On The Waterfront | "I Coulda Been A Contender" | CineStream
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 2 ต.ค. 2024
- Terry speaks with Charley about his lost days of promise.
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A brutally realistic tour de force, this timeless classic is based on a series of Pulitzer prize-winning newspaper articles, chronicling the conflict between a corrupt labor boss (Lee J. Cobb) and a crusading Catholic priest (Karl Malden). Highlighting this gripping film is one of Marlon Brando's signature performances.
#OnTheWaterFront #MarlonBrandon #RodSteiger
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On The Waterfront | "I Coulda Been A Contender" | CineStream
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Brando's little gestures . Like when he says" well no one ever stopped you from talking ".
" I could've been a contender " connects to everyone who has lost his opportunity because of someone's not supporting them.
“I coulda been a contender!” Is the line. It’s the line that defines the movie, and a new sub-sub-genre of movies from that point out. We remember that line and we quote that line. But upon first watching this movie, the line that moves the picture is, “It was you Charlie.” That’s the line where it all breaks loose. Where brothers be damned, Terry tells Charlie that he’s the one who perpetuates his collapse. He held him back, he screwed him and his whole life. For a couple of bucks. And then what’s he do, try to get him a faux job on the docks? Where men are already getting screwed? This film is monumental and timeless because it is real.
He pulled a gun on his own brother! Sigh. Poor soul, under so much stress. His face is full of pain. Both of them.
What a scene
I was privileged to see this film on the big screen in Pittsburgh with my father years back, preceded by a live interview with Eva Marie Saint and Ben Mankiewicz. When I was growing up, dad always said that there was no substitute for watching a movie in the theater, that it was the only way to be fully engrossed by a film and truly experience what it has to offer.
Your dad was correct.
He certainly was.
Based fact
so true
those two were FIRE together
Charley dies for his brother, as Penance, for not helping him be Somebody, which he finally does become.
Rod Steiger and Marlon Brando, bloody hell....
Honestly, as good as Brando was, Rod Steiger matched him.
One of the best scenes in any film.
Probably te best in history
Everything Brando touches is gold
Brings me to tears everytime… “it was you Charlie…. It was you”
Me too.
Agree this scene killed me at 15 when I saw it. I cry easy and I was a fighter in new England mass trained by the best chin ever in a middleweight champ... The Marvelous one Hagler. Was his sparring guy for yrs!
Deniro added the "it was you" in raging Bull, interesting that you added that.
Man, I was just gonna say the same thing. No matter how many times I’ve seen this movie, this scene, I tear up, because it touches a nerve deep down. What an amazing film.
2:05 The pain in his voice when he says, I could have been a lot better charlie!
The greatest scene in one of the greatest films ever made. Naturally Brando was phenomenal, but so was Steiger. Both were terrific method actors.
Honestly, there’s so many great scenes in this movie. Father’s speech at the dock. When Terry reveals what he did to Edie. Father’s speech when Terry wants to kill the boss. Father’s speech about “follow your conscience”… honestly just all of the scenes with the pastor in it lol. The opening scene. Ugh just the whole movie(we don’t mention the part where Terry assaults Edie though… that scene doesn’t exist)
@@Zack-bl2gg What assault?!?
@@Woozler554 so context, Terry recently told Edie that he contributed to her brother’s death, so she ran away from him. Terry’s brother Charlie let’s terry go, and terry breaks into Edie’s place. She’s terrified and keeps on pushing him away and saying no, “get away from me”, all that, and he forces himself on her and kisses her. It’s seen as “all better now” because they “love each other” but… y’know… idk if that’s quite right…
I’m apologetic for some noir scenes where the guy pushes the kiss on a girl, because a lot of the time it’s one of those toxic relationships where both are in the wrong, but this one was just kind of straight up assault. Edie was a nice girl
@@Zack-bl2gg That's wussy talk.
@@Woozler554 lol what does that even mean 😂 wussy? Y’mean like p*ssy?(just a different way of censoring it?)
Rod Steiger, so under-appreciated, like George C. Scott!
This is pretty the much the lynchpin moment in any man's life, although boxing isn't a good career path. Do you take the risk, or do you miss the boat, or does someone you care about blow it for you.
Two absolute thespian powerhouses at the very top of their game
Marlon Brando was Genius!!! No one else in all history of acting could delivery performance like Brando ! We have amazing actor but they are actor. Brando was Genius!!!
"You don't understand" - so alive how he says it
Greatest scene of the 1950’s
Streetcar,Waterfront,
Godfather,Brando's
Utimate acting,in my book!
This is the saddest most heartwrenching performance ever.
I get misty every time I see it.
And this was their last conversation. God damn, what a movie...
Great scene from a great movie
$400 a week back then was crazy money.
One of the greatest films ever made. And this, one of the greatest scenes of all time. Released 70 years ago on the day I am writing this.
I love this movie so much that I couldn’t stop watching it.
Steiger is so good here.
That Scene Won M.B. the Oscar.
best acting Brando ever did
This movie is the mother of all movies when it comes to the acting
Method actors from the school of how to be somebody!
The best best actor oscar winning performance in history.
Hard to top Brando was one of the finest actors who will ever live💪
There will never be another magnificent BRANDO
Rod Steiger was incredible in this scene.
I am 71 years old and am conventional quoting desirous pacino and Brando as not so much the best actors as who gave me most 🎉
You can actually see the clip on TH-cam of Steiger speaking about this scene.
this movie made a super impression on me as a teenager 😢😢😢😢
Steiger would not allow himself to be out-acted by Brando in this scene. Read up on it and find out why.
Ny/NJ piers were King than...Lots of money to be made.
Rod and Marlon. who could ask for anything more
Marlon Brando is epic in this movie
Terry Malloy got out of the wrong side of the cab!!!!
Well you don’t really know what was going on in that cab at that exact moment but if you’ve ever ridden in a cab in NYC you never get out on the road side, always on the curb side.
and I realize it was set in NJ but still…
Why is something this good impossible to replicate today ? Have we lost something? Mediocrity rules?
Replicating isn't art. New ideas is art. Richard Dreyfuss even implies this.
@@jeromerizzo423 I think you may be confusing replicating with duplicating
@@alfredopampanga9356 I think you just made no sense with this reply. 🤣 🤣 🤣 🤣
@@jeromerizzo423 I’m crushed
Elia Kazan made Brando's film career on the 50s.
Who's with me?? Brando sent a Cherokee up to get his Oscar and gave us more than any other
Stella!!!
4:17 The way Rod Steiger delivers that line in such a depressed way is brilliant. Like he’s trying to bargain with his own conscious about what he did (a huge them of the movie for Terry as well)
I do understand why my late dad considered him the best actor ever.He delivered sad, heartrending performance of how he had been done unfair,of how life had cruelly crushed his ambitions in no stagy fashion.Everyone of us can relate to him.We all have cherished big dreams and sometimes they fail to come true.
Wow this scene was so powerful.
I coulda been a contender icoulda been somebody instead of what I became...a bum!!
What actors 😢
It was you Charlie !!!!!.....it was youuuuuuuu
Wow
Brando was greatness. Change d the world of acting
Steiger was a great actor. He didn't like this scene. When they were doing the close ups of Rod Steiger , Marlon Brando went off saying " That's it I'm done here" so Rod just did the scene to the camera . He thought Brando was unprofessional for doing this.
Brando wasn't in the car on his close ups, movie editing
God, I love that scene...
The mentioned Billy Cohn was the boxing lightheavyweight champ in The Forties. He challenged heavyweight champ Joe Louis and was winning the match before being KO'ed.
Billy didn't listen t his corner man who told him he was winning so stay away from Louis.
Stanley zpornack brought me here😂😂
Defeat is nothing compared to this Wilson leading a dignified life, the complete opposite of him. that is the real defeat
except this scene went a lot different then it did in the movie with my brother.
This movie is from a time when movies were intelligent with great acting. I miss those days. 😞😞😞
Rod is actually a year younger, both born in April...
Steiner blows out Brando who's always been an overblown ham.
400 a week being good money is so unfathomable 😂
Brando was actually a year older than Steiger
Brando suffered from uncontrollable flatulence and let go in this scene causing many retakes 💨
We call this acting. Amazing.
Dats right!!! I gotta tell my Charlie...deres more to dis than i thought! ...😢
The line “ I coulda been a contender originated from a former Welterweight James Donoghue …..as a consultant to Elia Kazan , teaching Brando to look like a fighter, during a break in production ….Kazan posed the question “ if you hadn’t murdered that guy in the ring ( Donoghue retired after one subsequent fight ) ….could you have been a champion ? No , but I could have been a contender
Is this true?
Brando
Great film, shame it was an allegory for the McCarthy witch hunts
The witch hunts were a shame on America.
The film transcends that. I'm not condoning what kazan and schulberg did but informing on the mob who killed your brother is not the same as the HUAC hearings, so the metaphor doesn't work. It's still a great film
What if they stole your job?
What is a cheesy supeinii
Know it’s the way it was back then. But scene would been so much better without the blaring violin/orchestra they used in dramatic scenes back in the day. 😉
I just saw this in the cinema for the first time and respectfully disagree! Bernsteins score really underpins the melodrama, stakes and crisis of the scene for me, shook me to tears! Though this is just personal taste and can see how the score might come across as didactic to some.
Love the guy, but at 0:50, referring to ambition: "Well, I always figured I'd live a little bit longer without it." That's just a blown delivery.
Donald Trump in 2021
With the CIA
Trump Meet...Mat
Do y know steiger was younger than Brando at this time😮