Reacting to THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN (1960) | Movie Reaction

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  • Опубліковано 15 жов 2024

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  • @gawainethefirst
    @gawainethefirst Рік тому +8

    “Well, the graveyards are full of boys who were very young…and very proud.”

  • @jamesgilburt1050
    @jamesgilburt1050 Рік тому +184

    Steve McQueen (who rode shotgun with Chris), James Coburn (the chilled guy) & Charles Bronson (who was chopping wood when the 7 were being recruited) all went onto star in The Great Escape together 3 years after this film. I highly recommend that for you to react to :)

    • @Kunsoo1024
      @Kunsoo1024 Рік тому +1

      I don't remember Coburn in the Great Escape. Are you confusing him with James Garner?

    • @Kunsoo1024
      @Kunsoo1024 Рік тому +8

      Oh, played the Australian! Forgot.

    • @clarencewalker3925
      @clarencewalker3925 Рік тому +5

      McQueen and Coburn were students of Bruce Lee.

    • @Gort-Marvin0Martian
      @Gort-Marvin0Martian Рік тому +6

      The Great Escape. An incredible film with soooo many stars in it.

    • @melenatorr
      @melenatorr Рік тому +8

      And Yul Brynner had a wonderful resume of his own. You can see him taking off on this sort of character in "West World", and probably his most famous role is as the King in the musical "The King and I". I have always had a crush on Brynner.....
      Robert Vaughn, the coward, had a difficult role, and he did it very well. I always felt bad for Lee. Horst Buchholtz (sp) was the young boy, a German actor who did very well here as a Mexican. The great Eli Wallach, a Brooklyn native (!!!) was the evil Calvera. You'll see him again in a major role in "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly".

  • @o.b.7217
    @o.b.7217 Рік тому +4

    (5:59) Yes. That's why it's called "riding shotgun".
    THe co-driver's job was to defend the coach against attackers (bandits, natives, etc).

  • @philmullineaux5405
    @philmullineaux5405 Рік тому +20

    The guy with the kids was Charles Bronson. In many great movies. Most famous of all, The Great Escape and The Dirty Dozen!

  • @gravenewworld6521
    @gravenewworld6521 Рік тому +15

    Robert Vaughns character has ptsd back then it was addressed as “losing your nerve”.

  • @arturnienartowicz7213
    @arturnienartowicz7213 Рік тому +71

    Best line of the movie: "Your fathers are brave ' cause they carry responsibility".

    • @johngardner4096
      @johngardner4096 Рік тому +4

      "Solving your problems isn't our line, friend."
      "We deal in lead."

    • @Hiraghm
      @Hiraghm Рік тому +5

      That whole scene is fantastic. It needs to be shown in every gradeschool classroom in the universe.

    • @redcaddiedaddie
      @redcaddiedaddie Рік тому +4

      "If God did not want them sheared, he would not have made them sheep!" That's the one I remember best!

    • @thomassmith-s4i
      @thomassmith-s4i 4 місяці тому

      No- best line:(about why the guy jumped into a mess of cactus): "It seemed like a good ideas at the time."

  • @manduheavyvazquez5268
    @manduheavyvazquez5268 Рік тому +5

    Calvera is one the best villans ever. Eli Wallach with calvera and tuco are a master ever. Great

  • @theblackbear211
    @theblackbear211 Рік тому +10

    Charles Bronson's speech about Courage is one of my favorite scenes in any western.

  • @okeefe757
    @okeefe757 Рік тому +109

    You want Steve McQueen in a car, then watch Bullit

    • @cajunsushi
      @cajunsushi Рік тому +7

      Bullit is a must.

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 Рік тому

      She wants Steve McQueen in a poncho and then she wants to peek under the poncho.

    • @rdramos13
      @rdramos13 Рік тому +8

      Or Le Mans (1971)

    • @JohnBullard
      @JohnBullard Рік тому +7

      Or at a card table, THE CINCINNATI KID. And don't forget, he also rode Ali McGraw in The Getaway.

    • @bigbow62
      @bigbow62 Рік тому +4

      Bullitt (With 2 t's ) Yes, it's a great movie with the greatest car chase !
      Le Mans is also an amazing movie with fantastic racing footage 🎥

  • @TheAes86
    @TheAes86 Рік тому +12

    5 of the 7 were huge actors at the time. Yul Brenner, the bald guy, Steve McQueen, Charles Bronson (Bernardo), Robert Vaughn (The "cowardly" gunslinger (he rehashed this role in a late 70's early 80's movie called Battle Beyond the Stars)), James Coburn.
    And when it came out, Everyone thought Lightning McQueen was named after Steve MCqueen, because of his love of racing and cars/ motorbikes, but it was after a PIxar animator who had died. The car Doc Hudson was voiced by Paul Newman who had a sort of friendly rivalry with Steve McQueen, because both looked similar though Newman was older. They appeared in Towering inferno together

  • @4Kandlez
    @4Kandlez Рік тому +10

    That was amazing to see your light bulb moment when you realised where the term "riding shotgun" came from 😆. Yes do watch Seven Samurai, it's a legendary film

  • @wessew6185
    @wessew6185 Рік тому +22

    The score by Elmer Bernstein is Magnificent.

  • @flynngames4703
    @flynngames4703 Рік тому +31

    Magnificent Seven based off of a great movie Seven Samurai. Both movies are wonderful. Another great movie based off of this story is The Three Amigos 😊 highly recommend watching all 3

    • @garysmith3037
      @garysmith3037 Рік тому +6

      You could say there were a plethora of movies based off of it.

    • @flynngames4703
      @flynngames4703 Рік тому

      @@garysmith3037 😂

    • @dougearnest7590
      @dougearnest7590 Рік тому +1

      I understand The Three Amigos had a much smaller budget. 😎

    • @DaveAlkema
      @DaveAlkema 2 місяці тому

      I would say Three Amigos is a different trope, also occupied by Galaxy Quest. 13 Assassins is another in the same trope as 7 Samurai.

  • @williewilliams6571
    @williewilliams6571 Рік тому +31

    One of the greatest things about films from this era is the musical scores.

    • @shawnmiller4781
      @shawnmiller4781 Рік тому +3

      Elmer Bernstein had his act together .
      Actually John Williams only come close

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 Рік тому +2

      @@shawnmiller4781 a lot of these soundtracks borrowed a lot from José Alfredo Jimenez. If you like old fashioned corridos, José Alfredo is your man. Also check out Siete Mares (7 seas). You’ll recognize it right away from a John Wayne movie. My sentimental favorite is Camino de Guanajuato. “No vale nada la vida. La vida no vale nada.” Jajaja, makes me want to sit in a dark corner of a cantina and get sentimental while drinking mezcal. 😂

  • @hobbievk5119
    @hobbievk5119 10 місяців тому +3

    Yul Brenner was an amazing actor and gifted guitarist. If you're ready to sample the movie musical genre, you'll find Yul Brenner in his most iconic, Oscar-winning role as the king of Siam in The King and I (1956). He also played the role on Broadway an unbelievable 4625 times and won 2 Tony's. Thanks for reacting to so many great old films! ❤

  • @patmurray9730
    @patmurray9730 Рік тому +3

    Eli Wallach was the leader of the bandits. He was also the Ugly in "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly."

    • @brandonangstman
      @brandonangstman Рік тому +1

      His gang in this is full of actual mexican gangsters who the studio was paying for protection. Eli ended up getting very friendly with them and recruted them to play his gang.

    • @sparky6086
      @sparky6086 Рік тому +2

      @brandonangstman6032 Those genuine banditos taught Eli to act like a genuine bandito!

    • @brandonangstman
      @brandonangstman Рік тому +2

      @@sparky6086 plus they just loved Eli, way I heard it they treated him like he legitimately was a bandit king. He actually had to calm them down when they thought the crew or the other actors weren't giving him respect.

  • @mrjoepad1
    @mrjoepad1 Рік тому +3

    At 5:31, the man on the left is Bing Russell, Kurt Russell's father.

  • @michaelm6948
    @michaelm6948 Рік тому +8

    Steve McQueen was very much associated with cars. He was into car racing and did amateur racing himself. A massive star, man's man and heartthrob. Charles Bronson, Fernando, was as big a bada** as Clint Eastwood in the 70s. One of the biggest box office stars of all time. Robert Vaughan, the man who lost his nerve, was a huge film and especially TV star in the USA. His show "The Man from U.N.C.L.E" was popular also in the UK in the 60s. Yul Brenner, Chris, was a huge movie star in the 50s and 60s, one of the first major celebrities to come out against smoking. Eli Wallach, a great stage actor, who became big in films. You've seen him as Tuco. Charles Coburn, the knife man, another great actor of the 60s and 70s. A legendary cast in this film. Thanks for introducing it to younger people who may not have been open to these kind of great films!

  • @kellynorton
    @kellynorton Рік тому +13

    I can't watch this movie without thinking of The Three Amigos. (which has the best use of the word plethora of any movie)

    • @nolantomlinson7554
      @nolantomlinson7554 Рік тому +4

      Do you even know what a plethora is?

    • @darrylhilbig6459
      @darrylhilbig6459 Рік тому +2

      ​@@nolantomlinson7554 yes, I have many thoughts on what a plethora is.

  • @jeffreybaker4399
    @jeffreybaker4399 Рік тому +11

    "Hammers, hammers are good. Frying pans." Some of the most amusing reaction commentary I have heard.

    • @Otokichi786
      @Otokichi786 Рік тому

      "Frying Pan" Marion Ravenwood in Cairo.;)

  • @dr.zacking2097
    @dr.zacking2097 Рік тому +1

    "Well, it's none of your business.." perfect comment, loved all this DM 👍👌

  • @DrMorb1us
    @DrMorb1us Рік тому +73

    It's great to see you reacting to old-time westerns. Another classic I can heartilly recommend is Rio Bravo (1959) starring John Wayne and Dean Martin. The film is an absolute classic, so much so that the director remade it a few years later called El Dorado (1966) with the same two stars. It's worthy of checking out just to see which one becomes your favourite.

    • @loungelizardatwar7375
      @loungelizardatwar7375 Рік тому +7

      I agree, Rio Bravo would be a great movie for Dawn. I think she'd really enjoy. Another western that doesn't get enough coverage is Silverado.

    • @BK45AUS
      @BK45AUS Рік тому +9

      El Dorado was John Wayne with Robert Mitchum but still very similar movies, both classics. I'd also add The War Wagon and Clint Eastwood's Pale Rider and The Outlaw Josie Wales.

    • @wraithby
      @wraithby Рік тому +11

      And it was done a third time as Rio Lobo, a somewhat different story but with the same overarching themes. All by director Howard Hawks.

    • @EastPeakSlim
      @EastPeakSlim Рік тому +3

      Rio Bravo. YES! As good as it gets.

    • @davidchase1439
      @davidchase1439 Рік тому +3

      The greatest western all time is the Searchers

  • @DANCING-MONKEY-66
    @DANCING-MONKEY-66 Рік тому +7

    Yul Brynner reprised the role as the Gunslinger in the science fiction movie Westworld.

  • @edgarcia4794
    @edgarcia4794 Рік тому +5

    My dad was a gun dealer and gun smith so I've been around my share.. My first two pistols when I was six (1967)i were a Remington 44 and a Colt 45 Peacemaker the type of pistol you saw them using in this movie.

  • @robertnichol3669
    @robertnichol3669 Рік тому +71

    Steve Mcqueen was a well known lover of cars in real life, as well a starred in probably one of the best car chase filmed pre-cgi (or post -CGI)..called "Bullitt". But this one and The Great Escape are my fav of his.

    • @clutchpedalreturnsprg7710
      @clutchpedalreturnsprg7710 Рік тому +3

      Starred in " Le Mans " too.

    • @shawnmiller4781
      @shawnmiller4781 Рік тому

      Not a McQueen movie but the final chase from the original “Gone in 60 seconds” is pretty epic as well.
      Sort of set the standard

    • @_mrdobermann
      @_mrdobermann Рік тому

      @@shawnmiller4781 yes

    • @_mrdobermann
      @_mrdobermann Рік тому

      yes

    • @richarddefortuna2252
      @richarddefortuna2252 Рік тому

      Gene Hackman's chase in The French Connection, where he's tracking the El through Brooklyn, is pretty damn top of the line when it comes to epic car chases, as well.

  • @behindthescenesphotos5133
    @behindthescenesphotos5133 9 місяців тому +1

    Larry Cohen and Clint Eastwood contacted John Wayne in the 70s about doing a western with Eastwood. Wayne didn't like Eastwood's movies (in particular, High Plains Drifter) and let him know. There are photos of them together, so they did cross paths a few times.

  • @acecombatter6620
    @acecombatter6620 Рік тому +3

    The old man said, "As for women, I became indifferent at 83."

  • @Hiraghm
    @Hiraghm Рік тому +3

    "Did he admit to being gay?"
    No, he admitted to being impotent... because old age.

  • @emilytrott
    @emilytrott 8 місяців тому +1

    The guy who James Coburn killed with a knife is Robert J Wilke, the same actor who Grace Kelly shot in High Noon.

  • @randallshuck2976
    @randallshuck2976 Рік тому +8

    I'm glad you picked the good one. There has been a recent remake that made a real hash of the movie. "All hat no cattle" Now you need to watch the "Three Amigos". The comedy version of this one

  • @keithr-xj7zx
    @keithr-xj7zx Рік тому +4

    Love that you're doing the old classics. I'm 67 and these are the movies I grew up watching. And to top it off, you're a beautiful woman with a Scottish accent. 💚 Keep them coming! A friend from America. ✌️

  • @emilytrott
    @emilytrott 8 місяців тому +1

    Steve McQueen may not have been in "Cars" but another actor who made quite a name for himself in automobile racing was. Paul Newman.

  • @maschwab63
    @maschwab63 8 місяців тому +1

    Steve McQueen is famous for a police car chase in a Ford Mustang in Bullitt 1968.

  • @seantlewis376
    @seantlewis376 Рік тому +2

    John Wayne and the 1960s: he got his Academy Award for 1969's True Grit, and kept making movies until his health gave out in 1976. He died three years later.
    The Magnificent Seven is the best western ever made. I'm glad you're watching this, and not the 2016 remake. They never should have remade this.
    Those "cowboy trousers" are called chaps, leather leg-coverings meant to protect the legs from sagebrush and stickers and such while riding. People still where them today.
    Bernardo's little speech to the boys about the courage of their fathers is the best line in the movie.

    • @brianalex5083
      @brianalex5083 Місяць тому

      The remake was fine don’t say something that’s not factually correct

  • @PiraticalBob
    @PiraticalBob Рік тому +3

    The fellow that played the chief bandit - - Eli Wallach - - also played Tuco in *The Good, the Bad and the Ugly.*

  • @chardtomp
    @chardtomp Рік тому +3

    Fun bit of trivia, the two traveling salesmen in the beginning that are trying to get the undertaker to go ahead with the funeral, the one on the left in the tan suit is Kurt Russell's dad, Bing Russell.

  • @Gr8Buccaneer
    @Gr8Buccaneer Рік тому +3

    Tuco didnt remember his own advice: if you have to shoot,just shoot..dont talk 😆

  • @KevDaly
    @KevDaly Рік тому +3

    The old man didn't admit to being gay, he said he became indifferent to women when he was 83.

  • @seanbumstead1250
    @seanbumstead1250 Рік тому +3

    The leader of the bandits is the actor that played Tuco(the ugly)in the good,the bad and the ugly

  • @waterbeauty85
    @waterbeauty85 Рік тому +4

    During the first take of the seven crossing the stream, Steve McQueen leaned down from his saddle to scoop some water out of the stream with his hat, and Charles Bronson was stretching and flexing his shoulders and arms. Seeing that the up and coming actors were trying to upstage veteran star Yul Brynner, director John Sturges turned to the person next to him (I think it was his director of photography) and said "This going to be a LONG shoot."

  • @Ozai75
    @Ozai75 Рік тому +5

    "We deal in lead, Friend." - Chris
    "So do I." -Calavera
    "If God did not want them sheered he would not have made them SHEEP." -Calavera
    Couple of the greatest lines in Cinema History.

  • @johnlloyddy7016
    @johnlloyddy7016 Рік тому +2

    It took seven men to go against an army of bandits in this movie, and in the end there were only three left. You need to watch a film where three men went in against an army of bandits and got out alive unscratched while achieving all the same things the magnificent seven achieved. That film is called "The Three Amigos" and it kicks ass!

  • @markhamstra1083
    @markhamstra1083 Рік тому +7

    You should watch _Seven Samurai_ as well. And if you are familiar with _King Lear_ , then you could watch another of Akira Kurosawa’s films: _Ran_ . That one kind of goes the other direction - _Magnificent Seven_ turns a Japanese story into a western, while _Ran_ turns Shakespeare into a feudal Japanese story. It’s a really good movie even if you don’t know Shakespeare, but even better if you know _King Lear_ .

  • @samuraiwarriorsunite
    @samuraiwarriorsunite Рік тому +4

    It's nice to see younger people appreciate Westerns. I grew up on them and have always loved the genre.

  • @johnmaynardable
    @johnmaynardable Рік тому +8

    The Seven Samurai is a great movie. This is a wonderful movie, but I really love the original Akira Kurosawa film. Also, if you like Yul Brynner you should try watching him in The King And I. It's a musical though and I don't know if musicals are big problems for reactors.

  • @maxs805
    @maxs805 3 місяці тому +1

    Yes your right DAWN MARIE thats where the name riding Shotgun came from to help protect back when stagecoaches carried strong boxes with money & mail in them 😊👍

  • @holydiver73
    @holydiver73 Рік тому +4

    The guy with the black gloves is Robert Vaughn. He played Albert Stroller in the BBC TV series Hustle in the early 2000’s (If you ever watched it). He was also Napoleon Solo in the Man from U.N.C.L.E for us oldies.

    • @shawnmiller4781
      @shawnmiller4781 Рік тому +1

      And was in the Towering Inferno, The Delta Force, Superman 3 and BASEkitball

    • @shawnmiller4781
      @shawnmiller4781 Рік тому

      And god knows how many TV shows

  • @loungelizardatwar7375
    @loungelizardatwar7375 Рік тому +16

    So glad you enjoyed this movie, one of my favorites. I think you would also enjoy "Silverado" (a newer western) and "Rio Bravo" with John Wayne.
    Looking forward to the next episode of Firefly.

  • @waterbeauty85
    @waterbeauty85 Рік тому +8

    Hilario's line about whether he thinks should have given in to Calvera: "Yes, when I think of Calvera and what he might do. No, when I remember the feeling I felt in my chest this morning, when I saw Calvera run away...FROM US. Man, that's a feeling worth dying for!" always gets to me. How to choose between the wish for safety and the wish for self respect is something people struggle with in real life.

    • @johngardner4096
      @johngardner4096 Рік тому +2

      "That's a feeling that I haven't felt in a long time... I kinda envy you."

  • @sintruder
    @sintruder Рік тому +6

    Another great western star was Audie Murphy, Destry is an awesome movie Murphy doesn't play the typical cowboy badass in it, and it starts off with a great twist. Audie Murphy was the most decorated soldier in American history, and he played himself in the movie about his exploits during WW2 called "To Hell And Back"

    • @PeterEvansPeteTakesPictures
      @PeterEvansPeteTakesPictures 8 місяців тому

      I'm looking for some more quality westerns and I haven't really checked the Audie Murphy catalogue, so thanks for the recommendation! I've only seen Murphy in Red Badge of Courage, which is pretty good but sadly the studio wouldn't let it be the great adaptation that Audie wanted it to be, apparently.

    • @sintruder
      @sintruder 8 місяців тому

      The best part of Red Badge of Courage is the movie dialog is from the book, written in 1895, and they sound more like they would've sounded in 1863. Murphy, Randolph Scott, Alan Ladd, and Joel McCrea made some of the greatest westerns@@PeterEvansPeteTakesPictures

  • @waterbeauty85
    @waterbeauty85 Рік тому +6

    Dawn's reactions are funny, cute and much smarter than she gives herself credit for.

  • @AmatureAstronomer
    @AmatureAstronomer Рік тому +3

    "That's gonna happen either way! Fight for your village!"
    Sounds like William Wallace.

  • @RetroRobotRadio
    @RetroRobotRadio Рік тому +1

    This plot was used again for the film "Battle Beyond the Stars." Same story, but in a sci-fi setting.

  • @250cchd54
    @250cchd54 Рік тому +4

    Dawn I could watch these old movies with you all day...lol Great job and fun to hear your comments

  • @CitiesTurnedToDust
    @CitiesTurnedToDust Рік тому +11

    Very interesting that you have watched 2 different Westerns, almost in a row, that were based on revered Japanese movies directed by Akira Kurosawa. This one was based on "The Seven Samurai" which is very very good IMO even after you've watched this Western version.

  • @roberthunter4884
    @roberthunter4884 Рік тому +24

    The original story was The Seven Samurai which then was remade years later in the US as the Magnificent Seven, which had a few sequels and even a TV series. The story would resurface in the 80's as a space-themed movie Battle Beyond the Stars, which has Robert Vaughn returning as his original "loner" character. The version in the 2000's was surprisingly good, but my favorite is still the one you just watched. Loved the review, love you, take care and stay safe ❤️

    • @xander66644
      @xander66644 Рік тому

      To add to this --- Charles Bronson is known for the "Death Wish" movie series about a vigilante

    • @MrVvulf
      @MrVvulf Рік тому +3

      I enjoy this movie, but it really doesn't hold a candle to Seven Samurai.

    • @Akindone53
      @Akindone53 Рік тому +1

      ​@@MrVvulf Absolutely correct.

    • @Dreamfox-df6bg
      @Dreamfox-df6bg Рік тому +1

      @@MrVvulf True, but as far as adaptions go, it is top notch.
      And in my opinion, this is where Star Wars: Rogue One failed the most. The only one where I was sad when he was killed was the droid. I didn't care about any of the other characters. Had we gotten to know them a bit more, their deaths could have had a similar impact like in Seven Samurai or in this one. It even worked in an episode of the Clone Wars series. With farmers, hired guns and Jedi versus pirates.

    • @bbwng54
      @bbwng54 Рік тому +1

      @@MrVvulf Thanks for putting this western movie into perspective. Most people don't even know about the Seven Samurai!!

  • @ExUSSailor
    @ExUSSailor Рік тому +6

    This is, basically, a Western re-make of Akira Kurasowa's 1954 masterpiece, "Seven Samurai".

    • @ColinFox
      @ColinFox Рік тому +3

      I think Kurosawa's original is better than this remake, personally.

    • @brandonangstman
      @brandonangstman Рік тому +2

      ​@@ColinFox Kurasawa himself said that seven samurai was influenced heavily by his love for weasterns. He was going for a gunslinger story in feudal Japan.

    • @brandonangstman
      @brandonangstman Рік тому +1

      @@ColinFox I will agree with you though, this films great but kurasawas was iconic. He was a master at setting atmosphere and his sets where always so detailed.

  • @kenpullig1652
    @kenpullig1652 Рік тому +7

    A great western with one of the most recognizable scores in movies. Although it is often called an American remake of Kurosawa's Seven Samurai, Kurosawa himself only thought it was an entertaining film but not a remake of his work. Classic good guys and bad guys, this movie was one of the last being made with such clear distinctions. Filmmakers were starting to move towards more realistic, ambiguous stories where motives were less altruistic and more self-serving, epitomized by the 1969 film The Wild Bunch. Still, with a magnificent cast, this is still one of my favorite movies. Great reaction. You've come a long way in understanding the films.

  • @oobrocks
    @oobrocks Рік тому +12

    A magnificent cover of the Seven Samurai ❤ Eil Wallach was a
    Magnificent actor too 🎉. Dawn is a
    Magnificent reactor ❤😊🎉

    • @anonygent
      @anonygent Рік тому +3

      Eli Wallach*

    • @bbwng54
      @bbwng54 Рік тому +1

      Thanks for mentioning Seven Samurai- people have no idea about this iconic 1954 film.

    • @oobrocks
      @oobrocks Рік тому

      No problem

  • @Deegee_1969
    @Deegee_1969 Рік тому +1

    Yul Brynner, the "Man in black" guy replayed the character in the 1973 film "Westworld", only this time he was the villian.

  • @richardfordham931
    @richardfordham931 Рік тому +1

    In actual history, many towns in the west had a by-law stating that when you came into town, you had to check your guns at the sheriff's office. You could reclaim them when you were leaving town.

  • @Ekkis25
    @Ekkis25 Рік тому +1

    Seven Samurai is in black and white and in Japanese, but the movie is so good that even subtitles don't detract from the experience.

  • @dansdiscourse4957
    @dansdiscourse4957 Рік тому +4

    Great reaction! Always happy to see more people appreciate this classic.
    Just FYI, 'campesino' means country dweller, rural person. And the blankety things some were wearing are called zarapes, not ponchos.

  • @waterbeauty85
    @waterbeauty85 Рік тому +2

    Yul Brynners bald head was so iconic that when he realized that Steve McQueen kept trying to upstage him, he told him "All I have to do is take of my hat, and peope won't even see you."

  • @stpetie7686
    @stpetie7686 Рік тому +10

    Whenever I see a new Dawn Marie reaction pop up, I know my day is about to get better. There's something special in her laugh that just makes me feel good. It gives an old guy something to look forward to.

  • @jamielandis4308
    @jamielandis4308 Рік тому +4

    I always think of “Cheers.” There’s an episode where the gang is going to watch this movie. It ends with them walking out singing the song.
    You still gotta see “High Plains Drifter.” Good John Wayne flicks: “McClintok,” “Big Jake,” and “True Grit.” Cowboy trousers are called chaps. Your thirst for bloody justice is adorable.

  • @dpall38
    @dpall38 Рік тому +1

    Your realization that “Riding shotgun” literally means riding upfront next to the driver like the man on the stagecoach with a shotgun, is priceless.

  • @carlanderson7618
    @carlanderson7618 Рік тому +19

    Thank you for this reaction. John Wayne and Jimmy Stuart starred in three movies together The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, 1962 (which you have already seen); How the West was Won, 1962 and The Shootist, 1976. The Shootist was John Wayne's last movie and I highly recommend it. They never made a movie with Clint Eastwood

    • @donaldstewart8342
      @donaldstewart8342 Рік тому +1

      Sorry ,Jimmy Stewart

    • @eddawg79
      @eddawg79 Рік тому +2

      Star Wars a New Hope was John Wayne's last voice role. They scrambled his voice and used it at the beginning. Just a little fun peice of trivia.

    • @Sprayber
      @Sprayber Рік тому +4

      Eastwood apparently wanted to work with John Wayne but Wayne hated the way Eastwood portrayed the West.

    • @Jim-Mc
      @Jim-Mc Рік тому

      ​@@Sprayber A shame too because I think they actually had very similar worldviews.

    • @CEngelbrecht
      @CEngelbrecht Рік тому

      ​@@Sprayber
      So unfair to Eastwood, 'cause he was just a TV cowboy taking a couple of gigs for a crazy Italian, 'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood' style. We all know now that Eastwood is as conservative as The Duke was (maybe a little less racist).

  • @andrewsawyer1375
    @andrewsawyer1375 Рік тому +4

    One of the best Westerns made with some great actors of that era.

  • @acecombatter6620
    @acecombatter6620 Рік тому +3

    Lightning McQueen is a reference to Steve. Steve also raced cars.
    Yes Riding Shotgun is a reference to a protective rider on a stage coach. They often carried payroll cash and/or wealthy people and were easy robbery targets when far from town.

  • @vincentlavallee2779
    @vincentlavallee2779 Рік тому +1

    Listening to your responses was a lot of fun. You often see what was coming too. But I think you need to know just a little bit about the wild west that will help you understand them in general., which I picked up from some of your comments. Besides there being regular people who worked the land (farmers), and those that raised cattle and other live stock (like sheep), and those that worked jobs, thee was a group of 'gunslingers'. Usually, gunslingers did not do any of these other types of methods of making money. They were outlaws or hired guns, who would occasionally take a job and work on a farm of help with cattle, but their main role was the use of their gun. Sometimes they were hired for protection, like in this movie, and sometimes as deputies, tracking down outlaws, and sometimes just being an outlaw! So, there was no way mature gunslingers would want to settle down, so this made perfect sense in this movie.
    I am an owner of a western style revolver, and I know what it is like to quick draw and fan the gun to be able to shoot multiple times in a row. These were all single action guns, which is very different from most of today's handguns. A single action gun means that you have to manually pull back the hammer before you can pull the trigger. AND if you keep the trigger depressed, you can use your other hand and 'fan' the hammer, making it shoot each time you force the hammer back, and the already depressed trigger allows the hammer to strike the cartridge and it shoots! You saw Clint Eastwood do in The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, also with Eli Wallach! I had special leather glove for quick drawing and fanning the hammer, would hurt without the glove in my left hand for the fanning. But in reality, aiming the gun when fanning it is near impossible! The hammer is usually NOT smooth, just so you can fan it. The other type of revolver there is is what is called a double action gun. With these, you just pull the trigger, and it pulls back the hammer for you, and of course, when the hammer is let go, it hits the back of the cartridge, which ignites it and makes it shoot. The third type of handgun is what you see in 99% of movies today, This is the semi auto pistol (as opposed to a revolver - wheel gun), which means that it will shoot every time you lull the trigger, but you must let the trigger go and pull it again in order for it to shoot again. Fully automatic guns (usually just rifles) will keep shooting as long as you have the trigger pulled back, like a machine gun. Of course, nothing like that existed in the Wild West days. The single action revolver was essentially all they had back then.
    As for this movie, it is probably the best western of all time. I also really like the Clint Eastwood Spaghetti westerns, but this is closer to what a western was. Not only is this story very clever, and quite uplifting, it has an amazing cast. Just about all of them became very famous actors. The youngster was Horst Bucholz, a German actor, and hence his accent. He went back to Germany and had a career there. He did not stay in the US movie arena for very long, but just about all the others, but one became very famous, and often had their own series, either in movies or on TV. Yul Brenner(a Russian, and hence his accent) had lots of movies to his claim, like The King and I and a Si-Fi movie called Westworld, which they made into a TV series not too long ago. Then Steve McQueen has lots of big blockbuster movies. The scared Mag & guy was Robert Vaughn who made many movies, as well as two long running TV series - The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (mid to late '60s) and Hustle in the early 2000'a. Then there was Charles Bronson, who had a series of movies (Death Wish), and many more movies. Then the was James Coburn, who also made many movies (one of which was 'Charade' with Cary Grant) and had his own short lived movies series called Our Man Flint (spy movies), which I found to be quite good and was sad that there were only two. Eli Wallach had a very long career, with tons of movies also, one of which was the Clint Eastwood movie The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. He was a really great actor. So,with so much talent, and great script, and great music, this to a lot of people is the best western all all time. The theme in this movie, along with the theme of the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly are still used today.
    Anyway, it was delightful watching you watch this abbreviated movie.

  • @CJPeiper13
    @CJPeiper13 Рік тому +9

    I think you might like the Jimmy Stewart movie 'Harvey'. It's not a western, but it's a loveably fun movie. Worth a watch 😎

    • @gitchegumee
      @gitchegumee Рік тому +4

      It's a hidden gem of a movie.

    • @slayerrocks2
      @slayerrocks2 Рік тому +2

      I rented Harvey from Blockbusters when my daughter was little.
      My wife thought she wouldn't watch a full black and white movie.
      She sat mesmerised through the whole thing, and went crazy when it finished.
      She still mentions it, as a 30 year old mother, herself.

  • @jessediaz1293
    @jessediaz1293 Рік тому +28

    I read that Yul Brenner hated sharing scenes with Steve McQueen.
    In all the scenes they are together, when Yul is talking to a character you notice that Steve is always doing something to get the viewer’s attention.
    When Yul would be saying his lines, Steve would take off his hat, play with a stick, or scratch his cheek.
    Something that would throw you off from Yul.
    He’s was petty 😂.

    • @matthewdunham1689
      @matthewdunham1689 Рік тому +5

      Two giant egomaniacs. I suppose that comes with the territory of being big movie stars.

    • @roberthunter4884
      @roberthunter4884 Рік тому +7

      Yes, there were interviews by both actors, Yul was upset, but Steve was just having fun.

    • @matthewdunham1689
      @matthewdunham1689 Рік тому +6

      @roberthunter4884 I read that stuff too. The funniest thing Steve reportedly did was build a little mound for him to stand on so he'd be taller than Yul. Yul went over and kicked it all away. That's hysterical.

    • @wraithby
      @wraithby Рік тому +8

      Steve McQueen was very controlling and obsessive about his scenes and how he should dominate. Even his good friend James Gardner couldn't stand working with him.

    • @BubbaCoop
      @BubbaCoop Рік тому +3

      That's the reason he chose the firefighter in Towering Inferno. More toys to play with.

  • @rayvanhorn1534
    @rayvanhorn1534 Рік тому +3

    Love that you're doing westerns! This is one of my favorites. Great cast of actors that gave us so many fantastic films. Not going to bother with a list, but I must recommend "Once Upon a Time in the West"...an amazing masterpiece.

  • @scottdarden3091
    @scottdarden3091 Рік тому +20

    🤣😂🤣😂"imagine if they forgot to put their jeans on, It was just their cowboy trousers" Dawn you are cracking me up before you even get started, I love you 😂😂😂😂 you are by far my favorite reactor 😊 In the USA we have bars were the female waitresses are just wearing chaps and a thong 😮😂😂

    • @MrKINSM
      @MrKINSM Рік тому +1

      Watch the movie 'Son in Law' and you'll see this very thing happen with Pauley Shore's character.

    • @sjbict
      @sjbict Рік тому

      There were bars in the 70/80s where men wore the same.

    • @mikehigbee2320
      @mikehigbee2320 Рік тому +6

      That would be called "The Brokeback Seven."

    • @4Kandlez
      @4Kandlez Рік тому +1

      @@sjbict Thanks for that horrible image

    • @waterbeauty85
      @waterbeauty85 Рік тому +1

      About 25 years ago, I was riding a bus down Sutter Street in San Francisco around 3pm and saw a guy walking on the sidewalk wearing black leather chaps and no pants (no trouser, no drawers, nothing). I don't remember what, if anything, he was wearing on his upper body.

  • @EastPeakSlim
    @EastPeakSlim Рік тому +3

    Great reaction, Dawn. The iconic score by Elmer Bernstein is one of the things that make this move truly... ahem... MAGNIFICENT.

    • @harveylee51
      @harveylee51 Рік тому +2

      @EastPeakSlim without that great score it would've been the MEDIOCRE SEVEN !!
      UGH was that awful ? alright i'll work on new material for next time.
      CHEERS .😄🙏

  • @davidkessinger1581
    @davidkessinger1581 Рік тому +14

    Eventually you just have to get into the Death Wish movies with Charles Bronson. Steve McQueen was in many great movies as well, but I will always have a fondness for The Blob. Yul Brynner played quite a few villians (Westworld, The 10 Commandments). I absolutely love that you react to older movies. Probably because I am older lol.

    • @MLJ7956
      @MLJ7956 Рік тому +3

      All 5 of the 'Death Wish' films (with Charles Bronson) were entertaining. 😎👍

    • @Gort-Marvin0Martian
      @Gort-Marvin0Martian Рік тому +2

      Ah yes, The Blob with a very young Steve McQueen. That film scared me so bad, I was looking behind doors for months after seeing it.

    • @creech54
      @creech54 Рік тому +1

      In "Westworld", Brynner plays virtually the same character, only he's a robot (who blows a fuse).

    • @ThreadBomb
      @ThreadBomb Рік тому +1

      @@Gort-Marvin0Martian The 80s remake of The Blob is underrated. Obviously nothing like the original.

    • @Gort-Marvin0Martian
      @Gort-Marvin0Martian Рік тому

      @@ThreadBomb I'm sure it has much better effects. But when your 8 yo for the first one the effects are kind of SCARY!!

  • @western302
    @western302 Рік тому +1

    Long before CGI car chases became gigantic catoonish action staples in today's movies, in 1968 Steve McQueen did a movie called "Bullitt," and even today the car chase in the movie holds up as one of the greatest chase sequences of any era of cinema. (Sales of Ford Mustangs went through the roof after this movie premiered) But there is one thing... it needs to be seen in a theater, or on an extremely large TV to get the full effect (80 or more inches at least). Watching this when it first came out was the first time I actually felt my stomach jump inside of me. And all real... no CGI. Check it out. Oh, and another movie worth checking out would be James Coburn in the 1966 spy spoof "Our Man Flint," followed by 1967's "In like Flint." I know you are too young to know, but many of the stars in The Magnificent Seven were some of the biggest names of their times.

  • @lm3513
    @lm3513 Рік тому +2

    Magnificent 7 is an inspired Western version of Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai. And Kurosawa's 7 Samurai is in itself inspired from his love of American westerns setting his story in Samurai times. The roundabout inspiration also happens with Kurosawa's Yojimbo to Sergio Leone's A Fistful of Dollars. Good films to check out if you ever want to experience a Kurosawa film.

  • @ultimatewarrior3310
    @ultimatewarrior3310 Рік тому +1

    I like dawn Marie she really gets down and dirty she don't care what people think. She watches movies unlike other reactors care that are popular.And she doesn't care how she looks or dresses. Be it crying with snot. She's a real trooper a real mccoy😂

  • @hawaiivolcanosquad3322
    @hawaiivolcanosquad3322 8 місяців тому +1

    When I get Airbnb guests from the EU & they ask about guns, I point @ the ground then say: This here is America. Everybody has got guns.

  • @bobbycorrigan7969
    @bobbycorrigan7969 Рік тому +1

    Guns don't kill people, people kill people. Another great video Dawn.👍

  • @RealRonSwanson
    @RealRonSwanson Рік тому +2

    One thing of which films like this remind us; evil exists and sometimes good people need to be prepared to defend themselves against it. ...with whatever the best tool for job happens to be.

  • @harryhowl2141
    @harryhowl2141 Рік тому +2

    Another Steve McQueen western to watch is Nevada Smith

  • @champagnerocker
    @champagnerocker Рік тому +1

    I keep expecting Robert Vaughn to break into _My little buttercup_ ;oP

  • @Flastew
    @Flastew Рік тому +1

    Great reaction Lady Dawn. You guessed correct when you said the saying "riding shotgun" came from the person guarding the stage coach or wagon would usually have a shotgun. It required less aiming and the short barrel of most of the ones they carried gave a really wide spread of the shotgun pellets. Again great job young lady.

  • @Jdavidson210
    @Jdavidson210 Рік тому +2

    One of the greatest theme songs of all time, one of the best, if not the best, western of all time.

  • @jeffdetmer4681
    @jeffdetmer4681 Рік тому +2

    Dawn, you did great. Steve McQueen (he played Vin, the guy who rode shotgun on the hearse) (and yes that is where that term comes from) was the epitome of cool back in the day. He also made some great movies. One of the best which several of these actors was in was The Great Escape. Not the typical war movie. A truly great film though. I would also suggest 2 movies starring Paul Newman and Robert Redford. One is The Sting (such a great movie) and the other is a western called Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid.

  • @philipcochran1972
    @philipcochran1972 Рік тому +2

    The bandit leader is the Ugly from The Good the Bad and the Ugly
    Steve McQueen, James Coburn and Charles Bronson are also in The Great Escape
    The film Seven Samuri was inspired by USA westerns and The Magnificent Seven is based on The Seven Samuri

  • @musiclistsareus1029
    @musiclistsareus1029 Рік тому +1

    When the old man said he became indifferent to women at 83, I think he meant that he became unable to perform sexually in his old age

  • @stratocruising
    @stratocruising Рік тому

    Best line in the movie was never spoken. "McQueen to Brynner, 'Where are you from?" Brynner points behind himself. "Where are you going?" Brynner points forward. No past, unknown future, existing only in the present. Calvera, the bad guy, was the "ugly" on Clint Eastwoods "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly."
    Charles Bronson, the one with the three kids who adopted him, starred in the best western ever made, "Once Upon a time in the West." It is absolutely a must see.

  • @manduheavyvazquez5268
    @manduheavyvazquez5268 Рік тому +2

    Masterpiece ever. Great

  • @sintruder
    @sintruder Рік тому +4

    Two of the greatest western stars that are highly underrated today are Joel McCrea, and Randolph Scott. They played believable characters that were fallible with high moral standards.

    • @donpietruk1517
      @donpietruk1517 Рік тому +2

      Ride The High Country, their final movie, an early film directed by Sam Peckinpah, is a magnificent western. It hits on themes of honor, dedication, comradeship and more. Plus the cinematography is stunning. Peckinpah would of course change the whole Western genre and the use of violence in film later with his classic The Wild Bunch.

    • @LordVolkov
      @LordVolkov Рік тому

      "Randolph Scott!" 🤠
      iykyk

    • @sintruder
      @sintruder Рік тому +1

      @@donpietruk1517 Personally I think the best movie ever done with Joel McCrea was "Dead End" not a western and he wasn't the star of the movie, but a great movie none the less.

    • @donpietruk1517
      @donpietruk1517 Рік тому

      @@sintruder Haven't seen that one. I will try to find it somewhere and take a look. I always liked him as an actor.

    • @sintruder
      @sintruder Рік тому

      @@donpietruk1517 ua-cam.com/video/Uly1vQnQxxw/v-deo.html

  • @MrTech226
    @MrTech226 Рік тому +1

    Dawn Marie
    You are correct about the term, Shot Gun. Person holding a shotgun on the carriage or a coach in the Old West of USA especially if the coach is carrying money. Famous American armor transport company gotten its roots from Old West. Company is Wells Fargo. Wells Fargo also has banking system with locations.

  • @richarddefortuna2252
    @richarddefortuna2252 Рік тому +2

    By the way, keep an eye out for Calvera as The Ugly in "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly."

  • @JesseOaks-ef9xn
    @JesseOaks-ef9xn 8 місяців тому +1

    The theme song was as famous as the movie. You ,might watch "The Great Escape" next.

  • @patmurray9730
    @patmurray9730 Рік тому +4

    If you like this try "The Wild Bunch" from 1969. I haven't seen it in AGES but if I remember right it is good.

  • @waterbeauty85
    @waterbeauty85 Рік тому +22

    Calvera's line "If God did not want them sheared, he would not have made them sheep" sums up the character's predatory world view so perfectly.

    • @Hiraghm
      @Hiraghm Рік тому +2

      also describes modern Americans pretty well, too. Sheep anxious to be sheared.

    • @ThreadBomb
      @ThreadBomb Рік тому +1

      @@Hiraghm You're so brave and manly!

    • @stacihensley7533
      @stacihensley7533 11 місяців тому +2

      One of the best movie villain lines ever!

  • @i.marchand4655
    @i.marchand4655 Рік тому +2

    What makes them magnificent? The music certainly sets that stage.

  • @torreyholmes7205
    @torreyholmes7205 Рік тому +2

    "The Wild Bunch" is a fine movie. A bit of an anti-western, showing how the Wild West era was coming to a close.