Movies and spaghetti: two of lifeâs most reliable and satisfying joys. When spaghetti appears in a movie, it can sometimes play an important part in the movieâs plot, style or character depiction, and could have, as this list will demonstrate, a lot more meaning or purpose beyond just food. So letâs count ten great films that contain memorable scenes in which spaghetti plays a major role. These are the top ten movies for spaghetti. Where the specific scene in question is not on youtube, trailers are provided.
Nothing is worse than the disappointing, nostalgic feeling you get when watching an old movie and you have to ask yourself, âWhy canât they make movies like this anymore?â Case in point: A Night at the Opera, by the Marx Brothers. At the center of this comedy masterpiece is a lively musical sequence that includes Allan Jones belting out a hearty vocal solo, Chico Marx performing his signature piano routine, and, of course, the ever poignant Harpo on the harp. And it all starts with a plate of Spaghetti.
As with similar comedy teams from the period (read: The Three Stooges), a running theme with the Marx brothers was that they were always trying to find something to eat. The context in this film is that they are illegal stowaways on a ship from Italy to New York, and they are starving, and when they finally do find food itâs a banquet of spaghetti, served out of a ridiculously large bowl, with meatballs and sauce, all liberally heaped onto their plates with no questions asked. Thereâs nothing they can do about it except stare with wide eyes at their newfound feasts, and smile. After all, what better way to launch into an epic song-and-dance number than on a full stomach? And with these amiable protagonists, itâs difficult for the audience not to feel stuffed right along with them. Yet, the spaghetti scene is only one of the many reasons A Night at the Opera frequently, and rightfully, earns a spot on shortlists for the highest-rated, most critically acclaimed films of all-time.
In his first foray into the family genre, Will Ferrell plays Buddy, the Elf, a man raised by elves on the North Pole. After learning that he is not really cut out for elf work, Buddy decides to leave his adoptive elf father (Bob Newhart) and reconnect with his biological father (James Caan), who lives in Manhattan, where the storyline proceeds with several zany, fish-out-of-water antics.
In one scene, Buddy makes himself a breakfast consisting of spaghetti topped with what appears to be sprinkles, marshmallows, M&Ms, maple syrup and chocolate fudge pop tarts. He then grabs this concoction and shovels it into his mouth with his bare hands. Besides being hilarious, this is an important scene because it gets to the core of what Buddy really isânot just outrageous, or ignorant, or bizarre, or immature, or stupid, but, in fact, childlike. What scene in this whole movie better portrays this one quality, and what better quality for him to have in a Christmas movie?
Itâs a shame, however, that the ending of this emotionally-driven movie was trampled by cheap CGI reindeer. You can view the clip here.
Two words: Spaghetti Tornado.
Two more words, these two meekly uttered by Flint Lockwood, the inventor (Bill Hader), when he first witnesses the terrifying Spaghetti Tornado: âMama Mia.â Enough said.
In this movie, probably categorized best as a âdark comedy,â Tracy Ullman discovers that her Italian husband (Kevin Kline) has been serially unfaithful. Devastated, her reaction is to secretly plan and carry out his murder. Unfortunately her many attempts at this fail, leaving him blissfully unaware that he is in any danger, and thus providing the action of the movie.
One of her ideas is to poison him by making him a big spaghetti dinner with two whole bottles of sleeping pills mixed into the sauce. She keeps serving him plate after plate, waiting for him to keel over, to no avail, as other silliness ensues. Now, it may be mildly notable that her character isnât Italian, sheâs a Slav, so there may be some vague racist tones in this spaghetti strategy of hers, especially since he and his mother-in-law insist on insulting each other in their native languages, but thatâs only if you want to look really deep into it. Given the rampant immorality of all the characters, this movie is actually very funny. At one point Kevin Kline says to one of his girlfriends, âIâm Italian, I canât make love to a woman with a German Shepard in the room. Itâs awkward for him.â
Going much further into the realm of the macabre, fittingly for Listverse, Se7en takes the concept of Murder-by-Spaghetti to whole new level.
The setup is basic enough: Morgan Freeman and Brad Pitt are detectives assigned to a case, Freeman is on the verge of retirement, he doesnât care for Pittâs cocky attitude, yada yada yada. Anyway, at the first crime scene they visit, they find a morbidly obese man sitting, dead at a table, with his hands and feet bound together with barbed wire, and his head facedown in a bowl of spaghetti. Thereâs also a bucket of vomit and human excrement under the table. After visiting with the coroner, they conclude that the man must have been tortured by being force-fed numerous cans of spaghetti, at gunpoint, until his organs eventually burst and he died from internal bleeding.
The story goes that the killer responsible is a maniac who follows a pattern based on the Seven Deadly Sins, with the obese victim representing Gluttony. The rest of the corresponding murders follow (Greed, Lust, etc, all similarly grotesque), but this first one is what sets the tone for the whole movie. Itâs twisted, disgusting and disturbing, which is exactly how both detectives feel about the unidentified âmetroâ setting they both live in, and cannot stand.
In this Japanese language film, a humorous restaurant scene shows an unexpected interplay between two cultures. A Japanese woman is instructing a group of younger girls the polite way to eat spaghetti. She demonstrates the correct way of holding a fork and spoon, how to politely twirl the noodles up off the plate, bite, chew and so forth.
Across the dining area at another table is a western-looking man who is served his own plate of spaghetti. As he eavesdrops on the etiquette lesson, he attempts to eat his spaghetti according to how the Japanese teacher is describing. Before long, however, he grows impatient and simply starts to scoop the spaghetti into his mouth and slurp it loudly. When the Japanese women hear him they are all very shocked and embarrassed, but after a couple of minutes they realize that his way is more effective and they all abandon the proper style in favor of slurping, including the instructor. This awesome scene works great even without subtitles.
The role of Italian food in this movie is to symbolize the extravagant life of the mob members, and it is summed up with a line from the final scene. Ray Liota, a former âwise-guyâ, and the filmâs narrator, is lamenting his new suburban life in the witness protection program, as he says, âI canât even get decent food! Right after I got here I ordered some spaghetti with marinara sauce and I got egg noodles and ketchup. Iâm an average nobody.â
Contrast this sentiment with a previous scene in which he and the gang are preparing a delicious dinner, while theyâre actually serving time in prison, on âMafia Row.â As mobsters, they were somehow privileged enough to not have to stay in cells like regular criminals, and they got to cook their own meals from scratch. As Pauly Cicero is cutting paper-thin strips of garlic with a razor blade, Liota walks in with fresh baked bread, cheese and two bottles of wine. (This scene only refers to âpastaâ, and not spaghetti specifically, but still.)
Another notable scene in which the relationship between food and lifestyle is illustrated is when Ray Liota is in the middle of a major drug deal, and he calls home to make sure his little brother is stirring the tomato sauce he has on the stove, just to make sure the sauce doesnât âstick.â
Make no mistake, Martin Scorsese earned an Best Director Oscar for this movie, even though they gave it to him for The Departed.
In one nice little scene Jack Lemmon is making dinner for Shirley McLane in the apartment, and as he is singing and dancing in the steamy kitchen, he uses a tennis racket to strain the spaghetti over the sink. As if this act of typical uncivilized bachelorhood wasnât enough, McLane then says, âYouâre pretty good with that racket,â to which Lemmon replies, âwait âtil you see me serve the meatballs!â Classic.
To fully appreciate the spaghetti scene in this movie, you have to consider it from the point-of-view of its target audience: adolescent boys. Bean Healy (John Ritter) is a single dad who is raising his only son, Junior, and the two of them are out on a double date of sorts with his (Benâs) single mother girlfriend Annie and her daughter Trixie. At the restaurant Junior and Trixie spot their school principal Igor Peabody (Gilbert Gottfried) sitting at a VIP table with his scantily-clad female companion, and the two kids decide to start some mischief. With a spoon, Junior catapults a meatball across the dining room and into the ample cleavage of Peabodyâs date where it is securely buried. As Peabody presumptuously attempts to fish it out with his fingers, Trixie pelts him in the side of the head with another meatball, at which point Peabody screams, âYou rotten kids! You should be locked in cages!â At this, Ben retaliates in the kidsâ defense and before long the entire restaurant is engulfed in a full-fledged spaghetti food fight (there are also pies).
This is a fundamental turning point in the movieâs plot and character development, as before this scene Junior and Trixie regarded each other principally as a rivals and both were in a power struggle against their parents, but now, as a result of the food fight, when they have teamed up for the first time, the audience can see how truly loyal all four characters are to each other, and how perfect they all are as a family.
Itâs difficult to single out another exact moment in all of the vast Disney collection thatâs more charming, creative, tender, iconic and downright romantic, than when the cocker spaniel and the schnauzer-mix in Lady and the Tramp serendipitously pull each other into a kiss when they slurp up the same noodle from a plate of spaghetti. Itâs their first official date, itâs under a starry sky, thereâs music, and theyâre both completely oblivious about whatâs about to happen until the very last moment when their lips touch! Except for the borderline-hostile ethnic stereotypes in this scene, it is nothing short of flawless.
Whatâs interesting is that, with such a great moment, it becomes totally irrelevant that the two characters are dogs, instead of people. No small accomplishment, but maybe the fact that theyâre non-human in the first place is what makes the whole thing so universally accessible to viewers young and old. This is truly one of the crowning jewels in the Magic Kingdom.
As a side note, this scene was later lampooned by the 1993 movie, Hot Shots Part Duex, even down to Charlie Sheen pushing a meatball across the plate with his nose. By and large a worthless picture, this one parody succeeds in not completely desecrating the original. It actually pays a modest tribute in its own weird way. The Lady and the Tramp scene was also alluded to by the show MarriedâŚwith Children when Buck takes a female dog to the backdoor of an Italian restaurant (where Al Bundy also goes to beg for food.)




















I know this has already been said before but why not the scene in "A Clockwork Orange"? And Why spaghetti?
As great as the Lady and the Tramp is, the Night at the Opera scene has to be #1. Great list.
Hey, you can learn from any kind of lists, it's up to you…
For example, i didn't know about the movie Elf, and i saw Tampopo on tv a few years ago, i really liked it, but i didn't catch the name, so i couldn't find it. And voilà, little miracle, thank you spagetti list, now i know the name of the movie i was searching for ^^
Always something to learn, don't play snob, people, if you stay humble and curious, you will learn so much things, any time, anywhere ^^
Today's list inspired me to have spaghetti for lunch. I hope tomorrow's list involves tacos.
when i read the title i was sure that the scene from Magical Mystery Tour would be mentioned here……..but yeah, it wasnt! boooooo!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ignore the haters, i liked this list. i like spaghetti especially with lots of cheese on it…mmmm… and i don't see anything ethnic racist about lady and the tramp! except those mean cats! roflmao
no Fisher King? With Amanda Plummer and Robin Williams dining out
Good call! I loved that movie, it's one of my all time favorites.
Them sitting in the faux golden dragon booth – Perry singing “Lydia the Tattooed Lady” – camera zooms slowly back, the booth reflecting on the shiny glass tops of the tables. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SqL_ja23Nv0&fe…
Terry Gilliam at his best – a true artist.
(ties in to # 10 – “Lydia the Tattooed Lady” was performed by Groucho Marx in “At the Circus”, 1939 – probably an ode to Groucho from Robin Williams and Gilliam) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n4zRe_wvJw8
I was actually surprised not to see "Patch Adams" on here. Does no one else remember the scene where they swam in a giant pool filled with spaghetti?
Unusual list, but cute
What's with all the hate on this list? It was a breath of fresh air, not entirely serious, just sweet. It was random, but it was nice to read. Not everything has to be oddly informative!
From the moment I saw the title, I saw hoping Lady and the Tramp would be listed. Pleased to see it was number one. (:
Thank you for the delightful read.
I thought I was going to hate today's list…~ surprise ~…it turned out to be amusing.
I am a big Marx Brothers fan…I mean, I know all of their movies…I love all of their movies…the earlier ones are better than the later ones, after they lost Chico, but I love them all, so when the list began with "A Night at the Opera", a movie I can literally play in it's entirety in my head, I knew the list was a winner no matter what.
Soooooo, the rest was a hit or miss, big deal. "Lady and the Tramp" was wonderful.
"Goodfellas" was wonderful.
"The Apartment" was a fabulous movie for so many reasons, the spaghetti scene really had so little to do with the brilliance of the movie as a whole.
I, too, question the exclusion of "A Clockwork Orange", but that decision is up to the list-writer.
Thank goodness for Turner Classic Movies – if it wasn’t for TCM I doubt anyone around here would ever get to see the Marx Bros.
"Hail, Hail Freedonia"
TCM has introduced an entire generation to some really wonderful movies they otherwise would never have seen.
I only took issue with Turner when he began to colorize a lot of the old black & white movies…they simply looked wrong in color.
agreed – I took Woody's side on that – not so much on Soon-Yi
I would have simply called it TCM rather than invoke his name, just not sure how feeds are around the country – the world
i have DTV – they showed "Freaks" the other night, called some freinds – they have ATT because of iPhone – BUT NO TCM
was u high when u made this list?
A favorite spaghetti scene of mine is from the Japanese sci-fi flick "Returner". In the scene Anne Suzuki, playing a time traveler from a post apocalyptic future, is served some spaghetti cooked al dente by Takeshi Kaneshiro, playing a present day thug. The food is so delicious to her malnourished palate that it literally brings her to tears.
This list was *****.
You damn right!
Aww! I love the choice you made for number 1!!
Spaghetti is good but for the love of pasta don't drown it in bolognese!
Is anyone besides me more than a little gooned out by that freaky looking kid enthusiastically chowing down on what appears to be a plateful of bloody entrails in the pic on the LV front page for this list? I think there should have been a warning posted. I had to go look at a picture of a clown holding a spider just to settle down. If you disagree, have a better look:
http://exurbanpedestrian.files.wordpress.com/2010…
HOLT ***** – THAT'S NO ROCKWELL – AND THAT'S NOT SPAGHETTI
That's one of the creepiest pictures I've ever seen…what's even creepier? That kid grew up, and is somewhere an adult, looking (holy moly) like a bigger version of that child! It's almost like Magg…oh…
oh…uh…nothing, Maggot, nothing at all…I had nothing in mind there…nope, not me…nu uh…well, I'll be shoving off now.
See ya.
What do Mangia Cakes know about pasta?
Yup, have to agree with this being one of the most stupidest lists you came out with. Ideas getting lax?
tee hee hee!
ne plus ultra!
Has the shark been jumped?
The shark got jumped long ago around here.
Please vote my comments down, I'm going for the record!
Odd Couple
Oscar Madison: Now kindly remove that spaghetti from my poker table.
[Felix laughs]
Oscar Madison: The hell's so funny?
Felix Ungar: It's not spaghetti, it's linguini.
[Oscar picks up the linguini and hurls it against the kitchen wall]
Oscar Madison: Now it's garbage.
This should have been #1, and it didn't even make it on the list at all. I call bull*****.
"Alien" is the only spaghetti scene.
I agree… as I read down the list I was sure it was going to be #1… I mean, who could forget that first entrance of the chestburster??? *****ing awesome scene from a *****ing awesome movie.
I loved lady in the tramp but this list is
Where is Magical Mystery Tour? Dumb list.
The old lady in Tampopo is Okada Mariko, a legendary actress.
How did this list get approved? I'm serious, this list is crap! There is no way that nobody submitted a better one than this tripe!!
Please vote my comment down, I'm going for the record!!
Spaghetti beats tripe;
most people agree to that.
perhaps that is why?
The best is #6 (se7en)…
I'll get a lot of flack for this,but this used to be an entertaining website.
So go ahead. See if I give a *****.
I give zero *****s.
The spaghetti scene in "Lady and the Tramp" pales in comparison to scene featuring "The Siamese Cat Song".
Its funny that I'm reading this list just after watching Remember Me. There's a scene from the film where the pegnant chick from Lost takes a huge pot filled with water and leftover spaghetti from dinner earlier on and dumps it on her boyfriend's head. There's even some spaghetti caught in the guy's shirt.
Spaghett!
spaghett-about-it!
and the quest for the golden treasure
Hey Frater….you could make a list of “biggest whiny crybaby primaddona ungrateful loser comments”…you dont even have to navigate out of this comments page to get your material!
The glaring omission is G U M M O !!!! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ARNRlkuTmjs
You missed my favorite, Alex delarge passing out in his plate.
This is the first time I've posted. I've been reading Listverse for almost 2 years, usually from my phone in the minutes right before I drift off to sleep. It wasn't until about 2 weeks ago, though, that I started reading the comments. It's honestly become just as good as the lists, especially when the list isn't that great.
Is it just me or is this list FAR too overly cautious about supposed racism? :-
What about the Gummo Spaghetti scene?? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ARNRlkuTmjs
it’s funny that I chanced upon another website this morning that talked about Tampopo but it a completely different context of coarse. weird. I love that movie or at least I remember loving that movie. Ah spaghetti lists! I know they’re a dime a dozen these days but it still thrills my noodle to think of all the best moments I’ve spent with spaghetti….and the worst too. Like, how many new shirts have been blotched by the sauce?? I have a whole trunk of spaghetti sauce shirts that I only where on very dark night or at that club with the red lights.
–So has anyone asked if the movie Meatballs has a spaghetti scene?
I luved the list! better than the ‘best swimming pool scenes in movies’ by Blogball.
—oh yes Dan!! Gummo spaghetti in a dirty tub with bacon taped to the wall!
Looks like you guys are running out if things to put in a list.
STUPID! DUMB! This is a crap list while well researched it is just well, DUMB! Where are the standards anymore?
When I saw this list I immediately thought of Wrongfully Accused.
ELF??????? The spaghetti appeared once for 1/2 a second and I had to watch it 3 times before I saw it. That is your memorable spaghetti scene? You must really like spaghetti to see that.
P.S. I show select scenes of Gummo (mostly the spaghetti scene) to my kids if they lay around all day being super lazy, asking them if that is how they would like to live later on…i like to throw it in as well that the kid has the motivation to wash his ears with soap even though he lives in a *****hole. Suddenly the kids are cleaning the hell out of the house…)
I don't like movie excerpts or spaghetti. I didn't even read the list, I just had to comment on my disappointment.
You sure you didn't have some traumatic spaghetti experience as a child? Something that involved a movie excerpt? Maybe you repressed it…..
No it was that famous Spaghnetti Incident by Guns´N Roses
Maybe you should create a list of your favorite full-length movies with no spaghetti scenes, a kinda yin to this yang of a list.
Well, I did learn how to properly eat spaghetti (using giant spoon to capture spaghetti whilts turning said carbs with fork) from a movie….No joke. Maybe I or perhaps you, can write a list about the things ppl learn from movies. *****, drugs, how guidettes are suppose to act (Jersey Shore), these were all firsts for me.
I always enjoyed the scene from Godfather 2 when a young Vitto Corleone has two of his friends at his apartment. His wife is making them all a spaghetti dinner & they are discussing how to get the local mobster off their backs. Vitto tells them that "He'll make the mobster an offer he can't refuse."
gummo had an interesting spaghetti scene. I'm just sayin
I've got a friend who has directed a handful of episodes on The Simpsons. In two of his episodes he's made a parody of Lady and the Tramp and I've joked that his entire animation career is based on that scene.
Reading this list made me want to watch lady and the tramp again. So I did.
Spot on putting it at number 1, it really is a classic.
But I agree that the spaghetti scene from a clockwork orange should have been on here!
*****in’ eggits tha lot of ya
What about that scene in Magical Mystery tour with John Lennon & the crying fat lady, and the waiter dumping loads of gross spaghetti on the plates with a shovel? I forget if it's John or the waiter, but somebody keeps saying "Spaghetti!"
Hey what about Gummo?? The bath tub scene with Solomon!
Where's I am David? there's a scene with spaghetti.
What about the bathtub seen in GUMO?
What about the bathtub scene in Gummo??!?!
sorry I didn’t see the other comments…but it should be there!
Charlie Kelly would approve ‘what is your spaghetti policy?’
Gummo should be at the top of this list.
Where is “A Woman Under the Influence”?
Best spaghetti scene in terms of palpable deliciousness is when the future Don Vito (Robert De Niro) eats spaghetti with his comrades while they’re planning how to take down Don Fanucci. They looked like the best goddamn noodles ever made.
Umm, this one’s a little obscure, but Lupin the 3rd: The Castle of Cagliostro had a really memorable scene involving two of the main characters and a big-ass plate of spaghetti.
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