The Death of Queen Jane - Oscar Isaac - Inside Llewyn Davis
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- Опубликовано: 16 сен 2014
- Inside Llewyn Davis is the soundtrack of music from the 2013 American film of the same name, written, directed and produced by the Coen brothers and starring Oscar Isaac, Carey Mulligan, John Goodman, Garrett Hedlund and Justin Timberlake.
Oscar Isaac and the film itself deserved so much more credit, how tragically ironic
Absolutely agree. Oscar Isaac is brilliant.
It is terrible how people that can't see the emotion through music have no idea of the value of this movie, it shows the greatness of it though
Enhkyboy Junior not just through music, through art in general. A lot of people misunderstand artists and therefore they end up miserable frustrated shells of themselves like Llewyn
It has Salieri in it. Doubly Ironic.
You know why ? Because he IS THE PATRON SAINT OF MEDIOCRITIES.
I had a phase after seeing Force Awakens that I wanted to see Oscar Isaac in more movies so I just binged a load of his work. Honestly this is my favourite because he has such a gorgeously sad singing voice. Love this gem of a movie.
The best song in the movie, and the best rendition of it. They recorded each song live for the movie. Oscar Isaac is soooo good!!
This is my favorite cohen bro movie but i think the ONE ISSUE i have with it is that Oscar Isaac, 1961 Gaslight, singing THAT, would have been BIGGER than Dylan. (but then i think thats sorta the point) Cuz if you se Dave Van Ronk stuff you can kinda understand the "i dont see a lot of money here" line. But OSCAR...in 61? singing like THAT? Oscar Elvis. lol
In my life, this is that sleeper film. I can watch it, love it, so watch it again. Never does it cease to amaze me how it comes back to me. In that respect, I can’t help but see it as the quintessential folk music love letter it is. As much distance as there is from my first experience with it, there’s as much emotional content every time I come back. Listen to Bob Dylan and you know, this stuff only ripens. Seldom sour, always relevant.
I loved the last scene, where we can hear Dylan sing... an end of an era, the start of another.
Watched it last night . Brilliant film . Not a blockbuster but just so well acted and well wrote and filmed. I love those those little gems
bigheadbob37 The cinematography was great.
So underrated
1:52
Right there...
👀
For those of us who have this persistent habit of NOTICING, that face right there...
that is the problem that we face...
that is the face of the problem...
It’s not just the problem in the music industry, or even the entertainment industry as a whole.
That problem extends to every facet of our lives.
A problem that has been there for the last 4000 years... swindling the masses... causing great empires to collapse... pitting nation against nation...
I think it’s time we tackle that problem, and solve it once and for all.
Thanks so much for posting this version from the movie. The album recording has the guitar throughout, and I love this version, with the acapella verse. Fabulous.
Funny you said that, I only looked this up on RUclips because the Acapella verse was SO beautiful and like you said, the album version leaves it out 😉
Lord this is a guy-wrenching scene. So beautiful but so self-defeating, so casually devastating. Nice work Coens, you’ve broken my heart again
After the performance.
The music executive called him and up and said-
"Dont worry Llewyn, I will speak for you, I speak for all mediocrities. I am their champion. Their patron saint.
In departure he says, mediocrities everywhere, I absolve you, I absolve you all."
Salieri always hated when someone was a better musician than him
nice mate
The look he gives him before that instrumental section/last verse says it all
This song makes me miss cold nights in New York
absolutely beautiful, wow
It's the point in the film where the protagonist turns down. Given all and still failed. It's a sober film. I like that about it. You don't walk away feeling big, rather, quite small. Wondering what of your effort.
i want to live in this song! just not historically
I don't see a lot of money here.
Salieri is always jelous when some one is a better musician than him
Saddest song
Oh my , So sad , but something thousand times more beautiful.
@@supermahmus9008 but he speaks for all mediocrities, right ?
Especially now with the British invasion.
This is the most brutal scene
Salieri became a music exec so he could destroy the next Mozart before he even started.
i love you isaac
so sad
I just realized. The end of the movie...Jean gets him the gig. Poppie pays him some money, he gets beat up as Bob Dylan sets the folk scene to come. Did Llewyn take his final gig money and get his Seamans papers back and ship out on the sardine can? Only to come back to see the thing he loved flourishing without him. "flourishing with out him" just like Diane in Akron or Jean and Jim.
I don't see a lot of money here
The acoustics at 2.08
Very nice version. Although in me opinion, the definitive one is from Micheál Ó Domnhaill with the Bothy Band...
This is a money world
A bit of Nick Drake in there.
from before Drake.
I see a money here ..
I don't see a lot of money here