THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN (1960) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION

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  • Опубликовано: 27 июл 2024
  • Enjoy my reaction as I watch "The Magnificent Seven (1960)" for the first time!
    This week is "Seven's Week" (for lack of a better name haha), and I'll be watching Seven Samurai, The Magnificent Seven (1960), and The Magnificent Seven (2016). You can check out the full-length reactions to all of them on Patreon!
    🎬 You can check out this specific full-length reaction on Patreon here: bit.ly/3OSMKND
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    //📖 C H A P T E R S
    00:00 - Intro
    01:58 - Reaction
    40:03 - Review
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Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @mohammedashian8094
    @mohammedashian8094 Год назад +541

    Akira Kurosawa actually liked what John sturges did with the magnificent seven so much that he gave him a ceremonial samurai sword and sturges said that that was his biggest accomplishment in life

    • @pwnorbepwned
      @pwnorbepwned Год назад +22

      For a fun parallel, a German studio asked Hayao Miyazaki if they could cut up the Nausicaa movie to make a wholly different movie. Miyazaki sent them a samurai sword with an engraving etched into the side of the blade. It said, in English for some reason, “No cuts!”

    • @MrDeejf
      @MrDeejf Год назад +34

      When the greatest filmmaker of all time says "you done good, kid", it kinda doesn't matter what anybody else says.

    • @RealTechZen
      @RealTechZen Год назад +4

      If you want an easy way to pick out some of the absolute BEST movies of the past 50 years, look for 2 names; on cinematography - Caleb Deschanel, and on casting - Susie Figgis.
      J. K. Rowling wrote some childrens' stories, but Susie Figgis found the three unheard of child actors who made J. K. Rowling famous.
      God said, 'Let there be light.', and Caleb Deschanel said, "Thanks. I'll take it from here."

    • @MrAndreasSaw
      @MrAndreasSaw Год назад +7

      @@pwnorbepwned No German Studio. It was for the Movie "Mononoke Hime" aka Princess Mononoke and it was Miramax/Weinstein in the US, who tried to trimming Mononoke down. And the Japanese Studie send the Sword with "no Cuts" engraved to Weinstein.

    • @zaftra
      @zaftra Год назад +4

      @@RealTechZen lol, Daniel Radcliff was the drippiest actor there is, he got the gig due to nepotism, and the books were already world famous.

  • @chrisofeasttennessee780
    @chrisofeasttennessee780 Год назад +404

    Steve McQueen, Charles Bronson, and James Coburn appeared together again 3 years later in "The Great Escape".

    • @framergod69
      @framergod69 Год назад +28

      great movie as well

    • @hughjorg4008
      @hughjorg4008 Год назад +26

      Steve McQueen and James Coburn trained with the legendary *BRUCE LEE* . The three of them were the first mix-martial artists.

    • @garryiglesias4074
      @garryiglesias4074 Год назад +8

      Charles Bronson: Once Upon a Time in the West, James Coburn: Once Upon a Time The Revolution (Duck, You Sucker).

    • @chrismaverick9828
      @chrismaverick9828 Год назад +6

      @@hughjorg4008 Chuck Norris and Kareem Abdul Jabar were also among Lee's students. One can only dream and marvel at what fantastic things would have evolved had Bruce Lee not been murdered.

    • @joerogers9413
      @joerogers9413 Год назад +7

      Chuck Norris actually lost a fight once....to Bruce Lee!

  • @Dokhollywood007
    @Dokhollywood007 10 месяцев назад +14

    Chis was played by Yul Brynner whom I had the pleasure of meeting once. I cannot say anything less than to say he was classy, humble, generous and kind. A true gentleman to the fullest extension of the word.

  • @jimmys50
    @jimmys50 Год назад +45

    This movie is also a good example of how music plays an important role in a movie

  • @JC-rb3hj
    @JC-rb3hj Год назад +178

    One of the three Mexican farmers that hired the gunman was my elementary school principle. He was always popping up on shows as I grew up. He was the gardener on a show called "Father Knows Best. " His name was Natividad Vacío'.

    • @imaginationsmusic1985
      @imaginationsmusic1985 Год назад +8

      As young folk who grew up watching classics, I remember that being a favorite episode of mine of Father Knows Best. 🥺 he seemed like a cool and sweet guy. Thanks for sharing that with us!

    • @thealexanderllanos
      @thealexanderllanos Год назад +6

      honestly, cool story.

    • @thrillalova1212
      @thrillalova1212 Год назад +3

      I can't look at Yul Brynner without thinking of Westworld (movie,not series)...So good 👍

    • @quwykxz
      @quwykxz Год назад

      He must not have been a very good PRINCIPAL, since it seems that you were never taught to know the difference between "principal" and "principle"...

    • @sergioh336
      @sergioh336 Год назад

      @Thrillalova I can't see Yul Brenner other than as the king in the King and I! Etcetera, etcetera, etcetera lol

  • @cryptocat9712
    @cryptocat9712 Год назад +167

    Simply one of the greatest westerns of all time! What a cast not to mention one of the memorable sound scores!

    • @clutchpedalreturnsprg7710
      @clutchpedalreturnsprg7710 Год назад +3

      The filming.

    • @Hexon66
      @Hexon66 Год назад +1

      The score is the best thing about the movie. That's praise and criticism.

    • @clutchpedalreturnsprg7710
      @clutchpedalreturnsprg7710 Год назад

      @@Hexon66 " Simply one of the greatest westerns of all time! " " What a cast "
      The cinematography and the setting.

    • @Raving
      @Raving Год назад +2

      Another of the best westerns ever made that has an awesome soundtrack is The Professionals. Also has a stellar cast. Burt Lancaster, Lee Marvin, Claudia Cardinale, Jack Palance, Woody Strode, Robert Ryan.
      Lee Marvin is one of those actors that has that cool factor dripping from every pore. Matched only by James Coburn and Steve McQueen. He rocks that Army Campaign Hat and M1911 in this movie like no one else.

    • @clutchpedalreturnsprg7710
      @clutchpedalreturnsprg7710 Год назад

      @@Raving Hello, yes this is a highly enjoyable movie. It's a best western. If I'm travelling and choose to stay at a motel I will stay at a Best Western Motel such as the one located in Tombstone, Arizona. Otherwise I open my bedroll atop a picnic table wherever I find one along my route. Though the ones at the Good Neighbor Sam Campgrounds in Tres Cruces, New Mexico are only four feet long. Therefore, they are too short. So, if there I open my bedroll on the sidewalk next to the swimming pool. " Hey! "

  • @nikkislovesyou
    @nikkislovesyou Год назад +25

    Just to clarify Cassie, when they are teaching the farmers to shoot and he says: "tighten the butt up to your shoulder" he's referring to the butt of the gun! The thick wooden end. He was basically saying: "hold the gun closer into your shoulder so it doesn't thrust backwards when you fire". I hope that helps! :D

    • @BogeyTheBear
      @BogeyTheBear 8 месяцев назад +2

      Bascially, "don't let the rifle pick up any speed before it hits your shoulder."

  • @robertwong4060
    @robertwong4060 Год назад +46

    Very cool that you recognized so many actors and the movies they were in.
    The "deeper meaning" is that the hired gunmen know that they themselves are morally/spiritually compromised. Their fight against the bandits is righteous but not enough to be absolved for the lives of violence they lead. "The meek (the farmers) shall inherit the Earth", etc. etc.
    My favorite scene is when Bernardo (Charles Bronson) scolds the boys for thinking their fathers are cowards.

    • @bentels5340
      @bentels5340 2 месяца назад +1

      That, and they know the time of the gunslinger is drawing to a close in The West. Life as they know it is ending and they have nothing to show for it.

    • @DrownedInExile
      @DrownedInExile 15 дней назад

      @@bentels5340 "Rented rooms you live in, check. Home, none. Wife, none. Prospects, zero."

  • @mrwidget42
    @mrwidget42 Год назад +25

    Chris was referring to holding the butt of the rifle tight against the shoulder as you fire, so the recoil doesn't launch a wood misile and break the arm bone.

    • @dongilleo9743
      @dongilleo9743 Год назад +2

      I found out about that the first time I fired a 12 gauge shotgun. The natural fear is to hold the gun away from your shoulder to avoid the recoil. All you end up doing is giving the gun stock a running start before it slams full speed into your shoulder. If you hold it tight, the recoil ends up just being a strong push.

    • @grahamtravers4522
      @grahamtravers4522 Год назад

      LOL. She was thinking of another kind of butt ... 😆

  • @Cadinho93
    @Cadinho93 Год назад +146

    Calvera's line, "If God did not want them sheared, he would not have made them sheep." It sums up the character's predatory world view so perfectly.
    Also, one of the greatest things about films from this era is the musical scores and Elmer Bernstein was one of the best.

    • @yaimavol
      @yaimavol Год назад +5

      Like every member of the World Economic Forum

    • @ChicagoPadre
      @ChicagoPadre Год назад

      And she never ONCE acknowledged the magnitude of that timeless score! She's an idiot !!

    • @46theud
      @46theud Год назад +1

      Calvera's view of the villagers, is also the view of politicians and preachers, of people.

    • @goldenager59
      @goldenager59 Год назад

      @@46theud
      The _less deserving_ politicians and preachers, to be sure... 😉

  • @FeaturingRob
    @FeaturingRob Год назад +47

    - Calavera was Eli Wallach....who played Tuco in 'The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly'. He was a lot of great characters! If you ever saw 'The Holiday' with Kate Winslet and Cameron Diaz, he played Arthur the old screenwriter Kate Winslet befriends.
    - Chris was played by the amazing Yul Brynner. Among his greatest roles...The King in the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical 'The King and I', a role he not only won the Best Actor Oscar for but the Tony Award for TWICE actually (he played the role 4.625 times on stage during his life!). He was Rameses II in 'The Ten Commandments' opposite Charleton Heston as Moses. The black costume and hat he used again for the Michael Crichton film 'Westworld' playing The Gunslinger (kind of a similar premise as Jurassic Park, but with androids). Brynner was a huge star in the 1950s and 1960s.
    - Vin was played by Steve McQueen aka The Cooler King Hilts in 'The Great Escape'.
    - Bernardo was played by Charles Bronson aka Danny, The Tunnel King in 'The Great Escape'.
    - Britt was played by James Coburn aka Sedgewick, the Manufacturer in 'The Great Escape'. He affected an Aussie accent for that one.
    - Lee was played by Robert Vaughn...This is where I mention ANOTHER version of this same story on film from 1980. 'Battle Beyond The Stars' was a space opera version and Vaughn played the exact same character in it, except his name was Gelt. The production design and art design were by James Cameron (of The Terminator, Avatar, True Lies, and Aliens fame), and the score was by James Horner (Braveheart and Titanic). It was low-budget and kinda goofy...but has charm. It also pays homage to 'Seven Samurai' director Akira Kurosawa.

    • @goldenager59
      @goldenager59 Год назад +3

      Well for you, mentioning *Battle Beyond the Stars,* a particularly dear fave of mine for many years. It was my introduction to the "Seven" myth and led me eventually to the Sturges and Kurosawa visions, in that order. I like to think of it as justification for cheesy sci-fi, which if done well can lead you down any number of more profound pathways. 😎

    • @Rystefn
      @Rystefn Год назад +1

      Awesome notes on Yul Brenner, who absolutely was one of the greats. But it's kind of wild watching that followed by basically "also Steve was there" like Steve McQueen wasn't one of the biggest stars of his day, too.
      Also, c'mon. "Charlie Bronson's always got a rope" was right there.

    • @david5544g
      @david5544g 10 месяцев назад +3

      Eli Wallach was legendary... To go from Tuco, and Calvera, to the loveable Arthur Abbott in The Holiday is amazing. He was great at everything.

    • @unclejoker9975
      @unclejoker9975 8 месяцев назад +2

      Also, McQueen wasn't happy that he didn't get more lines. If you watch him, you'll notice that he is always fiddling with something. Brenner started getting annoyed by him doing this and upstaging others from the background. Brenner threatened to take his hat off and block him out of the scene completely if he kept it up.

  • @Jerome616
    @Jerome616 Год назад +68

    Bernardo’s character has always had a special place in my heart. as a child I heard his words and it made me understand my fathers sacrifice, and now I’m the father and the words strike me in a different way.

    • @Kasino80
      @Kasino80 10 месяцев назад +8

      And Bronson acts the hell out of every line.

  • @CSC52698
    @CSC52698 Год назад +44

    Eli Wallach said he took the role because even though Calvera was a very small on-screen role, all they kept saying was, "He's coming back.", and he loved that. As do I. Classic writing.

  • @PiraticalBob
    @PiraticalBob Год назад +42

    Three of the actors in this movie were also in *The Great Escape.* Steve McQueen (Cooler King Hilts), Charles Bronson (Tunnel King Danny) and James Coburn (The Australian). Yul Brynner, who played Chris, you might recognize from *The Ten Commandments, where he played Rameses.

    • @Carandini
      @Carandini Год назад +4

      Maybe 'Westworld' will be another for the list of movie reviews...

    • @randallwright1973
      @randallwright1973 Год назад +2

      @@Carandini oh, I love the Westworld movie! Need to watch it again.

    • @mercednoriega4086
      @mercednoriega4086 Год назад +3

      So let it be written. So let it be done.

  • @bobkarafin
    @bobkarafin Год назад +9

    Even if this movie hadn’t been a classic, it would’ve lived forever because of its wonderful and iconic soundtrack by Elmer Bernstein. The music was used by Marlboro cigarettes in their advertising all through the 60s…

  • @JasonRule-1
    @JasonRule-1 Год назад +15

    Bernardo, the one of the seven who was chosen by the children to provide flowers for his grave is Charles Bronson. He stars in one of the most iconic Westerns ever: Once Upon a Time in the West.

    • @drhkleinert8241
      @drhkleinert8241 Год назад

      It was the first big role for Bronson and Buchholz in US Cinema. Before this Bronson had only small roles as comparse (indians or as thug in Vera Cruz)

  • @theworldisfascinating
    @theworldisfascinating Год назад +220

    When you said, “Isn’t he the guy from the good, the bad and the ugly?“ I was just so happy for you! I love that you know all these movies now! Love your channel!

    • @carlosurdaneta4361
      @carlosurdaneta4361 Год назад +8

      And yet... I was astounded to see that, apparently, she doesn't even to know what John Wayne looks like!! What???😱 How's that possible???😲😊

    • @MrDeejf
      @MrDeejf Год назад +11

      @@carlosurdaneta4361 She's seen _one_ movie of his. Give her time.

    • @catrionacolville2192
      @catrionacolville2192 Год назад +6

      ​​@@MrDeejf haven't seen a single John Wayne film and I know exactly what he looks like. She has no culture at all and lacks so much knowledge. She thought John Wayne was president. I likely know more about US presidents than she does and I'm Scottish.

    • @leemacpeek2698
      @leemacpeek2698 Год назад +3

      True, she has much to learn. However, that is one of the charms of watching her channel.
      I am glad you know so much US culture.

    • @MrTech226
      @MrTech226 Год назад +6

      That guy was legendary actor, Eli Wallach. Eli lived to 98 in 2014. His last acting job was in 2010's Wall Street sequel, Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps.

  • @justinamerican8200
    @justinamerican8200 Год назад +21

    "Meat's back on the menu!"
    Cassie turning into a straight up savage.

    • @mandotranspo
      @mandotranspo Год назад +2

      tryin to touch shoulder to butt and squeeze had me rollin

    • @Laurelin70
      @Laurelin70 Год назад

      Or, you know, Ork.

  • @michaeldavis2001
    @michaeldavis2001 Год назад +5

    Chris was Yul Brunner.
    The wood chopper was Charles Bronson (Danny in The Great Escape.
    You spotted Steve McQueen from The Great Escape, but you missed the knife throwing James Coburn, the Canadian (?) who escaped in The Great Escape!

  • @RetroClassic66
    @RetroClassic66 Год назад +12

    13:19 This is Horst Buchholz. He was a German actor who appeared in more than 60 feature films from 1951 to 2002. During his youth, he was sometimes called "the German James Dean". He is perhaps best known in English-speaking countries for this role, as Chico, as a communist in Billy Wilder's ONE, TWO, THREE (1961), and as Dr. Lessing in LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL (1997).

    • @AmericaSpeaks1
      @AmericaSpeaks1 Год назад +1

      Trivia: James Cagney couldn't stand him in "One, Two, Three" and he almost came to blows with him.

    • @junosaxon4370
      @junosaxon4370 9 месяцев назад +1

      I loved the film One, Two, Three. Both funny and interesting in post war Berlin.

  • @kenpullig1652
    @kenpullig1652 Год назад +148

    George Orwell said, “People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.” Movies like this remind me of that quote. And those rough men know they will never have that life of peace. So, when Chris says "The farmers always win, we lose," I think he is saying something similar. Those who create and live in peace win, those who live violently cannot.

    • @sashipman51
      @sashipman51 Год назад +8

      A version of That Orwell line reappears in A Few Good Men in the famous "you can't handle the truth " final scene.

    • @waterbeauty85
      @waterbeauty85 Год назад +2

      That's a great way of putting it. It sort of reminds me of when Capt. Nathaniel C. Fick, author of "One Bullet Away: The Making of a Marine Officer," said "I believe that combat diminishes the soul...and permanently" talking about the lasting after effects of fighting in war and the need for psychological support for veterans when he appeared in a documentary about the Marine Corps.

    • @Quotenwagnerianer
      @Quotenwagnerianer Год назад +3

      One could turn that around. Without rough men willing to do violence on anyones behalf, there would be no disturbance of the peace in the first place. ;)

    • @Mailed-Knight
      @Mailed-Knight Год назад

      @@Quotenwagnerianer There is nothing rough about those who tend to incite violence they tend to slimy little perverts. You have also forgotten that wild animals exist.

    • @bearcatXF
      @bearcatXF Год назад

      No, he didn't say that.
      See > "Rough Men Stand Ready": Neither Churchill nor Orwell"
      ( The Churchill Project, Hillsdale College)
      Excerpt: "While neither Churchill nor Orwell uttered the words, they held the same attitude toward the defense of liberty. [okay...] In ordering a bombing attack on Germany in 1942, Churchill exclaimed: "Let 'em have it. Remember this. Never maltreat the enemy by halves."
      Of course those principally receiving 'it' would be non-combatant women, children, old people and babies ...but you get the point.

  • @vincentsaia6545
    @vincentsaia6545 Год назад +117

    The movie was Yul Brynner's idea. When he approached John Sturges to direct Sturges, an admirer of Akira Kurosawa, said he would not direct a retelling of SEVEN SAMURAI without Kurosawa's permission. Kurosawa subsequently contacted Sturges and gave him his blessings saying he was an admirer of Sturges's work.

    • @asterix7842
      @asterix7842 Год назад +16

      Kurosawa was a fan of American westerns and intended The Seven Samurai to be an homage to them.

    • @jcorbett9620
      @jcorbett9620 Год назад +11

      James Coburn (Britt) was also a huge fan of The Seven Samurai, having watched the movie at least 15 times. He campaigned to have the same role in The Magnificent Seven as the expert swordsman in Seven Samurai (Kyūzō), and played his character in a similar way.

    • @jorluo
      @jorluo Год назад +2

      Director Akira Kurosawa was a complex character and was often criticized by his countrymen for "arrogant" behavior. In an interview in 1966, Kurosawa said: “The American copy is a disappointment, although entertaining. It is not a version of Seven Samurai. I do not know why they call it that.” In 1980, speaking of his and other Japanese directors films that had been copied in the west, he remarked: "Gunslingers are not samurai".

    • @cuffzter
      @cuffzter Год назад +5

      @@jorluo Having just seen Cassies reaction to the Seven Samurai, the Magnicifent IS a pale copy of it. But you have to realize that the Magnificent 7 had the intended audience of those that hadn't seen the original, so naturally the audience back in the day were awestruck anyway.

    • @jorluo
      @jorluo Год назад +3

      @@cuffzter True. I too saw The Magnificent Seven in the movies when I was young, long before I saw Kurosawa's Seven Samurai. Now I love them both and I've seen them tens of times. Seven Samurai is an incomparable classic and The Magnificent Seven (1960) is full of the big screen heroes of my youth in their prime (McQueen, Bronson, Coburn, etc.) - I have to admit that I didn't like the latest version though. Maybe because the previous two have stuck in my mind so deeply.

  • @seanmorehouse2834
    @seanmorehouse2834 Год назад +176

    Cassie becoming the kind of person that throws Lord of the Rings references into everything is what this channel is all about.

    • @BobBlumenfeld
      @BobBlumenfeld Год назад +4

      You're right!

    • @AMortalDefiant
      @AMortalDefiant Год назад +6

      That was so out of left field, I had to rewind a few times. 😂

    • @nicks3766
      @nicks3766 Год назад +2

      Hear, hear!

    • @o0pinkdino0o
      @o0pinkdino0o Год назад +12

      Cas is no longer a girl that has not watched movies.
      One of us ! One of us ! One of us !

    • @oakinwol
      @oakinwol Год назад +2

      I'm here for it!

  • @roykliffen9674
    @roykliffen9674 Год назад +34

    I always loved this movie. It's exciting with marvelous characters. But when I finally watched The Seven Samurai I was blown away; it's a true masterpiece.

  • @susanliltz3875
    @susanliltz3875 Год назад +53

    Yul Brenner got to see him in “THE KING AND I” great movie, great charisma, musical!! Him and Deborah Kerr together!! Movie magic!!

  • @angelomaurizio1668
    @angelomaurizio1668 Год назад +9

    This movie reminded me of the comedy The Three Amigos. It was a comedy released in 1987 that features Chevy Chase, Martin Short and Steve Martin. Its pretty much a parody of the Magnificent Seven - very similar storyline but only three are used rather than seven.

    • @mserinjohnson
      @mserinjohnson Год назад +3

      I think she should watch it. I think she would enjoy it.

    • @unclejoker9975
      @unclejoker9975 8 месяцев назад +1

      Do you even know what a plethora is?

  • @rickymoore1905
    @rickymoore1905 Год назад +5

    Horst Buchholz who played Chico was German. He was known as the German James Dean.
    He was in an excellent comedy with James Cagney titled "One, Two, Three".

    • @user-sx7wo1yl7y
      @user-sx7wo1yl7y 5 месяцев назад

      Yep. And it's interesting that the gunman at the cemetery gate also spoke with what sounds like a European accent. And yet, the movie is so good, it sweeps you right up and you just ignore these improbably linguistic oddities.

  • @davidschecter5247
    @davidschecter5247 Год назад +68

    Elmer Bernstein's score makes this great film so much greater. One of the greatest music scores of all-time.

    • @JJ_W
      @JJ_W Год назад +1

      The main theme is so majestic.

    • @erocrush
      @erocrush Год назад

      It’s like another character. It’s hard to believe it’s the same composer who scored “Robot Monster.”

    • @JJ_W
      @JJ_W Год назад

      @@erocrush And _Airplane!_ .

    • @SirHilaryManfat
      @SirHilaryManfat Год назад +3

      And then Bernstein went and made another of the greatest music scores of all time, with The Great Escape.

    • @Joe-hh8gd
      @Joe-hh8gd Год назад +3

      @@JJ_W Marlboro agreed with you. The movie theme was their advertising theme as well, for many years.

  • @keithbrown8490
    @keithbrown8490 Год назад +18

    Trivia - Watch near the start when Brynner and McQueen first appear to ride the hearse. The two sales guys who are paying for the hearse , one of salesmen is character actor Bing Russell the father of "Tombstone's" Wyatt Earp Kurt Russell !

    • @robertwelsh4094
      @robertwelsh4094 Год назад

      Have you ever seen the Battered Bastards of Baseball about Bing Russel's Portland Baseball team?

    • @johnnyskinwalker4095
      @johnnyskinwalker4095 Год назад

      what's a hearse

    • @keithbrown8490
      @keithbrown8490 Год назад +1

      @@johnnyskinwalker4095 That's the horse drawn carriage taking the coffin to the graveyard.

    • @johnnyskinwalker4095
      @johnnyskinwalker4095 Год назад

      @@keithbrown8490 ah got it.

  • @MrDeejf
    @MrDeejf Год назад +19

    The reason for the ending ("we lost") in both movies is that the world is changing, and there is no place for the samurai/cowboys in the new world. It's not meant to be a statement of despair or total defeat, but more a melancholy observation of that which cannot be changed.
    In fact, that sentiment and ending state is one of the major components of the myth of the west as it exists in the American imagination. Without getting into spoilers for any particular movie, the image of the hired gun, or professional gunman, who has defended the forces of civilization successfully, but cannot join the characters whose lives he has saved and must ride off into the distance alone, is _primal_ and key to understanding many of the greatest westerns ever written or filmed. There is a quality of Moses to it: he brought his people to the Promised Land, and saw it, but could not enter it himself.
    On another note, it's a canard among certain kinds of critics (and non-critics) to claim that "such and such actor can't act". They usually reserve this disdain for popular masculine actors who play masculine men --- John Wayne and Charles Bronson got it a lot. Anybody who thinks Bronson cannot act has never seen this movie, in particular the scene where he tells the boys how courageous their fathers are, and what a coward he is by comparison.

  • @NeetkaAbru
    @NeetkaAbru Год назад +4

    Your channel gives me hope. I've been shopping around for awhile now trying to find a movie reaction channel that doesn't watch the same movies as everyone else. I know it makes me sound like a cranky old lady (likely because I AM a cranky old lady) but so few of them show rom-coms or comedies that rely on great writing and acting rather than slapstick and one-liners. I'd love to see your reaction to The Sting (Paul Newman & Robert Redford), The Goodbye Girl (Richard Dreyfus & Marsha Mason), All of Me (Steve Martin & Lily Tomlin), Brian's Song (James Caan & Billy Dee Williams), It Happened One Night (Clark Gable & Claudette Colbert), The Birdcage (Robin Williams & Nathan Lane), Dave (Kevin Klein & Sigourney Weaver) - I could go on a lot longer but I imagine it's getting annoying so I'll stop. You have a great channel, keep it up!

  • @noirgatherer
    @noirgatherer Год назад +34

    Another Akira Kurosawa Samurai film turned into a western later is Yojimbo (turned into Clint Eastwood’s A Fistful of Dollars). Also worth seeing.

    • @rick3792
      @rick3792 Год назад +1

      Also turned into a gangster movie Last Man Standing with Bruce Willis

    • @BobBlumenfeld
      @BobBlumenfeld Год назад

      So is there another sub-category of westerns like "spaghetti westerns," maybe called "sushi westerns"?

    • @noirgatherer
      @noirgatherer Год назад +1

      @@BobBlumenfeld samurai films are the Japanese equivalency of westerns. The studio productions were done the same with large reused city sets used from film to film and endless wardrobe lots that were signed out to set actors over and over again in all the films. Akira Kurosawa was heavily influenced by John Ford and other filmmakers later influenced by Kurosawa.

  • @TheHockeywitch
    @TheHockeywitch Год назад +82

    I always thought there was no way anyone wouldn't be able to recognize Yul Brynner after watching him once in any movie. That face and especially his voice is unmistakable. He was great as Ramses in The Ten Commandments.

    • @roykliffen9674
      @roykliffen9674 Год назад +15

      Especially in his role as gunslinger in Westworld; heck he even wore the same outfit.

    • @randallwright1973
      @randallwright1973 Год назад +13

      And king Mongkut of Siam in The King and I.

    • @randycliff4045
      @randycliff4045 Год назад +4

      Imposing in any movie or on stage, I was impressed with the power of "The Journey (1959)" with Deborah Kerr, 3yrs after they starred in "The King and I (1956)". Brynner was born in eastern Russia, and his Major Surov is my favourite of his various Russian characters.

    • @waterbeauty85
      @waterbeauty85 Год назад +5

      I remember a film historian in the commentary track of a "Magnificent Seven" DVD described Yul Brynner's voice as being "like a pronouncement from God."

    • @dnish6673
      @dnish6673 Год назад +3

      Butt tight in the shoulder made me lol

  • @adamplace1414
    @adamplace1414 Год назад +2

    The actor who played the dapper member of the seven, Lee, was Robert Vaughn. He had a career that carried up until he died a few years ago. My favorite character on the BBC show Hustle was played by him.

  • @jonm1114
    @jonm1114 Год назад +13

    I have a tip for you. One of the greatest westerns ever made is "Shane". That movie, I think, will explain to you exactly why Chris and Vin rode away at the end feeling like only the villagers had won while the gunmen who had helped them had been among the losers. I recommend you watch "Shane" as part of your exploration of Hollywood westerns. It is a true classic.

  • @danielmatthews1522
    @danielmatthews1522 Год назад +88

    The Magnificent Seven is one of the most introspective Westerns ever made. It dances around the difficult topics of honor, fighting, the cost of killing, the life of a warrior, and the things that matter most in life. At its heart it dismantles the glamour of the lone gunman, and shows how difficult a path it is to do something great in a world where mistakes are lethal.

    • @goldenager59
      @goldenager59 Год назад +18

      I, personally, have long held Bernardo's monologue to the boys about their fathers' unsuspected bravery to be one of the most significant scenes in all of cinema, if not of all storytelling. 🤠

  • @storbokki371
    @storbokki371 Год назад +26

    The leader of the group was played by the actor Yul Brynner. You should really see him in the 1956 film "The King and I", a true classic.
    Yul Brynner also played an Egyptian Pharaoh in the classic movie "The Ten Commandments", also from 1956, with Charlston Hestor playing Moses.

    • @judithturner1593
      @judithturner1593 Год назад +2

      Cassie should've recognized Yul Brynner from her 'The Ten Commandments' reaction she did a couple years ago... I think she's the only reactor in all of RUclips who's reacted to it! (Other reactors go for the animated 'The Prince of Egypt'. )

    • @user-jz9zv2xg8q
      @user-jz9zv2xg8q Год назад

      Ull Brenner bought the copyright of Sevens Samurai from Japan. He bought it with his pocket money. Interestingly, Yul Brenner was born in Sakhalin, Russia. It is an island immediately north of Hokkaido. Akira Kurosawa is born in the south of Hokkaido and is famous for Akita dog in the north of the whole Japanese archipelago. Ull Brenner is Russian and Sakhalin half. He understood the samurai mind well.

    • @stevenhernandeznon-profitf968
      @stevenhernandeznon-profitf968 Год назад

      For me Yul is one the most charismatic performers ever on screen!

    • @AmericaSpeaks1
      @AmericaSpeaks1 Год назад +1

      And before "The Terminator" and Arnold Schwarzenegger, there was Yul Brynner in "Westworld" (The original, not the remake)

  • @RetroClassic66
    @RetroClassic66 Год назад +3

    14:28 This is Robert Vaughn. He was an American actor noted for his stage, film and television work. His television roles include the spy Napoleon Solo in the 1960s series The Man from U.N.C.L.E.; the detective Harry Rule in the 1970s series The Protectors; Morgan Wendell in the 1978-1979 miniseries Centennial; General Hunt Stockwell in the fifth season of the 1980s series The A-Team; and grifter and card sharp Albert Stroller in the British television drama series Hustle (2004-2012), for all but one of its 48 episodes. He also appeared in the British soap opera Coronation Street as Milton Fanshaw from January until February 2012.
    In film, in addition to this role, he was also notable for his roles as Major Paul Krueger in THE BRIDGE AT REMAGEN (1969) with George Segal and Ben Gazzara, the voice of Proteus IV, the computer villain of DEMON SEED (1977), Walter Chalmers in BULLITT (1968) with Steve McQueen, Ross Webster in SUPERMAN III (1983) with Christopher Reeve, General Woodbridge in THE DELTA FORCE (1986) with Lee Marvin and Chuck Norris, and war veteran Chester A. Gwynn in THE YOUNG PHILADELPHIANS (1959) with Paul Newman, which earned him a 1959 Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor.

  • @gildavis8266
    @gildavis8266 Год назад +3

    Carly you, and your sister, are adorable! Every time I see you, or the both of you, doing one of your segments exploring these older movies I smile.
    The message in this one is simply a good story is always worth re-telling. And the fact that all of the principles in this film are gone really doesn't matter because their work speaks for itself. That will never change.
    Please keep doing what you are doing because I enjoy watching younger people being exposed to the magic of great cinema.

  • @TheTerryGene
    @TheTerryGene Год назад +25

    Steve McQueen, after this film and The Great Escape”, went on to become one of the biggest stars in the world before dying at the young age of fifty. Virtually every one of the Seven (save Brad Dexter as Harry Luck) became major stars in the ensuing years. The reason for the cleanliness of the farmers in this film was to assuage the concerns of the Mexican government. An earlier movie, Vera Cruz with Gary Cooper and Burt Lancaster, had depicted the peons’ clothing as dirty. By the way, one of the two peddlers who paid for the burial at the beginning of the film was played by Bing Russell, who was Kurt Russell’s (Tombstone) father.

    • @perolavhavik2585
      @perolavhavik2585 Год назад +2

      I grew up on a farm. No farmer can work and be this clean for a day, let alone a week. The idea was to respect the Mexican farmers by showing them in shiny white clothes, but to me it just looks funny and it takes me out of the movie.

    • @garfieldsmith332
      @garfieldsmith332 Год назад

      Yes the Mexican government and censors really came down hard on the film company. Apparently they also insisted that the 3 men went to town to buy guns so they could fight the bandits. They did not want the Mexicans to hpre men to fight for them. With the problems of dealing with the government and the lower production costs in Spain all the sequels were filmed on Spain.

  • @michaelg2529
    @michaelg2529 Год назад +32

    I genuinely respect and appreciate you reaction videos but OMG Cassie, "Pull the butt into your shoulder" and then you attempt the contortion. You're priceless.

    • @AdmiralJota
      @AdmiralJota Год назад +4

      I wonder if she's figured out yet that he meant the butt of the rifle.

    • @whoarocket
      @whoarocket Год назад +1

      I am just at that point in the video and cracking up at that. Cassie, the butt of the rifle is another word for the stock--that long wood part at the back.

    • @tomcolby5821
      @tomcolby5821 Год назад +1

      She also didn't understand that Charles Bronson wanted the farmer to squeeze the trigger. Well, she is Canadian....; - )

  • @richardyett3985
    @richardyett3985 Год назад +2

    Yul Bryner was in "King And I", "Ten Commandments" & "Westworld". Westworld was a Sci-fi film from 1973 and Yul Plays a cowboy robot.

  • @gutz1981
    @gutz1981 Год назад +2

    "Butt against your shoulder" is the butt of the rifle to keep it steady and to handle the recoil. "Squeeze" in terms of the trigger. You never pull, you squeeze it to avoid missing the target you are locked on.

  • @maingun07
    @maingun07 Год назад +30

    I remember when I was a young tank crewman and the first combined arms exercise I went on. I was just a loader, but sitting up on the edge of the hatch I could see all 17 tanks in the company rolling through the desert in a wedge formation. I couldn't help but have this theme playing in my head. 100% awesomeness!

    • @lbh002
      @lbh002 Год назад +1

      I am not a spiritual person, but there is something about a team working together that I feel in my soul, if I had one.

    • @maingun07
      @maingun07 Год назад

      @@lbh002 I hear ya and that's what I felt at the time. 68 pistol wearing gunslingers riding 17 iron monsters totaling nearly a thousand tons of steel and over 12,000 horsepower all moving in one formation covering about a kilometer in width. It was seminal moment for me. That's when I knew we were a family albeit a highly dysfunctional one. We were drunks and brawlers and insubordinate and general troublemakers. We regularly failed inspections and always had at least one person with an Article 15, but when we were doing what we trained to do, it felt like we could take on the whole Soviet army by ourselves.

  • @nicholasbartonlaw341
    @nicholasbartonlaw341 Год назад +23

    You must watch Shane (1953) if you are into westerns. One of the most famous westerns ever made. The acting is superb, and Alan Ladd, perfectly cast, plays the archetypical cowboy.

  • @tehawesomeface1337
    @tehawesomeface1337 Год назад +43

    You reacted to the epic film ‘The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly’. I think you are ready for the next step. That film was the third film of a trilogy. The first film was ‘A Fistful of Dollars’. This film was also inspired by Japanese director Akira Kurosawa, who did ‘The Seven Samurai’. Kurosawa did ‘Yojimbo’ which starred actor Toshiro Mifune, the ‘rogue’ member of the Seven Samurai. Yojimbo inspired Western films that led to ‘The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly’, and Mifune’s portrayal of the ‘samurai with no name’ led to Clint Eastwood’s ‘man with no name’ cowboy.
    I became an author and illustrator of samurai history, inspired by the films of Akira Kurosawa.

    • @larrywong6331
      @larrywong6331 Год назад +1

      Clint Eastwood, played in the Good Bad and The Ugly, Eli Wallach, Lee Van Clef, and Clint directs a lot of good movies.

    • @finncarlbomholtsrensen1188
      @finncarlbomholtsrensen1188 Год назад +1

      Many years ago I saw Akira Kurosavas first film, made during the war, and still with his love for the traditional Japanese and a dislike for the West! His villain wears a suit, as his crooks mostly uses western weapons, as in Yojimbo, The Samurais and also one of his last films. The battle in the end are won with Portuguese guns, imported to Japan

  • @jeffdetmer4681
    @jeffdetmer4681 11 месяцев назад +3

    Cassie, a bit of a P.S. to my previous comment. This movie was filmed entirely in Mexico. Both outdoor scenes and in studio. Also when they were teachung the farmers to shoot, LOL, he meant tuck the butt of the rifle tight into your shoulder. Not his actual butt. You are so adorable. Also Yul Brenner kept his hat on because he was bald. I guess he thought it didn't fit with the character???? Oh and 2 more quick things which you may hear in future movies. When he said squeeze, he meant not to jerk the trigger back but to gently squeeze it. Better accuracy. And finally, that thing you like when they kind of slap at the hammer of their pistols when they are shooting is called fanning. Not always as accurate but happens a lot in the movies.

  • @charlize1253
    @charlize1253 Год назад +20

    A western with a love story: HIGH NOON, starring a young Grace Kelly and the legendary Gary Cooper. It's the greatest western of all time, ranked #32 on the AFI list of greatest movies of all time. It's movie that Jon McClane and Hans Gruber banter about in "Die Hard"

    • @StuartKoehl
      @StuartKoehl Год назад

      Still ranks behind The Searchers, in my opinion. But both films address aspects of the American mythos.

    • @sashipman51
      @sashipman51 Год назад

      High Noon was not just a western. it was an allegory for McArthyism's grip on Hollywood. Like the townsfolk, so many cowards failed to stand-up for their colleagues when they needed them most.

  • @ianmorrisonmovienutcase5713
    @ianmorrisonmovienutcase5713 Год назад +11

    The lead actor is Yul Brynner. If you want to watch a good John Wayne western, react to Rio Bravo.

  • @shanem4703
    @shanem4703 Год назад +1

    The part of the rifle that butts up against the shoulder is called the buttstock, or referred to as the butt of the rifle.
    He was telling them to keep the butt of the rifle tight against their shoulder to prevent injury from the recoil upon firing, and keep the aim more accurate.
    It was adorable though watching you do your experimental butt / shoulder jig trying to work out the logistics of his meaning.

  • @russellockwood8621
    @russellockwood8621 Год назад +2

    I just watched your reaction to "The Magnificent Seven" 1960 and I'm very surprised that a woman of your age doesn't know anything about John Wayne, nicknamed the Duke.
    Anyway, if you are interested in seeing the best of the best classic westerns to react to you MUST see the 4 best ever, 2 of which happen to be starring John Wayne. 2 are black and white and the others are color.
    The first one, and my favorite starring John Wayne, is "Red River" from 1948 (b+w).
    The next one is "High Noon" from 1952, also b+w.
    The 3rd on is "Shane" from 1953. This one is in color.
    The 4th one, also starring John Wayne and in color, is called "The Searchers" from 1956.
    All of these are directed by award winning directors.
    Very important. The great thing that distinguishes these films from other westerns is that they are not just shoot 'em ups. They are great stories about the human interactions of the people in the stories and some very strong women characters.
    I strongly suggest that you check these films out. Old movies are some of the greatest movies ever made. ENJOY!

  • @brandonangstman
    @brandonangstman Год назад +11

    Cassie, those men playing the bandits, those are real mexican bandits! The director payed them off to keep the crew safe when they filmed in Mexico, and Eli Wallach started talking to them and befriended a couple of them, they needed some extras for the film so Eli convinced the director to hire some of the guys guarding the set. They genuinely loved Eli Wallach and really treated him liked he was their leader.

  • @3dbadboy1
    @3dbadboy1 Год назад +4

    When he talks about tightening the shoulder, he means to press the shoulder tight against the butt of the rifle. If there's any space between them, the rifle will kick back and slam against the shoulder or arm and injure him, not to mention miss the target most likely.

  • @tomtom34b
    @tomtom34b 5 месяцев назад +1

    Steve McQueen wasn´t the only actor who was in the great escape as well. Charles Bronson (the guy with the flowers on his grave) and James Coburn (the knife-thrower) were in the great escape.

  • @JasonRule-1
    @JasonRule-1 Год назад +3

    Seeing the depth of your emotional reactions makes watching these movies special.

  • @chunksaflyin
    @chunksaflyin Год назад +8

    "How do you get your butt tight in your shoulder?" Will be one of my favorites from now on, especially with the look on her face. THE BEST! This is a classic and one of my favorite movies. Just in case no one has said it yet, that term means to keep the butt of the weapon tight against your shoulder because the recoil or kick of the weapon when fired can hit hard and could break a bone.
    A couple of good westerns are Shane - 1953 and Silverado - 1985 with Kevin Costner. I'd also love to see you react to the Yul Brynner movie The King and I - 1956. I think you'd love it. Great reaction all around, thank you for sharing yet again.

    • @harley4230
      @harley4230 Год назад +1

      I was confused on what she meant at first but started laughing so hard when I finally realized what she was confused about. I then started laughing even harder once she attempted to get her butt tight in her shoulder lol. It's a great Cassie moment.

  • @McPh1741
    @McPh1741 Год назад +60

    Another really good ensemble cast western is “Silverado” starring Kevin Costner, Danny Glover, Scott Glenn, Kevin Klein, and a bunch of others. It had a story similar to this.

    • @christianemden7637
      @christianemden7637 Год назад

      While I agree that Silverado, is an excellent movie with a fantastic cast, I would strongly disagree that the stories are even remotely similar.

    • @Nevets1073
      @Nevets1073 Год назад +2

      @@christianemden7637 I think the plot is actually pretty similar in a lot of ways. It's about a group of guns who decide to do the right thing against foes who outnumber them and have way more power over the people.
      But it definitely has a different tone than "The Magnificent Seven", that's for sure.

    • @thepayne7862
      @thepayne7862 Год назад

      Such a great Western.

    • @russelturner5771
      @russelturner5771 7 месяцев назад

      Not sure how the two movies are similar.

  • @joesky011
    @joesky011 Год назад +4

    The theme song to this movie has been regarded as one of the top 25 American film scores. It was written by Elmer Bernstein who wrote the soundtracks to many big movies including The Great Escape, My Left Foot, even comedies like Airplane, The Blues Brothers, Ghostbusters and more. This theme song was also used in the TV commercial for Marlboro cigarettes...."come to where the flavour is, come to Marlboro country". 😄

    • @Daniel24724
      @Daniel24724 Год назад

      ...and the soundtrack of "THE 10 COMMANDMENTS" ! 🤷‍♂

    • @larrywong6331
      @larrywong6331 Год назад +1

      Tom Selleck was one of the Marlboro actors in the commercial.

  • @brycehiigel235
    @brycehiigel235 Год назад +1

    This is one of my all time favorite westerns.
    Side note. When he talking about the snugging the butt to the shoulder he was talking about the butt of the firearm. You want to snug up to the shoulder so the recoil is closer to a push on the shoulder however different calibers have harder recoils.
    He was also talking a bout squeezing which is when you pull the trigger to fire the firearm. If you jerk the trigger it affects the accuracy. So squeezing evenly helps.

  • @bigbow62
    @bigbow62 Год назад +33

    "That was my first mistake... generosity"
    " We deal in lead friend" 🤠
    So many great lines in this classic ✌️🙂

    • @erocrush
      @erocrush Год назад +2

      “I’ve been offered a lot for my work...but never everything.”

    • @modernjosephus356
      @modernjosephus356 Год назад

      I actually use the "So far, so good" story every time I am about to say "So far, so good". 😅

  • @mishkatown8625
    @mishkatown8625 Год назад +16

    As a result of not recognizing the woodcutter and knife thrower were also from the Great Escape, I deduct two points from Cassie. In this movie, Yul Brynner, best known for his role in The King and I, played the lead role.

    • @Robert-un7br
      @Robert-un7br Год назад +1

      Yul was cool! Do you remember how he re-created this look for the first of the three sequels to this movie and as the gunslinger robot he played in the movie ‘Westwood’ and it’s sequel ‘Futureworld’.

    • @davidmaldonado1111
      @davidmaldonado1111 Год назад +2

      Cassie reacted to the 10 Commandments part 1 and 2 and still didn't recognize Yul aka "John Wayne" Brynner. "So let it be written! So let it be done!"

    • @Robert-un7br
      @Robert-un7br Год назад +2

      @@davidmaldonado1111 strange how he was also named Chris in that one too.
      Pharaoh Chris II. 🤔

  • @tehawesomeface1337
    @tehawesomeface1337 Год назад +1

    I grew up in the Philippines in the 60’s. The theme music for The Magnificent Seven was everywhere. It was used again and again by Filipino ‘Western’ films that copied the original film. Weird! Filipinos playing ‘cowboys’?! Elmer Bernstein’s music for the film is so well-loved that you can find RUclips videos of symphony orchestras still performing The Magnificent Seven theme on stage around the world to this day.

  • @joelmoreno4223
    @joelmoreno4223 3 месяца назад

    Yes, filmed in México. The back end of a rifle is called the 'butt', you press the back-end (the 'butt') tight against your shoulder, so the 'recoil' does not slam the butt into your shoulder, high caliber rifles can have a powerful recoil and it will 'smart' when it hits your shoulder.
    PIB: You didn't remember Charles Bronson (Bernardo O'Reilly)...also was in "The Great Escape"? Everyone remembers Charles Bronson for his very unique face

  • @donlatt
    @donlatt Год назад +15

    Yul Brynner used the same look of the man in black for his role in West World. He also has a great tough guy role in the "Ultimate Warrior" 1975. You missed a great line where they get shot at on the hearse " Did you get elected ? " "No. But I got nominated" Great movie.

    • @gog583
      @gog583 Год назад

      I also liked him in "Children of the Sun".

    • @ianstopher9111
      @ianstopher9111 Год назад +1

      @@gog583 Don't you mean Kings of the Sun? Also starring Brad Dexter.

    • @gog583
      @gog583 Год назад

      @@ianstopher9111 Yeah, that's probably it. been a while since I've seen it. But to confirm, it's the one where Yul Brenner play an Indian (and involves Milans, or Incas, or Aztecs. )..

  • @thomast8539
    @thomast8539 Год назад +11

    Cannot wait for Cassie to get around to watching Shane (1953).

    • @nedporkus8602
      @nedporkus8602 Год назад

      if there is a single movie that encapsulates the whole mythology of the American Frontier it is Shane.

    • @porflepopnecker4376
      @porflepopnecker4376 Год назад +2

      Greatest western of all time!

    • @Emma-3010
      @Emma-3010 Год назад

      "Shane" was remade by Clint Eastwood as "Pale Rider" in 1985. The two films might make for another "twofer" for Cassie. BTW, "Shane" stars Jean Arthur, an ageless beauty who began her career in the silent era. She did a LOT of great films. I'd love to see Cassie watch "If You Could Only Cook" or "The More the Merrier."

  • @RetroClassic66
    @RetroClassic66 Год назад +1

    4:49 The man in the middle here, in the brown hat and suit, is Bing Russell, Kurt Russell’s father.

  • @fireballfireball6962
    @fireballfireball6962 Год назад +1

    Its the guy from the great escape right? he he Steve Mcqueen must be smiling up there in heaven. He's one of the most highly influential actors ever. The King of Cool!

  • @luckyskittles8976
    @luckyskittles8976 Год назад +15

    Fun reaction. Yul Brynner shaved his head when he did "The King & I" on stage and decided to keep it that way. You need to do the "King & I" the movie 1956 with Yule Brenner & Deborah Kerr a musical.

    • @AMortalDefiant
      @AMortalDefiant Год назад

      It's hard to go back. I shaved my head when I graduated high school, and haven't gone back in 20+ years. It's very liberating, it saves a lot of money on barbers, and the scalp is very sensitive. An interesting sensation is feeling snow melt on your scalp.
      And Brynner totally rocks the look, so I'm glad he kept it that way.

  • @charlie2640
    @charlie2640 Год назад +19

    It's amazing the staying power of this story and the ability to translate to different forms. "Battle Beyond the Stars" and "Bugs Life" are also retellings and I'm sure there are many more.

    • @hansolo1225
      @hansolo1225 Год назад +2

      Three Amigos

    • @Hexon66
      @Hexon66 Год назад

      Yet none have surpassed Shichinin no Samurai.

    • @adamp2029
      @adamp2029 Год назад

      Three Amigos, A Bug’s Life, and Galaxy Quest are all comedic takes on this. They’re all “what if the hired guns weren’t really the heroes the oppressed people thought they were?” But, of course, they all do become heroes by the end.

    • @ellef7730
      @ellef7730 Год назад +2

      I'm glad to see someone mention "Battle Beyond the Stars" I don't think "7's week" will be complete until it gets a view. I think it is interesting to compare/contrast Robert Vaughn's roles in both movies.

  • @tonyweaver2353
    @tonyweaver2353 Год назад +1

    Damn Bernardo died like Boromir. So many references even at the end when he says they are like a strong wind, a divine wind, if you will, which is what Japanese call kamikaze. When they say the farmers won and we lost, they mean that they have no home, no wife, no kids. That farm though teems with life. They work, provide, and have families. Those drifters can and will not they just carry too much baggage to even want or accept that lifestyle. They probably had that at one point and had it all ripped away from them, fear to pursue it anymore after being disappointed for so long.

  • @whoarocket
    @whoarocket Год назад +1

    Cracking up moment part two was Cassie saying the scene needed music and choosing "Here Comes the Hot Stepper", of all things! And the attempt to sing it was fantastic too.

  • @jethryk
    @jethryk Год назад +15

    A really good John Wayne western is El Dorado with Robert Mitchum and The Godfather's James Caan. It's a lighter movie than Westerns are normally, I think you would really enjoy it.

    • @clintizzo7693
      @clintizzo7693 Год назад +1

      And/or The Sons Of Katie Elder, basically the same thing but with Dean Martin.

    • @michaelstach5744
      @michaelstach5744 Год назад +2

      I prefer Rio Bravo but…

    • @YukonCaribou
      @YukonCaribou Год назад +2

      The Searchers, Thats the best John Wayne western I think personally, followed by The Cowboys.

    • @davidsharpe1611
      @davidsharpe1611 Год назад

      El Dorado is good, though my favorite John Wayne movies are Big Jake and Chisum.

  • @johnharkness7114
    @johnharkness7114 Год назад +27

    Eli Wallach (the 'bad guy') is a true genius. Before being type cast as a villain, he starred in a mostly forgotten film "The Tiger Strikes Out" where he is a frustrated postman who decides to kidnap a cute young thing but ends up kidnaping and older woman (played by his wife, Anne Jackson), and random madcap hilarity ensues. It is also famous (or should be) as the first movie which Dustin Hoffman has a (extremely minor) role

    • @Robert-un7br
      @Robert-un7br Год назад +2

      I’ve seen it. It’s a little known gem.

    • @Manu-rb6eo
      @Manu-rb6eo Год назад +2

      He was also able to play in different languages, he was with French legendary actors like Bourvil and Belmondo and David Niven in the French film the brain.

    • @randycliff4045
      @randycliff4045 Год назад +2

      You'll have to watch "The Holiday (2006)". While the two couples are the leading characters, Eli Wallach is a mere 90yrs old playing a role that steals the show and always makes me smile. He's brilliant at any age, in any role.

    • @Divamarja_CA
      @Divamarja_CA Год назад +1

      @@randycliff4045 I feel like she’s made reference to The Holiday before. I believe she’s seen it and loved it!

  • @tinderbox218
    @tinderbox218 2 месяца назад

    Love seeing her make the connections in her head when she remembers what other classic films she saw this or that actor in. 👍🎥

  • @kuribayashi84
    @kuribayashi84 Год назад +1

    Robert Vaughn (Lee) would go on to play basically the same role in _Battle Beyond the Stars,_ a fun little 1980-Sci-Fi-remake of _The Magnificent Seven._

  • @PotatoSalad614
    @PotatoSalad614 Год назад +15

    This movie’s cast was absolutely stacked!

  • @PapaEli-pz8ff
    @PapaEli-pz8ff Год назад +12

    I saw this film at the Brevoort Theater in Brooklyn, New York when it was first released in 1960. I was ten years old at the time. It remains one of my all-time favorite films! Great selection, Cassie 🤠

    • @donnieloco4909
      @donnieloco4909 Год назад +1

      I was born Jan 08, 1950. Same birth DAY as Elvis & David Bowie but younger of course. I see you were also born in 1950.
      We grew up with the best music & movies didn’t we? I also loved this movie.

  • @karenlkvm
    @karenlkvm Год назад +1

    Eli Wallach Is one of my all time favorites. My two favorite films with Wallach are not westerns. Check him out in THE MISFITS (1961) with Marilyn Monroe, Clark Gable, and Montgomery Cliff. My favorite Wallach performance is in BABYDOLL (1956) with Carroll Baker and Karl Malden. He steals the show!

  • @lastrada52
    @lastrada52 Год назад

    Very good observance -- yes! That's Eli Wallach (Calvera) who was also in The Good, the Bad & The Ugly as Tuco. Died 2014.
    The man in the blue shirt is Yul Brynner (he was also The Egyptian pharaoh in "The Ten Commandments," & the King in the classic "The King & I," (film & Broadway play).
    The young guy is Steve McQueen starred in "The Blob," the year before this western. He went on to the original "Thomas Crown Affair," "Papillon," & YES! you guessed right again young lady "The Great Escape." Died from cancer in 1980.
    The younger black-hat fella following up behind them on foot is German actor Horst Bucholtz (Chico) who was also in the Academy Award-winning 1997 film "Life Is Beautiful." He died in 2003.
    The man chopping wood is Charles Bronson (Bernardo). Major box office movie star in the 70s. "Hard Times," & "The Dirty Dozen," (another all-star cast film). All Bronson films are action-packed. The tall slender guy with the knife James Coburn was also with Bronson in "Hard Times" & with Bronson-McQueen in "The Great Escape." Coburn (d. 2002) won an Academy Award in the Nick Nolte 1997 film "Affliction."
    The bully in the train yard, who challenges Coburn's knife against his gun is character actor Robert J. Wilke. He was a gunman in the classic Gary Cooper western "High Noon" & went on to major films 1978's "Days of Heaven," with Richard Gere, & 1981's "Stripes," with Bill Murray
    Brad Dexter was after the "gold" and made several films but wasn't as famous. In reality, he was known for having saved Frank Sinatra from drowning in 1964. He was one of the producers of the 1972 Diana Ross film about Billie Holiday, "Lady Sings the Blues." He made other films with Yul Brynner & Charles Bronson.
    The man with vest & leather gloves seated on a bed is Robert Vaughan (died 2016). Became famous in the TV series "The Man From U.N.C.L.E," & went on to make 2 great exciting films with Steve McQueen -- "Bullitt," & "The Towering Inferno."
    The last major cast member to pass away was the gorgeous Mexican girl Rosenda Monteros. (Passed in 2017).
    You did a great job as usual...facial expressions are wonderful. Smile sparkles. But I think you know more than you're letting on. Do some John Wayne films.

  • @coyotefever105
    @coyotefever105 Год назад +39

    Yul Brynner, I say this as a heterosexual male, made bald look beautiful

    • @LordVolkov
      @LordVolkov Год назад +5

      He does the cowboy look in the original Westworld too. Just sayin...😉

    • @SJ-GodofGnomes21
      @SJ-GodofGnomes21 Год назад +4

      Agreed

    • @CloneByDesign
      @CloneByDesign Год назад +4

      In an era where your hair was everything, he did the impossible.

  • @browniewin4121
    @browniewin4121 Год назад +11

    You recognized Steve McQueen from The Great Escape, but didn't recognize Charles Bronson the wood chopper as having been in the same movie as one of the tunnel kings.
    Yul Brenner was a big star, his most famous role was on stage and screen in The King and I (1956) for which he shaved his head and then kept it that way the rest of his life. He is also well known for The Ten Commandments (1956), West World (1973).

    • @Vinterfrid
      @Vinterfrid Год назад

      Yul Brynner!!!

    • @chardtomp
      @chardtomp Год назад +1

      James Coburn was in that movie as well.

    • @Jessica_Roth
      @Jessica_Roth Год назад +1

      Or James Coburn (Britt) as Sedgwick, the Australian guy who makes all the equipment and gets away when the French Resistance gets him to Spain.
      John Sturges directed both films, so it's not surprising he brought back several of the same actors.

    • @hughjorg4008
      @hughjorg4008 Год назад +2

      *James Coburn* (the knife thrower) was in THE GREAT ESCAPE too. He's the one escapes by crossing the border between France and Spain.

  • @thomastimlin1724
    @thomastimlin1724 Год назад +2

    Elmer Bernstein's musical score for this is magnificent by itself. Yes that's Eli Wallach from The Good the Bad and the Homely...Steve McQueen from the Great Escape. Charles Bronson, the "wood chopper" was also in the Great Escape as "Danny the tunnel King."

  • @NiteOfTheWorld
    @NiteOfTheWorld Год назад +1

    The bald guy who serves as the de facto leader of the Seven is played by Yul Brynner. You might remember him from The Ten Commandments, where he played Rameses II.

  • @vincentdawn9689
    @vincentdawn9689 Год назад +5

    For a second in the the thumbnail I thought this was The Wild Bunch. Not sure our host here is ready for that one, in fact, I am almost certain she would not like it. Sam Peckinpah doesn't play around.

    • @thomast8539
      @thomast8539 Год назад

      Ha. Looks like it doesn't it? She will get around to it. I have no doubt.

    • @cryptocat9712
      @cryptocat9712 Год назад +1

      Still "The Wild Bunch" is a must watch what a classic! Like to see Cassie add "The Searchers" John Wayne Classic also.

  • @torreyholmes7205
    @torreyholmes7205 Год назад +16

    Love the viewing of these 3 stories all in one week. Two more westerns to consider: "Shane" is a rather noble western from the 1950s and "The Wild Bunch" was made in 1969 is a more jaded look at Western violence from an era when people were dealing with Vietnam and Good and Bad were not clear cut. Both movies also touch on the idea that somebody wins, but it's not always the protagonists.

    • @sdkelmaruecan2907
      @sdkelmaruecan2907 Год назад +1

      "High Noon" would be a good one, too

    • @PrinceofArfon
      @PrinceofArfon Год назад +1

      "Shane" is wonderful and so powerful, but far sadder than "The Magnificent Seven." She should see it, but it's good to be prepared for tragedy!

    • @perolavhavik2585
      @perolavhavik2585 Год назад

      More "must see" westerns: The Searchers, True Grit (both of them), Once upon a time in the West, Red River and the Man with No Name-trillogy starring Clint Eastwood

    • @Hexon66
      @Hexon66 Год назад

      Definitely "The Wild Bunch". For what it's worth, a much better (classic, in fact) iteration of the final battle as an assault, rather than defense. A deviation in this film from the original Seven Samurai that I never felt really worked. The assault on Agua Verde and Mapache, The Battle of Bloody Porch, however, is brilliant. ruclips.net/video/_ysVoV3x5Zo/видео.html

  • @junosaxon4370
    @junosaxon4370 9 месяцев назад +3

    Nice to see The Magnificent Seven again with you. I liked the relationship between Charles Bronson's character and the three boys and the scene where they put flowers on his grave as they promised, a very touching moment. Some of my favourite actors are in this film, Steve McQueen, James Coburn, Robert Vaughn. If you like Steve McQueen you should see The Sand Pebbles, it's another one of my favourite films with McQueen. I hope you get to see it. Take care.

  • @michaelj7069
    @michaelj7069 Год назад +21

    Masterpiece! That's a rare feat to have a remake just as good as the original.

    • @user-sx7wo1yl7y
      @user-sx7wo1yl7y 7 месяцев назад +1

      The remake wasn't even close. There should be a law against remaking classics.

    • @user-sx7wo1yl7y
      @user-sx7wo1yl7y 7 месяцев назад

      Absolutely- the music makes the whole film. The great Elmer Bernstein's greatest work.

  • @bmbirdsong
    @bmbirdsong Год назад +10

    You know, of course, that A Bug's Life has a rightful place in the Magnificent Seven playlist.

  • @ToylandChairman666
    @ToylandChairman666 Год назад +14

    Robert Vaughn, who plays Lee, was the last surviving member of the original seven until his death in 2016. He later appeared in the sci-fi retelling BATTLE BEYOND THE STARS (1980) and even guest-starred on a few episodes of the TV series THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN (1998-2000).

    • @paulanerruhrpott6188
      @paulanerruhrpott6188 Год назад +1

      She needs to watch Battle beyond the stars!

    • @terencejay8845
      @terencejay8845 Год назад +5

      And...he was a Man From Uncle.

    • @matthintz9468
      @matthintz9468 Год назад +4

      And he co-starred in Bullit with Steve McQueen!

    • @joerogers9413
      @joerogers9413 Год назад +1

      He also appeared in an episode of Kung Fu: The Legend Continues that's basically a modern day Magnificent Seven.

    • @blueboy4244
      @blueboy4244 Год назад +1

      I know him from 'the man from U.N.C.L.E.'

  • @asterix7842
    @asterix7842 Год назад +4

    One of the best westerns ever. Akira Kurosawa was a big fan of American westerns and he intended The Seven Samurai to be an homage to westerns. This movie brings it full circle by making a western version of a Japanese film which was an homage to westerns.
    That was Yul Brynner, not John Wayne, as Chris. You can also see him in Westworld and The King and I. Yes, Eli Wallech (Calvera) was in The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. And Steve McQueen was in The Great Eacape, with James Coburn (Britt) and Charles Bronson (Bernardo). These movie were made in the time of the studio system, when actors had contracts with movie studios and were only in movies made by the studio they were in contract with, so it was common to see the same actors appear together in multiple movies. Charles Bronson is also in The Dirty Dozen (1967), another great WWII movie. I’ve lost track of which movies you’ve seen already, but High Noon, Once Upon a Time in the West, and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid are all good westerns. Support Your Local Sheriff, with James Garner, is a good western comedy.

    • @larrywong6331
      @larrywong6331 Год назад

      Charles Bronson stared in the Dirty Dozen, with Jim Brown the football player, Trini Lopez, the singer, Telly Savalas, and many others.

  • @jefferybarnett6056
    @jefferybarnett6056 Год назад +2

    The Butt of the rifle is the part that fits against your shoulder. Keeping it tight against your shoulder reduces the recoil a bit allowing for more accuracy and the rifle doesn't beat you up as much. The larger the caliber of the rifle, the more recoil against your shoulder ( generally ). Also, chaps are worn to help prevent chaffing and protection from brush and briars while on horse-back...they won't stop a bullet. As a chick flick recommend: I think you and your sister would love The King and I, which stars Yul Brenner, the leader of this group of seven. This movie ( The Magnificent Seven ) was jam packed with big named stars, all great in their own right. You were correct early on when you recognized Eli Wallach as being in The Good The Bad and The Ugly..He performed for over 60 years.

  • @TheRealMediaMan
    @TheRealMediaMan Год назад +5

    I HIGHLY recommend. “The Thing From Another World “. A classic horror film but one that still holds up today.
    And given the recent high level government discussions it’s more timely now than ever.
    It’s a great film. And still creepy to this day

  • @ash1851
    @ash1851 Год назад +27

    So an anecdote I once read about the filming of this: McQueen took numerous opportunities to upstage Brynner and draw attention to himself, including shielding his eyes with his hat, flipping a coin during one of Brynner's speeches, and rattling his shotgun shells. Brynner told McQueen if he kept up, during his big scene, Brynner would just take his hat off.

    • @scoobers90
      @scoobers90 Год назад +4

      I've heard that Brynner would make little mounds of dirt to make himself appear taller and between takes McQueen would walk through and kick the dirt around. McQueen did anything he could to steal every scene he was in.

    • @Dularr
      @Dularr Год назад +3

      He does that in almost every role. In the Great Escape, it was the baseball and glove.

    • @Quotenwagnerianer
      @Quotenwagnerianer Год назад +3

      I have nothing against doing that if the kind of character you are playing behaves like that. But if you deliberatly play all your characters this way to steal scenes, then it becomes an issue fast.

    • @Cheepchipsable
      @Cheepchipsable Год назад +3

      @@Dularr They added the motor bike scenes because McQueen cried he wasn't the star.

    • @craigwheller
      @craigwheller Год назад +1

      McQueen had a huge ego. He turned down a role in the Longest Day because it was an ensemble and he wouldn't be "The Star"

  • @RuphusR
    @RuphusR Год назад +3

    You should watch Silverado (1985) with Kevin Costner, Scott Glenn, Kevin Kline, Danny Glover, Jeff Goldblum, and Brian Dennehy. Its a fantastic western with a great cast and a similar story.

  • @zziicckk01
    @zziicckk01 2 месяца назад

    Thank you for your reaction! There was an episode in Cheers (80s tv show) where the guys in the bar were going to Sam's apartment to watch the "The Magnificent Seven"; Diane Chambers (a bar maid and scholar) wanted to come along to watch, as she put it, an inferior version of Kurosawa's "Seven Samurai"... I couldn't agree more. :) The Maginificent Seven is a very good Western, but Seven Samurai is a classic, epic film.

  • @merlinsclaw
    @merlinsclaw Год назад +94

    While I laugh every time Cassie gets a name wrong, it continually amazes me that she doesn't just read the names of the actors at the beginning of the movies. 🤣

    • @Kasino80
      @Kasino80 Год назад +10

      That's not exclusive to Cassie 😁, a lot of reactors don't pay attention to that.

    • @PrinceofArfon
      @PrinceofArfon Год назад +9

      I know she's not alone in this, but it amazes me too! I rarely go into a movie without checking the cast first, and if not before then I definitely will after. People worked hard on the movie and I want to know who they are!

    • @Mr59Kenzo
      @Mr59Kenzo Год назад +3

      cracks me up how disappointed she gets if it's not a happy ending.

    • @Kasino80
      @Kasino80 Год назад +1

      @@Mr59Kenzo especially seeing how the Samurai ended 😁

    • @russellmassey9324
      @russellmassey9324 Год назад +10

      @@PrinceofArfon I once recommneded a film to a reactor, giving the title, the year and the names of the leads. I got told off by her for giving spoilers! Apparently she doesn't want to know the names of the actors in films she is about to watch. I really can't condsider anything that would appear on the film poster as a spoiler!

  • @pauld6967
    @pauld6967 Год назад +4

    The butt of the rifle is the portion of the stock that you place against your shoulder as you aim along the sights.
    Yul Brynner was telling them to pull the butt of the rifle in tight against the shoulder pocket.
    Charles Bronson was telling the farmer to squeeze the trigger. Steady pressure rather than trying to suddenly jerk it.
    The motion, Cassie, that you keep making is called "fanning the hammer" or just "fanning." It is a staple in Westerns but in reality, it is horrible for accuracy.

  • @MetalEyeWierdo
    @MetalEyeWierdo Год назад +1

    "Meats back in the menu!" nice. LOL!! All that movie watching is paying off!

  • @johnnyringo80
    @johnnyringo80 Год назад +1

    Since you stumbled again over the "we lost" phrase, let me explain what I think it means. There's a theme in the movies that the heroes - the gunmen as well as the ronin samurai - are aimless drifters who have nothing to gain from the fight. While the farmers get their lives back and return to their peaceful ways, the fighters will be off to the next fight and the next one, probably until they die eventually like the four they lost this time. They sort of lost with their life choices and now they're so addicted to the thrill-seeking that they are unable to settle down. That's a common theme by the way; that the "tough guy"'s life is hard and not a preferable lifestyle. They are tragic heroes at best - and at worst, they are themselves the bad guys.

  • @charlessheifer2264
    @charlessheifer2264 Год назад +5

    Cassie - Here are ten John Wayne westerns to choose from for reaction: 1. "The Searchers"; 2. "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance" (co-starring James Stewart); 3. "Rio Bravo"; 4. "The Sons of Katie Elder"; 5. "Stagecoach" (1939 version); 6. "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon"; 7. "Hondo"; 8. "Red River"; 9. "Rio Grande"; 10. "Fort Apache". Every single one a classic!

    • @kanem5moone
      @kanem5moone Год назад

      You forgot 'The Cowboys', she would absolutely love that film