The thing is: Orator in ancient rome was someone who was PAID to either, speak on behalf, or to teach the art of public speaking for the sons of wealthy roman families, usually a greek was hired for that job, So when Charlton Heston as Mark Anthony says he is not an orator, it means he isn't saying what he has to say for money, but he says it because it comes from the heart
Check out Amistad. There's an extended monologue by Anthony Hopkins that he was able to deliver in a single take (even though there are cuts in the version in the film). It impressed Stephen Spielberg so much that he went from referring to Hopkins as "Tony" to addressing him as "Sir Anthony."
Literally everyone who goes through Theater/acting school, which is most actors, can give this monologue off by heart. Not one doesn’t study Shakespeare & this is his biggest one.
@@knutdergroe9757 An odd thing to chose Brad Pitt, who influenced a great number of people with his speeches in Fight Club as an example. I could easily see many of today's actors deliver a fine speech in one take. Many of them do, it is by no means a dying art. Just because directors like to use more cuts these day doesn't mean actor's can no longer do it, what's wrong with you people.
You can’t help but get swept up in the emotional rollercoaster of this, yet at the same time you can see how Antony is playing the mob and leading them to mutiny while “praising” the conspirators and looking like he’s “just defending his friend”. The cleverness of the bards writing puts the audience in the place of the mob and shows them how charismatic people can twist information and emotions to lead you to certain conclusions rather than just telling you how to think. perfectly written and acted.
By constantly refering to them as "honorable" but pointing out there crimes hes making an obvious allusion to the conspirators hiding their actions and misdeeds behind their titles.
You know, if I could wind the clock back to a time when Charlton Heston was still extant, I would very much like the opportunity to look him in the eye and shake his hand and tell him just how much I enjoyed his portrayal of Mark Antony.
"Charlton Heston, ever one of the very best classically-trained stars." May he forever rest in honorable peace. We are unlikely to ever see his kind again.
Yes, he and others from an age of players past that could project the image. For alas in these days i cannot class any "actor" an actor, but a shallow vessel of no depth.
What a kind and lovely tribute to Charlton Heston... I had the pleasure to work with him on stage at the Ahmansohn Theater in LA...I truly admired him as an actor but much more as a charming, dedicated, generous human being. I am proud to have been in his presence.
Honor has maybe killed more humans than the lack of it. A whole lot of women and children in that number too. Honor is a piss-poor substitute for empathy and awareness. Those Senators are absolutely 'honorable men', as they care about the selfish and personal which is the root of honor; Antony names them rightly. This is the genius of Shakespeare and this speech.
@@MrBendylaw You do realise that honour is just an old-fashioned way of saying integrity right? You want people to not have integrity? In the end the people who shout loudest about empathy are usually the people who lack it themselves. They usually demand empathy for people like themselves and conveniently forget about it for their opponents. Integrity is the cornerstone of avoiding the egotistical traps of life, if you maintain your integrity (i.e. your honour) you will do what is right *despite* the selfish little voice that might tell you otherwise. Whereas the people who cry out for empathy are usually the most selfish, they have the least integrity, and are usually concerned with what they think they (and the people of their group) 'deserve'. A selfish concept since nobody inherently deserves anything in this world. Edit: also you do understand that empathy doesn't mean you care about people right? It just means to understand someone's perspective. Sociopaths can exhibit empathy, that's how they manipulate people. The word you're looking for is *sympathy* which is actually caring about someone.
@@AeneasGemini I've read it (empathy) defined as a two-faced thing, cognitive empathy being the basic ability to discern (but not necessarily connect) to another's feelings; and affective empathy being the ability to make the connection and share the feeling. When the rabbit screams in the meadow, the fox calculates upon the former, the other rabbits upon the latter. And as for sympathy, I have less regard for it. Half the sympathy I've ever seen has been as real as a three-dollar bill, and obviously, cheaply so. And anyways, it never applies to the finer moments in life. Who ever felt sympathy for the laughing child, or the victor, or the in-love, or the new mother? Only someone inwardly twisted and only willing to look at wonderful things through their own darkly ironic glass. See: 'cognitive empathy', above.
Since it is from Shakespeare they wouldn't have been able to use it for Rome. I'm guessing fear of knowing whatever they'd write would be measured against the speech from the play is why they only opted to show the eulogy's immediate aftermath. Shame, really. Purefoy is a good actor so it would have been nice if they gave him a eulogy to perform, even if it wasn't Shakespeare's dialogue.
@Sebastian But in that same series Purefoy gives a heartbreaking and eloquent speech after his defeat at Actium, which proves he was very capable of delivering that kind of emotion.
One of the greatest speeches of all time delivered by one of the greatest actors of all time. God rest your soul, Charlton Heston. There will never be another like you.
Brando's speech had more anger and rage that Antony would feel, but Heston's is more the tone of a clever man which we know Antony was. The debate will never be settled.
It depends on if you want a romanticized version of Caesar or the reality. The reality was that Caesar was, in fact, ambitious. He sought to destroy the Republic and become king. And Brutus was, in fact, an honorable man. He sought to save the Republic. Yet history remembers Caesar as some sort of martyr and Brutus as a betrayer. It really just goes to show you that it's those that identify with Caesar--the man who would be tyrant--that determine what we learn as history.
@@raynmanshorts9275 I think it is a stretch to call Brutus an honorable man, he was a man manipulated by Ogliarchs to give credence to murder, at this point the republic had become nothing more than a oligarchy run to benefit those that were already rich and powerful
@@raynmanshorts9275 it seems you need to learn history. of course he was ambitious. what man who is not ambitious can change a country? he was ambitious but it was all for the glory of rome, honorable raynman
Nonsense, Brando sounds like a living human who lives his lines, Heston sounds like a stilted "actor" in front of a camera. He wouldn't even have been audible in front of anything other than a sound stage. Utter fail. Brando was far superior as a true lead actor.
According to Plutarch, an early Greek Roman historian of the Roman Empire, Antony did deliver a rousing funeral oration during Julius Caesar’s funeral. Shakespeare no doubt used literary license for dramatic effect for Antony’s exact speech in his tragedy play-Julius Caesar-upon which this film was based on. The oration has become a classic in public speaking.
HERE WAS A CAESAR! WHEN COMES SUCH ANOTHER?! I got chills from that. The entire speech is one that would create armies, but those last words would drive men to fury.
@@ninodino444 dafuq. How is he "not real". There is surely someone named "Jesus" at one point of time. Crying out loud. Edit: Napoleon was not real, his memoirs are 19th century made up folk tales.
hahahahaha! Marlon Brando is an idiot of an actor! Heston was much better in this one then he was in 1950 and better then brando in this one! What a fool you are!
Yes, giving them money paid for by taking the gold mines in Gaul, for which he killed ONE MILLION people. And another million were sold into slavery, to pay for his "generosity" so he could get power. This from a population in Gaul of six million. Right before his death he planned to invade more land in the east. More people killed, slaves taken, to pay for his generosity. He filled the Senate with foreigners who'd vote like he wanted, and Romans saw their gods replaced by foreign gods due to the new masses coming to Rome. The senators who fought Caesar's power grab were what remained of the old Rome. After them came more dictators like Caesar, like the monster Caligula from his own family, and the tyrant Nero. With the Senate pushed aside one man could do whatever he wanted to the people.
And he often FORGAVE those that went against him. His old friend Pomey, who he chased all the way to Egypt. When presented with his head Caeser was furious! Not only was he a CONSOL OF ROME! But caeser dear old friend and he had plans to forgive him! To be robbed of this reconciliation…
This is what the conservative faction of Rome's senators just couldn't get over: why give lands in Italy to Roman veterans? Why leave such immense amounts of money to each Roman citizen? What is so appealing to populism that it would be worth overthrowing a "republic", or rather oligarchy, for? If Cato just understood that the power that lies among the masses, especially under leadership, was something to embrace rather than shun, he would have negotiated peace prior to Caesar even crossing the Rubicon and relied upon Roman citizens rather than his slaves and gladiators for support.
Heston understood the speech on a level Brando did not. He perfectly conveyed Shakespeare's intent with this speech, of how Antony skillfully manipulates the crowd with his words. Politicians for centuries after the first performance of this play have intentionally and unintentionally cribbed from this speech.
Brando's interpretation felt more like the speech of a man who truly felt every word he uttered: the rage and the passion. Heston meanwhile, seems to convey the intent of manipulation in his performance, which I do think is what Shakespeare intended.
I disagree..While Brando brought more emotion to his performance than other actors did, it did not lack in persuasive power in any way..I also like how while the crowd were contemplating what he said, the camera focused on Brando’s face, and you can see his manipulative intent on his face..I thought the 1955 film made use of the idiosyncrasies of film in fleshing out the Bard’s great play more than this version did..This version felt like the play was put on and filmed as it was while the 1955 version felt like an adaptation of the play to film..
@albion65 I saw a version of Julius Caesar with William Shatner as Antony. I know that Shatner can't compare to either Heston or Brando, but Shatner played the role in a very sly way. When he starts the "Friends Romans Countrymen" monolog, he starts off as fearful because if he had straightaway attacked Brutus and Cassius, there was every chance that he could have been torn apart by the mob, because at that moment, the fickle crowd was on the side of Brutus in believing that Caesar was ambitious. He was speaking to the crowd as though his life depended on it, because at that moment, for all intents and purposes, it DID. Shatner's Antony knows he has won the crowd over when he says, "Bear with me. My heart is there in the coffin with Caesar, and I must pause til it comes back to me." By overhearing what each citizen is saying. Then he has the mob eating out of his hands when he mentions the will. When the crowd says, "They were traitors honorable men!" At that point, Antony knew he had them, both the crowd and the conspirators, exactly right where he wanted them. Again, I don't put William Shatner on the same level as Charlton Heston or Marlon Brando, but, playing it that way was pretty damn ingenious.
@@panzerlieb yes , Augusts turned a city of stones and turned into a city of marbles. He was indeed pretty good , sadly , his whole dynasty only had 2 good emperors , 1 stooge and 2 tyrants , with Caligula as the crazyiest we would ever saw.
In 1966, we were reading this speech in "Julius Caesar" and struggling a bit between the number of times "honorable man/men" were spoken. As 16-year-old high school sophomores, our English teacher finally explained to us that Antony was being sarcastic. Sarcasm is not unknown to high school students. After that, the speech was easier to "get". Telling my mother about this, she shared this story from her high school sophomore days in 1946. In her high school days, each student had to recite Antony's funeral oration from memory (as did we, by the way). Her boyfriend sat in the front while she recited. She got as far as, "Friends, Romans, Countrymen, lend me your ears..." when her boyfriend stage whispered, "I can't get them off!" My mother collapsed in laughter and almost failed the class. She never said what their punishment was. I suspect they got sent to the principal's office.
Knowing the time, she was probably waterboarded and her boyfriend was banished to the torture dungeon, from whence he would never return, thus leading you to be born!!! 😊🎉
@cam5816 Ah, but he emerged and married the girl his family chose for him. My mother married my father, who had been in the Pacific Theater during WW II. He left high school at 17 to support his mother and sisters when his father died.
I have to say I much prefer this version - Charlton Heston has picked up all of the nuance and subtle craftiness of this speech. THIS is a polished politician and Charlton plays him as such. Brando's performance is more theatrical, dramatic and very much suited for plays as it was written. Heston, in my opinion, takes this speech to another level.
@@abrahamgideon I disagree. There is just about the same amount of "rawness" and power in Brando's version, simply interpreted with a different style during a different era of acting. They are both great in my opinion, and it's useless to contest which version is better.
@@hairglowingkyle4572 The fact that I prefer Heston's version doesn't mean Brando is any less an actor. It probably boils down to personal preference than anything else.
He gave every roman citizen 3 months wages... The will was narratively and historically the straw that broke the camel's back in regards to caesar's deification
Nope. You really need a basis for comparison here. (And, Chuckie-Cheese ain't it.) Compare the great James Mason in "The Desert Fox", co-starring Jessica Tandy: ua-cam.com/video/T4n48bVGom8/v-deo.html
@@CLASSICALFAN100 Chuck lead the Screen Actors Guild in their march with MLK on Washington, and campaigned for Hollywood's first inter-racial screen kiss (The Omega Man). I find your 'Chuckie-Cheese' comment somewhat disrespectfull. Addendum, your link is broken ...
@@johncodmore One of the first, but not the first. For one, the Kirk/Uhuru kiss on "Star Trek" preceded "The Omega Man" by several years. There's a funny comment by Heston about working with Cash on the movie's Wikipedia page in the section on the kiss.
Heston had a lifelong love of Shakespeare's work, and it clearly it shows here in this spirited persuasive interpretation. It is at once intimate and then the crowd is involved. skillful direction. and photography.
I did not know Charlton Heston until this speech by Mark Anthony. This is one of the most impressive speech delivery in movies I have seen. Also, I'm about to perform this oration to my english class and I'm thankful for this reference. Wish me luck!
JC conquered Gaul & **immediately** sold every man, woman & child into slavery, by a special one-time deal with the slave merchants who followed him there. Yep, he was certainly Mr. Nice Guy...
@@CLASSICALFAN100 In Roman terms, he WAS a good guy. He could simply have had them killed. But he didn't. And Roman slaves could and did buy their freedom. There are many Stele, erected by former slaves, thanking their masters for their kindness. Would someone, newly freed do such a thing if their masters had been cruel? Parents would often sell their children into slavery, knowing that they were giving them opportunities for education and housing they could never afford. So many people today simply don't understand the Roman system.
Which ACTUALLY reflects the intent of the words. Listen to what he is saying. Antony is brilliantly manipulating the crowd to turn against Brutus and the rest. Heston's performance reflects that intent perfectly. Brando ( a brilliant actor) might as well be yelling "Stella!!!!!" in his Antony performance.
I thought excactly the same, Brando uses extrovert expressiveness, while heston is more controlled Thus there is no better, just bits of quotes intronation and body language that you could prefer Every aspect of the director's choices (movie related/shots etc..) then it's whole new thing to add in consideration
……it was such a pleasure hearing this wonderfully spoken actor recite poetry, at a live performance. His bass voice was just mesmerising. He was an extremely well read man, humble, great dad to Fraser, & Holly. He’d just celebrated his 64th Wedding Anniversary to his beautiful wife, Lydia, when he died. They’re both gone now………RIP
1:16 this little moment fascinates me so much, the entire speech is a performance but on two levels. The actor Charlton Heston performing as Mark Antony, and the character of Mark Antony performing this riveting diatribe to rouse the mob to his own ends. But the line of “he was my friend, fair and just to me” is absent that performance, Heston is still acting but he drops the guise for a moment and the character of Antony speaks honestly, you can hear the pain of loss and genuine grief in those words.
A great performance by a great actor. If you want to see another great performance by Heston, watch him in "A Touch of Evil". After Charlton Heston was hired to star in the film, he insisted that Orson Welles be hired to direct it. Welles not only directed "A Touch of Evil", he also re-wrote the script and co-starred in the film. And it's a masterpiece. With Welles and Heston and Marlene Dietrich all starring in the film, it's great beyond greatness.
The quiet of the crowd as he says "I come to bury Caesar not to praise him" has so much atmosphere its amazing they make me feel like part of the crowd
...and easily manipulating the fickle crowd...and outright buying their loyalty at the end. So...yeah. If Ceaser's killers are 'honorable men'...so is Antony. :D
This is as close to portraying actual Roman rhetoric and oratory skills as we have ever come. With Shakespeare's writing, and Heston's acting. Marcus Tullius Cicero considered public speaking as acting, as much as it was persuading other men.
Look at the bold, rich colors and the quality of the film. This was pretty fucking impressive for 1953. You can tell they were going for this big epic so they went all in and it shows. Looks like a great movie.
Watched both versions back to back and although I seem to be in the minority with this opinion I have to say I like Heston's version better than Brando's. Brando delivers the speech with a lot of passion and power in his voice, but compared to Heston he also seems to rush through the lines a bit. What gives Heston's version the upper hand in my opinion is that he plays to the crowd more through tonal shifts between calm and soothing, rousing passion, anger and sadness. He purposefully uses his skills as a publik speaker to slowly build up to certain key points of his speech and slowly build up suspense, and thereby not only makes sure that they all cling to his every word, but also slowly changes their minds and makes it seem like it wasn't even his intention. He plays this crowd like damn fiddles and they don't even realise it. The only ones who slowly reaslise what Antony is doing are Brutus and the other conspirators. I for one found myself much more captivated by Heston's performance than by Brando's and since captivating a crowd is the main theme in this scene, I lean towards Heston.
Literally all Caesar had to do to win over the masses, even after his death, was "40 acres and a mule". Just shows how BAD the Senate was ignoring everyday issues for Roman citizens...
The only really great performances by Big Chuck were while he was really young, "when he was still an Actor, before he became a Star", as they say in Hollywood. Ben-Hur, Touch of Evil, some early TV, but very little else...
@gary grine I once read an interview with Heston about doing Shakespeare where he said that he thought the best actors had a responsibility to perform Shakespeare but that he didn't get far in convincing Robert De Niro that he should be doing it. I appreciate the kind of missionary impulse that makes one a noodge.
@@randomcenturion7264 The first Brutus gave the surname honorable value by deposing the tyrant Lucius Tarquinius Superbus but the last Brutus would undo that by being a quasi-tyrant himself along with a political party of tyrants by killing the man who was a threat to their power...A man who had more in common with the first Brutus than the last. He brought eternal shame and a permanent end to that line forever.
I have never considered Charlton Heston a great actor, although I have enjoyed his films, but his portrayal of Mark Anthony in this Shakespeare classic was a superb piece of acting. I stayed enthralled throughout. If he did not get an Oscar for this, he should have.
@@adamdunlaptv Totally and completely disagree with you. Brando's fury is there almost from the very beginning, while Heston initially plays the critic of Ceaser only to gradually stick the knives in the back of Brutus, Cassius and the rest.
@@d3finit1on99 Octavian was Caesar's nephew , so it do share his blood , although indirectly. As Julius pointed him as his heir , he too was considered a proper Ceasar. It was when the Octavian Dynasty had broken that things goes weird
Heston delivering The player king's speech In Kenneth Brannagh's Hamlet was the first time I truly understood it's dramatic implication even though I had the privilege of performing in several professional productions of Hamlet
I particularly failed in love with his modulating voice, his pitch at times goes down and up in rhythmic moves with his hands (Kinesis). Great job Charlton Heston Mark Anthony. The greatest speech of all time. This is an essential lesson for all Rhetoric trainers and inspired speakers.
''I believe that charlton Heston shows great leadership. and he even looks like a great barbarian. but what ever role he is playing it is great,and that is the true and great charlton heston.
Heston's version of Marc Antony's speech is the best, better than Brando's. Heston adds the right amount of sarcasm, irony, and masculinity. Too many other versions blubber, or miss the sarcasm, and don't know where to place the fury.
Watching them back to back there is something more human about Brando's performance. When he takes pause and says "My heart lies in there with Caesar" it catches me unlike Heston's performance does. That said Heston does an amazing job that he made his own
Charlton Heston never failed to deliver in the big roles. It would have been interesting to see him play a small part, a character part. Surely one of my favourite actors. In a era of Kirk Douglas, Marlon Brando, Ingrid Bergman, Gregory Peck etc...these people could play huge roles.
Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears; I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him. The evil that men do lives after them; The good is oft interred with their bones; So let it be with Caesar. The noble Brutus Hath told you Caesar was ambitious: If it were so, it was a grievous fault, And grievously hath Caesar answer’d it. Here, under leave of Brutus and the rest- For Brutus is an honourable man; So are they all, all honourable men- Come I to speak in Caesar’s funeral. He was my friend, faithful and just to me: But Brutus says he was ambitious; And Brutus is an honourable man. He hath brought many captives home to Rome Whose ransoms did the general coffers fill: Did this in Caesar seem ambitious? When that the poor have cried, Caesar hath wept: Ambition should be made of sterner stuff: Yet Brutus says he was ambitious; And Brutus is an honourable man. You all did see that on the Lupercal I thrice presented him a kingly crown, Which he did thrice refuse: was this ambition? Yet Brutus says he was ambitious; And, sure, he is an honourable man. I speak not to disprove what Brutus spoke, But here I am to speak what I do know. You all did love him once, not without cause: What cause withholds you then, to mourn for him? O judgment! thou art fled to brutish beasts, And men have lost their reason. Bear with me; My heart is in the coffin there with Caesar, And I must pause till it come back to me.
I have to say, I loved the recent HBO "Rome" series, but was crestfallen they didn't show Mark Purefoy's Marc Antony give this speech. They just showed him finishing up, and everyone acknowledging it was a powerful oration. I guess between Chuck Heston, Marlon Brando, Orson Welles', Richard Burton, and Laurence Olivier, those were some big (and well-worn) shoes to fill.
That's why I like about Shakespeare: you can have such a wide variety of subtle nuances in interpretation, that the same text feels very different depending on the artists.
Apart from the quality of the acting in se, which is superb in both Brando's and Heston's case, the true protagonist here is rhetorics, or public speaking if you want, whose power to persuade the people's hearts and deform reality are the weapons that Anthony plans to use to, ultimately, seize power. His grievance for Caesar's violent demise sounds sincere, but he is already thinking about his own future and political career. Are Caesar's assassins honorable men? Indeed they are nought. But Anthony is playing a double game here, and the Roman people easily fall in the trap. The people wants to be deceived, the Romans used to say: vulgus vult decipi.
The phrase is; "Vulgus (Mundus) vult decipi, ergo decipiatur" "The common people (world) wants to be decieved. And therefore they will be." It's how Trump got elected.
But were they deceived, or were Brutus and Co. not so honorable after all? To me they were elitist patricians, Brutus himself being one of the biggest moneylenders in the entire empire.
@@imapseudonym1403 It's not how Trump got elected you buffoon. The establishment, which you obviously drool over, is how Trump got elected. And he'll be elected again with their antics over his term. I'll say this, with that phrase, is exactly how the establishment and their lemmings (you) are being played and deceived by Trump!
@@josephgibson5493 " The establishment" The establishment does not vote. It requires voters, and plenty of them, both ill-educated and gullible, to put someone like trump in the white house.
I stumbled across this a few days ago. I’m become slightly obsessed with this play and speech. It has inspired me to be better in my art. To learn more about Shakespeare and history. I haven’t acted in many years but I hope to one day portray this play on stage. I missed the impact of art.
corvus13 yeah, Shakespeare had no problem with anachronism, wasn't there a clock that rang out in the play Julius Caesar despite clocks not even having been invented yet?
"I come not, friends, to steal away your hearts! I am no orator, as Brutus is, but as you know me all - a plain, blunt man that loved my friend (...) For I have neither wit nor words nor power of speech to stir men's blood, I only speak right on, I tell you that, which you yourselves do know." Oh the old "I'm not a lying, manipulating politician with fancy words, I *only say it like it is!*"-schtick was recognized even in Shakespeare's day.
I remember my English teacher explaining to us when we read 'Julius Caesar' how Antony totally knew what he was doing under the smokescreen of grieving.
@@811chelseafc Indeed. What satire refutes, refutes satire. What labels weak that which the mind has missed, as a bird flies a clouded draped sky, at night now less. But Dawn will break before the parapet of the Castel, if honor be sarcasm.
I am no orator... "continues to give one of the greatest speeches of all time"
lol classic
Indeed sir
The thing is: Orator in ancient rome was someone who was PAID to either, speak on behalf, or to teach the art of public speaking for the sons of wealthy roman families, usually a greek was hired for that job,
So when Charlton Heston as Mark Anthony says he is not an orator, it means he isn't saying what he has to say for money, but he says it because it comes from the heart
@S billings O judgment! Thou art fled to brutish beasts, and men have lost their reason!
Humble intro to catch the crowd off guard.
Total respect to the people those days that can give a speech without any cuts.
Check out Amistad. There's an extended monologue by Anthony Hopkins that he was able to deliver in a single take (even though there are cuts in the version in the film). It impressed Stephen Spielberg so much that he went from referring to Hopkins as "Tony" to addressing him as "Sir Anthony."
Could you see Brad Pitt,
Or some other current actor do this...
Not even,
Real Acting,
With class and skill.
Literally everyone who goes through Theater/acting school, which is most actors, can give this monologue off by heart. Not one doesn’t study Shakespeare & this is his biggest one.
There were some cuts here......all films have cuts.....U have to readjust lighting just for that sake alone
@@knutdergroe9757 An odd thing to chose Brad Pitt, who influenced a great number of people with his speeches in Fight Club as an example.
I could easily see many of today's actors deliver a fine speech in one take. Many of them do, it is by no means a dying art.
Just because directors like to use more cuts these day doesn't mean actor's can no longer do it, what's wrong with you people.
"I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him."
> doubt.jpg
He said what the crowd needed to hear.
@@Agentcoolguy1 yes or else traitors like Brutus and Cassius would've been served like they have dominated the entire world
@@udgampatel8103 To be fair in real life Mark called ceaser a god and used him to further his grasp in rome.
I come to bury Jason Robards, not to praise him. His portrayal of Brutus was terrible.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
You can’t help but get swept up in the emotional rollercoaster of this, yet at the same time you can see how Antony is playing the mob and leading them to mutiny while “praising” the conspirators and looking like he’s “just defending his friend”. The cleverness of the bards writing puts the audience in the place of the mob and shows them how charismatic people can twist information and emotions to lead you to certain conclusions rather than just telling you how to think. perfectly written and acted.
By constantly refering to them as "honorable" but pointing out there crimes hes making an obvious allusion to the conspirators hiding their actions and misdeeds behind their titles.
You know, if I could wind the clock back to a time when Charlton Heston was still extant, I would very much like the opportunity to look him in the eye and shake his hand and tell him just how much I enjoyed his portrayal of Mark Antony.
Agreed..the best speech ...The best play by shakespeare ..
“Telling you how to think…”
How can one get this close to the answers and in five words completely miss the target?
That’s exactly what my English teacher said. We were studying figurative language;).
"Charlton Heston, ever one of the very best classically-trained stars." May he forever rest in honorable peace. We are unlikely to ever see his kind again.
Yes, he and others from an age of players past that could project the image. For alas in these days i cannot class any "actor" an actor, but a shallow vessel of no depth.
What a kind and lovely tribute to Charlton Heston... I had the pleasure to work with him on stage at the Ahmansohn Theater in LA...I truly admired him as an actor but much more as a charming, dedicated, generous human being. I am proud to have been in his presence.
we have to keep antiquity alive
It was my privilege to have met Charlton Heston several times and even sit with him during a luncheon. I cried when he passed. A great man.
And Charlton was an honorable man
"I'm starting to think that these guys aren't honorable men!"
LOL
Honor has maybe killed more humans than the lack of it. A whole lot of women and children in that number too. Honor is a piss-poor substitute for empathy and awareness. Those Senators are absolutely 'honorable men', as they care about the selfish and personal which is the root of honor; Antony names them rightly. This is the genius of Shakespeare and this speech.
But he said they were honorable
@@MrBendylaw You do realise that honour is just an old-fashioned way of saying integrity right? You want people to not have integrity? In the end the people who shout loudest about empathy are usually the people who lack it themselves. They usually demand empathy for people like themselves and conveniently forget about it for their opponents.
Integrity is the cornerstone of avoiding the egotistical traps of life, if you maintain your integrity (i.e. your honour) you will do what is right *despite* the selfish little voice that might tell you otherwise. Whereas the people who cry out for empathy are usually the most selfish, they have the least integrity, and are usually concerned with what they think they (and the people of their group) 'deserve'. A selfish concept since nobody inherently deserves anything in this world.
Edit: also you do understand that empathy doesn't mean you care about people right? It just means to understand someone's perspective. Sociopaths can exhibit empathy, that's how they manipulate people. The word you're looking for is *sympathy* which is actually caring about someone.
@@AeneasGemini I've read it (empathy) defined as a two-faced thing, cognitive empathy being the basic ability to discern (but not necessarily connect) to another's feelings; and affective empathy being the ability to make the connection and share the feeling. When the rabbit screams in the meadow, the fox calculates upon the former, the other rabbits upon the latter.
And as for sympathy, I have less regard for it. Half the sympathy I've ever seen has been as real as a three-dollar bill, and obviously, cheaply so. And anyways, it never applies to the finer moments in life. Who ever felt sympathy for the laughing child, or the victor, or the in-love, or the new mother? Only someone inwardly twisted and only willing to look at wonderful things through their own darkly ironic glass. See: 'cognitive empathy', above.
We were robbed of James Purefoy giving this speech in HBO's Rome. Absolutely robbed.
Rome was so good. I love when she places a curse on Caesar.
Since it is from Shakespeare they wouldn't have been able to use it for Rome. I'm guessing fear of knowing whatever they'd write would be measured against the speech from the play is why they only opted to show the eulogy's immediate aftermath.
Shame, really. Purefoy is a good actor so it would have been nice if they gave him a eulogy to perform, even if it wasn't Shakespeare's dialogue.
No kidding. Time was a masterpiece but seemed very rushed
Nah, doesn't have enough obscenities for the Purefoy version of M.Anthony. xD
@Sebastian But in that same series Purefoy gives a heartbreaking and eloquent speech after his defeat at Actium, which proves he was very capable of delivering that kind of emotion.
His heavy, deep voice fits for shakespeare. What a powerful performance.
Have you seen him in Branagh's Hamlet? A supporting role only, and he stole the show.
ua-cam.com/video/ta9_16_um1k/v-deo.html
great actor
@@ewaldseiland8558 I just watched your link. Fantastic!
He was great as the Player King, too. Sorry he didn't do more Shakespear, he could have made it a career.
Ikr!, Loved his performance in Ben Hur!
That little smile he adds when you hear, "There's not a nobler man in Rome than Antony." It basically says, "I got them right where I want them."
One of the greatest speeches of all time delivered by one of the greatest actors of all time. God rest your soul, Charlton Heston. There will never be another like you.
Or as Heston put it "When comes such another!"
Well, there was Marlon Brando before him.
He is no way close to marlon brando.
Absolutely true Darryl. I double that 👍
Surprised he never ran for president!
*And Brutus is an honorable man*
SO ARE THE ALL, HONORABLE MEN
👍🏻
Lol hes so honorable that he charged poor ppl 50 interest on a loan
He looks like he's lying through his teeth right now
dont comment again
Brando's speech had more anger and rage that Antony would feel, but Heston's is more the tone of a clever man which we know Antony was.
The debate will never be settled.
It depends on if you want a romanticized version of Caesar or the reality. The reality was that Caesar was, in fact, ambitious. He sought to destroy the Republic and become king. And Brutus was, in fact, an honorable man. He sought to save the Republic. Yet history remembers Caesar as some sort of martyr and Brutus as a betrayer.
It really just goes to show you that it's those that identify with Caesar--the man who would be tyrant--that determine what we learn as history.
@@raynmanshorts9275 I think it is a stretch to call Brutus an honorable man, he was a man manipulated by Ogliarchs to give credence to murder, at this point the republic had become nothing more than a oligarchy run to benefit those that were already rich and powerful
Love Brando but Heston delivers the speech better
@@raynmanshorts9275 it seems you need to learn history. of course he was ambitious. what man who is not ambitious can change a country? he was ambitious but it was all for the glory of rome, honorable raynman
Nonsense, Brando sounds like a living human who lives his lines, Heston sounds like a stilted "actor" in front of a camera. He wouldn't even have been audible in front of anything other than a sound stage. Utter fail. Brando was far superior as a true lead actor.
According to Plutarch, an early Greek Roman historian of the Roman Empire, Antony did deliver a rousing funeral oration during Julius Caesar’s funeral. Shakespeare no doubt used literary license for dramatic effect for Antony’s exact speech in his tragedy play-Julius Caesar-upon which this film was based on. The oration has become a classic in public speaking.
Such repetition of the word honourable turns its meaning entirely about-face!
And that speech is apparently even more crazy and mob inducing than this.
@@xanderalaniz2298 Is there anything extant?
3:38 the delivery of that “who you all know are honourable men” is just hilariously and perfect
HERE WAS A CAESAR! WHEN COMES SUCH ANOTHER?!
I got chills from that. The entire speech is one that would create armies, but those last words would drive men to fury.
Eloquently put!
Caesar was the greatest man in history -
until Jesus Christ, and since then, and forevermore none greater
@@Atlantis1789 Jesus is not real
@@ninodino444 lol, lmao
@@ninodino444 dafuq. How is he "not real". There is surely someone named "Jesus" at one point of time. Crying out loud.
Edit: Napoleon was not real, his memoirs are 19th century made up folk tales.
This is what a Natural 20 Charisma check looks like.
+Tarik360 Agreed
The Dice Gods have spoken
Check out Marlon Brando giving the speech. THAT'S natural charisma!
hahahahaha! Marlon Brando is an idiot of an actor! Heston was much better in this one then he was in 1950 and better then brando in this one! What a fool you are!
Both are good
Antony :- _"I want to make a small speech. Nothing more"._
Brutus :- _cool_
Antony :- *(I'm about to end this man's entire career)*
Here was a comment. When comes such another?
Bruh....
Why memes are great. They can fit every occasion.
y do to persuade the audience ? Is it mostly a logical-reason based persuasion, or mostly emotional ?
Life
Something to note: Caesar was *insanely* popular among the masses because of his generosity to the common people of Rome.
Yes, giving them money paid for by taking the gold mines in Gaul, for which he killed ONE MILLION people. And another million were sold into slavery, to pay for his "generosity" so he could get power. This from a population in Gaul of six million. Right before his death he planned to invade more land in the east. More people killed, slaves taken, to pay for his generosity. He filled the Senate with foreigners who'd vote like he wanted, and Romans saw their gods replaced by foreign gods due to the new masses coming to Rome. The senators who fought Caesar's power grab were what remained of the old Rome. After them came more dictators like Caesar, like the monster Caligula from his own family, and the tyrant Nero. With the Senate pushed aside one man could do whatever he wanted to the people.
And he often FORGAVE those that went against him. His old friend Pomey, who he chased all the way to Egypt. When presented with his head Caeser was furious! Not only was he a CONSOL OF ROME! But caeser dear old friend and he had plans to forgive him! To be robbed of this reconciliation…
This is what the conservative faction of Rome's senators just couldn't get over: why give lands in Italy to Roman veterans? Why leave such immense amounts of money to each Roman citizen? What is so appealing to populism that it would be worth overthrowing a "republic", or rather oligarchy, for? If Cato just understood that the power that lies among the masses, especially under leadership, was something to embrace rather than shun, he would have negotiated peace prior to Caesar even crossing the Rubicon and relied upon Roman citizens rather than his slaves and gladiators for support.
Heston understood the speech on a level Brando did not. He perfectly conveyed Shakespeare's intent with this speech, of how Antony skillfully manipulates the crowd with his words. Politicians for centuries after the first performance of this play have intentionally and unintentionally cribbed from this speech.
Brando's interpretation felt more like the speech of a man who truly felt every word he uttered: the rage and the passion. Heston meanwhile, seems to convey the intent of manipulation in his performance, which I do think is what Shakespeare intended.
I disagree..While Brando brought more emotion to his performance than other actors did, it did not lack in persuasive power in any way..I also like how while the crowd were contemplating what he said, the camera focused on Brando’s face, and you can see his manipulative intent on his face..I thought the 1955 film made use of the idiosyncrasies of film in fleshing out the Bard’s great play more than this version did..This version felt like the play was put on and filmed as it was while the 1955 version felt like an adaptation of the play to film..
This was his 2nd attempt actually he played mark Anthony a year earlier than Marlon Brando....
i agree with every word my friend@@dianrongyu1326
@albion65
I saw a version of Julius Caesar with William Shatner as Antony. I know that Shatner can't compare to either Heston or Brando, but Shatner played the role in a very sly way. When he starts the "Friends Romans Countrymen" monolog, he starts off as fearful because if he had straightaway attacked Brutus and Cassius, there was every chance that he could have been torn apart by the mob, because at that moment, the fickle crowd was on the side of Brutus in believing that Caesar was ambitious. He was speaking to the crowd as though his life depended on it, because at that moment, for all intents and purposes, it DID. Shatner's Antony knows he has won the crowd over when he says, "Bear with me. My heart is there in the coffin with Caesar, and I must pause til it comes back to me." By overhearing what each citizen is saying. Then he has the mob eating out of his hands when he mentions the will. When the crowd says, "They were traitors honorable men!" At that point, Antony knew he had them, both the crowd and the conspirators, exactly right where he wanted them. Again, I don't put William Shatner on the same level as Charlton Heston or Marlon Brando, but, playing it that way was pretty damn ingenious.
I was always amazed at how quickly Mark Anthony flipped the hearts and minds of the populace. The Bard really understood human nature.
"I have neither wit nor words"
*gives rousing and memorable speech*
"...but as this House commands me..."
This is honestly the best delivery of this monologue and it needs more attention.
Hestons acting made this film, Robarts (bless him) almost killed it.
Brando's performance was leagues above this one
@@Badpoison1 Very funny
Damien Lewis' delivery of this speech is also exceptional
@@Badpoison1 No it wasn't.
"Here was a Caesar! WHEN COMES SUCH ANOTHER!"
NEVER!!!
Augustus is pretty good
rezandra rizky exactly, there is never a shortage of tyrants. But only the smartest prevail. Augustus was pretty smart.
@@panzerlieb yes , Augusts turned a city of stones and turned into a city of marbles.
He was indeed pretty good , sadly , his whole dynasty only had 2 good emperors , 1 stooge and 2 tyrants , with Caligula as the crazyiest we would ever saw.
@@phantasosxgames8488 2 good is himself and Claudius, yes? Tiberius, Caligula, and Nero were all tyrants. Which was the stooge?
In 1966, we were reading this speech in "Julius Caesar" and struggling a bit between the number of times "honorable man/men" were spoken. As 16-year-old high school sophomores, our English teacher finally explained to us that Antony was being sarcastic. Sarcasm is not unknown to high school students. After that, the speech was easier to "get". Telling my mother about this, she shared this story from her high school sophomore days in 1946. In her high school days, each student had to recite Antony's funeral oration from memory (as did we, by the way). Her boyfriend sat in the front while she recited. She got as far as, "Friends, Romans, Countrymen, lend me your ears..." when her boyfriend stage whispered, "I can't get them off!" My mother collapsed in laughter and almost failed the class. She never said what their punishment was. I suspect they got sent to the principal's office.
Knowing the time, she was probably waterboarded and her boyfriend was banished to the torture dungeon, from whence he would never return, thus leading you to be born!!! 😊🎉
@cam5816 Ah, but he emerged and married the girl his family chose for him. My mother married my father, who had been in the Pacific Theater during WW II. He left high school at 17 to support his mother and sisters when his father died.
I have to say I much prefer this version - Charlton Heston has picked up all of the nuance and subtle craftiness of this speech. THIS is a polished politician and Charlton plays him as such. Brando's performance is more theatrical, dramatic and very much suited for plays as it was written. Heston, in my opinion, takes this speech to another level.
٨٨
True there is a rawness and honesty in Heston's performance that is lacking in Brando's.
@@abrahamgideon I disagree. There is just about the same amount of "rawness" and power in Brando's version, simply interpreted with a different style during a different era of acting.
They are both great in my opinion, and it's useless to contest which version is better.
@@hairglowingkyle4572 The fact that I prefer Heston's version doesn't mean Brando is any less an actor. It probably boils down to personal preference than anything else.
Senate. "It's just words..."
Antony. "I have here Caesar's will..."
Senate. *sweats profusely*
Jason 🤣🤣🤣
Missing the point. The will was just a useful oratorical prop. Anthony would have gotten them riled up without it.
The majority of the Senate loved Caesar
The Senate should have known the power of words. The Senate had Cicero after all.
He gave every roman citizen 3 months wages... The will was narratively and historically the straw that broke the camel's back in regards to caesar's deification
Charlton Heston, one of the classiest men ever to grace Hollywood. What a voice and what an actor. In my opinion, he was the best.
Nope. You really need a basis for comparison here. (And, Chuckie-Cheese ain't it.) Compare the great James Mason in "The Desert Fox", co-starring Jessica Tandy: ua-cam.com/video/T4n48bVGom8/v-deo.html
@@CLASSICALFAN100 the fuck kind of a response is that?
@@CLASSICALFAN100 Chuck lead the Screen Actors Guild in their march with MLK on Washington, and campaigned for Hollywood's first inter-racial screen kiss (The Omega Man). I find your 'Chuckie-Cheese' comment somewhat disrespectfull. Addendum, your link is broken ...
Yes he was best
@@johncodmore One of the first, but not the first. For one, the Kirk/Uhuru kiss on "Star Trek" preceded "The Omega Man" by several years. There's a funny comment by Heston about working with Cash on the movie's Wikipedia page in the section on the kiss.
Heston had a lifelong love of Shakespeare's work, and it clearly it shows here in this spirited persuasive interpretation. It is at once intimate and then the crowd is involved. skillful direction.
and photography.
As do I. Also, I'm glad that he never tried to put on a British accent. It would have ruined it all.
I did not know Charlton Heston until this speech by Mark Anthony. This is one of the most impressive speech delivery in movies I have seen. Also, I'm about to perform this oration to my english class and I'm thankful for this reference. Wish me luck!
Good luck
Brilliant actor . An American icon. Greatly missed but not forgotten.
Damn Heston made me mourn for Caesar!
JC conquered Gaul & **immediately** sold every man, woman & child into slavery, by a special one-time deal with the slave merchants who followed him there. Yep, he was certainly Mr. Nice Guy...
@@CLASSICALFAN100 The rules of ancient warfare were rough.
@@CLASSICALFAN100 In Roman terms, he WAS a good guy. He could simply have had them killed.
But he didn't.
And Roman slaves could and did buy their freedom. There are many Stele, erected by former slaves, thanking their masters for their kindness. Would someone, newly freed do such a thing if their masters had been cruel?
Parents would often sell their children into slavery, knowing that they were giving them opportunities for education and housing they could never afford.
So many people today simply don't understand the Roman system.
As you should.
Methinks there is much wisdom in his sayings.
Brando's version had the rage & explosiveness of a young man, Heston's version is more devious & calculating
Ya u got it.
I agree, (set looks absolutely beautiful too.)
He is more believable.
And the great part is, that each version had a little of the other thing.
Which ACTUALLY reflects the intent of the words. Listen to what he is saying. Antony is brilliantly manipulating the crowd to turn against Brutus and the rest. Heston's performance reflects that intent perfectly. Brando ( a brilliant actor) might as well be yelling "Stella!!!!!" in his Antony performance.
I thought excactly the same, Brando uses extrovert expressiveness, while heston is more controlled
Thus there is no better, just bits of quotes intronation and body language that you could prefer
Every aspect of the director's choices (movie related/shots etc..) then it's whole new thing to add in consideration
……it was such a pleasure hearing this wonderfully spoken actor recite poetry, at a live performance. His bass voice was just mesmerising. He was an extremely well read man, humble, great dad to Fraser, & Holly. He’d just celebrated his 64th Wedding Anniversary to his beautiful wife, Lydia, when he died. They’re both gone now………RIP
1:16 this little moment fascinates me so much, the entire speech is a performance but on two levels. The actor Charlton Heston performing as Mark Antony, and the character of Mark Antony performing this riveting diatribe to rouse the mob to his own ends. But the line of “he was my friend, fair and just to me” is absent that performance, Heston is still acting but he drops the guise for a moment and the character of Antony speaks honestly, you can hear the pain of loss and genuine grief in those words.
A great performance by a great actor. If you want to see another great performance by Heston, watch him in "A Touch of Evil". After Charlton Heston was hired to star in the film, he insisted that Orson Welles be hired to direct it. Welles not only directed "A Touch of Evil", he also re-wrote the script and co-starred in the film. And it's a masterpiece. With Welles and Heston and Marlene Dietrich all starring in the film, it's great beyond greatness.
& don't forget Janet Leigh
The best Mark Antony's Speech and act in all Julius Cesar play history. Nobody can play it better than him. It is the top level of this character.
The quiet of the crowd as he says "I come to bury Caesar not to praise him" has so much atmosphere its amazing they make me feel like part of the crowd
"Honourable men" my arse! I love Anthony's speech, so incredibly damning of the assassins without once insulting them outright.
...and easily manipulating the fickle crowd...and outright buying their loyalty at the end.
So...yeah. If Ceaser's killers are 'honorable men'...so is Antony.
:D
8 years ago?
@@playeatsquizzes yes 8 years is a very long time.. i wonder if hes alive.. i mean in good health?
@@dclark142002 have we considered that caesar was a supporter of the lower classes for a reason?
Charlton Heston really did this speech justice--had not seen this till now. Thanks!
We all need a friend like Mark Antony
This is the best funeral oration there is.
This is as close to portraying actual Roman rhetoric and oratory skills as we have ever come. With Shakespeare's writing, and Heston's acting.
Marcus Tullius Cicero considered public speaking as acting, as much as it was persuading other men.
I'd recommend you to watch Marlon Brando as Antony. Even better than Heston.
Talk to any Shakespearean actor. They will tell you Brando was a fine actor BUT not Shakespeare. Heston was the real deal.
shigsho Brando’s is lightyears better
Cool
Shakespeare wasn't even close to Roman rhetoric
Look at the bold, rich colors and the quality of the film. This was pretty fucking impressive for 1953. You can tell they were going for this big epic so they went all in and it shows. Looks like a great movie.
This movie was made in 1970
I had to learn this speech for drama class about one year ago, I don’t think I will ever be able to forget it again
William Shakespeare wrote this speech so well, like he was there to witness it himself
I regret not appreciating this in secondary school. What a powerful speech. This is how you work a mob ...
Jan. 6, 2012: "We're gonna WALK to the Capitol..."
I don't think that Shakespeare himself had ever imagined such a scene to be acted in this extraordinary fashion as it was preformed by Heston.
How many times and with what strange accents shall this, our scene, be reenacted?
Watched both versions back to back and although I seem to be in the minority with this opinion I have to say I like Heston's version better than Brando's. Brando delivers the speech with a lot of passion and power in his voice, but compared to Heston he also seems to rush through the lines a bit.
What gives Heston's version the upper hand in my opinion is that he plays to the crowd more through tonal shifts between calm and soothing, rousing passion, anger and sadness. He purposefully uses his skills as a publik speaker to slowly build up to certain key points of his speech and slowly build up suspense, and thereby not only makes sure that they all cling to his every word, but also slowly changes their minds and makes it seem like it wasn't even his intention. He plays this crowd like damn fiddles and they don't even realise it. The only ones who slowly reaslise what Antony is doing are Brutus and the other conspirators.
I for one found myself much more captivated by Heston's performance than by Brando's and since captivating a crowd is the main theme in this scene, I lean towards Heston.
Both absolutely superb, and yet quite different, interpretations.
I like Brando's main speech but Heston's overall performance in this scene.
Give Braggnath due justice.
Completely agree. I don’t understand the pacing at all in Brando’s
I completely agree! I find this one miles ahead of Brando's. Much more contrast - gives me chills.
"I speak not to disprove what Brutus spoke......but I shall low-key disprove what Brutus Spoke"
Literally all Caesar had to do to win over the masses, even after his death, was "40 acres and a mule". Just shows how BAD the Senate was ignoring everyday issues for Roman citizens...
Real nostalgia is repeating this knowing it wasn’t your role in high school yet somehow you can.
Heston was also memorable in Kenneth Branagh's Hamlet as the elder player.
The only really great performances by Big Chuck were while he was really young, "when he was still an Actor, before he became a Star", as they say in Hollywood. Ben-Hur, Touch of Evil, some early TV, but very little else...
@@CLASSICALFAN100 He was 46 when he did this, and watching this scene again confirms to me that this was a great performance.
@gary grine I once read an interview with Heston about doing Shakespeare where he said that he thought the best actors had a responsibility to perform Shakespeare but that he didn't get far in convincing Robert De Niro that he should be doing it. I appreciate the kind of missionary impulse that makes one a noodge.
heston is so elegant. wonderful actor rip #41
"aNd Brutus iS aN hOnOURable mAn"
pfft, Brutus became a damn meme
@@heloise_flores His name is now a byword for gross violence and betrayal.
Talk about getting dealt a bad hand by history.
@@randomcenturion7264 The first Brutus gave the surname honorable value by deposing the tyrant Lucius Tarquinius Superbus but the last Brutus would undo that by being a quasi-tyrant himself along with a political party of tyrants by killing the man who was a threat to their power...A man who had more in common with the first Brutus than the last. He brought eternal shame and a permanent end to that line forever.
Shakespeare's articulate words and Charlton Heston's magical voice, diction and delivery. Absolutely fantastic!!!
I have never considered Charlton Heston a great actor, although I have enjoyed his films, but his portrayal of Mark Anthony in this Shakespeare classic was a superb piece of acting. I stayed enthralled throughout. If he did not get an Oscar for this, he should have.
Brando was nominated for an Academy Award for his Anthony. I don't think Heston was.
@@johnbrady6276 Heston did win an Oscar for Ben Hur.
You didn’t think he was a great actor ? In the words of Heston “ poor miserable bastards” ! 😂
Flawless. Absolutely flawless.
Brando is more powerful and theatric, Heston feels much more natural! Both are good.
hairypolack I prefer Heston's 'friends, Romans, countrymen' but Brando's 'Cry Havoc' is astonishing.
Heston is not natural in this. He's pushing all over. No nuance or moment before. It's all contrived. It doesnt compare to Brando. Not even close.
Heston's is much much better than Brando's.
True
@@adamdunlaptv Totally and completely disagree with you. Brando's fury is there almost from the very beginning, while Heston initially plays the critic of Ceaser only to gradually stick the knives in the back of Brutus, Cassius and the rest.
The person is such an amazing actor !
Here is Caesar! When come another!?
Octavian: actually now that you asked, hi I’m Caesar
@@d3finit1on99 Octavian was Caesar's nephew , so it do share his blood , although indirectly.
As Julius pointed him as his heir , he too was considered a proper Ceasar.
It was when the Octavian Dynasty had broken that things goes weird
No! I am Caesar!
A film to be remembered lifetime. Charles Heston's acting is beyond comparison.
Heston delivering The player king's speech In Kenneth Brannagh's Hamlet was the first time I truly understood it's dramatic implication even though I had the privilege of performing in several professional productions of Hamlet
this is a masterpiece of instigation
Chuckles...
Employing reverse psychology.
I particularly failed in love with his modulating voice, his pitch at times goes down and up in rhythmic moves with his hands (Kinesis).
Great job Charlton Heston Mark Anthony.
The greatest speech of all time. This is an essential lesson for all Rhetoric trainers and inspired speakers.
A great speech delivered by one of the greatest actors! Charles, how could you be so perfect!
The man knows how to present a closing argument.
''I believe that charlton Heston shows great leadership. and he even looks like a great barbarian. but what ever role he is playing it is great,and that is the true and great charlton heston.
Heston's version of Marc Antony's speech is the best, better than Brando's. Heston adds the right amount of sarcasm, irony, and masculinity. Too many other versions blubber, or miss the sarcasm, and don't know where to place the fury.
good points
Tim Penfield and of course the inimitable Charlton Heston voice.
Watching them back to back there is something more human about Brando's performance. When he takes pause and says "My heart lies in there with Caesar" it catches me unlike Heston's performance does. That said Heston does an amazing job that he made his own
User Discretion only Heston has captured the fury. All others dodder
Perhaps Brando was too monotonously Stanley Kowalski Stanislavski Scorpio furious.
This speech gives me chills!
" Here was a Caesar. When comes such another ?! " What a friend Antony is, 💗 worth dying for
Charlton Heston never failed to deliver in the big roles. It would have been interesting to see him play a small part, a character part. Surely one of my favourite actors. In a era of Kirk Douglas, Marlon Brando, Ingrid Bergman, Gregory Peck etc...these people could play huge roles.
Check out his speech in Wayne's World 2.
" Here was a Caesar, When comes such Another"
NEVER !!!
Hopefully soon.
That was spectacularly well done. Thank you for posting this!
Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears;
I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him.
The evil that men do lives after them;
The good is oft interred with their bones;
So let it be with Caesar. The noble Brutus
Hath told you Caesar was ambitious:
If it were so, it was a grievous fault,
And grievously hath Caesar answer’d it.
Here, under leave of Brutus and the rest-
For Brutus is an honourable man;
So are they all, all honourable men-
Come I to speak in Caesar’s funeral.
He was my friend, faithful and just to me:
But Brutus says he was ambitious;
And Brutus is an honourable man.
He hath brought many captives home to Rome
Whose ransoms did the general coffers fill:
Did this in Caesar seem ambitious?
When that the poor have cried, Caesar hath wept:
Ambition should be made of sterner stuff:
Yet Brutus says he was ambitious;
And Brutus is an honourable man.
You all did see that on the Lupercal
I thrice presented him a kingly crown,
Which he did thrice refuse: was this ambition?
Yet Brutus says he was ambitious;
And, sure, he is an honourable man.
I speak not to disprove what Brutus spoke,
But here I am to speak what I do know.
You all did love him once, not without cause:
What cause withholds you then, to mourn for him?
O judgment! thou art fled to brutish beasts,
And men have lost their reason. Bear with me;
My heart is in the coffin there with Caesar,
And I must pause till it come back to me.
Thank you😘
I assure you, snow always melt.
Very nice
Awesome
Didn’t the Romans use cremation?
saw it in high school english. what a brilliant scene. heston rocks this so hard.
I have to say, I loved the recent HBO "Rome" series, but was crestfallen they didn't show Mark Purefoy's Marc Antony give this speech. They just showed him finishing up, and everyone acknowledging it was a powerful oration.
I guess between Chuck Heston, Marlon Brando, Orson Welles', Richard Burton, and Laurence Olivier, those were some big (and well-worn) shoes to fill.
That's why I like about Shakespeare: you can have such a wide variety of subtle nuances in interpretation, that the same text feels very different depending on the artists.
the thing with shakespere is with every actor that plays brings their own nuances in their act for shakespere can be interpreted on many ways.
Apart from the quality of the acting in se, which is superb in both Brando's and Heston's case, the true protagonist here is rhetorics, or public speaking if you want, whose power to persuade the people's hearts and deform reality are the weapons that Anthony plans to use to, ultimately, seize power. His grievance for Caesar's violent demise sounds sincere, but he is already thinking about his own future and political career. Are Caesar's assassins honorable men? Indeed they are nought. But Anthony is playing a double game here, and the Roman people easily fall in the trap. The people wants to be deceived, the Romans used to say: vulgus vult decipi.
The phrase is;
"Vulgus (Mundus) vult decipi, ergo decipiatur"
"The common people (world) wants to be decieved. And therefore they will be."
It's how Trump got elected.
But were they deceived, or were Brutus and Co. not so honorable after all? To me they were elitist patricians, Brutus himself being one of the biggest moneylenders in the entire empire.
@@imapseudonym1403 It's not how Trump got elected you buffoon. The establishment, which you obviously drool over, is how Trump got elected. And he'll be elected again with their antics over his term. I'll say this, with that phrase, is exactly how the establishment and their lemmings (you) are being played and deceived by Trump!
@@josephgibson5493 " The establishment"
The establishment does not vote. It requires voters, and plenty of them, both ill-educated and gullible, to put someone like trump in the white house.
@@imapseudonym1403 even today they are . Except it is easier to fool them .
We used to memorize and present this speech in class when in high school.
Felt nostalgic though
If only cinema can make movies like this today. Truly no greater acting has ever been done and to muses we beg let it be so again.
THIS is how an actor goes about plying his trade. Brilliant. Crowd Stirring. Passionate. And Absolutely Playing to a Crowd.
'This was the most unkindest cut of all'
'I am no orator, as Brutus is', Oh yes you are, this is as great a speech as ever was.
I stumbled across this a few days ago. I’m become slightly obsessed with this play and speech. It has inspired me to be better in my art. To learn more about Shakespeare and history. I haven’t acted in many years but I hope to one day portray this play on stage. I missed the impact of art.
i still know this speech by heart 20yrs since my high school days
"And sure Brutus is an honourable man"
Next level of satarism!! 😂
My god, is it real or just an acting, he made it so real, Real Mark Antony
what a showman..look at how he baits the crowd 'my heart lies there with caesar, i must pause...' Shakespeare knew his stuff.
Marcus Antonius/Mark Anthony really ate his spinach before delivering this speech to upstage Brutus.
The fact this speech wasnt in the show Rome is a great travesty, watching James deliver this speech would have been earth shattering.
Watching this on the Ides of March 2021.
I wish the costuming wasn't so horrible. The population in Rome at the time of Caesar did not dress like 12th century European peasants.
thank you
The population in Rome at the time of the Shakespearean production dressed like 15th century European peasants.
corvus13 yeah, Shakespeare had no problem with anachronism, wasn't there a clock that rang out in the play Julius Caesar despite clocks not even having been invented yet?
they sure look like peasants hehe
@EnlightenedThinker1 actually it was Alexander the Great that spun popularity in shaving beards.
"I come not, friends, to steal away your hearts! I am no orator, as Brutus is, but as you know me all - a plain, blunt man that loved my friend (...) For I have neither wit nor words nor power of speech to stir men's blood, I only speak right on, I tell you that, which you yourselves do know."
Oh the old "I'm not a lying, manipulating politician with fancy words, I *only say it like it is!*"-schtick was recognized even in Shakespeare's day.
Except Mark Antony was actually an honest, and honorable man.
@@robertsmalls2293 That's debateable.
@@Rasbiff Not really, no. Not everything is debatable.
Without a doubt Charlton Heston was one of the greatest actors of all time. 🎭🤔
I remember my English teacher explaining to us when we read 'Julius Caesar' how Antony totally knew what he was doing under the smokescreen of grieving.
I can't understand half of this dude's speech but I can feel the shit and I love it.
One of the finest moments of the art of cinema.
mark antony! you did quite JUSTICE WITH CAESAR by AWARDING THESE BLOODY **HONOURABLE MEN!!**
a reason to love mark antony's speech :
sarcasm ! :D
meh, sarcasm is for the weak minded
More like irony
So says CastelDawn. And CastelDawn is a strong minded man
@@811chelseafc Indeed. What satire refutes, refutes satire. What labels weak that which the mind has missed, as a bird flies a clouded draped sky, at night now less. But Dawn will break before the parapet of the Castel, if honor be sarcasm.
@@CastelDawn "Sarcasm is the lowest form of wit, but the highest form of intellect" Voltaire.
'Mischief thou art afoot. Take thou what course thy wilt'.
The greatness in this scene is unbelievable 😮it shakes me to my bones !!