We’ve all experienced it: we’re sitting in the theater, watching a new release, and a famous actor or actress appears on the screen that we weren’t expecting. Everyone in the theater gasps, or screams, or gives the signature “woahhh!” The actor or actress drops a heavy or geniously silly one-liner before disappearing as quickly as they arrived, not to appear again for the rest of the movie. They didn’t have an important role, yet they played one of the most important parts in the movie.

Cameos happen in films all the time, but every once in a while, a star shows up in a movie briefly and then manages to walk off with the entire film, claiming the best scenes for themselves so that they are the first – and sometimes only – thing you remember when you look back on the film. Here is a list of 10 movies where a star showed up for a single scene, and ended up stealing the whole movie.

MOVIEWEB VIDEO OF THE DAY

9 Mike Tyson / The Hangover

     Warner Bros. Pictures  

Mike Tyson playing himself in The Hangover was a brilliant casting choice, and he nearly walks off with the whole movie just by being himself. Oh, and owning a tiger.

MOVIEWEB VIDEO OF THE DAY

MOVIEWEB VIDEO OF THE DAY

MOVIEWEB VIDEO OF THE DAY

When the heroes wake up after an insane bachelor party the night before, one of the first things they discover is that there is a live tiger in the bathroom. Over the course of many, many detours, all taken to try to piece together what happened during the previous night, they discover that the tiger – which the heroes had managed to steal the night before – belongs to none other than Mike Tyson.

Eventually, Tyson tracks them down and ambushes them while listening to Phil Collins’ “In The Air Tonight,” and eventually decking Zack Galifanakis with a right hook to the face. He then demands that they bring the tiger back to Tyson’s mansion, and leaves. When they arrive, Mike shows them security footage of them peeing in his pool and walking the tiger out on a leash to put it in a cop car they stole. The entire time, Tyson is holding a little white puppy, and the information they receive sets them on course to eventually find their missing friend, Dave. He doesn’t return for the rest of the movie.

8 Margot Robbie / The Big Short

The Big Short is an entertaining, biographical drama designed to educate the public on exactly how the housing crisis of 2007/2008 took place. When it comes time to explain how banks profited off of the subprime loan scheme that led to the crisis, the movie offers up Margot Robbie drinking champagne in a bubble bath to explain it.

“Basically Lewis Ranieri’s mortgage bonds were amazingly profitable for the big banks. They made billions and billions on their 2% fee they got for selling into these bonds…” Robbie says. Adam McKay has made a name for himself by writing movies that explain complex topics that he believes all Americans should understand, but might have a hard time coming to terms with. He accomplishes this by displaying these topics in ways we can all relate to, and using imagery and familiar faces to draw us in, so we can actually pay attention and follow along. This short cameo might be the best example.

7 Bill Murray / Zombieland

     Sony Pictures Releasing   

Bill Murray all but redefined what a cameo could mean when he showed up in Zombieland (2009). In this film, the world has ended due to a violent zombie apocalypse, leaving our quartet of main characters on a road trip west to an amusement park that may or may not exist. The foursome of heroes consists of Columbus (Jesse Eisenberg), Tallahassee (Woody Harrelson), Wichita (Emma Stone), and Little Rock (Abigail Breslin).

After several adventures, Tallahassee comes up with a brilliant idea: to set up a home in the mansion of a Hollywood icon, who is slowly revealed to be none other than Bill Murray. The crew makes their way to his house – which has a large, golden ‘BM’ on the gate – and immediately makes themselves at home.

As it turns out, Bill Murray is still alive. At first, he appears to be zombified, as he meanders down towards the group. However, by the time he comes down to meet Tallahassee and Wichita, we learn that he just wears zombie makeup and prosthetics because it allows him to wander the streets to get groceries and leave the house.

In one scene, Murray dons his zombie makeup and shuffles down the aisle of the theater to prank Columbus and Little Rock, only to startle Columbus into shooting him with a shotgun. He gets in some wickedly clever last words, though, with “Do you have any regrets?” … “Maybe Garfield.”

6 Johnny Depp / 21 Jump Street

     Sony Pictures  

Towards the end of 21 Jump Street, Jonah Hill and Channing Tatum are pulled out of prom and taken to a drug deal with Dave Franco and the biker gang who supplies the drugs. Things go sideways, and guns are suddenly pointed at everyone in the room. But, out of the blue, one member of the biker gang rips off his blond wig and mustache to reveal none other than Johnny Depp, declaring that he’s been undercover (presumably since the original) investigating the drug ring, and he shifts to pointing his gun at the actual drug dealers, telling the new stars, “You’ve just ruined a five-year investigation.” Things seem to calm down for a moment, as Tatum tells Depp that they’re all part of the Jump Street Division, and just as Johnny lets his guard down, he’s shot in the neck.

5 Stan Lee / Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. II

     Marvel Studios  

Prior to his death, Marvel legend Stan Lee made a cameo in every single Marvel movie, going all the way back to 2000s X-Men. Typically, he plays as an extra character for a clip of just a few seconds or less: a bus driver, a mental ward patient, or a security guard, usually letting out a clever one-liner before disappearing again.

In Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. II, however, his cameo is a bit more involved. When he appears in the film, Lee is on a planetoid in deep space, surrounded by members of the Watchers, the ancient race who observe everything happening in the universe and who occasionally meddle in it despite a strict non-interference policy.

The Watchers have played multiple roles in the comics, namely one named Uatu, who debuted the race in the comics back in 1963 to warn The Fantastic Four of the coming of Galactus. Compared to the many, many other Stan Lee cameos in Marvel Films, this one seems to imply more than just a creator appearing in the movie form of his creations. Is Stan Lee a Watcher? Is he really gone? Or has he just taken a more hands-off approach – watching from a distance instead of being easily located here on Earth?

4 Keanu Reeves / Always Be My Maybe

     Netlfix   

Always Be My Maybe, which features Ali Wong as Sasha and Randall Park as Marcus, is a romantic comedy about two childhood friends who reconnect later in life but haven’t yet realized how deep their feelings towards each other go. The chemistry between them returns immediately, and thus begins a hilarious dance around the possibility of them being more than friends, despite a number of roadblocks.

One of the most significant (not to mention hilarious) roadblocks appears during a double date between Marcus, his girlfriend, Sasha, and – you guessed it – Keanu Reeves. Reeves plays himself as the pretentious artist, but maintains some of his legendary zen-like charm, and the entire dinner scene with him is legendary, as Marcus’ date remarks that Reeves is her favorite star, and Keanu responds, “The only stars that matter are the ones you look at when you dream.” The best part of his appearance comes just a few minutes later, as he wears restaurant-provided headphones and weeps as he listens to the screams of the animal he’s consuming. The way Keanu plays up this pretentious-actor-persona is gut-bustingly hilarious. When he disappears later in the film, he would take the whole movie with him.

3 Brad Pitt / Deadpool 2

In Deadpool 2, Ryan Reynolds’ titular anti-hero assembles the X-Force in an attempt to stop Cable (Josh Brolin). This crew includes Domino (Zazie Beetz), Bedlam (Terry Crews), Shatterstar (Lewis Tan), Zeitgeist (Bill Skarsgård), a regular mustachioed human named Peter (Rob Delaney), and Vanisher – who, for most of his screen time, is completely invisible.

Unfortunately, most of the X-Force die almost immediately, minus Domino. Bedlam crashes onto a bus, Shatterstar is killed when he lands on the spinning blades of a helicopter, Zeitgeist lands on a wood chipper and when regular old Peter tries to help him, he gets acid vomit all over him, killing him. Vanisher has similar luck, as he crashes onto the cables of a streetlamp and is immediately electrocuted. However, the electrocution did allow viewers to finally catch a glimpse of his face, and it turned out to be none other than Brad Pitt. It’s an incredibly brief, blink-and-you’ll-miss-it cameo, which makes it all the more impressive that it’s there.

Pitt’s Deadpool 2 cameo is officially the shortest A-list celebrity cameo in film history, but the shock of seeing an invisible character that half of the cast are convinced isn’t even really there, and have him at last appear as such a big star, was such a quick delight – one very suitable to the Deadpool methodology.

2 Michael Cera / This Is The End

     Sony Pictures Releasing  

This Is The End is about hell cracking all the way through the earth to Hollywood, and many favorite comedic celebrities play themselves in it. It’s a bold concept, as each of the celebrities are playing as themselves while simultaneously playing up very pretentious, unlikeable characters. Michael Cera – although not one of the main characters and only appearing in scenes lasting less than ten minutes – is simultaneously bizarre and fitting.

According to Seth Rogen, “We thought it would be funny to kill someone you don’t expect to die, and it needed to be someone who was despicable so when they do die really graphically, you’re entertained by it, not wrapped up in the fact that this person you like just died.” He described it as the “perfect storm” to have Cera appear as a drugged monster, but apparently Cera’s comedic instincts took over and took this cameo to a whole other level, and he’s portrayed as a rude, arrogant, and horrible person.

In his big scene, all the party-goers eventually run outside to find L.A. on fire, Michael stops the group to ask who took his cellphone, demonstrating his lack of care for anyone other than himself. Meanwhile, a crack in the earth begins to form beneath him, dislodging a nearby streetlight that promptly falls and impales him, then lifts him back up off the ground. Hanging in the air, covered in blood, with a streetlight protruding from his stomach, he finds his cellphone in his pocket, says, “Well, this is embarrassing,” before he and the streetlight are dragged into the earth through a flaming crack, never to be seen again.

1 Donald Glover / Spider-man: Homecoming

     20th Television/Disney-ABC Domestic Television  

In Spider-Man: Homecoming, Donald Glover plays a regular shady dude, and Tom Holland’s Spider-Man attempts to interrogate him. Spider-Man wants to know who’s making and selling the weapons he’s having to deal with in the film, and he attempts to use an intimidating voice to scare Glover into giving up the information. It doesn’t exactly work.

But Glover’s character recognizes that Spider-Man is a hero, and states that he doesn’t want the weapons in his neighborhood either because he has a niece in the area, and that the culprit needs to be stopped. Glover states that he doesn’t know who the villain is or where he is, but that he needs to be stopped, and he knows where he’s going to be. After giving up the details, Glover, in his typically cool and collected manner, tells Spider-Man that he needs to get better at the intimidation/interrogation part of his job. Spider-Man has webbed Glover’s car shut, and tells him it should dissolve in about two hours. Glover’s none too pleased, but Spider-Man continues on his mission to save the day. Glover exudes cool and collected vibes in a way few actors his age are capable of, and, because of that, this mostly throwaway conversation is elevated to one of the cooler asides of the entire movie.