The Thrill

The Thrill

Where's it At? (9/16/17)

Where's it At? (9/16/17)

Where's it at...? (9/22/17)

Where's it at...? (9/22/17)

Multiply This!

Multiply This!

Where's It At? ;)

Where's It At? ;)

Where's It At Is Back

Where's It At Is Back

Where's It At with SJL

Where's It At with SJL

Where's It At with LMM

Where's It At with LMM

Where's It At with LMM

Where's It At with LMM

Where's It At with LMM

Where's It At with LMM

Where's It At with LMM

Where's It At with LMM

Where's It At with LMM

Where's It At with LMM

Where's it At with LMM

Where's it At with LMM

Where's it At with LMM

Where's it At with LMM

Where's it At with LMM

Where's it At with LMM

Where's it At with LMM

Where's it At with LMM

Where's it At with LMM

Where's it At with LMM

Where's it At with LMM

Where's it At with LMM

Where's it At with LMM

Where's it At with LMM

Where's it At with LMM

Where's it At with LMM

Пікірлер

  • @walterbenjamin1386
    @walterbenjamin13866 ай бұрын

    Professor Shutt, I am your unknown student, greatly appreciating your book on The Iliad and Odyssey. Superb!

  • @davidiancrux
    @davidiancrux3 ай бұрын

    The same here!!! I've been listening to many of his lectures. Fantastic analyses. God bless the man!

  • @akosimj9544
    @akosimj9544 Жыл бұрын

    This movie is what the power of a SIMPLE STORYTELLING can touch many imaginative souls.

  • @wildfoodsaregood
    @wildfoodsaregood Жыл бұрын

    yeah the second last scene was a thriller...i was myself shouting at antonio, "Do it. Come on. Do it. You deserve it. Come on." great review by the way

  • @yaseriqbal2794
    @yaseriqbal2794 Жыл бұрын

    No doubt the best scene in history of movies, drama but there is much much more into this than explained

  • @bharatbhushanist
    @bharatbhushanist Жыл бұрын

    Excellent explaination Sir... 🙏

  • @user-ux8bw7ue1c
    @user-ux8bw7ue1c2 жыл бұрын

    Very sad movie I cry so much 😭🚴

  • @bokusworld9780
    @bokusworld97802 жыл бұрын

    Dude. Yes. Nailed it.

  • @cratilofilmes1654
    @cratilofilmes16542 жыл бұрын

    Great! Grande!

  • @leahnewyork
    @leahnewyork2 жыл бұрын

    "Write what you *want* to know." Great advice! Heard very late in life, alas, but... heard. Thank you so much.

  • @damancandance1
    @damancandance12 жыл бұрын

    awesome analysis, learned so much about shots from this!

  • @vagarwal9084
    @vagarwal90843 жыл бұрын

    Excellent interpretation. Mille grazie.

  • @PrenticeBoy1688
    @PrenticeBoy16883 жыл бұрын

    Yikes.

  • @jens4979
    @jens49793 жыл бұрын

    From which country is the speaker?

  • @tonyclifton265
    @tonyclifton2653 жыл бұрын

    instantly loses credibility by calling it "the bicycle thief" when the correct name is "bicycle thieves" and indeed the whole point of the film is that there is more than one thief!

  • @abooswalehmosafeer173
    @abooswalehmosafeer1733 жыл бұрын

    Thanks. To a Child, an Adolescent young Adult or whatever , a hard working poor father, Hero Shall Always Be. Like Mine Was. And you know,I have always Dreaded of being A Fathet because it is simply awfully Tough especially if you are poor and weak in character. Being A Father is not just a Biological Mission.It entails so much. Similarly with Being a Husband, Bloody Tough. Hard Work,when you are Poor. No wonder the world is rotting away,poverty,homelessness,unemployment as the Rich enrich themselves more by hook or crook. Some poor manage to climb the greasy poles by cheer toughness of character. Some fail. That is Life. I almost cried watching this. This is the Story of All Times.

  • @DavidRice111
    @DavidRice1114 жыл бұрын

    I realized every one of your observations while watching the film, before I saw this "lecture" and clicked on it. Can't believe I let you waste my time on your "insight".

  • @gavingerb
    @gavingerb3 жыл бұрын

    You have a large brain!

  • @DavidRice111
    @DavidRice1113 жыл бұрын

    @@gavingerb Smarter than the average bear, there Booboo!

  • @AnalRampage
    @AnalRampage4 жыл бұрын

    thanks

  • @bennyjets3445
    @bennyjets34454 жыл бұрын

    4 minute lecture that goes on for nearly 10 minutes...

  • @neoepicurean3772
    @neoepicurean37722 жыл бұрын

    Never heard of x2?

  • @leeannoleary1881
    @leeannoleary18814 жыл бұрын

    So well done albeit so sad

  • @juliolopez8929
    @juliolopez89294 жыл бұрын

    This is a Master movie It tells you how a 🚲 bicycle Was taking their lives apart They were becoming strangers with each other At the end they were together brilliant.

  • @davidadamvideo
    @davidadamvideo5 жыл бұрын

    great review! thanks

  • @cormorant_on_arock7934
    @cormorant_on_arock79345 жыл бұрын

    maybe You're "desperate for him" to steal the bike, but I was begging him not to. To me, the bicycle was a symbol of his truest self, his soul, if you will. I think his son is an emblem of this, too, in a way; the old man paralleled his own father's state, and where he knows he could end up if he doesn't get his "bicycle" back, and the teen - whom he fights with - tells us that the mistake he made (that we all, or, most make) in life was made in his adolescence. That's the sense I strongly got in this film - that when he was fighting, physically (or, struggling) with the teenager - the bicycle thief - he was symbolically fighting with his past self. Like "why did you do that?!?! (, self - when you were a teen. So young and foolish, not caring about the future). … I didn't explain that well at all, as usual, but I hope some of it came through. Oh yeah, and another thing that made me interpret the message of the film this way, is that he hits his son right after losing sight of the old man. This rather vaguely gave me the sense that the brokenness, generally speaking, which Anotonio's father had passed onto him inevitably, had finally begun to be passed onto his own son. So we have Bruno, who is purely good and innocent, receiving the violence and frustration of the world, and then having to process it, to deal with it. That was my favorite scene and image of the film - it was really genius! and I am no longer using that word lightly in my opinions these days; it was absolutely brilliant/genius; it makes me swell with emotion just thinking about it briefly - when he is in the midst of dealing with that pain which his father so unjustly and carelessly passed to him, he is seen at the top of that stone staircase, by the bridge and river, his father down by the river, looking up at him. And when the camera gives us the father's point of view, Bruno is standing at the top of that stair, looking down, and it is as if he is a god of Roman mythology, like a statue carved by Michelangelo. Not that he literally, physically looks like such a statue, mind; but that same sort of essence of majesty and divinity is instilled in the scene by way of the subject matter - the theme of children being closer to the divine, and here we are given a reverent look into the psychology and spiritual side of the feelings which come from Bruno, so lovingly devoted to his father, when that father strikes out at him savagely. Masterfully done by De Sica.

  • @Red-pv7kx
    @Red-pv7kx5 жыл бұрын

    Cormorant_on_aRock True. He lost me 30 seconds into the vid after he made that statement. Think he missed the point. Also, it’s bicycle thieves not “the bicycle thief” so made me have doubts going into the video in the first place.

  • @gracehaven5459
    @gracehaven54592 жыл бұрын

    You have been fortunate enough to never been truly desperate to save your family if you do not empathize with this man's need to steal a bike. I envy you. Growimg up truly poor and experiencing sporadic malnutrition during various times growing up, watching this in film class brought me to tears from the memories of the most desperate of times. Sometimes morality is a privilege and it's one not everyone can afford. The implications at the end of the film are that they will all starve to death so yeah I hope that makes you happy.

  • @valveman99
    @valveman996 жыл бұрын

    good one!

  • @valveman99
    @valveman996 жыл бұрын

    Lindsay not Lindsey

  • @valveman99
    @valveman996 жыл бұрын

    'spechted more from the brainiacs at Kenyon, yo - just sayin - the reefer must be good in Gambier!

  • @gomezesmorticia
    @gomezesmorticia7 жыл бұрын

    There are some good things on her program on NPR on Sundays but her voice is annoying as is the theme song. It sounds like something from Sesame Street or Barney.

  • @valveman99
    @valveman997 жыл бұрын

    dig the dumpster deal, but it should have been a real dumpster, as in garbage in it and STANKIE!

  • @ehobb1363
    @ehobb13639 жыл бұрын

    this banter sounds well intended, but lets start by asking why kenyon wanted to outsource their own maintenance and security staff and who some of the big neocon contributors to the "campus" are...kenyon actually developed the AP hoax years ago as a means to track and separate out the weak from the strong....well intended maybe, but somethings amiss...the problem with education is that the recipients aren't owners of a process; instead they consume a "product" designed by scatter brained ivory tower intellectuals and department store moguls.....thanks, but no thanks....i'll read plain talking professor howard zinn any day...

  • @taijawilliams5849
    @taijawilliams584910 жыл бұрын

    B all

  • @ellis1305
    @ellis130510 жыл бұрын

    thank you for this; i was having trouble understanding the berry paradox through text uvu

  • @MadiRoseT
    @MadiRoseT10 жыл бұрын

    Go Claire!

  • @zikafus
    @zikafus10 жыл бұрын

    The older guy is easily the biggest insecure douche I've ever watched. I'm sure he is brilliant, but his brilliance is an end to it's own means. Complete giant douche.

  • @kennyfedorko5134
    @kennyfedorko513410 жыл бұрын

    Ooooo! Very nice!

  • @dumbadze
    @dumbadze11 жыл бұрын

    This is like watching the Dean in an episode of "Community," except only creepier.

  • @Cccuba
    @Cccuba12 жыл бұрын

    not really enough dogs for true 'rabble rousing' !