Martin Scorsese speaking about Marlon Brando

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  • Опубликовано: 25 авг 2024
  • Full original upload: • Martin Scorsese on 'On...

Комментарии • 142

  • @gardensofthegods
    @gardensofthegods 2 года назад +307

    I love watching Martin Scorsese talking about film because he totally loves them and he's so unpretentious ... it's like somebody who totally loves ice cream eating it in front of you sharing it with you and just talking about how wonderful it is

    • @ideas_on_palette
      @ideas_on_palette 2 года назад +2

      So true🙌🏻

    • @SOLXXX41
      @SOLXXX41 2 года назад

      Indeed. Could listen to Marty all day. He makes talking about films so accessible.

    • @waynej2608
      @waynej2608 2 года назад +1

      Yes, Marty is an extremely bright guy and has such a great reverence for film. I certainly share his enthusiasm for One Eyed Jack's, and many other wonderful films, throughout history. And, I'm a huge fan of his films. Many are classics.

    • @Purplenpinkk
      @Purplenpinkk 2 года назад +6

      He seems so humble - It's like he doesn't realize that he is one of the greatest directors that ever lived. Like he thinks he's just a guy who loves films and stumbled into making some here and there.

    • @gardensofthegods
      @gardensofthegods 2 года назад

      @@Purplenpinkk yeah he is humble that's one of the things I like about him and that he's down-to-earth and still has a good sense of humor .
      I think he's so grateful for help his interest his hobby his love of film turned into a full-time career for him that he doesn't have an entitled attitude because he seems so appreciative and grateful for everything

  • @isabellastasicastriotascan6467
    @isabellastasicastriotascan6467 2 года назад +74

    Thank you, Martin Scorsese, for your testimony about Marlon Brando at that time. And your commitment towards Film History 💖

  • @romanclay1913
    @romanclay1913 Год назад +12

    Marlon Brando is the greatest actor because of his unmatched acting range. From 1950-60 he played a paraplegic in THE MEN, Stanley Kowalski in A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE, a Mexican revolutionary in VIVA ZAPATA, Mark Anthony, a Hell's Angel in THE WILD ONE. Terry Malloy in ON THE WATERFRONT, Napoleon in DESIREE, sang and danced in GUYS AND DOLLS, a Japanese man in TEAHOUSE OF THE AUGUST MOON, a contrite nazi in YOUNG LIONS then directed ONE EYED JACKS.

  • @Tonycillian5
    @Tonycillian5 Год назад +21

    I can only imagine how good a movie with Prime Brando directed by Martin Scorsese would have been monumental

    • @Benji306
      @Benji306 Год назад +1

      or Stanley Kubrick. Shame he didn't stay on the film, would have been interesting to see the end result...Kubrick/Brando, intriguing....

    • @Tonycillian5
      @Tonycillian5 Год назад +2

      @@Benji306 Yeah biggest Hollywood L is that we didn’t have a Brando/Kubrick collaboration perhaps the best actor and director ever together would have been something

    • @Benji306
      @Benji306 Год назад

      @@Tonycillian5 Almost happened with "One Eyed Jacks" but sounds like Brand's ego got in the way. Shame.

  • @piranha5506
    @piranha5506 2 года назад +31

    Thank you for the Brando videos. It’s quenching my obsession with him.

    • @doctornov7
      @doctornov7  2 года назад +6

      You’re very welcome :) I’ve got some new ones ready to go, so will try and put them out over the next few days.

    • @gardensofthegods
      @gardensofthegods 2 года назад +5

      I always loved Marlon Brando as an actor since I first saw him as a kid but there's some things about him in his personal life ; he could sometimes be a horrible human being .
      I believe his ex-wife when she talks about how he used his money influence and lies to get custody of her child and how he paid off some psychiatrist to have her deemed mentally unstable so that he could get the custody .
      There's a clip here somewhere of either the woman or her husband or both of them talking about it ...
      I think I recalled the husband saying she had been on some kind of strong medication for a long time only to find out from other doctors later that she did not even have that mental illness . and what they are saying is very credible .
      Anyway , I saw some clips here of people talking about how he basically slept around with a lot of people of both sexes , including believe it or not , Richard Pryor , whose own wife said yes it's true .
      However , I do feel bad for him because early on when he was having success there was an interview with his father and Marlon ... you just get the impression his father didn't really like his own son that much and wasn't proud of his success .... and perhaps even jealous .

    • @declanmills
      @declanmills 2 года назад +6

      @@gardensofthegods We will always be drawn to the man, and the myth of people like, Marlon. The glaring intensity and performance genius (if such a thing exists) of his work on screen will always, imo, always outshine and outlive all of the 'stories' about him as a man or a husband or a father or a son or a lover or even an activist. Such great art will always dwarf the artist, if not the man.

  • @KpxUrz5745
    @KpxUrz5745 2 года назад +15

    One Eyed Jacks has always been one of my most favorite films, and now I just must see it again. It is so profound and wonderful on so many levels. Really enjoyed Martin's comments.

  • @HB-forensics
    @HB-forensics 2 года назад +55

    That film was a masterpiece: every actor, the director and cinematographer did a phenomenal job. If there was a director's cut it would be a national treasure if it ever surfaced.

    • @geneobrien8907
      @geneobrien8907 2 года назад +6

      I just happened to have watched it a couple of weeks ago. It was the first time I watched the whole film uninterrupted and it is a masterpiece. For 1961 audiences who were used to John Wayne movies, it probably went over their heads.

    • @galimir
      @galimir 2 года назад

      whats the name of the movie?

    • @geneobrien8907
      @geneobrien8907 2 года назад +3

      @@galimir One Eyed Jacks

  • @paulbfields8284
    @paulbfields8284 2 года назад +19

    I just watched One Eyed Jacks the other night.!!! Stunning performances.. I didn’t realize Brando directed it till the end. Outstanding

    • @brian-vz5hz
      @brian-vz5hz Год назад +1

      Fun fact:. Stanley Kubrick was set to direct this film but Brando fired him and took over as director.

  • @GUISNIP
    @GUISNIP 2 года назад +7

    I love this picture and listening to Martin Scorsese talk so lovingly about it is just terrific!

  • @73reider
    @73reider 2 года назад +16

    There is nothing more important in all of American art than Marlon Brando..

    • @DudeMan-xs3db
      @DudeMan-xs3db 2 года назад +1

      Until Machine Gun Kelly came along.

    • @bunny.thebest9103
      @bunny.thebest9103 2 года назад +1

      I would say Orson Welles is as important as Brando in American cinema.

    • @Jarrod1212
      @Jarrod1212 Год назад +1

      @@bunny.thebest9103 I’d agree, I think Welles had a huge impact on Brandos generation of actors (Dean, Clift, Newman,etc) brando has impacted every generation since everyone from Meryl Streep, to Johnny Depp to edward Norton has talked about his impact on them

    • @DMalltheway
      @DMalltheway Год назад

      @@Jarrod1212Not Christopher Reeve

    • @Jarrod1212
      @Jarrod1212 Год назад

      @@DMalltheway Christopher Reeve is not in the same league as the people I mentioned. both critically and commercially

  • @PatrickMHoey
    @PatrickMHoey Год назад +7

    Love listening to Scorsese talk film making. The labor of love that makes someone a masochist, at times giving 100% of your focus over something that 99 out of 100 people may never notice, and at others having to have the discipline to wrap and move on-mentally move on-and accept that the balance may lean toward preparation or chance.

  • @dinkmartini3236
    @dinkmartini3236 8 месяцев назад +2

    People who share their knowledge and passion make the world a better place.

  • @joestimemachine6454
    @joestimemachine6454 2 года назад +41

    If only we got a Scorsese/Brando project. Scorsese is a master of getting phenomenal performances out of any actor and a collaboration with one of the finest actors ever would have been magic.

    • @ricogomez4020
      @ricogomez4020 2 года назад +1

      Brando was about money 1st than making movie magic. Like Hollywood today is about agenda 1st money 2nd.

    • @brandothecatmeow
      @brandothecatmeow Год назад

      That would have been a dream come true.

    • @iggyp4390
      @iggyp4390 Год назад +3

      @@ricogomez4020 I always felt Brando became so openly greedy as a way of criticizing/exposing the grotesque face of the film industry. It’s almost as if his later life was a performance where he played the “role” of the very type of bloviated, tempestuous, hypocritical, obnoxious hack job Movie Mogul that he saw dominating the studios. Privately, Marlon never lost his love for the arts or the craft of storytelling. He would occasionally phone friends and perform entire soliloquies of Shakespeare from memory. I feel the tragedy of Brando is not that he didn’t respect the arts, but that he respected the arts so deeply he was broken by seeing how little Hollywood respected the arts and ignored its power (in Brando’s view, its moral obligation) to raise important questions and assist social movements.
      Marlon sank his own ship, which is a shame because there were many filmmakers doing the kind of work he wanted to see and his involvement might have helped elevate them in the public eye-if not in his own time, then certainly nowadays.

    • @Tonycillian5
      @Tonycillian5 Год назад

      If Prime Brando was in the 70s Scorsese would have him in every film he would have probably taken all of De Niro’s parts

    • @Benji306
      @Benji306 Год назад +1

      or Stanley Kubrick. Shame he didn't stay on the film, would have been interesting to see the end result...Kubrick/Brando, intriguing....

  • @hakukuze7947
    @hakukuze7947 2 года назад +9

    It’s a great film and though visually aged, the spirit of the film still very much timeless. Every is good in it, not just Brando.

  • @ThaRuralJuror
    @ThaRuralJuror 2 года назад +6

    Just to watch Marty speak about a film he admires is impressive and entertaining. It's very easy to get caught up in his enthusiasm... and he has that unmistakable Italian expressivity.

    • @Missjunebugfreak
      @Missjunebugfreak Год назад

      I concur. He has such a beautiful way of speaking and strong passion for cinema that it's infectious. I think if he'd not become a filmmaker he'd have been a great professor.

  • @mijyadoc5374
    @mijyadoc5374 Год назад +1

    I say "Thank you, Y Campbell" for sharing this with the lucky ones who stumble upon your posting.

  • @bySterling
    @bySterling 2 года назад +2

    Wow what a memory, I could listen to Mr Scorsese all day

  • @rodrigomachado5291
    @rodrigomachado5291 7 месяцев назад +1

    Scorsese loves his craft. Has real spiritual passion about it.

  • @locolima279
    @locolima279 2 года назад +7

    Loved this movie. "You may be a one-eyed jack in this town. But, I've seen the other side of your face!" Best line.

    • @ricogomez4020
      @ricogomez4020 2 года назад

      I like "tub of guts" line myself.

  • @brandothecatmeow
    @brandothecatmeow Год назад +3

    The master of his craft talking about the other master of his craft! I am in heaven!

  • @Toracube
    @Toracube 2 года назад +12

    Brando slept with the actress then dumped her. She then committed suicide.

    • @schreineinAV
      @schreineinAV 2 года назад +15

      If you’re referring to Pina Pellicer, no one knows the real reason for her suicide.... ‘one eyed jacks’ was released in 1961, she committed suicide in 1964.....

    • @ruly8153
      @ruly8153 2 года назад +1

      That’s like saying Hitler killed him self because of the evacuations of Dunkirk...

    • @Jondoe297..
      @Jondoe297.. Год назад

      Not really his fault I’ll be honest

    • @ManolixOlas
      @ManolixOlas 2 месяца назад

      Change your diapers first before you talk Bullshit 😂

  • @likearollingstone007
    @likearollingstone007 Год назад +1

    I could listen Scorsese talk with passion about cinema for hours

  • @facetina
    @facetina 2 года назад +10

    Its more interesting to listen to this man talk about old classics that to watch his new films.

  • @OctPSfever
    @OctPSfever 2 года назад +1

    Dont know why this movie is so underrated..I loved his movie...

  • @paulgerkin2851
    @paulgerkin2851 Год назад +1

    It's hard to believe some critics originally were critical of this film . It was very fresh and original .

  • @gato0082
    @gato0082 2 года назад +3

    he did it, bcz he was /is an artist 🎨 🎨 🎨

  • @barryedwardchadwick8162
    @barryedwardchadwick8162 Год назад

    My favourite western for so many reasons,just beautiful,magnificent,a term widely used,but seldom reality,a masterpiece

  • @henrycavillfriend5479
    @henrycavillfriend5479 2 года назад +6

    The man, the myth, the legend ❤

  • @williamcochell9889
    @williamcochell9889 Год назад +2

    What an incredibly underrated film! I absolutely loved it one of my favorites of all time! Brando was brilliant! Karl Malden gave an epic performance! and now seeing Scorsese pointing out directing qualities makes me further appreciate the movie! what a shame Brando didn’t direct more movies! and performing more Movies as well! Unfortunately he wasted epic talent!

  • @OnlyThe1Son
    @OnlyThe1Son 7 месяцев назад

    the cinematographer Charles Lang was nominated 18 times in his career for best cinematography
    he was also nominated for this picture..
    the movie is shot beautifully.
    I mean after jacks Charles went on to shoot to How The West Was Won
    of course 1 year prior to jacks he shot the Classic - The magnificent Seven
    one of the most famous Dps in hollywood at the time...

  • @bloggaloggs
    @bloggaloggs 2 года назад +7

    Even if he had picked another calling in life, Scosese would have been the ultimate university lecturer.

  • @gt-gu7rb
    @gt-gu7rb 2 года назад +8

    One Eyed Jack's was indeed a good film.

  • @claswihlborg6334
    @claswihlborg6334 2 года назад +7

    One eyed jacks was magnificent.

  • @morgantylerv9406
    @morgantylerv9406 9 месяцев назад

    You should have directed him Martin Scorsese‼️That wave was amazing but didn't they cut it out of the film? Brando didn't care if that wave took a month or 3. He definitely would have waited‼️It's truly amazing how much knowledge Brando had! He knew something about everything‼️ We'll never see another Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift, or James Dean. Not in this lifetime. They were the trifecta of greatest actors in cinema history‼️🙏💔🙏💔🙏💔

  • @ZulcanPrime
    @ZulcanPrime 2 года назад +2

    If the Director's Cut was five and half hours long then how long was the Work Print?

    • @truefilm6991
      @truefilm6991 2 года назад

      Ha! Depends on the shooting ratio, obviously. Dozens of 1000ft reels I reckon. Or perhaps even over a hundred reels. This was shot on 35mm 8 perf horizontal (VistaVision), work prints very likely optically printed onto regular 35mm.

  • @NomeCultJoe
    @NomeCultJoe 2 года назад

    He had charisma and was a chad, maybe that's why he had the former but to regard his acting as anything exceeding ordinary is extraordinary

  • @hookywookywithmalarkyman704
    @hookywookywithmalarkyman704 2 года назад +2

    There was onl 1 Marlon .

  • @2696ize
    @2696ize 2 года назад

    I always like this movie. For all the reasons mentioned. Brando was great.

  • @WingZeroSymphonics
    @WingZeroSymphonics 7 месяцев назад

    Yeah man its true, that was great cinematography!

  • @davemarr7743
    @davemarr7743 Год назад

    I loved One-Eyed Jack's right down to the title...

  • @stever1791
    @stever1791 2 года назад +4

    Martin Scorsese also worked on the Elvis On Tour movie - with Elvis, I wonder what his thoughts are about working or meeting Elvis ?

    • @ajsmith5295
      @ajsmith5295 2 года назад

      He didn't meet him, he only worked on it in the studio and mixing camera shots, split screen etc

    • @stever1791
      @stever1791 2 года назад +2

      @@ajsmith5295 Oh ok , Thank you for that information.

  • @JohannesYtterstrom
    @JohannesYtterstrom Год назад

    I got a hold of some strange DVD-version of this. The picture quality was really bad but I still liked the movie. I will buy a better version of it someday and enjoy it again. Now when I've seen quite a few Marlon Brando movies.. This is one I would really recommend.

  • @romanclay1913
    @romanclay1913 Год назад

    "He didn't give me no selection."

  • @omarlozano3219
    @omarlozano3219 4 месяца назад

    SCORSESE FILM GENIUS 🎞🎬📽✊🏽🔥🔥

  • @wladymirociaccia9201
    @wladymirociaccia9201 Год назад +1

    Bravo Scorsese!

  • @SuperBagshot
    @SuperBagshot Год назад

    Scorsese knows his craft

  • @johns8596
    @johns8596 7 месяцев назад

    Someone bullied the bully. Lol
    Two artistic giants that want to run things.
    Brando vs kubrick.
    I generally dont love westerns but this one was the most underrated ever.
    Yeah he brought something else to the western genre.
    Reuniting again with karl.
    It was more than just lets get the natives...yeee haw or rescue the girl. It was an anti hero and it influenced leone.
    It was a deep character study of two men. And their interactions were among some of the best acting you'll ever see.

  • @Johnconno
    @Johnconno 2 года назад

    'Old smoked meat! You're about the last of your kind old man.'

  • @funshine817
    @funshine817 2 года назад +8

    What the Hell is up with those Brando eyes! 😍😍

    • @daviddaemon
      @daviddaemon 2 года назад +1

      Especially on the hill when arrested by the federales. With his face facing ahead, his eyes are nearly closed as he raises both arms to the air in defeat.

  • @fcassini007
    @fcassini007 Год назад

    The master!

  • @apollosun2725
    @apollosun2725 Год назад

    Marty is expressing his envy towards Brando

  • @Missjunebugfreak
    @Missjunebugfreak Год назад +1

    If only Scorsese had got to work with Brando in his prime. Two titans of cinema.

  • @ajsmith5295
    @ajsmith5295 2 года назад +1

    My favourite Western, Brilliant and underestimated

  • @mark11967AD
    @mark11967AD 2 года назад +2

    Honestly I think if someone had committed murder or anything else for hardcore cinemafiles like Marty it just doesn’t matter. Similarly with someone who wrote a great novel or short story. I mean I kind of have to agree the two are separate and only mildly relevant to the other. I say this partly because some actors are beyond eccentric and like other driven elite people in their field hurt a lot of people. Many say Brando was one of those destructive types.

  • @harry2928
    @harry2928 2 года назад +3

    very fascinating the things these auteurs and various associates see in film that the avg. joe /us only occasionally perceive. I say occasionally because some of it I do feel or see but I might be 16 instead of 57 when I watch a picture the 1st time. Artists make the best scientists. They are already innately much more observant than someone who has to Learn observation in a stifling college classroom.

  • @johnpritchard5410
    @johnpritchard5410 2 года назад

    you're not a one-eyed jack to me, Dad; I've seen the other side of your face....

  • @Jakub.K0
    @Jakub.K0 Год назад +1

    Brandos only directorial debut to this day is an enjoyable movie, Kubrick was so embarrassed of his first he wanted to erase every copy. I can't imagine Brando putting up with Stanley's 60-80 takes 😂

  • @spb7883
    @spb7883 2 года назад

    Would’ve loved to watch this without the fade edits.
    Year?

  • @dr.aniasara7038
    @dr.aniasara7038 Год назад

    Loving you Marty, wish I could sit with you.

  • @johnpritchard5410
    @johnpritchard5410 2 года назад

    like giving the baby a hammer...

  • @johnhetherington8830
    @johnhetherington8830 2 года назад

    enough is enough

  • @timforde6944
    @timforde6944 2 года назад

    Oh yeah p.s. you've got no Time

  • @vascoespañol
    @vascoespañol Год назад

    Rethric level in the US os crap. Ummmm uhh ummm uh ummmm

  • @yokoreia
    @yokoreia 2 года назад +3

    Only Kurosawa and Kubrick matters, others are side shows.

    • @January.
      @January. 2 года назад

      *matter

    • @ruly8153
      @ruly8153 2 года назад +7

      That’s a thick slice of bullshit my friend

    • @John-xk2sd
      @John-xk2sd 2 года назад +1

      John Ford was the master of Westerns

    • @immanuelcunt7296
      @immanuelcunt7296 2 года назад

      Horseshit

    • @DMalltheway
      @DMalltheway Год назад +1

      @@John-xk2sdHoward Hawks too

  • @ct1216
    @ct1216 Год назад

    Why do you talk about Brando no need

  • @chrischichester7823
    @chrischichester7823 2 года назад +1

    Is Marlon Brando Jesus Christ? He’s an actor. Get a grip, America. He didn’t save lives or conduct research or do anything without faking it. Capiche, Martin. Screaming ‘Stella’ like a violent sociopath and mumbling to Al Pacino is nothing special America baby.

    • @stynershiner1854
      @stynershiner1854 2 года назад

      He donated money to many organisations. He was an advocate of civil rights movement and the plight of blacks in America and was one of the first champions of Native Americans in the media back then. He may not have literally saved lives, but he used his position as an actor to bring light to such issues.

    • @chrischichester7823
      @chrischichester7823 2 года назад +1

      Fair enough. Good points. If that's true he is just like millions of Americans. An actor that participates in politics, public life and political causes is exercising a First Amendment right. That's praiseworthy. An actor that condescends to 50% of Americans by telling those Americans each is immoral or unethical is in the arena. The arena is opposition. I don't care if Vanessa Redgrave is a radical for terrorists in the Palestinian Liberation Organization or Olympia Dukakis supports the presidential candidacy of her cousin Michael Dukakis. These two made political statements an issue in public, and each is in the arena that will provoke opinions. Hollywood for 40+ years is a one-party totalitarian state. It is the radical Left and that's why the Academy Awards is a ridiculous emotional confession that the Democrat National Committee can script.

  • @thomaslopez155
    @thomaslopez155 Год назад

    😂😂😂😂bursts 😂😂😂man just spitting uslees words CAREER of words
    .....AMERICAN DOSENT NEED YOUR VIOLENT MOVES YES GOOD ,BUT DOSE NOT TELL AMERICAN HISTORY AT ALL JUST VIOLENCE...HISTORY....😂😂😂