As a Maine native who lived there for 35 of my 38 years, I really have to commend Fred Gwynne on his exceptional dialectical work, here. There are quite a few subtleties that he just NAILS. There’s a certain cadence and rhythm to the way old folks from western and central Maine speak, and he does it so well that it actually evokes distinct memories and feelings for me from my childhood.
Fred Gwynne was a great actor. I don't think people realized how good of a character actor he was because of his role as Herman on "The Munsters" which sadly overshadowed his legitimate acting talents.
i loved him in this film and it's my favorite role of his. but i think people did realize it when he did My Cousin Vinny as the Judge. that may be a comedy but it's got drama in it too.
After reading the book I realized how amazing of a job they did on this adaptation. The actor who plays Jud Crandall fits the description of the character PERFECTLY .
Even if they remake or re-adapt this story, they're not going to find anyone as spot on as Fred Gwynne was for Jud. That was a once-in-a-lifetime performance.
Absolutely. This adaptation was excellent and that's saying a Lot! It seems like most of those late 80's/early 90's S.K. films were all pretty good. The same goes for a good amount of the made for TV versions. I especially liked the TV version of "Desperation." I loved the books (Regulators/Desperation) and I thought the TV adaptation was excellent. Ron Perlman as Sheriff Collie Entragian.!!! Come On! That was a perfect fit! "Tak!"
Absolutely no need to remake this movie .... There is no way John Lithgow is going to top Mr Gwynne as Jud Crandall. Can tell just watching the trailer that I'm probably gonna be disappointed
The remake was an utter disappointment. The original is way better, and Fred Gwynne was perfect as Jud Crandall. The ending in the remake was just really dumb, imo.
Ricky May both actors in the original Jud and Louis were a million times better. The original had atmosphere and suspense. I think illl watch the original again to cleanse myself of this mediocre remake.
@@zxvb9827 I was sad that they left that whole concept out of the movie, but I guess you can only fit so much in a movie. The book was such an amazing read.
+angusyjr I never thought about it, but the way his character reacts then, I'm wondering if he buried his wife there. It's been so long since I've seen the whole movie, never seen part 2, and I've never read the book. So it had me wondering. He was great in this.
He reacts that way because he knows a person was once buried in the burial grounds. The person in question went by the name of Timmy Baderman, a world war II hero. Read the novel it fleshes out his character quite well.
"Well sometimes, dead is better. The person you put up there ain't the person that comes back. It might look like that person, but it ain't that person, because whatever lives on the ground beyond the Pet Sematary ain't human at all."
Although Bill Skärsgard was amazing. Both portrayals are in leagues of their own. Apples and oranges. It's like comparing Jack Nicholson's Joker and Heath Ledger's Joker. Both were amazing in their own right.
I like bill skarsgards work on IT but he’s made to be the modern hot topic superhero villain version Tim Curry’s version was more of a regular clown that was off beat which made it scarier but the book version is the best cuz it forces you to interperate Stephens version
What i don't understand is why is this cemetery different to other cemetery honestly? Plus what i don't understand is why they build that place in first place honestly?
Of course. His character is based on the real old Yankee types that live in Maine, NH and Vermont. Or USED to live in VT, before all the liberal hippies invaded the state and took it over in the 1980s and 90's.
Jud is definitely my favorite character in this movie. Loved Fred Gwynne in My Cousin Vinny too..... Mr. Gambini, what's a Ute? That shit kills me every time I see it
+guardian08527 No the moral of the story is appreciate your loved ones while you still have them and remember that when they go, they will be better off (if they haven't lived a life of sin). Nothing lasts forever and oh does King point that out is so many ways in so many of his novels.
Did not know for long time this character was portrayed by same actor who played the Frankenstein father, Herman Munster, in the Munsters tv show. Frederick Hubbard Gwynne was a great guy. Was a WWII veteran and said a great line passionately and sincerely I believe. Not just scripted or rehearsed in the Munsters show. An article mentions good ol Fred Gwynne in light of protests over police violence and racism towards blacks. A clip shows him saying (a Frankenstein’s monster who happens to be husband and father) is trying to teach his little werewolfish son, Eddie Munster, a vital lesson in self-worth and acceptance of others. “The lesson I want you to learn,” Herman says, “is that it doesn’t matter what you look like. You could be tall or short, or fat or thin, or ugly - or handsome, like your father - or you can be black or yellow or white, it doesn’t matter. But what does matter is the size of your heart and the strength of your character.” 💛 👏👏👏👏
Hollywood and Television are both filled with superb actors, classically trained in theater, and they do a really amazing job of making the young "stars" look like they're the great actors. Sometimes you get both in one person. Usually, the best actors can literally become or embody any role, while the movie star usually plays his or herself in every film. Fred Gwynne was maybe most known as Herman Munster, but he was in a lot of great stuff, and I think by the 90s everyone knew how awesome he was, because of this movie, and 'my cousin Vinny'.
"What you buy is what you own, and what you own always comes home to you." Amen to that. One of my favorite Stephen King novels 💀, and a great example of how to actually make an intelligent adaptation of same -- a rarity sad to say😞. I do miss Fred Gwynne, a brilliant actor and artist (LOVED his depiction of a LITERAL "String Quartet"😊). ☺ I'm at the age (60) where more and more of my personal favorites are gone...😳 Shit, now I might just have to get this one on DVD as well. 😅😅😅😅
I always open my beer bottles with a bottle opener because of watching Jud...yes I'm aware that our domestic bottles here in the states are twist off! I just like using a bottle opener.
True story. I had a lot of different pets growing up. Dogs and cats mostly. Many got sick, one drowned in a swimming pool, and one just of old age. We buried them all on our property and we'd say a little prayer afterwards. This was back in the 70s and early 80s. Well, time moved on and my mom passed and the house was eventually sold. Still, I sometimes think of all the pets that are still buried there to this day. It's strange and a little creepy. I seriously doubt the new owners have any idea at all about the animals, unless they start digging. Oh and coincidentally the house was (is) on a busy street with constant traffic. I guess you could say it was a case of life imitating art or vice versa.
I lived next to a people's cemetary for 6+ great years. This book shook up that feeling of total calmness. It wasn't "cursed/sour" but I would not go there on Halloween due to the darker aspect of the holiday. Ever.
Anki Hansen you can literally just search it up. The Wendigo is basically a cannibal or an evil spirit that eats humans. They are native to the north woods and would possess people that have tasted human flesh or felt the need of greed and would force them into a state of unquenchable hunger for human flesh.
@@amandaeklund9499 Tells him about the Indian burial ground in the first place, from what I remember it isn't known about beyond a few people. So Jud telling Louis about it directly leads to both Gage and the cat coming back as erm 'different' Obviously not at fault for them dying in the first place but everything that happens due to Gage coming back possessed is kinda on Jud :)
No, he was not. He knew the place was evil and was terrified of it and he never wanted to go back there....but he had to, because whoever uses that burial ground is bound to a curse to go back there with someone else at least once in their lifetime. The curse was so strong that it kept people alive and healthy until they fulfilled it. That's why Jud was very healthy and agile for an 83 years old man. After he brought Louis and his dead cat up there, he started looking very old as if he was catching up with his age really fast....the curse was on Louis's shoulders now. It also seems that Jud did not have a full understanding of the curse he was under. When asked by Louis why he brought him there, he only invented reasons and spelled the words "The soil of a man's heart is stonier...". These words were spoken by all the people who used those grounds. The Wendigo put those words into their minds. He was somehow aware that the burial ground was "making things happen".
The idea of all the old men in a small town sitting on their porches late into the night, slowly drinking beers and with the orange glow of a cigarette the only light in the darkness, watching, waiting … because they know a secret. And it has to be the men who watch, because the soil of a man’s heart is stonier.
The soil of a man's heart is stonier, Louis. A man grows what he can, and he tends it. 'Cause what you buy, is what you own. And what you own... always comes home to you
Butters Stotch there’s an interview of Trey & Matt explaining the inspiration for Butters. Apparently it’s based on a friend of there’s, a producer for the show
Fuck was that at the end? You had a great montage and then end it with Jud dying over and over. "Uhhaahh! Uhhaahh! Uhhaahh! Uhhaahh!" Fuck was that acid tripish shit? LOL. Ahh who am I kidding... I'll probably use that as my new ringtone. 😂
Absolutely, hands down one the Greatest movie adaptation's of a Stephen King 👑 book! Now, whenever I read ANYTHING by S.K. and there's a narrative character/town elder, it's Judd's voice I hear! Some of the made for TV versions were pretty good as well. "Desperation" is another favorite of mine and the TV adaptation was very close to my minds interpretation. These new reboots, (most of them) like the newest reboot of Pet Semetary I have found to be soo very boring and uninteresting. Nevermind the fact that the character roles were swapped around! "WHY DO THEY ALWAYS INSIST ON DOING THAT!!?" There Are a few exceptions but COME ON MAN! It's like these directors and producers are hired just to completely ruin something that doesn't need to be fixed! Sorry, lost track there! 😁 You guys know what I mean and that's All that matters!!! In the meantime, Let's All hold our BREATH for the new upcoming "FIRESTARTER!" Hahahaha Yaaay!!!!! Hooray 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
I get the feeling that if I hadn't seen the movie I could pretty much get the jist of it from just these Jud scenes haha. Thinking about being Jud for Halloween this year.
Bruh jud cursed them because after he told Louis that secret about the pet sematary he died he lived all them years then all of sudden the wendigo killed him
Big Mac Indians! Am I the only who thinks when the young guy asks “whose burial grounds?” old Jud’s answer sounds like he’s saying “big mac indians?” My dad was from New Hampshire and his dad (my grandpa who i only met a few times) sounded very similar to old Jud. My dad lost most of his accent, but he did use the term ayuh now and then. Small town New Englanders are a strange bunch, but I like their style overall.
There is where my mom got my brothers name. Gage. His name Gage William T. Lol hes 22 now. We live where big rigs come down here too and its a small town, small street. Therea this gray cat come by i call it 'church' lol
That wouldn't help. The evil would still be there. Jud implies that when he mentions that the Creed house has "stayed empty for too long". No one wanted to live there.
Jud Crandall stole the show in this movie. Acting was perfection.
PHANTOM Yea that's the only thing I didnt like about the trailer. I wish the guy playing his character at least tried to talk like him.
Same and I love John Lithgow and Im not confident in his abilities.
HaffBakedGaming no way it is? I didnt even recognize him lmao
Jud always reminds me of my Dad its a shame he isn't alive to see me grow up.
PHANTOM yeah. His performance will forever top what the new one brings.
As a Maine native who lived there for 35 of my 38 years, I really have to commend Fred Gwynne on his exceptional dialectical work, here. There are quite a few subtleties that he just NAILS. There’s a certain cadence and rhythm to the way old folks from western and central Maine speak, and he does it so well that it actually evokes distinct memories and feelings for me from my childhood.
Yeah, this dude is the epitome of Maine.
Ayuh.
Chummy
It's so cool how all these different accents evolved..I looked it up and it's really interesting.
And who ever would
Fred Gwynne was a great actor. I don't think people realized how good of a character actor he was because of his role as Herman on "The Munsters" which sadly overshadowed his legitimate acting talents.
He does a great rural Maine accent.
+Skillmaster Yah, he was fantastic.
Cool. I have been to Ogunquit. Really beautiful country up there.
vista7
Yea it's nice place to visit. I've long since moved back to NY (upstate).
i loved him in this film and it's my favorite role of his. but i think people did realize it when he did My Cousin Vinny as the Judge. that may be a comedy but it's got drama in it too.
Sometimes....Dead is better
Yup, don't want to go down that road...
No no . . . Sometimes dead is bettah
Thats a mean road ayah
@@edie3902 that's a mean roahd, ayuh
I liked "Christ on his throne no"!
After reading the book I realized how amazing of a job they did on this adaptation. The actor who plays Jud Crandall fits the description of the character PERFECTLY .
fred gwyne
Even if they remake or re-adapt this story, they're not going to find anyone as spot on as Fred Gwynne was for Jud. That was a once-in-a-lifetime performance.
I agree Josh.
Absolutely. This adaptation was excellent and that's saying a Lot! It seems like most of those late 80's/early 90's S.K. films were all pretty good. The same goes for a good amount of the made for TV versions. I especially liked the TV version of "Desperation." I loved the books (Regulators/Desperation) and I thought the TV adaptation was excellent. Ron Perlman as Sheriff Collie Entragian.!!! Come On! That was a perfect fit! "Tak!"
How dare you refer to Herman Munster as “the actor”.
This performance alone is reason that this remake should not have been attempted.
ROWDY RICO yeah the new actor doesn’t have the gruff accent either. Which I feel like the character needs, but I’m no expert by any means.
Absolutely no need to remake this movie .... There is no way John Lithgow is going to top Mr Gwynne as Jud Crandall. Can tell just watching the trailer that I'm probably gonna be disappointed
The ending was changed in the 2019 adaption. That is why I hate it
The remake was an utter disappointment. The original is way better, and Fred Gwynne was perfect as Jud Crandall. The ending in the remake was just really dumb, imo.
Ricky May both actors in the original Jud and Louis were a million times better. The original had atmosphere and suspense. I think illl watch the original again to cleanse myself of this mediocre remake.
The soil of a man's heart is stonier..
A man grows what he can...and he tends it.
Oz The Gweat and Tewwible
@@zxvb9827 I was sad that they left that whole concept out of the movie, but I guess you can only fit so much in a movie. The book was such an amazing read.
One of the scariest/ greatest lines in any movie!
"christ on his throne no! and who ever would?!"
fred Gwynne is awesome in this movie. herman munster in pet sematary. lol! this was awesome!
+angusyjr I never thought about it, but the way his character reacts then, I'm wondering if he buried his wife there. It's been so long since I've seen the whole movie, never seen part 2, and I've never read the book. So it had me wondering. He was great in this.
He reacts that way because he knows a person was once buried in the burial grounds. The person in question went by the name of Timmy Baderman, a world war II hero. Read the novel it fleshes out his character quite well.
Lionel Hutz I'm reading the book right now just wanted to see the victor piscow scene.
@@deborahc.delossantos1772 *Pascow
Fred Gwynne nailed the role of Judd Crandell perfectly from the book. They couldn't have cast a more perfect actor for the part.
I love that moment when Jud scoops Gage up. The little boy was so tiny and Fred was so big, it looks kind of like Mike Tyson holding a dove.
Makes ya wonder wtf the dad and mom was doing letting that little kid by that road
@@joshuahaynes7128 They were checking on Ellie who got hurt from the tire swing, when it`s rope snapped and fell to the ground.
"Well sometimes, dead is better. The person you put up there ain't the person that comes back. It might look like that person, but it ain't that person, because whatever lives on the ground beyond the Pet Sematary ain't human at all."
Fred Gwynne and Tim Curry. Two amazing portrayals of SK characters. Can't pictures anyone else in the roles of Jud Crandall or Pennywise the Clown.
Although Bill Skärsgard was amazing. Both portrayals are in leagues of their own. Apples and oranges. It's like comparing Jack Nicholson's Joker and Heath Ledger's Joker.
Both were amazing in their own right.
I like bill skarsgards work on IT but he’s made to be the modern hot topic superhero villain version Tim Curry’s version was more of a regular clown that was off beat which made it scarier but the book version is the best cuz it forces you to interperate Stephens version
@@nicholasrue7397 Both Curry and Skarsgård were great, Curry was better clown and Skarsgård better monster.
The best portrayal of a Steven King character in my opinion is Kathy Bates in Misery
Buried my cat the other day, thought of Fred Gynne's line, "Each buries his own."
Did he come back and hiss at you with glowing yellow eyes yet? Remember, sometimes, dead is better.
No, he's in the yard, not the abandoned Mikmak Burial Ground.
Yuri Andropov Make sure that the ground back there hasn't gone sour.
No, but the soil of a man's heart is stonier Louis.
Yuri Andropov sorry to hear about your cat ):
I love Fred Gwynne's voice. I would have loved for him to read me a bedtime story lol
Me toooo..!!!
Imagine him reading Pet Sematary to you...or any other SK book for that matter 😁
I could imagine him reading a story about cowboys and cattle or somethin
He was an author, too!
I want him to repeat "the soil of a man's heart is stonier Louis" as I fall asleep. I could die happy
He is a legend rip Fred amazing actor played this role amazing
When I first saw this movie, as Jud was saving Gage, I almost cried... He's just awesome for the part he plays c:
South Park did an amazing job with this character
John Lithgow is a superb actor but he'll never top Fred Gwynne. He was born to play Jud.
When you first see the indian burial ground, you know it's serious
Fantomas612 wouldn't bury nothing there
Fantomas612 you are so right!!
What i don't understand is why is this cemetery different to other cemetery honestly? Plus what i don't understand is why they build that place in first place honestly?
@@jelenav3336 natives buried their dead there for too long. Until the ground has been soiled.
@@AnubisDark wasn't just that the wendigo came across it and cursed the whole land
RIP, Herman Munster.
Jud was the best thing about this story.
Of course. His character is based on the real old Yankee types that live in Maine, NH and Vermont. Or USED to live in VT, before all the liberal hippies invaded the state and took it over in the 1980s and 90's.
@@justforever96 "liberal hippies" eh? Ahh fuck off, man. Truly. I am so sick of you hateful types injecting your bigoted bullshit into everything.
Jud is definitely my favorite character in this movie. Loved Fred Gwynne in My Cousin Vinny too..... Mr. Gambini, what's a Ute? That shit kills me every time I see it
And miko as gage
@@justforever96 they’ve really done it in Vermont….now they’ve got to Un-do it!
"Do you want that milk pasteurized?"
Tom Gorman no just up to my boobs. I can splash it up to my eyes.
LMFAO!
@@kaiobikeg8749 Rip Fred Gwynne😢😢😢😢
"No, just up to my boobs, I want to splash it in my eyes"
No, just up to my boobs. I can splash it in my eyes.
Moral of the story: Stay away from the Knicknackpaddywhack Indian burial grounds.
+guardian08527 No the moral of the story is appreciate your loved ones while you still have them and remember that when they go, they will be better off (if they haven't lived a life of sin). Nothing lasts forever and oh does King point that out is so many ways in so many of his novels.
Everyone lives a life of sin. That was kinda pointless
ROFLMAO, a bit like you really?
Yeah, like me and everyone else on this earth
Thanks for the comedy!
Did not know for long time this character was portrayed by same actor who played the Frankenstein father, Herman Munster, in the Munsters tv show. Frederick Hubbard Gwynne was a great guy. Was a WWII veteran and said a great line passionately and sincerely I believe. Not just scripted or rehearsed in the Munsters show. An article mentions good ol Fred Gwynne in light of protests over police violence and racism towards blacks.
A clip shows him saying (a Frankenstein’s monster who happens to be husband and father) is trying to teach his little werewolfish son, Eddie Munster, a vital lesson in self-worth and acceptance of others.
“The lesson I want you to learn,” Herman says, “is that it doesn’t matter what you look like. You could be tall or short, or fat or thin, or ugly - or handsome, like your father - or you can be black or yellow or white, it doesn’t matter. But what does matter is the size of your heart and the strength of your character.” 💛 👏👏👏👏
Lotta history on that rod
He sounds EXACTLY like I thought he would!
Hollywood and Television are both filled with superb actors, classically trained in theater, and they do a really amazing job of making the young "stars" look like they're the great actors. Sometimes you get both in one person. Usually, the best actors can literally become or embody any role, while the movie star usually plays his or herself in every film. Fred Gwynne was maybe most known as Herman Munster, but he was in a lot of great stuff, and I think by the 90s everyone knew how awesome he was, because of this movie, and 'my cousin Vinny'.
“He’s goin down the rhoaaad! Don’t let him go down that rhoaad!”
It’s funny Jud is such a good friend they treat him like he’s part of the family
I'm reading the book now and constantly think of Fred G. whenever Judd talks/is in the book
"What you buy is what you own, and what you own always comes home to you." Amen to that.
One of my favorite Stephen King novels 💀, and a great example of how to actually make an intelligent adaptation of same -- a rarity sad to say😞. I do miss Fred Gwynne, a brilliant actor and artist (LOVED his depiction of a LITERAL "String Quartet"😊). ☺ I'm at the age (60) where more and more of my personal favorites are gone...😳
Shit, now I might just have to get this one on DVD as well. 😅😅😅😅
Jud was my favorite character.
Fred Gwynn’s Jud is such a fucking adorable character. Such a simple, gentle and friendly person.
Jud Crandall is an absolute cult caracter! He should get an award. I love to talk like him when i'm drunk :)
Fred Gwynne Has been dead for almost 30 years.
I always open my beer bottles with a bottle opener because of watching Jud...yes I'm aware that our domestic bottles here in the states are twist off! I just like using a bottle opener.
They’re only twist offs if you drink crap beer lol, but yea same.
The soil of a man's heart is really stonier.. It's your cat now Lewis.
True story. I had a lot of different pets growing up. Dogs and cats mostly. Many got sick, one drowned in a swimming pool, and one just of old age. We buried them all on our property and we'd say a little prayer afterwards. This was back in the 70s and early 80s. Well, time moved on and my mom passed and the house was eventually sold. Still, I sometimes think of all the pets that are still buried there to this day. It's strange and a little creepy. I seriously doubt the new owners have any idea at all about the animals, unless they start digging. Oh and coincidentally the house was (is) on a busy street with constant traffic. I guess you could say it was a case of life imitating art or vice versa.
Fred Gwynn was so good in this.
The love a man has for his family can't easily be replaced.
What happened at the end? Did he step on a tack?
When I get old, I wanna be just like Jud Crandall, sitting on my porch, drinking beer and smoking.
Either him or Gandalf, and I'm not much for growing a beard.
Hell, why wait??
Gwynne's Jud Crandall was one of the greatest realized characters from a King book.
I lived next to a people's cemetary for 6+ great years. This book shook up that feeling of total calmness. It wasn't "cursed/sour" but I would not go there on Halloween due to the darker aspect of the holiday. Ever.
Love this movie! R.I.P. Jud
It was Jude's fault for starting that shit in the first place!
Who the hell is Jude?
Anyway, the wendigo was behind it all. Read the book. ;)
@@nicholasrue7397 What is a wendigo, it's the sixth time I've heard about that besides Pet Sematary.
Anki Hansen you can literally just search it up. The Wendigo is basically a cannibal or an evil spirit that eats humans. They are native to the north woods and would possess people that have tasted human flesh or felt the need of greed and would force them into a state of unquenchable hunger for human flesh.
How was it his fault? :-(
@@amandaeklund9499 Tells him about the Indian burial ground in the first place, from what I remember it isn't known about beyond a few people. So Jud telling Louis about it directly leads to both Gage and the cat coming back as erm 'different' Obviously not at fault for them dying in the first place but everything that happens due to Gage coming back possessed is kinda on Jud :)
Lot of history on that road, yup.
The whole video is great but the ending is a spectacle LOL Great actor love the accent
South Park nailed this guy lol
Fred Gwynn was PERFECT !! It's like HE took THIS role to HEART and a personal challenge !!
His performance is so memorable he didn't just become a one-off spoof on South Park, but a recurring character.
Fred Gwynne was the perfect casting choice for Jud Crandall. Best part about the movie imo.
Sometimes I wonder if Judd wasn’t an emissary of the burial site - none of them would have known about the power of the site without him
He seems to have more information about this place honestly which means they would listened to him non of this would happened in first place honestly!
No, he was not. He knew the place was evil and was terrified of it and he never wanted to go back there....but he had to, because whoever uses that burial ground is bound to a curse to go back there with someone else at least once in their lifetime. The curse was so strong that it kept people alive and healthy until they fulfilled it. That's why Jud was very healthy and agile for an 83 years old man. After he brought Louis and his dead cat up there, he started looking very old as if he was catching up with his age really fast....the curse was on Louis's shoulders now.
It also seems that Jud did not have a full understanding of the curse he was under. When asked by Louis why he brought him there, he only invented reasons and spelled the words "The soil of a man's heart is stonier...". These words were spoken by all the people who used those grounds. The Wendigo put those words into their minds.
He was somehow aware that the burial ground was "making things happen".
i like the orginal of pet semprey fred gwynne powerful brillent wonderful acting
Absolutely, he was great in that too. Not many actors today can compare.
sometimes dead is better
The idea of all the old men in a small town sitting on their porches late into the night, slowly drinking beers and with the orange glow of a cigarette the only light in the darkness, watching, waiting … because they know a secret. And it has to be the men who watch, because the soil of a man’s heart is stonier.
What a fucking awesome comment dude
The soil of a man's heart is stonier, Louis. A man grows what he can, and he tends it. 'Cause what you buy, is what you own. And what you own... always comes home to you
Those words were told by everybody who used the burial ground. The sinister Wendigo put those words into their minds.
This dude Jud has been in my head for years....haha this guys seriously scared me as a kid but I realized now he was the best in the movie.
Way to fucking plant the seed in his head, Jud! "Oh, but don't do _that,_ why would you ever do that?"
I love the South Park version :D
Don't do it Stotch, Don't bury your son up in the indian burial ground,.......that's right over there, behind the Andersons' Bar.......
Butters Stotch there’s an interview of Trey & Matt explaining the inspiration for Butters. Apparently it’s based on a friend of there’s, a producer for the show
You dont wanna go down that road
"you've done it you stupid old man...now you've got to undo it"
*proceeds to sit on porch with a six pack of beer and pack of cigs and fall asleep*
My favorite man in the whole movie he made this horror movie less scary when it was getting scarier
I loved this movie as a kid..still do. Only now Everytime I see this I think about South Park lol.
You don’t wanna go down that road..
Wish he was my neighbor. Such a sweet old man.
Fuck was that at the end? You had a great montage and then end it with Jud dying over and over.
"Uhhaahh! Uhhaahh! Uhhaahh! Uhhaahh!"
Fuck was that acid tripish shit? LOL.
Ahh who am I kidding... I'll probably use that as my new ringtone. 😂
This movie scared the hell out of me as a child
Absolutely, hands down one the Greatest movie adaptation's of a Stephen King 👑 book! Now, whenever I read ANYTHING by S.K. and there's a narrative character/town elder, it's Judd's voice I hear! Some of the made for TV versions were pretty good as well. "Desperation" is another favorite of mine and the TV adaptation was very close to my minds interpretation. These new reboots, (most of them) like the newest reboot of Pet Semetary I have found to be soo very boring and uninteresting. Nevermind the fact that the character roles were swapped around! "WHY DO THEY ALWAYS INSIST ON DOING THAT!!?" There Are a few exceptions but COME ON MAN! It's like these directors and producers are hired just to completely ruin something that doesn't need to be fixed! Sorry, lost track there! 😁 You guys know what I mean and that's All that matters!!! In the meantime, Let's All hold our BREATH for the new upcoming "FIRESTARTER!" Hahahaha Yaaay!!!!! Hooray 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
I get the feeling that if I hadn't seen the movie I could pretty much get the jist of it from just these Jud scenes haha.
Thinking about being Jud for Halloween this year.
Jud didn't die; he was reincarnated into a South Park character.
The K13?you dont wanna go down that run.that runs gotta history.
1:33 is my favorite part, "Christ on his throne no, WHOEVER WOULD"?!
Wish they would've worked on the father/son relationship in this version. No joke that's the only thing missing from the movies it seems.
Points butters down the wrong path.
Bruh jud cursed them because after he told Louis that secret about the pet sematary he died he lived all them years then all of sudden the wendigo killed him
Big Mac Indians! Am I the only who thinks when the young guy asks “whose burial grounds?” old Jud’s answer sounds like he’s saying “big mac indians?”
My dad was from New Hampshire and his dad (my grandpa who i only met a few times) sounded very similar to old Jud. My dad lost most of his accent, but he did use the term ayuh now and then. Small town New Englanders are a strange bunch, but I like their style overall.
The film would have been far more darker had Mr. Gambini been buried in the Pet Semetary.
ah haha!! his voice! ohh its amazing :( i love everything he says in this movie, especially when he says the dos name... ''SPAHTT'' haha!
Clássico filme 1989👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼🇧🇷
you left out the best line. "Sometimes dead is better"
The Big Mac Indians?
Sky hound no Mikmaq (Mig-Mah)
snowy cajun indians with the big mac indians
lol the outro be like: 😵😵😵😵
Where's the "Sometimes dead is better", line? I was looking forward to hearing his whole story thing with that quote.
Such a great actor. I didn't think "Herman Munster" but only Jud when he was on screen.
Herman Munster was always a good story teller.
There is where my mom got my brothers name. Gage. His name Gage William T. Lol hes 22 now. We live where big rigs come down here too and its a small town, small street. Therea this gray cat come by i call it 'church' lol
Love this damn movie so much!
Thank god for the subtitles of the movie lol. Didn’t understand a thing
"I may have murdered your son, Louis--DARN! DARN! DARN! DARN!"
And to think that this is the only movie Mary Lambert directed she could have been the new Wes Craven or Clive Barker
Also it’s Louie Creeds fault for not building a fence around his property. Especially if by a highway.
It's that damn road meet a lot of children unhappy
"Lotta history down that rodd. Ayuh."
Fred's put one one of the better Maine accents that I've heard.
I cannot believe no one has uploaded Judd telling the story about his dog Spot.
“Rachel? RACHEL?!”
Jud Crandall is the new Batman
Ribbon And Shine The Shiny And Normal Sylveons made that joke last night watching this film, great minds
Whea were the othah drugs goin'!? Betta not be down that road!
I LOVE his accent!
The sound of the loon used to creep me out apparently it's the wendigo
This is the best cut of the movie EVER.
Herman Munster for the win!
Judd’s rationale - Nobody will notice their cat has come back as an evil zombie. Cats are evil anyway 😄
why do I have a feeling that whole tragedy could have been avoided if they JUST BUILT A DAMN FENCE!!!!
That wouldn't help. The evil would still be there. Jud implies that when he mentions that the Creed house has "stayed empty for too long". No one wanted to live there.