St. Helens (1981) - Full movie with eng. subtitles

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  • Опубліковано 26 лип 2018
  • Dramatization of the 1980 eruption of Mt. St. Helens. The movie begins with the volcano's awakening on March 20 and ends with its eruption on May 18, 1980.
    Don´t forget to check this video, which is animation of Mount Saint Helens eruption: • Morphed eruption of Mt...
    Director: Ernest Pintoff
    Writers: Michael T. Murphy (story) (as Michael Timothy Murphy), Larry Sturholm (story) |
    Stars: Art Carney - Harry Truman, David Huffman - David Jackson (Johnston), Cassie Yates - Linda Steele
    My whole list of all Mt. Saint Helens videos on my channel: • Mount Saint Helens and...
    Harry and his raccons day before eruption: www.papergreat.com/2019/03/pos...
    Moje FB stránky: / gorovavidea

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,8 тис.

  • @BrandiHilton-pq2km
    @BrandiHilton-pq2km 8 місяців тому +65

    My parents and I lived in Vancouver WA in 1980 when it erupted. It's very accurate in details. Harry Truman was stubborn and refused to leave his house. He didn't care if it was going to erupt or not. He didn't believe it. The eruption was so destructive. It wiped out Spirit Lake& Toutle. The lumber businesses around the mountain was destroyed; thousands of animals were killed; It was devastating. I did reports for high school & college about the eruption, I earned all A's. It's been over 40 years. It's crazy. This movie is so accurate.

    • @scotthayes4135
      @scotthayes4135 2 місяці тому

      This disaster happened two years before I was born. I was born in 1982.

    • @honkytonk4465
      @honkytonk4465 Місяць тому +1

      ​@@scotthayes4135why were you born in '82,makes no sense to me?!

  • @michaelk3582
    @michaelk3582 4 роки тому +707

    My mom is dancing with the co star in the bar scene early in the film, ( filmed in the Bend woolen mill, Bend Or ) ..... We lost her 5 yrs ago and I like to come back and watch her dancing and smiling right up to the hug at the end of the scene...😀

    • @Elizabeth-ct8xp
      @Elizabeth-ct8xp 4 роки тому +35

      Hugs dear

    • @davidgee4399
      @davidgee4399 4 роки тому +37

      You should put the moment of the film where her scene is.

    • @ceciliawinterhalder6830
      @ceciliawinterhalder6830 3 роки тому +38

      What a great memory. Sadly, David Huffman, who played David Jackson, was murdered a couple years later in 1985 at age 39.

    • @travisn2875
      @travisn2875 2 роки тому +28

      @@ceciliawinterhalder6830 The real scientist's name was actually David Johnston.
      Such a sad story about David Huffman.

    • @k.s.7104
      @k.s.7104 2 роки тому +31

      Loved this movie growing up and still today. Great assembly of talent. May your mom rest easy and those who stared in it who are no longer with us!

  • @cindyharding574
    @cindyharding574 11 місяців тому +62

    It's so nice to see all the cars and trucks I grew up seeing look brand new again. I wish i could leave 2023 and forever live in 1980. I'd do it in a heartbeat.

    • @bradr2142
      @bradr2142 2 місяці тому +9

      Me too.

    • @powwowcritic13
      @powwowcritic13 2 місяці тому +4

      Me too instead of this plastic metal which kills is faster than our old real metal rides

    • @saythankyou111
      @saythankyou111 Місяць тому +2

      Oh yes,the economy was booming,the worst think on tv was mtv…..and no identity wars 🇺🇸😳

    • @teresamerklin4614
      @teresamerklin4614 20 днів тому

      Do you have kids? Do you really want to give them back if you do?

  • @andreamallery8999
    @andreamallery8999 9 місяців тому +51

    I grew up in Spokane Washington and will never forget the sight that day...everything closed, shoveling ash,the sight of the sky slowly turning black on a beautiful blue sky spring day... it will be in my memory forever and I'm now 56.

    • @TheNightWatcher1385
      @TheNightWatcher1385 6 місяців тому +1

      It’s a sight I wish I could see. I’ve always struggled to imagine just how massive it must have been.

    • @mrh0wler353
      @mrh0wler353 5 місяців тому +2

      Was at my job in Northern Illinois and I remember a few semi-trucks roll in to the Motorola loading docks covered with inches of ash.

    • @cristineconnell7803
      @cristineconnell7803 2 місяці тому

      ​​​@@TheNightWatcher1385It was overwhelming & terrifying! We had no idea what happened & took some time to find out! Figured it was ash that turned day to night only after it started raining on us! But the wall of black coming to cover the sky & everything in it was unreal! Not something I want to experience again! Common sense told us to try to cover our cars, & not breath the air! But all we had was scarfs! Lived by Mt St Helen's when she was puffing off in 2003-2005, was able to spend time studying it all! Really enjoyed the forest service guys up there! Struck me as salt of the earth types! And they worked safe! She started to act up, we hightailed it out! Though I got cut off of the side of the mountain I needed to grab my children from school. They took me on fire roads around the other side! Had to drop down by the river to head back! And what do you know, I made it to school with a few minutes to spare!😂😂 I was in a small town in NE WA when she blew! We were outside hanging clothes on the line we had just tie dyed! They all came out grey, even though we took them off the line quick! 😂 Ruined any cars paint that wasn't under cover! 😢 Any time the mountains around us start rumbling, I tend to grab my heavy air filter mask, extra air filters for the rigs! Like breathing sand only worse!

    • @RonaldwToussaint
      @RonaldwToussaint Місяць тому

      ❤❤❤❤❤

    • @laurascherr2941
      @laurascherr2941 19 днів тому

      I’ve lived in Spokane, Washington when this happened. What a crazy day.

  • @jonahfalcon1970
    @jonahfalcon1970 2 роки тому +23

    Johnston and Truman didn't live more than a second. The pyroclastic flow vaporized them almost immediately.

  • @kaijufan6246
    @kaijufan6246 2 роки тому +29

    About a week ago, a classmate of mine asked me if I could live on another planet, would I take it? I told him no. I told him "This is the planet I was born on. This is the planet I will die on."
    I couldn't help but think of Harry Truman in this movie. That mountain was doomed to erupt, but he wanted to die on that mountain with his family.
    St. Helens is a classic movie. Thank you for having it on UA-cam. Highly appreciated.

    • @olavwilhelm6843
      @olavwilhelm6843 4 місяці тому

      thats a little pathetic lol

    • @feiryfella
      @feiryfella 3 місяці тому +1

      His 16 cats that had no choice?

    • @cristineconnell7803
      @cristineconnell7803 2 місяці тому

      We all die at some point! Can't run from life! However if I had any inkling, I would pack up & come back to rebuild! Then again as we get older & tired out, what difference does it make!😂😂 Such a beautiful area! The awesome wonders of GOD'S creation! Mt St Helen's taught us so much!

    • @janetmariededick6061
      @janetmariededick6061 Місяць тому

      @@olavwilhelm6843that’s what I thought. Those poor kitties died a horrible death because he didn’t care to save them. They were innocent. I’m a cat lover so it upsets me to think of those poor cats.

  • @staceyshaffer4984
    @staceyshaffer4984 Рік тому +43

    I was 6yrs old turning 7 On the day Mount St Helen's erupted I was outside in Puyallup Washington playing in the ashes not knowing what had just happened
    Last Saturday me and my husband visited Mount St Helens
    It was breathtaking

  • @derekschoenike5685
    @derekschoenike5685 4 роки тому +63

    As a kid I remember watching the news of St. Helens, and seeing people shoveling the ash like it was snow. Weitd that's what stuck with me all these years.

    • @livetotell100
      @livetotell100 2 роки тому +7

      I actually have a few jars of the ash. I was a youngster at the time, but my Grandmother lived in Spokane Washington. And she brought us some of the ash that landed in her backyard.

    • @angelawilliams4239
      @angelawilliams4239 2 роки тому +3

      I remember seeing it on tv, here in Australia, when I was a little girl.

  • @mariekatherine5238
    @mariekatherine5238 4 роки тому +40

    My cousins lived in OR, they sent us a few jars of ash and a Christmas ornament made out of Mt. St. Helen’s glass.

    • @lynneshapley3948
      @lynneshapley3948 8 місяців тому +1

      My sister lived there afterwards and would find burnt wood...she would send us bits and pieces of evidence from mt st helens....I also have an ornament made from the ash

  • @shewolf2671
    @shewolf2671 2 роки тому +146

    Brought back a lot of old memories, I was a teenager and watched St Helens blow from our big picture window in Castle Rock. Devastated a lot of people I loved and knew, disrupted, effected and forever changed all of our lives. Harry was an awesome old guy, we used to swim off the dock where he fished and he always gave us kids a hard time as there where 7 of us. He used to tell us that we had our own tribe, I think he looked forward to giving us a kids a hard time, lol.

    • @NanaVicki1
      @NanaVicki1 2 роки тому +15

      That is truly a rare and beautiful memory that you have. One of the gteats for sure.

    • @davesperling3384
      @davesperling3384 2 роки тому +2

      Where did you get the CB handle ( she wolf )

    • @PlatinumIrishrose
      @PlatinumIrishrose 2 роки тому +9

      What a beautiful Precious memory. You should write a story about it.

    • @acefire4050
      @acefire4050 Рік тому +5

      I was 5 years old when this happened and I told of it when I was 4 years old and actually it was a few weeks before I turned six to about 3 months or slightly shy of 3 months and I told of this on Christmas after my birthday of my fourth birthday and yet you still have not seen the full potential of what it could do but you might see what it can do one day.

    • @prissypants2336
      @prissypants2336 Рік тому +6

      My Aunt lived in Seattle at the time..she brought me a jar of ash home to Ky.

  • @GM8101PHX
    @GM8101PHX 5 років тому +185

    I was stationed at Fairchild AFB during the eruption, even the the vehicle the sheriff was driving is of the time period, including the police light bar. Us security police at Fairchild were driving the same Ford Broncos. By 3 in the afternoon it was dark as night as the ash cloud drifted over our base. We were having an open house and airshow that day, the base commander cancelled it, ordering security police to evacuate civilians off the base. After everything calmed down the search and rescue squadron at my base started rescuing people trapped by the eruption. We raided the base exchange for nylon clothing to protect the air cleaners on the military and civilian vehicles on the base. The destruction was beyond belief. I had ash in my car when I drove back to Arizona in 1982 over two years after.

    • @thatsmrharley2u2
      @thatsmrharley2u2 4 роки тому +10

      How many sasquatch did you guys find?

    • @vexile12
      @vexile12 3 роки тому +10

      Nature is beautiful but dang she scary

    • @michaelshields7777
      @michaelshields7777 3 роки тому +6

      I was up in Kettle Falls when St Helen's blew her top.

    • @Seri-Katil
      @Seri-Katil 3 роки тому +3

      So basically you drove a filthy car that you never bothered to clean out for 2 years after the eruption.

    • @dharter100
      @dharter100 3 роки тому +6

      I was caught driving in it between Hanford and Yakima. Couldn't see anything just was dark and ash everywhere. They were saying how the ash could damage everything it came in contact with.

  • @dontcallmeshirley5786
    @dontcallmeshirley5786 5 років тому +169

    No matter how many times I watch stuff about Mt. St Helens , I will always feel horrible about the losses everyone had suffered.

    • @MsAggie78
      @MsAggie78 2 роки тому +9

      Well, they were ALL warned, knew the risks, and disregarded them.🙄🤷‍♀️🤷‍♀️

    • @spikespa5208
      @spikespa5208 2 роки тому

      If Truman really acted and talked like that.........no big loss.

    • @secretsquirrel6308
      @secretsquirrel6308 2 роки тому +4

      Anne Morgan, the devastation was hundreds of miles. Example, people in Idaho had vehicles ruined by the great volumes of highly abrasive ash. Streams across three states were filled with ash. Many streams were blocked for decades. Measurable amounts of ash from this eruption were found across the nation.

    • @marvintrujillo2647
      @marvintrujillo2647 2 роки тому +4

      42 years later,still some haunting memories for that community.....1:25:24 is like the doomsday clock of not only this movie but the entire Northwest of the US...

    • @robbieallan6522
      @robbieallan6522 Рік тому +3

      It was a tragedy.

  • @TalentedDilittante
    @TalentedDilittante 4 роки тому +77

    The day after Mt St Helens blew, I was about 600 miles or nearly one thousand kilometers away in Fernie, British Columbia, Canada, when the constant rain of ash began. By the following day, everything was eight to ten inches deep in ash. I remember the TV interviews of Harry Truman, his determination to stay.

    • @harrietharlow9929
      @harrietharlow9929 3 роки тому +1

      He was either very brave or very foolish. I'll go with brave.

    • @jonathanlawson4667
      @jonathanlawson4667 3 роки тому +6

      He was just ignorant and it got him killed he actually thought he was far enough away from it that it wouldn't hurt him but I'm sure as the skin melted off his bones from the hot ash and rubble he was regretting his ignorant decision

    • @stevebragg4256
      @stevebragg4256 2 роки тому +3

      @@jonathanlawson4667 probably happened so fast he felt nothing. He was in his 80s, even if he had move, looking at his area afterward may have done him in anyway.

    • @haroldlawson8771
      @haroldlawson8771 2 роки тому +2

      @@jonathanlawson4667 actually he said if the mountain go so do I also it unlikely he would have feel pain he more likely then not died before his body could register pain

    • @spikespa5208
      @spikespa5208 2 роки тому

      If he was anything like he's portrayed here, I'd go with ornery, pigheaded stupidity.

  • @ChristienahRobertsonTravis
    @ChristienahRobertsonTravis Рік тому +31

    Harry Truman had motivation to stay and used his bravado to keep everyone from realizing that he still missed his wife. He wanted to go. What a way to go.

    • @feiryfella
      @feiryfella 3 місяці тому

      I bet his 16 cats he killed would disagree with him.

    • @James-mz7tv
      @James-mz7tv 19 днів тому

      Eddie (Edie) was his dream gal, she came walking up all those years ago, and they had a storybook life and romance up there. Surely he was just devastated after she was gone.

  • @chasestf2andytpvideos.92
    @chasestf2andytpvideos.92 2 роки тому +52

    This Movie is 40 years old and it's still great these days.

  • @supersnake151
    @supersnake151 14 днів тому +3

    Im so glad the full movie is on UA-cam!

  • @hobbs1701a
    @hobbs1701a 2 роки тому +52

    I remember watching this movie as a kid on HBO. It was because of this that I became so fascinated by volcanoes, going so far as to wanting to be a volcanologist for a time.

    • @dlane5292
      @dlane5292 2 роки тому +5

      I had a similar interest, along with planes n trains, railroading won out.

    • @ironmartysharpe8293
      @ironmartysharpe8293 8 місяців тому

      This was the first movie I recorded on HBO when I got my first VCR and when I saw the movie on the schedule , I didn't even know they made a movie about Mount St Helens so I had to record it and check it out ,
      That massive explosion , 500 atomic bombs is Way Way beyond imagination along with over a cubic mile of solid rock equivalent to over a ton of rock for every person on earth
      Billions of tons of rock instantly blown away , It definitely goes to show you how powerful Mother Nature can be
      Even today I'm still surprised how low the death toll was despite that massive explosion and that the majority of the people in the area had time to get out
      Because Who knows , That mountain could have blown up without warning

    • @fandoria09
      @fandoria09 7 місяців тому

      The 1st time I got to watch this movie on HBO, I was 13 in 1984 at my 1st cousin's house. Where I lived, we only had 5 TV channels through an outside antenna. If we wanted cable, it would have had to come from those big satellite dishes that took up most of the yard. I lived on a farm just outside a village where, to this day, cable companies don't go because we're too far from and big cities. That village has yet to get a population of over 275 people. They had to go with either Dish Network, etc. when they became available.

    • @BooPeek13
      @BooPeek13 7 місяців тому

      Me too. I wanted be a vulcanologist as well. Unfortunately I have dyscalculia, so no science for me.

  • @lilbehr1
    @lilbehr1 4 роки тому +155

    I was 20 years old and living in Oregon when Mount St. Helens blew. We were about 75 miles away and still heard and felt the explosion. The sky grew dark and the ash fell for days, we got around 6 to 7 inches of it. It looked liked an atomic bomb had gone off, you could see the mushroom cloud in the distance. The blast literally flattened tress for 200 miles around the mountain. It was a day I will never forget, that's for sure.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur 3 роки тому +6

      I wish I had seen it - but not too close! P.S. Trees were knocked down maybe 10-20 miles away, but certainly not 200 miles away. I flew over in a little plane about 10 years later.

    • @pattieprophet7987
      @pattieprophet7987 3 роки тому +1

      WOw!!!!

    • @williamgreene4834
      @williamgreene4834 3 роки тому +8

      @@Sashazur
      I think it's a typo seeing as they were 75 miles away.

    • @majoroldladyakamom6948
      @majoroldladyakamom6948 2 роки тому +1

      What's a "tress"?

    • @pw8970
      @pw8970 2 роки тому +1

      thank you for sharing your experiences.

  • @SissyD61
    @SissyD61 5 років тому +9

    Disaster Junkie Here! Am I the only person here today? What a good movie, for it's day. Thanks for the upload. The subtitles were misspelled a lot..but that was funny in it's own way. I just don't understand why some people don't heed warnings. I just now read some comments below. So I hit edit and just wanted to say,"Thank you all so much for sharing the Mother Nature Nightmare."

    • @mattpollack5823
      @mattpollack5823 3 роки тому

      Yes Sissy it was a good movie

    • @mattpollack5823
      @mattpollack5823 3 роки тому

      Hi Sissy
      i hope this year brings happiness and prosperity to all Americans & Europeans and all over the world 🌍

  • @tuttt99
    @tuttt99 2 роки тому +17

    Trivia:
    David Jackson was loosely based on real life USGS scientist David Johnston, who died at the Coldwater II observation post on the ridge that now bears his name. His family and 36 colleagues protested his depiction in the film as he was a highly dedicated professional in real life; and not at all the reckless daredevil portrayed in the film.

  • @valeriahargand6861
    @valeriahargand6861 5 років тому +69

    Pretty memorable day for our family. My husband knew Harry Truman well. Our son turned 11 the day Mt. St. Helen's blew her top. My niece was born the day Mt. St. Helen's blew her top. It rained ash snow at our home in Cathlamet, and there were aftershock tremors felt at our home in Cathlamet that shook the coffee cup out of my hands ... rattled windows (our included), and swayed chandeliers in other homes in Cathlamet. My husband was a shovel operator in one of the first logging companies allowed into the Red Zone for cleanup salvage logging. What a day. What an experience.

    • @SissyD61
      @SissyD61 5 років тому +3

      Thank you for sharing that with everyone! Thank God you all lived through it!!

    • @crocodile1313
      @crocodile1313 3 роки тому +4

      I was also 11 years old when St. Helens erupted, so your son must be at 51 today like me. Thanks for sharing your story; that certainly was a memorable day for your family!

    • @mikehagan4320
      @mikehagan4320 3 роки тому +2

      My Father in law also worked on the cleanup. I Believe he worked for Washington at the time.

    • @rayt5987
      @rayt5987 3 роки тому +2

      Funny. Was 11 at the time. Lived in Clarkston. Didn't hear it. But got a coating of ash.

    • @terryleeschiller8515
      @terryleeschiller8515 3 роки тому +1

      I Had A Son !!! I'll Never NEVER Forget That Day ❣️

  • @conniemcmurry9589
    @conniemcmurry9589 4 роки тому +24

    In 2003, a friend and I took a helicopter ride over the whole Mt St Helens area....the pilot even took us down into the top of the volcano to show us how the cone was rebuilding!!
    The trip cost us that day, but it was once in a lifetime!!

    • @mattpollack5823
      @mattpollack5823 3 роки тому

      Smiles 🥰🥰😊

    • @mattpollack5823
      @mattpollack5823 3 роки тому +2

      Hi Connie
      i hope this year brings happiness and prosperity to all Americans & Europeans and all over the world 🌍

  • @lilithbrantley4930
    @lilithbrantley4930 Рік тому +18

    We were stationed at Fort Lewis in Washington back in 2009. It was an awesome experience knowing I was walking on land that had been devastated from the volcano. It was something I'll never forget. We hiked Mt Rainier all seasons. Springtime was amazing with all of the wild flowers and critter's. It was my favorite duty station!

    • @sitnspin1819
      @sitnspin1819 Рік тому

      Rainier's eruption will be a true fresh level of hell.

    • @cristineconnell7803
      @cristineconnell7803 2 місяці тому

      Grew up camping all over those mountains every year growing up! Life was really hard with a cranky single Mom, but she grew up in the hills & took us back every weekend we could go!❤ Awesome memories ❤ We often went with extended family & friend's too! Some of the most breathtaking country! Have visited many beautiful places in my life, but this area is home always❤ O couldn't leave our trees & mountains! The streams, rivers, hidden lakes & waterfalls! A taste of heaven on earth❤

  • @elfowl6873
    @elfowl6873 4 роки тому +109

    Remembering the eruption and the lives lost on that horrific day, and the wildlife too. God Bless.

    • @michaelshields7777
      @michaelshields7777 3 роки тому +5

      Poor creatures.....

    • @terrybardy2848
      @terrybardy2848 3 роки тому +6

      May they all rest in peace.

    • @TimothyCihal-pn7fm
      @TimothyCihal-pn7fm 3 роки тому +2

      So this is your loving forgiving god?

    • @catherinehansel
      @catherinehansel 3 роки тому +3

      @@TimothyCihal-pn7fm This is your broken sinful world that a loving forgiving God gave an opportunity for salvation to anyone who choses

    • @MsAggie78
      @MsAggie78 2 роки тому +8

      The people were ALL warned. They just had no respect for Nature's power.🤷‍♀️🤷‍♀️ I feel worse about the animals, honestly. And the scientists.

  • @edbiasi
    @edbiasi 5 років тому +86

    I was 5 years old when St, Helens blow, it woke me up! We lived in Wilsonville OR at the time and I remember waking everybody else up saying "it's snowing outside". I believe we got 3-4 inches of ash. My Father still has some ash in a baby jar!

    • @sda9995
      @sda9995 5 років тому +3

      I was 8 but i don't remember hearing about Mount st Helen

    • @apachetribeswearealive2313
      @apachetribeswearealive2313 4 роки тому +4

      DID YOU KNOW THAT IT IS TOXIC. .CARBON DIOXIDE and FLOURINE GASES IS TOXIC TO HUMANS AND ANIMALS
      IT COULD LEAD TO DEFORMITY CROP FAILURE AND DEATH.

    • @gustavopacheco919
      @gustavopacheco919 4 роки тому +14

      @@apachetribeswearealive2313 Why are you yelling?

    • @karenengelhardt1610
      @karenengelhardt1610 3 роки тому +1

      Haha. So, ash would not have fallen on Wilsonville until later in the day. I know this because I remember thinking that I could go play in it; we'd already driven through the eruption to get home from the beach that morning so it was in the afternoon when ash started falling in Vancouver

    • @ethics3
      @ethics3 3 роки тому +1

      @@apachetribeswearealive2313 HOWWWW

  • @markgardner4426
    @markgardner4426 5 років тому +25

    Bothered me that they turned Harry's 16 cats into one dog. Would have gotten a better idea of the man if was truer to facts but then filming a movie with a bunch of cats around would have been a nightmare. My maternal grandparents lived outside Yakima and got a ton of ash on their property. My paternal grandparents were living in Bend while this was filmed. Thank you for posting this film; I'd only seen part of it once a long time ago.

    • @Goro488
      @Goro488  5 років тому +3

      Years before the eruption he had a dog, called him Boy. You can see him here: picclick.com/Snowed-in-Mt-St-Helens-Lodge-WA-Vintage-401524495487.html

    • @mr.anonymous7898
      @mr.anonymous7898 3 роки тому

      I’m guessing that because dogs are mostly easier to train than cats. Try to teach a cat to sit it’s pretty hard to accomplish.

    • @rsb97080
      @rsb97080 3 роки тому

      The story was, at the time they made this movie, supposedly Art Carney was allergic to cats. But I found that hard to believe since he and a cat were the main stars of Harry and Tonto, six or seven years prior.

  • @jasonsnyder8341
    @jasonsnyder8341 3 роки тому +53

    Love this movie. Watched it when it came out. I was 5 yrs old. Gave me chills then and still does.

    • @therese6447
      @therese6447 Рік тому +4

      I remember watching this movie..I was 6 when it came out..80s was the best

    • @scotthayes4135
      @scotthayes4135 10 місяців тому

      42:32 when animals start acting strange like that there's something horribly wrong. There was a similar scene on "Earthquake" when the birds all flew off and all the dogs were barking and howling.

    • @jblakeslee44
      @jblakeslee44 7 місяців тому +1

      I was an extra in this movie. It was produced in Bend, Oregon. The actual mountain in the movie is another Cascade range volcano, Mt. Bachelor, just west of Bend.

  • @garypodgurski3126
    @garypodgurski3126 2 роки тому +3

    In the 1981 HBO television film St. Helens, actor David Huffman starred as David Jackson, a fictional character supposedly based on Johnston, but with almost no representation of his actions in 1980. Johnston's parents objected to the production of the film, arguing that it possessed not "an ounce of David in it" and portrayed "him as a daredevil rather than a careful scientist". Johnston's mother stated that the film had changed many true aspects of the eruption, and depicted her son as "a rebel" with "a history of disciplinary trouble".[19] Prior to the film's premiere on May 18, 1981, the first anniversary of the eruption, 36 scientists who knew Johnston signed a letter of protest. They wrote that, "Dave's life was too meritorious to require fictional embellishments," and that, "Dave was a superbly conscientious and creative scientist."

  • @STanner7
    @STanner7 11 місяців тому +8

    I was 11 years old when this occurred and I was at my friend Shirley’s in Portland. We went out to saddle the horses. Went riding. I’ll never forget it. The horses were behaving strangely. I heard an explosion. The next thing I knew, I witnessed this cloud of ash and it became quite humid. It appeared to be right over us. In fact it was 70 miles away. It covered the sky in darkness. My dad drove up and told me to get into the car. I couldn’t take my eyes off of this huge plume of ash. I could see lightning striking from a distance. It’s something I’ll never forget.

  • @ramonanorris4509
    @ramonanorris4509 3 роки тому +17

    Graduation 1980 When It Blew 😔 Watching Jan2021😔 Never Forget 🙏🏼

  • @RyanHannaMusic
    @RyanHannaMusic 5 років тому +19

    my uncle owns a sawmill, there was an old painting on the office wall of an oregon logging trail with a big mac truck snaking its way down the mountain - it was from the late 70s, but a picture can evoke so much for me an i always imagined what the lives of the folks in that small logging town would have been like this movie is filling those wonders! id have loved grafting out on some rainy slope choking logs and kicking back at that lodge inn every weekend and having a little dance to the country music...i ended up working at my uncles mill, stayed there longer than i did any job. now i sing country lol

    • @paulpallott8302
      @paulpallott8302 4 роки тому +1

      Sounds cool

    • @cristineconnell7803
      @cristineconnell7803 2 місяці тому

      It's how I grew up, watching my big brothers climb & take down the lumber etc! ❤ Miss those days & that beautiful lil town!❤

  • @leeleeporch7876
    @leeleeporch7876 4 роки тому +34

    Wow, what a special heart felt movie... The writer of this movie has a wonderful sense of humor. especially while trying to inform us all about 1980 St Helen and how people were set in there ways... Thanks very much for the upload...

    • @tjp2109
      @tjp2109 Рік тому

      Set in our ways...? Lived all my life in the PNW. I remember the eruption you see and people weren't snowflakes back then. Literally. Oregon was considered back country to the rest of the US. But we had common sense. Smart was smart. Stupid was stupid. Now we have millions of purple haired having, welfare loving, man bun wearing idiots that can't tell what gender they are. All common sense is gone thanks to Californians moving in year after year 😒 We're ruined now.

  • @michaeltapper4249
    @michaeltapper4249 5 років тому +23

    As a kid from Paw Paw Michigan l came outside the day after the eruption to find a fine dust like substance all over. Amazing how far the ash spread. Thanks for the film.

    • @Goro488
      @Goro488  5 років тому +3

      You´re welcome :-)

    • @hayliedlr
      @hayliedlr 4 роки тому +1

      I was almost 2yrs old when this happened. I lived in Michigan at that time too, but I live to the north. From my understanding, Michigan didn't feel the effects. I only learned about the eruption when I studied volcano.

  • @charlieirvin5423
    @charlieirvin5423 3 роки тому +17

    They say you never know when the last days on this earth will ever be . don't take life for granted . live your life to it's fullest You Never know when its taken

    • @bobhutton1409
      @bobhutton1409 3 роки тому +1

      Because we don't know when we're going to die we have to be ready. The only way to be ready is to accept Jesus Christ as our personal Saviour. Look up peacewithGod.net

    • @lindacarvalho5422
      @lindacarvalho5422 Місяць тому

      So true

  • @youarepredictable
    @youarepredictable Рік тому +12

    I remember watching this on HBO as a kid repeatedly. I was fascinated by this movie/event.

    • @flcopperhead766
      @flcopperhead766 Місяць тому

      You aren't the only one. I loved watching this when I was a kid. Bet we hadn't had cable a year when I saw this. Great memories.

  • @mousethatroared1213
    @mousethatroared1213 4 роки тому +8

    My parents and I had left Marysville, WA, and were on our way to Yellowstone. We stopped in Missoula--we were really tired--and debated whether to stop there or keep going. Finally, we decided to keep going--and that turned out to be a good idea. We stopped in Bozeman to rest and spend the night. The mountains were beautiful and we were lounging in the hot springs when a woman came in and told us the mountain had erupted. The next morning I opened the door of our van to see nothing but ash, about six inches of it, ash on the ground and hanging in the air. We were lucky: Missoula got three feet of ash! My brother back in Marysville, a good five hours from St. Helens, said the house started shaking, and he knew the mountain had blown.

  • @phelan5387
    @phelan5387 Рік тому +13

    I was in the town of Mt.Vernon 150 miles north of Mt. St. Helen's on the morning of April 18th 1980. I heard a tremendous blast in the distance and the entire house rattled from the shock wave. I will never forget the sound it made. Harry Truman did not want to leave the Spirit Lodge.

    • @user-pc8ee8sx7v
      @user-pc8ee8sx7v Рік тому

      I was in Arlington not too far from you.

    • @peatmoss4415
      @peatmoss4415 10 місяців тому

      Wow! You heard it erupt a month before it happened!

  • @GM8101PHX
    @GM8101PHX 5 років тому +27

    I most likely will never experience something of this nature again in my life, it is April 2019 yet I still remember that day and I was on top of an aircraft hanger at Fairchild, we were west of Spokane Washington. We had a nuclear mission at the time, even that was disrupted for a few days as aircraft such as our B-52's and KC-135's could not fly in the ash. Our Tanker aircraft took off in a MITO formation to get away from the area before being trapped, they went to other Air Force Bases not effected by the eruption. Other Bombers were uploaded at other SAC bases to replace ours that were grounded. The base went into a stand still. I have a plaque hanging on the wall in my office for the assistance of clean-up of the ash from the eruption. May 18th 1980 will always be in my mind!

    • @ghostcityshelton9378
      @ghostcityshelton9378 4 роки тому +3

      Maybe you'd like to see the interactive map of Yellow Stone. Things seem to be picking up. ALOT more earthquakes and all. Might be something, or might not, who knows.
      One thing is for sure that 'IF' it ever does blow we will ALL know about it, and I bet it will effect the rest of the world.

    • @colleenkennedy1934
      @colleenkennedy1934 2 роки тому

      LIAR! your other comment says it was an airshow not a nuclear mission

  • @oscarholybeeiii3760
    @oscarholybeeiii3760 3 роки тому +5

    I spent a few years working as a news reporter for the Goldendale Sentinel. While there I caved and climbed. I met Harry. Caved in St. Helens cave with Bill Halliday. Climbed St. Helen's. After the eruption, the NSS held its annual convention in Bend.
    Friends from Boise invited us to ride along on a fly over. I was shocked.

    • @petergreen4890
      @petergreen4890 3 роки тому +1

      I was 7 when it erupted, but I sure remember .. nearly died in Yakima

  • @graceisamazing5493
    @graceisamazing5493 Рік тому +40

    I'm delightfully grateful for the opportunity to rewatch St. Helens. This is the first time I've seen it since it was new.
    I was 28 and living in Amarillo, Texas when she blew. We got ash all the way down there. Amazing what nature can do!
    Harry Truman was quite the character, & Art Carny was the perfect man to play him. If I'm not mistaken, I think this may have been Art's swan song. Appropriate.

    • @Kevin-tn1hp
      @Kevin-tn1hp Рік тому +4

      Carney had a small role in the Last Action Hero (1993) as Arnold Schwarzenegger's cousin. This is a great movie though. I saw it when I was around 10 and thought I'd look it up. Glad to see it on you tube.

    • @graceisamazing5493
      @graceisamazing5493 Рік тому +3

      @@Kevin-tn1hp I also loved him in Harry & Tonto. Ever see it?

    • @genehasenbuhler2594
      @genehasenbuhler2594 9 місяців тому +1

      I live in EL Paso Tx and remember the sky being brown for a day after the eruption!

    • @MARIAAPARECIDA-wk1bw
      @MARIAAPARECIDA-wk1bw 9 місяців тому

      😢😮❤

  • @patbackus7668
    @patbackus7668 4 роки тому +7

    Love how they always show these arm wrestling scenes in movies, and people always hug afterwards, every time I’ve ever seen them in a bar a brawl breaks out ,

  • @freemarketjoe9869
    @freemarketjoe9869 Рік тому +14

    I flew over the crater in 1982. It was smoking slightly and all the trees were laying flat, spread out in a pattern falling away from the blast.Spirit lake was still there, a muddy pond at the base of the massive crater. It was a perfect,sunny day with low clouds , their shadows just underneath. Spectacular.

    • @melodiefrances3898
      @melodiefrances3898 6 місяців тому

      I did a helicopter fly over. Breathtaking, horrible and beautiful. The sheer power was something you couldn't conceive of. Those trees flattened and stripped in a second. The "excavation" and the gaping horseshoe it left
      You could see how the pyroclastic flow that went over a ridge.
      I wish I was young enough to dee more of its evolution.

  • @lisasmith9311
    @lisasmith9311 5 років тому +40

    I lived on foothills of My St Helens it's the most beautiful place I've ever seen

  • @joecombs7468
    @joecombs7468 4 роки тому +34

    I was a senior in high school when this eruption took place. Everything just kind of stopped and we watched what was happening and couldn't believe it.
    A lot of the stuff we were told ended up being wrong but then the scientist were doing the best they could.
    They learned so much from this one eruption, more than any other eruption.
    There were several theories before about how and if the eruption would happen.
    The most ironic thing?
    The one scientist whose theories were the most accurate was the scientist that was on the north face when it blew.
    Damn. Just think where volcanology would be today if he had been some place else that morning.

    • @Gigi-ty2jy
      @Gigi-ty2jy 2 роки тому +1

      I was also a senior in high school when this happened. Money and politics seem to be the driving forces behind pretty much everything and science is no different, especially now. There are a few scientific voices out there keeping us informed of what is actually happening around our globe. Won't see any of them on the nightly news though which leads me to wonder what have we really learned. Had he not been on that mountain that day, he would still find himself being silenced.

    • @briancathey498
      @briancathey498 2 роки тому

      the people who died are like people who live in the gulf coast, florida , and the eastern seaboard during hurricanes . oh and lets not forget the dumbasses who live on flood plains , stupid because they dont leave when their told to or they build their house on dangerous ground

    • @patrickkanas3874
      @patrickkanas3874 2 роки тому

      Myom was a high schooler when the mountain blew, she told me that for a couple of days there was this light haze which turned out to be smoke from the eruption that kept traveling east. We live in Wisconsin

    • @freebird7057
      @freebird7057 Рік тому

      But just think if they would have thrown that virgin in the volcano maybe it would have settled down. 😁

    • @andreamallery8999
      @andreamallery8999 9 місяців тому

      I was 13 and remember every detail to this day...amazing to live through that isn't it? 😢

  • @summerrose299
    @summerrose299 4 роки тому +42

    I was living in England when this happened and right away I phoned my Aunt in the United States to ask about my cousin who lived near the volcano. My Aunt said he was alright and in fact he and his wife was staying at her house in Michigan and had been there for two weeks, so they were safe.

    • @Alaninbroomfield
      @Alaninbroomfield 4 роки тому +2

      I was 11 years old in Michigan at the time. I could see the ash cloud in the sky, not very dark, but noticeable. Interesting times.

    • @tracyhanf9192
      @tracyhanf9192 3 роки тому +1

      I was 17 at the time. I’m in Denver Colorado area and unaffected by it. I’m fascinated with volcanoes and what makes them work and I was concerned that it was going to blow as i followed the story closely.

  • @PorkRollActual
    @PorkRollActual 3 роки тому +8

    for some reason this movie showed up in my suggested videos. I remember watching it when I was very young with my dad, who passed recently. He lived in Portland, OR. when Mt. St. Helens erupted. He had a ton of pictures and collected a jar of ash from it. Was a nice to relive the stories and memories he told me about while watching this.

  • @celydolot2530
    @celydolot2530 8 місяців тому +2

    It's a beautiful movie to watch. Thank you

  • @scoobycarr5558
    @scoobycarr5558 5 років тому +20

    That's right! Next year will be 40 years after Mt. St. Helens did the huge eruption! I was a freshman in high school when I learned about the historic eruption of Mt. St. Helens.

  • @dbecker595
    @dbecker595 Рік тому +4

    Sat on the roof of my house in 1980....just south of Beaverton. I remember thinking about how something that beautiful could be so destructive. I do recall that was maybe the first moment i realized the world was much bigger than my town, my street, my house. I didnt yet understand what an impact that moment would have on my life. I am over 50 now but still pause for a moment or two every May 18th.

  • @yourmumschancla3953
    @yourmumschancla3953 Рік тому +12

    I have watched this damn near on repeat for a solid month and I always love the character progression for Harry who cares for the professor by the end like a son, knew he couldn't treat him like one but had the same respect for his choice following him trying to tell david to leave. Truman was a vibe in my opinion with a strong character whos the kind of person I think we all need. Truman was a good man if a brutal talker XD

  • @karenengelhardt1610
    @karenengelhardt1610 4 роки тому +2

    I was a toddler and don't remember the entire thing, but I do remember that my mother was screaming for my dad to pack us up so we could get home from the beach before they closed the freeway. Traffic was completely stopped when we got to Kelso/Longview and my dad picked me up and showed me what I thought was a thunderstorm going on; the damn cloud had its own lightning going on inside it. We only lived as far away from it as Vancouver so we could see the entire thing from our house after we made it home. For YEARS afterward my brother and I could find pieces of pumice in our yard from the later eruption, and we scratched the hell out of our bathtub playing with those cool floating rocks.

  • @susanhowe163
    @susanhowe163 Рік тому +5

    1980. So long ago 😪 and yet to many of those who were directly
    living through the horrible nightmare in 1980, it's terror lives on in their sleep.
    The fact that you live on is to be applauded and may God bless you and your generations.

    • @yourmumschancla3953
      @yourmumschancla3953 Рік тому +1

      when you truly think about it it wasn't actually that long ago. Realistically so much has occurred in such a small amount of time.

  • @ivorytower99
    @ivorytower99 3 роки тому +30

    I remember the eruption of Mt. St. Helen. I never knew there was a movie about it. Thanks for the upload!

  • @delavalmilker
    @delavalmilker 3 роки тому +21

    OMG it's the great Art Carney! His career spanned from The Honeymooners in the fifties, numerous movies and TV shows, to this one. He was PERFECT as old irascible Harry Truman! He steals the movie in every scene he's in. And gosh--I didn't know he could play the piano!

  • @Nana-vi4rd
    @Nana-vi4rd Рік тому +2

    Love this movie, that blew the year my middle child was born and the Skyway bridge down in Tampa Bay Florida collapsed. And I knew Mr. Carney, his parents lived in the building where my grandfather was the Superintendent, His mother use to make us kids cookies all the time. And he would come visit his parents at least once a month. Telling us stories about the places he had been and things he had seen. He was a lot like the Character he played in the movie. May he rest in peace.

  • @billterry5243
    @billterry5243 2 роки тому +3

    I lived it. I lived in Castle Rock WA when it blew, about 40 miles west of Mt. St. Helens. About 50 yards from the Cowlitz River

  • @tonerc.8191
    @tonerc.8191 3 роки тому +59

    I'm actually really surprised no one has made an update movie at least sometime in the 2000s. they could make a good movie about it in modern times with all the effects we have now.

    • @Dman425
      @Dman425 3 роки тому +14

      They sort of did in the 90’s with Dante’s Peak. Obviously it wasn’t about St. Helens

    • @annetteslife
      @annetteslife 3 роки тому +2

      Hey don't give these so called film critics any ideas

    • @harrietharlow9929
      @harrietharlow9929 3 роки тому +4

      @Lockheed Martin F-22 RAPTOR I liked it. They actually quote David Johnston's, "Vancouver! Vancouver, this is it!!"

    • @Amoth_oth_ras_shash
      @Amoth_oth_ras_shash 3 роки тому +1

      true...but i guess its like with the asteroid impact movies.. despite how promising the setting is not just to make a decent long movie with a broad spectrum of topics to sneak in some trivia for people ontop of the entertainment ,or a real deep look into a short slice of time in such an event.
      but after one , unless you got personal connection to a name people just think one vulcano movie as another..and the big publishers only wants 'all' the money so regardless if a good movie make profit unless its a world wide block buster..they rather kill the idea and leave more 'empty space' for what ever crap they decide to make to catch peoples attention across the social platforms slowly being converted into covert commercial or corp miss information tools.

    • @universalsoldier2293
      @universalsoldier2293 2 роки тому +2

      @@Dman425 That's what I was going to say, too.

  • @conniecrawford5231
    @conniecrawford5231 5 років тому +33

    Gotta love the 70's cars.I remember this so well- 37 years later!

    • @rogerswindell7537
      @rogerswindell7537 5 років тому +4

      Hey Connie ; I was 9 years old at that moment and I remember the cars too ; Not like now how it’s KIAS , INFINITYS , NISSANS, TOYOTAS, ACURAS, SCIONS and being small with refrigerator motors😡 , But at a time when there was FORDS,MERCURYS, OLDSMOBILES , CHEVYS , PONTIACS , CHRYSLERS and they were CARS with REAL ENGINES with a standard V8 , Oh and remember when opening and closing the doors and the sound would make the earth tremble 🙂 and today’s cars the doors are quiet

    • @sda9995
      @sda9995 5 років тому +3

      I remember my grandpa had a big car in the 70s u could fit 8 people in it! Just can't remember the name of the car

    • @mattpollack5823
      @mattpollack5823 3 роки тому +1

      Hi Connie
      i hope this year brings happiness and prosperity to all Americans & Europeans and all over the world 🌍

  • @nickrizzo8517
    @nickrizzo8517 3 роки тому +31

    Great movie about a historical event. Thank you for posting this.

    • @offgridcabin1557
      @offgridcabin1557 2 роки тому +1

      Don't take this as a historical movie. This is Hollywierd. Very little in this movie is factual. I grew up just a few miles north of the mountain and my wife was from Toutle. We were there when the Mountain blew. Her writing tourist songs and living in Toutle and me working for the U.S. Forest Service out of Packwood. We met in 1982 and married because of the mountain erupting and changing our lives forever. We are divorced now but share a daughter and five grandsons together and all because of that Mountain Erupting. Two of my friends growing up Kim & Marlina (Brother & sister) lost their Parents in the eruption. Their Dad Jim, was a Weyerhaeuser Timber Company Foreman and their Mom, Kathleen decided to ride with him on the morning of May 18th to check on the companies equipment in the Red & Blue Zone on the Mountain. The Pluards were never seen again. Many many friends of mine were logging there and if it had erupted Monday instead of Sunday, the death toll would have been hundreds higher. As it was, 57 people lost their lives in the eruption.

  • @dawneendostert3576
    @dawneendostert3576 10 місяців тому +2

    Was in Amboy that morning sitting on the ground keeping score for my husband’s softball game. I could feel the earth shaking. I walked up the little hill behind us you looked straight up into the grey and black roiling mass of lightening filled ash from the mountain. No one would move the game further away and there were still people filling the roads around there while people were suffering on the other side of her.
    An equipment operator friend said later he worked the Spirit Lake mud flow dam with others to clear it. They were bused in when it was deemed safe enough to do so.
    I’ll be riding my horse on the SW flank of the mountain with many others mid July. So much has changed since 1980 but the area still holds much beauty and fascination.

  • @loneyhearts
    @loneyhearts 2 роки тому +6

    I remember the volcano eruption. My grandmother was in Washington state at the time. She survived and brought some of the ash from the eruption.
    I think back to the fear of losing my Grandmother 👵 💔 😞

  • @charlenemorris5516
    @charlenemorris5516 2 роки тому +3

    This is a pretty good show of what happened, may 18, 1980. I was working for Weyerhaeuser at the time.

  • @michaelrandy8764
    @michaelrandy8764 Рік тому +2

    I recently heard someone talk about mt St Helens on a podcast, I knew about it's eruption way in the back of my mind despite me being born 6 later, but in my adult life, in Florida, I kinda "forgot about volcanoes" in general, hadn't even thought about volcanoes in years, so after that "oh yeah, volcanoes! " moment - in the past 48 hours I have watched at least 9 hrs worth of volcano documentaries and movies Lol
    What a time to be alive!

  • @elviraarriaga1424
    @elviraarriaga1424 3 роки тому +24

    Thanks for the movie! And i didn't know it was based on a true story & feel sad for People & creatures who lived & died there in mt.helens just to live in a beautiful state like this one

    • @theonlyonestanding8079
      @theonlyonestanding8079 3 роки тому +4

      Yes I know...I was 13yrs old at that time.... I wish I visited Mt.St. Helens before it blew up. I'm into trees and wildlife🏕🗻🌋🏞

    • @harrietharlow9929
      @harrietharlow9929 3 роки тому +1

      @@theonlyonestanding8079 I moved out here after the eruption. I've seen pictures of St. Helens before the eruption and she sure was beautiful. Almost like pictures of Mt, Fuji.

  • @unitedwestand5100
    @unitedwestand5100 5 років тому +39

    Wow, 1980,
    This seems like it happened yesterday.
    Time sure does fly by....

    • @hayliedlr
      @hayliedlr 4 роки тому +2

      I was almost 2yrs old when this happened. I lived in Michigan at that time. From my understanding, Michigan didn't feel the effects. I only learned about the eruption when I studied volcano eruptions.

    • @christopherparrisjr.3146
      @christopherparrisjr.3146 4 роки тому +3

      40 years next year

    • @petebentley3156
      @petebentley3156 4 роки тому +3

      No to me it seams like it happened a million years ago and not 40,I'm 61 now and live in Virginia.but back then when it happened it was big news,I marred my child hood sweet heart in 1979 and was racing on the pro motocross racing circuit.but they did cancel quite a fue races back then for us in the northern part of the the western part of the country,then one night me and my wife was watching this movie on HBO about the st Helens eruption then 6 mouth later I lost my beloved wife to breast cancer.but now this movie does bring back some bad memories for me,not only for the people who died and had there lives torn up side down but me loosing the most precious thing and person in my life at the time.well they day that time heals all wounds well that's one big lie to some of use now!!!!!!!!!!

    • @mikehagan4320
      @mikehagan4320 3 роки тому +2

      @@petebentley3156 I'm Sorry that Happened to you and Your Wife.
      I lost a wife and Teenage Daughter in a Divorce after 28 Years of Dedication. I'm not perfect but I didn't deserve this and neither did my Beloved Children.
      Some things seem impossible for a person to get there mind around. They are simply Unbelievable. But your only Choice is go on or die. I've Chosen to go on.
      Best Wishes! M.H.

    • @unclepush2895
      @unclepush2895 3 роки тому

      @Sabrina Dugan you were broke by then;)

  • @cylenadee
    @cylenadee 5 років тому +5

    Thanks for downloading this movie! Can’t forget that event! I still have all the newspapers and magazines from Mount Saint Helens eruption.
    I lived in Hood River, Oregon at the time. I now live in the upper valley at the foot of Mt. Hood.
    I was up early that Sunday morning getting ready for church . . . my house being quiet in the mornings as usual . . . so when I got to church at about 9 o’clock they told me that Mount St Helens blew!!
    My jaw dropped!! I was shocked and in a state of disbelief because I didn’t hear a thing!! It seems that all of the noise from the eruption went towards Canada!
    There was barely any ash fall here being about 60 miles south-east of St Helens as the crow flies. But I sure felt sorry for those living directly in its path across Washington and Idaho though. They got buried under so much ash and to make their miseries worst they were in total blackness!

  • @katherinehunter9526
    @katherinehunter9526 Рік тому +2

    I was living in south Alberta when she blew up and we could see the ash!
    Thanks for sharing this video.
    ✌💞🗻🌋🙏

  • @Avigazed
    @Avigazed 3 роки тому +23

    "Don't shit me buddy, I got a turd in every pocket." Thats just gold. Some great lines in this movie.

    • @Robz82001
      @Robz82001 3 роки тому +4

      Agreed, almost as good as:
      Person one: "you're shitting me."
      Person two: "I wouldn't shit you, you're my favorite turd."

    • @petergreen4890
      @petergreen4890 3 роки тому +1

      🤣🤣🤣

  • @LivingWithScience82
    @LivingWithScience82 5 років тому +22

    I lived in Cottage Grove, Oregon when it blew. I felt the harmonics through the ground similar to a space shuttle taking off with full ground vibration. My family, however didn't notice a thing, and after looking around, nothing was amiss. I chalked it up to a nearby quarry blasting on a Sunday. Since we were south, we didn't even get any ash. I was really impressed with a newspaper article of a family who had camped on top of the mountain, and fled westward which saved their lives. I'll post when I find a link.

  • @conniecrawford5231
    @conniecrawford5231 5 років тому +65

    I drove to Mount Saint helens a few months later and will never forget the thousands of trees flattened on the ground. Naure's power is beyond belief!

    • @celticjay2306
      @celticjay2306 5 років тому

      Connie Crawford
      Wow. Thank you... I always wanted to talk to someone who was there.. I wasn't around yet.. Lol..

    • @allencrabbe8543
      @allencrabbe8543 5 років тому +2

      Thank you Connie Crawford! The power of Nature is definitely not to be disrespected, or disbelieved. I was a freshman in high school when it happened, and followed the story. When I watched this movie, it made me feel like I was there. Despite not having today's big budget special effects, I thought they did pretty good. Your friend out here in UA-cam land, Allen (AKA The Lone Wolf of Indiana)❤🐺🌵🇺🇸💖

    • @MarylandGuy-ey3st
      @MarylandGuy-ey3st Рік тому

      I wasn’t a sperm in my father’s nutsack yet lol

  • @LisaSimpsonRules
    @LisaSimpsonRules 4 роки тому +7

    I liked the link between Harry Truman and David Johnson: they are in opposite points of views but can respect each other.

  • @Papz2theDome
    @Papz2theDome 5 років тому +5

    Dave Huffman... the Guy that plays Jackson in this film was murdered back in 1985 while trying to stop a thief in a park. Got stabbed in the chest.

    • @Papz2theDome
      @Papz2theDome 5 років тому +1

      Albert Salmi the guy who played Whittaker. Back in 1990 murdered his wife then shot himself.

    • @ceciliawinterhalder6830
      @ceciliawinterhalder6830 3 роки тому +1

      Re: David Huffman. That's how I came across this movie. Was binge watching (of all things) Little House on the Prairie and he was in an episode the last season. I thought he was handsome and googled him. When I saw date of death, at only 39 and cause of death "homicide" I was in shock. Started binge watching his stuff, which led me to this movie. I like it, and not just because David looks hot with the scruff.

  • @christophertote8912
    @christophertote8912 3 роки тому +11

    I was out of the room when Bill McKinney first spoke with that distinctive voice when going after Otis...Can't be, but, yes; infamous Deliverance scene on the river! I love this movie! Good work by cast and crew. Much appreciated! Peace

    • @guadalahonky4002
      @guadalahonky4002 Рік тому

      That's veteran character actor Bill Kinney, who was an unofficial member of Clint Eastwood's stock acting company going back to the 70s. His character in Michael Cimino's "Thunderbolt and Lightfoot" is even stranger than his character in "Deliverance." If you saw "The Green Mile", Bill was the disfigured guard who threw the switch. Also a member of the Black Widow biker gang in "Every Which Way But Loose", which I went to see at the theater at age 12 in 1978.

  • @jaimealarcon9644
    @jaimealarcon9644 5 років тому +34

    It's unfortunate the writers didn't just let the story unfold the way it happened...it's not a documentary by a long shot. That being said, Art Carney had the best lines!

    • @urchy54
      @urchy54 4 роки тому +6

      Just saw this for the first time ever. Whilst I have always been fascinated by the My. St. Helens eruption and seen lots of documentaries about it all, this movie really humanised the event (Australian spelling there).
      At first I thought "Oh God, Hollywood is at it again." Love interest, Red-neckery and greed. But then it occurred to me that 'this is life.' And so the grain of truth is allowed to be amplified in the movie. True drama it was.
      Loved it. And yes, I do agree that Art Carney is the best . He played the role exactly as I would have imagined that crotchety old so-and-so (with respect to Harry anyways) to be.
      Cheers,and thanks for the upload permitting me to see something new.

    • @CrossCuntryFranco
      @CrossCuntryFranco 4 роки тому +5

      @@urchy54 It wasn't a Hollywood movie; this was filmed by an indie company back in '81, though I suspect Universal (whose MTE television division would later distribute the film in the '90s) was a little bit interested in the film. I don't get why they say it was made for TV, when it was clearly made for theatrical distribution (film posters from Europe show this).

  • @turnoffmainstream
    @turnoffmainstream 18 днів тому +2

    Went there in 2014 and the growth was amazing. After 10 years I bet it's even more beautiful..
    Nature can't be stopped!
    They have sections marked by the years as to when they started planting trees...

  • @arthurbishop3173
    @arthurbishop3173 Рік тому +2

    Thanks for uploading this. I recently lost my DVD copy, and the most recent copy that I bought is of poorer quality. I think I'll just send it back and enjoy your upload 6)

  • @jameson7252
    @jameson7252 5 років тому +54

    This movie was filmed in Bend, Oregon!
    ELK lake lodge was used as Harry Truman’s lodge. The lodge is still there and hasn’t changed much.
    Mt. Bachelor was used as Mt. St. Helens. It’s about a 10000 ft mtn. I’ve climbed it and it’s one fun mtn!

    • @suwanneevalleyunsolved2008
      @suwanneevalleyunsolved2008 5 років тому +6

      Jameson I knew I saw the Sisters in the distance during the airport scene!

    • @AngelCintiaRockgirl
      @AngelCintiaRockgirl 5 років тому +5

      Jameson I've been to Bend many times. Was that also the town where everyone freaked (where they filmed it)? Also, was that supposed to be Cougar? It didn't look anything like Cougar.

    • @jcdenton5828
      @jcdenton5828 5 років тому +3

      Just over 9,000ft actually :P

    • @kakel536
      @kakel536 5 років тому +3

      I thought so! I'm in Bend and thought, Wow, that sure looks like Bachelor! The first photo I mean.

    • @karenengelhardt1610
      @karenengelhardt1610 4 роки тому +2

      I knew it. Bend looks nothing like the area where Mt St Helens is. Evergreen Airport and Pearson Airfield look nothing like their "Vancouver Airport".

  • @PenelopeRoberts9212
    @PenelopeRoberts9212 5 років тому +34

    Thanks very much for uploading this as, like others here, I've waited a long time to watch it again. In the UK it was titled, "Killer Volcano" and was never released on DVD. I recorded it from the TV on VHS but, of course, I no longer have a VHS player. The scenery is absolutely beautiful and what happened was a tragedy but watching the St. Helens area returning to life again over the years has been a revelation.

    • @Goro488
      @Goro488  5 років тому +7

      You are welcome

    • @mattpollack5823
      @mattpollack5823 3 роки тому +2

      Hi Penelope
      i hope this year brings happiness and prosperity to all Americans & Europeans and all over the world 🌍

  • @timmyangeltlc4888
    @timmyangeltlc4888 3 роки тому +14

    I was 10 years old when Mt. St. Helen's erupted. I lived in Wisconsin and eventhough it was happening so far away I was scared. It took my mom quite a while to calm me down. So sad about the loss of human lives, the devastation, and the hardships so many went through in the aftermath.

    • @trentcruise3084
      @trentcruise3084 3 роки тому +2

      @Tina Gouine. Dont be scared. And those Idiots that were killed had plenty of time to leave before the Mountain Collapsed.

    • @timmyangeltlc4888
      @timmyangeltlc4888 3 роки тому +1

      @@trentcruise3084 oh I'm not scared now but at the time I was. I am now 50 years old. Being 10 I didn't know any better that I wasn't in danger until my mom was able to calm me down. Thanks.

    • @lynneshapley3948
      @lynneshapley3948 8 місяців тому

      I was 19 and lived in Missouri....I remember the news and the day it blew. Good movie !

  • @papadollar3156
    @papadollar3156 4 роки тому +14

    I visited st helens in 97’, it’s absolutely beautiful and astonishing at the same time....a must see

  • @ebb2421
    @ebb2421 5 років тому +23

    I was in Banff Alta, heard a low rubbling like thunder that lasted a quite awhile.
    Found out later st.helens blew up...

    • @jcdenton5828
      @jcdenton5828 5 років тому +4

      eb b About a 1,000km away, that’s stupidifyingly insane! :O
      Lucky bastard xD

  • @dlane5292
    @dlane5292 2 роки тому +10

    I know the family of David Johnston were a little upset of portrayals of him by the making of this film, but it was a good film, & I liked it. Watched since it came out, & several times over the years as well. Lot of memorable one liners. I was nearly 6 years old when the real St Helen's event happened. I have vague memories hearing of it in the news, & I also remember a thin layer of ash on everything in the small town I lived in southwest Montana.

  • @bertspencer590
    @bertspencer590 3 роки тому +9

    I lived in northern Idaho at the time and left to find work, mom stayed in Idaho when mt staint Helen blew like 2 months after I left and found work, mom was not doing well due to her breathing and all. Bless mom and blessed all those who was in the ashes or lost a family member or someone close to them

  • @laurenstevenson8263
    @laurenstevenson8263 Місяць тому +1

    Mount St. Helen's erupted on my 22nd Birthday....I still remember that day.

  • @conniemcmurry9589
    @conniemcmurry9589 4 роки тому +12

    I was a 33-year-old and living in Redmond Washington at the time. We followed all the happenings on TV. Most of the ash went east into Yakima, where it looked like night.People were getting stranded when their cars stalled because of "inhaling" the ash.

    • @petergreen4890
      @petergreen4890 3 роки тому +2

      I was 6 and in Yakima, but I remember it well....we were leaving church and almost didn’t make it home

    • @mattpollack5823
      @mattpollack5823 3 роки тому

      Hi Connie
      i hope this year brings happiness and prosperity to all Americans & Europeans and all over the world 🌍

  • @jeremiahweed6470
    @jeremiahweed6470 5 років тому +13

    My dad and mom in 1980 remembers in Missouri we had dust covering the ground..I wasn't born then.. good movies

    • @tabbysmithfield7840
      @tabbysmithfield7840 5 років тому +3

      Jeremiah Weed hey, I have a Jeremiah Weed liquor mirror! Dated circa 1980, says across the bottom "he was a helluva railroad man"

  • @patriciachrzan146
    @patriciachrzan146 4 роки тому +3

    Good movie. Nice to see Art Carney. Thanks for the upload. 🙂

  • @stevenlloyd39
    @stevenlloyd39 5 років тому +10

    I was a kid when this happened. Not long after my parents received two glass tubes of ash from Mt. Saint Helens from two of their friends who lived in that area. Wish I still had them.

    • @LilyGazou
      @LilyGazou 4 роки тому +3

      Steven Lloyd I can dig some up for you. Plenty left.

  • @gailedmonds9107
    @gailedmonds9107 2 роки тому +5

    I remember this day. My husband, son & I were at Delta Park sitting in the car watching the kids play soccer & from time to time looking up at Mt. St. Helen's. I told my husband that we needed to head for home now because I was getting worried that the mountain looked like it was going to blow & then it started. By the time we got home to Beaverton it had already turned dark & the ash was coming down like dirty snow & piling up heavily & quickly. We covered our moths & ran into our apartment where we stayed for days.

    • @katel7309
      @katel7309 2 роки тому +1

      how did you see that? I was just interested, since the movie shows that people didn't give a stuff or disbelieved it.

  • @afc322
    @afc322 3 роки тому +6

    I was 5 when this happened. I was enthralled about the story. Saw this movie some year later, it is a riot watching it now. Holds up ok.

  • @chaschk2
    @chaschk2 3 роки тому +2

    I lived in Portland Oregon the day Mt. St. Helens blew. We heard the blast.

  • @cheese-qw9vd
    @cheese-qw9vd 3 роки тому +6

    14:31 left to right is Mt. Bachelor, Broken Top, South Sister, Middle Sister and North Sister in Central Oregon. The pre-blast mountain footage is of Mt. Bachelor. Obviously shot in Cnetral Oregon...South Sister makes some cool apperances too.

    • @stevebragg4256
      @stevebragg4256 3 роки тому

      Elk lake Resort near Bend OR is where Harry's Lodge is depicted in the movie, it's still there but they built more things and the front porch is built in like a room now.

  • @capie44
    @capie44 5 років тому +5

    May 18th 1980
    I was living on Fairchild AFB near Spokane, Wa -- 300 miles away.
    The Air Base was having their open house. What a mess.
    The first thing that gave us the clue was the strange colored cloud coming from the West.
    Then the base announced the eruption, the end of the Air Show, and evacuation of the base.
    Minutes later, "Follow Me" trucks and tugs came onto the tarmac to pull show craft onto the staging areas so they may take off and head East or be placed in hangers.
    Then the Air Raid sirens came on...for over eight hours those sirens blared.
    It got on everyone's nerves.
    I lived with one of those poles on the corner of our yard.
    The Governor didn't know how to turn them off for those long, nerve-racking hours.
    I went outside the next day and scooped a small sample of that ash. A few years later, I sold it at a yard sale. I wish I hadn't.
    .

  • @richardmark561
    @richardmark561 Рік тому +5

    God bless Harry Truman a WW1 vet

  • @micheleclass2248
    @micheleclass2248 5 років тому +15

    The part where the roads are blocked with people coming to see the volcano, and having a parade, are so Pacific Northwest. 😁
    My family was living in Northern Oregon, right by the Columbia river, near Blue lake park, when all of this was happening; but we were on vacation in Hawaii.
    As the plane was flying back into Portland, the pilot announced it, and told everyone to look out the windows.

  • @crystalrusmisel1832
    @crystalrusmisel1832 5 років тому +21

    When this volcano erupted she took many lives. My cousin was being born at the exact moment that day. Her mom my aunt always told us that st Helens wasn't the only thing to erupt that morning lol Sadly my cousin's not with us anymore. She was my best friend and I'll miss her always.

    • @Mysticcatpurr
      @Mysticcatpurr 4 роки тому

      :(

    • @alexmercier3964
      @alexmercier3964 4 роки тому +2

      Fifty-seven people were killed; 250 homes, 47 bridges, 15 miles (24 km) of railways, and 185 miles (298 km) of highway were destroyed

    • @mattpollack5823
      @mattpollack5823 3 роки тому +1

      Hi Crystal
      i hope this year brings happiness and prosperity to all Americans & Europeans and all over the world 🌍

    • @mattpollack5823
      @mattpollack5823 3 роки тому

      @@Mysticcatpurr Hi Angie
      i hope this year brings happiness and prosperity to all Americans & Europeans and all over the world 🌍

  • @laurabogue3503
    @laurabogue3503 3 роки тому +7

    Thank you for posting this video. I have the movie myself but haven't seen it in a while. I saw the mountain in 2016 she was proud and beautiful then. I haven't seen her in a while though. You don't appreciate the destruction till the last 20 miles. Then as you crest one hill it is layed out in dramatic fashion. Truly a sight.

  • @joyleenpoortier7496
    @joyleenpoortier7496 5 років тому +166

    Thank you I really enjoyed this movie. RIP to all who were lost including all the Animals

    • @fauxmanchu8094
      @fauxmanchu8094 5 років тому +7

      Joyleen Poortier 🙏👍👏😿

    • @SMGsweets
      @SMGsweets 5 років тому +26

      @Joyleen Poortier ...I have more pity for the animals...they had no idea...The people that died had been warned and warned and did not evactuate ...They deserved what they got...They were stupid, stubborn and ingnorant and paid for it with their lives...

    • @ioannisalex5089
      @ioannisalex5089 5 років тому +20

      The same here. I always feel sorry for the animals, than humans. Animals are defenseless and get no help/warning from anybody !!

    • @justsandra71
      @justsandra71 5 років тому +17

      @@SMGsweets
      I agree. Poor animals 😭

    • @SissyD61
      @SissyD61 5 років тому +11

      Amen!

  • @rdg771s123
    @rdg771s123 Рік тому +3

    This is a good movie. I had never heard of it until UA-cam recommended. Glad to have watched!

    • @semoneg2826
      @semoneg2826 11 місяців тому

      Its also a true story

  • @broella6493
    @broella6493 2 роки тому +2

    I was 25 years old when Mt. St. Helens erupted. I live in Colorado and I remember going outside the day after and my car was covered in ash… Never forget it..