Top 20 Movies That Left Out the Real Horrific Ending

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  • Опубліковано 31 гру 2024

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  • @WatchMojo
    @WatchMojo  2 роки тому +162

    Know of any other true-story movies that changed the endings? Let us know in the comments!
    Movies that are factually right and wrong! ua-cam.com/play/PLmZTDWJGfRq1EfDAKAQFH707J_sFz7oV7.html

    • @liamkent9557
      @liamkent9557 2 роки тому +3

      How is it that you post like 20 times a day

    • @danielsch.6463
      @danielsch.6463 2 роки тому +4

      how about Inglorious Basterds? Have you guys seen this movie?

    • @marvelsProtege
      @marvelsProtege 2 роки тому +1

      Everyone in this said something that would make me leave UA-cam

    • @jacobbradford2543
      @jacobbradford2543 2 роки тому +1

      Not movies but the media leaves out the truth of some controversy that happens in the world and only shows part of a video that fits their narrative.

    • @roberthoisington9266
      @roberthoisington9266 2 роки тому +1

      That movie is SUPOSSED to be fiction. It's not based on any true story.

  • @marahbaker8615
    @marahbaker8615 2 роки тому +1674

    "Gentleman, it has been an honor playing with you tonight" is one of the most badass lines in film history. It always fills me with a deep sense of respect for those musicians

    • @robertduna3421
      @robertduna3421 2 роки тому +89

      Yes not to mention that it was probably the most spot on performance ever done. Knowing your about to die and playing for the last time would bring out the best you ever had.

    • @MrOldboy360
      @MrOldboy360 2 роки тому +30

      "privilege" not honor

    • @patricialear3532
      @patricialear3532 2 роки тому +12

      Didn't they all die? How do we know what they said?

    • @randybarnes4440
      @randybarnes4440 2 роки тому +4

      Facts

    • @BoredPanda66
      @BoredPanda66 2 роки тому +32

      @@patricialear3532 there were over 700 survivors.. that’s why we know so many details..

  • @danielpearce8567
    @danielpearce8567 2 роки тому +625

    After the war, Louie Zamperini found his faith, overcame PTSD, and forgave his captors. He also worked with at risk boys for decades and lived to be 97 years old.
    Legend

    • @blackheartthedarklord6428
      @blackheartthedarklord6428 2 роки тому +25

      My step-dad actually met him one time. He told me he was a kind person.

    • @dkdebest
      @dkdebest Рік тому +4

      @@blackheartthedarklord6428 ok did they kiss?

    • @thomashumphrey48
      @thomashumphrey48 Рік тому +3

      Unbroken 2

    • @leanajo754
      @leanajo754 11 місяців тому +6

      He was also an Olympic track star in the 1936 Olympics

    • @MASTEROFEVIL
      @MASTEROFEVIL 10 місяців тому +3

      He also went back to Japan to carry the olympic torch in 2014

  • @frankthespank
    @frankthespank 2 роки тому +3057

    I loved that the ending to Once Upon a Time in Hollywood was changed, it was such a relief to not see the awful ending we all knew was coming. Everyone says “life isn’t a happy ending!” but I don’t watch movies to see “real life”, I see that 24/7 for free, I watch movies to escape real life and that’s what I got. Thank you Quentin 😎

    • @mattlawrence1932
      @mattlawrence1932 2 роки тому +43

      Okay okay calm down!!!!!! Quentin didn't do it for u , he did it for himself because that's what he wanted to see just like every other film he's ever done so don't be thankful to him💯 that's why he never made actual factual movie based on real life in his entire career , he likes his fantasy world but if u like it too & it makes u happy I understand but still...he doesn't make movies that others want to see , he makes movies that he wants to see that never been made before!!!!!!

    • @frankthespank
      @frankthespank 2 роки тому +120

      @@mattlawrence1932 No, he did it for his audience and me being a member of that audience I was VERY thankful for it. I kept watching that movie saying to myself: “OK…. brace yourself, the awful part is gonna happen and it’s gonna suck seeing a beautiful pregnant woman get butchered by these a-holes, hopefully he makes it so over the top it’s funny and we don’t think of what REALLY happened…” and Quentin gave us a break. We knew what the real ending is/was and he did a “what if” and I loved it ‘cause the real ending just sucks so much… If we want “the truth” or “the REAL ending” we can all pull up a documentary or something on UA-cam of what really happened and be sickened by it, ya know? I was just happy for the ending we got ‘cause I knew the real ending and I just didn’t want to see it but I wanted to see the ending to this movie so I was kinda torn and again, Quentin did us a solid and I’m thankful for it.
      Did you know Quentin wants to retire? Yeah… music sucks, now let’s have movies suck too.. I hope he’s just kidding. I love his movies 😎

    • @michele36618
      @michele36618 2 роки тому +43

      Totally agree with everything you just said. I was dreading the ending the WHOLE TIME. Hoping it would be an over the top blood bath to where I wouldn’t feel just emotionally horrified by what I KNEW was coming. !! When I realized what the ending actually was, I actually said out loud “YES!!! HELL YEAH!!!” 😂😂 I even think I clapped 😂😂 that was a good movie and I’m glad it ended the way it did. Despite the horrifying truth, which we all already know…It’s what SHOULD have happened and I love that he changed it. 👏 👏 👏

    • @ItsJustRyansChannel
      @ItsJustRyansChannel 2 роки тому +45

      If you believe in the whole infinite parallel universes things then it's almost like Tarantino just showed us a universe in which the Manson family were a bunch of idiots and got their asses handed to them. Particularly in this case lol

    • @frankthespank
      @frankthespank 2 роки тому +18

      @@michele36618 Yup! If I ever meet Quentin I’m gonna shake his hand and tell him “thanks”. I have a feeling I’m not the only person that does that.

  • @giggle_snort
    @giggle_snort 2 роки тому +497

    I think 'Anastasia' deserves a place on this list too. Wonderful movie, but the real princess died with the rest of her family.

    • @immikeurnot
      @immikeurnot 11 місяців тому +26

      And the person they sort-of depict in the movie was a con artist.

    • @schisandra
      @schisandra 11 місяців тому

      @@immikeurnotstick

    • @gilgameshofuruk4060
      @gilgameshofuruk4060 10 місяців тому +12

      ​@immikeurnot There is a theory that the real fake Anastasia had a trauma induced personality disorder that made her genuinely believe she was the real deal. This was then encouraged by opportunists who tutored her in the facts to support her claim.
      It was her delusion that helped her maintain the pretence for so long.
      Whatever the truth, it was one heck of an effort. Most other wannabe Romanovs gave up after a few months or weeks, she kept on for decades.

    • @colleenobrien1234
      @colleenobrien1234 8 місяців тому

      My sister took a class on Russian history in college and Anastasia is apparently so inaccurate (I mean obviously since none of the Romanovs survived) that it was marketed in Russia as a fairy tale

    • @JesusMagicPanties
      @JesusMagicPanties 8 місяців тому +1

      @giggle_snort@ In Russia, miraculous survivals simply do not happen. Meticulousness in killing is one of the few things in which the Russians have achieved unparalleled excellence because it gives a sense of fulfilment to the 'Russian soul'.

  • @suntanman99
    @suntanman99 2 роки тому +96

    "How Stella Got Her Groove Back" was based on author Terry McMillan's real life romance and eventual marriage to a much younger man. In future years however, it was came out that her real life husband was actually gay, which lead to a very bitter divorce and money battle.

  • @montanadash20
    @montanadash20 2 роки тому +832

    I watched 12 yrs a slave ONE time and i was NEVER able to watch it again. That was ine of the hardest watches ive ever experienced. Finding out that there's a possibility he was possibly sold BACK into slavery is just.... Depressing smh

    • @willh3972
      @willh3972 2 роки тому +107

      The slavery era of the United states was a hell of a thing. Some slave states basically had laws where if a black person was in state for a certain length of time, free or not, they could be considered slaves and captured and sold. This was briefly mentioned near the end of the original Roots. Of course, that series openly took a ton of liberties with the truth but that was very real.

    • @chillychese
      @chillychese 2 роки тому +24

      @@willh3972 You do realize that pretty much every civilization has had slavery and the US in actuality wasn't even close to the worst in it's treatment of slaves. Not defending the actions but the narrative is usually about the US when in reality every nation has done it.

    • @material-cheshirekhatter2413
      @material-cheshirekhatter2413 2 роки тому +1

      @@chillychese Shut up, Stop trying to downplay the horrors of slavery in the u.s

    • @topshelfmike
      @topshelfmike 2 роки тому +73

      @@chillychese curious who would you consider worse?

    • @catisreckless4647
      @catisreckless4647 2 роки тому +138

      @@chillychese How do you miss such an obvious point so entirely? Fucking yikes.

  • @stevegallo8483
    @stevegallo8483 2 роки тому +1152

    The Disney movie Pocahontas took a lot of liberties. There was no romance between John Smith and Pocahontas as portrayed in the movie. She was a child when the English settled in Jamestown, VA. She also married a different English settler named John Rolfe.

    • @TheGavrael
      @TheGavrael 2 роки тому +86

      It was 'based on a true story', but actually 'based on the journals of John Smith'. But actually, 'based on the second journals of John Smith', because what he journaled showed two different accounts of what happened and seem to be written after the fact. Smith has very little to do with Pocahontas in reality. They might have seen each other once.

    • @joshuathompson4571
      @joshuathompson4571 2 роки тому +42

      Totally correct, but I always find it interesting that few people note that the natives gave/exchanged her to John Smith. Not a particularly nice time in history for any involved. Native Americans were brutal toward their own women. The film sugarcoats/whitewashes this big time , but so do the classrooms wherein we learn about these people.

    • @ang-a
      @ang-a 2 роки тому +51

      I think men of those times didn't really care how old a girl was..if she went through puberty that was old enough.

    • @RantePlayz
      @RantePlayz 2 роки тому +14

      @@joshuathompson4571 is there proof where they just gave her to him?

    • @stephonmanny7555
      @stephonmanny7555 2 роки тому +15

      @@TheGavrael Yeah he just made a fanfic

  • @sheilarough236
    @sheilarough236 2 роки тому +220

    Howard Hughes may have suffered from a condition, caused by the horrific plane crash that almost killed him, that made his body extremely sensitive to touch. Making trimming his nails, hair, shaving, bathing and even wearing clothes very painful. Combined with his untreated OCD, making him a very tragic figure

    • @leslieannvanhumbeck7630
      @leslieannvanhumbeck7630 2 роки тому +10

      That sounds like fibromyalgia. I have it.

    • @omarbracamontes4741
      @omarbracamontes4741 Рік тому +6

      OCD could also be connected with germs. Its a common type OCD and left untreated could make a person spiral.. OCD is a painful disorder and sucks the life out of the person.. I suffer from it lol so it suuuuuuuuuuuucks.

    • @JoeSmith-dl9ok
      @JoeSmith-dl9ok 10 місяців тому +3

      He became addicted to opioids after the XF11 crash. He was OCD, a germaphobe, an agoraphope, and was manipulated by his “staff” while they stole his $

  • @Melanie_Dawn
    @Melanie_Dawn Рік тому +106

    I’ve never even seen 12 Years A Slave, but just hearing what might have/probably happened to him at the end had me in tears

    • @AnglephileSwedenGerman
      @AnglephileSwedenGerman 9 місяців тому

      Don't you cry

    • @Medusa13579
      @Medusa13579 8 місяців тому +3

      It's a hard watch certainly, but it remains a great film, with an excellent cast

    • @TeddyB-hf3ks
      @TeddyB-hf3ks 6 місяців тому +1

      Ummm.....ok....

  • @SPDYellow
    @SPDYellow 2 роки тому +504

    You left out that Pocahontas was TWELVE when she met John Smith, a fact which really puts a damper on any so-called romances.

    • @elenarodriguez7809
      @elenarodriguez7809 2 роки тому

      And was raped by several men in captivity and became pregnant. John Rolfe was one of the men that raped her and really didn't want to be married to her. When Rolfe died he did his best to not leave anything to "their son" but Rolfe's family didn't allow it.

    • @Outofstep2006
      @Outofstep2006 2 роки тому +9

      John smith was like zamn shes 12

    • @redzuanhashim1193
      @redzuanhashim1193 2 роки тому

      pedophile..its america anyway LOL

    • @povertylevelphilanthropy1524
      @povertylevelphilanthropy1524 2 роки тому +13

      There were girls, younger than twelve, already getting married, back in the day. Though, in this case, it wasn’t true, it still isn’t that unheard of.

    • @clnblk7773
      @clnblk7773 2 роки тому +10

      ​@@nahhhbruhhh because it's a "fact" not an "excuse" it's not like you getting upset changes anything. here's another fact, most people didn't live until 30 back in Europe and the New World

  • @ArcherSuh4721
    @ArcherSuh4721 2 роки тому +484

    In Goodfellas, Tommy initially refused to kill Stacks after the Lufthansa heist. The two of them were very close friends and Tommy was uncharacteristically remorseful over it, even calling Stacks' mother after the funeral to genuinely send his condolences. Paulie ultimately convinced Tommy to kill Stacks by promising to "make" him... and we all know how that went.

    • @lavisdizzi3903
      @lavisdizzi3903 2 роки тому +27

      Never knew this

    • @danieljones0078
      @danieljones0078 2 роки тому +34

      The real goodfellas story was crazy

    • @jh565bb
      @jh565bb 2 роки тому +7

      Damn I never knew that.

    • @tobyjackson657
      @tobyjackson657 2 роки тому +47

      The movie only tells the first half of Henry Hill, the second half of his life is like a whole different movie. And the real Goodfellas story is way more graphic
      [Appreciate the unexpected likes]
      ("Henry Hill Documentary"; about 40+minutes long with rare pictures and footage, told by Henry Hill himself. Disregard other documentaries)

    • @saloniparashar5080
      @saloniparashar5080 2 роки тому +1

      @@lavisdizzi3903 iii As soqsa

  • @freddyp319
    @freddyp319 2 роки тому +87

    Erin Brockovich, I detoured on my way to Vegas once because of traffic. I drove by the military base, reluctant to go inside. I was extremely curious of this whole event. With the prison across the street, the abandonment of the base, you would think a movie would develop again. This story is filled with controversy but the fact that you can drive into the base with no issue and just explore is so crazy to me.

  • @sethvanpelt5707
    @sethvanpelt5707 2 роки тому +246

    That's why I love the imitation game. Although it mixed around the events, they pulled no punches with the tragic ending to the genius that was Alan Turing.

    • @BrandonGavin_EDC
      @BrandonGavin_EDC 2 роки тому +3

      That was a good movie.

    • @joshuathompson4571
      @joshuathompson4571 2 роки тому +6

      They totally pulled punches in that film...

    • @KalEL224
      @KalEL224 2 роки тому +10

      They also made it seems like he was the only one who cracked the code when it was a much larger team

    • @BrandonGavin_EDC
      @BrandonGavin_EDC 2 роки тому +14

      @@KalEL224 they showed the team the entire movie. Obviously the movie was about him so that’s why when it was cracked it focused on him but it showed them working with him everyday after he gained their trust and attention.

    • @sethvanpelt5707
      @sethvanpelt5707 2 роки тому +9

      @@joshuathompson4571 I'm just saying the ending was brutally accurate

  • @RR-VanityInKnickers
    @RR-VanityInKnickers 2 роки тому +162

    I've noticed that quite a few movies are now stating "loosely based on a true story" instead of based on a true story.

    • @willh3972
      @willh3972 2 роки тому +6

      I still meet people that think Texas Chainsaw Massacre really happened, not to mention the stupid remake had the "found footage" intro.

    • @heatheraggus7501
      @heatheraggus7501 2 роки тому +10

      Or "Inspired by true events".

    • @hybridgamer4708
      @hybridgamer4708 2 роки тому +2

      @@willh3972 I liked the remake and the addition of that found footage, kind of foolish to blame the film makers for the audience’s stupidity

    • @konstantinkoverchenko9587
      @konstantinkoverchenko9587 10 місяців тому +3

      …or “based on true events.”

    • @SuperMrHiggins
      @SuperMrHiggins 9 місяців тому +1

      I don't get why they can't make historically accurate movies. It's so rare. Make a fantasy then, or maybe just write a new story. Don't shit on someone's life to make a buck. Though that's certainly nothing new. :(

  • @notaniceguy34
    @notaniceguy34 2 роки тому +90

    You forgot 'Lady Sings The Blues.' It ended with the concert and didn't show how it failed to get Billie Holliday's cabaret license back and then her subsequent death. Although these things were acknowledged.

    • @LadyDuchess
      @LadyDuchess 10 місяців тому +3

      Most of that movie was bullsh*t. The real Louis McKay was a monster.

    • @TSXDHLledaArtifacts
      @TSXDHLledaArtifacts 5 місяців тому

      I don’t like that they were so LIGHT on her activism and how the CIA was harassing her

  • @masilomoshesh1475
    @masilomoshesh1475 2 роки тому +851

    Shoutout to Quentin for changing the ending to what it was. He did right by Sharon, Jay and the other victims.

    • @sandhanitizer15
      @sandhanitizer15 2 роки тому +51

      What do you mean he did them right? They were murdered in real life, you can't change that.

    • @masilomoshesh1475
      @masilomoshesh1475 2 роки тому +136

      @@sandhanitizer15 He honored them and their families by altering that scene and having perpetrators die brutally instead.
      It would have definitely offended the families if he had played it out the way it actually happened

    • @SecretWars98
      @SecretWars98 2 роки тому +3

      👍🙌🎥❤️

    • @SundayMourningLove
      @SundayMourningLove 2 роки тому +35

      @@masilomoshesh1475 I have to say that families should not be "offended" by the retelling of such a famous and well-known piece of history; as dark, tragic and macabre as it may be. Maybe a bit hurt everytime they see it retold, but not offended. And honestly I don't think the family would watch this movie either way, no matter what the ending had been. I understand what you're saying, and it sounds like a sweet enough sentiment, but I respectfully disagree with it. No matter how "sweet" or "inoffensive" we wish to be, it simply doesn't alter history's twisted facts. If it were a loved one of mine that had been so brutally murdered, I would prefer the truth to be told. The truth, with a focus on how completely innocent and adored my loved one was; how utterly unfair what happened was, showing just how many people it actually affected, for the victims go far beyond "just" the ones murdered that night. The truth, with a focus on how evil & twisted the perpetrators were; never giving in to any sort of "understanding" of their perspective, showing only their guilt & vileness. Their selfishness & greed.
      But that's just me and my opinion. We all see things differently. Maybe you are right and I'm wrong. It really doesn't matter who's "right" or "wrong" though. Maybe we're both a bit right and a bit wrong. Either way, I just thought I'd share another perspective on the matter.

    • @Y0uKnowMyName
      @Y0uKnowMyName 2 роки тому +7

      It was so avant garde that I just love the implication that it may have pissed off so many nazi bitches.

  • @erichoffman2908
    @erichoffman2908 2 роки тому +483

    Along the lines of them billing the Titanic musician's family, the coroner charged Buddy Holly for the autopsy that was performed on his body. The amount was taken from the money Holly had in his possession at the time of his death. The charge is noted in the personal effects section of the autopsy report.

    • @Bumblebee67544
      @Bumblebee67544 2 роки тому +79

      That is disgusting

    • @MrBananaCheeks
      @MrBananaCheeks 2 роки тому +17

      Most hospitals charge for autopsies, they either charge the insurance or the estate itself. Though I'm not seeing anything about them taking payment for it from his cash on hand.

    • @jasonbrown3095
      @jasonbrown3095 2 роки тому +5

      Thanks, Google!

    • @erichoffman2908
      @erichoffman2908 2 роки тому +23

      @@MrBananaCheeks if you image search the autopsy report it's noted under his personal affects they list the total amount and then subtract the fee.

    • @SantanaCampbell
      @SantanaCampbell 2 роки тому +8

      Jock Hume's body is buried in my hometown (Halifax, Nova Scotia)!

  • @benhaney9629
    @benhaney9629 2 роки тому +137

    Zamperrini found peace eventually. He lived a full long life. He even took up skateboarding in his 60s. The real “bad” ending of that story is that the sadistic Japanese guard never faced justice of any kind. He and Zamperrini actually met in like the 90s. And the guard was unrepentant. Acting like he was Zamperrinis friend and shit.

    • @77mpickett
      @77mpickett 2 роки тому +14

      Really I heard about that also but I heard the guy wouldn't even meet with him zamperini was ready to move on and forgive him but dude wouldn't even see him. Not sure if it was out of shame or contempt but idk that's what I heard

    • @hannahmabbott7370
      @hannahmabbott7370 2 роки тому +9

      Wait What!? He took up skateboarding when he was in his 60s? Damn talk about being built like a brick crap house.

    • @skwisgarskwigelf7191
      @skwisgarskwigelf7191 2 роки тому

      I hope Zamperrini knocked his buck teeth out

  • @donovanbradford8231
    @donovanbradford8231 2 роки тому +121

    I thought that Remember The Titans did a good job bringing up just how tough Coach Boone was on these young he coached. You saw the way he was verbally abusive to the starting running back to the point of the young man was ready to quit until the assistant coach told hom he could play on the defense. You also saw how he was when players asked for a water break and he would make them work even harder. And the sense I felt that really hit home with how tough Boone was, was the up down scene. Where in blistering heat these players were working out in drills so long that his own assistant walked up and said, "there's a difference between being tough and crazy. And you're flirting with it right now" Boone called a hault to the drill and many players broke down and started to vomit or pass out.

    • @silversleeper1193
      @silversleeper1193 Рік тому +13

      One of the actual players moved to the town I grew up in and would talk about his experience on the team. He made no secret of the fact Boone was ten times worse than anything they showed in the movie.

    • @maggiegarber246
      @maggiegarber246 10 місяців тому +2

      My brother played college football in the 60’s. They had practices twice a day. He told of players having dry heaves. That was during the era when it was thought that people, including workers, that sweat a lot needed salt tablets.

  • @roberthoisington9266
    @roberthoisington9266 2 роки тому +383

    "Boys Don't Cry", the 1999 movie about Brandon Teena. Starring Hillary Swank as the transgender Brandon, the movie leaves out a huge amount of facts about Teena's death. Brandon and Candace Lambert were both killed by Tom Nissen and John Lotter, but for some reason the movie leaves out the murder of Phillip DeVine, who was also visiting Candace and Teena that day. The movie also shows Candace's baby crawling out of the house on it's own, but in reality they took the baby out and left it in a cornfield to starve to death. And, lastly, the movie shows Lana Tisdel trying desperately to protect Brandon from being killed, but the sad reality is that the police suspected that Lana and her mother, Linda, set up Brandon to be murdered. I have no idea why the movie changed some really important facts about the case.

    • @Yomomma45738
      @Yomomma45738 2 роки тому +47

      Very interesting. Good read. But when explaining things like this either go with the first name or last name. Multiple times you switched from saying the last name to the first name. Gets a bit confusing while reading it and makes you have to re read it.

    • @radevthard7565
      @radevthard7565 2 роки тому +20

      Man that’s depressing

    • @kenbrown2927
      @kenbrown2927 2 роки тому +57

      Boys Don't Cry is in my top five favorite movies of all time.
      Brandon was just trying to live his life, but he couldn't escape the ignorance and rednecked people of his city.
      I couldn't figure out why I felt so connected to him in the movie when I was younger, but slowly realizing as an young adult I am also trans and had to hide it for so long.
      His family never accepted him as Brandon, and sadly (and stubbornly for them) had his tombstone written as Teena.

    • @lavisdizzi3903
      @lavisdizzi3903 2 роки тому +13

      Sources? Everything I've read all accounts and witness testimonies say the baby was left in his crib, and Lana was sympathetic towards Teena even bailing him out of jail after finding out he wasn't cisgender.

    • @roberthoisington9266
      @roberthoisington9266 2 роки тому +4

      @@Yomomma45738, Thanks. I should have caught that.

  • @globetrekker86
    @globetrekker86 2 роки тому +77

    The truth behind A Beautiful Mind is utterly heartbreaking

  • @eec589
    @eec589 2 роки тому +71

    "Tell me a happy story.
    There's no such thing. All stories have a sad ending.
    Then tell me a happy story but end it in the middle."

  • @rachelle_banks
    @rachelle_banks 2 роки тому +15

    I couldn't even finish "The Greatest Showman".
    The fact that they had to omit the way he actually got started (with Joyce Heath) shows that they were not going to be showing his real life. His exploitation of people knew no bounds. Very, very dark and ending for a lot of the people in his "show", but it was at Barnum's own hand.

  • @phidy315
    @phidy315 2 роки тому +26

    One of my favorite "true stories" is Ghosts of Mississippi. It tells the re-trial for the murder of Medgar Evers. We covered the movie in my US History class in high school during our Civil Rights portion. Alec Baldwin stars as the lawyer that got the case reopened. The movie won't show this because it came out prior, but the real Bobby DeLaughter went on to become a judge and was sent to prison in 2009 on obstruction charges.

  • @stefanjentoft8107
    @stefanjentoft8107 2 роки тому +172

    The commentary about Schindler reminds of another Holocaust hero: Raul Wallenberg, a Swede in the Budapest consulate. He used his connections to get Jews jobs at the consulate thus protecting them. At the end of the war, the Russians took him off. His younger brother searched for decades to find him, only to eventually realize that the rest of his family had paid off the Russians so they could claim the family fortune. The rest of the family had been actively impeding the brother's efforts to find him. I know all this because said brother's daughter is a close family friend.

    • @stephenhernandez7609
      @stephenhernandez7609 2 роки тому +22

      Some family its disgusting, at least his brother cared though

    • @dianamgallagher
      @dianamgallagher 2 роки тому +10

      How tragic!

    • @deborahblackvideoediting8697
      @deborahblackvideoediting8697 2 роки тому +14

      Thank you for this information. I remember watching a mini-series about him starring Richard Chamberlain. I was fairly young at the time and quite upset about what happened to him. I remember asking my mother why on Earth the Russians would take him away. What would they want with a Swedish man who has done them no harm? It's so disturbing that his own family orchestrated his capture (and I presume his death as well). It's sickening. His younger brother must have been horrified when he realized what his own family had done.

    • @VideoAlMckinnon
      @VideoAlMckinnon 2 роки тому

      Your niece?

    • @bheast86
      @bheast86 2 роки тому +1

      Polke Bernadotte negotiated the release and repatriation of concentration camp prisoners, and was duly assassinated by the Stern Gang

  • @lubbbduppp
    @lubbbduppp 2 роки тому +153

    I just watched "Once upon a time in Hollywood" last night. The ending made me unexpectedly emotional 😢Sharon and her four friends should've still been here today. It was nice cinematic justice

    • @69orgtfo73
      @69orgtfo73 2 роки тому +6

      I get teary eyed every time I watch it that's such a beautiful movie

    • @farrellmcnulty909
      @farrellmcnulty909 2 роки тому

      @@69orgtfo73 I was really moved by it, after laughing my ass off as DiCaprio and Pitt went nuts on those asshole hippies. 😅. I walked out of the theater feeling a little buzz that rarely happens with I see a happy ending, but this one was outright joyous.

    • @joelwillems4081
      @joelwillems4081 Рік тому +7

      And Tate's husband, Polanski, should not be here.

  • @ranwolf1240
    @ranwolf1240 2 роки тому +78

    Hugh Glass also didn't have a son. The men he was looking for took his gear because they thought he was dead. When he tracked them down they returned everything they had.

    • @HayleighPaige
      @HayleighPaige 2 роки тому +20

      Thank you!! I was bothered that part got left out 😂

    • @elenarodriguez7809
      @elenarodriguez7809 2 роки тому

      @@HayleighPaige Me too!

    • @ianonufer6988
      @ianonufer6988 2 роки тому +5

      I too did research on this movie. Without thier liberties there would not have been much of a movie. Tough guy for sure but maybe not worth a movie

    • @BradSivyer
      @BradSivyer 10 місяців тому

      Also the youngster who Glass tracked down and forgave, wasn't named Bridges' it was Bridger as in Jim Bridger who would become one of the most celebrated and famous mountain man of the western fur trade.

    • @gilgameshofuruk4060
      @gilgameshofuruk4060 10 місяців тому

      ​@ianonufer6988 Maybe it could have been a good old fashioned 90 minute movie. Remember them? When you didn't have to avoid eating or drinking for 24 hours beforehand in order to get through it.

  • @russell28533
    @russell28533 2 роки тому +105

    There is a missing part somewhere with the Herman Boone entry. Back in '96, Mr. Boone was the instructor for my drivers ed class, so he must have eventually gotten rehired by ACPS. To my knowledge, he was regular faculty and was seen at school daily by everyone. On a side note, even then we were told someone was writing a script to make a movie about him but as us cynical GenX kids, we all shook our heads and went "A movie about Mr. Boone? yeah right"

    • @leighburton832
      @leighburton832 2 роки тому +11

      He was fired as the football coach. He was not fired from teaching at TC Williams.

  • @BishopWalters12
    @BishopWalters12 2 роки тому +75

    Eight Below, the true story happened in the 1950's and I think it was like 2 dogs survived out of 15 if I remember correctly. Accused is a great movie but that poor woman had a rough life, and I didn't know that she died so young.

    • @KaylaMarieYT
      @KaylaMarieYT 2 роки тому +15

      eight below traumatized me as a child

  • @Garbeaux.
    @Garbeaux. 2 роки тому +211

    I always thought Leo deserved the Oscar for The Aviator. Cate Blanchett definitely deserved hers for that film but he should have too. Knowing he only won for The Revenant for his body of work. Award shows are bad about that - especially the Oscars. You can look back and see people who have won for lesser movies but made even better films where they didn’t win. Some even acknowledged as much.

    • @Jessi24073
      @Jessi24073 2 роки тому +20

      100 percent agree. Leo has BEEN deserving an Oscar, starting with What’s eating Gilbert Grape. He has delivered a stellar performance in everything he has done. Not just the revenant

    • @BestBES
      @BestBES 2 роки тому +12

      The Oscars are a popularity contest. There are some absolutely incredible actors that have never won. Example: Johnny Depp transforms into practically a new person every movie but he's constantly overlooked. I respect George C. Scott (won Best Actor in 1971) for standing his ground on the Oscars. He told them twice he wouldn't accept it and told them not to even put his name on the ballot (called the whole thing a "two hour meat parade"). He won and, when someone accepted for him, returned it the next day. Personally, I think the only reason he won is bc their legitimacy was being called into question that year so who better to give the win to than a man that hates it? No way they can be rigged then, right? Now, I just accept that the winners will be whomever campaigned the most

    • @cynthiakarkeys
      @cynthiakarkeys 2 роки тому +7

      @@BestBES Agreed! Apparently he only won for The Revenant because he really tried to get out there and schmooze it up, something he had usually shied away from after his other roles.

    • @lilyluu973
      @lilyluu973 2 роки тому +6

      110% Aviator is my favorite Leo movie.

    • @jacquelinecallejas1390
      @jacquelinecallejas1390 2 роки тому +5

      Absolutely. Elizabeth Taylor did some great work (She also did some turkeys but heh.) but they gave her the Oscar for Butterfield 8. I saw that movie. It was overrought garbage. They gave it to her because they robbed her at a different time.

  • @duncancurtis1758
    @duncancurtis1758 2 роки тому +66

    The Perfect Storm nailed it good, making us assume there were survivors but sadly none from the Andrea Gail. That got me.

    • @diceguyg3799
      @diceguyg3799 2 роки тому +3

      How in hell did it leave you thinking anyone survived?? Who? The Mark Wahlberg character?? He was hundreds of miles out in a raging sea alone....while they didn't show his death only an idiot would assume he was able to survive.

    • @fromthehaven94
      @fromthehaven94 2 роки тому +6

      @@diceguyg3799 I believe the captain of another boat included Wahlberg's character among those who perished in her eulogy. And the movie ends with the Andrea Gail being memorialized.

    • @willh3972
      @willh3972 2 роки тому +7

      Where did the movie show survivors from the Gail? The only guy out of the boat in the film was in the storming ocean with no life jacket. Death sentence

    • @TallCFarms
      @TallCFarms 2 роки тому +4

      @@fromthehaven94 I've never watched that movie again, but just remember that Clooney was in it. Was M.Walberg in it too??
      (I effing hate movies with depressing endings like that one)

  • @kennethferrari5232
    @kennethferrari5232 2 роки тому +94

    I have 3 that should have been honorable mentions. Ankh-es-en-amon from the Mummy movies was a real life person. What the movies do not tell is the fact that she was really cursed as she was the wife of King Tut and that both he and their child died really young. Second the movie Glory left out an important detail. 2 of the soldiers with Mass 54th were the sons of Fredrick Douglas. While they survived the battle, it took both men many years to finally come to terms with it. Finally Dottie Schroder, who the fiction Dottie Hensen in the movie A League of Their Own was based one was never married.

    • @SexyButCurious
      @SexyButCurious 2 роки тому +6

      Damn didn't know about Glory. Knew the Mummy and A League of their own stories.

    • @aishalee5924
      @aishalee5924 2 роки тому +11

      Dottie Hinson is based off career of Dottie Kamenshek and the position and appearance of Dottie Green. Plus Dottie K’s spouse was a lady named Margaret.

    • @kennethferrari5232
      @kennethferrari5232 2 роки тому +10

      @@aishalee5924 Thanks for the update, I forgot about the other 2(I guess Dottie was a common nickname back then). One of my neighbors in the 1990s had played for the Rockford Peaches so that is how I knew about them. i guess Dottie Schroder had stuck in my mind because she was the only player to play all the seasons the league was in place, come to think of it though she never played for the Peaches. It was either the Daisies or Lassies, I forget which. I cannot remember what my neighbor's name was, one of these days I will see if I can look it up.

  • @davelightsaber1621
    @davelightsaber1621 2 роки тому +415

    … “how stella got her groove back” . the man she marries at the end, turned out to be a closeted homosexual in real life, and she discovers this years after the book/movie was released . He only used her to get to America . but, “watchmojo” doesn’t do black films …

    • @DarlingNicky
      @DarlingNicky 2 роки тому +79

      He not only turned out gay, he also sued her for half of her possesions.

    • @willh3972
      @willh3972 2 роки тому +1

      "To get to America" I know someone who got married to a guy so he could get citizenship. Turned out to be abusive trash. Never do it. Friend of the family, known them forever, don't care. Never do it. Make them get it on their own.

    • @PhoenixRising87
      @PhoenixRising87 2 роки тому +30

      @@DarlingNicky Damn. Always ask for a prenup, kids...

    • @Specialkxxx
      @Specialkxxx 2 роки тому +12

      He nearly broke her. So sad

    • @michalbar22
      @michalbar22 2 роки тому +22

      Watch mojo is Tbe kind of fake woke channel that believed the green book deserved the Oscar and wasn’t an insult ! 😂

  • @RowanWarren78
    @RowanWarren78 2 роки тому +48

    The saddest movie I've seen recently was "The Imitation Game". Most of us know what happens to Alan Turing at the end, but the way the movie alludes to it is so emotional, and well done. It's such a fascinating, but tragic story.

  • @Double979tv
    @Double979tv 2 роки тому +153

    What’s brilliant about The Greatest Showman omitting so much is that we see this entertaining spectacle, and feel disappointed when we learn the truth. Much like how someone would feel going to the circus and finding out the truth behind the acts.

    • @stephonmanny7555
      @stephonmanny7555 2 роки тому +10

      Unfortunately a lot of people don’t and think the movie was what actually happen.

    • @eldritchumbra9834
      @eldritchumbra9834 Рік тому +5

      Just like Barnum would have wanted. He'd love that people don't know how vile he really was.

    • @thegiantbeagle
      @thegiantbeagle Рік тому +1

      Even thought The Greatest Showman is my favorite movie I want to see a biographical musical where Barnum is the villain

    • @joelwillems4081
      @joelwillems4081 Рік тому

      I have always known the truth and couldn't stand watching more than a few minutes even though I like many of the actors in it. They "Chicagoed" the story.

  • @AshesAshes44
    @AshesAshes44 2 роки тому +8

    I very much enjoyed the thoughtful, intelligent tone of this video. I'm looking forward to watching more. Keep it up!

  • @josiewoodrose7616
    @josiewoodrose7616 2 роки тому +17

    The Imitation Game's ending was not nearly as horrific as how Alan Turing was actually treated after playing a crucial part in the Allies winning WW2.

  • @ezekieltyrus5064
    @ezekieltyrus5064 2 роки тому +70

    There was a movie from the early 90s based on a true story called Murder in the First with Kevin Bacon and CHristian Slater where Bacon as a prisoner on Alcatraz was there because he stole for to feed his little sister when the real man he was playing was a career criminal doing time for rapes and murdering his rape victims. The prisoner later was transferred to another prison, then made parole and dropped off the face of the Earth. The movie is based on a case where a San Francisco journalist proved people were being tortured by guards on Alcatraz but they totally white washed the prisoner that Bacon's character was based on.

    • @gabrielmunoz987
      @gabrielmunoz987 2 роки тому +6

      well damn i just watched that movie not to long ago and i admit i did not do research on this. Pretty messed up!

    • @luv2bdazzled
      @luv2bdazzled 2 роки тому +5

      Holy crap!!! I forgot about that movie but was really affected by it at the time! Couldn't stop thi king of that poor man....yeesh. 🤨

    • @ezekieltyrus5064
      @ezekieltyrus5064 2 роки тому +2

      According to wikipedia, he was a bank robber and a murderer but I do recall hearing somewhere, the man was a rapist and murderer, too.

    • @ginacleveland7995
      @ginacleveland7995 2 роки тому +7

      Speaking of Alcatraz, the movie Birdman of Alcatraz with Burt Lancaster playing Rober Stroud was completely whitewashed, also😖

    • @conservativepineapples6203
      @conservativepineapples6203 2 роки тому +1

      Great movie though! Kevin Bacon was amazing in it!

  • @johnconnor4040
    @johnconnor4040 2 роки тому +90

    A whole movie w/ the Titanic should be done around top Baker Charles Joffen who was the only survivor to be pulled out of the water. Probably being heavily intoxicated helped him survive, but what should be focused on was him giving his seat on a life boat up and how he threw Chairs into the water for flotation devices.

    • @Oliver-yc5fi
      @Oliver-yc5fi 2 роки тому +12

      He wasn't the only one look into it more and you'll see there were quite a few more.

    • @robirvine6970
      @robirvine6970 2 роки тому +2

      How would being drunk stop you freezing to death?

    • @angelabarnes1675
      @angelabarnes1675 2 роки тому +6

      Hunny no, there was way more ppl that were rescued from the water. But he was the last person to be on the Titanic since he rode on the back. But there were quite a few survivors, please research it hun.

    • @Oliver-yc5fi
      @Oliver-yc5fi 2 роки тому +2

      @@robirvine6970 Numbs you to the pain. I'm guessing it kept him swimming around longer.

    • @Oliver-yc5fi
      @Oliver-yc5fi 2 роки тому +2

      I do agree they should make a movie about the guy, it would be great.

  • @cunderw12
    @cunderw12 2 роки тому +35

    Went missing again 4 years after being returned home. That makes me sad, even if it’s been over 100 years.

  • @blackmagician7645
    @blackmagician7645 2 роки тому +82

    Another thing about Titanic. If they had just followed Violet Jessop's story, they could of played out a trilogy. As Violet Jessop- a.k.a "miss unsinkable" was the only known survivor of not just the Titanic. But two of it's other sister ships as well. Which all met a sinking disaster at different points at time.

    • @tmclaug90
      @tmclaug90 2 роки тому +1

      One of them didn't sink. Was in a nasty collision maybe? But didn't go down. I believe it was the Olympic. It was two crewmembers, one male, one female that were on all three ships during their disaster. Which makes more sense than it being a passenger. Also, Olympic rammed and sank a U-boat during WW1. They fled the scene without stopping to pick up survivors.

    • @tmclaug90
      @tmclaug90 2 роки тому

      Arthur John Priest.

    • @blackmagician7645
      @blackmagician7645 2 роки тому +2

      @@tmclaug90 😲Oh yeah-. It was just decommissioned years later. Good catch. And Authur John Preist had the moniker "Unsinkable Stoker". While Violet Jessop was "Miss Unsinkable". I wonder if they had shipping compatriots to set them up together? If not, that would have certainly been a shame.😅

    • @tmclaug90
      @tmclaug90 2 роки тому +1

      Probably to scared to date one another. Maybe they each blamed the other for their misfortune.

    • @blackmagician7645
      @blackmagician7645 2 роки тому

      @@tmclaug90 Well, I still ship them.😉

  • @SecretWars98
    @SecretWars98 2 роки тому +71

    Definitely did not know the truth to some of these endings, don’t believe many who would know All of them. 👏🎥 ❤️ *Respect* ✊

    • @carmelmhennessy9738
      @carmelmhennessy9738 2 роки тому +1

      Yes. Very interesting video. Thank you watch mojo

    • @tianapitesr8553
      @tianapitesr8553 2 роки тому

      Would you want to play them out completely?

    • @SecretWars98
      @SecretWars98 2 роки тому +2

      @@tianapitesr8553 Haha! Umm..No? That is after all what makes a movie a movie? 🎥 Personally, of course, would much rather see a happy ending to tragic events in a “Movie” otherwise I’d just watch a “Documentary” on the story itself..anything else? 💭

    • @tianapitesr8553
      @tianapitesr8553 2 роки тому +1

      How about BIG EYES?

    • @SecretWars98
      @SecretWars98 2 роки тому

      Reminds of: 💭
      “In my nite life I don't think twice
      Everything is so nice
      Loving in the luxury of the nite life
      Everything is alright
      Blinding by the head lites
      Driving past midnite
      Looks like a still life
      Give me something cheap
      Not enough sleep
      Which one do I keep?
      You are my nite life
      Nite life, brite lite, hold tight
      Turn right, turn left
      Like that bright light
      In my nite life I don't think twice
      Everything is so nice
      Loving in the luxury of the nite life
      Everything is alright
      Blinding by the head lites
      Driving past midnite
      Looks like a still life
      Give me something cheap
      Not enough sleep
      Which one do I keep?
      You are my nite life” - ADULT 🎶
      Love The Original as well of course 🎥❤️💯

  • @sethmizrachi8337
    @sethmizrachi8337 Рік тому +13

    You could add Cocaine Bear to this list. The real story is that after ingesting about 40 kilos of cocaine, the bear died almost instantly and did not rampage.

  • @myopiniondoesntmatterh9073
    @myopiniondoesntmatterh9073 2 роки тому +42

    The Von Trapps also did not sneak out in the middle of the night during a concert nor did they escape through the mountains. They were already an established music group and left by train to perform a concert in Italy, where they were legal citizens because Georg had been born in what is now Croatia. The concert tour took them t the US, where they eventually applied for immigtant status. They also had ten kids, not seven, but who's counting? Georg and Maria had also been married for eleven years at that point. But the version of events as told in the movie/play, but it made for a better story with all those changes.

  • @johnp1277
    @johnp1277 2 роки тому +64

    In The Untouchables...Eliot Ness was fictionalized to have been married with children during the time the movie's narrative took place...in reality, Ness was not married, nor a father...but adding a fictitious family make the stakes of his risk of trying to take down the legendary organized crime boss Al Capone, seem much more fraught with danger

    • @williammatthews693
      @williammatthews693 2 роки тому +14

      His career in law enforcement also took a nose dive and a career in politics ended before it ever really began. Ironically, he became an alcoholic. Still, the man is a legend.

    • @christopherharvey8046
      @christopherharvey8046 2 роки тому +2

      An he never seen or talked to Al Capone

    • @ebriggs3498
      @ebriggs3498 2 роки тому

      Interesting! Didn’t know that.

  • @michelleallred8521
    @michelleallred8521 2 роки тому +45

    Shindlers List was incredible. I cried so hard, harder than I have in a movie. He was a good man who deserved more for his good deed

    • @gr3yh4wk1
      @gr3yh4wk1 Рік тому +8

      A movie I can never watch again. If a movie can do that, I cannot begin to imagine what the real thing was like

  • @KevinAdamFlores
    @KevinAdamFlores 2 роки тому +90

    The Conviction one got to me. I love that movie; I believe Sam Rockwell should’ve won his first Oscar for that performance, and Hilary Swank another. It’s really sad that the real life Kenny accidentally died only after a few months of freedom.

  • @brucenatelee
    @brucenatelee 2 роки тому +66

    Seriously though, Pocahontas should have just been an original movie, story, and character not named Pocahontas for being so inaccurate.

    • @willh3972
      @willh3972 2 роки тому +5

      Hate that movie, burn it with fire.

    • @redacted2275
      @redacted2275 2 роки тому +4

      That's Disney in a nutshell.

    • @pandroidgaxie
      @pandroidgaxie 2 роки тому +1

      idk if you're are old enough to remember it, but disney would not make pocahontas have actual amerind features. Instead they used computers to blend 26 different types of faces from around the world ... and their pocahontas came out looking like a supermodel with no nose.
      apparently they had caught flack because they made Aladdin's Jasmine look a little bit ethnic by having a genuine sized nose.
      Apparently consumers did not want disney princesses to have noses at all, thus pocahontas.

    • @elenarodriguez7809
      @elenarodriguez7809 2 роки тому +1

      What's so ironic about Pocahontas is the fact that many of the creators thought it was going to be a huge hit. And they made it around the same time they were making the Lion King and many working on the Lion King wanted to work on Pocahontas instead.

  • @JanayaTandia
    @JanayaTandia Рік тому +57

    The truth behind Chris McCandless’s (Alexander Supertramp) death in the movie “Into the Wild” was more tragic than what was depicted in the film.

    • @laurenlinden3204
      @laurenlinden3204 Рік тому +1

      It was, but the book is incredible and way more accurate, depicts his life

    • @MASTEROFEVIL
      @MASTEROFEVIL 10 місяців тому

      How did he die in the book?

    • @brad7932
      @brad7932 9 місяців тому +2

      ​@@MASTEROFEVIL
      He was alive, alive, alive, dead.

    • @toddgaak422
      @toddgaak422 7 місяців тому

      McCandless was a victim of his own ignorance and arrogance. I have zero sympathy for that idiot.

  • @davidsavage5630
    @davidsavage5630 2 роки тому +16

    That was literally the point of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood though...to have a cathartic alternative outcome..

  • @paulbellino5330
    @paulbellino5330 2 роки тому +10

    Now Nash may not have made that exact same speech in the film but A beautiful mind did get the fact right that nash made a almost full recovery using mostly his own mind. A miracle if I ever saw one. Interviews in his later proves this. Also you should have added nashes own son would eventually have schizophrenia as well.

  •  2 роки тому +39

    I thought "Judy" would be on this list. For a movie that covers the last months of Judy Garland's life, it cuts to the end before we can watch her demise. Honestly, for better.

  • @COEYRN
    @COEYRN Рік тому +10

    Tarantino you are a hero filming that. My history teacher in grade 5 told my whole class the ranch story, we were ten, it was 1981.
    It haunted me forever. Lets just say watching that Fantasy Tarantino part, was great medicine.

  • @RankSarpac
    @RankSarpac 2 роки тому +33

    Damn, I forget how beautifully shot The Sound of Music is.

  • @clevelandbci9562
    @clevelandbci9562 2 роки тому +17

    Ron Howard also left out John Nash getting arrested for soliciting a male undercover cop🤣🤣🤣

  • @julierobinson3633
    @julierobinson3633 2 роки тому +7

    With 'Once Upon a Time In Hollywood' the changed ending is literally THE WHOLE POINT O F THE FILM! That is why it's 'Once Upon a Time' - the traditional beginning to FAIRY TALES. Tarantino has taken what everyone knows to be a story with a tragic ending and has instead given it the traditional fairy tale happy ending. Hollywood has a dark underbelly and is full of real life tragedies, but it's also 'the Dream Factory' - so what better place to set a fairy story where reality is subverted and instead the baddies get their comeuppance and the princess lives happily ever after...

  • @Erulin68
    @Erulin68 2 роки тому +31

    Fun fact about the house used in The Sound of Music. It was the house Hedy Lamarr, actress and the inventor of spread spectrum broadcastings used in all forms of wireless communications to this very day, and her husband an arms manufactorer till she fled to the U.S. Just the story of her escape alone would make a more compelling movie then The Sound of Music.

    • @beautifulmidnight
      @beautifulmidnight 2 роки тому +1

      I agree, not only just because I fucking hate Sound of Music and would rather watch almost anything else.
      (Also, I’ve seen Blazing Saddles far too many times, because in my head, I heard “That’s *Hedley*!” )

  • @melissateague3936
    @melissateague3936 2 роки тому +20

    At my grandfather's death over a decade ago, he only weighed around 88 pounds, himself, which is a sign of alzheimers disease as patients stop eating towards the end. It's possible that Howard Hughes also secretly suffered from this, too

    • @DeidreL9
      @DeidreL9 11 місяців тому

      Good point. It’s a cruel illness, my mum passed of it as well.

  • @Artimao
    @Artimao 2 роки тому +25

    I remember being frustrated when I learned the truth about Chrissy Brown last years. The movie has such an uplifting message about humanity, but reality makes you feel nauseated

    • @KimS_lynxmynx
      @KimS_lynxmynx 2 роки тому +2

      Christy* Brown. I was typing in some of the names to reference them and got Whitney Houston and Bobby Brown’s daughter from Chrissy Brown. 😁 I saw “My Left Foot” decades ago. So brutal and moving. Where Daniel Day-Lewis showed the exceptional actor he was and came to be.

  • @GamerFromJump
    @GamerFromJump 2 роки тому +19

    It should be noted the psychology profession no longer calls it PTSD. The term has been deprecated in favor of PTSS or simply PTS. They don’t want to imply that the reaction is unnatural.

    • @angelairidescenceartglass6289
      @angelairidescenceartglass6289 2 роки тому +8

      US still uses PTSD as defined in the DSM - V. At least until the DSM-V-TR drops sometime this month (March 2022). May or may not change then, though, not sure since it hasn’t been published yet.

    • @cherylbo888
      @cherylbo888 2 роки тому +5

      That's weird. Because it is a disorder. Why remove that?

    • @angelairidescenceartglass6289
      @angelairidescenceartglass6289 2 роки тому +7

      @@cherylbo888 short answer? To try to reduce stigma associated with mental health issues. Long answer? Try is the operative word and while most people will suffer some stress after a traumatic event so, yeah, it is a “normal” reaction in that sense - clinical diagnosis means that the stress reaction is either of an intensity or duration that it interferes in major life function and is “disordered.” Not that PTSS - Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome is all that different. Syndrome vs Disorder is a matter of semantics. The understanding of PTSD and how it is classified and treated have changed dramatically over the last 40+ years. We now know that it’s far more common and that the types of trauma that can cause it are more varied than once thought. This is a good thing - more understanding, better treatment options, more folks getting help, etc. Lots of folks with what we know as PTSD today would have been diagnosed as having “shell shock” or “hysteria” or be labeled as morally or mentally deficient in the past. All of which are problematic since they have heaping piles of judgements and stigma attached. Some language changes are aimed at trying to overcome that prejudice. Others reflect better understanding. Some do, or at least attempt, both.

    • @valmacclinchy
      @valmacclinchy 2 роки тому +6

      @@angelairidescenceartglass6289 one could also look at it the opposite way, that taking out the "disorder" minimizes it. George Carlin did a routine about how bad things have become "sanitized" over time, by changing words.

    • @cherylbo888
      @cherylbo888 2 роки тому +4

      @@angelairidescenceartglass6289 In my opinion it is understandable but not normal. People literally suffer from it. I have to note there is no "blame" here. Your brain develops PTSD as a way to survive at that moment. But after a while you need to heal and you can't really if you're caught in a loop of suffering. I explain it as an huge alarm that goes off at times when it's not necessary (anymore). Ofcourse we all have different experiences. But I do believe our brains are wired a certain way. Especially when it comes to PTSD. I have had PTSD for a long time and have been PTSD-free for a year now. It has been a huge battle (understatement) but it was worth it. I will never be the same as someone who never experienced it. But I'm not suffering anymore. And that is so important for your quality of life. I wish you guys peace. It's what I've craved for for so long and now I lived it I'm 100% sure it is not something that should be "normal" and not treated. PTSD should always be treated if possible. It is hell on earth.

  • @SlyfyGummy
    @SlyfyGummy 2 роки тому +63

    I didn’t know about the 12 years a slave real ending but…..I thank God for freeing my people through the justice system of a nation divided.

    • @lexkanyima2195
      @lexkanyima2195 2 роки тому

      But it felt so confused

    • @StoryTimeZE
      @StoryTimeZE 2 роки тому +10

      Even more tragic was patsy. She was only about 14-15 at the time of the film and was suffering the worst abuses. She was liberated by Union troops in 1863 I believe, but there is no mention of her after that.

    • @MrDilkington15
      @MrDilkington15 2 роки тому +3

      WAKANDA FOREVER

    • @S1aughtahyou
      @S1aughtahyou 2 роки тому +4

      Lol yet your people act like it happened just yesterday.

    • @MrDilkington15
      @MrDilkington15 2 роки тому +2

      @@S1aughtahyou Exactly. Bet none of them ever heard of the Barbarey Slave Trade Africans taking whites as slaves before theres even happened lmao dont see us crying about it

  • @SensationalBanana
    @SensationalBanana 2 роки тому +49

    Clint Eastwood's take on the story that inspired Changeling really rubs me the wrong way... He cut out details to make the story more palletable, and made a BS ending where Christine Collins had a love interest... No, she died alone, never ever giving up hope about her son and never having a love interest.

    • @lacountess
      @lacountess 2 роки тому +12

      This is similar to how they ended the movie “Miss Potter.” The actual Miss Potter never moved on from the death of her first husband like the movie tried to imply with a new potential love interest. The author herself protested this portrayal as she was still mourning that loss after so many years. It was in fact a really sad story.

    • @SensationalBanana
      @SensationalBanana 2 роки тому +11

      @@lacountess Yeah, exactly! I hate when they do that... It's one thing when it's done like Quentin Tarantino's Inglorious Basterds or OUATIH, but movies being all serious about the "based on a true story" only to then use the Hallmark-brush on the story to make it less visceral and depressing makes me feel cheated.

    • @ryancoulter4797
      @ryancoulter4797 2 роки тому +7

      And the Canadian boy. Years later in 1962, his next door neighbor, a young nurse, went missing. Her body was found 2 weeks later in a shallow grave by a river just blocks away. It could be just a coincidence but it’s a hell of a coincidence.

    • @charlesbuckwheat2347
      @charlesbuckwheat2347 2 роки тому

      *palatable

    • @melindaboulton9070
      @melindaboulton9070 2 роки тому +2

      They actually found her son’s body on the farm. I can’t remember the name of the book, but the author was the nephew of the killer.

  • @lDarkfoxxl
    @lDarkfoxxl 2 роки тому +26

    The movie "Burden" is the story of a guy that sells something and has a realization. They changed so many things from real life that it's hard to recognize who or what the original story was from watching the movie, however this movie was about my grandfather as well as Mike Burden and the Preacher and due to my broken life my parents were split up and my father ended up in jail so he brought us to my grandpa's home so my mother wouldn't get custody.
    I lived with my grandpa around this movies time (1996) and they changed a lot of things to make the story have heroic parts and to keep from having to pay royalties to me grandpa's kids. I don't condone anything he did in his past or support him, he died a hated man and not even his children cried in his last days for his death from what my brother told me. I haven't spoken to my father in years either. My grandpa was a hateful man and was far from a hero but i will say that Mike Burden wasn't a hero and if anyone in that story can be called one, it's the Preacher that bought the item. I didn't want to spoil the movie so I kept things vague

    • @01scottydogg
      @01scottydogg 2 роки тому +7

      Respect to you for coming out and saying what you did and you being family and knowing more than most with inside knowledge i take all you said in. I aint seen the movie but now cause you put this comment up i am going to try get it asap. Hipe you are doing well and getting on with your life without any of said past hindering you and if not still you are great to be able speak about family past, you are your own person who no one could even come close to thinking that they know or understand so just do right by you and your loving close family and friends and stay safe. Respect and love from Scotland

    • @lDarkfoxxl
      @lDarkfoxxl 2 роки тому +12

      @@01scottydogg wow, one of the nicest thought out comments I've ever gotten, I'm doing a lot better. My father will never meet my family or my brother's family due too the past but that doesn't bother me, my wife has asked about meeting him and i just told her she could if she felt the need to but i won't be there so she didn't want to after that. Thank you for your comment

    • @cocomarch8019
      @cocomarch8019 2 роки тому +3

      I have to say the word, shattered. Good for you to live on. Love well, life well lived is precious.

    • @lDarkfoxxl
      @lDarkfoxxl 2 роки тому +1

      @@cocomarch8019 thank you

    • @cocomarch8019
      @cocomarch8019 2 роки тому +1

      @@lDarkfoxxl you are welcome. Thanks for your reply.

  • @carsonyoung9965
    @carsonyoung9965 2 роки тому +35

    Schindler is a great example that greatness and incredible compassion and action comes from unlikely places. There's nothing superheroesque about most people that do such things

  • @eythorh092
    @eythorh092 2 роки тому +17

    dude you do understand that saying the abbreviation "WW2" is 4 more syllables than "world war 2" right?

    • @lindsay9838
      @lindsay9838 2 роки тому +3

      🤣I thought that was so weird when I heard it. Glad I wasn’t alone

  • @nekograce7914
    @nekograce7914 2 роки тому +6

    Remember the Titans was filmed at Berry College where my best friend attended college. It was during that time the movie was filmed so they saw the movie production first hand and saw Washington get into a car, he waved. But the room he’s giving the speech in is the old food hall it’s not used anymore (well wasn’t then) except for rental space like receptions etc. But you could go in back then it wasn’t always locked so I’ve been in it like many others and a friend got married at Berry and the reception was in there. So every time I see this scene and many others, I’m hit with the nostalgia of college. (I was at the University of Georgia and we’d go back and forth to visit each other. And we are still friends to this day)

  • @JenX1975
    @JenX1975 2 роки тому +46

    Thank you Quentin for changing how things happened for Sharon, Jay, Abigail and other victims. I know that made Sharon and her momma smile

    • @TeddyB-hf3ks
      @TeddyB-hf3ks 6 місяців тому

      Nah. They were already dead.

  • @jakerocinante1133
    @jakerocinante1133 2 роки тому +113

    About the number 2, yes I do not mind Tarantino changing the history of the Manson murders

    • @democlips1
      @democlips1 2 роки тому +15

      After all, he did the same with WW II in Inglorious Bastards

    • @delorme9
      @delorme9 2 роки тому +4

      As a big Sharon Tate fan ,I must agree

    • @robbieking4070
      @robbieking4070 2 роки тому +3

      Yeah, after seeing him burn the third reich and blow Hitler’s face into bloody hamburger, I welcomed his exaggerated change in history with OUATIH.

    • @SexyButCurious
      @SexyButCurious 2 роки тому

      Yes I love how he changed the stories of Sharon Tate and company along the Nazis and the slave masters.

    • @karawardlaw4090
      @karawardlaw4090 2 роки тому +1

      I mean, it was well known that the movie was a fictionalized version of the story. So why would anyone mind that it was changed?

  • @cesarvictorino8624
    @cesarvictorino8624 2 роки тому +64

    Top 10 Movie Franchises That Haven’t Lost Their Touch.

  • @kickinwings420
    @kickinwings420 2 роки тому +4

    In regards to a beautiful mind you neglected to mention that Nash had an illegitimate child with a woman he considered to be lower class because she didn’t have as high level an education as his so he refused to accept the child was his. And not to mention Alicia was a 19 year old college freshman when they met while nash was a middle aged college professor. Yea, dating and impregnating his own students. Real stand out guy right there!

  • @pierre-lucbrizard1327
    @pierre-lucbrizard1327 2 роки тому +6

    I always tought the ending to Once upon a time meant the Mansons would come back to finish the job. The way Tate calls Rick on the speakor phone is kind of creepy. Cliff won't be there to defend them.and they even go out their way to mention the dog is out of the equation and they litteraly leave the door open.

  • @robinbaxter3055
    @robinbaxter3055 2 роки тому +29

    Flight (2012) - it claims to be based on true events; the disaster in the film is inspired by a real crash, but while in the film most of the people on-board survive in the real disaster everyone died.

    • @Sephiroth766
      @Sephiroth766 2 роки тому +5

      alaska airlines flight 261, I've seen a documentary about it, and it's an awful heartbreaking crash.

  • @PoppaWillie
    @PoppaWillie Рік тому +1

    Great Video... But "a guy named Bridger"? His name was Jim Bridger who became a legend in his own lifetime. He was the young man that was forgiven for leaving because he was 16 and it was his first time in the mountains. In his later years he was considered one of the greatest of the mountain men and is said to have regretted his action his entire life. It's a pretty good story on it's own, you should consider doing a video on him.

  • @phantom_angel
    @phantom_angel 2 роки тому +3

    Very informative, I love it! Thx so much 💓

  • @2up3rm4n1
    @2up3rm4n1 2 роки тому +5

    There were so many things not shown in Titanic that could have been shown other than the abysmal Jack and Rose, but I guess the two biggest gripes would have to be elderly Rose stating "only one lifeboat came back. Only one" giving no regard to not wanting to return a lifeboat with passengers, so they had to be passed around among five lifeboats, then the empty one returned, and that this had to be done on the ocean in the middle of night. Anyone who could have performed the deed better, have at it.
    But the final woman who left the ship and survived is documented. She is also the only woman who went down with the ship and survived, and she was not some daft little American socialite named Rose Doitt Bukater, she was a 39-year-old English mother who lost her two sons in the sinking, Rhoda Abbott, for some reason, listed in the Titanic log as Rosa Abbott.

    • @willh3972
      @willh3972 2 роки тому +1

      There weren't enough lifeboats to go around in the first place. Manipulative junk like this always grinds my gears, the whole thing was a complete disaster but let's make it look like poor rose was the victim here.

    • @2up3rm4n1
      @2up3rm4n1 2 роки тому +1

      @@willh3972 well, I told people '97 Titanic is a good visual, but that's about it.
      Also worth noting, only five females in first class perished, and none of them was an American socialite teen. All five women are documented as to who they were, but ironically, the acclaimed Upstairs, Downstairs also had a woman lost in first class, and all I could think was, no she didn't.
      The lifeboats were absurdly determined by the bulk of the ship, not individual passengers, which makes no sense.

  • @bil186
    @bil186 2 роки тому +39

    I haven't seen American Sniper in a long time...but they definitely gloss over the implications of the main characters death in that film - when he is killed by a soldier at a firing range who had PTSD..

    • @ovoxo456ovo4
      @ovoxo456ovo4 2 роки тому +1

      True

    • @heisenberg9240
      @heisenberg9240 2 роки тому +4

      A long time? The movie is only 7 years old lol

    • @ovoxo456ovo4
      @ovoxo456ovo4 2 роки тому

      @@heisenberg9240 also true lol

    • @AGCcachanilla
      @AGCcachanilla 2 роки тому +6

      American sniper guy was a lying SOB

    • @SexyButCurious
      @SexyButCurious 2 роки тому +4

      @@heisenberg9240 The person means they haven't watched in awhile. I personally haven't seen it since I saw it in the theater

  • @datsapaddlin
    @datsapaddlin 2 роки тому +100

    Ain’t no such things as a real happy ending. We all are toast at the end of the day but enjoy the happy moments when ya can.

  • @joshuadesautels
    @joshuadesautels 2 роки тому +7

    RIP Sheryl Yoast (died of a heart condition at 34).

  • @marotte05
    @marotte05 2 роки тому +4

    Please watch documentary about Schindler's wife. He was not as noble as you might seem, his wife was. She deeply cared for people. He left her alone in Argentina to go to Germany and claim compensation. Even if he promised to bring her later, he never did. His wife is a hero who unfortunately was never recognized.

  • @cahones01
    @cahones01 2 роки тому +11

    Remember the Titans left out/changed many details. The school integrated years before Boone became the head coach, the town was supportive of the team, Gerry Bertier wasn’t in the car crash until after the season, and they won the championship in a blowout not a come from behind win.

  • @tammylynnbeatricedoyle4500
    @tammylynnbeatricedoyle4500 Рік тому +4

    Once Upon A Time in Hollywood was absolutely amazing 💯

  • @manuelbello5806
    @manuelbello5806 2 роки тому +7

    The PTSD doesn’t come as a surprised for Louis since he was a veteran and was incarcerated

  • @TheCommenterDragon
    @TheCommenterDragon 2 роки тому +37

    The band on the Titanic may have died but at least they didn't die in vain and now they're spending all eternity playing music for the afterlife.

    • @lexkanyima2195
      @lexkanyima2195 2 роки тому

      It was very complex about how they will survive

    • @duncancurtis1758
      @duncancurtis1758 2 роки тому

      Or the rumours that Thomas Andrews was seen in a lifeboat.

  • @Alczervik
    @Alczervik 2 роки тому +8

    It’s a shame that you guys didn’t include Amistad. Joseph Cinque, who fought so bravely for freedom, ended up returning to Africa where he lived a fruitful life and died a (wait for it) a slave trader. Smh. Hypocrisy.

  • @bethking7348
    @bethking7348 2 роки тому +22

    You missed a big one, "Walk the Line". Johnny Cash continued to be unfaithful after marrying June Carter and I believe he still had issues with drugs and alcohol. She did not cure him

    • @HiggsBosonBlues2020
      @HiggsBosonBlues2020 2 роки тому +1

      Damn beth, why you doing this to us good folks? What did we do to ever wrong you that you wronging us like this. Blasphemy! Its in the bible, “she was his lord god and saviour, and it was only when he truly understood that, he submitted himself to her, so that he was saved. And so he was.”

    • @bethking7348
      @bethking7348 2 роки тому +1

      @@HiggsBosonBlues2020 hahahaha!!!!

  • @biffstrong1079
    @biffstrong1079 2 роки тому +5

    Gladiator was a remake of the 1964 movie Fall of the Roman Empire. They cover the same period of time where the last of the good emperors Marcus Aurelius dies and is followed as Emperor by his son the horrible gladiator emperor Commodus. In Gladiator Maximus the former general kills Commodus in the arena and though he dies, Commodus's sister then starts a rule in Rome that involves the senators and is supposed be like the ancient Roman Republic.
    Commodus actually was emperor for 15 years. He killed his sister in the first couple years of his reign. He was killed in his bed/assassinated by a wrestler. The Praetorian than auctioned off the emperorship. A senator Pertinax was the highest bidder but died within the year. The next year was the infamous year of the five emperors where five different men were emperor for a part of the year as they pulled the Empire apart. There was never a return to the republic or the democracy suggested at the end of the movie. The Emperor Septimus Severus fully restored the Empire a year after the death of Commodus.
    The point of the original movie was that this was the last bright moment of the empire under Aurelius. The movie Gladiator gave you some sort of roman democracy fantasy ending

  • @AA-qb7ni
    @AA-qb7ni 2 роки тому +36

    I love how Tarantino honoured Sharon with that ending.

  • @joshpeveto805
    @joshpeveto805 Рік тому +5

    Once Upon a Time in Hollywood shouldn't necessarily be on here. QT regularly changes the endings to his movies like this

    • @JulianaTabares
      @JulianaTabares 7 місяців тому

      I agree. That's exactly what he does. Changes the complete story, and creates a parallel universe. It is not that he did not told the complete story.

  • @mizstories9646
    @mizstories9646 11 місяців тому +1

    People always blame his association with Peter Pan for Peters end. They never mention the PTSD from serving in war, the alcoholism, the emphysema or the fact that his wife and 3 children all had Huntingdon’s Disease. Oh and he was 63 when he died. They always make it sound like he was young. Also, if he hated being the namesake for Peter Pan so much, why did he name his youngest child Peter Jr?
    Its a tragic story either way, but especially in a video about leaving out the real ending, you really shouldn't have left all that out.

  • @aafinish7029
    @aafinish7029 2 роки тому +6

    Michael Myers: The mom’s death in the end and Michael being able to stand back up

  • @97Mizzo
    @97Mizzo 2 роки тому +2

    You left out the ending of Nitram. Absolutely sickening buildup but the abrupt cut was an incredible relief and great act of respect.

  • @porcupineinapettingzoo
    @porcupineinapettingzoo 2 роки тому +4

    Foxcatcher! When happened after the film ends, there's a whole new drama on how a certain character is arrested

  • @scottt5400
    @scottt5400 2 роки тому +2

    The last years of Howard Hughes life shows just how bad it can be, when someone ignores a serious mental condition. Lots of that happening today. In fact, there is one condition in particular today that is actually celebrated, encouraged, and even enforced in some cases by popular culture and a certain political party.

  • @juliedavis9659
    @juliedavis9659 2 роки тому +6

    Ptsd is no joke. Many years ago my husband thought he was back in Iraq. After someone set off fireworks down the street, he grabbed his K Bar and jumped out the window while telling me I was crazy bec i refused to acknowledge the danger. He ended up smashing the glass doors to our building entrance. After about 20min of chasing him/ trying to calm him, and the landlord coming to reassure him he relaxed.

  • @ellie-soriano
    @ellie-soriano 10 місяців тому +1

    watching 12 years a slave for a class was such a heartbreaking experience. i read the book first and had to take breaks to finish it.

  • @mitchc9167
    @mitchc9167 2 роки тому +50

    If you’re planning on a spin off to this based on book/video game/play to film adaptations, you may want to consider Disney’s Hercules. Spoiler alert, but in the myth, Hercules was the son of Zeus, but his mother wasn’t Hera. Hera usually tried to punish any children of Zeus as comeuppance on her husband, who frequently cheated on her. For Hercules, she made him go mad and kill all of his family, except for his nephew. Yeah, Hercules killed Meg. Sounds like fun kids?

    • @YummyBabe94
      @YummyBabe94 2 роки тому +3

      I need more details on this. I’m intrigued.

    • @MyDailyMeltdown
      @MyDailyMeltdown 2 роки тому +5

      @@YummyBabe94 read the actual 12 trials of Hercules

    • @aztecwrrior1997
      @aztecwrrior1997 2 роки тому +1

      Wow that's crazy

    • @robertduna3421
      @robertduna3421 2 роки тому

      Why did hera punish Zeus by hurting his kids if he wasn't the cheating husband?

    • @robertduna3421
      @robertduna3421 2 роки тому

      @@MyDailyMeltdown why was Zeus' children punished for her husband's infidelity?

  • @LevvyJFoxxy
    @LevvyJFoxxy 2 роки тому +1

    10:18 holy shit, sudden memory unlocked! that little snippet of adverts on VHS tapes you had to fast forward through to watch the film - that would ALWAYS be on ANYTHING

  • @stressmuffin
    @stressmuffin 2 роки тому +8

    In Selena, I heard that Selena’s husband Chris didn’t get any royalties from Selena’s albums, merchandise,nothing. That his former in-laws, particularly Selena’s father Abraham would not give any money from Selena’s albums. Chris wrote an autobiography about his and Selena’s relationship. Chris went on to be remarried with children, but that second marriage ended up in divorce.

  • @MelissaRae1975
    @MelissaRae1975 2 роки тому +1

    Outstanding vid thank you