Ein Meisterwerk und unterschätzter Film Polanskis absolut reell und aktuell nach 47Jahren👍👍👏👏 Polanski versteht sein Handwerk, ich verbeuge mich vor dem Regisseur!!!!✌️👌 Schön das es ihn gibt!!!👍🙂🙂
@@entotorados i didnt understand what were you saying, sorry. Now I have. You have got really good music, and movie taste. You were really polite answering me, how old are you? Happy new years !!!!!!!
Martin L. The Shining is over-rated. What other movies are you into? This is a really psychological one and it beats the Shining and all other non-sense if people really go deep about it. Thats my opinion and ive seen thousand and thousands of movies. The other ones you mention are no where near this epic movie here:)
Suspiria is excellent art with an incredible scary atmosphere. The Sentinel is also scary as hell and there's a lot of Polański inspired stuff. The Shining (Stanley Kubrick) is a legendary horror classic. And now here comes some modern masterpieces: Goodnight Mommy is the most intensive nightmare I ever watched. Even days later I was still traumatized. True Love Ways is another masterpiece of professional horror inspired by Polański and Hitchcock. All these movies are masterpieces in their way.
Martin L. Sure, I will check the movie one more time for you. Suspiria. I find Stanley To be an over-rated film producer. Look at most of his drawn out movies with not real essence, some are better at the beginning than the end. Goes for a lot. I would recommend the Shining on Book instead of Movie. Sure good parts, But also some awful parts, I like the concept of going insane in some snow fever. I really like this Cabin fever insanity going on there. But his wife annoys me and the kid is so annoying in the role with the voices and such. Some of Stephen Kings books are better to read that on film I noticed. Goes for alot, I only read Stephen King as Child. Like 22 books, and Read more of Dean R. But again Didnt read that into my 20s, Read more Charles Darwin and De Sade and things started to get complicated from there. About Hitchcock, sure this man was genius. But Sad he had to use the same actors and such for many of his movies and not be more inventive? Because of the scene back then, That man would of made something very creepy now for sure. Sad Polanski dont make that many movies really? What other movies by him do you like? Goodnight Mommy starts real good half of it but gets abit dry. Im thinking of psychological movies I like. Let me think, I got so many movies. Thousands, Im total not having a thought in my head right now, Since I just woke hmm. What you think of some of the Lunch stuff? Im thinking of making my own psychological short movie actually, I only have a few cams, And not any budget, I might buy a drone for filming upwards or use other techniques, Just a short movie, I just hate modern cities and neon light, So prefer old factories and fog and such to be in the movie, Hand held camera, Dogme style its called and made by Lars Von trier back in the 90s. Riget is a very strange serie from Denmark filmed that way, has 50 percent ok content and is also with sub titles, Have you checked the Danish Pusher Movies, Like Pusher 1 and Pusher 3? They are really innovative in many ways, the filming, But im thinking of making something total obscure, about a man who cant remember what his doing at night, And wakes up to this telephone machine telling him cryptic warnings of what he did last night, And yet we never really see what he does, and then it all ends with him maybe just dreaming it or having a psychosis? Im working on some different ideas and thinking of who to play the roles. It has to be very moody and slow and depressing. With real rain in the face and real harsh emotions expressed. So hard to find like minded for this stuff. Most idiots from film school are just pure morons who dont impress me.
Masterpiece... You have the best channel in youtube... Thank you very very much. I was looking for this soundtrack for years, this is my favorite movie and Roman Polanski is my favorite director. A big kiss from Greece
While the movie is a classic, one of my all times favorite...credit must also go to the author, Roland Topor. Few of his literature has been translated. Look for "Leonardo was right", a play. Purely hilarious and surrealist. Google him and enjoy his drawings!
I went to Paris to see film location Unfortunately this was filmed in the studios Only the front big door was used in the scene which I went to see Still great and the neighbourhood still looks the same
A great Polanski on the level of Rosemary's Baby and Chinatown. Very strange and unnerving. Modern directors should watch this and see how a scary movie should be built...slowly...with a quiet menace instead of the cheap visceral "gotcha!" moments that seldom to lead up to anything. Roemary's Baby still provokes chills up my spine. The use (or in some cases the overuse) of music is another key element of a good Polanski film. Sometimes silence is better.
one of my best movies ... i read the novel too by the late roland topor ... could you recommend other movies that have the same atmosphere ?..from my part , l recommend ...santa sangre ... by the chilian director alejandro jodorovski ... you wont regret it ...
Once upon a time Polanski used to make very interesting films but he seems to get more conventional as the years go by. This is a very strange film. One of the best moments (and I shall not spoil it) is when Polaski is sitting in the apartment and something passes just outside the window. It is an amazing and disturbing moment. I'd like to read the Roland Topor source novel but the price it's going for is beyond reason for paying for a single book. I cannot recall now the last Polanski film I truly enjoyed. I haven't seen The Pianist or any of his films over the last decade or more. The last I can recall was Bitter Moon. I did like one with Sigourney Weaver called Death and the Maiden. It seems as if the best American films are made by European directors who see the country and its culture with that detach foreign eye and see stuff that we have just taken for granted and periodically need to be reminded how odd it is. It must be the modern audiences who became timid and unadventurous and the movies are merely a reflection. They have to conform to the prevailing tastes, sadly, and we are being robbed of potential great films. This is a generation of directors whose numbers are rapidly dwindling and it must (I imagine) be tough to constantly fight against the current of mediocre movie. A film like The Tenant might find a small following if it went made today but it would by considered a bomb by the crass Hollywood standards. The period of the late 60's and 70's were the best times for risky films but the era of the blockbuster was looming in the horizon and then the independants had their all too brief moment of glory in the early to mid 80's but they were destined to be swept away. I'd watch Jim Jarmusch over John Hughes anyday.
GREG FREEMAN I found the novel in a discount rack many years ago at a ridicolously low price - but the novel isn't even half as good as the movie!! Better stick to the movie and forget the book!
GREG FREEMAN My book, ROMAN, was inspired by Polanski's films. Check it out - it's on amazon at a low price. And as for the original Tenant book, I found a copy on eBay a few years ago, but the other dude was right, it wasn't as exciting as the film.
Sometimes there are those rare occasions when the film is an improvement over the book. To Kill A Mockingbird is the only other film I can recall off the top of head that I prefer over the book. I wish Polanski would stop making these frivilous little movies. I just started to watch Tess on Hulu. I have never seen it and I like what I've seen thus far. Kinski's Irish accent is a bit awkward. The visual style reminds me of Kubrick's Barry Lyndon. I would like to see Polanski try to make a science fiction film. We need intelligent directors to drag the genre away from talentless man-children who are more hardware than head. 2001 is still the high water mark that has never been equalled or surpassed.
+GREG FREEMAN I read the novel back in 1977 or so and it was pretty good, actually. I don't think it was exactly like the movie, which is heightened. The strongest take-away I remember is a scene in which Trelkovsky takes pleasure in passing gas in the street and watching pedestrians walk through the cloud.
WOW. I need it on spotify! Edit: And ye, bth the movie is perfect❤one of my favourits. Polanski wes very cool these years: chinatown, the tenant, rosmary's baby---all these are fucking great masterpices!!!!!
does anyone know what is the instrument that accompanies? a vibraphone? certainly there is a glass harmonica and violin ... perfect soundtrack. from the first notes at the beginning of the movie ... still nothing has happened and you are already scared
Avez-vous le livre "Philippe Sarde, des notes pour l'écran", le seul ouvrage consacré au musicien ? Il est disponible notamment via Amazon.fr et a été écrit par le journaliste Daniel Bastié