Best Scene From "The Pianist"

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
  • Playing on piano Scene From "The Pianist"

Комментарии • 1,7 тыс.

  • @TheTrueNarthumpulous
    @TheTrueNarthumpulous 4 года назад +1747

    His body was broken but the fire in his soul remained.

    • @dbodooley
      @dbodooley 4 года назад +7

      Edna Turner huh??

    • @abdullaahmad2468
      @abdullaahmad2468 4 года назад +6

      Such a soul

    • @dbodooley
      @dbodooley 3 года назад +8

      What a great comment.

    • @JenniferCurran-wr3in
      @JenniferCurran-wr3in 3 месяца назад +2

      The soul animates the body. Bodies die but souls never do. We are energy and that energy is the soul outside of us and within us . The 5 senses lead to the fulfillment of the 6th sense. The World was just a means to an end. Pain is the payment for eternal love and the 6th sense is guided by our angels to our souls completion.

    • @humptydumpty-m8u
      @humptydumpty-m8u 2 месяца назад

      If it’s because of some flashbacks, pls ignore 🙏🏻

  • @CryptoTruthBombs
    @CryptoTruthBombs 4 года назад +5339

    What made this so powerful was the fact that he was pretty certain the Nazi was going to kill him, so he performed it passionately as if it was going to be the last time he ever played anything. Him crying at the end signifies this.

    • @allstarmark12345
      @allstarmark12345 4 года назад +123

      What a wonderful interpretation. I’m going to believe you are correct!

    • @zombierevel
      @zombierevel 4 года назад +68

      Though the same thing. He gave it all like it was his last time

    • @andrewmccloud8581
      @andrewmccloud8581 4 года назад +123

      Wilm Hosenfeld wasn't a Nazi.

    • @nicolasperez4443
      @nicolasperez4443 4 года назад +12

      thanks, I was looking for context cause it just adds more significance to literally anything in life.

    • @maison8858
      @maison8858 4 года назад +16

      Thank you Lou for analysing wonderfully this passage .... I feel the same

  • @bipinchandra2664
    @bipinchandra2664 4 года назад +4520

    "Music is the only one language, the whole world understands".

    • @ethanmallard5942
      @ethanmallard5942 4 года назад +39

      Not true but ok

    • @Suspectedly
      @Suspectedly 4 года назад +6

      I Have Aids Gaming it is?

    • @ethanmallard5942
      @ethanmallard5942 4 года назад +73

      @@Suspectedly deaf people

    • @dylanmorgan7900
      @dylanmorgan7900 4 года назад +34

      @Cavin Groenendijk i doubt it, and most people today who can hear are still unable to understand this music

    • @philneal3750
      @philneal3750 4 года назад +12

      War: allow me to introduce myself

  • @johnychrist2559
    @johnychrist2559 3 года назад +957

    1:28 the moment everything became clear for this German officer.
    "How can we treat these people as subhuman?" His face says. "How can someone capable of producing such art be oppressed such as this?"
    God, what a brilliant film. Watched it in school as a kid and these scenes have stuck with me.

    • @wacodraco1558
      @wacodraco1558 3 года назад +63

      The expression you’re referencing is more attuned to 2:03 where the power dynamic shifts fully in the room for the time being and he sits in the manner of a child in awe.

    • @devikaweerakoon6901
      @devikaweerakoon6901 3 года назад +1

      😭😭😭

    • @lindaname9413
      @lindaname9413 3 года назад

      And Frederic Chopin was a viralent anti-semite. Incredible..

    • @kavialla
      @kavialla 2 года назад +24

      But it seems to me he was thinking: How we, a great and cultured nation, led the world to the fact that so talented pianist turn into driven animal on the brink of survival?

    • @billofrightsamend4
      @billofrightsamend4 2 года назад +5

      The German officer was a Jew himself. When he brought the pianist food he said I guess God wants us to live.

  • @scaper8
    @scaper8 4 года назад +1191

    "What's your name?"
    "Szpilman."
    "Szpilman? Good name for a pianist."

    • @nexogames4819
      @nexogames4819 4 года назад +112

      "Szpilman" sounds like "Spielmann" in German ( a guy who is playing sth.)

    • @sidharthwarrier9001
      @sidharthwarrier9001 4 года назад +8

      Perfect*

    • @u.v.s.5583
      @u.v.s.5583 4 года назад +8

      Szpilman? A Jew?

    • @fidanmammedzadeh4691
      @fidanmammedzadeh4691 4 года назад +3

      @@u.v.s.5583 i know he was from poland ,im not sure

    • @Wrocuaf
      @Wrocuaf 4 года назад +11

      @@fidanmammedzadeh4691 yes he was polish jew who was born at Sosnowiec

  • @musicalentertainment7435
    @musicalentertainment7435 5 лет назад +3050

    Frederic Chopin Ballade No. 1 Op. 23 in G Minor

    • @peergrewolls9364
      @peergrewolls9364 5 лет назад +26

      Esteban Outeiral Dias Jep same here
      One of my favorites
      But this interpretation isn’t quite how I would play it

    • @virgiledavid4464
      @virgiledavid4464 5 лет назад +5

      Esteban Outeiral Dias ahhhh thanks same

    • @therobertguy2436
      @therobertguy2436 5 лет назад +49

      But it was actually Chopin Nocturne No. 20 in C Sharp Minor IRL

    • @pianoconcertono2
      @pianoconcertono2 5 лет назад +13

      Robert Actually, it was not.

    • @1minutequickvideos-169
      @1minutequickvideos-169 5 лет назад +11

      Fryderyk Chopin not frederic

  • @Dankboi420
    @Dankboi420 5 лет назад +801

    When you saved your life by playing the piano 🎹

    • @stranger2langley143
      @stranger2langley143 5 лет назад +96

      I’m sure he wouldn‘t have killed him either way.

    • @hudiscool4186
      @hudiscool4186 5 лет назад +7

      That was the good old times!🤐

    • @michelestewart4152
      @michelestewart4152 5 лет назад +2

      @@stranger2langley143 maybe~

    • @Mybpeterson
      @Mybpeterson 4 года назад +24

      When you play like it's your last time because you believe the German will kill you when you're done.

    • @jarekwajcfeld5127
      @jarekwajcfeld5127 4 года назад +2

      Not only that he shows the officer nazi they are not masters race

  • @joshuali26
    @joshuali26 4 года назад +1944

    This scene is so cinematically powerful. That can of food on the left represents life, and Hosenfeld's cap on the right represents death, and all that stands in between are 88 keys and it's up to Szpilman to save himself. The piano is literally between life and death.

    • @willshaw6405
      @willshaw6405 3 года назад +69

      No...Hosenfeld was merely calling him out for claiming to be a pianist, or he simply wanted to hear great music in the middle of the chaos. But not a trial for his life. You are either a killer or not, and Hosenfeld was not...

    • @abravexstove289
      @abravexstove289 3 года назад +24

      Ur over analyzing it

    • @roisinc8299
      @roisinc8299 3 года назад +24

      That’s a clever way to look at it!!

    • @ooievaar6756
      @ooievaar6756 3 года назад +19

      88 means H H... etc in nazi circles. This cap is just from a wehrmacht officer, not an ss cap. The normal german soldiers were mostly ok. They were forced as well and men/children of their time and place. But you see things clear

    • @fjorinasimoni9832
      @fjorinasimoni9832 2 года назад +3

      Right description🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼

  • @carolmarie5105
    @carolmarie5105 4 года назад +2272

    I wish there was more music and less war in our world.

    • @Thesaxclinic
      @Thesaxclinic 4 года назад +53

      You mean, more good music?

    • @carolmarie5105
      @carolmarie5105 4 года назад +14

      @@Thesaxclinic sure, I'll take it!

    • @Thesaxclinic
      @Thesaxclinic 4 года назад +23

      @@carolmarie5105 I think there is plenty of music. Just nothing good like before. Or at least its harder to find..

    • @HeiwidH
      @HeiwidH 4 года назад +7

      We need war to win superiority in our world without it we wouldn't have a need for government, military, president. Either some nation rules the world or every nation is equal. We dont have the money for that or food. Also humans are just known to test competition and power, we are territorial just like animals

    • @julianarose9872
      @julianarose9872 4 года назад +5

      tony castillo god yes , we have no music in our lives , every home should have instruments , there should be live music everywhere , all of our activities should have music 🎶 not the canned , sound engineering of a keyboard & computer that creates the fake sound of instruments , but musicians & singers that make music

  • @GHanBax
    @GHanBax 4 года назад +701

    1:22 His face really gives the emotion that he sees the pianist as a real person, someone who used to practice, someone who tried to make a living, someone who had a family to feed, but is now struggling to live while having no fault in the situation. It's sad to see people who just want to survive in life desperately try to survive in living. It's crazy to think how many talents were gone, all the brilliant minds and the creative souls wasted, all because of war and senseless violence.

    • @SpaceClord
      @SpaceClord 2 года назад +15

      Well said. Well said indeed.

    • @musicalme27
      @musicalme27 Год назад +7

      And HATE

    • @sadjaxx
      @sadjaxx Год назад +4

      And hate. Don't forget hate.

    • @adrianziecik6280
      @adrianziecik6280 10 месяцев назад +4

      I remember before this scene this guy was playing Fur Elise. He connected with him for love of music. Remember this song is hardest to play for pianist. So he admired his skill.

    • @rheailiarome2287
      @rheailiarome2287 4 месяца назад +1

      Isn't that terrible that many people like the pianist are now being murdered in their homes and killed in a war and being stopped from going to class just because they are Jewish!
      How can we love this scene and keep quiet when this is happening again at this very moment??

  • @alylyshua74937
    @alylyshua74937 5 лет назад +3033

    I would just like to say props to the piano that survived the chaos outside and remained tuned even though we see the instrumentist's breath!

    • @JAAHUNGHAAM
      @JAAHUNGHAAM 5 лет назад +13

      😂

    • @jtm232556
      @jtm232556 4 года назад +49

      It's not in tune, moron.

    • @gertjanfaes2090
      @gertjanfaes2090 4 года назад +9

      @@jtm232556 not a pianist, how can you tell?

    • @jtm232556
      @jtm232556 4 года назад +127

      @@gertjanfaes2090 By hearing it😄 It sounds like most peoples' living room upright pianos. Like it had been tuned at some point, then not tended to again for many years.

    • @deanodog3667
      @deanodog3667 4 года назад +11

      @@jtm232556 well there was a.war on after all !

  • @LisaSimpson2006
    @LisaSimpson2006 5 лет назад +493

    The Nazi gave him bread and jam. I remember his face when he tasted the jam with his finger.

    • @agnesakne4409
      @agnesakne4409 4 года назад +4

      Lisa Simpson and his armee jacket knowing Russians are coming : D

    • @brainrich1358
      @brainrich1358 4 года назад +51

      Sad he couldn't repay the officer by saving him from being a prisoner.

    • @lee.as.in.l.e.e.7394
      @lee.as.in.l.e.e.7394 4 года назад +4

      Wermacht

    • @AustinFVIXV
      @AustinFVIXV 4 года назад +6

      Brain rich He was too late in getting the news that the officer was a POW, and even later in getting the news of where he was held, poor man.

    • @jlei1995
      @jlei1995 4 года назад +9

      @@brainrich1358 He tried and beg the Soviet soldiers, but they didn't listen. Others did the same. I still don't understand why they didn't let him out.

  • @jcalli66
    @jcalli66 4 года назад +605

    This single scene was the inspiration for me to take up piano lessons at the age of 37 after years of thinking about it, and I have been playing on-and-off for 17 years since then, and can play some of Chopin's nocturnes & preludes (and the funeral march of course), but haven't yet tackled this magnificent Ballade . I haven't had the courage & commitment but someday :-)
    I would say to anyone thinking about taking piano lessons -go for it! You're never too old and youtube is a wonderful reference for piano classic tutorials.

    • @ThePainkiller713
      @ThePainkiller713 4 года назад +7

      I also didn’t have the courage and commitment to play Hungarian Rhapsody no. 2 by Franz Liszt. I thought for years it would be out my ability until a few months ago at a very low point, I started learning out of curiosity. It’s often pieces like these that seem out of reach but it’s fear keeping us from playing them. I hope after reading this comment, you log off, acquire the sheet music, and start playing this song friend.

    • @kennydong4232
      @kennydong4232 3 года назад +5

      me too .I learnt piano at 37years of age and play some nocturne and not able to play this piece completely,now I am 56 still have the passion for the music I love

    • @HeyItsMeGabriella
      @HeyItsMeGabriella 3 года назад +6

      Thank you for your comment. I'm 24 years old and I have never played the piano in my life. The idea of learning how to play it has been in my head for a while now, but I was afraid and felt a bit ridiculous because I thought I was "too old" for it. Your comment has convinced me to go for it! Do you happen to have any recommendations for beginners? 😊

    • @JEANSDEMARCO
      @JEANSDEMARCO 3 года назад +4

      @@HeyItsMeGabriella Yes "BEGIN"!!

    • @lindaname9413
      @lindaname9413 3 года назад +4

      keep going, try sooner than later and work toward mastering. You can do it.

  • @pianoconcertono2
    @pianoconcertono2 5 лет назад +748

    Playing the piano literally saved his life

    • @julianbastian6723
      @julianbastian6723 4 года назад +78

      he was gonna save him anyway he just wanted to see how passionate szpilman was

    • @farhan007
      @farhan007 4 года назад +127

      The officer here was Wilm Hosenfeld. He was a kind man with a large heart who always detested Nazi treatment of Jews and the Polish. He helped many Polish and Jewish people during his time as a German officer risking his own life by betraying Nazi orders. Unfortunately he died in a Soviet labor camp. The pianist tried really hard to get him free by having him and other Jewish people who the officer helped save testify his deeds to Soviet officials but they didn't care.

    • @Insert-Retarded-Reply-Here
      @Insert-Retarded-Reply-Here 4 года назад +9

      Farhan Chowdhury fucking soviets, they are almost as bad as the SS

    • @evanstaf18
      @evanstaf18 4 года назад +6

      @@Insert-Retarded-Reply-Here wtf what?

    • @Insert-Retarded-Reply-Here
      @Insert-Retarded-Reply-Here 4 года назад +12

      Vaggelico you heard me

  • @dbodooley
    @dbodooley 3 года назад +668

    This is one of the most passionate, amazing scenes in any movie. The Pianist is one of the greatest movies ever made in my opinion.

    • @arturkajzar5625
      @arturkajzar5625 3 года назад +11

      I agree.
      Heartbreaking story, true story.
      My mind is despairing. This evil. I don't understand.
      How is it possible and why ?
      PS. I come from Poland.

    • @christiankrueger2330
      @christiankrueger2330 Год назад

      Too bad it was made by a pedophile rapist... one great movie doesn't undo drugging and raping a 14 year-old child.

    • @inagordan4589
      @inagordan4589 Год назад +1

      yes indeed

    • @cccycling5835
      @cccycling5835 Год назад +5

      Despite my very low opinion of Hollywood and Roman Polanski, I agree completely.

    • @scottwallace1
      @scottwallace1 Год назад +1

      @@arturkajzar5625 I struggle with this question seemingly every second of my life. I don’t understand why it’s so difficult to just be kind to one another and let others live as they choose. Yes society needs order to function and not everyone will agree on precisely what that means and the priorities that take hold. But the vitriol and hate of others….. I do truly wonder why any benign creator would set up the universe in this manner, where all but a handful of apex species die horribly and painfully in the teeth of a stronger predatory species.

  • @tobiasroedgarza2300
    @tobiasroedgarza2300 5 лет назад +504

    when the video is 8 years old, but the comments are only 2 days old.

  • @bravaLiz
    @bravaLiz 4 года назад +482

    This film is too powerful for words. This scene makes me cry unlike few others. This is a masterpiece.

    • @janedoe-hq9vn
      @janedoe-hq9vn 4 года назад +1

      Its propaganda...

    • @lucyfoster4082
      @lucyfoster4082 4 года назад +6

      jane doe It’s true life.

    • @helpiswhatyouneed.6758
      @helpiswhatyouneed.6758 4 года назад +14

      @@janedoe-hq9vn Based on a *true story.* It literally says it in the movie.

    • @katica7873
      @katica7873 3 месяца назад

      Spätestens hier haben Alle geweint..❤😭

  • @benanderson8240
    @benanderson8240 4 года назад +37

    Possibly one of the greatest movie moments in history

  • @avocadotortilla746
    @avocadotortilla746 5 лет назад +1006

    " why did he skip the middle part? "
    Well, this is a sad movie and the middle part sounds happy so adding the middle part would destroy the sad theme in this part lels

    • @numanemirhanoglu9258
      @numanemirhanoglu9258 5 лет назад +10

      sensible

    • @furahaaswan
      @furahaaswan 5 лет назад +58

      It skipped the dark section with the arpeggios right before the middle part too.

    • @ericlego321
      @ericlego321 5 лет назад +98

      Its because of screen time most probably.

    • @alviilmie1869
      @alviilmie1869 5 лет назад +22

      Mashed potato would u play a “happy” middle to the nazi?!

    • @ledesmagabriel7104
      @ledesmagabriel7104 5 лет назад +2

      @@alviilmie1869 he spittin sum fax

  • @jlei1995
    @jlei1995 4 года назад +99

    So sad Wilm Hosenfeld died in Soviet camp despied Szpilman and many trying to save him. His wife even wrote a letter to the officers. Another prisoner who was given a false identity by him also tried to help, but it was no use. At least he is being recognize today as righteous among the nations. ❤❤❤❤❤

    • @johhny711
      @johhny711 2 месяца назад

      It makes what’s happening in Gaza even more disturbing.

  • @simplymelodicmeissimplyme237
    @simplymelodicmeissimplyme237 4 года назад +105

    William Peng this is so true.I had benn homeless for a while, and went into a church service being set up for service and an old piano was leaning against the wall.I asked could I play it while they set up,they told me yes.I sat down with my cold pink fingers and started playing.The pastor walked in the door and heard me.He asked did I have a place to stay, I told him No..the Pastor said You do now.I was taken to a sober recovery house for women after the church service😊

    • @thisisme3161
      @thisisme3161 4 года назад +4

      Good for you ! Wish you the best

    • @rjgula3259
      @rjgula3259 3 года назад +4

      Hallelujah, God is great!

    • @2doodledo
      @2doodledo 3 года назад +1

      And what happened after that?

    • @agatamaglio5004
      @agatamaglio5004 8 месяцев назад

      Questo brano porta bene a tutti ❤

  • @FxnWaySheGoes
    @FxnWaySheGoes 4 года назад +32

    Amazing scene. Amazing actor who played the german officer. You can actually see his inner turmoil and empathy, realising everything hes been standing for is wrong. "How could we kill people with such beautiful souls?" The question he will be asking himself as he sits in awe of the beauty infront of him. His world changed that day, everything he thought he stood for came crashing down infront of his own eyes.

    • @Nursegirlalexandra
      @Nursegirlalexandra 4 года назад +6

      He was probably a German solider. Not a Nazi. Not all German soldiers were Nazis.

    • @NavidIsANoob
      @NavidIsANoob 4 года назад +1

      @@Nursegirlalexandra The Wehrmacht swore an oath of loyalty to the Nazi party. They were, for all intents and purposes, agents of the Nazi ideology.

    • @andrewmccloud8581
      @andrewmccloud8581 4 года назад +1

      Wilm Hosenfeld wasn't a Nazi. He helped Jews throughout the war.

    • @juttaweise
      @juttaweise Год назад +2

      @@NavidIsANoob the majority had no choice as the army was compalsory! So you can be sure that there
      were many who did not follow the official narrativ! There where times when the SS and the police went to schools, universities and families to get every "man" available. Most of them never had any army training, that's why so many of those young men died.

    • @eeg-rh7jv
      @eeg-rh7jv Год назад

      ​@@NavidIsANoob Most of them were trained against their will and brainwashed when they were still kids

  • @m1co294
    @m1co294 Год назад +46

    In reality, Wladyslaw couldn't be more fortunate to encounter this particular German officer, as the officer in question is Wilhelm Hosenfeld. A high-ranking Wehrmacht captain who--unlike his peers--dedicated his life to help the Poles, the Jews, and other "enemies of the state" instead of persecuting or straight up executing them. Had it been any other Nazi, he'd have been shot on the spot.
    After the war, Captain Hosenfeld was captured by the Red Army, and such a selfless hero, comparable to the likes of Oskar Schindler, painfully died in Soviet captivity in 1952. He is now amongst the "Righteous Among The Nations", a honorific title given by Israel to non-Jews who risked their lives to save those who were from extermination during the Holocaust.

    • @enricochestri
      @enricochestri 2 месяца назад +6

      Thank you for your explanations

  • @DRPANAM22
    @DRPANAM22 Год назад +15

    Was wären wir ohne Kunst? Ohne Musik, Literatur, Malerei usw. Diese schlimmen Zeiten wären kaum zu ertragen...

    • @monikastoye9141
      @monikastoye9141 12 дней назад +1

      Alles wird gerade zerstört... Wird nochmal so wunderschöne Musik, Literatur, Kunst entstehen können?

  • @marinus4258
    @marinus4258 5 лет назад +359

    Me: *surprised* holy shit that was pretty good
    The captain: *talking german and russian at the same time while having an english subtitle*

  • @brooke4608
    @brooke4608 4 года назад +380

    How did that guy piano in the freezing cold? When my fingers are cold I can barely play twinkle twinkle little star.

    • @pabloreyes7082
      @pabloreyes7082 4 года назад +61

      Because he was a Master...

    • @luciayay
      @luciayay 4 года назад +6

      Hahaha so true

    • @mrbrianc
      @mrbrianc 4 года назад +72

      Your life probably never depended on it

    • @brooke4608
      @brooke4608 4 года назад +33

      Brian Connelly if my life depended on it that would make it worse and I would 100% freeze up. Even just playing in front of my piano teacher makes me play worse than at home .

    • @kimquinn7728
      @kimquinn7728 4 года назад +29

      Fear is a great motivator.

  • @TheModesC
    @TheModesC 5 лет назад +661

    This is one of my favourite movies of all time. Every single time this scene comes on, I bawl my eyes out.

    • @michelestewart4152
      @michelestewart4152 5 лет назад +7

      ditto. my eyes were so swollen afterwards I didn't want anyone to look at me

    • @goforgold7082
      @goforgold7082 4 года назад +8

      The scene at the end where he walks out into the street. This thin, lonely figure with only devastation around him. That really got me

    • @goforgold7082
      @goforgold7082 4 года назад +3

      @@tigranbok1716 I must just disagree with you on the "stupid German" part. I can tell you that German people are extremely intelligent, I have one staying with me for 3 months every year and there is virtually nothing that he cant do or fix. Yes some people may not be "cultural" but you get that in every nation

    • @mikeleblanc5030
      @mikeleblanc5030 4 года назад

      Never heard of it? Is it a older movie?

    • @goforgold7082
      @goforgold7082 4 года назад

      @@mikeleblanc5030 it was released in 2002

  • @sporty1701
    @sporty1701 4 года назад +216

    For a few brief moments, Chopin brings the war to a halt and unites two
    unlikely individuals...profound. Love this movie on so many levels.

  • @whiterose1796
    @whiterose1796 4 года назад +148

    I just love the officer's reaction to his playing. I feel as if he doesn't really believe the other man's ability to play the piano at the beginning. But then as the other starts playing, there is that look in his eyes, which, the way I see it, means: " What are we really doing?"

    • @seckino82
      @seckino82 4 года назад +14

      That is exactly what I have always thought about this scene.. he seemed to assume Spillman was trying to get away with a lie at first, but then quickly realized he was telling the truth.. anyway, as others stated in the comments, he wouldn't have harmed him no matter what Spillman gave as an answer..

    • @NavidIsANoob
      @NavidIsANoob 4 года назад +12

      Exactly. Near the end, he really did think "What was all this good for?". So many millions people, each with their own stories and talents, dead. For nothing.

    • @andrewmccloud8581
      @andrewmccloud8581 4 года назад +6

      @@NavidIsANoob Wilm Hosenfeld thought that from the start.

  • @irenepapachristou793
    @irenepapachristou793 2 года назад +215

    As a pianist myself who is obsessed with Chopin, This was an incredible performance

    • @mannualfpv6293
      @mannualfpv6293 Год назад +3

      Is Chopin the composer of the song

    • @OtoOtarashvili-g3x
      @OtoOtarashvili-g3x Год назад

      @@mannualfpv6293yes

    • @MaranDavid
      @MaranDavid Год назад +4

      ​@@mannualfpv6293ballade no.1 :)

    • @wendygraham6863
      @wendygraham6863 Год назад +1

      You are very blessed to have such a talent

    • @spikespa5208
      @spikespa5208 Год назад

      Having only a year or so listening to classical music in depth, was hoping someone would name the piece and composer. Since the poster couldn't be bothered.

  • @georgeisaak5321
    @georgeisaak5321 3 года назад +6

    Such a remarkable way to express yourself , i always felt like piano was the way of the gentlemen so to speak , an amazing ability to tell a story , full of images and emotions without even open your mouth !
    Music knows no age , no religion , no boundaries , no skin colors , no genders , it's universal and piano is one of the most complete instruments , whoever knows to play piano has access to any type of music .
    That movie was wonderful !

  • @ko4325
    @ko4325 4 года назад +98

    The moonlight shining on him make this scene much more beautiful.

  • @gardenphoto
    @gardenphoto 4 года назад +55

    I can't believe that only ONE other person who has watched this incredible video knows the Chopin piece being played; so, without further ado, it's his Ballade No. 1 in G minor, Op. 23 (composed in 1835, after his move to Paris from a lengthy stay in Vienna. Robert Schumann first heard the piece in 1836 and said (to Chopin himself!) that he thought the piece "the best and most ingenious of all your compositions." After a lengthy pause, Chopin replied, "I am very happy to hear this since I too like it very much and hold it very close to my heart." I think we may all agree that we hold
    Chopin's Ballades (and Nocturnes, Scherzi, Preludes and Etudes) very close to our hearts as well. How much of today's music will move future generations even remotely as much as this 185-year-old masterpiece? I prophesy, with all possible assurance: NOT MANY!
    Mike D.

    • @2104T34
      @2104T34 10 месяцев назад +1

      Didn’t know that Chopin and Schumann communicated
      Is there more to it?

  • @stumpedsuper2014
    @stumpedsuper2014 3 года назад +2

    I put this in my " Most Memorable Moments in Life and Media" Playlist. It is one of the best scenes i have ever seen

  • @czror
    @czror 4 года назад +68

    In this Chopin's Ballade you can find everything. Sadness, Joy, Anger, peace... There would not be Wars at all if just pieces of this music were in all hearts

  • @ltsarco8053
    @ltsarco8053 5 лет назад +546

    your lie in april flashbacks intensify

    • @iresineherb7
      @iresineherb7 5 лет назад +1

      😂

    • @deedum1162
      @deedum1162 5 лет назад +20

      LtSarco anime is trash

    • @venkateshshanker8088
      @venkateshshanker8088 5 лет назад +74

      @@deedum1162 Fuck off mate

    • @kuriboh_Alato
      @kuriboh_Alato 5 лет назад +58

      @@deedum1162 fuck off mate

    • @ltsarco8053
      @ltsarco8053 5 лет назад +37

      Daniello shut up before i sen you to the pocket dimension you uncultured little piece of nazi shit

  • @Royalskunk974
    @Royalskunk974 5 лет назад +759

    I'm so happy I'm finally able to play this masterpiece

    • @GermanLehmann98
      @GermanLehmann98 5 лет назад +29

      How long did it take you to learn it and how long have you been playing piano for? Congrats mate! Must feel great to play this, it's an amazing piece.

    • @GermanLehmann98
      @GermanLehmann98 5 лет назад +13

      @@totozilla6396 Niceee, congrats man! I'm glad for you :)

    • @longdang-nt6rz
      @longdang-nt6rz 5 лет назад +1

      Un homme triste wow ur sight reading rlly good tho, any tips for me?, im playing the piano about 6 months

    • @hxppythxughts7149
      @hxppythxughts7149 5 лет назад +13

      @@totozilla6396 *pieces not song

    • @Royalskunk974
      @Royalskunk974 5 лет назад +78

      @@GermanLehmann98 I literally started the piano for this piece, 10 month ago. I spent 2-3h the week and 3-5h the week end. Took me 3 month to play/learn the 3 first part, and the last part took me so much more time to play correctly. It was hard but with determination everything is possible.

  • @J_Braz_
    @J_Braz_ 5 лет назад +6

    this scene made me cry 12 years ago

  • @Cdrewbloch
    @Cdrewbloch 4 года назад +148

    Holy hell. This scene is beautiful on its own, but in the context of the movie it’s so much more powerful. To watch him slowly descend into this life he has to live, and everything just keeps getting worse in gradual steps. And you sort of get used to it and adjust to it just like his character does as the movie goes on. Then you get this scene that gut punches you with a reminder of who he was at the beginning of the movie and how far he’s fallen. Cue the tears.

  • @ricardoalves5416
    @ricardoalves5416 4 года назад +2

    Food for the soul. Brilliance

  • @delrey874
    @delrey874 3 года назад +102

    Adrien Brody was the youngest actor to win an Oscar. But I think he is still underrated.

  • @jonjoe9657
    @jonjoe9657 4 года назад +103

    Back when movies used to hire actors that could actually play instruments
    NOT SACRILIGEOUS

    • @ArsalanAFG-fo1yx
      @ArsalanAFG-fo1yx 4 года назад +19

      yh but actors are actors not musicians. You don't hire an actual psychopath to play a psychopath.

    • @rorymosley9356
      @rorymosley9356 4 года назад +8

      Arsalan. AFG i mean you could

    • @thenumidium1915
      @thenumidium1915 4 года назад +14

      The closeups are the hands of polish pianist Janusz Olejniczak. You hire actors to act and musicians to play, though some overlap helps.

    • @foreverbooked2964
      @foreverbooked2964 3 года назад +1

      I am the first one in the reply section of understand the two set reference

    • @cristobalzamorano377
      @cristobalzamorano377 3 года назад

      I think it wasn't the actor who played

  • @owo2290
    @owo2290 5 лет назад +526

    Video: 8 years ago
    Comments: 1 hour ago
    🤔
    Hotel: Triv ago

    • @Joanquintero_
      @Joanquintero_ 5 лет назад +3

      Jajajaja

    • @아-g5w
      @아-g5w 5 лет назад +3

      도대체 왜 프사가 그모양이죠ㅋㅌㅋㅋㅋㅌㅌㅋㅋ

    • @ArthurAgamenon_
      @ArthurAgamenon_ 5 лет назад

      oloko mano

    • @zafirtama
      @zafirtama 5 лет назад +3

      Awoakwok *laugh in indonesian

    • @anyasalazar.g
      @anyasalazar.g 5 лет назад

      Potatoes? Yez please

  • @ΓιώργοςΣκορδίλης
    @ΓιώργοςΣκορδίλης Год назад +1

    War means destruction!!! Music means love!!! The world could be saved by music and love!!!

  • @magdalenasracz
    @magdalenasracz Год назад +3

    For anybody wondering what the piece is: Chopin - Ballade No. 1 Op. 23 in G minor❤

  • @xartmanx
    @xartmanx 5 лет назад +370

    Chopin's melancholia that accompanied him throughout his life in France was always about love for his beloved Poland. A country that always seemed to be in the path of conquering powers.
    This Ballade captures the innermost Chopin and how poetic that the symbolism of this work captures the absurdity of conquering powers and hate that still dominates our world. I revere Chopin and the fact that his music is still relevant today speaks volumes about the power of music and in spite of it all, music still and will always transcend the darkest aspects of Humanity.

    • @OneWhoLivesThere
      @OneWhoLivesThere 5 лет назад +6

      Well stated! Do you know which Chopin ballade was performed? And did the performance in the film follow truthfully to the Chopin, or was there an embellishment toward the end of the piece? When I watched the film, I thought that perhaps this was Szpilman's original music in this scene.

    • @xartmanx
      @xartmanx 5 лет назад +5

      @@OneWhoLivesThere Ballade number one is the one in question. The Ballad was shortened for the film, but in my opinion, it should have been left in its totality in the film. As far as who played it in the film, I'm not sure if it was Mr. Szpilman's.

    • @stmvert6471
      @stmvert6471 5 лет назад +2

      Andres Montoya do you the song he’s playing?

    • @xartmanx
      @xartmanx 5 лет назад +1

      @@stmvert6471Hello Stmv Ert, I did know it, slightly, when I was a music student long time ago. How about you?

    • @stmvert6471
      @stmvert6471 5 лет назад +1

      Andres Montoya well i was asking you about the name so i can play it later, i am a pianist, what instrument do you play tho?

  • @MF-vy9sj
    @MF-vy9sj 2 года назад +10

    自分も母が講師のためピアノは生まれた頃から友達でした。幼稚園の頃に見て衝撃的だったと共に、ショパンを好きになったきっかけでもあります。高校生で念願のポーランドはワルシャワと強制収容所に訪れることが出来、運が良くシュピルマンの子孫の方にもお話をお聞きする機会を頂きました。自分をこんなにも奮い立たせるなんて…本当に貴重な一本です。そんな私も現在は映像ディレクターという職につき、感慨深いものがあります。

  • @robertochavez3000
    @robertochavez3000 2 месяца назад

    This is indeed one of the best piano musicals composed by Adrien Brody in the movie The Pianist, and he did an amazing job since this is the same picture from Chopin's Nocturne Nocturnes, Op. 9: No. 2 in E-Flat Major composed by Frédéric Chopin.

  • @amyexner
    @amyexner Год назад +31

    Classic music is timeless; it awakes the same emotions in all of us no matter who we are and of which side of the playing field we’re are.
    I’m German, and I grew-up only listening to classic music; became a classic singer-soprano.
    My dad also was an officer in Hitler’s Germany-this actor reminds me of my dad..and every time I see this screen, I see my father-He was a good man and I loved him dearly.

  • @guitarmetaldemon
    @guitarmetaldemon Год назад +1

    The second he realizes this man can play this song he starts to walk to a chair. That's a powerful realization.

  • @player1giogamer93
    @player1giogamer93 Год назад +41

    that scene absolutely moved my soul... i could not stop my tears i was crying while watching this scene... this germany soldier was the real human that appreciated this pianist and saved him

    • @jelenamatvienko9145
      @jelenamatvienko9145 11 месяцев назад +2

      "love is the only one language, the whole world understands".

    • @annettewilliams1932
      @annettewilliams1932 Месяц назад

      It is the last days. 1 Timothy 3: 1-5. No love.

  • @ivanherrera69521
    @ivanherrera69521 Год назад +1

    He wasn't a Nazi. He was just a soldier of the German army

  • @tamaramalevich1665
    @tamaramalevich1665 4 года назад +34

    Языки между людьми смешать не стоило труда, а вот язык музыки смешать не удалось.
    Великий Шопен явился в мир в единственном числе и никто и никогда его не повторит!
    Спасибо за клип.

  • @SSpitz9907
    @SSpitz9907 3 года назад

    Ugh. Chills every time. What kind of monster hits dislike for this?

  • @ultimatepotato192
    @ultimatepotato192 5 лет назад +157

    Fun fact: adrien brody had to practice playing the paino until he could do a decent copy of Chopin music

    • @douwese
      @douwese 4 года назад +19

      Ultimate potato The challenging pieces were actually played by Janusz Olejniczak, a Polish pianist who is famous for his Chopin interpretations.

    • @kirsteni.russell5903
      @kirsteni.russell5903 4 года назад +12

      What he had to do was get the fingering as well as he could, so it would look like he was playing. But this sure sounds like it was played by an accomplished pianist!

    • @kissingthings2265
      @kissingthings2265 4 года назад +6

      At least 15 pro pianists performed the music for this movie

  • @wandermesquita4225
    @wandermesquita4225 3 года назад

    It was a magnificent scene and excellent performance for the piano player. That knows he will be killed when finished her presentation. Fantastic.

  • @ronkryngel1159
    @ronkryngel1159 5 лет назад +9

    The Nazi captain finally understood that humanity was denied the beauty, the talent and richness of other cultures

    • @marcelonunez9114
      @marcelonunez9114 5 лет назад +2

      He was not a Nazi ... He was a captain of the whermacht. Where do you see the runes on the collar of his jacket? His biography indicates that he was not a Nazi.

    • @ronkryngel1159
      @ronkryngel1159 5 лет назад

      marcelo nuñez . I’m sure he saw the atrocious, the tortured souls, the starving masses, the mass executions, the shootings of children, mutilated innocence. yet, he chose to continue to fought to the bitter end for The Führer . If you are outraged by my posting you may want to do some introspection of your personal beliefs. You don’t have to wear the SS insignia to be a Nazi.

    • @cek128
      @cek128 4 года назад

      I think he realized beautiful things come from anywhere and anyone!

    • @marcelonunez9114
      @marcelonunez9114 4 года назад +2

      @@ronkryngel1159 Still, he was not a Nazi. Read his biography. Marshal Rommel was an affiliate of National Socialism and still attentive against Hitler. And they forced him to commit suicide. What do you think a whermacht captain could do? You do not know in what situations you will have been involved. You can't judge it. It is possible to understand that he was against the murder of Jews and innocents. We don't know how many more actions like this he will have done. Or not. but the Talmud says that who saves a life saves humanity.
      You were wrong again. My convictions are Christian, democratic, anti-Nazi, anti communist, anti socialist and anti abortion and I love the Jewish people. Just point out the error, because I saw that you put everyone in the same bag. I refute whenever I can the Holocaust deniers. best regards.

  • @rhodienite4897
    @rhodienite4897 Год назад +7

    I would love to see something like this to happen in Ukraine today. An Ukrainian pianist, saved by a Russian soldier who opposed the invasion

    • @ljiljanabanovic2169
      @ljiljanabanovic2169 2 месяца назад

      Не сери. Ми бисмо волели да видимо 2014. Украјинца који се не иживљава над Русима.

    • @9Betoven
      @9Betoven Месяц назад

      ​@@ljiljanabanovic2169😂, 👍

    • @izzybell11
      @izzybell11 Месяц назад +1

      How about an Ukrainian soldier who was grabbed from the street and thrown to the frontline being saved by Russian soldier ??? We all know that Russians treat Ukrainian soldiers w dignity. No wonder some don’t want to come back to Ukraine do you like this version????

  • @carlospech581
    @carlospech581 4 года назад +15

    Si, has encontrado el comentario en español, ya puedes compartir lo mucho que amas esta escena.

  • @mimicotom
    @mimicotom 5 лет назад +36

    Adrian Brody. Great actor.

  • @skeelter2222
    @skeelter2222 Год назад +13

    CAN YOU GUYS IMAGINE THAT THE BEST MOMENT OF THE FILM IS ACTUALLY A SHORTEN VERSION OF A PURE MASTERPIECE ?

  • @Tulsenus
    @Tulsenus 4 года назад +1

    beautiful

  • @pbarry299
    @pbarry299 Год назад +6

    I would like to add to the very insightful comments on this film moment. It says all the above that’s been said but the piece actually captures in music the whole madness of War.

  • @Rideeon
    @Rideeon 4 года назад +5

    Dammit find the first part of this scene and edit it in. always miss the part with him trying to open that jar of pickles and gets caught. Makes the scene stronger. This just puts it out of context.

  • @jeremy.bentham
    @jeremy.bentham 5 лет назад +84

    2011: nah
    2012: nope
    2013: no
    2014: not yet
    2015: not now
    2016: nope not the time
    2017: still no
    2018: hell no
    2019: yes now is a good time

    • @DKy0
      @DKy0 5 лет назад +4

      Hey man this comment so good i never see this comment u must have 1000iq no?

    • @tvnetworks6610
      @tvnetworks6610 4 года назад

      @@DKy0 I'm pretty sure this was recommended to me in 2017.

    • @oofoof1012
      @oofoof1012 4 года назад +2

      2020: Yes.

    • @18entumecido62
      @18entumecido62 4 года назад

      2020: EVEN BETTER

  • @spg242
    @spg242 Год назад

    Hosenfel's calm and firm face reveals the profound anger and agony for the misery of the pianist who deserves the honour and love of all for being one of the greatest and finest artists of the world. The calm face also shows the determination to punish himself for being the cause of misery of humanity. The last scene of the movie proves this.

  • @josephbingham1255
    @josephbingham1255 5 лет назад +20

    The writer is trying to show a little bit of common humanity among these brutal ruins and situation. I think it works well.

  • @richarddamico5639
    @richarddamico5639 10 месяцев назад

    And at the end of the movie, it was the officer held behind barbed wire pleading with his emotion for the Pianist to save his life as he did his.

  • @falastinefreedom
    @falastinefreedom 4 года назад +13

    Chopin - Ballade in g m no. 1 op 23...one of the greatest pieces of all time

  • @i.am.allei1223
    @i.am.allei1223 2 месяца назад

    Most probably this was the time Hosenfeld was contemplating wether to capture Szpilman or to hide him.

  • @Juliababy-tv3pn
    @Juliababy-tv3pn 4 года назад +38

    This movie ... took a lot of my tears and this scene, it touched my heart deeply

  • @dradski1758
    @dradski1758 4 года назад

    I wish the movie actually played the full song. It's worth it and it would teach alot of people emotion built from the different sections

  • @hermionedelano6307
    @hermionedelano6307 5 лет назад +215

    The German officer was great.

    • @thamuzm2684
      @thamuzm2684 5 лет назад +18

      This is Kind of a Message that Even If you're leader is injust Just don't follow him
      In the time Hitler was unfair killing the Jewish people but this officer didn't follow the rule because he didn't see him as an enemy but as a friend

    • @em8714
      @em8714 5 лет назад +44

      @@thamuzm2684 wasnt that simple back then. It was either obey your leader/commander or get a bullet to the head

    • @kingassasin6031
      @kingassasin6031 5 лет назад +2

      thefinalshoe nazi’s were volunteers

    • @alessandrofarina2852
      @alessandrofarina2852 4 года назад +4

      @@kingassasin6031 yeah but he was in Wehrmacht, nobody decided who was gonna die

    • @tonymaccaroni1683
      @tonymaccaroni1683 4 года назад +3

      The officer was risking his career, even his life for not following the orders, yet he had the balls to stand for his ideals. Chapeau.

  • @terraseamapping823
    @terraseamapping823 2 месяца назад

    What i like about this scene is that if you pay close attention you can hear he is making mistakes because he is rusty of course since he hasen’t played for years and also he has cold hands. But in terms of passion and emotion it’s probaly the best he has ever played ever.

  • @izabellamardo1074
    @izabellamardo1074 4 года назад +6

    Eu amo esta cena!!!!!!

  • @timmugaseth892
    @timmugaseth892 3 года назад

    This the music that never dies

  • @aztecayt7080
    @aztecayt7080 5 лет назад +68

    Hi future viewers! Welcome, and take a seat, RUclips has finally recommended us a great video! Enjoy.

    • @brey6134
      @brey6134 3 года назад

      I hv answered your summon

  • @colintyler1405
    @colintyler1405 6 месяцев назад

    This is truly extraordinary cinema. The seriously moving interplay between sheer beauty in the midst of the horror of war. Good art can be very powerful. Blows me away every time. Does anyone know what happened to the Nazi officer after the war?

    • @morganmills13
      @morganmills13 5 месяцев назад

      I don't think we can rightly call Wilm Hosenfeld a "Nazi" officer. He was a German officer, plain & simple. He actually saved a great many Jewish lives, so there was no way he could have ascribed to the Nazi ideology that the fanatics embraced. He died in a Soviet POW camp many years after the end of WW2. In the 1950's, I believe. He is recognized by Israel as Righteous Among the Nations for his saving of Jewish lives, a tremendous honor. As an amateur historian with a special interest in WW2, I like to remind people that there were good men who wore the uniforms & were only Nazis "on paper." Lots of stories about German officers being truly great people. Look up Albert Göring, Heinz Heydrich, and Franz Stiegler to name a few.

    • @colintyler1405
      @colintyler1405 5 месяцев назад

      @@morganmills13 Thanks for your informative response.

  • @ВалентинаНикодимова-ц2ъ

    Гимн жизни ... Музыка выше смерти ... Потрясающая игра актеров ... Напомнили ... Благодарю .

  • @donallen1384
    @donallen1384 Год назад

    If music be the food of love, play on!

  • @martinschulze5399
    @martinschulze5399 4 года назад +37

    it took me 10 years since I started piano and watched this movie (I was 22, now im 32), but finally I approached this piece one year ago and can play ballade no. 1 now fluently and at tempo

  • @Alex-fr4hk
    @Alex-fr4hk 9 месяцев назад +4

    "Without music, life would not be worth living." -- Nietzsche

  • @zeroismydelay
    @zeroismydelay Год назад +29

    I've never cried so hard for a movie before. Truly a masterpiece!! 😭

  • @sudis4390
    @sudis4390 19 дней назад

    He decides to play chopins one of the hardest after ot having eaten for days together. My man

  • @CathDad4
    @CathDad4 4 года назад +24

    Just for a fun fact this isn't the actual piece he played during the real event. In real life he played Chopin's Nocturne No. 20 (C# minor).
    You can find videos of Szpilman playing the piece on RUclips much later in his life.

    • @stumpedsuper2014
      @stumpedsuper2014 4 года назад

      I wonder why they chose this piece?

    • @CathDad4
      @CathDad4 4 года назад +2

      @@stumpedsuper2014 The Ballade is more technically impressive. That's my guess. They play the nocturne at the beginning of the movie so they gave it a nod.

    • @user-yc6vr8vn5j
      @user-yc6vr8vn5j 4 года назад +1

      @@CathDad4 imo the piece portrays the perpetual (at the time) suffering of Szpilman and more broadly the Jewish people. It feels as though the piece somewhat accepts this fact at first and then gradually gets enraged by it.
      Nocturne in C# minor however doesnt have as much of this depth in my mind but instead sounds simply mourning (not to say the piece doesnt have depth, its a great piece)

  • @sarlkojules8542
    @sarlkojules8542 3 года назад +2

    Triste pour moi cette guerre, enfin bref je tire mon chapeau aux musiciens juifs ❤️ et paix à leurs âmes 😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢

  • @vittoriomoscato4089
    @vittoriomoscato4089 8 месяцев назад +4

    Non posso sentire questa musica e vedere il volto di ADRIEN BRODY senza piangere dalla commozione…grande musica e stupendo interprete.

  • @ВалерийШпанагель-х6н

    Музыка прекрасна навека!восхищён.! Ким Гаусс,старый город площадь Ротуше Kaunas. Там столько людей погибло в 9-ом форте.

  • @devbom878
    @devbom878 5 лет назад +15

    Didn't expect the Russian voice-over at all. That shit cracked me up LOL

  • @mistyfalin5445
    @mistyfalin5445 10 месяцев назад

    Sit up , eyes forward, are you listening
    I miss you mom

  • @classicalinspiremusic
    @classicalinspiremusic Год назад +4

    The scene from "The Pianist" where Władysław Szpilman plays Chopin's Ballade No. 1 in G Minor on a piano in a bombed-out building is a powerful and moving moment in the film. Adrien Brody's portrayal of Szpilman and his emotional connection to the music is truly unforgettable. If you enjoyed this scene, we invite you to explore more of our classical music content on our channel and to join our community of music lovers. Let's discover the beauty of classical music together! 🎹🎬🎶

    • @karim8516
      @karim8516 Год назад

      You wrote his name correctly.Are you polish?

    • @cesardiezv
      @cesardiezv 11 месяцев назад

      Brilliant. It's good to remember that Szpilman is a real person and that the scene actually happened, only that he played the nocturne 20 in C sharp minor.
      ruclips.net/video/zB2TLFJP3YA/видео.htmlsi=TQSVPGoawpfq5our

  • @CRapt
    @CRapt 3 года назад

    Music brings peace among people!

  • @cupa6285
    @cupa6285 5 лет назад +28

    i’m speechless with this scene...

  • @susannavaccaro794
    @susannavaccaro794 3 года назад

    👏E' si,ho sempre pensato che la musica,( come poche altre cose ,).arriva ovunque. E ' di tutti,non ha classe politica o sociale, puo' arrivare come un vento ristoratore ed abitare nel cuore di chi la sa' accogliere,apprezzare.Lo spartito di base e' universale,il modo d' interpretare ,eseguire,e' piu' personale,come il canto.:ogniuno ha la sua voce,ogni pianista fa' vibrare le dita sui tasti,con la propria percezione del brano e abilita'. ***Ho visto molto tempo fa' questo film,ma questa scena mitica,la ricordo. L' incontro tra i due,in mezzo alle macerie,desolazione grigiore. " Cosa fai" ? - ," Il pianista". Solo le note nell' aria,possono ridare colore,un attimo di respiro, dopo la distruzione. Restituire bellezza ,e dignita' al lacero ' pianista'.♥️♥️♥️

  • @DjSunexx
    @DjSunexx 5 лет назад +60

    is he playing a shortened version ?

    • @em8714
      @em8714 5 лет назад +16

      Yes he just playes the first them opening of second theme and cadenza.

    • @ryacoli
      @ryacoli 5 лет назад +1

      Why?! The whole movie is centred around the pianist

    • @em8714
      @em8714 5 лет назад +37

      @@ryacoli because its a movie not recording of the piece.

    • @Musiconwings
      @Musiconwings 5 лет назад +18

      Cyan Drools also because a lot of the middle section of this piece is quite bright and happy and delightful. It would have ruined the feeling of this scene if they played the entire thing here

    • @nexogames4819
      @nexogames4819 4 года назад

      @@ryacoli I think they have not the permission to show it public.

  • @tukasaue4903
    @tukasaue4903 2 года назад +1

    Just one woed , wonderfui !

  • @onuroram
    @onuroram 3 года назад +13

    That was one of the most impressive scenes of the cinema history. I hae goosebumps

  • @vincentneale2620
    @vincentneale2620 2 года назад +14

    I found the whole film so powerful that I bought the DVD - everytime I see it I get goosebumps and go through all sorts of emotions

  • @AllGamingStarred
    @AllGamingStarred 11 лет назад +124

    best scene ever.

  • @diegoyoshiro
    @diegoyoshiro 3 года назад

    this movie is magical