You said "I'd like to show the importance of this scene." The word you used was "importance," so use the word "important." It's as simple as that.
A writer's job is always to communicate well. If you know that word X has the right meaning and you're not quite sure what word Y means, use word X. If you communicate your meaning well, nobody is ever going to give you a bad grade for doing it in plain words instead of fancy ones. In fact, most guides to good writing style will tell you to use the plain words.
Here is an example illustrating the meanings of the words in English.
"Sherlock Holmes, can you deduce who is stealing cookies from the cookie jar."
"You know my methods, Watson! Apply them."
"Ann is wearing red shoes."
"Irrelevant, Watson."
"Barbara loves cookies."
"Better, Watson, better! Relevant, but unimportant. Who doesn't love cookies?"
"Cindy was seen in the kitchen with her hand in the cookie jar and cookie crumbs all over her face."
"Now that, Watson, is an important observation."