Sommersby 1993 Crucial Scene

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  • Опубліковано 29 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 22

  • @davidormsby9439
    @davidormsby9439 2 роки тому +3

    Even as a manly man...the last 10-15 minutes as he's about to die always brings a lump in my throat and tear in my eye.

  • @ashleyclairekim9155
    @ashleyclairekim9155 2 роки тому +5

    This movie is one of the masterpieces ever!

  • @TheLszanto
    @TheLszanto 3 роки тому +6

    My favorite scene 💞

  • @mitchfromtwitter81
    @mitchfromtwitter81 Рік тому +1

    You’re telling me that she couldn’t tell he was not her husband? So, she couldn’t tell that he kissed differently?That is bed she couldn’t tell that his body was different?

  • @Jan96106
    @Jan96106 12 років тому +11

    This is a beautiful and powerful movie about love and redemption. The flawed main character is reminiscent of John Proctor in Miller's The Crucible (who bravely faced a similar dilemma and fate). I was shocked when I went on-line and found most film critics failed to appreciate it, but I was heartened to find regular movie viewers saw it for the true gem it is. It does what every good tragedy should do: leave the audience uplifted.

    • @bretagnejean2410
      @bretagnejean2410 3 роки тому

      Its à True story in 16th century. Martin guerre and Bertrande are married young for interested a big farmer family. They have only one son after 6 years. One day Martin is gone. 6 years laters one man come and begin to live with bertrande. They have 2 girls. One is dead. They seem happy and famille say nothing about this. One Day he says i m Martin guerre and i want to buy New field for growbup thé farmer. Then Martin brother call autority for say Martin isnt thé réal. He have no right in the property. They ask 300 persons. 280 persons say its not Martin guerre. Bertrande , Sisters and few relatives say he is real Martin.
      Finally they found Martin guerre. He was in a hospital. One leg is cut. He was fought in spanish war. Impostor is hanged.

  • @deborahelliott3376
    @deborahelliott3376 Рік тому +1

    ‘Cos I never loved him like I love you….😢not a dry eye in the house

  • @domjervis
    @domjervis 2 роки тому

    Earlier in the movie:
    "His own dog didn't recognize him."
    That oatmeal-for-brains prosecutor was too ignorant to even consider the possibility that a dog would know his Master's scent.
    And then there was that two-sizes-smaller foot template. Not taking that even one Angstrom Unit further LOL

  • @shuntajones1153
    @shuntajones1153 2 роки тому +1

    Definitely.

  • @KnappyMarshall
    @KnappyMarshall 2 роки тому +1

    Ah the old court house in Charlotte Court House, Virginia. I sat through many a court dates in those uncomfortable benches

    • @Helga7850
      @Helga7850 Рік тому

      How worth was $ 10,000 in 1870s?

    • @Tacticode
      @Tacticode Рік тому +1

      @@Helga7850 that's $233,000 in today's money

    • @Helga7850
      @Helga7850 Рік тому

      @@Tacticode thank you

  • @carinnevitelli1240
    @carinnevitelli1240 Рік тому

    Powerful truth

  • @caesarfiorini1728
    @caesarfiorini1728 2 роки тому

    Rich!

  • @ssnettey
    @ssnettey 12 років тому +4

    Her husband looks exactly like to Richard Gere so it wasn't about his looks; it was his personality, specifically her "new" husband is loyal, honest, and loving while her "old" one was a womanizing, abusive, brute. The selling out, as you would put it, makes more sense in context.

    • @spuriouseffect
      @spuriouseffect Рік тому

      When my best friend divorced her husband, she finally told me how abusive he was. The boyfriend she had before she got married was really good looking, and so funny and loving, but once she had him wrapped around her finger, she somehow lost all interest in him. There was no challenge left. Her husband on the other hand cheated on her, verbally and physically abused her, and treated her like a subservient. but she saw him as something strong, and exciting, and wild that she had to tame. So many of my friends love that drama. I have no idea what they're thinking sometimes. Anyway, she cried when we ran into her old boyfriend years later and saw how happy his wife and kids looked. She traded stability, happiness, and laughter for excitement and turmoil. This is the story of most divorced women I know. It has to be some primordial, survival of the fittest, genetic type attraction thing going on. It certainly isn't logical.

    • @basedandchristpilled
      @basedandchristpilled Рік тому

      @@spuriouseffect no offense but she sounds like an idiot

    • @spuriouseffect
      @spuriouseffect Рік тому

      @@basedandchristpilled The majority of women are. Something like 80 percent of women surveyed are exclusively chasing men over 6 foot, while only 14.5 percent of men are over 6 foot. LOL

    • @basedandchristpilled
      @basedandchristpilled Рік тому

      @@spuriouseffect I don’t understand the height thing tbh, I mean if you can get a tall guy great.. but personality is the most important factor imo. Also taller people are more prone to disease and die sooner lmfao. Chasing a man because they have a certain physical trait is idiotic

    • @spuriouseffect
      @spuriouseffect Рік тому

      @@basedandchristpilled You're right, it certainly looks idiotic from a logical standpoint. Most women chase men for 1. financial stability, 2. physical traits 3. personality, 4. emotional strength. Love rarely comes into the equation. It's more of an afterthought. Men are the ones who write most of the love poems. Men are designed to provide for and protect those they love. Women are designed to make sure their offspring are protected and cared for. If you look at it that way, women are simply following their genetic programming to find the strongest man they can find that will provide the most for their offspring. Feminism has flipped that on its head though. Now women get ran through by those "top tier men", and expect decent men to pick up the pieces, or they label all men "misogynists" and live the rest of their lives with cats. A glaring example of this is found among black men. 36 percent are married with children. 50 percent are not married and have no children. And 14 percent of men "father" the majority of children with multiple baby mamas. So that means 64 percent of black women are sharing the top 14 percent of men, while ignoring the rest. That's a recipe for disaster. Institutionalized marriage was probably designed for this very reason.