It was so sad though for Steve McQueen. His final movie was him being a sort of bounty hunter. Can't remember the film. Sadly his Fate IRL was so heartbreaking. He died in a hospital in Juarez after a 5lb cancerous tumor was removed from his abdomen. His only release was that he died of heart and lung failure not soon after the surgery. He was only 50, but his legend lives in movies like this and so many others.
I have the book after seeing an extract of the movie I told some colleagues about it and they bought it for me as a gift. It's really a nice reading. I tend to most of the time prefer the books than the movies.
I remember seeing this at the cinema, When It first came out in the 70s, seen it loads of times since, also read the book, One of my all-time favourite films
The most moving part about the movie was Papillon's honor and loyalty as a friend--which made the goodbye and escape to freedom all the more breathtaking.
Same with "Deliverance" (fantastic cast & tunes) or "A Bridge Too Far" (cast of many), or "Were Eagles Eagles Dare" (Clint Eastwood, Richard Burton, etc.). All actual footage.
Because they dont want too. I heard one producer saying that its awful giving people what they want. Its about feeding peoples minds with trash. And it works.
Another shit on Hollywood post, how charming. So let's just forget about some really good movies of the past 20 years and live in the distant past where everything was so wonderful and nice, right? Bullshit. Really despise people that feel the need to crap on others just to elevate their own "glory days". Such cringe.
I saw this movie when I was only 18, it touched me deeply when Papillon was accused of being guilty wasting his life. Reminded me of late father, who suffered the same, he abandoned his wife, my mom and his children, that's us. I'm thankful I grew up to be responsible and loving. I'm now grandfather with a terrific grandson.
I loved the movie. I cheered for Papillon! I wanted to know more about him. I read about him. Disappointment. Very different from the movie. Wish I hadn't researched him.
@@cameronpickard7456 The film was very accurate to the book. The book was amazing, but the film had Steve McQueen, Dustin Hoffman and an unforgettable soundtrack, which the book could not provide, of course.
@@cameronpickard7456 The book is awesome. I was in fourth grade ( I was already reading at a high school level)and my dad was reading it. He was an Army pilot so he was gone a bit. I read it before he did and due to a lot of really obscure and big words they bought me an unabridged dictionary. Now 60 and still love to read. I remember when I had to do "30 days" helping a few learn to read at a basic level. They seemed to appreciate it and I hope they continued to learn.
No Stunt Double: Steve McQueen insisted on performing the stunt where he jumps off a cliff himself. He once said of this that it was "one of the most exhilarating experiences of my life". Onlybone long shot so you can't tell if it's actually him in the film but it is! These days you'd have 5 different cameras from all angles covering it showing it's him really doing the stunt. It never occured to them to do it that way in 1973. Or maybe the jump was just the thing, he just did it. Legend.
When you're young, you identify toSteve Mc Queen, and then time goes by and you put yourself in the shoes of Dustin Hoffman. You realize you've been afraid to escape your own prison all your life.
That explains the human condition perfectly,, and gives me another insight into why people can't stand up and grow a pair and refuse to wear masks as a collective,, fully functioning thinking awake individuals!!
It took 41 years for me To reach my goal Each day, week, month Year I persevered At least 10000 failures Now at age 64 I have Reached it. “Hey you bastards I’m Still here”
When I volunteered at Cranbrook Institute of Science in Michigan, restoring the insect collection, they had butterflies and beetles in their drawers collected by prisoners of this colony, and still do.
Discovered later than in the end scene, a diver was positioned under that coconut raft to steady it so Papillion could lay on it as depicted. If you look close, you can see the diver.
This is the kind of scene in a movie that grown men will cry at, and there aren't many of those. These two were on this island together for over 20 years, and it would be hard to say goodbye to your best friend, knowing you'll never see each other again. Very hard. And in my opinion, the same scene in the remake doesn't have nearly the same tear jerking power as in the original.
Comparable to how BJ Hunnicut had a hard time saying good bye to Hawkeye Pierce in the very last MASH episode…so he spells out out with a bunch of sticks so that Hawkeye sees it as his helicopter takes off.. 😔
The remake was a tear jerker as well. Dega stays not because he was afraid of the fall, but because he has nothing to live for outside Devil's Island. The moment Papi screams "I made it, you dirty little forger!", then both scream their hearts out, was sweet because Papillon was free at last, and bitter because he and Dega weren't going to see each other anymore.
@1:06 Once Dega realized that Papillon was going to jump anyway, he nods his head up and down and smiles. Great touch, with the clear message being...go for it!
I was probably twelve years old when I saw Papi come out of five years of _Reclusion._ I think my stomach lurched because I saw what one year did to him.
The reason Papillon always wanted to escape from the prison was FREEDOM. I know it's simple to figure, but the prison and his escape were metaphors for the necessity of freedom in life before one could feel alive. Without freedom life is no different than death. His friend asked him that he might die while trying to escape, but for Papillon the prison was already a big grave and he was a dead person in it. So a dead man never fears death. An alive man does, because he loves his life and wants to live. So Papillon took the risk of getting killed and escaped constantly so he could have that worthy life outside; there could never be a chance for him inside prison to have a life. Only outside freedom could be found, and life could be owned. But inside a prison, there is only death. "Life" is not only eating, working, and sleeping; life is when you have your freedom to move about anywhere you please, to do anything you love to do, to think anyway you want, and to express yourself freely and peacefully, and to love where you are among the people who don't restrain your freedom. Without such freedom one is no different than in a prison, no different than a dead. Even if one live with all the money, wealth, and people in the world, without freedom he'd feel no life in himself. Life is freedom. Freedom is life.
***** I liked the poem. Sometimes, a solitary place might also be felt as a place to be free, freedom from many problems and chaos in society, but what feels as a higher-freedom in my opinion is having the ability to feel free at anytime one pleases, among people or not.
The one aspect of this fantastic movie that makes it SO fantastic, is Mr. Jerry Goldsmith's musical score. Goose-bump inducing is just a part of what it does to the listener. Truly one of Mr. Goldsmith's greatest works!
@@jiddern973 Wow, such a silly comment. So people vote on a website, you don't agree with general consensus and you blame the website? How fuckin stupid are you?
"Papillon made it to freedom . . . and for the remaining years of his life, he lived a free man. This, the infamous penal system in French Guiana, did not survive him."
Maybe there are people like me who don't understand English completely. I really appreciate it when people write down important movie lines for others....
Saw this at fifteen at the central theatre in passaic nj.i was blown away.this story has stayed with me my entire life and kept me from ever going to prison.
I love how you can clearly see the diver underneath him to keep the float steady, and you don't care because the scene is SO good. The 70's was a era in movies we will never see again. Chinatown, All The President's Men, Alien, Young Frankenstein, Apocalypse Now, Network, MASH, The Deer Hunter, The French Connection, Animal House, Rocky, Halloween, Star Wars, Blazing Saddles, Taxi Driver, Jaws, The Godfather I and II... What a decade.
Because in the 70s and 80s movies had more freedom to do things. In the 90s you can see the changes being made and then in the 2000s entertainment was being locked down.
I completely agree with you. Those movie meant something, they had a meaning, they were not just pure entertainment like today. Cinema, at that level, was a form of art.
McQueen insisted on doing the cliff-jumping stunt. He said that it was one of the most exhilarating experiences of his life. Yeah, that would rate pretty high on most anyone's list.
As a young man I remember watching this film late one night in the mid 1990's. I only ever watched it the once but it will remain with me always until my dying day, amen.
The Movie was great, the book was a fabricated story that turned out to be a lie, but, the movie was amazing. Steve McQueen deserved an Oscar, Dustin Hoffman deserved one as well.
@Paddy le Blanc Not true. Herni Charrière was ACCUSED of falsifying events but that is what critics are for and do. Those accusations have never been proven. Dull and ordinary people can not believe in great accomplishments because they have none of their own.
@@romanis6660 There are no record of him being on Devils Island he escaped from Cayenne Prison which was on the mainland in French Guiana, he only spent two years in St Joseph island for solitary confinement. His story is pretty accurate in terms of a depiction of what the islands were like through other inmates eyes which he pieces together but it is not a linear story by any means. I do enjoy the film.
When I was 12 I snuck into the theater to watch this movie. All I can tell you is that while watching this movie something came over me and changed me. This movie altered who I was, it had and still does have the biggest impact on me. In short over time I realized that I look at life thru the eyes of papallion and I am so grateful for that. I'll sign off with this. "Courage is your only option."
Very true what you siad about ( courage. ) but as you probably observed especially during the COVID phase that people were paralysed to stand - up to the criminality of the situation that was unfolding in front of them. Instead they gave into the tyranny and the madness and handed - up their constitutional rights not excluding their human and civil rights by putting on a mask which was a precursor to them taking a lethal experimental Bill Gates vaccine which breached the Geneva Convention on Vaccine safety.and human rights in every regard. These mask-wearers handed - up their unalienable rights and bodily integrity under constitutional law in the blink of an eye
❤ My girlfriend gave me this book to read in 1974... Senior Year in Highschool.... ....I took her to see this movie in Chelmsford Massachusetts Cinema back in 1974 also. . AWESOME 😮😮😮
No Stunt Double: Steve McQueen insisted on performing the stunt where he jumps off a cliff himself. He once said of this that it was "one of the most exhilarating experiences of my life".
@@pauldames381 - I bet you’re right. I’ve jumped into water only a third as high as that and it REALLY hurts! Also, there is no way they would risk Steve McQueen for a shot where you can’t even see his face.
I watched this movie three times in the theatre alone then, these two great legends Steve MCQueen and Dustin Hoffman are simply the greatest actors. Unfortunately Hollywood doesn’t makes good movies like this anymore, all about special effects with the latest technology, seeing’s is not believing now.
@@npc3po301 Movies are now used for manipulation, and as a form of black magic, as the powers - for example preparing us for for Tsunami by flashing a picture of a tsunami wave on a mug in a movie. This is known as "Predictive Programming". Digital Currencies, One World Government, Normalization of Peedoh, 9/11 in the Simpsons years before it happened. All in movies.
Two great performances...! By this point in his life Steve Mcqueen had become a truly great film actor, but with not much longer to live, seriously underrated. ..and he remains underrated to this day...
One of the best books I've ever read, what a great perspective it was written with. Was sorry to hear it was really a mix of stories and characters, but still...some great writing.
Papillion loved his buddy and his friend did not want to mess up Papillion's last attempt at freedom. He knew in his heart he was not as tough as Papillion and would slow him down, great ending, "I'm still here you bastards" what a line for a close !
My dad showed me this movie for the first time several weeks ago. I was SOOO happy that he jumped to freedom and made it to France. It also showed me that my will to survive in todays world couldnt be more relevant. I will be Steve Mcqueen when I escape this plandemic, while my parents will be Dustin Hoffman.
It's good to know that the majority of us are on the same page, and are awake to this PLANDEMIC. /SCAMDEMIC of Tony fauci and co.. All the best to you and your family in this EVIL time of CRIMINALITY AND GENOCIDE..!
When They hug ,the director chose to focus Steve McQueen´s face and the kiss of Dustin Hoffman and then McQueen ´s face again; it is absolutely unforgetable and comunicate a lot of feelings, It is the perfect farewell and of course the whole scene is terrific.
It is really surprising that Dalton Trumbo also wrote the screenplay of this movie.He is a pure genius,full of insights and ideas who always touches heart of people with great emotional depict.
It would be a very rare occasion for a film like this to be made in this current time or even to be made as the same quality unless your getting a remake because people in the movie industry have no good ideas of there own ohh hold on you are getting a remake loool
I saw this movie when I was a child. I have seen many hundreds since then. None have made such an impact on me as this one. To put it simply - a masterpiece.
4:02 I remember when Dustin's character was going on about how he was going to get out of that place and how his wife was going to have the lawyers free him. Then McQueen asked him how hard he would fight to get his wife free. Dustin said he would fight with everything he had to free her. Then McQueen asked, how hard do you think she's fighting for you. That's when Dustin decided to try and escape. This was one of the finest films I have ever seen. To think that it is true makes It all the more better.
probably seen this relatively unknown classic about 20 times. very underated film. amazing performances, writing, direction, cinematography, production design, soundtrack .... everything is top drawer, never get tired of it
I watched this movie with my big brother as we watched all movies together back then and I remember to this day him telling me he would have never left without me. He's gone now but he was right he took part of me with him. Great movie 🎬
May my DVD player never break, because this is one movie in my collection that gets replayed OFTEN! Thank you Dustin Hoffman for one of the most fascinating TOUCHING characters ever committed to the silver screen. That theme music in the harmonica = friendship, trust, loyalty, and a heart wrenching goodbye all in one. THE BEST!
You are absolutely right - accordion it is. It's really interesting to learn that an accordion and a harmonica each contain the same type of "free reed" - which would explain the very similar sound that these two instruments make. I believe that the man who invented the harmonica is also credited with developing the first accordions. Regardless - this "reedy" sound is synonymous with French folk music, and Jerry Goldsmith's brilliance manifests itself with a melody that is both short and unforgettable. It's one of the most delightful "ear worms" I have ever had the pleasure of trying to forget. :-) :-)
@@tomgoerz2411I know what you mean. After hearing it recently, I couldn't stop humming it...and I've heard it many times. I guess that's one testament to Jerry Goldsmith's greatness.
Actually I think it's meant to say that if you are sane nothing will be as precious as freedom. Losing his mind didn't mean he lost human feelings for his friend although he was not able to make a decision to join him in his daring escape.
McQueen and Hoffman -- doesn't get much better. McQueen's gritty determination, and poor Hoffman, lost, abandoned, resigned, the head tilt giving it away.
One of the scenes that got me; as Papillon is planning the major escape (much younger) with a boat, he tries to convince Dega to go too. Dega resists, insists his wife is working on his case, "Her letter is overdue." Papillon says "Listen to me. If she was here, and you were in France with all that money, how much would you pay to get her back?" Dega: "All that I have!" Papillon says "And how much is SHE willing to pay, .....to get YOU back?" Degas' face becomes stricken. He suddenly faces reality.........
Over the years I'd think about this movie from time to time. That's how good this masterpiece was. I saw it when I was 10 in 1976 and still think about it today. Really glad I ran across the video.
I read that also. That Steve McQueen did that jump himself. I remember seeing this in NY when I was a 12 years old. The theater roared with clapping for Steve McQueen when he jumped. Brought me goosebumps when I see this movie at my oldest age.
People often say movie is long and boring. Seems to me we haven't watch same movie. This movie is anything but long and boring. It is in a way adventour movie with lots of places. Ship, prison, solitare, island, jungle, tropic indians, nons, solitare, boat, island. It is iconic scene when the old man who is anoyed that Papillon is sittin on the bench ask him who is he to sit on that bench. Than he answer - nobody with complete rezignation. Like he is sayin that all that was nothing, he's complete life. After that he realize he still can escape and his spirit comes back followed with this great sceene. The part he is fighting to ecape from indians that shot him with nedles and he fallin into the water with open arms like buterfly is lightmotiv of the movie. Great movie.
I like and empathize with Hoffman because he doesn’t want to be alone on an island again and he thinks McQueen will get killed this time. Old age is not a time for adventure but looking for security and safety. I don’t care about the remake. How dare they think they can replace McQueen and Hoffman. Impossible!
Non saprei cosa scrivere, non saprei descrivere l' emozione nel vedere questo geniale capolavoro del cinema. Una storia di amicizia di affetto di lealtà, ma soprattutto di tenacia e perseveranza. Un mio saluto a tutti quelli che scappano, ad ogni innocente, ad ogni colpevole, contro ogni pena ingiusta. Contro la pena in genere
What's the use of being alive and comfortable if you are not free. That was the Papillion's message. He at the end finally beat those who had took away his freedom and freed himself. "Hey bastards, I'm still here!"
I love this story. I like the part where Papillon tells Dega: if only I had some coconuts, some sacking and a well trained diver, than maybe, just maybe, I might have a chance escaping.
Unbelievable how this one scene can be better than hundreds thousands of movies . This one scene with this soundtrack is a treasure
3.17....til end
Your comment is Underrated!
I think this unbelievable how us humans can subject each other to the misery’s of French Guiana
Agreed. The dream scene is right up there too.
❤
Two of the greatest actors, in one of the finest films and a truly unforgettable soundtrack .... A must see !!!
It was so sad though for Steve McQueen. His final movie was him being a sort of bounty hunter. Can't remember the film.
Sadly his Fate IRL was so heartbreaking. He died in a hospital in Juarez after a 5lb cancerous tumor was removed from his abdomen. His only release was that he died of heart and lung failure not soon after the surgery.
He was only 50, but his legend lives in movies like this and so many others.
@@deathstrike His last movie was called 'The Hunter' (1980).
@@outpost31mac Thank you!! I could never remember that movie, now I can find it again and watch it.
最後の映像、涙をさそいます。二人の名優と音楽最高です、若い頃封切で見ました、今でも忘れません名作です。
I have the book after seeing an extract of the movie I told some colleagues about it and they bought it for me as a gift. It's really a nice reading. I tend to most of the time prefer the books than the movies.
I love how Hoffman is able to express complete happiness for his friend and sadness for his own loneliness to come.
Hoffman is a fantastic actor, as was McQueen.
The real life Dega did make it back to France.
The squint, wide left eye, almost closed, glint of tears. He felt that moment.
The level of acting that many of these great actors gave us during the 1970's is seriously insane.
@@AT-sd9qqThe greatest decade in cinema history that will never be topped.
Movies with stories, with characters. No sequels no re-boots, no franchises...just great movies. Hollywood died long time ago.
I remember seeing this at the cinema, When It first came out in the 70s, seen it loads of times since, also read the book, One of my all-time favourite films
you got that right !
No CGI. No screen tint. No loud crashy soundtrack.
@Amazing People And no soy.
they made tons of reboots between the 60s and 80s most people just arent familiar with the stories told in the 30s and 40s cinema
The most moving part about the movie was Papillon's honor and loyalty as a friend--which made the goodbye and escape to freedom all the more breathtaking.
One of the greatest films ever made - with 2 of the greatest actors who ever lived
3..., if you count the diver under the bag of coconuts 🥥
@@MichaelandCathy1999 let it go.
@@MichaelandCathy19994 si no mencionas eso nos dejas disfrutar con mucha emoción el momento. Te saludo, siempre hay gente como tu.
And no Oscar 😂
A time when great actors made great movies.
Separation and isolation,two sides of human tragedy well portrayed.A soul strring movie. Tears well your eyes.
The best last scene ever to remember. What a movie!
Sorry Hollywood, you can't make this kind of movie anymore.
Agree 100%
Same with "Deliverance" (fantastic cast & tunes) or "A Bridge Too Far" (cast of many), or "Were Eagles Eagles Dare" (Clint Eastwood, Richard Burton, etc.). All actual footage.
Because they dont want too. I heard one producer saying that its awful giving people what they want. Its about feeding peoples minds with trash. And it works.
Nope! The best last scene in a movie will always be "One Flew over the Cookoo Nest"!
Another shit on Hollywood post, how charming. So let's just forget about some really good movies of the past 20 years and live in the distant past where everything was so wonderful and nice, right? Bullshit. Really despise people that feel the need to crap on others just to elevate their own "glory days". Such cringe.
Feeling good whenever I see this movie. Watched it for 1000 times. Magical story, magical music, perfect film.
The book is even more amazing. Very nice.
This movie is one of a kind! No Oscars, no Cannes, just what 2 friendd can do! No sex, no romance!
I saw this movie when I was only 18, it touched me deeply when Papillon was accused of being guilty wasting his life. Reminded me of late father, who suffered the same, he abandoned his wife, my mom and his children, that's us. I'm thankful I grew up to be responsible and loving. I'm now grandfather with a terrific grandson.
brotherjohn25 👏👏👏👏👏
I also saw it when I was 18, I sat through it twice.
I'm 62 and still failing. Still hoping. Still hurting.Still believing....
@@indigogolf3051 Find some good in your life. It's there. Serve others in small ways and your life will be meaningful.
@@patrick5838 Patronising twat.
THIS is THE Papillon .No refilming needed.
no the book is papillion
Please don't give ideas to the the crap currently managing Hollywood
I loved the movie. I cheered for Papillon! I wanted to know more about him. I read about him. Disappointment. Very different from the movie. Wish I hadn't researched him.
@@cameronpickard7456 The film was very accurate to the book. The book was amazing, but the film had Steve McQueen, Dustin Hoffman and an unforgettable soundtrack, which the book could not provide, of course.
@@cameronpickard7456 The book is awesome. I was in fourth grade ( I was already reading at a high school level)and my dad was reading it. He was an Army pilot so he was gone a bit. I read it before he did and due to a lot of really obscure and big words they bought me an unabridged dictionary. Now 60 and still love to read. I remember when I had to do "30 days" helping a few learn to read at a basic level. They seemed to appreciate it and I hope they continued to learn.
never seen in my life a stronger message of freedom than this. epic
Yes, Papillon lived the rest of his remaining life as a free man.
No Stunt Double: Steve McQueen insisted on performing the stunt where he jumps off a cliff himself. He once said of this that it was "one of the most exhilarating experiences of my life". Onlybone long shot so you can't tell if it's actually him in the film but it is! These days you'd have 5 different cameras from all angles covering it showing it's him really doing the stunt. It never occured to them to do it that way in 1973. Or maybe the jump was just the thing, he just did it. Legend.
When you're young, you identify toSteve Mc Queen, and then time goes by and you put yourself in the shoes of Dustin Hoffman. You realize you've been afraid to escape your own prison all your life.
Perfect
This coment ia so good
Yes. I also believed that.
Absolutely true
That explains the human condition perfectly,, and gives me another insight into why people can't stand up and grow a pair and refuse to wear masks as a collective,, fully functioning thinking awake individuals!!
I cried very much, this scene is fantastic. Nice music with freedom and eternity. Love this man.
he never gave up on life.
moi aussi ..putin c est tres touchant ..
It took 41 years for me
To reach my goal
Each day, week, month
Year I persevered
At least 10000 failures
Now at age 64 I have
Reached it.
“Hey you bastards I’m
Still here”
You reached the age of retirement?
Yes but I'm still going
You're a fuckin beast! Respect.
live it out in peace. you have paid.
@@scottrussell1006 Thank you sir
One of the best films ever made...
Yоu саn wаtсh Раpillооoоn hеrе twitter.com/5bd3e705fa65bf7f6/status/850531188309610497
Hope you took the time to read the second book also.
Thee best film ever made
Giant actors .
That's so true. You can never say 'the best film ever.'
Saw this in ‘73, watched it again today 2024.Loving it ❤
When I volunteered at Cranbrook Institute of Science in Michigan, restoring the insect collection, they had butterflies and beetles in their drawers collected by prisoners of this colony, and still do.
Wow
The Cranbrook campus is a pretty magical place
Back then, when Hollywood produced quality content: great acting, amazing stories, incredible scenarios, fantastic music.
I miss so much real cinema.
Today you can’t find a movie without woke messaging in it.
Your right, seemed that there was a classic every few months back in the day. Now, Marvel ruined it.
One of the most memorable movie endings. What a great, great movie.
Discovered later than in the end scene, a diver was positioned under that coconut raft to steady it so Papillion could lay on it as depicted. If you look close, you can see the diver.
This is the kind of scene in a movie that grown men will cry at, and there aren't many of those. These two were on this island together for over 20 years, and it would be hard to say goodbye to your best friend, knowing you'll never see each other again. Very hard. And in my opinion, the same scene in the remake doesn't have nearly the same tear jerking power as in the original.
Comparable to how BJ Hunnicut had a hard time saying good bye to Hawkeye Pierce in the very last MASH episode…so he spells out out with a bunch of sticks so that Hawkeye sees it as his helicopter takes off.. 😔
The remake was a tear jerker as well. Dega stays not because he was afraid of the fall, but because he has nothing to live for outside Devil's Island. The moment Papi screams "I made it, you dirty little forger!", then both scream their hearts out, was sweet because Papillon was free at last, and bitter because he and Dega weren't going to see each other anymore.
What a magnificent shout for freedom as the coconut boat sets off hey you Bs... im still here! wonderfull considering all he suffered...
Havent seen the remake yet
@1:06 Once Dega realized that Papillon was going to jump anyway, he nods his head up and down and smiles.
Great touch, with the clear message being...go for it!
good one
Hoffman was perfect for this role.
This movie gutted me. Such pain. Such suffering. Such loss. A terrific film. Memorable and heartfelt.
Steve McQueen was such a terrific actor. Hollywood doesn't have his like today.
delavalmilker Daniel day Lewis is one of many.
delavalmilker No one even comes close! 🤨
i agree
Ehhh De niro Lewis Pacino Nicholson?
@@FT-op4do these guys are old as fuck
I watched this movie 40 years ago, and this is the scene I most remember.
I was probably twelve years old when I saw Papi come out of five years of _Reclusion._ I think my stomach lurched because I saw what one year did to him.
The reason Papillon always wanted to escape from the prison was FREEDOM. I know it's simple to figure, but the prison and his escape were metaphors for the necessity of freedom in life before one could feel alive. Without freedom life is no different than death.
His friend asked him that he might die while trying to escape, but for Papillon the prison was already a big grave and he was a dead person in it. So a dead man never fears death. An alive man does, because he loves his life and wants to live. So Papillon took the risk of getting killed and escaped constantly so he could have that worthy life outside; there could never be a chance for him inside prison to have a life. Only outside freedom could be found, and life could be owned. But inside a prison, there is only death.
"Life" is not only eating, working, and sleeping; life is when you have your freedom to move about anywhere you please, to do anything you love to do, to think anyway you want, and to express yourself freely and peacefully, and to love where you are among the people who don't restrain your freedom. Without such freedom one is no different than in a prison, no different than a dead. Even if one live with all the money, wealth, and people in the world, without freedom he'd feel no life in himself.
Life is freedom. Freedom is life.
***** I liked the poem.
Sometimes, a solitary place might also be felt as a place to be free, freedom from many problems and chaos in society, but what feels as a higher-freedom in my opinion is having the ability to feel free at anytime one pleases, among people or not.
You should watch Runaway Train. The John Voigt character expresses the same motivation. One of the best end scenes of any movie. Just watch it.
Max Texts Damn that was awesome.
True I never thought u would come up 4 air at 1 stage a the game .
christopher james lmao
The one aspect of this fantastic movie that makes it SO fantastic, is Mr. Jerry Goldsmith's musical score. Goose-bump inducing is just a part of what it does to the listener. Truly one of Mr. Goldsmith's greatest works!
indeed
This movie is extremely underrated on IMDB. It's just 8.1 where it actually deserves 10
Will never use imdb again !!
@@jiddern973 Wow, such a silly comment. So people vote on a website, you don't agree with general consensus and you blame the website? How fuckin stupid are you?
Imbd can go fuck itself.
It's 8 now, where Avengers is 8.4. Pathetic.
@@flybeep1661 You’re a fucking moron. How did you get the idea that I blame the website?
Two magnificent actors and an unforgettable film!
"Papillon made it to freedom . . . and for the remaining years of his life, he lived a free man. This, the infamous penal system in French Guiana, did not survive him."
Yes. This was said just a very few moments ago. Why say it again?
soslothful Putang Ina mo gago!!!!!!
soslothful you just asked another guy in another comment the same question. Why would you repeat yourself?
Maybe there are people like me who don't understand English completely. I really appreciate it when people write down important movie lines for others....
@@harrypp_pharm8356 or maybe he was trying to confirm if it was true or not. I do the same thing, just want a second opinion.👍
Saw this at fifteen at the central theatre in passaic nj.i was blown away.this story has stayed with me my entire life and kept me from ever going to prison.
Doesn't get much better than this. A classic.
I see this movie in the cinema when I was 8 years old with my father I never forget it what a super actors Steve McQueen and Dustin Hoffman
No special effects, no green screen..this is so pure and simple but so effective...idk how often i saw this movie. An alltime favorite and classic !
Thank goodness that scuba diver was holding up the raft!
I love how you can clearly see the diver underneath him to keep the float steady, and you don't care because the scene is SO good. The 70's was a era in movies we will never see again. Chinatown, All The President's Men, Alien, Young Frankenstein, Apocalypse Now, Network, MASH, The Deer Hunter, The French Connection, Animal House, Rocky, Halloween, Star Wars, Blazing Saddles, Taxi Driver, Jaws, The Godfather I and II... What a decade.
"I love how you can clearly see the diver"?????
Because in the 70s and 80s movies had more freedom to do things. In the 90s you can see the changes being made and then in the 2000s entertainment was being locked down.
Pero que lo tienen que comentar, Lee quieran a uno la inspiración, la escencia, la emoción, el amor, todo. Críticos de cine
I completely agree with you. Those movie meant something, they had a meaning, they were not just pure entertainment like today. Cinema, at that level, was a form of art.
I can't take it anymore.
One of the best scenes in the history of cinema.
Hamed Mahdavi I don’t know dude There was some great footage in Ben Hur
McQueen insisted on doing the cliff-jumping stunt. He said that it was one of the most exhilarating experiences of his life. Yeah, that would rate pretty high on most anyone's list.
Watch more movies. That is a ridiculous opinion.
@@mja91352 In your opinion it's ridiculous. And you know what they say about opinions. They're like.........
In my opinion is the best scene in history!!
To say this film is a masterpiece is a understatement.This is beyond what any studio is doing today.More the pity.
"hey you bastards.....I'm still here!!" classic.
YES!!!
Yohooooo!!
Me Too.
Who the bastards There???
I'll yell that still sometimes when I come through some bad shit in my life.
As a young man I remember watching this film late one night in the mid 1990's. I only ever watched it the once but it will remain with me always until my dying day, amen.
The Movie was great, the book was a fabricated story that turned out to be a lie, but, the movie was amazing. Steve McQueen deserved an Oscar, Dustin Hoffman deserved one as well.
The book lot longer
Great comment McQueen deserved an Oscar
@Paddy le Blanc Not true. Herni Charrière was ACCUSED of falsifying events but that is what critics are for and do. Those accusations have never been proven. Dull and ordinary people can not believe in great accomplishments because they have none of their own.
@@romanis6660 There are no record of him being on Devils Island he escaped from Cayenne Prison which was on the mainland in French Guiana, he only spent two years in St Joseph island for solitary confinement. His story is pretty accurate in terms of a depiction of what the islands were like through other inmates eyes which he pieces together but it is not a linear story by any means. I do enjoy the film.
@@db7610 even 2 years in solitary, that is still something
When I was 12 I snuck into the theater to watch this movie. All I can tell you is that while watching this movie something came over me and changed me. This movie altered who I was, it had and still does have the biggest impact on me. In short over time I realized that I look at life thru the eyes of papallion and I am so grateful for that. I'll sign off with this. "Courage is your only option."
Very true what you siad about ( courage. ) but as you probably observed especially during the COVID phase that people were paralysed to stand - up to the criminality of the situation that was unfolding in front of them. Instead they gave into the tyranny and the madness and handed - up their constitutional rights not excluding their human and civil rights by putting on a mask which was a precursor to them taking a lethal experimental Bill Gates vaccine which breached the Geneva Convention on Vaccine safety.and human rights in every regard. These mask-wearers handed - up their unalienable rights and bodily integrity under constitutional law in the blink of an eye
I was eleven in 1973. I got a butterfly tattoo like on the back cover of the book on my chest in Thailand in 2011.🦋🇹🇭🦋
Is there anyone who has seen the ending scene of this masterpiece with the divine music without filling his eyes with tears?
ruclips.net/video/vuglWJsGsjw/видео.html this what you looking for?
The ending scene is the abandoned prison.
Not me.
Best scene ever made. It gives insights to many people.
one of the finest movies ever made. pure inspiration.
❤ My girlfriend gave me this book to read in 1974... Senior Year in Highschool....
....I took her to see this movie in Chelmsford Massachusetts Cinema back in 1974 also. . AWESOME 😮😮😮
No Stunt Double: Steve McQueen insisted on performing the stunt where he jumps off a cliff himself. He once said of this that it was "one of the most exhilarating experiences of my life".
Wow! He's one brave man. God bless!
The late great Dar Robinson did this..look it up
@@pauldames381 did what?
@@JoeRuizLordoftheRings the jump I guess
@@pauldames381 - I bet you’re right. I’ve jumped into water only a third as high as that and it REALLY hurts! Also, there is no way they would risk Steve McQueen for a shot where you can’t even see his face.
I watched this movie three times in the theatre alone then, these two great legends Steve MCQueen and Dustin Hoffman are simply the greatest actors. Unfortunately Hollywood doesn’t makes good movies like this anymore, all about special effects with the latest technology, seeing’s is not believing now.
The Oscars committee just announced that movies must now be "Diverse...." Good movies are GONE
They don't go anywhere near the 'rebel beats the man' trope now, can't be seen to push liberty, too in bed with the controlfreaks
Maybe you should watch The Shawshank redemption...!!
@@npc3po301 Movies are now used for manipulation, and as a form of black magic, as the powers - for example preparing us for for Tsunami by flashing a picture of a tsunami wave on a mug in a movie. This is known as "Predictive Programming".
Digital Currencies,
One World Government,
Normalization of Peedoh,
9/11 in the Simpsons years before it happened.
All in movies.
Two great performances...! By this point in his life Steve Mcqueen had become a truly great film actor, but with not much longer to live, seriously underrated. ..and he remains underrated to this day...
I wished he made a movie like this with De Niro before he passed away
One of the best books I've ever read, what a great perspective it was written with. Was sorry to hear it was really a mix of stories and characters, but still...some great writing.
Papillion loved his buddy and his friend did not want to mess up Papillion's last attempt at freedom. He knew in his heart he was not as tough as Papillion and would slow him down, great ending, "I'm still here you bastards" what a line for a close !
My dad showed me this movie for the first time several weeks ago. I was SOOO happy that he jumped to freedom and made it to France.
It also showed me that my will to survive in todays world couldnt be more relevant. I will be Steve Mcqueen when I escape this plandemic, while my parents will be Dustin Hoffman.
It's good to know that the majority of us are on the same page, and are awake to this PLANDEMIC. /SCAMDEMIC of Tony fauci and co.. All the best to you and your family in this EVIL time of CRIMINALITY AND GENOCIDE..!
It's now 2019 brought back long forgotten memories of this film & new tears. True classic forever.
When They hug ,the director chose to focus Steve McQueen´s face and the kiss of Dustin Hoffman and then McQueen ´s face again; it is absolutely unforgetable and comunicate a lot of feelings, It is the perfect farewell and of course the whole scene is terrific.
It is really surprising that Dalton Trumbo also wrote the screenplay of this movie.He is a pure genius,full of insights and ideas who always touches heart of people with great emotional depict.
Considering how Hollywood did Trumbo and many others.
A masterpiece of a movie. I saw when I was 19 years old for the first time and still remember it well.
love this movie it give me so much power in bad situations......please more movies like this instead of this junk form movies now a days
It would be a very rare occasion for a film like this to be made in this current time or even to be made as the same quality unless your getting a remake because people in the movie industry have no good ideas of there own ohh hold on you are getting a remake loool
Because the people just want to make money 💰 fast and Easy way,includes movies industry 🎬🍿
Watch 'the shawshank Redemption
@degree7 that "over rated movie" helped me tide over some difficult times.. Thank you
@degree7 I have fond memories of watching Papillon with my dad during school days.. I love this movie too!!
Everytime I watch this I cry. Such a wonderful movie
One of the best movies ever.
Watchin it once again, brilliant performance Steve McQueen..love it..
I saw this movie when I was a child. I have seen many hundreds since then. None have made such an impact on me as this one. To put it simply - a masterpiece.
4:02 I remember when Dustin's character was going on about how he was going to get out of that place and how his wife was going to have the lawyers free him. Then McQueen asked him how hard he would fight to get his wife free. Dustin said he would fight with everything he had to free her. Then McQueen asked, how hard do you think she's fighting for you. That's when Dustin decided to try and escape. This was one of the finest films I have ever seen. To think that it is true makes It all the more better.
This movie changed my life.
una gran pelicula siento lo mismo
rebellion .
Me ha enseñado mucho
How? ?
The book is wonderful as well, I highly recommend it!
probably seen this relatively unknown classic about 20 times. very underated film. amazing performances, writing, direction, cinematography, production design, soundtrack .... everything is top drawer, never get tired of it
This scene is a tear jerker, yet happy for Papillion that he makes it to freedom. ..
I watched this movie with my big brother as we watched all movies together back then and I remember to this day him telling me he would have never left without me. He's gone now but he was right he took part of me with him. Great movie 🎬
May my DVD player never break, because this is one movie in my collection that gets replayed OFTEN! Thank you Dustin Hoffman for one of the most fascinating TOUCHING characters ever committed to the silver screen. That theme music in the harmonica = friendship, trust, loyalty, and a heart wrenching goodbye all in one. THE BEST!
I think that might be an accordion, but I'm not positive.
You are absolutely right - accordion it is. It's really interesting to learn that an accordion and a harmonica each contain the same type of "free reed" - which would explain the very similar sound that these two instruments make. I believe that the man who invented the harmonica is also credited with developing the first accordions. Regardless - this "reedy" sound is synonymous with French folk music, and Jerry Goldsmith's brilliance manifests itself with a melody that is both short and unforgettable. It's one of the most delightful "ear worms" I have ever had the pleasure of trying to forget. :-) :-)
@@tomgoerz2411I know what you mean. After hearing it recently, I couldn't stop humming it...and I've heard it many times. I guess that's one testament to Jerry Goldsmith's greatness.
He watched his friend escaping to freedom then went back to his loneliness , imprisonment, how sad !
he lost a large part of his mind . . . he was happy with his decision . . as he knew no better.
Actually I think it's meant to say that if you are sane nothing will be as precious as freedom.
Losing his mind didn't mean he lost human feelings for his friend although he was not able to make a decision to join him in his daring escape.
I don't think I have been moved more by any scene in the movies than this one. Dustin Hoffman is an all-time great!!
McQueen and Hoffman -- doesn't get much better. McQueen's gritty determination, and poor Hoffman, lost, abandoned, resigned, the head tilt giving it away.
Both men should have received Oscar's.
There are scenes in this movie that have brought me to tears.
Truely an underrated classic.
The ending gets me EVERY time. When Louie begs him not to do it knowing that he's going to. Wow. Beautiful and sad.
One of the scenes that got me; as Papillon is planning the major escape (much younger) with a boat, he tries to convince Dega to go too. Dega resists, insists his wife is working on his case, "Her letter is overdue." Papillon says "Listen to me. If she was here, and you were in France with all that money, how much would you pay to get her back?" Dega: "All that I have!" Papillon says "And how much is SHE willing to pay, .....to get YOU back?" Degas' face becomes stricken. He suddenly faces reality.........
You do not have to be inside a prison to live a life of mere existence.
😭
Amazing movie ! and big lesson to all of us ! never give up ! fighting for our freedom and dreams!
Over the years I'd think about this movie from time to time. That's how good this masterpiece was.
I saw it when I was 10 in 1976 and still think about it today. Really glad I ran across the video.
스티브 맥퀸! 넘 일찍 가신듯! 70년대 중반 중딩때 보고 감동의 여운이 가시질 않앗는데! 그 당시 까까머리 시절의 순수햇던 소년이 초로의 길로 ㅜㅜ!
Saw movie as kid. Impacted me. I set myself free. And the journey was as hard as this movie depicts
MAQUEEN INSISTED ON JUMPING OFF THE CLIFF HIMSELF. HE LATER SAID THAT IT WAS "ONE OF THE MOST EXHYLARATING EXPERIENCES OF HIS LIFE".
Thank u ✌✌✌
I read that also. That Steve McQueen did that jump himself. I remember seeing this in NY when I was a 12 years old. The theater roared with clapping for Steve McQueen when he jumped. Brought me goosebumps when I see this movie at my oldest age.
@@tonystewart4113 The man was an adrenaline junkie😆😆😆😆
A monumental film...I saw this one in the theatre-great then and great now....
masterpiece
You should read the book, it is great
McQueen Should Had Won the Oscar for That Role, May He R.I.P.
A Great wise man once said, go forward with your dream and never look back. It's like a never ending journey that continues on.
Fantastic acting from both, sad, Steve mcqueen died a young 50,RIP.a legend
One of the best movies I ever saw....and a true story.
People often say movie is long and boring. Seems to me we haven't watch same movie. This movie is anything but long and boring. It is in a way adventour movie with lots of places. Ship, prison, solitare, island, jungle, tropic indians, nons, solitare, boat, island. It is iconic scene when the old man who is anoyed that Papillon is sittin on the bench ask him who is he to sit on that bench. Than he answer - nobody with complete rezignation. Like he is sayin that all that was nothing, he's complete life. After that he realize he still can escape and his spirit comes back followed with this great sceene. The part he is fighting to ecape from indians that shot him with nedles and he fallin into the water with open arms like buterfly is lightmotiv of the movie. Great movie.
One of the greatest movies ever, & don't even believe it was nominated for best picture or actor at the time. What a disgrace.
It got one nomination for an Oscar, for best score.
It's over 40 years since I saw this show, but I'll never forget "every seventh wave". 😊 Great show!!
Love this film so much, one of the rare cases where the film was every bit as good as the book.
I like and empathize with Hoffman because he doesn’t want to be alone on an island again and he thinks McQueen will get killed this time. Old age is not a time for adventure but looking for security and safety.
I don’t care about the remake. How dare they think they can replace McQueen and Hoffman. Impossible!
Best performances ever by both of them.
Hoffman was better in Rainman,won the Oscar
@@brando7266 More popular movie, but not a better performance.
@@georgestevens1502 McQueen was the star of papillon, not hoffman, hoffman was the star of rainman
@@brando7266 So what Marlon. A distinction without a difference.
@@georgestevens1502 hoffman was also better in midnight cowboy,
Non saprei cosa scrivere, non saprei descrivere l' emozione nel vedere questo geniale capolavoro del cinema. Una storia di amicizia di affetto di lealtà, ma soprattutto di tenacia e perseveranza. Un mio saluto a tutti quelli che scappano, ad ogni innocente, ad ogni colpevole, contro ogni pena ingiusta. Contro la pena in genere
This was one of the very few movie scenes ever to make me tear up.
The movie industry will never make movies like this again. It was good while it lasted. RIP Hollywood.
I have a great memory watching this historical fantastic and amazing movie with my father ❤️
Where we can watch full movie in English ??
Not available in RUclips
자유를 향한
한인간의 그 끝없는 도전과
갈망을 표현한 슬픈 감동의 이야기라 생각합니다
What's the use of being alive and comfortable if you are not free. That was the Papillion's message. He at the end finally beat those who had took away his freedom and freed himself.
"Hey bastards, I'm still here!"
I'm 55 and still remember how I used to watch this movie every time it came on HBO back in the day.
I love this story. I like the part where Papillon tells Dega: if only I had some coconuts, some sacking and a well trained diver, than maybe, just maybe, I might have a chance escaping.
he actually did that jump himself Steve McQueen was the man
I thought Dar Robinson was the stunt man in Papillon..
Not a big deal, but thanks.
He was, but McQueen insisted on doing the jump himself
Yes he did...but the location was in Hawaii.
The soundtrack is by far my most beloved one , it really is, RIP Jerry Goldsmith .