Understanding the Opening Scene of Inglourious Basterds | Scene Study Film Analysis
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- čas přidán 6. 06. 2024
- This is a Deep Analysis of the Opening Scene for Inglourious Basterds by Quentin Tarantino. I breakdown the camera set-ups, composition and framing, and point out key turning points in the scene where Tarantino changes his coverage scheme.
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Clips in the video are being uses for educational purposes to discuss the craft of film making. - Krátké a kreslené filmy
It was also known that the French would poison select bottles of their wine in anticipation of German looting. (Since wine would surely be taken in the plunder). Landa asking for the milk was unexpected as it’s unlikely to be laced and reveals he’s not falling for any tricks.
never head this observation this is great!!
@@dr.mark.b.hubble to be honest most directors dont do this much. But this is a great scene to demonstrate what directors should be doing and what level of thought should go into the coverage. But once yiu get it you can see which directors are doing it and which ones dont
If Landa were alone, perhaps. But the presence of the submachine gun armed detail stationed outside the farmhouse precludes that.
I think the poison is a great catch, however, in the scene, since we see the soldiers waiting outside, it would have been a suicide assassination before they really understood the threat they faced. Possible, but not probable. Still, the comment makes the chess match more intriguing.
@@TwoFoxGibbon In a fictional movie, it’s all speculation anyways. Maybe he just wanted some fresh milk…lol. Dairy products were a theme throughout the movie, adding an element of suspense to the cat and mouse relationship between Landa and Shoshana. At the dinner, we all wondered if he knew she was Shoshana and was teasing her by ordering milk for her and cream to put on the strudel. :)
People always rave about Waltz's performance, and it is brilliant but Denis Ménochet is every bit as good in this scene. The way he breaks down as Waltz breaks him down is just amazing. A extremely proud and strong man being broken.
Indeed. Landa steals every scene he's in, but all of Tarantino's actors are giving a top-notch performance. In basically every movie of his. LaPadite is no difference, he was impeccable.
Well said...very subtle and beautifully acted
you always need a great response to make an amazing scene...
The sadness in his eyes in the moments before the tear drop falls are so intense. I love every scene in this film.
@@b.p.879 yep. it's amazing acting.
Missed one thing. When Landa is complimenting the daughters beauty in saying “The village rumors of your family are true” also has the implication that the village had rumors of the family hiding away Jews. This whole scene is a masterpiece all on to its own.
Also notice how Landa lingers on Charlotte's hand when meeting her and uses his fingers to check her pulse, then does the same to another one of the girls when he asks for milk instead of wine.
even the English switch dialogue(thought was random) has an implication of I know everything about you and your family.
The Frenchman is a phenomenal actor in portraying someone trying to not look guilty when talking to a cop. Which I’ve done many times so it stands out to me
This opening scene to the movie is all about tension and that line did an excellent job of adding to the tension.
I also like how hanz uses two different versions of good bye, since in french you have “Adieu” which would be used if you didn’t expect to see that person again, which is what hanz used while ordering the execution of the family, and the other version is “au revoir” which can be translated to “we will see each other again” which is what he called out to shoshana
Good observation. I'll see you again Shoshonna! It's chilling.
Something I always loved about the French in this movie, it’s a masterful use of grammar and vocabulary that viewers who don’t speak French wouldn’t get.
That also happens in Django: Dr Schultz also plays with that very same figure with the German option to say goodbye to Calvin Candie.
I love how Christophe Waltz plays Hans Landa. In so many war films, the SS are portrayed as aggressive and shouting at everybody. But Landa is charming and polite, and ingratiates himself with everyone. It’s a fascinating portrayal.
I also like that La Padite smokes a tiny pipe, and then Landa takes his pipe from his pocket, and it’s massive. It’s almost like a dick measuring competition.
Except for when he brutally strangles Bridget Von Hammersmark, of course. He is in fact very aggressive in every scene he's in if you think about it. He's simply more subtle.
I think that the pipe was to throw us off, let us know he's full of tricks and won't be meeting whatever expectations we had set up. It's a comical, almost farcical pipe. Totally inappropriate for someone of Landas station. And if you're thrown off your footing, you might just stumble...
Landa's calm, ingratingly demeanor places him as the wolf in the fold. It ratchets up both the tension and desire to see just what he's going to do next.
everyone laughed at the cinema when this happened back in the day :D amazing detail
I actually love his linguistic abilities. His French (at least my ear) annunciation sounded like a native. Likewise with his Italian in the theater scene. I learned years after seeing the film that that while he is fluent in English and French along with this native German, he does not speak Italian. He merely learned the lines needed for the film yet spoke them like a native.
This scene is truly a masterpiece. Also the scene when Landa and Shoshanna meet again at the Café. Bone-chillingly perfect evil. And the actors! Admirable!
Landa's "Wait for the cream" line is what that whole branch of the story revolves around for me.
Was just going to bring up that scene. These two + the scene in the underground bar are the three amazing scenes that rocked me.
I agree.
Anyone say anything about the milk, and then wait for it - the cream?
When they meet the 2nd time. Did he know that was her?
The subtle morphing on Landa's face at 21:10 is some of the best acting I've ever seen. At that moment, I was hooked with Waltz' performance. Tarantino knows how to write a captivating yet terrifying villain.
Yeah Christoph Waltz is an amazing actor, and this scene (among many in this movie) was just incredible
tarantino even said he would have not shot the movie if he had not met waltz. Same spectecular performance in django
Ordinary cinephiles like me know intuitively this is one of the great opening scenes in movies, based on the dialogue and buildup in dramatic tension. What we don't appreciate (until now, that is), is how the camera work does all the heavy lifting with an easy grace and style. Thank you for explaining both the technique and the rationale behind this process.
Well said
Very true! It's an engaging, nerve-wracking, emotional roller coaster of a scene without being overly dramatic (until the end) or obviously tugging at heart strings. Definitely a masterpiece of a scene, I imagine it will be held up as perfect for many decades.
If i had to rank top 3 movie openings of all time.. 1. jaws still terrfies everyone who watches it for the first time 50 years after it came out 2. the dark knight that bank robbery scene with joker at the end taking off the mask... legendary 3. this scene.... perfect and chilling.... waltz earned that oscar right here....
This was the scene where I knew Christoph would be nominated for an Oscar. The close up when he asked lapatite if he was hiding the Dreyfuses. The expression on his face looked like CGI the way Waltz’s expression morphed into cunning evil. He was fantastic in this role and such a great actor. I’ve enjoyed all his roles in every film since.
Yes it was a great move but you know who he is doing? It’s Ralph fiennes from schindlers list. Fiennes did this thing when his face would have an expression. sometimes annoyance. Some times tenderness and then the eyes go dead and then he commits an atrocity. Waltz does the same thing.
@@hanscombe72 All due respect to Fiennes, he's never done this as well as Waltz in this scene. Christophe is the master.
I'm fairly sure when he stops the daughter, he actually is checking her pulse a la Sherlock to see how nervous they are.
@@d.l.3993 Even if he did, it‘s nevertheless an interesting point. No need for a nasty comment like yours
@@d.l.3993 None of my business, I know, but maybe you're capable of learning something. To paraphrase:
So it's ok to point out the presumed speck in your brother's eye for which you have no evidence but it's not ok when someone else points out the plank in yours?
I always thought about it as a power move personally, while also being manipulative. Showing that he is in control and that they are in good hands to see if they let their guard down and reveal some important information.
Bro, why the hell is this thread so upset? People always find something to be upset about, don't they..
Nice observation! I never thought of that!
In another analysis of the scene that was given additional context from interviews with Taratino himself, there is another, greater reason he interfered with her fetching wine to request milk instead and focused on the way he grasped her wrist, and held it for an extended time with his two fingers placed over her pulse point to check if she was calm or not and gauging her level of anxiousness. He does the same with Charlotte when he kisses her hand as he introduced himself to the girls.
Another thing that adds to the well crafted anxiousness and tension of the scene is that Christoph Waltz was only allowed to practice his lines only with Tarantino, so the other actors would not know what to expect from him and make their reactions more genuine.
People always praise Christoph Waltz's performance, but not enough people are complimenting how Denis Menochet did as playing the father and helping create this perfect scene
Now, this is art. Never thought of film making with such depth with the breakdowns. Thank you, seriously informational.
Thanks!! My goal was to help people understand the craft better so that they can enjoy films more. Definitely validates the effort to here that
@@emotiondesigner I couldn’t agree more! You did an amazing job. Many many thanks 😊
@@lenkajf7816 Thank you. I am working on more. stay tuned
@@emotiondesigner Yes, I subscribed, I can’t wait for more :)
@@emotiondesigner The best breakdown I ever seen.
He basically remakes westerns in a non western setting. It's a strange type of genius
And those Westerns were in turn often re-makes/homages of Japanese films, which were in turn inspired by Film Noir films. We stand on the shoulders of giants.
That's what hit me! I have this video recorded. The music in this movie gave me that feeling.
@@glenkeating7333 yeah, swap landas car and uniform for a horse and Stetson at the beginning and all we need is Lee Van cleef chopping the wood
Rob Dean. Just like writing the song Eleanor Rigby. It’s genius is in its’s simplicity.......Film noir
it is modern Western (kind of). Tarantino was inspired by westerns and Japanese martial action films, its kind of mix of boths
Having watched this movie three times over the years, one of the things that now strikes me from the beginning is just how desperate La Pedite seems from the start. He seems to have a sense of existential dread, knowing that he can only hold out for so long hiding his friends. He knows that he faces an awful choice when the push comes. It's either his family or the family he's hiding - or most likely both will be sacrificed if he's caught. It's horrifying. We can all see ourselves in his position. It's there from the moment he washes himself. Symbolically, it could be seen as an attempt at spiritual cleansing - as if he knows this is the end - but there is no salvation.
What's horrifying is knowing we'd all do it to save our kids.
The first time I saw this entire scene I almost crapped myself. One of the most smolderingly tense and frightening bits ever put to film. Brilliant!
I don't know if you missed this but Charlotte looks at Landa, the down at the floor, then up at Lapedite. She was communicating where they were hiding and Landa caught it.
This comment makes me wonder if landa showed up at the house knowing full well they were hiding jews, or if he figured it out almost immediately.
Damn your keen of observation is as sharp as Landa..
5:29
Future Bond girl
@@redhotchilipepper432 There is no doubt he already knew they were there. Someone snitched. Probably one of the daughters.
LaPadite says "after you" when inviting him in but Lande actually grabs him and ushers him into his own house letting him know he's in control
A list of all subtle parts easily missed:
1: Landa has his men wait outside so its easier for him to have LA Padites daughters excused. The daughters may have prevented La Padite from revealing the hidden jews in the end.
2: The milk is instead of wine which was often poisoned before Nazi arrival and looting. And perhaps to check the pulse of the daughter.
3: His staring could be seen as a creepy sexual habit, but he is a "hawk" watching their every emotion and move especially the daughter who was most nervous.
4: Landa uses a complex sentence in French that is almost at an expert level of grammar to say that he is unable to speak it, this shows that he may know more than it seems and tricks will not slide under his nose.
5: Landa calls the soldiers "ladies" in French to give the hidden jews less time to crawl out, because they'd assume he's calling the daughters back into the house. Landa perhaps discussed this with the soldiers ahead of time.
6: Landa perhaps let's Shoshanna escape by not hustling over to the doorway or hastily taking a shot because he's confident in his abilities to find her again (this point is reinforced later in the film)
7: Landa wanted to be inside for the conversation to listen as a "hawk" would for noises behind walls, under floors, behinds doors, etc.
6. His big mistake.
I always felt like it was because he felt like doing the killing was beneath him. His job was to find the jews, not kill them. That was the soldiers under him's responsibility.
Good observations
@@andreww9791 Except for #5. That's not subtle at all, but made extremely obvious to the viewers.
At 22:15 he tells Lapadite to follow him back to French but he uses the word masqerade. Isn't that word almost exactly the same in English and French? Wouldn't the family have understood that something was wrong? I love the acting and the scene in general it just always bugged me that he would use a word that they could most likely understand below after being so elaborate.
*The lighting is underrated.*
🔅 Anyone who has ever been on a set knows how long the days are and the takes go
🔅 Even in a studio on a set you have a variety of factors like props casting shadows and factoring in the blocking of the actors
🔅 Even white balancing and color correcting take dozens if not hundreds of hours per film project
I’m always amazed at the level of suspension of disbelief required for people who understand how painstaking it is to create a film *to enjoy a film* without being preoccupied *by thinking about the difficulty or skill level it must’ve taken to get EVEN THEM to enjoy the film.*
Film is like sleep.
Some are able shut out everything and enjoy.
Others can’t enjoy shutting down because they’re consumed with processing everything else going on instead of enjoying what’s in front of them. 🛌 🎥🍿
Christoph Waltz is an underated actor. He is brilliant
Yes, Waltz made that movie a masterpiece.
Gazes, looks, gestures, he is in the role.
He fits the role like a hand in the glove.
he's won two academy awards my dude
@@jamesondenhartog8109 yeah was about to say that
I don’t think he is underrated everyone who knows him and understands the slightest bit of acting also knows he’s a brilliant actor
The *real* underrated actor here is the dairy farmer. He does a great job.
@@heatherperleberg7816 hell yes
Shot 99 at precisely 21:13 to 21:17 is one of the greatest transformations without the use of CG/camera trickery quite possibly in film history. Hans' face is the defining moment this scene changes. Even Hans', "And assured there will be" line was not nearly as intimidating, or scene-changing as the ever so slight and subtle, nearly unnoticeable-until-he-speaks face transformation. Brilliant acting and directing.
that's good acting for you
@ozymandias nullifidian You misunderstood the comment. it wasn't a question. It's great acting
I couldn't agree more. Of this entire movie, this exact few seconds is the most amazing. "You are sheltering enemies of the state..." literally turns from debonair, polite but inimical interaction into straight faced SS killer
I've never analysed films to this extent but I would say shot 98 is close to par with 99
I'd say the transformative feeling starts at shot 97. I mean, it's a solid 15 minutes spent in a two hander, so when the close ups are all of a sudden introduced, the effect is jarring. The "and rest assured there will be" line doesn't even have time to register given how cordial the last 15 minutes were, and the line only starts to sink in once the shots change to reflect the tone. But I do agree, if you get sucked into this entire sequence, especially on first viewing, his face in shot 99 has an uncanny morphing effect as the weight of the situation hits you.
Make more of these. You've said they take a lot of time and you have other projects, but seriously, there is nothing else like this I've found and I've watched it multiple times and have shared it with friends. If you make more I bet you can monetize big time and grow your channel substantially.
thanks I'll try. I have a few in various stages of completion. They just take up a lot of time and I am directing a lot of other projects simultaneously. This one is on scene study and theres one on story structure but its just such a big topic its not easy to explain clearly. Or i just need to do simpler easier ones that dont take that much time to make. I'll work on it though. Thanks for the encouragement.
@@emotiondesigner I agree that your breakdown is great. I used this for a shot/reverse shot lesson. The comments on the film/characters are understandable, but what I love about your video is the analysis of the technique. I would love to see more, possibly with a focus on other techniques.
new one is up and live as of yesterday. Its on The Editing of Whiplash specifically. each video will be on a different thing so I can cover more of filmmaking. You'll see.
QT’s masterpiece. This scene made his talent completely undeniable. The way Waltz escalates tension to breaking point through a seemingly benign visitation is exceptional.
I agree this is a masterful scene that builds greatly with tension, but to go into it thinking that this is in any possible way a "benign visitation" just seems bizarre. I suppose if you went to see it without ever seeing a trailer, movie poster, or ever hearing anything about it, including who directed it, sure. And I'd be almost jealous if that was the case. I like to know minimal things about a movie I'm gonna watch, but it's nearly impossible to crawl out from under a rock for a Tarantino movie. Let alone recognizing immediately that these are Nazis...
Great job. Don't apologize for the video being long - the scene deserved it. Well done.
Like the scene that’s being dissected, it’s as long as it needs to be.
First time I’ve seen a movie breakdown like this. Very technical
I also think the fact that he congratulated them on the milk is a reminder that he is the judge, he decides and he is in control. He could have just remained silent after drinking the milk, asking for another one, just saying thank you, yet he rates it, they are there to serve them and he decides what happens.
I think an other reason, why Landa asks for milk, is that Friedrich Nietzsche writes in his description of übermensch, that the übermensch does not drink alcohol, he drinks milk.
I think he is proving to the family that he knows everything about them
When did Nietzsche say that?
As German I can confirm you it is more a reason because the French had Wine with poison because Germans plundered everything, specially the Wine.
Milk was generally "good" in Germany for Bones etc. (which is totally the opposite) Drink your Milk & become strong. Not a Übermensch thing. Nazis just used everything for Propaganda what would help them etc.
An unusual viewpoint. Most people would say that milk is for children.
@@terry9238 Germans have a few other stupid points of view 😅 Still today.
I was about to sleep but now 27 minutes later, I know a lot more about filmmaking. Subbed.
Landa is not just SS...he's a member of the SD (closely linked to the Gestapo), as shown by the patch on his left arm (near the elbow) in a later scene. The SD were particularly skilled at investigative work and locating enemies of the Nazi regime.
...... you seem to know a lot about Nazi history, Herr Proctor.
Well , I did nazi the connection before!
@Schlomo Baconberg The SD did use white branch color on their caps, but green on their shoulder boards. They were part of the Allgemeine-SS. Although it is true that the crusher style cap was more used by the armed wing of the SS in the battle field.
@JimProctor: Enemies of the Nazi regime? He (and his kind) hunted innocent Jews. Hardly enemies of ANY regime. And I'll never believe the whole of Germany didn't know about it and fully cooperate with the "final solution"!
Ive already watched this masterpiece of a movie twice, but even watching a video explaining the scenes is still giving me some anxiety. Christoph's Hans Landa is truly terrifying.
Those are rookie numbers. Watched it twenty three times till date. Still get goosebumps every single time.
‘It’s been a pleasure chatting with a fellow cinema lover.’
He’s a boss. Nothing scares Asians more than an intelligent, charismatic and confident white man who doesn’t apologize
those are rookie numbers
Well, the comment section really is complete - and your comment here, Daniel, is pretty much in the direction of what I was thinking. I went to the comments 30 seconds in, the scene makes me actually angry, it's so good (good acting, directing, camera, good CZcams video & comments (i guess) and on top of all regretfully realistic).
And even the replies here are fair, except maybe the provocative one.
and there is so much more. The hand movements, the glances, the wording and not to mention the lighting and music. It is a masterpiece. Absolute fav movie.
This and hateful eight are my two favorite movies. I’ve loved all of the characters and scenes from Tarantino
Landa controls every scene he is in until Hermann is shot right at the end. This is possibly the best movie Tarantino has ever made....very underrated
Agreed
NOT UNDERRATED as anyone who has seen this film is agreed.
Why in t.f. does everyone keep using that "underrated" bullsht?
Inglorious Basterds is "underrated" now? This is one of Tarantino's highest rated movies...
No doubt this is the best Tarantino movie
Thanks for an incredible breakdown of this scene. Its an entire college course of filming in less than 1/2 hour.
Thanks for saying that. Some people come on here and just tell me I'm captain obvious or they correcxt the one word I mispronounced, so its great to hear people appreciate the work I put in.
Great video and analysis of things I never noticed before.
just the sceme with 9 tiles is done to the frame plus the borders in this one. But the borders only appear to those who don't watch at the intended ratio of the screen (21). So tiles are not correct. Still reminds me of people learning a language with a set of logic tools instead of a feeling. Also as like the best sitting position is the "next one" it is here the same with the (calm) movement of the cameras, which in play with the hight difference plays the main role in creating a movement before the horns drop in, which is i believe the main secret to building a tense scene across this dialogue. And not the science formula about positioning objects in frame. Still in this scene there is nothing to do better except maybe use a real tape with grain like nolan does, so it would look less "nowadays". But Tarantino probably believes that he doesn't need any hooks to the past to be good enough
This is what it looks like when the right director finds the right actors to exchange the right dialogue in the right setting...brilliant!
Landa as a character is just genius .. his presence is tremendously intimidating and his manipulation and understanding of his surroundings is honestly perfect for portraying a hunter on his toes .
Like a smiling shark. Charming and menacing. The intellect is unnerving. Forced into a deadly game of wits.
He is checking the daughter’s pulses by grabbing their hands. Holy shit. GREAT scene study, I always analyze a Tarantino film more... like I would a Kubrick film, but this made me really think about every scene in this film. Fantastic work, sir!
Yep. When he asks for the glass of milk, he literally grabs her wrist, as if to check her pulse.
@@Coconutscott amazing what we fail to notice the first time round, or the first few dozen times around! Nice to meet you, friend!
Christophe Waltz's character Hans Landa was the best performance I've ever seen in film. Being "fluent" in 3 languages made him seem intelligent and also being a murderous madman made his character so interesting. Waltz is a genius actor. Your breakdown of this scene was as captivating as the scene itself, incredible job emotiondesigner!
Since this movie came out, I have always considered this to be the most chilling verbal interaction between two characters. I am a professional interviewer in my career, and was at the edge of my seat watching how Landa put on his fake friendliness show and over the top small talk. You could see the ease in which he performed, also suggesting that he had done this situation many times before. So he softens the mood briefly before he exerts his power with questions, and seems to really enjoy his job.
Psychopaths mirror 'normal' behaviour. It doesn't come natural to them but they observe other people and become great actors. Waltz was acting over his character. He was acting acting.
I’m 30 years old but the best way I can describe Christoph Waltz’s performance is “ate it up and left no crumbs”. The man gives me chills in this movie.
Excellent analysis i definitely learned a lot, two things that stood out to me was during the first milk scene Landa is watching the daughters in particular the youngest. At 5:50 you can see the youngest daughter look at the ground while Landa is looking at her, this is probably the moment when he was able to determine their location. We can see again at 6:10 where the daughter makes a quick glance at the floor and then to the father.
The second thing was that this is a small farm and communites tend to be pretty close-knit so its very likely all the locals are very familiar with each other and would know the children's approximate ages.
"I have never met the family"
"I know their names and ages and where they supposedly went"
yeah exactly! great point! this is the best summary of how landa caught him.
When Landa says “Having never met the Dreyfus family” I think he was speaking of himself.
He’s never met them, so he was asking LaPadite to confirm the names and ages of everyone in the household, as just another way of getting him to lower his guard before the sledgehammer reveal that he knows the Dreyfus family is hiding under the floorboards.
People in rural areas and small towns (especially in the time & place of this film) commonly know the business and the gossip of practically everything and everyone around them within a good-sized radius. I think it would have been more suspicious if Lapedite said he did not know anything about the Jewish family.
I just stumbled upon this, and I'm not really into film analysis; but what an incredible dissection of a scene. Makes me appreciate what distinguishes a director from a great director. Bravo!
Your analysis is every bit as compelling as this amazing scene. I'm grateful for what you have provided your subscribers. I will remain on the lookout for your next post. Thank you!
You should do the dinner table scene in Django!
YES
Good call, epic 🙌
Wonderful analysis. This opening is a masterpiece. I get chills every time I watch it!
this is one of my most favourite scenes ever. there’s so much more involved the the art than i had ever known! great video thanks
Prior to you breakdown, I just knew that this scene, as well as the rest of the movie, was entertaining and evocative. Now, I know all the effort it took to have me so engaged. Thanks for your great work.
Thank you for this. Gives me a richer understanding of the devices of filmmaking. In addition to the framing, also thought the lighting of these scenes was so contributory and superb. Tarantino is a master.
Glad i could help with anyones appreciation for films
Wow. I know nothing about film making, and your analysis brought so many things I never noticed to my attention. Really well done.
I'm enjoying every single second of this analysis. As perfect as the scene itself. Great job man!
probably my favourite movie of all time, nice to see someone put so much effort in to letting me understand why i appreciate it so much. Thanks for the great insight & analysis.
Hi mate, I have seen various breakdowns of films, scenes, camera/cinematography and lighting including this movie and this EPIC opening scene. I am a film-maker myself. This is hands down a learning experience for me which is amazing! Thank you so much for the breakdown. You got every beat, every camera movement and eery directorial framing choice spot on. QT is a genius but your analysis helps us all understand the language of cinema so much better. Thanks so much
This was such a cool breakdown and such an amazing scene to do it with. You rock.
I’ve watched this film so many times and I’ve only just now noticed the sheer panic that moves across the daughters face when Landa mentions all the rumours being true, then plays it off with a passing comment about them being lovely. God damn that’s real stuff
This is one of the best breakdowns of a scene I've ever scene. Bravo, wish you had more videos.
Very underrated channel , deserves way more subs / views , excellent breakdown of these scenes thoroughly enjoyed - subbed
One of my favorite scenes in one of my favorite movies. I’ve seen many dissections of this but this is hands down the best.
Amazing breakdown of one of the greatest scenes ever. I enjoyed this thoroughly. Great work.
What an amazing video. I've watched this scene with a pen and notepad a dozen times trying to figure out the mechanics, but every time I literally just end up watching the whole movie. So truly, thank you!
Amazing scene, exceptionally establishing and memorable. Thank you for your in depth analysis, a delightful informative pleasure.
dude, thanks so much for that
This is one of my all time favorite movie scenes - now I understand why.
I've been searching for a breakdown of this scene for long time, this is a great analysis of one of the greatest opening scenes of ANY MOVIE of ALL TIME
oh my gosh I love this analysis, please do more or someone recommend a youtuber who analyze like you because I love it so much
This is really great. A tremendous amount of detail here. Thanks.
This scene has since I first saw it been my favorite scene in any movie I've seen. I don't know exactly how long it is in its entirety, maybe 15 minutes? And it consists basically of only 2 people, in one room, face to face talking, but the tension building during the entire time sends chills down your spine. Both actors give an incredible performance. It was great seeing this breakdown of the scene.
Woah, this is the type of content I really dig! Hope you guys do more film frame-by-frame breakdowns / analyses in the future!
What an amazing breakdown of a movie scene. Definetely won a subscriber!
Tremendous job, my friend. This is a beautiful and well-made video. Thank you for taking the time to create this!
Look forward to the next one
Thanks so much! I felt like the world needed one of these so people would appreciate this film and Tarantino's work as a whole a lot more. I'm already working on more videos. They won't all be this detailed because it takes so long to make one of these. But stay tuned. More Content coming.
new one is up and live as of yesterday. It's on the editing of Whiplash specifically. Because each one of these is going to be on a different aspect of filmmaking.
This amazing scene impressed me immediately. I've always described this as a chess match. Now I could even relate it to a game of pool. What's important is both players go in thinking they're better than the other. With Landa doing just enough keep it going (while seemingly unthreatening) as Pierre increasingly believing he controls the game. Ending with the mild seriousness drawing out Pierres horror and paying off as Landa goes in for the kill, pivoting during "sheltering enemies of the state..." to the crushing blow of knowing where they were at
And YES, this is an excellent breakdown of this scene. You're a master of this one, sir!
Beautiful work my friend! For me it's one of the greatests openings in the history of cinema and you made me appreciate it even more!
Dude the way Hans stares at la paditte, shoo! He is such a great actor, Great movie as well, and a great video, very informative and I learned quite a bit 😀
Can you do more of these? This was incredibly informative and pleasant to watch. Thank you for this!
thank you! I'm working on more of them. I have different ones at different stages of completion. I work a lot on multiple projects so I complete these as my schedule affords me time.
new one is up and live as of yesterday. It's on the editing of Whiplash specifically. Because each one of these is going to be on a different aspect of filmmaking.
This sequence has long been one of my favorites in cinema. The camera moving through the floor to reveal the family for the first time chills me every time. And your film analysis of camera placement etc. was very enjoyable. Merci!
Not panning which is swivel movement left or right, you mean craning or jibbing up or down.
@@RumourdProd you are technically correct
Cinematography. A true form of art particularly in the hands of a genius of a direct in Tarantino. Excellent explanation and narrative!
This is definitely one of my favorite movies of all time, and even though I've seen it so many times I'm still getting that sense of dread and fear from the opening scene in this video. Quentin Tarantino is a fucking master, one of the greatest film directors ever.
For sure. Londa is absolutely terrifying, and makes me nervous/anxious when he enters a scene.
Same! This is my most favourite movie.. been a fan of QT ever since.
Wow this is such an underrated video,you did such an amazing job.
This is one of my favorite sequences. Great break down and shot by shot.
Your commentary was brilliant. First time I've watched your analysis. Inspirational!
Thank you very much. Your video made me enjoy this scene even more.
Awesome, glad I could share my appreciation for this scene!
Brilliant. Both the analysis and Tarantino’s directing.
An absolutely gripping start to introduce the protagonist. Brilliant analysis, well done.
What a thorough and absolutely stunning analysis. Thank you, very well done!
I'll never forget this scene. Every time I watch this one my heart pounds in agony and feel the stress to my bones.
nice job with this. can't figure out why this came up in recommended videos as it's not really a subject I'm particularly interested in, but this was really quite a fascinating breakdown
I need more of this masterpiece! Love your work!
Simply one of the best instructional videos on CZcams. Brilliant and much appreciated. Subbed tonite.
Christoph Waltz is one of my favorite actors, he is so convincing every time. He can transform from a nice guy to a monster in a blink of an eye.
The best most memorable actors are known for portraying evil.
You did a good job on this video. This opening scene if my favorite scene in a movie. I have always though of this scene in the way that you have described. I love the way it is shot the dialogue between the the actors in different language that seems well spoken. A few things I would add that you might of touched on or didn't. There is no mother showing that he is the one to look over the family, the protector, just his daughters and his home. Hans, the bad guy, enters the scene from the left which is the side evil goes to/from. I felt Hans being in the house was showing intrusions of the safe place the father was the protector of. At the end the camera moving in the air over the rafters was showing the hawk flying over the rat. Hans exiting the door, dark in the house, Death of her family out side bright vibrant showing hope. There is a few more but a well shot scene.
The hawk-eye-view is a great point. Also the moving Right to Left. I'm aware of it because of graphic design and star wars, but I always wonder if other people apply it and if it is intentional when I see it. But if it was intentional, flipping to the OS from the daughters perspective was a clever way to facilitate that choice. great comments!
If the director put this much work into every shot no movies wud ever get finished
@@007nadineL Sort of makes you wonder what the heck is going on with Avatar 2 through whatever.
@@007nadineL Ever hear of a guy named Stanley Kubrick?
@@007nadineL It's not just the director...
One of my favorite cinematic scenes. Thank you for your insight. Will share with DD to help her to see how a movie' scenes are set up and used to guide viewers through the experience. Excellent breakdown!!! Thanks again
This is really well detailed & a whole new way at looking at the scene as a whole. I'm not into filming or anything like that, but this is very interesting.
I'll definitely be checking out more of your clips.
wow, would love to see more videos like this, great work!
thanks, yeah I'm definitely working on creating more. So stay tuned. After I finish a couple music video projects I've been working on I'll get a couple more of them up. They just aren't the easiest content to create and it takes some time. They won't all be scene breakdowns like this. I think I want to break down or focus on different aspects of filmmaking that people aren't aware of.
I think it’s also worth mentioning that Waltz/Landa’s movements are extremely telling of who is in charge of the situation. Landa’s demeanor is laid back yet precise. One thing that always stands out to me is when he gets out his pen and paperwork. His movements are precise and almost mechanical, they don’t feel human. Even when he throws back the glass of milk he does it swiftly, with essentially one gulp. Nothing that he does really feels human as even his smile and lighting his pipe feel fake.
Welcome to psychopathy
Excellent breakdown, i can tell you put a ton of time on this. Would love to see more film analyses from your perspective
We need more videos like this. Masterful breakdown.
They're in the works
After watching this beautiful scene coupled with your in-depth breakdown I immediately thought of the 'Like a Virgin' table scene in Reservoir Dogs, because that's another quality and complex work of art scene by QT.
I really hope you start getting more credit for your work. From a technical perspective, your analysis is very useul and adds a lot to the comprehension of the scene. Keep up the excellent job!
new one is up and live as of yesterday. It's on the editing of Whiplash specifically. Because each one of these is going to be on a different aspect of filmmaking.
I've shared this video so much. It's a perfect exercise in media literacy. Your upload may be over 3 years old, but this exploration will surely stand the test of time.
What a good video. I couldn’t watch it past four minutes, the first time. I remember how tense this was seeing the movie in the theater Very moving.