It ’s soooo state of nature that Alan Rickman only had about four minutes of full concealment meter as Snape in eachHarry Pottermovie .

1.Evan Peters (as Peter Maximoff / Quicksilver), who’s responsible for one of the coolest movie scenes ever, even though he was only on screen for 5 minutes and 15 seconds inX-Men: Days of Future Past.

You can watch the performance here:

2.Alec Baldwin (as Blake), who was somehow on screen for less than 8 minutes inGlengarry Glen Ross, but his monologue rivaled those of co-stars Jack Lemmon and Al Pacino.

3.Lee Fierro (as Mrs. Kintner), who appeared briefly as the grieving mother who slapped Chief Brody across the face for leaving the beaches open inJaws.

4.Hal Holbrook (as Ron Franz), who was only in 13 minutes of the 2.5-hourInto the Wild, but he probably still made you cry your eyes out anyway.

5.Molly Shannon (as Tracy), who only had one scene but should have EGOT’d anyway for her three-minute performance inThe Santa Clause 2.

6.Drew Barrymore (as Casey), who only appeared in the first 12 minutes ofScream.

7.Viola Davis (as Mrs. Miller), who was nominated for an Oscar after appearing in only one scene inDoubt.

8.Jonathan Groff (as King George III), who received an Emmy nomination after appearing in less than 10 minutes of the stage recording ofHamilton.

9.Anthony Hopkins (as Hannibal Lecter), who won the Best Actor Oscar despite being on screen for only 24 minutes ofThe Silence of the Lambs.

10.Rooney Mara (as Erica Albright), who only had about five minutes of total screen time inThe Social Network.

11.Kimberly Adair Clark (as Honey, Frozone’s wife), who was so iconic even though she only had a couple lines inThe Incredibles.

12.Donnie Wahlberg (as Vincent Grey), who was soooo incredibly haunting, despite only appearing on screen for about three minutes inThe Sixth Sense.

You can watch the performancehere(it’s unfortunately not available as an embed).

13.Bill Murray (as himself), who was somehow only in about five minutes ofZombieland.

14.Vanessa Redgrave (as Old Briony), who was so deserving of an Oscar nomination (but somehow didn’t get it) after her single monologue at the end ofAtonement.

15.Denis Ménochet (as Perrier LaPadite), who was only on screen during the opening sequence in the 153-minuteInglourious Basterds.

16.Anne Hathaway (as Fantine), who won an Oscar after appearing in less than 15 minutes of the 158-minuteLes Misérables.

17.Harry Belafonte (as Jerome Taylor), who made such a lasting impression from just one monologue inBlacKkKlansman.

18.Julia Butters (as Trudi Fraser), who was in less than 10 minutes of the 161-minuteOnce Upon a Time in Hollywood.

19.Matthew McConaughey (as Mark Hanna), who was physically on screen for only about five minutes of the three-hours-longWolf of Wall Street.

20.Mariah Carey (as Ms. Weiss), who was only in a few short scenes inPrecious.

21.Gene Jones (as the gas station proprietor), who only appeared in a single four-minute scene inNo Country for Old Men.

22.Michelle Williams (as Randi Chandler), who got an Oscar nomination after appearing in less than 10 minutes ofManchester by the Sea.

23.Alfred Molina (as Rahad Jackson), who was so chaotic and fantastic in a single scene of the 155-minuteBoogie Nights.

24.Kenneth Tigar (as the old man), who was soooo memorable, even though he literally only had two lines inThe Avengers.

26.Robert Englund (as Freddy Krueger), who’s somehow only on screen for seven minutes, despite literally being the antagonist ofA Nightmare on Elm Street.

28.Judi Dench (as Queen Elizabeth), who won an Oscar after being on screen for only eight minutes ofShakespeare in Love.

29.And Alan Rickman (as Professor Snape), who was only on screen for 1 minute and 15 seconds in the firstDeathly Hallowsmovie, accumulating only 43 minutes of total screen time for all eightHarry Potterfilms.

mention : submission have been edited for distance and uncloudedness .

Quicksilver using his super-speed to save everyone from getting killed in the kitchen

20th Century Fox  /youtube.com

Alec Baldwin passionately speaks to Ed Harris and Jack Lemmon in an office, setting with several desks and papers

Lee as the grieving mother, in all black, talking to Chief Brody outside by the water

Close-up scenes from the movie with Hal Holbrook and Emile Hirsch's characters, outdoors, in a desert landscape, ending with them on a rocky hilltop

Tracy singing and dancing at the dinner table while on a date with Scott Calvin

Drew as Casey hiding from the killer in the house

Viola talking to the nun outside in "Doubt"

Jonathan Groff dressed as King George III on stage

Clarice talking to Dr. Lecter in his cell in the movie

Mark and Erica at the bar in the opening scene

Frozone talking to his wife in his apartment

Vincent talking, shirtless, in Malcolm and Anna's home

Bill Murray pretending to be a zombie

Vanessa Redgrave speaking to the camera at the end of "Atonement"

Ménochet speaking to Waltz inside in the opening scene

Anne Hathaway as Fantine in "Les Mis" and accepting her Oscar

Harry Belafonte sitting in a chair while talking to a group of students in the movie

Butters and DiCaprio laughing while shooting the fake Western

McConaughey and DiCaprio's characters at a fancy restaurant

Mariah and Monique speaking at her office in the movie

Javier Bardem talking to Gene Jones in a store in "No Country for Old Men"

Michelle Williams' character talking outside to her ex

Alfred's character dancing to "Jessie's Girl" in his bachelor pad

The old man standing up to Loki

Thelma Ritter talking to Edmund Gwenn (as Santa) in "Miracle on 34th Street"

Freddy haunting people in their dreams

William Hurt talking with Viggo Mortensen in the movie

Judi Dench as Queen Elizabeth

Harry Potter talking to Snape while Snape dies