Once Upon a Time in the West (1968) Reaction

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 16 лют 2022
  • Full Reactions, Choose Shows/Movies I Watch, & Support the Channel: / studythecraft
    Screenwriter Reacts DAWN OF THE DEAD (2004) First Time Watching Movie Reaction | Screenwriter Watches
    Movie Reaction Playlist: • Movie Reactions
    Other Reactions:
    Inception (2010) Reaction: • SCREENWRITER REACTS To...
    Terminator 1 (1984) Reaction: • SCREENWRITER MOVIE REA...
    Jurassic Park (1993) Reaction: • SCREENWRITER MOVIE REA...
    Wall-E (2008) Reaction: • WALL-E (2008) SCREENWR...
    Joker (2019): • SCREENWRITER MOVIE REA...
    On Study The Craft, we watch movies together while I give my breakdown during the movie reaction using my screenwriting knowledge while trying to also just enjoy the film.
    *Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED. All rights belong to their respective owners.
  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 178

  • @JakeLovesStories
    @JakeLovesStories  2 роки тому +16

    I'm not gonna lie, I'm not a huge fan of stories over 2 and half hours and mention it a couple times, but this was still a great story
    UA-cam Movie Reactions Playlist: ua-cam.com/play/PLFyO_F_gScu5ASMweIxqOcItRxcWvfYn_.html
    Full Patreon Reactions: www.patreon.com/StudytheCraft

    • @patinho5589
      @patinho5589 2 роки тому +6

      This is the greatest western ever made. You just have to go into a trance .. and watch it all in silence.. not ideal for reaction videos.
      Edit: when you have more and more pain in life to cry to it’s better also.

    • @thunderstruck5484
      @thunderstruck5484 2 роки тому +1

      Can’t wait for Lawrence of Arabia it’s only about 4 hours! Haha
      Just kidding but when I was a kid in the 60s they had intermissions in all the long movies it really helps thanks again!

    • @internetenjoyer1044
      @internetenjoyer1044 2 роки тому +3

      @@thunderstruck5484 Oh, Lawrence of Arabia is a must see. Everyone knows about it being breathtaking visually but narratively is extraodinary as well. It's action adventure that morphs into political thriller, Greek tragedy and character study. Once upon a time in America is another long film thats just one of the all time greats

    • @Ranadkins
      @Ranadkins Рік тому

      You have to remember that back in those days everything was wait for this, wait for that. Life was at a snails pace. This film beautifully shows it. It makes you live in that time where they’d wait for a long time for a train. Try to keep that in mind.

    • @DerekDerekDerekDerekDerekDerek
      @DerekDerekDerekDerekDerekDerek Рік тому +4

      Then you ain't no screenwriter

  • @rearlafull2870
    @rearlafull2870 2 роки тому +30

    09:53 this is why the TikTok generation of screenwriters will never create any masterpieces

  • @alexanderlindner5808
    @alexanderlindner5808 2 роки тому +122

    Young people seem to have a real problem with long movies. When we saw this film in the theatres, we all thought it wasn't long enough. We wanted more.

    • @trhansen3244
      @trhansen3244 2 роки тому +14

      This is the kind of movie one savors.

    • @tjampman
      @tjampman 2 роки тому +6

      It is kinda funny, I think todays movies are too long!
      I think this movie works because keeps the tension and mystery going til the end, whereas modern movies just goes on rails to to extend the action

    • @vincentneumann798
      @vincentneumann798 Рік тому +8

      Here 20 Years old and i love this Movie i watched it for the first time today and i will watch this masterpice again.😄

    • @bencaspar
      @bencaspar Рік тому

      Ok boomer

    • @robboaron
      @robboaron Рік тому +5

      Yeah, it's no problem nowadays to binge watch tv shows for hours in a row, but a 3 hour movie is too long. :P

  • @bonhzeppelin55
    @bonhzeppelin55 Рік тому +50

    The Final duel was far more cruel than you thought. It wasn't a heart shot, it was a deliberately placed LUNG shot so Frank would bleed out just long enough to realize who his avenger is. What an Epic end to an Epic Film by the Master: Sergio Leoni!

  • @grimmjowespada2422
    @grimmjowespada2422 Рік тому +14

    Back then, viewers weren't treated like idiots

  • @BaldJean
    @BaldJean Рік тому +17

    You younger guys don't get it, but it's the slow pace that's making movies like this great. They take their time to tell a story. It is not that these old movies are too slow-paced, the newer movies are too fast-paced.

  • @alessandromancuso7242
    @alessandromancuso7242 2 роки тому +50

    If you cannot understand the greatness of this film, the magic of some scenes, the beauty of the soundtrack and the great immersion that some scenes build and all you can think of is "well, nice scenses but too long, today i can make the same thing in half the time" forget directing films. There are already too much "directors" that can make a 1 and a half hour movie with tens of explosions and shootings.... And all added up are not worth a fingernail of Sergio Leone.

  • @SRG1966
    @SRG1966 2 роки тому +63

    The reveal of Henry Fonda as Frank was huge. He was a superstar and known as always playing a good guy. For a modern comparison, imagine the same scene but you find out Tom Hanks was Frank. Leone's cinematography never looked better.

    • @shaunholt
      @shaunholt 2 роки тому +9

      What ☝🏼 said. It was casting against type, which wasn't as much a thing then. And Henry Fonda was famous for playing beloved heroes. So that reveal as Frank (Fonda) gunning down a family and then killing a child blew audiences minds.
      This film actually got only a mediocre reception when it came out, but has since been considered one of the best Westerns ever. Personally I like it over The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly.

    • @chrisdaily2077
      @chrisdaily2077 2 роки тому +1

      It's part of the reason I love this movie. Going from 12 Angry Men to this movie is such a turn and I love it.

    • @angelcanez4426
      @angelcanez4426 2 роки тому +2

      I just had a conversation the other day on how Tom Hanks needs to play a terrible villain, and I used Henry Fonda as an example or good guy gone bad.

    • @SRG1966
      @SRG1966 2 роки тому +2

      @@angelcanez4426 Well playing Colonel Parker in the Elvis pic is a step in that direction, if it's at all accurate.

    • @randywhite3947
      @randywhite3947 2 роки тому

      @@shaunholt this is arguably the third time Fonda has played a played a villain

  • @88wildcat
    @88wildcat 2 роки тому +32

    This is my all time favorite movie. It has so many layers to it. There is a bigger theme than just Harmonica vs. Frank or Jill vs. Frank. The railroad represents civilization and civilization means the end of the independent individual, i.e. Harmonica (and Frank and Cheyenne too for that matter). Their time is over. Frank tried to be the modern businessman but realized that's not who he was. He tried to evolve from the gun to the stack of money as his weapon of choice but in the end he returned to the gun. That was the point of the conversation between him and Harmonica when Harmonica says that there will be other Mortons who come. Morton represented modernization and the end of the era of the "wild" west. Soon the dollar would replace the gun and the likes of Frank, Harmonica, and Cheyenne would no longer have a place in the world when that time arrived. It's also why Harmonica doesn't stay. Not only does Morton represent the arrival of a more modern society but so does Jill. That is why she is left to oversee the building of the station at the end. You seemed to miss that all four main characters each had their own musical theme that played whenever they were onscreen. Naturally Harmonica had the harmonica theme. Cheyenne had the bom-bom-de-bom banjo like theme. Frank had the distorted electric guitar theme. Jill had the orchestral operatic theme. Leone actually Ennio Morricone compose the music for the movie before he started filming so he could play it while the scenes were filmed. Like other people have commented at the time Henry Fonda was the last actor anyone in the audience would have expected to be the one to shoot a child onscreen. It was like watching Mr. Rogers murder a family in cold blood. That's why Leone wanted Fonda so badly for the part.
    The opening scene also plays into the greater theme of the movie. Jack Elam, Woody Strode, and Al Morlock were all veteran actors who appeared in lots of westerns. Killing them off in the manner they were killed was symbolic of killing the western as a film genre (Morlock actually committed suicide during the filming.) Leone wanted a film that served both as a tribute to the western (Casting Elam, Strode, and Morlock, filming in Monument Valley, using the railroad as a component in the plot, etc.) and a eulogy to the genre with the railroad eventually sweeping away everything and everyone that came before it.

    • @tjampman
      @tjampman 2 роки тому +5

      I heard Sergio was trying to cast Clint Eastwood, Lee Van Cleef and Eli Wallach as the guys who got shot in that first gun firght.

    • @randywhite3947
      @randywhite3947 Рік тому +3

      @@tjampman your right

    • @joemoss5138
      @joemoss5138 Місяць тому +1

      ​@@tjampmanyeah and Clint said no way. That was probably a good call not just for him personally but for ythe posterity of the Dollars trilogy and that of TMWNN character.

  • @g.panitikan1929
    @g.panitikan1929 2 роки тому +23

    Once Upon A Time In The West is my favorite movie of all time if you haven't watch The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly check it out it is another Sergio Leone's western masterpiece arguably the greatest western film ever made.

  • @jessediaz1293
    @jessediaz1293 2 роки тому +13

    “How can you trust a man who wears both belt and suspenders. Your pants don’t even trust you.”
    Lmao 🤣 that’s the line.

    • @Mibit911
      @Mibit911 11 місяців тому +2

      "You can't even trust your own pants"

    • @hw2508
      @hw2508 10 місяців тому +1

      I used that analogy now and again.

  • @pablovandyck
    @pablovandyck 2 роки тому +20

    That is a film-maker's movie. The cinematography, the score, a simple tale of revenge made compelling through interesting everyday characters arriving together at a moment in time. And very little dialogue; no wasted words. The dialogue is mundane; there is almost zero exposition in the script. The story is told by witnessing it.

  • @lukebarton5075
    @lukebarton5075 2 роки тому +31

    Certainly one of the greatest westerns ever made. You should also watch “Once Upon a Time in America” (1984) An epic mobster movie by the same director.

    • @scottjo63
      @scottjo63 2 роки тому +1

      And the best news is there are 2 versions. The shorter 2 hour crappy version and the over 4 hour masterpiece. A movie you can really compare which one is best, the real long should be cut down masterpiece or 2 hour confusing mess of a movie just because they just want an extra showing or 2 to make more money in the theater.

    • @Dreee2x
      @Dreee2x Рік тому +1

      The directo is Sergio Leone he's Italian 🇮🇹

    • @sebastianemond5313
      @sebastianemond5313 10 місяців тому

      Don't forget the middle child of the *Once Upon A Time In...* series, Duck, You Sucker, or Once Upon A Time In... The Revolution, or A Fistful of Dynamite- Holy crap, so many titles for that James Coburn movie.

  • @orvoloco8261
    @orvoloco8261 2 роки тому +29

    I understand this kind of masterpieces can be difficult for a young man with an attention span of 2 minutes...

  • @jamesharper3933
    @jamesharper3933 2 роки тому +11

    This is the best Western ever made. Sergio Leone was a genius and Ennio Morriconne's score is a masterpiece with each main character having their own theme music. The black actor at the beginning of the film is Woody Strode. He was a decathlete and football star. He was the first black athlete in post war NFL. Check out John Ford's The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance with James Stewart, John Wayne and Woody Strode.

  • @shermanlin5554
    @shermanlin5554 2 роки тому +13

    Great reaction video. Keep in mind a lot of the actors didn't speak English. Claudia Cardinale spoke Itslian and the actor playing Mr Choo Choo also only spoke Italian. It was all dubbed laterm the director also spoke no english but is considered the greatest American western director of all time. Cheers

  • @hichambarrak2902
    @hichambarrak2902 2 роки тому +13

    Very disappointing reaction IMO. Poor insight into the craftsmanship put in to make this movie an epic movie from which guys like Tarantino, the film director, learned a lot about cinematogrophy. You just stuck to the storyline. Not a single word about the soundtrack which was and still is a masterpiece as far as soundtracks go. Sergio Leone, the director of this movie and 3 other previous westerns, is to this day a legend.

  • @thequietrevolution3404
    @thequietrevolution3404 Рік тому +8

    When you think about it, this way was actually a better kind of revenge against Frank. He'd not only lost his life, but all his men, the land and potential millions. And Frank died with the knowledge that he'd been defeated by the only mistake he's ever made in his life: He didn't kill the brother of a previous victim. And now for some movie trivia:
    (1) Harmonica was riding the same train Jill was riding (she alights later at the town).
    (2) Three men waiting for a train pays homage to the film "High Noon".
    (3) The sawed-off Winchester used by Stony (Woody Strode) pays homage to the tv series "Wanted: Dead or Alive" starring Steve McQueen.
    (4) Originally, the three waiting gunmen were slated to be Clint Eastwood, Lee Van Cleef and Eli Wallach (a good friend of Henry Fonda).
    (5) Henry Fonda wanted to wear brown contact lenses. However, Sergio Leone decided Fonda's blue eyes world seem even more menacing.
    (6) Jill's house is the same house used in Quentin Tarantino's "The Hateful Eight" (2015).
    (7) Claudia Cardinale's character (Jill McBain) pays homage to Joan Crawford's character (Vienna) from the film "Johnny Guitar"

  • @missk8tie
    @missk8tie Рік тому +8

    The introduction of Frank played by Henry Fonda...I'd only seen a few of his movies my dad liked, but he was *always* the good guy. So that way he said "Well, now that you've called me by name..." gave me chills.

  • @jimmyzee7040
    @jimmyzee7040 2 роки тому +6

    The great Charles Bronson plays the harmonica character, classic role.

  • @user-pe9gz8si8k
    @user-pe9gz8si8k 2 роки тому +8

    Verisimilitude. You must also remember this is the age of epic movie soundtracks. When going to a theatre meant a whole night out.

  • @JoseGonzalez-ke3zs
    @JoseGonzalez-ke3zs 2 роки тому +6

    This movie is an art, cmon niga, do you prefer a Wild West?

  • @veronikahk1826
    @veronikahk1826 2 роки тому +8

    Looks like you didn't get the movie. And I did when I was like 15🤣

  • @m.ericwatson968
    @m.ericwatson968 7 місяців тому +2

    Remember when Frank says "maybe now you'll tell me what you're after", Harmonica merely says "only at the point of dying", and Harmonica delivers one fatal bullet, lets Frank contemplate as he bleeds out..."who...who are you?"

  • @mik9124
    @mik9124 2 роки тому +10

    ' Once upon a Time in the West ' still the best peace of Art about the Wild West . Never cut out one second . This is Epic ... watched it about 40 Years , enjoyed every second again and again

  • @Fallopia5150
    @Fallopia5150 2 роки тому +8

    Showing your youth! Some of the best movies of all time were made before you were even a glint in your Daddy's eye, maybe even before your Grandpa's ! Hitchcock never gets old. Keep watching the 'oldies' - they really knew about setting, pace, dialogue, atmosphere building, telling a story. I'd rather have a movie like Rope or Harryhausen effects than all the CGI fast paced no real story rubbish.(Venom is great though!) :)

  • @meanstreetmook
    @meanstreetmook 2 роки тому +7

    So you'd reduce this absolute masterpiece to the length of a music video, with the final shootout having them blast full clips into each other. Let me guess, in The Godfather, when the gunmen rush up to assassinate, Vito would pull two uzi's out and blast them to hell! Then he takes out the 5 families John Wick style. 20 minutes tops.

  • @ripp3rjak934
    @ripp3rjak934 2 роки тому +7

    Now this is a movie

  • @Zofer-1920
    @Zofer-1920 2 роки тому +5

    It has been often said it was a love letter to the genre of the American Western from Leone. By the time of this film, the Western as a film genre was disappearing. Leone included many staple features of the Western genre. Also, near the last dialogue between Harmonica and Jill McBain, she asks if she’ll ever see him again. “Maybe,” Harmonica replies. It can be interpreted as it’s a question of would we ever see the Western film genre again? And with that the “Western” figuratively departs. Love this film. There’s always something to find in every viewing.

  • @ragdaj
    @ragdaj 2 роки тому +4

    great example of "show, don`t tell"

  • @Marjolein26264
    @Marjolein26264 7 місяців тому +2

    One of the best movies ever! And the soundtrack is one of the best in history! So sad that most young people don't appreciate a masterpiece (however long!) when they see it!

  • @giginogigetto7153
    @giginogigetto7153 2 роки тому +8

    guess you feel more comfortable reviewing movies like naked gun or spiderman..
    or tv commercials

  • @anthonymunn8633
    @anthonymunn8633 2 роки тому +5

    Nice to see you cover this masterpiece.The western as visual poetry.

  • @youtradvostraductions3082
    @youtradvostraductions3082 2 роки тому +6

    I love this movie, on par with The good, the bad & ugly. Great commentary and reaction

  • @Jerome616
    @Jerome616 2 роки тому +24

    This is an older style of film referred to as an “epic”. Basically like a Zach Snyder’s Justice League level of directorial indulgence.
    Love this movie to bits, even as a young teen this movie connected with me.

    • @Godzilla370
      @Godzilla370 2 роки тому +1

      Snydercut sucks

    • @legion24100
      @legion24100 2 роки тому +1

      @@Godzilla370 I loved the snyder cut

  • @michaelrunnels7660
    @michaelrunnels7660 Рік тому +2

    The movie is 3 hours long but there are only 15 pages of dialog. The entire sound score was recorded and in the can before the first scene was shot. Sergio Leone played the sound track on set during filming.

  • @chadmaxwell5189
    @chadmaxwell5189 9 місяців тому +1

    Each character has their own tune. And in that scene all the tunes were combined

  • @scotthall7307
    @scotthall7307 Рік тому +4

    Dude it was hilarious watching you talk about the final duel knowing the revelation that was coming. Despite everyone KNOWING it was gonna be a one shot duel the emotional payoff of learning Harmonica's history made it all so worth it. Cheyenne dying will always stick with me. He was a man out of time, a relic living on the fringes of the future and yet he gave his life ending a corrupting force of that future in Morton; there is a kind of twisted poetry in that. Glad you enjoyed the film even if it permanently damaged your back.

  • @onlyme064
    @onlyme064 5 місяців тому +2

    Its so painful watching a young person watching a masterpiece like this and not understanding all the things that makes this one of the best movies ever. Today people wants fast pace to anything and dont have the patience to appretiate good storytelling.

  • @garryiglesias4074
    @garryiglesias4074 2 роки тому +7

    They They They. It was SERGIO LEONE... All in HIS head, he directed the music first, then directed actors playing the music on stage, all was in HIS head... He was a genius.
    This is the best movie in Space Time.
    And don't be fouled, as much as I respect Enio Morricone and love his work, in those movie he was DIRECTED by Sergio... So even on the sound track, there's Sergio genius "inside".

  • @mannysotelo6434
    @mannysotelo6434 Рік тому +4

    Hearing you complain about how long this epic film was the most painful thing. Maybe if you pretend that three hours is all you have to live, perhaps then you can appreciate it better.

  • @strawdawgs78
    @strawdawgs78 Рік тому +1

    Sergio Leonne speaks a purely cinematic language. Dialogue in his movies comes secondary. The story unfolds through characters that act and interact in a universe of visuals, composition, camera movement, and the music of Ennio Morricone.

  • @DevInvest
    @DevInvest Рік тому +2

    Anytime water is introduced in literature/ film it signifies “change” or “renewal”
    Think Andy in the rain in Shawshank or Neo /Smith fight in the downpour etc
    Hard to introduce water in this film setting
    A little masterwork by Leon links the characters yearning for the water to the upcoming turn of events

  • @76ludlow
    @76ludlow 9 місяців тому +1

    It has long been my view that this ranks as one of the finest westerns ever produced, a masterpiece of cinema from one of the greatest ever directors Sergio Leone and with a music score by his regular collaborator Ennio Morricone that ranks among the best. To really appreciate it you need to put yourself in the shoes of a movie goer in 1968 seeing it for the first time. The lengthy opening credits sequence, among the longest opening credits scene ever filmed, completely fooled the audience. The three men waiting on a train, playing homage to another cllassic western, included two legends of Hollywood westerns Woody Strode (the black man) and Jack Elam the man tortured by a fly. Audience members were encouraged to imagine that the film was about them, never suspecting that they would be dead before the credits ended! Their sudden deaths would have been shocking to many fans who knew them from the many westerns the two actors had appeared in.
    Another shocking scene for the 1968 audience was the sudden reveal of Hollywood legend Henry Fonda as a cold blooded killer of children. Fonda was well known for his portrayals of decent guys in many many movies since thge mid-1930s, including Grapes of Wrath, Young Mr Lincoln, Drums along The Mohawk, Twelve Angry Men and so many other Hollywood classics. Movie goers had never seen him give such a performance as a villain before and he absolutely nailed it.
    Yes it is a long movie, but I have seen it so many times and it never ceases to amaze me.

  • @TheDoctorIWho
    @TheDoctorIWho Рік тому +1

    One reason for the length is, that Ennio Morricone always composed before the movie was shot or cut. And Sergio Leone created it exactly fitting to his musical masterpiece.

  • @laapache1
    @laapache1 Рік тому +1

    Each character has his own theme music

  • @arnodobler1096
    @arnodobler1096 9 місяців тому +1

    Back then, they didn't extend films, but they took their time with the story and characters. Like Tarantino today, which would not have existed without Leone/Morricone.

  • @Jrbrass
    @Jrbrass Рік тому +8

    Sorry, had to leave at the 10 minute mark. You keep on talking about why the movie is too long. I had to leave due to you talk too much in this reaction. Instead of complaining, try to pay attention as to why it's one of the greatest westerns ever made. That's why it's a classic. You'll never be a successful screenwriter with that attitude. It's because you're young and that's all you know from your generation. Watch and learn from other reactions from people your age. They totally love the older movies due to the detail. In older movies, they could afford a multitude of great actors. These days, they can only afford one or two. Suggest watching It's a Wonderful Life with Jimmy Stewart. It's the simple details that will make it a forever classic. Hope you learn from this and other great older movies. Right now, with your attitude if you ever write one, it will be a one and done.

  • @user-cb9ul1ds6y
    @user-cb9ul1ds6y 8 місяців тому +1

    Jill's Theme is a masterpiece!! And Claudia Cardinale is a goddess!!!!!

  • @m.ericwatson968
    @m.ericwatson968 7 місяців тому +1

    Sorry, jumped right to the end, seen this film so many times, even seen it in a theater on 70mm, it was incredible, but that ending sequence is truly epic; it's a brilliant film, a genuine masterpiece of film and cinema. Yeah fam, it takes some time to get to it, story gets convoluted but once it comes full circle, holy hell, anyone can feel the pent up rage and anguish that somehow "Harmonica" managed to use as fuel, 'Go on, keep your loving brother happy" is just so chilling, Fonda and Bronson knock it out of the park! And Henry Fonda was regarded as the good guy, the "everyman' in all his characters prior, to see him as the bad guy, and he went full tilt with this role, his chance to really stretch his acting skills, it literally shocked audiences.

  • @Mash3OH3
    @Mash3OH3 11 місяців тому +1

    But this was what vengeance was all about. Vengeance is methodical and patient.
    He didn't rush himself. Harmonica took everything from frank and made him come to him instead.
    Harmonica won the mental battle and the physical battle
    And all it took was a single bullet. Nothing too complicated like a cheesy shootouts or martial arts cinematography.
    Just a simple duel to the death. One bullet.
    Harmonica is literally Frank's Ghost haunting him.
    And the ending is the most heart wrenching because Harmonica WON HER HEART. She had no interest in anyone else but him. Even Chyenne. Cause guys like Harmonica lives free and he was jusf a different breed of man. Literallt built different.

  • @rory693
    @rory693 2 роки тому +6

    If you’re going to review movies and claim to be a future award winner (geezus) you should try harder or review something lighter. Try and be more articulate. It’s painful listening to you review this. Do better.

  • @xjp1998
    @xjp1998 Рік тому

    Here are some things about this movie, 1. it was supported to be the 4th no-name film, and the role of harmonica was originally offered to Clint Eastwood, but he turned it down. 2. it has the longest carriage ride in movie history for her trip to the farm, starting in Spain and ending in Monument Valley. 3 the Dialog person was very important because the film was shot with no sound, and everyone had to over-dub the movie because 80% of the cast did not speak English. This is why it's called a spaghetti western. 4. it holds the longest time of release in theaters, for it stayed in theaters for 3 solid years.

  • @darrylhilbig6459
    @darrylhilbig6459 2 роки тому +5

    This feels like a spaghetti western. Made by Sergeo Leone. IE: Clint Eastwood (the man with no name) westerns.

    • @mhagain
      @mhagain 2 роки тому +6

      Probably because it is a spaghetti western made by Sergio Leone. :)

    • @rory693
      @rory693 2 роки тому +2

      Geezus man! 🙄

    • @randywhite3947
      @randywhite3947 2 роки тому +1

      Clint Eastwood was almost in this film

  • @jbagger331
    @jbagger331 2 місяці тому

    Every shot in this movie is like a painting.

  • @raymondbrush6442
    @raymondbrush6442 Рік тому +1

    This may have been mentioned but here it goes. You keep calling it the death song but it is Harmonica's theme music. The four main characters each have one. That is Harmonica, Frank, Cheyenne, and Mrs. McBain. It was writen to explain who the man with no name is in the The Good The Bad and The Ugly trilogy. Clint Eastwood was busy so the gave his role (Harmonica) to Charles Bronson. This movie marked the change from the old westerns to the modern western.

    • @putinscat1208
      @putinscat1208 Рік тому +1

      Yes, similar to the themes in Star Wars for the main characters.

    • @raymondbrush6442
      @raymondbrush6442 Рік тому

      Should have said 5 characters. The Tycoon also had his own music. Something else about Hamonica's theme is the windmill in the opening scene also sounds like it playing it.

  • @alexjohnson9630
    @alexjohnson9630 2 роки тому +3

    I loved your reaction to the big reveal at the end. Priceless. Yes, the movie is totally worth it. The big payoff.

  • @snipedude4953
    @snipedude4953 Рік тому

    17:45 My grandad used to wear a belt and suspenders, he didn't want to takeany risks and he spent some time in London as an ARP warden during the Blitz and Doodlebug Summer in 1944.

  • @JabbaTheAmerican
    @JabbaTheAmerican 9 місяців тому

    "So you found out you're not a businessman after all."
    "Just a man."
    "...An ancient race."

  • @twoking10
    @twoking10 Рік тому +1

    Jason Robards. check out the eye movement... 8:32 in this video.

  • @custisstandish1961
    @custisstandish1961 4 місяці тому

    That "black man in a 1968 movie" you refer to is the great actor Woody Strode, mostly known for his roles in western movies. Check out the great film Sargeant Rutledge which features Woody Strode. And, one of his last films Black Jesus.

  • @1sabryn
    @1sabryn Рік тому +1

    The Professionals with Lee Marvin and Burt Lancaster also good Western.

  • @JakeLovesStories
    @JakeLovesStories  2 роки тому +4

    What do you think Harmonica Guy did after this story?

    • @AutomanicJack
      @AutomanicJack 2 роки тому +1

      riding home farming corn in peace now and practice shooting and harmonica while enjoying the fresh water from his well. eventually he came back to visit Sweetwater someday.

    • @Renedekoficial
      @Renedekoficial 2 роки тому +4

      in fact probably nothing, the story its about how that kind of man became useless in a word of technoligical advances, bussines and all that modern times brought. This is reflected in the death of all 3 of male protagonist. cheyyene died, frank too and harmonica metaforicaly also died(he search for vegeance for his whole life and when he gets it his life finally lost sense).

    • @patinho5589
      @patinho5589 2 роки тому +2

      I think he wondered around very unhappy and tried to face his demons.. unsuccessfully.. eventually succumbing to laziness and comforts.
      Of course he’s not a real person so this is a meaningless question and answer.

    • @hrolfdemayrsson542
      @hrolfdemayrsson542 2 роки тому

      Harmonica was an angel of death, his purpose is over ...

    • @ohauss
      @ohauss 2 роки тому +1

      Frank:
      Morton once told me I could never be like him. Now I understand why. Wouldn't have bothered him, knowing you were around somewhere alive.
      Harmonica:
      So, you found out you're not a businessman after all.
      Frank:
      Just a man.
      Harmonica:
      An ancient race. Other Mortons will be along, and they'll kill it off.

  • @brandonflorida1092
    @brandonflorida1092 2 роки тому +9

    If you liked this, you might want to watch another film by the same director - "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly." There is general agreement that it's one of the best movies ever made.

    • @cliffordmoshay7382
      @cliffordmoshay7382 2 роки тому +3

      "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly" has some great moments. My favorite of that trilogy has to be "For a Few Dollars More" though.

    • @Will-gg1zr
      @Will-gg1zr 2 роки тому +2

      @@cliffordmoshay7382 I agree, I love van cleef as the good guy instead of the villain.

    • @angelcanez4426
      @angelcanez4426 2 роки тому +2

      I think this one is his best

  • @CharlieCanfield
    @CharlieCanfield 11 днів тому

    nice to hear your analysis at the script level! and yeah, you set yourself up for a challenge watching a film of this length without moving or refreshments!! for sergio's epics that take their time, and especially with his italian penchant for not recording sync sound in favor of dubbing (for ease of shooting, and using international actors that speak different languages), they take on a certain stylization that i enjoy more if i think of them as 'operatic'.

  • @laapache1
    @laapache1 2 роки тому +1

    If you notice each main character has his or her own theme music

  • @StrikrEureka219
    @StrikrEureka219 Рік тому

    Aparently seeing Henry Fonda play frank back then would be like seeing Tom hanks play a serial killer for us

  • @putinscat1208
    @putinscat1208 Рік тому

    The theme is a play on Don Giovanni. You might recognize it, cause Hans Zimmer uses it in almost every movie. Sherlock Holmes, Man of Steel, Dune. But this is the best one, and one of the best soundtracks ever done.

  • @francoisgrenier935
    @francoisgrenier935 9 місяців тому

    great analogy with Stringer Bell!

  • @DevInvest
    @DevInvest Рік тому

    That quote by QT is FAXTS
    I rented movies from him when he worked at “Video Archives” Video Rental shop in the South Bay-
    My mom was disabled so I’d ride my bike there to get her movies for the week.
    She was a piece of work, my mum, lol, loved the bad “B” horror movies
    Killer Nuclear Earthworms From Mars type none-sense -
    So QT would have a bad ass selection for her new every week.
    He knew my mom fairly well but then she just couldn’t get there.
    He was always extremely cool to me, always had martial arts or funky 70’s
    movies on inside
    He was STUDYING while he was working
    That’s why those genres influence his work even the soundtracks.
    He was very kind to my mum who was pretty ill.
    I was around 12 or so
    He was a good dude.

  • @DevInvest
    @DevInvest Рік тому

    27:11 “tension..”
    No idea-
    Waiting for the climatic scene reaction!

  • @windsaw151
    @windsaw151 2 роки тому +1

    29:36 If you want fistfights as a finale to a western you were looking for the wrong kind of spaghetti-western. The correct ones would be most of those starring Bud Spencer and Terrence Hill. (or both)

    • @alanjay981
      @alanjay981 2 роки тому

      Have U ever seen Ride beyond vengeance Chuck Conners, the final fistfight is out on its own extremely brutal.Likewise The Spoilers John Wayne 1942.dont be put off by the year, it's lengthy & truly amazing.

    • @windsaw151
      @windsaw151 2 роки тому

      @@alanjay981 I haven't. "The Spoilers" sounds interesting. I'm a bit surprised that I haven't even heared of it.

  • @mauriziocolombo1152
    @mauriziocolombo1152 Рік тому +2

    Go to see a Marvel Movie, friend! You deserve it!

  • @TheHarmonica
    @TheHarmonica 19 днів тому

    I see you missing the ponts as you reviewing this movie. Like the reason for Frank to shoot that kid, was that one of his crew members said "What we gonna do with this one Frank". When he said his name, he had to kill him, or else he would have been busted.

  • @LuckyBastardProd
    @LuckyBastardProd Рік тому

    The version your watching, and is now thee version everyone sees, is not the one that was released. Paramount chopped the hell out of it after its premier didn’t go over so well. This and all home video releases is from the restoration from the early 90’s. Some say it may had even been a bit longer than this version.

  • @DevInvest
    @DevInvest Рік тому

    Watch
    RAN
    Akira Kurosawa, The LEGEND-
    Directed
    Based on King Lear so if you’re not familiar with that story I’d suggest a quick UA-cam review before watching
    Kurosawa IS-
    “Every frame a masterpiece “
    RAN is one of the most beautifully filmed movies of all time.
    It’s epic in every way
    The colors and perspectives are stunning
    For my humble opinion there’s three or 4 “of all time” candidates
    Kurosawa
    Kubrick
    Sergio Leon
    John Ford
    all were genius of perspective and color

  • @bri4837
    @bri4837 Рік тому +5

    Not often you get someone react to this film so i was ready to hit the subscribe button. Unfortunately you lost me after 5 minutes, a complete lack of emotional intelligence, you are unable to connect with any character. The quiet scenes are to set the tone, atmosphere, your relationship with the characters, to build tension and to increase the impact of the scenes. You missed all of that, i'd focus on directing Tv comercials or music videos because your never going to make it in films.

  • @urbanpropertymanagement5656
    @urbanpropertymanagement5656 2 роки тому +6

    i would really like you to check out the movie " The harder they fall". This is Jeymes Samuel film directorial debut

  • @hw2508
    @hw2508 10 місяців тому

    Revenge is like forgiveness. It is not about what one deserves but what one needs.
    Harmonica was a decent guy, not a sadist. He would not lower himself to the level Frank had when it came to killing people. He had to do it, but he had to do it clean, because that is who he himself is.
    About the pacing of the film. It is like music. The notes are nothing without the pauses in between. A fast paced movie with all this killer lines would be a stupid action film. The tension is created with the pace.

  • @jamescriag671
    @jamescriag671 9 місяців тому

    If I had a chance, I would love to sit down with you and discuss this film in serious depth. Singularly, I would use the word “Operatic” to describe this film. The drawn out, pacing (which is not used today at all) was also not a technique wisely used even in the time of this film. Sergio Leone, like Kubrick, understood that cinema is the art of showing the story and NOT telling the story.
    Sergio Leone also understood something that maked him standout compares to almost all American western filmmakers: with all due respect to John Ford, the Italian master understood what the west was really like even more so (American film makers tended to create a Mythic (fantasy) West and American audiences tended to by into it.) Leone was not interested in glorifying the west, but showing that it was dirty, sweaty, hot, and beyond lawless.
    Premiere magazine once described Lyons his other film, “The Good, The Bad and The Ugly”.
    One can see something operatic in the conclusion, not in the gunfight, or even in the death of Cheyenne, but in Mrs. McBain in her bringing water to the hard-working men. She came to Sweetwater to become a mother to children who lost one. Now you can well imagine in this harsh and remote section of the west these workers were orphans of the frontier and mrs. McBain becomes mother to them all.

  • @happy-xi4kq
    @happy-xi4kq 10 місяців тому

    This movie is epic in every way,

  • @laapache1
    @laapache1 Рік тому

    There is mainly trinity of gun fighters , in Sergio , Hawks movies

  • @chadmaxwell5189
    @chadmaxwell5189 9 місяців тому

    No, Frank had a reason to kill the kid. He was trying to frame Cheyenne

  • @randywhite3947
    @randywhite3947 2 роки тому

    This came out in late 68 while Star Wars came out in May of 1977 so less than 9 years.

  • @jeffmurray1681
    @jeffmurray1681 2 роки тому +1

    Patience my young friend. 😄

  • @alanjay981
    @alanjay981 2 роки тому

    This film was made because of the worldwide success of the GOOD BAD & UGLY Dir Sergio Leone.Have U ever seen it, fast moving highly Stylised & great sound track.This film doesn't date & Quentin Tarantino names it as his favourite movie.

    • @randywhite3947
      @randywhite3947 2 роки тому

      Rio Bravo is his favorite

    • @alanjay981
      @alanjay981 2 роки тому

      @@randywhite3947 Its debatable, if U key in, Is The Good Bag & Ugly Quentin Tarantino's favourite Western. The article quotes him as saying My Absolute fav movie & the greatest achievement in the history of cinema.Check it out keying in word for word what I've written above.All the best.

  • @alissonlares2926
    @alissonlares2926 Рік тому +1

    Why people think so much the past was so puritan? Is totaly the opposite, nowadays that everything is forbiden.

  • @DP-um1ck
    @DP-um1ck Рік тому

    So about Frank. The actor who plays him was known for playing "good guys" in other movies. And... I just wanted to share this bit of interview with you:
    ua-cam.com/video/cHI6Hl7FUqA/v-deo.html

  • @laapache1
    @laapache1 Рік тому

    do you know anything about Henry Fonda, Charles Broson , Jason Robar. Fonda the OxBow incident

  • @tednorberto3086
    @tednorberto3086 Рік тому

    At 34:10 why are my eyes sweating?

  • @petto82
    @petto82 Місяць тому

    Italian film❤❤

  • @almost_harmless
    @almost_harmless Рік тому

    Building atmosphere takes time. I think movies today could stand to be a little bit better in that regard. This movie might be just a tad too long in places, but I like that it dwells on things, building suspense and making me understand and embrace the characters more than a modern movie would. In a modern movie, scenes are cut so short that I feel nothing towards the characters. Those that manage it, are few and far between, even if it can be done with just a few scenes. Take "Triple Frontiers". On paper, I would love this movie, but I feel no connection to the protagonists, so when things happen to them, there is no sense of loss or dread. I miss that in movies today (there are execptions).
    The thing about the beginning is that it was not normal by the time the movie was made, to show children being killed or even just dead. That was a shocker. The second shock was seeing Mr. Good guy himself, Henry Fonda, playing the bad guy. He only played wholesome and standup guys. So, from a writer's point of view, I guess, this would be the equivalent of showing some horrific rape scene nowadays, and handing the bad guy role to Tom Hanks or George Clooney.
    I was born long after the film was made, but it made an impact on me when I first saw it. The music, the story, the directing, the photography and the acting all was spot on for me. I get why younger people feel it's too long. It might be. Nowadays, this could have been made as a solid HBO mini-series to get the same effect.

    • @JakeLovesStories
      @JakeLovesStories  Рік тому +1

      I'm fine with movies taking their time when earned. Let's look at this movie compared to The Batman (2022), both are roughly the same length at close to 3 hours. However, I think there is no reason The Batman should be that long with a singular main character being on screen for 95% of the movie. Most movies the main character shares screen time with B-story and the villain, Once upon a time does that, we have Harmonica guy, we also cut to Cheyenne, and the woman, AND the villain; so the length I'm fine with. BUT when you have shots such as a woman looking for a ride that literally lasts around a minute, they add up and can get a bit much sometimes. Especially in a movie as slowly paced as this. I did see this movie was edited down by about 20 minutes before being released in the US and flopped because of it, so it seems the extra scenes were needed.
      My problem with long movies is most of them don't need to be 3 hours, like The Batman. If your movie is 3 hours and NEEDS it to tell the story as concisely as possible, then it should have wayyy more than one storyline like this movie does.

    • @niknigal3379
      @niknigal3379 Рік тому

      ​@@JakeLovesStories Your criticisms of the movie are exactly why this film is one of the best. We get to be completely absorbed by the world, tone, feeling and characters of the film, and by the time the film ended, I wanted more. THIS is how you direct a film.

  • @moussegarbonzo8352
    @moussegarbonzo8352 Місяць тому

    Big difference between this and Star Wars? 😂 Uh yeah, this takes place in the old west. Star Wars takes place a long time ago in a galaxy far far away. This film is a masterpiece. That’s not even an opinion. It’s a stone cold fact.

  • @dagnabbit6187
    @dagnabbit6187 2 місяці тому

    If you and your generation can’t understand true art , I suggest you stick to franchise movies like the Marvel universe ones or Fast and Furious

  • @lorddaver5729
    @lorddaver5729 Рік тому +2

    You interrupt TOO much. Listen and watch more.

  • @porkyparry1
    @porkyparry1 10 місяців тому

    For me it doesnt translate well to new york

  • @ratdad48
    @ratdad48 2 роки тому +3

    Talk to much. What are you doing?

  • @ebenclukey7293
    @ebenclukey7293 2 роки тому

    Yay!!! I'm the one hundredth like!!!

  • @uriadelavaro3956
    @uriadelavaro3956 Рік тому +3

    You talk too much.

  • @aristotlebaptista6960
    @aristotlebaptista6960 9 місяців тому

    You talk way too much lol