston University with a degree in Political Science but cured himself of the desire to be a politician almost immediately after graduation.
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15 Best Movie Speeches of All Time
Dialogues and speeches are the string, which binds the beads of a good cinema. Acting, cinematography, production they can all fall apart if the writing sucks. There are so many movies with great stories who aren’t impactful, because of lame dialogues. On the other hand, people remember even mediocre movies because of a powerful speech. These speeches are so inspirational that they make the listener believe that anything’s possible. The sheer power of words is strong enough to move mountains. In these speeches, the speaker enthralls the audience with his wisdom and experience and motivates them to carry out the impossible in life. We, at the Cinemaholic, made a list of top movie speeches ever that will inspire you. Be ready to get motivated!
15. Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World’s End (2007) – “Hoist The Colours”
Consider this. A fleet of pirate ship have been surrounded by the elite force of Her Majesty’s Royal Navy. The pirates are broken, without any command and their faith lies in their pirate queen Elizabeth who probably due to a turn of fate, became their leader. Tricked into a cornered position, by a cunning lord Beckett, she is left with no choice but retaliate with whatever she has. And she choses this moment to rise to the occasion. She thunders at her fellow pirates, asking them to fight like free men and not surrender meekly like cowards. And it resonates with pirates, irrespective of their clans and they roar as every version of Jolly Roger starts flying high in the wind.
14. V For Vendetta (2005) – “The Revolutionary Speech”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KKvvOFIHs4k
Just like Hitler crafted a dictatorship, disguised within a so-called superior race driven government, in a not so distant future version of London, the chancellor Adam Sutler formed a reign where in the name of security, privacy was looted. In return of order and peace to the society, the people traded their foremost weapon – consent. In the garb of protecting the people, the reigning government unleashed tyranny and oppression. In such times, one fine day, every TV gets tuned into a channel where a man wearing a Guy Fawkes mask speaks to them. He reminds them of Guy Fawkes, who brought a revolution to the people 400 years ago. To end this cruelty and meek submission, he asks everyone to join him in exactly one year later, on 5th of September on the gates of the Parliament. This speech sets in motion, of the events of ‘V for Vendetta’.
13. The Wolf Of Wall Street (2013) – “I’m not fuckin’ leaving”
The high flying, corrupt and megalomaniac Jordan Belfort is finally caught and as a part of the deal with the FBI, he’s supposed to leave Stratton Oakmont and never ever indulge in the market of share trading, which made him so rich. He appears in his office and makes an announcement about his stepping down from the company, in front of his beleaguered colleagues. He explains his pain in leaving them in lurch and how he’s going to miss them all. While talking about their collective effort to make money overcoming their individual struggles in life, all of sudden he realizes, this is place where he belongs after all. And despite the warning of FBI, he screams his lungs out – ‘I’m not fuckin’ leaving !!’
12. Rocky Balboa (2006) – “It ain’t about how hard you hit”
https://youtu.be/mk82j1jQw_8
Rocky Balboa is an ageing boxer, who has left the sport, only to come back to it again. His wife’s dead and his son is sick and tired of the name and pressure of being related to Rocky. His father’s fame has started to affect him professionally and personally as well. So he gets the news of his arthritic father, gearing up for another bout of boxing, he discourages him by stating his example of being a failure, despite of being a Balboa. Rocky thunders when he says, ‘It’s ain’t about how hard you hit, it’s about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward.’ He asks him to stop blaming others for his failure. It’s an moving speech with some profound advice for life. Life’s meant to be unfair and its sole plan is to keep you down. Instead of cribbing, you’ve to accept your loses and move forward. That’s how you win.
11. Any Given Sunday (1999) – “Life’s a game of inches”
Before an all important play off game, coach D’Amato, played by Al Pacino gathers around his players. Through many difficulties and infightings, they’ve reached a place where one mistake can cost them everything. He begins the talk with comparing their current position to being in a shit hole and it’s totally up to them to get beat the shit out of themselves or fight hard to come back. He cites his own example of being a broken man who lost money, family and himself for taking bad decisions in life. But life is just like a game of football . It’s all about the margin of error. Just like a game of football, where once one starts losing, he gets the drift of the game and then tries crawl into those inches. He urges them to come together as a team and win it for themselves.
10. Wall Street (1987) – “Greed, for lack of a better word, is Good”
Wall street is about money. Wall street is about power. Wall street is about greed. And greed, ladies and gentlemen, for the lack of a better word, is good. That’s what Gordon Gekko believed in. In a speech to the investors of a loss making paper company Teldar, he explains meticulously that the sole reason the company lost so much of money is because of inefficient people at the top and not because he broke the company to pieces. He argues that his greed of making money actually liberates loss making industries. Greed is an evolutionary trait and it’s greed which has made man go for more, be it knowledge, technology or profit. It’s an amazing take on something which itself is labelled as a biblical sin. Michael Douglas as Gordon Gekko, gives an amazing performance.
9. Dead Poet’s Society (1989) – “Carpe Diem, seize the day boys”
In a school, where discipline is revered, a new English teacher comes in a breather among the strict disciplinarians. To a motley group of students, he reaches out and asks them to come out of their shell. He tells them to live their lives in their own way and not to someone’s expectations. One’s life duration is limited and eventually everyone will die. What will be left, is his legacy. So instead of living a dull life, one should do something to make it extraordinary. That’s the essence of Carpe Diem. The character of John Keating was played by the late Robin Williams , who demonstrates the importance of individuality to the students through this inspiring speech. He inspires them to be achieve greatness rather than to be successful.
8. Remember The Titans (2000) – “Take a lesson from the dead”
At the heights of racism, a black man is appointed as the head coach of a school, where traditionally it’s usually filled up by a white man. Tackling racism and discrimination at every step, coach Boone takes up the challenge. The team suffers from racially motivated conflicts and its success is deterred due to the ever meddling school authorities. Coach Boone takes everything to his stride and takes his team through a gruelling schedule of training at the Gettysburg cemetery where thousands of men died during the battle of Gettysburg. Through this speech, he asks his team to learn from those people, who laid their lives while fighting for each other. He urges them to be better by coming together and play as one team. His speech motivates his team to achieve success. Denzel Washington plays coach Boone in the sports drama ‘Remember The Titans’.
7. Braveheart (1995) – “They may take our lives, but they’ll never take our freedom”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hIvRkjOd1f8
In an English ruled Scotland, a young William Wallace witnesses the English massacring his family. He flees from the country only to return as a rebel who takes charge to lead the rebellion against the English. As he leads a rag-tag army of Scottish peasants and farmers, he asks them to fight as free men, against the enormous English army. When somebody from the army says that it’s better to hide and live than to fight and die, Wallace roars back by saying that the enemy may take their lives but they will never be able to take their freedom. Mel Gibson acted as well as directed this film, which went on to win five academy awards, including Best Picture and Best Director.
6. Scent Of A Woman (1992) – “When shit hits the fan, some guys run and some guys stay”
At the Baird school, which traditionally has given the country many leaders and achievers, a disciplinary meeting takes place, for an act of mischief. While the reason remains trivial at its best, the focus shifts to two persons, who were supposed to be the witnesses of the events. One of those witnesses is a boy, whose father is a key figure in the school management. Hence he gets off the hook, after naming the suspects. Naturally it’s the other guy Charlie, who despite of being innocent, gets to take the blame. And it almost happens but for the presence of Lt Colonel Frank Slade. He makes his point that while everyone chose to be indifferent to the situation, Charlie showed integrity by not behaving as a snitch. And this is the stuff leaders are made of. Al Pacino played Lt Colonel Slade and gave a performance of a lifetime.
Read More: Best Nuclear War Movies of All Time
5. Independence Day (1996) – “Today, we celebrate our independence day”
While the world burns and is at the mercy of aliens, it comes down to a few brave men who decide to join forces to fight against the aliens. After repeated attempts of failure, a final assault is planned in the lines of a kamikaze attack, similar to a suicide mission. The president, himself a pilot mans the mission. Before they leave the base, he reminds them that this mission, incidentally to commence on 4th of July will be the biggest battle of their lives. And should they win, it will no longer be an American holiday. Rather it will be the day, when the world will be liberated of their common enemy. It shall be the world’s independence day. It’s a speech that evokes thunderous applause from everyone, as their belief in their leader becomes firm.
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4. Network (1976) – “I’m mad as hell and am not going to take it anymore”
News these days, are more of shock inducing and eye grabbing details rather than journalism based on facts. In ‘Network’, a TV network’s struggle with declining viewership turns into a full-blown war when its own people start making factory made shows to get ratings. The movie is primarily about how TV controls the life and through it audio-visual medium, can sway public opinion about everything. In a way, this is what controls the masses today. When the veteran news anchor Howard Beale screams at his viewers to shout that they’ re mad as hell and are not going to take it anymore, he vents out his frustration at the growing influence of TV on the people. He cites example of life going astray while the TV shows paint a rosy picture. Many years later, as we see today, the real has imitated the reel and today literally the TV controls everything. This speech is truly pathbreaking.
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3. The Shawshank Redemption (1994) – “Get busy living or get busy dying”
There’s nothing new that can be told about ‘The Shawshank Redemption’ . Arguably the best movie ever, this is Andy Dufresne’s story spanning across nineteen years in the infamous Shawshank penitentiary. While Andy makes the most out of his time at the prison doing various jobs, he also gets into a tiff with a corrupt warden over his discharge which leads him into a solitary confinement. When he’s out, his friend Red becomes afraid that this may break him forever. However a nonchalant Andy tells him about his dream destination and his wish to spend rest of his life there, thus explaining that life is all about hope and at times, it comes down to one simple choice – Get busy living or get busy dying. This speech is also a metaphor for being hopeful in the most hopeless of situations.
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2. A Few Good Men (1992) – “You can’t handle the truth”
A soldier dies at GITMO base camp and the blame goes to couple of fellow soldiers as an act of negligence. While the soldiers plead that they were under order to punish the dying soldier, it comes down to one of the most laziest of military lawyers to take up their case. As the case reaches its final stage, upon repeated provocation from the defence lawyer, Colonel Nathan Jessup becomes enraged and tells that at times, despite being wrong, people need to take decision that may take one life but in return save thousands. Freedom comes at a price and being a provider of the same, that’s what entitles him to take decisions which may or may not be ethical. This’s the truth and that possibly cannot be fathomed by a layman. A stunning performance by Jack Nicholson !
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1. The Great Dictator (1940)- “We think too much and feel too little”
Charlie Chaplin ’s ‘The Great Dictator’ is a political satire, in the garb of comedy and it condemns the ways of the contemporary dictators of the time, namely Hitler and Mussolini. A Jewish barber, who’s also a lookalike of the tyrant ruler of a fictional country gets to replace the dictator and ends up in a podium where he has to deliver a speech. He rises to the occasion when he tells his subjects that instead of ruling everyone as a dictator, he wants to help everyone. As human beings, one should rise above the ever engulfing greed. Though the world has progressed into future through numerous innovations, still it does distinguish people based on their caste, creed and colour. Humanity has been lost its meaning in the countless machinery that does our jobs. We’ve become cynical due to our ever growing penchant for knowledge. And that’s where we all lose as mankind.
Read More: Best Adolf Hitler Movies of All Time
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The 20 Best Movie Speeches of All Time
Public speaking is not just a skill, it is an art form, one that very few can master.
For most, it is a source for anxiety. The sight of a large crowd and all the attention on one person can make even the most confident individual turn into a stuttering mess. However, when done correctly, they can inspire the very best and, sometimes, the very worst in humanity.
For these 20 films, the art of the speech is on full display, perfectly crafted by screenwriters and actors. Whether it is inspiring a team before the big game, soldiers before the big battle, students before entering the real world or as a rally cry against evil, corruption and the wicked, these speeches have transcended art and have entered the popular lexicon, sometimes as satire, but sometimes as a source of inspirations.
20. Invictus (2009) – “This is it! This is our Destiny!”
Following his release from prison in 1990, Nelson Mandela (Morgan Freeman) ran for government and became President of South Africa, effectively ending Apartheid. Despite this, the country still remained divided and tense. Mandela, however, saw hope in the form of the Springboks, South Africa’s National Rugby Union team.
After beating heavyweights France, Western Samoa and Australia in the 1995 Rugby World Cup, the team faces the number one side: the Legendary New Zealand All Blacks. Overcoming the odds and securing a 15-12 lead, the team only has to hold out for seven minutes. Team captain Francois Pienaar (Matt Damon) addresses his team, telling them to listen to the crowd, all singing in unison, “Heads up, look into my eyes”.
This is a real team captain talking, his message still simple for a rugby team, “Defence, defence, defence”. Plain yet inspiring. Pienaar is portrayed as a man who knows exactly the history he is about create. When asked at the end of the game if he could have done it without the 60,000 South Africans present at the game, “We didn’t have the support of 60,000 South Africans…we had the support of 43 million South Africans”.
The finale with Pienaar receiving the Web Ellis Trophy from a Springbok Jersey wearing Mandela remains not only one of the great moments of sport, but a great moment in human history.
19. Henry V (1989) – “We few, we happy few, we band of brothers”
Very few actors have been able to transport the Bard to the big screen. Lawrence Olivier, Orson Welles, John Gielgud, Ian McKellan are just a few that have succeeded. Today, most of Shakespeare’s plays are adapted into contemporary settings, from fairy tale Venice Beach (Romeo + Juliet) to gangland Melbourne (Macbeth).
However, Kenneth Branagh’s performance in Henry V (following in the footsteps of Laurence Olivier) shows that one can still enjoy a classic, especially when watching the St Crispin’s Day speech.
“From this day to the ending of the world, but we shall be remembered – we few, we happy few, we band of brothers; for he to-day that sheds his blood with me shall be my brother”. Branagh does not deliver this line with awe and gravitas, but rather with joy. A great smile burnt across his face as he rallies his men with promises of immortality.
Perhaps Henry’s heart is filled with joy at the concept of being side by side with his men at his longest hour, or is Branagh portraying a naive boy king who is yet to understand the true horrors of war? One thing is for certain: audience will seldom find such passion and truth in modern Shakespeare.
18. Rudy (1993) – “Since when are you the quitting kind”
There are only a handful of films that men will acknowledge crying in. Rudy (Sean Astin) is one of them. How can you keep a dry eye when watching every member of the University of Notre Dame’s football team walk into the head office before the final game of the year, offering their position up for Rudy.
But before this immortal moment, Rudy quit the team, frustrated at failing to make the final team list of the year. It is only after the dressing down he receives from stadium janitor Fortune (Charles S. Dutton) that he changes his mind, “Since when are you the quitting kind,” he barks at a defeated Rudy. This not only acts as the key turning point for the film, it reveals the true character of Fortune, finally breaking down the emotional brick wall he built between himself and others.
Fortune, just like Rudy, had an opportunity but threw it away out of anger, “And I guarantee a week won’t go by in your life you won’t regret walking out, letting them get the best of you”. There is not softness, no compassion. Not Fortune’s style. Instead he gives Rudy the kick up the arse he needs to continue fighting to earn the title of ‘Fighting Irish’.
17. Mr Smith Goes to Washington (1939) – “Well, I guess this is just another lost cause, Mr Paine”
There is no worse feeling than the moment you realise you have been beat. No second chances, no extra time. Nothing. You have lost. This was the moment that underdog Senator Jefferson Smith (James Stewart) not only realised he had lost but that he had been powerless all along. His first bill draws the wrath of a corrupt politician, not only destroying the bill, but turning Smith’s own constituents against him. Where he is shown the letters and telegrams sent demanding his resignation.
Beaten, exhausted and near collapse he seems resigned to his fate, “well, I guess this is just another lost cause, Mr Paine,” he mumbles, now barely conscious.
Instead, he finds one last ounce of energy, promising to continue the fight against political corruption, “You think I’m licked? Well, I’m not licked and I’m gonna stay right here and fight for this lost cause. Even if this room is filled with lies like these”. Mr Smith goes to Washington remains one of Frank Capra’s best and one of the truly great films on American politics.
16. Dead Poet’s Society (1989) – “Carpe, carpe diem, seize the day boys, make your lives extraordinary”
A good teacher is not meant to simply teach, but rather inspire his students. Guide them into finding their passion and push them into pursuing it. Inspiring teachers are a popular market with films like Stand and Deliver, Mr. Holland’s Opus and October Sky. However, nothing matches the wit, charm and passion found in Dead Poet’s Society’s John Keating (Robin Williams).
Despite the strict and conservative foundations of the school they attend, former student turned poetry teacher Keating encourages his students to rip out the mathematic formula for rating poetry and to stand on their desk shouting poetry, much to the chagrin of the headmaster.
But Keating’s teaching philosophy is laid bare when he shows his students photos of the past alumni who attended, “They’re not that different from you, are they? Same haircuts, full of hormones”, before whispering his magnum opus, “Carpe diem”. Keating is not just teaching poetry, he is teaching the boys to become individuals. To not be constrained by the social mores that there very school is trying to implement.
15. Friday Night Lights (2004) – “I want you to put each other in your hearts forever, because forever is about to happen here”
So inspiring is the coach’s speech to his team that it has become almost cliché. Halftime, down by a lot, exhausted and low morale, the team finds solace in the inspirational words of the calm and collected coach. Friday Night Lights is part of this cliché, but it is one of the few that gets it right.
Only gaining entry into the state final by virtue of a coin toss, the Permian Panthers and their coach Gary Gaines (Billy Bob Thornton) know they are the underdogs. But more than that, Gaines knows for many of them it will be their last game. Some may get a chance to play College Football and there might be that lucky one who goes on to play for the NFL. However, many of these boys will graduate from high school and live out the rest of their life.
In the end, it comes down to how they remember the game, “And that truth is you did everything you could. There wasn’t one more thing you could’ve done. Can you live in that moment as best you can, with clear eyes, and love in your heart, with joy in your heart? If you can do that gentlemen, then you’re perfect”. For the film, football is not about winning or losing, it is about character.
Movies Quotations
13 iconic movie speeches that inspire greatness.
Table of Contents
Key Takeaways
- Iconic movie speeches have a profound impact on pop culture and resonate with audiences, tapping into deep emotions and symbolizing powerful themes.
- Movie speeches, such as those delivered by Vader and Luke in Star Wars and Jack Nicholson in A Few Good Men, showcase the immense power of performance and the impact of truth-telling.
- Speeches like Don Corleone’s in The Godfather and John Keating’s in Dead Poets Society inspire individuals to seize opportunities, embrace change, and take control of their destinies.
- The significance of home is highlighted in movies like The Wizard of Oz, where it symbolizes belonging, comfort, and refuge, resonating with audiences and reminding us of its importance in our lives.
I Am Your Father" – Darth Vader, Star Wars
You Can’t Handle the Truth!" – Colonel Jessup, a Few Good Men
Powerful courtroom monologue.
Impact of Truth-Telling
Truth | Justice | Perception |
---|---|---|
Reveals | Upholds | Challenged |
Uncomfortable | Fairness | Shifted |
Unsettling | Integrity | Questioned |
Life Is Like a Box of Chocolates" – Forrest Gump, Forrest Gump
- Capturing the essence of life: The metaphor of a box of chocolates perfectly encapsulates the unpredictability of life. Just like when you open a box of chocolates, you never know what you’re going to get, life presents us with a series of unknowns and surprises. This message encourages us to embrace the uncertainty and embrace the opportunities that come our way.
- Inspiring resilience and adaptability: Forrest’s simple yet profound statement teaches us to be adaptable in the face of life’s challenges. By acknowledging that we can’t control everything that happens to us, we’re empowered to navigate through life’s ups and downs with resilience and grace. This speech reminds us that even in the face of adversity, there’s always an opportunity for growth and self-discovery.
Make Him an Offer He Can’t Refuse" – Don Corleone, the Godfather
Carpe Diem. Seize the Day, Boys!" – John Keating, Dead Poets Society
Inspiring Words in Film
- The impact of motivational speeches:
- Keating’s speech serves as a reminder that we’ve the power to seize the day and make the most of our lives.
- It encourages us to break free from societal norms and pursue our passions with unwavering determination.
- Force as a metaphor:
- Keating’s use of force as a metaphor for life’s challenges reminds us that it’s through facing adversity head-on that we discover our true potential.
- It encourages us to embrace the unpredictable nature of life and find strength in the face of obstacles.
Impact of Motivational Speeches
Impact on Personal Growth | Influence on Societal Change | Power of Motivational Speeches |
---|---|---|
Pushes individuals to break free from societal expectations | Inspires a generation to question authority | Motivates individuals to pursue their passions |
Encourages embracing individuality | Promotes change and progress | Instills a sense of purpose and determination |
Inspires self-reflection and introspection | Challenges the status quo | Transforms individuals and communities |
Fosters personal development and growth | Sparks conversations and debates | Empowers individuals to make a difference |
Cultivates a mindset of seizing opportunities | Drives social and cultural shifts | Ignites a desire for greatness |
Dead Poets Society’s Influence
There’s No Place Like Home" – Dorothy Gale, the Wizard of Oz
I’ll Be Back" – the Terminator, the Terminator
- Intrigue: The line is a promise of something significant to come. It creates anticipation and leaves viewers eager to witness the Terminator’s return, wondering what he’s in store for them.
- Resilience: ‘I’ll be back’ embodies the determination and resilience of the Terminator. It reinforces the idea that no matter how tough the situation may be, he’ll not be defeated. This message resonates with individuals facing challenges in their own lives, inspiring them to persevere and overcome obstacles.
May the Force Be With You" – Various Characters, Star Wars
Force as a metaphor.
Impact of Iconic Speeches
Impact on Society | Memorable Quotes |
---|---|
Represents power of belief | "May the Force Be With You" |
Symbol of unity and hope | "I am your father" |
Source of inspiration for generations | "Do or do not. There is no try" |
Why so Serious?" – the Joker, the Dark Knight
- Captivating the audience : The Joker’s question immediately grabs our attention, forcing us to ponder the deeper meaning behind his sinister words. It challenges us to question our own seriousness and embrace the unpredictable nature of life.
- Unleashing the dark side : By captivating our attention, the Joker’s speech taps into our primal instincts and unleashes our darkest desires. It reminds us that within each of us lies a potential for chaos and destruction, urging us to explore the depths of our own psyche.
- Challenging societal norms : The Joker’s speech defies societal expectations, encouraging us to question the status quo and challenge the established order. It reminds us that greatness often comes from pushing the boundaries and embracing our true selves, even if it means stepping into the darkness.
You Had Me at Hello" – Dorothy Boyd, Jerry Maguire
Here’s Looking at You, Kid" – Rick Blaine, Casablanca
- The impact of iconic movie speeches:
- They can evoke strong emotions: Rick Blaine’s line in Casablanca is a perfect example of how a simple phrase can elicit powerful emotions such as love, longing, and nostalgia.
- They can become ingrained in popular culture: ‘Here’s looking at you, kid’ has become a widely recognized and quoted line, showcasing the lasting impact of iconic movie speeches.
- The influence of motivational speeches:
- They can inspire greatness: Motivational speeches in movies have the power to ignite a spark within individuals, pushing them to achieve their goals and pursue greatness.
- They can provide a sense of hope: Motivational speeches often deliver messages of hope and resilience, reminding audiences that they’ve the strength to overcome challenges and achieve their dreams.
You Can’t Put a Price on a Good Time" – Ferris Bueller, Ferris Bueller’s Day off
It’s Not Who I Am Underneath, but What I Do That Defines Me" – Batman, Batman Begins
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the significance of the quote "i am your father" in the star wars movie, how does the quote "you can’t handle the truth" contribute to the storyline in a few good men, what does the quote "life is like a box of chocolates" symbolize in the movie forrest gump.
How Does the Quote "Make Him an Offer He Can’t Refuse" Define the Character of Don Corleone in the Godfather?
What is the context behind the quote "carpe diem. seize the day, boys" in dead poets society and how does it inspire greatness, what makes these movie speeches iconic and inspirational.
Lauren’s talent in writing is matched by her passion for storytelling. Her love for books and deep understanding of culture and entertainment add a distinct flavor to her work. As our media and press contact, Lauren skillfully bridges the gap between afterQuotes and the broader media landscape, bringing our message to a wider audience.
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10 unforgettable 80s action hero one-liners.
- Memorable quotes from Arnold Schwarzenegger and Sylvester Stallone have had a significant impact on the action genre, shaping their tough guy personas and influencing other action heroes.
- Bruce Willis and Clint Eastwood’s catchphrases have become iconic in their own right, capturing the essence of their characters and leaving a lasting mark on pop culture.
- Mel Gibson’s one-liners in 80s action films have added humor and intensity to the films, becoming cultural references and symbolizing rebellion and resilience.
- Harrison Ford’s quick wit and delivery of memorable retorts, as well as Jean-Claude Van Damme’s intense power and signature moves, have solidified their status as unforgettable 80s action heroes.
Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Classic Catchphrase
Sylvester Stallone’s Memorable Line
Bruce Willis’ Unforgettable Moment
Clint Eastwood’s Iconic Phrase
Mel Gibson’s Action-Packed Quote
Gibson’s Iconic Catchphrase
- It encapsulated the rebellious spirit of the era, giving voice to the renegade within us all.
- It empowered audiences to break free from societal norms and embrace their inner badass.
- It became a symbol of resilience, inspiring us to never back down, no matter the odds.
- It injected a much-needed dose of swagger into the action genre, elevating it to new heights of coolness.
Impact of Memorable Quotes
Action Hero | Memorable Quote |
---|---|
Mel Gibson | "I’m too old for this shit" |
Arnold Schwarzenegger | "I’ll be back" |
Sylvester Stallone | "Yo, Adrian!" |
Bruce Willis | "Yippee ki-yay, motherf***er!" |
Harrison Ford’s Memorable Retort
Favorite Ford One-Liner
- ‘I love you.’ – ‘I know.’ (Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back)
- ‘Get off my plane!’ (Air Force One)
- ‘I’m just a reporter with a deadline.’ (Blade Runner)
- ‘It’s not the years, honey. It’s the mileage.’ (Raiders of the Lost Ark)
Impact of Ford’s Retorts
Iconic Ford Movie Quotes
- ‘Get off my plane!’ ( Air Force One ) – This line perfectly captures Ford’s no-nonsense attitude and his determination to protect what’s his.
- ‘It’s not the years, honey. It’s the mileage.’ ( Raiders of the Lost Ark ) – Ford’s character, Indiana Jones, delivers this line with a cheeky grin, showcasing his charm and wit.
- ‘I love you.’ ‘I know.’ ( The Empire Strikes Back ) – This exchange between Han Solo and Princess Leia has become one of the most iconic romantic moments in film history.
- ‘Blade Runner’ (title of the film) – Ford’s portrayal of the brooding detective, Rick Deckard, in this sci-fi classic gave us a glimpse into a dystopian future and left us questioning our own humanity.
Jean-Claude Van Damme’s Power-packed Line
Chuck Norris’ Legendary One-Liner
Kurt Russell’s Unforgettable Verbal Punch
Steven seagal’s memorable battle cry.
- It showcased his raw strength and determination, instantly captivating viewers.
- The battle cry added an extra layer of intensity to the fight scenes, making them even more thrilling to watch.
- It became a signature element of Seagal’s on-screen persona, solidifying his status as an action hero.
- The battle cry became a source of empowerment for fans, inspiring them to overcome their own challenges with a warrior’s mindset.
What Other Catchphrases Did Arnold Schwarzenegger Use in His Action Movies?
Which movie did sylvester stallone’s memorable line come from.
What Was the Context of Bruce Willis’ Unforgettable Moment?
What is the significance of clint eastwood’s iconic phrase, which action-packed movie did mel gibson’s quote come from, can implementing action hero one-liners help improve workplace unity.
4 Best Pre-Battle One-Liners in Action Cinema
Have you ever felt a surge of excitement right before a confrontation, with your heart racing and adrenaline pumping through your veins?
Well, it just so happens that we stumbled upon the perfect list for you! We’ve discovered the 4 best pre-battle one-liners in action cinema, and trust us, they are absolute game-changers.
Picture this: you’re about to face your nemesis, the tension is palpable, and then, out of nowhere, a perfectly timed line escapes your lips, leaving everyone in awe.
So, join us as we delve into the realm of epic movie quotes that will inspire and ignite your inner warrior. Get ready, because the battle is about to begin!
- Pre-battle one-liners in action cinema have become iconic and memorable, defining both the characters and the films they belong to.
- These one-liners have a powerful impact on audience engagement, heightening excitement and drawing viewers deeper into the action.
- Epic pre-battle movie quotes showcase unwavering resolve, add danger and urgency, and inject chaos and tension, making them essential in building anticipation for battle scenes.
- Pre-battle one-liners have evolved over the years, starting as simple statements and transforming into clever remarks that pump up the audience and add depth to the character and story.
Classic Action Film Quotes
In our opinion, some of the most memorable moments in action cinema come from the classic action film quotes. These iconic catchphrases have the power to ignite our excitement and anticipation before the battle begins.
Whether it’s Arnold Schwarzenegger’s ‘I’ll be back’ in Terminator or Clint Eastwood’s ‘Go ahead, make my day’ in Dirty Harry, these lines have become an integral part of our cultural lexicon. They not only define the characters delivering them but also encapsulate the essence of the films they belong to.
Memorable One-Liners From Battle Scenes
As action cinema enthusiasts, we can’t help but get pumped up by the memorable one-liners that are delivered during intense battle scenes. These lines have a powerful impact on audience engagement, drawing us deeper into the action and heightening our excitement. One-liners have become a staple in contemporary action films, with filmmakers recognizing their popularity and effectiveness in creating memorable moments. They serve as rallying cries, giving the heroes a chance to showcase their wit and determination in the face of danger. To illustrate the significance of these one-liners, let’s take a look at the following table, showcasing some of the most iconic lines from battle scenes in action cinema:
Movie | One-Liner |
---|---|
Terminator 2 | "Hasta la vista, baby." |
Die Hard | "Yippee-ki-yay, motherf***er!" |
The Avengers | "I have an army." |
Braveheart | "They may take our lives, but they’ll never take our freedom!" |
Gladiator | "Are you not entertained?" |
These one-liners not only add to the intensity of the battle scenes but also become memorable quotes that resonate with the audience long after the movie ends.
Epic Pre-Battle Movie Quotes
Let’s countdown the top five epic pre-battle movie quotes that have left us on the edge of our seats. These quotes have a profound impact on audience engagement, drawing us deeper into the impending battle and heightening our anticipation for the action to come.
- ‘I’ll be back.’ – Terminator (1984): This iconic line delivered by Arnold Schwarzenegger has become synonymous with his character and adds an air of unstoppable determination to the impending battle.
- ‘May the Force be with you.’ – Star Wars (1977): This quote not only serves as a rallying cry for the heroes, but also reminds us of the vast power and hope that the Force brings to the battle.
- ‘I could do this all day.’ – Captain America: The First Avenger (2011): This line showcases Captain America’s unwavering resolve and unwavering dedication to fighting for what’s right.
- ‘You shan’t pass!’ – The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001): Gandalf’s powerful declaration adds a sense of danger and urgency to the battle, as he stands between the fellowship and certain doom.
- ‘Why so serious?’ – The Dark Knight (2008): The Joker’s dark humor injects an element of chaos and unpredictability into the battle, creating a sense of unease and tension.
Legendary Action Cinema Last Words
The impact of iconic action movie catchphrases can’t be overstated. From Arnold Schwarzenegger’s iconic ‘Hasta la vista, baby’ in Terminator 2: Judgment Day to Bruce Willis’ memorable ‘Yippee ki-yay, motherf****r’ in Die Hard, these lines have become cultural touchstones, instantly recognizable and imitated by fans worldwide.
Over the years, we’ve witnessed the evolution of pre-battle one-liners in action cinema. What once started as simple, straightforward statements has transformed into clever and witty remarks that not only pump up the audience but also add depth to the character and the story.
What Are Some Examples of Classic Action Film Quotes That Have Become Iconic in Pop Culture?
We all know and love those iconic action film quotes. They’ve shaped popular culture and become a part of our everyday language. Their memorable delivery and ability to resonate with audiences is what sets them apart.
Can You Provide Any Memorable One-Liners From Battle Scenes in Action Movies?
Which Epic Pre-Battle Movie Quotes Have Left a Lasting Impact on Audiences?
Certain pre-battle movie quotes have had a profound impact on audience reception, leaving a lasting impression on their minds. These memorable lines have also influenced future action films, shaping the genre and captivating viewers with their power and intensity.
What Are Some Legendary Action Cinema Last Words That Have Become Legendary in the Genre?
Legendary action cinema last words have had a profound impact on audiences, evoking emotions of excitement, anticipation, and empowerment. Over time, these pre-battle one-liners have evolved, becoming more powerful and iconic, reflecting the audience’s desire for liberation and thrilling storytelling.
Are There Any Behind-The-Scenes Stories or Trivia Related to the Creation of These Pre-Battle One-Liners in Action Cinema?
When it comes to pre-battle one-liners in action cinema, the impact on actors is undeniable. They prepare meticulously to deliver these lines with conviction, knowing the lasting impact it will have on their performance. Directors, meanwhile, craft these memorable lines with a clear vision, making creative choices to ensure they resonate with audiences long after the battle is over.
From classic films to modern blockbusters, these quotes have become iconic in their own right. They serve as a reminder of the power and excitement that action cinema brings to our screens.
So the next time you find yourself gearing up for a battle, remember these legendary lines and get ready for an adrenaline-fueled ride.
Top 9 Action Movie Villain Monologues Revealed
- The Joker’s monologues are captivating and unpredictable, leaving a lasting impact on the audience.
- The T-1000’s cold and calculated demeanor, along with its ability to adapt and blend into any environment, make it a terrifying villain.
- Hans Gruber’s sophistication, attention to detail, and ability to manipulate others with charm and wit make him a memorable antagonist.
- Raoul Silva’s vengeful madness, manipulation tactics, and unsettling physical appearance create a chilling tone for the film.
The Dark Knight’s Joker: Chaos Unleashed
Terminator 2’s T-1000: Cold and Calculated
Die Hard’s Hans Gruber: Suave and Deadly
Skyfall’s Raoul Silva: A Madman’s Revenge
The Matrix’s Agent Smith: The Illusion of Control
No Country for Old Men’s Anton Chigurh: Fate’s Messenger
Chilling Coin Toss Scene
- As the coin spins in the air, time freezes, mirroring the characters’ uncertainty and the weight of their decisions.
- The metallic clang as the coin lands, echoing through the room, signifies the irrevocable consequences that await.
- Chigurh’s unwavering gaze and calm demeanor as he flips the coin heighten the tension, revealing his unwavering dedication to his twisted sense of justice.
Symbolism of Chigurh’s Hair
Impact of fate theme.
Kill Bill’s Bill: The Philosophy of Violence
The Silence of the Lambs’ Hannibal Lecter: A Cannibal’s Wisdom
Inglourious Basterds’ Colonel Hans Landa: The Power of Language
Language Techniques | Effect on Victims | Purpose |
---|---|---|
Flattery | Elicits trust | Gain information and control |
Intimidation | Creates fear | Establish dominance and control |
Manipulative questions | Confusion and uncertainty | Disorientate and control |
Charm | Disarming | Gain compliance and control |
How Does the Dark Knight’s Joker Justify His Chaotic Actions?
How does terminator 2’s t-1000 display his calculated nature throughout the movie.
What Makes Die Hard’s Hans Gruber Such a Suave and Deadly Villain?
What is the motivation behind skyfall’s raoul silva seeking revenge, how does agent smith from the matrix manipulate the illusion of control, are action movie villain monologues similar to classic theater monologues in terms of impact.
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11 best inspirational pep talks in movies.
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5 years after the mandalorian premiered, i finally think that star wars feels like star wars again, star wars turns obi-wan's most famous lesson to anakin into a lie.
The pen may be mightier than the sword, but a good speech or pep talk in a movie is more powerful than any villain, deadlier than any weapon, and can make the impossible possible. As the Bee Gees once crooned, “It’s only words,” but sometimes words are all heroes have. And what’s more, words are the spark which can move mountains, save worlds, turn the tide and win the day.
You want to inspire, you want to galvanize, you want to defy the odds, upset the apple-cart, and make flights of fancy and figments of the imaginations realer than real? Then by Christ you need a good speech and someone who knows a thing or two about delivering words with meaning, majesty and might.
A good speech or pep talk can define the message of a movie in a nutshell. So without further ado, listen up, as Screen Rant presents its list of 11 Best Inspirational Pep Talks In Movies.
11. Rocky Balboa (2006) - “It Ain’t About How Hard Ya Hit!”
Although the crown of the rhyming and styling king of the ring would most definitely go to Muhammad Ali, you’d have to go a long way to find a better pugilist poet than Rocky Balboa . Although never the most articulate tool in the box, the Italian Stallion has always been something of a bar-room philosopher and boasts a strangely beautiful, albeit broken way with words.
The back street brawler’s inner bar room philosopher comes into his own in Rocky Balboa with a father to son speech that is second to none. After having a stomach full of his boy telling him how he’s failed in life because of the shadow cast over him by his famous father, Rocky dishes out some tough love and tells Robert (Milo Ventimiglia), that somewhere along the way he stopped being true to himself and “Let people stick a finger in your face and tell you you’re no good.” Rocky then begins to really wax lyrical and delivers the sort of words everyone needs at times when they’re thinking of throwing in the towel.
“Let me tell you something you already know. The world ain’t all sunshine and rainbows. It’s a very mean and nasty place and I don’t care how tough you are, it will beat you to your knees and keep you there permanently if you let it. You, me, or nobody is gonna hit as hard as life. But it ain’t about how hard ya hit. It’s about how hard you can get it and keep moving forward. How much you can take and keep moving forward. That’s how winning is done!”
The beauty of this speech and its core message of self-belief, is, it doesn’t just sum up a scene, or the essence of Rocky’s character, it’s homespun words of wisdom are the driving force behind every single Rocky film right up to Creed, and it’s a philosophy which everyone, from waitresses to five star generals can take to heart when times are tough and the road is long.
10. Watership Down (1978) - “All The World Shall Be Your Enemy”
An animated film about bunny rabbits would, at face value, be the last place you’d expect to find the sort of pep talk capable of shining like a beacon of hope in the darkest of nights, but scratch the surface of Martin Rosen’s classic and you’ll find Watership Down is all about the underdog. It’s all about how a “Prince with a Thousand Enemies” must be full of street smarts and guile if they’re to survive in a world inhabited by sharp-toothed and razor clawed monsters who want to savagely kill and eat them.
The sun god Frith delivers the speech and sets the tone for the rest of the film by warning the rabbit prince El-ahrairah that,
“All the world will be your enemy, Prince of a thousand enemies. And when they catch you, they will kill you. But first they must catch you; digger, listener, runner, Prince with the swift warning. Be cunning, and full of tricks, and your people will never be destroyed.”
9. The Empire Strikes Back (1980) - “Do Or Not Do. There Is No Try”
By rights, little green creatures with bizarre voices shouldn’t be capable of delivering the sort of speeches which are passed down through the generations with knowing nods of the head and serious facial expressions. Yet such is the power of Star Wars and Yoda in particular, that his speeches from The Empire Strikes Back onward have been given the same sort of gravity usually reserved for passages from the Old Testament.
However, the standout quote from Yoda, and the one which has become a catchphrase of our times has to be the one said during the X-wing sequence on Dagobah, just before Luke Skywalker attempts to raise the fighter from the swamp through the power of the force alone. When Yoda tells Luke , “Do. Or not do. There is no try.” He’s not just telling the young Jedi hopeful to stop acting like a baby and man up, he’s giving us all an invaluable lesson. And that lesson is, for Jedis and all living things alike, the moment is everything. You have to live in it, own it and commit yourself 100% or face the consequences of being burdened by the past and crippled by the future.
8. Independence Day (1996) - “We’re Going To Live On”
When you’re battling to save your country from being invaded, your woman folk enslaved and your comrades obliterated, then you need a pretty red hot speech to give you added impetus to fight that little bit harder and go that extra inch. when the entire world as we know it is under threat of animation by an alien race, then the speech has got to be out of this world. And President Thomas Whitmore in Independence Day delivers the goods and makes the sort of speech that you’d expect from a politician who then jumps into a fighter jet and leads the charge to fight the little green men.
Of course, the good President is blessed with a cause the entire world can unite on and he’s lucky in the sense he gets to make his impassioned plea to save humanity on the Fourth of July, but when the man tells you, “We can’t be consumed by our petty differences anymore. We will be united in our common interests.” Then you better believe it, and if, after hearing the big fella snarl, “We are fighting for our right to live. To exist. We will not go quietly into the night! We will not vanish without a fight! We’re going to live on! We’re going to survive!” Then who amongst you isn’t tempted to pick up a ray gun and yell “Hell yeah! Let’s kick us some extraterrestrial ass!”
7. The Shawshank Redemption (1994) - “Get Busy Living”
You wouldn’t think the story of a banker wrongly banged up for double homicide and subjected to all manner of vile abuse and degradation would make for an uplifting film, but it does, and what’s more, The Shawshank Redemption boasts a handful of memorable lines that could easy be sliced and diced into one of those self-help and "power of positive thinking" books, perhaps titled, “How to Stay Upbeat when The World’s Tried Its Damnedest To Crush Your Spirit.”
After serving 19 years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit, the stoic Andy Dufrense (Tim Robbins) not only survives his ordeal, he comes out a better person, and one who’s quite good at making speeches and giving pep talks on the enduring power of hope and the ties which bind. Andy’s a man of few words, but when he does speak, every syllable is carefully measured and weighted like a philosophical nugget made out of nine carat gold. In fact, Andy’s entire outlook on life can be summed up in the often quoted and eternally memorable line he delivers to his old pal Ellis "Red" Redding (Morgan freeman), “I guess it comes down to a simple choice, really. Get busy living or get busy dying.” Something to remember the next time you’re in danger of being paralyzed by self-pity.
6. Any Given Sunday (1999) - “Inch By Inch”
A good speech or pep talk can not only help you win a big battle. More importantly, it can also help you win a big game. Sports coaches, as a rule, love the sound of their own voices, and from grassroots level to the professional leagues, the coach loves to make speeches. Few of them are any good at it, but when they are, they can hit a nail squarely on its head, unite the team, and inspire the players to go the distance and win the game.
In Any Given Sunday , Tony D’Amato (Al Pacino) is head coach of the Miami Sharks, a team who were once great but are in trouble, divided, and lacking in spirit. D’Amato isn’t having that and before the Sharks go out to decide their destiny in a playoff game, he cuts through all the bull and the lucrative sponsorship deals by ditching his old formulaic, jaded and worn out cliched speeches, and instead opts to tell the players he made every wrong choice a middle-aged man could make and, that when you start losing stuff in life, it becomes like football, a game of inches. D’Amato then give perhaps the best sporting pep talk committed to film and tells his players,
“In either game, life or football, the margin for error is so small. The inches we need are everywhere around us. On this team, we fight for that inch. On this team, we tear ourselves, and everyone around us to pieces for that inch. We claw with our finger nails for that inch. Cause we know when we add up all those inches that’s going to make the f**king difference between winning and losing, between living and dying.”
And who said poetry in the locker room was dead?
5. Dead Poet’s Society (1989) - “Seize The Day”
Any film with the words "Dead" and "Poets" in its title and Robin Williams in a lead role is going to be a wordy affair, but the beauty of Tom Schulman’s Dead Poet’s Society is that it’s all about breathing new life into literature and rescuing poetry from the graves of old wordsmiths by making it dynamic, fresh and free of cobwebs. It succeeds in this mainly through a dynamic turn by Robin Williams as unorthodox English teacher John Keating, who believes in individuality, standing on desks, speaking in Latin and the power of poetry when it comes to inspiring people to find their inner strength and live life on their own terms.
In a pep talk, Keating inspires his pupils to think outside of the box as life is short and we need to make the most of every minute of every day, because, “We are food for worms, lads. Believe it or not, each and every one of us in this room is one day gonna stop breathing, turn cold, and die.” He then encourages the pupils to not let life pass them by, their dreams die, and their hopes rust, by imploring, “Carpe Diem. Seize the day boys. Make your lives extraordinary.”
4. 300 (2007) - “The Enemy Outnumber Us A Paltry Three To One”
The Spartans were a strange bunch. Apart from a love of warfare, honor, wrestling bears, and battling ridiculous odds, they’re suckers for a good speech, especially pre-conflict. In fact, when they’re not busy proving their prowess in battle, and boasting about how many of the enemy they’ve killed, these battle-hardened warriors like nothing more than a spot of gushing oratory to get them in the mood.
Nowhere is this more apparent than in the closing scene of 300 , when after recounting King Leonidas’s legendary exploits as leader of 300 Spartans who took on 300,000 Persians, his friend Dilios rallies the Spartans and Greeks under his command by triumphantly crying, “ The enemy outnumber us a paltry three to one, good odds for any Greek. This day we rescue a world from mysticism and tyranny and usher in a future brighter than anything we can imagine. Give thanks, men, to Leonidas and the brave 300.” The Spartans answer their countryman’s call and give thanks in the only way they know how, by charging at the enemy in a rush of retribution.
3. Braveheart (1995) - “They’ll Never Take Our Freedom”
Convincing a mob of men that they should throw themselves head first into an orgy of violence and risk life, limb and vital organs, when they could be at home growing potatoes and admiring their livestock is a tricky proposition. When you’re thinking of marching to war against superior firepower, you need a leader with conviction, a leader with drive, and a leader with just a hint of the wild-eyed insanity of the shaman and the psychotic tendencies of a nutjob who paints his face blue before a fight, to convince you that no matter what, your sides going to win. In short, you need Mel Gibson’s take on Scottish nationalist William Wallace.
Gibson is at his most unhinged, rage driven, viciously righteous best as the Scottish rebel who believes in freedom and a violent and bloody end to the English tyrants who rule the roost like high-pitched, sexually perverse, foppishly dressed decadents.
Much imitated, but never surpassed, Gibson’s battles speeches in Braveheart have almost created a genre all their own. Gibson escalating passion almost makes him articulate as he spits out every word in an artery bursting rage. Frothing at the mouth in indignation he demands his men look at the big picture and asks, “And dying in your beds many years from now, would you be willing to trade all the days from this day to that for one chance, just one chance to come back here and tell our enemies that they may take our lives, but they'll never take our freedom!”
2. The Princess Bride (1987) - “My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die”
In Rob Reiner’s epic The Princess Bride , Inigo Montoya (Mandy Patinkin) doesn’t just make a speech to end all speeches, he lives the very words he utters, because they are his very lifeblood, his mission statement, and when he finally gets to deliver them, they are all that keep him alive to carry out his quest to avenge his father’s killer - the six-fingered Count Rugen.
Flamboyant fencer Inigo has a poetic soul and a burning desire for revenge after Count Rugen killed his father in front of hum when he was just a 11-year-old and left two dueling scars on the devastated boy’s face to remind him of the murderous act. In the eventual showdown with his father’s killer, the Count seriously wounds Rugen and mocks him for thinking he could ever avenge his death, before preparing to deliver the killing blow. Seemingly in a bad situation with no exit in sight, Inigio recovers his strength by repeating the mantra “My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die” over and over again with a growing ferocity.
Pleading for clemency, the Count begs for his life and offers Inigo anything he wants if he just spares him. Poignantly, Inigo answers , "I want my father back, you son of a bitch,” and then kills him.
1. Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King (2003) - “This Day We Fight”
When the world is on the brink of being plunged into a darkness without equal and hideously ugly creatures are baying for you blood and desperate to hack you into bloody pieces with a huge axe, it’s always nice to have a good looking chap who’s handy with his sword and a dab hand at making inspiring speeches on your side.
Such a fella keeps the morale up and it doesn’t matter how heavily outnumbered, outgunned, and out of the game you are, such a gung ho type of guy can always convince you, through sheer force of personality and a persuasive charisma, that winning is just a state of mind.
In The Return of The King , Aragorn is that man. As he rides back from the Black Gate ahead of the mother of all battles, he looks the orgy of violence and tsunami of terror to come squarely in the eye and tells his brothers in arms, “I see in your eyes the same fear that would take the heart of me!” Admittedly that’s not exactly what you want to hear from your leader prior to the big fight, but it gets better, as Aragorn ups the ante and shouts, “A day may come, when the courage of men fails, when we forsake our friends and break all bonds of Fellowship, but it is not this day! This day we fight!”
Now gather round’ people and listen up! you know of any rabble rousers, firebrands, extraordinary orators, and savvy speechmakers who should be on this list why not get on your soapbox and sound off in the comments section below.
The 10 Most Inspirational Movie Speeches For Cinephiles
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Although films can be more about visuals, many carry impactful dialogue. While body language and facial expressions are necessary for actors, some have proven the mastery of spoken word. Some of these speeches are filled with words, while others have only a few lines. Regardless of how long the moment is, these speeches inspire their audiences.
RELATED: 10 Great Movies That Surprisingly Aren't Adapted From A Book
Several films contain historically accurate and entertainingly original movie speeches. Many of them stand the test of time, and others mark a new era.
10 The King's Speech: King George VI Challenges Us To Overcome Our Greatest Enemies
The King's Speech's protagonist, Prince Albert, is pushed to overcome his speech impediment, while dealing with the pressure of being a member of Britain's Royal Family. The Prince and his wife turn to actor and speech therapist Lionel Louge, who digs into the emotional trauma behind the impediment.
The audience's emotional attachment only increases when Prince Albert is named the new King of England and is expected to lead the country into war with Nazi Germany in the late 1930s. His first act as King George happens to be his first wartime radio broadcast. As he works through the stress of relaying his hopeful words for victory, he takes his first steps into overcoming his disability, an inspirational moment in history and cinema.
9 The Return Of The King: Aragorn's Speech Made For A Stirring Start To The Final Battle
Throughout The Lord of the Rings trilogy, Aragorn makes for a brilliant leader, but often stands aside to let another take over. His hesitation to claim his birthright as King of Men, along with his great humility, is only a part of why his rousing speech at the end of Return of the King is so impactful.
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The final battle at Mordor is the last obstacle the heroes have to face to end Sauron's chaos , but even after all they've overcome, victory still seems bleak. It's Aragorn's speech that brings back hope for better days and stirs up the men, and the audience's courage, to face the challenge that's ahead of them.
8 Independence Day: The President's Speech Is Iconic For Its Bold Honesty And Empowerment For All
The power of a speech lies in how the speaker captures their audience. Though he struggles at first to rally his troops, President Whitmore's wartime speech is the spark to the war effort against the alien enemy in Independence Day , .
His honest start defining the venture that they were about to embark on, avoided sugar-coating the situation; they were about to fight for their survival . It's his change in topic, focusing more on how the world is going to fight together and how "we will not vanish without a fight" , that gives everyone strength.
7 Ratatouille: Anton Ego's Critique Is A Victory For The Artists Who Dream Big
Though the concept of a rat cooking in a restaurant might leave some with an upset stomach, Pixar took the idea and created the inspirational masterpiece Ratatouille . The film follows the rat Remy, whose passion for cooing leads him to secretly become a chef at his idol's famed restaurant, Gusteau's.
As the restaurant's popularity rises thanks to Remy's cooking, the harsh critic Anton Ego steps in to test his talent, not realizing he isn't human. After a mass exit from the kitchen staff, Remy is helped by his family to serve Anton his finest meal. Upon discovering Remy's true identity, Anton is forced to accept and now uphold the late Gusteau's ideology of "anyone can cook" , calling Remy "the finest chef in France" in his in-depth food critique.
6 Remember The Titans: Coach Boone's Speech Unifies His Team And The Audience
Following the story of the first racially integrated football team in Virginia, Remember The Titans balances its societal commentary and engaging storytelling brilliantly. In one of the film's serious moments, the team is led on a grueling run that leads them to the land where the Battle of Gettysburg historically took place.
As the young athletes take a moment to catch their breath, Coach Boone compares the team's struggle to work together to the bloody battle that happened nearly a century ago. "If we don't come together, right now... we too will be destroyed -- just like they were" , are some of the influential words Boone shares. As haunting as his speech becomes, it ends on a hopeful note of "maybe we'll learn to play this game like men."
5 Dead Poets Society: Mr. Keating's Passion For The Arts Breathes Life Into The Audience
Viewers were not prepared for the emotional tour de force of Dead Poets Society , the story of one English teacher's unique efforts to help his students live their best lives and overcome the pressures pushed onto them. With many of his students carrying a misunderstanding of why they are studying poetry and the arts, Mr. Keating shares poetic words of his own on the connection between poetry and the passion of life.
In his speech, he shares the words, "poetry, beauty, romance, love, these are what we stay alive for" , and in an effort to convince the young students to think and live for themselves, he adds, "you may contribute a verse." The inspiring speech ends with a call to action, both for the characters and the audience, "What will your verse be?"
4 Hidden Figures: Mary Jackson's Bold Speech Stirs Up Viewers' Courage
With the restriction of segregation holding her from her potential, Mary Jackson's historical fight for an equal education is shared in the remarkable film Hidden Figures . Mary was already brilliant in engineering before she was given the official job, but she needed the credentials from an accredited school in order to be granted the promotion.
The only school available was, at the time, an all-white high school. Mary boldly stands before a judge and declares "I have no choice but to be the first." The genius of her character shines in this scene as she makes a direct connection with the judge, who she points out has done some history-making of his own. The bold approach works and the judge allows her to bend the segregation laws, an empowering step for Mary and for the audience watching.
3 Good Night, And Good Luck: Edward R Murrow's Harsh Criticisms On Media Still Have An Impact Today
Though a moody piece , Good Night, and Good Luck presents a light at the end of the tunnel as far as the abuse of mass media goes. It highlights the monumental work of reporter Edward R. Murrow and his fight against the extremes of McCarthyism. It also emphasizes his belief in the power of radio and television broadcasting.
His speech in the film may be a bit dreary for those looking to be uplifted, but it hits inspirational notes where it needs to. In the words from the film, "This instrument can teach. It can illuminate and, yes, it can even inspire," a sentiment that means a great deal to those who share in Murrow's ideology on the power of media.
2 The Princess Bride: Inigo Montoya's 'Introduction' Was Worth The Great Build Up
Inigo Montoya is incredibly likable even though he's helping one of the villains in the The Princess Bride . His life as a rogue swordsman has all been for the sake of finding the man who murdered his father and taking his vengeance. Coincidentally, that same man is an enemy of the story's hero, Wesley, giving Inigo the support he needs to reach his goal.
RELATED: 10 Modern Movies To Watch If You Like Princess Bride
For decades he practiced the same speech over and over again, introducing himself to his father's killer, but when he finally has the man in his clutches, he loses, or so it seems. Unwilling to give in to his devastating wounds, Inigo repeats the same speech, raising his voice louder and louder as his attacks grow in power. At last, he has the murderer right where he wants him and deals the final blow, making for one of the most exciting final battles in cinema that has stood the test of time.
1 Pursuit of Happyness: Chris Gardner's Speech On Chasing After Dreams Applies To All Ages
In one of his most inspirational films, Will Smith plays Chris Gardner, a man down on his luck after he and his son are evicted from their home. The father and son struggle living out on the street as Chris works hard to land a job at a brokerage firm. Toward the end of the film, Chris and his son are playing basketball together as the little boy proclaims one day he'll become a pro player. Without thinking, Chris shuts down his son's dream to spare him from disappointment .
After seeing the impact of his negative words, Chris tells his son, "Don't ever let somebody tell you, you can't do something, not even me." He then encourages his son to go after his dreams, telling him "If you want something, go get it. Period." For everyone in the world, no matter their age, this speech inspired by a true underdog, means a lot.
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21 great speeches from the movies
'remember the titans' — a lesson from the dead.
Struggling through the heated process of integration, Coach Herman Boone (Denzel Washington) teaches his football players a lesson they will never forget at Gettysburg Battlefield.JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGRV9IRkNZejR4Nm8lMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'Dead Poet's Society' — Carpe Diem
'But if you listen real close, you can hear them whisper their legacy to you. Go on, lean in. Listen, you hear it?'JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGejRncEFXMmt0NmslMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'Miracle' — This is Your Time
U.S. Olympic Hockey Coach Herb Brooks (Kurt Russell) delivers this stirring pregame speech as his team prepares to take on the Soviet Union in the 1980 Winter Olympics, and he does so wearing spectacular plaid pants.JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGdGRteW9NZTRpSE0lMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'The King's Speech' — Radio Broadcast
When his brother abdicates the throne, newly crowned King George VI must confront two obstacles: an impending war with Germany and a stammer. The movie follows the king's journey as he meets with speech therapist Lionel Logue (Geoffrey Rush), culminating in the king's first radio speech to declare war on Germany in 1939.JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGQUhZMlV6T29uaWclMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'Gladiator' — My Name is Maximus
After being stripped of his headline as chief commander and suffering through the murder of his wife and children, Maximus (Russell Crowe) is forced to become a gladiator. He finally comes face to face with the man responsible, and this is what he says.JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGWDFVbUhmV0N3LTQlMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'The Alamo' — There's Right, and There's Wrong
Leave it to the Duke to tell it like it is. John Wayne, we couldn't have said it better (or been a cooler Davy Crockett).JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGSzZkRjhJazB4TTQlMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'The Return of the King' — Not This Day
'A day may come when the courage of men fails, when we forsake our friends and break all bonds of fellowship, but it is not this day.'JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGRmNQT3Y4bG1FaTglMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'Independence Day' — We Will Not Go Quietly
The aliens are coming, and Earth is uniting to fight. Good to know we can rely on the president of the United States to rally the planet.JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGM2dGTjF0N0dveWslMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'Coach Carter' — Our Deepest Fear
Timo Cruz (Rick Gonzalez) almost died working as a drug dealer. He makes this speech to the man who saved him from a life on the streets, his basketball coach.JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGWWJ0OHdYSWFoUVUlMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'Armageddon' — 14 Brave Souls
POTUS strikes again! Not aliens this time, but an asteroid headed for Earth. Will space ever give us a break?JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGWmplOTF4VGQ2TGMlMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'The Two Towers' — There's Some Good in This World
Always faithful, always loyal, Samwise Gamgee is the unassuming hero who in the darkest of hours reminds us all what matters most. This speech deserves a new adjective: goosebump-and-tear-inducing.JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGazZDOFNYMG1XUDAlMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2' — They Didn't Die in Vain, But You Will
Neville. Is. A. Boss. Thank you, and goodnight.JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGMXZZN0hqWi1WTXMlMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'Secondhand Lions' — Things Worth Believing In
A young Haley Joel Osment and a not-so-young-but-always-awesome Robert Duvall steal the show as great uncle Hub gives part of his famous 'what every boy needs to know about being a man speech' to his nephew Walter.JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGd0plbURaY2dJWkUlMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'Casablanca' — Here's Looking At You, Kid
Ingrid Bergman will get on that plane if it is the last thing Humphrey Bogart does!JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGckVXYXFVVmFjM00lMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'Guys and Dolls' — Ear Full of Cider
'On the day when I left home to make my way in the world my Daddy took me to one side. 'Son,' my daddy says to me, 'I am sorry I'm not able to bankroll you to a very large start, but not having the necessary lettuce to get you rolling, instead I'm going to stake you to some very valuable advice...''JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGYUROekZ2M0ZKdTAlMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'West Side Story' — Killed by Hate
Yes, they danced around with knives, and the whole musical has haunted you since you were forced to watch it in high school, but you have to admit that Maria's closing speech is a powerful reminder to us all.JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGREd0RDVRQWFBR1klMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'Brian's Song' — Rare Form of Courage
Chicago Bears running back Brian Piccolo passed away from cancer in 1970. A month before his death, Piccolo's best friend and teammate Gale Sayers accepted the George S. Halas Award for Most Courageous Player. In his speech, Sayers told the audience they had selected the wrong man and gave a beautiful speech about his dying friend, re-enacted here in the 1971 movie 'Brian's Song.'JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGT2ZJX0hUMzllZU0lMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'Star Wars: A New Hope' — Help Me, Obi-Wan Kenobi. You're My Only Hope
Note to self: If you need something done, just end your speech with 'you're my only hope.'JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGcFVheFhzcUdlRkklMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'The Muppet Movie' — I've Got a Dream
Winner of 'the most moving speech ever given by an amphibian.'JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGQ1ZPMGZScGVuczglMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'Footloose' — A Time to Dance
Each time you 'cut footloose' you can thank Ren McCormack (Kevin Bacon) for fighting for your right to boogie.JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGNEVka1V0NGY1d2clMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
'The Princess Bride' — Drop Your Sword
Any speech that makes a grown man drop his weapon and voluntarily hand himself over to be tied up is a good speech.JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI2MDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGSW9TSG1Wa2ptdUElMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=
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The 50 Greatest Awards-Show Speeches of the Last 55 Years
The best acceptance moments make or break careers, cement fandoms, and spark blind items..
This article was featured in One Great Story , New York ’s reading recommendation newsletter. Sign up here to get it nightly.
The entire room was holding its collective breath when Olivia Colman beat odds-favorite Glenn Close to the Best Actress Oscar in 2019. Close had long been expected to win the season’s biggest prize for her performance in The Wife — a movie in which she plays the wife of all wives — having already taken home the Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Drama and other precursor awards. Colman also won a Golden Globe that year, for Best Actress in a Musical or Comedy , for her part as the gouty, manipulated Queen Anne in The Favourite , and her tipsy speech (in which she thanked her “bitches” and extolled private jets) fortified what prognosticators already thought: Colman was funny, but Close was the serious winner. Until she wasn’t. In the face of such upset, what would Colman say?
Looking out onto a crowd she didn’t expect to face, Colman reached for the truth: to win, she said, is “ genuinely quite stressful ,” before admitting, through gasps and tears, it’s also “hilarious.” It’s an accurate two-part description of the general allure of awards shows, which can present moments both laughable and genuinely thrilling. We anticipate the Oscars and its kindred ceremonies for their red carpets and host monologues and cinematic montages and the times when Queen Latifah sings something, but we endure the hours-long award-show broadcasts for the psychic whiplash of acceptance speeches, when the polished Hollywood stars we admire are caught earnestly surprised, gracious, or moved to tears — or, just as captivating, when they perform surprise, gratitude, and deeply felt emotion and make it all seem genuine. Even the most choreographed of speeches embrace the power of pure spectacle, becoming windows into souls that are, at their core, either deeply beholden to the people who helped them along the way or deeply vengeful toward the people who didn’t help them along the way. Some of the best read like blind items forming live on our TV screens.
Back at the Oscars, Colman eventually composed herself and delivered a heartfelt and perfectly meandering ode to Close, Colman’s kids, her husband of 25 years, her agent, little girls practicing speeches in front of the telly, some people at Fox, Yorgos Lanthimos and her aforementioned “bitches” castmates, and, for no apparent reason other than she’s sitting in the front row of the audience, Lady Gaga — every appreciation customized for the subject and punctuated by genuine physical outbursts, as though her ecstatic brain was warring with her stunned body. It is a spectacle you can’t peel your eyes from that builds with tension until she blows a kiss to Ally Maine and relinquishes the stage to, as promised, snog anyone she forgot to acknowledge. Like any unforgettable speech giver, she managed to meet the high-stakes moment in which she found herself.
Watching as many acceptance speeches as we have as hosts of a podcast with the name “Oscar” in it , we’ve come to appreciate the specific qualities that separate the merely adequate awards-ceremony speeches (from nearly every male performer) from the truly special ones (from actresses, plus certain ornery old men and at least one rabble-rousing documentarian). The greatest acceptance speeches are enthusiastic like Colman’s without verging into inscrutability (sorry, Roberto Benigni ), though exceptions exist for speeches that are so low energy it’s the gag. They are quotable, with at least one defining line of speech, even if it’s the only line of speech (see Nos. 31 and 23 on this list). Sincerity in a speech is more important than the message; it’s why a baffling but believable reaction to winning an Oscar is cemented in our brains before the ones that are dutifully gracious or that perfunctorily advocate for something beyond the recipient’s own skills. (Although everyone loves a scorched-earth speech — see No. 14 on this list). And, of course, the prestige level of the award show itself matters; a memorable speech at the Oscars can outrank one of the same caliber at the Globes, because the pins-and-needles suspense at the pinnacle of awards season only ups the ante of the viewing experience. At the same time, a precursor speech of lower standing can tip the scales of an Oscar campaign, and we recognized those too. (In the interest of variety, we also only considered one speech per actor per awards cycle; sorry, Colman’s breathy “hi” at the Globes, but her breathy “hi” at the Oscars was better.)
This year, an already dense awards season will see the Emmys wedged in between the Golden Globes and the Academy Awards, so what better time to revisit unforgettable awards-season moments by acknowledging the 50 speeches of the last 55 years? (To be eligible for this list, speeches needed to be archived somewhere online, and the earliest recording here dates back to 1969.) While the Grammys will also be broadcast next month, we’re keeping this ranking to screen and stage awards (the MTV movie awards qualify, but the VMAs do not), where the art of the acceptance speech has been perfected by stars who make a living performing dialogue and the filmmakers and craftspeople who make them look good doing it. (Speeches by below-the-line artists were eligible for this list, but our final 50 ended up favoring the performers of Hollywood.) And remember, this ranking is about speeches , not bits. Winona Ryder mugging behind David Harbour’s SAG Ensemble speech for Stranger Things ? Good meme, beautiful meme, but you won’t see Harbour’s acceptance moment celebrated here.
50. Patti LuPone, 62nd Tony Awards (2008)
Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role, Gypsy
The Tony Awards are where we’re most reliably reminded that “Stars, they are not like us. Its recipients are accustomed to not only the spotlight but commanding a theater of people eight times a week. Take, for example, Patti LuPone, who in 2008 won the second of her three Tonys as Mama Rose in a revival of Gypsy . It was her first win in nearly three decades, despite boasting one of the most revered careers in the American theater. With a sense of glory and triumph usually reserved for horn sections, LuPone amended a prepared speech from a previous loss (hilarious!) and trilled through an inventory of thank-yous that spanned multiple theater companies and professionals, up to and including the ghosts of the St. James Theatre. But as one of Broadway’s grand dames, naturally she still comes off as earnest and heartfelt doing it. When the orchestra begins to play over her speech (we’ll have more of those, just wait), she’s affable to it at first, but then she erupts like an ocean squall full of pent-up Tony losses and earned litigiousness toward Andrew Lloyd Webber: “Shut up! It’s been 29 years!”
49. Ben Affleck and Matt Damon, 70th Academy Awards (1998)
Best Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen, Good Will Hunting
Speaking of yelling: Sometimes when you win an award, the Boston jumps out. The otherwise prim quality of an awards ceremony can favor a speech where the winner’s enthusiasm and wide-eyed disbelief are at full volume. Here, Affleck and Damon maintain the composure expected in a ceremony like the Oscars (Affleck even says the words “We’re fortunate enough to be involved with a lot of great people upon whom it’s incumbent upon us to thank”) … before basically ending their speech doing keg stands. Like a pair of brothers with a fancy new toy, their thank-yous get louder, more tangled, more manic. Producers are great! Moms are beautiful! Their hometown is everything! Affleck’s voice eventually cracks and the effusion comes to a halt. They really were just two young guys!
48. Ving Rhames, 55th Golden Globe Awards (1998)
Best Actor — Miniseries or Television Film, Don King: Only in America
Over the years, the Golden Globes has earned a reputation for being the awards show where all the craziest shit happens. And that reputation was probably formed around the time Ving Rhames tried to give his best actor trophy to Jack Lemmon. The entire moment is a generosity battle between two unyielding mensches. First of all, Rhames is endearingly formal in asking “Mr. Jack Lemmon” to emerge from the crowd and take the stage. Lemmon is in a daze as he takes the long route to the stage. Rhames tells Lemmon he’s not going to give him the Globe — so as not to scare him off, then gives Lemmon the award as soon as he arrives at the mic. At this point, Lemmon’s basically playing one of his everyman characters, trying to figure out in real time whether the right thing to do is hand the award back or accept Rhames’s gesture in the spirit in which it was intended. Meanwhile, in the audience, Goldie Hawn is in tears, Jodie Foster is laughing her ass off, and Jack Nicholson is cheekily suggesting Lemmon pass the award to him next. Despite the “you take it, no you take it” tug-of-war that nearly ends with the statue getting dropped, both Rhames and Lemmon ultimately combine for an incredible tandem speech. Rhames brings emotion (the tears come quickly and don’t stop) and the elegance (a Stanislavsky quote). You get the sense that only someone as emotionally open as Rhames would have ever made the gesture, and only someone as seasoned as Lemmon could have rolled with the punch.
47. Susan Lucci, 26th Daytime Emmy Awards (1999)
Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series, All My Children
The occasion of Susan Lucci finally winning a Daytime Emmy after 18 previous nominations failed to result in a statue would have been enough to enshrine this moment in awards-show history. But Lucci went on to deliver a speech worthy of soap opera history, too. After lapping up the absolute pandemonium of the crowd (Rosie O’Donnell weeping; Oprah Winfrey hollering from the wings of the stage) for nearly 90 seconds, smiling, gasping, squealing, and bursting with “I can’t believe it’s,” Lucci eventually thanks the audience, her husband and kids, and the team at All My Children . But she gets into an oratory groove when she mentions that she was originally seen by casting directors as merely an “ethnic type,” only good enough to appear every other Tuesday. Lucci then points to Agnes Nixon, the great matriarch of daytime drama, for “changing the face of our medium” — placing her own struggle for legitimacy in the historical context of soaps’ perpetual uphill climb for industry respect. And she’s right to do so — Lucci’s quest for a long-awaited Daytime Emmy helped legitimize the awards by giving them a level of intrigue every year. And by the end of the speech, she might as well be standing in the middle of Pine Valley’s town square. She’s fully slipped into Erica Kane’s version of magnanimity, standing proudly beneath the stage lights, promising her legions of fans that she’ll be back at work with them on Monday.
46. Lin-Manuel Miranda, 62nd Tony Awards (2008)
Best Original Score, In the Heights
On any list of polarizing figures and acquired tastes in musical theater, there is Lin-Manuel Miranda, whose style of rapping has become as omnipresent at the Tonys as the phrase “the Shubert organization.” It’s easy to find his energy infectious, this fresh young face taking Broadway by storm, the look of awe still there on said face. You could, at the same time, find his schtick cringey, the Wesleyan try-hard pirouetting out as he nods to Thomas Kail “for keepin’ the engine burnin’, for being so discernin’.” But there’s an undeniable energy to his first Tony win as he tremulously freestyled his thank-yous, crescendoing with shout-outs to Stephen Sondheim and Puerto Rico. You need only look at the ensuing years of Tony Awards full of Neil Patrick Harris spitting L.M.M.-penned rhymes at the end of the show to see how this speech resonated.
45. Patty Duke, 22nd Primetime Emmy Awards (1970)
Outstanding Single Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role, My Sweet Charlie
There’s nothing like watching a celebrated performer suck the inflated pomp and circumstance out of a room with their sheer magnetic intensity. Patty Duke does so by taking the stage and making the audience soak in her silence — something you’ll almost never hear during an awards ceremony! Soon after she arrives at the mic, she raises a flattened hand to her brow to wordlessly investigate the audience only to utter the words, “You, Mom. Happy birthday.” (No exclamation point.) The dead air she inserts on either side of an eventual word — “enthusiasm” — turns her minimalist intensity into a fine art. And even as it dips into the slightly bizarre, she never loses our attention.
44. Rue McClanahan, 39th Primetime Emmy Awards (1987)
Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy, The Golden Girls
When Ben Affleck won Best Picture for Argo , he said to endure in Hollywood as he had, you can’t hold grudges. But he said it in a way that sounded like he’d very much been holding onto some real grudges. He’d have been better off accepting his Oscar by showing a video of Rue McClanahan’s speech from 1987. After winning for her role on The Golden Girls , McClanahan recalled her mother’s advice that “Every kick’s a boost.” And to the ones who gave her kicks along the way, Rue — eyes darting and narrowing in a genuinely intimidating rhythm, fingers massaging her rings, that Southern voice purring as was her signature sound onscreen — assured them they’d be “in the book.”
43. James Cameron, 70th Academy Awards (1998)
Best Director, Titanic
This is a list of the greatest speeches, though not necessarily the most innately likable ones. James Cameron’s brand of cheerful self-regard, which he carried with him throughout Titanic ’s full-steam-ahead push in the 1997 awards season, wasn’t always the most endearing. But when he capped off his best director win by earnestly quoting his own character, Jack Dawson, with an “I’m the king of the world!” — his howls echoing through the Shrine Auditorium — he was the triumphant auteur incarnate. Sure, he sounded like he was shoving it in the face of all the other movies that got steamrolled by Titanic that year, but if you can’t feel on top of the world when you’re winning an Oscar, when can you?
42. Sharon Stone, 53rd Golden Globe Awards (1996)
Best Actress in a Motion Picture — Drama, Casino
For as much as Sharon Stone got kicked around Hollywood, with everyone from critics to comedians acting like she was some kind of bad actress after Basic Instinct , she’d be forgiven for thinking it a miracle that she’d get this award over the likes of Meryl Streep, Emma Thompson, and the eventual Oscar winner in her category that year, Susan Sarandon. Stone’s speech makes the list for two reasons: first, the pitch-perfect comic timing when Stone, fumbling for how to begin this unlikely acceptance, finally fixes her eyes on the audience and deadpans, “Okay, it’s a miracle.” And the unvarnished yet still appreciative way she thanks people like Martin Scorsese who made “room for the breadth and annoying moments of my uncontrollable passion.” We love candid self-awareness.
41. Steven Soderbergh, 73rd Academy Awards (2001)
Best Director, Traffic
In recent years, as Oscar telecast producers have gotten more stringent about limiting their broadcast’s runtimes, they have used the occasion of the nominees’ luncheon to screen Soderbergh’s 2001 acceptance as an ideal speech. It’s brief (under a minute), it says something meaningful about art, and thanks anybody out there “who spends part of their day creating.” Most importantly, it eschews the laundry list of names that ceremony producers just cannot stand. In general, this ranking endeavors to celebrate exactly the kind of speeches that Oscars producers say they don’t want, but we have to admit, Soderbergh is quite eloquent in his brevity. Here’s to those who create!
40. Marion Cotillard, 80th Academy Awards (2008)
Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role, La Vie en Rose
Quick, say “Thank you, love; thank you, life” to the first person you find in an unironic beret and they will surely tell you that it’s true there are some angels in this city. At the 80th Academy Awards ceremony, a then new-to-English and new er -to-awards Cotillard brims with the gratitude and possibility of a child witnessing their first snowfall. You can’t blame her zeal — her performance as Édith Piaf in La Vie en Rose was the first performance in the French language to win a best actress statue, and no one could have predicted her win even after smaller roles in a few American movies. Cotillard was running neck-and-neck with Julie Christie for the win, and clearly Cotillard was taken by surprise to be declared the victor. The triumph blends the best of two awards-speech worlds: profound honesty and accidental quotability. “You rocked my life!”
39. Taraji P. Henson, 23rd Screen Actors Guild Awards (2017)
Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture, Hidden Figures
Speeches can achieve greatness for their level of contagious pep, or for the recipient’s simple talent for speaking, and Taraji P. Henson’s acceptance on behalf of her Hidden Figures cast is an example of both. But what it most resoundingly delivers is something that many speeches aim for and miss: a galvanizing message at exactly the moment we need to hear it. Succinctly speaking to the film’s real-life subjects as inspirational figures for finding solutions in times of infinite problems, Henson gave a response to the 2016 electoral elephant in the room without even having to invoke him by name. “This story is about unity, this story is about what happens when we put our differences aside and we come together as a human race.” SAG Ensemble prizes are often love fests, but Henson seized the moment and it was anything but an accident.
38. Tiffany Haddish, 84th New York Film Critics Circle Awards, 2018
Best Supporting Actress, Girls Trip
By the miracle of Vulture’s own Alison Willmore, there exists video evidence of Tiffany Haddish’s incredible 17-minute acceptance speech. Which means we’re clear to include this NYFCC award on our list. Haddish openly flirts with Michael B. Jordan; chats at length about the giant many-armed goddess statue at the ceremony’s venue, TAO; gives a line reading from Girls Trip that Universal demanded be cut; and wonders why critics don’t have another TV show like Siskel and Ebert did. It is a marathon, not a sprint, and Haddish held court the entire time, displaying her star power as sure as any onscreen performance could. Speeches like this one (and the annual Governor Awards that celebrate lifetime achievement in the film industry) don’t put time constraints on recipients, and are a reminder that if the speaker is captivating enough, we’ll watch them for as long as they want to keep speaking. And if they speak long enough, they might make a joke about wearing “God’s panties,” and that’s when it gets really special.
37. James Hong, 29th Screen Actors Guild Awards (2023)
Best Performance by an Ensemble in a Film, Everything Everywhere All at Once
The great thing about SAG’s ensemble award is that it allows some of the cast members who haven’t been singled out for individual awards to get their moment in the spotlight. That was never better than when 94-year-old James Hong accepted on behalf of his Everything Everywhere All at Once cast in 2023. Hong began by speaking Cantonese “in case they broadcast us in Hong Kong,” then pulled some classic grandpa “I remember my first movie was with Clark Gable” business. But Hong followed that up with a harsh reminder of Hollywood’s racist past, when Asian characters were played by white men with slanted-eye makeup. Hong’s rebuke was a welcome dash of vinegar to keep Hollywood from being too self-congratulatory over finally awarding Asian actors like Michelle Yeoh and Ke Huy Quan.
36. Rita Moreno, 29th Tony Awards (1975)
Best Featured Actress in a Play, The Ritz
Not only did Moreno practically samba her way onto the stage to accept her Tony Award in a stunning fashion turban, but she did so with bracing honesty. “I’m the leading lady of The Ritz , I am not a supporting actress,” she said about her performance as heavily accented bathhouse performer Googie Gomez in Terrence McNally’s pre-AIDS sex farce. It was a not-so-subtle jab at the powers that be for putting her into a lesser category. Good natured as always, Moreno points out, as Ms. Gomez might have said: “Listen, honey, the only thing I support in that show is my beads!”
35. Tilda Swinton, 80th Academy Awards (2008)
Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role, Michael Clayton
Tilda Swinton is a one-of-a-kind performer, and so she also delivered a one-of-a-kind acceptance speech. By that I mean, one curiously obsessed with anatomy. She kicks off her speech (clearly flummoxed, but in a totally chill Tilda Swinton way) by saying she’ll give the trophy to its doppelgänger, her agent, who looks like it in all physical attributes including, “It has to be said, the buttocks.” Then, when thanking her Michael Clayton collaborators, she calls out George Clooney’s Batman nipples as the inspiration that they are. You could give the art-world-borne Swinton points for being the most high-toned person in the room, but she wasn’t above this . Typically steelish and composed when speaking publicly, it’s oddly affecting to see Swinton with her guard down.
34. Denzel Washington, 74th Academy Awards (2002)
Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role, Training Day
We’re going to say it a lot on this list, but so much of what goes into a great speech is a sense of occasion: delivering the right speech, with the right tone, at the right time, with the spotlight on you. Denzel Washington knew that Sidney Poitier would be in the audience when he accepted his Oscar. Poitier was an icon to Washtinton and to that date was the only Black performer to win an Oscar for a leading role. Both Washington and Halle Berry would join those ranks in 2002, and Washington used his speech to build a bridge from Poitier’s groundbreaking career to his own, and in doing so, helped to crystallize one of that night’s most historic narratives. “I’ll always be chasing you, Sidney,” Washington said, beaming. “I’ll always be following in your footsteps, sir. There’s nothing I would rather do.”
33. Ruth Gordon, 41st Academy Awards (1969)
Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role, Rosemary’s Baby
One interesting element of speech writing is finding your own unique way of stating “thank you” without using those two words. Ruth Gordon, after years in the business, opened with this phrasing: “I can’t tell you how encouraging a thing like this is!” An Oscar, she hints, is simply the nicest pat on the back to emerging talent like her. The riotous laughter and applause she garnered is proof the succinct bit landed perfectly.
32. Ingrid Bergman, 47th Academy Awards (1975)
Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role, Murder on the Orient Express
“It’s always very nice to get an Oscar” is the neatest way to begin any awards speech. In fact, it should be mandatory for all repeat winners, like an AMPAS pledge of allegiance. (See also: costume designer Sandy Powell’s “I’ve already got two of these.”) But third time winner and screen legend Ingrid Bergman’s acceptance for Murder on the Orient Express is even more wonderful for how she spends the rest of the speech either celebrating fellow nominee Valentina Cortese or lamenting how she doesn’t quite understand how Oscars rules work for international films.
31. Joe Pesci, 63rd Academy Awards (1991)
Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role, Goodfellas
Sometimes, the brevity of an acceptance speech can be read as shade (take, for example, Alfred Hitchcock accepting his honorary Oscar with a curt “Thank you” and a quick exit) or a symptom of confusion (hello, Gloria Grahame ). But the famously press-shy Pesci’s version of the simple hat tip was the gentleman’s version: “It was my privilege.” It was poetry that acknowledged his appreciation of his industry and his peers without skimping on the showmanship. Brief but full-bodied, like a shot of bourbon.
30. Sutton Foster, 65th Tony Awards (2011)
Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical, Anything Goes
Please give Sutton Foster another Tony so that she can give us an update on her former dresser Julien Havard who was leaving her next week (which was a great thing!!) to pursue his dream as an artist on Cape Cod.
29. Robin Williams, Eighth Critics’ Choice Awards (2003)
Best Actor, One Hour Photo
How does a loser give the most memorable speech of an awards ceremony? He just has to be Robin Williams. In the early days of the Critics’ Choice Awards, categories only held three nominees. When a tie occurred between Jack Nicholson for About Schmidt and Daniel Day-Lewis for Gangs of New York , rascal extraordinaire Nicholson called the unawarded Williams (for One Hour Photo ) to the stage. Williams then gave a speech to cheers that thanked the Irish people, mocked the ceremony’s set design, referenced Buddhism, and called Jack so thrilled “He could drop a log.” It’s so wild that it manages to make Day-Lewis seem painfully square, Nicholson seem so disarmed as to shed his trademark awards-show sunglasses, and presenter Salma Hayek seem like the only person in Hollywood able to corral them all.
28. Julia Louis-Dreyfus, 65th Primetime Emmy Awards (2013)
Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy, Veep
Comedy bits as acceptance speeches can work, but the risk-reward ratio is daunting. For when they fail, they fail miserably. The secret sauce is commitment, which Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Tony Hale possessed in spades when they opted to accept Louis-Dreyfus’s award in character, with Hale playing his Veep flunky. They didn’t cheat or giggle or give any indication that the ceremony was taking place in anything but some weird in-between space where reality and Veep have converged for the length of this one acceptance speech. As the series went on, that convergence felt permanent.
27. Jack Nicholson, 56th Golden Globe Awards (1999)
Cecil B. DeMille Award
Just a year prior to receiving his lifetime achievement award, Nicholson had taken the stage to accept an award for As Good As It Gets and paid tribute to his co-nominee Jim Carrey by literally talking out of his butt , Ace Ventura –style. The 1999 version of Nicholson was more demure, but only by a degree. At the 1999 Golden Globes ceremony, Nicholson reminisced on the good old days before the awards were televised, when Joan Crawford grabbed her own breasts onstage (“In my day, we had ’em”) and Rita Hayworth flipped her dress up over her head. It’s Jack in prime “life of the party” form, regaling you with tales like we were all courtside at a Lakers game. He takes some friendly shots at presenter and pal Warren Beatty, too, and delivers one perfectly executed joke about his agent (“… His name escapes me”). ) This is old-school Hollywood at its finest, and most unfiltered. And in feeling free to tell his ribald tales, Nicholson manages to be his most sincere. Even his acknowledgement of his advancing years is met with a joke (the “fear of the shroud”) and a reminder to the room that he’s still ready to work.
26. Renée Zellweger, 92nd Academy Awards (2020)
Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role, Judy
Renée Zellweger’s second Oscars speech gloriously derailed, transforming from a well-meaning listing-off of her heroes to a communication from a fugue state. Neil Armstrong gives way to Dolores Huerta and Venus, Serena, and Selena. Bob Dylan! India, disillusionment, silence. The dreams we used to say, the house we spent away. Ever the class act, Zellweger finds her point again, making the whole thing positively Garlandian.
25. Fred Rogers, 24th Daytime Emmy Awards (1997)
Lifetime Achievement Award
What makes a tear-jerker speech worthy of accolades? Given the preponderance of award recipients who thank their spouses and children and parents and mentors, it’s not exactly difficult to find an acceptance moment that tugs at wholesome heartstrings. But there’s low-hanging sentiment and then there’s Mr. Rogers. His call for ten seconds of silence “To think of the people who helped you become the people you are” was a classic Fred Rogers gambit. And wouldn’t you know, he had Linda Dano weeping in the crowd.
24. Jane Fonda, 44th Academy Awards (1972)
Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role, Klute
Fonda was no stranger to memorable awards-show stage appearances, whether she was signing in ASL for her second Oscar win for Coming Home or standing proud with a Mount Everest of hair as she accepted on behalf of her ailing father, Henry Fonda, for his On Golden Pond performance. But the most striking speech is the one she made after her first win for Klute , loaded in its simplicity — and therefore deeply quotable. This was months before her controversial visit to Hanoi, but she was already well-established as an antiwar activist, much to Hollywood’s discomfort. But instead of using her time at the mic to speak specifically to the activism she cared about, she let these words linger in the room instead: “There is a great deal to say and I’m not going to say it tonight.” There would continue to be a great deal to say, to say the least.
23. Merritt Wever, 65th Primetime Emmy Awards (2013)
Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series, Nurse Jackie
The single greatest quick speech of all time came from a shock Emmy win for underdog contender Merritt Wever, facing stiff competition and clearly unprepared for victory. Whether Wever genuinely did not want to be in the situation or was simply yes-anding the surprise of her own win to comedic effect, her “I gotta go, bye” will absolutely go down in awards-ceremony history.
22. Meryl Streep, 74th Golden Globe Awards (2017)
Donald Trump’s election was a fresh wound when Meryl Streep, hoarse from protesting, took the stage to accept her lifetime achievement award from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. Streep took the occasion to blast the president — without ever uttering his name — for the cruelty of his politics, as well as his recently instituted travel ban on people from Muslim-majority countries. Streep took a tour of the ballroom at the Beverly Hilton and cited the birthplaces of everyone from Viola Davis to Ryan Gosling to Dev Patel — “outsiders and immigrants” partially responsible for the stories being celebrated that night. Sure, it wasn’t hard to whip up the spirits of a sympathetic room, but her staunch defense of compassion and multiculturalism gave focus and clarity to Hollywood’s anti-Trump movement — she’d be nominated a year later for the politically timely The Post — and earned her a place on the then-president’s shit list.
21. Ally Sheedy, 14th Independent Spirit Awards (1999)
Best Actress, High Art
“OHHH MYYY GODDDDD!” was how Ally Sheedy began her acceptance speech, after literally crawling up onto the stage and locking best pal and presenter Rosanna Arquette into an unbreakable embrace. Sheedy, an icon of ’80s movies like The Breakfast Club but largely forgotten by the time she starred in Lisa Cholodenko’s 1998 lesbian drama, High Art , physically demonstrated just how impossible it felt to claw her way back to industry recognition. And whatever emotional or chemical state she was in at the time, she was not going to relinquish that spotlight. Sheedy spoke, hollered, laughed, and cried for ten full minutes, highlighting the Spirits’ anti-Oscars vibe while at the same time guaranteeing this career resurgence of hers would live on in some way.
20. Kirstie Alley, 43rd Primetime Emmy Awards (1991)
Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series, Cheers
To say that Kirstie Alley was a peculiar personality in her prime is probably putting it lightly. Her acceptance speech when she won the Emmy on her third try as Cheers ’ leading lady was an exercise in resisting sincerity and schmaltziness. So she poked fun at co-star Ted Danson’s famous Emmy drought and made a joke about the dry cleaner finding her old unused acceptance speeches in her dress pockets. But she put a bow on her stand-up when she thanked her then-husband, Parker Stevenson, “For giving me the big one for the last eight years.” Cheers to that .
19. Mo’Nique, 82nd Academy Awards (2010)
Best Actress in a Supporting Role, Precious
Throughout Mo’Nique’s Oscars season in 2009–2010, she faced unfair criticisms from the press and bloggersphere for her reticence to participate in the Hollywood baby-kissing tour that is an Academy Awards campaign, even as she obtained frontrunner status. Mo’Nique gave very limited interviews, and appeared at few “for your consideration,” events but was also busy launching her talk show at that time. So when the multi-hyphenate performer took the stage and thanked the Academy for awarding “the performance and not the politics,” the more casual Oscar watchers at home might have been confused as to what she meant. But it was a gratifying crack to the system that Mo’Nique could achieve what many of them could not.
18. Geena Davis, 63rd Golden Globe Awards (2006)
Best Actress in a Television Series — Drama, Commander in Chief
Geena Davis delivered the ultrarare postmodern acceptance speech when she won the Globe for playing the [gasp] female president of the United States on Commander in Chief . Adopting some of the more treacly clichés of the acceptance-speech artform, Davis began to tell a story about a little girl out on the red carpet who tugged on her dress and told her, “Because of you, I want to be president.” And then Davis yanked the rug right out from under the audience, weaponizing their “ awwws ” against them by revealing the story to be a complete lie. Besides showing the Globes audience as a bunch of credulous saps, Davis also delivered a subtle message: Keep giving me awards and I’ll keep being this funny.
17. Elaine Stritch, 56th Primetime Emmy Awards (2004)
Outstanding Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program, Elaine Stritch at Liberty
Leave it to another Broadway legend to perform the hell out of a Hollywood acceptance speech. Elaine Stritch won the Emmy for the HBO filmed version of her stage show, then proceeded to stage an epic siege of the podium. Stritch referenced her drinking problem, got bleeped, nearly got HBO exec Chris Albrecht’s name wrong, and then declared she’d just start naming names until someone dragged her off the stage. Was the speech genuinely unhinged? Did it matter? By the time Stritch was shouting out Scott Saunders (“I don’t like him very much, but he got us the money!”) and flirting with an F-bomb, she’d very nearly earned herself a second Emmy for the speech itself.
16. Jack Palance, 64th Academy Awards (1992)
Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role, City Slickers
It took nearly 40 years from Jack Palance’s first brush with Oscar — he was nominated back to back for 1952’s Sudden Fear and 1953’s Shane — for him to finally get the prize, and by the time he took the stage to accept his award from Whoopi Goldberg, the old man was full of beans. Casting a glance downstage to that year’s host, his City Slickers co-star Billy Crystal, Palance quoted his character, Curly, by sneering, “I crap bigger than him.” He followed that with some words about how Hollywood producers won’t always cast old veterans for parts that require any physicality, before dropping to the stage and performing a series of one-armed push-ups, to the delight of the audience — not to mention Crystal, who spent the rest of the evening riffing off of Palance’s surprising show of vitality.
15. Michelle Williams, 71st Primetime Emmy Awards (2019)
Best Lead Actress in a Limited Series or TV Movie, Fosse/Verdon
Two years before she took on the role of Gwen Verdon, Michelle Williams found herself inadvertently at the center of one of the great dust-ups of the new Me Too era when it came out that she had been paid a fraction of what her All the Money in the World counterpart, Mark Wahlberg, had been paid for the job. Two years later, when accepting her Emmy, Williams put a button on that moment, thanking her bosses at FX for listening to her needs for more vocal training, dance lessons, better fake teeth and wigs (essential!), and for paying her equally. “They understood that when you put value in a person, it empowers that person to get in touch with their own inherent value, and where do they put that value? They put it into their work.” Williams made an extra-pointed statement for women of color in this regard, making the speech a home run for advocacy — and succinctness (the entire speech fell under two minutes).
14. Sacheen Littlefeather for Marlon Brando, 45th Academy Awards (1973)
Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role, The Godfather
The massive success of The Godfather was a victory lap for Marlon Brando, overturning a decade’s worth of film failures overnight and making him the obvious best actor winner for his performance as Don Corleone. But Brando boycotted the ceremony to speak out against the ongoing mistreatment and misrepresentation of Native Americans in Hollywood films amid the ongoing occupation of Wounded Knee. In his place, Brando sent Native American actress and activist Sacheen Littlefeather to read a prepared statement (which was forcibly reduced onscreen by Oscars producers). Littlefeather received a torrent of boos in the theater and was harassed by industry members backstage before reading the entire speech for the press backstage. Brando was criticized not only for using the Oscars as a political platform but also for forcing Littlefeather to face the heat from the industry. Months before she passed away in 2022, the Academy issued Littlefeather a formal apology.
13. Sheryl Lee Ralph, 28th Critics’ Choice Awards (2023)
Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series, Abbott Elementary
So many speeches, even great ones, play to the room rather than the audience watching at home. Not I, said the great Sheryl Lee Ralph, who after speaking of the hardships in her career, knew exactly where her camera was and pointed straight to it with the righteous self-conviction of a trash-talking WWE champion. But instead of bringing the pain, she brought a new pinnacle of the uplifting awards speech. Making eye contact with our souls as the camera operator zoomed in, she spoke of the importance of self-love (which can sound phony coming out of most Hollywood mouths) over any other form of respect, making even the most wavering self-doubter into a believer in only the way a truly self-actualized person can.
12. Jim Carrey, MTV Movie Awards (1999)
Best Male Performance, The Truman Show
It’s important to situate this one on the grand Jim Carrey timeline, as it came mere months after he was snubbed for an Academy Award and shortly after he filmed the Andy Kaufman biopic Man on the Moon . Perhaps taking Kaufman’s cue, Carrey accepted his tub of golden popcorn deep in character as a Jim Morrison–esque free-loving biker burnout. To the delight of several A-listers in the crowd (his co-star Courtney Love but also Keri Russell and Salma Hayek), Carrey leeringly noted that there was “Some fine-looking pussy in the room tonight,” thus checking the “quotable” box on our scorecard and bringing the performance of sincerity to a whole other stratosphere.
11. Cuba Gooding Jr., 69th Academy Awards (1997)
Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role, Jerry Maguire
In any awards show — but especially at the Oscars, it seems — there is an unspoken battle between the producers and the awards recipients. The producers have their eye on the clock, not wanting to let the ceremony drift toward an unwieldy runtime. They also know that a rambly, unfocused speech isn’t great television, and they tend to hustle those off the stage with a premature cue of the orchestra. This battle can be uncomfortable to watch play out. An overzealous orchestra can give the unwelcome impression that we’re all just trying to get this over with as soon as possible. But when Cuba Gooding Jr. accepted his Oscar for Jerry Maguire and seemed momentarily dazed by the enormity of the moment, the orchestra’s intrusion kind of hip-checked Gooding into action. Suddenly fighting back against the music, Gooding’s thank-yous got louder, his gratitude got more exuberant — he was about 30 seconds away from levitating off the stage. It’s one of the most pure expressions of joy ever seen at the Oscars, and it’s even better when you watch the view from the production booth .
10. Tom Hanks, 66th Academy Awards (1994)
Best Actor in a Leading Role, Philadelphia
It’s fair to criticize the history of straight actors being rewarded for playing gay characters, and Hanks was quick to acknowledge the unfairness of his position when awarded an Oscar for playing Andy Beckett in Philadelphia . The lasting impression of his speech is its impassioned plea for acceptance of gay people during a hostile time, one that rings more honestly felt than the talking points later male-acting winners would mimic. Hanks chokes up early and stays that way throughout, giving one of his first steps as everyone’s movie dad and a quintessential message speech so articulate you might overlook its religious overtones. Hanks also recognizes the impact of two gay fellow creatives on his life, a fellow actor and his high-school drama teacher, a statement that would be satirized a few years later in In and Out — bet you can’t name another acceptance speech that inspired a whole movie!
9. Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams, MTV Movie Awards (2005)
Best Kiss, The Notebook
The MTV Movie Awards’ Best Kiss category has a checkered past, displaying mild-to-medium homophobia some years and engendering over-the-top eye rolls other years. But it’s an interesting subset of Hollywood awards in that it has, in retrospect, recognized some of our greatest performers (from Moonlight actors to Twilight actors). So how, in accepting such an award, do you express the gratitude indicative of a future star while also recognizing the frivolity of the whole affair? If you’re complete geniuses like Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams, you re-create the whole lift-kiss thing from The Notebook onstage while perfectly mid-aughts sex-groove Maroon 5 plays in the background. And one of you has a Darfur T-shirt on. The then-still-dating stars milked the moment for all it was worth, demonstrating a level of confidence and showmanship you would expect from seasoned stars, not two breakthroughs, as well as a savvy understanding of the fact that the MTV Movie Awards exist for fan service and not much else. While McAdams hasn’t had many opportunities to accept awards thereafter (fix it, Academy cowards!), this speech set the tone for Gosling’s later mischief-maker persona, someone who refuses to take any awards ceremony too seriously.
8. Michael Moore (with Michael Donovan), 75th Academy Awards (2003)
Best Documentary Feature, Bowling for Columbine
Even with Moore’s reputation for political pot-stirring, the filmmaker was entering Oscars night as something of a success story, riding high on the praise for Bowling for Columbine that made him among the surest bets to win that night. But this ceremony was also three days after the U.S. invaded Iraq. Taking the stage for his documentary feature win with his fellow nominees, the audience gave him a standing ovation (how often does that happen for docs?!) and chaos ensued. Moore called out the Bush administration, remarking, “We live in fictitious times [with] fictitious election results that elects a fictitious president … sending us to war for fictitious reasons.” Instantly throughout the theater a cloud of boos descends, with scattered agreeable applause, and the voice of fear visibly ringing in the head of every star on camera not to show their true feelings (catch Scorsese beginning to clap, though! Harrison Ford, living for the chaos!). It would make Moore a household name in America and serve as table setting for his next film, Fahrenheit 9/11 , the highest-grossing documentary to that point.
7. Olivia Colman, 91st Academy Awards (2019)
Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role, The Favourite
Colman’s win takes us on a breakneck guided tour of the best categories of awards speeches, arriving at each new fence post with a swiftness envied by most high-speed rail systems: the wildly funny type, the directed-to-the-daydreamers-at-home motivational type, the sobbing type, the effusively aware-of-her-fellow-nominees type. It is arguably the most quotable acceptance speech of recent years, from the anxious opener, “It’s genuinely quite stressful,” to her smooching “LADY GAGA!!” finish. But the speech category that ties them all together is one more typically found at the Golden Globes: the drunk type (later, Colman admitted that expecting not to win, she’d gotten knackered). Every great speech should offer a lingering question (in this case, who earned Colman’s early tears of “Hi”?). And if they must be scattered, they should be gloriously and hilariously so, and cement what makes the recipient a deeply lovable and emotionally activated comedic actress [ blows raspberry ].
6. Halle Berry, 74th Academy Awards (2002)
Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role, Monster’s Ball
Halle Berry’s Oscar for Monster’s Ball was the first best-actress win for a Black woman, carrying with it the weight of not only the past but the present of an industry that hadn’t advanced as much as it liked to tell itself it had. And Berry managed to meet that moment with the feeling in her speech. Berry’s emotional outpouring is still impossible not to be moved by on rewatch, and it (along with Denzel’s speech) remains the gold standard for how to recognize the performers that paved the road before you. Crucially, her speech mentions not only former Oscar nominees like Dorothy Dandridge and Diahann Carroll but also her contemporaries who hadn’t been given the chance at an Oscar because of Hollywood’s continual denial of opportunities for Black actresses.
5. Sally Field, 57th Academy Awards (1985)
Best Performance by a Leading Actress, Places in the Heart
Sally Field got so much shit for this, you guys. Expressing how her second win felt like acceptance into an industry — that had once pigeonholed and discarded her as Gidget and the Flying Nun — in a way that her first had not, this speech was a moment of vulnerable “you like me!” earnestness that instead turned her into the butt of the joke. Forgive me for tsk-tsking the culture at large from half a century ago, but there was no mention at the time in the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences rulebook that a second-time Oscar winner must be self-effacing, and there has yet to be any to this day.
4. Viola Davis, 89th Academy Awards (2017)
Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role, Fences
A rousing speech can floor us in a single quote, as Viola Davis did: “There’s one place where all the people with the greatest potential are gathered … that’s the graveyard.” Hers is the delivery of a master speechwriter, piecing together the kind of personal and professional gratitudes that usually get doled out in an acceptance speech, and molding them into a moving proclamation as much about the artist’s calling as it is about how you choose to live a life. Too many speeches, even by the most charismatic stars, are bullet-pointed names of people we know nothing about, but Davis’s speech makes them feel like real humans begging to be known. Lesser stars can be clunkier when trying to pull into their speeches the themes of the film for which they won, but Davis shows Fences and the work of August Wilson as intrinsic to who she is as an actress and a person who makes this one hell of an artist’s statement.
3. Shirley MacLaine, 56th Academy Awards (1984)
Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role, Terms of Endearment
Humility is a great virtue, provided it comes naturally. But if that’s not what you’re feeling, sing out , Louise! Shirley MacLaine ended her Oscar speech with a hurried “I deserve this,” which was partly comical and partly sincere — MacLaine owning her pride at achieving a career pinnacle in Terms of Endearment , into which she put so much of her creativity and hard work. But before the sincere part, MacLaine took a good-natured dig at the length of the ceremony, poked fun at her own recently earned reputation for transcendentalism, thanked Jack Nicholson for the “middle-aged joy” of having him in bed in the film, and thanked her co-nominated co-star, Debra Winger, for her “turbulent brilliance.” MacLaine and Winger famously feuded on the set of the film, and Winger’s bemused (yet smiling!) reaction seemed to hide something muttered under her breath. We’ll say it again, there’s nothing like an Oscar speech that produces a blind item.
2. Julia Roberts, 73rd Academy Awards (2001)
Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role, Erin Brockovich
You think you know the moment when Julia Roberts’s Oscar speech becomes the second greatest of all time. Certainly, it was when she unhinged her jaw and let out that irrepressible, whooping cackle, ending with an “I love it up here!” Or wait, perhaps it was a smidge earlier when she admonished orchestra conductor Bill Conti (“Stick Man”) to keep his baton at bay. But the real moment when Roberts officially GOATed that speech arrived with the fifth word out of her mouth: “Thank you, thank you ever so much!” like she was just handed a scepter from the queen of England. And wield that scepter she did. By a rough watch of the clock, Roberts took three minutes and 48 seconds — including one break to make sure her dress looked pretty — to be gracious (mentioning her fellow nominees), quotable (she loves it up there!), and unabashedly thrilled. The speech was criticized at the time, mostly for being too long and for forgetting to thank the real Erin Brockovich (whom Roberts had thanked profusely at the Golden Globes). But what her critics failed (and in some cases continue to fail) to see is that the Oscars exist as a public pageant because of the power of movie stars. And here was Roberts, one of the biggest movie stars in the world, accepting a long-awaited industry recognition of her talent. So she took her time, straightened her dress, and thanked everybody else, from Steven Soderbergh to Albert Finney, Danny DeVito to her niece Emma. Her speech was everything the Oscars should be: self-indulgent, loudly complimentary about artists, compulsively watchable, and long.
1. 1. Dame Emma Thompson, 53rd Golden Globes (1996)
Best Motion Picture Screenplay, Sense and Sensibility
Let this be your quarterly reminder to invite Dame Emma Thompson to every awards show and let her do whatever she wants. There has never been a more ingenious way of accepting a Hollywood award than when Thompson called a séance on the ghost of Jane Austen after adapting Sense and Sensibility . Owing the success of the film’s writing (and thus the screenplay award she was accepting) to the original author, Thompson jettisoned a traditional speech and instead composed a diary entry in the voice of Austen herself, as if she had attended the Globes. (Among the speech’s many Austen-approximating brilliancies include calling the ceremony the “Golden Spheres” and saving the worst of her scorn for Thompson herself.) In doing so, Thompson simultaneously takes the piss out of the awards, exalts Austen, and ever-so-deftly silences any lingering naysayers who didn’t believe that a mere actress could translate the prose of one of the greatest writers of all time. And after winning the lion’s share of acting prizes a few years before for Howards End , why not have a little fun? Few have ever dared, much less achieved, a pre-written gag awards speech so decadently bold, but Thompson has the talent to pull it off without breaking a sweat. Her Austen invocation feels commensurately silly and self-aggrandizing, while hitting the bull’s-eye of legitimate gratitude. It’s a perfect speech if there ever was one, and it undoubtedly paved the way for her Oscar win that year .
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The 30 Best Movie Inspirational Speeches. Cinema's most stirring oratories and spirit-raising team talks. by Helen O'Hara |. Updated on 26 03 2020. In times of trouble, you need a little help...
From sports to war, love to education, and beyond, a great speech raises goosebumps like nothing else in film can. These examples are some of the best speeches we've used to inspire us.
In these speeches, the speaker enthralls the audience with his wisdom and experience and motivates them to carry out the impossible in life. We, at the Cinemaholic, made a list of top movie speeches ever that will inspire you.
Whether it is inspiring a team before the big game, soldiers before the big battle, students before entering the real world or as a rally cry against evil, corruption and the wicked, these speeches have transcended art and have entered the popular lexicon, sometimes as satire, but sometimes as a source of inspirations.
Iconic movie speeches have a profound impact on pop culture and resonate with audiences, tapping into deep emotions and symbolizing powerful themes. Movie speeches, such as those delivered by Vader and Luke in Star Wars and Jack Nicholson in A Few Good Men, showcase the immense power of performance and the impact of truth-telling.
The Greatest Movie Speeches/Monologues of all time! by jaimie-k • Created 14 years ago • Modified 14 years ago. Starting with the following, I'm going to try and compile a definitive list of the greatest speeches ever captured on film...
From 300 to Dead Poets Society, these pep talks motivated characters and audiences alike.
Regardless of how long the moment is, these speeches inspire their audiences. RELATED: 10 Great Movies That Surprisingly Aren't Adapted From A Book. Several films contain historically accurate and entertainingly original movie speeches. Many of them stand the test of time, and others mark a new era.
To celebrate the move, we've compiled a sample of the best speeches immortalized in film, delivered by people who clearly got an 'A' in public speaking.
Welcome to awards season, when the acceptance speeches can make or break careers, cement fandoms, and spark blind items. Here are the 50 greatest of the last 55 years of Hollywood history.