He was actually talking to the director about that part in Jurassic Park and they thought it would fit in well there too so they put the voice over in lol
to answer your question about how Steve knew where to look for Jasmine...that's very simple. He TOLD her to be there. Jasmine took all the people she found to El Torro Air Force Base and stayed there over night. Steve took his helicopter from Nevada and flew to California.
Fun fact: Casse was originally supposed to be rejected at the recruitment, but show up with his biplane and a missile strapped to it when the President asks if anyone has more missiles. This is why nobody seems to know who he is despite clearly participating & communicating earlier in the battle, and also why he needs cover fire with guns despite him being in the same plane. The cockpit shots were done 6 months after shooting, which is why his kids hair is way longer when he waves bye to them in the hangar. The fighter jet in exterior shots was digitally added over the biplane, which is why he appears to be flying so slow, especially during the "hello boys, I'm baaaaack" impact scene.
Would love to see those outtakes, though I'm glad he wasn't rejected in the final cut. But I don't think they would reject him in that situation, the limited number of pilots and newbies who probably never even flew before and Russell with substantial military flying experience from Vietnam and his very heavy log of flight hours in general. The director and producer obviously connected the dots on this and therefore properly included him.🙂
I saw this in the theater with my brother and sister it blew me away! It was a box office success making $890 million dollars against a $70 million dollar budget. It won the Oscar for Best Visual Effects.
That dude gave the greatest speech in American history, and is also remembered as the greatest president in American history.😅 Excellent reaction Blue.💙
As a British person we don’t get riled by speeches like Americans always do this intrigues me as to why Also the speech didn’t even get me emotional he’s just an actor reading a script
Spaceman 1251. Yep. Great speech. There are two recent ones that I think are a little better, or just up there on par. Captain’s speech in “Endgame”, and the kid at the end of “The Great Debaters”!
My strongest memory of this movie was back then I was a heavy smoker (Yuck!) and I don't remember ever not having to sneak out during a slow part of a movie for a quick couple of drags🤔 I sat through this entire movie without a single cigarette it never slowed up, and I never did it again until I stopped smoking completely.
Looked for your only fans.. didn't see it only Instagram and Patreon 🤔. I'm really only on fb. But if you talk on only fans dm lemme know what it is and I'll try and message you there. Worst case scenario you can always ask in some way for my actual phone #. Like your vids. They are good
I used to go to my friends and watch this with a few beers and a curry. We've all got kids now and moved, changed jobs. Not seen it for years. Tracy my friend and part of the watching died young we buried her just after her 50th. RIP mate there are still young crazy kids enjoying this!
Roland Emmerich, the director of Independence Day, is famous for his epic disaster films. Not only has he made films like 2012 and Independence Day, he made his own Godzilla movie in 1998. People complained about it not having the "real" Godzilla, but it's still a fun western take on the genre. It starred Mathew Broderick and Jean Reno (Leon The Professional). He also made Stargate, which eventually spawned several TV shows and a novel series. It's an epic sci-fi adventure starring James Spader and Kurt Russell ("Ego" in Guardians Of The Galaxy 2).
At 22:42 when blue say "and no one thought of this" for when they said to release the virus. You got to remember this was 1996 CGI and computer network viruses were not so "usual" stuff. I do not know have you noticed, but there were no mobile phones and only beepers. He only had remote phone because he was tv operator..... average person would not be able to do it.
This wasn't CGI, they used models, puppets and pyrotechnics with compositing. Convincing Computer Generated Imagery was still expensive in the 90s. When someone asked the visual effects team "What software did you use to get the lighting on the plane?" they answered "A flashlight". The shadow on the obelisk was made by backing up a truck onto a model of it. The only CGI is what you actually see on the computer screens themselves. I wish people stop using CGI instead of VFX. That word does not mean what you think it means … The concept of computer viruses was known back then, but the writers ignored that you have to write them specifically for the OS, so Jeff Goldblum doing it in less than a day on a complete alien system is quite a stretch … but being IT myself I'd say he probably just installed Windows 95 on their mainframe …
@@Caseytify yeah, but the majority of of their specialist are already dead, the US military had less then 15% of their forces remaining well before they even get to area 51, that means bases, personnel, etc. They basically have only the more remote posts left this point.
@@Cau_No I knew they used load of practical effects and almost only ones were ones on alien crafts / shields and shooting main lasers. On viruses yea concepts were known but thinking on infecting some unknown OS would be more then a stretch. And Will Smith knowing to fly alien ship instantly (especially with screen on spaceship being couple of lines) BUT that is why we call it fantasy movie.... And people know on OS then very little, especially when I as a kid said friend that we had argument a bit.... to type in in DOS "Format C:" welllll after it we get in argument even more....
@@Cau_No - I love a lot of your points, and the little "Princess Bride" reference you slipped in, that was genius man. Personally, I wish that they would tone down a lot of CGI and bring back more Practical Effects, so many people today are constantly getting surprised with "How Good" the older style Special Effects look, and it kind of baffles me, because it's like ... they are using real actual physical objects for their special effects stuff... so of course it looks real ...... because it IS real, not a fake imaginary thing generated on a computer, so it will ALWAYS look very convincing. Don't get me wrong, with modern technological advances in computer tech, a lot of CGI is very good now and can look amazing, but I feel like in many instances, they should TRY to make real physical effects first, and resort only to CGI when it's really necessary to get something done, like space lazers, or death rays etc because CGI can make those really convincing and easily done. But spaceships and monsters ,,, just build models, use latex, makeup and costumes. Peace man, I think that word really doesn't mean what they think it means. ;)
Blue the overall theme of this movie is a modern update of H.G. Wells' novel War of the Worlds in which Martians invade Earth take over but are eventually defeated by a biological virus rather than a computer virus in this movie. There are subtle references to other famous Sci-fi movies. One example is when David's computer on the alien ship says "Good morning Dave" that is a reference to HAL the computer from 2001 A Space Odyssey
@@amazingusername8925 yeah I agree. The “virus” in this movie didn’t kill the aliens here. All it did was drop their shields. Weapons delivered the final blow to the alien ships.
The scene at the end, when our two heroes emerge from the desert, their spaceship aflame behind them, is taken from the movie "The Right Stuff". That amazing film is about the first astronauts chosen by NASA to explore Space, in the Mercury missions of the early 1960s. It is based on the well-researched book of the same title, and shows us all the character flaws and the cool heroism of those chosen men. Above all, it shows us about the one, greatest test pilot of all time, who was Not selected for the Space program. He was Chuck Yeager, WWII air hero and the first man to break the sound barrier, and the coolest damn human to ever live. And by the way, Jeff Goldblum has a small, funny role in "The Right Stuff", early in his career.
As a kid this movie really stuck with me because the depiction of the alien ships was so awe inspiring and the mood for a lot of the middle part of the movie was so desperate and dark. Overall it's a cheesy action movie, but it does some stuff really well to make it a classic.
This movie has a very special place in my heart as it was the first movie I saw in theaters after completing Basic Training for the Navy(Recruit Training Command, Great Lakes, Illinois, April to June of 1996). I was 25 at the time. Twenty-six years later and I still never get tired of watching this movie.
Fun fact: On the Behind-the-scenes there is an alternative scene of the last missile being delivered by Mr. Casse. He now flies the crop duster plane. Yes it is ridiculous seeing this slow plane trying to zigzag between fast fighter jets and enemy aircrafts, but its a nice bonus.
When the first missile hit the flying saucer for the first time, in the theater it was like a sports time, pop corn flying and cursing and clapping... I never experienced anything similar after that.
When this came out they had a fake news broadcast where they pretended alien spaceships really were landing... we had my little brother totally fooled 🤣
16:00 that line and kicking was completely improvised by Will Smith. The location was actually at the salt flats of Utah in the U.S. Nobody warned him about the horrible smell of billions of dead brine shrimp that comes from around that area.
In case you’re wondering~ The first attack went down like this: the aliens position their destroyer crafts above the target cities, using our satellites to maintain efficient communications as well as locate the exact positions of these cities. The destroyer’s primary weapon opens fire upon the city from its highest point; the resulting blast sends a wall of hellfire in all directions within a diameter of 15 miles - the exact width of the ships themselves. This blast wave annihilates literally everything in its path, and it’s only fast enough for humans to be unable to outrun. It’s a slow and painful death. The reason Russel Casse’s kamikaze attack was so effective was because he hit the destroyer craft’s weapon the exact second it fired. So the same hellfire you saw annihilate the major cities also annihilated the destroyers. Sweet revenge.~
The notion of city-sized alien spaceships, hovering above all of Earth's major cities, was originated by Arthur C. Clarke in his 1953 novel, "Childhood's End". Clarke is best-known for his novel version of "2001: A Space Odyssey", on which he collaborated with filmmaker Stanley Kubrick, for four years. Arthur C. Clarke was a physicist as well as an S.F. author and popularizer of Science for young people. In 1945 he wrote a short paper that proposed using manned satellites in geosynchronous orbit, to make possible planet-wide coverage of radio signals. This concept is used today for all communications, except our satellites are unmanned. The concept is illustrated in "Independence Day" by Jeff Goldblum's character, in his drawing of three satellites having uninterrupted comms.
3:08 "I remember those big phones". We just called them phones, back in the day. Then they were called landlines once cell phones became popular. Now, most people don't know what one is and have never used one (except maybe if they work in an office) ... and zoomers couldn't operate one if you handed it to them 🙂
There's some *hilarious* YT vids showing teens-&-early-20s folks trying to use an old-style rotary phone ... I watched 4 or 5 of them in a row when I first found 'em. I had to take a break 'cause I was laughing so much that I was gasping for air, and could feel my face getting red! Even after I stopped, I continued chuckling off-&-on for 30 or 40 minutes! If you're in need of a good laugh, check 'em out!
@@ephennell4ever I saw one of those, and laughed too. But then at my age, I can't figure out how to use my smart phone and have to ask my son how to do something.
- You know I have a secret that in actuality I share with many people all the time, it's wonderful, and it still shocks me how it feels like I'm the only one to make this conclusion. I have a cell, and a landline - however I never tell anyone really my cell number or even that I have one (It's for a very select few people who are "on the list" of my VIP), and I only ever share my landline number. It gives me the single most advantageous ability. If I don't want to talk to someone, especially like if your Boss calls on your day off, I can just ignore the call, and if someone later was like "Hey, I tried to call, but you didn't answer" I can just say "Oh, I was out, didn't get your call until later when i got back home" and NO ONE can argue it, because that's how landlines work, it's fantastic, and I'll never do any different, if you only have mobile phones, and you don't want to answer, people will get all mad and say "Oh, thanks for ignoring my call jerk" - my method lets me do what I want, but only when i want, and can't be made guilty for not answering calls. Also, why do people say "Such Big Phones" ??? they're literally just normal phone sized, always have been from like the invention of phones until now : ear thing is at the ear, mouthpiece is by the mouth, the handset fits on the base properly.... there is no "Big" involved, it's just phone sized stuff. the only reason people think of them (incorrectly) as "Big" is because electronics have always always been pushing for miniaturization, make things smaller, as a sales angle, a way to convince buyers "Look, it's so compact, so convenient, weighs less, so much better. Buy yours today" They really should push for "So Fragile, so flimsy, so easy to lose, so hard to find. Don't get one, buy a real phone today." At least that would be honest advertising. And then, they charge MORE for a product that uses less materials to make. And they can't really use that B.S. line about how "Harder" it is to make smaller things, labor costs go up, etc etc B.S. There isn't anything "Hard" about an automated assembly machine making 50K new phones a day, there is just the one guy watching the terminal making sure the machine actually doing the work keeps functioning. It literally would take the same amount of time to make a regular sized cell as it takes to make the new "Slimfit" ones, the parts would be smaller, but the assembly time would be pretty much identical. If they still did stuff like this by hand, they might have a point, but yeah, that excuse don't fly, they just use it as an excuse to artificially inflate prices to enable them to buy another new sports car to impress their paid G/F with front end implants.
If you'd like to see a more "realistic" version of culture clash with aliens -- along with a VERY strong social message (lol), I highly recommend District 9.
“Not all countries celebrate Independence Day at the same time…” Not all countries HAVE an Independence Day lol Thats like when I got confused about why no one seemed to know what Guy Fawkes night was when I was watching V for Vendetta reactions 😅🤣
To be fair, the government barely had time to get their bums out of harm's way before their visitors set everything ablaze. Everyone was so busy with damage control that there was no time to think about countermeasures.
Great reaction, Trixy! Also enjoyed your reaction to Top Gun: Maverick not long ago. You might be interested to know that in that film the character named "Bob" is played by Lewis Pullman, the real-life son of Bill Pullman, who plays the U.S. president in this film.
This was such a blockbuster hit I love this movie lol 12:17 the crowd cheered at that part in the theaters from what I heard lol 15:57 all that was improved lol 25:44 I can't believe you cut one of the best speeches in movie history lol
In the original version, when Russell Casse said "I'm a pilot," they rejected him because he was so obviously drunk, so he didn't get an F/A-18 to fly. At the climax, when the president asked "doesn't anyone have any missiles left?" and Casse answered, he was flying his biplane with a missile duct taped to the side. Skipping the defective launch bit, the rest of the scene was the same. Test audiences didn't react well as they didn't like the implication that he planned his suicide from the start. They re-shot the scene so he was in a jet, and his decision was an unplanned sacrifice instead. All they did was re-shoot a couple close up scenes of Quaid in a jet cockpit. If you watch the scene again the Hornet flies oddly, the movement was originally matched to his biplane, and they didn't change that. All they did was stick another plane in. Isn't CGI wonderful?
Same basic plot, but a completely different approach is Tim Burton's 'Mars Attacks!'. Stars Jack Nicholson, Glenn Close, Michael J Fox, Pierce Brosnan, Danny DiVito, Natalie Portman, Lisa Marie, Jack Black, Annette Bening, and more.
"He is very confident for someone that doesn't know what is happening." Funny thing about pilots, especially fighter pilots, is that they're all kinda like that.
Blue, When this movie came out in 1996 around USA's Independence Day on July 4, country celebrated its then 220th Birthday. Now, USA is 246 years old in 2022
This is my ritual birthday movie. Every 4th of July, I have a slice of pizza, and I watch this movie. Ever since 1997 when it came out on VHS. Saw it in theaters in 1996. Good stuff. This is a classic popcorn movie, in my view.
4:55 Space is big, and back in the 90s, only a few nations had Aeronautic capability, or the capacity to actually observe near Earth activity. You wouldn't just see that thing.... Especially if the aliens were purposely approaching without radio activity until they were near the Earth. Also when you see the large mothership later on... No light. It's dark. Meaning its probably not very reflective, which means it wouldn't be easily detected by anyone on Earth. There's a quote from a disaster movie that came out just a couple years after this where a NASA scientist says to the president in that movie "With all due respect sir its a big ass sky, and we only have budget to observe about 10% of it at a time."
23:21 The government had no idea. By the time anyone had come up with anything, knowing what to look for as David did, it was already a half hour before the first strike. There was just no time.
The ship taking time to shoot the primary weapon is a recurrent and valid criticism of the final act. My explanation to that is the fact the ship is firing on the move, so it must take longer to gather the energy necessary for the shot. Mind that they took a few hours to position themselves before destroying the cities during the first wave. It's just my way of seeing it though.
5:12. I had an old pickup when I was a kid that I wanted to paint this kind of explosion pattern on. As with everything I wanted to do as a kid, it never happened.
This is one of the best classic action movies of the 90s, and the speech of the president Withmore was becoming in one of the most iconic quotes in Hollywood of all time.
33:40 -- "He just won their respect as, like, the coolest President." When I saw this in the theater way back in the day, I told the random woman sitting next to me (the theater was packed) after his speech, "If he survives this, he's a shoo-in for re-election."
This movie was my one of best childhood memories and when I see this film, I had lots of emotion because I see awesome actions and see humanity fought back against aliens. What a brilliant ride. 😊🎉
1. Hiller is a USMC Captain he knows his holiday off is over. That's why he didn't even have to wait to be called in. His squeeze should know that. 2. In the theater I was in the people in there actually stood up and cheered when the White House and the Capitol Building blew up. 3. In my top 10 reasons out of thousands to NOT live in a Metropolis. Getting the hell out. 4. Lisa Jakub/Alicia is FINE! fine fine😍😋 5. Brent Spiner/Dr. Okum played Data in Star Trek TNG. It's nice to see him with emotions. 6. Goof: The president said he sent up an AWAC. It's AWACS= Airborne Warning And Control SYSTEM. 7. Hiller clearly failed his parashoot landing training 🙄
If you haven't already, you should watch a parody pitch meeting for the making of Independence Day. Just search on YTube using the following exact words to find it - 'Independence Day pitch meeting'. It's on a channel called Screen Rant.
Adam Baldwin(whose character shot the alien at area 54) is also in Predator 2, Firefly, Serenity, and The Last Ship, in addition to non-science fiction projects.
The F/A-18 Hornets that the pilots are flying are operated by the US Navy, not the Air Force as shown in the film, and these are SEVERELY under-armed. A Hornet can carry 12 ATA missiles, not four, and also has a 20mm rotary cannon. The reason there is so much fire as the ships enter our atmosphere is precisely because their technology allows them to ignore things we need to be cognizant of, such as entry angles and friction mitigation. They literally just dropped their ships into the atmosphere which caused so much friction that it set the air on fire, but their shields are protecting them :P That weapon of theirs on the City Destroyer ships is most likely a plasma cannon (it's just called an 'energy weapon' in the notes), but for destruction of that magnitude a laser wouldn't cut it. Plasma is ionized gas and can be fired as a weapon via a magnetic containment field. This would set fire to everything around it, including the air, whereas a laser would be used for more precise, targeted attacks on weapon emplacements and ship subsystems.
The best thing about the movie for me now is that the President of the U.S. is in an F-18. Just like his son is in an F-18 in Top Gun Maverick. 😀 Bill Pullman plays the President and his son Lewis Pullman plays Bob in Maverick. 😀
Friendly reminder: Independence Day was from 1996. The Star Wars Prequels didn't come up til 1999. So George Lucas copied Independence Day. **wink** But yeah, many felt this was a Star Wars vibe film. Turned out it's better than the Star Wars Prequels. It was a long interim between 1983 (Return of the Jedi) til 1999 (The Phantom Menace). Independence Day helped the hype of Star Wars Episode 1. Fans were itching for a new Star Wars movie.
A bit off topic, but the game you mentioned at the start reminded me of a book (more a collection of illustrations). "Film in Five Seconds" by Matteo Civasch I'd recommend it even to people that (usually) don't read books; as mentioned, it's a book of very few words. And it makes for a nice present for everybody with some Interrest in movies.
Blue I believed that you are correct about the reference to Star Wars. Both Roland Emmerich and Dean Devlin are Star Wars' fans. With Alien ships with doomsday laser (Death Star) and fighters (Tie Fighters).
22:53 History! Most people did not know about computer virus back then because the public at large did not suffer from them. Yes, the Internet existed since the 1970s but the one the public knows (World Wide Web) now had only existed since around 1994, most people outside the computer industry did not know of such things in 1996.
I don't know if you've watched any of the Star Trek movies, but if you have, it may interest you to know that Brent Spiner, who played Dr. Oaken, also played Lieutenant Commander Data.
Trixie can be so dense sometimes, it's an American movie whos events falls on July 4th, again it's an American movie what else would it be called but Independence Day 😂😂😂
Only someone who doesn't know the definition of Independence would ask why a double entendre has two meanings. 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️ or do you not know what a double entendre is?
@@justindenney-hall5875 That did sound like it didn't it. I was meaning she had many different reactions while watching this movie, happy, sad, and excited. Sorry for the confusion and thanks for the reply.
This was the first film I sneaked out to see in a theater after having joined the Amish. I managed to stay away from movies for years until this film came out! Please watch Jeff Goldblum starring in David Cronenberg's The Fly (1986). Jasmine went to El Toro to find Steve. Steve went to El Toro because he'd told her to go there. That was the first place to look for her--but his biggest worry was that she'd been killed there when El Toro was destroyed. Anyway, that's how he "found" her. He went right to where she was expected to be.
As pointed out in the movie, the aliens attacked the military and major cities first. The Pentagon, headquarters of every branch of the US military, was one of the first places hit. Second on the list was NORAD, the North American Aerospace Defense Command. Likewise, the aliens destroyed all military bases in every country as quickly as possible, including El Toro, where the captain had been stationed - and where he told his girlfriend to meet him.
Back in 1997 I was going to the store and I saw an ufo over a house it was big and it slowly moved across the street over the car and took off like a bolt of lightning
This is one of those rare movies that's completely derivative of other movies, utilizes ridiculous scientific concepts, and yet is still a blast to watch.
23:15 ya that's obvious NOW (and to people that knew anything about computers) but back when this movie came out there weren't computers in almost every home/pocket. It wouldn't have been obvious to the audience back then so it worked as a plot point in the 90's. You should watch War Games from the 80's.
In the middle there, you kept saying, "The government must have a team to handle this." Reminded me of a other movie with a similar quote- "Armagaddeon" with Bruce Willis. If you like sci-fi "end of the Earth" films, you should watch it.
Jeff Goldblum in Jurassic Park: "Must...go faster..."
Jeff Goldblum in Independence Day: "MUST GO FASTER!"
One of the better call backs. ;)
He (Goldblum) saw the chance to put the line in and asked for it. The director just about tripped over himself to say YES!
@@Caseytify I don't know how he got away with it. Oh yeah, he's Jeff Goldblum....Now that's chaos.
So, nods to Star Wars, Jurassic Park, Some Like It Hot ("Nobody's perfect") and The Right Stuff (walking out of a crash in the desert)...Any others?
He was actually talking to the director about that part in Jurassic Park and they thought it would fit in well there too so they put the voice over in lol
This was so cool seeing in theaters in ‘96. It was just mind-blowing.
Truly amazing
to answer your question about how Steve knew where to look for Jasmine...that's very simple. He TOLD her to be there. Jasmine took all the people she found to El Torro Air Force Base and stayed there over night. Steve took his helicopter from Nevada and flew to California.
Fun fact: Casse was originally supposed to be rejected at the recruitment, but show up with his biplane and a missile strapped to it when the President asks if anyone has more missiles. This is why nobody seems to know who he is despite clearly participating & communicating earlier in the battle, and also why he needs cover fire with guns despite him being in the same plane. The cockpit shots were done 6 months after shooting, which is why his kids hair is way longer when he waves bye to them in the hangar. The fighter jet in exterior shots was digitally added over the biplane, which is why he appears to be flying so slow, especially during the "hello boys, I'm baaaaack" impact scene.
Would love to see those outtakes, though I'm glad he wasn't rejected in the final cut. But I don't think they would reject him in that situation, the limited number of pilots and newbies who probably never even flew before and Russell with substantial military flying experience from Vietnam and his very heavy log of flight hours in general. The director and producer obviously connected the dots on this and therefore properly included him.🙂
Ummm,...how exactly does a 1930's open cockpit biplane fly in the upper atmosphere? Snoopy power?? That's way beyond idiotic.
I saw this in the theater with my brother and sister it blew me away!
It was a box office success making $890 million dollars against a $70 million dollar budget.
It won the Oscar for Best Visual Effects.
That dude gave the greatest speech in American history, and is also remembered as the greatest president in American history.😅 Excellent reaction Blue.💙
Cinema wise, it was the greatest speech other than William Wallace’s speech in BRAVEHEART.
I’d vote for him
As a British person we don’t get riled by speeches like Americans always do this intrigues me as to why
Also the speech didn’t even get me emotional he’s just an actor reading a script
Spaceman 1251. Yep. Great speech. There are two recent ones that I think are a little better, or just up there on par. Captain’s speech in “Endgame”, and the kid at the end of “The Great Debaters”!
My strongest memory of this movie was back then I was a heavy smoker (Yuck!) and I don't remember ever not having to sneak out during a slow part of a movie for a quick couple of drags🤔 I sat through this entire movie without a single cigarette it never slowed up, and I never did it again until I stopped smoking completely.
Looked for your only fans.. didn't see it only Instagram and Patreon 🤔. I'm really only on fb. But if you talk on only fans dm lemme know what it is and I'll try and message you there. Worst case scenario you can always ask in some way for my actual phone #. Like your vids. They are good
"Time to party like theres no tomorrow. Because theres no tomorrow." That! Is a great quote!
"Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we die."
In most stories you know that the heroes will win, the question is what will it cost them to do so?
I used to go to my friends and watch this with a few beers and a curry. We've all got kids now and moved, changed jobs.
Not seen it for years.
Tracy my friend and part of the watching died young we buried her just after her 50th. RIP mate there are still young crazy kids enjoying this!
Condolences.
Independence Day is one of my all time favourite movies. Especially the part that Will Smith punches the alien and says "Welcome to Earth" 😆
“Now that’s what I call a close encounter” 😉
Roland Emmerich, the director of Independence Day, is famous for his epic disaster films.
Not only has he made films like 2012 and Independence Day, he made his own Godzilla movie in 1998. People complained about it not having the "real" Godzilla, but it's still a fun western take on the genre. It starred Mathew Broderick and Jean Reno (Leon The Professional).
He also made Stargate, which eventually spawned several TV shows and a novel series. It's an epic sci-fi adventure starring James Spader and Kurt Russell ("Ego" in Guardians Of The Galaxy 2).
Stargate!!! :)
Also The Day After Tomorrow is an entertaining movie
@@christianjulio3537 that is a good movie.
I only wish the Stargate TV show would've stuck to the movie's feel and vibe.
@@emre05x
Too epic for their budget. Even if they were slotted for 100 episodes right out of the gate, they were still on a budget.
At 22:42 when blue say "and no one thought of this" for when they said to release the virus. You got to remember this was 1996 CGI and computer network viruses were not so "usual" stuff. I do not know have you noticed, but there were no mobile phones and only beepers. He only had remote phone because he was tv operator..... average person would not be able to do it.
This wasn't CGI, they used models, puppets and pyrotechnics with compositing. Convincing Computer Generated Imagery was still expensive in the 90s.
When someone asked the visual effects team "What software did you use to get the lighting on the plane?" they answered "A flashlight".
The shadow on the obelisk was made by backing up a truck onto a model of it.
The only CGI is what you actually see on the computer screens themselves.
I wish people stop using CGI instead of VFX. That word does not mean what you think it means …
The concept of computer viruses was known back then, but the writers ignored that you have to write them specifically for the OS, so Jeff Goldblum doing it in less than a day on a complete alien system is quite a stretch … but being IT myself I'd say he probably just installed Windows 95 on their mainframe …
virii were quite common back then; in fact they were common 10 years before that in the PC world.
@@Caseytify yeah, but the majority of of their specialist are already dead, the US military had less then 15% of their forces remaining well before they even get to area 51, that means bases, personnel, etc. They basically have only the more remote posts left this point.
@@Cau_No I knew they used load of practical effects and almost only ones were ones on alien crafts / shields and shooting main lasers.
On viruses yea concepts were known but thinking on infecting some unknown OS would be more then a stretch. And Will Smith knowing to fly alien ship instantly (especially with screen on spaceship being couple of lines) BUT that is why we call it fantasy movie....
And people know on OS then very little, especially when I as a kid said friend that we had argument a bit.... to type in in DOS "Format C:" welllll after it we get in argument even more....
@@Cau_No - I love a lot of your points, and the little "Princess Bride" reference you slipped in, that was genius man. Personally, I wish that they would tone down a lot of CGI and bring back more Practical Effects, so many people today are constantly getting surprised with "How Good" the older style Special Effects look, and it kind of baffles me, because it's like ... they are using real actual physical objects for their special effects stuff... so of course it looks real ...... because it IS real, not a fake imaginary thing generated on a computer, so it will ALWAYS look very convincing. Don't get me wrong, with modern technological advances in computer tech, a lot of CGI is very good now and can look amazing, but I feel like in many instances, they should TRY to make real physical effects first, and resort only to CGI when it's really necessary to get something done, like space lazers, or death rays etc because CGI can make those really convincing and easily done. But spaceships and monsters ,,, just build models, use latex, makeup and costumes.
Peace man, I think that word really doesn't mean what they think it means. ;)
One of my favorite films. It always puts me in a good mood when I’m having a hard day. Wonderful reaction friend. ✌🏻
Everyone in my theater applaud and cheered like crazy when the dog made it! That was the only time they did lol.
Blue the overall theme of this movie is a modern update of H.G. Wells' novel War of the Worlds in which Martians invade Earth take over but are eventually defeated by a biological virus rather than a computer virus in this movie. There are subtle references to other famous Sci-fi movies. One example is when David's computer on the alien ship says "Good morning Dave" that is a reference to HAL the computer from 2001 A Space Odyssey
It's not even close to 'War Of The Worlds'. Both stories involve an alien invasion but that is literally where the similarities end.
@@amazingusername8925 yeah I agree. The “virus” in this movie didn’t kill the aliens here. All it did was drop their shields. Weapons delivered the final blow to the alien ships.
@Mir Ronorah Is that a good or bad thing I've always thought it was kind of obvious?
The scene at the end, when our two heroes emerge from the desert, their spaceship aflame behind them, is taken from the movie "The Right Stuff". That amazing film is about the first astronauts chosen by NASA to explore Space, in the Mercury missions of the early 1960s.
It is based on the well-researched book of the same title, and shows us all the character flaws and the cool heroism of those chosen men. Above all, it shows us about the one, greatest test pilot of all time, who was Not selected for the Space program. He was Chuck Yeager, WWII air hero and the first man to break the sound barrier, and the coolest damn human to ever live.
And by the way, Jeff Goldblum has a small, funny role in "The Right Stuff", early in his career.
As a kid this movie really stuck with me because the depiction of the alien ships was so awe inspiring and the mood for a lot of the middle part of the movie was so desperate and dark. Overall it's a cheesy action movie, but it does some stuff really well to make it a classic.
Correct, we do not all celebrate independence day on the same day.
However, most people do celebrate independence from the same country 😂
This movie has a very special place in my heart as it was the first movie I saw in theaters after completing Basic Training for the Navy(Recruit Training Command, Great Lakes, Illinois, April to June of 1996). I was 25 at the time. Twenty-six years later and I still never get tired of watching this movie.
This movie was released on July 2, 1996. I saw it in the theater on opening night.
A classic summer blockbuster. Glad you enjoyed it!
Fun fact: On the Behind-the-scenes there is an alternative scene of the last missile being delivered by Mr. Casse.
He now flies the crop duster plane. Yes it is ridiculous seeing this slow plane trying to zigzag between fast fighter jets and enemy aircrafts, but its a nice bonus.
Yeah, they changed it so you could see his face when he decides to make the heroic sacrifice.
Also, unexpected Daft Punk!
When the first missile hit the flying saucer for the first time, in the theater it was like a sports time, pop corn flying and cursing and clapping... I never experienced anything similar after that.
When this came out they had a fake news broadcast where they pretended alien spaceships really were landing... we had my little brother totally fooled 🤣
16:00 that line and kicking was completely improvised by Will Smith. The location was actually at the salt flats of Utah in the U.S. Nobody warned him about the horrible smell of billions of dead brine shrimp that comes from around that area.
In case you’re wondering~
The first attack went down like this: the aliens position their destroyer crafts above the target cities, using our satellites to maintain efficient communications as well as locate the exact positions of these cities. The destroyer’s primary weapon opens fire upon the city from its highest point; the resulting blast sends a wall of hellfire in all directions within a diameter of 15 miles - the exact width of the ships themselves. This blast wave annihilates literally everything in its path, and it’s only fast enough for humans to be unable to outrun. It’s a slow and painful death.
The reason Russel Casse’s kamikaze attack was so effective was because he hit the destroyer craft’s weapon the exact second it fired. So the same hellfire you saw annihilate the major cities also annihilated the destroyers. Sweet revenge.~
The notion of city-sized alien spaceships, hovering above all of Earth's major cities, was originated by Arthur C. Clarke in his 1953 novel, "Childhood's End". Clarke is best-known for his novel version of "2001: A Space Odyssey", on which he collaborated with filmmaker Stanley Kubrick, for four years.
Arthur C. Clarke was a physicist as well as an S.F. author and popularizer of Science for young people. In 1945 he wrote a short paper that proposed using manned satellites in geosynchronous orbit, to make possible planet-wide coverage of radio signals. This concept is used today for all communications, except our satellites are unmanned. The concept is illustrated in "Independence Day" by Jeff Goldblum's character, in his drawing of three satellites having uninterrupted comms.
3:08 "I remember those big phones". We just called them phones, back in the day. Then they were called landlines once cell phones became popular. Now, most people don't know what one is and have never used one (except maybe if they work in an office) ... and zoomers couldn't operate one if you handed it to them 🙂
There's some *hilarious* YT vids showing teens-&-early-20s folks trying to use an old-style rotary phone ... I watched 4 or 5 of them in a row when I first found 'em. I had to take a break 'cause I was laughing so much that I was gasping for air, and could feel my face getting red! Even after I stopped, I continued chuckling off-&-on for 30 or 40 minutes!
If you're in need of a good laugh, check 'em out!
@@ephennell4ever I saw one of those, and laughed too. But then at my age, I can't figure out how to use my smart phone and have to ask my son how to do something.
- You know I have a secret that in actuality I share with many people all the time, it's wonderful, and it still shocks me how it feels like I'm the only one to make this conclusion.
I have a cell, and a landline - however I never tell anyone really my cell number or even that I have one (It's for a very select few people who are "on the list" of my VIP), and I only ever share my landline number. It gives me the single most advantageous ability. If I don't want to talk to someone, especially like if your Boss calls on your day off, I can just ignore the call, and if someone later was like "Hey, I tried to call, but you didn't answer" I can just say "Oh, I was out, didn't get your call until later when i got back home" and NO ONE can argue it, because that's how landlines work, it's fantastic, and I'll never do any different, if you only have mobile phones, and you don't want to answer, people will get all mad and say "Oh, thanks for ignoring my call jerk" - my method lets me do what I want, but only when i want, and can't be made guilty for not answering calls.
Also, why do people say "Such Big Phones" ??? they're literally just normal phone sized, always have been from like the invention of phones until now : ear thing is at the ear, mouthpiece is by the mouth, the handset fits on the base properly.... there is no "Big" involved, it's just phone sized stuff. the only reason people think of them (incorrectly) as "Big" is because electronics have always always been pushing for miniaturization, make things smaller, as a sales angle, a way to convince buyers "Look, it's so compact, so convenient, weighs less, so much better. Buy yours today" They really should push for "So Fragile, so flimsy, so easy to lose, so hard to find. Don't get one, buy a real phone today." At least that would be honest advertising. And then, they charge MORE for a product that uses less materials to make. And they can't really use that B.S. line about how "Harder" it is to make smaller things, labor costs go up, etc etc B.S. There isn't anything "Hard" about an automated assembly machine making 50K new phones a day, there is just the one guy watching the terminal making sure the machine actually doing the work keeps functioning. It literally would take the same amount of time to make a regular sized cell as it takes to make the new "Slimfit" ones, the parts would be smaller, but the assembly time would be pretty much identical. If they still did stuff like this by hand, they might have a point, but yeah, that excuse don't fly, they just use it as an excuse to artificially inflate prices to enable them to buy another new sports car to impress their paid G/F with front end implants.
" It's like showing your cool shit to the chick you just brought home." --- LOL!!! That is a perfect description!
If you'd like to see a more "realistic" version of culture clash with aliens -- along with a VERY strong social message (lol), I highly recommend District 9.
“Not all countries celebrate Independence Day at the same time…”
Not all countries HAVE an Independence Day lol
Thats like when I got confused about why no one seemed to know what Guy Fawkes night was when I was watching V for Vendetta reactions 😅🤣
A uniquely English holiday. ;)
To be fair, the government barely had time to get their bums out of harm's way before their visitors set everything ablaze. Everyone was so busy with damage control that there was no time to think about countermeasures.
Great reaction, Trixy! Also enjoyed your reaction to Top Gun: Maverick not long ago. You might be interested to know that in that film the character named "Bob" is played by Lewis Pullman, the real-life son of Bill Pullman, who plays the U.S. president in this film.
When they made the attack, it was on July 4th. Which is why the Independence Day line had more impact.
Love your reaction. Thanks for watching. 😊
I fucking love the informal use of "Peace" on the aliens at the end.
This was such a blockbuster hit I love this movie lol
12:17 the crowd cheered at that part in the theaters from what I heard lol
15:57 all that was improved lol
25:44 I can't believe you cut one of the best speeches in movie history lol
Everyone in the theater cheered when the dog made it.
In the original version, when Russell Casse said "I'm a pilot," they rejected him because he was so obviously drunk, so he didn't get an F/A-18 to fly.
At the climax, when the president asked "doesn't anyone have any missiles left?" and Casse answered, he was flying his biplane with a missile duct taped to the side. Skipping the defective launch bit, the rest of the scene was the same. Test audiences didn't react well as they didn't like the implication that he planned his suicide from the start.
They re-shot the scene so he was in a jet, and his decision was an unplanned sacrifice instead.
All they did was re-shoot a couple close up scenes of Quaid in a jet cockpit. If you watch the scene again the Hornet flies oddly, the movement was originally matched to his biplane, and they didn't change that. All they did was stick another plane in. Isn't CGI wonderful?
Same basic plot, but a completely different approach is Tim Burton's 'Mars Attacks!'. Stars Jack Nicholson, Glenn Close, Michael J Fox, Pierce Brosnan, Danny DiVito, Natalie Portman, Lisa Marie, Jack Black, Annette Bening, and more.
And it only took a Yank Country singer to yodel away the Alien Menace!
Mars Attacks… OMG! That was one of the worst movies ever
@@nsasupporter7557 We need to agree to disagree.
"He is very confident for someone that doesn't know what is happening." Funny thing about pilots, especially fighter pilots, is that they're all kinda like that.
Blue,
When this movie came out in 1996 around USA's Independence Day on July 4, country celebrated its then 220th Birthday. Now, USA is 246 years old in 2022
This is my ritual birthday movie. Every 4th of July, I have a slice of pizza, and I watch this movie. Ever since 1997 when it came out on VHS. Saw it in theaters in 1996. Good stuff. This is a classic popcorn movie, in my view.
4:55 Space is big, and back in the 90s, only a few nations had Aeronautic capability, or the capacity to actually observe near Earth activity. You wouldn't just see that thing.... Especially if the aliens were purposely approaching without radio activity until they were near the Earth. Also when you see the large mothership later on... No light. It's dark. Meaning its probably not very reflective, which means it wouldn't be easily detected by anyone on Earth. There's a quote from a disaster movie that came out just a couple years after this where a NASA scientist says to the president in that movie "With all due respect sir its a big ass sky, and we only have budget to observe about 10% of it at a time."
23:21 The government had no idea. By the time anyone had come up with anything, knowing what to look for as David did, it was already a half hour before the first strike. There was just no time.
20:12 "Sometimes love isn't enough"...... I had a girl tell me that once.... broke my fing heart! 😭😭😭
Moneyis always a factor for Girlfriends
Oh you're doing a 90s blockbuster. You should do a reaction of The Mummy, (1999) Gremlins (1984) and Home Alone. (1990.)
22:42 No, no one would think a Windows 95 virus would take down an advanced alien species.
"Not all countries celebrate Independence Day at the same time." The More You Know 🌠 😆
The ship taking time to shoot the primary weapon is a recurrent and valid criticism of the final act. My explanation to that is the fact the ship is firing on the move, so it must take longer to gather the energy necessary for the shot. Mind that they took a few hours to position themselves before destroying the cities during the first wave. It's just my way of seeing it though.
5:12. I had an old pickup when I was a kid that I wanted to paint this kind of explosion pattern on. As with everything I wanted to do as a kid, it never happened.
All desert scenes in "star wars"were filmed in Tunisia,north africa.als use for "raiders of the lost ark".
The lead scientist studying the aliens is played by Brent Spiner, who played Data in Star Trek.
They didn't 'know what the sound meant'... They were just excited that there WAS a sound. :)
4:33. Great song on “Frog Stomp”, by Silverchair! “In the Shade”.
This is one of the best classic action movies of the 90s, and the speech of the president Withmore was becoming in one of the most iconic quotes in Hollywood of all time.
Sci-fi movies 😉
Fun Fact: The little boy (Dylan), also plays Will's little cousin Nicky in The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air.
35:46 "the right salad of movie" Yup, a perfect cocktail of action romance comedy and sci-fi plus forth of July.
I would like to know where to get ahold of some neon light decorations like in the back ground.
33:40 -- "He just won their respect as, like, the coolest President."
When I saw this in the theater way back in the day, I told the random woman sitting next to me (the theater was packed) after his speech, "If he survives this, he's a shoo-in for re-election."
Do you remember what she said back?
@@Ruzz-wd7it Just a non-verbal pleasant and seemingly affirmative acknowledgement.
watch his 2 part - independence day resurgence , intresting fact is this movie made after 20 years with the same cast.
This movie was my one of best childhood memories and when I see this film, I had lots of emotion because I see awesome actions and see humanity fought back against aliens. What a brilliant ride. 😊🎉
1. Hiller is a USMC Captain he knows his holiday off is over. That's why he didn't even have to wait to be called in. His squeeze should know that.
2. In the theater I was in the people in there actually stood up and cheered when the White House and the Capitol Building blew up.
3. In my top 10 reasons out of thousands to NOT live in a Metropolis. Getting the hell out.
4. Lisa Jakub/Alicia is FINE! fine fine😍😋
5. Brent Spiner/Dr. Okum played Data in Star Trek TNG. It's nice to see him with emotions.
6. Goof: The president said he sent up an AWAC. It's AWACS= Airborne Warning And Control SYSTEM.
7. Hiller clearly failed his parashoot landing training 🙄
If you haven't already, you should watch a parody pitch meeting for the making of Independence Day. Just search on YTube using the following exact words to find it - 'Independence Day pitch meeting'. It's on a channel called Screen Rant.
Adam Baldwin(whose character shot the alien at area 54) is also in Predator 2, Firefly, Serenity, and The Last Ship, in addition to non-science fiction projects.
Don't forget Chuck.
@@mizrolistThanks! (Big forehead slap!)
The F/A-18 Hornets that the pilots are flying are operated by the US Navy, not the Air Force as shown in the film, and these are SEVERELY under-armed. A Hornet can carry 12 ATA missiles, not four, and also has a 20mm rotary cannon.
The reason there is so much fire as the ships enter our atmosphere is precisely because their technology allows them to ignore things we need to be cognizant of, such as entry angles and friction mitigation. They literally just dropped their ships into the atmosphere which caused so much friction that it set the air on fire, but their shields are protecting them :P
That weapon of theirs on the City Destroyer ships is most likely a plasma cannon (it's just called an 'energy weapon' in the notes), but for destruction of that magnitude a laser wouldn't cut it. Plasma is ionized gas and can be fired as a weapon via a magnetic containment field. This would set fire to everything around it, including the air, whereas a laser would be used for more precise, targeted attacks on weapon emplacements and ship subsystems.
Irony...the pilot president is Bill Pullman. His real life son is Bob, the technical flyer, in top gun Maverick!
Thanks for uploading this! 🙃
The best thing about the movie for me now is that the President of the U.S. is in an F-18. Just like his son is in an F-18 in Top Gun Maverick. 😀 Bill Pullman plays the President and his son Lewis Pullman plays Bob in Maverick. 😀
How would like to die?
Me: 31:20
Blue calling out the cheesy pick up line makes me wonder what is the cheesiest pick up line a guy has ever used on her?
"Sir we got Aliens..and they AIN"T from Mexico !!"
Harry Connick Jr is Will's partner, multiple good TV shows and movies. But type in here, Harry Connick Jr sings, cuz his voice is next level!
Friendly reminder: Independence Day was from 1996. The Star Wars Prequels didn't come up til 1999. So George Lucas copied Independence Day. **wink**
But yeah, many felt this was a Star Wars vibe film. Turned out it's better than the Star Wars Prequels. It was a long interim between 1983 (Return of the Jedi) til 1999 (The Phantom Menace). Independence Day helped the hype of Star Wars Episode 1. Fans were itching for a new Star Wars movie.
but independance day copied the original star wards triology
A bit off topic, but the game you mentioned at the start reminded me of a book (more a collection of illustrations).
"Film in Five Seconds" by Matteo Civasch
I'd recommend it even to people that (usually) don't read books; as mentioned, it's a book of very few words. And it makes for a nice present for everybody with some Interrest in movies.
Blue
I believed that you are correct about the reference to Star Wars. Both Roland Emmerich and Dean Devlin are Star Wars' fans. With Alien ships with doomsday laser (Death Star) and fighters (Tie Fighters).
I love how blue thinks the people working for the government are the smartest people in the room....so innocent.
22:53 History! Most people did not know about computer virus back then because the public at large did not suffer from them. Yes, the Internet existed since the 1970s but the one the public knows (World Wide Web) now had only existed since around 1994, most people outside the computer industry did not know of such things in 1996.
I don't know if you've watched any of the Star Trek movies, but if you have, it may interest you to know that Brent Spiner, who played Dr. Oaken, also played Lieutenant Commander Data.
23:23 to quote the pitch meeting guy: "so the movie can happen!"
Trixie can be so dense sometimes, it's an American movie whos events falls on July 4th, again it's an American movie what else would it be called but Independence Day 😂😂😂
Only someone who doesn't know the definition of Independence would ask why a double entendre has two meanings. 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️ or do you not know what a double entendre is?
This is such a fun movie and loved your reactions to it. You have a really fun laugh that is contagious and fun.
@@justindenney-hall5875 That did sound like it didn't it. I was meaning she had many different reactions while watching this movie, happy, sad, and excited. Sorry for the confusion and thanks for the reply.
Truxy Blue: “yes! Saved the dog”! While millions of humans die!😂😂😂😂😂😂
The independent day speech still is one of my all time favorite movie speeches
This was the first film I sneaked out to see in a theater after having joined the Amish. I managed to stay away from movies for years until this film came out!
Please watch Jeff Goldblum starring in David Cronenberg's The Fly (1986).
Jasmine went to El Toro to find Steve. Steve went to El Toro because he'd told her to go there. That was the first place to look for her--but his biggest worry was that she'd been killed there when El Toro was destroyed. Anyway, that's how he "found" her. He went right to where she was expected to be.
As pointed out in the movie, the aliens attacked the military and major cities first. The Pentagon, headquarters of every branch of the US military, was one of the first places hit. Second on the list was NORAD, the North American Aerospace Defense Command. Likewise, the aliens destroyed all military bases in every country as quickly as possible, including El Toro, where the captain had been stationed - and where he told his girlfriend to meet him.
Back in 1997 I was going to the store and I saw an ufo over a house it was big and it slowly moved across the street over the car and took off like a bolt of lightning
This is one of those rare movies that's completely derivative of other movies, utilizes ridiculous scientific concepts, and yet is still a blast to watch.
If ET has a force shield, the earth is doomed 😢
Will Smith slapped that alien like it was Chris Rock. 🤪👽
Episode 1 wouldn't come out for another 3 years. Happy Independence Day!
There is an Independence Day squeal, Independence Day: Resurgence.
23:15 ya that's obvious NOW (and to people that knew anything about computers) but back when this movie came out there weren't computers in almost every home/pocket. It wouldn't have been obvious to the audience back then so it worked as a plot point in the 90's.
You should watch War Games from the 80's.
In the middle there, you kept saying, "The government must have a team to handle this." Reminded me of a other movie with a similar quote- "Armagaddeon" with Bruce Willis. If you like sci-fi "end of the Earth" films, you should watch it.
Love the video Blue 💙. Keep making us smile and keep up the amazing work 😁
You said this 2 weeks before the video was even uploaded
@@-M0LE Yt members get early access to videos 😊
When he says … now that’s what I call a close encounter. He was referencing the movie Close Encounters of the third Kind.
23:18 Well the government isn’t Jeff Goldblum, miss Blue. 💁🏻♂️
😂
22:45 you weren't there... you thought of it. 🤣
I don't know why you were worried about the dog. It's a Hollywood film. That dog is wearing more plot armour than all the other cast combined.
18:03 was inspired by true events 💯
You don't want to die a virgin 🤣😂🤣 one hell of a pick up line 🤣🤣🤣