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* ''[[Hot Fuzz]]'': Timothy Dalton looks into the camera for a second in a bar scene. Instead of using a different take, the director actually put a cash register ring on it, to draw ''even more'' attention to it.
* In the opening scene of ''[[The Marx Brothers|A Night At The Opera]]'' there's a woman in the background who is framed precisely in the center between between Sig Ruman and Magret Dumont, who stares into the camera the entire time. ([http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9sRTTKwvys Here starting around 5:00])
* In ''[[Love
* Averted in ''Pan's Labyrinth''. It is pointed out in the DVD commentary, where one of the actors looked at the camera as he was exiting the scene, that they covered it up by digitally replacing his head in the relevant frames with his head from the last frame before he looked. It's all over in less than a second, so you don't notice it unless it's pointed out.
* In ''[[
* Happens a few times in ''[[Dazed and Confused]]'', a consequence of using some very fresh actors and random locals as extras.
* An in-universe version occurs in ''[[Captain America:
* In the 1956 ''[[The Ten Commandments]]'', Sephrah warns Moses of an intruder nearby; Moses tells Sephrah "Your eyes are sharp as they are beautiful". Yvonne [[De Carlo]] responds by staring straight into the camera, ''away'' from where she's just said the danger was.
* Obi-Wan appears to do this in ''Star Wars'' just after scaring the Tusken Raiders off and ensuring that Luke is alive. He turns to the camera, doffs his hood and says "Hello there!" The very next shot shows that we have been looking through R2-D2's eyes.
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