THE BIRDS (1963) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION

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  • Опубліковано 23 лис 2024

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  • @chrishackett554
    @chrishackett554 Рік тому +665

    Jay made a comment during the swarming attack at the school about CGI. There was no CGI back then, illustrators had to paint the extra birds into the scenes. Most scenes used real birds but to get the swarming flock effect they used the painted in special effects just like a cartoon, frame by frame.

    • @jacobskinner3522
      @jacobskinner3522 Рік тому +66

      Some shots were also composites, with bird footage laid over shots of the actors.

    • @GUNNER67akaKelt
      @GUNNER67akaKelt Рік тому +56

      Yep, this was way before CGI.

    • @frikiman
      @frikiman Рік тому +44

      CGI means Computer Generated Image. Before the existence of computers with enough power to create "realistic" images, all the special effects in movies were created with manual and/or visual tricks, puppets, maquettes, in the filming set. And postproduction techniques like the still used blue/green Screen, the mix of diferent filmations, or painting directly on the filmed negatives on by one. The first movie that includes a good and realistic CGI is Young Sherlock Holmes from 1985 in a great short scene, a very good aventure movie for you to react! Tron from 1982 also includes CGI but much more primitive. You are doing a great work guys!

    • @BouillaBased
      @BouillaBased Рік тому +38

      I always get a laugh when they talk about "CGI" or "graphics" in reviews for films from the days when all effects were either practical or they had to literally draw onto each frame of the film. It's a different era, having to either build a mechanical bird or bring in 3200 live birds, trained to do what you want them to do. And that includes bringing in trainers, wranglers, feeders and medics, as well as supervisors to ensure no harm came to them during production. It's a bygone era, when if you wanted it to be seen, you had to find a way to really put it there.

    • @JMulvy
      @JMulvy Рік тому +13

      Same way they handled a lot of the wide-set shots in the first Star Wars. Individual components were hand painted on glass. I love when art becomes painstakingly impossible.

  • @brandonhicks9926
    @brandonhicks9926 Рік тому +210

    The scene where Tippi Hedren is sitting on the bench and each subsequent shot reveals more and more birds is peak filmmaking. It raises tension in such a natural way

    • @johnw8578
      @johnw8578 Рік тому +12

      I love how HIGH ANXIETY mimics that scene in the park with Mel Brooks.

    • @rebo2610
      @rebo2610 Рік тому +16

      I think the repetitive children's song in that scene helps to create tension, too.

    • @MAGGOT_VOMIT
      @MAGGOT_VOMIT Рік тому +2

      I've tried to watch this movie at least three times over the last 40yrs. It's so slow and not really scary (mostly comical), I've fallen asleep every time. 😆 Ya want scary?? Have a movie with an invasion of Cassowaries or Shoebills. Now ya got my attention!! 😳😆

    • @chadwyckoff2229
      @chadwyckoff2229 Рік тому +4

      I totally agree. It still creeps me out to this day. Such a great scene.

    • @catherinelw9365
      @catherinelw9365 Рік тому +12

      @@MAGGOT_VOMIT It's a suspense film. Stick to Marvel comics.

  • @sarahmclellan8577
    @sarahmclellan8577 Рік тому +251

    Hitchcock was the master of SUSPENSE not horror. In interviews with him, he stated that if you were at a theater and he announced that there was a bomb beneath one of the seats but didn't know which one or when it would go off, the suspense would be created in your mind trying to figure out the details. THAT'S what made him a master of this genre of psychological thrillers. He didn't need to create the gore - your own mind would do that.

    • @macyjensen3390
      @macyjensen3390 Рік тому +15

      Exactly. This is how my mom explained Hitchcock to me. Leaving some things up to the imagination is the true horror. And it really is!😨

    • @TheTerryGene
      @TheTerryGene Рік тому +6

      Good explanation. You beat me to it.

    • @MAGGOT_VOMIT
      @MAGGOT_VOMIT Рік тому

      Ever since the early 70's, I and even my parents considered this Hitchcock classic, extremely slow-moving, exaggerated and one of the least scary products of his work. It always seemed more of a comedy to me, like the Freddy Kruger movies. I don't think I've heard the expression "Yeah, right!! 🙄" said so many times before I fell asleep, by my Dad and my brothers while watching any other movie growing up.
      Ya want scary?? Have a movie with an invasion of Cassowaries or Shoebills with a touch of JAWS music. Now ya got my attention!! 😳😆

    • @DaniJay-fk8qr
      @DaniJay-fk8qr Рік тому +4

      Horror *is* a form of suspense. In fact, I'd say there's a very find line between the two. There are some horror movies that are freakishly suspenseful, and there are some suspense movies that step over the line into horror. So, while most of Hitchcock's films are suspense, he definitely did some horror. This very movie, for example, is horror. Plain and simple.
      I think that, now days, the term "horror" makes people think of slasher movies and gore fests, and they seem downright insulted that Hitchcock is being associated with something so low brow. But, back in the day, horror and suspense were considered two sides of the same coin, often distinguished only by the fact that, in a horror story, the suspense was being caused by something mysterious and unknown, possibly even supernatural.
      In fact, a lot of writers and such that did mystery and suspense also did horror. Arthur Conan Doyle, for example.

    • @MusicalMiranda82
      @MusicalMiranda82 Рік тому +10

      One of my favorite quotes from him is, "There is no terror in the bang, only in the anticipation of it."

  • @todderickson2435
    @todderickson2435 Рік тому +88

    What you call "starting slow" is classic Hitchcock: laying the groundwork for the movie, developing characters you actually care about, and building suspense that has a fantastic payoff. The vast majority of suspense and horror movies of the past 30+ years do almost none of that. I greatly prefer this style of movie.

    • @Grnacrz3
      @Grnacrz3 10 місяців тому +6

      Yes, just as he did in Rebecca!

    • @deniseg812
      @deniseg812 6 місяців тому

      Yawn

  • @One_Proud_Papa
    @One_Proud_Papa Рік тому +39

    In case nobody mentioned, a group of crows is called a Murder.

  • @Dej24601
    @Dej24601 Рік тому +108

    Remember- Hitchcock was not about making “scary” films as they are today. He was all about suspense, and making the audience experience as much suspense as possible for what the characters in his films were going through. He was about setting up psychological mysteries and forcing the audience to figure out a lot of situations for themselves.This is definitely one of his more open-ended films, but they all left some questions unanswered or motivations unexplained.

    • @HuntingViolets
      @HuntingViolets Рік тому +3

      Yes, although I have seen at least one UA-cam reactor say this movie terrified him.

    • @vodoumyers
      @vodoumyers Рік тому +11

      He's the Master of Suspense for a reason

    • @threethymes
      @threethymes Рік тому +6

      The film is based on a short story by the British author Daphne du Maurier who also wrote "Rebecca" which Hitchcock filmed too. Hitchcock expanded the concept by a lot but it was her original idea.

  • @jeffmansfield914
    @jeffmansfield914 Рік тому +89

    I think part of the reason it was left unexplained is because it’s more unsettling to have no idea why this would happen. There’s also no predictable pattern of when they might attack. It leaves the audience in a weird suspicious place so when they leave the theater and walk outside… they see birds, and they look at them differently. Now, you see a flock of birds hanging out in a group and it gives you an uneasy feeling. You keep your eye on them.
    It is a cool way to bring the horror and suspense out of the theater and carry it with you. If the movie was about space aliens or crazy monsters, you wouldn’t have that feeling because you never actually see those… but birds are everywhere. 😳

    • @doratiscareno5856
      @doratiscareno5856 Рік тому

      THEY WANTED REVENGE AGAINST HUMANITY...FOR TAKING NATURE FOR GRANTED
      dont believe me
      Research it

    • @evilvolts
      @evilvolts Рік тому

      it left it open for The Birds II

    • @MacMc691
      @MacMc691 Рік тому +5

      I agree, it was left open for everyone to interpret their own version or vision of why it happened. I don't remember how old I was when I first saw this movie, had to be back in the 80's though. One time we were at the beach, this was some time in the 90's and like a fool, I decided to feed a couple of the seagulls some of the chips we had, major mistake... lol Next thing we saw were dozens of birds flying towards us, this movie quickly came to mind, I dropped the bag of chips and we bailed. lol Agree with everything you mentioned, it was left open for a reason.

    • @wfoster-graham6363
      @wfoster-graham6363 Рік тому

      Indeed.

  • @buckbuchanan4902
    @buckbuchanan4902 Рік тому +104

    In old monster movies, sometimes you could get 40 minutes or more into the movie without ever seeing the monster. Viewers were more sophisticated back then and appreciated a good build up, unlike now where everyone seems to have such short attention spans and needs to see the monster in the opening scenes.
    Movies used to be story driven, now they are action and special effects driven.
    This movie is an absolute masterpiece of suspense, which is what Alfred Hitchcock was all about. Not horror, but suspense!

    • @LMmccallL57
      @LMmccallL57 Рік тому +8

      Very well said!

    • @RobinT-treehugger
      @RobinT-treehugger Рік тому +7

      Amen.

    • @SurvivorBri
      @SurvivorBri Рік тому +8

      And when the monster is revealed, it hits you in the face. Hitchcock didn't hold back.

    • @Mcfly85A
      @Mcfly85A Рік тому +10

      I was going to say the same thing. Young viewers don't understand good filmmaking. They want all action and no story. They don't even want nor care to get to know the characters. It's sad really.

    • @julietfischer5056
      @julietfischer5056 Рік тому +8

      Movies have been playing 'Top this' for so long that modern audiences want the monster front and center. That's besides the texting and other distractions. "Less is more" gets lost in the attempt to make money in foreign markets and before pirated copies make the rounds.

  • @itsjuliescottyay
    @itsjuliescottyay Рік тому +95

    I always thought the reason that they got out without being attacked during the last scene was that they had the lovebirds in a cage. One of the birds screamed out “Back off guys…they have hostages!”

  • @MarkGunnells
    @MarkGunnells Рік тому +68

    The genius of this film is that it does start out like a romantic comedy which makes it even more unsettling when that all shifts.

    • @neutrino78x
      @neutrino78x 4 місяці тому +1

      like From Dusk Til Dawn, starts out as a kidnapping movie then turns into a vampire fighting movie 😲

  • @jfox9126
    @jfox9126 Рік тому +283

    Rear Window is a great one. It’s so charming, suspenseful, and visually pleasing. And the main actors Jimmy Stewart and Grace Kelly are great together - I hope you get to that one!

  • @ryanfeit1420
    @ryanfeit1420 Рік тому +127

    The actress who played the mother was Jessica Tandy. She starred in the 1985 hit "Cocoon" and "Fried Green Tomatoes" from 1991 which also starred Kathy Bates. (Tandy and Bates were terrific together in that film--highly recommended). Jessica Tandy won an Oscar for best lead actress for "Driving Miss Daisy" (1989) and became the oldest actress to ever win the award. For a truly scary and gross out film for you guys to watch I recommend watching "The Fly" with Jeff Goldblum. For sheer tension and fear I recommend watching the 1978 remake of "The Invasion Of The Body Snatchers" which stars Donald Sutherland and a young Jeff Goldblum. The unease from this movie will stay with you quite a while after watching it.

    • @paulmartin7332
      @paulmartin7332 Рік тому +9

      The Invasion Of The Body Snatchers from 1978 is a Great one to check out. Probably my top choice for creepiest, most effective, and well-made sci-f/horror films ever. So glad somebody finally suggested it.

    • @LAPhil13
      @LAPhil13 Рік тому +9

      And Body Snatchers also stars Veronica Cartwright (playing Jeff Goldblum's wife), the girl who played Cathy in this movie.

    • @rickryb4587
      @rickryb4587 Рік тому +7

      The original is far superior to the remake.

    • @melindamcquigg4629
      @melindamcquigg4629 Рік тому +5

      Yeah I suggested cocoon too great movie ❤

    • @user-ii4zf5iq3t
      @user-ii4zf5iq3t Рік тому +4

      ​@@paulmartin7332
      I'm still afraid of "the pods".

  • @shawneseignious2088
    @shawneseignious2088 Рік тому +54

    This was based on a true story of a bird attack in California in 1961. The reason was never discovered just like this movie. Daphne DuMaurier is one if my favorite authors and wrote one if my top 10 books, Rebecca.

    • @SilentSooYun
      @SilentSooYun Рік тому +18

      Actually, the same region experienced the same problem in 1991. Turns out that single celled algae will occasionally become toxic, then works its way up the food chain to the fish that the sea birds eat. None of the other animals are bothered by this toxin, but it has a devastating effect on birds. It causes disorientation, seizures and even death. The dead birds in 1961 weren't tested, but a lab had a sample of a small organism that fed on algae from 1961, so that specimen was tested. It was rife with the toxin.

    • @wheredidthetimego8087
      @wheredidthetimego8087 Рік тому +3

      @@SilentSooYunhmmm didn’t know that! Thanks!

    • @SteveSwags
      @SteveSwags Рік тому +5

      Wiki (yeah, I know) says the cause was toxic algae, but that wasn't known at the time.

  • @1buggiej
    @1buggiej Рік тому +4

    Back in 1971 my sister and I were leaving our high school for the day. There was a kid walking in front of us eating pop corn. As we crossed the football field birds started to attack him. He panicked and started to run. We yelled for him to drop the pop corn as we tried to chase the birds away. There were over a dozen. When he finally dropped the pop corn they left him alone and we all ran for the bus stop. We had all seen this movie as kids and we were sure shaken up.

  • @marcieconant5559
    @marcieconant5559 Рік тому +52

    The actress who plays the Mother was Jessica Tandy. You can also see her in "Driving Miss Daisy" and "Fried Green Tomatoes", both movies that I think you should do reaction videos for, Jay and Amber. 😇👍

  • @judywelch1044
    @judywelch1044 Рік тому +28

    Hitchcock movies are not horror movies, they are suspense movies.

  • @JMulvy
    @JMulvy Рік тому +50

    First of all the movie is based upon a short story by Daphne du Maurier so that is why it ends abruptly. Next, Hitchcock didn’t do Horror. He did Suspense. He was a master of building tension, letting your own fears get the best of you and popping the balloon when you least expected it. He was also a master story-teller and every detail of every shot was story-boarded. The shots of the wood chipping away was done over several times because it was not happening the way he had envisioned it. He was reported to have been one of the most frustrating people to work with and his movies show you why. This gets categorized as horror because when it came out it completely pushed the envelope for theater-goers. For example: the scene of the guy in pajamas was extremely controversial at the time.

  • @JL-kd6pi
    @JL-kd6pi Рік тому +48

    This story is about relationships and the birds are symbols of emotional upheaval. Annie was still in love with Mitch and was jealous of Melanie. The mother was weak and fearful and jealous of both Annie and Melanie. The woman with children in the restaurant saw Melanie as an irresponsible playgirl. In the end, the birds are calm when the mother nurses Melanie as they leave for the city.

  • @roger3141
    @roger3141 Рік тому +20

    Hitchcock is the master of suspense. There are scary moments but his power was to slowly increase the tension and then let your mind fill in the horror.

  • @randybass8842
    @randybass8842 Рік тому +35

    Hitchcock wrote a final scene, and even did the storyboards, where they're driving through the town and the birds attack again, pecking at the convertible top, and just as it is totally destroyed, they reach the edge of town and Mitch is able to step on the gas and speed away. But Hitchcock thought that would detract from the climactic scene, which was the attack on the house and Melanie in the upstairs bedroom, so he left it out. He also wanted to leave it unexplained as to WHY th birds were attacking. You can think it was because of the two lovebirds, but then wouldn't the other birds have attacked and broken the cage to set them free when Cathy brought them outside? As the studio had Hitchcock add an explanatory scene with the psychologist in Psycho, I think he wanted to do it his way in this movie and leave you guessing even more than you would have in Psycho.

    • @MsAppassionata
      @MsAppassionata Рік тому +11

      I read that Hitchcock wanted to end the film by having them drive all the way to San Francisco trying to escape, only to find the Golden Gate Bridge covered in birds. The studio rejected that idea, thinking that it was too pessimistic.

  • @robertburke5354
    @robertburke5354 Рік тому +68

    Hitchcock is the master of suspense, rather than horror. The deliberate lack of explanation leaves the audience wondering forever. Genius!

  • @danielflynn9141
    @danielflynn9141 Рік тому +254

    Hitchcock wanted to portray nature striking back at man, and he selected birds as nature's weapon because they have historically been shot at, stuffed, eaten, and put in cages. He was also pursuing highly inventive photographic techniques like rotoscoping, and the use of big wide shots like the birds descending from the sky during that scene of chaos, which some called a "bird's eye view" and he corrected as "God's view." In addition to using live birds, he also used stuffed birds, animatronic birds, and animated birds. For the climactic scene in the attic, he physically threw live birds at Tippi Hedren until she physically broke down. Hitchcock was the master of suspense, and he liked bringing chaos, murder, and suspense to quiet and idyllic American towns, especially places where they don't lock their doors and everybody knows their neighbors business. Ultimately, the reason for the birds attack is unknown, and NOT KNOWING is chilling, because it might not be our place or within our comprehension to know. After all, what often gets us into a scrap with nature is our arrogant view of humanity being above nature or able to tame nature. What's most terrifying to me about this film is that the birds could have killed all of them, but they chose to WAIT. Whatever for?

    • @ptthunder
      @ptthunder Рік тому +8

      Wrong. This was a movie adapted from a best selling short story, picked by the studio head and given to Hitchcock to direct.

    • @edlilli
      @edlilli Рік тому +6

      I think her name is Daphne Du Maurier. @@ptthunder

    • @rhwinner
      @rhwinner Рік тому +2

      Birds were in Psycho also - the stuffed ones in Norman's office.

    • @rhwinner
      @rhwinner Рік тому +14

      Modern films feel they have to explain everything. Hitch knew not knowing was much more chilling.

    • @audraross3012
      @audraross3012 Рік тому

      ​@@edlilliyes, and she hated the movie. 😅 The story is very good and different characters than this movie.

  • @melissabrooke1146
    @melissabrooke1146 Рік тому +87

    Alfred Hitchcock was the master of suspense. Every inch of a film by him was meticulously detailed by plan. One of my favorites by him is Shadow of a Doubt and of course Rear Window and so many more.

    • @Muckylittleme
      @Muckylittleme Рік тому +9

      I'd prefer Jay didn't react to old movies, he has no appreciation of the times or the craft employed.

    • @ronfoskey2417
      @ronfoskey2417 Рік тому +3

      Absolutely He planned movies like a comic magazine, essentially frame by frame.

  • @skbirds
    @skbirds Рік тому +21

    If you want to know why the birds attacked, you’ll have to ask the birds. When I saw this as a kid, I figured out a room in my house that would be the safest if the birds attacked 😂 (it was a big closet)

  • @Broomrider1492
    @Broomrider1492 Рік тому +50

    I was nine years old when this came to the theatres in 1963 and I saw it. One of my favorite Hitchcock films. My friend and I sat in the first few front rows. Scared us to death, but loved every minute of it. This is back when you could see a double feature for 25 cents.

    • @timfenton7469
      @timfenton7469 Рік тому +4

      I was the same age in ‘63 and had the same experience.

    • @patriciamillin-j3s
      @patriciamillin-j3s Рік тому +3

      I was also the same age when this movie came out. I can still watch it today and still love it.

    • @tehsma
      @tehsma Рік тому +2

      that's so cool!!!! What a film!

    • @threethymes
      @threethymes Рік тому +3

      I saw this film when I was young too and it terrified me. Every house I was in I would scan it to see if it could be defended against birds. Like an inner room you could hide in... such as a pantry or under the stairs.

    • @frankdenardo8684
      @frankdenardo8684 Рік тому +3

      Saw it on Creature Features on KTVU back in the day. Filmed in Bodega Bay in Sonoma County California by Sir Alfred Hitchcock.

  • @jsapcakrrow
    @jsapcakrrow Рік тому +85

    This has always been my favorite Hitchcock movie since I was a kid. Birds don’t bother me BUT if I see a large gathering of birds my mind automatically goes back to the playground scene with all the birds covering the monkey bars.

    • @garyhiggins5823
      @garyhiggins5823 Рік тому +1

      Me too, along with that song popping into my brain. Blippity Bloppity tickity tockety sprickity sprockety now now now....😂

    • @ckobo84
      @ckobo84 Рік тому

      Fun fact about birds: boys don't have a penis, and girls don't have a vagina.

    • @conureron3792
      @conureron3792 Рік тому +2

      It’s amazing how that scene plays in our minds decades after first seeing it.

  • @citydweller99
    @citydweller99 Рік тому +22

    I always wonder how a movie like 'The Birds' plays to people 30 and younger because there is a lot of build up and character development before the terror starts.. and the ending is so unsettling because there is no resolution.

    • @Progger11
      @Progger11 Рік тому +5

      I'm in my early 30s and grew up with this movie. I think it depends more on what types of movies you're exposed to early on.

  • @LAPhil13
    @LAPhil13 Рік тому +77

    Cathy was played by Veronica Cartwright, who grew up to appear in some iconic movies in supporting roles, notably Alien, The Witches of Eastwick, and the 1978 version of The Invasion of the Body Snatchers. Check 'em out.

    • @ABoomerReacts
      @ABoomerReacts Рік тому +10

      And her sister is Angela Cartwright famous for The Danny Thomas Show and Lost in Space.

    • @NikkieTwix
      @NikkieTwix Рік тому +7

      Holy crap I never realised that’s her ! Now I see it

    • @julietfischer5056
      @julietfischer5056 Рік тому +3

      The Children's Hour.

    • @ashleyfrost8906
      @ashleyfrost8906 Рік тому +3

      Check them all out! Also, she played Jack’s mother on Will & Grace.

    • @timberwolf5211
      @timberwolf5211 Рік тому +2

      ​@ABoomerReacts you forgot the Sound of Music. 😊

  • @Robbyrool
    @Robbyrool 10 місяців тому +4

    The Birds was partly inspired by the true events of a mass bird attack on the seaside town of Capitola in California on August 18, 1961, when "Capitola residents awoke to a scene that seemed straight out of a horror movie. Hordes of seabirds were dive-bombing their homes, crashing into cars and spewing half-digested anchovies onto lawns". The cause of the birds' behavior was toxic algae.

  • @genicemilliner7667
    @genicemilliner7667 Рік тому +11

    This movie totally freaked me out the first time I saw it. It still freaks me out. Then I read some of the horror stories that Tippi Hedren went through during filming...hell no!

  • @harley2704
    @harley2704 Рік тому +27

    Hitchcock wanted you think about the movie long after it was over. Not explaining why the birds attacked is a good way to do that. Because sometimes nature happens. The Birds is not intended to be a horror movie like a slasher movie. Its a Man vs. Nature tale. It’s that slow creep up the spine . A classic thriller from the master of suspense.

    • @scottfield5849
      @scottfield5849 Рік тому +1

      That's what makes it so good. "What's up with the birds?" - we don't know, and so can't really prevent or predict it. And that could happen to YOU too - who's to say? Brilliant. 😉👍

  • @sabrinapittsley2304
    @sabrinapittsley2304 Рік тому +28

    The leading lady is the mother of Melanie Griffith and grandmother of Dakota Johnson. Another great Hitchcock movie that Tippi Hedren is in is called MARNIE. It’s a very good movie as well. The leading man in that movie is Sean Connery.

  • @OneArmedRetroGamer
    @OneArmedRetroGamer Рік тому +70

    I like that they didn't force the birds to start attacking for any particular reason and then stopped just as soon. Not everything has to ve spoon-fed

    • @davidwoolbright3675
      @davidwoolbright3675 Рік тому +11

      The fact is…if it really happened there would likely be no reason we could figure out why!

    • @zedwpd
      @zedwpd Рік тому

      well it did happen in California in 1961 and they did have a reason. @@davidwoolbright3675

    • @SwiftFoxProductions
      @SwiftFoxProductions Рік тому +5

      @@davidwoolbright3675 Exactly. It's, honestly, much more realistic than any explanation they could give and the not knowing is what makes it scarier. It turns the birds into a singular force of nature. And by the end of the movie, they are the ones in control, not humans. In the end, they win.

    • @scoobysnacks
      @scoobysnacks Рік тому +4

      @@davidwoolbright3675 They'd immediately tell us it's the result of climate change and will need to send another $4 billion to Ukraine. That has to be the costliest war the US was never in.

    • @rickryb4587
      @rickryb4587 Рік тому +5

      Not the place

  • @Whitebrowpriest
    @Whitebrowpriest Рік тому +14

    Another truly great, classic 60s film is, "Whatever Happened To Baby Jane?" (1962), starring cinema legends, "Bette Davis and Joan Crawford".

    • @ACD1994
      @ACD1994 8 місяців тому +1

      Fantastic movie.

    • @deb4578
      @deb4578 4 місяці тому +1

      One of my faves.

  • @TVerc-
    @TVerc- 2 місяці тому +3

    "They're worse than Walmart birds" 😂

  • @MaxLeGrand33
    @MaxLeGrand33 Рік тому +68

    Really glad you guys watched this masterpiece of suspense/horror. Have you noticed that there is absolutely no music the whole time?

    • @beatleschick1000
      @beatleschick1000 Рік тому +3

      Except for the now, now, now song lol 😂

    • @brinsonopinion
      @brinsonopinion Рік тому +2

      that ain't music LOLOL @@beatleschick1000

    • @glowormrdr6183
      @glowormrdr6183 Рік тому

      That doggone song, it lasts forever! @@beatleschick1000

    • @stephaniem6482
      @stephaniem6482 Рік тому

      I've watched this movie like 10 times and never noticed that!

  • @bobcarn
    @bobcarn Рік тому +75

    This movie is not a scary movie like other moderns, it's a classic horror film. It does not rely on jump scares, instead it lets the acts speak for themselves. We don't know why this is happening, there isn't a handy explanation that conveniently makes itself known. We know no more than the characters to whom this is all happening. There aren't musical queues to artificially manipulate your emotions. It's nature striking back at man in its purest form. This is a movie that I never get tired of watching. All of the actors are impeccable in their roles, and every scene is flawless. Hitchock, as disgusting as he was toward Tippi, knew how to make a great horror movie.

    • @greymomma
      @greymomma Рік тому +6

      Unfortunately, today people are so used to being shown and told every detail of the storyline of a film that they've begun to depend on that almost to the point that they can't enjoy a movie without it. Hitchock spoke once about the difference between a momentary scare and extended suspense. It reminds me of the original movie The Fly where throughout the movie, until the very end, we never saw the face. We were made to build in our own minds what the character might look like. How horrible he'd become. In the newer film with Goldblum, they show his transformation throughout the movie which to me doesn't create the same feeling of horror and suspense. The end of the original movie in the garden, you're brought to the point where you feel like yelling at Francois to turn around so he can see Andre' the fly trapped in the web screaming, "Help me!". We hear him screaming but Francois doesn't and the audience naturally feels like calling out to Francois to save him. Again the suspense. Rather than the newer version where, after fighting Goldblum, Geena Davis shoots him. I love these movies much more. When we as the viewers, are allowed to add our own bits and pieces to the story, sometimes we make up in our minds even more frightening stories than the writers might. Why are these birds doing this? What does he look like under the hood?

    • @timcardona9962
      @timcardona9962 Рік тому +2

      Well said. Some folks think that Horror is supposed to be non-stop gore and jump scares when in fact that is the opposite of good Horror. The tension created in this movie is smply second to none and way scarier than any spoon fed CGI Marvel crap that new franchises are full

    • @kbrewski1
      @kbrewski1 Рік тому +1

      I don't think its a "horror" movie, and Hitchcock himself said he did NOT make horror films. This is a SUSPENSE/MYSTERY movie. Hitch was the Master of SUSPENSE, not Horror.

    • @timcardona9962
      @timcardona9962 Рік тому

      @@kbrewski1 It is very obviously Hitchcock's take on a "Monster Movie" Yes he does it with his own twist. but make no mistake: a movie about Birds monstrously and violently attacking people is a Horror movie no matter how you spin it

    • @kbrewski1
      @kbrewski1 Рік тому

      @timcardona9962
      I'll go by Hitchcock's own words rather than your off base speculative musings. Again, Hitchcock was known as the Master of SUSPENSE and NEVER called the Master of Horror.

  • @patrickdowdle5121
    @patrickdowdle5121 Рік тому +49

    When i first saw this film , i started looking at birds as something more, than just our cute feathered friends . Rod Taylor was brilliant in this and in my opinion , he was Australia's greatest ever actor . You have to watch The Time Machine, Rod Taylor is brilliant as H G Wells

    • @DeanStrickson
      @DeanStrickson Рік тому +3

      Yes! Especially to reacting to The Time Machine. That’s one not too many are reacting too, sadly.

    • @AndrewJens
      @AndrewJens Рік тому +1

      Both Taylor and James Garner were excellent in the 1964 film _36 Hours._

    • @jujubegold
      @jujubegold Рік тому +4

      @@AndrewJensactually James Garner and Rod Taylor give me the same vibes. A man’s man. Honorable and very alpha.

    • @kylehopkins1180
      @kylehopkins1180 Рік тому +3

      Rod’s last movie was Inglorious Bastards.

    • @kylehopkins1180
      @kylehopkins1180 Рік тому +5

      If they skipped the beginning we wouldn’t have a vested interest in the people.

  • @JTMason001
    @JTMason001 Рік тому +18

    I’m so glad you watched this! I’m sure someone mentioned this but if not - the daughter is Veronica Cartwright who played Lambert in “ALIEN”! This movie has a build up for sure. Your faces when the birds came out of the chimney had me crying! 😂

    • @tsblonde510
      @tsblonde510 Рік тому +7

      She was also in the 1978 version of Invasion of The Body Snatchers

    • @paulaholte6735
      @paulaholte6735 Рік тому +1

      @@tsblonde510 and in the Sound of Music

    • @infonut
      @infonut Рік тому +2

      @@paulaholte6735 ... That was her sister, Angela.

    • @paulaholte6735
      @paulaholte6735 Рік тому

      @@infonut oops ... you're right :-P my bad

  • @that1dragonkid
    @that1dragonkid Рік тому +10

    Another thriller by Alfred Hitchcock is Rear Window. Jimmy Stewart and Grace Kelly made such a good pairing. And Raymond Burr waa just amazing! I can watch that movie everyday for the rest of my life and never get tired of it.

  • @nellgwenn
    @nellgwenn Рік тому +27

    There was an incident that happened in California where sea birds that ate toxic algae started attacking people, houses, and cars, and puking all over. Hitchcock read an article about it and it became an inspiration for the movie along with a 1952 short story with the same name, written by Daphne du Maurier.
    The majority of the birds used were real. However $200,000.00 was spent on mechanical birds. The special effects were created at Walt Disney studios by Ub Iwerks.

  • @gkiferonhs
    @gkiferonhs Рік тому +27

    Hitchcock is the master of suspense. You won't see any gore or blood he'll just keep you on the edge of your seat by what's in your own brain. And you'll think about it every time you see a lot of birds on a power line.....

  • @deborahlewis656
    @deborahlewis656 Рік тому +56

    The masterpiece of Hitchcock was his psychological magic instead in your face bloody, dumb slasher films....it's more use your own thoughts, and the " what if birds; all billions talked, and flocked together, we'd be done for"😊He's the best at letting each person interpret their own dialog, and storytelling at its best😊think about crows, buzzards, gulls just to name a few, if they stayed together instead of migrating separately...we'd be done for( they love soft tissue like eyes)😅

  • @Whitebrowpriest
    @Whitebrowpriest Рік тому +4

    "Imitation of Life" (1959). Starring Lana Turner, Juanita Moore, and Susan Kohner.

  • @jamesdrynan
    @jamesdrynan Рік тому +2

    The schoolyard scene is classic Hitchcock. The children chanting, the tension building as more birds settle on the jungle gym. I also found the mother's run down the hall after discovering the body extremely provocative.

  • @facts2741
    @facts2741 Рік тому +65

    Hitchcock didn't go for cheap jump scare garbage that is what most 90-minute horror films have become. Please don't ever judge his work off of the crap that goes for thrillers/horror today. Hitchcock was a genius and each of his films is meant to transport viewers to a world that is both familiar and unfamiliar simultaneously. Every frame can be frozen into a portrait that looks like a piece of art. There's always a mood that he's going for and he can paint it just as easily with words of dialogue as he can with unique set designs. It all works together in each of his films to create something new and fresh and wholly unique in each one. If you watch any other film of his, you'll start to see the common vocabulary in audio and visual storytelling. Its his and nobody else will ever be Hitchcock.

    • @sugarspice1689
      @sugarspice1689 Рік тому +5

      Thank you that’s what they’re used to seeing bloody gore as soon as the movie started they even used mechanical birds so far ahead of its time

    • @Fool3SufferingFools
      @Fool3SufferingFools Рік тому +6

      Yeah, the idea isn’t the immediate jump scare but giving you something to remember in the long term and make the real world a little scarier. Lots of people (including my parents) were nervous about taking a shower after seeing Psycho, and I suppose some people probably got uneasy around birds after seeing this one.

  • @susanbaker2240
    @susanbaker2240 Рік тому +18

    Alfred Hitchcock movies are more suspenseful than scary. That is what makes them so good and why they are all classics.

  • @kenpaden
    @kenpaden Рік тому +39

    Jessica Tandy is the actress who plays the Mother, she has two films I would love for you to react to, both are in my top 10 of all time favorite films, first DRIVING MISS DAISY, co starring Morgan Freeman, she won an Oscar for her performance, the movie has two scenes that get me misty eyed every time and are deeply deeply touching, the movie is mainly about a developing friendship between an older woman and her driver, Dan Aykroyd has a supporting role. The next movie, is FRIED GREEN TOMATOES , a deeply touching movie about friendship , Kathy Bates co stars with Jessica.along with Mary Stuart Masterson and Mary Louise Parker For your next Hitchcock film, I suggest REAR WINDOW, its a murder, thriller, mystery type film co starring two screen legends, Jimmy Stewart and the stunning Grace Kelly, you have not seen glamour until you have seen Grace Kelly!!!

  • @lisaprince6996
    @lisaprince6996 Рік тому +4

    I loved seeing Suzanne Pleshette! She was such a beautiful lady and dearly loved!

  • @clg0003
    @clg0003 Рік тому +4

    "Walmart parking lot birds"...you're probably thinking of Grackles

    • @ktcarl
      @ktcarl 6 місяців тому

      Those birds aren't scary. They only attack left over french fries in the parking lot.

  • @michaelcoffey1991
    @michaelcoffey1991 Рік тому +19

    One of the many things I love about any Hitchcock film is the amazing vista's no shot is wasted, all dialog matters, and the tension just mounts and mounts and mounts.

  • @michellemccall6511
    @michellemccall6511 Рік тому +12

    Jessica Tandy played the mother. She's in Driving Miss Daisy with Morgan Freeman. You will love that movie!❤

  • @jeannoah2018
    @jeannoah2018 Рік тому +30

    My favorite scene in the whole movie is the 2 lovebirds swaying with the turns of the car. That always makes me laugh!

    • @CoopyKat
      @CoopyKat Рік тому +3

      @jeannoah2018 I saw this movie in a theatre long after this movie originally came out, in the 80s. The audience in the theatre laughed so hard at the two birds swaying with the car!

  • @CoopyKat
    @CoopyKat Рік тому +4

    The fact that it doesn't explain why the birds attacked and didn't have a perfect happy ending with the birds being wiped out (something that is so over-done in movies now) makes this movie very suspenseful and mysterious. It was a classic ending. It's what is now as a dark ending, which is actually very cool.

  • @Christy_Abner
    @Christy_Abner Рік тому +3

    I seen a documentary about Tippi Headren. It said that Hitchcock made advances on her and she refused. So the scene where she’s in the attack with the birds attacking her, he made her repeat over and over. She actually did get hurt by some of the real birds they used.

  • @RMBittner
    @RMBittner Рік тому +15

    I think the fact that the attacks are never explained makes them more unsettling. And no, I don’t think they were spurred on by the lovebirds, Melanie’s arrival, or any other event. They just decided to attack.

  • @TSIRKLAND
    @TSIRKLAND Рік тому +19

    44:22 - when they rescue her from the attic, and she comes to on the couch, and the camera is directly above her, her eyes open, and looks straight down the barrel of the camera: full eye contact with us, the audience, with wide-eyed panic, hands flailing: that bit gets ME every time. The visceral response to human panic, right there. Hitchcock knew what he was doing!

  • @susanliltz3875
    @susanliltz3875 Рік тому +12

    More Hitchcock please!!
    1. Rear Window
    2. North By Northwest
    3. To Catch A Thief
    4.Dial M For Murder
    5. The Man Who Knew
    Too Much (Jimmy Stewart and Doris Day you’ve reacted to her as a singer , now see her as an actress!)

    • @michaelstach5744
      @michaelstach5744 Рік тому

      Rebecca and Strangers on a train

    • @ChrisW-17
      @ChrisW-17 Рік тому +1

      And Hitch's other masterpiece, Vertigo!

    • @johnw8578
      @johnw8578 Рік тому

      The Trouble with Harry!

  • @trimmoos
    @trimmoos Рік тому +2

    The ultimate cliffhanger... 60 years and counting.

  • @maryrichardson1318
    @maryrichardson1318 Рік тому +6

    One of my best Halloween costumes was when I went to a party as Melanie Daniels. I had the cute sixties suit, the French twist hairdo, fake birds attached all over me, and lots of blood everywhere. It was amazing.

    • @ca8944
      @ca8944 Рік тому

      That’s really original!
      Did anybody get it?

  • @donny1960
    @donny1960 Рік тому +36

    The writer of this book was a genius. 70 years later and we still are talking about what this all means. The Human imagination is infinite. There have been 100's of theories as to why the "Birds" acted this way. And there will be 100's more. Again, the Author let us finish the story in our minds and through our conversations. A very effective way to keep the book and movie alive through the generations. Thanks for your reaction.

    • @RMBittner
      @RMBittner Рік тому +3

      Just to clarify: This was based on a short story, not a novel, and it really just provided inspiration for Hitchcock’s story. There are few similarities between the two, apart from inexplicable bird attacks. DuMaurier’s story, by the way, was said to have been based on a real event.

    • @Cau_No
      @Cau_No Рік тому +4

      The best theory about what happened is that the birds got something in their food chain that made them aggressive, something like toxic algae.
      But this movie started a trend of 'nature attack' movies like "Kingdom of the Spiders" with William Shatner, or "Phase IV" directed by Saul Bass, who also made the titles for some of Hitchcock's movies.

    • @donny1960
      @donny1960 Рік тому +1

      @@Cau_No I heard the "Best" theory was that Mitch's Mother had an influence over nature that she did not consciously know. Was it just coincidence that the women in Mitches life seemed to bear the brunt of the attacks? As I said in a comment here. The Author let us finish the story. And there are a lot of "us"... ha ha

    • @xzonia1
      @xzonia1 Рік тому

      @@RMBittner Oh drats, I think I said it's based on a book in my comment too, but yes, it was a short story. :P Lol

    • @xzonia1
      @xzonia1 Рік тому

      @@Cau_No I loved Kingdom of the Spiders! Shatner made that movie for me. X) Ants! was another great nature attacks movie from 1977; definitely made your skin crawl! Lol

  • @lydianunez2522
    @lydianunez2522 Рік тому +28

    One of my favorite movies. Went to Bodega Bay. Toured the area. Visited the school. The restaurant, there is a little country store that plays the movie all day and has so much memorabilia. I loved that town. This is a suspenseful movie. The unknown is what scares you.

    • @malalaz66
      @malalaz66 Рік тому +6

      They have the phone booth there too. Plus tons of signs that say….
      Got…..Birds?

    • @rosyellis14
      @rosyellis14 Рік тому +5

      LOVE bodega bay, i go there every year!

    • @coolcpa3321
      @coolcpa3321 Рік тому +2

      My parents had a beach house in Bodega Bay and we'd spend summers and several holidays there each year. I started going in the early 1970s, so the town looked very much as it does in the film. My parents have since passed away and we sold the beach house, but it was such a wonderful experience and I still visit often. The lore around The Birds is still prevalent among the locals in BB.

    • @ca8944
      @ca8944 Рік тому

      I used to live in the Bay Area and I always wanted to take that drive and I’m mad at myself for never doing it

  • @channelthree9424
    @channelthree9424 Рік тому +16

    Actress Tippi Hedren, who plays Melanie, is Melanie Griffith’s mother.
    The scene where Melanie is upstairs being attacked by birds left Tippi Hedren traumatized. Some of those birds were literally tied to her. Alfred Hitchcock may have traumatized some of the other actresses in his movies but he never cared. He just wanted a scene.

  • @glitterfox6840
    @glitterfox6840 Рік тому +7

    Now you've watched The Birds you really have to watch 'The Crow' a gothic love story based on a comic book. Sadly Brandon Lee was shot dead during the filming but it truly is an epic movie and very suitable for Halloween 🎃

  • @jaymanuel3396
    @jaymanuel3396 Рік тому +5

    The sound effects during the opening credits is insane, it sets the tone for the rest of the movie.
    Great reaction! ❤❤

  • @NikkieTwix
    @NikkieTwix Рік тому +7

    That scene with the eyeballs hanging out traumatised me when I was a kid 🤣

    • @beatleschick1000
      @beatleschick1000 Рік тому

      Me too. I watched it at home on our black-and-white TV. I was probably between 10 and 11. It came on the late show and I had a TV in my room. I snuck and watched it. It was days before I could tell my mom why I couldn’t sleep and was afraid. I wasn’t supposed to watch it. 😂The guy with his eyes pecked out was one of my nightmares

  • @Gort-Marvin0Martian
    @Gort-Marvin0Martian Рік тому +15

    A lot of Hitchcock films end that way. You're supposed to decide the why of the birds. You must see, North By Northwest. OMG it is amazing. It's disturbing on a totally different level.
    Great reaction as always.
    As we say in Texas; y'all be safe.

    • @fleason771
      @fleason771 Рік тому +3

      North By Northwest is a masterpiece 🥰 One of my all time favourite films of all time along with The Birds & Rear Window. God I miss my days as a film studies student 😢

  • @pamelaesparza1586
    @pamelaesparza1586 Рік тому +23

    So glad you are watching older psychological thrillers ❤️ you might want to check out Whatever happened to Baby Jane. So so good ❤️

    • @alicecoulter8103
      @alicecoulter8103 Рік тому +3

      Oh yes! That is a fantastic film! One of my favorites. The fact that the real-life Joan Crawford and Bette Davis feud made for perfect casting was entertaining.

    • @elviscool9822
      @elviscool9822 7 місяців тому +1

      Baby jane I have dvd better davis is so funny scary at the same time but tht scene wer she kicks Joan to deaf is unessasarily

  • @AEnimikeFeeb
    @AEnimikeFeeb Рік тому +2

    his face when that first seagull attacked the woman was priceless. super serious super fast lol.

  • @racing2cat
    @racing2cat Рік тому +10

    I think if I'd been on set during the filming of this movie, I'd have been traumatized and forever terrified of birds! When I saw that you two were reacting to this one, all I could think is "Poor Jay!"🙂❤
    Edited to add: This was also loosely based on a real story of bird attacks in a CA town!

  • @davidbarnes1113
    @davidbarnes1113 Рік тому +25

    I remember watching that as a kid with my mom when it came on TV. That school yard scene when all the kids and teachers were slowly walking past all the crows. Omg I was terrified 😂. Another classic y’all should do is “The Bad Seed”.

    • @frauleinmona
      @frauleinmona Рік тому +8

      Ohhh! "The Bad Seed"! Excellent movie!! Patty McCormack was brilliant!

    • @rddav1
      @rddav1 Рік тому

      The scene that traumatized me, as a kid, is when Mitch's mother discovered Dan's body, with his eyes pecked out! Really messed me up!

    • @Progger11
      @Progger11 Рік тому +1

      "Gimme those shoes!"

    • @frauleinmona
      @frauleinmona Рік тому

      @@Progger11 "What will you give me for a basket of kisses?" 😂

  • @sclarkehamlin
    @sclarkehamlin Рік тому +18

    In college, my husband went to a dorm Halloween party, and his date dressed up as Melanie Daniels. She sewed craft-store birds to a suit she found at a thrift store. He still talks about that costume 40 years later - not the girl, just the costume. Next, you have to react to "Rebecca," Hitchcock's first film after he moved from England to America in the late 1930s. Great twist.

    • @amyslingsby6947
      @amyslingsby6947 Рік тому +1

      My sister made a costume of Melanie too. Green suit and fake birds in her hair.

    • @charlessheifer2264
      @charlessheifer2264 Рік тому

      Why bother with "Rebecca". Jay won't like it because it is black & white and has a storyline to follow.

  • @pastorofmuppets13
    @pastorofmuppets13 Рік тому +51

    So happy you are doing another Hitchcock film! EDIT - This will not conquer Jay's fear of birds. It will turn it into a man-eating monster of a phobia just like the rest of us after watching it the first time! (Sorry Jay!)

    • @xzonia1
      @xzonia1 Рік тому +3

      Yeah, this movie was so intense back in the day! Maybe it's time for a remake so Jay and other modern viewers aren't taken out of the story by the lack luster special effects. X)

    • @pastorofmuppets13
      @pastorofmuppets13 Рік тому +4

      @@xzonia1 I think it is really easy to miss the point that nature (in this case birds) can come in a f the world up anytime it wants to. People fear politicians and wars, but just imagine if birds or insects or dogs just rose up and decided to take over, we are done. That is what terrified me about this movie - I had an existential crisis at about age 10 lol.

    • @xzonia1
      @xzonia1 Рік тому +1

      @@pastorofmuppets13Agreed. I loved all the nature attacks horror movies of the 60's - 80's for that reason ... bringing awareness to the world! ;)

  • @dougdoesall
    @dougdoesall 11 місяців тому +2

    The children singing before the school attack was irony. Innocent song while evil gathers.

  • @barbaracollins385
    @barbaracollins385 Рік тому +1

    Man up Jay! First thing I do in the mornings is get that first cup of coffee and go on my back porch. The birds start singing at precisely 7:10 each morning. Maybe there is a difference between city birds and country birds. Mine are usually red or blue birds. They don't attack they just sing their hearts out.

  • @jerrykessler2478
    @jerrykessler2478 Рік тому +15

    You can visit the place where this was filmed. It's Bodega Bay on the California coast north of San Francisco. The crows landing on the playset was a classic move from Hitchcock. He would show the audience the peril while keeping the character oblivious to the danger to heighten the tension.

    • @cindyhurzeler3885
      @cindyhurzeler3885 Рік тому +2

      I went to the school last year. It's a private home now. There's a big plaque out front. Lots of trees are there now. Bodega Bay is lovely.

  • @markhernandez6111
    @markhernandez6111 Рік тому +68

    Ok, so I have been suggesting this forever. Jay's reaction did not disappoint. His whole demeanor was one of defense. As many have already stated Hitchcock was all about suspense. Your reaction is very much like most people. The suspense builds, the horror builds, and then you never get a resolution. Why did this happen? When my family watched this, back in the day, we asked the same questions. How did it start? Were the love birds carriers of some kind? And biggest of all, is that how it ends???
    Hitchcock was a genius. Check out Rope, Rear Window, Frenzy, and his one genuine comedy, The Trouble with Harry. You will not be disappointed.
    If not mentioned before, the scene where Melanie entered the room and got attacked by the birds, totally freaked out the actress, Tippy Hedron. She had to be sedated after, and the scene where Mitch carries her down the stairs, is not Hedron. She was not able to shoot it. A whole day of Hitchcock throwing birds in her face for the bedroom scene, really messed her up.
    Another good scary movie is The Andromeda Strain from 1970. This is SciFi horror, but its pretty good. Written by Micheal Crichton, who also wrote Jurassic Park.
    Well Happy Halloween. Give thought to watching some of the classic Monster movies, Frankenstein, Dracula, The Wolfman, and The Creature From the Black Lagoon. Enjoy!

    • @KarenMcGehee
      @KarenMcGehee Рік тому +7

      FANtastic recommendations! I LOVE ROPE! It is about the best suspense movie ever. Rear Window - classic movie! The old monster movies mentioned, Frankenstein, Draucla, The Wolfman, and the Creature from the Black Lagoon are ALL great movies!

    • @Muckylittleme
      @Muckylittleme Рік тому +6

      His demeanour was of a brat made to sit through a movie. 🤣

    • @meyerhave
      @meyerhave Рік тому

      @@Muckylittleme Jay seems to be forever doomed as just another M.A.G.A. OKIE jock head schmuck who can only enjoy over the top "junk food cinema"; totally clueless to a finely honed screenplay's nuance - I.E. : in his mind "too slow" - in that pea brain located beyond his bratty & stuck up stubby nub of a nose. What an unaware asshole, with his continuing blowhard reactions that totally miss the point(s) by a mile.

    • @uteziemes5633
      @uteziemes5633 Рік тому +2

      For the scene where the main character almost dies, some real birds were also tied to the actress's clothes with nylon straps.

    • @ca8944
      @ca8944 Рік тому +2

      Don’t forget Vertigo. Every time I drove up the 101, it reminded me of that movie.
      There’s also Dial M for Murder and Strangers on a Train

  • @Vinylrebel72
    @Vinylrebel72 Рік тому +9

    The little girl, shes Veronica Cartwright, she played “Lambert”, the lady with the short blond hair in the 1979 film Alien with Sigourney Weaver. She was also in another classic horror film in 1979, called Invasion of the Body Snatchers. So to be in 3 iconic films, is a big accomplishment.

    • @rickpat-x9u
      @rickpat-x9u Рік тому +1

      funny, I always thought that Angela Cartwright did Birds right before doing Lost In Space. Thanks for info

    • @brinsonopinion
      @brinsonopinion Рік тому +1

      She was also the "church lady" in Witches of Eastwick who had the profane freak out in church & power-barfed the cherries til her husband offed her lol!

    • @JimS-lu5fb
      @JimS-lu5fb Рік тому +2

      Veronica Cartwright (Angela's sister) also played astronaut Gus Grissom's wife in "The Right Stuff", and in the late 1950s she played Violet Rutherford in the "Leave It to Beaver" TV series.

    • @JimS-lu5fb
      @JimS-lu5fb Рік тому +1

      And one of the other girls in the schoolhouse attack (the girl on the right in the still shot when the 2 girls are looking up at the birds) is the child actress Suzanne Cupito, who later renamed herself as Morgan Brittany, and appeared as Katherine Wentworth in the TV series "Dallas" (among other things).

    • @JimS-lu5fb
      @JimS-lu5fb Рік тому +4

      And no one has mentioned that the school teacher is Suzanne Pleshette, who made many movies, and was in the Bob Newhart TV series.

  • @TailoredTaylor
    @TailoredTaylor Рік тому +3

    One of the inspirations Hitchcock had for the Birds was based off a News article he read about a real life set of bird attacks off the pacific northwest. There was an episode of mysteries at the museum about it. Loved the reaction.

  • @andrewleavenworth2309
    @andrewleavenworth2309 Рік тому +5

    I would recommend "Alien" as a good scary and suspenseful movie. I remember the advertising for that movie was: "Nobody hears you scream in space." Such a good line. The Exorcist is also intensely scary, but it sounds like Jordan isn't having it.

  • @nanawalks
    @nanawalks Рік тому +19

    Jays face when they came through the fireplace 😂😂 Thanks guys, I really needed the laugh today.
    This is my favorite Hitchcock movie. It’s just possible enough…

  • @royoschroeder
    @royoschroeder Рік тому +7

    I remember watching this as a kid with my cousins and for a while we would yell "get down!" when we saw birds flying in our general direction lol

  • @beowulfthedane
    @beowulfthedane Рік тому +8

    Partally inspired by a true story that took place in Capitola, CA in 1961. The birds were infected by a toxic algae that made the attack.

  • @tremorsfan
    @tremorsfan Рік тому +2

    That attic scene was shot over 3 days and involved stage crew throwing real birds, with some even being tied to her. Eventually, her doctor made them put a stop to it when she started experiencing nightmares.

  • @rlevitta
    @rlevitta 7 місяців тому +1

    It’s a perfect end. What were they going to do? Interview the birds and ask them why? The answer is, there is no reason. That’s why it’s so unsettling. I remember when The Sopranos ended and everyone was freaking out. I thought to myself, “I guess they never saw The Birds.”

  • @robertjewell9727
    @robertjewell9727 Рік тому +8

    This film is a metaphor about relationships. It starts out as sort of odd romantic thing, but arcs into birds symbizing how frivolous people are about either being genuine or just playing games with each other and them pointing out in an apocalyptic scenario what's most important.

  • @cindyhurzeler3885
    @cindyhurzeler3885 Рік тому +39

    Interesting fact: Tippi Hedren is the reason why we can all afford manicures and pedicures. She visited a Vietnamese refugee camp near Sacramento and the women were fascinated with her nails. She brought in cosmetologists and they learned a trade that kept them from ever becoming a burden to taxpayers and nail salons became affordable to all.

  • @KimbaLoveAdams
    @KimbaLoveAdams Рік тому +35

    This movie came out in 1963. Times were different and terms of engagement were different. A son calling his mother Dear or Darling was not unusual uncommon or weird. You said it like he meant it in a sexual manner. Language evolved with the times sadly and today it’s looked at as something strange when it was completely loving and respectful in his time to speak of his mother in such a way.

    • @thebibagirrrlshow
      @thebibagirrrlshow Рік тому +15

      I came here to say this, plus the mannerisms at that time, the younger generations see as stalkerish. If you met someone you were attracted to, it was normal to find out where they lived, send a gift or do something to get their attention. Now it will be equal to liking someones instagram photo & sending them a DM.

    • @infonut
      @infonut Рік тому +4

      @@thebibagirrrlshow ... They never miss an opportunity to play victim.

    • @MD-gw4rk
      @MD-gw4rk 11 місяців тому +2

      Exactly 💯 percent the terms sons used in those days was total respect for the parents.

    • @jaydock1
      @jaydock1 8 місяців тому

      Perhaps, but in the movie they make a point that he and his mom are close and she is possessive over him.

  • @BaccarWozat
    @BaccarWozat Рік тому +2

    "In Hitchcock's movies, mysteries, one sometimes finds slight inconsequences in the story. But, I think, it would be also a right opinion that movies should only be enjoyable. Well, I, I dread that many birds! Indeed, how did they shoot those scenes?!"
    - Akira Kurosawa, famous Japanese director, on his favorite Hitchcock film

  • @mikerant4135
    @mikerant4135 Рік тому +3

    In some ways the lack of 'clarity' makes the suspense greater. If the attacks were explained in 'human' terms, it would, perhaps, have 'cheapened' the overall effect. As it is, if a bird flies down or a seagull pinches a chip (fry) from your hand, the movie will suddenly come back to your mind - as it will of you drive down a road and the wires are full of crows. It was Hitchcock's way of saying 'what if' and then not supplying any answer! J, I had a REAL phobia about birds, especially in close proximity - but I went to the UK humming bird sanctuary where they are literally all around you (it's in a hothouse), cured me completely! :) It's all in the mind!

  • @antoinetteserrano3082
    @antoinetteserrano3082 Рік тому +4

    Fun fact: a group of crows 🐦‍⬛ is called a murder. A murder of crows. How awesome is that.

  • @TheFadingMan
    @TheFadingMan Рік тому +16

    I have always loved this movie. Could you review The Exorcist? Now that is scary. If you like great 1960s horror movies, please review Rosemary's Baby.

  • @atuuschaaw
    @atuuschaaw Рік тому +20

    I can't believe it! I'm ready to watch this reaction. My heart goes out to you brother. ♥ This is my favorite Hitchcock movie. Freaked me out when I was a kid. 😉

  • @mtinta2000
    @mtinta2000 Рік тому +2

    My freshman year in college, they had a Hitchcock week on TV. My roommate got so scared she would sleep with me. There was a lot of Ivy outside our dorm and it would get full of birds and you could hear them. We would go beneath the arch entrance really cautiously until we went through. 😂 Now I looked back and laugh.

  • @stephenmoss6874
    @stephenmoss6874 4 місяці тому +1

    The scene when the guy catches fire when dropping the match and you get a far out shot seeing the birds flying and looking at the sheer devestation with the fire is truely brilliant and just the sound of the birds is really creepy. A Hitchcock classic.

  • @bigbow62
    @bigbow62 Рік тому +6

    Thats why i love the old classics they set up the story and tell a bit of the back story compared to todays movies that just fly through the whole thing with lots of music and CGI effects... give me the classics 9 out of 10 !

  • @mrantdagreat
    @mrantdagreat Рік тому +8

    One of many all time classics from Hitchcock! 💯💯💯

  • @cynthiaschultheis1660
    @cynthiaschultheis1660 Рік тому +6

    LITTLE GIRL IS VERONICA CARTRIGHT. GREAT ACTRESS, WHO WAS IN "ALIEN" AND "WILL & GRACE" AS JACK'S MOM.

    • @denisletourneau9750
      @denisletourneau9750 Рік тому

      Her sister was the young girl in Lost In Space TV Show & The Danny Thomas Show.

  • @ChristopherJ0884
    @ChristopherJ0884 7 місяців тому +2

    Sometimes the best horror movies are the ones where there is no explanation for what’s happening

  • @alexandervasel6845
    @alexandervasel6845 Рік тому +1

    The craziest thing is, Hitchcock was inspired by a real life crazy bird attack in 1961. It was in a small town in California. If i recall, there was some kind of toxic algae and small fish were eating it. The birds ate the toxic fish and literally went crazy.