Skyblue: hahaha yesss It is soo funny! Just after Emma is talking about Brandon's sweetness and tenderness he appears slapping that guy's face😄😅. No doubt Alan was unique!. RIP
This is my favorite Alan Rickman part ever. He delivers the most brilliant, beautiful version of Colonel Brandon here. And never has a romantic hero been more deserving of a happily ever after than Brandon in Sense and sensibility. Especially the way AR played him. Emma did amazing with the script and she was so right about casting AR for this part.
Story time: I was young when I discovered this masterpiece of a movie-I think it was just after the Deathly Hallows part 1 was released-I could only have just been 13, I was flicking through the movie channels and saw Emma Thompson who I adore with a passion, but was quickly disappointed to find that it was a "Boring" period drama. Nevertheless, I persisted, then about 80% of the Harry Potter cast showed up, so I had a little more reason to stay. I only had Alan as Snape in my head, so I thought Brandon was the bad guy here, too. Then he proved to be the sweetest man who ever lived-even if it was just a story. I was in tears when he and Marianne walked out of the church together. I still wasn't over it by the time Deathly Hallows part 2 was released and suddenly found myself viewing Snape with an almost unhealthy adoration that had most certainly not been there a year previous. Then, when the "memories" scene came up, I was a mess! This was not only the film that made me fall in love with Alan Rickman, but cemented him as a giant among actors, and men, who could truly do any sort of role. His passing truly broke my heart, but I'm so thankful I managed to discover what I think is his most underrated performance as well as to grow up alongside his best. 💖
Sense and Sensibility is one of my favorite films. I only knew Alan Rickman as Colonel Brandon until finally seeing the Harry Potter movies...I only just now binged watched them last week with my husband. I’m very late to the game. Lol I kept rooting for Snape, he seemed so broken and of course Colonel Brandon was broken. Alan played perfectly both these characters. What a beautifully tragic ending for Severus Snape. Wish he could have had a Colonel Brandon ending. I hate that we won’t get to see Alan do what he does best any longer. But thankfully he gave us these wonderful characters that we can watch again. ❤️
This resonates with me..I was 8 or 9 when I saw this movie and was infatuated with it. I remember loving Alan's character so much and his particular aura I guess you could say really stuck out to me. He was so intoxicating as an actor. I saw him years later in HP and was infatuated all over again. He was effortless, classy and incredibly sexy...I always wondered if he knew how gorgeous and appealing he was. And that voice. My god. Its beyond erotic. I was totally born in the wrong generation and on the wrong continent.
@@turkeysub7168 I often wonder too, if he knew how enticing he was... then I see him with fans, how humble, kind, and personable he was. Either he had no idea, despite the hordes of ppl tell him for practically his entire life, or he knew and he was just the most amazing man who ever lived. Damn Rima is lucky! She must be some lady to have captured his heart so completely💗
I’ve been a fan ever since I watched him in ‘Die Hard’. He was the ‘bad guy’, yet he was sophisticated, at times a bit charming, and stole the film!! When I watched him in this classic period film-- WOW -- he oozed an undercurrent of sensuality blended with kindness, masculinity, and honor. I’ve seen most of his films and am grateful to have had the privilege, of seeing his onscreen brilliance.
I finally saw the movie. It was awesome. In fact I bought it. Emma is right. He IS the type of man all of we women wish we could find. And Alan is the type of man we all wish we could find because many co-workers of his said that he was very much like Colonel Brandon. And I was so glad that Marianne finally had the good sense to marry Colonel Brandon. She had a man worth more than that insufferable jerk Willoughby who treated her so horribly.
I’ve loved Alan since I saw this film when it came out and I was a young 23 yr old. Probably about the age of Marianne. How could she have fallen for a cocky cad like Willoughby when this Dashing Gentleman obviously adored her? I know I would have instantly chosen Brandon!!
She was a 16 year old and he was 35. I'd be weirded out if someone more than twice my age started hitting on me! He's still my favorite character, though. Edit- Willoughby was 25, which, while still creepy by modern standards, would have still been a big step up when it comes to relatability and attraction for a teenage girl. Because she was, in fact, a girl, even though we, as adult women like to live vicariously through her character. Which is understandable, as what straight/bisexual woman wouldn't want Alan Rickman to be head over heels for her? Especially 90s Alan Rickman. *Fans self dramatically*
Alan Rickman was an amazing Actor! His role as Colonel Christopher Brandon is one of my favorites! I was 17 when he died and the Saddest thing of all was the fact that he died on my Birthday! I didn't cry when I learnt of his passing back then, but now as a 22 year old I tear up every time I think of him
i love that little shove in the end. and as seemingly always he is right. brandon never developed close relationships after that first love affair. what a lonely life he must have lived.
Okay, so I am watching this video repeatedly just to look the epic moment of Alan shoving the face of the other guy and Emma's words, " man of extraordinary sweetness" aligning with it. Its hilarious.
Without Alan Rickman's wonderful interpretation of Brandon, I never would have appreciated Austen's character. Whenever I would read S&S, I'd always thought of him as an old fuddy-duddy and couldn't picture him ending up as a good match for such a young girl (I think she was 15 or 16 in the book). I'm so glad to have had that attitude changed because of this superb portrayal of Col. B.
@@luciusmalfoy7778 I know but it is funny how they edit the video that she says he is sweet and then you see him push someone to the other side of the set 🤣
THIS WORLD SUCKS, WITHOUT MR. RICKMAN. ALAN RICKMAN PLAYED PROFESSOR SNAPE BRILLIANTLY, IN ALL EIGHT, OF THE HARRY POTTER MOVIES. I TOTALLY MISS YOU, SO MUCH, ALAN. YOU ARE SO FUCKING AWESOME. 2016 SUCKED, WHEN MR. BOWIE, & MR. RICKMAN, BOTH DIED. TWO-OF THE SEXIEST, BRITISH MEN, I EVER GOT ADDICTED TO. I STILL REALLY WISH MR. RICKMAN, WAS-STILL AROUND.
I find Brandon to be lusting after Marianne because he clearly is basing her off of his earlier love for his lost love. Plus, I feel Marianne fell too hard and fast for Mr. Brandon. I would have loved to have seen her remain faithful to Willoughby, like Fanny Price was to Edmund, and refuse Mr. Brandon but wish him well. I don't think she loved him, he clearly was second choice.
Read the book again. The point of them being married in the end is that you CAN love again even after all the pain you had to endure the first time. She did love Brandon eventually, Austen herself has said so: "Marianne could never love by halves; and her whole heart became, in time, as much devoted to her husband, as it had once been to Willoughby.” Also, Willoughby was a scoundrel who impregnated and abandoned another girl and immediately married someone rich after he was disinherited. Why would you want someone to still love a man as wicked as him? You have poor taste in people, I'm sorry to say :(
@@tabiren382 The point is not every woman feels the need to love more than one man and that is the beauty of true faithful love - even in real life. Look again to Elinor, she could have been wooed by Colonel Brandon, but her heart was only for Edward Ferrars, despite the fact he had years before meeting her proposed to another woman Lucy Steele. For your education in that area, I recommend reading either "Bleak House" by Charles Dickens which does have (among other numerous subplots) the love triangle between two honorable men Alan Woodcourt and John Jarndyce for Esther Summerson or "The Odyssey" by Homer, where the character of Penelope could have "moved on and "love again", but she remained faithful and in love and hoping for her beloved Odysseus and despite him screwing with two Goddesses, just to save his and his crew's skin - basically, his heart remained faithful to Penelope. As for Austen books, a more honorable literary man than Colonel Brandon is the underrated Henry Tilney. Between Colonel Brandon and Tilney, I'd take Tilney any day over him. As for poor taste, I feel sorry for you preferring to follow the toxic lust belief of needing to screw with more than one man. Maybe that's some women's idea of romance, but I prefer to have one faithful man to love and happily, I have found that man and we've been together for 9 years. ;) No pity necessary.
@@EmilyGloeggler7984 it would be absolutely tragic to spend your whole life remaining "faithful" (lets change that word to deluded) to someone who dropped you like a ton of bricks and let you almost die of grief. Thats not some kind of noble love, its a complete waste and a lack of self regard which is toxic in the extreme. To suggest that moving on from someone who has abused you shows a lack of commitment or lack of true love is absurd.
@@EmilyGloeggler7984 you call 'faithfulness of the heart' that which by all standards is stupidity in the head. Luckily J. Austen's characters had a brain besides a heart. As someone else commented, Willoughby was a scoundrel, a playboy who sleeps around and uses women for his own selfish interests by today's standards. She, like women who read too many tales and in her case, Shakespeare and other poets, didn't know any better because she was young. Please don't advocate such foolishness when he wasn't even faithful to her. That's complete disrespect of women and their entitlement to make sound, reasoned decisions and have some modicum of happiness as a result. Which is exactly what Jane Austen advocated being ahead of her time as she was.
There is a perfect sweetness Alan Rickman has and I thought he would just be perfect for it *slap to the face* 😂
Skyblue: hahaha yesss It is soo funny! Just after Emma is talking about Brandon's sweetness and tenderness he appears slapping that guy's face😄😅. No doubt Alan was unique!. RIP
Exactly what I just thought. This made me laugh so much!
“ He naturally brings all this sweetness.” Shows he shoving a guys face. XD
😂👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼That was unexpected & funny! I imagine Alan Rickman was great fun! I wonder what was being said!? Oh...to have been a fly on a wall near by! 😁
This is my favorite Alan Rickman part ever. He delivers the most brilliant, beautiful version of Colonel Brandon here. And never has a romantic hero been more deserving of a happily ever after than Brandon in Sense and sensibility. Especially the way AR played him. Emma did amazing with the script and she was so right about casting AR for this part.
He's just the most gorgeous Colonel Brandon ever ❤
"There is the most extraordinary sweetness to his nature." *shoves someone in the head*
He's an absolutely adorable man!!!!!
😂😂😂😅
I was about to say that.. What a timing 😂😂
Story time:
I was young when I discovered this masterpiece of a movie-I think it was just after the Deathly Hallows part 1 was released-I could only have just been 13, I was flicking through the movie channels and saw Emma Thompson who I adore with a passion, but was quickly disappointed to find that it was a "Boring" period drama. Nevertheless, I persisted, then about 80% of the Harry Potter cast showed up, so I had a little more reason to stay. I only had Alan as Snape in my head, so I thought Brandon was the bad guy here, too. Then he proved to be the sweetest man who ever lived-even if it was just a story. I was in tears when he and Marianne walked out of the church together. I still wasn't over it by the time Deathly Hallows part 2 was released and suddenly found myself viewing Snape with an almost unhealthy adoration that had most certainly not been there a year previous. Then, when the "memories" scene came up, I was a mess! This was not only the film that made me fall in love with Alan Rickman, but cemented him as a giant among actors, and men, who could truly do any sort of role. His passing truly broke my heart, but I'm so thankful I managed to discover what I think is his most underrated performance as well as to grow up alongside his best. 💖
Sense and Sensibility is one of my favorite films. I only knew Alan Rickman as Colonel Brandon until finally seeing the Harry Potter movies...I only just now binged watched them last week with my husband. I’m very late to the game. Lol I kept rooting for Snape, he seemed so broken and of course Colonel Brandon was broken. Alan played perfectly both these characters. What a beautifully tragic ending for Severus Snape. Wish he could have had a Colonel Brandon ending. I hate that we won’t get to see Alan do what he does best any longer. But thankfully he gave us these wonderful characters that we can watch again. ❤️
This resonates with me..I was 8 or 9 when I saw this movie and was infatuated with it. I remember loving Alan's character so much and his particular aura I guess you could say really stuck out to me. He was so intoxicating as an actor. I saw him years later in HP and was infatuated all over again. He was effortless, classy and incredibly sexy...I always wondered if he knew how gorgeous and appealing he was. And that voice. My god. Its beyond erotic. I was totally born in the wrong generation and on the wrong continent.
@@turkeysub7168 I often wonder too, if he knew how enticing he was... then I see him with fans, how humble, kind, and personable he was. Either he had no idea, despite the hordes of ppl tell him for practically his entire life, or he knew and he was just the most amazing man who ever lived.
Damn Rima is lucky! She must be some lady to have captured his heart so completely💗
I’ve been a fan ever since I watched him in ‘Die Hard’. He was the ‘bad guy’, yet he was sophisticated, at times a bit charming, and stole the film!! When I watched him in this classic period film-- WOW -- he oozed an undercurrent of sensuality blended with kindness, masculinity, and honor. I’ve seen most of his films and am grateful to have had the privilege, of seeing his onscreen brilliance.
You should watch 'truly madly deeply'
Alan too is like Brandon - chivalrous, calm, sweet, quiet and smart
He's been my long time crush since Truly Madly Deeply. Miss him and his talent.
This is one underrated actor that I truly miss the most!
He wasn’t underrated....where do you come from, the Moon???
this person obviously doesnt know what there saying
OHHh Yessss, Emma. He really was perfect for the roll. We all fell in love with him. He is very dearly missed. R.I.P. Alan!
He was so wonderful in all his performances. He is greatly missed 😪🥀🕯
I finally saw the movie. It was awesome. In fact I bought it. Emma is right. He IS the type of man all of we women wish we could find. And Alan is the type of man we all wish we could find because many co-workers of his said that he was very much like Colonel Brandon. And I was so glad that Marianne finally had the good sense to marry Colonel Brandon. She had a man worth more than that insufferable jerk Willoughby who treated her so horribly.
He had such a smile
His character and Alan is the man of every women’s dreams !!
I’ve loved Alan since I saw this film when it came out and I was a young 23 yr old. Probably about the age of Marianne. How could she have fallen for a cocky cad like Willoughby when this Dashing Gentleman obviously adored her? I know I would have instantly chosen Brandon!!
Because she read too many romantic novels, he read Shakespeare, and fit the role of the romantic poets.
Brandon. Ah... I also would chose him. Only him
She was a 16 year old and he was 35. I'd be weirded out if someone more than twice my age started hitting on me!
He's still my favorite character, though.
Edit- Willoughby was 25, which, while still creepy by modern standards, would have still been a big step up when it comes to relatability and attraction for a teenage girl. Because she was, in fact, a girl, even though we, as adult women like to live vicariously through her character. Which is understandable, as what straight/bisexual woman wouldn't want Alan Rickman to be head over heels for her? Especially 90s Alan Rickman. *Fans self dramatically*
The world isn't the same without him.
Alan Rickman was an amazing Actor! His role as Colonel Christopher Brandon is one of my favorites! I was 17 when he died and the Saddest thing of all was the fact that he died on my Birthday! I didn't cry when I learnt of his passing back then, but now as a 22 year old I tear up every time I think of him
LMAO THE LAST SECOND IM DEAD
Such a sweetness in his nature *Bamn*
"I thought he'd be perfect for it"
*shoves face* 🤣🤣🤣
i love that little shove in the end. and as seemingly always he is right. brandon never developed close relationships after that first love affair. what a lonely life he must have lived.
RIP Alan Rickman💙
Any time, Alan is the most perfect in my opinion
Okay, so I am watching this video repeatedly just to look the epic moment of Alan shoving the face of the other guy and Emma's words, " man of extraordinary sweetness" aligning with it.
Its hilarious.
This movie brought to my awareness this amazing actor and man. RIP, Mr Rickman.
Without Alan Rickman's wonderful interpretation of Brandon, I never would have appreciated Austen's character. Whenever I would read S&S, I'd always thought of him as an old fuddy-duddy and couldn't picture him ending up as a good match for such a young girl (I think she was 15 or 16 in the book). I'm so glad to have had that attitude changed because of this superb portrayal of Col. B.
Emma talks about Alan his sweetness.
Alan shoves guys face to the other side of the set 🤣
They were just messing around loool. Me and my siblings sometimes slap each other too. It's all just jokes.
@@luciusmalfoy7778 I know but it is funny how they edit the video that she says he is sweet and then you see him push someone to the other side of the set 🤣
@@LadySamurai88 Lol it's very funny
O want one coronel like this please !!! 😍😍😍😘😘😘😘 Alan... I love you extraordinary Man... rest in peace
Wow,que príncipe tan bello Alan❤❤❤❤❤❤🙏🙏🙏
Loved this movie🥰
Have probably seen it a dozen times.
The ending 😂
最後那一推...太可愛了Alan😂😂😂
感謝您的評論。訂閱頻道
It like if Alan Rickman/Snape went back in time
The way how the video ended😂😂
Rip Alan / Snape 🐍😢😥😩
omg that last bit whahahahah
Class video 🌹🌷👍💕💟😍
스윗 그 자체ㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠ 보고싶어요ㅠㅠ
Великий актер!!!
THIS WORLD SUCKS, WITHOUT MR. RICKMAN. ALAN RICKMAN PLAYED PROFESSOR SNAPE BRILLIANTLY, IN ALL EIGHT, OF THE HARRY POTTER MOVIES. I TOTALLY MISS YOU, SO MUCH, ALAN. YOU ARE SO FUCKING AWESOME. 2016 SUCKED, WHEN MR. BOWIE, & MR. RICKMAN, BOTH DIED. TWO-OF THE SEXIEST, BRITISH MEN, I EVER GOT ADDICTED TO. I STILL REALLY WISH MR. RICKMAN, WAS-STILL AROUND.
Who cares about Rose or Jack or some big sinking ship?? IMO, Marianne and Col. Brandon are the greatest love story on the silver screen!
Where is the next part?? 😂
So nice
what are the names of all the scenes. please tell me I'm begging you
Sigh!
I know...he is perfect!!...Subscribe if you want.
Alan Rickman Fan I will!!
😂😊😍🤣❤️
Pourquoi il a pousse le visage de l'autre a la fin???
It was love, actually 😉
Am I the only one shipping Elinor and Col.Brandon??
don't know but in reality Emma Thompson is married to Greg Wise who played Willowby.
maybe you should've cut the part out where he shoves a guys face away, if you're talking about his "sweet nature"
But Alan was very sweet in real life. Emma knew him very well
I find Brandon to be lusting after Marianne because he clearly is basing her off of his earlier love for his lost love. Plus, I feel Marianne fell too hard and fast for Mr. Brandon. I would have loved to have seen her remain faithful to Willoughby, like Fanny Price was to Edmund, and refuse Mr. Brandon but wish him well. I don't think she loved him, he clearly was second choice.
Read the book again. The point of them being married in the end is that you CAN love again even after all the pain you had to endure the first time. She did love Brandon eventually, Austen herself has said so: "Marianne could never love by halves; and her whole heart became, in time, as much devoted to her husband, as it had once been to Willoughby.”
Also, Willoughby was a scoundrel who impregnated and abandoned another girl and immediately married someone rich after he was disinherited. Why would you want someone to still love a man as wicked as him? You have poor taste in people, I'm sorry to say :(
@@tabiren382 The point is not every woman feels the need to love more than one man and that is the beauty of true faithful love - even in real life. Look again to Elinor, she could have been wooed by Colonel Brandon, but her heart was only for Edward Ferrars, despite the fact he had years before meeting her proposed to another woman Lucy Steele. For your education in that area, I recommend reading either "Bleak House" by Charles Dickens which does have (among other numerous subplots) the love triangle between two honorable men Alan Woodcourt and John Jarndyce for Esther Summerson or "The Odyssey" by Homer, where the character of Penelope could have "moved on and "love again", but she remained faithful and in love and hoping for her beloved Odysseus and despite him screwing with two Goddesses, just to save his and his crew's skin - basically, his heart remained faithful to Penelope. As for Austen books, a more honorable literary man than Colonel Brandon is the underrated Henry Tilney. Between Colonel Brandon and Tilney, I'd take Tilney any day over him. As for poor taste, I feel sorry for you preferring to follow the toxic lust belief of needing to screw with more than one man. Maybe that's some women's idea of romance, but I prefer to have one faithful man to love and happily, I have found that man and we've been together for 9 years. ;) No pity necessary.
@@EmilyGloeggler7984 it would be absolutely tragic to spend your whole life remaining "faithful" (lets change that word to deluded) to someone who dropped you like a ton of bricks and let you almost die of grief. Thats not some kind of noble love, its a complete waste and a lack of self regard which is toxic in the extreme. To suggest that moving on from someone who has abused you shows a lack of commitment or lack of true love is absurd.
@@EmilyGloeggler7984 you call 'faithfulness of the heart' that which by all standards is stupidity in the head. Luckily J. Austen's characters had a brain besides a heart. As someone else commented, Willoughby was a scoundrel, a playboy who sleeps around and uses women for his own selfish interests by today's standards. She, like women who read too many tales and in her case, Shakespeare and other poets, didn't know any better because she was young. Please don't advocate such foolishness when he wasn't even faithful to her. That's complete disrespect of women and their entitlement to make sound, reasoned decisions and have some modicum of happiness as a result. Which is exactly what Jane Austen advocated being ahead of her time as she was.
I don’t find him attractive but he played the character decently.
I think that's the point. Because Brandon is supposed to be reserved, wounded and old compared to Willoughby who is charming, handsome and a blaggard😁
How dare you say Colonel is not attractive. 😠😠😠😠😠😠
I´ve always seen him as the most attractive guys in this film and Alan Rickman was one of the most attractive guys on earth.
I guess beauty is in the eye of the beholder. I think he wasn't conventionally handsome, but I thought he was an attractive man myself.
Amy P he was in many ways conventionally handsome. It was only really his nose that made him apart