Thank you for watching the video, It means a lot to me . I will leave this pinned message here to REMIND everyone that i do not have TELEGRAM and there is no GIVEAWAY. Those you see are bot scams . Keep yourself safe and know that I would not ask for your info. ❤ ❤
I watched this movie with a friend from Germany and when Michael Fassbender’s character held up three fingers she gasped, such a genius detail by Tarantino!
@@roryjoey1778 It's explained by Bridget von Hammersmark when they're at the vets. Germans hold up their thumb, index, and middle finger to represent 3, while English cultures (and presumably others) use the three fingers between thumb and little finger to represent 3. So it was a dead giveaway that he wasn't German.
Well, every European has had the same reaction. It wasn't an original idea, nor was it so brilliant. Only Americans use that sign to indicate the number 3. In Europe everyone uses the same which the Germans also use
Tarantino had been sitting on this script for a VERY long time, and the main reason why is he was struggling to find an actor to play Hand Landa. He obviously found his guy.
@Cal M bruh it's a reaction, if you wanna watch the movie then watch the movie. I'd rather have someone give their actual thoughts instead of just silently grimacing like a clown.
The scene when they are presenting themselves as the fake Italian camera men, with those terrible accents, is one of the funniest dialogue scenes ever 😂
The trope of a villain drinking milk is basically this. Milk is seen as a symbol of something wholesome and nourishing, for a villain to drink it is viewed as a subversion of this. The villain is flaunting his villainy.
Your movie reactions are some of the very best on UA-cam. You figure things out and make observations that sometimes never occurred to me even if it's a movie I've seen a hundred times. And listening to you speak is comforting. My best friend, who was Romanian, died recently and listening to your accent reminds me of her. Thank you.
I am from Germany and I love this movie! That said, I love most of Tarantinos work tbh. His presentation style and love for details, but also his excessive ultraviolence and blending of over the top characters into a great and alternative surreal story as well as the marvelous visuals is what captivates me I guess. Großartiger Film...bitte gerne mehr Tarantino hier bei deinen Reaktionen ^^
11:25 Das Wort Schnitzel leitet sich als Diminutiv snitzel vom MITTELHOCHDEUTSCHEN Wort sniz für „Schnitt“ ab. UND Herkünfte: Deutschland, Österreich (disputed) Schnitzel ist definitiv deutsch. Auch wenn man wahrscheinlich überall das Begriff "Wiener Schnitzel" kennt. Das ist aber nur die Zubereitungsart. Das hat aber nichts damit zu tun, ob das Schnitzel aus Österreich kommt oder aus Deutschland. Das ist einfach nur die Zubereitungsart
11:44 “Death smiles at us all. All a man can do is smile back.” Marcus Aurelius Notice how Dominic Decoco was supposed to have the worst Italian but Hans Landa doesn't question him twice? Lol cracked me up the first time
The thing that makes Hans Landa such an amazing character is that he's the defintion of a predator playing with his food. He's always five steps ahead and eventhough he knows the truth and can see through the lies, he just let it happen, just to see the other person panic. There's no other villain I can think of that creates a feeling of false hope while at the same time leave everyone having a panic attack. Measuring each word just to keep you wondering. I know some animals play with their prey before killing them, but they're not thinking about it like psychological torture. This guy represents the human equivalent of that. And how humans can take "playing with your food" to the next level.
Because milk is so damn delicious. I drink straight milk. It's best if it's untreated and straight from the cow. So I prefer to get it from a farm where I genuinely just ask the farmer for some milk. No process, not even the pasteurisation if possible.
I've had family who killed Germans and Germans who've killed family. But in this day and age it's not the same. I've got friends from Germany, Georgia, and even Russia. Friendship has not boundaries in this americans eyes ❤🪖
Milk does the body good. Whole milk actually has a fat that attaches to other bad saturated fats and flushes it out of the body. It also relieves hunger pain if you need some food in your belly.
calling hans landa "very smart" is the understatement of the year^^ he is a mozart, a genius of his craft. to bad, he is working fot the wrong side. if he would work for the allies, he would shorten the war for years.
QT has stated “without Christoph Waltz I couldn’t have made this film,” bc Waltz is trilingual. The movie got tremendous reviews and Oscar nominated. Waltz got the Oscar
This movie was very popular when it came out. I think it was nominated for 8 Oscars. Christophe Waltz won the Oscar for his portrayal of Hans Landa. His performance is absolutely perfect. This is my favorite Tarantino film. I enjoyed your reaction.
I loved this movie, watch it every chance I get (and thank you for letting me enjoy it with you) and highly recommend it. It introduced me to Christoph Waltz and his wonderful acting ability.
Americans weren't "relaxing" on the beach. Adolf was talking about Normandy. It was funny that Omar -- who didn't speak a word of Italian prior to that mission -- sounded the most authentic to Hans.
The movie is supposed to be over the top. Based largely on films like The Dirty Dozen and Kelly's Heroes, not a realistic depiction of the era. Plus you have a whole platoon of special forces Jewish soldiers, so they are going to be a bit overzealous. As bad as Tarantino goes after the Nazis in this movie, he is equally harsh on slave owning southern Americans in Django Unchained where the villain of this movie is a hero.
During WWII many action comic books (War Comics) were made for teenage boys that depicted fantastical fictional stories about war. This movie is a take on such comic books.
What a reaction! The fact that you speak French, German and English....and that you live in Germany....made this a very special reaction! Now I suddenly want to see you react to some of the great French and German movies! There are a few that other reactors have done! "Das Boot" is a fantastic movie and it tells a WWII story from the German perspective. "Run Lola Run" is a wild, fun, super cool (and very short!) movie from 1998. For France, some reactors do "Amelie". I'd LOVE if you did the french "Beauty And The Beast", directed by Jean Cocteau. Amazing. The French horror film "Eyes Without A Face" There are lots of French (and German) films I love, but I think those would definitely get views. (In your private time, watch Claude Chabrol's "Les Biches". WIld movie! Anybody reading this! "Les Biches" from 1968)
The crazy thing is that Christoph Waltz got this role because he could speak French, German, Italian, and English. Tarantino was about to nix the whole film altogether because after several months he couldn’t find anyone to play Hans Landa, who he felt was the single most important character in the film, who could speak all four until Christoph Waltz came in and absolutely killed his audition lol
I am a Native Apache from Texas. In the great olden times, scalping was a simple way to prove you killed someone. A whole head would get smelly, and a lock of hair would get lost easily. A bunch of hair stuck to a piece of leather is perfect. It’s practical… and perhaps a little intimidating… but mostly the first thing.
I had to subscribe. For several reasons. I love your accent, reaction was great and I respect your reaction on film violence. You are not weak and enjoy some fun, like it was intended to.
If you want to watch a more historically accurate WW2 movie, I recommend watching the movie Valkyrie, starring Tom Cruise. It's about the assassination attempt that got closest to succeeding in killing Hitler and removing the Nazi Party from power.
I thought that it was well known that Germans, and well most of Europe indicates the number 3 with the thumb extended plus the index and middle finger. I've known that for decades. Only Americans indicate the number 3 by extending the index finger, middle finger, and ring finger, which is awkward and unusual for a European. I saw you do it first naturally, then you struggled a bit to do like Americans, which was cute. If you try it, you'll find that it's easier and more natural to finger count 3 starting with the thumb.
Is this the first movie that you've seen directed by Tarantino? He has a very particular style for his movies, and he loves to play with history without worrying about being too over the top or offensive. 'Django Unchained' and 'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood' are other great examples.
Christoph Waltz was masterful in this (and has gained high prominence in American film since), but there are two German actors in this film which I have long thought to be underrated and under-cast. Diane Kruger (Bridget Von Hammersmark) I've loved in a number of films, including the 'National Treasure' films... and Til Schweiger (Hugo Stiglitz), who has had great parts in many American films, but usually as a secondary character, but always excellent.
It's interesting to see that the German three is apparently still the same to this day. You may already know by now, but it's SUPER easy to do the American three. You use your thumb to hold down your pinky, and then you have three fingers up. I'm guessing if you didn't know that, you also don't know how we signal two with fingers either. Same thing, except instead of putting your thumb over just your pinky, you put it over your pinky and ring finger both, and bam you've got two fingers up. And it's the same for one really. Pretty much put your thumb over your middle finger and the rest follow suit quite easily by staying down. We don't ever use the thumb to represent a number with our hands unless it's at least five. Though now that I'm trying it, it's not terribly difficult to keep your pinky down without covering it with your thumb either. It just feels so weird though. But anyway, concept is pretty simple. Use your thumb to cover any fingers you don't want showing, and then it's easy to represent however many fingers you want. Even with four, we put our thumb over the palm of our hands ending at the base of our pinky, so all the numbers are very uniform, and clear/easy to understand and perform. The German three is still quite easy, but it's about twice as hard as the American three.
Christoph Waltz is brilliant! He got Oscar for this role and for "Jango Unchained" - another great Tarantino's movie. It would be great if you react it too!
Tarantino has done three movies where he puts characters in settings of real historical tragedy, and his approach is to treat it seriously at first but then let the protagonists go off the rails into fictional revenge fantasy that's dark comedy.
That melody you were singing at the beginning is called Fur Elise. Edit: The drinking milk is a symbolism of pretending to be an ordinary average person, usually associated with monsters as a juxtaposition.
i guess i'm late to the party but I think you should lean into this being a GERMAN reaction to this movie. its interesting as an american to watch the tavern scene and see how real germans react to it! especially since i neither speak any german to notice fassbender's accent, nor did i know about the way you guys gesture the number 3! I feel like you'd get a lot more views if your description made it clear that you're a german reacting to it.
It was filmed in Germany and had a lot of German actors who really enjoyed the experience- definitely a fantasy film… well executed, suspenseful, funny, horrific…
This was such an enjoyable reaction, thank you for picking this one! I don't have too much to add that hasn't already been addressed by others in the comments, but I did scroll a few pages to see if anyone answered your question about the markings around Aldo Raine's neck. (I might have spelled his name wrong) Anyways, those marks are produced from when being hanged. Earlier in the movie, Brad Pitt's character was identified as an Apache, which is a native American tribe in the southern parts of the US back in the day. Whatever he did, it had to have been bad enough for him to swing from a rope, however, in rare occurrence, after he was dropped and was swinging for a bit, which would have been enough to form that scar, whether it be divine intervention or just a chance of circumstance, something or someone intervened thus stopping his execution. One could surmise that it wasn't long after such an event, he saw fit to join the military in order to either settle his debt to society or perhaps just needing to get the hell out of Dodge.
9:35 Don't worry, that guy actually survived somehow: I saw him robbing banks in Marseille in the '90s in the French Luc Besson movie "Taxi" (1998)! He aged really well too, he was looking even younger than he did during WW2!
"This is movie is so damn violent, I like it" that's my girl right there. I absolutely love your reactions, personality, and the way you carry yourself. One hell of a woman, and you got me absolutely hooked on you Bisscitt, and you at 51:50 is one of the main reasons why, so real, unique, and beautiful you are mi amour.
When I was in Germany in 2014 I had someone ask me to put up three fingers to see what fingers I'd use to visibly display the number 3. Jokes on them I put up my little,ring and middle fingers.
Alternate history movies are fun, loved that you spotted the 3 fingers being held up the wrong way too. Nice catch vampire Biss! I hope it's ok to joke and call you a vampire because you're Romanian?
Most people in Russia would show "3" number like this, so it differs from country to country :) for me it's so wild to use big finger for that number, more than that - we use big finger only for "5"! :D
The movie is absolutely great. But please remember that there was a big difference between Nazi, German and Wehrmacht soldier. I find German history incredibly fascinating because the Germans and Germany were always there, but at the same time not and always different like a shapeshifter. Stupid oversimplified: Rejects Roman annexation - Germanic Tribes defeat Rome, are often slapped in the face, but Rome generally fails to subdue them Creates an empire that wasn't really an empire but also was an empire and somehow lived for over 1000 years - very special and unique The Kingdom of Prussia and hundreds of German States gangsta! Before being defeated by one of history's greatest generals. defeats the French, unites into a new empire Get a colonial empire Fights 80% of the world alone and almost won.. Is treated badly Comeback as Villian, fights the whole world and only lost because of own mistakes.. Gets divided again Reunites again and is not allowed to be strong again. Also a few German inventions: - Incandescent lamps (Heinrich Göbel 1854) - The Telephone (Johann Philip Reis 1859) - The dynamo and tram (Werner von Siemens 1866) - The 35 mm camera (Oskar Barnack 1925) - Nuclear fission and atomic bomb (Otto Hahn - emigrated to the Americans during Nazi Germany - 1938) - The ship chart (Jürgen Dethloff and Helmut Gröttrub 1969) - Periodic Table (Julius Luther Meyer 1864) - Jeans (Levi Strauss 1873) - The recorder, player - with which the first films were possible (Emil Berliner 1887) - The Aspirin - Which all great athletes felt used to relieve pain, And which saved countless lives (Felix Hoffmann, Klausi Alder.. 1879) - Spark plug (Robert Bosch 1902) - Thermos flask (Reinhold Burger 1903) - the toothpaste (Ottomar Heinsius von Mayenburg) - The coffee filter (Melitta Bentz) - Cassette recorder (Fritz Pfleumer 1928) - Teabag (Adolf Rambold 1929) - The jet engines - Essential for all jets and rockets + First war rockets V1, V2 of the Nazis (Hans von Ohain 1929) - First rocket (in general, Hans von Ohain) - The helicopter (Heinrich Focke 1936) - The first car (Carl Benz - With honorary Schnauzer - 1886) - First Computer (Konrad Zuse 1941) - First 3D film (during the Third Reich) - Fanta (Yes THAT Fanta.. Also during the Nazi era) - The typewriter (Peter Mitterhofer - 1869) - NASA (actually the US buyed thousands of German engineers to build NASA because they can't do it themselves) - The first letterpress Mashine (Which was probably the best invention of all time because now they could start printing books, Johannes Gutenberg - 1440) - Motorcycle (Gottlieb Daimler 1885) - Birth control pill (Schering AG 1961) - the trigger of the gold rush (Johann August Sutter was a Swiss but actually German since he was born in Germany, but Swiss and German are one blood anyway, Who triggered the gold rush in America. Not an inventor but cool fact - 1848) Well, as you saw, the Germans changed the world with their inventions many times. Where we would be today without the German art of thinking. Germany the land of poets and thinkers - that's how it was known (Actually) The problem is that many Germans are not proud of their country and blood, unfortunately also because they were brought up that way. Because if you say anything to that effect, you will be called a Nazi. The problem is that many people don't have the right deep historical knowledge that people need to understand the world and and that only Hitler himself and his party were Nazis. Almost no German was a Nazi during the Nazi era. Also, any historian will tell you that the Allies, created Nazi Germany and WWII because of the unfair Versailles Treaty. Germans were so depressed that it is unimaginable for us. They were seen as evil around the world as they were blamed for everything in World War I. And when you have 3 kids at home, no job, money is worthless and no food and water you will follow anyone who fixes it. Because that's what the Nazis did in the beginning - they fixed everything and gave the Germans hope again. No German at the time could have known that Hitler was so crazy. It's not as easy as we always think. Even in the Wehrmacht, only a few liked the Nazis. They were German soldiers dying for the country. the general German soldier, like my grandfather, had nothing to do with the Nazis and the Holocaust. You must consider this one army fought against the rest of the world. And if we are honest: what kind of "peace" could the general German soldier expect? What could have they expect after all the Nazi crimes and everyone thought that all Germans were evil Nazis. What "Peace" could they expect. These soldiers fought for their lives and German people against a planet. If even many of Hitler's own generals like Rommel (legend) or Stauffenberg knew that he was not quite right in the head.. Then the normal people knew that even more. Many were manipulated and could do nothing about it. The Nazis were a small parasite not the Germans. You can imagine the Nazis like a natural dark Parasite Rising from the suffering of the Germans. And the 'Problem' is that Germans are People who have a very special work and perfectionism mentality. That's not a weak enemy. Calling all German soldiers Nazis is like calling all American soldiers democrats because they were in power. We should be prouder of ourselves, after all, Germany has repeatedly fought against the entire world, one time under a bad regime. We made this modern world possible and maintain a reputation for perfection and quality. The hard-working German with perfection in his blood! Or rather, we once had this reputation. Today there is no longer a country of poets and thinkers. We are still occupied by the USA. And people are manipulated and have no prospects. A dark age. What I also find very interesting is that the Germanic people spread very far and are therefore the ancestors of many other people. Therefore, historians are not entirely sure how German the Germanic peoples were, but since they were the first to speak German and also created English, they were already German. In addition, the Germans were also the ancestors of the Vikings means Germanic mythology is almost identical to Norse mythology. Actually the same. I would be in favor of not only teaching the Americans that Germany is the bad guy and that they really deal with it. Most of the settlers who came to America at that time were German. Over 40 million. That's why you have so many German names. That's why the Americans love German culture and are surrounded by it, but don't want to admit it. Every "American" fairy tale was recorded and reinvented by the Brothers Grimm, they were German.. Thanks for listening 🎉
You should check out an old 1980s British sitcom called `Allo `Allo. That takes the seriousness of WWII in Europe and totally amplifies the humor. It's about a middle-aged, fat, dumpy-looking cafe owner in France who finds himself playing both sides to survive. While he is often called upon by the French resistance for assistance in their plots to defeat the Nazi occupation, the cafe owner must also make nice with the Nazis occupying the area, who frequent his establishment. One of the officers is "sweet" on the cafe owner, but the cafe owner is as straight as they come ; despite his uncomely visage, he is thoroughly enjoying boffing his waitresses (who moonlight as prostitutes and use the upper level of the cafe as a brothel), all while trying to keep it secret from his shrew of a wife. He often gets caught but he is a slick fibber and always manages to turn it around on his wife and make her feel foolish for "misunderstanding" the situation. The entire show is spoken in English, but the language barriers are presented by the ACCENTS - if someone speaks with a German accent, it is implied they are speaking German, French accent = speaking French, etc. From the first episode to the final one, the entire series tells one big story arc. Each new episode picks up exactly where the last one left off. Each episode opens with the cafe owner breaking the 4th wall and speaking to the audience, providing a brief recap of recent events. He is the only character to do this. It's really hilarious - they characters are all well developed and unique. The humor is all over the place from clever and smart, to wacky and ridiculous.
Tarantino was onto something. Those darn WW2 villians really did just shapeshift and blend in elsewhere. Forehead carving is much more prominent and permanent than armbands. Future leaders take note!
Random fact about this movie Adam Sandler and Quentin Tarantino are good friends and Adam has always wanted to be in a Tarantino movie so when Quentin was writing this script he wrote the bear Jew specifically for Adam and when they were gonna start filming Sandler was already filming Funny People so Adam still is kinda sad and has regrets for not being apart of this
Bisses reactions are blooming Gorgeous. She has a dirty laugh (that's a compliment) the involvement and smiling when the cinema is burning down, and playing with her hair when Brad Pitt starts getting ready with his knife skills! Plus a great sense of humour.x Cheer's Gorgeous 🇬🇧
There was an absolutely rediculousness movie that came out in the 70s with this title. This is Quentin's take on that movie. All Tarantino movies are great! He also had script work in, From Dusk till Dawn, and a great one, True Romance! His first direction movie is still my fave. Reservoir Dogs!
Milk is good for your bones!! Vodka makes you fall down...not so good for your bones!! LOL PS. In most European countries I have lived in or visited, they count on their hand starting with their thumb being "one" . In the US we generally start with our index finger as "one" and the thumb would be last as number "five".
@@BissFlix lol. Well at least you tried. When I first saw this movie I was surprised to see there was even another way of doing it. I guess it's the small things that make us all interesting. Great job on the movie reaction👍
Thank you for watching the video, It means a lot to me .
I will leave this pinned message here to REMIND everyone that i do not have TELEGRAM and there is no GIVEAWAY. Those you see are bot scams . Keep yourself safe and know that I would not ask for your info. ❤ ❤
38:13 That music you hear is David Bowie girl! Show more respect aye!
How is it, milk disgusts you Biss, but cream does not?
I watched this movie with a friend from Germany and when Michael Fassbender’s character held up three fingers she gasped, such a genius detail by Tarantino!
What does it mean?
@@roryjoey1778 It's explained by Bridget von Hammersmark when they're at the vets. Germans hold up their thumb, index, and middle finger to represent 3, while English cultures (and presumably others) use the three fingers between thumb and little finger to represent 3. So it was a dead giveaway that he wasn't German.
Well, every European has had the same reaction. It wasn't an original idea, nor was it so brilliant. Only Americans use that sign to indicate the number 3. In Europe everyone uses the same which the Germans also use
@@robyfiorili I'm a New Zealander, not American. So no, not just Americans.
@@shikahn Well, it's wrong to do it that way. I am Italian so I have a strong experience speaking with hands 😂
Christoph Waltz is such an amazing actor, damn! He nailed that role and made Landa the iconic character that he is.
I loved his acting
Agree. And his French was beautiful. Obviously he wouldn't fool a native speaker, but his accent was incredible.
Tarantino had been sitting on this script for a VERY long time, and the main reason why is he was struggling to find an actor to play Hand Landa. He obviously found his guy.
August Diehl was also very good as the Gestapo Agent.
oh he is the perfect actor, he made Hans Landa one of the most terrifying and disgusting villans of all time
-"A river derchi" LOL always get me 🤣
Best line of the reaction " this movie is so damn violent I like it! "
hahaha
"I would smash, hard" during the strudel scene.
The fact that Bisscute didn't know this was a Tarantino movie until the end makes this reaction ever better. 👍✌❤
Haha thanks, I was surprised that it was
@@BissFlix You talk WAY too much during the movies. Shush.
@@calm713STFU, you go make your own channel then
@Cal M bruh it's a reaction, if you wanna watch the movie then watch the movie. I'd rather have someone give their actual thoughts instead of just silently grimacing like a clown.
@@calm713 You shush, Putz.
The last line of the movie and the fast cut to credits is timed brilliantly.
The scene when they are presenting themselves as the fake Italian camera men, with those terrible accents, is one of the funniest dialogue scenes ever 😂
The trope of a villain drinking milk is basically this. Milk is seen as a symbol of something wholesome and nourishing, for a villain to drink it is viewed as a subversion of this. The villain is flaunting his villainy.
A glass of milk by itself is fucking great, that's why people do it.
Your movie reactions are some of the very best on UA-cam. You figure things out and make observations that sometimes never occurred to me even if it's a movie I've seen a hundred times.
And listening to you speak is comforting. My best friend, who was Romanian, died recently and listening to your accent reminds me of her. Thank you.
I am so sorry for your loss. Ill be here and talk as much as you are willing to listen hahaha
40:56 - Thanks for laughing at that moment. Not many reactors do. Personally, I think it's one of the funniest scenes in the entire movie. XD
INCREDIBLE! I always thought that the "German Three" was something that Tarantino made up ... but it's Real! LOL!
32:41 so it looks like Germans arent the only ones who instinctually throw up the 3 fingers that way. I like this detail.
I am from Germany and I love this movie!
That said, I love most of Tarantinos work tbh.
His presentation style and love for details, but also his excessive ultraviolence and blending of over the top characters into a great and alternative surreal story as well as the marvelous visuals is what captivates me I guess. Großartiger Film...bitte gerne mehr Tarantino hier bei deinen Reaktionen ^^
Everyone skips Jackie Brown, I think it’s one of Quentin Tarantino’s finest films.
Absolutely agree!
"Pulp Fiction" too
Everyone forgets Four Rooms too.
Also, he wrote Natural Born Killers.
@@illuminahde I own both and adore them. Also, True Romance, but I was mainly referring to his main works outside of his collaborative efforts.
Absolutely. Pulp Fiction is my favorite Tarantino movie, but Jackie Brown is his best.
11:25 Das Wort Schnitzel leitet sich als Diminutiv snitzel vom MITTELHOCHDEUTSCHEN Wort sniz für „Schnitt“ ab.
UND
Herkünfte: Deutschland, Österreich (disputed)
Schnitzel ist definitiv deutsch.
Auch wenn man wahrscheinlich überall das Begriff "Wiener Schnitzel" kennt.
Das ist aber nur die Zubereitungsart. Das hat aber nichts damit zu tun, ob das Schnitzel aus Österreich kommt oder aus Deutschland. Das ist einfach nur die Zubereitungsart
11:44
“Death smiles at us all. All a man can do is smile back.” Marcus Aurelius
Notice how Dominic Decoco was supposed to have the worst Italian but Hans Landa doesn't question him twice? Lol cracked me up the first time
He ordered the strudel bcs during the war it was made with pork lard. Not kosher, it was a test
Christoph Waltz (Hans Landa) is absolutely amazing in this film... In "Django Unchained" as well!!!
Hugs from Brazil!!!!
"You tried, she's hating your whole bloodline, though".
There's harsh, and then there's this. Damn! :P
Quentin Tarantino makes _fables_ which are fantasy versions of history or reality.
The thing that makes Hans Landa such an amazing character is that he's the defintion of a predator playing with his food. He's always five steps ahead and eventhough he knows the truth and can see through the lies, he just let it happen, just to see the other person panic.
There's no other villain I can think of that creates a feeling of false hope while at the same time leave everyone having a panic attack. Measuring each word just to keep you wondering.
I know some animals play with their prey before killing them, but they're not thinking about it like psychological torture. This guy represents the human equivalent of that. And how humans can take "playing with your food" to the next level.
Because milk is so damn delicious. I drink straight milk. It's best if it's untreated and straight from the cow. So I prefer to get it from a farm where I genuinely just ask the farmer for some milk. No process, not even the pasteurisation if possible.
lol this guy drinks it directly from the cow teet
I've had family who killed Germans and Germans who've killed family. But in this day and age it's not the same. I've got friends from Germany, Georgia, and even Russia. Friendship has not boundaries in this americans eyes ❤🪖
Milk does the body good. Whole milk actually has a fat that attaches to other bad saturated fats and flushes it out of the body. It also relieves hunger pain if you need some food in your belly.
calling hans landa "very smart" is the understatement of the year^^
he is a mozart, a genius of his craft.
to bad, he is working fot the wrong side.
if he would work for the allies, he would shorten the war for years.
QT has stated “without Christoph Waltz I couldn’t have made this film,” bc Waltz is trilingual. The movie got tremendous reviews and Oscar nominated. Waltz got the Oscar
This movie was very popular when it came out. I think it was nominated for 8 Oscars. Christophe Waltz won the Oscar for his portrayal of Hans Landa. His performance is absolutely perfect. This is my favorite Tarantino film. I enjoyed your reaction.
I loved this movie, watch it every chance I get (and thank you for letting me enjoy it with you) and highly recommend it. It introduced me to Christoph Waltz and his wonderful acting ability.
Glad you enjoyed it, and thanks for watching
Americans weren't "relaxing" on the beach. Adolf was talking about Normandy.
It was funny that Omar -- who didn't speak a word of Italian prior to that mission -- sounded the most authentic to Hans.
The movie is supposed to be over the top. Based largely on films like The Dirty Dozen and Kelly's Heroes, not a realistic depiction of the era. Plus you have a whole platoon of special forces Jewish soldiers, so they are going to be a bit overzealous. As bad as Tarantino goes after the Nazis in this movie, he is equally harsh on slave owning southern Americans in Django Unchained where the villain of this movie is a hero.
During WWII many action comic books (War Comics) were made for teenage boys that depicted fantastical fictional stories about war. This movie is a take on such comic books.
What a reaction! The fact that you speak French, German and English....and that you live in Germany....made this a very special reaction! Now I suddenly want to see you react to some of the great French and German movies! There are a few that other reactors have done! "Das Boot" is a fantastic movie and it tells a WWII story from the German perspective. "Run Lola Run" is a wild, fun, super cool (and very short!) movie from 1998. For France, some reactors do "Amelie". I'd LOVE if you did the french "Beauty And The Beast", directed by Jean Cocteau. Amazing. The French horror film "Eyes Without A Face" There are lots of French (and German) films I love, but I think those would definitely get views. (In your private time, watch Claude Chabrol's "Les Biches". WIld movie! Anybody reading this! "Les Biches" from 1968)
.....and for Tarantino: I'm dying for you to see "Jackie Brown" and "Death Proof"!
Saving private Ryan
The crazy thing is that Christoph Waltz got this role because he could speak French, German, Italian, and English. Tarantino was about to nix the whole film altogether because after several months he couldn’t find anyone to play Hans Landa, who he felt was the single most important character in the film, who could speak all four until Christoph Waltz came in and absolutely killed his audition lol
And her native language. 🙂
Das Boot is extraordinary. Without doubt.
Yeah, Christoph Waltz acting just PHENOMENAL 👏👏
I am a Native Apache from Texas. In the great olden times, scalping was a simple way to prove you killed someone. A whole head would get smelly, and a lock of hair would get lost easily. A bunch of hair stuck to a piece of leather is perfect. It’s practical… and perhaps a little intimidating… but mostly the first thing.
I had to subscribe. For several reasons. I love your accent, reaction was great and I respect your reaction on film violence. You are not weak and enjoy some fun, like it was intended to.
Thank you so much, glad you loved it
If you want to watch a more historically accurate WW2 movie, I recommend watching the movie Valkyrie, starring Tom Cruise. It's about the assassination attempt that got closest to succeeding in killing Hitler and removing the Nazi Party from power.
I would describe this film as being : "history-based action with comedy relief". That's a sloppy "category" but that's the best I can do right now.
'Historical Fiction' is the genre which best describes this film imho :)
I see, ty
The things we wish we could do = Tarantino Humor...LOL
Christoph Waltz's (Hans Landa) performance is something really special.
He did great
Quentin Tarantino
Pay tribute to Hugo Stiglitz
A Mexican actor from the 70s and 80s
When I saw this in a cinema everyone cheered at the end. Very strange energy leaving the theatre
You live in Germany? OMG I visited there through the military and would love to go back some day. I'm jealous of you! LOL
Biss negotiating with her pinky is the best thing on the internet today.
I thought that it was well known that Germans, and well most of Europe indicates the number 3 with the thumb extended plus the index and middle finger. I've known that for decades. Only Americans indicate the number 3 by extending the index finger, middle finger, and ring finger, which is awkward and unusual for a European. I saw you do it first naturally, then you struggled a bit to do like Americans, which was cute. If you try it, you'll find that it's easier and more natural to finger count 3 starting with the thumb.
I’m American, just tried it, and you’re right. The thumb way is much easier.
There has to be a story behind why we do it like this.
That Buongiorno gets me rolf everytime 🤣🤣🤣
Is this the first movie that you've seen directed by Tarantino? He has a very particular style for his movies, and he loves to play with history without worrying about being too over the top or offensive. 'Django Unchained' and 'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood' are other great examples.
Christoph Waltz was masterful in this (and has gained high prominence in American film since), but there are two German actors in this film which I have long thought to be underrated and under-cast. Diane Kruger (Bridget Von Hammersmark) I've loved in a number of films, including the 'National Treasure' films... and Til Schweiger (Hugo Stiglitz), who has had great parts in many American films, but usually as a secondary character, but always excellent.
It's interesting to see that the German three is apparently still the same to this day. You may already know by now, but it's SUPER easy to do the American three. You use your thumb to hold down your pinky, and then you have three fingers up. I'm guessing if you didn't know that, you also don't know how we signal two with fingers either. Same thing, except instead of putting your thumb over just your pinky, you put it over your pinky and ring finger both, and bam you've got two fingers up. And it's the same for one really. Pretty much put your thumb over your middle finger and the rest follow suit quite easily by staying down.
We don't ever use the thumb to represent a number with our hands unless it's at least five.
Though now that I'm trying it, it's not terribly difficult to keep your pinky down without covering it with your thumb either. It just feels so weird though. But anyway, concept is pretty simple. Use your thumb to cover any fingers you don't want showing, and then it's easy to represent however many fingers you want. Even with four, we put our thumb over the palm of our hands ending at the base of our pinky, so all the numbers are very uniform, and clear/easy to understand and perform. The German three is still quite easy, but it's about twice as hard as the American three.
I like how you deduced the way he signaled for 3 glasses gave him away...
Thanks
Я в России всю жизнь показывал 3 по американски, было забавно наблюдать, как девочка с трудом складывает пальцы таким образом.
Christoph Waltz is brilliant! He got Oscar for this role and for "Jango Unchained" - another great Tarantino's movie. It would be great if you react it too!
I loved his acting, Django is definitely on the list waiting to be reacted to
Your intelligence is amazing to watch. You’re so bright, cute, and funny. You do keep me entertained.
Keep going.
10:02 When Biss invites you to her team, you go to her team. She has spoken, this is the way.
36:03 "Sit! Siiiiiit!"
love it everytime Biss goes supersonic :D
Hahaha
The most intense opening scene in history to me...and YES. I have memorized every line of Saving Private Ryan. It's a different kind of tension.
Apparently you've never seen Debbie does dallas
Tarantino has done three movies where he puts characters in settings of real historical tragedy, and his approach is to treat it seriously at first but then let the protagonists go off the rails into fictional revenge fantasy that's dark comedy.
Interesting
I'm trying to understand how drinking milk is crazy..Please, help me understand..
That melody you were singing at the beginning is called Fur Elise.
Edit: The drinking milk is a symbolism of pretending to be an ordinary average person, usually associated with monsters as a juxtaposition.
Composed by Beethoven
i guess i'm late to the party but I think you should lean into this being a GERMAN reaction to this movie. its interesting as an american to watch the tavern scene and see how real germans react to it! especially since i neither speak any german to notice fassbender's accent, nor did i know about the way you guys gesture the number 3! I feel like you'd get a lot more views if your description made it clear that you're a german reacting to it.
What’s wrong with drinking a lovely glass of cold milk? It’s awesome..have you never had chocolate chip cookies with milk?😋
It was filmed in Germany and had a lot of German actors who really enjoyed the experience- definitely a fantasy film… well executed, suspenseful, funny, horrific…
Glad you liked it, I liked it too
At the end Shoshanna should have told the soldier, "Not now, but I promise to meet you after the movie." 🙂
This is my all time favorite movie, great reaction!
This was such an enjoyable reaction, thank you for picking this one! I don't have too much to add that hasn't already been addressed by others in the comments, but I did scroll a few pages to see if anyone answered your question about the markings around Aldo Raine's neck. (I might have spelled his name wrong) Anyways, those marks are produced from when being hanged. Earlier in the movie, Brad Pitt's character was identified as an Apache, which is a native American tribe in the southern parts of the US back in the day. Whatever he did, it had to have been bad enough for him to swing from a rope, however, in rare occurrence, after he was dropped and was swinging for a bit, which would have been enough to form that scar, whether it be divine intervention or just a chance of circumstance, something or someone intervened thus stopping his execution. One could surmise that it wasn't long after such an event, he saw fit to join the military in order to either settle his debt to society or perhaps just needing to get the hell out of Dodge.
This was the movie that introduced me to Tarantino movies! definitely one of my favorites!
Oh nice, I didn't it was a Tarantino movie till the end but so far I am liking his movies
38:16 Native English speaker would say “I can’t put my finger on it”
this and django unchained are my favorite movies from quentin tarantino. christoph waltz won an oscar for each movie as best supporting actor 👌
Cutest reaction of the week: girl trying to make her fingers make non-German 3. 😂
I believe Christoph Waltz won an Oscar for his role
His acting was great
9:35 Don't worry, that guy actually survived somehow: I saw him robbing banks in Marseille in the '90s in the French Luc Besson movie "Taxi" (1998)! He aged really well too, he was looking even younger than he did during WW2!
"This is movie is so damn violent, I like it" that's my girl right there. I absolutely love your reactions, personality, and the way you carry yourself. One hell of a woman, and you got me absolutely hooked on you Bisscitt, and you at 51:50 is one of the main reasons why, so real, unique, and beautiful you are mi amour.
Aweee thank you so much, happy you love the reactions
When I was in Germany in 2014 I had someone ask me to put up three fingers to see what fingers I'd use to visibly display the number 3. Jokes on them I put up my little,ring and middle fingers.
The most intense intro in film history
Alternate history movies are fun, loved that you spotted the 3 fingers being held up the wrong way too. Nice catch vampire Biss! I hope it's ok to joke and call you a vampire because you're Romanian?
First time viewer. I loved your… “Europeanness”
Most people in Russia would show "3" number like this, so it differs from country to country :) for me it's so wild to use big finger for that number, more than that - we use big finger only for "5"! :D
you're right. he wrote the screenplay and is also in the movie.
Germany is the land of delicious pastries and beautiful bakeries. Germany is worth visiting just for the great food.
Oh you live in Germany??
Sorry I’m new to you channel. I live here too from America
Aldo sniffs snuff tobacco. It's ground dry tobacco, and it is a stimulant.
that beginning reaction tho!😂
"is this a comedy? i have no idea"
that's how it felt in the theater! then the music shifts with christof
😦😧😨😰
3 fingers (easiest way): Loosely close hand, place thumb over little fingernail, hold down, raise remaining 3.
yes, the movie with the great Christoph Waltz. Love it
Glad you loved it
The movie is absolutely great. But please remember that there was a big difference between Nazi, German and Wehrmacht soldier.
I find German history incredibly fascinating because the Germans and Germany were always there, but at the same time not and always different like a shapeshifter.
Stupid oversimplified:
Rejects Roman annexation - Germanic Tribes defeat Rome, are often slapped in the face, but Rome generally fails to subdue them
Creates an empire that wasn't really an empire but also was an empire and somehow lived for over 1000 years - very special and unique
The Kingdom of Prussia and hundreds of German States gangsta! Before being defeated by one of history's greatest generals.
defeats the French, unites into a new empire
Get a colonial empire
Fights 80% of the world alone and almost won..
Is treated badly
Comeback as Villian, fights the whole world and only lost because of own mistakes..
Gets divided again
Reunites again and is not allowed to be strong again.
Also a few German inventions:
- Incandescent lamps (Heinrich Göbel 1854)
- The Telephone (Johann Philip Reis 1859)
- The dynamo and tram (Werner von Siemens 1866)
- The 35 mm camera (Oskar Barnack 1925)
- Nuclear fission and atomic bomb (Otto Hahn - emigrated to the Americans during Nazi Germany - 1938)
- The ship chart (Jürgen Dethloff and Helmut Gröttrub 1969)
- Periodic Table (Julius Luther Meyer 1864)
- Jeans (Levi Strauss 1873)
- The recorder, player - with which the first films were possible (Emil Berliner 1887)
- The Aspirin - Which all great athletes felt used to relieve pain, And which saved countless lives (Felix Hoffmann, Klausi Alder.. 1879)
- Spark plug (Robert Bosch 1902)
- Thermos flask (Reinhold Burger 1903)
- the toothpaste (Ottomar Heinsius von Mayenburg)
- The coffee filter (Melitta Bentz)
- Cassette recorder (Fritz Pfleumer 1928)
- Teabag (Adolf Rambold 1929)
- The jet engines - Essential for all jets and rockets + First war rockets V1, V2 of the Nazis (Hans von Ohain 1929)
- First rocket (in general, Hans von Ohain)
- The helicopter (Heinrich Focke 1936)
- The first car (Carl Benz - With honorary Schnauzer - 1886)
- First Computer (Konrad Zuse 1941)
- First 3D film (during the Third Reich)
- Fanta (Yes THAT Fanta.. Also during the Nazi era)
- The typewriter (Peter Mitterhofer - 1869)
- NASA (actually the US buyed thousands of German engineers to build NASA because they can't do it themselves)
- The first letterpress Mashine (Which was probably the best invention of all time because now they could start printing books, Johannes Gutenberg - 1440)
- Motorcycle (Gottlieb Daimler 1885)
- Birth control pill (Schering AG 1961)
- the trigger of the gold rush (Johann August Sutter was a Swiss but actually German since he was born in Germany, but Swiss and German are one blood anyway, Who triggered the gold rush in America. Not an inventor but cool fact - 1848)
Well, as you saw, the Germans changed the world with their inventions many times. Where we would be today without the German art of thinking.
Germany the land of poets and thinkers - that's how it was known (Actually)
The problem is that many Germans are not proud of their country and blood, unfortunately also because they were brought up that way. Because if you say anything to that effect, you will be called a Nazi. The problem is that many people don't have the right deep historical knowledge that people need to understand the world and and that only Hitler himself and his party were Nazis. Almost no German was a Nazi during the Nazi era. Also, any historian will tell you that the Allies, created Nazi Germany and WWII because of the unfair Versailles Treaty. Germans were so depressed that it is unimaginable for us. They were seen as evil around the world as they were blamed for everything in World War I. And when you have 3 kids at home, no job, money is worthless and no food and water you will follow anyone who fixes it. Because that's what the Nazis did in the beginning - they fixed everything and gave the Germans hope again. No German at the time could have known that Hitler was so crazy.
It's not as easy as we always think. Even in the Wehrmacht, only a few liked the Nazis. They were German soldiers dying for the country. the general German soldier, like my grandfather, had nothing to do with the Nazis and the Holocaust. You must consider this one army fought against the rest of the world. And if we are honest: what kind of "peace" could the general German soldier expect? What could have they expect after all the Nazi crimes and everyone thought that all Germans were evil Nazis. What "Peace" could they expect. These soldiers fought for their lives and German people against a planet. If even many of Hitler's own generals like Rommel (legend) or Stauffenberg knew that he was not quite right in the head.. Then the normal people knew that even more. Many were manipulated and could do nothing about it. The Nazis were a small parasite not the Germans. You can imagine the Nazis like a natural dark Parasite Rising from the suffering of the Germans. And the 'Problem' is that Germans are People who have a very special work and perfectionism mentality. That's not a weak enemy. Calling all German soldiers Nazis is like calling all American soldiers democrats because they were in power.
We should be prouder of ourselves, after all, Germany has repeatedly fought against the entire world, one time under a bad regime. We made this modern world possible and maintain a reputation for perfection and quality. The hard-working German with perfection in his blood! Or rather, we once had this reputation. Today there is no longer a country of poets and thinkers. We are still occupied by the USA. And people are manipulated and have no prospects. A dark age.
What I also find very interesting is that the Germanic people spread very far and are therefore the ancestors of many other people. Therefore, historians are not entirely sure how German the Germanic peoples were, but since they were the first to speak German and also created English, they were already German. In addition, the Germans were also the ancestors of the Vikings means Germanic mythology is almost identical to Norse mythology. Actually the same.
I would be in favor of not only teaching the Americans that Germany is the bad guy and that they really deal with it.
Most of the settlers who came to America at that time were German. Over 40 million. That's why you have so many German names. That's why the Americans love German culture and are surrounded by it, but don't want to admit it. Every "American" fairy tale was recorded and reinvented by the Brothers Grimm, they were German..
Thanks for listening 🎉
Nice reaction matey , I have not seen anyone take offence to this movie yet
Thank you, glad you liked the reaction
Quentin Tarantino IS Ballsy...Never Forget This!
You should check out an old 1980s British sitcom called `Allo `Allo.
That takes the seriousness of WWII in Europe and totally amplifies the humor.
It's about a middle-aged, fat, dumpy-looking cafe owner in France who finds himself playing both sides to survive. While he is often called upon by the French resistance for assistance in their plots to defeat the Nazi occupation, the cafe owner must also make nice with the Nazis occupying the area, who frequent his establishment. One of the officers is "sweet" on the cafe owner, but the cafe owner is as straight as they come ; despite his uncomely visage, he is thoroughly enjoying boffing his waitresses (who moonlight as prostitutes and use the upper level of the cafe as a brothel), all while trying to keep it secret from his shrew of a wife. He often gets caught but he is a slick fibber and always manages to turn it around on his wife and make her feel foolish for "misunderstanding" the situation.
The entire show is spoken in English, but the language barriers are presented by the ACCENTS - if someone speaks with a German accent, it is implied they are speaking German, French accent = speaking French, etc. From the first episode to the final one, the entire series tells one big story arc. Each new episode picks up exactly where the last one left off. Each episode opens with the cafe owner breaking the 4th wall and speaking to the audience, providing a brief recap of recent events. He is the only character to do this.
It's really hilarious - they characters are all well developed and unique. The humor is all over the place from clever and smart, to wacky and ridiculous.
Watching you try to convince your pinky to go down was hilarious
hahaha, glad you enjoyed that
Tarantino was onto something. Those darn WW2 villians really did just shapeshift and blend in elsewhere. Forehead carving is much more prominent and permanent than armbands. Future leaders take note!
Tarantino is great
Don't know why you're so worried about people being upset. This film is entirely anti-Nazi, which is a pretty popular feeling these days.
In my personal opinion, the best Quentin Tarantino film so far.
Random fact about this movie Adam Sandler and Quentin Tarantino are good friends and Adam has always wanted to be in a Tarantino movie so when Quentin was writing this script he wrote the bear Jew specifically for Adam and when they were gonna start filming Sandler was already filming Funny People so Adam still is kinda sad and has regrets for not being apart of this
It is fiction,
very enjoyable and brutal fiction.
Greetings from Germany.
Bisses reactions are blooming Gorgeous. She has a dirty laugh (that's a compliment) the involvement and smiling when the cinema is burning down, and playing with her hair when Brad Pitt starts getting ready with his knife skills! Plus a great sense of humour.x Cheer's Gorgeous 🇬🇧
Thank you so much
35:44 It's stuff like this why Bisscute is fast-becoming one of my favourite Reactors. The pinkie thing is hilarious a adorable. 🤣😍
Aweee thank you so much
There was an absolutely rediculousness movie that came out in the 70s with this title. This is Quentin's take on that movie. All Tarantino movies are great! He also had script work in, From Dusk till Dawn, and a great one, True Romance! His first direction movie is still my fave. Reservoir Dogs!
Milk is good for your bones!! Vodka makes you fall down...not so good for your bones!! LOL PS. In most European countries I have lived in or visited, they count on their hand starting with their thumb being "one" . In the US we generally start with our index finger as "one" and the thumb would be last as number "five".
To do the British/American "3" you use your thumb to hold the pinkie finger down.
I trieeed I do not manage
@@BissFlix lol. Well at least you tried. When I first saw this movie I was surprised to see there was even another way of doing it. I guess it's the small things that make us all interesting.
Great job on the movie reaction👍
I love your reactions! Have you been in México? Greetings from here!