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Andie MacDowell
Jamie Lee Curtis
Radha Mitchell
Anne Heche
George Clooney

Watch "Fahrenheit 451" Full Movie Online

Information

Year: 1966
Rating: 7.2(12862)
Listed in: Drama, Sci-Fi, Thriller
  "Aflame with the excitement and emotions of tomorrow!"

Movie info

Languages: English
Filming dates: 13 January 1966 - 15 April 1966
 
Plot: From the Ray Bradbury novel, Fahrenheit 451 is the temperature that paper will burst into flame. Oskar Werner plays a fireman who does not put out fires, but who searches out books and burns them. Books make people unhappy. In a parody of social correctness, all discordant strains are removed. The world is a lonely one of separate people in which Werner begins to read the books before burning them.

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Goofs

  Continuity: When Montag gets in the boat to hide from the flying cops, you can see the rope still tying the boat to the bank. Montag subsequently rows away with out untying it.
Continuity: In the first scene in the monorail, the view through the windows show they keep passing the same house.
Revealing mistakes: The views through the windows of the monorail were shot from an ordinary railway train and when Clarisse and Montag met for the first time. the railway tracks are visible. It's also obvious that the landscape is not seen from high above the ground (as it should be from the real monorail).
Continuity: As the firemen leave the apartment in the first raid, the sack is half full of books. The bag they toss over the balcony is twice as full.
Revealing mistakes: Montag's hair in the final scene is different than it is in the rest of the film. This is because Oskar Werner, to show his dislike of director François Truffaut, purposely did this to create a continuity error.
Revealing mistakes: After Montag comes out of the first raid to burn the books, the placement of the fire protective clothing (helmet and gloves) are unnatural movements and appear to be a reverse run of film footage. This is further compounded by the fact that he walks backwards to get the flamethrower which has flame entering the nozzle instead of leaving the nozzle.
Continuity: When the books are being burned in the beginning of the movie, some books that are on the ground suddenly appear in the fire pit even though nobody moved them.
Revealing mistakes: SPOILER: After Montag has revolted against the other Firemen, The Captain's body lies on a pile of books on fire. The way the body's legs are bent reveal that it is a dummy.
Crew: When Montag and Clarisse are on the elevator, you can briefly see the director through the mirror.
Fact errors: Book paper does not begin to burn at 451 degrees F (~233 deg. C); it does catch fire around 450 deg. C (842 deg. F).

Quotes

  Guy Montag: Fahrenheit four-five-one is the temperature at which book
paper catches fire and starts to burn.
Guy Montag: Well, it's a job just like any other. Good work with lots
of variety. Monday, we burn Miller; Tuesday, Tolstoy; Wednesday,
Walt Whitman; Friday, Faulkner; and Saturday and Sunday,
Schopenhauer and Sartre. We burn them to ashes and then burn the
ashes. That's our official motto.
Guy Montag: To learn how to find, one must first learn how to hide.
Guy Montag: [reading from David Copperfield] David Copperfield.
Chapter one. I am born. Whether I shall turn out to be the hero of
my own life, or whether that station will be held by anybody else,
these pages must show. To begin my life with the beginning of my
life, I record that I was born, as I have been informed and believe
on a Friday, at twelve o'clock at night. It was remarked that the
clock began to strike, and I began to cry simultaneously.
Guy Montag: [holding a book in his hand] Behind each of these books,
there's a man. That's what interests me.
Guy Montag: [reading from dictionary] Rhinoceros: any of certain
large, powerful, thick-skinned perissodactyl mammals of the family
Rhinocerotidae.
Book Lady: Play the man, Master Ridley. We shall this day light such
a candle, by God's grace as I trust shall never be put out.
Guy Montag: Do you remember what you asked me the other day: if I
ever read the books I burn? Remember?
Clarisse: Uh-huh.
Guy Montag: Last night I read one.
The Captain: The books have nothing to say.
The Captain: Listen to me, Montag. Once to each fireman, at least
once in his career, he just itches to know what these books are all
about. He just aches to know. Isn't that so?
The Captain: You see, it's... it's no good, Montag. We've all got to
be alike. The only way to be happy is for everyone to be made
equal.
Book Person: 'Martian Chronicles': I'm "The Martian Chronicles" by
Ray Bradbury.
The Captain: Trouble between you and the Pole, Montag?
The Captain: Go on, Montag, all this philosophy, let's get rid of it.
It's even worse than the novels. Thinkers and philosophers, all of
them saying exactly the same thing: "Only I am right! The others
are all idiots!"
Guy Montag: [to Linda] You've spent your whole life in front of that
family wall. These books are my family.
Clarisse: But why do you burn books?
Guy Montag: Books make people unhappy, they make them anti-social.
Clarisse: Do you think I'm anti-social?
Guy Montag: Why do you ask?
Clarisse: Well... I'm a teacher, not quite actually, I'm still on
probation. I was called to the administration office today, and I
don't think I said the right things. I'm not at all happy about my
answers.
Fireman: [the Book Woman is given 10 seconds to get out of the house]
1... 2... 3... 4... 5... 6... 7... 8... 9...
Book Lady: Nine elevenths are ninety-nine, nine twelfths are a
hundred and eight, nine thirteens are a hundred and seventeen, nine
fourteenths are a hundred and twenty-six.
The Captain: What's going on?
Fireman: This house has been condemned, it's to be burnt with the
books immediately.
The Captain: Burning the books is one thing, burning the house is
another altogether.
Clarisse: Is it true that a long time ago, firemen used to put out
fires and not burn books?
Guy Montag: Your uncle is right, you are light in the head, put out
fires? Houses have always been fireproof.
Clarisse: Ours isn't...
Guy Montag: Well, it should be condemned, destroyed, and you'll have
to move to one that is.
Clarisse: You don't like books, then.
Guy Montag: Do you like the rain?
Clarisse: Yes, I adore it.
The Captain: Come on now, madam. We're going to burn the house.
Book Lady: No!
The Captain: What do you want, martyrdom?
Book Lady: I want to die as I've lived.
The Captain: You must have read that in there. Now, look, I'm not
going to ask you again. Are you going?
Book Lady: These books were alive; they spoke to me!
Guy Montag: [trying to figure out why Clarisse was fired] You must've
said something that...
Clarisse: Oh I never got along well with the staff, they disapprove
of me... I... don't always stick to the times tables... well we
have fun in my class, and they don't like that.
Linda Montag: Did you see that? Cousin Claudette's got a bouffant
tonight.
Guy Montag: Who?
Linda Montag: Cousin Claudette.
Guy Montag: Who is cousin Claudette?
Linda Montag: The cousin announcer; the one you don't like.
Guy Montag: I don't like any of them.
Guy Montag: Tell me, this uncle of yours, did he ever tell you not to
talk to strangers?
Clarisse: No, he did say once if anyone asked how old I was to say I
was 20 and light in the head. They always seem to go together.
Guy Montag: Light in the head?
Clarisse: Mm-hmm, loopy, crazy.
Guy Montag: [reading] Once upon a time there was a woodcutter
named...
Book Lady: They can't have my books, they'll never take them away.
Cousin Claudette: Today's figures for operations in the urban area
alone account for the elimination of a total of 2,750 pounds of
conventional editions, 836 pounds of first editions, and 17 pounds
of manuscripts were also destroyed. Twenty-three anti-social
elements were detained, pending re-education.
The Captain: These are all novels, all about people that never
existed, the people that read them it makes them unhappy with their
own lives. Makes them want to live in other ways they can never
really be.
The Captain: Look, all stories of the dead, biography that's called,
and autobiography. My life, my diary, my memoirs, my - intimate
memoirs.
The Captain: Just tell me this, Montag: at a guess, how many literary
awards would you say were made in this country on an average each
year? 5? 10? 40? Not less than 1,200.
The Captain: By the way, what does Montag do on his day off duty?
Guy Montag: Not much, sir, just mow the lawn.
The Captain: And what if the law forbids that?
Guy Montag: Just watch it grow, sir.
Clarisse: Why?
Guy Montag: What?
Clarisse: How did it come about? How did it begin? How could someone
like you be doing this work? I know everyone says that but you -
you're not like them. When I say something to you, you look at me.
Why did you choose this job? With you it doesn't make any sense.
Guy Montag: Look at that fellow over there.
Clarisse: What's he doing?
Guy Montag: That's the information box. He can't make up his mind.
Clarisse: What does he want to find out?
Guy Montag: He doesn't want to find out anything. He knows someone
who has books, so he got hold of the person's picture and number
and is going to drop it into that box.
Clarisse: But he's an informer!
Guy Montag: No, he's an informant.
The Captain: Robinson Crusoe, the Negroes didn't like that because of
his man, Friday. And Nietzsche, Nietzsche, the Jews didn't like
Nietzsche. Here's a book about lung cancer. You see, all the
cigarette smokers got into a panic, so for everybody's peace of
mind, we burn it.
[first lines]
Announcer: An Enterprise Vineyard Production. Oskar Werner, Julie
Christie... in Fahrenheit four-five-one.

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