The Beauty and Anguish of Les Misérables! (feat. Lindsay Ellis) | It's Lit! | PBS Digital Studios

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 8 вер 2024
  • PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: to.pbs.org/Dona...
    ↓ More info below ↓
    Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables is one of history’s most famous novels and one of the longest-running musicals in Broadway history. On this special episode of It’s Lit! we explore how Les Miserable became both a national and revolutionary anthem, and so publicly adored that all 1,900 pages never went out of print.
    Be sure to tune into the new Les Misérables adaptation on Masterpiece on PBS. You can stream it on PBS.org, PBS Video app on your Apple TV, Roku, Chromecast.
    Interested in using this video as a teaching resource? Check it out on PBS LearningMedia: to.pbs.org/3Ag...
    Written by Princess Weekes & Lindsay Ellis
    Directed by David Schulte
    Animation by Jordan Husmann
    Fact Checked: by Yvonne McGreevy
    Produced by Stephanie Noone
    Executive in Charge (PBS): Adam Dylewski

КОМЕНТАРІ • 380

  • @pbsvoices
    @pbsvoices  4 роки тому +19

    Looking for more It's Lit? You can find the latest season on Storied, PBS's home for arts and humanities content here on UA-cam. Subscribe to Storied for that latest episodes of It's Lit and get your folklore fix with Monstrum while you're there! ua-cam.com/channels/O6nDCimkF79NZRRb8YiDcA.html

  • @natsmith303
    @natsmith303 5 років тому +593

    "Admit it. You skimmed the Waterloo chapters."
    I didn't come here to be called out like this.

    • @daometh
      @daometh 5 років тому +7

      what is worst i i was listening to it on audible and still skipped it....god that chapter was boring

    • @edienandy
      @edienandy 5 років тому +6

      I bet you skimmed all those descriptions of the sewers too!!!

    • @wppb50
      @wppb50 5 років тому +21

      "And so to escape Javert, Valjean and Cosette fled into a nunnery.
      "Now, let's spend twenty chapters talking about the detailed history of the convent, its architecture, its history, its place in society, and Hugo's thoughts on how the monastic system has become obsolete in the society and economy of nineteenth-century Europe..."

    • @madmau
      @madmau 4 роки тому +3

      I actually read the Waterloo book in one sitting

    • @BradyPostma
      @BradyPostma 4 роки тому

      I only read the abridged. =[

  • @robinisademon
    @robinisademon 5 років тому +201

    I love how for all the characters they took pictures of the BBC series, but then when it comes to Enjolras they're like "..... nope we need Aaron Tveit."

  • @jasonblalock4429
    @jasonblalock4429 5 років тому +644

    Heh, I think this is the first time I've seen Lindsay do a promotional message where she didn't sound like she was totally embarrassed.

    • @SharkAlien66
      @SharkAlien66 5 років тому +66

      Or obviously reading off of cue cards in a way that just screams "I don't care and you don't have to either."

    • @dacealksne
      @dacealksne 5 років тому +4

      This also is first time she appeared on camera pregnant.

    • @titanuranus3095
      @titanuranus3095 5 років тому +6

      @@dacealksne WAT!? I missed that!

    • @SharkAlien66
      @SharkAlien66 5 років тому

      @@dacealksne
      Say whaaa

    • @Monocultured01
      @Monocultured01 5 років тому

      @@dacealksne hold up, what?

  • @SodaVampire
    @SodaVampire 5 років тому +366

    “Injustice isn’t going to just itself.”

    • @Kaefer1973
      @Kaefer1973 5 років тому

      Which is of course wrong, one day we will all be dead, that will happen by itself and it's just.

    • @wpaunan
      @wpaunan 5 років тому

      Hmmm interesting....I guess this story CAN be looked upon as a nihilist fable. @@Kaefer1973

  • @BarbraYaga
    @BarbraYaga 5 років тому +485

    I see Lindsay, I click. That's how the dork do.

  • @indaattic
    @indaattic 5 років тому +137

    Fun Fact. We of the Channel Islands love Victor Hugo so much we had a ferry named after him travelling from Alderney to France. It was notoriously rocky and people call it the Victor Spewgo. It's also why you can find a statue of him in the Candy Gardens, next to our museum.

    • @miiiwu1999
      @miiiwu1999 5 років тому +1

      Snailman Productions victor spewgo would be a good pornstar name

    • @SonofSethoitae
      @SonofSethoitae 5 років тому +1

      @@miiiwu1999 Or punk rock band name

  • @gogetta159
    @gogetta159 5 років тому +309

    I'm a simple man, I see a video with Lindsay in it and I watch it.

    • @phreakazoith2237
      @phreakazoith2237 5 років тому +7

      we have come here to chew bubble gum and watch a new video by Lindsay.

    • @alphanum001
      @alphanum001 5 років тому

      Is that a meme or something?

    • @phreakazoith2237
      @phreakazoith2237 5 років тому +2

      @alphanum001 Carpenters "They live", a movie I might recommend not for being great itself but for having fascinating ideas and visuals about the aliens among us. or memewise just check for the "I have come here to chew bubblegum and to" scene

    • @paulcooper1046
      @paulcooper1046 Рік тому

      Lynyrd Skynyrd would be proud.

  • @rachel_sj
    @rachel_sj 5 років тому +222

    Just finished watching Lindsay’s Norte Dame video for the nth time, perfect time to upload. My teenage self could only get through the first 10 pages of Les Mis....

    • @MeMe-gm9di
      @MeMe-gm9di 5 років тому +14

      My adult self isn't much better. I want some sort of story, not a lecture on bookkeeping.
      That said, the overall story is great, it's just written rather... exhaustingly.

    • @KaijaSchmauss
      @KaijaSchmauss 5 років тому +6

      Same. I adore the story (the stage adaptation is one of my favorite musicals of all time), but the book moves at a glacial pace. I had the same problems with Wicked.

    • @rachel_sj
      @rachel_sj 5 років тому +3

      Kaija Schmauss Oh god, it was the same can’t-get-through-the-first-ten-pages syndrome with Wicked too. I like the story but I think I’m a reader who’s more destined to read Non-Fiction, lol!

    • @Fs3i
      @Fs3i 5 років тому +2

      @@rachel_sj I found wicked a bit easier, but still not easy. In other words, I put wicked down later than Les Mis.

    • @KaijaSchmauss
      @KaijaSchmauss 5 років тому +4

      @@rachel_sj Same. I LOVE the musical Wicked. The metaphor about racism is brilliant. But I just couldn't finish the book it was based on. I don't need to know all the details of Elphaba's mothers affairs. I want to read about how Elphaba became the Wicked Witch of the West.

  • @KelciaMarie1
    @KelciaMarie1 5 років тому +256

    DID SHE JUST INCITE US TO REVOLT!??!

    • @Dorian_sapiens
      @Dorian_sapiens 5 років тому +11

      Sounded that way to me.

    • @Flowtail
      @Flowtail 5 років тому +35

      Well it's not going to just itself

    • @zappawoman5183
      @zappawoman5183 5 років тому +29

      In the case of the USA, it is LONG overdue.

    • @manray5140
      @manray5140 5 років тому

      SÍ SE PEUDO!!!!!!!!!!

    • @eliasapollo4131
      @eliasapollo4131 5 років тому +4

      Well, duh. Hugo was right when he said that we need an era of good men not great men. It's about time to try and work on that

  • @curiousteddie
    @curiousteddie 5 років тому +148

    The choices of visuals combining the BBC version and the musical? ABSOLUTELY CORRECT. Both are good, Oyelowo is g o d l i k e as Javert but Tveit is the dreamcast E. Good job graphics team!

    • @oof-rr5nf
      @oof-rr5nf 5 років тому +8

      oh my gosh is that a fellow bi in the wild

    • @curiousteddie
      @curiousteddie 5 років тому +6

      @@oof-rr5nf sure is! Bi-five!

    • @asherschmidt9820
      @asherschmidt9820 5 років тому +5

      Greetings fellow bi humans

    • @asherschmidt9820
      @asherschmidt9820 5 років тому +1

      Tveit is a good choice indeed, lol

    • @sandradermark8463
      @sandradermark8463 5 років тому +6

      MoBro Enj (in BBC Les Mis): the last thing I hoped to see. Dark-haired, short-haired, with a thin moustache... and R himself looks like Jabba the Hutt more or less.

  • @RKStrikerJK5
    @RKStrikerJK5 5 років тому +163

    1:00 Sorry, Lindsey , but I read all of the Waterloo AND Sewer system parts.

    • @MoonShadowWolfe
      @MoonShadowWolfe 5 років тому +11

      Skimmed the Waterloo a bit just to see where it ended, but yes, the sewer system part was unexpectedly fascinating.

    • @purcascade
      @purcascade 5 років тому +2

      Me too. Unfortunately.

    • @eliasapollo4131
      @eliasapollo4131 5 років тому +14

      Don't forget the parisian gangster language!

    • @only_sleeping7276
      @only_sleeping7276 5 років тому +6

      the stupid abbey part says hi

    • @yuutafan
      @yuutafan 5 років тому +6

      I actually found the first 50-60 pages about the Bishop the hardest to get through. But yes, read the whole book, no skimming.

  • @introusas
    @introusas Рік тому +6

    That quote from Victor Hugo made me tear up. Les Mis, in my personal opinion, is the greatest story that’s ever been told. I had to sell myself to make my rent and it truly tore my soul in two. Les Mis does bring comfort to my heart

    • @paulcooper1046
      @paulcooper1046 Рік тому +1

      You took it to the next level here. Health and happiness. Cheers.

  • @Hypotetiskt
    @Hypotetiskt 5 років тому +34

    "In the end only two well developed characters are shown as ready to die for their beliefs"... Hey! Don't forget Gavroche!

  • @Dorian_sapiens
    @Dorian_sapiens 5 років тому +394

    Lindsay said it's time to do a revolution. Let's go, comrades. To the barricades!

    • @phreakazoith2237
      @phreakazoith2237 5 років тому +19

      it's action that counts, not words and we need actions now. This calls for immediate discussion!

    • @stormbob
      @stormbob 5 років тому +35

      Do you hear the people click? Clicking the vids of angry men...

    • @phreakazoith2237
      @phreakazoith2237 5 років тому +1

      @WJ It's wise to do so at least since Aristophanes

    • @wppb50
      @wppb50 5 років тому +1

      hey Antifa is also red (THE WORLD ABOUT TO DAWN) and black (THE NIGHT THAT ENDS AT LAST)!

    • @obiwankenobi9141
      @obiwankenobi9141 3 роки тому +1

      It is the music of a people who will not be in quarantine again!

  • @Limonenmixgetraenk
    @Limonenmixgetraenk 5 років тому +67

    I read the whole thing - which completely made me understand why abridged books are sold. Like, thanks for the information regarding language - and you know, if it hadn't rained, France would - maybe - could - perhaps - have won!

    • @tarmaque
      @tarmaque 5 років тому +1

      I recently gave my copy of _Cryptonomicon_ to a friend of mine. Like most people, I never finished it. He's very close to the end and both fascinated and excited to finish it. I have weird friends.

    • @Lexivor
      @Lexivor 5 років тому

      @@tarmaque I love Cryptonomicon! When it first came out a bunch of my friends and I read it the whole way through. We also all read the Baroque Cycle; reading books like that with friends helps.

    • @tarmaque
      @tarmaque 5 років тому

      @@Lexivor My friend is just about to start on _The Baroque Cycle_ but I doubt I'll be joining him. I loved _Snow Crash_ and _The Diamond Age_ though. However I've since moved on and am reading more Iain Banks.

    • @VertigoDefinitivo
      @VertigoDefinitivo 5 років тому

      You ate the whole plate.

    • @archer1949
      @archer1949 5 років тому

      tarmaque I couldn’t finish Cryptonomicon, but I devoured The Boroque Cycle in a couple months. Loved it.

  • @cucaulwell1287
    @cucaulwell1287 5 років тому +44

    There is no justice, there is just us. ~ Terry Pratchett

  • @KathyTrithardt
    @KathyTrithardt 5 років тому +22

    I... actually read all 1900 pages before playing a chorus part on the musical for a community theatre show.

  • @AnotherJenn42
    @AnotherJenn42 5 років тому +9

    I read the unabridged Les Miserables after I saw the musical in high school. Did not skim over the Waterloo chapters, thank you. In fact, over 25 years later, the impact was so great the imagery remains. I never checked it for historical accuracy, but wow. Very worth a read.

    • @paulcooper1046
      @paulcooper1046 Рік тому

      I remember my peers in English honors classes being required to read the novel in high school. I wasn't in honors classes, so I wasn't introduced to it. I still haven't read it or seen any of the adaptations, but I'm considering reading the novel at some point. Cheers.

  • @bewilderbeastie8899
    @bewilderbeastie8899 5 років тому +30

    "Javert the... Javert"

    • @juanjuri6127
      @juanjuri6127 5 років тому +1

      if there's one thing I've learned from the memes is that Javert is Javert

    • @ChrisMaxfieldActs
      @ChrisMaxfieldActs 5 років тому +7

      @@juanjuri6127 Javert is a symbol of the misguided and narrow application of the principals of Justice.

  • @KrystineBrown
    @KrystineBrown 5 років тому +109

    Les Mis? Lindsay? Sounds about right

  • @alexm4421
    @alexm4421 5 років тому +17

    I'm absolutely obsessed with Les Mis (my icon actually is from an older adaptation of it) and I think the main point of this video is accurate even if some of the historical details are off. (e.g. the June Rebellion was actually a worker's rebellion in real life but Hugo chose to focus on students, the monarchy was re-established in 1815 not 1830 but the king changed over because of the July Revolution of 1830) And I'm surprised Lindsay didn't talk about how Marius was kind of a Hugo self-insert with the similar backstories and all.

  • @calidabrisadeverano
    @calidabrisadeverano 5 років тому +18

    I remember reading the whole thing as a teenager, and even though the ending was rather sweet, I cried so much. I didn't understand at the time much of the historical context, and some parts were so long and kept going about it, but it was still such a compelling book.

    • @Jurgan6
      @Jurgan6 5 років тому +1

      Honestly the ending was my least favorite part. I just thought it was unnecessarily cruel to Valjean. His reason to cut ties with Cosette didn’t convince me, so it just came off as Hugo piling more misery on top of someone who’d already suffered plenty.

  • @Minorheadlines
    @Minorheadlines 5 років тому +6

    Totally was expecting a ‘thud’ or a ‘crack’ sound effect this time when he jumped into the water

    • @jbvader721
      @jbvader721 4 роки тому

      Or Colm Wilkinson's weird "home" noise.

  • @panchish
    @panchish 5 років тому +9

    god the very thing i adore about les mis is how hopeful it all is
    (also? screamed when aaron tveit popped on screen)

  • @UltraPrimal
    @UltraPrimal 5 років тому +67

    I've only seen the Animaniacs version, Les Miseranimals.

    • @goodjobeli
      @goodjobeli 5 років тому +8

      I've only seen the Sesame Street version. Les Mousarables.

  • @authoralysmarchand4737
    @authoralysmarchand4737 5 років тому +11

    I didn't skip anything in this book. I took it as a challenge to read it in its entirety. That's not to say I retained it all since there were parts that dragged, but I did look at and read the words. :D I love this book. And I love France. In Paris, you can visit Victor Hugo's home. It's dreary and makes me feel claustrophobic and dizzy. The dining room has such a busy and pattern on the walls that continues to the drapery and to the ceiling that I just want out...and I normally love darkness! But his home is just too much.

  • @oindri1999
    @oindri1999 3 роки тому +4

    Yo the Waterloo chapters are one of my favourite bits of the book. I've read it so many times my book literally opens to that page :-)

  • @mayabrabender8085
    @mayabrabender8085 4 роки тому +3

    Oh god the way two ads play after she says that they lost the revolution is too real

  • @sleekest1
    @sleekest1 5 років тому +15

    I love how Lindsay is wearing the French flag colors.

    • @ristilukki
      @ristilukki 5 років тому

      Yeah, red, white and black. French colours

    • @sleekest1
      @sleekest1 5 років тому

      @@ristilukki The bottom of her dress is dark blue.

  • @Yubsie
    @Yubsie 5 років тому +17

    Ahem, I read all the Waterloo chapters. I complained the entire time, but I read them!

    • @parus6422
      @parus6422 5 років тому +2

      I thought the worst part was when he was talking about the patterns on the walls of a room.

    • @Yubsie
      @Yubsie 5 років тому +3

      @@parus6422 I most resent the two pages about the cheese industry in the town that Valjean never even wound up going to. Especially since they were supposed to be a letter someone was writing. Which isn't in Waterloo but still.

    • @JimmyneutronwasokayIguess
      @JimmyneutronwasokayIguess 5 років тому

      I hear Hugo and a bunch of other French literary giants were in a hashish club together. I’m sure it had some positive impacts on his work, but from what I’ve gathered of the Waterloo chapters, they’re just 19th century versions of a college student doing shrooms for the first time. I mean describing the patterns on the wall? Where have I heard that one before?

  • @christopherlundgren1700
    @christopherlundgren1700 5 років тому +3

    I remember opening Victor Hugo at the M13 prerelease. That guy is such a bomb in limited.

  • @dahliasdarkside1695
    @dahliasdarkside1695 5 років тому +4

    "Always trust the injustice cause its not going away" to quote lily allen. Because well like she says you can always trust injustice to exist

  • @Lukz243
    @Lukz243 5 років тому +5

    I've never read les miserables, but after watching this video, I feel compelled of doing it. And also, I'm a huge fan of Lindsay Ellis

    • @tarupilled
      @tarupilled 5 років тому +1

      you should read it !

  • @newsiesforever208
    @newsiesforever208 5 років тому +10

    I would have called Javert the guy that says "And I'm Javert."

  • @spencerd6126
    @spencerd6126 5 років тому +1

    This video made me realize Marius is extremely similar to Hugo. His royalist grandfather and republican father, a rich man fighting for the poor, etc.

  • @sandradermark8463
    @sandradermark8463 5 років тому +10

    About characters who die for their beliefs: Enj and Javert... AND WOT ABOUT GRANTAIRE, LINDS???

    • @sandradermark8463
      @sandradermark8463 5 років тому +3

      Wot about Grantaire, dear bewildered and awkward Grantaire? Has Lindsay forgotten or overlooked that he also died for his beliefs?

    • @vejiicakes
      @vejiicakes 5 років тому +4

      Sandra Dermark I think Lindsay’s just singling out characters who died for beliefs that were.. kinda lofty and abstract? Grantaire certainly died for his singular belief in Enjolras (and only in Enjolras, as he’s at one point called out for. By Enjolras.) but ehhhh I can see why she left him out ^_^;; If the other barricade boys didn’t warrant a mention, he definitely doesn’t..

    • @eliasapollo4131
      @eliasapollo4131 5 років тому +3

      Grantaire died for and with a person he believed in, not a cause or a set of ideals. Don't get me wrong, "permets-tu?" still gives me the feels and all but like the person before me said, if combeferre, courfeyrac, feuilly etc didn't get a mention neither should grantaire.

  • @Yakmage
    @Yakmage 5 років тому +7

    I didnt know victor hugo was illustrated by Noah Bradley. He's one of my favorite artists.

  • @Yakerina
    @Yakerina 5 років тому +7

    I listened to the audiobook read by George Guidall of the translation by Julie Rose. I have to drive a lot for work. So I did not skip Waterloo. Or the history of Paris' sewer system. Might have in the reading, no promises about that. It was my first time for the novel. Heckuva read!

  • @curiousworld7912
    @curiousworld7912 5 років тому +1

    I think the best version of 'Les Miserable' is the 1995, Claude Lelouch version, with Jean-Paul Belmondo. It's an adaptation in the sense of being set a century or so later, features a main character whose life has parallels to Jean Valjean and who is obsessed with the book. The performances are all excellent, the direction and writing are outstanding and it's well worth a three hour watch.

  • @souldreamer9056
    @souldreamer9056 4 роки тому +1

    The Waterloo pages (and the Argot pages) were appendices in the version I read, so I technically didn’t skip them.

  • @noemitamas4066
    @noemitamas4066 5 років тому +2

    I've read it from cover to cover when I was in high school :D It's still one of my favourites!

  • @fei7134
    @fei7134 5 років тому +1

    When I was 11 we moved to a new country where I didn't speak the language and kids weren't very friendly, so I asked my grandma to send me some books and one of them was Les Miserables, I read it a good 15 times. #teenangst

    • @TheFiresloth
      @TheFiresloth 5 років тому +2

      Victor Hugo was pretty much teen angsting through life, so that's an appropriate read ^^

  • @notafangirl
    @notafangirl 5 років тому +5

    I needed some Lindsay Ellis pontificating upon literary works in my life right now. Thanks internet :)

  • @dylanjones5408
    @dylanjones5408 4 роки тому +2

    The ABC Cafe sounds like a place you'd find on sesame street

  • @Heowa
    @Heowa 5 років тому +21

    I didn't skim the Waterloo chapters. Nor the description of that congregation of nuns. Nor the account of what France looked like in 1832 regarding politics, culture, architecture and all kinds of random stuff. Being totally obsessed with Les Mis can take you a long way...

  • @Jaqen-HGhar
    @Jaqen-HGhar 5 років тому +1

    OMG!! I can't say how I love that Les Miserable my all time favorite thing is also combined with Lindsay and Magic some of my other favs!

  • @MaddyBlu9724
    @MaddyBlu9724 5 років тому +1

    Lindsay is out here teaching me new words! If anyone else wondered what ingénue (awn-je-noo) means, here's wikipedia's definition;
    "The ingénue is a stock character in literature, film, and a role type in the theatre; generally a girl or a young woman who is endearingly innocent and wholesome....Typically, the ingénue is beautiful, kind, gentle, sweet, virginal, and often naïve, in mental or emotional danger, or even physical danger, usually a target of the cad; whom she may have mistaken for the hero."

  • @robertqld
    @robertqld 5 років тому +8

    One day I will get through the unabridged edition of Les Mis. Including the Waterloo section!
    I mean, anything it's possible right?

  • @nuit-scs8970
    @nuit-scs8970 5 років тому +1

    It's awesome for a french (like me) to hear your voice say french word !

  • @jimc.goodfellas
    @jimc.goodfellas 5 років тому +6

    Great classic. Yeah another one that takes time to get through, but is worth it.

  • @alexwright4930
    @alexwright4930 5 років тому

    Never read the book, but seeing this musical in London on New Year's Day 2011 is what hooked me head over heels onto musical theatre.

  • @cabalpaxiarch7239
    @cabalpaxiarch7239 4 роки тому +2

    Love the use of magic the gathering cards.

  • @uhrtmyfillins951
    @uhrtmyfillins951 5 років тому +1

    You're always be learning me up Lindsey

  • @cascharles3838
    @cascharles3838 5 років тому +1

    Okay I know the les amis only had 1 paragraph to a couple of pages to each of their descriptions BUT they were still pretty developed and very unique and lovable characters. I wan Are you really gonna tell me Jehan didn’t die for what he believed in?? Or Grantaire?!? They all deserve recognition!!!
    I’m sorry but I take my revolutionaries very seriously

  • @erraticonteuse
    @erraticonteuse 5 років тому +2

    Even the Masterpieces of French Literature class that I took in college only had us read an abridged version. IT LONG.

  • @kaamn1829
    @kaamn1829 4 роки тому +3

    Les Misérables means the miserable ones, yes, but it also means *the impoverished ones* as la misère can also mean poverty. It's an important connotation, and one of the reasons translated copies keep the french title instead of translating it too (think something like Crime and Punishment is translated in title too).

  • @PKMNResearcherSkyler
    @PKMNResearcherSkyler 5 років тому +2

    I love this series

  • @PogieJoe
    @PogieJoe 5 років тому +1

    This series is the best. I can't wait for Lindsey to come back on her own channel, but this was a nice one to tide me over.

  • @AlyssaSteiner
    @AlyssaSteiner 5 років тому +1

    "be honest, you skimmed the waterloo chapters" I ADMIT IT. I've been slowly reading the full novel and ive gotten through a lot of dredge but i just CAN NOT read pages of battle description hahah

  • @jacobbelow4136
    @jacobbelow4136 5 років тому +1

    I certainly am looking forward to seeing the Les Mis series when it comes to me on Netflix!
    When I was taking French my junior year in high school, one of our assignments was to dress up as a famous historical French figure-in French! Who else should I pick but Victor Hugo? Even dressed up in the beard, which my teacher ESPECIALLY liked!
    Regarding how the novel focuses on a rather minor and more obscure revolution, I feel it appropriate to steal a classic quote from ANOTHER smash-hit musical: "Who lives, who dies, who tells your story..."

  • @ieatgremlins
    @ieatgremlins 5 років тому

    The animation in this series is always remarkable.

  • @queerprose
    @queerprose 5 років тому +5

    OH MY G!!! I've been waiting weeks, weeks I say, for a new Lindsay vid!!!!!!

  • @Mr.Turano
    @Mr.Turano 5 років тому +3

    Another great job, you're always so clear it's easy to re listen while I'm working. Thanks again for the insight to books I haven't thought of giving a chance. I'll have to audio book it.

  • @lukecarlson4710
    @lukecarlson4710 5 років тому +5

    But Lindsay, now I can navigate the Parisian sewer!

  • @eliasapollo4131
    @eliasapollo4131 5 років тому +3

    Hugo just shuts down the arguments of Bonapartists with three words (two in the original French) through the character of combeferre. Respect, Victor!
    Also, can we talk about Marius banging his head against a tree for hours because cosette is moving? A mood.

    • @thatjillgirl
      @thatjillgirl 5 років тому +2

      It's even more pitiful in the book, because she's like, "We're moving away for a whole month! Maybe two, even!" And he's like, "WHAT?! Two whole months?!!! But how can I LIVE?????"

    • @eliasapollo4131
      @eliasapollo4131 5 років тому +2

      @@thatjillgirl Marius is honestly such a mess in the brick but at least it's entertaining. He also has quite the character arc which most older screen adaptions as well as the stage musical barely show

  • @Wats06071
    @Wats06071 5 років тому +5

    I didn't skip "Waterloo". On contrary, I thought it was one of the most beautifully written sections of the novel and sparked a massive interest in me about the small details of the battle. I did skip the convent part though:)

  • @TJ-mm8fx
    @TJ-mm8fx 4 роки тому +1

    Brilliant.

  • @alexwright4930
    @alexwright4930 5 років тому

    I watched that new Les Mis series over Christmas & New Year on the BBC so I recommend it.

  • @TalonSky
    @TalonSky 5 років тому +1

    "Admit it, you skimmed the Waterloo chapters."
    I feel personally attacked.

  • @slavkovalsky1671
    @slavkovalsky1671 4 роки тому +1

    Oh come on! The 100 (or so) Waterloo pages is one of the best bits! And then there is Stendhal's La Chartreuse de Parme, with his *eyewitness* description of the same battle... and W.M. Thackeray's Vanity Fair with his... After some 30 or so years, those are about the only bits I actually remember from those novels.

  • @Yersifanel
    @Yersifanel 5 років тому +1

    Might as well get that series, I can't disappoint Victor Hugo now, can I?

  • @atomsplitter601
    @atomsplitter601 4 роки тому +2

    Well this has new context with Floyd

  • @CountOrlok22
    @CountOrlok22 5 років тому +1

    I would love to see you tackle class in the works of Charles Dickens, Upton Sinclair, and John Steinbeck.

  • @apizzathatgiantforthesimpl5191
    @apizzathatgiantforthesimpl5191 5 років тому +1

    I saw that edition of Hunchback with the drawing of the Notre Dame and now I'm sad.

  • @floraknowsstuff
    @floraknowsstuff 5 років тому

    thank you!! Have been having Lindsey les mis withdrawal symptoms ever since her video has disappeared from the internet

  • @abramthiessen8749
    @abramthiessen8749 5 років тому +1

    I read the whole thing. In translation that is.
    It took me 15 months from starting it to finishing it.

  • @gabe_s_videos
    @gabe_s_videos 5 років тому +7

    When it comes to video essayists, it's Lindsey and everyone else. Period.

    • @paulcooper1046
      @paulcooper1046 Рік тому

      Lindsey versus Everybody.

    • @gabe_s_videos
      @gabe_s_videos Рік тому

      @@paulcooper1046 Everybody threw the first punch at Lindsey.

  • @fantasyfiction101
    @fantasyfiction101 5 років тому +2

    OH my gosh I'm so happy to see her show back!!

  • @Firegen1
    @Firegen1 5 років тому +2

    Definitely watch the PBS (BBC for UK audiences likea me) version. It tells the story beautifully.

    • @stefan1024
      @stefan1024 5 років тому +1

      And it's with McNulty from The Wire :)

    • @Firegen1
      @Firegen1 5 років тому

      @@stefan1024 Oh yeah!

  • @sandradermark8463
    @sandradermark8463 5 років тому +1

    About characters who die for their beliefs: Enj and Javert... Wot about Grantaire, dear bewildered and awkward Grantaire? Has Lindsay forgotten or overlooked that he also died for his beliefs?

  • @BrandonMichelle
    @BrandonMichelle 5 років тому +1

    I've read the whole book. It took me three months but I did it!

  • @I4get42
    @I4get42 5 років тому +1

    That was awesome, thanks Lindsay!

  • @floramew
    @floramew 5 років тому

    I think I learned that les mis was about the June rebellion way back in 2012 and the film came out, and you (& friends, iirc,) talked about it. I'd read the book at that point -- though, yes, I'd entirely skipped the Waterloo chapters except the last few pages where I saw the name thenardier I think and went back a few pages to see what that was about, lmao -- but yeah, I think you talking about that was probably the start of me diving deeper into historical/ political/ social context of pieces I read. It's heartwarming to hear about this same topic again, with new insights, and new adaptations.

  • @Conformist138
    @Conformist138 5 років тому

    I've tried reading that exact printing of Les Mis so many times! Never could get more than 100 pages in, but I'm very, very well acquainted with the priest :)

  • @matthewjimenez9547
    @matthewjimenez9547 5 років тому

    I have the same chair. Got it at IKEA. It's wonderful.

  • @timothygallagher4663
    @timothygallagher4663 Рік тому

    Fantastic! Thank you

  • @QueenGoldnGreen
    @QueenGoldnGreen 4 роки тому +1

    Literally bought a lighter that I didn’t need the other day just because it said It’s Lit and I adore Lindsey

  • @incalescent9378
    @incalescent9378 5 років тому

    Why didn't we have this in class? I'd listened to the musical pretty extensively, would have read the book then (and later did, and yes, I skipped chapters and then bought the abridged version) and would have enjoyed this and engaged in this topic in school. There's so much that's interesting here.

  • @thefoundationsofdeslay
    @thefoundationsofdeslay 5 років тому +2

    the saltiness of using aaron tveits enjolras instead of the bbc les mis one after only using the bbc les mis cast to represent the characters is very much relatable

  • @-chippedstars-2889
    @-chippedstars-2889 5 років тому +1

    I read the abridged version in middle school

  • @stephaniemartorelli6860
    @stephaniemartorelli6860 5 років тому

    Yes!! This is my favourite book! I hope there will be a video on War and Peace one day, too!

    • @paulcooper1046
      @paulcooper1046 Рік тому

      When you read novels, you set the bar high.

  • @Baron3D
    @Baron3D 5 років тому +4

    Très intéressant. Très bien.

  • @carolinekreusel4189
    @carolinekreusel4189 5 років тому

    Thank you for the okay that I skipped those 50 pages over the battle of Waterloo!!

  • @ShockedLogic
    @ShockedLogic 5 років тому

    Man, I could listen to Lindsay talk about depressing french novels all day! Maybe some Voltaire and an analysis of Candide?

  • @glittery_cucumber
    @glittery_cucumber 4 роки тому

    This really makes me want to read the book for some strange reason.

  • @McCbobbish
    @McCbobbish 5 років тому +1

    Hugo actually witnessed the June rebellion, oddly enough.

  • @sophovot5079
    @sophovot5079 5 років тому

    the ending theme reminds me of a cruel angel's thesis

  • @Jurgan6
    @Jurgan6 5 років тому +3

    In the novel, M. Thenardier survived and became a “slaver,” but his wife died in prison (I think). The point there, I believe, was that she was a victim of his controlling personality and turned her cruelty on Cosette as an outlet. In the musical, they’re more on equal footing (she calls him a bastard with a small dick to his face). She’s not a victim in that version, so she survives along with him.

    • @syystomu
      @syystomu 5 років тому

      Yeah, she died in prison in volume 4 in the novel and you're right about her being much more on an equal ground with her husband in the musical. In the novel she's definitely a cruel person herself but she's also very much controlled by her husband. She's not quite as heartless as him (not that it's saying much) since she does care about her own daughters at least and he doesn't care about anyone but himself. Hard to say if she would have been a better person if she'd fallen in love with a different man but maybe.

  • @somethingandapie
    @somethingandapie 5 років тому

    I could not javert my eyes from this video