Richard III - Scene 3

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  • Опубликовано: 30 апр 2008
  • Richard III Scene 3

Комментарии • 331

  • @Crichjo32
    @Crichjo32 10 лет назад +268

    This is the greatest example of why having the villain as the main character is awesome!

    • @Jelutro
      @Jelutro 6 лет назад +20

      if it was done well you wouldnt see him as the villain. The bad guy doesnt know he is the bad guy. In his mind he is completely justified. You should fall in love with the bad guy if done right

    • @Kelly14UK
      @Kelly14UK 6 лет назад +1

      Yup

    • @Herodollus
      @Herodollus 5 лет назад +15

      @@Jelutro well, in richard iii the audience is supposed to fall in love with him, knowing he is a villain, with himself admitting to it, much like lady anne

    • @Crichjo32
      @Crichjo32 3 года назад +6

      @@Jelutro I feel like Richard very much knew he was the villain, and he was having a lot of fun doing so.

    • @Jelutro
      @Jelutro 3 года назад +4

      @@Crichjo32 I have since been studying acting as a career for the past 3 years and I totally take back what I said haha. How naive I was haha. Sir Ian is one of the acting greats and you're right. His sense of self delight is incredible

  • @douglasmilton2805
    @douglasmilton2805 3 года назад +132

    Genius move to have had the first part of this speech delivered to an adoring public, then have Richard confide in us his real motives...while having a slash, which is about us intimate as you get. So hard to find a new way to deliver famous Shakespeare soliloquies. David Tennant does it very well with 'To be or not to be...'.

  • @Nolaris3
    @Nolaris3 Год назад +45

    I like how they modernized his deformity by giving him a withered arm, the same issue as Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany

    • @323guiltyspark
      @323guiltyspark 3 месяца назад +4

      Holy shit, I didn't realize that until you mentioned it. Same arm too.

    • @alandimes579
      @alandimes579 20 дней назад

      @@323guiltyspark An interesting parallel, sure, but it's in the original. Henry VI. Part Three. Richard's soliloquy, Act III, Scene II: Why, Love forswore me in my mother’s womb,
      And, for I should not deal in her soft laws,
      She did corrupt frail Nature with some bribe
      To shrink mine arm up like a withered shrub;
      To make an envious mountain on my back...

  • @colinmoore5991
    @colinmoore5991 6 лет назад +209

    I always loved the way Jim Broadbent laughs when McKellen delivers the line "...our dreadful marches to delightful measures", as though it's some kind of terribly funny inside joke between the two of them.

    • @photo161
      @photo161 6 лет назад +10

      It must be an inside joke because it doesn't make any sense to anyone else the way McKellen does it

    • @JustSomeCanadianGuy
      @JustSomeCanadianGuy 5 лет назад +6

      Kind of a problem I have with Shakespeare is that's how I read EVERY moment where a character laughs. :D

    • @davidbaird2211
      @davidbaird2211 4 года назад +23

      Colin Moore I took it to mean that Broadbent’s character (Buckingham) is just a power hungry sycophant trying to flatter his betters.

    • @fermintenava5911
      @fermintenava5911 4 года назад +19

      The emphasis is on "marches", because the hunchbacked Richard surely prefers his marches in "delightful measures". While the crowd takes it as an ironic jest, McKellen and Broadbent know exactly how much venom it bears.

    • @niktafr
      @niktafr Год назад

      Wonder what..

  • @jamesr1524
    @jamesr1524 6 лет назад +46

    I love how he invites us to be part of the plot. Ian McKellan does an amazing job of letting the viewer come along for the ride.

    • @urosmarjanovic663
      @urosmarjanovic663 2 года назад +4

      That is the fucking point of soliloquy at the beginning of a play.

  • @davidgifford8112
    @davidgifford8112 10 месяцев назад +17

    This is a brilliantly imagined version of Richard III. It almost feels like it was written for an early 20th century Marshal kingdom. Mckellan’s interpretation is inspired, miking it one of the best filmed Shakespeare play ever made.

  • @mattdeans9873
    @mattdeans9873 4 года назад +21

    McKellen is astounding. I had the great fortune to see him in Richard III onstage in Denver. I will remember it my whole life.

  • @willr8764
    @willr8764 4 года назад +310

    McKellen is THE modern Shakespearean actor. Many actors, from amateur to professional, can't see past the beauty of Shakespeare's language. So they start with the words, adding emphasis wherever they can and coming across as artsy fartsy. McKellen, on the other hand, starts with the character, breathing actual life into the words, making them seem organic and real. He is a genius of his craft.

    • @slingshotmcoy
      @slingshotmcoy 4 года назад +13

      That always annoyed me about theater performers. They're always so self absorbed and make no space in their ego for the actual character they're supposed to become. They try to think of how to sound more dramatic than the last person with the words and not become the type of person who might use them.

    • @jamesonjaksch4883
      @jamesonjaksch4883 3 года назад +7

      Laurence Olivier is better.

    • @Hotspur77
      @Hotspur77 3 года назад +3

      Yes! A modern Shakespeare - that's exactly what we need! And probably deserve.
      The original just isn't good enough nowadays - just words! We want organic and real - we want to SMELL those goddamn actors! And have more light-saber battles. Also, a score by John Williams.
      Shakespeare's text...meh. Soooo overrated, and BORING.
      Yes, a "modern" Shakespeare is what we DESERVE. LOLZ!!!

    • @tomservo75
      @tomservo75 3 года назад +5

      I've observed this myself. And I hate to say this, but I think Lawrence Olivier is one counterexample. By all means a fine actor, but some people try to get too technical with the lines. This has the added negative effect of making the lines harder to understand and driving off audiences. As much as I like McKellan, the best Richard III I've seen was Ben Cumberbatch in the Hollow Crown. What's unique about that series is that they're not acting out a play, they're acting out a movie, using gestures and emotion that would be recognizable to everyday people. Olivier spoke the words very well, but came across as focused too much on the words, not enough on, as you say, the beauty behind them.

    • @Hotspur77
      @Hotspur77 3 года назад +4

      @@tomservo75 Have to strongly disagree with your assessment of both Olivier’s Richard and Cumberbatch’s CGI-enhanced depiction. The first Hollow Crown series (Richard II, 1 & 2 Henry IV, Henry V) was excellent (especially Richard II and the Henry IV films).
      The Henry VI and Richard III installments, alas, were a huge disappointment…damnable, I dare say. Stunt casting, anachronisms (ineffective ones at that), and most of Richard’s soliloquies cut from the script. Absurd special effects, an obnoxious score, and weird, obtrusive cinematography. Failure as both film and WS adaptation.
      I always recommend the “Hollow Crown” Richard II and Henry IV films to everyone I know - they are worthy first choice entries into the WS film canon. Wonderfully acted, filmed, and edited. As good as it gets.
      Hard pass on Henry VI and Richard III. Olivier owns that role on film…Benedict Cumberbatch perhaps deserved better from the “writers” but perhaps he best stick to playing his sexless, autistic Sherlock.

  • @HailAnts
    @HailAnts 11 месяцев назад +18

    This film is the perfect hybrid of old and new. It retains the Elizabethan, which a lot of people simply can't deal with.
    But if you can, the modern day setting and various trappings, and McKellen's fourth wall breaking soliloquies make it so much more accessible!

  • @WillScarlet16
    @WillScarlet16 9 лет назад +441

    McKellan gets Richard's sense of humor much more than Olivier.

    • @jaypob
      @jaypob 6 лет назад +7

      Peter Moon. Compelling argument made 2.5 years after the OP.

    • @bretnielsen9056
      @bretnielsen9056 5 лет назад +10

      By far and away the better... a superb grasp of the eloquence of Shakespeare's pen

    • @chriselyr2484
      @chriselyr2484 5 лет назад +4

      I wouldn't have thought so neither, but Sir Iain seems to manage it.

    • @Ziggysprints
      @Ziggysprints 5 лет назад +10

      Olivier is two pounds of ham in a one pound bag.

    • @aceharris1463
      @aceharris1463 5 лет назад +1

      Tom Jackson
      “I can add colours to the chameleon, Change shapes with Proteus for advantages...”
      Yep, that guy is one note. Totally one note.

  • @sirtalkalotdoolittle
    @sirtalkalotdoolittle 5 лет назад +18

    The way he speaks about being "half-made up" is without the resentment shown by Olivier. I saw him saying, "This is who I am and since I can't do one thing, I will do what I am best at."

  • @syndicatephilharmonic9205
    @syndicatephilharmonic9205 7 лет назад +131

    McKellen really brings out the double-faced irony in this monologue.

  • @kevincruz7986
    @kevincruz7986 8 лет назад +302

    I watched Romeo + Juliet and this movie back to back. And I must say, it's so much easier to follow the story when the actors obviously know the meaning of what they're saying.

    • @josephvickrey5396
      @josephvickrey5396 8 лет назад +13

      Romeo+Juliet is a very pretty movie. Bas Lurman knows how to set a scene. Harold Perniu(Name Butcher) was amazing in that film. The Queen Man speech was awesome.

    • @followyu98
      @followyu98 7 лет назад +2

      Kevin Cruz Where can I find the full movie? I've searched on Amazon and RUclips.

    • @lesliewyatt4188
      @lesliewyatt4188 6 лет назад +2

      Indeed, it is. I agree

    • @bretnielsen9056
      @bretnielsen9056 5 лет назад +6

      @@josephvickrey5396 By far and away the better... a superb grasp of the eloquence of Shakespeare's pen

    • @daryodecarvalho9308
      @daryodecarvalho9308 4 года назад +2

      @Alan Mundy I do acting, and I have to tell you how much I appreciate this comment! Theatre training IS the best training for an actor, as many professionals will tell you😀

  • @Zagadka42
    @Zagadka42 Год назад +12

    This film was packed to the rafters with an amazing cast, and with the giga-wattage of pure talent they all brought to this film, they all stood in the shadow of McKellen. As plays go, this one, more than most, makes amazing use of the aside, and in McKellen's hands it is used to maximum effect to illustrate what is created when naked ambition and a brilliant mind can turn into in the face of slights, both real and perceived.

  • @bretnielsen9056
    @bretnielsen9056 5 лет назад +5

    By far and away the better... a superb grasp of the eloquence of Shakespeare's pen

  • @johnjones6601
    @johnjones6601 6 лет назад +24

    McKellen is a genius pure and simple. How I love that man.

    • @suebursztynski2530
      @suebursztynski2530 Год назад

      I have seen him on stage in Melbourne, as Lear, with Sylvester McCoy as the Fool. He is amazing! Both of them, actually!

  • @rogerallen6644
    @rogerallen6644 4 года назад +5

    I really liked this. Ol Ian McKellen could read stereo instructions and hold my attention.

  • @sirtalkalotdoolittle
    @sirtalkalotdoolittle 3 года назад +10

    I guess it's a weakness, but I would follow this Richard down to Hell, simply because he would be so much fun to be around for all eternity.

  • @tonycavanagh1929
    @tonycavanagh1929 7 месяцев назад +4

    Simple, plain Clarence, I do love thee so
    That I will shortly send thy soul to heaven,
    If heaven will take the present at our hands.

  • @baseball1257
    @baseball1257 6 лет назад +38

    Saw him do this on the stage...love the 1930s Third Reich vibe.

    • @MrOswald
      @MrOswald 2 года назад

      The set design of this film is fascinating, and I agree, it feels that vibe of the Third Reich in the 30's.

    • @thatperformer3879
      @thatperformer3879 24 дня назад

      This is much more the German Empire than it is the Third Reich.

  • @jcalli66
    @jcalli66 6 лет назад +6

    'Well, your imprisonment shall not be long - I will deliver you' . What a marvelous ,darkly funny line from Shakespeare and perfectly delivered with such ironic malevolence by Mckellan who certainly carries out his 'promise'.

  • @indrajitdas3017
    @indrajitdas3017 4 года назад +10

    Both the performances by sir Ian mc kellen and sir laurence olivier are great.
    A great learning process by watching the performance of these great and veteran actors. 👍

  • @54blewis
    @54blewis Год назад +4

    I love this rendition of RICHARD III it gave it a interesting twist and made it more realistic …

  • @suzannewillis817
    @suzannewillis817 4 года назад +12

    "I can smile,and murder while I smile!"says Richard as he gets even with the snobs in this movie boy he sure is very clever.

  • @MisterTutor2010
    @MisterTutor2010 Год назад +3

    All Hail King Magneto :)

  • @eviloverlordsean
    @eviloverlordsean 4 года назад +5

    Mckellen's performance is delightful... a humorous villain throughout the movie.

  • @AGMundy
    @AGMundy 11 месяцев назад +7

    This is one of the finest adaptations of .Richard III in my opinion with many outstanding performances. Nigel Hawthorn's Clarence has never been bettered. McKellen is a revelation, just so much to admire.

  • @AnarchicJ
    @AnarchicJ 7 лет назад +17

    Shakespeare's historic plays were the 16th century English equivalent of 20th Century American Gangster Movies, on par with 'The Godfather/Goodfella's/Casino etc..' with equally memorable dialogue and scene's

  • @Calinga8
    @Calinga8 14 лет назад +16

    It's not supposed to be funny; it's there for a very specific reason. Richard says he decides to be a villain because he cannot be a lover, and his reason behind it is that he has a physical deformity which he repeatedly refers to throughout the play. This trait, significant to the most basic plot since it is the motivation behind his actions, is manifested through the hunchback. Not a joke or a slight -- an important part of the play.

  • @patrickelliott-brennan8960
    @patrickelliott-brennan8960 7 месяцев назад +1

    A stunningly brilliant example of how to express the lines in a natural spoken delivery

  • @kapitankapital6580
    @kapitankapital6580 4 года назад +16

    This is such a fascinating way to deliver the lines, and such an interesting take on the character. The acting is phenomenal, of course, but that is to be expected, I really think the directing is worthy of credit.
    I always thought of Richard as being very similar to Shylock as one of Shakespeare's great sympathetic villains, somebody shaped by his conditions to be evil. I find the line "since I cannot play the lover, I am determined to play the villain" to be particularly resonant. Not so with this performance. Here, Richard is an unapologetically evil schemer, the soliloquy isn't a cry of anger and resolution of evil as much as it is a twisted sense of pride in his wickedry that he wants to share with the audience.
    I love this direction that they took the character, and honestly think this is the best performance on RUclips, having watched both Cumberbatch's and Olivier's before this.

  • @machtrebel
    @machtrebel 12 лет назад +17

    I'm just glad his washes his non-crippled hand afterwards!

  • @LackaJudgment
    @LackaJudgment 8 лет назад +34

    This and Julie Taymor's Titus are my favorite shakespeare adaptations. Poetic, surreal and full of intrigue!

    • @mushroomhead3619
      @mushroomhead3619 8 лет назад +2

      This is a dump of shit on Shakespeare's legacy! At least the Lawrence Olivier version was historically accurate!

    • @Zebcast
      @Zebcast 8 лет назад +18

      +Mushroom Head It's a modern interpretation. Shakespeare would have liked it I think.

    • @matthewutech5970
      @matthewutech5970 4 года назад +7

      @@mushroomhead3619 Shakespeare own, unaltered works is ripe with historical inaccuracies and unrealistic actions. He wasn't a historian, but a director and writer for making what was then "popular" entertainment; plays that were made to be re-adapted by a theater or a troupe see fit as time goes on.
      To try to shove in "historical realism" in often unapologetically historically inaccurate and unrealistic by design plays doesn't work like you think it would.

  • @suem6004
    @suem6004 11 месяцев назад +2

    This is a master class! Pure delight to watch. Well done, all.

  • @massgeneral9873
    @massgeneral9873 4 месяца назад +2

    that cut from podium to urinal is brilliant.

  • @hcpf2009
    @hcpf2009 13 лет назад +7

    It's Sir Humphrey and Magneto! [Both amazing Lears as well]

  • @PescadoDelDiablo
    @PescadoDelDiablo 5 месяцев назад +1

    As a trained actor, the greatest revelation of my education was learning that Shakespeare is meant to be heard, not read. Beautiful use of the English language.

  • @Zikanovich
    @Zikanovich 4 года назад +15

    0:50 when one of the boys lowkey makes a reference to an inside joke in public

  • @oakdaddy
    @oakdaddy 5 лет назад +5

    Sir Ian is my favorite actor.

  • @ernesthill4017
    @ernesthill4017 7 месяцев назад +1

    Ian McKellen re-ignited the power and glories of Shakespeare for me 😊

  • @waynegray5568
    @waynegray5568 Год назад +3

    Brilliant!

  • @janiakowska
    @janiakowska 9 лет назад +24

    the great sir Ian !!

  • @theingabo212
    @theingabo212 5 месяцев назад

    4:17 Oh perfection, I adore these lines!!

  • @tropicalgardenvlogs
    @tropicalgardenvlogs 9 месяцев назад +2

    Damn! Nigel Hawthorne as Clarence too 👏👏👏👏 I must what this!

  • @Three-Headed-Monkey
    @Three-Headed-Monkey 4 года назад +5

    Very creative interpretation of this speech. Great stuff.

  • @defiraphi
    @defiraphi 7 лет назад +17

    I love when the actors talks to us in front of the camera , love this way of filming . Ian McKellen a brilliant actor , he as Max Von Sydow has kinda the same way of playing in the movies . Laurence Olivier version of Richard 3 was different and older . This version with Ian McKellen is a refreshment of Shakespeare . Another actor would have been excellent in the role of Richard 3 was Patrick McGoohan .

  • @JPLOWMAN2
    @JPLOWMAN2 10 месяцев назад +3

    Okay now I gotta see this film, if only to see a younger (ish) Galdalf hamming it up. As for Olivier’s performance as others have mentioned it, I’ve seen it, and while it isn’t as zany as this, I think it has its own merit. Olivier gave the monologue as a more cynical but coldly calculating character, who could put a lot of sudden emotion into his words when he wanted to. McKellen takes it to another dimension though, able to publicly portray a smiling face with the confidence of everyone around him while still having a brooding, scheming dark side that seems on the edge of breaking the fourth wall

  • @kathrynoneill81
    @kathrynoneill81 8 месяцев назад

    McKellen - utterly brillinat.
    The scene change - perfect, moving from the announcement in public to the private brooding in the bathroom.

  • @puppylove2493
    @puppylove2493 2 года назад +1

    The greatest film of any of Shakespeare's plays.

  • @agschool708
    @agschool708 13 лет назад +6

    Sir Nigel, Sir Ian and Dame Maggie in one movie.... Fantastic. Watch "Yes Prime Minister" to see Sir Nigel at his best.

    • @schwakyl000
      @schwakyl000 4 года назад +1

      His best performance ever, in my opinion, was in The Madness of King George... Astonishing portrayal of one of history’s most well known, yet least explained monarchs.

    • @agschool708
      @agschool708 4 года назад +1

      @@schwakyl000 I saw the movie. I thought it was fiction. I found it funny that one of the reasons they thought he was mad was because he was faithful to his wife. I was an interesting peek at what goes on behind the glamour and glitz of royalty.

  • @bcfairlie1
    @bcfairlie1 4 года назад +3

    What a stunning performance. Mckellen at his best.

  • @ingriddubbel8468
    @ingriddubbel8468 5 лет назад +5

    I so wanted him to do what he did at the NT; it was machine gun fire. I saw it 4 times.
    Bluntly!
    If you've never seen Sir Ian in stage, you've never seen him , trully, act.
    Live, he is perfect...Mozart perfect.

  • @markmuldoon805
    @markmuldoon805 Год назад

    A brilliant rendition and setting.

  • @thanksforanotherbadhaircut1211
    @thanksforanotherbadhaircut1211 6 лет назад +1

    Just wonderful!

  • @m3rrys0ngstr3ss
    @m3rrys0ngstr3ss 7 лет назад +7

    Amazing how adaptable the speech is!

  • @markpage9886
    @markpage9886 Год назад +1

    I love the casting of Americans for the parvenus Woodvilles. Genius.

  • @thatperformer3879
    @thatperformer3879 24 дня назад

    See this is one of the few reimagined productions of Shakespeare that I like, setting it in a WWI German Empire style era is genius. Most of the time I absolutely despise modernity in theatre, especially minimalist set pieces.

  • @thomasley7178
    @thomasley7178 11 месяцев назад

    What an extremely clever adaption!

  • @jkorshak
    @jkorshak 5 месяцев назад

    McKellan's Richard III is one of the great villains of theater/cinema.

  • @beekbok795
    @beekbok795 12 лет назад +35

    i love how ww2 is transformed into the war of the roses, with Richard as Hitler

    • @baqarah131
      @baqarah131 7 лет назад +18

      Right, Beek--and perhaps the most chlling scene is the room hung with Richard's banners, a brilliant imitation of Nazi pageantry.
      Will there even be a greater Shakespeare film? I doubt it.

    • @suzannewillis817
      @suzannewillis817 4 года назад +2

      Richard takes nothing from no one.

  • @ingriddubbel8468
    @ingriddubbel8468 5 лет назад +17

    I saw this on stage 6 times.
    McKellen is brilliant here.
    BUT.
    You MUST see him on stage to understand what a brilliant actor he is; he feeds off an audience.
    To be blunt, he is 99% better than ever other Shakespearean actor in this film. On stage, he has NO Peers in this role.
    Oliver, looks like a novice in comparison.

    • @tatyanamelnikoff9578
      @tatyanamelnikoff9578 4 года назад +1

      olivier seems to be sort of a ham.

    • @kennethwayne6857
      @kennethwayne6857 3 года назад

      Absolutely love McKellan and regret more than ever not having seen him onstage (yet), but Olivier a novice in comparison? Come on...

  • @speaklowww5747
    @speaklowww5747 Год назад +1

    it's a difficult monologue, often hard to understand. great arrangement of it.

  • @Nicollie1062
    @Nicollie1062 12 лет назад +7

    i wish they would make a new movie about Richard III...maybe based on The Sunne In Splendour...there are so many movies and shows about the Tudor era...yet I find the York and Lancaster era much more interesting...if only they would concentrate on that era for a little bit in the entertainment industry :(

  • @nhmooytis7058
    @nhmooytis7058 2 года назад

    Terrific film!

  • @hosephhoestar5969
    @hosephhoestar5969 4 года назад +7

    Nobody:
    No-one:
    Not a soul:
    Sir Ian McKellen: *_time to take a piss_*

  • @lakehayden
    @lakehayden 9 месяцев назад

    Left a deep impression on me as a teenager

  • @sgtmajvimy
    @sgtmajvimy 4 года назад

    Before sir Ian made this film, he performed it on stage in Brooklyn NY , at BAM in the early 90s. Had the chance to attend one of those performances. 🧐🥃😷

  • @hjkgx7895
    @hjkgx7895 7 лет назад +5

    gooood acting!!!

  • @RobertKincaid-vq3hn
    @RobertKincaid-vq3hn 6 часов назад

    now this what i call i cast of major actor/ess set in the in 1930,s all star cast here

  • @mortman200
    @mortman200 10 месяцев назад

    Donald Sumpter Ian McKellan and Nigel Hawthorne acting agaonst each other its too good!

  • @indrajitdas3017
    @indrajitdas3017 4 года назад +1

    Awesome 👍👍👍👍👍

  • @clarheart2301
    @clarheart2301 7 лет назад +96

    In case you wanted to watch Gandalf read Shakespeare to professor Mcgonagall

  • @kailockhardt4193
    @kailockhardt4193 2 года назад +1

    I need it for school

  • @mashah1085
    @mashah1085 2 года назад +1

    Gandalf/Magneto.....Professor McGonnagle....Professor Slughorn....Tony Stark...Supreme Intelligence...Mr. Carson from Downton....and Sir. Humphrey Appleby of the DAA.

  • @thewkovacs316
    @thewkovacs316 10 месяцев назад

    always thought that framing richard III as dark comedy was brilliant

  • @meemeekeykat9402
    @meemeekeykat9402 Год назад

    ian mckellen doing a perfect job. and everyone else. great depiction of this play

  • @MeAbroad2004
    @MeAbroad2004 7 лет назад

    Brilliant

  • @MarvalMontreal
    @MarvalMontreal 3 года назад

    Génial.

  • @sofanr3
    @sofanr3 5 лет назад

    so good

  • @TheTonybudd
    @TheTonybudd 8 лет назад +3

    ~ Go on Gandalf !!! . . .

  • @user-od5fh3gn4d
    @user-od5fh3gn4d 10 месяцев назад +1

    Winter is coming! 😂

  • @Kelly14UK
    @Kelly14UK 4 года назад +1

    COVID is the SUMMER of our discontent

  • @mielelilac1036
    @mielelilac1036 2 года назад

    Now is the winter of our discontent
    Made glorious summer by this son of York; And all the clouds that lour’d upon our house In the deep bosom of the ocean buried.

  • @Zebred2001
    @Zebred2001 4 года назад

    Go get 'em Richard!

  • @Mozartkugeln16
    @Mozartkugeln16 11 лет назад

    GANDALF!!!!

  • @clausesanta5042
    @clausesanta5042 Год назад +1

    0:45 I see young Tony Stark.

  • @calvaryn
    @calvaryn 11 лет назад

    yes

  • @MugsOfMilk
    @MugsOfMilk 11 месяцев назад

    PLOTS HAVE I LAID!

  • @ingriddubbel8468
    @ingriddubbel8468 4 года назад +2

    Damn, he does this FAR BETTER on stage.

    • @diegoborges1348
      @diegoborges1348 3 года назад +2

      I mean, there are restrictions and alterations in a movie setting. It's kinda natural for that to be so.

  • @destorybeautiful
    @destorybeautiful 8 лет назад +1

    Sir Humphrey!

  • @oowatwat
    @oowatwat 13 лет назад

    @seamonsterization i know right. he's suited to this time of peace. =/

  • @ledichang9708
    @ledichang9708 3 года назад

    @2:59 "I'm sorry Richard, I don't know what you don't know..."

  • @michaelnewton1332
    @michaelnewton1332 3 года назад

    I always knew Magneto loved Shakespeare.

  • @P1B1U1H1
    @P1B1U1H1 12 лет назад +4

    @Nicollie1062 That sounds like a very good idea. Richard III does quite well on film, which is why its done so well by so many. By contrast, no film of Macbeth, a far better play than Richard III, works for me, including the recent effort by Patrick Stewart. So there's something about the plot that is suited for this medium. Very likely another version would be a hit.

    • @ernestbrown9660
      @ernestbrown9660 7 лет назад +1

      Dr. Samuel Johnson always said that Macbeth is a play that reads better than it can be acted out.

    • @artygunnar
      @artygunnar 6 лет назад

      The problem with Macbeth, if you will, if you could call it that, is that it is a bare bones play. It is much "Shorter" in a sense and gets straight to the point, which works well in a play, but in a film you need several stories to be going on. You could make a good Macbeth, but you'd have to let quentin tarantino do it.

    • @aronpuma5962
      @aronpuma5962 6 лет назад +4

      If you haven't seen it, I'd recommended "Throne of Blood" by Akira "Emperor" Kurosawa. It is by no means a straight adaptation. It translates Shakespeare not only into the Japanese language, but into Japanese history with the influence of Japanese art, but I think it's a incredible adaptation to behold, although I understand if you consider it too distant from the source material to include.

  • @mjau65
    @mjau65 3 года назад

    I got a hunch I'm gonna be king!

  • @thewarden4798
    @thewarden4798 7 лет назад +7

    Sir Ian Sir Ian Sir Ian

    • @artygunnar
      @artygunnar 6 лет назад +1

      ACTION!!!! GANDALF: YOU SHALL NOT PASS!!!! CUT!!!! Sir Ian Sir Ian Sir Ian

    • @suzannewillis817
      @suzannewillis817 4 года назад

      Too much iron in your blood!!!!

  • @suebursztynski2530
    @suebursztynski2530 Год назад

    I want to know why I can’t get hold of this version, which I saw at the cinema.

  • @ianlacey6588
    @ianlacey6588 2 года назад +1

    It may be heresy to some but I prefer this version.

  • @syndicatephilharmonic9205
    @syndicatephilharmonic9205 7 лет назад +2

    Did McKellen completely delete the banter with Hastings?

  • @gbonkers666
    @gbonkers666 8 лет назад +4

    He's got a lot of balls of killing the woman's husband and then ask for her for her hand.

    • @woroGaming
      @woroGaming 8 лет назад +14

      +gbonkers666 Well, it is rather awkward and pointless asking her while she is married.