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[Les Miserables] - 10th anniversary [At the End of the Day]
[Les Miserables] - 10th anniversary [At the End of the Day]
The Royal Albert Hall 레미제라블 자막
The Royal Albert Hall 레미제라블 자막
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Видео
[Les Miserables] - 10th anniversary [ Prologue - Work Song ]
Просмотров 84 тыс.14 лет назад
[Les Miserables] - 10th anniversary Work Song The Royal Albert Hall 레미제라블 자막
If you have not seen Les Mis live, you have not seen Le Mis, the Greatest of all Musicals, end of.
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If this isn't a brilliant commentary on the world today, nothing is.
すごい😂 力強くてすき💗
The arrangement and production of this particular performance of this song is one of the most beautiful and fascinating things I've ever heard. It all weaves in and out and comes together in perfect precision!!! It is extraordinary!
Words are very powerful things… poor Fantine. She did nothing wrong or illegal.. she was just trying to keep her baby alive and those horrible innkeepers were clearly taking advantage of her financially too.
It's a shame that poverty and slavery still exists among us in the 21th century. It makes it hard to watch it in a musical.
This is my favourite of the modern musicals. I've seen it several times on different stages plus the film and other productions on DVD. The one constant is that I cry like a baby. Beginning to end. The music, lyrics, and story get to me every time.
Can anybody tell me who plays the nasty lady co-worker?
Les Mis the Greatest of all Musicals, and I will fight anyone who disagrees.
Hear Hear.... it will always remain my biggest regret in life, not having been at the original performance with the original cast.
Sadly this sounds like what people are facing today
Nearly 200 years later. Not much has changed.
Too fast, if only it was like 15 present slower...
Wrong it’s perfect tempo.
Ironically leaving Fantine in the streets was Valjean's biggest crime, and the only one that did not break any laws.
Valjean is probably worried throughout the entire book of getting caught by Javert and getting his facade blown off which led him to lead Fantine on the street. But I think that's probably made him have some mistakes during book he also made the mistake of not letting Cosette out that much which isn't a crime but it doesn't get Cosette much time in the story.
He did not do so directly, though. He was naive and trusted his foreman, who was actually a woman in the original book. And even in the musical, he does instruct the foreman to 'be as patient as you can.' Personally, I consider the biggest crime to be a tie between Eponine not realizing she could and should find someone a lot less shallow than Marius and raising Cosette so sheltered that the girl ended up without a lick of sense. Marius and Cosette deserve each other, lol.
The ironic thing in the book is that Valjean made it a point that his employees had to follow a code of morality (thus why the male and female workers were kept separate), and it was because of this very code that the forewoman went to the trouble of travelling to the Thénardiers’ inn to find out about Cosette. So it was because of his attempting to do good that Fantine was ruined.
@@anonymoussaga8723 Exactly. Valjean is a deliberately flawed, realistic protagonist. He makes mistakes. But he also admits them and really does his best to atone for them.
The foreman is proof that the concept of an incel was not a new one.
Wait till the next scene when that posh cunt reports her to the police
French version: Prisoners: Have pity, pity, Your life you drag along, Have pity, pity, By the ball of your chain, Prisoner 1: The sun is burning, It's hot as hell below, Prisoners: Have pity, pity, There's twenty years to go. Prisoner 2: I did no wrong, Sweet Jesus, I implore you, Prisoners: Have pity, pity, Sweet Jesus doesn't care. Prisoner 3: I know she'll love me, I know that she'll be true. Prisoners: Who knows? Who knows? No one wants her but you. Prisoner 4: When I get free, I will avenge myself Without pity. Prisoners: Have pity, pity, How longer must we suffer? Prisoner 5: Have mercy, Lord, And rather let me die! Prisoners: Have pity, pity, Your life you drag along, Have pity, pity, By the ball of your chain. Javert: Now bring me prisoner 24601, Your time is up and your parole has begun, Do you understand? Valjean: Yes, that I am free. Javert: No. It means you get your yellow ticket of leave, You were a thief! Valjean: I stole a loaf of bread. Javert: By breaking and entering, Valjean: I broke a window pane. To feed my sister's child, I had to pay dearly. Javert: You will pay again Unless you learn to respect the law. Valjean: I know the meaning of those nineteen years, The law stole from me. Javert: Five years for what you did, The rest because you tried to flee, Yes, 24601 Valjean: My name is Jean Valjean. Javert: And I'm Javert. Do not forget my name. Never forget me, 24601. Prisoners: Have pity, pity, Your life you drag along, Have pity, pity, By the ball of your chain. Valjean: Freedom at last, A new world dawns I breathe again the fresh air. In this new world, let me see, If any hope remains for me.
French version: The Poor: At the end of the day, it has passed for nothing, Man is deaf and blind to the sorrows of his neighbor, We the poor know in advance, That tomorrow and all the days that follow, Will hold no difference for us. One day less to be living. At the end of the day, it has passed without joys, And you have to go back in the rain and the cold. You implore the bourgeois who ignore you, To give you at least a farthing, They throw only one to you, before going to sleep, By having a good conscience. At the end of the day there's another day dawning, It is necessary that we will go on strike, With the storm and the earthquake, And hunger in the land, that we will feed With those who never had a chance At happiness. Foreman: At the end of the day, we get what we deserve, And the lazy have little to feed their children. Worker 1: We must feed our children Worker 2: And earn our living while doing it Worker 1: But at least we have something to eat, Woman 1: And something to drink! Workers: We are so lucky! Woman 1: Have you seen how the foreman is fuming today? And his wandering hands are spreading bad luck? Woman 2: It's the fault of Fantine, who won't give him his way, Woman 3: And earns her pay by sitting around. Woman 4: And the boss, he does not know, That his team is still in heat, Woman 2: If Fantine doesn't watch out, what will happen? Some misfortune will befall her. Women: At the end of the day, it's another day over. And we get little more than a soup for the day, We have to scrape to get by, And pay the landlord with our salary, They still scrape us dry of every penny, And we still have to pay, At the end of the day. Factory girl: What are you hiding, my pretty like that? So tell us, Fantine, what are the news? Oh! "Dear Fantine, your child is ill, Send us money or she will die." Fantine: Give me that letter, It is none of your business. You have a husband who is enough for you, Live your own life, and let me have mine, Who are you to give me lessons of virtue? Valjean: Seperate them, I order you, This is a factory I run, Not a herd that I lead. Come on, ladies settle down, I am the mayor of this city, I charge you to restore order, And see that everyone does their job, Foreman: Who began this mess? Factory girl: I do not know, Other than that she began it. Woman 1: She has a kid she hides, we can imagine why. Woman 2: She has to pay a man, And we can guess how she does it, Woman 3: And she earns her salary by sleeping around, She's the one who began it. Fantine: Yes, it's true there is a child Who has only me in the world. Her father left us to fend for ourselves. I have to pay to raise my Cosette And earn my living too, I am an honest woman, Monsieur, you understand. All: At the end of the day, we're another day older, And this black sheep still infests the flock. She rolls out of her beds and into palaces, You must send her away or we'll all lose our places, And we will have to pay, At the end of the day. Foreman: I should have seen it coming, I might have known, That this bitch has her claws at the ready. Here is the virtuous Fantine, The virgin of this factory, You have bought me with your tears, Yet in the night you make love with men, Factory girl: If you knew it, She'd be the only one in town Women: Crying like a crocodile, Factory girl: You must sack the whore Women: Sack the girl today! Foreman: Right, my girl. You're out!
I don't know where you got this but I'm french and haven't seen those french lyrics anywhere.
Okay, it seems you posted here the lyrics of the french version that was made before the american version and not the lyrics of the french version that was made before the american version.
Longest goosebumps i had in my life.
Nothing ever changes.
Sad, but true
meet Fantine, a random woman who sends an incriminating letter to work for some reason.
I'm so upset they didn't make a movie with this cast. The man who sings the Master of the House song is THE MAN for that song.
He also played one of the scottish nobles in brave heart
Well,the movie was made almost 30 years after this version,the guy who plays Valjean in this version plays Bishop Myriel in the movie
Alun Armstrong, legend
He created the role!
@@MsSpiffz no it is the french who did
Just not the same without the DX7 synth like in the original cast recording
this is soooooo good
Look down, look down Don't look 'em in the eye Look down, look down, You're here until you die [CONVICT ONE] The sun is strong It's hot as hell below [PRISONER] Look down, look down, There's twenty years to go [CONVICT TWO] I've done no wrong! Sweet Jesus, hear my prayer! [PRISONERS] Look down look down, Sweet Jesus doesn't care [CONVICT THREE] I know she'll wait, I know that she'll be true! [PRISONERS] Look down, look down, They've all forgotten you [CONVICT FOUR] When I get free ya won't see me Here for dust! [PRISONERS] Look down, look down Don't look 'em in the eye [CONVICT FIVE] How long, oh Lord Before you let me die? [PRISONERS] Look down, look down, You'll always be a slave Look down, look down, You're standing in your grave [JAVERT] Now bring me prisoner 24601 Your time is up And your parole's begun You know what that means. [VALJEAN] Yes, it means I'm free. [JAVERT] No! It means you get Your yellow ticket-of-leave You are a thief [VALJEAN] I stole a loaf of bread. [JAVERT] You robbed a house. [VALJEAN] I broke a window pane. My sister's child was close to death And we were starving. [JAVERT] You will starve again Unless you learn the meaning of the law. [VALJEAN] I know the meaning of those 19 years A slave of the law [JAVERT] Five years for what you did The rest because you tried to run Yes, 24601. [VALJEAN] My name is Jean Valjean [JAVERT] And I am Javert Do not forget my name! Do not forget me, 24601.
As much as I LOVE this, will we one day get to see them actually putting on the musical, as opposed to just standing around singing at each other?
is that what they usually do? i thought this was just a special show
its called a concert not the musical
@@nolanhewitt2563 No I understand that it’d just that you never see copies of them actually doing the musical. Not all of us can afford tickets to NYC/Broadway
Yeah. I wanted a film stage version. Cause while the show can be carried without the sets and all they add so much.
@@virginiaseybold This show is actually in The Royal Albert Hall in London, UK
A fine example of what happens when the majority of society has their labor sold out from under them and can barely scrape by, when women have internalized society's misogyny and on top of that they're pitted against each other in order to ensure their own income and survival, and a man thinks he's entitled to a woman's body
Why were the workers so against her?
Yvonne Carmody they were just a bunch of haters
Also she was beautiful?
Because they thought she was an amoral woman who was having sex and children out of wedlock, but what they didn't bother to heed or understand was that when Fantine was a teenager, she fell passionately in love with Félix Tholomyès, one of a quartet of rich college students and had hoped to marry him, and yes she did have sex outside of marriage and had her only child Euphrasie (whom she lovingly nicknamed Cosette). One day, he invited her to on an outing. They finish the day at a restaurant, only to be abandoned by him with a goodbye note. Fantine is left heartbroken. However, she can't afford to take care of Cosette in the expensive city all on her own, so she decides to move back to her old town of Montreuil-sur-Mer, but she can't possibly care for her daughter and go to work at the same time - so she makes the bad decision to leave her with the Thenardiers, with the intent it will only be temporary and thinking they will take care of her until she can earn enough money to return for Cosette and take care of her on her own. So in the meantime, she tries to send them money for her upkeep until she can come to bring Cosette home. Sadly, this exchange of money is found out by one of the employees and she misunderstands and accuses Fantine of being, essentially, a whore and she loses her job - and this is what happens in this song.
Emily Greene wow so detailed. Thanks a million : )
(Also because of internalized misogyny)
이노래를 영화로 들으면서 명대사가 생각났는데 전쟁을 겪은 아이와 안겪은 아이의 정의는 다르다고....
겪
겪
한글자막 넘~고마워요^^
whether korean or chinese, whoever gives it a shit
It's funny how many people think that the subtitles are Chinese
Obvious Korean is obvious
lol -coughs- That's Korean -coughs-
Wow.. Really? This cast is much better then the 25 cast. Colm is perfect
Only now do I realize the irony of Fantine becoming what the workers accused her of as a result of them forcing her to lose her job.
This comes up more often in Les Miserables. For example, Valjean stole some bread, got heavily punished and treated as an outcast on parole, leading to him stealing from the bishop
@@thingiezz And this is why Valjean understands
Also, because of Fantine, Valjean absconds and likely the factory is sold and a lot of people are sacked, so by kicking down, the factory workers are also kickong themselves.
There's a lot of irony in Les Miserables specifically something terrible happens to the character then something good happens.
@@jeffreyzheng8875 Well Valjean's whole arc is keeping the whole promise of the bishop.
yes, colm wilkinson. He played the orginal Jean Valjean.
Reflects school perfectly :p
Yes. Colm Wilkinson
Is the actor for Jean Valjean here same with the actor for the Bishop of the Les Miserables 2012 movie?
Yes
we're watching this in music class and this so far is my favorite song
Yeah. I kind of like Alfie Boe better but this one is good too. But I love Alfie's "My name is Jean Valjean" and "Yes it means I'm free" lines better
It's true that Alfie Boe has a technically stronger voice, but I love the tone and strain in Colm Wilkinson's voice. It adds so much emotion and conviction. They're both great though--so great that I really couldn't choose a favorite between the two of them.
Colm and Philip = Perfection. <3
아 멋지다 대박....ㅠㅜ
7년전이라 뒷북이긴 한데 저런 개막장상황을 이렇게 웅장하게 표현할 생각을 어케했나 싶어요
I'll admit. He's probably better than this one. However, this performance is a better one than the 25th anniversary. That one is just terrible by comparison.
Colm Wilkinson is the only true Jean Valjean, the part was written for his voice. Colm Wilkinson is the only person that hasn't played Jean Valjean, he IS Jean Valjean.
i love his voice.....
agreed
youd have to have it mounted to the front of you or have it between you and the jetpack and hope that you were high enough to free yourself from it during a free fall and deploy your chute.. not totally viable imo
i dont know why this debate is on a les miserables video but, have you ever heard of plan b "the parachute"
Jet packs will never be viable not even in your grand childrens time. If it fails you gona drop like a stone...
lol nothing's really original anymore, everything that could be invented has been invented. jet packs etc etc its just improving on from here on out.