Uncle Boris talks about art with Sammy Fabelman, from Steven Spielberg movie "The Fabelmans"
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- Опубліковано 6 січ 2023
- Subtitle: Serbian
Uncle Boris talks about art with Sammy Fabelman,from Steven Spielberg movie "The Fabelmans".
Growing up in post-World War II era Arizona, young Sammy Fabelman aspires to become a filmmaker as he reaches adolescence, but soon discovers a shattering family secret and explores how the power of films can help him see the truth.
“We’re like junkies and art is our drug.”
Damn. Speech really hits home.
The best scene in the whole movie ❤️❤️💔💔
Absolutely. It was by far the best scene for me & others struggling to fully embrace our Art.
Having an Uncle Morris show up to absolutely terrify and supporting our choice to be an artist. ❤
What a Messenger!!
Such a beautiful monologue.
Black belt acting. Best acting I've seen since watching there will be blood and training day
Just watched this movie. It has been a long while that I could sit through a whole movie without wanting to take a break. Speilberg still has it. This scene is so true for anyone that does the arts. It doesn't matter what kind.
All are connected. When he says Art is no game, it as dangerous as a lions mouth.
What a scene.
The scene that got him the Oscar nomination
You know, because it is his only scene😂
As opposed to all of those other scenes he was in?
William Hurt was only in A History of Violence for ten minutes..and he got an Oscar nomination back in 2006...
He's not lying about Art not being a game. He's completely right about art being as dangerous as a lion's mouth
💔💔
I can’t believe that UA-cam doesn’t offer to rent this movie instead of price-gouging the public nearly $26 to buy it. Forget it.
I got it for $2 from a Redbox machine to own, best $2 I ever spent.
LOL he basically played the same character he played in Independence Day
On the nose dialog + over acting + stereotypes = 7 Oscar noms?!
Brilliant film though
Which movie are you describing because it's not this one.
@@proman84 "The Fabelmans received seven nominations at the 95th Academy Awards, including Best Picture, but failed to win any"
@@apollocobain8363 What does this have to do with it being a fantastic film? I was referring to the left part of your post. Cute seeing you go from implying that 7 nominations is a lot to downplaying them in the next reply.