E.T. (1982) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 2,8 тыс.

  • @trinaq
    @trinaq 2 года назад +698

    "I'll be right here." Even in the throes of adulthood, that ending never fails to make me bawl like a baby! 😭💔

  • @Xardion55
    @Xardion55 2 года назад +153

    23:09 - This may be the most underrated kindest moment in the movie. To know that not only was he not a villain/antagonist, but he was grateful that Elliot met E.T. first, knowing that this could potentially be the best first contact moment that could ever have between two different worlds.
    _"I'm glad he met you first."_

    • @ThePoorBoy
      @ThePoorBoy 2 года назад +29

      It's one of the most inspired and unforced twists in film history. The movie doesn't end up having any villains. If there's anything that could be pointed to as a source of antagonism, it's the reality of life and death. Thankfully we have movies like E.T. to help us cope with it and give us some sense of wonder and hope about something beyond our world.

    • @leojamesclune1730
      @leojamesclune1730 3 месяца назад

      ​@@ThePoorBoyFear of the unknown or different?

  • @jonbruton3557
    @jonbruton3557 2 года назад +215

    I love the fact that Drew Barrymore was so young here that she thought ET was real. She was very concerned when they filmed the dying part and was really crying. Throughout the filming she truly believed ET was a real being. [she was too young to try to explain differently and it may have affected her acting] Such a cute thing to know about the filming and the young star's role.

    • @BenjWarrant
      @BenjWarrant 2 года назад +4

      Yeah, no.

    • @jp3813
      @jp3813 2 года назад +4

      @@BenjWarrant No, yeah.

    • @HamburgerHelperDeath
      @HamburgerHelperDeath 2 года назад +3

      And 6 years later she was an alcoholic.

    • @-taz-
      @-taz- 5 месяцев назад

      And she's done so many drugs she believes he's real again.

    • @MarceloVitacca
      @MarceloVitacca Месяц назад

      Spielberg also make the technicians to maintain the illusion by keeping alive ET even when they where not filming for Drew,

  • @runabout76
    @runabout76 2 года назад +246

    Fun Fact: The movie was filmed in sequence rather than in a more traditional way to help the child actors bond with ET. Apparently it's more difficult to film that way, but was a success to get the genuine reactions from the young actors. Great review. I should watch the movie again. It's been 40 years since I watched it!

    • @PlumbPitiful
      @PlumbPitiful 2 года назад +15

      Is actually better sometimes when kids are involved because they change so often when they're growing. Case in point: Listen how much Daniel Radcliffe's voice keeps changing back and forth during the first Harry Potter movie!

    • @cristonsloan
      @cristonsloan 2 года назад +23

      You are absolutely correct and the reason why it is FAR more difficult and expensive to film that way has all to do with the cost of erecting and maintaining sets and securing locations.
      During the course of a story, the characters may return to a certain location multiple times. Because it takes so much time and money to erect and light that set (or secure that location), it makes logical and fiscal sense to film all the scenes related to that particular place all in one go. To film chronologically, one has repeatedly to do all the work and/or pay the cost involved to secure the location each time that place occurs in the story. The sacrifice made to film chronologically is immense, so a dedication to making that sacrifice for the sake of artistic integrity cannot be overstated.

    • @ForEternia
      @ForEternia 2 года назад +1

      That's a cool fact. I hadn't heard about that one. It makes sense. So you haven't seen E.T in 40 years? What are you waiting for? I must have seen it a jillion times since I first watched in theaters. I've had the VHS, DVD (plus I took my parents to see it for the 20th anniversary special edition in theaters). I also owned the bluray and today I own it on 4K bluray.

    • @catgirl6803
      @catgirl6803 2 года назад +11

      A fun fact I just learned was whenever Drew was on set they had ET "working". They never allowed her to see him as a puppet or still animatronic because they didn't want to freak her out.

    • @Achallon
      @Achallon 2 года назад

      @@PlumbPitiful never noticed that, gonna have to rewatch it now

  • @SoaringTrumpet
    @SoaringTrumpet 2 года назад +120

    I strongly feel that E.T. is one of John Williams' best scores. The bicycle chase is particularly spectacular and the final moments with Eliot before E.T. departs for home is incredibly moving and always brings tears to my eyes.

    • @BaronSpamedi
      @BaronSpamedi 2 года назад +16

      Most of the time film scores are edited and chopped up to fit the pacing of the film.
      One of the reasons the bike chase and farewell theme (E.T. - Adventures on Earth) works so well is because Williams scored that whole section, at approx 10 minutes long, as one piece and Spielberg edited the movie to fit the music.

    • @jedijones
      @jedijones Год назад +5

      @@BaronSpamedi True, but that was only after a few attempts where Williams couldn't get the timing of the conducting to match the movie perfectly. Spielberg then said to play the music by itself and he would recut the movie as needed to fit the timing.

    • @ForceMaximus84
      @ForceMaximus84 Год назад +2

      Between this and Superman for me, but the finale of this movie is the greatest piece of score that he ever created.

    • @MusikPiratCH
      @MusikPiratCH Год назад

      Well, I thought this for some times until I discovered that the first scene was taken from Richard Wagner "Walkürenritt" ("Ryde of the Valkyre") - since that discovery for me John Williams was done as a composer! Sorry to write so! 😱

    • @Quotenwagnerianer
      @Quotenwagnerianer 5 месяцев назад

      John Williams is too modest to say something about the quality of his own music but he is on record saying again and again, that is his favourite movie of Spielberg.
      To me that basically confirms that he agrees and thinks it is one if not the best score he ever did.

  • @sandimcalisterblood2675
    @sandimcalisterblood2675 2 года назад +194

    Steven Spielberg was a one-of-a-kind genius. You need to see Close Encounters of the Third Kind that he did in 1977. You won’t be disappointed!

    • @nebularain3338
      @nebularain3338 2 года назад +21

      "is" not "was". He's still alive.

    • @Rowgue51
      @Rowgue51 2 года назад +12

      @@nebularain3338
      Still alive. But he hasn't really done anything of note since probably "War Horse" back in 2011. And the last really genius work he did was "Saving Private Ryan" all the way back in 1998. He's been almost exclusively an executive producer on everything in the last thirty years.
      He seems to be pretty much tapped out of ideas at this point. But that's kind of to be expected. He created masterpiece after masterpiece and blew people's minds with every new film for around twenty five years.

    • @sandimcalisterblood2675
      @sandimcalisterblood2675 2 года назад +4

      @@nebularain3338 yes I know he is. I was just referring to that time period. thanks😊

    • @goORIOLES236
      @goORIOLES236 2 года назад +3

      @@Rowgue51 So we’re just going to pretend West Side Story didn’t happen, then?

    • @Rowgue51
      @Rowgue51 2 года назад +5

      @@goORIOLES236
      That's an almost verbatim film adaptation of a broadway musical that's been being constantly performed since 1957. He did a fine job of making a movie with it, but it can hardly be considered a product of his genius.

  • @brbrdeng9122
    @brbrdeng9122 2 года назад +92

    "Everything terrible happens in a cornfield at night"
    Wise words Cassie!

    • @gamleskalle1
      @gamleskalle1 2 года назад +4

      Children of the corn, Stephen King.

    • @Melancthon7332
      @Melancthon7332 2 года назад +3

      But wait, she just watched Field of Dreams a few months ago

  • @txmoney
    @txmoney 2 года назад +201

    I saw this in the theater on opening night with a packed house. The audible sounds of crying were deafening. A true Spielberg classic.

    • @GeneralZodFDNY77
      @GeneralZodFDNY77 2 года назад +8

      Same.

    • @Ellis_Hugh
      @Ellis_Hugh 2 года назад +18

      @@GeneralZodFDNY77 I was 10, my little sister as about 5... and I vividly remember he STANDING on her seat, tears streaming down her face, screaming NOOOOOO! at the top of her lungs.

    • @misterprickly
      @misterprickly 2 года назад +9

      I remember having to wait in a drive-in line up for over two hours to see this movie.
      It was SO worth it!

    • @leslie2149
      @leslie2149 2 года назад +7

      I took my niece to see this movie. She was about 9 at the time. As we were leaving she told me, "I cried three times. Once when he died, once when he came back to life, and when he left." I told her you and everyone else in the theater, honey, including me.

    • @kbentjg24
      @kbentjg24 2 года назад +8

      I’m surprised they didn’t cry at all watching this.. I’ve been watching all her reaction videos and can’t recall her crying over any movies maybe 12 years a slave was the only one

  • @Arthezius
    @Arthezius 2 года назад +89

    I was a 9-year-old boy when this came out. Our family fell in love. I haven't seen it in about 7-8 years. At 49, I had tears watching certain scenes with you ladies. The nostalgia factor is incredible with this movie. It is one movie that the term movie magic is heavily applied. I feel like younger generations have been robbed of some great magical moments with modern special effects and lack of imagination in storytelling. I am so happy you both enjoyed it!

    • @joshgellis3292
      @joshgellis3292 2 года назад +7

      Absolutely, the lack of imagination is missing. 38 myself. Rock The F ON! LOL!

    • @bodie463
      @bodie463 10 месяцев назад

      Too true.

    • @ChristopherGlymph
      @ChristopherGlymph 9 месяцев назад

      Too much time making spectacles and too little time making good stories. That’s why many older films have so much more depth to them, they were all story.

  • @pacebrison1453
    @pacebrison1453 2 года назад +30

    I was 12 when I saw this at the theater during the holiday season in 1982. My sisters were in the high school choir and were singing at a local mall. My mom had me go see this at the theater next to the mall to kill some time. I remember, after the movie, bawling my eyes out as I was walking through the parking lot back to the mall. I’m now a 51 year old man and this movie still brings tears to my eyes.

  • @trinaq
    @trinaq 2 года назад +270

    Drew Barrymore as Gertie really elevated this movie, despite her tender age. She was so upset at seeing poor ET hooked up to those machines like that, possibly dying.💔

    • @shauntrek
      @shauntrek 2 года назад +15

      I honestly don't know if Drew has ever been better than she is here.

    • @susanalexander6721
      @susanalexander6721 2 года назад +12

      Was on the news back then, she really became very attached to E.T.

    • @birchflash
      @birchflash 2 года назад +19

      I think I heard that at that time Drew Barrymore believed that ET was a real alien. They made/let her think that. That's why she 'acts' so good.

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 2 года назад +4

      Alligators in the sewers.

    • @birchflash
      @birchflash 2 года назад +23

      I was right. Dee Wallace (the mom) says "[director Spielberg] had two guys on E.T. at all times, so that any time [Drew B.] went over to talk to him, his eyes could work and his head could go up and down and he could respond to [her]".

  • @jamesmoyner7499
    @jamesmoyner7499 2 года назад +141

    I just realized something after seeing this film for many years is the line "Why don't you think how other people feel for a change" Michael said to Elliot. Then later on Elliot and ET are feeling each others feelings and Michael says “Elliot feels his feelings.”

    • @jamesmoyner7499
      @jamesmoyner7499 2 года назад +4

      @Schaden Freude Your comment makes no sense.
      I wasn't talking about how I felt about the film I was talking about how a line from early on in the film would come back later on.

    • @jamesmoyner7499
      @jamesmoyner7499 2 года назад +3

      @Schaden Freude Well thank you for the apology and explanation.

    • @johnkennethwiseman5460
      @johnkennethwiseman5460 2 года назад +5

      It could be a foreshadow. Some movies do that and many viewers pick up on it, others dont. I am the latter

    • @jamesmoyner7499
      @jamesmoyner7499 2 года назад +2

      @@johnkennethwiseman5460 I know what foreshadowing is.

  • @jenspfennig9226
    @jenspfennig9226 2 года назад +86

    Growing up my Mom & I had a tradition of going to the movies the week before Christmas. Mom chose this one in '82 and I thought I was way too old (almost 17 🤣) for it. Needless to say I bawled my eyes when they said goodbye. Thank you for reviewing the Spielberg masterpiece and bringing back a very happy childhood memory. (RIP Mom 💔)

    • @keithartworker
      @keithartworker 2 года назад +2

      I was 12 and the movie my twin wanted to see was some Ricky Shrouder movie ( maybe with Benji the dog??). I campaigned hard and thank goodness got everyone onboard the ET train 🙂

  • @bodie463
    @bodie463 10 месяцев назад +7

    Im a 255lb bodybuilder & my two young boys find it funny that this still makes me cry 40yrs later. Such a magical time to grow up ❤

  • @malalaz66
    @malalaz66 2 года назад +54

    The deal about the Reese‘s pieces is that in the scene where Elliot puts a trail of candy on the floor to get ET to come out hiding, they were going to use M&Ms, but they would not allow the movie to use them. They refused. So Spielberg used Reese’s pieces instead.

    • @mrichmon
      @mrichmon 2 года назад +8

      The book that was released with the movie mentions M&Ms. I didn’t grow up with Reese’s so I’ve always been confused about why there is a connection to Reese’s Pieces. This finally explains it.

    • @chuchulainn9275
      @chuchulainn9275 2 года назад +13

      I heard the Mars Bars executive who turned down the offer was fired because he basically gave rise to the competition.

    • @andrewmurray1550
      @andrewmurray1550 2 года назад +4

      No M & M's but "blatant" product placement for Star Wars action figures? Then again Spielberg and Lucas have some unspoken agreement (or just do so for the sake of doing so), and often reference each others movies in their own. So E.T. features Elliot's toys - Star Wars action figures, and Star Wars (Phantom Menace) has E.T.'s in the Senate chamber.

    • @BradSimsCPT
      @BradSimsCPT 8 месяцев назад +4

      ..and Reese's (Hershey) made millions because of it!! One of the finest examples of movie product placement ever done.

    • @Sarah_Gravydog316
      @Sarah_Gravydog316 4 месяца назад

      @@mrichmon this movie made Reese's Pieces super huge too
      they weren't popular before

  • @ThomasCorp
    @ThomasCorp 2 года назад +172

    One of Spielberg’s most heartwarming films, and one of the finest scores John Williams has ever composed. Just listening to John’s score for this alone will make me cry. The climactic portion of the score, often entitled Adventures on Earth, John was given creative freedom to compose however he saw fit and was such a big hit with Spielberg that he edited the film to match the music rather than the other way around as is traditionally the case.

    • @retrogames3404
      @retrogames3404 2 года назад +3

      Totally agree

    • @adamarens3520
      @adamarens3520 2 года назад +6

      Well said! Loved this movie as a kid and as an adult I find even more to love about it.

    • @ariochiv
      @ariochiv 2 года назад +4

      John Williams never misses. Even if the movie is crap, the score is still perfect.

    • @howardbalaban7051
      @howardbalaban7051 2 года назад +6

      YES! John Williams is the GOAT. And seriously, try watching this movie (or Jaws, or Close Encounters, or a bunch of others) on mute. See how much LESS impact it has.

    • @dabe1971
      @dabe1971 2 года назад +8

      Yes, yes, YES ! IMHO it’s John’s best work - and that’s some body to choose from. Yes the effects are somewhat clunky compared to other films that came after, even with the reworking Steven did. But the score, oh the score is perfect. I’m a 50+ year old man but the whole suite from when the kids set off on the bikes NEVER fails to reduce me to tears at the final stanza. Bravo Mr Williams.

  • @TheCdavy
    @TheCdavy 2 года назад +91

    This is pure Spielberg movie magic at work. One of the greatest cinematic experiences I’ve ever had! 👍🏻

    • @SuperAsdwa
      @SuperAsdwa 2 года назад +7

      Spielberg and John Williams music always makes for an Instant classic.

  • @comeonman7782
    @comeonman7782 2 года назад +76

    I was 12 when I saw this and my parents were going through a divorce at the time. I really felt alone but upon seeing Elliot going through this helped me cope. What an awesome movie and so glad you and your sister enjoyed it!!

  • @gregjarnigan3515
    @gregjarnigan3515 2 года назад +11

    I had almost forgotten how much this movie affected me when I first saw it. Old man here, 63... I cried, too.

  • @GoldenKnight0309
    @GoldenKnight0309 2 года назад +9

    The guys in the space suits that came to get E.T. Always scared me as a kid…I would run into the kitchen with my Nana and Mom there and they always knew what part in the movie it was at! Throwback!

  • @The_RedVIII
    @The_RedVIII 2 года назад +69

    Spielberg was having the E.T. puppet being puppeteered during breaks as well, so that the kids grew a closer bond to it. Drew Barrymore even thought the puppet was real, so she was actually crying for real during the death scene and lot of the emotional scenes.

    • @larrystuder8543
      @larrystuder8543 2 года назад +2

      During the 1950's there were vans that cruised residential areas, monitoring what the people were watchjng on TV. Or at least there were rumors of such. Keys ( the government guy ) is a call out to that....

    • @MoMoMyPup10
      @MoMoMyPup10 2 года назад +1

      That makes a lot of sense. I was just commenting on how authentic she was here and steals every scene. Now I know why.

    • @johnabbottphotography
      @johnabbottphotography 2 года назад +1

      @@larrystuder8543
      While I can' t speak for what the government was doing:
      Pirate cable boxes - and non-cable boxes like the ones for ONTV (which descrambled broadcast signals) - emitted spurious television signals which could be picked up in the immediate area by specialized equipment. The cable companies sent out vans that had that equipment in their van, along with directional antennas, to locate people who were pirating cable.
      I know... just a random fact.

    • @charlesbyrneShowComments4all
      @charlesbyrneShowComments4all 9 месяцев назад

      They actually had real doctors on set and then were trying to revive him as they would a human. It made the scene more authentic.

  • @tanyahendricks8465
    @tanyahendricks8465 2 года назад +48

    I guess I was about 8 when this came out. Was at the theater with my friend and her family. I bawled like a baby. My friend’s aunt had to pull me into a hug for comfort after it was over. I think it was the first movie to really bring me to tears like that. Of course, it still does.

    • @thomast8539
      @thomast8539 2 года назад +3

      Stop, your choking me up.

    • @sergiodavila5269
      @sergiodavila5269 2 года назад +1

      I was a wreck for a full day after I saw this in ‘82….

    • @macgonzo
      @macgonzo 2 года назад +2

      Yeah, same here. I think I was 6 or 7 when I saw this in the cinema, my first time ever being in a cinema, and I'm pretty sure I nearly drowned everyone I cried so much 😭😭😭

  • @TheCoasterFoodie
    @TheCoasterFoodie 2 года назад +57

    This movie is so very special to me, I watched it so many times as a kid and hearing that beautiful score and seeing that ending will never not make me cry.

    • @Mike-wr7om
      @Mike-wr7om 2 года назад +4

      I believe it is the greatest musical score of all time. It is John Williams' greatest masterpiece.

  • @rocketeightyseven1823
    @rocketeightyseven1823 2 года назад +44

    This is the first movie that I ever saw in theaters. I went and saw it with my mom way back in the 1980's. My mom loved this movie! She passed away a few years ago, but each time I watch it...I feel like I get to hang out with her for a few hours. At the end when E.T says, "I'll be right here..and points to Elliott's head, " I feel like I truly get what was implied...My mom will always live inside my mind and memories." E.T has to be the greatest film of all time!

    • @stever7157
      @stever7157 Год назад +1

      My Mom loved this movie as well and took me and my brother a second time even though it was more for her. She bawled through the second half of the movie. I didn’t then, but I sure did when I watched it for a he first time in about 20 years a few nights ago. I’m not sure if I can sit through it again anytime soon as it brought back so many memories of losing my Mom 5 years ago.

    • @rocketeightyseven1823
      @rocketeightyseven1823 Год назад +1

      @@stever7157 Same here. It’s crazy how different you see movies as an adult. My mom was my hero and I swear when I watched E.T a couple of years ago…when E.T raises his finger and brings it to Elliotts head and says, “I’ll be right here,” that was exactly how I felt when my mom passed. She now lives in my mind.
      What a profound movie E.T is!

  • @tear728
    @tear728 2 года назад +113

    The scene where the mom is reading Peter Pan is one of my favorites because it really highlights the brilliant writing.
    ET is Tinkerbell. He dies to save Elliot just as Tinkerbell drinks the poison to save Peter. Later, Elliot saves ET by saying he believes he is real, which is how Peter saves Tinkerbell.
    Some major themes in the film is the magic of childhood, the loss of that with age, and then reconnecting with it in adulthood. The scientist who searches for ET is the adult trying to reconnect with his inner child and Elliot's brother is the adolescent that is forgetting his childhood as he becomes an adult.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 2 года назад +15

      Spielberg does that with the Blue Fairy in AI. He can still connect with his childhood self...think that's a big part of why he's been so successful.

    • @BillyButcher90
      @BillyButcher90 Год назад +3

      Spielberg also revisited Peter Pan in Hook (1991).

  • @SolidSnake8295
    @SolidSnake8295 2 года назад +92

    “IT WAS NOTHING LIKE THAT, PENlS BREATH!”
    I love how they found a roundabout way to have a kid call someone a “🐓 sucker” in a family movie. 🤣

    • @trinaq
      @trinaq 2 года назад +8

      Agreed, I didn't understand that line until I was much older! 😂

    • @dlweiss
      @dlweiss 2 года назад +21

      And I love how the Mom has to stop herself from laughing after he says it.

    • @tbirdUCW6ReAJ
      @tbirdUCW6ReAJ 2 года назад +4

      That’s rude

    • @anthonyvasquezactor
      @anthonyvasquezactor 2 года назад +5

      @@dlweiss And she wasn't acting, she really did break character and start laughing when he said it, because that one wasn't scripted, so she wasn't sure what to expect.

    • @ryanjacobson2508
      @ryanjacobson2508 2 года назад +2

      A lot of stuff got "snuck" into PG movies in the 70's and early 80's.

  • @Nick-nk1sq
    @Nick-nk1sq 2 года назад +34

    I saw this film as a kid in the theater and was crying so bad at the end. Still a favorite to this day.

    • @TheFioda
      @TheFioda 2 года назад +1

      same here...and, still today, EVERY SINGLE TIME, the bikes are flying, there comes the tears...pure joy and memories from my childhood

    • @maverickmac1797
      @maverickmac1797 2 года назад +1

      Me too, and I steal feel that teary sting whenever I see this movie.

    • @laurakali6522
      @laurakali6522 2 года назад +1

      I cried as a young adult.

  • @RyanAllThingsPossible909
    @RyanAllThingsPossible909 2 года назад +32

    Omg ... the ultimate bawl your eyes out ending ... lol = the moment, the music, the words, you feel like ET, with your heart literally leaping out of your chest. Timeless story. Works every time 😭💔

  • @johnkennethwiseman5460
    @johnkennethwiseman5460 2 года назад +25

    Well done Cassie for identifying that scene from the quiet man.

    • @trainfire2008
      @trainfire2008 2 года назад +2

      Hmm yeah I’ve watched this all the way through , but I’ll need you to be more specific…..what quiet man⁉️and when⁉️🤔😳11 thumbs up know more than me……

    • @stankulp1008
      @stankulp1008 Год назад +1

      @@trainfire2008 it's a title of a John Wayne movie

    • @ravenzyblack
      @ravenzyblack Год назад

      @@trainfire2008- That was the movie playing on the tv when Elliot kissed the girl in his Science class.

  • @scottdecker9115
    @scottdecker9115 2 года назад +10

    The Bike Chase scene is one of the most dramatic and exciting sequences in cinema history, but it doesn't get made without the magnificent genius of John Williams and the delightful directing of Steven Spielberg.

  • @jflaugher
    @jflaugher 2 года назад +5

    FYI: Neil Diamond wrote a song about E.T. called, "Turn On Your Heartlight."

  • @oscarchip01
    @oscarchip01 2 года назад +20

    I’m 39 years old and this is my all-time favorite movie. As a kid, it was a dream it wish come true. As a teen, it helped me deal with my parents divorce. As an adult, it’s kept me grounded and taught me to cherish my relationships. Now as a new father, it has me longing for the day I can show it to my baby girl.

    • @DonnySpielberg
      @DonnySpielberg 2 года назад +1

      I'm 38 and it's my all time favorite movie. My parents divorced when I was 3 and my mom brought home this video for 5 year old me and I was HOOKED.

  • @markw4613
    @markw4613 2 года назад +64

    Melissa Mathison never gets enough credit for having wrote this. Yes Spielberg brought the movie magic but the reason it leaves you with tears in your eyes is down to Mel.

    • @thereturningshadow
      @thereturningshadow 2 года назад

      She was also the one Harrison Ford cheated on with Carrie Fisher.

    • @markw4613
      @markw4613 2 года назад

      @@thereturningshadow no that was his first wife.

  • @davidmeir9348
    @davidmeir9348 2 года назад +10

    Saw it in theatre with my mom and my brother.
    At the scene where ET dies, my brother was bawling so hard in the theatre that my mom was actually embarrassed.

  • @CinHotlanta
    @CinHotlanta 2 года назад +12

    This came out when I was ten and to call this movie a global phenomenon would still be understating it. I think it stayed in theaters for almost a year.

    • @keithferris9574
      @keithferris9574 2 года назад +1

      That's one of the things the modern world has robbed from us. With the endless, and mostly subpar material available all the time, nobody shares these awesome experiences anymore. I really think that plays a large role in how people have become so unattached to each other.

  • @frankbowman9493
    @frankbowman9493 2 года назад +10

    Please watch Close Encounters of the Third Kind! It is a beautiful film!

  • @seffthemayda
    @seffthemayda 2 года назад +69

    I love how lucas added E.T.s race into Star Wars (they can be seen in episode I: the phantom menace as one of the alien races that's part of the senate) which makes it seem that E.T. was reaching for the kid in the yoda costume because he recognized Yoda/Yodas people

    • @edwardnonymous6804
      @edwardnonymous6804 2 года назад +11

      E.T.'s race TOTALLY had force powers. The flight of the bicycles, telepathy, the flowers. There's more.

    • @zynius
      @zynius 2 года назад +8

      This of course means that SW in the ET universe is not just a movie, but a dramatization of historical events.

    • @MrMortull
      @MrMortull 2 года назад +4

      Well, there *is* an EU story that is supposed to explain "a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away"... long story short; Earth is an accidental lost colony established by a pathfinder ship in the early Republic era that got dropped through an anomaly (Farscape style).
      This goes together to mean that, not only are the E.T.s a member species of the Republic, but they're also *intergalactic* and quite possibly time travellers as well.

  • @PatrickFoxGaming
    @PatrickFoxGaming 2 года назад +15

    14:50 - "I think you've killed him already", is the most underrated line in the film. So funny.

  • @py2007
    @py2007 2 года назад +8

    The tears at the end from the kids were real. Drew and the others grew to love ET on set and thought of him as real.

  • @Scottred77
    @Scottred77 2 года назад +10

    45 year old man here, not afraid to admit that this film still gets me to this day no matter how many times I watch it 😭😭

  • @philrob1978
    @philrob1978 2 года назад +12

    As a 5 year old, a terrifying yet irresistible concoction. As a 44 year old, a terrifying yet beautiful movie about childhood's end. A truly special piece of work, combined with one of the greatest scores of all time. What more could you want?

  • @markjames553
    @markjames553 2 года назад +92

    Fun fact. E.T recognises the Yoda costume and his species are members of the senate in the Star Wars prequels. And since he has powers in this movie it has given rise to the theory that E.T. was a Jedi, or at least was gifted in the force.

    • @Mr_Incognito113
      @Mr_Incognito113 2 года назад +11

      The fact that a kid is wearing a yoda costume on Halloween means the star wars movies exist in the ET universe, how do humans in the 80s know what an Alien from a galaxy far far away a long time ago looked like? It was just intended as fun little nod and geeks run away with it despite it not making any sense

    • @ApolloCDR
      @ApolloCDR 2 года назад +24

      MrIncognito, I find you lack of faith disturbing... 👽👽👽

    • @juansantos-lq2kz
      @juansantos-lq2kz 2 года назад +1

      Wrong galaxy...

    • @digi_edits
      @digi_edits 2 года назад

      Interesting.

    • @PhilipMReeder
      @PhilipMReeder 2 года назад +10

      ET's species was also in Return of The Jedi.
      During the Death Star II briefing on the Mon Calamari ship and during the Ewok celebration.

  • @ariochiv
    @ariochiv 2 года назад +6

    At the end of the movie when spaceship door closes, the music swells and then there's an abrupt silence... and in that moment, in the theater, you could hear all the people around you sobbing.

  • @mena94x3
    @mena94x3 2 года назад +1

    15:30 . . . Totally different world. My brother and I were latchkey kids. I was two years younger but was the one trusted with the house key, on a shoelace around my neck. We were only home alone for an hour and a half, maybe two hours before my mom got home from work, but I cherished that freedom. It was awesome.

  • @mycroft16
    @mycroft16 2 года назад +7

    Very few directors have ever been able to do the dynamic between family and friends quite as realistically as Spielberg. The banter, the joking and teasing instantly switching to being there for one another in a crisis. No one ever expects to end the movie sobbing over ET leaving, but we all do. A lot of that is the very real chemistry the kids have together and with the puppet. Drew Barrymore was insanely adorable as a kid.
    A good one to check out that is sort of an homage to the Spielberg kid family/friends style films like Goonies and ET is Super 8.

  • @pcwkid76
    @pcwkid76 2 года назад +23

    Saw this in theaters as a kid. To this day I can't here Elliott scream "YOU'RE KILLING HIM!" without getting choked up.

    • @wakachica
      @wakachica 2 года назад +4

      Same! I cried the entire way to the car after this movie (age 7) even though ET had been saved. I was totally emotionally devastated by his near death and still tense up when they find him all pale in the ditch :(

  • @dtnetlurker
    @dtnetlurker 2 года назад +16

    No matter how many times I have seen this film over the years it always gets me choked up at the end. A wonderful film that never fails to deliver. I was just a little kid, but I will never forget seeing it in the Theater with my Dad back in 82 when it was first released. We were both amazed. Even though he has since passed on for a good while now, those are Magical memories I will never EVER forget. So vivid they are to me still. One of the last great decades for films. They just don't make em like this anymore.

  • @JorgeMartinez-rp6bx
    @JorgeMartinez-rp6bx 2 года назад +16

    Fun Fact: ET’s species can be seen in the Galactic Senate in Star Wars episode 1, put there by George Lucas in honor of Spielberg, and the name of the species is Spielberg written backwards 😂

  • @monalisasmile6629
    @monalisasmile6629 2 года назад +3

    Yes, 'Gertie' is Drew Barrymore. She was about 6 or 7 at the time. The child actor who plays Elliott - Henry Thomas, was Samuel in Legends of the Fall.

  • @joeriveracomedy
    @joeriveracomedy 2 года назад +4

    I'm old enough to remember the vhs launch. It was quite the cultural phenomenon.

  • @seanheath929
    @seanheath929 2 года назад +21

    Loved this movie as a kid. Fun fact - the E.T species actually feature in Star Wars episode 1, as one of the aliens in the senate.

    • @mokane86
      @mokane86 2 года назад +6

      This makes it basically cannon that our ET is a powerful force user.

    • @lassesipila6418
      @lassesipila6418 2 года назад +9

      He also recognized and approached Yoda. (18:16) E.T. is definitely a Jedi.

    • @ieyke
      @ieyke 2 года назад +4

      The species is called Grebleips.
      (Spielberg backwards)

  • @sandrobittencourt7170
    @sandrobittencourt7170 2 года назад +6

    So lovely!!! I'm 47 years old now (same age of Drew Barrymore). This was my first movie on cinema... I was only 7!!!
    The first time we never forget!!! Hugs from Brazil!

  • @sergiodavila5269
    @sergiodavila5269 2 года назад +8

    When I saw this at the theater in ‘82, I was a wreck at the end of this awesomely lovely movie….even at 48 years old, I’m still a man that weeps like a child when ET says “I’ll be right here…” still the sweetest movie moment EVER 😰💔😰💔😰

  • @christhompson6010
    @christhompson6010 2 года назад +3

    I was 20 when this came out and remember waiting in line 4 hours to see this movie. No multiplexes then. So you waited for one group to go in and then come out until it was your turn. All ages were touched by this movie.

  • @SVSky
    @SVSky 2 года назад +6

    Was flying high over our local cliffs over the Pacific ocean when William's "Flying Theme" from ET hit, in my headphones on random play. It was a powerful moment, because you know how those kids felt when their bikes took off. Truly a modern classic!

  • @bmbirdsong
    @bmbirdsong 2 года назад +11

    I absolutely love how you make up happy endings for various characters in the movies you watch, like mom and the nice alien guy.

  • @reservoirdude92
    @reservoirdude92 2 года назад +34

    I just turned 30 a couple weeks ago but haven't seen this film since I was 20 or so, and watching this reaction ALONE managed to make me weep like a damn baby. Spielberg crafted one of the most heartwarming and beautiful films on American cinema with this.

    • @MarkDemeo
      @MarkDemeo 2 года назад +1

      It's actually 40 years old.

    • @di3486
      @di3486 2 года назад +1

      Imagine if you were a kid in the 80s!

    • @worldtourmaster
      @worldtourmaster 2 года назад +2

      I'm 46. This was the first movie I remember seeing in the theatre. I literally cried just watching this reaction. My eyes just water.

  • @stonecoldku4161
    @stonecoldku4161 2 года назад +19

    There was a holiday commercial a few years back, where they got Henry Thomas to reprise his role as Elliot. Of course, grown up with a wife and children. ET comes back to visit him for the holidays.
    There is also video of Henry Thomas' audition for this film. I believe both the commercial and the audition can be found on RUclips. I highly recommend watching both.

    • @Firefax
      @Firefax 2 года назад +2

      It's here: ruclips.net/video/52roM4-5GWs/видео.html
      I've never cried at a commercial before.

    • @davidanderson1639
      @davidanderson1639 2 года назад

      If you look closely during the Xfinity commercial, you’ll actually see the photo Elliot’s mum took on Halloween on the refrigerator door!! Also, there’s a shooting star; a nod to virtually all Spielberg’s films, as a shooting star appears in everything from Jaws, to Temple of Doom.
      Another cool little Easter Egg is the toys working by themselves, which is a call back to Close Encounters of the Third Kind, when the little boys toys go crazy. They also included the original bike, along with Gertie’s cup.
      Spielberg was so enthusiastic about the project, that he actually signed off on the commercial, as it honoured the original film.

  • @manuelvillacana9284
    @manuelvillacana9284 Год назад +3

    Always loved this movie because it was my mother's favorite movie before she passed away in 1985,, I remember ET was either still in theaters or just came out of theaters but I was only six years old when my mom passed and I remember she had all the stuffed animals of e.t. that she can find,!!

  • @MizRouge
    @MizRouge 6 месяцев назад +1

    “This is reality, Greig” is my favourite line from all the films I have ever seen. It never fails to make me laugh. Thank you for including it.
    Also, best ending to a movie, ever. My childhood ❤.

  • @violetvalkyrie476
    @violetvalkyrie476 2 года назад +6

    Both me and my baby brother had our first movie theater experience watching this when it came out. I was 7, and he wasn't even a year old. I dont remember him crying once. I do remember the look on his little face though. He was absolutely enthralled. Priceless memory. This movie holds a special place in my heart.

  • @bradleyd6000
    @bradleyd6000 2 года назад +4

    😲 How is it possible the two of them have never seen E.T.?
    Watched this when I was 7 or 8 in the theater and I remember crying all the way home.

  • @doghousereilly3795
    @doghousereilly3795 2 года назад +21

    I've been watching Steven Spielberg's movies since I was little, for the longest time he was my favorite director. But I hadn't seen E.T. in probably 10+ years, and about 6 months ago i got a bluray copy and watched it again and couldn't believe how perfect of a movie it really is. It's so touching and funny, sad but heartwarming. And say what you want but I'll take practical and prosthetic special effects over modern cgi any day of the week. I'm glad you both enjoyed it. This was a magical era of filmmaking.

  • @sethzimmerman1653
    @sethzimmerman1653 3 месяца назад +2

    There are very few movies that are absolute perfection. This is one of them.

  • @jamesaitchison9478
    @jamesaitchison9478 2 года назад +5

    E.T is such a special film you've really got to experience it as a kid to feel how emotionally powerful it can be.
    Watching it again as an adult you see it through different eyes, the experience is different but no less powerful.
    I first watched E.T when i was a kid maybe 5 or 6 years old back in the 80's, i never cried so much when E.T died, and so joyous when i knew he was alive.
    A beautiful timeless tale for the ages.

  • @dawggirl
    @dawggirl 2 года назад +15

    I saw it in the theater when I was 10! There, I just gave my age away. My friends made fun of me for crying. Little did they know that 40 years later, I'm watching this reaction and *still* crying! Thanks so much to both of you. So nostalgic for me.

  • @kjek1
    @kjek1 2 года назад +19

    Back when everything Spielberg touched turned to gold. Can’t deny the magic of John Williams either, his score does a lot of the heavy lifting in terms of the emotional impact

    • @diggerdog9205
      @diggerdog9205 2 года назад

      There's a version of the end without any music that really shows how important the music really is

    • @thomast8539
      @thomast8539 2 года назад +2

      John Williams had been killing it for about a decade by 1982, just to let everyone know. Amazing stuff from that man.

  • @jasonbeatty831
    @jasonbeatty831 2 года назад +10

    First movie I ever cried at. My parents took me when I was 7 years old. When ET "died" I bawled in the theatre and yelled "Don't die ET!", my mom had to console me in the seat next to her. One of my fondest memories was seeing this picture.

  • @williamscott3123
    @williamscott3123 2 года назад +12

    Such a moving film about childhood innocence, friendship and life overcoming death. I will never forget the first time that I saw it in the theater in the summer of 1982. As a 16 year old, I didn’t want my mom and 10 year old sister to see me cry. It didn’t matter. Everyone in the theater was sobbing. Few movies have affected me like ET. This is one of Spielberg’s finest.

    • @CPTDoom
      @CPTDoom 2 года назад +1

      I commented on another reaction vid to this movie that it was such a phenomenon when it was released, and the entire theater - adults, kids, didn't matter - were sobbing when it looks like ET's dead.

    • @stankulp1008
      @stankulp1008 Год назад

      this was only supposed to be a side light between important films, but the script was so good, and the kids' acting was so good that it became a classic.

  • @OTownNews
    @OTownNews 2 года назад +7

    Saw it in IMAX this past weekend. The things you notice on the big screen you take for granted so many years before - it was like seeing it for the first time. Let’s get this out the way - Henry Thomas’ performance was the best of his generation - probably one of the best ever. How he never got an Oscar for it will remain one of life’s greatest mysteries.
    But let’s don’t sleep on MacNaughton - that age where you’re holding on to childhood, while stepping up in the face of his parents’ divorce. [I don’t think I’ve felt more seen than when he was on the bus, stoic while everyone else goes wild]. I never realized until when I saw it in the theater just how transformative his performance was, especially after they call TOD on ET how Michael was just as shattered as Elliot was.
    Also, Drew Barrymore. Period. End of sentence.

  • @socalcali
    @socalcali 2 года назад +8

    Finally, this is probably my favorite movie of all time. Thank you for getting around to this one.The magic of a boy, an alien and Steven Spielberg is timeless still. Get your tissues ready.

  • @crowtcameron
    @crowtcameron 2 года назад +9

    I just counted and this is the 21st film (so far) that Popcorn In Bed has reacted to that the music was done by the great John Williams! And the score to E.T. is one of his very best. The last 15 minutes of this film are so amazing! The music is a BIG reason why. The ending to E.T. and the music Williams did for it is a very strong highlight in both of the careers of Williams and Steven Spielberg. The ending of E.T. may just be the best and strongest example of their over 50 year collaboration. They truly created movie magic with this film and the ending especially. It's also extremely impactful, heartwarming, incredible, and moving. It gets me every time. It's is the kind of stuff that cements my almost lifelong belief that movies can truly be a magical thing. And John Williams is a big reason why I believe that.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 2 года назад +3

      This score is so so great. Spielberg and Williams are freakishly magical together. An underrated one is 'The Mecha World' from AI.

  • @alansevern290
    @alansevern290 2 года назад +11

    I'm soooo happy you finally watched E.T. I saw this in the cinema way back in 1982 when I was just 11 years old and the scene when he's found by Elliot's brother in the brook made me cry my heart out, and the ending still brings me to tears, such a fantastical movie by the King of cinema, Mr Spielberg! Well done ladies, love your channel. 🇬🇧❤🇺🇸

  • @bjjukes4969
    @bjjukes4969 2 года назад +4

    Fun fact. The teacher in Elliott's class with the frogs is actually Harrison Ford in an uncredited role.

  • @spaghetti9845
    @spaghetti9845 2 года назад +1

    Seen this movie many times and the bit where he get's drunk is the best

  • @revarvel
    @revarvel 2 года назад +8

    Awesome, I get to cry tonight! I was three when my parents took me to see this in '83. My first movie at the theatre. The first, favorite and personal best movie of all time for me.

    • @etxkevin7452
      @etxkevin7452 2 года назад +1

      Same! I was 5 and they said I balled like a.....5 yr old.

  • @onemanreactionfaction7636
    @onemanreactionfaction7636 2 года назад +18

    As if Jaws, Close Encounters and Raiders didn't do it already, Steven Spielberg literally became a god in Hollywood after this movie.

  • @petergoss821
    @petergoss821 2 года назад +6

    That musical buildup as the mom and feds are running to the ambulance in the park, cutting to the five of them pedaling is just so frickin goosebumps every time.

  • @davidahmed7792
    @davidahmed7792 2 года назад +4

    The two of you would love STARMAN (1984) it's a beautiful story with Jeff Bridges and Karen Allen. The music alone will get you reaching for the tissues by the end. It's along the lines of E.T. , but more for grown-ups.

    • @PlumbPitiful
      @PlumbPitiful 2 года назад +1

      Someone told me that Cassie has already reacted to that movie a long time ago but it's on her Patreon page as an exclusive for members only and will not be coming to RUclips

  • @PlutozReal
    @PlutozReal 2 года назад +102

    Fun fact: ET is in the star wars universe. In one of the prequel star wars movies you can see ETs species represented in the senate. The reason ET walked towards the kid dressed as Yoda is probably because he knew who Yoda was and thought he could help. ET being able to fly the kids is probably because he's force sensitive if not a full blown Jedi.

    • @MrGrifter123
      @MrGrifter123 2 года назад +8

      You thought about this all by yourself didn't you 😂😂😂. None of that was thought about when this movie was made. Jesus Christ 🤦🏾‍♂️😂

    • @Eagles4life221
      @Eagles4life221 2 года назад +12

      That literally makes no sense lol. Elliot was playing with Star Wars figures

    • @johnlime1469
      @johnlime1469 2 года назад +13

      @@Eagles4life221 Basically, since George Lucas and Spielberg are friends, they have characters from movies made by both of them make cameos in each other's movies. One example is the Star Wars figures appearing at the start of the film (imagine the cost of buying rights to use Star Wars IP if that wasn't the case). ET following Yoda is a comedic scene that can be interpreted as such.
      You actually _can_ see like 3 ETs in one of the SW senate seats. I don't remember the episode, but they're definitely there.

    • @DamonNomad82
      @DamonNomad82 2 года назад +21

      @@johnlime1469 They're in the Senate scene in "The Phantom Menace". They're called "Grebleips" ("Spielberg" spelled backwards!)

    • @kristinaF54
      @kristinaF54 2 года назад +4

      @@johnlime1469 Very true. There's actually an R2-D2 glued on the mothership (model) in Spielberg's Close Encounters movie as an easter egg that you can see in silhouette.

  • @ceruleanblu3184
    @ceruleanblu3184 2 года назад +6

    There was a special edition of this movie, with updated effects, added scenes (E.T. takes a bath), and the authorities guns were digitally replaced with… walkie-talkies.
    Spielberg has since regretted making the special edition and shelved it for the original version.

    • @SquigglyP
      @SquigglyP 2 года назад +1

      Mildly related story:
      So one of my first jobs was at a Blockbuster, and I was working there when they started releasing "Special Editions" of any relatively 'classic' movie older than ten years with some kind of fan or cult following. One of the ones we got at my store was called "Gator Bait: Special Edition", which is some sleazy 70s exploitation / revenge flick that apparently had some kind of cult following or fanbase. The back of the box had a blurb that read something like "... This newly re-edited Special Edition of the film contains newly restored footage never before seen, including the fully restored prison rape scene!"
      When we got it, I fucking died laughing about how that was a big enough feature to put on the back as some kind of especially great addition to the movie. After that point, any time someone brought up a Special Edition version of ANY movie, I would always say something like "Oh man! Have you seen the special edition before!? NO? You're gonna love it! It's got the fully restored prison rape scene!"
      I got yelled at so much, but it just never got old. I miss working at a video store. I had my own shelf of recommendations that was always full of weird-o shit, and I would keep making my own unsanctioned "special" shelves with my own little hand-drawn sign that I'd hide off in a corner people didn't walk through much that was for movies that would have a specific theme, like "Best Bar Fights" or "Good movies with bad titles" and stuff like that. For some reason I liked to come up with themes that let me put Gleaming The Cube on there...

  • @stevendelarosa1914
    @stevendelarosa1914 2 года назад +5

    You girls make my day, give close encounters of the third kind a view.

  • @philthemovieguy81
    @philthemovieguy81 2 года назад +11

    I’m so so so excited to see this reaction! From both of you no less! This is in my top 5 favorite films of all time! I saw this movie when I was 5 in the theater and it is the film that made me fall in love with cinema.

  • @BigAl53750
    @BigAl53750 2 года назад +7

    My wife and I went to see this in 82 and there was an old lady sitting next to us, who bawled her eyes out in the sad parts. There were a lot of adults there with their kids and I saw more than a few tears on grown up faces. Including ours.

    • @grahamcollins4187
      @grahamcollins4187 2 года назад +1

      I'm nearly 50 and i still end up in tears when i watch ET

  • @pfcampos7041
    @pfcampos7041 2 года назад +4

    This was the first movie I ever saw in the theatre growing up. I think I was around 7yrs old. A classic!

  • @davidanderson1639
    @davidanderson1639 2 года назад +72

    Some interesting facts about the production of ET.
    Spielberg filmed it in chronological order. This allowed for the cast to build a greater emotional attachment to ET.
    Notice how nearly all the adults are seen from the waist down? This is to give it a child’s perspective.
    ET was a combination of a person who was born with no legs, who walked on their hands & an animatronic puppet. ET was designed by Carlos Rambaldi; the man behind the aliens in Close Encounters of the Third Kind & who helped with the animatronics of the Alien in Ridley Scotts film of the same name.
    The girl Elliot kisses went on to star in Baywatch during the 1990s.
    Spielberg was actually directing ET & Poltergeist at the same time. However, due to rules in Hollywood at the time, directors couldn’t have two films in production simultaneously; hence why Tobe Hooper is credited as the director on Poltergeist. The cast of Poltergeist have since confirmed that Hooper directed very little of Poltergeist & as was rumoured for a very long time, but not confirmed, it was in fact Spielberg behind the camera.
    After the London premier, Princess Diana had to go fix her make up as she’d been crying so much.
    You have to watch the Xinfity Christmas commercial from a few years ago!!! It hit anyone who’s a fan of ET so hard!!!
    Oh & the Caterpillar climbing frame, is still in the playground….albeit a different colour.

    • @shauntrek
      @shauntrek 2 года назад +8

      Hopping in to add - the teacher is Harrison Ford.

    • @davidanderson1639
      @davidanderson1639 2 года назад +1

      @@shauntrek hopping in 😂 I see what you did there!! If I’m not mistaken he’s not the class teacher, but the head teacher drunk Elliot is taken to see in a deleted scene?

    • @shauntrek
      @shauntrek 2 года назад +1

      @@davidanderson1639 He's the class teacher. You can tell if you listen to his voice.

    • @charlesballard5251
      @charlesballard5251 2 года назад +5

      Erika Eleniak did indeed go on to star in "Baywatch" as well as playing Ellie Mae Clampett in theatrical movie "The Beverly Hillbillies", as well as "Under Siege". But before any of that she was Playboy's Playmate of the month for July, 1989. Also the science teacher was played by Richard Swingler, watch again Shaun Andrews, that was NOT Harrison Ford's voice. Ford played the principal on the other end of the phone conversation with Elliot's mom. Ford's scenes were cut from the original version but if I remember right they were edited in for the crappy re-issue with all the awful CGI. As far as I am concerned, there is only ONE watchable cut of this movie, and it's the original theatrical cut which the sisters watched here.

    • @jeffreymcmahon3627
      @jeffreymcmahon3627 2 года назад +3

      Erica Eleniak, and she was Ellie May in the Beverly Hillbillies movies

  • @alphalifestyleacademy
    @alphalifestyleacademy 2 года назад +6

    I was 8 years old when this movie came out! I lived in a small town with one theater and each week they had a new movie but when ET came to town it played for at least a month. I saw it every Sunday for weeks.

  • @robertshaffer3808
    @robertshaffer3808 2 года назад +14

    It's funny that Carly said "may the force be with you". E.T. makes a cameo in Star Wars episode 2 during the Senate scene. You can see three E.T.s in the lower right hand corner of the shot. Also since E.T. can move things with his mind and he recognizes the kid dressed as Yoda, he might be a Jedi.

    • @edwardnonymous6804
      @edwardnonymous6804 2 года назад +3

      Just my theory, not trying to argue or be confrontational or whatever, but I feel like E.T.'s race is definitely very connected to The Force, but not Jedi, because he never fought or showed Jedi/combative tendencies. The dog scared him awfully badly when he could have used a "force push" to push it back into the hall and shut the door. He instead fell backwards. Again, just my thought about whether he was a Jedi or not.

    • @joshargenbright01
      @joshargenbright01 2 года назад +1

      So in the full movie of E.T., when they are trick or treating, E.T. runs up to a kid dressed as Yoda and tries to communicate. Then when the senate scene happened it made a full circle, like E.T. knew Yoda or some of his species. I thought that was a cool 20 year old reference. As most know, Spielberg and Lucas have been friends for a very long time, so this movie and Star Wars take place in the same universe. Just a fun comment.

    • @ghostofyourmom
      @ghostofyourmom 2 года назад

      Sorry but it's impossible for them to be in the same universe. In the E.T. universe, Star Wars is just a movie. It's just a wink-wink reference for US, it's NOT lore. How the hell does the fictional Lucas here know that there are Yodas and Jedis eons ago? It's literally impossible. I'm sick to death of this stupid theory.

    • @edwardnonymous6804
      @edwardnonymous6804 2 года назад

      Because it's all made-up stories? Documentaries exist, you know. You might like watching those, a lot of them are really interesting and in plenty of cases they're not fictional. Just a thought.

    • @ghostofyourmom
      @ghostofyourmom 2 года назад

      @@edwardnonymous6804 ok but the connected universe theory for these two is still stupid and makes no sense, can you shut up now

  • @joeybee1914
    @joeybee1914 2 года назад +2

    Saw it in the theater when it came out. I was 4 years old. At the end of the movie the entire sold out crowd stood up and gave a standing ovation. One of my earliest memories, and it'll always be with me.

  • @tommyjames5030
    @tommyjames5030 2 года назад +4

    Seen this at the drive in theater. What a memory. My aunt and uncle took me and my cousin to see it. I was 9 yrs old and we had popcorn and ordered a frozen pizza from the concession stand. It was all a big treat for us back then.

  • @tbmike23
    @tbmike23 2 года назад +7

    The perfect blend of crafts, incredible cinematography and direction, incredible music, and childhood fantasy. Spielberg played all the heartstrings in this movie, and he did it well.

  • @nintenmetro
    @nintenmetro 2 года назад +5

    Yes! This is the film behind the iconic Amblin logo. I remember watching this film for the first time in 2002 for the 20th anniversary.
    In 2019 during Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, NBC released a Comcast commercial/short film sequel titled A Holiday Reunion. They brought back Henry Thomas to reprise his role as Elliot Taylor.

  • @English_MoFo
    @English_MoFo 2 года назад +32

    Was the highest grossing movie after Star Wars. Lucas and Spielberg we're going at it every few years with the heavy hitters. It started with Jaws, then Star Wars then they just kept battling. Harrison Fords wife came up with the idea of an alien being left behind during lunch with Spielberg

    • @geetadhumane5793
      @geetadhumane5793 2 года назад +2

      ....it was actually Spielberg who came up with the idea while doing some excavation stuff with Lucas whilst filming Raiders

    • @pebblesanddirt
      @pebblesanddirt 2 года назад +4

      Lucas took out a full page ad in trade papers with the Star Wars characters lifting ET up on their shoulders when the movie overtook Star Wars as the biggest box office movie all time.

    • @English_MoFo
      @English_MoFo 2 года назад +1

      @@geetadhumane5793 "the script was largely written while on location filming for Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) during filming breaks. Steven Spielberg dictated the story to screenwriter Melissa Mathison who was there with her then-boyfriend and future husband Harrison Ford"

    • @christianwise637
      @christianwise637 2 года назад +2

      @@pebblesanddirt It's always really sweet to hear about filmmakers supporting each other and their successes like this

  • @DFW031470
    @DFW031470 2 года назад +3

    Your film viewing experience would not be complete without E.T. in the history somewhere...I'm glad you got to watch this one. When I saw it in 82 at the age of 12, it was my first real emotional response to a film (besides Charlotte's Web), and I left the theater at West Edmonton Mall, completely wrung out lol.

  • @vibesandstuff76
    @vibesandstuff76 2 года назад +3

    I was obsessed with this movie as a kid. Obsessed. Posters. Clothing. My glasses even had ET etched on the side. The end of this still gets me every time.

  • @axelfoley1406
    @axelfoley1406 2 года назад +3

    Greatest child actor of all time.

  • @Ebhen1
    @Ebhen1 2 года назад +3

    This was the first movie I went to without any parent. It was just myself and my friends and we were 12. My growing interest for space and sci-fi was really getting a boost by this movie and that hasn't stopped since. Thanks for this happy little moment. 😊

  • @margaritakmp
    @margaritakmp 2 года назад +3

    I don't know why this movie makes me cry SO much, but I end up weeping every single time, it's just so sweet

  • @Trenchcoat3
    @Trenchcoat3 2 года назад +2

    When you said "I think I know why you have strong memories of a finger" while doing that motion I nearly died 😂

  • @That1punk91
    @That1punk91 2 года назад +1

    i just saw this movie for the first time this year and I am 30 you guys aren't alone