Daniel Aarvik
Daniel Aarvik
  • Видео 17
  • Просмотров 180 918
KrFs stohetstid kortfilm
KrFs stohetstid kortfilm
Просмотров: 20

Видео

Valgerd Svarstad Haugland kortfilm
Просмотров 832 года назад
Valgerd Svarstad Haugland kortfilm
KrFs storhetstid
Просмотров 192 года назад
KrFs storhetstid
render 2
Просмотров 102 года назад
render 2
Anne Enger mini_film
Просмотров 953 года назад
Anne Enger mini_film
28. november 2020
Просмотров 233 года назад
28. november 2020
Tvangsevakuering av Finnmark og Nord-Troms
Просмотров 7924 года назад
Tvangsevakuering av Finnmark og Nord-Troms
Gro Harlem Brundtland må gi statsministerkontoret til Kåre Willoch
Просмотров 3,4 тыс.4 года назад
Gro Harlem Brundtland må gi statsministerkontoret til Kåre Willoch
Bergen i krig
Просмотров 174 года назад
Bergen i krig
Isdalskvinnen trailer
Просмотров 5765 лет назад
Traileren til min nye film om Kvinnen i Isdalen.
Verdensrommet Danielsen
Просмотров 4865 лет назад
Verdensrommet Danielsen
Flyktninger fra nord
Просмотров 1515 лет назад
Evelyn vokser opp i Talvik under krigen. I 1944 blir hele Finnmark brent og ødelagt.
Titanic tea scene
Просмотров 175 тыс.5 лет назад
The countess of Rothes, Molly Brown and Ruth Dewitt Bukater
Flyktninger fra nord trailer
Просмотров 736 лет назад
Flyktninger fra nord trailer
Small Talk-trailer
Просмотров 556 лет назад
Small Talk-trailer

Комментарии

  • @egeozturk9571
    @egeozturk9571 15 дней назад

    I watched the Titanic film in Turkish, and it says: "Oh that dirty-mouthed woman is coming" 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @seankim884
    @seankim884 18 дней назад

    That’s What Happened In Beau Is Afraid.

  • @bman3794
    @bman3794 21 день назад

    They should have let her sit with them so she could warn them about the dangers of playing foosball.

  • @asfdhp94168
    @asfdhp94168 Месяц назад

    0:11 0:11 0:10 0:24

  • @maxfrankow1238
    @maxfrankow1238 2 месяца назад

    Molly Brown is one of the most real people I’ve ever seen. Class act. Kathy Bates was amazing in the role. Seemed like a person who would take you in, toss a coat on you for comfort, and just talk.

  • @reneecrotty6910
    @reneecrotty6910 2 месяца назад

    Rose is the only person I would have wanted to hang out with lol

  • @Keviva007
    @Keviva007 2 месяца назад

    The audacity of Ruth to look down on Molly while she herself was the one who was hanging by a thread.

  • @koreanjesus1983
    @koreanjesus1983 3 месяца назад

    I don't understand why Molly wanted to associate with those small-minded women anyway.

  • @geraldthebusdriver3491
    @geraldthebusdriver3491 3 месяца назад

    For all Men who think Women were good back then and became snakes today This scene reminds us that it was not at all different when it came to toxic girls These 3 girls in the scene are essentially the original Mean Girls from 1912

  • @dc4l923
    @dc4l923 3 месяца назад

    Rochelle Rose who played Noel Leslie. Celebrity crush; 1912 edition.

  • @Perich29
    @Perich29 3 месяца назад

    No room no room no room nooo room No Room Alice: I thought there plenty of room. Manhatten: it's very rude to sit down when your not invited Rat: It's very rude indeed. Alice I didn't know about that.

  • @noornaharKhatun-hl7bu
    @noornaharKhatun-hl7bu 4 месяца назад

    Bangale uk England er stupid 33year boy

  • @09283265124
    @09283265124 5 месяцев назад

    those hats are cake sized

  • @lepapercastle
    @lepapercastle 6 месяцев назад

    Historically, women of society in the West were made to speak very softly so as not to come off as domineering or unlady like. While I'm not particularly loud, I can't imagine speaking this way all of the time. If we were meant to stay quiet, our voices couldn't break glass.

    • @TimberlakeTigerGirl
      @TimberlakeTigerGirl 2 месяца назад

      I don't think you needed to whisper all the time. Just keep your voice down indoors and don't swear like a sailor is what was expected of women back then. Do you want your private conversation heard from across the room?

    • @lepapercastle
      @lepapercastle 2 месяца назад

      @@TimberlakeTigerGirl I didn't say anything about whispering.

  • @thetillerwiller4696
    @thetillerwiller4696 7 месяцев назад

    The hats in this scene are the only reasons why I like it so much 😅

  • @areyougoingtoeatthatbanana2095
    @areyougoingtoeatthatbanana2095 7 месяцев назад

    Molly seems very Working Class even though she is in 1st class

    • @FieldsOfUppland
      @FieldsOfUppland 4 месяца назад

      She did work her way up. Unlike those other women.

  • @mysticdevils
    @mysticdevils 7 месяцев назад

    molly best character idc

  • @bencekovacs8052
    @bencekovacs8052 7 месяцев назад

    Though I did like the movie it's pity it didn't show any of Margaret's real-life activism and what a warm-hearted woman she was!

  • @dairymilkbaraddict90
    @dairymilkbaraddict90 7 месяцев назад

    Basically my school years

  • @ticklishpaul
    @ticklishpaul 8 месяцев назад

    They wouldn’t have called her Countess, they would’ve called her Lady Rothes

  • @theforgottenone687
    @theforgottenone687 9 месяцев назад

    What is the name of the song playing in the background

  • @user-kb9ft8gn4n
    @user-kb9ft8gn4n 9 месяцев назад

    مثل لافينا

  • @Darci-pu5qv
    @Darci-pu5qv 10 месяцев назад

    Molly’s like yeah nice try I’m not stupid I know how you type of women you are 🙃

  • @humbertoosorio9417
    @humbertoosorio9417 10 месяцев назад

    This scene reflects the "contempt" or low importance of the woman's studies. The most important thing is that the woman was a lady. The important thing for a woman's fulfillment was to "marry well."

    • @TimberlakeTigerGirl
      @TimberlakeTigerGirl 2 месяца назад

      Girls and women did get education back then. More than just how to be a wife and mother. They were taught to read and write, learned math and literature. And were encouraged to pursuit the arts like music, dancing, painting, poetry, etc. Getting married rarely stopped women from having hobbies that made them happy.

  • @bennettbutler1084
    @bennettbutler1084 11 месяцев назад

    Margaret Brown sounds like a cowboy😂

  • @nassauguy48
    @nassauguy48 Год назад

    Molly saying that she needed to catch up on her gossip when the others told her they were going for a walk on the boat deck was an obvious shade! (Translation: That's about all you hens do, anyway!)

  • @nassauguy48
    @nassauguy48 Год назад

    LOL. Mean Girls, 1912 style.

  • @Noone9227
    @Noone9227 Год назад

    Such cunts and phonies esp the poser that had no money.

  • @twelfthlady847
    @twelfthlady847 Год назад

    The Countess's costume in this scene is the most gorgeous in the whole film to me.

  • @francessweeney2308
    @francessweeney2308 Год назад

    Margaret was "new money ", her husband had struck gold(literally)in mining and had made a fortune. She had left school at 13 years old to work at a tobacco factory to support her family. At 18, she left home to marry a small mine owner, who was poor by mine owner's standards, but they were comfortable and had two children together. After laws changed and all mines had to give a portion of silver to the government,Margaret's husband started mining for gold as well and got lucky. By the time Margaret sailed on the Titanic, she was fluent in 4 languages, separated from her husband and had a monthly allowance of $700! In other words, she had more wealth, independence and education than any of the women who shunned her.

  • @ChrisManley1994
    @ChrisManley1994 Год назад

    “Here comes that vulgar Brown woman.” “Quickly get up before she sits with us.” 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @mauricio5522
    @mauricio5522 Год назад

    Quiero probar algo más arriesgado que tiovivo 1

  • @lesigh1749
    @lesigh1749 Год назад

    If Smith HAD lit those last four boilers, what difference might the ship going a knot or even half a knot faster have made? It might just have never coincided with that south drifting Iceberg if it sailed past it qurter of an hour sooner.

  • @jcmat9917
    @jcmat9917 Год назад

    … and they thought they could get rid of her. 😂😂😂

  • @pablomartner2359
    @pablomartner2359 Год назад

    0:10 Daniel, The image quality and lighting of the film look very good. what version is the movie? what brand and model is the tv?

  • @TheSHN61
    @TheSHN61 Год назад

    For a second i thought the server was John Cena 0:01

  • @paulezekiel5037
    @paulezekiel5037 Год назад

    I feel bad for molly shes the most carring and kindess of all the characters.

  • @anavilla7134
    @anavilla7134 Год назад

    ROSE BECOMES FROM ARISTOCRATIC WOMAN TO A TYPE OF CAN-CAN DANCER WHICH I TALK ABOUT IN A VIDEO ON MY CHANNEL

  • @Justin1an
    @Justin1an Год назад

    Who's like me? When i watch this movie as a kid, i thought Molly was really a toxic woman who people don't like hanging around. Because the way Rose mother treat her is really look like that at the time. Now as an adult, i realize she is the one who is smart around the actual toxic person, Rose mother. I love this kind of detail in a film. In reality, there's still a lot of people out there who like to befriend with a toxic person like Rose mother, and seen them as smart. But the actual smart person like Molly is being seen as weird, arrogant, creep, loner and being excluded and ostracized by people.

    • @dairymilkbaraddict90
      @dairymilkbaraddict90 7 месяцев назад

      No I always knew Molly was nice and Rose's mum and Cal were stuck up twats

  • @michaelkearns5630
    @michaelkearns5630 Год назад

    Fk that sht.

  • @jenniferwilliams5478
    @jenniferwilliams5478 Год назад

    Crazy how back then women only went to universities to find husbands and to start families and not for educational purposes.

    • @TimberlakeTigerGirl
      @TimberlakeTigerGirl 2 месяца назад

      Contrary to popular belief, girls and women did get an education in more than just being a wife and mother. They were taught to read and write, even learn different languages if possible. They were also taught math and literature. And were encouraged to pursuit the arts like music, dancing, painting, etc. Since women couldn't live independently back then, marrying was their only option to have a stable life. The wealthier the man, the better off the woman was financially. And unless the man was a real prick like Cal, men didn't usually stop their wives from pursuing their hobbies or interests. Would it be hard once she had a baby? Yeah but they could afford a nanny, or had a relative to help care for the baby, the wife can still do her hobbies.

  • @Eternall23452
    @Eternall23452 Год назад

    Molly Brown was so much ahead of time. Real personality! Fits bill like todays start up founders. I like her.

  • @johnrotten3268
    @johnrotten3268 Год назад

    I will never understand why women thought those hideous big hats looked good lol... Awful...

  • @sylvia1797
    @sylvia1797 Год назад

    Fun fact: the Countess of Rothes was actually considered a hero during and in the aftermath of the sinking. The steward of her lifeboat was overwhelmed and did not know how to steer, so she took control, both steering and helping to row the boat herself. When their boat got to the Carpathia, she spent her time on the rescue ship helping to care for third-class survivors.

  • @harveythecat
    @harveythecat Год назад

    Frances Fischer is amazing in this role

  • @helend7542
    @helend7542 Год назад

    The countess wasn’t as stuck up as she was portrayed in the movie

  • @Coolygirl031
    @Coolygirl031 Год назад

    Awww when Molly says "Countess" all smiling n sweet. Those bitches :P

  • @JesseNinja321
    @JesseNinja321 Год назад

    There are few parts I could hate in this movie, though Titianic is the spectacular, drama romance movie based on the real-life Titanic sinking in 1912, but this one is downright rude. I mean Ruth immediately finished off her tea party with the friends right before Molly was about to join? What is wrong with that woman?! Molly is a nice supportive passenger, and a supporting character in the movie. What was Ruth thinking?

  • @YD-uq5fi
    @YD-uq5fi Год назад

    1912 : "Once a woman has secured a husband by age 17, there is no need for attending a university." 2023 : "My daughter has $200K in student debt, a degree that is pure feminist indoctrination, and now no man wants to marry her, so she still lives with us at age 35".