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GREATEST CROWD
FILM SCENES |
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(See this site's Film Terms Glossary for definitions and examples, the History of Film by Decade, and an extensive timeline of other Milestones and Turning Points in Film History.) |
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(Part 2, chronological) Part 1 | Part 2 |
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| Film Title and Description
of Crowd Film Scene |
Example
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| With many massive crowd scenes, including the crowds watching the famed chariot race, the arduous slave/prisoner march and the revolt. |
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| Spartacus (1960) With numerous crowd scenes, including the gladiators' freedom revolt and the large-scale battle sequences with thousands of extras, and the sight of 1,000's of men on crucifix crosses lining the road. |
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With a panoramic view of Lawrence's looting Bedouin army poised to attack a train in the desert, and other long-shots of desert battles and caravans. |
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The Longest Day (1962) Darryl F. Zanuck's film re-created the Allied invasion on Normandy on D-Day in 1944. One aerial shot along the beach was unbelievable - as hundreds of soldiers ran up during the assault. |
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| Cleopatra (1963) The most expensive film ever made ($300 million adjusted for inflation) that featured massive crowd scenes and large scale battles. |
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| Chimes at Midnight/Falstaff
(1966) The Battle of Shrewsbury in this film was considered the first great battle scene of the modern era, influential on Mel Gibson's Braveheart (1995). |
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| Ran (1985, Jp.) Akria Kurosawa's last great film - a medieval Japanese interpretation of William Shakespeare's King Lear that featured violent, colorful large-scale battles. |
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| The Last Emperor (1987) Bernardo Bertolucci's Best Picture winner included a memorable scene in which 3-year old toddler Pu Yi (Richard Vuu) rushed out of his palace to see hundreds of obedient servant/vassals bowing before him. |
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| Stargate (1994) One of the last films to employ actual extras that comprised "a cast of thousands" - instead of simply using CGI to "paint" them in, as evidenced by its massive slave revolt scene. |
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| Braveheart (1995) A Best Picture-winner with large-scale, brutally-violent battle scenes, led by William Wallace (Mel Gibson). |
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| Antz (1998) This CGI animated film featured crowd scenes of up to 10,000 individual characters, including the "wrecking ball" scene comprised of hundreds of individual ants, and the Starship Trooper-ish battle scene between ants and termites. |
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| Gladiator (2000) Many of the large-scale crowds and battles in this film featured thousands of CGI extras to save money and time, as well as insure safety when dealing with such things as computer-generated tigers. Winner of the Best Visual Effects Oscar. |
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| The Lord of the Rings
Trilogy (2001-2003) Peter Jackson's trilogy featured many large-scale CGI battles, the largest and most noteworthy being the Battle of Helm's Deep in The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002) (pictured). |
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| Gangs of New York (2002) With many brutally violent gang wars, especially the opening and closing battles between the Natives and the Dead Rabbits; also, the performance of Uncle Tom's Cabin with hundreds of booing spectators, and the protection of a church from a vengeful Bill Cutting (Daniel Day-Lewis) by hundreds of women and children holding candles. |
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| I, Robot (2004)
This film featured massive crowd scenes, including the battle scene between live humans and CGI robots. |
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