This scene is so bittersweet to me because, even though its beautifully shot, it depicts the deteriorating marriage of a man who wanted love but just didn't have what it took to keep it alive. Even though I side with Emily here, I can't help feeling sorry for Charlie.
They shoot twice, with an overlayed Cotton against a black background used to blend with the next scene. You can use a rewind crank for old school double exposure...Iover of this film from school days
That's why this movie is considered revolutionary. Other movies have done all the techniques in this movie but not so extravagant and tied to narrative like this movie
@@malartsnyI don’t believe this is it. Welles has said that it’s done by using what he knew from stage lighting. They merely dimmed down all the lights on the background and left only the lights on the character on so that the black/dark portions go first. They did this on a lot of scenes.
As boring and slow as this movie is to watch now. It is still an amazing masterpiece. This scene alone still makes me envious of their relationship. Now... you would have already been divorced twice or on your 4th marriage by that last scene.
@Randy White bullshit. 119min Black and white undramatic time period piece. Again, amazing movie... The acting and storytelling in this should standardized.
@@Rodrgo1997 First off... The fact that its black and white, nor the length of the movie, is not my reason of why I said it was boring. [Actually, I didn't give the context]. Read what you are commenting on... Describing a movie and saying it bored. Doesn't actually mean the movie was boring(or somehow, boring means bad). Stop being stupid.
Love how she’s trolling him at the end by reading the rival paper at the breakfast table.
Never noticed that. Genius.
This scene is so bittersweet to me because, even though its beautifully shot, it depicts the deteriorating marriage of a man who wanted love but just didn't have what it took to keep it alive. Even though I side with Emily here, I can't help feeling sorry for Charlie.
The music really plays a great role in this scene. It goes from innocent and romantic-sounding to discordant and sinister.
The way he says “Emily was a little nicer” then coughs weirdly, they must’ve had a little thing at dance school
1:57 "that's a mistake that will be corrected one of these days"
One of the ever best quote ever!
He was only 25 and the makeup really sells it. Amazing.
Who was? Welles?
Yes. Welles was 25 here.
Notice how as they become further apart the flowers disappear? Withering away like the relationship.
such an exquisitely made scene, it’s so profound, so symbolic
"Social distancing" ca. 1931
🤣🤣🤣
c. 1910s
What's great is that this montage shows the slow disintegration of a marriage over years very quickly.
“People think...what I’ll tell them to think” - Today’s Tech Giants
*former President Trump
Andrew Holmes 🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑
@@davidpar2 Yeah Trump is a 'stable genius', right?
Perfect progression, just great to watch
Love that segment...Good exchange of contrasting ideas.
It's amazing how Leland could describe the incidents without actually being there!
I was thinking of this scene, for a new project I'm doing. Has been such a long time since I've watched this film
Wonderful, wonderful, wonderful!!
My parents over the years
ALL marriages, over the years.
rdecredico not all
How the heck does the scene behind Cotton dissolve before he does?
They shoot twice, with an overlayed Cotton against a black background used to blend with the next scene. You can use a rewind crank for old school double exposure...Iover of this film from school days
That's why this movie is considered revolutionary. Other movies have done all the techniques in this movie but not so extravagant and tied to narrative like this movie
@@malartsnyI don’t believe this is it. Welles has said that it’s done by using what he knew from stage lighting. They merely dimmed down all the lights on the background and left only the lights on the character on so that the black/dark portions go first. They did this on a lot of scenes.
@@justinmakesmovies33That's how I thought the transition was done when I first saw it.
Ruth Warrick... to be seen later as Phoebe Tyler in All My Children!
Whereabouts did Charles and Emily live here? Obviously not Xanadu, which was buit years later for his 2nd wife.
Nicker check?
who else is here for their final
Final what? Moments of life? 🤔
brilliant
1:10 oops
Good catch.
rdecredico what?
she looks at the camera?
Bravo
He looks like Prince at the beginning.
0:28
Genio.
So sad
Old people are funny
If you lucky, you will be funny too, one day.
Good luck on getting there.
He absolutely destroyed @Lance McSteel
Young people are funnier.
What are you, like three years old and just learning to type?
thankfully this was a comment from 7 years ago so i’m 10 now and can type good
silly.
As boring and slow as this movie is to watch now. It is still an amazing masterpiece. This scene alone still makes me envious of their relationship. Now... you would have already been divorced twice or on your 4th marriage by that last scene.
@Randy White bullshit. 119min Black and white undramatic time period piece. Again, amazing movie... The acting and storytelling in this should standardized.
@@Rodrgo1997 First off... The fact that its black and white, nor the length of the movie, is not my reason of why I said it was boring. [Actually, I didn't give the context]. Read what you are commenting on... Describing a movie and saying it bored. Doesn't actually mean the movie was boring(or somehow, boring means bad). Stop being stupid.
@Beech exactly. I'm not speaking for any one. Nor did say that I was not.
@Beech pass
Ok zoomer