The Last Duel | Based on a True Story

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  • Опубликовано: 1 июл 2024
  • Thanks to Praesidus for sponsoring this episode. To check out their historically inspired watches, go to praesidus.com/?rfsn=6805033.7...
    A historical review of The Last Duel. Dueling has an interesting history, and while this was the last judicial one in France between Jacques le Gris and Jean de Carrouges, there is a much more expansive context that precedes and follows the events depicted in this film.
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    See pinned comment and its replies for notes, responses, and errata
    Bibliography
    Eric Jager, The Last Duel: A True Story of Trial by Combat in Medieval France, reprint (2004; New York: Arrow, 2020), audiobook. amzn.to/3ADJBs5
    John Norris, Pistols at Dawn: A History of Dueling (Stroud, UK: The History Press, 2009), ebook. amzn.to/3JEm1OV
    Stephen Wynn, Dueling through the Ages (Barnsley: Pen and Sword Military, 2021). amzn.to/3JqWCbf
    www.medievalists.net/2021/10/...
    www.historyvshollywood.com/re...
    slate.com/culture/2021/10/las...
    www.smithsonianmag.com/histor...
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    ------------------------------------------------------------
    Wiki: The Last Duel is a 2021 historical action drama film[6] directed by Ridley Scott from a screenplay by Nicole Holofcener, Ben Affleck, and Matt Damon, based on the 2004 book The Last Duel: A True Story of Trial by Combat in Medieval France by Eric Jager. Set in medieval France, the film stars Damon as Jean de Carrouges, a knight who challenges his former friend, squire Jacques Le Gris (Adam Driver) to a judicial duel after Jean's wife, Marguerite (Jodie Comer), accuses Jacques of raping her. The events leading up to the duel are divided into three distinct chapters, reflecting the contradictory perspectives of the three main characters. Affleck also stars in a supporting role as Count Pierre d'Alençon.
    Chapters
    0:00 intro and promo
    2:39 reality
    8:33 scholarship
    9:42 accuracy
    13:05 inaccuracy
    16:50 outtakes
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    Hashtags: #history #LastDuel #Dueling #review #BasedOnATrueStory

Комментарии • 179

  • @CynicalHistorian
    @CynicalHistorian  Год назад +11

    Thanks to Praesidus for sponsoring this episode. To check out their historically inspired watches, go to praesidus.com/?rfsn=6805033.72f618f&.72f618f
    Click "read more" for further info, corrections, and bibliography
    Thanks for watching! Please consider supporting the channel by buying merch: teespring.com/stores/the-cynical-historian
    Or by donating to my Patreon: www.patreon.com/CynicalHistorian
    *[reserved for errata]*
    *Bibliography*
    Eric Jager, _The Last Duel: A True Story of Trial by Combat in Medieval France,_ reprint (2004; New York: Arrow, 2020), audiobook. amzn.to/3ADJBs5
    John Norris, _Pistols at Dawn: A History of Dueling_ (Stroud, UK: The History Press, 2009), ebook. amzn.to/3JEm1OV
    Stephen Wynn, _Dueling through the Ages_ (Barnsley: Pen and Sword Military, 2021). amzn.to/3JqWCbf
    www.medievalists.net/2021/10/medieval-movie-review-last-duel/
    www.historyvshollywood.com/reelfaces/last-duel/
    slate.com/culture/2021/10/last-duel-movie-historical-accuracy.html
    www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-true-history-behind-the-last-duel-180978860/

    • @leonidas130
      @leonidas130 Год назад

      Tell me what is your opinion on the flying tigers ?

  • @Altrantis
    @Altrantis Год назад +175

    Wait, the french expert of studies of chevalerie is named Lorris Chevalier? He is an expert on knights called knight.

    • @jessevandeinsen4202
      @jessevandeinsen4202 Год назад +10

      Nomen est omen is apparently still a thing

    • @Altrantis
      @Altrantis Год назад +5

      @@jessevandeinsen4202 I mean if your name is an obvious word it can influence your interests. I know a Victoria, which in Spanish, our language, is just... Victory. And it has shaped her personality, making her more positive and success-oriented cause victory is part of her identity.

    • @forickgrimaldus8301
      @forickgrimaldus8301 Год назад +4

      Yo dang we heard you love Chivalry.

    • @Pantsinabucket
      @Pantsinabucket Год назад

      @@jessevandeinsen4202 it’s been. Another great ironic example is South Africa’s (former) leading white supremacist, Eugene Terre’Blanche, or good heritage white land in English.

    • @Alfred_Leonhart
      @Alfred_Leonhart Год назад

      Based

  • @LJStability
    @LJStability Год назад +67

    This was a pretty interesting film, especially after I read more on how much it got right. However, I think including more of the major details of how long this trial was would've helped put things into context. It turns out that this trial and all the drama that followed was causing issues for both parties standing at the time. We know a lot about this trial due to the records kept, which wasn't common for most proceedings at the time. I personally didn't find any trouble with how the film portrayed "the truth" portion because of its attempt to frame the widespread misogyny and sexual abuse of women at this time. From what I gathered in my readings, most historians do agree that she was raped and likely by the person the film portrays.
    The film also does a good job showing how a society can dehumanize a women just as much as her individual relationships with her husband. These intertwining themes were powerful and gave me perspective and interest to read further on these topics. I think the film got a bad rap at times because people focused on how the rape was presented twice rather than looking at how the perspectives of the event shifted between the victim and perpetrator. If you haven't seen this film, I would suggest giving it a shot.

    • @EyreAffair
      @EyreAffair Год назад

      You mention "most historians" here. Who are "most historians"? What sources are you citing here?

    • @noodles6390
      @noodles6390 Год назад

      @@EyreAffair He wants to "believe all women" like Ridley and Affleck ... funny that a french female historian mentioned her symapthy with Jaques Le Gris and the fact that he was a womanizer who doesn't needed to rape women because he was swarmed by them. Most of the sources point out that Jean De Carrouges was an ugly and brutal men who probably beat his first wife to death and was after the Land he got "stolen" by Count Pierre/Peter and given to Le Gris for his sympathy towards him. Money was and is everything and will always be for the upper class ... and back in the day land was money. The sources were mostly french and from before 20th Century.

    • @trumpetperson11
      @trumpetperson11 Год назад +3

      I do have a slight issue with the conception that historian's accounts are going to be accurate. A major point of the trial by combat is the cases lacking true evidence. And in many cases as this, history is written by the winners. Because the duel was won by one party, most people would assume that they had been correct and thus written the history to be that way. The only true account that would know the real truth was Lady Marguerite and possibly the assailant. But any accounts that these people would make would obviously have to be taken with a grain of salt as there were large implications of anything they accounted.

    • @zippymufo9765
      @zippymufo9765 27 дней назад

      ​@@trumpetperson11The truth is that no court would have convicted Le Gris on the available evidence. Fighting a judicial duel was the only recourse they had to "prove" the rape happened.

  • @thinkinaboutpolitics
    @thinkinaboutpolitics Год назад +21

    The Last Duel is the best movie nobody saw in the last few years.

  • @kzonedd7718
    @kzonedd7718 Год назад +15

    Back then saying 'I'm right, fight me' MEANT something...

  • @SidheKnight
    @SidheKnight Год назад +23

    Off-topic rant:
    I hate the blue-grey filter they put on almost all medieval movies these days. Even shows like Game of Thrones.
    The Middle Ages were actually a rather colorful era. This ubiquitous blue-grey gloomy desaturated dullness makes all these movies look bland and unappealing.
    For all its flaws, I appreciate Kingdom of Heaven for daring to actually have color and (gasp) sunlight in its medieval setting.
    Except the parts that take place in France, those also fall victim to the blue filter of dullness. It's like they took the term "Dark Ages" WAY too literally

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  Год назад +6

      I hadn't noticed that before. I'll have to keep an eye out, for the next one I watch

    • @Oxtocoatl13
      @Oxtocoatl13 Год назад +6

      Yep, you can pinpoint the moment GoT goes bad because everyone changes to black attire and the sun dies.

    • @joshuawagner2590
      @joshuawagner2590 Год назад +2

      This. It's incredibly annoying. But, medieval misconceptions continue to abound.

    • @pennyforyourthots
      @pennyforyourthots Год назад +5

      I feel like you can almost use colors to signal certain time periods and places at this point.
      If it's blue-grey then it's medieval Europe or a major city.
      If it's orange-yellow then it's Mexico or the Middle East
      If it's green-blue or red it's somewhere in Asia
      If it's brown then it's somewhere in Africa or India
      If it's white it's anywhere that snows, probably Russia
      If it's just gray it's world war one or two
      And if it's green it's the matrix

    • @GuineaPigEveryday
      @GuineaPigEveryday Год назад

      Also Kingdom of Heaven shows Medieval Europe in such a revisionist bullshit way, as if they’re all muddy dirty peasants living in a cold dour miserable world while the East is where its all colourful and lively. Kingdom of Heaven changes history a lot to make its point about the West, which is understandable given the Hollywood attitude post-9/11 being largely hostile to islamic culture.

  • @Valpo2004
    @Valpo2004 Год назад +58

    One problem I have with the film that you did not mention is that implied Le Gris's defense was essentially that it was consensual sex when he maintained the entire time that he didn't even see her that day and that the charge was being made up due to the rivalry. Also this movie like others overstated the lack of rights women have. While women where not afforded the right to really participate in society at the same time they where not considered property either. If his statement is correct that it was only considered a crime against her husband, a widowed or unmarried woman with no family should theoretically be free for anyone to rape, kill or do whatever they wanted. And that quite frankly was not the case. Women where not full citizens the way a man of the same rank was, but they where not simply property owned by a man. The truth is they where something in between. 2nd class citizens would be a better way of describing them. Chattel slavery was humans as property. An imperfect analogy would be that they had similar rights to that of a child today. It was considered important that they needed a man to take care of them but they could still in their own right be the victims of crime including rape. To be fair the husband would have likely been considered a victim as well but it was not like he was considered the ONLY victim.

    • @thats4thebirds
      @thats4thebirds Год назад +8

      Calling someone sorta property still sorta makes them property ya know?

    • @forickgrimaldus8301
      @forickgrimaldus8301 Год назад +10

      Also she is a noble woman so the vid is kind of a bit too demening on her (it wouldn't have likely got the traction it did it wasn't for that fact), while we see a lot of Bigoted stuff especially on Religion, Gender and Class on the Medieval Period the vid way too much leans on to it, yeah Women had been used as Barganing Chips and lesser than men at the time but at the sametime it kind of implies a Noble Lady had the same treatment and rights as the lower class Peasants and Serfs which isn't really true, Knights were asked to respect Higher Class Women emphisis here on Higher Class as the period was you know.

    • @Valpo2004
      @Valpo2004 Год назад +15

      @@thats4thebirds she isn't sort of property, she is just doesn't have the same rights. As I said a imperfect comparison would be that the status of women in the middle ages as akin to the status of children today. But she can't be bought and sold like property, in fact the dowry was given to help pay for her care, but it was not like he could have sold her away once he married her. Plus she could be considered the victim of a crime. That to me is the most glaring issue, the guy saying that rape was a property crime against the husband. It wasn't. It was considered a grave crime against her person which is why it was penalized with death and not some sort of payment to the husband. Now don't get me wrong they are accurate in that they believed you can't get pregnant from rape and they also likely would not take her word for it against a man of equal social status. (If she accused a peasant they might take her word for it). Chattel slavery is humans as property and she had way more rights in medieval society than a chattel slave has had in any society.

    • @mbryson2899
      @mbryson2899 Год назад +1

      It was a crime against a woman's caretaker, not necessarily a husband.

    • @forickgrimaldus8301
      @forickgrimaldus8301 Год назад +8

      @@mbryson2899 yeah but te Vid kind of implies she has the same rights as a Serf or a Peasant which isn't really true, yeah the Medieval Period wasn't really a place of equal rights but its kind of exaggerating it when a Lady is implied to have the same rights and respect as lower class women.

  • @tomhahnl1927
    @tomhahnl1927 Год назад +32

    I loved this movie (watched it three times in theater)! Movies based on true stories can never be 100% accurate, in this case (as you pointed it out) they did a pretty good job.

  • @williamtimonen6814
    @williamtimonen6814 Год назад +7

    People that responded to Ridley Scotts complaints about millenials having bad attention span were completely right when they said this was badly advertised. I thought this movie was about the same story as that one Netflix movie with Pattinson.

    • @jupiterkansas
      @jupiterkansas 8 месяцев назад

      The Pattison movie (The King) is the same story as Shakespeare's Henry V (and Shakespeare did it better)

  • @larrywave
    @larrywave Год назад +12

    Fun fact Finland had duel in its law code until 1969 😂

    • @Oxtocoatl13
      @Oxtocoatl13 Год назад

      Many countries had/have it, but it's rendered redundant by other laws. If you take part in a duel and stab your opponent, you're already breaking the law. The duel itself doesn't have to be illegal.

  • @paulreveresluggage3921
    @paulreveresluggage3921 Год назад +5

    On the Notre Dame, I think it was being repaired at that time period not built so showing scaffolding wouldn't necessarily be wrong.

  • @treetheoak8313
    @treetheoak8313 Год назад +14

    Congrats on the sponsorship! I was very hesitant to watch this movie as the director is so hit and miss recently.

  • @haraldisdead
    @haraldisdead Год назад +6

    "Long in the tooth" means old, not long.

  • @robertskubinski2971
    @robertskubinski2971 Год назад

    Thanks I been waiting for you to cover this one.

  • @thespunkman8
    @thespunkman8 Год назад +2

    really nice vid dude, as always!

  • @TheGahta
    @TheGahta Год назад +14

    Definitely would have been improved with a "by these swans..." moment 😆

  • @Eamonshort1
    @Eamonshort1 Год назад +10

    Eyyyy, welcome back Film CinHist, these are my favourite of your vids. However I generally prefer it when youtubers are passionate about the subject so I appreciate you waiting until it was something you really wanted to discuss rather than cranking out obligatory content. Keep doing you, I'll be here for the whole journey.

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  Год назад +5

      Yeah, definitely only doing these when I want to. Getting angry about every bad film is just emotionally draining. I've got two more reviews in the works: 24th and Casino

    • @Eamonshort1
      @Eamonshort1 Год назад +3

      @@CynicalHistorian oh man oh man, I know is historical accuracy is dubious but Casino rules. But I'm glad you understand what most youtubers don't. I'd rather watch an hour of someone speak with passion on a subject I couldn't care less about, than 5 mins of low effort content on something I actually love.

  • @TheZollum
    @TheZollum Год назад +16

    Thanks. Enjoyed the movie especially the parts where we have truly medieval conflicts of ideas which can seem alien to us. But I had a sense they had changed some parts to appeal to modern views/views of medieval times. Interesting point you raised about Victorian ideas of the relationship between orgasms and rape/pregnancy.

    • @stellviahohenheim
      @stellviahohenheim Год назад

      or you can just say they dumbed down the movie so more people would watch it

  • @grizwoldphantasia5005
    @grizwoldphantasia5005 Год назад +17

    I did not know that the book was written from five different sources, sporadically chosen. Are there any good counterpoints to clarify this?
    When I read the book, it seemed to be a perfect Hollywood candidate, and that was my only suspicion that it was too good to be true. I was annoyed that the movie changed the combat itself, and the wife's role seemed a bit too politically correct, but neither mattered that much in the overall big picture, so to speak.

  • @pbh9195
    @pbh9195 Год назад +1

    Been a while since you did a film review welcome back

  • @edspace.
    @edspace. Год назад +5

    One of the most interesting duels I heard about was in the Ukraine Soviet Socialist Republic (now Ukraine) in 1934, I think.
    While there seem to be a few conflicting details as to what caused the duel it also has a world record for the longest duel between 2 individuals (clocking in at around 35 hours).
    Supposedly there was a tradition going back to the days of the Sich where two men who had a dispute would duel on Good Friday so they could go to Easter together reconciled.
    However unlike the Sich Cossack of old the average Soviet Citizen didn't have access to a Cossack Sabre or other applicable weapons and so they came together at the appointed hour and like men of old swore they had considered their action without impediment of anger, hunger or intoxication, that they had found no satisfaction in their dispute and thus would undertake to let it be decided on the field of honour by the first to draw blood, then they drew their hands and each began slapping one another, taking turns to slap one another across the face.
    Funnily enough, I also read how it meant the religious services could go on uninterrupted since it was impossible for the NKVD to tell who was was in the square to go to church and who was there to watch the slap fight although I'm not sure if this is legend or not.
    Anyway, after 35 hours of no-one drawing blood and no-one backing down they were pulled off each other by the onlookers.

  • @CaseyRoseAlwaysPositive
    @CaseyRoseAlwaysPositive Год назад +2

    Excellent, as always !! 👍

  • @Oxtocoatl13
    @Oxtocoatl13 Год назад +7

    I wish the film had spent more time on the actual trial, which was fascinating. Like the fact that Le Gris claimed to have an alibi, but then the man vouching for his alibi was arrested in Paris during the trial... also for rape. Or the fact that Le Gris made a counter suit of defamation, demanding 40 000 livres in compensation. Or that de Carrouges' maidservant was called to testify and then tortured to verify the accuracy of the testimony. They should have made the movie a straight up courtroom drama, culminating in a duel. The multiple perspectives thing is great, but it also leads to repetition and makes the movie feel a bit long. I particularly did not enjoy watching a r*ape scene twice. I also feel like the marketing and the trailers falsely advertised the film as being about a woman seeking justice when in reality the rivalry between de Carrouges and Le Gris makes up the bulk of the film's runtime.

    • @RANDOM27ify
      @RANDOM27ify Год назад +3

      I legit couldn't make it through either of them ended up having to leave the theater because it was all a bit too much. Maybe that was the point but honestly showing it twice felt gratuitous.

    • @Oxtocoatl13
      @Oxtocoatl13 Год назад +2

      @@RANDOM27ify Exactly. And the scenes were almost identical, which made it difficult to justify even with the 2 perspectives angle.

  • @HistoryandHeadlines
    @HistoryandHeadlines Год назад +8

    I haven't seen it yet, although one of my students recommended it to me. I like knowing how accurate history based films are.

  • @capitalistraven
    @capitalistraven Год назад +3

    Glad to see a half decent portrayal of this time period. As a medieval history buff the lack of effort annoys me.

  • @count_bodies_like_sheep9296
    @count_bodies_like_sheep9296 Год назад +7

    I think this is the best film Ridley Scott has made in the past ten years.

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  Год назад +3

      There _The Martian._ I really liked that

    • @count_bodies_like_sheep9296
      @count_bodies_like_sheep9296 Год назад +2

      @@CynicalHistorian Oh shoot. Thanks for reminding me!!

    • @GuineaPigEveryday
      @GuineaPigEveryday Год назад

      @@count_bodies_like_sheep9296yeah i think generally ur right. All The Money In The World was such a mediocre film, also especially weird they changed the ending to make it seem like the evil rich dude died and the mother got the money (not true, he stayed alive and never gave her a penny). Besides that the movie was quite boring. Ridley Scott is a great director though, he’s just not a great screenwriter, so I’m hopeful for whatever movies he does next

  • @robchuk4136
    @robchuk4136 Год назад +1

    Good stuff, man

  • @Sawrattan
    @Sawrattan 5 месяцев назад

    To their credit, the artistic license of Notre Dame under construction was still an epic scene and gave me chills.

  • @davea6314
    @davea6314 Год назад +6

    On January 6, 2021 Rudy Giuliani demanded trial by combat. Someone please teleport Giuliani and his master Don the Con Trump back 700 years into the past to undergo trial by combat.

    • @kellyalves756
      @kellyalves756 Год назад +1

      On that note- any time an ad interrupts that yutz mid-yap and angel gets its wings.

    • @philkensebben157
      @philkensebben157 Год назад

      Time travel nothing. If they want to fight for their freedom, I got no issue knocking out a couple of fat old farts.

  • @Jamie_Powell
    @Jamie_Powell Год назад +1

    I can't believe how interesting the add was, forgot what it was until you said let's get back to the video

  • @zackhartley4718
    @zackhartley4718 Год назад +2

    I love how there is a Boston Terrier in the movie which did not even exist until 500yrs later. Boston’s are the best so I’ll let it slide! I really enjoyed the movie.

  • @hemmingwayfan
    @hemmingwayfan Год назад +2

    I adore this movie. It is criminally underrated in my opinion

  • @papatom5780
    @papatom5780 Год назад +1

    Forgive me for being somewhat off subject, but I appreciated the reference to the non radioactive glow in the dark paint on the Praesidus watches. I am a former paratrooper with the 82nd Airborne. I was issued a watch in 1983 with radioactive Tritium and Tritium gas sealed inside. The watches actually had a radioactive warning stamped on the back.

  • @Argos-xb8ek
    @Argos-xb8ek Год назад +1

    This is one of those epic stories of Friends turned to Enemies stories like Temujin vs Jamuka Caesar vs Pompey

  • @HistoryCity1
    @HistoryCity1 Год назад +3

    Great Review, I thought this movie was great but long as well. I know a guy that majored in this time period and the movie didn't sit right with him. But I can't imagine being this hard headed with something that has sourcing problems.

  • @koalasandwich567
    @koalasandwich567 Год назад +5

    Why didn't you mention one of the biggest duels of all time Dwight vs. Andy

  • @Maxaldojo
    @Maxaldojo Год назад +1

    Fun! Wasn't interested in this film, but may give it a try. Thanks, Cypher!

  • @RubensBudgetCreations
    @RubensBudgetCreations Год назад +3

    You mist one type of duel that still goes on within some germanic student societies in germany, Austria, Latvia, Switzerland, Poland, Estonia, Belgium and maybe on Dutch student fraternity, the Mensuur/mensur which is fought with a saber like sword an eye, nose and chest protection. The go of the Mensuur/Mensur is to hit the face but isn't a kind of "free for all" fight but is more of a choreographed set of movements where if one of the fighters is just a bit wrong the other may use the opening created to slash the cheek of his opponent.

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  Год назад +1

      Didn't miss it. That's just fencing

    • @RubensBudgetCreations
      @RubensBudgetCreations Год назад +2

      @@CynicalHistorian, well actually most fights are duels about honor and just asstarted by giving the opponent a ripped up business card. Most mensur practitioners only fight about 3 times in their life.

    • @RubensBudgetCreations
      @RubensBudgetCreations Год назад

      Forgot to add that Mensur still uses sharp swords.

  • @riograndedosulball248
    @riograndedosulball248 Год назад +2

    I mean, in the year of our Lord of 2017 a guy just down the road from me got killed in a dagger duel. It just happens sometimes

  • @RebelSandGaming
    @RebelSandGaming Год назад +1

    If they made dueling legal again how would the legal system handle this and would there be a bunch of regulations for it

  • @Kobolds_in_a_trenchcoat
    @Kobolds_in_a_trenchcoat Год назад +4

    You can't really have a "believe women" narrative when the woman's perspective is not available due to a lack of historical source explaining her perspective. That said, I had a few books in several of my classes (someone at my university loved that story) about the Return of Martin Guerre that was trying to get a woman's perspective where the source base was borderline nonexistent (we have some testimony but not much and what we do have is layers removed). Still, even the Return of Martin Guerre's book about Guerre's wife acknowledge that it is, at best, a historical reconstruction of a possible perspective she may have had, not a definitive true retelling of her actual perspective.
    Just an interesting parallel to a few books I had in some of my classes.

    • @szymonlechdzieciol
      @szymonlechdzieciol 15 дней назад

      I mean it's not like we have personal diaries of Carrouges and Le Gris as well.
      We have a lot of legal documents, and notes from lawyers - all made by external forces to three major participants.

  • @thumper8684
    @thumper8684 Год назад +1

    I hear that people of the Americas once did battle with banjos. It sounds truly terrifying.
    What happened to this ordeal? When was it finally done away with?

  • @sirabraham1561
    @sirabraham1561 Год назад +4

    Still my favorite historian

  • @Mister_Matt_X
    @Mister_Matt_X Год назад +11

    The Last Duel was an interesting movie and I think we’ve never seen a movie based on the French Monarchy until now but I hope we see a French Monarchy movie about King Louis XVI... I’m part French in America but as far as I know... I have very little ancestors history and documents from 14th Century France I just make predictions and theories of their lifestyles but the 19th century is far as I could go... which is a head scratcher if there are any documents left... about what they did what their day to day life was like etc.
    It always curious me how back then was a complete different world... they probably heard about this duel but I think they just cared less and continue their lives and I can’t imagine how ugly it must’ve been...

    • @Piloulegrand
      @Piloulegrand Год назад

      What do you mean ? There a plenty of movies about the french monarchy ...And we also have a LOT of written sources from the 14th century

    • @jorgepedro8431
      @jorgepedro8431 10 месяцев назад

      The Messenger: The Story of Joan D'Arc.
      Marie Antoinette.
      The three Musketeers.
      Should watch it

  • @Jarod-vg9wq
    @Jarod-vg9wq Год назад +1

    Wish I saw it in theatres.

  • @paulbabcock2428
    @paulbabcock2428 Год назад +2

    10:15 That attitude isn't foreign and outdated enough presently. Just a few years ago, some christian right congressman went on in congress about how women seldom/never get pregnant during a "legitimate" rape.

    • @meredithr9824
      @meredithr9824 Год назад +1

      That was Todd akin. I will never forget that embarrassment.

    • @paulbabcock2428
      @paulbabcock2428 Год назад

      @@meredithr9824 Thanks. And while I ought to be aware of the fucker's name, so as to better watch out for him, I confess I was entirely content being entirely unaware of who he was.
      Idt he deserves any more fame at all.

  • @achaemenidarsenic
    @achaemenidarsenic Год назад +2

    As a history buff, I cannot find a definitive answer that bugs me about this movie so maybe you guys would know. The orgies shown in this movie; was it normal for rich nobles to have them? Did they have to make them secret since they had lived in a christian society? Were bisexual orgies a recorded thing? I know that some popes liked to have extravagant parties, but these were with prostitutes. Not ''respectable'' god-obedient noblewomen.

    • @Oxtocoatl13
      @Oxtocoatl13 Год назад +1

      I know medieval attitudes towards sex weren't as puritanical as we sometimes imagine, prostitution was legal and present and we have plenty of records of extramarital affairs and such. But I think you're right in saying that if parties of this nature took place, the women were probably lower class sex workers.

  • @TexasTrosper
    @TexasTrosper 2 месяца назад

    What about the ancient mullet? Is that accurate?

  • @strigoi_guhlqueen8355
    @strigoi_guhlqueen8355 Год назад +2

    Loved the Movie.
    Thought the truth bit was silly, because with historical material i would avoid such statements.

  • @promiscuous5761
    @promiscuous5761 Год назад

    Thank you.

  • @rosomak533
    @rosomak533 Год назад

    Would like to know your take on "Weapons masters rate 7 duels in movies".

  • @newpeupyoass
    @newpeupyoass Год назад +3

    "The Truth"
    I litterally shouted at the screen "How the fuck would you know Scott?"

    • @ICU-812
      @ICU-812 Год назад

      Yeah, it almost spoiled the rest of the film for me. This idea that they could set up a writer's interpretation of what a person who died 500+ years ago MIGHT have experienced as THE TRUTH jarred me out of the narrative.

  • @johnnybernie3061
    @johnnybernie3061 Год назад

    LETS GO!!!

  • @rarecandy3445
    @rarecandy3445 Год назад

    the movie was cool, tho was turned off at first because ridley scott was being such a baby about the film. glad you covered it

  • @samwill7259
    @samwill7259 Год назад +1

    The idea of a judicial duel deciding something is so ridiculously funny to me.
    Like, what if one dude is 6'6" and the other is 5' flat? Is it still god's choice when the 5' guy gets the SHIT kicked out of him in the first round?

    • @turdferguson7686
      @turdferguson7686 Год назад +2

      please refer to case #1samuel17. David v Goliath.

    • @forickgrimaldus8301
      @forickgrimaldus8301 Год назад

      Actually depending on the region a Judicial Dual was created to be as "fair" as possible, you can only use what weapons that was actually agreed upon by the 2 parties (in Devorce Duels for example the guy had to sit in a hole for the entire fight to make it fair for the woman, there are even manuals for it for both Ex-es), Dueling is also very risky so if your the guilty party as shown here it can go not so great even if you have a clear advantage in skill and height your still injuring and killing each other with weapons.
      Also for a pre industrial society Lawenforcement was very difficult especially for the Medieval Period so its understandable why this became popular but even back then they understood that analyzing of evidence was way better then just letting the Nobility and people kill themselves over crimes unless the evidence was really weak you can't just ask the Lord or King to duel the opposite party unless your not asking for permission to the proper authorities.

    • @meredithr9824
      @meredithr9824 Год назад

      I bet it was a last straw attempt by an authority to solve a problem between two people. "well if one of them is dead and they can't bug me about this forever"

  • @jerranspearman3369
    @jerranspearman3369 Год назад +1

    good video

  • @ecurewitz
    @ecurewitz Год назад

    A fight, to the pain!

  • @ryanh4775
    @ryanh4775 Год назад

    I read somewhere long ago than dueling was never technically outlawed in New York state however upon consulting it with my attorney he says I would probably catch a manslaughter charge... I must admit I was set on walking up to a certain someone and slapping them with a pair of leather gloves.

  • @jupiterkansas
    @jupiterkansas 8 месяцев назад

    I'm surprised you didn't mention the king character.

  • @whyjnot420
    @whyjnot420 Год назад +1

    I have to admit it, Louis the Knight is a much cooler name than Lewis the Tailor.

  • @fredhinsley2544
    @fredhinsley2544 Год назад

    It looks like an awesome watch to have :)

  • @Jarod-vg9wq
    @Jarod-vg9wq Год назад

    I also liked the fight it’s pretty intense to watch.

  • @quantgeekery6358
    @quantgeekery6358 Год назад

    Have you ever done a bookshelf video?

  • @kightsun
    @kightsun Год назад +1

    I actually like the "the truth" aprt because it framed the entire narrative as the woman's. So you could then frame the duel as what she emotionally experienced, semi-excusing how Hollywood it was. But I'm high AF so idk.

  • @nicholasricardo8443
    @nicholasricardo8443 Год назад

    One thing that I griped with was the idea of women being completely unreliable in testimony in medieval courts. A woman of nobility such as Marguerite would have commanded much more respect than the movie depicts, yes the crime of rape was abhorrently viewed as chiefly an offense against her husband, but sympathies towards noblewomen due to the popularity of Chanson de Geste novels suggest that a charge such as this would have not been as chauvinistic as Scott depicts.

  • @devinrice1632
    @devinrice1632 Год назад +1

    Thank gosh I never seen this movie since the movie got some stuff wrong

  • @hxcdanny3x
    @hxcdanny3x 7 месяцев назад

    7:02 now thats soldiering

  • @D.Jay.
    @D.Jay. Год назад +3

    #BringBackOlympicDuels

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  Год назад

      Fully agreed

    • @forickgrimaldus8301
      @forickgrimaldus8301 Год назад

      With improments on Personal Protection these days its kind of more safer than before. (But I doubt it would ever take off due to still being fairly dangerous.)

  • @lustrazor44
    @lustrazor44 Год назад +1

    The definitive statement at the end, I believe, was the film communicating she was right because her husband won the duel as was the law.
    I didn’t take it as a believe all women stance or that she was indeed telling the truth. It just struck me as the final mail driving home that this duel solidified she was right, within the context of how the society was operating at the time.
    Could be wrong but that’s what I got out of it. The constant talk of “if I win, god has decided you were raped” kind of was building to that statement at the end. I think it was just driving home the rape happened because of the outcome.
    I don’t think it was a statement on the actual REAL truth if it happened or not. Because all we have is…one guy lost a duel therefore it happened. Would be a bit silly to make a statement like that.

    • @Valpo2004
      @Valpo2004 Год назад +3

      I disagree, it was clear what the society at the time declared to be true, but the text is speaking to the modern viewer. It also goes out of it's way to make her husband also look terrible. It was a clear directorial decision to be feminist.

    • @mattdunn0804
      @mattdunn0804 Год назад

      I might also add that the film was written by Matt Damon and Ben Affleck who had a long-standing relationship with Harvey Weinstein, which they took some heat for some years ago. I personally didn’t even notice that detail while watching the film, but if that’s the case, we can see where their motivations might have been. The movie industry is based on image after all.

    • @ignitetheinferno1858
      @ignitetheinferno1858 Год назад

      As I recall, Ridley got angry at an interviewer who asked which account was angry by basically saying, “Are you f-king stupid? It’s called ‘the truth’ in the movie!”
      He was quiet vulgar in all his interviews. 😂 But no, Ridley wanted to give a definitive answer to who was in the right.

  • @xObscureMars
    @xObscureMars 7 месяцев назад

    Armor in most movies ruins it for me but they did a really good job in this movie and then go and ruin it with the ****** helmets in the end

  • @Grandpa_pc
    @Grandpa_pc Год назад +1

    Are you going to do any History videos on the FBI and CIA?

    • @loner1878
      @loner1878 Год назад +1

      J Edgar would be a good one.

  • @johnyricco1220
    @johnyricco1220 Год назад

    I don’t understand how the guy wasn’t knighted until the duel when he was already 50 years old and a commander of a military garrison. Weren’t people knighted in their 20s? Was this something particular to France?

    • @TalonAshlar
      @TalonAshlar Год назад +6

      Jacques le Gris; the antagonist of the Last Duel was a common foot soldier who served as squire and proved himself a useful captain of the guard and was well on the path to becoming a vassal knight but this promotion required the assent of the king. Jean de Carrouges however was the son of a landed knight and thus theoretically higher up the social totem pole.
      Knighting Le Gris before the duel achieved 2 things; 1) it preserved the social hierarchy since ideally only nobles of equal rank were allowed to duel and commoners not at all. Meanwhile the increase in rank meant that if Le Gris won the duel he owed the king a favor as did Carrogouges for granting it.

  • @54032Zepol
    @54032Zepol Год назад +4

    I couldve sworn the accused was innocent since he was on the other side of France and one of the arguments was that he was so rich he could afford a fresh horse at every stop and thats how he made his way there and back from the crime committed also he claimed he was innocent even when died. But this was before the movie so things might have come to light.

    • @johnhenry4844
      @johnhenry4844 Год назад +8

      The distance was 50 miles in one day on horseback, that being said his alibis could easily have been falsified.
      Fact is we will never know for sure, as there are too many conflicting personal interests in the case

    • @johnhenry4844
      @johnhenry4844 Год назад +1

      Also one of the guys proving Le Gri’s alibi was arrested in Paris for rape during the trial, no joke

    • @forickgrimaldus8301
      @forickgrimaldus8301 Год назад +2

      @@johnhenry4844 which is why the Duel even happened so if there was anything solid about it the Duel wouldn't have happened anyways.

  • @usptact
    @usptact Год назад

    Dueling should be brought back.

  • @JeffreyDeCristofaro
    @JeffreyDeCristofaro Год назад +1

    Wow, a Ridley Scott film more historically accurate than his previous historical films! Can't wait to see Nick's review of this on HISTORY BUFFS, I'm sure he would have plenty to add!

  • @Jarod-vg9wq
    @Jarod-vg9wq Год назад

    Didn’t anyone just duel by boxing?

  • @sandrahertel6282
    @sandrahertel6282 Год назад

    Interesting story and movie. I’m inclined to believe the woman, she was putting her honour, her husband’s honour and both their lives on the line for this. Le Gris no matter was not a chivalrous man, he would never have put her in that position if he cared a whit for her let alone loved her as inferred.

  • @STRANDENGER42
    @STRANDENGER42 Год назад

    Directors said Millennials are too stupid to get the movie… so I’m not going to watch it. Appreciate the synopsis

  • @MethodAudioVisual
    @MethodAudioVisual 6 месяцев назад

    Long in the tooth means old, not long

  • @christiannipales9937
    @christiannipales9937 Год назад

    3:47 I see Japanese media hasn't changed much

  • @theshenpartei
    @theshenpartei Год назад

    I was wondering when there was going to be a video about the last duel.

  • @ehrldawg
    @ehrldawg Год назад

    Kitty Kiss ?!?!

  • @MrAtoz-jq5ry
    @MrAtoz-jq5ry Год назад

    Aha! Lit Crit fails again.

  • @dwbrannon
    @dwbrannon Год назад

    Why are the Middle Ages always portrayed as gray and gloomy. Didn't the sun shine back then. Didn't people laugh? Has anybody ever seen a movie set during this time period in which someone told a joke? Except for the Holy Grail, of course. When they say the Dark Ages, they didn't mean it was always dark.

  • @gideon-abelcole681
    @gideon-abelcole681 Год назад

    The Matrix | Based on a True Story

  • @mrmr446
    @mrmr446 Год назад +1

    I enjoyed the film and as you point out the inaccuracies don't matter too much, bit baffled as to how showing her perspective, known as the reason given for the duel and indirectly from testimony, is so enraging. The guilt of the defendant was decided by God after all.

    • @grizwoldphantasia5005
      @grizwoldphantasia5005 Год назад +2

      Baffling that you don't understand it. To unilaterally take the side of a person whose account isn't even definitively known, is irresponsible. As he says, "believe the victim?" Why?

    • @mrmr446
      @mrmr446 Год назад +2

      @@grizwoldphantasia5005 The tale wasn't "unilaterally" told, his denial is also shown. As is his defence, that while she put up "customary protestations" she was willing. To me that sounds like a confession, not sure how else to understand those words. As for believing the victim who could have stayed silent, why not?

  • @meredithr9824
    @meredithr9824 Год назад +2

    I disagree about the purpose of roshaman style is to avoid being definitive. I think it worked well here because all three sides believe they are in the right. We are not trying to solve a mystery with three clashing testimonies- we are seeing three perspectives. And learning just how fucked the entire society's understanding of women's rights and justice was, and is.

  • @MAOofDC
    @MAOofDC Год назад +5

    Yeah I didn't like that they implied that her story was the truth. With the longstanding rivalry and the fact that they were having difficulty conceiving children. That she could have had an affair trying to conceive by any means necessary, got caught then cried rape. Or even that the rivalry had progressed so far that Carrouge lied so that he could kill his rival without repercussions. Or even more twisted Carrouge knew about and approved of the affair, because his wife was in on the plot to kill his rival.
    The point is Carrouge went into that match with far more combat experience than his opponent and it was certain to give him an advantage.

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  Год назад +8

      There's been a surprising amount of theorizing on this point over the years. Like Voltaire wrote an entire pamphlet on it 4 centuries after the fact and caused a mini-scandal (dude never stopped with the scandals, LOL). And to argue that trial by combat actually decided who was guilty is beyond preposterous (literally the comment before yours says that). So there is a lot to think about within the sparse details of this case, but nothing definitive. I hedged my telling of this story with a lotta "probably" and "alleged" or just purposely avoiding specificity altogether because of that

    • @forickgrimaldus8301
      @forickgrimaldus8301 Год назад

      @@CynicalHistorian to be fair a lot of Medieval History is very "He said, She said" details are often muddied by not only contradicting statements but also self interest of the writers.

  • @JensBoerner
    @JensBoerner 7 месяцев назад

    "How cares" (concerning the helmets") says the "cynical historian".
    Let me be cynical.
    A historian does.
    A historian, especially with focus on that period, suffers. I do.
    Are we getting a good sense odf the period?
    No, we don't!
    Wrong:
    - Clothing
    - Style (hair, beard)
    - Armour (not only the helmets
    - General depiction of the scenery (you noticed they removed all colours, did you?)
    - Military tactics, fighting techniques, locations, scenarios (pretty unimportant? Why did they care about showing it in the first place? Because....hollywood.)
    - The duell itself (the one in the title)
    - Locations (you named it, the place wher the duel took place is well described, and was nothing like shown)
    - Rites (marriage negotiations in front of the women? Nope. Show me a source for that; it even makes no sense from a medieval point of view. It is just used to underline the movie's message "woman in the middle ages were screwed"
    - gender role: not as much as the rest. The topic you touched about the point of the accusation being rather one of property then of morale or such simply has to do with the way trials worked at the time, with no legislative existing taking the role of the accusor (in many cases, thus also changing in late middle ages). In this case the accusation has to be carried by the person being harmed. Now, the fact that this was a woman and that her being raped not being considered a morale flaw isn't correct. The code was simply based on the bible, or better: roman law based on the 10 commandmends, in this case, seeing this as a violation of 9th and 10th commandment. And yes, wouldn't she have been married it would have been her father to carry the accusations. That does *not* mean people saw rape as something morally "ok". The point is simply that during that time, without said legislative, the accosator could be held responsible of damage in case of his case not having been proved. With the lack of general (not local) formalized law during a longer period of middle ages (changing from late 13th century, especially in the cities) this meant especially for a woman that she had to prove her case. If this happened, the sentence for the rapist could be quite serious. Studies on this (see "Rape in Medieval England: An Historical and Sociological Study", or: "Caroline Dunn, Stolen Women in Medieval England : Rape, Abduction and Adultery, 1100-1500") tend to concentrate on the "punishment" rather on compensation, which was a very vital part of medieval handling of such things, up to the of course for us today completly inacceptable sentence to marry the victim: this however ties into the medieval treatment of actions and their "damage" inflicted: a raped woman was damaged in her possibility to marry. But even though the movie here touches some points at least up to now not being handled in movies, it falls flat in the description of the social situation of the woman in general. "I have no legal standing without you" is simply not correct.
    "It's a good film with an excellent look in medieval society"?
    No it is not. Not at all. It touches one aspect of the role of women in medieval times, but it fails in painting a realistic picture of france in the 1380s, in nearly every other aspect.
    It's hollywood, with a good idea, on a book, on an interesting historical case.
    How splendid could it have been if been done by a filmmaker who cares about what advisors say.
    Aka, not by Ridley Scott.
    As we can see with his latest one.

  • @OPFlyFisher304
    @OPFlyFisher304 Год назад

    Comment

  • @MrHEC381991
    @MrHEC381991 Год назад

    Those medieval methods of duels seem barbaric.
    2022: A video of people fighting in a McDonald's.

  • @Gguy061
    @Gguy061 11 месяцев назад

    I hate Adam Driver. Kylo-Ren was a bad idea for a villain. He's a low rent Darth Vader. The entire star wars sequel trilogy was a stupid idea. I will forever associate his face with stupid, unoriginal ideas. I'm immediately skeptical of this movie because his stupid, wannabe Keanu Reaves face is in it

  • @jamesboaz4787
    @jamesboaz4787 Год назад +1

    I am absolutely for trail by combat. I've bin to prison I guarantee if I was a scout for gladiators I'd start on death row. These people aren't there because they stole candy from a baby I make no apologies for my statement. Also I truly believe only those who have fought or are at the very least have looked deeply inward and know they would definitely die for there Nation or there Neighbors. Those who participated in these hard character building exercises truly know what it is to both have a power and to not use it. These people weren't just hacking away at each other in the street's they organized the met up. Mutual combat is still legal in most states.

    • @pja6476
      @pja6476 Год назад

      Extremely based

  • @michelmarchman8602
    @michelmarchman8602 Год назад

    ✨ ρгό𝔪σŞm

  • @michaelgonzales3978
    @michaelgonzales3978 11 месяцев назад

    Believe all wahmen

  • @alok26k68
    @alok26k68 Год назад

    I tried. But you won't fix this film with knowledge or logic.
    This film had time travel so we could watch jodie lay down 10times. I was hoping the mother inlaw knew so it would have been a slight payoff but fk me, dull and painfully boring to watch.

  • @loner1878
    @loner1878 Год назад

    Why not show her perspective? God decided who was right apparently.

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  Год назад +3

      who said anything about "not showing her perspective!?" This is a pretty disingenuous comment

    • @loner1878
      @loner1878 Год назад

      @@CynicalHistorian Its a facetious comment...

    • @CynicalHistorian
      @CynicalHistorian  Год назад

      @@loner1878 oh, use the "/s" since no one can tell it's a joke