Analyzing Evil: Hans Landa

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  • čas přidán 8. 12. 2020
  • Welcome everyone to the fourteenth episode of Analyzing Evil! Our feature villain for this video is Hans Landa from Inglorious Basterds. I hope you enjoy, and thanks for watching. If you have any feedback or questions feel free to let me know below!
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    Charlie Rose interview with Tarantino: • Quentin Tarantino Expl...
    Scenes and Songs video on Shoshanna and Landa: • Does Hans Landa Recogn...
    The song in this video, 9th Symphony, Finale by Beethoven was provided by the CZcams Audio Library.
    #HansLanda #IngloriousBasterds #QuentinTarantino

Komentáře • 8K

  • @Rondoggy67
    @Rondoggy67 Před 2 lety +15208

    Two things you missed in the café scene. He orders milk for her, knowing that it will not be kosher. When she accepts it without a problem, he increases the pressure by ordering apple strudel. In that period, dairy products were in short supply, and pork fat was used as a substitute in pastries like this. He already knows who she is, so this isn't a test, it is just sadism.

    • @Raver-1601
      @Raver-1601 Před 2 lety +1148

      Yeah but I really don't believe if he definitely knows that he's talking to the one Shoshanna Dreyfuss. He's simply just baiting some jews, but that's really where it all end imo

    • @Rondoggy67
      @Rondoggy67 Před 2 lety +1957

      @@Raver-1601 He also chose milk because she had been hiding on the dairy farm. He knew!

    • @8is
      @8is Před 2 lety +427

      I really don't think he knew. If he did, he would have factored that in for his get-away scheme.

    • @TheControlster
      @TheControlster Před 2 lety +850

      Hans often talks in double meaning. Half of which is politeness, the other half with threatening undertones. You see this when he says "May I call your Emmanuelle?". I'm 100% certain he know who she is.

    • @vincentveilleux1035
      @vincentveilleux1035 Před 2 lety +526

      If you strictly look at the scenes, it's impossible for Hans to recognize her. He never saw her face, he only knew her name. For me, it's one and done with this fact alone. Unless I'm missing something.

  • @eduardodiaz9942
    @eduardodiaz9942 Před 3 lety +20523

    Christoph Waltz's Oscar for this role was well deserved

    • @bryanalstoncoxing
      @bryanalstoncoxing Před 3 lety +832

      From the very first scene it was clear he was gonna win. He was incredible in this role and really made you wonder where Tarantino found him

    • @KayGeee86
      @KayGeee86 Před 3 lety +46

      So true!

    • @JohnBlazinni
      @JohnBlazinni Před 3 lety +194

      Agree...his acting of this character is *ON POINT*

    • @latifahgordeeva6198
      @latifahgordeeva6198 Před 3 lety +18

      It sure is

    • @damianstarks3338
      @damianstarks3338 Před 3 lety +80

      Agreed this dude can act.

  • @kooltom4
    @kooltom4 Před rokem +3179

    Can we also give due to the amazing acting of the man who played La Paditte? Almost wordless, so much conveyed in his expressions and movements, extraordinary.

    • @hurana795
      @hurana795 Před rokem +43

      His other movies are phenomenal.

    • @IHWKR
      @IHWKR Před rokem +12

      Why do you insist on needing to ask for permission?

    • @syzygyloon
      @syzygyloon Před rokem +170

      @@IHWKR it’s a rhetorical sentence structure, chill out

    • @TT-mr8ly
      @TT-mr8ly Před rokem +4

      @@hurana795 what’s his name?

    • @SyndicateSuperman
      @SyndicateSuperman Před rokem +39

      ​@@TT-mr8ly a great actor named Denis Ménochet

  • @juzington
    @juzington Před 9 měsíci +601

    I always felt Hans strangling her was a personal thing. They seem to have known each other for years (as when the two of them meet at the party they greet each other like old acquaintances) and i feel that him not knowing she was a spy was a shot to his intelligence as a detective. Which is also why her death is as brutal and anger filled as it is shown.

    • @marco7563
      @marco7563 Před 7 měsíci +83

      Her poor excuse makes me doubt she ever could have outsmarted Landa. I'm thinking he was offended by how pathetic they were

    • @juzington
      @juzington Před 7 měsíci +19

      @@marco7563 That could also be an additional factor on top of everything, I agree.

    • @calreed4441
      @calreed4441 Před 4 měsíci +26

      I think it's a bit of both. He never suspected her of being a spy, but then, in the cinema, she insults his intelligence with terrible excuses

    • @jui20oct
      @jui20oct Před 3 měsíci

      Maybe she was never in a situation with him where she had to give a poor excuse or come up with an impromptu one. Maybe whenever he met her, he took her for a dumb celebrity actress and he might have never thought of a well known star to be involved.@@marco7563

    • @gregorsimon9337
      @gregorsimon9337 Před 3 měsíci

      Of course it was personal. Von Hammersmark indirectly threatened to expose his homosexuality and her charade was an insult to his intelligence. She has the fame he desires, even though she is a much worse actress than he is. He fears that as a celebrity she will take the credit for the plot against the Nazi leaders that he claims for himself.

  • @_Harvestman_
    @_Harvestman_ Před 3 lety +6884

    The scariest part about him is that you never know exactly what he knows. You can't tell if he has the upper hand or not until he's where he wants to be

    • @jonnyseymour4278
      @jonnyseymour4278 Před 3 lety +139

      Its part of his bluff to gain power, we don’t know if he has knowledge of the situation or not. This makes us think that he knows whats going on even if he doesnt.

    • @heavymetal_cutting_fabrication
      @heavymetal_cutting_fabrication Před rokem +69

      Acting like you know everything but not revealing what you actually do or don’t know is a very effective technique. It’s pretty good for parenting also. 😂

    • @fcknzs246
      @fcknzs246 Před rokem +10

      Sounds like my grandma

    • @massacretv4988
      @massacretv4988 Před rokem +2

      We always have that Hans in the office.

    • @crabbypadty393
      @crabbypadty393 Před rokem +1

      I think the scariest part of him is that he’s not really. He’s fake.

  • @omni_0101
    @omni_0101 Před 3 lety +5312

    When Hans takes her wrist, he's actually checking her pulse. Her heart was pounding which was his first real clue the La Padites were hiding something...or someone.

    • @iannamico
      @iannamico Před 3 lety +748

      that's a bingo

    • @fluffytoaster427
      @fluffytoaster427 Před 3 lety +348

      @@iannamico “...ye just say bango.”

    • @stewartmair3995
      @stewartmair3995 Před 3 lety +182

      eh, i'm not sure that's what he was doing. Unless you're specifically trained not to, the human heart can fluctuate because the person is being touched. Given the fact he was almost certain that the jews were already there it then became a question of getting the occupants to reveal it was so.

    • @Garbagejuicewaterfall
      @Garbagejuicewaterfall Před 3 lety +5

      Sounds legit.

    • @lxlKHARMAlxl
      @lxlKHARMAlxl Před 3 lety +35

      Holy shit dude...

  • @shivvWhore
    @shivvWhore Před rokem +3017

    I think the reason he singles out the daughter Charlotte when he is looking at the Lapetite daughters is because unlike her sisters she has blonde hair and blue eyes, a perfect 'Aryan' girl.

    • @Zachariahszz
      @Zachariahszz Před rokem +35

      She has red hair tho

    • @lp.shakur
      @lp.shakur Před rokem +334

      @Thomas he fancies her exactly for that reason, she looks German

    • @dawsynasay4841
      @dawsynasay4841 Před rokem +280

      He singles her out because of how nervous she was compared to the rest. Her eyes kept darting around so Landa knew something was up. Charlotte gave them up because of how she was acting

    • @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat
      @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat Před rokem +4

      Was she not ginger?

    • @katsuo3228
      @katsuo3228 Před rokem +126

      @@dawsynasay4841 exactly. They were at Hanz' mercy the moment he stepped foot in their property. It's often revealed that people like Hanz don't really view other people, even the perfect Aryan girls, as their equals. I believe he singles her out because she seemed the most nervous out of the three. He knew they were hiding Jews in their property. But he didn't know where. But Hanz is investigating like Sherlock Holmes. He singles Charlotte out because he knew she would crack sooner or later under pressure. Which she did. Before that uncomfortable exchange of Charlotte with her father, she shifted her eyes for a split second to where the Jews were hiding. Hanz most certainly noticed that. And Charlotte and her father's uncomfortable exchange was like Charlotte saying, “I am sorry dad” and her father saying, “What have you done?!”

  • @Iisdabest889
    @Iisdabest889 Před rokem +590

    I think Hans absolutely knew who Shoshanna was in the restaurant, but didn't give her away for two reasons: one - he sometimes likes to play with his toys, and two - she obviously didn't come to own a theater all on her own. There were people helping her and he wants to weed them out too.

    • @Some_Guy6
      @Some_Guy6 Před 10 měsíci +7

      He never saw her face, so how could he?

    • @unbreakableroad9294
      @unbreakableroad9294 Před 7 měsíci +39

      @@Some_Guy6said this somewhere else but he knew it was shoshanna running away without seeing her face, he must of known what she looks like

    • @thepeatboggy
      @thepeatboggy Před 7 měsíci +67

      I think he definitely knows but he also doesn’t care
      He is not a real nazi as in “a fanatical believer”, the ending tells us this, he is not attached to the ideology personally, he doesn’t hate jews specifically, he just does his job to his fullest and thrives on power
      I think he knows its Shoshanna but he is no longer hunting jews, today he’s just organising security for the theatre and watching her squirm and knowing he has total power is amusing to him

    • @duroxkilo
      @duroxkilo Před 7 měsíci +15

      @@unbreakableroad9294 that is because he had a file w/ their names and she was the only teenage girl in the family.
      he's satisfying his kink of 'politely terrorizing his victims' more than doing complex detective work. his real smarts is his uniform and the terror it inspires.. there's nothing genius in finding the hiding spot for example, he just makes it sound like he's smarter than his predecessors when in reality they just didn't do a proper job for whatever reasons... this motif repeats a few times thru-out the movie

    • @pornneliushubbard1967
      @pornneliushubbard1967 Před měsícem

      He knew about the inglorious basterds and there plan. By not telling anyone about it he knew her theater wil be the best fit to wipe out the entire third reich. So he needed soshanna to help carry out his plan to help the basterds and to defect to the Americans. That’s why he didn’t do anything to her. If he did then his plan would’ve been busted

  • @jacktowers7533
    @jacktowers7533 Před 2 lety +4269

    The fact Waltz goes from being one of the best villains in Bastards to one of the best heroes in Django whilst always being German As Fuck just shows his range and Tarantino being a great director letting him do what he needs to do for the role

    • @Max.Hartmann
      @Max.Hartmann Před rokem +192

      Waltz actually is Austrian as fuck as was Hitler an Austrian originally too. Didn't really had to act that.

    • @goofygoober779
      @goofygoober779 Před rokem +24

      @@Max.Hartmann If you use "didn't" you usually don't use "had", rather "have".

    • @Max.Hartmann
      @Max.Hartmann Před rokem +60

      @@goofygoober779 sry for my german grammar

    • @crummyclub9344
      @crummyclub9344 Před rokem +30

      @@Max.Hartmann Austria and Germany are so similar, it's really hard to tell the difference from an Austrian and a German.

    • @Max.Hartmann
      @Max.Hartmann Před rokem +17

      @@crummyclub9344 yes but somehow no

  • @PsychMdM
    @PsychMdM Před 3 lety +4867

    He also plays Dr. Shultz perfectly in Django except he's a good guy in that one. He's a fantastic actor.

    • @Metternich_Enjoyer
      @Metternich_Enjoyer Před 3 lety +80

      *Schultz

    • @azeljoyportugues2580
      @azeljoyportugues2580 Před 3 lety +49

      Thank you for reminding me to download that 1.
      After watching the Basterds, I'm digging for Waltz, I do remember him from Alita battle only

    • @joeygawl4346
      @joeygawl4346 Před 3 lety +53

      Hes kind of a good guy in this movie too. Yeah he killed hella people BUT they ended up killing Hitler. And he helped them pretty much cut the head off the snake as far as nazis go. For a price of course.

    • @mam0lechinookclan607
      @mam0lechinookclan607 Před 2 lety +19

      @@joeygawl4346 Yeah in the movie, he did the most of any charakter to stop the Nazis.

    • @joeygawl4346
      @joeygawl4346 Před 2 lety +9

      @@mam0lechinookclan607 Nah, Landa never gave Aldo Raine his 100 Nazi scalps. As far as I can tell hes useful for only selling out his allies.

  • @idonaveh5343
    @idonaveh5343 Před rokem +249

    Hans also has a thing for linguistics. He always wants to know the exact phrase and accent in the native speakers’ tongue, indicating an extraordinary punctuality

    • @bootstrapperwilson7687
      @bootstrapperwilson7687 Před 8 měsíci +7

      Punctiliousness.
      Maybe you could switch off autocorrect; it can make us look like real ignorami.

    • @LetHimRead
      @LetHimRead Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@bootstrapperwilson7687 Maybe you could turn off the pretentiousness while on CZcams. It makes *you* look like someone who cannot identify CZcams "decorum".

    • @danieljosephbestguy5990
      @danieljosephbestguy5990 Před 3 měsíci

      Hans speaks French only at the beginning of the film in the first chapter when he presents himself to the LaPadites before switching to English for most of the sequence. He then only speaks French in the third chapter when he reencounters Shosanna posing as Immanuel Mimieux. He speaks English in only the first and final chapter. German is the language he most speaks throughout the film when he talks to Goebbels and Zoller in Chapter 3 before talking to Shosanna, Chapter 4 when he examines the corpses at the tavern and discovers Bridget von Hammersmark's handkerchief with an autograph and missing shoe. Then in Chapter 5 when he's being the security at the Premier he speaks German when talking to the Nazis, his comrade and Bridget von Hammersmark as well as Italian when talking to the disguised Basterds to show off his skills and detect that they're fakes before concocting his plan to ally with them.

    • @salhb737tm2
      @salhb737tm2 Před měsícem

      Literal grammar Naz1

  • @zhekayakovchuk2993
    @zhekayakovchuk2993 Před rokem +1324

    Hans is like Lalo Salamanca. Charming, charismatic but so sinister.

    • @huldu
      @huldu Před rokem +80

      Very true. He also had that charming, very dangerous aura around him. You never knew where he stood. He like Hans didn't need to be violent or aggressive to get the point across.

    • @shin29534
      @shin29534 Před rokem

      ​​@@huldu but hans would know that gus is full of shit

    • @kakyoindonut3213
      @kakyoindonut3213 Před rokem +36

      Hans salamanca

    • @cristiantapia631
      @cristiantapia631 Před rokem +4

      Finished this movie and you're so right!

    • @deepbluebeer
      @deepbluebeer Před rokem +4

      The other way around

  • @ravikkar
    @ravikkar Před 2 lety +10357

    His claim that he has exhausted his usage of the French language, after several minutes of fluent, errorless conversation, was always a huge red flag to me.

    • @johanstinson
      @johanstinson Před rokem +203

      Agreed.

    • @empathematics8928
      @empathematics8928 Před rokem +816

      the way that he so verbosely claimed that he couldn’t speak the language is paradoxical 😛

    • @ems901
      @ems901 Před rokem +47

      Exactly

    • @sriram04144
      @sriram04144 Před rokem

      It's the same with Germans now days. They speak fluent English all day only to claim that their English is terrible.

    • @Jay-over-Jay
      @Jay-over-Jay Před rokem +364

      And better yet, later in the movie he speaks fluent French with Shoshanna in the cafe and at the movie premiere

  • @EMAN-tx7lp
    @EMAN-tx7lp Před 3 lety +6484

    Hans Is scary because he’s not impulsive or easily angered, he’s so level headed and calculated it makes him seem like he already knows all your secrets. A lot of movies show nazis/ cops as stupid or incompetent but Hans is clever, and has a cold pressure to him

    • @skybot7091
      @skybot7091 Před 3 lety +73

      Like Thrawn but more sadistic

    • @veritasetlibertas7889
      @veritasetlibertas7889 Před 3 lety +109

      @George Thomas Yep!!! Adolf Eichman. Read "Eichman in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil" by Hannah Arendt.

    • @daelaenor
      @daelaenor Před 3 lety +102

      @George Thomas It's easy to be superior if you actually think you are. A lot of confidence for Nazis, the opposite for others.

    • @GordonGekkoo
      @GordonGekkoo Před 3 lety +63

      Thank you for you kind compliments. I do am the best in my work, if i may humbly admit so.

    • @sylvamoise5788
      @sylvamoise5788 Před 3 lety +17

      They was never stupid.who you think teach American about astronomy.they was way infront of america.hitler lost the was it's just because he was saw bigger than is belly.hes mistake is not supposed to attack Russia.

  • @BadatStuff
    @BadatStuff Před rokem +257

    Another crazy thing about his interrogation with Lapadite:
    Lapadite definitely speaks some pretty good English, but it's not his native tongue. That means it's significantly more difficult to lie/hide details than if he were speaking French, and Hans exploited that as well when he switched to English. He might have had suspicions, but that could be how he 100% confirmed Lapadite was hiding the Dreyfuses
    Lapadite's actor also needs some serious props. He spoke English just fine and you see him maintaining kind of a stone cold persona of his own but clear nervousness. Something that a genius like Landa would notice, especially if he's speaking a language he's less comfortable with

  • @Greeny445
    @Greeny445 Před rokem +319

    Still my favourite on screen villain, he's just so charismatic and likeable which makes him so much more dangerous. You expect a nazi to be terrifying and ruthless yet Hans is able to hold a conversation and make you feel like your not in any danger. Perfect acting from Christoph and perfect casting choice from Tarantino!

    • @Nellsism
      @Nellsism Před 9 měsíci +8

      For real. You get the sense that if it wasn’t for the uniform, he’d be a perfectly affable, likable guy. Hence why it’s so important that the basterds give him “something he can’t take off”

  • @A_R_888
    @A_R_888 Před 3 lety +3242

    Hans stared at the youngest daughter because he knew she would reveal where the Jews were hiding. She revealed it the second she glanced towards the floor whereupon she immediately looked at her father in fear because she knew what she did. Her father knew it too and you could see he had already decided to tell Hans the truth to protect his daughters. The rest of their conversation was entirely theatre because Hans enjoys his job.

    • @Darklarik
      @Darklarik Před 2 lety +142

      Not necesarily, alot of people look down when they are in a state of fear and submission, which the Nazis would obviously cause in any sensible person.

    • @ThiaZdk
      @ThiaZdk Před 2 lety +138

      Nop it was because She was the only girl with aryan like looks. The others had Brown hair.

    • @austinyoder5247
      @austinyoder5247 Před 2 lety +7

      @Pop Corn Of course he did, he just needed to know where to shoot

    • @VixxKong2
      @VixxKong2 Před 2 lety +70

      @@ThiaZdk
      That would explain the first greeting. But the persistent looks seemed to actually have a goal. Not just staring at her for her blondish hair

    • @carlamarlene2927
      @carlamarlene2927 Před 2 lety +2

      With relish

  • @AlbinoGorillaXX
    @AlbinoGorillaXX Před 3 lety +6262

    I think Hans strangled the girl, strictly because he felt his intelligence was so blatantly insulted with her bs story of the rock climbing and that she actually believed a man of his infamy and status would believe such an idiotic excuse. Simply hurt his pride too much.

    • @andrewgregovic1608
      @andrewgregovic1608 Před 2 lety +673

      I think there's more to it - envy. See my latest comment:
      RE: "You get what you paid for" - that's basically him saying "you should have paid ME to run this plot of yours instead of paying some stupid actress, who got so easily caught by ME". And as we saw later - he would have been 100% game. It's essentially grandiosity and envy. That's why he killed her - pure murderous envy.

    • @jacobavakian5893
      @jacobavakian5893 Před 2 lety +66

      He kills her because he knows shes a spy! But interesting interpretation

    • @lufsolitaire5351
      @lufsolitaire5351 Před 2 lety +271

      @@jacobavakian5893 Both are probably true to some degree, he was probably going to kill her regardless but wounding his ego gave him the extra venom he needed. He could of killed her any which way but he chose an extremely intimate way to kill her which deterred from his usual efficiency. Sadist or personal slight?

    • @Kurzxclan
      @Kurzxclan Před 2 lety +9

      you've convinced me.

    • @jacobavakian5893
      @jacobavakian5893 Před 2 lety +39

      @@lufsolitaire5351 i think he plays games with his prey bc he is sadistic! He also plays games with von to match the shoe of the crime scene to his suspicions!

  • @Chicharrera.
    @Chicharrera. Před rokem +178

    Hans is like the classic situation of how a cat plays with a mouse both before and after killing it. For no other reason than the joy of it.

  • @williamthomas5215
    @williamthomas5215 Před rokem +157

    I heard someone make a great description of Hans.
    “He holds your hand just a second too long, he stares just a beat more than he should, and he drags the breathe of his words just a moment more than he should”

  • @woelke
    @woelke Před 2 lety +4982

    i remember reading somewhere that if u look carefully you'll notice Hans doesn't just take the girls hands, he takes them by the wrists an studys their pulse to get a feeling of their true reactions

    • @carlosspeicywiener7018
      @carlosspeicywiener7018 Před 2 lety +456

      It's more than that. You can gauge a pulse, breath, look for pupilary dilation, and the "blush response" but also trembling, goosebumps, and perspiration. The man was a detective

    • @standartenfuhrerhanslanda343
      @standartenfuhrerhanslanda343 Před 2 lety +286

      That’s a bingo!

    • @ElronHumpperdink
      @ElronHumpperdink Před 2 lety +66

      @@carlosspeicywiener7018 a maniac for sure, in the true sense, not crazy but maniacal and methodical

    • @crimsonclover9871
      @crimsonclover9871 Před 2 lety +39

      @@standartenfuhrerhanslanda343 Ya just say bingo...🤣😘

    • @ynoanton4447
      @ynoanton4447 Před 2 lety +26

      Damn this movie is so full of details!

  • @hamzabelattar
    @hamzabelattar Před 3 lety +5572

    Everyone Gangsta until Hans Stop Smiling

    • @cebo213
      @cebo213 Před 3 lety +140

      My sentiments exactly! It's all fun and games until Hans stops smiling and locks his eyes

    • @barringtonfisher87
      @barringtonfisher87 Před 3 lety +74

      The only look that could stop Mike Tyson's left hook

    • @dylantrippe5193
      @dylantrippe5193 Před 3 lety +2

      Yup!! hahaha

    • @AnthonyKravitz
      @AnthonyKravitz Před 3 lety +12

      You mean when he was getting a swastika carved on his skull ? I'm pretty sure he wasn't smiling in that scene.

    • @TheAnderson0701
      @TheAnderson0701 Před 3 lety +2

      @@AnthonyKravitz when does he get scalped dumbass?

  • @mralabbad7
    @mralabbad7 Před 11 měsíci +134

    In the strudel scene, he ordered her milk, then, he didn't finish his strudel, didn't finish his cigarette, AND didn't finish his thought. I think these are all hints to him not finishing the job the day she ran from him.

    • @frost5711
      @frost5711 Před 5 měsíci +7

      Not to mention he made her wait for the cream which contained pork. As a Jew Shoshanna could not eat pork

    • @RXTransit
      @RXTransit Před 5 měsíci +6

      ​@@frost5711how do? Cream is dairy, milk comes from cows

    • @LeiLeiPhD
      @LeiLeiPhD Před 5 měsíci +1

      Very very good!!!

    • @damilolaamusan6395
      @damilolaamusan6395 Před 4 měsíci +9

      You sure you aren't reaching a little there, bud?

    • @mralabbad7
      @mralabbad7 Před 4 měsíci

      @@damilolaamusan6395 bless your heart pal

  • @Annatar_Lord_of_Gifts
    @Annatar_Lord_of_Gifts Před rokem +94

    Hans 100% knew who Shoshana was in the cafe scene. Ordering milk for her was not just some mere coincidence. He was toying with her, it’s fun for him as you say. Even the look he gives her at the end, the same look he gave Pedite before calling him out for hiding her family. The smile fades into the cold dead eyed stare. He doesn’t arrest her because he wants to keep playing with her.
    Hans killed Bridgette (I believe) because he not only was mad at her for betraying Germany and the Nazis, but that he also may of had some fantasy feelings for her sexually and that was him expelling them in disgust.

    • @theSeljack
      @theSeljack Před 9 měsíci +5

      There’s a thought I had that he didn’t exactly knew who Shoshana was but that in fact he knew she was jewish. Because he could have most likely asked for milk in any houshold he visited. Like that he could just observe who ever he is talking to if he orders milk and their reaction to that as he triggers their memories.

    • @Autistic_Cl0wn
      @Autistic_Cl0wn Před 9 měsíci +10

      He also asked for Apple strudel, and during the time pork fat was used as an additive.

    • @theSeljack
      @theSeljack Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@Autistic_Cl0wn good observation

    • @roronoalaw7772
      @roronoalaw7772 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Makes no sense for him to be mad at her betraying the Nazis when he was fine with doing the same thing

    • @Annatar_Lord_of_Gifts
      @Annatar_Lord_of_Gifts Před 7 měsíci

      When he came to terms that they would never win the war, yes. @@roronoalaw7772

  • @Xpistos510
    @Xpistos510 Před 3 lety +3496

    I love how Hans Landa, in accordance with his obvious intelligence, has shown not to be ideological in any meaningful sense. It's almost as though he privately knows that the politics of the Third Reich are absurd, but he doesn't care because it's an opportunity for him to flex his intellectual prowess as a detective and hunter.

    • @frogglen6350
      @frogglen6350 Před 3 lety +62

      Would've worked more in his favor he started working with the winning side

    • @foxhound963
      @foxhound963 Před 3 lety +346

      Thats why he DID start working for the winning side.

    • @chriswilson1968
      @chriswilson1968 Před 3 lety +108

      He pretty much told us this himself when disregarding the title of Jew Hunter.

    • @tomterry2370
      @tomterry2370 Před 3 lety +177

      He pretty much explicitly states in the first scene that he is in it because he enjoys the process of investigating and tracking down people. He is good at it, and the ideal scenario for him to exploit his talent presents itself - in the form of the SS. As Vile Eye says, the perfect oppurtunist.

    • @iisusvoryvzakone7345
      @iisusvoryvzakone7345 Před 3 lety +34

      @@frogglen6350 That's stupid, if a war breaks out you are gonna work and fight for your country, you don't have the resources to contact a foreing country. By winning side you mean America? America wasn't in the war, they just came to it at the end to take the spoils and only because they were dragged into it. People play the cards that they have, people like Landa play it well, they are only there for their self interest, they were winning until the USSR beat them in Stalingrad, the movie show us the moment that he can access to new cards. People don't predict the future, maybe all the people working for the US are stupid for not working for the chinese under that logic. The world is full of people like Landa, that's the scary thing, most of them maybe are not that smart. The people that think of themselves as heroes maybe are the incarnate evil of the future, the people want to be a hero now, but they want to be cheered for that, not punish. The nazis thought (and in their logic it has sense) that they were the salviors of the world and that their cause was fair and noble, if you really belive in what you say you stay untill the end, Hitler was one of this people, he could have scaped Berlin and he didn't because he believed in what he said, even if for us his way of thinking was monstruous. But most people even whith the greatest words just want to float above the shit, just a few have the skills and the resources to do it.

  • @el_duderino3432
    @el_duderino3432 Před 2 lety +3609

    I’m still waiting for you to analyze the evil of my mother in law. Thanks.

  • @level102magikarp
    @level102magikarp Před rokem +53

    The opening scene is one of the greatest scenes ever. Christoph Waltz was the perfect choice for such an amazing villain

  • @TwiztedJugallo
    @TwiztedJugallo Před rokem +46

    Hans Landa is one of my all time favorite characters. Manners, etiquette, well spoken. He had it all.

  • @SomeUnkindledAsh
    @SomeUnkindledAsh Před 3 lety +5451

    Man, not many people in the world could play Hans like Christoph.

    • @AleXxTM123
      @AleXxTM123 Před 3 lety +236

      Let me second this. There is no one who could play him like Walz. In my opinion the mo is should be watched in German. Christoph synced him self in French, English, Italian and German.

    • @becksimilian2955
      @becksimilian2955 Před 3 lety +203

      Production was almost pushed back because Tarantino couldn't find the right person to play Landa.... until Christoph waltz auditioned

    • @SomeUnkindledAsh
      @SomeUnkindledAsh Před 3 lety +58

      @@AleXxTM123 yeh. The dude is fuckin impressive 👏

    • @SomeUnkindledAsh
      @SomeUnkindledAsh Před 3 lety +11

      @@becksimilian2955 i saw Tarantino talking abt that on a documentary

    • @susanryman9948
      @susanryman9948 Před 3 lety +29

      Adam Harmon -I cannot imagine anyone else having such an effect on so many. He completely encapsulates menacing evil. He is mesmerizing.

  • @oo-mj4gj
    @oo-mj4gj Před 3 lety +7187

    anybody that downs a cup of milk while making eye contact is a threat

    • @ravioli9171
      @ravioli9171 Před 3 lety +198

      That's so true. It was actually disturbing

    • @triphophoney2981
      @triphophoney2981 Před 3 lety +214

      My kids can be somewhat threatening. ;-)

    • @ravioli9171
      @ravioli9171 Před 3 lety +123

      @@triphophoney2981 string bones = strong fear

    • @Jordan-rn4kp
      @Jordan-rn4kp Před 3 lety +61

      I'm sorry I come off as threatening for liking milk

    • @ravioli9171
      @ravioli9171 Před 3 lety +122

      @@Jordan-rn4kp it's too late, milk boy.

  • @adventurfly879
    @adventurfly879 Před 8 měsíci +26

    This was tarantinos take on "the benality of evil". And he crafted one of the most evil characters in cinematic history. So well written and acted

  • @jamesmooney7522
    @jamesmooney7522 Před rokem +25

    When he holds the wrists of the girls in the beginning on the farm, he's actually checking there pulse to see if it is raised / panicked, you can see it if you look closer he is pressing into the underside of the wrist, knowing full well how everyone is freaking out and he's is just there cool, calm and evil.

  • @Rocky-oq9cy
    @Rocky-oq9cy Před 3 lety +2134

    Christoph Waltz is one of the best actors in the scene right now. He nails EVERY role he plays. So talented.

    • @Rocky-oq9cy
      @Rocky-oq9cy Před 3 lety +4

      @leah rose I get what you mean. Not every movie can be a smash hit and that’s why it’s hard for actors sometimes. You could jump on a role that launches you into the top 10 or the movie you play in could be SO BAD that is just destroys your personal image.

    • @martinpiekarski1512
      @martinpiekarski1512 Před 3 lety +24

      @leah rose Spectre is quite old now, it was 5 years ago already. Better watch more recent movies such as Alita Battle Angel - he has a much better role in this movie.

    • @martinpiekarski1512
      @martinpiekarski1512 Před 3 lety +4

      @@Rocky-oq9cy But it's difficult to know which movie is worth playing in or not. Like, Bond movies are famous, if not for their quality, then for being popular and well-received by the public. So it's not that surprising actors are willing to play in those movies as they are fairly reliable. But, as it turns out, even well-established franchises have their bad eggs. On the other hand, some low-budget and not well-known movies can actually turn into something good, if they are written well.

    • @bluefacebaby9334
      @bluefacebaby9334 Před 3 lety +5

      the director had no idea what he was doing; he made Christoph Waltz do an impression of himself

    • @martinpiekarski1512
      @martinpiekarski1512 Před 3 lety

      @leah rose So what was your point then?

  • @IAMJAKETRIMBLE
    @IAMJAKETRIMBLE Před 2 lety +2997

    Hans’ use of subtle actions, questions, etc. that let his victims *know* they’ve been caught is what makes him the perfect villain to me. He lets you know you’re doomed but instead of just ending it, he toys with his victims just for fun... he may even just say “Au Revior” and let you live in fear indefinitely. Beautifully written and performed.

    • @whyohwhy9679
      @whyohwhy9679 Před 2 lety +32

      Agreed. You always know where you stand with Hans. Not a good place. Ever.

    • @nathantower5565
      @nathantower5565 Před 2 lety +19

      You'd think Hans would instantly figure out at the end of the movie that he can just say a Nazi marked him before he left Germany. It's way more believable than anything Pitts shitty character does

    • @mydogdeli
      @mydogdeli Před 2 lety +5

      au revoir, not "revior"

    • @weirdshibainu
      @weirdshibainu Před 2 lety +18

      A big tell in the interview with La Padite , is early on, Landa says that he understands that La Padite can speak English. From La Padites perspective, he realizes that Landa already knows things about him.

    • @jefft5824
      @jefft5824 Před 2 lety +6

      Some of the best acting I've ever seen. Dialogue and mannerisms are what make Tarantino and Scorsese so damn good and rewatchable

  • @KaosNova2
    @KaosNova2 Před rokem +29

    I always found Hans Landa pretty intimidating in how calm and fearless he could appear in the scenes.

  • @prometheusstarr5103
    @prometheusstarr5103 Před 8 měsíci +14

    I feel like Landa killing Von Hammersmark was perfectly in character. He's taking her place in the plan and doesnt need her contradicting that.

  • @herschelschueler
    @herschelschueler Před 2 lety +3860

    When his neutral expression goes into visible distaste in the opening scene you damn well know, this guy is no joke. It's such a subtle change, but done so perfectly that your heart just drops the way LaPadite's does.

    • @marxel4444
      @marxel4444 Před 2 lety +7

      i mean when the "friendly" ss nazi after drinking your milk and making smalltalk goes full death stare and says outright "your haboring jews...do you not"
      its clear he doesnt play around anymore,either you cooperate and save yourself or your in with them.

    • @herschelschueler
      @herschelschueler Před 2 lety +7

      @@marxel4444 of course not. All I was saying is, his face conveys the message before he has to speak.

    • @marxel4444
      @marxel4444 Před 2 lety +9

      @@herschelschueler yeah. he made it quite clear without even saying a word that the charade is over.

    • @trawlins396
      @trawlins396 Před 2 lety +24

      @@herschelschueler the way he was able to emote pure fury with just a stare was frightening. I saw this in the movie theater on opening day and during that scene you could hear a pin drop.

    • @zumabbar
      @zumabbar Před 2 lety +10

      i don't agree it's subtle, but it is indeed a very great nonverbal acting. a wunderbar one.

  • @chasey2944
    @chasey2944 Před 3 lety +2859

    I've always been of the opinion that Landa knew that Emmanuelle was Shoshanna when they spoke, but deliberately spared her because she had a believable and consistent backstory for her current identity. As you say in your video, much of Landa's presence and interrogation throughout the film has to do with performance, and the performances which turn sour and violent only do so the moment he's broken through the façade of the people he's been interrogating. I believe that he knows Shoshanna's identity is a falsehood but doesn't care to pursue her on that note both because it wouldn't be of any personal gain to him and because he respects the work she's put into the lie. Had anyone aside from Landa been there he would've been fooled entirely, and Landa sees pride in a good performance.
    I don't think that his murder of von Hammersmark is out of character for that exact same reason. He doesn't kill her because it would necessarily be beneficial to him or his plot, but because he's outraged by the pathetic story they've come up with and clearly put no thought or rehearsal into, and because they thought it would be enough to fool him, specifically. It's a disrespect to both his intellect and his craft and so he sees it as the ultimate insult. Thus the "you get what you pay for" remark - she was an actress, and obviously he believed her to be a very poor one.
    Thus also why the scarring of his forehead was the ultimate insult, since he can no longer pretend he was anything else.

    • @RMBII91
      @RMBII91 Před 3 lety +245

      I believe this was the case too, Landa deliberately orders milk for Shoshanna.

    • @normalplateletcount
      @normalplateletcount Před 3 lety +286

      i am mindblown by how accurate this analogy is and that i never saw it this way. amazing

    • @Garvant_
      @Garvant_ Před 3 lety +187

      Oh man when you put it that way the carving is such perfect punishment for Hans; The man so expert in theatre can now only play one character ever again, a Nazi failure.

    • @UserNameAnonymous
      @UserNameAnonymous Před 3 lety +47

      Wow...excellent analysis.

    • @xGrimVargrx
      @xGrimVargrx Před 3 lety +27

      Astute observation, my dear Chasey.

  • @HR-yd5ib
    @HR-yd5ib Před rokem +24

    The opening scene is a true masterpiece in writing and execution.

  • @CakeMonster82
    @CakeMonster82 Před 8 měsíci +9

    That’s my favorite part of the movie too you can see the ice in his veins turn solid when his face turns menacing when he says, “You’re hiding enemies of the state, are you not?” The sheer terror displayed and he gives off is one of the best performances I’ve seen in a long time in a movie definitely Oscar worthy

  • @youngwang97
    @youngwang97 Před 2 lety +2295

    I like the small detail that whenever Landa is in control of a situation, he usually takes his hat off. But in the ending scene where he was helpless, his hat stayed on

    • @rjlack1975
      @rjlack1975 Před 2 lety +146

      Interesting, and a good idea to put forth. Thank you for that. But, this could also be explained away by saying that a gentleman takes his hat off when he is indoors.

    • @pcjaxson1003
      @pcjaxson1003 Před rokem +14

      He was also handcuffed in the last scene

    • @themagpie_1
      @themagpie_1 Před rokem +40

      you never wear a military cover indoors.

    • @navegandolejanooriente6268
      @navegandolejanooriente6268 Před rokem +4

      That’s good observation that I did pick up

    • @gregscott7411
      @gregscott7411 Před rokem +7

      @@themagpie_1 Very true and you ALWAYS wear your cover outdoors.

  • @entr0pix
    @entr0pix Před 3 lety +3192

    he orders her a glass of milk. he knows EXACTLY who she is, it was never up for debate in my opinion.

    • @Beverly_Dingus
      @Beverly_Dingus Před 3 lety +439

      I agree that he knew who she was, and I think the reason he didn't arrest her is because he knew she would be useful to him. The scariest thing about Landa is that we're kept in the dark about what he does and doesn't know. And he plays with the other characters, letting them think they're safe when they aren't. Waltz really played this part perfectly.

    • @InfamousRafe
      @InfamousRafe Před 3 lety +27

      Quite impressive observation

    • @robertprobst3836
      @robertprobst3836 Před 3 lety +147

      He did not. It makes no sense. I keep seeing this type of comment everywhere under Inglorious Basterd videos and it is outright stupid. He likes milk himself and he is playing games testing suspected Jews (milk is not necessarily koscher and a more traditional Jew would not simply drink a glass of milk in 1940). Landa did nothing out of the ordinary here which would justify saying that he identified Shoshanna. He didn't even know her until he sat on down that table.

    • @adamgardiner5869
      @adamgardiner5869 Před 3 lety +5

      I'm such a dunce, I never picked that up. Great observation.

    • @susanne2126
      @susanne2126 Před 3 lety +48

      Maybe milk, as a typical baby food, is meant as a ridiculous counterpoint to his predator nature.

  • @KnightsWhoSayNi222
    @KnightsWhoSayNi222 Před 4 měsíci +6

    The fact that Tarantino never thought he’d be able to done anyone perfect enough for this part. And he actually did, is extraordinary. Acting and directing both brilliant and it’s a pleasure to watch.

  • @ericbotondbatternay8452
    @ericbotondbatternay8452 Před rokem +13

    Nearly every scene with him produced wonderful suspense. Truly a master of the "bomb under the table" style of risk elevation.

  • @libertusprimus
    @libertusprimus Před 3 lety +1593

    OOOOO ZATS A BINGO!
    .... is zat how you say it? Thats a bingo?
    "... you just say Bingo"
    Ahhh.... Bingo....

    • @SerpentSupremacy
      @SerpentSupremacy Před 3 lety +65

      How fun!

    • @carvedouttastone
      @carvedouttastone Před 3 lety +96

      I wonder if even that mistake wasn't deliberate on reflection. The psychology behind every one of Landa's actions can measured and weighed for motive.
      He wanted to concede some power to his "captives", knowing that they would soon hold his life in the balance once he surrendered to them. The "mistake", softens his arrogance and superiority a little, making him less menacing and more childlike in the eyes of these Nazi-killers.
      It's another subtle and nuanced move in the masquerade-driven chess match he's playing towards the end-game.

    • @andrewparkins1803
      @andrewparkins1803 Před 3 lety +35

      @@carvedouttastone hans is definitely a multilayered character who it appears has motives beyond the base motivation to his character

    • @svenlindroos8830
      @svenlindroos8830 Před 3 lety +3

      Bringo ya dangus!

    • @emberducati9237
      @emberducati9237 Před 3 lety +16

      I thought the scene beautifully illuminated the contrast between European sophistication and American pragmatism.

  • @chucksenhowzen9740
    @chucksenhowzen9740 Před 3 lety +1225

    I watched the opening scene with the Frenchman a dozen times and still am enthralled by Hans’s psychotic charisma

    • @therev2100
      @therev2100 Před 3 lety +47

      Sociopathic actually.

    • @JoshuaKevinPerry
      @JoshuaKevinPerry Před 3 lety +12

      @@therev2100 Normies have made them to be the same, so there's no distinction

    • @robertlehnert4148
      @robertlehnert4148 Před 3 lety +9

      Tarrantino was definitely doing an homage to the opening scene of Sergio Leone's _The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly_ with Angel Eyes' (Van Cleef) introduction.

    • @ulture
      @ulture Před 3 lety +21

      he is most definitely not psychotic. People with psychosis have enough problems without being compared to Nazis.

    • @robertlehnert4148
      @robertlehnert4148 Před 3 lety +9

      High functional sociopath WITH definite sadistic drives.

  • @catriona_drummond
    @catriona_drummond Před rokem +16

    The Strudel Scene is actually full of explicit violence. He is telegraphing Shoshana her future via the way he treats his Strudel. He is not just eating it, he is violently murdering it. All while smiling and with the nicest of manners.

    • @imz5195
      @imz5195 Před měsícem

      Reach think he’s just eating mate

  • @samvelbaloyan409
    @samvelbaloyan409 Před rokem +7

    Such a clear pronunciation and detailed speech! Can't get tired of rewatching it again and again
    Thanks for an amazing content!!!

  • @moscrow3247
    @moscrow3247 Před 3 lety +880

    I remember a theory why he killed the actress was that he becomes enraged when she stops playing the game with him. When she admits she’s a spy and “you got me” (pretty sure she says something to that effect) he is enraged because she broke the “rules” of the game.
    In that she gave up.

    • @angelamaro3480
      @angelamaro3480 Před 3 lety +33

      I forgot that part. I was thinking it was because she ruined her own alibi with her mountain climbing in France excuse

    • @True38
      @True38 Před 3 lety +36

      She says "So what happens now?". And maybe you're right.

    • @jameslopez9661
      @jameslopez9661 Před 3 lety +27

      I always thought he knew German high command in one spot to be killed and win the war would absolve his war crimes . Instead of a spy like the actress to get credit for ending the war

    • @josethebioform7519
      @josethebioform7519 Před 3 lety +14

      I figured it had to do with him still having a strong sense of national pride and he was an anti semite so vanhammersmark working with the hastards wasnt only a betrayal to germany but to her "German race"

    • @troyounce3295
      @troyounce3295 Před 3 lety +5

      @@josethebioform7519 that's real dumb.

  • @user-ip5yc7bg2k
    @user-ip5yc7bg2k Před 3 lety +2113

    Where the hell does Tarantino find people like these? Their acting is so good many celebrities become famous because of him.

    • @mollymole7
      @mollymole7 Před 3 lety +274

      Well, notice how every actor PEAKS under his direction, he doesn’t find them, he MAKES them.

    • @everydaygaming496
      @everydaygaming496 Před 2 lety +53

      Waltz it’s ducking amazing

    • @wonderingweirdo7476
      @wonderingweirdo7476 Před 2 lety +39

      @@everydaygaming496 duck yeah!

    • @Happyfoam-lw3yt
      @Happyfoam-lw3yt Před 2 lety +113

      Well... Considering the fact that he's widely considered the finest director that's ever lived, I'd say credit is due. Sure, the actors are phenomenal, but it's his DIRECTION that makes the film.

    • @lufsolitaire5351
      @lufsolitaire5351 Před 2 lety +21

      He has a knack for making the darker aspects of history hilarious. Plus wanton violence “is so much fun”.

  • @sebastianrussso6958
    @sebastianrussso6958 Před rokem +14

    If im not mistaken, the reason why he hold the hands of Lapadite's daughter for an uncomfortable period of time was also to determine wether they were stressed out or not

  • @bruceleroy8063
    @bruceleroy8063 Před 10 měsíci +7

    The way his face changes in the opening scene is masterful and the tear rolling down the cheek is heart-rending.

  • @rickykeim2005
    @rickykeim2005 Před 3 lety +858

    Christoff waltz was great in Django Unchained too.

    • @wtp7631
      @wtp7631 Před 3 lety +76

      Has he ever been anything other than great?

    • @SAIIIURAI
      @SAIIIURAI Před 3 lety +22

      True...but i would say in evil antagonist roles is where he really shines imo like here!

    • @IDADDYIproductions
      @IDADDYIproductions Před 3 lety +8

      Phenomenal actor to say the least

    • @wtp7631
      @wtp7631 Před 3 lety +17

      @@SAIIIURAI agreed, it was strange to see him so upbeat in Django.

    • @bastardjustice
      @bastardjustice Před 3 lety +3

      His talent was wasted in The Musketeers though

  • @r_r_rye2441
    @r_r_rye2441 Před 3 lety +1106

    I've always loved that he was not particularly loyal to the Nazis, more just an opportunist. Everything he did was for himself. He would have played a flute if that was the key to his own success.

    • @MC-yy2bx
      @MC-yy2bx Před 3 lety +42

      I think the character in the movie ( not the actor ) DID play the flute. If you know what I mean. Evidence: He " made arrangements " to take his aide with him to safety in America. I think there was more than a bit of a BROMANCE going on there.

    • @gachapinCUEVA
      @gachapinCUEVA Před 3 lety +15

      @@MC-yy2bx Poor Herman

    • @camerong5513
      @camerong5513 Před 3 lety +2

      @@MC-yy2bx ha. Imaginative. Thanks

    • @frankiel3767
      @frankiel3767 Před 3 lety +52

      I would say that’s the worst aspect of his character. To a certain extent I feel bad for the people who were taught antisemitism and authoritarianism since they were young and became Nazis. But if you’re smart enough to know antisemitism is stupid and that what you’re doing is wrong but you do it anyway, you’re worse than the idiots you work for

    • @MoneyMyChains
      @MoneyMyChains Před 3 lety

      Bingo

  • @a1b1c184
    @a1b1c184 Před 10 měsíci +23

    Waltz was such a hidden gem of an actor. He blended in nicely in Bastards with the all star cast and shined bright as a star in Django. I absolutely love being able to pull off the nice but still terrifying personality like Waltz can. The man is talented.

  • @johndreyer9730
    @johndreyer9730 Před 6 měsíci +6

    His performance in that opening scene is haunting, but the scene with him and the girl at dinner asking about the theatre was incredible.

  • @ooMshAntiOom
    @ooMshAntiOom Před 3 lety +1825

    What is "evilest" about him, is that he makes evil elegant and perfect.

    • @samanthagupta
      @samanthagupta Před 3 lety +18

      That’s 💯 what I love about him.

    • @harrywhite7639
      @harrywhite7639 Před 3 lety +26

      I think he was a hero, fighting for the fatherland

    • @Gigipretty64
      @Gigipretty64 Před 3 lety +1

      And very efficient.

    • @harrywhite7639
      @harrywhite7639 Před 3 lety +12

      @@Gigipretty64 😞 if only they had won

    • @themarquis336
      @themarquis336 Před 3 lety +3

      Well, that’s where you’re wrong. He doesn’t make it so.. evil IS inherently elegant and perfect, that’s why Landa (or rather Christoph Waltz’s sublime performance of the character) is the most perfect personification of evil.

  • @LongVu-lh9el
    @LongVu-lh9el Před 2 lety +2126

    I really think Landa spared the La Padites family. Looking at him innocently surrendering his weapons to the Basterds despite being an extremely clever and cunning man shows that Landa is someone who truly respects agreements. To him everything is business, his killing of the actress is simply a business, he wants to complete his businesses before switching sides.

    • @weirdshibainu
      @weirdshibainu Před 2 lety +32

      It would be nice to think he did spare the family...

    • @MrClickity
      @MrClickity Před 2 lety +281

      @@weirdshibainu Honestly, it wouldn't be much of a stretch. Even evil bastards understand that people become less inclined to make deals with you once you develop a reputation for killing people who make deals with you.

    • @weirdshibainu
      @weirdshibainu Před 2 lety +29

      @@MrClickity I'd say it's a coin toss. The entire family could just disappear, with neighbors racing to snitch on one another. When the Germans invaded Poland and then Russia, neighbors turned on one another in a vain attempt to curry favor with the Germans

    • @steffenpanning2776
      @steffenpanning2776 Před 2 lety +91

      It would also be in character. Himmler stressed in one of his speeches, that 'keeping word' is one of the highest virtues for a member of the SS. Even if an SS-man gives his word to a scoundrel (in the eyes of Himmler), he has to keep it.

    • @VK-sz4it
      @VK-sz4it Před 2 lety +18

      I actually can't see him as a villan. He is just doing his job. Not trolling here.

  • @andrewh7085
    @andrewh7085 Před měsícem +2

    The shot of Hans and his facial expression in the house as he makes his coup de grace is duplicated with Shoshana at the end of her interrogation . Then at the last second he claims to forget what his last question was, and forcefully extinguished his cigarette in the creme. He knew exactly who she was. I thought the reason he decided to let her go was hinted at in the start of the scene when they were discussing rank. To kill her would jeopardize the event being planned by his superiors. There was also the complication of harming the "girlfriend" of the German soldier who was being honored at the film event. There were too many complications and he kept his cool. Those kind of elements make him my favorite villain.

  • @kevintang4340
    @kevintang4340 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Wow, fantastic writing and incredibly intricate analyses of Hans Landa. Just rewatched the film because of your video and it really elevated the experience and my understanding of Hans' character development!

  • @estebanrodas31
    @estebanrodas31 Před 3 lety +639

    It was most definitely not out of character for him to kill her. She was lying to his face and taking him for a fool. He greets her as an old friend but knows full well what she's up to. That won't sit right with a man like Landa who needs everyone to know he is the smartest, most perceptive man in the world. "You get what you pay for" indicates his disdain for her botched plan that was poorly thought out, including that they hadn't even bothered to practice any Italian. To Landa, it's all about competence, professionalism and respect and he has no problem showing his deep disdain for those who he seems don't show it.

    • @theozlander4629
      @theozlander4629 Před 3 lety +73

      Yeah, I think that scene was Tarantino showing us that no, this charming, well spoken man is in fact a narcissistic sociopath. And it wasn't just murder, Landa tackles, straddles and strangles her with this bare hands. His hair is even stringier from the sweat and exertion when he goes to the phone - he put everything he had into killing her - because she insulted his intelligence by her lame excuse and the fact they didn't even practice basic Italian. Then her arrogant "what now colonel?", basically saying "what you gonna do about it?" pushed him over the edge.
      You are 100% right about it not being out of character - they insulted his intelligence from the moment he stepped up and he needed to put SOMEONE in their place. Or in this case, their grave.

    • @DallasGreen123
      @DallasGreen123 Před 3 lety +5

      Because culture is his weapon and what keeps him empowered. His victims are forced to engage with him because of societal rules, they can't simply tell him "sorry I have to go". They are playing his game, and he is good at it.
      His ultimate threat are people rejecting culture, like in the end scene where the basterds just throw aside all professionalism and simply kill him.

    • @tedwojtasik8781
      @tedwojtasik8781 Před 3 lety +32

      @@DallasGreen123 They did not kill him, they just carved a swastika in Landa's head so everyone back in the states would know he was a Nazi. They wanted him to live and live with that mark. The proverbial mark of Cain for a man who was in practice, Cain.

    • @ibubezi7685
      @ibubezi7685 Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah, that was a weird observation: Landa had already shown he could kill - ordering the soldiers to shoot the cabin/family - didn't he shoot at fleeing Emanuelle, in the field? Also, it was war - she was the enemy. He strangled her, not causing a mess or the shot being heard. I wonder if he not secretly (had) desired her - yet now she was openly defying him, working with the enemy, rather clumsily, at that, and ridiculing him in front of other people.... not smart...

    • @englishwithkristin8962
      @englishwithkristin8962 Před 3 lety +6

      I think he killed her so that he could get all the credit for the plan to kill Hitler. If she had lived, she would have also been rewarded for the plan and she could have said that Hans had nothing to do with the plan. With her dead, he could take all the credit.

  • @pillboxmovies
    @pillboxmovies Před 3 lety +602

    I feel like Tarantino spent the 00's developing his idea of the antagonist (Elle Driver, Bill, Stuntman Mike) and this was the culmination of that idea.

    • @uppercutgrandma4425
      @uppercutgrandma4425 Před 3 lety

      As opposed to just having all of his characters being antagonists?

    • @vtheyoshi
      @vtheyoshi Před 3 lety +5

      I think you can see this earlier than that. Jules from Pulp Fiction and Hans have the same sort of presence and control of a scene. You can see that Jackson plays this type of character again in Django a couple of years after this film.

    • @starbars96
      @starbars96 Před 3 lety

      Jacky brown has a very similar scene

  • @sephuris5555
    @sephuris5555 Před rokem +17

    I have watched a lot of WW2 movies and played A LOT of WW2 video games no German character has gripped me more then Hans Landa

  • @skins4thewin
    @skins4thewin Před rokem +6

    I've been saying for a long long time that this was one of the most powerful scenes in cinema history. So simple yet it had me absolutely suspended in terror while watching. Absolutely brilliant.

  • @Eskilz40
    @Eskilz40 Před 2 lety +721

    That first 20 minutes with him and the farmer are terrifying, especially when the farmer realizes there’s nothing gonna stop him from finding those people

    • @jasonjamrs7413
      @jasonjamrs7413 Před rokem

      You could also have to hope he won't find them

    • @gronvold3
      @gronvold3 Před rokem +10

      @@jasonjamrs7413 hope is a good tthing but at the expense of your daughters? i dont think so, Hans clearly new he was hiding them somewhere

  • @peacefuldawn6823
    @peacefuldawn6823 Před 2 lety +534

    He's the best villain because he's so much damn fun to watch. The scene where he bursts out laughing at Bridget's ridiculous story is gold!

    • @goldengun9970
      @goldengun9970 Před 2 lety +9

      After the first scene at the movie i could never call watching him fun. Awesome acting but fun wasn't the emotion i felt

    • @notme1998
      @notme1998 Před 2 lety +32

      @@goldengun9970 in the cinema when brad Pitt says "arrivederci" which means bye bye in Italian with that shitty accent i almost passed out by how much I laughed my god i had a lung hanging out of my throat

    • @DrCruel
      @DrCruel Před 2 lety

      Lavrenty Beria would have raped the girl before he killed her, and disposed of everyone else in this movie in the most brutal manner imaginable. And all before lunch.
      czcams.com/video/aHQo8mjMge0/video.html

    • @LIONTAMER3D
      @LIONTAMER3D Před 2 lety +1

      the way he stirs his beverage is great acting

  • @llq4ever309
    @llq4ever309 Před 5 měsíci +3

    That stood out to me more than anything in that scene was at 6:32 the way you can literally see his eyes change is unreal. Also the actor who played the father did an amazing job as well. One of my all time favorites. Christolph is a treasure.

  • @rickwilliams967
    @rickwilliams967 Před rokem +10

    I don't see him killing her as out of character. I'd argue it's an evolution of his selfish motivation. It could also benefit him, with her knowing she was found out. I always thought of it as tying up loose ends.

  • @davidmartinez52420
    @davidmartinez52420 Před 3 lety +574

    Waltz earned his Oscar on that subtle face transition in the first scene alone

    • @michaelhennesy2934
      @michaelhennesy2934 Před 2 lety +4

      Exactly, that is the sign of pure evil .

    • @allminegod
      @allminegod Před 2 lety +1

      what moment are you talking about?

    • @davidmartinez52420
      @davidmartinez52420 Před 2 lety +23

      @@allminegod The beginning scene when Hans is talking to the French dairy farmer. Initially, he was kind and courteous. Then eventually he gets into why he's really there and you can see the warmth from his face disappear in favor of a cold, emotionless stare. It's very subtle, but when you notice it it's pretty chilling.

    • @allminegod
      @allminegod Před 2 lety +1

      @@davidmartinez52420 thank you I will watch it again

    • @ben_b_blake
      @ben_b_blake Před 2 lety

      This was my first thought...

  • @orange555
    @orange555 Před 3 lety +287

    Landa knew exactly who she was. But two things: 1) Zoller was smitten with her, and Goebbels was smitten with Zoller. Landa had no interest or anything to gain by causing waves; 2) Honestly her continued existence didn't really threaten him. She wasn't an assignment anymore. But, he did want her to know that HE knew exactly who she was. Intelligence is a game of chess to Hans. Intellectual and strategic chess, and he revels in his opponents' fear. He had her at checkmate, and she knew.

    • @64siskat96
      @64siskat96 Před 3 lety +6

      if he caught her as a jew it would be an achievement but with her new papers there was no need to expose her. He was career driven and as the guy said he wasnt really interested in harming individuals

    • @Mystic_Stirling
      @Mystic_Stirling Před 2 lety +2

      This just proves a point how he’s 2 steps ahead. Damn

    • @daethe
      @daethe Před 2 lety +3

      @The Ol’ Babaganoush That's not really a fit of homicidal rage. As you said, he conclusively revealed her to be a double agent. He killed a traitorous woman that had deceived him, and countless others, contributing to the deaths of a Major (a ranking officer only two ranks below Hans himself) and multiple other German soldiers both specifically in the room, and likely hundreds of others from previous situations she may have been involved in. While he obviously wasn't married to the SS, and ended up turning traitor himself, he may have very well believed that while things were going great for his career that they likely were not going to win, and as such saw an opportunity to secure a way out for himself that basically freed him of any responsibility for the atrocities he had committed.

    • @ashleytrueblood2200
      @ashleytrueblood2200 Před 2 lety +1

      Duh

  • @wotringjjiv
    @wotringjjiv Před rokem +7

    Brilliant analysis! Landa's gentlemanly polite manners while carrying out the most despicable crimes exacted against humanity in the 20th century heightens the tension. Christoph Waltz deftly delivered this portrayal of evil to the highest level.

  • @jamesgordon7040
    @jamesgordon7040 Před rokem +9

    An unbelievably solid character. My first time watching this movie, the first scene had me legitimately on the edge of my seat.after the first scene I was hooked and ready to have my eyes glued to the screen for the next 2 hours. Tarantino is a cinema genius man

  • @maninscratch
    @maninscratch Před 3 lety +1437

    wait.. how is there no mention of the 'Cream'? He orders the stroodle without the cream at first. then, he sais something like "Oh, I forgot to order the cream" knowing, that Jews don't eat cream because apperantly it's not kosher. So he commands her to wait for the cream, just to read her. At least that's my guess.

    • @Llewellyn2844
      @Llewellyn2844 Před 3 lety +222

      You are correct. Depending on how you view the strudel scene,
      Landa is either testing or taunting Shosanna by forcing her to
      eat non-kosher whipped cream.

    • @Llewellyn2844
      @Llewellyn2844 Před 3 lety +152

      @Mike Litoris
      Well, I'm not Jewish, but I'm familiar with kosher rules.
      Landa may be evil, but he's also highly intelligent and
      well-educated. He certainly knows a great deal about
      Jewish culture, since such knowledge would aid him
      as a "Jew hunter." Even if Shosanna doesn't betray
      herself by rejecting the cream, Landa takes pleasure
      in watching her choke down a non-kosher dish.

    • @jbrothman
      @jbrothman Před 3 lety +19

      Why do you think cream isn't kosher? It's a component of milk, which is kosher. She is from a family of dairy farmers, after all.

    • @habanos2000
      @habanos2000 Před 3 lety +107

      @@jbrothman often gelatin (a pork product) is added to stabilize whipped cream. That's the potential issue.

    • @trexoxford9149
      @trexoxford9149 Před 3 lety +13

      I did not know this, thanks for sharing !

  • @NourArt02
    @NourArt02 Před 2 lety +2925

    The opening scene of this movie has a 15 minutes conversation between Hans and Mr. LaPadite, in any other movie this would have been boring, but i can safely say that i'de rather watch a 1 hour conversation of Waltz's Hans Landa than to watch a 2 min MCU superheros bad jokes

    • @whyohwhy9679
      @whyohwhy9679 Před 2 lety +31

      You are so right.

    • @mechamedeamigo3984
      @mechamedeamigo3984 Před 2 lety +57

      @@Maxrepfitgm sometimes insults are just straight up facts, and no decent person can aford to lie am i wrong?

    • @flynnlivescmd
      @flynnlivescmd Před 2 lety +1

      @@Maxrepfitgm It's nour art, which according to google means light.
      Also i see it more as a comparison/ opinion. Couldnt agree with his OP more however lol.

    • @bigol9223
      @bigol9223 Před 2 lety +47

      @@Maxrepfitgm Don't cry. MCU shit is a phenomenon that's practically taken over the film industry, people can contrast and critique.

    • @daniel57327
      @daniel57327 Před 2 lety +11

      @@Maxrepfitgm box office earnings dont mean a lot, commercialy it can be a, succsess but if people liked it cant be magicaly seen from it. As there are flops that become favored so are blockbuster movies that are forgotten after a year.
      You do realize that marvel universe is based on comics. From that whole hodge podge of movies i can take ragnarok, first 2 iron man movies, 1st guardians of the galaxy movie and doc. Strange as something thats good the rest is just lukewarm water to me. Comic to movie isnt easy. The marvel universe to me is action split by dad jokes. It is funny for a time but it does not age well.
      These movies are very different but people will compare them becouse they can and make peace with that. Inglorius bastards has substance to it, you can olways find a part of it thats fun to dissect while marvel is just nostalgia and eye candy.

  • @falk6121
    @falk6121 Před rokem +7

    The underbite of Christoph Waltz makes Hans Landa look ever more evil. Perfect cast!

  • @huntersorenson7261
    @huntersorenson7261 Před 9 měsíci +3

    One thing that always stuck with me was Landa’s reaction to Aldo killing his assistant at the end. For someone that seemed so cold the whole movie, suddenly Landa is overcome with surprise and disgust that a man he personally bargained freedom and life for was killed so callously. Any theories as to why Landa had such a connection to that man as he was never shown previously?

  • @compton_187
    @compton_187 Před 3 lety +263

    At the dairy farmer’s house, when Lands is meeting the girls, notice how he holds their hands, and later wrist before he orders the milk. That’s feeling out their pulse. A human lie detector.

    • @stevekaczynski3793
      @stevekaczynski3793 Před 3 lety +25

      More like a fear detector and I don't think a visit from an SS colonel (which Landa is) in an occupied country would be regarded as a calming social occasion.

    • @firearmsstudent
      @firearmsstudent Před 3 lety +12

      @@stevekaczynski3793 True but if they didn't have anything to hide the discomfort would have subsided, which is why he does it twice.

    • @123jomaks
      @123jomaks Před 3 lety +9

      Thats just stupid, any girls heart would pound like crazy if ure being held by a nazi officer in war time

    • @EndbossProductions
      @EndbossProductions Před 3 lety +8

      that was denied by tarantino - ppl tend to over analyze movies

    • @SaintSC05
      @SaintSC05 Před 3 lety +13

      @@firearmsstudent Dude, its a Nazi in your house in Nazi occupied France. They absolutely have reason to be nervous regardless of whether they are hiding anything at all. He could order them to be killed at a whim.

  • @BenCaesar
    @BenCaesar Před rokem +8

    Loved this, Hans is probably the most chilling villain on screen. Couldn't have been done better. Please do fire lord Ozai. He comes in late in the series but his presence is so strong through the entire series

  • @YippeeSkippie426
    @YippeeSkippie426 Před rokem +1

    I had always thought that him looking over Charlotte and holding the other sister's wrist were just a bit ... overly freindly in that "one weird uncle" kind of way. Viewed as a way of non-verbally showing the farmer who is really dominating this situation, but in such unusual and seemingly harmless ways, makes Landa's talk with the farmer even more foerboding.
    Well done! In the videos I've watched analyzing Landa, this is something that wasn't covered quite the way you did. Liked and subbed.
    So far as Landa scoffing at his own nick-name while interrogating Raine, though he liked it while interrogating LaPadite, all I can think of is that after four years of war and all of his own doings (and knowing the war was lost), he was as tired of his nickname as he was of the war.

  • @Mm-zl8ks
    @Mm-zl8ks Před 3 lety +299

    I cant get the image of ryan from the office killing nazis out of my head.

    • @alexrandell9199
      @alexrandell9199 Před 3 lety +21

      I like to think that’s why he went on a power trip as VP of Dunder mifflin. His past life as a Nazi hunter took over

    • @ethancooper1560
      @ethancooper1560 Před 3 lety +5

      Yeah I keep seeing actors from the office in everything

    • @darthollie
      @darthollie Před 3 lety +4

      It's a well known plague, same with Daniel Radcliffe, once you've taken a good role that blows up your career, it's all people will ever see you as. Like when Harry Potter went into the Klu Klux Klan

    • @darthollie
      @darthollie Před 3 lety

      @James Bond I've not seen it, I'm only aware of it's existence

    • @redstaplerguyforlifepastpr5763
      @redstaplerguyforlifepastpr5763 Před 3 lety +1

      I can't help but see the comparisons between this guy , and both of my parents , interrogations , traps , and even his subtle threathing gestures lol.

  • @whensomethingcriesagain
    @whensomethingcriesagain Před 2 lety +536

    What makes Landa scary to me is that in all his scenes he knows pretty much everything people are trying to hide from him, and always more than he lets on, and he's very careful in how he doles out information about just how much he knows. And when he's finally played his full hand, it's like a switch flips, his cheeriness vanishes, and you see just how dangerous he truly is.

  • @glennlopez6772
    @glennlopez6772 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for the video!
    Really interesting and
    with selected references to the writing in the book!

  • @idanlewenhoff2295
    @idanlewenhoff2295 Před 10 měsíci +3

    what I loved about the opening scene is it rewards you to watch it again and again because you know that he already knew what was going to happen before he came into the house, and the confidence he is presenting is so on point when you as the viewer know as well what will happen.
    also it took me some time to understand why he didn't shoot Shoshana, Hans loves the chase. that's it. he just loves as a hunter to hunt and the excitement for more.

  • @jeremyferrante
    @jeremyferrante Před 3 lety +1592

    When he takes their wrists he's checking on their pulse

    • @garymartens9151
      @garymartens9151 Před 3 lety +176

      nice catch... never thought of that

    • @curlsforthegirls6598
      @curlsforthegirls6598 Před 3 lety +68

      I thought he was looking for the tattoo you get in the concentration camps.

    • @juliusalexandria4361
      @juliusalexandria4361 Před 3 lety +81

      @@curlsforthegirls6598 Maybe. Not many people escaped those camps though.

    • @Jelorm2
      @Jelorm2 Před 3 lety +30

      @@garymartens9151 wait a second.They were afraid to begin with, irrespective of being guilty or not, pulse wouldn’t have made any difference.

    • @garymartens9151
      @garymartens9151 Před 3 lety +12

      @@Jelorm2 but if a person wasnt guilty of anything, what's there to be afraid of? Did the germans have a history of rolling up on random french families and killing them for no reason?

  • @maxklein2409
    @maxklein2409 Před 2 lety +575

    The scene in Django when Schultz kills Candie, theres a whole speech about the difference between the type of goodbyes in german and how auf wiedersehen basically translates until I see you again - Tarantino is an absolutely insane writer

  • @bellman4336
    @bellman4336 Před rokem +9

    That first scene is chilling. And the way he keeps looking at charlotte, like he know that she knows about the Jewish family hiding in the house. Just A+ acting.

  • @kuanged
    @kuanged Před 7 měsíci +2

    I love how Hans Landa lives while Shoshanna dies. It so accurately reflects real life. Reminds us that we indeed do live in a wicked world that is beyond hope.

    • @southtoe3607
      @southtoe3607 Před 5 měsíci

      yeah but he probably didn't live a great life in the USA after getting that nasty scar on his forehead

  • @dirtyunclehubert
    @dirtyunclehubert Před 2 lety +409

    the way he looks at the daughters. what masterful acting. look at how cold, controlling and ready to exact authority and or violence he comes off in those tiny moments. he knows very well his friendliness is a unnecessary extra bonus towards his targets.

    • @carlamarlene2927
      @carlamarlene2927 Před 2 lety +7

      Right? Hes look is in no way even sexual just...intimidating

    • @HulkSmash512
      @HulkSmash512 Před 2 lety +5

      Unnecessary extra bonus 😂 I like the way you phrase that. Like he knows he doesn't even need to waste his time with all these nicecities but he's gonna be polite and you better be polite back or else....

    • @dirtyunclehubert
      @dirtyunclehubert Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@HulkSmash512 hunter and prey. he enjoys it. im pretty sure, had he been a real person, he would have despised göring, himmler....but adored heydrich for his demonic intellect, equal to his.

    • @LIONTAMER3D
      @LIONTAMER3D Před 2 lety +3

      chris waltz played this character like a violin

    • @kjudad1185
      @kjudad1185 Před 2 lety +8

      What if find most interesting is how he looks and behaves towards Charlotte. Out of the three she seems to interest him the most. He even kisses her hand in the first moment while almost ignoring the others.
      Charlotte is the closest of them three to what the Nazi Race-Ideology saw as a "perfect aryan" woman. Blond hair and blue eyes. Coincidence? Maybe. But the entire (known) family has dark hair. Why choose an actress whos appearence differs so much from the rest of the cast of the family?

  • @ElronHumpperdink
    @ElronHumpperdink Před 2 lety +441

    What’s wild about the character is that he pulled off that “cool, relaxed bully.” Like, from the outside he’s the well-mannered man mentioned and onlookers etc don’t see anything happening at first, but in his mind, he’s relishing your discomfort. He was portrayed so well.

    • @getoffmygrass4857
      @getoffmygrass4857 Před 2 lety +1

      What's even sadder is you don't realize your wife is a mini version of her that will one day take up place.

  • @TVSSC21
    @TVSSC21 Před 11 měsíci +7

    In regards to the scene with shoshana, I feel like he suspects everyone of wrongdoing but isn’t 100% sure it’s her but has a pretty good idea.
    With Bridget I feel like maybe they were in a relationship of some sorts and he is just releasing his inner evil for personal reasons

  • @adamspimbly4706
    @adamspimbly4706 Před rokem +88

    I always had a different interpretation regarding the inconsistencies of Hans loving or hating his nickname.
    In the context of him saying he 'loves' his name, he's trying to intimidate the farmer. He's expressing that he loves his name, as it highlights just how good he is at catching Jews. This puts more pressure on the farmer, as it shows him how confident and successful Han's apparently is. Its a Hans subtly - yet in plane sight - telling him that he'll find the jews he's hiding.
    Whereas in the scene with the Bastards, he's trying to earn favour and support with them, and paint himself as a more forward thinking person who the allies can do a deal with. Hence him here refuting the name that associates him with something that would be seen as unfavourable for his potential new allies. I don't think the scenes tell us whether Han's loves or hates his nickname...its instead being used to show how he manipulates details to get the results he wants.

    • @Donnerbalken28
      @Donnerbalken28 Před rokem +3

      Add to this his sudden and uncharactiscally brutal killing of Hammersmark, hinting that he may hide a lot of his vindictive and violent tendencies behind his veneer of politeness. His plan was obviously to cut a deal with Aldo Raine and Allied Command the second they stepped into that cinema; so killing her to earn favors with his Nazi superiors makes no sense - unless he really did feel strongly about specifically her betraying Germany.

  • @internetstrangerstrangerofweb

    His medals also say a lot about him.
    While it probably wasn’t intentional, the ribbon on his right breast is known as the Blood Order, which was given at large to members of the Beer hall putsch who were injured, which displays that he has been indeed with the movements since it’s beginnings
    It probably was unintentional and just another medal, but, either way says a lot if you know what it is.

    • @thomaskole9881
      @thomaskole9881 Před 3 lety +87

      Which would be even more confirmation of his total opportunism. He either joined in with the nazis early, reasoning that they would eventually come to rule Germany (despite the setback of the Bierkeller Putsch) and his long-standing loyalty to the party would be rewarded, or he stole/forged the medal because it would give him more credibility among the higher-ups and old guard of the Reich.

    • @jordananderson2728
      @jordananderson2728 Před 2 lety +134

      It's Tarantino. You know every single thread on every costume was placed there with intent.

    • @jeremynewcombe3422
      @jeremynewcombe3422 Před 2 lety +68

      @@thomaskole9881 The only people who would've been at the Beer Hall Putsch were genuine Nazis who believed in the cause when no one else did. If Hans truly was there, then he was an adamant Nazi from the beginning, which I find hard to believe given how brutish and dim-witted the Old Guard were. They just don't strike me as the company he'd surround himself with. Big fish in a small pond. Hans may have faked the medal but that seems too unescessary a risk. The only other way of seeing it is that Hans was so incredibly intelligent, he, as a pure opportunist, was able to predict the Nazis coming to power years before anyone else even considered it a possibility.

    • @tedarcher9120
      @tedarcher9120 Před 2 lety +1

      Hans is an austrian, he wouldn't have been in munich

    • @aldoforcorleon557
      @aldoforcorleon557 Před 2 lety +25

      @@tedarcher9120 Hitler was Austrian too. Even back then people could travel from one country to another you know...

  • @slickceretto9760
    @slickceretto9760 Před 3 lety +329

    I never realized the pipe smoking scene was Hans flexing that he had it all figured out. It makes perfect sense now.

    • @MyEverythingBurrito
      @MyEverythingBurrito Před 2 lety +7

      that's something that was kind of decided after the fact. I watched an interview with Tarantino where he was talking about Waltz in this role, and he said Waltz approached him during production and asked "does Landa really smoke, or is it intimidation?" and Tarantino said something like "i'm not sure". the two of them talked about it and together came to the conclusion that Hans Landa doesn't smoke recreationally, only in situations like this.
      Tarantino really likes smoking in movies, as you can see in any of his films, so i'm betting he just wrote Landa smoking a pipe without thinking *too* much about until Christoph was trying to get into character.

    • @jamesbradley5401
      @jamesbradley5401 Před 2 lety +3

      @MyEverythingBurrito The reason I believe Landa smokes for only show purposes is because of two key points
      1) Landa is a high ranking member of the SS, he’s even recognised by Goebells in the restaurant, therefore because of this it is highly likely he is a non-smoker as Hitler detested and ordered for people in the Reich not to smoke
      2) He’s playing that detective role, and the fact that he’s solved the crime and that the pipe is the same one used by the likes of Sherlock Holmes points to it being a part of an act rather than Landa being a smoker, there’s also a rumour I’ve heard that he reveals a bigger pipe because of what it says about a certain part of his anatomy being bigger than LaPadite, but that’s just a rumour

  • @adachichay9298
    @adachichay9298 Před rokem +10

    Mr Waltz and Gary Oldman my 2 favorite villains. I was terrified by them.

    • @arwahsapi
      @arwahsapi Před rokem +1

      For me its Sir Anthony Hopkins

  • @FirstWorldProblemz
    @FirstWorldProblemz Před 3 lety +438

    He made strudel , whipped cream and milk seem even more delicious after this film

    • @adrian0soares
      @adrian0soares Před 3 lety +7

      Underestimated comment

    • @tylerberry855
      @tylerberry855 Před 3 lety +2

      @@adrian0soares *underappreciated

    • @erederiu
      @erederiu Před 3 lety

      Don't forget the espresso

    • @chiarosuburekeni9325
      @chiarosuburekeni9325 Před 3 lety +7

      Quentin Tarantino has a knack for making food look delicious. Like when Jules had that burger in Pulp Fiction or that beer on tap in Django etc

    • @jduff59
      @jduff59 Před 3 lety

      I had a half-German Grandpop and he loved strudel - my Grandmom learned how to bake it and it's an amazing pastry if baked properly - flaky, never soggy

  • @coletrain6545
    @coletrain6545 Před 3 lety +992

    He didn't switch to English because his French was bad he did it cuz the likelihood of them understanding English was slim to none. Clever on his part

    • @CodenameHaswelly
      @CodenameHaswelly Před 3 lety +84

      holy shit bro ... u figured it all out.... no shit dude did u not even watch the movie? he literally says it lmao what a dumb comment

    • @KingEli
      @KingEli Před 3 lety +11

      Still it's unlikely that a farmer knows English that well or even any...

    • @lufsolitaire5351
      @lufsolitaire5351 Před 2 lety +6

      @@KingEli exactly, I get it was done to add to the intrigue and intensity of the scene but the likelihood of a working class French farmer in the 40s being able to hold at least a conversational level of English is unlikely. Maybe he knew an English speaker or has a higher level of education than other farmers but he’s inconsequential to the plot so who knows?

    • @reptilesceptile1035
      @reptilesceptile1035 Před 2 lety +1

      @@CodenameHaswelly Why u mad?

    • @Fingolfin7455
      @Fingolfin7455 Před 2 lety +6

      The german version makes it muuch better. Him switching to german makes more sense and its save to assume that a french farmer in occupied france has to speak german is plausible.

  • @lobo2367
    @lobo2367 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Good analysis, but I wish you highlighted the individual dominance/power moves!... Like how he holds the glass of milk after he's done drinking. It's a very odd gesture, like a conquering King holding a scepter from a renaissance painting. Or the way he paternally rubs the hands of the women at every opportunity

  • @MiniLemmy
    @MiniLemmy Před rokem +9

    The greatest movie villain of all time imo - he is such an engaging and intelligent individual, rare for an absolute monster

  • @marco484x
    @marco484x Před 3 lety +657

    I feel like Hans killing Bridget was not out of character.
    It was simply his more brutal, feral side. He could have killed her by shooting her, but he chose not to: he put her through the whole ordeal of slowly dismantling her lies, and while he was doing that he was also losing his amiable facade. The strangling was simply the culmination of his anger, which he had so carefully hidden before.

    • @jupnik5318
      @jupnik5318 Před 3 lety +56

      And additionally, I think that he felt some extra grudge against the actress.
      Look, he did not against Americans or Shoshanna. They were just enemies, so it was natural for them to fight. But the actress, a traitor? I think that he felt disgust towards her and probably he, and the officer killed in the bar were really close.
      Suming it up, he hated her, beat her on every front of this spygame and murdered her with pure joy, as he unleashed his worst side on her. This is why he just strangeled her, he indeed was a cruel monster inside- but with respect towards his enemies.

    • @KingEli
      @KingEli Před 3 lety +2

      Yup Hans is a coward deep down.

    • @jupnik5318
      @jupnik5318 Před 3 lety +6

      @@KingEli yeah totally! Used power against weak, but when they started losing immidately looked for his way out

    • @kanhakun4323
      @kanhakun4323 Před 2 lety +10

      @@jupnik5318
      Just watched movie.
      You said he felt disgusted bcz she was a traitor. But he betrayed germans himself siding with americans. So why would he kill her for doing the same?
      Sorry for my bad english

    • @jeambeam3173
      @jeambeam3173 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kanhakun4323 i think its adds to him being a narcissist he sees what he's doing as something that will help Germany where he sees her as just a traitor

  • @TheLegoJungle
    @TheLegoJungle Před 3 lety +243

    My God man, every scene with him was incredibly uncomfortable and tense. Even him telling to kindly wait for cream feels creepy. But I also have a weird admiration for him as he’s fluent in many languages and wants to learn the lingo more intimately: he asks the saying of “bingo.” It just shows his fascination with language, and care and attention to detail.

    • @Smenkhaare
      @Smenkhaare Před 2 lety +3

      Oooh that's a bingo....

    • @noneofyourbusiness4294
      @noneofyourbusiness4294 Před 2 lety

      The bingo part wasn't interest. It was confirmation

    • @whyohwhy9679
      @whyohwhy9679 Před 2 lety +3

      Uncomfortable and tense - that's exactly how I felt during his scenes. Hans is like the coiled snake that could strike you at any moment, but you just don't know when.
      Then you're uncomfortable because he takes up all the space in the room and you know he's in charge. Not you. At all.
      I also admired his fluency and curiosity. He wants to fit in wherever he goes and rise to the top.
      He is pure evil. And Christof Waltz was genius casting.