"What I heard then was the melody of children at play. Nothing but that. And I knew the hopelessly poignant thing, was not Lolita's absence from my side...but the absence of her voice from that chorus." What an absolutely amazingly written line.
I've read the book by Nabokov a few times and its honestly one of the if not the most beautifully written novel I've ever read. The novel is full of beautiful poetic lines.
It took me a second rewatch to realize that the absence of Lolita’s voice from the children’s playful innocence meant he had stolen hers. The guilt overwhelmed even the love he felt for her.
@@carolinpurayidom4570 True. But I would argue that the only reason he was able to feel deeply regretful was because of this newfound love for Dolores as the feeling human being that she was. Up until this very point, his lust for her was placed above everything else, and he realizes that.
@@bluesummers5051 I don't think so, he's regretful probably because he KNOW what he stole from her, he know what he prived her of. To feel regret, love is not a requirement.
Beautifully directed scene. For me at least, this is the moment that Humbert releases how much of a mess he's made, and how much he's willing to suffer for it. (Not defending his actions, just my take).
@@yagesh287 Id say both. If you like reading, then i would read it and watch it too. The 1998 one portrays the story pretty well though as it shows dolores in stress more.
It's so great because he isn't fooling himself for once with paragraphs of witty prose and self-pity, he sees clearly that as heartbroken as he was over his childhood love - he robbed the innocence from a little girl for his own selfish desire, and he regrets it all. He wishes at the end he just left Lolita alone.
truly a sad, tragic but beautiful ending to an unfortunate movie. the admission that he has robbed her of her innocence breaks me every time, unquestionably beautifully shot scene.
At least he realized his guilt. Even he asked lolita the last time he saw her: "can you forgive me what I did to you?" He realized he lied to himself all the time and that her seductive behavior and willingsness was only in his fantasy. We all lie to ourselves because we want the person we love to love us back. But the sick thing is that he "loved" a child. P*dophiles claim the kids love them back. But they don't love the kids. They love the control and the power over them.
@@miamoser2389 Control and power argument may not be applicable on everyone. You never know what things fires up your love for someone, human emotions are very complex. He liked her because she reminded him of Annabel (at least initially). Can't you get this simple thing in your head before putting on him all sorts of preconceived stereotypical labels.
@@miamoser2389 not control or power. That's not true for Huberts case. He loved her because she reminded him of his teenage love who died and he never got over. He is a broken man who wanted to relive his young teenage adolescence. When Dolores reciprocated his affections somewhat, he leaped at her and tried to contain her to be her Annabelle
this scene gets me everytime after hh sees dolores pregnant and with another mans child he is technically cured and his obsession with nymphets has moved on but its far too late he loves her for herself now but the damage he’s done to her is unable to be fixed and that final confession is where he realizes it it’s truly tragic but also so well written and is the main reason why I love this story
@@closetglobe.IRGUN.NW0 The truth is you can never find a person in another that is one of the things my life teach me The only thing that remains is the memories you spend with that person, its irreplaceable and needs to be treasured
That is why he stopped loving lolita romantically when she got a couple years older because when he first saw her he didnt see her as lolita he saw her subconsciously as anabell abd when she got older she couldnt be anabel anymore.
@@mattygreen6233 you are judging this story with the circumstances of 80 years later. Back then, therapy was nothing but electroshock for the crazy. Now i am not ever justifying his actions not am i discarding the fact that he is a disgusting man to sexually abuse a child but it was the result of his poor circumstances that he ended up this way.
@@detectivefiction3701 In the introduction of the novel, Humbert's attorney acknowledges that a competent psychoanalyst might have helped Humbert. But he presents the conflict between art and a healthy society that is safe for children, saying they if Humbert had gotten himself treated and, presumably, overcome his problem, then "we wouldn't have this book."
The thing is, he could never admit to just how much of a monster he was... for all his lustful thoughts of her and treating her like an adult (yet still wanting to control her), he admits she was a child all along... Brilliantly acted, HH deserved to suffer, as did CQ
@Avy42F ...because there is such a thing as trauma bonding. And don't forget in the book she's 12 years old - but whatever the difference in ages between the book and the film/s she was a child. A child. I didn't realise I had stumbled upon a comment section for paedo apologists...!
@@SarahTheNearlyInSP lol stop with the acquisitions. While true that she was 12 in the start of the movie she was an adult by the end of it. He also died in jail. He also had to go through years of searching for her and missing her so that sounds like suffering and in the end of it all he showed regret.
This movie I watch it 1 thousand times still brought me to tears I just loved jeremy and lolita as dominique thier act was so very classy and the clothes so aesthetics I wanna cry again 😭
@@augustschweigeryt559 there is the problem and the subversive natural of moral relativism and critical theory. Monsters cant be romanticized in any setting other than a broken culture. Ths only heart out of chest for child molesting evil is akin to the old Aztec ajd Mayan method
@@thegadflygang5381 It's not a romanticisation, it's a fucking tragedy. It's literature, dealing with something tremendously bad that the writer, the novel, (the scriptwriters, the director, the actors, the film) and we all know is tremendously bad but is nonetheless an aspect of human experience and as such worth tackling hard. It does this, and while we certainly won't be made to feel any less repulsed by the sickness on display or any less desirous of its punishment when it happens in reality we can, if we follow the story diligently and with an open heart, see that even in the lowest, most far gone among us there still shines the light of a human soul.
@@thegadflygang5381 even monsters possess the divine spark, and that is about as far away from moral relativism as you can get. It's paradoxical, it's challenging, it's horrifying, finally it is Illuminating. But none of those reactions are possible if you don't first believe in the essential realities of good and evil.
In the end Humbert was alone, like he had always been. He never connected with adults his age and only hung out with a 13yo. He was a kid once and became a monster. I don’t give a fuck that some will say I’m not supposed to feel like this. Besides admitting his perversion, this scene also embodies that. I discovered this movie about a year ago now. It shaped my year and completely transformed me. A timeless masterpiece I will always come back to for comfort, that of seeing a monster failing to convince me that he’s not. Thank you Jeremy. 20 years on this earth and I know I will never live another ending such as this one.
It really touches me because many who use or abuse children can never admit even to themselves!! It's so Beautiful that he is willing to accept who he is and begin healing!! The monster who molested me and my sister and many others has yet to admit he did anything wrong to this day!! Whether people even accept or know the long term damage done, one can't begin to heal unless acknowledgement is even given that wrong was done by those who did it!! I will never forget this scene, so special! ❤
Wow. What the fuck. Are you ok??? And your sister??? I’m so sorry… but…. That’s not quite how it works, dear. Child molesters such as Humbert DONT feel regret. HH didn’t feel any regret for what he did. He knows who he is but, doesn’t feel any remorse. Which I think is even worse. He won’t heal, the wound will never ever heal. Though it’s nice you have hope. But im truthfully sorry for you and anyone who gets molested. It takes away one’s innocence. One’s trust. HH is a horrible man.
I actually felt empathy to Humbert for this entire film. When I was 14 years old I also had and lost my first love, though I lost her not to death but to life itself. We dated for a few months but, she did not want me, maybe she never did. After some time she left, she found herself a new boyfriend. As far as I know, she's with him even now, maybe she's gotten herself kids and whatsoever. I'm 22 now, and I know that even if she was an old woman that lived her whole life with someone else by her side that it was not me, I'd still be loving her. Never loved anyone before, and I couldn't love anyone else, and believe me. I tried. Even tried to look at younger girls, though I'll never be delusional and ruin anyone's life like Humbert did. To my own disgrace, I'll always love you, Victoria. “I looked and looked at her, and I knew, as clearly as I know that I will die, that I loved her more than anything I had ever seen or imagined on earth. She was only the dead-leaf echo of the nymphet from long ago - but I loved her, this Lolita, pale and polluted and big with another man's child. She could fade and wither - I didn't care. I would still go mad with tenderness at the mere sight of her face.”
I always found it tragic how they both only died a month apart, it’s like the movie is trying to say that they were true lovers & couldn’t live without the other… disgusting
Kids and teens have a sad bond with their ab*sers and even feel loyal towards them because everybody victim blames them. Look at celine dion. She is miserable after her husband died who groomed her since she was 12. It's called stockholm syndrome.
His big mistake was not finding out sooner that the innocence that he was desperately trying to "save" , in his own perverted ways, has always been inside himself, and only himself. Lolita was never truly innocent to begin with. She was merely the instrument of his own self-destruction for not knowing himself. And yet, The chorus of children playing will always be inside his heart. Her voice will always be inside his heart.
Omg I watch this movie and I just keep thinking about how the music was beautiful and the lines that were said in the movie this line is one of the most fascinating one I think about not in a bad or good way in a way that just makes you think honestly the movie was a kind of movie you think about a lot honestly it’s really hard to explain in words
Omg same. I first watched this movie when I was 14, I have NO idea how I found out about this movie, but I really wanted to be like Lolita (*definitely* not be in the same situation tho 🤢🤢🤢🤢, I wanted her personality) now that I’m rewatching this movie, I can’t help think how DISGUSTING Humbert is.
Cop 1: “Shouldn’t we go over there and arrest him? Cop 2: “Nah, I can tell from the look on his face he’s doing some internal monologue. We can let him finish that up.”
I lost my innocent beautiful niece in a a sudden death in his bedroom, may be with a mistaken overdose😢. He was a decent young gentleman son. Nobody doubts he may be a drug addicted. Just like to remind that never ever feel trust or angry to the youth, bc they are still need to be watched like a kid and at least pretend to treat them like an adult. They are so vulnerable and should be cared until 25. I don’t tell a number for maturity 😓😓😓😓 Please pray for my sister who has struggled with her loved lost 😞💔
I’m soo so sorrry for you 💔 but this scene is about rape, I mean this whole film is about Humbert stealing a little girls innocence. Lolita is a manifestation of his own self-destruction. She is an instrument of it. It is a truly horrible, disgusting, and sad film. Tragic ending too, everybody died. ….
Humour was Kubrick's get-out clause because it allowed him some distance from the troubling material. Lyne does the opposite, he envelops us in the confusing emotions and makes us see from the eyes of both victim and abuser.
Many p*dos end their lives because they know their p*rversions are wrong. They always have an inner fight. In germany there is a therapy session for p*dos where they can learn to control their feelings. Even hotlines exist. It's a very good idea and it makes a bit easier to feel bad for p*dos if they ask for help.
I'm in the us went to therapy, and they didn't taught to control feeling but instead controlling your body(meaning not take actions) which i never needed help with, so i just wasted money lol.
@@xolio1993 on the contrary Lo was mesmerized by Quilty because of his power as a Playwright and was rich even though it was disturbing knowing the fact hence the movie is a great masterpiece.
This scene makes me cry... he really loved her, I know it’s not the same in the book but this movie really gave me a different perspective, I believe she loved him too just not in the way Humbert did. Hope there’s some people that agree with me
⚠️ Do you want to be in good shape? I show you how: bit.ly/3zz6o68 ⚠️
⚠️ The book Lolita, in English: amzn.to/3jm0zDd ⚠️
How is that related to this movie?
"What I heard then was the melody of children at play. Nothing but that. And I knew the hopelessly poignant thing, was not Lolita's absence from my side...but the absence of her voice from that chorus."
What an absolutely amazingly written line.
that line was from the novel the movie was adapted from
Very moving and true.
I've read the book by Nabokov a few times and its honestly one of the if not the most beautifully written novel I've ever read. The novel is full of beautiful poetic lines.
Wow. What a gut punch of a line
It took me a second rewatch to realize that the absence of Lolita’s voice from the children’s playful innocence meant he had stolen hers. The guilt overwhelmed even the love he felt for her.
Thats not love but lust
@@carolinpurayidom4570 True. But I would argue that the only reason he was able to feel deeply regretful was because of this newfound love for Dolores as the feeling human being that she was. Up until this very point, his lust for her was placed above everything else, and he realizes that.
@@bluesummers5051 I don't think so, he's regretful probably because he KNOW what he stole from her, he know what he prived her of. To feel regret, love is not a requirement.
@@Megelos Maybe some level of empathy then, but you’re right.
Humbert realized that he destroyed Dolores.
Beautifully directed scene. For me at least, this is the moment that Humbert releases how much of a mess he's made, and how much he's willing to suffer for it. (Not defending his actions, just my take).
Is it similar or different from the actual novel?
@@yagesh287 Id say both. If you like reading, then i would read it and watch it too. The 1998 one portrays the story pretty well though as it shows dolores in stress more.
@@kennedy8791 where did you watch it
It's so great because he isn't fooling himself for once with paragraphs of witty prose and self-pity, he sees clearly that as heartbroken as he was over his childhood love - he robbed the innocence from a little girl for his own selfish desire, and he regrets it all. He wishes at the end he just left Lolita alone.
The final confession that he robbed Dolores of her innocence is touching...
His final repentance. Yes.
Yes and if you read the book, it goes even more into depth about the realization and his repentance. The tragedy is that it is too little to late.
Innocence? read the book
@@DrPangloss this comment is specifically about this movie and not the book...
Common dolores was not that innocent of a child we all know that very well
I think Jeremy Iron’s romanticised British accent was perfect accompanied by the incredible music of Morricone... sends me into tears....
truly a sad, tragic but beautiful ending to an unfortunate movie. the admission that he has robbed her of her innocence breaks me every time, unquestionably beautifully shot scene.
At least he realized his guilt. Even he asked lolita the last time he saw her: "can you forgive me what I did to you?" He realized he lied to himself all the time and that her seductive behavior and willingsness was only in his fantasy. We all lie to ourselves because we want the person we love to love us back. But the sick thing is that he "loved" a child. P*dophiles claim the kids love them back. But they don't love the kids. They love the control and the power over them.
@@miamoser2389 Control and power argument may not be applicable on everyone. You never know what things fires up your love for someone, human emotions are very complex. He liked her because she reminded him of Annabel (at least initially). Can't you get this simple thing in your head before putting on him all sorts of preconceived stereotypical labels.
Your pfp is amazing :D
@@miamoser2389 not control or power. That's not true for Huberts case.
He loved her because she reminded him of his teenage love who died and he never got over. He is a broken man who wanted to relive his young teenage adolescence.
When Dolores reciprocated his affections somewhat, he leaped at her and tried to contain her to be her Annabelle
@@mhk6093 "preconceived stereotypical labels" stereotypes for who?? P3dos?? What are you even on about 😭
this scene gets me everytime after hh sees dolores pregnant and with another mans child he is technically cured and his obsession with nymphets has moved on but its far too late he loves her for herself now but the damage he’s done to her is unable to be fixed and that final confession is where he realizes it it’s truly tragic but also so well written and is the main reason why I love this story
What’s a nymphet?
His word for young beautiful girls that he finds sexually arousing
he never loved her, he was just a pervert and a pedophile, all he wanted was to take advantage of her and her innocence
@@HadassaMoon144 true, he calls them nymphettes to forget they are humans.
"The child I loved was gone
But I kept looking for her...
Long after I'd left my own childhood"
He was always searching for Annabel in Lolita
Kinda like me fr
@@closetglobe.IRGUN.NW0 The truth is you can never find a person in another that is one of the things my life teach me
The only thing that remains is the memories you spend with that person, its irreplaceable and needs to be treasured
yup He needed to fill the painful void that never left him
That is why he stopped loving lolita romantically when she got a couple years older because when he first saw her he didnt see her as lolita he saw her subconsciously as anabell abd when she got older she couldnt be anabel anymore.
He goes deeper into this in the book, so good
That’s the calmest police chase I’ve ever seen
right like atp just let him go they weren’t even trying 😭😭
police can't use their Ultimate (shooting in the chest 35 times) if the character's skin isn't black
It was nice of the police to let him stand there and internally deliver that last line of monologue.
The ending is like a Shakespeare tragedy. By the end EVERYBODY is dead!!
his life ends at age 14 when Annabel died
@I Was Here imagine if he would have just gotten therapy or some shit and he might have been a normal person
@@mattygreen6233 read the book please
They certainly did have psychiatry back then.
@@mattygreen6233 you are judging this story with the circumstances of 80 years later. Back then, therapy was nothing but electroshock for the crazy. Now i am not ever justifying his actions not am i discarding the fact that he is a disgusting man to sexually abuse a child but it was the result of his poor circumstances that he ended up this way.
@@detectivefiction3701 In the introduction of the novel, Humbert's attorney acknowledges that a competent psychoanalyst might have helped Humbert. But he presents the conflict between art and a healthy society that is safe for children, saying they if Humbert had gotten himself treated and, presumably, overcome his problem, then "we wouldn't have this book."
This movie is very sad and sickening, but so beautiful and sensitive, so many mixed emotions.
Adrian Lyne picked the perfect shot of her to end the movie. What a genius filmmaker he is!!
I agree goose bumps
Falling onto the pillow when the orchestra harmonically resolves! Genius he is!
The thing is, he could never admit to just how much of a monster he was... for all his lustful thoughts of her and treating her like an adult (yet still wanting to control her), he admits she was a child all along...
Brilliantly acted, HH deserved to suffer, as did CQ
while i agree he was a bad person, she didn't hold grudge against either of them.
@Avy42F ...because there is such a thing as trauma bonding. And don't forget in the book she's 12 years old - but whatever the difference in ages between the book and the film/s she was a child.
A child.
I didn't realise I had stumbled upon a comment section for paedo apologists...!
@@SarahTheNearlyInSP lol stop with the acquisitions. While true that she was 12 in the start of the movie she was an adult by the end of it. He also died in jail. He also had to go through years of searching for her and missing her so that sounds like suffering and in the end of it all he showed regret.
This movie I watch it 1 thousand times still brought me to tears I just loved jeremy and lolita as dominique thier act was so very classy and the clothes so aesthetics I wanna cry again 😭
Where can you watch it? I found a video on UA-cam but didn’t finished it only went half way and the when I came back it was banned :(
@@dddiddyd7694 you can watch it on tubi. It's a free movie app that you can download on your phone.
same their acting is so amazing this scene brings me to tears everytime
I've been thinking about this movie since the day i watched it. So heart breaking
Me too😭 I feel so depressed watching this movie
There is so much in the novel that is objectionable, tiresome, cynical. Then this passage arrives and suddenly your heart is gone from your chest.
And we're able to see the humanity even in monsters.
@@augustschweigeryt559 there is the problem and the subversive natural of moral relativism and critical theory. Monsters cant be romanticized in any setting other than a broken culture. Ths only heart out of chest for child molesting evil is akin to the old Aztec ajd Mayan method
@@thegadflygang5381 It's not a romanticisation, it's a fucking tragedy. It's literature, dealing with something tremendously bad that the writer, the novel, (the scriptwriters, the director, the actors, the film) and we all know is tremendously bad but is nonetheless an aspect of human experience and as such worth tackling hard. It does this, and while we certainly won't be made to feel any less repulsed by the sickness on display or any less desirous of its punishment when it happens in reality we can, if we follow the story diligently and with an open heart, see that even in the lowest, most far gone among us there still shines the light of a human soul.
@@augustschweigeryt559 he ain't a monster
@@thegadflygang5381 even monsters possess the divine spark, and that is about as far away from moral relativism as you can get. It's paradoxical, it's challenging, it's horrifying, finally it is Illuminating. But none of those reactions are possible if you don't first believe in the essential realities of good and evil.
In the end Humbert was alone, like he had always been. He never connected with adults his age and only hung out with a 13yo. He was a kid once and became a monster. I don’t give a fuck that some will say I’m not supposed to feel like this. Besides admitting his perversion, this scene also embodies that.
I discovered this movie about a year ago now. It shaped my year and completely transformed me. A timeless masterpiece I will always come back to for comfort, that of seeing a monster failing to convince me that he’s not.
Thank you Jeremy. 20 years on this earth and I know I will never live another ending such as this one.
if they wanted to convince you then they wouldn't had made him Controlling/paranoid. the credit should go to the authors not to the actors.
He broke her heart. I merely broke her life.
@Goldberg Brian it's a line from the novel, Humbert at least seems to realize to a certain degree what he has done
What
This is a pretty depressing ending. But oh well. It's viewed as wrong by everyone.
Okay now seeing Duncan on a lolita scene has got to be in my top 10 oddest youtube comments.
can you explain what you mean
Sus
It was so fucking sad scene...
It made me cry even more when I saw the lolita clip at the end damn ! Why ?????? 😭😭😭😭
@Maverick sthu
Or the scene when she attacks him and repeats""K*ll me like you k*lled my mother!" You realise in the scene the most that she was a scared child.
So much sympathy for Humbert in these comments,I despise him he deserved to suffer more even if he realized.
It's not sympathy....wtf? It's just people finding some comfort in the fact that he finally realizes what he did in the end.
@@Georgina-lv9bt boohoo pedo pedo pedo he touches kids unga bunga hunga dunga
It really touches me because many who use or abuse children can never admit even to themselves!! It's so Beautiful that he is willing to accept who he is and begin healing!! The monster who molested me and my sister and many others has yet to admit he did anything wrong to this day!! Whether people even accept or know the long term damage done, one can't begin to heal unless acknowledgement is even given that wrong was done by those who did it!! I will never forget this scene, so special! ❤
Wow. What the fuck. Are you ok??? And your sister??? I’m so sorry… but…. That’s not quite how it works, dear. Child molesters such as Humbert DONT feel regret. HH didn’t feel any regret for what he did. He knows who he is but, doesn’t feel any remorse. Which I think is even worse. He won’t heal, the wound will never ever heal. Though it’s nice you have hope. But im truthfully sorry for you and anyone who gets molested. It takes away one’s innocence. One’s trust. HH is a horrible man.
Did anyone noticed they both died in 1950
they died about one month apart from each other. it rlly is a tragic story all around
lmao who wouldnt notice that
Humbert Humbert died.
Physically? November 1950
Mentally? Ages ago.
shutup
@@amjadmohsin7 why don't you? Loser
@@amjadmohsin7why? Their point is true.
Found my fellow Lana stan in the comment section of a Lolita-related video.
I actually felt empathy to Humbert for this entire film. When I was 14 years old I also had and lost my first love, though I lost her not to death but to life itself. We dated for a few months but, she did not want me, maybe she never did. After some time she left, she found herself a new boyfriend. As far as I know, she's with him even now, maybe she's gotten herself kids and whatsoever. I'm 22 now, and I know that even if she was an old woman that lived her whole life with someone else by her side that it was not me, I'd still be loving her. Never loved anyone before, and I couldn't love anyone else, and believe me. I tried. Even tried to look at younger girls, though I'll never be delusional and ruin anyone's life like Humbert did. To my own disgrace, I'll always love you, Victoria.
“I looked and looked at her, and I knew, as clearly as I know that I will die, that I loved her more than anything I had ever seen or imagined on earth. She was only the dead-leaf echo of the nymphet from long ago - but I loved her, this Lolita, pale and polluted and big with another man's child. She could fade and wither - I didn't care. I would still go mad with tenderness at the mere sight of her face.”
this movie messed me up for a while 🧍🏽♀️
I always found it tragic how they both only died a month apart, it’s like the movie is trying to say that they were true lovers & couldn’t live without the other… disgusting
*SAD BUT TRUTH*
Kids and teens have a sad bond with their ab*sers and even feel loyal towards them because everybody victim blames them. Look at celine dion. She is miserable after her husband died who groomed her since she was 12. It's called stockholm syndrome.
I still think about this movie, wrenched my heart out
And the Great Ennio Morricone, unfortunately, passed away. Thank you, Ennio! Your legacy will be always remembered. Riposa in Pace!
06/07/20
Ci manca, maestro! Grazie di tutto. :)
06/07/21
I like Jeremy Irons. He's an amazing actor.
LEGENDARY SCENE
The work of a genious.
His big mistake was not finding out sooner that the innocence that he was desperately trying to "save" , in his own perverted ways, has always been inside himself, and only himself. Lolita was never truly innocent to begin with. She was merely the instrument of his own self-destruction for not knowing himself. And yet, The chorus of children playing will always be inside his heart. Her voice will always be inside his heart.
This is beautiful 😭
Omg I watch this movie and I just keep thinking about how the music was beautiful and the lines that were said in the movie this line is one of the most fascinating one I think about not in a bad or good way in a way that just makes you think honestly the movie was a kind of movie you think about a lot honestly it’s really hard to explain in words
his voice..omg!! in love with it
I graduated from hs today and watching this seems meaningful to watch ...
I’m about to graduate and i just watched this yesterday yeah. It hit. You should watch it
@@kennedy8791 girl i definitely watched the movie (in sophomore year) it defined my life....
Did u 2 also get with older guys or what?
@@closetglobe.IRGUN.NW0 None of ur business
Lolita death Sad had his life destroyed gave a beautiful smile lolita was happy more Humbert destroyed everything 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
One of the best tragic romance, a rare piece of art.
Romance? It's about a p*dophile ab*sing a child.
I hate this movie now for what it did to me at 12 my young niave mind wanted to be like lolita so bad
I first watched this at 12, what I got from it was shock and sadness which persisted for a couple of days
Omg same. I first watched this movie when I was 14, I have NO idea how I found out about this movie, but I really wanted to be like Lolita (*definitely* not be in the same situation tho 🤢🤢🤢🤢, I wanted her personality) now that I’m rewatching this movie, I can’t help think how DISGUSTING Humbert is.
A young person should definitely not see this… it can manipulate your mind just like Lolita was manipulated💔
Don't beat you over the head with it. Allot of adults don't really get this movie either.
@@xolio1993 how was Lolita was manipulated? did you watch the movie or read the book?
Such a sad movie :(
Lolita😔
Absolutely beautiful piece of cinema
Ang sakit nman😭😭😭😭
Cop 1: “Shouldn’t we go over there and arrest him?
Cop 2: “Nah, I can tell from the look on his face he’s doing some internal monologue. We can let him finish that up.”
Que hombre más atractivo
I lost my innocent beautiful niece in a a sudden death in his bedroom, may be with a mistaken overdose😢. He was a decent young gentleman son. Nobody doubts he may be a drug addicted. Just like to remind that never ever feel trust or angry to the youth, bc they are still need to be watched like a kid and at least pretend to treat them like an adult. They are so vulnerable and should be cared until 25. I don’t tell a number for maturity 😓😓😓😓
Please pray for my sister who has struggled with her loved lost 😞💔
I’m soo so sorrry for you 💔 but this scene is about rape, I mean this whole film is about Humbert stealing a little girls innocence. Lolita is a manifestation of his own self-destruction. She is an instrument of it. It is a truly horrible, disgusting, and sad film. Tragic ending too, everybody died. ….
😓@@xolio1993
Lolita without the Kubrick humor.
The old version is simply awful.
Older doesnt mean better. Face it, 1997 version is much better
1962 one was dreadful. no emotion whatsoever
Humour was Kubrick's get-out clause because it allowed him some distance from the troubling material. Lyne does the opposite, he envelops us in the confusing emotions and makes us see from the eyes of both victim and abuser.
Underrated movie. Better than Kubrick's.
Uhhhh no sir
@@calebwilliams1759 Yes !!! By far ...
I'm a big fan of Kubrick's movies but I think lolita is probably the worst.
This passage is basically all you need to understand the entire book
I loved the ending
I remember my first love and how I lost him forever.
Wtf do you know what this movie is about
@@ersazyla1171 I know this movie understand me bitch?
Was he 14
@@dawsonlenard2848 What do you want to say by this?
@@elm7028 they are asking if your lover was 14 bc the movie shows the "romance" between a 40 yr old and a 14 yr child 😰
Life hurts n breaks u down when ur soul mate abandons u. I think about "it" every now n then. I like life. But
Humbert ruined everyone's life: Charlotte's, Lolita's, and his own.
🙃 but you called the police to catch me by bullying me instead!?
What a sad ending for Humbert.. His life did end at 14...
how
he deserved way worse he did horrible sick things you shouldn't feel bad he knew what he was doing
The colour girl she had a family now SO and she chose it. I dont feel bad about lolita. She is stubborn clearly she can do what she wants
Pumble Grump People have the right to pity.
I Was Here Because people have emotions? Can’t control emotions 🙄
The moment he realises that his "nymphets" are human children.
specifically girls(and he always knew).
Devastating
The only beautiful thing here are those bikes.... like ... 🤪
Turns out Titanic was not the best movie from 1997.
Many p*dos end their lives because they know their p*rversions are wrong. They always have an inner fight. In germany there is a therapy session for p*dos where they can learn to control their feelings. Even hotlines exist. It's a very good idea and it makes a bit easier to feel bad for p*dos if they ask for help.
I'm in the us went to therapy, and they didn't taught to control feeling but instead controlling your body(meaning not take actions) which i never needed help with, so i just wasted money lol.
😢🥺💔
If this only took place 3 centuries ago it would of been acceptable.
“if only” ur sick. just cuz it was normalized back then doesn’t make it ok. in no world is a 40 year old man with a 12 year old ok.
@@mel-dy3pohere 44 year old man marry 17,what are you trying to say emo
@@retrogamer847 that you are a pedo who couldn’t get any girls ur age to like you… most likely bc you are a weirdo who married underage girls /:
Have you ever thought about suicide?
@retrogamer847 and youre ok with that?
He killed her????
No he killed quilty, Lolita died during childbirth like it says at the end
@@savi6552 thank you 🙏🥺
most depressing movie ever made.. mapapa what the fuck ka tlaga dito .. hayyyssss
kuyaaa san mo napanood
@@kylaarmodia3606 sa fb lng... wag mo panuorin.. ma dedepress ka ng 1 week.. sobrang lungkot ng ending..pero mganda un story
Puteks ung ending
Lolita by Lana Del Rey 🥺
Please I know ur not trying to but don’t romanticise this depressing disgusting film… (though it’s beautifully done).
Why is there blood on his face
Watch the whole movie
@@musicislife2000yh. But Humbert killed Clare Quilty (the child pornographer trying to take advantage of Lo)
@@xolio1993 on the contrary Lo was mesmerized by Quilty because of his power as a Playwright and was rich even though it was disturbing knowing the fact hence the movie is a great masterpiece.
Dolares never cared about her, her first man, Charlie. And it was the dead man she loved
She was a child. Humbert is no victim.
This scene makes me cry... he really loved her, I know it’s not the same in the book but this movie really gave me a different perspective, I believe she loved him too just not in the way Humbert did. Hope there’s some people that agree with me
I agree :) and im literally crying rn lol
He would have stopped "loving" her once she wasn't a child anymore lol
@@lornm1856 you don't know
@@woodoyoy that's how pedophiles are stop romanticizing it. If he had any love for the child he wouldn't fucking touch her either
i dont think he really loved her, he loved the idea of her, the her he made up in his mind, she reminded him of his gf who died.
She pisses me off she just left him like that that’s so fucked up man.
No it isn't. He's fucked up not her
He's a pedophile -
He was a pedophile ? What is wrong with you ?
Er, he's a paedophile... and she was abducted...
Wtf ??? What’s wrong with you man. She was 14. She escaped him. He was raping her of her innocence. Wtf is wrong with some people😐