Let’s play.

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You may have to think for a minute, but it won’t hurt. I promise.

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Soooo many to choose from, but I’m going with the scene that chokes me up no matter how many times I see it.

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Casablanca.

The part where the Nazis start singing the German anthem and Paul Henreid instructs the band to play La Marseillaise. The French patriots stand, sing… and drown out the Germans. A simple, poignant moment where good triumphs evil.

It’s classic.

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If you’re young… and you’ve never seen Casablanca? Please do so immediately. It’s the perfect movie.

Drama, romance, humor, war.

Love, loss and sacrifice. I don’t care how many times I watch it… it never disappoints.

Now you.

What’s your favorite old Hollywood movie scene?

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41 thoughts on “Let’s play.”

    1. This is my answer too. When George Bailey returns to a house filled with friends and neighbors giving him money and learns he’s “the richest man in Bedford Falls,” I get choked up each and every time.

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  1. Before I read more than the headline, the scene that jumped into my head was from the same film – the ending scene with “Major Strasser has been shot! Round up the usual suspects”, and “Louis, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship.” But the one you picked brings tears to my eyes. A bit of trivia for you: the character who approaches Captain Renault at the end of the scene and says “Your winnings, sir” was played by Marcel Dalio (uncredited). When he arrived in the US in 1940 he spoke no English. Dalio played Rosenthal in the 1937 French film La Grande Illusion. He was the only survivor of WW II in his family. The rest were killed in Nazi concentration camps.

    I’m not sure I can pick a single favorite. But I agree, everyone should see Casablanca.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I agree with you. This anti-Nazi scene in Casablanca is my favorite old Hollywood movie scene, too. Another scene that gets me is from The Man who Shot Liberty Valance when we discover it was Tom Doniphon (John Wayne) and not Ranse Stoddard (Jimmy Stewart) who shot Liberty Valance (Lee Marvin) . – “When legend becomes fact, print the legend.”

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