Barry Lyndon is a superlative feat of filmmaking craft and is considered by many Kubrick purists to be the director's finest feature. 8:08 [The Independent]
Stanley Kubrick was a very influential and controversial director. His films were noted for their unique cinematography, attention to detail and an inspired use of music scores. 10:01 [NZQA]
@@PLuyindula it’s tough! ‘Barry Lyndon’, ‘Master and Commander’ ‘The Go-Between’, ‘The Godfather Part 2’ and ‘Midnight Cowboy’….I’d also want to put ‘Picnic at Hanging Rock’ in there but that’s six 😂…I love French cinema too…
@@paulruderstaller5062 just so you know, Barry Lyndon wasn't a Hollywood film. Kubrick made it in Ireland, England and Germany, with his own production company Hawk Films.
Love love love the film. The end..with Lady Lindon signing the payment to Barry..all silence..she just sighs, breaths..looks sad..and signs the" check". All said without words. Masterpiece!
I always adored the version of the music that begins at 2:43. So effective how it begins when Bullingdon is looking for Barry in the hall where all the men are passed out drunk or gambling, but then carries over into the next scene where the two men are to duel. The final duel is one of the greatest scenes in all of cinema. A young man scourged wanting to wage war on a man who once grew up a young scoundrel in a similar vein, but by circumstance of time, experienced war and then had little to fear. A scene for the ages. A film for all time!
un film che non sono mai riuscito a vedere per intero, ma solo perche è uno spreco vederlo su uno schermo di tv o peggio ancora da computer (e sono uno di bocca buona,,,, scarico qua e la...)...visivamente è un gioiello, il giorno che lo rifanno in qualche cinema sarò presente in prima linea
. Sarabande sous forme de variations, mêmes rythmes et notes, mais variations par les instruments. Pour le duel, les timbales seules (et le soutien des cordes avec cette sorte de scansions en forme de coups de feu) est un choix réussi. Enfin en 3, retour au salon de musique. J'aime aussi ce choix de Kubrick d'alterner les tutti et soli (qui collent aux scènes du film), il le fait aussi dans la sérénade avec mandoline de Lindoro/comte Almaviva, de l'opéra de Paisiello, avec le violoncelle qui joue le passage chanté 'saper bramate' de cette cavatine. Dans le fond, son "Barry Lindon" est un opéra magnifique et tragique du XXe siècle.
I remember borrowing this from the library in 2000 right before I watched it for the first time. There was a blurb on the box that said " Its raw, aching beauty will wipe you out." I don't think I could think of a better way to say it.
@@gianpaolorosati1356 Gianpaolo (nice name, btw), what you thinking, eh?🤌The movie is set between the years 1800 and 1816, so that's makes it "early 19th century" , no? 🤔
And Alatriste! Almost every shot looks like an oil painting in that movie as well. The costuming for early to mid 17th century is the best I’ve seen in film.
I sincerely don't understand why this movie isn't included among the best films by Kubrick as well as best movies ever made. It might never be as loved as A Clockwork Orange or The Shining since it's longer and brings forth less emotion, which would bore the average audience member. But film enthusiasts and critics at least have to give it the attention it deserves by acknowledging it as the undisputed masterpiece to which it should be referred if there's any justice in this world at all.
Cheers Giuseppe! ^^ it may of course be that if you keep looking around, you’ll also find things that you don’t like, but regardless, I appreciate it :) I believe there should be much more to enjoy than not for anyone who likes those things ;)
The sarabande (from Spanish: zarabanda) is a dance in triple metre, or the music written for such a dance. The Sarabande evolved from a Spanish dance with Arab influences, danced by a lively double line of couples with castanets. A dance called zarabanda is first mentioned in 1539.
You all are praising Kubrick's film but remember that you must also thank Thackeray (who wrote "The Luck of Barry Lyndon" in 1844) and of course Haendel...
Thank you for taking the time to check out the «back catalogue»! I don’t mind you asking, but I don’t know that you will find the answer very interesting or satisfactory. To give you the short version, I believe in God. I’m not a Christian, however, and I find what’s left of written sources about the Norse religion much more compelling on an emotional/aesthetic plane (even though it has several gods and not One). The same goes for other European religions. I guess I have leanings toward perennialism, as I do believe that all religions point toward one over-arching Truth (some do it better than others), but I would rather be an adherent of a single faith if I found it possible for me to believe that human beings have got it essentially «all figured out». I *do* believe that it’s possible to have a more or less direct experience of the divine (indeed I think we are surrounded by it everywhere in nature/the world), but I also view it as a great mystery that cannot adequately be put into language. Perhaps music (J. S. Bach’s works are to me the ultimate example) is the best way for us to convey what God is. Or maybe I’m just rambling! So pardon the perhaps incoherent reply, that’s the way it has to be when coming from me, lol. What is your own faith or beliefs?
@@Vingul I mostly like gaining people whom have similar views as me and wanting to know their faith. I am almost the same, but since I am in love with philosophy I can only really say the philosophers Emerson and Thoreau and their work for Transcendalism is something truly inspiring, even tho it might seem like a quite progressive ideology in humanitarianism, I would say I’m more conservative in it, I think traditions, culture and religion are key aspects of the human, while technological progress of whom I oppose is the opposite and a danger to the humanself. I would kinda guess they are a sort of pagan/pantheistic organization, that doesn’t take shame in acknowledging the good of the Bible and the good of nature, for a mindset like that is important in my opinion! Either way, it’s of course interesting to meet pagans as I love religious history and especially to learn about paganism!
@@langskeppet9887 it indeed sounds like we are not very far apart in that regard, then! I have a collection selected by Carl Bode called «The Portable Thoreau», and it’s been a long time, but I read some of the texts two or three times. More than «Walden», I enjoyed texts like «Walking», «A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers» and «Winter». These and others were quite influential on me. And though I’m sure «Civil Disobedience» would be too anarchistic/libertarian for me now, I found it very powerful back then (I’m sure it still packs a punch rhetorically). Ialso have an Emerson collection, but I never got far into it. Maybe I should pick it up again. Your comment definitely made me keen on revisiting Thoreau sooner or later :) In case you’d be interested to know it, some of my favourite authors are Knut Hamsun, J. R. R. Tolkien, Hermann Hesse and Mark Twain. Especially the first two.
@@Vingul Tolkiens work is fantastic, and if anything I wished his ideal middle earth was Europe. I’ve not heard about any of the rest except Mark Twain, but I only know some small parts about him. My first thought was that you were some Brazilian Catholic Integralist, but from my knowledge you are way more profound and knowledgeable then that and I am quite sure I am very wrong about a Brazilian ethnicity, but I would assume Norwegian? Either way brother, thanks for answering my questions, I hope the world can change its progressive tide and officially lay the groundwork of a pro-rural, pro-religion, culture and traditional society.
@@langskeppet9887 Hahah, I have no idea why you thought I was Brazilian -- or a Catholic Integralist for that matter -- but fair enough! I do like quite a lot of Brazilian music but have never posted any. Norwegian is correct. I think you missed the comment on the thread where we were introduced were I said "jättebaserat" to signalise I'm a fellow Scandi, lol. I can only fully agree with your hopes for the future. Knut Hamsun is probably as well known (maybe even more) in Norway as Ingmar Bergman is in Sweden, and quite controversial... I think you will find him an interesting figure. I warmly recommend reading his novel "Markens Grøde" a.k.a. "Growth of the Soil". Probably good to read it in a Swedish translation.
Can't anybody come up with a negative comment? I suppose it can only be positive, and I agree with myself. Fair enough, the movie is twisting history a bit, but who cares, we are not historians.
@@Vingul but where does this "Sarabande" come from specifically in Handel's output? what is the source? where can I find it played by a Baroque orchestra or ensemble?
I wish I could wipe Barry Lyndon from my memory so I can experience it for the first time again.
Barry Lyndon is a superlative feat of filmmaking craft and is considered by many Kubrick purists to be the director's finest feature. 8:08 [The Independent]
Ophüls, Fellini and Bergman were commonly mentioned as Kubrick's favorite directors.
Stanley Kubrick was a very influential and controversial director. His films were noted for their unique cinematography, attention to detail and an inspired use of music scores. 10:01 [NZQA]
“If it can be written, or thought, it can be filmed.”
Stanley Kubrick
you can, thanks to lsd
RIP Ryan O' Neill. You will always be Barry Lyndon.
Saw yesterday that he died. R.I.P. 🙏
Боже Царя Храни сыльной Державный😅😅😅😅
One of my top five films. It is Kubrick's masterpiece. I cannot think of a piece of music more aptly used than Sarabande in 'Barry Lyndon'.
Hi , what is your top 5?
I've personally boycotted Hollywood, but continue to listen to the works of great composers.
@@PLuyindula it’s tough! ‘Barry Lyndon’, ‘Master and Commander’ ‘The Go-Between’, ‘The Godfather Part 2’ and ‘Midnight Cowboy’….I’d also want to put ‘Picnic at Hanging Rock’ in there but that’s six 😂…I love French cinema too…
Sure. And yet the other 2 parts of the sarabande are highly unknown are even more beautiful
@@paulruderstaller5062 just so you know, Barry Lyndon wasn't a Hollywood film. Kubrick made it in Ireland, England and Germany, with his own production company Hawk Films.
Love love love the film. The end..with Lady Lindon signing the payment to Barry..all silence..she just sighs, breaths..looks sad..and signs the" check". All said without words. Masterpiece!
The most haunting ending of a film, completely agree. Barry Lyndon isn't even in the final scene, yet he weighs to heavily in it.
Mister Kubrick was ....and still is a Genius !!!
He died unter mysterious circumstances after " Eyes wide shut "....
I always adored the version of the music that begins at 2:43. So effective how it begins when Bullingdon is looking for Barry in the hall where all the men are passed out drunk or gambling, but then carries over into the next scene where the two men are to duel. The final duel is one of the greatest scenes in all of cinema. A young man scourged wanting to wage war on a man who once grew up a young scoundrel in a similar vein, but by circumstance of time, experienced war and then had little to fear. A scene for the ages. A film for all time!
though Bullingdon and Barry so different, the former would have made a real protagonist while Barry is the special one
Well spoken both.
Attraction and popularity of Sarabande are off the charts and immeasurable
A great movie that doesn’t nearly get the playtime it deserves on classic TV networks!!
Kubrick' skill in matching music and script is beyond words
Скучаю
Simply sublime from Kubrick - so good that it beggars belief. I don’t expect to watch anything as great for the rest of my days.
O Just watch the movie few months ago one of the greatest movies ever made
Magnifique !
Probably the finest period piece of our era, and Ryan O'Neill's best role. Everything about the film is impeccable.
God sent these composers as a blessing to us , mere mortals❤🙏🙏
un film che non sono mai riuscito a vedere per intero, ma solo perche è uno spreco vederlo su uno schermo di tv o peggio ancora da computer (e sono uno di bocca buona,,,, scarico qua e la...)...visivamente è un gioiello, il giorno che lo rifanno in qualche cinema sarò presente in prima linea
I have always loved this irresistibly sublime music like the genius who used it in one of his best films
I fell in love with Kubrick's art since very young age, and from today's point of view, I can only say damn I had good taste
Una de las deliciosas películas del para mí grandísimo director Kubrick... Saludos...
Sin duda alguna la mejor película de Kubrich
.
Sarabande sous forme de variations, mêmes rythmes et notes, mais variations par les instruments.
Pour le duel, les timbales seules (et le soutien des cordes avec cette sorte de scansions en forme de coups de feu) est un choix réussi.
Enfin en 3, retour au salon de musique.
J'aime aussi ce choix de Kubrick d'alterner les tutti et soli (qui collent aux scènes du film), il le fait aussi dans la sérénade avec mandoline de Lindoro/comte Almaviva, de l'opéra de Paisiello, avec le violoncelle qui joue le passage chanté 'saper bramate' de cette cavatine.
Dans le fond, son "Barry Lindon" est un opéra magnifique et tragique du XXe siècle.
I remember borrowing this from the library in 2000 right before I watched it for the first time. There was a blurb on the box that said " Its raw, aching beauty will wipe you out." I don't think I could think of a better way to say it.
tragic but full of life!
Лучший фильм Кубрика.
up there with tarkovsky
Che musica. Riempie l anima , l aria la storia. Al pari di Vivaldi.
Il '700 ha dato compositori, pittori, artisti geniali.
The guy I see the most comments from and then uploading one of my favorite pieces from the greatest film of all time, truly demented and unhinged
Lol!
Magnifique ! La perfection à l' état pure ! 🌹
"The Duelists" is pretty good at being pretty too.... Every scene is an animated early-19th-century oil-painting, much like this film.
I like that one a lot too!
I would say, Eighteen Century.
@@gianpaolorosati1356 Gianpaolo (nice name, btw), what you thinking, eh?🤌The movie is set between the years 1800 and 1816, so that's makes it "early 19th century" , no? 🤔
@@gianpaolorosati1356 oh... I see now, my bad... you were talking about THIS movie (duh).... Yes, it is $100% "18th century"... 👍
And Alatriste! Almost every shot looks like an oil painting in that movie as well. The costuming for early to mid 17th century is the best I’ve seen in film.
I sincerely don't understand why this movie isn't included among the best films by Kubrick as well as best movies ever made. It might never be as loved as A Clockwork Orange or The Shining since it's longer and brings forth less emotion, which would bore the average audience member. But film enthusiasts and critics at least have to give it the attention it deserves by acknowledging it as the undisputed masterpiece to which it should be referred if there's any justice in this world at all.
Ok, now I'm subscribing... I've gone from "slow Harpsichord" to "Uillean pipes" to "Hapsburg music" to "Werner Herzog" to this... I'm in! 👍😁
Cheers Giuseppe! ^^ it may of course be that if you keep looking around, you’ll also find things that you don’t like, but regardless, I appreciate it :) I believe there should be much more to enjoy than not for anyone who likes those things ;)
Thank you for this gift.
Mankind’s greatest contributions to the world are, music and golf courses.
😂
😢
Very deep and dark ambience
The sarabande (from Spanish: zarabanda) is a dance in triple metre, or the music written for such a dance. The Sarabande evolved from a Spanish dance with Arab influences, danced by a lively double line of couples with castanets. A dance called zarabanda is first mentioned in 1539.
Your channel and music selection is impeccable! From Barry Lyndon OST to Burzum! Incredible thank you!
Thank you very much! Glad you had a look around the place, good to have you here.
This music thrills me..
Love this !
Masterpiece
Excellent
handel at his best
Fantastic and Unreal Crimson Kiss to YOU.
Un momento cumbre del arte cinematográfico.
You all are praising Kubrick's film but remember that you must also thank Thackeray (who wrote "The Luck of Barry Lyndon" in 1844) and of course Haendel...
Magnífico!
❤Ryan O, neal, Fantástico ❤
Не думаю,что музыку это можно с чем-то сравнить
being 17 in the future is the best
De casualidad no tienes la versión que suena en el funeral de el hijo de Barry Lyndon?
Música de los dioses
The Field of Barnes! (Deluxe)
The more I look around your channel, the more beautiful things I find! What’s your faith? If you don’t mind answering
Thank you for taking the time to check out the «back catalogue»!
I don’t mind you asking, but I don’t know that you will find the answer very interesting or satisfactory. To give you the short version, I believe in God. I’m not a Christian, however, and I find what’s left of written sources about the Norse religion much more compelling on an emotional/aesthetic plane (even though it has several gods and not One). The same goes for other European religions. I guess I have leanings toward perennialism, as I do believe that all religions point toward one over-arching Truth (some do it better than others), but I would rather be an adherent of a single faith if I found it possible for me to believe that human beings have got it essentially «all figured out». I *do* believe that it’s possible to have a more or less direct experience of the divine (indeed I think we are surrounded by it everywhere in nature/the world), but I also view it as a great mystery that cannot adequately be put into language. Perhaps music (J. S. Bach’s works are to me the ultimate example) is the best way for us to convey what God is. Or maybe I’m just rambling! So pardon the perhaps incoherent reply, that’s the way it has to be when coming from me, lol.
What is your own faith or beliefs?
@@Vingul I mostly like gaining people whom have similar views as me and wanting to know their faith. I am almost the same, but since I am in love with philosophy I can only really say the philosophers Emerson and Thoreau and their work for Transcendalism is something truly inspiring, even tho it might seem like a quite progressive ideology in humanitarianism, I would say I’m more conservative in it, I think traditions, culture and religion are key aspects of the human, while technological progress of whom I oppose is the opposite and a danger to the humanself. I would kinda guess they are a sort of pagan/pantheistic organization, that doesn’t take shame in acknowledging the good of the Bible and the good of nature, for a mindset like that is important in my opinion! Either way, it’s of course interesting to meet pagans as I love religious history and especially to learn about paganism!
@@langskeppet9887 it indeed sounds like we are not very far apart in that regard, then!
I have a collection selected by Carl Bode called «The Portable Thoreau», and it’s been a long time, but I read some of the texts two or three times. More than «Walden», I enjoyed texts like «Walking», «A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers» and «Winter». These and others were quite influential on me. And though I’m sure «Civil Disobedience» would be too anarchistic/libertarian for me now, I found it very powerful back then (I’m sure it still packs a punch rhetorically).
Ialso have an Emerson collection, but I never got far into it. Maybe I should pick it up again. Your comment definitely made me keen on revisiting Thoreau sooner or later :)
In case you’d be interested to know it, some of my favourite authors are Knut Hamsun, J. R. R. Tolkien, Hermann Hesse and Mark Twain. Especially the first two.
@@Vingul Tolkiens work is fantastic, and if anything I wished his ideal middle earth was Europe. I’ve not heard about any of the rest except Mark Twain, but I only know some small parts about him.
My first thought was that you were some Brazilian Catholic Integralist, but from my knowledge you are way more profound and knowledgeable then that and I am quite sure I am very wrong about a Brazilian ethnicity, but I would assume Norwegian? Either way brother, thanks for answering my questions, I hope the world can change its progressive tide and officially lay the groundwork of a pro-rural, pro-religion, culture and traditional society.
@@langskeppet9887 Hahah, I have no idea why you thought I was Brazilian -- or a Catholic Integralist for that matter -- but fair enough! I do like quite a lot of Brazilian music but have never posted any. Norwegian is correct. I think you missed the comment on the thread where we were introduced were I said "jättebaserat" to signalise I'm a fellow Scandi, lol.
I can only fully agree with your hopes for the future.
Knut Hamsun is probably as well known (maybe even more) in Norway as Ingmar Bergman is in Sweden, and quite controversial... I think you will find him an interesting figure. I warmly recommend reading his novel "Markens Grøde" a.k.a. "Growth of the Soil". Probably good to read it in a Swedish translation.
💖💖💖💖🎉
Ryan nunca tuvo mejor papel😊😊
6:55 Playing this if I was guilty but got proven "innocent"
"OK, Barry. Show us on the doll"
"Show you what?"
"Where he touched you"
Si es que hay mucho paleto comparar esta joya con 'Lo que el viento se llevó "es una herejia
Can't anybody come up with a negative comment? I suppose it can only be positive, and I agree with myself. Fair enough, the movie is twisting history a bit, but who cares, we are not historians.
Good observation! Just about 100k views now and not a single negative comment.. here's hoping it stays that way.
How does the film bend history?
Where did you find the main title version ?
Me when put on the powdered wig:
this has nothing to do with Handel. it's a theme after which the variations should ensue. the music was composed by Corelli and called "Follia"
Not this music. Corelli based his piece on previous pieces of music as well. This has everything to do with Händel.
@@Vingul these are modern adaptations anyway. where is the original Handel composition? which opus or anything to locate it in its Baroque setting?
@@JerryCarrera-cx4tl That's true, it was adapted for different instrument combinations as per Kubrick's wishes, specifically for the film.
@@Vingul but where does this "Sarabande" come from specifically in Handel's output? what is the source? where can I find it played by a Baroque orchestra or ensemble?
@@JerryCarrera-cx4tl Good question, I must confess I don't know! I should try to seek it out.
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