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This Is the Best Scene In Cinema, Here's Why | Paris, Texas Analysis 

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Full spoiler warning for Paris, Texas (1984). This is my new favorite movie of all time, and it features the best scene I have ever witnessed in a film. In this video, I share my observations on the final peep booth scene between Travis and Jane (Harry Dean Stanton and Nastassja Kinski). Before the analysis, I give a brief overview of the film leading up to the key scene. There is so much beauty and depth to this film that I don't touch on in this video, so I look forward to hearing your insights in the comments. If you enjoyed the video, leave a like. If you didn't enjoy it, leave a dislike, that's what the buttons are for.
Video Chapters:
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2:22 - Background
8:15 - The Scene
14:55 - Camerawork
18:16 - Soundtrack
21:10 - Color/Light
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#videoessay #wimwenders #paristexas

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15 май 2024

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Комментарии : 160   
@MrOtistetrax
@MrOtistetrax 18 дней назад
Few people have ever looked so beautiful on film as Nastassja Kinski in Paris, Texas.
@ninawildr4207
@ninawildr4207 16 дней назад
I dont know ...she looked perfect in Tess...❤
@glennhubbard5008
@glennhubbard5008 10 дней назад
❤️
@TheSassJacket
@TheSassJacket 4 месяца назад
Absolutely beautiful breakdown. As someone who'se gone through their own broken marriage, the gentle sense of longing and desire to apologise and renew that which is unrenewable resonated very very strongly wth me. Gorgeous film.
@sder
@sder 4 месяца назад
means a lot! thanks for watching.
@willard39
@willard39 19 дней назад
I watched this first when I was in my 20's and while I enjoyed it and appreciated it purely for the filmmaking, I didn't have the emotional maturity or experience to appreciate it fully. I tried watching it again later in life, after my wife had left me and our three kids (there was no alcoholism or abuse in my situation). I couldn't do it. It was too raw and my loss shattered any attempt at appreciating the movie without my own pain bubbling up and overtaking me. I think it's time I rewatched to not only properly appreciated it on every level, even through Jane's eyes, but also as a funeral for my own pain and a celebration of letting go.
@The_dude03
@The_dude03 9 дней назад
Everyday people make mistakes and we forget and move on, people everyday solve their problem and continue moving oni wish you a good luck in your daily life brother
@xxnightopsxx
@xxnightopsxx 3 месяца назад
A true masterpiece and one of the top 10 films of the 80s, certainly one of the greatest films of all time. It manages to say so much about existence with a few words of dialogue and often with no words at all. Cinema at its finest. Timeless. Outstanding video and analysis....
@sder
@sder 3 месяца назад
I agree completely. Thank you for watching!
@ZZZardoz762
@ZZZardoz762 Месяц назад
The first time I saw this movie was in 1985, in the attic of the PX building of my post in Germany. It was shown by a volunteer with morale support to a bunch of hungover soldiers on a Sunday afternoon. At first, we were all fairly loud and boisterous as you might expect young hungover soldiers to be, but by the time the movie was halfway through, nobody was making a sound. I remember getting up from my seat once the movie was over, feeling just a bit unsettled.
@davey64
@davey64 4 дня назад
That Wim Wenders is still creating masterpieces to this day on such varied themes of humanity is a testament to his brilliance.
@MCOult
@MCOult 3 месяца назад
I saw Paris, Texas when it was first released and was amazed at the impact of the entire production: writing, acting, direction, art, music, and cinematography all combined into a film so moving and real I was immersed. You've done a wonderful job of shedding light on so much of the "why" about it. Thanks!
@m1m1williams2
@m1m1williams2 Месяц назад
Breathtaking cinematology, well acted believable script. Travis was a coward. The big reveal was a disappointment. Neither of their explanations justified abandoning their son for 4 years. To make matters worse after Travis put in efforts to establish a relationship with Hunter he was willing to abandon him again to locate Jane so that she could be in his life. After 4 years of wandering aimlessly there was no personal growth, regret or even a significant desire to do better if given another chance. He didn't have the cajones to explain what happened to his brother. Travis refused to inform his brother that he took Hunter, he left that job up to a 7 year old.
@chevexx1111
@chevexx1111 22 дня назад
I agree. Hunter should have stayed in the better environment with the brother.
@silang8381
@silang8381 12 дней назад
People make ridiculous, nonsensical decisions when they are ruled by their emotions. I respect your right not to understand or like the movie. However, somehow Paris Texas resonates deeply with me at 55 and even more so than when I first watched it in the 1980s when I was completely entranced by it. I have watched this movie so many times and it is just as rich with meaning as it was when I first watched it.
@m1m1williams2
@m1m1williams2 9 дней назад
@@silang8381 I thoroughly enjoyed the movie, I just don't agree with the chooses all the characters made. But that is one of the movie's strengths; the characters, despite their flaws, are so believable. Emotions are fleeting. Deciding to make similar choices 4 years after coming face to face with the long-term detrimental impact of your decisions is more indicative of a flawed character. Frankly, Walt was a better man and a better Father than Travis. Walt didn't allow his emotions to overwhelm him or drive him to abandon his 'post'. He raised his brother's son despite the fact that Travis's presence would uproot the family dynamics his wife and he established. And he did not shirk away from introducing Travis as Hunter's Father. Walts tenacity is echoed in Hunter. The best that Travis could offer Hunter was to remove him from stability and two parent household that he had and drop him off on the parent who also abandoned him. Guilting her into taking on a responsibility he was unwilling to shoulder. He did so knowing that Jane wasn't even financially stable; her support payments were inconsistent. The bank scene is another indication that Travis was an ill equipped Father. He actually fell asleep while Hunter was on the side of the parking lot and he was halfway down the block. I was on edge worried that Hunter would be kidnapped at any minute. Travis deciding to leave Hunter with someone significantly younger than him as well as his inability to make any personal growth is a play on the adage "with age comes wisdom, but sometimes age comes alone". Travis is a character that you want to dislike because of his impulsive, irrational, irresponsible choices before and during the entire movie. However, he is someone that I'm compelled to feel sorry for despite his shortcomings. This movie has so much depth that I'm sure decades from now I'll have even come insight into it than I already have. And that's the beauty of it.
@canti7951
@canti7951 Месяц назад
The definition of a perfect film for me. Nothing could simply be taken away. Also, that thing about parallel train tracks meeting at the ever elusive horizon is such a cruel joke, whether intended or not, I love it. Great review!
@amma1666
@amma1666 2 месяца назад
Okay I am confused how do you not have more subscribers? I just found your channel and I have not stopped watching. Simply incredible.
@LaCorvette
@LaCorvette Месяц назад
Well done on the breakdown in this video. This movie really takes me in emotionally. The beauty of it being, that although the main protagonist’s dreams are almost tangible, they are unreachable, which serves up a bitterness, that feels somehow relatable to me. So in the end the son is reunited with his mother, whereas the protagonist just goes back to roaming. This offers such a stark contrast compared to more conventional „happy“ endings in cinema.
@malafakka8530
@malafakka8530 Месяц назад
Before I watch the video, I don't know if it is the best scene ever, but if it isn't, it is damn close to it. When I first watched it I didn't get into the movie. I was almost bored. But when that scene began it all turned around for me. I suddenly got into the movie and it all made sense to me. To say I was amazed and moved by the scene and the actors is an understatement. I was mesmerized by how Kinski was acting with her face for a big part of the scene. The pain of the characters felt so real in that moment.
@andreeailiescu2220
@andreeailiescu2220 2 месяца назад
beautiful analysis thank you! also it's soothing you hear these words in your voice. what a beautiful film!
@sder
@sder Месяц назад
I really appreciate it! A beautiful film indeed.
@EZgoinBowen
@EZgoinBowen 2 месяца назад
Thank you for making this video! I'd like to add that Ry Cooder's music was such a huge reason why the emotion hits and flows perfectly with the dialogue and emotion. It's a beautiful film that most people unfortunately have not seen, quite possibly the greatest film visually.
@sder
@sder 2 месяца назад
Absolutely. I hope everyone gets the opportunity to watch in their lifetime.
@stephenmitchell8577
@stephenmitchell8577 3 месяца назад
Bravo! This just showed up in recommended videos for me (I assume because I put together a video on Paris Texas for a paper I wrote a couple years ago). Your editing here is great! Makes me wish I spent more time on mine from a video element - I spent a long time on the paper but I threw together the video in one evening. Anyway, just wanted to say, from one Paris, Texas fan to another - well done!
@MegaJackpinesavage
@MegaJackpinesavage 20 дней назад
Brilliant analysis, very moving.Though I've not seen the film (which I "liked" to impress people) in years, I'm old enough now to be emotionally strummed by it. The artistic beauty & pathos are very well served by your unintrusive commentary --- I'll watch it again very soon.
@Dev._.
@Dev._. 3 месяца назад
Amazing synopsis and editing. Thank you for including 20:00, the original Cowboy Bebop does a similar thing at the end of each episode with the main character monologuing to an acoustic guitar. Cool to see where the creators drew inspo from
@sder
@sder 3 месяца назад
Very cool, thanks for watching!
@leonardoderosaASAP
@leonardoderosaASAP 26 дней назад
Thank you so much, this is the best video essay i've seen upon this movie, wich is probably my favourite. You managed to explain a lot in 26 minutes, hats off to you sir!
@sder
@sder 26 дней назад
That means a lot, thank you for watching!
@fynix.
@fynix. 4 месяца назад
Awesome video as always, really liked your commentary about the use of color in the mirror scene as I didn't pick up on that earlier. Surprised and impressed that they had only half a script going into it as the end result and especially the mirror scene was so well done. The Super 8 filming and music give this film such a unique feel and Travis as a character really resonates with me, definitely going to remember and think about this movie for a long time.
@sder
@sder 4 месяца назад
Easily my favorite movie right now. Thanks for watching man, means a lot.
@fynix.
@fynix. 4 месяца назад
​@@sderfor sure man, always down to watch quality content!
@stephenwolf6135
@stephenwolf6135 2 месяца назад
Just watched this last night for the third time. It's absolutely stunning and heart breaking every single time.
@bigfoot_28
@bigfoot_28 Месяц назад
Thank you for this deep analysis and high quality of the video
@sder
@sder Месяц назад
Glad you liked it!
@Skimmerlit
@Skimmerlit 4 месяца назад
Glad to see you’re back. You’re very sharp.
@sder
@sder 4 месяца назад
Means a lot! thanks for watching 🤝
@patrickward1470
@patrickward1470 Месяц назад
My goodness was this amazing. Extraordinary breakdown. Thank you for making this
@sder
@sder 24 дня назад
Glad you enjoyed it!
@Finnjamin19
@Finnjamin19 3 месяца назад
such a gorgeous movie, with great video and analysis, Keep up the great work!
@sder
@sder 3 месяца назад
Thank you 🙏
@Jallandhara
@Jallandhara 4 месяца назад
God I love your work so much. Thank you!
@sder
@sder 4 месяца назад
Means a lot!
@kathc659
@kathc659 3 месяца назад
Thanks so much I learnt a lot about this classic - it's origin, making and ideas.
@sder
@sder 3 месяца назад
Great to hear!
@josiastroeps987
@josiastroeps987 4 месяца назад
Man the audio quality is reall getting better with every video. Really love listening to voice!!
@sder
@sder 4 месяца назад
couldn't do it without you 🙌
@IsaacLuke
@IsaacLuke 2 месяца назад
Another banger like usual! Just finished the movie for the first time and decided its time to watch your breakdown.
@sder
@sder 2 месяца назад
Well I'll be. Thanks for watching man.
@baddogmtv
@baddogmtv 8 дней назад
Great video, keep up the good work. This movie stuck with me, even though i watched it when i way too young to understand ( Maybe 12 years old). Movies like this are very few and far between.
@Pouch-Thinking
@Pouch-Thinking Месяц назад
Excellent, thoughtful analysis. It could well be one of the best scenes in cinema. Emotion cinema.
@sder
@sder Месяц назад
Thank you for watching!
@ryanrusso7956
@ryanrusso7956 Месяц назад
I’ve recently stumbled upon your videos and my only complaint is that there aren’t more for me to binge before bed. Your editing style is so unique and brilliant, there’s a few clips in particular that I am extremely curious about how you were able to implement, as a content creator myself, I find it so hard to navigate all the softwares out there to perfectly encapsulate my vision. Would love to talk more about the questions I have if you have time. Thank you, and keep grinding.
@sder
@sder Месяц назад
I appreciate that a lot man, thanks. College has made it difficult to make as many videos as I want to. My email is in the channel details, I'd be happy to help with any questions if I'm able!
@johnnyrascal6109
@johnnyrascal6109 Месяц назад
I liked your personal analogy about the train tracks colliding down the way.
@sder
@sder Месяц назад
I appreciate it!
@rustbonse
@rustbonse 3 месяца назад
Man this is the best review I ever saw For real.
@sder
@sder 3 месяца назад
I really appreciate that!
@joshuam.4127
@joshuam.4127 2 месяца назад
Good analysis. I saw this movie for the first time about a month ago and found this particular scene arresting. Especially as the camera reveals in half done interiors of the women’s side of the peep show. I’m excited to watch wim wenders new movie about Japanese bath houses.
@sder
@sder Месяц назад
I need to watch Perfect Days. Wim Wenders is incredible.
@rutherfrogp.wilmington4907
@rutherfrogp.wilmington4907 Месяц назад
No idea why this film isn't more well known and referenced. Truly a cinematic masterpiece
@sder
@sder Месяц назад
Agreed
@blattspitze
@blattspitze 2 месяца назад
Loved the movie since I first saw it - and now I know how they made me love it! Great video, thank you!
@sder
@sder 2 месяца назад
Glad you enjoyed it!
@tyleryoast8299
@tyleryoast8299 13 дней назад
I watched this last week for the first time Something about the framing of him pouring his heart out with the window between them works so well
@sder
@sder 13 дней назад
I agree!
@gorryman
@gorryman 16 дней назад
I have this sound track on vinyl and that whole story is on the record , I have listened on repeat for whole shifts at work and it never gets old.
@sder
@sder 15 дней назад
that is awesome
@matheusmagalhaes6577
@matheusmagalhaes6577 7 дней назад
this is my fav movie of all time. i just can't watch the monologue scene without crying...
@spades5174
@spades5174 4 месяца назад
Hell yeah a new Soder upload
@sder
@sder 4 месяца назад
Let’s go
@ALIVEDJP
@ALIVEDJP 2 месяца назад
Wow. Just stumbled across this. I mention this movie as my favorite movie ever. And it’s really because of this scene. I’m glad I’m not alone in thinking this.
@sder
@sder 2 месяца назад
Thank you for watching. An incredible scene in an incredible film.
@MB-mh6xv
@MB-mh6xv 24 дня назад
My favorite movie. I saw it at the Oriental Theatre in Milwaukee when it came out. The first 10 minutes, or so, are just amazing. I listen to the soundtrack often, to this day... and yes, a red ball cap, too. Sam Shepard was beyond cool.
@sder
@sder 24 дня назад
So cool!
@Kornspel
@Kornspel Месяц назад
Fantastic video. Thank you!
@sder
@sder Месяц назад
thank you for watching it!
@SuperMax_____0.0_____
@SuperMax_____0.0_____ 3 месяца назад
beautifully crafted, good film for taking a nap
@sder
@sder 3 месяца назад
Agreed, just hopefully not on the first viewing 🤞
@russellk631
@russellk631 28 дней назад
I saw this movie in the theater in my 20’s and it certainly left a big impression on me. Even more so now that I’m older. It’s still Wenders best film but I also like Wings of Desire very much as well. Thanks for the upload.
@sder
@sder 28 дней назад
Thank for watching! I am looking forward to coming back to this film at different stages in my life
@matthewramirez8319
@matthewramirez8319 3 месяца назад
Great video I’m gonna have to run this movie back asap
@sder
@sder 3 месяца назад
Thanks for watching!
@benjaminwheat9851
@benjaminwheat9851 2 месяца назад
Just watched Paris Texas and loved your breakdown of the movie! 5/5 on Letterboxd for sure
@sder
@sder 2 месяца назад
Thank for watching Ben! It's been a long time, glad you liked the movie 🤝
@benjaminwheat9851
@benjaminwheat9851 2 месяца назад
Yeah bro you’ve got a gift keep up the great work!
@BuddhaFang
@BuddhaFang Месяц назад
Amazing soundtrack, too!
@sder
@sder Месяц назад
one of my favorites for sure
@JB-ti7bl
@JB-ti7bl 18 дней назад
Wow, great video! Sad to admit that I've never watched this whole movie. I rented it once, but couldn't get thru the whole thing. My vague recollection is of a very slow film that I didn'r connect with. Maybe I'll give it another try.
@joshhigdon4951
@joshhigdon4951 3 месяца назад
Dude, awesome channel. Binging. If you could produce 2 videos of your quality a month, you'd have millions of subs and do this full time. I'm sad I don't have much to binge watch.
@nastyatumys
@nastyatumys Месяц назад
amazzzzing work
@sder
@sder Месяц назад
thanks so much!
@nastyatumys
@nastyatumys Месяц назад
thank u! wanna ask for the link of the interview, which is on 1:29 and goes on. thanks !
@mike9rr
@mike9rr 11 дней назад
Ry Cooder was the perfect pick for this soundtrack. And isn't that Duane Allman playing Little Martha at the end of this? A beautiful piece.
@heisenberg1372
@heisenberg1372 2 месяца назад
can u do an analysis abt the film "The Last Picture Show"? great analysis btw
@jacobcockerham8034
@jacobcockerham8034 4 месяца назад
He’s back
@sder
@sder 4 месяца назад
🫡🫡🫡
@DavidMoore-bl7gb
@DavidMoore-bl7gb 21 день назад
I had forgotten about Kinski , she was a gem.
@sder
@sder 20 дней назад
very underutilized as an actress in her prime
@DavidMoore-bl7gb
@DavidMoore-bl7gb 20 дней назад
I saw al of her films b/c she was such a beauty, but her acting chops were def prime.
@RichardLucas
@RichardLucas 2 месяца назад
Goddamn, that woman was beautiful.
@ElSantoLuchador
@ElSantoLuchador 12 дней назад
My favorite film ever. I must have seen it six times. A Wim Wenders masterpiece, and Ry Cooder's soundtrack kills. Oh ya, and Sam Shepard's script. Beyond it's cinematic beauty it had a profound emotional effect on me.
@joaokehl
@joaokehl 16 дней назад
Haven’t watched yet, but I’m here to agree.
@chevexx1111
@chevexx1111 22 дня назад
Is this movie suppose to make sense? This young woman whose income comes from a peep show is better for Hunter than the family who picked him up and took him in as their own son when this young women went thru some kind of emotional turmoil after becoming a mother and then abuse by her husband? After 4 years, it is determined that this women is a better environment for the son which she abandoned? I found Travis annoying & the ending horrible. I guess I am not artistic enough to overlook the obvious, glaring real life problems with this ending.
@plainlake
@plainlake 13 дней назад
Great cinematography, but I also find the plot like a fantasy for divorced men. That the woman they loved and left them was unchanged and longing after them years after they separated despite him acting like an immature boy.
@silang8381
@silang8381 12 дней назад
No. People make ridiculous, nonsensical decisions when they are ruled by their emotions. I respect your right not to understand or like the movie. However, somehow Paris Texas resonates deeply with me at 55 and even more so than when I first watched it in the 1980s when I was completely entranced by it. I have watched this movie so many times and it is just as rich with meaning as it was when I first watched it.
@irlancruz7973
@irlancruz7973 5 дней назад
The movie is not a prescription. The idea here is not the ideal "what should be", but what a hurt and confuse man do to reconcile with the past. You don't have to agree with the character decisions, as you don't agree with people in real life.
@matthewporter3117
@matthewporter3117 4 месяца назад
Well done
@sder
@sder 4 месяца назад
thank you sir
@redadamearth
@redadamearth 28 дней назад
There are very few perfect films. "Paris, Texas" is one of them.
@sder
@sder 28 дней назад
agreed
@remoman
@remoman Месяц назад
What is the music that starts at 12:48?
@Leo-V
@Leo-V 3 месяца назад
In my top 10 movies
@analogemma
@analogemma Месяц назад
Ry Cooder's soundtrack brought me to this great film
@sder
@sder Месяц назад
incredible
@antoniopacelli
@antoniopacelli День назад
Page of Pitti de Bicci dei Borbone? Thin Jacobson?
@4623620
@4623620 16 дней назад
Yeah, I know that feeling . . .
@ruffmeow9893
@ruffmeow9893 13 дней назад
OMG - just trying to find a spot in the video where Jane is really talking - not finding it
@stinaandthewolf
@stinaandthewolf Месяц назад
Genius
@thebrunostrange
@thebrunostrange 13 дней назад
I love this movie so much
@sder
@sder 13 дней назад
Same
@natmanprime4295
@natmanprime4295 8 дней назад
izzat what the colours mean? interesting
@HenryCasillas
@HenryCasillas Месяц назад
🌻
@glennhubbard5008
@glennhubbard5008 11 дней назад
Great movie.
@Sean-lv6fx
@Sean-lv6fx 19 дней назад
I watched this film years ago only because I read it was Kurt Cobain's favourite film. The booth scene near the end is indeed a great scene, the cinematography throghout the film is great.
@paulmoore7064
@paulmoore7064 29 дней назад
Two badly underrated and underemployed actors.
@sder
@sder 29 дней назад
It’s really a shame
@transcripttranslation8801
@transcripttranslation8801 16 дней назад
This movie is a collective male fantasy, a European flavored one, about relatively unpeopled expanses of the American West where a man could dissolve into the landscape without socially imposed bonds, with few complications and no immediate responsibilities constricting his choices. Like Oden or Cain, or Odysseus as imagined in Lord Tennyson’s poem, the wanderer abdicates some familial pied à terre and leaves far behind the woman and child who tend his hearth for the freedom to measure the breadth of the horizon. The woman in such stories (for this is an old genre, pre-dating cinema) is not a fully fledged human but a projection of male fantasies about feminine beauty, lasting loyalty, and ultimate loving acceptance of the man despite his violence, immaturity, and material abandonment of his offspring. The film is beautiful but the plot is too infuriating, as it’s apparent that the deeply emotional moments aren’t really ever seen from a woman’s perspective, despite the framing.
@genericname2893
@genericname2893 4 месяца назад
Worried I wouldnt see you post for like a whole year or somthing.
@sder
@sder 4 месяца назад
Yeah didn’t mean to be gone so long, but we back!
@destinypirate
@destinypirate 2 дня назад
I hate to say it, but I will. Harry Dean Stanton needed an actress who, along with heartbreaking beauty, could also convey heartbreaking pain. Stanton has the inherant character to pull from the deep. Beautiful Nastassja was simply too well, too well. From the era, possibly Meryl, or....?
@lynjazz5122
@lynjazz5122 Месяц назад
This film was, oddly enough (when you consider their suicides), Elliot Smith's and Kurt Cobain's fav film. Whatever, right? It's a darn good film nonetheless!
@sder
@sder 29 дней назад
that is very interesting
@megandolimpio6579
@megandolimpio6579 7 дней назад
This movie God
@indunilfernando1336
@indunilfernando1336 2 месяца назад
Artificialintelligence AI
@emilioquezadatorres6683
@emilioquezadatorres6683 3 месяца назад
its okey, i think i understand the finals sequence, but i dont release what was the motive to travis left hes wife and son after he achiviement their family reunion
@MrMolotov69
@MrMolotov69 3 месяца назад
In the final sequence it reveals that he was an abusive alcoholic and that they ran away from him. It’s also alluded throughout the film that he hasn’t resolved his alcoholism and that he’s a broken man hence his incapacity to be a good father and partner which is why he runs away again to save those that love him from himself.
@backabeyond
@backabeyond 8 дней назад
I liked the movie on some levels, but I just couldn't get over how despicable these two are and how damaged that little boy would grow up to be.
@TiagoCavalcanti-ji6hu
@TiagoCavalcanti-ji6hu 29 дней назад
In Portuguese we say "Win Wenders e aprendenders"... even his bad movies are good. Enough said.
@sder
@sder 28 дней назад
Which of his films do you recommend I watch next? I have only seen Paris, Texas as of now.
@TiagoCavalcanti-ji6hu
@TiagoCavalcanti-ji6hu 28 дней назад
@@sder Wow, you're in for a ride! There's no wrong choice. Some folks don't like his too slow-paced movies (apparently not a problem for you), like his last one, "Perfect Days" (really slow, beautiful); and "Don't Come Knocking". My favorite ones are all the ones following "Paris, Texas": "Wings of Desire"; "Until the End of the World"; "Faraway, so close!"; "Lisbon Story"; "The End of Violence"; "The Million Dollar Hotel". His documentaries are also awesome, like Buena Vista Social Club, Pina, and The Salt of Earth. Obviously, "Wings of Desire" and "Far Away, So Close" are probably one of the first things you should definitely watch. But again, you can't go wrong! Cheers!!!
@TiagoCavalcanti-ji6hu
@TiagoCavalcanti-ji6hu 28 дней назад
Can't wait for you to react to them, lol! No spoilers, you're safe!
@sder
@sder 28 дней назад
@@TiagoCavalcanti-ji6hu I appreciate the response! I will check these out for sure
@TiagoCavalcanti-ji6hu
@TiagoCavalcanti-ji6hu 28 дней назад
@@sder Cheers, bruh! Let us know.
@gloriajordahl1086
@gloriajordahl1086 Месяц назад
I thought when Travis left their son in the hotel so he could reunite with his mother was one of the most selfless things he could've done. He was too old to be with her and their relationship was toxic.
@mortystraphouse5077
@mortystraphouse5077 18 дней назад
have u see the hallway scene from Oldboy? u need to watch more movies u think this is best scene in cinema lmao respect tho
@superbowl2848
@superbowl2848 Месяц назад
Seen way better, and with a nice score playing.
@sder
@sder Месяц назад
What are your propositions?
@matthewmaguire3554
@matthewmaguire3554 2 месяца назад
Exposed insulation...what's that about?
@GraniteQuarrier
@GraniteQuarrier Месяц назад
Well amigo, let’s make it up: it’s the only section of the room the customer cannot see and thus does not require any additional expensive finish carpentry, or insofar as we present idealized selves to others there are always those itchy insecurities underneath, or one or both characters require insulation from the other, or maybe the director and audience are just stringing together pretty/crude elements and infusing them with a personal, empathized sense of meaning and tragedy. I didn’t care for the film. My brother-in-law loves it. My wife literally wanted to go get fries during the last hour which is why I love her. Bottoms up.
@bruno_dias
@bruno_dias 20 дней назад
You must have watched very few films... Probably a very young guy with typical overemphasized opinions to sell videos better... But apart from your naive exaggerated claim your video is kind of nice, although the majority of the video's time is wasted just simply recounting the film itself in a compressed format. Even about the scene you like so much you just recount it in an obvious way. Why? For whom? Why don't you compare the scene with other great scenes of film history, for example? Is this just a personal thing you can't explain? If so, then this is just the scene you like the most, which is a less useful proposition but a more honest one.
@davidmayhew8083
@davidmayhew8083 13 дней назад
Ridiculous.
@johnbrown4568
@johnbrown4568 11 дней назад
😳🤣😂 This sort of over dramatic crap is why I don’t watch Hollywood movies 🤮
@adamgates1142
@adamgates1142 28 дней назад
I dunno man, the whole movie I'm just begging them to take the kid back. I found it impossible to care about these two...
@MaryDeanDotCom
@MaryDeanDotCom 14 дней назад
Haven’t seen the film… looks horrible. A good advertisement for birth control.
@neburarieiv
@neburarieiv Месяц назад
Sooo boring.
@user-qt4qp6bj1q
@user-qt4qp6bj1q 17 дней назад
The very crappy movie is clearly built around this scene.
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