The Hateful Eight Christ Opening Scene plus Ennio Morricone's - L’Ultima Diligenza di Red Rock
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- Опубліковано 21 вер 2024
- Tarantino always in all his movies has marvelous opening scenes. The shot that zooms out of the Christ/Jesus on the cross statue is outstanding cinematography. The Hateful Eight sure does not disappoint when it comes to Tarantino opening scenes.
This video is not mine, all rights go to its rightful owners; Quentin Tarantino, The Weinstein Company, Double Feature Films, Film Colony, Ennio Morricone, Decca Records etc.
That moment on 3:02 when the name of Maestro appears and music explodes.
similar thing happens in pulp fiction's opening credits too. theme song changes when music supervisor's name appears on screen.
Always gets thunderous applause in the theater when his name pops up.
Rest in peace Maestro.
Coincidence, I think not?
Grande Maestro Morricone!!
RIP to one of the best composers ever. This is Ennio Morricone's finest piece of music.
Not his finest cause he was a genious and produced hundreds of masterpieces.
I'd have to disagree and say The Good, the Bad and the Ugly was his best but he damn well came close with this.
@@ejl1000 Cinema Paradiso is his most beautiful.
yep sad day for music lovers the world over...utter legend
Once Upon a Time in the West is where it's at
2016: it's ok movie
2020: it's good movie
2026 it's great movie
2040 : it's masterpiece
Nah its a masterpiece all the way
@@torsken7301 the word "masterpiece" is thrown around too easily these days. It's a good movie with an incredible cast but masterpiece is overstating it. A Fistful of Dollars, Once Upon a Time in the West, THOSE are masterpieces.
@@ReservoirPunk I havent seen those, so they may be better than hateful eight. I may also not have seen enough movies to evaluate what is a masterpiece and what is not, but what i do know is that this movie is my favorite. I cant really describe why, but i just love it. So yeah it might not be a masterpiece but its my favorite movie.
@@torsken7301 Wow, I'd definitely recommend watching the Dollars trilogy and Once Upon a Time in the West. You'll love them.
And nothing wrong with this being your favourite movie, it's a great flick. I just think "masterpiece" is a little too strong.
Hope you have fun watching those movies(if you do lol)
@@ReservoirPunk Fair enough. Ill have to give them a watch
Tarantino proves that an opening credit scene doesn't have to be flashy and complex to set the mood. All he shows is the setting and the Christ statue and with Ennio Morricone's score it helps develop this tense and scary feeling to the movie. On a side not, it's about time Ennio won an Oscar.
***** I didn't say he was the only guy to do it. It's just a rarity these days.
I know right!
I agree 100%.
+Jake Mitchell The font and colour of the font is pure Tarantino. I think that, almost more than the haunting score, hints at the luridness to come. Other directors would have used an elegant typeset to enhance the visuals. Tarantino dirties it up with the garish yellow font.
Leila Mars yellow font was i guess fit the period of Western genre films, I believe.
0:58 the way the music changes on "the 8th film of quentin tarantino" goosebumps every time
Same
The bassoon part is absolutely brilliant.
Please listen to this music, which is related to a South Indian movie, similar to the one - ua-cam.com/video/05Xz0x2wQF0/v-deo.html
A highly UNDERRATED film for me, it's bound to become a cult classic.
Mad Max and Hateful8 ... good year .
I find somewhat fascinating how some acclaimed mainstream filmmakers released strange movies these last few years and despite the strangeness all of those movies have a weird quality in them in which they seem to be bound to become cult classics.
They are: Quentin Tarantino's "The Hateful Eight", Paul Thomas Anderson's "Inherent Vice", Joel and Ethan Coen's "Inside Llewyn Davis" (maybe even "Hail, Caesar!"), Martin Scorsese's "Silence", Charlie Kaufman's "Anomalisa"... I have a feeling Christopher Nolan's "Dunkirk" is going to be the same, since it seems like some of his trademarks are going to be absent (not much dialogue, a seemingly simple survival story without mind-boggling twists, no combat in a war film etc.).
Cult Classic?! More like all time classic
The movie would have been better if the whole movie wasn't in tiny cottage
If the PC/Feminism generation doesn’t have all scenes of racial language and mistreatment of women excised form the film, this is.
The day I wished would never come has the Maestro has passed RIP THE GREATEST
It is sad indeed. Ennio Morricone will be missed.
No one lives forever, buddy. I know what you mean and how you feel about it, but this rule of life also needs to be understood, doesn't it?
FR
Ennio Morricone will always be one of my favorites composers of all time! I bought his book of his autobiography "In His Own Words"
Now this. Is a fucking movie.
*brilliant epic movie
this is on of the few movies released since 2010 that really stood out to me.
+claudio paoli thank you, i just watched it today and thought it was amazing but then looked it up and people seem to be finding it boring
Tanin Moores Don't Torrent movies bro. It's hurting the industry.
i torrent some movies that i know did well but i couldnt bring myself to torrent the hateful 8 cause i heard it didnt make that much money and i respect everyone involved so i bought it on blu ray
The score was so haunting that it makes it look like it's QT's first horror movie... In fact, in some aspects, it kinda was. Daisy was terrifying.
+Tony Vercetti Yeah, its a shame the academy didn't award her The Oscar. I haven't watched The Danish Girl but i doubt Wikander's performance was better then Leigh's.
+Stormy Molnjavichen how can you have that opinion when you haven't even seen the film.
+Racquel Hampton It just my hunch. Jennifer Leigh was so fucking incredible here, such a feisty performance. It's very hard for Wikander to top that one. But yeah i don't deny my opinion is wrong. Its just my 2 cents.
+Stormy Molnjavichen And its Vikander
+Racquel Hampton Oh yeah, lol, sorry.
I’ve never heard a score that better captures the “I don’t trust any of you” vibe.
Try The Thing music from Ennio as well. This movie is heavily inspired by The Thing actually.
perfect summary of the movie
One of the greatest opening scenes I’ve ever seen. The shots, the music, the cinematography. Absolutely incredible.
Totally. I was in Awe when it came out, everything the cinematography, the sound, the titles, the music, setting up the mood so greatly.
The beginning is pure cinema, a la Kubrick himself. Absolutely memorizing
hablas español?
Preparing you for some good horse shit ... 100% Movie
Then you'll like There Will Be Blood.
a great opening the best thing in this fi
m awguri ennio morricone
kriteon I would compare the film rather with Leones movies but yes the opening is very kubrick ..
This movie got a lot of crap from some people when it was released; but i'm calling it now: in 10 or maybe 20 years, this movie will be called a masterpiece and one of Tarantino's best. It is a movie with the ability to stand the test of time, unlike so many others.
For me it certainly is a masterpiece already.
Tarantino's latest masterpiece.
What were people saying about it?
apparently it lacked emotional depth. it made up for it, as far as i'm concerned, in every other aspect
Literally writing a paper on why the Hateful eight is a masterpiece
I Concur
tarantino's films just have this irresistible swagger to them- everything is so confidently handled. he's truly a master of his craft
doody magoob what I also love is that you can tell the actors/actresses are having so much fun when they're working under Tarantino.
yes definitely Jake Mitchell
Well said
His films are like a side of ourselves we don't want to face or accept.
Yes about time Ennio Morricone won an oscar!!! So excited!!!
Me to, we were lucky enough to see him recieve his BAFTA at the O2 in London this year.
modernwarfare He should have won it for Once Upon A Time In America. That soundtrack is a masterpiece.
modernwarfare can't believe he won an Oscar. most of this soundtrack is pilfered from "The Thing"
Sometimes you can see how wrong the academy it is.
1. John Williams
2. Hanz Zimmer
3. Ennio Morricone
4. That dude from game of thrones i’m drawing a blank
Hearing this in the theater was quite the experience.
You aren’t kidding. When the strings hold that pitch. Goosebumps
I froze when the sustain happens with the strings
Fuck, this opening is so unsettling...great flick.
I literally listen to this riding around in the hood
sometimes...in Tarantino movies, a smile slowly wipes across my face..because...those are the moments when I realise the brilliance of the man...
The music in this movie is superb.
It was made by a guy named Ennio Morricone Ive heard hes made some pretty good soundtracks besides that...
It has that The Shining Feel when it announces the Title.
Maximus Toon YES totally!!!!
What an amazing opening to a movie! Sends chills down the spine! Such an overlooked movie of 2015!
I absolutely agree.
This movie is getting better with time for me.
One of the best openings to a movie Ive ever seen
Hands down... the best opening scene of a movie in cinematic history. It's just brilliant.
I don't know about THE best. But it is DEFINITELY one of the greatest film openings of all time.
+pyrocus 2001?
Sterling Mathis Ooh, that's a good one, but I don't know if that deserves the #1 title of being the best film opening in cinema history either. Definitely ONE of the best cinematic film openings ever though.
I agree, this intro was brilliant. I think Raging Bull's intro was outstanding too.
+pyrocus Why is that?
What a great score. One of the best I've heard in a while.
This movie was excellent. Should have received more Oscar nominations.
It should.
masterpiece
genius Tarantino and genius Morricone
django939 'D' is silent
@@Cho-cy9ci I know
When the camera moves from the cross slowly you piece by piece absorb the detail of how violent man can be. Its just a face at start, just like these men when they were acquainted. As time unfolds you see there is death and destruction attached to those faces just like this opening.
+Rob N Cool elaboration.
+Stormy Molnjavichen Cool upload =)
the whole statue is also a face. freeze frame a look. j.
i don't follow.
there's two holes - eyes, and the protruding bit is the nose. j.
Beautiful and menacing at the same time.
Such as nature itself
This opening scene was so amazing! it was almost hypnotic, with the slow zoom out from the cross, accompanied by one of the best scores I've ever heard, and the cinematography was incredible
I really hope Tarantino doesn’t stop after 10 movies.
Clayton K., we can only hope. Please Quentin if you read see our comments please don’t stop after 10.
I’ve been on a Tarantino interview binge, and he just seems too passionate about cinema to stop 😆
Well he has a child, I think he wants to spend time with his family eventually.
He's retiring from directing movies because it's too labor-intensive and he's getting old but he plans to write plays, novels and books about movie history. I think that would be pretty awesome.
I kinda wish he DOES stop cause then that makes his work even more exclusive
The death of Morricone was the death of the beautiful music that touched the soul
I Am Egyptian and Muslim and different from everything from Morricone
But now the grief for the loss of this great one
When it comes to art " Pure Art " , everything is oblivious, especially our origins and identities ..
Man, I'm so glad I was able to see this in 70mm when it first came out. This might be my favourite Tarantino into purely based on how much it accomplishes with such simplicity. Nothing compares to hearing those deep notes come in with the drums... so badass
the slowest but coolest opening scene of a movie
Ennio Morricone created some of the greatest scores in cinema, but this is just on another level. This movie was also CRIMINALLY underrated.
Probably the most intense and terrifying opening credits I’ve ever experienced in my whole life since Inglorious Bastards. With the help of Morricone, it becomes more haunted and gothic vibe.
The greatest opening scene EVER
My favorite opening scene is from 'Nobody wanted to die' ('Niekas nenorejo mirti', Lithuania 1965). Also, that movie's score actually sounds very similar to this one, maybe this is the spirit of the 60s.
I would agree....the combination of the visuals and the soundtrack - absolutely spellbinding.
Quentin Tarantino is just a genius
+Doughnut Intern No, he's a genius.
***** Do you know that he's won two oscars for writing original screenplays, and many critics and directors have hailed him as an artistic genius.
+Doughnut Intern Actually, Kubrick did win one. (Best Visual Effects)
+Nicky "The Gent" well not genius but he is 'upper class' so sure. definitely not genius, but most if his movies are really good to watch. nice screenwriting and overall atmosphere of the movie.
+Nicky "The Gent" umm, care to explain how?
dooooo dodo dodo dodo dododododododododooooo
+Cheesus Crust and i was singing the tune reading your comment
best part
+Ysnd Ganesh me too lol
+My Tigga do do do, do do, do do, dodododododododoooooooooo
Amezing
Mr. Morricone when you FINALLY one the Oscar for this film, I was screaming my head off saying finally the gave it to him after all these years! You truly deserved it! Thank You so much for all the music you left behind. You were a GREAT composer!
One of the greatest intro's of all time. Absolute masterpiece this movie, the dialogue and build-up is second to none.
I don't know if it's an unpopular opinion, but I think the Hateful Eight is better than Django. I've seen a lot of people comparing the two films. I love them both, but this one is so interesting and well-written. It takes goddamn skill to write a 3 hour long movie that takes place on the same location and keeping the suspense and attention of the viewer.
Also, great soundtrack of the Maestro! Good use of his song from The Thing they didn't use for that movie. Fits so well!
💖 I've only seen the theatrical version at the movies. Do you need to buy the Blu-ray version to get the whole 3 hours?💖
Ancora grazie per le sue colonne sonore, che rimarranno scolpite nella storia del cinema.
Riposi in pace, Maestro.
I love how it begins extremely epic, showinh grand landscapes and playing a music epic, but a bit mysterious. Then we slowly understand where things are going. The shots get less and less epic, the scope gets closer. It moves from vast horizons to a forest, then closer to the trees and that'a when the theme begins and we know: though it's a 70mm western it is not an epic, it's a mystery thriller, and a violent one. Perfect setup for the film. The luckiest people will be those who catch this movie someday and watch from the start having no idea what it is about.
You will be remembered in the centuries Ennio, thanks for everything.
The overture, this fucking intro, the intermission, and seeing it projected on 70mm made the screening room feel so alive! Quentin Tarantino is as true of a filmmaker as they come.
+Bluemgwes Sidenote, 2:24 'til the end is my favorite part.
3:02 it feels so good to see that credit for the 1st time in a Tarantino movie!
Master Ennio Morricone deserved all the awards won for this incredible score (including the Oscar, of course)!
Probably my favorite Tarantino film, it was basically his first horror movie, Tarantino even said that this film is the closest thing he has come to horror, the tension was so real. Man is the most dangerous animal of all.
Seeing this in 70mm with an overture and a packed screening was madness! Unforgettable experience
It's not easy to pull off a shot like this. Such meticulous timing and everything. The work of a master cinematographer.
Gotta love Robert Richardson.
This is the real cinema. Not the superhero bullshit
I really thank Tarantino for getting Ennio out of his retirement to win an oscar. At least he got one of the much he deserved, RIP maestro
R.I.P. Ennio Morricone. Thank you for creating this masterpiece of score!
CONGRATULATIONS ON THE OSCAR FOR BEST SCORE!!!
RIP Ennio Morricone. This is how I became familiar with his name
Stanley Kubrick and Alfred Hitchcock watching this from heaven...
Quentin Tarantino doesn't make movies, he makes art.
Remembering the great Ennio Morricone today.
This is a great opening, simple:
One image and the music of a genius.That's all.The beauty of simplicity!
This sets the tone immediately. It's pure cinema as it can be. It'll be hard for Tarantino to exceed this masterpiece.
And with This Tarantino became the king of Western filmmaking in the 21st Century.
Drew Russell
A Men whith no name
Got room for one mo'?
In particular emancipated blacks!
Walk over there where I can get a good look at cha!! ...
SenorPredo - Minecraft Coasters
"Name's Major Marcus Warren, former U.S. cavalry, currently servin for the court".
If it where up to me, I would, but it aint up to me
Genius coment men
RIP to Maestro. this intro is sublime and incredible...
The Opening Scene:
Nature is Beautiful, but at the same time it can KiLL You.
+SLiMDeeZuL I like your open mind. :)
+SLiMDeeZuL jesus cross is covered in snow, it appears tiny compared to the landscape.. it predicts the total impiety in this movie.
It will
+SLiMDeeZuL and vice versa
So it's basically a Werner Herzog movie.
Hello from Italy. Sorry for my poor english and long message.
Even if I'm an absolute fan of maestro Morricone (I'm sure that we are all his fans here) I have to admiit that I was quite disoriented at first listening. And I'm sure that also many of you were, perhaps also Tarantino was: we expected something like to "Once upon a time in the West" or similar.
Then I watched the movie "Ennio" by Giuseppe Tornatore (strongly advised) in which Morricone declared that his aim, in his last soundtracks, was not the research of a capturing melodies but the creative use of few few notes (three or four) with the main goal of supporting the story by working in development of this basic material.
Listening again....well, Maestro, You did it. In a way You only could. Natural artists never repeat their step, they always innovate.
Great piece of music!
The opening music is perfection.
La sua bellissima musica nel film " Cinema Paradiso" mi porta le lacrime agli occhi ogni volta la sento, c'e' una tristezza di sottofondo che mi smuove di dentro, addio Ennio, sei stato grande!!!
My theater applauded at the 8th film by Quentin Tarantino part. And I did too. :) and was lucky enough to see the roadshow edition with the overture and the 6-10 minute intermission during the middle part of the film. It came out last Christmas I think did it?
mike stanberry yeah it did. I saw the roadshow edition as well.
Scott Bennici what was it like ?
I saw the 70mm Roadshow when it came out and I went all the way to The Park in Vancouver to see it. I was still a teen back then but not only getting to experience a movie with an Overture and Intermission, but with a format I had never experienced before was incredible. Ennio Morricone's score is fantastic and I absolutely love the music in this film. It might be my favorite film Tarintino has ever done.
Gotta love this music by Ennio Morricone about time he won an Oscar
You just know shit will eventually go down with this opening. This is one of my favorite movies and one of Tarantino’s most underrated films.
Tarantino must have been absolutely ecstatic when the great man Morricone let him hear this masterpiece for the very first time!
3:02
It's so beautiful that I could just cry
An opening sequence that is both beautiful and haunting at the same time.
music, photography, atmosphere, Jesus in the kkk hat ... all fucking badass!!! 😲
"the 8th film by Quentin Tarantino" cue the music. perfect!
Absolutely fantastic movie and score. Tarentino is a modern classic
I had an option to chose to see this or The Revenant on the big screen, I chose The Hateful Eight and I have no regrets. Ended up buying The Revenant on blu ray, and I do wish I got to see it in theaters, but man witnessing The Hateful Eight was awesome. Just wish I saw the Roadshow version tho.
Who else but Tarantino could make us stare at a statue of Jesus for 3 minutes and make it work
I love how the music gets really big and epic when Ennio Morricones credit appears
This film reminded me very much of my experience reading Dostoyevsky's, The Brothers Karamazov, which is one of my favorite books. Not to mention ost, and seeing it in 70mm, was all simply beyond awesome. To me The Hateful Eight was the work of a master.
Can I ask what is 70mm? Was like a ratio or what?
+Frag Wall it was film used with panavison anamorphic lenses for an aspect ratio of 2.76:1
mbaikie So it was lense? It doesn't bother the ratio or anything?
Grazie Ennio.. ❤️😢
I rewatched the movie in a bigger way i did the first time, meaning this time i payed more attention to the dialogue and the way each character acts and feels towards the other. In this sense i can say that this movie is a masterpiece. Not to mention the original score which right away gets you inside the " disaster-full " feeling of the movie.
I have a vivid memory of walking into the cinema with my great friend. We sat down and as soon as the music started really kicking in we just looked at each other and started to laugh. It's Tarantino time baby!!
Goddammit I don't have time to rewatch this movie over and over again. But fuck it if this isn't his best movie since Pulp Fiction. I do think I like Jackie Brown a bit more for personal reasons but man... This is movie so Tarantino and yet it's not at all Tarantino. Brilliant fucking balance of tone and by far the best soundtrack of his so far.
9/10.
completely agree with the 9/10, easily the best I've seen in 2015/early 2016
the revenant: lower 9/10, for doing everything this film did but with bland characters
prefered Django and Basterds though
Triple no, there is 2 songs from the thing used, but only one was in the movie
RIP Ennio Morricone. Your ability to create atmosphere through music was unparalleled.
0:59 that bass dropped harder than major's warren testicles
Joao Reis LoL
LOOOOOOL
Calling it now. Any future dislikes are gonna come from Major Warren
This introduction is extraordinary. She justifies the enormous talent of Quentin Tarantino and places it in my opinion as one of the greatest directors still alive, alongside Terrence Malick, Nicolas Winding Refn and Martin Scorsese.
At the last second, one feels that one is going to live a great film, as the last note of violin that sounds like a dagger
This opening scene is one of my favorites. It has a sense of danger, dread and caution. It prepares you for what it is to come....
RIP Mr Morricone, you were the best.
showing the crucifix was deliberate. Christ died for the sins of man, the movie shows in graphic detail how sinful man truly is🙏
I always found the crucifix there interesting.
They mock Jesus Christ. If you want to learn more check my channel.
I always saw it as Christ(empathy towards fellow man) vanishes in hellish conditions(snow storm).
@@JimmyBergman7 your channel is a fucking joke.
@@piratesfan1995able Yes, and it's an awful image... That uneasy music, and the statue of a dead crucified man with snow on it... You can guess how horribly the film is going to end.
This opening scene and score describes what lies ahead. The long and slow evolving faith of all. The build up of the track and the mad play in second part is what exactly happens when you translate the music into screenplay!
Tarantino’s unsung masterpiece.
this is possibly the best example I've ever seen of an opening sequence setting the tone for the entire rest of the film
I absolutely love this movie!
Absolutely great opening. Showing the big snowy world while rest of the movie is in interior, but you know that there is this world around where travelling is hard right now so makes sense to stay in the cottage. Heavily inspired by The Thing (also + Ennio + Kurt Russell). Well, QT even admited that this movie should have that The Thing vibe like - who is the bad guy here?! Masterpiece.
Underrated Movie
Ladies and Gentleman...Mr Ennio Morricone...👏💔🇮🇹
Rest in peace Maestro!! Absolute legend.
Morricone opens this film up beautifully - reminds me of the job he did on The Thing opening scene with the hostile Antarctic landscape and the pounding bass. A lot of composers all have the same flavour to their music - but Morricone was so different and versatile - its unbelievable that the same person wrote the music for Good the Bad and the Ugly.
First 20 minutes of Red Dead Redemption 2
Totally inspired by this movie!
This is one of the greatest openings to any film. The shots in this film are so lovely and so captivating! And they along with the awesome score just set the tone for the movie! It's an awesome opening!