I love how English Bob and William Money contrast eachother. English Bob exaggerates his past to make himself sound scarier than he really is, whereas William Money downplays the horrible shit he did on account of not being able to keep track of most of it.
If you want to see Eastwood's chops entirely behind the camera, see his two films about the Battle of Iwo Jima. "Flags of Our Fathers" and "Letters from Iwo Jima." They're both gorgeous and brilliant.
When Bauchamp was offering the gun to English Bob, it was loaded, but not in the next chamber. So Bob would have pulled the trigger and nothing would have happened, while Little Bill would have shot him.
I liked the way the story showed events with continued escalation. When some bad event occurs, your choice is to escalate or de-escalate. Here we start off with a giggle, the cowboy can either ignore it or escalate, he cuts her face. Once that happens, the girls can accept the fine imposed, plus the extra pony for the victim, or they can escalate. They save money for hit men. So a giggle eventually gets turned into Will Munney killing 5 people (plus the original 2) & threatening to kill everyone in the town.
I'm always impressed with some people's level of perceptiveness. I always be thinking I am quite perceptive myself but then someone comes along and shows a perspective, or a level of perception, that is leagues beyond me. I wonder if this type of perception comes natural or is it taught/learned? Is this what people learn in art and film school? Or do they just think different naturally?
@@randycooper3428 Blood Meridian is my favorite (anti)western novel and The Proposition my favorite (anti)western movie. if those things interest you at all, check them out! i think in the least you would agree that The Proposition is the best Australian Western movie 😅
Now you must watch " Tombstone " which went head to head with " Unforgiven " for the Academy Award. In my opinion, I liked Tombstone much more ( maybe because it's based on a true story ) !👍🏾✊🏾💯
This has always been my favorite "Cowboy/Western" film. I bet a lot of gun fights happened like that in those days. Guys would draw too fast and miss, shoot themselves or their guns would misfire.
I doubt it. Writing movies and books relies heavily on tropes. Like the village idiot or the guy who shoots himself on accident etc etc. I'm almost 100% certain that cowboys were thorough about their lifestyles, including the firearm aspect. It was a matter of life and death and back then it mattered a lot more than it does today to be thorough. An example is, these days not every man absolutely has to know anything about cars cause he can just take it to the auto shop. But lacking knowledge and competence back then meant you died. Just my two cents.
Does anyone realize this is Clint Eastwood apologizing for his earlier westerns and the whole Hollywood glorification of westerns…. This movie is a referendum on the past and a clarification on the truth of violence/murder…. I am in awe of the beauty/violence and truth we get…. This is is magnificent film making….. Highest apperception.
One of the best g'dang Westerns ever made. A rare one is the first anti-hero western made... or major hit any way. Black and White movie with John Wanye, Lee Marvin, James Stewert color was available, but b/w was picked. Its called The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence.
Can someone clear something up for me? I was told that this was a sequel. To either the Man With No Name trilogy or Outlaw Josey Wales. I forgot. 🤷♂️ Anyways, anyone know if this is true or a bunch of BS?
I like Jimmy but many of his edits are insanely short. Unforgiven in a little over 20 minutes? I know copyright claims can't be the whole reason because others post much longer edits/reactions.
Your friend hasn't seen any of the Dirty Harry movies?? How about Bird, which he directed? It stars Forest Whitaker as the prodigy sax player Charlie Parker. It's a must. But so is Dirty Harry.
The original Albus Dumbledore. Very nice reaction. "...He should've armed himself"
The "Two Gun Corchran" story in the jail was a classic piece of Gene Hackman acting.
I love how English Bob and William Money contrast eachother. English Bob exaggerates his past to make himself sound scarier than he really is, whereas William Money downplays the horrible shit he did on account of not being able to keep track of most of it.
If you want to see Eastwood's chops entirely behind the camera, see his two films about the Battle of Iwo Jima. "Flags of Our Fathers" and "Letters from Iwo Jima." They're both gorgeous and brilliant.
When Bauchamp was offering the gun to English Bob, it was loaded, but not in the next chamber. So Bob would have pulled the trigger and nothing would have happened, while Little Bill would have shot him.
Is this actually true? Always saw English Bob reacting disappointed he didn't take the gun once he saw it was loaded.
@@znk0r Little Bill is a sadist.
Gene Hackman is too damn good in this movie. And that final section of the movie... impeccable. Top-tier cowboy shit lol
"The Outlaw Josey Wales" Clint stars and directed, Must See ! 👍✌️
Love the reactions. Always cheers me up.
Anyone know how old our Jimmy is? Anyone remember Loansom Dove? I tried to watch it as a kid but was past my bed time so never got to see it all lol.
I liked the way the story showed events with continued escalation. When some bad event occurs, your choice is to escalate or de-escalate. Here we start off with a giggle, the cowboy can either ignore it or escalate, he cuts her face. Once that happens, the girls can accept the fine imposed, plus the extra pony for the victim, or they can escalate. They save money for hit men.
So a giggle eventually gets turned into Will Munney killing 5 people (plus the original 2) & threatening to kill everyone in the town.
I'm always impressed with some people's level of perceptiveness. I always be thinking I am quite perceptive myself but then someone comes along and shows a perspective, or a level of perception, that is leagues beyond me. I wonder if this type of perception comes natural or is it taught/learned? Is this what people learn in art and film school? Or do they just think different naturally?
Omg just realised what film it is, not seen it for years, RIP dad he loved clint
This and Tombstone are my favorite 2 westerns all-time.
did you ever see The Proposition?
@@beepboop204 I have not.
@@randycooper3428 Blood Meridian is my favorite (anti)western novel and The Proposition my favorite (anti)western movie. if those things interest you at all, check them out! i think in the least you would agree that The Proposition is the best Australian Western movie 😅
Tombstone!!!
Watch also the great ''Silverado'' (1985), with an excellent cast. It's actually the movie that revived the Western in Hollywood in the 1980s.
Now you must watch " Tombstone " which went head to head with " Unforgiven " for the Academy Award. In my opinion, I liked Tombstone much more ( maybe because it's based on a true story ) !👍🏾✊🏾💯
Tombstone is on here.
Jimmy have you seen Clint Eastwood in the 1993 movie "In The Line of Fire"?
This has always been my favorite "Cowboy/Western" film. I bet a lot of gun fights happened like that in those days. Guys would draw too fast and miss, shoot themselves or their guns would misfire.
I doubt it. Writing movies and books relies heavily on tropes. Like the village idiot or the guy who shoots himself on accident etc etc. I'm almost 100% certain that cowboys were thorough about their lifestyles, including the firearm aspect. It was a matter of life and death and back then it mattered a lot more than it does today to be thorough. An example is, these days not every man absolutely has to know anything about cars cause he can just take it to the auto shop. But lacking knowledge and competence back then meant you died. Just my two cents.
The scenes between Bill and the Duck are the best!
I mean, what can you say about the movie that inspired Garth Ennis to create The Saint Of Killers?
Does anyone realize this is Clint Eastwood apologizing for his earlier westerns and the whole Hollywood glorification of westerns…. This movie is a referendum on the past and a clarification on the truth of violence/murder…. I am in awe of the beauty/violence and truth we get…. This is is magnificent film making….. Highest apperception.
He's NOT apologizing. There's no need to.
One of the best g'dang Westerns ever made.
A rare one is the first anti-hero western made... or major hit any way.
Black and White movie with John Wanye, Lee Marvin, James Stewert
color was available, but b/w was picked.
Its called
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence.
Jimmy, how can I get you guys to watch I Saw The Devil? I’m dying for you to check it out. Your commentary would be great
One of my all time favorites!
the Appaloosa "Bar Scene" is the only western scene i rank above "deserves got nothing to do with it"
Yeah, that is a good scene.
Moral grey area. That’s this movie.
Not a bad Eastwood movie to start with.
Can someone clear something up for me? I was told that this was a sequel. To either the Man With No Name trilogy or Outlaw Josey Wales. I forgot. 🤷♂️ Anyways, anyone know if this is true or a bunch of BS?
Well it for sure isn’t a sequel to Outlaw Josey Wales. The backstories are way off.
Not a sequel.
Alice was Clint's wife at the time.
I like Jimmy but many of his edits are insanely short. Unforgiven in a little over 20 minutes? I know copyright claims can't be the whole reason because others post much longer edits/reactions.
Channels aren't treated equally unfortunately
Attention spans are short..
I'm a fan of his reactions too but gotta admit this was not edited well.
@1:06 Make him leave your house immediately! I suspect he is a robot... or maybe an alien. You've gotta make him watch Gran Torino.
Our*
great westerns movies were mostly going away by the 90s
Watch Eastwood movie Heartbreak Ridge... great movie 😂
Y'all should watch "The Mule"
I feel like this is a Jimmy Macram special. A whole lot of terrible people doing messed up things.
Your friend hasn't seen any of the Dirty Harry movies?? How about Bird, which he directed? It stars Forest Whitaker as the prodigy sax player Charlie Parker. It's a must. But so is Dirty Harry.
NONE… but one other Clint movie since
Does he know who John Wayne is? I mean, jeez. Be like a reactor going, Who is Sidney Poitier?
Who IS Sidney Poitier tho…
The audio is so bad I cant hear you nor the movie