J'ai projeté discrètement ce film en 1972 en URSS pays ou les gens ne pouvaient le voir ou ecouter du Jazz etc..dans ce petit salon Il y avait des gens qui pleuraient en voyant cette scène désormais ancrée dans ma mémoire comme un cadeau des hommes de coeur..♥♥♥
Les russes sont ouverts à toutes les nouveautés, et adorent découvrir les cultures étrangères, mais vous voulez dire que ce film n'était pas distribué en URSS, vous l'avez passé sous le manteau ?
C'étaient les films avec Louis de Funès qui avaient la préférence des autorités sovietiques. La série des Fantomas a fait plus de 20 millions d'entrées dans les cinémas d'URSS. Ça a été tellement populaire, que le leader politique national bochevique Édouard limonov avait détourné le portrait de Fantomas pour illustrer ses meetings. @@richardvilnius4589
Bonjour sachez que ce genre d'anecdotes racontées par le biais d'une vidéo publiée sur internet est assimilable à de la sauvegarde historique et que beaucoup de gens adoreraient avoir tout les détails de ce type d'histoires
Des rencontres improbables..avec des gens qui ont tout vecu..peu importe qu ils soient sourds et muets. Ils gardent tout en eux. Le seul moyen d expression..c'est la zic..c'est formidable
Delivrance 1972 extrait Dueling banjos 1708pm 28.8.24 a very gritty film. sadistic film. the director must have had total control or just let things happen.... you tell me.... gave rise to evil dead movie, for sure... and those hillybilly rapists looked dead as in really dead. you come to rossendale valley you're back home if yer from the sticks down yonder....
@@vi683a Comments on ‘Delivrance 1972 extrait Dueling banjos’ 1137am 29.8.24 a dire film. a good film, though. but when you say: good film they assume you enjoyed or concurred with the senimtents expressed. they're infantile on that level. it's a vile film. a sadistic film.... very heavy. but a good yarn.
@@JJONNYREPP The expression was idealistically centered upon the musical structure of two apparatuses interrelation superseding the temporal limitations of the physiological. No one said "good film" but you.
@@vi683a Comments on ‘Delivrance 1972 extrait Dueling banjos’ 1254pm 29.8.24 i will keep on saying: it's a good film. cos it is. even though it does not mean i concur with the violence expressed. refer to southern comfort. another cinematic dredge though the idea of the contemporary vs the lost world of the new world.............. eh?.......... even though you are only referencing the musical interlude - heard here.... which expresses the, alleged white trash hillbilly, overhauling his alleged reticense (sic) and guarded cultural cliches regards social intercourse with his alleged betters... to dishearten the worth of the city slicker - who loses out to nature, buggery and all manner of existential angst. everyone forgot that this was a segment of a wider ranging tale of varying juxtapositions - other than me. king kong set the pace on that score re: angst created regards old vs new, nature vs man... Id vs ego... all is lost. you feel sorry for the hillbilly, no? and then feel sorry for the city slickers killed off or maimed in the name of...... embarrassment... lost or erased ancestry... technological achievement over simple and deferential simplicity. your seeming high falutin' erudition does nothing to alleviate the tedium of hamr done, a past gone mad or your desire to dodge the issue regards which flannery o'conner tale was this based on... the sadism of movie making... the cheapness of life itself. cajun gangsters took it as well as dished it out, here...
J'ai vu ce film il y a a peu près 50 ans. Indémodable et reflète parfaitement les travers de la nature humaine .A revoir ou a voir pour les plus jeunes. Un des meilleurs film de son temps.
Certain movies have an impact on your life. I had just graduated from high school and my friend and I went to see it. This scene and "the other" infamous scene had a profound (and yes, even shocking) effect on my life. I only saw it that one time.
@@Mr.SugarFoot I think if you mention two scenes in Deliverance and don't name the other one, it's the one everyone will remember, more than 50 years later.
the kid couldn't really play the banjo though, that was tricked by having another expert banjo player's hands on the frets and plucking the strings from behind him with fakes sleeves on his shirt. Just saying, movies have other ways of creating a reality and creating effects.
This shows no matter how different our socioeconomic backgrounds might be, we can still be brought back together as human beings by the power of art. A truly inspiring message.
It really is. On so many levels, just perfect direction, production, editing and how the fuck did they find a banjo playing alien. But seriously the way these locals have no time for these outsiders besides their money, and on accident, have a musical connect only to be dismissed just as fast was remarkable.
@@lobomalsano I believe it is one of Burt Reynolds best roles. Probably worth it just to see that. Two first time in major movie with actors with Ned Beatty and Ronnie Cox.
Duelling Banjos was initially composed by Arthur Smith (Sometimes called Arthur “Guitar Boogie” Smith) in 1954 and was first called ‘Feudin’ Banjos’! It contained all sorts of entertaining riffs from another classic song, ‘Yankee Doodle.’ When Smith first recorded ‘Feudin’ Banjos’ 1955, he was playing a 4-string plectrum banjo and was joined by the classic 5-string bluegrass banjoist, Don Reno. From there, almost 10 years later, this classic banjo duo, finally made an airing… The song’s first country-wide airing was in 1963 on a TV episode of ‘The Andy Griffith Show‘ The most pivotal and globally recognised appearance of ‘Duelling Banjos’ was in the 1972 film, Deliverance. (guitar and banjo) This was the very moment that Smith’s original composition became famous worldwide. But there was controversy over deliverances use of Smith’s masterpiece… The film led to a successful lawsuit by Smith as the song was used without his permission. Eric Weissberg claimed copyright as he arranged the film version and took all the credit. Smith did win the lawsuit, and today the song is widely played by banjoists both beginners and seasoned banjo veterans, worldwide.
Did you know that Billy Redden who played the almond eyed redneck isn't actually playing the banjo? He is wearing a special shirt which allowed a professional banjo player to put his arms through and play from behind him. That's why the scene is shot from only a few camera angles.
@@audiodead7302 Music in films is never live. Actors don't need to play the instruments, they have to fake it which in this scene is very obvious. The boys fingers do not match the music, no professional banjo player in sight.
5 giorni fa mi trovavo propio li, a pochi km da Chattanooga, dove furono girate le scene del film,ero sulle smoky mountains, più precisamente a Maryville(Tennessee). Dopo 52 anni mi sono ricomparsi quei paesaggi visti da giovane nel film, …. Indimenticabile! Che emozione gente!!!!
I saw two performers do this in Harry's bar in Albufeira using the same guitar. It was absolutely fantastic. One made it sound like a banjo, while the other played the same guitar. I have never heard a louder ovation at the end. I bet anyone there that night will never forget it; I certainly won't.
Maybe I've watched a thousand plus movies in my life. Every time i see this duel I stop everything and just watch the magic. That young kid made the banjo sing. As he increased the tempo the guitar could not sustain the pace. I have never forgotten this scene. Americana film making had it's own magic...now we have CGI and Marvel movie BS. Or entertainers who can show more skin than a harlot....My society reminds me of the Fall of Rome...decadence, carnal men and women, loss of spirituality and morality. It is sickening and the loss of soul is upon us.
Maybe for some but I felt it put respect into people because they realized that you might roll into a place where people don't act like you or talk like you but that don't mean they're stupid. They just do things different and different is OK. In fact, I've seen people pretty similar to this in the Appalachians and they weren't stupid but to an outsider who didn't know they sure sounded stupid. Once you got to know them you found out they were brilliant in their own way. That's the whole point of this skit in my opinion.
I remember when this movie was released in '72, three years after I got wounded in Vietnam. I was 23 years-old, and it was talked about a lot back in the day.
@@greensceneBirds I was lucky. I 'only' received mortar shrapnel to my left foot, both legs, arms, and right flank causing liver and kidney damage. Wiped out my 21st year on the planet having to spend 9 months in army hospitals in 1969 and '70. Other than that it wasn't bad.
@@felixmadison5736 I was born in 52. I think back to those days and think we were very sheltered to the horrors of life. My son joined the army in 2000, he had turned 21 Jan 1979. He was in boot camp at Fort Knox Kentucky. I had begged him not to join the army. I threw a fit Until I realized as a mother I needed to stop acting so upset, because being in the service can change one's life and he sure didn't need the memory of his mother being upset. So, one of his sisters and I went to visit him while he was in bootcamp. All of a sudden, I started to cry. My son said, it will be alright mom. I said, it will never be alright again. He, my son, eventually ended up in Iraq. He starved, remember hearing about Halliburton? They were supposed to feed our soldiers but didn't. When my son came home, he wouldn't tell me all the hell he went through, because he didn't want me to cry, He did tell me that he and other soldiers had to go through bombed out places searching for food. When he came home, he and others were sent to Ft. Benning Georgia. They were put in condemned barracks. Mold on the walls and cockroaches. Fucking shit way to treat vets! when he came home to his sister's home, he told me he's okay and it didn't affect him from what he endured in Iraq. I knew that wasn't true. He saw so many dead people and children and dogs eating the dead. His whole reality, everything a human being holds sacred had been destroyed. How he didn't lose every brain cell is beyond me. I told my son the only way I know for you to get back to wanting to live with what you've seen and been through is to remember your nieces, nephews, sisters and I love you. We couldn't even pass a trash truck; the fumes reminded him of the smell of dead people. Anyway, my son ended up with stage 4 colin cancer and died on July 27, 2023. His cancer was related to the burn pits in Iraq I am still heartsick just as so many men and women are today and in the past that have lost loved ones or vets that have survived with injuries and demons. I find it very hard to look at a military man or woman and not cry. Because this life can be wicked cruel. Always has been and always will be. I truly with all my heart thank all vets and all people from the very beginning for affording me a doable life. THANK YOU!!! I feel like most people live in a fantasy world because they simply cannot face the reality that life is, which includes myself. But being old right now and all the talk about WWIII I am scared for everyone. Here and abroad. It is long past due that no 1 person in control Dictator, President. King should have the right to start a war when not directly in the path of an aggressor or attack. Why the HELL should any man, woman or child die because of 1 jackass? I know life isn't that simplistic, but it can improve. Anyway, this is more than I ever meant to say. The heartbeat of America is our military's, brave men and women that serve the citizens here and abroad. We should never, ever forget that. I am alive today because many somebody's served for my freedom.
@@felixmadison5736 It’s always refreshing to see how tough Men were/are compared to this new generation.. “other than that, it wasn’t bad”.. thank you for your service Sir. Also curious though, what part of the movie were people talking about the most back then?
J'ai grandi à Atlanta, qui se trouve à environ 2 heures de l'endroit où ce film a été tourné. Cette partie de la Géorgie est comme une jungle à la fois belle et sauvage.
WoW - i love it ! …thanks for offering that super great music scene that i have almost forgotten… best dialogue: “Hey Mister - I love the way you wear your hat!”…. “You don’t know nothing!”
Teen-ager when this came out,older guy now,loved it then,love it now,,in 024, The strangest bit is,the part he's playing in the movie,was supposed to be of a Black Albino,they couldn't find one,so he got the part,also,he doesn't even know how to play the banjo,
Quel film magnifique. ❤.. stressant... avec une scène cruelle dans laquelle Ned Beatty. se trouve en mauvaise posture........un film fort ! Je suis tombé sur le film UA-cam ** l'affaire Marcus Nelson** et j'ai reconnu Ned Beatty. de suite..... . à voir ..avec Kojac...
I justs did my cousins from scotland.. I live in Norway.. One lives in Australia atm.. otherone is wherever.. Used to go camping a few times .. I invited them back to Norway and I linked this Video.. lol
Oh my goodness I remember this so long ago this is so beautiful. It turns into such a beautiful song together. I love it it is 2024 October and I’m listening to this now. I haven’t heard it in a long time. It’s beautiful video too.🥰❤️
on ne se lasse pas de regarder cet extrait d'un film d'antothologie qui retrace de manière très réaliste ce qu'on peut parfois rencontrer dans des régions reculées ...
Tout est lié dans l' âme...du blues, n'est ce pas? L' ame des travailleurs pauvres, noirs, blancs, et indiens...! Et le Rapp de nos jours. Merci de votre remarque Cordialement 🇨🇵🍻
Le blues est dérivé de cette musique folk c'est la même gamme mais en mineur.Les esclaves noirs se sont inspirés de la musique de leurs maîtres mais en mode triste vu ce qu'ils vivaient.
@@Olive-gd3wn "la musique de leurs maîtres" 😅Ca vire au pathos là 🤣Origines stylistiques : Musique africaine; musique d'Afrique de l'Ouest. Le blues du désert Au Mali n'a pas eu besoin de pathos pour exister bien avant le blues etats uniens. Donc rien a voir avec le pathos mais juste l'origine est africaine point barre: L’origine du blues Blues du Mali: la source du blues occidental que nous connaissons aujourd’hui. Il se joue aussi bien en binaire qu’en ternaire: mesures à 2, 3 ou 4 temps. Ce blues est basé sur la gamme que les occidentaux appellent gamme pentatonique. La particularité de cette musique c’est qu’elle est tonale c’est-à-dire qu’il y a généralement un seul accord, ni majeur, ni mineur, composé de notes toniques à l’octave et de quintes. Origine du blues Blues du Mali - Balafon Ceci est certainement dû au fait que le balafon, cet ancêtre du piano, est accordé pour pouvoir accompagner les chants traditionnels qui sont basés sur une musique tonale. N’oublions pas que la racine de la musique africaine est le chant, d’abord, puis le tam tam ou djembé ou tambour: un tronc d’arbre évidé sur lequel on tend une peau d’animal séchée et qui a, selon son diamètre, une puissance bien.
Εκπληκτική ταινία την είχα δει το 1976 και θυμάμαι αυτή την σκηνή . Ήταν από τα πιο ωραία θρίλερ που έχουν παιχτεί στον κινηματογράφο !! Θέλω να το ξαναδώ
The last American combat troops left Vietnam on March 29, 1973, ending the United States' direct military involvement in the Vietnam War. Would you care to rethink your comment?
For that we're thankful... But this is the best time of year to go. It's Beautiful here... Sad the way Hollywood stereotype has created division in this country. Not to mention disinformation.
The eerie thing about this scene that sets up the whole movie s the premise that "hey, in our own way we are alike". Fun for a minute, except at the very end of the duel there is a sudden cold, slicing reality that no...we aren't. Leave, now. That one unsettling moment leaves that thought in your mind and instinct that never leaves..."run". Never ignore it.
My mother Loved John Wayne & My dad loved Burt Reynolds. And this movie is one I will always remember because of dad. It was the first one I remember watching with him at home on tv. Then we went an seen Smokey & the Bandit at the drive in theater soon after. Good times. Miss Mom & Dad.
Our guitarist friend stringing songs to sing around a campfire decided to play this melody and I decided to play my boobs to his guitar strings! So much laughter! Oh, so much fun. Awesome memory ❤️
What an extraordinary cast. Ronny Cox is superb in this, as are the others. Memorable roles include Capt. Edward Jellico in Star Trek TNG: Chain of command Pts 1 & 2. He reminds me a lot of Jeff Daniels, whose character Will McAvoy once said "I'm a news anchor on the side," whilst playing the guitar superbly.
It kinda crazy that so many people think the same thing, I had that thought one day and googled for a side by side picture comparison of them and found out that I wasn't alone. 🤔🤣😂🤣
Great movie and this was my favorite part of the movie. Burt Reynolds character , when his leg was injured during the rafting scene used chitterlings 😂.
The boy cant play banjo though , they used clever camera angles , and used a proper musicians arms to play the banjo who was behind the boy on the couch . Its trick photography and it is not the boys hands when you see him playing fast , this is here on Utube fascinating
We aren’t all from the same walk of life, nor are we all the same color as the other. Certainly not all of us bow our heads and pray to the same god. We all understand the love of music because its language is universal and color it does not see. There’s a little more to this then meets the eye. A mutual respect established through sound alone. That’s beautiful even if you are not.
'Hey mister, I love the way you wear that hat" Man removes hat from his head, looks at the hat, places hat back onto his head then say's. 'You don't know nothen'....wow. To me that scene demonstrates how often city folks (at least back then) always felt country folks were simple minded and aloof, when actually they're very keen, wittier, and know how to survive.
Delivrance 1972 extrait Dueling banjos 1710pm 28.8.24 flannery o'connor's river...? dunno....... a pointless movie. which is where i'm heading - to watch pointless. good bye...
A classic piece of cinema that will live for a long long time. Brilliant.
This scene is one of three of my all time favorite movie scenes. Just came together for movie magic.
@@ronniejackson9901 Give us the two others, please!
That old man dancing was my great grandfather , may he’s soul rest in peace 🙏
And that he dances on forever in Heaven.🙏💕
^really?
@@rs4204 lol wake up its the internet
No American would write "he’s" instead "his"
Sure he was. Go back to sleep.
J'ai projeté discrètement ce film en 1972 en URSS pays ou les gens ne pouvaient le voir ou ecouter du Jazz etc..dans ce petit salon Il y avait des gens qui pleuraient en voyant cette scène désormais ancrée dans ma mémoire comme un cadeau des hommes de coeur..♥♥♥
Les russes sont ouverts à toutes les nouveautés, et adorent découvrir les cultures étrangères, mais vous voulez dire que ce film n'était pas distribué en URSS, vous l'avez passé sous le manteau ?
Waouh !
C'étaient les films avec Louis de Funès qui avaient la préférence des autorités sovietiques. La série des Fantomas a fait plus de 20 millions d'entrées dans les cinémas d'URSS.
Ça a été tellement populaire, que le leader politique national bochevique Édouard limonov avait détourné le portrait de Fantomas pour illustrer ses meetings.
@@richardvilnius4589
Bonjour sachez que ce genre d'anecdotes racontées par le biais d'une vidéo publiée sur internet est assimilable à de la sauvegarde historique et que beaucoup de gens adoreraient avoir tout les détails de ce type d'histoires
Ils ont dit quoi quand il a fait le cochon ?
Des rencontres improbables..avec des gens qui ont tout vecu..peu importe qu ils soient sourds et muets. Ils gardent tout en eux. Le seul moyen d expression..c'est la zic..c'est formidable
Avec des gens issus de consanguins… !
George michaè
😮I can't make you loveme
Ich Aintree is in liverpool
Le joueur de banjo était dans la réalité un type tout à fait exempt de handicap.
52 years - and I still love this clip!
I'm 56 and still watch the whole movie.
@@armandobryant1108 FYI ...
I'm 74, the film is about 56 years old!
But IMO that clip is "Immortal"!
cheers
☺
I'm 68 and love it too. And would like to see the whole movie, seen it so many years ago. Nisse from northern Sweden...
i am 50
I'm 43yo and I know and love that part since my birth.
One of the greatest scenes of all times.
Delivrance 1972 extrait Dueling banjos 1708pm 28.8.24 a very gritty film. sadistic film. the director must have had total control or just let things happen.... you tell me.... gave rise to evil dead movie, for sure... and those hillybilly rapists looked dead as in really dead. you come to rossendale valley you're back home if yer from the sticks down yonder....
Iconic scenes among many!
@@vi683a Comments on ‘Delivrance 1972 extrait Dueling banjos’ 1137am 29.8.24 a dire film. a good film, though. but when you say: good film they assume you enjoyed or concurred with the senimtents expressed. they're infantile on that level. it's a vile film. a sadistic film.... very heavy. but a good yarn.
@@JJONNYREPP The expression was idealistically centered upon the musical structure of two apparatuses interrelation superseding the temporal limitations of the physiological.
No one said "good film" but you.
@@vi683a Comments on ‘Delivrance 1972 extrait Dueling banjos’ 1254pm 29.8.24 i will keep on saying: it's a good film. cos it is. even though it does not mean i concur with the violence expressed. refer to southern comfort. another cinematic dredge though the idea of the contemporary vs the lost world of the new world.............. eh?.......... even though you are only referencing the musical interlude - heard here.... which expresses the, alleged white trash hillbilly, overhauling his alleged reticense (sic) and guarded cultural cliches regards social intercourse with his alleged betters... to dishearten the worth of the city slicker - who loses out to nature, buggery and all manner of existential angst. everyone forgot that this was a segment of a wider ranging tale of varying juxtapositions - other than me. king kong set the pace on that score re: angst created regards old vs new, nature vs man... Id vs ego... all is lost. you feel sorry for the hillbilly, no? and then feel sorry for the city slickers killed off or maimed in the name of...... embarrassment... lost or erased ancestry... technological achievement over simple and deferential simplicity. your seeming high falutin' erudition does nothing to alleviate the tedium of hamr done, a past gone mad or your desire to dodge the issue regards which flannery o'conner tale was this based on... the sadism of movie making... the cheapness of life itself. cajun gangsters took it as well as dished it out, here...
Quel film! Et cette scène extraordinaire !!
A gkmjopi, jhdfui, jhnbiu, cvuyui, buyguih.
Вижу первый раз ! Очень круто !
I think I could watch this scene a hundred times.
I believe you could!
I think I have!
Me too
@@NicoAnimationI was just about to say this but you beat me to it
J'ai vu ce film il y a a peu près 50 ans. Indémodable et reflète parfaitement les travers de la nature humaine .A revoir ou a voir pour les plus jeunes. Un des meilleurs film de son temps.
Moi aussi, cette scène m'a toujours fasciné.
Jf
On est tous d'accord, me semble-t-il. 😉
I read it with a french accent
Petit, à la tv, dans les années 80, je suis tombé par hasard sur cette fameuse scène que je ne saurais décrire tellement cela m'avait choqué.
It seems French people don't seem to like this great classic to much.
J’ai des frissons quand j’écoute ce passage…C’est divin !!! 👌🏼🌹
Film culte ! 🌹🌹🌹
I had a bicycle T-shirt that read "Pedal Harder, I Hear Banjo Music", always reminded me of this movie.
😂😂😂😂😂😂
I'm sorry but who puts a tshirt on their bicycle? I think this is all just getting ridiculous.
@@greenxxghostie what kind of a perv sits on a naked bike? pffs, kidz these days, no shame.
I think it was paddle instead of pedal. I’ve seen shirts like it.
@@YourDemocracy_lol Paddle for a canoe, pedal for a bike, peddle for your dealer.
Scène et passage musical mémorable d'un grand film des années 70...Burt Reynolds y est magnifique. ✨
The first evening I ever had cable TV service at home, this movie came on at 1am. I stayed up and watched it and was haunted by it for weeks:) lol
I have been haunted by this movie for about 20 years! ❤
It's hard to sit down after watching the movie. Feels so.... uncomfortable
@@thegornlololololololol after watching it with my uncle mee too hahahah
Never seen the movie... and from what I've read about it I don't want to.
@@TheFlyingZulu my uncle did that to me one time
There are movie scenes which once you saw them, they just seared in your mind and stay there forever. This is one of them.
yes man !
What a Great movie................Thats when Hollywood had pure Class.
hollywood in the 70s was anything bubt class. Good movies, but they were just as shitty as now
This is a master piece. I like the master pieces. The master pieces are forever. Thanks for this legacy of music. Hugs with the heart.
Certain movies have an impact on your life. I had just graduated from high school and my friend and I went to see it. This scene and "the other" infamous scene had a profound (and yes, even shocking) effect on my life. I only saw it that one time.
Such an AWESOME Movie! R.I.P Burt Reynolds and Thank You for making such a great cult classic! 1 of 2 great scenes you will never forget!❤
Would not call the other a great scene.
@@MichaelBrown-xb6pp how do you know what scene I’m talking about?
@@Mr.SugarFoot I think if you mention two scenes in Deliverance and don't name the other one, it's the one everyone will remember, more than 50 years later.
Squeal like a pig.....
Rest in peace Burt , you were a total spunk lol
No computers, no files, no green rooms, just a roll of film, a glass lens camera, and dirt everywhere.❤
and incredible editing... alternating wide shots and portraits in tight focus... high and low angles, just cinema...
@@nidian31jmn41 master class!
the kid couldn't really play the banjo though, that was tricked by having another expert banjo player's hands on the frets and plucking the strings from behind him with fakes sleeves on his shirt. Just saying, movies have other ways of creating a reality and creating effects.
This shows no matter how different our socioeconomic backgrounds might be, we can still be brought back together as human beings by the power of art. A truly inspiring message.
Until someone asks you to squeal like a pig
the fact that movies like this cannot be made today is a sadness and failure of the current world.
it is planned destruction from the ilks of Blackrock Corp and the pedo networks
This movie FREAKED me out 😮! But this scene is Epic!
Yep, that kid was the real deal.
Cinema History Classic. One of the 70's best films. Bravo
The Deer Hunter was up there too!
When the old man starts dancing the old mountain way it brings tears to my eyes!
Estilo irlandés
check his footwork
A beautiful gifted guitarists beyond words to describe! As for the film? Kept my mind open for over 40years+.
The kid couldn't play, they had the banjo player behind him.
Hello, I wouldn't know I wasn't there in person.
@@4418CARLOU Like in all films, the music is mimed by the actors. The boys fingers do not match the music, there was no banjo player behind him.
I saw this my senior year of college -- great film, it ages much better than I did.
One of the best scenes in American cinema,☘️
Agree 100 %
It really is. On so many levels, just perfect direction, production, editing and how the fuck did they find a banjo playing alien. But seriously the way these locals have no time for these outsiders besides their money, and on accident, have a musical connect only to be dismissed just as fast was remarkable.
the whole movie, is it worth it or a time loss?
@@lobomalsano I believe it is one of Burt Reynolds best roles. Probably worth it just to see that. Two first time in major movie with actors with Ned Beatty and Ronnie Cox.
The squeal like a pig scene?
Duelling Banjos was initially composed by Arthur Smith (Sometimes called Arthur “Guitar Boogie” Smith) in 1954 and was first called ‘Feudin’ Banjos’! It contained all sorts of entertaining riffs from another classic song, ‘Yankee Doodle.’ When Smith first recorded ‘Feudin’ Banjos’ 1955, he was playing a 4-string plectrum banjo and was joined by the classic 5-string bluegrass banjoist, Don Reno. From there, almost 10 years later, this classic banjo duo, finally made an airing… The song’s first country-wide airing was in 1963 on a TV episode of ‘The Andy Griffith Show‘
The most pivotal and globally recognised appearance of ‘Duelling Banjos’ was in the 1972 film, Deliverance. (guitar and banjo) This was the very moment that Smith’s original composition became famous worldwide. But there was controversy over deliverances use of Smith’s masterpiece… The film led to a successful lawsuit by Smith as the song was used without his permission. Eric Weissberg claimed copyright as he arranged the film version and took all the credit. Smith did win the lawsuit, and today the song is widely played by banjoists both beginners and seasoned banjo veterans, worldwide.
Did you know that Billy Redden who played the almond eyed redneck isn't actually playing the banjo? He is wearing a special shirt which allowed a professional banjo player to put his arms through and play from behind him. That's why the scene is shot from only a few camera angles.
@@audiodead7302 Music in films is never live. Actors don't need to play the instruments, they have to fake it which in this scene is very obvious. The boys fingers do not match the music, no professional banjo player in sight.
5 giorni fa mi trovavo propio li, a pochi km da Chattanooga, dove furono girate le scene del film,ero sulle smoky mountains, più precisamente a Maryville(Tennessee). Dopo 52 anni mi sono ricomparsi quei paesaggi visti da giovane nel film, …. Indimenticabile! Che emozione gente!!!!
I saw two performers do this in Harry's bar in Albufeira using the same guitar. It was absolutely fantastic. One made it sound like a banjo, while the other played the same guitar. I have never heard a louder ovation at the end. I bet anyone there that night will never forget it; I certainly won't.
Maybe I've watched a thousand plus movies in my life. Every time i see this duel I stop everything and just watch the magic. That young kid made the banjo sing. As he increased the tempo the guitar could not sustain the pace. I have never forgotten this scene. Americana film making had it's own magic...now we have CGI and Marvel movie BS. Or entertainers who can show more skin than a harlot....My society reminds me of the Fall of Rome...decadence, carnal men and women, loss of spirituality and morality. It is sickening and the loss of soul is upon us.
"...hell in a hand basket." is the saying that comes to mind - this was a nice diversion from reality though.
It’s actually Flat and Scruggs-genius actual musicians. The actors aren’t even keeping up with the real soundtrack…
…and the “loss of soul amoung us,” has been around for as long as the Fall of Rome…hasn’t changed one bit.
Too bad he's not really playing that banjo. I thought he was when I saw this scene as an 8 year old.
I wholeheartedly agree with everything you said, Alan Smith, thank you for your comment and God bless you and your loved ones.
This film set back perceptions of mountain folk so much, still fighting the stigma today. 😮💨
Maybe for some but I felt it put respect into people because they realized that you might roll into a place where people don't act like you or talk like you but that don't mean they're stupid. They just do things different and different is OK. In fact, I've seen people pretty similar to this in the Appalachians and they weren't stupid but to an outsider who didn't know they sure sounded stupid. Once you got to know them you found out they were brilliant in their own way. That's the whole point of this skit in my opinion.
I remember when this movie was released in '72, three years after I got wounded in Vietnam. I was 23 years-old, and it was talked about a lot back in the day.
this movie was is still scary to watch unless you have fairy lights a bong and music while movie plays mute
same, i got shot in the balls in 69.
@@greensceneBirds I was lucky. I 'only' received mortar shrapnel to my left foot, both legs, arms, and right flank causing liver and kidney damage. Wiped out my 21st year on the planet having to spend 9 months in army hospitals in 1969 and '70. Other than that it wasn't bad.
@@felixmadison5736 I was born in 52. I think back to those days and think we were very sheltered to the horrors of life. My son joined the army in 2000, he had turned 21 Jan 1979. He was in boot camp at Fort Knox Kentucky. I had begged him not to join the army. I threw a fit Until I realized as a mother I needed to stop acting so upset, because being in the service can change one's life and he sure didn't need the memory of his mother being upset. So, one of his sisters and I went to visit him while he was in bootcamp. All of a sudden, I started to cry. My son said, it will be alright mom. I said, it will never be alright again. He, my son, eventually ended up in Iraq. He starved, remember hearing about Halliburton? They were supposed to feed our soldiers but didn't. When my son came home, he wouldn't tell me all the hell he went through, because he didn't want me to cry, He did tell me that he and other soldiers had to go through bombed out places searching for food. When he came home, he and others were sent to Ft. Benning Georgia. They were put in condemned barracks. Mold on the walls and cockroaches. Fucking shit way to treat vets! when he came home to his sister's home, he told me he's okay and it didn't affect him from what he endured in Iraq. I knew that wasn't true. He saw so many dead people and children and dogs eating the dead. His whole reality, everything a human being holds sacred had been destroyed. How he didn't lose every brain cell is beyond me. I told my son the only way I know for you to get back to wanting to live with what you've seen and been through is to remember your nieces, nephews, sisters and I love you. We couldn't even pass a trash truck; the fumes reminded him of the smell of dead people. Anyway, my son ended up with stage 4 colin cancer and died on July 27, 2023. His cancer was related to the burn pits in Iraq I am still heartsick just as so many men and women are today and in the past that have lost loved ones or vets that have survived with injuries and demons. I find it very hard to look at a military man or woman and not cry. Because this life can be wicked cruel. Always has been and always will be. I truly with all my heart thank all vets and all people from the very beginning for affording me a doable life. THANK YOU!!! I feel like most people live in a fantasy world because they simply cannot face the reality that life is, which includes myself. But being old right now and all the talk about WWIII I am scared for everyone. Here and abroad. It is long past due that no 1 person in control Dictator, President. King should have the right to start a war when not directly in the path of an aggressor or attack. Why the HELL should any man, woman or child die because of 1 jackass? I know life isn't that simplistic, but it can improve. Anyway, this is more than I ever meant to say. The heartbeat of America is our military's, brave men and women that serve the citizens here and abroad. We should never, ever forget that. I am alive today because many somebody's served for my freedom.
@@felixmadison5736 It’s always refreshing to see how tough Men were/are compared to this new generation.. “other than that, it wasn’t bad”.. thank you for your service Sir.
Also curious though, what part of the movie were people talking about the most back then?
J'ai grandi à Atlanta, qui se trouve à environ 2 heures de l'endroit où ce film a été tourné. Cette partie de la Géorgie est comme une jungle à la fois belle et sauvage.
Magnifique ! Un moment de grâce ! Merci !
WoW - i love it !
…thanks for offering that super great music scene that i have almost forgotten…
best dialogue:
“Hey Mister - I love the way you wear your hat!”….
“You don’t know nothing!”
Teen-ager when this came out,older guy now,loved it then,love it now,,in 024,
The strangest bit is,the part he's playing in the movie,was supposed to be of a Black Albino,they couldn't find one,so he got the part,also,he doesn't even know how to play the banjo,
One of two very memorable scenes in Deliverance. The other scene was a lot different, though. :(
You mean the raping?
Well, both scenes had hillbillies having fun playing with city folk....
Someone always squeal's like a piggy
Wonderful scene.... unsettling ending that hinted at what might come...
Nerd guitar player: "I'm Lost".
Deep Woods Banjo Boy: Turns head away, and quickly, when offered a handshake.
Music shows that no matter how different the walks of life people come from, they can be brought together. A great message for the world.
Not if Trump takes has his way.
I saw this performance a very very long time ago when I was a young boy and this music is still etched in my memory.
yeah I bet it is, now squeal like a piggy
Quel film magnifique. ❤.. stressant... avec une scène cruelle dans laquelle Ned Beatty. se trouve en mauvaise posture........un film fort ! Je suis tombé sur le film UA-cam ** l'affaire Marcus Nelson** et j'ai reconnu Ned Beatty. de suite..... . à voir ..avec Kojac...
Mauvaise posture c'est le cas de le dire !!!
Oh man, that is one of the best movie scenes from all time!
Un film de grande facture d une Amérique profonde un must ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
It's called the Deep South. I live in the state of Georgia, where parts of Deliverance were filmed.
John boorman
@@yannoch9167 The author of the book Deliverance was James Dickey. He played one of the cops in the movie, and was also a United States Poet Laureate.
Always riveting to watch. Read a fascinating interview in a mag some years ago with the guy who played the banjo player.
One of the defining moments of 20th century cinema
Music brings everyone together
Yep nothing like dueling bangos and afterwards some real hard core SA going on.
Well said!!!
One of the underrated scenes in american's movies.
I justs did my cousins from scotland.. I live in Norway.. One lives in Australia atm.. otherone is wherever.. Used to go camping a few times .. I invited them back to Norway and I linked this Video.. lol
Probably not lmao
Never "underrated". CELEBRATED. What the hell, man. It's a classic.
BS...everyone knows it
@@mikeschneider1624 thanks for your comment.
Greetings from Brasil👍
One of the Best Films ever made, this scene from the film is surely the most memorable thing when anyone references the film Deliverance.
This film still shocks folks in parts even today
Oh my goodness I remember this so long ago this is so beautiful. It turns into such a beautiful song together. I love it it is 2024 October and I’m listening to this now. I haven’t heard it in a long time. It’s beautiful video too.🥰❤️
Ce film, exceptionnel, m a cassée . Génial !;;;
Really, really cool!
Congratulations from Brasil 🇧🇷
Absolutely the best part of the movie 💕
on ne se lasse pas de regarder cet extrait d'un film d'antothologie qui retrace de manière très réaliste ce qu'on peut parfois rencontrer dans des régions reculées ...
Une scène mémorable dans un film mémorable... ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
That was so good to see where that song originated!! ❤❤
Damn, now I wanna watch the movie again.
I thought and felt the same......😎👍
The best scene in the whole damn movie.
.....but not the most memorable. 😂
Oh squeally?
@@MattPurvis-gt3ww which one there were quite a few, here's one, "He got a real purty mouth aint he?".
@@thegorn Mountain Man : I bet you can squeal like a pig. Weeeeeeee!
Bobby : Weee!
The most memorable is when he is fighting with the current.
Scène mystique....!
Wouaaaa ...
Amérique profonde.
Vive le Blues...!
🇨🇵👍💪😘🍻
Disons plutot Blue grass ... folk, country😅
Tout est lié dans l' âme...du blues, n'est ce pas?
L' ame des travailleurs pauvres, noirs, blancs, et indiens...!
Et le Rapp de nos jours.
Merci de votre remarque
Cordialement 🇨🇵🍻
nob It's the Deep South. I'm American, from the state of Georgia, where parts of Deliverance were filmed.
Le blues est dérivé de cette musique folk c'est la même gamme mais en mineur.Les esclaves noirs se sont inspirés de la musique de leurs maîtres mais en mode triste vu ce qu'ils vivaient.
@@Olive-gd3wn "la musique de leurs maîtres" 😅Ca vire au pathos là 🤣Origines stylistiques : Musique africaine; musique d'Afrique de l'Ouest. Le blues du désert Au Mali n'a pas eu besoin de pathos pour exister bien avant le blues etats uniens. Donc rien a voir avec le pathos mais juste l'origine est africaine point barre:
L’origine du blues Blues du Mali: la source du blues occidental que nous connaissons aujourd’hui.
Il se joue aussi bien en binaire qu’en ternaire: mesures à 2, 3 ou 4 temps.
Ce blues est basé sur la gamme que les occidentaux appellent gamme pentatonique.
La particularité de cette musique c’est qu’elle est tonale c’est-à-dire qu’il y a généralement un seul accord, ni majeur, ni mineur, composé de notes toniques à l’octave et de quintes.
Origine du blues Blues du Mali - Balafon
Ceci est certainement dû au fait que le balafon, cet ancêtre du piano, est accordé pour pouvoir accompagner les chants traditionnels qui sont basés sur une musique tonale.
N’oublions pas que la racine de la musique africaine est le chant, d’abord, puis le tam tam ou djembé ou tambour: un tronc d’arbre évidé sur lequel on tend une peau d’animal séchée et qui a, selon son diamètre, une puissance bien.
Magistral !!
J'ai vu ce film il y a des années, ça m'a donné envie de le revoir, merci 🧡🌼🌷🌼🧡
Un film qu'on ne peut pas oublier !!
Best part of this great movie 😊😊
je ne me tanne jamais de réécouté ce bout de cet incroyable film américain c'était tout de bons acteurs
I was just a kid when this movie came out. It was fun until it wasn't. Had a few nightmares after. Solid movie.
I didn't know President Biden played the banjo when he was a kid, he was pretty good
lol
Εκπληκτική ταινία την είχα δει το 1976 και θυμάμαι αυτή την σκηνή . Ήταν από τα πιο ωραία θρίλερ που έχουν παιχτεί στον κινηματογράφο !! Θέλω να το ξαναδώ
Film géant, reflet nocif d'une certaine "Amérique profonde", à interdire aux enfants en dépit du thème sportif et aventurier du début ...
Man that was BEAUTIFUL!
This was two years before I volunteered to go to Vietnam in 1974 remember it well, I was 17 years old at the time.
Glad you made it back.
We live in a different usa than that was for sure...
19? I am surprised that had not draft you by that time. Most of our class when within 6 months of being 18.
Thank you for your service 🙏
The last American combat troops left Vietnam on March 29, 1973, ending the United States' direct military involvement in the Vietnam War. Would you care to rethink your comment?
Absolutely fantastic , love it
…I need to watch this movie again!!!!
This movie is why I will never go into the mountains
For that we're thankful...
But this is the best time of year to go.
It's Beautiful here...
Sad the way Hollywood stereotype has created division in this country.
Not to mention disinformation.
@ maybe one day I will get a chance to visit such a beautiful place did not mean to be a “city slicker “where did the movie take place
The eerie thing about this scene that sets up the whole movie s the premise that "hey, in our own way we are alike". Fun for a minute, except at the very end of the duel there is a sudden cold, slicing reality that no...we aren't. Leave, now. That one unsettling moment leaves that thought in your mind and instinct that never leaves..."run". Never ignore it.
That old man dancing was my great grandfather , may his soul rest in peace 🙏
You must be a sibling or a 2nd cousin to Mike Waters?? 😉
He must have been a hit with the ladies what with all the people on here saying he was their great grandad...
@@anetaparslow9377 Could he have been both their great grandad and grandad? 😬
My mother Loved John Wayne & My dad loved Burt Reynolds. And this movie is one I will always remember because of dad. It was the first one I remember watching with him at home on tv.
Then we went an seen Smokey & the Bandit at the drive in theater soon after.
Good times. Miss Mom & Dad.
Our guitarist friend stringing songs to sing around a campfire decided to play this melody and I decided to play my boobs to his guitar strings! So much laughter! Oh, so much fun. Awesome memory ❤️
I have always loved watching this scene with Daniel Ronald Cox AKA Ronnie Cox 👏👏👍👍💯💯
Ho guardato Deliverance decine di volte e continuerò a guardarlo
Why am I the only one who sees the similarity between the banjo pickin kid and Joe Biden? Hysterical similarity.
We just don't love Branden as much as you do?
What an extraordinary cast. Ronny Cox is superb in this, as are the others. Memorable roles include Capt. Edward Jellico in Star Trek TNG: Chain of command Pts 1 & 2. He reminds me a lot of Jeff Daniels, whose character Will McAvoy once said "I'm a news anchor on the side," whilst playing the guitar superbly.
Top scene from a top film. Can you imagine anything of this quality being made today. All John Voghts films were excellent.
Man, what a flashback. Thanks for this clip!
This boy went on to become president of America, never settle
It kinda crazy that so many people think the same thing, I had that thought one day and googled for a side by side picture comparison of them and found out that I wasn't alone. 🤔🤣😂🤣
The same intellect too….
Lol
@@pathunter7003 Mr Trump can't help it
@@MarisaPaola-um5yb but mr trump doesn’t have any mental deficiencies like Biden does hon…
Сильная сцена, символичная. Даже музыка, которая может объединить людей, отзвучав, оставляет каждого в своём состоянии...
Simplemente espectacular, no se cuantas veces lo he visto
I've watched it and watched, so many times....Still gives me goosebumps 😊
This is my favorite footage of Joe Biden when he was young
Great movie and this was my favorite part of the movie.
Burt Reynolds character , when his leg was injured during the rafting scene used chitterlings 😂.
Magnifique et annonciateur!
The boy is William Redden (born October 13, 1956)
The boy cant play banjo though , they used clever camera angles , and used a proper musicians arms to play the banjo who was behind the boy on the couch . Its trick photography and it is not the boys hands when you see him playing fast , this is here on Utube fascinating
One off my favourite go to clipsgreat on so many levels
We aren’t all from the same walk of life, nor are we all the same color as the other. Certainly not all of us bow our heads and pray to the same god. We all understand the love of music because its language is universal and color it does not see. There’s a little more to this then meets the eye. A mutual respect established through sound alone. That’s beautiful even if you are not.
Soo Good!! Loved This Movie!!
C'est aussi le Monde et sa diversité. Superbe!👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
'Hey mister, I love the way you wear that hat"
Man removes hat from his head, looks at the hat, places hat back onto his head then say's.
'You don't know nothen'....wow.
To me that scene demonstrates how often city folks (at least back then) always felt country folks were simple minded and aloof, when actually they're very keen, wittier, and know how to survive.
Also, that kid reminds me of Jason, from Friday the 13th, before Jason's character was even developed.
Fait la truie ! Ce film est une pure merveille
Ruine
always puts a smile on my face, love it.
J adore cette petite scène le morceau guitare banjo, pour Miki en mémoire de son premier banjo lol
C'est véritable bonjoniste ce miki
Great stuff ! Thanks ! 🥰🥰🥰
This movie is amazing! Pure art! Great cast! Top notch! Unforgettable!
Delivrance 1972 extrait Dueling banjos 1710pm 28.8.24 flannery o'connor's river...? dunno....... a pointless movie. which is where i'm heading - to watch pointless. good bye...