hairbandfan1967 I read a story by Joe Eszterhas where after the latest Rocky came out (in about 2007 or so), Stallone said it reminded him about how much he enjoyed writing screenplays, and he wondered aloud as to why he hadn't done that in a long time. "Because you've had your face in pussy for the last 30 years," Eszterhas responded. "Yeah, that's probably right," Stallone retorted.
I am shocked at all the credit Stallone DOES NOT get for his brilliance in writing, directing as well as acting. People just make fun of the outter appearance but this shit went deep...so deep I have not been able to stop thinking about it. It hit me just as hard as Deer Hunter did...Bravo Stallone!!
The smartest part of this whole scene is Stallone's reaction at the end. No horrible one liner or come back to try and break the tension. No screams of anguish, no other speeches about Barney's own regrets. He quietly turns and walks away. That silence at the end of the monologue is what really ratchets the impact up a few notches.
That'd a really good point. In something like an MCU movie there would be some stupid joke after a long monologue like this. Stallone cleverly left that out. Stallone isn't a perfect filmmaker or actor but he's nailed it quite a few times.
Yes it was, but it wasn't a particularly good movie in general. It was as generic an action movie as there was but it had so many stars we grew up watching, so it was a must watch. But still, this scene is great.
There is something about two Men speaking their hearts out to their closest of friends in the dead of night.. Their vulnerabilities, their emotions.. Being a man ain't easy either..
This reminds me of a painting I saw about twenty years ago. It was a Samurai in the style of Feudal Japan, at least I think it was. I just remember it being so damn intense! Until you got to the eyes. They were just two soulless black pits, seemed to go on forever. There was no soul in them. You see, the samurai was like mercenaries are today, warriors for hire, just fighting for whoever had the most coin in their purse. No loyalty. No soul. It’s sad, really.
@@icaroraposo5103 watch some of stallone's parts in rocky 1 & 2 and tell me his acting skills are not first class. in rocky 2, there is a scene where he asks mick to get him back into fighting. mick quickly points out of of rocky's eyes ain't worth 'xhit" and proves it by slapping rock. the power of that hit brings rock back to reality...........
@@icaroraposo5103 I've seen plenty of great performances done by actors and actresses who hadn't gotten nominated. Oscar nominations don't mean jack squat.
"Mickey, we're gonna have you come into this movie, act the SHIT out of one scene, and then basically you can just chill the rest of the time, because it's really just all about explosions."
The fact that these two super manly warriors are almost brought to tears at the end of the monologue... such a deep scene. I don’t think emotional pain has been represented so well on screen before
It's amazing how effortless he makes it seem. He's the greatest living storyteller in the world imo. His timing, his speech pattern, pauses, body language... He's so original.
Something I love about Rourke’s acting here is the dialogue. How he delivers it, with the slight stuttering and repeating of certain phrases. It’s just like how human beings *actually* talk in situations like that. And it is beautiful.
Sometimes when we watch a movie, there maybe a scene that sticks out and stays with us forever...this is one of those. I may have watched expendables a thousand times but this scene still gives me goosebumps.
Mickey just has this amazing ability to take a cameo and turn into the most memorable moment of the film. His cameo in Body Heat, his Oscar-worthy, uncredited 3 minutes in Sean Penn's The Pledge, his deleted scene from The Thin Red Line and then, of course, this moment.
This is why the first expendables was so good. They were all severely damaged war dogs. It wasn't just an 80s collab. They were humans. The sequels were just 80s action popcorn movies. And there's nothing wrong with that. But the first one had actual heart.
I agree with you10000%. Because he made a bad decision to have plastic surgery..that's all we hear about him today...that's all that is talked about. His acting is legendary...Rumblefish, The Wrestler, 9 1/2 weeks...all brilliant movies and he is the reason...so what he messed with his face...(and a very handsome face it once was)..he is still pure genius and an artist in my opinion who gets way too little recognition.
This monologue is the last best piece of writing Stallone came up with. Mickey performed it to perfection and the way at the end Stallone just walked away without a word proves that as a director he knows the audience of an action film is not stupid enough to warrant a punch line at the end of every scene. I don't think Sly has directed anything since he directed this film. Be that as it may, it is a great directorial swansong 👍👍👍👍
"I was gonna paint this for her and, ah, y'know what I'm gonna finish it. Then I'm just gonna smash the shit out of it." I can relate to that so much. My girlfriend wanted me to paint the cabinets in our kitchen from yellow to Navy blue. We broke up under truly shit circumstances so she never got to see them, but I'd already started on three so I just kept on going. Never got around to the smashing part, though.
I just watched this movie for the first time ever yesterday. I was shocked and stunned at the brilliance in the writing...even though it was a smash em' up, crash boom bang action movie...this monolouge crushed me...body, mind and soul. I have not been able to stop thinking about this...Mickey Rourke should have won SOMETHING for this part. Do we ever stop to think about what these men from war carry home in their hearts and minds when they come home? I didn't...not until today.
Susan Martin Unfortunately nobody thinks about it, only the ones who were somehow related to some kind of violence first hand (soldiers, war victims and refugees)...the rest of our society just think about their next paycheque, how to look cool, Kim Kardashian and her transgender stepfather ...by the way, I like your comment, God bless.
Susan Martin Stallone wrote this :) and from what I know, Mick had a hard time memorizing it. So they wrote it for him. That's why he's looking down in this scene to read it on paper :)
TheSlystallonefan that's a made up bullshit, Rourke came up with the suggestion to make his character deep...he did the same for Iron Man 2...he never takes his job that light as you want to make it sound....by the way, I speak sarcasm too ;)
Susan Martin it was Sylvester Stallone that wrote the screen play along with being one of producers and Director besides being the star. Mickey Rourke was filming his scenes along with his scenes for Iron Man 2 at the time where was playing the villain.
TheSlystallonefan Rourke didn’t forget his lines he came up with the idea of making his career dark and is suffering from PTSD from years of killing and why is shown upset in scene that also no longer goes with The Expendables on their jobs as done with killing and chooses to be the man that gives them the work
In war, in all that killing, one of the hardest things to deal with is innocence being lost. In Kosovo, I saw mass graves, dead bodies, and small arms skirmishes. Nothing was worse for me than seeing a kid run naked toward our convoy, in the dead of winter, for help. And all we did was just keep moving.... never stopped. 21 years later... I still see it happening.... this scene gets me every time
Yep, watching regular people get hurt is the hardest part, because they didn't ask for this situation, just had the rotten luck of being born in the wrong country at the wrong time. When an enemy dies, hell even when a fellow comrade in arms dies, it at least makes sense to you in a fucked up way because we chose that life and that profession, so it comes with the territory. But when you watch people who never had any desire to be within 100 miles of a war having to deal with it on a day to day basis it's gut-wrenching and will eat at your soul for a long time.
Mickey made you believe this character's past with the emotion he put into this scene. One of the best monologues in recent memory by far. Just goes to show what a fantastic actor he is.
Fantastic scene. Watching this in the cinema I wasn't expecting it. One of my fave moments in a movie. "if I'd saved that woman I mightve save what was left of my soul" Wow
Was just watching this film again and this scene still floors me. The alcohol, the "Dracula black" he's talking about, I hear exactly what he's saying. Bravo Mick, you should've took home the statue for The Wrestler imo
I cannot stop watching this. His acting is masterful. It's so out of place in the movie but beautifully shot. Even with poor dialogue ("Dracula black") he still manages to come off powerful, believable, and emotional
For sure. Did you ever see "Inferno: The Making of The Expendables"? Such an awesome documentary, showing how not only is he a great writer, but also director, and of course, actor. Definitely reccomend checking it out. It's on the Blu ray copy of the dvd, and on RUclips free with ads. Makes you love Sly even more!
Rourke is so AMAZING AND UNDERRATED !! I am always in awe of his acting and I swear when he was in The Wrestler - he was incredible and should've won the Oscar that year!! He blows me away in everything he does - just simply freaking the BEST!! I LOVE MICKEY ROURKE ALWAYS !!
“After taking all them lives here was one that I could’ve saved but didn’t and what I realized later on is if I saved that woman I would’ve saved what’s left of my soul”
As a veteran, and with a fellow veteran who was on a target with you, this writing of conversation was a close hit to home for me. Usually after a bit of drinking. A good scene and both legendary actors did it well.
Wow powerful I have watched this scene tons of times and still come back. Great actor and slys writing and directing etc has to be the most underrated actor in Hollywood. Brilliant piece of movie magic.
Got to agree that this scene made the movie. It gave it an actual smidgen if feeling and plot. That's why the next two stunk. They forgot there has to be some sort of acting for a movie to be good.
What is so eerie about this scene is that it rings true. Right now, I'm facing a similar situation with a friend. I am doing my best to help her, though. I hope I could save her. I know what I have to do, but time is running out. Yet, I have a friend who is facing a similar situation with me (same one I'm trying to help). I have always noticed this scene in the film, and I have always loved it.
Say what you want about the movie but this was the best scene in both expendable movies. This is what was missing in the second. A heart filled scene like this give a "tool" so to speak an outlet with the fans
I briefly scanned through the comments to see if anyone had mentioned this and I didn't see it, so I'm going to bring it up. Barney is trying to understand why he can't let go of the girl refusing to leave. His conscience is quietly wondering about it. He's wearing a black shirt, but standing under a moderate light. Tool has his demons in front of him reliving the story as he tells it, while sitting in the shadows, just barely illuminated. Barney is still partially in the light, while Tool sits in the dark. It's a damn good trick in the lighting to show where the characters are emotionally and mentally.
@@angelmunoz34 I appreciate your compliment. It was just something I noticed watching the scene. The one living in his own mental hell was in shadow, and the one trying to find his way out was still somewhat in the light. It's really a creative way to show where the characters are in their mental states, honestly the credit goes to the screenwriter (I'm assuming stalone) who chose to have it lit that way.
I watched this film because I wanted to see action and violence ....... But this scene takes my breath away and surprisingly I like this movie because of this scene
Stallone wrote this. He doesn't get enough credit as a screenwriter.
hairbandfan1967 I read a story by Joe Eszterhas where after the latest Rocky came out (in about 2007 or so), Stallone said it reminded him about how much he enjoyed writing screenplays, and he wondered aloud as to why he hadn't done that in a long time.
"Because you've had your face in pussy for the last 30 years," Eszterhas responded.
"Yeah, that's probably right," Stallone retorted.
I am shocked at all the credit Stallone DOES NOT get for his brilliance in writing, directing as well as acting. People just make fun of the outter appearance but this shit went deep...so deep I have not been able to stop thinking about it. It hit me just as hard as Deer Hunter did...Bravo Stallone!!
So true
He also wrote the rest of this film, but yeah, he wrote rocky, I didn’t know that as a kid
The smartest part of this whole scene is Stallone's reaction at the end. No horrible one liner or come back to try and break the tension. No screams of anguish, no other speeches about Barney's own regrets. He quietly turns and walks away. That silence at the end of the monologue is what really ratchets the impact up a few notches.
1000 percent agreed it amplified it's power times 100!
Stallone doesn't get the credit he deserves for instincts like that, but goddamn I'm sure Rourke helped A LOT!
Exactly it’s amazing.
That'd a really good point. In something like an MCU movie there would be some stupid joke after a long monologue like this. Stallone cleverly left that out. Stallone isn't a perfect filmmaker or actor but he's nailed it quite a few times.
Barney unleashed
"If I might have saved that woman, I might have saved what was left of my soul"
Gets me every time.
DAMN RIGHT,
hands down the best scene in this film
yes it was
Yes it is.
I just uploaded a video paying homage to Mickey Rourke’s scene ( featuring the Churchwarden pipe and Knife ). Check it out !! Thanks
Yes...indeed...
Yes it was, but it wasn't a particularly good movie in general. It was as generic an action movie as there was but it had so many stars we grew up watching, so it was a must watch.
But still, this scene is great.
There is something about two Men speaking their hearts out to their closest of friends in the dead of night.. Their vulnerabilities, their emotions.. Being a man ain't easy either..
Spot on my friend.
Raises a glass
Damm straight
Truth
This reminds me of a painting I saw about twenty years ago. It was a Samurai in the style of Feudal Japan, at least I think it was. I just remember it being so damn intense! Until you got to the eyes. They were just two soulless black pits, seemed to go on forever. There was no soul in them.
You see, the samurai was like mercenaries are today, warriors for hire, just fighting for whoever had the most coin in their purse. No loyalty. No soul. It’s sad, really.
Gotta say for an action film. I wasn't expecting an oscar moving performance
@@icaroraposo5103 watch some of stallone's parts in rocky 1 & 2 and tell me his acting skills are not first class. in rocky 2, there is a scene where he asks mick to get him back into fighting. mick quickly points out of of rocky's eyes ain't worth 'xhit" and proves it by slapping rock. the power of that hit brings rock back to reality...........
@@hoss3250 Exactly!
@@icaroraposo5103
Stallone was nominated Oscar 2 Times for Acting whereas Rourke was nominated once
@@icaroraposo5103 Watch jet Li in unleashed
@@icaroraposo5103 I've seen plenty of great performances done by actors and actresses who hadn't gotten nominated. Oscar nominations don't mean jack squat.
"Mickey, we're gonna have you come into this movie, act the SHIT out of one scene, and then basically you can just chill the rest of the time, because it's really just all about explosions."
I thought it then and still do, he was the best part of the whole movie
Stallone probably didn’t even need to act for this scene. He looks mesmerized by Rourke’s performance. Natural reaction.
Yip
The fact that these two super manly warriors are almost brought to tears at the end of the monologue... such a deep scene. I don’t think emotional pain has been represented so well on screen before
Strongest of men cry, the weak ones hide.
It's amazing how effortless he makes it seem. He's the greatest living storyteller in the world imo. His timing, his speech pattern, pauses, body language... He's so original.
Finally someone gets it … Micky Rourke the hidden gem … up there with the deniros and pacinos easily
This is the scene that gave EXPENDABLES a soul!
Well said
Mickey uses his dark and troubled past to make scenes like this memorable. He truly is the underdog of Hollywood and that's why we love him.
Something I love about Rourke’s acting here is the dialogue. How he delivers it, with the slight stuttering and repeating of certain phrases. It’s just like how human beings *actually* talk in situations like that. And it is beautiful.
I can never got over how great this monologue is...
"just the human parts, brother".. the way that gets me
“What dried up?”
“Just belief man…just belief in the soul”
Sometimes when we watch a movie, there maybe a scene that sticks out and stays with us forever...this is one of those. I may have watched expendables a thousand times but this scene still gives me goosebumps.
Mickey just has this amazing ability to take a cameo and turn into the most memorable moment of the film. His cameo in Body Heat, his Oscar-worthy, uncredited 3 minutes in Sean Penn's The Pledge, his deleted scene from The Thin Red Line and then, of course, this moment.
You nailed it.
He was great in Rainmaker
It can be taken for granted but the character would be much more boring and less powerful without Rourkes presence
This is why the first expendables was so good. They were all severely damaged war dogs. It wasn't just an 80s collab. They were humans. The sequels were just 80s action popcorn movies. And there's nothing wrong with that. But the first one had actual heart.
Great emotional scene here. give him an oscar.
I agree with you10000%. Because he made a bad decision to have plastic surgery..that's all we hear about him today...that's all that is talked about. His acting is legendary...Rumblefish, The Wrestler, 9 1/2 weeks...all brilliant movies and he is the reason...so what he messed with his face...(and a very handsome face it once was)..he is still pure genius and an artist in my opinion who gets way too little recognition.
Dracula black is right, scary in there. I always come back to this scene once in a while.
you can see at the end how Stalone was about to cry out some real tears.. remarkable scene, totally love it!
This monologue is the last best piece of writing Stallone came up with. Mickey performed it to perfection and the way at the end Stallone just walked away without a word proves that as a director he knows the audience of an action film is not stupid enough to warrant a punch line at the end of every scene.
I don't think Sly has directed anything since he directed this film. Be that as it may, it is a great directorial swansong 👍👍👍👍
"I was gonna paint this for her and, ah, y'know what I'm gonna finish it. Then I'm just gonna smash the shit out of it."
I can relate to that so much. My girlfriend wanted me to paint the cabinets in our kitchen from yellow to Navy blue. We broke up under truly shit circumstances so she never got to see them, but I'd already started on three so I just kept on going.
Never got around to the smashing part, though.
This scene was moving , .. hence the reason it has me looking for it on RUclips ... Very beautiful
Now that's a performance with depth and resonance.
I just watched this movie for the first time ever yesterday. I was shocked and stunned at the brilliance in the writing...even though it was a smash em' up, crash boom bang action movie...this monolouge crushed me...body, mind and soul. I have not been able to stop thinking about this...Mickey Rourke should have won SOMETHING for this part. Do we ever stop to think about what these men from war carry home in their hearts and minds when they come home? I didn't...not until today.
Susan Martin Unfortunately nobody thinks about it, only the ones who were somehow related to some kind of violence first hand (soldiers, war victims and refugees)...the rest of our society just think about their next paycheque, how to look cool, Kim Kardashian and her transgender stepfather ...by the way, I like your comment, God bless.
Susan Martin Stallone wrote this :) and from what I know, Mick had a hard time memorizing it. So they wrote it for him. That's why he's looking down in this scene to read it on paper :)
TheSlystallonefan that's a made up bullshit, Rourke came up with the suggestion to make his character deep...he did the same for Iron Man 2...he never takes his job that light as you want to make it sound....by the way, I speak sarcasm too ;)
Susan Martin it was Sylvester Stallone that wrote the screen play along with being one of producers and Director besides being the star. Mickey Rourke was filming his scenes along with his scenes for Iron Man 2 at the time where was playing the villain.
TheSlystallonefan Rourke didn’t forget his lines he came up with the idea of making his career dark and is suffering from PTSD from years of killing and why is shown upset in scene that also no longer goes with The Expendables on their jobs as done with killing and chooses to be the man that gives them the work
In war, in all that killing, one of the hardest things to deal with is innocence being lost. In Kosovo, I saw mass graves, dead bodies, and small arms skirmishes. Nothing was worse for me than seeing a kid run naked toward our convoy, in the dead of winter, for help. And all we did was just keep moving.... never stopped. 21 years later... I still see it happening.... this scene gets me every time
Yep, watching regular people get hurt is the hardest part, because they didn't ask for this situation, just had the rotten luck of being born in the wrong country at the wrong time. When an enemy dies, hell even when a fellow comrade in arms dies, it at least makes sense to you in a fucked up way because we chose that life and that profession, so it comes with the territory. But when you watch people who never had any desire to be within 100 miles of a war having to deal with it on a day to day basis it's gut-wrenching and will eat at your soul for a long time.
The fact that Tool and Barney are crying shows that they still have souls. They may be damaged, but they still have them.
Holy smokes, that was a performance!
Mickey made you believe this character's past with the emotion he put into this scene. One of the best monologues in recent memory by far. Just goes to show what a fantastic actor he is.
Damn. Mickey's performance here is incredible. The way he delivers those lines is award-worthy
and the way he broken his Words when he remember that moment. the way he tell the story make You easy imagine the scene Word by Word. A Master piece
@@emmanuellegonzalez3725 His lips tremble when he says "I see this woman". That's masterful
It's a shame he deserved the oscar for the wrestler.
This was one of my favorite scenes from this movie. Mickey Rourke definitely shined in this scene.
The best scene of the movie.
The greatest actor of our time. He always makes a line his own. I love Mickey Rourke.
Fantastic scene. Watching this in the cinema I wasn't expecting it. One of my fave moments in a movie.
"if I'd saved that woman I mightve save what was left of my soul"
Wow
" I might have saved what was left of my soul, ya know"
It's scenes like this that this franchise is missing
Payton Decorah And blood in the third one. It looked like a game with parental controls!
"And i aint feeling no pain now"....so numbing and relate-able to me
Whole lotta life lessons in this scene. Incredible performance.
i saw this movie in theatres and i said to myself, "whats real acting doing in this movie?" this is one of my favorite scenes in movies, period.
Was just watching this film again and this scene still floors me. The alcohol, the "Dracula black" he's talking about, I hear exactly what he's saying. Bravo Mick, you should've took home the statue for The Wrestler imo
I cannot stop watching this. His acting is masterful. It's so out of place in the movie but beautifully shot. Even with poor dialogue ("Dracula black") he still manages to come off powerful, believable, and emotional
Just a powerful scene. Router is a gifted actor.
What a scene man! what a scene! 🙌🙌🙌
Stallone is a hell of a writer
For sure. Did you ever see "Inferno: The Making of The Expendables"? Such an awesome documentary, showing how not only is he a great writer, but also director, and of course, actor. Definitely reccomend checking it out. It's on the Blu ray copy of the dvd, and on RUclips free with ads. Makes you love Sly even more!
Rourke is so AMAZING AND UNDERRATED !! I am always in awe of his acting and I swear when he was in The Wrestler - he was incredible and should've won the Oscar that year!! He blows me away in everything he does - just simply freaking the BEST!! I LOVE MICKEY ROURKE ALWAYS !!
I still dont get how Mickey and Al Pacino didnt get the Oscar for “The Wrestler” and “Dog day afternoon” respectively.
I never will.
Mickey Rourke is just plain mesmerizing in this role…I’ve always remembered this scene!
Was by far the best piece of acting in all the films.
“After taking all them lives here was one that I could’ve saved but didn’t and what I realized later on is if I saved that woman I would’ve saved what’s left of my soul”
Really one of the best monologues of all time
As a veteran, and with a fellow veteran who was on a target with you, this writing of conversation was a close hit to home for me. Usually after a bit of drinking. A good scene and both legendary actors did it well.
greatest moment in cinema history!
Mickey doing what Micky does -- acting the shit out of a scene.
Another one bites the dust brother . Story of my life ...
this is the deepest scene and monologue from any movie ive ever seen. it deserves the internet.
I really liked this from the movie. Rourke's slight facial twitches and the way he delivered those lines, I truly felt for his character. Great job.
Best scene out of all the expendable movies
Wow powerful I have watched this scene tons of times and still come back. Great actor and slys writing and directing etc has to be the most underrated actor in Hollywood. Brilliant piece of movie magic.
2:45 💔 Gets me every time
1:59 I love how the line " And I aint feeling no pain now " syncs with the crescendo of the music
This acting is so good that it doesn’t even seem like acting
Only a true actor can make you feel. Mickey Rourke has been through a lot in his life and it was him talking in this scene not a character.
Thank you for posting this scene. My favorite part of the movie. Absolutely heartbreaking.
Is this what made Stallone go back and save Sandra?
After taking all them lives here's one I could of saved but didn't ......Dracula Black.... Most inspiring...
The greatest scene in this movie!
In case anyone is wondering: Slivovitz
It's spirit made from plums.
This is a homage to Albert Camus’s ‘the fall’ wonderfully acted by these two. What a scene.
Stallone walked away at the end like damn this man really just stole the movie
A very touching scene in an action movie...
3:13 that's me when shit gets too emotional. "nothing to do here"
Same, btw hope you doing fine.
One of my favorite monologues, of all time.
Got to agree that this scene made the movie. It gave it an actual smidgen if feeling and plot. That's why the next two stunk. They forgot there has to be some sort of acting for a movie to be good.
Metallica’s song fade to black comes to mind when I watch this scene. Rourke killed it and it’s probably my favorite scene of the whole trilogy
As everyone says - not the greatest movie in the world - but this has to hit you deep somewhere.
This is beyond exquisite.
Dark. Very dark.
Yet so arresting.
Wow that was a very moving scene
Your soul struggles between good and evil. As long as there is still a struggle, God is still working on you.
Amen
by far my favorite scene in any movie. especially when it hits home.
this scene proves again,that Mickey Rourke deserves a goddamn Oscar
this performance is really out of this world... a true jim raynor character. heartbreaking.
I looked up this scene. I had a thirst that needed quenching
This monolugue is torturous. The darkness that permeates every part of his being is bone chilling.
Mickey Rourke is a fuckin legend
The human parts, brother...
Scenes like this are what the later movies were missing.
What is so eerie about this scene is that it rings true. Right now, I'm facing a similar situation with a friend. I am doing my best to help her, though. I hope I could save her. I know what I have to do, but time is running out. Yet, I have a friend who is facing a similar situation with me (same one I'm trying to help).
I have always noticed this scene in the film, and I have always loved it.
Incredible actor. So natural
Say what you want about the movie but this was the best scene in both expendable movies. This is what was missing in the second. A heart filled scene like this give a "tool" so to speak an outlet with the fans
this is the bomb. completly outta left field. exactly whats needed these days
I briefly scanned through the comments to see if anyone had mentioned this and I didn't see it, so I'm going to bring it up.
Barney is trying to understand why he can't let go of the girl refusing to leave. His conscience is quietly wondering about it. He's wearing a black shirt, but standing under a moderate light.
Tool has his demons in front of him reliving the story as he tells it, while sitting in the shadows, just barely illuminated.
Barney is still partially in the light, while Tool sits in the dark. It's a damn good trick in the lighting to show where the characters are emotionally and mentally.
Your good you 👉 ,your fucking good.
@@angelmunoz34 I appreciate your compliment. It was just something I noticed watching the scene. The one living in his own mental hell was in shadow, and the one trying to find his way out was still somewhat in the light. It's really a creative way to show where the characters are in their mental states, honestly the credit goes to the screenwriter (I'm assuming stalone) who chose to have it lit that way.
@@benjaminrussell3458 some heavy shit man
Always remember it. Heavy duty scene. The magic of mickey and stallone.
Watching this beautiful scene in the middle of this ridiculous movie is like finding a beautiful poem tucked into a porn magazine.
As a movie I feel that this film is the best of the franchise!
Truth and right words from the bottom of a heart, these are precious.
This was such a good scene..😢
Mickey Rourke is truly a great actor!!!
he is an awesome actor
I watched this film because I wanted to see action and violence ....... But this scene takes my breath away and surprisingly I like this movie because of this scene