Peter Pan (1953)
Back then, as a child, there had been way more important things than a Disney movie, and all the blatantly scandalous messages by the media giant were brought into our naive little heads. Yet thankfully, some Disney fans pay more attention to the dark scenes in some of our personal favorite Disney classic movies. And yet audience members can’t let anything like this happen, either—Peter Pan ‘s adaptation by J.M filmed in 1953. Barrie, Peter and his companions, The Lost Boys, his beloved shadow, and, of course, Tinker Bell were living in Neverland. Peter does a little trick in the scene to prove that the evidence that he sewed at his feet and has now been trapped for the rest of his life, giving the audience an improper yet quick illustration of his inferior personality.
Star Wars: A New Hope (1977)
The first episode, Episode IV: A New Hope, featured one of the most widely discussed scenes throughout the world’s most renowned Star Wars franchises. This occurred when Luke Skywalker saves Han Solo while Princess Leia was rescued from the Death Star by the rest of her team. All through when they’re hiding, the Stormtroopers searched and boarded their ship. You see, one of these people knock his head on the frame of the door from the ground when you watch closely. The shot had now become an iconic deleted scene not only when people look at this sequence again and again, but also when the DVD was set to release George Lucas applied a sound effect to the bang to make it even more fun.