Pontypool (2008) Grant Mazzy's Monologue *High Quality*
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- Опубликовано: 14 авг 2011
- Phenomenal actor Stephen McHattie performs his monologue from the film Pontypool. I do not own this video, nor the rights to it. All rights belong to Ponty Up Pictures and Shadow Shows, Content Lizenz Agentur, etc.
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This movie is horrifically underrated.
It's a film I discovered by accident, it is brilliantly written, and it'll be with me forever. It reminds me of In The Mouth Of Madness a little, with the radio broadcast heard right at the end about the spread of the mass killing which is eerily similar to the reports Mazzy hears as the film develops.
Probably my favorite movie and I stumbled on it by accident. I see this movie becoming a cult classic as more and more people discover it. Well written and acting is superb!
rootsm3 I agree. Love this movie. Don't regret not checking it out
Not to mean a true Zombie horror fan. I watch at least one zombie movie a night.
You prolly dont give a damn but does someone know of a tool to get back into an Instagram account..?
I stupidly forgot the account password. I appreciate any assistance you can give me!
Was writing a dissertation paper on Rolande Barthes when I first saw this. Words cannot express how much I love Pontypool.
I had the pleasure of seeing this film at the Melbourne International Film Festival nearly a decade ago, it's a shame not everyone gets the chance to sit and watch this film in a packed theatre! definitely one of my favourite viewing experiences
Stephen McHattie is a total badass :D
That is maybe my all-time favourite monlogue in film. Wonderful.
This is a movie that doesn't get old.
I really wanna watch this
this scene gives me chills every time i see it
Just watched this again recently, and it really is an amazingly effective horror movie. Minimalist and imaginative with great dialogue (that never slows down). Top notch acting. Classic. Also, I am from Ontario, Canada ,So this movie feels special to me on many levels.
Love this movie, but somehow forgot this great scene. Holds more truth, today, than I could ever have imagined possible in 2008.
When I remember this movie, I swear in my mind's memory that I read this book. Oh and a few quotes; "Listen to the sounds" , and "Gotta light?"
The book is very different from the movie. The radio host is in the book for only a few moments.
Beautiful.
The men on the radio were addressing the woman by name telling her to cut transmission because the man is sick, also this part of the movie always makes me cry
I cry every time I listen to this
By this point in the movie, Grant (the DJ) and Sydney (the Producer) both have learned that the English language transmits the virus. They're trying a last-ditch attempt to override the virus (and save themselves from the horde outside) by confusing meaning with nonsense in English words, but the Canadian national guard is scorched-earth preventing any possible contamination, including stopping the broadcast.
It's left ambiguous in this last act if Grant's infected, since he definitely acts unhinged like Laurel-Ann (the Producer's Assistant) when she got infected, but since he's both a **gregarious** radio personality and the main empathetic protagonist, it's murky for most of it whether he's really infected or "the one sane man" left in Quebec.
When the music really starts kicking in at 1:46, good GOD.
2:45 Honestly sounds like a speech from Doctor Who
You're thinking of the Doctor's "scale model of war" speech from The Zygon Inversion, aren't you?
l'homme qui parle est malade!
Comforting.
stop understanding and listen to me! outside, the french are closing in.
the postmodernists of old would adore this movie. fuck, i adore this movie.
Watching this after the public school shootings in Colorado and wondering if maybe this guy is talking to us right now.
Maybe our problem is that we're trying to understand too much about each other, and it's making us crazy.
l'cie.
what time is it. check twice.
What's l'cie?
It's a god from final fantasy 13