32 Memorable Music Moments From ’80s Movies

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There are two things about the 1980s that will be forever linked, the movies and the music. It was a unique decade for both and there are so many great songs that came from movie soundtracks that it’s almost impossible to limit this list, but we’re going to do our best. Here is our list of some of the very best music moments in classic 1980s movies like Dirty Dancing and Top Gun.

Judd Nelson raising his fist in the air as he walks across a sports field at the end of The Breakfast Club

(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

“Don’t You (Forget About Me)” – The Breakfast Club

One thing fans of The Breakfast Club will never do is forget about you. The song, written and performed by Simple Minds, is one of the most iconic songs of the decade. The use of it in The Breakfast Club is equally iconic, as Bender and the rest of the “club” leave detention at the end of the day.

Anthony Edwards looking back over his should with his arm around Tom Cruise's shoulders, who has his back to the camera in Top Gun

(Image credit: Paramount Pictures)

“Playing With The Boys” – Top Gun

The Top Gun soundtrack produced multiple hits and the whole album is full of bangers. If we’re going to pick one iconic moment in the movie that fits the music perfectly, we have to go with the Kenny Loggins’ hit “Playing With The Boys” during the volleyball scene. The moment you hear the song, you think of those fit guys playing on the beach… even if Tom Crusie is inexplicably wearing jeans.

Giancarlo Esposito and others in Do The Right Thing

(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

“Fight The Power” – Do The Right Thing

While there are great songs all over movies from the ’80s, there are few that had the cultural impact as Public Enemy’s “Fight The Power” from the equally impactful Spike Lee joint, Do The Right Thing. Both exploded onto the scene and neither music nor movies were the same after them.

Eddie Murphy swinging from the back of a truck in Beverly Hills Cop

(Image credit: Paramount Pictures)

“Neutron Dance” – Beverly Hills Cop

Not only is Beverly Hills Cop one of the funniest movies of the decade, but it’s also a great action movie, and to top it all off, it’s filled with fantastic songs, including the theme song “Axel F” by Harold Faltermeyer. But there is no more memorable scene than the opening with Axel (Eddie Murphy) swinging from the back of the truck in an amazing chase with “Neutron Dance” by The Pointer Sisters blasting in the background.

Kevon Bacon on a bulldozer wearing a red shirt in Footloose

(Image credit: Paramount Pictures)

Yet another ’80s movie with an iconic soundtrack is Footloose. Sure, we could have gone with the theme song here, but is there a more memorable scene than the game of chicken on heavy construction equipment with “Holding Out For A Hero” by Bonnie Tyler accompanying the ridiculous (and amazing) scene? We think not.

Jason Patric and Corey Haim smiling in front of a fire in The Lost Boys

(Image credit: Warner Brothers)

“I Still Believe” – The Lost Boys

There is just something that is just so 1980s about. greased up, topless Tim Cappello shouting out “I Still Believe” as he gyrates around with his saxophone. That scene in The Lost Boys is both ridiculous and ridiculously awesome.

De’voreaux White as Argyle driving the limo in Die Hard

(Image credit: Twentieth Century Fox)

“Christmas in Hollis” – Die Hard

When John McClain asked Argyle if he had any Christmas music in Die Hard and the chauffeur answered with “Christmas in Hollis” it was a revelation for millions of middle-class Americans who had no idea there was Christmas hip hop. It’s still the best seasonal rap song, don’t you agree?

John Candy in Planes, Trains and Automobiles

(Image credit: Paramount Pictures)

“Mess Around” – Planes, Trains And Automobiles

A whole bunch of things really go wrong for John Candy and Steve Martin in Planes Trains And Automobiles. The wildest has to be when Candy’s character burns down the rental car while he smokes and jams out to the Ray Charles classic “Mess Around.”

Willem Dafoe with his arms up in the air as he dies in Platoon

(Image credit: Orion Pictures)

“Adagio For Strings” – Platoon

The most powerful moment in Platoon is when Elias (Willem Dafoe) is killed with his arms out in a Christ-like pose. Without question, a big reason the scene is so emotional is the choice by director Oliver Stone to use the piece “Adagio For Strings” by composer Samuel Barber. It’s the perfect piece of music for the scene and really adds to the incredible impact of it.

Jack Nicholson imitating a statue in Batman

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

“Partyman” – Batman

Sometimes people who weren’t around in the 1980s don’t really understand what a huge cultural moment Tim Burton’s Batman was. It was a huge deal and Burton getting the enigmatic Prince to write some songs for the movie was an inspired moment. The Purple One’s “Partyman” is the perfect song for the scene when The Joker (Jack Nicholson) and his henchmen break into Gotham’s art museum and deface the art.

Tom Cruise singing into a candlestick and wearing a pink shirt in Risky Business.

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

“Old Time Rock And Roll” – Risky Business

Is there any way we could put together this list without Tom Cruise dancing in his underwear in Risky Business to the Bob Seeger classic “Old Time Rock And Roll”? No, there isn’t and there really isn’t anything else to be said here, It’s a classic film moment.

Patrick Swayze standing in the ballroom in Dirty Dancing.

(Image credit: Vestron Pictures)

“(I’ve Had) The Time of My Life” – Dirty Dancing

Nobody puts Baby in the corner, and only one person can launch Baby up in the air. When Johnny and Baby finally pull off that lift at the end of Dirty Dancing is one of the most triumphant moments of ’80s film. The song that accompanies the moment, “(I’ve Had) The Time of My Life” by Bill Medley and Jennifer Warnes became just as iconic.

John Cusack in Say Anything

(Image credit: 20th Century Fox)

“In Your Eyes” – Say Anything

Walking a fine line between romantic and psychotic is Lloyd Dobler (John Cusack) holding his boom box over his head while playing “In Your Eyes” by Peter Gabriel outside Diane’s (Ione Skye) window in Say Anything. We’re saps at our core, so we’ll call it 100% romantic and 100% iconic.

The funeral procession in The Big Chill driving over a long bridge

(Image credit: Columbia Pictures)

“You Can’t Always Get What You Want” – The Big Chill

Boomer culture was in full nostalgia mode in the 1980s and nothing sums that up more than The Big Chill. That’s not to say that the movie doesn’t have its moments. One of the coolest tricks the movie pulls off is near the beginning when the organ player at the funeral starts playing “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” by The Rolling Stones. It segues perfectly into the actual song as the funeral procession drives across a long bridge. It’s probably the best scene in the movie if we’re honest.

Graffiti on a bus that says

(Image credit: Paramount Pictures)

“Oh Yeah” – Ferris Bueller’s Day Off

“Oh Yeah” by Swiss electronic band Yello was used in a few movies in the 1980s, like Uncle Buck and The Secret Of My Success. With all due respect to the Michael J. Fox classic, the best use of the song came at the end of Ferris Bueller’s Day Off when Principal Rooney (Jeffrey Jones) is forced to ride the school bus and learns that he does, in fact, “eat it.”

Prince in Purple Rain

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

“Let’s Go Crazy” – Purple Rain

Prince was one of the biggest stars of the 1980s and his magnum opus was the soundtrack to his movie Purple Rain. Obviously there is a ton of great music in the movie, but the best scene has to be when Prince plays “Let’s Go Crazy” in a club before jumping up on an amp and shredding that amazing guitar solo at the end of the song.

Beetlejuice Day-O scene

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

“Day-O (The Banana Boat Song)” – Beetlejuice

Even songs from the 1950s were able to create amazing musical moments in the 1980s. Take the Harry Bellefonte song “Day-O (The Banana Boat Song)” in Beetlejuice for example. The wild scene that the song accompanies is when the dinner party is interrupted by the ghosts living in the attic and it’s the most memorable moment in the whole movie.

Phoebe Cates gets out of the pool in red bikini in Fast Times at Ridgemont High.

(Image credit: Universal)

“Moving In Stereo” – Fast Times At Ridgemont High

In the interest of keeping this list rated G, we won’t say much about the scene in Fast Times At Ridgemont High that features The Cars’ song “Moving In Stereo.” expect to say it involves Phoebe Cates in a red bikini and IYKYK.

Molly Ringwald and Michael Schoeffling as Sam and Jake Ryan cake kiss moment in Sixteen Candles

(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

“If You Were Here” – Sixteen Candles

Director John Hughes had a knack for creating amazing musical moments in between the hilarious quotes from his movies. In Sixteen Candles one of those classic moments happens at the end when Jake and Sam finally kiss over Sam’s birthday cake as “If You Were Here” by Thompson Twins plays over the scene.

Chevy Chase in National Lampoon’s Vacation

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

“Holiday Road” – National Lampoon’s Vacation

Fleetwood Mac veteran Lindsey Buckingham provided the classic “Holiday Road” for National Lampoon’s Vacation and while it only plays briefly as the Griwolds first hit the road in Chicago, it’s been an enduring hit ever since.

David Bowie singing in Labyrinth

(Image credit: LucasFilms)

“Magic Dance” – Labyrinth

1986’s Labyrinth not only launched Jennifer Connelly’s career, but if gave one amazing musical moment when the villain, played by the legend himself, David Bowie, sings his song “Magic Dance” along with a whole slew of Jim Henson puppets. It’s as magical and the name of the song implies.

Sylvester Stallone in Rocky III

(Image credit: MGM/United Artists Distribution and Marketing)

“Eye Of The Tiger” – Rocky III

In the first Rocky movie, audiences were treated to that amazing moment of Rocky (Sylvester Stallone) climbing the stairs of the Philadelphia Art Museum to “Gonna Fly Now.” Of course, that doesn’t count for this list of ’80s movies, but luckily in Rocky III, we get “Eye of the Tiger” for the training montage. It’s a toss-up for which is better.

Pee-Wee Herman on top of a bar doing his famous dance

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

“Tequila” – Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure

For years after Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure was released, people were still doing the Pee-Wee dance whenever they heard “Tequila” by The Champs. The ’60s classic created a classic ’80s moment.

Matthew Modine and a another actor sitting at a table in city scene in Full Metal Jacket

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

What makes “These Boots Are Made For Walking” by Nancy Sinatra so amazing in Full Metal Jacket is that it feels so upbeat immediately after the darkest moment in the movie when Private Pyle (Vincent D’Onofrio) kills his drill sergeant and then himself. It’s director Stanley Kubrick at his finest.

A close up of Michael McKeon singing into a microphone in This Is Spinal Tap

(Image credit: Embassy Pictures)

“Big Bottom” – This Is Spinal Tap

Well, once again, we’ve come to a movie that there was no way we could leave off this list. The rock mockumentary This Is Spinal Tap. There are at least a dozen scenes we could choose here, but the most iconic has to be the song “Big Bottoms” and that was proven years later when literally dozens of bass players joined the sort of fake, sort of real band for the song at Live Earth concert in 2007.

Huey Lewis in Back to the Future

(Image credit: Universal)

“The Power Of Love” – Back To The Future

We just had to include the meta moment in Back To The Future when the fictional band led by Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) starts playing a rocking version of the movie’s theme song “The Power Of Love” only to be shut down by a teacher played by Huey Lewis who, with his band The News, actually played the song for the movie. It’s just too darn loud.

Tom Cruise playing pool, with a black t-shirt that says "Vince" in The Color Of Money

(Image credit: Touchstone Pictures)

“Werewolves Of London” – The Color Of Money

Warren Zevon is one of the most beloved songwriters in rock history, but he didn’t have a ton of hits. One exception is “Werewolves of London” a song that was a hit when it came out in 1978 and then fans fell in love with it again when it appeared in an amazing scene in The Color Of Money in 1986.

Andrew McCarthy and Molly Ringwald in Pretty in Pink

(Image credit: Paramount Pictures)

“If You Leave” – Pretty In Pink

Like all his other movies, John Hughes using “If You Leave” by Orchestral Movements in the Dark in Pretty In Pink created one of the all time combos of music and movie. It’s still weird that Andie didn’t end up with Duckie, though.

River Phoenix as Chris Chambers, Wil Wheaton as Gordie Lachance, Jerry O'Connell as Vern Tessio, and Corey Feldman as Teddy Duchamp in Stand By Me

(Image credit: Columbia Pictures)

“Lollipop” – Stand By Me

For many in Gen X, their first introduction to classic early ’60 music came from Stand By Me. One of the songs used, “Lollipop” is almost a novelty song, but it’s an incredibly infectious earworm too, so it ended up being one of the most iconic moments in the movie, music-wise.

Madonna standing next to a jukebox in Desperately Seeking Susan

(Image credit: Orion Pictures)

“Into The Groove” – Desperately Seeking Susan

Desperately Seeking Susan isn’t a great movie. It feels rushed and half-baked, and it was, really, as it was an attempt to capitalize on Madonna’s burgeoning fame. It’s the Material Girl’s first major foray into film and the most memorable moment came when she is in a bar, listening to her own song, “Into The Groove.”

The cast of Adventures In Babysitting looking scared.

(Image credit: Touchstone Pictures)

“Gimme Shelter” – Adventures In Babysitting

If you aren’t paying attention, you might miss “Gimme Shelter” by The Rolling Stones in Adventures In Babysitting, but it adds a real foreboding as the kids hitch a ride back to the station wagon that they hope has been repaired and they can finally wrap up their crazy night.

Two men hugging in front of a white car in The Killing Fields

(Image credit: Goldcrest Films)

“Imagine” – The Killing Fields

John Lennon, and later Yoko Ono, were very protective of the former Beatles’ music, especially his iconic “Imagine.” Ono gave permission to the producers of The Killing Fields to use it at the end when the two protagonists are reunited after the horrors of the Khmer Rouge are finally over and it’s an incredible emotional moment, in no small part to the song.

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