The Movie That Faked Its Death (And Got Away With It)

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  • Опубліковано 3 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 90

  • @cyrilkamal
    @cyrilkamal Рік тому +35

    Oh, that casual smile and those restless eyes, Orson.

  • @OrdinaryThings
    @OrdinaryThings Рік тому +25

    really good video about my favourite late night movie to watch when everyone else has gone to sleep. love the description of the score as something you might hear at a Clown's Funeral.

  • @leoinsf
    @leoinsf Рік тому +18

    In my book, The Third Man is one of the greatest movies ever made.
    Once seen, the originality makes this movie "stick!"
    The music is so original. It becomes the "conscience" of the film.
    Americans need to see the movie to get a sense of "post-war Europe."
    Orson was great, but so was Joseph Cotton and Alida Valli.
    Seeing it one summer at 12 years of age, the emotions I felt forced me to ask my Mom for another quarter so I could go back to see it again just to figure it out.
    In my book it is one of the greatest movies ever made! Once seen, never forgotten!!!

  • @mandolindleyroadshow706
    @mandolindleyroadshow706 Рік тому +43

    A detail about the cinematographer, Robert Krasker, was he was the original DP on David Lean's Great Expectations (1946). Early in the shoot, there were complaints that Krasker was not getting enough contrast onto the screen (too much gray). Lean was so disappointed by the dailies, he had Krasker fired and replaced by Guy Green (who won the Oscar for best cinematography). Bob Krasker was so upset about being fired and loss of reputation, he went to town on The Third Man and cranked up his contrast levels to eleven, proving David Lean wrong.

  • @KrazeeKrab
    @KrazeeKrab Рік тому +18

    Loved this video.
    My grandparents grew up in Vienna during the time the movie was shot.
    You did both the city and the movie justice!

  • @CannoliRose
    @CannoliRose Рік тому +10

    Well dang! This is proof that UA-cam has issues with how it does it's thing! You've been around for years, and I've never heard of this channel until today, thanks to a shout out from Ordinary Things! And I have been actively looking for content like this and UA-cam just pushes the same content creators over and over! So glad I know you exist!!
    This video is top notch, the opening was perfect! That needs to be on shirt, haha! Your voice is perfect for this subject; I'm usually futzing about with my video games, drawing or cleaning, so when someone has a voice that is easy to listen to it makes everything else I'm doing more enjoyable. I also appreciate how this video is staged outside instead of in a house, haha! I sometimes get distracted with the background and decorations in a the house/room of other UA-camrs. I appreciate the time you took in making this video!! I'm excited for each video you make! I'm now looking forward to watching this movie again with a whole new perspective! A million thanks!!
    Would you be willing to look into Laugh Clown, Laugh? 1928, Starring Lon Chaney and Loretta Young.
    It is still one of the most captivating and beautiful movies I've ever seen that really empathized the beauty and sorrow of unrequited love.

  • @jennymccollom8198
    @jennymccollom8198 Рік тому +13

    Great line at the end, that boldness last! I love this movie and you did a great analysis of it.

  • @rwrynerson
    @rwrynerson 3 місяці тому +1

    My favorite film from the time I first saw it in 1965. Later, the U.S. Army assigned me to Berlin, and I saw it with Berliners and German film students. It lost a bit on the dialogue dubbed in German and I realized that the original version with foreign languages untranslated was part of the mystery. It was so powerful in other ways that I don't think the Berlin audience missed anything. In December 1970 I visited Vienna, and it was as cold and damp as the film portrays. The people were warm, and the food was good.

  • @buildingblockparty7380
    @buildingblockparty7380 Рік тому +8

    I don't normally subscribe to a channel after just one viewing of one's work, but you got me. Absolutely excellent.
    And personally, I think that "The Third Man" is a much better film than "Casablanca".

    • @johnstephen7610
      @johnstephen7610 2 місяці тому +1

      Agreed. "Casablanca" is a fun film to watch, but really it's just Bogie (like John Wayne films are just John Wayne). "The Third Man" goes way beyond "Casablanca"; it one of the finest films I've ever seen.

  • @curtpeterson7386
    @curtpeterson7386 Рік тому +3

    It's amazing the great films that Orson Welles was either in or created, and had difficulty being in or creating them. Despite budget concerns, studio interference or his ability to sometimes just finish a film, Welles left a distinguishable fingerprint on everything he came in contact with.
    Maybe the fact he strayed from the university trappings in favor of gaining an education roaming foreign countries and mixing with dignitaries gave him the ability to make films with the same intrigue and flavor those places brought him.
    We'll be lucky to find another personality with as much character and ability as Welles in this era.
    Personally, he's one of my favorite 3 directors along with Hitchcock and Ford.

  • @pierremartineau9179
    @pierremartineau9179 Рік тому +2

    This young man has done his research,knows what he’s talking about, and it shows. Great work! I’m going to be a follower...

  • @jon780249
    @jon780249 Рік тому +5

    Let’s not forget how great Trevor Howard is in the movie as well.

    • @teijaflink2226
      @teijaflink2226 8 місяців тому

      Yeah and he's in another great movie that is worth checking out Brief encounter.

  • @pmichael73
    @pmichael73 Рік тому +7

    Good insights told without critical BS. Thank you!

  • @welshskies
    @welshskies Рік тому +7

    Without doubt my favourite film, a perfect ten! In 1987 I was visiting Vienna and had a spare afternoon so went to see a matinee of The Third Man, there were only a dozen people in the cinema, it was a magical experience. My father served in the British army of occupation in 1945-46 and as a child in the 1950/60s I knew real life personalities just like Major Calloway and Sergeant Paine.

  • @chrisperry7963
    @chrisperry7963 Рік тому +3

    Oh man, how I love this movie! Great job! In my eyes, a perfect film; all the elements come together. And savagely funny as well.

  • @georgelaing2578
    @georgelaing2578 Рік тому +1

    I enjoyed your "mini-lecture" on one
    of my favorite films. Being a very
    old person, I have time to see it 50
    or more times; very often in theaters.
    I was stationed in Germany in the
    early 50's, so that lent a certain
    special tone to my viewings.
    I am now one of your subscribers
    and am looking forward to future
    videos.

  • @spmoran4703
    @spmoran4703 Рік тому +7

    Harry Lime is the best villain ever . Far better than The Joker and all them .
    Harry is believable.

  • @elichilton7031
    @elichilton7031 Рік тому +11

    Well done. Again you managed to cut between your own commentary, doc footage, and clips from the film, and you cut it all together while presenting us with your admiration for this classic.

  • @FrickFrack
    @FrickFrack Рік тому +3

    I have seen more than 2000 movies. The Third Man was one of the best.

  • @alexanderkarayannis6425
    @alexanderkarayannis6425 Рік тому +1

    Thank you very much for your brilliant analysis of this film, for the catchy title to the video, and your fresh look into a movie that has been talked about for over 74 years and still manages to fascinate viewers to this day...

  • @Tordogor
    @Tordogor Рік тому +3

    Fir ne, these three films are in a tie as the best movies ever:
    * The Third Man (Carol Reed, 1949)
    * Citizen Kane (Orson Welles, 1941)
    * The Searchers (John Ford, 1956)
    I love those movies. I watch them anytime, anywhere I have the opportunity.
    Similarly, Wyler's 'Ben-Hur', Hitchcock's 'North by Northwest', and Kubrick's '2001: An Space Odissey' are also huge favorites.
    I have lost count of how many times I have seen them.
    Very good video!!👍👏
    Subscribed!

  • @richardking3206
    @richardking3206 Рік тому +3

    This is often recognised as the greatest British film ever made. I’d go further and say it’s one of the greatest films ever made, never mind British. There’s an argument that it is certainly the best Film Noir ever made. Of course, Americans might not like that a non-US film might take that title, I dare say.

  • @hughjainisis1683
    @hughjainisis1683 10 місяців тому +1

    I can't remember where I heard this, but someone described this film as the 'anti-Casablanca'. Casablanca is about the U.S. waking up and doing the right thing by getting involved in the war. The Third Man is like a message to the Americans that they don't know what they've gotten themselves into by entering the global power struggle after the war, particularly in Europe.

  • @knitterscheidt
    @knitterscheidt 2 місяці тому

    I was introduced to this film as a child due to it was my father's favorite and we would watch it on the local old movie tv station. Too young to understand it completely but I appreciated the beauty of the film. The scene of the stairway and the parrot would appear in my dreams. Also, I thought the landlady was my German grandmother which made my father chuckle. She has several humorous lines in the movie which are untranslated. An example, something like, "this is an upstanding house, a Metternich has visited here", or, "liberation yes, but such a liberation I never imagined". Americans shouldn't see this film to learn about postwar Europe but instead to learn how Americans were perceived by postwar Europe, which is perhaps still true today.

  • @pepelemoko01
    @pepelemoko01 Рік тому +1

    Like Casablanca the audience is left with that uncomfortable feeling that hero,doesn't always "get the girl"

  • @almost_harmless
    @almost_harmless Рік тому +1

    I love this movie. Always have. The atmosphere got me first, as I saw it when very young. Then the music. Later, I loved the story. It builds so slow, but so good. Subtle and mysterious.

  • @dskit7339
    @dskit7339 Рік тому +2

    The music is jaunty but somehow empty....soulless. And perfect.

  • @Kermit_T_Frog
    @Kermit_T_Frog Рік тому +1

    A good choice of an often overlooked film.

  • @richardmardis2492
    @richardmardis2492 3 місяці тому

    Well done- best review of this movie that I’ve seen in a while.

  • @maxzeecoolguy
    @maxzeecoolguy Рік тому

    You keep making these, I'll keep watching them

  • @funkyalfonso
    @funkyalfonso Рік тому

    This has always been my favourite movie for so many reasons. Great analysis, liked and subbed.

  • @LawrenceWhite-mp9qe
    @LawrenceWhite-mp9qe 2 місяці тому +1

    Boldness Lasts !

  • @tobingallawa3322
    @tobingallawa3322 Рік тому

    11:59 I bought a postcard with the final shot of The Third Man about 15 years before I saw the movie. It did not say what it was from, just the image of him leaning on the cart, the girl, and trees to the horizon.
    I must have seen this movie two or three dozen times, you notice little things when you watch it over and over. The Third Man is my favorite movie. Fallen Idol is also great

  • @dennisgreene7164
    @dennisgreene7164 6 місяців тому

    Great analysis of one of my all time favourite films. Thankyou.

  • @mollyfilms
    @mollyfilms Рік тому

    Great video, you get this film 100% and your film really works spot on for the telling of the story. Love this film!

  • @michaelcolleary8245
    @michaelcolleary8245 Рік тому

    Beautifully done. Thank you.

  • @petenorton883
    @petenorton883 Рік тому

    A very good analysis of one of my favourite films

  • @jaewok5G
    @jaewok5G Рік тому +1

    I couldn't believe how much I enjoyed that movie when I finally saw it. I think of another film at the same time similar but very different, the shadow version of the 3rd Man … "One, Two, Three"

  • @jacko.6625
    @jacko.6625 Рік тому

    "playful, yet nostalgic, like something you would play at a clown's funeral"---subscribed

  • @jasonchambers4495
    @jasonchambers4495 Рік тому

    Thanks. This was great.

  • @dcdad556
    @dcdad556 Рік тому

    My only objection: the last shot: those trees are denuded, bare, clean as a whistle from leaves and yet leaves fall. I've seen this film numerous times for decades and never noticed that until recently.

  • @walterbenjamin1386
    @walterbenjamin1386 5 місяців тому

    I think Anna Schmidt was the most poignant and noble character. She remained uncorrupted and uninvolved in the brutal slaughter. An artist who only performs comedy, she bravely walks off, rejecting all the corruption, pain and tragedy, but we know she's doomed. The Soviets will take her; they despise the Czechs, so her future is dark and unknown. Martins seems to me a commentary on the Europeans' view of Americans. No wars occurred there. Martins was boneheaded in his attempts to assert his "rights". He was innocence as stupidity. Anna was innocence as victim. One of the greatest films I've ever seen.

  • @mrb7094
    @mrb7094 Рік тому +5

    Wonderful click bait title to this video. Almost perfect in it's cynicism. Channelling Harry Lime perhaps? I hope so. Otherwise I can find no other explanation.

  • @normanmeharry58
    @normanmeharry58 4 місяці тому

    As you say , it's a movie that repays digging. The profundity of the resurrected imperfect messiah figure is something that interested Greene and reverbs in some of his writing.

  • @michaelcase8574
    @michaelcase8574 Рік тому

    Orson had a fantastic radio series in the 50s The Adventures of Harry Lime. It was out of England by Harry Allen Towers. Very well Witten, encompassing the spirit of the movie.

    • @merccadoosis8847
      @merccadoosis8847 20 днів тому

      That series and the tv show 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐓𝐡𝐢𝐫𝐝 𝐌𝐚𝐧 (1959 to 1965) which starred Michael Rennie helped prove that Holly Martins did NOT kill Harry Lime at the end. There were numerous hints throughout the movie which suggested this would be the final outcome.
      Overall, when compared with 𝐂𝐚𝐬𝐚𝐛𝐥𝐚𝐧𝐜𝐚, I'd say 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐓𝐡𝐢𝐫𝐝 𝐌𝐚𝐧 was the better movie though by only a very slight margin as both were excellent.

    • @michaelcase8574
      @michaelcase8574 20 днів тому

      @merccadoosis8847 I agree. Both films were amazing. Movie making at the highest level.
      There was much doubt on the set of Casablanca with the actors that the movie was going to be successful. Lots of division among the actors and confusion over the shooting schedule.

  • @LouisEmery
    @LouisEmery Рік тому

    I made a point to visit the Prater amusement park when I visited Vienna 20 years ago.

  • @j.ascierto308
    @j.ascierto308 4 місяці тому

    the ending is amazing, but my only criticism there is, what's up with the falling leaves? It's winter, there are no leaves on any of the trees. And they're only falling immediately in front of the camera. Maybe Reed thought that a scene like that required more motion but--and i know this is like criticizing the mona lisa or kane (who do i think I am?)--but i would've preferred no leaves. Otherwise, a 99.9 percent perfect film

  • @rosieloomoonmcbeth3189
    @rosieloomoonmcbeth3189 Рік тому

    It has been too long. I must see it again…👏👏👏👏

  • @danschneider7531
    @danschneider7531 Рік тому +2

    Welles actually spent many years on radio and tv shows of the 60s and 70s claiming that he wrote and directed parts of the film, and the influence of Welles is allover the film. Fallen Idol uses some canted angles, but it's nowhere near in the class of 3rd Man, and even Fallen Idol is a bad aping of Welles' earlier films. Welles' DNA is all over the film, whereas Reed was a solid studio director. He never before nor after the film came within a light year of as great a film. Welles made great films regularly.

    • @TheSnowmanBKK
      @TheSnowmanBKK Рік тому

      Welles never claimed he helped direct The Third Man nor write any dialogue apart from the cuckoo clock speech. Peter Bogdanovich cleared this up several times.

    • @danschneider7531
      @danschneider7531 Рік тому

      @@TheSnowmanBKK Throughout the 60s and 70s Welles did tons of interviews on his career, on radio and tv, and he often claimed he played a greater role- I saw and heard this many times, and it was common knowledge that this was so. It was only after Welles' death that others started claiming he did not. Here and there, if on the spot, he'd waffle, but it's clear from any look at the works of Welles and reed that 3rd Man is Wellesian.
      In a similar way the original Planet Of The Apes has been de-Serlinged, even though the sctrpt has Serling's DNA all over it.

  • @ryklatortuga4146
    @ryklatortuga4146 Рік тому +1

    Solid film but the lack of anything about Cricket made me wonder if it was a really a British film at all.

  • @kevinjones4559
    @kevinjones4559 Рік тому

    Visit Vienna in midwinter and go to the Central Cemetery to see the settings in the film near the Soviet section. Take a Third Man tour in the dark, not a lot has changed.

  • @theLeftHandedDog
    @theLeftHandedDog 6 місяців тому

    This film is definitely one of my favorites too. Just for the hell of it, here are a few random criticisms. These are mostly of the script, though, not the film.
    In the opening scene, the Porter says he only knows a little English, but he proceeds to lay out the events explaining Lime's absence pretty clearly.
    The idea of the unexpected death is a clever way to open the story, but the roles that Lime's accomplices play are those of clumsy and amateurish villains. I don't know much about the professionalism of British soldiers, when they were stationed in Vienna - following the war - but it seems unlikely Lime's little troupe could have gotten away with their plan, even if it were it not for Martins, inadvertently helping Calloway. He'd already made good progress, right? It's also a bit of bad planning on the part of Lime; wouldn't he have been better to let things settle down a bit, after his "death", before inviting Martins over to reconnect with him?
    At the meeting on the bridge, the doctor rolls up on his goofy-looking bicycle, and the three friends of Lime don't make an especially menacing trio. Only Popescu seems like someone you'd want to avoid in a dark alley. The remark about "you'll never be able to teach these Austrians to be good citizens" always struck me as peculiar; Do Austrians have a reputation for lawlessness I should know about? Or did the Romanians have some kind of ongoing feud with the Austrians, for some reason?
    I always feel slightly short-changed by Anna's reaction when she learns that Lime isn't dead. Wouldn’t that be astonishing news - and cause for incredible joy from her? She reacts as if she's found an earring she lost in the bathroom. I'd even say it's strange how unmoved she is by Lime’s disappearance in the first place; when Martins meets her backstage at the Josefstadt theater, she's practically indifferent. That’s an odd part of the story; why wouldn't Lime have told her of his plan in the first place? - he trusted his male friends, after all. It's hard to believe he would've wanted to ditch her.
    I've read too many narratives comparing the humble, bumbling American, embodied by Martins' out-of-place character, with the old-world cynicism and sophistication of the Europeans, captured by Anna’s stoicism and the behavior of nearly all the other characters. I just don't get that. Are we Americans really the naive simpletons everyone seems to think? I guess in this film, the answer’s yes. Come to think of it, I think Greene was British, so that might explain it.
    There’s one other scene that’s always bothered me; when Calloway takes Martins to the bar, when they first meet, there’s a really lousy bit of continuity, with Martins getting punched in one direction but then hitting the ground in the other.
    Factoid; In the final shot, they had guys up on very high fire department ladders, dropping a few leaves. P.S. These are all just nit-picky things; the story works beautifully and I wouldn’t change a thing.

    • @randolphpinkle4482
      @randolphpinkle4482 2 місяці тому

      Austrians were deeply impacted by WW2 and the reverberations can be felt today. There are YT videos about how WW2 changed Austrians in some negative ways. Worth a watch. I'd say that in 1949, Austria was exactly like The Third Man shows it to be, almost like PTSD, with everyone just trying to survive in any way they can. The amorality would have been characteristic like a hangover from the most devastating war of all time.

    • @randolphpinkle4482
      @randolphpinkle4482 2 місяці тому

      And to your question: " Are we Americans really the naive simpletons everyone seems to think?" The answer, sadly, would be in the affirmative. That a fraudster like Trump could grift and con so many gullible Americans speaks VOLUMES.

  • @trevorfoley4930
    @trevorfoley4930 Рік тому

    I generally detest when essayists cut to themselves in their essays (it undermines the feeling of being transported), but you pulled it off.

  • @macsnafu
    @macsnafu Рік тому +5

    Wait--how did the movie "fake" its death???

    • @FrickFrack
      @FrickFrack Рік тому +2

      It's makes more sense after you see the movie.

    • @macsnafu
      @macsnafu Рік тому +1

      @@FrickFrack I've seen the movie and enjoyed it. So how did the *movie,* not a character in the movie, fake its death?

    • @FrickFrack
      @FrickFrack Рік тому

      @@macsnafu The movie contains a death. But it turns out the death was faked. So the movie contains a "fake death". Or you could say the moved faked the death that it contains. Faked it's portrayed death. Faked it's death.
      Yes, the logic is stretched and the phrasing is odd. But I think the video name is intended to be intriguing but not too much of a spoiler.
      My best guess.

  • @durasaxon5131
    @durasaxon5131 Рік тому

    I had the advantage of being
    in single-digit years in the
    1960's.
    I turned 10 years old at the end
    of November 1968
    So many great movies
    were being shown on
    regular commercial TV
    that was devoid of
    the Cable Systems.
    Think of it this way...
    'The Jazz Singer'
    appeared in 1929?
    (The first 'Talkie')
    As a child I was able to see
    40 years of movies
    in short order.
    Can you imagine seeing
    The Third Man
    through the eyes of a child?
    That's why it's called;
    Movie Magic.
    As I used my imagination
    it ran away with me.
    Stark films of the Cold War Era
    as well / many in
    Black and White . 📽️ 📺
    I want to thank you for
    your analysis.
    Still, seeing certain classic movies
    through the eyes of a child
    and comprehending it
    is an interesting way of viewing it.
    + Durasaxon + ✝️
    One bit of advice?
    Try to find that moment to
    SMILE
    Yes, I truly appreciate your
    Point of View!

    • @durasaxon5131
      @durasaxon5131 Рік тому

      No. 432
      Jesus Christ is my Savior.
      Knights Code of Honor prayer
      March 6- 9, 2013.
      Having visited Europe
      I actually feel a connection
      to the lands of my ancestors.
      My family fought in Europe
      as American Servicemen in
      World War's 1 & 2
      Not everyone was as fortunate
      to have come home from
      these conflicts as is always
      present in War.
      War can take many forms.
      War is not an elective.
      War is an action of last resort.
      The Answer
      The answer to the question
      Jesus Christ is ____________ ?
      Is the answer to the question.
      Jesus Christ is the answer.
      © 2014. All Rights Reserved.
      by Dura Saxon/ Durasaxon
      Richard S.

  • @sambust3293
    @sambust3293 Рік тому

    At the 7:35 mark where the score is discussed I couldn't help but think of SpongeBob.

  • @willieluncheonette5843
    @willieluncheonette5843 Рік тому

    I wrote a lukewarm review of this on a movie site and boy did I get it from all sides. I should have worm a flak jacket...lol

  • @Certamaniac
    @Certamaniac 7 місяців тому

    I still don't understand why the video is titled what it is.

  • @Raneriu
    @Raneriu Рік тому

    Nice

  • @galrjkldd
    @galrjkldd Рік тому

    Can I get your feedback on pronunciation of Casablanca? it's supposed to Blahnca, but so many say Blanka. But Blahnca is the name of the place. just because some american actors couldn't properly pronounce it doesn't mean we should all fumble it too, does it?

  • @ldm8571
    @ldm8571 Рік тому

    Like in the movies Forbidden Plant and Deliverance, the sound track of The Third Man is inseparable from the movie. Take it away and the movie would feel flat, dull, soulless.

  • @TheSaltydog07
    @TheSaltydog07 7 місяців тому

    He didn't get away with it. He died like a rat in a sewer.

  • @Earl-z3t
    @Earl-z3t Місяць тому

    This Movie us my Favorite Thing. I have seen it many, many times. It's weird. You have to be on something-something, to see the movie for what it is. Maybe, Selznick's Crank?!
    This just came to me. Maybe, Holly is crazy/drugged? We only see Lime with Martens. Everyone talks ABOUT Harry Lime BUT we only ever see Holly talk TO him. Maybe? Still love it but it's weird. 😊

  • @TheSaltydog07
    @TheSaltydog07 Рік тому +1

    Graham Greene.

  • @rogerpropes7129
    @rogerpropes7129 Рік тому

    That notorious line maligning and mocking perfect little Switzerland, apropos of nothing and disgustingly coy, ruins the whole movie for me.

    • @HT-mt1hc
      @HT-mt1hc Рік тому

      A rather forced, wordy little (fake) history lesson Wells came up with to underscore Lime’s callous self-justification. He actually seems to struggle a bit to keep the moment physically alive - backing away, fiddling with his glove (?) keys (?) - long enough to spit the line out. Doesn’t at all destroy the film for me. Lime is a criminal who would see the world through a distorted, lying lens. And probably no offense intended to Switzerland : )

  • @johnlittle3430
    @johnlittle3430 Рік тому +1

    Great piece on my favourite film, bar none.

  • @sherila4834
    @sherila4834 Рік тому

    Terrific job! Not clickbait at all (it's a spoiler if we say why the name of the video suits the movie). Or you can Google "Harry Lime"-an unforgettable, unique character in an unforgettable, unique film. For a similar postwar city location film w the opposite (much more optimistic) tone, also take a look at Roman Holiday.

  • @vipermad358
    @vipermad358 Рік тому +1

    Film snobs have taken over from Classical Music Snobs as the snobbiest pretentious snobs in the Snobby Arts. 😂