Best Film Speeches and Monologues
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Film Title/Year and Description of Film Speech/Monologue |
Screenshots
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About Schmidt (2002)
Screenwriter(s): Alexander Payne, Jim Taylor
"I'm
An Extremely Sexual Person"
While serving chicken noodle soup, aging hippie
Roberta Hertzel (Kathy Bates), the mother of fiancee husband
Randall Hertzel (Dermot Mulroney), told widower and retired
insurance executive Warren Schmidt (Jack Nicholson), the father
of the bride-to-be Jeannie Schmidt (Hope Davis), about the
key to successful marriages - sex!:
You already know how famously they get along
as friends, but did you know that their sex life is positively
white hot? The main reason both of my marriages failed
was sexual. I'm an extremely sexual person, I can't help
it, it just how I'm wired, you know, even when I was a
little girl. I had my first orgasm when I was 6 in ballet
class. Anyway, the point is that I have been always very
easily aroused and very orgasmic, Jeannie and I have a
lot in common that way. Clifford and Larry, they were nice
guys, but they just could not keep up with me. Anyway,
I don't want to betray Jeannie's confidence, but let me
just assure you that whatever problems those two kids may
run into along the way, they will always be able to count
on what happens between the sheets to keep them together.
More soup?
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About Schmidt (2002)
Screenwriter(s): Alexander Payne, Jim Taylor
"Today
is a Special Day... I Am Very Pleased"
The wedding reception speech, a conciliatory
self-healing and consoling about-face reflection, by the father
of the bride - 66 year-old Warren Schmidt (Oscar-nominated
Jack Nicholson), a recently-retired Omaha, Nebraska insurance
actuary; he was asked to give a few words following the wedding
of his only daughter Jeannine (Hope Davis) to a "nincompoop" waterbed
salesman named Randall (Dermot Mulroney):
I didn't get much sleep last night, so forgive
me if I'm a little foggy. But you know, today is a special
day. We're here to mark a crossroads in the lives of two
people. A crossroads where they come together and now walk
along a new road. It's not the same road that they were
on before. It's a new road. A road that, uhm (pause)
- As many of you know, I lost my wife recently. And Jeannie
lost her mother. Helen and I were married 42 years. She
died very suddenly. I know we all wish she could be with
us today, and I think it would be appropriate to acknowledge
just how pleased she was that Jeannie had found someone
to share her life with. A companion. A partner....That
brings me to what I really want to say. What I want to
say, what I really want to say is, uh...
Then after a very long pause, Warren
continued - seemingly ready to cathartically release his disdain,
disgust and anger, and lash out at his hated new in-laws, but
instead, he decided to swallow his pride:
Thank you, to you, Randall, for taking such
good care of my daughter especially recently with our loss.
Ever since I arrived here a couple of days ago, I have
so enjoyed getting to know Jeannie's new family...Everybody
else, terrific people. Terrific. And in conclusion, I just
want to say on this special day, this very special day,
that I am very pleased.
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Adaptation. (2002)
Screenwriter(s): Charlie Kaufman, Donald Kaufman
"Today
is the First Day of the Rest of My Life"
The opening voice-over monologue by self-loathing
screenwriter Charlie Kaufman (Nicolas Cage), heard over the
credits - presented as small white typewriter text at the bottom
of a black screen:
Do I have an original thought in my head?
My bald head. Maybe if I were happier my hair wouldn't
be falling out. Life is short. I need to make the most
of it. Today is the first day of the rest of my life. I'm
a walking cliché. I really need to go to the doctor
and have my leg checked. There's something wrong. A bump.
The dentist called again. I'm way overdue. If I stop putting
things off, I would be happier. All I do is sit on my fat
ass. If my ass wasn't fat, I would be happier. I wouldn't
have to wear these shirts with the tails out all the time,
like that's fooling anyone. Fat ass. I should start jogging
again. Five miles a day. Really do it this time. Maybe
rock climbing.
I need to turn my life around. What do I need
to do? I need to fall in love. I need to have a girlfriend.
I need to read more and prove myself. What if I learned Russian
or something, or took up an instrument. I could speak Chinese.
I would be the screenwriter who speaks Chinese and plays
the oboe. That would be cool. I should get my hair cut short.
Stop trying to fool myself and everyone else into thinking
I have a full head of hair. How pathetic is that? Just be
real. Confident. Isn't that what women are attracted to?
Men don't have to be attractive. But that's not true. Especially
these days. Almost as much pressure on men as there is on
women these days.
Why should I be made to feel I have to apologize
for my existence? Maybe it's my brain chemistry. Maybe that's
what's wrong with me. Bad chemistry. All my problems and
anxiety can be reduced to a chemical imbalance or some kind
of misfiring synapses. I need to get help for that. But I'll
still be ugly though. Nothing's gonna change that.
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Adaptation. (2002)
Screenwriter(s): Charlie Kaufman, Donald Kaufman
Wasting
My Two Precious Hours
The answer given to struggling screenwriter Charlie
Kaufman (Nicolas Cage) during a 3-day NYC writing seminar given
by lecturer Robert McKee (Brian Cox), when Charlie asked about
how to "write a story where nothing much happens...more
a reflection of the real world":
The real world?...The real f--king world.
First of all, you write a screenplay without conflict or
crisis, you'll bore your audience to tears. Secondly, nothing
happens in the world? Are you out of your f--king mind?
People are murdered every day. There's genocide, war, corruption.
Every f--king day, somewhere in the world, somebody sacrifices
his life to save somebody else. Every f--king day, someone,
somewhere takes a conscious decision to destroy someone
else. People find love, people lose it. For Christ's sake,
a child watches a mother beaten to death on the steps of
a church. Someone goes hungry. Somebody else betrays his
best friend for a woman.
If you can't find that stuff in life, then
you, my friend, don't know crap about life. And why the f--k
are you wasting my two precious hours with your movie? I
don't have any use for it! I don't have any bloody use for
it.
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Adaptation. (2002)
Screenwriter(s): Charlie Kaufman, Donald Kaufman
The
Ending: "I Like This. This is Good"
In the last lines of the
film, long-suffering scriptwriter Charlie Kaufman finally realized
how to finish his script for The Orchid Thief, after
honestly expressing his love for pretty ex-dating partner Amelia
Kavan (Cara Seymour) and for once being filled with hope -
with the upbeat playing of The Turtles' song "Happy Together." The
film concluded with a sped-up time lapse photograph of flowers
and an LA street over a period of several days:
I have to go right home. I know how to finish
the script now. It ends with Kaufman driving home after
his lunch with Amelia, thinking he knows how to finish
the script. S--t, that's voice-over. McKee would not approve.
How else can I show his thoughts? I don't know. Oh, who
cares what McKee says? It feels right. Conclusive. I wonder
who's gonna play me. Someone not too fat. I liked that
Gerard Depardieu, but can he not do the accent?
Anyway, it's done. And that's something. So:
'Kaufman drives off from his encounter with Amelia, filled
for the first time with hope.' I like this. This is good.
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Gangs of New York (2002)
Screenwriter(s): Jay Cocks, Steven Zaillian, Kenneth Lonergan
Knife-Fighting
and Killing
The chilling scene in which Bill "The Butcher" Cutting
(Daniel Day-Lewis) showed young Amsterdam Vallon (Leonardo
DiCaprio) how to knife-fight, using a butchered pig as a proxy
for a man, before stabbing the pig repeatedly in demonstration:
You get to know a lot butchering meat. We're
made up of the same things - flesh and blood, tissue, organs.
I love to work with pigs. The nearest thing in nature to
the flesh of a man is the flesh of a pig...This is the
liver. The kidneys. The heart. This is a wound -- the stomach
will bleed and bleed. This is a kill. This is a kill. Main
artery. This is a kill.
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Gangs of New York (2002)
Screenwriter(s): Jay Cocks, Steven Zaillian, Kenneth
Lonergan
"That's
What Preserves the Order of Things - Fear"
WASP gang leader Bill "The Butcher" Cutting
(Daniel Day-Lewis) delivered a wizened, weary speech at the
foot of Amsterdam Vallon's (Leonardo DiCaprio) bed after he'd
saved him from an assassination attempt, not knowing Priest
Vallon (Liam Neeson) was Amsterdam's immigrant father:
No, I don't never sleep too much. I have
to sleep with one eye open, and I only got one eye, right?...
I'm forty-seven. Forty-seven years old. You know how I
stayed alive this long? All these years? Fear. The spectacle
of fearsome acts. Somebody steals from me, I cut off his
hands. He offends me, I cut out his tongue. He rises against
me, I cut off his head, stick it on a pike, raise it high
up so all on the streets can see. That's what preserves
the order of things. Fear.
That one tonight, who was he? A nobody. A coward.
What an ignominious end that would have been. I killed the
last honorable man fifteen years ago. Since then, it's...
You seen his portrait downstairs? (pause) Is your
mouth all glued up with cunny juice? I asked you a question...
Oh, you got a murderous rage in you, and I like it. It's
life, boiling up inside of you. It's good. The Priest and
me, we lived by the same principles. It was only faith divided
us.
He gave me this, you know. That was the finest
beating I ever took. My face was pulp, my guts was pierced,
and my ribs was all mashed up. And when he came to finish
me, I couldn't look him in the eye. He spared me because
he wanted me to live in shame. This was a great man. A great
man. So I cut out the eye that looked away. Sent it to him
wrapped in blue paper. I would have cut 'em both out if I
could have fought him blind. Then I rose back up again with
a full heart and buried him in his own blood... He was the
only man I ever killed worth remembering. I never had a son.
Civilization is crumbling.
He kissed his own hand, and placed it on Amsterdam's
forehead as a blessing.
God bless you.
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Gangs of New York (2002)
Screenwriter(s): Jay Cocks, Steven Zaillian, Kenneth
Lonergan
Eulogy
for the Fallen Dead in New York
In the film's closing monologue, Amsterdam
Vallon (Leonardo DiCaprio) eulogized the dead and fallen of
New York after major riots in 1863, narrating that New York
would be rebuilt, but that they wouldn't be remembered:
In the end, they put candles on the bodies,
so's their friends -- if they had any -- could know them
in the dark. The city did this free of charge. It was four
days and nights before the worst of the mob was finally
put down. We never knew how many New Yorkers died that
week before the city was finally delivered. My father once
told me we was all born of blood and tribulation. So then,
too, was our great city. But for those of us who had lived
and died in them furious days... it was like everything
we knew was mightily swept away. And no matter what they
did to build this city back up again -- for the rest of
time -- it would be like nobody even knew we was ever here.
It was followed by the astonishing "time
passage" sequence which showed the development of Lower
Manhattan from 1863 through to pre-9/11 while U2's Hands
That Built America played. |
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