Establishing Character Moment/Film

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


  • 10 Things I Hate About You: The movie opens with perky pop song playing over fun, bouncing credits, as four perky pretty girls roll up to a stop sign in a brightly-coloured sports car...then the pop music is rapidly drowned out by Joan Jett's "Bad Reputation", as a lone, sour-faced young woman rolls up next to them in a beat-up Ford, glaring. Six minutes before we learn her name, five minutes before she ever speaks, and we already know Kat's basic character.
    • Also captured in that wonderful exchange with Miss Perky:

Ms. Perky: People perceive you as somewhat...
Kat: Tempestuous?
Ms. Perky: "Heinous bitch" is the term used most often.

  • The Dark Knight Saga:
    • The Joker arguably has two of these, the first being the bank robbery when he shows himself ready and willing to betray his teammates for his own ends, and later his "magic trick" involving a pencil and plenty of Eye Scream, which shows his mental instability and viciousness.
    • Harvey Dent also establishes himself in his first scene: flip a coin, diss a crime boss, punch out a would-be assassin and then tell the assassin that if he is going to try to kill a public servant, he suggests buying American. Some of those actions simultaneously establish the character he's going to become as Two-Face.
  • Star Wars:
    • Han shooting first.
    • Luke's Binary Sunset scene.
    • Vader's "I find your lack of faith disturbing" scene.
      • Earlier than that, strangling Captain Antilles while interrogating him.
    • The opening of The Phantom Menace is this for Obi-Wan, Qui-Gon, and, by extension, the entire Jedi Order. ("Have you ever encountered a Jedi Knight before, sir?")
  • Seven Samurai,
    • Kambei's Batman Cold Open, in which he shaves off his topknot, a symbol of honor for a samurai, in order to trick a kidnapper and rescue a child. Roger Ebert wonders in his review if it's the origin of the practice, now common in action movies, of introducing the main hero with an undertaking unrelated to the main plot.
    • Good-natured Heihachi is found cutting wood in order to get by. Rather than complain about doing such lowly labor, he accepts it with good cheer and a quip about being from the "Woodcut School."
    • Kyuzo, the expert swordsman, is first seen engaged in a duel. His opponent refuses to be convinced that he truly lost their non-lethal exchange and insists on repeating it in earnest, whereupon Kyuzo immediately kills him.
    • Kikuchiyo is first seen front and center while carrying a really long sword.
  • The Magnificent Seven, a Setting Update of Seven Samurai, features alternate establishing character moments for its versions of the characters. Vin and Chris volunteer to drive a hearse containing an Indian up to Boot Hill despite the protests of the townspeople, which mirror's Kambei's socially dishonorable and morally correct actions. Britt is introduced with a duel, as with Kyuzo in Seven Samurai: he demonstrates non-lethally his ability to win a pistol duel with a knife, and displays complete indifference to being called a liar and a coward, only agreeing to repeat the duel in earnest when his opponent threatens to shoot him where he sits otherwise.
  • Achilles in Troy waking up from a threesome, several hours late for a battle and after being called up to fight some gigantic champion in a duel, running up and just casually stabbing him in the neck.
  • In Iron Man, Tony Stark seems to get two moments several scenes apart. In the very first scene, he's drinking, flirting with a female soldier, downplaying yet at the same time bragging about his abilities to nail beautiful women, carousing with a soldier, and making morbid yet situation-appropriate jokes. Then, despite being a businessman who's never seen a real fight, he shows something approximating a cool head by asking for a gun (and, in a deleted scene, actually using one for a few moments), running when there's no other option, calling for help on his phone, and revealing himself to have been wearing a flak jacket. For his first Crowning Moment of Awesome, he blows the side out of a mountain applying the ideas behind his personal life to his business.
    • Pepper Potts's first appearance when she speaks with Christine Everheart, the reporter who Tony sleeps with and then subsequently dumps.

Christine: After all these years, Tony still has you picking up the drycleaning?
Pepper: I do anything and everything Mr. Stark requires. Including, occasionally, taking out the trash.

  • In Raiders of the Lost Ark:
    • We first learn that Indiana Jones is no man to be trifled with when he bullwhips a treacherous partner behind his back. The entire Batman Cold Open in the ancient temple and ultimate Indy Escape also establish him as a daring adventurer who's not exactly perfect.
    • Also later when he encounters an Arab with a giant sword, his response is simply to shoot him. A Throw It In moment that permanently establishes him as the ultimate Combat Pragmatist.
    • Marion is introduced as a tough chick by outdrinking a sherpa twice her size, then punching our hero in the face.
    • "Dr. Jones. Again we see there is nothing you can possess which I cannot take away. And you thought I'd given up." Belloq's personality, role and shared history all laid out in three sentences.
    • In Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, we see even after almost 20 years, Indy's still the same badass as he faces down Commies:

Col. Dovchenko: You recognize building, yes?
Indy: (deadpan) Drop dead.
(Dovchenko slaps Indy)
Indy: (still deadpan) I'm sorry, I meant "Drop dead, comrade".

"That's a Smith and Wesson... and you've had your six."

  • Manos: The Hands of Fate: "I aM ToRgO. I taKe cAre oF tHe PlaCe wHiLe thE MasTer iS awaY."
  • The Proposition is really clever about this. The first character we see is Mikey Burns, who is, appropriately enough, confused, hiding, and entirely reliant on the protection of his older brother Charlie. Charlie establishes his character by quietly mumbling "Touch me brother again, and I'll kill ye." Arthur Burns is established through Stanley's recounting of Arthur's Moral Event Horizon, and then introduced as the nicest guy you'd ever want to meet. And then there's Eden Fletcher, who spends most of his first scene looking at a badly wounded Mikey and repeatedly commenting "What a little piece of filth."
  • The entire wedding sequence in The Godfather, in which Vito conducts nefarious business in a darkened office alongside the bright festivities of his family.
  • Apocalypse Now: Col. Kurtz gets one via audio only via a recording of his descent into insanity being played for Willard as his "termination" mission is assigned to him.

Col. Kurtz "I have seen...a snail...crawl along the edge...of a straight razor. I have seen...a snail crawl along the edge of a straight razor...and survive. That's my dream. That's my nightmare."

    • Willard going crazy in his hotel room shows the inner turmoil he tries to suppress for the rest of the film.
  • In The Elephant Man:
    • John's moment is the revelation that he can read, and is, therefore, intelligent. "The 23rd Psalm is beautiful. It's my favorite."
    • Carr Gomm doesn't get one of these for quite a while, not until just after John's. "Can you imagine the life he must have had?"
    • Mr. Bytes is introduced as a scummy, exploitative man ("My treasure.") and just goes downhill from there.
    • The Night Porter establishes his character in his first scene. "I got friends who'd love to meet you. And they will, mate. Believe me. They will."
    • Mrs. Kendall is established by her line "I should very much like to meet this Mr. Merrick." Not "elephant man", but "Mr. Merrick".
    • Mothershead's moment would probably be the fear that John is just being stared at all over again. This is quite appropriate, as the characters have seen little of her personality up to now, either.
    • And Frederick Treves doesn't get one at all. This keeps his fears of being Not So Different from Bytes all the more effective.
  • The first quarter-hour of Cloverfield establishes the character who will be holding the camera for most of the movie as the kind of person who's just enough of an obsessive nerd to do that. This doubles as trope justification, since the first question anyone asks is "Who would actually keep the camera running at a time like this?"
  • Tombstone
    • Doc Holliday's first appearance
    • Johnny Ringo matching wits and gunplay with Doc establishes them as rivals.
  • Darryl Revok, the Big Bad of Scanners, shows us all what a Crazy Awesome guy he is by strolling into a seminar, tricking the audience into thinking he's just an extra, and then assassinating his target in the coolest possible way.
  • The first scene in Swordfish is John Travolta's character Deconstructing Hollywood's traditional portrayal of bank robberies. By itself, it tells a lot about the mindset of his character, but what really makes it an Establishing Character Moment is what happens afterward. He walks out of the café, convince the heavily armed SWAT team to move out of his way by bringing up a detonator and cross the street to where he has a bank robbery in progress, revealing that the people he has been talking to are hostage negotiators.
  • In The Night of the Hunter, Sinister Minister Harry Powell introduces himself by driving his car, talking loudly and colloquially to God, about his own sick, misogynistic views. It's strongly hinted (and confirmed, later) that Harry is a Serial Killer.
  • The first scene of Reservoir Dogs is one huge Seinfeldian Conversation and is seemingly irrelevant to the plot, but gives most characters their establishing moments. Some of these are quite adequate (White is shown as levelheaded and experienced, and his friendship with Mr Orange is evident if you watch close enough; Mr Pink gives the impression of a whiny powerhouse of logic; Mr Brown is talkative and not serious-minded), some are misleading (Psycho for Hire Mr Blond as a jolly Elvis lookalike? Puh-lease!), and there is even a bit of clever Foreshadowing concerning The Mole.
  • Blue Velvet's villain, Frank Booth, introduces himself in the story by randomly brutalizing and raping a woman, including such sexual perversions as erotic asphyxiation, fisting, dry humping, and sadomasochism, and then taunting her about her mutilated (by him no less) husband. It should be pretty obvious to the audience just what kind of character he is by that point.
  • In the first Blade, this is the first appearance of the titular character. Pretty much says it all.
  • In the movie version of Ripley's Game, Ripley starts out by calmly beating a thug to death with a fireplace poker and tricking a couple fellow criminals out of several million dollars worth of forged paintings. That pretty much sums up his entire character.
  • Se7en
    • Detective Mills's establishing moment arguably comes shortly after the investigation of the third victim commences, when he chases away an apparently harmless photojournalist, establishing him as an angry guy who has difficulty controlling his temper (which becomes much more relevant later on).
    • Detective Somerset's establishing moment arrives right at the beginning of the film, in which he asks questions about a particular crime that none of the other detectives are interested in answering, makes sarcastic comments about the "crime of passion," wonders why his new partner (Detective Mills) would actually want a transfer to this city, before going home and lulling himself to sleep with a metronome. All of this sums him up as both intelligent and remarkably cynical.
    • "DETECTIVE!"
  • Barton Keyes' first scene in Double Indemnity, in which he tears apart a guy trying to claim insurance on his truck by revealing that the man had set fire to it himself. The scene is completely irrelevant to the plot, but it serves to thoroughly introduce Keyes, his methods, his quirks, and his relationship to Neff.
  • In Stargate, Daniel Jackson gives a lecture on the Pyramids where his (correct) conclusions on their age are mocked and everyone abandons the talk before he's done, showing that he's a brilliant but unappreciated scientist. Jack O'Neil is introduced looking moodily at a gun while sitting on his recently dead son's bed. This establishes the pain beneath his gruff exterior and explains why he would take a suicide mission to begin with. Both moments also show that neither man has a lot going for him on Earth.
  • In Daredevil, Bullseye is first seen landing a series of bulls-eyes into a dartboard without looking and while downing a beer, establishing his superhuman accuracy. He then murders a man in front of a bar full of witnesses over a muttered insult, with a paperclip, establishing that he is Ax Crazy.
  • In A Clockwork Orange, the very first shot is Alex leering into the camera while a synthetic funeral march blares on the soundtrack, establishing Alex's strong, hypnotic and thoroughly evil personality before the voice-over even mentions "the old ultraviolence."
  • The first appearance of the Operative in Serenity, in which he casually kills the head doctor of the Academy and praises him for his good work even as the doctor dies, impaled on the Operative's sword. This establishes him as intelligent, honorable, and completely ruthless.
  • In the Loop opens with Malcolm Tucker sweeping into Number 10 in his long flowing black coat, before a colleague engages him in some friendly banter:

Malcolm Tucker: "How'd your team do at the weekend?"
Number 10 staffer: "Alright, we won!"
Malcolm Tucker: "Yeah? Hehehehe...wanker."

A desert holiday
Let's pack the drag away
You pack the lunch and tea
I'll pack the ecstasy
Fuck off you silly queer
I'm getting out of here
A desert holiday
Hip hip hip hip hooray.

  • It isn't long into the first appearance of the Twister from Ip Man 2 before he calls Master Hung a "yellow piece of fat", and he only gets worse from there.
  • In A Hard Days Night, the ECM for John, George, and Ringo has them running for their lives from the fans. They are further established, along with Paul's grandfather, in the first train scenes.
  • In Give My Regards to Broad Street, we first see Paul in the back seat of a limo that's stuck in traffic in the rain, dividing his time between writing lyrics and listening to the radio with an air of silent resignation. Even though this is one level of reality up from most of the film, it foreshadows his role in the film surprisingly well.
  • In Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory the first time we see the titular character, he's slowly limping with a cane towards the crowd and appears to suddenly trip just before the end...only to suddenly do a somersault and stand up triumphantly. This scene was Gene Wilder's idea, to convey to the characters and the audience that Wonka is not to be trusted.
  • Predator 2 opens with Lt. Mike Harrigan (Danny Glover) pulling off a move that's completely over-the-top awesome (even for the '80s) to save two police officers pinned down. He stuffs bullet-proof vests in the windows of one side of the car, smashes the driver's-side door off, and drives in while leaning out of the car, shooting at the gang members. He then picks up his shotgun (having dismissed the pistols as "too small"), flanks the gang members, and kills them. This immediately gives us the idea that if anyone can take on an alien hunter with superior technology, it's this man.
  • In one of the first scenes of The Thing, MacReady is playing chess with a computer. When he loses, he pours his scotch into the CPU and calls the program a cheating bitch. In the long run, the outburst tells a lot about his character; in the end, he'd rather burn down the whole facility than let the Thing win, just as he'd rather fry the computer than admit defeat to it.
  • Jack Napier in the 1989 Batman. In his introduction scene, he establishes that he's part of the criminal element plaguing Gotham City by his first line (in response to Harvey Dent's speech about making the city safe for decent people), "Decent people shouldn't live here. They'd be happier someplace else." His next line, "If this clown could touch Grissom, I'd have handed him his lungs by now," establishes that he is a psycho. Next, he comments on how his boss is a "tired old man" and how he "can't run the city without me," suggesting that he wants to run the show himself someday (which is expanded upon later in the "think about the future" scene with Eckhardt). He then admires himself in the mirror, and when the attractive woman he's been talking to (his girlfriend, who is also his boss's mistress) approaches him and compliments his looks ("You look fine"), he is insulting ("I didn't ask"), revealing that he is an arrogant jerk with a focus on his looks, which foreshadows his later transformation and the psychological effect it will have on him.
  • The Batman films used different techniques to introduce Bruce Wayne.
  • Jigsaw's pre-disfigurement establishing scene in The Punisher: Warzone has him look at himself in a mirror and makes an arrogant rebuff when his woman compliments him.
  • In The Big Lebowski, the first thing we see The Dude doing is shopping for half-and-half in his robe, tasting it in the store, then paying for it by writing a check for 69 cents. If that's not The Slacker, then nothing is.
  • Avatar: Sigourney Weaver's character barks, "Where's my goddamn cigarette?" showing that she's tough even though she's a scientist.
  • In Trainspotting, Francis Begby is shown to be a violent thug when he casually tosses a beer mug off a balcony, hitting a girl in the face with it, then starting a brawl. Just before kicking a guy in the crotch, he roars with an exultant look on his face, showing that violence is a drug to him.
    • Also, there's a scene at the beginning of the film that introduces the five leads acting out their Establishing Character Moments- as part of a football game: Sick Boy fouls, and shouts "What?" as if trying to look innocent; Begbie dropkicks one of the opposing team-members, wearing a delighted grin as he gets up; Spud acts as goalie, completely misses an incoming ball and gets yelled at by his own team; Tommy gets caught in a corner and tries valiantly to escape without performing a foul; finally, Renton gets hit in the head with the ball and collapses- all the while narrating sarcastically.
  • Every character in Curse of The Black Pearl got one. Jack got three.
  • Ghostbusters. Venkman is first shown giving an ESP test to two students in which a wrong answer is followed by an electric shock. Because one of his test subjects is an attractive female student, Venkman keeps zapping the other (male) subject regardless of who gets the right answer. This reveals Venkman as a Jerkass, a scientific fraud, and a man who thinks with his groin.
  • The opening scene of Top Gun. Maverick and another Navy fighter encounters enemy MiGs. Maverick manages to fly right above and upside down one MiG so close his RIO (Radio Intercept Officer), Goose, takes a Polaroid of the surprised pilot. This establishes Maverick as a skilled flyer and he and Goose as best friends who like to clown around. When the encounter causes his fellow pilot has a Heroic BSOD in mid-air, Maverick defies orders to stay with him to help guide him back to their aircraft carrier safely. This establishes Maverick as a rebel and heroic.
  • The opening scene of Patton does a very good job of establishing the title character, with all his medals, and pearl handled revolvers giving a Rousing Speech to his army offscreen in front of a giant American Flag.
  • The Good the Bad And The Ugly has one for each of the title characters.
    • Tuco: Is eating in a bar. A group of gunmen come in to kill him and he shoots them all before crashing out of a window, still eating his dinner. "The Ugly."
    • Angel Eyes: Has been hired to get information from a man. He enters his house, talks with him, refuses the man's counteroffer of more money if Angel Eyes leaves him alone and instead kills his boss, then shoots the man dead. His son comes downstairs and Angel Eyes kills him too. He then goes back to his boss, giving him the information, and then kills him -- he took the first victim's money, and he always finishes the job once he's been paid. "The Bad."
    • Blondie: Tracks down Tuco, kills several rival bounty hunters, and turns him in for a reward, then frees him so they can repeat the process several more times. When the jig is up he abandons Tuco in the desert and rides off with the money. "The Good."
  • The eponymous Mystery Team has two: the harassment of Old Man McGinty for absolutely no reason, and the investigation and interrogation of Eric; these two scenes set up their childlike attitude, Jason's paper thin disguises and their tendency to overreact to the smallest thing.
  • Superman establishes the famed Man of Steel three separate times; each time is awesome.
    • The first time is when the baby Kal-El reaches Earth. The baby crawls up out of the wrecked spacecraft and raises his arms to the stunned Ma and Pa Kent (whose characters as established here as well). Moments later as Pa Kent is changing the tires the jack goes loose and the truck nearly crushes him. But it doesn't...because the little baby caught the thing and is holding it over his head, smiling sweetly at the awed humans. The kid can't read a nursery rhyme, and already he's starting his superhero career.
      • In an Establishing Character Moment that's also a Crowning Moment of Heartwarming, Ma Kent gushes about how she's begged and begged all her life for the Good Lord to give them a child as she looks at the infant from Krypton. As if on cue, the baby, who's never seen her a day in his life, spins around and hugs Ma Kent. Establishing Family Moment?
    • We flash to a teenage Clark Kent, whose acting as a waterboy for the football team. He's painfully shy around Lana Lang, his crush and can't even talk to her unless she talks to him. And rather than beat the snot out of her smug jerkass boyfriend, he grudgingly gets back to work. In a fit of rage he kicks the football when no one's looking, seemingly into orbit. Already Clark is learning how to hide his true nature, how to control the urge to simply overpower his foes, and we see his famous awkwardness around women.
    • Lastly, the Fortress of Solitude scene climaxes his training and his lessons from Jor-El with the first appearance of the adult Clark Kent/Kal-El, dressed in the classic blue suit and flowing red cape. As the Rousing Music blasts away in the background, he flies away from the Fortress of Solitude, the first demonstration of his greatest known ability. (This leads directly to the first appearance of adult Clark Kent in alter-ego form as he arrives for his first day of work at the Daily Planet. This establishes the classic Kent bumbling and aloof disguise.
  • X Men First Class. The Nazi scientist, Dr. Klaus Schmidt, tries to get the young Erik to use his powers to move a coin, first by using a chocolate bar and when that doesn't work....by shooting his mother in the face. And when the kid has a BSOD tears the place up with his metal powers, the guy laughs with satisfaction. The funny thing is, the Nazi scientist persona was a cover for his true identity, but that moment told you precisely the kind of a son of a bitch from hell you were dealing with.
    • The following scene shows an adult Erik sitting silently in a hotel room, fiddling with the same coin using his powers. He stares at a wall papered with pictures of notable Nazis, including a hand drawing of Dr. Schmidt. He looks at it for a moment before spearing the picture of Schmidt with the coin. Everything we need to know about how this man becomes Magneto is right in that scene.
    • The first meeting between a young Charles Francis Xavier and Mystique.
  • First Knight
    • Lancelot teaching swordsmanship establishes him as a man of action.
    • Guinevere playing soccer shows she's a Royals Who Actually Do Something.
    • Arthur standing up to Malagant shows he's not to be trifled with even in his old age.
  • "You gotta ask yourself one question; "Do I feel lucky?" Well do you, punk?"
  • Die Hard's Big Bad Hans Gruber showed his refined taste when he complimented Takagi's suit.
    • Gruber already established the Magnificent Bastard, Smug Snake type of criminal he is when he's directing his goons to prep before taking the Nakatomi Christmas Party hostage. And then, after they burst in and spray the place with bullets, he gently chides the screaming, terrified, hostages to please, please be quiet and allow him to speak.
      • Detective McClane's Anti-Hero tendencies start to peek through as he's talking to the doctor on the flight to LA.
  • The coffee shop meeting of Detective Alonzo Harris and Officer Jake Hoyt in Training Day.
  • The opening voiceover of his letter to his mother establishes the mindset and character of Colonel Robert Gould Shaw in Glory.
  • Morpheus's first phone call to Neo in The Matrix. Apparently all-knowing, a dismebodied voice of wisdom, and bad things happen when his orders aren't followed -- but also completely dogmatic, trying to steer Neo's every action.
    • Neo's comes between his introductory scene and his interrogation with Smith. In the first he's a loner, living in an empty apartment surrounded by computers, looking for answers to mysterious, elusive questions. In the interrogation he demands the rights he is entitled to, shows disrespect for authority, and by all accounts he helps his landlady carry out her garbage.
  • The scenes of the young James T. Kirk and young Spock near the beginning of Star Trek.
  • Sarah Connor doing pull ups in Terminator 2 showed she Took a Level in Badass at the cost of her sanity.
  • Men in Black contrasted Jay and Kay's ways of catching criminals.
  • Steve Rogers in Captain America: The First Avenger has quite a few. Keep in mind that all these moments occurred before his transformation into Captain America. One was where he dove for a grenade and cradled it despite not knowing it was a dud. Also the scene when the sergeant tells the recruits to get a flag off a pole. Everyone fails to climb it but Steve casually takes the screws off the pole, causing the pole to fall and retrieved the flag that way. And we can't forget this line:

Steve Rogers: I don't want to kill anybody; I don't like bullies, wherever they come from.

    • Earlier than that, you find out he's attempted to enlist in the army multiple times, he calls out a guy for being rude in a movie theater, later is fighting said guy even when it's obvious who has the upper hand and doesn't run away no matter how much he gets beaten.
    • Peggy Carter's first scene is dealing with someone who was mocking her for being English and making several rude comments towards her. She knocks him down with one punch.
  • Léon: The Professional. The first scenes show Leon as a badass hitman with almost supernatural skills due to years of training. He spends the rest of his day as mundanely as possible- going to the store, watering his plants and cleaning his guns.
    • Norman Stansfield gets two establishing moments: he's introduced standing in the background, listening to classical music on his headphones and completely disconnected from the rest of the world. Then, when his second-in-command informs him of a problem (a drug holder apparently cut some of the dope he was supposed to be keeping safe), he removes the headphones, and sniffs the holder for a few seconds, before declaring him innocent. Stansfield's next scene shows him leading a gang of thugs towards the holder's apartment: he takes a moment to down a pill and muse on how much he likes "these calm little moments before the storm," before charging into the apartment with a shotgun, killing the holder's wife, the holder's teenage daughter, then finally cornering the holder himself... so he can chat about classical music while the rest of his gang search the apartment for drugs.
  • In Audition, the hero, a grieving widower has met a beautiful, demure woman named Asami through the ruse of a movie audition. Over the objections of his friend, he calls her back, and we see her sitting on the floor in a largely unfurnished apartment, near the only two other things there: the ringing phone, and a lump burlap sack whose contents lurch over with an incoherent groan. And she's staring at the phone.
  • Last of the Mohicans:
  • Con Air
    • Larkin mocking one of his superiors behind his back.
    • Cyrus speaking to Johnny-23 in Spanish.
    • Malloy parking his car in a handicap space.
    • Garland Greene's entrance offset by his gentle manner of speaking.
  • Face Off
    • Archer venting his frustrations on his subordinates.
    • Castor planting a bomb then dancing away.
  • Maj. Jackson in Django shows his Complete Monster qualities by shooting a bunch of Mexicans for sport.
  • The Hangover
    • Dave being a Nice Guy to Allen.
    • Allen letting a dog kiss him.
    • Phil stealing the money meant for a class trip.
    • Stu getting bitched out by his girlfriend.
  • The first hint that Einon from Dragonheart isn't the good prince Bowen believes him to be is the moment he callously takes his dying father's crown while his father tries to hold onto it.
  • The Departed had the one where Dignam congratulates Colin's passing the detective test with "Woop de fucking doo"
  • In Green Lantern, Hal Jordan is first seen late to work, jumping out of bed with a woman in it, rushing to a test flight against two AI fighters and while outmatched in almost every way he manages to outwit the drones by doing a stunt that almost got him killed. As he learns how to control the ring, Hal demonstrates the tendency to act intuitively (the Racetrack) and thinking outside of the box.
  • In The Prestige, Nikola Tesla walks casually out of a cloud of plasma arcs and shows Angier how to power a light bulb with the electrical currents in the human body, demonstrating one thing: Tesla is a goddamned wizard.
  • The opening scenes from Payback show that Porter is a major Villain Protagonist. Among other things, he jumps turnstiles, robs a beggar, steals the wallet of an Innocent Bystander, (and subsequently runs up the guy's credit cards) ducks out on bills, and he doesn't tip his server.
  • Jumper: Roland is introduced telling a Jumper at his mercy that only God should have this power, then shanking the man in the gut[1], establishing his religious extremism and viciousness.
  • Airplane!
  • The Lord of the Rings
    • Sam telling Frodo about the promise he made to Gandalf ("Don't you lose him, Samwise Gamgee!").
    • Merry & Pippin's mischief at Bilbo's birthday.
    • Boromir throwing down the shattered sword Narsil.
    • Legolas defending Aragorn against Boromir.
    • Gimli trying to smash The Ring.
    • Saruman chastising Gandalf for consorting with Hobbits.
    • Sauron fighting an army by himself during his battle against Isildur.
  • In The Social Network most of the main characters get one of these:
    • Mark has a conversation with his girlfriend where it's established that he's very intelligent but almost completely anti-social; he's arrogant, condescending and overly sensitive, which results in him getting dumped at the end of the conversation.
    • Eduardo shows up in Mark's apartment after reading his blog, ready to give Mark emotional support, but all Mark wants is a formula he invented. Combined with the dialogue about Eduardo in the opening conversation, it's established that Eduardo is also very intelligent but much more personable about it. Eduardo also tries to ground Mark while he creates Facemash, which foreshadows his role in Facebook later.
    • The Winklevoss twins get a very streamlined ECM - we see them effortlessly winning a boat race, while talking about the lack of opposition and making reference to the laws of motion. This shows them as very good sportsmen and intelligent, but arrogant and completely unaccustomed to losing.
    • Sean makes witty banter with a college girl he's just slept with.
  • While his siblings are suckling on a milking machine, Babe is the only one who shows sadness that his mother was taken away.
  • Xerxes meets Leonidas while he rides on a mobile throne pulled by dozens of slaves.
  • Alaska: Sean refusing a compass as a gift from his father and proclaiming to his face that wishes that he had died instead of his mother firmly cements Sean as an unsympathetic Jerkass.
  • Labyrinth: Jareth's first scene can be boiled down to his response when Sarah rejects his offer of a dream-viewing crystal if she'll forget about the baby brother she's just wished away: He turns the crystal into a snake and tosses it at her. The snake just as quickly turns into a harmless scarf, and then into a goblin when she drops it. "You're no match for me, Sarah" indeed! (His Circling Monologue in the climax adds a wrinkle to this when he suggests that his intimidation of her is born of mutual genre savviness -- namely, he is aware of what she expects someone like him will act like, so he's been acting accordingly.)
  • Act of Valor: Shabal's willingness to let children be collateral damage in his assassination of the US ambassador firmly shows that he's a nasty piece of work, while Christo's Psychotic Smirk when he hears Morales get punched by the torturer earns him no sympathy either.
  • Tony Manero strutting down the street and stopping to admire new shoes and a possible new shirt showed him as a poor kid who has big plans for his future even though he doesn't know it yet.
  • Professor Moriarty's first on-screen appearance in the new Holmes films: He confronts Irene Adler at her favorite restaurant, then just as she thinks she's safe in public, he empties the restaurant with a tap of a spoon on a teacup. And then, kills her by letting her drink a cup of tea laced with an untraceable poison. The man used his substantial resources to demonstrate to Ms. Adler that at no point was she untouchable, moments before killing her anyway. Just to make a point.
  • The Naked Gun began with Drebin beating the tar out of the world's most evil men then falling out of a window.
  • In The Avengers, a few characters get defining moments:
    • Agent Maria Hill is first shown walking quickly alongside Nick Fury, questioning one of his orders. Later, she hops into an armored vehicle in solo pursuit of Loki and his minions, showing that she's strong-willed and highly trained.
    • Loki appears out of the Tesseract in a crackle of blue energy, with a fancy new spear and a really creepy grin on his face--he's changed for the worse since we last saw him in Thor.
    • We first see Black Widow being interrogated by Russians and seemingly under duress--until she pulls a Wounded Gazelle Gambit and takes them all out with ease. This shows that she's calculating, multi-layered, and extremely badass. In addition, this lays the foundation for yet another ECM later on when Loki gives her the excellent "can you wipe out that much red?" speech and she is yet again unfazed. Basically, any time Loki gives a speech is an opportunity for an ECM.
  • Mulan shows off her cleverness and resourcefulness to the viewers when she fashions a means of getting her dog to feed the chickens so she still has time to change her clothes. Soon afterward, she reveals a lack of grace during a meeting with the matchmaker, suggesting that life as a trophy wife will not properly fulfill her destiny.
  • Shifu from Kung Fu Panda effortlessly evades all his students' attacks during a training session and then rebukes them for "doing well if they were trying to disappoint [him]."
  • The Incredibles has Dash using his speed to pull pranks on his teachers. Violet turning invisible and shyly looking at her crush as he walked by.
    • The first minute or so of the movie also sets up a nice Subversion for Bob, Ellen, and Lucius. Bob expresses a desire to settle down and Ellen says she cant get enough of the superhero gig, veiwpoints that the both do a complete 180 on once the main story has actually started. Lucius is portrayed at first to be a womanizer who doesn't like to get intimate, but is shown to have a wife later on in the movie.
  • The Nightmare Before Christmas does this for each of the main characters. Jack gets a dramatic entrance during the Halloween celebration, but it's during his song a few minutes later that his real character is shown.
    • Sally's is more subtle. In her first few seconds onscreen she is shown doing what she will spend the rest of the movie doing: gazing lovingly at Jack and rebelling against her Mad Scientist creator/father figure.
    • The Mayor gets an ECM as well, albeit a little ways into the story, when he goes to Jack's house for advice and panics when he finds Jack has disappeared. This is the first time we see him wear his second face.
    • Oogie Boogie's reputation precedes him as the most malevolent resident of Halloween Town, but his first few seconds on screen (even though only his shadow is shown) make his creepiness, evil intentions, and love of gambling very clear.
  • Aladdin: Aladdin, shows himself to not only be a affable thief, but a guy whose soft enough to give bread away to children.
  • Gothel from Tangled is shown discovering a magical flower that could heal people from any disease, including aging. Instead of sharing it, she hordes this flower for hundreds of years, using it for her selfish gain of remaining young.
  • Gru from Despicable Me is shown to be Affably Evil as he makes a balloon for a crying boy only to pop it and when he goes into a coffee shop, he freezes everyone around him so he could be first in line but tips the cashier before he leaves (though he doesn't actually pay for the coffee or muffin).
    • Miss Hattie firmly establishes herself as a Bitch in Sheep's Clothing when she cheerily greets the girls. But as soon as Agnes ask if anyone has come to adopt them, she brutally tells them "Hmm, let me think ... NO!"
  • Scar from The Lion King is introduced "playing" with a helpless mouse he is about to devour while skipping out on his nephew's birth ceremony. When Zazu reprimands Scar (causing him to lose the mouse) he immediately tries to eat Zazu.
  • Prince Naveen from The Princess and the Frog gets a wordless one: his very first scene has him ripping off his royal decor, grabbing a ukelele, and totally disregarding his manservant and any royal pomp as he joins a street band, complete with immediate posse of fawning ladies. It easily establishes him as an impulsive ladies' man completely dedicated to enjoying himself.
  1. instead of, say, a relatively painless and quick bullet to the head