Betty Cominotti
Betty Cominotti
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medieval hardcore
musici medievali @ Borno, Palio di San Martino
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Видео

Alfred Hitchcock's Notorious - Final Scene
Просмотров 72 тыс.14 лет назад
Alfred Hitchcock's Notorious - Final Scene
Editors - Bones
Просмотров 3314 лет назад
Editors live @ Palasharp - 4Dec09
The Killers - All These Things | Live
Просмотров 2815 лет назад
The KIllers performing "All These Things" Live @ DatchForum, Milan, 17th March 2009

Комментарии

  • @neidecapps8270
    @neidecapps8270 Месяц назад

    Sensacional filme com paisagens do Rio esse maravilhoso casal com cenas que apaixonante parecem real amor lindo de ver❤

  • @eheaven3
    @eheaven3 4 месяца назад

    Perhaps THE best ending of all time. Hitchcock’s best. Grant and Bergman . . . the most believable “I love you” ever uttered on the silver screen. Audiences cheered . . . as did I.

  • @abdulahad0736
    @abdulahad0736 Год назад

    Hitchcock is genius.

  • @meadbook999
    @meadbook999 Год назад

    That’s your headache.

  • @TeresaLevy
    @TeresaLevy Год назад

    For me the best film ever

  • @Malstrom86
    @Malstrom86 Год назад

    "Alex, would you come in please? I wish to talk to you..."

  • @reidasplataformas9397
    @reidasplataformas9397 Год назад

    Eu amo esse final, é tão romântico

  • @micah4242
    @micah4242 2 года назад

    One rarely sees such genuine intimacy in old films.

  • @nestordavidgonzalezrodrigu140
    @nestordavidgonzalezrodrigu140 2 года назад

    A real man, it's all it takes.

    • @betsylalich4570
      @betsylalich4570 Год назад

      Indeed ! So gallant ! The perfect actor for this role.

  • @valentinamasiello1971
    @valentinamasiello1971 2 года назад

    Uno dei più riusciti film di spionaggio appassionate le scene d'amore tra Grant e la Bergman Hitchcock si vede alla festa di Sebastian

  • @giusypollina7915
    @giusypollina7915 2 года назад

    La scena d'amore ,più d'amore che ci sia nella storia del cinema.

  • @viknetetsy8744
    @viknetetsy8744 2 года назад

    Пот-ря- са-ю- щая сцена!!!!!!!

  • @martingaughan1136
    @martingaughan1136 2 года назад

    Ingrid Bergman is great in Notorious. The film is really hers. Her finest Hollywood performance.

  • @christinedubois5954
    @christinedubois5954 2 года назад

    Claude Rains puts Modern Actors to shame! Evil in The Movies, but, in real life, a very private Man, with wonderful and fascinating stories and antidotes about Acting! Modern Actors aren’t like that. They’re evil in The Movies, and, they’re evil in real life. I wish Claude Rains was still alive.

    • @Q.Gold30
      @Q.Gold30 2 года назад

      Am a big fan of Claude Rains

    • @monmothma3358
      @monmothma3358 9 месяцев назад

      What are you talking about? Noone is necessarily evil just because they play evil. Not now, not before. I do love Claude Rains, though. The way he makes us symphathize with the villain here is incredible

  • @reidasplataformas9397
    @reidasplataformas9397 2 года назад

    Junto com Janela Indiscreta esse é o meu filme preferido

  • @Dousch
    @Dousch 2 года назад

    7:06 Simple yet incredibly striking framing.

  • @jameshaynes7062
    @jameshaynes7062 2 года назад

    The first time I watched this film, I came away with a strong impression of Alex as a pathetic coward. Subsequent viewings have changed my mind. Of course he tries to escape-- who wouldn't under such dismal circumstances?-- but in the last analysis he shows a good deal of courage, knowing full well that he's going to be murdered.

  • @neilmccormick2064
    @neilmccormick2064 2 года назад

    "There's a plane full of gemermans. There's a plane with mermans in it. Wanna go see Ethel Merman with me? " Can't stop thinking about that scene from Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid.

  • @annmacleod1099
    @annmacleod1099 3 года назад

    No Claude rains I'm not sentimental but I don't have a heart of stone that some people have when people are ment to have feeling and be human .

    • @Q.Gold30
      @Q.Gold30 2 года назад

      Claude Rains put modern actors to shame

  • @tharold8730
    @tharold8730 3 года назад

    Huge hit for RKO in 1946

  • @acdragonrider
    @acdragonrider 3 года назад

    Why is there no restored version of the film like everywhere I look there isn’t any HD or 4K film

  • @burizaemon9305
    @burizaemon9305 3 года назад

    Hail Hydra..😬

  • @highwind1991
    @highwind1991 3 года назад

    Cinema is so incredible. It just shows 4 characters slowly walking down a flight of stairs and yet because of the camera work, the editing, the acting and the stories context, it's the most suspenseful and exciting thing. It puts a lot of modern Blockbuster sequences to shame

    • @muhammadirvansyahsyahaziz7758
      @muhammadirvansyahsyahaziz7758 3 года назад

      It's the most excellent Hitchcock movie of all time for me,absolutely incredible,i watch this film today,and Tokyo story by ozu,what a day.

    • @highwind1991
      @highwind1991 3 года назад

      @@muhammadirvansyahsyahaziz7758 tokyo story is a perfect film

    • @muhammadirvansyahsyahaziz7758
      @muhammadirvansyahsyahaziz7758 3 года назад

      @@highwind1991 yes,indeed,btw this Is my list for best film 1.The Godfather 2.Tokyo Story 3.Citizen Kane 4.Casablanca 5.Vertigo 6.Notorious 7.2001 a space Odyssey 8.Taxi driver 9.The Godfather part 2 10.Inception

  • @lizzy-wx4rx
    @lizzy-wx4rx 3 года назад

    I just love how ruthless Cary Grant is at the very end, I don't know why.

    • @pizzibarbarodellamaremma3179
      @pizzibarbarodellamaremma3179 3 года назад

      He's a bad boy

    • @nancyperlman3884
      @nancyperlman3884 3 года назад

      Sebastian & his mother poisoned the woman he unconditionally loves

    • @betsylalich4570
      @betsylalich4570 Год назад

      Cary was a superb actor...suave, deeply intelligent, gorgeous, whether in suspense or humor, he conveyed something so genuine.

  • @roddycurt9139
    @roddycurt9139 3 года назад

    This scene still gives me chills!!

  • @shirleylane131
    @shirleylane131 3 года назад

    Anyone know where I can watch it for free.

    • @keilet8582
      @keilet8582 3 года назад

      You can find it fully version in RUclips..

    • @Q.Gold30
      @Q.Gold30 2 года назад

      Claude Rains put modern actors to shame

  • @m.m6726
    @m.m6726 4 года назад

    I so far, watched Rear Window, Notorious And Spellbound and Notorious is my favorite! I Am going to watch Vertigo, To Catch a thief and Dial M for murder (All Hitchcock movies) and I hope notorious will still be my all-time Hitchcock favorite!

    • @wildsmiley
      @wildsmiley 4 года назад

      serial killers fascinate me I hope you enjoyed Vertigo, it’s not only my favorite Hitchcock film but my favorite classic film. I’d recommend Strangers On A Train, Rope, The Birds, Shadow of a Doubt and especially North By Northwest. All fantastic.

    • @macc.1132
      @macc.1132 4 года назад

      40's and 50's Hitchcock - so different, but all so good. Rebecca is a good haunting and any scene with Judith Anderson is aces! I hope you make time to see it. How'd you like Vertigo? It's such a good film, so ahead of its time. If you haven't seen Psycho, then you're in for a good film. Another film ahead of its time.

    • @UvilleraMente
      @UvilleraMente 3 года назад

      I doubt it. Once you get to vertigo U WILL KNOW!!

    • @roddycurt9139
      @roddycurt9139 3 года назад

      Dial M For Murder is my absolute favorite! Runners up are Strangers on a Train, Notorious, The Lady Vanishes and 39 Steps. Have fun!!!

  • @tadimaggio
    @tadimaggio 4 года назад

    What A GREAT way to give a villain his comeuppance: to threaten to reveal a fatal secret unless he lets you go! This is just about the only time in screen history when having the bad guys see the hero and heroine as they escape works to the advantage of the good guys. This is easily on the short list of Hitchcock's best films. Its title was also unintentionally ironic, to a pretty considerable degree. Only two years after finishing "Notorious", Ingrid Bergman became "notorious" in real life, for daring to leave her cold and unloving husband for another man. At least Alicia Huberman didn't end up getting denounced on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives, as Ingrid did. And -- a further irony -- one of the first films that Ingrid and her new husband, Roberto Rossellini, made together after their "bolting" was "Europa '51", one of the most powerful dramatizations of the Christian ethic in action that has ever been committed to film; it ranks with Dreyer's "The Passion of Joan of Arc" and Bresson's "Diary of a Country Priest" as a key Christian work of art in the twentieth century. As to Ingrid herself, perhaps the best comment belongs to the great filmmaker Jean Renoir. When he asked her to appear in his film "Elena et les Hommes", they agreed to meet for dinner in Paris to discuss it. The next day, one of Renoir's assistants asked him: "Monsieur, you must tell me. What was it like to have dinner with Ingrid Bergman?" Renoir smiled and replied, "It was like spending three hours across the table from a talking orchid."

    • @acdragonrider
      @acdragonrider 3 года назад

      Agreed for me it’s Psycho Vertigo Notorious Shadow of a doubt Rear window

    • @betsylalich4570
      @betsylalich4570 Год назад

      Thomas, How very beautiful : "a talking orchid". Indeed, Ingrid was and remains more than just a beauty or talent, but great spirit.

  • @johnmaritato3587
    @johnmaritato3587 4 года назад

    From one of the most romantic scenes in movies to one of the most suspenseful. Hitchcock baby. Hitchcock. Had to watch here because this is the precise moment where my DVD gets stuck.

  • @nakrat11
    @nakrat11 5 лет назад

    The bedroom scene is so incredibly romantic, and the lighting phenomenal. Note how it mirrors the beginning, when she wakes up in bed with a hangover, to see Cary Grant standing there too.

  • @susanb2015
    @susanb2015 5 лет назад

    I feel so bad for Claude Rains' character at the end even though he is the villain. He's a terrific actor.

    • @colbjallen8334
      @colbjallen8334 4 года назад

      Susan B boo

    • @Line...
      @Line... 3 года назад

      Same here... he adds so much to every movie he's in

    • @susanb2015
      @susanb2015 3 года назад

      @@Line... He was a very good actor.

    • @Line...
      @Line... 3 года назад

      @@susanb2015 indeed he was.

    • @scottfree2248
      @scottfree2248 3 года назад

      He got his just rewards.

  • @hannahgentry2711
    @hannahgentry2711 5 лет назад

    The pain in Grant's voice when he asks her if she is in pain is just 😍😍

    • @Q.Gold30
      @Q.Gold30 2 года назад

      Grant was very handsome

    • @cynthiahusband106
      @cynthiahusband106 17 дней назад

      Hitchcock brilliant in all that he did he making movies , Grant and Bergman made a stunning couple , the acting, story, screenplay excellent ,higher standards back then I guess.

  • @hannahgentry2711
    @hannahgentry2711 5 лет назад

    Is it assumed that she dies with the true love of her life or is it assumed that he takes her to the hospital and she lives?

    • @_ttnxo
      @_ttnxo 5 лет назад

      She lives. I read that they got married in an deleted scene.

    • @hannahgentry2711
      @hannahgentry2711 5 лет назад

      @@_ttnxo Oh that's good!

    • @nancyperlman3884
      @nancyperlman3884 3 года назад

      When Cary Grant stars in a Hitchcock film, neither he nor the lead actress die. The audience who previewed Suspicion was not in favor of the original ending (where Joan Fontaine is killed by Cary Grant's character) so it was changed

  • @alg11297
    @alg11297 5 лет назад

    Amazing how she never says she loves him. Even near death as she is.

    • @hannahgentry2711
      @hannahgentry2711 5 лет назад

      He knows. She was the one that needed to hear it. He knew long ago

    • @betsylalich4570
      @betsylalich4570 Год назад

      She never says it? She portrays it in her acting.

    • @12classics39
      @12classics39 Год назад

      she wouldn't have had a reason to beg him to say he loves her if she didn't feel the same way.

  • @emilylucas2217
    @emilylucas2217 5 лет назад

    I don't actually feel sorry for Alex. After all who would feel sorry for the man who poisoned them because of his own cowardice? The scene of Devlin and Alysha is beautiful every time I see it.

    • @Line...
      @Line... 3 года назад

      b-but it's claude rains, I can't help it

  • @CaminoAir
    @CaminoAir 7 лет назад

    Should Devlin have taken Alex with him in the car at the end? Alex would have been extremely useful to American intelligence. He would have known a lot about what the ex-Nazi's were up to. I understand that Alex has to get what's coming to him in movie logic, but that was a major mistake by Devlin purely as a operative. I'm sure his boss would have been seriously unimpressed if Devlin told him what had actually happened.

    • @_ttnxo
      @_ttnxo 5 лет назад

      I don't think Alex would have been very helpful if they took him with them. He could have been armed and he could have killed both of them.

    • @pa3997
      @pa3997 4 года назад

      I think that you are right, it is a mistake on an operative level. But he is probably beyond that and acts on an emotional Level because of His love.

    • @scottfree2248
      @scottfree2248 3 года назад

      Alex probably would have taken his life like Alicia's father did. I doubt he would have turned into an informant.

  • @alcd6333
    @alcd6333 7 лет назад

    I love the black & white photography, showing the wonderful contrasts between light and shadow. This is especially true in the close-ups with Grant and Bergman.

  • @Krista2882
    @Krista2882 7 лет назад

    my favorite scene of the movie

    • @Q.Gold30
      @Q.Gold30 2 года назад

      Ingrid was incredibly gorgeous

  • @RandomJayne
    @RandomJayne 8 лет назад

    The older woman is totally rockin' Princess's Leia's braid crown from Empire Strikes Back.

    • @MonsieurJoao1
      @MonsieurJoao1 7 лет назад

      she is also one of the prototypes of Frau Blücher... actually, the real prototype is in one Pabst's film, in the 30's...

    • @Q.Gold30
      @Q.Gold30 2 года назад

      I agree with you

    • @betsylalich4570
      @betsylalich4570 Год назад

      She was called "madam"...a great villain!

  • @vynyoe30
    @vynyoe30 8 лет назад

    The resolution of this movie is about love, beauty and death. Grant confesses his love for Alysha and this saves the day. Raines is broken hearted and blinded by such. It is his mother who is afraid to die not him. The Dr. is blinded by her beauty not realizing she could ever be a spy. Raines' friends believe this is a weird love triangle and not spy v spy. Only the goon has some suspicion but it comes to late. Their judgment is clouded by their emotional interest in such a beautiful, young woman.

  • @jeremymarshall7319
    @jeremymarshall7319 9 лет назад

    Leopoldine Konstantin plays Sebastian's mother, in her only Hollywood film.

  • @The1Thrashmaster
    @The1Thrashmaster 10 лет назад

    The suggestion that Alex Sebastian is about to be killed is not justified. We don't know that there weren't phones *outside* Alicia's room. Alex's story is not outlandish. At least one of Sebastian's colleagues thinks very highly of Alicia, and would not suspect her to be a traitor. Plus, if they are so suspicious, why do they let her leave at all? Even if his death is near, surely this man is planning exit strategies. This is an emotional ending. As a legitimate plot resolution, it fails.

    • @loge10
      @loge10 5 месяцев назад

      So instead of attacking you for being a little over the top in your plausibility demands, I'd be interested for you to provide an example of a film who screenplay meet your standards for such things, yet also provides an emotional engagement and satisfaction. Many great films would be considered to have failed by the scrutiny you seem to demand.

    • @The1Thrashmaster
      @The1Thrashmaster 5 месяцев назад

      @@loge10 Thank you for asking. Notorious is a great, believable story. I’m actually fine with the information that it gives us. I was picking on how the ending is presented. It is very emotionally engaging, but it leads the viewer to make assumptions. Yes, it is a tough standard. As the situation in this clip is a serious, life-or-death one, I’ll name some movies that have similar situations and, unless I’m wrong, do basically nothing to exaggerate them. Obviously, these movies are also dark, serious things. Sunset Blvd. and Brubaker are terribly plausible. Everything that Do the Right Thing, Platoon, Ride the High Country, The Naked City, Bedlam (1946) and Cape Fear (1962) say seems convincing to me. Stage Fright, which is also directed by Alfred Hitchcock, is quite impressive. I believe that people tend to survive things. I love a movie that sends a message that you can simply believe.

  • @The1Thrashmaster
    @The1Thrashmaster 10 лет назад

    :) I'm sure he'll be more explicit about his sorriness when he's had time to gather his thoughts. You know, after they get all of that poison out of her system.

  • @The1Thrashmaster
    @The1Thrashmaster 10 лет назад

    Let's see now. He's a Nazi. He's hiding key ingredients for nuclear weapons. He rushed her into this marriage, and conspired to inflict on her a slow and painful death. True, this woman may not have a especially merciful heart. But one can hardly blame her for her lack of sympathy.

  • @ISFSeattle
    @ISFSeattle 11 лет назад

    The whole movie was worth it just to see Cary Grant confess his love to her at the end. The only words missing were "I'm sorry" ... since he'd been unbelievably cruel to her almost the entire film. Though I suppose "I couldn't see straight or think straight. I was a fat-headed guy full of pain. It tore me up not having you" pretty much meant "I'm sorry"... :)

    • @12classics39
      @12classics39 Год назад

      yes it did mean "i'm sorry." also his act of risking his life to find her and get her out of there proved all of his previous cruel words to be empty and meaningless.

    • @ReligionOfSacrifice
      @ReligionOfSacrifice 10 месяцев назад

      @@12classics39, it's more than just these words. So many of their lines are what men and women say to each other for far less or even complete false reasons. Or what they desire to say to people of the opposite sex.

    • @sweetanarchi
      @sweetanarchi 7 месяцев назад

      That's what I'm also thinking

  • @bertdockx
    @bertdockx 11 лет назад

    "That's your headache" and than she smiles... How cruel is that!

  • @Polyfusia
    @Polyfusia 11 лет назад

    Brilliant cinematography at the end.

  • @floridafyme
    @floridafyme 12 лет назад

    My favorite Hitchcock movie.

  • @janejones11
    @janejones11 12 лет назад

    Best scene !

  • @IngridBergmanRocked
    @IngridBergmanRocked 12 лет назад

    Hot...Hot...HOT!!!:D