Barry Lyndon Barry's Threat

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024

Комментарии • 199

  • @thirael
    @thirael 6 лет назад +167

    the gentleman asleep in his chair is such a nice touch

    • @jasperswarp
      @jasperswarp 3 года назад +18

      A slight link to the scene before the duel at the end of the film where Barry is the one sleeping in the chair, was it a comment by the director that the gentry led boring and largely pointless lives ?

    • @donnyscallz
      @donnyscallz 3 года назад +15

      that particular scene was depicted in an actual painting from that era.

    • @miamitten1123
      @miamitten1123 Год назад +1

      @@donnyscallz I see 🤔

    • @ianboard544
      @ianboard544 Год назад +4

      Straight out of Hogarth.

    • @Billythetoaster2004
      @Billythetoaster2004 4 месяца назад +1

      That is a good take ​@@jasperswarp

  • @erikfreitas7093
    @erikfreitas7093 Год назад +22

    “I hope you’re not thinking of leaving us soon, Sir Charles.” His hollow insincerity there made me laugh 😆

  • @lesternapoleongreen7543
    @lesternapoleongreen7543 4 года назад +133

    Whoever is playing Sir Charles Lyndon needed some sort of award. He makes me feel like I'm staring into history

    • @botulismcasserole9832
      @botulismcasserole9832 Год назад +1

      He makes me think that you wear a gravy filled diaper

    • @oswaldconjugation3647
      @oswaldconjugation3647 Год назад +6

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Middlemass

    • @cimerti
      @cimerti Год назад +2

      He played the Fool in BBC production of King Lear!

    • @thomasj219
      @thomasj219 Год назад

      Yes

    • @skelter1153
      @skelter1153 Год назад +1

      @@botulismcasserole9832
      That sounds so .................greazy.
      Well, I know what I'm doing this weekend. Thanks for the idea !

  • @sevensolaris
    @sevensolaris 8 лет назад +189

    The actor who played Sir Charles Lyndon gave what I thought to be one of the best performances of the movie.

    • @g0679
      @g0679 5 лет назад +5

      Lindon Lamont ... Yes. But I’m glad that I wasn’t his hankie.

    • @birderjohn3396
      @birderjohn3396 5 лет назад +13

      Frank Middlemass

    • @Bufoferrata
      @Bufoferrata 5 лет назад +16

      @@birderjohn3396 : He played Charles Poldark in the Original Poldark series and Pyotr Arkadievich Stolypin in Fall of Eagles. Solid character actor, believable in everything he does. Pity he didn't get the recognition he deserved. But that's what comes of working in such a crowded field. The UK produces legions of brilliant actors. I love British TV/movies.

    • @Casarzino
      @Casarzino 5 лет назад +5

      yeah and this was his only scene lol

    • @Casarzino
      @Casarzino 5 лет назад +2

      yeah and this was his only scene lol

  • @Fan_Made_Videos
    @Fan_Made_Videos 9 лет назад +126

    Redmond Barry's Five Trash Talking Points Heart Implosion technique on display.
    RIP Sir Charles Reginald Lyndon

    • @RogerTCross
      @RogerTCross 8 лет назад +1

      Yes

    • @annakimborahpa
      @annakimborahpa 7 лет назад +17

      "Sir, let those laugh who win." How's that exile prepared by Sir Lyndon's son Lord Bullingdon working out for you, Redmond Barry?

    • @mmelloe
      @mmelloe 6 лет назад +4

      this is maybe one of my favorite comments

    • @jonc2648
      @jonc2648 2 года назад +2

      @@annakimborahpa indeed, nobody's laughing at the end of this sordid tale.

    • @annakimborahpa
      @annakimborahpa 2 года назад +2

      @@jonc2648 Stanley Kubrick transformed William Thackeray's comedic book The Luck of Barry Lyndon into a film tragedy, particularly by adding the final duel between Lord Bullingdon and Redmond Barry. Over a decade earlier, Kubrick had transformed Peter George's ultra-serious book Red Alert about the potential for nuclear war into the satirical comedy film Dr. Strangelove. In both cases, Kubrick elevated cinema into storytelling far beyond what heretofore had been the usual standard film re-telling of a preexisting book narrative.

  • @soldiersvejk2053
    @soldiersvejk2053 3 года назад +68

    Not a single shot is unnecessary in a 2+ hour movie. Genius.

  • @DavidErdody
    @DavidErdody 6 лет назад +88

    When the pills went flying...you knew he was f***ed.

    • @chopin65
      @chopin65 5 лет назад +9

      Is that so? I'd have bet it was when Mr. Barry entered the room.

    • @Bulacanos
      @Bulacanos 2 года назад +3

      No, it was downing pills with a brandy chaser

    • @AmyWebster-u6l
      @AmyWebster-u6l 2 месяца назад

      That scene is in the book, just about word for word. But Sir Charles dies somewhat later.

  • @futuropasado
    @futuropasado 5 лет назад +34

    "Good evening Mr. Barry!" Love how he delivered that line, classy scene from a classy actor...

  • @diegoandres2906
    @diegoandres2906 3 года назад +25

    One little historical problem, the Kingdom of Belgium was created in 1830, sixty years after the time when this scene is taking place. Spa in that moment was within the Austrian Netherlands

    • @commanderjameson2708
      @commanderjameson2708 Год назад

      I guess that would have confused the viewers. (In the book he dies in Ireland)

  • @TLpjh888
    @TLpjh888 4 года назад +51

    The most beautiful movie I've ever seen.

    • @vilhelmhammershoi3871
      @vilhelmhammershoi3871 4 года назад +7

      Me too! I thought I was the only one who thought that. And the musical editing binding scenes together into one musical movement and every actor, including extras (see the card scene where Barry meets Mrs Lyndon and Rev. Runt) acting on cues with chords in the music. Out of this world.

    • @MusicFed
      @MusicFed 3 года назад +4

      Absolutely

    • @joestimemachine6454
      @joestimemachine6454 3 года назад +2

      Barry Lyndon and Lawrence of Arabia leave my awe struck by the beauty.

    • @jonc2648
      @jonc2648 2 года назад +5

      @@vilhelmhammershoi3871 no no, its cinematographic perfection.

    • @vilhelmhammershoi3871
      @vilhelmhammershoi3871 2 года назад +3

      @@jonc2648 Exactly!. Perfection. No other movie comes close to this!

  • @westonstevens3239
    @westonstevens3239 Год назад +30

    An 8.1/10 on IMDB, and still find that to be a travesty. This is one of the very greatest films ever made, like top 10. And Stanley Kubrick's finest work.

    • @atomicsmith
      @atomicsmith Год назад

      It’s definitely a film that requires a few viewings. IMDb will have a lot of reviews from people that just watched it.

    • @grumpysorc3744
      @grumpysorc3744 Год назад +1

      It's OK for a masterpiece, the Seventh Seal, Andrei Rublev and Rashomon have these 8,1. At the same time, many great films are even lower on the IMDB list, while some overrated ones occupied the top because they are more well known, simple, profitable etc.

    • @gregbors8364
      @gregbors8364 7 месяцев назад

      “‘Titanic’ is the greatest film that was ever made.” - Oprah
      lol

  • @vilhelmhammershoi3871
    @vilhelmhammershoi3871 4 года назад +21

    1:03 the best acted ''What?'' in the history of theatre and film in the English language.

  • @juandomingoperon7965
    @juandomingoperon7965 5 лет назад +27

    I love the actor of Charles Lyndon's heart attack performence, as someone who knows people who have suffered severe heart attacks, his mannerisms are pretty realistic.

    • @IPlayWithFire135
      @IPlayWithFire135 Год назад +3

      It captures the pain and panic of it.

    • @justinneill5003
      @justinneill5003 Год назад +2

      @@IPlayWithFire135Shit, I hope that never happens to me.

  • @DevilDogDen1775
    @DevilDogDen1775 Год назад +19

    I saw this movie with my parents WAAAAAY back in 1975, and I was 15 at the time. I immediately fell in love with this movie primarily due to the incredible cinematography, and of course the music. And I have watched this timeless masterpiece innumerable times, and still this is my absolute favorite movie of all time.

    • @daveygivens735
      @daveygivens735 Год назад +1

      I wish I could have seen it in the cinema.

    • @AmyWebster-u6l
      @AmyWebster-u6l 2 месяца назад

      My favorite as well. Do you find that when it ends a magic spell is broken? In spite of the unpleasantness.

  • @liammhaha
    @liammhaha 4 года назад +14

    “Let those laugh, that win.”

  • @mixererunio1757
    @mixererunio1757 Год назад +5

    I love how Barry went from "I literally have no idea what you're talking about" to "The game in on, you fucker"

  • @DocPopulus
    @DocPopulus 6 лет назад +20

    Brilliant detail keeping the candles in shot - you can see them flicker as Sir Charles shouts and flails his arms

    • @hjarten
      @hjarten 2 года назад +1

      In a behind-the-scenes clip on YT, it's mentioned that custom candles were used; 3 wicks.

  • @jackxiao9702
    @jackxiao9702 Год назад +6

    Sir Charles looks like a man terrified of an inevitable fate. Barry Redmond feels like a supernatural being, a representation of death or doom.

  • @eamonwright7488
    @eamonwright7488 Год назад +7

    2:55 When the coffee pot finishes brewing.

  • @sfselzer
    @sfselzer 4 года назад +29

    Of the supporting cast, my two favorites scenes (among many great performances) are Steven Berkoff's facial mugging as Lord Ludd & the late Frank Middlemass's brilliant monologue here. Both the dialogue & delivery are magnificent; every time I view it, I feel like I'm watching an actual 18th-century aristocrat in the flesh.

    • @lizclegg7556
      @lizclegg7556 3 года назад +5

      I completely agree. Those are two of the best scenes and best actors in the film. It would have been really interesting if Steven Berkoff had played Redmond Barry. But then I guess they wanted a big "commercial" name like Ryan O'Neal.

  • @cfrincon
    @cfrincon 8 лет назад +53

    Language truly is a wonder thing.

  • @stephenpitkin5492
    @stephenpitkin5492 5 лет назад +24

    There seems to be a strong parallel between this great standalone scene with Frank Middlemass as Sir Charles and that of Aubrey Morris playing Mr Deltoid in A Clockwork Orange, both characters a flawed conscience, rightly and boldly skewering the lamb-like deception of the anti-hero, but falling short into grotesque black slapstick. Even the elocution is remarkably similar.

  • @pod9363
    @pod9363 4 года назад +29

    3:13 imagine being him thinking of it all coming to an end, his whole life a big mistake, his wife fixing to re-marry, all of that going through his head while he scrambles for a pill on the table. ugh.

    • @dr.strangelove9815
      @dr.strangelove9815 4 года назад +17

      I was thinking the same thing, what a crappy way to go. Your whole life to that age serving your nation, to have your wife not care for you and being insulted in front your compatriots, then having a serious medical emergency. : /

    • @nickimillennium
      @nickimillennium Год назад +4

      No sympathy, she was a very young woman, probably barely more than a child when he married her

    • @gibsonflyingv2820
      @gibsonflyingv2820 Год назад +4

      @@dr.strangelove9815 It was pretty funny though. He was so cocky then died pathetically and cowardly. Not honorably at all.

    • @intiorozco5063
      @intiorozco5063 Год назад

      I wonder what those pills were. Probably some useless or even deadly drug from back in the day.

  • @lesternapoleongreen7543
    @lesternapoleongreen7543 8 лет назад +49

    Kubrick made movies look like moving paintings

    • @andrewma9682
      @andrewma9682 7 лет назад +1

      Kind of like Harry Potter but in real life

    • @randylahey2923
      @randylahey2923 4 года назад +5

      Andrew Ma Idk man i’d say this sits upon a higher creative tier than harry potter

    • @sevensolaris
      @sevensolaris 4 года назад +1

      That was what he was after here. To make a painting "come alive" so to speak.

    • @michaeljmobley
      @michaeljmobley 5 месяцев назад

      Initially was a photographer. He was a master at framing, staging, and camerawork

  • @thesouthernsinger2763
    @thesouthernsinger2763 2 года назад +5

    Lord Lyndon's reaction reminds me of my boss's reaction when I asked him for a raise after he found the co-manager with his wife.

  • @alienlizardqueen8748
    @alienlizardqueen8748 Год назад +1

    Barry is explaining that he would not be stepping into Sir Charles' shoes, so much as he would be stepping into the chaplain's.

  • @pschroeter1
    @pschroeter1 Год назад +18

    I'm oddly impressed by the wealth it took to have enough candles to play cards after dark. I believe this movie is famous for shooting theses scenes only illuminated by candlelight, and it was an eye opener to see how dark it must have been.

    • @daveygivens735
      @daveygivens735 Год назад +4

      Kubrick had to commandeer special lenses with Fstops fast enough to work in candlelight. There were only 10 in the world and Stanley bought 3 of them. I think the rest belonged to NASA.

    • @brianmccarthy5557
      @brianmccarthy5557 Год назад

      The candles were special too, being incredibly bright for candles. Special wax, three wicks and fast buring. Don't want to even think how many candles he burned through to film a scene. We're used to bright. People as late as the early 1900's weren't.

    • @daveygivens735
      @daveygivens735 Год назад

      @@brianmccarthy5557 I'll be damned. As many times as I've watched this, I never noticed. I see the double wicks.

    • @AmyWebster-u6l
      @AmyWebster-u6l Месяц назад

      You are so right. Think about power outages. A lot of them in Cowpens, SC. I am so happy to find a community that loves this movie as I do.

  • @vincenzocaggiano3027
    @vincenzocaggiano3027 8 лет назад +44

    The Kingdom of Belgium was founded only in 1831, so in this part there is an error.

    • @timdewit6088
      @timdewit6088 7 лет назад +14

      Always bothered me, seeing how the rest of this movie is so historically accurate. Can't understand how they missed such a basic historical fact.

    • @oggjoshua
      @oggjoshua 6 лет назад +6

      I wonder if the novel got this wrong.

    • @chopin65
      @chopin65 5 лет назад +10

      Actually it was "officially recognized in 1830" but this is merely a technical distinction. From an article in Wikipedia on the history of Belgium we have:
      The history of Belgium extends before the founding of the modern state of that name in 1830.
      It's like most nations an incredibly complex story that stretches from the dawn of history to present day.
      So, you can pick a date and make the kind of case you want. It's knit picking on your part.

    • @Ekvitarius
      @Ekvitarius 5 лет назад +7

      David Henson in those days it may have been more accurate to say the Austrian Netherlands or Flanders, depending on the part of the country.

    • @friedrichii41
      @friedrichii41 4 года назад +4

      In true technicality, the Kingdom of Belgium was a mere possession split between the greater European powers. Spa itself in this time period was apart of the Bishopric of Liège, of which was a French possession. As some have already stated - Belgium wasn't officially recognized until 1831. Until then, it was known as a Kingdom, though it was just occupied by other European powers.
      A prime example of this is Switzerland. Many people know about the Swiss Confederation, yet few know that parts of Switzerland was carved up by foreign powers in Europe to hold influence. Namely you had the Italian Genoese and Lombardians in the south, the French in the West, bordering with Prussian holdings in the canton of Neuchâtel, etc. European geo-politics is an amusing, yet complicated game.

  • @johnduncan4387
    @johnduncan4387 6 лет назад +29

    The single classiest movie ever made

  • @g0679
    @g0679 5 лет назад +9

    Redmond certainly was displaying chutzpah by approaching that table.

  • @nocturnalrecluse1216
    @nocturnalrecluse1216 Год назад +1

    Looks like he wouldn't even need arsenic. Just a wicked insult.

    • @sit2go
      @sit2go 7 месяцев назад

      He didn’t even insult him 😂
      He killed the man by just being in his presence

  • @thundershirt1
    @thundershirt1 3 года назад +3

    That scary, livid, old guy is a great SK trope: “Trieeeee the wiiiiiine! Have another gloss.” (From Clockwork Orange.)

  • @TomthatiscalledTom
    @TomthatiscalledTom 7 лет назад +13

    Frank Middlemass puts a brilliant performance as the ailing Sir Charles Lyndon

  • @pmatula3080
    @pmatula3080 6 лет назад +8

    Barry’s mike drop moment.

  • @happy543210
    @happy543210 6 лет назад +14

    i absolutely love this scene...frank middlemass ( sir lyndon) is amazing!!

  • @fastcars393
    @fastcars393 6 лет назад +15

    Brandy as always is the cure. ; )

    • @geg6315
      @geg6315 3 года назад +2

      Brandi and heart pills are a great combination. Makes you think what actually killed him

  • @amanhasnoname1510
    @amanhasnoname1510 5 лет назад +13

    1:03 epic aristocratic laugh

    • @jimkoral3824
      @jimkoral3824 5 лет назад

      I love it! Such a memorable laugh!

  • @PeterTubaEuph
    @PeterTubaEuph Год назад +1

    Barry delivers a burn so sick this dude up and dies. What a picture.

  • @dougmaclennan8654
    @dougmaclennan8654 3 года назад +4

    Advising me on a religious matter. Ooooch. That had to be aggravating.

  • @cimerti
    @cimerti Год назад +2

    Frank Middlemas played the fool in the Royal Shakespeare BBC production of King Lear. I was incredulous to know it was the same great actor!

  • @Boxmediaphile
    @Boxmediaphile Год назад +4

    The last W Barry got

  • @carlmarston1687
    @carlmarston1687 Год назад +4

    Greatest performance in a minor role in history

  • @grumpysorc3744
    @grumpysorc3744 Год назад +1

    Everyone praises the painting-like scenes - and this is very true, you can hardly find such a movie that perfectly displays the 18th century through subtle references with painting of that era. But the sound is equally important here, the voices sound just incredible.

  • @adelef8280
    @adelef8280 3 года назад +3

    Marvellous performance by Frank Middlemass.

  • @paulscott3114
    @paulscott3114 8 лет назад +8

    great scene

  • @andresstadelmann7583
    @andresstadelmann7583 7 лет назад +31

    I was very surprised when he said the word cuckold, didn't know it traced back so far

    • @TheSeanoops
      @TheSeanoops 6 лет назад +9

      Andrés Stadelmann it comes from the name of the cuckoo bird.

    • @JohnBolender
      @JohnBolender 5 лет назад +7

      Shakespeare remarked how the cuckoo bird mocks married men.

    • @AmyWebster-u6l
      @AmyWebster-u6l 2 месяца назад

      I have seen the word used in 1765

  • @daveygivens735
    @daveygivens735 Год назад +2

    In a movie filled with magnificent performances, Frank Middlemass' is maybe the best.

  • @duncanfisher2986
    @duncanfisher2986 Год назад +1

    MAGNIFICENT!

  • @AmyWebster-u6l
    @AmyWebster-u6l Месяц назад

    At this point he was Redmond Barry.

  • @eduardodifarnecio2336
    @eduardodifarnecio2336 Год назад +1

    You can watch this guy in another wonderful performance in To Give Them All My Days. A series about teachers in a English public school. I believe still on RUclips

  • @wolfpax22
    @wolfpax22 Год назад

    The most plot-convenient heart attack ever.

    • @ccfliege
      @ccfliege Год назад +3

      They didn't say that he died there at that place

    • @AmyWebster-u6l
      @AmyWebster-u6l 2 месяца назад

      According to book he dies later.

  • @gedrooney9305
    @gedrooney9305 Год назад +1

    A god damn masterpiece

  • @michaeljmobley
    @michaeljmobley Год назад +1

    Props to the man stone drunk and passed out in his chair next to everyone in the scene.

  • @Maximus02020202
    @Maximus02020202 4 года назад +1

    Have some brandy sir Charles 😄🥃

  • @wjgmspeedy
    @wjgmspeedy 4 года назад +2

    Sir Lyndon has the same voice as the masked ceremony leader in EWS.

    • @harryhoffer9804
      @harryhoffer9804 3 года назад +6

      It’s actually the voice Leon Vitale, Lord Bullingdon in Barry Lyndon.

  • @MathVdb
    @MathVdb Год назад

    Belgium was only founded in 1831? Or what is the director referring to?

  • @retireddoubleagent7309
    @retireddoubleagent7309 5 лет назад +2

    I always liked but also thought it was weird how the narrator faded out into the intermission before finishing his sentence of the obituary.

  • @voiceofreason2674
    @voiceofreason2674 Год назад

    Get his AZZ Barry !!!

  • @running-man9138
    @running-man9138 5 лет назад +2

    Great scene

  • @khalidalali186
    @khalidalali186 5 лет назад +9

    The Kingdom of Belgium in the 18th century?

  • @danielsnook5029
    @danielsnook5029 3 месяца назад

    Try to count all the candles before the scene ends.😂

  • @varolussalsanclar1163
    @varolussalsanclar1163 5 лет назад +5

    Pills in the 18th century??

    • @itsumonihon
      @itsumonihon 4 года назад +5

      cardiac medication has been around for a very long time. it's plant based toxin which is used to try to correct arrhythmia or increase the strength of a heartbeat

  • @jacqudace
    @jacqudace Год назад

    It's Rocky!

  • @samuelbousfield4342
    @samuelbousfield4342 4 года назад

    Such a polite threatening

  • @flippert0
    @flippert0 4 года назад

    I feel reminded of "Viccini, the Sicilian" from the Princess Bride

  • @HunterShows
    @HunterShows 4 месяца назад

    His wife actually did to him what Barry later did to her.

  • @michelm5072
    @michelm5072 Год назад

    In this movie you can see several nobles and gentlemen sleeping, as if it were not casual and had some meaning.

  • @TheBetito123
    @TheBetito123 10 лет назад +11

    AHAHHHAHAHAAHAHAHAHAHHAAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

  • @JesusOquendoCortesrocks2002
    @JesusOquendoCortesrocks2002 3 года назад +1

    The actor who played Ryan O’Neal as Sir Charles Lyndon i heard this one great movie
    It’s lot scenes this movie that movie made by Warner Bros. Pictures from 1975!!!!!!! 😀🎞📽🎥🍿

  • @ollielan
    @ollielan Год назад +2

    Too bad the narrator is talking about the Kingdom of Belgium, which wouldn't exist before at least 60 years after those events. Spa was then part of the Principality of Liège, in the Holy Roman Empire. Great scene and great movie though.

    • @Reichsritter
      @Reichsritter Год назад

      True, only Napoleon made the way for the made up country of Belgium, though of course, in some forms Belgium was a term for the whole Low Lands

  • @marcoline505
    @marcoline505 11 лет назад +1

    bary lyndon je vrlo počan i super film

  • @PHILKENTADM
    @PHILKENTADM 4 года назад +3

    Sorry, but is it a fart I heard at 2:40 ?

  • @mcleanedwards7748
    @mcleanedwards7748 Год назад

    Cya

  • @tiffles3890
    @tiffles3890 Год назад

    What's with all those powdered up faces? Did they apply make up like women?

  • @Prousto
    @Prousto 2 года назад +2

    I love this incredibly boring movie.

  • @cplassen2138
    @cplassen2138 Год назад

    This film gets way too many plaudits It's crap from start to finish, with millions of dollars, fancy credits and posh names associated with it in the bargain. Rubbish

    • @AmyWebster-u6l
      @AmyWebster-u6l Месяц назад +1

      Something tells me you just didn't understand it.

    • @Ahnjay_2k
      @Ahnjay_2k Месяц назад

      Pleb

    • @cplassen2138
      @cplassen2138 Месяц назад

      @@AmyWebster-u6l Sorry. 4 yr degree from flagship university - cum laude. MPPA - Honor graduate. 2 yr PhD candidate - noped out. I understood that bloated vanity project just fine. I just didn't like it. Wouldn't it be nice if someday a person could express a personal opinion on a subjective matter on the internet and not have some jackass accuse them of being too stupid to understand?

    • @cplassen2138
      @cplassen2138 Месяц назад

      @@Ahnjay_2k Piss off, curry stench.

  • @nocturnalrecluse1216
    @nocturnalrecluse1216 Год назад

    Looks like he wouldn't even need arsenic. Just a wicked insult.