Daniel is an acting legend, but Michelle oh my God she was amazing in this movie! . The way she expressed Ellen's emotions and character was flawless, pure art.
What a tragic scene...oh so incredibly sad. This just hits you at so many levels. What an outstanding and emotionally filled movie... beyond phenomenal.
What I loved about this movie was that as much as these two people loved and longed for each other, their passion was not destructive. Like in Anna Karenina for example, her obsession with Vronsky blinds her to everything else: her children, her marriage, her status. Ellen and Newland don’t simply throw all reason out the window, they consider how a potential affair could hurt the people around them. In the end they both choose honor, and they show their respect and compassion towards May. Loved this movie, and if I didn’t know who was the director, I’d never guess it was Martin Scorsese.
Ogni volta che guardo questi due amarsi pazzamente e farsi del male non posso non provare un senso di dolore profondo e profonda ingiustizia. La scena è magnifica e dolorosissima, superata solo da quella tragica finale!!!
Cara, esse filme é um filme pouco falado da filmografia do Scorsese e que aparece pouco na lista dos melhores filmes dele, mas para mim é um dos melhores filmes dele e uma verdadeira obra-prima! Com atuações excelentes, e na minha opinião, a Michelle Pfeiffer tinha que ter sido indicada ao Oscar de melhor atriz por esse filme, Scorsese consegue falar sobre a dor do amor e faz um estudo filosófico que nos faz pensar por que algumas pessoas se entregam as paixões e outras não fazem isso. O filme é para poucos porque ele tem um ritmo próprio e uma linguagem que nem todo mundo entende e consegue captar, mas é uma obra de arte incrível!!!
I never had spotted the "SCHOONMAKER'S PAINTER'S SUPPLY STORE" board at the upper right side of the screen in reference to the film's editor, Thelma Schoonmaker.
He loved May enough to ask her to marry him. But I guess the grass was greener on the other side of the fence. People who have affairs often make this mistake. He and Ellen would have become disenchanted with each other eventually and the pain and suffering they would have caused their families wouldn’t have been worth it. Being an adult means carrying one’s responsibilities not running away from them.
Not necessarily. When you've never experienced a magnetic pull before. You think you are in love but really you are not. Himself and May were more platonic. They all had affairs back then. That class of people...Married for status/business. Not love.
i sobbed uncontrollably at the end, im still unsure if i wanted him to go to Ellen or not. Would it be a disappointment if he went to rekindle things, or the rapturous, passionate embrace of lovers finally reunited by destiny? A truly beautiful novel & it stayed true to it in the movie adaptation.
I felt the same, I thought I wanted them to be together, but I think I was happy when he walked away. It felt like peace in the end, like saying goodbye to a dream, in the face of a better reality with his son and family. I like to think he truly came to love May in the end, and the life they had together through the years came to hold more weight than a fit of passion, no matter how strong.
إن قلبي تصيبه غصة كلما رأيت هذه الاسطورة تتحرك امامي لم يحدث أن لامس قلبي قصة كما فعلت هذه القصة و تعجز المشاعر الحقيقية أن تكون ببراعة هذا التمثيل نجمان اسطوريان بحق احبكما
"Marble Halls" covered by Enya. It's an aria ("I Dreamt I Dwelled in Marble Halls") from The Bohemian Girl, an 1843 opera that--like Faust, the opera at the beginning of the film--was extremely popular with 1870s music lovers.
So much different than the book, where Newland is an affected dandy, more in love with the idea of romance than Ellen herself. And Ellen, looking to become a mistress because her husband and family cut her off financially when she left him. The romance and love here are much less affected play acting than they are in the original. Also, Ellen is from America and merely married a foreigner. The accent is wrong and ridiculous.
They are all speaking in a 19th century upper class northeastern dialect. Watch old movies and listen to old radio. American accents have changed considerably over the last 120 years, and this story takes place before that.
This was by far the most boring movie in all of BoraBora..Despite boring me out of my gourd, I was mesmerized by the boringness of Gentelmen Boring and Countess Boredomeska...BOOOOOORING, HOW BOOOOOOOOOORING!
Daniel is an acting legend, but Michelle oh my God she was amazing in this movie! . The way she expressed Ellen's emotions and character was flawless, pure art.
She is riveting. I can't take my eyes off her or pay any attention to the rest of the cast, good as they are.
Day-Lewis is magnificent, his range is unique, nowadays.
All 3 (ryder too) are the perfect ansamble for this movie
They were all great but Michelle Pfeiffer was magnificent. Winona Ryder got the accolades, but I think Pfeiffer is underrated.
What a tragic scene...oh so incredibly sad. This just hits you at so many levels. What an outstanding and emotionally filled movie... beyond phenomenal.
How many people have lived
this moment ? Heartbreaking.
I have.
@@peachyyy7728 Take a seat, Paul. The adults are speaking.
@@peachyyy7728 Sorry you're sad. Hope life gets better for you.
Me too
Me too .just watched this now.still am heartbroken even at my age..a senior
Where s my reply
His voice 💙
Such a sad movie. Very beautiful but sad
What a beautifully tragic scene. What heartache I feel for these two..
Oh Michelle, what an actress you are!
I'm the man who married one woman because another one told him to ..that line killed me
That's how arranged marriages happen
Just don't do what you were told. Cut off the marriage promise and live a few years alone first and see what will happen.
O😊8😅
😊 3:08 @@hanaluong2672
I love his voice
What I loved about this movie was that as much as these two people loved and longed for each other, their passion was not destructive.
Like in Anna Karenina for example, her obsession with Vronsky blinds her to everything else: her children, her marriage, her status.
Ellen and Newland don’t simply throw all reason out the window, they consider how a potential affair could hurt the people around them. In the end they both choose honor, and they show their respect and compassion towards May.
Loved this movie, and if I didn’t know who was the director, I’d never guess it was Martin Scorsese.
One of my all time fave films. 💯
Ogni volta che guardo questi due amarsi pazzamente e farsi del male non posso non provare un senso di dolore profondo e profonda ingiustizia. La scena è magnifica e dolorosissima, superata solo da quella tragica finale!!!
I know I should feel bad for archer but I don't. May gave him an out before the marriage and he didn't take it
Cara, esse filme é um filme pouco falado da filmografia do Scorsese e que aparece pouco na lista dos melhores filmes dele, mas para mim é um dos melhores filmes dele e uma verdadeira obra-prima! Com atuações excelentes, e na minha opinião, a Michelle Pfeiffer tinha que ter sido indicada ao Oscar de melhor atriz por esse filme, Scorsese consegue falar sobre a dor do amor e faz um estudo filosófico que nos faz pensar por que algumas pessoas se entregam as paixões e outras não fazem isso. O filme é para poucos porque ele tem um ritmo próprio e uma linguagem que nem todo mundo entende e consegue captar, mas é uma obra de arte incrível!!!
Esta peli m partio la cabeza excelente Los dos capos
bravooooo! my life o n the screen !!!
A G ممثكمص
Um filme inesquecível!
this is acting. fir those who ask what it is, watch it again
Correggo, non farsi de male, essere vittime dell'altrui crudeltà , davvero terribile, uno dei film più dolorosi e più grandi mai realizzati!!!
I never had spotted the "SCHOONMAKER'S PAINTER'S SUPPLY STORE" board at the upper right side of the screen in reference to the film's editor, Thelma Schoonmaker.
A frequent collaborator to Scorsese.
He loved May enough to ask her to marry him. But I guess the grass was greener on the other side of the fence. People who have affairs often make this mistake. He and Ellen would have become disenchanted with each other eventually and the pain and suffering they would have caused their families wouldn’t have been worth it. Being an adult means carrying one’s responsibilities not running away from them.
Not necessarily. When you've never experienced a magnetic pull before. You think you are in love but really you are not. Himself and May were more platonic. They all had affairs back then. That class of people...Married for status/business. Not love.
That class still marries for status and business connections to this day.
My fab actors together! A dream ❤
Bill the Butcher all cleaned up.
Glenn Joshua 😂👍
Instead of starting a deadly criminal gang based in New York he decided to become a lawyer
1:11 almost went back to old Bill for a second there
i sobbed uncontrollably at the end, im still unsure if i wanted him to go to Ellen or not. Would it be a disappointment if he went to rekindle things, or the rapturous, passionate embrace of lovers finally reunited by destiny? A truly beautiful novel & it stayed true to it in the movie adaptation.
I felt the same, I thought I wanted them to be together, but I think I was happy when he walked away. It felt like peace in the end, like saying goodbye to a dream, in the face of a better reality with his son and family. I like to think he truly came to love May in the end, and the life they had together through the years came to hold more weight than a fit of passion, no matter how strong.
إن قلبي تصيبه غصة كلما رأيت هذه الاسطورة تتحرك امامي
لم يحدث أن لامس قلبي قصة كما فعلت هذه القصة و تعجز المشاعر الحقيقية أن تكون ببراعة هذا التمثيل
نجمان اسطوريان بحق
احبكما
'because another one told him to' peer pressure in the 1870s.
What's the title of the music that flows at the end?
Marble Halls by Enya
Tragic scene
For my Rajrajeshwari!
What is the name of the song at the end of this video?
It's an Enya song.
Marble Halls by Enya
"Marble Halls" covered by Enya. It's an aria ("I Dreamt I Dwelled in Marble Halls") from The Bohemian Girl, an 1843 opera that--like Faust, the opera at the beginning of the film--was extremely popular with 1870s music lovers.
Daniel - Day Lewis as Abraham Lincoln.
Who is singing?
Enya. The song is Marble Halls.
@@veroniquelaurent3734 thanks
I instantly wept
@@veroniquelaurent3734 Oh so that's why it reminded me so much of LotR! So magical...
What happened?why did Daniel go see countess olenska now that he was free.why did he walk away.what did the closing of the windows meant.
Longing for each other and doing stupid things, wtf. If you love one woman, DO NOT marry a different one!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
So much different than the book, where Newland is an affected dandy, more in love with the idea of romance than Ellen herself. And Ellen, looking to become a mistress because her husband and family cut her off financially when she left him. The romance and love here are much less affected play acting than they are in the original.
Also, Ellen is from America and merely married a foreigner. The accent is wrong and ridiculous.
They are all speaking in a 19th century upper class northeastern dialect. Watch old movies and listen to old radio. American accents have changed considerably over the last 120 years, and this story takes place before that.
This was by far the most boring movie in all of BoraBora..Despite boring me out of my gourd, I was mesmerized by the boringness of Gentelmen Boring and Countess Boredomeska...BOOOOOORING, HOW BOOOOOOOOOORING!
Why are watching clips of such a boring movie then?😂
You have the attention span of a gold fish.