Barry Lyndon • Piano Trio in E-Flat • Franz Schubert

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  • Опубликовано: 23 дек 2019
  • Soundtrack from the 1975 Stanley Kubrick film "Barry Lyndon," with Ryan O'Neal, Marisa Berenson, Patrick Magee, Hardy Kruger, Steven Berkoff, Gay Hamilton, Marie Kean, Leon Vitali, Pat Roach, Wolf Kahler, Anthony Sharp, Philip Stone, Leonard Rossiter & Michael Hordern. Based on the novel by William Makepeace Thackeray. --- HD Film Tributes is a channel with over three hundred movie homages currently posted. We make zero money from RUclips as obviously none of these edits will ever be monetized by us. Any and all ad revenue from these videos goes directly to Google as well as to the various copyright owners, just as it should.
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Комментарии • 883

  • @HDFilmTributes
    @HDFilmTributes  14 дней назад +1

    *Help Support This Channel?*
    This channel currently has over three hundred film tributes posted. We make ZERO money from RUclips as obviously any and all ad revenue from these videos goes directly to Google as well as to the various copyright owners, just as it should. -- Please consider supporting our editing efforts by leaving a small tip in our tip jar. Thank you! - paypal.me/HDFilmTributes

  • @rolando-hernando
    @rolando-hernando 4 года назад +1527

    Every frame is like a painting

    • @pelegred6123
      @pelegred6123 4 года назад +29

      Do another take and get right

    • @randallkoch6183
      @randallkoch6183 3 года назад +35

      The wealthy people wore so much make up and clothing to hide their syphilis lesions.

    • @diejaenicke
      @diejaenicke 3 года назад +2

      1 : 1 my thoughts

    • @soviethammer645
      @soviethammer645 3 года назад +1

      You beat me to it by 9 months.

    • @Charlie-qn4my
      @Charlie-qn4my 3 года назад

      Yes

  • @jec1ny
    @jec1ny 3 года назад +1072

    One of the most underrated films of all time. The entire movie was like an audio-visual love letter to the 18th century.

    • @hannahquintua
      @hannahquintua 3 года назад +2

      title????

    • @virginiavoolf
      @virginiavoolf 3 года назад +12

      @@hannahquintua Barry Lyndon

    • @jam6875
      @jam6875 3 года назад +41

      Underrated? lol

    • @malcolmabram2957
      @malcolmabram2957 3 года назад +23

      The temper of the movie is unique and is a new experience when first watched.

    • @Caarle1312
      @Caarle1312 3 года назад +16

      lol it's not underrated what are you saying. It's well known and recognized.

  • @schmebulockjizz
    @schmebulockjizz 3 года назад +826

    *This is not even a movie anymore. It is beyond that, its a life-changing experience.*

    • @lizclegg7556
      @lizclegg7556 3 года назад +7

      How did it change your life?

    • @jamesmiller4184
      @jamesmiller4184 3 года назад +8

      Very nicely said and, of course, this commenter agrees.
      +|+

    • @jamesmiller4184
      @jamesmiller4184 3 года назад +14

      @@lizclegg7556 Likely because it would be too deeply personal to reveal, just as it would be if I were to be asked thus, by your gently-inquiring self.
      +|+

    • @williambunter3311
      @williambunter3311 3 года назад +4

      Get a grip, Brandon. There's a difference between a movie and real life. I bet you think soap operas are real too!

    • @AGoodEgg_
      @AGoodEgg_ 3 года назад +24

      @@williambunter3311 art doesn’t move you or enrich you?

  • @PointyTailofSatan
    @PointyTailofSatan 3 года назад +417

    The candle scenes are far more complex than one might think. Kubrick had special extra volatile candles with three wicks each made to provide more light. That's why their flames are so large and bright. These would burn out in minutes, so they had to be changed constantly. Second, Kubrick had to buy an incredibly fast camera lens (for camera nerds: f/0.7 !) from Zeiss that was originally designed for use on the Apollo missions for taking pictures from orbit of the dark side of the Moon. But the lens didn't fit a normal movie camera, so he had one camera modified at huge cost for use only with this lens. Also, the lens had an incredibly narrow depth of field, so anyone moving as little as a couple of inches farther or closer to the camera would go out of focus. So during shots, the actors had to be extremely careful not to move toward or away from the camera, and only move sideways to the camera. All of this just to film a few scenes by candlelight! Genius.

    • @wanlitan7406
      @wanlitan7406 3 года назад +18

      This reminds me of a quote from a dictionary of films and directors: "Few American directors have been able to work within the studio system of the American film industry with the independence which Stanley Kubrick has achieved."

    • @zwaqster
      @zwaqster 3 года назад +1

      way cool

    • @kweejibodali7009
      @kweejibodali7009 3 года назад +2

      yikes, had no idea...thanks for that

    • @malquezare
      @malquezare 2 года назад

      Thanks to remember this technics details

    • @paulustarsus
      @paulustarsus 2 года назад +5

      I only discovered these facts in the past few years. I was wondering why I was always drawn to the movie ever since I was at it's first Dublin showing as a 13 year old kid (40 odd years ago). Even then, I was captivated by how it portrayed the beauty of my country (Ireland). Now, to learn how Kubrick sat around for days waiting on the right type sky, purely for my entertainment? Sheer Class. Rest in Peace, Stanley. ✝️🇮🇪💚

  • @adelavitalis9988
    @adelavitalis9988 3 года назад +329

    The most gorgeous movie ever created in terms of: painting, music, light and directing every frame. Can't stop watching and wandering Art of Stanley Kubrick.

    • @Ch9-7708
      @Ch9-7708 2 года назад +13

      Greatest film
      Greatest director
      Films like these can’t be described in words, it’s best to just watch and enjoy.

    • @ms.annthrope415
      @ms.annthrope415 2 года назад +2

      I'd need 3 demitasse cups of cuban coffee to stay away to watch this .

    • @stewartbloomfield8035
      @stewartbloomfield8035 Год назад

      @@Ch9-7708 So true Stew FMJ Crew.

    • @baskervillebee6097
      @baskervillebee6097 8 месяцев назад

      And soundtrack.

    • @TheWritter-qo9ty
      @TheWritter-qo9ty 2 месяца назад

      story?

  • @jeanbartok7163
    @jeanbartok7163 3 года назад +688

    Napoleon from Kubrick would have been a master piece... so sad he died too soon...

    • @FlagAnthem
      @FlagAnthem 3 года назад +53

      one of the "what if" of cinematography

    • @jeanbartok7163
      @jeanbartok7163 3 года назад +32

      @@FlagAnthem Yep, we'll see what will do Ridley Scott with J. Phoenix... it can be good. (sorry for my english I m french). :)

    • @FlagAnthem
      @FlagAnthem 3 года назад +3

      @@jeanbartok7163 pas du probleme

    • @jeanbartok7163
      @jeanbartok7163 3 года назад +10

      @Mr Sheffner lol ! Vive la France!

    • @jeanbartok7163
      @jeanbartok7163 3 года назад

      @What' Ev Is there a theory? You speak about Eyes wide shut's controversy?

  • @MadThanos79
    @MadThanos79 2 года назад +328

    There will never be another film like Barry Lyndon. The artistry and skill needed to make something like this again is sadly forever lost. It doesn't even seem like it is a scripted story. More like a magical window to a bygone era.
    Magic.

    • @mrhoplite2931
      @mrhoplite2931 2 года назад +14

      A magical window - very well said!

    • @Kupferdrahtful
      @Kupferdrahtful Год назад +18

      Don’t underestimate humanity

    • @chefandmusician9170
      @chefandmusician9170 Год назад +3

      We just need to be original

    • @mellowingman
      @mellowingman Год назад +1

      words of wisdom.

    • @ntinetaspi
      @ntinetaspi Год назад +2

      @@Kupferdrahtful what a nice comment! Tender and humorous! Lamenting it s worth while in @Θανάσης Μανταίος way! Hoping and jiggling too!

  • @DCFunBud
    @DCFunBud 3 года назад +254

    I was so lucky to see this movie on a full screen at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts c. 1977. The cinematography was spectacular.

    • @schmebulockjizz
      @schmebulockjizz 3 года назад +3

      I would have died to see that

    • @DCFunBud
      @DCFunBud 3 года назад +3

      @@schmebulockjizz It was like going to museum except these giant murals passed before you without your having to move.

    • @quarkoftheseus152
      @quarkoftheseus152 3 года назад +6

      @@DCFunBud It's really obvious that Kurbrick has studied Reynolds, Gainsborough Constable, and Hogarth. He also wrote the voiceover narration, in an excellent imitation of eighteenth century prose. (The novel is actually written in first person.) Kubrick is one of the very few filmmakers I would not hesitate to call a genius.

    • @timblock3483
      @timblock3483 3 года назад

      Yes. Saw it at a premium theatre in Milwaukee. Fantastic.

    • @environmentart
      @environmentart 3 года назад

      Truly an honour!

  • @maxheadroom1837
    @maxheadroom1837 4 года назад +337

    This film was Kubricks greatest achievement

    • @gordonhall752
      @gordonhall752 3 года назад +17

      ...with one exception: The casting of Ryan O'Neal as Redmond Barry. It just doesn't work. The sets, on the other hand, were the first time I'd ever encountered truly representative period sets. However this Schubert Piano trio was written about seventy-five years post the period this film is supposed to represent. Nonetheless, I forgive Kubrick that, it works tremendously well in the film.

    • @randallkoch6183
      @randallkoch6183 3 года назад +6

      @@gordonhall752 A lot of movies are like that. For example "The Sting" that music predates the time period the movie took place in by 30-35 years. That worked too.

    • @knurdyob
      @knurdyob 3 года назад +42

      @@gordonhall752 kubrick actually addressed that in an interview once, he said he used that music deliberately even knowing it wasn't accurate to the period, because music from that period lacked that certain tragic and romantic quality he was looking for, not even a tradeoff in my opinion, I can't imagine the film with any other music

    • @freelancer9955
      @freelancer9955 3 года назад +1

      What is this movie about? Just imagine that you had made 2001: A space Odyssey and Lolita. And you were influenced by the art of Sergei Eisenstein. And somebody answered you with Solaris.) It is interesting to know what you would do next if you were the English language man.

    • @larryscott3982
      @larryscott3982 3 года назад +4

      Gordon Hall
      Yes, Ryan O’Neal is a bit like a Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court
      Or a 20th c mannequin. The role was so critical to the entire film, I can’t believe.... Even Micheal Caine would’ve been better. I would’ve of liked to have seen Albert Finney in the lead.

  • @ludwig773
    @ludwig773 6 месяцев назад +77

    RIP Mr Ryan O'Neal. As Barry Lyndon, main character of the greatest film ever, you will be alive forever.

    • @pingamalinga
      @pingamalinga 6 месяцев назад +2

      Shit I didnt know he passed away.

    • @rahulhead330
      @rahulhead330 5 месяцев назад +1

      I learnt it here

  • @HT-ym6re
    @HT-ym6re 9 месяцев назад +68

    The choice of this piano sonata is excellent for this perfect cinematographic video. It is a true match, if ever there was one. Melancholic music to the tragic story of Thackeray's Barry Lyndon. To me it is Kubrick's best film and higly underrated.

    • @successsystem2468
      @successsystem2468 8 месяцев назад

      💯

    • @galahadthreepwood
      @galahadthreepwood 6 месяцев назад +1

      Truly one of the greatest. Perhaps second only to the moon landings

    • @successsystem2468
      @successsystem2468 6 месяцев назад

      @@galahadthreepwood 🤣🤣

    • @0xdeadbeef975
      @0xdeadbeef975 9 дней назад

      This is not a piano sonata...

    • @baldrbraa
      @baldrbraa 4 дня назад

      @@0xdeadbeef975It’s not, it’s a piano trio, one piano and two strings. But «sonata» isn’t entirely wrong, because it’s in overall sonata form like most such pieces of the era, whether they’re solo pieces, chamber music like this, or orchestral symphonies.

  • @Aldoborzoni
    @Aldoborzoni 3 года назад +55

    Barry Lyndon, a masterpiece. I'm 70 now and I want to enjoy it one more time. Please, Netflix, if you love cinema stop producing garbage and bring back the good movies from the likes of geniuses like Stanley Kubrick!

    • @pixiesyay
      @pixiesyay 2 года назад +1

      Not going to happen, Aldo :(

    • @cornbrains
      @cornbrains 2 года назад

      DVD netflix still have it. Just watched it tonight. Netflix streaming is shite.

    • @sackamore
      @sackamore 6 месяцев назад +1

      It’s on RUclips!

  • @DugB0915
    @DugB0915 3 года назад +218

    Saw this film for the first time last night. I thought the ending was quicker than I had liked. The cinematography, framing, costumes, where shots were taken..well..I was gobsmacked. I mean, how the hell did he do all that? The lighting...he FILMED INDOORS WITH CANDLES AND IT WORKED. Good god what a great film.

    • @filegrabber1
      @filegrabber1 3 года назад +20

      Kubrick got a little help from NASA with the camera lenses, which were designed for the Apollo lunar program.

    • @edwarddejong8025
      @edwarddejong8025 3 года назад +10

      @@filegrabber1 0.7 lenses! wow.

    • @stewartbloomfield8035
      @stewartbloomfield8035 3 года назад +6

      @@filegrabber1 And had a camera converted to film in very low light too.stew fmj crew.

    • @pixiesyay
      @pixiesyay 2 года назад +3

      It grows on you. I have never appreciated a Kubrick film as much the first time as I have each time after.

    • @opencurtin
      @opencurtin Год назад +4

      Yes it ends rather abruptly maybe that was because of the 3 hour length and was edited that way but maybe it was just to show how quickly Barry disappeared back into obscurity.

  • @chandanrawal4137
    @chandanrawal4137 3 года назад +126

    just finished watching this film....my eyes are full of happiness.

  • @rockyraccoon6114
    @rockyraccoon6114 Год назад +23

    I don’t care what the critics say…this is an outstanding film. Also, the cinematography is absolutely divine and flawless.

  • @MS-eb8cf
    @MS-eb8cf 4 месяца назад +5

    This is the greatest period drama film ever made. Barry Lyndon is the true cinema definition of 'masterpiece'.

  • @MichaelJordan-uo1qm
    @MichaelJordan-uo1qm 3 года назад +38

    Barry Lyndon is not only my favorite Kubrick film but is also in my top five favorite films of all time. It's hard to think of a movie that was as beautifully filmed as Barry Lyndon.

  • @rockyracune1779
    @rockyracune1779 2 года назад +15

    When the movie was first released, critics and audiences YAWNED.
    Now? Now the movie is broadly recognized as one of the greatest films ever made. Kubrick was so ahead of the cultural curve.

  • @jacquelinecorso7968
    @jacquelinecorso7968 9 месяцев назад +36

    Not a fan of Ryan O'Neal but I love, love, love Barry Lyndon. What a beautiful film! It's an absolute masterpiece.

    • @thegame6141
      @thegame6141 8 месяцев назад +2

      Are you a fan of Adam Sandler?

    • @chrisstrawn4108
      @chrisstrawn4108 6 месяцев назад +1

      I was too young to see this when it came out, but I sure saw it on cable over the years. I've always thought IRL Ryan O'Neal has a great deal in common with Barry Lyndon. A deeply flawed, courageous scoundrel who loves his kids and can't stop chasing women/burning money. It's come out in the last decade that he supported his second wife for years after their divorce during her extended health issues. Not a guy I'd want to be related to or a great actor or even an admirable person but certainly a life fully lived. Most of us don't even do one tenth what he did by the time he was 40. O'Neal really is Barry Lyndon.

  • @BavarianHerz
    @BavarianHerz 6 месяцев назад +12

    R.I.P Dear Ryan O'Neal (1941-2023). ❤

  • @heruchai
    @heruchai 3 года назад +92

    My absolute favorite film of all time and the best soundtrack of any film ever, as well. 🙏

    • @LKRaider
      @LKRaider 3 года назад

      One of the top anime betrayals of all time

  • @ThePlataf
    @ThePlataf 6 месяцев назад +12

    When I first saw Barry Lyndon, I was so enraptured by its beauty and grace that it was a profound shock to leave the cinema and re-emerge into the speed, noise and garish electric lights of the 20th century.
    It gave me an adoration of the music, clothes and architecture of the 18th century.
    Kubrick's greatest achievement, one never to be equalled, let alone surpassed.

  • @unskilledlabor1
    @unskilledlabor1 3 года назад +39

    The most visually stunning motion picture of all time
    Nothing compares, it is in a league of its own

  • @michaelroyz1941
    @michaelroyz1941 3 года назад +58

    The film is literally pure art. Every scene and every frame of that film is made to look like a painting. In the future if Europe survives, it will find its place on the wall of a British Museum.

    • @elenaprovotorova4016
      @elenaprovotorova4016 2 года назад +6

      If Europe survives... How sad that 40+ years since the launch of the film there's virtually nothing that ,,civilization,, can boast of in music, literature, cinematography. What they've offered to the public at large narrows down to cyber and virus horror. No soul, no art, no talent. Mindless shells.

    • @MKMousanz
      @MKMousanz 2 года назад +4

      @@elenaprovotorova4016 That's just utterly wrong. There's plenty of talent and masterpieces done by Europeans post 1970's. You just need to look for them and stop being pessimistic.

    • @marioarguello6989
      @marioarguello6989 Год назад

      Incorrect, paintings are made to look like a movie. He copied many paintings for this movie.

    • @LordVader1094
      @LordVader1094 Год назад +1

      @@MKMousanz Yes, like stationary toilets posited as art.

    • @bestbeloved2704
      @bestbeloved2704 Год назад

      @@LordVader1094 lol

  • @endapian
    @endapian 6 месяцев назад +8

    Each screen of this movie is like a true painting master piece. Unbelievable.

  • @fortomnicron5436
    @fortomnicron5436 3 года назад +72

    A superb movie. A classic masterpiece from a great director.

  • @richardbrown1189
    @richardbrown1189 3 года назад +172

    Wonderful edit, the music is sublime. Probably the most beautiful film ever made.

    • @ZoolGatekeeper
      @ZoolGatekeeper 3 года назад +3

      Yes, but many didn't realise the music used was not from the 18th century period where this movie takes place. This piece by Schubert was completed in 1827. But to be clear, this was a deliberate choice by Kubrick.. He felt the earlier music hadn't much variety to be used as a good background for the themes in his film.

    • @patrickpaganini
      @patrickpaganini 3 года назад +1

      @@ZoolGatekeeper Good point. That's true. I think music really reached a high point in the early 19th century. Beethoven symphonies, Paganini, and Schubert if you get bored. I like the quote apparently from Schubert "Can you play me a happy tune? No - because all music is sad".

    • @gertrudedierude7224
      @gertrudedierude7224 Год назад

      The music is _troppo staccato._ There’s a much better version in »The Hunger«, taken from Kubrick’s »Barry Lyndon«, which makes me doubt about where this audio comes from.

  • @midnightchannel7759
    @midnightchannel7759 9 месяцев назад +13

    Only film ever made shot in candlelight. Stunning effect, stunning... Made the age come to life.

  • @emmanueldidier7122
    @emmanueldidier7122 3 года назад +179

    An absolute masterpiece!
    The candle light in the playing rooms is out of this world...
    BTW: there should have been an Oscar for the "candles manager"!

    • @edwarddejong8025
      @edwarddejong8025 3 года назад +7

      Kubrick obsessed over using natural candlelight. The scenes are a bit dark as he refused to use regular lights, but it does give an intimacy to the film. He was a real obsessive/compulsive director, a real genius.

    • @ZoolGatekeeper
      @ZoolGatekeeper 3 года назад +4

      As much as I hate the Oscars, I must admit they got it right with costumes and cinematography.

    • @jamesmiller4184
      @jamesmiller4184 3 года назад

      Good point, Emmanuel Didier !!
      +|+

  • @josenighthawk
    @josenighthawk 6 месяцев назад +11

    This symphony of visuals of a film freezes time. ... What a magnificent achievement.... From a time when Beauty was a must. ... Most certainly deserving to be included in a time capsule.

  • @guillaume.4093
    @guillaume.4093 6 месяцев назад +15

    Will never forget you, Barry Lyndon, R.I.P. Ryan O'neal !

  • @aliosman0
    @aliosman0 9 месяцев назад +14

    Every scene of this movie looks like a painting

  • @Jacam781
    @Jacam781 Год назад +12

    Saw it in my twenties, confused. Saw it again in my forties: "Brilliant!"

  • @debattol
    @debattol 3 года назад +40

    Among the 5 film masterpieces of my life, where images are as powerful as music in a unique symbiosis.
    How much kubrick is missing.

    • @alexandersalter6686
      @alexandersalter6686 3 года назад +4

      What are the other 4 film masterpieces?

    • @debattol
      @debattol 3 года назад +5

      @@alexandersalter6686 It is always difficult to rank the things we like most in our life because our life is made up of memories, sensations, made up largely of images.
      For me, a film must be a perfect combination of non-trivial script, the power of music and the actor's part.
      All these factors must achieve a single purpose and that is to excite me, laugh, cry, but still excite me. Here are these movies that I mention have created all of this about me that I just stated.
      Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes - Werner Herzog 1972
      Ultimo tango a Parigi - Bernardo Bertolucci 1972
      Giordano Bruno - Giuliano Montaldo 1973
      The Deer Hunter - Michael Cimino 1978
      Tess - Roman Polanski 1979
      The Last Temptation of Christ - Martin Scorsese 1988
      The Straight Story - David Lynch 1999
      No Country for Old Men - Joel ed Ethan Coen 2007
      Gran Torino - Clint Eastwood 2008

    • @alexandersalter6686
      @alexandersalter6686 3 года назад +5

      @@debattol Ah yes! I have seen a few of those films. I absolutely love The Deer Hunter, especially the ending when it shows the credits, it really shows how time is irreversible and contrasts the change in mood from good times to bad, and the soundtrack is fantastic.
      Some other films that I particularly like and would recommend are:
      Dances with Wolves
      The Last of the Mohicans
      The Mission
      Gladiator
      A Clockwork Orange
      2001: A Space Odyssey
      The Godfather
      The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
      A Fistfull of Dollars
      For a Few Dollars More
      Once Upon a Time in the West (storyline is a bit slow in my opinion but the soundtrack is very good)
      The Pianist
      Schindler's List
      The Boy in the Striped Pajamas
      Lawrence of Arabia
      Doctor Zhivago
      Gone with the Wind
      The last two are my favourites, but all of them have fantastic soundtracks!

    • @brucekilby9957
      @brucekilby9957 2 года назад +3

      @@alexandersalter6686 You have good taste sir. They are all great movies. Everyone has a least one Kubrick movie they like. Thanks ⚖

  • @50tv29
    @50tv29 3 года назад +176

    just saw the film.. can't believe it was done in 75.

    • @jeffnathan8189
      @jeffnathan8189 3 года назад +30

      Kubrick was so ahead of his time, it's criminal that he never won an Oscar for Best Director but neither did Alfred Hitchcock. Two of the greatest directors who ever lived.

    • @andrewsmactips
      @andrewsmactips 3 года назад +7

      Why can’t you believe it was done in 75?

    • @davidw.2791
      @davidw.2791 3 года назад +5

      Andrew Burke Must have been the cutting edge CGI. Jurassic Park, eat yer heart out. /s

    • @steveparadis2978
      @steveparadis2978 3 года назад +12

      Actually if you were really getting into movies since 1968, it's been a slow downhill crawl since the 70's. Back then it was a great original picture every month or so. Now it seems like nothing but franchises.

    • @Argonaut121
      @Argonaut121 3 года назад +2

      Same was true of 2001: A Space Odyssey. And Dr. Strangelove was ahead of its time in an entirely different way (still the best comedy ever). And A Clockwork Orange. Kubrick was unsurpassed. No two movies he made we ever even remotely alike, and none was less than a work of genius.

  • @TheFiown
    @TheFiown 2 года назад +6

    I dressed Marisa for a big fashion show and even made shoes for her so she wouldn't trip on the wooden walkway. As she walked out in dimmed lights, this music played and as she went down the runway the lights came up and people on recognising her applauded. It was great fun.

  • @varoprats_erodprati
    @varoprats_erodprati Год назад +18

    The scene of the cards game with Marisa Berenson under candle lights, with this music, is one of the beautiest cinema experiences I had... 💙💙💙

    • @varoprats_erodprati
      @varoprats_erodprati Год назад

      But it slightly appears here...

    • @CJStew06
      @CJStew06 5 месяцев назад +2

      Might be my favorite scene-the actor who plays the reverend is so good, the way he observes the courtship out of the corner of his eye and displays concern/possible jealousy with nothing but body language. Everyone in that scene is perfect.

  • @uslines
    @uslines 3 года назад +16

    One of the most beautifully photographed color films of all time.

  • @CaesarInVa
    @CaesarInVa 3 года назад +23

    One of cinematography's greatest masterpieces! Enigmatic, mysterious, sumptuous and intriguing, Kubrick's "Barry Lyndon" is the Mona Lisa of the medium. And the personal irony is that, with each passing year I see more of myself in Barry and as a consequence have a foreshadowing of my fate.

    • @pixiesyay
      @pixiesyay 2 года назад

      "the Mona Lisa of the medium." Perfect.

  • @rogueriderhood1862
    @rogueriderhood1862 3 года назад +12

    Probably the most beautiful film ever made.

  • @TheBricksAndIvyArchive
    @TheBricksAndIvyArchive Год назад +6

    There’s movies, and then there’s cinema. Barry Lyndon is cinema to me.

  • @SalemHill
    @SalemHill 2 года назад +9

    Saw it for the first time on the big screen in 1975. My favorite Kubrick.Gorgeous cinematography. A sumptuous feast for the eye.

    • @lucalone
      @lucalone 2 года назад +2

      my favorite movie by Kubrick, too.
      and I've watched all his movies that he has made between 1955-1999.

    • @SalemHill
      @SalemHill 2 года назад +1

      @@lucalone 👍😀

  • @richardscally694
    @richardscally694 11 месяцев назад +12

    This is a Magnificent Beautiful Masterpiece by the great master filmmaker, Stanley Kubrick.

  • @environmentart
    @environmentart 3 года назад +5

    The tragic story of a man who goes from rags to riches, losing all of his false self-perceptions, then finding his true nature along the way. Trampling on those around him to climb the social ladder, sacrificing everything only to be rejected by those he seeks to impress. He ends a broken man with only his aging mother for comfort, leaving behind the shattered heart of the only woman who truly loved him - and gave him her all. The final cue a memento mori: a humbling reminder of the fate that awaits us all, rich and poor, great and small - the final silence and solemnity of the grave.
    Kubrick was truly a genius.

  • @goncalonunodurao7656
    @goncalonunodurao7656 3 года назад +27

    Schubert is ETERNAL ! Great music !

  • @ludwig773
    @ludwig773 9 месяцев назад +8

    In this movie, each frame is a master's painting. And there are 277 500...

  • @uhlersoth99
    @uhlersoth99 2 года назад +6

    A time when men were men and woman were woman. I wish I could lived in those times. A simple time no rush no traffic no noise, just nature and life in its simplest form. Industrial revolution was just around the corner to pollute our home planet. this is truly a moving painting to watch never will there ever be one such as artistic as Kubrick. Even walking was such an art form. posture, colour, depth perception , sound with so much emotion, so many things to look at in these fils of mr Kubrick. What a legend.

  • @jjrj8568
    @jjrj8568 6 месяцев назад +4

    RIP Ryan O'Neal

  • @tHeWasTeDYouTh
    @tHeWasTeDYouTh 2 года назад +27

    0:29 this part of the song has so much emotion and it plays perfectly as a man with more status/power takes the main characters woman. perfection.
    "Nobody understands another's sorrow, and nobody another's joy."
    -Franz Schubert

    • @Karolkid
      @Karolkid 2 года назад +1

      This piece of music it's enormous, it just describes too many things to me. It's a world itself

  • @jazzywayz9773
    @jazzywayz9773 4 месяца назад +3

    Dear Bruce, thank you for teaching me about the art and beauty of cinema, in particular, Stanley Kubrick films. Imagine 4 Hispanic late teen boys in the early 1990s America, being into cinema, and loving this movie. Man! Kids were different back then!

  • @user-be9nk3oi6x
    @user-be9nk3oi6x 8 месяцев назад +21

    Действительно правда. Кто не жил в 18 веке, тот вообще не жил. На мой взгляд лучшая экранизация той эпохи. Костюмы, манеры, взгляды, игра актёров просто бесподобны. Каждая сцена как картина величайших живописцев классицизма. Так тонко описано это золотое время западной Европы. Музыка Шуберта же настолько прекрасна, что можно слушать её бесконечно.

    • @Danleesixdoublefive321
      @Danleesixdoublefive321 7 месяцев назад +3

      I’m grateful to god that such beautiful art exists for us to enjoy❤❤❤

    • @terrylee7277
      @terrylee7277 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@Danleesixdoublefive321이런 영화를 볼 수 있게 해주신 신께 감사드림

  • @susanvaughan-schiele4201
    @susanvaughan-schiele4201 3 года назад +10

    Oh god we miss you Kubrick.

  • @kyleshiflet9952
    @kyleshiflet9952 3 года назад +6

    The most beautiful film ever made

  • @gmmgmmg
    @gmmgmmg 2 года назад +9

    This movie is up there in the Olympus of Arts, together with the Sistine Chapel, Picasso's Guernica and Mozart's Kyrie in C minor. It's an achievement for Humankind like Armstrong's steps on the Moon. It makes me grateful to be alive.

  • @rochebaudelaire
    @rochebaudelaire 3 года назад +10

    Le plus beau film jamais réalisé. La perfection. Une sublime méditation sur les passions et l'ambition.Tout ceci nous le devons au plus grand, Stanley KUBRICK

    • @rouquindunord8420
      @rouquindunord8420 3 года назад

      Visuellement, Meurtre dans un Jardin anglais et The Baby of Macon de Peter Greenaway se rapproche du degré de perfection atteint ici.

  • @TimmacTR
    @TimmacTR 2 года назад +6

    One of the best films I ever saw

  • @stefanomarassi9668
    @stefanomarassi9668 3 года назад +25

    An evergreen timeless masterpiece.
    The classic never dies
    Grazie Stanley

  • @shmabadu
    @shmabadu 3 года назад +17

    It’s ironic, how the one good deed Barry does, purposefully missing his shot at the last duel, costs him everything his misdeeds earned him.

    • @mashk
      @mashk 2 года назад +1

      it doesn't cost him everything. Barry had already lost pretty much everything when his son had died and he had spent a lot of Lady Lyndon's money getting into debt. Which was why Lord Bullingdon was called back to take charge. Barry would have ended up in a debtors prison. But he was granted an annuity of 500 guineas a year to leave the family and never return. A not inconsiderable sum. Unfortunately, he chooses to gamble (without his prior success)

  • @AGoodEgg_
    @AGoodEgg_ 2 года назад +5

    This film is stunning. Just overwhelms your senses with beauty

  • @doankimtuananh9317
    @doankimtuananh9317 2 года назад +3

    Kubrick's finest. What can I say? First time watching this I was amazed by the frame, light and colors. Until found out who is director and just :"That's Kubrick for ya!".

  • @brandonknickerbocker2816
    @brandonknickerbocker2816 3 года назад +26

    Truly phenomenal, moving, perspective-shifting. This is definitely one of those movies that leave you feeling full of meaning and desire.

  • @jayanxiety
    @jayanxiety 3 года назад +9

    Stanley Kubrick's most underrated film! A forgotten masterpiece!

    • @shefmeisterextraordinaire3717
      @shefmeisterextraordinaire3717 3 года назад +2

      Underrated? Forgotten? This film has been re-appraised over the last 10, 20 years to the point that most film critics would agree it's probably the best film he made.

    • @galahadthreepwood
      @galahadthreepwood 6 месяцев назад

      Not as underrated as the moon landings

  • @mrugod
    @mrugod 3 года назад +11

    Someone in another video said Kubrick is overrated... I came to clense my eyes.

  • @omerfarukasker5815
    @omerfarukasker5815 2 года назад +6

    This is not a film this is something different

    • @user-lb2ed9um9x
      @user-lb2ed9um9x Месяц назад

      This film is great art. I saw it at least ten times, when I was young, in the 70es, the 80ties. It definitely changed my life.

  • @behnamzakhireh6425
    @behnamzakhireh6425 Год назад +7

    Wow, what a great performance, both the pianist and the orchestra are amazing👍🙏

  • @orlando469
    @orlando469 Год назад +29

    Barry Lyndon: Um dos melhores momentos da História do Cinema!!!

  • @carlotapuig
    @carlotapuig 3 года назад +14

    Europeans have always been the best at music and art in general. Just amazing talent.

    • @nolls14
      @nolls14 3 года назад

      I'm European, but let's not forget that the great man who directed this masterpiece was a New Yorker. There's great Art the world over.

    • @DanDoesStuffOnCamera
      @DanDoesStuffOnCamera 3 года назад +1

      i dunno man. You wanna take a closer look at some of the stuff that came out of places like Egypt and China. European culture is great, but it's in no way limited to any area or ethnicity

    • @carlotapuig
      @carlotapuig 3 года назад +1

      @@DanDoesStuffOnCamera Ancient Egypt was European culture. Ancient Northern Africa and Asia Minor were big centers of European culture in the past (much more than Northern Europe was) until the invasions of Turks and Arabs. It is estimated that 97% of inventions in the world have been created by people with European genetics. Europeans have been incredible inventors and artists for millennia. Rgds

    • @DanDoesStuffOnCamera
      @DanDoesStuffOnCamera 3 года назад +2

      @@carlotapuig Don't make me laugh! Ancient Egypt was producing sophisticated writing systems, feats of engineering and works of high culture and artistry while most Europeans were still chasing Aurochs. And there's nothing wrong with that. I say this as a European myself.

    • @carlotapuig
      @carlotapuig 3 года назад

      @@DanDoesStuffOnCamera Have you read my comment above?

  • @markbeck8384
    @markbeck8384 3 года назад +12

    This was one of my favorite movies ever; and the way it was mixed with the music and
    Nature was wonderful. The story is good as a book, but was even better as a film.

  • @falkz.5234
    @falkz.5234 6 месяцев назад +2

    It's perfect. That goddamn movie is perfect. I love everything about it.

  • @dennyjay4252
    @dennyjay4252 3 года назад +9

    One of the best movies I’ve ever seen

  • @mollywoodshots6503
    @mollywoodshots6503 3 года назад +17

    This Is How A Beautiful Poem Looks Like In Silver Screen👏

  • @greyman8335
    @greyman8335 5 месяцев назад +3

    Indescribable beauty. This movie + music can only be described as nothing less.

  • @rajnishpatil8911
    @rajnishpatil8911 8 месяцев назад +5

    If a perfection needs the example ❤

  • @Emeraldman
    @Emeraldman 6 месяцев назад +2

    R.i.p. Ryan O'Neil a fine actor in this Kubrick masterpiece.

  • @CarlosDiaz-hf3qv
    @CarlosDiaz-hf3qv 3 года назад +10

    The first time I saw this film I was like 11. Even then, although I did not quite understand what I was watching, it made an impression on me. I became fascinated with everything to do with the XVIII century. Eventually, I discovered the great Masters: Fragonard, Watteau, Reuben, Reynolds. Every frame of this movie seems to copy a scene from the strokes of one of those XVIII century painters. The dresses, the mannerism, the Sprit-de-Temps, Kubrick captures it all in this film, as if he had traveled back in time to capture every moment as it unfolded. Perfect.

  • @alansmithee4927
    @alansmithee4927 3 года назад +4

    Might the the best cinematography ever?

  • @BladeRunner2077
    @BladeRunner2077 4 года назад +43

    Thank you for this tribute. Such an incredible, amazing, beautiful, and underrated film. This film inspires me so much

  • @saladsalad9991
    @saladsalad9991 3 года назад +8

    my roommate and I watched this film for the first time and we laughed and we cried -- it was incredible

  • @josealqueres
    @josealqueres 2 года назад +4

    I love this movie so much.

  • @rizzenri
    @rizzenri 5 месяцев назад +2

    Capolavoro assoluto. L'ho visto tre volte e lo rivedrei ancora.

  • @giorgiosalmaso5903
    @giorgiosalmaso5903 3 года назад +26

    Film come un’opera d’arte. RIP Stanley!

  • @jackiwannapaint3042
    @jackiwannapaint3042 2 года назад +2

    the scoring of the film is the icing on the cake--or maybe even the cake itself

  • @Phil_Mitchell
    @Phil_Mitchell 6 месяцев назад +4

    RIP Barry Lyndon!

  • @mr.intolerance
    @mr.intolerance 3 месяца назад +8

    They don't make em like this anymore. They can't. Because of their lack of decency and dedication for the art.

    • @madcyborg1822
      @madcyborg1822 3 дня назад +1

      I don't think they "ever" made movies like this. Barry Lyndon is so far ahead of its time, there was nothing like it before it or after it. It stands alone in its brilliance and unparralled beauty.

  • @mariep5066
    @mariep5066 3 года назад +16

    Il a vraiment un don pour l image , l harmonie visuelle, la lumière c est une grande réussite 🤩. Terrible pour cette époque

  • @Molimo95
    @Molimo95 3 года назад +6

    so beautiful it hurts my brain.

  • @pascalmassie4706
    @pascalmassie4706 3 года назад +16

    Thank you Shubert!

  • @ednguyen3822
    @ednguyen3822 3 года назад +7

    Among costume dramas, #2 is The Duellists for beauty. #1 is Barry Lyndon, truly incomparable!

    • @carolcox302
      @carolcox302 2 года назад

      So agree re The Duellists. Visually a delight.

  • @thkim4076
    @thkim4076 9 месяцев назад +4

    Good job with editing. Watched it on bluray just recently after 20 years on a tiny University cathode ray tube monitor. I think on par with 2001. Different but just as absorbing

    • @johnhead3431
      @johnhead3431 9 месяцев назад

      In a certain sense Barry Lyndon is a film about focusing and the difficulty about that hence the candle lit scenes, depth of field of battle to come etc. 2001 is always in focus by contrast and is more about positioning eg the ship to dave positioning is like a devouring mother complex. 2001 has deep emotions in certain spots but is really about virtuosity and the fears that absence brings. Barry Lyndon is a very emotional movie in the sense of you're always thinking can I change things? Barry is incorrigible but that he is so resolute in getting t where he wants to be (with his mother, what happens to her anyways?) carries over even after he apologises

  • @bowieupland6112
    @bowieupland6112 Год назад +2

    This whole movie, is like admiring a beautiful painting, in a beautiful museum in Europe.

  • @andreadalcortivo747
    @andreadalcortivo747 7 месяцев назад +1

    In each scene of this masterpiece is represented the "immobility"...like the end of an age.
    In each scene there is a motinless figure or group in landscape.
    ...And last date in lady's letter is 1789

  • @mysticmouse7261
    @mysticmouse7261 3 года назад +3

    The choice of Schubert an elegant strut to love and death. The empty gorgeous lives of the bourgeoisie

  • @helenathesoviet9195
    @helenathesoviet9195 3 года назад +9

    I love this film. The exchange of stares is sublime, like those typical cour scènes in The Princess of Clèves

  • @gonguro2133
    @gonguro2133 2 года назад +3

    Every second of the movie, calculated to be the closest to perfection

  • @leonevergreen
    @leonevergreen 2 месяца назад +1

    This edition is amazing! I just watched the movie again in less than five minutes!

  • @BassistPaul
    @BassistPaul 3 года назад +18

    The most magnificent film.

  • @constanzaed
    @constanzaed 3 года назад +4

    Great music, great movie!!!

  • @ianboard3555
    @ianboard3555 3 года назад +9

    One of my favorite movies. For those not familiar with it, the book is excellent too.

    • @rubenalbersonorellanamarti2226
      @rubenalbersonorellanamarti2226 2 года назад

      Podrías decir de que trata por qué si no me equivoco la escena del duelo no estaba en el libro por fa

  • @JK-ww8dn
    @JK-ww8dn Год назад +3

    Huge thanks to the camera man for traveling back in time and bringing us these incredible images.