Tim Roth Tutorial, Lesson
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- čas přidán 21. 09. 2012
- Workplace Etiquette: You've done wrong. Your boss knows you've done wrong. You know your boss knows you've done wrong.
The best way to get out of this situation is to use the Rothian Kitten Maneuver.
To best effect, blink your giant, pretty cat eyes in response to the boss' anger.
This will give you time to hatch a plan wherein you might later kill everyone, boss included,
and come out on top.
The maneuver is still used in modern industry today, and is often called The Cunningham Defensive.
Source: Rob Roy - Zábava
John Hurt makes a small acting choice in this scene that I have always loved. Throughout the film, he speaks in a mannered, upper-class English accent, but when he loses his temper with Archie, his accent changes slightly and his vernacular becomes more Scottish (“I ken not,” instead of “I know not”), reminding us that beneath his affectations of nobility, he is still a Scottish Laird.
Tim Roth's greatest film performance!⚘🌸⚘⚘🌸⚘
John Hurt was one of the best British actors ever.
one of the best actors ever, British or otherwise. Up there with Laurence Oliviers and Marlon Brandos
He’s no Jason Statham, bro.
@@Here4theComments9 much better character actor definitely😂
I didn't fink mr Roth could pull off such a performance and Mr hurt played a super nasty type but innocent of any of Archibalds skulduggery.
No disagreement there. He did two films that will stay with me my whole life. "Naked Civil Servant" and "Elephant Man". One line in the latter still chokes me up to think about; "I am not an animal. I am a human being". How detached and removed from society and humanity are you where you HAVE to declare to OTHER people that you are a human being? It unsettles me to no end.
I love your analysis of their word exchange as well as their bodily mannerisms .
your words inspire me, it's a good exemple of what i to got in mind
This is my fave- Roth tutorial#130
The Tim Roth tutorials should be taught at theater schools everywhere 😅😅👌
Wow I just read your machavelian analysis. It’s sounds right in this evil world
Mr Montrose finally realised that the gruesome twosome were up to no good.
Funny as hell the end credits
Do you take me entirely for a wig sir? !!!
Whig is the proper spelling.
Whigs and Tories
@@nihilistcentraluk442 get a life. geesh .
C-KRET LAB-Z , Montrose is one very intelligent man. Could use him as President. Slab a librat silly
The line always sounded to me like "Do you take me entirely for a Windsor?" although the Royal Family didn't change its name from the House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha to the House of Windsor until 1917, and a Whig is short for "whiggamore" or cattle-driver. The term Whig was a political insult of the time applied to someone who wanted to exclude the deposed Stuart king James II (Jacobus - Jacobite), so Montrose probably could accurately be called a Whig. But Windsor is much funnier.
One day ill find the proper time to say that
Never was I happier than when Roths character was sliced in twain.
TWAIN!!!😂😂😂😂😂😂
REAL THOOOOO (i love him sm tho)
anyone else searched for "cunningham defense" after this...it´s actually a chess move...by scottsman Alexander Cunningham.
For anyone wondering, he is saying: "Do you take me entirely for a Whigser?", as in someone who is a member of the Whigs liberal party.
Montrose would never ever call Archibald a sir, even mockingly, because he is a person who is extremely conscious of status and rank.
Wish i could hear it .
I love this scene! The acting is superb. I always thought Montrose said, “ do you take me entirely for a Windsor”. Was I wrong?
He said, "wig, sir" or maybe "whig" Windsor assuming you were thinking he was making a jab at the British royalty, didn't exist yet.
that's what I thought too. it's not very clear. But this is one of my favorite movies.
Yes I was thinking it was a jab at theRoyals...great movie. Would have done better at the box office if Braveheart didn’t come out the same year
The word is Whig, a political viewpoint and precursor to modern liberalism. A fool, in other words.
@@kylehill6384 i thought the word was winser a Scots word for soft or a simple person
Sound volume is way too low.
i had to play it in vlc player
The Corruption of Randy Cunningham and Mitchell Wade
Audio Tutorial #1 use a compressor / limiter
I care not for what you and that greasy capon( castrated male chicken) have cooked up. 😂
VOLUME >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>!
Otherwise it is useless!!!
lol
Wtf did I just watch
To think the British Empire was feared world-wide, but they walked around very feminine and did gay little gestures and poses. How can something so rainbowishly gay be so feared on the battle field?
It is only gay by today standards. It is only gay because the fat bullying kids at school told you it was gay. In that era, wearing a wig and high heels, and bowing constantly was a sign of a status and power. Different times, different manners.
@@Aelipse The elite are afforded the capacity to be overtly vain divas as they were *real people*
It's no different than today. Look at the Mafioso. Nice suits and hair slick back. But they will kill you in brutally inefficient ways.
@@sashmiel6566
Peacocks lol
Answer.....the Irish Catholics, Scottish Highlanders & Gurkhas from Nepal! Recruit those already conquered peoples, already intrinsically warlike & ultra hardy, & then have them rigorously trained & drilled into the finest & fiercest professional soldiers on Earth, doing the battlefield bidding of the diabolically Machiavellian, uber rapacious & conquest minded upper crust, the notoriously fopish aristocracy. That's how!
R.I.P. William Hurt
That's John Hurt
@@Ribby00 i thought it was Henry Johnston Hurt III.
@Floyd1504 It's been a long time since I've seen the word 'imbecilic'. That made me laugh. Well done.
@Floyd1504
he's "Hurt" by your comment lol