It is absolute genius to show her bittersweet, sudden death and having Rolfe's calm voice-over establish her passing, only to then cut to a beautiful vignette of her running through the field in her English clothes, with a revived joy inside of her that she hasn't shown in such pure a form since she was a young girl dancing amid the tall grasses of her homeland. Malick contrasts the moments where she feels her imminent death upon her with the moments where she feels most alive, all set to Wagner's beautiful music that is always giving a sense of continuous upward motion. Masterpiece.
drw5500 The joy on her face is the joy of redemption. The water she douses herself with is like the asperges at a catholic church, cleansing, purifying, sanctifying.
+drw5500 Oh, well said, well said indeed! This scene never fails to bring tears to my eyes. A masterpiece, yes... the same can be said about your comment. Thank you for the time and attention you took to write it.
I've always felt that this was her soul, not her. Malick cuts from her playing with her son (I also feel that this is her spirit, already out of body) to Rolfe holding her hand as she lays dying to an empty bed to a Native American (death) who runs out of the confines of the home then back to her: finally free ("Mother, now I know where you live." This is nature, alive in all things, everywhere, all of the time, and never manifested more clearly than in one's own offspring). We cut to a grave with the cross, then the masts of the ship forming two crosses. Then to nature, then a port, and slowly but surely nature: trees, water, trees, water, always water. The emotions this brings up... My heart always swells. Unparalleled.
By far one of the best endings to a film I’ve ever watched. The sadness mixed in with the peace of the situation, mixes perfectly to create such a bitter sweet ending. Oh and God, that music… Just so beautiful. It’s like it’s speaking to us. That no matter the bitter sweetness of the situation, always remember the good times and strive for the future which holds accomplishment and a new day. A new world.
This film NEVER gets old for me. Poetry in motion. In my opinion, Malik is at his prime. James Horner's the Forbidden Corn is amazing as well. I've watched 100xs & will watch 100xs again :-)
I am male and I have a tendency to like love stories best of all stories, perhaps a little unusual in my cohort. In my humble opinion this is the greatest depiction of love between a man and a woman ever, sacrificial, heartbreaking and redeeming.
Absolute marvel of a film. Malick creates magic in each of his movies, especially this ending. All of his signatures are there, the tall trees, the flowing grass, the running water, the bird flying from left to right, which you also see in Days from Heaven and Tree of Life at least, the somersault as in Days of Heaven......this is so beautiful and emotional, no matter how many times one watches that ending
I just absolutely love this film. I saw it in the theatre and it is just so incredibly beautiful. This ending scene is just perfection. Lyrical, simple and profound. It is amazing and has stayed with me for so many years.
Haunting and sublime, mystical and profound. From beginning to end, this gorgeously ethereal color movie is three dimensional paintings in constant motion, animated with hypnotic cinematic brilliance. Her eternal soul returns unto nature, released free to soar homeward through space time. Haunting majestic music equally effectively used during Nosferatu The Vampyre - 1979.
There's really something magical here. The music in contrast to the imagery and choice of scenes is simply amazing. I feel as if I'm entering the gates of heaven watching them play in that garden as the scene progresses to them sailing to sea.
I loved this movie so much I watched it twice back to back…I’m happy she got to live a life of joy…he son will never want for anything ..I’m crying just typing this …what a great movie
i was fourteen when this movie came out and i went to see it with my dad. i remember the movie ending and us leaving the theater and driving home and both of us being silent. we were truly gobsmacked by how beautiful it was.
so few words and yet so much to be understood from these images. it's a magical and yet simple film. I don't know how you combine these two without being pretentious and grandiose. he's a great director. I got goosebumps on my arms just watching this scene. this is why I want to get into directing. I want to create magic like this.
ive visited pocahontas memorial in gravesend and its so amazing seeing her life in a film and knowing she was real it never ceases to make me emotional
the day I leave this crazy world and close my eyes for the last time, I hope I hear something so beautiful so powerful and like the valkyrie enter a new world
When I watch that final shot of the towering fir tree, and the music has faded, leaving only the sound of water rushing towards the sea, I'm reminded of the last few stanzas of "The Great Gatsby", as Gatsby's friend watches night fall slowly over Manhattan. As I reread them now, and think of all that has transpired in just four swift centuries, it's almost as if Fitzgerald was writing not only Gatsby's epitaph, but that of our entire miraculous species... _I spent my Saturday nights in New York because those gleaming, dazzling parties of his were with me so vividly that I could still hear the music and the laughter, faint and incessant, from his garden, and the cars going up and down his drive. One night I did hear a material car there, and saw its lights stop at his front steps. But I didn’t investigate. Probably it was some final guest who had been away at the ends of the earth and didn’t know that the party was over._ _On the last night, with my trunk packed and my car sold to the grocer, I went over and looked at that huge incoherent failure of a house once more. On the white steps an obscene word, scrawled by some boy with a piece of brick, stood out clearly in the moonlight, and I erased it, drawing my shoe raspingly along the stone. Then I wandered down to the beach and sprawled out on the sand._ _Most of the big shore places were closed now and there were hardly any lights except the shadowy, moving glow of a ferryboat across the Sound. And as the moon rose higher the inessential houses began to melt away until gradually I became aware of the old island here that flowered once for Dutch sailors’ eyes - a fresh, green breast of the new world. Its vanished trees, the trees that had made way for Gatsby’s house, had once pandered in whispers to the last and greatest of all human dreams; for a transitory enchanted moment man must have held his breath in the presence of this continent, compelled into an aesthetic contemplation he neither understood nor desired, face to face for the last time in history with something commensurate to his capacity for wonder._ _And as I sat there brooding on the old, unknown world, I thought of Gatsby’s wonder when he first picked out the green light at the end of Daisy’s dock. He had come a long way to this blue lawn, and his dream must have seemed so close that he could hardly fail to grasp it. He did not know that it was already behind him, somewhere back in that vast obscurity beyond the city, where the dark fields of the republic rolled on under the night._ _Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgastic future that year by year recedes before us. It eluded us then, but that’s no matter - to-morrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther. . . . And one fine morning_ -- _So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past._ (F. Scott Fitzgerald, "The Great Gatsby")
i absolutely agree with you!! such beauty and profoundness, love how everything speaks for itself, all the camera angles, the shots and expressions, no need for any talk :)
Remembering the baptism of my mother ann and the times we played hide and seek in are garden long long ago in them golden years of my childhood and has i see her touch the tree of life she is now to me a wild spirit and has free has a bird to dance endlessly were and ever her spirit desides to take her and has i look into a new dawn and into a new life i look back to were she lays with great sadness but with great joy for i no now were she lives.
I thought I was weird for finding this ending so captivatingly powerful...the spiritual and mystic bridge between live and death is not a far distance. As a mother we all wish to be there to witness and attest to your child becoming an adult. But is not up to us. It is in the hands of destiny...we are just a vessel for the divine act of creation. And at the end of that blessed act Death sits waiting for comfort and relieve us. May I have given all the Love I could and served as Best I could. Remember me as kind and helpful. And have pity and mercy for my faults. Oh! Come Sweet Death Be Thee Gentle Yet Unyielding My Work Is Accomplished.
There are 2 versions. The one pictured here, which inclundes the historal background and the casting of tribal actors, building the exact copy of Jamestown. Behind the scenes, interviews, the blessing ceremony by the Tribal actors [which Colin Farrell attended] at the begining of filming. The 2nd. version is longer and has more of the romance with Smith..director's cut.
I've always assumed that he was a kind of Native America version of the Grim Reaper, or Charon the ferryman from Greek mythology, who was there to guide the spirit of Pocahontas to the afterlife.
@Niall Johnson-Byrne Yes Indian is a derogatory term that Christopher Columbus called the natives. He thought he had sailed to India at that time because the people he encountered were also dark skinned. The Moorish Nation was still in existence at that time which is the real name of the people in that hemisphere. I am also part Cherokee so do not call me a moron again.
+Georgia Brewer No, it's not. Cherokee are a Native American Tribe. It's possible for some African Americans to have Cherokee genes through family line just as it's possible you or any other American or even non American does. I suggest you research anthropology and your family tree as you do not seem to have a clue. Why do you think some black couples have a child with blonde hair and blue eyes? or a white couple to have a black baby?. This means somewhere in their family tree the gene entered the family, often as far back as the time of slavery, and suddenly chooses to appear years down the line in a random child.
This film NEVER gets old for me. Poetry in motion. In my opinion, Malik is at his prime. James Horner's the Forbidden Corn is amazing as well. I've watched 100xs & will watch 100xs again :-)
He’s good although very uneven. I’m my opinion, the greatest filmmaker since Kubrick is a three way between Spielberg, Linklater, and maybe Alexander Payne. Just my opinion though!
@@plumeria66 Not just her mother, but Mother Earth itself. Through the inevitability of her death, she's finally realized the answers to her many questions throughout her life.
From 1:49-2:01 as horrible as it is to watch because we know what her fate will be. I see a small silver linning. His anguish as he holds her hand and as she gently strokes his hair the image of true love! They had a short but beautiful life together. She left this world knowing how much love he had for her and he will raise their son with compassion and confidence.
drtr95 You're very welcome! It's been almost four years since I've posted this and I come back to it from time to time. I still think it's one of the most beautiful sequences in recent film history. I'm always moved by the cut and then the shot that shows her hugging her child just as Wagner's music begins to emerge. It's a breathtaking moment of maternal solace that speaks volumes about this extraordinary woman... the "mother" of our country as she's been called.
I saw this in its subdued Austin debut. Terrence Malick's wife was quietly in attendance in the rear of the theater and at the end commented that Terry saw his films as little poems. This ending is the quintessential example of this.
A scene like this is what Malick is always trying to achieve. Personally I think this is his best movie after the long break...I know most don't agree but I thought this one blended nature, the self-reflection and a coherent story more than any of his recent films.
Malick"s BEST FILM. Perfect from beginning to end! An unforgettable experience. Hesitated to watch it a second time because nothing could compare to that first viewing and was not sure my heart could make it through.
This form of stylish just leaves me both meditative and at a complete standstill. I felt this way with The Thin Red Line as well. Malick brings something so unique and different to the table that some enjoy and some don't. As unconventional as he is, I truly find him a deep, deep visionary. You either hate these movies or love them with no in between. I get goose bumps from this final scene.
Every time I watch this movie I cry, and cry. Even watching this video. I don't normally do so, but it's such a beautiful movie. Unfortunately not many people know about this true masterpiece. The music, the acting...it's just 10 out of 10! :-)
I was actually a actor in this movie. I so happy so many of you enjoyed it. Being part of this was amazing
You have been part of one of humanities greatest poetic artistic achievements
Who did you play?
Consider yourself blessed to have been part of a masterpiece of cinematography. Extraordinary film and director vision.
@@Technically_classicwith no answer of course
@@Technically_classic He's just fooling around lol
I cannot watch this scene without crying my eyes out.
This scene never fails to move me, nor to awake powerful emotions deep within my soul.
It is absolute genius to show her bittersweet, sudden death and having Rolfe's calm voice-over establish her passing, only to then cut to a beautiful vignette of her running through the field in her English clothes, with a revived joy inside of her that she hasn't shown in such pure a form since she was a young girl dancing amid the tall grasses of her homeland. Malick contrasts the moments where she feels her imminent death upon her with the moments where she feels most alive, all set to Wagner's beautiful music that is always giving a sense of continuous upward motion. Masterpiece.
drw5500 The joy on her face is the joy of redemption. The water she douses herself with is like the asperges at a catholic church, cleansing, purifying, sanctifying.
+drw5500 Oh, well said, well said indeed! This scene never fails to bring tears to my eyes. A masterpiece, yes... the same can be said about your comment. Thank you for the time and attention you took to write it.
I've always felt that this was her soul, not her. Malick cuts from her playing with her son (I also feel that this is her spirit, already out of body) to Rolfe holding her hand as she lays dying to an empty bed to a Native American (death) who runs out of the confines of the home then back to her: finally free ("Mother, now I know where you live." This is nature, alive in all things, everywhere, all of the time, and never manifested more clearly than in one's own offspring). We cut to a grave with the cross, then the masts of the ship forming two crosses. Then to nature, then a port, and slowly but surely nature: trees, water, trees, water, always water. The emotions this brings up... My heart always swells. Unparalleled.
EyeGodZA o
Thank you. Your thoughtful observation has enhanced my experience of this scene.
By far one of the best endings to a film I’ve ever watched. The sadness mixed in with the peace of the situation, mixes perfectly to create such a bitter sweet ending.
Oh and God, that music… Just so beautiful. It’s like it’s speaking to us. That no matter the bitter sweetness of the situation, always remember the good times and strive for the future which holds accomplishment and a new day. A new world.
I watched it once, then, a few weeks later and I had a totally transformative experience. Genius work.
It's the ouverture to Wagners Rheingold, in case you didnt know :)
This film NEVER gets old for me. Poetry in motion. In my opinion, Malik is at his prime. James Horner's the Forbidden Corn is amazing as well. I've watched 100xs & will watch 100xs again :-)
I own Colin's main screen worn clothes from this film so I.too. never get tired of it. It is a MASTERPIECE!
I am male and I have a tendency to like love stories best of all stories, perhaps a little unusual in my cohort. In my humble opinion this is the greatest depiction of love between a man and a woman ever, sacrificial, heartbreaking and redeeming.
emojummper1 I appreciate this comment a lot.
Deep inside we are all like you, we can’t always pretend to be the Lion, sometimes we are just ourself, and we shouldn’t hide it...👍🏻
This is the best love story ever told in cinema. Its genuine and neither fake or corny.
Thank you for this comment, feeling less alone now
Absolute marvel of a film. Malick creates magic in each of his movies, especially this ending. All of his signatures are there, the tall trees, the flowing grass, the running water, the bird flying from left to right, which you also see in Days from Heaven and Tree of Life at least, the somersault as in Days of Heaven......this is so beautiful and emotional, no matter how many times one watches that ending
I just absolutely love this film. I saw it in the theatre and it is just so incredibly beautiful. This ending scene is just perfection. Lyrical, simple and profound. It is amazing and has stayed with me for so many years.
Haunting and sublime, mystical and profound. From beginning to end, this gorgeously ethereal color movie is three dimensional paintings in constant motion, animated with hypnotic cinematic brilliance. Her eternal soul returns unto nature, released free to soar homeward through space time. Haunting majestic music equally effectively used during Nosferatu The Vampyre - 1979.
There's really something magical here. The music in contrast to the imagery and choice of scenes is simply amazing. I feel as if I'm entering the gates of heaven watching them play in that garden as the scene progresses to them sailing to sea.
My heart drops every time when the boy calls “mama”?
I keep coming back to this scene, it's so moving. Perfect in every way. Well done Mr Malick.
Me too. Very blissful
Perfection. One of cinema's greatest moments.
being a native myself i really enjoy this movie even if it has a sad ending
Peace and sadness merge perfectly on this scene. Malick´s talent at its best...
Something about this whole scene that makes me want to write a novel of my own
Any progress on the draft?
I tried but I'm a single dad with a baby atm so finding time is hard lol!
@@Spenceyboi89 no sweat, that's a lot of responsibility. Hope it's all going well for you both!
Big talk. Just do it
@@Spenceyboi89 Do it
I loved this movie so much I watched it twice back to back…I’m happy she got to live a life of joy…he son will never want for anything ..I’m crying just typing this …what a great movie
This is one of my favorite films ever. I cried so much when she leaves Passion (John Smith) for real love (her husband)... Wonderful.
i was fourteen when this movie came out and i went to see it with my dad. i remember the movie ending and us leaving the theater and driving home and both of us being silent. we were truly gobsmacked by how beautiful it was.
Terrence Malick is America's greatest film maker! Beautiful film on so many levels.
so few words and yet so much to be understood from these images. it's a magical and yet simple film. I don't know how you combine these two without being pretentious and grandiose. he's a great director. I got goosebumps on my arms just watching this scene. this is why I want to get into directing. I want to create magic like this.
ive visited pocahontas memorial in gravesend and its so amazing seeing her life in a film and knowing she was real it never ceases to make me emotional
The grind was incended no?
the day I leave this crazy world and close my eyes for the last time, I hope I hear something so beautiful so powerful and like the valkyrie enter a new world
It's not the valkyrie, but the gods entering Valhalla over the Rainbow Bridge.
This is the best ending scene in all of film.
When I watch that final shot of the towering fir tree, and the music has faded, leaving only the sound of water rushing towards the sea, I'm reminded of the last few stanzas of "The Great Gatsby", as Gatsby's friend watches night fall slowly over Manhattan. As I reread them now, and think of all that has transpired in just four swift centuries, it's almost as if Fitzgerald was writing not only Gatsby's epitaph, but that of our entire miraculous species...
_I spent my Saturday nights in New York because those gleaming, dazzling parties of his were with me so vividly that I could still hear the music and the laughter, faint and incessant, from his garden, and the cars going up and down his drive. One night I did hear a material car there, and saw its lights stop at his front steps. But I didn’t investigate. Probably it was some final guest who had been away at the ends of the earth and didn’t know that the party was over._
_On the last night, with my trunk packed and my car sold to the grocer, I went over and looked at that huge incoherent failure of a house once more. On the white steps an obscene word, scrawled by some boy with a piece of brick, stood out clearly in the moonlight, and I erased it, drawing my shoe raspingly along the stone. Then I wandered down to the beach and sprawled out on the sand._
_Most of the big shore places were closed now and there were hardly any lights except the shadowy, moving glow of a ferryboat across the Sound. And as the moon rose higher the inessential houses began to melt away until gradually I became aware of the old island here that flowered once for Dutch sailors’ eyes - a fresh, green breast of the new world. Its vanished trees, the trees that had made way for Gatsby’s house, had once pandered in whispers to the last and greatest of all human dreams; for a transitory enchanted moment man must have held his breath in the presence of this continent, compelled into an aesthetic contemplation he neither understood nor desired, face to face for the last time in history with something commensurate to his capacity for wonder._
_And as I sat there brooding on the old, unknown world, I thought of Gatsby’s wonder when he first picked out the green light at the end of Daisy’s dock. He had come a long way to this blue lawn, and his dream must have seemed so close that he could hardly fail to grasp it. He did not know that it was already behind him, somewhere back in that vast obscurity beyond the city, where the dark fields of the republic rolled on under the night._
_Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgastic future that year by year recedes before us. It eluded us then, but that’s no matter - to-morrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther. . . . And one fine morning_ --
_So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past._
(F. Scott Fitzgerald, "The Great Gatsby")
love it so much
men what a disgusting thought you have..we talk her about miracle in life the greatness and mysteries of the soul and you bring here gatsby ??????
this is the best version i have ever heard of the prelude to the Das Rheingold opera by Richard Wagner.
Its not. Georg Soltis version is the undisputed best one.
The minute she died her spirit was freed she went back to her ancestral ways , it’s so bittersweet
Terrence malick you don’t watch a movie but you watch a dream
Terrence Malick always knows what music blends perfectly at what moment.
Masterpiece...
My favorite Thanksgiving movie. So beautiful.
How the hell I have not seen this movie yet! This is so beautiful!
this movie is so dreamlike and calming to watch, almost like using drugs
i absolutely agree with you!! such beauty and profoundness, love how everything speaks for itself, all the camera angles, the shots and expressions, no need for any talk :)
Heartbreaking to know that Pocahontas died in England , never again to see her beloved Virginia .
Remembering the baptism of my mother ann and the times we played hide and seek in are garden long long ago in them golden years of my childhood and has i see her touch the tree of life she is now to me a wild spirit and has free has a bird to dance endlessly were and ever her spirit desides to take her and has i look into a new dawn and into a new life i look back to were she lays with great sadness but with great joy for i no now were she lives.
Greatest montage I've ever seen.
I thought I was weird for finding this ending so captivatingly powerful...the spiritual and mystic bridge between live and death is not a far distance. As a mother we all wish to be there to witness and attest to your child becoming an adult. But is not up to us. It is in the hands of destiny...we are just a vessel for the divine act of creation. And at the end of that blessed act Death sits waiting for comfort and relieve us. May I have given all the Love I could and served as Best I could. Remember me as kind and helpful. And have pity and mercy for my faults. Oh! Come Sweet Death Be Thee Gentle Yet Unyielding My Work Is Accomplished.
Ah this is a master piece
This scene made Ebert call Malick a "Visionary"
Malick and Wagner: a winning combine!
It's good! But I imagine other composers....Scriabin? Honneger? Vangelis?
Esa pelicula se quedara siempre en mi memoria 💖
ულამაზესი სცენებია 💞 საოცარი მუსიკის ფონზე 👌
Whoever likes the Disney version better than this should really reevaluate themselves as a human
Très beau film ,collin farrel ,christian bale ... magnifique paysage,romance, histoire ,bravo...
Wagner just makes everything better. Don't you think?
Music meant for the pathway to Heaven IMHO
Are you Jewish sir? What was that you were whistling?
Can add profundity where there's little of it.
Malik is so good that even Christopher Plummer refuses to work with him ever again.
@BlackRaven0211 I am teary eyed as I type this. This scene is so beautiful. Malick transcends everything.
Kubrick is one of the greatest filmmakers of all time, no doubt about it. All I'm saying is that Malick's aesthetic is more affecting for me.
Great movie.....sad ending x
Does this film inspire you to read/learn about American Indian history, culture, and heritage?
you would call them what?for god's shake, it's a movie. a masterpiece,actually.
Que poema !!!!!.-
Now watching this Pocahontas infance ruined 😭
Walt Whitman
That hair style looks pretty on her. It looks like one of Princess Leia's.
There are 2 versions. The one pictured here, which inclundes the historal background and the casting of tribal actors, building the exact copy of Jamestown. Behind the scenes, interviews, the blessing ceremony by the Tribal actors [which Colin Farrell attended] at the begining of filming. The 2nd. version is longer and has more of the romance with Smith..director's cut.
Malick, the genius
Reign of King James the 1st. Early 17th Century.
Pocahontas died on England and Rolfe on america
Whats the name of this song ?!
What is the name of the melody playing?
I love this movie so much.. I just have one question. Who’s the Indian running out of the doorway? Thanks for the answer !
I've always assumed that he was a kind of Native America version of the Grim Reaper, or Charon the ferryman from Greek mythology, who was there to guide the spirit of Pocahontas to the afterlife.
I think he was from Pocahontas’s tribe. We went with her to look after her
@Niall Johnson-Byrne
Yes Indian is a derogatory term that Christopher Columbus called the natives. He thought he had sailed to India at that time because the people he encountered were also dark skinned. The Moorish Nation was still in existence at that time which is the real name of the people in that hemisphere.
I am also part Cherokee so do not call me a moron again.
Ernest crowder - Isn't it common knowledge that all black people are part Cherokee?
+Georgia Brewer No, it's not. Cherokee are a Native American Tribe. It's possible for some African Americans to have Cherokee genes through family line just as it's possible you or any other American or even non American does. I suggest you research anthropology and your family tree as you do not seem to have a clue. Why do you think some black couples have a child with blonde hair and blue eyes? or a white couple to have a black baby?. This means somewhere in their family tree the gene entered the family, often as far back as the time of slavery, and suddenly chooses to appear years down the line in a random child.
No doubt.
Damn does the sun ever come out in this movie?
❤❤❤
Why isn’t this song on the soundtrack?🥺
very late but it’s because it’s not part of james horner’s original soundtrack, it’s a wagner song from the 1800s
What's the song they used for this?
Volkmar Golembusch Oh my gosh, thank you SOOOO much! God bless!
For God's shake, it's a movie. I mean, it was not a real kiss (a deep kiss).
its by Wagner, Das Rheingold Prelude
loved the movie...hated the music score of what sounds like an orchestra tuning up for 2 hrs....
One of my fave movies of all time still, both Collin and Christian showed her love and learning in different parts of her life
Stendhal syndrome.
ok, movie takes place in 1600s music from 1800s
image of the tombstone from the 2000s
we dont know the music from Rome or Greece. We know what music existed in 1620.
Actors from the 2000's.
do you expect actors from the 1600s
+gaguy1967 some trees used were from 1954 as well.
This film NEVER gets old for me. Poetry in motion. In my opinion, Malik is at his prime. James Horner's the Forbidden Corn is amazing as well. I've watched 100xs & will watch 100xs again :-)
A highly underrated film.
But way too loonngg.
Criminally underrated
Totally agree
@@thegirllikesmovies7389 I award it :
3/10
@@benlotus2703 ok
I was blown away by this film. The choice of music, the pacing, acting performances, scenery.. everything. Simply brilliant
I keep coming back to this. This is the most beautiful ending to a movie ever.
the number of Malick fans in this world is small, but I'd say they know how to experience the beauty of cinema the most..
Yeah well the music, the fking music
That's so sad😭
I almost weep to this. Every. Time.
Words can’t even begin to describe how beautiful this is!
That's the true power of cinema. It says what words can't.
This movie is a masterpiece.
Malick is the greatest user of music since Stanley Kubrick.
You mean since Richard Wagner - who composed this.
He ripped the usage off from Werner Herzog, who first used Vorspiel to great effect in his film Nosferatu the Vampyre.
The two comments above are equally stupid.
May be the greatest _filmmaker_ since Kubrick!
He’s good although very uneven. I’m my opinion, the greatest filmmaker since Kubrick is a three way between Spielberg, Linklater, and maybe Alexander Payne. Just my opinion though!
"Mother, now I know where you live..."
What does this refer to?
Rob Kenway Her mother died earlier. And now she knows what it’s like to be in heaven.
@@plumeria66 Thankyou, a truly beautiful movie.
@@plumeria66 Not just her mother, but Mother Earth itself. Through the inevitability of her death, she's finally realized the answers to her many questions throughout her life.
These words have such a strong meaning
So sad that Pocohontas died far from home and so young. I like to think the last scene suggests Pocohontas 'returned' home after she died.
Died in Gravesend Kent.
I also thought she died on her voyage back to US, not in England
You can never go home
Home? America was not her home anymore after the colonization.
But was buried on england
From 1:49-2:01 as horrible as it is to watch because we know what her fate will be. I see a small silver linning. His anguish as he holds her hand and as she gently strokes his hair the image of true love! They had a short but beautiful life together. She left this world knowing how much love he had for her and he will raise their son with compassion and confidence.
Thanks you, Mike. The greatest living film director. Any 4 minutes of his films could prove this, but this is a particularly excellent choice.
drtr95 You're very welcome! It's been almost four years since I've posted this and I come back to it from time to time. I still think it's one of the most beautiful sequences in recent film history. I'm always moved by the cut and then the shot that shows her hugging her child just as Wagner's music begins to emerge. It's a breathtaking moment of maternal solace that speaks volumes about this extraordinary woman... the "mother" of our country as she's been called.
+Mike Geraghty Jr "mother of our country"... says who...?
Christ. This is film folks. A masterpiece.
sadness as deep as the Grand Canyon. Still, one of the most moving and beautiful films ever done.
I could only dream of someone loving me as much as Christian Bale made it look. Amazing actor... beautiful perspective of Pocahontas.
I saw this in its subdued Austin debut. Terrence Malick's wife was quietly in attendance in the rear of the theater and at the end commented that Terry saw his films as little poems. This ending is the quintessential example of this.
So lucky
transcendent film making
A scene like this is what Malick is always trying to achieve. Personally I think this is his best movie after the long break...I know most don't agree but I thought this one blended nature, the self-reflection and a coherent story more than any of his recent films.
No doubt about it. Extremely amazing work here!
Malick"s BEST FILM. Perfect from beginning to end! An unforgettable experience. Hesitated to watch it a second time because nothing could compare to that first viewing and was not sure my heart could make it through.
Brilliant film. Splendid use of Wagner. So full of promise.
This form of stylish just leaves me both meditative and at a complete standstill. I felt this way with The Thin Red Line as well. Malick brings something so unique and different to the table that some enjoy and some don't. As unconventional as he is, I truly find him a deep, deep visionary. You either hate these movies or love them with no in between. I get goose bumps from this final scene.
"Das Rheingold" by Wagner - this version is by Edo de Waart and the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
One of the most absolutely SOUL STIRRING moments in movies.
These final moments of this film convey such an aching sense of loss.
One of the greatest films ever made. If you aren't a little choked up at the end you may not be human.
Every time I watch this movie I cry, and cry. Even watching this video.
I don't normally do so, but it's such a beautiful movie. Unfortunately not many people know about this true masterpiece. The music, the acting...it's just 10 out of 10! :-)