0:05 Peter Finch - Network 2:17 Clint Eastwood - Dirty Harry 3:00 Burgess Meredith - Rocky II 6:16 James Stewart - Mr. Smith Goes to Washington 7:52 James Earl Jones - Field of Dreams 9:56 Kevin Bacon - Footloose 12:29 Rick Gonzalez - Coach Carter 13:22 Robin Williams - Good Will Hunting 17:58 Charlie Chaplin - The Great Dictator 21:21 Sylvester Stallone - Rocky Balboa 23:20 Denzel Washington - Training Day
I've loved the song iron sky for so long and I've never known that the monolouge was Charlie Chaplin and I would highly recommend to listen to the song
Honestly this is a phenomenal list of monologues from great movies over the years however i truly feel that Gordon Gecko’s speech from Wall Street (1987) should be at least recognized, honored, and respected but also added somewhere amongst the others on this list. The ending monologue from American History X should also be at least remembered and reflected upon.
Robin’s speech gives me chills every time 😢❤it’s so perfect and how could you ever better describe life and real love in a footnote. Absolute Masterpiece
Wow, if you close your eyes, you'll think that he's talking about todays issues, this is insane! Life imitating Art! I'M AS MAD AS HELL AND I'M NOT GOING TO TAKE IT ANYMORE! We need to unite! God Bless.
Unfortunately, I have had to be by somebody in the hospital during cancer. I’m pretty much tearing up while he saying this. When he says, loving something more than you love yourself, it’s true
You don't have half a clue what you're talking about, do you? Name me a single actor who played a Shakespeare character in Shakespeare's time. Greek tragedies were an art form for a millennium. Can you name a single actor? Without Google, can you name 3 actors in Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather?
Chaplins speech was epic in so many ways..words coming from the mouth of such an iconic silent film star...words condemning a man..Hitler.. when he was still popular..even in America.. he prophecies the war to come..
I'm surprised I'm not seeing more about it. You can tell he feels every word, given the time, it shows his character, breaking his silence to remind everyone that no matter how many tyrants arise in our lifetimes, the beauty of humanity can always prevail.
I think his time as the Penguin in the campy Batman tv show may have hurt his cred a little. I think the role as mickey in the Rocky movies was perfect for him.
It is truly remarkable. It meant a lot to me, and I took the time to think how it might be profound to others, in their own way and because of their own circumstances. I'd be on board with the bench statue. Seriously. The clip is magical.
Good Will Hunting was such a damn good movie. Both Robin Williams and Matt Damon both absolutely nailed those roles. Just such a shame that with all the laughs he gave millions of people (and is still doing so with his movies being out there) Robin Williams hurt so much. Absolutely heart breaking.
The James Earl Jones speech for me. Is that movie schmaltzy? Sure, it doesn’t apologize for it, so you can knock it for that but not James Earl Jones. He is the living embodiment of sincerity.
The first scene is still relevant, But Charlie Chaplins speech is my all time favorite and every single line still applies today. At one point, he looks straight at the camera and you feel like hes personally talking to you and it gets me every time. When you listen, you want that wonderful world he talks about, where all are equal and we are productive and work together. All these scenes are magnificant. :)
When he says the earth is rich and can provide for everyone... So much truth. We just need to be cultivators rather than exploiters and live more simply so everyone has what they need, not hoarding everything while people die all around us. I love this monologue so much. I wish everyone one took the time to watch it. Possibly his most impressive work as an actor.
@@charlotteryner6583 it's "as mad as hell", I know don't sound right but that's what he says, so YEAH, get as mad as hell, (or as Nancy reagan said 'just do it' LOL)
The second Rocky one was the biggest wake up call I ever had. Felt like it was almost coming directly from my late dad (he was a boxer and loved those films)
"your move chief" is one of the best lines. so succinct but also conveys exactly what the audience wants to say themselves. sets up the next few scenes perfectly.
That Coach Carter poem monologue is so impactful because the whole movie Carter kept asking him "What are you so afraid of?" He kept pushing and asking this boy because he wanted to know why he was holding himself back.
I gotta throw out a vote for the Herb Brooks "you were born to be hockey players" locker room speech. It might be cheesy disney drama, but I still get chills. Haha
Robin Williams when he asks matt damon who are you and then continues to say quote " You're terrified of what you might say" Now that' some line to digest and think about ooof.
Rest in peace, my friend you know it’s amazing. I’m gonna sit here and pretend to be all tough it really does bring me to tears when you hear hard, honest truth
Al Picino's speech in Any Given Sunday was great! WoW! I had to delete my last comment and correct it. Also, Bill Pullman's speech in Independence Day.
I would add Colonel Jessup's courtroom monologue from A Few Good Men to this list and the Scent of a Woman speech of "I'll show you out of order!", but these are all the finest examples of wonderful acting that transcended celluloid and spoke to us on a soulful level, and we need this bravery to make movies like this again!
From what I can tell, these are the films featured (and sorry if I've made a mistake): "Network" "Dirty Harry" "Rocky II" "Mr Smith Goes to Washington" "Field of Dreams" "Footloose" "Coach Carter" "Good Will Hunting" "The Great Dictator" "Rocky Balboa" "Training Day"
Great list! The only one that is missing is Talk Radio Barry Champlain's (eric bogosian) last monologue. I think it's very relevant today to the hate that is spewed on social media today.
How in the world did Chaplin memorize and perform those lines in a one shot? Holy crap. If you look up the monologue, written, it its paragraph after paragraph after paragraph. Amazing.
Because we never stop having the same fight ❤ this man was an exceptionally talented and brave smart ilic genius 😂and i am so here for it!!!!! That Jewish spirit hits different man never stop the good fight 🎤🎤🎤 Beautiful
Ooh, BIG shout out to James Earl Jones: the guy was Darth BLOODY VADER, and Field of Dreams was crazy, but I would have trusted my life to those dulcet tones too. What an actor. What a range he had.
@maxpower2542 And as an actor myself, a hell of difficult monologue. A very close-up with only raw feelings. I beg he has done that in a very few tapes.
How about the monologues in The wolf of Wall Street,mostly Leo but also McConaughey? I just rewatched Good Will Hunting after many years, cried a lot and still remembered a lot of lines wonderfully acted by Robin Williams...what a loss,professionally and as a person 💔 ❤
"Do you think I'd know the first thing about how hard your life has been, how you feel, who you are.. because I read Oliver Twist? Does that encapsulate you?" Such a perfect way to explain to him how closed off and judgmental he is being.
RIP James Earl Jones. We loved baseball before him, and by God, we definitely loved it after he spoke about it. In not only Field of Dreams, but also The Sandlot! My generation will always say for-ev-er, for-ev-er.
The greatest monologue I've seen in a film happens in Last Tango In Paris when Marlon Brando sits beside his wife who had just committed suicide several days earlier and he's trying to understand why she did it and to tries to fathom the mystery of their relationship. I think it's his finest performance, surpassing that in The Godfather. There's something raw and revealing about this moment as a man spirals downwards. He berates her, curses her, and finally crumbles into tears at her death. Burgess Meredith was great. I don't know if he ever won an Oscar over course of his remarkable career or if he was nominated for his outstanding performance in Rocky but he deserved it. He was among the great character actors who tend to get overlooked. As great as the "I'm mad as hell" speech is I think the monologue by Ned Beatty later in Network tops it. It's chilling, especially when Beatty says, "YOU WILL ATONE!!!" Howard Beale looks like a little kid being admonished by the principal of his school.
I would add Robert Shaws's character Quint's monologue in Jaws, about when he was at Indianapolis when it sunk and he and his crew where attacked by thousands of sharks. It was terrifying.
Do not confuse my writing, every one of these speeches is worthy of every person watching and taking in. But… The speech from “The Great Dictator” by Charlie Chaplin, is on a different level. We need to listen, and we need to absorb it! We have the power!
These are some great monologues, absolutely. But for a list of ELEVEN monologues I'm surprised not to see a single woman... Elizabeth Taylor, Katharine Hepburn, Sally Field, Viola Davis, Meryl Streep, American Ferrera have all delivered some of the most famous monologues of all time. Just something to consider if you make more compilations.
0:05 Peter Finch - Network 2:17 Clint Eastwood - Dirty Harry 3:00 Burgess Meredith - Rocky II 6:16 James Stewart - Mr. Smith Goes to Washington 7:52 James Earl Jones - Field of Dreams 9:56 Kevin Bacon - Footloose 12:29 Rick Gonzalez - Coach Carter 13:22 Robin Williams - Good Will Hunting 17:58 Charlie Chaplin - The Great Dictator 21:21 Sylvester Stallone - Rocky Balboa 23:20 Denzel Washington - Training Day
There are so many great moments in movies, hard to pick a few. And yes, as someone noted here, the actors brought it to life but it was conceived by the writers. Why aren't they making movies like this anymore? What happened to Hollywood? Too much reliance on special effect and not enough on story. BTW, I was waiting to see if they included Al Pacino's monologue at the end of Scent of a Woman. Unfortunately it's not there, but we all know it could have been.
Not even close how great Robin Williamns is. Every scene is great in this clip, but there is no fi niher. Robin Willy is not comparable. It's not even halfway there. Watch it again. These are all great clips.
I wish these words were true. We never had the way. How ever with patience and time the way can be found. Stay the course. Follow the hard road. The easy road is paved with the devils gold... The word of the Mandalorian holds true. THIS IS THE WAY....
Agree with the "Dirty Harry" speech but the best one was in front of the bank pointing his S & W at the bank robber on the sidewalk. Besides the Jimmy Stewart monologue that is posted, there should be another by him from the movie: "It's a Wonderful Life" when he gives a lecture to the grumpy town Banker. 1946. Kenneth Branaugh as King Henry V, giving the "St. Crispian Day Speech" before a battle in France. "Henry V" 1989. George C. Scott as "Patton" in the opening scene of the movie. 1970. David Niven in "The Guns of Navarone", just before the operation when he finds his explosives have been tampered with. 1961 Henry Fonda replying to George Peppard in "How the West Was Won" about "Injuns" and the Railroad company and promises. 1962. Richard Attenborough, speaking in the Sergeant's Mess in the movie "Guns at Batasi". 1964.
0:05 Peter Finch - Network
2:17 Clint Eastwood - Dirty Harry
3:00 Burgess Meredith - Rocky II
6:16 James Stewart - Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
7:52 James Earl Jones - Field of Dreams
9:56 Kevin Bacon - Footloose
12:29 Rick Gonzalez - Coach Carter
13:22 Robin Williams - Good Will Hunting
17:58 Charlie Chaplin - The Great Dictator
21:21 Sylvester Stallone - Rocky Balboa
23:20 Denzel Washington - Training Day
Thank you, Batman.
that was needed thankyou
Not all heroes wear capes!
I've loved the song iron sky for so long and I've never known that the monolouge was Charlie Chaplin and I would highly recommend to listen to the song
Honestly this is a phenomenal list of monologues from great movies over the years however i truly feel that Gordon Gecko’s speech from Wall Street (1987) should be at least recognized, honored, and respected but also added somewhere amongst the others on this list. The ending monologue from American History X should also be at least remembered and reflected upon.
Christ, what a fantastic actor Robin Williams was. RIP, mate.
Couldn't agree with you more.
A once-in-a-century entertainer.
I met him in 2009. He was a great person. The universe loves you Robin
No one could do comedy and drama so seemingly... ❤
He was a lousy actor who could occasionally be good.
Robin’s speech gives me chills every time 😢❤it’s so perfect and how could you ever better describe life and real love in a footnote.
Absolute Masterpiece
Crazy how relevant the first scene is
What’s the first one from?
@@TheRainbowKiss Network (1976)
Here from 2 months in the future and it’s even more relevant
And the last one. It was a prophecy. The Charley Chapman one.
Extremely succinct. To the point of precision. But it isn't over just yet.
network, was very prophetic
"We have developed speed but we have shut ourselves in" nothing but the truth spoken there.
3/29/24 and the first one rings more true than ever
Just keeps getting more accurate every month. Tomorrow is December and things are still slowly but surely spiraling.
“Your move chief…”
RIP
I just can’t get enough of these scenes
Ty
Wow, if you close your eyes, you'll think that he's talking about todays issues, this is insane! Life imitating Art! I'M AS MAD AS HELL AND I'M NOT GOING TO TAKE IT ANYMORE! We need to unite! God Bless.
We are mad as hell, and we're not gonna take it
It's less life imitating art and more History Repeats Itself...
@@KateBlackSpence I would agree. Its a shame, cuz it shouldn't be this way. You have a nice voice.
Unfortunately, I have had to be by somebody in the hospital during cancer. I’m pretty much tearing up while he saying this. When he says, loving something more than you love yourself, it’s true
I was on the other side when I had a bad brain injury, seeing that pain on my loved ones faces really made me feel that scene, im sorry for your pain
May the Good Lord be with you
Life and death Is 50 50 then ur 101
Writers will never get enough credit actors definitely bring it to life but my god the words! THE WORDS!
Some actors make the writing better, some actors write there own 🫡
You don't have half a clue what you're talking about, do you? Name me a single actor who played a Shakespeare character in Shakespeare's time. Greek tragedies were an art form for a millennium. Can you name a single actor? Without Google, can you name 3 actors in Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather?
If you properly words can be extremely strong the way they should be they should have meaning worth value substance
You’re better than that ❤ 😢
@@skynyrdjesusthe godfather, Marlon Brando, James Caan, Al Pacino, John Cazale. That’s 4 right there without google
Chaplins speech was epic in so many ways..words coming from the mouth of such an iconic silent film star...words condemning a man..Hitler.. when he was still popular..even in America.. he prophecies the war to come..
I'm surprised I'm not seeing more about it. You can tell he feels every word, given the time, it shows his character, breaking his silence to remind everyone that no matter how many tyrants arise in our lifetimes, the beauty of humanity can always prevail.
Burgess Meridith might be one of the most underrated actors of all time
I think his time as the Penguin in the campy Batman tv show may have hurt his cred a little. I think the role as mickey in the Rocky movies was perfect for him.
Good actors get better as they age .
Al Pacino's "God" monologue at the end of "The Devil's Advocate." AWESOME!!!!
Robin William's monologue still gives me chills. Has anyone commissioned a statue of him next to that bench? If not, I'm willing to help pay for one.
It is truly remarkable. It meant a lot to me, and I took the time to think how it might be profound to others, in their own way and because of their own circumstances. I'd be on board with the bench statue. Seriously. The clip is magical.
Or, how about a statue that is the entire bench so you can sit next to him.
Yes pleaseeeeee. I'm on board with this.
sit him on the bench.
@@mattjones7226that's the best suggestion yet. Love it. But I'm too poor. I can help organize it though😂
A lot of great monologues in this video, but Robin Williams in Good Will Hunting still hits different.
Good Will Hunting was such a damn good movie. Both Robin Williams and Matt Damon both absolutely nailed those roles. Just such a shame that with all the laughs he gave millions of people (and is still doing so with his movies being out there) Robin Williams hurt so much. Absolutely heart breaking.
The entire monologue was completed in one continuous take
The James Earl Jones speech for me. Is that movie schmaltzy? Sure, it doesn’t apologize for it, so you can knock it for that but not James Earl Jones. He is the living embodiment of sincerity.
The first scene is still relevant,
But Charlie Chaplins speech is my all time favorite and every single line still applies today.
At one point, he looks straight at the camera and you feel like hes personally talking to you and it gets me every time.
When you listen, you want that wonderful world he talks about, where all are equal and we are productive and work together.
All these scenes are magnificant. :)
Thank you for the kind words. Not that I had anything to do with the scenes; But, I'm glad you enjoyed my collection.
I doubt trump has ever seen it, let alone understand it.
When he says the earth is rich and can provide for everyone... So much truth. We just need to be cultivators rather than exploiters and live more simply so everyone has what they need, not hoarding everything while people die all around us.
I love this monologue so much. I wish everyone one took the time to watch it. Possibly his most impressive work as an actor.
@@SteveBerryhillThank you for commenting on a unifying speech with such a divisive reply. Await further instructions comrade.
"You are not machines! You are not cattle! You are MEN!"
The charlie chaplin speech is legendary and still means something.
"It reminds us of all of what once was good, and what could be again" God, such a good line.
First scene is pretty much relevant now 45 years later
That why it's the first one. It's a really great moment too.
Do you know from which movie it is?
@@thierry091985 Network
I'm mad as hell, and I'm not gonna take it anymore!!! Get mad, people. Get mad as hell.
@@charlotteryner6583 it's "as mad as hell", I know don't sound right but that's what he says, so YEAH, get as mad as hell, (or as Nancy reagan said 'just do it' LOL)
that first scene aged like the FINEST wine dear god
The second Rocky one was the biggest wake up call I ever had. Felt like it was almost coming directly from my late dad (he was a boxer and loved those films)
Yeah, the first two and then the last one (Rocky Balboa) are a nice trilogy if you don't want to get involved with all the craziness of III, IV, & V.
"your move chief" is one of the best lines. so succinct but also conveys exactly what the audience wants to say themselves. sets up the next few scenes perfectly.
Burgess could sure make you feel every moment of a scene he was in.
He's so captivating. I can never look away when he's on screen, whether funny or serious.
amazing actor of generations
He was a Great one!
Remember, Mickey loves ya.
Thank you for the great effort…much appreciated
That Coach Carter poem monologue is so impactful because the whole movie Carter kept asking him "What are you so afraid of?" He kept pushing and asking this boy because he wanted to know why he was holding himself back.
Yeah, I agree. You summed it up nicely.
"What is your deepest fear young man"
Movie is free on TH-cam currently 😊
Great list. I would have proabbly added A Few Good Men monologue here. That one is always epic.
I try to stay away from Tom Cruise movies.. The Church of Scientology might want some cash or worse yet, my soul.
Let's not forget about the writers who created these moments, they should be recognized first. Scent of a women should be here too.
And The Shawshank Redemption
The scene in Rocky Balboa was actually written by Stallone. He wrote all the Rocky movies
Preach to them!!! 🙏
Hoo-ah!
I gotta throw out a vote for the Herb Brooks "you were born to be hockey players" locker room speech. It might be cheesy disney drama, but I still get chills. Haha
Yeah, that's a great one. It's in my sports movie video and the 7 more monologues video, I think.
The USS Indianapolis speech from Jaws is the all-time greatest monolog in movie history.
Agreed. It's a masterpiece in acting.
I absolutely agree with you
Should be on this list…..easily. Robert Shaw.
@@TerrillFischer thank you
Robin Williams when he asks matt damon who are you and then continues to say quote " You're terrified of what you might say" Now that' some line to digest and think about ooof.
Everyone born in the 80s and 90s and definitely beyond need to watch The Network. Masterpiece of a film.
Spencer Tracy's speech from " Guess who's coming to Dinner" also priceless
Ohhhhh, very VERY good call. That one is sheer class, one of my all-time favorite acting moments (and a long 'moment' at that, haha).
Thank you for showing us (me) an amazing collection of inspirational messages. I will look into some of these films in great detail.
Glad you enjoyed it
Robin Williams was something so special. RIP king.
Burgess Meredith and Robert Shaw should of won the Oscar for there roles.
I love all the monologues ! It's very great.
Thank you for the kind words.
Wow that first scene is totally relevant today .
Great TH-cam collection. Thank you
Peter Finch might just have the most famous lines in cinema history
Peter finch deserved his Oscar . Monologues are hugely challenging .
Burgess Meredith such an amazing actor.
Rest in peace, my friend you know it’s amazing. I’m gonna sit here and pretend to be all tough it really does bring me to tears when you hear hard, honest truth
Al Picino's speech in Any Given Sunday was great! WoW! I had to delete my last comment and correct it. Also, Bill Pullman's speech in Independence Day.
0:30 My God, nothing has really changed in 40 years. The same problems persist.
lol people? Yeah they’re still around.
It’s a shame that the father’s monologue from Call Me By Your Name wasn’t included in here. Such a beautiful scene and a powerful message
Great selection. I will add Scent of a Woman, Al Pacino final monologue, one of my favorites.
@javiercolon447 it's on one of my other videos. Yeah it's a good one.
Burgess Meridith what a fine actor.
I would add Colonel Jessup's courtroom monologue from A Few Good Men to this list and the Scent of a Woman speech of "I'll show you out of order!", but these are all the finest examples of wonderful acting that transcended celluloid and spoke to us on a soulful level, and we need this bravery to make movies like this again!
It's on my other monologue video.
16:28
The side eye he gives when he calls him out. Like it's the first time in his life someone has seen through the facade.
I always liked Ray and Winston talking about judgment day in Ghostbusters 1. Short and sweet.
Fine selection... I can think of a few others, but these are some of the most memorable to survive the test of time.
Not sure what year the 1st monologue is from, bit it could fit right in with 2024!! Crazy
Great list. My personal favourite was the USS Indianapolis speech by Quint in Jaws.
Yeah, that's a great one. He was actually really drunk when filming that scene. Look it up. Crazy.
Piece of art.
From what I can tell, these are the films featured (and sorry if I've made a mistake):
"Network"
"Dirty Harry"
"Rocky II"
"Mr Smith Goes to Washington"
"Field of Dreams"
"Footloose"
"Coach Carter"
"Good Will Hunting"
"The Great Dictator"
"Rocky Balboa"
"Training Day"
What movies are these?
The Footloose guitar riffs go hard 👏🏾👏🏾🔥
Great list! The only one that is missing is Talk Radio Barry Champlain's (eric bogosian) last monologue. I think it's very relevant today to the hate that is spewed on social media today.
lmfao at the first one. it was like predicting the future.
Miss this brilliant man. On almost all levels.
Chaplin having maybe the greatest monologue of all time in his first and last movie with sound is crazy. Imagine if he had a whole career with sound
How in the world did Chaplin memorize and perform those lines in a one shot? Holy crap. If you look up the monologue, written, it its paragraph after paragraph after paragraph. Amazing.
I think he may have had cue cards.🤷♂️
That's crazy right!
Stage actors have been doing this for hundreds of years. Doesn't make it any less impressive though.
Chaplin speech so relevant even now.
Because we never stop having the same fight ❤ this man was an exceptionally talented and brave smart ilic genius 😂and i am so here for it!!!!! That Jewish spirit hits different man never stop the good fight 🎤🎤🎤 Beautiful
Great monologues! Could you make a similar video, but with female monologues instead?
That first speech. Sooo relevant today. But maybe that just means the more things change the more things stay the same.
Ooh, BIG shout out to James Earl Jones: the guy was Darth BLOODY VADER, and Field of Dreams was crazy, but I would have trusted my life to those dulcet tones too.
What an actor.
What a range he had.
He still has it
Robin Williams all the way. That was fanatic monologue!
Yeah, he was one hell of a talent. Thanks for watching, too.
@maxpower2542 And as an actor myself, a hell of difficult monologue. A very close-up with only raw feelings. I beg he has done that in a very few tapes.
How about the monologues in The wolf of Wall Street,mostly Leo but also McConaughey?
I just rewatched Good Will Hunting after many years, cried a lot and still remembered a lot of lines wonderfully acted by Robin Williams...what a loss,professionally and as a person 💔 ❤
"Do you think I'd know the first thing about how hard your life has been, how you feel, who you are.. because I read Oliver Twist? Does that encapsulate you?"
Such a perfect way to explain to him how closed off and judgmental he is being.
RIP James Earl Jones. We loved baseball before him, and by God, we definitely loved it after he spoke about it. In not only Field of Dreams, but also The Sandlot! My generation will always say for-ev-er, for-ev-er.
Is there a list of sources for these film monologues? I want to see em all
The greatest monologue I've seen in a film happens in Last Tango In Paris when Marlon Brando sits beside his wife who had just committed suicide several days earlier and he's trying to understand why she did it and to tries to fathom the mystery of their relationship. I think it's his finest performance, surpassing that in The Godfather. There's something raw and revealing about this moment as a man spirals downwards. He berates her, curses her, and finally crumbles into tears at her death.
Burgess Meredith was great. I don't know if he ever won an Oscar over course of his remarkable career or if he was nominated for his outstanding performance in Rocky but he deserved it. He was among the great character actors who tend to get overlooked.
As great as the "I'm mad as hell" speech is I think the monologue by Ned Beatty later in Network tops it. It's chilling, especially when Beatty says, "YOU WILL ATONE!!!" Howard Beale looks like a little kid being admonished by the principal of his school.
Really great collection
Thank you, appreciate it✌
Far better than Mojo... Thank you
At 12:32 the film is footloose.
Sometimes a lost cause is the only cause worth fighting 4
I would add Robert Shaws's character Quint's monologue in Jaws, about when he was at Indianapolis when it sunk and he and his crew where attacked by thousands of sharks. It was terrifying.
It's on one of my other videos.
Tears in the rain, Roy Batty, 1982 Blade Runner?
Epic. I have a son. I know now what to show him. Danke.
Do not confuse my writing, every one of these speeches is worthy of every person watching and taking in.
But…
The speech from “The Great Dictator” by Charlie Chaplin, is on a different level.
We need to listen, and we need to absorb it!
We have the power!
Nic cage had a great one in moonstruck. "I lost my hand!"
Manny Perez' speech to the Army recruiters in Greencard Warriors. Is my favorite.
Don't think I ever seen or heard of that movie.. have to give it a look.
play this while listen to for the first time instrumental ver. hit diff fr
nothing is over..nothing! Rambo first blood last monologue probably the greatest monologue ever. nothing is prepare for that monologue for the movie.
Brilliant.
These are some great monologues, absolutely. But for a list of ELEVEN monologues I'm surprised not to see a single woman... Elizabeth Taylor, Katharine Hepburn, Sally Field, Viola Davis, Meryl Streep, American Ferrera have all delivered some of the most famous monologues of all time. Just something to consider if you make more compilations.
As Gomer Pyle said.. Surprise, Surprise, Surprise.
Honestly Robin should be on here twice. People forget how great he was in "Dead Poets Society" or it's simply shadowed by "Good Will Hunting"
thank you
Sorry for being dumb and i have missed the links but someone list the links? Kindly grateful, CP.
Spencer Tracy's speech about race and love at the end of "Guess Who's Coming To Dinner."
Does somebody have a list of all these?
0:05 Peter Finch - Network
2:17 Clint Eastwood - Dirty Harry
3:00 Burgess Meredith - Rocky II
6:16 James Stewart - Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
7:52 James Earl Jones - Field of Dreams
9:56 Kevin Bacon - Footloose
12:29 Rick Gonzalez - Coach Carter
13:22 Robin Williams - Good Will Hunting
17:58 Charlie Chaplin - The Great Dictator
21:21 Sylvester Stallone - Rocky Balboa
23:20 Denzel Washington - Training Day
There are so many great moments in movies, hard to pick a few. And yes, as someone noted here, the actors brought it to life but it was conceived by the writers. Why aren't they making movies like this anymore? What happened to Hollywood? Too much reliance on special effect and not enough on story. BTW, I was waiting to see if they included Al Pacino's monologue at the end of Scent of a Woman. Unfortunately it's not there, but we all know it could have been.
It's in my Monologue/ Duologue video
“I’m the po lease, I run shit up in here, you just live here!” Denzel is phenomenal
Great compendium. Next time can you add some text with the name of the production?
Not even close how great Robin Williamns is. Every scene is great in this clip, but there is no fi niher. Robin Willy is not comparable. It's not even halfway there. Watch it again. These are all great clips.
Thanks, glad you enjoyed it✌🤘
I wish these words were true. We never had the way. How ever with patience and time the way can be found. Stay the course. Follow the hard road. The easy road is paved with the devils gold... The word of the Mandalorian holds true. THIS IS THE WAY....
Agree with the "Dirty Harry" speech but the best one was in front of the bank pointing his S & W at the bank robber on the sidewalk.
Besides the Jimmy Stewart monologue that is posted, there should be another by him from the movie: "It's a Wonderful Life" when he gives a lecture to the grumpy town Banker. 1946.
Kenneth Branaugh as King Henry V, giving the "St. Crispian Day Speech" before a battle in France. "Henry V" 1989.
George C. Scott as "Patton" in the opening scene of the movie. 1970.
David Niven in "The Guns of Navarone", just before the operation when he finds his explosives have been tampered with. 1961
Henry Fonda replying to George Peppard in "How the West Was Won" about "Injuns" and the Railroad company and promises. 1962.
Richard Attenborough, speaking in the Sergeant's Mess in the movie "Guns at Batasi". 1964.
Nic cage early in the movie diei g of the light and the tatoo guy in expendables was very touchi g in a tortured way