What becomes a little more obvious upon rewatch is that when Rose reprimands the officer for asking for Chris’s ID, she isn’t standing up for Chris’s rights, she’s eliminating the paper trail that ties him to her when he disappears.
@K.C-2049 Why call the cops to have any kind of record? The cop got her information and noted that a black gentleman was with her. Now, he'll definitely remember because she threw a hissy about looking at his ID. When Chris goes missing and Rose's name is attached, guess who'll know?
I mean, even if there were a paper trail, if things went as planned, the blind guy could've just pretended to be chris when the cops came knocking, so both of your points are invalid.
You had the right idea about the ending. Originally, it was actually the cops. They show up and arrest him. After test screenings it was changed to be his friend, so the movie could have the more positive ending.
But you still get this great moment. That instead of "oh thank god it's the cops" ending of a typical horror movie with a white girl surviving, you get an "oh no it's the the cops!" Moment.
I didn’t mind, it’s more a bittersweet realistic ending it’s hard to get away with killing like that so it just made more sense he got arrested but the good thing is like he says to Reggie “I stopped it.”
@@magicbrownie1357Peele basically said he changed it because Trump was elected. The movie was supposed to be a criticism of white liberal "racism" of the Obama era but he didn't want people to leave the theatre with the emotional tone the original ending would've caused.
The brother kept going on about Chris' supposedly superior physical abilities and strength. But in the end when they fought by the door Chris didn't overpower him - he outsmarted him! Chris took note that the brother kept blocking the door with his foot whenever Chris tried to open it, so he tricked him into doing the leg move again so he could stab him in the leg and get free. A small detail, but important one.
This is a movie that greatly rewards multiple views. One of my favorite little details is that throwaway line that the grandfather was a competitive runner, so later when we see the gardener sprinting in the dark, it's not just horror movie trope 101 to scare the audience, this is a man enjoying the physical benefits of his new body to relive his glory days.
I saw this movie three times in theaters. This is how well Jordan Peele knew his audience: everyone gasped/yelped at the jump scare of Georgina in the kitchen, cheered when Chris killed the family, groaned when they saw the lights and sirens of the "cop" car, and laughed at Rod's jokes at the end. Each time. Three different audiences. Same thing.
When I saw it people were literally screaming at the screen during the Rose’s pics reveal, half were like ohhhh I knew it! And the other half were like noooo she’s brainwashed too! And when she showed the keys everyone laughed, screamed, or groaned. The audience reaction was sooo good, saw it at least twice in theaters
I really like the semi-inversion of the classic "horror movie film friend". Like he definitely is kinda bumbling and clear comedic relief but all of it is during scenes where he's either warning the main character giving him surprisingly sound advice or actively helping him. He isn't just going "Ohhhhh shiet duuuuuude!" and screaming the whole movie.
The scene where everyone goes silent at the party once they go upstairs is SO eerie. That, the camera flash scene, and the silent auction were so well done.
This movie is great with subtle hints, like the father mentioning they have "black mold" in the basement. Another is the fact that the cop responding to their deer accident was likely asking for Chris's ID in response to all of the missing people and trying to investigate the disappearances
And her "standing up to the cop" in his stead and not letting the cop get his ID was not her protecting him from racism, but rather making sure he leaves no paper trail. Chilling
Also, "we keep a little bit of my mother" in the kitchen, as the camera shows Georgina... who's literally being possessed by "a little bit of [his] mother's brain".
Daniel Kaluuya also stars in Black Mirror season 1 episode 2 called "15 Million Merits," in which his character is also helplessly enslaved in a dystopian world and tries to get out. Made before "Get Out," it's every bit as unforgettable and thought-provoking, so be sure to check it out.
One of my fav episodes of the show. Daniel's role in Black Mirror is what actually got me intrested in the movie in the first place since I wasn't as familiar with Key and Peele
Another thing to note is that the brother was mad after the “auction” because he didn’t get Chris. He was acting weird at the dinner table because he wanted to be a better fighter (In chris’s body of course). So Jordan Peele let them have their last fight at the end of the movie. The fight he wanted at the dinner table. And of course chris won because he thought ahead. Reaching for the door causing the brother to kick it shut, causing chris to get the stab off
The deer in the movie may symbolize buck breaking. The movie starts with a deer being hit and incapacitated/killed alluding to if a "young buck" gets too close to this family the same will happen to them. Then the trophy head above the tv before the surgery implies that they've "taken heads" before and love to show it off. Finally it's switched on them when the trophy head is used to kill and free a victim.
Actually, it confuses me how he can block out all sound with a little wisp of cotton, yet Rose hears his car leaving while wearing big headphones and listening to music.
I noticed this little detail too and made the mistake of mentioning it under another reaction video, and all these people came out of the woodwork and said things like, "Why does everything have to be about race?" and "Why do people always make it about race?" and "That's such a stretch." In a movie where a Black character is being enslaved by a white family and he literally picks cotton to save himself. What movie were these people watching? I think it was the first time I've truly understood the phrase "lost for words."
☕️ I always thought that Rose has a little bit of her mom's ability. Not only does she have to find someone that doesn't have a lot of family ties (that would push for a massive manhunt if they go missing), she has to bring home the ones that are susceptible to hypnotism. Otherwise, it would be a waste of time to gather everyone for the weekend auction and then find that the subject won't go into the sunken place.
My favorite tidbit is the cop from the beginning was actually good. He probably knew that black people have been going missing and potentially even suspected Rose's family. If the officer had recorded Chris' ID, he could've had evidence that Chris was in fact in the area if Chris had gone missing. Rose's insistence against the cop seeing Chris' ID has a much different meaning considering her role in the rest of the movie.
I love how the doe reminds him of his mother, and in the end he uses a buck to fight his way out. It's like linking him with his mom, like she's watching over him.
At around 1:34:13, as Georgina wakes up and looks at Chris, her wig comes off and exposes her surgery scar line. We can see this with Walter at around 1:35:30 when his cap comes off after tackling Chris. I will assume it's the same with Andre's (aka Logan) boater hat at around 45:00. This shows the level of brilliance in detail and consistency this film has.
Everyone, everywhere, had the exact same reaction when they see the police lights appearing near the end and everyone knew what it meant if it went the other way. This movie effing nails it. Glob dang this movie is horrific and brilliant
I watched this movie with a couple surgeons and they were horrified the dad recontaminated himself after scrubbing in. And I'm like, um, they are doing candlelight brain surgery in a basement....
@@zbennalley It is the most positive depiction of the TSA ever put on screen haha. I don't know if it's accurate, but if I was a TSA guy I'd sure love it haha.
The scariest part of this movie is "The Sunken Place". Suspended in a deep, black void with nothing to hold onto, the outside world is far away like a tiny TV screen you can't reach, trapped alone. That is a true nightmare scenario.
A perfectly constructed movie with symbolism everywhere. I wish Allison Williams had gotten an Oscar nomination for her role as Rose. Truly one of the great movie villains of all time. Also the interesting thing is that Jeremy is the least evil. He drinks and is uneven compared to the cold professionalism of the rest of the family, almost certainly because he has some semblance of a conscience buried underneath all that conditioning. Whereas Rose lives for the hunt and loves what she does.
Real standouts here are Daniel Kaluuya and Betty Gabriel doing that single tear, frozen face and Allison Williams doing the deadpan phone call. Chilling...
I feel like he identified with the deer? Being unable to act in the face of death just like what happened with his mom, he just didn't do anything? Dunno.
I saw Being John Malkovich when it first came out when I was a kid, and probably 10 times since, it's such a trip of a movie. I don't see Get Out as original like so many others do and takes away from the experience a bit. Similarly, I can imagine people seeing BJM now after Get Out, knowing there's a connection, will not experience the same impact.
30:21 she’s right. He used music in the first night scene to make you jump. That woman walking across the screen in the background would have been mildly concerning and possibly even missable without the overly loud musical cue. Then the movie does it 2 more times in a row when he goes outside. It was cheap. But the movie doesn’t rely on it to be scary/creepy or good.
Something I literally didn't catch until this rewatch is the first shot of Georgina is while the dad is saying the line, "My mother loved her kitchen so we keep a piece of her in here." STOP, lmao. And yeah, that scene between Georgina and Chris was absolutely incredible, especially once you understand the context after the drop. The "No no no no no no no no no" isn't just an answer to Chris, but the grandma and the original personality fighting for control, maybe even saying "no" at the same time. Even more disturbing is the fact that Georgina was presumably a lesbian, and she would have to be present for any intimate activities between grandma and grandpa.
Love that the gardener is played as freaky but once we find out about the transplants its makes sense since he was a track star! Also the brother saying "I wasn't gonna hurt him" reading more like "I wasn't gonna damage the goods" in retrospect. Also we Stanfield's character was talking to the girlfriend in the beginning! Also the girlfriend separated the whites and "colors" when eating cereal.
The actor that played the boyfriend Daniel Kaluuya was in season 1 episode 2 of black mirror 15 million merits he was brilliant in that episode. If you haven't seen it yet I highly recommend it. This movie is very black mirror-esque. Black mirror did a similar thing.
6:30 The father was talking more about hiring them to take care of the house and grounds as it got to be too much for his aging parents. Not that he took healthcare professionals and kept them on as housekeeper and gardener.
I love this movie, it works as a horror movie on its own but it's also an amazingly well done allegory for the horrors of slavery. Some people like to make excuses for antebellum slavery saying things like "Oh, for most slaves it wasn't that bad", but the horror is that a slave wasn't allowed to control even what they did or did not do with their own bodies and the owners would even try to control their thoughts and feelings, leaving the slaves to be forced to only be themselves on the inside. Even the owners that treated them with "affection" like the daughter, will still doing so within the context of them being a possessed object.
When they hit the deer she protested so much about him not showing his id cause she didn't want the cop to find out his name and details if somebody were to report him missing.
This movie is an absolute masterpiece. Best Horrormovie of the 2010s and immediately a modern classic. Everything about this movie is flawless. Every rewatch is so much fun because you always find new details and hidden messages
actually your point about the flash made me realize for the first time that.. the art dealer/wannabe photographer would have been fairly hecked.. like trying to exercise any or both of those activities while avoiding flashes seems impossible? not even counting galas, art gallery vernissages..? he would be escaping left and right huh..
There's a film reviewer - not a reactor - whom I really like, and it's funny because even though she's young and black, she routinely uses old fogey white expressions like "shenanigans," "the whole shebang" and "yikes." It always makes me smile.
With this one film Peele firmly established himself, for me, as not only a director to watch closely but a truly impressive outing for someone new-ish to the game. His resume so far as been really outstanding.
I love the trope in horror movie cinematography of nature as a karmaic force, hitting the deer being a common one that conveys a prophecy for either the person to curb their current moral outreach if they're a more violent character and what they're capable of, or a warning that you too, are the deer in this scenario off the top of my head; same thing with the kangaroo in Talk to me, and in the game Until Dawn its even a mechanic implying that what you do to an animal in a narrative will return to you tenfold, like this universal grim fallacy that always comes back
There's another horror movie, _The Invitation_ (the 2015 movie, not the more recent one with that title), where a couple on their way to a house party also with cultlike vibes hit a coyote and have to "put it out of its misery." You're right; this is a common trope.
Since I assume everyone in the comments will rightfully recommend Peele's other films, Us (2019) and Nope (2022), some other great movies about race in America that I'd really like to see covered on the channel are Spike Lee's masterpiece Do the Right Thing (1989) and the underrated Blindspotting (2018), which was popular enough to be turned into a TV show that follows the events of the movie, although it was tragically just canceled a few weeks ago. Lee also made Malcolm X (1992), which is another masterpiece, although I suppose I'm more inclined to think of that as a true story movie or a biopic first and foremost even if it is obviously about race. Another one that might come up a ton in this context is Boots Riley's Sorry to Bother You (2018), which with Blindspotting and Black Panther, form a trio of great 2018 movies that grew out of the Black Bay Area experience. Sorry to Bother You also stars LaKeith Stanfield, who plays Andre Hayward in this.
I concur. Do The Right Thing is a classic American movie and should be seen by everyone. Malcolm X is also one of my favorite movies that almost never gets reacted to. It's right up there with Shawshank Redemption and Forrest Gump on my list of brilliant movie making and acting.
@@BobbyBlueshoes-l1cI believe in an honor system. If you promote that it’s your first time watching, it should be your first time watching. You don’t need to convince me, but I’ve certainly come across channels that were clearly lying. Cinebinge is not one of them. Regardless of how I feel about them, I don’t believe they’re lying to me about if they’ve seen these movies before.
Peele was inspired by the books Rosemary's Baby and The Stepford Wives. He made the main character a lot like the Stepford Wives protagonist, and also named his gf Rose.
I just caught a line I never heard before. When they are giving the tour and the enter the kitchen, the dad says his mother loved her kitchens and they keep a piece of her in here, and then they show goergina
Your reactions are a perfect reflection of the slow release story-telling in this movie. You're given just enough hints to keep you on the edge of your seat, then as soon as you realise it's a mind-share, he starts fighting back. Lakeith Stanfield is great in this and everything else Ive seen him in. If you havent seen 'Sorry To Bother You', it's another trip of a movie with Lakeith as the lead.
I see how you could see the flash thing as a logic leap. However, if you rememeber from the informational film Chris watched, this procedure was developed a long time ago. So this probably worked better during the time before cellphones and cameras were readily available. Great reaction!!!
Anyway, the potential buyers seem to be millonaires that live in their mansions and don't interact much with the outside world, so it's probably not such a big issue in their everyday lives.
There was originally a different ending where it was just another cop that showed up instead of his friend, but those who viewed the test screenings thought it was too depressing so they went with the ending we see in the release for some levity and catharsis.
The value of lingering on him and the deer is a bit subtle but applies to later. When he reveals that his mom died, but not immediately, but laid there dying, alone on the street. You also realize it on the rewatch but the reason she didn't want him to show his license to the cop was to leave less of a trail when he eventually goes missing.
I remember our theatre letting out a collective groan when the police showed up at the end but then a sigh of relief when it was revealed to be his friend
He mentioned locked-in syndrome, I've experienced brief surgery awareness, what I'm able to remember of it was just a moment of awareness where I heard the staple gun POP-click-clack a staple right next to my left ear (was having neck surgery, this was on closing). It didn't hurt, it was more just weird, and still years later when I'm in an office and someone staples something that sound puts me on edge.
I just watched three of your reactions in a row and George’s look of utter confusion during every single intro has me dying every time. The Mummy 2 reaction was the most consternated face he could have possibly made.
27:42 didn’t even notice it the first time I watched the movie but when they introduce the grandma in the first scene with her they say we always like to keep a piece of her in the kitchen in that scene
That “Run Rabbit, Run” song always gets to me for being so super creepy. 🎼🐰🚫😳 Tim Burton also used it in his “Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children” movie, albeit in a different context. 😁 Thanks George and Simone for another great review! xoxo Christine in sunny Colorado, USA ♥️
Lakeith Stanfield (plays the guy who says the title line) also plays one of the most iconic ever TV characters in the show "Atlanta." Highly recommend that show.
Allison Williams performance as Rose, particularly in the final act make me think she would be an amazing villain in a Terminator movie. Especially considering the original idea was that the Terminator infiltration units were excellent at pretending to be humans until they acquired their target
I’m glad you watched this ending , I just saw another reaction to the ending where his TSA buddy sits down accross the glass from him in prison to talk to him thru the phone , so depressing and now I keep seeing that ending even in this one, if u think about it , we were told this family I had very high up powerful connections , all of them dead “murdered” by chris he better have a wildly amazing attorney to get him off , looks SO bad for him which is scary! Excited for this one , missing my daughters and this is a great movie reaction to help my night not be so rough
When you say about sharing your body with someone else who has total control of your body, it remind me to the 1972 movie "The thing with two heads"... You need to check that too! It's a lovely clssic!
I agree with George. I don't think it relies on jump scares. It has a couple of jump scares because it's a horror movie and it's using its tropes but it doesn't RELY on them; it doesn't depend on them. If you take them out, it's still a very effective and creepy horror film. It's not the jump scares that make the horror here.
I mean, Simone didn't say it relied on jump scares, she just said there WERE some jump scares, and was correct, and then George denied it and said it was her fault for being jump scared by the jump scares :P
Can't wait for Us and Nope. All 3 have been fantastic, whenever I rewatch them it's always fun to notice certain things in the background or further analyze lines, etc. and when it hits you, it's always "HOLY SHIT! IT'S BEEN THERE THE WHOLE TIME?!"
This is one of my favorite reactions I've seen of yours. First, there was watching you try to figure out just what was going on. And now, if you go back and watch it again, you'll find hints along the way. The other thing I found really interesting was George mentioning locked-in syndrome. I never made the connection with that, and I'm surprised I didn't. A little over 20 years ago, I learned about locked-in syndrome when my father was locked in due to a stroke, only able to see, hear and blink his eyes. He lived like that for about a week, and I can understand why you say being in that state terrifies you. And before anyone comments, yes I am aware of The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, and I have no interest in reading it or seeing the movie, but thank you.
That Locked In idea freaks me out as well. When I had some bad blood sugar issues off and on for a few years, I would have these exhaustion episodes where I would zonk out and very frequently partially wake up, where I was locked in sleep paralysis and each time it was terrifying. I can't imagine dealing with something like that long term. I had similar freakout feelings during the last episode of season 1 of Chucky and the film All Hallows Eve, both of which had scenes with amputations. Captors keeping someone by cutting off their limbs.
You got the first of the Jordan Peele trilogy. Next two movies: US and NOPE. Which could be a very short conversation. Person 1: 'GET OUT!' Person 2: 'US? NOPE!'
I had an ingrowing toenail removed under hypnosis, I felt everything. It turned out my GP was addicted to painkillers and the hypnosis was a means to write her own prescriptions.
27:22 - “is it the grandparents?” there are clues throughout. Bradley Whitford mentions “a piece of [his mother]” in the kitchen, and they talk about how his father never quite got over losing to Jesse Owens, hence the late night running in a black body
I am not a horror movie fan (sometimes even watching your reactions for horror movies I haven't seen is too much 🤣) but I LOVE Jordan Peele's films! You two should definitely watch Jordan Peele's other movies "Us" and "Nope". Both are great, but a heads up that George will probably have issues with "Us". I would highly recommend that you don't try to over analyze it, if you do, you may ruin it for yourself!
Us is an odd one, though, in the sense that the film demands analysis in terms of all the allegory that's loaded into the movie, but you definitely don't want to analyze in terms of actual plot mechanics, and the practicality and such. Its really more of like a surreal art thing than actual horror.
@@rexmundi2986 there’s definitely more allegory in US, but as long as you can suspend disbelief, which you have to do a fair share of in any horror movie, even this one, then it’s a real ride. The first half especially is great at building tension. Loved Nope too. I think that’s my favorite of the three.
"Us" was really good up until the major plot hole at the end, which ruined it for me. "Nope" was just good and cool overall, though I can imagine some people might find it a bit on the slow side.
Vaguely gives a similar feeling to an old Rock Hudson film from the 60's, a thriller called "Seconds" ( story is not the same, but it is about identity ).
What becomes a little more obvious upon rewatch is that when Rose reprimands the officer for asking for Chris’s ID, she isn’t standing up for Chris’s rights, she’s eliminating the paper trail that ties him to her when he disappears.
Ahhh, good point.
@@MauriceCalis bad point. Who called the cops? Rose. Why would she if this were the case?
@K.C-2049 Why call the cops to have any kind of record? The cop got her information and noted that a black gentleman was with her. Now, he'll definitely remember because she threw a hissy about looking at his ID. When Chris goes missing and Rose's name is attached, guess who'll know?
I mean, even if there were a paper trail, if things went as planned, the blind guy could've just pretended to be chris when the cops came knocking, so both of your points are invalid.
no shit lol
"My mother loved the kitchen, we keep 'a piece of her' in here." I only just realised how chillingly literal that is.
💯😂😂😊
You had the right idea about the ending. Originally, it was actually the cops. They show up and arrest him. After test screenings it was changed to be his friend, so the movie could have the more positive ending.
But you still get this great moment.
That instead of "oh thank god it's the cops" ending of a typical horror movie with a white girl surviving, you get an "oh no it's the the cops!" Moment.
The cop ending would've been more in line with the horror genre.
I didn’t mind, it’s more a bittersweet realistic ending it’s hard to get away with killing like that so it just made more sense he got arrested but the good thing is like he says to Reggie “I stopped it.”
@@magicbrownie1357Peele basically said he changed it because Trump was elected. The movie was supposed to be a criticism of white liberal "racism" of the Obama era but he didn't want people to leave the theatre with the emotional tone the original ending would've caused.
"It's not what it looks like"
“She’s the honeypot!”
Greatest George moment ever
lol its the Honeytrap, not the honeypot
and he's the Pooh ;)
I exclaimed "She's the bait!" then he said honeypot and I said "That's a better term!"
The brother kept going on about Chris' supposedly superior physical abilities and strength. But in the end when they fought by the door Chris didn't overpower him - he outsmarted him! Chris took note that the brother kept blocking the door with his foot whenever Chris tried to open it, so he tricked him into doing the leg move again so he could stab him in the leg and get free. A small detail, but important one.
Yeah Mr "smart jiu jitsu vs strong judo"
I don't want to give the brother any excuses, but he did just get bashed with a croquet ball
@@chadjenkins4876 why are you so right?!
So true
The acting of the housemaiden when she nearly broke out and only pressed a single tear while smiling also made me drop my jaw!
This is a movie that greatly rewards multiple views. One of my favorite little details is that throwaway line that the grandfather was a competitive runner, so later when we see the gardener sprinting in the dark, it's not just horror movie trope 101 to scare the audience, this is a man enjoying the physical benefits of his new body to relive his glory days.
I saw this movie three times in theaters. This is how well Jordan Peele knew his audience: everyone gasped/yelped at the jump scare of Georgina in the kitchen, cheered when Chris killed the family, groaned when they saw the lights and sirens of the "cop" car, and laughed at Rod's jokes at the end. Each time. Three different audiences. Same thing.
When I saw it people were literally screaming at the screen during the Rose’s pics reveal, half were like ohhhh I knew it! And the other half were like noooo she’s brainwashed too! And when she showed the keys everyone laughed, screamed, or groaned. The audience reaction was sooo good, saw it at least twice in theaters
"the jump scare of Georgina in the kitchen" SEE GEORGE don't be a dick about Simone getting jump scared by the obviously intentional jump scare :P
NOPE was very similar, and similarly great.
I really like the semi-inversion of the classic "horror movie film friend". Like he definitely is kinda bumbling and clear comedic relief but all of it is during scenes where he's either warning the main character giving him surprisingly sound advice or actively helping him. He isn't just going "Ohhhhh shiet duuuuuude!" and screaming the whole movie.
Honestly when it comes down to it his friend is one of the most hyper competent horror movie side characters in history.
Dude is downright genre savvy, to the point of almost breaking the fourth wall.
I will always remember watching this and Logan on the same day. Pat myself on the back for that one. Classic double feature
Damn, that was a great day. Two wonderful unique movie experiences.
Logan is brilliant! The best X-Men movie. Unless you want a little bit more of X-Menning from your X-Mens then the best one is X2.
Oh hey, I went to see those back to back, too. Tough night, but no regrets.
I RENTED THEM BACK TO BACK AND IT IS SUCH A GOOD DOUBLE FEATURE
Those are two solid movies... I didn't see this in theaters, but Logan made me cry like a baby in theaters.
The scene where everyone goes silent at the party once they go upstairs is SO eerie. That, the camera flash scene, and the silent auction were so well done.
This movie is great with subtle hints, like the father mentioning they have "black mold" in the basement. Another is the fact that the cop responding to their deer accident was likely asking for Chris's ID in response to all of the missing people and trying to investigate the disappearances
Also chris work as a photographer is all black and white pictures. Then the comments about the deer from the father was really about black people.
And her "standing up to the cop" in his stead and not letting the cop get his ID was not her protecting him from racism, but rather making sure he leaves no paper trail. Chilling
Also, "we keep a little bit of my mother" in the kitchen, as the camera shows Georgina... who's literally being possessed by "a little bit of [his] mother's brain".
Daniel Kaluuya also stars in Black Mirror season 1 episode 2 called "15 Million Merits," in which his character is also helplessly enslaved in a dystopian world and tries to get out. Made before "Get Out," it's every bit as unforgettable and thought-provoking, so be sure to check it out.
One of the most excellent pieces of television, in my opinion
One of my fav episodes of the show. Daniel's role in Black Mirror is what actually got me intrested in the movie in the first place since I wasn't as familiar with Key and Peele
On the lighter side, he's also Spider-Punk! 😁
Another thing to note is that the brother was mad after the “auction” because he didn’t get Chris. He was acting weird at the dinner table because he wanted to be a better fighter (In chris’s body of course). So Jordan Peele let them have their last fight at the end of the movie. The fight he wanted at the dinner table. And of course chris won because he thought ahead. Reaching for the door causing the brother to kick it shut, causing chris to get the stab off
One little detail I always thought is genius is that he saved his life by picking cotton.
(From the chair to plug his ears)
damn.. didn't even think of that. Good observation. I notice something new everytime I watch this, but never caught that.
The deer in the movie may symbolize buck breaking. The movie starts with a deer being hit and incapacitated/killed alluding to if a "young buck" gets too close to this family the same will happen to them. Then the trophy head above the tv before the surgery implies that they've "taken heads" before and love to show it off. Finally it's switched on them when the trophy head is used to kill and free a victim.
@@jessecortez9449 Damn I came here to see if anyone said something about the cotton but I didn't even think of that before. It fits.
Actually, it confuses me how he can block out all sound with a little wisp of cotton, yet Rose hears his car leaving while wearing big headphones and listening to music.
I noticed this little detail too and made the mistake of mentioning it under another reaction video, and all these people came out of the woodwork and said things like, "Why does everything have to be about race?" and "Why do people always make it about race?" and "That's such a stretch." In a movie where a Black character is being enslaved by a white family and he literally picks cotton to save himself. What movie were these people watching? I think it was the first time I've truly understood the phrase "lost for words."
☕️ I always thought that Rose has a little bit of her mom's ability. Not only does she have to find someone that doesn't have a lot of family ties (that would push for a massive manhunt if they go missing), she has to bring home the ones that are susceptible to hypnotism. Otherwise, it would be a waste of time to gather everyone for the weekend auction and then find that the subject won't go into the sunken place.
I do love how the son is the least subtle when it comes to being part of a family of psychos
My favorite tidbit is the cop from the beginning was actually good. He probably knew that black people have been going missing and potentially even suspected Rose's family. If the officer had recorded Chris' ID, he could've had evidence that Chris was in fact in the area if Chris had gone missing. Rose's insistence against the cop seeing Chris' ID has a much different meaning considering her role in the rest of the movie.
George: "The mom seems okay"
Me: Oh, my sweet summer child...
I love how the doe reminds him of his mother, and in the end he uses a buck to fight his way out. It's like linking him with his mom, like she's watching over him.
At around 1:34:13, as Georgina wakes up and looks at Chris, her wig comes off and exposes her surgery scar line. We can see this with Walter at around 1:35:30 when his cap comes off after tackling Chris. I will assume it's the same with Andre's (aka Logan) boater hat at around 45:00. This shows the level of brilliance in detail and consistency this film has.
Everyone, everywhere, had the exact same reaction when they see the police lights appearing near the end and everyone knew what it meant if it went the other way. This movie effing nails it. Glob dang this movie is horrific and brilliant
I watched this movie with a couple surgeons and they were horrified the dad recontaminated himself after scrubbing in. And I'm like, um, they are doing candlelight brain surgery in a basement....
I watched with a TSA agent, and he was like,"This is the most accurate and best interpretation of us on any medium."
@@zbennalley It is the most positive depiction of the TSA ever put on screen haha. I don't know if it's accurate, but if I was a TSA guy I'd sure love it haha.
And also partial brain transplants for the purpose of possession.... I think realism isn't a priority here 😂
The scariest part of this movie is "The Sunken Place". Suspended in a deep, black void with nothing to hold onto, the outside world is far away like a tiny TV screen you can't reach, trapped alone. That is a true nightmare scenario.
Love that first the deer is a symbol of fear, but in the end he uses it as a weapon to free himself.
A perfectly constructed movie with symbolism everywhere. I wish Allison Williams had gotten an Oscar nomination for her role as Rose. Truly one of the great movie villains of all time. Also the interesting thing is that Jeremy is the least evil. He drinks and is uneven compared to the cold professionalism of the rest of the family, almost certainly because he has some semblance of a conscience buried underneath all that conditioning. Whereas Rose lives for the hunt and loves what she does.
The way she eats dry cereal separate from the milk is so unsettling.
How odd would it be for her to get one for this movie but not Kaluuya
She definitely acted her ass off in this movie. She knows how to act in horror I’m seeing. She has real talent!
@@_VISION.they both were great tbh man both of their eyes in this movie stick with you
I watched this in theater and the whole audience applauded at the end. It was pretty amazing
Real standouts here are Daniel Kaluuya and Betty Gabriel doing that single tear, frozen face and Allison Williams doing the deadpan phone call. Chilling...
You should give "Being John Malchovich" a go. It's not a horror, but stars the mother in another body swapping role.
I swear these 2 movies exist in the same universe.
Yeah they're totally in the same universe!!
Done with people willing, Get Out is AGAINST their will.
I feel like he identified with the deer? Being unable to act in the face of death just like what happened with his mom, he just didn't do anything? Dunno.
I saw Being John Malkovich when it first came out when I was a kid, and probably 10 times since, it's such a trip of a movie. I don't see Get Out as original like so many others do and takes away from the experience a bit. Similarly, I can imagine people seeing BJM now after Get Out, knowing there's a connection, will not experience the same impact.
30:21 she’s right. He used music in the first night scene to make you jump. That woman walking across the screen in the background would have been mildly concerning and possibly even missable without the overly loud musical cue. Then the movie does it 2 more times in a row when he goes outside. It was cheap. But the movie doesn’t rely on it to be scary/creepy or good.
Something I literally didn't catch until this rewatch is the first shot of Georgina is while the dad is saying the line, "My mother loved her kitchen so we keep a piece of her in here." STOP, lmao.
And yeah, that scene between Georgina and Chris was absolutely incredible, especially once you understand the context after the drop. The "No no no no no no no no no" isn't just an answer to Chris, but the grandma and the original personality fighting for control, maybe even saying "no" at the same time. Even more disturbing is the fact that Georgina was presumably a lesbian, and she would have to be present for any intimate activities between grandma and grandpa.
Seen this movie a bunch of times and I always love watching people predict what’s gonna happen. Then being so wrong. 😂
He got very close at parts, but every time, I kept saying, "So close, but somehow it's so much worse than that, still."
Love that the gardener is played as freaky but once we find out about the transplants its makes sense since he was a track star! Also the brother saying "I wasn't gonna hurt him" reading more like "I wasn't gonna damage the goods" in retrospect. Also we Stanfield's character was talking to the girlfriend in the beginning! Also the girlfriend separated the whites and "colors" when eating cereal.
There's a fine line between laughing and screaming.
I'm glad I found this channel I watch these videos every day after work. I love how there's so many videos to watch so I don't run out of content
The actor that played the boyfriend Daniel Kaluuya was in season 1 episode 2 of black mirror 15 million merits he was brilliant in that episode. If you haven't seen it yet I highly recommend it. This movie is very black mirror-esque. Black mirror did a similar thing.
You two really give me something to look forward to in the morning.
6:30 The father was talking more about hiring them to take care of the house and grounds as it got to be too much for his aging parents. Not that he took healthcare professionals and kept them on as housekeeper and gardener.
“Get Out” is the best documentary I’ve ever seen.
I love this movie, it works as a horror movie on its own but it's also an amazingly well done allegory for the horrors of slavery. Some people like to make excuses for antebellum slavery saying things like "Oh, for most slaves it wasn't that bad", but the horror is that a slave wasn't allowed to control even what they did or did not do with their own bodies and the owners would even try to control their thoughts and feelings, leaving the slaves to be forced to only be themselves on the inside. Even the owners that treated them with "affection" like the daughter, will still doing so within the context of them being a possessed object.
When they hit the deer she protested so much about him not showing his id cause she didn't want the cop to find out his name and details if somebody were to report him missing.
This movie is an absolute masterpiece. Best Horrormovie of the 2010s and immediately a modern classic. Everything about this movie is flawless. Every rewatch is so much fun because you always find new details and hidden messages
Second this 100%.
Is it really Horror tho? Idk
@@Spidr-Man yes it is
actually your point about the flash made me realize for the first time that.. the art dealer/wannabe photographer would have been fairly hecked.. like trying to exercise any or both of those activities while avoiding flashes seems impossible? not even counting galas, art gallery vernissages..? he would be escaping left and right huh..
Mother: reveals herself to be a monster.
George: "that seems kinda, unethical..?"
lmao George being an old man and saying "there was a lot of hubbub".
There's a film reviewer - not a reactor - whom I really like, and it's funny because even though she's young and black, she routinely uses old fogey white expressions like "shenanigans," "the whole shebang" and "yikes." It always makes me smile.
Comedy and horror are both extremely dependent on timing, which is why many people who excel in one can transition to the other.
And a laugh and a scream can sound similar and are both a release of tension.
With this one film Peele firmly established himself, for me, as not only a director to watch closely but a truly impressive outing for someone new-ish to the game. His resume so far as been really outstanding.
George: "Fantastic acting."
This whole movie has absolutely brilliant performances, especially Daniel Kaluuya (who is amazing in everything hes in).
I love the trope in horror movie cinematography of nature as a karmaic force, hitting the deer being a common one that conveys a prophecy for either the person to curb their current moral outreach if they're a more violent character and what they're capable of, or a warning that you too, are the deer in this scenario
off the top of my head; same thing with the kangaroo in Talk to me, and in the game Until Dawn its even a mechanic implying that what you do to an animal in a narrative will return to you tenfold, like this universal grim fallacy that always comes back
There's another horror movie, _The Invitation_ (the 2015 movie, not the more recent one with that title), where a couple on their way to a house party also with cultlike vibes hit a coyote and have to "put it out of its misery." You're right; this is a common trope.
Since I assume everyone in the comments will rightfully recommend Peele's other films, Us (2019) and Nope (2022), some other great movies about race in America that I'd really like to see covered on the channel are Spike Lee's masterpiece Do the Right Thing (1989) and the underrated Blindspotting (2018), which was popular enough to be turned into a TV show that follows the events of the movie, although it was tragically just canceled a few weeks ago. Lee also made Malcolm X (1992), which is another masterpiece, although I suppose I'm more inclined to think of that as a true story movie or a biopic first and foremost even if it is obviously about race. Another one that might come up a ton in this context is Boots Riley's Sorry to Bother You (2018), which with Blindspotting and Black Panther, form a trio of great 2018 movies that grew out of the Black Bay Area experience. Sorry to Bother You also stars LaKeith Stanfield, who plays Andre Hayward in this.
I second Do The Right Thing. Brilliant movie
I concur. Do The Right Thing is a classic American movie and should be seen by everyone. Malcolm X is also one of my favorite movies that almost never gets reacted to. It's right up there with Shawshank Redemption and Forrest Gump on my list of brilliant movie making and acting.
I'm begging you to watch Peele's Nope. It's a masterpiece
Seconding Blindspotting (2018)
@@moonorange9358seems like a good George movie, somehow
"Grandma loved her kitchen, so we keep a little piece of her here". I caught that on my like tenth time seeing it :)
Get out is also a great rewatch since there are a few things you start to pick up on. What a movie!
This is going to be fun because George is going try to figure it out and I’m confident he’s not going to. Let’s go!
Damn, he totally did.
@@BobbyBlueshoes-l1cI believe in an honor system. If you promote that it’s your first time watching, it should be your first time watching. You don’t need to convince me, but I’ve certainly come across channels that were clearly lying. Cinebinge is not one of them. Regardless of how I feel about them, I don’t believe they’re lying to me about if they’ve seen these movies before.
@@Bringmethehorizondude Well, I don't think he predicted the brain transplants. NOBODY predicts the brain transplants!
This is such a rewatchable movie. So many signs
Took seeing this to catch the “my mother loved her kitchen so we kept a part of her here” line.
The Grandfather was a runner who lost out to Jesse Owens… that’s why he’s using his new body to run.
This movie is so good. I can tell you that when he took the dad down with the antlers everybody in the theater cheered. It was awesome.
Peele was inspired by the books Rosemary's Baby and The Stepford Wives. He made the main character a lot like the Stepford Wives protagonist, and also named his gf Rose.
I just caught a line I never heard before. When they are giving the tour and the enter the kitchen, the dad says his mother loved her kitchens and they keep a piece of her in here, and then they show goergina
The reason comedy and horror are similar is because of the format. Jokes and scares are about the setup and punchline (or jumpscare for horror)
Your reactions are a perfect reflection of the slow release story-telling in this movie. You're given just enough hints to keep you on the edge of your seat, then as soon as you realise it's a mind-share, he starts fighting back. Lakeith Stanfield is great in this and everything else Ive seen him in. If you havent seen 'Sorry To Bother You', it's another trip of a movie with Lakeith as the lead.
I see how you could see the flash thing as a logic leap. However, if you rememeber from the informational film Chris watched, this procedure was developed a long time ago. So this probably worked better during the time before cellphones and cameras were readily available. Great reaction!!!
Anyway, the potential buyers seem to be millonaires that live in their mansions and don't interact much with the outside world, so it's probably not such a big issue in their everyday lives.
There was originally a different ending where it was just another cop that showed up instead of his friend, but those who viewed the test screenings thought it was too depressing so they went with the ending we see in the release for some levity and catharsis.
The value of lingering on him and the deer is a bit subtle but applies to later. When he reveals that his mom died, but not immediately, but laid there dying, alone on the street.
You also realize it on the rewatch but the reason she didn't want him to show his license to the cop was to leave less of a trail when he eventually goes missing.
I remember our theatre letting out a collective groan when the police showed up at the end but then a sigh of relief when it was revealed to be his friend
He mentioned locked-in syndrome, I've experienced brief surgery awareness, what I'm able to remember of it was just a moment of awareness where I heard the staple gun POP-click-clack a staple right next to my left ear (was having neck surgery, this was on closing). It didn't hurt, it was more just weird, and still years later when I'm in an office and someone staples something that sound puts me on edge.
"the mom seems ok" LOL
I just watched three of your reactions in a row and George’s look of utter confusion during every single intro has me dying every time. The Mummy 2 reaction was the most consternated face he could have possibly made.
I love that the Dad rants about the deer in the beginning and then Chris stabs him with the deer antlers at the end😂
I hope you guys continue with Jordan Peele and do Us and Nope
@K.C-2049 Sometimes your food doesn't agree with you; it happens! 😅
so happy you guys enjoyed this
Heck yeah. I just rewatched this a couple nights ago.
Phenomenal concept for a movie. Jordan peele is a genius.
27:42 didn’t even notice it the first time I watched the movie but when they introduce the grandma in the first scene with her they say we always like to keep a piece of her in the kitchen in that scene
27:05 - I'm surprised no one mentioned she's drinking milk right when Simone says "what a psycho"
My mother loves her kitchen so we keep a piece of her in here. His mom was literally in there 😮
When you watch this movie a second time, and you know what’s going on, it’s pretty neat!
The cotton from the couch is such a small detail but sooooooooooooooo powerful at the same time !
That “Run Rabbit, Run” song always gets to me for being so super creepy. 🎼🐰🚫😳 Tim Burton also used it in his “Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children” movie, albeit in a different context. 😁 Thanks George and Simone for another great review! xoxo Christine in sunny Colorado, USA ♥️
Lakeith Stanfield (plays the guy who says the title line) also plays one of the most iconic ever TV characters in the show "Atlanta." Highly recommend that show.
george's cup is EVERYTHING lol, happy to see a fellow stormlight archive fan
Allison Williams performance as Rose, particularly in the final act make me think she would be an amazing villain in a Terminator movie. Especially considering the original idea was that the Terminator infiltration units were excellent at pretending to be humans until they acquired their target
want these guys to react to Barry sooo bad. Stephen Root kills it in that
I’m glad you watched this ending , I just saw another reaction to the ending where his TSA buddy sits down accross the glass from him in prison to talk to him thru the phone , so depressing and now I keep seeing that ending even in this one, if u think about it , we were told this family I had very high up powerful connections , all of them dead “murdered” by chris he better have a wildly amazing attorney to get him off , looks SO bad for him which is scary!
Excited for this one , missing my daughters and this is a great movie reaction to help my night not be so rough
Just like Back to the future. I love rewatching this movie so many clues to what's happening. We keep a piece of grandma with us. I love this movie.
When you say about sharing your body with someone else who has total control of your body, it remind me to the 1972 movie "The thing with two heads"... You need to check that too! It's a lovely clssic!
I agree with George. I don't think it relies on jump scares. It has a couple of jump scares because it's a horror movie and it's using its tropes but it doesn't RELY on them; it doesn't depend on them. If you take them out, it's still a very effective and creepy horror film. It's not the jump scares that make the horror here.
I mean, Simone didn't say it relied on jump scares, she just said there WERE some jump scares, and was correct, and then George denied it and said it was her fault for being jump scared by the jump scares :P
'Is iron iron...' I understood that reference!
Can't wait for Us and Nope. All 3 have been fantastic, whenever I rewatch them it's always fun to notice certain things in the background or further analyze lines, etc. and when it hits you, it's always "HOLY SHIT! IT'S BEEN THERE THE WHOLE TIME?!"
I think they've already done Nope. Try searching for it.
Lol "Is iron....iron?" is definitely from that podcast 'The Basement Yard' with Joe and Frankie lmao
"She's using Bing so of course she's evil" - one of my favourite George's line on this channel!
This is one of my favorite reactions I've seen of yours. First, there was watching you try to figure out just what was going on. And now, if you go back and watch it again, you'll find hints along the way.
The other thing I found really interesting was George mentioning locked-in syndrome. I never made the connection with that, and I'm surprised I didn't. A little over 20 years ago, I learned about locked-in syndrome when my father was locked in due to a stroke, only able to see, hear and blink his eyes. He lived like that for about a week, and I can understand why you say being in that state terrifies you.
And before anyone comments, yes I am aware of The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, and I have no interest in reading it or seeing the movie, but thank you.
You should've heard the audience sigh of relief when they saw the "airport" letters on the door
That Locked In idea freaks me out as well. When I had some bad blood sugar issues off and on for a few years, I would have these exhaustion episodes where I would zonk out and very frequently partially wake up, where I was locked in sleep paralysis and each time it was terrifying. I can't imagine dealing with something like that long term.
I had similar freakout feelings during the last episode of season 1 of Chucky and the film All Hallows Eve, both of which had scenes with amputations. Captors keeping someone by cutting off their limbs.
You got the first of the Jordan Peele trilogy. Next two movies: US and NOPE.
Which could be a very short conversation.
Person 1: 'GET OUT!' Person 2: 'US? NOPE!'
I had an ingrowing toenail removed under hypnosis, I felt everything. It turned out my GP was addicted to painkillers and the hypnosis was a means to write her own prescriptions.
I'm going to hazard a guess that this was in America
@@TheReelStuff This was in the UK,
27:22 - “is it the grandparents?”
there are clues throughout. Bradley Whitford mentions “a piece of [his mother]” in the kitchen, and they talk about how his father never quite got over losing to Jesse Owens, hence the late night running in a black body
"Monkey's Paw" was a famous horror story.
Great reaction, both of you. I'm sorry George had to go through that with his gf's parents.
One thing I didn't notice till now, when the cop asked for his license she defended him to keep people from knowing where they were going
I am not a horror movie fan (sometimes even watching your reactions for horror movies I haven't seen is too much 🤣) but I LOVE Jordan Peele's films!
You two should definitely watch Jordan Peele's other movies "Us" and "Nope". Both are great, but a heads up that George will probably have issues with "Us". I would highly recommend that you don't try to over analyze it, if you do, you may ruin it for yourself!
Us is an odd one, though, in the sense that the film demands analysis in terms of all the allegory that's loaded into the movie, but you definitely don't want to analyze in terms of actual plot mechanics, and the practicality and such. Its really more of like a surreal art thing than actual horror.
Thats because these movies are not horror movies. They are just long Key and Peele skits
@@rexmundi2986 there’s definitely more allegory in US, but as long as you can suspend disbelief, which you have to do a fair share of in any horror movie, even this one, then it’s a real ride. The first half especially is great at building tension. Loved Nope too. I think that’s my favorite of the three.
"Us" was really good up until the major plot hole at the end, which ruined it for me. "Nope" was just good and cool overall, though I can imagine some people might find it a bit on the slow side.
Vaguely gives a similar feeling to an old Rock Hudson film from the 60's, a thriller called "Seconds" ( story is not the same, but it is about identity ).