I loved the book where he summarised what happened in 1925, every small farm closed due to a 2 year drought, which means he would have lost the farm in 1925 anyway. So when his wife wanted to sell up and move, it was absolutely the right call to make
It was fairly important for awhile, but by the 1920s this form of farming was dying out, it may have already been dead in Nebraska. I was born and have for my entire life lived where this novel is based on, as in right on the exact location. Privately owned farming still exists, but by the 20s, if you wanted to compete with anyone, you had to have massive staffing, and it would have been a pittance of money in contrast to the efficiency all the new technology and farmhands would have brought. This is pretty heavily referenced in 1922, as the narrator is essentially of the belief that you had to do everything yourself, and that any form of change or updating to the both inefficient, and selfishly ran farm, was immoral or bad. I.E, the bank loan was intended to turn it into a farm that would make money, and part of why Arlette hated the farm was that Thomas Jane's character was forcing his family to live in abject poverty, with a decaying house, and Jane having no business sense, it conflicted with Arlette's intelligence and savvy business sense. Part of what motivates the grand tradgedy of it is that it's heavily implied that Arlette's sale of her land would have been a good thing, and that Jane was not reliably relaying information when he implies that the sale would ruin his ability to farm. As it's shown that the sale would have made the family wealthy, and even allow Arlette to open a secondary business in a big city, which it's implied the family would handle both jobs together. However, as Jane became more and more angry and irrational, the plan changed, wherein Arlette believed that they should stop farming entirely now, as Jane was not going to change his methods. This spawned a delusion that Arlette was seeking to sabotage him, in which he was unable to realize he was abusing his family, and was making compromise seem more and more impossible. This abuse lead to Arlette believing he wanted a divorce, and her proposal of doing what she believed he wanted, which unintentionally fed even more into Jane's sense of abandonment and betrayal. The issue was less that his land was his pride, as that's less of a genuine sentiment most of the time, and only really was a sentiment experienced primarily on the frontier in the 19th century. It was more of his ingrained belief that the tradition his family had kept was more important than wellbeing, financial security, or being a genuinely good farmer. The tradgedy being that he unintentionally lead to the outright annihilation of his own life, and unintentionally made it impossible to maintain the tradition by refusing to take care of his family. In essence, he was infatuated with a romanticized idea, to the point of becoming blind and delusional, his own stupidity preventing him from being able to achieve it in what is to us, an easy solution or methodology.
iMajoraGaming so by today’s standard. It’s better to buy a smaller patch of land 1-10acres with equipment (which I’m working on) compare to his 80acres manual labour (which slows down production, waste time, money) in his time. It’s true he does not have any business sense. What I thought in the movie is, why not sell off parts of his land and buy newer agricultural equipment to speed up production. I guess he just love doing it manually or live a stagnant life. And man, you should post this on the comments. Not in a comment of a comment.
@@MalaysianChopsticks That's generally the better approach to modern farming, mechanical equipment means that you can do a lot more with less than you used to have to, which is I think part of the greater tradgedy of 1922, Jane's character was more or less falling behind and was driving around 80+ acres of land in a single truck, harvesting with two entire people the whole time. The tradgedy is amplified by the fact that he had enough sense to use a truck, but got so caught up in romanticisms that he never went beyond that, he never tried to make extra steps, like a second truck that could be staffed by a labourer or two. He could have downsized significantly, and would probably have been better off, the longer a crop is left, I.E when you have to drive a 1920s truck over 80 acres, the crop can fall victim to poaching, disease, animals eating it, meaning what he first harvested would have been the best quality, and worth the most, but by the time he got to the last, it would have been useful only as cattle-feed, adding another layer to the self-inflicted misery, as he was unintentionally costing himself a lot of money by not going for a smaller, but vastly more lucrative and high-quality harvest. I think 1922 is as much a story about self-inflicted harm, as it is about someone who failed to make use of the change the world was undergoing during, more or less being left behind while corporations, like the Farmington Company, began to mechanize farming, all the while boiling land-managment down to a science, I.E how they intended to use Arlette's 100 acres for multi-species animal farming, slaughtering, and meat processing, wheras Jane was using 80 acres for a single crop that was being harvested by two measly people at a time.
What I like about Thomas Jane is how his best three roles were all ones that dealt with family, he always convinced me of what he was playing in those. Punisher, loss of his family. The Mist. protecting his son only to lose him in the end. 1922, the video explains that one for me. The man is underused in Hollywood and deserves more recognition.
I absolutely love 1922. When I first saw the film it really gave me a dark impact on what while sacrifice that’s close to your heart in order to live a happy life. And I couldn’t sleep well when I was finished with the film. Thank you for the film explained, another film that’s based off of Stephen King’s novels is Gerald’s Game. Another good Netflix film.😈👍🏼
@Name-bn3vo a mans love for his life. Back in the early 1900s all a man had was his "business". His business being farming. Like here in texas the law still states that those who steal cattle are up for the death penalty. I'm not saying what he did was right at all. It was gross, but it's historically accurate. Learn history.
I will never understand why people say that Steven King is unoriginal... btw Niat, is Lord Harkon on the list? If you don’t know Harkon is the main antagonist from the Elder Scrolls V:Skyrim DLC Dawngaurd
The reason people say Steven King is unoriginal is because he often writes very similar characters; a lot are from Maine, have drunken father figures, etc. I think he has written some very good books (fire starter, The stand, the dark tower) he has also written a lot of mediocre and bad books. But if you write that many it's understandable there are going to be recurring themes and characters.
@@filmcomicsexplained hey man im A long time fan I was wondering if you could cover the headcrabs and half life in general as UA-cam is completely devoid of pertinent information
The story in this video sounds like exactly the same story Dostoyevsky told in his book Crime and Punishment. A man murders a woman with full intent but is haunted by his actions through the rest of the story
@@moonflowerspeaks Bonnie and Clyde were not just friends, they were lovers... and Bonnie was married but she had not seen her husband for a long time.
I watched this last night. Thomas Jane was the best part of the movie. He really knocked it out of the park. I didn't even realize it was him until halfway through the movie!
I hope you have read the source material from the collection "full dark, no stars". A very painful read but wonderful nonetheless. As usual, another great vid
I had a hard time figuring out if what he was seeing was real, or just his imagination. If you go back to the scene in the basement when his dead wife is whispering in his ear about what trouble their son has gotten into, he makes a remark stating, "She was telling me stuff only a dead person would know." That kind of lead me to think that maybe he was wasn't imagining her there, maybe she was actually there haunting him.
It's sad that murder can happen over something like that... Really I'm starting to wonder if something was a bit off with our protags base mindset because thinking of murder as the only option says a lot. I wonder if the directors tried to convey that at all xd. Anyways, great video as Always!
I almost feel bad for Wilford tbh but then I think about the gruesome way he killed Arlette and the way he manipulated Henry to take part in such . Imagine the damage to Henry’s mental health to not only lose you mom so tragically but to have also played such a major role in as well.
Coming back to the channel after a couple months and honestly I gotta say your video quality has improved a fair amount. Stays interesting for longer, the content at its core was always great but I think you’re becoming a better storyteller yourself not just an analyst.
Watched this film on a whim and bloody hell am i pleasantly surprised. I had zero expectations but was utterly blown away with the very believable (and deeply morbid) tragedy
Jane is one of my favorite actors. He always does a hell of a good job in the roles he's given, even if it's a really shitty role in a bad Predator sequel.
I watched this after I finished Geralds Game which is another Steven King Netflix adaptation. I really enjoyed this movie I had no idea what it was even about when I started it and I'm glad I watched it. Its underrated imo, no one really talks about it.
At first I’m like “Stephen King was inspired by Poe’s A Tell Tale Heart” but then I was like “Stephen King was inspired by Poe’s A Tell Tale Heart and made it *betterr*!!!”
Arlett was wrapped up when she was thrown into the well. How did she become unwrapped in the scene when he threw the suitcase down there with her? And the first scene when you see the rats staring to break through the wall, the wall was off white. Later it was green.
Hey, new subscriber here, and I gotta say I love the way you delve into films, their themes and especially their creatures! Ever thought about doing a video on the Morlocks from H.G. Wells' Time Machine?
Great video! If you don't mind me asking.... Can you cover The Babadook sometime? Both the film and creature? Was the monster real? Or was he just a split personality? I honestly want to hear your take on it.
Jon Berthol(?) does the role justice but Thomas Jane will always be my Punisher. I grew up with that version and that's where my love of both the Punisher _and_ Thomas Jane began. Been a massive fan of both for a long time (fuck I'm old)
Hey Niant, if that is how your name is spelled, I really like your videos. Could you one day an explanation of how the kaiju's from Pacific Rim were able to come into our world through a tear at the bottom of the ocean? Also, could you do a video explaining the other types of viruses from Resident Evil please?
Hey buddy, I've done a video on the Kaiju already and its in my monster playlist. Plus two videos on Resident evil also in the virus playlist! Enjoy :)
@@filmcomicsexplained sorry I forgot I watch them later. By the way, I love your videos can you do one about the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and the mutagen that created them
Hey man would u ever do a video on the comic series "The Crossed" ? You should def check it out it's a completely different take on the zombie apocalypse genre
Interesting about that Stephen King adaptation streaming service warning Hulu any other is Netflix they're good about the dark Towers going to be Amazon
I enjoyed the film. Any critique I have is moreso style than substance. But the one thing I cant hold back on is that it is just a rehashing of the Tell Tale Heart. Instead of a heart thumping under the floor, its rats coming from the walls. Still, if i had the chance to use it in class, Id have my students read Poe then watch 1922.
I loved the film. Have watched it about ten times. Happy that you brought to my attention things that I had not noticed. Thank you. Have a great day/night guys and gals. ❤💀✌😱👻
I haven't seen the movie but read the story. This looks really good and close enough to the way it went. I can't recall the name of the story. It's in a book of stories from King. A doctor turned heroine smuggler gets stranded on a small outcrop of rock in the ocean after a shipwreck... has a whack load of H but no food.... that would make a great short movie... anyone remember the name of the story?
Not really my type of movie but then again I am not a horror fan either, still there is the occasional one I watch but I'd rather watch a good drama or action :-) Now I blame most of my exposure to horror movies on my brother and cousins so here is a few suggestions that made me take a LONG walk whenever they would get together for a horror marathon. Pet Cementary the Hills have eyes Cannibal holocaust Bad taste (Peter Jackssons low budget one) Braindead And now I am going cleanse my mind of these via the glory Sergion Leone's Dollar trilogy and "Once upon a time in the west" Anyway best of luck to you :-)
Can you do a GameExplore and explore the Traveler from Destiny? I kinda play the game and hardly watch the cut scenes, so I pretty much don’t know what’s going on except you need to shoot anything that isn’t a Guardian.
I loved the book where he summarised what happened in 1925, every small farm closed due to a 2 year drought, which means he would have lost the farm in 1925 anyway. So when his wife wanted to sell up and move, it was absolutely the right call to make
He would've had to kill her to avoid that "I told you so." Completely kidding, what a haunting movie and a side of murder I'd never thought about.
And yet in the 30's the only people (that weren't rich) that had food in their stomach every night were Farmers.
Truth is stranger than fiction.
This might be Stephen King's best work. It is completely character focused and doesn't get sidetracked by stereotypes and supernatural elements.
A man’s pride was a man’s land.
This speaks true to me. Working on getting my own land at this very moment. No wife murderin if ya askin
Mr. Chopsticks that sounds like what a wife murderer would say
Herky61 Well, if my wife is a cow who dropped down a well being buried at this moment? *spit* Bist git muhself back to work.
It was fairly important for awhile, but by the 1920s this form of farming was dying out, it may have already been dead in Nebraska. I was born and have for my entire life lived where this novel is based on, as in right on the exact location.
Privately owned farming still exists, but by the 20s, if you wanted to compete with anyone, you had to have massive staffing, and it would have been a pittance of money in contrast to the efficiency all the new technology and farmhands would have brought.
This is pretty heavily referenced in 1922, as the narrator is essentially of the belief that you had to do everything yourself, and that any form of change or updating to the both inefficient, and selfishly ran farm, was immoral or bad.
I.E, the bank loan was intended to turn it into a farm that would make money, and part of why Arlette hated the farm was that Thomas Jane's character was forcing his family to live in abject poverty, with a decaying house, and Jane having no business sense, it conflicted with Arlette's intelligence and savvy business sense.
Part of what motivates the grand tradgedy of it is that it's heavily implied that Arlette's sale of her land would have been a good thing, and that Jane was not reliably relaying information when he implies that the sale would ruin his ability to farm. As it's shown that the sale would have made the family wealthy, and even allow Arlette to open a secondary business in a big city, which it's implied the family would handle both jobs together.
However, as Jane became more and more angry and irrational, the plan changed, wherein Arlette believed that they should stop farming entirely now, as Jane was not going to change his methods. This spawned a delusion that Arlette was seeking to sabotage him, in which he was unable to realize he was abusing his family, and was making compromise seem more and more impossible.
This abuse lead to Arlette believing he wanted a divorce, and her proposal of doing what she believed he wanted, which unintentionally fed even more into Jane's sense of abandonment and betrayal.
The issue was less that his land was his pride, as that's less of a genuine sentiment most of the time, and only really was a sentiment experienced primarily on the frontier in the 19th century. It was more of his ingrained belief that the tradition his family had kept was more important than wellbeing, financial security, or being a genuinely good farmer.
The tradgedy being that he unintentionally lead to the outright annihilation of his own life, and unintentionally made it impossible to maintain the tradition by refusing to take care of his family. In essence, he was infatuated with a romanticized idea, to the point of becoming blind and delusional, his own stupidity preventing him from being able to achieve it in what is to us, an easy solution or methodology.
iMajoraGaming so by today’s standard. It’s better to buy a smaller patch of land 1-10acres with equipment (which I’m working on) compare to his 80acres manual labour (which slows down production, waste time, money) in his time.
It’s true he does not have any business sense. What I thought in the movie is, why not sell off parts of his land and buy newer agricultural equipment to speed up production. I guess he just love doing it manually or live a stagnant life. And man, you should post this on the comments. Not in a comment of a comment.
@@MalaysianChopsticks That's generally the better approach to modern farming, mechanical equipment means that you can do a lot more with less than you used to have to, which is I think part of the greater tradgedy of 1922, Jane's character was more or less falling behind and was driving around 80+ acres of land in a single truck, harvesting with two entire people the whole time. The tradgedy is amplified by the fact that he had enough sense to use a truck, but got so caught up in romanticisms that he never went beyond that, he never tried to make extra steps, like a second truck that could be staffed by a labourer or two.
He could have downsized significantly, and would probably have been better off, the longer a crop is left, I.E when you have to drive a 1920s truck over 80 acres, the crop can fall victim to poaching, disease, animals eating it, meaning what he first harvested would have been the best quality, and worth the most, but by the time he got to the last, it would have been useful only as cattle-feed, adding another layer to the self-inflicted misery, as he was unintentionally costing himself a lot of money by not going for a smaller, but vastly more lucrative and high-quality harvest.
I think 1922 is as much a story about self-inflicted harm, as it is about someone who failed to make use of the change the world was undergoing during, more or less being left behind while corporations, like the Farmington Company, began to mechanize farming, all the while boiling land-managment down to a science, I.E how they intended to use Arlette's 100 acres for multi-species animal farming, slaughtering, and meat processing, wheras Jane was using 80 acres for a single crop that was being harvested by two measly people at a time.
What I like about Thomas Jane is how his best three roles were all ones that dealt with family, he always convinced me of what he was playing in those. Punisher, loss of his family. The Mist. protecting his son only to lose him in the end. 1922, the video explains that one for me. The man is underused in Hollywood and deserves more recognition.
I absolutely love 1922. When I first saw the film it really gave me a dark impact on what while sacrifice that’s close to your heart in order to live a happy life. And I couldn’t sleep well when I was finished with the film. Thank you for the film explained, another film that’s based off of Stephen King’s novels is Gerald’s Game. Another good Netflix film.😈👍🏼
"On what while sacrifice that's close to your heart"
What are you talking about?
@Name-bn3vo a mans love for his life. Back in the early 1900s all a man had was his "business". His business being farming. Like here in texas the law still states that those who steal cattle are up for the death penalty. I'm not saying what he did was right at all. It was gross, but it's historically accurate. Learn history.
Haven't seen the movie, but man dont you do a great job explaining! Amazing work
Definately check it out, its a great film !
Agree with the last part of your comment.
It is currently on Netflix. I love the film btw. ✌💀😊
@@terilefevers6189 thanks, ill check it out
why are you watching this when haven't seen the movie before? Do something with your life man
I'm so happy you started to upload more but when you upload I'm in class so I have to listen without seeing D;
Oh noo! I'm sorry to hear that, the visuals are half the fun :)
I love this one. I could just never decide if he really was haunted, or if he just went insane with guilt.
I will never understand why people say that Steven King is unoriginal... btw Niat, is Lord Harkon on the list? If you don’t know Harkon is the main antagonist from the Elder Scrolls V:Skyrim DLC Dawngaurd
Sure will add him to the list now :)
The reason people say Steven King is unoriginal is because he often writes very similar characters; a lot are from Maine, have drunken father figures, etc. I think he has written some very good books (fire starter, The stand, the dark tower) he has also written a lot of mediocre and bad books. But if you write that many it's understandable there are going to be recurring themes and characters.
@@alastairbond7104 he's the cliche king and fears originality
@@filmcomicsexplained hey man im A long time fan I was wondering if you could cover the headcrabs and half life in general as UA-cam is completely devoid of pertinent information
The story in this video sounds like exactly the same story Dostoyevsky told in his book Crime and Punishment. A man murders a woman with full intent but is haunted by his actions through the rest of the story
So Henry and Shannon was the even younger Bonnie and Clyde.
Alexander Pade yes but Henry and Shannon were actually dating. Bonnie and Clyde were just friends and Bonnie was married
@@moonflowerspeaks Bonnie and Clyde were not just friends, they were lovers... and Bonnie was married but she had not seen her husband for a long time.
thought that too
I watched this last night. Thomas Jane was the best part of the movie. He really knocked it out of the park. I didn't even realize it was him until halfway through the movie!
Very well made film, just like all content coming from this channel.
Even when I already know the meanings and endings to movies I'll still watch these videos
Well that was depressing. He ruined everyone's life!
Never saw the movie, but I had heard it was a pretty good psychological horror thriller film from the works of Stephen King.
Yeh its great mate, plus its on Netflix :)
I was so glad that Thomas Jane did good in this movie. One of my favorite actors that is making a reappearance it seems.
He's one of my favs too. I love his body of work :)
This was next level. When I truly realized he had real range. Excellent
I hope you have read the source material from the collection "full dark, no stars". A very painful read but wonderful nonetheless. As usual, another great vid
I love your channel bro keep up the good work.
I had a hard time figuring out if what he was seeing was real, or just his imagination. If you go back to the scene in the basement when his dead wife is whispering in his ear about what trouble their son has gotten into, he makes a remark stating, "She was telling me stuff only a dead person would know." That kind of lead me to think that maybe he was wasn't imagining her there, maybe she was actually there haunting him.
You should do "as above so below" I was so lost in that one
Not sure what this was at first but really enjoyed the breakdown. great work! As usual :)
So this really reminds me of the classic Edgar Allan poem story "the telltale heart" but more of a semi-modern retelling
Rainbow Myr Stephen king said it was a wester Riff inspired by Edgar Allan Poes story
By far my favorite horror movie ever. Loved everything about it
It's sad that murder can happen over something like that... Really I'm starting to wonder if something was a bit off with our protags base mindset because thinking of murder as the only option says a lot.
I wonder if the directors tried to convey that at all xd.
Anyways, great video as Always!
If you watched the movie, Wilfred had a seething, almost irrational hatred of his wife. The murder was motivated by little other than pure contempt.
@@rutvin8763 That's pretty fucked. It's certainly odd how people often develop the most cruel hate for people they once cared for dearly.
Love your work Niat, you really delve into the mindset behind the characters actions, bringing the story to life in a fantastic way 🙌
Thanks Pretty Pixy! :)
Stephen King was a legend.....
Ps :when are u doing John Constantine??
its on the list mate, will get to it and everything else in time, thanks :)
@@filmcomicsexplained
And that's why ladies and gentlemen he is my favourite youtuber....
Stephen King IS a legend. Man is alive and well and still writing amazing stories
I almost feel bad for Wilford tbh but then I think about the gruesome way he killed Arlette and the way he manipulated Henry to take part in such . Imagine the damage to Henry’s mental health to not only lose you mom so tragically but to have also played such a major role in as well.
Such a good movie. It was a slow burn movie. Thomas Jane is amazing.
Absolutely correct. ✌
Wow I can’t believe I never heard of this
Its on Netflix! check it out :)
Can you please do Edge of Tomorrow? Would love to see that.
Waiting for you to do an analysis of this movie it's crazy.
How you don't have more subscribers is beyond me. Keep up the great work I'll keep watching
Great video...Thanks FCE!
Thanks Tonni!
@@filmcomicsexplained You're very welcome. I'd thank you by your name but unsure off the spelling. Haven't thought to chk your profile.
There goes Hemmingford Home again...I like how the towns King uses tend to stay the same in his writings
Coming back to the channel after a couple months and honestly I gotta say your video quality has improved a fair amount. Stays interesting for longer, the content at its core was always great but I think you’re becoming a better storyteller yourself not just an analyst.
Have you considered the aliens from the movie Battle: Los Angeles
YES
Yes
Movies too damn good. May watch it again today
Yeh its fantastic!
Yasss I’m finally not 20 hours late.
👍
missed this looks good
Watched this film on a whim and bloody hell am i pleasantly surprised. I had zero expectations but was utterly blown away with the very believable (and deeply morbid) tragedy
I love your videos, mate! Your the best!
Thanks champ!
I love your channel. Keepem coming. You are doing an awesome job
I love this channel subbed
Thanks Joel! welcome aboard :)
King's novella is a quite classic case of haunted by guilt story. Beautifully narrated, and bleak as a Lovecraft story.
Do "Stubbs the Zombie in Rebel Without a Pulse"
Well basically it's a Steven king adaptation so it's depressing. Ending explained easy as that
Nah tho love the channel keep up the good work dude
Jane is one of my favorite actors. He always does a hell of a good job in the roles he's given, even if it's a really shitty role in a bad Predator sequel.
I watched this after I finished Geralds Game which is another Steven King Netflix adaptation. I really enjoyed this movie I had no idea what it was even about when I started it and I'm glad I watched it. Its underrated imo, no one really talks about it.
At first I’m like “Stephen King was inspired by Poe’s A Tell Tale Heart” but then I was like “Stephen King was inspired by Poe’s A Tell Tale Heart and made it *betterr*!!!”
Arlett was wrapped up when she was thrown into the well. How did she become unwrapped in the scene when he threw the suitcase down there with her? And the first scene when you see the rats staring to break through the wall, the wall was off white. Later it was green.
While I was watching the movie I seriously had no clue what was going on but you explained it so clearly 🙏🏻
Please do the exorcist
This film was amazing in my opinion
I've seen this movie at least 5 times. Its crazy good! Glad to see you did a video on this movie
Can you make a video for Stephen Kings “the stand”? You do great work! Keep the videos coming.
Nice explain...
Agreed.
Hey, new subscriber here, and I gotta say I love the way you delve into films, their themes and especially their creatures! Ever thought about doing a video on the Morlocks from H.G. Wells' Time Machine?
yeh I have and they are already on the list, thanks Tuomas!
Mutsis
@@donttalktomeormysoneveraga2322 Emäs
Nice vid! Any future plans in the works?
Great video!
If you don't mind me asking....
Can you cover The Babadook sometime? Both the film and creature?
Was the monster real? Or was he just a split personality?
I honestly want to hear your take on it.
Sure thing buddy! its on the list already :)
The real punisher.
100 % agree with you :)
Jon Berthol(?) does the role justice but Thomas Jane will always be my Punisher. I grew up with that version and that's where my love of both the Punisher _and_ Thomas Jane began.
Been a massive fan of both for a long time (fuck I'm old)
VelociFaptor fun fact Tom Jane was originally supposed to be Rick Grimes, and Jon Berinthol was Shane both are Punishers👍😎
Spend it all on drink? Lol the way you talk always gives me a good laugh 😂 your channel is amazing tho man I rewatch videos everyday 🤘🏼
Nice video, i loved 1922, it had a unique genre mixing horror and murder
This novel is like a modern more sophisticated version of "The Telltale Heart"
Hey Niant, if that is how your name is spelled, I really like your videos. Could you one day an explanation of how the kaiju's from Pacific Rim were able to come into our world through a tear at the bottom of the ocean? Also, could you do a video explaining the other types of viruses from Resident Evil please?
One N
Hey buddy, I've done a video on the Kaiju already and its in my monster playlist. Plus two videos on Resident evil also in the virus playlist! Enjoy :)
@@filmcomicsexplained sorry I forgot I watch them later. By the way, I love your videos can you do one about the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and the mutagen that created them
Hey man would u ever do a video on the comic series "The Crossed" ? You should def check it out it's a completely different take on the zombie apocalypse genre
Good thing I subscribed
You mean Mother Abigail's Hemingford Home, Nebraska?!
Well, mayhap it is and mayhap it ain't! 🤣
(M-o-o-n, that spells "mayhap"! 👍😊)
Laws, yes!
The movie was really good. But I would like to see you do a review on George A Remaros land of the dead
yep its on the list :)
Hemingford Home, Nebraska?!?
Well, mayhap it is, and mayhap it ain't!! 😂
(M·O·O·N!! That spells, "Mayhap"!!)
Went in thinking it'd be a horror movie, Netflix deemed it so. Was disappointed, but like you said, change the genre and it's a great movie
When are you going to do Captain Trips from The Stand?
Do something about trench 21
11*
sure thing! adding that to the list now :)
Interesting about that Stephen King adaptation streaming service warning Hulu any other is Netflix they're good about the dark Towers going to be Amazon
Do Terrifier next plz! Very good horror movie that needs explaining!
now you need to do Gerald's game, because Stephen King
yep! sounds good mate, adding it to the list now, thanks :)
This is a very good movie... Nice summary!
Great movie just watched it today. 4 out of 5 🌟
I GOT to read the book! This was a great movie
But is it all connected with the lore?
Yes? Anyways keep up the great work
Have you done a 1408 movie explanation or review , it's a great film
This is a Netflix movie right?
Yep! go check it out :)
Idk man I got somebody who always occupies the TV 😅
I sas the movie and loved it
I enjoyed the film. Any critique I have is moreso style than substance. But the one thing I cant hold back on is that it is just a rehashing of the Tell Tale Heart. Instead of a heart thumping under the floor, its rats coming from the walls. Still, if i had the chance to use it in class, Id have my students read Poe then watch 1922.
I have friend who own land near there lmfao, Im from Crete
Love your explanations btw
Keep up the good work
I JUST watched this
Could you do a video on Stephen King's film Desperation?
Can you do a video explaining the alien and bladerunner universe?
I loved the film. Have watched it about ten times. Happy that you brought to my attention things that I had not noticed. Thank you. Have a great day/night guys and gals. ❤💀✌😱👻
Movie was pretty good but it broke my heart when Caitlin died in the shed in the snow
I haven't seen the movie but read the story. This looks really good and close enough to the way it went.
I can't recall the name of the story. It's in a book of stories from King. A doctor turned heroine smuggler gets stranded on a small outcrop of rock in the ocean after a shipwreck... has a whack load of H but no food.... that would make a great short movie... anyone remember the name of the story?
plz do ‘the Strain’ virus explained
Can you make a video on the traveler from destiny?
Sure! will add that to the list now :)
Can you do ready player one please
Sure! adding that to the list now, thanks :)
This movie kept me up at night haha
Not really my type of movie but then again I am not a horror fan either, still there is the occasional one I watch but I'd rather watch a good drama or action :-) Now I blame most of my exposure to horror movies on my brother and cousins so here is a few suggestions that made me take a LONG walk whenever they would get together for a horror marathon.
Pet Cementary
the Hills have eyes
Cannibal holocaust
Bad taste (Peter Jackssons low budget one)
Braindead
And now I am going cleanse my mind of these via the glory Sergion Leone's Dollar trilogy and "Once upon a time in the west"
Anyway best of luck to you :-)
Thanks mate, adding them all to the list now :)
The shining was my first king movie and novel
One of the best movies!
What does king have against corn fields?
Yeah at 1922 it's really a terrifying Feeling Good Feeling with Stephen King made this
Can you do a GameExplore and explore the Traveler from Destiny? I kinda play the game and hardly watch the cut scenes, so I pretty much don’t know what’s going on except you need to shoot anything that isn’t a Guardian.