Ozymandias - As Read by Bryan Cranston: Kinetic Typography [Breaking Bad]
2013 ж. 4 Қар.
493 228 Рет қаралды
This was my 1st attempt at using Adobe After Effects to create Kinetic Typography for my motion graphics class.
I stayed up crazy late the night before it was due and there are 2 spelling errors: "survive" and "whose" I fixed it and re-uploaded here: vimeo.com/83556037
This audio was taken from the AMC promo for the final half of season 5 of breaking bad.
• Ozymandias - As Read b...
Ozymandias - As Read by Bryan Cranston: Kinetic Typography Breaking Bad
“Say my name.” “Ozymandias” “You’re goddamn right.”
ctrl c + ctrl v never fails am i right ?
Elisa Yonamine nah wrote this myself
@@olliedylan1381 funne first heard it from loliconics also wiki Dis*ambiguations are a gift eg vainglory kokutou and other media edit:*
is that walter?
Bryan Cranston has the perfect voice to read this marvellous poem. So rich, deep and resonant.
777Psychodelia And yet he seems to miss the point of it somehow. To my ear he reads quicker than he should be reading and stressing at the wrong places. I much more preffer Vincent Price's reading. It catches the depth of what Shelly wanted to say. Or so it seems to me.
Haven't heard Vincent's version, if it is on youTube I will check it out. I had the pleasure of seeing Vincent Price on stage many years ago playing Oscar Wilde - he does have a 'delicious' voice (as in Alice Cooper's the Black Widow).
777Psychodelia try listening to jj burnel' s reading of it it's definitely very different but I think it's quite good
bosleycor=nnor27 why thank you I will do that
When I fuck my wife -- it is "SO RICH, deep AND RESONANT!"
That 4 second pause after "look on my works ye mighty and despair" is chilling. The tonal shift to "nothing beside remains" is one of the most beautiful and powerful moments in poetry and Cranston absolutely nailed it.
scares the shit outta me every time. yet as addicting as hell.
Thanks brotha!
Hell I've seen this more than a few times yet it still gives me goosebumps
This poem can apply to so many fallen greats; Rome, the Titanic, WALTER WHITE....
You mean HEISENBERG
MrMortsnarg Harambe
All Life
Tony Soprano
I don’t think you got the point of the poem
Man, Malcom's dad is quite the poet isn't he?
Yes I know that Frankie Muniz is a race car driver!
The crawl space ending music makes it completely perfect
Probably one of the most powerful poems ever written, and Percy B. Shelley likely didn't even try.
He's not even credited here.
@@ishmaelforester9825 dont think anyone needs to credit that. And if your poem is so damn famous that it doesnt need to be credited, you know you did good job
I think the best pieces of art come from works the artist doesnt expect to be his\her best.
@@maxsimes fair point, I'm not sure what I was thinking with that comment
Shelley is one of the purest and best poets in his language and has relatively enduring respect, but you can't ignore the fact he existed as a man. He deserves simple credit when you knowingly publish him, that was my thought
I met a traveller from an antique land, Who said-“Two vast and trunkless legs of stone Stand in the desert. . . . Near them, on the sand, Half sunk a shattered visage lies, whose frown, And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command, Tell that its sculptor well those passions read Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things, The hand that mocked them, and the heart that fed; And on the pedestal, these words appear: My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings; Look on my Works, ye Mighty, and despair! Nothing beside remains. Round the decay Of that colossal Wreck, boundless and bare The lone and level sands stretch far away.”
Thank you
Bryan is perfect for this as his character Heisenberg and Ozymandias are practically the same with their masculinity and periods of power and ruling to their eventual downfalls as well as the fact he’s an outstanding actor
Ozymandias didn't rule to his eventual downfall. He had a long and succesful reign as pharaoh and died at the old age of 90 and is remembered as the greatest ruler of ancient egypt. His life is as succesful as one human life can possibly be.
I think it's more about how even the greatest kings will all be forgotten with the sands of time.
@@samatar6852 and even then, all his creations has been destroyed and only the mockery of a statue survives to talk about a land that there is no more
@@samatar6852 He’s remembered for a poem more than he is remembered as a ruler.
@@patty1247 that’s maybe taking it a bit far … chances are he’s the Pharoah that talked to Moses
I'm lost for words to describe the feeling that this piece of poetry is inducing me. Shelley was... a god.
Nail on the head! This is exactly what romantic poets were going for. They wanted to describe and explore big emotions (good, bad, or in between) that were hard to explain and codify.
Ironically, shelley was an atheist.
@@SilverFeet Very poor description of Romanticism
His wife was better.
Nah not really
Cranston captures the spirit of the "turn" just like Shelley intended.
Pls don’t spam about Sadist :/ We love them but it’s rude to spam about her on every video that relates to her animatics
I think you should have acknowledged this poem to be Percy Shelly's to be honest
blackmetalmagick1 Very true!
Its the first return on google which reflects almost everyone knows already. His wife wrote Frankenstein etc
the poem says "Half Sunk", combine the two words and you get hank, the poem also says lifeless. Half life 3 confirmed... i mean, hank's death confirmed
You know it was written two hundred years before Breaking Bad, don't you?..
Irvin Valdivia HALF LIFE 3 ACTUALLY CONFIRMED
@Red Diamond It's still possible foreshadowing, not only because the poem is about the death of empire, but also because Hank ended up half sunk in the desert (i.e. buried in a shallow grave). They could have plotted out the final season in such a way that it aligned really well with the poem.
the fact that for me bryan cranston would make the perfect gordon freeman makes this comment very eerie
@@rtozier2011 I thought the ‘half sunk’ line links better with Walt’s now infamous reaction to Hank’s death, which is the beginning of the end of Heisenberg
pretend this comment is removed, I didn't knew this was from Walter White himself, I am terribly sorry for doing a sadist reference
ok i laughed
I love the double entendre presented in the line, “look on my works, ye mighty, and despair”. So good.
Can you explain it for me😅
@@Alesti5 The king writing it meant for people to look upon his empire and despair in fear and awe of his enormous power, but instead the mighty look upon the feeble ruins of what once was and despair at the fact that they too will one day be obsolete.
@@crisptomato9495 As Cliff Robertson once said (in TheGreat Northfield Minnesota Raid): That, Sir, is irony.
I love that it’s playing the “crawl space” score😩
same
The audio effects and the narrating skills make the poem sound so cool!
Sad-Ist anyone?
Reminds me of Poonthanam's Njanappana from 16th Century... "Kandu kandagerikkum njanangale, kandillanu varuthanutham Bhavan.. Malikamukaleriya mannante tholil marappu chartunnathum Bhavan..." Rough Translation from Malayalam: "As God Wills, People You meet Every Day Disappear, those living in High Mansions Die and go to Dust".
Thank you for sharing! It is interesting to see how similar concepts and wisdoms evolve across the world independently
Love it, love everything about it.
Ive rewatched this an unhealthy amount of times
Dude. This is awesome.
Every word of this poem is just epic
I've heard several renderings of Shelley's magnificent poem -- Cranston's is perfect.
This poem fucks me up every time I listen to it. It gives me gooseflesh every time I listen to it. It humbles me every time I listen to it.
That's actually really good. Well done.
I love how they even have the breaking bad music in the background
Gifted actor, thank you!
Excellent animation!
So amazing!
Don't think a poem has ever depressed me as much as this one.
Culture , read more and you will eventually understand it .............
Awesome
This literally is what happens in Breaking Bad
But in the end it doesn't even matter
@@sasmitroy5480 haha I got that
Amazing work!
Lol his typography really had a hold on culture from the 2010 - 2013 era didn't it
Ozymandias" I met a traveller from an antique land Who said: "Two vast and trunkless legs of stone Stand in the desert. Near them on the sand, Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown And wrinkled lip and sneer of cold command Tell that its sculptor well those passions read Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things, The hand that mocked them and the heart that fed. And on the pedestal these words appear: 'My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings: Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!' Nothing beside remains. Round the decay Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare, The lone and level sands stretch far away.
Great job!
Now people will be talking about SAD-ist's new animation.
Soon it will be appropriate for Bob Odenkirk to read this. And perhaps Rhea Seehorn as well.
Great job!
Thank you!
0:25 SURIVE ? Perhaps metaphor of how words believed as correct and true from one perspective can, over time, be clearly a mistake. DEEP... ESOTERIC... WISE.
R.I.P Walter H White
Shelley would be proud of this
Fantastic
This was partly mentioned in batman the animated series in the episode fire of Olympus.
Ironically, however, Shelley demonstrates the power of words; a man who died in 1822 at the age of 29 is still relevant in 2017.
CHILLS
I love this as it actually represents Walter White from Breaking Bad quite well..
Awesome.
Cranston's voice is frightening
“Quiet people have the loudest minds.” ― Stephen King
Waiting for the raid of 12 year old dream smp fans
One of the strongest poem in history
First I thought Ozymandias refers to ASAc Shrader. Look on my work Ye mighty and despair.
Ozymandias is definitely supposed to be Walt. Or Heisenberg. How a mighty, powerful man has been beaten by the one thing he doesn’t have power over - time.
@@olliedylan1381 it was the first click... The mighty one....was Hank all along. Later Walt proved me wrong.
Does anyone else think Bryan Cranston would make a great Optimus Prime if something happened to Peter Cullen?
Yes and michael fassbender looks like him!
Cranston's deep voice sounds too "evil" to be a good Optimus. Peter Cullen's voice acting as Optimus, especially in G1, is supposed to portray the "Gentle Protective Dad" voice, not the "Dead end Dad turned Drug Kingpin" intonation.
On the Sand, half sunk, a shattered visage lies In the same episode, Walt has his face on the Sand, hopeless and despaired. Was that on purpose...?
Nope, complete coincidence.
Surely, Ozymandias perfectly represents the spirit of the episode, it's the fall of Walt, the climax of the show
Can Bryan please read all the great poems of all time plzzzzzz
Maybe it sounds great!
Between "land" and "who said" there are a pause: ",".
"Surive"? *Survive
I know :/ I fixed it and put the link to the new upload in the description :)
**cold shiver** God damn it! Bryan Cranston is the greatest actor OF ALLLLL fucking time! He has IT He IS "IT" Fuck! Just fucking bravo!
imagine doing all this work and misspelling "whose"
Or writing "surive"
Nobody knows this but the Poem itself literally told you the entire brawl that happened in the desert at the start of the episode, "Two vast trunkless legs of stone." Depict Hank and Steve Gomez dead on the ground. "A shattered Visage lies wholes frown and wrinkled lip sneer of cold command." Depicts Walter white lying on the ground shocked that Hank (His Brother in law) is dead. "The hand that Mocked them" Is Jesse watching the chaos that has unfolded, and "The heart that fed them" is Todd looking at Jack mercilessly Killing Hank in "The sands that stretch far away". Truly one of the best details in Breaking Bad! 🧪
This is the perfect poem for Martin Chatwin in The Magicians. If you know why, then you know. I don't spoil
Good reading
Here because of Ozymandias, the episode. You know which one ...
This is honestly beautiful, wish I wouldve found it sooner. I dont know why but it gives me ulysses from fallout new vegas, the way its presented and spoke just instantly reminded me of him
Cranston would make a great Ulysses in a movie or series tbh.
This poem can apply to Adrian Veidt too
Any sadist animation viewers
Outkast - Aquemini
I wonder how many people who watched this have noticed the typo. "Surived", not "survived".
surive
Heisenberg was basically Ozymandias in that show.
cool
And to think I'm studying this for GCSEs right now...
This poem always makes me smile at the naive and primitive arrogance of Ozymandias because he had yet to see the millennia that would follow when mankind has achieved great progresses in every field of man's endeavor despite which mankind somehow remains modest in comparison to him.
It's a double meaning. Ozymandias proclaimed greatness before any of his time and all who would follow, but all there is to show for it is desolation and waste. Our achievements will eventually follow suit. Even Armstrong's footprint on the moon will be gone in a billion years. We cannot conquer the maddening impermanence of existence. Believing otherwise is a mirage that dooms any who would try.
does anyone have the background music ? the periodical thumping on the background.
From the Crawl Space scene in Breaking Bad
SURIVE!!!
Surrive
road rage
fucking chills
Better Call Saul: *Vitae Summa Brevis* Breaking Bad: *Ozymandias*
Surive
here from sadist's video lol
same
اكثر من رائع
Hi, I did a voice over on your video but I need your permission to upload it on youtube
Hi, I did a voice over on your video and I need your permission to upload it.
This perfectly describes wilbur
ok why are you the only one here besides me
Any idea how I can find just the backing track on its own . Would love it for a project . Thanks
it sounds like the later half of the "crawl space" track from breaking bad with an extra section of the beat on the end
I just realised you spelt survive wrong
Please anyone knows name of this music ?
I am a drag king and I picked Ozymandias as my scene name
what is the sound effect you used in the background?
A poem that gets just pipped by Invictus by William Ernest Henley.....in my opinion.
Can't find this trailer for the life of me
kzhead.info/sun/nbGyg6pppZ2Ea6c/bejne.html
@@mohammedmegahed2722 That's not the trailer, for some reason AMC blocks all of the Breaking Bad extras on every country but the USA.
It's too bad you can't get Shelley read by an actor. Cranston, or many people could do it. Because poetry is really best read aloud as opposed to just reading it in a book. There's a great audio book of Jeremy Irons doing TS Elliot, there's other ones. But there's nothing for Shelley.
who came here from the sadist animation...
🙋
Ughhh
BREAKING BAD REFERENCE
Game of Thrones
How long did this take you?
Infernal. with storyboarding, creating the graphics, and animating probably about 2 weeks