Marlon Brando, Act 3 scene 1: O, pardon me, thou bleeding piece of earth, That I am meek and gentle with these butchers! Thou art the ruins of the noblest man That ever lived in the tide of times. Woe to the hand that shed this costly blood! Over thy wounds now do I prophesy, --- Which, like dumb mouths, do ope their ruby lips, To beg the voice and utterance of my tongue --- A curse shall light upon the limbs of men; Domestic fury and fierce civil strife Shall cumber all the parts of Italy; Blood and destruction shall be so in use And dreadful objects so familiar That mothers shall but smile when they behold Their infants quarter'd with the hands of war; All pity choked with custom of fell deeds: And Caesar's spirit, ranging for revenge, With Ate by his side come hot from hell, Shall in these confines with a monarch's voice Cry 'Havoc,' and let slip the dogs of war; That this foul deed shall smell above the earth With carrion men, groaning for burial.
I feel like in the modern era filmmakers have so many tools to fall back on... (editing processes.. CGI... etc...) where in the 50s they had to rely on the acting so much more and so we see performances like this
buddy quit being a pompous ass by today's standards, this overacting with intelligent-sounding words but for the standards for when it was written it was low brow stuff and normal-sounding words this would be like the society in the next half-millennium finding something like Transformers and calling it artsy
Timeless is timeless Beacuse something's Will forever enrage the minds stir the hearts move the fist and finally lossen the fingers mouths of men. Such things are like quicksand They are to be avoided and only engaged in when the hubris of one side can no longer be appeased and ignored the balance must be restored. Before the fingers let slip The beast that knows no master.
His roll was completely natural, gracious, powerful and beautiful. There was not a movement, a look or a pose that was overrunning, or missing. His acting was perfect and complete.
I knew Brando could act...scenes and characters from certain movies are only mimicked, and become part of the collective folklore...satirized and instantly recognized...if the original is so perfect that it CAN be mocked and joked about, yet lose not the tiniest bit of it's power...I cite Brando's "Don Vito Corleone" as an example. That Brando was able perform Shakespeare-and deliver the part of Marc Antony so powerfully-should not have surprised me....but it DID. I stand corrected.
Yes, this part by Brando is significantly better than all other renditions. Heston might be comparable with his rabble-rousing antics, but not even he has anything on this here scene.
What is amazing in this, is that this is the greatest shakesprian perfoermence, played by an american method film actor who opposed the 'shakspeere english approach'
I respect your opinion, but Charlton Heston’s was my personal favourite. It aligns more with his character, and fits the visual perfectly, being as Marc Antony was in his 40’s at the time, and Charlton was 42 when he recorded the role. It also depicts him as being more intelligent, rather than someone who’s easily susceptible to rage and anger.
@@tommyt1971 Damien Lewis' rendition was fucking abismal. He whispers the entire speech, and lacks all brute strength, Passion, vigour, and righteous fury that Anthony was famed for. Not to mention the fact nobody would've been able to hear him back then without a microphone and speaker amplifier (which BTW weren't invented for another 1900 years).
"Woe to the hand that shed this costly blood" and with these nine words does our play, Julius Caesar, take a new and death-filled path. This may be the greatest soliloquy in the English language. Whereas "To be or not to be" is an ode to indecision and vacillation, this speech, "Oh pardon me thou bleeding piece of earth", is decision and determination and righteous indignation distilled.
John Mark Cornetta to be or not to be was done 6 times before the bard got to it. Tis not where you take it from that matters, Tis where you take it to.
Shakespeare is usually the province of English actors but I think you'd be hard pressed to find a better rendition of the "cry havoc" speech than Brando's. He expresses the controlled fury of a man you know is going to extract a merciless revenge when the time is right. It's almost scary.
I agree. I have just watched the role played by Charlton Heston and Ray Fearon. Both very good - but Brando, excellent. The rest of the cast in this film also perform well. Julius Caesar is a favourite of mine. The power of a good orator to change the opinion of the crowd. Frightening.
+deriter64 I agree that Brando's performance is absolutely brilliant, but please note that he speaks with an almost English accent, which he obviously thought right for his role. This 1953 movie is now a classic of Shakespeare on screen, I only wish it was available in the UK. Oh, and do see Keith Michel as Antony in the BBC TV production, also on U-tube.
+MonkeyButler300 I wish he had done Hamlet. He would have been so perfect for that role. I saw Mel Gibson's Hamlet, which i thought was great, but Marlon's would be unbeatable.
+MonkeyButler300 I would also have liked to see him in the part of Tibalt in Romeo and Juliet. Or even as Mercutio or Romeo. I luved what Michael York did in the part of Tibalt in that movie, and would luv to have seen Brando in it as well.
During the filming of the scene, the stunned movie crew gave Marlon a standing ovation at the end of his "Dogs of War" speech. How many times does that happen ?
I remember watching the film in High School English class and was half-asleep by the time this scene showed up, then Antony yelled "HAVOC!!!!" and I payed the f*ck attention the rest of the time.
No one can better this portrayal of Antony and no one can deliver such powerful words of Shakespeare like Brando ...from a sullen face to a persona filled with anger and rage in front of his closest friend is breathtaking to watch..
Powerful Performance by Brando,he embodied the role,and looking Every inch The Roman Nobleman..The British actors who worked on the set,were in Awe,and they were of Total students of The Bard,and were may of been doubtful that an American actor could carry off the role,but were surprised and understood they were in the presence of Greatness,and though were impressed by his Street Car performance ,they saw he had Great command of the English language and cadence.
@andrion waser Y'know, I can see Brando doing it.... even if his trademark mumbling would have made it impossible to hear him under a mask. GOD, I wonder what Norton would have sounded like saying THIS...
This is the exact film where Brando literally ushers in the new school by directly clashing with the old school. The other actors in this film, all fantastic, albeit older styled, more traditional in their forms, are somehow completely dominated by Brando’s realism. It wasn’t really recognized at the time, and this film is not widely available, but it’s a seminal moment in acting and filmmaking.
I wish people in Congress spoke like this and actually stood up and gave speeches for authentic filibusters. For all of their privileges and pomp and lofty cloistered educations, they can't do this. Not anymore, anyway.
Just think what Brando was doing in the early to mid 1950s. Aside from this, he did Streetcar and On the Waterfront. Should have gotten Oscars for all 3.
Yet he was totally out of his confort zone here, method actor doing Shakespeare, the finest art of classic acting, and he still killed it like it was nothing
if you ever wonder why people claim brando was the greatest actor of his time you should come and watch him do Shakespeare. he makes it come to life and even be gripping. it's a performance of genius.
Spot on, Brando's passion surpasses any rules he misses with this piece, this is the type of acting that can excuse the rules of Shakespeare. He is so alive and real you know he created some great circumstances to get through those lines!
John Huston once compared watching Brando's Antony to opening the door of a furnace. The heat burns through the screen. If Brando had only played more of the great classical roles. John Gielgud said during the filming of "Julius Caesar," he asked Brando: "Why don't you play Hamlet?" Gielgud said Brando looked at him and said: "Will you direct it?" Gielgud said he agreed to do so. Nothing, alas, ever came of it.
Nope, and it's not even my first language. On the other hand, it wasn't Brando's either) Anyway, now I am inspired to memorise it. Though, I am afraid of never doing this soliloquy real justice. Especially with me being female)
The fire in his eye, the anger in his voice the frustration in his action... this is Marlon Brando at his most brilliant... no other actor has portrayed Mark Antony as he has... even I would follow him to seek vengeance..but he fell victim to that Egyptian floozi and lost an empire to that cunning Octavian.. Marlon.. you were a contenders... you were somebody..🤔🙂
"I hoped we could all come here and reason together. But I'm a superstitious man. And if something should befall my Caesar, if he should be struck by a bolt of lightning, then I'm going to blame some of the people in this City. And then, I do not forgive!"
The actor that brought Method Acting to the forefront. That any actor can be placed above Brando strikes me as pure nonsense. He took every character he portrayed and buried his soul into it. Inhabiting them completely. A horses ass of a person. An actor nonpareil.
So compelling and grabbing and gripping the way brando comanded your attention .It was almost like to strong to ignore or even turn away from Truly magnetic why there arent any more performances like this now is not hard to understand.Brando truly was the best ,not trying to hype him up to being more then what he was but i defy anyone being compared to brando today.To pull this off the way he did ;they cant come close
The range of the young Brando. The film he made right before this one, he was a Mexican revolutionary and the film after, the leader of a motorcycle gang.
1:53 best scream in the cinema history 😂😂 I only knew the German dubbed version of this movie. Not that the dub was bad, but the scream wasn't anywhere near this loud. Imagine my surprise 😉
I can only try and fail to imagine what a foreign dub of shakespeare is like. The English used and formed by the bard is so special that I simply cannot imagine it in translation at all.
I do like this speech. I have heard it many times before but today was the first time I have noticed the similarities between this and the Harfleur speech in Henry V. Both convey barely supressed rage building to blood curdling, but reluctant, threats of savagery to be visited on the enemy. Both also throw in the prospect of butchering infants and the expected response of their mothers. I am going to Stratford Upon Avon tonight to see the play so I will compare Anthony's effort there with Brando;s brilliance here.
blood and destruction shall be so in use and dreadful objects so familiar that mothers shall but smile when they behold their infants quarter'd with the hands of war; all pity choked with custom of fell deeds: and Caesar's spirit, ranging for revenge, with ate by his side come hot from hell, shall in these confines with a monarch's voice cry 'HAVOC!!!'
He did Hamlet, had a traumatic experience during the ghost scene and never step on the stage again- He actually thought he saw the ghost of his own father
I'm surprised there aren't more comments on this video in general, and I'm especially surprised at the lack of comments that mention Mr. Aday. oh well, I suppose I shall just post a comment with Mr.Adays name in it everytime I watch the video 5 times!
44 honourable men disliked this
Marlon Brando, Act 3 scene 1:
O, pardon me, thou bleeding piece of earth,
That I am meek and gentle with these butchers!
Thou art the ruins of the noblest man
That ever lived in the tide of times.
Woe to the hand that shed this costly blood!
Over thy wounds now do I prophesy,
--- Which, like dumb mouths, do ope their ruby lips,
To beg the voice and utterance of my tongue ---
A curse shall light upon the limbs of men;
Domestic fury and fierce civil strife
Shall cumber all the parts of Italy;
Blood and destruction shall be so in use
And dreadful objects so familiar
That mothers shall but smile when they behold
Their infants quarter'd with the hands of war;
All pity choked with custom of fell deeds:
And Caesar's spirit, ranging for revenge,
With Ate by his side come hot from hell,
Shall in these confines with a monarch's voice
Cry 'Havoc,' and let slip the dogs of war;
That this foul deed shall smell above the earth
With carrion men, groaning for burial.
Theres no way I could memorize this.
@@anthonycampos8057 How do you get to Carnegie Hall? Practice. I have faith in you.
Thanks a lot. Now I can read it too. Make notes on it
Anthony Campos Brando was actually famous for using cue cards.
@@anthonycampos8057 there must be cue cards behind the camera XD
It's sad how even with modern techniques we find it difficult to create a scene that is as believeable and well acted as this one.
I feel like in the modern era filmmakers have so many tools to fall back on... (editing processes.. CGI... etc...) where in the 50s they had to rely on the acting so much more and so we see performances like this
buddy quit being a pompous ass
by today's standards, this overacting with intelligent-sounding words but for the standards for when it was written it was low brow stuff and normal-sounding words
this would be like the society in the next half-millennium finding something like Transformers and calling it artsy
@@The-Big-Boss it’s Shakespeare you fucking idiot
@@dakotaplaysvhs8039 true but shakespeare did lowbrow humor for real. Like really mom jokes in titus.
Timeless is timeless
Beacuse something's
Will forever enrage the minds stir the hearts
move the fist and finally lossen the fingers mouths of men.
Such things are like quicksand
They are to be avoided and only engaged in when the hubris of one side can no longer be appeased and ignored the balance must be restored.
Before the fingers let slip
The beast that knows no master.
His roll was completely natural, gracious, powerful and beautiful. There was not a movement, a look or a pose that was overrunning, or missing. His acting was perfect and complete.
I agree
This is not acting... this is living.
well said. has anybody ever had so much screen presence. awe inspiring.
Spamming jihadi POS.
I knew Brando could act...scenes and characters from certain movies are only mimicked, and become part of the collective folklore...satirized and instantly recognized...if the original is so perfect that it CAN be mocked and joked about, yet lose not the tiniest bit of it's power...I cite Brando's "Don Vito Corleone" as an example. That Brando was able perform Shakespeare-and deliver the part of Marc Antony so powerfully-should not have surprised me....but it DID. I stand corrected.
@@sockdolager3884 She's Indian, I think.
Yes, this part by Brando is significantly better than all other renditions. Heston might be comparable with his rabble-rousing antics, but not even he has anything on this here scene.
for me, this will always be Brando's greatest performance and the best Shakespeare performance I've ever seen.
Indeed!
What is amazing in this, is that this is the greatest shakesprian perfoermence, played by an american method film actor who opposed the 'shakspeere english approach'
I was astonished to discover this performance and I share your conviction.
Olivier is a great actor. But for me, even a small sample, Brando is the greatest Shakespeare actor
Ian McKellen in Richard III was incredible. Give it a watch.
everyone overlooks this speech in favor of his 'honorable man' roast that comes up next.
but i personally prefer this one...
Probably because this one is a lot less interesting whereas the pulpit speech is the masterful dramatic centrepiece of the play.
That mothers shall but SMILE when they see their infants quartered by the hands of war....amazing control over an incredible voice...goosebumps
I felt it too🤯
Brando's anger is so palpable that you want to step back from the screen after he speaks the line, "infants quartered by the hands of war".
The best portrayal of Antony I have ever seen.
TrueMedia When you get a chance, watch Damian Lewis’ rendition of the honorable man soliloquy. Amazing!
This is how I personally believe Antony would've felt when he saw Caesar's body.
By far. It's a perfect embodiment of the spirit of the character.
I respect your opinion, but Charlton Heston’s was my personal favourite. It aligns more with his character, and fits the visual perfectly, being as Marc Antony was in his 40’s at the time, and Charlton was 42 when he recorded the role. It also depicts him as being more intelligent, rather than someone who’s easily susceptible to rage and anger.
@@tommyt1971 Damien Lewis' rendition was fucking abismal. He whispers the entire speech, and lacks all brute strength, Passion, vigour, and righteous fury that Anthony was famed for. Not to mention the fact nobody would've been able to hear him back then without a microphone and speaker amplifier (which BTW weren't invented for another 1900 years).
"Woe to the hand that shed this costly blood" and with these nine words does our play, Julius Caesar, take a new and death-filled path.
This may be the greatest soliloquy in the English language. Whereas "To be or not to be" is an ode to indecision and vacillation, this speech, "Oh pardon me thou bleeding piece of earth", is decision and determination and righteous indignation distilled.
John Mark Cornetta to be or not to be was done 6 times before the bard got to it. Tis not where you take it from that matters, Tis where you take it to.
Shakespeare had it all.
John Mark Cornetta Very nicely put.
Well explained.
Brando is still King.
Shakespeare is usually the province of English actors but I think you'd be hard pressed to find a better rendition of the "cry havoc" speech than Brando's. He expresses the controlled fury of a man you know is going to extract a merciless revenge when the time is right. It's almost scary.
I agree. I have just watched the role played by Charlton Heston and Ray Fearon. Both very good - but Brando, excellent. The rest of the cast in this film also perform well.
Julius Caesar is a favourite of mine. The power of a good orator to change the opinion of the crowd. Frightening.
+deriter64 I agree that Brando's performance is absolutely brilliant, but please note that he speaks with an almost English accent, which he obviously thought right for his role. This 1953 movie is now a classic of Shakespeare on screen, I only wish it was available in the UK. Oh, and do see Keith Michel as Antony in the BBC TV production, also on U-tube.
+MonkeyButler300 I wish he had done Hamlet. He would have been so perfect for that role. I saw Mel Gibson's Hamlet, which i thought was great, but Marlon's would be unbeatable.
+MonkeyButler300 I would also have liked to see him in the part of Tibalt in Romeo and Juliet. Or even as Mercutio or Romeo. I luved what Michael York did in the part of Tibalt in that movie, and would luv to have seen Brando in it as well.
WindWipper Yes, I agree with you.
Did you see Marlon Brando in Streetcar Named Desire?
egards.
He scared the crap out of me as a teenager when he cried "Havoc!"
Amen!
Woke me tf up
Brando in his prime was amazing.
He always was really
Brando's greatest performance was in Last Tango in Paris. This is an okayish performance.
During the filming of the scene, the stunned movie crew gave Marlon a standing ovation at the end of his "Dogs of War" speech. How many times does that happen ?
"Look how they massacred my boy" - Marc Anthony
I remember watching the film in High School English class and was half-asleep by the time this scene showed up, then Antony yelled "HAVOC!!!!" and I payed the f*ck attention the rest of the time.
No one can better this portrayal of Antony and no one can deliver such powerful words of Shakespeare like Brando ...from a sullen face to a persona filled with anger and rage in front of his closest friend is breathtaking to watch..
Powerful Performance by Brando,he embodied the role,and looking Every inch The Roman Nobleman..The British actors who worked on the set,were in Awe,and they were of Total students of The Bard,and were may of been doubtful that an American actor could carry off the role,but were surprised and understood they were in the presence of Greatness,and though were impressed by his Street Car performance ,they saw he had Great command of the English language and cadence.
one of best acting I have ever seen
To hell with Vito Corleone and Terry Malloy and Stanley Kowalski. THIS is Marlon Brando's best performance.
BrokenWolf1990 Well i don't know about that but yes Brando's Marc Anthony is peerless .
@andrion waser Not at all, I'm afraid.
@andrion waser I saw that film before ever knowing who Brando was so there was never any confusion for me. Hell, before knowing who Ed Norton was.
@andrion waser Y'know, I can see Brando doing it.... even if his trademark mumbling would have made it impossible to hear him under a mask. GOD, I wonder what Norton would have sounded like saying THIS...
This is the exact film where Brando literally ushers in the new school by directly clashing with the old school. The other actors in this film, all fantastic, albeit older styled, more traditional in their forms, are somehow completely dominated by Brando’s realism. It wasn’t really recognized at the time, and this film is not widely available, but it’s a seminal moment in acting and filmmaking.
My high school textbook ruined Julius Caesar for me. This scene revived it.
I wish people in Congress spoke like this and actually stood up and gave speeches for authentic filibusters. For all of their privileges and pomp and lofty cloistered educations, they can't do this. Not anymore, anyway.
His modulation and pacing is just *PERFECTION*!!! I agree that he is the greatest actor of all time.
I had no idea Marlon Brando was a Shakespearean actor. He was superb. No false accent, every moment was true. A brilliant scene.
Nothing less than a masterful performance!
I had tears in my eyes when he cried havoc....... When i see this I feel i am a part of this act ........ So brilliant acting i just loved it.......
I did too.
@@Rohilla313 It made the hair stand on my arms. I almost wanted to join him and avenge Julius Caesar alongside Mark-Antony.
Just think what Brando was doing in the early to mid 1950s. Aside from this, he did Streetcar and On the Waterfront. Should have gotten Oscars for all 3.
Yet he was totally out of his confort zone here, method actor doing Shakespeare, the finest art of classic acting, and he still killed it like it was nothing
Brando, the great "Method" actor, doing a marvelous job of classical acting.
The mount of intensity that he delivered this was so powerful, I trembled.
This is such an awkward soliloquy yo perform, and he does it excellently.
THIS isnt ACTING..its the TRUTH and Brando makes you believe it'll
if you ever wonder why people claim brando was the greatest actor of his time you should come and watch him do Shakespeare. he makes it come to life and even be gripping. it's a performance of genius.
Very few American actors have the power, and passion that he brought. To bring the words alive and do a performance that is mesmerizing.
No one can match his acting brilliance in the role of Mark Anthony. Marlyn Brando has nailed the role.
Jesus Christ! John Gielgud be damned - this is how to speak Shakespeare's words.
Gielgud coached him.
@@timkeenan8287 and then teacher became pupil !
Brando ....A great 'Caesar' of an actor....When such another?...Never !!!
James Mason is also the best Brutus
Spot on, Brando's passion surpasses any rules he misses with this piece, this is the type of acting that can excuse the rules of Shakespeare. He is so alive and real you know he created some great circumstances to get through those lines!
There are no rules of Shakespeare, he was full of ale and fun.
I'm using this monologue for an audition (listening helps me memorize.) And now I fell like I should be ashamed...
feel*
Be inspired instead!
mumbles my arse
+James Cronly You must have Marlon Brando confused with James Dean.
This is acting at its peak! No more need be said.
Not bad for a kid from Omaha.
The Greatest Actor
“You come to me on the day of my daughter’s wedding...”
John Huston once compared watching Brando's Antony to opening the door of a furnace. The heat burns through the screen.
If Brando had only played more of the great classical roles.
John Gielgud said during the filming of "Julius Caesar," he asked Brando:
"Why don't you play Hamlet?"
Gielgud said Brando looked at him and said:
"Will you direct it?"
Gielgud said he agreed to do so.
Nothing, alas, ever came of it.
See what Brando did for Huston - another of his best performances
Blown away, you believe every second.
hmu if u here for an english project
Nope, and it's not even my first language. On the other hand, it wasn't Brando's either)
Anyway, now I am inspired to memorise it. Though, I am afraid of never doing this soliloquy real justice. Especially with me being female)
Greatest Shakespeare play on film I’ve ever seen
Jesus Christ this is absolutely mesmerizing
I always loved this rant. He nailed it.
I am here less to revise Shakespeare's stirring words but to marvel at Marlon Brando in n his prime.
The fire in his eye, the anger in his voice the frustration in his action... this is Marlon Brando at his most brilliant... no other actor has portrayed Mark Antony as he has... even I would follow him to seek vengeance..but he fell victim to that Egyptian floozi and lost an empire to that cunning Octavian.. Marlon.. you were a contenders... you were somebody..🤔🙂
"I hoped we could all come here and reason together. But I'm a superstitious man. And if something should befall my Caesar, if he should be struck by a bolt of lightning, then I'm going to blame some of the people in this City. And then, I do not forgive!"
Thank u very very much....this helps me in performing very well in my school.... got an idea how to act and tell the dialogues
Marlon Brando at his finest and most powerful.
One of the best renditions of Antony's speech, and one of the best of Brando's perfomances.
Gave me goosebumps
well said Massimo Passante. has anybody ever had so much screen presence. awe inspiring.
Powerful
Yeah, he's definitely NOT kneeling before Zod...
In this day and age, everyone needs to hear this speech and think about what needs to be done.
CRY HAVOC!
And let slip the dogs of war!
This will be very popular soon.
The actor that brought Method Acting to the forefront. That any actor can be placed above Brando strikes me as pure nonsense. He took every character he portrayed and buried his soul into it. Inhabiting them completely. A horses ass of a person. An actor nonpareil.
So compelling and grabbing and gripping the way brando comanded your attention .It was almost like to strong to ignore or even turn away from Truly magnetic why there arent any more performances like this now is not hard to understand.Brando truly was the best ,not trying to hype him up to being more then what he was but i defy anyone being compared to brando today.To pull this off the way he did ;they cant come close
Great act of all time!!
The range of the young Brando. The film he made right before this one, he was a Mexican revolutionary and the film after, the leader of a motorcycle gang.
Too bad they don't do these anymore.
The Best
I came here for an example of how to voice this part for my english memorization project. I feel like I'll get a double A if I do it like this
Noyfb33 How'd it go?
Marlon Brando.................. Original OG
Still gives me chills
You haven't heard Shakespeare until you've heard it in the original Klingon....
1:53 best scream in the cinema history 😂😂 I only knew the German dubbed version of this movie. Not that the dub was bad, but the scream wasn't anywhere near this loud. Imagine my surprise 😉
I can only try and fail to imagine what a foreign dub of shakespeare is like. The English used and formed by the bard is so special that I simply cannot imagine it in translation at all.
@@Hereford1642 I think the dub is quite good but it can never really compare to the original, of course.
CRY HAVOC!!!!
i actually perfer this to the friends romans country men speech
possibly also the best performance in drama ever
the song "cry havoc" by Ex Deo they included this entire speech of marcus antonius to the song.
I do like this speech. I have heard it many times before but today was the first time I have noticed the similarities between this and the Harfleur speech in Henry V. Both convey barely supressed rage building to blood curdling, but reluctant, threats of savagery to be visited on the enemy. Both also throw in the prospect of butchering infants and the expected response of their mothers. I am going to Stratford Upon Avon tonight to see the play so I will compare Anthony's effort there with Brando;s brilliance here.
Chilling.... I love it!
blood and destruction shall be so in use and dreadful objects so familiar that mothers shall but smile when they behold their infants quarter'd with the hands of war; all pity choked with custom of fell deeds: and Caesar's spirit, ranging for revenge, with ate by his side come hot from hell, shall in these confines with a monarch's voice cry 'HAVOC!!!'
Cry HAVOC!!!
Gets me every time.
Brutus was an an errand boy, sent by grocery clerks, to collect a bill.
Bravo!
In short..."It is on!"
“Whatever farm animal of war, Lana!”
Really breath taking acting.
The greatest actor alive ☺
He did Hamlet, had a traumatic experience during the ghost scene and never step on the stage again- He actually thought he saw the ghost of his own father
Cj Okeke that war DD Lewis
not true, that was Daniel Day Lewis
DD Lewis did over method acting . Brando was just perfect
Mr. Aday??more like Mr. Payday! not just roasted, HONEY roasted
Inimitable.
I'm surprised there aren't more comments on this video in general, and I'm especially surprised at the lack of comments that mention Mr. Aday. oh well, I suppose I shall just post a comment with Mr.Adays name in it everytime I watch the video 5 times!
This guy !
When your Minecraft Dog is killed by your friends:
Probably the best 2 minutes of acting I've ever seen or heard
Goosebumps
Shout out to Mr. Aday!!
'All pity choked with custom of fell deed'.