Added: 4 years ago
From: dday0606
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  • I think this scene really encapsulates Nicholson's motivations for engineering a top notch bridge- even if it is to his captors advantage.

    The bridge is Nicholson's contribution to world. In his warped brain, he feels it is something in which he will be honorably remembered for.

  • Never tire of watching this film,the actors fit the parts perfectly and of course it would not be a great film without David Lean,the best.

  • The sunset... the bridge...beauty in both or neither.

    Beauty in a state of mind, contentment in the middle of a lousy situation.

    In a War

    In a Jungle

    As a Prisoner

  • Surely this film is summed up in one line...' What have i done?' David Lean is God and SuperSealSniper is a knobhead.

  • non-sense; everyone knows that the power-hungry british looted India and Asia, got their ass kicked by Hitler, and left asia. No softness to the cold Brits. A diamond hard toughness and ruthlessness to the british.

  • where is the next?

  • No, the best scene is the very end when the colonel says, my god, what have I done?

  • @MrSteverino1958 After he says "you....." and a snarling William Holden retorts "youuuu....."

  • Its incredible how a simple scene can contain the entire spirit of one thing, as the movie itself. Guinness's reflection about life is so deep and complete with details you put yourself to think about the real meaning of all the efforts you make during your lifetime. What an actor. Like a few we rarely see currently. Interesting to observ Sessue Hayakawa was almost 70 y-old at this time. He also is an excellent actor who bravery represented the greatness of japanese culture.

    Priceless scene.

  • Thank you for your support of The Bridge on the River Kwai! We'd love to share more clips and trailers with you. Watch them on our YouTube channel! youtube.com/columbiaclassics!

  • perfect characterization by Alec Guiness of the stiffed upper lip of the British Army officers

  • essentially the best scene from any film, ever made

  • A bit of trivia here:

    Sir Alec wanted this scene in closeup

    and could not understand why the director chose to shoot it from behind.

    Lean was right of course and the result...the most poignant scene in the film.

  • @ 2:10 The moment in which, being a soldier was no longer a factor. The artistic manner in which his hands are open and lets go the riding stick is so passionate as he focuses on a vision. For that one moment, he was not a prisoner...but, free. This perhaps was something that the Japanese Commander envyed...not bad for someone who has no honor in the eyes of Bushido.

  • Went the day well?

    We died and never knew

    But, well or ill.

    Freedom, we died for you

    Went the day well?

  • To me, this is one of the most powerful and masterfully directed scenes in the movie. The contrast in culture is depicted in many ways, one being the contrast in uniforms, but all that is laid aside as a very formidable opponent in the character Col. Nickelson, reveals the most vulnerable focus of his reflecting on his own military career and purpose in life, to his captor. Brilliant scene of 'bridging' two diametrically opposed nations at war, with human feelings.

  • Comment removed

  • @NotesCollector  Kipling? Sassoon? You? Do tell. Thanks

  • the Greek scholar John Maxwell Edmonds , also a name of a 1940 British film on how a Nazi invasion of Britain could have turned out, search for it under " The Lieutenant died last" ! I hope that helped :)

  • @pkneenoJohn Maxwell Edmonds

    went the day well? we died and never knew.

    but well or ill, England, we died for you.

    it was corrupted and plagiarised

  • Perhaps the best scene in a great film ... Immortal words

  • Comment removed

  • Hey can you post the bit at the end after the bridge blows with the medic chappy walking away from the wreckage saying "madness" over and over again?

    that was one of the best scenes in the film i reckons

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