Saw this with my dad at a drive in . We also were members of the national muzzleloading rifle association . We dressed , and hunted just like you see here . 62 now that was along time ago .
Wonderful movie. Great script. Great acting. Extraordinary scenery. Had the pleasure of meeting Redford by accident in Salt Lake City many years ago. On a cold winters Sunday morning. Blue sky. He was waiting for his daughter to go to lunch. I actually did not recognise him at first and we just talked. Quiet, well spoken, humble man. How blessed we are to have lived in the generation of Butch & Sundance.... and Jeremiah Johnson. Thanks for the memories.
@@musicfunlax1224 You aren't trying hard enough. I just looked and it's easy to find. If you want to rent, the whole movie is on UA-cam. If you want if free, it's on Vimeo. All I did was search the internet for "Jeremiah Johnson free movie". It's that easy.
@@zachgravell8924 Titled: Jeremiah Johnson. It is an epic story and a must watch. Very good depiction of mountain folk. What we see here is the beginning of a personal vendetta, a lot more happens before. The music and songs have a bardic flavor.
I am 64, in December I'll be 65. I don't know when I first saw this movie, could have been with my father but I don't recall. My father is also long gone, took me the 25th anniversary showing of GONE WITH THE WIND (complete with intermission) in 1964. He took me to see Disney's FANTASIA sometime after that. Distinctly recall he took me to see AMERICAN GRAFFITI in 1973. Can't recall all the numerous drive-in movies we went to. Most of them involved (before the movie started) being pushed on the swings, spun on the merry-go-round in front of the screen. Usually my brother and I fell asleep in the back of the 1964 Dart as my mother and father (probably) smooched through the end of the movie.
@@andyman8630 And not all actors were artists. Not by a long shot. Beautiful women have gotten movie roles on the _casting couch_ all the way back to the silent film era. Same applies to men for that matter. Nothing new at all for actresses that had no discernable talent to become starlets.
50 myself, I saw it with my ole dad to twin aire drive in mid 80's Knoxville Tennessee, they would show double features of some films that were a few years old fridays and saturdays
@@fisherj5087 I think maybe an app called TV Land, but I may be a little off, I have a VHS copy that I wear out, I'll try to digitize it and post it on my little brothers channel, it is Redfords opus in mine own opinion, it is a definite worthy view. I am 56% CHEROKEE. And we watch it on my little 27 inch analog TV with a VHS built in
I can never tire of this Movie, a great classic among every great American achievement. Sydney Pollak and Robert Redford 2 of America's finest Sons ever, and special mention to Mr. Will Greer.
One of the best movies you'll ever see about that time period of American history. It doesn't candy coat anything on any one side. It's just raw and wild and the fact that it is actually based on a real historical figure is a bonus.
Very sad. A man just trying to find solace and peace after a terrible war. No good deed goes unpunished. You can understand Caleb's silence after this happens as the horror consumes Jeremiah. Incredible movie and great performance. Really enjoyed him in Out of Africa, The Sting, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, and The Way We Were. All great movies...
If I may make a suggestion: see _The Natural._ I'm not into baseball movies, but I happened to catch it on TV during the title sequence and for some reason I was hooked. HAD to see to the very end. Oh, and _Three Days of the Condor._ Great suspenseful espionage movie.
@@WarDog793 Thank you! Totally forgot The Natural! Love baseball movies! Watch Kevin Costner in For the Love of the Game. I have never seen Three Days of the Condor.
The moments he spends with his eyes glossed over remembering all time and love he shared with them...then his horse showed up telling him the time to morn can wait, we have revenge to to get and time is short, let's ride
It's amazing how versatile director Sidney Pollack was. The same guy who did Jeremiah Johnson also made Three Days of the Condor (another great one with Redford) as well as the romance of The Way We Were and the broad (no pun intended) comedy of Tootsie. One of my personal favorites was The Yakuza with Robert Mitchum...
For an 11 y/o kid in *FLATLAND* Texas the scenery in this movie just blew me away. Managaed to see the Rockies for the first time 6 years later. Entire month of June camping in back country NM, CO, WY & UT. Simply majestic
@@willbass2869 good for you TEXAS! The Rock Mountains are the marrow of the world! Please come visit Yosemite here in my State...you need to see the Giant Sequoia trees and Kings Canyon right next door.... there's a loop you can drive through the parks.... coming from Texas id drive to the California Coast and bring a mask snorkel and swim fins to Snorkel Laguna Beach! But seriously I wish every single American could see and enjoy Yosemite and her trees!
Those mountain scenes were my backyard growing up Wasatch mountain range. The towering snow covered peak Is named Mt. Timpanogas. Redford owns Sundance ski resort where much of it was filmed. I'm sure you know why it is named Sundance. The Sundance film festival is held in park city Utah, just up the highway a few miles. An old mining town turned tourist trap
It came out in 1972. I was 14. It hit television as a movie in 1975 with one of the network stations in the area where I lived. I watched it with my late father. Redford was around 36 when it was made. That was definitely a different period of time.
I’ve seen this movie probably 10 times and I can’t believe I just noticed that at the Indian burial site he’s basically clean-shaven and when he gets to his home he’s got a week or two beard growth.
I read the book first, stunning novel. I don’t usually like movie adaptations, but this movie nailed the book like none I had read at the time. And it’s still one of the best adaptations I’ve seen of a book. Imho
This movie is a big reason I still travel to the west to hunt in the rockie mountains! Saw it with my dad for the first time in the early 80s. What a great movie!
Happened upon this movie as me and best friend visited 3rd best, apartment in a blizzard just as we were getting off in an Ohio blizzard. Sat there and was stunned. We were roughly speechless for 2 hours whatever. Always going to be one of the favorites alongside Kelly's Heroes and Thunderbolt and Lightfoot.
I wouldn't be surprised if this movie has the least amount of dialogue of any modern film. And it's one of my all-time favorites, because of scenes like this.
@@GCWERK Excellent point! It's been even longer since I've seen that movie (the great Toshiro!). Now I'm curious as to which one actually has less dialogue! 🙂
@@mr.w5132 Another excellent choice, and one that didn't occur to me. I wonder if anyone's ever done an analysis of the transcripts of these films to discover which one has the least dialogue.
For me, this is the best western ever made, tells it like it was. However I am an Englishman & it's likely not for me to judge, only Americans can judge with true accuracy.
Before the day of the Western. They were trappers, fur traders, hunters and scouts. Since you're a Brit, compare it to Watership Down. Courage, loyalty, integrity, and ALWAYS survival... im 54, and that film still teaches me lessons...
You’d be able to judge its accuracy just as well as any American, other than those who actually study this place and time. Being of a country doesn’t give you inherent knowledge of stuff that happened before you were born. I guess you could learn it in school but I would never rely on that to be significant knowledge lol.
A man's man. a truly great actor. Redford's greatest accomplishments.. It must been a difficult task just to make this movie... For all men who seek adventure, risk, the wild country this is the movie for you!! A cinematic masterpiece no doubt!!
@@sam74mumm hardly, this film has a better script, better characters, better music, better acting, better directing, better overall story and most importantly, one cares for Jeremiah, I dont care for DiCaprios character, I dont even remember his name......The revenant is just "art for art's sake", an empty shell of a movie
@@mtklaric Can´t agree at all. The revenant and his personal story of grief and betrayal never gets old for me, other than you I have warmed to his personality and felt his suffering every inch of the way, while Jeremiah is doing what most american movie heroes did in that age. He´s not suffering the same, he mostly stays clean and sober like the other popular heroes from that age. The optics are way better in the revenant, atmosphere and pictures from the nature are absolutely fantastic while Jeremiah is an old looking movie with was well done for the time. Its pictures can´t compete with the revenant or True grit in the slightest. The story does though, its the only point where we can agree.
Man what a great movie, made go buy a hawkens rifle when I was n my 20’s and go in the woods and I was a mountain man in Florida. I actually built a shelter and hunted and lived it. 😊
My All Time favorite movie !!! Always wanted to live in the mountains ...... Sunshine or thunder A man will always wonder Where ...... The fair wind blows .... Where ..........the fair wind blows
Watched this at the Jesup Drive In as a high school senior. It was such a good movie I kept my hands to myself, except for the occasional handful of popcorn. My girlfriend wasn't pleased.
I like how the film accurately portrayed someone that is in shock. Him just sitting there for hours staring and not moving. That really happens to some people after a traumatic event. The horse snapped him out of it.
Epic classic....best mountain man film ever.... can't even think of a second place. Revenent maybe but it was far fetched in places. Best ever bar none
I seen this movie when I was about 11 years old and I liked this movie very much !!! Great acting by the classic Robert Redford !!! This was an absolute awesome movie from start to finish !!! Again , great movie !!!
The older I get, the more I understand this movie. He moved away from the city because of the problems, then he found the same problems exist everywhere people are, then he realized he was no different.
The Chinese and the Japanese would compose death poetry, sometimes as they were breathing their last breath. The Crow singing his death song was always a reminder of how similar refined warrior cultures truly are.
Saw this with my dad at a drive in . We also were members of the national muzzleloading rifle association . We dressed , and hunted just like you see here . 62 now that was along time ago .
Went with my dad opening night. A film I will never forget, I'm 63. My mom wasn't pleased at the time but my dad paid no mind and took me anyway.
Just took my 16yo son to the NMLRA shoot in Friendship this past weekend, had an amazing time, already planning of going back next year.
Wonderful movie. Great script. Great acting. Extraordinary scenery. Had the pleasure of meeting Redford by accident in Salt Lake City many years ago. On a cold winters Sunday morning. Blue sky. He was waiting for his daughter to go to lunch. I actually did not recognise him at first and we just talked. Quiet, well spoken, humble man. How blessed we are to have lived in the generation of Butch & Sundance.... and Jeremiah Johnson. Thanks for the memories.
One of my favorite Redford movies. No matter when I run across it, I will watch it, it's that good.
like this clip:)
me2
Will Geer also helped to make the film. My favorite shot of him is coming down in the snow on horse back.
Agreed. It's a great movie. One of Redford's best. Very realistic and based on a true character.
3 Days of the Condor 1 of my favorite Redford movies.
Truly a classic. It says so much about 1972, as it does about 1872.
1830s during war with Mexico
One of the best movies ever made.
Absolutely 👍
A legend a true actor/artist
He always had that terrific hair.
Agreed.
When a man is overcome with grief and rage, he can become an unstoppable force
Someone with absolutely nothing to lose in the most dangerous enemy
Dont you mean when an actor is overcome with greif and rage and the actors pretending to be Crow are good stuntmen he becomes an unstoppable force.
@@ishitunot5152Can’t get one over on you.
Cept liver eatin johnson was even more badass
Taking a nap while allowing an Indian to live is NOT a good idea.
I reckon this is one of Redfords most brilliant performances he deserved an Oscar for his performance he played his role superbly
This was done in the early1970s. Times were different then. This is one Of Robert Redford better films.
Human nature never changes, people just become more domesticated
"Times were different then"
Meaning?
@@NGCS-ej4lz No wellfare...
He portrayed a Man, then became a sissy boi in real life.
@@peterkonitzer4410 Spoken like someone who's never actually had to experience poverty or welfare.
The dismount with a rifle in each hand is completely bad ass.
I agree! there is no grace in dismount; just business!
Yea my boy just walks up with two rifles and goes to work lol. Boss
The Crow were noted for their complete unawareness of the world around them.
That movie would never be made now! It's one of my all time favorite movies.
From Spain: Were are all that films now my god. I watched it most than 50 times.
And finding that movie to download somewhere is quite impossible , why?
@@musicfunlax1224 You aren't trying hard enough. I just looked and it's easy to find. If you want to rent, the whole movie is on UA-cam.
If you want if free, it's on Vimeo. All I did was search the internet for "Jeremiah Johnson free movie". It's that easy.
@@musicfunlax1224 Because it shows, that the White man has the right to defend himself and his nearones.... And that IS "rasist" in 2024😮😮😮
One of my favorites..
One of Redford's best performances.
agree
What's the movie called?
@@zachgravell8924 Titled: Jeremiah Johnson. It is an epic story and a must watch. Very good depiction of mountain folk. What we see here is the beginning of a personal vendetta, a lot more happens before. The music and songs have a bardic flavor.
IMHO, his best performance out of many
Id say it is his very best
I'm 64 now. My Dad took me to this movie. He's gone now. It was a special movie then and even more so now.
I took my mother to see Dances with Wolves at the theater when she was in her '70's. Now that she is gone, it is one of my favorite memories.
Why he gone? Róbert Redford?😊
@@luxbeci2 He means his father is gone, not Robert Redford
I am 64, in December I'll be 65. I don't know when I first saw this movie, could have been with my father but I don't recall.
My father is also long gone, took me the 25th anniversary showing of GONE WITH THE WIND (complete with intermission) in 1964. He took me to see Disney's FANTASIA sometime after that. Distinctly recall he took me to see AMERICAN GRAFFITI in 1973.
Can't recall all the numerous drive-in movies we went to. Most of them involved (before the movie started) being pushed on the swings, spun on the merry-go-round in front of the screen.
Usually my brother and I fell asleep in the back of the 1964 Dart as my mother and father (probably) smooched through the end of the movie.
This is my favorite Redford movie. Can't believe how old it is now. Just a baby when it came out over 50 years ago.
When actors were artists, not celebrities.
They've always been celebrities
What do you mean? Cocaine fuelled actors nowadays, know about politics and everything on how to run your life.
@@donarthiazi2443
but not always artists
Amen.
@@andyman8630
And not all actors were artists. Not by a long shot. Beautiful women have gotten movie roles on the _casting couch_ all the way back to the silent film era. Same applies to men for that matter. Nothing new at all for actresses that had no discernable talent to become starlets.
60-something here. Awesome movie! It never gets old.
62 here saw it at a drive in with my dad
50 myself, I saw it with my ole dad to twin aire drive in mid 80's Knoxville Tennessee, they would show double features of some films that were a few years old fridays and saturdays
Love movies from the 70s but never seen this one. Where to watch?
@@fisherj5087 I think maybe an app called TV Land, but I may be a little off, I have a VHS copy that I wear out, I'll try to digitize it and post it on my little brothers channel, it is Redfords opus in mine own opinion, it is a definite worthy view. I am 56% CHEROKEE. And we watch it on my little 27 inch analog TV with a VHS built in
@@whatsreal7506 ... My now-16-year-old loved watching this film when she was 3 4, 5 6. She'd ask for 'Johnson'.
Watched this movie in 73, at the theater .. Age 8 - Still blown away, to this day
Ditto born 1965
First PG movie I saw. I was 9 years old.
I can never tire of this Movie, a great classic among every great American achievement. Sydney Pollak and Robert Redford 2 of America's finest Sons ever, and special mention to Mr. Will Greer.
'night Grandpa
He was a card-carrying communist. Literally. I always root for the bear chasing him.
One of the best movies you'll ever see about that time period of American history. It doesn't candy coat anything on any one side. It's just raw and wild and the fact that it is actually based on a real historical figure is a bonus.
I like the way Mr Redford moves. So natural, so fluid.
The whole Movie is a Masterpiece.
A devastating scene, everyone he loved butchered. Revenge was all he had left. What a movie.
Very sad. A man just trying to find solace and peace after a terrible war. No good deed goes unpunished. You can understand Caleb's silence after this happens as the horror consumes Jeremiah. Incredible movie and great performance. Really enjoyed him in Out of Africa, The Sting, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, and The Way We Were. All great movies...
If I may make a suggestion: see _The Natural._ I'm not into baseball movies, but I happened to catch it on TV during the title sequence and for some reason I was hooked. HAD to see to the very end. Oh, and _Three Days of the Condor._ Great suspenseful espionage movie.
@@WarDog793 Thank you! Totally forgot The Natural! Love baseball movies! Watch Kevin Costner in For the Love of the Game. I have never seen Three Days of the Condor.
Well, he did find solace in eating their livers.
Indubidubly
Brubaker was good, too, imo.
such a great movie - such a great ending, as well
I was never a fan of Robert Redford, but I absolutely love this movie and his performance in it , way better than anything else has ever been in.
The moments he spends with his eyes glossed over remembering all time and love he shared with them...then his horse showed up telling him the time to morn can wait, we have revenge to to get and time is short, let's ride
EXACTLY!!!!!! THAT'S EXACTLY WHAT I TOOK FROM THE HORSE 🐴 AS WELL. He's saying -' Time for some payback '.
Amen
mourn
He was in shock from the traumatic event. Sitting, staring and not moving. The horse snapped him out of it.
I agree 💯. Horse was like, what are we waiting for?
It's amazing how versatile director Sidney Pollack was. The same guy who did Jeremiah Johnson also made Three Days of the Condor (another great one with Redford) as well as the romance of The Way We Were and the broad (no pun intended) comedy of Tootsie. One of my personal favorites was The Yakuza with Robert Mitchum...
A Timeless Classic. Redford and Pollak at it's best.
He loved her and he loved the boy. He loved the life he carved out for them all. He is shattered like all of us would be!
One of the best movies ever!
A movie with Robert Redford and Will Geer and the fact it’s based off a true story makes it even better.
Redfords acting is superb not just physical but silent acting with his facial expressions and body language
Not a massive fan of Redford but this film was excellent from start to finish.
Three Days of the Condor is pretty good.
@mikecimeria
So is _Butch & Sundance_
@@donarthiazi2443 no, I personally wasn't too keen on that, I'm very pernickety when it comes to films 📼
@@martinlewis2969
I know what you mean. I'm like that about grammar and spelling.
That would be _"persnickety"._
@@donarthiazi2443 touché
Take away what makes a man at peace and he will make sure you never have peace again.
One fantastic movie. I've watched it at least a half dozen times and I'll probably watch it again, and again, and again...
For an 11 y/o kid in *FLATLAND* Texas the scenery in this movie just blew me away.
Managaed to see the Rockies for the first time 6 years later. Entire month of June camping in back country NM, CO, WY & UT.
Simply majestic
@@willbass2869 good for you TEXAS!
The Rock Mountains are the marrow of the world! Please come visit Yosemite here in my State...you need to see the Giant Sequoia trees and Kings Canyon right next door.... there's a loop you can drive through the parks.... coming from Texas id drive to the California Coast and bring a mask snorkel and swim fins to Snorkel Laguna Beach!
But seriously I wish every single American could see and enjoy Yosemite and her trees!
Those mountain scenes were my backyard growing up
Wasatch mountain range. The towering snow covered peak Is named Mt. Timpanogas. Redford owns Sundance ski resort where much of it was filmed. I'm sure you know why it is named Sundance. The Sundance film festival is held in park city Utah, just up the highway a few miles. An old mining town turned tourist trap
@@Adrian-gn5bw Did you fish the rivers? If so how was the fishing?
Or was it " Fished out since 25?" LoL...
Seriously though....
It came out in 1972. I was 14. It hit television as a movie in 1975 with one of the network stations in the area where I lived. I watched it with my late father. Redford was around 36 when it was made. That was definitely a different period of time.
I hope to God noone even attempts to remake this Redford classic.
Unfortunately they probably will make a remake, a woke version where R.Redfords part will be played by a disabled, black, gender fluid, Lesbian.
@@Chris66able well,your list doesn't exclude anyone so,considering the state of Hollywood today,your probably right.
@@darrylwiggins4799 I tried not to, but I had had a few beers 😉 I've always been very fair, I treat everyone with equal contempt.
@@Chris66able I respect your honesty and believe you and I should share a fifth of Johnnie Walker black and a case of beer.my treat.
The power of that horse, running across the wintry meadow ...
I want to see full movie again please. Put it on again.
I’ve seen this movie probably 10 times and I can’t believe I just noticed that at the Indian burial site he’s basically clean-shaven and when he gets to his home he’s got a week or two beard growth.
Means he sat there for days greiving
I read the book first, stunning novel. I don’t usually like movie adaptations, but this movie nailed the book like none I had read at the time. And it’s still one of the best adaptations I’ve seen of a book. Imho
La vi cuando tenía 14 años,hoy con 65 la disfruto como la primera vez......
I read the book in the seventies when I was a kid. The book is awesome
I used to have this movie on VHS and I miss having it. This was one of my most favorite movies of all time.
I feel you, same story. My pops showed my this and we would trade lines from it every chance we got. Excellent film.
It is my favorite also
I still have it on DVD.
My favourite was butch n sun dance but I know how you feel
One of the GREATEST movies made!
Great movie, we have it on DVD. Never get tired of it. Watch it in the summer to cool off. Love Redford.
This movie and Sometimes A Great Notion are my faves from the 70’s
I never get tired of seeing this flick. Everyone is just terrific. Peace......is all he wanted. peace....
I love the ending of this movie, I could watch it everyday.
All I could think about watching this , was how beautiful and majestic the Rockies are. Breathtaking landscape and scenery .
Great movie!
Redford's best work by far.
They say he’s still out there JJ ❤
Epic movie, saw it as a kid, finally got it on dvd. Long movie, but not long enough for me.
I bought this movie for both my son's for Christmas present. They could watch it and love it like I do.
This movie is a big reason I still travel to the west to hunt in the rockie mountains! Saw it with my dad for the first time in the early 80s. What a great movie!
This is the mindset that we need to have today with all the district attorneys turning blind-eye to crime we need to have the fortitude that he has…
Happened upon this movie as me and best friend visited 3rd best, apartment in a blizzard just as we were getting off in an Ohio blizzard. Sat there and was stunned. We were roughly speechless for 2 hours whatever. Always going to be one of the favorites alongside Kelly's Heroes and Thunderbolt and Lightfoot.
Tripping on blotter acid about '79 or '80.
I wouldn't be surprised if this movie has the least amount of dialogue of any modern film. And it's one of my all-time favorites, because of scenes like this.
Lee Marvin did Hell in the Pacific. Way less dialog.
@@GCWERK Excellent point! It's been even longer since I've seen that movie (the great Toshiro!). Now I'm curious as to which one actually has less dialogue! 🙂
Castaway?
@@mr.w5132 Another excellent choice, and one that didn't occur to me. I wonder if anyone's ever done an analysis of the transcripts of these films to discover which one has the least dialogue.
Even the director basically said this was a silent movie.
For me, this is the best western ever made, tells it like it was. However I am an Englishman & it's likely not for me to judge, only Americans can judge with true accuracy.
Before the day of the Western. They were trappers, fur traders, hunters and scouts. Since you're a Brit, compare it to Watership Down. Courage, loyalty, integrity, and ALWAYS survival... im 54, and that film still teaches me lessons...
You’d be able to judge its accuracy just as well as any American, other than those who actually study this place and time. Being of a country doesn’t give you inherent knowledge of stuff that happened before you were born.
I guess you could learn it in school but I would never rely on that to be significant knowledge lol.
This movie and The Searchers. Beauty but such a difficult life. No sugar coating.
In my 60's love this movie , work with a young guy in his 20's say it's his favourite movie
A man's man. a truly great actor. Redford's greatest accomplishments.. It must been a difficult task just to make this movie... For all men who seek adventure, risk, the wild country this is the movie for you!! A cinematic masterpiece no doubt!!
I've never seen this film, now I want to watch it.
You will not be disappointed .
It comes on grit TV regularly!!!
My #2 movie of all time…. I’m 73….Josie Wales #1
Watched this gem one wknd all alone when I was little, was totally engrossed.
Classic....one of the best films of this genre 👍😎
It seems like "The revenant" also got inspired by this all-time favourite.
Mainly from the movie 'Man In The Wilderness.'
only this movies is 20x times better than The Revenant
@@mtklaric Matter of taste.
@@sam74mumm hardly, this film has a better script, better characters, better music, better acting, better directing, better overall story and most importantly, one cares for Jeremiah, I dont care for DiCaprios character, I dont even remember his name......The revenant is just "art for art's sake", an empty shell of a movie
@@mtklaric Can´t agree at all. The revenant and his personal story of grief and betrayal never gets old for me, other than you I have warmed to his personality and felt his suffering every inch of the way, while Jeremiah is doing what most american movie heroes did in that age. He´s not suffering the same, he mostly stays clean and sober like the other popular heroes from that age. The optics are way better in the revenant, atmosphere and pictures from the nature are absolutely fantastic while Jeremiah is an old looking movie with was well done for the time. Its pictures can´t compete with the revenant or True grit in the slightest. The story does though, its the only point where we can agree.
Man what a great movie, made go buy a hawkens rifle when I was n my 20’s and go in the woods and I was a mountain man in Florida. I actually built a shelter and hunted and lived it. 😊
My All Time favorite movie !!! Always wanted to live in the mountains ......
Sunshine or thunder
A man will always wonder
Where ...... The fair wind blows ....
Where ..........the fair wind blows
This movie is my favorite, by Robert Redford’s! May God bless everyone ✝️🇺🇸!
A true classic, I must have seen this movie a couple hundred times in my life.
I can’t tell you how many times I’ve watched this movie!
That music always comes back to me in sad times
Great. Greetings from Germany. Seen the fil ages ago....
Alles gute from Canada to you .👍😀🍻
Jawohl!!
love this movie
Watched this at the Jesup Drive In as a high school senior. It was such a good movie I kept my hands to myself, except for the occasional handful of popcorn. My girlfriend wasn't pleased.
Certainly one of the best films .redford brilliant
When I come across this on TV it's an instant remote drop and I'm watching it until it's over!!
classic, my favorite Redford movie, he played that character so convincingly
I like how the film accurately portrayed someone that is in shock. Him just sitting there for hours staring and not moving. That really happens to some people after a traumatic event. The horse snapped him out of it.
Great movie.....I saw it when it was released. Redford looks pretty young there. 52+ years ago.
Epic classic....best mountain man film ever.... can't even think of a second place. Revenent maybe but it was far fetched in places. Best ever bar none
Charleton Heston and Brian Keith in the MOUNTAIN MEN
Any person that can shoot a .50 Caliber Hawken rifle with one hand, IS THE MAN!!!!!
I seen this movie when I was about 11 years old and I liked this movie very much !!! Great acting by the classic Robert Redford !!! This was an absolute awesome movie from start to finish !!! Again , great movie !!!
Saw this at a movie theater in '73, age 11, Sunrise Mall Theater's , Carmichael California. Gripping then and now.
Amazing film, I have it on DVD 😊
Title?
@@pino8447Jeremiah Johnson. I also have the DVD.
I'm glad he had a supply of razor blades and a good barber was handy too. So realistic.
Id rather see the scene.."you know how to skin a grizz greenhorn"?..lol..loved it
"Turn right at the Rocky Mountains and head due west." Greatest scene. Greatest movie. Greatest era. Only Unforgiven could equal.
Movies this good will never be made again
Excelente película con diálogo inexistente, me gustaría verla nuevamente.
One of my favourite actors Robert Redford and one of my favourite movies he also was great in the movie The Way We Were ❤💯
My wife loves this movie ,every time its on she says AGAIN????
To better times not so long ago and gratitude for those people and times and the joy they brought to my and others lives. May we never forget.
After he gets it in the back the turn around flintlock shot is epic
The older I get, the more I understand this movie. He moved away from the city because of the problems, then he found the same problems exist everywhere people are, then he realized he was no different.
The Chinese and the Japanese would compose death poetry, sometimes as they were breathing their last breath. The Crow singing his death song was always a reminder of how similar refined warrior cultures truly are.
The warrior cultures of Native Americans and Japanese aren't convergent, they are congeners.
@@vadimpm1290 right. What?…..
Murdered helpless women and children but then RUNS away from a fair fight to sing a little song? Some warriors they were.
When he sang his death song my heart glowed
@@Valadtheinstaller Eastern Asians and Native Americans come from the common ancestors, so these songs may be their common cultural heritage.
The horse was like "Bro, Its time. We must bury our fallen, then we will ride and take many scalps for vengance"
vengeance
@@JakeBor"We will have both"😂
Poor Jeremiah lost the only thing he could call family.
Even worse was the fact that the Indian woman and boy were completely innocent.
Sad.😔
Great movie
Congratulations Sam on the big 5k well done 👍
Beware the wrath of a peaceful man.
Saw this movie in my local theater back in ‘72-‘73. Went with some friends, only a dollar and they didn’t care about age. We were 8 years old.😅
Same. And back then, we were able to sit and watch it again here in CT w/o paying a 2nd time.