There Will Be Blood: Vocal Control in Movies

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  • Опубликовано: 6 окт 2024
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    Voice shows a characters control of a scene. Depending on how they talk and when they talk, you can see the power dynamics between characters. Who's in control, and who's being dominated. With this thinking in mind, Daniel Plainview becomes a fascinating character to study. And do first understand Daniel Plainview's voice, you have to first understand John Wayne's voice.
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Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @28holes
    @28holes 4 года назад +962

    The scene with Eli forcing Daniel to repeat the phrase "I have abandoned my boy" is a great example of the power dynamic of revenge and competition in the movie. The ending scene in the bowling alley where Daniel makes Eli repeat the phrase "I am a false prophet, God is a superstition" is such a big motif of personal revenge against Eli.

    • @CigaretteCrayon
      @CigaretteCrayon 3 года назад +11

      I don't agree with Eli Sunday's point, regarding HW. He seemingly inserted his opinion there, and we can see that Daniel sent him to get an education as his bid to try to communicate with him again.

    • @NERDXCORE
      @NERDXCORE 3 года назад +14

      So many levels to this film.

    • @soccerman9307
      @soccerman9307 3 года назад +37

      @@CigaretteCrayon if that was the case he wouldn't have lied to him and abandon him on the train. he would have also learned sign language if he wanted to communicate with him.

    • @hanschristopherson8056
      @hanschristopherson8056 3 года назад +1

      Because he also is a fraud, a false prophet who uses religion to serve himself

    • @catherinefrisbie1342
      @catherinefrisbie1342 3 года назад

      Yes

  • @mrjack8849
    @mrjack8849 5 лет назад +1924

    It’s hard for an actor to keep with DDL but Paul Dano did a pretty good job in that movie.

    • @user-fq1ig3uy3q
      @user-fq1ig3uy3q 5 лет назад +61

      I was looking for a comment like this. Bravo.

    • @clayborngrey3552
      @clayborngrey3552 5 лет назад +243

      He’s a very underrated actor. He’s absolutely fantastic in Prisoners as well

    • @mynineridesshotgun
      @mynineridesshotgun 5 лет назад +79

      Clayborn Grey I agree that he’s amazing in Prisoners. That movie doesn’t get enough recognition.

    • @brokenwave6125
      @brokenwave6125 5 лет назад +37

      @Abdulla Saleh And both decided to work with Paul Thomas Anderson...
      One of the best directors ever

    • @i.am.fearlessone
      @i.am.fearlessone 5 лет назад +8

      @@clayborngrey3552 Agreed. Paul Dano is amazing.

  • @woodedco
    @woodedco 5 лет назад +1050

    "The voice is the fingerprint of the soul" - Daniel Day-Lewis

    • @TheSighphiguy
      @TheSighphiguy 5 лет назад +13

      its funny how that quote applies completely to John Wayne, but not at all to himself.
      John wayne can be identified by voice alone in every one of his movies even if you never saw the movie before, where as, you would be hard pressed to ever identify Mr. Lewis by voice alone.
      John Wayne was great, but very "one note" in his delivery. Danial Day is ever changing and unique to a fault in every part he plays.
      I would arguably rate Mr. Lewis as the greatest actor to ever grace the screen.

    • @HafiizhHamid
      @HafiizhHamid 5 лет назад +20

      @@TheSighphiguy Couldn't agree more. While John Wayne being John Wayne in every John Wayne movie, I don't really see Daniel Day-Lewis. All I see is his character. He talks differently for different character. From the quote, my guess is that his first step is finding the voice of the character.

    • @LMFmaskO
      @LMFmaskO 4 года назад +10

      For decades, i never knew DDL' actual voice, i can spot most actors in animated films and do pretty well with intentional misdirects... But I'll never be able to identify his actual voice...
      I'll never forget his performances in GangsofNY, Lincoln, and TTWB... Holy fuck.. he's unbelievable

    • @makemeajmod
      @makemeajmod 4 года назад +1

      @@TheSighphiguy hes not implying the recognition of the voice. ex oh thats defiantly John Waynes voice. he is implying what this videos is suggesting. being able to control the narrative and harness the moment.

  • @kezzler9556
    @kezzler9556 6 лет назад +1738

    There will be blood is a masterpiece. One of my all time favorite films.

    • @richiehops7881
      @richiehops7881 4 года назад +53

      His destruction of Eli is beautiful. Epic film.

    • @brianphillips5978
      @brianphillips5978 4 года назад +6

      Have you seen Donnie Brasco, its on Netflix and a great ass movie

    • @vCLOWNSHOESv
      @vCLOWNSHOESv 4 года назад +10

      @@brianphillips5978 But why? I love that movie but this man is on another level.

    • @brianphillips5978
      @brianphillips5978 4 года назад +12

      @@vCLOWNSHOESv im suggesting a movie, fuck you mean "bUt WhY"

    • @brianphillips5978
      @brianphillips5978 4 года назад +1

      @@vCLOWNSHOESv this a good movie i guess, but the mob and mafia movies in my opinion are better than western type movies

  • @JuanAMatos-zx4ub
    @JuanAMatos-zx4ub 4 года назад +675

    To this day, no performance grips me from beginning to end like Daniel Day Lewis in There Will Be Blood. In my opinion, it's the best performance ever captured on camera.

    • @jadenstearns7211
      @jadenstearns7211 4 года назад +25

      For me it is this and Tony Soprano by James Gandolfini

    • @jamescaban7710
      @jamescaban7710 4 года назад +26

      I give you two thumbs up I agree wholeheartedly most impressive Daniel Day-Lewis in my opinion is the greatest actor of our time

    • @Arisbe_obasmoqweef
      @Arisbe_obasmoqweef 4 года назад +10

      I almost want to agree but I will say it’s comparable to Christy Brown, Bill Cutting or to his character in Last of the Mohicans, but perhaps the cinematography and score and other performances detract to his perfection of that role. In the Name Of the Father was good too. I didn’t care for his last movie too much but his talent in role playing is undeniable.
      And I’m sorry I can’t stand James Gandolfini. His role as Tony Soprano was the same mannerisms, same tone of voice almost same character as the guy he played in True Romance. I think he is an overrated actor that got the hype due to the quality of the show. Any actor could have gotten that part and made it just as big give or take a few memorable moments here and there. I betcha there are some actors who would have catapulted that show even through further greatness. But regardless that’s just me guessing.
      Daniel Day Lewis is a powerhouse. I can’t think of a better actor.

    • @r.p.mcmurphy6328
      @r.p.mcmurphy6328 4 года назад +11

      DDL is the man. Absolutely hard to top. I love the last statement in the movie, "I'm finished.". It's like he's saying to his butler, "Come see my work of art. Now clean it up.". Haha.

    • @justicekreider2978
      @justicekreider2978 3 года назад +3

      Dont forget Bill the Butcher from Gangs of New York

  • @lydiadob
    @lydiadob 6 лет назад +3146

    My mom came in during the cattle scene and said “John Wayne? I’d know that voice anywhere.”

    • @NowYouSeeIt
      @NowYouSeeIt  6 лет назад +267

      EXACTLY

    • @robbepetitjean4343
      @robbepetitjean4343 6 лет назад +23

      Nice job acting like a dick

    • @SICKDOAPNIXON
      @SICKDOAPNIXON 6 лет назад +2

      Paul Smecker is always ahead of things.

    • @ssjwes
      @ssjwes 6 лет назад +14

      For the life of me I don't see why people tell others like this, they're lying. First how the hell do you know and second why the hell would someone lie about something like that? So in the end even if they are, who cares? Doesn't even matter.. so trivial...

    • @pierreo33
      @pierreo33 6 лет назад +5

      stellvia hohenheim during the "cattle scene"

  • @phlaelym
    @phlaelym 6 лет назад +835

    "Talk low, talk slow, and don't say too much." - John Wayne

    • @Prodmullefc
      @Prodmullefc 4 года назад +11

      Aristotle says almost the same in thing in Ethics

    • @streetrat48
      @streetrat48 4 года назад +11

      Fuck John Wayne

    • @ridespirals
      @ridespirals 4 года назад +22

      @@streetrat48 whoa there pil grum

    • @katherinea.williams3044
      @katherinea.williams3044 4 года назад +9

      Couldn’t concur with you more! I meant Wayne.
      Much like Betty Draper, her childhood character, she was fined a penny by her parents by talking too much.
      The art of conversation is SUCH a lost art.
      People just say whatever pops into their head, without thinking AT ALL of the words as they literally say them.
      A damn shame.
      But one I take great pride in.
      Love & Light from Miami✨✌🏼
      Stay safe everyone🌎

    • @streetrat48
      @streetrat48 4 года назад +9

      @@ridespirals He was a hate filled racist piece of shit, to quote Joker from FMJ, "He can eat the peanuts out of my shit."

  • @labyrinthwomb
    @labyrinthwomb 4 года назад +342

    I think Don Draper in Mad Men has a very similar vocal control. His motto is "If you don't like what's being said, change the conversation." But it's all a front and he's extremely unhappy. Also, Jon Hamm does a great job playing him.

    • @465marko
      @465marko 4 года назад +15

      And additionally, his name is reminiscent of the tasty sandwich meat we all know and love.

    • @callumsamericanfriend2943
      @callumsamericanfriend2943 4 года назад +9

      Vocal control and dialogue in Mad Men is extremely underrated to me, but I agree that especially Don's character is a great example of this.

    • @markboston9303
      @markboston9303 4 года назад +4

      What makes Jon Hamm complex is that he stole the power and narrative of his life from someone else he met in the war.
      essentially his whole existence is manufactured , just like how his business will manufacture perceptions about the products they advertise .
      His existence is hastily created and performed but his manipulations, demonstrated by the many people he hurt over time, was the truest part of his character and the most lasting.
      before becoming Jon Hamm he was a passive coward of sorts (didn't they say he had a stutter when he was young?) . and the dichotomy of Hamm was that the character drives , especially with the women be chased, were born out of his desire to run away from his past.
      his continued manipulation and ignorance of who he really was ironically were the most solid elements of what Jon Hamm was.

    • @markboston9303
      @markboston9303 4 года назад +2

      adding onto this, lot of his mottos were always drenched in a man obsessed with changing who he was.
      crazy to think that he was an actor playing an actor playing someone opposite of who he was

    • @joancollaku8744
      @joancollaku8744 4 года назад +2

      Tony Soprano too

  • @losthor1zon
    @losthor1zon 5 лет назад +213

    I recall a quote from, I think, an Oscar Wilde character: "It's not enough that I should succeed, but that others should fail." That seems to match the Daniel Plainview character's drive.

    • @BOOGiNS
      @BOOGiNS 4 года назад +7

      Nevermind the fact that he actually says the line in the movie. Just keep trying to take credit for nothing tho

    • @losthor1zon
      @losthor1zon 4 года назад +1

      @@BOOGiNS - Cool! I'll have to look up the quote, because I'm pretty sure it's not original.

    • @BOOGiNS
      @BOOGiNS 4 года назад +11

      @@losthor1zon "I have a competition in me. I want no one else to succeed"...

    • @dunctank612
      @dunctank612 Год назад

      Gore Vidal said that, not Wilde

    • @losthor1zon
      @losthor1zon Год назад +2

      @@dunctank612 - Ok, now I really have to figure this out. Instead of forgetting about it for another three years.

  • @mgaf9995
    @mgaf9995 3 года назад +54

    “In the end plainview wins but he’s not in control” this is not only a great summation of the that final conversation, but the plot as a whole.

  • @devoncrestway338
    @devoncrestway338 5 лет назад +302

    Interesting fact: John Wayne modeled his walk, talk, and overall mannerisms in film after Wyatt Earp. He met the man once and, after that, knew that it was who he wanted to mimic on screen.

    • @jimmetopramen7827
      @jimmetopramen7827 4 года назад +4

      Really? I sincerely hope there's true

    • @devoncrestway338
      @devoncrestway338 4 года назад +1

      @@jimmetopramen7827 it is. it's a well-recorded fact.

    • @meh9682
      @meh9682 3 года назад +6

      @@devoncrestway338 Which one, Costner or Russell? I enjoy both movies but Tombstone with Kilmer epic performance as Doc it's not close. 😜I know.

    • @trackstar6742
      @trackstar6742 3 года назад

      Any proof of your fact?

    • @devoncrestway338
      @devoncrestway338 3 года назад +3

      @@meh9682 huh? lol. no, man. i mean the REAL wyatt earp.

  • @kenichidc
    @kenichidc 6 лет назад +706

    Please never stop making these. Every frame a painting isn't a thing anymore

    • @adamlord
      @adamlord 6 лет назад +25

      KenichiDC why isn't he anymore? He was an inspiration for alot of us

    • @justcallmecaligula
      @justcallmecaligula 6 лет назад +42

      Adam Lord i don't remember where exactly it was uploaded but he made a post on his blog written by him and his girlfriend talking about how they're doing different things now

    • @Nirvanist100
      @Nirvanist100 6 лет назад +117

      Damn, that's a real loss. I considered him perhaps the best at what his channel did. One step above even "Now you see it", which is still a truly great channel. Well, life goes on I guess, there will be other creators providing content and some maybe will achieve a similarly excellent quality of content

    • @epicvader5603
      @epicvader5603 6 лет назад +8

      I think it was on reddit. I saw the post too. :/

    • @00HoODBoy
      @00HoODBoy 6 лет назад +1

      luca pons check out channel criswell, my fav

  • @RafiOmar83
    @RafiOmar83 6 лет назад +100

    There Will Be Blood is one of those rare movies that you can watch again and again and still be able to find something new. Daniel Plainview is one of the most realistic characters in movie history, and Daniel Day Lewis one of the greatest actors.

  • @TheStranger513
    @TheStranger513 4 года назад +328

    Lol I should dislike this for the fact that you didn't show "I. DRINK. YOUR MILKSHAKE!!! SSSSSSSLLFFLLLLHHHHHHHH.
    I think that's how you spell that slurping sound.

    • @FalloutUgglan
      @FalloutUgglan 4 года назад +9

      Such a memorable scene

    • @fire34084
      @fire34084 4 года назад +8

      I unlike your comment so I could re like it

    • @altobonifacio8936
      @altobonifacio8936 4 года назад +4

      I think it's more like SSSSSSSLRUHRUHRURHRURUUHHHHHHHHHSSLAALALAHALASHSHSHALHSHSALAALHURRRRR

    • @jamillie87
      @jamillie87 4 года назад +2

      😂😂😂

  • @karsaoblong2630
    @karsaoblong2630 6 лет назад +25

    Its interesting to see Daniel Day Lewis playing characters who are not only internally troubled but also have to partake in intense psychological battles with other characters. His vocal control and range is one skill that really sets him apart from other actors and enables him to do justice to playing such amazing characters over and over again.

  • @RisingJake
    @RisingJake 6 лет назад +1485

    But of course, Daniel Day-Lewis is in complete control when his voice spikes on "MILKSHAKE!"

    • @PedroOrdep-kv5vw
      @PedroOrdep-kv5vw 6 лет назад +1

      It's good to see you here RisingJake.

    • @goat9199
      @goat9199 6 лет назад +5

      The should have put you in a JAR

    • @MrClickity
      @MrClickity 6 лет назад +27

      Bastard in a basket! BASTARD IN A BASKET!

    • @declanmcnamara2223
      @declanmcnamara2223 5 лет назад +7

      his losing control in that moment shows just how unhinged the character has become

    • @nickmattio3397
      @nickmattio3397 5 лет назад +4

      “We’ll offer quail prices >:•{D”

  • @richiehops7881
    @richiehops7881 4 года назад +634

    The destruction of Eli was beautiful and highly satisfying.

    • @LMFmaskO
      @LMFmaskO 4 года назад +26

      I make a yearly habit to watch TTWB for that moment, you cant skip the movie or it wont resonate, also GangsofNY, xmas movies.

    • @gabhandebrun1871
      @gabhandebrun1871 4 года назад +8

      @Brian Cencere
      Try Christy Brown autobiographical film MY LEFT FOOT if you’re haven’t seen it already it’s a empowering role in which DDL plays a cerebral palsy born into a family of 22 children and doctors and nurses told them he should be put into a mental home as he would be a mute vegetable and a burden but the family an my nannie in particular discovers a spark behind his eyes and helped with great struggles at times to awaken the genius within in a rough tough working class dublin so great and proud!! 🇮🇪✊👍

    • @CDeeez94
      @CDeeez94 4 года назад +32

      I agree, but honestly I also wanted Daniel to get his comeuppance too. I mean, he is an alcoholic recluse in the end, but the first time I watched the movie, I thought he might've been killed by the end of the movie, and I thought that's what the movie was leading to.

    • @jml6263
      @jml6263 4 года назад +66

      @Astro Apollo The way Daniel treated his son, especially in regards to his deafness which he brought upon his child, at the end of the film hit me differently. Eli was a shit but Daniel was a level of cruel that was unrelenting and spared no one. I do think that the last line of the film did mean that Daniel's comeuppance was coming, we just don't get to witness it (maybe through the loss of his son). Anyways H.W. was about the only character in this film I ended up respecting as a person and thank god he got out happy and truly loved.

    • @Lodatzor
      @Lodatzor 4 года назад +46

      @@jml6263 Also, Eli is more complicated than just being a shit. He's a fraud, and someone who craves social power, but at the same time he was right the whole time about how Daniel had cheated him (and his family). Their entire conflict stems, ultimately, from the fact that Eli correctly perceives that Plainview is trying to screw them over for his own gain. One had to wonder how much more smoothly everything would have gone, if Plainview had simply given Eli the $5,000 he wanted for the oil. Eli's biggest crime in the movie is playing the townsfolks for saps as their spiritual healer. Daniel's crimes are far more extensive, and worse in my opinion.

  • @xeroxre6837
    @xeroxre6837 6 лет назад +108

    Daniel Plainview is my favorite character of all time
    So courageous, so tragic, so flawed, so doomed

    • @seven11noe
      @seven11noe 3 года назад +3

      I take it you like modern art too ?

    • @fwef7445
      @fwef7445 3 года назад +7

      Daniel was an extreme narcissist

  • @AlaskaChromeProductions
    @AlaskaChromeProductions 5 лет назад +38

    DDL literally is the master of accents and characters. Gangs of New York! His portrayal of bill the butcher had me shook! The guy is incredible!

  • @Bacnow
    @Bacnow 4 года назад +74

    I think Clint Eastwood has a total mastery of voice that rivals or exceeds John Waynes

    • @jamescaban7710
      @jamescaban7710 4 года назад +14

      Yeah Clint Eastwood speaks in the 3rd tonal value, with that slight slurring in his throat he sounds like he means Business...

    • @thalastkg
      @thalastkg 4 года назад

      True!

  • @brianmessemer2973
    @brianmessemer2973 6 лет назад +595

    2:34 - so THAT'S where Arnold Shwarzenegger's T-800 Terminator gets the one-handed shotgun reload from in Terminator 2 Judgement Day! He's doing a John Wayne! The Harley was a modern stand-in for a horse! Wow, cool.

    • @yokatta-f
      @yokatta-f 5 лет назад +45

      @D D Very thought-provoking comment

    • @thecadman99
      @thecadman99 5 лет назад +7

      And probably with a real production rifle, not a lightweight prop gun.

    • @lucentblood
      @lucentblood 5 лет назад +14

      Maybe. interestingly notice how the gun John Wayne uses had a large loop for the lever. This aides in the ability to do the flip load. On T2 there were two different props. One with a normal lever and the other with the large loop for doing the flip loads. Apparently Arnold attempted to do a flip load with the normal lever and almost broke his fingers in the process. Also good to note that John Wayne is using a rifle, while Arnold was using a shotgun

    • @xandercorp6175
      @xandercorp6175 5 лет назад +20

      The one-handed shotgun reload comes from real people reloading real shotguns with one hand. Do you also think that the way horses run in Seabiscuit "came from" 1878's horse in motion, that people who walk in moves "got it" from 1895's "Roundhay's Garden Scene, or that 1895's "Arrival of a Train" set the standard for how trains stopped at stations for movies forever more? Shotguns are real things in the real world, and reloading them one-handed is a real thing that happened even before they were ever featured in a movie and still happens in the modern era.

    • @mariaah3073
      @mariaah3073 5 лет назад +16

      @@xandercorp6175 The fact that it happens in real live doesn't make it less of a reference or a homage. I mean, I'm pretty sure many twin sisters have stood in hallways holding hands throughout history, but whenever we see it in a movie it's almost certain to be a reference to The Shining. Whenever we hear a "I'll be back" from someone, even though it's been said thousand, millions of times by normal people, we think of Terminator. It's about the imagery, meaning and relevance of a certain thing, not about the mundane act itself.

  • @TheProphegy
    @TheProphegy 6 лет назад +876

    DDL. The best actor I’ve ever witnessed. His performance in TWBB is one of the best performances ever.

    • @colinbreland1696
      @colinbreland1696 6 лет назад +48

      Eddie Cardwell watch Jake gyllenhaal in nightcrawler. Fantastic performance and I'm biased here, but in an actually good movie.

    • @TheProphegy
      @TheProphegy 6 лет назад +30

      Colin Breland - He’s good too. I’ve seen it. He’s underrated.

    • @kristiangac4935
      @kristiangac4935 6 лет назад +3

      Colin Breland are you implying TWBB isn't good?

    • @colinbreland1696
      @colinbreland1696 6 лет назад +19

      Kristian Gac yes. I think TWBB is terribly boring with nothing interesting to say. I can think of two good scenes, the intro where no one is speaking and when DDL and his "brother" are on the beach. DDL is terrible in this and Paul Dano sucks too. What's an entertaining part of this movie? The big explosion? Not really. The milkshake scene? Comically bad, honestly, seeing DDL limp/run like his leg was full of rot looked ridiculous. Listening to him yelling about he drank the guys milkshake was so dumb. To end, it wasn't entertaining and not interesting. Not trying to be a cunt here but honestly, tell me what was good/you liked about the movie. I see people say day Lewis is the GOAT actor and I think it's ridiculous, he's terrible in this. Cinematography is far from something special in this, I didn't like the soundtrack, acting was sub-par, story was boring.

    • @duffman18
      @duffman18 6 лет назад +10

      Colin Breland I've never liked DDL either. He plays every character exactly the same, and never really captures your imagination like say Al Pacino in the godfather part 1 and 2

  • @BenJaminLongTime
    @BenJaminLongTime 3 года назад +7

    There Will be Blood is a masterpiece. All of the actors involved were no small part, and the writing and camera work sound, etc. all very very well executed.

  • @lukebauer5495
    @lukebauer5495 5 лет назад +357

    So, it seems there is a clear shift in meaning of the word "vocal control" throughout this video. It starts out sounding like "vocal control" refers to the ability to control one's vocal range and tenor, while later in the analysis of There will be Blood vocal control basicall means "having the floor" or "steering the narrative or flow of conversation".
    It's as if the notion of vocal control, which to me seems to be relatively specific regarding vocal range and tone, breathiness or not, etc., is touched on briefly only to turn the topic of the video into something else, which really is not about vocal control at all. While the remarks about the camera are astute, they seem to subtly undermine the importance of "vocal" control.
    Seemed like an interesting video but all in all it seemed really confused about what it was trying to say.
    At the very end, "vocal control" means "not losing one's temper". Just feels like a cheap usage of the word vocal control in three ways without even distinguishing.
    Controlling your vocal range, tone, accent, etc.
    Using your voice to control things
    Controlling your voice by controlling your temper
    Quite disappointed. Postmodern reference in the first few minutes but has no commitment to defining its own terms :(

    • @banino9295
      @banino9295 5 лет назад +3

      Vocal control isn't an expression, it's only meaning is what the words provide, "vocal" and "control": control through voice; whether it refers to a charismatic trait or a movie direction technique depends on the context

    • @wtfpwnz0red
      @wtfpwnz0red 5 лет назад +15

      It's both, though. You can't control anything if you can't control yourself. The voice is a powerful instrument in interacting with others, exercising autonomy, and in influencing those around you.
      Great orators don't just magically influence people, and it's not always their ideas that win over crowds. The commonality is that they know how to connect using voice as their tool. It takes practice to master any tool.

    • @therantingboy
      @therantingboy 5 лет назад +52

      Totally agree. The essayist appears to be giving the actor credit for decisions that are made by the director. The actor doesn't "control" a voice being heard before they're seen, the director and editor do. Day Lewis doesn't "control" when the camera stops, the director does. Day Lewis doesn't control who or when he speaks, the writer does. Annoying because a video about tone of voice is an interesting concept.

    • @lukebauer5495
      @lukebauer5495 5 лет назад +16

      @@therantingboy Yeah, it seems as if the analysis is ok with just blending all these terms together. Quite disappointing.
      As for the other two responses....yes, by definition of the word "expression", it is indeed an "expression" via the definition: "a word or group of words used in a particular situation or by particular people:" as "voice control" is not really an everyday commonplace word but is more jargon.
      And I never said both of these things could not be involved in the creation of an aura around a character. But acting like all of these things are attributable to the actor when clearly most of these things are director/screen-writer/producer decisions, just makes it not worth taking seriously imo. And the whole analysis is presented in this post-modern kind of style, looking at how things today break the mold and undermine the way things used to be done (hence the most stereotypical examples from the past are found to show how pomo everything is now, and how absolutely genius this is).
      Once again, really cool idea for a video. Less than ideal execution.

    • @xsamuraibear947
      @xsamuraibear947 5 лет назад +5

      yes well said. as many can see the person who wrote this essay went from talking about vocal control to breaking down the literal representation of the voice, and the story of there will be blood. The john wayne part isnt even necessary

  • @enotsnavdier6867
    @enotsnavdier6867 5 лет назад +15

    I can't hear John Wayne's voice without laughing. I'll always associate it with his role as Genghis Khan and his voice was hilarious when he was playing a Mongol.

  • @orsonwelles4254
    @orsonwelles4254 6 лет назад +92

    "Is that you, John Wayne? Is this me?"

    • @fabianmorales2280
      @fabianmorales2280 6 лет назад +41

      Who said that? WHO THE FUCK SAID THAT?

    • @yuothineyesasian
      @yuothineyesasian 6 лет назад +5

      Watch the version of that scene where they replace the voices with Disney characters. It's gold.

    • @orsonwelles4254
      @orsonwelles4254 6 лет назад +2

      I saw that

    • @haydenbarnes5110
      @haydenbarnes5110 6 лет назад

      If I weren't a large cheese I'd make you pay for that remark

    • @zarlus8
      @zarlus8 6 лет назад +1

      Lol! I'm so glad you wrote this.
      Fabian Morales
      I'm so glad you responded.

  • @bgezal
    @bgezal 6 лет назад +231

    Too little is credited John Wayne's script writers. Talking like John was probably a lot of hard work for the writers.

    • @anunexaminedlife1207
      @anunexaminedlife1207 6 лет назад +2

      tf are you talking about 😂

    • @LiamHagan
      @LiamHagan 6 лет назад +53

      They're saying that those scripts were probably written that way because John Wayne had such a limited range. It was less about what John Wayne could do with a script, and more about what a script could do with John Wayne.

    • @ZiplineShazam
      @ZiplineShazam 6 лет назад +8

      Yep, John Wayne could only talk like "John Wayne". . . .I don't understand why people consider him to be a good actor. He was mediocre at best.

    • @bgezal
      @bgezal 6 лет назад +15

      I was born while John was still doing movies and this is all about if John delivered concise quotable one-liners it wasn't because of his talent but the writer's and he just delivered them in his style, which the writer's obviously wrote for. If any of his lines were ad-libbed by himself just let me know.

    • @ZiplineShazam
      @ZiplineShazam 6 лет назад +7

      Unexamined, "You don't pay a movie star top dollar to ACT like someone else" ?!?!? What in the hell kind of cough syrup have you been drinking ?!? What do you think "movie stars" are paid to do ?? They are paid to ACT !!! That is what it means to be an actor. . .an actor portrays "someone else" . . .otherwise it wouldn't be acting. Now, there are really good actors like Daniel Day Lewis who have the ability and talent to play multiple characters (aka "someone else") but then you have mediocre actors like John Wayne who just play "themselves" over and over and over again because they have a certain Shtick that gives them some kind of appeal.

  • @this-aint-no-party
    @this-aint-no-party 6 лет назад +111

    you know your christmas holiday is going to be constructive when you watch a video 3 minutes after it comes out

  • @fuzzypiglet
    @fuzzypiglet 6 лет назад +60

    Daniel Day Lewis' acting is far superior to John Wayne's. I remember watching "The greatest story ever told" on TV as a child and Wayne is playing a roman soldier and at the point where Jesus is crucified and huge thunderstorm starts and Wayne Wayne points his sword up at Jesus and says with his awful voice/accent "Truly this man was the son of god" and it wrecks the whole scene! I'm surprised he had a sword in his hand - it could have just as easily been a shotgun and probably no one would have noticed.

    • @guinnesstrail
      @guinnesstrail 4 года назад +7

      Ian Graves, I disagree. John Wayne is iconographic, and the acting is brilliant. Day Lewis has range but he also has a tendency to go over the top (In The Name of the Father, Gangs of New York, The Boxer, The Crucible). Wayne is very understated but his presence lends gravitas to both acting and roles (The Quiet Man, The Searchers, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, The Shootist). Therefore, superiority is relative. It’s all about the totally of the film, including mis en scene.

    • @noobie1890
      @noobie1890 4 года назад +3

      Wait, so didn’t they kind of spoof that scene in “Hail Caesar!” when George Clooney fucked up his line at the end??

    • @skepticmonkey6923
      @skepticmonkey6923 4 года назад +7

      guinnesstrail no way dude, John Wayne plays one character in all of his movies and it’s a generic one at that. DDL just transforms in to whatever character he plays.

    • @christiansanchez7448
      @christiansanchez7448 2 года назад

      @@guinnesstrail absolutely horrendous take lol

  • @ECL28E
    @ECL28E 4 года назад +60

    "Never apologize. It's a sign of weakness"
    *rolls eyes so hard, they fall into the back of my head and rattle around like in a pachinko machine*

  • @georgiethumbs2438
    @georgiethumbs2438 6 лет назад +93

    "That'll be the day"...That's from the movie "The Searchers" which Buddy Holly saw in the movie theater and that's how he got the idea for the song

  • @Skymarshal
    @Skymarshal 6 лет назад +685

    Bane in DKR is a pretty good example of this as well. Considering we never see his mouth move when he speaks, it makes it even more of a "god-like" quality over the scene/other characters.

    • @CunningCondor
      @CunningCondor 6 лет назад +94

      Not to mention Darth Vader.

    • @Dr170
      @Dr170 6 лет назад +29

      Problem is he sounds like a drunk Welshman doing a bad Sean Connery, so unless that is your own specific conjectural voice foe a personification of an indefinable metaphysical force, any godlike authority is nonexistent.

    • @kathiravanganesh5618
      @kathiravanganesh5618 6 лет назад

      Skymarshal Tom Hardy always speaks like that maybe Christin bale is good at vocals

    • @Skymarshal
      @Skymarshal 6 лет назад +32

      Tom Hardy and Bale are two of the best actors of this generation. I think they both know what they're doing.

    • @killergoose7643
      @killergoose7643 6 лет назад +79

      It doesn't matter how he talks. What matters is his plan.

  • @MinaF99
    @MinaF99 6 лет назад +556

    I fully approve of the birdcage used in this video

    • @RobiticDuck
      @RobiticDuck 6 лет назад +6

      Mina F The Birdcage! That movie is so good

    • @markant9534
      @markant9534 6 лет назад +3

      There were rumours of John Wayne being gay! So maybe Robin Williams was really playing Wayne in this scene! lol!

    • @DaygoG
      @DaygoG 6 лет назад

      Your last name is Foohoorar is it?

    • @NikkiMKarLen
      @NikkiMKarLen 6 лет назад +2

      Smear. Men smear.

  • @mz610
    @mz610 5 лет назад +35

    the "vocal" part was very confusing but i enjoyed the thematic/story breakdown. that was good.

  • @pj9259
    @pj9259 3 года назад +1

    Daniel Lewis was fucking amazing in there will be blood. As good as it gets. People rate his performance as Lincoln but his performance as Daniel Plainview was the peak of his career imo and I cant see anyone topping it. The man is a genius at his art form.

  • @whateveritsnoyes
    @whateveritsnoyes 6 лет назад +13

    Not to take anything away from DDL, but PTA specifically told him to ‘watch John Huston interviews’ to get the voice down for Daniel Plainview in pre-production. Now go watch a John Huston interview and get your mind blown. It’s to a tee.

  • @Uriel.Cinema
    @Uriel.Cinema 6 лет назад +400

    Your starting too really get into unique video essay topics, continue the great work!

  • @TenThumbsProductions
    @TenThumbsProductions 6 лет назад +273

    So good. Great work.

    • @arnav6808
      @arnav6808 6 лет назад +1

      My favourite Ukulele Teacher watches Video Essays! That's great!

    • @LuisSierra42
      @LuisSierra42 3 года назад +1

      I drink your milkshake

  • @jeffeldredge1608
    @jeffeldredge1608 Год назад +1

    Everything Daniel has done? is just the maximum effort by the artist to portray his character in every aspect.
    Who else holds a candle to this man? Very few actors come close.

  • @chriszablocki2460
    @chriszablocki2460 4 года назад +7

    "I drink your milkshake"
    (dude immediately back chokes him to death)
    "hard to drink milkshakes when you're dead..."

  • @michaelolson7626
    @michaelolson7626 6 лет назад +116

    This is a masterful video. I have seen a LOT of videos on There Will Be Blood. There's a lot to say about it. But this is the first time I've seen a lot of these insights. Thank you. The intro reminds me of the word Laconic. Which means saying much in as few words as possible. The spartans, or Lacedaemonians were so refined at this art that today we call such speech Laconic, which is very John Wayne/Clint Eastwood. When Philip of Mastedon wrote to the king of Sparta "If I enter Laconia, I will raze Sparta to the ground," The Spartans simply responded "If."

    • @LupeJustinian
      @LupeJustinian 6 лет назад +1

      Darren Foley's got an essay highlighting these points on vimeo

    • @adexuna6155
      @adexuna6155 6 лет назад +23

      You mean laconic?

    • @SICKDOAPNIXON
      @SICKDOAPNIXON 6 лет назад

      Lacan-esque

    • @sheltr9735
      @sheltr9735 6 лет назад

      A fine comment. However, I presume you were referring to Philip of Macedon / Macedonia.

  • @whiteowl87
    @whiteowl87 6 лет назад +9

    Wow, I never caught Eli's method. Paul Dano did a vow of silence in Little Miss Sunshine, so this makes it extraordinary.

  • @lucidexistance1
    @lucidexistance1 6 лет назад +250

    I drink your milk shake! *SHHHLLLLUUUUURRRRPP*

  • @jamesfisherhorror
    @jamesfisherhorror 4 года назад +8

    I still love this film so much. It deserves more praise and awareness. Long, well written films just don't sell with people's low attention span, sadly. Daniel Day Lewis is excellent.

  • @johnguilfoyle3073
    @johnguilfoyle3073 5 лет назад +6

    Fun Fact: John Wayne's line "That'll be the day." from The Searchers (Great movie!) was the inspiration for the 1950's song "That'll Be The Day When I Die".

  • @camila____
    @camila____ 6 лет назад +50

    Great essay. I started thinking about that when Tom Hardy said that finding a voice was finding a character. Even Tatiana Maslany, who played different roles in Orphan Black, can embody the clones so distintive from each other even with voice.
    But I've never thought about voice control as a form of power. Wow. Something to reflect on.

    • @rkrokberg
      @rkrokberg 6 лет назад

      *Grunt* My name is Max *Double grunt*

  • @ralphparker4757
    @ralphparker4757 6 лет назад +24

    Jesus, there is so much stuff in here that I would've never considered. I've seen There Will Be Blood like 3 times but I never really noticed the importance of Day-Lewis' use of vocals in the film. Fantastic video as usual, good sir.

    • @TheStockwell
      @TheStockwell 6 лет назад

      Something that's almost never pointed out: Day-Lewis's accent is not much more than him doing an impression of the American filmmaker and actor, John Houston.
      ruclips.net/video/QJeqiC_PkyY/видео.html

  • @murdockfiles9406
    @murdockfiles9406 6 лет назад +13

    I don't think you give Red River enough credit. John Wayne utilized his masculinity to a consequential degree in Red River. His confidence and masculinity actually fails him. He doesn't get what he wants by the end of Red River, he abides by his surrogate son's achievements which were always a contradiction of his own goals. His masculinity actually masked his love for his surrogate son, only resolved in the ending when he admitted defeat to him.

    • @CLASSICALFAN100
      @CLASSICALFAN100 5 лет назад

      Red River had 1 message: *NOBODY* can ignore tremendous stress. It takes its toll, no matter who you are. Sooner or later, it will collect its "pound of flesh"...

  • @hardliketissues7463
    @hardliketissues7463 2 года назад +4

    Paul Dano is one of my favorite underrated actors ever. There will be blood, prisoners, and little miss sunshine are all fantastic performances by him.

    • @evergray5063
      @evergray5063 Год назад

      Prisoners... great movie, but even as a person who likes so-called ‘gritty’, realistic entertainment (No Country for Old Men, Breaking Bad, There Will be Blood, Alpha Dog, etc) and who completely loathes the MCU, even for me, Prisoners is SO DARK and dreary, it’s hard to rewatch. The only movie I liked but just refuse to ever watch again is Requiem for a Dream; it’s a good movie, I liked the quick, erratic cuts, but it’s just ... idk, like, ONCE is ENOUGH. This sort of dirty feeling you get from watching it is not something I want to experience again.
      Nearly the same with Prisoners. Absolutely GREAT performances for all involved; Jackman is spectacular and, more importantly, BELIEVABLE as the father so overwhelmed with grief that is will do literally ANYTHING to find her. The lady, the real abductor, I don’t remember her name, is exceptional as well. But Dano... probably one of the reasons I don’t rewatch it more, he’s so good in convincing as the suuuuper creep haha. His voice, his mannerisms, his movements, everything. Same for the other creep guy (Forget his name also, but he was one of the jokers henchmen in dark knight) who has the fake graves and snakes. Soooo creepy. Again, GREAT movie, and right up my alley in terms of genre, it’s just almost TOO realistically dark and haunting to watch on a regular basis

    • @evergray5063
      @evergray5063 Год назад

      I don’t know if you have seen it, but there is another movie he is in with Daniel Radcliffe called “swiss army man”... not realistic at all, the total opposite actually; it’s not the sort of movie I would typically like, but it’s just so weird and original, very creative. Check it out if you’ve never seen it

  • @cleonRIP
    @cleonRIP 4 года назад +6

    I just watched this again on Netflix. Thanks, man! Loved finding this vein of storytelling and having you confirm their tug-of-war for control in each scene 👍

  • @zeetstweets
    @zeetstweets 6 лет назад +71

    there will be blood: favorite movie of all time

    • @TheProphegy
      @TheProphegy 6 лет назад +6

      Papi Chulo - Best performance In a film ever as well. DDL is the GOAT.

    • @uremawifenowdave
      @uremawifenowdave 5 лет назад +7

      I agree with both of you. It saddens me that DDL feels that he has nothing left to give acting and has announced his retirement. No matter what film he’s in, whither he’s the main character or not, he always dominates through the quality of his acting.

    • @CLASSICALFAN100
      @CLASSICALFAN100 5 лет назад

      I remember MAD magazine that used to make fun of movies. For this one, they would have probably entitled the satire, "There Will be Idiots", or something like that. Here's the 1st page of their take-off on the old super-corny TV show, "Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea" : www.vttbots.com/mad_1.html

    • @dailytimes6787
      @dailytimes6787 5 лет назад +1

      Uremawife Nowdave Daniel day Lewis is highly overrated. I would go as far as saying he is legitimately bad

    • @robspear03
      @robspear03 5 лет назад

      @@dailytimes6787 Your trolling needs work.
      Youd have been better off arguing that John Wayne was overrated instead.
      Youll get there. As you get older, youll get experience.

  • @lemaxmas
    @lemaxmas 6 лет назад +81

    Just some back story related to your thesis. Wayne's opening shot in "Stagecoach" was all about John Ford, the director of that film. Ford created the look, the sound and Wayne's total demeanor down to the smallest detail. He wanted Wayne to have a memorable entrance so to speak and Ford succeeded. That moment is fair more Ford's creation than Wayne's. And in a way, so is the Wayne persona more of Ford's creation than Wayne's. His best films early in his path to stardom were his collaborations with Ford. Through Ford, Wayne eventually found what worked and could bring it in varying degrees to different roles with other directors. As per his voice control, I doubt that Wayne ever gave it much thoight except in terms if the sound man could hear him. In your description of Wayne's performance you speak of it as if he were doing this all on his own, when it was totally a creation of Ford, who exercised great control over his films and was as I stated earlier creating the very impressions you note. Not Wayne but Ford. An actor like Wayne was in far less control of his instrument than a master actor like Day-Lewis.
    If you hear him in interviews he sounds much the same.
    Vocal training has really been an extremely important part of acting for hundreds of years. It existed well before the time of Stanislavky, considered the father of the method. Actors like Daniel Day Lewis are a rare example of the ghold school of acting where voice, diction, projection etc are just as important as the inner life. It was also a big part of the early talking films where many stage actors right out of that period where vocal skill was used to simulate an emotion. Excellent actors like George Arliss and later Olivier right through to Burton, Branagh and Day-Lewis have made use of this among others.
    I think you should shift the emphasis of control over the director. Film is a director's medium. The voice doesn't control the shot, the director allows the actor to do what they want. Altho an actor like Day-Lewis brings more to the party in invention, talent, etc. it is still the director's choices and all are under his control, unless the director is inexperienced and or new.
    Also, ironically Day-Lewis did an imitation of the great film director, John Huston. For some reason this was on purpose.

    • @grossepointemichigan760
      @grossepointemichigan760 5 лет назад +1

      The director...AND the screenwriter.

    • @good-questions
      @good-questions 5 лет назад +3

      I mean, you raise a point, but you swing the pendulum too far. If anything you kind of miss the fact that it’s a network of creativity and work. At this point you could also say (not necessarily in John Wayne’s case because i don’t know who cast him) the casting director is utterly essential for the director to even be able to get this effect with the right actor. And directors all have different methods and opinions. Eg, Quentin Tarantino had cast some people for Inglorious Basterds and even begin initial work.... but then said to his producer that he had written a role that maybe no actor could play to his satisfaction. So, clearly the role created by Tarantino matters, but so did the other puzzle pieces.

    • @good-questions
      @good-questions 5 лет назад

      Christoph Waltz, that is. Also, now that I’ve finished the section on Wayne I totally see what you mean about the points the video raises.

    • @saber-jocky3436
      @saber-jocky3436 5 лет назад

      Fascinating words coming from someone who would never measure up to the Duke. I believe you have some deep fantasy for Lewis. All that praise, and for what? You are quick to site his excellence as an actor and not credit his director but insist that the Duke was entirely made by the director. I wonder, do you often double standard things in your life?

    • @morgianehamadou6034
      @morgianehamadou6034 3 года назад

      I agree with you but I was going to make the same point about the screenwriter actually. That's the person who creates the character in the first place.

  • @Yodavid1
    @Yodavid1 6 лет назад +5

    i think that in 15 years, this movie will get the actual attention it deserves

  • @FloppsEB
    @FloppsEB 4 года назад +1

    this is simply one of the finest video essays on film i have ever seen. congratulations, and thank you for it.

  • @jtoland2333
    @jtoland2333 5 лет назад +6

    Fun fact, John Wayne became friends with Wyatt Earp. He patterned his walk, mannerisms and his voice on the lawman.

  • @patrickharrison8185
    @patrickharrison8185 6 лет назад +14

    There Will Be Blood is a commentary on power and dominance. Vocal control is just a means of extending your sphere of influence; TV framing and techniques merely manipulate the audience's perception of its subjects.

    • @memowilliam9889
      @memowilliam9889 5 лет назад +2

      Patrick Harrison I believe it’s specifically a social commentary on capitalist greed vs religious hypocrisy. How each use each other to further their own agendas.
      TWBB is not so much a hint at the death of Eli but rather a looming reconciliation owed to God - who detests greed and hypocrisy.
      Blood for blood.
      There will be blood.

    • @jamescaban7710
      @jamescaban7710 4 года назад

      @@memowilliam9889 most excellent observation power and control over capitalism versus fundamental Christian beliefs

    • @matsab7930
      @matsab7930 4 года назад

      Patrick Harrison I feel like this is obvious. Of course the way a movie is filmed influences how people view it, that’s sort of a moot point.

  • @jaseneffendy17
    @jaseneffendy17 6 лет назад +500

    Analysis on Cliché in movies?

    • @nowhereman6019
      @nowhereman6019 6 лет назад +12

      Cliques are cliques for a reason: they work.

    • @gnalkhere
      @gnalkhere 6 лет назад +2

      and on that note, first=/=better, but they can be the same

    • @JWinterhaven
      @JWinterhaven 6 лет назад +2

      Jasen Effendy cliché or tropes?

    • @tf5500
      @tf5500 6 лет назад

      Jasen Effendy Do you have an instagram account so we can talk about movies

    • @betatester03
      @betatester03 5 лет назад

      That's a tough one. A cliche might not have been a cliche when a movie was released. People who are watching Seinfeld for the first time will often criticize it for rampant use of cliches without realizing that what they're often seeing is the root of the cliche -- the origin that worked so well others were compelled to emulate it.

  • @Yaarrr
    @Yaarrr 6 лет назад +52

    My favourite movie of all time

  • @16Willmanutd
    @16Willmanutd 5 лет назад +3

    One of the best movies ever made. Daniel Day Lewis is freaking amazing in this film and also the music in this film just sets the tone so well.

  • @geeess9436
    @geeess9436 3 года назад +3

    I watched There Will Be Blood recently and thought it was a great piece of cinema. Day-Lewis and Dano both put on exceptional performances.

  • @ClearCritique
    @ClearCritique 6 лет назад +6

    This is the first review I've seen on your channel. Well done, dude.

    • @summerw.1425
      @summerw.1425 6 лет назад

      All of his video essays are really good theyre worth a binge watch. You'll lose track of time theyre so good.

  • @CineRanter
    @CineRanter 6 лет назад +10

    This film was incredible

  • @phyrr2
    @phyrr2 5 лет назад +9

    Voice actors are rarely credited for the amazing work they do. They're actors just the same, and they lure us into virtual worlds that would utterly fail without them.
    Mel Blanc, Rob Paulsen, Dave Fennoy, Michael Gould...

  • @dwdelcourt3294
    @dwdelcourt3294 2 года назад +2

    I like how you explained John Wane as the fantasy version of the male control narrative and then contrasted it with TWBB as the more realistic version of that narrative. I wasn't sure if it was going to tie together, but it totally did!

  • @Colin-kh6kp
    @Colin-kh6kp 4 года назад +1

    DDL as Daniel Plainview is the greatest performance I’ve ever seen.

  • @emilymatson9749
    @emilymatson9749 6 лет назад +23

    I actually love your videos you ignited my passion for movies again and enabled me to watch them in a whole new light! I’d love it for you to analyse movies like Garden of Words or 5cm per Second I know they are anime but there’s a lot of deep meaning in them and they are very technical

  • @nixdaddio
    @nixdaddio 6 лет назад +27

    10:00 Give me a break! Plainview is drunk. He is a truly human character in all its flawed beauty.

    • @bretteader6758
      @bretteader6758 5 лет назад +9

      He’s a raging alcoholic. He will never not be again. His mind and body is decimated by not only that, but the years of chipping rock, breaking his back. I can’t even articulate how much the DP character means to me.

  • @name001
    @name001 6 лет назад +145

    Where does the script, editing, and directors "vision" all play into this?

    • @redcaddiedaddie
      @redcaddiedaddie 5 лет назад +33

      ... my question exactly! The narrator implies that THE ACTOR has total control over the entire scene, & although voice modulation , pacing & tone are obviously an integral part of a scene, MUCH relies on the direction, editing & the words the actor is given... a TEAM EFFORT after all, IMHO.

    • @stolenname94
      @stolenname94 5 лет назад +8

      I actually think the direction is what brings out the actor. I do acting an extra work and almost every shoot I've been on I make myself as blank as possible then allow the script proxcemics and director paint the picture if that makes sense. I found if I went into a piece with my own ideas it often leaves the director not much creative freedom since I've already established a character. Good direction can be found just in the use of punctuation, almost everything you do as an actor is based around getting told what to do. But that don't mean you can't do the work yourself some want that and I appreciate it others don't but I have to respect the vision.

    • @mariaah3073
      @mariaah3073 5 лет назад +9

      @@redcaddiedaddie almost everything about making a movie is a matter of team effort, but THIS video chooses to focus on performance. No one's denying the influence of other people, it's just that this time it's a 14 minutes conversation about actors and their vocal capacities applied to narratives.

    • @brokenwave6125
      @brokenwave6125 5 лет назад +5

      @@redcaddiedaddie He was referring to the character....
      Which is a summation of efforts between the actor, writer, director etc...
      He focused mostly on the actors role because ultimately that's the person who is actually speaking.

    • @redcaddiedaddie
      @redcaddiedaddie 5 лет назад

      @@brokenwave6125 OK...

  • @merlinsrobe4621
    @merlinsrobe4621 Год назад +1

    There was a nice contrast here between Paul Dano, who was straight acting and gave a true to life performance, and Daniel Day-Lewis, who was method acting and gave a larger than life performance. Personally I prefer the true to life performance, but given all of Day-Lewis’ accolades, most people seem to think of larger than life performances as being better “acting”.

  • @simonfive1874
    @simonfive1874 6 лет назад +9

    Daniel is a god amongst men, legendary actor.

  • @ChuckHenebry
    @ChuckHenebry 6 лет назад +7

    Great analysis, and excellent selection of clips.
    But I wish you didn't stretch the 4x3 aspect of the older movies to fit the 16x9 RUclips viewer. It makes John Wayne look weird.

  • @sakshivora4805
    @sakshivora4805 6 лет назад +32

    I just realised something........
    Daniel Day Lewis' actual voice is unknown.....

    • @tialatunna
      @tialatunna 6 лет назад +3

      It's known, you can hear it in interviewes. Surpisingly unpleasant (in my opinion)

    • @Technodook93
      @Technodook93 6 лет назад +2

      he pretty much uses his regular voice in Phantom Thread if you haven't seen that yet

    • @gillri
      @gillri 5 лет назад +3

      Its quite a calming middle class English accent

    • @brokenwave6125
      @brokenwave6125 5 лет назад

      No its not...

  • @Elrond_Hubbard_1
    @Elrond_Hubbard_1 4 года назад +2

    This video brings up an interesting point about how voices command attention in film, but I think a more interesting thing is how this same method works in real life. It's a huge simplification to just say 'talk with confidence', but there are ways I've found with how you use inflection and timing with what you say to make people listen.

  • @Demonator27
    @Demonator27 5 лет назад +2

    Exceptional video about my hands-down favourite movie of all time. Thanks for making this!

  • @DestroyerX61
    @DestroyerX61 6 лет назад +38

    look up gary oldman's EVERYONE for a real lesson in vocal control

    • @mdnblues
      @mdnblues 4 года назад +4

      Gary Oldman is so underrated it's crazy.

    • @ppvk2610
      @ppvk2610 4 года назад +2

      Indeed talk about vocal control..
      Drexl? Anyone?... then..
      Korshunov?...
      Zorg?...
      Dracula, Beethoven, lee Harvey Oswald, Churchill....?!
      Comm.Gordon, Sirius Black
      All in a different voice...
      Best immo...

  • @jackofsuit
    @jackofsuit 6 лет назад +4

    Good and insightful. However, the answer cannot be that dominance hierarchies are bad. I think the point of older movies was to show an ideal of a good man in charge. The point of the 'There Will Be Blood' is to show a pathological dominance. Being strong is not wrong--only the desire that no one else succeed. So they are addressing the same issue from different angles.

    • @TheMGIvideos
      @TheMGIvideos 3 года назад

      There Will Be Blood comes from a novel written by an anarchist and you think dominance hierarchies are bad isn't the point?

  • @holy_braille
    @holy_braille 4 года назад +4

    A buddy of mine in college was having some people over and asked to borrow a film. I lent him "There Will Be Blood." He returns it once they all leave and goes "what the f*** was that? Nobody even talks for like 30 minutes." I tell him "you asked to borrow a film. I gave you one of the best films ever made. You want words, go to a play."

    • @skepticmonkey6923
      @skepticmonkey6923 4 года назад +3

      Jason Sams I mean, there’s movies you watch alone and movies you watch when your friends come over, TWBB is for the former occasion.

    • @rogerpaips9701
      @rogerpaips9701 3 года назад

      @@skepticmonkey6923 o couldnt agree more, this is definitely not the movie you want to watch with a pack of friends. i experienced that and its the most awful thing ever when you watch a masterpiece movie the most insane scenes are happening and your stupid friends are talking about potato chips they are eating. FUCK THAT.

  • @valkeriejones3818
    @valkeriejones3818 5 лет назад +1

    Just saw this movie for the first time. Daniel Plainview is one of the best characters I've ever seen. Complex and dyanamic, he shows his true colors as the film progresses.

  • @lukebrog3702
    @lukebrog3702 6 лет назад +1

    That was mind blowing. I'd be fascinated to know how you notice such subtle things/process of analyzing movies. You definitely have a talent

  • @peterpetruzzi
    @peterpetruzzi 6 лет назад +6

    2:07 - 2:13 I laughed out loud seeing that death stare out of context

  • @MarkArandjus
    @MarkArandjus 6 лет назад +69

    This is why I'm bothered when Bruce Wayne (the real one, not the playboy facade) is portrayed as a nice dude in the films. In reality someone so powerful and so obsessed with control would be a very difficult person to be around, even if they weren't malicious or self-serving. It's telling that the guy he gets along with the most is a professional servant :D

    • @Karl_vulture
      @Karl_vulture 6 лет назад +3

      Mark Arandjus I always thought the Keaton take was better for this reason. Whenever he’s Bruce he always feels a little off, like he’s almost uncomfortable in his own skin. Bale’s version has too much on the nose exposition but portrays zero subtext.

    • @IamHueGraves
      @IamHueGraves 5 лет назад +1

      I thought it was pretty clear that he was a difficult person since, as you said, a professional servant is the only person that ever hangs with him for more than 10 minutes. He's a good dude, but people definitely don't like him (assuming he ever even acts like himself or knows how to).

    • @brokenwave6125
      @brokenwave6125 5 лет назад

      Nice...and difficult to be around...aren't mutual exclusive.
      So you have no point.
      Not to mention...Bruce isn't depicted as being nice to be around.
      The only people he spends personal time with in the Nolan films are his butler and someone he's known since he was a kid. That's it.
      He spends some time with Gordon and Fox but that's Batman business. They aren't just hanging out.
      None of that points to "Wow, he's a really great guy that everyone wants to hang out with"

  • @GermanSnipe14
    @GermanSnipe14 6 лет назад +78

    "He even controls the camera. When he moves, it moves." If that didn't happen, camera wouldn't be tracking him anymore and he'd be off frame lmao

    • @xthebumpx
      @xthebumpx 6 лет назад +18

      The point is he's the one the camera is tracking and not someone else.

    • @dildonius
      @dildonius 6 лет назад +9

      @@fuzzypiglet no, it's just that you apparently don't understand cinematography and the concept of mise-en-scène

    • @idonotdraw
      @idonotdraw 6 лет назад +4

      You could still hear him outside the frame, and that would give off a different idea cinematically about the character. So, by having the camera follow, he's in control.

    • @carlosmarte428
      @carlosmarte428 6 лет назад +2

      Pietro Guglielmi Call me a simpleton, but it's fascinating to see the meaning people derive from even the slightest things...to me the camera was following him because he was speaking haha. I would have never thought of this.

    • @idonotdraw
      @idonotdraw 6 лет назад +1

      @@carlosmarte428 if done well, you never notice! :) I'm studying cinematography and all it changes for me is just being able to point at shots and make barely educated guesses. Things are really damn hard to spot the first time you watch a movie though, there's a little too much to take in all at once to read through the lines. It gets easier every rewatch.

  • @markparkinson6947
    @markparkinson6947 3 года назад +1

    Saying that apologising is a sign of weakness is like what the video said; it’s unrealistic and dangerous, and can be detrimental to resolving conflict and improving relationships.

  • @alphatrion4365
    @alphatrion4365 4 года назад +1

    DDL owns every scene in that movie. As soon as his presence is there, he's the one everybody listens to. He was the same in Gangs of New York. Dicapprio is a very good actor, but DDL absolutely steals any scene he's in with him.

  • @CarMad97ci
    @CarMad97ci 4 года назад +3

    You make it like the actor has control over the script, dialog, and editing...

  • @jaymore012
    @jaymore012 4 года назад +4

    That second John Wayne scene was similar to the shining scene on the stairs.

  • @c9brown
    @c9brown 5 лет назад +5

    Whats strange about this analysis is the disregard for the wall between the production of the film and the film universe itself. I think it's just a liberty with language, but you refer to characters as controlling the direction and filming of the scene (and also to actors controlling the course of the story), neither of which are the case. Clearly, what you are referring to is how the actors and directors worked together to give or take control to and from characters in the narrative, but the way you describe it blurs this distinction.

    • @morgianehamadou6034
      @morgianehamadou6034 3 года назад

      I totally agree though I don't know much about film making, I got this weird feeling from the analysis that there was a confusion somewhat. He makes good points in the video though, just misdirected imo.

    • @neilkristjansson8477
      @neilkristjansson8477 2 года назад

      They're talking about how the visual narrative is told in relation to the portrayal of the characters, like how how the film tells a subconscious story outside of just the words being spoken and the actions being done by each character (and subtly manipulates the viewer into having subconscious thoughts and feelings about it).
      The video doesn't actually suggest that the characters are directing or the actors controlling the course of the story. It's just an easier way of speaking about visual storytelling analysis.

  • @SwazNasty
    @SwazNasty 4 года назад +1

    Paul Dano showed he can act with the best in this movie. There will be blood is absolutely in my top 5 all time fav, Daniel Day is in my top 5 of actors, but the fact that Paul could keep up with DDL this early in his career really says alot. Such a good movie.

  • @JarthenGreenmeadow
    @JarthenGreenmeadow 4 года назад +1

    John Wayne talking off camera is a trick because audio and video originally were recorded separately and had to be synced.
    Having him off screen removes the need to sync.

    • @JarthenGreenmeadow
      @JarthenGreenmeadow 4 года назад +1

      I like the video but you're ascribing complex meaning where a simpler answer is needed.

  • @petergugganig3225
    @petergugganig3225 6 лет назад +39

    When your ad is mid video it really takes out the flow. Maybe you could put it at the beginning.

    • @SICKDOAPNIXON
      @SICKDOAPNIXON 6 лет назад +2

      how do you live without adblock on youtube?
      also the ad is in the end and part of the video
      the _first 700 people to click the link part_ is disgusting

  • @TheGatesOfFire
    @TheGatesOfFire 5 лет назад +22

    I don't think that you can know for a fact that the actors actually planned to do what you are stating. You can only analyse the effect.

  • @juriepica1174
    @juriepica1174 6 лет назад +57

    Good Job :) and happy holidays

  • @cammpion
    @cammpion 2 года назад +1

    I don't know guys ... but There will be blood hit me very hard, deep inside my heart, from my soul ... it's a movie that changed my life ... how? I don't know, I just know that broke something inside of me that I could never get back.
    And I like It...

  • @WiggysanWiggysan
    @WiggysanWiggysan 5 лет назад +1

    Daniel Day-Lewis - simply *OUTSTANDING* in every role he did.

  • @WillIsWellGood
    @WillIsWellGood 6 лет назад +4

    This is an absolutely fantastic video essay; interesting and entertaining and Illuminating. And it simultaneously addresses techniques of film *and* the sociological concepts of masculinity and control. One of the best videos I’ve seen on RUclips ever - thank you.

  • @CH1EFBL1TZ
    @CH1EFBL1TZ 6 лет назад +2

    There Will Be Blood is simply my favorite movie of all time, next to The Fellowship of the Ring.

    • @jdarling5315
      @jdarling5315 4 года назад

      so really it's your second favorite movie of all time

  • @aviewofyou2641
    @aviewofyou2641 6 лет назад +5

    There are actors who have distinctive and compelling voices and personas: John Wayne, Clint Eastwood, Bruce Willis, Vin Diesel. You know what you're going to get from them in their movies but the larger movie itself can be great and they can be convincing in their roles.
    Then there are actors who play a wide range of characters and transform their voices and mannerisms to fit the role: Daniel Day Lewis, Meryl Streep, Dustin Hoffman, Tom Hanks, Laurence Olivier. These actors are in a different league altogether and I don't think John Wayne would argue the point.
    I would not call what John Wayne does vocal control. It's his voice with a little added flair. What DDL and Meryl Streep do is real vocal control in the service of legendary performances.

  • @donna30044
    @donna30044 5 лет назад +2

    John Wayne only played variations on one character for his entire career, and that character was John Wayne. . . and he was consistently good at it.

    • @rachelgarber1423
      @rachelgarber1423 5 лет назад

      Well, it sure isn't acting imho. Genghis Kahn oh look it's John Wayne, Stagecoach oh yeah John Wayne, True Grit Green Beret John Wayne. Supposed to be acting, it's called acting for a reason, not to be yourself. Wouldn't waste my time or money on one of his movies. I've seen several Daniel Day-Lewis, he always becomes the characters he plays.

  • @claudegray2759
    @claudegray2759 6 лет назад

    Second time watching this, there is a lot you didn't touch on, because you, of course, have a time limit and also need to stick to one topic, but while thinking about this essay I realized so many hidden dimensions of There Will Be Blood. An all-time favorite of mine, and now in maybe even higher on the list.

  • @theartfuldodger935
    @theartfuldodger935 5 лет назад +5

    DDL mimicked John Huston in TWBB.