Film Kisses of All Time in Cinematic History 1987 |
Film Title/Year and Description of Kiss in Movie Scene | ||||||||||||||
Broadcast News (1987) Warm-Up Teasing Kisses Director/writer James L. Brooks' romantic comedy-drama told about the relationships and careers of employees while they worked at a TV news organization in Washington, D.C., including:
During a budding but mismatched romance between the two, they attended a Correspondent's Dinner event, but Jane pulled him outside before they went through security (embarrassed that the condoms she had boldly brought in her purse would be discovered). Outside, Tom felt Jane's breast through her clothing and teasingly ran his fingers along the top of her low-cut dress. She laughed and told him: "At least kiss me when you do that." He replied: "You just can't stop editing me, huh?" She quipped back: "This is hysterical," and they passionately kissed. They talked further:
She took a drink to strengthen her resolve to his sexual advances and replied: "Me too." When he responded that he couldn't say why he just said what he did, she answered for him:
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Jane Craig Kissing Tom Brunick |
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Broadcast News (1987) The Promise of Time-Off Kiss As the entire office was packing up after a severe hiring cutback, handsome but vacuous network news anchorman Tom Grunick (William Hurt) gestured to young intensely-driven, workalcoholic female producer Jane Craig (Holly Hunter) to join him in one of the offices to talk privately. She complained about the "awful" situation everyone faced:
Unsympathethic and callous about everyone's plight, he said: "Maybe I haven't been here long enough" - and then congratulated her on her promotion to the position of bureau chief. He explained how the same thing had happened at every station where he had previously worked ("I'm sorry I can't stand here feeling bad because I don't feel worse"). He then asked whether she would join him during her "fourteen weeks" of time off, before he had to relocate in a week to a new position in London: "Let's get the hell away to some island fast and, and find out how we are together away from this" - she responded in awe: "Well, I just think that's an extraordinary proposal." When he wondered whether she meant "yes," she replied with an affirmative and enthusiastic 'yes': "That's more than 'yes'. That's 'you bet'!" After he passionately kissed her, she wrapped her arms around him. Later however, after she realized that he had breached some ethical boundaries by faking tears (on cue) in a cutaway shot during an emotional interview (that she viewed on videotape), she left him at the airport to take the trip by himself. |
Jane Kissing Tom, and Agreeing to Go Away to an Island with Him |
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Dirty Dancing (1987) Sensual Dancing Moves Kisses In this popular teen dance film by director Emile Andolino, a young girl learned some hard truths about life and 'dirty' dancing during her time in 1963 at a summer resort in the Catskill Mountains known as Kellerman's. The two principals were:
She fell in love with him, during expressive R 'n' B, hip-to-hip dance moves, and when he put other romantic moves on her, while teaching her how to balance on a suspended log, and how to do an extended dive into his outstretched arms (both in a forest and in a lake).
The film's most sexual kissing scene took place one night after Baby had been scolded by her repressive father and she disobediently visited Johnny in his red-lit bungalow to express her fear:
She then invited the shirtless Johnny to symbolically "Dance with me." Incredulous, Johnny asked: "What, here?" and she replied boldly: "Here." She sensuously put her arms around his shoulder and dipped backwards, coming close to almost kissing him, as they danced to Solomon Burke's "Cry to Me." He helped her to remove her blouse from the bottom up, exposing her white bra and jeans as he caressed and kissed her when she came close to his lips as he held her when she dipped backwards, before the scene dissolved to them in bed kissing - presumably before sex. They also shared a few other occasions to have sex and passionately kiss. As the film wound down to its conclusion, Johnny was fired by the hotel's manager Max Kellerman (Jack Weston), a friend of the Housemans, for intermingling with the guests, including Baby. After Johnny informed Baby that he had been let go, she felt her dreams with him had been dashed: "So I did it for nothing. I hurt my family, you lost your job anyway, I did it for nothing!" He was still thankful for her faithfulness to him: "No, no, not for nothin', Baby! Nobody has ever done anything like that for me before." Johnny's goodbye scene with Baby was accompanied by "She's Like the Wind" (performed by Patrick Swayze with Wendy Frazer), as he told her: "I'll never be sorry." She answered: "Neither will I" - and they kissed. In the film's finale during the smaltzy end-of-season stage revue show, Johnny returned to the resort and confronted Baby's parents (mostly her protective father). He told him that Baby shouldn't be seated in the corner at their family's table: "Nobody puts Baby in a corner!" Then, he led Baby to the stage. Although he had been fired from the staff, he interrupted and announced to the crowd that they would be dancing together. To the tune of Bill Medley and Jennifer Warne's Oscar-winning "(I've Had) The Time of My Life," he and Baby danced - performing the dance moves they had practiced all summer, including Johnny lifting Baby above his head in the midst of the audience, and encouraging the many other guests at the Catskill Resort to loosen up and dance with them. |
Baby's Confession of Her Fears About Life to Johnny Baby to Johnny: "Dance with me" Passionate Kisses |
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A Man in Love (1987, Fr./It.) (aka Un Homme Amoureux) Kisses as Prelude to Torrid Love-Making French director/writer Diane Kurys told a tale of infidelity in a passionate and erotic art film (a film about film-making itself) about the life of the Italian poet Cesare Pavese (who committed suicide) and his last love, Gabriella, with the tagline: "Love Devours Only the Hungry." The two lovers having an extra-marital affair while on an Italian set during film-making:
During dinner, Steve asked Jane a blunt question: "Will you stay with me tonight?" but they were unable to be intimate. Their secretive romance was threatened by the unexpected arrival of Elliott's neglected and estranged wife Susan (Jamie Lee Curtis), Jane's own French boyfriend, and the lingering illness of Jane's dying mother Julia (Claudia Cardinale). They had another chance later on, when he began slowly touching her under her blouse, and they hesitated to kiss each other until their erotic tension was so great that they couldn't resist each other. He dropped his pants and they began to make love against the wall, as they continued to nibble at each other with love bites - the camera tracked in for close-ups of their faces. They were clearly in love, and had many more opportunities to kiss each other and be torridly intimate. The character of Jane was self-awakened and transformed by film's end, and typing a manuscript titled "A Man in Love." |
Kisses Between Steve and Jane |
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Moonstruck (1987) A Kiss for a Wolf 37 year-old Italian-American bookkeeper Loretta Castorini (Cher) after being widowed for seven years (after being married at age 28) was recently engaged to 42 year-old Momma's boy Johnny Cammareri (Danny Aiello). In Ronny's apartment, she cooked up a steak, served with a bottle of whiskey, to Johnny's younger estranged and tortured brother Ronny Cammareri (Nicolas Cage) who was still cynical about love. A bread-slicer bakery accident five years earlier involving Johnny had left him maimed (one-handed) and without a fiancee. Both called each other "stupid" for not following through with love since their mutual life-altering events. He told her: "She was right to leave me." Loretta confessed to Ronny about the loss of her previous husband:
She also offered unsolicited advice to him about his life, calling him a wolf:
Then, Loretta admitted why she was marrying Johnny - whom he called a 'fool': "Because I have no luck." Ronny stood up: "He [Johnny] made me look the wrong way and I cut off my hand. He could make you look the wrong way, you could lose your whole head!" Ronny called her: "A bride without a head" and she retorted back: "A wolf without a foot." And then, Ronny tossed the dining table aside and grabbed Loretta for a passionate kiss. For a moment, Loretta pushed him away with: "Wait a minute! Wait a minute!", but then lunged back for another kiss. He cried out: "Son of a bitch," as he carried her into his bedroom: ("To the bed!") and she surrendered to him:
During the night, they both stood in the moonlight (that "looks like a big snowball") of the venetian-blinded window, and kissed again. |
Ronny to Loretta: "To the bed" Standing at the Window In the Moonlight |
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Moonstruck (1987) A Kiss to Seal the Marriage Deal In the climactic breakfast proposal scene, Johnny (Danny Aiello) canceled his engagement to Loretta (Cher), and their wedding was off, due to his suspicious fears that their marriage would cause his mother's death: ("Loretta, I can't marry you...If I marry you, my mother will die"). Momentarily offended, Loretta removed her ring, threw it at him, and mutually declared the engagement off. But then, Ronny (Nicolas Cage), Johnny's younger brother, immediately proposed to Loretta instead: ("Loretta...'Will you marry me?'", with Johnny's stunned reaction: "WHAT?!"), and another wedding was on. Ronny borrowed and then offered the same engagement ring when he formally requested her hand in marriage: ("Loretta Castorini - Will you marry me?"). Loretta accepted ("Yes, Ronny, in front of all these people, I'll marry you") and assured her mother Rose (Olympia Dukakis) of her love: "Ma, I love him awful." The mother responded: "Aw God, that's too bad." They kissed to seal the deal, after Johnny smiled: "She loves me." |
Ronny to Loretta: "Will You Marry Me?" Kiss to Seal the Deal |
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The Princess Bride (1987) The Most Passionate and Pure Kiss In this classic fairy tale by director Rob Reiner, the Grandfather (Peter Falk) read a bedtime story to his sick Grandson (Fred Savage). The boy was persuaded to listen to his grandfather's present - a "special book" -- "It was the book my father used to read to me when I was sick, and I used to read it to your father. And today, I'm gonna read it to you." The Grandfather tried to convince him that the story would be full of action:
The boy reluctantly agreed and shrugged: "It doesn't sound too bad. I'll try and stay awake." He listened to the story set in the fictional land of Florin about an early kissing scene between the two fairy tale characters, Buttercup (Robin Wright) and her heroic Westley (Cary Elwes), a poor farm boy, before they parted ways. The young Grandson asked: "Is this a kissing book?" He was convinced to hold on and keep listening to the story. Westley decided to leave - he "had no money for marriage" and could "seek his fortune across the sea." He promised he would come back for Buttercup: "This is true love. You think this happens every day?" before kissing her and then departing. Five years later, Westley appeared before Buttercup disguised as the masked Dread Pirate Roberts (who was rumored to have killed Westley), and she was spiteful of him for killing her lover: "You can die slowly cut into a thousand pieces." She had been kidnapped by a trio of outlaws and was being pursued by Florin's Prince Humperdinck (Chris Sarandon), who had compelled Buttercup to become betrothed to him. After she shoved the black-garbed pirate down a hill and they tumbled down together, when he shouted his famliar phrase: "As you wish!", she realized that he was her long-lost love Westley ("Westley: "Death cannot stop true love"). They were reunited and kissed. After their tender kiss, the Grandson became perturbed again and protested: "They're kissing again. Do we have to read the kissing parts?" Much later, Westley saved the despairing Buttercup from committing suicide in her Honeymoon Suite after she was forced into marriage with the Prince. He surprised her when she was about to suicidally thrust a dagger into her chest: "There's a shortage of perfect breasts in this world. It would be a pity to damage yours." She rushed over to the bed and profusely kissed him. He explained how she hadn't really been betrothed because she never completed her marriage vows with the Prince. As the film concluded, Buttercup was rescued by her true love Westley, and they rode off on two white horses. The Grandfather began to introduce the "most passionate" kiss to his Grandson in the film's conclusion (when the fairy tale story ended with a happy ending):
But then the Grandfather paused - as they were about to kiss, so he wouldn't bore his Grandson: ("No, it's kissing again. You don't want to hear it"). But the Grandson urged him to continue: "I don't mind so much." The Grandfather continued to read (off-screen in voice-over) as Westley and the Princess Bride (Buttercup) kissed passionately:
Ultimately it was a "kissing book." As the Grandfather was leaving, the Grandson asked: "Maybe you could come over and read it again to me tomorrow." The Grandfather responded with Westley's words: "As you wish..." |
Grandson: "Is this a kissing book?" Early Kissing Scene - Westley's Departure from Buttercup Kissing After Rolling Down a Hill Together Kisses After Saving The Despairing Buttercup From Suicide Grandfather: "As you wish..." |
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Roxanne (1987) Awkward Long-Nosed Kiss Director Fred Schepisi's romantic comedy updated Edmond Rostand's 1897 Cyrano de Bergerac tale about a man with a grotesquely-long nose. The enchanting Roxanne (Daryl Hannah) delivered a heartfelt, romantic speech in the film's happy ending, to disbelieving, modern-day Cyrano fire chief C.D. Bales (Steve Martin) as he sat on his roof under the stars. She professed her love for him:
He responded: "Are you kidding?" and then slid down the roof and performed a full-body forward flip to the ground to be next to her. After a few awkward moments of finding the right angle and having him tilt his head to the right, she kissed him. |
Roxanne After Professing Her Love For Long-Nosed Charlie |
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Some Kind of Wonderful (1987) Tutoring Kisses In this successful teen coming-of-age drama-romance (similar to Pretty in Pink (1986), although gender-reversed) from writer John Hughes (directed by Howard Deutch, star Lea Thompson's future husband), lone outsider, sensitive and working-class high school senior Keith Nelson (Eric Stoltz), and also an aspiring artist, was friends with pert tomboy and fellow misfit Watts "Drummer Girl" (Mary Stuart Masterson). (One of Watts' crew-cut admirers Ray (Scott Coffey) told her that he didn't believe she was gender "confused": "You radiate this sexual vibe. If you wanted to, you could be a girl - (he snapped his fingers) like that!" She replied: "This is 1987. Did you know that a girl can be whatever she wants to be?") Keith became smitten with and had a crush on the unattainable, popular and beautiful Amanda Jones (Lea Thompson), after she had accepted a date with him. Amanda was regularly dating rich Hardy (Craig Sheffer). Watts proposed proper planning and advice, suggesting that Amanda was not a "minor leaguer" and that he must learn how to kiss (beyond his own "amateur lips") for his big date to "deliver a kiss that kills." She gave him a hands-on lesson in kissing, while secretly in love with him - in this love-triangle tale of unrequited love:
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Keith with Watts |
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Some Kind of Wonderful (1987) Revealing Kisses In the happy ending, Keith (Eric Stoltz) was presented with the diamond earrings that he had originally bought for Amanda (Lea Thompson). She returned them to him, encouraging him to give them to someone else who truly loved him:
Keith realized - finally - that Watts (Mary Stuart Masterson) truly cared about him, and he ran after her to kiss her in the middle of the street:
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Finale Kiss Between Keith and Watts |
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Superman IV: The Quest for Peace (1987) Another Amnesia-Inducing or Memory-Wiping Kiss Superman gave Lois a similar amnesia-inducing kiss, as he had in Superman II (1980). Concerned about what to do about the nuclear arms race, Clark (Christopher Reeve) jumped off his Metropolis' outdoor balcony - with Lois Lane (Margot Kidder), and as Superman, they flew cross-country as he cleared his mind, and she assured him that he would do the "right thing." He was buoyed by being with her: "You make me laugh. You're the only one I can talk to, Lois." She also revealed: "I remember everything" - she knew about his identity, even his original name Kal-El. As he looked down, he said to himself:
He then delivered a quick kiss, to instantly erase her memory of their idyllic time together. |
Clark with Lois - A Memory Wiping Kiss |
(in chronological order by film title) Introduction | 1896-1925 | 1926-1927 | 1928-1932 | 1933-1936 | 1937-1939 | 1940-1941 1942-1943 | 1944-1946 | 1947-1951 | 1952-1954 | 1955 - 1 | 1955 - 2 | 1956-1958 | 1959-1961 1962-1965 | 1966-1968 | 1969-1971 | 1972-1976 | 1977-1981 | 1982 1983-1984 | 1985-1986 | 1987 | 1988 | 1989-1990 | 1991 | 1992-1993 | 1994 1995 | 1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006-2007 | 2008 | 2009- |