"That's funny, that plane's dustin' crops where there ain't no crops"

Usually when a film criticism outlet runs a Top 100 list, it's a sign of a desperation grab for new readers during a slow editorial month. So by golly, how slow must June have been for Empire to run a 1001 Greatest Movie Moments Feature in their latest issue? Whenever Obsessed With Film runs a Top 100 or Top 1000 anything, be sure to throw these words back into my face and bring me up on this issue. Anyway, according to the list, Cary Grant rigidly running, from the shootings of a crop duster in the 1954 Alfred Hitchcock classic North by Northwest, probably the first bit of exercise he got in any of his movies up until that point is the greatest movie moment of all time. I don't know who compiled the list, but they deserve some kudos for A) a pretty damn good choice and B) for telling us the moment occurs at exactly 01:08:44. north-by-northwest-hitchcock-cary-grant-pic-2 In my now defunct Greatest Movie Scenes feature, it took me only five weeks until I got around to placing it in my feature. Empire say...

"Even Hitchcock knew the scene made no sense at all. After all, if you've lured your quarry all the way to a lonely bus stop, why not simply shoot him?"
But of course that is the genius of North by Northwest, as it's a fantasy comedy/thriller, based on the idea of over the top theatre play. It's a movie about mistaken identity, and play-acting to the 100th degree. Later in the movie, Cary Grant's advertising salesman, a profession we don't need reminding is all about moral deception tells the villainous James Mason....
"The only performance that will satisfy you is when I play dead."
Such fun when it comes from the mouths of such a legend like Cary Grant. Here's the crop dusting scene for your enjoyment...

A little too high for my liking on the list is E.T.'s riding as high as the moon which is memorable but really the greatest singular moment achieved on film? I think not. Missing from the Top 20 are unmistakable landmarks of film, such as the last reel of The Good, The Bad & The Ugly or the ending from Planet of the Apes. The list also loses all kinds of credibility and shows Empire's complete laziness by having the rest of the picks after the Top 20 relegated to cheap throaway gimmicks. I.E. numbers 85 - 94 are "The Ten Greatest Moments in Citizen Kane" and 125-149 all being made up of Steven Spielberg moments!
Editor-in-chief
Editor-in-chief

Matt Holmes is the co-founder of What Culture, formerly known as Obsessed With Film. He has been blogging about pop culture and entertainment since 2006 and has written over 10,000 articles.