The Sting (1973) Movie REACTION!

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  • Опубліковано 13 лип 2022
  • For Film Friday #37, Madison watches The Sting for the first time.
    #TheSting
    Full Length Reaction: / madisonkthames
    Website: madisonthames.com
    Instagram: @madisonkthames
    Twitter: @madisonkthames
    Facebook: @madisonkthames
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 278

  • @billbabcock1833
    @billbabcock1833 Рік тому +67

    The reaction in the theater when the audience realizes THEY were conned was great. People were clapping, laughing and shouting. Such an incredibly well done movie.

    • @chadbennett7873
      @chadbennett7873 9 місяців тому +5

      I saw this in a theater when it first came out, and you're 100% correct! I felt conned, but loved every single second of it! A true work of art!

    • @IAMCAVE
      @IAMCAVE 2 місяці тому +1

      The chemistry between Newman and Redford is unmatched, their “solo” work is just as great.

  • @glennwisniewski9536
    @glennwisniewski9536 Рік тому +43

    Won 7 Academy Awards: Best Picture, Best Director, Best Screenplay, Best Art Direction, Best Costume Design (the great Edith Head), Best Film Editing and Best Music Adaptation (Marvin Hamlisch, of Scott Joplin compositions). Edith Head is so famous that she was parodied in the animated The Incredibles as Edna Mode, costume designer for the supers, complete with black round glasses and short stature.

    • @CharlesDickens111
      @CharlesDickens111 Рік тому +6

      The screenplay was especially brilliant - one of the best there's ever been.

    • @flnthrn2
      @flnthrn2 Рік тому +3

      $160 million box office in 1973-1974. Would be $900 million today.

  • @MrAitraining
    @MrAitraining Рік тому +32

    You are probably my fav reactor. You don't ramble on or take away from the experience. Chill, authentic and perfect.

  • @jaykaufman9782
    @jaykaufman9782 Рік тому +36

    Your remarks about Robert Redford foot speed was spot on. He was a first-rate baseball player and considered sticking with it and hoping to make the major leagues. Charles Durning described doing the scene where he pursues Redford on foot, and shooting it again and again because Redford would go all-out and just disappear, he was so fast. Durning would try to catch his breath while they set up to film the scene again, and Redford would be unwinded, waiting for Durning -- who'd barely run.

    • @keithmays8076
      @keithmays8076 Рік тому +8

      Yeah. You would almost say he was...a " Natural."

    • @skylinerunner1695
      @skylinerunner1695 Рік тому +1

      The proof is in Redford's economy and form when running, it's streamlined perfection. He relished physical scenes, skiing in Downhill Racer, tumbling through forests and swamps in The Chase, and running his way through Three Days of the Condor, The Way We Were, and, most impressively, The Sting. And to think that it was Charles Durning who spent three years in the infantry. I'm guessing he didn't keep a regime going after being demobbed. When it came to running in films, Redford was the Tom Cruise of his time.

    • @jeffreyjeziorski1480
      @jeffreyjeziorski1480 Рік тому +1

      @@skylinerunner1695 just need a motorcycle and the transformation is complete.

    • @skylinerunner1695
      @skylinerunner1695 Рік тому

      @@jeffreyjeziorski1480 😀

  • @davidcruz8667
    @davidcruz8667 Рік тому +36

    Another great Paul Newman movie is "Cool Hand Luke". The line "what we have here, is a failure to communicate" comes from here.
    And for Robert Redford, "Jeremiah Johnson" is another great classic, shows him becoming a mountain man in America when the fur trade was highly profitable. It's dramatic and gut-wrenching and expansive, at times awe-inspiring. Very good movie.

    • @skylinerunner1695
      @skylinerunner1695 Рік тому +1

      David, so true about Jeremiah Johnson. a true gem and an intimate epic.

    • @PurushaDesa
      @PurushaDesa Рік тому

      Ah. So that's what Guns N' Roses are sampling at the start of Civil War.

    • @davidcruz8667
      @davidcruz8667 Рік тому

      @@PurushaDesa Sampling?
      Sounds like something a teenie-bopper hip-hop group would do.

    • @skylinerunner1695
      @skylinerunner1695 Рік тому +1

      @@zerpblerd5966 Great recommendation! Sometimes a Great Notion was based on the impenetrable novel by Ken (One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest) Kesey. The movie was released in some countries under the title 'Never Give An Inch'. Paul Newman directed as well as starred along with Henry Fonda and Lee Remick. Well worth watching.

    • @barblessable
      @barblessable 8 місяців тому +2

      Somebody Up There Likes Me or Hud are 2 underrated Paul Newman films.

  • @glennwisniewski9536
    @glennwisniewski9536 Рік тому +34

    All the music is ragtime, popular at the turn of the century. The tunes in this movie were written by early 20th century ragtime composer Scott Joplin. The title song is Joplin's "The Entertainer."

    • @Cbcw76
      @Cbcw76 Рік тому +5

      For several years after this film, ragtime and Joplin's music was very hip, very cool. So was the nose touch.

    • @gunkulator1
      @gunkulator1 Рік тому +3

      The movie score was written by Marvin Hamlisch who also performed all the Joplin pieces.

    • @glennwisniewski9536
      @glennwisniewski9536 Рік тому +1

      @@gunkulator1 Hamlisch adapted/orchestrated what were Joplin piano tunes, and won an Oscar. And, yes, Hamlisch is the one playing the piano in "The Entertainer" and the other rags. Also, see Robert Jewell's comment about two Hamlisch-composed tracks that weren't adapted from Joplin.

    • @thomasoa
      @thomasoa Рік тому +1

      @@Cbcw76 It was actually starting to gain popularity before the movie. Joshua Rifkin did a very popular recording of Joplin's rags in 1970. "The Sting," however. upped the popularity even more. But the choice to use Joplin, a turn of the century composer, for a film set in the 1930s, was no doubt in part because of the prior renewed interest in Joplin.

    • @reverbscherzo7850
      @reverbscherzo7850 Рік тому

      @@Cbcw76 …and card tricks

  • @glennwisniewski9536
    @glennwisniewski9536 Рік тому +12

    "Faro" is one of the oldest gambling games played with cards, supposedly named after the picture of a pharaoh on certain French playing cards. A poker "cooler" is a very strong hand that any player will find very hard to fold, but loses to an even better hand.

    • @CheerfulPessimist
      @CheerfulPessimist Рік тому +3

      Actually a cooler is a cold deck. A cold deck is one that's not being used ie isn't in the game. So when he says stack me a cooler he is saying fix a deck that is "cold" and is going to be switched into play. When people talk about coolers in hold 'em what they actually mean it's as if this deck was pre-stacked in order to make me lose my chips. The deck switch performed in the sting is 100% legit and was performed by John Scarne.

  • @johnnehrich9601
    @johnnehrich9601 Рік тому +8

    The on-screen friendship between Paul Newman and Robert Redford in Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid turned out to be so awesome, many people at the time (myself included) saw The Sting as a sort of follow-up encore performance. However, the set-up in The Sting seemed to be hinting at the same type of tragic ending as in the Butch Cassidy. So I think the audience twice as STUNNED at the ending here, that the FBI involvement was part of the con, played on the viewers as much as on the villains.

  • @jamesharper3933
    @jamesharper3933 Рік тому +34

    Great reaction 😊. Luther was played by Robert Earl Jones, James Earl Jones father. He was an actor and professional boxer. Other Robert Redford movies to add to your list are 1975's Three Days of the Condor with Max Von Sydow (The Exorcist) and Faye Dunaway (Network). Also the 1976 film All The Presidents Men with Dustin Hoffman. One of the best political thrillers ever, Presidents Men was nominated for best picture while winning 4 academy awards. Neither film has been reacted to by anyone on UA-cam. I guarantee you will love them both.

    • @ericwalker8636
      @ericwalker8636 Рік тому +3

      Excellent recommendations. I would add "Sneakers" with Redford, Sidney Poitier and Dan Aykroyd.

    • @flatebo1
      @flatebo1 Рік тому +1

      And The Candidate (1972).

    • @i.m.7710
      @i.m.7710 Рік тому

      Network!

    • @skylinerunner1695
      @skylinerunner1695 Рік тому

      @@flatebo1 Yes, yes, yes and YES!

  • @DinoNardelli
    @DinoNardelli Рік тому +25

    Great review! I commend you for watching the older classic films. Speaking of which, another classic Newman film, that not many people have reacted to on UA-cam, is Cool Hand Luke. It is a must-see and in my top 20 movies list. Cheers!

  • @Cbcw76
    @Cbcw76 Рік тому +18

    I like that analysis: "Three best lead actors" but also the 3 sets of supporting characters: Redford had his little group along with 'Loretta Salino', 'Luther Coleman', Charles Durning's city cop and others; Newman had his entire con-artist brotherhood - Harold Gould, Eileen Brennan, Dana Alcar; and Shaw's gunsels, flat-nosed Charles Dierkop, et al. Rewatching this film highlights those supporting actors, more with each viewing, too. It's a great and almost infinitely rewatchable work.

  • @wraithby
    @wraithby Рік тому +11

    Paul Newman in "the Hustler" is a great , dark ,character study film from 1960. Newman at the top of his acting game.

    • @MrTech226
      @MrTech226 Рік тому +2

      Paul returns in the sequel to Hustler: 1986's Color of Money with Tom Cruise. Paul won Best Actor for this movie.

  • @tommix6457
    @tommix6457 Рік тому +5

    Funny fun fact when the movie came out about a couple of weeks later everybody that played piano or had a music recital or anything was playing the theme for the sting. And that went on for months. It was a really popular song back in the day. Good little honky-tonk kind of tune.

    • @thomastimlin1724
      @thomastimlin1724 Рік тому

      I was one of those piano players lol. Everybody kept asking me to "play the Sting." I would correct them and say "You mean the Entertainer." there are still a few toys, computer games, ice cream trucks, and cell phones that still play the Entertainer. Now, no one knows that is it a from the movie or Scott Joplin, they think it is that game theme, etc. What a laugh...

  • @MrLovegrove
    @MrLovegrove Рік тому +2

    This is my favorite movie of all time. I think it's basically perfect. The writing, dialog, music, acting, clothing, scenery, casting....I wouldn't change a thing. It's so damn smart and sharp. I love your reaction, and I'm really glad you enjoyed it. On a side note Madison, you looked absolutely amazing.

  • @flatebo1
    @flatebo1 Рік тому +5

    The theme song is Scott Joplin's The Entertainer, a ragtime tune written in 1902. Ragtime music was long out of fashion by the 1930s when The Sting is set. But it's got that "old time" feel, and that's good enough.
    The 1981 film Ragtime is, unsurprisingly, about a ragtime piano player in 1910's NYC.

  • @ollietsb1704
    @ollietsb1704 Рік тому +1

    And in the audiences, everyone sighed great relief, laughed, applauded - "I got stung, too!"

  • @glennwisniewski9536
    @glennwisniewski9536 Рік тому +7

    Hooker loses at the roulette wheel because the game is fixed, not because of bad odds (note the croupier pushing a button under the table). Hooker knows his croupier friend had to do it - the big boys upstairs weren't about to lose big.

  • @davidwillis691
    @davidwillis691 Рік тому +2

    Madison, go back to 27:32...the look on your face is priceless! (Same look we ALL had in the theater in 1973!)

  • @chefskiss6179
    @chefskiss6179 Рік тому +7

    I always forget about the race announcer reading in the next room; such a great punchline to that scene. Loved this reaction vid with ya :)

  • @wesleyrodgers886
    @wesleyrodgers886 Рік тому +7

    A wonderful script. Great acting. Marvellous movie.

  • @Yldcatz
    @Yldcatz Рік тому +3

    The song The Entertainer charted very high if not #1 on the pop charts after the movie came out.

  • @itt23r
    @itt23r Рік тому +8

    Great movie. Glad you found it and enjoyed it. And now, given your love of westerns I think you'd also enjoy checking out another Redford flick (one of his most memorable) and one of the most iconic ever made: JEREMIAH JOHNSON. It is one of the first big screen depictions of Native Americans not as stereotypes but as real people and IMHO the hands down best western from the early New Hollywood era.

  • @Peter-pj4zj
    @Peter-pj4zj Рік тому

    I love it 🤩. At the end of the movie we realize that the audience that was being conned for the last hour and a half. Bravo 👌!

  • @robertjewell9727
    @robertjewell9727 Рік тому +2

    The music was adapted from the works of Scott Joplin by Marvin Hamlisch with the exception of I think 2 scenes, carousel music and one that Hamlisch composed using the same orchestration and ragtime nuance.

  • @ephennell4ever
    @ephennell4ever Рік тому +7

    Cool to see one of my old fave movies reacted to ... and glad you enjoyed it!
    The theme-music, "The Entertainer", was made popular by the movie; so much so that I actually heard it played on pop-music radio stations! The fact that *that* style of music (Ragtime) was 40 years old didn't matter. In fact, some other movies in the next couple years inserted Ragtime-style material, hoping to capitalize on "The Entertainer". Fine by me, I enjoy a lot of the old-style music!

  • @flatebo1
    @flatebo1 Рік тому +4

    "Your odds aren't good when you're playing a game like that."
    Your odds are even worse when the game is rigged. When Hooker lays the $3k bet, the dealer looks to the pit boss for permission to take the bet. The pit boss gives the dealer a signal, and the dealer hits a concealed button under the table - which is why the camera focuses on his hand. There would be a couple different buttons to rig the game different ways. Hooker bet on red, so the dealer flipped the game so it could only land on black. It's why the dealer looks kind of ashamed after Hooker loses, as well. He knows he cheated Hooker, but when you're running a rigged, illegal casino, that's part of the job.

  • @garyburley1960
    @garyburley1960 Рік тому +9

    there is a feelgood movie with Robert Redford in it called 'The Natural' 1984, it doesn't have Paul Newman in it but it absolutely feels like the Sting and Butch and Sundance, if you want a third fix of happiness the first two movies gave you this is definitely the third, also set during the early part of the 20th century during the depression. cool hand luke is the fourth movie with just Paul Newman in it. all four of these films have the same feel to them

    • @skylinerunner1695
      @skylinerunner1695 Рік тому

      Interesting that the novel is far more downbeat and defeatist in tone. The movie version has very different qualities and is among Redford's few acting jobs in the 80's.

  • @conureron3792
    @conureron3792 Рік тому +4

    More Paul Newman: Cool Hand Luke…and the Verdict. More Robert Redford: The Natural …and Brubaker

    • @rickc661
      @rickc661 Рік тому +1

      Newman And Eliz Taylor - 'cat on hot tin roof'. Taylor & James Dean ' Giant'. no CGI in these.

  • @skylinerunner1695
    @skylinerunner1695 Рік тому +1

    I was looking forward to Madison Thames commenting on the old time illustrations chaptering the movie, as it's nice to hear an artist respond to art. So glad she watched this film with its wonderful pacing and water-tight script.

  • @Kurtiscott
    @Kurtiscott Рік тому +1

    Absolutely fantastic (and satisfying) reaction to this beloved classic. This movie is as tight as a drum. Writing, direction, cinematography, production design, costumes and acting all handled masterfully. And btw, your editing of the film clips was really nicely done. Your restraint made it enjoyable to revisit the movie without a bunch of irritating jump cuts that so many reactors resort to. So, thank you for that and cheers from Northern California.

  • @ironman20740
    @ironman20740 Рік тому +1

    One of my favorite movies of all time

  • @rustynix993
    @rustynix993 Рік тому +5

    YES! This is a great one to watch after Butch and Sundance! :-) I love this movie too!

  • @umbertocalvini7429
    @umbertocalvini7429 Рік тому +3

    George Roy Hill the director was grossly underrated, never received the recognition that he deserved according to Redford!

  • @ericwalker8636
    @ericwalker8636 Рік тому +2

    Without doubt, my favorite movie of all time! Thanks for leaving my favorite line in your edit. "Sit down and shut up. Will ya? Try not to live up to all my expectations." 😆

    • @stevenmotchan2048
      @stevenmotchan2048 Рік тому

      My favorite line was "sorry I'm late I was taking a crap."

  • @vinnynj78
    @vinnynj78 4 місяці тому

    I first caught this film when I was about 11. Took me awhile to catch on but I loved it. Completely blew my mind when I learned Luther was James Earl Jones's dad.

  • @rustincohle2135
    @rustincohle2135 Рік тому +2

    Yea, the misdirection of this film is so well executed. As you pointed out at 24:37 and at 24:45, the characters appear to be conflicted (Hooker appears to feel guilty to us about betraying Gondorff). But no, within the context of the story, their conflicted looks is just them being nervous about whether the big con will work out or not. And also, the misdirection with the Solino character. It's so superbly directed by George Roy Hill, who yes, also directed "Butch Cassidy".

  • @phantombrakeman4983
    @phantombrakeman4983 Рік тому +5

    One of my all-time favorite movies. No need to kill Lonigan, he thinks they are both dead and will never come looking for them. He has to deal with all the money he lost while Hooker and Gandorf can laugh about how they conned him

    • @michaelceraso1977
      @michaelceraso1977 Рік тому

      U summed it perfectly . so mny debbi downers here wth "oh Lonnign or his crew" wil eventully fnd out tht Hooker & Henry G r living. 2 points- he nor his flunkies will be on look out for them, not lke in Good fells where idiots spent 10-20 k on nutty gifts

  • @tomstanziola1982
    @tomstanziola1982 Рік тому

    This poker game sequence is a thing of beauty!!!! 👏👏👏

  • @steelers6titles
    @steelers6titles Рік тому

    "Scott Joplin" (1977) starred Billy Dee Williams in the title role, with Clifton Davis as Louis Chauvin and Art Carney as music publisher John Stark.

  • @writerwade9241
    @writerwade9241 Рік тому

    I'm old and saw this in the theater when I was a kid. It was SO much fun watching your face as you tried to guess. So fun to see your reaction (Since I knew the whole time) as it came to a conclusion. Great reaction!!!

  • @anrun
    @anrun Рік тому +5

    Great reaction, thank you.
    I love The Sting and have rewatched it more times than I can remember. However, the ending does push the suspension of disbelief a bit. They were giving him only to win bets and then decide to go with a second place ("Place") bet at only 4 to 1? And then Kid Twist shows up to deliver that information even though there are only supposed to be a few minutes between him giving the information and the race running. Did he fly there? Lonnegan would have been a fool not to investigate the whole thing afterwards.
    FYI: the actor who played Luther was the father of James Earl Jones.

  • @Paul_Waller
    @Paul_Waller Рік тому +3

    one of me and my dads favorites, music nice

  • @80HD8
    @80HD8 Рік тому

    I'm really enjoying your reactions. I love your enthusiasm for these movies.

  • @ttrdf
    @ttrdf Рік тому

    Me and dad used to watch it all the time, he used to play this music in the car too

  • @PurushaDesa
    @PurushaDesa Рік тому +1

    Robert Shaw in From Russia with Love is incredible. One of the all time great Bond villains. That guy had some range.

    • @8RBrain
      @8RBrain Місяць тому +1

      Shaw's limp was real. A week before filming began, he tore the ligaments in his knee while playing handball. The costumes of the loose-fitting suits popular in the 1930's helped Shaw hide the knee brace he had to wear.

  • @firegod001
    @firegod001 Рік тому

    This is one of my all time fave movies. Keep up the great job.

  • @kennethrussell1158
    @kennethrussell1158 Рік тому

    Wow, I love your channel and reactions. I was a 17 year old high school student when this movie was released in 1974.

  • @HMcQ7891
    @HMcQ7891 Рік тому +2

    👉 _Sneakers_ (1992) - if you liked _The Sting,_ you'll love this classic Robert Redford heist comedy thriller.
    👉 _Slap Shot_ (1977) - the third team-up of Paul Newman & _Butch Cassidy_ / _Sting_ director George Roy Hill. One of the best sports comedies ever made. Recommended.

  • @atty61
    @atty61 8 місяців тому

    Oh the look on your face when they were both shot is a classic. I was 12 when this came out and I had to watch it several times before I understood it. So clever. It remains the best film I ever saw just because it scrambled my brain, and of course Redford and Newman together were superb. Having just discovered your channel I'll now go and watch some of your other reactions as I enjoy the way you go about it. Calm, thoughtful, not asking loads of silly questions like some do. Thanks.

  • @davidpost428
    @davidpost428 Рік тому

    Great reaction to this film classic and its twists and turns and how we root for the underclass Chicago crooks. Being from Chiago, I loved the sets and cityscapes.

  • @chuckcharles3113
    @chuckcharles3113 Рік тому +4

    This film is such an underappreciated and under reacted to masterpiece. To me Shaw steals the film. That poker game on the train is flawless. Check him out in another masterful performance. That came out around the same time as this. Staring alongside Walter Matthau and Jerry Stiller. In the original Taking of the Pelham 1-2-3. Take care stay safe and be well always !

  • @davidmichaelson1092
    @davidmichaelson1092 2 місяці тому

    I had a cousin who was a baseball star (Harry "The Horse" Danning) before WW II. I talked with him on the phone once. He also used the term "You follow" though his version was "Ya Follow me?" I guess it was a thing at the time.

  • @robertzander9723
    @robertzander9723 Рік тому

    That's one of my favourite movies of all-time. Everything is so good with this movie 🎥🍿.

  • @chetcarman3530
    @chetcarman3530 7 місяців тому

    The screen cards were telling us what they were doing at each step -- the last one said, "The Sting." I LOVE that they were telling us WE had been set up & were about to get "Stung!" Lol!! ❤❤❤

  • @dagnabbit6187
    @dagnabbit6187 Рік тому

    Lots of great lines . I like the first line to Snyder when he went to that FBI set up “ Sit down and shut up and try not to live up to my expectations “ Great reaction young lady ! Can you imagine what it was like seeing The Sting for the first time in 73 when you were still a high school teenager ?

  • @davidsandy5917
    @davidsandy5917 Рік тому

    I remember watching this when I was in college. The film was new in those days.

  • @barryodonohoe9806
    @barryodonohoe9806 2 місяці тому

    Very catchy tune the Entertainer. I had it as my ringtone on my cell phone onetime. I was queuing up in crowd to get out of a rail station when I received a call. I could not get to my phone and everyone in the crowd began to whistle along to the tune, I took it off my phone the next day.

  • @maxtew6521
    @maxtew6521 Рік тому

    The guy that played Luther Coleman, the black gentleman who helped pull the con job at the beginning of the film, was an interesting guy. Born in 1910 in Mississippi, he became a successful boxer -- his sparring partner was Joe Louis. He moved north during the Great Migration, and got into acting. He became one of the first prominent black stars of the silver screen. His name was Robert Earl Jones. Also, he had two sons: one named Matthew Earl Jones, and one named James Earl Jones.

  • @tomfrankiewicz4030
    @tomfrankiewicz4030 Рік тому

    I saw The Sting back when I was a kid with my older brothers and my Father

  • @texasray7301
    @texasray7301 Рік тому

    It's hard to believe that it has been 49 years since I first saw this in 73 👍🙂

  • @RDRussell2
    @RDRussell2 Рік тому +1

    Scott Joplin was the composer of all the beautiful ragtime piano music. For this movie, Marvin Hamlisch took Joplin's music and wrote arrangements for ragtime band - which is great! But I'm grateful so much of the piano music was presented as just that: piano music. Joplin and ragtime were almost entirely forgotten by the time this movie came out, but the movie's popularity restored public interest in this style. Many who saw the movie were hearing ragtime for the first time in their lives. In fact, many people think the song from the opening credits is called "The Sting." (The true title is "The Entertainer.") When I started to learn how to play the piano, I had many people request that I play "The Sting." Great name for a movie, but just so everyone knows, Joplin never wrote a piece called "The Sting."

    • @Krommer1000
      @Krommer1000 Рік тому

      Beat me to it. :-)

    • @steelers6titles
      @steelers6titles Рік тому

      The piece dates from 1902; when it became a hit on the pop charts in conjunction with the movie, it was one of the oldest ever.

  • @aweebunny
    @aweebunny Рік тому +2

    Great movie from the '70s. 'Chinatown' starring Jack Nicholson. Crime Noir set in the 40s. It was nominated for and it should've won best picture. It's my all time favorite movie.

    • @clash79
      @clash79 Рік тому

      Yes, this. It’s definitely one of my all time favs as well

  • @mikefoster6018
    @mikefoster6018 Рік тому

    As close to a perfect movie as I've ever seen! Mischevious, heartwarming and with such a strong sense of place.

  • @Serai3
    @Serai3 7 місяців тому +1

    It's impressive how the screenwriters used the same tricks on the audience that the con men used on their marks. For example, the whole Salino plot thread depends on the audience's automatic assumption that Salino is a man. 1) The name ends in an "o", which tends to suggest a male, 2) there are only a couple of lines where Salino is mentioned, and a pronoun is never used, and 3) the mere fact of Salino being an assassin would automatically bring a man to mind, especially back when this film was made. When you really look at the story, it's amazing how many times the film managed to con us, one after another, and yet we kept getting fooled, because _we want to think we know the truth when we see it._ It's a great lesson in how easy it is to be conned.
    That first con, where they took Motolla's $11K, has the rare distinction of being commented on by the _soundtrack._ Watch it again and you'll hear it - he opens the kerchief, sees the paper, the penny drops... and the music _laughs._ It's a perfect use of Joplin's jaunty ragtime, and it set the tone for the whole film. Oh, and you know the theme music precisely because of this movie. Ragtime had pretty much disappeared by the 70's, so Marvin Hamlisch's choice to use it for this film was both inspired and turned out to be popular. The theme song, "The Entertainer", becamse a MASSIVE hit on radio. (Seriously, you couldn't get away from the damn tune for about a year.) It passed into what would now be called a meme, and yes, you've heard it floating around the ether. And that's because of The Sting. :)

  • @roadrunner3100
    @roadrunner3100 День тому

    Great reaction to a great film. Seeing this movie for the first time is a great joy for a film buff. You are correct that this and Butch Cassidy were done by the same director, George Roy Hill. Newman once said Hill was his favorite director to work with. He worked with Hill a third time on the movie Slap Shot, a comedy/sports movie about a fictional hockey team.

  • @davidanderson4876
    @davidanderson4876 Рік тому

    I love watching people react to the last act. They get all dark and worried when the FBI convinces RR to rat on PN. Then the eye-popping shock when they shoot each other - and then the amazement when they realise it's all part of the scam. Then the laughing and relief. I remember the first time I saw it when it came out and it's the same as everyone reacting. Great movie.

  • @innercircle341
    @innercircle341 Рік тому

    I love the smile in the thumbnail. Great reaction

  • @frankofva8803
    @frankofva8803 Рік тому

    I enjoyed your reaction. Great channel.

  • @Isleofskye
    @Isleofskye Рік тому +1

    Great Reaction from S E London:)
    I am not a movie buff but this was superb:)

  • @davidwillis691
    @davidwillis691 Рік тому

    24:50 "he's feeling guilty because he doesn't want to kill him" (fishhook in your mouth and reeling you in! 😁)

  • @otisroseboro5613
    @otisroseboro5613 5 місяців тому

    R.I.P To A Great Actor Paul Newman, Still Miss You Always

  • @ronaldmilner8932
    @ronaldmilner8932 Рік тому

    Great reaction Madison! The scene where Robert Redford runs out of the tavern and on to the train tracks was shot in Chicago! I was a high school freshman and I saw that scene being filmed! It was at 43 and King Drive on Chicago's southside! I saw Robert Redford!

  • @shainewhite2781
    @shainewhite2781 Рік тому

    Winner of 7 Oscars including Best Picture.

  • @jackasswhiskyandpintobeans9344

    13:13 This actor was in one of the "Big Con," episodes of the Rockford Files.

  • @Gort-Marvin0Martian
    @Gort-Marvin0Martian Рік тому

    One of the all-time best.!! So many things in your mind that are going to occur and the mission happens at the end and you've been had along with Lonigan.

  • @Jeff_Lichtman
    @Jeff_Lichtman Рік тому

    The music was all Scott Joplin rags, the main one being The Entertainer. It was anachronistic, because ragtime was all but dead in the 1930s when this story was set. Swing music was popular at the time. It doesn't matter, though, because the Joplin rags set the tone perfectly.

  • @SusanSloate
    @SusanSloate Рік тому

    You've almost cerrtainly heard the music because it became INCREDIBLY famous as a result of being used here. It's "The Entertainer" by Scott Jopin, adapted by Marvin Hamlisch for this film. You had to have heard it as a direct result of this film, because it was almost forgotten before THE STING came out.

  • @kermitcook8498
    @kermitcook8498 Рік тому +1

    Two iconic serious actors in a comedy? I Love it. I think Paul is more comedic in his roles " The secret war of Harry Frigg" and Robert is a better romcom guy "Legal Eagles". But mostly they both did the drama thing. Good job Madison.

  • @thomasgriffiths6758
    @thomasgriffiths6758 Рік тому

    I have a wonderful Scott Joplin CD that I listen to all the time it's fantastic music.

  • @carlchiles1047
    @carlchiles1047 10 днів тому

    When I think of The Sting.. and Lonigan, I think JAWS..because Robert played Lonigan and the captain in Jaws as well as a James Bond villain..

  • @cappaman73
    @cappaman73 Рік тому

    Watching this the first time, the fact that the FBI was part of the con.....just didn't see that coming ! One of my favourite all time movie. Great cast, brilliant writing. Loved your analysis and reaction too.

  • @podunkcitizen2562
    @podunkcitizen2562 9 місяців тому

    Im almost 60. Only a few movies have I seen where the audience applauded at the end. One was the original Rocky where the audience was cheering like it was a real fight and not scripted. Another one was this movie.

  • @stewartlowe4597
    @stewartlowe4597 Рік тому

    A couple of things. When I saw the picture in a Melbourne theatre there was an audible gasp when Newman and Redford were shot and 'you could have heard a pin drop'. Also the limping by Robert Shaw. Just before filming he twisted his ankle playing squash. He apologised to the director and offered to drop out of the film. The director made him walk across the room so he could observe the limp...and said, no, we can use that as part of the character. Shaw was like the villain on Weimar Cinema; powerful but infirmed in some way. (Personally, The Sting along with the 1947 version of Miracle on 34th Street are my two favourite scripts because of their complex plausibility.)

  • @marksterner7532
    @marksterner7532 Рік тому

    Other Redford films you should check out: 1) The Natural , 2) All is Lost , 3) Spy Game , 4) The Horse Whisperer , 5) The Last Castle

  • @craigtalbott731
    @craigtalbott731 Рік тому

    I didn't catch this one in the theatres (tho I'm of the age to have done so) but enjoyed the cable TV showings; a fine companion "follow-up" to BC&TSD. For several yrs my sister was practically nuts over Redford. My late Auntie was a film/TV actress and worked w/ Redford on one of his very first appearances on the tube when starting out on his career.

  • @timreno72
    @timreno72 Рік тому

    I studied this movie in my High School cinema class. Back in the day my High School offered a cinema class (watch movies) that was an alternative to an English credit. I also took cooking (for science credit) and automotive (for math). The good old days.

  • @ricocampos1331
    @ricocampos1331 Рік тому

    What a movie! Good reaction. 👏👏👏🎬

  • @itt23r
    @itt23r Рік тому +3

    it is a fun movie and very well made but the reality of it is that with so many people involved they would have never have been able to pull it off. A good realistic example I think is the Lufthansa heist as depicted in GOOD FELLOWS. Besides that, the biggest flaw was finishing the con by killing off the Redford and Newman characters. That condemned them to having to lay low for the rest of their lives if they wanted to stay alive, because as soon as Lonigan got wind of either still being alive (and it is ridiculous to assume that he wouldn't have) the jig would have been up and a contract would have been put out on both of them.

    • @Hondo0101
      @Hondo0101 Рік тому

      Sting 2. :)

    • @itt23r
      @itt23r Рік тому

      @@Hondo0101 its been 40 years since i saw the sequel and i do not remember a thing about it. Did they deal with the obvious problem of Lonigan almost certainly eventually finding out that they conned him? I don't see how they would have gotten away with staying alive indefinitely unless Lonigan would have somehow died before he found out

    • @Hondo0101
      @Hondo0101 Рік тому

      @@itt23r if memory serves me right they did deal with him.
      He knew they conned him.

  • @texasray7301
    @texasray7301 Рік тому

    The Sting is one of the best movies ever made.

  • @jackmessick2869
    @jackmessick2869 Рік тому

    This movie propelled the theme song, Scott Joplin's "The Entertainer", into the top 10 on the Billboard music rating for a number of weeks in 1973.

  • @littleghostfilms3012
    @littleghostfilms3012 Рік тому

    It's more satisfying for the audience to see Lonegan totally conned at the end believing Hooker and Gondorf to be dead than if they had killed him. Of course that leaves the possibility that he might cross paths with one or both of them down the road in that world of gamblers and con men. Such a perfect cross section of big Hollywood production and brilliant, intriguing plot and characters.

  • @steelers6titles
    @steelers6titles Рік тому +1

    Scott Joplin 1868-1917
    Swipesy Cake Walk Rag
    The Ragtime Dance
    Magnetic Rag
    Pineapple Rag
    Bethena (A Concert Waltz)
    Solace (A Mexican Serenade)
    The Entertainer (movie theme)
    Treemonisha (opera)
    Heliotrope Bouquet (w/Louis Chauvin)
    and
    Maple Leaf Rag

  • @marksterner7532
    @marksterner7532 Рік тому

    Other Newman films you should check out: 1) Cool Hand Luke , 2) The Hustler , 3) Verdict , 4) The Color of Money (reprises role of Eddie Felson - years later - who teaches a cocky young hustler the ropes.

  • @chrispittman8854
    @chrispittman8854 Рік тому

    I was getting ready to go to bed and then... I saw this... DAMN YOU MADISON!!! If a fall asleep at work, it's your fault. LOL!

  • @otisroseboro5613
    @otisroseboro5613 Рік тому

    Rip to a great Actor Paul Newman, we still miss you

  • @Cheepchipsable
    @Cheepchipsable Рік тому +1

    A few other iteresting con movies, Paper Moon, The Grifters.
    Some films worth reacting to - Meet the Feebles, (early Peter Jackson - LotR director), The Elephant man.

  • @artbagley1406
    @artbagley1406 6 місяців тому

    After all this time, I just recalled another "heist" film you might enjoy, if you haven't already tracked it down: "Dirty, Rotten Scoundrels." Stars Steve Martin, Glenne Headly, and the wonderful Michael Caine.

  • @Echo4Bravo
    @Echo4Bravo Рік тому +1

    I wouldn't recommend this to just any girl. Thunderbolt and Lightfoot 1974. Jeff Bridges, and Clint Eastwood. I'm a old former Marine, and I cry at the end.

  • @donvito2682
    @donvito2682 10 місяців тому

    I loved the scene with Robert shaw and Newman playing poker together.
    Robert Shaw as Lonagon became so angry at losing he thought for sure he'd get even and come out on top after cheating.
    The rage on his face when he lost anyway..lol

  • @maxout7306
    @maxout7306 Рік тому

    I think you are right; Newman, Redford and Shaw were well cast here supported by a good screenplay from David S. Ward - a cinematic sting with an audience sting. Thank you for uploading and reacting - liked.