Jeremiah Johnson (7/7) Movie CLIP - You Have Done Well (1972) HD

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  • Опубліковано 10 вер 2024
  • Jeremiah Johnson movie clips: j.mp/2dX4IMD
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    CLIP DESCRIPTION:
    Jeremiah Johnson (Robert Redford) encounters Bear Claw (Will Geer) again, this time as equals, true mountain men.
    FILM DESCRIPTION:
    Years before Kevin Costner danced with wolves, Robert Redford headed to the mountains to escape civilization in Sydney Pollack's wilderness western. Around 1850, ex-soldier Johnson (Redford) decides that he would rather live alone as a mountain man in Colorado than deal with society's constraints. After a series of setbacks, he meets grizzled mountain veteran Bear Claws (Will Geer), who teaches him how to survive. Jeremiah strives to live as peaceably as possible in the rugged environment, trading with the native Crow tribe, adopting a boy (Josh Albee) after his family is massacred, and even marrying the daughter (Delle Bolton) of a Flathead chief in order to avoid confrontation. He settles into a mountain home with his family, but the U.S. cavalry, complete with a puritanical Reverend, interrupt the idyll to compel Jeremiah to lead them over the mountains and through a Crow burial ground to rescue white settlers. After the Crow kill his family in retaliation, Jeremiah's frenzied moment of payback precipitates a long-running vendetta, turning him into a legendary Indian killer at the expense of his original ideals, on the way to a final moment of grace. Spectacularly shot on location in Utah, the film captures both the appeal and the challenge of the landscape that Jeremiah chooses over civilization. With an unglamorous performance by Redford and a story that questioned white colonialism while mythologizing the man of nature, Jeremiah Johnson appealed to its 1972 audience and became one of the biggest hits of the year. Wavering between heroicizing Jeremiah for surviving and damning him for killing, Jeremiah Johnson took its place among the Vietnam-era cycle of critical westerns, like Arthur Penn's Little Big Man (1970) and Robert Altman's McCabe and Mrs. Miller (1971), that condemned civilization for corrupting the wilderness and preventing individuals from going pacifistically native.
    CREDITS:
    TM & © Warner Bros. (1972)
    Cast: Will Geer, Robert Redford
    Director: Sydney Pollack
    Producers: John R. Coonan, Mike Moder, Joe Wizan
    Screenwriters: Edward Anhalt, Robert Bunker, Vardis Fisher, John Milius, David Rayfiel, Raymond W. Thorp
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 172

  • @JohnnyWalker721
    @JohnnyWalker721 4 роки тому +163

    Both seem so intelligent. You’d think they’d want to talk more, but they chose that life for a reason. They want to be alone, so they exchange a few words; some meaningful, some not so much. Then they go their own way perhaps to never see each other again. So is the way of a mountain man...

    • @AZ-kr6ff
      @AZ-kr6ff 4 роки тому

      Silent wisdom.

    • @Mstewable
      @Mstewable 4 роки тому +10

      I think its painful for Bear Claw to see Johnson's predicament and knows there's nothing anyone can do about it.

    • @AZ-kr6ff
      @AZ-kr6ff 4 роки тому +1

      @@Mstewable
      What is Johnsons predicament?

    • @ashtonbowers1122
      @ashtonbowers1122 4 роки тому

      @@AZ-kr6ff All the natives are trying to kill him, he has to be on the run constantly.

    • @AZ-kr6ff
      @AZ-kr6ff 4 роки тому

      @@ashtonbowers1122
      That's not even a little bit true.
      Have you even seen the movie?

  • @t6v5c2
    @t6v5c2 5 років тому +178

    What an epic scene. Bear Claw speaks to Johnson as a peer. Hard and tough, Jeremiah has arrived.

  • @deadreckoning6288
    @deadreckoning6288 5 років тому +248

    A classic. One of the best films ever made. The mountain men had a tough life but it makes one yearn for a simpler time.

    • @jerrykeown753
      @jerrykeown753 3 роки тому +7

      Freedom to roam the earth.

    • @josephmenegus3657
      @josephmenegus3657 3 роки тому +7

      Idd rather live back then than these days

    • @NormAppleton
      @NormAppleton Рік тому

      Redford, as pretty as he is, he's still smarter

    • @wilsonblauheuer6544
      @wilsonblauheuer6544 Рік тому +2

      to be a mountain dweller, if one had a woman and perhaps a small group such as one's sibling and their family would have made the lifestyle very doable desirable providing that there was enough food to hunt and forage. I believe it is the story of the origin of white civilization.

    • @wilsonblauheuer6544
      @wilsonblauheuer6544 Рік тому

      @@josephmenegus3657 untilyou are fourty years old and approaching the end of your time on earth.

  • @jerrypipher457
    @jerrypipher457 Рік тому +25

    A movie you can watch over and over. So much said with so few spoken words. The respect shown between friend and foe. You earned it, it just wasn’t given.

    • @NormAppleton
      @NormAppleton Рік тому +1

      This and Little Big Man put respect to the native people.

  • @majorfrost8206
    @majorfrost8206 2 роки тому +42

    Great film. I met Redford some years ago at an event in Vancouver that my radio station was sponsoring. When I got a chance to meet him I said, "You've done well to keep so much hair when there's so many after it", His smile made my night.

    • @wakeoftheflood2
      @wakeoftheflood2 2 роки тому

      Lol, nice....was it his wig then, or real hair

    • @nelsonbriles7061
      @nelsonbriles7061 2 роки тому +1

      Great post...thanks for sharing that encounter.

  • @Gunners_Mate_Guns
    @Gunners_Mate_Guns 5 років тому +195

    The perfect synopsis for the movie.
    When Bear Claw first meets Johnson, Johnson is barely hanging on for survival and half starved.
    Bear Claw takes him under his wing and shows him the ways of thriving in a harsh environment, then Johnson leaves to apply all of the critical lessons that Bear Claw has now taught him.
    Years later, after Johnson's wife and adopted son are murdered in retaliation for Johnson leading a rescue party across a Crow Indian burial ground, then Johnson carries on a decades-long one-on-one war with the Crows, killing over twenty of the Crows in that time.
    Bear Claw meets Johnson after all of that has happened -- well aware of Johnson's lonely war, with Johnson already a legend among even the toughest of fellow mountain men -- asking "Were it worth the troube," and Johnson laconically only replies to that question with a two words question of his own: "What trouble?"
    The economy of speech in this movie makes it so much more than it otherwise would have been, thanks to the brilliant writing of John Milius.

    • @Gunners_Mate_Guns
      @Gunners_Mate_Guns 5 років тому +12

      @Bryce Corbin Definitely
      I love how they maintain their stoicism, which is much more poignant than any quivering chins and watering eyes.
      They saved the necessary mourning for Johnson alone, sitting in his cabin, only feet away from his slain wife and adopted son, silently crying.
      That scene itself was terribly painful, but consider that most of the story of the real Jeremiah Johnson, a man by the name of John Johnston, is hard to verify fully.
      However, the two parts of his story that are known fact are regarding what happened to the crazy woman and how his Flathead Indian wife (there was no mention of a son), who was actually pregnant with Johnston's baby at the time, was murdered by the Crows while he was away on a hunting/trapping foray.

    • @Gunners_Mate_Guns
      @Gunners_Mate_Guns 5 років тому

      @Bryce Corbin Yep
      :)

    • @PaddyD378
      @PaddyD378 5 років тому +7

      An epic and beautiful film, so many great scenes. The ending with the Crow chief is so powerful. Its a masterpiece and towers far above the Revenant in my opinion and I know they are different stories but Jeremiah Johnson is a true nod to the spirit of the mountain man.

    • @Gunners_Mate_Guns
      @Gunners_Mate_Guns 5 років тому +5

      @@PaddyD378 Yes
      That ending is permanent how Johnson encounters Crow chief Paints His Shirt Red across a valley, then Paints His Shirt Red raises his hand palm outward to show that their war is now off, then Johnson wordlessly answers in the affirmative by raising his own hand palm outward.

    • @bmphil3400
      @bmphil3400 4 роки тому +2

      I think Milius had a hand in Dirty Harry, Apocalypse Now, and Jaws......I can't think of others right of the top of my head.......

  • @nicholascecil6733
    @nicholascecil6733 6 місяців тому +7

    I thank God my Dad is still with me, this is his favorite movie

  • @willong1000
    @willong1000 Рік тому +24

    Made half-a-century ago and it's still the definitive mountain man movie and one of my favorites of all! "Jeremiah Johnson" is what "The Revenant" wishes it was.
    In a movie filled with adventurous action and a fair amount of humor, this brief and poignant interaction between Bear Claw and Jeremiah is probably my favorite scene.

  • @thomasconnors4338
    @thomasconnors4338 2 роки тому +13

    My dear departed little brother and me used to swap quotes from this back and forth ever since he helped me move out to the Bakken oil boom. Brings a tear to the eye. Makes me hope he looks down with approval.

    • @D45VR
      @D45VR 2 роки тому

      I know he does. Peace to you.

  • @michaelbarnett2527
    @michaelbarnett2527 4 роки тому +41

    Epic scene. Something about them speculating on what month of the year it is, eating fresh rabbit on a cold day with a fire is very appealing.

  • @mikepowell1076
    @mikepowell1076 2 роки тому +15

    I wish they made movies like this still. Great movie.

  • @870Rem12gauge
    @870Rem12gauge 7 років тому +75

    Now that was an ending. " I hope you will fare well."

  • @Gwaithmir
    @Gwaithmir 4 роки тому +20

    Bear Claw reminds me of my own grandfather who was my hunting companion for over 20 years.

  • @russellcampbell9198
    @russellcampbell9198 4 роки тому +34

    One of my very favourite conversations from film. My late father loved the line, "There wasn't no griz left anyway." Much said in a few words.

    • @NormAppleton
      @NormAppleton 3 роки тому +1

      Will Geer was a giant. Look him up

  • @christopherreynolds7739
    @christopherreynolds7739 2 роки тому +11

    Beautiful scene in a movie full of hard times.

    • @shiplymowed6688
      @shiplymowed6688 2 роки тому +1

      They are sad, both, and cold as the place

  • @JLange642
    @JLange642 2 роки тому +31

    Such a character Will Geer played, and such an actor. A very poignant moment in this movie. I always enjoyed this scene, as it brings the film and Jeremiah’s quest to be a mountain man full circle.

    • @NormAppleton
      @NormAppleton Рік тому

      Yeah, A lot of people think he's grampa Walton. Hey was big.

    • @NormAppleton
      @NormAppleton Рік тому

      You might want to look up a movie called Seconds

    • @donaldelfreth553
      @donaldelfreth553 Рік тому

      Will Geer played a lot of film and TV roles but for me this is by far his most iconic. Hard to imagine any other actor doing Bearclaw.

  • @Nympheffect
    @Nympheffect 3 роки тому +22

    This was my grandpas favorite film. This scene always kicks me in the gut but in a good way

  • @TicklesTinkles
    @TicklesTinkles 7 місяців тому +2

    This was the first real movie my dad took me to see in the theater. Flash forward to "Saving Private Ryan," which I took him, a World War II veteran to see, and that right there marks my two favorite films of all time. The only time this guy who had a root canal with no pain killer cried was at the end of "Saving Private Ryan." I miss him so much.

  • @gparsons8
    @gparsons8 2 роки тому +6

    This movie has the best screenplay. The few words made the movie a classic. The visuals and thoughts of the characters had me at hello.

  • @leestamm3187
    @leestamm3187 6 місяців тому +1

    Great scene. "Stays long this high" is a line that resonates with those of us familiar with the high country.

  • @tomdoty8334
    @tomdoty8334 4 роки тому +27

    I saw this when I was 20 years old. Still one of my favorites. My son, now 40, loves it too. We often spring a line from the movie on one another, to see if the other catches up. We do that on a lot of classics.

  • @syrsknight
    @syrsknight Рік тому +6

    Read somewhere that they had such a low buget that most of this movie is filmed on Mr. Redfords land. Excellent movie & timeless!!!

  • @u.s.paratroops4633
    @u.s.paratroops4633 5 років тому +20

    "Keep your nose in the wind and your eyes along the skyline"

  • @irishcountryman4866
    @irishcountryman4866 6 років тому +74

    No phones or anythig digital just a man and his mountain. What a way to live.

    • @barrybarndtt318
      @barrybarndtt318 6 років тому

      This is a great movie l like this movie About mountain men.

    • @RaphaelAnthony
      @RaphaelAnthony 3 роки тому +2

      Ted Kaczynski would be proud!

    • @hashishsenju2015
      @hashishsenju2015 3 роки тому +1

      That's because they weren't exposed to the internet yet. If they had...lol

  • @Stingball22
    @Stingball22 7 років тому +79

    You've come far, Pilgrim.

    • @Lue_Jonin
      @Lue_Jonin 6 років тому +10

      Feels like far.

    • @wendellcotham7258
      @wendellcotham7258 6 років тому +2

      @@Lue_Jonin yes it does you say peace so be it AMEN

  • @imsnowedn
    @imsnowedn 3 роки тому +3

    They made movies with such clear film and warmth. The music adds a lot to the mood.

  • @edwarddeitch8886
    @edwarddeitch8886 5 років тому +26

    Thinking on it this is kind of a sad ending. Alone in the mountains. Family dead and nobody to even talk to for months until he dies.

    • @willong1000
      @willong1000 Рік тому

      The real John Johnson concluded his feud with the Crow, homesteaded near Red Lodge, Montana and even served as a town marshal for awhile.

  • @johnwayne2103
    @johnwayne2103 3 роки тому +6

    This movie is a masterpiece!

  • @sammyvh11
    @sammyvh11 3 роки тому +7

    Every March I think of what Ole Grizz said about it down below. Rip Will Geer

  • @rexross7086
    @rexross7086 Рік тому +5

    Sure would be nice if they could make Movies as this was today

  • @eddie12454
    @eddie12454 3 роки тому +5

    Wonderful moving scene.

  • @kevinmcnamara2082
    @kevinmcnamara2082 3 роки тому +4

    That scene gets my in the feels every time.

  • @tacticalpossum7090
    @tacticalpossum7090 2 роки тому +4

    When people talk about this movie they always seem to skip over "There was no grizz left anyway". Says a lot about the period. Their world was changing, they were changing it.

  • @charleshendrix232
    @charleshendrix232 Місяць тому

    I saw this when it came out in a Drive In theater in NJ. I was about 16 and didn’t know which way was up or where I was going. I thought a life in the wilderness might be an answer. It made a big impression on me even knowing it wouldn’t really come to pass. Great flick

  • @davidcoleman2796
    @davidcoleman2796 Рік тому +4

    I remember after years of hunting one day a old guy I knew who did not really like me said the same kind of thing to me . I will never forget how good it made me feel . ( he is dead now )

  • @waragainstmyself1159
    @waragainstmyself1159 3 роки тому +2

    Made me cry tbh

  • @chasbro777
    @chasbro777 5 років тому +14

    This is where I am at....I get every word.

  • @haroldconner2645
    @haroldconner2645 5 днів тому

    Truly a great movie

  • @bradpertner1035
    @bradpertner1035 4 роки тому +2

    He doesn't care of the time... beautiful...

  • @chestercallahan8856
    @chestercallahan8856 2 роки тому +2

    Reminds me of my dad who recently passed.

  • @michaelcline3123
    @michaelcline3123 3 роки тому +1

    In the adventure of life. Sometimes I feel like saying AHHH!

  • @t6v5c2
    @t6v5c2 5 років тому +16

    “What trouble?”

  • @kevincaldwell4707
    @kevincaldwell4707 2 роки тому +1

    This scene got me...not being sure what month it is, that sounds almost magical to be able to forget man made things like months.

  • @swimbait1
    @swimbait1 4 роки тому +4

    “I hope you will fare well”.

  • @nealfry2230
    @nealfry2230 9 місяців тому +1

    I'll Always Love you Hayden Panettiere

  • @Void304
    @Void304 3 роки тому +1

    And some folks say, "He's up there still."

  • @philipsommers5647
    @philipsommers5647 Рік тому +1

    Cody museum in Cody Wyoming has the real Jeremiah Johnson rifle and knife on display...if it could only talk..🤔🐻

  • @peppermintcatsass3141
    @peppermintcatsass3141 5 років тому +5

    🖤this story!

  • @mariaferreras5411
    @mariaferreras5411 2 роки тому +1

    Will Geer was magnificent.

  • @mics1694
    @mics1694 Рік тому

    Oh how I yearn for solitude. Been to long.

  • @rickjensen2833
    @rickjensen2833 2 роки тому

    "Every parents wish upon their child at the very least."
    Mojojensen.

  • @davidwise3426
    @davidwise3426 7 років тому +7

    Great film, one of my favorite westerns.

  • @tomevans4402
    @tomevans4402 Рік тому

    Beautiful

  • @evilqtip7098
    @evilqtip7098 6 місяців тому

    A start ❤

  • @greggorsag9787
    @greggorsag9787 Рік тому

    “What trouble?”
    Secret to life.

  • @hirundine44
    @hirundine44 3 роки тому +1

    Yes but not that high in mountains. Look at the trees but yeah, pleasant tale..

  • @john-paulnagel2732
    @john-paulnagel2732 5 років тому +8

    Would You Happen to know what Month of the Year it is?
    You’ve come a Long Way
    Pilgrim!

    • @jselectronics8215
      @jselectronics8215 3 роки тому

      Redford also tries to guess the month in Three Days of the Condor, when he's looking at photographs taken by Dunaway.

  • @jwdickinson643
    @jwdickinson643 2 роки тому

    Will Geer was fabulous!

  • @wendellcotham7258
    @wendellcotham7258 6 років тому +4

    Cold up here

  • @tedhoward7394
    @tedhoward7394 6 років тому +8

    The only Redford movie I like...the best Western movie of all time for me

    • @baskervillebee6097
      @baskervillebee6097 4 роки тому +1

      John Wayne. The Searchers

    • @219garry
      @219garry 3 роки тому +1

      You don't like The Natural or Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid?

    • @duffysullivan2794
      @duffysullivan2794 3 роки тому +1

      Yep JJ is up there with the best of them. I also like One Eyed Jacks and Josey Wales.

  • @officermiclawdogzurc6156
    @officermiclawdogzurc6156 2 роки тому

    WHEN I WAS YOUNG movies like this were boring to me my dad watches them till this day ..and now I'm in my 30s and I like all these movies and star trek to

    • @Letharium-f7c
      @Letharium-f7c 2 роки тому

      "when you were young" ;-) it would add much to your viewing if you watched one with your dad.

    • @danielponiatowski7368
      @danielponiatowski7368 2 роки тому

      i was a kid when this and other movies like it came out, we liked them ok but its what there was so not as much choice as today, man called horse was another. original star trek was good and i use it to this day somtimes to put me to sleep. not because its boring but because when i watched it as a kid it was on friday nights, my father was out at a nightclub those nights so i was left in peace and could relax. to this day if i put one on and kick back i can drop off no probs.

  • @confused_beekeeper
    @confused_beekeeper 3 роки тому +1

    Truly manly movie

  • @michaeldinkins9145
    @michaeldinkins9145 Рік тому

    Watch your top knot

  • @stevejensen3471
    @stevejensen3471 Рік тому

    At 1:53, Bearclaw shows emotion for his friend as he wipes a tear from his eye. Subtle but it's there.

  • @jonemarques2718
    @jonemarques2718 3 роки тому +3

    Filme muito bom

  • @wendellcotham7258
    @wendellcotham7258 6 років тому +8

    What trouble

  • @bulldogingles6594
    @bulldogingles6594 2 роки тому +1

    Melhor filme de Robert Redford, ele deveria levar um Oscar por este filme.

  • @SIunits
    @SIunits 2 роки тому

    He seems so heartbroken...and tired.

  • @ibtgb2
    @ibtgb2 3 роки тому

    “Feels like far”

  • @ultrakool
    @ultrakool 6 років тому +6

    good filming, as in good prep, pilgrim. ha.

  • @broste2121
    @broste2121 2 роки тому

    "Feels like far"

  • @OskarMikee
    @OskarMikee 6 місяців тому

    Feels like far...

  • @johnjarou2357
    @johnjarou2357 7 років тому +18

    will geer stole this scene.

  • @stevenmarry6845
    @stevenmarry6845 3 роки тому +1

    why does bear claw wipe his eyes, has he seen that johnson is dying?

    • @willong1000
      @willong1000 Рік тому

      It is out of the concern and sympathy that he feels for his friend who is not really "all there" at the moment, distracted by scenes running through his mind, somewhat out-of-it from what generations later would come to be called traumatic stress, though not quite to the point of a thousand-yard stare.

  • @grampsradio
    @grampsradio Рік тому

    March maybe

  • @marcdewey1242
    @marcdewey1242 Рік тому

    Hated to hear about bear claws cabin and mule

  • @barragin9893
    @barragin9893 2 роки тому

    As a 70's and 80's kid, is that Grandpa Walton?

    • @petergriss6131
      @petergriss6131 2 роки тому +1

      Sure is

    • @danielponiatowski7368
      @danielponiatowski7368 2 роки тому +1

      aah yeah so it is. i grew up watching that as well. in 1979-80 i lived on a farm for a short while and we got our milk from a dairy a few miles from the town. they lived near the local tip and would drag any car dumped there back to their place. they had a waltons truck with the solid rubber tyres that still ran and was used on their property. it wasnt the same model, i think the waltons was a ford, and they had a chev or the other way round but it looked the same and thats what i called it.

  • @Mannnnnnnn
    @Mannnnnnnn 2 роки тому

    Feels like far

  • @jamescoleakaericunderwood2503

    Huh....What trouble?

  • @ShoutsWillEcho1
    @ShoutsWillEcho1 Рік тому

    Youve Come a Long way, Pilgrim!

  • @williamscottmcnemar5672
    @williamscottmcnemar5672 Рік тому

    What time is it...in nature...

  • @bradpertner1035
    @bradpertner1035 4 роки тому

    He truly doesn't, Does not matter...

  • @Asconisti
    @Asconisti 5 років тому +7

    1:09 why Bear Claw looks so serious?

    • @jreese2474
      @jreese2474 5 років тому +5

      I always figured it's because he's asking what month it is. On the mountain its Summer, Fall, Winter, Spring. Months are what people back in civilization use. It's sort of a "Why do you care?" look.

    • @nomadhakunamatata5793
      @nomadhakunamatata5793 5 років тому +1

      @@jreese2474 i always saw seasons as future planning.months are for remembering the past.might not make much sense but i was happier when i thought of time as seasons.

    • @willong1000
      @willong1000 4 роки тому +3

      Twofold reasons I reckon. First, the realization that he does not himself know the month. Second, the concern and sympathy he feels for his friend who is not really "all there" at the moment, distracted by scenes running through his mind, somewhat out-of-it from what generations later would be called traumatic stress, though not quite to the point of a thousand-yard stare. Notice how Bear Claw turns his face away and daubs at his eye at 1:52 as he rises to mount his horse and ride away.
      Given the current state of the country, I've grow to detest self-congratulating Hollywood "elites" who seem to think they know best how the rest of us ought conduct our lives. However, "Jeremiah Johnson" remains one of my favorite movies which, I think, contains some great writing and acting both; this scene being an example. Too bad that the Left now seems oblivious to the ideals of intrepid individualism and self-sufficiency that the movie's characters exemplify.

    • @TheTommyboy63
      @TheTommyboy63 4 роки тому +2

      @@willong1000 a very insightful and articulated reply. Well done!

    • @willong1000
      @willong1000 4 роки тому +2

      @@TheTommyboy63 Thank you.

  • @1AvrgJoe
    @1AvrgJoe 2 роки тому +1

    Records favorite movie. I’d agree it’s his best. I can watch it once a year and enjoy it. True story too. Natives killed his wife and boy and he found one that had her rifle and he killed the whole group. He actually got help from other natives. Everyone was killing everyone else those times. There was no good or bad guys. White men had no right to steal this land. But the natives stole it from some other people that were here first. It’s just how it goes. A Grizzly Bear has his territory. He’ll chase or kill off any other bear. Till one day he’s old and slow and a young fast bear comes and takes what Was his for a long time. That’s just nature, savages can be.

  • @Joey-JoJo-Jr.64
    @Joey-JoJo-Jr.64 Рік тому

    And to think, Grandpa Walton’s legacy would be Walmart. 😊

  • @northerniltree
    @northerniltree 5 років тому

    Grizz is tastier than rabbit.

  • @gurujr
    @gurujr 4 роки тому +2

    No crappy bosses, student debt, or dealing with real estate agents. Just pick out a liveable space, hunt for food and fight off intruders.

    • @rev.jimjonesandthekool-aid4488
      @rev.jimjonesandthekool-aid4488 4 роки тому +1

      Please dear god, do not buy a house right now. We are at the top of the market for christ sake. Wait for the market to crash

  • @williamcprettyweasel8308
    @williamcprettyweasel8308 3 роки тому

    Mahanic, rule and dominance is over. Talk about cannibalism. This don't scare me. None at all. U came and fulfilled. Its done. It's over. Face it

  • @wilsonblauheuer6544
    @wilsonblauheuer6544 4 роки тому

    White man belongs in the wilderness as much as any other

    • @willong1000
      @willong1000 Рік тому

      Evolved white from ancestors who migrated out of Africa into Europe and Asia. They trekked through Ice Age climate hunting great Pleistocene fauna on the fringes of glaciers where melanin was no longer an advantage. Hunting, fishing and camping are popular ways to unwind for good, perhaps genetic, reasons.

  • @johnjacobs3502
    @johnjacobs3502 3 роки тому

    .

  • @youngimages2000
    @youngimages2000 3 роки тому +1

    Did u know that grizzly bears never stop growing?
    Big ones means they’re very old.
    Would be cool to see if they weren’t hunted to extinction

    • @simonsaysdie3155
      @simonsaysdie3155 2 роки тому +6

      Did you know eventually animals die ?
      And there are 55,000 still in north america?
      You just made it sound like we have none left lol

    • @youngimages2000
      @youngimages2000 2 роки тому

      @@simonsaysdie3155 , all wild animals will be extinct sooner than anyone cares :-(

    • @simonsaysdie3155
      @simonsaysdie3155 2 роки тому +2

      @@youngimages2000 everyone alive will be dead before that ever happens

    • @youngimages2000
      @youngimages2000 2 роки тому

      @@simonsaysdie3155 , it won’t be during our lifetime, maybe not during our kids’ lifetimes,
      definitely during our grandkids times tho…

    • @simonsaysdie3155
      @simonsaysdie3155 2 роки тому +4

      @@youngimages2000 bro what, all animals will be gone in the next 80 years ?

  • @extrasolar213
    @extrasolar213 3 роки тому

    :D

  • @shaunr5450
    @shaunr5450 4 роки тому +3

    City life castrates a man. Glad I gtfo.

  • @k.p.5736
    @k.p.5736 Рік тому

    Of all the movies out there that I have seen , and being a Clint Eastwood , Pacino , John Wayne , etc , etc , this movie just captivates me one of my all time favorites ..

  • @jaimehernandez237
    @jaimehernandez237 Рік тому

    Seen this clip a hundred times. Not enough. It's a classic.