Blue Cut train robbery from The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford
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- Опубліковано 3 жов 2024
- Great title, wouldn't you agree? As for legal matters;
This video contains copyrighted material which I am not the owner nor producer of, all rights of material go to whoever is in ownership, I don't know and don't particularly care either, just recognize that I'm not profiting from this video and merely wanted to share the great scene from the great movie.
Everything about this scene. The spooky cinematography, the colours, the pacing of it, the incredible music in 5/4 that subtly unsettles. One of my all-time favourite cinematic moments.
that scene alone should have won an academy award
One of the most beautiful scenes in all of cinematic history.
This is imo the most impressing scene by Roger Deakins - the world's greatest living DoP
This is probably one of the most beautiful scenes in film history.
This scene is so damn haunting and gorgeous to watch.
One of my favorite movie scenes of all time. Every now and then I like to watch it. Sick cinematography!
Masterpiece... one of my all time favorite movies.
So much haunting beauty in just under three minutes. The cinematography in this film is absolutely compelling.
I love this scene!!! So eerie. Made the whole movie that much better.
In my opinion, the single best scene for cinematography/lighting in cinema history, although I'm definitely open to suggestions for other great cinematography!
I can’t believe “There Will Be Blood” won Best Cinematography over this masterpiece.
Movies i should watch alone brought me here
Oh I'm a good old rebel now that's just what I am.
Best filmscene ever made in filmhistory!
Love this movie
Love this movie and scene...but why didnt the train just blast through the lumber?
I think this was just the first of several barricades they assembled.
una de las mejore escenas que he visto
RED DEAD REDEMPTION 2 ☝️👆💪😎
I was so hyped when this came up in the game
Aynı red dead redempion
best scene with the suicide scene the musiq ic very cool
Não fui eu que fiz aquele comentário daquele tipo com uma foto de perfil igual à minha do feice! :p
Ricardo Freitas ok
Robert lee arnold jr in missoura only one who cant stop a train of abuses a fucking men
Does ANYBODY have the whole thing upped?
it was a joke but your a cool guy we shoud hang out some time friends
Nice music, scene's a bit dull tho
Dull??? Take your ADD pills and allow the scene to create tension.
This comment is 2 months old, come on. I haven't even seen the movie itself, but I mean, the movie is 10 years old, it's predictable
@@TheThailatte - Your comment is 2 months old? Oh, ok, that makes is less stupid.
So what is the point in replying when I've completely forgotten about this video. I watched it again before, opinion hasn't changed. Did you not read the rest of my comment?
When you've seen a lot of movies, especially in this day and age, comparing this to them, it's dull. Perhaps you are old?
I just watched this movie and it annoys me to some extent that the film seems to further a mythos around Jesse James. The man was no different than a serial killer, gangster, or terrorist. I know that the Fords weren't alter boys, but seriously.... what'll they produce next, "The Assassination of Jeffrey Dahmer by the coward Christopher Scarver?"
And, in the scene, rather than correcting the quantity of James' children, why wouldn't Robert correct the fact that Jesse never gave a goddamn cent to the poor, and he was responsible for the murder of ~17 people...some of which he shot while they were unarmed and tied up. And his wife was no saint. Similar to contemporary mob wives, she knew where the money was coming from, but knew better than to ask. Also, from what I've read, The Fords were in actual fear for their lives-they were essentially held captive in the home of a paranoid pyschopath.
This film comes across as an attempt to make the viewer to sympathize with piece of garbage killer.
I gotta be honest, I feel the exact opposite. While the film starts with Jesse portrayed as somewhat of a Robin Hood type character, by the end my feelings had been completely reversed. I felt terrible for Robert Ford. He went from being as happy as can be, getting to work for his idol, to being terrified for his life anytime Jesse was in the room. And when he did finally kill him, people were so blinded by the mythology of Jesse James that they hated Ford for killing someone who honestly deserved to die, and was then gunned down by a man he had never wronged. Not only that but the man who killed him was eventually pardoned, and no one gave a shit about ford after he died. I think the title of the film serves almost as a joke, calling him a coward, when really he was sent to kill one of the most dangerous men at the time, and actually succeeded, then in the wake of it, he became more hated than any outlaw of the time. There was little time (if any) where I had sympathy for Jesse, though his larger than life persona did deeply interest me, but almost the whole film I felt sadness for Bob Ford. I feel that the film more or less gives you the facts, and lets you decide what to think of them. It does tell you how the people of the time idolized him, but only to inform you, and to show how people love to side with an outlaw and the mythology that follows them, but never did I feel the film was aggrandizing Jesse's life or trying to turn him into some tragic anti-hero.
I feel similar about Jesse as I do about Escobar in Narcos. They present the facts, show that the poor loved him, but he was still a power hungry man who committed acts of terror. Like Jesse, I find him Deeply fascinating, but in no way do I think he is the hero
This is just how I saw the film, I'm not saying you are necessarily wrong in how you viewed it, but I have now seen it multiple times, and both my dad and I agree with what I have said above, in fact he even felt more strongly about it than I did after watching it.
Maceo Banyan I agree. The movie portrayed Jessie James as a man, who for all intensive purpose, knew he was a dead man. The law was closing in on him, so he groomed Robert Ford to be his killer, he manipulated him and put him into a situation where Ford was always going to kill him. He did this to cement his legacy, I mean which headline adds to his myth more? ‘Jessie James killed by lawmen’ or ‘Jessie James shot in the back by supposed friend’
Johnny McAuliffe - All due respect, but did we watch the same movie? I think perhaps you miss some of the nuance that Roger Deakins both brilliantly and cleverly inserts into the film via his absolutely genius cinematography, scene selection, music selection, costuming, camera angles, shot direction, lighting style, etc. etc. etc. etc. I could go on for a while - I think perhaps you are a "big picture" type of personality and therefore missed the nuance, subtlety, suggestion, and shading of the film.