This is the final offering of my 3-part blog about movies. It's a given that actors speak the dialogue written in the script, or at least are supposed to say the words the writers gave them. But that's not always the case. Some of our most memorable movie lines were not in the script. They were adlibbed by the actor and were so great they were kept in the movie. And many of them became classics. Here are some of those now classic lines of unscripted movie dialogue.
Casablanca (1942)
"Here's
looking at you, kid."
Humphrey
Bogart first said this line while teaching Ingrid Bergman how to play poker
between takes. The phrase came out spontaneously during one of the Paris
flashback scenes and became a recurring line in the movie, most memorably near
the end.
Midnight Cowboy (1969)
"I'm
walkin' here!"
Dustin Hoffman
was genuinely angry when a taxi (not part of the movie) ran a red light and
almost hit him and Jon Voight while they were filming a scene on the city
streets. Hoffman stayed in character and the line stayed in the movie.
Taxi Driver (1976)
"Are
you talkin' to me?"
Robert De Niro
did a brilliant job of improvising the entire scene, inspired by a single
sentence in the script—Travis looks in the mirror.
Young Frankenstein (1974)
"What
hump?"
For his
character of Igor, Marty Feldman kept shifting the hump on his back as a joke
for the other cast members. After someone noticed, the improvisation was worked
into the script.
Goodfellas (1990)
"What
do you mean funny? Funny how? … Funny like I'm a clown, I amuse you?"
Joe Pesci
based this dialogue on an encounter he had years earlier with an actual mobster
at a restaurant where Pesci worked.
Jaws (1975)
"You're
gonna need a bigger boat."
Roy Scheider
didn't have a line right after his close encounter with a Great White, so he
made up this one.
Apocalypse Now (1979)
"You're
an errand boy, sent by a grocery clerk."
On location,
Marlon Brando folded up pages of the script and turned them into a paper hat,
which he put on his head. He later ad-libbed some 18 minutes of dialogue for
his character, Colonel Kurtz.
The Third Man (1949)
"In
Italy for 30 years under the Borgias, they had warfare, terror, murder,
bloodshed. They produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance.
In Switzerland they had brotherly love, 500 years of democracy and peace. And
what did that produce? The cuckoo clock."
Only Orson
Welles would have the confidence to add his own lines to a screenplay by Graham
Greene.
Silence of the Lambs (1991)
"Hsssssss."
Anthony
Hopkins made an unexpected hissing sound right after delivering the memorable
line about eating the census taker's liver with fava beans and a nice chianti.
He intended it as a joke. The director kept it in the movie, along with Jodie
Foster's stunned reaction.
Deliverance (1972)
"Squeal
like a pig!"
The most
disturbing line in the movie was improvised on set in an effort to clean up the
dialogue, with the hope that Deliverance could eventually be shown on
television.
Dr. Strangelove (1964)
"Mein
Fuhrer, I can walk!"
Peter Sellers,
who played three characters in Stanley Kubrick's Cold War satire, ad-libbed
much of his dialogue. The lines were later added to the screenplay after they
had been spoken.
The Shining (1980)
"Heeeeere's
Johnny!"
Director
Stanley Kubrick, who lived in England, didn't know the reference to Johnny
Carson's Tonight Show. Jack Nicholson's dark joke nearly ended up on the
cutting room floor.
There are, of course, many more occasions where this has happened, producing memorable movie lines. This is merely a sampling.
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