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Добавлен 13 фев 2016
Видео
Uma Thurman'ın Kill Bill setinde geçirdiği araba kazası
Просмотров 3376 лет назад
Uma Thurman'ın Kill Bill setinde geçirdiği araba kazası
Person of Interest Season 4, Episode 6
Просмотров 3,4 тыс.6 лет назад
Person of Interest Season 4, Episode 6
House of Cards 5. Sezon, 1. Bölüm, İkinci Sahne
Просмотров 11 тыс.7 лет назад
Geçtiğimiz günlerde beşinci sezonuna oldukça sürükleyici başlayan House of Cards adlı dizinin bu sahnesinde; kurgusal bir Amerika diktatörünün, Amerikan Senatosu içerisindeki 'diktatörce' taleplerini seyrediyoruz. Bunun üstüne bir de,Kevin Spacey' in oldukça akıcı oyuculuğuna ve konsantrasyonuna da tanık oluyoruz. İyi seyirler.
Knockin on Heavens Door (1997)
Просмотров 6717 лет назад
Türkçe' ye Cennet Yolcuları adı ile çevrilmiş olan 1997, Belçika yapımı olan filmin yönetmeni Thomas Jahn olup, film 87 dakikadır. Film, 'Credits' kısmından sonra film devam ediyor.
"SOMEBODY CALL SOMEBODY"
My question is would Mills became a different person if he didn’t succumb to his “wrath/vengeance”? He did what i think anyone would do, but will that at the end of the day mend his soul? Cause from the looks of it it will haunt him forever, but If he showed mercy could the outcome be any different?
I believe, later mills will suicide
It’s kind of messed up that the villain died while still achieving his perfect victory.
Would it be a bad time for Somerset to say to Mills, "I told you so"?
W. Somerset Maugham
The first thing that comes to my mind in this scene is what John Doe told Mills, “You should be thanking me. Because you’re going to be remembered after this.”
Even though Detective Mills survived, he’s dead in life.
“John Doe Has The upper hand!” - Sommerset That line has such a big impact it’s so chilling, so simple, yet Disturbing.
“We’ll take care of him.” “How?” “We’ll investigate ourselves and find no wrongdoing. It was probably an issue of officer safety.”
My absolute favorite movie. I love how it subverts expectations because ultimately the only person who gets what he wants is John Doe. Doe wanted to be killed to complete his sick, twisted plan and Mills gave him that satisfaction. Doe was a religious fanatic and his plan was to victimize everyone for a deadly sin. He was so dedicated that he victimized himself just to ensure that Mills finished his job. Now, whether or not this would inspire copycats like Doe wanted is hard to say. The average psychopathic murderer would probably get caught LONG before victimizing seven people because Doe was ludicrously smart and resourceful. Most people would not cover their tracks even a tenth as well as he could. Mills lost his wife and unborn child. He may have gotten revenge but he was dead inside afterwards because he knew that he gave Doe what he wanted, he now faced murder charges, and even if he was found not guilty, he had nothing to return to. Realistically, he would return to no job, no family, and would probably kill himself eventually. Somerset was ready to retire throughout the movie but Doe’s brutality and Mills’s breakdown made him realize that he needed to stay in a job he hated for even longer. This type of heartless ending was incredibly ballsy and I applaud David Fincher for choosing not to bend to the studio’s request to come up with a lighter ending. This ending is one of the best in the history of film because of how it subverts expectations, pulls no punches, and is perfectly presented. I love this movie.
Somersault begged Mills to put the gun down because he knew of Mills' temper and that he would prefer to kill John and go to jail. That ending still haunts me to this day.
Would he really go to jail...also if he was really scared wouldn't he just get in the way of the gun or not tell mills or kill doe himself..he's apathetic and knew the outcome...he probably makes the same choice
@razkable I mean, he lost his whole family, so he had nothing left to further lose I can't say I blame him for pulling the trigger, but you can even tell that he. Regretted it, but in the end he still knew he had nothing left It was all gone in instant
It's more than that. He didn't want John Doe to win.
Sommerset won the debate. But him winning caused him to stay.
What debate do you mean? About the Hemingway quote or something else?
"The world is a fine place and worth fighting for...i agree with the second part." Fantastic!
Everyone loves to compliment sick and twisted movies like this without realizing this was thought up by an actual human being. Someones mind created the personality of an utter killer yet you all watch the creation as if it carries no shame. You ever wonder how fucked up someone has to be to think about creating something like this? Ever wonder what they may be doing? Evil like this only exist because we allow other humans to dream it up. These directors should genuinely be investigated
Everyone has the capacity for evil. Writing about it doesn’t mean you are capable of committing it. Remember Susan Smith and Andrea Yates, who murdered their own children?
Jack The Ripper didn't need movies.
@@vksasdgaming9472 That’s the wonderful thing about the freedom to choose. If something offends your sensibilities, you can avoid it.
“There are two kinds of people who sit around all day thinking about killing people...mystery writers and serial killers. I'm the kind that pays better.” ― Richard Castle
Man Idk what do you want us to watch? Mickey Mouse?
John Doe completely killed Mills
Mills literally killed John Doe
He got Morgan Freeman too cause he stayed proving he can't do anything and still had hope and was lying....mills was right about that
@fellino8049 I mean he proved Mills is Wrath and he lost all hope
@@razkable Somerset should not open the box and throw the gun
“John Doe Has the Upperhand”
Somerset now has PTSD in his golden years as a reward for his long and stellar career. That’s just beautiful. John Doe gave a huge finger to Somerset too.
I don't think he does. He has seen so much I think he is immune to It all, though he is evidently backtracking on his plan to retire. He stays to fight because Mills can't.
@@martinistakis1825 Somerset never saw the severed head of someone he knew and had dinner with, in a box. He wasn't immune to THAT. He absolutely does have PTSD, don't kid yourself.
John Doe even beat Somerset in a way. All throughout the film, Somerset is desperate to get out and leave this job. He wants that retirement to escape this world and maybe enjoy the simple things in life without being confronted with evil every day. Here at the end though, Somerset feels a sense of duty to stay and help Mills and his fellow officers for support. He's trapped now too and haunted by this case forever.
I kinda wish the film ended with him retiring not the quote so it feels bleaker and means he didn't change....that's sorta a win then for the good guys but the film said that's sorta a happy ending and depressing so let's just go with a more meaningful reaction to the case and plot instead....not sure if I agree with this ending...best ending would be him killing doe himself and sacrificing his own freedom for mills purity to go along with the sins angle....
@@razkableit’s a strong ending with a strong message. A hard fact to accept, but it’s a true case.
I see this as a win tbh. Somerset realized that we need more empathy in a world filled with apathetic people and chose to be one of them.
@@MrGister9999 totally agree and i choose to give more empathy every day i hope that other people will do the same. Apathy brings nothing but misery and hate is the worst thing to ever happen to humanity i believe we can overcome both of us each and everyday by choosing to have empathy and do the best we can for others no matter what. honestly imo its the whole message of the movie really.
It's definitely not a happy ending and it's still a brilliant ending, I think many films should learn from Seven regarding how to conclude a story, it takes you from the beginning to the end and it feels like it throws you in a cliff of emotions, that's incredible
If this ever went to court it would just be jury nullification. No way the jury would convict him even though they know he is guilty.
Hopefully they would acquit.
Am I the only one who believes Morgan was the one behind all those murders! I mean John Doe did kill them all but it was Morgan's plan all along so that he wouldn't get retired/replaced by Brad as a detective. Morgan's colleagues jokes about him and his works at the start of the film and he was about to get replaced by Brad. The line at the end "I believe in the second one" which was "it's worth fighting for" made be believe it was Morgan's plan to show the department that they still need him as a detective and he got all the credits for solving John Doe's case.
That is actually a nice and interesting Theory. But i like Morgan in this Movie too much as a friendly Detective😅
But if I recall correctly he wanted to quit. And didn’t want to teach the younger one. Was a nuisance for him. This is about a guy who wanted to give up and in the end that killer gives him back the strength to keep fighting.
No jury on this planet would convict him.
Lord knows people and cops have gotten off for far worse before lol
probably manslaughter
Hopefully not, anyway.
I always wondered what happened next
You're probably right, but he's a broken man now.
You are not alone. She is ok now.
We did it, for Jane 💫♥️🏴☠️🖤🌹💫
"I agree with the second part" shows Somerset's faith has been restored... so it's a happy ending
But it also confirms his belief that mills said he didn't believe for his retirement so in a way he was right didn't change his mindset besides in retiring and he said what he always believed....it's still sad
The intended emphasis is more that "the world is NOT a fine place". No happy endings here partner.
I think you completely missed the point of that sentence. The emphasis was the part which Freeman did not agree.
@@michaelsong5555 nope. A key part of the story is his friendship with Mills' wife restores his faith in humanity. He is a changed man
@@shizzyfinn To call that a “happy ending” is such an unfathomable stretch of the imagination.
"I admire you". I wonder if he had different victims in mind for wrath and envy before he met mills
Everything about this movie was amazing
I really like how Brad’s facial expression in this scene captures the aftermath look of someone who wailed their heart out.
Being in the back of a police car - symbolic AF
Mills is arrested by the police for killing Doe, while Somerset watches him as he mentions a phrase from Ernest that "The world is a fine place to fight for, and is agreed with a second part".
Ok...obviously, we didn't need you to type it out
"Where you gonna be?" *[Somerset, having just worked a 24 hour shift]* "Can I go home?"
realistically how long would he be in jail for doing that?
Life or death sentence. It was sane, public execution with multiple shots as he was a police officer on duty. Most probably death sentence if the parents or other members of the family were actually rich. The shot suspect would be pleaded post factum as mentally insane and pardoned. Sorry, but the law harshly punishes being a vigilante, especially public servants. Otherwise everyone would do this with an excuse.
He wouldn't have gone to jail
@@ardex9677 but there have been known people who sought after revenged or promptly set up like the sick fuck did do him I don’t think he does life the facts say with presumably with the defectives testimony he killed his wife then bragged about it then left his unborn child in a box
@@CamsCinemaYt You say there have been known people. What people in real life?
@@ardex9677 the dude who killed his sons molester who he caught lacking at a airport and only got a few years
One of the best ending lines in any movie
Its a proper Rosebud
Right up there with "and then I woke up" and "I was cured alright."
@@JoeKing69No Country for Old Men and A Clockwork Orange, right?
@@keith.gabrielson hell yeah!
Strange cause it feels forced upon the director cause the original ending was too sad and bleak and not responded to by the audience correctly...it isn't consistent with the movie tone and it feels forced and unearned
This ending was so emotionless for me. (I’m not saying that it’s a bad thing though). There was very little to no sadness in this last scene. Which was really amazing. It felt so nihilistic.
Maybe that was the point for it to be emotionless, especially since freeman's character said he'd be "around " and quoted hemmingway...yet made it known he only agreed with part of the quote. As messed up as the events were for that day, it was just another Tuesday for him.
@@sharonjo7630 I think the point was no he wasn't retiring
Its nihilism mixed with hopefullness, absolutely amazing.
it felt like life
The world may not be a fine place but it is worth to fight for to make it a fine place which is probably why somerset agrees with the second part.
Ernest Hemingway once wrote the world is a fine place and worth fighting for... This is a line from Ernest Hemingway's classic novel "For Whom the Bell Tolls"
Thanks. Always wondered where it came from in his works.
i looked it up on Goodreads. its one of the few ernest hemingway books i havent read
I disagree with him. The world is not a fine place, and it definitely isn't worth fighting for. But people fight over the limited resource for selfish gains, because they are afraid of pain that comes with the lack of said resource.
@@michaelsong5555 you must be very young
@@CamHJ25 You're gonna have to do better than that. What you said had no substance whatsoever.
“I’ll be around” this ending is so sad
@JonnyKay-co4xche was going to flee and close his eyes from the cruelty of this world. Mills reenacted the idealist in somerset so that he sticks to his ideals and his work. In fact this is not sad but the final glimpse of hope in the dark symbolism of this movie.
The ending was actually supposed to be darker, but they decided to add this scene and imply that they're going to give David all the help and support they can, just so the movie didn't end on a total downer note. And thankfully, that's how it is in real life a lot of the time after a traumatic event, especially nowadays.
Can mean he still retires but it's sad either way
@@Eisenbisonim curious. What was supposed to be the 'darker' ending
Que mal final que se lo lleven preso no ?
qué tiene de malo?
@@NuwandaLunaDragon no se
@@NuwandaLunaDragon pero la primera vez que lo vi, me impacte y comenté eso pero ahora digo bueno se lo llevaron preso que se le va a hacer
@@pou2309 para mí hizo justicia se vengo
@@ericjohn6876 a
How can up to his neck in humanity's shit still have hope? Every day he fights the same battle and never even considers giving up. Prendergast is truly heroic character.
@Jeff Robinson My mistake. It was Somerset in this film. Both are great movies.
Imagine Pendergast and Sommerset swapped though. Pendergast in Seven, Sommerset in Falling Down
Prendergast would end up like Somerset too if Dfens sucess killing his family
Sometimes knowing the world is ugly, imperfect, and lacking in moral character is rightfully a disheartening and nihilistic thought. Having the strength to understand that though and be against all that and letting this world know you won't falter because of it is the inspiration to keep going forward. Things will always get worse before they get better.
@@PGGreatOak Maybe Somerset's unyielding dedication to being good person and good police can be summarized by Death: you need to believe in things that are not true. How else could they become?
Fake stuff here. The weapon they fired uses an explosive round, a 25mm HE shell. It would not just punch holes in the cars like a big bullet. It would explode on impact causing much more damage than they showed here.
Well, if that doesn’t sum up our world, I don’t know what does.
I really liked Walter.
100th like
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Every now and then a perfect movie comes along. Great script, great acting, and great direction. This one definitely qualifies.
I think as well, despite never seeing the murders, the movie is unflinching in the way it is told
I think is a masterpiece. And I'm surprised everything he can do after that. As Brad Pitt,😎😎 Just Nolan and Tarantino got this level nowadays 🥱🥱🥱
I think it’s a masterpiece but not perfect, mainly because of the plot twists surrounding John Doe’s plan.
"Around..........I'll be around"
Man, I’ve never seen shittier acting, and such a terrible script
How else would you react though if that happened
Emilie Clark! Just saw your 🎬 . It was 👍
One of the greatest movies ever....
Pure brilliance
Politik dizilerin en iyi sahnesidir
This episode was refreshing