Jeremiah Johnson (1972) - Mountain life is no joke.
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- Опубліковано 17 кві 2020
- Opening few minutes of Jeremiah Johnson. He decides that he wants to be a mountain man and live off the land. Quickly he realizes that it won't be easy.
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Back in a time where men were as hard as iron. That's the type of men we need today.
And honest - no bullshit power hungry politicians.
"I, Hatchet Jack, being of sound mind and broke legs..."
What a way to start a will. Phenomenal writing
Note to self: if I am going to be a mountain man, be sure to get a 50 caliber Hawken, fish hooks and line, as well as a good winter coat with gloves.
@Justice Mcdonald you’re a good man
I’m kind of the man. Been 3 years off grid , I got me 45.70 , had to scare 3 black bears to claim my shack. Wife moved out with 1 1/2 years ago . The solitude was good but she been with me 48 years and I built a new cabin by my self, Nieghbor gave me a week for me helped nag him. He sold out, other Nieghbor moved back to town , my age but health failing and he got liking drinking and wacky tobacco, I abstain , some would call us religious. But freedom and mountain living has been my dream, and I’m living it.
you can have all these tools and still be a noob hunter
If you're seriously considering living in the wilds of the Rocky mountains and you want to arm yourself with traditional/primitive firearms then I suggest you get a 54 or maybe even a 58 caliber muzzleloader. Plenty of Hawken rifles to choose from in 54 caliber. You could get a carbine musket reproduction in 58 caliber that shoots mini-ball Conicals. That'd be the best choice for Elk, Moose, and Bear, but within 100 yards a 54 caliber Hawken will still do the job with patched round ball.
@@smartacus88 in the beginning of the movie when he starts off with just a .30 caliber hawken is that pretty much like a .22 ?
The brave looks at him like, "you don't belong here" and just turns his horse and walks away. Priceless.
His name is "Paints his shirt". His look at Jeremiah is more in the realm of, "God, what an idiot." Doesn't even think his scalp is work it.
@@TheJTcreate
HaHaHa EXACTLY. Like, no reason to kill this imbecile. He'll soon die from starvation anyway 😂
That Injun was "Paints his Shirt Red" He owned Jeremiah at that moment but let him go.
"It is a good rifle...it kilt the bear that kilt me....Anyway, I am dead."😆🤣
"Did I already tell you I was dead? Anyway.."
“Yours truly, Hatchet Jack”, you can’t get any more cool with a last will and testament than that.
Indeed
Needs to be restored in 4k.There is so much beautiful scenery in this film 🎞 that can be brought to such an amazing quality for more people see a true American film. It will be like watching it for the first time all over again.
Meh... leave it alone
Old man yells at cloud
great movie. I was sitting at home as a boy in the 1980s flipping channels, trying to find something to watch. This movie had already started. It looked boring. I asked my ma in the kitchen what it was as I turn the channel. she said it was a good movie and I should watch it. I flipped it back and watched. One of the best films ever made.
You've come far pilgrim :- D
@@viarnay Eh, what trouble?
Watch yer topknot!
My favorite movie ever!!
I discovered this movie the same way you did. Flippin’ channels sometime in 1989 and came across it already in progress. It was the scene where Jeremiah is trying to catch fish. I’ve seen this movie too many times to count, probably around 20 times. I see it every time it comes on tv. I even have it on dvd.
You'll get Hatchet Jack's .50 caliber Hawken when you pry it from his cold, dead hands...
Exactly
@@thomasarbec7242 Of course, by late spring you'd be left to pull it clear from what was left of his scavenged, rotting corpse...
@@jkorshak I don't think scavengers wait for spring. Least not the ones I've seen.
@@Requiredfields2 That's kind of what I mean - by late spring what's left of Hatchet Jack would be spread across the whole area. JJ was lucky to find him so well preserved even in Winter.
@@Requiredfields2 They apparently waited long enough for JJ to find him unscavenged, as per the script.
There a few dynamics here. How long had he been dead, how long had he been frozen, how available was his NON frozen corpse to area meat eating scavengers like bugs, birds, cats, wolves, and bears. By the look of him he had not been scavenged at all. He was certainly frozen - possibly solid - so, frozen and unavailable enough to avoid being scavenged between the time he froze and when he was found by JJ.
Had he not been found by JJ it's reasonable to expect scavenging would be on him as soon as his scent was able to clear his frozen body, which might be the next sunny day, or maybe not until the first thaw, given he's frozen into a bank of ice and snow in a mountainous, forested, and presumably higher altitude region where any thaw coming later might not be until the Spring.
Hatchet Jack's rifle: when you want the entire mountain range to know where you are.
Hatchet Jack loved panther pussy, even in a cave on the musselshell! 😂 🐱
Still at the top of my list of the best.
Back in those days, that's the only thing that can kill big game, especially game that is trying to kill and/or eat you.
One of my all time favorite movies . Not much dialog, real acting. Mr. Redford still owns the land in utah, I believe.
Why not. If he ever wanted to cool off in the summer it would be a perfect place to go.
Word
Ya... if it wasn't for that damn reverend guilting him into crossing the burial grounds...
He owns Sundance Ranch in Utah, named after the character he played. This film was filmed on all public land i.e. National Parks.
@@blakebeverly84 Butch Cassady and the Sundance Kid
One of dad's favorite movies. I've saw it about a jillion times. It's a good winter time movie. The dude on the horse was Paints his Shirt Red. Later he said to Jeremiah, "You fish poorly."
Jillion is alot. I know what you mean. It was my first PG movie when I was 9 with my Uncle and cousin (PG-13 didn't exit back then). The movie had an impact on me, and I watch it all of the time because of the memories of when I was a kid. Uncle is no longer with us. What a trip he was with his sense of humor.
The dude on the horse IS Paints His Shirt Red.
Redford said it was his favorite movie. Me too
My brother just passed,this was his favorite movie.love you Steve .
Cheers to your brother minus 148
We understand Steve 🍷
To Steve! Godspeed on your last adventure in death! We are all following behind i wish it wasnt the truth haha.
This was made before my time but I came across it one evening completely by accident, on TV. I was hooked straight away and watched it to the end. What a film, Robert redford was, I came to understand, looked upon as a kind of a pretty boy, but he shows in this movie that he was the real deal.
I always loved this movie … nowadays we can barely get up from the couch can’t imagine living like that
Paints His Shirt Red says, "You fish poorly."
You've come far pilgrim.
Feels like far.
Feels like far
you’r fine target pilgrim
Empty your hand
One of my all time movies- I can watch over and over again
This is,and always has been my favorite movie of all time.
Thee and me.
And thee makes three
One of the best movies in the last 50 years. Mountain Men with Charlton Heston and Brian Kieth is good, as well.
This sums up problems during the pioneering era. There's something special about this film that makes me watch again and again.
Awesome movie; first saw it in the 70's and many times since, love it. They simply don't make movies of this quality anymore, or actors of Redford's caliber.
People don’t want movies of this quality.
Such beautiful scenery in this film.
This absolutely was the best movie I've ever seen in school
One of my very favourite movies. RR is awesome in this film. It is such a wonderful movie ...
One of the BEST MOVIES ever made!!!!
Paints-his-shirt-red was probably thinking, awh this guy ain't gonna make it
I would have thought the same.
@@raulcastro3277 He'd probably seen lots of white tenderfeet die in the mountains. We think of what great survivors the mountain men were. We forget how many of them died in those mountains, even veterans like Hatchet Jack.
one of the all time greats .
Survival is all about mental capacity to deal with failure after failure after failure and keep digging because eventually you will have success in one thing then another then another if you JUST DON'T GIVE UP!!!!
It’s also about practice.
Absolutely the best movie ever made.
Wondrous film. There are mountains here in Arkansas, but I took a trip into the mountains of Colorado last year. There's just no comparison. I can only begin to imagine the bravery and resilience of frontiersmen like Jeremiah and natives like Paints-his-shirt-red.
The stories of Jim Bridger and Jedidiah Smith are factual accounts of the early explorers and trappers in the early 1800's.
Preston Williams those aren’t mountains in Arkansas, those are hills. I grew up near the Ozarks in Missouri and always wondered why people called them mountains. In my travels for work, I went to Wyoming, Washington State, Colorado, and Alaska and traveled through Montana, N Dakota, S Dakota, Idaho, and Oregon. I remember seeing the Green Mountains in Wyoming, the first real mountain range, and being amazed. Then I traveled over the northern Rockies, through Idaho, and over the Cascades and thought I had finally seen seen real mountains. Then I went to Alaska, boy was I impressed then. By far one of the most beautiful, and dangerous, places on Earth.
Most of these mountain men were employees of fur trading companies.. they set up camp and moved from place to place trapping..they brought their pelts, got paid, got supplies and headed back when it was trapping season
Favorite movie of all time.
Never get tired of it.
I have seen this great movie so many times and never grow tired of it. Wonderful Utah scenery, some dramatic scenes with the Crow indian tribe and a touch of comedy too. The scene where Jeremiah mourns the death of his indian wife and his adopted son is extremely moving. Fine performances, especially from Redford and Will Geer.
Jeremiah Johnson
Made his way into the mountains
Betin on forgettin
All the troubles that he knew
The trail was wide and narrow
The eagle or the sparrow
Showed the path he was to follow
As it flew
A mountain man's a lonely man
And he leaves a lot behind
It ought to have been different
But you often times will find
That story doesn't always go
The way you had in mind
And Jeremiah's story was that kind
Jeremiah's story was that kind
Tru damnit indeed, but he show respect through that bariel ground....
Yee-haww, now god damnit i said Yeee-hawww
One of my all-time favorite movies. Read the book though ... it's fantastic.
The way they did Hatchet Jack looks so realistic (and it's from 1972!). The corpse actor is the best I've ever seen. The close ups aren't freeze frames because I can see trees moving. Even the slightly wider shot where Redford interacts with the corpse looks convincing.
Pretty cool acting.⛄
Paul Benedict portrayed the Reverend in this movie, but if you take close notice, he also is uncredited as Frozen Hatchet Jack.
I had a friend years ago who played in MMOs, and his name was always some version of HatchetJack. I never got the refrence.
One of the best movies ever made
25 comments not enough people have seen this great movie.
John I have sen this great movie at least there times. Trying hard to be realistic, without silly wimen spoiling same just looking beautiful and not for any purpose. I was so japp when I found it on Netflix.
John I have some corrections- perhaps it was evident just the same. Motherlanguage Swedish, and at times the spellingprogram change into Swedish I was so happy.....etc.🤪
A forgotten classic for sure
This is one of my favorite movies of all.
Character is based from a book as well.
You'd think that Jeremiah would have thought to bring along some hooks and fishing line as part of his kit before setting out on his trip into the wilderness.
@BelizeHD Why would you say that? I have it in my DVD collection and I've probably watched it 20+ times. The part where you see him using a fishing line takes place after he'd already been in the mountains for a few years.
That's the point. Don't go into the Rockies unprepared. There is no "fat of the land."
Fishing line probably wasn't readily available everywheres like it is today
Best Robert Redford movie EVER!!!!
Low budget film. $ 4 million
Grossed $ 44 million.
Shot on location on Redfords property, 600 acres in Utah.
Greatest historical depiction of the Western Mountain Men & Native tribes of the American West.
Very good information.
Jeremiah Johnson was killed by Indians between Hugoton Kansas and Ulysses Kansas near Wagon Springs Creek. I used to go there with friends to drink beers when I went to college. We would ride 5 to 1 motorcycle out there carrying all the beer we could drink. There is a plaque out there that tells his history and about where he was killed.
@@yapandasoftware - this movie is based upon "liver eating johnson," who died in santa monica, california. must be a different "jeremiah johnson."
brother zeke - my all time favorite movie.
@@z-z-z-z I know this place well. I've been there hundreds of times. I've read the plaque hundreds of times. Wagon Springs Creek. I'll call my friend Pat today in Hugoton Ks. (I live in the Arab Emirates so our timeline is about 13 hours apart) and find out for sure if it's the same Johnson. It says on the plaque that he died by the Crow Indian who killed him by that creek. So it sounds like the same guy.. But somebody has something wrong.
I've been searching for this scene on UA-cam for a while now .. "You fish poorly." Priceless to see Paints-his-shirt-red walk away with all those caught fish when Jeremiah's distraught and struggling ..
I love how Johnson squares off with Paints-his-shirt-red when he realizes his gun is afar and accepts his fate .. these beautiful movies say so much with such little dialogue .. the scenery is fantastic.
Yeah.
@@roba1899 Redford's back yard!
Nature plays no favourites and teaches hard lessons.
Nature is neither fair nor cruel; it just is...
One of the all-time great western movies.
One of my all time favs
Legend has it Hatchet Jack is still there
I found Hatchet Jack in Grizzlies West, next to the dormin Crest. :) #ArthurMorgan #RDR2
Its a Hell Of A Life The Be A Mountain Man
Beautiful movie
Great movie
I love a great film like that.
The best movie ever made. Wish we could live like this still
You can.
@@NoahNelson-Smith Ok then tell me how
@@Nerdperior There are plenty of places on Earth that are rarely visited by anyone. If you really wish to live in the wilderness without any external help, you can go there and try to survive. You aren't forced to partake in modern life.
It’s a hard way to live.
Most definitely one of my all-time favorite movies! I have it on DVD and watch it often.
My ancestors settled Petoskey in northern Michigan around 1750. I can't even imagine how hard daily life was.
I can't imagine how cold the water 🥶
My favorite movie ever
My brother is named after this movie. Jeremiah Johnson Webb. We watched this so many times growing up
Fifty-seven views? No comments? This is a nice long clip from a great movie.
Amen ..
One of the better movies for some time now.
14,509 views
1 Aug 2020
I really enjoyed this movie, I only discovered it about one year ago.
One of my favorites.
One of my favs
Recently saw this again, never gets old. One of my favorites.
"Lord hope it be a white man" hatchet jack
Yeah, cant believe Jeremiah and all his white privilege!
I love the small fiddle part that plays when he sees hatchet jack just shows that sometimes little is more
Great flick.
This is a great movie and I have watched it many times and it never gets old. Nothing like this modern trash
Great movie !!!
Seen this movie thousands of times and didn't ever know there was meme about the nod
Redford said filming this was extremely hard work. I could definitely see it with a movie like this.
I'm in the mountains 1/2 the year. The title is 100% true
Some Folk say,he’s up there still ….
From what I read there were three ways a mountain man could die and they are hunger, freeze to death or get attacked by some angry animal. They say if you survive your first winter you got lucky than most. It was a hard and tough way to live.
You forgot injury
@@TheJTcreate That too.
What about disease
Great film! Recommend for all times.
If he didn't have dry clothes fire and shelter. They would have found him and hatchet jack dead. The next spring
True but hatchet Jack had a 50 cal hawken..You couldn’t do no better..
@@Himlee335 good thing he left a note
It seems like the true culprit for Jack was the bear rather than exposure.
@@wikipediaintellectual7088 the bear broke his legs dooming him to death by exposure so it’s about even on what did him in
I saw this movie on the big screen in ‘72 and at 12 years old, desperately wanted to head to the mountains. Still do.
Liver eating johnston was what legends were all about!!!!
His name.. was Jeremiah Johnson, ... Some say he wanted to be a mountain man, the stories about the tall ghostly hills didnt scare him none, he wanted a Hawkin gun 50cal or better he settled for a 30 but dam it was a genuine Hawkin
Top five favorite flick.
That is one of the greatest wilds scenes ever. An Indian would have been amused by Jeremiah's clumsy and desperate fishing.
Awsome Movie
Such a damn good movie! Hated the part where his Crow wife and the boy are killed! That Hawkins 50 cal was alot of firepower!
I really want to watch this noe. Great movie
5:09 Him warming up his sounds doesn't sound so worldy. Literally sounds like a man screaming and echoing.
great movie
I recommend it always
One great movie
He let him continue thinking, this white boy ain't making it a week..God I love this movie..my grandma said that Robert Redford was her boyfriend..in her dreams!
Thats what I was thinking
No point wasting energy, he will find him dead in few days and take his stuff
I was reading about "Old Bill" Williams. They reckon he ate another man once
in order to survive when they got stuck in a snowdrift
@Dan Trebune Look up Alferd Packer (that is how he spelled his first name).
No CGI there baby. 1972, when actors got frostbite to get the money shot. Real men, not the soy brigade we gotta suffer through at the movie theatre today.
I was thinking the same thing. The scene in the creek was all fresh snow. They had to wait for Mother Nature to cooperate to film that.
Oh shut up ya whiny bastard.
"Been a lot of lies said around this table here tonight."
true
@Robert Shorthill Leo in Django Unchained before smashing a glass into his hand - Not exactly a weak performance.
Saw this film in the theater when it opened and have always loved it and admired the spirit and determination of the plains- and mountain men who settled this country(yes, I said it). Too bad they left out the whole "liver-eatin' part of Johnson's life. Might not have made him so sympathetic to the audience after his wife was killed. EIther way, it's still a great American wilderness movie.
Most of this movie was filmed on Robert Redford's property.
How do you know that little fact ?
Jimmy
@@jimmyguenza3767 It states in the book and credits at the end of the movie. Also there is a UA-cam video that mentions it.
Hilarious!
Robert Redford said that it was,just read an article about how it was filmed on his property or close by .They did it to save money because they were only given 4 million to film it .Tbe director actually mortgage his house for tbe movie also.
Thanks for sharing that Golden Nugget Amber! Love this movie !
JJ says something about the inevitability of conflict when societies with different values make contact.
The inevitability of conflict stems from people's nature of being in conflict with themselves. Everything else is built on top of that premise.
DAMN!!! I can just imagine how cold that water was for the actor. I've felt stream water in the fall and THAT was friggin ice cold, this water has to be just a tiny bit above actual freezing.
Thank you Hatchet Jack
Utah is amazing country.
a mountain man is a lonely man who leaves the world behind
Great movie to watch on Netflix.
In the book, Johnson (Johnston) was no greenhorn. He didn’t come from some city center with servants not knowing how to start a fire or hunt. What he didn’t know, however, was how to scalp his enemies. Hatchet Jack taught him how to properly do it and to Jack’s amazement, Johnston got it right the first time. The cut had to be clean, and the hair jerked with enough speed and force where the scalp would come off clean. Typically done while putting a foot on your enemies face.
Please explain greenhorn?
Did you know that the early European settlers were the scalpers that taught the Indians how to do it !
Sand Fox, greenhorn=newbie.
My mother’s first language was Swedish, although she was born in the USA 1927. She told me how they would tease and bully her at school by calling her “greenhorn”.
Because Robert Redford fell in love with Utah.....The Sundance Film Festival....was born....and here in Utah......I love it
"Liver Eatin Johnson",... The original Bad Ass...
Good movie.
Directed by Sydney Pollack in one of his early films. Also with Redford in 3 Days of the Condor (good movie) and the way we were, absence of malice, the firm, Michael Clayton and more