According to both Rickman and Emma Thompson, he really, really, really wanted this part to for once get to portray a romantic hero. Thompson tailored it to him. As far as I know, they didn't consider casting anyone else for the part. He is just marvelous in this role!
"The prince of darkness is a gentleman." There's a fine line between a compelling villian and a romantic hero. It doesn't surprise me that an actor who is really good at one can also do a really good job at the other.
The beauty of Austen, and the reason why this adaptation is so great, is that she sprinkles witty and apt observations of people in between all the seriousness. And this book in particular actually isn't all that romantic but in fact _very_ sarcastic. :-)
I remember Kate Winslet saying how she wanted to “collapse in a heap” when she first met Alan Rickman because she just didn’t feel worthy to be in his presence even though he was the one to introduce himself to her in hair and makeup. She mentions it a few times in interviews lol.
This movie came out the same year my mum died suddenly and my world fell apart...it was my only happy place through the worst years of my life, I still watch it regularly, just love, love, love it!!!!
To this day, I love Alan Rickman, and I will always. I do carry a warm spot in my heart for Hugh Laurie, and to see them act together is middle age heaven.
Kate is so good in these heartbreaking, yearning love scenes in movies. When she realises she has been shut out of Willoughby's life forever, looking longingly at his estate, soaked and bleak, is so relatable and heartbreaking. Also in 'The Holiday', where she gives that heartbreaking speech about having your heart shattered by unrequited love and finally picking up the pieces of your broken heart. And of course, Titanic, every scene in that has me feeling something!
God I felt for Marianne. It was so heartbreaking to watch her fold in on herself like this. We have all lost someone we loved and perhaps did not share the same feelings.
It makes me laugh how much Marianne is carried throughout the movie. Willoughby, Brandon AND Palmer. The look on Hugh Laurie’s face when he picks up Kate 😅 I would’ve died
Alas, she sought eternal and everlasting love with the wrong man. Fortunately for her, the right man was there ready to catch her when she fell, hopeful that she'd love him in return.♥️
Uh no thanks. I don’t need a guy with baggage who is after me because I remind him of an ex. Thank God my husband is much better than such guys like Brandon or Willoughby.
@EmilyGloeggler7984 Everyone over the age of 18 has baggage, and it wasn't so much she reminded him of the woman in his past but how he recognised a vulnerability and depth in her he had indeed seen before which drew him in and made him want to know her.
It’s heartbreaking how she recites a poem about eternal love at the moment her dream of finding eternal love crumbles away. Little does she know that she is looking the wrong way and her eternal love is indeed on his way to her at that very moment.
@@EmilyGloeggler7984 I don't gush over actors but he had a rare personality of kindness and gentleness that was appealing; much like David Tennant - another superb actor who is a kind and gentle man
One of my favorite films, but this particular segment points out a continuity issue that drives me nuts. Hugh Laurie stands up and hands Emma Thompson a cup of tea, says his bit and then seconds later, his wife hands Emma Thompson another cup of tea.
I always thought it was just her refilling Eleanor's cup. It doesn't actually stay how much time has passed between the first cup and the second and considering how far Marian walked in may have been quite a while
No it's not a continuity error, it's a purposeful time cut. Elinor is given a cup of tea, then there's a cut in the scene, and to emphasize that some time has now passed, Elinor is given a new cup of tea. This is supposed to signal to the audience that Colonel Brandon has been away, looking for Marianne, for some while now.
Well, men weren't that hands-on with children in earlier times. They weren't even allowed to be present at their child's (or children's, if there are multiple births) birth until the 1970s. Even now some medical professionals are a bit iffy about fathers being in the delivery room because in some instances once the new father sees his child being born, he passes out.
Love is not love Which alters when it alteration finds, Or bends with the remover to remove. O no, it is an ever-fixed mark That looks on tempests and is never shaken; It is the star to every wand'ring bark, Whose worth's unknown, although his height be taken.
It's called a "time cut": repeating an action, to give a sense that time has passed. Mr Palmer hands Elinor a cup of tea as Brandon is searching in the greenhouse; we next see Mrs Palmer handing Elinor another cup of tea as Brandon carries Marianne down the hill.
Yes she was just like the book, "short and plump, a very pretty face, and the finest expression of good humour in it than could possibly be.... It was impossible for anyone to be more thoroughly goodnatured or more determined to be happy than Mrs. Palmer."
I have seen this movie many many times and this is the first time I've noticed the nurse's hands trembling and trying her best not to tear back the baby, HAHAHAHA. She does NOT trust those parents. Crackign up now.
Interesting thing: for a while, those weird Victorian photographies of small children, with an ominous veiled person crouching right behind them (or holding them) were discussed a lot. They make sense once you realize that (1.) getting a small child to hold stock still is very hard, and very necessary unless you want a picture of a toddler-sized blurr . (2.) the nanny would be the one spending most time with the children, and also the one who *has* to learn how to calm and guide them, because she's the one who *has* to handle them when they get cranky / fearful / over-excited. (3.) what with photographies being an expensive state-of-the-art commodity, you wouldn't want your nanny immortalized on them, because when all's said and done, she's not part of the family. I guess there must have been pictures with the mother holding the child, too - after all, that parents _could_ hand the kiddie off to the nanny for 90% of the time doesn't mean they all did - but I guess in some cases, the nanny was the only one who could make a photography possible.
I think I read somewhere that the baby was not suppose to be crying but he started to and the actors just kept going with the scene so they kept in the film.
@Elizabeth Stamper yes Snape is the reason I watched sense and sensibility , what a pity he died a virgin in Harry Potter. Here I could watch him getting married . 😀😀
Did you guys know that in real life, the actor played by Gilderoy Lockart was Professor Trelawneys (emma thompson) husband and he cheated on her with Bellatrix(Helena Carter) , read up in Google.
Well, he married her. Never ceases to amaze me how annoyed men are about their ditsy wives, as if their silly personality just sprang whole cloth after they were married. He never noticed her behavior before their wedding 🤣🤷🏻♀️
@@rachelgarber1423 He married her for her money and, as his mother-in-law pointed out "You cannot give her back." He would probably make a good husband for a woman like Elinor; he is always kind and gentle with her.
Oh, Emma Thompson is just amazing. And shockingly handsome even today. And of course, if you mix up character and actor (and after all, every character is very much influenced by the actress they are played by) they make sense as a match. Willoughby definitely needs a woman with a strong head on her shoulders to reign him in. Even Jane Austen herself said that Marianne would never have been able to do that.
love is not love Which alters when it alteration finds, Or bends with the remover to remove. O no, it is an ever-fixed mark That looks on tempests and is never shaken Willoughby! Willoughby! Willoughby! 💔 😭
Es una de las escenas más maravillosas del cine❤ Kate Winslet bajo la tormente recitando ese soneto de Shakespeare... y como Alan Rickman la lleva en sus brazos al igual que la llevó Wilgby cuando se conocieron por primera vez, no se escapa detalle ninguno. Tengo muchas versiones de Sentido y sensibilidad porque soy una amante de Jane Austen, y para mí esta es la mejor versión que hicieron del libro. Emma Thompson y esa joven Kate Winslet me enamoraron. Una historia de amor de hermanas sin ninguna duda que me llega al alma.
I have now noticed how both Mrs. Parmer passes Eleanor a cup of tea IMMEDIATELY after Mr. Parmer gives her a different one and now I can't get over where she put the first tea cup
2:13 This Is me when i Always Heard the words of my sister when She told me that Ezra Bridger and Sabine Wren are not in love when i watched Rebels season three. It was happened on December 2016. I was 19 and i was a FOOL and immature. For Seven years those words remind in my head. Maybe i going to die under the Rain as Marianne did It
@@joannethorne6555 he bled her because she had a high fever. She got wet from the rain and then got a high fever and became bedridden. Also, why not take her umbrella? They had umbrellas for the sun.
I mean you can get sick from staying in the rain too long, the body doesn't like it much, that's why most people try to avoid that. She was also depressed, which puts a strain on the body. Also it's from a literary text, so that's common metaphor for "dying of a broken heart". She didn't take her umbrella because she didn't want to. She wasn't well already, before she got wet.
We got coughs and colds for getting wet in the rain at times. Remember back then they have no medication. Plus the cups they gave Elinor indicate how much time has passed meaning she was in the rain for long. It only makes sense Marianne got sick from the rain.
She was offered different parts, but she wasn't available at those times, during filming of The Harry Potter Series. She was either doing other roles, or at one point she had one of her children. She did an interview a few years back, and discussed this. I can't remember the talk show or commentator, but she wasn't quite interested enough to do the jobs. ❤
omg I just noticed a movie mistake. I've watched this movie so many times and this is the first time I have noticed it. Hugh Laurie's character gave emma thompson a cup of tea when he stood up. and then his wife proceeded to give her a cup of tea as well and the previous cup of tea seems to have never existed.
Because Jane Austin [the wonderful author of these fantastic stories] was unmarried, she always ended the stories at the point of marriage. She didn't have the experience of being married, so she didn't feel equal to writing about an experience she never had. Her sister had been engaged and her intended had died before they married, and even Jane, herself had been engaged, but a marriage didn't happen. I feel she died far too young, and so many more stories in her to share with the world. 😢
Because Jane Austin [the wonderful author of these fantastic stories] was unmarried, she always ended the stories at the point of marriage. She didn't have the experience of being married, so she didn't feel equal to writing about an experience she never had. Her sister had been engaged and her intended had died before they married, and even Jane, herself had been engaged, but a marriage didn't happen. I feel she died far too young, and so many more stories in her to share with the world. 😢
I just noticed that they gave her tea twice. First the husband, then the wife. Random I know but I had to post my findings. Cinema Sins here I come! hehe
One of my favorite books, but I can't stand Marianne, capricious and selfish who only cares about her own pain; having said that, I love the movie and what a top cast!
Step aside, Darcy!! You may come to me across a hazy field, but Colonel Brandon will carry me through a rainstorm!
The best comment I’ve ever seen
Well done!
Love
No. That was Greg Wise as Willoughby
@@Me-fo1kk huh?
Just proves Alan Rickman can be the ultimate villain and the ultimate gentlemen.
Yup
Thats what we want😇
The duality 🤌🏽
According to both Rickman and Emma Thompson, he really, really, really wanted this part to for once get to portray a romantic hero. Thompson tailored it to him. As far as I know, they didn't consider casting anyone else for the part. He is just marvelous in this role!
"The prince of darkness is a gentleman." There's a fine line between a compelling villian and a romantic hero. It doesn't surprise me that an actor who is really good at one can also do a really good job at the other.
I know this scene is of tragic beauty. But I can't get over the Look Hugh Laurie and Alan Rickman shared over crying baby Thomas. Peak comedy.
The beauty of Austen, and the reason why this adaptation is so great, is that she sprinkles witty and apt observations of people in between all the seriousness. And this book in particular actually isn't all that romantic but in fact _very_ sarcastic. :-)
@@beth12svist absolutely
The HOUSE in him came out. Lol
@@JENerationX75 Nah, I think that was pure Fry & Laurie at this point in history.
This is the second time I’ve seen Hugh Laurie and Imelda Staunton play husband and wife. They play so well off each other.
It's fun watching Hugh Laurie as Mr. Palmer. Such a tiny part, but he still chews the scenery with his undisguised contempt.
I lurve Hugh Laurie as well, a bloomin' National Treasure in his own bloody right as is Dame Emma & Kate!
My favorite movie ever! Kate Winslet is superb in the role of Marianne and Alan Rickman as Colonel Brandon is so fantastic!
Mine too. It's magical. Perfect in every way. I loved Willoughby and cried with Maryann and the family. Thank goodness for Colonel Brandon.
He looked so young
It’s my favorite as well. I watch it every few weeks 😅
Me too!!!!!
Pero muy mayor y muy maduro para, ella muy joven y caprichosa
I remember Kate Winslet saying how she wanted to “collapse in a heap” when she first met Alan Rickman because she just didn’t feel worthy to be in his presence even though he was the one to introduce himself to her in hair and makeup. She mentions it a few times in interviews lol.
To each their own - he was disturbing as the camp Sheriff of Nottingham.
He vwas magnificent in Nobel Son and an Awfully Big Adventure.
Don’t forget his superb villainess in “Die Hard”!
I’ll always love him most in Galaxy Quest. 😂
Severus always 💔
This movie came out the same year my mum died suddenly and my world fell apart...it was my only happy place through the worst years of my life, I still watch it regularly, just love, love, love it!!!!
My mum died suddenly a few months ago. It's a very hard thing.
@@bernicerogers2383 My mother died suddenly almost a month ago as well. ❤
Prayers of healing light for y'all 🙏
❤
My most sincere condolences to all of you who lost family members. 😢 I pray that you find comfort and peace in God's love. ❤
Trelawney, Snape and Umbridge in one scene. 👏🎉👏🎉👏🎉
hahha i wondered who else thought it
This is the comment I was looking for lol
Also in this movie- Mr. Fudge and the Fat Lady 😂
And Madam Pomfrey
Also Dr House
To this day, I love Alan Rickman, and I will always. I do carry a warm spot in my heart for Hugh Laurie, and to see them act together is middle age heaven.
Miss, I assure you that it is not only middle age heaven for I'm in my early twenties and certainly understand that feeling. 😅
Kate is so good in these heartbreaking, yearning love scenes in movies. When she realises she has been shut out of Willoughby's life forever, looking longingly at his estate, soaked and bleak, is so relatable and heartbreaking. Also in 'The Holiday', where she gives that heartbreaking speech about having your heart shattered by unrequited love and finally picking up the pieces of your broken heart. And of course, Titanic, every scene in that has me feeling something!
She’s such a great actress, you should watch Hamlet too.
God I felt for Marianne. It was so heartbreaking to watch her fold in on herself like this. We have all lost someone we loved and perhaps did not share the same feelings.
Willoughby loved Marianne but he choose money over love
It's tormenting 😢
Indeed.
@@potato_kake The sad thing is if he had been able to the Colonel would have given up his money for his first love Eliza.
Yep. I've been there, done that. It sucks.
Kate Winslet was only 20 years old in this film,.......she is superb.
She was 19
Magnificent performance!
Severus Snape, Dolores Umbridge and Trelawney all in the same scene? Mindboggling!
Don't forget Madame Pomfrey, Cornelius Fudge and the 1st Fat Lady!
Love this bit, the poetry on the hill, pouring rain, Kate Winslet does it great.
Yes
She is a fantastic actress! I absolutely love her in all of her movies..
I had this read at my wedding and it's all because of this movie
Willoughby came to regret it
You do realize Jane Austin wrote Marianne in a sarcastic tone and with nothing but contempt.
It makes me laugh how much Marianne is carried throughout the movie. Willoughby, Brandon AND Palmer. The look on Hugh Laurie’s face when he picks up Kate 😅 I would’ve died
Lol
Ah, to have a Colonel Brandon and that loving devotion.
Yes
Absolutely.❤️🌹🙏
A guy with baggage? No thanks.
I can soooo see myself in marianne,shes wanting what everyone on earth wants,eternal and everlasting love
Alas, she sought eternal and everlasting love with the wrong man. Fortunately for her, the right man was there ready to catch her when she fell, hopeful that she'd love him in return.♥️
Everyone needs a Col. Brandon in their life
Uh no thanks. I don’t need a guy with baggage who is after me because I remind him of an ex. Thank God my husband is much better than such guys like Brandon or Willoughby.
Maybe someday I'll meet my Colonel Brandon.
Not everyone deserves a Colonel Brandon
@EmilyGloeggler7984 Everyone over the age of 18 has baggage, and it wasn't so much she reminded him of the woman in his past but how he recognised a vulnerability and depth in her he had indeed seen before which drew him in and made him want to know her.
they're in the friendzone....the back up guy. But he had money.
It’s heartbreaking how she recites a poem about eternal love at the moment her dream of finding eternal love crumbles away. Little does she know that she is looking the wrong way and her eternal love is indeed on his way to her at that very moment.
She was definitely blinded by her desperate love for Willoughby.
That's beautiful ❤️
Her heartbreak always gets me 😢
If they didn't already, women everywhere fell in love with Alan Rickman after seeing this film.
I fell in love with him in Robin Hood Prince of thieves.
@@spookycat8556 Oh yes, definitely and even though he played an evil character in Quigley Down Under, he was still very attractive in that role.
@@hilaryc3203 Man, I forgot about his performance in Quigley Down Under! Thanks for reminding me!
He doesn’t do it for me, but I respect him as an actor.
@@EmilyGloeggler7984 I don't gush over actors but he had a rare personality of kindness and gentleness that was appealing; much like David Tennant - another superb actor who is a kind and gentle man
Hugh Laurie and the baby🤣😂😅
I love the Score, so romantic! Kate's performance as Marianne in this scene is brilliant! she sounds so Lifeless and Heartbroken!
That’s how it starts - in this scene she hands Emma a cup of tea - but at Hogwarts she “sacks” her and kicks her out of her home... 😉
Let no-one say Imelda has no range. Lol.
Wait,,,,I didn’t realize that’s Prof. TREWLANY from HP 😭😭😭😭 omg
🤣🤣🤣
Hahaha ...I didn't realize that's the same actress 😅
My friends and I used to watch this on VHS at slumber parties in the late 90s and 2000s. Such an amazing movie ❤
One of my favorite films, but this particular segment points out a continuity issue that drives me nuts. Hugh Laurie stands up and hands Emma Thompson a cup of tea, says his bit and then seconds later, his wife hands Emma Thompson another cup of tea.
I thought I imagined that initially. Had to do a rewind and also found that error.
Same! That stood out to me the first time I watched it! Agh!
I always thought it was just her refilling Eleanor's cup. It doesn't actually stay how much time has passed between the first cup and the second and considering how far Marian walked in may have been quite a while
No it's not a continuity error, it's a purposeful time cut. Elinor is given a cup of tea, then there's a cut in the scene, and to emphasize that some time has now passed, Elinor is given a new cup of tea. This is supposed to signal to the audience that Colonel Brandon has been away, looking for Marianne, for some while now.
It is called a time cut. First she is stood at the window, and then she leans against the table.
Just listening to him talk...❤❤❤
Ugh. When he reads to her....🫠🥹🥰🥰
Colonel Brandon is the one, thanks to irresistible Alan Rickman.
Nah, pass. If I’m going with any Austen male hero, I gotta go with Henry Tilney.
Was that Hugh Laurie looking quite put out holding the baby?
yes.
Dr house
Well, men weren't that hands-on with children in earlier times. They weren't even allowed to be present at their child's (or children's, if there are multiple births) birth until the 1970s. Even now some medical professionals are a bit iffy about fathers being in the delivery room because in some instances once the new father sees his child being born, he passes out.
Love is not love Which alters when it alteration finds, Or bends with the remover to remove. O no, it is an ever-fixed mark That looks on tempests and is never shaken; It is the star to every wand'ring bark, Whose worth's unknown, although his height be taken.
She found out was real love was. ❤️
Not one scene of love from her. Just a recognition she must accept the backup guy.
@@toddjohnson271the ultimate debate 😂
@@thefinewino not really...just selling fantasy.
One of the movies I own and watch it every time with the same heart felt emotion.
I’ve seen this movie 100 times and I just noticed that both hand Emma Thompson a cup of tea, in the matter of seconds.
It's called a "time cut": repeating an action, to give a sense that time has passed. Mr Palmer hands Elinor a cup of tea as Brandon is searching in the greenhouse; we next see Mrs Palmer handing Elinor another cup of tea as Brandon carries Marianne down the hill.
NO IMELDA STAUNTON IS SO PERFECT FOR THE ROLE OF CHARLOTTE PALMER IT'S HILARIOUS
Yes she was just like the book, "short and plump, a very pretty face, and the finest expression of good humour in it than could possibly be.... It was impossible for anyone to be more thoroughly goodnatured or more determined to be happy than Mrs. Palmer."
Imelda Staunton as Charlotte and Miranda Hart as Miss Bates are two of the most amazing casting choices of all the Austen adaptations
Everyone in this film was so well cast. This is my favourite Jane Austen story and definitely my favourite film.
I have seen this movie many many times and this is the first time I've noticed the nurse's hands trembling and trying her best not to tear back the baby, HAHAHAHA. She does NOT trust those parents. Crackign up now.
*cracking*
Interesting thing: for a while, those weird Victorian photographies of small children, with an ominous veiled person crouching right behind them (or holding them) were discussed a lot.
They make sense once you realize that
(1.) getting a small child to hold stock still is very hard, and very necessary unless you want a picture of a toddler-sized blurr .
(2.) the nanny would be the one spending most time with the children, and also the one who *has* to learn how to calm and guide them, because she's the one who *has* to handle them when they get cranky / fearful / over-excited.
(3.) what with photographies being an expensive state-of-the-art commodity, you wouldn't want your nanny immortalized on them, because when all's said and done, she's not part of the family.
I guess there must have been pictures with the mother holding the child, too - after all, that parents _could_ hand the kiddie off to the nanny for 90% of the time doesn't mean they all did - but I guess in some cases, the nanny was the only one who could make a photography possible.
I think I read somewhere that the baby was not suppose to be crying but he started to and the actors just kept going with the scene so they kept in the film.
Their love story was tragic, Marianne up the hill looking over Willoughbys home, and later will him be up the hill looking over Marianne.
0:52 both men reaction to the baby's crying is hilarious 😂
Kate Winslet is so pretty in this she looks so young
She IS young, age 20 when this was filmed, I think.
This scene makes me cry every time I watch it.
I love this movie so much! I saw it in my 20s in 1995 its one of my very favorites.
Amazing cast!!!
i did not know that Dolores was in here
Cornelius fudge is also here
Professor Trewleney is also here🤣
@Elizabeth Stamper yes Snape is the reason I watched sense and sensibility , what a pity he died a virgin in Harry Potter. Here I could watch him getting married . 😀😀
Did you guys know that in real life, the actor played by Gilderoy Lockart was Professor Trelawneys (emma thompson) husband and he cheated on her with Bellatrix(Helena Carter) , read up in Google.
I know. I just watched this last night and I'm like the whole Wizarding world is here! Fudge, Trewlaney, Umbridge, Snape, and house from house.
Willoughby, you're a shmuck. But Colonel Brandon is the perfect gentleman.
A beautiful story on love between Marianne and Colonel Brandon in "sense and Sensibility'
That Charlotte would drive me nuts! She never shuts up! Lol..
She played the part so wonderfully!
Well, he married her. Never ceases to amaze me how annoyed men are about their ditsy wives, as if their silly personality just sprang whole cloth after they were married. He never noticed her behavior before their wedding 🤣🤷🏻♀️
Jane Austen obviously knew some very silly women during her lifetime. She must have to be able to write about them so well.
@@rachelgarber1423 He married her for her money and, as his mother-in-law pointed out "You cannot give her back." He would probably make a good husband for a woman like Elinor; he is always kind and gentle with her.
She plays a depressed person so well...
0:51 Funny scene between Snape and Umbridge 😂
The music is wonderful 🎧🎻🎻🎻🎧
When someone tells Marianne that they think it might rain, do you think she would ever listen?
What a man.
The way some people will never get what is like to go through that kind of heartbreak
Coronel Brandon is the ideal man. T.T
Just noticed in this scene both Hugh Laurie & Imelda Staunton give Emma Thompson a cup of tea! Editors!!
Time had passed. Its a time cut.
It hurts so deep when you give him all of you and the only you got left is a broken heart.
Best Jane Austen adaptation.
Hugh Laurie as a doting father ... no wonder that this is the movie that spawned twenty years worth of new adaptations. It's as perfect as can be.
But Ms Dashwood really stole Willowby's heart because they are still together today. Emma and Greg.
Oh, Emma Thompson is just amazing. And shockingly handsome even today. And of course, if you mix up character and actor (and after all, every character is very much influenced by the actress they are played by) they make sense as a match. Willoughby definitely needs a woman with a strong head on her shoulders to reign him in. Even Jane Austen herself said that Marianne would never have been able to do that.
1:54 either you've left the garden, or it's a bigger garden than anybody has any right to expect this house to have, Marianne.
It’s an estate. There’s several rather large gardens in all likelihood
😔😔😔Me rompió esta escena, despidiendose de sus ilusiones y recuerdos
Ésa frase me conmueve aunque la haya visto muchas veces, me reconforta saber que Mariane encontró el verdadero amor con el coronel ❤
Both of them give Miss Dashwood a cup of tea.
It's either a mistake or intentional (to show the passage of time) depending on what comments here you believe.
love is not love
Which alters when it alteration finds,
Or bends with the remover to remove.
O no, it is an ever-fixed mark
That looks on tempests and is never shaken
Willoughby! Willoughby! Willoughby! 💔 😭
How much contrast Hugh Laurie can show as an introvert here and bombastic in black adder
Colnel Brandon is the Mr Darcy of this Jane austen novel
Eh he is a vapid screwed up hypocrite, similar to Willoughby but he clearly hasn’t gotten over his ex Eliza.
Hugh is the milk chocolate in a movie full of black coffee
We lost Alan Rickman to soon. 💔
Best scene
Funny, Mr. and Mrs Palmer offer a cup of tea.
What I would’ve given to be Marianne in this scene…
Ich liebe diesen Film ,klasse Schauspieler
Which one?
@@l.a.3479
EMMA Thompson und Hugh Grant
Es una de las escenas más maravillosas del cine❤ Kate Winslet bajo la tormente recitando ese soneto de Shakespeare... y como Alan Rickman la lleva en sus brazos al igual que la llevó Wilgby cuando se conocieron por primera vez, no se escapa detalle ninguno. Tengo muchas versiones de Sentido y sensibilidad porque soy una amante de Jane Austen, y para mí esta es la mejor versión que hicieron del libro. Emma Thompson y esa joven Kate Winslet me enamoraron. Una historia de amor de hermanas sin ninguna duda que me llega al alma.
I have now noticed how both Mrs. Parmer passes Eleanor a cup of tea IMMEDIATELY after Mr. Parmer gives her a different one and now I can't get over where she put the first tea cup
2:13 This Is me when i Always Heard the words of my sister when She told me that Ezra Bridger and Sabine Wren are not in love when i watched Rebels season three. It was happened on December 2016. I was 19 and i was a FOOL and immature. For Seven years those words remind in my head. Maybe i going to die under the Rain as Marianne did It
I’ll never get why the damsels got deathly sick from a rain shower.
Did you not see the "Doctor"...BLEEDING HER!
She probably would have been up and about had he not tapped that vein.
@@joannethorne6555 he bled her because she had a high fever. She got wet from the rain and then got a high fever and became bedridden. Also, why not take her umbrella? They had umbrellas for the sun.
I mean you can get sick from staying in the rain too long, the body doesn't like it much, that's why most people try to avoid that. She was also depressed, which puts a strain on the body.
Also it's from a literary text, so that's common metaphor for "dying of a broken heart". She didn't take her umbrella because she didn't want to. She wasn't well already, before she got wet.
We got coughs and colds for getting wet in the rain at times. Remember back then they have no medication. Plus the cups they gave Elinor indicate how much time has passed meaning she was in the rain for long. It only makes sense Marianne got sick from the rain.
@@alicedeligny9240The depression would not help, especially if she had been crying a lot.
tte fact that Elinor and Willoughby ended up together is the same as Lizzy and Mr Wickham 😂
Oh, I saw the wibbly wobbly hedge near Montacute Houe just a few weeks ago!
And you stop it right at the best part.
Never seen the movie (kind of want to now) but just seeing the scene Hugh Laurie hold the baby and knowing how he is in House MD 😂
Snape, Professor Sybil and Dolores Umbridge what are y'all doing here?
professor snape and doctor house in the same room
I am so happy and grateful...
For what?
I wish Kate was in HP too 😢
She was offered different parts, but she wasn't available at those times, during filming of The Harry Potter Series.
She was either doing other roles, or at one point she had one of her children. She did an interview a few years back, and discussed this. I can't remember the talk show or commentator, but she wasn't quite interested enough to do the jobs. ❤
Heartbreaking scene 💔
❤ Colonel Brandon ❤
Montacute house in Somerset.
I vist there lots and always think of this movie
Been there...
Coronel Brandon 🛐
Severus Snape , sybill trelawney, dolores umbridge...😅
omg I just noticed a movie mistake. I've watched this movie so many times and this is the first time I have noticed it. Hugh Laurie's character gave emma thompson a cup of tea when he stood up. and then his wife proceeded to give her a cup of tea as well and the previous cup of tea seems to have never existed.
Why stop it before the best part??
Because Jane Austin [the wonderful author of these fantastic stories] was unmarried, she always ended the stories at the point of marriage. She didn't have the experience of being married, so she didn't feel equal to writing about an experience she never had. Her sister had been engaged and her intended had died before they married, and even Jane, herself had been engaged, but a marriage didn't happen. I feel she died far too young, and so many more stories in her to share with the world. 😢
Because Jane Austin [the wonderful author of these fantastic stories] was unmarried, she always ended the stories at the point of marriage. She didn't have the experience of being married, so she didn't feel equal to writing about an experience she never had. Her sister had been engaged and her intended had died before they married, and even Jane, herself had been engaged, but a marriage didn't happen. I feel she died far too young, and so many more stories in her to share with the world. 😢
Just me and my potterhead brain. But did i just saw umbridge and snape in one movie aside from harry pottter. Hehehe
I think I see the actress who wi plat Dolores Umbridge, and of course a future Snape and Trewalry. As well as Hugh Laurie.
I just realized BOTH Hugh Laurie AND Imelda Staunton give Emma Thompson a cup of tea in this scene!
I would assume it was caused by the editing and not noticed. Additional footage indicating time passing was probably cut.
Hugh Laurie was the PERFECT choice of actor for Mr Palmer😂😭
They both handed her a cuppa. Where did the first one go?
I just noticed that they gave her tea twice. First the husband, then the wife. Random I know but I had to post my findings. Cinema Sins here I come! hehe
You're not the only one who notices the little things. lol
Its called a time cut, indicating that time has passed between the two cups of tea.
When snape, umbridge, nanny McPhee and House watch after rose… it is all I can see
I guess this movie is not for you, then.
@@l.a.3479 prob not
Конечно, чтобы ей не сказали про Уиллоби, а Марианна была в состоянии шока, что так всё получилось.
scrolling through looking for the harey potter references 😁
One of my favorite books, but I can't stand Marianne, capricious and selfish who only cares about her own pain; having said that, I love the movie and what a top cast!
Wait is that Umbridge holding that baby??