That was amazing. The frame rate was so perfect and the resolution so crisp it looked like it was shot this afternoon. I really really enjoyed that. Thank you my friend. You never fail to impress. Simply the best.
Few months ago I had the chance of visiting Veracruz and was surprised at the beauty of the new areas. There’s Old Veracruz, traditional and slow paced and then, by driving a few miles, you’ll find yourself in a vibrant and modern town. The food was A1+ and I would strongly recommend to drop by and have a great time.
Few indeed! 467 Specials and 312 Roadmasters. Last year for the 4-door convertibles from GM, and then again, only available from Oldsmobile, Buick and Cadillac. None from Pontiac or Chevrolet anymore. Kind of difficult to ascertain taking into account potential artifacts introduced by the AI resolution upscaling but this particular car seems to be a Special with three portholes (on the hood side trim) and a 121" wheelbase (as opposed to four portholes and 126" wheelbase on the Roadmaster). A gorgeous car either way, with an extremely smooth and comfortable ride. Most certainly a very stylish way to travel and see the sights. Nowadays there are double decker buses with no roof on the top level which allow tourists to fully experience downtown Mexico City architecture.
@@freetzin8907 thanks for the info. I appreciate your detailed explanation.Buicks were always special cars to me. Phaetons were a luxury car body style and in my opinion very desirable.
Buicks and Packards where THE Cars to own in Mexico back when. If you owned an Super Clipper Limo or a Super Eight series you owned the nation, moguls and politicians HAD to own one. INO the "Mexican Rolls Royce", Caddies where cool, Fords & Dodges where for "the masses", Rolls Royces "were nice but NOT Packards" My grandma spend her life salivating on the one her family once owned.
I am from Mexico City and seeing these images in high resolution and vibrant color makes my heart skip a beat. Sure, nowadays, once in a while you may get to see blue skies in one of the most polluted cities in the world, but most of the time the sky is gray. However, the damage done by overpopulation and overdevelopment is basically irreversible. This shows a dreamlike version of my beloved city I sadly only got to experience the last remnants of when I was a child in the 70s Would you happen to know what the original purpose of this footage was? Maybe for a commercial motion picture or promo video about a trip through Mexico, of the ritzy couple in the Buick being chauffeured by important landmarks? Definitely looks too professional to be a home movie.
Wow,look how rich in culture and heritage the area appeared.There were alot of American automakers that built a certain amount of American brands in Mexico. Everyone took pride in their own country no matter how rich or poor you were.You can see and feel it in the sights.The airport footage was quite impressive,i was hoping to see the plane take off.
ANY American car was available in Mexico until the 60s. Ford's first plant outside the US was built in Mexico City. Nowadays Mexico offers a wider variety of cars than in the US, tons of Chinese cars are quickly taking over the scene.
While the source material must have been quite impressive, what you did with it is remarquable. The sense of actual presence is astonishing. I just wish we could have seen the plane take off at the end...
THE MAN AND WOMAN ON THE BEACH DRESSED TO THE NINES, SURE ARE GETTING LOTS OF COVERAGE IN THIS FILM, AS THEY ALSO ARE SEEN RIDING IN REAR SEAT OF 1941 BUICK CONVERTIBLE !
I am sure this was a "B" roll for tourism. Hence the "gringo Upper Class" dudes cruising around Mexico's attractive sites. Veracruz fell of favor when the highway to Acapulco was finished and it became the vacation destination worldwide. Everyone from John Wayne to Marilyn, JFK and Elizabeth Taylor visited Acapulco. Howard Hughes spent lots of time in the "Acapulco Princess Hotel" which he built there some years before his death.
These were exterior shots for a movie they were filming. The camera shots were just too good for amateur photographers. Cool, nonetheless. I love the man's two-tone dress shoes. They really add to the look when a man wears them with a straw fedora and a lime green speedo...at the beach.
Yea world peaked in the 50s for sure. Actually more likely in early 70s just before going off the gold standard when money became imaginary and the wealth gap went exponential
This must be a "B" Roll for a Tourism Promotional directed towards the US: American models in a Packard, the car to own back then. 0:10 _NOT Sure if this is Veracruz._ Looks a lot like Acapulco maybe Caletilla beach: hill, boulders, vegetation... 1:38 Mexico City, Paseo de la Reforma (previous Paseo de la Emperatriz under Emperor Maximilian) 1:53 Ángel de la Independencia, Mexico's Statue of Liberty. But with an Angel not a Woman. 2:19 Benito Juárez Hemicycle, Mexico´s Abraham Lincoln. 2:56 Monumento "la Raza", honoring Mexico's indian heritage. (All the people standing next to it are Street Vendors, poor people trying to make a "peso": buck). 3:50 "Diana la Cazadora" fountain: Roman goddess of the hunt. The Irony? Feminists want this sculpture down due to sexual exploitation. _A sculpture honoring a _*_Female hero..._* 4:21 Monumento a la Revolución. Honoring the Mexican Revolution, absurdly this was going to become the "Palace of he Legislature", Mexico's congress hall but then the revolution happened. 4:39 No clue, maybe a cemetery? 4:49 Ángel de la Independencia, Avenida Reforma (2nd. take). 5:14 Heroes of the independence. 5:46 Mexico City Airport (Benito Juárez) still active today, established in 1910 in what once was the outskirts of the city. 5:48 Film clearly sponsored by Packard Motor Co. or... did ALL Mexicans drive a Packard? 7:20 DC-3 of Cia. Mexicana de Aviación (Mexicana), established in 1921, first foreign airline to land in L.A. Went bankrupt in 2010 due to fraud, rescued in 2023. Currently owned by the gov., operated by the Mexican Army... 8:21 Braniff Airways (US) once Mexico's most loved airline.
@nwicconsultants6640 30 minutes ago It's called Monumento de la Raza (monument to the people) construction began in 1930 and completed in 1940. Unfortunately funding for upkeep discontinued in 2022 and because of vandalism,fires,etc it will not be long before it will be completely destroyed. Note: Congresswoman Gabriela Pulido of Mexico City is fighting to have this monument upgraded to Capital Cultural Heritage status but of this date nothing has done officially and it's only a matter of time that for safety reasons it may have to be demolished.
It's called Monumento de la Raza (monument to the people) construction began in 1930 and completed in 1940. Unfortunately funding for upkeep discontinued in 2022 and because of vandalism,fires,etc it will not be long before it will be completely destroyed. Note: Congresswoman Gabriela Pulido of Mexico City is fighting to have this monument upgraded to Capital Cultural Heritage status but of this date nothing has done officially and it's only a matter of time that for safety reasons it may have to be demolished.
“La Raza” translates literally as “The Race” and it refers to the new race that originated from the mixing of immigrants from Europe with native people. (Creoles/Mestizos) Aside from presently being in a sad state of disrepair, the monument was rendered somewhat inaccessible by the expansion of Avenida Insurgentes which by the way is technically part of the Pan-American Highway. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monumento_a_la_Raza_(Mexico_City)
Otimas imagens de uma época tão bonita e que eu gostaria de?ter vivido !! Só não entendi porque o mesmo chevrolet conversivel aparece tantas vezes con as mesmas pessoas?? 😂😂
How care a bout this people, How remind this people؟؟؟ no body. Our life now this is like this. In the future 100 years . No body remind you. You forgotten for ever. So donmatter . Just do it. Make a good life for self. Time is short
Like And Share Please!
That was amazing. The frame rate was so perfect and the resolution so crisp it looked like it was shot this afternoon. I really really enjoyed that.
Thank you my friend. You never fail to impress. Simply the best.
Same here
Thank you ;))
It looked very nice and clean there. And probably quite safe back then also.
Few months ago I had the chance of visiting Veracruz and was surprised at the beauty of the new areas. There’s Old Veracruz, traditional and slow paced and then, by driving a few miles, you’ll find yourself in a vibrant and modern town. The food was A1+ and I would strongly recommend to drop by and have a great time.
That 1941 Buick Phaeton was a special car. Few were made. It looked very glamorous. What a look back in time!
Few indeed! 467 Specials and 312 Roadmasters. Last year for the 4-door convertibles from GM, and then again, only available from Oldsmobile, Buick and Cadillac. None from Pontiac or Chevrolet anymore. Kind of difficult to ascertain taking into account potential artifacts introduced by the AI resolution upscaling but this particular car seems to be a Special with three portholes (on the hood side trim) and a 121" wheelbase (as opposed to four portholes and 126" wheelbase on the Roadmaster). A gorgeous car either way, with an extremely smooth and comfortable ride. Most certainly a very stylish way to travel and see the sights. Nowadays there are double decker buses with no roof on the top level which allow tourists to fully experience downtown Mexico City architecture.
@@freetzin8907 thanks for the info. I appreciate your detailed explanation.Buicks were always special cars to me. Phaetons were a luxury car body style and in my opinion very desirable.
Buicks and Packards where THE Cars to own in Mexico back when.
If you owned an Super Clipper Limo or a Super Eight series you owned the nation, moguls and politicians HAD to own one.
INO the "Mexican Rolls Royce", Caddies where cool, Fords & Dodges where for "the masses", Rolls Royces "were nice but NOT Packards"
My grandma spend her life salivating on the one her family once owned.
The aircraft at the end are Mexicana (Compania Mexicana de Aviacion) and Braniff Airways Douglas DC-3s. Thanks for sharing!
Thank you ;))
Traveling with Braniff meant you were "Upper Class" everyone in Mexico wanted to fly that airline.
The quality is insanely good. 😮
Great historical moments in time. Thanks! NASS
Thank you very much for your support God bless you! 🙏
walking on the beach with a suit and tie on long pants lol
👏👏👏 Thank you for your time and effort. ❤❤❤❤
Thank you for❤
I am from Mexico City and seeing these images in high resolution and vibrant color makes my heart skip a beat. Sure, nowadays, once in a while you may get to see blue skies in one of the most polluted cities in the world, but most of the time the sky is gray. However, the damage done by overpopulation and overdevelopment is basically irreversible. This shows a dreamlike version of my beloved city I sadly only got to experience the last remnants of when I was a child in the 70s
Would you happen to know what the original purpose of this footage was? Maybe for a commercial motion picture or promo video about a trip through Mexico, of the ritzy couple in the Buick being chauffeured by important landmarks? Definitely looks too professional to be a home movie.
Tourist Promotion for the US market for sure.
BTW the skies in the city have been improving a LOT over the last decade; *I live here.*
Amazing quality video, it looks like it was shot in the 70's or 80's! And that DC-3 airplane scene at the end was stunning!
Thank you for making these video's.
Thank you, NASS. ¡Es un placer vivir en este país ahora!
All of your videos prove we as a society are going backwards!
Instead of improving getting worse🫤
Wow,look how rich in culture and heritage the area appeared.There were alot of American automakers that built a certain amount of American brands in Mexico.
Everyone took pride in their own country no matter how rich or poor you were.You can see and feel it in the sights.The airport footage was quite impressive,i was hoping to see the plane take off.
ANY American car was available in Mexico until the 60s. Ford's first plant outside the US was built in Mexico City.
Nowadays Mexico offers a wider variety of cars than in the US, tons of Chinese cars are quickly taking over the scene.
your work never disappoints!
Thx!!!!!!
IRRECONOCIBLE el Paseo de la Reforma. Parece que tenía muy pocos edificios construídos.
Came to your channel after watching an old Joey b toons video. He was prasing your work. He's not wrong, subscribed.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Your usual amazing work. How cool it would have been to ride in that plane. And the skies and clouds are perfection!
Thank you ;))
It's a DC-3, most popular passenger plane at the time
Прекрасные памятники чудесно сочетаются с раскидистыми деревьями.
Буду рад, если вы улучшите какие-нибудь видео про Россию 1910-х
Excellent quality!
Thank you.
NASS! Thanks for posting this video
Thank you bro ;))
While the source material must have been quite impressive, what you did with it is remarquable. The sense of actual presence is astonishing. I just wish we could have seen the plane take off at the end...
THE MAN AND WOMAN ON THE BEACH DRESSED TO THE NINES, SURE ARE GETTING LOTS OF COVERAGE IN THIS FILM, AS THEY ALSO ARE SEEN RIDING IN REAR SEAT OF 1941 BUICK CONVERTIBLE !
A 1941 Buick Phaeton. They sure are living the life.
Well they are rich and brought with them their own camera man.
I am sure this was a "B" roll for tourism.
Hence the "gringo Upper Class" dudes cruising around Mexico's attractive sites.
Veracruz fell of favor when the highway to Acapulco was finished and it became the vacation destination worldwide.
Everyone from John Wayne to Marilyn, JFK and Elizabeth Taylor visited Acapulco.
Howard Hughes spent lots of time in the "Acapulco Princess Hotel" which he built there some years before his death.
Amazing. Great job. How many hours does it take to do one of these on average?
It depends on the difficulty of the video But processing is very slow
I loves this channel
Thank you ;))
A big work! South of the border, down Mexico way...
These were exterior shots for a movie they were filming. The camera shots were just too good for amateur photographers. Cool, nonetheless. I love the man's two-tone dress shoes. They really add to the look when a man wears them with a straw fedora and a lime green speedo...at the beach.
شكرا ❤❤🌹🌹🇾🇪🇾🇪🇾🇪🇾🇪🇾🇪
Must've been scenes from a movie about the couple in the convertible.
Do a video on 1940s Albania, Pristina and Kosovo in color. I find Albania was still a monarchy back then. Well, I love this country
ok ;))
Yea world peaked in the 50s for sure. Actually more likely in early 70s just before going off the gold standard when money became imaginary and the wealth gap went exponential
More like the '90s
Dad vacationed in Mexico early 1950 new 0 Spanish he might have had a dictionary
Just watch the video and shut up man
Definitely peaked in the 90's
@@danam0228as a 90s baby born on the 9-0 I concur
Idyllic scenes and no Cartel' soldiers terrorizing and killing . Sad when you realize how bad it is now.
I have been to Mexico a few times the majority of the people seem nice.
C’était propre
Awesome job!!!
Must have been originally filmed for a movie or travel film as the same couple from the beach can be seen in the car
7:00 lovely bird 🎉
Superp quality and colourisation.
Thank you ;))
thanks nass! always enjoy ur work! always delivers on his product!
Thank you ;))
Fantastic. BTW I think Mexicana is the oldest airline in the world.
KLM Royal Dutch Airlines is the oldest airline in the world.
@@BillVol It was one of the oldest but then the new owners broke and ran away. SOP.
Woodie at 3:55 - 3:59.
Zoot suits should make a comeback 😊
Let's play a little game: Where's Wally? he is not alone, a lady accompanies him. Can you find him?
😋 😎 😍
+1 like. merci.
Thank you.
Съёмки как у камеры андроид 2018 года. И это 40ые года! Прям машина времени
Я согласен
This must be a "B" Roll for a Tourism Promotional directed towards the US: American models in a Packard, the car to own back then.
0:10 _NOT Sure if this is Veracruz._ Looks a lot like Acapulco maybe Caletilla beach: hill, boulders, vegetation...
1:38 Mexico City, Paseo de la Reforma (previous Paseo de la Emperatriz under Emperor Maximilian)
1:53 Ángel de la Independencia, Mexico's Statue of Liberty. But with an Angel not a Woman.
2:19 Benito Juárez Hemicycle, Mexico´s Abraham Lincoln.
2:56 Monumento "la Raza", honoring Mexico's indian heritage. (All the people standing next to it are Street Vendors, poor people trying to make a "peso": buck).
3:50 "Diana la Cazadora" fountain: Roman goddess of the hunt. The Irony? Feminists want this sculpture down due to sexual exploitation. _A sculpture honoring a _*_Female hero..._*
4:21 Monumento a la Revolución. Honoring the Mexican Revolution, absurdly this was going to become the "Palace of he Legislature", Mexico's congress hall but then the revolution happened.
4:39 No clue, maybe a cemetery?
4:49 Ángel de la Independencia, Avenida Reforma (2nd. take).
5:14 Heroes of the independence.
5:46 Mexico City Airport (Benito Juárez) still active today, established in 1910 in what once was the outskirts of the city.
5:48 Film clearly sponsored by Packard Motor Co. or... did ALL Mexicans drive a Packard?
7:20 DC-3 of Cia. Mexicana de Aviación (Mexicana), established in 1921, first foreign airline to land in L.A. Went bankrupt in 2010 due to fraud, rescued in 2023. Currently owned by the gov., operated by the Mexican Army...
8:21 Braniff Airways (US) once Mexico's most loved airline.
Super healthy looking society
“インディ・ジョーンズ/クリスタル・スカルの王国”を思い出す
Not really
I expected to see Humphry Bogart in these clips.
Could someone tell me what the structure is a 2:58 ?
Thanks, NASS!
@nwicconsultants6640
30 minutes ago
It's called Monumento de la Raza (monument to the people) construction began in 1930 and completed in 1940. Unfortunately funding for upkeep discontinued in 2022 and because of vandalism,fires,etc it will not be long before it will be completely destroyed.
Note: Congresswoman Gabriela Pulido of Mexico City is fighting to have this monument upgraded to Capital Cultural Heritage status but of this date nothing has done officially and it's only a matter of time that for safety reasons it may have to be demolished.
Monumento a la Raza... today its a shithole with grafitti in mexico city.
@@nwicconsultants6640 I really appreciate your reply. Thank you for taking the time.
Incrível!
The first scene looks more like Acapulco. It's definitely not Veracruz (City of).
These are nothing without a side by side comparison of then and now
Does anyone know what the structure is at 2:55?
It's called Monumento de la Raza (monument to the people) construction began in 1930 and completed in 1940. Unfortunately funding for upkeep discontinued in 2022 and because of vandalism,fires,etc it will not be long before it will be completely destroyed.
Note: Congresswoman Gabriela Pulido of Mexico City is fighting to have this monument upgraded to Capital Cultural Heritage status but of this date nothing has done officially and it's only a matter of time that for safety reasons it may have to be demolished.
“La Raza” translates literally as “The Race” and it refers to the new race that originated from the mixing of immigrants from Europe with native people. (Creoles/Mestizos)
Aside from presently being in a sad state of disrepair, the monument was rendered somewhat inaccessible by the expansion of Avenida Insurgentes which by the way is technically part of the Pan-American Highway.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monumento_a_la_Raza_(Mexico_City)
2:28
миленько
Здравствуйте
@@sprunkadct приветствую
Otimas imagens de uma época tão bonita e que eu gostaria de?ter vivido !! Só não entendi porque o mesmo chevrolet conversivel aparece tantas vezes con as mesmas pessoas?? 😂😂
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
It is really annoying that each scene is repeated twice...
Mexico 🇲🇽: before the drug lords took over.
Ever been to Mexico?
You'd be surprised to see how great it is nowadays...
📺📺📺🎃🎃
The scenes keep repeating
All of them are dead now
You’re a Genius
Maybe the little girl at 2:36 is still around. Who knows?
No, the young kids could stll be alive. If this was shot in the late 40's they should be around 90 years old today..
How care a bout this people, How remind this people؟؟؟ no body. Our life now this is like this. In the future 100 years . No body remind you. You forgotten for ever. So donmatter . Just do it. Make a good life for self. Time is short