There Is No Kill Like Overkill/Film

"Alfred: We burned the forest down."
 * It's all the more chilling for its quiet, guilt-tinged delivery when Alfred in The Dark Knight Saga reveals how his mercenary squad finally caught the Robin Hood-style bandit they were hunting after they couldn't find him and he realized didn't care about money:

"Ernest:(coming down the stairs with what looks like a whole lot of fishing gear, strapped with wires and making whirring sounds.) You see before you the state-of-the-art troll-fighter of tomorrow. This multi-directional unitized high-tech fighting machine is toll-free, mucus-free and comes equipped with fifteenmillion megabytes of double-density wayfer-thin alloy forming a virtual reality of modern troll extermination.(he heaves the large device he's carrying gun-like on his shoulder into his hands in a dramatic pose.) Need I say more? (He glances down at Lady Hackmoore who is decidedly unimpressed)."
 * The 2010 Live Action Adaptation of Space Battleship Yamato seems to run on this trope. The ship is armed with enough gun turrets to throw a wall of bullets in every direction and destroys an entire fleet this way. Not to mention the ship's iconic BFG, the Wave Motion Gun is powerful enough to create a massive shockwave that creates a crater when it's fired near the Earth's surface. And that says nothing about the damage it does to the enemy ship on the receiving end. Not to mention causing powerful tremors felt in the Earth Defense Forces underground base and knock out nearly all communications.
 * As Hannibal so eloquently put it, "overkill is underrated."
 * The James Bond films are archetypal for their rather messy deaths, although most of them are not caused by Bond himself or are Karmic Deaths. Then Licence to Kill upped the ante with a Darker and Edgier Bond who had no qualms with dispatching enemies in the most violent way possible, culminating with sending the Big Bad to Hell via an exploding tanker truck.
 * Bond's cars are a special case themselves - a self-destructing Lotus, a BMW being sewn in half, an Aston Martin that gets rotated 7 times...
 * The Godfather:
 * The death of Santino "Sonny" Corleone. Ambushed at a toll booth by a dozen Tommy Gun-wielding gangsters, shot several dozen times inside his car, then shot some more outside the car, then shot on the ground after he died, then had his face kicked in for good measure. The commentary for the film confirms that they wanted to make sure Sonny stayed dead, given that his elderly father had been repeatedly shot earlier in the film and survived, and that Sonny was known to be a tough bastard.
 * At the end of the movie, The body count for the end of Part II is relatively minor compared to Part I  It would take the mob boss massacre orchestrated by Joey Zaza in Part III to top the whole trilogy.
 * In Training Day,
 * Predator might be a borderline case in that the protagonists are fighting an almost invisible opponent and just happen to have his approximate position known. But then, the six people are emptying two assault rifles, two sub-machine guns, a grenade launcher, and a minigun at a patch of jungle over the next 40 seconds, all the while reloading and continuing to fire. And they didn't even get a good hit.
 * RoboCop:
 * Just about everything. Giving a security robot Gatling guns? Sure, why not? How about making a new police robot as tall as a auditorium? Sure...
 * In the original Robocop, the main character's brutal death at the hands of Boddicker and his men before he was rebuilt as the titular cyborg.
 * Crazy Survivalist Burt Gummer from the Tremors series is all about the overkill. In the second movie, his "Grizzly" anti-tank rifle prompts Earl to comment, "Man, Burt, you put a whole new shine on the word 'overkill'." And it's not even the biggest gun he uses in the series...
 * Ending of Bonnie and Clyde, with the titular characters being ambushed by a posse. Except this is also Truth in Television.
 * In the fourth Rambo movie we are introduced to an un-exploded Tallboy bomb as the Mercenaries trek through the jungle toward the massacred Karen village. Later John Rambo sets up a Claymore next to the bomb while Burmese soldiers chase him. The Tallboy was developed by the British in WW 2 (more specifically, by Barnes Wallis, he of the Dambusters' Bouncing Bomb) to destroy hardened bunkers and was at the time the single most concentrated repository of High-Explosive in a single weapon. The Claymore by itself is capable of invoking the Chunky Salsa Rule on everyone within a dozen yards, when it went off and caused the Tallboy to sympathetically detonate the results were... impressive.
 * Also at one point upon stealing a machine gun turret John Rambo empties several rounds into a single soldier in a jeep literally ripping him to pieces.
 * Team America: World Police: Team America uses machine guns, rocket launchers, and missiles to kill terrorists, even if they are in a crowded city. They wind up destroying all the monuments and destroying the town, but hey, the bad guys are dead!
 * In the Robert Rodriguez film adaptation of Frank Miller's Sin City the character Hartigan, after knifing one of the primary villains of the piece in the gut and proceeding to
 * He did take Junior's other 'weapon' away once already, ineffectively, some years ago. This time, he was just making sure.
 * In Sukiyaki Western Django, Hiyomuri shoots a boy's father dead in front of him, then shoots him 4 more times once he's hit the ground and his wife is crouching over the body, who he then attempts to rape because he likes the look of her bathed in her husband's blood.
 * In Pet Sematary 2, after Edward Furlong's father kills the revived corpse of the sheriff, he leaves the house to go to search for his son. But just as he's about to open the door to his pickup, he stops, goes back in the house, empties the clip, reloads, empties the clip again, then leaves in his pickup! Zombies: Always Make Sure.
 * In The Gamers, the protagonists Back Stab an old rival with a ballista.
 * Mr. Grocer's favorite method of assassination in Grosse Pointe Blank.
 * In Outlander, Kainan's people do orbital bombardment on a planet just to kill its natural inhabitants. Of course, given the amount of damage a single Moorwen did to the colony, this is perhaps a Justified Trope in retrospect.
 * Freddy vs. Jason
 * One of Jason's first victims is the Jerkass Trey, who he impales somewhere around a half-dozen times with his machete. Afterward, noticing Trey's death spasms, Jason sets down his machete, grabs both ends of the bed, and breaks it (and Trey) in half.
 * Let's just say it; Jason Voorhees is the patron saint of this trope. Especially when played by Kane Hodder.
 * In Friday the 13 th: The Final Chapter, Tommy Jarvis hacks Jason Voorhees into little pieces. Then, in Part VI, he comes back, and impales him with a rod. That probably wasn't such a good idea.
 * Halloween:
 * The Curse of Michael Myers has Michael preparing to kill a bunch of sanitarium employees by overlooking a tray filled with medical tools. At first, it looks like he's going to grab a scalpel, but, having apparently gotten tips from Jason Voorhees, he decides to grab a huge machete (that was there for some reason) instead.
 * In Rob Zombie's Halloween II, Michael stabs a nurse in the back. And then does it again. And again, and again, until after about an entire minute filled with stabbings, he rams the knife into her skull and leaves it stuck there.
 * Portrayed in a video game within Inside Man. A young boy makes his alter ego shoot many times at what must be an already dead man's head, and then he puts a grenade in the man's mouth. The lead bank robber, who is chatting with him at the time, is appalled.
 * In X-Men Origins: Wolverine, Logan brings down a helicopter and its mutant operator, who is then incapacitated and trapped. He could use his adamantium claws to stab his helpless victim, but decides instead to blow up the entire helicopter in a massive display of pyrotechnics.
 * The Naked Gun
 * In the first movie, And Drebin's boss starts to cry, saying "My father went the same way!"
 * At the beginning of the same movie, O.J. Simpson's character is shot six times, then hits his head on a pipe, burns his hand on a stove, leans against a freshly painted door, gets his other hand caught in a window, falls face first into a wedding cake and then steps in a bear trap before finally falling into the harbor. He survives.
 * During a rooftop gunfight in the sequel, Nordberg (O. J. Simpson) assembles his weapon: It starts a Desert Eagle pistol, turns into an M60 machine gun, then a Browning M1919A4, and finally a Bofors 40mm AA gun. He fires it once immediately after the gunfight is over, blowing a hole in a building.
 * Star Trek:
 * The Narada, Nero's ship is capable of wiping out whole fleets of Klingon Warbirds and drilling down to a planet's core. (The drill is left over from when it used to be a mining ship.) As soon as he gets his hands on Red Matter, a his raging overkill tendencies just get that much worse.  Just a bit of an Omnicidal Maniac.
 * At the end of the film,
 * In The Great Mouse Detective, Ratigan tries to dispose of Basil with an overkill-tastic Death Trap including a mousetrap, an axe, a gun, and a falling anvil, noting that he couldn't decide which method would be best . . . so he used them all.
 * Ernest Scared Stupid
 * Ernest goes to his con-artist friends for help and they sell him an enormous amount of fake anti-troll equipment., but it's still impressively like overkill.

"Tom: Fourteen cans of troll-away spray nineteen ninety-five apiece. Two Bolivian Army slingshots, nine ninety-five each... troll ninja ninchucks... slime-proof troll gloves... chopped troll bait... fifteen no-troll strips... one trolling motor... for a grand total of... Ernest: Does that include the giant album of every troll love song ever written?"
 * Really, for not knowing about, Ernest had overkill coming out the whazzoo. He set up traps in dumpsters for that troll!

"ACME Chairman: You see, if the Train of Death doesn't kill him, those twenty boxes of TNT will. That, or the 100-pound anvil dangling above him, or- Oh, look. There's the Pendulum of Doom! What's the Pendulum of Doom doing here?! I did not order the Pendulum of Doom! It's overkill! Get rid of it!"
 * Also, when they were building the treehouse. They had pizza tossers, dog-food gatling guns and a helicopter bomber.
 * The fate of  in Con Air: beaten to within an inch of his life, smashed through a bridge on the extended ladder of a moving firetruck, gets electrocuted after he falls off the ladder, dumped on a conveyor belt and his head smashed by a piledriver (the machine, not the wrestling move). He doesn't get better.
 * District 9 features several varieties of alien weapons. Most result in Ludicrous Gibs, all work on this principle. And it is oh so satisfying.
 * In Inglourious Basterds, were riddled with bullets, blown up with dynamite, and  was burned to the ground.  suffered similar fate as well, although not as bad.
 * Kenneth Branagh's version of Hamlet. Hamlet not only stabs Claudius with his fencing sword, he also drops a chandelier on him and, while Claudius is pinned down by said chandelier, force-feeds him poison.
 * In Aliens, Ripley recommends nuking the site from orbit to make absolutely sure that no xenomorphs escape.
 * In Alien:Resurrection, Ron Perlman's character shoots at a little spider with his sidearm.
 * Steven Seagal is made of this trope. See the climax of Marked for Death. Seagal grabs the Big Bad, gouges out his eyes using his thumbs, breaks his back over his knee, throws him through a wall and finally sends him down an elevator shaft, where he lands on a spike.
 * Bert I. Gordon's 1955 debut monster pic King Dinosaur has a group of astronauts exploring a rogue planet that's drifted into the solar system, and discovering a giant iguana among its native animals. After being forced to flee from it, one of the astronauts calmy announces "I've brought the atom bomb", and they proceed to nuke the giant lizard. As stock footage of a mushroom cloud fills the screen, the heroes proudly announce, without a trace of irony, that "we've brought civilization to Nova."
 * Final Destination In the first movie after the cast cheats Death, they begin to die off one by one. Most of these deaths were simple, except for one. Sure you don't want to divert a meteorite to crash into the wreckage just to be absolutely sure, Death?
 * Der Clown - Payday:
 * How do you kill the remaining two villains?.
 * In the pilot of the series, they're shooting bazookas at people during one shootout.
 * In Ghostbusters II, we learn that Vigo the Carpathian was "poisoned, stabbed, shot, hung, stretched, disemboweled & drawn and quartered". After all that, he still managed to say a few words before his head died.
 * The Self-Destruct Mechanism for Resident Evil: Degeneration probably counts. In sequence, it consists of: drenching the contaminated areas, up to and including the whole facility, in flammable decontamination fluid, igniting said fluid, dropping the contaminated sections down a 3000ft deep shaft, blowing them up again, and then, if the whole place is contaminated, sealing everything under a steel cover thick and tough enough to withstand a nuclear blast. Admittedly, they are working with some of the most lethal infectious pathogens on the planet, but it's still a little overboard.
 * Considering what has happened in Resident Evil before when these lethal infectious pathogens get out, you can never be too careful.
 * Undercover Brother's
 * In 300 and Hero
 * The captain of the salvage team in Event Horizon, after having found out that the titular ship, he was inclined to fire missiles at it until it's vaporised.
 * In Shooter, a gun nut recounts the story of a sniper who was infamous for his brutality on the battlefield. The opposing side despised him so much that when they corner the sniper in the building, instead of trying to flush him out, they just bombarded it with enough artillery to level an entire city block. This is standard tactics for dealing with snipers, just not usually while they're in urban areas.
 * Letters From Iwo Jima is a rare example of overkill being shown from the receiving end.
 * Die Hard:
 * It has VERY pragmatic "terrorists" (there's always a twist on what they really are in each movie, usually thieves). Even when McClane was a nobody, and when the bad guys thought it was just a random guy, they took no chances and attempted to kill him several times, prompting John's Properly Paranoid moments on the walkie talkie.
 * Then there's a scene in the second movie where the bad guys shoot at an airplane cockpit with machine guns, filling it with bullet holes, and then throw all their grenades just for good measure. When they see him parachuting out of the explosion, they just call him (again pragmatically) "Lucky Bastard"
 * Swarmed
 * One character goes after a wasp with a double-barreled shotgun after it kills her boss, the mayor. It takes three tries, but she does eventually kill it... after destroying a chandelier, corkboard, and an office chair.
 * Later they graduate to flamethrowers, and end up blowing up the swarm with about six propane tanks. Soaked in lighter fluid.
 * In Bruges: Ray kills with many, many gunshots, even though he was at close range.
 * What does it take to defeat Shadow Moon in All Riders vs. Dai Shocker? The All Rider Kick - twenty-six Rider Kicks, performed en masse by the protagonists of every Kamen Rider series from the original through Decade. Overkill? Sure. Crowning Moment of Awesome? You bet your Scarf of Asskicking it is.
 * The death of a revived Doras in the Decade finale movie isn't quite as over-the-top, but close. He gets taken out by.
 * A feat nearly equaled in the Chou Den-O Trilogy, where Diend's Complete Form summons copies of eight movie-exclusive Riders, with all nine of them performing their finishers en masse. The opponent in question wasn't even nearly as strong as Doras, making this an even bigger case of overkill.
 * Subverted, sort of, in Looney Tunes: Back in Action:

"Ordell Robbie: AK-47: the very best there is. When you absolutely, positively got to kill every motherfucker in the room, accept no substitutes."
 * He's talking to Wile E. Coyote, by the way.
 * In the climactic shootout of John Woo's A Better Tomorrow II, one mook gets shot more than 20 times.
 * In Beverly Hills Cop, drug dealer Victor Maitland gets shot about twenty times by Foley and Bogomil at the climax.
 * In The Transporter, there's an attempt at killing Frank Martin at home. Since he's got a reputation of being Badass, it involves thousands of machine gun rounds and three missiles. He survives by.
 * The Matrix:
 * The helicopter scene is this. Then again, shooting at Agents with a minigun for several seconds straight is absolutely justified.
 * And the famous lobby scene. You really start to wonder whether the advantages of carrying a loaded and ready gun outweigh the rather more severe disadvantages of having far less ammunition to work with, as well as the sheer amount of weight and bulk that carrying over a dozen guns would impose on the wearer.
 * Star Wars a New Hope:
 * The amount of energy required to destroy a planet is some eight - nine orders of magnitude greater than what killed the dinosaurs, and seven - eight more than required to just kill everyone. And the Death Star gives five - six orders of magnitude more than that. Not to mention, that they could have cracked the surface, or burned away the atmosphere, using a lot less resources (A Hyperdrive with the safety's turned off, for instance ).
 * Darth Vader: Don't be too proud of this technological terror you've created. The ability to destroy a planet is insignificant next to the power of the Force.
 * Revenge of the Sith: After Aalya Secura is shot by the Clone troopers, they continue to shoot at her dead body afterwards.
 * After Harley knocks out Brother Bob with his own monster truck in Monster Man, Adam takes the wheel and proceeds to drive over him again and again until he is nothing but bloody paste.
 * Burt Gummer of the Tremors franchise lives and breathes this trope.
 * In the first movie, he and his wife unload multiple machine guns, assault rifles, an elephant gun, and even a flare gun into a Graboid. Then, he makes home made bombs that're powerful enough to make their guts airborne when exploded underground.
 * In the second movie, he kills his first Graboid with 4 pounds of C-4. And then kills another with a cluster bomb. Then, he shoots one of the Shiekers with a .50 caliber ant-tank gun with a solid broze bullet. Then they detonate 4.5 tons of high-explosives and reduce an entire oil refinery to a large crater to kill the remaining Shreikers.
 * In the 3rd movie, he blows up his entire house to kill a single Ass Blaster.
 * In the prequel, his ancestor buys a 2-inch bore Punt Gun and uses that to kill a Graboid.
 * 2004 The Punisher movie: Castle just doesn't kill Howard Saint, but also just about everything Saint cares about. . Saint's an asshole that had it coming to him, but damn, what an example of overkill.
 * Memetic Badass Samuel L. Jackson describes this phenomenon perfectly in Jackie Brown:


 * In The Raid, Jaka kills a mook with three point-blank headshots. When the residents attack the SWAT van, they open up on full-auto and just keep firing.