Carl visits his childhood home

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 21 вер 2024
  • Carl visits his childhood home

КОМЕНТАРІ • 311

  • @bradleybrown8399
    @bradleybrown8399 Рік тому +118

    "little feller"...
    one of the best movies ever made.

    • @joeypilotte5864
      @joeypilotte5864 4 місяці тому +6

      Absolutely heartbreaking

    • @chrishensley6745
      @chrishensley6745 3 місяці тому +3

      Sure is man.....aint no good movies or nothing on cable nowandays.

  • @brianmeen2158
    @brianmeen2158 Рік тому +154

    This is one dark scene . Haunting. Thornton and Duvall nailed it.

    • @vicchavez6570
      @vicchavez6570 8 місяців тому +8

      When Duval clicks his dentures ..

    • @topazfire974
      @topazfire974 4 місяці тому +4

      I had to turn my head during the grave sean , 😢

  • @kevinthomas2622
    @kevinthomas2622 10 місяців тому +93

    "He ought had a chance to growed up... he'd had fun sometimes"
    With Carl....his bigger brother👊
    This scene just slays me.......

  • @Pajamasam32112
    @Pajamasam32112 Рік тому +194

    When the camera fixes on the hole carved into the ground, you can feel the years of senseless neglect and cruelty. This entire scene is biblical in its spiritual weight.

  • @flintsky7706
    @flintsky7706 3 місяці тому +64

    Robert Duvalls mouth movements in this scene always disturbed me

    • @Space_Ghost_Hunter
      @Space_Ghost_Hunter 2 місяці тому +18

      I finally figured out what his dad is mumbling to himself when Carl walks in:
      "Kick yer head in... bout 25 years ago yer dead I guess... wher'd you go to? But old brotha that's kinda sad, cuz I was drunk when I did it... Cuz I had to... hehe hehe..."

    • @JSawmill63
      @JSawmill63 Місяць тому +2

      @@Space_Ghost_Huntercrazy ol coot

    • @ExplorerDS6789
      @ExplorerDS6789 Місяць тому +3

      @@Space_Ghost_Hunter he was talking to an imaginary dog named Bullet, a Duvall himself claimed in an interview.

    • @joshallen128
      @joshallen128 Місяць тому +1

      ​​@@ExplorerDS6789 now that you mention it I did hear the word bullet while looking at the window fan and dog barking beneath music

    • @JB-ef7ks
      @JB-ef7ks 15 днів тому

      My father acts EXACTLY like that sadly!!

  • @sethreinders9296
    @sethreinders9296 Рік тому +141

    I'd say it's one of the best movies ever created...it's unforgettable and I think that's what makes a movie great

  • @plbeckman
    @plbeckman Рік тому +83

    I will never forget this movie. It stays with you

    • @cw9790
      @cw9790 4 місяці тому +2

      I've only seen it twice and it has stayed with me.

    • @2Shine55
      @2Shine55 Місяць тому

      @@cw9790Likewise, ……..

    • @abcrustics5252
      @abcrustics5252 Місяць тому

      Exactly my sentiments! Tommy Lee Jones was amazing in it!

  • @RadioactiveSince1990x
    @RadioactiveSince1990x 9 місяців тому +47

    That slow panning shot of the interior of the shed is heart shattering. After knowing how he was raised and how it affected him into adulthood, actually seeing it still there years later is so depressing. This dilapidated shack, probably in not much worse shape than when Carl was a child. Knowing he spent most of his developing years just sitting on that dirt floor. The music is perfect too. Its just so sad.

  • @debbiemetke5938
    @debbiemetke5938 Рік тому +78

    I never noticed before how angelically magnificent Karl is portrayed in the last scene here where he is up on that bridge.

    • @frankt5682
      @frankt5682 5 місяців тому +3

      He's on his own cross.

    • @mysterfrosty
      @mysterfrosty 3 місяці тому

      Some say the waters cold...

    • @gillz107
      @gillz107 2 місяці тому +2

      Thats a good way to describe the scene. I just noticed when I watched this scene again, the two support arches (or whatever you call them) for the train bridge look like wings. Thats the way I see it, at least

    • @mrmustangman
      @mrmustangman Місяць тому

      @@mysterfrosty ...and deep too.!!!!

  • @topazfire974
    @topazfire974 4 місяці тому +44

    My heart broke for him , no little boy should have to go through this 😢😢😢

  • @EmersumBiggins
    @EmersumBiggins 3 місяці тому +37

    Karl’s father denies him 3 times.

    • @bunberrier
      @bunberrier 3 місяці тому +13

      Great observation. At the conclusion of his visit he also ascends in a way, standing high above this on a trestle.

  • @LassieFarm
    @LassieFarm Рік тому +143

    He just wanted some acknowledgement from his dad, but of course an abuser would never give that

    • @NikkiMiller-re5fl
      @NikkiMiller-re5fl Рік тому +16

      It's fucking sad. Too many never get acknowledgment.

    • @Carnage7209
      @Carnage7209 3 місяці тому +7

      An generation of abusive monsters

    • @mysterfrosty
      @mysterfrosty 3 місяці тому

      Thats how it goes......no one ever talks someone into anything.........

    • @bunberrier
      @bunberrier 3 місяці тому +5

      His response was horrible, but its possible hes correct, "aint no kin". Remember what he caught his mother doing. Was that the first time? Probably not.

    • @bkpatrick5488
      @bkpatrick5488 Місяць тому

      Karl did what he thought he needed to by killing Doyle so frank can be free. Karol already seen this once before he is secretly smartest guy at things he is good at which that is very true for people with disabilities everything about his character what Billy Bob Thornton did is magnificent who knows how long it took him learn lawn Mowers but he is great at it

  • @totAlvoetbal
    @totAlvoetbal 2 місяці тому +17

    The ambient music at the start is amazing

  • @FromUSofA
    @FromUSofA  2 роки тому +222

    One of the most melancholic scenes from Hollywood, depicting the life in American South. I believe Carl's manners and ethics are far superior than an average person.

    • @FromUSofA
      @FromUSofA  Рік тому +29

      it just broke my heart and...eyes got teary, the moment he opened the door of that shack that he used to live in 25 years ago, with all that junk along with the torn apart bed spread and the spring box still around that hole he used to sleep in. The music of Daniel Lanoise was spot on such a sad scene with great facial and walking impressions of Billy Bob.

    • @King--88
      @King--88 Рік тому +6

      @@FromUSofA his parents lied to him about them stories they told him lmfao 😂 😂 😂 😂"I ain't got no boy" " you ain't no kin to me" lmfao 😂 😂 😂

    • @sarcasticallyrearranged
      @sarcasticallyrearranged Рік тому +7

      Superior, really?
      Exaggerated to the max.

    • @buck2559
      @buck2559 Рік тому +16

      ​@@johnbailey-dn8hkI live at the foot hills of the Appalachian mountains northeast ga,it shore does hit home

    • @grovedwayne390
      @grovedwayne390 Рік тому +6

      More like life in rural America. Lots of similarities

  • @jarrodanderson2124
    @jarrodanderson2124 Рік тому +71

    This movie feels dated in all the right ways.

    • @mrzip3206
      @mrzip3206 Рік тому +8

      Like when I dated your xister

    • @mrzip3206
      @mrzip3206 Рік тому +4

      Mmmhhh

    • @B1FFCO
      @B1FFCO 11 місяців тому +1

      ​@@mrzip3206sister*

    • @crminalminds12
      @crminalminds12 4 місяці тому

      @@mrzip3206 what's an xister? do you mean sister?

  • @Space_Ghost_Hunter
    @Space_Ghost_Hunter 2 місяці тому +11

    I finally figured out what his dad is mumbling to himself when Carl walks in:
    "Kick yer head in... bout 25 years ago yer dead I guess... wher'd you go to? But old brotha that's kinda sad, cuz I was drunk when I did it... Cuz I had to... hehe hehe..."
    *Creepy*

    • @TheSpook313
      @TheSpook313 29 днів тому +1

      Wow I never paid attention to that..... 😮

  • @mcgannahanskyjellyfetti6854
    @mcgannahanskyjellyfetti6854 Рік тому +56

    Tom Hagen was NEVER really the same since parting ways with the Corleone family...☹

    • @OBSVFULC
      @OBSVFULC Рік тому +5

      That damn consigliere

    • @bikramadhikari4117
      @bikramadhikari4117 Рік тому +5

      😂😂😂

    • @Joseph-kq9zc
      @Joseph-kq9zc 3 місяці тому +4

      Naw, they took away the Chevys on his NASCAR team and started racing Fords

    • @MRCLEAN84420
      @MRCLEAN84420 3 місяці тому +1

      ❤❤❤ "Nice one "!

  • @fframer1
    @fframer1 4 місяці тому +19

    I saw this at the movies when it came out. I was 25 and it blew me away. The huge sound of the music in the theater added to the intensity of the scenes.

  • @andyroberts805
    @andyroberts805 24 дні тому +3

    Really powerful scene. Karl starts it off by trying to have a relationship with his dad, but quickly realizes how sad and pathetic he is. Karl truly is the bigger man.

  • @adamcolbenson5638
    @adamcolbenson5638 2 місяці тому +11

    From someone who experienced the horror: this movie freed my soul.

  • @bunberrier
    @bunberrier 3 місяці тому +14

    01:32 The appliance to his left is a washer from the 50's, probably a Maytag. The round drum washes the clothes as a normal upright washer, but is filled and drained manually.The bar across the top is a wringer. Two rollers are turned by motor and clothes are passed piece by piece between them, wringing out the water which falls back in the drum.

    • @mattytheenigma
      @mattytheenigma 2 місяці тому +1

      Nice catch! Thanks for the info.

    • @mikedoss9777
      @mikedoss9777 2 місяці тому

      We had one when I was a child in the mid 80s. It would pinch you fingers if you weren’t careful and caught my sister’s hair in it once.

    • @bunberrier
      @bunberrier 2 місяці тому +1

      ​@@mikedoss9777Ive only seen one used once. In my grandmothers house. She had nearly all the same stuff in her house from the 50s-60s until she passed. I bet collectors were excited when they sold it all out. Gleaming, like new appliances from long ago. Fridge had as much chrome on it as an old Buick. And its worth noting... they worked that long too.

    • @kerrylee4633
      @kerrylee4633 26 днів тому +1

      I got my arm caught in the wringer of a machine similar to that one. I was 5 years old. Not many safety features in those days.

    • @wwaynemcg
      @wwaynemcg 8 днів тому

      We had one when I was a toddler. My sister got her arm pulled into the wringers. Still has the scar.

  • @rondorthecruel124
    @rondorthecruel124 Рік тому +134

    The first time I watched this scene with captions on, I noticed that Robert Duvall’s incoherent rambling lines were actually captioned. I never cared much before, because it just sounds like nonsense. I feel like at a glance, it’s supposed to illustrate his dementia and feeble-mindedness in his old age. But when I read his actual lines, I can’t help but think it’s Carl’s head he’s talking about kicking in while drunk.
    The whole movie, we never actually know Carl’s diagnosis other than he’s mentally challenged in some way. It could have been that he was born that way. At least, that’s the most natural assumption. He even demonstrates great abilities in certain areas, similar to those with autism.
    But these few lines force you to consider the real possibility that Carl’s mental challenges are a result of brain injury sustained from a violent beating as a child. It makes this scene all the more saddening and heartbreaking.
    Maybe that was obvious to some, but I didn’t piece that together for a long time.

    • @CriscDogs22
      @CriscDogs22 Рік тому +8

      I think it’s a reference to Carl’s little brother that he beat to death n has been going insane (probably from dementia n whatnot too) for the last 25 years. That’s why he says later “that u shouldn’t have done that to my little brother-he would have had fun sometimes” but I could be wrong too

    • @rondorthecruel124
      @rondorthecruel124 Рік тому +20

      ​@@CriscDogs22 The brother that is referenced is the newborn baby that they threw out and made Carl bury while it was still alive, after they presumably aborted it somehow on their own. Any kind of beating is never referenced other than here though. It could have happened to Carl while he was only 2 or 3 years old, which would explain why he doesn't talk about it, because he doesn't remember.

    • @CriscDogs22
      @CriscDogs22 Рік тому +4

      @@rondorthecruel124 damn I totally forgot that!! Been too long since I watched this movie in full. Thanks for reminding me but can’t believe forgot that! Lol

    • @JarrettAldrich
      @JarrettAldrich Рік тому +18

      Absolutely. The father killed the brother but he attempted to do the same to Carl. But Carl survived. With brain injury.

    • @cat_city2009
      @cat_city2009 Рік тому +9

      I figured Carl's intellectual disability is from the years of neglect and abuse. Beatings, lack of stimulation, malnutrition.
      That explains why he's pretty capable in some ways.

  • @GeorgeRamsey22
    @GeorgeRamsey22 Рік тому +25

    How could anyone ever forget this movie?
    It may have a simple story, but the deep themes are done so well. Every scene contributes to the story and the characters, not one bad scene. That's why this is a perfect movie.

  • @ytelpeloncito5151
    @ytelpeloncito5151 Рік тому +27

    He loved his brother so much.

    • @mysterfrosty
      @mysterfrosty 3 місяці тому

      ......he weren't no bigger than a squirrel....watchu talkin 'bout?...

  • @waltermarshall3575
    @waltermarshall3575 Рік тому +45

    One of the best movies ever made.

  • @bamesbamesbames
    @bamesbamesbames 3 місяці тому +5

    Just when you think the acting masterclass can't get any better, Robert Duvall shows up.

  • @gersonlinares2307
    @gersonlinares2307 Рік тому +35

    The Soundtrack alone is a masterpiece

    • @brianmeen2158
      @brianmeen2158 Рік тому +4

      Haunting

    • @hismajestysmen
      @hismajestysmen 10 місяців тому +4

      The soundtrack for the film was written and played by the Canadian genius Daniel Lanois. His song "The Maker" plays during the closing credits of the film.

    • @goblinbollocks2838
      @goblinbollocks2838 Місяць тому

      I'm surprised that more comments here aren't related to this. Amazing music.

  • @kylsh1
    @kylsh1 4 місяці тому +9

    The music….. it’s so good… this scene is heartbreaking….❤️❤️

  • @kellyyork3898
    @kellyyork3898 2 місяці тому +14

    If you grew up outside of a large city in the SE, in a smaller town, you knew a “Carl” because every small town had one. Sometimes “Carl” had a little, poor family, and sometimes not. But he was always there, and everyone knew him. Remember that, even today, the rural SE is very different from larger cities in the South. Drive 45 minutes outside the city limits of a large, southern city like Atlanta, and you’re in another world.

    • @CountryboyAR
      @CountryboyAR Місяць тому

      Right you are. I grew up in Benton Arkansas, where this movie was filmed and not too far from where Billy Bob Thornton is from. Every small town in the south has a "Carl" of some form and plenty of "Doyles". It's like a completely different society and time when you're in major cities, even southern major cities.

    • @twiceonsundays
      @twiceonsundays 29 днів тому +1

      That's true. In VA, NC, and SC, aside from the major cities, it's pretty much nothing but rural areas and it seems like you've gone through a time machine that took you back about 20 or 30 years when you're only an hour or so outside of the major areas.

  • @philiphatfield5666
    @philiphatfield5666 Рік тому +27

    This movie is so superb that Billy Bob Thornton need never direct another movie. Like Orson Welles, his place in cinema history is secure with this one masterpiece. For Robert Duvall, despite his long and brilliant career, "Tender Mercies" and "The Apostle" are the two movie classics that he will be best remembered for-----with "Lonesome Dove" making him a TV legend as well!

  • @w7100
    @w7100 3 місяці тому +6

    yeah, french fried taters funny and all that but this movie is pure genius near spiritual, the acting, directing, camera shots are on a level I can't properly explain

  • @MrPreshita
    @MrPreshita Рік тому +26

    It's very difficult to limit this comment to a few sentences - or even sections.
    What an utterly electifying experience it was to watch this movie. Here in 2023, the world is busy going crazy, and while that's going on, important lessons about fatherhood, life, religion, people, culture, morals, predujice and purity that's all wrapped up into movies like this.. Gone.... Happy I was around to get the opportunity to watch it!

  • @presence5426
    @presence5426 3 місяці тому +15

    Some people think there weren't many bad people in the "olden days." There were some. There was quite a bit of bad parenting and poverty. That's why we need social workers, so that children don't fall through the cracks.

    • @TheVIC-vo6yi
      @TheVIC-vo6yi 3 місяці тому +2

      Maybe, or maybe not..Aint no guarantee just because high paid shrinks come to visit...

    • @Suddenlyits1960
      @Suddenlyits1960 3 місяці тому

      There weren't. Compare the stuff kids are doing today, 13 year old girls stabbing their friend in the woods, the two 10 year old boys that abducted and killed and sodomized a 2 year old boy,just for the heck of it. The mother who cooked her infant in an oven...things like that didn't happen in the 50's and 60's. It would have been headline news. Now these are nearly weekly occurances.

    • @presence5426
      @presence5426 3 місяці тому +2

      @@Suddenlyits1960 What I said was, 'there were bad people back then.' It may be true that there were fewer wacky, depraved crimes back then. Even per capita (there are more people now). But there was also a strong "don't report/don't discuss" sentiment back then. Lots of bad things swept under the rug. Rural police departments with few good investigators. They would bow to pressure from community leaders who didn't want shame brought on "their town."

    • @mfdink7128
      @mfdink7128 3 місяці тому +2

      @@Suddenlyits1960 Brother, the past is no stranger to the wicked. Even in the 50s, serial killers captured the headlines, various injustices were aflame, and small acts of hatred held their silent grip, in dark corners of the country. And be mindful to separate your golden age from that before it, they endured enough poverty and war to sober a generation from crime and death.

    • @zangmaster
      @zangmaster 3 місяці тому +1

      What? There was tons of bad people all throughout time even worse people

  • @afterthefox
    @afterthefox Рік тому +19

    this movie flows...not a bad scene or line...i remember being so disappointed when it ended...

  • @lucian5304
    @lucian5304 4 місяці тому +11

    It's 2024 and they make movies today that cost tens of millions ..and they don't come close to this classic..not sure what this budget was..but it just a simple movie with great acting

    • @mrmustangman
      @mrmustangman Місяць тому

      1 million budget
      grossed 24.4 million worldwide

  • @wll1500
    @wll1500 3 місяці тому +6

    "Weird bullets. And you, where you go to? Then you're here. What were you? I kicked your head in 25 years ago, you're dead, I guess. Where'd you go to? I know Mother, that's kinda sad. I was drunk when I did it. What was I up to? Hmm Hmm."
    His dad is either in a semi-drunken stupor, or he's showing early signs of being senile and he's having conversations with people who aren't there, and it kinda sounds like he is recounting killing someone in the past.

  • @codydavidyates72
    @codydavidyates72 3 місяці тому +7

    He was going for his gun, but he couldn't find it

  • @j.lietka9406
    @j.lietka9406 Рік тому +21

    This movie is so deep....

  • @B-ud9cf
    @B-ud9cf Рік тому +16

    God be ye real daddy son, God watches you everyday for always

  • @EricGray-zr2es
    @EricGray-zr2es 7 місяців тому +8

    Notice the framed painting of "The Last Supper" revealed once Carl moves to leave. From what I gather, Carl is a Christ-like figure, very pure and honest. Not an inkling of deception. Many around him surround themselves with the icons of Jesus begging for salvation yet constantly judge others. Carl is redeemed and beyond that mental prison. Plus, his name has parallels to Carl Jung, so he is also very adept at understanding the psychology of others. 🎉

    • @realeyesrealizereallies1194
      @realeyesrealizereallies1194 5 місяців тому +3

      I also noticed the sun shining on his mouth only while speaking to his dad. Meaning his word is bond.

  • @db7292
    @db7292 3 місяці тому +5

    I studied on it too Carl....quiet a bit.

  • @kiddetroit8403
    @kiddetroit8403 5 місяців тому +6

    This will be forever one of the most magic scenes in cinematic history

  • @christihampton2349
    @christihampton2349 Рік тому +25

    very sad scene from the movie.. Theabuse that carl went threw very sad

    • @mysterfrosty
      @mysterfrosty 3 місяці тому

      It made him the man he is today...

  • @pepsrunhell3399
    @pepsrunhell3399 5 місяців тому +9

    Omni by Daniel Lanois, beautiful

    • @harveyatlaw
      @harveyatlaw 4 місяці тому +2

      Thank you for this. And well said. His music is also featured in the video game Red Dead Redemption II, which is how I even recognized his name!

  • @denverfowler5290
    @denverfowler5290 Рік тому +20

    Despite A L L the years , and time passing ,
    Carl still remembers where his little brother is buried , probably also abused .
    .
    Hard scene to stomach ,
    knowing a A human was forced / made to sleep out in a shed , on the cold , hard ground
    , no warmth , no human caring , no nice words.

  • @sianspherica
    @sianspherica 6 місяців тому +15

    I don't think another live has ever depicted the intensity of huge poverty in America as Sling Blade did.

    • @Wowzersdude-k5c
      @Wowzersdude-k5c 5 місяців тому +1

      It's a bit exaggerated. I live in the heart of the south (in a fairly small town) and I drive by mansions quite a lot. But, yes, there are definitely poor areas, just as there are in every U.S. state.

    • @kitosjek9541
      @kitosjek9541 2 місяці тому

      Horrors of neoliberalism

    • @hunterhunter106
      @hunterhunter106 2 місяці тому +1

      And yet people do anything they can to come live here? Get a clue. Poor people in America and Europe are still historically wealthy. You just have no idea what it was like in the past, or even large swaths of the world today.

    • @willashland4597
      @willashland4597 2 місяці тому +1

      ​@@hunterhunter106 Ding ding ding. People complain about being poor even as they have cars, phones, food, and can afford to door dash items to their house.
      Poor people in history were starving, diseased, and dying. Many places in the world are still like this. People in prosperous countries have zero context as to the cruel nature of actual poverty and deprivation.

  • @adamdesanti6713
    @adamdesanti6713 2 місяці тому +3

    The word "masterpiece" gets thrown around a lot these days. For _Sling Blade_ the word actually applies.

  • @Itszachmiller
    @Itszachmiller Рік тому +14

    Elite level movie

  • @kristoferkeller6287
    @kristoferkeller6287 5 місяців тому +2

    I simply need this piece of music in my life. The film is literally perfect. Genius. Real.
    The music. Everything.
    “That like That Doyle, that’s some good shit. Alright! Haaaawwww!”

  • @joenop3393
    @joenop3393 4 місяці тому +1

    This movie speaks on so many levels of the Bible. Outstanding!!

  • @Rood67
    @Rood67 5 місяців тому +12

    Slingblade has some hilarious parts, like “It ain’t got no gas in it.”
    Yet for the most part, it just tears at my heart.
    What a great movie that should have gotten Oscar nods if not outright wins. So much better than $200 million dollar blockbusters that I forget after a few months.
    It’s been nearly two decades since I watched Slingblade and I still quote it, do Karl’s voice to make one of my doctor’s receptionist laugh.

  • @CatnessStrange
    @CatnessStrange Рік тому +7

    Beautiful film

  • @MarcusThomas-cc2po
    @MarcusThomas-cc2po 4 місяці тому +6

    You know you’re in Arkansas when you see a tin roof

    • @CountryboyAR
      @CountryboyAR Місяць тому +1

      There are small towns with houses like this all over the country, not just in Arkansas. I live in Arkansas and have been to almost every state in the US and I've come across several houses similar to this in small towns. West Virginia is one of many states that has Arkansas beat in that category.

    • @MarcusThomas-cc2po
      @MarcusThomas-cc2po Місяць тому

      @@CountryboyAR nah, it’s Arkansas

  • @ExplorerDS6789
    @ExplorerDS6789 7 місяців тому +9

    Anybody in the Benton, Arkansas area know where this house is located? In the commentary, Billy Bob said it was an empty house they found on the highway.

    • @mysterfrosty
      @mysterfrosty 3 місяці тому +3

      Its on the corner of elm street and some other street....

    • @ExplorerDS6789
      @ExplorerDS6789 3 місяці тому

      @@mysterfrosty Elm Street? Huh, yeah, I imagine Freddy Krueger's house would look something like this

    • @mrmustangman
      @mrmustangman Місяць тому

      @@ExplorerDS6789 you didn't get the joke..... 🤣

  • @mrmustangman
    @mrmustangman Місяць тому +1

    "Weird bullet. Where'd you go to? Then you're here. What were you? I kicked your head in 25 years ago, you're dead, I guess. Where'd you go to? I know Mother, that's kinda sad. I was drunk when I did it. What was I up to? Hmm Hmm, Hmm Hmm."

  • @goblinbollocks2838
    @goblinbollocks2838 Місяць тому

    Only just seen this film. Can tell it will stay with me. If any Americans are interested in some high quality evocative cinema/TV that they probably won't have seen before, the feeling this scene left me with reminded me of some of the works of an English director by the name of Shane Meadows, in particular Dead Man's Shoes, the final episode of the TV series sequel that followed his film This Is England, and the TV series The Virtues. Thematically any similarities are relatively small, Dead Man's Shoes is about a boy with an unspecified mental condition who falls in with a crowd of lowlives who bully him mercilessly and his brother's reaction to it - very funny in parts for a film on that subject, and does a great job at making the petpetrators human rather than caricatures - and The Virtues is about a struggling alcoholic who relapses when his young son moves to Australia and travels back from England to the town in Ireland he fled from as a child to track down his younger sister and piece together his past and what made him like he is. This is England has even less similarities but there is the relationship between a troubled grown man and a young boy who lost his father at the fore I suppose when a violent, racist individual comes home from prison and causes a divide in a previously happy group of young skinheads in a deprived town in 80's England, then the three series of the TV programme sequel follows the aftermath of the film. I'd encourage anybody who likes good film to try to find a way to watch his stuff. Don't look up scenes on UA-cam though as they'll likely give away big plot points and massively detract from the experience of watching them properly if you decide to.

  • @ldrobarts
    @ldrobarts 3 місяці тому +1

    I live in a rather small town in Indiana. There’s like maybe 5 or 6 street lights. Anyways, I love the town. Ppl are friendly, polite….everything big city’s aren’t but there are pockets of houses where there is obvious serious neglect. Ppl who when the mower stops running it’s just left right where it quit at. House n yard in complete disrepair…anything and everything by those who quit taking care of themselves or the place they call home. Sad

  • @r.b.ratieta6111
    @r.b.ratieta6111 Місяць тому

    Duvall, total A-list actor just randomly showing up as Carl's Dad, only a few minutes long. Yet he completely sets the scene.

  • @LassieFarm
    @LassieFarm Рік тому +18

    My dad has passed, we were estranged, so our confrontation was via email. At least I got some closure 👍

    • @nateharris1918
      @nateharris1918 Місяць тому +2

      I got my closure when I left, never heard from him again. He passed 2 years ago.

  • @oifwarveteran
    @oifwarveteran 4 місяці тому +5

    This is one of the greatest movies ever made and by far one of the best acting performances I've ever seen. Only thing that pissed me off about it was Geoffrey Rush winning the Academy award over Thornton. His, (Thornton), acting and directing was absolutely amazing.

  • @josferatu666
    @josferatu666 6 місяців тому +2

    Sad Story pulls my heart strings I hate to see someone get put through that situation

  • @stillcantbesilencedevennow
    @stillcantbesilencedevennow 8 днів тому

    Mustard on biscuits, his only real crime. 😆

  • @MarkBenefield-iq2pm
    @MarkBenefield-iq2pm Місяць тому

    Well then, may I say this 6 minute scene touched my soul so hard that I cried, especially when I saw the hole Carl had to sleep in ❤❤❤

  • @norton2757
    @norton2757 8 місяців тому +4

    Incredible…… Just incredible this movie.

  • @susanbobo5098
    @susanbobo5098 Рік тому +14

    I think that had he been raised right he’d been ok

  • @danielorlando8172
    @danielorlando8172 Місяць тому

    For a guy who doesn't know the difference between a large french fry portion or a small, he has an impeccable sense of direction since being locked up for the better part of 40 years with mind numbing medication

  • @inkspotdevil194
    @inkspotdevil194 Місяць тому +1

    No film will e'er depict the minutia of Appalachia, its traumas and solemn borne pains and endearing beauty so well as Slingblade

  • @hangdogdaddy38
    @hangdogdaddy38 Місяць тому +1

    It is a nation treasure film. Thornton completely transforms into another person. An absolute amazing performance. Cheers.

  • @KAISER-OUTDOORS
    @KAISER-OUTDOORS 13 днів тому

    glad this film is part of the criterion collection. 🇺🇸

  • @Fannygolightly
    @Fannygolightly 5 місяців тому +1

    Amazing film

  • @paddy9449
    @paddy9449 Рік тому +5

    So VERY strong in so many ways....

  • @ExplorerDS6789
    @ExplorerDS6789 7 місяців тому +4

    I like to analyze the hell out of this entire scene, and one thing that sticks out: Karl goes into the house, he's heading down the hall, then he stops and looks in this one room and we hear the distorted voice of his father (I assume). Slow the video down to 0.25, it's creepy. Is there some significance about that particular area?

    • @MattFNC
      @MattFNC 6 місяців тому +1

      It's probably the room where he killed his mom.

    • @ExplorerDS6789
      @ExplorerDS6789 6 місяців тому

      @@MattFNC No, because according to Karl, he saw it through the screened in porch, and in Some Folks Call it a Sling Blade, it was said to be in the kitchen.

  • @Dane_Youssef
    @Dane_Youssef 10 місяців тому +5

    My God, there’s the hole he slept in… This is getting me in my feelers… Damn…

  • @keithepley2132
    @keithepley2132 25 днів тому

    Film rarely captures nightmare worlds so effectively. Sometimes David Lynch gets it right, frequently at the risk of story or maybe narrative. This film goes right into the ID and let's us see evil and darkness, offering a strange kind of resolution if not transcendence. Like Ingmar Bergman transplanted into violent backwoods South.

  • @Moon_Doggi_Dog
    @Moon_Doggi_Dog 4 місяці тому +1

    I’m not sure what the melody is or the music playing in the background but it’s very very melodic🥲

  • @melissaraymond8235
    @melissaraymond8235 8 місяців тому +2

    I feel your pain ❤

  • @MarkBenefield-iq2pm
    @MarkBenefield-iq2pm Місяць тому

    This 6 minute scene was my favorite part of the movie ❤❤

  • @meerkat7406
    @meerkat7406 3 місяці тому

    Come back to this movie a lot. Billy Bob's masterpiece. I belive Daniel Lanois did the soundtrack.

  • @MoonPieCancer3754
    @MoonPieCancer3754 Рік тому +4

    1996 SLING BLADE

  • @Cardiacpack
    @Cardiacpack Місяць тому

    I love how when he entered the house, the only color he saw was red.

  • @Davis190
    @Davis190 4 місяці тому +1

    There are so many dilapidated homes along the road and I wonder, who lives in some of them?

  • @terrismith9095
    @terrismith9095 Рік тому +7

    Jonathan Frakes did an amazing job directing this movie.

    • @johnnyhicks8034
      @johnnyhicks8034 Рік тому +2

      Frakes was involved with Sling Blade? I thought Billy Bob was the director.

    • @bobbybackpain
      @bobbybackpain Рік тому +1

      According to imdb billy Bob was the director

    • @terrismith9095
      @terrismith9095 Рік тому

      @@bobbybackpain Yep. Frakes is amazing.

    • @evansgate
      @evansgate Рік тому +1

      what a weird troll lol, Frakes literally had nothing to do with this movie@@terrismith9095

    • @ryantogo8359
      @ryantogo8359 7 місяців тому +1

      ​@@terrismith9095you've got some wires crossed in your brain

  • @suttybuddy7273
    @suttybuddy7273 Рік тому +3

    I haven’t seen the whole movie but I like Dwight Yokam in it even though he played an idiot. I reckon some people can’t spell his name right

  • @christophergaudreau9265
    @christophergaudreau9265 Рік тому +5

    Powerful scene @ 4:07

  • @williamparish32
    @williamparish32 3 місяці тому

    Very good movie, if you haven't seen it yet you should

  • @stevesparta4995
    @stevesparta4995 4 місяці тому +1

    I can only imagine what a piece of work Karl's mother was. Probably worse than his father.

  • @privateer0561
    @privateer0561 2 місяці тому +1

    So his father killed his younger brother and then buried him in the back yard?

    • @mrmustangman
      @mrmustangman Місяць тому

      dad told Karl to throw it out but Karl realized it was a baby so he buried it instead.....

  • @jjones3121
    @jjones3121 2 місяці тому

    The hole in the ground. So sad and pitiful.

  • @KathleenT-m6b
    @KathleenT-m6b 3 місяці тому

    The sort of thing goes on everyday people, right now😢

  • @DaTo-k1o
    @DaTo-k1o 5 місяців тому +2

    Not many people see the real American south.

  • @Mickey-bj1kz
    @Mickey-bj1kz 3 місяці тому

    Haunting.

  • @JuaneDoses-zk9dm
    @JuaneDoses-zk9dm Рік тому +1

    This is what we all come from

  • @goblinbollocks2838
    @goblinbollocks2838 Місяць тому +1

    What is this music? It doesn't appear on the soundtrack.

    • @KAISER-OUTDOORS
      @KAISER-OUTDOORS 13 днів тому

      “omni” by Daniel Lanois
      epic sound & harmonies.

  • @marylett9556
    @marylett9556 5 місяців тому

    Lights still on after all those years,common ni!

  • @Fongolitus
    @Fongolitus Рік тому +5

    what? no Hemi Plymouth stashed away in there!?

  • @casey3831
    @casey3831 6 днів тому

    I call it a Kaiser blade

  • @icecoldnewz
    @icecoldnewz Рік тому +5

    What’s the name of this movie

  • @heveyweightheveyweight5399
    @heveyweightheveyweight5399 10 місяців тому +1

    Very deep scene

    • @mysterfrosty
      @mysterfrosty 3 місяці тому

      Some say its deep......others say its cold....

  • @bunberrier
    @bunberrier 3 місяці тому

    Given his mothers "activities" its possible Mr. Childer's statement might be true.
    "You aint no kin to me"

    • @mrmustangman
      @mrmustangman Місяць тому

      never thought of it like that.... maybe his brother too.....

  • @kiddetroit8403
    @kiddetroit8403 4 місяці тому

    Not to mention Bobby Duvall is in the house