Ten great head shots in the movies
Lots of people get shot in the head in the new film 'Wanted'. Read our guide to some other great head shots on film
The Deer Hunter (1978)
Currently languishing in the pesto purgatory of neo-revisionist
anti-American sentiment, Michael Cimino’s spectacularly moving film on
the pain and confusion that the Vietnam War was wreaking across a
divided nation is in danger of being a baby that’s thrown out with the
bathwater. Centring on the fortunes of a trio of drafted Pennsylvanian
steel workers, it culminates with a heartrending scene in which
Christopher Walken’s broken and forsaken GI is reduced to playing
Russian roulette for coin in the back room of a Saigon rub ’n’ tug shop.
His opponent is old pal Robert De Niro, who’s trying to convince him to
come home. The law of decreasing returns, however, has other ideas…
Blade Runner (1982)
‘Wake up. Time to die.’ Intergalactic cyber-lug Leon Kowalski (seriously? Robots are called Kowalski?) is having a bad day. As if escaping from an off-world colony, hopping a freighter back to Earth and being forced to bump off a nosy cop isn’t enough, now he’s got Harrison Ford poking around his flat and pinching his family snaps, and a distinctly cranky Rutger Hauer moping over his shoulder. What better way to let off some steam than to take that snoop Ford and give him a damn good pasting in a darkened, industrial alleyway? But just as Leon’s getting into the swing, a shot rings out. In a shocking display of replicant-on-replicant violence, Sean Young’s Rachel has snuck up out of nowhere and planted one smack between his purpose-built eyes, causing his skull to shatter inward in a creepy, blood-rimmed, candle-hole in the cake icing sort of way.
Young Guns (1988)
So you ask
yourself, what happened to the Western after the moody empire building
of ‘McCabe and Mrs Miller’ and the beauteous folly of ‘Heaven’s Gate’?
The '80s happened, that’s what. Harking back to the boil-in-the-bag
B-pic dynamics of the '40s and '50s, Christopher ‘Gone Fishin’’
Cain re-wired the Western as pulpy, star-driven, apolitical drive-in
fodder with ginger laughing boy Emilio Estevez saddled in the role of
that lovable thief and serial murderer, Billy the Kid. Forced into a
game of cat and mouse in and around New Mexico with wrinkled old
coot Jack Palance, the predictable denoument sees Billy’s crew holed up
in an abandoned farm house and stuck on the business end of a massive
Army-supplied machine gun. Billy escapes to shoot Palance in the centre
of the forehead from long range, delivering the nonsensical, albeit
very cool line, ‘Reap the whirlwind, Murphy’. It saves the film. Just.
Bullet in the Head (1990)
That
brutal title says it all. Before the dove-laden logic wilderness of
‘Windtalkers’, ’Mission Impossible’ and ’Paycheck’, stocky, long-time
underachiever John Woo produced perhaps the ultimate film about being
shot in the head back in his bone-crunching days as a Hong Kong maestro
of genre cinema. With plot and character not dissimilar to ‘The Deer
Hunter’, Woo’s film sees three happy-go-lucky Fonz-a-likes
prancing around some neon-lit back lot without a care in the world
before deciding to prolong their summer hols in war-ravaged Saigon to
kickstart some ‘naughty’ black market ops. After being captured by a
group of blood-thirsty Viet Cong, one of our plucky smugglers gets
blasted in the head for non-compliance, and survives! He spends his
days shooting heroin in a Hong Kong back alley waiting for that ever
elusive mercy kill.
Wild at Heart (1990)
Hats and, indeed, heads off to Bobby Peru, the sickest, twistedest, most physically repulsive lip-quivering creep in the whole history of cinema. A Vietnam vet with a history of psychotic behaviour, Bobby has been spending time in the town of Big Tuna drinking cold beers, molesting hot women and planning ruthless crimes. That is, until a heist gone wrong leaves him spattered with a feedstore clerk’s arterial blood and facing a carful of angry Texan lawmen, with nowhere to turn but down the barrel of his trusty sawnoff. The exact circumstances behind Bobby’s death remain unclear – does he slip, or is the final shot intentional? Either way, there’s no mistaking the consequences: Bobby’s entire head, firmly encased in a spit-slick stocking, rips loose with the force of the blast, pirouetting balletically through the air before slapping wetly to earth like a condom packed with chopped liver. A fitting end to a gruesome existence.
Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)
In
what could and should have been an awful miscalculation, Arnie
triumphantly returns to the ‘Terminator’ franchise as guardian angel to
a teenage John Connor – the future saviour of mankind whose existence
he so tenaciously attempted to obviate in 1984’s seminal sci-fi
actioner. In the red corner is the liquid-metal form of
coathanger-jawed non-actor Robert Patrick, into whose malleable noggin
Schwarzenegger puts round after round of point blank double-ought
buckshot to no deleterious effect whatsoever. That Patrick went on to
reprise/spoof his iconic role in ‘Wayne’s World 2’ suggests, however,
that he didn’t escape with his grey matter entirely intact.
Hana-Bi (1997)
Making Clint Eastwood look like some farm-reared, blubbering mammy’s
boy who wouldn’t know a .44 Magnum from a electric hand blender, ‘Beat’
Takeshi Kitano is the Japanese pseudo-clown turned meditative
overhauler of the Yakuza genre whose entire oeuvre comprises a
veritable rogues gallery of great shots to the skull. There were
threats in his debut film ‘Violent Cop’ where he plays an out of
control detective who darts around town in a brown suit, forcing all
and sundry to suck Glock while the precinct commissioner tears his hair
out. The same goes for the Russian Roulette-based tomfoolery of
‘Sonatine’. But it’s 1997’s ‘Hana-Bi’ that contains one of cinema’s
most beautiful head shots, as Kitano’s officer Nishi casually caps some
goon in the forehead while capturing a spiralling plume of blood in
gorgeous super-slow motion.
Fight Club (1999)
'How do you shoot
the devil in the back? What if you miss...?' So retorts Kevin Spacey’s
crippled fall guy to the implication that he missed the opportunity of
taking down vindictive Turkish criminal puppetmaster Keyser Soze in
Bryan Singer’s brainy 1996 potboiler ‘The Usual Suspects’. It’s a
thorny dilemma all right, and one echoed in Edward Norton’s agonised
refrain of millennial self-doubt in David Fincher’s divisive ‘Fight
Club’; 'What if you try to blow your brains out to rid yourself of the
Nietzschian fury burning within the mental projection of your
sociopathic imaginary friend?' Many of us are still unclear as to the
answer.
Last Days (2005)
Michael Pitt loads up on guns and alienates his friends in Gus Van Sant’s meandering, arguably tasteless portrait of Kurt Cobain’s final moments on earth. The Cobain-worshipping community was up in arms when the movie was first announced, but after persuading their dads to let them see it, found that there was nothing much to get excited about; indeed, the movie relentlessly stifles any potential sense of intrigue or even interest through a merciless deployment of icy arthouse distancing techniques. Pitt’s anhedonic rockstar Blake potters about the house, plays the guitar, walks aimlessly through the woods for what feels like days, then caps it all by capping himself, just like Kurt, with a shotgun under the chin in the greenhouse. It may be better to burn out than fade away, but either is preferable to being slowly bored to death.
No Country For Old Men (2007)
Javier Bardem’s ludicrously improbable yet downright bone-chilling turn as tonsorially misguided angel of death Anton Chigurh in the Coen brothers’ Oscar-winning Tex-Mex carve-up threw an intriguing spanner into the crime-scene works. Harbouring an ironclad motive and given ample opportunity, the only legal obstacle to his prosecution – apart from the not-inconsiderable feat of actually catching him – would be presenting to a jury the means by which he dispatched his victims. One between the eyes from the nozzle of a high-pressure compressed air canister is quiet, clean and leaves no room for ballistic reports. It’s hardly worth the boys from forensics even getting out of bed.
Author: Adam Lee Davies, David Jenkins, Tom Huddleston
User comments on this story
-
- D A Beckham said...
- Two from Cronenberg, Scanners head explosion (a mental head shot), and from Videodrome, The squirting head shot in the conference room, and Barry Convex's head splitting open from the tumor gun. Posted on Jul 06 2008 15:33
- Report as inappropriate
-
- pac_manager said...
- Time Out is sick for celebrating violence in such a way and you are all sickos for getting hard-ons over seeing someone killed. No-wonder the world is F+cked Posted on Jul 06 2008 14:11
- Report as inappropriate
-
- Michael said...
- The best one was barney the movie where he got his shotgun out his hat and shot the winkster,good times. Posted on Jul 05 2008 04:35
- Report as inappropriate
-
- driftwood said...
-
how about the disturbing headshot in "full metal jacket"???
or the fantastic "in bruges"? Posted on Jul 04 2008 11:05 - Report as inappropriate
-
- Araby said...
- I know this might seem a bit obvious but the Pulp Fiction head shot when they are driving the car has to be in there. Still remember the first time seeing it. Very funny... for a head shot. Posted on Jul 02 2008 07:17
- Report as inappropriate
-
- Shum said...
-
What about "MANIAC"
That is clearly the best head shot ever committed to celluloid. Tom Savinis work is sickening. A close range double barrelled shotgun blow to the head from which the camera doesnt pull away. Icky mess. Posted on Jul 02 2008 00:54 - Report as inappropriate
-
- Dylan said...
- How about the end of "No Way Out" when Will Patton shoots himself in the head in front of Gene Hackman and Costner ... GREAT head shot ... Posted on Jul 01 2008 22:28
- Report as inappropriate
-
- Link said...
- Come on, you missed two of the top shots - Pyle blowing his head off on the lav in Full Metal jacket (top marks for symbolism) and the all time best head shot in Fulci's The Beyond when the creepy zombie girl gets her head blown in half in slow motion! Posted on Jul 01 2008 17:40
- Report as inappropriate
-
- Smells said...
- Bambi? Posted on Jul 01 2008 17:26
- Report as inappropriate
-
- Dave said...
- "Boogie Nights"...Little Bill at New Year's Eve 1979 into 1980. "Se7en"...John Doe in the field. "A History of Violence". "JFK"?? Posted on Jul 01 2008 15:40
- Report as inappropriate
-
- Scaramouche said...
- "Soldier Blue" -- Lingering slow-motion of a head shot with splattering blood and brains, and an eyeball flying out of the socket. Can't beat it! Posted on Jul 01 2008 13:27
- Report as inappropriate
-
- Dave said...
- What about "The Untouchables"...Sean Connery's Canadian "unapprovable methods"...or "The Devil's Advocate"? Does DeNiro's pantomime in "Taxi Driver" count?? Posted on Jul 01 2008 13:12
- Report as inappropriate
-
- Con F said...
- Thanks for acknowledging the oversight re: "They Shoot Horses," but I know of at least two other deserving candidates: the original "Walking Tall" (which has a COUPLE of head shots!) and "The Godfather" (ditto!). Posted on Jul 01 2008 12:54
- Report as inappropriate
-
- tom said...
-
'They Shoot Horses, Don't They', was a genuine oversight, and a collective culpa is in order for that one. Dawn of the Dead was discussed, but ended up being left out due to some kind of clerical error. Sorry. Some of us also fought hard for 'Alferd Packer: The Musical' (the amazing snowman scene) but others didn't find it particularly funny.
And Travis, yes, it was just bullets. But when we come to compile our top ten of other head-intruding objects, we'll be sure to count Battle Royale alongside Lost Highway, Bad Taste, Star Trek II and hey! maybe even Dawn of the Dead for that classic screwdriver scene. Posted on Jul 01 2008 11:54 - Report as inappropriate
-
- Con said...
- The climax of 'They Shoot Horses Don't They' should be on this list. I, for one, didn't see THAT coming..... Posted on Jul 01 2008 11:37
- Report as inappropriate
Most popular on this site
Features
Bridesmaid revisited
Anne Hathaway crashes more than a wedding in Rachel Getting Married.
Old-school house
Even in the age of the multiplex, a few old movie theaters continue to thrive in NYC.
Keeping the faith
Hope abounds in Spike Lee’s latest—as it does in the director himself.
Going the distance
TONY toughs out the Toronto International Film Festival, blow by blow.
Race you to the top
Tyler Perry doesn’t need critics—and may not need new audiences.
Spanish intuition
Scarlett Johansson and Rebecca Hall flirt away an Iberian summer in Vicky Cristina Barcelona.



What do you think?
Post your comment now