My all time favorite movie.......not too impressed with your reaction. First......you talk too much during the movie. Nobody wants to hear you sing "Heaven.....this is heaven'. Just watch the movie and react. That is what people want to see. You seem to be the guy that talks during the movie and misses parts of the movie.
Not too impressed with this comment. First... you comment on a reaction video complaining about him talking too much during the movie. One solution I have for you is to just WATCH THE MOVIE. Complaining that a reactor is someone who talks to much during a movie is like complaining that a minister is too preachy.
@@submersivemedia9995 I have watched the movie countless times. The whole point of watching these reaction videos is to watch someone else react to the movie. Duh. And he didn't react to some things due to his talking. So your comment makes zero sense. Not too impressed with your understanding of why people watch others reacting to videos. Let me ask you something......If you wanted someone to watch a video that you loved and while you were showing them they talked the whole time and missed what you wanted them to see......would that not annoy you a bit?
@@diggitydog412 I don't think you understand how crazy you sound. "...If you wanted someone to watch a video that you loved and while you were showing them they talked the whole time and missed what you wanted them to see......would that not annoy you a bit?" You're not *showing him* the movie. He's not your friend. He doesn't owe you anything. This isn't your house, guy. It's a stranger on the Internet. And you're taking time out of your day to inform him that he's not watching the movie the way you would want him to if you were showing it to him? You sound unhinged.
@@diggitydog412 What UA-cam movie reactions are you watching where the reactor just sits quietly watching the movie? That's just a bizarre notion. The entire point is for reactors to share their impressions as they take in the film for the first time. We expect them to talk, yes?
@@diggitydog412 This line is unhinged: "If you wanted someone to watch a video that you loved and while you were showing them they talked the whole time and missed what you wanted them to see..." *You're* not showing him the movie. He's not in *your* house. He's not *your* friend. He doesn't owe *you* anything. Your unearned sense of entitlement is wild.
Great reaction! So to answer why Karen falling was necessary was to illustrate that our dreams change. Moonlight gave up being a ball player when there was a child in need.
That moment scared the hell out of me I’m fragile when it comes to the kiddos lol. It was a hell of a scene to see him cross the line to do his duty as a doctor. What an excellent film. Thank you for watching and hanging out! 🤓
Went to the field during a family reunion in 92. Had a catch on it with my dad. Personal note-the farm in the distance was owned by my dads cousin during filming and still in the family
Terrance Mann isn't a ghost and doesn't become a ghost. He's alive and goes out into the corn to write about what's out there with the idea being that he'll return with the story. Ray asks him for a full report because he'll come back alive. There's zero evidence to suggest he's dead or he died.
If you wish to pursue the lore of the 1919 Black Sox scandal, take a look at the movie "Eight Men Out." Archie "Doc" Graham was supposed to be at the field (a) to help save Karin and (b) to live out his BASEBALL DREAMS. Terrence wrote something very fast and it got circulated even faster to result in all those cars showing up.
Its enigmatic at best. Shoeless Joe & the White Sox began in the corn, Moonlight came from Minnesota and a roadside in 2 different decades, and Terrence was in Boston. What are the rules of the cornfield??????
WP Kinsella used a real writer in the original novel. JD Salinger was the author of Catcher In The Rye among others; by this time he'd become a recluse. Kinsella didn't know Salinger and didn't get his permission. By the time of the movie, I think Salinger let it be known that we would not let himself be portrayed on film. So they invented Terrence Mann. But my theory is that Mann was alive and, if the story had continued, would have come back from the cornfield just as alive. Moonlight Graham was a real ballplayer, although I believe they played with the date of his death for the movie. The townspeople who told stories about him really were townspeople who knew him. Watch those scenes again; it really does make them more real to know that.
It makes sense. The way they were talking in some of the scenes was so powerful and real. It was like speaking in poetry terms. There’s not a lot of films anymore with great dialogue like that
Big thumbs up for sitting on an enclosed porch to watch lightning. *I was annoyed by the talking about nonsense rather than what's happening in the movie, but you won me back by actually knowing who Eva Braun was.
Since you asked, heres a little trivia for you. Matt Damon is in this movie but not as credited character or even a cameo. Before he became known and perhaps before he was even an actor he got cast (with many others who'd applied) to be one of the uncredited fans in the Fenway Park stadium scene. He's not easy to make out though if you decide to try and look for him.
I love the final scene with his dad. My dad died when I was 8. I played baseball from 5yrs old to 17yrs old. My dads health started going down hill when I was 4 and I never got to play catch with him. What I wouldn't do to be able to play catch with him just once.
Im so sorry to hear that and I really wish you would have gotten that chance. Thank you for sharing that, and it really puts it in perspective for the ones that still have that chance how fortunate they are
I saw an interview of Matt Damon. He said that he and Ben Affleck were starting out and were extras in this movie. Also, Terrence Mann was not dead, nor did he die. If he was dead the whole time, the concessionaires would not have been able to hear him ask for a hotdog and a beer. If he were dead, he would not been able to interview all of the people in the town about Doc Graham. The purpose of the whole movie was for people to not only get their dream, but to go back and do what they were meant to do. The players went back to playing ball, Doc Graham got his wish, but went back to being a doctor because it was what he was meant to do. Ray reconciled with his father because that was what he was meant to do. Terrence was asked to see what was in the corn to inspire him to write again because that was what he was meant to do. The movie does have a deeper meaning too. People have dreams but not everyone gets to live them out. Some go on to do other things, but does that mean their lives had no purpose? Also, when you are chasing your dreams, it’s always going to be difficult. People are going to tell you that you are crazy and that you should stop and be more practical. But the ones who make their dreams come true ignore the voices of everyone else around them and follow their heart in spite of all the negativity around them. True fact: Ray Liotta died never having seen this movie. Sad. Same with Burt Lancaster. They said it was his last film and that he died before it came out. So it’s like he’s actually walking into that cornfield and into the afterlife every time I watch it.
Great Reaction! This is one of my all time favorite movies. My grandfather was born in Ohio in 1884 and felt the same way about baseball as Shoeless Joe apparently did. It was a huge part of who he was! He played mostly in the Minor leagues, but he actually divorced his first wife because she gave him such grief over playing baseball on Sundays! I have watched many UA-cam videos reacting to Field Of Dreams, and I think I enjoyed yours the most! And I think you are the first reactor who knew that Terrence Mann was using an old fashion bug sprayer to get rid of Ray in that scene! Anyway, I thoroughly enjoyed this reaction, I subscribed to your channel, and I look forward to seeing more of your reaction videos!
Karen falling was a way to wake up the brother so he wouldn't foreclose and I believe it more to give closure to Moonlight Graham that a dream hadn't passed him by like a stranger in a crowd. That being a doctor was the actual dream. When they were in his office he talked about the wish to hit the ball so longingly so poetically it was obvious that not having been able to have done that still registered with him as great disappointment. Even though he felt being a doctor for only 5 minutes would've been the tragedy. And yet. When he stepped off that field to help Karen it wasn't because life's circumstances forced him into a decision to quit baseball. This time it was because he wanted to be the doctor. It gave the man and the ghost peace.
"Field of Dreams": A Baseball movie that can reduce strong men to tears, then call their father. 13:39 A Karen that I never get tired of hearing: ua-cam.com/video/Tt1MqAZ9XHw/v-deo.html "Is this Heaven? Yes, it's Iowa." I've come across younger UA-cam reactors that do everything but react to the movie; you're doing just fine. Your experiences and the context you provide are fascinating.;) 31:29 What's my impossible wish? I would like to visit my hometown, the sugar plantation community of Aiea in the 1950's, as a high school student or adult. I'd stroll around with a Leica IIIa, a 50mm f/3.5 collapsible Elmar lens, loaded with Kodachrome slide film, to take some pictures of daily life. (And to see what that Pool hall with the huge Monkey Pod tree looked like, inside.;)
You are the only one who also believes Terrance Mann is a ghost from the time Ray met him. The first hint is when Ray takes him home and drops him off. Ray makes a U-turn and there is Terrance right in front of him. Terrance is at least 20 and maybe as much as 30 years older than Ray, yet he is not showing any signs he just ran across three lanes to be in front of Ray. The next time is when Ray is reading the newspaper and discovers Terrance is missing. Terrance has the phone in between his legs as Ray leaves, Terrance picks up the receiver and starts to dial but stops and wonders what he is going to tell his son. Ray and Terrance never talks about Terrance's phone call. So yes I believe he was a ghost the whole time.
You knowwwww I rewatched this the other night and I agree with you 100% There are too many little clues (unless it on purpose) that point to that conclusion. The phone call was the weird one for me. Maybe he is and neither of them know it...
A good sports movie that everyone has slept on and no one has reacted to is the one and only curling comedy Men With Brooms. It's that good old weird Canadian type comedy in the vein of Letterkenny or the Red Green Show.
I’ve seen short clips of this, but never watched the whole thing. I’ve been a lifelong A’s fan, and I’ve raised my son (almost 9yo) as a fan as well. He’s loved baseball since he was a baby, and plays travel ball now. We’ve had the hardest couple weeks dealing with the team leaving oakland. It truly is more than a business to us. It’s a lifetime of memories and time spent together. This was a great movie and reaction 💚💛⚾️
Damn I’m sorry man. I live on the other side of the country but I’m a lifelong raiders fan and it broke my heart that I never got a chance to see them play at the true home…THE Coliseum
Kevin Costner is one of my favorites, in my opinion he has not 1 bad film, Waterworld is considered "bad" but I thought it was entertaining and hes put out such great movies I can say its his worst for sure. This film to me gets me so emotional I cry everytime
My Favorite Kevin Costner Movie besides this is "Silverado." Gaby Hoffman who plays Karen is also Amazing in "Now and Then." And "Sleepless in Seattle.'
@@submersivemedia9995 You're sorta wrong there. The players were dead and came back, Terrance could write, come back and give the book to Ray. He absolutely died the minute he walked into the field and disappeared
@@adampare8088 Sorry, but I'm sorta not. Have you read the book? In the book it's JD Salinger (he threatened to sue the filmmakers so they changed it to a fictional character) and JD Salinger does not go into the corn and die. He goes into the corn to write a book about it and then return. Terrance Mann fills exactly the same role. Saying "He absolutely died" like you have some sort of proof is wild. Again, neither the book nor the movie offer any evidence that he died. If that's the theory you choose to believe, go for it. But the film doesn't offer anything to back it up.
@@adampare8088 Did you watch the movie? Joe says Ray needs to stay, and then Ray says why, and then he realizes his father is there. He has to stay to meet his father. It literally happens right after. He doesn't have to stay because he needs to live. He needs to stay to reconnect with his father. It's literally what the entire movie is about. I don't understand how you can watch the movie and not even grasp what it's about. Again, your version of events makes no sense from a character arc perspective. Ray's problem is that he has an unresolved relationship with his father. He has to stay to fix that. Terrence's problem is that he has lost the will to write anymore. By going out into the corn, Terrence has found something new to write about. This idea that "it's the afterlife so he must be dead" is just nonsense. You can go all the way back to Greek mythology and see Orpheus, Heracles, and Theseus all go into the underworld as living people and return as living people. Your entire argument is based on this concept that "it's heaven, so he must be dead." But no one is saying that in the movie. The only person saying it is you.
Watching reactions to this movie, everyone always wonders, at the end, if Terrance Mann was dead. I'm still not sure myself, but remembering that "his father was getting no response to repeated calls," and they thought he might be dead, makes me believe he had to have passed.
He didn't pass. Nothing in the movie backs this up. He literally tells Ray he's going to write about it. Who's he going to write about it for? Himself? He's going to release a book as a ghost? He's going out into the corn to find out what's out there, then he's going to come back and write about it. This is much more obvious in the book where it's JD Salinger, who is a real living person (at the time) and isn't going out into the corn to die - he's going to use it a material for a book. I get why people are confused, but Joe (who is a ghost) invites Terrance (who is not a ghost) into the corn so that a writer who has lost his will to write can find it again. That's just a basic character arc. He's not going into the corn to die. That doesn't make any sense from a thematic perspective.
@@submersivemedia9995 Good points. Like I said, I've never been sure. But he would be the only person to enter the cornfield that is alive. I like that it would be his purpose for being there, to write about it. Maybe that would help bring more people there and create a continuing income for the farm. I've always just believed his purpose was the monologue he gave that convinced Ray not to sell. 🤔
@@John-ws2zr that monologue helps resolve Ray’s arc (and Mark’s), but not Terrence’s. Terrence’s arc is really clear. He’s become disillusioned with writing and with the effect his writing has on people. Him writing about the field and the afterlife resolves that arc. Him dying doesn’t. Everyone else who went into the corn was dead, yes. But everyone else who went into the field died a long time ago. They came out as ghosts and went in as ghosts. Terrence is a different case because he goes in alive, so we have no information at all as to what will happen to him, because we’ve never seen that happen before. Given that, we need to rely on what the movie gives us and both Terrence’s character arc and what he actually says make it clear he intends to return and write about it once he’s visited.
I don't think they were on screen, but two of the extras during the Fenway scene were Matt Damon and Ben Affleck. Also, you have to consider that Terrance Mann never called his son back and he was a recluse then he disappeared into the corn. It is debatable that his character was dead the whole time.
@@stevenprice8253 If you are talking about Terrence Mann, everyone could see the baseball players too. You know, the ones that had been dead for decades.
@@libertyresearch-iu4fyMy point was that Mark, Annie's brother, could not see the dead ballplayers throughout most of the movie. Logic dictates that if Terrence was dead, Mark would be unable to see him as well.
Why did you watch this then, and making no sense to you, you must be thick with no empathy at all. Shame really 😴 Keep on with the troll lessons, cause you ain't no good at that either 🤣
My all time favorite movie.......not too impressed with your reaction. First......you talk too much during the movie. Nobody wants to hear you sing "Heaven.....this is heaven'. Just watch the movie and react. That is what people want to see. You seem to be the guy that talks during the movie and misses parts of the movie.
Not too impressed with this comment. First... you comment on a reaction video complaining about him talking too much during the movie. One solution I have for you is to just WATCH THE MOVIE. Complaining that a reactor is someone who talks to much during a movie is like complaining that a minister is too preachy.
@@submersivemedia9995 I have watched the movie countless times. The whole point of watching these reaction videos is to watch someone else react to the movie. Duh. And he didn't react to some things due to his talking. So your comment makes zero sense. Not too impressed with your understanding of why people watch others reacting to videos. Let me ask you something......If you wanted someone to watch a video that you loved and while you were showing them they talked the whole time and missed what you wanted them to see......would that not annoy you a bit?
@@diggitydog412 I don't think you understand how crazy you sound.
"...If you wanted someone to watch a video that you loved and while you were showing them they talked the whole time and missed what you wanted them to see......would that not annoy you a bit?"
You're not *showing him* the movie. He's not your friend. He doesn't owe you anything. This isn't your house, guy. It's a stranger on the Internet. And you're taking time out of your day to inform him that he's not watching the movie the way you would want him to if you were showing it to him? You sound unhinged.
@@diggitydog412 What UA-cam movie reactions are you watching where the reactor just sits quietly watching the movie? That's just a bizarre notion. The entire point is for reactors to share their impressions as they take in the film for the first time. We expect them to talk, yes?
@@diggitydog412
This line is unhinged: "If you wanted someone to watch a video that you loved and while you were showing them they talked the whole time and missed what you wanted them to see..."
*You're* not showing him the movie. He's not in *your* house. He's not *your* friend. He doesn't owe *you* anything.
Your unearned sense of entitlement is wild.
Great reaction! So to answer why Karen falling was necessary was to illustrate that our dreams change. Moonlight gave up being a ball player when there was a child in need.
That moment scared the hell out of me I’m fragile when it comes to the kiddos lol. It was a hell of a scene to see him cross the line to do his duty as a doctor. What an excellent film. Thank you for watching and hanging out! 🤓
Went to the field during a family reunion in 92. Had a catch on it with my dad. Personal note-the farm in the distance was owned by my dads cousin during filming and still in the family
Wow that’s amazing. That property was absolutely gorgeous. I am a sucker for the farm houses
Terrance Mann isn't a ghost and doesn't become a ghost. He's alive and goes out into the corn to write about what's out there with the idea being that he'll return with the story. Ray asks him for a full report because he'll come back alive. There's zero evidence to suggest he's dead or he died.
I love how they presented it like that, and very curious as to what he would have seen
If you wish to pursue the lore of the 1919 Black Sox scandal, take a look at the movie "Eight Men Out." Archie "Doc" Graham was supposed to be at the field (a) to help save Karin and (b) to live out his BASEBALL DREAMS. Terrence wrote something very fast and it got circulated even faster to result in all those cars showing up.
Every Actor that walked into the cornfield alone and vanished , Shoeless Joe , Moonlight Graham and Terrence Mann are now no longer with us..
Its enigmatic at best. Shoeless Joe & the White Sox began in the corn, Moonlight came from Minnesota and a roadside in 2 different decades, and Terrence was in Boston. What are the rules of the cornfield??????
There are no rules in the corncobs 🤓
@@gavinsheridan4680I think he meant the actors are all no longer with us.
WP Kinsella used a real writer in the original novel. JD Salinger was the author of Catcher In The Rye among others; by this time he'd become a recluse. Kinsella didn't know Salinger and didn't get his permission. By the time of the movie, I think Salinger let it be known that we would not let himself be portrayed on film. So they invented Terrence Mann. But my theory is that Mann was alive and, if the story had continued, would have come back from the cornfield just as alive.
Moonlight Graham was a real ballplayer, although I believe they played with the date of his death for the movie. The townspeople who told stories about him really were townspeople who knew him. Watch those scenes again; it really does make them more real to know that.
It makes sense. The way they were talking in some of the scenes was so powerful and real. It was like speaking in poetry terms. There’s not a lot of films anymore with great dialogue like that
Big thumbs up for sitting on an enclosed porch to watch lightning. *I was annoyed by the talking about nonsense rather than what's happening in the movie, but you won me back by actually knowing who Eva Braun was.
Any chance of a storm and we are planted on that porch
Since you asked, heres a little trivia for you. Matt Damon is in this movie but not as credited character or even a cameo. Before he became known and perhaps before he was even an actor he got cast (with many others who'd applied) to be one of the uncredited fans in the Fenway Park stadium scene. He's not easy to make out though if you decide to try and look for him.
Damn I'm 54 and I always cry at the end of this movie. Who doesn't want to play catch with your father who has passed away. I know I wish I could.
I love the final scene with his dad. My dad died when I was 8. I played baseball from 5yrs old to 17yrs old. My dads health started going down hill when I was 4 and I never got to play catch with him. What I wouldn't do to be able to play catch with him just once.
Im so sorry to hear that and I really wish you would have gotten that chance. Thank you for sharing that, and it really puts it in perspective for the ones that still have that chance how fortunate they are
Nice Rookie of the Year reference. Loved that movie so much as a kid.
Yes! I was wondering if anybody caught that. I loved how the manager never called him the correct name. Rosenblatter!
I saw an interview of Matt Damon. He said that he and Ben Affleck were starting out and were extras in this movie. Also, Terrence Mann was not dead, nor did he die. If he was dead the whole time, the concessionaires would not have been able to hear him ask for a hotdog and a beer. If he were dead, he would not been able to interview all of the people in the town about Doc Graham. The purpose of the whole movie was for people to not only get their dream, but to go back and do what they were meant to do. The players went back to playing ball, Doc Graham got his wish, but went back to being a doctor because it was what he was meant to do. Ray reconciled with his father because that was what he was meant to do. Terrence was asked to see what was in the corn to inspire him to write again because that was what he was meant to do. The movie does have a deeper meaning too. People have dreams but not everyone gets to live them out. Some go on to do other things, but does that mean their lives had no purpose? Also, when you are chasing your dreams, it’s always going to be difficult. People are going to tell you that you are crazy and that you should stop and be more practical. But the ones who make their dreams come true ignore the voices of everyone else around them and follow their heart in spite of all the negativity around them. True fact: Ray Liotta died never having seen this movie. Sad. Same with Burt Lancaster. They said it was his last film and that he died before it came out. So it’s like he’s actually walking into that cornfield and into the afterlife every time I watch it.
No. Matt and Ben were extras in the crowd at Fenway.
I agree with what you said about the house. I always thought it looked so welcoming.
If you want to know more about the White Sox scandal watch the movie Eight Men Out.
Great Reaction! This is one of my all time favorite movies. My grandfather was born in Ohio in 1884 and felt the same way about baseball as Shoeless Joe apparently did. It was a huge part of who he was! He played mostly in the Minor leagues, but he actually divorced his first wife because she gave him such grief over playing baseball on Sundays! I have watched many UA-cam videos reacting to Field Of Dreams, and I think I enjoyed yours the most! And I think you are the first reactor who knew that Terrence Mann was using an old fashion bug sprayer to get rid of Ray in that scene! Anyway, I thoroughly enjoyed this reaction, I subscribed to your channel, and I look forward to seeing more of your reaction videos!
Thank you so much for your kind words it really means a lot to me!
In case you didn't know, the actor playing Dr. Graham was Burt Lancaster.
Burt
@@carlosmauricioardissone4736 Thanks for the correction.
Eight Men Out is another good sports movie. The true story behind the players being banned from baseball.
A few people mentioned this to me, I’m very interested
Karen falling was a way to wake up the brother so he wouldn't foreclose and I believe it more to give closure to Moonlight Graham that a dream hadn't passed him by like a stranger in a crowd. That being a doctor was the actual dream. When they were in his office he talked about the wish to hit the ball so longingly so poetically it was obvious that not having been able to have done that still registered with him as great disappointment. Even though he felt being a doctor for only 5 minutes would've been the tragedy. And yet.
When he stepped off that field to help Karen it wasn't because life's circumstances forced him into a decision to quit baseball. This time it was because he wanted to be the doctor. It gave the man and the ghost peace.
Thanks for the video. I enjoyed it.
"Field of Dreams": A Baseball movie that can reduce strong men to tears, then call their father.
13:39 A Karen that I never get tired of hearing: ua-cam.com/video/Tt1MqAZ9XHw/v-deo.html
"Is this Heaven? Yes, it's Iowa." I've come across younger UA-cam reactors that do everything but react to the movie; you're doing just fine. Your experiences and the context you provide are fascinating.;) 31:29 What's my impossible wish? I would like to visit my hometown, the sugar plantation community of Aiea in the 1950's, as a high school student or adult. I'd stroll around with a Leica IIIa, a 50mm f/3.5 collapsible Elmar lens, loaded with Kodachrome slide film, to take some pictures of daily life. (And to see what that Pool hall with the huge Monkey Pod tree looked like, inside.;)
well played my friend
You are the only one who also believes Terrance Mann is a ghost from the time Ray met him. The first hint is when Ray takes him home and drops him off. Ray makes a U-turn and there is Terrance right in front of him. Terrance is at least 20 and maybe as much as 30 years older than Ray, yet he is not showing any signs he just ran across three lanes to be in front of Ray. The next time is when Ray is reading the newspaper and discovers Terrance is missing. Terrance has the phone in between his legs as Ray leaves, Terrance picks up the receiver and starts to dial but stops and wonders what he is going to tell his son. Ray and Terrance never talks about Terrance's phone call. So yes I believe he was a ghost the whole time.
You knowwwww I rewatched this the other night and I agree with you 100% There are too many little clues (unless it on purpose) that point to that conclusion. The phone call was the weird one for me. Maybe he is and neither of them know it...
I need to go back and rewatch Eight Men Out. I can't remember why there were eight players who were paid off, when there are nine starters on a team.
A good sports movie that everyone has slept on and no one has reacted to is the one and only curling comedy Men With Brooms. It's that good old weird Canadian type comedy in the vein of Letterkenny or the Red Green Show.
🫨 I love Letterkenny. Definitely going to watch this thank you! What’s what I likes about ya’s
No one realizes what the bug sprayer is. 😊 you got it! Yay!!
"The Great Bambino" was Babe Ruth, not Shoeless Joe Jackson.
They said babe Ruth and shoeless Joe. I said shoeless Joe and the great bambino. Keep up 🤓
They said Babe Ruth in the intro, not the place where you inserted the comment. Slow down. Your reaction was a good one. Hope to see more.
Thank you 🙏🏻
I’ve seen short clips of this, but never watched the whole thing. I’ve been a lifelong A’s fan, and I’ve raised my son (almost 9yo) as a fan as well. He’s loved baseball since he was a baby, and plays travel ball now. We’ve had the hardest couple weeks dealing with the team leaving oakland. It truly is more than a business to us. It’s a lifetime of memories and time spent together. This was a great movie and reaction 💚💛⚾️
Damn I’m sorry man. I live on the other side of the country but I’m a lifelong raiders fan and it broke my heart that I never got a chance to see them play at the true home…THE Coliseum
I look forward to playing catch with my father.
Good luck with that job opportunity!
It went well thank you!
You only get one chance to watch this for the first time. I don’t think you got the full effect by talking through it. Too bad.
Dude. The Great Bambino was Babe Ruth.
They said Babe Ruth and Shoeless Joe. I said Shoeless Joe and Great Bambino. It’ll be ok
Kevin Costner is one of my favorites, in my opinion he has not 1 bad film, Waterworld is considered "bad" but I thought it was entertaining and hes put out such great movies I can say its his worst for sure. This film to me gets me so emotional I cry everytime
I love Waterworld 🤓 “dry land is not a myth!” The part where he introduced his father to his daughter got me.
The War is an undiscovered classic. Costner & Elijah Wood are both great in that.
@gavinsheridan4680 I totally forgot about that one! It's been a long time now a rewatch this weekend
The Pineview dance: ua-cam.com/video/s9r3G6sB0m8/v-deo.html
Author David Brin thought that the finale for "The Postman" (2013) was OK with him.
My Favorite Kevin Costner Movie besides this is "Silverado." Gaby Hoffman who plays Karen is also Amazing in "Now and Then." And "Sleepless in Seattle.'
Once a skater, always a skater. Look at Tony Alva, still shredding at 67.
One of my all time favorite movies! 😊
Ok, every time I watch a reaction where you mention skateboarding, I am going to say you need to watch Lord's of Dogtown.
That sounds like a plan!
The Director left it up to the audience of leather Terrence MannIng was alive or not.
Best movie wife imo.
Another good one on the White Sox scandal is Eight Men Out
My one wish is to spend another day with my Dad.
That hits hard, I’m sorry 🙏🏻
Did u react to A Bronx Tale?
I have not, but I have had quite a few requests for it. Very soon my friend
Terrance Mann was alive. Remember his dad listed him as missing and T.M. did interviews at the bar. He died when he walked into the cornfield
he didn't die. He's coming back to write the story. What's the point of writing it if he's dead?
@@submersivemedia9995 You're sorta wrong there. The players were dead and came back, Terrance could write, come back and give the book to Ray. He absolutely died the minute he walked into the field and disappeared
@@adampare8088 Sorry, but I'm sorta not. Have you read the book? In the book it's JD Salinger (he threatened to sue the filmmakers so they changed it to a fictional character) and JD Salinger does not go into the corn and die. He goes into the corn to write a book about it and then return. Terrance Mann fills exactly the same role. Saying "He absolutely died" like you have some sort of proof is wild. Again, neither the book nor the movie offer any evidence that he died. If that's the theory you choose to believe, go for it. But the film doesn't offer anything to back it up.
@@submersivemedia9995 Then why did Shoeless Joe tell Ray he's not invited and said stay here. It's the afterlife, plain as day.
@@adampare8088 Did you watch the movie? Joe says Ray needs to stay, and then Ray says why, and then he realizes his father is there. He has to stay to meet his father. It literally happens right after. He doesn't have to stay because he needs to live. He needs to stay to reconnect with his father. It's literally what the entire movie is about. I don't understand how you can watch the movie and not even grasp what it's about.
Again, your version of events makes no sense from a character arc perspective. Ray's problem is that he has an unresolved relationship with his father. He has to stay to fix that. Terrence's problem is that he has lost the will to write anymore. By going out into the corn, Terrence has found something new to write about.
This idea that "it's the afterlife so he must be dead" is just nonsense. You can go all the way back to Greek mythology and see Orpheus, Heracles, and Theseus all go into the underworld as living people and return as living people. Your entire argument is based on this concept that "it's heaven, so he must be dead." But no one is saying that in the movie. The only person saying it is you.
U r a statue lol
🤓 I have noticed this myself
Watching reactions to this movie, everyone always wonders, at the end, if Terrance Mann was dead. I'm still not sure myself, but remembering that "his father was getting no response to repeated calls," and they thought he might be dead, makes me believe he had to have passed.
There was the newspaper article that said he was missing as well 🤔
No.
He didn't pass. Nothing in the movie backs this up. He literally tells Ray he's going to write about it. Who's he going to write about it for? Himself? He's going to release a book as a ghost? He's going out into the corn to find out what's out there, then he's going to come back and write about it. This is much more obvious in the book where it's JD Salinger, who is a real living person (at the time) and isn't going out into the corn to die - he's going to use it a material for a book. I get why people are confused, but Joe (who is a ghost) invites Terrance (who is not a ghost) into the corn so that a writer who has lost his will to write can find it again. That's just a basic character arc. He's not going into the corn to die. That doesn't make any sense from a thematic perspective.
@@submersivemedia9995 Good points. Like I said, I've never been sure. But he would be the only person to enter the cornfield that is alive. I like that it would be his purpose for being there, to write about it. Maybe that would help bring more people there and create a continuing income for the farm. I've always just believed his purpose was the monologue he gave that convinced Ray not to sell. 🤔
@@John-ws2zr that monologue helps resolve Ray’s arc (and Mark’s), but not Terrence’s. Terrence’s arc is really clear. He’s become disillusioned with writing and with the effect his writing has on people. Him writing about the field and the afterlife resolves that arc. Him dying doesn’t.
Everyone else who went into the corn was dead, yes. But everyone else who went into the field died a long time ago. They came out as ghosts and went in as ghosts. Terrence is a different case because he goes in alive, so we have no information at all as to what will happen to him, because we’ve never seen that happen before.
Given that, we need to rely on what the movie gives us and both Terrence’s character arc and what he actually says make it clear he intends to return and write about it once he’s visited.
I don't think they were on screen, but two of the extras during the Fenway scene were Matt Damon and Ben Affleck. Also, you have to consider that Terrance Mann never called his son back and he was a recluse then he disappeared into the corn. It is debatable that his character was dead the whole time.
I like open ended storytelling like that. It makes you really dissect the story and see if there’s any hints along the way
I have to disagree. Annie's brother could see Terrence sitting in the bleachers and interacted with him BEFORE his "conversion"
@@stevenprice8253 If you are talking about Terrence Mann, everyone could see the baseball players too. You know, the ones that had been dead for decades.
@@libertyresearch-iu4fyMy point was that Mark, Annie's brother, could not see the dead ballplayers throughout most of the movie. Logic dictates that if Terrence was dead, Mark would be unable to see him as well.
@@stevenprice8253 Terrance was NOT on the field until the end.
You, Sir., are an enigma, situated within a conundrum, wrapped in a paradox. Orphic (adj.), if you will. - I dig it.
🤣 not the first time I’ve been told that
Never cared for this movie. Made no sense to me
🤷🏻♂️
Fail
Why did you watch this then, and making no sense to you, you must be thick with no empathy at all.
Shame really 😴
Keep on with the troll lessons, cause you ain't no good at that either 🤣
You have got to be kidding 😢