This film is so incredibly beautiful to look at. The aesthetics doesn’t diminish the plot or the story line. It’s part of the movie’s dialogue. Of course, it’s an adaptation of a very complex and detailed novel. But I feel that it captured some of the brightest sparks of the source material. Anyway, it’s a gorgeous movie to get lost in. I have this on Blu-ray, and having watched it on VHS originally it’s quite breathtaking. Just a beautiful movie.
0:40 I like her face after she hands over the dead baby. She knew it was dead but used it to get on the train. But here she looks at him like " after all that you're not going to take me too?"
40 years ago I worked on a movie with Klaus Kinski and mentioned the next scene on the train to him - when he rattles his shackles and shouts, "I'm the only free man on this train. The rest of you are cattle!" When I first saw Doctor Zhivago in the theater I was 9 years old. I thought I was watching a bit of the Russian Revolution and Civil War - then Klaus Kinski's scene - he represented the chaos and insanity of war. Scared the pants off me. He could care less what I had to say, just demanded, "Where's the girl?" Another PA who was tired of being sexually harassed every time she had to go near him. A great actor, perhaps not so great a human being -- unless that was in the script.
Fun fact: The actress who played "The Train Jumper" actually fell under the rail car on this scene. Her scream was real as she disappears from the camera's view. Then, the camera somehow shows them pulling the woman up. She was obviously very lucky. The actress managed to miss the wheels of the rail car and rolled into a ball under the rail car. She was hospitalized for minor cuts and bruises, and then returned to film the remainder of this scene.
*The scene of the woman with a baby in her arms* : it has a black anecdote associated with the shooting. The train in which the Zhivago family travels to Barikino passes through a devastated village (the small town of Villar del Campo in Soria, Spain) where a woman with a baby in her arms who works as an extra tries to get on the train and runs parallel to it. The scene itself is very hard, as there comes a moment when the woman stumbles and falls under the wheels of the train. The rumour that the figure had actually fallen and lost both legs quickly spread through the town, perhaps eager for something humorous to comment on. The joke didn't go down too well with the film crew; as Geraldine Chaplin said in an interview some time later, the director kept shouting: "Let them dress up the stand-in! Because he didn't want to stop filming and because he knew that the woman who had stumbled had not done anything to herself (just some minor injuries). It is anecdotal to know that the injured extra was the Hungarian actress living in Spain, Lili Murati, who became famous some time later thanks to various Spanish productions (Carola de Día, Carola de Noche; Doctor, I like Women, is it serious?)
Nothing like trying to revisit a classic piece of cinema history and having to endure ignorant,pathetic advertisements before it starts thanks RUclips,you continue to disappoint.
Later in the film, Yuri says it's Minsk where the atrocities happened. Nevertheless, you don't go through Minsk, Belarus while travelling from Moscow to Siberia, it's actually the opposite part of the Russian empire / USSR. Can anybody clarify on this geographic anomally?
Ha ha Klause Kinsky giving one liners and demanding a million dollars but David the producer said he will command until he's patient and he did run around in a Rolls Royce later .
She did not. She was tumbled under the car, but escaped serious injury. She returned after recovery to film the scenes in the train cart discussing Strelnikov.
Omar Shariff looks like he’s about to cry in every scene he’s in this film
His heart man, his heart. The walls were thin as paper.
عمر الشريف فنان قدير يستطيع أن يعبر بعينيه
If I had lived in the Soviet Union, I'd be in tears as well.
@@deanpd3402 If I had lived in the Soviet Union I would have beeen the happiest woman alive. Now The Great Russia !!!!!! Best country in the world.
@@mohamedghazaly6132 yes, his eyes were so expressive, warm, and he was so handsome and so very charismatic!!
This film is so incredibly beautiful to look at. The aesthetics doesn’t diminish the plot or the story line. It’s part of the movie’s dialogue. Of course, it’s an adaptation of a very complex and detailed novel. But I feel that it captured some of the brightest sparks of the source material. Anyway, it’s a gorgeous movie to get lost in. I have this on Blu-ray, and having watched it on VHS originally it’s quite breathtaking. Just a beautiful movie.
0:40 I like her face after she hands over the dead baby. She knew it was dead but used it to get on the train. But here she looks at him like " after all that you're not going to take me too?"
One of David Lean’s Masterpieces!!
40 years ago I worked on a movie with Klaus Kinski and mentioned the next scene on the train to him - when he rattles his shackles and shouts, "I'm the only free man on this train. The rest of you are cattle!" When I first saw Doctor Zhivago in the theater I was 9 years old. I thought I was watching a bit of the Russian Revolution and Civil War - then Klaus Kinski's scene - he represented the chaos and insanity of war. Scared the pants off me. He could care less what I had to say, just demanded, "Where's the girl?" Another PA who was tired of being sexually harassed every time she had to go near him. A great actor, perhaps not so great a human being -- unless that was in the script.
"The baby's dead."
Next shot shows a big bubbling stew pot. . . .
I thought the same thing...
Full of potatoes....
@@seadog2396 The kid corpse is full of potatoes?
@@MokkaMatti Wha?
Tonya said ''The child is dead'' - what a bad actress she was then, she improved with time like good wine
Best film ever made!
Fun fact:
The actress who played "The Train Jumper" actually fell under the rail car on this scene. Her scream was real as she disappears from the camera's view. Then, the camera somehow shows them pulling the woman up. She was obviously very lucky. The actress managed to miss the wheels of the rail car and rolled into a ball under the rail car. She was hospitalized for minor cuts and bruises, and then returned to film the remainder of this scene.
@Ludwig van Beethoven - Wow.
Stupid
👊👊👊👊👊👊👍
Was her name Anna Karenina?
@@WillN2Go1 hahahaha !!!!!! A good one !
@@WillN2Go1BYE LMAO
"There was trouble on the Berlin Express....they knew I was on that train."--Omar Sharif in 'Top Secret'
David lean was the master of epic movies
Klaus Kinski is amazing in this movie. :)
In praise gratitude and compassion
*The scene of the woman with a baby in her arms* : it has a black anecdote associated with the shooting. The train in which the Zhivago family travels to Barikino passes through a devastated village (the small town of Villar del Campo in Soria, Spain) where a woman with a baby in her arms who works as an extra tries to get on the train and runs parallel to it. The scene itself is very hard, as there comes a moment when the woman stumbles and falls under the wheels of the train. The rumour that the figure had actually fallen and lost both legs quickly spread through the town, perhaps eager for something humorous to comment on. The joke didn't go down too well with the film crew; as Geraldine Chaplin said in an interview some time later, the director kept shouting: "Let them dress up the stand-in! Because he didn't want to stop filming and because he knew that the woman who had stumbled had not done anything to herself (just some minor injuries). It is anecdotal to know that the injured extra was the Hungarian actress living in Spain, Lili Murati, who became famous some time later thanks to various Spanish productions (Carola de Día, Carola de Noche; Doctor, I like Women, is it serious?)
When she speaks she sounds like Pola Negri.
I. Went. To. Mpls. Movie theater. In1965 and. Saw this movies
I read that they filmed the train shots like at 1:08 in Alberta apparently. The rest they filmed in Spain and Finland.
Wow, wow, wow, wait, wait... Is that Klaus Kinski??
Yes it is
He's the only free man on that train.
Yup - dubbed by Robert Rietty (although unbelievable and hardly recognisable).
@ricarleite - It is. xD
@@NondescriptMammal 0 e⁸
Una película fantástica.Muchas Gracias Saludos cordiales.
I must cry!! Sorry.....🥲
Cini se da je ovaj film pravi dokaz kako se sa mukom stvarala jedna istinska narodna drzava!
I wonder if she knew the child was dead before running for the train.
Great film
My lover' s favorite song
Nothing like trying to revisit a classic piece of cinema history and having to endure ignorant,pathetic advertisements before it starts thanks RUclips,you continue to disappoint.
Best movie
Hermoso que lindo no puedo explicar lo que ciento
Later in the film, Yuri says it's Minsk where the atrocities happened. Nevertheless, you don't go through Minsk, Belarus while travelling from Moscow to Siberia, it's actually the opposite part of the Russian empire / USSR. Can anybody clarify on this geographic anomally?
Later he says "A place called Mink." Not Minsk.
Ha ha Klause Kinsky giving one liners and demanding a million dollars but David the producer said he will command until he's patient and he did run around in a Rolls Royce later .
U okay man?
Who ran around a Rolls Royce? The Master and Commander? Yeti? Papa Smurf?
David Lean was the Director, ot the producer
$$$
The train jumper
We're following the money leader
$$$
Excelentes adelante éxitos más!!
The woman loses her legs in real life after she screams.
She did not. She was tumbled under the car, but escaped serious injury. She returned after recovery to film the scenes in the train cart discussing Strelnikov.
اين اجد هذا الفلم مترجم؟
My ex boy friend' s favorite movie and ❤❤❤
Muráti Lili (1912-2003)
So funny that the leading man about Russians is the Lebanese Omar Sharif. So cool lol
He's egyptian
@me3mari online he was born in egypt to Lebanese parents. Egyptian by nationality, Lebanese by heritage
So he's egyption ☺
They originally wanted Peter O'Toole. He turned the role down, so they gave it to Omar Sharif.
@@me3mari.online نعم مصري
K Kinsky il più intenso attore del 900
USA may never see Europe by now , only egoistic
Egoistic?
Linda la estupidez de comunismo
Ok
$$$
The train jumper
We're following the money leader
$$$
CAPITALIST PIG!!