Special effects? Lol you dummy almost all movies use special effects. Special effects aren’t relegated to big action adventure movies. Something as small as taking a camera out digitally that was in a reflection. Is considered a special day for effect. Hell Christopher Nolan uses in camera special effects Quit trying so hard to be a cool art house nerd. It’s lame.
Loved him as Noah, and as Director in the Dino DE Laurentis production of “The Bible “. In awe of the quality of everything necessary to create a 🎥 film.
The first film I loved as a boy was Moby Dick. I remember when it would come on TV, they would call it, "John Huston's Moby Dick." I wondered who John Huston was since he wasn't in the movie. Not too much later I learned the role of a director and their job on movies, and years later I became one. Largely thanks to John Huston.
Grew up with his voice work in the Hobbit, Return of the King, and The Black Cauldron, and only discovered today that he was a director! What a talented man.
It's a shame that no mention was made of "Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison", a superb film. But then, this documentary would have to be many hours long to do full justice to the subject.
Great to see Angela Allen here. But this documentary is bloody blinkered, with Zero Mention of The Asphalt Jungle; Reflections In A Golden Eye; The Life & Times of Judge Roy Bean, Fat City; Prizzi's Honor, & The Dead. What the hell?
The Man Who Would Be King is very pertinent to today. Yes, it has all that, “man v nature,” stuff, and testing yourself to the limit things, etc. But its central theme is how con men come up with various stories on the hoof to suit any situation, just to get what they want, until one of them falls for his own legend and dooms them both. How many business moguls, now in jail, or politicians, now convicted, have we seen like that? That’s why it’s one of Huston’s greatest artistic achievements; because it speaks truth in fiction. A truth that is a warning and that resonates more strongly now than it did back then.
James Joyce's The Dead. Ironically, it wasn't filmed in Ireland, but in Hollywood. Huston was too ill to travel by 1986, so they built Dublin streets and houses in a studio.
What is so damn ODD here...they leave out his film; Reflections in a Golden Eye. They talk about Huston as if he was a Homophobe YET he directed a film written by a famous Gay man (Tennessee Williams) which featured a Repressed homosexual played by Brando. One of the strangest films ever. Why is it left out?
First Chaplin & Milestone & Walsh & Hawkes , then Ford & Houston & Corman , then Kubrick & Penn & Leone & Cimino , ....then De Palma , Coppola , Scorsese , Spielberg , & Cameron.... & then Eastwood , Tarantino , Finchter & Paul W Anderson !!!!
Oh for gods sake. If you refuse to even pronounce the man's name correctly, you have no business making a documentary about someone. His name isn't "Hooston." It's pronounced Houston, like the city. LONG U. NOT "HOOSTON!"
ya 40,50 years hope the young kids see this...highly addictive on the set of the dead he was dragging a iron lung just to breath i just love this kid....
It’s really infuriating to have to listen to this guy calling him “John Hooston” over and over and over again. Ugh! He knows perfectly well how to pronounce his name. It’s arrogant and insulting to deliberately and repeatedly mispronounce the man’s name.
DIDNT LIKE HOUSTON, HE LIED ABOUT ERROL FLYNNS FIGHT WITH HIM, FLYNN KNOCKED HIM DOWN AND DIDNT KICK HIM WHEN HE WAS DOWN, HOUSTON SAID HE LAYED HIM OUT WITH ONE PUNCH, FLYNN WON THAT FIGHT, AND FLYNN SENT A STUNT MAN TO HOSPITAL, HE WAS A GREAT FIGHTER, HOUSTON LOST THAT FIGHT WITH ERROL.
Studying the works of John Huston is such a pleasure and a challenge. It is a library of movie-making and great story-telling.
Very enjoyable. I had forgotten just how talented he was. Movies were art in those days, now it's all about special effects. Thank you.
And you think Huston wouldn’t have used special effects if he could have? You can’t use that as your analogy!
@@catofthecastle1681 meeeow kitty cat, you are not the boss of me!
Special effects? Lol you dummy almost all movies use special effects.
Special effects aren’t relegated to big action adventure movies. Something as small as taking a camera out digitally that was in a reflection. Is considered a special day for effect. Hell Christopher Nolan uses in camera special effects
Quit trying so hard to be a cool art house nerd. It’s lame.
"Special effects" and remakes and remakes and remakes...and don't forget the cartoons.
When the film says John Huston, one stands to pay respect.
Loved him as Noah, and as Director in the Dino DE Laurentis production of “The Bible “. In awe of the quality of everything necessary to create a 🎥 film.
This is beautiful documentary of an astounding man...thank you
The first film I loved as a boy was Moby Dick. I remember when it would come on TV, they would call it, "John Huston's Moby Dick." I wondered who John Huston was since he wasn't in the movie. Not too much later I learned the role of a director and their job on movies, and years later I became one. Largely thanks to John Huston.
Grew up with his voice work in the Hobbit, Return of the King, and The Black Cauldron, and only discovered today that he was a director! What a talented man.
The hobbit he didnt do the voice for that i think your mixed up with someone else Huston died in 1987
A real unique character & love his movies. Thank you for this.
My channel is full of this "Huston" style directing, lol, I kid. Very nice piece!!
It's a shame that no mention was made of "Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison", a superb film. But then, this documentary would have to be many hours long to do full justice to the subject.
No mention of 'Fat City', 'Key Largo' or 'Under the Volcano' either...
Robert Mitchum in ‘heaven knows’ with Huston at the helm was a real treat
Great to see Angela Allen here. But this documentary is bloody blinkered, with Zero Mention of The Asphalt Jungle; Reflections In A Golden Eye; The Life & Times of Judge Roy Bean, Fat City; Prizzi's Honor, & The Dead. What the hell?
Not to mention one of my favorites 1963's The List of Adrian Messenger.
Excellent mini doc.
...Huston , great director, and great persona, one of my favorite, ...look for his autobiography, if anyone is interested...
The "Great White Hunter". And he doesn't need no stinking badges.
The Man Who Would Be King is very pertinent to today. Yes, it has all that, “man v nature,” stuff, and testing yourself to the limit things, etc. But its central theme is how con men come up with various stories on the hoof to suit any situation, just to get what they want, until one of them falls for his own legend and dooms them both. How many business moguls, now in jail, or politicians, now convicted, have we seen like that? That’s why it’s one of Huston’s greatest artistic achievements; because it speaks truth in fiction. A truth that is a warning and that resonates more strongly now than it did back then.
Thank you for that.
John just ate life had a great big bite loved every bit of it,and he loved his children
Another good video about Ford.
His character was creepy in Chinatown. 😯
Rightly so
No mention of the last film he did, in Ireland. A shirt film, the name of which I’ve forgotten ... but one of his very best. It’s a triumph.
James Joyce's The Dead. Ironically, it wasn't filmed in Ireland, but in Hollywood. Huston was too ill to travel by 1986, so they built Dublin streets and houses in a studio.
The dead 1987
I actually like The Visitor too
What is so damn ODD here...they leave out his film; Reflections in a Golden Eye. They talk about Huston as if he was a Homophobe YET he directed a film written by a famous Gay man (Tennessee Williams) which featured a Repressed homosexual played by Brando. One of the strangest films ever. Why is it left out?
He was fast friends with Truman Capote also...
Good doc…especially like the choice of clips 😅
Walter was in Rain, I believe.
i knew a 90 something man, father to a 6 year old boy, his only that looked just like you. Nice.
Laid back, not lazy.
Bogie is - great.
Lawgiver who knows about the future!
So those Cigars he smoked, they were actually just large cigarettes with tobacco leaf coloured paper.
Andrew Sarris' assessment is worth investigating.
No Key Largo .. means no doco.
First Chaplin & Milestone & Walsh & Hawkes ,
then Ford & Houston & Corman ,
then Kubrick & Penn & Leone & Cimino ,
....then De Palma , Coppola , Scorsese , Spielberg , & Cameron....
& then Eastwood , Tarantino , Finchter & Paul W Anderson !!!!
!
Key Largo.. was a Good Film..
I liked fat city yeh❤
Oh for gods sake. If you refuse to even pronounce the man's name correctly, you have no business making a documentary about someone. His name isn't "Hooston." It's pronounced Houston, like the city. LONG U. NOT "HOOSTON!"
cigarettes killed him
Dick Cavett said to him at the end of a 1972 interview: " i wish you wouldn't inhale those ( cigars) as your one of our finest artists"...
when he was 81. you have to die from something.
ya 40,50 years hope the young kids see this...highly addictive on the set of the dead he was dragging a iron lung just to breath i just love this kid....
It’s really infuriating to have to listen to this guy calling him “John Hooston” over and over and over again. Ugh! He knows perfectly well how to pronounce his name. It’s arrogant and insulting to deliberately and repeatedly mispronounce the man’s name.
DIDNT LIKE HOUSTON, HE LIED ABOUT ERROL FLYNNS FIGHT WITH HIM, FLYNN KNOCKED HIM DOWN AND DIDNT KICK HIM WHEN HE WAS DOWN, HOUSTON SAID HE LAYED HIM OUT WITH ONE PUNCH, FLYNN WON THAT FIGHT, AND FLYNN SENT A STUNT MAN TO HOSPITAL, HE WAS A GREAT FIGHTER, HOUSTON LOST THAT FIGHT WITH ERROL.
who cares? everybody's not an errol flynn fan boy.
@@plasticweapon YOU MUST REPLY IN ALL CAPS@@@@@@@!!!!
the uglyest woman in the room is a unicorn to huston....
This man says "i think"so many times..you know its waste of time to watch this
John h.documetry
There r mny othrs elsewhere
Why no mention of Prizzi's Honor? Why leave that out?
Because it was far from his best