Waiting for Godot Movie

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  • Опубликовано: 30 июл 2024
  • On a bare road in the middle of nowhere, two world-weary friends await the arrival of the mysterious Godot. While waiting, they speculate, bicker, joke and ponder life’s greater questions. As dusk begins to fall, two figures appear on the horizon.
    Regarded as one of the most significant plays of the twentieth century, Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett is a masterpiece that draws endless interpretations.

Комментарии • 153

  • @joshuajordan1300
    @joshuajordan1300 3 года назад +203

    The stark irony of the audio cutting just as Lucky finally gets to speak is not lost on me.

    • @dublintales6311
      @dublintales6311  3 года назад +20

      Ooops!

    • @johntanner9224
      @johntanner9224 2 года назад +2

      I think the point Becket makes is that Lucky isn't lucky at all Which of us is?

    • @kramsdrawde8159
      @kramsdrawde8159 Год назад

      Lucky had no wisdom to offer, there isn't a hint of any wisdom in one nano second of this film. Complete garbage sold as "intellectual", which is fine as long as intellectual means worthless and absurd.

    • @105robmajor
      @105robmajor 8 месяцев назад +1

      What happened to the audio on Lucky’s speech? Dublin Tales, please see if you can fix it.

    • @105robmajor
      @105robmajor 8 месяцев назад

      Lucky’s name is most appropriate because unlike the others, he knows his place in the world. All his needs are met. How many of us should be so fortunate.

  • @robdillon2478
    @robdillon2478 2 месяца назад +4

    I watched this coming off a trip many years ago after a big night out. Seemed to fit with the lsd perfectly.

  • @mincraftfrontiersman
    @mincraftfrontiersman 7 месяцев назад +17

    Lads chilling in a 3am discord call

  • @Michelle-Anna
    @Michelle-Anna 2 года назад +75

    Just if anyone´s wondering: Act 1 ends at 1:03:25 (had do watch it for university, so if you need to know it too, you´re welcome)

  • @jimcazador6057
    @jimcazador6057 Год назад +20

    The best rendition ever of the best play ever.

  • @RedCanary2005
    @RedCanary2005 5 месяцев назад

    The best thing I ever watched. Thank you.

  • @Browncoyote
    @Browncoyote Год назад +6

    I just watched this and feel a lot better. Really people should recommend this more.

  • @MrHoladog
    @MrHoladog 2 года назад +18

    Everything and nothing wrapped up in the most wonderful two hours...

  • @soulie5287
    @soulie5287 Год назад +26

    This for me is the definitive production of Waiting for Godot. I have lost count of the times I have watched it. I finally get 'Godot' at least in my own mind. I view Godot the same as Clive Barkers Hellraiser, sounds strange but the people in Hellraiser are trapped in their own personal Hell. A Hell where nothing happens and nothing changes, they are doomed to live in their own personal sufferring on a Hamsters Wheel which just goes round and round and round, nothing changes, every day has the same outcome.

    • @jamesfrearson9630
      @jamesfrearson9630 7 месяцев назад

      Best version I came across was the version read by Sean Barret and David Burke -audio book, with Sean also doing The Unnamable and Malone Dies - born to read it. I see what you mean though about getting attached to certain versions. Clive Barker is awesome too.

  • @sarahhall9457
    @sarahhall9457 3 года назад +27

    This is so great! First time I watched it was like 13 years ago. As I am older, I laughed so hard but with complete empathy! This is better than the Sir Patrick Stewart performance!! THANK YOU GUYS!!

    • @sarahhall9457
      @sarahhall9457 3 года назад +3

      It was this one I watched.. Back then the whole thing saddened me because of the representation of the human condition.. What makes me laugh now is.. Ive become Gogo.. 😆 🤣 😂 ❤ 🙏

    • @SamuelBlack84
      @SamuelBlack84 3 года назад +3

      @@sarahhall9457 Have trouble taking off your boots?😃

    • @m4u1020
      @m4u1020 3 года назад +2

      Exactly !💐

    • @virag220
      @virag220 Год назад

      @@sarahhall9457 I’m Lucky. I’m at your command

  • @Z5Z5Z5
    @Z5Z5Z5 Год назад +6

    Definitely my favorite play. I think about it all the time and i read it like 4 years ago

  • @_rob_.
    @_rob_. 6 месяцев назад

    ((standing ovation))
    Ty for posting this.

  • @timgmail6549
    @timgmail6549 3 года назад +14

    Lucky's speech should be done in Auditions.....

  • @joseseguin5358
    @joseseguin5358 2 года назад +35

    As I grow older, this play gets more and more devastating...

    • @kramsdrawde8159
      @kramsdrawde8159 Год назад +4

      This film is about meaningless of a vain imaginations. Hope can be found in the person of CHRIST, far beyond the grasp of the proud intellectual. In Christ and in the New and Old testament the answers of all time for the human are four, they are: origin, meaning, morality, and destiny, ALL ANSWERED in the PERSON and WORK of Jesus of Nazareth, Messiah and KING of the JEWS... READ for yourself from the New Testament and answer life's greatest questions, I pray.....

    • @peat_moss856
      @peat_moss856 Год назад +4

      @@kramsdrawde8159 Fascinating. I was just linked to this video from a discussion on the emptiness of Jesus' promise to return. 2,000 years and not a trace of the guy. But so many of our politicians make decisions based on the assumption that The World Will End. And so our culture acts like we don't want to stick around another thousand years, because I guess we don't? Still, it would be nice to live in a world without ideologies that require every other person on earth to submit to them.

    • @davidlean1060
      @davidlean1060 Год назад +4

      Strangely, I find the play life affirming! I think it's the stoicism throughout the story and the constant humour in the face of absurdity. Beckett was also full of great lines about simply getting back up and going again when you fall or fail. I find that attitude to be rather inspiring to be honest.

    • @remotefaith
      @remotefaith Год назад +4

      @@kramsdrawde8159 what is it with religious cranks and the arbitrary capitalisation of words?

    • @danilanaumov4068
      @danilanaumov4068 Год назад

      I watched five minutes of it and couldn't understand the humour of the past at all. It makes me hopeful that the threatre of absurd today has progressed so far.

  • @swantiuppal8956
    @swantiuppal8956 3 года назад +25

    Existentialism ❤️❤️ ...loved the movie !!

    • @SamuelBlack84
      @SamuelBlack84 3 года назад +3

      Matter exists for a while then it doesn't. Entropy is the only meaning of life

    • @Killgore-ip2yq
      @Killgore-ip2yq Год назад +6

      It's actually absurdist short. Existentialism is about making meaning from nothing and that they would have chosen to leave when they realize he's not coming.
      Absurdist philosophy is no meaning, and still persists to wait for Godot regardless of the results.

    • @samuelpoulston2964
      @samuelpoulston2964 11 месяцев назад

      Jung@@SamuelBlack84

  • @rotosphere2000
    @rotosphere2000 2 года назад +27

    An apt play for our Facebook times. We log in waiting for something of real interest to be posted. It never happens but we log in the next day just the same.
    We could deactivate our accounts or entirely delete them. Maybe tomorrow we will.

    • @joepiol5105
      @joepiol5105 2 года назад +2

      The play is also apt for the type of society that many people are anticipating. By that I mean socialism/communism. The two main characters have given up everything to some nebulous authority figure or governmental structure that doesn't care about them, and in any case, may not wish to help these two or even be able to help. I am thinking of the former Soviet Union, in which people at times had so little that they would often join a line because there was a line, without knowing what they might receive when and if they reached the front. Sometimes they would wait in line for hours, and then receive nothing.
      Now, people in power want to bring that type of existence to all of us.

    • @sekoivu
      @sekoivu 5 месяцев назад

      Yes, tomorrow we'll do. Definitely tomorrow...

    • @nancybell2254
      @nancybell2254 3 месяца назад

      That's an awesome comment!!! It is the same!

  • @djskizzle1
    @djskizzle1 3 года назад +55

    dang 2 hrs, itll take less time to read again lol. shouts to anyone who studied this in university ;)

    • @wolfgang4047
      @wolfgang4047 3 года назад +4

      thats me at university

    • @reitumetseebineng3855
      @reitumetseebineng3855 2 года назад +3

      Me in high school :)

    • @Manima108
      @Manima108 2 года назад +1

      Read it in high school and rereading it now

    • @D3mi_Glaz3
      @D3mi_Glaz3 2 года назад +2

      H-high school

    • @ucantSQ
      @ucantSQ 2 года назад +1

      Had a friend study it in college. Wouldn't have ever known about it otherwise. It pays to have friends in the theatre.

  • @richardrickford3028
    @richardrickford3028 3 года назад +21

    Interesting to look at modern situation comedies like "The smoking room" and "one foot in the grave" in the context of this.

  • @GrigsQuest
    @GrigsQuest 3 года назад +37

    My personal favorite version I've seen (and yes, I've seen more than one!)

    • @jamesderoc6717
      @jamesderoc6717 3 года назад +12

      the tone and timing is just perfect

    • @SamuelBlack84
      @SamuelBlack84 3 года назад +4

      I would love to find the versions with Rik Mayall and Adrian Edmondson as well as the one with Patrick Stewart and Ian Mckellen

    • @kramsdrawde8159
      @kramsdrawde8159 Год назад

      I can't imagine having to sit through this piece of garbage more than once, feckless rubbish and a complete waste of almost 2 hours of breathing and listening to the utter stupidity and useless double-talk. You really shpuld find good intellectual reasoning like C.S. Lewis.

  • @pietrusso
    @pietrusso Год назад +3

    We always find something that gives us the impression that we exist

  • @davidlean1060
    @davidlean1060 Год назад +2

    Did anyone notice Barry McGovern in Game of Thrones? Arya and The Hound meet him on their travels. He plays, yep, you guessed it, a man sitting out in the country, wounded and waiting for death. The Hound saves him from the pain he is suffering and gives him a merciful death.
    Since D and DB met studying at Trinity College Dublin, they no doubt saw this version of Godot.

  • @annevaughan999
    @annevaughan999 Год назад

    Wonderful 👏👏👏👏👏

  • @TheKeithbh
    @TheKeithbh 3 месяца назад +2

    Beckett's classic play with an Irish flavour (albeit, with accents easily comprehendible to North American ears) . A wonderful combination of existential wonder and woe.

  • @greg55666
    @greg55666 5 месяцев назад +1

    Man that was great.

  • @LizaLaha
    @LizaLaha 2 месяца назад

    💕💕💕 thank u

  • @effingsix3825
    @effingsix3825 2 года назад +5

    We’re waiting for Godot, friend-o.

    • @nazaryn
      @nazaryn Год назад +2

      He's coming tomorrow, don't worry. ;)

  • @2140shadow
    @2140shadow 2 года назад +2

    Brilliant...just Brilliant.

  • @peterforsythe3643
    @peterforsythe3643 2 года назад +4

    Suggestion: put some of credits in the intro
    Enjoyed the production. Wonderful

    • @973doggett
      @973doggett Год назад

      it's how the RTE production begins. there's nothing cut out

  • @m4u1020
    @m4u1020 3 года назад +1

    Personally recommend : please see after read a book... !

  • @mdtareqahmed024
    @mdtareqahmed024 2 года назад +3

    Important for University students

  • @edwardprice140
    @edwardprice140 Год назад +4

    Birmingham Festival Theatre
    Jan 20 - Feb 05 2023

    • @nazaryn
      @nazaryn Год назад +1

      I am so sorry

  • @douglasmilton2805
    @douglasmilton2805 9 месяцев назад +1

    Excellent production, although I’d love to see both the Leo McKern and Tim Roth ones again - they used to be up on RUclips. But I really enjoyed this, thanks for posting.

  • @kipling1957
    @kipling1957 Год назад +1

    I think this was a BBC TV play rather than a movie shown in theatres.

  • @eazystreet5507
    @eazystreet5507 Год назад +3

    Life goes by as hope looses its bright colors.

  • @honeyinglune8957
    @honeyinglune8957 8 месяцев назад

    1:34:36 there are some moments of extreme optimism in beckett

  • @elvisfonzie
    @elvisfonzie 4 года назад +7

    That’s creepy

  • @tanqt
    @tanqt Год назад +3

    how does the meaning derived from the play change for you as you age?

    • @MrZeroTerrorRide
      @MrZeroTerrorRide Год назад +4

      Having just finished it mere seconds ago... At the ripe age of 42. Devastating. I'm going for a smoke. Then I shall watch endgame.

  • @besserman1
    @besserman1 7 месяцев назад +1

    Joey the Lips RIP

  • @joefish6091
    @joefish6091 Год назад

    Why no credits for actors and crew !?

  • @muffinzuniverse
    @muffinzuniverse 2 года назад +1

    bookmark: 1:36:40

  • @ayouxy
    @ayouxy 3 года назад

    15:30
    Play (they remain motionless)
    This:

  • @stalkholm5227
    @stalkholm5227 2 года назад +1

    Who does he look like? Waitaminute.....

  • @ucantSQ
    @ucantSQ 2 года назад

    Unless they're not the same...

  • @thefog3361
    @thefog3361 10 месяцев назад +1

    nothing to be done

  • @ryangrabowski9856
    @ryangrabowski9856 4 года назад +10

    bruh.

  • @stephenrees7041
    @stephenrees7041 2 года назад +6

    For when the audio for Lucky speech cuts out - ruclips.net/video/eGQToJ9RR-4/видео.html

  • @AcuraTLMan
    @AcuraTLMan Год назад +1

    Saving this for me
    15:19

  • @mikedaniels3009
    @mikedaniels3009 3 года назад

    2 hours????

  • @randyjohnson6073
    @randyjohnson6073 5 месяцев назад

    devastating

  • @iselenekishon3098
    @iselenekishon3098 2 года назад

    It could be better if there was lyrics in it..this nasal voice is somehow tough though... otherwise thanks for the short and amazing act.

  • @Lynkevmusic
    @Lynkevmusic 2 года назад +9

    I've been working on putting music to this play.
    I see Waiting for Godot as being a subtle piece, a meditation on the questions of existence.
    This is an open question. If the music is on point, subtle and doesn't mess with themes, is it possible to bring something to the table?
    ..any advice welcome..

    • @salvadorkent8207
      @salvadorkent8207 2 года назад +1

      Keep it sparse I reckon, sounds like a cool interpretation of a great play

    • @Lynkevmusic
      @Lynkevmusic 2 года назад

      @@salvadorkent8207 thanks man, yes sparse. I'm really unsure about it, I have my own interpretation but i know that this play needs a silence so I don't want to mess with that.

    • @salvadorkent8207
      @salvadorkent8207 2 года назад +1

      @@Lynkevmusic I think the idea would be to have music very subtly inbetween moments, perhaps subtly accentuating plot points stuff like that

    • @WeeCarBoot
      @WeeCarBoot Год назад

      Beckett himself would have forbidden it. It's not in the stage directions. If you did put music to it, he'd very likely sue you and force you to put a disclaimer in the program to say that your production bore "no resemblance whatsoever" to his original play. (He did that on occasion.)

    • @johnvcorbett6528
      @johnvcorbett6528 Год назад

      No.

  • @yubrajbk4066
    @yubrajbk4066 2 года назад

    lots of interpretation

  • @wolfgang4047
    @wolfgang4047 3 года назад +3

    having to write a paper about this movie

    • @ebrarceven6625
      @ebrarceven6625 3 года назад

      currently, me struggling :D

    • @JetFire9
      @JetFire9 3 года назад +2

      Gogo and Didi are actually one person. Think Fight Club.

    • @SamuelBlack84
      @SamuelBlack84 3 года назад +1

      Everything is merely what it is. The end

    • @yoshismithy1955
      @yoshismithy1955 2 года назад +1

      Everyone is everyone, that's as far as I can figure out.

    • @wolfgang4047
      @wolfgang4047 Год назад

      @Chris Kavanagh I do remember this play I had a class at the community college college called U.S. History from 1865 till present and they made us watch this play. It was pretty interesting to watch.

  • @wayne-kj4iw
    @wayne-kj4iw 2 года назад +7

    this is the proof of the absurd , albert camue , reminds you of the myth of sisyphus

    • @dimkilago2958
      @dimkilago2958 Год назад +1

      Beckett really hated Camus,lol.He has a nice ironic piece in The Unnamable for his "philosophy" " The essential is to go on squirming forever at the end of the line, as long as there are waters and banks and ravening in heaven a sport- ing God to plague his creature, per pro his chosen shits. I’ve swal-lowed three hooks and am still hungry. Hence the howls. What a joy to know where one is, and where one will stay, without being there. Nothing to do but stretch out comfortably on the rack, in the blissful knowledge you are nobody for all eternity. A pity I should have to give tongue at the same time, it prevents it from bleeding in peace, licking the lips. Well I suppose one can’t have everything, so late in the proceedings." Also in Malone Dies has also something ironic about Camus more straight and made the priest a nice guy there,i am sure,having Camus in mind,lol. For Beckett is all about the "redempition" he doesn't care what keeps you to continue, hope,the stupid philosophy of Camus or whatever.Also objectively the concept of sisyphus mentality is stupid and pure ideology.Camus needed Marxism and psychology to not end in this stupid concept but denies both in his philosophical try.

  • @RubyGem
    @RubyGem 2 года назад +2

    45:00 did this part lose audio

  • @malak-yy3te
    @malak-yy3te Месяц назад

    What is the importance of repetition in a play?

    • @dublintales6311
      @dublintales6311  Месяц назад

      Waiting for Godot was famously described by Irish critic Vivian Mercier as a play in which ‘nothing happens, twice’.
      I always saw the repetition in the first and second act as born from Beckett's own existentialist philosophy. Have a read of Camus's Myth of Sisyphus, the Titan is doomed to push that blasted rock up a hill in the underworld for all eternity, as we are all doomed to repeat the mundanity of life until we die.

  • @Beechgoose1
    @Beechgoose1 2 года назад +2

    The kid looks like Shane McGowan?

    • @spywood
      @spywood 5 часов назад

      Indeed. Interestingly enough, i believe that that young actor is the son of the actor who played Vladimir.

  • @maikhaled7387
    @maikhaled7387 8 месяцев назад

    1:03:32
    act 2

  • @shawnlasrado8257
    @shawnlasrado8257 4 года назад +1

    41:18

  • @grubthak
    @grubthak Год назад

    Dog song at 1:04:14

  • @Pensivecoco
    @Pensivecoco 3 месяца назад

    "Let's hang ourselves immediately"

  • @Sammy1104
    @Sammy1104 Год назад +1

    1:28:40 -1:30:20

  • @isaacdouglas1119
    @isaacdouglas1119 3 года назад +11

    This is lower energy Eric Andre show vibes

  • @richardwarner3705
    @richardwarner3705 3 месяца назад

    ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

  • @bleuuw_
    @bleuuw_ 4 месяца назад +1

    Don't watch this stuff stoned because damn this was confusing!

  • @natlax
    @natlax 6 месяцев назад

    lol was good!

  • @kingfart1318
    @kingfart1318 Год назад

    1:05:00

  • @hellxsco
    @hellxsco Год назад +2

    37:45 my favorite part

  • @miky9932
    @miky9932 3 месяца назад

    1:13:37

  • @honeyinglune8957
    @honeyinglune8957 8 месяцев назад

    57:09 1:45:00

  • @Psl_power
    @Psl_power Год назад

    55:13

  • @paddymeboy
    @paddymeboy Год назад +1

    'Waiting for Godot' = waiting for God - right? Isn't that what it's about?

    • @dublintales6311
      @dublintales6311  Год назад +2

      Nope. In fact Beckett explicitly said it wasn't about god. It's an analogy for his own personal philosophy, existential nihilism. Most of his work was in fact.

    • @paddymeboy
      @paddymeboy Год назад

      @@dublintales6311 Well, mate, in order to be nihilistic you have to deny meaning, deny God, don't you? So whether he admitted it or not, I think that's what it's about, albeit in a negative way. I think once you realise that, the whole thing makes a lot more sense. 'If Godot comes, we'll be saved!' Besides, the whole thing is full of religious references. Seems like a case of denying the bleedin' orbvious.
      'Nope' indeed! God, why is everybody on RUclips so bloody chippy?

    • @dublintales6311
      @dublintales6311  Год назад +3

      @@paddymeboy He is more of an expert on his work than I am or you are and he won the nobel prize so I'll quote him about the true meaning behind the play: "If by Godot I had meant God I would have said God, and not Godot."

  • @kramsdrawde8159
    @kramsdrawde8159 Год назад +2

    This play put the meaningless existence on display, this question of meaning is one of the four greatest attached to the understanding of human experience: origin, meaning, morality and destiny none of which may be answered adequately in the nihilist, rationist or materialist world view. Only in the person and work of Jesus Christ may all of these questions be completely answered through study of the bible and the "...Fear of God is the begining of wisdom" and "The fool has said in his heart, there is no God..."

  • @globyois
    @globyois Год назад

    This isn’t a play it’s a homily. Mere philosophical babble, Elitist “synthetic” art masquerading as Drama. The playwright should abandon his title and adopt the moniker of “Preacher.”
    More fitting.

    • @kathylarson8876
      @kathylarson8876 8 месяцев назад +1

      You babble shows your unimaginative small mind

  • @kramsdrawde8159
    @kramsdrawde8159 Год назад +1

    I hope some of the critics of this time had labeled this "defecation", I agree with anyone that is a big pile of steamy, smelly,defecation. Why Beckett produced this ? He needed money, it shows, ,attempts at humor are lame, existentialism is futile, absurd & empty. Nothing to take from this rubbish, it's dialog being useless, in thought it comes up feckless & good-for-nothing, altogether meaningless fustian noise. This work would only identify for the depressed, suicidal or existentialist now known to be one of the most useless philosophies around, having a positive attitude and working to that end are far superior to the gloomy gus beckkett serves as drama.

    • @anjalidilish6495
      @anjalidilish6495 Год назад +12

      do you believe that the the purpose of every piece of literature/drama is to take the moral high ground or dictate goodness? a key feature of modernist writing is the fact that existentialist thoughts were rampant, and therefore looming pessimism due to the impact of the world wars and whatnot. moreover, experimental styles of writing and the stream of consciousness began emerging too. your opinion is as valuable as anybody's, but without making any assumptions i think if you should give the play a fair chance, probably by understanding the context it was written in. i think it is an apt representation of life, surprisingly to this day. there's lot to take from it imo, to be called defecation is really a shame. cheers anyway :))

    • @joenjeru5927
      @joenjeru5927 9 месяцев назад +1

      Perhaps serious literature is not for the naive who are bent to popular theatre

    • @kramsdrawde8159
      @kramsdrawde8159 9 месяцев назад

      PERHAPS he made this play to see what complete brainless people would pay to see this garbage and waste of time ...He made it at a time he was very broke, and desperate...it shows.@@joenjeru5927

    • @kramsdrawde8159
      @kramsdrawde8159 9 месяцев назад

      He should have used this play to wipe his bum, it would have a better use that way...
      @@anjalidilish6495

    • @kathylarson8876
      @kathylarson8876 8 месяцев назад

      You sound like a jealous fool

  • @dennislogan6781
    @dennislogan6781 2 года назад +1

    You hear about some books that are so amazing that you must read or see performed. I have now seen "Waiting for Godot" and I want my time back. Boring, not funny, and a major waste of time. I don't care if it was written by a Irishman. I would not recommend it to anyone.

  • @lornz0
    @lornz0 Год назад

    40:04