On The Waterfront | "I Coulda Been A Contender" | CineClips
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- Опубликовано: 28 сен 2022
- Terry speaks with Charley about his lost days of promise.
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A brutally realistic tour de force, this timeless classic is based on a series of Pulitzer prize-winning newspaper articles, chronicling the conflict between a corrupt labor boss (Lee J. Cobb) and a crusading Catholic priest (Karl Malden). Highlighting this gripping film is one of Marlon Brando's signature performances.
#OnTheWaterFront #MarlonBrandon #RodSteiger
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On The Waterfront | "I Coulda Been A Contender" | CineClips
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I was privileged to see this film on the big screen in Pittsburgh with my father years back, preceded by a live interview with Eva Marie Saint and Ben Mankiewicz. When I was growing up, dad always said that there was no substitute for watching a movie in the theater, that it was the only way to be fully engrossed by a film and truly experience what it has to offer.
Brings me to tears everytime… “it was you Charlie…. It was you”
The greatest scene in one of the greatest films ever made. Naturally Brando was phenomenal, but so was Steiger. Both were terrific method actors.
“I coulda been a contender!” Is the line. It’s the line that defines the movie, and a new sub-sub-genre of movies from that point out. We remember that line and we quote that line. But upon first watching this movie, the line that moves the picture is, “It was you Charlie.” That’s the line where it all breaks loose. Where brothers be damned, Terry tells Charlie that he’s the one who perpetuates his collapse. He held him back, he screwed him and his whole life. For a couple of bucks. And then what’s he do, try to get him a faux job on the docks? Where men are already getting screwed? This film is monumental and timeless because it is real.
This is the saddest most heartwrenching performance ever.
One of the best scenes in any film.
The best best actor oscar winning performance in history.
Why is something this good impossible to replicate today ? Have we lost something? Mediocrity rules?
Greatest scene of the 1950’s
Two absolute thespian powerhouses at the very top of their game
He pulled a gun on his own brother! Sigh. Poor soul, under so much stress. His face is full of pain. Both of them.
Rod Steiger and Marlon Brando, bloody hell....
2:05
That Scene Won M.B. the Oscar.
Steiger is so good here.
This movie is the mother of all movies when it comes to the acting
I love this movie so much that I couldn’t stop watching it.
Rod Steiger was incredible in this scene.
Streetcar,Waterfront,
And this was their last conversation. God damn, what a movie...