Kevin Pollack was also in "Grumpy Old Men" (1993) and "A Few Good Men" (1992), and his father Dee Pollack was in "Kelly's Heroes" (1970) Great Chazz Palminteri: "Mulholland Falls" (1996) "Jade" (1995) Pete Postlewaite: "The Town" (2010) the "Sharpe's" series of movies
Chazz Palminteri was nominated for a supporting actor Oscar for the movie Bullets Over Broadway, which is one of the funniest, smartest movies I've seen. Jennifer Tilly was also nominated for that movie for supporting actress, and she was absolutely priceless in it. It's got a great all star cast. I very highly recommend it.
Half Failed Mission: The first priority was to kill the one man that could identify Keyser, which Keyser did, the second priority was to be the only person to walkaway to remain anonymous. Everybody knows what Keyser looks like now so the only thing that he accomplished was killing all the guys he put together for the job because they had stolen from him.
Pete Postlethwaite (Kobayashi, priest in Romeo + Juliet) is epic as the father in In The Name of the Father, which is based on an incredible true story and won several awards and was nominated for a bunch of Oscars and a bunch of Golden Globe Awards. Highly recommended!
He's also excellent in a great little movie called "Brassed Off", about the closure of the coal mines in England during the Thatcher era. Ewan McGregor also stars in one of his earlier cinema roles.
You've become one of my favorite reaction channels!!!!! I have a recommendation. The Ref. It's a forgotten comedy gem from the 90s with Denis Leary. I think you'd really enjoy it.
I love that movie, I remember seeing it in 94 when it was released. I’ve suggested it multiple times on other channels that I watch, but to no avail. So I strongly second your request.
I find it immensely entertaining that so many people credit the characters/actors with the lines when it's the script writers who deserve the credit. But well done, Tara, figuring out the twist.
@@ItsTaraAnn😊 oh yes. The actors are critical when it comes to delivery. But lots of people seem to forget that it's not the characters' (the actors') cleverness in coming up with the lines but the writers'.
Tara would absolutely love "Pain & Gain" (2013) w/ Mark Wahlberg, Dwayne Johnson, Anthony Mackey, Ed Harris, & Tony Shalhoub. Directed by Michael Bay *True Story*
I think the reason Tara confused this movie with Very Bad Things is they both have very similar looking DVD box art. They both have a bunch of characters standing next to each other in a line, with a white background. And they both use a similar font for the movie title too. That's where my mind instantly went, anyways.
Great review! If you want to see a highly underrated movie with a young Giancarlo Esposito, check out Harley Davidson and The Marlboro Man (Mickey Rourke & Don Johnson)!
One clue i dont see many people mention is "Verbal" smoking. When hes interrogated, he asks for help lighting his cigarette despite a few scenes showing him smoking in the "flashbacks". Im probably just seeing a thing thats not really a clue though. LOL.
He can’t operate some kind of lighters. We never see him light his own cigs, except for the “help me” part, and then the reveal of him being able to light it himself at the end (which matches Keyser lighting it on the boat, which Keaton scoffs at). You were seeing a clue kind of.
Great reaction Tara finally you are reaction to one of my favourites movies of all time. There are some fun-facts about it like always. The line-up scene was improved with a fart. When asked by a fan on Twitter about whether there was truth to the fact the group of actors kept making each other laugh while shooting the line-up scene, McQuarrie elaborated that it was specifically one actor farting that caused this to happen. However, he expressed gratitude for the incident and explained how it helped improve both the scene and the script overall. It's pretty well-known by this point that the actor McQuarrie is referring to is Oscar winner del Toro, who Pollack previously revealed: "farted like 12 takes in a row." Lol Keyser Söze was named after a lawyer. Screenwriter Christopher McQuarrie once worked for a lawyer named Keyser Sume (pronounced sue-may), whom he told: “You’ve got a great name. You’re going to be the villain in a script some day.” When it came time to write The Usual Suspects, McQuarrie figured that, for legal reasons, he’d better not use the exact name, and so he replaced it with part of the Turkish expression “söze boğmak,” which means “talk too much” (literally, “drown in/with words”). Considering that the movie also has a character nicknamed, Verbal because he “talks too much,” Turkish audiences might not have been as surprised by the movie’s ending as other viewers were. Kevin Spacey asked to be in the movie before he even knew what it would be. The actor met Bryan Singer at a screening of the director's first feature, Public Access, which won the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance in 1993. Spacey liked the movie so much that he told Singer he wanted to be in whatever he made next. “I took that as an assignment,” Singer told Charlie Rose. “Because I worship this man as an actor.” Al pacino turned down the role of dave kujan to play a cop in a different movie. That would be Heat, which famously paired him onscreen with Robert De Niro for the first time. Pacino didn’t want to play a cop twice in the same year, so he opted for the more prestigious, Michael Mann-directed project. Fenster’s unique dialect was all benicio Del Toro’s idea. As Del Toro explained it on Inside the Actors Studio, his character’s only real purpose in the story was to die. So to liven things up, Del Toro tried delivering Fenster’s lines the way the audience hears them in the film-very quickly, and with a thick, indiscernible accent. Nobody on the set could understand him. Singer later recalled, “At first I thought it was a joke, but I didn’t want to offend him if it wasn’t a joke.” Keep up the good work.
@@tarasneverseen Can I add one more tid to your bits. The two cops interrogating at the beginning are Writer Chris MacQuarrie and Director Bryan Singer.
21:46, I'm a big Star Trek fan. Within the shows and movies at Starfleet Academy there is a test that senior cadets must take called the "Kobayashi Maru". The test is a no win scenario that helps a cadet learn things about themselves that can help in their future careers as officers. Practically nothing the cadet can do will allow them to rescue the Kobayashi Maru and her crew and let the cadet's own ship survive. I bring this up because the way Mr. Kobayashi is portrayed he is a living breathing no win scenario. Even if Keaton and the gang were to end him, his minions would still be able to reach out and hurt their families. Also they still wouldn't be able to get to Keyzer Souze. So they have no choice but to do as he says.
Gabriel Byrne speaks in his natural "Dublin" accent throughout the entire movie as far as I can tell? I'm (Dublin) Irish and I didn't notice him attempting an American accent at any stage?
@@tarasneverseen You may be right, but I didn't notice it. To me he sounded the same as he did in the Coen brothers "Millers Crossing" speaking in his Dublin accent. Anyhoo, enjoyed the reaction😉
I didn't recognize Gus from Breaking Bad either until watching this awhile back. Same thing with Zed from Pulp Fiction (complete with a gimp reference). Speaking of Breaking Bad, I didn't recognize "Mike" in Beverly Hills Cop on a recent watch as well.
Notice how Hockney is totally relaxed in the holding cell at the beginning? Kujan's theory is right: The guilty guy relaxes. And we find out Hockney stole the truck.
Whether Hockney stole the truck or not is irrelevant, Kujan’s theory is bullshit in my opinion. Guilt and innocence are not very good determining factors in how a person is going to react to being arrested. You can have people who are completely innocent getting a good night sleep because they don’t have anything to hide, and you can have people who are guilty as hell panicking because they’ve been caught and are now trying to hide what they’ve done. But if you predicate your entire case solely on whether or not someone gets a good night sleep, you could be wrongfully trying to incriminate an innocent person, who might just be naturally calm in high stress situations, based on your own confirmation bias.
@@SFOlson IRL, Kujan's theory would fail mainly because, like Keaton mentions, you don't bring in a bunch of hardcases on speculation. They would all be icier than a normal person, and all would be expecting trouble for one reason or another. But we the audience have an inside view, and can see that Hockney is way chiller than the others. Keaton is grimly annoyed. McManus is having fun. Fenster is agitated. And they already know Verbal isn't a real suspect, but are hoping to lean on him for information, possibly about what he hears right there in holding. But then there's Hockney, practically falling asleep. But Kujan's theory would probably work against less cold-blooded people. A less serious criminal who has no clue why they're in a police station is angry and anxious. The guy who did it would be the odd man out in such company.
@@dudermcdudeface3674In real life, Kujan’s theory could get picked apart and used against him by a really good lawyer, and I’m saying this as someone who grew up around a lawyer. A good lawyer could get Kujan on the stand, get him on the defensive, and get him to have an outburst like he did at Verbal, and that would be where he, and his case predicated on whether or not someone was getting a good night sleep or not would start crumbling. And it wouldn’t matter at that point if the person was actually guilty of something, if you could make him snap, in court, like he did with Verbal in private, and based on the character, I don’t think it would be too difficult, all credibility goes out the window, and the person basically walks free at that point.
@@SFOlson It's moot anyway because they had no probable cause for the sweep. But if they did, Kujan is just talking about where to begin probing, not how to assemble and wrap up hard facts already.
@35:56 He’s showing that hand because he “has” Cerebral Palsy. That’s why he couldn’t operate the cigarette lighter. Also why they call him gimp and cripple. They establish it about twenty times to make sure the audience is good and lied to.
@@LordVolkov Oscar is just a special movie. It has so many layers of entertainment. Comedy, writing, pacing, intrigue, costume, set, Stallone’s wife is alien-beautiful, Chazz and Tim are hilarious with just their faces and that jazz piano scene - I’ve tried to play all four hands of that. I could watch a Peter Riegert’s character and Connie movie or sitcom. A whole show based on that household would jave been great. “Maybe we do you too one day. Make you looka very nice” Sidetip: I really liked Peter Riegert in Cold Blooded with Jason Priestly. Ever heard of that indie lil flick ? Michael J Fox produced (and cameos) and I think after release he kept it from getting much exposure because it’s a little violent. Peter Riegert is interesting in that but you have to be in the right mood for that movie.
"The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world he did not exist." Fun Fact: The stolen emeralds were real gemstones, lent to the production. Method Actor Fact: Kevin Spacey met with doctors and experts on cerebral palsy to discuss how it might affect his characterization. Movie Props Fact: Kobayashi (Pete Postlewaite) Porcelain is not a real company. But places like Amazon sell products with that logo, including mugs. What Script Fact: The line-up scene was scripted as a serious scene, but after a full day of filming takes where the actors couldn't keep a straight face, director Bryan Singer decided to use the funniest takes. King Blabbermouth Fact: In an interview, Kevin Spacey revealed that Bryan Singer managed to convince every one of the major actors that they were Keyser Soze. When first screened for the company of actors, Gabriel Byrne was so stunned when he found that he wasn't Keyser Soze that he stormed off into the parking lot and argued with Singer for a half hour. Slight Of Hand Fact: Pay close attention to the scenes during and leading up to the line-up at the beginning of the film. Verbal (Kevin Spacey) is either not shown or is shown in the background being completely silent during these scenes, hinting that he most likely wasn't actually present in this portion of the story. He is not shown getting arrested leading to the line-up. He is not shown getting interrogated by the police. He is not shown having the conversation with the rest of the men in the holding cell until he is abruptly introduced. The only part of these flashbacks where Verbal is seen the entire time is during the actual line-up scene, when he is asked to repeat the same line as the other criminals.
The perfect book end for this movie is Seven. It's kind of a counterpoint in most ways. But it shares several key features: the brilliance of the writing and the corollary total immersion of the viewer as the story unfolds, and there's
Kevin here - Basses are characterized by their deep and resonant voices ranging from E2 to E4 with some exceptions based on the subcategory. Baritones reach higher, usually extending from an A2 all the way up to an A4 or even higher
Maybe time for a Very Bad Things rewatch? I think it's a wildly underrated dark comedy. Or perhaps the all girl remake - Rough Night with ScarJo and Zoe Kravitz (similar premise but way less dark)
"You just figured it out." BRO... Confirming she got it right during the sequence it's all put together is a crime. You ruined that entire sequence and the best part of every reaction to this movie. Congrats.
"He's the priest in Romeo + Juliet!"
RIP to Pete. He also plays a priest in Dragonheart 😉
Pete was in a ton of great stuff and always fantastic.
One of the greatest endings to a movie ever. I watched this in the theater when it came out and everyone was like WTF?? Such a great twist at the end
Kevin Pollack was also in "Grumpy Old Men" (1993) and "A Few Good Men" (1992), and his father Dee Pollack was in "Kelly's Heroes" (1970)
Great Chazz Palminteri:
"Mulholland Falls" (1996)
"Jade" (1995)
Pete Postlewaite:
"The Town" (2010)
the "Sharpe's" series of movies
OMG someone else that loves Bio-Dome as much as we do. We sing the filter song all the time.
MY FAV😂CLUE THAT NOBODY CATCHES, VERBAL SAYS" THIS IS ALL BULLSHIT " , RIGHT BEFORE HE WALKS OUT, I THINKS THAT'S BRILLIANCE!
Like The Sixth Sense, they give you clues throughout, you don’t know they’re clues. A great movie and one of the best surprise endings ever.
Chazz Palminteri was nominated for a supporting actor Oscar for the movie Bullets Over Broadway, which is one of the funniest, smartest movies I've seen. Jennifer Tilly was also nominated for that movie for supporting actress, and she was absolutely priceless in it. It's got a great all star cast. I very highly recommend it.
Half Failed Mission: The first priority was to kill the one man that could identify Keyser, which Keyser did, the second priority was to be the only person to walkaway to remain anonymous. Everybody knows what Keyser looks like now so the only thing that he accomplished was killing all the guys he put together for the job because they had stolen from him.
Gabriel Byrne just speaks in his native accent throughout
Pete Postlethwaite (Kobayashi, priest in Romeo + Juliet) is epic as the father in In The Name of the Father, which is based on an incredible true story and won several awards and was nominated for a bunch of Oscars and a bunch of Golden Globe Awards. Highly recommended!
He's also excellent in a great little movie called "Brassed Off", about the closure of the coal mines in England during the Thatcher era. Ewan McGregor also stars in one of his earlier cinema roles.
@tamarleigh I TOTALLY AGREE WITH YOU 💯!!!!!!!
Personally, another one that I thought he was really good in, was Alien 3.
@@SFOlson Totally!
You've become one of my favorite reaction channels!!!!! I have a recommendation. The Ref. It's a forgotten comedy gem from the 90s with Denis Leary. I think you'd really enjoy it.
Save it for the holidays 😉
@@LordVolkov facts. It is technically a Xmas movie.
Dark Christmas
I love that movie, I remember seeing it in 94 when it was released. I’ve suggested it multiple times on other channels that I watch, but to no avail. So I strongly second your request.
I find it immensely entertaining that so many people credit the characters/actors with the lines when it's the script writers who deserve the credit. But well done, Tara, figuring out the twist.
Well I mean clearly the writers get credit, but why not credit the actors as well for their delivery of the lines??
@@ItsTaraAnn😊 oh yes. The actors are critical when it comes to delivery. But lots of people seem to forget that it's not the characters' (the actors') cleverness in coming up with the lines but the writers'.
Kevin Pollack was a good stand-up comedian thus the choice to drop the quips.
Spacey is a supporting actor in LA Confidential, but his parts in it are like an acting masterclass.
I saw this and SE7EN in the same day in 1995. What a great day it was.
Tara is spot on, keyser selected the best people for the job.
Tara would absolutely love "Pain & Gain" (2013) w/ Mark Wahlberg, Dwayne Johnson, Anthony Mackey, Ed Harris, & Tony Shalhoub. Directed by Michael Bay *True Story*
It is now on the list! Thanks for the suggestion!
"That's Cher's dad."
Heathens. He's Nick Tortelli.
I think the reason Tara confused this movie with Very Bad Things is they both have very similar looking DVD box art. They both have a bunch of characters standing next to each other in a line, with a white background. And they both use a similar font for the movie title too. That's where my mind instantly went, anyways.
yep..Kevin put the pics up in the outro as we talked about it again
@@tarasneverseen Ah, lol. That's what I get for commenting while still watching the video. I only got to the end a few seconds ago. :P
Besides playing Cher's dad in Clueless, I always remember Dan Hedaya as Tully, the Addams family crooked accountant in the first Addams Family movie.
That's right!!!
He was Carla’s ex-husband Nick Tortelli on Cheers.
@@kathyastrom1315That character was hilarious too.
Kevin mentioned that but it didn't make the cut
Hey, don't forget a few episodes from the series: "Cheers."
The cast is so young. It's hard to believe the film is almost 30 years old
Great review! If you want to see a highly underrated movie with a young Giancarlo Esposito, check out Harley Davidson and The Marlboro Man (Mickey Rourke & Don Johnson)!
One clue i dont see many people mention is "Verbal" smoking. When hes interrogated, he asks for help lighting his cigarette despite a few scenes showing him smoking in the "flashbacks". Im probably just seeing a thing thats not really a clue though. LOL.
He can’t operate some kind of lighters. We never see him light his own cigs, except for the “help me” part, and then the reveal of him being able to light it himself at the end (which matches Keyser lighting it on the boat, which Keaton scoffs at). You were seeing a clue kind of.
Great reaction Tara finally you are reaction to one of my favourites movies of all time. There are some fun-facts about it like always. The line-up scene was improved with a fart. When asked by a fan on Twitter about whether there was truth to the fact the group of actors kept making each other laugh while shooting the line-up scene, McQuarrie elaborated that it was specifically one actor farting that caused this to happen.
However, he expressed gratitude for the incident and explained how it helped improve both the scene and the script overall. It's pretty well-known by this point that the actor McQuarrie is referring to is Oscar winner del Toro, who Pollack previously revealed: "farted like 12 takes in a row." Lol
Keyser Söze was named after a lawyer. Screenwriter Christopher McQuarrie once worked for a lawyer named Keyser Sume (pronounced sue-may), whom he told: “You’ve got a great name. You’re going to be the villain in a script some day.” When it came time to write The Usual Suspects, McQuarrie figured that, for legal reasons, he’d better not use the exact name, and so he replaced it with part of the Turkish expression “söze boğmak,” which means “talk too much” (literally, “drown in/with words”). Considering that the movie also has a character nicknamed, Verbal because he “talks too much,” Turkish audiences might not have been as surprised by the movie’s ending as other viewers were. Kevin
Spacey asked to be in the movie before he even knew what it would be. The actor met Bryan Singer at a screening of the director's first feature, Public Access, which won the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance in 1993. Spacey liked the movie so much that he told Singer he wanted to be in whatever he made next. “I took that as an assignment,” Singer told Charlie Rose. “Because I worship this man as an actor.”
Al pacino turned down the role of dave kujan to play a cop in a different movie. That would be Heat, which famously paired him onscreen with Robert De Niro for the first time. Pacino didn’t want to play a cop twice in the same year, so he opted for the more prestigious, Michael Mann-directed project. Fenster’s unique dialect was all benicio Del Toro’s idea. As Del Toro explained it on Inside the Actors Studio, his character’s only real purpose in the story was to die. So to liven things up, Del Toro tried delivering Fenster’s lines the way the audience hears them in the film-very quickly, and with a thick, indiscernible accent. Nobody on the set could understand him. Singer later recalled, “At first I thought it was a joke, but I didn’t want to offend him if it wasn’t a joke.” Keep up the good work.
all amazing tidbits!
@@tarasneverseen Can I add one more tid to your bits. The two cops interrogating at the beginning are Writer Chris MacQuarrie and Director Bryan Singer.
21:46, I'm a big Star Trek fan. Within the shows and movies at Starfleet Academy there is a test that senior cadets must take called the "Kobayashi Maru". The test is a no win scenario that helps a cadet learn things about themselves that can help in their future careers as officers. Practically nothing the cadet can do will allow them to rescue the Kobayashi Maru and her crew and let the cadet's own ship survive.
I bring this up because the way Mr. Kobayashi is portrayed he is a living breathing no win scenario. Even if Keaton and the gang were to end him, his minions would still be able to reach out and hurt their families. Also they still wouldn't be able to get to Keyzer Souze. So they have no choice but to do as he says.
Good☝👍 eyes & ears fellow "Star Trek" fan.
Stop arguing with her Kevin! She's got it!
😂🤣😂🤣
She's a 🦚 Kevin! You gotta let her fly!!!
@@LordVolkov I say that ALL THE TIME!!
Kevin out here being all Agent Kujan.
Top 25 best endings in film. Treat to see your take on it
Also, another classic "Wtf is going on" type of movie like this, Inside Man. It's so good!!!!
Gabriel Byrne speaks in his natural "Dublin" accent throughout the entire movie as far as I can tell?
I'm (Dublin) Irish and I didn't notice him attempting an American accent at any stage?
Felt to us like it was coming and going
@@tarasneverseen You may be right, but I didn't notice it. To me he sounded the same as he did in the Coen brothers "Millers Crossing" speaking in his Dublin accent.
Anyhoo, enjoyed the reaction😉
Kevin Spacey Oscar winning Performance For Best Supporting actor 👍😎👌🍁
Another great one with Dan Hedaya is The Crew (2000), with Richard Dreyfuss and Burt Reynolds
I didn't recognize Gus from Breaking Bad either until watching this awhile back. Same thing with Zed from Pulp Fiction (complete with a gimp reference).
Speaking of Breaking Bad, I didn't recognize "Mike" in Beverly Hills Cop on a recent watch as well.
Mike has a line in Airplane too.
It was gasoline @ the raid on the NYPD taxi service. Kerosene does not ignite quickly like that.
Notice how Hockney is totally relaxed in the holding cell at the beginning? Kujan's theory is right: The guilty guy relaxes. And we find out Hockney stole the truck.
Whether Hockney stole the truck or not is irrelevant, Kujan’s theory is bullshit in my opinion.
Guilt and innocence are not very good determining factors in how a person is going to react to being arrested. You can have people who are completely innocent getting a good night sleep because they don’t have anything to hide, and you can have people who are guilty as hell panicking because they’ve been caught and are now trying to hide what they’ve done. But if you predicate your entire case solely on whether or not someone gets a good night sleep, you could be wrongfully trying to incriminate an innocent person, who might just be naturally calm in high stress situations, based on your own confirmation bias.
@@SFOlson IRL, Kujan's theory would fail mainly because, like Keaton mentions, you don't bring in a bunch of hardcases on speculation. They would all be icier than a normal person, and all would be expecting trouble for one reason or another. But we the audience have an inside view, and can see that Hockney is way chiller than the others.
Keaton is grimly annoyed. McManus is having fun. Fenster is agitated. And they already know Verbal isn't a real suspect, but are hoping to lean on him for information, possibly about what he hears right there in holding. But then there's Hockney, practically falling asleep.
But Kujan's theory would probably work against less cold-blooded people. A less serious criminal who has no clue why they're in a police station is angry and anxious. The guy who did it would be the odd man out in such company.
@@dudermcdudeface3674In real life, Kujan’s theory could get picked apart and used against him by a really good lawyer, and I’m saying this as someone who grew up around a lawyer. A good lawyer could get Kujan on the stand, get him on the defensive, and get him to have an outburst like he did at Verbal, and that would be where he, and his case predicated on whether or not someone was getting a good night sleep or not would start crumbling.
And it wouldn’t matter at that point if the person was actually guilty of something, if you could make him snap, in court, like he did with Verbal in private, and based on the character, I don’t think it would be too difficult, all credibility goes out the window, and the person basically walks free at that point.
@@SFOlson It's moot anyway because they had no probable cause for the sweep. But if they did, Kujan is just talking about where to begin probing, not how to assemble and wrap up hard facts already.
@@dudermcdudeface3674It’s a moot point anyway, it’s just a movie.
Great Reaction To One Of My All Time Favorite Movies, Sweetheart
Aparently the part in the line up where everyone was laughing so hard was that Benicio Del Toro kept on farting
Type in here, Kevin Pollock immitates Christopher Walken and Jason Statham!
Hi, gr8 episode. Reminded me of people attending the premiere in L.A.
Chazz in Oscar to see him be funny-dumb in a brilliant comedy….also Stallone, Marisa Tomei, Tim Curry.
@35:56 He’s showing that hand because he “has” Cerebral Palsy. That’s why he couldn’t operate the cigarette lighter. Also why they call him gimp and cripple. They establish it about twenty times to make sure the audience is good and lied to.
6th Sense is most undeserved hype ever.
Connie is one of the best parts of Oscar 🍗
@@LordVolkov Oscar is just a special movie. It has so many layers of entertainment. Comedy, writing, pacing, intrigue, costume, set, Stallone’s wife is alien-beautiful, Chazz and Tim are hilarious with just their faces and that jazz piano scene - I’ve tried to play all four hands of that. I could watch a Peter Riegert’s character and Connie movie or sitcom. A whole show based on that household would jave been great.
“Maybe we do you too one day. Make you looka very nice”
Sidetip: I really liked Peter Riegert in Cold Blooded with Jason Priestly. Ever heard of that indie lil flick ? Michael J Fox produced (and cameos) and I think after release he kept it from getting much exposure because it’s a little violent. Peter Riegert is interesting in that but you have to be in the right mood for that movie.
@@LordVolkov Omg I just noticed your emoji. Hand me that gat.
Thank you from The Netherlands Tara.
"Is it Friday already?"
This film has more twists than a pretzel factory. Alfred Hitchcock would have loved it.
You should check out my favorite movie.... "What's Up, Doc?" One of the funniest movies ever made. Film debut of Madeline Kahn.
Finally! Someone other than I who has seen & love that movie! Maybe Babs funniest movie.
"The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world he did not exist."
Fun Fact: The stolen emeralds were real gemstones, lent to the production.
Method Actor Fact: Kevin Spacey met with doctors and experts on cerebral palsy to discuss how it might affect his characterization.
Movie Props Fact: Kobayashi (Pete Postlewaite) Porcelain is not a real company. But places like Amazon sell products with that logo, including mugs.
What Script Fact: The line-up scene was scripted as a serious scene, but after a full day of filming takes where the actors couldn't keep a straight face, director Bryan Singer decided to use the funniest takes.
King Blabbermouth Fact: In an interview, Kevin Spacey revealed that Bryan Singer managed to convince every one of the major actors that they were Keyser Soze. When first screened for the company of actors, Gabriel Byrne was so stunned when he found that he wasn't Keyser Soze that he stormed off into the parking lot and argued with Singer for a half hour.
Slight Of Hand Fact: Pay close attention to the scenes during and leading up to the line-up at the beginning of the film. Verbal (Kevin Spacey) is either not shown or is shown in the background being completely silent during these scenes, hinting that he most likely wasn't actually present in this portion of the story. He is not shown getting arrested leading to the line-up. He is not shown getting interrogated by the police. He is not shown having the conversation with the rest of the men in the holding cell until he is abruptly introduced. The only part of these flashbacks where Verbal is seen the entire time is during the actual line-up scene, when he is asked to repeat the same line as the other criminals.
The perfect book end for this movie is Seven. It's kind of a counterpoint in most ways. But it shares several key features: the brilliance of the writing and the corollary total immersion of the viewer as the story unfolds, and there's
Seven is a GREAT movie!!
ludacrious speed! They've gone plaid!
LONESTAR!
Please ad glen Gary glen ross to your list
I shave all my dolls heads but swear ill getcha on the next 1
You hold the gun sideways because it came in the box that way.
The value of purple sticky punch goes far above just toking. With it's rapid rate of photosynthesis it can provide more oxygen for EVERYONE.
It makes a fine rope!
I have music question for you. Do the terms baritone and bass mean the same thing? Or is bass lower than baritone?
Kevin here - Basses are characterized by their deep and resonant voices ranging from E2 to E4 with some exceptions based on the subcategory. Baritones reach higher, usually extending from an A2 all the way up to an A4 or even higher
@@tarasneverseen do the numbers refer to octaves on the piano?
A Shocking Ending
Maybe time for a Very Bad Things rewatch? I think it's a wildly underrated dark comedy. Or perhaps the all girl remake - Rough Night with ScarJo and Zoe Kravitz (similar premise but way less dark)
Have you seen tank girl because i almost feel like its insulting recommending it to you because i would bet its your favorite
It’s on the list
@@ItsTaraAnn I think it's more perfect for you then any other reactor I've seen... rad as fuck
hello from The Netherlands, you look great, who is that guy?
27:13
U know it kinda seemed like u were getting mad😐pausejk
Awesome reaction/ can you please watch a movie called A RIVER RUNS THROUGH IT.
I’ve seen that one and love it!
@@ItsTaraAnn oh ok/ how about a movie called THE LAST OF THE DOGMEN.
@@christopherking4932 never heard of it but I’ll check with Kevin
@@ItsTaraAnn appreciate it/ I'm not sure if it a well known movie/ I accidentally found it one day and was pleasantly surprised how much I liked it.
Two movie suggestions. The Hard Way and Weird the al yankovic story.
I love "The Hard Way" !
James Woods gives a masterclass in barely-suppressed seething fury! 😂
I concur, the Hard Way is great.
We watched the Weird Al movie not too long ago
Great picks...do you think she's seen tank girl
Oh wait I thought walk hard
have you ever watched ocean's 8 before?
So she’s the only person I’ve ever seen guess the twist so early
My mom figured it out really fast. I asked her how she knew and she said he's the only one alive so it's got to be him
"You just figured it out." BRO... Confirming she got it right during the sequence it's all put together is a crime. You ruined that entire sequence and the best part of every reaction to this movie. Congrats.
@bored312 he ruined nothing… eat 3 dicks on your way out!