It's truly painful to see a caring, gentle and goodhearted man Roderick was with his Annabel Lee, and what he became by choosing to follow his sister in her ambition and doing so, feeding his own dark egotistical desires. Annabel Lee was his heart, and he chose to kill it for greed and lust of power.
But then he made the deal with Verna knowing he already had two kids, when Madeline didn’t even want to and she never had kids because of it. He was an absolutely terrible person
I actually laughed because I didn’t expect it at the time, but, the truth is that it was his fault for losing her so I guess in a way, Mike Flanagan included this in that moment to signify that no one else was to blame but the man himself. It’s a pretty underrated show to be honest which I didn’t expect to enjoy this much. It’s probably the only horror show I’ve rewatched because of the story and how it unfolds before us from start to end. Every episode is a small piece of the puzzle which makes it more interesting than your usual horror story.
Seriously, this show was amazing. I really loved it from first watch, but rewatching it brings new levels of appreciation. It’s an ode, an artistic love letter, from Flanagan to Poe. “Annabel Lee” is such a hauntingly beautiful, bittersweet poem. (It’s probably my favorite piece from Poe, and he’s maybe my favorite writer in all of literature.) And how the sentiments, and the actual lines, were woven into the series was *chef’s kiss*. Zach Gilford’s delivery captures that sweet, youthful innocence of first love you feel from the beginning of the poem, and Bruce Greenwood (and Katie Parker’s performance as Annabel) really delivers on that heartbreak from the latter half of the poem. And slow clap 👏 for the comedic relief from Dupin/Carl Lumbly…”You’re the fucking wind, Shakespeare.” 😂
Kudos to Bruce Greenwood & his voice/delivery because I could listen to him read poetry all damn day. Also, while Roderick is NOT a smypathic character, this is one of only 2 times I felt somewhat bad for him because it's clear he loved Annabel Lee. Really the only other time he gets so emotional is the death of Lenore. I will say I find it interesting how Roderick reverts to speaking poetry for both Lenore and Anabel Lee. Using this form of spoken word that he had passion for (and could have made his career) to describe the two girls he loved most and lost is very impactful. When he says "my darling, my darling, my life and my bride"...oh I got all choked up!
His sound is amazing For the moon never beams, without bringing me dreams Of the beautiful Annabel Lee; And the stars never rise, but I feel the bright eyes Of the beautiful Annabel Lee; And so, all the night-tide, I lie down by the side Of my darling-my darling-my life and my bride, In her sepulchre there by the sea- In her tomb by the sounding sea.
I immediately cried from the moment I clicked this video until “ you are the f-king wind Shakespeare” dude WHY? Needless to say I was crying and laughing at the same time
The swearing was on point and funny. Such a beautiful poem about a lost love to a disease, an unavoidable tragedy. While actually here, Roderick was the disease who killed her by pushing her to suicide. Dupin admired her and was right to call out the bullshit!
It's truly painful to see a caring, gentle and goodhearted man Roderick was with his Annabel Lee, and what he became by choosing to follow his sister in her ambition and doing so, feeding his own dark egotistical desires. Annabel Lee was his heart, and he chose to kill it for greed and lust of power.
Sisters hay
But then he made the deal with Verna knowing he already had two kids, when Madeline didn’t even want to and she never had kids because of it. He was an absolutely terrible person
@angeltomlinson6354 I think they're both equally as bad as each other but she did edge him on, even if it was just a nudge
I am happy I am not the only who loves this part. This was definitely one of my favorite parts of the mini series.
One of the most fascinating interpretations of Poe's last complete poem.
The musical score at the end completes the scene. It's perfect.
"You're the fucking wind Shakespeare!" That was funny
I actually laughed because I didn’t expect it at the time, but, the truth is that it was his fault for losing her so I guess in a way, Mike Flanagan included this in that moment to signify that no one else was to blame but the man himself. It’s a pretty underrated show to be honest which I didn’t expect to enjoy this much. It’s probably the only horror show I’ve rewatched because of the story and how it unfolds before us from start to end. Every episode is a small piece of the puzzle which makes it more interesting than your usual horror story.
Seriously, this show was amazing. I really loved it from first watch, but rewatching it brings new levels of appreciation. It’s an ode, an artistic love letter, from Flanagan to Poe. “Annabel Lee” is such a hauntingly beautiful, bittersweet poem. (It’s probably my favorite piece from Poe, and he’s maybe my favorite writer in all of literature.) And how the sentiments, and the actual lines, were woven into the series was *chef’s kiss*. Zach Gilford’s delivery captures that sweet, youthful innocence of first love you feel from the beginning of the poem, and Bruce Greenwood (and Katie Parker’s performance as Annabel) really delivers on that heartbreak from the latter half of the poem.
And slow clap 👏 for the comedic relief from Dupin/Carl Lumbly…”You’re the fucking wind, Shakespeare.” 😂
Kudos to Bruce Greenwood & his voice/delivery because I could listen to him read poetry all damn day. Also, while Roderick is NOT a smypathic character, this is one of only 2 times I felt somewhat bad for him because it's clear he loved Annabel Lee. Really the only other time he gets so emotional is the death of Lenore. I will say I find it interesting how Roderick reverts to speaking poetry for both Lenore and Anabel Lee. Using this form of spoken word that he had passion for (and could have made his career) to describe the two girls he loved most and lost is very impactful. When he says "my darling, my darling, my life and my bride"...oh I got all choked up!
Of all the things that stuck with me from this show, this scene was my favorite.
Same
mine too...I watch over and over, esp the part in the church. bruce Greenwood managed to put pain and regret into it
beautifully done
The heart of the show
I just can't get over how good that series was ...
I wish the actor would do a full version of this poem in the same way he did it here. I could listen to it over and over
His sound is amazing
For the moon never beams, without bringing me dreams
Of the beautiful Annabel Lee;
And the stars never rise, but I feel the bright eyes
Of the beautiful Annabel Lee;
And so, all the night-tide, I lie down by the side
Of my darling-my darling-my life and my bride,
In her sepulchre there by the sea-
In her tomb by the sounding sea.
Exactly, I keep listening to it again and again 😭
Heart of the show!
I immediately cried from the moment I clicked this video until “ you are the f-king wind Shakespeare” dude WHY? Needless to say I was crying and laughing at the same time
The guy reciting the poem is the reason Annabel lee died and the guy with him has no patience for him
Annabel lee "Radio Futura"
This is the one. ❤
Holy shit, I hope this dude does The Dark Tower
TY
Dear lawd
I’ve always found this to be an allegory for Adam and Eve, perhaps even the first loss of humanity. The narrator is Adam and Annabel Lee is Eve.
The narrator is Poe.
@@AB-no2dceven so
How she died? They didn't show that..
She had a big hole through the back of her head when she appears at the funeral. It's implied that it was suicide.
She swallowed a bullet
Gonzalez Christopher White Mark Lewis Karen
good besides the swearing plz
It is paradoxical how Poe uses language at its highest expression while the cussing from this cast portrays the lowest expression of language
grow up, you absolute infants
The swearing was on point and funny. Such a beautiful poem about a lost love to a disease, an unavoidable tragedy. While actually here, Roderick was the disease who killed her by pushing her to suicide. Dupin admired her and was right to call out the bullshit!
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