the greatest nod in film history. real tears, real displaced peoples, no fake patriotism here. still one of the most inspirational scenes I have ever viewed.
Mine too. I don't really cry, but after reading how the woman who was crying really felt as she was singing, you feel for her as she was a French refugee who had to leave France with her Jewish husband. Every person that is singing the song was just like her. Even Paul Henreid, had to flee Austria-Hungary because he spoke out like his character, Lazslo.
The first time he does so overtly. He's been quietly sticking his neck out for refugees the entire movie, such as when he has his croupier rig the table for the Bulgarian refugees seeking shelter in the United States.
Spent time with the French 57,th artillery at the hi gh point of the cold war. Good soldiers all. Love the movie and never listen without tears in my eyes any time I hear the French sing I still tear up a bit, soldiers are all brothers and we love freedom Us army and france
The majority of the actors singing the French anthem were mostly people who had escaped from Europe at the time... This is one of my most favorite scenes ever. Thank you.
In fact only 3 of the actors in the movie were American. The rest were all European. Do you know who the were? Hint not Ingrid Bergman. She was Swedish.
This is truly a great scene in a movie filled with great scenes. Bogie, Ingrid Bergman, Paul Hendrix, Claude Raines, Peter Lorre, Conrad Veidt, and a host of others were all great.
@@AndrewLouWho Bogie, Joy Page (the young Bulgarian bride), and Dooley Wilson (Sam) were the three American actors in the movie. Conrad Veidt, who played Major Strasser was a German actor who fled Germany with his Jewish wife. Madeleine Lebeau as Yvonne was French as was her husband, Marcel Dalio who played the roulette croupier. Sidney Greenstreet was British, Paul Heinreid was Austrian, and Peter Lorie was German. Even Curt Bois, the pickpocket, was a German refugee. Finally, Ingrid Bergman was Swedish.
I first watched this film a couple of years ago after hearing and reading about it for years. I can see why it's at the top of lists of great films. This scene is so incredibly moving, even eighty years after it was made.
This scene is what made Casablanca a classic movie when it premiered in February 1942. And I myself am part French on my father's father side. My grandfather Monsiuer Laplume whose ancestors were from the province of Biarritz in France. 😊
This scene always brought a tear to my eyes. A brilliantly directed scene. Those camera shots to the women's faces were stunning in black and white. I just teared up now.
When France was occupied by the Nazis, the national anthem was banned. Imagine the emotion of the French in 1944 when they saw General De Gaulle parading on the Champs Elysée at the time of the liberation of Paris, and they started the Marseillaise for the first time in 4 years! 🇨🇵 🇨🇵👏
One of the greatest movies of all. Those were REAL tears shed. The last scene before boarding the plane when the camera pans each person is absolutely brilliant! A true classic in every way.
Many of the supporting actors in this picture were German-Jewish rather than French (even Paul Henried was of Austrian-Jewish origin) so this scene was more than just about French patriotism.
@@davidc.weiser9740 - My favorite as well. I strongly doubt they'll ever produce another movie that is it's equal. It's a shame the newer generations will never know what good cinema really is.
Back when I was living in Dublin this was going to be on television. I borrowed a TV and had a party. We watched the film and then had a French dinner.
Casablanca is my favourite movie. This is one of the scenes I love the most in the movie. It gives every citizen regardless of their nationality a sense of belonging, strength and unity.
The German song is not Nazi, but a Napoleonic era German song about standing up to the French on the Rhine. A thorough slap in the face to a French audience after the German blitz. The French song was, at that time, the FORMER French national anthem, dropped by the military dictatorship that replaced the Republic. So they are singing an anthem of restoration of the old French Republic in defiance of the German military that destroyed it. The emotions of the actors were not forced.
I've made the comment before . . . Every man should feel a moment such as the look Ingrid Bergman gives Paul Henried. The love and admiration in her eyes is unmistakable. Vive la France. Vive la liberte.
@@Sylvander1911 There are so many good movies that I love, but if I had to pick the best it would be this one. And this scene is arguably the best scene in film.
0:36. Just look at the juxtaposition between Paul Henreid as Victor Laszlo and Humphrey Bogart as Rick Blaine. Bogey is kind of sourly amused, while Henreid is grimly determined to do something. That, plus Ingrid Bergman's admiring gaze at 1:38 foretells how the film is going to end. What a masterpiece this film is!
Bergman asked Michael Curtiz who she was supposed to be in love with and he told her to play it as if she was in love with both men. This is one of the few scenes where she really looks like she is in love with Victor. Also, when Claude Rains pops up to arrest them and she instantly moves closer to Laszlo.
As it is, La Marseillaise is the most rousing national anthem. Add to it the context of this scene, and you have one hell of an emotional scene. Vive la France, indeed!
Liberty is earned, the price may be high and is payed in blood. Indeed. Some benefiting this liberty have the luxury to say nowadays that the price was too high.
I like how the two songs sync up in the middle for a bit until the Germans give up. I also think the scene other woman crying while she's singing it is very powerful.
She, Madeleine Lebeau, was, like many of the extra's, refugees from Europe during the war. She and her Jewish husband fled just ahead of the Nazis as they overran France making this scene extremely powerful.
Have YOU never been to Paris, for le Fête Nationale, on July 14th? EVERYONE cries for the number ONE anthem in the world. An anthem that means what is says, that was founded in the Revolution, unlike your rag of a flag, and a child's tune of an anthem.
Tha value of Leadership. It is like Lazlo was thinking "They will not insult us anymore", and took action. And the people, breaking their apathy, rallied around him.
The French actress in that scene (Madeleine Lebeau) had actually escaped from France about a year earlier. As one commenter said, those were real tears. Some of the most memorable scenes in classic Hollywood occurred when the audience sang along, especially in a dramatic scene (Casablanca, Sound of Music). Why can't they have scenes like this anymore in the movies?
The "post-modern writers" of today don't now how to write such a scene, or more likely, see it as "trite and old-fashioned." Here's looking at those kids with dismay...
And when her close‐up takes place, she is singing "... they're coming into our homes to slit the throats of our sons and our womenfolk" (my translation).
Ta scena powinna być pokazywana każdemu francuskiemu dziecku, żeby wiedziało, że Francuzi mają jaja-de Gaulla i Napoleona,a ich marszałek jest polskim bohaterem narodowym.Wielu rzeczy należy się wstydzić,ale i też wieloma należy się chlubić!
An intricate scene brilliantly edited. We see Bergman look at her husband with pride and love. Even though she loves Rick, we see why she left him. We see the police officer, a Frenchman himself, barely hiding his contempt for the Germans. We see the french girl recover her patriotism. The guitar player playing and singing with so much emotion! It's so hard to pick a favorite scene in this movie when the whole film is one great scene after another. But this one comes close!
Incluir La Marsellesa justo en ese momento de la cinta es en mi opinión la más brillante idea que se le pudo ocurrir a algún libretista (la película tuvo varios). Talk about timing, they couldn't have placed that hymn in a more appropriate moment, pure genius !!!
Conrad Veidt, as Major Strasser, was a Jewish refugee. He turned his face away, as his song was drowned out. I choose to believe he sang Le Marseillaise along with everyone else.
One of my favourite scenes in movies. And the Greek subtitles were a bit of a bonus. I enjoyed learning that La Marseillaise is called La Massaliotida, i. e., Greeks are still calling Marseille by the name that ancient Greek settlers gave it back in the BCs.
Bet audiences rose and sang along when shown in theaters. You can see the heartache and pain in Ms. LeBeau's face, since she had just escaped from France.
All the actors except the 2 Americans were refugees from the war, even the germans. They were not really acting in this scene; they were expressing their real emotions.
The Marseillaise is the very best anthem in the whole world. It actually stands for REALITY, something that everyone can understand and feel. I am Irish, ex-British, and I play it every day when I get out of bed. I also fly the EU, France, Ireland, Ukraina, and Polish flags. The Marseillaise cuts across nationality, except for ONE country. And only ONE country.
@@EwanCummins All 3 things that you Anglo-Saxon mongrels didn't have the goolies for back on the 30th January 1649. You made a right mess of that. And you seem to suggest that there is nothing wrong with a political system that takes the best infanticides, fratricides, murders, thieves, rapists, incestuous parents, greedy, vicious, under-educated thugs and elevate them to the top position, regardless of the lack of any innate qualities, and continues the experiment for generations. Adult countries, such as France, Ireland, Germany, Poland, Italy, Czech Republic, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, and there are just 4 monarchies in the EU, out of 27, that leaves 4 countries that just haven't grown up yet. And, of course, the country called Pryttynn is still too infantile to move towards an adult political system. And the Anglo-Saxons are the chief culprits of that situation, using the active monarchy, the Freemasons, and the "elites" of the Harrow/Eton, Oxford and Cambridge bloc, to keep the country from moving way beyond childish attitudes, and becoming a democracy. As to your opinion of the French national anthem, how does it differ from the English "GOD save the mongrels"? And how does the 2nd French anthem differ?
I cry like an imbecile at this scene. It's the emotional heart of the movie (IMHO ). The fact that they sing even with the Germans and then overtake them is to me symbolic that the right will prevail. Genius juxtaposition of the songs there ! The greatest movie of all time !
Questo pezzo del film è eccezionale verrebbe quasi da alzarsi in piedi e cantare assieme agli altri.......se avessimo anche noi un poco di piu di spirito nazionale......!!!
the greatest nod in film history. real tears, real displaced peoples, no fake patriotism here. still one of the most inspirational scenes I have ever viewed.
So moving. Always moving
Hmm.🤔 So after securing a hard fought and sacrificial victory, whose idea was it to let the 🤪 Islamists in.
And actually during the war time... Impressive...
And actually during the war time... Impressive...
And only if you understand the French lyrics
This is my most favorite scene in
“Casablanca”! I cry each time I see it.
Thank GOD for TH-cam. I can watch it
anytime I want!
C'est la France libre du Maroc pendant l'occupation de la France
Le combat contre cette chose sans nom
Mine too. I don't really cry, but after reading how the woman who was crying really felt as she was singing, you feel for her as she was a French refugee who had to leave France with her Jewish husband. Every person that is singing the song was just like her. Even Paul Henreid, had to flee Austria-Hungary because he spoke out like his character, Lazslo.
Me too.
Favorite is already a superlative. Adding the word "most" ruins your sentence.
@@blacbraunno grammer less I ns,need please .
When Rick gives the nod to play the French national anthem, it is a turning point because it’s the first time Rick actually chooses a side.
Well said
I loved the lightning-flash behind that nod; almost unconsciously affirming the decency of Heinred’s action
God point.
The first time he does so overtly. He's been quietly sticking his neck out for refugees the entire movie, such as when he has his croupier rig the table for the Bulgarian refugees seeking shelter in the United States.
Spent time with the French 57,th artillery at the hi gh point of the cold war. Good soldiers all. Love the movie and never listen without tears in my eyes any time I hear the French sing I still tear up a bit, soldiers are all brothers and we love freedom
Us army and france
The majority of the actors singing the French anthem were mostly people who had escaped from Europe at the time... This is one of my most favorite scenes ever.
Thank you.
Giant !
In fact only 3 of the actors in the movie were American. The rest were all European.
Do you know who the were? Hint not Ingrid Bergman. She was Swedish.
I believe Bogie and Claude were two of them.. perhaps Peter Lorrie as well?
This is truly a great scene in a movie filled with great scenes. Bogie, Ingrid Bergman, Paul Hendrix, Claude Raines, Peter Lorre, Conrad Veidt, and a host of others were all great.
@@AndrewLouWho Bogie, Joy Page (the young Bulgarian bride), and Dooley Wilson (Sam) were the three American actors in the movie. Conrad Veidt, who played Major Strasser was a German actor who fled Germany with his Jewish wife. Madeleine Lebeau as Yvonne was French as was her husband, Marcel Dalio who played the roulette croupier. Sidney Greenstreet was British, Paul Heinreid was Austrian, and Peter Lorie was German. Even Curt Bois, the pickpocket, was a German refugee. Finally, Ingrid Bergman was Swedish.
I first watched this film a couple of years ago after hearing and reading about it for years. I can see why it's at the top of lists of great films. This scene is so incredibly moving, even eighty years after it was made.
Claude Rains' oh s*** look @ 0.35 and later when he closes the joint and takes his winnings is hilarious!
Fell in love with Le Marseilles because of this film .I don’t think I’m alone.
Ingrid Bergman is just beautiful. The stare on her face reveals to me that her mind showed how she was feeling. Perplexed?
This scene is what made Casablanca a classic movie when it premiered in February 1942. And I myself am part French on my father's father side. My grandfather Monsiuer Laplume whose ancestors were from the province of Biarritz in France. 😊
ค
Vive la france vive la démocratie! quelle belle marseillaise!!
This scene always brought a tear to my eyes. A brilliantly directed scene. Those camera shots to the women's faces were stunning in black and white. I just teared up now.
When France was occupied by the Nazis, the national anthem was banned.
Imagine the emotion of the French in 1944 when they saw General De Gaulle parading on the Champs Elysée at the time of the liberation of Paris, and they started the Marseillaise for the first time in 4 years!
🇨🇵 🇨🇵👏
Yes indeed it IS a great anthem
One of the greatest movies of all. Those were REAL tears shed. The last scene before boarding the plane when the camera pans each person is absolutely brilliant! A true classic in every way.
And not just the actors and acting, but the cinematography, the writing, the music, the costumes... It all just came together in a perfect storm.
Many of the people in that film were refugees from Europe.
Greatest scene in the worlds greatest movie. Powerfull!
One of my favorite scenes in!
Yes!
C'est vrai.
Same here
Those were real tears there....most of these folks had been in occupied areas & many had gotten out by the skin of their teeth...😮
This is it. Viva La France 🇫🇷!
greatest scene from the greatest movie ever made. period.
Many of the supporting actors in this picture were German-Jewish rather than French (even Paul Henried was of Austrian-Jewish origin) so this scene was more than just about French patriotism.
And Conrad Veidt, the nasty nazi, was a German with a Jewish wife
Im 72 and that scene still brings a tear to my eye what a scene in a movie brilliant stuff
I'll see your 72 and raise you 10. It remains my single favorite movie.
@@davidc.weiser9740 - My favorite as well. I strongly doubt they'll ever produce another movie that is it's equal. It's a shame the newer generations will never know what good cinema really is.
Te comprendo y comparto, esta escena significa todo para los antifascistas, es maravillosa.
Your not alone :)
Likewise, tears, every time. Was not alive at that time, but I understand and can feel the emotions in this scene.
Back when I was living in Dublin this was going to be on television. I borrowed a TV and had a party. We watched the film and then had a French dinner.
I’ve watched the movie and this scene in particular dozens of times and I still get goosebumps.
Just absolutely heart stirring I have tears in my eyes and I am not even French
For one minute in that scene, we're all French.
@@danieldickson8591 Yes it is a inspiring anthem
The French Woman that sang the anthem , was the last living cast member !😢❤
Femme de Marcel DALIO
Casablanca is my favourite movie. This is one of the scenes I love the most in the movie. It gives every citizen regardless of their nationality a sense of belonging, strength and unity.
There are a number of scenes in movies that, if I miss them, I am so disappointed. This is the scene in Casablance that makes the film.
The German song is not Nazi, but a Napoleonic era German song about standing up to the French on the Rhine. A thorough slap in the face to a French audience after the German blitz.
The French song was, at that time, the FORMER French national anthem, dropped by the military dictatorship that replaced the Republic.
So they are singing an anthem of restoration of the old French Republic in defiance of the German military that destroyed it. The emotions of the actors were not forced.
And an anthem that's a litteral call to arms to fight against opressors and tyrants...
I've made the comment before . . . Every man should feel a moment such as the look Ingrid Bergman gives Paul Henried. The love and admiration in her eyes is unmistakable.
Vive la France. Vive la liberte.
Indeed! The "look" every man who's ever been in love dreams of seeing!
As Stephen Spielberg said of this, for several minutes we all became French
ONE OF THE GREATEST FILMS OF ALL TIME !!!
Not "One of"
@@Sylvander1911 There are so many good movies that I love, but if I had to pick the best it would be this one. And this scene is arguably the best scene in film.
Surely, on the list of 100 greatest films ever.
You're made of stone if this doesn't move you =,)
@@ernesthill4017 TRUE
One of my all time favorite films. I always cry when they sing the Marseilles.
One of the greatest films ever made, a true classic. Thanks4 the memories.
The greatest edition of La Marseillaise ever.
As they say...content is everything. The war was still on and undecided when this was filmed.
As an American, I will always have a certain feeling of brotherhood for mon amis!
All actor's in this movie are at the top of their game. A marvelous production.we miss this level of film production.
Brings tears to your eyes Ken.
0:36. Just look at the juxtaposition between Paul Henreid as Victor Laszlo and Humphrey Bogart as Rick Blaine. Bogey is kind of sourly amused, while Henreid is grimly determined to do something. That, plus Ingrid Bergman's admiring gaze at 1:38 foretells how the film is going to end.
What a masterpiece this film is!
About that gaze @ 1:38 .. Isn't that what every man who's ever been in love dreams of seeing from his beloved? Sigh! Just a hopeless romantic here!
Her eyes said it all
She was remembering why she fell in love with Victor.
Bergman asked Michael Curtiz who she was supposed to be in love with and he told her to play it as if she was in love with both men. This is one of the few scenes where she really looks like she is in love with Victor. Also, when Claude Rains pops up to arrest them and she instantly moves closer to Laszlo.
One of the greatest movie scenes
Casablanca es un clásico del cin de los años cuarenta del siglo Pasado. Y el juego de miradas y gestos de esta escena es genial.
As it is, La Marseillaise is the most rousing national anthem. Add to it the context of this scene, and you have one hell of an emotional scene. Vive la France, indeed!
Hm, La Revolution devoured all her children at the horror time
For every nation, their national anthem is always the most rousing of all !
@@reynaldoflores4522 Listen to God Defend New Zealand. It's a dirge.
@@ivanboskovic1260 But came through finally to become a great and a free nation.
Liberty is earned, the price may be high and is payed in blood. Indeed.
Some benefiting this liberty have the luxury to say nowadays that the price was too high.
Cada vez que veo esta escena tengo que ponerme en pie. Es increíble, maravillosa, fantástica. Grande.
Puta Madre, hombre ! Tienes razon.
I like how the two songs sync up in the middle for a bit until the Germans give up. I also think the scene other woman crying while she's singing it is very powerful.
She, Madeleine Lebeau, was, like many of the extra's, refugees from Europe during the war. She and her Jewish husband fled just ahead of the Nazis as they overran France making this scene extremely powerful.
Have YOU never been to Paris, for le Fête Nationale, on July 14th? EVERYONE cries for the number ONE anthem in the world. An anthem that means what is says, that was founded in the Revolution, unlike your rag of a flag, and a child's tune of an anthem.
That's right! Whoever arranged the music made sure the two songs were in the same key.
@@danawinsor1380 Or did some classical education and heard 1812 Overture. ;)
@@vojemeteThe 1812 incorporates some bars of La Marseilles.
Tha value of Leadership. It is like Lazlo was thinking "They will not insult us anymore", and took action. And the people, breaking their apathy, rallied around him.
Para el recuerdo ,yo tenía 9años cuando vi esta película fue tan bella esta escena que nunca olvidé!
Damn I love this scene. Rick decides to rejoin the fight.
The French actress in that scene (Madeleine Lebeau) had actually escaped from France about a year earlier. As one commenter said, those were real tears. Some of the most memorable scenes in classic Hollywood occurred when the audience sang along, especially in a dramatic scene (Casablanca, Sound of Music). Why can't they have scenes like this anymore in the movies?
Not diverse enough lol
The "post-modern writers" of today don't now how to write such a scene, or more likely, see it as "trite and old-fashioned." Here's looking at those kids with dismay...
And when her close‐up takes place, she is singing "... they're coming into our homes to slit the throats of our sons and our womenfolk" (my translation).
The most recognized two minutes in movie history no one needs to ask from what movie.
Ta scena powinna być pokazywana każdemu francuskiemu dziecku, żeby wiedziało, że Francuzi mają jaja-de Gaulla i Napoleona,a ich marszałek jest polskim bohaterem narodowym.Wielu rzeczy należy się wstydzić,ale i też wieloma należy się chlubić!
An intricate scene brilliantly edited. We see Bergman look at her husband with pride and love. Even though she loves Rick, we see why she left him. We see the police officer, a Frenchman himself, barely hiding his contempt for the Germans. We see the french girl recover her patriotism. The guitar player playing and singing with so much emotion! It's so hard to pick a favorite scene in this movie when the whole film is one great scene after another. But this one comes close!
And that "look" from Bergman is what every man who's ever been in love dreams of seeing from his beloved! ... Sigh! Just a hopeless romantic here!
Possibly the best scene ever in a movie!
When I watch Casablanca, I always stand during the singing of La Marseillaise - even when I'm home alone.
Incluir La Marsellesa justo en ese momento de la cinta es en mi opinión la más brillante idea que se le pudo ocurrir a algún libretista (la película tuvo varios). Talk about timing, they couldn't have placed that hymn in a more appropriate moment, pure genius !!!
Twenty years off the gratest movie off all time!!!❤❤❤❤❤❤
The orchestra sounded way bigger and fuller than is possible that with the few musicians appearing in the scene.
One of the greatest scenes ever
Conrad Veidt, as Major Strasser, was a Jewish refugee. He turned his face away, as his song was drowned out. I choose to believe he sang Le Marseillaise along with everyone else.
One of my favourite scenes in movies. And the Greek subtitles were a bit of a bonus. I enjoyed learning that La Marseillaise is called La Massaliotida, i. e., Greeks are still calling Marseille by the name that ancient Greek settlers gave it back in the BCs.
Ingrid Bergman, für immer und in jeder Hinsicht die Nr.1 !!!
Maravilhosa guerra simbólica entre os hinos. Um dos mais brilhantes filmes da História!
Quite simply the most stirring scene in cinema history.
No sé cuantas veces la vi, pero esta parte siempre me hace llorar.
L'inno nazionale più bello del mondo "la marsigliese"
It’s not just a national anthem - it’s a call to arms (written during the French Revolution), so it was a doubly powerful message to the Nazis.
Bet audiences rose and sang along when shown in theaters. You can see the heartache and pain in Ms. LeBeau's face, since she had just escaped from France.
Je suis français en j'en pleure !! 😢
vive la France!
@@jacklou8553 Casablanca c'est au Maroc
@@Antoine.45603 Maroc a été sous la protection de la France.
@@jacklou8553 les marocain ont libéré le sud de la France
@@Antoine.45603 il a libéré en 1956
A truly 'moving' scene in film history, considering the actual background of WWII at that very time (1943).
My favourite scene of the greatest film
Liberté égalité fraternité ou la Mort
Pelicula unica hermosa actores maravillosos esta escena transmite emocion triteza esperanza y valentia joya del cine de esa epoca 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
This scene removed Casablanca from the Warner Bros. movie assembly line into a class by itself.
The French were good at Singing but not so good at fighting
@@leftin74 They were good, fighting allies against King George in the Revolutionary War.
The best scene in the best movie.
Lo que emociona es la parte de la escena de la chica francesa que canta y grita "viva le france ".ella no actúa, lo hace con el corazón.
She died several years ago, the last living member of the cast.
ella escapó con su marido poco antes de la caída de Francia, y casi todo el elenco eran refugiados que huyeron de media Europa escapando de los nazis
@@davidallbaugh6858gracias. Desde Argentina.
There may be a greater scene in a movie somewhere.......but I don't know what it would be. Superb!!
The final scene of City Lights (1931). If that doesn't move you, you are not human.
"Did you bring a horse for me?''
No, I guess we're shy one horse.
No ,you you brought two, too many!
All the actors except the 2 Americans were refugees from the war, even the germans. They were not really acting in this scene; they were expressing their real emotions.
Even more powerful when you look at the words in the anthem.
You mean like watering our fields with the enemies blood?
Greatest Legend from Hollywood.
Esta escena pone los pelos de punta!
Thats a powerful scene
Will always love this scene and this glorious yet simple act of resistance!
Nice that a dive bar as the national anthem ready to play. .
Classic scene. One of my most favorite movie scenes.
The Marseillaise is the very best anthem in the whole world. It actually stands for REALITY, something that everyone can understand and feel. I am Irish, ex-British, and I play it every day when I get out of bed. I also fly the EU, France, Ireland, Ukraina, and Polish flags. The Marseillaise cuts across nationality, except for ONE country. And only ONE country.
What 'country' is that?
@@mcannon1974 A young bloke like you knows already. Which country has had just 26 years of peace in its entire existence?
It's a wretched anthem of murder, regicide, and rebellion.
@@EwanCummins All 3 things that you Anglo-Saxon mongrels didn't have the goolies for back on the 30th January 1649. You made a right mess of that. And you seem to suggest that there is nothing wrong with a political system that takes the best infanticides, fratricides, murders, thieves, rapists, incestuous parents, greedy, vicious, under-educated thugs and elevate them to the top position, regardless of the lack of any innate qualities, and continues the experiment for generations. Adult countries, such as France, Ireland, Germany, Poland, Italy, Czech Republic, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, and there are just 4 monarchies in the EU, out of 27, that leaves 4 countries that just haven't grown up yet. And, of course, the country called Pryttynn is still too infantile to move towards an adult political system. And the Anglo-Saxons are the chief culprits of that situation, using the active monarchy, the Freemasons, and the "elites" of the Harrow/Eton, Oxford and Cambridge bloc, to keep the country from moving way beyond childish attitudes, and becoming a democracy.
As to your opinion of the French national anthem, how does it differ from the English "GOD save the mongrels"? And how does the 2nd French anthem differ?
My grand-parents were forced to sing that anthem as my great-great grandfather was put into colonial jail.
Victor Laszlo,a man among men.
Music direction in this scene is awesome. The German song and the French are in the same key - so reduces dissonance.
She is soooo beautiful
I cry like an imbecile at this scene.
It's the emotional heart of the movie (IMHO ).
The fact that they sing even with the Germans and then overtake them is to me symbolic that the right will prevail.
Genius juxtaposition of the songs there !
The greatest movie of all time !
You're not alone.
If you cry, you're not an imbecile. Neither am I, for that matter.
Gets me every time.
One of my favorite scenes ❤❤
Most powerful scene in the movie, only matched by the ending.
I heard a rumor the Royal Navy sang La Marseillaise at Mers-el-Kébir too. ;) So much for the "accomplices of Bouillé".
I love that scene
My favourite scene in a brilliant film
Fantastic anthem, the French, can’t help but be moved by it
Que majestuosa expresión de admiración y adoración de Ingrid Bergman.
What a wonderful feeling to sing 🎶 one’s national anthem with so much pride.
What a beautiful beautiful song
Essa parte é lindíssima, gente. Cena perfeita.
Every time I watch the film, I get goosebumps.
Grandissimo!!!
A perfect movie and the end was as good as it gets without any violence too. You can watch it over and over.
Without any violence, ignoring Major Strasser, who gets shot with a pistol at the airport.
No blood though. LOL @@Egilhelmson
is this why the french have the best national anthem
Of all the movie this scene is the best.
Questo pezzo del film è eccezionale verrebbe quasi da alzarsi in piedi e cantare assieme agli altri.......se avessimo anche noi un poco di piu di spirito nazionale......!!!
Cosa c'entra lo spirito nazionale con questa rivolta antinazifascista?
One of my favourite movies, the hairs on my neck stood to attention 🇫🇷🇬🇧🇺🇸