Tyler's apparent ignorance of so many facts... _That's_ traumatising, in my opinion. Surely not all Americans view (hopefully not?!) the rest of the world as Tyler does?😢😮🤔☹️🤭
I have two joint favourites for the "most American thing ever" - both of which I heard said by American tourists when I was on holiday in Italy: "Do they speak Spanish in Italy?" and "Hey! They have pizza in Italy!" Priceless....
Not only is the character a British secret agent but the books featuring the character were written by Ian Fleming who was a member of the British secret service during WW2 although he worked in London, he was one of those people who helped to create the officers who were sent into the covert operations against the Axis powers. He also regularly worked with American intelligence agency the OSS which later became the CIA. After the war he left the country and moved to the island of Jamaica, to start his writing career. The first actor to play the role on radio was actually an American but he was later replaced by a British actor who had been living in South Africa and later gained fame as the presenter of a British television game show called Blockbusters, his name was Bob Holness, who was renowned for being asked by the contestants “Can I have a P please Bob.” The only film on the list that I have not watched was Hamlet, most of them several times and the best for me is the Ladykillers which has been recently remade in America starring Tom “Forest Gump” Hanks.
“I’m not technically sure where Arabia is” ffs 🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️ and “James Bond is British?” Double ffs 🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️ I have now come to the conclusion that Tyler has never set foot outside his basement EVER
No, satire would have more background, such as subtly lampooning the ignorance of many Americans. But I find him tiresome in displaying his ignorance as some sort of entertainment with no self-irony
I think the thing most Americans can't see because it's the water they swim in is we built America, we built and invented almost everything over hundreds of years. If you just know recent American culture in Tyler's lifetime why would you know x
Nah... he's the average 'Murican... there's a difference (insert Liberian Flag here - 🇱🇷 🤦♀️). USA! USA! USA! ...Although, Kudos for playing the role of the classic 'idiot American'. Tyler really isn't that thick if you watch his other videos....gets the views in 100%. Especially from us Brits. We LOVE to take the piss out of the USA....and every other country in the world apparently 😬.
Yup, definitely a jaw dropping moment, I had to try to make any sense out of that, but I couldn’t. Help, these are the people who are supposed too be leaders of the free world, unfortunately most Americans don’t know that there is a big wide world outside of the USA and they may well never know if the balloon goes up and somebody decides to start throwing instant sunshine bombs around.
The film that inspired Stephen Spielberg's entire career, after he saw it as a teenager; with what he considers the best ever scenes in cinema... He even restored it, working alongside David Lean, in 1988.
Lawrence of Arabia is set in the First World War. A British officer goes to what is now Jordon (near Saudi Arabia) and encouraged the Arabs to rise up against the Turks. Brilliant film.
"We don't get exposure to British content" lmao yeah alright. Lawrence Of Arabia only won Best Picture at the Academy Awards, an American institution, but sure. NO exposure.
He works for MI6, has Union Jack parachutes and life rafts, sexual innuendoes, dry humour, clever gadgets rather than large guns, known for driving an Aston Martin DB5, even though he drove a BMW more often. Screams British!
My favourite Hamlet 3 free-range eggs 10g/½oz unsalted butter 30g/1oz cheddar, preferably Montgomery cheddar 1 thick slice ham, finely chopped salt and freshly ground black pepper
Also,Tyler's Americanism mispronounces Craig as Creg, (😡) Graeme / Graham as Gram... Anthony as An_thony_ (instead of _Antony_ as the 'h' is silent) and Geoff as Goff!! Etc...etc...etc. ☹️
James Bond is British? Daniel Craig is American? Oh, we're off to a great start. Shakespeare is British? What? "Lawrence of Arabia . . . an esteemed British officer in World War One." "So it's about a guy named Lawrence? And he goes to Arabia? Not exactly technically sure where that is. And it has to do with war?" Serious note: Powell and Pressburger's best film was 'A Matter Of Life and Death.' Also serious: how weird to mention Barry Lyndon and not 2001. Anyway, another classic from Tyler, back on form. I might try to rewrite 'To be or not to be' in American, if I'm feeling creative over the next few days. Of course, we'll always have Arnie: ua-cam.com/video/9Eont_yEGZs/v-deo.html
I love the way he wraps up saying they don't get much exposure to British film and yet he seems to have missed Bond & Shakespeare are British, bless his cotton socks
I think there was only one actor who played Bond and he was a Australian a d only played once With Diana Riggs and Tele Savas ,correct me if I am wrong 😅😅😅🎉🎉🎉
Another great film is 'Kind hearts and coronets' starring Alec Guinness, who plays eight parts, and Denis Price. 'The life and death of Colonel Blimp' (Powell and Pressberger), starring Roger Livesey and Deborah Kerr, was released during the Second World War. It depicts a 'good', non-Nazi, middle-aged German. Winston Churchill wanted to ban it.
Who wants to tell him that all James Bonds actors were from the British isles & 22 of the 24 movies were filmed at Pinewood studios? Also A lot of the Star Wars films were filmed in English Studios. 10 years ago you could drive past the millennium falcon on the M27! A lot of the films on this list were shown on TV on a Sunday afternoon during the 1980s, so I’ve seen most of them.
At least with the American strong aversion to smoking, he is is unlikely to know of the link between Hamlet and cigars...?! Though he _has_ watched old British adverts... He "might not" remember what he watched previously?!
"Is James Bond (with a 27 film franchise) British? And probably the MOST FAMOUS spy EVER... followed by "Daniel Craig is American" Nope English. Shakespeare? OMG. Alfred Hitchcock, yep English. TE Lawrence lead Arab irregulars against the Ottoman forces in the middle east in WW1. Great start to this one dude! Love every moment.
So today we have discovered movie history is not within his knowledge.... to add to geography,literature,history,the arts,sport,food,maths and just outright common sense.Begs the question what actually does he know?
I hope Tyler is never used as an advert for the American education system. His complete lack of awareness of most subjects is astonishing. But bless him, he does try. It is just so painful watching him.
@@martinpatrick8964 I've read many, but, more fundamentally, I've walked from Chester to Saltney on multiple occasions. If, however, you actually think that I'm under the impression Chester is in Wales, then your literalism is an ill match with my facetious observations
Hamlet was written in England by an English playwright, and its first theatrical rendition was done still in England by English actors about 420 years ago.
Tyler you have 68m British people screaming at you over the Daniel Craig & Bond comments. We’re really struggling on this one mate. You’re testing our ability to forgive & forget 😂
The Third Man is pure genius. I am not British but I have seen all these movies. Lawrence of Arabia is one of the most breathtaking movies of all time. The 39 Steps is Hitchcock perfection. Dr No is possibly the best Bond movie of all. To not notice that Bond is British, and works for British intelligence is crazy to me. Tyler, you have seem plenty of British films, you have just not realised they were British. 2001: A Space Odyssey, Four Weddings & A Funeral, A Fish Named Wanda, Life of Brian, Borat, etc. Many Oscar winners have been British. Films like Gandhi, Slumdog Millionaire, Chariots of Fire, The King's Speech, The Last Emperor for example. Then there are the movies that can be more difficult to ascribe to an individual country. Dr Zhivago for example was a British/Italian/US production, but shot mostly in Spain. The Day of The Jackal was a British/French production and shot in both countries. There are a lot of movies with that large British component.
Hamlet is by Shakespeare, I would hazard a guess you should know who Shakespeare was, but based on what I see and hear from you, I think you might not know lol. Shakespeare is a famous English writer from 450 years ago who is credited with creating around 1700 words in the english language that we use today, such as 'addiction' or 'fashionable' and loads more common ones. He wrote famous plays like Hamlet and Romeo & Juliet
Tyler, you do make me smile, I love your honesty, Daniel Craig is british and so was the james bond author Ian Fleming the writer of Chitty Chitty bang bang also. Some british films you may know are wicker man, the full monty, the Italian job, Gandhi, Zulu, Oliver and many more, and Shakespeare was british too. We watch a lot of american films and british too, also blockbusters like star wars may have been financed by america but were mainly shot in UK studios as many great films are.
It dropped my jaw that he didn't know James Bond was British, from the character to the source material to the actors (Lazenby and Brosnan aside). But my jaw had nowhere left to go when he didn't know Shakespeare was British.
Hi, Tyler. Yes, Alfred Hitchcock was born and raised in England. He is considered one of the most influential filmmakers of all time and is often referred to as the "Master of Suspense.
Ha! I did see the pic & think he has to be trolling. James Bond & Harry Potter have to be our biggest film exports. But just cause the lady killers was on all the time when we were kids, unless you are into films you are unlikely to know x
If anyone who reads this knows Tyler, please get him to read the comments or at least tell him about them or that they exist. He could make one of his best videos by commenting on the comments.
Hitchcock was born in London. He spent years making silent and then sound films, totaling about 25 in all, in England (and some for German studios.) He was brought to Hollywood in the spring of 1939 (at a time when many Europeans were still able to come to the US, but later had restrictions due to wartime conditions.) Throughout his career in the US, he used many British actors and crew, and several of those films were at least partially set in Britain.
Like most from the USA if it is not in the USA they do not have a clue, hell in a study some years ago only a few in high school could point out the USA on a world Map, they all think it is the center of everything.
I'm Canadian and I've seen all these films some of them multiple times except for Blowup, I admit I've never heard of that one. Are American really that isolated in their U.S. centric bubble or is it just that Tyler doesn't watch movies?
Im Danish so we get a lot of European movies back in my youth, sadly we have become more Hollywood centric now and why I give some credit to Netflix in trying to make more international series
@@whitetigercol8186 Saw Blowup many years ago (I'm 82) and what a terrific movie it is. Never rushed but does give that noir(ish) tension. Great cast. I can just imagine Tyler saying, "what? You're telling me that the late Queen Elizabeth and The Duke of Edinburgh were BRITISH???" Methinks that Tyler's not as green as he is cabbage looking.
English is not my first language and I have seen them all, several times. I was 16 when Blow Up (Antonioni) was my favourite film. Friends who have lived behind the Iron Curtain have seen them. I have asked an Indian friend (he has seen them). A Pakistani friend (except the Beatles one). I don't think the people I know are very special. I think my friends simply watch the best cinema in the world (and most of the best is European).
Wait a second, you really thought James Bond "MI6" "Queen and Country" was an American!? And you didn't know Hamlet by William Shakespeare is British? 🤦
Craig is not pronounced Creg like the way you would pronounce that site craigslist. It is pronounced as 'Crayg' and is actually Scottish in origin. James Bond the single most iconic British film export of all time really, based on various British spies that Ian Fleming came across during his work for British Naval Intelligence in WW2
@@MickRiley I've lived and worked in both the USA and in Russia. I think the cultures and attitudes have many similarities. But Russians tend to know a lot more about world history.
"Is James Bond British?" I never thought he could say anything more ridiculous on this channel and then he goes and tops it 🇨🇦 ("I didn't know Alfred Hitchcock was British" - a close second.) Tyler should apologise to his fellow Americans for constantly generalizing that they share his lack of knowledge because at least in this case it simply isn't true (I've never heard of ANYONE to not know James Bond - novels or films - is 100% British.).
Guys please he can't be this ignorant it must be to get feedback in the comments and generate traffic ..if it is its genious if its not its really horrible lol
The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp was a masterpiece showing the change in society in both England and Germany through the rivalry of two "officer class" men. It covers most of the first half of the 20th century and starred Roger Livesey. Tyler would not begin to comprehend it. I was fortunate enough to see it first time round when the context was relevant.
I think there is a scene in the film where Forest asks if Little Forest is like him. I took that to mean Forest Gump is aware of his differences. It's much less clear than Tyler is aware or cares. Best Wishes. ☮
I don't think I have ever cringed so much at Tyler's ignorance, but it probably goes for almost all of his ignorant generation, which is incredibly sad.
At first I thought ' Oh my goodness this is painful ' and then the obvious truth dawned - Tyler Rumple- no way that's his real name . He's the U.S.'s answer to Borat . Sacha Baron Cohen look what you've spawned !
I really do think this is the very worst Tyler Rumple video I have yet seen. I follow several U.S. reactors to British subjects and all of them seem to start from a basis of ‘I don’t know too much about the UK but I want to find out more’ - and then they do so. This video is not about anything more than popular culture which is surely within most people’s grasp - but not his. I hesitate to cast aspersions on his mentality because I should really be upset if I were to put my foot in it by insulting a person somewhat fragile in the brain but I cannot continue to follow him if this is to be his standard. Unsubscribed.
This documentary was very frustrating. Britain has influenced cinema in so many ways that most people don't know. Did you know that the original 'Superman' films were shot in London, and that the techniques developed to make Christopher Reeve fly created here? The original 'Star Wars' films were also shot in the UK, as was 'Batman'. For a small nation, we punch way above our weight in so many things.
Lawrence of Arabia was one of the greatest movies ever. It won 7 Academy Awards including Best Picture..The film was nominated for ten Oscars at the 35th Academy Awards in 1963, winning seven including Best Picture and Best Director. It also won the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture - Drama and the BAFTA Awards for Best Film and Outstanding British Film. The dramatic score by Maurice Jarre and the Super Panavision 70 cinematography by Freddie Young also won praise from critics. Lawrence of Arabia is widely regarded as one of the greatest films ever made. In 1991, it was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry.[7][8] In 1998, the American Film Institute placed it fifth on their 100 Years..
A clockwork orange was banned in the UK in 1973, allegedly concerned about reports of copycat violence, and threats made to the safety of himself and his family, Kubrick withdrew the film from circulation in the UK
I believe they have American renditions of the Star Spangled Banner as well!! Who'd have thought? Perhaps that well known American scribbler called Shakespeare wrote the words, and another Yank called Edward Elgar the music 🤪 The world gets odder by the day. 🙋♀️🇬🇧🙄
l have seen all of these, The '39 Steps' & 'Lawrence of Arabia' are my favourites. But l must say, David Hemmings does a great David Bailey in 'Blow Up' with Vanessa Redgrave putting in a great performance. Yes Tyler in these in these movies they actually have dialogue, characters and story lines with not just things exploding .......lol
I'm a 76 yo Swede: I've never heard of 'The Blimp', Hamlet I've of course heard of, but never seen the film. All of rest I've seen, the ones from '62 and newer when they were more or less new. I still think that 'The third man' is one of best films ever - globaly. And btw: Alfred Hitchcok was a 'very english' englishman.
Ian Fleming who wrote James Bond books was in the SOE during WW2 and a very capable spy himself, look into Operation Mincemeat which fed the Germans false information relating to allied landings
@@Temeraire101 I could post a link to a Wikipedia article but you know how YT feels about external links. Search for "Allegory of the cave" Basically our reality is formed by what we observe. If you live in a cave then your reality is formed by what passes in front of the cave. From what I have seen of American media your comment "Swap the word ‘Cave’ for ‘America’" is on point.
Of the early Hitchcock films made in Britain, four are often studied to demonstrate the instances of the themes, character types, twists and special fx and innovative techniques he perfected in his later films and all are considered extremely enjoyable classics: The 39 Steps, The Lady Vanishes, Foreign Correspondent and his first version of The Man Who Knew Too Much.
Imagine discovering a whole world exists outside of America. Must be quite traumatic.
Tyler's apparent ignorance of so many facts... _That's_ traumatising, in my opinion. Surely not all Americans view (hopefully not?!) the rest of the world as Tyler does?😢😮🤔☹️🤭
That was the vibe I got
@@brigidsingleton1596I think they do. On purpose.
@@brigidsingleton1596 By that I mean the education system in place and the basic support services set up that result.
@@caleyhook4091
Or, (grrrr!) "on accident"?! 😠☹️
"Is James bond British?" has got to be one of the most American things I've heard for a while. lol
I have two joint favourites for the "most American thing ever" - both of which I heard said by American tourists when I was on holiday in Italy: "Do they speak Spanish in Italy?" and "Hey! They have pizza in Italy!" Priceless....
They think they own the internet as well
Is James Bond British? May well be the most American thing you have ever said on this channel :-). Its a British Film Series.
I think it's a pose. He can't possibly think that James Bond is American, talking all the time about MI6 and with a British accent.
Not only is the character a British secret agent but the books featuring the character were written by Ian Fleming who was a member of the British secret service during WW2 although he worked in London, he was one of those people who helped to create the officers who were sent into the covert operations against the Axis powers. He also regularly worked with American intelligence agency the OSS which later became the CIA. After the war he left the country and moved to the island of Jamaica, to start his writing career. The first actor to play the role on radio was actually an American but he was later replaced by a British actor who had been living in South Africa and later gained fame as the presenter of a British television game show called Blockbusters, his name was Bob Holness, who was renowned for being asked by the contestants “Can I have a P please Bob.” The only film on the list that I have not watched was Hamlet, most of them several times and the best for me is the Ladykillers which has been recently remade in America starring Tom “Forest Gump” Hanks.
@@sydneywellington_cazadora yeah, its got to be a bit, no one could be that dumb.
Not to mention the fact that Daniel Craig is an ENGLISH actor, not American! 😆😆
The clue should be for Tyler "On her Majesty's secret service"!😂😂
“I’m not technically sure where Arabia is” ffs 🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️ and “James Bond is British?” Double ffs 🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️
I have now come to the conclusion that Tyler has never set foot outside his basement EVER
Or never remembers anything from videos he's seen in the past.
Why the hell would you think that Daniel Craig is American?
He probably saw "Cowboys and aliens".
And thought that was a Bond film,too
Knives out
i thought daniel craig was german, after seeing a photo in a war museum of a nazi corporal who looked exactly like him
Because they think his name is pronounced 'Cregg'.
This channel is satire. Please tell me this is satire.
No it's just Tyler being his same lovable self. He's honest at least. Tyler for next PRIME MINISTER 🇬🇧
No, satire would have more background, such as subtly lampooning the ignorance of many Americans. But I find him tiresome in displaying his ignorance as some sort of entertainment with no self-irony
Just play dumb and hope for clicks.
Tyler, please don't tell me that you think William Shakespeare is an American?? He was born in 1564!! Lol
Well they think Jesus was American.
I think he does, he says, “ so this is British version of the movie Hamlet” this guys is either trolling us or a complete melon😅😅
I think the thing most Americans can't see because it's the water they swim in is we built America, we built and invented almost everything over hundreds of years. If you just know recent American culture in Tyler's lifetime why would you know x
😂
@@gmdhargreavesI'm going with melon.
Tyler, "I'm an average American"
World, "You don't say.
Below Average. I'd say😅
😂😂😂
ffs, he sure is 'the average American'. Not an f'ing clue. Bless.
Average USA-ian, as opposed to the other 1 billion Americans in the other 20+ countries on the continent.
😂😂😂
Nah... he's the average 'Murican... there's a difference (insert Liberian Flag here - 🇱🇷 🤦♀️). USA! USA! USA!
...Although, Kudos for playing the role of the classic 'idiot American'. Tyler really isn't that thick if you watch his other videos....gets the views in 100%. Especially from us Brits. We LOVE to take the piss out of the USA....and every other country in the world apparently 😬.
No shit Sherlock
I was just getting into this channel, when you say 'I never realised james bond was British' if you are and average american, God help you country.
'So I guess the film's about a guy called Lawrence and he went to Arabia'. 'I don't know where that is' - - - As a Brit - OMG
I am still reeling from that one....😮
@@nolaj114 Makes you want to tell him but he doesn't bother to read the comments so he won't ever learn anything.
Yup, definitely a jaw dropping moment, I had to try to make any sense out of that, but I couldn’t. Help, these are the people who are supposed too be leaders of the free world, unfortunately most Americans don’t know that there is a big wide world outside of the USA and they may well never know if the balloon goes up and somebody decides to start throwing instant sunshine bombs around.
The film that inspired Stephen Spielberg's entire career, after he saw it as a teenager; with what he considers the best ever scenes in cinema... He even restored it, working alongside David Lean, in 1988.
@@wessexdruid7598 one of the best movies ever and i don’t have boomer nostalgia as i didn’t see it until 2002. looks amazing in 4k now
Lawrence of Arabia is set in the First World War. A British officer goes to what is now Jordon (near Saudi Arabia) and encouraged the Arabs to rise up against the Turks. Brilliant film.
Where is Jordon?
I thought watching Tottenham was hard work but this is getting painful to watch now
😂
🤣🤣
Says the Gooner.🙄
COYS
i made 2 separate comments before even finishing this video. very painful
"We don't get exposure to British content" lmao yeah alright. Lawrence Of Arabia only won Best Picture at the Academy Awards, an American institution, but sure. NO exposure.
He works for MI6, has Union Jack parachutes and life rafts, sexual innuendoes, dry humour, clever gadgets rather than large guns, known for driving an Aston Martin DB5, even though he drove a BMW more often. Screams British!
not to mention, hes referred to as a "british secret service agent" numerous times, a lot of characters refer to him as british etc
There were several Lotus to be fair...
But it's not like Sean Connery spoke with a Scottish accent or anything obvious like that.
On Her Majesty's Secret Service .....
Books penned by an English writer as well.
Is Tyler truly this ignorant? Or is he trolling us all to generate comments? For the sake of my sanity I really, REALLY hope it's the latter.
I think he is being satirical, there is no way he doesn't know this stuff
He's just far too young for these movies.
This was embarrassing....for Tyler.
In my opinion he should stop making UA-cam videos he's getting it wrong
That would be a lot less fun for us 😂 @@AndrewBush-d2j
@@soozb15 🇨🇦🤣
Yes Hitchcock is British
Americans just don't anything beyond america
My favourite Hamlet
3 free-range eggs
10g/½oz unsalted butter
30g/1oz cheddar, preferably Montgomery cheddar
1 thick slice ham, finely chopped
salt and freshly ground black pepper
All bond movies are British to my recollection, Daniel Craig and Alfred Hitchcock are both British btw Tyler.
he also has been told this before.
@@alexanderwiles2003 Yeah just shows though that he doesn't read the comments even when he asks us about something, its weird.
Also,Tyler's Americanism mispronounces Craig as Creg, (😡)
Graeme / Graham as Gram...
Anthony as An_thony_ (instead of _Antony_ as the 'h' is silent) and
Geoff as Goff!!
Etc...etc...etc. ☹️
The First James Bond screening was American and aired in 1954 starring American actor Barry Nelson as James Bond.
I don’t think Tyler reads any comments.
James Bond is British? Daniel Craig is American? Oh, we're off to a great start.
Shakespeare is British? What?
"Lawrence of Arabia . . . an esteemed British officer in World War One."
"So it's about a guy named Lawrence? And he goes to Arabia? Not exactly technically sure where that is. And it has to do with war?"
Serious note: Powell and Pressburger's best film was 'A Matter Of Life and Death.'
Also serious: how weird to mention Barry Lyndon and not 2001.
Anyway, another classic from Tyler, back on form.
I might try to rewrite 'To be or not to be' in American, if I'm feeling creative over the next few days.
Of course, we'll always have Arnie: ua-cam.com/video/9Eont_yEGZs/v-deo.html
'Daniel Craig is an american'🤦🏼♂️ starting off strong on this one tyler.......bless you !
Just when we think that we have plunged the depths of his ignorance, he surprises us again.
Daniel Wroughton Craig was born on March 2, 1968, in Chester, Cheshire, England.
😂
I thought the same 😂
I love the way he wraps up saying they don't get much exposure to British film and yet he seems to have missed Bond & Shakespeare are British, bless his cotton socks
How about Charlie Chaplin, Stan Laurel and Bob Hope, all British.
Cary Grant, Apple Pie, Baseball....all British....oh wait....America.....British invention, or a long-term social experiment...discuss..
Nothing beats the videos of Americans finding out Hugh Laurie is British
Daniel Craig and the Queen at the opening of the 2012 Olympics struck you as American did it.
I think it's a pose. He can't possibly think that James Bond is American, talking all the time about MI6 and with a British accent.
I'm not convinced he's even heard of the Olympics, never mind watched any of it.
I think there was only one actor who played Bond and he was a Australian a d only played once
With Diana Riggs and Tele Savas ,correct me if I am wrong 😅😅😅🎉🎉🎉
Is he for real? Does he really believe that Hamlet was a British version of an American original ? ?
Daniel Craig’s surname is not pronounced Creg, it is pronounced Crayg. Please Americans get it right.
Did you never hear American's pronounce "Colin Powell" who was secretary of state under Republican president George W. Bush
@@MisterEE100that always cracks me up about how Americans pronounce Colin and Cecil and another one is Bernard 😂
Malcolm in the Middle they pronounce Craig Cregg
@@juliajoyce4535 How else do you pronounce it? Im canadian and pronounce it as "Co-len"
@@samdoe3021 in the UK its pronounced Coll in
Another great film is 'Kind hearts and coronets' starring Alec Guinness, who plays eight parts, and Denis Price.
'The life and death of Colonel Blimp' (Powell and Pressberger), starring Roger Livesey and Deborah Kerr, was released during the Second World War. It depicts a 'good', non-Nazi, middle-aged German. Winston Churchill wanted to ban it.
Now this will totally floor you Tyler ….. ALL the James Bond films are British. Unbelievable I know.
But one of the actors who played James Bond wasn’t British. George Lazenby who played 007 in On Her Majesty’s Secret Service is Australian.
@@miniveedubDon't forget Pierce Brosnan (Irish) and Sean Connery (Scottish) and Timothy Dalton (Welsh)
@@thedoobieshrew0244 they are still british, just not english
@@ashleychance1228 How is an Irishman British?????
No, I've heard of most of them, but not all, and I'm 63. I can't see how you couldn't have noticed James Bond was a British secret agent, lol.
Not knowing that Hamlet is Shakespeare and that Shakespeare is English! Sometimes I doubt that Tyoer is real.
Well he certainly can’t be typical, either that he is being deliberately obtuse to obtain knowledge
Who wants to tell him that all James Bonds actors were from the British isles & 22 of the 24 movies were filmed at Pinewood studios? Also A lot of the Star Wars films were filmed in English Studios. 10 years ago you could drive past the millennium falcon on the M27!
A lot of the films on this list were shown on TV on a Sunday afternoon during the 1980s, so I’ve seen most of them.
He probably didn't know Hamlet was written before the USA was found! 80 years before.
At least with the American strong aversion to smoking, he is is unlikely to know of the link between Hamlet and cigars...?! Though he _has_ watched old British adverts... He "might not" remember what he watched previously?!
The US is even more lost now than then.
@@brigidsingleton1596 Or Hamlet being a small village...
@@daveofyorkshire301 Unlikely to happen in the US as a hamlet doesn't have a church.
@@daveofyorkshire301
Indeed...in fact, I know of a school named in part "_______ Hamlet" fairly near where I used to teach horseriding.
"Is James Bond (with a 27 film franchise) British? And probably the MOST FAMOUS spy EVER... followed by "Daniel Craig is American" Nope English. Shakespeare? OMG. Alfred Hitchcock, yep English. TE Lawrence lead Arab irregulars against the Ottoman forces in the middle east in WW1. Great start to this one dude! Love every moment.
So today we have discovered movie history is not within his knowledge.... to add to geography,literature,history,the arts,sport,food,maths and just outright common sense.Begs the question what actually does he know?
Add politics too that. He reckoned he did not know there had been an election.
Know one is this stupid. He plays for his audience
The stupid in this one is strong 😂
The unfathomable depths of american education
@@Mike-po2gx totally agree!! Like most across the pond..he knose how to sniff out the money!!!
SO he's really called Jon Snow (ironically played by a British actor... 🤣)
Is this guy putting on an act, or is he really as......?
I think he's yanking our collective chains.
Acting I reckon.
@@continental_driftNice Pun
SEVERELY RETARDED? 👍
I hope Tyler is never used as an advert for the American education system. His complete lack of awareness of most subjects is astonishing. But bless him, he does try. It is just so painful watching him.
hes one of the better educated ones
Fact he thinks hamlet is American i find incredible.
Makes Tim Nice-but-dim look like a genius
I'd say it makes him the poster child for the American Education System, aka nationalist propaganda.
Where is there _any_ evidence that he tries? Serious question.
‘A British rendition of Hamlet’ 😂
Everyone simultaneously ran to the comments the moment you said Daniel Craig was American 😂………. Erm no nope he’s definitely English
Wasn't he Welsh?
@@sgoslinga1not unless Chester is in Wales lol
@@Reba-123It is, give or take a few miles 😁
@@Cruithneach NO!!!! Read a map.
@@martinpatrick8964 I've read many, but, more fundamentally, I've walked from Chester to Saltney on multiple occasions. If, however, you actually think that I'm under the impression Chester is in Wales, then your literalism is an ill match with my facetious observations
Hamlet was written in England by an English playwright, and its first theatrical rendition was done still in England by English actors about 420 years ago.
Poor Tyler .says he wants to learn ..but with most of his videos .nothing seems to sink in ..
I'm becoming more and more convinced that he's putting on an act to pull in the views/generate comments. NOBODY can be as thick as he seems.
He doesn't read the comments, which doesn't help.
@monicawarner4091weol that disproves his claim that he wants to learn.
@@lisbetsoda4874 • You're right. He doesn't.
With the best will in the world.....any decent level of academic achievement for this specimen is unlikely if not impossible!
Tyler you have 68m British people screaming at you over the Daniel Craig & Bond comments. We’re really struggling on this one mate. You’re testing our ability to forgive & forget 😂
Tyler experiences Groundhog Day... Wakes up every morning knowing nothing, but what a great life being so ignorant.
hahahah this is great. Well done, sir!
Agreed. He is also one of the smartest American reactors on UA-cam.
That`s because yanks have a memory span of a goldfish.
He's got early onset dementia...
The Third Man is pure genius. I am not British but I have seen all these movies. Lawrence of Arabia is one of the most breathtaking movies of all time. The 39 Steps is Hitchcock perfection. Dr No is possibly the best Bond movie of all. To not notice that Bond is British, and works for British intelligence is crazy to me.
Tyler, you have seem plenty of British films, you have just not realised they were British. 2001: A Space Odyssey, Four Weddings & A Funeral, A Fish Named Wanda, Life of Brian, Borat, etc. Many Oscar winners have been British. Films like Gandhi, Slumdog Millionaire, Chariots of Fire, The King's Speech, The Last Emperor for example.
Then there are the movies that can be more difficult to ascribe to an individual country. Dr Zhivago for example was a British/Italian/US production, but shot mostly in Spain. The Day of The Jackal was a British/French production and shot in both countries. There are a lot of movies with that large British component.
Hamlet is by Shakespeare, I would hazard a guess you should know who Shakespeare was, but based on what I see and hear from you, I think you might not know lol. Shakespeare is a famous English writer from 450 years ago who is credited with creating around 1700 words in the english language that we use today, such as 'addiction' or 'fashionable' and loads more common ones. He wrote famous plays like Hamlet and Romeo & Juliet
That's BS. Everyone American knows Shakespeare was from the Bay area of San Francisco.
@@billyo54?
@@billyo54😅😅😅
Tyler, you do make me smile, I love your honesty, Daniel Craig is british and so was the james bond author Ian Fleming the writer of Chitty Chitty bang bang also. Some british films you may know are wicker man, the full monty, the Italian job, Gandhi, Zulu, Oliver and many more, and Shakespeare was british too. We watch a lot of american films and british too, also blockbusters like star wars may have been financed by america but were mainly shot in UK studios as many great films are.
I think the best character that have ever been created is Tyler Rumble because in real life nobody can´t be this clueless.
It dropped my jaw that he didn't know James Bond was British, from the character to the source material to the actors (Lazenby and Brosnan aside).
But my jaw had nowhere left to go when he didn't know Shakespeare was British.
The Right Dishonourable Donald Trump claimed that he listened to Shakespeare last week.
This was very painful to watch.
All his videos are painful to watch.
Very😐
@@zeeox Yet you watched them, Me too :-)
@@Bryt25 - yup. The cringe is addictive. It could well be that Tyler is, in fact, a genius!
As a non american, I think it was hilarious
Hi, Tyler. Yes, Alfred Hitchcock was born and raised in England. He is considered one of the most influential filmmakers of all time and is often referred to as the "Master of Suspense.
007 in Her Majesty's Service
a real American wouldn't even say that 😁
James Bond has ALWAYS been British (Englsh). Americans think that their country is the centre of the universe...
Tyler are you such a good actor your trolling us? Please tell me you are just taking the p*ss! 😂
Ha! I did see the pic & think he has to be trolling. James Bond & Harry Potter have to be our biggest film exports. But just cause the lady killers was on all the time when we were kids, unless you are into films you are unlikely to know x
I often think he must be 😂
The Ladykillers is an absolute gem of a film
If anyone who reads this knows Tyler, please get him to read the comments or at least tell him about them or that they exist.
He could make one of his best videos by commenting on the comments.
He isn't even a genuine person. He uses multiple aliases to pretend to learn about various countries.
Hitchcock was born in London. He spent years making silent and then sound films, totaling about 25 in all, in England (and some for German studios.) He was brought to Hollywood in the spring of 1939 (at a time when many Europeans were still able to come to the US, but later had restrictions due to wartime conditions.) Throughout his career in the US, he used many British actors and crew, and several of those films were at least partially set in Britain.
T.E.Lawrence...a real person... look him up.!! Plus not knowing where Arabia is?! Good grief... I am flabbergasted.
What do you expect when 75% of americans think that europe is a country. 😅
Like most from the USA if it is not in the USA they do not have a clue, hell in a study some years ago only a few in high school could point out the USA on a world Map, they all think it is the center of everything.
He's definitely a sandwich short of a picnic, surely no one is as clueless as he is😂
It’s all an act it has to be
I'm Canadian and I've seen all these films some of them multiple times except for Blowup, I admit I've never heard of that one. Are American really that isolated in their U.S. centric bubble or is it just that Tyler doesn't watch movies?
I'm English, and I have never seen or heard of Blowup either.
Im Danish so we get a lot of European movies back in my youth, sadly we have become more Hollywood centric now and why I give some credit to Netflix in trying to make more international series
@@whitetigercol8186 Saw Blowup many years ago (I'm 82) and what a terrific movie it is. Never rushed but does give that noir(ish) tension. Great cast. I can just imagine Tyler saying, "what? You're telling me that the late Queen Elizabeth and The Duke of Edinburgh were BRITISH???" Methinks that Tyler's not as green as he is cabbage looking.
The short answer is yes they only know about their own country and they often get the facts about that wrong as well
English is not my first language and I have seen them all, several times. I was 16 when Blow Up (Antonioni) was my favourite film. Friends who have lived behind the Iron Curtain have seen them. I have asked an Indian friend (he has seen them). A Pakistani friend (except the Beatles one). I don't think the people I know are very special. I think my friends simply watch the best cinema in the world (and most of the best is European).
I think Tyler's regressing. Less 'average', and more 'below average' now.
Didn't realise James Bond is British. I don't know what to say !
I wouldn't worry he thought Hugh Laurie was american and he's supposed to be a fan his 😂
@@richardwani2803but he did a good impression of one in House. Of course we British think of him as playing the part of an upper class twit.
Or the fact Daniel Craig was AN American in them.
Wait a second, you really thought James Bond "MI6" "Queen and Country" was an American!? And you didn't know Hamlet by William Shakespeare is British? 🤦
Craig is not pronounced Creg like the way you would pronounce that site craigslist. It is pronounced as 'Crayg' and is actually Scottish in origin. James Bond the single most iconic British film export of all time really, based on various British spies that Ian Fleming came across during his work for British Naval Intelligence in WW2
Do you not understand how accents work? You people are as ignorant as you claim Tyler to be.
I'm begining to think Tyler's doing it on purpose. It's not possible to be so ignorant. He's pulling our legs!
What do they teach in school Tyler? The US is starting to sound more and more like the old Soviet Union.
Lol that's a tad harsh 😂 to be honest most schools in the US only rely on us history.
@@MickRiley I've lived and worked in both the USA and in Russia. I think the cultures and attitudes have many similarities. But Russians tend to know a lot more about world history.
@@MickRiley the same in the USSR, thats my point.
How you have never see Lawrence of Arabia, shocks me!
It isn't just a fantastic story but a Cinegraphic master piece!
"It's about a guy named Lawrence who goes to Arabia" This will be no. 1 in Tyler's book of movie plot summaries.
...bot not sure where that is....😅
It's extremely succinct. Maybe he's actually a genius?
On a par with Baldrick
Yes to all these comments, hilarious 😂
William a Shakespeare was from Stratford Upon Avon in the UK, probably the most famous playwrite
I feel like my culture is being violated
😂😂😂
More like our intelligence is being insulted. This has to be a act.
"Is James Bond British?" I never thought he could say anything more ridiculous on this channel and then he goes and tops it 🇨🇦 ("I didn't know Alfred Hitchcock was British" - a close second.) Tyler should apologise to his fellow Americans for constantly generalizing that they share his lack of knowledge because at least in this case it simply isn't true (I've never heard of ANYONE to not know James Bond - novels or films - is 100% British.).
A commander in the Royal Navy working for MI6 is obviously an American CIA cover
I think I've lost the will to live
Guys please he can't be this ignorant it must be to get feedback in the comments and generate traffic ..if it is its genious if its not its really horrible lol
The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp was a masterpiece showing the change in society in both England and Germany through the rivalry of two "officer class" men. It covers most of the first half of the 20th century and starred Roger Livesey. Tyler would not begin to comprehend it. I was fortunate enough to see it first time round when the context was relevant.
tyler reminds me of forest gump
A foolish one though.
I think there is a scene in the film where Forest asks if Little Forest is like him. I took that to mean Forest Gump is aware of his differences. It's much less clear than Tyler is aware or cares.
Best Wishes. ☮
Hamlet! William Shakespeare! Bill the Bard! For crying out bloody loud!
I don't think I have ever cringed so much at Tyler's ignorance, but it probably goes for almost all of his ignorant generation, which is incredibly sad.
Ooo! Nasty! And this is coming from. Welsh native./ British
I think most of the incredulity is an act to get comments to boost the Algorithm with UA-cam, the fact that they go unread is an indication of this.
ALARMING YOU MEAN!!!!
The other American reactors who see this must die a little inside watching this.
A British spy is British? For her majesty’s government? How does that work? ;)
In the words of Monty Python - Can you keep a secret? well you're in then !
At first I thought ' Oh my goodness this is painful ' and then the obvious truth dawned - Tyler Rumple- no way that's his real name . He's the U.S.'s answer to Borat . Sacha Baron Cohen look what you've spawned !
Yes. In his Canadian version his name is Tyler Bucket
That’s rather insulting to Borat tbh…
I really do think this is the very worst Tyler Rumple video I have yet seen. I follow several U.S. reactors to British subjects and all of them seem to start from a basis of ‘I don’t know too much about the UK but I want to find out more’ - and then they do so. This video is not about anything more than popular culture which is surely within most people’s grasp - but not his. I hesitate to cast aspersions on his mentality because I should really be upset if I were to put my foot in it by insulting a person somewhat fragile in the brain but I cannot continue to follow him if this is to be his standard. Unsubscribed.
He is a university graduate but I assume he has an engineering degree or such, where he knows his subject but very little of the world at large.
Well, Tyler, you really got me there! How could I possibly not have realized you were trolling us all, and you got us all? Nice going!!
Not only is the movie Hamlet from Britain, it was based on Hamlet by William motherfucking Shakespeare, Not Tennessee Williams Shakespeare.
This documentary was very frustrating. Britain has influenced cinema in so many ways that most people don't know. Did you know that the original 'Superman' films were shot in London, and that the techniques developed to make Christopher Reeve fly created here? The original 'Star Wars' films were also shot in the UK, as was 'Batman'. For a small nation, we punch way above our weight in so many things.
Everyday must be a wonder for you.
Ignorance is bliss I guess ☺️
😅😅😅
HAHAHAHAHAHAAAAAA
Sadly, he will never read this.
Lawrence of Arabia was one of the greatest movies ever. It won 7 Academy Awards including Best Picture..The film was nominated for ten Oscars at the 35th Academy Awards in 1963, winning seven including Best Picture and Best Director. It also won the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture - Drama and the BAFTA Awards for Best Film and Outstanding British Film. The dramatic score by Maurice Jarre and the Super Panavision 70 cinematography by Freddie Young also won praise from critics.
Lawrence of Arabia is widely regarded as one of the greatest films ever made. In 1991, it was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry.[7][8] In 1998, the American Film Institute placed it fifth on their 100 Years..
A British rendition of Hamlet 👌
Lol 😂
7:54 the 39 steps is a cracking story. This, and the Rupert Penry-Jones version are highly recommended viewing!
Would you know if his full title was used - *Sir Alfred Joseph Hitchcock KBE*
KBE stands for *Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire*
A clockwork orange was banned in the UK in 1973, allegedly concerned about reports of copycat violence, and threats made to the safety of himself and his family, Kubrick withdrew the film from circulation in the UK
British /rendition/ of the play Hamlet? Oh ffs man, the play was written by Shakespeare, where do you think he comes from?
I believe they have American renditions of the Star Spangled Banner as well!! Who'd have thought? Perhaps that well known American scribbler called Shakespeare wrote the words, and another Yank called Edward Elgar the music 🤪 The world gets odder by the day. 🙋♀️🇬🇧🙄
I think it's all an act for him, his you tube persona...At least I hope so as a fellow American.
l have seen all of these, The '39 Steps' & 'Lawrence of Arabia' are my favourites. But l must say, David Hemmings does a great David Bailey in 'Blow Up' with Vanessa Redgrave putting in a great performance. Yes Tyler in these in these movies they actually have dialogue, characters and story lines with not just things exploding .......lol
I'm a 76 yo Swede: I've never heard of 'The Blimp', Hamlet I've of course heard of, but never seen the film. All of rest I've seen, the ones from '62 and newer when they were more or less new.
I still think that 'The third man' is one of best films ever - globaly.
And btw: Alfred Hitchcok was a 'very english' englishman.
WOW Dude just WOW.
I am Australian and have seen all these films. It is true that in the US if a film has an accent it will not be shown.
Is James Bond British?
I do apologise,I was raised in a cave.
Swap the word ‘Cave’ for ‘America’
Ian Fleming who wrote James Bond books was in the SOE during WW2 and a very capable spy himself, look into Operation Mincemeat which fed the Germans false information relating to allied landings
Yes, Plato's cave.
@@continental_drift I don't get it?
@@Temeraire101 I could post a link to a Wikipedia article but you know how YT feels about external links.
Search for "Allegory of the cave"
Basically our reality is formed by what we observe. If you live in a cave then your reality is formed by what passes in front of the cave.
From what I have seen of American media your comment "Swap the word ‘Cave’ for ‘America’" is on point.
Daniel Craig was born in Cheshire in the uk. Hamlet was written by Shakespeare (British playwright) …Alfred Hitchcock :British
I'm shocked you thought James bond was American.
He probably believes we all live in mud huts and that 9/11 was a terrorist attack and Americans landed on the moon.
The Clockwork Orange was never banned in the UK. Kubrick withdrew it himself because of death threats.
I’m Australian and I’ve heard of and seen all of these films except two.
Which two?
Of the early Hitchcock films made in Britain, four are often studied to demonstrate the instances of the themes, character types, twists and special fx and innovative techniques he perfected in his later films and all are considered extremely enjoyable classics: The 39 Steps, The Lady Vanishes, Foreign Correspondent and his first version of The Man Who Knew Too Much.
Bond works for MI6 ,the BRIT Secret Service , ffs .