Chopin Ballade in G Minor Scene- The Pianist

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  • Опубліковано 26 сер 2024
  • The title says so

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,1 тис.

  • @Omfgwhtavid
    @Omfgwhtavid 7 років тому +5214

    Plus, nobody seems to mention this, it's really fuckin hard to play when you're hands are cold

    • @abdoali51
      @abdoali51 7 років тому +185

      I know about this from piano tiles

    • @Mr.Existence
      @Mr.Existence 7 років тому +12

      HAHAHHAHAA

    • @angryguy2724
      @angryguy2724 7 років тому +174

      Hell yeah, it is. I'm a pianist, as well, and I hate it when I have to play in cold weather. My hands tense up so bad, and my fingers are desperate not to move. 😅

    • @brians.5597
      @brians.5597 7 років тому

      Dangleplums AMEN

    • @Jamesi03
      @Jamesi03 7 років тому +2

      This is true

  • @brianbernstein3826
    @brianbernstein3826 5 років тому +7424

    he honestly believed the officer would kill him after his performance. he believed he was caught, that his life was over. this performance was him saying goodbye to life, to everything and everyone he loved. only this piece could do this

    • @afshanpezeshkian6510
      @afshanpezeshkian6510 5 років тому +194

      No, he did not believe it, because he took the can to the room with him, it means hope ...

    • @aramkhachaturian8043
      @aramkhachaturian8043 5 років тому +106

      read the book my friend

    • @aerohk
      @aerohk 5 років тому +49

      No. He knew he was safe.

    • @iLastStar
      @iLastStar 4 роки тому +217

      he actually played nocturne in real life i think, but for cinematic purposes, director chose Ballade.

    • @kelvinhua202
      @kelvinhua202 4 роки тому +32

      @@iLastStar Pretty sure he's hitting the right notes for the Ballade

  • @nunosousa8162
    @nunosousa8162 4 роки тому +4134

    The straight face the german officer has through the whole piece is almost as if he was heartbroken and thought to himself "How many like him did we kill?"

    • @janeyrevanescence12
      @janeyrevanescence12 4 роки тому +341

      Or, knowing his life story (he helped many like Spzilmen before dying in a Soviet POW camp), he was wondering about the people he tried to help and if they were okay.

    • @andwhat5248
      @andwhat5248 4 роки тому +85

      Doubt it. Probably thought, "fuck it, the war is lost".

    • @metallema8231
      @metallema8231 3 роки тому +100

      yeah i also though of this, like how many young people full of talent and different experience did they just turn into nothing, pretty heart breaking and hard pill to swallow to anyone in the right mind

    • @jaspervanlier9107
      @jaspervanlier9107 3 роки тому +241

      @@andwhat5248 No not true, learn about him, Wilm Hosenfeld. He helped a lot of jews and poles during the entire war, after his death he was even rewarded the Righteous among nations by Israel

    • @irenecarrillo6750
      @irenecarrillo6750 2 роки тому +26

      I think he thought of how horrible wars are, and how we are all the same, how we all shine on our own, and how sad our existence can be

  • @nashkii227
    @nashkii227 5 років тому +1270

    He skips some parts and that actually touched me.
    He actually skips it because he played it when ww2. Which the parts he skips are the joy parts and he cannot interpret it for that time.

    • @Koldatt
      @Koldatt 4 роки тому +22

      Thank you fpr the insight

    • @Samgurney88
      @Samgurney88 4 роки тому +54

      The parts he skips are not only the more sanguine parts, but the parts that were interrupted by bombing in the very first scene of the film.

    • @rhz1089
      @rhz1089 4 роки тому +92

      Lol actually he skips some parts cuz I bet they couldn’t fit the whole 9 minute piece into the movie 😭. And three piece from the beginning was Chopin nocturne in c# minor, not this ballade.

    • @Samgurney88
      @Samgurney88 4 роки тому +51

      @@rhz1089 Sorry, you're right - not quite sure how I managed that mistake (I shall plead tiredness and complacency)! In the original memoire Władysław Szpilman said that he played the Nocturne in C# minor, not the Ballade in G minor, to Wilm Hosenfeld when he was discovered by him, so maybe that has something to do with this brain malfunction!
      Nevertheless, I do think there is a motif of artistic joy being excised or interrupted in the film - the bombs crash down on the radio station as Szpilman begins to play the 'happier' sounding parts of the Nocturne in C# minor in the opening, this Ballade has been truncated with the more joyful parts ommitted. Until the end of the film (when he plays the grand polonaise), the only music that is either uninterrupted or joyful is played by other people - the Nazi neighbour playing her lullaby during his hiding, Dorota practing Bach's cello suites. Even as a cafe pianist in the ghetto he is constantly being interrupted.
      I don't think this is all done merely incidentally because of time constraints. There is a theme woven throughout of the horrors of the war and Nazi occupation frustrating art - the Bechstein that must be sold, the violin that must be stuffed full of hidden Zlotys even if it becomes unplayable. And, of course, most obviously there is the piano which he is unable to play during hiding. I read the film as partly a meditation on art as something almost redemptive of the horrors of life and as in some sense ineradicable - that even despite the constant intrusion and dehumanisation of the Nazi atrocities, Szpilman will go on playing even if it is only in his imagination.

    • @imsmashingurgrandma
      @imsmashingurgrandma 3 роки тому +9

      @@Samgurney88 God, your writing is beautiful.

  • @naimahmajeed5036
    @naimahmajeed5036 7 років тому +2332

    I'm pretty sure this is everyones favorite scene. He just played the story of his life.

    • @agamaz5650
      @agamaz5650 5 років тому +35

      yeah this scene is good, he played well but i wish the actor actually played this piece and all of it..... the most beautiful section was cut

    • @TheOne-pq4ph
      @TheOne-pq4ph 5 років тому +16

      Agamaz they prob didn’t have time to have it in the movie also It is a pretty long piece

    • @agamaz5650
      @agamaz5650 5 років тому

      @@TheOne-pq4ph well then that sucks

    • @Wired4Life2
      @Wired4Life2 4 роки тому +4

      @Dave Ciccantelli Well, beyond the opening of it, to help convince the audience that Brody's playing the rest of it and not, as it was in actuality, an expert pianist as the hand model.

    • @akonvictor
      @akonvictor 4 роки тому

      yes naimah.......this is mine too.....

  • @pointly
    @pointly 5 років тому +1497

    According to Chopin, this is by far one of his most difficult pieces to play. According to scholars, the song is about loneliness.

    • @lefinlay
      @lefinlay 4 роки тому +51

      Crimson Tiger, the hardest part is getting the phrasing. With practise, the notes aren’t too bad. Just invest the time 🤷🏼‍♂️

    • @numberoneolive2464
      @numberoneolive2464 4 роки тому +84

      It was Chopin his favorite composition. Its really challenging technically, it has everything in it, especially the coda is a beast. But to me as a pianist the voicing and phrasing is the hardest part of this piece. But as another pianist once said its a journey of a lifetime.

    • @samuellopez9633
      @samuellopez9633 2 роки тому +1

      @@numberoneolive2464 yes! I’m 14, and the voicing is pretty hard,

    • @thenit3vision
      @thenit3vision Рік тому +3

      Just mindlessly hitting keys on it should be hard. It’s invoking the perfect emotions that take years to master I think.

    • @taronsento
      @taronsento Рік тому +4

      Song?

  • @3pimpzilla
    @3pimpzilla 4 роки тому +11167

    I was showing this movie to my ex girlfriend and she kept talking through this scene. That's why she is now my ex

  • @LukeFaulkner
    @LukeFaulkner 5 років тому +7718

    This scene inspired me as a child. Fifteen years on, I am a professional pianist. This performance is just as poignant now as it was then.

    • @Railfan9743
      @Railfan9743 5 років тому +25

      Luke Faulkner hey! :)

    • @chetblueychristiansalinaso2738
      @chetblueychristiansalinaso2738 5 років тому +40

      oh my god I love your music

    • @marcjacobs6613
      @marcjacobs6613 5 років тому +12

      Luke Faulkner if not more!

    • @jrodriguezpiano
      @jrodriguezpiano 5 років тому +75

      Luke Faulkner oh hey its the dude who shamelessly promotes his crappy music in the comments sections of other peoples videos with the same copy pasted paragraphs, over and over again!

    • @TheMusicalKnokcers
      @TheMusicalKnokcers 5 років тому +3

      @@jrodriguezpiano does he ?

  • @Paganini67
    @Paganini67 8 років тому +3224

    This is my favourite scene. I can feel the pain from both characters.

    • @baberina1
      @baberina1 6 років тому +12

      Paganini67 the agony and the ecstasy. Life. 😘

    • @twilightzone1798
      @twilightzone1798 5 років тому +40

      I feel ChoPAIN

    • @GROENAASMusic
      @GROENAASMusic 5 років тому +3

      @@twilightzone1798 Shut up xD

    • @thgentleman9210
      @thgentleman9210 5 років тому +7

      Oh yeah it just must be so painful for the German guy....

    • @NavidIsANoob
      @NavidIsANoob 4 роки тому +14

      Knowing the war was about to end, that officer probably felt regret for having participated in a monstrous machine of death and destruction. Seeing that husk of a man create magic made him realize the consequences of his actions and those of his fatherland. He would later die in a prisoner camp, reflecting on those thoughts until his last breath.

  • @Gooner1990
    @Gooner1990 8 років тому +6435

    One of the most powerful and beautiful scenes in film history.

    • @cunt9459
      @cunt9459 8 років тому +13

      Indeed

    • @TheBri656
      @TheBri656 8 років тому +26

      I agree, but would also recommend the film Children of Men for an equally powerful scene. I won't spoil it and you should watch the film first, but if you don't care the scene is on UA-cam called "Miracle Cease Fire"

    • @originalnumber9
      @originalnumber9 8 років тому +16

      It is not an equally powerful scene......... I guess that particular scene reminded you of this one because it's an abandoned building during war time.

    • @TheBri656
      @TheBri656 8 років тому +8

      Zelina Castro Watch the movie first before making accusations for why I recommended that scene. And the fact you think I would recommend that scene only because the location is in a building and it's during a war shows that you obviously haven't seen the movie because it has nothing to do with why it's so powerful.

    • @originalnumber9
      @originalnumber9 8 років тому +1

      ***** I've seen it.

  • @ricardoacosta2838
    @ricardoacosta2838 5 років тому +1572

    I am a pianist and I knew the second he started playing what piece it was. I was a sobbing mess. No other composer could portray the tragedy like Chopin. Except maybe Beethoven.

    • @salimzenini561
      @salimzenini561 5 років тому +19

      Stop bragging, if you were such a real pianist you would have noticed that this scene in the movie was speeded. it is impossible to do that part of the song with this haste, even Vladimir Horowitz is not that quick

    • @brandonedwards1181
      @brandonedwards1181 5 років тому +75

      @@salimzenini561 Cancerous comment. How do you know if he hadn't or did? He only mentioned that he recognized the piece being played and not at which speed it was being played at. Peanut brain.

    • @salimzenini561
      @salimzenini561 5 років тому +14

      @@brandonedwards1181 i stand by your comment until you insulted me, we do not insult we argue !

    • @mcflysuntiedshoe9389
      @mcflysuntiedshoe9389 4 роки тому +115

      @@salimzenini561 No, you started with an insult by questioning his background in piano

    • @salimzenini561
      @salimzenini561 4 роки тому +2

      ​ok then... but he was bragging XD

  • @cm-ut9nq
    @cm-ut9nq 5 років тому +313

    He plays good with cold hands damn

    • @giovanniah1300
      @giovanniah1300 4 роки тому

      indeed whattttt

    • @julio_como_el_mes
      @julio_como_el_mes 4 роки тому +7

      The adrenaline

    • @FirstGentleman1
      @FirstGentleman1 3 роки тому +9

      Richter said cold hands doesn't matter once you start playing for an audience, they get warm real fast. At least for him. Sviatoslav.

  • @Homeboy8227
    @Homeboy8227 8 років тому +2675

    "I am... I was a pianist" sad how spilzman, couldn't say he still was since the nazis took that from him. but he still never forgot how to play, I especially admire the scene where he imagines the notes being played while he airplays the piano

    • @cellowbrz9848
      @cellowbrz9848 6 років тому +5

      ='(

    • @zoibydalobster22
      @zoibydalobster22 6 років тому +40

      Playing the piano is like riding a bike. You never forget how to do it.

    • @Greey16
      @Greey16 6 років тому +46

      you never played the piano, have you? lol.

    • @lefinlay
      @lefinlay 6 років тому +4

      He could have just as easily said “I am... was..” about being a teacher, road worker, or scientist.

    • @sacc2388
      @sacc2388 5 років тому +6

      about 3 years ago, i used to be able to play fur elise, but ever since we moved, i havent touched one piano. well except for like about 1 month ago. and then when i tried to play fur elise, it didnt work. but im planning to get back into learning how to play the piano properly. I never actually knew hoe to play the piano. i just tought myself how to play fur elise. but it sounded kind of bland. i didnt put emotion into the music

  • @BANHMIZON
    @BANHMIZON 7 років тому +6138

    Imagine if Chopin hadn't died at the young age of 39...

    • @jolantakobiako483
      @jolantakobiako483 6 років тому +93

      Piękna muzyka Chopina w pewien sposób pojednała tych mężczyzn .Nie czują się wrogami.Na chwilę jakby zapomnieli o wojnie.Myślami są na sali koncertowej.
      Jest to piękna , wzruszająca scena.
      Będę ją pamiętać do końca życia.

    • @TheSeveredTongues
      @TheSeveredTongues 6 років тому +1089

      he would have died at a later age

    • @peep3879
      @peep3879 5 років тому +487

      @@TheSeveredTongues youre a big brain lord

    • @pontikipsito46
      @pontikipsito46 5 років тому +44

      pretty old for his age

    • @flyingpenandpaper6119
      @flyingpenandpaper6119 5 років тому +38

      @@pontikipsito46 No.

  • @mbvglider
    @mbvglider 4 роки тому +562

    Truthfully, I feel like any pianist who hadn't played in years and had one last chance to play something would pick the G Minor Ballade. It's just the perfect piece of music.

    • @UncleBenPackWatch
      @UncleBenPackWatch 4 роки тому +4

      The a Major of theme 2 and the coda are my fav parts to play!!!!

    • @mangomerkel2005
      @mangomerkel2005 11 місяців тому +8

      I would play Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No.2

    • @leonardsalinas2002
      @leonardsalinas2002 10 місяців тому +2

      @@mangomerkel2005I would’ve gone with Beethoven’s “Fur Elise”

    • @am.Shub2770
      @am.Shub2770 6 місяців тому

      I'd liked Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata 1st movement

    • @ryanrude_
      @ryanrude_ 6 місяців тому +18

      @@leonardsalinas2002💀

  • @danielalamilla8080
    @danielalamilla8080 Рік тому +449

    The scene in 2:42 having Szpilman playing the most emotional part of the musical piece while showing the German officer physically tired, but more mentally exhausted about everything going on in the world at that time. All with a completely detroyed place on the background. This has to be one of the most iconic direction / photography moments in film history.

  • @passcomcompass2623
    @passcomcompass2623 7 років тому +567

    Officer walks out of building,
    turn to the guards: heard that?! I played that !

    • @drainpig894
      @drainpig894 5 років тому +11

      I wondered the same thing. Perhaps his aides were in on it too?

    • @fquerubin
      @fquerubin 4 роки тому +7

      Hhe actually played Chopin's nocturne which is quieter.

    • @Mixomatic
      @Mixomatic 4 роки тому +1

      Felix Querubin No he played moonlight sonata

    • @sarahkraus8247
      @sarahkraus8247 4 роки тому +1

      @@Mixomatic pretty sure he played C#m nocturne

    • @Mixomatic
      @Mixomatic 4 роки тому

      @@sarahkraus8247 which one are you talking about? I meant the officer played moonlight sonata when the pianist went back to the attic with his tin can. He didn't really see him playing just listened to the music. That scene is just before this one.

  • @diegoe.4639
    @diegoe.4639 7 років тому +2435

    i almost shit my pants when the russians found him wearing an officer's coat in the movie

    • @Lollerlol12
      @Lollerlol12 7 років тому

      Diego E. Ikr?!

    • @Dyunyunechka
      @Dyunyunechka 7 років тому +112

      Diego E. but they were poles...no?

    • @diegoe.4639
      @diegoe.4639 7 років тому +1

      +Anastasia Melnikova im not sure. it could be a possibility

    • @yossarian3x
      @yossarian3x 7 років тому +82

      Poles , I can assure you .

    • @walbrzych9975
      @walbrzych9975 7 років тому +1

      Michał Kowalski don't be stupid

  • @olliet7739
    @olliet7739 5 років тому +690

    I saw this when i was much younger and a less experienced pianist. It touched me so deeply I took the music to my piano teacher despite it being far too advanced. We battled for probably about 8/9 months but I mastered it. It's my go to when I need to think, escape, take a moment to myself - it's become one of the most important pieces of music I've ever had the pleasure of hearing.

    • @r.g6170
      @r.g6170 2 роки тому +1

      what was your background back then?

    • @lapsemusic579
      @lapsemusic579 Рік тому +4

      It baffles me that something so beautiful could be written by one person! One of the most moving pieces of music ever!

  • @clinger5520
    @clinger5520 3 роки тому +84

    “All war is a symptom of man's failure as a thinking animal.” John Steinbeck

    • @Hesheli27
      @Hesheli27 2 роки тому

      Let us make man in our image

  • @goktugblack
    @goktugblack 8 років тому +2993

    Music has no fatherland; its homeland is the whole universe. Frederic F. Chopin

    • @LeWildSister
      @LeWildSister 7 років тому +63

      I LOVE HIM HOLY FUCK

    • @milton3204
      @milton3204 7 років тому +55

      That's actually false. People ASSOCIATE Chopin's music with nationalism because he incorporated traditional Polish music into his music during a period in which Poland was being invaded by foreign powers like Russia. In fact this so called "Chopin's nationalism" was popularly spread posthumously (after Chopin's death) by Liszt, and various Polish writers and artists in order to revitalize Polish nationalism. Chopin himself believed in "absolute music", that instrumental music needed no programme, stories, or literary inspiration to invigorate itself - that it should be able to speak for itself. Yes, the very idea of nationalism being in his music is antithetical to Chopin's own philosophy.

    • @marchbell
      @marchbell 7 років тому +51

      Milton, Chopin was very deeply patriotic Pole, coming from a patriotic family, supporting Polish cause everywhere he could, hating Russian occupiers etc. Nothing ugly or narrow-minded about it. Nobody had to "invent" this part, read something more about him before writing your noble intuitions. There is no contradiction in his Polish patriotism and universal quality of his art.

    • @n0b0dy81
      @n0b0dy81 6 років тому +5

      Ferenc Liszt was Hungarian not Polish

    • @karozielo2945
      @karozielo2945 6 років тому +16

      Liszt Hungarian Chopin Polish /Lengyel Magyar ket jo barat :)

  • @linasuperdina994
    @linasuperdina994 8 років тому +3011

    I think the fact that he's a pianist makes the whole movie so much more powerful. Instruments are the embodiment of peace and joy, we use instruments to bring up feelings inside of us, to make others happy or sad, and to kill a musician is to kill all of that. This man did nothing to deserve the treatment he got, and the soldier realises that. I really think music can bring us togheter like few other things

    • @meganega3248
      @meganega3248 8 років тому +12

      great comment my friend !

    • @allblackblue
      @allblackblue 7 років тому +7

      linasuperdina thank you

    • @johnnytastetest
      @johnnytastetest 7 років тому +83

      Yeah, the piano is important. In the original screenplay he was an expert on the kazoo, but when they did screen tests, it just didn't have the same feel.

    • @saturnascendz
      @saturnascendz 7 років тому +19

      Music is a universal art form no matter who you are.

    • @penchaud1
      @penchaud1 7 років тому +15

      johnnytastetest this comment had me laughing for ages

  • @orsolyaannasari1567
    @orsolyaannasari1567 6 років тому +176

    What makes this scene so brilliant and powerful is the way Szpilman and Hosenfeld affect each other. By letting him play the piano again, Hosenfeld gives Szpilman the chance to regain part of himself which he had lost: he could be pianist once again. On the other hand, Hosenfeld is fascinated by his talent, and the way he didn't give up, and this gives him a chance to be human, a hero, and a new hope for Szpilman, who had lost all his hopes. It's amazing how they create a few minutes of peace and humanity during a bloody war.

  • @flores5420
    @flores5420 5 років тому +612

    I love how out of tune he piano is. It matches the pain he faces and his broken life

    • @pianist.fernando.4996
      @pianist.fernando.4996 4 роки тому +1

      Yessssssss

    • @cyrosubod2317
      @cyrosubod2317 3 роки тому +6

      That was the point

    • @jimmyburke3727
      @jimmyburke3727 Рік тому +9

      It pained me to find out the piano is perfectly in tune in the original film😭Bc the out of tune in this video truly did set the feel of the moment

    • @tucody8497
      @tucody8497 5 місяців тому +2

      The piano, oddly, is sharp by almost a semitone. Usually when pianos go out of tune it’s because the strings loosen and therefore becomes lower pitched.

  • @franglish7014
    @franglish7014 7 років тому +414

    That look he gives makes this scene one of the best "What have we done" moments in cinema history.

  • @shadowprincessnami3412
    @shadowprincessnami3412 8 років тому +1218

    My social studies teacher showed us this in grade 8, through a lot of the movie people weren't paying attention and didn't really care (as many 13 year olds wouldn't) but during this scene everyone was silent.

    • @BlueMaxx86
      @BlueMaxx86 8 років тому +122

      I also watched in a class. 10th grade, I believe. Same effect. It was sorrowful, his playing and their expressions, and the underlying suspense of not knowing what the German was going to do once he was done playing.

    • @kropeczek22
      @kropeczek22 8 років тому +49

      Spilmann just though,I don't care if I'm gonna die now... Once I will play like I couldn't do for so long and I'll put all my pain on it... I'll give him my story...

    • @shadowprincessnami3412
      @shadowprincessnami3412 7 років тому +2

      Be Water what do you mean?

    • @shadowprincessnami3412
      @shadowprincessnami3412 7 років тому +16

      Be Water okay then..... I don't see where the Marx stuff is coming from but okay.... 😟

    • @shadowprincessnami3412
      @shadowprincessnami3412 7 років тому +31

      Be Water repeating that does not make me understand where Marxism comes into play. Also it was 8th grade, it was a mandatory course, what's the big deal? It was basically history class.

  • @failedchemistry
    @failedchemistry 4 роки тому +116

    And since I did not find any mention of this- the brief cut to the German chauffeur by his car shuffling uneasily around outside in the moonlight was an unbelievably underrated moment of genius. In a few seconds of screen time it captured the tension, desolation, uneasiness, loneliness, and discomfiture of the post-apocalyptic war-torn streetscape dramatically awash in the melancholic chiaroscuro-esque beauty of blue tinted moonlight longing for what was and has since ceased to exist. The chauffeur was all of us watching this scene - we are the outsiders, experiencing the moment as it was to him - a distant echo reverberating through the silent ruins of history, with each note of Chopin’s composition transporting us to a fleeting moment of respite.

    • @crisandiana2567
      @crisandiana2567 Рік тому +3

      Beautifully explained

    • @puraydura
      @puraydura Рік тому +1

      nadie éramos el puto chófer que sólamente escuchaba un piano de lejos.Yo como oservador estoy viendo tocar a Szpilman

  • @tales3753
    @tales3753 4 роки тому +144

    Can you imagine what szpilman felt when he played "ballade in G minor"? He thought he was going to die, so he interpreted the composition as if his life depended on it, it is not a simple interpretation of the piece, but an interpretation that was worth his life for sure.
    He chose this song as if it were the last one he was going to play.
    He played as if he didn't hear tomorrow, I doubt that any live pianist will be able to arrive at the REAL interpretation of szpilman in this scene. The film tried to approximate the facts, but I'm sure the interpretation was unique in real life.
    I have to say, as a pianist, I'm very happy.

    • @HysteriaVybe
      @HysteriaVybe 4 роки тому +2

      Well actually apparently he played nocturno but the people decided on ballade in g minor because it represented his loneliness

    • @tales3753
      @tales3753 4 роки тому +1

      @@HysteriaVybe yes, when i wrote that comment, i didn't know that the nocturne was played instead of ballade no 1.

    • @HysteriaVybe
      @HysteriaVybe 4 роки тому

      Tales lmao

    • @tales3753
      @tales3753 4 роки тому

      @@HysteriaVybe Still I think it closes well with this "fanciful" part of the movie hahahah.
      but I confess to be embarrassed, because a grade 6 piano conservatory student like me should know that ahaha

    • @HysteriaVybe
      @HysteriaVybe 4 роки тому

      Tales I don’t because I just watched the movie and was in love with it and I only found this out because it was said it the upper comments

  • @kennytee6882
    @kennytee6882 7 років тому +2588

    After witnessing the deaths of so many people at the hands of others, Hosenfeld listening intently to every note that Spzilman played perfectly allowed him to regain that piece of humanity he had probably lost or forgotten about in the Horrors of War.

    • @karenmarieyoung6145
      @karenmarieyoung6145 6 років тому +60

      Kenny Tee Yes! Such a beautiful, insightful comment. Thank you for sharing, I remain grateful even as the realization of your words shatter my heart.

    • @ruslanotarov9727
      @ruslanotarov9727 6 років тому +1

      Kenny Tee Great comment!

    • @carloshumbertocacaofiguero7556
      @carloshumbertocacaofiguero7556 6 років тому +4

      Supiste expresar de una manera magistral la intención de la escena. Thank you for share it

    • @akeemcampbell6736
      @akeemcampbell6736 6 років тому +6

      thanks you just help me with my homework... kinda

    • @natisleepy
      @natisleepy 6 років тому +5

      Probably realised that they’re both people. During the war I wouldn’t be surprised if the nazis thought of the Jewish, polish, Lithuanian, gypsy and all the victims as not human.

  • @GroundhogDayisAWESOME
    @GroundhogDayisAWESOME 9 років тому +846

    Adrien Brody DESERVED that Oscar for this!

    • @AwesomeDanielStyles
      @AwesomeDanielStyles 8 років тому +117

      I think he means the whole Movie and not playing the piano you don't get an Oscar for playing a piano even if it's a really impressive play

    • @abelcolunga9722
      @abelcolunga9722 7 років тому

      Max Walker acud

    • @mutantoyster6425
      @mutantoyster6425 7 років тому +43

      Max Walker he did win a oscar for this lol

    • @kezzamedic
      @kezzamedic 7 років тому +38

      kevin Alvarado he meant he deserved the Oscar he got

    • @ClaudeTRONCHE
      @ClaudeTRONCHE 7 років тому +1

      Sorry you did'nt understand me.Yes It is Just a Movie I KnowlThat.

  • @jagdishdhaygude6588
    @jagdishdhaygude6588 6 років тому +68

    *one of the best WW2 movie ever based on a true story I really wish the pianist could have succeeded in saving the German officer*

  • @samadheeismail5610
    @samadheeismail5610 5 років тому +116

    I stopped playing piano when I was about 17 to focus on school. Years later I watched this movie and it inspired me to play piano again. Today I am learning to play this piece for my ltcl exam.

    • @thegreatone12345678
      @thegreatone12345678 3 роки тому +3

      I;m in the same boat right now! stopped when I went to college and now am reinspired thanks to this movie

    • @NellieKAdaba
      @NellieKAdaba 2 роки тому +5

      I am relearning piano 🎹 and learning classical music 🎶 and modern pieces.

  • @fel1b0nax
    @fel1b0nax 7 років тому +1023

    That german officer was Wilm Hosenfeld, he was an hero and he saved many judes from sure death with the risk of the own proper life. He died few months after red soviet army entered in Poland, he died sadly in a soviet prisoners field as a war criminal. I don't know if God exists but i hope now he can rest in peace and watch many humans watch him like an example of what a human should be.

    • @Amelia4144
      @Amelia4144 6 років тому +3

      Absolutely! Kindest regards from Argentina.

    • @barbaramazur5091
      @barbaramazur5091 6 років тому +53

      Soviet army entered Poland on 17th of September 1939 so Hosenfeld couldn't die few months after this, as he actually died in 1952 as far as i remember.

    • @LittleBlacksheep1995
      @LittleBlacksheep1995 5 років тому +15

      It could be Polanski's interpretation but Hosenfeld said it himself in the movie "it's good to have faith". I believe that he's resting in Paradise now. If he doesn't deserve heaven then no one does.

    • @jkl7607
      @jkl7607 5 років тому +19

      God does exist...and i am sure he is with him

    • @shmayameir8271
      @shmayameir8271 5 років тому +6

      @@LittleBlacksheep1995 Struggle to commend even his good actions as he was in the Waffen. A truly good man would have refused to serve, and faced the consequences

  • @panzerraven4135
    @panzerraven4135 9 років тому +414

    Wilhelm hosenfeld hero of humanity ... I salute you

    • @GroundhogDayisAWESOME
      @GroundhogDayisAWESOME 9 років тому +10

      STOP OBAMA!

    • @MegaTamer111
      @MegaTamer111 8 років тому +23

      +Panzer Raven unfortunate for captain wilm hosenfeld, he was sent to a war camp after ww2 and died in 1952 after seven years of hard labour. :( he deserved to live rather than be punished.

    • @vanVoltaire
      @vanVoltaire 8 років тому +3

      +Panzer Raven It's much, much harder to be a human, when you are expected to be a monster. Hosenfold, Franz Stigler... It's funny, they lost their war, so they are called now bad guys. So why we hear more stories about chivalrous Germans, and much less about, for example Russians?

    • @albertog70
      @albertog70 8 років тому +2

      or the firebombing of dresden or the nuking of innocent civilians in japan .

    • @healthyperson8214
      @healthyperson8214 7 років тому +4

      According to Wikipedia, he saved only 2 Jews, but he has also participated in killing many more Jews. He was a Nazi Captain, and you do not get such a high rank for sitting and doing nothing.
      He was presented as a hero in the movie, but I think that his presence in the movie, was rather linked to the fact, that most of us are somewhat empathetic, soft and humane, when it comes to dealing with certain things, especially the things that we love. He was a nasty Nazi soldier, but he helped a Jew that was in need, and Szpilman played the music that this soldier loved.

  • @m1co294
    @m1co294 4 місяці тому +6

    Many think the German officer spared him because of his talent. It was very likely that was only a fraction of the case. The officer that Szpilman encountered was Wilm Hosenfeld, and he was someone we would call a "good Nazi" much like Oscar Schindler, and Szpilman was just one of the many he would save during the war. He died in Soviet captivity.

  • @bobsum1745
    @bobsum1745 2 роки тому +46

    I'm old, but my eyes are full of water when I see The Pianist, especially this scene. May be because my family didn't make it, thru Warsaw's Ghetto. I never had grandparents, uncles and aunts, cousins, they all gone. Only my Mother has survived. She's now almost ninety and now I take care of here. I don't even ask her what she thinks about that movie. It's so painful.

    • @sandrawatchestv8146
      @sandrawatchestv8146 3 місяці тому

      I wish the best to you and your mother. It was such a horrible time that no living Jews can forget even until this day.

  • @TheCrookedPenguin
    @TheCrookedPenguin 10 років тому +1651

    the magesty of cinema and music creating a magnificent result

  • @martlad1
    @martlad1 10 років тому +405

    In his autobiography, "Death of a City", re-printed and re-published as "The Pianist", Szpilman said to the German officer, as soon as he'd finished playing this ballade "Well, are you going to take me outside and shoot me now?"..fully expecting that to be his fate. Thankfully, Capt. Hosenfeld didn't..

    • @Kretek
      @Kretek 10 років тому +94

      Fun fact. He did not played this ballade for german officer in real life. He played Chopin's nocturne No. 1 in C minor. It was changed in the movie.

    • @martlad1
      @martlad1 10 років тому +28

      Thank you!..I am all for historical accuracy!

    • @iLastStar
      @iLastStar 7 років тому +3

      Kretek why was it changed ?

    • @ezequielstepanenko3229
      @ezequielstepanenko3229 6 років тому +2

      I've thought I've read somewhere that it was a sonata by Beethoven

    • @nell1251
      @nell1251 6 років тому +5

      Ezequiel Stepanenko well you that article or Whatever is wrong

  • @loner.720
    @loner.720 4 роки тому +21

    earlier in the movie you can notice that he pretends to play the piano in his mind, people call him crazy but i call it a true love of music...he wants to play the piano with all his heart, but he couldnt risk the piano making noise and attract the soldiers attention and kill him..a true pianist..

  • @dreuvasdevil9395
    @dreuvasdevil9395 Рік тому +82

    Unbelievable performance, they really managed to capture the wildness and agony of the piece, especially the coda. Extremely well done. I've heard dozens of interpretations of this piece, Zimmerman, Pollini, but for some reason I always come back to this video and sit amazed just like the German officer does.

    • @koka3243
      @koka3243 Рік тому +1

      Try listening to von Oeyen's version

    • @LudgerAxel
      @LudgerAxel 5 днів тому

      You should also try listening to Ivan Moravec. The finest coda I have ever heard, in my opinion.

  • @uppubhai
    @uppubhai 8 років тому +2316

    I cried when i came to know that german officer died in a soviet labour camp. Wish I had power to go back in history and save this man

    • @alexandrabalaur5482
      @alexandrabalaur5482 8 років тому +285

      How about over 2 millions of Soviet civilians who died in Germany as a result of forced labour? Would you go back in history and save them? 13,7 millions of Soviet civilians overall? Or at least the Janowska concentration camp orchestra, which consisted of 40 Jewish musicians from Lviv orchestras, and who were all killed while they played before they could be liberated? The German officer died, oh my. He must have come to Warsaw as a tourist, I suppose.

    • @uppubhai
      @uppubhai 8 років тому +236

      Alexandra Balaur how about i just go in the past and kill hitler ,stalin and chhurchill

    • @alexandrabalaur5482
      @alexandrabalaur5482 8 років тому +64

      I hope that somewhere in a parallel universe this had been done.

    • @TheBimmerfan
      @TheBimmerfan 7 років тому +137

      Churchill was the chief of the good ones, please don't put him together with psychopaths like hitler and stalin. This man had a perfectly clear view over the world's situation, that's worthy even nowadays.

    • @fireemblemistrash75
      @fireemblemistrash75 7 років тому +31

      +TheBimmerfan If his view was seen clear, then what man lets a famine begin under his control?

  • @jiujiu
    @jiujiu 7 років тому +355

    One of my favorite movie scenes of all time.

  • @Alex-df6ux
    @Alex-df6ux 4 роки тому +52

    This scene made me cry like a baby, it's so powerful ... The looks, the music, the atmosphere ...

    • @PaulRudd1941
      @PaulRudd1941 9 місяців тому

      I'm glad this movie is on youtube for free. It deserves to be watched by all.

  • @1stPersonStateConsciousness
    @1stPersonStateConsciousness 4 роки тому +24

    Fav part from this scene is the ending where the keys sound off and after finishing the song, his hands fall off the piano like they were straining to keep themselves on the keys. A lot of intense emotion

  • @alzirdeon8236
    @alzirdeon8236 7 років тому +132

    Mr Spilzman's wife came to my school (in France) and I think it's so incredible.. I had been touched so deep in my heart, I can't believe this happened. I feel so lucky to have seen the last person that really knew him

    • @roza0587
      @roza0587 3 роки тому

      Wow, You were really lucky

    • @Jontek
      @Jontek 2 роки тому

      Mr Szpilman...

  • @salome3049
    @salome3049 8 років тому +249

    Who is good and who is evil...who is to judge in this moment when there is only music and two human beings...each suffering in his own way...thanks for movies like The Pianist

    • @kitioppa
      @kitioppa 7 років тому +4

      One Alexandra I mean... I'm pretty sure we an say the nazi were evil... right?

    • @kitioppa
      @kitioppa 6 років тому +3

      Juancho Alvarado I know I'm hungarian we were fucked the most and did even less to deserve it but still the actions of the nazis can be viewed as evil and if we decide to be understanding and try to see with their eyes instead of dehumanising them into the cartoon vilains of history we will surely find reasons why they thought they are right but in that case what's the point of even using the words good and evil ever

  • @martinsex3143
    @martinsex3143 4 роки тому +23

    I remember when they showed us this in school and the kids laughed though the whole film it was hard to find a brain cell in that room

  • @johnpendell9042
    @johnpendell9042 4 роки тому +48

    I love how there are TINY little mistakes in the performance to show how long its been since he played. Such attention to detail. I hate this movie because of it's vivid realism but keep it close because of its emotional power

    • @tristan1042
      @tristan1042 9 місяців тому +1

      That’s prolly just him

  • @hp9118
    @hp9118 7 років тому +75

    R.I.P.. Wilhelm Adalbert Hosenfeld

  • @paulafrengul9761
    @paulafrengul9761 8 років тому +55

    One of the most powerful scenes in the history of cinema. Truly moving.

  • @odimor382
    @odimor382 2 роки тому +5

    Thomas kretschmann amazed me in this scene, this kind of intelligence in his scene, this kind of caring attitude, with Chopin in the background.. made me adore him forever

  • @danielhoven570
    @danielhoven570 5 років тому +14

    The piano catches an element of the human soul, in the same way the violin plays the strings of the heart.

  • @alsenar2
    @alsenar2 7 років тому +2666

    A german officer and a polish pianist in one room. No words. No hate. No racism. Just the magic of the music turning the whole War and hatred into complete nonsense.
    Sadly...we are again in a time of War, hate and racism. And people didn't learn anything from History!...it makes me sad and angry. Wasn't the death of over 60 Million people enough?
    What is wrong with us Humans? We should be a intelligent species...but i can't find that intelligence anymore.

    • @alsenar2
      @alsenar2 7 років тому +61

      A little quote:" We think that we should separate us from each other with borders and religions...but Earth doesn't look separated from space."

    • @RomPontifex
      @RomPontifex 7 років тому +60

      It has nothing to with intelligence. We have plenty of intelligence, we don't have any love. We are an arrogant, selfish species that shows no compassion. We are godless, self-worshiping, consuming parasite and it will only get worse.

    • @Jessica-oy6fe
      @Jessica-oy6fe 7 років тому +11

      +Onyx Fire Jesus loves you. He loves you so much, that he's giving you the chance to apologize to Him.

    • @Jessica-oy6fe
      @Jessica-oy6fe 7 років тому +7

      +Onyx Fire Seriously, He could easily send us to Hell right now, and give us what we deserve. But, in His mercy, He gives us the chance to repent of our sins, to return to Him, to trust we have been forgiven by Him, because of the torture and death he took for us, and then trust Him to change our hearts. And when we do that--He will give us peace in our hearts, no matter what trials we face.

    • @Hollowedfigure
      @Hollowedfigure 7 років тому +27

      Jessica Jesus can suck our cocks.

  • @umitbilgi86
    @umitbilgi86 9 років тому +132

    I cry so much on this movie

    • @ioana183695
      @ioana183695 8 років тому +1

      +gazmanmuuh .muhh Me either .A truly masterpiece which states a single truth:Nobody can give you what you never had, and nobody can take what is yours. And don't be upset, maybe someday you won't have any reason to cry.Greetings

    • @roxsywalencia322
      @roxsywalencia322 8 років тому +1

      +gazmanmuuh .muhh oh you're not the only one, I start crying from this scene until the end... My favorite movie, Adrien&Thomas, my favorite actors

  • @CarlosBarros-nr2ye
    @CarlosBarros-nr2ye 3 дні тому +1

    I still remember watching this on cinema so many years ago.
    No one said a word, complete silence. We were just in ow.

  • @dorothymichaels4996
    @dorothymichaels4996 7 місяців тому +6

    I have watched this scen many, many times! The intensity of the German soldier, his facial expressions... and his submission to the sheer beauty of the Chopin!

  • @colinmurphy2214
    @colinmurphy2214 8 років тому +237

    Very powerful scene. Impressive to watch and beautiful to listen to. I highly recommend the movie to anyone who hasn't seen it start to finish yet.

    • @Homeboy8227
      @Homeboy8227 8 років тому +21

      +beer patzer how can you honestly say it sucked?!?!?!

    • @nitramanyer7990
      @nitramanyer7990 7 років тому +3

      fuck you

    • @willpollock7243
      @willpollock7243 7 років тому +2

      Each to their own I guess. But I suppose opinion sometimes flirts with fiction enough to warrant a response lol. Beautiful movie in every way.

    • @mykonos466
      @mykonos466 3 роки тому

      Very proud to see Alekhine as your photo

  • @roxannaz2683
    @roxannaz2683 8 років тому +453

    I admire this piece so much, I'm learning it now. Shame he didn't play the entire piece, it's 9 minutes long.

    • @marecku21
      @marecku21 7 років тому +127

      That's why he didn't play it. I think, for the purposes of the film, a full 9 minute piece would have killed the dramatic flow of the scene and the film.

    • @thegreenpianist7683
      @thegreenpianist7683 6 років тому

      sAkram what?

    • @mehdizazoua7122
      @mehdizazoua7122 6 років тому +3

      sAkram Exactly bro! Thank you

    • @cranez006
      @cranez006 6 років тому +2

      Nail on the head. That's exactly what they did, and quite well, I must say.

    • @ukaszRozyo
      @ukaszRozyo 6 років тому

      the most popular vide :)

  • @andwhat5248
    @andwhat5248 4 роки тому +30

    Its the change from a major chord to a minor chord he hits at 1:07 that captivates my attention. Literally powerful.

  • @saido45
    @saido45 Рік тому +16

    I'm so glad they found a way to fit the coda in here even though they had to shorten it. This has been my favorite piece for so long and never one time has it failed to give me the chills.

  • @kingbernard_30
    @kingbernard_30 7 років тому +3904

    Not all heroes wear capes. One of them wore a Nazi uniform.

    • @miguelmartins9706
      @miguelmartins9706 7 років тому +280

      King Bernard A German officer uniform you mean.

    • @shezarr1668
      @shezarr1668 7 років тому +415

      The Wehrmacht wasn't affiliated with the Nazi political party. It was the German Army of the time.

    • @emilyvivian3302
      @emilyvivian3302 6 років тому +171

      Héctor D P I agree...im half Austrian and half Kiwi...both my Austrian grandparents fathers served in the war...they were forced to...it was either keep their family safe or die...

    • @perpetualconfusion5885
      @perpetualconfusion5885 6 років тому +256

      you're half fruit?

    • @tonymaccaroni1683
      @tonymaccaroni1683 6 років тому +232

      Many Germans risked their lives to save jews from their own government. Being ruled by evil forces doesn't mean that all people living inside thise regime have lost all their humanity.

  • @jackzhang631
    @jackzhang631 8 років тому +42

    loves how his nose turns red whenever it faces light.

    • @Homeboy8227
      @Homeboy8227 8 років тому +10

      I always thought that was such a nice detail, definitely helped add to the starving and hiding jew image

    • @ryanricks3002
      @ryanricks3002 4 роки тому +2

      that actor just has huge nose lol like a beak .. but he was cool in king Kong

    • @danielw5850
      @danielw5850 3 роки тому +1

      All credit to the Director and the Cinematographer on this movie; those minute details can be overlooked, thinking the audience won't appreciate them, but this begs to differ :)

  • @roxanne4820
    @roxanne4820 2 місяці тому +1

    I've been playing piano for over a decade and Ballad 1 is one piece I keep coming back to and will always have a special place in my heart. It was by are the most loved piece that people tipped me for the most when I played in public. I think it has a special place in everyone's hearts.

  • @water.8622
    @water.8622 Рік тому +6

    Who else could compose pain so beautifully?

  • @rudiratlos8493
    @rudiratlos8493 10 років тому +16

    Actually, I consider this one of the most powerful and moving scenes in cinema history. I've got to watch this over and over again.

  • @hayajbee6679
    @hayajbee6679 7 років тому +54

    RIP Hosenfeld

  • @iNTERS22
    @iNTERS22 5 років тому +7

    I bet when Chopin wrote this piece, he had no idea that one day it could save someone's life!

  • @thehaseeb9136
    @thehaseeb9136 4 роки тому +5

    This piece is a literal interpretation of how at first he was living a elegant happy life and then life full of sorrows and disturbances 😔

  • @lucassouza5370
    @lucassouza5370 8 років тому +646

    Captain Wilm Hosenfeld, great human being

    • @muhammadaqsathfaza9532
      @muhammadaqsathfaza9532 7 років тому +50

      and sadly he's died in soviet labour camp

    • @alexandrasoroca8868
      @alexandrasoroca8868 7 років тому +7

      The prisoners built houses, if that's of any consolation for you. They built houses to replace the ones their army had previously levelled to the ground. One of my friends lives in such a house built by German prisoners. It's very quiet, I love sleeping there.

    • @lucassouza5370
      @lucassouza5370 7 років тому

      +Jorsh Jager He didn't hate, so...who cares?

    • @_ivanche
      @_ivanche 7 років тому

      This is the niceist movie i ever seе!!! I аdvise еverybody to watch it :) twitter.com/fb99d4e69bafa7667/status/795841699654213632 Chopin Bаllаde in G Minor Scеne TТTТhe Pianist

    • @MilkHS
      @MilkHS 7 років тому

      stfu

  • @bengarcia8202
    @bengarcia8202 7 років тому +111

    when the captain turns away after adrien brody starts playing....he knew what was coming

  • @epicablaze
    @epicablaze 4 місяці тому +2

    I had seen this scene before, but returning home from week abroad I decided to sit through the plane ride and watch this magnificent work. Hours of awe. This scene struck me in a way I could not, and still cannot describe. That moment will never repeat itself for me, but I only hope it can for every human being on this planet. Emotionally perfection, beauty incarnate.

  • @Brendon_Xu_The_Big_B
    @Brendon_Xu_The_Big_B 2 роки тому +4

    2:50 The transition to the coda is clean

  • @alexand191
    @alexand191 7 років тому +29

    i remember the first time i saw this movie, I was so disturbed. Such a beautiful scene..

  • @mykeegetsit
    @mykeegetsit 5 років тому +4

    Just watched this on netflix 2mins ago, been wanting to watch it for a long time, and its one of my favorite songs to listen to.

    • @drainpig894
      @drainpig894 5 років тому

      I just watched it on Netflix too. I found it very moving, glad I took the time.

  • @riderktm16
    @riderktm16 Рік тому +4

    If you don’t admire this moment you’re not human

  • @Li-wt8hi
    @Li-wt8hi 8 років тому +25

    When he plays, I have the impression that he speaks about the war. The
    quiet period then when everything crowds then calms down him but the
    horror of the war returns. I have difficulty in putting words
    on what this play makes me feel...
    sorry for the bad english ( French people )

  • @gulnarsahmarova6941
    @gulnarsahmarova6941 10 років тому +75

    I watched many times, but I can watch over and over ...my best

  • @zoeyeung1175
    @zoeyeung1175 4 роки тому +5

    I love how the piano is not quite in tune but it makes his playing more emotional

  • @dmtdreamz7706
    @dmtdreamz7706 5 місяців тому +3

    Then I heard a new sound: a living sound, like the richest, most complex, most beautiful piece of music you've ever heard. Growing in volume as a pure white light descended, it obliterated the monotonous mechanical pounding that, seemingly for eons, had been my only company up until then. The light got closer and closer, spinning around and around and generating those filaments of pure white light that I now saw were tinged, here and there, with hints of gold.

  • @AestheticMotivation-jb7jr
    @AestheticMotivation-jb7jr 8 років тому +67

    This piece is composed by a genius composer as it's Chopin, who else could be!

  • @josephsaliba79
    @josephsaliba79 10 років тому +26

    this film is a master piece....

  • @gabrielcallejasgil1227
    @gabrielcallejasgil1227 5 місяців тому +3

    The captain hosenfeld was the BEST german person, he didn t deserve to die😢

  • @sayash_7
    @sayash_7 Рік тому +2

    when i watched this movie for first time, i liked this piece and scene. not anything more,took it just as a scene and music too, as i didn't knew about what composition and whose composition. but recently i came to know about this piece and it is soo emotional how i was not able to remember i heard it somewhere but didn't knew where and when. now i came to know it was the same peice in this movie. back then i didn't get the greatness of this, but now it hits very different.

  • @AlmondRed
    @AlmondRed 6 років тому +67

    Did he think the Nazi wouldn't notice that he cut the piece short

    • @AustinFVIXV
      @AustinFVIXV 5 років тому +17

      AlmondRed Lol, the actual piece is 10 minutes long and i dont think youd want to watch 10 minutes of this piece, as beautiful as it is, it gets the point across the way it is

    • @drainpig894
      @drainpig894 5 років тому +8

      Just to reiterate what someone else said, this officer was not a member of the Nazi party, it's an important distinction, because a Nazi would not have saved him, however much he appreciated the music, well, that's if they were capable of appreciating anything beautiful, questionable, eh?

    • @miravespania
      @miravespania 4 роки тому

      Wahaha lol people wouldntwant to see the full 10 mins of this cos its not the main point

    • @nitra01
      @nitra01 4 роки тому +1

      They cut it in a way where no happy parts of the piece are heard

    • @user-jc6jz8mz8y
      @user-jc6jz8mz8y 4 роки тому

      bountY the part they cut out sounds too happy/triumphant to me. It’s a shame, I really like that part

  • @danjtitchener
    @danjtitchener 10 років тому +15

    And I thought the pressure was on when playing Chopin for piano exams....

  • @user-eg4zk5ko3o
    @user-eg4zk5ko3o Рік тому +3

    Chopin was almost a profit of music. He was expressing the dark hour that was about to come, unconsciously.. being polish & all.

  • @eliasascui5981
    @eliasascui5981 6 місяців тому +3

    Such a powerful, amazing scene!!

  • @10mimu
    @10mimu 8 років тому +152

    They should've let the A major section, not skip half of the piece, even if time is sparing in the film

    • @agamaz5650
      @agamaz5650 6 років тому +15

      agreed i was dissapointed

    • @hlardi4329
      @hlardi4329 6 років тому +3

      Human Effigy parts of the song was skipped since when szpilman was actually playing it he played only half then a tank interrupted it
      After the war he continied the other half

    • @Jonbo117
      @Jonbo117 6 років тому +1

      Red Icarus Two different songs bro.

    • @nandoflorestan
      @nandoflorestan 6 років тому

      Yeah, I expected more from Polanski. You don't shoosh the most magnificent genius of your own country like that. Completely ruins the film for me -- the disrespect of watering down one of the most important aspects of the story.

  • @LiamCuthbert
    @LiamCuthbert 7 років тому +47

    the reality of war is the only thing that determines your enemy is the flag they bare, if not for that flag, would you still call them an enemy? or a potential friend? even potential loved one? Sometimes we all just need to take a step back and listen, music bares no flag and the language it speaks can be interpreted by all.

  • @ShirleyLyMusic
    @ShirleyLyMusic Рік тому +24

    This scene inspired me to start composing classical music when I was 15. Without this scene, I would have never started.

  • @nikiiankov7566
    @nikiiankov7566 3 роки тому +3

    Art is stronger than war! The music, the scene, the silence at the end!

  • @knoxmoon3568
    @knoxmoon3568 8 років тому +9

    This movie made my heart bleed. Ive never been so grateful for the hand Ive been dealt.

  • @monsieurcandie8894
    @monsieurcandie8894 10 років тому +68

    This scene is so powerfull, the Jew playing the piano next to a Nazi officer, playing a melancholy song, expressing all his sorrows, his frustrations through the piano and the officer just admiring him in silence.. i will always remember this movie!! i really have no words to describe how i feel about it

  • @user-rf3dd1mj4v
    @user-rf3dd1mj4v 5 років тому +2

    Many thought Hosenfeld didn't kill Szpilman, because of this scene. But in real life, Hosenfeld was a German officer who helped and saved many Jews. He never had any intentions to harm Szpilman from the beginning.

  • @alisson3306
    @alisson3306 4 місяці тому +1

    In this scene it is possible to see that he can express all the possible feelings of a human being, through music.

  • @momonkeymoproblems4633
    @momonkeymoproblems4633 10 років тому +217

    I found it hard to believe the pianist's fingers would move so fluidly after being in the cold for such a long time, especially after months of not playing. Brilliant scene but would have been better if he had started playing a bit rougher then progressing to the perfect climax. Considering he was playing for his life, a rougher start would have added to the tension before the office took his seat.

    • @momonkeymoproblems4633
      @momonkeymoproblems4633 10 років тому +3

      *officer

    • @selmeczy-tamas
      @selmeczy-tamas 10 років тому +55

      Hi! You may be right, but I think there was enough tension in this scene, more tension might have been too arty. Anyway it is just a film, otherwise the piano itself would have been untuned in the given circumstances. But all these things are not important, the message comes over, and touches the heart..

    • @momonkeymoproblems4633
      @momonkeymoproblems4633 10 років тому +5

      Tamás Selmeczy Very true. My ability in suspension of disbelief has taken a battering from the nonsense that gets spewed from Hollywood, I shouldn't let it spoil a genuine masterpiece :)

    • @LisztianGR
      @LisztianGR 10 років тому +15

      You do well not to believe. In reality, Władysław Szpilman played the Nocturne in C-sharp minor. No way he'd be able to perform the Ballade in such a bad condition.

    • @LordAntherion
      @LordAntherion 10 років тому +5

      Hi! Considering from the playing for his life aspect you may be right. But as you said, it's been a very long time since he last played. He couldn't have started rougher than he did. Imagine you 're back home from a war that lasted for months and you meet your beloved wife after so long. And you use your fingers to remember how her skin feels. How rougher would you have started mate...? ;)

  • @CristianPintea
    @CristianPintea 10 років тому +14

    Playing for his life :) Amazing scene!

  • @CalculationNation
    @CalculationNation 9 місяців тому +1

    He explained all his troubles and Sorrows through that piano to the officer......TOP NOTCH ACTING

  • @DipankarGhosh007
    @DipankarGhosh007 Місяць тому +1

    The moment when spillman lost his family made a grown man like me cry. I binged a lot of wwii movies after watching saving private ryan.

  • @Techsystemes
    @Techsystemes 8 років тому +6

    One of the best movies I've ever seen. This scene still gives me goose bumps.