Here is a man who would NOT take it anymore!
A man who stood up against the scum, the cunts, the dogs, the filth, the shit!
Here is a man who stood up!'
-Taxi Driver
Pardon my French...i dont usually speak that way!
Post your favorite badass toughguy (or toughgirl) movie lines here and share the title!
The rougher and tougher the better!
You can call me Father, you can call me Jacob, you can call me Jake. You can call me a dirty son-of-a-bitch, but if you EVER call me Daddy again, I'll finish this fight
“I haven’t lost my temper in 40 years; but, Pilgrim, you caused a lot of trouble this morning; might have got somebody killed; and somebody oughta belt you in the mouth. But I won’t. I won’t. The hell I won’t!”
"Uh oh. I know what you're thinking. "Did he fire six shots or only five?" Well to tell you the truth in all this excitement I kinda lost track myself. But being this is a .44 Magnum, the most powerful handgun in the world and would blow your head clean off, you've gotta ask yourself one question: "Do I feel lucky?" Well, do ya, punk?
Jimmy Stewart-Bend in the River
He needed at least one.
You'll be seeing me. You'll be seeing me. Every time you bed down for the night, you'll look back to the darkness and wonder if I'm there. And some night, I will be. You'll be seeing me!
I want you to get this fuck where he breathes! I want you to find this nancy-boy Eliot Ness, I want him DEAD! I want his family DEAD! I want his house burned to the GROUND! I wanna go there in the middle of the night and I wanna PISS ON HIS ASHES!
You watch those nature documentaries on the cable?
You see the one about Lions?
You got this Lion... He is the king of the jungle...Huge mane, out to here!
Hes laying under a tree in the middle of Africa and hes SO big, its SO hot!
He doesnt want to move...
Now all the little lions come, they start messing with him.
Biting his tail, biting his ears...
He doesnt do anything.
The Lioness, she starts messing with him, coming over, making trouble...
Still nothing
Now the other animals, they notice this, they start to move in
The Jackals, the HYENAS, theyre barking at him, laughing at him!
They nip at his toes and eat the food that is in his domain...
They do this and they get closer and closer, bolder and bolder...
'Til one day that Lion gets up and tears the shit out of everybody
Runs like the wind
Eats everything in his path
Because every once in a while the Lion has to show the Jackals who he is😺
See, I was a good friend of your dad’s. We were in that Hanoi pit of hell together over five years. Hopefully, you’ll never have to experience this yourself, but when two men are in a situation like me and your Dad were, for as long as we were, you take on certain responsibilities of the other. If it had been me who had not made it, Major Coolidge would be talking right now to my son Jim. But the way it turned out is I’m talking to you, Butch. I got something for you.
This watch I got here was first purchased by your great-grandfather during the first World War. It was bought in a little general store in Knoxville, Tennessee. Made by the first company to ever make wrist watches. Up till then people just carried pocket watches. It was bought by private Doughboy Ernie Coolidge on the day he set sail for Paris.
It was your great-grandfather’s war watch and he wore it every day he was in that war. When he had done his duty, he went home to your great-grandmother, took the watch off, put it an old coffee can, and in that can it stayed until your granddad Dane Coolidge was called upon by his country to go overseas and fight the Germans once again. This time they called it World War II. Your great-grandfather gave this watch to your granddad for good luck.
Unfortunately, Dane’s luck wasn’t as good as his old man’s. Dane was a Marine and he was killed, along with the other Marines at the battle of Wake Island. Your granddad was facing death, he knew it. None of those boys had any illusions about ever leaving that island alive. So three days before the Japanese took the island, your granddad asked a gunner on an Air Force transport name of Winocki, a man he had never met before in his life, to deliver to his infant son, who he’d never seen in the flesh, his gold watch. Three days later, your granddad was dead. But Winocki kept his word.
After the war was over, he paid a visit to your grandmother, delivering to your infant father, his dad’s gold watch.
This watch. This watch was on your daddy’s wrist when he was shot down over Hanoi. He was captured, put in a Vietnamese prison camp. He knew if the gooks ever saw the watch it’d be confiscated, taken away. The way your dad looked at it, that watch was your birthright. He’d be damned if any slopes were gonna put their greasy yellow hands on his boy’s birthright. So he hid it in the one place he knew he could hide something. His ass. Five long years, he wore this watch up his ass. Then he died of dysentery, he gave me the watch. I hid this uncomfortable hunk of metal up my ass two years. Then, after seven years, I was sent home to my family. And now, little man, I give the watch to you.
If you ever get the chance Kevin Pollack also does an amazing Alan Arkin.
There's a story he tells of him leaving messages on Alan Arkin's answering machine as Alan Arkin.
The real Alan Arkin thought he couldn't remember leaving the messages to himself.