As a teen in 1975, this film knocked me down sideways. The cinematography, the history, the visuals - I was deemed a geek for loving this movie. I had amazing tastes. It is magnificent.
thats why i still love the old total war game. you could install marching songs. after that the best part of gameplay was just movig lineinfantry around and listen to the songs.
Definitely my favorite Kubrick film, followed by Dr. Strangelove. It’s a pity this didn’t win Best Picture, but it lost to One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest.
@@christophernunn943 yes indeed. it is also a master class for costumes, which were real dresses, not simply stage costumes, they were designed and realised by the Swedish Ulla-Britt Söderlund and my fellow countrywoman Milena Canonero
Anyone with an interest in history should see this movie. The attention to detail is incredible, and no expense and effort was too much to recreate the world of mid-18th century England.
Yes agreed, probably the most beautiful and gracefully made film of all time. In terms of class it is up there with 2001, and Clockwork Orange - oh, and Full Metal Jacket.
@@nessa3354 It's impossible to compare one Kubrick movie to another, they are that unique. Each one is like a painting hanging in a gallery, and in Lyndon's case, the entire movie is like wandering through a gallery.
The cinematography on this is so amazing I actually kept forgetting I was watching a modern movie and not a documentary because they didn't have motion picture film cameras back then.
The look on Capt John Quinn's face, right after he gives the "eyes right" command and tilts his head. Cracks me up every time, lol. Nice marching though.
I could watch this movie everyday for the rest of my life and never get tired of it. They say a picture is worth a thousand words. This masterpiece of ultra cinematic genius is worth unlimited words!
I love this clip! As a retired soldier and military historian with an 18th century focus, there is so much to like. I especially love the way the drums "thunder" and not just "rattle" (like in so many movies and TV shows). Yes, I know there are some historical inaccuracies: it looks like two companies marching with a full regiment's complement of musicians, and the colors are reversed; but I still love it.
So true, the story arc of Barry in his youth being enamored with the 'glamour' of war, only to realize later that WAR is just misery, suffering, death and grief. Seeing the carnage and seeing your friends die strips all glory and glamour from the endeavor. When I was a young man, I was far more of a 'war hawk' than I am as an older man. I've seen the abject suffering of armed conflicts, though I still see the need for such things (like if one's country is being invaded, etc.). But War, like Cancer, sucks.
And I particularly love his next line: "None of you will be here, when this war ends. Everything we fought for, will be lost. Everything we loved, will be broken. The victors will be as cursed as the defeated. The world will grow old, and men will wonder about the lost ruins and go bad. Tradition, virtue, restraint - they all go. I'm not mourning for myself, but for the people who will come after me (...)"
Not to mention the final quote: "It was in the reign of George II that the above-named personages lived and quarrelled ; good or bad, handsome or ugly, rich or poor, they are all equal now”. It's an humility lesson - not to mention an harsh call to reality - that stays there to remind us that no matter whether we are a genius or a rogue, a success or a failure, we aren't going to dodge our final and common destiny.
Once upon a time, when I was a young MP, I stood tall around the reviewing stand when about 15,000 troopers of our division marched past, "Pass in Review". It was an impressive sight, of course! More importantly, the sense of being part of something that impressive was also very thrilling. Most of us never have that sense of being part of something much bigger and more important than ourselves. Doing so sometimes give a lot of purpose to life and also builds morale, community and dedication. These days, we are all so busy, Busy, BUSY with our own individual lives, we seem to have lost that sense of unity, focus, commitment and dedication to our nation and its' role in history; our destiny. Too bad! So sad!
Yes, he was quite good in this film! The only other movie I saw in which he was featured was in "2001: A Space Odyssey" when he played the role of a Russian scientist. Would love to see him in some other films!
I can imagine Kubrick saying to him "Leonard, can you dance?" Well, even though it was a simple one you could see he could. Also, his facial expression in the duel is acting of the highest calibre - he was also in 2001. I agree , one of Kubrick's best.
I watched this movie for the first time about a month ago. When I saw him, I had one of those "Wait, wait... I've seen this guy before" moments. I wouldn't let myself look it up. I figured it out in a few minutes. Yep, he was the Russian scientist in _2001: A Space Odyssey._ It was a short part and an understated character, but he did play it very well.
@@Astrobrant2 Leonard Rossiter played many classic parts in the theatre and was in many films. He also played the lead role in one of the UKs great sitcoms, Rising Damp - 1974 to 78. He also played La Petomane in a tv play in 1979 about a French theatre performer who could suck air into his anus and make all sorts of noises. He was a wild success. Both of these can be viewed on youtube. He was a very versatile actor.
@@Astrobrant2 He was also in a long running comedy TV series here in UK called Rising damp .I believe he was also a champion squash ball player in his social life .A great comedian sorely missed.
@@John-ob7dh I've never seen him in a comic role, but he does seem to have the features and mannerisms that would work well as a comedian. I can't say that about every actor I've seen. I can definitely picture him as being a Rowan Atkinson or John Cleese type.
I love the way that Redcoat turns his head to the side as he marches and fixes his gaze with all the pomp and ceremony of the British Empire. Such a twit. It calls attention to him just enough to lay the groundwork for what happens in later scenes. Brilliant.
I had the wonderful experience of actually being an extra in the making of this film when it was being filmed around Bath, in England. I met Kubrick & Ryan O'Neill & Kurd Jurgens! Kubrick did all the filming personally, & only had a professional cameraman at hand to do the light readings! To watch Kubrick at close quarters was awesome! He was witty, funny and easy to talk to and was a genius! He was one of the first directors to pioneer the use of available natural light when others used the usual battery of floodlights!! O'Neill was also witty & his exchanges with Kubrick hilarious! With Jurgens, during a lunch break, I sat with him on a big woolsack & talked with him about his childhood in Berlin. I appear twice in the film - once as a Redcoat soldier, walking behind a wagon & a white bull, against the background of a blazing barn, and also in the closing scene as a tramp, limping across the road towards a half-timbered English inn, accompanied by my own Jack Russell dog, "Copper"!
@@stewartbloomfield8035 There was also a lady, Mary Husband, in charge of make-up, and I still see her name, appearing in the list of credits, in later films, in the same capacity. Also fascinating, & funny, was that during breaks, the "English" & "French" soldiers, all gathered in separate groups together, separated according, NOT by who they actually were but according to which UNIFORM they were wearing!! Reminded me of a social experiment, carried out at a large school some years ago, where half the kids were dressed in red T-shirts & the other half in white T-shirts! When break-time arrived, they were filmed from a helicopter, all the kids in red were all together in one crowd & those in white all together in another!! Only a very small minority group consisted of a few "reds" & "whites" mingling together!! Says something about human nature & herd behaviour!! By the way, Stew, what do the small case letters, before "crew" in your name mean? Best wishes, The Mouse!
Slight correction! I HAVE seen the name of Mary Husband in re-runs of "'Allo! Allo!!, but there she appears in the credits as "Costume", & is therefore responsible for the minute detailed accuracy of the German uniforms in that hilarious series!
From what I've read Kubrick took his inspiration from paintings of the time -- Gainsborough, etc. You can totally see it in most of the major set pieces.
Looking at the comments below.... Im not British but I love and admire the English Sarcasm and the beautiful, poetic and refined way to belittle other peoples.. Rule Britania!!!
It was an American director, a German producer, a Cypriot assistant director, with a US production company, how in the world is the UK responsible for this gem of a movie?
I wasn't talking about the film but its characters. This small island dominated the world or centuries because its inhabitants knew how to dominate themselves and at the same time they knew how to dare, take risks, want more...
Kubrick made an astonishing number of great films For those of you under 50 the ridiculous officer in this scene is the great comedy actor Leonard Rossiter who starred in a long-running brilliant comedy series Rising Damp it is still shown on British TV and is superior by miles to any modern Sitcom
Embarr He was also in "The Long Ships" as the Persian soldier who is catapulted onto a mechanism that slices him in two! This was to prove his loyalty! Just for the record, the book was better.
It's a performance full of immersive feeling that people in this movie are likely to appear in front of me . From Tokyo of the Land of the Rising Sun 🇯🇵
@@duo496 Really ? I think this flag is the Japanese Rising Sun's flag Thank-you Someday please visit Japan in spring The cherry blossoms in full bloom are beyond your imagination and beyond description . Be on the alert for Covid - 19
@@ibrijira4855 Thank-you so much to your fabulous comments Someday please come to Japan beyond description's Japanese delicious foods , immeasurable heartfelt hospitality and unfathomable amazing and marvellous things wait for you Good luck !
One thing I love about Barry Lyndon is the discipline those people had in daily life back then. Kubrick was an extremely disciplined man, almost obsessively so, and I'm sure that attracted him to the story. Underneath the social niceties though, the people's behavior is pure animal, grasping for survival.
Just came back from France .Had free shuttle bus from the hotel back and forth for 3 days .I always left a tip for the French drivers as they were courteous, and they were always pleased to see appreciation from a Brit.
Love the British Grenadiers they were one of the best military regiments in all of history long live the British Empire legacy and God Save Queen Victoria soul forever indeed!
Leonard Rossiter was absolutely magnificent as the simpering captain was who was "killed" in a duel with Redmon Barry that essentially kicked off this adventure. "It was in the reign of George II. that the above-named personages lived and quarrelled ; good or bad, handsome or ugly, rich or poor, they are all equal now. "
Don't forget he was not killed .her relatives set it up with weak gunpowder because once she married him he would be on a captains pension and the family would be relatively well off for that time .They did not want to risk him getting killed by a itinerant Irish lad.
@@abc64pan - Either he practiced a lot until he could do it with his eyes closed or he's a natural born dancer. Either possibility is beyond my capabilities.
Probably one of the only historical film to ever get the colour of the uniform correct . Redcoats they may have called them , but a really red coat was difficult and expensive to manufacture. The uniforms were always more of a brick red /orange colour.
Red coats Started with Cromwell. Red was the cheapest dye available at the time, probably Madder based (the dye colour depended on pH). The RAF got their shade of blue because the Tsar's men, for whom the cloth was made and dyed originally, had no use for it after 1917. Some things never change at "Mod".
As a teen in 1975, this film knocked me down sideways. The cinematography, the history, the visuals - I was deemed a geek for loving this movie. I had amazing tastes. It is magnificent.
my favourite movie. every frame is sublime.
Beautiful photography
thats why i still love the old total war game. you could install marching songs. after that the best part of gameplay was just movig lineinfantry around and listen to the songs.
Definitely my favorite Kubrick film, followed by Dr. Strangelove. It’s a pity this didn’t win Best Picture, but it lost to One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest.
😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊@@klauskinski5969
Two of my uncles were extras as British red coats in this film, They could very well be in this scene.
Good for them! Being in a Kubrick film is amazingly lucky.
Rob Smith i know. the gay ass dancing
+Rob Smith How cool! Can you recognize them at all?
+In Depth Gaming it's sure as fuck not a compliment to be called gay!
+In Depth Gaming is a different word now.
An underrated film. Maybe the most accurate work of Stanley Kubrick and a master class about how a movie should be written, filmed and photographed.
Sadly a box office flop....modernity has a lot to answer
@@christophernunn943 yes indeed. it is also a master class for costumes, which were real dresses, not simply stage costumes, they were designed and realised by the Swedish Ulla-Britt Söderlund and my fellow countrywoman Milena Canonero
Rigsby????
You are absolutely right. It is one of the finest films ever made and visually the most beautiful film of all time.
Anyone with an interest in history should see this movie. The attention to detail is incredible, and no expense and effort was too much to recreate the world of mid-18th century England.
Seen this on Blu ray and it looks fantastic. This film deserves to be seen on the big screen today, just as they did with 2001.
What's the name??
Christian Andersson thanks :) I was expecting this to be an angry comment.... I get a lot of those XD
I fucking love history and historical movies!
Ellijah De Leon You seen A Royal Affair?
Remember kids, this used to be the world's boss music 300 years ago.
Now, it's trap music.
Boss music for indians
@@Tataras1k for Native Americans.
Boss music for 26% of the world
What do you mean "used to", quite a few militaries still make that mistake...
2:33 that guy in the back clapping on his own is me at a party
Same
Same
Same
XD i could relate
Haha loser
One of the greatest Kubrick masterpieces - and that is saying quite a lot...
I wаtccched Bаrrу Lyndоn full mоvie here twitter.com/a9debee91eacf3139/status/795843389044293632 Baaаarry Lyndon British Grenadiеers
Yes agreed, probably the most beautiful and gracefully made film of all time. In terms of class it is up there with 2001, and Clockwork Orange - oh, and Full Metal Jacket.
anything with Kubrick's name on it is worth the watch
@@nessa3354 It's impossible to compare one Kubrick movie to another, they are that unique. Each one is like a painting hanging in a gallery, and in Lyndon's case, the entire movie is like wandering through a gallery.
STANLEY KUBRICK, IS THE GREAT OF WORD!!!
Un Saludo desde España (Spain)
Shoutout to the cameraman who time travelled back just to film this
Lmao
The cinematography on this is so amazing I actually kept forgetting I was watching a modern movie and not a documentary because they didn't have motion picture film cameras back then.
Thank you! Glad you appreciate it 😄😉🇬🇧
Of course he did! He also had to use candlelight to film indoors! The 18th Century...what can you do!?
You idiot this is reenactment!
IT’S ON A MOVIE! YOU DUMB ASS!
I played this to my Indian roommate
His room is now my room.
I trust you civilised him whilst about arriving at the understanding, old chap.
Haha!
LOL!
Which indian? The north american or the asian variety?
@@andreascovano7742 Indian of Asia
The look on Capt John Quinn's face, right after he gives the "eyes right" command and tilts his head. Cracks me up every time, lol.
Nice marching though.
Yeah, it's so funny and intentionally so. Also his face during the duel with Barry is excellent, too.
Awesome actor, he's playing the basic military dummy so well.
I thougth it was the late great Leonard Rossiter (RIgsby from Rising Damp) the first few seconds I was watching it.
@@pwallacepugh that's because it is him. He also appeared in 2001: A Space Odyssey :)
@@EugeneOneguine Yes, the incompetent 'gentleman' that can impressively drill troops but is a lousy combat commander that squanders lives.
Barry Lyndon is most definitely a masterpiece. I encourage you folks reading to invest in buying this movie. It’s extremely well done.
I could watch this movie everyday for the rest of my life and never get tired of it. They say a picture is worth a thousand words. This masterpiece of ultra cinematic genius is worth unlimited words!
A beautiful film , won Oscar for best photography. Never get tired of watching it.
The Captain of this unit does smug like an absolute grand master, he forever has my respect.
The actor who played Capt. Quinn was Leonard Rossiter (1926-1984)
I love this clip! As a retired soldier and military historian with an 18th century focus, there is so much to like. I especially love the way the drums "thunder" and not just "rattle" (like in so many movies and TV shows). Yes, I know there are some historical inaccuracies: it looks like two companies marching with a full regiment's complement of musicians, and the colors are reversed; but I still love it.
So true, the story arc of Barry in his youth being enamored with the 'glamour' of war, only to realize later that WAR is just misery, suffering, death and grief. Seeing the carnage and seeing your friends die strips all glory and glamour from the endeavor. When I was a young man, I was far more of a 'war hawk' than I am as an older man. I've seen the abject suffering of armed conflicts, though I still see the need for such things (like if one's country is being invaded, etc.). But War, like Cancer, sucks.
And I particularly love his next line:
"None of you will be here, when this war ends. Everything we fought for, will be lost. Everything we loved, will be broken. The victors will be as cursed as the defeated. The world will grow old, and men will wonder about the lost ruins and go bad. Tradition, virtue, restraint - they all go. I'm not mourning for myself, but for the people who will come after me (...)"
Not to mention the final quote: "It was in the reign of George II that the above-named personages lived and quarrelled ; good or bad, handsome or ugly, rich or poor, they are all equal now”. It's an humility lesson - not to mention an harsh call to reality - that stays there to remind us that no matter whether we are a genius or a rogue, a success or a failure, we aren't going to dodge our final and common destiny.
Some sort of gangster rap
He’s mourning me and the follow englishmen who are left in england and not over run by muslims
@@jboydayz Yawn..... Change the record, sonny... Better yet, why not look at the statistics...
That march melody is very catchy. I found myself whistling at it randomly every now and then lol. Best Kubrick movie IMO.
That was one of the most visually and musically stunning movies i ever saw!!!
This captain is so full of himself. Very funny. I haven't seen this movie since I was a teenager nearly 50 years ago. Photography is very beautiful.
The way the march makes the song even better this is a banger
I really enjoy the contrast between the cheerfulness of the flutes versus the menacing purpose of the drums.
Yes, a fascinating dichotomy.
This movie was an absolute esthetic shock for me ...
May you rest in Peace, Dearest Stan 🤍
This film was done with natural lighting, including interiors...brilliant.
Nah it's more expensive in a studio so they went here
@@Zackislivid but that actually make this movie much better and realistic
Such a light and catchy tune, but if you heard it on a field in the 1700's, you were proper fukt.
That dude at the end xD
The officer stealin his girl
Zach M
Not merely his girl! His cousin.
@@joellaz9836 What are you, gay? Cousins are boys. 🙃
@@CountArtha wait what? My uncle's daughter is my cousin, just like her brother is also my cousin. Are you special?
@@Peoples_Republic_of_Devonshire ^ It's an incest joke ^
@@CountArtha a very unclear one
The commander marching. Yiu can see that the actor loved being in this film. One of the greatest movies out there. Classic
one of my favourite movies by Stanley Kubrick and worth seeing projected
we had to march into class after assembly to that tune.....and people still danced like that at country barn dances and faires in 1968
Me and the boys when we see an uncolonised piece of land
“Ey yo Britain where should we colonies ne-“
*Y E S*
Says the guy who has a bald eagle and American flag logo
@@mahmud2. lol
@@mahmud2. yeah, America the new world empire...
How come the replies are new
One of the greatest movies of all time
Thank you Stanley Kubrick rest in peace
Once upon a time, when I was a young MP, I stood tall around the reviewing stand when about 15,000 troopers of our division marched past, "Pass in Review". It was an impressive sight, of course! More importantly, the sense of being part of something that impressive was also very thrilling. Most of us never have that sense of being part of something much bigger and more important than ourselves. Doing so sometimes give a lot of purpose to life and also builds morale, community and dedication. These days, we are all so busy, Busy, BUSY with our own individual lives, we seem to have lost that sense of unity, focus, commitment and dedication to our nation and its' role in history; our destiny. Too bad! So sad!
The movie is a painting that comes to life.
Not enough Leonard Rossiter in this film. He stole every scene he was in, even without dialogue; the expressions on his face were amazing.
Yes, he was quite good in this film! The only other movie I saw in which he was featured was in "2001: A Space Odyssey" when he played the role of a Russian scientist. Would love to see him in some other films!
Did u know he was also a champion squash player.
Plus he was a super dancer. He looked at the girl as though he already owned her.
@@John-ob7dh he chewed the scenery of everything he starred in and acted everybody else out of the picture.
@@nihilistcentraluk442 He was great in the Cinzano adverts.
STANLEY KUBRICK WAS A GENIUS ...THE BEST DIRECTOR EVER !!!
Agreed.
He was also a micromanaging wanker who made life hell for the people under him by bullying them. You should bear that in mind
How about Federico Fellini?
@Aman dinho no I mean a prick. There is nothing worse than a micromanager
@@Peoples_Republic_of_Devonshire True, when he filmed the fake moon landings he insisted they be filmed on location.
Kubrick was such a perfectionist that, had this scene been shot at that time, it could not have been better.
I love the fire and drum march. Can't get it out of my head. Very catchy.
Check out the words they are great.
I can imagine Kubrick saying to him "Leonard, can you dance?" Well, even though it was a simple one you could see he could. Also, his facial expression in the duel is acting of the highest calibre - he was also in 2001. I agree , one of Kubrick's best.
I watched this movie for the first time about a month ago. When I saw him, I had one of those "Wait, wait... I've seen this guy before" moments. I wouldn't let myself look it up. I figured it out in a few minutes. Yep, he was the Russian scientist in _2001: A Space Odyssey._ It was a short part and an understated character, but he did play it very well.
@@Astrobrant2 Leonard Rossiter played many classic parts in the theatre and was in many films. He also played the lead role in one of the UKs great sitcoms, Rising Damp - 1974 to 78. He also played La Petomane in a tv play in 1979 about a French theatre performer who could suck air into his anus and make all sorts of noises. He was a wild success. Both of these can be viewed on youtube. He was a very versatile actor.
@@Astrobrant2 He was also in a long running comedy TV series here in UK called Rising damp .I believe he was also a champion squash ball player in his social life .A great comedian sorely missed.
@@John-ob7dh I've never seen him in a comic role, but he does seem to have the features and mannerisms that would work well as a comedian. I can't say that about every actor I've seen. I can definitely picture him as being a Rowan Atkinson or John Cleese type.
I like their culture, their dance style, their everything. Why we aren't seeing such military parades anymore?
I love the way that Redcoat turns his head to the side as he marches and fixes his gaze with all the pomp and ceremony of the British Empire. Such a twit. It calls attention to him just enough to lay the groundwork for what happens in later scenes. Brilliant.
Leonard Rossiter even in this serious piece looks like he's playing it for laughs.
I had the wonderful experience of actually being an extra in the making of this film when it was being filmed around Bath, in England. I met Kubrick & Ryan O'Neill & Kurd Jurgens! Kubrick did all the filming personally, & only had a professional cameraman at hand to do the light readings! To watch Kubrick at close quarters was awesome! He was witty, funny and easy to talk to and was a genius! He was one of the first directors to pioneer the use of available natural light when others used the usual battery of floodlights!!
O'Neill was also witty & his exchanges with Kubrick hilarious! With Jurgens, during a lunch break, I sat with him on a big woolsack & talked with him about his childhood in Berlin.
I appear twice in the film - once as a Redcoat soldier, walking behind a wagon & a white bull, against the background of a blazing barn, and also in the closing scene as a tramp, limping across the road towards a half-timbered English inn, accompanied by my own Jack Russell dog, "Copper"!
Awesome from a fellow kubrick worker stew fmj crew.
@@stewartbloomfield8035 There was also a lady, Mary Husband, in charge of make-up, and I still see her name, appearing in the list of credits, in later films, in the same capacity. Also fascinating, & funny, was that during breaks, the "English" & "French" soldiers, all gathered in separate groups together, separated according, NOT by who they actually were but according to which UNIFORM they were wearing!! Reminded me of a social experiment, carried out at a large school some years ago, where half the kids were dressed in red T-shirts & the other half in white T-shirts! When break-time arrived, they were filmed from a helicopter, all the kids in red were all together in one crowd & those in white all together in another!! Only a very small minority group consisted of a few "reds" & "whites" mingling together!! Says something about human nature & herd behaviour!!
By the way, Stew, what do the small case letters, before "crew" in your name mean?
Best wishes,
The Mouse!
It's nice to get the occasional insight worth reading.
Slight correction! I HAVE seen the name of Mary Husband in re-runs of "'Allo! Allo!!, but there she appears in the credits as
"Costume", & is therefore responsible for the minute detailed accuracy of the German uniforms in that hilarious series!
@@tomroland2315 Thanks, Tom!
Leonard Rossiter, what a guy. He even got into "2001 a Space odyssey"
did a famous campari ad with Joan Collins back in the 70s
He is sorely missed.
Even by miss Jones.
One of the best movies ever made . The candle lit scene of gamblers ,is now famous .
Probably the most underrated epics ever.
wonderful !!
from Japan🇯🇵
A really great film...slow, but each shot looked so well composed...almost a classic...would put in the top 20.
From what I've read Kubrick took his inspiration from paintings of the time -- Gainsborough, etc. You can totally see it in most of the major set pieces.
Kubrick should had won the Oscar for this awesome film. the man was a genius.
Seeing as Spielberg wasn't even nominated for Jaws that same year, the Oscars are a pile of crap.
Looking at the comments below.... Im not British but I love and admire the English Sarcasm and the beautiful, poetic and refined way to belittle other peoples.. Rule Britania!!!
Well we grow up practising on each other, so when it comes to peoples from over the water... it comes as easy as breathing!
@@Mark_Bickerton Yes, that's right. I've always had a poetic way of belittling other people, its an art form........
Leonard Rossiter (Captain John Quinn) also appeared in Kubrick's 2001, playing the part of a Russian Scientist.
Just try and not march along when this is playing. I grew up reenacting and to this day decades later…
How such a small island has produced so many valiant men is one of the great mysteries of human history. And it is a Frenchman who says so.
Merci Mon Ami.
Merci mon ami.ditto
valiant lmao
It was an American director, a German producer, a Cypriot assistant director, with a US production company, how in the world is the UK responsible for this gem of a movie?
I wasn't talking about the film but its characters.
This small island dominated the world or centuries because its inhabitants knew how to dominate themselves and at the same time they knew how to dare, take risks, want more...
Kubrick made an astonishing number of great films For those of you under 50 the ridiculous officer in this scene is the great comedy actor Leonard Rossiter who starred in a long-running brilliant comedy series Rising Damp it is still shown on British TV and is superior by miles to any modern
Sitcom
stop talking about history, this movie is one of the greatest films ever made, if you haven't seen it yet don't wait more please.
I can't get the first verse of the British grenadiers outta my head.
Good old Rigsby showing a fine leg.
Now if he'd have done that in Rising Damp Miss Jones would have been all his. No doubt about it.
She wanted phillips spear badly ha
Ha!
A great achievement in the history of cinematic art
The dance music is so perfect and the grandfatherly voice in background was also perfect
nice work guys
Voiceover was Sir Michael Hordern, a veteran actor who appeared in many films.
Leonard Rossiter as John Quinn. Taken far too early. R I P. 🌷🌷
The officer calling the sword salute was Leonard Rossiter! He appeared in 2001 A Space Odyssey.
He also in some funny series too. Can't remember the name of the programme. Very funny too.
+David Black ...as "Rigsby" the landlord in ' Rising Damp' a brilliant British sitcom !
+David Black The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin.
Embarr He was also in "The Long Ships" as the Persian soldier who is catapulted onto a mechanism that slices him in two! This was to prove his loyalty! Just for the record, the book was better.
Top film and very underated. Ask most folk to name a Kubrick film and it wont be this one!
Vaya. Que enorme cantidad de personas no han entendido un comino ni de cine ni de de que va esta joya absoluta.
Imagine this being that last thing you hear before getting your head caved in by a kettle
@kamerad dog.
Kettle?
Skitter yes like one of those big metal ones like your nan has
There is no sweeter death.
@@kamerad-dog Q
SACREBLEU!
POV: your brother takes the last ice cream and you play the british grenadiers to invade his brain
" His Majesty King George was too much in need of men to care from whence they came......"
I still walk through to the kitchen like this every morning lol 😂 eyes right!!!
It's a performance full of immersive feeling that people in this movie are likely to appear in front of me .
From Tokyo of the Land of the Rising Sun 🇯🇵
thats the flag of North Macedonia
@@duo496
Really ?
I think this flag is the Japanese Rising Sun's flag
Thank-you
Someday please visit Japan in spring
The cherry blossoms in full bloom are beyond your imagination and beyond description .
Be on the alert for Covid - 19
@@shin-i-chikozima Yes. North Macedonia's flag is yellow and red, while the Rising Sun's flag is red and white. And I love Japan too!
@@ibrijira4855
Thank-you so much to your fabulous comments
Someday please come to Japan
beyond description's Japanese delicious foods , immeasurable heartfelt hospitality and unfathomable amazing and marvellous things wait for you
Good luck !
0:58 when u waste a cup of tea
Mr. Kubrick, you are a master. A misunderstood master.
Leonard Rossiter as the officer in charge is brilliant.
Oh Miss Jones....
They looked so freaking spectacular when they were marching.
My brother is in this scene and also as a prussian soldier. Filmed in Ireland by and large. It's an excellent film.
Anthony Cosgrave He marched well... Was he in the service?
@@sethkimmel9706 Yes in the defence forces from 1961 to 1997. He passed away last year.
One thing I love about Barry Lyndon is the discipline those people had in daily life back then. Kubrick was an extremely disciplined man, almost obsessively so, and I'm sure that attracted him to the story. Underneath the social niceties though, the people's behavior is pure animal, grasping for survival.
Played this in Sydney, I'm now in the Colony of New South Wales
I'm so unaware that this music originally came from Britain but we played this everytime in Flag Ceremony in Philippine elementary schools
Such tight formation drilling. Marvelous.
Excelente filme. Barry Lindon foi um personagem fantástico em um filme bem dirigido e de excelente fotografia.
I remember watching Barry Lyndon when it came out and being enchanted with the visual imagery.
Old Rigsby cutting a fine dash ….ooooooh Miss Jones 😊
I use this march to motivate my self to brush my teeth every night when i am lazy
Grandísima película, la volvería a ver 100 veces.
Respect from France you were great oponents before 1914 and great allies after !
exame ģiinecoogio
We were allies in Crimea in 1853 to 1856 and the Entente Cordiale was signed in 1904.
Just came back from France .Had free shuttle bus from the hotel back and forth for 3 days .I always left a tip for the French drivers as they were courteous, and they were always pleased to see appreciation from a Brit.
Ein perfekter Film. Von A bis Z.
Leonard Rossiter was one of the best comic actors around in the 70s
Would love to see a regiment of these boys marching through Bradistan and London.
I played this to my British roommate.
I now only live with my other 26 roommates.
Briliant production, impossive today.
Ain't that the truth
Love the British Grenadiers they were one of the best military regiments in all of history long live the British Empire legacy and God Save Queen Victoria soul forever indeed!
1:32 My face when my teacher use my name as a good example
A number of the beautiful scenes in the film were shot near this location in Waterford. It makes a great days hike
*Simply. Beautiful.*
Leonard Rossiter was absolutely magnificent as the simpering captain was who was "killed" in a duel with Redmon Barry that essentially kicked off this adventure.
"It was in the reign of George II. that the above-named personages lived and quarrelled ; good or bad, handsome or ugly, rich or poor, they are all equal now. "
Don't forget he was not killed .her relatives set it up with weak gunpowder because once she married him he would be on a captains pension and the family would be relatively well off for that time .They did not want to risk him getting killed by a itinerant Irish lad.
One of the most humorous movies ever made. 😄
my coffee turned into tea 🤣😂🤦♂️
I didn't get where I am today without recognising Reggie Perrin!
The final boss music for any civilisation
I’m listening to this in Quebec
Brazil
Germany
DAMN. I couldn't do those dance moves if my life depended on it... but then again I've never been much of a dancer...
Those moves are hard to master on a solid surface. He did it effortlessly on GRASS!
@@abc64pan - Either he practiced a lot until he could do it with his eyes closed or he's a natural born dancer. Either possibility is beyond my capabilities.
Yes it was the late Leonard Rossiter (Rigsby from the 1970s sitcom "Rising Damp") playing Quinn who led his Grenadiers!
Probably one of the only historical film to ever get the colour of the uniform correct . Redcoats they may have called them , but a really red coat was difficult and expensive to manufacture. The uniforms were always more of a brick red /orange colour.
Red coats Started with Cromwell. Red was the cheapest dye available at the time, probably Madder based (the dye colour depended on pH). The RAF got their shade of blue because the Tsar's men, for whom the cloth was made and dyed originally, had no use for it after 1917. Some things never change at "Mod".
love this film. It really is a true Masterpiece!