@@45Gunner556yep. according to many veterans, the chinese soldiers had no care for their own life and would do nothing but charge at us. So many unnecessary casualties in the chinese army
I will tell one like: a gay a colored person and a asian enter a buss in the 50s, the condutor say: go sit behinde, the gay say just if was with the black guy, then he goes to jail for being a comunist lol!
All jokes aside, Clint Eastwood is a phenomenal actor. I also don't know if anyone else knew this but Eastwood wrote the script to this and directed it
No one gives props to the actor in the middle of the black hoodlums. He is so stoked to be opposite Clint, he's desperately trying not to smile. Rewatch the scene.
@@Razzrazz90Liberal edition: men are no longer men, people wear masks whilst alone in the car, AND there’s more then one sexuality other than female or male 😂😂😂
1:17 Now this is something that doesn’t get mentioned by the media that much especially liberals would go nuts over that. Not trying to be political correctness and war should be. But that all happened in Korea. I’ve met plenty of Korean War veterans who told me stories. Besides even hearing stories from documentaries. I also heard them talk about how they had their enemies as sandbags that actually was quite common in Korea. Nobody realizes it or talk about it, but that is very true. They were used as sandbags because they didn’t have time to build sandbags so they use the remains of the bodies. The bodies will be too solid would be the perfect shield, especially when counter attack happens.
@evm6177 No. That diminished what he achieved. Sure hes a shitty person who is a racist, but you understand why despite not excusing it, hes been through a hell of a lot.
@@Cynidecia HE'S BEEN THROUGH WHAT?? O BOO HOO CRY ME A RIVER.. Don't give a rats ass 🐀if he's been through hell or high sea, or even poverty, prostitution, aids, drugs or homelessness!
@@Cynideciaaww he’s mean so he’s a shitty person? He literally dies for these people at the end of the movie, how can he actually be racist? He might be racist by the bullshit modern standard where hurt feelings and mean words = racism, but he clearly doesn’t actually hate them, and if he thought he was better than them, he definitely wouldn’t have gotten riddled with bullets for them.
Fun fact: none of these scenes were in the script. Clint Eastwood just started saying these things and the cameraman recorded him. Eastwood liked the scenes so much he decided to keep them.
How did they ever make this movie without busting a gut, I’ll never know…. 😆🤷♂️. I love the scene with the Korean Grandmother spitting out her chaw. priceless.
@@audellaroque4730I guess the perception is that war brings out the worst in some people which could possibly make them hateful towards others who share the enemy’s ethnicity. Sometimes the veterans can move on and become better individuals, while others are bitter with hardened hearts to the very end.
Ok … the character died for the boy so he could have a better life… that is a deep message showing how empathy and honor can be far more powerful than prejudice. That is a nice movie
Not just the boy. He died so that the entire neighborhood could grow up in safety. None of them could stand up to the gang. Even Walt couldn't take down the gang, not really. What Walt could do though, in the little time he had left, was help rebuild the neighborhood, with Thao's help, and then sacrifice himself to get the gang arrested. The neighbors, who couldn't stand up to the gang, could at least testify to what happened. So Walt toughened Thao up, rebuilt the neighborhood, found a brand new family, and sacrificed himself for it and their safety.
He’s not really racist. He’s just extremely bitter (and rightfully so) after the death of his wife. He takes Thao under his wing and ends up having better relationship with him than his own sons. This is type of father figure we all needed at one point.
Yup, he never even really planned on getting close to Thao. It just happened while he was using Thao's debt to rebuild the neighborhood, which he just did so that he wouldn't have to look at it's rundown state anymore.
@@LucianDevine disrespecting people you don’t know is not a form of respect tho. That’s like saying “because I call my best friend a b*tch” it’s somehow a term of endearment towards everyone else as well. I wouldn’t call some random person I don’t know out of their name like that, AS a show of respect, unless they’ve done something to piss me off.
@@wileymoore3914 He's calling the random people that, people's he's a bitter, damage, and grieving old man who's seen all his neighbors either die or move away. When he says it to their faces, it's because they are acting like what he's calling them, like the guys harassing Sue. He marks remarks about his neighbors, but not to their faces, then when interacts with them, he's nothing but respectful, despite how they look at him. He even fixes the wobbly drier. He only got racist to their faces when they messed with his lawn trying to pull Thao off the porch. If you act like a stereotype, he's going to treat you like a stereotype, like Toad. Once Toad proved he was worth respect though, he earned a name, Thao. That's just how people were back in the day.
Fun Fact: Clint Eastwood openly says that one of the things he hates the most is racism, on his younger days working in the Dirty Harry franchise Eastwood stated how he lost contact with other actors that were racist
Who were these other actors. And what was their about working on Dirty Harry that brought out racist actors? (Pardon me, but I have an overly inquisitive mind.)
@@jonahhex6593 no, Wayne didn't like that Clint's westerns and cop movies featured something on the late '60's and early '70's called "the anti-hero." In those more cynical times younger audiences wouldn't watch cops unless the cops had problems with doing what they were told by other cops. Dirty Harry had problems with his bosses...always portrayed as clowns. In westerns, in Wayne's era westerns were a sort of a backdrop for a morality play where there's pretty clear cut good and bad (and he always liked showing the average people back then (barbers, blacksmiths, store keeps) being upstanding and hardworking. Eastwood's westerns featured a different kind of hero. I'm sure Wayne didn't want anything to do with spaghetti western themes or High Plains Drifter...where good guy is about as bad as the bad guy.
@@antifur1727 The reality is exclusionary zoning and White Anglo-Saxon Protestants giving a warped perception of masculinity and what it means to be a man.
Man out of context, the scene of Eastwood saving that girl is so damn strange. He sees her with some gang dudes, points a 1911 in their face and essentially steals their chick.
Perhaps the best part is he ever so subtly insinuated himself with the three punks by dissing on his son playing that b**** wannabe character, as well as standing up to them and making them s*** their pants and grateful he didn't blow their heads off. Notice the one actor kind of meant it when he responded to Clint's line of take care with you too? Clint had earned their mad respect
Right I don't think you could call him racist since he never says he's better than them. He's just loaded with stereotype insults about everyone. 'Racist' just makes an easier title.
Woah, Jim Carrey's impersonations of Clint Eastwood are WAAAAAYYYYYYY more on point than i thought originally 😬 Seriously, i cannot stop seeing him doing his impersonations while watching this.
Fun fact this movie was suppose to be about a nice old man helping out his asian neighbors acclimate to the new environment. But Clint Eastwood just can't stop himself from being racists against his minority co-stars that they decided keep it like that, since they wasted so much film on it. Bravo, Vince.
My granddad served in Korea and he legit talked like that about Koreans long after he served 💀 he was so against eating Asian food too because of it… wild stuff
I mean to be fair Korea was one of the most shittiest places to be in the 1950s. Right after being liberated from Imperial Japan and now split between Soviet Russia and the US. No sign of any modern-era infrastructure (Most metal, fabric and industrial materials were shipped off to supply the desperate Japanese defense on the Pacific war). Everything run-down and peasants begging for food. If that's your first impression of a country, AND you're risking your life in that country, I understand not wanting to have anything related to it anymore.
It's hard to imagine that right now, but even a lot of current 3rd-world countries sent troops and aid supplies under UN flags to help the poor bastards living in 1950s Korea
@@elderleon1844 They all kinda look similar, and to top it off america went to war with vietnam not 15 years after that, plus the war with japan just 5 years before. It is not irrational to think the oldschool hardened american veteran would viscerally hate the asians in general, either by direct confrontation (china-japan) or ideologically.
IMO he seems to have dislike for everyone in the movie. He uses stereotype insults because it's easier for him to judge rather than to understand people. Which Walter finally begins to throughout the movie. He isn't racist IMO, he fought in the Korean war so he just has more suspicion and distain for asian folk, Who are very prominent in his area.
Walt's past in the war probably changed him into a angry and hateful man. Yes he was racist but he was hateful and distant towards everyone with the exception of his wife and dog. Even his kids and grandkids didn't like dealing with him. I grew up in the era of Vietnam vets being my generations fathers and I've heard numerous stories of how they came back a different person.
racist? lmao he called the barber a wop, dago and a jew, called the irish a mick, despises his ungrateful family, called black folks a spook and called the hmong gooks and chinks this guy just hates everyone 😂😂
The point of the movie is he’s racist but develops such a bond for the boy and his family that he willingly lays down his life to protect them. It’s not empty platitudes about racism bad it’s getting to know someone on a personal level instead of a tribal line that’s actually how you stop it.
Clint Eastwood putting his son in the movie just to shit on him is top tier Clint Eastwood
😂
Lol! I did not realize that was his son.
Lmao
@@SpaceMissileScott was probably around 19 at the time. Weird how he looks more like his dad as he got older.
" these guys don't wanna be your "bro" and I don't blame them.... hahahaha
"Clint that's not in the script."
Funnier when you remember he directed this movie
Pretty sure Clint has an N word pass anyway
@@franciscovalle3137"well now it is"
"I wrote the script."
AHAHAHA
Fun fact: None of this was scripted. They just found some home footage from Clint Eastwood and cut it into the movie.
lol 😂
Fun fact: 50 other people have mentioned this fun fact
Bravo Vince
Based.
@@chriswelcome8102Only 50?
"Alright, CUT! That was a great, Clint!"
"Wait, we were filming?"
Clint was directing he's the one to say CUT or else the crew would be dead
@@tareklegrand7747 we get it we get it... he was directing the movie thank you... this same comment is being posted everywhere under every joke
@@madduckling4436do you get it? That reply wouldn't need to keep being posted if these dorks weren't saying dumb shit in the first place
😂😂😂
@@clintonepikratis580 greek clint eastwood spotted
Clint: *spits*
Lady: *spits better*
Clint:
*growls*
Lady: BANZAIIII
(I know I'm culturally off because Korean/Japan stfu)
Lol
Thank you man, I really needed an audio description to my blind friends
Was that lady’s spit healthy? Was it chewing tobacco? It was so much.
@@chriscross8547 wwoooooowwww 😂😂🤣
“Mr. Eastwood, the line was ‘Howdy neighbor!’”
xD
Now I imagine Clint Eastwood voice acting as Ned Flanders...
He directed it though. :p
Clint: Shut the F**K up! Do you hold the camera?! No, I roll whatever goes on! And I turn it into cinema!
Not anymore it ain't.
“You don’t belong in a fight you belong in a sweatshop, so go ahead… make my iPod” Clint Eastwood to Bruce Lee, November 2012
"i even squint better than you"
You mean the Bruce Lee whose been gone since 1973? he said this to THAT Bruce Lee? in 2012??
@@mynameisfoxxy6110can’t tell if this is a joke or not
@@mynameisfoxxy6110 look up “ERB- Clint Eastwood vs Bruce Lee”
@@mynameisfoxxy6110he meant the epic rap battle between clint eastwood and bruce lee
Ngl, that line about him stacking bodies like sandbags is such a raw line and disturbing thought
It was pretty funny lol
It’s true though
@@45Gunner556yep. according to many veterans, the chinese soldiers had no care for their own life and would do nothing but charge at us. So many unnecessary casualties in the chinese army
@@45Gunner556 That’s also why I find it disturbing, given the real life implications of it
@@Samsung-1.9Cu.Ft.Microwavebout to see more of those walls pretty soon
"Clint, you don't even have a speaking role, what the hell?"
Niiiice
You win this comment section! 🤭😆🤣
"Well, I do now..."
The other actors : wow he stays in character for way longer than needed
His son: stay in what?
Clint was the director of
@@jamlife919 got it
😂
0:56 grandpas telling the gen z cousins a joke
Ironic that he used the polite terms for the three guys in the joke.
@@Sinnerboy88 I didn't even notice, have only seen these clips.
I will tell one like: a gay a colored person and a asian enter a buss in the 50s, the condutor say: go sit behinde, the gay say just if was with the black guy, then he goes to jail for being a comunist lol!
Based
@@ZacHawkins42because the guy on the left has the Jeew nose
All jokes aside, Clint Eastwood is a phenomenal actor. I also don't know if anyone else knew this but Eastwood wrote the script to this and directed it
Clint Eastwood is amazing!
Of course he wrote the script 💀
No one gives props to the actor in the middle of the black hoodlums. He is so stoked to be opposite Clint, he's desperately trying not to smile. Rewatch the scene.
He just wanna do a lil acting
So....HE WROTE IT
idk why but "I thought asian girls were supposed to be smart" made me die laughing
🤣🤣🤣
"Top 10 moments when the actors weren't acting"
Hey dragon lady, get me another beer
🐲💁♀️🍺
Isn’t that the password to get into Area 51?
Bro these comments💀💀
@@2010Atomix I know, I love them, too!
Ah yes, Clint Eastwood; *Racist* edition. Everyone's favourite
Oh wow, we get a special edition in the *standard* package? lol
@@Razzrazz90 lmfao
Everybody loves racism.
@@Razzrazz90Liberal edition: men are no longer men, people wear masks whilst alone in the car, AND there’s more then one sexuality other than female or male 😂😂😂
@connorlynndan2415 Clint Eastwood is not Clint...it's Sarah now and all the guns are walkie talkies
Eastwood calling his own son a pussy warms my heart.
That was his son? I never noticed that.
At the end?
@@jarrettowens6073yes in real life
@@bonzoluv Nah, the white kid who said "Thanks, bro" at 2:04 or so - that was a young Scott Eastwood.
@@bonzoluvBro, are you serious
0:55 my grandpa during christmas dinner
I’m black and that is the greatest joke of all time I don’t care what anyone says haha!
@@brandenr5937 technically I probably should’ve said I’m the “colored guy” to be consistent with the joke, but I’m here for you, bud.
Puss cake is my new favorite insult
1:11 that line was cold
1:17 Now this is something that doesn’t get mentioned by the media that much especially liberals would go nuts over that. Not trying to be political correctness and war should be. But that all happened in Korea. I’ve met plenty of Korean War veterans who told me stories. Besides even hearing stories from documentaries. I also heard them talk about how they had their enemies as sandbags that actually was quite common in Korea. Nobody realizes it or talk about it, but that is very true. They were used as sandbags because they didn’t have time to build sandbags so they use the remains of the bodies. The bodies will be too solid would be the perfect shield, especially when counter attack happens.
Idk, it gives me Navy Seal Copypasta vibes
Reminds me of Dirty Harry " He doesn't play any favourites Harry hates everybody"
I believe he's very creative and very good at it.
I would finish that quote that DiGeorgio said, but yt will probably ban me.
@@KRS2000 Yeah probably but the whole dialogue was hilarious.
How does he feel about Mexicans?
@@69in89 Ask him.
"Mr. Eastwood, your line was "the hell these guys up to?"."
You can really tell the character has seen some messed up stuff and its made him into this bitter old man with a chip on everyones shoulder.
That's what war does to lots of people
Na.. It's just a life time of chasing entitlement benifits.
@evm6177 No. That diminished what he achieved. Sure hes a shitty person who is a racist, but you understand why despite not excusing it, hes been through a hell of a lot.
@@Cynidecia HE'S BEEN THROUGH WHAT?? O BOO HOO CRY ME A RIVER.. Don't give a rats ass 🐀if he's been through hell or high sea, or even poverty, prostitution, aids, drugs or homelessness!
@@Cynideciaaww he’s mean so he’s a shitty person? He literally dies for these people at the end of the movie, how can he actually be racist? He might be racist by the bullshit modern standard where hurt feelings and mean words = racism, but he clearly doesn’t actually hate them, and if he thought he was better than them, he definitely wouldn’t have gotten riddled with bullets for them.
I like that the title implies this is not a character, he’s just like that
My wife is Korean. We laughed so hard. She's the best.
You should tell her "now let's go eat some of that good gook food" every once in a while. 😂
Great wife, man! God bless!
that’s how you know you got a good wife
Alot of Koreans are racists, especially towards southeast asians.
Fucking korea
Fun fact: none of these scenes were in the script. Clint Eastwood just started saying these things and the cameraman recorded him. Eastwood liked the scenes so much he decided to keep them.
Fun fact: 50 other people have mentioned this fun fact
@@chriswelcome8102 This just reinforces the fact that Clint was acting out of script.
@@pliniojr95 Fun fact: Fun fact fun fact fun fact. Fact
source: I made it the fu ck up
@@HowDoYouTurnThisOn_I understood that reference
Bro reminds me of Batman who finally got old 😂
Very accurate statement 😂
Trivia: Frank Miller's inspiration for his Batman was Clint Eastwood
No he reminds me of punisher.
I've always said Clint would have been perfect as Bruce Wayne in a live action Batman Beyond movie
Unironically accurate 😂 remind me when Batman and Greenlatern travel in time
2:25 - IMO the most outta pocket one. I love it.
Bruh that one caught me off guard had me laughing out loud
The one after 💀
How did they ever make this movie without busting a gut, I’ll never know…. 😆🤷♂️. I love the scene with the Korean Grandmother spitting out her chaw. priceless.
They’re not Korean though, they’re Hmong, which is a Vietnamese subculture
How dare you assume their gender
@@RiveBassCovers Laotian
@efanshel nope, they’re Hmongs.
@@RiveBassCoverswrong, hmong people are their own ethnicity. they just dont have a country
Oddly enough alot of Korean war veterans end up marrying Asian women
What is odd about that
@@audellaroque4730I guess the perception is that war brings out the worst in some people which could possibly make them hateful towards others who share the enemy’s ethnicity. Sometimes the veterans can move on and become better individuals, while others are bitter with hardened hearts to the very end.
Fun fact a lot of American ww2 soldiers married women from German descent 🤣🤣
@@Chadrick2 Being stationed in South Korea and West Germany and interacting with civilians was likely a big factor for both trends.
@@seandonnellan3710 Im only joking Im talking about how Americans mainly came from German descent.
The look on his face when the old lady spits out more than him is probably the greatest scene in this movie
You can't Cancel Clint Eastwood, Clint Eastwood Cancels you 😂
Life will cancel him soon, he’s so old
@@stopmotionharry8989shut up. What a horrible comment.
@@stopmotionharry8989That's death's job...
@@stopmotionharry8989 Still, he lived a hell of a life
"Now get your ole fade paddy ass down the road"
Instantly levels up with good karma 😅
Ofay is a racist white term
O'Fay*. its like "cracker" for Irish
Equal races equal hate
“Uh, Mr Eastwood, those aren’t actors, and that’s not in the script.”
He said “get off my lawn” to both groups of Asians. The bad and the good ones. That’s consistency
Bro's serious about his lawn care!
1:32 Mr. Eastwood your line was "pick on someone your own size"
WTH you 👻 up to is a great line
i mean he's right though them fuckers are outa control
2:05 😂😂😂😂
I couldn’t believe that was his own son. Hilarious
Ok … the character died for the boy so he could have a better life… that is a deep message showing how empathy and honor can be far more powerful than prejudice. That is a nice movie
Yeah I liked it
Not just the boy. He died so that the entire neighborhood could grow up in safety. None of them could stand up to the gang. Even Walt couldn't take down the gang, not really. What Walt could do though, in the little time he had left, was help rebuild the neighborhood, with Thao's help, and then sacrifice himself to get the gang arrested. The neighbors, who couldn't stand up to the gang, could at least testify to what happened. So Walt toughened Thao up, rebuilt the neighborhood, found a brand new family, and sacrificed himself for it and their safety.
@@LucianDevinewell said… I really love this movie
@ It really is a hell of a movie!
He’s not really racist. He’s just extremely bitter (and rightfully so) after the death of his wife. He takes Thao under his wing and ends up having better relationship with him than his own sons. This is type of father figure we all needed at one point.
Yup, he never even really planned on getting close to Thao. It just happened while he was using Thao's debt to rebuild the neighborhood, which he just did so that he wouldn't have to look at it's rundown state anymore.
“He’s not really racist”…proceeds to call every character a racial slur 😂😂😂
@ He calls all of his friends slurs too. That's just how and who he is. He can call you a slur and still like and respect you.
@@LucianDevine disrespecting people you don’t know is not a form of respect tho. That’s like saying “because I call my best friend a b*tch” it’s somehow a term of endearment towards everyone else as well. I wouldn’t call some random person I don’t know out of their name like that, AS a show of respect, unless they’ve done something to piss me off.
@@wileymoore3914 He's calling the random people that, people's he's a bitter, damage, and grieving old man who's seen all his neighbors either die or move away. When he says it to their faces, it's because they are acting like what he's calling them, like the guys harassing Sue.
He marks remarks about his neighbors, but not to their faces, then when interacts with them, he's nothing but respectful, despite how they look at him. He even fixes the wobbly drier. He only got racist to their faces when they messed with his lawn trying to pull Thao off the porch. If you act like a stereotype, he's going to treat you like a stereotype, like Toad. Once Toad proved he was worth respect though, he earned a name, Thao. That's just how people were back in the day.
1:00 I hate how I laughed at that lmao.
0:25 I’ll have to agree with him there
Right sooo much more civilized to have your meat butchered for you 🙄 ignorant
Fun Fact: Clint Eastwood openly says that one of the things he hates the most is racism, on his younger days working in the Dirty Harry franchise Eastwood stated how he lost contact with other actors that were racist
He has racist views nowadays and conservative right wing views so this is bs.
He also kissed a child which is pedo shit
Who were these other actors. And what was their about working on Dirty Harry that brought out racist actors? (Pardon me, but I have an overly inquisitive mind.)
Wasn’t that the reason John Wayne said he’d never do a movie with Eastwood?
@@jonahhex6593 no, Wayne didn't like that Clint's westerns and cop movies featured something on the late '60's and early '70's called "the anti-hero."
In those more cynical times younger audiences wouldn't watch cops unless the cops had problems with doing what they were told by other cops. Dirty Harry had problems with his bosses...always portrayed as clowns. In westerns, in Wayne's era westerns were a sort of a backdrop for a morality play where there's pretty clear cut good and bad (and he always liked showing the average people back then (barbers, blacksmiths, store keeps) being upstanding and hardworking. Eastwood's westerns featured a different kind of hero. I'm sure Wayne didn't want anything to do with spaghetti western themes or High Plains Drifter...where good guy is about as bad as the bad guy.
@@teller1290 ah I see
0:55 that actually make me laugh
I don't get it
Yea I cracked up too
Wait no… it needs a Jehovah’s Witness somewhere in there… a Jehovah’s Witness
@fan.of.feet2310 your pfp is RANCID
Same
This is Commissar Sebastian Yarrick after being forcefully retired. I'm sure he miss those damned Orks.
God if by some miracle Hollywood makes a movie of Yarrick and Clint is still alive, he'd fit right in!
Yup
he went from competetive racism to just casual racism in movie
At that point, it's just used as a term of endearment, lol.
I love when he calls him TOAD 🤣😂😂
My 83 year old grandfather laughed until he cried. At one point we thought he'd stopped breathing...
I loved this movie, especially the line, "What are you spooks up to?" It's still true today.
Wow. Wanna reiterate what you mean by that?
I think it speaks for itself
@@Kid.B-Kid.Bthis comment has me rolling lmao. Did you not get it the first time? Yeah it’s not a good comment really but come on. You understood.
@@Kid.B-Kid.Bsomeone doesn’t like reality lol
@@antifur1727 The reality is exclusionary zoning and White Anglo-Saxon Protestants giving a warped perception of masculinity and what it means to be a man.
Grand torino is by far one the best movies depicting old people mentoring the youth
Damn
He wasn't racist
He hated everybody equally
Ex
Exactly
"I even squint better than you"
You can't be too tough you got killed by an aspirin.
This movie never gets old...
So.... I'll just get my "oh Faye" paddie-ass down the road....
Clint Eastwood is #LEGEND!!!😊
0:12 i wished to know that myself.
69,420
gee that many? eeeee.
No other actor ever dud this as well as Clint Eastwood.
Clint "Not in my neighborhood" Eastwood.
How come someone is so charismatic and handsome in both his 20s on 70s. clint eastwood is just something else man.
and 90's. Cry Macho was pretty good too
He took that lady's spit personal, he gave that "it's on" look
2:14 the fact thats his irl son is hilarious
Right!😂
If he had different hair, he's the spitting image of Clint in Revenge Of The Creature
I’m Mexican, and that bartender joke is hilarious
lol me too i actually laughed
1:06 Mr. Nebbercracker in Monster House
"What are you fish heads looking at?" was one of my favorites.
" Clint... I'm not sure these quotes were in the script "
Now this is a good recommendation
Clint Eastwood being relatable for 3 minutes
As an Asian even I had to get some of these lines to fuck with my homies
Blondie's favourite Yu-Gi-Oh card is the Blue Eyes White Dragon.
top 5 times actors weren't acting
Doctor: You have got three minutes left to live.
Me:
Swamp rats lol. Never heard that one
“Clint, you’re not even in this scene, get off the set!”
“What are you spooks up to”
Man out of context, the scene of Eastwood saving that girl is so damn strange. He sees her with some gang dudes, points a 1911 in their face and essentially steals their chick.
dude even out of context you can say she wasn't confortable with thaat guys and that what was happen in the context they where trying to abuse her
Yeah even without context they’re surrounding her and one is them is holding their arm
Perhaps the best part is he ever so subtly insinuated himself with the three punks by dissing on his son playing that b**** wannabe character, as well as standing up to them and making them s*** their pants and grateful he didn't blow their heads off. Notice the one actor kind of meant it when he responded to Clint's line of take care with you too? Clint had earned their mad respect
you don't normally see young Asian girls hanging out with groups of black males
Now the algorithm has learned what content i want to see
I wish he was my grandpa. Would def visit him weekly.
Now, let's rethink this. Walt Kowalski was unapologetically un-PC, but not a racist.
Right I don't think you could call him racist since he never says he's better than them. He's just loaded with stereotype insults about everyone.
'Racist' just makes an easier title.
@@TheGuyWhoTries. Maybe "irascible" would have been more accurate.
@@BigBri550 no kidding
Anything can be racist if you use your imagination
@@sroevukasroevuka only if one ignores the definition of "racist"
“Clint, your line was hello new neighbors”
It’s called pattern recognition
It's not racism it's just being race aware and there's nothing bad in it
It should have been called "Clint Eastwood spitting for 3 minutes"
That sandbag line was 🔥
"Walt Kowalski: [Walt has just gotten Thao a job from his Irish friend] Come on, Zipperhead. We'll leave the mick here to play with himself."
Clint Eastwood is my spirit animal
Woah, Jim Carrey's impersonations of Clint Eastwood are WAAAAAYYYYYYY more on point than i thought originally 😬 Seriously, i cannot stop seeing him doing his impersonations while watching this.
Fun fact this movie was suppose to be about a nice old man helping out his asian neighbors acclimate to the new environment. But Clint Eastwood just can't stop himself from being racists against his minority co-stars that they decided keep it like that, since they wasted so much film on it. Bravo, Vince.
"What the hell are you spooks up to?"😂😂😂😂
Jim Carrey "I saw that tape..... I showed it to all my friends........"
Now THIS IS MY algorithm
Clint Eastwood not being racist at all.
that's not racism.
that's called breaking the ice.
real racism isn't like this.
My granddad served in Korea and he legit talked like that about Koreans long after he served 💀 he was so against eating Asian food too because of it… wild stuff
I mean to be fair Korea was one of the most shittiest places to be in the 1950s.
Right after being liberated from Imperial Japan and now split between Soviet Russia and the US. No sign of any modern-era infrastructure (Most metal, fabric and industrial materials were shipped off to supply the desperate Japanese defense on the Pacific war). Everything run-down and peasants begging for food.
If that's your first impression of a country, AND you're risking your life in that country, I understand not wanting to have anything related to it anymore.
It's hard to imagine that right now, but even a lot of current 3rd-world countries sent troops and aid supplies under UN flags to help the poor bastards living in 1950s Korea
@@김태환-s2iYou right
he know that korea is not asia as whole right?
@@elderleon1844 They all kinda look similar, and to top it off america went to war with vietnam not 15 years after that, plus the war with japan just 5 years before. It is not irrational to think the oldschool hardened american veteran would viscerally hate the asians in general, either by direct confrontation (china-japan) or ideologically.
Feel like Clint was waiting a long time to say that to his own kid.
most of this wasnt even racist. it was him being disgusted by appalling shit.
To the modern american mind (or whatever is in there) a grand majority of the english dictionary is racist and non-inclusive.
He literally called people slurs, wtf are you talking about?
@@rad1kalblu3s34 watch the movie, he respected those people more so than the so called "inclusive" snowflakes
@@yankoelgueta1116 you're a nutcase buddy
@@rad1kalblu3s34 word can't hurt yo and word is not racism
0:27 spitting competition is crazy bro . Had me rolling 😂
Clint Eastwood being BASED for 3 minutes.
No bitches?
No Clint the line was “what are you guys up to”
Does he hate them because of their race? Or does he use racially abusive language because of their actions?
He helps two Asian young people.
IMO he seems to have dislike for everyone in the movie. He uses stereotype insults because it's easier for him to judge rather than to understand people. Which Walter finally begins to throughout the movie. He isn't racist IMO, he fought in the Korean war so he just has more suspicion and distain for asian folk, Who are very prominent in his area.
Walt's past in the war probably changed him into a angry and hateful man. Yes he was racist but he was hateful and distant towards everyone with the exception of his wife and dog. Even his kids and grandkids didn't like dealing with him. I grew up in the era of Vietnam vets being my generations fathers and I've heard numerous stories of how they came back a different person.
racist? lmao he called the barber a wop, dago and a jew, called the irish a mick, despises his ungrateful family, called black folks a spook and called the hmong gooks and chinks this guy just hates everyone 😂😂
@@TheGuyWhoTries. He is racist and for good justifiable reason as well
Watch the full movie
The point of the movie is he’s racist but develops such a bond for the boy and his family that he willingly lays down his life to protect them. It’s not empty platitudes about racism bad it’s getting to know someone on a personal level instead of a tribal line that’s actually how you stop it.
You don't mess with Clint
We all need an old man like him in our lives.
“Always Treat the Jewish kids friendly or they’ll put the sheeny curse on you.”
-A grandmother
“The hell you spooks up to”😭