Gran Torino (2009) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | Movie Reaction | Movie Review | Movie Commentary

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • * ROAD TO 30,000 SUBSCRIPTIONS **
    to Donate using Paypal!: www.paypal.com...
    Cashapp: $mrlboyd
    Patreon - / mrlboyd
    DISCORD - / discord
    FOLLOW ME: / mrlboyd
    MAIN CHANNEL: / @mrlboydreacts
    MUSIC REACTIONS : / @mrlboydmusic
    CLICK THE BELL! 🔔
    CONTACT ME
    ➡️ / mrlboyd
    ➡️ / mrlboyd
    ➡️ / malagaphotography
    ➡️ Snapchat: MrLboyd

Комментарии • 413

  • @hackerx7329
    @hackerx7329 6 месяцев назад +182

    Walt wasn't a racist he was a misanthrope. He didn't single out any one group, he hated absolutely everybody regardless of skin color or nationality or religion or anything else. As you clearly saw, that included his entire family. You also saw that the trash talk, slurs, and everything else was used equally with friends just as it was with strangers. He was a true equal opportunity offender.

    • @Parallax-3D
      @Parallax-3D 6 месяцев назад +46

      @yt45204- Misanthrope is someone who hates humanity. Lycanthrope is a werewolf. 😂

    • @coltenharris1053
      @coltenharris1053 6 месяцев назад

      No, he is racist. When you use dehumanizing and derogatory terms that are aimed at a specific race it's racist, regardless if he is doing it towards people of all races. It perpetuates the cycle of underlying racism that is evident in American society. Sure he hates the lack of humanity in people but he doesn't have any either, and it doesn't change the fact that he is just a terrible human to begin with. He just hates people being different, I'm sure if there was a gay character or trans, there would be a scene where he is calling them out and he would be proven to be in the right because they have different view than someone from the 50s. The ending tries to have him cast of a some sort of light but his crass behavior is what allowed for people to be so shitty to one another. The dialogue is pretty cringy as well, written by what feels like someone who doesn't understand the cultures he is even stereotyping. Lastly, people who talk call their friends names really have toxic relationships. Often times, because they don't wanna seem weak people act like they don't care, but they do, and they harbor it deep inside and it becomes another insecurity, and then do it to another person to make themselves feel better and the cycle continues. How about being nice towards people who you are friends with and not getting enjoyment at their expense? Walt is literally like a 12 year old who never grew up.

    • @StrawberriPoison
      @StrawberriPoison 6 месяцев назад +2

      “Hating everybody” isn’t exactly a defense against racist behavior. Don’t get me wrong I love this film and have no issue with it! But that arguments kind of absurd, if your behavior is racist in one setting it doesn’t change the weight of your words just because you act that way in another.

    • @hackerx7329
      @hackerx7329 6 месяцев назад +15

      @@StrawberriPoisonYou are arguing against dictionary definitions.

    • @StrawberriPoison
      @StrawberriPoison 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@hackerx7329 and you are simplifying an issue as massive, ongoing, undefinable and potentially undefeatable as racism by a 10 word definition. Forgive me for not worshipping the English language I suppose? Clearly not gonna change your mind and I don’t think you will to mine either. Adios

  • @bugvswindshield
    @bugvswindshield 6 месяцев назад +12

    Clint Eastwood is Master Class all the way.
    Brilliant man.

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад +1

      Everything he's in is a masterpiece

  • @michaelatteberry6462
    @michaelatteberry6462 6 месяцев назад +12

    Great reaction, as usual. However, you obviously have no idea of the American culture of those who lived in the 40s to 60s

    • @TeddyKGB12
      @TeddyKGB12 6 месяцев назад

      Actually, he does. He mentioned several times that his step-father spoke the way Walt does in the movie. Try removing your head out of your ass, you'll catch a bit more.

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад +1

      Olden day America was something else aye

  • @MajorRza
    @MajorRza 6 месяцев назад +41

    What this movie was to me was the perfect example that actions speak louder than words. As much as Walt used words of hate, his actions throughout pointed to him being a good person with a rough exterior.

    • @GregorySnipe
      @GregorySnipe 6 месяцев назад

      It's not a binary. You can be a good person and be decent with your words. That's just a cop out.

    • @MajorRza
      @MajorRza 6 месяцев назад +3

      @@GregorySnipe I agree I think it’s a cop out in today’s generation who was taught that this isn’t how you speak to people, but it was a very different time when you are talking about a guy who was in the military during the Korean War. Not that it was right, but in the example of this movie his actions ultimately spoke louder to me than his words. But I understand that everyone isn’t going to have the same feeling.

    • @Puzzlesocks
      @Puzzlesocks 3 месяца назад

      @@GregorySnipe Sure, you can be, but who are you to tell people how they SHOULD act? At least Walt tells people how it is without covering it up in flowery language and passive aggressiveness. He's being more true to his true emotions than any wokie covering it up by using "inclusive" language. He's more than willing to accept the consequences of his words.
      There is a reason that the root for spelling (as in words) and spells (as in magic and deception) are the same. People get deceived and distracted by words and miss the reality.

    • @GregorySnipe
      @GregorySnipe 3 месяца назад

      @@Puzzlesocks I'm not telling anyone to act. Walt is not a real person. He's a movie character but if I was telling someone how to act that's my right at freedom of speech and you have the right to disagree with that. You can tell people how it is without covering it up in flowering language and passive aggressiveness and also not be a racist jerk like Walt. Like I said in my original point, you can do both things. I don't care if he's willing to accept responsibility for his actions. Also spells are called spells because they're made of words just like stop signs and cookbooks and magazines. It has nothing to do with words being the same as magic because they both trick people. And magic has nothing to do with deception. Unless you're talking about show magic. In that case, you don't use spells because it's not a magic spell. It's a trick.

    • @Puzzlesocks
      @Puzzlesocks 3 месяца назад

      ​@@GregorySnipe That's just not the etymology at all, but you can believe what you want. The more modern translation would be "an ability to control or influence people as though one had magical power over them.", which is exactly what words do in this context.
      Also when you talk to people you should probably not open with the assumption that the other person is an idiot. I assure you that I understand what fantasy is better than you understand the difference between perception and reality, since you are still missing the point.

  • @jefflytle5799
    @jefflytle5799 6 месяцев назад +7

    the older you get the better the movie is

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      Very true, I've been watching it since I was 20-21

  • @jadechurch98
    @jadechurch98 6 месяцев назад +2

    I live for people getting emotional over words that pierce their little heart. Just to see their reaction instead of a response.

  • @Halph87
    @Halph87 6 месяцев назад +1

    I’ve known old guys like this that speak in ways we consider inappropriate, but then they are kind and generous with anyone that they deem to be a quality person in their eyes no matter the race. I have members like this in my family and they say stuff and I say don’t say that, and they say why? My response is because it doesn’t matter how you mean it, people will hear it a certain way.

  • @aaronburdon221
    @aaronburdon221 6 месяцев назад +7

    I talk to people like that all the time. It's not racist. It's equivalent to teasing someone about their heritage. We all have heritage, just like we all poop and pee and ALL heritages have Stereotypes so it's just an exaggeration of that stereotype. It's very much a bro code sort of thing. For regular people in your life, it's good to just talk plainly, but for those whom you are close to, you can mess with them a little bit. They insult you, you insult them. Just bat it back and forth.

    • @Sig509
      @Sig509 5 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah, the guy acts like he is permanently online and looks actively to be offended by something xD. Seriously, one of the weakest reviews I saw.

  • @anthonycurby4606
    @anthonycurby4606 6 месяцев назад +2

    Great reaction, as usual, kind sir. I would like to recommend the movie, Trouble with the Curve. Its anothe Clint Eastwood film. A masterpiece of a film in my opinion, but i could be biased by baseball lol

  • @DevInvest
    @DevInvest 6 месяцев назад +2

    The biggest dude you’ll ever see get out /in of a small car is
    “Tyrone” the getaway driver in
    “Snatch” (a must see!)

  • @BigBass-xf5yi
    @BigBass-xf5yi 4 месяца назад

    Possibly the biggest character arc in cinematic history

  • @HD-gx8eh
    @HD-gx8eh 6 месяцев назад

    What year Jeep are you talking about replacing? It could be anywhere from $1000 to $2000 unless you got some bullshit new rig. Great reaction btw Mr Lboyd

  • @eltondiesel
    @eltondiesel 6 месяцев назад +1

    I could have swore I watched you react to his before. Maybe I'm mistaken. Is this a re-upload?

    • @mrlboydschannelmanager
      @mrlboydschannelmanager 6 месяцев назад +1

      No it is not. It was posted a while ago on patreon but not here

  • @joer8432
    @joer8432 6 месяцев назад

    Amazing reaction. I really appreciated the way you explained your thoughts. Keep up your great work sir.

  • @christopherbayne9061
    @christopherbayne9061 5 месяцев назад +1

    The commentator lacks testicular fortitude.

  • @couch.patati-patata
    @couch.patati-patata 6 месяцев назад

    It starts with the car.

  • @SmokinDroFrayser
    @SmokinDroFrayser 6 месяцев назад

    Clint Eastwood wrote it lol

  • @thewhitewolf7728
    @thewhitewolf7728 6 месяцев назад +77

    You're missing his interactions with the barber.....it's not because they don't look like him. He just makes those comments to EVERYONE. And those willing to dish it back to him he respects and likes.

    • @Sig509
      @Sig509 5 месяцев назад +5

      Exactly. You can even see the barber at Walt's funeral, when he laughs when the priest is recalling Walt's description of him. They were friends.

    • @thewhitewolf7728
      @thewhitewolf7728 5 месяцев назад +1

      @Sig509 YESSS. I absolutely love that small easy to miss acting decision!!

    • @TheAlkochef
      @TheAlkochef 4 месяца назад +3

      It is just oldschool general smack talk/banter man... It was ´great times back then D: Now ppl so woke, wtf man....

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      @@Sig509 Yeah he loved Walt

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      @@TheAlkochef NGL it's annoying

  • @Tr0nzoid
    @Tr0nzoid 6 месяцев назад +33

    "This is not a realistic encounter."
    The only thing unrealistic about the encounter with the guys on the street is that they didn't start fighting sooner or shoot at Walt when he pulled his gun.

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад +1

      Agreed, irl they'd probably have pulled out a piece as soon as they saw him walk up to them. With that being said I think he'd still have went cowboy mode on them and made it out

    • @QueenAstroParticle
      @QueenAstroParticle 2 месяца назад

      My thoughts exactly. I envy anyone for whom this encounter seems unrealistic, because that means you've not been subject to such things. But i can promise you it's quite realistic. I've personally been party to them.

    • @PrinceofPain-wv1lo
      @PrinceofPain-wv1lo 29 дней назад

      Logical movies was highly offended at the scene..He did laugh at Walt calling Scott Eastwood slurs..Logical movies is a real George Jefferson

  • @Guild0fGamers
    @Guild0fGamers 6 месяцев назад +22

    I love that Walt’s behavior is so confusing to you. This was basically both of my grandfathers growing up.

  • @revengeofthenerd5261
    @revengeofthenerd5261 6 месяцев назад +59

    As an autoworker who works in Detroit, I love this movie and relate to Walt Kowalski so much, and I'm only 37 who's never fired a gun in his life. Thank you for reacting to this

    • @DannyBedo
      @DannyBedo 6 месяцев назад +5

      Go to the range 😂😂 make some friends, guns are fun if you’re safe and responsible

    • @revengeofthenerd5261
      @revengeofthenerd5261 6 месяцев назад +6

      @DannyBedo I understand that. But I suffer from depression, I've attempted suicide before, so for a person like me, if I were to take your advice and go to the gun range, the moment I get a loaded gun in my hand, I'd be as likely to shoot my right temple as the target in front of me. So knowing that, I just generally avoid firearms. But that doesn't mean I'm anti-2A or anything. Guns are just not for people like me

    • @DannyBedo
      @DannyBedo 6 месяцев назад +4

      @@revengeofthenerd5261 woof, I definitely get it. I have a lot of friends that aren’t here anymore and I have some tendencies myself. Buy a nerf and shoot cups 😂 it’s just as fun plus plush won’t pierce the cranium

    • @420_momentum
      @420_momentum 6 месяцев назад

      I hers detroit is filled with tough guys , gangs and people fight a lot there tho

    • @johnathanstruble1064
      @johnathanstruble1064 6 месяцев назад +1

      Love from Oklahoma Detroit Auto Worker! 💯

  • @lsbill27
    @lsbill27 6 месяцев назад +11

    I'm guessing you haven't spent much time in the hood. We lived for several years in the projects and I'm here to tell you interactions like Sue and her friend had with the locals do happen. It's not commonplace but it does happen.

  • @Ichabod69
    @Ichabod69 6 месяцев назад +24

    The interaction between the black gentleman that happens a lot when you're in the hood

  • @cravenmadness967
    @cravenmadness967 6 месяцев назад +13

    having a 'tight posterior' isn't anything 'new', it used to be the mainstream preferred before 'phat posteriors' in rap songs decided over-weight and cellulite filled backsides were the preference. I still love me a tight little 'posterior'...

    • @jamestrotter5828
      @jamestrotter5828 6 месяцев назад +2

      Lol they talking about the "ENTRANCE"

    • @cravenmadness967
      @cravenmadness967 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@jamestrotter5828 I still love me one'a those too.

  • @lorig-ski
    @lorig-ski 6 месяцев назад +40

    He wasn't a horrible human; he was a very bitter and remorseful human. He saw his once beautiful neighborhood decay into basically a slum area because nobody took pride in their homes. He watched as gangs and crime became the new normal. He struggled with the memories of taking lives during the war, and the only person who ever truly understood him was his wife, who is now gone, and nobody seems to care. His family did not shed a single tear over the loss of their mother/grandmother. Materialistic weasels with no respect.

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      His family were selfish and never even cared to check up on him to see if he's ok, Walt was right to be bitter to them

  • @poeslanding
    @poeslanding 6 месяцев назад +7

    Sorry to say but those are real conversations that happen from scumbags all the time.

  • @4Realgames69
    @4Realgames69 6 месяцев назад +9

    your so critical to decide how different parts of america ethic groups interact with each other. Surprisingly enough many of these Steryo types are real with millions of people.

  • @RezaREX
    @RezaREX 6 месяцев назад +13

    While words matter, it's the actions that have a much more significant impact.

  • @RyneMurray23
    @RyneMurray23 6 месяцев назад +11

    It was very intelligent. He knew he didn't have that long to live so he sacrificed himself for Thao and Sue. Those guys shot an unarmed Korean war veteran in front of at least 20 witnesses. They aren't getting out of prison. 👍🏼

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      They're defo getting life in prison for killing this veteran

  • @toodlescae
    @toodlescae 6 месяцев назад +56

    Walt accepts his sons' distance because he knows he wasn't the most loving or attentive father. He tried to make up for that by helping Tao. His grandkids are still entitled brats.
    For the most part Walt is an equal opportunity hater. He hates just about everyone...outwardly. Inside Walt really was a good man deep down. He just didn't know how to show it. Not only was he from a different generation but his experiences in Korea created a hard shell around him.
    The guy with Sue when Walt rescues her is Clint Eastwood's son.
    Yes that's Clint Eastwood singing at the end.

    • @dougstevenson1503
      @dougstevenson1503 6 месяцев назад +9

      Equal opportunity hater is the way that I always describe Walt in this, it's definitely apt. It's not about people who don't look like him, it's about someone who throws those words around at/to everybody without really thinking about it.

    • @DannyBedo
      @DannyBedo 6 месяцев назад

      It’s even, makes it still racist. “he’s equally illogical and consistently misinformed” how cute, he’s still a fucking super bad person. I hate the idea of “quaint” racism, it’s not adorable and old. It’s annoying.

    • @motorcycleboy9000
      @motorcycleboy9000 6 месяцев назад

      Some old-timers are like that. My nickname was the N-word at one place (I'm white Hispanic), because I'd do the jobs no one wanted. As I proved myself over and over and worked my way up, the old-timers still called that "bad ass n-word." It pissed me off at first, I grew up in a black neighborhood and black church, but I put some respect on that name over time. And I definitely had words for their old soggy asses.

  • @DTwxrisk
    @DTwxrisk 6 месяцев назад +17

    dude you have NO idea what this movie is about . It is NOT movie about racism -- at al. I' hae been a big fan of your videos for long time and you are completely missing the point of this movie. Racism is not the same thing as bigotry. WALT is a bigot Because in his generation everybody was. BUT in the sociological sense racism is the practice of using the power structure of establishment to suppress ridicule and diminish people who don't look like you or who don't act like you. otherwise it's bigotry
    Yet walt ends up helping the people who are immigrants who are VERY different from him . Walt despises his own self-centered American middle class family that is the epitome of modern White America middle class values-- greed self-centeredness materialism. Walt dies -note the JESUS on the cross pose when he is shot dead and is on the ground -to help an immigrant family and to protect the family from a gang. I am not sure how you can think he is a racist. I submit to you that it is not racist to use ethnic racial terms but also commit to help people who are different from you when they need your help.

    • @tl8960
      @tl8960 6 месяцев назад +7

      yeah he didn't get it at all

    • @2971username
      @2971username 6 месяцев назад +4

      Exactly. I am a Mexican American who grew up in the 80’s. I had white friends, black friends and Asian friends, and we ALL talked shit to each other, made stereotypical jokes to each other about each others individual race. BUT we each had each others back. Very different from being racist. It was a level of comfort and bonding and trust knowing it was just that SHIT talking. In fact the closer and tighter you were with someone the more shit y’all talked to each other. People today are too sensitive.

    • @GentlemenMonkey
      @GentlemenMonkey 6 месяцев назад +8

      Respectfully, you are drawing an incorrect distinction between racism and bigotry.
      Racism is prejudice, discrimination, or antagonism against a person based upon on their race or ethnicity.
      Bigotry is a prejudiced opinion or belief against a person or group.
      These things are not mutually exclusive. Bigotry does not have to be based on race but it can be, and when it is it is also racist, it's racial bigotry.
      All racism is bigotry, not all bigotry is racism.
      Take for example your characterization of Walt's entitled children and grandchildren. You proclaim that they are an accurate representation of the American white middle class.
      That's racial and classist bigotry. You may feel it's a justified and accurate representation of a commonly observable phenomenon within a certain racial and economic group, but it is nonetheless stereotyping a group and is therefore bigoted.
      Incidentally, this isn't a personal attack upon your moral character and no offense is intended. I don't interpret any malicious intent in your comment, my point is simply that bigotry is a really broad term which can encompass any sort of generalization about a group of people.
      I understand that with the redefining of words you are presenting it makes sense to draw a distinction but Walt has prejudices against other races that manifests beyond his words into his actions in how the tries not to associate with them and how he mentally holds a disdainful presumption about their intentions which he articulates at times. Much of Walt's expositions exist narratively to reveal to us the negative presumptions he makes about people based on their race.
      What the story shows us through the film is that despite Walt's bigoted prejudices, when he gets to know people as individuals he morally evolves. His experience in the war, the gang, the girl being harassed, those all serve as negative experiences which rationalize Walt's prejudiced assumptions, it illustrates how a man who is moral and honorable at his core like Walt can hold racist beliefs through a form of confirmation bias. It's only when he begrudgingly gets to know people as individuals and has the epiphany that he has so much in common with them that his racial lens is shattered.
      The overall story of the film is a tale of redemption. Thao's redemption is learning to become a proper man who puts the world around him in order and builds things instead of (as represented by the gang) creates chaos in the world and destroys things. Walt's redemption is in overcoming his racist prejudices to see people as individuals instead of their group, being a better father figure to Thao than he was his own sons, and in the end with his sacrifice it's a form of reconciliation with God. None of this works if we hand wave away Walt's flaws. A core point of the story is that Walt is profoundly racist but that this doesn't make him an irredeemably evil person. He doesn't hate people, he just has ignorant presumptions about them and when life circumstances force him confront those assumptions he accepts that he was wrong. A bit of subtle nuance that's important to note is that this was only possible because his neighbors saw him more from his actions than from his words, and I think there's an important social commentary point therein. They see the cognitive dissonance between Walt's words and actions and choose to see the value in him rather than focus on his flaw.
      I respectfully submit to you that not only is Walt categorically racist in the film but that it is essential to the story. The nuance I think you're trying to put forward is that Walt doesn't hate these people and that he's a decent person at his core as is evidenced by all the good he ends up doing for them.
      True! That's a core part of the story!
      I believe the disconnect here is that you think that can't be true if he starts off as racist, that he would be nonredeemable if he was racist.
      My whole long winded point here is that a major point of the film, if not the main point, is precisely that he IS racist but that he IS redeemable.
      If I wanted to write another page I'd bloviate on the manifestations of racism and what Walt specifically is representing but instead I'll wrap up my TED talk and thank you for your time and consideration.
      TLDR: I think I get what you mean, but I think you're hung up on the terms and that you might be missing some nuance because of it.

  • @andreworlando7374
    @andreworlando7374 6 месяцев назад +5

    That sin is often misquoted a translates to Thou shalt not murder not kill there is a difference

  • @TeenTyrant
    @TeenTyrant 6 месяцев назад +8

    I think that receiving a medal for killing scared, defenseless people made Walt feel like he was unworthy of being praised, admired, or idolized. I think he projected the image of a cranky, ignorant, hate, racist, belligerent old bastard deliberately so that nobody would see him as any kind of role model or someone to try to be like, including his sons. The fact that he had such a wonderful wife, and that he felt guilty for what he did during war, shows that he’s not as terrible a person as he wants people to think he is, and that he befriended Sue and Tao so easily and so quickly despite all that shows that he was never actually as racist and hateful as he wanted to seem. I think he deliberately didn’t want anybody to like him because of that guilt, and when he realized a way that he could maybe make up for his past, partially, he truly was at peace, and revealed himself to actually be a good and caring man underneath the act.

  • @BlueeyedRabbit
    @BlueeyedRabbit 6 месяцев назад +41

    I think the message of this movie is " actions speaks incredibly louder then words !!!"

    • @TheKyfe
      @TheKyfe 6 месяцев назад +1

      Hah! underrated comment

    • @GregorySnipe
      @GregorySnipe 6 месяцев назад

      It's not a binary choice. You can be a good person and speak to people respectfully. No one ever sat around saying, well I'd like to do good things but since I'm polite to people I can't do good things.

    • @BlueeyedRabbit
      @BlueeyedRabbit 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@GregorySnipe There is an important difference between harmless and peaceful. If you are peaceful, you can still be capable of raw violence. If you are harmless then you are not capable of it.

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      Taking action is the most important factor

  • @fuerchtenichts
    @fuerchtenichts 6 месяцев назад +17

    This movie questions exactly the narrative the reactor is clinging to. In modern society a lot of people judge others on hollow phrases but on their actions. This led to an inability to have a hard but constructive argument. People prefer to be told lies as long as they sound good.

    • @ryanr8364
      @ryanr8364 6 месяцев назад +6

      He and the entirety of the generation he is part of, regrettably. Such a hypervigilance and sensitivity to outward cliches of "the R word," perceived prejudice, etc., but so little ability to discern when there really is hate vs. the caricatures they have in their minds of what they've been told hate looks like. "Old boomers who use bad words and mean slurs are r-ists!" they smugly feel confident about, when the true hater approaches with a smile, righteous words, and plan hidden behind her back.

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      It's crazy

  • @jduncanandroid
    @jduncanandroid 6 месяцев назад +15

    The more they made Walt detestable in the first half of the film, the more powerful his sacrifice becomes at the end... it's a dichotomy

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      I always liked Walt though, even in the first half

  • @dieseldave2273
    @dieseldave2273 6 месяцев назад +10

    The duality of mankind has always been interesting to me, I always thought this movie did a great job of show casing it.

  • @dive2drive314
    @dive2drive314 6 месяцев назад +10

    I work in construction and I've spoken to a lot of guys that talk like that who worked at the service desk of a lumber yard or supply store.

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад +1

      So have I during my engineering internship, I bantered a lot with other guys there lol

  • @zackstoner4523
    @zackstoner4523 6 месяцев назад +5

    I have not watched this reaction yet. I have big hopes for it. Walt is not a racist! He jut talks shit. His action prove the man he truly is.

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      I saw the reaction yesterday actually, it was alright but I feel as though the viewer sorta missed the point of the movie

  • @Lightningrod75
    @Lightningrod75 6 месяцев назад +14

    At 48:35 not just a door, its the real confessional.

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      Because Thao meant more to him

  • @dmwelchdw
    @dmwelchdw 6 месяцев назад +28

    I'm not making excuses for racism, but in this context I think it makes sense for the character to be the way he is. You can see later that he carries the guilt of his actions during the war and my reasoning is that his way of coping with that guilt is to completely distance himself and push everyone away.

  • @TheDuckofDoom.
    @TheDuckofDoom. 6 месяцев назад +5

    Intent matters far more than the specific word choice. Notice his friend group flings insulting language at each other, but they aren't intended or taken as insults any deeper than superficial sparring.

  • @rightmunted7538
    @rightmunted7538 6 месяцев назад +15

    An underrated part of the film that nobody seems to appreciate because they get caught up in the "hes not racist anymore!" is the significance of Thao and Walt regardless of race and culture.
    Its evident that it took Walt a long time to be able to lets say function again after he went to war. That combined with the probability of the time, being that he probably had his sons when he was still very young, is the perfect recipe for a father who doesnt raise his sons in a productive manner.
    Later on he comes to realise this, he sees his sons have grown into spoilt and morally questionable people and regrets his own inactivity in raising them.
    As he takes Thao under his wing he begins to teach Thao the way he probably has gone to sleep wishing he taught his sons for decades.
    Its a therapeutic experience for him, above his acts in war, his one slip up in being a faithful husband, he regrets how he raised his sons.
    In his last chapter of life he in some way redeems himself in his own eyes by teaching a surrogate son to be an honest man.

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      Yeah most viewers get too caught up with the "He's not racist anymore" thingy when really they should be looking at the much bigger picture

  • @syx3s
    @syx3s 6 месяцев назад +9

    this movie wouldn't be half as important without the language.

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      It had such an impact on it enough to make it a masterpiece

  • @mil2k11
    @mil2k11 6 месяцев назад +8

    isn't this the old adage that actions speak louder than words?

  • @RicoRaynn
    @RicoRaynn 6 месяцев назад +4

    Having spent several years in Mississippi (Jackson) and being married to an Asian woman (also Hmong), I can truthfully say things like that interaction with the assholes on the street happen frequently. My wife is 4'11 and about 100 lbs. By the end of our first month in that state, she wouldn't go to the store or the mall without me with her, simply because these exact things happen constantly if she went out by herself.

  • @ericmarois6960
    @ericmarois6960 6 месяцев назад +3

    Quite interested to hear what you have to say about this one since the subject matter is not sugar coated at all. I'm hoping it gets your approval in the end but this may be a rough ride to get there. Let's see.
    Edited to add:
    You do realize he was condemned and didn't have long to live anyway, right? He was couching up blood, his doctor was asking for a lot of tests. If he wasn't he thought he was and figured he'd go out his own way setting some things right as he did. He's biased against a lot of people but has also seen a lot of the worst parts of humanity as a veteran from war so although I do not approve of his behavior and vocabulary I can understand where it's coming from. He's said so at some point how he had to take some lives to keep his own and how it changed him, he carried that burden the rest of his life. I choose to believe he was a decent human being before he was a soldier but the experiences changed him. A tough movie for sure, also a powerful one well worth the watch. About the "I need a filter" comment: please don't. It's part of your honest reaction to what you hear and see and also why I keep coming back. Thank you. This was interesting and entertaining. I'll be looking forward to seeing you again soon.

  • @stevenwalker5343
    @stevenwalker5343 6 месяцев назад +5

    We were brought up with " sticks and stones will break my bones but words can never hurt me".

  • @Rebelrocker69
    @Rebelrocker69 6 месяцев назад +18

    My dad was a Korean War veteran and he never spoke like that. On the other hand I had two uncles that were Vietnam War veterans and they both spoke like that. One for about fifteen years after the war and the other for the rest of his life. Perhaps it was a defense mechanism to allow their minds to cope with the near constant kill or be killed situation, and they had trouble readjusting to normal life. I don't know, but they both became alcoholics.

    • @nickschnider9191
      @nickschnider9191 6 месяцев назад +2

      My grandpa served in Korea. He came back an alcoholic and long story short he ended up in prison for a while.

    • @marquisdesade3025
      @marquisdesade3025 6 месяцев назад

      You have to do something to trivialize the enemy. Or so I’ve read and can only imagine.
      If you’re worried about respecting someone’s nationality, etc then it’s gonna be a lot harder to take them out.
      I imagine that sticks with you after the war is over.

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      I guess it depends on the experiences of the individual

  • @randabeast
    @randabeast 6 месяцев назад +65

    For all of your smug pontificating you completely see the movie on a surface level and not the undertones and themes of the movie.

    • @ryanr8364
      @ryanr8364 6 месяцев назад +16

      It really was a total miss by this reviewer. A shame.

    • @hellbillyjr
      @hellbillyjr 6 месяцев назад +4

      It's hard to get a full appreciation from a reaction channel. There's was things LBoyd missed while watching the whole thing and I found that disappointing

    • @westlod
      @westlod 6 месяцев назад +4

      @randabeast exactly what I thought, we all know the movie is racist but doesn’t need to be pointed out after every comment.

    • @GregorySnipe
      @GregorySnipe 6 месяцев назад +1

      Watch another reviewer.

    • @yarsivad000.5
      @yarsivad000.5 5 месяцев назад +2

      He understood the movie fine in the end.

  • @TheTriumphbsa
    @TheTriumphbsa 6 месяцев назад +4

    The underlying theme throughout is Walt's slow acceptance of Asians as he gets to know Tao and Sue. Its his sloughing off of conscious hatred for Asians he learned through his Korean War experience; while alleviating his unconscious guilt for what he had to do to them, especially the kid that just wanted to surrender. His final self forgiveness and atonement comes with him sacrificing his own life, for those of two Asians he has come to accept and befriend.

  • @BushmasterBrackett
    @BushmasterBrackett 6 месяцев назад +8

    Walt was in fact ignorant of people who appeared different than himself. However, unlike some people he had the curiosity and patience to learn about 'others' once they cracked his battle hardened exterior.

  • @FilterHQ
    @FilterHQ 6 месяцев назад +4

    The Film subverts our expectations because we know Clint as a badass who kills the baddies...so you dont expecxt the ending to be like that. Well played Clint..well played.

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      Yeah I was expecting him to go full dirty Harry on them but then again it makes sense as to why he chose to just let himself go out like that, especially when you realize he was on his way out anyhow

  • @TotallyTVNATION
    @TotallyTVNATION 6 месяцев назад +3

    I don't know man, I usually agree with you but living in Virginia/DC I saw similar encounters as the Black/White/Asian girl and dudes. The dialogue was dated and corny but I think that's just Clint's age showing LOL....

  • @Hawk-ODA212
    @Hawk-ODA212 6 месяцев назад +3

    Too many Hollywood movies break a crucial rule in screenwriting. They create flawless or near flawless main characters. This movie made us quite aware of Walt's flaws as he expressed his anger with offensive slurs and stereotypes. But the theme or message was equally as clear. We are all flawed. Despite those flaws the potential is still there to do something good if given the opportunity and if we choose to do so. As angry as Walt was at himself and at the whole world, Tau and his family unlocked Walt's desire to love and be loved. It's a relationship he didn't even have with his on blood relatives, a relationship he only shared with his wife. Once she died, he had no one except his dog. Walt knew the only chance Tau and his family had was to eliminate the gang members from their lives. He knew he couldn't kill them all so he willingly gave his own life, giving Tau and his family a chance to live a productive life and pursue the American dream without influence or fear of the gang. Well done once again Mr. Eastwood. Thank you Mr. LBoyd for another great reaction.

  • @seasickviking
    @seasickviking 6 месяцев назад +4

    I loved Walt's reactions toward people, mainly because his animosity towards the Hmong isn't racism in the sense that he actually looks down at them, but in fact scorn because every time he sees them, he's basically experiencing flashbacks from his time slaughtering people that looked exact;y like them in Korea. His reaction is scorn towards the things he did over there, and the fact that he's literally surrounded on all sides by a culture that look like the people he had murdered has left him with perpetual torment and anger over what he did and chronic self-loathing over what he had been forced to do to survive. It's exactly how he said in the film: "the thing a man regrets the most isn't what he was ordered to do, but what he wasn't ordered to do but does anyway".

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      Poor Walt, he really was going through a lot

  • @kevinkleinsasser9387
    @kevinkleinsasser9387 6 месяцев назад +3

    No point in me watching when the video is hidden and can barely see it. Other reactors I've watched don't.

    • @ThatShyGuyMatt
      @ThatShyGuyMatt 6 месяцев назад

      If you wanted to see the movie, go watch it lol.

    • @Tr0nzoid
      @Tr0nzoid 6 месяцев назад

      One thing about the movie window being so small is that it makes it hard to scan through and find a particular remark to a scene.

  • @bald_eagleusa
    @bald_eagleusa 6 месяцев назад +15

    Interesting tidbit: white kid confronted by three black kids in real life is Eastwood’s son.
    Eastwood character is racist but at least he’s savage to everyone! Lmao

    • @johnski4709
      @johnski4709 6 месяцев назад +1

      define racist please?

    • @bald_eagleusa
      @bald_eagleusa 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@johnski4709
      “racist” as defined by the Oxford online dictionary: a person who is prejudiced against or antagonistic toward people on the basis of their membership in a particular racial or ethnic group.
      Now, does Walt qualify? Was he antagonistic towards individuals of various racial groups?

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад +1

      I think he wanted his son to be cast in the movie for that role

    • @johnski4709
      @johnski4709 4 месяца назад

      @@bald_eagleusa muh poor feelings. It's ok to dislike other people.

    • @bald_eagleusa
      @bald_eagleusa 4 месяца назад

      @@johnski4709 sure it’s ok to dislike people-but that dislike should be based on their character/actions not appearance.

  • @mplskush612
    @mplskush612 6 месяцев назад +8

    the main hmong "gangster" rode my school buswhen i was in elementary school he was in high school and taught me my 1st swear words lol.

  • @wavygravy63
    @wavygravy63 6 месяцев назад +4

    Maybe when it comes to Walt. The phrase don’t judge a book by its cover applies in spades. 😅. Like most people pointed out. He’s a good man deep down.

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      Yeah I think Walt had a heart of gold but it was just hard for some people to see it

  • @TheTriumphbsa
    @TheTriumphbsa 6 месяцев назад +2

    As I'm sure you have just forgotten, Grandma was chewing what every rural person does in S.E. Asia; Betelnut. Juicy, huh? Lol

  • @CrustyRetiredMarine
    @CrustyRetiredMarine 5 месяцев назад +2

    “The Mao people”? The Maos are from India, not SE Asia. But you keep trying to sound smart.

  • @galemoore521
    @galemoore521 6 месяцев назад +3

    Take a walk in someone else's shoes occasionally sir!

  • @Ro6ns
    @Ro6ns 2 месяца назад +2

    “Movies basically about this car” automatically made this a bad review 😂😂😂

  • @sleezye100
    @sleezye100 6 месяцев назад +4

    You are not ready to watch this movie

    • @Sig509
      @Sig509 5 месяцев назад +1

      yeah, the dude is so easily offended by everything that it is actually funny how shallow hie take is. How he is unable to see that Walt hates everyone equally, and the most himself. That it is just words, and the actions are what counts, and his actions speak for themselves. When he gets to know them, he starts to like them. As it should be. It does not mean that he will stop using the foul language.
      Seriously, the dude seems to have twitter running in his blood, as he is so easily offended xD

  • @willcool713
    @willcool713 6 месяцев назад +3

    In my opinion, the tradition of confession is as much about repatiating yourself to the body of the Church and to the community, as it is to freeing yourself to be able to pursue atomement and face life without the nagging burdeon of unprocessed guilt. I'm not sure Walt needed either, so I wonder if his wife made the priest promise that just so someone would be there for Walt after she was gone.

  • @robovike
    @robovike 6 месяцев назад +4

    I must say that I love the refrain "get out of my house right now" as it fits Walt and it fits our esteemed rector right'cheere.

  • @lockaby1
    @lockaby1 6 месяцев назад +2

    Check out THE MULE its a good Clint Eastwood movie

  • @kray421
    @kray421 6 месяцев назад +2

    At the beginning of his life he fought and killed for his country and at the end he fought and died for it 😢

  • @verribarry
    @verribarry 6 месяцев назад +2

    This reactor has plenty of angry old man energy himself.

  • @wyattc.4455
    @wyattc.4455 6 месяцев назад +3

    My mom was at a gas station in Richmond and a group of black guys were cat calling her and giving her shit. Only found out when she got back to the car. That interaction does happen in real life. It’s hood culture.

  • @TheNeonParadox
    @TheNeonParadox 6 месяцев назад +5

    The original screenplay for this movie had it based in St. Paul, MN, which has the highest Hmong population in the country. But the studio thought it'd be better to set it in Detroit, where there are almost no Hmong people comparatively. Hollywood, folks. Lol

  • @Jeff-lb1de
    @Jeff-lb1de 6 месяцев назад +3

    Perfectly realistic conversations...

  • @dinoc734
    @dinoc734 5 месяцев назад +2

    Somewhere in the world it’s a real conversation

  • @SchlockstarJoe
    @SchlockstarJoe 6 месяцев назад +3

    Dude, you’re way too hard on this young priest who’s just trying to help. I had to stop watching at 13:41.

    • @Sig509
      @Sig509 5 месяцев назад

      yeah, I noticed that also. There is not much sympathy in me for the clergy, but actions of that young priest were not "harrasement", but respecting the wishes of the dead wife. He was looking after Walt, and for they guy that claim to be "logical" it is silly that he did not see, that Walt ain't gonna go to psychoterapy. Confession is a stop gap for that, telling someone else, and God by extention (if you believe in it) your sins, problems ect. helps to open up.
      Anyway it is a job of a priest to take interest in his parish, and try to help people.
      and now he has trouble with Walt reaction to the doctor xD. Has he ever met an old person? They take time in trusting the doctor, they go years to one, and when they change they feel disturbed.

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      how? I was annoying by him too, he wouldn't leave Walt be

  • @ryanr8364
    @ryanr8364 6 месяцев назад +2

    This was not your best work. Perhaps less pausing and cutting in with your own self-conscious and immediate commentary, which was disappointingly lacking in understanding of what the movie is about. I mean, of course, you are making a reaction video, and you need to react; but perhaps wait for every third thought before halting the video. It would give your thoughts more time to coalesce, and be less jarring to the viewer.

    • @Sig509
      @Sig509 5 месяцев назад +1

      It is so funny that the reactor looks like a closed minded guy, and Walt looks like an open minded :D.

  • @kittykatt7652
    @kittykatt7652 6 месяцев назад +23

    "You're going to get FONDLED!". Hilarious😂

  • @kittykatt7652
    @kittykatt7652 6 месяцев назад +8

    Soft language my guy. This generation is SOFTTTT! Easily triggered. Why are you amazed at hearing old school words from an old person? Watch some tv shows from the 70's. Your ears will explode.

    • @Big_BadaBom
      @Big_BadaBom 6 месяцев назад

      Our country has turned weak its the schools and the internet that caused it, the movie demolition man seems to be the most accurate prediction of the future.

    • @Sig509
      @Sig509 5 месяцев назад

      his reaction seemed like a twitter feed xD

  • @danieladiaphorist1308
    @danieladiaphorist1308 6 месяцев назад +2

    Amazing how this movie spotlights the prejudices of the audience. Thank you

  • @jphogannet
    @jphogannet 6 месяцев назад +5

    Clint Eastwood's son Scott was the one walking Sue in the scene he "rescued" her. Incidentally he is the spitting image of his father from his movies at about the same age.

    • @TedwardsTube
      @TedwardsTube 5 месяцев назад

      I don’t see much resemblance. To me, Clint Eastwood looked pretty much the same his whole career.

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      @@TedwardsTube I'd say the resemblance is there but not like more than 50%

  • @nicktaylor3747
    @nicktaylor3747 6 месяцев назад +2

    The seen at 20 minutes would happen like that, where are you from, saw it all the time down south. dont misinform because you disagree with it

    • @wyattc.4455
      @wyattc.4455 6 месяцев назад +1

      Not even just down south. Any hood ever there are groups of losers waiting around for “entertainment”.

  • @2Cerealbox
    @2Cerealbox Месяц назад +1

    maybe actions mean more than words, and maybe you misjudged him and who he was based on superficial aspects. In the modern, digital, social media age what you say is your social cache. But in Korea, what you did mattered. You couldn't just say your feelings, but you demonstrated it with your actions. Tao demonstrated he was a good person by helping that old lady. But you, you have issues with that because he kept *saying* the wrong thing. And here you're forced to recognize that even though Walt isn't what acting the way reddit and tumblr expect a good person to act, he's actually doing good thing, and he's willing to sacrifice himself to the greater good. Which is far different from paying lipservice to what you're supposed to say to not offend people. Walt certainly isn't perfect. His inability to soften up and expressive love and affection for his family alienated him from them. But perhaps you can learn a lesson here that being a good person isn't actually about what you say, but what you do.

  • @darrenshoults4620
    @darrenshoults4620 2 месяца назад +1

    Having a Recon Ranger for a cousin during the Vietnam War, l can say that he was a kind generous human being. But plagued with depression, drugs and alcohol. And could be one of the scariest people you could have met. As he told me, the good Lord didn't make me to hurt anyone but l will kill in a New York second.

  • @Nick9Three
    @Nick9Three 2 месяца назад +1

    This movie is great. I know it’s just a movie but I genuinely believe people can change. This rivals American history x for me.

  • @justintrefney1083
    @justintrefney1083 Месяц назад +1

    This movie is in Detroit. Where I grew up. There are no laws and the police don't come in 20 minutes. They might show up in an hour to draw a chalk outline.

  • @ashleybruton7076
    @ashleybruton7076 6 месяцев назад +4

    The main actor is Clint Eastwood.He's known for playing Lots of Western movies.And that is the son the ,young boy walking with the young asian girl

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      Have you seen most of his stuff?

  • @malagastehlaate9923
    @malagastehlaate9923 6 месяцев назад +1

    I really like this movie... though it makes me very sad. Walt reminds me a lot of my Pops. He could seriously say some very harsh stuff... but he really cared about things. He was a good person really but could be scary sometimes. I always say my father was like Clint Eastwood, George Carlin, and Jack Nicholson all rolled into one... scary, smart, and witty... harsh at times... but caring. He often lacked tact when talking to people. But it wasn't out of malice... it was just how he talked.

  • @TheKawkawlin8
    @TheKawkawlin8 5 месяцев назад +1

    The fall od Detroit. Car manufacturers shipped jobs south to Mexico. Laid off the majority of the city. Detroit went from one of the beat cities in the world to urban decay in a decade. Flint and Saginaw too. Depressed and decrepit even today.
    Sad story.
    Don't put all your eggs in 1 basket...I guess

  • @lawrenceallen8096
    @lawrenceallen8096 3 месяца назад +1

    When he was in the "confessional" (his basement screen door), he admitted he shot a scared Korean kid in the face..."And not a day goes by that I don't think about it." Saving Tao and his family was his atonement for the guilt he'd been carrying his entire adult life.

  • @ken_9359
    @ken_9359 6 месяцев назад +1

    I love your reactions, they're different and funny to me. God bless. Blame Clint Eastwood for this movie because he directed it.

  • @lisazaccardimeunier8378
    @lisazaccardimeunier8378 6 месяцев назад +8

    Another Clint Eastwood masterpiece is Million Dollar Baby. It’s heartbreakingly sweet.

    • @TedwardsTube
      @TedwardsTube 5 месяцев назад

      Unforgiven is a masterpiece too. I remember In The Line of Fire being quite good. Been meaning to re-watch it. When I was a kid I used to love the Any Which Way movies (You Can, and But Loose), but I haven’t seen them since the mid 1980s. I suspect they may be a bit too silly and not hold up well.

    • @Kenny-ep2nf
      @Kenny-ep2nf 4 месяца назад

      @@TedwardsTube Unforgiven is his best western

  • @TedwardsTube
    @TedwardsTube 5 месяцев назад +1

    I’ve seen this film many times and adore it. I was surprised recently to hear that the actor who played Tao has spoken out publicly about his strong feelings that this film does more to promote racism than fight it. That’s not at all how I feel. Obviously there’s a metric ton of racial slurs uttered throughout the film, but it’s in the service of showing how ignorant and racist Walt is, how wrong that is, how wrong he comes to see that he is, how rich life can be when we accept people and their cultures for who and what they are, and how it’s never too late. A person is never so far gone that they cannot be reached. I think that’s a beautiful message for a film to have at its core. Now, I’m a fairly old white man, and Clint Eastwood has about 40 years on me, so it’s no surprise that he (and I) don’t have a perfect grasp of how people of other cultures would feel about this film, or perceive the realism (or lack thereof) of the interactions portrayed. So it’s interesting to hear the perspective of a black man watching this.

  • @sketchtherapy1218
    @sketchtherapy1218 6 месяцев назад +3

    Cold blooded murder is a sin, self defense is a right & a virtue.

  • @briandrummond8446
    @briandrummond8446 6 месяцев назад +1

    Let me get this right. So when Walt says something, he's racist, but when the black people say something, the scene is unrealistic? Wow.

  • @mranimesamurai1
    @mranimesamurai1 6 месяцев назад +1

    Yeah while I think you seemed a little triggered in the beginning, I think you chilled towards the end and understood the message. Which I think is: look at a man's actions, not so much their words. It seems way too much empathize is put on the later these days and it gets a lot of people riled up so we get overly defensive and make assumptions.

  • @JimNorkas-qx4nt
    @JimNorkas-qx4nt 3 месяца назад +1

    Young sir : she is chewing betal nut. A stimulant know to the people who remember the old knowledge

  • @zintzao1074
    @zintzao1074 6 месяцев назад +1

    To me the ending was more of Walt excepting what he thought should he his judgement and taking death by firing squad for killing a non-combatant bringing it up because of when he confessed confessed about it to Tao saying that he shot the kid that only wanted to give up and it's always on his mind and since he found out he had cancer anyway he thought it would be best to take that judgement as well as getting rid of the gangsters at the same time

  • @timmyfoxworth6710
    @timmyfoxworth6710 5 месяцев назад +2

    You talk to much.

  • @DirtSpud
    @DirtSpud 6 месяцев назад +2

    Me and my gramps have this ritual of having a cup of coffee or two every saturday morning and just catching up. One morning I had decided to put this movie on and my gramps seen Clint Eastwood and decided he was down watch. Before the movie started he called it lol he said "let me guess ole Clint plays a hard ass old man who doesnt take any shit?" Lol the scene where Walt threatens the gansters and talks about stacking them five feet high for sandbags my gramps just started lauging his ass off and was like "ok Clint calm down we get it " lmao. He was in the korean war as well and said he knew a few guys JUST like Walt. Good guys to go to war with but keep em in the house lol break glass in case of emergency type guys.

  • @thumbingwong8651
    @thumbingwong8651 6 месяцев назад +2

    Amazing you know about the Hmong ppl...and the color description...