Hannah and Her Sisters - Favorite Scenes

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 24 фев 2010
  • КиноКино

Комментарии • 134

  • @gertrudemcfuzz74
    @gertrudemcfuzz74 9 лет назад +127

    "Just on a simplistic level, why were there nazis?!"
    "Tell him Max!"
    "How the hell do I know why there were nazis, I don't know how the can opener works!"
    Kills me everytime.

    • @louiso.4325
      @louiso.4325 8 лет назад +8

      That's my favorite line from the whole movie haha

    • @verve92
      @verve92 7 лет назад +4

      I've stolen that line on advice above my head only I don't know how the iPhone works!

    • @lucindaarmour7422
      @lucindaarmour7422 7 лет назад +14

      That whole scene with the parents is a perfect piece of performance and writing. Its just wonderful. Not one line or gesture out of place. Very very funny.

    • @joniheisenberg6691
      @joniheisenberg6691 3 года назад +8

      There are two kinds of people: those who obsess about these types of questions and those who never contemplate them.

  • @christophergarr2074
    @christophergarr2074 3 года назад +37

    I don't care about his personal life, this man puts a smile on my face and that means everything to me. I respect woody's right to privacy.

  • @MajorSeventh
    @MajorSeventh 12 лет назад +46

    His dad's perspective is pretty much mine, "I'll be unconscious, or I won't, I'll deal with it then!" Perfectly crafted scene.

    • @eebbeerrttpp
      @eebbeerrttpp 3 года назад +2

      We really don’t know. One chooses what to believe. But yes, at least one should try to enjoy life and be a decent human being. End of the story.

    • @eebbeerrttpp
      @eebbeerrttpp 3 года назад +1

      He basically said, I don’t care!
      There no reason to sound pompous.
      Capisci?

    • @dmrr7739
      @dmrr7739 Год назад +3

      When asked what he thinks happens to us after we die, a friend of mine answered, “remember all those years you spend waiting to be born? No? It’ll be just like that.”

    • @theintrovertedaspie9095
      @theintrovertedaspie9095 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@dmrr7739 The difference is that you didnt know you didnt exist until AFTER your born. That's why you cant wrap your mind around that idea and what it feels like to not exist. But you will die one day die and will continue to not exist. And since we know it is coming is what makes it scary. We cannot fully wrap our minds around simply not existing. It's just like sleeping. You don't know you were asleep until after you wake up. Granted you can feel your dozing off and sometimes you might have a dream and when you wake up your often left with vague memories of it or no memories at all. There is a difference between being dead and just not existing in this context. Before you were born you didn't exist. But when you die you will be dead, which also means to not exist anymore.

  • @jadentrez
    @jadentrez 9 лет назад +67

    "I'll do anything to believe in God -- I'll dye Easter eggs!"

    • @marciloni12
      @marciloni12 2 года назад +2

      That is the extent of my Christian tradition and rituals.

  • @velera21
    @velera21 2 года назад +16

    Words about life and death have never been truer spoken. Thanks woody Allen for breathing life back into this widower.😇

  • @laurinhacac
    @laurinhacac 7 лет назад +155

    This film (and these scenes, specially) really saved my life once. And I always get back so it can save me again a little more. Thank you, Woody Allen

    • @cilanthropetunia
      @cilanthropetunia 6 лет назад +6

      Laura Araujo me too! This film these things never fail to remind me that life is worth living no matter how horrible it can feel sometime

    • @deweypug
      @deweypug 6 лет назад +6

      I'm so thankful that this worked for you... Every time I'm feeling down, this film especially this last scene just serves up a healthy dose of how great life really is... Cheers!

    • @ale5punk
      @ale5punk 5 лет назад +1

      Me too!!!

    • @u.s_nyc8513
      @u.s_nyc8513 5 лет назад

    • @phatrickmoore
      @phatrickmoore 5 лет назад +1

      this movie breathed life back into me !

  • @witheringi9492
    @witheringi9492 9 лет назад +50

    what a brilliant piece of film and philosphy

  • @Anna-vz5jl
    @Anna-vz5jl 5 лет назад +14

    I’ve seen this movie a billion times. ... still one of a kind .

  • @TheSimonBOULDER
    @TheSimonBOULDER 10 лет назад +32

    I'm a religious person but I actually liked this movie because it asks questions and does it in a very entertaining way.

    • @pnutbutrncrackers
      @pnutbutrncrackers 7 лет назад +4

      Completely agree. The movie has something to say, while retaining the best of Woody's cleverness and humor (Christian here).

  • @arc236
    @arc236 Месяц назад +2

    Awesome stuff. Definitely one of his best movies.

  • @robertweedman8043
    @robertweedman8043 2 года назад +7

    Genius writing.

  • @cyberlioness
    @cyberlioness 4 года назад +11

    Woody Allan makes me mad but I love this film and I never get tired of watching it.

  • @adamgordon6435
    @adamgordon6435 Год назад +5

    Woody has always said that he's dissatisfied with this movie in interviews because he intended it to have a darker Ingmar Bergman type theme, but then he changed the script to make the ending more upbeat because it worked better for audiences. This is one of my favorite films and the thing is although Woody Allen was influenced by Bergman, what makes it great is Woody's unique ability to mix comic relief with the existential questions.

  • @peterkierst2744
    @peterkierst2744 5 лет назад +11

    Three minutes into this clip and three hilarious lines already.

  • @MrHutchy52
    @MrHutchy52 8 лет назад +13

    surely woody at the height of his powers , timeless and thoughtful ,my favourite woody allen film

  • @christopherallen9580
    @christopherallen9580 2 года назад +6

    Woody does ask a lot of interesting questions

  • @gmenrocker425
    @gmenrocker425 9 лет назад +17

    That's the meaning of life right there

  • @fatbackfunk
    @fatbackfunk 12 лет назад +18

    "how the hell do I know why there were Nazis I don't know how the can opener works"..

  • @johnblack8036
    @johnblack8036 7 лет назад +27

    The entire movie could be in a favourite scene compilation. It's one great scene after the next. That almost never happens. No filler, no wasted shots, no trivial dialogue. This was near the end of an almost unbelievable 10 year run of masterpieces. From Annie Hall to Radio Days. Even if he had done nothing prior to or after that, he would be considered an all time great director. The fact that he scripted those films makes it ever more astonishing. He should have just retired after that. Now he did have world class cinematographers, art directors, costume designers and and an all-time great film editor in Susan E. Morse working for him. She was the one that gave Allen's movies their seamless quality. After that collaboration ended, his films weren't quite the same.

    • @dalenixon6981
      @dalenixon6981 7 лет назад +5

      If he ended then, we would never have had great films like Match Point or Midnight in Paris. It's not all hopeless.

    • @johnblack8036
      @johnblack8036 7 лет назад +3

      Okay, I'll give you that. I did like Match Point. It's really hard to criticize him, but he raised the bar so high in 1980's, that everything that came after just seems to pale in comparison.

    • @dalenixon6981
      @dalenixon6981 7 лет назад

      ***** He's still looking to make his masterpiece. Something that matches the likes of Bergman and the other masters of cinema. We can hope.

    • @johnblack8036
      @johnblack8036 7 лет назад

      He's running out of time. He's already made a handful of masterpieces. I have great respect Bergman's work and you can see the influence on not just Allen, but a number of other directors. I love his shot composition. His closeups just look different that everyone else's. I have a Swedish friend that always tells me you really can't appreciate his films unless you speak the language. Imagine watching Annie Hall and not being able to understand English. There's dialogue you can't possibly translate. I'm trying to get into Tarkovsky, but his films go right over my head, but the visuals leave you speechless. My friend has a UHD Blu-Ray player and just got The Mirror on Blu-Ray. It left me dumbfounded. I thought Kubrick had an great eye, but that man is on another level. I've never seen anything like it.

    • @phatrickmoore
      @phatrickmoore 5 лет назад +1

      I just watched the full movie and was completely stunned. Every minute was a new lesson about life

  • @jimsmith1856
    @jimsmith1856 4 года назад +7

    "You'll look like Jerry Lewis" . HahahahHah!

  • @bobbo924B
    @bobbo924B 13 лет назад +11

    This contains some of the wisest info we're probably equipped to know (as opposed to believe). Thank you for posting it!

    • @eebbeerrttpp
      @eebbeerrttpp 3 года назад +1

      For you, probably someone who thinks a black hole is waiting for him around the corner.
      It’s a comedy! Capisci?
      Woody Allen must be laughing at people who take his comedy seriously.
      And so am I. 😂😂😂😂😂

  • @bluedale6563
    @bluedale6563 6 месяцев назад +1

    2024 still loving it

  • @antidepressant11
    @antidepressant11 2 года назад +2

    The best way to tackle the "big" questions is with humour. The "truth" is no longer important. Just live. Chill. Relax. Everything will be fine in the end .

  • @tomtraveller
    @tomtraveller 7 лет назад +31

    who are you kidding, you're gonna shave your head and dance around airports ?.....lol

  • @webbess1
    @webbess1 9 лет назад +14

    He's kind of cute in his nebbishy, neurotic way.

  • @bobbo924B
    @bobbo924B 11 лет назад +7

    His films are usually intelligent, but this one is unique in its optimism. He's usually not this happy in his movies. "The heart is a very resilient little muscle." Compare that to the depressing, off-the-cliff endings of "Annie Hall" and "Manhattan."

    • @michaelpiano1
      @michaelpiano1 6 лет назад +2

      Robert Goldberg you are right about Hannah and her sisters, but I think that Manhattan is as humanistic as it gets. It’s subtle, but the message is very clear when the pure 18 year old tells him not everybody gets corrupt, and that he should have a little faith in people. This is shear and profound optimism, which is why it tears me up every time again.

  • @MegaSnippezz
    @MegaSnippezz Год назад +1

    I also find the ending scene when Mickey realises he can be a biologival father quite beautiful - it's interesting to assume that this ended his existential anxieties, that is, by creating another life.

  • @paigelove263
    @paigelove263 5 лет назад +15

    You left out the scene where he comes home with a paper bag and takes out a crucifix and a loaf of Wonder bread!

    • @1028dianemarie
      @1028dianemarie 3 года назад +2

      My all-time favorite woody Allen movie scene.

    • @rama108
      @rama108 Год назад +1

      And Hellman's Mayonnaise.

  • @ColKurtzknew
    @ColKurtzknew 3 года назад +4

    The genius of WA in raising deep questions and interacting with them in a LOL manner. Truly brilliant. Sadly, in this movie as with others, he opts for a simplistic resolution rather than scoping the depths of the issue intellectually. Still on my top 5 best ever !

    • @ellarose1685
      @ellarose1685 2 года назад

      Good point. It can fall a little flat when his films end with such simple romantic scenes but I think the reason is he always circles back to a love is the answer type philosophy

    • @ColKurtzknew
      @ColKurtzknew 2 года назад +2

      @@ellarose1685 I think you're spot on about him. At heart he is a romantic. His problem is epistemic. On his hard scepticism/agnosticism his conclusion, while correct imho, lack the serious undergirding of a critically thought out worldview. Still love his work though lol

    • @ellarose1685
      @ellarose1685 2 года назад +1

      @@ColKurtzknew Totally. He’s also said that while he always wanted to be perceived as a serious Bergman type, comedy was always what he ended up making/ being pushed into making, which no doubt pressured him into tying his scepticism up into a neat little bow

    • @ColKurtzknew
      @ColKurtzknew 2 года назад +3

      @@ellarose1685 Hannah, Annie Hall, Manhattan, Crimes and Misdemeanors

  • @samanthab1923
    @samanthab1923 Год назад +1

    Always loved the dads canopener line

  • @nygblue24
    @nygblue24 9 лет назад +5

    Mickey Sachs and Albee Singer are two of the best characters ever.

  • @Perebynis
    @Perebynis Год назад +1

    "So you will believe in Jesus Christ?!" - "I know it sounds funny but I gonna try!" :D

  • @cerzule
    @cerzule 13 лет назад +8

    This part of the film is so wonderful.
    "I had to sit down -- I went into a movie house; I didn't know what was playing or anything, I just needed a moment to gather my thoughts and be logical, and put the world back into rational perspective."
    *cut to the anarchic comic lunacy of the Marx Bros.* -- priceless!

  • @frankboyle1320
    @frankboyle1320 12 лет назад +8

    Great I'll have to sit through the Ice Capades again LMAO!!!!

  • @cerevor
    @cerevor 12 лет назад +2

    That's also what I thought about his dislike of animals. You don't get anything "out of them", so he can't appreciate their enjoyment and liveliness for themselves, as I guess he reserves for certain works of art, "women" and other limited positives of life.

  • @allspamme
    @allspamme 12 лет назад +11

    Marx Bros is the answer to eternal Happiness !!!

  • @genki2genki
    @genki2genki 7 лет назад +11

    Marx Brothers dancing is about the same as the Krishnas.

    • @marciloni12
      @marciloni12 2 года назад

      'Cause they're all a bunch of clowns!👏

  • @haroldcocksfield615
    @haroldcocksfield615 7 лет назад +2

    i love it

  • @somegreens
    @somegreens 12 лет назад +7

    ' you look like Jerry Lewis'

  • @kdohertygizbur
    @kdohertygizbur Год назад

    Cuz you won't exist
    So
    The way the Dad says no always cracks me up

  • @Mayerling52
    @Mayerling52 12 лет назад

    great!♥

  • @GoodMrDawes
    @GoodMrDawes 12 лет назад

    Love it

  • @antidepressant11
    @antidepressant11 2 года назад +2

    See. It's best to see how hilarious we are when we think we are being deep and meaningful.

  • @Anglynn74
    @Anglynn74 8 лет назад +2

    I went through the 80s never seeing this film, not sure why because I'd really like to see it

  • @jamespeterson8482
    @jamespeterson8482 2 года назад +1

    His conclusion is David Humes conclusion!

  • @edmund184
    @edmund184 5 лет назад +3

    You missed the scene where Max Von Sydow says why we asking the wrong question about the Holocaust

  • @thedudewithbigballs
    @thedudewithbigballs 12 лет назад +3

    this is what you call secular humanism

  • @pnutbutrncrackers
    @pnutbutrncrackers 5 лет назад +5

    Great, but how did you not include the bit where the joggers are running by and we hear his fatalistic thoughts about them? Cracks me open every time.

    • @ColKurtzknew
      @ColKurtzknew 3 года назад

      PC bs

    • @pnutbutrncrackers
      @pnutbutrncrackers 3 года назад +1

      @@ColKurtzknew Didn't even think about that, but wouldn't surprise me.

  • @jh2264
    @jh2264 Месяц назад

    The Marx Brothers can help bring perspective to life!😂

  • @Searchinganswers
    @Searchinganswers 12 лет назад +4

    Why is this scene good? Sure people would create God to have a meaning, but that dont mean God does not exist. Where did everything come from?

  • @Mayerling52
    @Mayerling52 12 лет назад +1

    great!♥ ha ha! doesn't Woody Allen give your brain a workout!!

  • @timmurphy4688
    @timmurphy4688 2 года назад

    What a great movie. Woody never grew up Catholic though. For us the worst would be going to hell when we die. As an atheist, Woody doesn’t even contemplate this. Some times not believing an afterlife is actually relief

  • @patriciaactis
    @patriciaactis 2 года назад

    🌺🌷❤🌻🌟

  • @paulaharrisbaca4851
    @paulaharrisbaca4851 4 года назад

    At 5:06 when Woody's character begins to wonder about the meaning of life, I began to think that my feeling about death was always like it having to leave a party where everyone is having a good time and some new people just came in, and some of them are really fun (or they could be jerks crashing the party and bringing guns and fighting in the parking lot, playing the Knockout Game with every person staggering out with their iPhone in their hand) and I was having to go to work or to some chore I was dreading! Then I started to think about how many of the things I was most afraid of in life proved to be really cool! BUT...still, I find there are so many cool things to experience and I want to do more of them, but sadly corporate media sees that it's far better to terrify people than to encourage them to take risks by getting married and having children...what a short-sighted view of things (on a corporate level). You don't grow businesses by keeping people alive longer, or shipping in huge numbers of people who will lay down and be exploited for NOW, until they get all La Raza or BLM and begin to demolish the very culture they used to love and wish to be a part of....
    Sorry, I went off on a completely unrelated tangent. My apologies.
    BUT apart from all that, Woody Allen really manages to express my inner angst. For some reason my mom disliked him. She said he made her nervous. She preferred Laurel & Hardy type humor. Or she also loved "All in the Family" and "Mary Tyler Moore" and "The Mothers-in-Law" which hardly anyone recalls, but it made her laugh until she wept.
    ruclips.net/video/65OMoWgfgNA/видео.html Not sure why. It's really a very interesting show no one remembers much, which is odd in today's feminist yet anti-woman environment. Modern feminism is completely opposed to women as women. Ashamed of bearing children, which no man can ever do. Making women ashamed and unhappy to be women as the better half of the human being.

    • @eebbeerrttpp
      @eebbeerrttpp 3 года назад +1

      First of all you think too much. Maybe you just don’t know what to do with your life. Just enjoy life while it lasts and be a decent human being. I find Woody Allen very funny but a lot of times he just says nonsense that is really stupid.

  • @37Dionysos
    @37Dionysos 8 лет назад +8

    Love Woody, but it's a good thing he's ignored Allan Watts or he'd lose his precious angst.

    • @SantiagoUscocovich1
      @SantiagoUscocovich1 8 лет назад

      Care to explain?

    • @37Dionysos
      @37Dionysos 8 лет назад +1

      Allen is worried about survival of his ego, which (for all of us) doesn't actually exist---and that's a good thing. Just give any lecture on the subject by Alan Watts some time and you'll happily see what I mean.

    • @SantiagoUscocovich1
      @SantiagoUscocovich1 8 лет назад

      +37Dionysos thanks, will do. I actually picked up his book called "the book" just out of curiosity.

  • @10Vernonplace
    @10Vernonplace 3 года назад

    Similar conclusions as movie Sullivans Travels.

  • @sammavacaist
    @sammavacaist 8 месяцев назад

    I'll dye Easter eggs if it works.

  • @trytobenice7234
    @trytobenice7234 2 года назад

    🎓 0:06 ⚕️ 1:37

  • @angelicavega2132
    @angelicavega2132 3 года назад +1

    A Seinfeld episode "the conversión"

  • @luckiller019
    @luckiller019 5 лет назад +3

    What is the second worst sentece after "I´m catholic" you can say to your jewish parents? "I droped from medical school."

    • @eebbeerrttpp
      @eebbeerrttpp 3 года назад +1

      You don’t know many Jewish people. Lots of them care a lot about their traditions and dislike failure. Capisci?

  • @hitman19865
    @hitman19865 9 лет назад

    Woody Allen fans! Check out this web-series "People with Issues" on the Keymaster Films channel

  • @ebrahimnajafi6863
    @ebrahimnajafi6863 2 года назад

    Why different scenes are mixed to each other?

  • @Mayerling52
    @Mayerling52 12 лет назад

    HA HA!

  • @henryboldi
    @henryboldi 7 лет назад

    this made me really depressed

  • @JennMM
    @JennMM 4 года назад

    ☯️

  • @robertbentzel8105
    @robertbentzel8105 11 месяцев назад

    Where’s the Joan Collins scene

  • @bullettoothburrows
    @bullettoothburrows 13 лет назад

    @pitchforks No, it isn't. But you'd like it to be...

  • @mariaalejandrasolano8662
    @mariaalejandrasolano8662 Год назад

    hahahahahahaa

  • @bobbo924B
    @bobbo924B 13 лет назад

    @brcbraga - Isn't almost a reasonable reply to nihilism?

  • @SoRiNgun
    @SoRiNgun 12 лет назад +3

    isnt he a little old to have that kind of discussion with his parents.I mean...a 40 year old asking for approval and certainty from his parents is not natural.He seems more like a 10 year old!!
    I believe that in this movie woody allen asked him self.What if i had my existential crisis in 40 not in 10."How would i deal with it?"

    • @Julius_Paul
      @Julius_Paul 7 лет назад +5

      George Tsardanidis ... sorry George but you're wrong, Woody actually gave a true realistic view of how most 40+ year olds STILL have to deal with their parents.... but Hollywood movies never show that kind of dialogue because it doesn't sell, due to the fact that it makes people uncomfortable

    • @marciloni12
      @marciloni12 2 года назад +1

      @@Julius_Paul You have it backwards. This is what PARENTS of 40 yr olds still have to deal with. We tend to be overly protective of our children that they stay closely connected to us, well into their adult life. Good or bad??? Depends...

  • @cerevor
    @cerevor 12 лет назад

    Some of his problem seem to be that he can't engage with any other perspective, which makes it all the same to him. I don't "believe" in anything but he seriously seems to think that it's all that "simple", which might be true from one perspective but doesn't mean that there's not much more to get out of engaging with various concepts, to begin with simply aesthetically, different from the automatic "Woody Allen"-mode.

  • @IStehSHIT
    @IStehSHIT 12 лет назад

    no;)

  • @georgetsardanidis6424
    @georgetsardanidis6424 4 года назад +1

    This is very weird , Woody Allen here is 40, I was 16 when I watched that, I identified so badly. But now at 26, I am like , well "duhh", about life and staff...I am not dephiloshophised now but I am like, "been there done lets see more now". Is society advancing in 40 years and collectively we are going forward in phiosophy? Or is it the Greek Crisis here that actually you dont have much space of this kind of "philosophising", you just have to surivive in many levels, both spiritually and as body.
    The Greek crisis is/was a societal and ethical crisis too so those Woody Allen's problems seem piece of cake .Its so weird that I found these scenes pointless now, such a spoiled character but there were so awesome for me bac then! But I can identify so good with the new movie "A Rainy day in New York" thats what I call "applied philosophy". Maybe that will seem pointless to in 10 years who knows? I can identify now much much better with exisntential much darker problems from Yorgos Lanthimos and Theo Angelopooylos. I dont know, here is like, " I am trying to have philosophical problems, I am atrracted to it" in the other films is like "You will face them in your real daily life and have to do something about them, that life ".

    • @randywhite3947
      @randywhite3947 4 года назад

      George Tsardanidis woody Is actually 49/50 here

    • @zxbc1
      @zxbc1 6 месяцев назад

      It's not uncommon to have existential crisis during mid-life crisis. This is the age period when you start getting more and more noticeably unhealthy, so quite realistically depicted here he started this whole panic when he had a health scare. When you're young, you go through all the philosophizing without any context, deep down inside you still believe you will live forever and your eventual ageing and demise is so far away that it just doesn't seem real to you. By 40+ you start to see the reality with a different mindset. What makes a lot of great Woody Allen films work is that they do provide different levels of emotional impact when viewed at different times of your life, to the point that you do end up appreciating it in different ways throughout your life. Just trust me, watching these films again when you're 40 will feel just as poignant and interesting.

  • @judyhano8277
    @judyhano8277 Год назад

    This is so sad... Ladies and gentlemen, Jesus Christ is the way to the Father. It's not over when you die. There is Heaven or hell. Why would you not choose Heaven? Religion isn't going to save you, only Jesus. (I am the way the truth and the light, no one comes to the Father but by me.) God bless.

  • @robertromero9488
    @robertromero9488 4 года назад +1

    Socratis used to knock off little Greek boys. Why did he kill Greek boys?

    • @kdohertygizbur
      @kdohertygizbur 4 года назад +2

      He was gay, he was screwing them

    • @marciloni12
      @marciloni12 2 года назад

      @@kdohertygizbur 😂😂😂

  • @haileyshannon7548
    @haileyshannon7548 6 лет назад +3

    SJWs just do no understand this guy

  • @dice1296
    @dice1296 Год назад

    typed in 'woody allen ice capades' and this came up. the internet really is good for some things