Thanks To These Famous Movie Scenes, There Are 8 Songs I’ll Never Hear The Same Way Again

Music often inspires emotional responses, however, while a song may naturally spark joy or sadness, some films have been able to reframe them in entirely new ways. Anything that gets deep into the senses has the ability to leave a mark and make an impression. A familiar smell can transport you back in time, sights and sounds can trigger a memory, but with music, it has the power to attach itself to multiple moments.

There’s a reason that soundtracks are so important for films, and people may even choose a handful of songs that become part of their own soundtrack. But while music is highly emotive, it can also evolve, and trigger different emotions over time. For instance, when an upbeat happy song is used to underscore a tense moment, or a laid-back tune is applied to a violent situation. Several films take familiar songs and give them a whole new meaning and life by using them in unusual or innovative ways.

8

Stuck in the Middle with You

Reservoir Dogs

Michael Madsen as Mr. Blonde dancing in Reservoir Dogs

First on the list, Reservoir Dogs stands out as one of the most popular Quentin Tarantino films ever made. Having released in 1992, the film helped to establish Tarantino as a serious director, with the potential to make incredibly tense crime films. His characters were well-defined, and the adventures that took place took the audience on a journey. But Tarantino also used his work to subvert expectations.

Quentin Tarantino in Reservoir Dogs and True Romance imagery

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This can be seen in one scene when Mr. Blonde is torturing a cop. While brandishing a razor blade, Mr. Blonde turns on the radio, and gets into the mood with an upbeat, cheerful tune, “Stuck in the Middle With You.” He dances, sings along, and gets into the groove, all while preparing to mutilate and injure the man tied up in front of him. Undoubtedly, this creepy scene has changed the song into a reminder of something much more sinister.

7

Don’t Stop Me Now

Shaun of the Dead

Shaun, Ed, and Liz with pool cues in Shaun of the Dead

Queen is one of the most popular bands of all time, having released a series of hits throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Their music often provides upbeat, joyful, and ecstatic tones that are empowering and encouraging. However, in Edgar Wright’s Shaun of the Dead, “Don’t Stop Me Now” becomes a beacon which brings a swarm of zombies to a pub where survivors are hiding. While trying to find a way to stop the music, Shaun and company are forced to fight a zombie who breaks into the pub, and as they pelt him with pool cues, they find themselves moving in time with the music and each other.

This moment is clearly set up for comedy, and it does a great job at delivering that. However, it has forever made this song, in particular one that brings to mind visions of Simon Pegg beating up an old man with a pool cue. It’s still as peppy as ever, but the context of the song is forever changed.

6

Mr. Blue Sky

Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2

Baby Groot frozen with Drax looking at him in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2

James Gunn is known for his wonderful taste in music and the way that he inserts that into his films. Throughout the Guardians of the Galaxy franchise, there are dozens of great classic songs and hidden gems that get their moment to shine in the films. However, during the opening of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, as Baby Groot finds himself dancing around a large arena while his friends fight a terrifying monster, the song “Mr. Blue Sky” transforms.

Peter Quill in Guardians of the Galaxy with Adam Warlock in Guardians of the galaxy vol 2

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The song is already a fun and jovial piece that lifts spirits and moods, but in this setting, it serves as a distraction to young Groot that actually puts him in danger. While the rest of the Guardians are fighting for their lives, Groot is lost in the music, dancing, and narrowly avoiding certain death. But despite his reckless behavior, the team look out for the youngest member, and continue to push him to safety, and out of harms way.

5

Free Bird

Kingsman: The Secret Service

Harry stands in the front of a church in Kingsman: The Secret Service

“Free Bird” by Lynyrd Skynrd is one of the most infectious and exhilarating guitar songs out there. The song delivers a sense of freedom, joy, and whimsy. However, when it appears as a backing track to the violent outbreak in Kingsman: The Secret Service, the song becomes a different type of infectious. As Harry, played by Colin Firth, sits in on a vitriolic church sermon which spouts nothing but hatred, the villains of the film test out a new technology on the congregation.

Their powerful radio waves inspire the congregation to behave erratically, and extremely violently, turning on one another and Harry. However, Harry is a trained elite agent, and he takes down the competition with relative ease. The ensuing fight is bloody and brutal, with “Free Bird” highlighting the intensity and action of the scene.

4

Hallelujah

Shrek

valheim shrek swamp house

“Hallelujah” is a religious song which depicts a biblical story. However, when it appears in Shrek, that same worshipful melody is transformed into an emotional, heart-wrenching ballad about loneliness, isolation, and distance. After Shrek retrieves Princess Fiona, he finds himself feeling deeply upset by the thought of not seeing her again. Despite being an ugly green Ogre, Fiona saw something in him that made him see more in himself.

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Regardless, overwhelmed by emotion, Shrek turns on Donkey, and he returns to his swamp alone. And as the music plays, it elevates the scene, making Shrek’s heartbreak into a shared experience. While the movie may be silly, goofy, and aimed at kids, it absolutely packs a punch in this tragic moment before Shrek decides to pursue Fiona.

3

Singin’ In The Rain

A Clockwork Orange

Alex and his droogs sing during a home invasion in A Clockwork Orange

“Singin’ in the Rain” debuted in 1952 as the titular song of the popular Gene Kelly film. And like the film, the soong captures romance, fun, and music in a charming and catchy tune. However, the cheerful ditty is taken to a much darker place when it is reused in 1971s A Clockwork Orange. This dystopian horror starring Malcolm McDowell follows a group of young thugs in a hellish alternate reality.

McDowell plays Alex, the leader of his group, and on quiet evenings, the group chooses to partake in what they call ultra-violence. They commit heinous crimes, break into homes, and cause havoc. And when they force themselves into the home of a kind young couple, Alex decides to cheerfully sing this show tune while performing degrading and cruel actions. It’s absolutely harrowing, and a departure from the source material of the highest level.

2

Heroes

The Perks of Being A Wallflower

Sam on the Back of a Car While Driving Through a Tunnel in The Perks of Being a Wallflower

David Bowie is a masterful storyteller and artist, with music that resonated around the world. However, some of his music can be quirky, alternative, and challenging to find a clear meaning in. This was in some ways the case for “Heroes,” a powerful ballad that feels like a call to action. However, when the song appears in The Perks of Being a Wallflower, it becomes much more clear the undertones of connection, strength, overcoming challenges.

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For many, this may have been the message they got from the song immediately, but the context of the film, and the pain and suffering felt by the protagonists, makes it abundantly clear just how much of an anthem this song can be. Since first seeing the film, the song has never played without reminding me of that iconic scene driving through a tunnel with Logan Lerman, Emma Watson, and Ezra Miller.

1

Hip To Be Square

American Psycho

Patrick Bateman, played by Christian Bale, discusses his CD collection in American Psycho

Christian Bale is a stunningly talented actor who elevates characters beyond the page into living, breathing things that exude emotion and intensity. This came to light early in his career when he landed the starring role in American Psycho as Patrick Bateman, and he slowly unravels over the course of the film. But one of the defining attributes of the murderous Bateman is his obsession with music, style, and being generally considered hip and in the know.

Bateman emphasizes this at several points in the film, and the movie masterfully sees Bateman try to juggle these intense obsessions and his darker nature. But in the scene when Bateman brings a work rival back to his apartment, he discusses his love for Huey Lewis and the News, and then murders his guest with an axe. The song continues to play, and the juxtaposition and symmetry is wild, creating yet another song that has forever been transformed by the film it appears in.

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