THE PRESTIGE (2006) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION

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  • @ComedicPause
    @ComedicPause Před 9 dny +822

    When Borden kept telling Angier that he didn't know which knot he tied, he was actually telling the truth. His twin brother tied it.

    • @blimpvapor
      @blimpvapor Před 9 dny +79

      I've seen this movie 6 or 7 times, and I've never realized that. Wow

    • @gabedamien
      @gabedamien Před 9 dny +49

      Yeah he literally says he argues with himself about it in the journal.

    • @MP197742
      @MP197742 Před 9 dny +26

      Yeah, but one of them knew. Seems crazy he wouldn’t tell his brother.

    • @samanthanickson6478
      @samanthanickson6478 Před 9 dny +34

      just like when he says he loves his wife some days, and some days he doesn’t. when the twin is with the wife is when he doesn’t love her. the poor wife never knew it was the twin that didn’t love her and had the mistress, and not her husband. the secrecy and the dedication to the craft sent her to her grave.

    • @scratchmonkey
      @scratchmonkey Před 9 dny +33

      @@blimpvapor Now watch it for the 8th time and try and figure out which brother is in every scene and how it changes the entire narrative. Then think about how Nolan never uses actual magic in his films and try and figure out the end that way. It's so much fun, probably the greatest re-watchable film in history.

  • @jberkhimer
    @jberkhimer Před 8 dny +78

    "show me that again!"
    said every single person who ever watched this movie. it's the only movie my dad and i saw in theaters, walked out, and we bought tickets to the very next showing lol.

    • @ezemdianosike5277
      @ezemdianosike5277 Před 6 dny +6

      That's awesome!!

    • @kashankhan6950
      @kashankhan6950 Před 6 dny +4

      Hahahh that’s epic man, Nolan is something else!

    • @KrystalAnn0688
      @KrystalAnn0688 Před 3 dny

      My sister & I watched this movie like 4 times in one day back to back once it came out on DVD & took notes trying to make sure we knew exactly what happened, & also trying to figure out all the tricks lol

  • @BrendanPatrickGrace
    @BrendanPatrickGrace Před 9 dny +558

    RIP to the late and great David Bowie as Nicola Tesla.

    • @3Kings_Industries
      @3Kings_Industries Před 9 dny +21

      The last known 'Wizard' of electricity played by the Space wizard of song.

    • @aidanrock8719
      @aidanrock8719 Před 9 dny

      Rest in piss to the child molestor, yep

    • @originalrockhead
      @originalrockhead Před 9 dny +19

      As amazing as Bowie was at music, I think a lot of people don't give him enough credit for how good an actor he also was.

    • @vvanheukelum
      @vvanheukelum Před 9 dny +13

      Which is why it was cool to see that when SpaceX launched a Tesla into space, it was playing David Bowie on the radio. You had Bowie playing Tesla, and a Tesla playing Bowie.

    • @crowneproductions9908
      @crowneproductions9908 Před 8 dny

      shut up, it was a fine performance but let's not pretend it was worthy of praise. It was milk toast. Grow up.

  • @ChileanIggy
    @ChileanIggy Před 8 dny +47

    "But where is his brother" whole mystery behind the movie, right in plain sight. This was Nolan at his absolute best.

    • @neil2444
      @neil2444 Před 2 dny +1

      I love that too. It tells you the twist, and you don't even know it first time you see it.

  • @danholmesfilm
    @danholmesfilm Před 9 dny +552

    Cassie: Doesn't recognize a shaved Hugh Jackman until 15 minutes in despite currently watching him every other week in X-Men
    Also Cassie: Is that Gollum?
    😅

    • @Emilysbrother1
      @Emilysbrother1 Před 9 dny +37

      She even calls him "not Hugh Jackman" at one point.
      Although I will admit that he looks a lot different 20 years ago than he does now. Like, he's not just older, his face used to be a bit skinnier and boyish, he wasn't as jacked...

    • @AlexanderChapin
      @AlexanderChapin Před 9 dny +26

      @@Emilysbrother1 Huge Jackedman

    • @BenjiSun
      @BenjiSun Před 9 dny +18

      @@Emilysbrother1 Her next film should be Kate and Leopold. Now there's a really young Hugh Jackman(just a year after the first X-men), and it's his first time working with Liev Schrieber.

    • @MrHale
      @MrHale Před 9 dny +6

      @@Emilysbrother1 First three X-Men movies came before or at the same year The Prestige came out. And X-Men Origins was only 3 years later.

    • @Scottie_S
      @Scottie_S Před 9 dny +6

      @@BenjiSun That is actually a GREAT suggestion! She would love the heck out of that!

  • @joeygauvin2765
    @joeygauvin2765 Před 9 dny +500

    It made me laugh that you took awhile to recognize Hugh Jackman, but recognized gollum right away 😁

    • @thinkbolt
      @thinkbolt Před 9 dny +4

      Hah! Yeah 😂

    • @CrispyChips007
      @CrispyChips007 Před 9 dny +16

      yeah and not only that but he is literally known for not showing his face in his movies lmao

    • @jamesxiong6420
      @jamesxiong6420 Před 9 dny +2

      lol I know right?!

    • @bigdream_dreambig
      @bigdream_dreambig Před 9 dny +1

      ​ @CrispyChips007 But he was recognizable from his time as Sméagol before he found the Ring.

    • @newbiesama
      @newbiesama Před 9 dny +1

      She actually said at the start "that almost looks like Hugh Jackman"

  • @Meee-ye7sr
    @Meee-ye7sr Před 9 dny +35

    One of the things I love about Cassie is that she watches these types of movies and doesn't talk over all the key points and reveals trying to solve some perceived mystery. She just watches it and enjoys it as a true audience member and then lets it BLOW HER DARN MIND. Ha! :-)

    • @bawzzzz
      @bawzzzz Před 6 dny +3

      Right, nothing more annoying than watching someone that just keep speculating when the thing they are speculating about is to be revealed soon or right there anyway and in the process talk over critical points that would help understand.

  • @LokRevenant
    @LokRevenant Před 8 dny +12

    "We were two young men at the start of a great career." He's not talking about himself and Angier; he's talking about himself and his brother.

  • @algomaone121
    @algomaone121 Před 9 dny +196

    This movie stars Batman, Alfred, The Black Widow, Wolverine, Gollum and that singing dark prince from Labyrinth. 😅

    • @DerekMoore82
      @DerekMoore82 Před 9 dny +13

      The Goblin King of the Labyrnth.

    • @Banterbear
      @Banterbear Před 9 dny +20

      And Moriarty off the Holodeck.

    • @stumilesyt
      @stumilesyt Před 9 dny +2

      @@DerekMoore82 You remind me of the babe...

    • @Gunleaver
      @Gunleaver Před 9 dny +2

      Don't forget the King Kong scientist.

    • @quietman71
      @quietman71 Před 9 dny

      @@stumilesyt what babe?

  • @lashier13
    @lashier13 Před 9 dny +213

    31:58 "Edison was the worst, apparently." - Popcorn in Bed
    "Edison was the worst, definitely." - Topsy the Elephant

    • @AdeboFunkyVoodoo
      @AdeboFunkyVoodoo Před 9 dny +11

      This made me laugh out loud.
      I am a terrible, terrible person.

    • @eddhardy1054
      @eddhardy1054 Před 9 dny +2

      @@lashier13 Come on, Topsy had it coming.

    • @stevenr6397
      @stevenr6397 Před 8 dny +2

      Ouch (electrical) Burn!

    • @josephritchie3289
      @josephritchie3289 Před 8 dny +3

      "They said, Ah Topsy at my...Autopsy!"

    • @matthew55793
      @matthew55793 Před 7 dny

      Edison owned the company that filmed the killing of Topsy, but the idea that he actually had anything to do with killing Topsy is a dumb internet rumor that some rando on tumblr made up and people believed it instead of actually looking it up.

  • @DoorElevenProductions
    @DoorElevenProductions Před 9 dny +78

    The greatest trick this movie plays is that it gives you the twist ending in the first 15 minutes when Borden tries to comfort the little boy by showing him the bird is still alive and the little boy asks, "but what about his brother?" ...Are you watching closely?

    • @Islam4Europeans
      @Islam4Europeans Před 2 dny

      And also when they play the trick with Olivia walking into her apartment

  • @Cadinho93
    @Cadinho93 Před 9 dny +268

    The moment Hugh Jackman's character said he no longer cared about his wife's death when it came to getting revenge, is the moment he becomes the antagonist of the movie.
    Also, I still love that literally the whole movie is laid out to you in the Caged Bird trick at the beginning. Like the whole movie is just a magic trick on us.

    • @talonkarrde9904
      @talonkarrde9904 Před 9 dny +19

      Are you watching closely?

    • @alexandru5369
      @alexandru5369 Před 9 dny +5

      Yep, he embraced being a villain with that line

    • @crmags
      @crmags Před 9 dny +8

      Borden's the only antagonist. Killed Angiers wife and drove "his" wife to suicide. Angiers only killed himself.

    • @Jared_Wignall
      @Jared_Wignall Před 9 dny +20

      @@crmagsBorden never intentionally killed his wife. It was an accident as one twin tied the knot and whenever he’s asked by Angier about which knot was tied, he doesn’t know as he’s talking the twin who didn’t tie the knot, so he couldn’t give an answer regarding which knot was tied, and it’s possible that if he was talking to the one twin who did it, he doesn’t know as everything went wrong and so a detail like that isn’t remembered. But Angier definitely becomes the antagonist as he should have left well alone and he didn’t because he was just driven by revenge after awhile and that doesn’t really end well for anyone.

    • @jabecker21
      @jabecker21 Před 9 dny +17

      @@crmagsAngiers framed Borden for murder and had him hanged so you can’t really say that he didn’t kill anyone.

  • @wanderingidle4848
    @wanderingidle4848 Před 9 dny +44

    I used to do magic , juggling, and general vaudeville stuff when I was growing up, and the line about how, "they'll ask you and beg for the secret to the trick, but as soon as you give it away you'll be nothing to them" is so true.
    They don't say it as explicitly in the film, but the bigger thematic point is that "the prestige" isn't usually the hard part. In general, the thing that impresses the audience is never the hard part (and that applies to juggling and slight-of-hand magic as well). The skill involved in making the trick work is the part that goes unseen, but what the audience claps at is the simple bit at the end that ties it all together.
    The "twist" at the end of the film works so well because it was never about the prestige, but about all the work that we never saw leading up to it. Of course everything is telegraphed from the beginning, but all magic is also about misdirection, which is what this film does so well. At the end it all seems like it should have been obvious, but the twist (the "prestige") is literally Nolan giving away the secret to the trick.
    In other words, he begins the film by saying that giving away the secret ruins the magic trick, and then uses the secret AS the prestige of the film.

  • @gotnotact
    @gotnotact Před 7 dny +61

    Once you realize that Christian Bale is playing two characters -- one who is calm and measured, one who is a hot head and impulsive -- it instantly clears up the confusion about why he's doing what he's doing and saying what he's saying. Masterclass performance from Bale.

    • @lirpa2300
      @lirpa2300 Před 6 dny +10

      So did Hugh Jackman for a brief moment when they found the drunk guy at the bar with the nose prosthetic to be his double.

    • @mikespearwood3914
      @mikespearwood3914 Před 6 dny +2

      @@lirpa2300 And the false teeth!

    • @KrystalAnn0688
      @KrystalAnn0688 Před 3 dny

      He never gives anything less ❤

    • @ronb2008
      @ronb2008 Před 3 dny +2

      Came here to write exactly this. Once you realize there's a more reserved Borden and a more reckless Borden everything falls into place. Such a brilliant film.

  • @davidburke2132
    @davidburke2132 Před 9 dny +24

    Oh Cassie:
    - the car/battery company called Tesla was called that before Elon Musk was ever involved with it. He didn’t set up the company… he merely invested in it quite early on;
    - Nikola Tesla (the character in this movie) was a real person who was a physicists and great inventor, especially in the field of electrical engineering, being instrumental in the development of alternating current electrical systems and developing a wireless power system (basically what we now have for mobile phone wireless charging); and
    - the car company is called Tesla in homage to Nikola Tesla, because he was so important in such a related field of engineering.
    Of course Tesla didn’t actually invent a machine that could replicate humans and animals 😉

  • @marshallprince2583
    @marshallprince2583 Před 9 dny +185

    Nobody knew CPR back then. It was first developed in 1960.

    • @randall-king
      @randall-king Před 9 dny +10

      I came here to say this.

    • @mattsanderson5258
      @mattsanderson5258 Před 9 dny +32

      Yup, thats humanity for you. We learnt how to split the atom before figuring out that pressing up and down on someone's chest might help start their heart again.

    • @AdeboFunkyVoodoo
      @AdeboFunkyVoodoo Před 9 dny +2

      That's what they want you to think.

    • @marshallprince2583
      @marshallprince2583 Před 9 dny +5

      @AdeboFunkyVoodoo well, I'll amend my earlier statement to most people didn't know about it. There might have been some powwow who knew something but would have been widely ridiculed as a looney if they professed it.

    • @randall-king
      @randall-king Před 9 dny

      @@marshallprince2583 Try to find a movie or TV show where CPR was performed on anybody in the 60s or 70s. You'd be hard pressed to find one. That's a good gauge for how widely known it was. I don't think it came to be widely known until the 80s. I seem to remember episodes of Punky Brewster and Three's Company dealing with it.

  • @thoso1973
    @thoso1973 Před 9 dny +27

    When you rewatch it one day, all the subtle clues placed along its runtime are revealed. Like, Alfred being the one to immediately spot the Chinese magicians secret - because he and his twin brother are doing a similar performance, whenever they are in public. Their real life off the stage IS the performance.

  • @Azulbloo
    @Azulbloo Před 9 dny +38

    Holy crap she finally watched it! One of my favorite movies of all time. My mind was blown at the end too.

  • @Emilysbrother1
    @Emilysbrother1 Před 9 dny +165

    I love that once you know what you're looking for, it's right out there in the open. The first shot with all the top hats looks like a graveyard, then they show the collapsing cage trick which is essentially what the final trick is, and they tell you that you have to bring it back... both "dead" characters return at the end of the movie!
    As for why both Christian Bales keep swapping roles, he explains it to Hugh Jackman's double, you risk giving one person too much power. Switching places keeps them equals, no one has the advantage over the other.

    • @promontorium
      @promontorium Před 9 dny +14

      At least that's a reason but not telling his wife was insane and having his brother play as him with his wife was insane. Clearly his downfall. If his wife knew at least on "off" days she'd know to be pleasant and read a book, not constantly berate him for not loving her and then killing herself.

    • @algomaone121
      @algomaone121 Před 9 dny +12

      It was a sicko thing to do to the wife. The ultimate swindle which cost her her life! If he had any conscience at all he couldn’t have done that to her.

    • @TheYakusoku
      @TheYakusoku Před 9 dny +12

      And the little boy crying at the beginning "gets" the trick right away. The bird has a brother who is killed to make it look like the same bird disappears during the turn and reappears during the prestige. Cutter explains in narration at the start of the film that we, the audience, as we're watching a magic trick we don't want to really find the secret. We WANT to be fooled.

    • @JR-tl2ym
      @JR-tl2ym Před 9 dny +3

      When this movie came out one of the professional reviewers described it as "satanic". Which I thought was appropriate.

    • @modarkthemauler
      @modarkthemauler Před 9 dny +9

      @@promontorium The thing with secrets is, they only stay secret if only one person knows it.

  • @dmastran
    @dmastran Před 9 dny +95

    The reason they didn't only go to the woman they loved was because you cant be in two places at the same time. they have to stay committed to the trick.

    • @exeterkered
      @exeterkered Před 7 dny +5

      No. If Borden One was the only brother who actually loved Sarah, then it was entirely possible for him to be the only brother who interacted with her, while Borden Two played Fallon. The brothers could easily exchange places when not in her presence, so that only Borden Two was having the affair with Olivia. When the four of them were together, Borden One would take precedence because he was publicly married to Sarah, and the affair with Olivia would be kept secret anyway. There was never any practical need for either of them to be intimate as Borden with the woman he didn't love. It really is a plot-hole at the expense of the women's lives and well-being, purely for tragic dramatic purpose.

    • @the-traveling-lens
      @the-traveling-lens Před 7 dny +9

      It's not a plot-hole because it's not that simple. There are so many situations and frankly, complexities of daily life that can't be accounted for. Borden Two might come off-stage, go into his dressing room and Sarah is there. Or switch that around and Olivia is in there when Borden One walks in. You can't just go "Hey give me like 15 minutes with Fallon" every time a situation that you can't control appears so that the correct version can be with who he needs to be. If Borden Two is with Sarah and simply can't get away due to a commitment or they are waylaid for some reason (which happens to everyone often), and Olivia is expecting him or (insert reason here), then Borden One simply has to do what is necessary. Besides, I'm sure they did switch whenever possible. The scenes we see are the ones they couldn't. They had to make the best of the situation they were in when it wasn't possible to do it.
      This being true and just being too difficult to deal with, made the decision an easy one. Well, not easy per se, but it made the decision itself simple. Rather than constantly trying to get in and out of costume (the movie makes it look like it takes about 2 minutes but it's likely longer) at every moment when Sarah is going to be with them, it made more sense to let each twin live half a life.
      Even when Olivia wasn't with Borden yet, it was still too difficult. As the movie shows, they each lived half a life. Maybe it wasn't totally fulfilling but they each had a chance to be part of the Prestige. It's what Angier didn't understand with his look-a-like, who wanted to switch places with him and Angier didn't trust him to do the first two parts. Maybe if Borden had done the same thing, he and Fallon's relationship would have gone the same way. It was the living half of a life for each that kept them in balance despite the problems it caused. And yes, staying committed to the trick. It's what Borden learned from the old Chinese guy at the beginning of the movie. The performance was Fallon always. They each tried the best they could with the women but on stage and as Fallon there was total commitment. It's why nobody knew, except Cutter.

    • @TheVetoSkreeemer
      @TheVetoSkreeemer Před 7 dny

      It s something the movie doesnt leave clear, maybe Borden and Fallen had sex with both women.

    • @mikespearwood3914
      @mikespearwood3914 Před 6 dny

      @@the-traveling-lens I wonder when Cutter actually found out about the twins? I assume only when one got hung?

    • @Tantalus010
      @Tantalus010 Před 5 dny

      @@mikespearwood3914 *hanged. When you're murdering someone by hanging, the past tense is hanged for some reason. I guess murderin' folk is special somehow.

  • @timbyrne242
    @timbyrne242 Před 9 dny +415

    David Bowie's performance in this movie is one of the most underrated supporting actor turns of the last 20 years. Just amazing.

    • @cruejones742
      @cruejones742 Před 9 dny

      Who?

    • @timbyrne242
      @timbyrne242 Před 9 dny +19

      @@cruejones742 David Bowie, musical superstar and occasional actor, plays Tesla.

    • @thebaffman4898
      @thebaffman4898 Před 9 dny +8

      I still can't believe he's gone.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Před 9 dny +5

      Had no clue he was in this.

    • @jek4837
      @jek4837 Před 9 dny +16

      As I was watching this reaction, I decided something. Many people watching for the first time will feel he's got a familiar face but won't know his name. If it's a young person/kid watching the movie, I'm going to tell them the actor was a famous musician who has passed away. It was Kurt Cobain.

  • @firemn4u
    @firemn4u Před 9 dny +40

    This was a fantastic movie… loved it. Don’t be sorry for working it out on camera, that’s one reason we watch reaction videos! It was awesome watching you work through it, no matter how long it takes! Great reaction, thank you!

    • @etherealtb6021
      @etherealtb6021 Před 9 dny +5

      Exactly! This was all of us watching this movie for the first time. She even caught onto a few things faster than I did!

  • @todd8398
    @todd8398 Před 9 dny +10

    43:00 The Dead Dantons would be a good name for a band.

  • @Blarglesnarfe
    @Blarglesnarfe Před 9 dny +90

    The Bordens were commited to living the magic act, no matter the cost.
    The Angiers were commited to performing the magic act, no matter the cost.

    • @nsnick199
      @nsnick199 Před 9 dny +11

      Foreshadowed by the Chinese man and the caged bird, respectively.

    • @zvimur
      @zvimur Před 9 dny +1

      The Angiers... not so much. The one Borden watch drowning in the tank, and the shot dead by clone were not happy to die.

    • @IDiggPattyMayonnaise
      @IDiggPattyMayonnaise Před 9 dny +2

      ​@@zvimurIt was the original that shot the clone, based on how the cat test works. The original stays in the machine. The gun was on the machine. The clone wasn't near the gun

    • @jayeisenhardt1337
      @jayeisenhardt1337 Před 8 dny +1

      @@IDiggPattyMayonnaise The OG is ripped from time a split second and that is how they teleport.
      Meaning the older you dies every time. As it should be.

    • @jmeds94
      @jmeds94 Před 8 dny +1

      It was the look on their faces.

  • @SquigglyP
    @SquigglyP Před 9 dny +6

    My favorite aspect of this movie is the parallel with the bird tricks. The trick requires that you kill the bird and reveal his 'brother'. Danton starts out not wanting to kill the birds, but by the end of the movie he's willing to kill himself over and over and over. His great trick is just the bird trick he didn't want to do.

  • @ZacharyLoeser
    @ZacharyLoeser Před 9 dny +7

    This is my favorite Nolan film. He tells you *exactly* what’s going on in fifteen minutes when the rivals visit the older magician.
    “How does he do it? He’s so old and feeble, even when no one’s looking!”
    And *immediately* we get the answer from someone who knows all too well: “he’s not feeble. his entire life is a performance in service of his art.”
    Only a short while later the girl realizes that the trick with the birds means a bird has indeed died. Again: real magic requires sacrifice.

  • @batjoker123
    @batjoker123 Před 9 dny +57

    Please do a rewatch with your sister
    The Second time watching this movie will hit different for sure

    • @steele8280
      @steele8280 Před 8 dny +2

      She’s quite the sleuth too so it’ll be interesting to see her reaction…

  • @zbennalley
    @zbennalley Před 9 dny +35

    My favorite thing is to rewatch this and know which Borden brother is on screen because their personalities are too different.

    • @etherealtb6021
      @etherealtb6021 Před 9 dny +6

      Yes! That's what I did on my second viewing, try to figure out when it was Borden or Fallon onscreen!

    • @rogermorrison4092
      @rogermorrison4092 Před 9 dny +3

      @@etherealtb6021 Tip for this, you'll notice they're referred to differently... Alfred and Freddie - at one point someone gets it wrong and presumebly Alfred say's something like don't call me that name.

  • @Jumpman67
    @Jumpman67 Před 9 dny +148

    “Did Elon get it from this?!”
    Oh my god.

    • @3Kings_Industries
      @3Kings_Industries Před 9 dny +13

      Not from this film, but from Tesla's concept if space age vehicles utilizing Battery stations that would have been set up throughout the continental US (and world eventually) utilizing the 'free' energy, which Tesla proposed to Westinghouse.

    • @JC-bh8qx
      @JC-bh8qx Před 9 dny +2

      Not Elon, Nicholas Tesla

    • @slayerje1884
      @slayerje1884 Před 9 dny +37

      @@JC-bh8qx Also, Elon took over Tesla. American entrepreneurs Martin Eberhard and Marc Tarpenning founded Tesla, Inc. in San Carlos, California in July 2003. I hate that Elon is where he is in pop culture...If he was born middle class or poor, he'd not be known more than your usual Joe, or John.

    • @oakinwol
      @oakinwol Před 9 dny

      @@slayerje1884 That's like saying anyone who was born to a father with money in South Africa would be the CEO of several billion dollar companies. Makes zero sense. Only people who have never even tried to do anything seriously hard can speak like this. He's not even the usual joe or john of people born affluent, talkless of the average person who, relative to Elon, has extremely little ambition.

    • @James_Ford4815
      @James_Ford4815 Před 9 dny

      @@slayerje1884 lol, calm down psycho

  • @ravissary79
    @ravissary79 Před 9 dny +12

    I'm still convinced this is Nolans BEST film... perfect performances, a great twist, its not too long, its alinear but not confusing, incredible writing and it ends so powerfully.
    If you're really paying attention the sympathetic protagonist switches places... and it's such a powerful character study in obsession, sacrifice and lies.

    • @janehollander3843
      @janehollander3843 Před 9 dny

      Agreed. This and Inception.

    • @todd8398
      @todd8398 Před 9 dny +2

      The Prestige was kind of ignored when it came out, but since then Nolan's rep has grown considerably, and it has received a lot more recognition.

  • @StevenDoskey
    @StevenDoskey Před 9 dny +86

    One of my all-time favorite movies!
    Also, calling Michael Caine, "the guy from Miss Congeniality" is killing me! 😂

    • @walterrutherford8321
      @walterrutherford8321 Před 9 dny +15

      Right! He’s the guy from Dirty Rotten Scoundrels.

    • @morpheusjones4753
      @morpheusjones4753 Před 9 dny +3

      ​@@walterrutherford8321Great hilarious movie!

    • @gatekeeperboxing5898
      @gatekeeperboxing5898 Před 9 dny +9

      He's the guy who said "you're only supposed to blow the bloody doors off" in The Italian Job

    • @samanthanickson6478
      @samanthanickson6478 Před 9 dny +7

      he’s alfie!

    • @lbrni417
      @lbrni417 Před 9 dny +4

      In that vein, I suggest for a future viewing The Quiet American (2002). It's a shame Michael Cain didn't win an Oscar for that role

  • @andoncroft
    @andoncroft Před 6 dny +4

    This is why Cassie is one the most popular and most followed reactionaries. Usually I'm not one for a fancy backdrop, but there's really nothing wrong with it especially if it adds to the scenery, its almost like being in a picture theatre ☺️ Also her reactions are GENUINE and not faked or over the top hypo like some. Cassie is just being herself, and best of all she actually picks interesting things to react to. These combined have super boosted her channel to warp 9 😇

  • @vudujl83
    @vudujl83 Před 9 dny +50

    A mind-bender for sure…but isn’t that what you’d expect from Christopher Nolan? 😉

    • @MrStath1986
      @MrStath1986 Před 9 dny +3

      Honestly I don't think it's that much of a mind-bender; the film jumps back and forth but once it plays it's hand everything makes perfect sense.

    • @anonymes2884
      @anonymes2884 Před 9 dny +2

      The movie is adapted from a novel (coincidentally, by _another_ Christopher) which has some differences but the same key ideas (the feuding magicians, Tesla, twins etc.).
      So _actually_ "...isn’t that what you’d expect from Christopher _Priest_ ?" :).

  • @wightrat1207
    @wightrat1207 Před 9 dny +26

    The bird in the trick they show multiple times, where the one in the box dies and the one that comes back is his brother, mirrors both of their tricks. Borden's does so in that it follows the idea of using a double. Angers' does so in that the man in the box is killed, much like the bird.
    This is truly a fantastic film.

  • @BulletTooth504
    @BulletTooth504 Před 9 dny +15

    4:25 No, that wasn't the Not-Hugh Jackman.
    20:20 THAT is the Not-Hugh Jackman.
    The man in the beginning was simply a Hugh Jackman.
    And the gentleman in the X-Men and Wolverine movies is a huge, jacked man.

  • @jennym2276
    @jennym2276 Před 9 dny +17

    Michael Caine is Ms. Conginality guy, David Bowie is Nikola Testa who really had a war going on with Edison.

  • @louisfriend99
    @louisfriend99 Před 9 dny +25

    This is the only film I have ever immediately rewatched the same night.

    • @monkeychicken27
      @monkeychicken27 Před 9 dny +4

      A 5-star choice. Cyranno was mine.

    • @etherealtb6021
      @etherealtb6021 Před 9 dny +4

      I first saw it in a preview a few weeks before the movie opened, but was there opening night because I *HAD* to see it again ASAP! 😁

    • @sandwiched
      @sandwiched Před 9 dny +1

      Try Identity or Basic (both 2003, IIRC).

  • @jeffreydavid6794
    @jeffreydavid6794 Před 9 dny +24

    Remember when Christian Bale was in "Newsies" where he danced around and sang about newspapers.

    • @3Kings_Industries
      @3Kings_Industries Před 9 dny +13

      Remember when he was in a Chinese internment camp in EMPIRE OF THE SON as a, what 10 year old?

    • @jeffreydavid6794
      @jeffreydavid6794 Před 9 dny

      @@3Kings_Industries I do not remember that. I'll have to check that one out.

    • @jlilley73
      @jlilley73 Před 9 dny +3

      Does anyone actually remember that "Newsies" scene? Did anyone actually watch that movie?

    • @jeffreydavid6794
      @jeffreydavid6794 Před 9 dny +4

      @jlilley73 We had it on vhs when I was growing up. It's a musical. The whole movie is them singing and dancing about newspapers. But I have never heard any other human being mention that movie. So sometimes I think maybe it was just a bad dream or something...

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Před 9 dny

      Used to love that movie. Some of the songs were really solid.

  • @brianalambert1192
    @brianalambert1192 Před 9 dny +38

    As far as I'm concerned, this is Nolan's greatest work. I would not change a thing in this movie. The performances are wonderful, the depths that we see these two men go to in order to one up each other, the ending twist being both so brilliant and so obvious in hindsight, and I absolutely love Jackman's speech about the end about the magic being the audience's reaction.

    • @etherealtb6021
      @etherealtb6021 Před 9 dny +1

      Same. Oppenheimer a close second. I'm glad people are finally watching this masterpiece. It is one of my fav films of all time!

    • @jmeds94
      @jmeds94 Před 8 dny

      Couldn't agree more.
      So... did the machine work?

    • @Corn_Pone_Flicks
      @Corn_Pone_Flicks Před 8 dny +1

      I would change one thing, which always needles me: The scene where the film basically cheats by having Borden, with no one but his brother around to see, pretend to be surprised that his diary was stolen, when we later find out that it was his plan all along. There's no reason at all for him to ask "Fallon" if his diary is missing, unless we're to believe that the other brother concocted the plan all on his own, which is a bit of a stretch for two men who are literally sharing both a wife and a mistress.

  • @markusjantzen2158
    @markusjantzen2158 Před 9 dny +3

    Greetings from Germany.
    The Prestige is my absolute favorite film.
    When you watch the movie again, you notice more and more details that point to the plot twist.
    Very well crafted. One of Nolan's strengths.
    I'm glad you were so blown away by the movie.

  • @Dr_Kubrick
    @Dr_Kubrick Před 9 dny +56

    There are 146 time jumps in the movie. Absolutely love this method of storytelling and no one really does it better than Nolan.

    • @cruejones742
      @cruejones742 Před 9 dny

      There were 146 moments in your life to do something meaningful instead of commenting on a lame CZcams channel and you didn't take a single one. You're not a but the loser. Why would anyone listen to you?

    • @browngilll
      @browngilll Před 9 dny +6

      I agree. First viewing of this film in the theater, I was thrown a little bit. Having seen it several times since then, I appreciate the craftsmanship more each time.

  • @PickledShark
    @PickledShark Před 7 dny +2

    This is my favorite Nolan film. It directly tells you what’s happening at several points, but just like the audience, your brain searches for a different explanation. It’s also a film that benefits greatly from a second viewing so you can catch all the subtle hints along the way

  • @monsterlair
    @monsterlair Před 9 dny +2

    One of the best reveals in cinema history, and Nolan's best film by far. An eye for an eye is never the way.

  • @MatthewStephensAU
    @MatthewStephensAU Před 9 dny +37

    One of my favorites! The twist isn't how the trick is done, it's the whole genre of the movie.

  • @44excalibur
    @44excalibur Před 9 dny +96

    The Prestige was supposed to be Christopher Nolan's next film after Insomnia, which would have had it be released years before The Illusionist. However, when Christopher Nolan was hired to direct Batman Begins, The Prestige ended up being made a few years later and came out the same year as The Illusionist.

    • @jayshupp5971
      @jayshupp5971 Před 9 dny +6

      The Illusionist was a far superior film. At least it's ending was halfway realistic.

    • @slayerje1884
      @slayerje1884 Před 9 dny +58

      @@jayshupp5971 objectively no. Cool opinion though.

    • @dlpheonix
      @dlpheonix Před 9 dny +9

      I too must unfortunately disagree that illusionist was superior

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Před 9 dny +5

      Didn't know he did Insomnia. Was that with Robin Williams?

    • @ofthenearfuture
      @ofthenearfuture Před 9 dny +2

      @@ct6852 Yup Nolan made it right after Memento, which was his first 'real' movie. It is however the only feature film he didn't also write and produce, he only directed it. The script was being developed by Warner Brothers and Nolan was interested in making it, but WB wouldn't take a meeting with him as they didn't have confidence after only seeing Memento. So Nolan reached out to Steven Soderbergh who convinced the studio to meet with him. And the rest is history, Nolan is still making his movies with WB 20 years later.

  • @6sKi6z6
    @6sKi6z6 Před 8 dny +2

    One thing I love about this movie is that despite the beginning seeming confusing the first time you watch it, by the end you realize that the twist was given away very early on. I remember being in the theater and being confused by the blind guy and Borden being arrested and all that. But by the end, I was blown away that the identity of Fallon was the same twist as the Chinese magician. “He lives his act.”

  • @Brejan
    @Brejan Před 9 dny +2

    Definitely my favorite of Nolan's films, and probably one of the best movies ever made, in my opinion. Everything, acting, direction, script, is so perfect, so tight and laser focused. David Bowie is mesmerising as Tesla. And on top of all that, the whole film is the magic trick. The movie is itself the thing it is about. And somehow, maybe because it's so character driven, despite all that cleverness it never feels pretentious. Brilliant piece of filmmaking.

  • @SathReacts
    @SathReacts Před 8 dny +3

    When Olivia's nephew asked about the bird's brother (to Borden's amusement) was the director revealing the whole damn thing of the twins; 1 free 1 dead

  • @Jumpman67
    @Jumpman67 Před 9 dny +24

    Imagine if they could’ve gotten the real Hugh Jackman?! This movie would’ve been insane.

  • @orarinnsnorrason4614
    @orarinnsnorrason4614 Před 8 dny +2

    This is my favorite Nolan movie. Literally played out like the three stages of a trick. So freakishly well done and thought out movie. Its pure genius.

  • @jroldo8353
    @jroldo8353 Před 18 hodinami

    I'm only 7 minutes in and I can tell the editor LOVES this movie. I also love how she's being quiet and absorbing the information.
    My gf hates reactions because 'they're always talking', this is a 10/10. For the love of the movie and seeing the viewers actual reaction...

  • @slimmccoy8863
    @slimmccoy8863 Před 9 dny +6

    Amazing filmI
    The opening/closing narration is masterfully done. Tells you what you're about to see, but does it in such a way that doesn't ruin the surprises.
    Great performances all around, would love to see Jackman and Bale together again.

  • @Pepitobenito
    @Pepitobenito Před 9 dny +4

    The Prestige and Sunshine are two of my favourite movies of all time, love hearing them mentioned back-to-back.

    • @etherealtb6021
      @etherealtb6021 Před 9 dny +2

      Sunshine is so bleak, but so good!

    • @anonymes2884
      @anonymes2884 Před 9 dny +4

      @@etherealtb6021 "Sunshine" has a lovely, poignant ending IMO (assuming we both mean the Danny Boyle one from 2007).

    • @etherealtb6021
      @etherealtb6021 Před 9 dny

      @@anonymes2884 It does!

  • @BravoDox
    @BravoDox Před 9 dny +2

    Note to Cassie:
    Angier's wife was played by Piper Perabo, star of "Coyote Ugly".
    "The guy from Miss Congeniality" is Michael Caine.
    Nikola Tesla was a real famous scientist who invented Alternating Current (AC) electricity and had a lifelong rivalry with Thomas Edison, who invented Direct Current (DC) electricity.
    Tesla was played by David Bowie.
    "Gollum's" actor is named Andy Serkis.

  • @clyde2006
    @clyde2006 Před 7 dny +1

    "Boxes...and...boxes of dead Dantons?"
    I'll be hearing that in my sleep tonight.

  • @James_Ford4815
    @James_Ford4815 Před 9 dny +14

    Surprised she didn't notice Star Trek TNG Moriarity as the judge. Also Data's Grandpa Ira Graves is in it.

    • @Eidlones
      @Eidlones Před 9 dny +4

      5 seasons into watching, and she wasn't sure if the federation invaded planets for colonization, or not. Why are you surprised she didn't recognize an actor she saw once?

    • @JamesDavis-sh9gh
      @JamesDavis-sh9gh Před 9 dny +1

      Wasn't Moriarity also the butler in The Nanny?

    • @ribbitrebecca
      @ribbitrebecca Před 8 dny +1

      ​​@@EidlonesOh come on, she has watched MAYBE five episodes per season of TNG, she's not going to remember everything perfectly. I find she's very perceptive most of the time.

    • @Eidlones
      @Eidlones Před 8 dny +1

      @ribbitrebecca So she's seen around 25 episodes. How many episodes do you need to figure out that the federation isn't a conquering organization? She's seen multiple episodes where the driving thrust of the narrative was "We don't interfere with other cultures"
      But sure, it's fine that she never picked up on that. The fact they make every possible attempt to solve things non-violently, and respect other cultures right to live as they see fit, and try their hardest not to dictate their own morals onto them doesn't discount that they might conquer other planets.

  • @TheOtherGuys2
    @TheOtherGuys2 Před 9 dny +60

    In case you're not familiar with the history of it, there was quite a rivalry between Thomas Edison and Nikola Tesla, largely around Edison's investment in DC electricity, vs Tesla's use of AC electricity. (Direct Current / Alternating Current) Edison would demonstrate how inefficient AC was by electrocuting dogs and elephants to death, because death by AC electrocution is long and excruciating. He conveniently omitted that death by DC electrocution is practically instant. Tesla on the other hand, built a machine that powered the entire town of Colorado Springs for free. His focus was on.. well, many things, but significantly on a way to generate unlimited clean energy for no cost of fuel. It's unknown if he really succeeded, because his lab kept mysteriously burning down every time Edison thought he might be gaining traction, and when Tesla died, the US government immediately confiscated all of his notes and equipment and still hasn't made any of it public.

    • @Tuning3434
      @Tuning3434 Před 9 dny +8

      There is a bit more to it. Edison was an entrepreneur, not a scientist himself so much. Edison had a whole team of engineers and scientists inventing for him. One of them was a promising Austrian-Hungarian / Serbian young engineer Tesla who worked at Edison's companies (first in France, later in the US) on power utility systems. Tesla had a falling out with the company (not known if directly at Edison) and shortly after joining the US company left to start a business for himself.
      Tesla struck a great deal with Westinghouse's by licensing his patent for an (two-phase) Induction AC motor, complementing Westinghouse's preferences to employ AC based utility systems. However, it remained difficult to get a two-phase motor to work in practical applications and it was succeeded by an inhouse designed three-phase design (which basically is the fundation of all electric machines), but still was paying out Tesla a generous license that almost bankrupted Westinghouse. Tesla made a huge contribution to modern power systems, and held a few very important patents, but a larger team was involved.
      The Edison Company was aware of the benefits of high voltage AC based utility systems, and was a loud participator in the "War of the Currents", inventing the electric chair as a demonstration of the lethality of AC power.

    • @anonymes2884
      @anonymes2884 Před 9 dny +12

      In fact the notes and equipment _have_ been made public (most of them were returned to his family in the early 1950s and are now kept in the Tesla museum in Serbia) and the US government (probably illegally) confiscated them largely because Tesla died in 1943 - i.e. during WWII - and they were worried that his nephew, the then Yugoslavian ambassador to the US, would get hold of them and give them to the Axis powers - IF (big 'if') they contained anything useful to a war effort that would obviously have been potentially disastrous.
      Fun fact: the engineer tasked with checking Tesla's papers for usable inventions, breakthroughs etc. was one Dr John Trump - yep, _that_ Trump's uncle - and he reported at the time that there was nothing useful in there.
      Tesla, for the record, didn't believe in subatomic particles and claimed that electrons, if they existed at all, had nothing to do with electricity (which 100+ years of science and technology shows is wrong). Nor did he believe the theory of relativity, claiming to have measured "cosmic rays" travelling at 50 times the speed of light (again, relativity has withstood every experimental test thrown at it for 100+ years and was already well supported by the 1930s, when Tesla was making these claims) so far from some mythic genius, in reality he was just an inventor who got some stuff right and made other claims that were very wrong.
      (all of this is a matter of easily googlable public record)
      Of course the Tesla myths and conspiracy theories persist regardless (he invented a death-ray, he discovered "free energy" and the government/big oil covered it up etc.) because people mostly don't arrive there by following actual evidence so actual evidence is unlikely to persuade them otherwise.

    • @mattjamison484
      @mattjamison484 Před 9 dny +1

      @@anonymes2884 Thank you.

    • @TrickyDicky2006
      @TrickyDicky2006 Před 9 dny

      one of the people involved in the confiscation of Teslas property was an engineer John G. Trump, the uncle of Donald Trump.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Před 9 dny

      Did Tesla's machine (that powered CS) use a lot of oil?

  • @andyh0428
    @andyh0428 Před 9 dny +1

    My second favourite movie ever. It’s clever, it has an epic cast, and more twists n turns than you can shake a stick at… this is movie excellence

    • @steele8280
      @steele8280 Před 8 dny

      You can’t say that without saying which is number 1…

  • @BenjWarrant
    @BenjWarrant Před 8 dny +1

    "...boxes and boxes of dead Dantons..." What an excellent summary!!

  • @MHLegacy
    @MHLegacy Před 9 dny +5

    I absolutely LOVE this movie! I still remember when I first saw it in the theaters when it first came out. So much subtle foreshadowing sprinkled throughout, twists upon twists. It is fitting that Andy Serkis, best known for playing a split personality character, is in this too.
    The inclusion of Tesla was also very fitting! Yes, Nikola Tesla was an amazing inventor who started off working for Edison's company before striking off on his own. Edison and Tesla both became very prominent in the field of electricity. Tesla had more of the natural brilliance as an Inventor; while Edison, who was no dummy himself, excelled more at the marketing and the showmanship. Tesla was an inmigrant to America while Edison was native born, so language usage was certainly easier for him. That, combined with biases towards immigrants, no doubt added to Edison's marketing advantages. Tesla, in this way, was more like the rougher but brilliant Borden, while Edison was more like the polished but arrogant Angier.
    Edison advocated for an electrical infrastructure based on Direct Current (DC), like batteries, as it was lower voltage and thus safer for people to use. He imagined every household and commercial building having its own electrical generator.
    Tesla advocated for Alternating Current (AC), which had higher voltage and could thus travel much further from its source. He envisioned a central power plant in a city that generated power, transmitted it on power lines, and then the electricity voltage was reduced through the use of transformers just prior to entering people's homes.
    Obviously, our current system is based off of Tesla's design, (though more and more homes with independent solar power actually mimics Edison's original vision, albeit through a very different kind of generator).
    At the time, Edison didn't go down without a fight. Yes, like we briefly saw in the movie, Edison had sent teams to harass and sabotage Tesla. In order to prove how "dangerous" Tesla's alternating current was, Edison made an invention that used AC to kill a person: the electric chair. The AC versus DC inspired the name of the AC/DC Rock band, and yes, Elon Musk's electric car company.

  • @OldTechNerd
    @OldTechNerd Před 8 dny +3

    #1 rated Movie Reaction Channel by WatchMojo and I have been watching since the channel started. The editing, formatting, audio are exemplary. Credit to your behind the scenes crew. Cassie, you and Carly are both such a joy to join for movies. I wholeheartedly recommend your channel to everyone.

  • @Hopehubris1492
    @Hopehubris1492 Před 9 dny +13

    Oh. And you can literally find some new amazing thing every time you watch. Last time for me it was the fact that the opening scene where Michael Caine explains the stages of a trick while performing for the little girl, is actually the moment before Borden walks in at the end and she sees him. Amazing. This time, I noticed Borden’s line at the beginning where he says “we were two young men at the beginning of a career”. It seems like he’s talking about he and Angier, but really he means he and Fallon. Brilliant!

  • @user-vn5li8xv2c
    @user-vn5li8xv2c Před 6 dny +1

    Something not many people mention is that Hugh Jackmans character also “lived” a performance. Angier wasn’t American like Borden thought.
    When he turns up at the prison as Lord Cordlaw he says he ‘always was’ him. And earlier he told his wife he used a stage name ‘as he promised to not embarrass his family’; so he was the same as Borden - he lived a lie to maintain an act

    • @crankfastle8138
      @crankfastle8138 Před 6 dny

      Kind of. He just stayed in a lazy character but it never effected his life. That choice had no consequence.

  • @twiceborn_by_grace
    @twiceborn_by_grace Před 9 dny +6

    Batman, Alfred, Black Widow, Wolverine and Gollum = good movie.

    • @radwolf76
      @radwolf76 Před 9 dny +2

      This is Goblin King erasure.

  • @viralmedia
    @viralmedia Před 9 dny +16

    Something that "Tesla" said that finally after 100 viewings hit me. When he say's "THEY ARE ALL YOUR HAT" and then it hit me. They are both COPY and ORIGINAL DANTON! The notion of who is the "clone" and who is the original, it simply is BOTH are Danton / Angier. We're not in the philosophical conundrum of the Ship of Theseus. He is not being broken down and rebuilt with other. Both carry the entire breath and experience of Angeirs life. Therefore neither and both were both original and copy. It renders the need to know which is which irrelevant because it simply both answers simultaneously .

    • @joeeyaura
      @joeeyaura Před 9 dny

      yeah is he the man in the box or the man on the stage.. after so many times doing it, he doesnt know. imagine starting the show every night, knowing youre going to die by drowning

    • @viralmedia
      @viralmedia Před 9 dny +1

      @@joeeyaura Neither one of them would now who they or the other would be. At the moment of doubling both are simply Angeir. So if Angier flipped the switch and thought he is the man in the box or on stage, he is simultaneously wrong and right. Once I stopped thinking one was a 'copy' it made the whole concept even creepier, that he was so obsessed he both literally and metaphorically killed his 'soul' every night.

    • @DenizYalcin
      @DenizYalcin Před 9 dny +1

      The Danton falling into the box is the original Angier. He literally kills himself, and the copy continues its life until the next show. The copy thinks he is the original because he is an exact copy. The machine doesn't teleport you; it creates a copy of you in another location. This is the same debate about teleportation in Star Trek, and the solution is exactly the same. People in Star Trek are not really being teleported; their originals are being destroyed on the teleportation pod, and their copies continue to exist on the remote location.

    • @6kembe4orba
      @6kembe4orba Před 9 dny +1

      @@DenizYalcin that's wrong cause it's not explicitly stated and you cant infer from anything in the movie that there's an "original" Angier and a "clone" cause we dont know how exactly Tesla's machine is working.
      Obviously you can't grasp the more complex concept that the machine is more than the simple "original ---> copying ---> clone". Even by this simpler explanation of yours I can 100% counter your "Danton falling into the box is the original Angier" by saying the machine makes a clone at the original position and transports the original some distance away. Or even I can take it even further, the machine could do this one time, the other time it does the opposite or is doing it at random.
      We dont know how the machine works. It can be by superposition principle and effectively both are 100% Angier and there's no original, there's no clone. IMO that's why it's not explained in the movie and that's Nolan's intent, that having 2 Angier in the same space-time (by the unexplained method) is at its core very Lovecraftian in nature. That's why it is so disturbing.

    • @bigdream_dreambig
      @bigdream_dreambig Před 9 dny +1

      Yes. This is actually a core principle in theoretical physics that sounds way simpler than it is: if two things are identical, they are the same. Usually, at the macroscopic level we live in, two things are never the same. You can tell the difference between an original and a copy because of errors that occur (changing the copy) and/or damage that is done (changing the original) in the copying process. However, if Tesla's machine is actually able to perfectly duplicate someone or something, then neither can be considered a copy or an original.

  • @matthewungar2138
    @matthewungar2138 Před 9 dny +2

    Sunshine is also amazing!!! Such a classic. ☀️

  • @aklimar2208
    @aklimar2208 Před 3 dny

    “I hate when people boo”. She’s so precious

  • @eddhardy1054
    @eddhardy1054 Před 9 dny +16

    I may have got this wrong but I think the whole point was that at the end Danton/Angier never actually knew whether it was the clone or the original who died in the water tank.

    • @maduross
      @maduross Před 9 dny +11

      It was the original who died. When Tesla first operated the machine, the original hat/cat stayed in place and there were dozens of clones far away before he re-calibrated it. When Danton performed the trick the first time, he shot his clone. But every time after that, the "original" fell through the trap door and drowned in the water tank. Since the clone has the same thoughts and memories of the original Danton he probably assumed he was the original.

    • @wal6377
      @wal6377 Před 9 dny +4

      ​@@maduross
      I dont think Danton/Angier never actually knew. The original fell into the tank. If the clone was dry, he knew he wasnt the original. It's a philisophical question. If im the clone, how do i have the same thoughts as the original? If im the original, then why aren't I dead.
      Each clone lives long enough to see to his own demise, so the next clone can live.

    • @MHLegacy
      @MHLegacy Před 9 dny +7

      He was saying it took bravery to step in and not know if he would be in the water or in the Prestoge. He had a 50/50 chance of dying each time he stepped into the machine. The body would be duplicated and transported while the other one dropped into the tank. His consciousness, memory, and even train of thought at that moment would also be duplicated.
      Try to imagine you're about to get on one of two planes and you know one of them will 100% crash, but you don't know which until the plane either lands safely, or you are plummeting to your death.

    • @slayerje1884
      @slayerje1884 Před 9 dny +2

      @@wal6377 And if it's truly a transported man, perhaps the original is transported and the clone replacing the original.

    • @jeffburnham915
      @jeffburnham915 Před 9 dny +10

      It's not a clone. Tesla saying they are all your hats points this out. There is no clone there's simply 2 Angiers.

  • @moviescatsmargs
    @moviescatsmargs Před 9 dny +42

    Nolan directed Memento, Insomnia, Batman Begins, The Prestige, The Dark Knight. All released in the 2000s. Its one of the best decade stretches by a director ever. All of those movies are absolute bangers, even Insomnia which doesnt have nearly the same recognition as his other films.

    • @pj4433
      @pj4433 Před 9 dny +1

      Insomnia is my favourite by far. So underrated

    • @serwinzzalot9989
      @serwinzzalot9989 Před 9 dny

      He went to the Stanley Kubrick school of film making too. But I would say he had a run of films akin to Martin Scorsese in 70s 80s, Spielberg, David fincher, early Tim burton.

    • @moviescatsmargs
      @moviescatsmargs Před 9 dny +2

      @@serwinzzalot9989 Fincher's 90s is a good comparison to Nolan's run in the 00s: Alien 3, Se7en, The Game, Fight Club

    • @emmanuelmartin1238
      @emmanuelmartin1238 Před 9 dny +1

      @@pj4433 such a solid movie, I fear it didn't have the 'hook' of his other movies, if it had something extra to make it stand out it would be rated much higher.

  • @ronb2008
    @ronb2008 Před 3 dny +1

    SO HAPPY you enjoyed it!! My second favorite Nolan film only behind The Dark Knight and still in my top 5. One thing I don't see people talk about is how this is one of the few movies/tv shows/novels where the protagonist is actually the villain of the story; and it WORKS. You don't hate Angier even though he's doing horrible things because the movie does such a superb job of explaining his actions. But if you think of the story from Borden's angle, Angier is a villain. Not even an antihero; a straight up villain.

  • @fusionaddict
    @fusionaddict Před 9 dny +2

    There's an early hint about Borden's big twist: when he is consoling Sarah's nephew, the nephew says "But where's his brother?" Borden replies that the boy is a sharp one. Also, in the original novel, even Borden's name is a trick: "ALFRED" = "ALbert" + "FREDerick".

  • @Wolfinger1935
    @Wolfinger1935 Před 9 dny +10

    For a classic oldie with "the guy from Miss Congeniality" and "the guy from The Rock". check out The Man Who Would Be King. Great film.

    • @NimpanZ
      @NimpanZ Před 9 dny +4

      @@Wolfinger1935 A rudyard kipling adaptation. Great movie 👍

    • @hurricane1951
      @hurricane1951 Před 9 dny +2

      Michael Caine PLUS Sean Connery. Great Film.

  • @3Kings_Industries
    @3Kings_Industries Před 9 dny +6

    What, no one mentioned the fantastically beautiful Scarlett Johansson?
    I mean, obviously C. Bale & H. Jackman. And of course, M. Caine. But a round of applause for the late, great, David Bowie.

  • @rbravender1
    @rbravender1 Před 7 dny +1

    What will bend your mind even more is when you think about Borden tying the knots, it wasn’t always him, and his twin wasn’t as good at it. That’s why Borden didn’t know what he tied because he hadn’t done it.

  • @cyruswhitley7840
    @cyruswhitley7840 Před 6 dny

    Bale’s performance in this is outstanding. After the first viewing, In every scene he is in you can tell which brother he is even though he seems like the same person on the first viewing. His choices and the nuances of his portrayals are outstanding.

  • @MatthewStephensAU
    @MatthewStephensAU Před 9 dny +7

    The whole film is a magic trick. We saw it happen in the first two minutes, and everything else was misdirection.
    (8:05) There (19:20) are (28:06) *so* many (33:13) clues to the Prestige of the whole movie, right from the opening shot of a dozen Top Hats. It's amazing we don't all work it out as we watch. I haven't found a single person who saw it coming. Because we're looking for the secret; (36:13) but we're still stunned at the end, because we're not really looking. We want to be fooled.

    • @NimpanZ
      @NimpanZ Před 9 dny +1

      I spotted Bale as Fallon immediately. Specs, mutton chops and Marlon Brando cotton ball cheeks weren't enough of a disguise for me. I hate that I spoiled what would have been an epic reveal for myself.
      I also watched Seven before the usual suspects and so I kind of spoiled the Spacey reveal.

    • @jeffburnham915
      @jeffburnham915 Před 9 dny

      @@MatthewStephensAU that is what makes the best twists. When it's right in front of your face and you don't see it. Unlike the usual suspects when the whole movie is a lie then it just makes a twist at the end. This movie shouldn't have had a twist you should've seen it the whole time. Clue after clue after clue and yet you never see it coming. They even tell you multiple times he's using a double.

    • @Dunc25535
      @Dunc25535 Před 9 dny +1

      ​@@NimpanZ same here mate, I remember my friend was actually annoyed at me the first time I watched because I guessed it so fast, he refuses to show me films still to this day haha

    • @NimpanZ
      @NimpanZ Před 9 dny

      @@jeffburnham915 like the usual suspects, the twist is dependent on the unreliable narrator. Angiers diary is an unreliable narration also. We come to know this as Borden reads it in prison. So if the diary is unreliable, then anything in it could be conjured up out of thin air.
      All of the colorado scenes.
      All the Tesla scenes.
      All the machine scenes.
      While the audience is congratulating themselves for finally seeing the Borden twins twist and trying to contemplate the gravity of a "real" cloning machine, Nolan has one last trick up his sleeve. Angiers diary is a lie and the machine doesn't work.

    • @NimpanZ
      @NimpanZ Před 9 dny

      @@Dunc25535 I think this unwanted talent came from the old mission impossible tv series. They used to dress up in hair, makeup and prosthetics as they went undercover but if you're familiar with anyones face, you're going to notice that something is off.

  • @anthonyluna352
    @anthonyluna352 Před 9 dny +7

    The trick where the bird is actually killed foreshadows what Hugh Jackmans character eventually does to the clones
    8:28

  • @ieyke
    @ieyke Před 9 dny +1

    Easily one of the best movies ever made.
    Like Christopher Nolan is pretty good, but none of his other movies rank among the best movies ever.
    This is FAR AND AWAY his best film.
    A movie that starts giving you the answers right from the start, and practically beats you over the head with the answers throughout the whole movie, but the whole thing is SO perfectly told that it catches you COMPLETELY off-guard and melts your brain when you're finally forced to confront the actual solutions to the story.
    The whole movie itself IS a flawless magic trick.

  • @atticusmcfly
    @atticusmcfly Před 9 dny +1

    Cassie: "He looks familiar too."
    Me as I'm watching: "THAT IS LITERALLY THE WORLD'S GREATEST ROCK STAR!!!!!" 👨‍🎤😂

  • @cupofjoe4642
    @cupofjoe4642 Před 5 dny

    I love how her head was spinning at the end trying to digest everything, that’s why this is one of the best movies ever. Stories that cause that level of question and discussion are marks of great narrative

  • @IntenseSarcasm
    @IntenseSarcasm Před 9 dny +67

    Borden: "He came in to demand an answer and I told him the truth. That I have fought with myself over that night, one half of me swearing blind that I tied a simple slipknot, the other half convinced that I tied the Langford double. I can never know for sure."
    This quote is so confusing the first time you hear it, but when you know the truth, it explains everything.

  • @wilagaton9627
    @wilagaton9627 Před 9 dny +6

    I love the metaphor of magic to storytelling. Just shows you the strengths of a 3 act structure. That is the reason I believe this is the most 'meta' of Nolan's films. Similar to how Inception is a metaphor for filmmaking.
    Another thing I love is the dynamics of the characters. There is no protagonist or antagonist. Both could've been the bigger man and just walk away. But its in their nature as magicians to one up each other.
    Still my favorite Nolan film.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Před 9 dny +1

      Curious which movies DON'T have a three act structure.

    • @j3huty
      @j3huty Před 9 dny +2

      Protagonist and antagonist don't mean "good guy" and "bad guy". They mean "person who the story is about" and "person that opposes them". Borden is the protagonist, Angier is the antagonist.

    • @wilagaton9627
      @wilagaton9627 Před 7 dny +1

      @@ct6852
      I would say The Dark Knight. The best way I can describe it (without getting too much into it) is that its two 3-act structure overlapping each other. So the structure of the story goes: Joker act 1 > Joker act 2/Two-face act 1 > Joker act 3/Two-face act 2 > Two-face act 3

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Před 7 dny

      @@wilagaton9627 I remember Dark Knight Rises having kind of a strange structure as well. Been a while since I've seen it though.

  • @JusBidniss
    @JusBidniss Před dnem

    I love how every trick and bit of story, from the opening scene with all the hats, was a foreshadowing of the final twist.

  • @charlesclinton3305
    @charlesclinton3305 Před 8 dny +1

    This movie (like Vertigo) is one of those stories that plays three card monty with the audience. Three card monty is a game where someone shuffles three cards and uses slight of hand to show you the Queen at the beginning but makes sure you never pick the queen after shuffling the cards.
    BTW, the guy from Miss Congeniality is Sir Michael Caine, yes that's right you have to say the Sir with him.

  • @davidbateleur8357
    @davidbateleur8357 Před 9 dny +3

    I believe there are 6 twists in this movie... no other movie comes even close to that amount of turns.

  • @3monthbender
    @3monthbender Před 9 dny +3

    Sunshine (while it does get oddly metaphysical later on) is a severely underrated, bordering on unknown, movie.

  • @Galiant2010
    @Galiant2010 Před 9 dny +1

    I love the implications of the big trick. As he repeats the "trick" over and over and over, the more he thinks "Well, I've always been the one to survive." But the one that dies also thought the same thing, too.
    This is basically the same thing people wonder about the transporter in Star Trek. The idea being that the transporter just essentially automatically "kills" the one standing on the pad. It's just through painless demolecularization rather than drowning, so it gets rid of the body at the same time.

    • @steele8280
      @steele8280 Před 8 dny

      That’s a sinister take on Star Trek that I hadn’t thought of before. Makes me not want to teleport.

  • @the.witch.of.november
    @the.witch.of.november Před 9 dny +1

    Ive watched this over and over, countless times and always pick up something I didn't before. This time I realized knowing that Borden is 2 people, is how he snuck into Sarah's house.

  • @darkphoenix2
    @darkphoenix2 Před 9 dny +29

    One of my favorite movies of all time. All three men were terrible. Alfred and "Fallon" were unfaithful to the people they loved, and lied to them all from the moment they met. Robert let go of everything he cared about just to prove he was the best, and didn't care about the consequences of cloning himself and then murdering himself every night. Such a wild, sick, well told story.

  • @marshallprince2583
    @marshallprince2583 Před 9 dny +17

    Nobody would believe that was Angio in the end. They didn't have broadcast news with photographs of people. He merely assumed a different identity and slightly changed his appearance.

    • @blechtic
      @blechtic Před 9 dny +4

      It wouldn't matter anyway: they identified the body.

    • @crankfastle8138
      @crankfastle8138 Před 6 dny

      I mean cutter would have validated it too.

  • @VunterSlaush1650
    @VunterSlaush1650 Před 8 dny

    A nice even 400k as I'm typing, congratulations Cassie and the next 400k is just around the corner!

  • @gloriousmr.e9815
    @gloriousmr.e9815 Před 9 dny +1

    This is my favorite movie of all time, Christopher Nolan directed and the cast is all star and the story is one of the best, I'm so glad you've seen it now

  • @TheJerbol
    @TheJerbol Před 9 dny +4

    Sunshine is a fantastic movie as well you should still watch it

  • @jaccilowe3842
    @jaccilowe3842 Před 9 dny +4

    I watch this movie at least once a year. It's so great.

  • @146348
    @146348 Před 8 dny +1

    I remember rewinding this movie a couple times to understand how I got to some scenes. I was so lost lol

  • @IzzyWizzy1982
    @IzzyWizzy1982 Před 9 dny +2

    Yay, it’s been such a long while! Glad I can finally watch a reaction from you as I only watch yr reactions when it’s a film I’ve seen

  • @trefen2534
    @trefen2534 Před 9 dny +67

    Nikola Tesla (played by the late great David Bowie) was a real American inventor and engineer. That's what the company "Tesla" (And the unit of magnetism) is named after.

    • @d.jparer5184
      @d.jparer5184 Před 9 dny +12

      *Serbian-american

    • @letstalk3265
      @letstalk3265 Před 9 dny

      Tesla was never American but was ripped off by Americans. His inventions included ''free'' power for all, that are now locked up under US statutes that will only ever be released if under open source environments because the oil, nuclear and mining interests never want to see this happen.

    • @tigerburn81
      @tigerburn81 Před 9 dny +14

      He was Serbian.

    • @thechonus3858
      @thechonus3858 Před 9 dny +24

      Tesla was born, raised, educated, and worked/invented in the Austrian Empire (current Croatia) and then Hungary. He didn't come to America until he was nearly 30 years old.

    • @trefen2534
      @trefen2534 Před 9 dny +2

      @@thechonus3858 he's considered Serbian-American.

  • @joeeyaura
    @joeeyaura Před 9 dny +3

    ha i never realized the judge is professor Moriarty from star trek tng.

  • @jonathanimler9745
    @jonathanimler9745 Před 9 dny

    This movie requires a rewatch and you’ll realize Nolan gives you the answer in the beginning with the dead bird (where’s his brother?)…and continues to give the answer throughout the movie. The viewer is so wrapped up in the misdirect that it never takes.

  • @Kinosis79
    @Kinosis79 Před 9 dny +1

    One of my all time favorite movies. I've watched it many times. Watch it again now that you know the secrets.