1077 Best Movie Monologues

Braveheart (William Wallace)

Braveheart (William Wallace)

Category: Movie Role: William Wallace From: Braveheart

Sons of Scotland. I am William Wallace. Yes I’ve heard. Kills men by the hundreds and if he were here he’d consume the English with fireballs from his eyes and bolts of lightning from his arse. I am William Wallace. And I see a whole army of my countrymen here in defiance of tyranny. You have come to fight as free men and free men you are. What would you do without freedom? Will you fight? Aye, fight and you may die, run and you’ll live, at least a while. And dying in your beds many years from now, would you be willing to trade all of this, from this day to that, for one chance, just one chance, to come back here and tell our enemies that they may take our lives but they’ll never take our freedom!

Breakfast at Tiffany's (Holly Golightly)

Breakfast at Tiffany’s (Holly Golightly)

Category: Movie Role: Holly Golightly From: Breakfast at Tiffany's

Look, I know what you think. And I don’t blame you, I’ve always thrown out such a jazzy line. But really…except for Doc…and you…Jose is my first non-rat romance. Oh, not that he’s my ideal of the absolute finito. He tells little lies and worries about what people think and he wants to be the President of Brazil. I mean it’s such a useless thing for a grown man to want to be and takes about fifty baths a day. I think a man should smell, at least a little bit. No, he’s too prim and cautious to be my absolute ideal. If I were free to choose from anybody alive, just snap my fingers and say “Come here, you!”, I wouldn’t pick Jose. Nehru maybe or Adlai Stevenson or Sidney Poiter or Leonard Bernstein…but I do love Jose. I honestly think I’d give up smoking if he asked me to!

Breaking the Waves (Bess McNeill)

Breaking the Waves (Bess McNeill)

Category: Movie Role: Bess McNeill From: Breaking the Waves

Bess McNeill, for many years you’ve prayed for love, should I take it away from you again, is that what you want?
No, no. I’m still grateful for love.
What do you want then?
I pray for Jan to come home.
He will be coming home in ten days. You must learn to endure, you know that!
I can’t wait.
This is unlike you, Bess. Out there there are people who need Jan and his work. What about them?
They don’t matter. Nothing else matters. I just want Jan home again. I pray to you, oh please, won’t you send him home?
Are you sure that’s what you want?
Yes.

Brian's Song (Gale Sayers)

Brian’s Song (Gale Sayers)

Category: Movie Role: Gale Sayers From: Brian's Song

You all know that we hand out a game ball to the outstanding player. Well, I’d like to change that. We just got word that Brian Piccolo is … that he’s sick, very sick. And, it looks like he … might never play football … again, or, uh, … a long time. And, I think we should dedicate ourselves to, uh, give our maximum effort to win this game and give the game ball to Pic. We can all sign it. And take it up. Aw, sh-sh, my God.

Bridesmaids (Megan)

Bridesmaids (Megan)

Category: Movie Role: Megan From: Bridesmaids

Yeah, oh shit. Took a hard hard violent fall, kinda pin-balled down hit a lot of railings, broke a lot of shit. I’m not gonna say I survived. I’m gonna say I thrived. I met a dolphin down there and I swear to God that dolphin, looked not at me, but into my soul, looked into my Goddamn soul.

Bridesmaids (Megan)

Bridesmaids (Megan)

Category: Movie Role: Megan From: Bridesmaids

MEGAN: I think you”re ready to hear a little story about a girl named Megan who didn”t have a very good time in high school. I”m referring to myself when I say Megan, it”s me Megan. I know you look at me now and think, boy she must have breezed through high school. Not the case Annie. This was not easy going up and down the halls with. They used to try to blow me up. People used to throw firecrackers on my head in high school. Firecrackers, literally, not figuratively. They called me a freak. Do you think I let that stop me? Do you think I went home crying to my mommy, “Oh, I don”t have any friends.” I did not. You know what I did? I pulled myself up, I studied hard, I read every book in the library and now I work for the government and have the highest possible security clearance. Don”t repeat that. I cannot protect you. I know where all the nukes are and I know the codes. You would be amazed, a lot of shopping malls. Don”t repeat that.I have six houses. I bought an eighteen wheeler just cause I could. You lost Lillian. You got another best friend sitting right in front of you if you”d notice. You need to stop feeling sorry for yourself. I do not associate with people that blame the world for their problems cause you”re your problem Annie, and you”re also your solution. You get that? I know you do, I know you do. Come on, bring it in.RelatedShareTweetPin

I have six houses. I bought an eighteen wheeler just cause I could. You lost Lillian. You got another best friend sitting right in front of you if you”d notice. You need to stop feeling sorry for yourself. I do not associate with people that blame the world for their problems cause you”re your problem Annie, and you”re also your solution. You get that? I know you do, I know you do. Come on, bring it in.RelatedShareTweetPin

Brief Interviews With Hideous Men (Ryan)

Brief Interviews With Hideous Men (Ryan)

Category: Movie Role: Ryan From: Brief Interviews With Hideous Men

Yes, it was a pickup. Plain and simple. And she was what one might call a granola cruncher. A hippie. And she was straight out of central casting: the sandals, flamboyantly long hair, financial support from parents she reviled, and some professed membership in an apostrophe-heavy Eastern religion that I would defy anyone to pronounce correctly. Look, I’ll just bite the political bullet and confess that I classified her as a strictly one-night objective. And that my interest in her was due almost entirely to the fact that, yes, she was pretty. She was sexually attractive. She was sexy. And it was really nothing more complicated or noble than that. And having had some prior dealings with the cruncher genus, I think the one-night proviso was due mostly to the grim unimaginability of having to talk with her for more than one night. Whether or not you approve, I think we can assume you understand. And there’s something in the way – I mean, a near contempt, in the way that you can casually saunter over to her blanket and create the sense of connection that will allow you to pick her up. And you almost resent the fact that it’s so goddamn easy. I mean, how exploitative you feel that it is so easy to get this type to regard you as a kindred soul. I mean, you almost know what’s gonna be said before she even opens her mouth. Okay, so now there we are in my apartment, and she begins going on about her religious views. Her obscure denomination’s views on energy fields and connections between souls via what she kept calling ‘focus.’ And in response to some sort of prompt or association, she begins to relate this anecdote. And in the anecdote, there she is, hitchhiking. Well, she said she knew she made a mistake the moment she got in the car. Her explanation was that she didn’t actually feel any energy field until she had shut the car’s door and they were moving – at which point it was too late. And she wasn’t melodramatic about it, but she described herself as literally paralyzed with terror. It was something about his eyes. She said she knew instantly in the depths of her soul that this man’s intentions were to brutally rape, torture, and kill her. And that by the time the psychotic had exited into a secluded area and actually said what his true intentions were, she wasn’t the least bit surprised because she knew that she was going to be just another grisly discovery for some amateur botanist or scout troupe a few days later – unless she could focus her way into a soul connection that would prevent this man from murdering her. I mean to focus intently on this psychotic as an ensouled and beautiful, albeit tormented, person in his own right, rather than merely as a threat to her. And I’m well aware that what she is about to describe is nothing more than a variant of the stale, old love-will-conquer-all, but for the moment, just bracket your contempt and try to see what she actually has the courage and conviction to really attempt here. Because imagine what it must have felt like for her. For anyone. Contemplate just how little-kid-level scared you’d be that this psychotic could bring you to this point simply by wishing it. And now here she is in the car, and she’s realizing that she’s in for the biggest struggle of her spiritual life. She stares directly into the psychopath’s right eye and wills herself to keep her gaze on him directly at all times. And the effects of her focus, she says that when she was able to hold her focus, this psychopath behind the wheel would gradually stop ranting and become tensely silent. And she wills herself not to weep or plead, but merely to use focus as an opportunity to empathize. And this was my first hint of sadness in listening to the anecdote as I found myself admiring certain qualities in her story that were the same qualities I had been contemptuous of when I first picked her up in the park! And then he asked her to get out of the car and lie prone on the ground. And she doesn’t hesitate or beg. She was experiencing a whole new depth of focus. She said she could hear the tick of the cooling car, bees, birds. Imagine the temptation to despair in the sound of carefree birds only yards from where you lay breathing in the weeds. And in this heightened state, she said she could feel the psychotic realizing the truth of the situation at the same time she did. And when he came over to her and turned her over, he was crying. And she claimed it took no effort of will to hold him as he wept, as he raped her. She just stared into his eyes lovingly the entire time. She stayed where he left her all day in the gravel, weeping, and giving thanks to her religious principles. She wept out of gratitude, she says. Well, I don’t mind telling you, I had begun to cry at this story’s climax. Not loudly, but I did. She had learned more about love that day with the sex offender than in any other stage of her spiritual journey. And I realized in that moment that I had never loved anyone before. She had addressed the psychotic’s core weakness. The terror of a soul-exposing connection with another human being. Nor is any of this all that different than a man sizing up an attractive girl at a concert and pushing all the right buttons to induce her to come home with him. And lighting her cigarettes and engaging in an hour of post-coital chit-chat. Seemingly very intent and close. But what he really wants to do is give her a special disconnected telephone number and never contact her again. And that the reason for this cold and victimizing behavior is that the very connection that he had worked so hard to make her feel terrifies him. Do you see how open I’m being with you here? Well, I know I’m not telling you anything you haven’t already decided that you know. I can see you forming judgments with that chilly smile. You’re not the only one who can read people, you know. And you know what? It’s because of her influence that I am more sad for you than pissed off. Because the impact of this story was profound and I’m not even gonna begin to describe it to you. Can you imagine how any of this felt? To look at her sandals across the room on the floor and remember what I had thought of them only hours before. And I’d say her name and she’d say ‘What?’ and I’d say her name again. Well, I’m not embarrassed. I don’t care how this sounds to you now. I mean, can you see how I could not just let her go after this? I just, I grabbed onto her skirt and I begged her not to leave. And then I watched her gently close the door and walk off barefoot down the hall, and never seeing her again. But it didn’t matter that she was fluffy or not terribly bright! Nothing else mattered! She had all of my attention – I had fallen in love with her! I believed that she could save me. Well, I’m aware of how all this sounds, I can see that look on your face. And I know you. And I know what you’re thinking. So ask it. Ask it now, this is your chance. ‘I believed she could save me,’ I said. Ask it now. Say something! I stand here naked before you. Judge me, you bitch. You happy now? You all worn out? Well, be happy because I don’t care. I knew she could and I knew I loved. End of story.

Broadcast News (Aaron Altman)

Broadcast News (Aaron Altman)

Category: Movie Role: Aaron Altman From: Broadcast News

Maybe the best part of your life is over and you don’t want to get up and start the bad part…What will happen? OK, that’s very easy. Five, six years from now, I’ll be back in town to collect an award representing the surge in foreign coverage by local stations…Anyway, I’ll be walking along with my wife and my two lovely children and we’ll bump into you. And my youngest son will say something, and I will tell him it’s not nice to make fun of single, fat ladies.

Brokeback Mountain (Ennis Del Mar)

Brokeback Mountain (Ennis Del Mar)

Category: Movie Role: Ennis Del Mar From: Brokeback Mountain

I tell ya there, there were these two old guys ranched up together, down home. Earl and Rich. And they was the joke of town, even though they were pretty tough ol’ birds. Anyway they, they found Earl dead in an irrigation ditch. Took a tire iron to ‘im. Spurred him up, drug him ’round by his dick ’till it pulled off. … I wasn’t… nine years old. My daddy, he made sure me and brother seen it. Hell for all I know, he done the job.

Boogie Nights (Dirk Diggler)

Boogie Nights (Dirk Diggler)

Category: Movie Role: Dirk Diggler From: Boogie Nights

I’ve been around this block twice looking for something, a clue. I’ve been looking for clues and something led me back here, yeah, so here I am. Coulda been me who was at Ringo’s place when the shit went down. Hey, I know how it is cuz I been there. We’ve all done bad things. We all have those guilty feelings in our hearts, you want to take your brain out of your head and wash it and scrub it and make it clean, well no. But I’m gonna help you settle this. First we’re gonna check for holes, see what we can find, then we’re gonna get nice and wet, so you’re gonna spread your legs. That’s good, so you know me, you know my reputation? Thirteen inches is a tough load, I don’t treat you gently. That’s right: I’m Brock Landers. So I’m gonna be nice and I’m gonna ask you one more time. Where the fuck is Ringo? I’m a star, I’m a star, I’m a star. I’m a star. I’m a star, I’m a big bright shining star.