You Sound Drunk To Me
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- Опубліковано 30 лип 2011
- Deadwood is an American Western drama television series created, produced and largely written by David Milch. The series aired on the premium cable
network HBO from March 21, 2004, to August 27, 2006, spanning three 12-episode seasons. The show is set in the 1870s in Deadwood, South Dakota, before and after the area's annexation by the Dakota Territory. The series charts Deadwood's growth from camp to town, incorporating themes ranging from the formation of communities to western capitalism. The show features a large ensemble cast, and many historical figures appear as characters on the show-such as Seth Bullock, Al Swearengen, Wild Bill Hickok, Sol Star, Calamity Jane, Wyatt Earp, E. B. Farnum, Charlie Utter and George Hearst. The plot lines involving these characters include historical truths as well as substantial fictional elements. Milch used actual diaries and newspapers from 1870s Deadwood residents as reference points for characters, events, and the look and feel of the show. Some of the characters are fully fictional, although they may have been based on actual persons. Deadwood received wide critical acclaim, particularly for Milch's writing and Ian McShane's co-lead performance. It also won eight Emmy Awards (in 28 nominations) and one Golden Globe.
There were initial plans to conclude the series with two special TV movies, but the plans have not come to fruition. Several of the stars have since commented that the series is now unlikely to return. HBO had repeatedly asserted that the two movies could still be made, but it noted in July 2008 that the possibility of the two TV movies being made was very slim.
The show was produced by Red Board Productions and Roscoe Productions in association with HBO and Paramount Television (CBS Paramount Television in season 3). - Фільми й анімація
“Or a high estimate of your athleticism” lmfaooooooo 😭
Seth is always the most emotionally unstable when it comes to having normal conversations
😂😂😂😂😂
In a mad world only the mad are sane
"Did you wish me... a happy fuckin' birthday!?"
@@trevscribblesI think I did, and to blow out the candles, or I’ll blow them myself.
Which is totally contradictory to Oliphants real life persona
Bullock gets so maddeningly angry, he tears up. That's cool.
And Al had a surprising soft side to him, also. That’s what made Deadwood so good. The characters were deep and multifaceted - like in real life.
He's tearing up because he wants to shoot him so badly it hurts to restrain himself.
Timothy Oliphant is the best😁
What makes me so maddeningly angry to the point I tear up is such a great show was canceled after only 3 seasons.
@@3PercentNeanderhal
CANCELING.
A SHOW THIS GOOD.
I’M TAKING YOU INTO CUSTODY.
“How’s your fucking ear?”
Oh man, when Seth delivered that line with Swer’gen later on makes this scene even better
Bullock. Swedgin. Heng dai.
Another nice moment where Al knows he can count on Merrick, a connection of harmony in a show with so much chaos ❤
LOL, I love the use of language in this series...makes most sailors blush with innocence. Bullock is a pretty violent man the actor plays the part admirably, even up to his eyes tearing when he gets insanely upset. Worth one's life to look askance at anybody in Deadwood. What a brutish time and place in American history...openly brutish. The pressures of staying alive, dealing with poor health and sanitation and infected teeth and other body parts would push people to their extreme edges. This series is realistically done so kudos to the director and the production staff.
Could watch this scene all day.
I love this series........
Can you blame Bullock here? He spent a lot of time trying to hold back his anger, he tried to settle a fucking dispute between Hostetler and Steve as peacefully as possible, and what did it result in? Hostetler committing suicide. That was it for Seth, he was done playing bullshit games.
Yes, I certainly can. He drew first by threatening to arrest him for being intoxicated.....in a friggin saloon.
@@chewcacachewpipi8879 He drew in response to Hearst's threat. Granted, Bullock was LOOKING for an excuse to draw, but Hearst gave him that when he threatened Bullock.
@@melgibsonafter10beers How did he threaten him?
@@melgibsonafter10beers He literally threatened him first lol. Some peace officer.
@@akneegrow6152 No he didn't. He told him he sounded drunk.
For a "peace" officer, Bullock is so violent. But he had to be back then.
That's all some people understand. Those were rough times in those days.
Exactly, he had to be. A chilled, less emotional guy wouldn't have lasted a week there.
@@jonathanturbide2232 Emotions are not a bad thing they are essential for instinct. A good cop can sense when something feels wrong.
It's what they said about the earps too, different times
Not really.
Imagine Seth Bullock having to deal with say the modern DMV. My God the viral video that would create.
Lol he'd actually be working for the DMV.
Not an easy job being sheriff in Deadwood
Con Stapleton did fine
@@TheCmascagni a shitheel
@@Gmthekiller 😂😂
Outstanding
That’s the best “Fuck...You” of all time.😁👍
Gotta love Bullock!
People just don’t get it. Before Bullock became hardware merchant/Sheriff, he tried his hand at farming Fucks... he failed. That plot is BARREN!
Meaning he hasn’t a fuck left to give?
On the contrary. I see Bullock's field of fucks to be bountiful. A literal orchard of fucks grows around his feet. Try as he might to salt or poison the soil, yet more fucks seem to grow. More fucks than he could eat in several lifetimes weigh heavy on his shoulders.
If he could just stop caring, he might actually be happy.
Funniest comment haha
So you’re saying, he has no fucks to give?
@@colinmacvicar2507 his fucks have runneth dry!
Gotta love Al
John Wayne, Clint Eastwood, Timothy Olyphant. A direct movie lineage.
... or a high estimate of your athleticism
fucking brilliant 😂
I was hoping that old guy would've put up a fight after the way he spoke to Bullock
Same.
He only acts tough when he’s got Captain Turner or an army of Pinkertons with him.
Bullock specifically does not return Al's gaze because he knows he just fucked up.
Any reason the presumably auto generated closed captions don't include the swear words?
imo
Simple...
UA-cam-which allows advertising for snake-oil bullshit, as well as political and social disinformation-doesn't want to upset large corporate advertisers with offensive language.
imo
I understand the ostensible reason that Al thinks it unwise to kill Hearst, but not the exact mechanism of it. As Al says to Bullock early on in S3, "forest is all they'll find here in 100 years [if we kill Hearst now]." Al believes Deadwood will be a memory if that happens; but why, exactly?
Is it simply that the death of such a man in Deadwood would attract federal attention, similar men to Hearst, then Pinkertons and thus ruin the town for the rest?
It always bothered me because it felt like a limitation imposed by history rather than logic. The fact is that the real George Hearst didn't die in Deadwood in the 1870's, and so neither could our fictional version. There are many ways to kill the man if you strike first and make it seem an accident. Early on, Hearst has few friends or associates in town and is not well-loved to put it mildly. Kill him quietly in his sleep w/ Farnum's aid and feed him to Wu's pigs. Or bash him over the head, drag him up to the cliff on Alma's claim where her husband died and push the body off. Mining accident. How many murders and mutilations would Al and Bullock really allow before they said fuck it and killed the bastard? I know, Bullock blew it here and caused Hearst to hire men. So the assassination would have to be prior to that or happen that night. In which case, seize the moment and have him "killed by his cell-mate." Supply a scapegoat and hope for the best. He is not a man you can reason with and, as the movie proved, not one you can rid yourselves of forever by any other means.
They can’t kill him because he didn’t die in Deadwood you simpleton. There’s nothing else to consider.
@@oldcountryman2795 Tbf they weren't exactly true to character for Hearst anyway, they should have just invented a villain imo.
They explain it at the end of this season. Hearst is simply an instrument of his companies shareholders. Kill him and a thousand rise wanting to take his place. It's a metaphor for capitalism and civilization. The issue with Hearst is systemic not individual.
@@AlexG-xl1cc Right! But it didn't have to be Hearst. It could have been Walcott. It could have been Man-Selling-Soap. I can't express why it bugs me that they lambasted a real life figure in the show so black-and-white-evil. There was nothing likeable about him, see how quickly and sharply he turned on Aunt Lou.
Yet as far as I've read there's nothing to support this historically...so why?
Fuck myself? Haha