FULL AND LONGER REACTION: www.patreon.com/MovieJoob Jade is here to watch Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid! P.S. There can be many UA-cam issues so we apologise if there are any scenes cut that are important! Join along in watching Jades reaction to this movie and as always leave a like, subscribe and click the notification bell to keep up with all our content!
This is one of my favorite westerns. Newman and Redford joined up again for The Sting, which is also a great movie. Remember, there are no rules in a knife fight. 😀Harvey was Ted Cassidy, the original Lurch in The Addams Family TV show in the 1960s.
@@MovieJoob Absolutely. The 00s movies were good, but nothing beats the original. And, yes, Carolyn was a dream. I did really enjoy the Wednesday series as well.
OMG. I love that you've decided to invest yourself in Westerns. I do hope you try out other genres as well at some point. But, as long as you are doing Westerns I'm going to keep on suggesting The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence. It is Steven Spielerg's favorite Western. And mine, too. Partially because it transcends the genre. Anyway... keep up the great work!
The infamous ending will always be jarring. Concerned about a lawman from their past as an army prepares to decimate them. That final freeze frame is iconic, the volleys punctuate their fate.
It's one of my all time favourites, and I'm so glad you enjoyed it. It's very close to their real story - it's actually true that Butch was a famous outlaw for years without killing anyone. He was raised Mormon and still had some moral scruples even after turning to crime. And the chemistry here between Newman and Redford is one of the best buddy performances I've ever seen.
This opening scene is really good. It explains the whole relationship. Explains how everybody sees them. It explains everything in such a short amount of time. 👍😎
Of course, if you want to see more Newman and Redford, the natural next choice would be to watch The Sting. Not a western, but it makes up for it in so many ways. Absolute classic. Loving the hat - still. 😄
There’s just something special about these old westerns. Something so classic and weirdly cozy. Also nostalgic as hell bc my grandpa used to binge them when we were out at his farm
It's so odd that you look back on this as an old western, whereas I still see it as a new western, post John Wayne, now Sergio Leone, Newman/Redford, Peckinpah; dirtier antiheroes.
Using the money he made from movies "Downhill Racer" and this one, Robert Redford bought a ski area in Utah named Timp Haven and renamed it Sundance Mountain Resort. It is there that the Sundance Film Festival began.
Etta is played by Katherine Ross, an actress who appeared in many iconic movies: "The Graduate", "Stepford Wives". She has been married five times, the last of whom is Sam Eliot, her husband of 40 years. Eliot is another great western movie star with a unique gravely voice recognizable to any who hear it.
My mom actually took me along to see this when it first came out, probably because she had a thing for Newman and Redford and there was nobody to watch me at home. Back then, the ratings systems were different. It was rated M "for mature audiences". I later told classmates about having gone and they thought it was big stuff back then. They were impressed ... for a day or so. And I'd forgotten Lurch was in this!
Thank you MovieJoob!! Great reaction. You gotta check out Coolhand Luke. The prison warden is hilarious! He’s the one that said that famous line: “What we’ve got here is failure to communicate.” I believe he was in this movie too, the guy that said “Can you shoot?” The voice was unmistakable. Paul Newman played Luke.
Redford and Newman paired up again in a GREAT film, "The Sting." Sort of a caper film set in the 1930s with one of the best scripts ever. You will love it. Also has the Capt of the Orca in "Jaws", Quint, as the chief villain in a great role.
The mine paymaster is played by Strother Martin, who starred with Paul Newman in what is arguable one of Newman's best movies, "Cool Hand Luke'. I highly recommend it. Enjoyed your reaction.
The animal that Sundance shot before they jumped off the cliff wasn't a snake. It was a Gila Monster (pronounced hee-la). It is a large venomous lizard native to the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico. It is the only venomous lizard native to the United States. It is a heavy, slow moving reptile that can grow up to 56 cm in length.
"I've got morons on my team..." a very useful phrase in my real life. Every time my co-workers did something dumb, I used it. Average, about once a month...
Nice reaction! "Young Guns" and "Bonnie & Clyde" are also very funny, mostly true stories about american outlaws that are both, in their own ways somewhat similar but very different to this.
Still love this movie. Love William Goldman's writing. He also had a script written for a movie about Blackbeard and Stede Bonnet called The Sea Kings that I wish had been made. Similar feel.
MJ: "That's the end of them.". Not necessarily. The reason the director ended the movie with a still shot was because it was the contention of Robert LeRoy Parker's friends and family that he did not die in Bolivia. Residents in Cassidy's hometown of Circleville, Utah U.S.A, claimed that he returned to western America and worked in Nevada until his death at around 60 years of age sometime about 1940. American forensic anthropologist Clyde Snow and his researchers traveled to San Vicente, Bolivia, and attempted to find the graves of the two outlaws in 1991. They did not find any remains with DNA matching the living relatives of Cassidy and Longabaugh. So the ending of the movie is a fairly accurate depiction of their end (other than the men who died in the gunfight never actually left the building alive). We will probably never know what really happened to Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid. The only thing we have any evidence of is that the bodies in the graves claimed as theirs are highly likely to contain two other men. Dang I love a good old western mystery.
When this movie was made, historians believed that they had died exactly as depicted in this movie. They ended on a still frame because they chose not to show the blood & gore, not because they were implying that Butch & Sundance had miraculously escaped. Everything that you mentioned happened after this movie came out. But yeah, the truth is we really don't know what happened to them.
Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head song was released as a studio version and wen straight to #1. BJ Thomas sang it. Written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David. It won an Oscar for Best Original Song. Bacharach also won Best Original Score. I'm old enough to be your grandfather, but you sure look cute in that hat lol.
"The Wild Bunch" is an excellent movie. Came out the same year. Much less humor. But similar theme (the end of the outlaw era in the West) and a similar ending too. Totally different vibe and very well made.
36:28 Best. Last Words. EVER. Butch: "You didn't see Lefors out there, did you?" Sundance: "Lefors? No." Butch: "Oh, good. For a moment there I thought we were in trouble."
My favourite Western ever, although The Good, The Bad & The Ugly is a very close second. This movie caused a stir when it was released because it glorified the baddies and had us all on their side. A tv series 'Alias Smith & Jones' was spawned from the idea of two outlaws going straight, and Butch & Sundance used the names Smith & Jones when they worked at the silver mine. Redford & Newman sadly only made one other movie together, 'The Sting', which is my favourite movie of all time. It is a masterpiece in every way.
Well, I you want to veer off the westerns, a good transition would be with The Sting (1973), which won 7 academy awards and where you would be reunited with Paul Newman and Robert Redford as a team of grifters in the 30's. A classic. Unless you don't like ragtime music 😋
Look up the real Butch Cassidy and the Sundance kid. You'll see the real picture they took in New York with the teacher woman. You'll get a kick out of it
True Grit (1969) with John Wayne, and The Gunfighter 1950 with Gregory Peck, The Fastest Gun Alive 1956 with Glenn Ford are three more westerns that are very good.
The classic Western that is a great counterpoint to this is The Wild Bunch. Both films follow a hunted outlaw group, but the direction is very different. If you leave Westerns without The Wild Bunch and The Outlaw Josie Wales you are missing out.
Loved your reaction. One of my favorite western movies of all time "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid" by Sam Peckinpah. Maybe you can find time for that one too.
Some fine music by Burt Bacharach & Hal David. As it was 1969, Redford didn't like the use of the "Raindrops" song in context of the movie, yet he later admitted (interview) that the song did work.
The magnificent film won four Oscars: for Best Cinematography (Filming), Best Score, Best Song (Burt Bacharach's “Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head”) and Best Original Screenplay (William Goldman). The film was also nominated for Best Picture, Best Director (Hill) and Best Sound.
a really fun flick. see the semi related ' Sting'. even better. so many real real good flicks in the 1970's. godfather , cuckoos nest , chinatown , Alien....
As from time to time you reply to my comments I'll risk a 2nd comment. Apart from The Sting, which would be classified as a heist movie, my thing is sci-fi, so Tron 1 & 2, Blade Runner 1 & 2, Dark City, Independence Day 1 & 2, Armageddon, I Robot and Robocop are all movies I watch again and again. The Crow and the Underworld quadrilogy are stunningly well made yet rarely get reaction videos. Yes, there are still a couple of Clint Westerns you can come back to in the future, but if you're looking for a change in genre I hope you will consider my suggestions. Thanks Jade! xx
Some folks did some research in the 1970's. They went to the town of that final scene. There was one grave. They exhumed the body, did DNA testing with Etta and Sundance's descendants. The body was his. Butch supposedly did 10 years in Bolovian prison, then returned to the USA, and lived out a long life in ( Wyoming? Colorado?) -- somewhere wilderness-- out West.
in the early 70s there was a tv show called "alias smith and jones." based on this movie if butch and the kid were offered a deal to go straight. a western comedy/drama it was also very good. most tv shows based on movies kinda suck. another great paul newman film from a few years before is "cool hand luke" (1967). and another excellent film from 1967 is "bonnie and clyde." i highly recommend both films. thanks for the video.
The critter that Sundance shot is called a Gila (pronounced He-La) Monster, a colorful reptile native to the American Southwest. It's bite is poisonous. After "Butch and Sundance" Paul Newman and Robert Redford did another "buddy" movie called "The Sting", which was set in the 1930's in Chicago. The "Butch and Sundance" movie was based on real characters, but with a little Hollywood flair, "The Sting" is fiction.
Since you're down under, I'm not sure if you recognize the references we're making to "Lurch". The part of Harvey Logan (the big, deep-voiced knife fighter) was played by Ted Cassidy. He became wildly famous for playing the large, creepy, intimidating, and thoroughly lovable character Lurch in the 1960's American comedy TV series The Addams Family. His character spawned catchphrases that generations grew up with, including his slow, baritone question "You raaaaang?" and his trademark groan when frustrated by the actions of other characters. Video clips of this classic series are all over UA-cam, and the show served as the inspiration for the Addams Family films that were produced decades later. 17:48, the creature they shot has the markings of a Gila monster (pronounced HEE-lah), a large, slow, but venomous lizard found in the southwestern United States. They can grow to over 20 inches in length. 22:40 - E H Harriman, that's a name of legend in railroad history. 23:55 - Not sure why they traveled all the way to New York City to get passage on a ship. In 1899, the ports of Galveston, TX and New Orleans, LA would have been closer. A year later, though, Galveston would be completely destroyed by "The Great Hurricane" of 1900.
Single you liked the Dollars Trilogy with Eastwood, check out Kurosawa! A Fistful of Dollars is an... unauthorized homage to Yojimbo (I hate to call it a rip off since I love both movies). Anyhoo, that's my suggestion! I say do Gangster stuff after you finish Breaking Bad!
In real life Butch Cassidy was loved by everyone. Also, it was reported that both were not killed in Bolivia- Butch may have survived. He made his way back to the US and lived quietly. There are many people way more knowledgeable about Butch and Sundance than I am here. I hope they correct the story where I’m wrong.
I wonder how they made the journey to Bolivia. With the Altiplano of the Andes on the west and the Amazon Jungle Basin on the east, it would seem quite a challenge. They must have made it however, it's documented.
They were in Wyoming, much, much closer to San Fransico. San Fransico is much, much, much, much closer to Bolivia, than is New York, from where they have to sail around the Cape of Capricorn, and brave the Straits of Magellan, They must have just wanted to see New York.
The ending is left ambiguous because nobody is actually sure of the exact when, where , and how of their demise. Rumors have them escaping and returning to the US. Others say they are buried right there in the courtyard in which they were "shot". Emma also. There have been no official records of Butch, Sundance, and Emma after the date of their reported death.
There is evidence that both never died in Bolivia. After their experiences in South America they lived in Paris for several years and returned to the USA - having had their faces altered by " plastic " surgery. I believe Butch died in the 1920's days after he reunited with his siblings and father. It was his distinct voice that was recognized by his father - something the plastic surgery of that era could not alter.
I remember watching a documentary years ago about them. This archeologist was trying to identify their remains with DNA from family members. The DNA didn't match the remains. He was pissed about it but said hell they're laughing at us buried on some mountain somewhere, saying We fooled'em again Butch!
This is one of the best screenplays ever, written by William Goldman (who later wrote the novel and the movie The Princess Bride). It is absolutely brilliant dialogue.
Ok, what does "jongy" mean ??? What actually happened to Butch and Sundance ??? Is it actually unknown what REALLY happened to them, as the two who were gunned down were never identified, and family members of Butch stated they had returned to the states, Butch reportedly not dying until 1`939. We'll never know for sure ... but their lives with "larger than life".
Technology is relentless. They were trying to continue a life advancing technology had made impossible. LaFours in his white straw hat reappears in _Mallrats_.
🤠👍 That jazzy scat-singing (at 26:37) in place of the more typical style of music that accompanies a chase scene in a western really caught audiences off guard back in 1969. Burt Bacharach won an academy award for that innovation. 🥸 As for which movie you should watch next, well, I just did a search of your channel and noticed that you've reacted to quite a bit of Spielberg ("Lincoln," "Catch Me If You Can" The "Indiana Jones" franchise etc). There's still dozens of his films you haven't seen yet. I think you would enjoy "War Of The Worlds" (2005). 😉
Hey Jade! What did you say about that llama? He was a chongy llama? Or a jongy llama? Excuse me but ... huh?! lol What was that weird sounding word you used, because I sure as heck have never heard it before. Best wishes to you as always, Jade! Cheers!
FULL AND LONGER REACTION:
www.patreon.com/MovieJoob
Jade is here to watch Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid!
P.S. There can be many UA-cam issues so we apologise if there are any scenes cut that are important!
Join along in watching Jades reaction to this movie and as always leave a like, subscribe and click the notification bell to keep up with all our content!
This is one of my favorite westerns. Newman and Redford joined up again for The Sting, which is also a great movie. Remember, there are no rules in a knife fight. 😀Harvey was Ted Cassidy, the original Lurch in The Addams Family TV show in the 1960s.
So awesome and hilarious I really enjoyed this and omg I loved the original 60s Addams Family! Even more than the 00s versions!
Carolyn Jones could’ve run me over with a car and I’d thank her 🫡
@@MovieJoob Absolutely. The 00s movies were good, but nothing beats the original. And, yes, Carolyn was a dream. I did really enjoy the Wednesday series as well.
I'm glad you mentioned The Sting. One of my first onstage roles as a theater kid!
Two of the most beautiful men in Hollywood. One of my favorite western movies. So many iconic lines. Great reaction!
I don't know how I missed this reaction to one of my all-time favorite movies?!? Yeehaw, Jade!
OMG. I love that you've decided to invest yourself in Westerns. I do hope you try out other genres as well at some point. But, as long as you are doing Westerns I'm going to keep on suggesting The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence. It is Steven Spielerg's favorite Western. And mine, too. Partially because it transcends the genre. Anyway... keep up the great work!
The infamous ending will always be jarring. Concerned about a lawman from their past as an army prepares to decimate them. That final freeze frame is iconic, the volleys punctuate their fate.
"Don't ever hit your mother with a shovel. It will leave a dull impression on her mind." 🤣
The future's all yours ya lousy bicycles!!
It's one of my all time favourites, and I'm so glad you enjoyed it. It's very close to their real story - it's actually true that Butch was a famous outlaw for years without killing anyone. He was raised Mormon and still had some moral scruples even after turning to crime. And the chemistry here between Newman and Redford is one of the best buddy performances I've ever seen.
That is so interesting!! What a unique outlaw! And yes their screen chemistry was so fun I enjoyed it a lot!
This opening scene is really good. It explains the whole relationship.
Explains how everybody sees them. It explains everything in such a short amount of time. 👍😎
One of the greats... If you're lookin' for another western-style Robert Redford movie, maybe give the film 'Jeremiah Johnson' a watch!
Definitely second that 👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻
One of my favorite movies
Of course, if you want to see more Newman and Redford, the natural next choice would be to watch The Sting. Not a western, but it makes up for it in so many ways. Absolute classic. Loving the hat - still. 😄
There’s just something special about these old westerns. Something so classic and weirdly cozy. Also nostalgic as hell bc my grandpa used to binge them when we were out at his farm
It's so odd that you look back on this as an old western, whereas I still see it as a new western, post John Wayne, now Sergio Leone, Newman/Redford, Peckinpah; dirtier antiheroes.
@@rogerlincoln451 It’s all about perspective I guess
Yes absolutely there is definitely a cozy element to it that I find so charming!!
Newman and Redford are great together again in The Sting, Oscar winner for Best Picture and a lot of fun, like this...
Using the money he made from movies "Downhill Racer" and this one, Robert Redford bought a ski area in Utah named Timp Haven and renamed it Sundance Mountain Resort. It is there that the Sundance Film Festival began.
Wait omg really!? I had no idea that is awesome!!
Etta is played by Katherine Ross, an actress who appeared in many iconic movies: "The Graduate", "Stepford Wives". She has been married five times, the last of whom is Sam Eliot, her husband of 40 years. Eliot is another great western movie star with a unique gravely voice recognizable to any who hear it.
William Goldman wrote this fabulous screenplay. He also wrote the Princess Bride ☮️
Raindrops are no longer falling on my head. Thanks, Precious. LOL ❤
Very good reaction. My Grandmother knew Etta Place when my grandmother was young. God bless you
Great selection MovieJoob! Wait until you see Lurch in a knife fight!
My mom actually took me along to see this when it first came out, probably because she had a thing for Newman and Redford and there was nobody to watch me at home. Back then, the ratings systems were different. It was rated M "for mature audiences". I later told classmates about having gone and they thought it was big stuff back then. They were impressed ... for a day or so. And I'd forgotten Lurch was in this!
I saw this in a double feature with Vanishing Point
Hahaha that badass feeling when your mum lets you watch mature films when you were young 💪🔥
If you haven't yet , watch " Cool Hand Luke ".
The Quick and the Dead is a great western to watch with an excellent cast. Blazing Saddles is a must as well and one of the funniest films ever made.
Thank you MovieJoob!! Great reaction. You gotta check out Coolhand Luke. The prison warden is hilarious! He’s the one that said that famous line: “What we’ve got here is failure to communicate.” I believe he was in this movie too, the guy that said “Can you shoot?” The voice was unmistakable. Paul Newman played Luke.
Redford and Newman paired up again in a GREAT film, "The Sting." Sort of a caper film set in the 1930s with one of the best scripts ever. You will love it. Also has the Capt of the Orca in "Jaws", Quint, as the chief villain in a great role.
Wait. That’s the same guy?!! Wow. Don’t know how I missed that.
Absolutely one of the best..two of the greats
The mine paymaster is played by Strother Martin, who starred with Paul Newman in what is arguable one of Newman's best movies, "Cool Hand Luke'. I highly recommend it. Enjoyed your reaction.
So "who are those guys". Good anticipation.
She’s been doing a lot of westerns. I haven’t watched a lot of westerns……. Good to see you.👍😎
I missed ya😊
The animal that Sundance shot before they jumped off the cliff wasn't a snake. It was a Gila Monster (pronounced hee-la). It is a large venomous lizard native to the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico. It is the only venomous lizard native to the United States. It is a heavy, slow moving reptile that can grow up to 56 cm in length.
"I've got morons on my team..." a very useful phrase in my real life. Every time my co-workers did something dumb, I used it. Average, about once a month...
Nice reaction! "Young Guns" and "Bonnie & Clyde" are also very funny, mostly true stories about american outlaws that are both, in their own ways somewhat similar but very different to this.
One of my all time favorites...They were a witty and charming duo , I even have an original framed movie poster..
Still love this movie. Love William Goldman's writing. He also had a script written for a movie about Blackbeard and Stede Bonnet called The Sea Kings that I wish had been made. Similar feel.
along with THE WILD BUNCH,one of the most beautifully filmed westerns of 1969.
The Big Country is an epic western for your consideration.
MJ: "That's the end of them.".
Not necessarily. The reason the director ended the movie with a still shot was because it was the contention of Robert LeRoy Parker's friends and family that he did not die in Bolivia. Residents in Cassidy's hometown of Circleville, Utah U.S.A, claimed that he returned to western America and worked in Nevada until his death at around 60 years of age sometime about 1940.
American forensic anthropologist Clyde Snow and his researchers traveled to San Vicente, Bolivia, and attempted to find the graves of the two outlaws in 1991. They did not find any remains with DNA matching the living relatives of Cassidy and Longabaugh.
So the ending of the movie is a fairly accurate depiction of their end (other than the men who died in the gunfight never actually left the building alive). We will probably never know what really happened to Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid. The only thing we have any evidence of is that the bodies in the graves claimed as theirs are highly likely to contain two other men.
Dang I love a good old western mystery.
When this movie was made, historians believed that they had died exactly as depicted in this movie. They ended on a still frame because they chose not to show the blood & gore, not because they were implying that Butch & Sundance had miraculously escaped. Everything that you mentioned happened after this movie came out. But yeah, the truth is we really don't know what happened to them.
Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head song was released as a studio version and wen straight to #1. BJ Thomas sang it. Written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David. It won an Oscar for Best Original Song. Bacharach also won Best Original Score. I'm old enough to be your grandfather, but you sure look cute in that hat lol.
"The Wild Bunch" is an excellent movie. Came out the same year. Much less humor. But similar theme (the end of the outlaw era in the West) and a similar ending too. Totally different vibe and very well made.
Jade: "Yes, we all live on the coast though (in Australia)"
Apart from those who live in Alice .... 😂
36:28 Best. Last Words. EVER.
Butch: "You didn't see Lefors out there, did you?"
Sundance: "Lefors? No."
Butch: "Oh, good. For a moment there I thought we were in trouble."
I forgot that Lurch was in this. (Ted Cassidy)
My favourite Western ever, although The Good, The Bad & The Ugly is a very close second. This movie caused a stir when it was released because it glorified the baddies and had us all on their side. A tv series 'Alias Smith & Jones' was spawned from the idea of two outlaws going straight, and Butch & Sundance used the names Smith & Jones when they worked at the silver mine. Redford & Newman sadly only made one other movie together, 'The Sting', which is my favourite movie of all time. It is a masterpiece in every way.
Well, I you want to veer off the westerns, a good transition would be with The Sting (1973), which won 7 academy awards and where you would be reunited with Paul Newman and Robert Redford as a team of grifters in the 30's. A classic. Unless you don't like ragtime music 😋
Look up the real Butch Cassidy and the Sundance kid. You'll see the real picture they took in New York with the teacher woman. You'll get a kick out of it
True Grit (1969) with John Wayne, and The Gunfighter 1950 with Gregory Peck, The Fastest Gun Alive 1956 with Glenn Ford are three more westerns that are very good.
The classic Western that is a great counterpoint to this is The Wild Bunch. Both films follow a hunted outlaw group, but the direction is very different. If you leave Westerns without The Wild Bunch and The Outlaw Josie Wales you are missing out.
"FUEGO!!"...What an Epic end for them! I`ll like to think that they Both get the Ship to Australia
Love your React
Loved your reaction. One of my favorite western movies of all time "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid" by Sam Peckinpah. Maybe you can find time for that one too.
nice reaction. have a great day!
Some fine music by Burt Bacharach & Hal David. As it was 1969, Redford didn't like the use of the "Raindrops" song in context of the movie, yet he later admitted (interview) that the song did work.
Strong choice
one of the extras in the bar in the beginning was Sam Elliott, yrs later he married Etta and they've been married for decades now
The magnificent film won four Oscars: for Best Cinematography (Filming), Best Score, Best Song (Burt Bacharach's “Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head”) and Best Original Screenplay (William Goldman).
The film was also nominated for Best Picture, Best Director (Hill) and Best Sound.
This is the first time I've heard the term "thruple" and it fits so perfectly.
Hahaha it’s a confusing dynamic but I believe it sums up their situation 😂😂
a really fun flick. see the semi related ' Sting'. even better. so many real real good flicks in the 1970's. godfather , cuckoos nest , chinatown , Alien....
Gangster route!!! Please check out A Bronx Tale! It’s insanely over looked but such a perfect story full of amazing life lessons
As from time to time you reply to my comments I'll risk a 2nd comment. Apart from The Sting, which would be classified as a heist movie, my thing is sci-fi, so Tron 1 & 2, Blade Runner 1 & 2, Dark City, Independence Day 1 & 2, Armageddon, I Robot and Robocop are all movies I watch again and again. The Crow and the Underworld quadrilogy are stunningly well made yet rarely get reaction videos. Yes, there are still a couple of Clint Westerns you can come back to in the future, but if you're looking for a change in genre I hope you will consider my suggestions. Thanks Jade! xx
G’day Joobs. It’s been awhile. Glad to see you’re still doing westerns. Great hat!!
Some folks did some research in the 1970's. They went to the town of that final scene. There was one grave. They exhumed the body, did DNA testing with Etta and Sundance's descendants. The body was his. Butch supposedly did 10 years in Bolovian prison, then returned to the USA, and lived out a long life in ( Wyoming? Colorado?) -- somewhere wilderness-- out West.
Written by William Goldman, who also scripted THE PRINCESS BRIDE and the film version of MISERY
in the early 70s there was a tv show called "alias smith and jones." based on this movie if butch and the kid were offered a deal to go straight. a western comedy/drama it was also very good. most tv shows based on movies kinda suck. another great paul newman film from a few years before is "cool hand luke" (1967). and another excellent film from 1967 is "bonnie and clyde." i highly recommend both films. thanks for the video.
Thanks, Jade! 🤠 I particularly enjoy the music in this one.
I did too!! Thank you for watching 🤠❤️
@@MovieJoob You're so welcome! 🥰
While you are doing Westerns, you can't miss out on the King of cool. Steve McQueen in Tom Horn 🤠🤠
What happened to Dances with Wolves reaction part 1? Was it copyright claimed? I was really looking forward to watching part 2.
Enjoyed your reaction. Btw, that hat looks good on you. I'd really like to see you react to "Young Guns" another inaccurate but "historical" western.
I love this movie ❤
The critter that Sundance shot is called a Gila (pronounced He-La) Monster, a colorful reptile native to the American Southwest. It's bite is poisonous. After "Butch and Sundance" Paul Newman and Robert Redford did another "buddy" movie called "The Sting", which was set in the 1930's in Chicago. The "Butch and Sundance" movie was based on real characters, but with a little Hollywood flair, "The Sting" is fiction.
Great Newman and Redford movie. A recommendation I'd suggest is Breaking Away 1979. Seems like a bicycle movie but it isn't.
There is a foto of them (the real guys) in NY before bolivia
You can see where some of the scenes and ideas in Red Dead Redemption 2 came from!
My favorite Redford film is Jeremiah Johnson ☮️❤️
Since you're down under, I'm not sure if you recognize the references we're making to "Lurch". The part of Harvey Logan (the big, deep-voiced knife fighter) was played by Ted Cassidy. He became wildly famous for playing the large, creepy, intimidating, and thoroughly lovable character Lurch in the 1960's American comedy TV series The Addams Family. His character spawned catchphrases that generations grew up with, including his slow, baritone question "You raaaaang?" and his trademark groan when frustrated by the actions of other characters. Video clips of this classic series are all over UA-cam, and the show served as the inspiration for the Addams Family films that were produced decades later.
17:48, the creature they shot has the markings of a Gila monster (pronounced HEE-lah), a large, slow, but venomous lizard found in the southwestern United States. They can grow to over 20 inches in length.
22:40 - E H Harriman, that's a name of legend in railroad history.
23:55 - Not sure why they traveled all the way to New York City to get passage on a ship. In 1899, the ports of Galveston, TX and New Orleans, LA would have been closer. A year later, though, Galveston would be completely destroyed by "The Great Hurricane" of 1900.
Have you considered doing more horror stuff? Like The Conjuring movies or Insidious? :D
I saw that in the drive-in when I was 7. I wasn't driving.
I’m very relieved to hear you weren’t driving 😂😂 but heck yeah to seeing it at the drive in!!
Single you liked the Dollars Trilogy with Eastwood, check out Kurosawa! A Fistful of Dollars is an... unauthorized homage to Yojimbo (I hate to call it a rip off since I love both movies). Anyhoo, that's my suggestion! I say do Gangster stuff after you finish Breaking Bad!
Hole-in-the-Wall is a real location in the middle of Wyoming. Pretty remote even today.
Oh wow! That’s so awesome!!
In real life Butch Cassidy was loved by everyone. Also, it was reported that both were not killed in Bolivia- Butch may have survived. He made his way back to the US and lived quietly. There are many people way more knowledgeable about Butch and Sundance than I am here. I hope they correct the story where I’m wrong.
Hi Jade hope you are having an great and awesome day ❤
Thank you so much as always John ❤
I wonder how they made the journey to Bolivia. With the Altiplano of the Andes on the west and the Amazon Jungle Basin on the east, it would seem quite a challenge. They must have made it however, it's documented.
Check out Clint Eastwood s westerns too
Fantastic
I will suggest support your local Sheriff. a light hearted comedy.
They were in Wyoming, much, much closer to San Fransico. San Fransico is much, much, much, much closer to Bolivia, than is New York, from where they have to sail around the Cape of Capricorn, and brave the Straits of Magellan, They must have just wanted to see New York.
The ending is left ambiguous because nobody is actually sure of the exact when, where , and how of their demise. Rumors have them escaping and returning to the US. Others say they are buried right there in the courtyard in which they were "shot". Emma also. There have been no official records of Butch, Sundance, and Emma after the date of their reported death.
What happened to Dances With Wolves?
In real life Butch shot his wounded partner between the eyes before turning the gun on himself.
Hey cowgirl! ❤ I'm ready with a few drinks! 🍻
Yeeehaw! 🤠 Hope you enjoyed!!
@@MovieJoob lol 😆 I always do!
Halloween is coming soon,so maybe some scary movies would be nice.I;d recommend "Drag me to HELL" .
what happened to dances with wolves reaction?
Hope you get to Jeremiah Johnson one day, really enjoy your reactions! Peace and see you on the next upload!
Love that movie. Very loosely based on Liver-Eating Johnson's life 👌🏻👌🏻
There is evidence that both never died in Bolivia. After their experiences in South America they lived in Paris for several years and returned to the USA - having had their faces altered by " plastic " surgery. I believe Butch died in the 1920's days after he reunited with his siblings and father. It was his distinct voice that was recognized by his father - something the plastic surgery of that era could not alter.
I remember watching a documentary years ago about them. This archeologist was trying to identify their remains with DNA from family members. The DNA didn't match the remains. He was pissed about it but said hell they're laughing at us buried on some mountain somewhere, saying We fooled'em again Butch!
Hello. I am once again asking you to watch NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN.
🙌🙌👋👋🤗🤗👏👏💖💖
Not to objectify them or anything. But those were two damned handsome men.
Men need all the compliments we can get. So please objectify us 😂
You can say someone looks good without all that bullshit man
@@portalmanHUN You are telling me what to say?
That they were!! Very handsome gents!
This is one of the best screenplays ever, written by William Goldman (who later wrote the novel and the movie The Princess Bride). It is absolutely brilliant dialogue.
Also Misery, Marathon Man, All The President's Men and uncredited on a bunch of other movies including Good Will Hunting. He was amazing.
@@rabbitandcrow In a discussion of his films, I heard Goldman once say that the cliffs that Butch and Sundance jump from are the Cliffs of Insanity.
Ok, what does "jongy" mean ??? What actually happened to Butch and Sundance ??? Is it actually unknown what REALLY happened to them, as the two who were gunned down were never identified, and family members of Butch stated they had returned to the states, Butch reportedly not dying until 1`939. We'll never know for sure ... but their lives with "larger than life".
After further review, your hat is different.
I wrote that an hour ago.
I'm a lifeguard though.
And I wonder. When you make maps, is south up and west right? Because east usually starts first?
Technology is relentless. They were trying to continue a life advancing technology had made impossible.
LaFours in his white straw hat reappears in _Mallrats_.
Etta completely fell out of history, no one is sure what happened to her
🤠👍 That jazzy scat-singing (at 26:37) in place of the more typical style of music that accompanies a chase scene in a western really caught audiences off guard back in 1969. Burt Bacharach won an academy award for that innovation. 🥸 As for which movie you should watch next, well, I just did a search of your channel and noticed that you've reacted to quite a bit of Spielberg ("Lincoln," "Catch Me If You Can" The "Indiana Jones" franchise etc). There's still dozens of his films you haven't seen yet. I think you would enjoy "War Of The Worlds" (2005). 😉
Hey Jade! What did you say about that llama? He was a chongy llama? Or a jongy llama? Excuse me but ... huh?! lol What was that weird sounding word you used, because I sure as heck have never heard it before. Best wishes to you as always, Jade! Cheers!
She said "chonky".
I love the way she said that. I might use it as a text alert ❤
Hahahaha yeah chonky but I kinda said it with a g cause that’s what I say to my cats sometimes 😂😂 (my cats are thickums)
@@MovieJoob Hm, welp, OK then. Chonky is my new Australian word for the day, because I've never heard of that one either! Haha!! Take care, Jade!
@@dggydddy59 In the US, it's used to describe overweight cats, and I think is one level below "Oh lawd, he comin'!"