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The Third Man - Final Scene

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  • Опубликовано: 20 июн 2010
  • Anna walks out of Holly Martins' life.

Комментарии • 447

  • @Horror-Man
    @Horror-Man 5 лет назад +390

    One of the saddest, most delicately beautiful endings of all time.

    • @normanmeharry58
      @normanmeharry58 5 лет назад +30

      And a good debating point for what the movie means. Greene thought an entertainment so favoured a happy ending. Reed saw profundity and this was the one. Thank goodness.

    • @fede018
      @fede018 4 года назад +2

      @Bruno56 SHE was no good for him? You got it backwards, pal.
      And I agree that it's not a sad ending.

    • @Kurodo222
      @Kurodo222 3 года назад +16

      @@fede018 the person you replied to deleted their comment but you're wrong. She wasn't good for him, he was a good guy who deserves better than someone who sympathises with a child killer

    • @brickhouse7401
      @brickhouse7401 3 года назад +11

      @@Kurodo222 I agree. Somehow Martins, a person with morals, fell under the spell of the unethical Anna, when all she could feel was the charisma of the disgusting Harry Lime.

    • @Jeff_Lichtman
      @Jeff_Lichtman 3 года назад +3

      @@brickhouse7401 Before then he was under the spell of Harry Lime.

  • @carolcallas
    @carolcallas 4 года назад +282

    She won’t even look at him, not while dropping dirt in Harry’s grave, she won’t pass by the Jeep he’s standing by, she won’t even acknowledge him standing in the road. He lights a cigarette in frustration and throws the match away...she has extinguished his flame 🔥 without even speaking. The poetic power of silence in this closing scene is simply astonishing.

    • @lesg.7983
      @lesg.7983 Год назад +7

      Well stated.

    • @Kidraver555
      @Kidraver555 Год назад

      Sounds like you are expert at playing with men's emotion's, sexual power will not get you the respect you really want, you have to earn that.

    • @Felipe4352
      @Felipe4352 Год назад +8

      Estoy de acuerdo. Esa escena final realmente me hace pedazos.

    • @barrycroucher602
      @barrycroucher602 Год назад +7

      What a great ending to a great film !

    • @henryseidel5469
      @henryseidel5469 Год назад +4

      It leaves the decision of who is right and who is wrong up to the audience. What a great ending: Not happy and not sad.

  • @Jeff_Lichtman
    @Jeff_Lichtman 4 года назад +165

    One way to look at The Third Man is that it's about a man having his illusions of himself and his place in the world shattered one by one. This closing shot, with Anna completely ignoring him as she walks past, is the final brick through the window.

    • @jeanharper2790
      @jeanharper2790 11 месяцев назад +13

      Really! I strongly disagree. Anna barely knew him (Holly Martins) and had zero interest in him. She was deeply in love with the scoundrel Harry Lime, who was trying to stay one step ahead of the law. She was a lost cause and Holly was rather a romantic! Women don't encourage men in situations such as these by looking at them, smiling, nodding, or otherwise acknowledging by them, men misinterpret! If Anna had done so, it would have sent a signal to Holly that he would misinterpret. She wanted to be alone with her pain.
      As to Holly and his illusions, I just don't think his character is that deep. He barely reacted to Harry's speech at the ferris wheel! He just knows Harry did something bad.
      I adore all of the actors, and it's been my favorite film since high school. I'm 70 now, seen many films, this one at least 8 times, and if I live long enough I'll see it 8 more.😂 Thanks for letting me sound off.

    • @magloyd4907
      @magloyd4907 6 месяцев назад +9

      ​@@jeanharper2790 Others have said that Holly represents American optimism not understanding a jaded, cynical, exhausted post-war Europe, and having his romantic notions of Harry and her crushed by reality.

    • @magloyd4907
      @magloyd4907 6 месяцев назад +5

      It's been interpreted as American optimism meeting a jaded, cynical, exhausted, post war Europe.

    • @jeanharper2790
      @jeanharper2790 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@magloyd4907 Personally, I think the cat had a lot more to to say!

    • @larrykelly-kf5pp
      @larrykelly-kf5pp Месяц назад

      @@magloyd4907harry was American wasn’t he? So… jaded cynical profiteer American meets optimistic American? (Two paths? Which will America choose?) Would Anne be exhausted beaten up Europe in this scenario?

  • @Tocsin-Bang
    @Tocsin-Bang 6 лет назад +168

    One of the greatest films of all time.

    • @patrickboone6960
      @patrickboone6960 6 лет назад +5

      Stephen Cook yes

    • @tonybennett4159
      @tonybennett4159 5 лет назад +3

      @@patrickboone6960 Yes, its one of those films like The Innocents, for example, where it's difficult to think of any way in which they could be improved.

  • @henryseidel5469
    @henryseidel5469 6 лет назад +202

    This scene is a unique witness of the emotionality of the post war period. Nothing compares to that. Absolutely great.

    • @jwmc41
      @jwmc41 2 года назад +14

      Yes, and no one else could have made or played the music like Anton Karas

    • @henryseidel5469
      @henryseidel5469 2 года назад +6

      @@jwmc41 He was the most capable and the cheapest band to accompany the plot of a movie.

    • @alessandrocaboni5882
      @alessandrocaboni5882 Год назад +1

      Magnifico. 2:08

    • @joelonzello4189
      @joelonzello4189 Месяц назад +1

      My Mother saw ruined cities like that making her way back to Germany from Krakow. Lost her at 96.

  • @janetwolfman7100
    @janetwolfman7100 5 лет назад +172

    Just watched this last long shot scene a dozen times. Amazed at the subtlety of the acting and the music. Really leaves one with a lump in the throat and tears. This has got to be one of the best endings in the history of cinema

    • @pato2200
      @pato2200 2 года назад +7

      Yes.
      so understated and subtle but heartwrenchingly powerful.

    • @raymondgood6555
      @raymondgood6555 Год назад +12

      I’ve always thought it was the single greatest scene in movie history

    • @marycrow3939
      @marycrow3939 Год назад +1

      @@raymondgood6555 I agree

    • @carefulconsumer8682
      @carefulconsumer8682 Год назад +3

      “The location at the end of the film is one of the main avenues of the cemetery, Zentral-Friedhof, Vienna, which runs southeast from Section 59E to Section 64. Lime’s interment takes place in Section 43A, just southwest of the church.” From what I read. One of the most classic scenes in film history captured by this director.

    • @carlospach654
      @carlospach654 8 месяцев назад

      Agreed

  • @paacer
    @paacer Год назад +32

    Pure genius ending from the Director . Mesmerising performance from Alida Valli as Anna .

  • @Lowtread
    @Lowtread 12 лет назад +127

    I love that she walks past the viewer as well so that you viscerally experience the same cold expression of indifference that Holly does!

    • @seandafny
      @seandafny 3 года назад +5

      Felt so bad for him. This is my life. I experience this sometimes twice a day.

    • @ramonmiranda223
      @ramonmiranda223 3 года назад +8

      can't agree more! she walks past the camera off at an angle vs her coming straight at the camera before this; no choice, actually.

  • @peterallebone6446
    @peterallebone6446 6 лет назад +86

    The best ending of any film - ever! When I first saw it as a kid, I thought how amazing it would be if the camera just waited for her to pass - in real time, but was sure they never would . . . and then they did! Loved it then, still do now!

    • @pato2200
      @pato2200 2 года назад +8

      I agree.
      It is so understated but that adds to its poignancy and power

    • @m.carmensanchezagudo4004
      @m.carmensanchezagudo4004 2 года назад +8

      And then you think the cut to Calloway will bring a little ellipsis to shorten her walk... And no! Glorious!!

  • @sobojetty
    @sobojetty 6 лет назад +106

    The mother of all movie endings!

  • @thomashogan16
    @thomashogan16 6 лет назад +35

    The priest is saying the Apostles' Creed over the grave. Same one as we said at Mass today. Timeless, this movie and its message. Love. No matter. Tears.

  • @humblescribe8522
    @humblescribe8522 4 года назад +63

    I first saw this at a University Film Club showing in the 80s, and it was this ending that sold the film to me, wholeheartedly. I was expecting the big Hollywood reconciliation. When she just walks past him and off down the arcarde of trees, I literally gasped. Yet it felt so right, so completely in keeping with what we know of Anna, that I couldn't help reflect on how every decision the film had made seemed to be the right one. Thirty years later, this is still my favourite film, and I watch it every year.

    • @raymondgood6555
      @raymondgood6555 Год назад +4

      Me too!!

    • @py8554
      @py8554 Год назад +2

      Hollywood no longer makes movies with this kind of ending. And neither the ending like Casablanca or the Roman Holiday.

    • @obscure.reference
      @obscure.reference 4 месяца назад

      @@py8554 la la land was less than ten years ago

    • @py8554
      @py8554 4 месяца назад +1

      @@obscure.reference Indeed LaLaLand is a rare exception to my observation, and being a film that was made with many a tributes to movies from the bygone eras it may not be so much of surprise. Personally I don’t like the movie but I really love the ending.

  • @andrewmasters8212
    @andrewmasters8212 5 лет назад +128

    Such a beautiful ending, and totally consistent with the story. It would have made no sense for Anna and Martins to end up together. A few other things I love about this scene:
    1. When Martins leans against that cart it's like he's standing in a painting.
    2. The music is stunning. I love the discordant twang that Karas throws in from time to time.

  • @johnmckillop7741
    @johnmckillop7741 4 года назад +30

    I have loved that movie, and especially it's final scene, for about 70 years - so far. I can't watch it without tears.

  • @0276boy
    @0276boy 11 лет назад +106

    The most soul-renching ending of any movie ever made. I weep to this day watching it. The finest and most haunting exploration of love the world has ever seen on the screen.

    • @brickhouse7401
      @brickhouse7401 5 лет назад +3

      Totally agree

    • @seandafny
      @seandafny 3 года назад +1

      Watch paranormal activity 3

    • @Bu-bo-Bu-bo
      @Bu-bo-Bu-bo 2 года назад +3

      I first saw the movie when i was 8, and only began to feel it when i felt love. But since then i have seen it maybe 10 or 15 times. It's a very powerful movie.

    • @deanwalker9605
      @deanwalker9605 Год назад +2

      You clearly haven't seen La Strada

    • @henryseidel5469
      @henryseidel5469 8 месяцев назад

      Is it really love to adore someone who easily sacrifices an despises human lives for his own greediness ?
      I don't think so.

  • @rogkeista1
    @rogkeista1 11 лет назад +59

    This sends shivers down my spine. Cinema at its best.

  • @JoseCortes-on6uy
    @JoseCortes-on6uy 6 лет назад +265

    A single sustained long shot briefly interrupted by a take of Trevor Howard taking off in his jeep. It's funny how a scene like this can make one gape in astonishment - it's like a tightrope act - while multi-million-dollar movies bursting at the seams with digital effects, frenzied cutting, backstory instead of drama, plus violence and cruelty, and nihilism as a pose cynically marketed as "realism", are so yawn-inducing. Those are my two bits. Thank you for reading.

    • @xlz24
      @xlz24 5 лет назад +11

      Sir, this is a Wendy's.

    • @elih9700
      @elih9700 4 года назад +2

      Outfuckingstanding sir.

    • @chrismorrison2805
      @chrismorrison2805 4 года назад +6

      this shot has stayed with me for days....I am so sad for the future of humans...real art has been replaced with wanting more.

    • @seandafny
      @seandafny 3 года назад

      Ok but Endgame was great too

    • @gardensofthegods
      @gardensofthegods 3 года назад +1

      So true , as the saying goes , they don't make 'em like they used to .

  • @patricktee6305
    @patricktee6305 3 года назад +13

    The compelling, yet understated, final scene from "The third man" (1949), a film I haven't forgotten even after 70+ years.

  • @ProofreadEnglish
    @ProofreadEnglish 5 лет назад +149

    There was an argument between the screenwriter, Graham Greene and the director/producer on how to end the picture. In Greene's initial draft/novella, Anna goes off with Rollo (Holly). But Selznick and Reed felt this "happy ending" would be too artificial. And they definitely made the right call. To me, it was clear through the whole picture that the person Anna loved was Harry - no matter what he had done (including to her). And she could not forgive Holly's betrayal. It would have diluted her character (and been entirely inconsistent with the rest of the film) if she'd thrown her previous principles aside and gone off with Holly. If you watch the other scene with her and Holly (just before Harry appears in the street), he does realise that his love for her is unrequited. There's nothing he can say or do that will make her return his love because Harry is constantly on her mind - even if she believes him dead.

    • @brickhouse7401
      @brickhouse7401 5 лет назад +26

      Lime was intensely corrupt and psychopathic yet Anna's devotion to him seems somehow authentic even though she's very intelligent and knows what he reaĺly is.

    • @normanmeharry58
      @normanmeharry58 5 лет назад +7

      Isn't that love perfectly captured?

    • @Jeff_Lichtman
      @Jeff_Lichtman 4 года назад +16

      "A person doesn't change just because you find out more." - Anna

    • @marcuscato9083
      @marcuscato9083 2 года назад +3

      Definitely glad that Graham Greene didn’t get his way here. That would feel so wrong.

    • @AlunThomas-mp5qo
      @AlunThomas-mp5qo Год назад

      @@marcuscato9083 I totally agree with you, it makes a realistic ending. Far too many films end with a ludicrous romance that would NEVER happen in real life.

  • @johnthatcher2014
    @johnthatcher2014 2 года назад +11

    best closing scene in the history of cinema

  • @bill291212
    @bill291212 6 лет назад +33

    That wailing zither gives me chills.

  • @QMPhilosophe
    @QMPhilosophe 12 лет назад +50

    I agree wholeheartedly. My favorite ending from any film. It's devastating. The entire film is a work of art. Not one bad shot.

  • @ratherknotty
    @ratherknotty 6 лет назад +39

    This perfect, final piece of brilliant music by Anton Karas is "Farewell to Vienna"

  • @gerrydonnelly9882
    @gerrydonnelly9882 2 года назад +23

    The greatest masterpiece of cinema ever created.
    I have watched it over 50 times and I can not find a flaw in the entire movie!
    In vienna a few years ago , went on the prater (the ferris wheel )and stood in
    the famous doorway.
    Joseph Cotton s
    voice echoing across the cobble streets and Anton Karras
    zither playing in my head.

    • @johnfellows2867
      @johnfellows2867 Год назад +1

      Went to Vienna about 20 years ago and did exactly the same !

    • @stephenvanwoert2447
      @stephenvanwoert2447 Год назад +1

      No flaw? How about illumination in the sewer system? Correct me if I'm wrong.

    • @stephenvanwoert2447
      @stephenvanwoert2447 Год назад

      @@johnfellows2867 For me, 30 years ago at the Prater. The ferris wheel and the roller coaster. A real kick.

  • @RedOcktober
    @RedOcktober 11 лет назад +43

    that ending... that magnificent ending...
    --Mike

    • @sergio42868
      @sergio42868 12 дней назад

      And the magic of the place where the scene takes place

  • @gokhansayram
    @gokhansayram 4 года назад +6

    One of the best ending shots ever recorded. Look at the photography!

  • @CJBlanda
    @CJBlanda 2 года назад +10

    One of the10 Best films in film history.

  • @jeanharper2790
    @jeanharper2790 11 месяцев назад +4

    The stunning Valli, with whom every man in the film falls in love, walks down the lane of trees with no leaves accompanied by the zither music of the great Anton Karas. This is my favorite film.

  • @steelmank4771
    @steelmank4771 7 месяцев назад +2

    As a youngster I watched this movie with my dad. Despite being one of hundreds, it left a lasting impression I haven't felt duplicated in 65+ years since. I credit the haunting theme of "The Third Man." It's played so effectively on the zither, this closing scene conveys to the viewer the loneliness Anna feels in her walk - as well as the helplessness Martins has in his desire to aid her. This movie's plot, musical score, skillful acting and the camera angles of this closing scene are the sum of it's parts that create this Extraordinary Classic indeed !

  • @martial234
    @martial234 12 лет назад +16

    The ending shot gets me going emotionally everytime, everytime! The gloomness and music just some up everything that I would expect to feel in a post-war period. The whole film is absolutly magnificent!

  • @henryseidel5469
    @henryseidel5469 Год назад +3

    That was the first movie my grandpa watched in a cinema after he had come home from a POW camp in 1948. He told me of this movie all his life long whenever I met him. And when he heard Anton Karas' cither on the radio there was silence in the room immediately, the family sat down without anyone telling them, and they listened attentively to the beautiful tune without saying a single word.

    • @johnm7012
      @johnm7012 2 месяца назад

      My dad loved it too. Here is a very nice rendition played on guitar by Evangelos Assimakopoulos: ruclips.net/video/J6updqgVsAU/видео.html

  • @firefightergoggie
    @firefightergoggie 4 года назад +8

    Every frame of this movie was like a portrait. Outstanding ending.

  • @jdecastilla6545
    @jdecastilla6545 6 лет назад +55

    The saddest scene in movie history

    • @randywhite3947
      @randywhite3947 3 года назад

      How so?

    • @NormAppleton
      @NormAppleton 3 года назад +6

      It's sad but it's so honest. I felt sad the first time I saw it but I feel better every time since. Holly loses here but Anna doesn't. They both will look back on this time with love but they weren't going to end up together.

    • @raymondgood6555
      @raymondgood6555 Год назад

      @@randywhite3947 guess you’ve never been in love

  • @scopex2749
    @scopex2749 6 лет назад +19

    A superb film but sad in many ways The music was AWESOME by Anton Karas and Orson Welles was a masterpiece!! The sadest ending of any movie in all time.............. I was only young when I first saw this wonderful movie and fell head over heels for Valli. Such a stunning looking actress her presence on film was electrifying. Sad for me now as my late father LOVED the film and the music - it always reminds me of him.

    • @peterallebone6446
      @peterallebone6446 6 лет назад +2

      The music WAS awesome - and amazingly, the only Oscar category for which the film wasn`t nominated?!

    • @_dan_gutierrez
      @_dan_gutierrez 3 месяца назад

      For the saddest ending of all time, I will direct you to the end of The Breaking Point (1950) a noir film starring John Garfield. The young boy left fatherless is sadder and heartbreaking, and much worse than the ending of this film. I do agree that the ending of the Third Man is one of the best endings ever crafted in film on multiple levels. It is the quintessential noir ending.

  •  6 лет назад +31

    The longest, most devastating walk in movie history. Marilyn Monroe fans eat your heart out!

  • @donniedarko1234
    @donniedarko1234 Год назад +3

    this IS one of the best ending in all of cinema. the cherry on top for such a great film

  • @tamazpatarkalashvili2811
    @tamazpatarkalashvili2811 6 лет назад +13

    Unforgettable film and music, can see and listen everyday

  • @dashawnmitchell832
    @dashawnmitchell832 5 лет назад +27

    That was breathtaking

  • @mpslegalcom7697
    @mpslegalcom7697 9 месяцев назад +3

    This if the best hauntingly devastating ending of any movie. The nostalgic chaotic chords of Anton Karas drive this post-WWII European film noir to its sad poetic ending. And The Third Man lives on forever with its meaning and romance still haunting us to this day. Beautiful!

  • @ziggerwebdesign1704
    @ziggerwebdesign1704 Год назад +2

    I did the Third Man tour in Vienna years ago and was fine until, in the cellar of a little bar, a lovely lady played the theme on a zither. "Are you crying?" asked my wife.
    The greatest film of all time.

  • @InvisibleRightLegLad
    @InvisibleRightLegLad 12 лет назад +15

    I've seen this movie many, many times.
    The ending makes me well up with tears about 1 in 3 times. It's just so perfect.

  • @windstorm1000
    @windstorm1000 12 лет назад +10

    This ending is so simple--simply devastating. You don't need CGI, explosions to create good films--don't tell today's filmakers that!!!

  • @holgerhansen7078
    @holgerhansen7078 5 лет назад +35

    If you believe in love, you'll realize that this is the best film ending ever.

  • @matthewgrasso7167
    @matthewgrasso7167 Год назад +69

    Such a great ending. It's
    devastating, beautiful, and kinda funny. Almost every guy has had that experience of some girl they were in love with but she isn't into him and worse, the person she's hung up on doesn't give a shit about her and at some point all you can do is give up and say "Goddam it", I love the way Martins throws the match at the end.

    • @brickhouse7401
      @brickhouse7401 Год назад +5

      Yeah apparently Joseph Cotton (Martins) winged that cigarette and match thing. Wasn't in script. I like that part too. Glad you noticed it.
      If you watch the end of Scorsese's 'The Departed', very similar

    • @stephenvanwoert2447
      @stephenvanwoert2447 Год назад +2

      "One loves, the other is loved." --from "Of Human Bondage."

    • @alessandrocaboni5882
      @alessandrocaboni5882 11 месяцев назад

      Wonderful ❤️

  • @J.J.Fox.1953.
    @J.J.Fox.1953. Год назад +4

    Devastating, emotional and powerful, this music has immortalised "The Third Man" in the history of cinema.

  • @probono3284
    @probono3284 5 лет назад +7

    I think this is the best film ever made. I must have watched it 20 times but it’s just as brilliant now as when I first saw it. There are so many magic moments - my favourite is when the cat is at Harry Lime’s shoe then we see him for the first time and the music changes.
    I love the fact that so many others feel the same, I wish we could all meet one day in Vienna!

    • @normanmeharry58
      @normanmeharry58 5 лет назад +2

      Decent film making is made up of 'hot-spots'... the more the better usually. But this movie has such a glut of good visual and dialogue hot-spots to spoil the discerning audience and then it's topped off with Karas' music.. What an achievement

    • @brickhouse7401
      @brickhouse7401 3 года назад

      @Pro Bono Third Man movie locations tour. Sign me up

  • @brickhouse7401
    @brickhouse7401 5 лет назад +9

    Mother told me she saw this film around 1948 on a date after spending WW2 in the Women's Land Army. She had to go back, alone, to the theater to see the film again the next evening, because it haunted her.

    • @randywhite3947
      @randywhite3947 3 года назад +1

      Impossible this film came out in 1949

    • @brickhouse7401
      @brickhouse7401 3 года назад +2

      @Randy White 'Around' 1948 ie '47, '49, or a bit earlier or later. 'Around' is vernacular for 'approximately' when one is discussing dates.

    • @billybizar
      @billybizar Год назад

      @@brickhouse7401 wrong answer. You have to be precise. Considering the fact that the release date was on 31 augustus 1949 in the UK and even much later in the US makes your answer inadequate. Much better would be: ´around ´50 ´.

    • @brickhouse7401
      @brickhouse7401 Год назад +1

      @@billybizar Listen to yourself. 'Wrong answer?' Give me a break. Thank her for her service. She's 102 and she might like that

  • @modestmouse9451
    @modestmouse9451 10 месяцев назад +4

    Greatest movie ending scene of all time.

  • @arap_brandich
    @arap_brandich 4 года назад +4

    Anna walking out of his life must be one of the saddest in the history of motion pictures. No effects, just raw emotion.

  • @ichirofakename
    @ichirofakename 2 года назад +7

    Every time I watch this clip, she walks RIGHT PAST HIM. Dang...

  • @thelawofitself
    @thelawofitself 2 года назад +18

    If you want to see an old man cry, then just show me this scene. Unforgotten, Mr. Anton Karras may you rest in peace 😢

    • @larryboyes7276
      @larryboyes7276 Год назад +2

      If there is a scene in any film with more appropriate music, I've yet to witness it.

    • @thelawofitself
      @thelawofitself Год назад +1

      @@larryboyes7276 Amen to that🙏

  • @les13robinson
    @les13robinson Год назад +6

    A hauntingly beautiful, melancholy scene. The sense of sadness and desolation made more so by the inability of the characters to communicate. A masterful film, where music has the power to transform the ordinary to something truly extraordinary. My favourite film, along with David Lean's Doctor Zhivago.

  • @stonesofvenice
    @stonesofvenice 5 лет назад +12

    My favorite movie ever.

  • @Frege100
    @Frege100 11 месяцев назад +3

    I heard that neither Cotton nor Valli knew what was going on when the scene was filmed. Cotton had no idea that Aldi had been told to walk past him. I always thought this was a great Graham Greene moment with devotion and faith edging out earthly compromise but in fact his original ending was a happy one and Reed changed it. Greene later agreed with him.

  • @simonyeo3246
    @simonyeo3246 2 года назад +6

    Makes me want to start smoking again

  • @edmondscott7444
    @edmondscott7444 Год назад +3

    What a wonderful film from a Graham Greene novella directed by Carol Reed. Stars Joseph Cotten, Alida Valli and the great Orson Welles. Music by Anton Karas. Best of British.

  • @jamesdrynan
    @jamesdrynan 2 года назад +2

    The skeletal trees in black and white frame the finale of The Third Man. Brilliant direction by Carol Reed. Bitterly sweet zither music paints a picture of loss and heartache.

  • @musikafossora
    @musikafossora 8 месяцев назад

    I wish I could watch this for the first time again...this scene took my breath away.

  • @moviemonk1000
    @moviemonk1000 12 лет назад +20

    Carol Reed a true artist insured that his ending would nbe timeless ..and so it is for viewers to ponder and isnt that what great cinema is all about?

  • @12classics39
    @12classics39 2 года назад +6

    The most anti-cliche ending of all time. The hero doesn’t get the girl. And yet, somehow, we’re not mad about it. That is clever writing right there.

  • @giuseppeisoli313
    @giuseppeisoli313 3 года назад +3

    Magnifico finale. Uno dei migliori visti!

  • @seandafny
    @seandafny 3 года назад +5

    One can’t just... leave...

  • @jpsned
    @jpsned 2 года назад +3

    My parents and I loved this film... ❤️

  • @kevingarrett2330
    @kevingarrett2330 Год назад +4

    I like happy endings. Imagine what would have happened if she had gone with him. She would have been cold and distant, saving her love for a man who didn’t really love anyone else but himself.
    She, knew this about herself and did Holly a favor by passing him by.

  • @bigcoolviking
    @bigcoolviking 4 года назад +2

    One of the Most Iconic clips in Movie History, magical.

  • @pauldeering6531
    @pauldeering6531 11 месяцев назад +1

    Its all about the atmosphere..the atmosphere completes the film.

  • @harrylimeracketeer
    @harrylimeracketeer 5 лет назад +11

    Sometimes I just gotta watch this scene.

  • @halwasserman7905
    @halwasserman7905 Год назад +1

    So beautiful. You have to wonder in an industry where filmmakers copy each other all the time why there has never been another movie remotely like The Third Man.

  • @barringtongilbert9230
    @barringtongilbert9230 5 месяцев назад

    Can you imagine if the match hadn't lit....cut....do it again!..Greatest ever ending to my fave film of all time. Perfection...timing, acting...just pure perfection.

  • @JamesLeaveyConnections
    @JamesLeaveyConnections Год назад +1

    Been to that very spot 25 years ago. Couldn't find Joseph Cotten's discarded cigarette...but I can dream. Great film, and cemetery. Followed in the footsteps of Harry Lime. Had a memorable lunch at the Hotel Sacher with The Third Man's assistant film director. Wrote several articles about Carol Reed's brilliant British movie..🎬🎼😎❤

  • @jas20per
    @jas20per 4 года назад +7

    I have watched this film many times and enjoyed it. But there is one thing in this final scene that grinds my gears, Firstly leaves falling from trees with no leaves and you never see them land on the ground also, the scene with Trevor Woward in the Jeep there are no leaves on the road. Nonetheless one of the best finest "Film Noir "ever made

    • @marciofernando679
      @marciofernando679 Год назад +1

      São as poucas que ainda estão caindo e cada vez que vejo moto uma que não tinha notado cena poderosa e emocionante sem um dialogo na travessia

  • @dizbang3073
    @dizbang3073 5 лет назад +9

    She's broken my heart about 25 times.

  • @johnzajac9849
    @johnzajac9849 Год назад +1

    The officer who drove off knew what it was all about. Marvelous ending of this grand film.
    We're going to pour ourselves another Scotch, listen to the zither theme, and shed a tear.

  • @tonysilver7937
    @tonysilver7937 5 лет назад +3

    One of my favourite movie scenes great music too !!

  • @QMPhilosophe
    @QMPhilosophe 12 лет назад +5

    I love how the camera lingers for so long on Holly.

  • @dizbang3073
    @dizbang3073 3 года назад +3

    Even the way he tosses his match right at the end ... just perfect.

    • @LewisSkeeter
      @LewisSkeeter 11 месяцев назад

      So true. The timing was flawless.

  • @ChubbyChecker182
    @ChubbyChecker182 5 месяцев назад +1

    Just caught this final scene on the TV, fantastic from when he gets out of the car 🤩

  • @moodyfeverdream
    @moodyfeverdream 11 лет назад +20

    devastating indeed. very few films have struck me with an ending as strong as this. the only other that has come close is the final shot in the 400 blows.

  • @cainocrodrigue
    @cainocrodrigue 4 года назад +4

    The greatest curve in cinematic history

  • @marianosolivellas8090
    @marianosolivellas8090 Год назад +1

    Best british movie of XX century.
    This scene is wonderful.

  • @MorganScorpion
    @MorganScorpion 3 месяца назад +2

    I know that a lot of people think Anna walking past Holly at the end is a sad ending, but I beg to differ.
    What sort of woman goes to the funeral of the man she loves, only to walk straight into the arms of another man half an hour later? Not the sort of woman you should have by your side. You'd never be able to trust her love or her loyalty. Holly may feel he's lost his love, but he's actually dodged a bullet.
    Just thought I'd add, Alida Valli later appeared in Les Yeux Sans Visage, and later still in Dario Argento's Suspiria and Inferno. Splendid actress!

  • @JHStretch
    @JHStretch 4 года назад +1

    A Truly perfect scene! Thank you for sharing!!

  • @edwardsiu4266
    @edwardsiu4266 4 года назад +2

    I wish I could see this film and especially the ending on the big screen. Perfect.

  • @donbuck8110
    @donbuck8110 6 лет назад +13

    Orson Wells said he had no imput in this but liked the idea of showing up half way into the movie because he thought it would be the most effective because it worked for him when he was doing plays. The scene with the coco clock lines was his and it worked well with J Cotten because the were old friends. BTW, Greg Toland did all the camera work. Great movie from start to finish.I saw it once on the big screen once.

    • @4Topwood
      @4Topwood 4 года назад +5

      No, Gregg Toland did not do the camera work. Robert Krasker was the cinematographer and won the Academy Award for his work.

  • @marciofernando7313
    @marciofernando7313 3 года назад +7

    A muito procurava este final!!! Lembro que quando vi esta cena pela primeira vez uma lágrima escorreu dos meus olhos😢😢😢 essa cena e de uma beleza espetacular e principalmente o instrumental de fundo👏👏👏a mais bela poesia já filmada em película❤💕

  • @Nojnotpu
    @Nojnotpu 12 лет назад +7

    @ron101346 I totally agree. Never mind about the greatest endings, this must have been one of the greatest movies ever made. The war torn Vienna setting, the Austrian actors used for the likes of Baron Kutz, Doctor Winkel, the caretaker at Lime's flat and so on were wonderful. Add to this, the music of Anton Karas (discovered in a Vienna wine bar) and the fabulous lighting and camara work. Not to mention the appearance of Orson Wells in the doorway. Just wonderful fantastic stuff.

  • @williamhicks7736
    @williamhicks7736 7 месяцев назад

    Such perfection… the framing, the pacing, the music…. I cry every time she passes through… 😭…

  • @johnfellows2867
    @johnfellows2867 3 года назад +2

    I'm in tears every time I watch this, would make a fabulous cigarette advert !!

    • @normanmeharry58
      @normanmeharry58 21 день назад

      They did in the early 60s for Strand cigarettes. Black & white ad, showing a Joe Cotton looker in coat & hat on a lonely street lighting a cigarette... with voice-over ... "your never alone with a Strand" It put them out of business because of the johnny-no-mates effect.

  • @johnwilliamknox7156
    @johnwilliamknox7156 Год назад

    This is movie Royalty! Made before it's Time a beautiful piece of historical significance and possibly to the world it's self ....Xx Priceless...xx

  • @alexanderball923
    @alexanderball923 3 года назад +6

    Nobody makes a film like this today. Unfortunately such artistry with all of it's honesty and subtlety is gone from film today. The Third Man will live forever at the pinnacle of film making.

  • @Calriec
    @Calriec 11 лет назад +6

    Just goes to show how many times true love is blind.

  • @nicholaskoulianos381
    @nicholaskoulianos381 9 месяцев назад +2

    She embodies post-WWII European anomie. Very moving. Headed into uncertainty.

  • @michaelmuldowney8
    @michaelmuldowney8 6 месяцев назад

    My favorite final shot of any movie in history. It made such an impact on a young Alan Parker that he pays homage to it in the scene of Billy walking away from the prison in Midnight Express.

  • @user-jn1tr8mo3g
    @user-jn1tr8mo3g 3 года назад +4

    Brilliant

  • @user-mi3vy3dd7b
    @user-mi3vy3dd7b 3 года назад +1

    映画史上これを超えるラストシーンは未だに無い。この映画を観ていない人にこのシーンの話をしてはいけない。。

  • @paulteti
    @paulteti 5 лет назад +6

    BEST ENDING EVER.

  • @L0r3n2
    @L0r3n2 5 лет назад +25

    To me the most realistic ending in all of cinema. Some endings should just be painful.

    • @brickhouse7401
      @brickhouse7401 5 лет назад +7

      Quite right. A heartbreaking final scene like this.. how could we ever forget

    • @normanmeharry58
      @normanmeharry58 5 лет назад +2

      It just destroys me everytime. I prepare myself for it... bite my lip, dog my nails in my palm... distract myself with pain... but she walks forever towards me & I'm weeping.

    • @randywhite3947
      @randywhite3947 3 года назад

      The book ends on a positive note

  • @christopherwibberley8984
    @christopherwibberley8984 3 года назад +1

    I have just purchased this film on 16mm.It cost megabucks but just watching this scene makes me realise that actually it is priceless. I can’t wait to get it up on a big screen

  • @jasonmarlow9735
    @jasonmarlow9735 2 года назад +1

    As I leave Vienna this morning, a place that is impossible to not love, I feel like now in some way I understand how Mr. Martins feels.

  • @james5460
    @james5460 Год назад +1

    "One can't just ... leave."