What you don't see in Barry Lyndon

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 401

  • @wolfcrow
    @wolfcrow  3 місяці тому

    Download My Free Ebook! How to Make Stunning Films on a Budget. My Proven Secrets: wolfcrow.com/free-ebook/

  • @curiousworld7912
    @curiousworld7912 3 роки тому +448

    I was fortunate enough to see 'Barry Lyndon' in a theater when it was originally released. To say I was 'blown away' is to understate my reaction. It is definitely one of my top favorite films of all time - it's beautiful (each scene is like a painting), technically unparalleled, and engrossing. I know many in the audience felt it was too long, too 'artsy', etc., but it's a film I can watch time and again.

    • @kristianmurphy4308
      @kristianmurphy4308 3 роки тому +6

      I thought The Duelists was right up there with BL...??

    • @curiousworld7912
      @curiousworld7912 3 роки тому +5

      @@kristianmurphy4308 It is a great film, and sadly overlooked. :)

    • @kasimirdenhertog3516
      @kasimirdenhertog3516 3 роки тому +11

      I’ve seen it in an art house movie theater, some 20 years ago. It was an unforgettable evening, watching it on the big screen with the dramatic Sarabande, slightly wobbly image and just a handful of other film enthusiasts to share in the delight. I hope they screen it again sometime.

    • @ET3Roberts
      @ET3Roberts 2 роки тому +13

      A true masterpiece, I love every single second of this movie.

    • @curiousworld7912
      @curiousworld7912 2 роки тому +1

      @@ET3Roberts Me, too. :)

  • @RyanPerrella
    @RyanPerrella 9 місяців тому +4

    @wolfcrow i think i first fell in love with Barry Lyndon the first time i really noticed what that ending text was saying. The film is one of my favorites for all the reasons you mention, plus, it is the story of a social climber and his ultimate fall, one story of billions lived on this planet, Barry was a interesting lad, Stanley did us all so well by putting so much work into this masterpiece.
    Great review.
    Why is Barry Lyndon a great film? It’s exceptionally made.

  • @richardmorrow5060
    @richardmorrow5060 11 місяців тому +7

    One of my favorites. I saw it in the theater when it came out and was mesmerized.

  • @johnduns8291
    @johnduns8291 10 місяців тому +13

    I came across this film, by accident, one afternoon over twenty years ago. I did't know anything about it, and watched it 'cold'. It took my breath away. Having seen Paths of Glory, Dr Strangelove, 2001 and A Clockwork Orange, I, for some reason, was not aware of this masterpiece.
    It's cleverness and picaresque nature allied to it's sheer beauty makes it utterly absorbing. If ever one had to produce evidence that cinema is art, this is it.

  • @janedoe5229
    @janedoe5229 11 місяців тому +87

    I saw this in the theater when I was a teenager. At the time, I wanted to be an oil painter and I could not get enough of the oil painting books at the library. Watching this on the big screen was AMAZING: every frame WAS like an oil painting. And the music was haunting. And as the parody in Mad Magazine pointed out: he was hero in the first half of the movie, and a the bad guy in the second half. Such a fantastic movie. (And I DID become an oil painter.)

    • @rudylopez7474
      @rudylopez7474 11 місяців тому +6

      I WAS at Art School when Barry Lyndon came out and it exhilarated me to heaven! Unfortunately, I took a young woman who was not impressed in the least. It was our only date. Still, it remains one of my favorite movies of all time.

    • @ensbassatt1192
      @ensbassatt1192 10 місяців тому +1

      I saw this film when it came.e out and I was amazed at it's beauty. I would love to see it a second time on the big screen so I could marvel at the artistry.

    • @peterpuleo2904
      @peterpuleo2904 10 місяців тому

      Please post some of your paintings.

  • @shaneyaw4542
    @shaneyaw4542 10 місяців тому +8

    This movie was absolutely breathtaking. It was engrossing from beginning to end and I highly recommend it to anyone who has not watched it yet. Truly a masterpiece.

  • @DDHaven.
    @DDHaven. 10 місяців тому +7

    The greatest masterpiece. Divine music by the Chieftans too. Just mind blowing. The fact that it wasn’t well received at first, is just a reflection on how shallow and dense the critics and populace were at the time.

  • @JeddieT
    @JeddieT 10 місяців тому +11

    I was young enough and lucky enough to see Barry Lyndon in its first run, 70mm theater release. It was breathtakingly beautiful in every sense of the word. Stunning, exquisite, sublime, are all words that attempt to do this film justice. If it is ever shown again in its original theatrical form, I will be first in line.
    Thank you for giving this movie the attention it deserves.

    • @jean-pierregutzeit6631
      @jean-pierregutzeit6631 10 місяців тому

      I know the advertisement of the Pacific's Cinerama, but I have never heard from a laboratory processed a 70mm print, unfortunately. 70mm direct prints of the original negative were used for the spectacular sharp screenings of "Spartacus" and "2001: ASO", I saw hundred times.

    • @johnburns8660
      @johnburns8660 6 місяців тому

      I travelled to a major city to see it first run and it wasn't 70 mm.

    • @JeddieT
      @JeddieT 6 місяців тому

      @@johnburns8660 …I remember back in the day the term was: “70 Millimeter Panavision”. It was an actual technique where the director would use two 35mm cameras simultaneously. Kubrick used this in Barry Lyndon and in 2001 ASO among other projects. More recently, Quentin Tarantino is known to use this technique. Only certain high-end theaters had the screen capacity to show a film in this form. So in fact, it WAS an actual technique, regardless of your doubts about its authenticity or your theater’s inability to make good use of this outstanding technique.
      ua-cam.com/video/aW_SkpWbE9g/v-deo.htmlsi=OFAf7O1oKu7TKcrR

  • @michaelk5507
    @michaelk5507 11 місяців тому +25

    The paradox, for me, is that at the time of its release, the film seemed on the surface to be just a historical film not really part of the modern world, and therefore, sort of dated. It was set in the past and somehow alien or even dated.
    Only it was dealing with far deeper 'Truths' than those that appeared on the surface. Barry Lyndon, as a character doesn't really dominate the film like a 'Star', he's not the Sun and everything revolves around him. He is though, the centre of the movie, but more like a Black Hole, than the Sun. It's the world around him, which he moves through, despite his lack of any sunstantial qualities, that's the interesting part for Kubrick. Ryan O'Neal's 'blandness' is perfect for his role. He's hansome and has ambition, but not much else. If he has any lasting quality, it's just luck. He's lucky, or fortunate that he lands on his feet, rising seemingly without effort, up the social ladder, from the bottom to the very top. Like a modern reality tv star. All surface and no real substance.
    And here the film now seems far more 'modern' than it used to. The vastly unfair social and economic structure of the 18th century, now resembles our own society far more than it did when Kubrick made Barry Lyndon half a century ago. Our social and economic sturcture, even our wars, have collapsed 'modernity' back into the 18th century. We've recreated the colossal wealth gap that existed in the 18th, with society ruled by a tiny social/economic elite with the mass of the people having virtually no real say or influence on the direction of society. Paradoxically, I think Barry Lyndon, was Kubrick's most futuristic film, made at the end of one era, the liberal democratic one, and on the cusp of the return of an old one, neo fuedalism.

    • @georgeghiultu8572
      @georgeghiultu8572 10 місяців тому +3

      In these days not very often you meet someone that understands the times that they are living. Chapeau!....

    • @tomlabooks3263
      @tomlabooks3263 10 місяців тому +2

      A bit like Forrest Gump…!

    • @dangurtler7177
      @dangurtler7177 10 місяців тому +1

      He never quite made it to the top though. Fake friends, his own ambition and prejudice did him in.

  • @joechaos13
    @joechaos13 Рік тому +18

    This film brings you right into the 18th Century and keeps you there for three hours. It's unbelievable.

  • @michaelinminn
    @michaelinminn 3 роки тому +74

    "Barry Lyndon is a film version of the Mona Lisa." You couldn't have said it better!

    • @klartext2225
      @klartext2225 10 місяців тому +1

      Make it Rembrandt's NIGHT WATCH, you fools. MONA LISA has a mystery, yes. But no great story. BL absolutely has. For me it is the perfect time travel machine to the 18th century.

  • @captainnolan5062
    @captainnolan5062 11 місяців тому +3

    This is my favorite movie of all time! I also got to view the movie in the theatre when it was first released. It is a phenomenal undertaking and a wonderful experience. I never get tired of watching it. Great review.

  • @rudylopez7474
    @rudylopez7474 11 місяців тому +56

    I'm shocked you didn't mention the musical contribution of the Irish band, The Chieftains. Not only did their music firmly place the context of the protagonist's home and station, but the tune, The Women of Ireland, perfectly expressed the tender longing and agony of young Redmond Barry for his first love. This movie introduced me to The Chieftains, and Irish traditional music, a love I hold to this day.

    • @Themanwhocameback2
      @Themanwhocameback2 10 місяців тому +3

      The maker of this is a film nerd. Did you not hear his monotone, inflectionless voice? He does not appreciate any of the music, and scarcely mentions it.

    • @pussycats456
      @pussycats456 10 місяців тому

      The music is mentioned at the 4.30 mark.

    • @rudylopez7474
      @rudylopez7474 10 місяців тому

      The music is mentioned, yes, but not the massive contribution of The Chieftains.@@pussycats456

  • @enriquesanchez2001
    @enriquesanchez2001 11 місяців тому +5

    ♥ I also saw Barry Lyndon in the theater as soon as it was released. The experience of it all, forced me to go BACK to the theater to see it again and recommend it to others, who were not as appreciative as I was and STILL AM. One of the greatest experiences of my life was BARRY LYNDON. ♥

  • @halleylow3615
    @halleylow3615 10 місяців тому +2

    thank you, if it hadn't been for your video i would never have watched this film. it was like watching a series of moving paintings from the 18th century like Gainsborough. just fantastic.

  • @luismaldonado4989
    @luismaldonado4989 3 роки тому +95

    This is Stanley Kubrick's masterpiece. Such a shame it gets overlooked by the general public and even some Kubrick fans believe it or not.

    • @HC-cb4yp
      @HC-cb4yp 11 місяців тому +2

      It's a nice painting.

    • @PeterLennon-n3i
      @PeterLennon-n3i 10 місяців тому

      There were trees in the background that could act with more animation and were more entertaining than Ryan O’Neill. That might have something to do with the public reaction.

    • @vandalorianvandalorian4769
      @vandalorianvandalorian4769 10 місяців тому +1

      Kubrick himself dubbed it his greatest failure!

    • @scottdavidson526
      @scottdavidson526 10 місяців тому

      It's the only Kubrick.movie that I've never have seen.

    • @steffenbach3580
      @steffenbach3580 10 місяців тому +1

      @@vandalorianvandalorian4769How was it a failure?

  • @lucybenton7341
    @lucybenton7341 Рік тому +3

    Great description ' Barry Lydon is the film equivalent of the Mona Lisa' totally agree.

  • @FigmentHF
    @FigmentHF Рік тому +7

    Just got done watching for the first time. Films like this feel like a window, or a portal even, into another time and place. And it’s not only the incredible attention to detail in the costumes and sets/locations, or even the authentic approach to lighting, but rather the slow pace, the lingering in space and time that allows for you to become enveloped by the scenes. Films that feature frequent cuts throughout, tend to break my connection, and push me away.

  • @TheStockwell
    @TheStockwell 3 роки тому +71

    This was a very personal project for Kubrick. It was the only film for which he wrote the screenplay himself, with no collaborators. Also, it gave him a chance to use some the research he never got to use for his Napoleon Project.

    • @jm7474
      @jm7474 2 роки тому +9

      I love and have seen this movie several time. I must respectfully remind you of this..William Makepeace Thackeray, The Memoirs of Barry Lyndon, Esq. written by himself

    • @captainnolan5062
      @captainnolan5062 11 місяців тому +7

      The world is a lesser place because of the lack of Kubrick's Napoleon project/movie (especially in light of Ridley Scott's recent Napoleon disaster).

    • @philrussell5258
      @philrussell5258 11 місяців тому +3

      Ridley Scott used to be a great director

    • @falconeshield
      @falconeshield 10 місяців тому +2

      ​​@@philrussell5258Then he grew old

  • @TheBoyjah
    @TheBoyjah 3 роки тому +16

    Your analyses are SO PERFECT and complete! Thank you!

  • @guy_incognito
    @guy_incognito 3 роки тому +16

    One reason Barry Lyndon failed at the box office (as you pointed out) was context and competition. Not only was it competing with the likes of Three Days of The Condor, Dog Day Afternoon, and Jaws, but it was unfavourably compared to The Three Musketeers/Four Musketeers franchise -- essential a swash-buckler comedy.; it was (and still is) long, and therefore cinemas lost a screening every day; and for all it's beauty it is essentially a static film, with very little "action". It also broke Kubrick's winning streak, and shook his confidence -- why else would he choose a horror movie as his next endeavour.
    Yet it endues, long past the point where it's technical achievements are now taken for granted, and all that is left is it's artistry. I would also argue that Kubrick has never been given due credit for his writing skill. While he always preferred collaborating, he wrote both Barry Lyndon and Clockwork Orange alone (no mean feat for a boy from the Bronx), and his skill with language was truly exceptional.
    Until Kubrick started shooting with candles, no one has seen the eighteenth century on film before -- everything prior was a simulation.

    • @oppothumbs1
      @oppothumbs1 Рік тому +3

      Barry Lyndon has a cool detachment. Many critics took issue with the film's slow pace and restrained emotion. It defies us to care, it asks us to remain only observers of its stately elegance. Many of its developments take place off-screen. There is very little emotion in it, things happen to Barry rather than him doing them. And it's a very long movie. Of course, one has to be bright to love it and that is one appeal of Kubrick to the "brights" but that doesn't mean many intelligent people would be bored. Good not great. It's much better than Eyes Wide Shut, Full Metal Jacket (particularly the second half of the movie). I like a good story with twists and turns and fewer details and I don't care about the great Lighting of candles. Much better movies: L.A. Confidential/Rear Window/ 12 Monkeys/ and even Die Hard.

    • @judeirwin2222
      @judeirwin2222 10 місяців тому +1

      You mean “for all its beauty“ not it’s, which means it is.

    • @aliensoup2420
      @aliensoup2420 9 місяців тому

      Not sure what is meant by "Kubrick's winning streak". Since "Spartacus", none of Kubrick's films won upon initial release, except possibly Strangelove. They were all controversial, and had mixed reactions from critics and audiences. They only win through their longevity, as they all acquired notoriety and fandom over time.

    • @guy_incognito
      @guy_incognito 9 місяців тому

      Actually they were all "commercial successes", from Lolita on, although 2001 didn't become a "hit" until a rerelease in 1971. Of course this was is an era where movies could play in cinemas for literally years. Barry Lyndon was his first commercial failure domestically.@@aliensoup2420

  • @humanbeing5300
    @humanbeing5300 10 місяців тому +4

    One of the absolute masterpieces of the art of cinema

  • @ManCave1972
    @ManCave1972 10 місяців тому +2

    A truly great movie. No better cinematography exists. Beautifully made and compellingly told. A masterpiece.

  • @yortsemloh1156
    @yortsemloh1156 2 роки тому +3

    I’m 39 and first saw this film on Showtime or HBO when I stayed home from school two weeks sick in the 6th grade. I’ve loved it ever since.

  • @RPMac
    @RPMac 10 місяців тому +5

    It's an incredible piece of art....one of the best films ever made. Not for meat heads who only want a kill count and car chases. Saw it in the movie theater in NYC when it came out and have watched it at least a dozen times since. It's a masterpiece.

    • @cicolasnage5684
      @cicolasnage5684 10 місяців тому +1

      Ummm I like kill counts and car chases. And I like Barry Lyndon.

    • @marcob.7801
      @marcob.7801 10 місяців тому

      You speak truth to every point you make!

  • @jimmerhardy
    @jimmerhardy 3 роки тому +49

    Kubrick is rarely appreciated by popcorn munchers, but as the years pass and theatrical films as based on CGI, his legacy will grow proportionately as will Barry Lyndon.

    • @raimo7310
      @raimo7310 3 роки тому +6

      I mean how far can his legacy go at this point? He's widely considered to be one of the greatest, if not the greatest, of all time, and so are his movies. 90% of them are among the greatest movies ever made. I think his legacy's already well established, it's hard to go further than #1 if you already are at the very top in the first place. I'm sure as new generations will grow, the genius of Kubrick blow them away just like it did with us.

  • @dmunro9076
    @dmunro9076 3 роки тому +24

    Excellent review. The 1973 version of The Three Musketeers adopted a similar style and had really striking visuals, that resembled period paintings. Unfortunately the recent 1080P BD release is a very poor transfer (the DVD release was better).

    • @kristianmurphy4308
      @kristianmurphy4308 3 роки тому +1

      The TM & FM were the best. When I learned to really appreciate Oliver Reed

  • @crouchie
    @crouchie 3 роки тому +32

    I think the thing that adds to it’s re-watchability is the story; before I watched it for the first time I knew it had a huge history and I’d looked at frames of it before viewing it. The story is bonkers! For some reason I thought it was going to be more, serious? Maybe that’s the wrong word, but I laughed so much more than I thought I would. Unbelievable, gripping storytelling, the ultimate in highs and lows, one of the many reasons it’s entertaining. And of course the way it looks and sounds. A great insight, thank you sir ✌🏼

    • @BBBJOT
      @BBBJOT 3 роки тому

      That's.. interesting, I guess, but it's really not supposed to be a comedy but good for you

    • @anima6035
      @anima6035 2 роки тому +3

      @@BBBJOT divine comedy

    • @caesarpizza1338
      @caesarpizza1338 Рік тому +3

      @@BBBJOT although not seem like a comedy, it's based on a comedic novel. and there some moments and scene that are delightedly funny, good sir!

    • @captainnolan5062
      @captainnolan5062 11 місяців тому +5

      @@caesarpizza1338 Especially Captain Feeny and his son robbing Barry. "Good day to you sir!" "I am afraid I can not let you keep your horse. In our line of work, we must be able to travel faster than our clients." "You can lower your arms now, Mr. Lyndon."

    • @judeirwin2222
      @judeirwin2222 10 місяців тому

      You mean its watchability, not it’s, which means it is.

  • @DeepfriedBaby
    @DeepfriedBaby 3 роки тому +6

    Saw Barry Lyndon at BAM with a live orchestra. Epic.

  • @SteveDondley
    @SteveDondley Рік тому +2

    I was captivated by this movie as a teenager in the 80s. It still never gets old and I’m awestruck by it every time I watch it.

    • @Lobos222
      @Lobos222 11 місяців тому

      It is also ironic that the actor who played Barry Lyndon was a similar aHole in real life. Who recently passed away as well.

  • @MattMaginley
    @MattMaginley 11 місяців тому +2

    Exceptional film analysis. I was listening to Chopin Nocturnes, and thought of the soundtrack of Barry Lyndon and saw this. Thanks for posting.

  • @ulfingvar1
    @ulfingvar1 3 роки тому +32

    I am soooo glad this magnificent work of art is finally been given the appreciation it deserves. Like Blade Runner (no comparison, of course) it for some reason didn't capture the imagination of cinema goers at the time of release, but, as there seems to be SOME justice in the world, time has been kind to it, and it is now, a tad belatedly, taking its rightful place among the greats in cinema history.

    • @deckofcards87
      @deckofcards87 2 роки тому +2

      My guess is that much of this new appreciation is due to Warner Bros' numerous Kubrick boxsets and numerous revivals of his films over the years since his passing. I wish other magnificent titles from the 70s would get as much appreciation today. Coppola's *The Conversation* for example, is still mainly only loved by critics. Tarkovsky's *Mirror* is another one.

    • @akmalrusydi2730
      @akmalrusydi2730 2 роки тому +1

      Both of the movies mentioned suffered good welcoming from audience for their long period, i really think modern audience should develop more patience in watching movies, this is even more prominent with the latest release of The Batman, it gives the director more flexibility and context character development etc. Of course long movies shouldn't really be a common thing since budget issue and sometimes people just want something light or easy to follow before sleep.

    • @ulfingvar1
      @ulfingvar1 Рік тому

      @@deckofcards87 Mirror is amazing!

    • @padzzz9377
      @padzzz9377 10 місяців тому +1

      @@deckofcards87Barry Lyndon got its revival through late night cinema and constant television showings. It was actually most shown Kubrick movie on television(citing Jan Harlan, Kubrick’s brother in law and long-time producer). So no, it had nothing to do with Warner Bros✌️

  • @MrSpock-hf1lw
    @MrSpock-hf1lw 3 роки тому +2

    I have seen it a dozen times and it never gets old,,,only better. Oh, you can see the movie light outside the window in the restaurant scene.

  • @madahad9
    @madahad9 2 роки тому +8

    If he was born earlier Kubrick would have been a great silent film director. His films were very visually driven and dialogue was a necessary evil. He stated in an interview that making a silent film can be very instructive to a young filmmaker, learning how to tell a story visually rather than having t the rely too heavily on dialogue. One could almost image Barry Lyndon as a silent film with its own sparse dialogue being conveyed by intertitle cards. Kubrick probably wouldn't have been able to film those scenes by candlelight but he would figured out another method of capturing that time period without it looking too phoney. I'd now rank Barry Lyndon in my top ten favourite films of all time. I have watched it numerous times over the decades and have yet to be bored by it. I know the story but it retains the power to engage my imagination every time. It's unfortunate that it never found a greater appreciation on its initial release but he must have known that the film was going to appeal to a somewhat limited audience. It's not some swashbuckling style period piece with a dashing and romantic hero, when in fact there is really no likeable characters and the tone is unrelentingly sombre. It's not a film that I would recommend to a person unfamiliar with Kubrick. Although the story itself is very simple and easy to understand it is the pacing and the film's length which might discourage some. For me those three hours fly by. Period films are hard to pull off and not look at all modern. It's obvious that he did an enormous amount of research to get the look just right,especially with costumes and the decor. It brings this era to life.

    • @tonywords6713
      @tonywords6713 2 роки тому +1

      My dad really enjoyed it surprisingly, he basically hates Kubrick and most movies I reccomend lol

  • @ianboard544
    @ianboard544 11 місяців тому +3

    It's in my top 5 and a lot of people I've told have thought I was crazy. It's a masterpiece.

  • @paulberloth5753
    @paulberloth5753 3 роки тому +52

    For the people who find this film boring and for the people who think there is a hidden meaning they are too lazy to look for: there is no hidden meaning and when you get the meaning of the film it is not boring. The movie is about a man struggling with extreme social conventions and etiquette of that particular period in time and place but also in any period in time where humans are living together. Every human act is molded in an extreme and suffocating ritual behavior that Kubrick so beautifully captures with his static camera use and the pace of the Sarabande. Only 3 times the camera ( a handheld one then) and thus the main character shakes and runs wildly all over the place when all the cultural varnish falls off and nature ( so not culture) bursts out. Your boredom is the very essence of the film. Personally I say this is the best film ever made and shows that film can be art in the sense that is is as complete an auteur- movie as can be because it is the work of just one person ( a criterium often used in the debate of what is art where often it is said that art is only art when it is a work that is made by just one person) Barry Lyndon is a work made by Stanley Kubrick and every aspect of it is exactly coming to us the way Kubrick envisioned it.

    • @evelynwaugh4053
      @evelynwaugh4053 10 місяців тому +3

      I don't think so. It's a character study, similar to Thackeray's better known Vanity Fair. Barry wants to be a great man, and for Barry, that means acquiring wealth. What does he do when he obtains it? He doesn't do anything honorable, like be a decent father or husband, write a novel, or make a scientific contribution. He's just another hedonistic parasite. Social conventions of the time weren't remarkably different than at any other time. If Barry had done his duty, he could have done anything he wanted within reason, as long as he was discrete. Thackeray is a realist. He really doesn't expect much from his characters. If they are just ordinarily decent, he is very kind to them, but if they are fools or villains, he subjects them to ruthless satire.

    • @steffenbach3580
      @steffenbach3580 10 місяців тому

      @@evelynwaugh4053Barry was a great father - the one true love of his life was to give to his son.

    • @evelynwaugh4053
      @evelynwaugh4053 10 місяців тому +1

      @@steffenbach3580 How do you think his son would have fared if he had grown older? Having love for your kids isn't enough to be a decent parent.

    • @spicycatsandthings
      @spicycatsandthings 10 місяців тому

      You are definitely wrong, and the first commenter that replied to you is correct. Barry Lyndon is a character study, and Barry is a Narcissist who’s machinations are all self serving, superficial, and underneath it all, the man is an empty human being. He chose Ryan for his lack of acting skill, and he often looks blank, and his dialogue is little to worthless, like his character.

    • @richardjy89
      @richardjy89 9 місяців тому

      It's a question of agency, not the social conventions. His father dies at the beginning of the movie. At the time it was possible for a person to go from minor landed gentry to Chief Justice, Lord Chancellor and Regent. (under much suffering, though not in mind to status) 1st Earl Hardwicke. Philip Yorke. Whig Faction during George II. There are religious factors at play, and the mercy of God.
      Not George III though being unfortunately "groomed", Tory Faction controlling like 99% of all the economic wealth. The only short lived antagonist in the movie, being based on the Tory Faction Leader.

  • @nicksallnow-smith7585
    @nicksallnow-smith7585 10 місяців тому +2

    Barry Lyndon is also my favourite film of all time and I enjoyed your video very much. I was slightly surprised that, when referring to the wonderful music, you omitted the Schubert piano trio in E flat which became the emblematic music clip from the movie. For me perfection in this matching of music to the drama was not only the sad and haunting emotional element but also how it slowed down the perceived pace of the movie itself. It seemed to me that what Kubrick was doing was trying to put the audience into the much slower pace of life in the 18th century. He did this partly through the music and partly through the extremely long camera shots before cutting to the next scene. Sometimes over a minute would pass as the camera panned without any cut. In a modern movie it's about 10 seconds. In my view this was a very important technique in transporting the audience into the past.

  • @stevenleroux7033
    @stevenleroux7033 10 місяців тому +2

    I cannot understand why this film wasn't bettered received. It had a great story and the scenes do like they are paintings. One if the most enjoyable films I have ever seen

  • @Roddy1965
    @Roddy1965 11 місяців тому +3

    I'd LOVE to see this on the big screen.

  • @dlower23
    @dlower23 Місяць тому

    I really couldn't agree more and watching this video you've made is sure to enrich my next viewing of this masterpiece.
    When I was in my late teens, I spent a month at home with mononucleosis. During that month, I watched every Kubrick film from Spartacus to Eyes Wide Shut (Paths of Glory was harder to find on home video at the time). I liked them all, of course, but the biggest surprise to me was how much I enjoyed Barry Lyndon. It's a shock to the system to go from A Clockwork Orange to this, at least on a superficial level, as there are actually some parallels on the level of tone and story structure. Just a master work that takes you to a time in the past as if you were a time traveller.

  • @SD-lw6uc
    @SD-lw6uc Рік тому +5

    Stanley Kubrick was a genius. I have seen this movie so many times. Absolutely genius!!!!!!!!

  • @phildavidson1406
    @phildavidson1406 10 місяців тому

    I like to watch Barry Lyndon every three or four years. Never fails to blow me away. I wish they would show it more often in the cinema as that is the best way to see it.

  • @saradecapua3264
    @saradecapua3264 Рік тому +1

    Visually the movie is magic. Everything about this movie w=is sublime. Costume, lighting, costume, storyline and music are as great as will ever be.

  • @tbwatch88
    @tbwatch88 2 роки тому +4

    have taught it, have worshipped it, have studied it dozens and dozens of times. it's like cooking or drinking: I don't trust people who don't do the aforementioned; and I don't trust anyone who doesn't love this film.

  • @elichilton7031
    @elichilton7031 3 роки тому +2

    Mysterious is right. It is utterly stunning in it's artistry, breathtaking in it's execution of the techniques of filmmaking, however, the narration mixed with Ryan O'Neil's performance is hypnotic and oddly blank. But it works. Period pieces such as this are usually over the top in their melodrama, performance, and general opulence in it's design. Barry Lyndon almost plays like a litmus test for your thoughts and feelings on the film and subject manner your watching. It forces us to stop, pause, look and listen, to take it in and be as detached as Kubrick designed it to be. I love Roger Ebert's thoughts on this film in his Great Films series, "'Barry Lyndon' isn't a great entertainment in the usual way, but it's a great example of directorial vision: Kubrick saying he's going to make this material function as an illustration of the way he sees the world."

    • @robertpaterson5477
      @robertpaterson5477 2 роки тому +1

      I agree with you about O'Neil's performance but I don't think it works. A better more carousing performance may have spoiled the images Kubrick was trying to create however. Nevertheless it stops the film from being great imo.

  • @kmlgraph
    @kmlgraph 10 місяців тому +3

    A bookend film to Barry Lyndon is "Amadeus" by Milos Forman.

  • @eugenemleblanc
    @eugenemleblanc 2 роки тому +1

    Yeah, your video really made me remember how much it is a really great piece of cinema.

  • @TT_1221
    @TT_1221 10 місяців тому

    This is a highly intelligent critique of a superb movie! One of the best films ever made. Bravo!

  • @JonathanHart1980
    @JonathanHart1980 8 місяців тому

    Excellent video. I personally tried to watch the film every decade since it's release. I failed miserably because I couldn't immerse myself into aristocracy themed films. Staying awake was a chore to say the least. I recently viewed it and now can't stop praising it. The scene at the card table and then on the veranda are perfection. How could anyone not fall in love with Lady Honoria? Labeling the film great is an understatement to say the least.

  • @philgreen815
    @philgreen815 10 місяців тому

    A superb treat for the eyes, I treasure this film, it is everything you say it is. I visited Wilton House where some of the scenes were taken, my elder brother was a footman there, so lucky to work amongst all of that splendour and art. A truly wonderful backdrop to the cinematic scenes taken there, an inspiration to the film makers and actors.

  • @michaelinminn
    @michaelinminn 3 роки тому +2

    wolfcrow, I love your intelligent description of everything that makes great cinema. Thanks.
    You make my love of movies more accessible and rewarding.

  • @shivamchakraborty9573
    @shivamchakraborty9573 7 місяців тому

    Holy shit, and Indian fan of Barry Lyndon, like me fr. On a serious note this movie is so amazingly well made, from the camera shots to the locations and period reenactment and the integration of music (Handel and Schubert in particular), to top it all of the story is entertaining and engaging too. The only thing most people complain about is its length, but that never bothers me especially because I love long movies especially when they are good. Easily my favourite Kubrick film, especially because of its premise and the time I watched it.

  • @ThirtyPack.
    @ThirtyPack. 6 місяців тому

    Just re-watched this cinema masterpiece again last night after not seeing it for like 25+ years💯🙏😎

  • @Tyrell_Corp2019
    @Tyrell_Corp2019 8 місяців тому

    I’ve been a Kubrick fanatic my entire life. I’ve owned and watched all of his films countless times. After seeing for the first time, it instantly became my favorite. So many people here on this thread, obviously feel the same. It is astonishing to me how “critics” could have missed the obvious greatness. They were literally staring at a moving Mona Lisa. And yet they were obsessed over a shark? Nothing seems to have changed.

  • @Synochra
    @Synochra 11 місяців тому +2

    There are some movies you can watch over and over - Barry Lyndon, for me, is that movie, more than any other. Thank you Stanley Kubrick!

  • @jeffwatkins352
    @jeffwatkins352 11 місяців тому +1

    I was in Hollywood when BL premiered and got video of Ryan and Tatum O'Neal standing atop the Cinerama Dome's marquis (the theatre where BL first screened in L.A.) being interviewed by Rona Barrett. As a press member, I saw the film about a month before it opened. I was the only one of my group who was blown away by the film. But that's typical of Kubrick's works. It takes time for most folks to "get" them. It remains my second favorite Kubrick, next to 2001 which, at age 71, I still think the greatest movie ever made.

  • @Hampsteadnw3London
    @Hampsteadnw3London 3 місяці тому

    I was a student at the London International Film School. I guess I am lucky to say that I have an unusual connection to Stanley Kubrick as peripheral as it might be. The Vietnamese girl in the famous transition scene from Boot Camp to Vietnam in Full Metal Jacket was in a memorable scene in my film. So that's my connection to Stanley. Needless to say, Barry Lyndon, if it's not my favorite film then it's certainly in my top three!
    🎬🎥🎞️📽️🍿

  • @chocolatemilk679
    @chocolatemilk679 11 місяців тому +4

    “Kubrick never made a big budget film again”
    I dont understand this statement. Eyes Wide Shut had 6x the budget of Barry Lyndon. Full Metal Jacket also had a higher budget, not by a lot, but these are two movies that came after Barry Lyndon that had a larger budget.

  • @VickersDoorter
    @VickersDoorter 10 місяців тому

    I first saw this on a 16mm projector at my college lecture theatre in London in 1980 and was in awe of the beauty of it. I've seen it several times since and visited Lavenham in Suffolk, where a number of scenes were shot.

  • @-AtomsPhere-
    @-AtomsPhere- 3 роки тому +4

    It’s my favorite movie.
    And not in just some shallow pretentious way. I remember the first time I saw it it just sucked me in. I think I’ve watched it 6 times now. It’s the mixture of a “Scorsese” like character who has a rise and a fall, with the out of this world Kubrick visual style. No other Kubrick movie hits me like Barry, not even close.

  • @danielhixson3717
    @danielhixson3717 2 роки тому +1

    I'm not sure if I'm a better person or not, but I've also loved Barry Lyndon.

  • @joid8689
    @joid8689 10 місяців тому

    I agree with 100% of what you said, and I have the same reaction to the movie: the more I watch it, the more I appreciate it. I was also already aware of the candle and the lighting before watching the movie, but even then, the more I watch the movie, the more I appreciate the visuals, the rhythm, the mood, the dialogs, and the music from Schubert is magnificent. It's interesting that Kubrick chose Schubert as a stylization, rather than to add detail to the era portrayed, as Schubert was not contemporary.

  • @BradiKal61
    @BradiKal61 10 місяців тому +1

    From a visual standpoint Kubrick is unmatched. The low light shots in Barry Lyndon are atill unequaled a half century later.

  • @prof.sirjeffreydarling-mil3463
    @prof.sirjeffreydarling-mil3463 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you sir for this beautiful summary

  • @greeneyes66
    @greeneyes66 10 місяців тому +4

    I came to this movie quite late, even as a Kubrick fan. Always thought that the period piece genre is not for me. At my first viewing, I was surprised that I quite like it. In later viewings I was able to fully appreciate the intricacies and finesse even more. Barry Lyndon really grows on you. Poetic, that his possibly finest work is among the least known of his canon.

  • @hjander
    @hjander 3 роки тому +3

    Thomas Gainsborough, among others, brought to life.

  • @ricardojordanjordan2216
    @ricardojordanjordan2216 Рік тому +1

    Favorite Kubrick movie ,watched this when I was a teenager,a real classic

  • @christopherpardell4418
    @christopherpardell4418 10 місяців тому

    I recommend this film to folks I meet who are newly into history, as a perfect example of a bygone era that captures not only is sound, its light, its language, and its culture, but its PACING. It is slow. Depicting a time when the pace of life was very much slower. That horses and people traveled most place at a walk. That distractions were for the most part quiet and patient. Social mobility for the most part inaccessible, and only really achieved thru very rare luck, or chicanery.

  • @acadia5898
    @acadia5898 2 роки тому +1

    one of the best movies i've seen from one of my favorite directors

  • @anttam117
    @anttam117 9 місяців тому

    I saw this movie for the first time, of all places, in a shitty little seat screen during an eleven-hours flight over the Atlantic. Hard to believe this was included in the airline’s roster of films, but there we were. I enjoyed it greatly and latter saw it again in a proper screen. It must have been incredible, truly an experience, to watch this on theaters back in the day.

  • @joudas877
    @joudas877 Рік тому

    My brother, God willing You will get a million subscribers by the end of this year. ❤ I absolutely love this channel

  • @WillHayes44
    @WillHayes44 2 роки тому +1

    I'm just happy that I stumbled over it and was intrigued, not by some names nor by some praise. I bought it, watched it, watched it again and again and again. While I value acting, style, details and overall how it draws attention in basically every scene. Technical Production and effort taken to aim for perfection I, as usual underestimated significantly. Well, except the gauntlet conducted by the Prussian Army being depicted. Frederick II got rid of it already in 1740.

  • @mfredcourtney5876
    @mfredcourtney5876 2 роки тому +1

    It is pure art! Fabulous.

  • @kennethbowry1521
    @kennethbowry1521 2 роки тому +1

    Kubrick had a great eye for interiors, no one else has come close other than Tom Hopper with John Adams.

  • @gustafprates2170
    @gustafprates2170 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you for such a wonderful video. This is likely my favourite movie!

  • @klartext2225
    @klartext2225 10 місяців тому +1

    One of my top ten favorites, yes. If I could take only 5 films for a year on this "remote island" - BL would be one of them. But "makes you a better person"...?? What nobody says: besides being a great romance film, a great "rise-and-fall"-film - it is also a GREAT WAR FILM. This shocked me the most when seeing it for the first time: the absurdity of walking in a straight line into enemy gunfire!

  • @benrosn8154
    @benrosn8154 11 місяців тому +1

    Phenomenal film, one of the best of its time so good

  • @tk210west
    @tk210west 9 місяців тому

    I, too, saw the movie on a huge screen in NYC when it first came out. I remember being immensely disappointed. This well-meaning video tribute reminds me of how repellent I found the film (and I’m a great admirer of most of Kubrick’s other films): how cold, how unnaturally slow, and - for all the vaunted authenticity of its lighting and furnishings and costumes, blah blah blah - how often the cast seemed to strike self-conscious poses, like a collection of waxworks. Perhaps that’s what comes from relying too closely on paintings of that era.

  • @BrianMcInnis87
    @BrianMcInnis87 2 роки тому +6

    4:15 If you read a quote from him to this effect, tell us where it's from. It's perfectly possible that he did consider it his best film when he made it, but the only instance I'm aware of of him giving his opinion on this question are the well-known reports from his family that he believed 'Eyes Wide Shut' was his best work as he was completing it.

    • @thephilosopher7173
      @thephilosopher7173 Рік тому +1

      Isnt it interesting that the execs blew-up at him to the point of almost physically fighting? lol To me that movie was the biggest "F-U" to whomever 'inspired' him to make that movie.

  • @TheAllstonians
    @TheAllstonians 10 місяців тому +1

    Kubrick improved the story. Thackery did not want to write this book and it showed. One of my favorite films.

  • @ivoted-5489
    @ivoted-5489 10 місяців тому

    RIP Ryan. You did well enough and we will strive to keep you going…lucky man with a great smile. 😉

  • @1adneumann
    @1adneumann Рік тому +1

    Your thoughts and analysis and comleteley spot on! All (well most) of his films are amazing feats....But BL really is his crowning achievement....."Never have 3 hrs cinema moved so swiftly".

  • @whiteknightcat
    @whiteknightcat 10 місяців тому

    Barry Lyndon was one of the greatest films ever made .... and yet I never heard of it before about 3-4 years ago and I was a frequent theater goer when it was released. Still never seen it.

  • @reubsbay
    @reubsbay 3 роки тому +1

    I just watched this today, crazy synchronicity

  • @SPAbyShorey
    @SPAbyShorey 3 роки тому +1

    Great work wolfcrow , thankyou for all you do !

  • @tiffsaver
    @tiffsaver 10 місяців тому

    This movie will age like fine wine, or artwork that you'd see in the Louvre. Beautiful beyond belief.

  • @limomangeno
    @limomangeno Рік тому +1

    I love Historical movies .The costumes are magnificent. Great movie .

  • @quite1enough
    @quite1enough 2 роки тому +5

    Tarkovsky once said, if I'm not mistaken, that thinking cinematography (art) as an entertainment is almost offensive

  • @rmas32
    @rmas32 2 роки тому +1

    One of my favorite movies!

  • @jankoodziej877
    @jankoodziej877 10 місяців тому +1

    Music in this movie really is not just something in the background, it plays foreground role in the most important scenes. And what's critical, Kubrick did not cut the music to the image, but cut the image to fit the music - which is something almost never done, because it's against the typical principles of cinematography and hard to pull off.

  • @PastPerspectives11
    @PastPerspectives11 Рік тому +1

    God this was utterly brilliantly said.

  • @sudevsen
    @sudevsen 10 місяців тому

    Barry Lyndon 4K Criterion has to be at the top of most-requested physical releases.

  • @MrOctober44
    @MrOctober44 Рік тому +1

    So underated, especially for a Kubrick film. Classic

  • @harrynking777
    @harrynking777 Рік тому +1

    Excellent commentry about the film. Another aspect of the film is the underlying humour. The gambling scenes in particular are great fun, though not for the loser!

  • @eunoiavision7567
    @eunoiavision7567 10 місяців тому

    I saw this as a film student and had to be convinced to like it. Watching all the clips brings back zero memories. I'll watch it again now that my film days are long gone and I truly want to be in love with this film. I couldn't get past the casting of Ryan O'Neil. Ryan O'Neil? Really?

  • @DelightLovesMovies
    @DelightLovesMovies Рік тому +1

    I love Stanley Kubrick and his films. They get better the more you watch them and Barry Lyndon is just like that.

  • @MrVideoVagabond
    @MrVideoVagabond 11 місяців тому +1

    Actually in The Grapes of Wrath, Greg Toland used a "trick candle". It is a hollow tube containing a bright light shining out of a gap (hidden from the camera), which illuminates the actor's face. The topmost part of the tube is a real candle, comprised of paraffin with a lit wick to complete the illusion. Prior to Barry Lyndon the only way to light with "candles" when shooting on celluloid, was to use such a trick candle, or shoot at a reduced frame rate (the latter technique however would speed-up the on-screen action, rendering it comical).

  • @BrianMcInnis87
    @BrianMcInnis87 2 роки тому +3

    5:58 'Barry Lyndon' was made with twelve million dollars. 'The Shining' was nineteen million. 'Full Metal Jacket' was somewhere between sixteen and thirty million. 'Eyes Wide Shut' was sixty-five million. What are you talking about, Sareesh?

    • @96CAMJ
      @96CAMJ 2 роки тому +1

      Ahah I made a comment to say the same. I even showed the imposture by saying: "In this piece, you kinda blame others for going to what is explicit rather than diving to what really made the work so good. According to your argument, this happen because is so much easier to hook people with big words. And then you do the same..."

  • @elizabethbrauer1118
    @elizabethbrauer1118 10 місяців тому

    I never saw this in a theatre, only on the small screen. I pray I have the chance to see it on the big screen some day. The star in this movie, ultimately, is Kubrick. Gorgeous movie.