- After the beginning mission that turns out to be a decoy arranged by Copley, Andy bitterly comments that, for all their efforts to help the world, it doesn't seem to work and that, if anything, the world is getting worse.
- Nile, upon learning that she cannot die, is frightened and bewildered... until Andy finds her, explains what she can, and even then Nile is devastated; she is heartbroken at the idea that her friends and family will age and die while she will not and the fact that she must not tell them or they will catch onto her secret.
- Andy's anguish that, even five centuries later, she still cannot find Quynh and her admission that she gave up.
- Quynh; she's been locked in an iron coffin and trapped at the bottom of the sea in an unknown location for five centuries, drowning and coming back to life over and over, forever fighting desperately to escape, her anger and desperation growing.
- Andy and Quynh screaming for each other as their captors drag them apart, lock Quynh in an iron coffin, and Andy can do nothing but scream for Quynh and pull at her shackles until her wrists bleed.
- After Nile's reflection that her family will grow old and die while she will not, Andy admits that she can't remember the appearance of her mother, her sisters, or any of her biological family. They're long gone while she continues to see the same old misery with only a few other immortals for company.
- It's not what time steals... it's what it leaves behind.
- Booker's recollection of how he saw his wife and all three of his sons age and die and of the angry deathbed denunciations of his youngest son toward him, and how he notes that, Just because we stop dying doesn't mean we stop hurting. His drinking and wistful expression make it clear that he's still grieving.
- This makes Booker's betrayal of his family even more poignant; he reasons that if a medical industry can find ways to save life then maybe it can find a way to end it.
- Booker's horrified regret when Copley and Merrick entrap Andy and then him after Booker has shot her to demonstrate that she heals from it... and finding that her immortality is faltering.
- The whole movie addresses the morality (or lack, thereof, in this movie) of medical intervention to save lives when that same intervention is not so intent on improving the quality of what life that one has.
- Andy is bitter that she sees the same old problems that she and her team have tried to resolve and she and Booker are both grieving their long-dead families while the likes of Copley and Merrick are too young to understand that, sometimes, what's best for somebody is not prolonged life.
- A heartwarming variant is Joe's concern for Nicky in the van while their captors tell them to shut up, followed by Joe putting the homophobic guards in their place with his eloquent declaration]] of his love for Nicky.
- Copley's My God, What Have I Done? after Nile chews him out for helping Merrick kidnap and torture her teammates just to see if immortality is medically possible; Copley, who had lost his wife to amytrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig's Disease), had followed the Immortals in the hope that this would be a gift to humanity and to his wife's memory, quickly realizes just how wrong he was to sell them out when Nile snaps, It wasn't your gift to give! From there, he seeks to atone for his betrayal.
- Booker's 100-year exile from the group for his part in their capture by Merrick. Booker did so out of a desperate hope that they might find a way for him to die and therefore reunite him with his dead family, but in doing do he put the rest of his Immortal family in danger and potentially jeopardized their cover. His exile is definitely not an easy decision for the Immortals, seeing as Booker's depression was hardly a secret and that they could have done better to help him and he helped their capture not for profit but out of desperation to find a way to die, but that does not change the fact that he betrayed the closest thing that he had to a family remaining; Joe is furious when he finds out that Booker was involved in their capture. And the fact that Andy is beginning to lose her immortality makes it less likely that he will ever see her again.
- Joe's reaction after the No-Holds-Barred Beatdown from Keane ends with Nicky being shot in the face as a result of desperately trying to keep Keane from hurting Joe. Even with their immortality, Joe is visibly close to tears seeing him dead on the floor, knowing that Nicky's healing could very well have randomly stopped just as Andy's and Lykon's did. When Nicky does resurrect, Joe all but collapses in relief.
- Another moment with Joe and Nicky. It's a brief thing but they've both been captured and beaten. And, in the midst of recovering from that, they still take a moment to touch foreheads before being separated.
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