![mjk](/img/default-banner.jpg)
- 9
- 77 761
mjk
Приєднався 2 бер 2013
Відео
The Shopping Affair - behind the scenes clip 01
Переглядів 3,5 тис.10 років тому
Ellicott Square Building, Buffalo, NY.
Ch 7 News - Updated Ellicott Square Bldg Filming
Переглядів 3,2 тис.10 років тому
The Shopping Affair - Ch 7 News Interview
The Snow Field (1996)
Переглядів 3,8 тис.10 років тому
An American sergeant escapes a bloody massacre by German troops and flees into the fierce winter landscape. Wounded and seeking shelter he comes across a woman praying in a small barn. She tries to help but the German soldiers are in pursuit and closing in. Format: 16mm, Black & White Run Time: 17 minutes Directed by Peter Coston Produced by Bruce Callarman Cinematography by Christopher Scollar...
bogart - panhandler
Переглядів 52 тис.10 років тому
Fred C. Dobbs scrounging for money on the streets of Tampico in The Treasure of the Sierra Madres.
0:25 underage vaping before the 21st century, kids found a way.
The lady 😊 smiling past was Anne Sheridan
That "fellow American" is the director of the film, John Houston. I have read some people are asking the value of the 1925 Mexican peso. The Federal reserve bulletin dated Jan 1929 lists the average annual exchange rates against the US dollar for 1922-1928. It says in 1925 the average exchange rate was 49.3926 expressed in (American) cents per unit of foreign currency. So 1 Mexican peso equals 49.3926 cents or essentially 2 pesos to the dollar.
EL BWANA! EL BWANA! EL BWANA!
Director, actor, man of the world, great friend of Orson Wells... Mr. John Huston.
hey pardon me but deh could ya help out a fellow american who down on his luck?
Bugs Bunny: HIT THE ROAD!!!
At the end of life, we shall all be judged by Charity... ❤️
Like the Episode of Bugs Bunny with the Little Penguin "Pardon Me, Can You Help a Fellow American That Down on His Luck". LOL (smile)
Notice how, the second time, Bogart makes the classic Bogart move. Gotta love it.
Say, pardon me but, could you help out a fellow American who's down on his luck?
I really like Huston's distinctive voice. In "Moby Dick" he's the barkeeper uncredited and unrecognizable but you know that voice right away.
I've seen this a time. Or two .just maybe il see a few more times 2
He panhandles money and becomes human.
John Huston: “…but from now on, you have to make your way through life without my assistance.” Also John Huston: **casts Bogart in The African Queen and Beat the Devil**
Say pardon me but can you help out a fellow American who’s down on his luck?
Gonna watch this movie just cuz of 8ball bunny
I like the slang "put the bite on me".
That shave was one of the best parts of the film and you cut it! Fail! lol.
The prostitute walking by is Ann Sheridan as a private joke/good luck gift to the production. Nice one, Ann!.💓😎
Wait, the video says 8 years ago but this video has no color 😕
Reminds me of a Bugs Bunny episode when Bugs flipped a pan handling Bogart a quarter and told him to "hit the road".
HOBOKEN!!!
@@downtownbillyandthenewjivefive OOOOOH, I'M DYING AGAIN!!
0:26 is nobody going to mention that kid Smoking?
A common sight back then. So no.
@@johnhein2539 So yes, son. It's odd, and wrong, even then. Disney's Pinocchio predated Sierra Madre, and even that film portrayed kid smoking as fucked. If the OP thinks it's strange, then he's right on the money.
What movie is this?
Treasure of the Sierra Madre
@@dogman586 What’s that?
@@josecarranza7555 Huh? It's a highly regarded and very enjoyable b&w movie from the late 1940s directed by John Huston & starring Bogart. The famous line: ""Badges? We don't need no stinkin' badges!" comes from it.
@@princeandrey That quote is not in this movie.
@@josecarranza7555 “I don’t have to show you no stinkin’ quotes”.
john huston
This is still going on. it was particularly bad at the local Walmart but the Town council banned panhandling and started handing out $50 fines. Problem solved.
$50 fines for people who don't have money in the first place? What genius came up with that fuckery?
@@corneliusalterego6527 Don't worry about the panhandlers, they don't pay taxes let alone fines.
You want to see panhandlers galore? Come to Berlin and ride the subways!!
@@kafenwar In Chile people knock on your door asking for money.
@@Romans8-9 That's another level of desperation that I haven't even seen in Egypt.
Hey mister, will you stake a fellow American to a meal?
i use this line with some of my friends just to see if they will hand over a five spot, if they acquiesce i know they are true friends, of course i never take the money, it’s all about the intent
@@bluetoad2001 an S test
@@bluetoad2001 How not? But $5.00 won't buy you much of a meal, eh?
This movie is supposed to be set in 1925, but at about 1:20 look in the mirror when Bogart is in the Barber Shop, it shows a 1940s car drive by!
Major goof
Nice catch!
He went back to the future for that shot.
There's always one
Good observation , but it’s art , not documentary…and if it were really like the twenties people would be much better dressed . The whole film had a 40s look…
*Could any of us of made it without John Huston ☺*
This is why we have panhandlers... Ask any panhandler if they be interested in raking your leaves washing your car doing anything for you for 20 40 even 60 bucks.. they won't leave their spot they're making more money there.. unless they're outside of a city..saying all this I don't hate them, they are there for the $, but I'll never pity one nor shame anyone who says no to them.
Go fuck yourself.
I don't mind erring on the side of generosity. And my experience, when I once offered a panhandler $$ for a job, was that he took it with enthusiasm. I guess we have different karma, eh? "And pity would be no more/If we made nobody poor," says William Blake. Heard of him?
From now on, I have to have my own money, YES SIR, Oley. BAK
Pardon me, but can you help out a fellow american who is down on his luck ?
Hit the road!
From now on, Please Sir some assistance? BAK
Best film of the 40s
Best years of our lives. Forget?
@@joenazario6189 not even one of the top five films the year it came out
I'm not rich man, but I don't mind taking a fellow American to a meal once or twice, or maybe even a few times. The other guy was a real gentleman and stern but fair with his words.
@@willoughby1888 The best way to counter such belittling is to take it in stride, and ignore it, or laugh at it. Nothing makes them feel worse than to be rebuked thusly.
well done
God-like architecture
Notice the giant sigil they dance upon
@@dmturner58 How did you get here?
@@pure9873 that's a long story but I'm on an epic mission haha tales of Templar Treasure and an end of the world prophecy.
@@dmturner58 I am a federal agent. We have been watching you for a while. Give up before someone gets hurt.
@@pure9873 you must have very limited brain cells if you think I believe that for one second .
"Hit the road"!
Bugs Bunny LOL (smile)
If you know you know. 🐰
🎵 If he should accomplish this daring thing, A miracle to Martinique, Bugs did bring. 🎵
if you've ever lost anything to a pawn shop you can relate to this.
Still the greatest American film of all-time. The best combination of creative expression and realism ever put on film. Huston & Bogart reach their peak together in this masterwork of art.
nobodyaskedbut okay we get it, stop posting the same thing
You might want to view Chinatown.
@@michaelkelly3221Sierra madre is a better film
Which Huston?
@@Telstar62aJohn.
This was in 8 Ball Bunny
OOOO, I'M DYYYIN'!!!
hey look st valintine feb 14
I read the novel not too long ago and, for the most part, Huston stuck closely to the source material. He had to leave out some of the more brutal violence and the racism stemming from the principle players because of the production code.
What violence did he leave out?
(SPOILER ALERT) The scene where Bogart is decapitated by the bandits. Huston wanted to actually film the head rolling down into the lake. He even had a prop head of Bogie made and was all set to shoot. If I remember the rest of the story, they filmed the head scene, but censors immediately wanted the scene cut.
@@michaelj.r457 Wow, rolling heads in the 1940s, not surprised they didn't allow it. First rolling head I ever saw was Hush Hush Sweet Charlotte in the mid '60s.
or wait... Strait-Jacket had a rolling head too. Not sure which came first.
When Bogart was handed 2 pesos he thought, Holy crap, now I can get a meal and a hooker!
to be honest, it was alot. my grandfather was well paid and he earned 40 pesos a week, so yeah, 1 peso could probably feed him well if he took care of it for a day
Good production
Well done
This looks like a very good short film. It's a shame the soundtrack is so much off, that it ruins the experience of watching it. Does anyone know where we can find a good print of this movie?
Wasting his money on lottery tickets, just like the poor fools of today : (
Who you calling a fool?😃
@@johnraz75 Since your reply, I rewatched the video, and noticed something I missed the first time. Bogart is given a single peso each time, by the man in white. Apparently a single peso was a lot of money back then. Currently, a Mexican Peso is worth 5 cents VS the USA dollar, or 20 to 1. I remember a time in the mid 1980's when the peso was 400 to 1 against the USA dollar.
@@dkeith45 I believe my Dad made a dollar a day in USA way back back when ..... & The guy in white was John Marcellus Huston
@@johnraz75 Pretty cool to have John and Walter Huston in the same movie. And the money, yeah, now that I think of it, my grandfather made I think, $12 a week around the late 30's, and it was considered a good wage. Later, my dad, working as an industrial electrician, made $4 per hour, and was very happy with the wage, and 40 hour work week in 1960.
There have always been people who have been foolish with their money.