@@Goodguy76.7just look up the actor name ! In all the movies he has ever been in will pop up even short films I believe I’m trying to remember there names there both in a lot of movies so i guess I’ll just have too look up another movie he was in previously looked him in the found his name Robert Pattinson!!
yeah that is why we sane people come together hundred year ago an decided never be friend with French and take them serious. See they cant even handle rats in their country now we dodged the bullet
Nah m8 the dude was just a scared coward more afraid of his own death than the death of his men. Super cringe. Might have won if he took the dudes offer.
@@RichardsNickname Well the history of it shows the French were right to be confident of victory. The English troops were fewer, were already tired after a long siege, didn't have cavalry and had relatively few men at arms. In short, the French lost because they were correct to assume that in a fair fight they could easily win. The fight wasn't fair though because the English duped them, forced them to fight in the mud where their cavalry advantage was nullified and secretly flanked them with longbowmen. The English outmaneuvered the French who weren't expecting it.
@@480pthacker Yes, apparently the modern British still share a large percentage of genetic ancestry with the people of France. (A 2015 study found that people living in southern and central England today typically share about 40% of their DNA with the French, 11% with the Danes, and 9% with the Belgians)
@henrychi4197 In my opinion, that is one of the things that make good leaders, that willingness to die to save thousands of lives, allies and enemies alike. Unlike others who sacrifice those same thousands to save themselves.
@@benhouston5975yeah and this would rarely ever work irl, in the medieval era kings weren't just telling their SUPERIOR ARMY to stand back while they fight they'd just kill off the inferior army also in their scenario John was more rightful to inherit the north anyway so he can use that chip this French king was being attacked by the English there's no way his people chooses England over him just because he believes the French army is superior to the English thus he wasn't willing to fight 1v1, that'd be cinematic tho
This was the first role that I gave Robert Pattinson a chance and he killed it. Good Time, The Lighthouse, Batman... he's killing it. Glad he outgrew Twilight.
@@NapoleonBonapaeteusfI'm pretty sure it's highly regarded. I've only ever seen it praised. Never seen a single negative thing said about it. At worst it's only slightly underrated.
Yeah, it’d be weird to judge someone for the rest of their life based on work they did in their early 20s. Ya’ll people expect perfection but don’t have even an ounce of it yourselves. 🙄
What is even more funny is that England nobility used to speak french at that time, if that movie was actually trying to be historically accurate, both kings would be speaking french
Coz honour and virtue. The possibility to save your friends, in arms, from dying. Sacrificing yourself to save others. Bravery.@@WhitePerson- UFC fighters are not brave, they are greedy.
Really? The dialogue in this scene is a bit off putting. It's like the writers couldn't decide if they wanted it to feel historical or modern. It doesn't accomplish either very well and just comes across like it was written by a teenager who doesn't know how language changed over the centuries.
Henry V was the first English monarch to be literate in English since 1066. His first language, and that of the English crown, was the Anglo-Norman dialect of French. The Dauphin would not have spoken to Henry in English. The Dauphin most likely didn't even know English, and wouldn't have debased himself with the speech of peasants with another noble either way.
If only that was the only historical problem with this movie ... The Dauphin was 12 yo during the battle of Agincourt and was certainly not leading the French Army. In fact the lack of a respected commander on the French side was one of the reasons for the disaster. I also hated the "British propaganda" aspect of this movie. Basically in this movie the French are just plain evil and so the virtuous English are therefore justified and even glorified for invading them. It's sadly quite reminiscent of the current Russian propaganda for invading Ukraine...
@@atistheso Dude go do some fucking research. Ukrainian negotiators already said that Russia only wanted Ukraine to remain neutral and not join NATO and guarantees that the Russian speaking donebass would be treated well and their would be no invasion. The Clown Johnson came and talked to the Ukrainian Clown and talked him into instead choosing WAR. Where the clown would see more than 20% of the 2nd biggest country in Europe now under Russian control, Hundreds of thousands of Dead Ukrainian soldiers, Destruction of the Ukraine economy and infrastructure. Millions of Ukrainians left for Russia and Europe and most will never return. The morons in Europe like good little lap dogs are destroying their own economies by cutting themselves off from cheap Russian raw materials when the countries they compete against still have access at even lower prices than pre war, also so the US MIC can make a killing.
I understand and agree with most of your analysis, here. However, you slid off the correct side of your statements when you mentioned the Russian reasons for invading Ukraine. I have no doubt there was plenty of propaganda on the Russian side, as there always is in Russia. Their news media remind me of the current American mainstream, both airing only stories paid for by the owners their respective networks. However, Russia WAS unfortunately justified in their invasion. They gave an ultimatum to NATO around 6 months beforehand plainly stating that if NATO didn't cease their increase of bases & armaments along their border, which NATO was doing and was a fairly reasonable demand, Russia would invade Ukraine and take back the territories America itself aided in solidifying when they helped Ukraine topple the pro-Russian "regime" in the mid-2010's (which Russia is clearly still angry about)... Just saying, we in the US have been fed our own propaganda about the reasons behind this war and our aid of Ukraine. We have monetary interests in Ukraines exports/resources. Period... NATO completely disregarded the warnings of Russia and did the exact opposite of Russia's demands as a big F-U. They cost Americans our very economy...
Sorry to disagree, but English wasn't around in 1066. The local hords got together much longer after that and West Germanic, old Norse and other tongues gave birth to high English. Much later, it developed into English, but there is a long history, which, obviously, I am omitting.
Fun fact he wasn’t there lol. He was eighteen and was staying with his father at Rouen but Shakespeare needed this confrontation between Henry and a royal so the dauphin magically appears at Agincourt.
@@gerryconstant4914 Dauphin isn't the princes name, but rather the title of the Crown Prince. Similar to how the Crown Prince of England is called the Prince of Wales.
@@gerryconstant4914"In the 12th century, the local ruler Count Guigues IV of Albon (c. 1095-1142) bore a dolphin on his coat of arms and was nicknamed le Dauphin (French for 'dolphin'). His descendants changed their title from Count of Albon to Dauphin of Viennois. The state took the name of Dauphiné" It IS because of the mammal.
@@spamfilter32 My junior high school when I lived in Alabama was named Dauphin. Our mascot was a Dolphin and I always assumed that's why. Now the name makes way more sense.
king henry actually spoke french, i believe it wasnt even custom for english nobility to speak english yet, as the french nobility who were the descendants of the lords who came with william the conqueror all spoke french amongst themselves in their courts, the common mans english was yet to percolate up the ranks of the blue blooded. fun side fact, the roman aristocracy spoke greek, not because most of them didnt know latin but because their culture was very smitten by the greeks, books like meditations by marcus aurelius (his personal diary) were written in greek, not latin. hope this was interesting to someone, paix a tout le monde!
@The Random Channel when an antagonist refuses this offer. Like Ramsay he's a coward. When a protagonist like Robb does it he's a hero. In truth it is not heroic to offer this when your chips are down. Even though in all these examples, the person who refused lost.
Fun fact: all French speakers at the time (and speakers of other french languages for that matter) trilled their R at the time. The modern guttural Parisian r didn't exist yet.
How can you say "all french speakers at the time" when it wasn't a unified language and north and south literally spoke languages of different origins ?
@@thegto8535 Because French in this context is synonym with Parisian French, the base of the "unified" French you speak of. I very clearly mentioned other French languages and said none of them had a guttural r at the time (such as Normand French speakers, a romance variety very close to Parisian French to begin with). You're literally trying to find something to get offended by.
@@thegto8535 North and south didn't speak languages of different origins, as most of France spoke latin-based languages. That means they came from Latin and hence shared an origin, the same way Castillian and Catalan share an origin even though they belong to different branches within the romance language family (Castillian being closer to Portuguese and Catalan to Occitan). If you feel like correcting people about languages, you ran into the wrong guy.
@@irdcs I assumed that by other french speakers you meant those who were in other european kingdoms created by the franks but ok. I do not but it seems like you do. I really dont get why you get triggered like that and have to get on your high horse for something as trivial as a question.. You must be one hell of an ass. I may have misused the "origin" wording as all are roman languages but "langues d'oc" and "d'oil" still had pretty singular differences as one incorporated quite a chunk of germanic (frankish influence since you seem to be the stupid type) and retained some celtic roots while the other wasn't much influenced by those. Hence my interrogation. You definitely are the wrong guy but clearly not the one you think.
@@thatoneguywithahugethang No and No… French is way more complexe given the craziness of the rules that English doesn’t have and almost half the words in English are from french, Germanic, Dutch origin. The most richest and complex language is by far Mandarin (and its derivations like Japanese), it’s a well known fact .
This is why you only accept to meet with another enemy away from your men, so they don't get the feeling that you wouldn't fight for them or to spare them death on the battlefield lol
Not really the right advice though he should be willing to fight his own battles one on one it would save a lot of lives and win or lose they will respect you a lot more.
@@lukasart3951 if there commander loses he was never fit to lead a army in the first place an army should be lead by a lion not a sheep giving orders to lions like politicians todays
@@Ghurdill Of course this is a time period when even the royalty of England spoke French and not English. So why would a French Prince prefer to speak or even know the language of peasants from another country?
@@imanoldurham5395 The movie Is based on a Shakespeare piece, but that piece Is based Is based on real historical events. The Battle of agincourt Is 100% real.
Few mistakes like the bowman doesn't have spikes to protect them, the armor is not painted enough to recognize your enemy on the battlefield and the bowman never shot in the air like all movies display.
Especially the first fight of the film against his cousin. Accurately portrays how cumbersome the armor was, and how inconvenient the helmet's faceguards were in the middle of a fight. Not to mention, them constantly losing their footing in the uneven muddy ground. F***, I love this movie lol.
@@snugglecity3500 The average armor weight was around 45-55 pounds in full plate. And being fully encased in said armor was more cumbersome than you'd imagine.
The resignation and exasperation in his voice when he says "let us make famous..that.. field..out there." There is no glory in war. Only death and misery for those who die and those who survive.
Worst movie ever. Lead protagonist has catalepsy, anything that happens his face doesn't change, historically speaking it's incorrect, the battle scenes are godawful like a homemade production, all the characters act like kids in puberty, how could you find anything enjoyable about this garbage?
@@prasetyoardi7912 From Wikipedia: _The Battle of Agincourt (AJ-in-kort) was an English victory in the Hundred Years' War. It took place on 25 October 1415 (Saint Crispin's Day) near Azincourt, in northern France. The unexpected English victory against the numerically superior French army boosted English morale and prestige, crippled France, and started a new period of English dominance in the war that would last for 14 years until England was defeated by France in 1429 during the Siege of Orléans._
It was a good movie, a little deception here and there makes the movie in the end. Not something id go out of my way for but its not something i wouldnt watch again either
The acting is excellent? Pattinson is so ridiculous he was nominated for a Razzie award ! Nothing about this movie is excellent : it's Historically wrong from the first to the last minute, the characters are caricatural (if you couldn't tell by watching this farce of a scene) and it's over two hours long. Do yourself a favor and spend these two hours doing something you love instead of watching this Netflix turd.
@@Aspett0 buddy, you’re ranting at someone who hasn’t even seen this film haha. Pattinson and Chalamet’s acting this scene was very good, but obviously I can’t vouch for the whole film. As for historical accuracy, I don’t require that from my entertainment as long as it’s not wildly anachronistic or injected full of current cultural and political ideologies.
It was really good, slow, but the score really made the difference in the movie the way the music would play in sceens with the intensity added by the piano. That's the reason i think it was good it sucked you in.
European history was not part of my curriculum in my school yrs. I like this movie a lot but I heard people say it's horrible, stupid hilarious and completely wrong. I still recommend it.
There is no path where we get rid of every nuke because of paranoia and conflicting ideals because the men in charge refuse to give up their seat of power.
The funny part is back then English nobility and the monarchy believed English was a dirty language of the peasants and refused to speak it. Most English nobility was actually French back then as well because of William of Normandy
@@Alex-cf3he What's named by english "Anglo norman" which is "norman french" is a norman french variant, there only some words from viking origin but it's basically french...
@@Alex-cf3heThe invaders were Normans (Northmen) of Viking stock, but those who came after their defeat and took the seats of power were in large part the Frankish nobility.
Theres another film hes in thats directed by some brothers. Its actually hard to watch if u get my saying. Its so real n ur watching him basically doom himself
This movie was so amazing and no one ever talks about it. I’ve watched it 5 times. Some of the best acting and somehow it was made by Netflix when it still cared. This movie is a 9. Almost a ten
This is a beautifull movie, unfortunately al lot of historical facts are wrong, and you can clearly see the french bashing taking place in all the new american movies of thé last décade… so sad, napoleon is by far the worst of them all
I loved the movie, but I think I watched it at least a year or two ago. Seeing this short made me realize Chalamee played Henry; I’d remembered Pattinson playing the Dauphin, but at the time, I believe, Chalamee was not nearly as well-known as he is now.
This movie is kinda hilarious for two scenes. This one and the end of the final battle. I won't spoil it. But this French man be pulling some funny moves at the end. Had me twisted.
**Spoiler alert** The french king slipped and fell when they were about to duel🤣 He got stabby stabbed lots…. Like really really lots till death and the french army were just looking at it and doing nothing 💀
Only issue I had with twilight was Bella’s actress and actually Jo two issues the actress and how they sucked all the emotion out of the characters felt like Edward Alice and Jacob were the only people in the movie jasper didn’t really get his shine which sucks cuz he is an awesome character
Check him out in The Rover. He plays a needy simpleton who is barely likeable but proves his worth in dire circumstances. If he'd got one full second wrong it would all be ruined.
Join our cozy corner of the movie word in Telegram - t.me/BMMCSpot
“Simple and ugly”……. French is pompous and effeminate, if y’all ask me.
I went to the group but couldn't find the movie idk if we're supposed to scroll up endlessly or something but not cool.
@@Goodguy76.7just look up the actor name ! In all the movies he has ever been in will pop up even short films I believe I’m trying to remember there names there both in a lot of movies so i guess I’ll just have too look up another movie he was in previously looked him in the found his name Robert Pattinson!!
@@Goodguy76.7also mate the movie is called The King 👑 came out in 2019 it’s also only on Netflix at the moment hope that helps!
Name of movie please.
"It is simple and ugly" he sounds authentically French here 😂
yeah that is why we sane people come together hundred year ago an decided never be friend with French and take them serious. See they cant even handle rats in their country now we dodged the bullet
Oui
"ALLUHAH AHKBAR!" -Modern French
his english is way too good to be authentic
l'anglais c'est vraiment une langue pour handicapé xD
King Henry was like, "May thy knife chip and shatter".
😂😂😂😂
An batman was like I WILL KILL HIM !! 😂
Long Live The Fighters!!!
Wrong millennia
😂😂
Word up!!!
Soldiers in the back like, “shit I was counting on that wtf” 😂
I know I would have🤣
Awesome 👏🏻
They want a battle too. A lot of money to be made
I would fcking exclaimed the loudet "F********CCCCCKKKKK!!!!" 🤣
@@BoleDaPole Haha no they dont most men in armies back then were not trained soldiers they were recruited or forced simple or farm men
"let us make famous that field out there" is a great line
Name Movie?
@@Soldier-men____1933 “The King” it’s on Netflix if you have it
@@Soldier-men____1933think it’s called like “The King” or “King” on Netflix pretty good movie I watched it in high school like in 2018
@@andrewangeles283 it came out in 2019. so how did you manage that
@@BazookaBeanIsEpic did you ever just stop and think “he probably just got the year wrong” dumbass
An english man playing a frenchman and a frenchman playing an english man
Thats dumb as hell
He's American.
@@ysabeausc1688 With some French ancestry. It's enough for the joke to be fine.
@@ysabeausc1688his name is Timothée Chalamet
That is EXACTLY what I was thinking the entire time 😂
"Let us make famous, that field out there"
Is cold as ice
Better last words, i cant think of
dude tripped in the mud and got shanked lol
He really made that field famous for Henry
That field out there is Agincourt
I was gonna say that, based AF @manasbapat6904
“Let us make famous that field out there”
That’s the best way I’ve ever heard someone say let’s go to war 😁
@TaehyungandStarswhy
The irony being the man throwing down then gets his ass clapped lol
Nah m8 the dude was just a scared coward more afraid of his own death than the death of his men. Super cringe. Might have won if he took the dudes offer.
@@RichardsNickname It’s cool if that’s your opinion 🤷🏾♂️
But I liked the dialogue.
I never seen the show or movie
Just the clip.
@@RichardsNickname Well the history of it shows the French were right to be confident of victory. The English troops were fewer, were already tired after a long siege, didn't have cavalry and had relatively few men at arms. In short, the French lost because they were correct to assume that in a fair fight they could easily win.
The fight wasn't fair though because the English duped them, forced them to fight in the mud where their cavalry advantage was nullified and secretly flanked them with longbowmen. The English outmaneuvered the French who weren't expecting it.
An actor of French ancestry playing the English King, and an English actor playing a French Prince. Both did great.
Next we'll have a jewish actor play Hitler
Both kings had more French blood than English
@@480pthacker Yes, apparently the modern British still share a large percentage of genetic ancestry with the people of France. (A 2015 study found that people living in southern and central England today typically share about 40% of their DNA with the French, 11% with the Danes, and 9% with the Belgians)
@@earlygray4456I mean I’d say that’s obvious considering the Norman’s… mainly Norman ancestry tho, even today many Irish etc have Norman second names
Pattinson great.
They settled it with a tickle fight, and the loser was dubbed a "silly billy."
You win the internet!
Lol 😂
lmao
😂😂😂
A peaceful end to what could’ve been an awfully violent conflict 😌
Why does the French prince sound like he’d want us to name 10 books
Lmao he does sound like that guy
“You can’t even name 10 books!”
O shit no😅😅😅😅
Brrrrr😂
Nice👍
It is because of him that we have to write a 3 page thesis of that field out there
Thesis is not 3 pages , that’s not even a paper
Name of movie pls?
@@manuelehimsa2186I don’t know, tho if I get it share it here👌
@@manuelehimsa2186 The King. It’s on Netflix
Well do not use this film as your source, it’s about as historically accurate as Star Wars
Im waiting for rob to say, "Im a french, why do you think I have this outrageous accent you silly king?!"
now go away or i shall taunt you a second time!
You and all your kkkkkkkkaaaaneeegiiittsss!!
Conversely, he speaks better English than 99.9% of all brits!
I fart in your general direction
But all english pretty girls love our french accents
So a guy named Robert Pattinson is playing the french guy and a Guy name Timothée Chalamet is playing the english guy. Makes sense.
Yeah who the f did the casting
Yeah exactly they shouldn't have been casted their last names are wrong!!!!!
Yeah it's called acting
I'm sure that for both of them the spoken language was Old French
Well, at least we know they can act haha
“ Treat your men as you would your own beloved sons. And they will follow you into the deepest valley. “
Nice quote!
warhammer 40k applied this to their primarch and their space marines
Kneel before no man.
That's from Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare, spoken by Kevin Spacey
@user-xo3cv6mc4nsounds like you have a problem raising children properly might wanna get that checked out
He won the battle and returned home to make the best chocolate the world has ever seen
That chocolate isn't all that
What chocolate?@@lorenzovonmatterhorn4756
chocolate is mexican. the worst chocolate is mexican and the best chocolate is mexican. chocolate is mexican
😂
😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣
“”I fart in your general direction”
Lmao 🤣🤣🤣. Bro they should have deffo added that monthy python reference to this film 🎥🤣🤣🤣.
Your father smells of elderberrys
Your mother was a hamster and your father.......smelled of.....
Elderberries!!!!
@@sparkyreb
😮
😠
I'm voting for this 🤣
"let us make famous that field over there" really packs a punch
To be fair, they did make the field famous.
Not only did they make the field famous they also made the English longbow famous as well.
Never as famous as a teenage girl named Jeanne d'Arc kicking the English out of the continent to suffer there first Brexit 😎 @@laszlokiss483
Did you forget the english captured and killed joan of arc ??? sounds like you forgot@@ommsterlitz1805
Then their own turned against her and killed her. @@ommsterlitz1805
"If we did it your way kingslayer, you'd win!"
Rob stark
I was thinking the same thing except for when Jon said it to Ramsey - "Will your men want to fight for you when they hear you wouldn't fight for them"
@@henrychi4197That was a clever move. Put him in a lose/lose scenario.
@henrychi4197 In my opinion, that is one of the things that make good leaders, that willingness to die to save thousands of lives, allies and enemies alike. Unlike others who sacrifice those same thousands to save themselves.
@@benhouston5975yeah and this would rarely ever work irl, in the medieval era kings weren't just telling their SUPERIOR ARMY to stand back while they fight they'd just kill off the inferior army
also in their scenario John was more rightful to inherit the north anyway so he can use that chip
this French king was being attacked by the English there's no way his people chooses England over him just because he believes the French army is superior to the English thus he wasn't willing to fight 1v1, that'd be cinematic tho
Jon Snow and Rob Stark…. Savages.
“Let us make famous that field out there” is such an underrated line
Describing anything these days as "underrated" is completely overrated.
@@mjt1517 yeah its crazy cuz i've seen more than a dozen comments saying how goated the line is anyway
"Let us make famous that field out there" What a line.
They don’t play the whole part lol
I presume the field out there is Agincourt?
He was afraid to fight like a man.
@@UserName-cb6jzlol battle is a lot more intimidating than a 1on1
@@ronaldbell7429correct
This was the first role that I gave Robert Pattinson a chance and he killed it. Good Time, The Lighthouse, Batman... he's killing it. Glad he outgrew Twilight.
Theres more, tennet and that movie where hes a criminal trying to free his brother
Twilight was definitely a case of bad writing being saved by a good actor. Those films are bad, but they would’ve been way worse if he wasn’t in them
How was he bad in Twilight? Just because the movies were bad doesn't mean his performance was.
@@NapoleonBonapaeteusfI'm pretty sure it's highly regarded. I've only ever seen it praised. Never seen a single negative thing said about it. At worst it's only slightly underrated.
Yeah, it’d be weird to judge someone for the rest of their life based on work they did in their early 20s. Ya’ll people expect perfection but don’t have even an ounce of it yourselves. 🙄
Frenchman: “I would prefer to speak English”
King Henry: “I don’t speak English”
Henry V was the first English king after 1066 where English was is first language.
@@Delogros Henry IV was the first English king to speak English actually, but they both spoke Middle English which contained a lot of french
@@heyitsjoe8446 Modern English contains a lot of French, like 40% - either way the point still stands :)
Henry the 5th could speak English
@@Delogrosit was a joke.
This is foreshadowing the battle between that happens in like 10,000 years on arackis
Exactly pual was doing more dominant
Exactly the comment I was looking for 🤣
I mean this memory is probably rattling around in his head somewhere between Agamemnon and Arakis
It’s so funny that Timothy is the one that speaks fluent French, and then Robert is the English man, but they’re playing reversed roles.
Reminds me of Sean Connery playing a Spaniard in the movie Highlander.
@@Thor-Orion He was an Egyptian that served the Spanish crown. Which makes Connery's accent even more insane to be used.
@@Maehock meanwhile Connor MacLeod is played by a French Jew.
What is even more funny is that England nobility used to speak french at that time, if that movie was actually trying to be historically accurate, both kings would be speaking french
Bro just discovered acting
Rob is really quite talented. I hate that he got caught up in that Twighlight BS but Im glad he has managed to come back and show his skill set.
We're all on a journey, who knows if he would be getting cast in these great movies if not for the relevance twilight brought.
Without tw he would still be working with his dad between minor roles
Both fair points. I agree. TwLt was major exposure.
He's perfect in Twilight. That's exactly how Edward is in the books.
repugnant shit?
@@GlacialScion
“Are you scared of this battle?”
“Clearly not as scared as you are of me.”
Rob’s character had multiple advantages in this battle and had no reason to fight Hal 1v1
Why would u fight a 1vs1 fight lmao its a war not UFC
That is a good line.
Coz honour and virtue. The possibility to save your friends, in arms, from dying. Sacrificing yourself to save others. Bravery.@@WhitePerson- UFC fighters are not brave, they are greedy.
@@WhitePerson-to spare your soldiers and to end a battle quickly. Simple
These 2 young actors did an awesome job….this is a really good movie.
Damn he might be a vampire from being prince of France to becoming the batman been alive for a long time
Underrated comment ❤
I understood those references
He was also killed my Lord Voldemort in the goblet of fire
But then he met the Kwisatz Haderach...
And still a bad actor.
This movie didn't get a ton of love, but I absolutely adore its dialogue.
Brilliant film
I loved this film.
Really? The dialogue in this scene is a bit off putting. It's like the writers couldn't decide if they wanted it to feel historical or modern. It doesn't accomplish either very well and just comes across like it was written by a teenager who doesn't know how language changed over the centuries.
It’s not historically accurate
@@taylorellis8611 They never are. I only recall that the was won by the English. What parts were not true at all?
Henry V was the first English monarch to be literate in English since 1066. His first language, and that of the English crown, was the Anglo-Norman dialect of French. The Dauphin would not have spoken to Henry in English. The Dauphin most likely didn't even know English, and wouldn't have debased himself with the speech of peasants with another noble either way.
If only that was the only historical problem with this movie ... The Dauphin was 12 yo during the battle of Agincourt and was certainly not leading the French Army. In fact the lack of a respected commander on the French side was one of the reasons for the disaster. I also hated the "British propaganda" aspect of this movie. Basically in this movie the French are just plain evil and so the virtuous English are therefore justified and even glorified for invading them. It's sadly quite reminiscent of the current Russian propaganda for invading Ukraine...
@atistheso Oh, so you were there then, if not, stop your propaganda!
@@atistheso Dude go do some fucking research. Ukrainian negotiators already said that Russia only wanted Ukraine to remain neutral and not join NATO and guarantees that the Russian speaking donebass would be treated well and their would be no invasion. The Clown Johnson came and talked to the Ukrainian Clown and talked him into instead choosing WAR. Where the clown would see more than 20% of the 2nd biggest country in Europe now under Russian control, Hundreds of thousands of Dead Ukrainian soldiers, Destruction of the Ukraine economy and infrastructure. Millions of Ukrainians left for Russia and Europe and most will never return. The morons in Europe like good little lap dogs are destroying their own economies by cutting themselves off from cheap Russian raw materials when the countries they compete against still have access at even lower prices than pre war, also so the US MIC can make a killing.
I understand and agree with most of your analysis, here. However, you slid off the correct side of your statements when you mentioned the Russian reasons for invading Ukraine. I have no doubt there was plenty of propaganda on the Russian side, as there always is in Russia. Their news media remind me of the current American mainstream, both airing only stories paid for by the owners their respective networks. However, Russia WAS unfortunately justified in their invasion. They gave an ultimatum to NATO around 6 months beforehand plainly stating that if NATO didn't cease their increase of bases & armaments along their border, which NATO was doing and was a fairly reasonable demand, Russia would invade Ukraine and take back the territories America itself aided in solidifying when they helped Ukraine topple the pro-Russian "regime" in the mid-2010's (which Russia is clearly still angry about)... Just saying, we in the US have been fed our own propaganda about the reasons behind this war and our aid of Ukraine. We have monetary interests in Ukraines exports/resources. Period... NATO completely disregarded the warnings of Russia and did the exact opposite of Russia's demands as a big F-U. They cost Americans our very economy...
Sorry to disagree, but English wasn't around in 1066. The local hords got together much longer after that and West Germanic, old Norse and other tongues gave birth to high English. Much later, it developed into English, but there is a long history, which, obviously, I am omitting.
A British dude playing a French dude and a French dude playing a British dude. Perfection
Fun fact he wasn’t there lol. He was eighteen and was staying with his father at Rouen but Shakespeare needed this confrontation between Henry and a royal so the dauphin magically appears at Agincourt.
There is an island south of Mobile, AL names for a prince of France. Most people think it's named after the sea mammal.
@gerryconstant4914 😂 great point, lmao 🤣
@@gerryconstant4914 Dauphin isn't the princes name, but rather the title of the Crown Prince. Similar to how the Crown Prince of England is called the Prince of Wales.
@@gerryconstant4914"In the 12th century, the local ruler Count Guigues IV of Albon (c. 1095-1142) bore a dolphin on his coat of arms and was nicknamed le Dauphin (French for 'dolphin'). His descendants changed their title from Count of Albon to Dauphin of Viennois. The state took the name of Dauphiné"
It IS because of the mammal.
@@spamfilter32 My junior high school when I lived in Alabama was named Dauphin. Our mascot was a Dolphin and I always assumed that's why. Now the name makes way more sense.
king henry actually spoke french, i believe it wasnt even custom for english nobility to speak english yet, as the french nobility who were the descendants of the lords who came with william the conqueror all spoke french amongst themselves in their courts, the common mans english was yet to percolate up the ranks of the blue blooded. fun side fact, the roman aristocracy spoke greek, not because most of them didnt know latin but because their culture was very smitten by the greeks, books like meditations by marcus aurelius (his personal diary) were written in greek, not latin. hope this was interesting to someone, paix a tout le monde!
"Let us make famous, that field out there". That is legendary.
To me that sounds like I'm too afraid to do a one v one
@@demnbrown Or he's not a moron, risking his own life in battle when he has the advantage over the enemy.
@@unknowablestrangerpretty sure bro got his ass beat anyway
@@kinglace3782The kid is the main character, he has plot amour thicker then a planet, what did you expect to happen.
@unknowablestranger I was talking historically. This actually happened and Henry went on to kick his ass.
“Let us make famous that field out there” is a crazy line!
The entire movie had great dialogue. 10/10 movie
Said no one ever...
Oh, except the 100 other comments
@The Random Channel when an antagonist refuses this offer. Like Ramsay he's a coward.
When a protagonist like Robb does it he's a hero.
In truth it is not heroic to offer this when your chips are down. Even though in all these examples, the person who refused lost.
Pattinson is so underrated. His role ability is so versatile. He did great in this one.
Fun fact: all French speakers at the time (and speakers of other french languages for that matter) trilled their R at the time. The modern guttural Parisian r didn't exist yet.
How can you say "all french speakers at the time" when it wasn't a unified language and north and south literally spoke languages of different origins ?
Cool
@@thegto8535 Because French in this context is synonym with Parisian French, the base of the "unified" French you speak of. I very clearly mentioned other French languages and said none of them had a guttural r at the time (such as Normand French speakers, a romance variety very close to Parisian French to begin with). You're literally trying to find something to get offended by.
@@thegto8535 North and south didn't speak languages of different origins, as most of France spoke latin-based languages. That means they came from Latin and hence shared an origin, the same way Castillian and Catalan share an origin even though they belong to different branches within the romance language family (Castillian being closer to Portuguese and Catalan to Occitan). If you feel like correcting people about languages, you ran into the wrong guy.
@@irdcs I assumed that by other french speakers you meant those who were in other european kingdoms created by the franks but ok. I do not but it seems like you do.
I really dont get why you get triggered like that and have to get on your high horse for something as trivial as a question.. You must be one hell of an ass. I may have misused the "origin" wording as all are roman languages but "langues d'oc" and "d'oil" still had pretty singular differences as one incorporated quite a chunk of germanic (frankish influence since you seem to be the stupid type) and retained some celtic roots while the other wasn't much influenced by those. Hence my interrogation. You definitely are the wrong guy but clearly not the one you think.
“It’s a battle of the jawlines”
"It is simple and ugly" *smiles in baguette*
Is he wrong though?
It is very Rosbif 😂
@j22563 well English is a more complex language technically.
Funny enough the richest most complex language BY FAR is Arabic. 😅
"Funny enough the richest most complex language BY FAR is Arabic."
According to what sources? @@thatoneguywithahugethang
@@thatoneguywithahugethang No and No…
French is way more complexe given the craziness of the rules that English doesn’t have and almost half the words in English are from french, Germanic, Dutch origin.
The most richest and complex language is by far Mandarin (and its derivations like Japanese), it’s a well known fact .
The name of the movie is so important it should be at the top for people to see.
I can’t tell if this is a joke or not
So what is the name?
@@davidfernandez351The King (2019)
The King.
on Netflix right now.
Honestly this movie made me respect both these actors way more than anything they've ever done.
Name?
What movie is this
I want the name too
@@hsgame4088movie is called "The King"
"The King"
One of the rare perfect french accent in cinema. The way he says "all the night" ❤
Even he laugh was French 😅😅😅
To pull off a French accent, all you have to do is sound like you’re throwing up when you speak. 😂
@scoobydoo5447 How your mum sounded when witnessing you at your birth?
Nah, far from it, actually. The only actor I've ever seen actually nail a french accent is Joseph Gordon Levitt in "The Walk".
@@cb9909 T'es français ?
This is why you only accept to meet with another enemy away from your men, so they don't get the feeling that you wouldn't fight for them or to spare them death on the battlefield lol
Not really the right advice though he should be willing to fight his own battles one on one it would save a lot of lives and win or lose they will respect you a lot more.
Idk if you’ve seen the movie but the English were horribly outnumbered he thought he was obviously surrendering, and thought his victory was assumed.
@@tomfabian1754great point
@@keironroberts5645I don’t know. There’s no guarantee your men will be spared if you lose. You may just be leaving them without a commander.
@@lukasart3951 if there commander loses he was never fit to lead a army in the first place an army should be lead by a lion not a sheep giving orders to lions like politicians todays
That last line, gotta be one of the scariest beginning of war lines one could ever hear.
If you’re looking for the name of the movie it’s called The King 👑 came out in 2019 & it’s playing on Netflix at the moment !
Is it good ?
Not all heroes wear capes
@@exilfilmTV yes it is!
@@KOTF777 Just watched it on Netflix !
It was cool ! Nice story and directing.
Thank you. I appreciate you stating it.
That french accent was spot on
you sir have never heard an actual french speaking english. Its a lot worse than that.
@@GhurdillNot so bad. It's pretty similar.
Yeah but the british accent slipped a lot after the "it's simple and ugly"
@@Ghurdill Of course this is a time period when even the royalty of England spoke French and not English. So why would a French Prince prefer to speak or even know the language of peasants from another country?
proving you have no clue what you are talking about. i don't know any french who speak english this well
I was waiting for 'SILENCE'
"Damnit! I didn't bring my sword. I really thought they would duke it out and I could go back home".
Henry’s army is about to roll this man up and smoke him, in one of the most embarrassing defeats of the Middle Ages.
Is not a historical movie, just fiction.
@@imanoldurham5395 The movie Is based on a Shakespeare piece, but that piece Is based Is based on real historical events. The Battle of agincourt Is 100% real.
Except it is in fact real battle, ofc its not 100% acurate but it still is@@imanoldurham5395
@@imanoldurham5395 Please get some history lessons. European history lessons. Things were going on over here when America was not even populated.
@@mixalisstathis274 That's a nice way of saying that native Americans don't count as people.
Twillight guy really killed this role. People forget what fantastic actor he is because of twillight.
Yet you call him "Twilight guy"
@@stevenfoster9402 i suppose he could have been referred to as that guy who died in Harry Potter
Actually, I liked his role in "Remember Me," better than the Twilight franchise.
I'm sorry, but vampires should not sparkle 🙄
@@stevenfoster9402 i call him the batman guy
The Batman vs the Lisan al-Gaib
Honestly out of all the medieval movies I’ve seen this depicts what actual armored knight battles may have looked like perfectly
Few mistakes like the bowman doesn't have spikes to protect them, the armor is not painted enough to recognize your enemy on the battlefield and the bowman never shot in the air like all movies display.
It’s sadly WILDLY historically inaccurate.
Especially the first fight of the film against his cousin. Accurately portrays how cumbersome the armor was, and how inconvenient the helmet's faceguards were in the middle of a fight. Not to mention, them constantly losing their footing in the uneven muddy ground. F***, I love this movie lol.
@@AJSantiestebanarmour really wasnt that cumbersome
@@snugglecity3500 The average armor weight was around 45-55 pounds in full plate. And being fully encased in said armor was more cumbersome than you'd imagine.
The medieval films are pleasant and majestic in language, for they speak not in improper grammar.
The resignation and exasperation in his voice when he says "let us make famous..that.. field..out there." There is no glory in war. Only death and misery for those who die and those who survive.
“Let us make famous, that field out there”
Is a great line
Man this movie was underrated. It was great.
there are too many historical errors
@@roguefrantzy6583you miss the point what films are about, if historical facts keep you away from enjoying a film
Maybe from some viewpoint, but I was way to distracted by the deviations from the history it’s based off to pay any attention to it…
@@roguefrantzy6583But was it good as a movie?
Worst movie ever. Lead protagonist has catalepsy, anything that happens his face doesn't change, historically speaking it's incorrect, the battle scenes are godawful like a homemade production, all the characters act like kids in puberty, how could you find anything enjoyable about this garbage?
Movie name “The King “
It's in the title but thanks
Ty I almost couldn’t read the title of the short
In the title, nitwit
Thanks 😊
"Let us make famous that field over there" We now know that field as The Battle of Agincourt
Never heard it before
@@prasetyoardi7912 You must be Gen Z? I can see how you don't know anything!
@@DogSerious What is Gen Z?
@@prasetyoardi7912 From Wikipedia:
_The Battle of Agincourt (AJ-in-kort) was an English victory in the Hundred Years' War. It took place on 25 October 1415 (Saint Crispin's Day) near Azincourt, in northern France. The unexpected English victory against the numerically superior French army boosted English morale and prestige, crippled France, and started a new period of English dominance in the war that would last for 14 years until England was defeated by France in 1429 during the Siege of Orléans._
@@prasetyoardi7912 One of the most famous battles in history and you've never heard of it?
What the heck do kids learn in school these days?
probably why he was cast as Paul Atreides.
timmy is half french playing an english prince, robert is british playing a french king. the directors knew what they were doing
Their fight in the mud is visceral and rad.
Underrated film
It’s not these two that have that fight. That’s earlier in the movie.
It's completely ridiculous and totally made up bullshit, this whole movie was made up propaganda...
What does "rad" means?
@@CreativeReaper90scool/good
@@roryoc18did you watch the movie ?
Hands down my favorite role from Robert Patterson, and Timothy for that matter. This movie is one of the best films Netflix EVER did.
What movie is this ?
Google Robert Patterson and Timothy chalomet movie lol
The King it's there on netflix
@@jordanboland8558why would you even bother commenting and not share the answer. I dont know who these idiots are.
Heavy opinions there 😂
The English nobility has been taught both French and English since William the conquerer.
British nobility spoke mainly French until relatively recently 😅 This British King would have almost exclusively spoken French...
ngl i was waiting for him to say "name 10 books" lmao
I haven’t seen this film, but this brief scene is enough to convince me that it deserves a watch. The acting here is excellent.
Yes, it's absolutely worth a watch! The ending was incredible
It was a good movie, a little deception here and there makes the movie in the end. Not something id go out of my way for but its not something i wouldnt watch again either
The acting is excellent? Pattinson is so ridiculous he was nominated for a Razzie award ! Nothing about this movie is excellent : it's Historically wrong from the first to the last minute, the characters are caricatural (if you couldn't tell by watching this farce of a scene) and it's over two hours long. Do yourself a favor and spend these two hours doing something you love instead of watching this Netflix turd.
@@Aspett0 buddy, you’re ranting at someone who hasn’t even seen this film haha. Pattinson and Chalamet’s acting this scene was very good, but obviously I can’t vouch for the whole film. As for historical accuracy, I don’t require that from my entertainment as long as it’s not wildly anachronistic or injected full of current cultural and political ideologies.
@@jon7684 fair enough. Thanks for your balanced perspective!
That French actor is pretty good, I could see him playing Batman if his American accent is convincing enough.
It was really good, slow, but the score really made the difference in the movie the way the music would play in sceens with the intensity added by the piano. That's the reason i think it was good it sucked you in.
“Are you scared of this battle?” - the guy who’s too afraid to duel 1 v 1
FOR THE KING AND SAINT GEORGE!
FOR SAINT CRISPIN AND CRISPINIAN!
@@crazylegz324show us here the metal of your Pasteur, you good omen who's limbs were made in England
@@James-zt7nf let us swear you are worth your breeding, WHICH I DOUBT NOT!
Still lost the war , english L
King Henry lookin sharp with the taper
"Please speak English, I enjoy to speak English, it is simple and ugly" massive lol
My two favorites actors in one movie? Love it
U can hear his accent slip when he says “I have been waiting all the morning, all the night”
Why have I not seen this yet....
It's called The King
Fool you must watch it immediately
@@robertbernard651It's Called The Kinga Dawg Shyte
To be more than willing to lay your own life down for your men is the biggest show of love, leadership, and balls I could ever imagine.
You like a good love story, don't you?
Maybe avoid the ball showing part.
Yeah I can see what you were going for, but the way your sentence is structured it really makes it gay as fuck…
Makes a badass king, but also a silly one. look at Richard the Lion heart.. I am sure he wished he was alive and not hit by some random ass arrow.
He clearly didn't have such high regard for his mens lives if he was using them to invade a foreign country.
Timothy playing an Englishman and Robert playing a Frenchman is diabolicaly subversive casting
few hundreds year later :
prince andrew was born
Not of the same lineage I would imagine now😅
European history was not part of my curriculum in my school yrs. I like this movie a lot but I heard people say it's horrible, stupid hilarious and completely wrong. I still recommend it.
People who say this movie is wrong are stupid because it's based on Shakespeare's play on Henry V, not the actual objective history.
In movies as an art historical accuracy doesn’t matter, if that’s what u seek watch a documentary.
Hidden gem that film! Love it!
Film name?
Film name sir ??
The king
Robert can really act. Every movie is a different person 👏🏽
I am Paul Muad'Dib the V and I am the King of England!
Long live the Band of Brothers!!!!
He unlocked Mud Power.
It would be interesting if World leaders handled situations like this today.
There is no path where we get rid of every nuke because of paranoia and conflicting ideals because the men in charge refuse to give up their seat of power.
Why do they always send the poor?
@@billyhernandez2103DISORDER DISORDER
This is a movie bruh, get a grip.
@@powerboon2kit's based on true story
Is that batman talking like a Frenchman?😂
Edward talking like a human
Bro came to pvp with a chainmail against plate armor, absolute madlad.
"May thy boots slip and trip"
The funny part is back then English nobility and the monarchy believed English was a dirty language of the peasants and refused to speak it. Most English nobility was actually French back then as well because of William of Normandy
They weren't French they were Norman. French speaking vikings
Who gives a rats ass.
@@Alex-cf3he What's named by english "Anglo norman" which is "norman french" is a norman french variant, there only some words from viking origin but it's basically french...
@@Alex-cf3heThe invaders were Normans (Northmen) of Viking stock, but those who came after their defeat and took the seats of power were in large part the Frankish nobility.
Look up the creation of the English language. It'll blow your mind! English isn't as old as you think it is and didn't start where you're told it did.
The france king then equip batman suit and whoop the other guy 😂😂
“I reject your proposal”
Movie ends
Best Patterson role ever. Hes perfect as the Dauphin.
Theres another film hes in thats directed by some brothers. Its actually hard to watch if u get my saying. Its so real n ur watching him basically doom himself
Pattinson*
@@ROBERT-p5f8n thanks mom.
This movie was so amazing and no one ever talks about it. I’ve watched it 5 times. Some of the best acting and somehow it was made by Netflix when it still cared. This movie is a 9. Almost a ten
All that and you don't mention the name
@@apocshadow1217in the caption, the king
Also Great soundtracks
This is a beautifull movie, unfortunately al lot of historical facts are wrong, and you can clearly see the french bashing taking place in all the new american movies of thé last décade… so sad, napoleon is by far the worst of them all
I too love this one. The cinematography with the trebuchet siege was beautiful. Great acting all around
One of my favorite movies, made me love timothee
ehh, the movie isn't bad, but it's not great.
They really screwed up Agincourt and destroyed the facts.
I really cant stand him, and idk why. Something about him just rubs me the wrong way
I loved the movie, but I think I watched it at least a year or two ago. Seeing this short made me realize Chalamee played Henry; I’d remembered Pattinson playing the Dauphin, but at the time, I believe, Chalamee was not nearly as well-known as he is now.
name pls?
Then Edward became a Vampire a year later 😂
A King that fights for his own men as they fight for him now that will be a sight
Swedish kings did that, they were on the front line, many died on the front line also.
@@Hoogee4 Many medieval king did it. Henry the 5th as well.
Imagine if politicians had this kind of personal courage and integrity.
I wouldn't want my country's future to depend on Joe Biden's boxing ability.
If only all conflicts could be settled like this😔
Great movie. Timothee was fantastic. And Rob was a great surprise. He is also very talent.
This movie is kinda hilarious for two scenes. This one and the end of the final battle.
I won't spoil it.
But this French man be pulling some funny moves at the end. Had me twisted.
coming soon 😉
What's the name of this movie?
@@ferdinand8994 vid title
**Spoiler alert** The french king slipped and fell when they were about to duel🤣
He got stabby stabbed lots…. Like really really lots till death and the french army were just looking at it and doing nothing 💀
In the mud and the English king keeps falling in the mud
Not the French actor playing the British man and the British actor playing the French man😂😂
The twighlight saga was a pain my ass but this guy is a real actor, he is fuxxing brilliant !!
Only issue I had with twilight was Bella’s actress and actually Jo two issues the actress and how they sucked all the emotion out of the characters felt like Edward Alice and Jacob were the only people in the movie jasper didn’t really get his shine which sucks cuz he is an awesome character
Check him out in The Rover. He plays a needy simpleton who is barely likeable but proves his worth in dire circumstances. If he'd got one full second wrong it would all be ruined.
I swear why king Henry look like mabu😂