The sermon on Jonah from Moby Dick

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  • Опубликовано: 18 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 123

  • @elizabethwilliams7790
    @elizabethwilliams7790 2 года назад +5

    Brilliant, absolutely brilliant speech ! I remember seeing this movie in 1956 when I was a kid. I was just in awe of this film...still am! 👍🌟👏

  • @surf7lakemich1
    @surf7lakemich1 9 лет назад +95

    I read an interview with Welles on this scene. He was quite aware of the role/scene and felt it was one of most important to him he'd ever attempted. His nerves got the better of him and he had to steady himself with brandy before doing the scene. Arguably the greatest American novel and one of the most powerful parts(of many) in the novel. This version has never been surpassed in my mind. Grade AAAA actors, screenplay, and direction. Ray Bradbury did the screenplay(with John Huston)...yes RAY BRADBURY! I read/reread the book every year or so and am still amazed by it.

    • @TheBertieW
      @TheBertieW 8 лет назад +8

      Agree 100% !

    • @edisone1
      @edisone1 7 лет назад +14

      Interview with John Houston confirms: Orson requested some inspiration, and John concurred, offering some Brandy - resulting in a single & most perfect "take" of the scene. Houston said that Orson was "SUBERB:", in that low growl of his.

    • @michaeljudge5027
      @michaeljudge5027 6 лет назад +10

      Worthy of Melville himself.

    • @raulbetancourt5795
      @raulbetancourt5795 Год назад +1

      So, one could argue he was technically drunk?

    • @garyv2196
      @garyv2196 Год назад +1

      I read that he was drunk in this scene,

  • @marktownsend4582
    @marktownsend4582 4 года назад +19

    The likes of which we will never see again....Real men and women with real talent and good honest values...Orson Welles, my god what a performance....

  • @lindsaypeterholden2701
    @lindsaypeterholden2701 9 лет назад +74

    You may watch a Thousand Films and You not see a performance like this.Pure Brilliance.

    • @danielridgway4970
      @danielridgway4970 6 лет назад +5

      You have got that right. No one could act like Welles.

    • @teodelfuego
      @teodelfuego 4 года назад +5

      Apparently, according to a John Huston interview, this was the first take and after a few shots of brandy

  • @TheBertieW
    @TheBertieW 8 лет назад +39

    Masterpiece. This scene and the whole movie.One of the best ever.

  • @khristofer9
    @khristofer9 11 месяцев назад +1

    Wow! Terrific job by Orson Welles. This scene was one of my favorites in the book. I re-listen to it occasionally on Audible too.

  • @JohnchapterVersesand
    @JohnchapterVersesand 3 года назад +28

    Bishop Robert Barron sent me here.

  • @dennisgreene7164
    @dennisgreene7164 5 месяцев назад +1

    I think this is quite possibly the ultimate American Novel - dark and brimming of Old Testament. I have never ceased to be amazed by it. As for Orson Wells here, he displays total affinity for the text. Brilliant.

  • @TotalSinging
    @TotalSinging 5 лет назад +14

    Acting 101. Nobody delivers a complete masterclass in dramatic acting in a single scene better than Welles.

  • @bushmanollie1525
    @bushmanollie1525 6 лет назад +25

    This is the greatest sermon I have ever heard!

  • @hpa2005
    @hpa2005 3 года назад +10

    Its fair to say that Mr. Wells knocked it out of park in this scene.

  • @erwinwoodedge4885
    @erwinwoodedge4885 7 лет назад +15

    What an actor, what a voice!

  • @OhNoNoNoNoNo
    @OhNoNoNoNoNo 3 года назад +9

    Can we just talk about the set real quick? It's beautiful! Really brought the pulpit to life.

    • @saudade2100
      @saudade2100 2 года назад +4

      The set is a very good reproduction of the real Seamen’s Bethel in New Bedford, referenced in Moby Dick. The exception is the pulpit. In the day, it was a standard pulpit. They changed it to the bow of a ship after this movie.
      The cenotaphs on the walls are very faithful to what you find at the real Seamen’s Bethel.
      From time to time, the Bethel does a marathon read of Moby Dick, along with the singing of “ribs and terrors of the whale”, which is what they are singing in the movie. So if you’re in the area, you could join in and re-create the scene. Actually, you can find videos of this on RUclips.

    • @OhNoNoNoNoNo
      @OhNoNoNoNoNo 2 года назад

      @@saudade2100 well, looks like I'm adding another place to my bucket list. Thanks for sharing!

    • @crimsondynamo615
      @crimsondynamo615 Год назад

      @@saudade2100 I figured the pulpit wasn’t really a ship, I get it’s a sailors church but come on that’s just silly.

  • @robertborselli9978
    @robertborselli9978 2 года назад +5

    Greatest cameo performance in movie history.

  • @schiller2222
    @schiller2222 7 лет назад +24

    "O Father! - mortal or immortal, here I die.
    I have striven to be Thine, more than to be this world’s, or mine own.
    Yet this is nothing; I leave eternity to Thee; for what is man that he
    should live out the lifetime of his God?"

  • @AtlantaBill
    @AtlantaBill 10 лет назад +18

    Thanks, Tim, for adding the subtitles. This is my favorite sermon of all time.

  • @robinblankenship9234
    @robinblankenship9234 6 лет назад +5

    From this to "Chimes At Midnight" and "Other Side Of The Wind"............ what an enormous span of mind and creative spirit. What a staggering, delightful, challenging, total talent. Beyond words.

  • @PackerBronco
    @PackerBronco 6 лет назад +22

    Orson Welles wrote this sermon himself and then did the piece in one take. Legend.

    • @UpperCrustthe3rd
      @UpperCrustthe3rd 6 лет назад +13

      Most of it comes straight from Melville's text, actually, with only slight variation

    • @lawrencemarocco8197
      @lawrencemarocco8197 2 года назад +3

      Supposedly, he was inebriated when he did it. Huston was afraid he'd fall off the rope ladder and injure himself while climbing up to the pulpit.

    • @PackerBronco
      @PackerBronco Год назад

      ​@@UpperCrustthe3rdtrue but it was edited masterfully.

  • @binggolitesbinggolites349
    @binggolitesbinggolites349 3 года назад +3

    No words. Am deeply moved. Forever grateful.

  • @jon780249
    @jon780249 2 года назад +4

    Astonishing performance in this extraordinary adaptation of Melville’s great novel.

  • @benfisher1376
    @benfisher1376 Год назад +2

    The end of this scene gives me goosebumps. Welles is hypnotic.

  • @btuesday
    @btuesday 4 года назад +9

    The greatest monologue ever recorded on film

  • @danielgrigg9501
    @danielgrigg9501 Год назад +2

    The only man who could have ever portrayed Judge Holden in Blood Meridian

  • @oatis053
    @oatis053 7 лет назад +14

    One of the greatist scenes from any movie all time! And I read he did this scene in one take!!!

    • @docmalthus
      @docmalthus 7 лет назад +1

      Not only that, but he wrote it as well!

    • @izitsosongs
      @izitsosongs 5 лет назад

      @@docmalthus I understand that the screenplay was written by Ray Bradbury.

    • @docmalthus
      @docmalthus 5 лет назад +4

      @@izitsosongs It was co-written by John Huston and Bradbury (much of it was Huston because, unknown to him at the time, Bradbury had never read Moby Dick). But it was common for Orson Welles to re-write any scene he was in so Huston told him to go ahead and do it. There's a documentary on Welles where Huston explains the whole story.
      ruclips.net/video/JgsEvQMsC0o/видео.html

    • @Redlinesixtynine
      @Redlinesixtynine Год назад

      John Huston said in interview, it was done in 3 takes, but each one was comma perfect. They had scheduled 2 days to do the scene, and Welles finished it before noon on the1st day.. Magnificent.

    • @oatis053
      @oatis053 Год назад

      @@Redlinesixtynine Awesome!

  • @malvinaaparicio2900
    @malvinaaparicio2900 3 года назад +5

    I gave this chapter to my students of American Litt to read and comment and one of them wrote, 'if more priests spoke like this, I WOULD GO TO CHURCH MORE OFTEN'

  • @NewYawkahBroad
    @NewYawkahBroad 3 года назад +2

    No one could have done this Truth justice as this incredible actor of our time.

  • @eazystreet5507
    @eazystreet5507 5 лет назад +8

    I on the behalf of all actors bestow THE AWARD OF THE MOUNTAIN OF MAGIC, THE KING OF ACTORS AND OF ENTERTAINMENT TO GRAND MASTER WELLES!

  • @harrellkerkhoff8054
    @harrellkerkhoff8054 8 лет назад +22

    When it came to acting, Orson Welles was a god!

  • @adamtzsch
    @adamtzsch 9 лет назад +7

    The man knows what he is doing.

  • @videowilliams
    @videowilliams 9 лет назад +13

    If my church delivered sermons like that I'm sure I'd go more often. What startling power this would have had to those whaling men!

  • @shiekyerbooti4068
    @shiekyerbooti4068 2 года назад

    And the set, lighting, and background was superb; reminiscent of the art nouveau scenes in Citizen Kane.

  • @masercot
    @masercot 5 лет назад +2

    One of my favorite chapters from the book.

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 3 года назад +3

    The sermon about Jonah by the preacher (Orson Welles) provides a little structure for the story in the movie. Captain Ahab (Gregory Peck) is the Jonah who seeks to escape God's rule by traveling on ship to a distant place. Elijah is the Jonah who scrambles around the docks of the port and is mocked by the sailors. Ishmael is the Jonah who is spit out by the whale (Moby Dick) to the safety of the coffin and then the ship Rachel. Queequee is the Jonah who is cast into the ocean (his coffin rises out of the ocean). Starbuck a little more complicated, is the Jonah who seeks to be cast into the ocean by the sailors. Stubb, the second mate, has something to do with Jonah who comes to recognize God's will. Flask, the third mate, is the Jonah who deals with and comments on authority. Matesman has something to with Jonah who reasons and debates about God. The crew has something to do with the Jonah who is swallowed up by the whale in the ocean. Probably more that can be talked about.

    • @NH1969GOAT
      @NH1969GOAT 3 года назад

      Well thought out. Thank you!

  • @geraldwalker2612
    @geraldwalker2612 3 года назад +3

    "if we are to obey God, we must disobey ourselves". That is a profound truth that I learned the hard way. Of course the whole book just carries on with countless incredible insights. As well as perplexing questions. I'm more or less"read"Moby Dick in the 5th grade because I thought it was a story about a whale 🤔 needless to say most of it was over my head but a lot of it wasn't and every time I listen to it it gets more and more profound to me. Part scripture part Shakespeare pure American genius.

  • @jimbogle8117
    @jimbogle8117 10 лет назад +11

    Thanks for sharing this great portion of that great motion picture. However, note, the sailors don't "mock" Jonah, but "mark" him. To "mark" someone is to watch them with keen curiosity. The sailors marked Jonah.

    • @eb311235
      @eb311235 9 лет назад +2

      Jim Bogle BTW "And Jonah cries unto the Lord, out of the fish's belly." In those days whales were referred to as fish because the Bible referred to them as such which is why pilot whales are often called blackfish.

    • @costismelolidakis7246
      @costismelolidakis7246 3 года назад +2

      @@eb311235 There is a whole chapter in the book providing proofs that whales are fish and not mammals. And, indeed, the sailors marked Jonas both times.

    • @MountainStreamLives
      @MountainStreamLives 3 месяца назад

      Artistic license to convey a message to contemporary audiences.

  • @DOI_ARTS
    @DOI_ARTS 2 года назад +1

    When Unicron speaks, everybody listens...

  • @stanmudge1148
    @stanmudge1148 4 года назад +3

    The character of Father Mapples was based in part after one of my ancestors...pretty cool!!

  • @luciancorvus9992
    @luciancorvus9992 7 лет назад +2

    The mythos is that this entire scene was a camera angle and lighting/sound test rehearsal shot.
    Wells so nailed this take that Huston called a "cut and print it"!

  • @servantofzardoz
    @servantofzardoz 2 года назад +1

    I'd be at that Church every Sunday with all the other shipmates.

  • @Hashem0011
    @Hashem0011 4 года назад +2

    This is gold shipmates!

  • @jackbuckley7816
    @jackbuckley7816 3 года назад +2

    Love the imaginatively-designed pulpit! Orson Welles as Father Mapple, giving a sermon for the ages but which also has immediate-relevance to the seafarers among the congregation. A great hellfire & brimstone preacher right-out of the Old Testament. I gave-up on modern-day church-sermons years & years ago. Man needs to be reminded---and now more-urgently than ever---of his total-dependence on God, without the feel-good fluff of today's lackluster-sermons, though I'm sure there are exceptions here & there.

    • @21kalel
      @21kalel  3 года назад

      Give Pastor Carl Dixon a try: www.ccsrq.cc/

  • @davidcabreonmunoz6258
    @davidcabreonmunoz6258 2 года назад +2

    Orson Welles muchachos, el hombre...La leyenda.

  • @ChupeTTe
    @ChupeTTe 5 лет назад +1

    What a workhorse... im highly impressed

  • @Ridgway55
    @Ridgway55 10 лет назад +16

    Thank you for posting this. All other posts the words do not match the lips. BTW, It is supposed to be 'the sailors mark him' not mock him.

  • @whitmanrilke
    @whitmanrilke 6 лет назад +2

    "Beloved shipmates, clinch the last verse of the first chapter of Jonah---'And God had prepared a great fish to swallow up Jonah.' Shipmates, this book, containing only four chapters--four yarns--is one of the smallest strands in the mighty cable of the Scriptures. Yet what depths of the soul does Jonah's deep-sea line sound! what a pregnant lesson to us is this prophet! What a noble thing is that canticle in the fish's belly! How billow-like and boisterously grand!"

  • @MountainStreamLives
    @MountainStreamLives 3 месяца назад

    I think this was his best scene as an actor. And that includes Kane.

  • @MountainStreamLives
    @MountainStreamLives 3 года назад

    You can see how important this scene was to him.

  • @graceonline320
    @graceonline320 7 лет назад +41

    This serious, passionate & inspiring style of preaching has almost
    disappeared from our churches. Nowadays it's often froth, bubble,
    entertainment and silly silly jokes. I'm not laughing!

    • @hpa2005
      @hpa2005 3 года назад +1

      Agreed

    • @graceonline320
      @graceonline320 3 года назад +1

      @@Pepsiguy Yes indeed.

    • @mkallen56
      @mkallen56 3 года назад +3

      trivial like the rest of modern life

    • @MrAquinas1
      @MrAquinas1 3 года назад +2

      Yes, Mr. Roger's Neighborhood homilies.

    • @kejiri3593
      @kejiri3593 2 года назад +1

      I guess church isnt very serious anymore. But i guess its more the times we live in. Cant blame them if they dont wanna be overly serious

  • @yan24to
    @yan24to 11 месяцев назад +1

    Amen 🙏

  • @tommyoneill5862
    @tommyoneill5862 6 лет назад +1

    That's the 'Seamen's Bethel on Johnny cake hill in New Bedford,I used to sleep upstairs from the chapel a flop house for sometime Fishermen.

  • @DragonDriver100
    @DragonDriver100 3 года назад +2

    I really liked this movie... MORE so than the book. I liked the movie of 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea MORE so than the book as well, AND the Mysterious Island.

  • @polkaringo
    @polkaringo 10 лет назад +1

    Nice work Tim

  • @traviskeller7086
    @traviskeller7086 2 года назад

    Pure brilliance

  • @russbentley7677
    @russbentley7677 2 года назад

    The sailors do not mock him like it says in the subtitles. The sailors Mark him, as in they take note of him.

  • @MountainStreamLives
    @MountainStreamLives 3 месяца назад +1

    Everyone critiquing “marked” and “fish’s” need to keep in mind they aren’t Orson Welles. He knew what he was doing and had reasons for doing so.

  • @mikekemp9877
    @mikekemp9877 2 года назад

    i watched this scene in total awe.it is simply one of the best acting scenes on screen.the only one i think comes close is oddly robert shaws indianapolis speech in similarly nautical jaws! this movie is a miracle .frankly thought by many to be unfilmmable huston overrode multiple difficulties to get it onscreen.production was hard enough as anyone who knows the history of jaws knows anything on water is difficult add in a mechanical shark or whale and it becomes nigh impossible.add to that the incredibly complex story metaphysical religeous and philosophical undertones and the basic problem of getting across what melville was striving to say and you have to say huston was a genius in getting a average version of the story on screen but he surpassed that and made the movie an absolute classic.ahab is said by actors to be the hardest part to play eclipsing even lear or hamlet casting gregory peck not an obvious choice was a stroke of genius.peck more familiar then as a matinee idol used his natural air of authority and commanding screen prescence to become ahab a stern resolute captain on the surface but with incredible depth as we see his dark side but never overacts or plays it large simply seethes with repressed emotion and hatred and incredible power as the man who stalks the whale and dares raise his fist to god! he is utterly convincing.huston used a lot of irish and british actors on the movie as well as a lot of non actors and filmed it in ireland after nantucket was very difficult about filmimg there and wanted a huge portion of the budget to permit the crew to make the movie.hustons revenge was to remove all reference to the town in the film substituting nantucket.as whalers were notoriously from all corners of the globe the largely non american supporting cast oddly add to the weird atmosphere of the film making them as strange as the events.there is an almost dreamlike quality to the film.it fits in with the sense of unease the fortelling by a brilliant royal dano and the climax when the crew succumb to the same madness as ahab.a breathtakingly good movie a piece of genius.

    • @mikekemp9877
      @mikekemp9877 2 года назад

      sorry meant to say substituting new bedford.

  • @stevelindstedt8858
    @stevelindstedt8858 4 года назад +2

    "The sailors mark him..." (Not 'mock'.)

  • @charlesedwardandrewlincoln8181

    Wow!

  • @KOLDBLU3ST33L
    @KOLDBLU3ST33L 3 года назад

    Riveting! Bravo! 👏 👏 👏

  • @beatricedanieleherve-berth7842
    @beatricedanieleherve-berth7842 6 лет назад

    Bonjour merci

  • @quita1569
    @quita1569 5 лет назад +1

    Deliver me...

  • @NH1969GOAT
    @NH1969GOAT 7 лет назад +2

    "out of the fish's belly"... not vicious belly...

  • @JimmySteller
    @JimmySteller 9 лет назад +1

    It's a shame that John Huston didn't cast Welles as Captain Ahab. Welles would have done such a great job.

    • @surf7lakemich1
      @surf7lakemich1 9 лет назад

      +JimmySteller Wells wanted this character, the preacher.

    • @PackerBronco
      @PackerBronco 6 лет назад

      As did Gregory Peck ...

    • @LordZontar
      @LordZontar 4 года назад

      @@PackerBronco Years later, in the TNT production of Moby Dick with Sir Patrick Stewart as Ahab, Peck finally got his wish to portray the preacher.

  • @DawoudKringle
    @DawoudKringle 7 лет назад +1

    I do volunteer work as an Islamic minister. I've borrowed from this sermon for a few of my own.

  • @RobertKachel
    @RobertKachel 3 года назад

    What is the name of the song that the church choir sings at the beginning?

  • @williamglenn777
    @williamglenn777 Год назад

    This reminds me of something Evangelist would have said to Christian in Pilgrim’s Progress. ❤️

  • @adamtzsch
    @adamtzsch Год назад

    the sailors mark him

  • @bricology
    @bricology 4 года назад

    02:44 should read "...out of the *fish's* belly..." (not "vicious")

  • @Punisherfan123
    @Punisherfan123 4 года назад

    What's the song they're singing?

  • @eb311235
    @eb311235 4 года назад

    "The sailors mark him" not mock.

    • @21kalel
      @21kalel  4 года назад

      I know. The subtitles are from the DVD and I had no way of correcting them.

  • @adamtzsch
    @adamtzsch Год назад

    *fish's belly

  • @drmayne
    @drmayne 10 лет назад +6

    He should have played the white whale.

    • @premanadi
      @premanadi 5 лет назад +1

      That was cruel, but it made me laugh...

  • @martinlopezpgara5treestart263
    @martinlopezpgara5treestart263 4 года назад

    is this Rosen wells?

  • @charlesedwardandrewlincoln8181

    Are there academic interpretations of this?

  • @mkallen56
    @mkallen56 3 года назад

    which hymn is this?

  • @firezuko123
    @firezuko123 7 лет назад +1

    edited to ten percent of the original and hugely impoverished as a result.
    eschew both hollywood and obfuscation!