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The End

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  • Опубліковано 17 бер 2012
  • Great movie ending for TSWNN March 16, 2012 Part Two

КОМЕНТАРІ • 134

  • @allangilchrist5938
    @allangilchrist5938 3 роки тому +53

    The tenderness shown in this scene by Sydney Carton towards the frightened little innocent seamstress is so very moving. It is true, anything in life can be faced with someone who supports you with loving kindness.

    • @jackiereynolds2888
      @jackiereynolds2888 2 роки тому +1

      Allan - you share your sur-
      name with a very favorite actress of mine.
      'Connie Gilchrist'.

    • @allangilchrist5938
      @allangilchrist5938 2 роки тому

      @@jackiereynolds2888 Hello Jackie, Sorry I didn't respond sooner. Thank you for your reply. Although I've always loved films, I don't think I know the actress you name. Perhaps it's just the name I'm not familiar with. Best Regards, Allan.

    • @helencampbell2064
      @helencampbell2064 Рік тому +3

      Just watched the ending of this true classic. I was fighting back tears.

  • @SilviaFernandez-kk7nh
    @SilviaFernandez-kk7nh 6 років тому +31

    A crime that Ronald Colman wasn’t even nominated for an Oscar that year. He was brilliant-the embodiment of Dicken’s character.

  • @lbroderick783
    @lbroderick783 10 років тому +64

    Love this version of A Tale of Two Cities. Especially love Ronald Coleman and his beautiful voice.

    • @lbroderick783
      @lbroderick783 8 років тому +3

      Isabel Beckerman
      I remember reading this book in school. This movie depicts the book so well. Sir Ronald Colman (not aware he was knighted until you mentioned it) was a great actor, good looking, and had that beautiful voice. I could probably listen to him talk all day.

    • @chanel58style70
      @chanel58style70 5 років тому +4

      L Broderick why does it seem, at least to me, that these old movies seem so well done. I love the black and white classics.

    • @michaelsterref
      @michaelsterref 5 років тому +3

      A satin voice.

    • @helencampbell2064
      @helencampbell2064 Рік тому +1

      @@michaelsterref Most definitely.

  • @XX-gy7ue
    @XX-gy7ue 3 роки тому +18

    ONE OF THE MOST REMARKABLE SCENES EVER FILMED , A GREAT MOMENT IN THE HISTORY OF ART !

  • @Setebos
    @Setebos 10 років тому +88

    I always get a wrench in the heart watching or reading the scene between Carton and the Seamstress.

  • @AssinnippiJack
    @AssinnippiJack 8 років тому +55

    Ronald Colman made the role of Sidney Carton his own. Rich delivery with every scene whether humorous or melancholy; riveting as only Colman could do.

    • @thesoundofphonics7369
      @thesoundofphonics7369 6 років тому +5

      My favorite actor. What a voice. I think though it was more than that. There was always about him, a feeling of kindness - especially this role.

    • @debjoymusic
      @debjoymusic Рік тому +1

      Really Amazing..

  • @shashanksharma1498
    @shashanksharma1498 11 місяців тому +5

    I read the novel, gut wrenching

  • @debjoymusic
    @debjoymusic Рік тому +8

    No doubt the best adaptation. Watched it yesterday, What an acting, Coleman Deserved an Oscar for this.. each and every cast, the background Music are better than perfect....

  • @WillScarlet16
    @WillScarlet16 Рік тому +7

    My grandmother had a crush on Ronald Coleman; I used to watch this movie with her, and her admiration for him was still evident in her 80s. After she passed we went through her albums and found a signed photo of him in one of them, I never knew how she got it. She probably wrote a fan letter to him and just got a premade response, but I still wish I'd been able to ask her about it.

  • @bccabernet
    @bccabernet 9 років тому +39

    Love this movie! It's my favourite version. Ronald Colman who plays Sydney Carton (A Tale of Two Cities) is absolutely brilliant.

  • @girlhh3908
    @girlhh3908 Рік тому +5

    Oh that sweet kiss 😢

  • @jcoltrane8976
    @jcoltrane8976 3 роки тому +8

    Modern screen acting begins here with Colman’s performance; it is that good. Very naturalistic and understated. Brilliant film! Essential viewing!

  • @cjpreach
    @cjpreach 2 роки тому +6

    My favorite film version of this story. I've seen others that were good, but this is standard by which all others are measured.

  • @pamelacorona3665
    @pamelacorona3665 8 років тому +49

    Did you notice that his number was 23 ? As in Psalms 23 The LORD is my shepherd..... Yea , though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death , I will fear no evil : for thou art with me ; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me........

    • @OnlyKiska
      @OnlyKiska 8 років тому +3

      Lol you sound like my english teacher

    • @pamelacorona3665
      @pamelacorona3665 8 років тому +2

      ***** Wow ! Thanks , I was the teachers aid / teacher for K - 5 for 7 years at a Christian school. And I do love numbers they reveal alot about each of us and our situations. Peace and Love : )

    • @pamelacorona3665
      @pamelacorona3665 7 років тому +1

      Dave Bronstein No I don't gamble : )

    • @richardfey1988
      @richardfey1988 6 років тому +2

      Pamela Corona off with their heads CHEERS lol like

    • @amberlights1
      @amberlights1 6 років тому +2

      They will probably be used in FEMA camps on those who refuse to get chipped...refusing the mark of the antichrist in the hand or forehead.

  • @vincentdesapio
    @vincentdesapio 7 років тому +17

    I first heard Colman's voice when I was about 13 and A Tale of Two Cities was on TV. I wasn't paying much attention when I heard his voice. It was unlike any other voice I had heard up to that time. Not only is his voice the most beautiful I have ever heard, but he is uncanny because he pronounces every syllable of every word, yet makes it flow.

  • @Im____ltm
    @Im____ltm 3 роки тому +9

    They just don’t make films like this anymore ❤️ so beautiful

  • @flipdeedoo
    @flipdeedoo 8 років тому +26

    When I watched this in my humanities class I immediately had a crush on Sydney like he's so handsome

    • @richardfey1988
      @richardfey1988 6 років тому +3

      flipdeedoo good man having his head chopped off instead of.the.right person

    • @BS-hq6iz
      @BS-hq6iz 6 років тому +1

      flipdeedoo i wish my class would of read this book I had to find it on my own

    • @leilaqian6704
      @leilaqian6704 4 роки тому +1

      I watched this movie in the English class when I was in Senior 2. In the end I couldn’t help crying.

  • @manweelder4387
    @manweelder4387 8 років тому +14

    I love how it ends with that verse and Adeste Fideles playing in the background.

  • @jackr1779
    @jackr1779 3 роки тому +10

    It's a myth that the majority of those guillotined were the nobility, most of the nobility had already fled the country in 1789 & 1791. The majority of the victims were innocent, simple people, like the seamstress here, & belonging to trades that had seen the majority of there clientele flee. Also those unlucky enough to fall under suspicion. Awful event!

  • @davidwilliams3907
    @davidwilliams3907 4 роки тому +18

    What a great ending! There is hope. Jesus lives and so shall I.

    • @cvagresto
      @cvagresto 4 роки тому +5

      AMEN BROTHER! AS JESUS CHRIST SAID, THAT HE AND ONLY HE, IS THE WAY, THE TRUTH AND THE LIFE PEROID.

  • @SimonGrowl
    @SimonGrowl 10 років тому +18

    I can't get through this in one sitting. It is just too upsetting.

  • @Sueb18631
    @Sueb18631 2 роки тому +5

    It always surprised me that this movie didn't include a scene where Lucie finds out that Sydney saved Charles in the end.

  • @JonnyQ358
    @JonnyQ358 2 місяці тому

    What a shame it is that the youth of America today will never know the reward and pleasure of the great novels and books we of another generation grew up with..

  • @indrajithbeddewela9102
    @indrajithbeddewela9102 3 роки тому +3

    who is watching this 2020..🤘🎊

  • @roseconmatswatson5389
    @roseconmatswatson5389 3 роки тому +15

    Ronald Colman as Sydney Carton. Just an absolute tour de force as the lovable rouge who makes the ultimate sacrifice. It’s a timeless performance.

  • @Boxghost102
    @Boxghost102 8 років тому +15

    My favorite version; he steals the ending with his performance.

    • @cjpreach
      @cjpreach 5 років тому +1

      I have enjoyed several different movie and tv versions of this story, but this is by far my favorite, despite the limited technology. Coleman is just too good to pass by in this performance.

  • @jimmypeters
    @jimmypeters Рік тому +1

    Isabel Jewell as the seamstress, she also appeared with Ronald Colman in Lost Horizon(1937).

  • @Sueb18631
    @Sueb18631 9 років тому +38

    I was always very glad they ended the movie before the blade dropped. We really didn't need to see that...

    • @richardfey1988
      @richardfey1988 6 років тому

      Sueb18631 why not

    • @hemantkandari33
      @hemantkandari33 4 роки тому

      why

    • @PungiFungi
      @PungiFungi 3 роки тому

      I couldn’t watch the ed until I saw your comment.

    • @Sueb18631
      @Sueb18631 2 роки тому +1

      @@hemantkandari33 Because it would have broken the emotional peace of the ending.

    • @richardfey5574
      @richardfey5574 Рік тому

      Would be good to see blade as been mannequin anyway

  • @jamesford518
    @jamesford518 8 років тому +8

    The best of the several versions.

  • @ruthiehenshallfan99
    @ruthiehenshallfan99 10 років тому +8

    The women at the beginning of this clip is Lucile La Verne, who is most remembered for her dual role of the Queen and the Hag in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs!

  • @clairek28
    @clairek28 4 роки тому +7

    watched this in class and i cried at this part

    • @Sueb18631
      @Sueb18631 4 роки тому

      It's very sad but they did a great job with it! What did your class think of the movie?

  • @jackr1779
    @jackr1779 6 років тому +5

    Note the ominous sounding voice that calls for "twenty-three".....fantastic film.

  • @clydenolet736
    @clydenolet736 5 років тому +7

    The most beautiful scene. Never saw the movie. Never read the book i know the gist and I saw rhis in psychology class.. 10 years later it's still haunting

    • @Themanwhocameback2
      @Themanwhocameback2 3 роки тому +1

      50 years later for me, and it's still haunting.

    • @danaarden8373
      @danaarden8373 3 роки тому +3

      The book is a must read and was always my very favorite Dickens' work. The Ronald Colman version remains the definitive version (what a sonorous voice he had) and the movie's only flaw is that Donald Woods is miscast as Charles Darnay.

  • @racourdav
    @racourdav 5 років тому +4

    Saddest ending ever...and Ronald Coleman's voice and last words...haunting

    • @prospero4183
      @prospero4183 4 роки тому

      His death has worth and heroric, a sadder death would be if it was empty

  • @phillippercy2416
    @phillippercy2416 3 роки тому +5

    I almost cried during those ten seconds of carton and the seamstress.

  • @leecotton3242
    @leecotton3242 2 місяці тому

    My late husband’s voice. Thanks.

  • @henrywestin117
    @henrywestin117 10 років тому +3

    Adestes Fideles -come all ye faithful. The carol ties into the beginning of the movie, the scene where Carton goes to Midnight Mass with Lucie. I believe it suggests the religious theme: Carton has repented his whiskey guzzling, determined to sacrifice his life for another. He recalls his boyhood religion, especially "the resurrection and the life." He looks forward to a better rest in a better place.

  • @vincently1995
    @vincently1995 4 роки тому +2

    RIP Sydney Carton

  • @patricialytle8578
    @patricialytle8578 11 років тому +2

    I agree I've read the novel five times.

  • @elthe3rd
    @elthe3rd 3 дні тому

    It's emotional watching this and thinking about how different eras like the French Revolution and the Dark Ages had so many innocent people killed. Plus, films have changed today so much that they would never have a quote from the Bible at the end of a movie unless it was an Angel film or from the Kendrick Brothers.

  • @costernocht
    @costernocht 9 років тому +8

    The actress is Isabel Jewell. I think she grew up on a ranch in Wyoming.

    • @giauscaesar8047
      @giauscaesar8047 5 років тому +2

      How strange I was thinking during the video I wonder who she was & low and behold someone was about answer it.

    • @happytoknowjesus
      @happytoknowjesus 4 роки тому +1

      She was Emmy Slattery in Gone With the Wind!!!!

    • @costernocht
      @costernocht 4 роки тому

      @@happytoknowjesus That's right! Can you imagine a more different role?!

    • @mb-ob2ye
      @mb-ob2ye 6 місяців тому

      @@happytoknowjesusno way! Thanks for sharing!

  • @OnlyKiska
    @OnlyKiska 8 років тому +10

    Honestly the Dark Knight Rises is the only movie that gave a decent cover of this speech.

  • @yogirocket
    @yogirocket 3 роки тому +1

    A Great Movie!

  • @Herman47
    @Herman47 7 років тому +7

    Although I like another version more, I like the way this Tale of Two Cities movie ends, with Sidney Carton's last words being said as we look upward to the sky.

  • @alexthelizardking
    @alexthelizardking 6 років тому +1

    Press F to pay respect.

  • @butura55
    @butura55 11 років тому +1

    very,very good movie!!

  • @pauljulion
    @pauljulion 5 років тому

    Thank you 🙏🏽 this is what connected me! #HubbardHSAP #. Dr Sheldon

  • @moviemonk1000
    @moviemonk1000 10 років тому +4

    Blance Yurka ( Madame De Farge) was not here she was detained by Miss Pruss
    Montage by Jacques Tournier ? Colemans voice ah that was it

  • @DEMON-bc6vh
    @DEMON-bc6vh 5 років тому +6

    Know what? I love Carton more than Darnay

  • @Guardian208
    @Guardian208 9 років тому +1

    wish you could post the scene when they first meet in prison.

  • @anitaellenmcgee7430
    @anitaellenmcgee7430 6 років тому +2

    The only time you hear a real french accent is when that guy comes in for the roll call of those about to go to the Guillotine

  • @Themanwhocameback2
    @Themanwhocameback2 2 роки тому

    Oh, my God!

  • @gkgrimes2608
    @gkgrimes2608 10 років тому +4

    Message Spock?

  • @chloe_speaks2384
    @chloe_speaks2384 3 роки тому

    He doesn't even go here!

  • @radamspse
    @radamspse Місяць тому

    great ending to the movie, but how I hate the number 23 for a number of reasons

  • @KrisLovesMoviess
    @KrisLovesMoviess 11 років тому +1

    Man fuck that guillotine! Makes me so saaa "whaaaaaasa" :,(

  • @kopynd1
    @kopynd1 8 років тому

    has this movie got something to do with bankers

    • @Sueb18631
      @Sueb18631 7 років тому

      One of the characters works for a bank.

  • @jenniferchan5982
    @jenniferchan5982 6 років тому

    can anyone tell me the year of this film please

    • @leilaqian6704
      @leilaqian6704 5 років тому

      1958

    • @dickiefears5832
      @dickiefears5832 5 років тому +1

      Ignore the other date. That was with Dirk Bogarde. This version was made in 1935.

    • @charliewest1221
      @charliewest1221 2 роки тому +1

      @@leilaqian6704 : Certainly not! 1935.

    • @thomasjorge4734
      @thomasjorge4734 10 місяців тому +1

      ​@@charliewest1221Yes, the 1930's: the peak of the Golden Age of Hollywood.

  • @sportsmediaamerica
    @sportsmediaamerica 10 місяців тому

    What is TSWNN??? Isn't this ATOTC?

  • @DarthBias1
    @DarthBias1 9 років тому

    What movie is this ... ? A Tale of Two Cities ... ? TSWNN?

    • @Sueb18631
      @Sueb18631 7 років тому

      A Tale of Two Cities

    • @DarthBias1
      @DarthBias1 7 років тому +1

      I thought so but what does TSWNN stand for ... ?

    • @Sueb18631
      @Sueb18631 7 років тому

      Hm, sorry, I have no idea! Guess we'll have to ask the person who posted the video.

    • @dannycummings3258
      @dannycummings3258 6 років тому +1

      DarthBias1 I was wondering that myself.

  • @sussexacademy3921
    @sussexacademy3921 5 років тому

    barstools&busstops

  • @KidMillions
    @KidMillions 10 років тому

    I wonder if the bible quote was added not to upset believers, as it's technically suicide which is a sin.

    • @michaelshell3541
      @michaelshell3541 9 років тому +3

      In the novel, that quote is on a wall when Sydney carton decides to give his life. We wanders the streets repeating it in his mind as he gathers himself to make this sacrifice. They couldn't show him thinking to himself obviously, so they tagged it on at the end

    • @truebeliever6440
      @truebeliever6440 9 років тому +5

      *****
      There is simply nothing about this that is "suicide" or a "sin". You do not seem to understand the Christian notion of either. If you give your life for another, this is not a sin. Christ did the same. Sydney does this here.
      Suicide always pertains to alleviate your own suffering and ONLY your own suffering, not that of others.
      Anyhow, hope you'll figure out the difference.

    • @KidMillions
      @KidMillions 9 років тому +2

      +Matt M You're correct, I forgot the full context. It's a sacrifice of course.

    • @truebeliever6440
      @truebeliever6440 9 років тому +4

      +KidMillions
      Thanks for saying so. I view this story as very "Christian" in nature. Remember the "Reign of Terror" was largely Secularists purging Christianity as well as the Aristocrats. I just didn't want the important message here to be simplified as mere "suicide".
      Take care.

  • @garrykwaku8505
    @garrykwaku8505 5 років тому

    So sad that the young girl had to go to guillotine, she did nothing wrong. May the ones who send her go to hell. Buddha look on her with peace.

  • @henrywestin117
    @henrywestin117 10 років тому

    Carton was English, the illiterate seamstress French. How did they communicate?

    • @NETSY296
      @NETSY296 9 років тому +2

      en francais

    • @Sueb18631
      @Sueb18631 9 років тому +7

      In the book, Carton is fluent in French, and we can assume he's fluent in French in the movie, too.

    • @charliewest1221
      @charliewest1221 2 роки тому

      @@Sueb18631 : Yes, he schooled in France. He was a brilliant scholar.

  • @dianapalmerbrooks
    @dianapalmerbrooks 2 роки тому

    I lost a friend who died this past year of brain cancer. I went to the Dallas FBI to report my memory to defend Brett Kavanaugh.

  • @jenniferschillig3768
    @jenniferschillig3768 11 років тому

    Wonderful ending, but what the heck's with the Christmas carol at the end?! This doesn't take place during Christmas!
    It's the same as with the adaptation of David Copperfield that was (I think) made in the same year--despite the fact that no part of the story takes place at Christmas, they had a choir singing a carol over the opening credits. Maybe it's just because they figured audiences associated Dickens with Christmas?

    • @eamonnbyrne4118
      @eamonnbyrne4118 4 роки тому +3

      'Adeste Fideles' is sung at Midnight Mass earlier in the film when Sidney realises he is in love with Lucy and that he is unworthy of her love.

  • @nimsaranikoshi6729
    @nimsaranikoshi6729 3 роки тому

    sydeny carton is very brave but I didn't like this end