1:51 fun fact: In many cultures, when you clink someone's glass like that (with your glass high above the rim of the other person's) you're basically calling yourself superior to them. So Tom was calling himself superior to Gatsby. That's likely the final straw that made him snap.
@Deathbound300 that's funny because I also had to watch this movie during at some point in my English 3 class Edit: Back in my Junior year of high school.
@@LallanAlexHockstetter And he had much better chemistry with Carey Mulligan than Leonardo DiCaprio did. Mulligan even said she would have liked to have worked with Edgerton again, particularly in a film that would have explored Daisy and Tom's relationship further.
alfredo gonzalez YESS!!! Same here actually! Tom Buchanan is such bad news but just because of how well Joel played his character, I actually liked him haha
I'm so chilled whenever I see the moment Gatsby loses his temper in this video. "Gatsby seemed like as if he killed a man..." He killed himself. He mistakenly killed his persona, which he had for his life, and he realized he couldn't go back to the second ago. I can't describe how Leo's acting seems real... What an unbelievable acting
Andru Cruz no Juliet is. Nobody: Juliet: welp since I can’t be with him I’m not gonna run away nooo. I’m gonna kind of kill my self Romeo: I must join her * Drinks posion * Juliet: IM AWAAKEEE Romeo’s dead Juliet: Welp I’m not gonna move on I’ll kill myself to I hate Juliet. PERIODTTT
@@lildebbie1062 I did the same my junior year high school except we watched the 60s version at that time since the 2013 movie barely came out maybe a few months after we watched 2 of the old films. Obviously the 2013 was way too modern itself, story was as usual but kinda lame.
This scene hits on the theme of the novel very well. It’s not just about Gatsby’s desire to have Daisy ... it’s about his pursuit to achieve what she represents: the elite class in America (The American Dream). Gatsby desperately wants to be accepted as high class ... but based on his upbringing and background, he can’t achieve it. At the end of the day, regardless how much money you have, America is still a country with class divisions ... and Tom reminds Gatsby of that in this scene. It strikes a nerve with Gatsby and his feelings of inadequacy boil over ... and it helps to show Daisy the truth: Gatsby is less than them (maybe not in terms of character or bank account, but in terms of class). It’s a tragic realization ... but a true one: The American Dream is a mirage ... you either have it or you don’t.
This was only relevant in the 1920s, wait until the Great Depression then they ALL become poor. Also today, you would be seen as snooty; none of today’s billionaires act like uptight socialites and most of them did not come from old money.
@@benyseus6325 lol 90something percent do come from old money. The billionaires you see on TV and media and hear about might be new money. But the real billionaires that run America are all old money. Be serious. Old money has always preserved itself. It doesn't take much effort to continue profiting when you have the capital to invest even in a small investment return if you put enough money in it.
danny isjuan according to a census report made by WealthX, 55-57% of American billionaires are self-made, meanwhile the next figure are first-generation billionaires meaning that they inherited their money as progeny; only a small number of billionaires in the United States inherited their money as an heirloom through generations. 57% is a majority so no I’m still right, this movie does not apply to us anymore. Also the Great Depression bankrupted most of the wealth of that era so it make sense that new billionaires would have to earn from the ground-up.
A real gentleman of money during that time would never lose his temper as gatbsy did....making it clear he is definitely not “real money”, ...therefore losing gold digging daisy
Even if he were old money, that temper lost shows a hidden violent soul. She is already with a bad man, why should she change him for ANOTHER bad and violent one?
Tom was a great antagonist. Having an affair with somebody else but cannot bear to witness his own wife having an affair. Sounds kinda like Scott's life
When Gatsby told her stuff like "I lost my temper" and "It was just a little moment," he sounded like an abuser apologizing for hitting his wife or girlfriend.
@@ARKHAM367 Thing is, that I think Tom hasn't treated Daisy with kid gloves and I don't think Daisy had an easy time of it. Athletes are not renowned for being gentlemen.
@@dianecrow6887 the last time I read the books was years ago, so I don’t remember perfectly. But in the books Tom was really bad to Daisy, was he not? I think it said he was constantly cheating on her, verbally abusive, and maybe physically as well? I can’t remember perfectly because I read it like 2,3 years ago but it was implied in the book that he was really mean and aggressive. But Daisy still loved him at the end ultimately, which I was surprised she wouldn’t choose Gatsby over him.
I think in that moment, Gatsby probably sounded a lot like Tom to Daisy. Her thought process was likely "If Jay has the potential to treat me the way Tom does, why should I leave security and status for someone who might not even treat me better?"
I do love Gatsby's quote: "The only thing respectable about you, old sport, is your money. Your money, that's it. And I have just as much as you. That means we're equal." Old money, new money, work your hands to the bone money. Many people act like they're better because of how much money they have or how they got it. It doesn't matter, really.
New money deserve much more respect they earned it while old money is inherited. The fact that new money is seen as less is nothing but jealousy from old money people.
Carey Mulligan (Daisy) stated in an interview that she would have liked to have had Daisy's relationship with Tom (Joel Edgerton) explored further. They had great chemistry. BTW, Gatsby did not lose his temper in the book. Daisy decided to stay with Tom after she learned that Gatsby gained his wealth via illegal activity (bootlegging).
Thanks for Clarifying that Gatsby didn’t lose his temper in the book, because when I watched first watched this scene I was like “I don’t recall him exploding like that but maybe I forgot...”
1:46 Gatsby was fine all until this moment. He allowed his frame (character) to be shattered. He showed weakness in front of Daisy and lost her forever. This scene is all the more beautiful as I grow older.
Yup, at that moment Tom struck at his deepest insecurity: that Gatsby was born poor and the rest of them were born rich. He imagined himself to be just like them and based his Gatsby persona off Dan Cody, but in this moment he couldn’t keep it in and the anger of James Gatz came out
@@pam0626 the class struggle is dead, it has been utterly solidified, you'll never go from abject poverty to rich in America ever again, the outliers are far rarer now than ever before, the "game" has been won.
@@keithfilibeck2390 The American Dream may not be alive and well, or truly dead as you point out, but people will never stop dreaming, struggling and hustling for a better life. It’s in our collective DNA to keep striving for more.
@@pam0626 you can want whatever, you exist, now, on some level, to be part of a giant system to make rich people's lives feel like a luxury wherever they go, or you live in such an abject poverty area (like I do) that Rich People do not exist/come there, and your just in a perpetual state of limbo, I don't even hate "rich people", but this is just how it is.
He only lost himself coz Tom hit him to where he's most vulnerable and sensitive at; his real status. Imagine he spent his life trying to fit to the higher class...
I find this scene so interesting. In blowing up on Tom gatsby inadvertently proves his point correct. Gatsby may have the wealth of Tom but he lacks the manners and background that he has. Thats why he regards gatsby as different than the rest. A real gentleman never loses his temper as gatsby did and tom knew he could bring it out of him.
But it shows how snobby the concept of a “real gentlemen” even is. Yes Gatsby lost his temper but that’s because Tom pushed the buttons he knew would cause him to. Tom hurts everyone around him constantly but when they get their feelings hurt and respond it’s suddenly “not his fault”, they’re just “low class and sensitive.” The rich can get away with acting like jerks, but the poor can’t. It’s like how Tom strings Myrtle along but says it’s not HIS fault she ran in front the car.
But Tom loses his temper plenty of times, too. At the beginning of the book, Daisy complains that Tom bruised her finger, calling him a hulking brute, then later Tom breaks Myrtle's nose when she dares to keep drunkenly yelling about Daisy.
@@oofyalDAMMIT no there's a noise while he's huffing that gets louder before he snaps. Earbuds or headphones makes it easier to hear if you haven't already
I remember when i watched this movie for the first time i was thinking, "hmm, Dicaprio didn't freak out on this one" then this scene happens and i was like "never mind..."
When I first saw this movie I was so pleased with how well Leonardo displayed blind rage in this scene. Not many actors can pull it off and make it believable like he did
Joel Edgerton has a way of standing out no matter who he is next to. He really turned Tom Buchanan into a much more interesting character. That laugh at 2:17 was such a good touch in that moment
The fact that Leonardo's cheeks are shaking gives to this scene even more authenticity as possible. This actor is so good my lord ! Moreover Joel Edgerton is also so strong here !
@@JustAPrayerexactly. She’s afraid Gatsby will treat her the same way Tom does. But while Gatsby loved an illusion and not the real her, I don’t believe for a second that he would’ve physically abused her. Yet also Daisy is a gold digger dreaming of “real money” with perfect manners 24/7 and so when Gatsby reveals his flaws, she can’t accept them.
i love that when tom continues to escalate the situation & further upset daisy, she goes to sit with nick. like that’s who makes her feel the safest and the calmest, even though jordan (her best friend) and gatsby (the man she’s madly in love with) are also there
I cried throughout the whole movie and book regardless of how surreal it's at the same time everything is so beautiful, touching and complexity of characters is so real you can see life through them because life is not black and white it has too many colors that are we can't see until we grew up to the point when we realise that we should accept everything as they truly are without labeling it
It might be because I'm a girl or because I'm a naturally demure person, but this moment when Gatsby finally snapped absolutely terrified me. Carey Mulligan did a great job, all of her body language and act of "drawing into herself" were they act same things I was subconsciously doing.
@@tekkenfan01 isn't that essentially who Gatsby is? A grown man who never grew into the character he made up, so when he gets pressured as he did here he shows his childish side because in reality that's who he is
This film version leaves out a crucial scene from the novel (which was included in the 1974 adaptation as well as the 2000 A&E TV movie). Just before they all leave for the hotel, Gatsby sees and is introduced to Daisy and Tom's daughter, Pammy. Nick states that up until that moment, Gatsby had never believed that the child existed. That is an important key to his character and his flawed view of the world. There, right in front of Gatsby, is proof that Daisy and Tom, did indeed "happen". But once again, in his desperate need to keep his fantasy going (and trying to force others to conform to that fantasy), he ignores the existence of that little girl and demands that Daisy declare that she never loved Tom and to abandon her life so he could fit her into his world. Again, showing that his "love" for Daisy was not rooted in reality and likely not even in really genuine.
everyone hates daisy but what more could she have been? she was a product of her own surroundings, and her familys flaws. what breaks my heart is the little detail of daisy running to nick, holding his hand, as though that bond of family could save her from the horror, no matter how detached they were from each other.
@@abra322 so I should marry a woman that stays with me for money and cheats on me with a guy she hasn't seen in 5 years just because she missed him,and I'd be disrespectful if I got him out of her life?
2:49 Based on how most women think, that's the worst thing he could do at this point, is try to fix it on the spot. She's emotionally taken back and shocked by his hidden side that she never knew about. She won't hear *any* rationalizations. The best thing he could do was maybe briefly look at her apologetically then storm out all regretful and ashamed. That's actually gonna make her more curious to talk to him and make sure he's okay. She'll think in *her* mind _"Oh no, no, you don't have to give up on this, it's okay. It wasn't even that bad"_ But if *he* tries to explain that it's okay, she'll think otherwise [ 2:59 - 3:10 ] Typical behavior, you can almost see it coming.
@James Moody Well yes but in different contexts. It doesn't have to be a rage outburst. It can be simply any flaw she comes to know about you. Don't try to explain it. Let it go. If you let it go, it will make her think it's not a big deal so she'll let it go too. The more you try and explain it, the less likely she'll ignore it
Specially when he goes all "it´s all right, just a moment, I´me not like that" that gave me the creeeps. And her husband NEVER shows violence (on screen)
There’s a lot of mixed opinions about this film but I personally love it. I’ve studied the book for A Level and Leo captures Gatsby’s character perfectly
Daisy was a product of her time just like the other characters. She wasn’t the perfect girl that Gatsby thought she was. She is just a symbol of what Gatsby ever wanted in life, but he never knew her.
Throughout the entire story of Gatsby, Nick is just always having a massive bruh moment
PETER Z ahahahah
un bromomento
He’s supposed to be the main character but he’s just a spectator
PETER Z gatsby is a simp
Jojo
Gatsby and Tom: *literally arguing and fighting*
Daisy: 😭😰
Nick and Jordan: 👁️👄👁️
Your pfp is perfect
underrated comment
@@antoniovivaldi6593 tru
Drop the literally please
Nick after Gatsby and Tom stopped arguing: Oh wait, it's my birthday today :D
1:51 fun fact: In many cultures, when you clink someone's glass like that (with your glass high above the rim of the other person's) you're basically calling yourself superior to them. So Tom was calling himself superior to Gatsby. That's likely the final straw that made him snap.
@Deathbound300 no problem 😅
I’m going through comments to help my undertstanding of the novel and find out other people’s possible perspectives so this helps a lot thanks
@@aadz3566 oh cool! Well good luck! And no problem!
@Deathbound300 that's funny because I also had to watch this movie during at some point in my English 3 class
Edit: Back in my Junior year of high school.
I didn’t know that but thank you for the fun fellow ole sport!
DiCaprio was phenomenal, but Joel Edgerton never gets the credit he deserves. Definitely one of the most overlooked actors out there today!
Comedy Bros for me, Joel stole the show in this movie. Just listen to how he changed his voice for the role of Tom Buchanan! It’s just amazing!!
@@LallanAlexHockstetter And he had much better chemistry with Carey Mulligan than Leonardo DiCaprio did. Mulligan even said she would have liked to have worked with Edgerton again, particularly in a film that would have explored Daisy and Tom's relationship further.
Muirmaiden this performance by Joel is Oscar nominee worthy in my opinion
@@LallanAlexHockstetter that's what I'm talking about mate. Tom Buchanan is my favorite character from this movie, thanks to Joel.
alfredo gonzalez YESS!!! Same here actually! Tom Buchanan is such bad news but just because of how well Joel played his character, I actually liked him haha
2:43 the way he says "that's right, mr. gatsby...show us some of those fine oxford manners" is, in context, the sickest burn in this video
He said that right as I saw the comment, lol
@@carterkruse6471 same bruh same
Innndeeeeeed.....
What does it mean 😭
Gatsby lied about going to Oxford,
I'm so chilled whenever I see the moment Gatsby loses his temper in this video. "Gatsby seemed like as if he killed a man..." He killed himself. He mistakenly killed his persona, which he had for his life, and he realized he couldn't go back to the second ago. I can't describe how Leo's acting seems real... What an unbelievable acting
And Gatsby was in WW1, so he did actually kill people personally.
“Gatsby looked in that moment, as though he had.. pizza time”
"or he forgot to fix the damn door"
😂😂😂
It was his reaction to Tobey being late, past 30 minutes.
@@Accountyoutube788 or to his dance
Thank you for this
Daisy is one of the most hated characters I’ve ever seen
But damn what a great film
Andru Cruz no Juliet is.
Nobody:
Juliet: welp since I can’t be with him I’m not gonna run away nooo. I’m gonna kind of kill my self
Romeo: I must join her * Drinks posion *
Juliet: IM AWAAKEEE
Romeo’s dead
Juliet: Welp I’m not gonna move on I’ll kill myself to
I hate Juliet. PERIODTTT
May May: Facts
That profile pic is so legendary
Eh, I don’t hate her and if more people read the book they’d understand her more.
@@madi.is.haunted I read the book and I still dislike her as a character. The movie portrays her pretty accurately
Daisy low-key acted as a child, her parents did not raise her to be her own woman. Look who she chose to be her husband.
She did act like a child. It was part of her act.
Women will always choose security
Well, it is the 20's
@@majinlee1298 not always
Majin Lee Here we go with generalisations made by men, about women.
Tobey Maguire throughout this scene:
😐😐😐😐😐😐😐😐😐😐😐😐
Tobey: I miss the part where that's my problem.
That's pretty much Nick throughout the book.
thats spooderman actually
That’s pretty much nick in a nutshell
@@lildebbie1062 I did the same my junior year high school except we watched the 60s version at that time since the 2013 movie barely came out maybe a few months after we watched 2 of the old films. Obviously the 2013 was way too modern itself, story was as usual but kinda lame.
Joel Edgerton did an AMAZING job as Tom Buchanan didn’t he? I mean seriously wow.
He was also amazing in The Gift. Very different character. He played the person being bullied.
00BeesKnees00 sounds interesting!! I’ll have to check that out!
I mean just listen to how Joel changed his voice for this performance!! Absolutely amazing!!
Neeraj Nair all actors in this movie did an amazing Job 💕💕💕
Bobby Berro i agree 100%!!!!
*I still like to believe that Gatsby is actually Jack, who survived Titanic and pawned heart of the ocean, and made a new life as Gatsby*
austinrrrodrigues and then faked his death AGAIN to resurrect as Jordan Belfort (lol stolen from trailer comment)
Except the heart of the ocean was with Rose the whole time
It would even work with the timeline
So he dies anyways! How great!!
Then he started dreaming.
This scene hits on the theme of the novel very well. It’s not just about Gatsby’s desire to have Daisy ... it’s about his pursuit to achieve what she represents: the elite class in America (The American Dream). Gatsby desperately wants to be accepted as high class ... but based on his upbringing and background, he can’t achieve it. At the end of the day, regardless how much money you have, America is still a country with class divisions ... and Tom reminds Gatsby of that in this scene. It strikes a nerve with Gatsby and his feelings of inadequacy boil over ... and it helps to show Daisy the truth: Gatsby is less than them (maybe not in terms of character or bank account, but in terms of class). It’s a tragic realization ... but a true one: The American Dream is a mirage ... you either have it or you don’t.
thanks, you just helped me out w English hw 😂
This was only relevant in the 1920s, wait until the Great Depression then they ALL become poor. Also today, you would be seen as snooty; none of today’s billionaires act like uptight socialites and most of them did not come from old money.
@@benyseus6325 lol 90something percent do come from old money. The billionaires you see on TV and media and hear about might be new money. But the real billionaires that run America are all old money. Be serious. Old money has always preserved itself. It doesn't take much effort to continue profiting when you have the capital to invest even in a small investment return if you put enough money in it.
danny isjuan according to a census report made by WealthX, 55-57% of American billionaires are self-made, meanwhile the next figure are first-generation billionaires meaning that they inherited their money as progeny; only a small number of billionaires in the United States inherited their money as an heirloom through generations. 57% is a majority so no I’m still right, this movie does not apply to us anymore. Also the Great Depression bankrupted most of the wealth of that era so it make sense that new billionaires would have to earn from the ground-up.
@@benyseus6325 well according to the census of my likes and yours. Your wrong. Majority rules.
Gatsby: 1:56 - 1:59
Nick: “you gonna cry?”
Peter parker:gonna cry?
He was probably going to show Tom some of the things he learned in the military but stopped in the nick of time.
Little Gatsby Jr. gonna cry?
Kuramadeus don’t you mean “little Gatsby Jr gonna cry?”
@@dannyreacts2679 Yeah, I corrected that. Thanks!
Can't believe Leo didn't get nominated for this movie as well
@Saitama Sensei maybe it means he isn't illuminati
Di caprio: breathes
Everybody: why doesn’t he get an oscar 😫😫
He had to literally claw his way to an Oscar, with real blood, sweat and tears.
65firered very good
Kyle Campbell same
this whole movie is everyone depending on nick carraway as he neutrally third wheels from start to end
Nick "bruh moment" Carraway
My life
Nick is my favorite
Hahah he was so awkward
@@KoolKukumber no:( I loved him being there
Casual watchers: Hey this is a pretty good movie
Lit Teachers: I'm about to end this whole man's career
*anybody who read the book
😂😂😂
BUT THE BOOK WAS GREAT
Des he means teachers over analyze it so much you eventually come to hate it
@@BabyItsSunny I hated the book. I would have read lord of the flies than this book ever again. It was jist too boring to read for me.
A real gentleman of money during that time would never lose his temper as gatbsy did....making it clear he is definitely not “real money”, ...therefore losing gold digging daisy
Thanks for that explanation. Never thought about it.
Even if he were old money, that temper lost shows a hidden violent soul. She is already with a bad man, why should she change him for ANOTHER bad and violent one?
I was wondering when we see a good explanation to learn yo .
Nesseire correct this entire episode killed the fantasy, she is stuck in a horrible marriage, and she having this affair gave her happiness
So being angry means you’re a violent person? Tell that to the rest of the human race who experience that emotion daily.
Tom was a great antagonist. Having an affair with somebody else but cannot bear to witness his own wife having an affair. Sounds kinda like Scott's life
I thought Bella from Twilight was the stupidest girl but Daisy is something more
99 bits yes so truee lmao
99 bits She’s supposed to be very self centred, being from an aristocratic family and representing the people of the time.
still a better love story than twilight
@99 bits Bella is still stupid. Daisy is one. Bella is 2
Have you dated someone that good looking?
“that’s right mr Gatsby, show us some of those fine oxford manners” 💀
I laughed so hard
1:53 When you on your 9th "damn, that's crazy" and they still going on about they story
Lmao 😂 👏🏽😂
Top lol
LMFAOOOOOO
ong😹😹
real
When Gatsby told her stuff like "I lost my temper" and "It was just a little moment," he sounded like an abuser apologizing for hitting his wife or girlfriend.
@@ARKHAM367 Thing is, that I think Tom hasn't treated Daisy with kid gloves and I don't think Daisy had an easy time of it. Athletes are not renowned for being gentlemen.
@@dianecrow6887 the last time I read the books was years ago, so I don’t remember perfectly. But in the books Tom was really bad to Daisy, was he not? I think it said he was constantly cheating on her, verbally abusive, and maybe physically as well? I can’t remember perfectly because I read it like 2,3 years ago but it was implied in the book that he was really mean and aggressive. But Daisy still loved him at the end ultimately, which I was surprised she wouldn’t choose Gatsby over him.
@@KoolKukumber and in the movie they deliberately have tom holding the pearl necklace to daisy's neck like a collar or a leash. It's implied yeah
More like he was apologizing to Daisy from her abuser .. 💔
I think in that moment, Gatsby probably sounded a lot like Tom to Daisy. Her thought process was likely "If Jay has the potential to treat me the way Tom does, why should I leave security and status for someone who might not even treat me better?"
Brilliant acting. You can see Leonardo DiCaprio get angrier and redder in the face every second. One of the best actors out there.
I do love Gatsby's quote:
"The only thing respectable about you, old sport, is your money. Your money, that's it. And I have just as much as you. That means we're equal."
Old money, new money, work your hands to the bone money. Many people act like they're better because of how much money they have or how they got it. It doesn't matter, really.
Ohh Noo.. nooo
Eggsplain
New money deserve much more respect they earned it while old money is inherited. The fact that new money is seen as less is nothing but jealousy from old money people.
@@R_t-99 Deserve or not, it doesn't matter in the end. Someone your kind never seems to understand.
@@EmptyMan000 well are you from the other kind?
Carey Mulligan (Daisy) stated in an interview that she would have liked to have had Daisy's relationship with Tom (Joel Edgerton) explored further. They had great chemistry. BTW, Gatsby did not lose his temper in the book. Daisy decided to stay with Tom after she learned that Gatsby gained his wealth via illegal activity (bootlegging).
It wasn't bootlegging though...
Thanks for Clarifying that Gatsby didn’t lose his temper in the book, because when I watched first watched this scene I was like “I don’t recall him exploding like that but maybe I forgot...”
So its like a "Dumbledore asked calmly" moment?
If she is talking about possibly a sequel, that would make sense considering F. Scott Fitzgerald never made a sequel to the book.
Great chemistry?
1:29-1:31, that's some amazing acting right there. You can just feel the restraint and anger boiling up inside of Gatsby.
actually biggest reasons of leo not getting oscar for such a long time is OVERacting
2:16
When you close cool math games but open it again when the teacher walks away
Pinche Poor this needs more likes
I almost peed 🤣🤣🤣
This killed me 😂😂
Okay, this one got me good.
My Parents : explain yourself now
Me : i.....
My parents : 1:54
Why I am laughing so hard at your comment......HHAHAHHAAHHAAHAHA
Here have a Oscar for your funny comment :D
🤣🤣🤣
...Are you ok tho?
A HAJAHAHAAHHA
@wang weihai they didn't specifically say they were being abused
1:46 Gatsby was fine all until this moment. He allowed his frame (character) to be shattered. He showed weakness in front of Daisy and lost her forever. This scene is all the more beautiful as I grow older.
Yup well said he honestly probably could have gotten daisy if he didn’t lose his temper in the movie yet sadly he did and his image shattered
Yup, at that moment Tom struck at his deepest insecurity: that Gatsby was born poor and the rest of them were born rich. He imagined himself to be just like them and based his Gatsby persona off Dan Cody, but in this moment he couldn’t keep it in and the anger of James Gatz came out
I was just saying he gave her the ick 😂
Im going to start incorporating “old sport” into my everyday dialogue
why
@@terry8794 Well why not, old sport?
I do that now. It’s literally been in my vocabulary since 2013 every day lol
@@terry8794 old sport
Please don't
Why are we not mentioning how hard Tom is for literally staying chill and then laughing in this mans face
That's what we call ✨ *class* ✨
Joel Edgerton seriously slayed this role
Hard? More like a narcissist, letting others fall apart through their abuse and lose their marbles while acting like a saint.
I like how nick and Jordan are just watching the show happen and have no saying into the argument
The dickheads wouldn’t let them leave
This story highlights so much about how already-rich see the rich-once-poor.
I just love this great book I'm fortunate to have read.
Preeti Rawat Yes. That class struggle exists even today.
@@pam0626 the class struggle is dead, it has been utterly solidified, you'll never go from abject poverty to rich in America ever again, the outliers are far rarer now than ever before, the "game" has been won.
@@keithfilibeck2390 The American Dream may not be alive and well, or truly dead as you point out, but people will never stop dreaming, struggling and hustling for a better life. It’s in our collective DNA to keep striving for more.
@@pam0626 you can want whatever, you exist, now, on some level, to be part of a giant system to make rich people's lives feel like a luxury wherever they go, or you live in such an abject poverty area (like I do) that Rich People do not exist/come there, and your just in a perpetual state of limbo, I don't even hate "rich people", but this is just how it is.
@@keithfilibeck2390 Yet the vast majority of millionaires are still self-made...
That was phenomenal acting by Leo, wow. What authentic intensity and captivating choices!! Some of the greatest acting I’ve ever seen.
He only lost himself coz Tom hit him to where he's most vulnerable and sensitive at; his real status.
Imagine he spent his life trying to fit to the higher class...
The author of the story made this a big deal since he too was also reminded of his social status. Poor boys don’t marry rich girls
@@Ladiesman2417 rich girl don't marry poor boy
@@dayyanahmad117 same thing basically
Spent his life trying to fit in and get daisy yet threw it away by making his money off illegal activity
Tom knew who Gatsby really was. Daisy didn't. Hence , her shock reaction
2:13
Tobey : Look at little Gatsby Jr, gonna cry ?
"your father despised you Gatsby you were an embarrassment to him"
@@crashpal pizza time
SHUT UP!
You're trash, Gatsby
Pizza time
1:53 when someone is about to say an endgame spoiler
That is so my friend
I died
Antman does his anal expanding routine.
What like they traveled back in time? Lmao that movie was a pile of garb
That is so true
I find this scene so interesting. In blowing up on Tom gatsby inadvertently proves his point correct. Gatsby may have the wealth of Tom but he lacks the manners and background that he has. Thats why he regards gatsby as different than the rest. A real gentleman never loses his temper as gatsby did and tom knew he could bring it out of him.
Gatsby should have ignored the baiting
But it shows how snobby the concept of a “real gentlemen” even is. Yes Gatsby lost his temper but that’s because Tom pushed the buttons he knew would cause him to. Tom hurts everyone around him constantly but when they get their feelings hurt and respond it’s suddenly “not his fault”, they’re just “low class and sensitive.” The rich can get away with acting like jerks, but the poor can’t. It’s like how Tom strings Myrtle along but says it’s not HIS fault she ran in front the car.
Didn't Tom literally break Myrtle's nose for bringing up daisy
But Tom loses his temper plenty of times, too. At the beginning of the book, Daisy complains that Tom bruised her finger, calling him a hulking brute, then later Tom breaks Myrtle's nose when she dares to keep drunkenly yelling about Daisy.
@@dateengineerazurecloud2904Gatsby should have ignored Daisy
I gotta admit, Leo is terrifying when he's enraged.
1:55
Imagine seeing me mad (I bench 135)
@@michaelyen1783 LMAO
@Don't Start but he benches 135
@@michaelyen1783pathetic
@@bdaarmy9736 jokes on him I bench 140 😂
Leo can portray every emotion really well. But, I think he is exceptionally good at rage scenes.
Me to to the unsupervised kid who has been screaming and running around the entire restaurant for 30 minutes: 1:53
For some reason I just love that Gatsby only starts to lose his cool when Tom drags Nick into the argument. "He's got nothing to do with this."
That laugh after the fit of rage, always gets me 🤣
It sounds like the clash royale king
2:15 Peter over here thinking if he should change or not
Lol
Lmao 😂
LOL
Teacher: "Okay class, you are dismissed"
Teachers Pet: "Excuse me, but you forgot to give us our home wor-"
Me: 1:55
😂😂😂😂😂
That sound leading up to his rage is slightly terrifying. Sounds like blood rushing through your ears to your increasing heartbeats, really lifelike
You mean Gatsby huffing?
@@oofyalDAMMIT no there's a noise while he's huffing that gets louder before he snaps. Earbuds or headphones makes it easier to hear if you haven't already
@@ParallelElle i heard
1:53 when your neighbors wouldn't let you sleep
When you're arguing with your sibling and they just keep going 1:53
Saitama Sensei 😂😂
DiCaprio's talent really shows here. What a great film and book.
This movie, shutter island, and what’s eating Gilbert grape showed me how talented he really his along with all his others
I remember when i watched this movie for the first time i was thinking, "hmm, Dicaprio didn't freak out on this one" then this scene happens and i was like "never mind..."
In a gentleman’s game, this is the exact moment when Gatsby lost Daisy.
1:52 Tom clinks his glass above the rim of Gatsby’s, telling him he’s superior to him
0:35 is so sad because daisy finds comfort in a man even tho the only 2 men’s she ever been with were abusive
nick is her cousin… and her friend. he never mistreated her in the movie.
When I first saw this movie I was so pleased with how well Leonardo displayed blind rage in this scene. Not many actors can pull it off and make it believable like he did
Joel Edgerton has a way of standing out no matter who he is next to. He really turned Tom Buchanan into a much more interesting character. That laugh at 2:17 was such a good touch in that moment
I thought these two were gonna kiss
I think we all thought that
Thats how i think when people get close like that when they are gonna fight
Plot Twist
yea leo was like :@ Shut up, Shut up and Kiss me
I know I was like I ship it
Nick is literally me when my friends fight. I just see all of them, don't take sides openly but want an honest, good friend to win.
The fact that Leonardo's cheeks are shaking gives to this scene even more authenticity as possible.
This actor is so good my lord !
Moreover Joel Edgerton is also so strong here !
It's like she's never ever heard anyone raise their voice before, the way she reacts.
I like to think it’s more like she’s sensitive to people getting angry because Tom clearly abuses her to some degree behind closed doors.
Yeah she acts like child in this movie.
@@JustAPrayerexactly. She’s afraid Gatsby will treat her the same way Tom does. But while Gatsby loved an illusion and not the real her, I don’t believe for a second that he would’ve physically abused her. Yet also Daisy is a gold digger dreaming of “real money” with perfect manners 24/7 and so when Gatsby reveals his flaws, she can’t accept them.
Everything Leo touches turns to gold. unbelievable performance
2:10 plot twist they loved each other
😂
Plottwist
No
And the fanfics began
And Nick got jealous hehe
😂😂😂😂
i love that when tom continues to escalate the situation & further upset daisy, she goes to sit with nick. like that’s who makes her feel the safest and the calmest, even though jordan (her best friend) and gatsby (the man she’s madly in love with) are also there
2:10 Tobey: “eh ha heh okay Gatsby I think it’s pizza time”
Gatsby: "give me rent first"
@@crashpal LMAO!😂
What are yall referring to because I keep seeing similar comments and I want in on the joke lmfao
aenjgeal their talking about the spider man movies
@@aenjgeal spiderman
I cried throughout the whole movie and book regardless of how surreal it's at the same time everything is so beautiful, touching and complexity of characters is so real you can see life through them because life is not black and white it has too many colors that are we can't see until we grew up to the point when we realise that we should accept everything as they truly are without labeling it
1:54 Man he had such a scream and angry face. First I thought was his experience as a soldier when the movie showed a ww1 scene.
It might be because I'm a girl or because I'm a naturally demure person, but this moment when Gatsby finally snapped absolutely terrified me. Carey Mulligan did a great job, all of her body language and act of "drawing into herself" were they act same things I was subconsciously doing.
I chuckled and I'm a guy.
Leo does a raging rant in all his movies
So does al Pacino but I could keep watching that
Mr.Jay_TheProphet Al does it with conviction and purpose. Leo seems to be a grown child whining and bitching
@@tekkenfan01 isn't that essentially who Gatsby is? A grown man who never grew into the character he made up, so when he gets pressured as he did here he shows his childish side because in reality that's who he is
Francisco all his roles
@@tekkenfan01 I'm dumb haha my bad
2:10 the best romance in history
This is honestly my favourite movie!! Such great actors and story line.
This film version leaves out a crucial scene from the novel (which was included in the 1974 adaptation as well as the 2000 A&E TV movie). Just before they all leave for the hotel, Gatsby sees and is introduced to Daisy and Tom's daughter, Pammy. Nick states that up until that moment, Gatsby had never believed that the child existed. That is an important key to his character and his flawed view of the world. There, right in front of Gatsby, is proof that Daisy and Tom, did indeed "happen". But once again, in his desperate need to keep his fantasy going (and trying to force others to conform to that fantasy), he ignores the existence of that little girl and demands that Daisy declare that she never loved Tom and to abandon her life so he could fit her into his world. Again, showing that his "love" for Daisy was not rooted in reality and likely not even in really genuine.
Damn you can see how much of a connection Gatsby and Nick have when Gatsby immediately gets defensive when Tom brings Nick into the argument.
- What about it old sport?
- dOnT y0u cAll mE OLd sp0Rt!
So even here, he's the Wolf of Wall Street.
Leo himself is defination of a pure Art.
everyone hates daisy but what more could she have been? she was a product of her own surroundings, and her familys flaws. what breaks my heart is the little detail of daisy running to nick, holding his hand, as though that bond of family could save her from the horror, no matter how detached they were from each other.
@@artfaist ok good for you
@@abra322 so I should marry a woman that stays with me for money and cheats on me with a guy she hasn't seen in 5 years just because she missed him,and I'd be disrespectful if I got him out of her life?
@@kyledeguzman5196 Tom cheated on Daisy continually. Why are you omitting that?
She’s not a child, she’s a grown woman. She can make her own choices
Women had fewer choices back then.
Tobey Maguire's so good at narrating stuff.
Spider-Man is good at everything
Bully Maguire: "want forgiveness get religion"
Gatsby’s fit of rage is one of the most relatable things I have ever seen.
Love how Daisy never dropped her cigarette
Great film adaptation of an incredibly complex masterwork of literature. Pretty hard to convert Gatsby to film, but this movie did a pretty good job.
2:16
When the teacher lets you keep your edgy nick name on kahoot
How come it took people so long to give his man an Oscar
2:49 Based on how most women think, that's the worst thing he could do at this point, is try to fix it on the spot. She's emotionally taken back and shocked by his hidden side that she never knew about. She won't hear *any* rationalizations.
The best thing he could do was maybe briefly look at her apologetically then storm out all regretful and ashamed. That's actually gonna make her more curious to talk to him and make sure he's okay. She'll think in *her* mind _"Oh no, no, you don't have to give up on this, it's okay. It wasn't even that bad"_ But if *he* tries to explain that it's okay, she'll think otherwise [ 2:59 - 3:10 ] Typical behavior, you can almost see it coming.
@James Moody Well yes but in different contexts. It doesn't have to be a rage outburst. It can be simply any flaw she comes to know about you. Don't try to explain it. Let it go. If you let it go, it will make her think it's not a big deal so she'll let it go too. The more you try and explain it, the less likely she'll ignore it
Specially when he goes all "it´s all right, just a moment, I´me not like that" that gave me the creeeps. And her husband NEVER shows violence (on screen)
as a woman, I can confirm that this is completely true lol
Yeah ... i was thinking exactly the same ...
But Not only women ,any person ...
Stick to your guns .
As the 20s bear closer to us and eventually on us, UA-cam will hit every user possible with non stop Great Gatsby clips and old sport
Nick throughout this whole scene is just like: "I missed the part where that's my problem"
This scene gave me chills. It was so unexpected.😨😨
There’s a lot of mixed opinions about this film but I personally love it. I’ve studied the book for A Level and Leo captures Gatsby’s character perfectly
The restraint. Brilliant acting.
Tobey: Feels like J. Jonah Jameson all over again. Only more violent.
2:10 imagine if they just started making out lmao
“It’s in our blood”
Sorry Tom I think that’s Alcohol not Superiority Bud.
"Dontcha call me old sport!!!"
We watched this in class and the part he screamed shut up was awkward af cos everyone just looked at each other like wtf
The most douchiest laugh of douchiest Tom 2:16
The master of freak out for a reason.
2:27-2:28 “Don’t kill me! Don’t kill me!”
Daisy was a product of her time just like the other characters. She wasn’t the perfect girl that Gatsby thought she was. She is just a symbol of what Gatsby ever wanted in life, but he never knew her.
1:52 when you finally stand up to your bully
I feel bad for Nick and Jordan. They gotta be in the center of all this. Almost like two innocent kids forced to watch their parents argue.
Hes good at being mad