The iconic scene from the movie Primal Instinct, in which Sharon Stone crosses her legs in a short dress without panties, still stirs men's imaginations today. The famous scene was also tried to be imitated by contestants on Spanish television who took part in the game Cross Your Legs as Sharon Stone. Although the task seems easy - after all, all you need is a pretty girl in a mini skirt, it's anything but simply crossing your legs and looking irresistibly attractive. Who do you think did the best in the role of Sharon Stone?
Watching movies has largely moved from cinemas to the comfort of our own home, where we can rewind certain scenes, watch them again, skip the most gruesome or boring part, or hit pause to see a scene in detail or check if we're really right seen Here are ten movie scenes where we pressed pause the most.
Did you also not understand what was going on while watching the movie? As it turns out, you are not always to blame for this, because in many films, some scenes that explain later events are simply left out by the authors of the film. Here are nine deleted movie scenes that explain unexplained scenes.
The Pokemon that the mobile game Pokemon GO made more popular than ever before in their 20-year history will sooner or later get their own movie. It's just inevitable. Even the Angry Birds are there. But before we get a movie version starring pocket monsters, let's take a look at what movies like ET, Throat, Indiana Jones, etc. would look like if they featured Pokemon.
Coffee is the focus of many people's attention every morning (and for many many times during the day), and it is also the focus of many famous movie scenes. These are the most memorable movie scenes with coffee, which you must watch with a cup of coffee in hand and accompanied by a characteristic itch.
The multi-talented Charlie Chaplin was a giant of silent film. He was one of the most prolific and influential filmmakers of the silent film era, and his film career spanned 65 years. During this time, this English actor, director, screenwriter and musician created many film masterpieces that went down in golden letters in film history. Charlie Chaplin is not synonymous with comedy by chance. These are the funniest scenes from his memorable movies.
You can count the number of movies without a hot movie scene on the fingers of one hand. Nudity has become an integral part of the seventh art, and if we don't see a bare breast in the film, girls in underwear stir men's imaginations. Below, we present the hottest underwear movie scenes of all time.
Phil Grishayev has an interesting hobby that will delight movie lovers in particular. Namely, he visits famous real film locations and publishes photos taken at the same location on Instagram and compares them with scenes from the film. Check out how they've changed in the meantime.
Did you know that many famous movie scenes were improvised? Although countless hours go into the preparation of the film, so that every detail is polished to the end, no one can predict what will really happen on the film set. So many shots that make it to the movie screens were not planned at all, but arose spontaneously as a combination of various circumstances. See movie scenes you never knew were completely improvised.
Wild chases are the heart and soul of many a movie. Car chases first appeared in the early 1970s, and Hollywood quickly turned them into a spectacle that takes viewers' breath away. From James Bond, Mad Max, Taxi, Mission: Impossible, the Bourne franchise, to The Fast and the Furious, these films cannot be imagined without a good chase. Watch a compilation of the best car chase scenes of all time.
Four wheels, fearless drivers and stunts. These are key elements of some of the most glorious car chase scenes, or more commonly known as "car chases". So what are the best and most dangerous movie car chase scenes?
What happens when a photographer and a film buff combine their love into one? A series of photographs that glue together identical scenes, one taken from a famous film and the other from real life. FILMography, as it is called, was signed by Christopher Moloney and is probably the closest that photography and film (the one in the camera is on its deathbed) will ever come.
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