Santa Fe Trail (1940) ERROL FLYNN

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  • Опубликовано: 27 авг 2024
  • Movie Class by PizzaFLIX: This was the 2nd movie in Oscar-winner Michael Curtiz's Western trilogy starring Errol Fynn, which also included DODGE CITY (1939) and VIRGINIA CITY (1940).
    Stars: Errol Flynn, Olivia de Havilland, Ronald Reagan, Raymond Massey
    Director: Michael Curtiz
    The story of Jeb Stuart, his romance with Kit Carson Holliday, friendship with George Custer, and his battles against abolitionist John Brown in the days leading to the outbreak of the American Civil War. The outstanding supporting cast includes Alan Hale Sr., William Lundigan, Van Heflin, and
    Guinn "Big Boy" Williams!

Комментарии • 339

  • @ritaturner368
    @ritaturner368 4 года назад +7

    Great movie. No sex, drugs and cursing. An excellent story, fantastic actors. Here we are in 2020 enjoying the work of acting legends many years after their passing. Thanks Pizzaflix.

    • @repent.sinner
      @repent.sinner Год назад

      You typed this in 2020 if it was before July 26 Olivia de Havilland was still alive, she lived to be 104

    • @porsche911sbs
      @porsche911sbs 11 дней назад

      @@repent.sinner Gene Reynolds, who plays Jason Brown in the movie, also died in 2020

  • @razorshark9320
    @razorshark9320 3 года назад +2

    I love this movie. I love the story, the characters, the fights, and ending.

  • @carlosrey6086
    @carlosrey6086 4 года назад +1

    I'm 62 & this movie never gets old.

  • @elchoya100
    @elchoya100 7 лет назад +63

    errol flynn was what great movies are all about.action and adventure and romance.along with tyrone power and alan ladd are my favorites.

    • @jamesromano2047
      @jamesromano2047 5 лет назад +1

      elchoya100 =

    • @frankcerbone6470
      @frankcerbone6470 5 лет назад +2

      Truly great movie, great battle scenes, the depth of the military forces engaging the combatants at Harper's ferry, the final gallows speech by john Brown. I remember his final speech to this day

    • @derekgreen1826
      @derekgreen1826 5 лет назад +1

      Captain hood Erroll flinn

    • @ourclassroom1570
      @ourclassroom1570 5 лет назад +1

      And don't forget my Clark Gable, Randolph Scott and ol' Gabby

    • @jimpetrella2660
      @jimpetrella2660 3 года назад

      @@jamesromano2047 hi

  • @pbrown6097
    @pbrown6097 6 лет назад +51

    Great movie, I have seen it several times in my 66 years, Errol Flynn and Ronald Reagan were both to me great actors.

    • @bonzodog6872
      @bonzodog6872 4 года назад +8

      Reagan did his best acting when he became President

    • @taoman85
      @taoman85 4 года назад +3

      Yeah he acted like a good president. I haven't seen this movie in a long time. The racial implications went unnoticed before. I'm only at the 1st meeting of John Brown. Not sure how I feel about it so far.

    • @garymckee8857
      @garymckee8857 4 года назад +3

      @@bonzodog6872 you are correct.

    • @justinchetham-strode5234
      @justinchetham-strode5234 3 года назад +1

      Neither of the pair was anything like a great actor on their best day, but Flynn was marginally better, and possessed a charm which Reagan had yet to develop. Having said that, I like the movie as much as I do most Errol Flynn flicks : nobody swashed a buckle like Errol Flynn !

    • @davidhampton2228
      @davidhampton2228 3 года назад

      @@bonzodog6872 Z 0

  • @yorkderek2484
    @yorkderek2484 5 лет назад +10

    Errol Flynn along with Ronald Coleman are my top two favorite actors of all time and I'm no where near that era.

  • @ritchiehowell8275
    @ritchiehowell8275 6 лет назад +14

    Forget the innacuracies just remember the gifted actors involved in this film. Warner Bros knew how to make em. Thanks for letting us enjoy again the magic of Errol Flynn and gang.

    • @billwilliamson9842
      @billwilliamson9842 5 лет назад +4

      john brown raped and killed women and kids, thats what they should talk about............................................

    • @josemontalvo5446
      @josemontalvo5446 5 лет назад

      @Marrowbones 9]

  • @ccbusa05
    @ccbusa05 5 лет назад +19

    Great movie! Hard to believe that Olivia de Havilland is still with us at 102 yrs. old!!

    • @stang4740
      @stang4740 5 лет назад +2

      One of the few remaining from the golden age of Hollywood with Kirk Douglas. God bless them !

    • @bonzodog6872
      @bonzodog6872 4 года назад

      @@eveyholmes I wouldn't fancy Kirk myself

    • @ericminch
      @ericminch 4 года назад

      How come this comment gets 16 upvotes and the identical comment above only gets 3?

    • @repent.sinner
      @repent.sinner Год назад

      Yeah she died July 26, 2020

  • @JSB1882
    @JSB1882 4 года назад +5

    Boy! This is the best copy I've seen in a long time of this movie! Thank you!

    • @cards0486
      @cards0486 4 года назад +1

      Dave La Violette
      Years ago I came upon this film on TV. It had been on for a good while. I’ve always wanted to see the complete film.
      I’m thrilled it’s on here. I love Olivia D. and Errol F. together.
      Eight films together, and their chemistry was obvious.
      Olivia said they had feeling for each other. But they never acted on them.
      He obviously wasn’t husband material, he wasn’t known for being faithful.
      Knowing him as well as she did I suppose she was just too smart to be ‘the other woman’.
      I think the ‘sexual tension’ was what made them look at each other like they did in scenes.
      Hot stuff!

  • @brettburke7707
    @brettburke7707 7 лет назад +24

    Great movie. Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland.

  • @heru-deshet359
    @heru-deshet359 4 года назад +4

    Amazing to see all these historical figures as one before the horrors of the Civil War. Very touching.

    • @cards0486
      @cards0486 4 года назад

      Heru- deshet
      So many officers in The War Between The States were classmates at West Point.
      During The War Union and Confederate officers that were friends would have meals together if they could.
      So sad to think they would go out the next day and lead groups of men to kill each other.

    • @heru-deshet359
      @heru-deshet359 4 года назад

      @@cards0486 Yes. Some were even goods friends before the war.

    • @porsche911sbs
      @porsche911sbs 11 дней назад

      It's quite inaccurate though. For example, JEB Stuart and George A. Custer are depicted as close friend in the film but in reality they never met.

  • @TIOMKIN1
    @TIOMKIN1 5 лет назад +21

    I saw this movie years ago and it still as good as when I saw it 50 years ago. It has a great Cast, Story. Director and a rough and tumble Music Score by the great Max Steiner. How you lose with a movie like this. Thanks for the upload. Out.

  • @BrendaNegri
    @BrendaNegri 5 лет назад +10

    Watch this film at least three times a year. Love it, the music, the people - sigh.....

  • @coilmanjoe
    @coilmanjoe 5 лет назад +6

    Raymond Massey was so good in this. What a public domain movie!

    • @inhibited44
      @inhibited44 5 лет назад

      He is convincing at playing a lunatic

    • @indy_go_blue6048
      @indy_go_blue6048 5 лет назад

      Ray is good (and extremely underrated) in just about every one of his roles. I especially enjoyed him as Citizen Shoblan (excuse the spelling) in "The Scarlet Pimpernel."

  • @davidcraig9779
    @davidcraig9779 5 лет назад +3

    Lee's speech after the fistfight was perfect. Easy to see why everyone loved him.

    • @davidcraig9779
      @davidcraig9779 5 лет назад +1

      @Leo Peridot Yes, I realize it's a movie and I did notice the glamorization of the South. Regardless, Lee was a great soldier and leader.

    • @davidcraig9779
      @davidcraig9779 5 лет назад +1

      @Leo Peridot I don't think he was in the picture, and I don't think they mentioned him. Sorry, I must have missed that part.

  • @garyhiggins8239
    @garyhiggins8239 6 лет назад +11

    Both great movies but my favourite is always The Dawn Patrol

  • @bradbilbo6696
    @bradbilbo6696 8 лет назад +42

    Great movie. Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland. I always had a crush on her after her role in Adventures of Robin Hood. Very very cute. Anyway everyone else thought so also so this is another movie that paired the two. Fantastic supporting cast and sets show their popularity at the time for this big budget film. 5 Stars...but I'm biased.

    • @AleadaA
      @AleadaA 5 лет назад +1

      I kinda had feeling for Errol Flynn while watching this, lucky girl with two hotties chasing her,. It is fun to see Ronald Reagan at this age, fascinating to know he became President. He was also a great actor.

    • @whatservicetojoin8593
      @whatservicetojoin8593 4 года назад +1

      @@AleadaA Dear John Brown & Tim McVeigh - we will always remember what u have done for us ! Even if the movies sometimes get things wrong ! We will always remember that u r heros for the people !

    • @jamesbetker6862
      @jamesbetker6862 4 года назад

      @@AleadaA When I lived in Chicago in early 80's, we heard that Reagan was going to visit Gordon Tech High School on North California Ave. The presidential helicopter landed on the Lane Tech football stadium. Then Reagan rode over to Gordon in the Presidential limo. The police would not allow people to go on California. So we went in the alley and found a house with a wide yard. You could see him when he got out of the limo.

  • @yomama8873
    @yomama8873 Год назад

    Thank you 🤩🤩🤩💖💖

  • @markhughes7927
    @markhughes7927 5 лет назад

    Five star movie: superb dialogue throughout. Takes you into the moment of history. Superb acting by ‘John Brown’ .

  • @bbobrm
    @bbobrm 5 лет назад +4

    Great cast and an excellent flick

  • @inhibited44
    @inhibited44 5 лет назад +3

    Van Heflin was such a versatile actor. I hated his guts in this role, yet I loved him in Shane.

    • @wallyplumstead614
      @wallyplumstead614 4 года назад

      Van Heflin's best part was in the 1954 "Civil War" movie THE RAID.

  • @abjr2010
    @abjr2010 5 лет назад +27

    Gentleman Jim, The Adventures of Robin Hood . Alan Hale

  • @hotvinder
    @hotvinder 5 лет назад +5

    A well crafted movie with thorough research on history, specially on John brown. Liked it.

  • @garyhiggins8239
    @garyhiggins8239 6 лет назад +20

    And don't forget the brilliance of Raymond Massey.

    • @dharmagraphics-architects7363
      @dharmagraphics-architects7363 5 лет назад +4

      It was great when he played Abraham Lincoln in Lincoln in Illinois.

    • @Songwriter376
      @Songwriter376 5 лет назад

      Those crazed eyes....those crazed eyes...

    • @inhibited44
      @inhibited44 4 года назад

      it was 1940 when they made the film. I suppose if Lee Van Cleef were an actor at the time, he could have made a fine John Brown with those beady eyes, looking so sinister. He started his career in 1952.

    • @inhibited44
      @inhibited44 4 года назад

      @faultroy That's true. every time Massey and Flynn are in a scene, Massey looks like an explosive ready to be ignited.

  • @dharmagraphics-architects7363
    @dharmagraphics-architects7363 5 лет назад +6

    This movie was made 7 years before I was born. I began to know Ronald Reagan's works while I was in Peoples Park in Berkeley Cal. where a hippy pushed flowers down the rifle barrel of one of his national guards. Later he would become President while I was in Washington DC. and Oliver North made his testimony in the Iran-Contra affair.

    • @dharmagraphics-architects7363
      @dharmagraphics-architects7363 5 лет назад +1

      @Marrowbones Are you kidding? the Pentagon wouldn't let a Hippie come within 3 blocks of the parking lot.

    • @dharmagraphics-architects7363
      @dharmagraphics-architects7363 5 лет назад +1

      @Marrowbones "Come on people smile on your brother, try to love one another right now" I was there also.

    • @dharmagraphics-architects7363
      @dharmagraphics-architects7363 5 лет назад

      ​@Marrowbones seriously! I think you're stuck in the past. It shouldn't phase us so much now in the present. What matters now ls whether we can hold our country together in the political divisiveness that we are facing right now.

    • @ericminch
      @ericminch 4 года назад

      Please @Dharma Graphics, a little pronoun discipline. When you say "he would become President", are you referring to the hippy pushing flowers, or to one of the national guards?

  • @brendano5440
    @brendano5440 2 года назад +1

    This was an excellent movie.

    • @PizzaFLIX
      @PizzaFLIX  2 года назад

      Thanks for watching PizzaFLIX. May the Sauce be with you. 🍕🍕🍕

  • @johnrettig1880
    @johnrettig1880 4 года назад +4

    If my memory is right .
    The follow up to this movie is
    " They Died With Their Boots On "
    To were Errol Flynn takes the part of George Armstrong Custer
    From his roll in the Civil War and goes from Captain to General
    and from there goes to the Dakota territory .

  • @carlreed6186
    @carlreed6186 8 лет назад +16

    Errol Flynn and Douglas Fairbanks Jr. where my favorite action film stars when I was a kid. Ronald Reagan was a little to Beaver Clever like for my taste.

    • @carlpen850
      @carlpen850 5 лет назад +3

      Well in "Bedtime For Bonzo" at the height of Reagan's acting career he was almost as good an actor as a chimpanzee... well actually Reagan was at the height of his acting career when he pretended he was president

    • @pharmacistmichael7820
      @pharmacistmichael7820 5 лет назад +1

      Too Beaver>>>= no waty R R is pure Eddie

    • @ohwhatelse
      @ohwhatelse 5 лет назад +1

      Carl Pen ...Reagan did many great things as president which made HIM a great president! You want me to count the ways? Getting them to tear down the Berlin Wall was just one small part of it. You must have been listening to & watching fake news back then, as well. If you expanded yr horizons you would find much greater things in life than FAKE NEWS!

    • @gypsylily2949
      @gypsylily2949 4 года назад

      @@carlpen850 Why you try to pretend to be respectful?

    • @gypsylily2949
      @gypsylily2949 4 года назад

      @@ohwhatelse Haters gonna hate.

  • @michelloranger2590
    @michelloranger2590 5 лет назад +3

    Good movie. Thanks for posting it.

  • @saulrequesens8116
    @saulrequesens8116 4 года назад

    One Hell Of A Movie. Thank you very much!!!!

  • @b4bluey
    @b4bluey 5 лет назад +3

    Very Enjoyable Movie !! >> Thank You !!

  • @sundancekick9359
    @sundancekick9359 4 года назад

    My favorite movie and also Oliver is still alive. Long live love for her.

  • @garyhiggins8239
    @garyhiggins8239 6 лет назад +14

    As history it's garbage , as a movie it ranks amongst the best. What else can you expect from Errol Flynn?

    • @ernesthendrickson7379
      @ernesthendrickson7379 5 лет назад +5

      Flynn was simply great. He’s missed even now and remembered, even now.
      His movies guarantee his fame forever. He was a great man and actor. He’s forever missed and loved!!

    • @carlpen850
      @carlpen850 5 лет назад +2

      @@ernesthendrickson7379... any guy who fucked as many young woman and did as much cocaine as Errol and still managed to stay out of jail is certainly great

    • @cookinandall6884
      @cookinandall6884 5 лет назад

      @@carlpen850 true

    • @inhibited44
      @inhibited44 5 лет назад

      @@carlpen850 - His lawyer must be great

  • @commentwhendrunk
    @commentwhendrunk 5 лет назад +2

    Will watch again when not high,just passing through.

  • @gregstewart6429
    @gregstewart6429 3 года назад

    Thanks for uploading 👍👍👍👍👍. Great movie 😀😀

  • @mattmcguire1577
    @mattmcguire1577 5 лет назад +4

    Films about an historical event often tell you more about the people who made it, than the people it is about.
    Although almost always inaccurate they do give us a starting point for wandering through the internet.
    I knew nothing of John Brown before watching, now I have name and some events to guide me.

  • @cookinandall6884
    @cookinandall6884 5 лет назад +5

    Honestly better than infinity war and endgame and I'm 13

  • @stevefarrell9609
    @stevefarrell9609 4 года назад +5

    In Glorious WobbleVison.

  • @nickdonvito4591
    @nickdonvito4591 6 лет назад +2

    Great Movie, thank you. Nick.

  • @danmiller3021
    @danmiller3021 5 лет назад +19

    amazingly Harper's Ferry terrain looks oddly similar to Southern California.

    • @mountainmanws
      @mountainmanws 5 лет назад

      I've been to Harper's Ferry a few times. No hills, no rivers, no trees. Thanks for writing your observation.

    • @pauinuhan8843
      @pauinuhan8843 5 лет назад

      Dan Miller o.

  • @debbiemaligalig3176
    @debbiemaligalig3176 5 лет назад +13

    It was Errol Flynn and Ronald Reagan (when very young. Quite A few others. Olivia de Havillind) over 100 years old.

    • @AleadaA
      @AleadaA 5 лет назад +1

      In 2020 the movie is 80 years old, in itself it is a bit of history!

  • @marookhmirza4784
    @marookhmirza4784 3 года назад

    Great film

  • @jimmybritt9537
    @jimmybritt9537 5 лет назад +3

    Worth seeing , thank's 👍😉🇺🇸

  • @royrayburn1503
    @royrayburn1503 4 года назад +3

    Raymond Massey was great as John. Brown!

    • @inhibited44
      @inhibited44 4 года назад

      I like how he had the ability to get his eyes nearly popping out of his head when talking to his Lord.

    • @jontamblyn5388
      @jontamblyn5388 3 года назад

      Great Canadian actor from a very well-known famous family.

  • @robertboyle2573
    @robertboyle2573 2 года назад

    I swear Errol punches Van Heflin for real.

  • @michaelhalbert9264
    @michaelhalbert9264 5 лет назад +3

    One of my all-time favorite flix, thank you.

  • @cpvn889
    @cpvn889 3 года назад

    Nice movie with good story line ... Ronald Regan was good.

  • @relir6030
    @relir6030 3 года назад

    Great movie. It shows the spirit of the cavalry then. Nam, Air Cavalry.

  • @uweloewel3110
    @uweloewel3110 5 лет назад +2

    clearly a really good film

  • @marymcnultybiros9659
    @marymcnultybiros9659 4 года назад

    2/agosto/2020.. fin de semana de toque de queda completo..tremenda pelicula, tremendos actores..

  • @davidcattell7631
    @davidcattell7631 4 года назад +1

    Excellent movie there are other movies like them / thay died with the boots on/ the adventures Robin hood /the charge of the light

  • @D45VR
    @D45VR 5 лет назад +5

    Reagan as Custer... Errol Flynn played Custer too

  • @californiadreamin8423
    @californiadreamin8423 5 лет назад +6

    Really enjoyed this film. A little uncomfortable because of the date 1940, a reminded of the real world. Incredibly Olivia de Havilland is still alive and deservedly so.

  • @icarusairways6139
    @icarusairways6139 5 лет назад +1

    You've got to love the musical score.

    • @ericminch
      @ericminch 4 года назад

      And because you said it twice it must be true.

  • @Baskerville22
    @Baskerville22 3 года назад

    Errol Flynn, Olivia De Havilland and Alan Hale were all together in The Adventures of Robin Hood.
    George Custer wasn't at West Point in 1854. He entered West Point in 1857 and graduated, last in his class, in 1861.
    J.E.B. Stuart was in the class of 1854, as was William Pender, and Robert E. Lee was at West Point in 1854, as Superintendent.

  • @danmaodi3940
    @danmaodi3940 5 лет назад +2

    John Brown, is a hero actually. As a Vancouverite, I was kindof suprised to know, that Errol Flyn died in Vancouver...

    • @inhibited44
      @inhibited44 4 года назад

      If John Brown was a hero, then is it ok to attack police? Brown had a price on his head from the Federal government, he was ahead of his time, but his methods were violent and he was ruthless.

  • @robertmulherine8195
    @robertmulherine8195 4 года назад

    Thank you for this upload. I have just subscribed. 👍

  • @francinebarr1204
    @francinebarr1204 5 лет назад +1

    Excellent 🌼

  • @FrankCarroll_Nevada
    @FrankCarroll_Nevada 6 лет назад +5

    J.E.B. Stewart was the only member of the class of 1854 for West Point, others were of several other graduating classes.

    • @ohwhatelse
      @ohwhatelse 5 лет назад +2

      Frank Carroll... Lol. I'm not enough history buff to know any of that. The John Brown role in history is auire complex though... killing innocent ppl in the name of God & freedom doesn't make it right. so I, for 1, don't call him a hero. Though he may have helped to free some slaves the innocents that he killed cancels out most of that. I wasn't there in that era, but the history in MY history books didn't seem to make complete sense...... ea. to their own opinions.

    • @porsche911sbs
      @porsche911sbs 11 дней назад

      @@ohwhatelse He wasn't the greatest strategist, but John Brown saw slavery as the great evil that it was. He did the only thing he knew to do to stop it, and gave his life for a righteous cause.

  • @gilbertcollazo7646
    @gilbertcollazo7646 5 лет назад +1

    Santa Fe Trail was one of the good movie or great movie that Ronald Reagan acted and became one of our leader of this country USA.

  • @inhibited44
    @inhibited44 5 лет назад +1

    Like how Errol Flynn never gets hurt in a film. Even if he is attacking a machine gun nest in the film about the norwegians. Teflon Flynn

  • @airdrop1670
    @airdrop1670 5 лет назад +5

    It's amazing all the guns in this movie that aren't period lol .

    • @inhibited44
      @inhibited44 5 лет назад

      I would never notice something like that. If true, that's a good point.

  • @gotrox1
    @gotrox1 5 лет назад +7

    Strange how the Union wanted to abolish that horrible act of slavery yet trampled on the Native Americans for their land. Could it be that they saw that the slave states were prospering more than the free states? The Western territories became States and the Indian became a despot with no home. A different kind of slavery exists today. Corporate companies drive prices up, fix and freeze wages causing Americans to work longer and harder; with temp services offering no health benefits. Car prices soar while there is a glut of cars that didn't sell but they won't bring the price down. Grocery prices climb when gas prices climb but when gas prices come down, groceries remain high. I've seen it over and over.

    • @indy_go_blue6048
      @indy_go_blue6048 4 года назад

      @Roger Baker I'm so glad I went to school before the Reds took over the education system and blamed the "banksters" for everything from the heartbreak of psoriasis to the worst breath of the morning. Baa-aa-aah.

    • @scotttheroux1538
      @scotttheroux1538 Год назад

      You can thank the dumbass Democrat for the BULLSHIT they have put on us

    • @porsche911sbs
      @porsche911sbs 11 дней назад

      The South was not so prosperous in the 19th century. Most Southerners were very poor.

  • @lindabrown7374
    @lindabrown7374 8 лет назад +25

    Historically inaccurate. I love it anyway. Love anything with Errol Flynn. Named one of my cats after him.

    • @beverlymcgrath7459
      @beverlymcgrath7459 5 лет назад

      Every era has its fanatics, terrorists, and just downright nuts people. J.E.B Stewart would get a name for himself also.

    • @inhibited44
      @inhibited44 5 лет назад

      I hope you got your cat neutered with a name like that.

    • @billwieworka7250
      @billwieworka7250 4 года назад +1

      This is definitely historically inaccurate
      For instance JEB Stuart was USMA class of 54 but I believe Armstrong Custer was class of 61. So it is extremely unlikely they knew each other. The history is a bit revisionist also. Portraying Jefferson Davis and the "southern cause" for instance very sympathetically ! I will also point to the portrayal of slavery and slaves in a way for lack of a better phrase is paternalistic. All this through a modern lens is quite damning! Nevertheless the film has some content that is Meaningful today. Its depiction of the military as as non-political should be commended. As well as it being a warning of what political divisions can do to a nation!

    • @vidimur1977
      @vidimur1977 4 года назад

      @@billwieworka7250 Only the inclusion of Custer in this history chapter and some characters y situations are fictitious. The rest is historically accurate.

  • @AleadaA
    @AleadaA 5 лет назад +4

    John Brown saved many slave's lives as he ran the underground railroad and he brought a light on the problem of slavery and helped Lincoln and the Republican Northern States get involved in the Civil War. Because of this he was a hero! Christianity and many other ideas on that day were very harsh as was child rearing and child labor laws. These were much more violent times in World History, we cannot go back and place our current values on these people, Society evolves and it is best to understand - look at history though the lens of the people who lived it.

    • @AleadaA
      @AleadaA 5 лет назад +2

      This movie is Democrat revisionist propaganda; Ronald Reagan was a Democrat at the time till he matured and came to his senses
      . The south would have never given up their Plantation Slaves especially because of Northern sentiment. If they would have considered freeing their slaves they would have not fought such a long and bloody battle. John Brown freed 2,500 slave though his underground railroad. He was considered a hero until politics changed the story.
      `

    • @inhibited44
      @inhibited44 4 года назад +1

      John brown murdered quite a few people who stood in the way or got in the way of his mission to free slaves. In contrast, Martin Luther King tried to improve the lives of blacks in this country, yet now that he is long gone, BLM has replaced him. Like Brown, BLM protests typically deteriorate into violence.

    • @USNWaveRet
      @USNWaveRet 2 года назад

      @@AleadaA And what you are not taught, many of those plantations were owned by Democrats in the North (i.e. NYC). Slavery was abolished in 1827 in New Amsterdam (NYC) however, you could still own slaves. You just could not bring them into the city. Slaves were sold on ships in the harbor. Havemann's Sugar, which became Dominos Sugar, owned a plantation on the islands and had slaves working the sugar cane fields. He was from NYC. One guy, name escapes me, owned three plantations in SC... he was a NYC Businessman. History gets distorted.... read up on Seneca Village, a town that once was in what is now Central Park...

  • @dindinprivate3477
    @dindinprivate3477 4 года назад +1

    John Brown was a hero and the cause of abolitionism was noble. This film has it 180 degrees wrong.

    • @ericminch
      @ericminch 4 года назад

      And what you say must be true because you said it twice.

    • @dindinprivate3477
      @dindinprivate3477 4 года назад

      @@ericminch Ha Ha - actually YT posted it FOUR times LOL. Then they wouldn't let me delete the superfluous copies.

  • @elsymatthew4653
    @elsymatthew4653 5 лет назад +2

    "As once You sent the rains to save Elijah, so, now You have delivered into my hands the precious means of continuing thy holy work. The Lord, our God is a great God! And mighty ... and terrible, who regardeth no persons nor taketh rewards. The Lord is a Man of War! Thy right hand shall become glorious through power. Thy right hand oh God, shall dash in pieces the enemy. "

  • @edevine2599
    @edevine2599 5 лет назад +3

    Did anyone else watch this because they liked John brown, because I did and boy am I disappointed

    • @edevine2599
      @edevine2599 5 лет назад

      @faultroy I'm disappointed because I know he wasn't the way they portray him. I mean he wasn't perfect, but he wasn't that bad

    • @inhibited44
      @inhibited44 4 года назад

      @Marrowbones Brown was financed by wealthy Bostonians. There is a plaque somewhere in Boston that mentions John Brown.

  • @kevindoran9271
    @kevindoran9271 8 лет назад +24

    Most of Flynn's films were historically inaccurate. But they were great entertainment. So who cares? Love Errol. And I enjoyed Ronald Reagan too. (notice I spelled his name right) Hollywood always takes artistic license. Get over it and get a life.

    • @walkerlyons3148
      @walkerlyons3148 5 лет назад +1

      love Movies With Good Ol Errol

    • @LordZontar
      @LordZontar 5 лет назад +1

      @Marrowbones "The usual pressure in Hollywood, even in the old days, was toward the Left. In "Gone with the Wind," for example, the words of the book were changed from "States Rights, States Rights," to "And we'll keep out slaves!" when the war broke out."
      Hate to have to burst your little Confederate-apologist balloon, but "We'll keep our slaves" is EXACTLY what the seceding states said to the world.
      One example, this passage from the Mississippi Declaration of Causes:
      "Our position is thoroughly identified with the institution of slavery-- the greatest material interest of the world. Its labor supplies the product which constitutes by far the largest and most important portions of commerce of the earth. These products are peculiar to the climate verging on the tropical regions, and by an imperious law of nature, none but the black race can bear exposure to the tropical sun. These products have become necessities of the world, and a blow at slavery is a blow at commerce and civilization. That blow has been long aimed at the institution, and was at the point of reaching its consummation. There was no choice left us but submission to the mandates of abolition, or a dissolution of the Union, whose principles had been subverted to work out our ruin."
      www.battlefields.org/learn/primary-sources/declaration-causes-seceding-states#Mississippi
      Georgia and Texas were particularly adamant in defending the principle of white supremacy in their declarations, and Alexander Stephens, Vice-President of the CSA, spelled that principle out in his infamous Cornerstone Speech of March 1861.
      So yes, "State Rights" amounted exactly to "We'll keep our slaves" as far as the seceding states were concerned.

    • @liecrusher3506
      @liecrusher3506 5 лет назад

      OH yeah?
      His depiction of Robin Hood, was dead on!

  • @locarnese5598
    @locarnese5598 5 лет назад +1

    Whoa. Just. Whoa.

  • @123kkambiz
    @123kkambiz 5 лет назад +2

    Ronald Reagan also is here

  • @carlpen850
    @carlpen850 5 лет назад +1

    He's a good man, a cruel killer, but a good man

  • @roydean1137
    @roydean1137 5 лет назад +6

    What I found interesting is that Jefferson Davis was the Secretary of War before the Civil War.

    • @indy_go_blue6048
      @indy_go_blue6048 5 лет назад +1

      And a pretty good one as well.

    • @jondeare
      @jondeare 4 года назад +2

      Damn Confederates.

    • @ukrainiansniper5916
      @ukrainiansniper5916 4 года назад +1

      And the Army officer saying "thus perish all enemies of the Union" was Robert E. Lee.

  • @Tralala691
    @Tralala691 5 лет назад +5

    Awesome American movie!! Hollyweird and it’s commies could never make such a fine upstanding movie today.
    Surprised the snoflakes haven’t had this taken off RUclips.

    • @jimjoslyn7222
      @jimjoslyn7222 5 лет назад +4

      Ur right brother onward through the fog good bless America u have too stand for something

    • @patrickhenigin4805
      @patrickhenigin4805 2 года назад

      Well the movie involves quite a bit of fantasy. Today there would be a cry for more historical accuracy. One thing the movie does is to make people want to take a look at what happened, when, and where. There are few actors who living or dead who could fill the boots of Raymond Massey or Errol Flynn.

  • @ToniHunterOne
    @ToniHunterOne 5 лет назад

    44:30 Then actor, Gene Reynolds is the only player of this entire cast that is still alive as of this date, August 13, 2019. My theory for his longevity is that he left acting altogether in 1967. Gene began Producing in 1967, that same year. However, Gene had already begun his directing career in 1957 and continued to do so un 1999.
    Congratulations Mr. Reynolds!

    • @ToniHunterOne
      @ToniHunterOne 5 лет назад +2

      @@siegfriedsassoon5071 Thanks for catching that! I don't know how I missed it. She's a grand old dame of 102!

  • @patriciaa.hunter8337
    @patriciaa.hunter8337 Год назад

    Iloveerrolo

  • @donmarshall4888
    @donmarshall4888 5 лет назад +3

    One thing that always tickled me was having Errol Flynn as J E B Stuart. I DO appreciate they did not try to give him a southern drawl. Would have ruined a creative movie.

    • @davidjohnson4343
      @davidjohnson4343 5 лет назад

      @Marrowbones Even if I hadn't seen "Died with their boots on", the flamboyant Flynn seems much better suited to play Custer.

  • @annajames229
    @annajames229 3 года назад

    John Brown (May 9, 1800 - December 2, 1859) was an American abolitionist. Brown, who said that speeches, sermons, and petitions were accomplishing nothing, that "moral suasion is hopeless",[1] saw violence as unfortunately necessary if slavery in the United States were to be eliminated. An intensely religious man who at one point studied for the ministry, and who effortlessly quoted the Bible from memory in his speeches (see John Brown's last speech), Brown felt that this was the work God called him to do. He said repeatedly, after he was arrested, that he was following the Golden Rule

  • @jeffolsen4983
    @jeffolsen4983 5 лет назад +1

    What a conundrum.

  • @jamesbetker6862
    @jamesbetker6862 4 года назад

    Did you see Ronald Reagan as George Armstrong Custer in the beginning?

  • @dolphinsc1
    @dolphinsc1 8 лет назад +2

    This is a great movie with a fascinating story. I wonder if it's based on an actual event.
    I would say for the times it happened for sure somewhere in the west.

    • @eddiemurphy5781
      @eddiemurphy5781 5 лет назад +4

      dolphinsc1 John Brown was a murderer of Women and Children. He also let blacks get killed.he did nothing for the Slaves.read your American history. But a Great Movie.

  • @ronsena7383
    @ronsena7383 5 лет назад +3

    OK. for one they never made it to Santa Fe.

  • @heru-deshet359
    @heru-deshet359 4 года назад +1

    God bless John Brown.

  • @realitymatters8720
    @realitymatters8720 5 лет назад +1

    Finally a movie where Erolly flynn is as much of an a-hole as he was in real life.
    Nice movie, and very educational as to the perseptions in the US at the time of filming.

  • @danielamorelli6968
    @danielamorelli6968 Год назад

    Capolavoro

  • @edevine2599
    @edevine2599 5 лет назад +1

    As crazy as it may sound I want a movie like this where John brown is a hero instead of a murderus lunitic

  • @eddiefisher1300
    @eddiefisher1300 5 лет назад +1

    long live! John! brown!

  • @johnnowakowski4062
    @johnnowakowski4062 7 лет назад +9

    "George Custer", I'm sure our Native American brothers watching this loved hearing that name being called out. Great movie, but American history was rather 2-dimensional back then and I don't necessarily blame them, we all learn over time...

    • @eddiemurphy5781
      @eddiemurphy5781 5 лет назад +2

      John Nowakowski Custer was a murdering Glory hunter who led his Men to Certain Death. Should be written out of American History Books.👿

    • @siseley1
      @siseley1 5 лет назад +6

      @@eddiemurphy5781 NO !! Write history over, and you WILL repeat it's mistakes !!

    • @williamallencrowder361
      @williamallencrowder361 3 года назад

      @@eddiemurphy5781 You are beyond wrong. Custer had the right idea, as did Andrew Jackson

  • @johnbrownlee7623
    @johnbrownlee7623 5 лет назад

    Amen........................

  • @terrygabrich4806
    @terrygabrich4806 5 лет назад +1

    One big mistake in this movie. The Civil War was not about slavery. In fact less then 1% of the southern whites owned any slaves. We forget that the very first slave state was Massachusetts, and that only one Confederate officer owned any slaves and that was Nathan Bedford Forrest. Consider the union officers that owned slaves such as Grant, Sheridan, Humboldt, Sherman, Thomas and many more. Roscrans and Sickle are about the only two union officers that didn't own any slaves. The slave owners were either Jews or blacks, and In fact, the very first slave owner in America was black, and the very first slaves were white. Many of the southerners in the western part of Virginia, in Tennessee, and Kentucky refused to fight for the Confederacy because they felt that blacks slaves were treated better than white slaves were, and they were.

  • @remmymafia3889
    @remmymafia3889 4 года назад

    Van Heflin!

  • @carlosrodriguez6717
    @carlosrodriguez6717 7 лет назад +2

    EROLL FLYNN PLAYED CUSTER

    • @eddiemurphy5781
      @eddiemurphy5781 5 лет назад +3

      Carlos Rodriguez great movie Carlos. But Custer was a glory hunter z he got all his men Slaughtered but for one.he should be written out of the History book.nothing short of A Murderer.

  • @adriangarcia543
    @adriangarcia543 4 года назад

    Make me wonder how many died from cannon shot?

  • @simpli7206
    @simpli7206 3 года назад +1

    Happy Birthday Ronald Reagan!

  • @thomasgronek6469
    @thomasgronek6469 5 лет назад +1

    What did I miss? It looks as though John Brown is doing the right thing. At the film's beginning, J. Brown was and 'anti-slaver', then the script changed.

    • @gearshaw2058
      @gearshaw2058 5 лет назад

      lf you compare john brown to today his morals were right but used terrorism to bring about political change.

    • @whatservicetojoin8593
      @whatservicetojoin8593 4 года назад

      @@gearshaw2058 Timothy McVeigh is a modern equivalent of John Brown ! ( Tim destroyed an ATF base to resist gun confiscation ! )

  • @davidhulkower7779
    @davidhulkower7779 2 года назад

    was the marines not cavalry that took brown

  • @adriangarcia543
    @adriangarcia543 4 года назад

    Where film the battle?

  • @amigosmineiros8626
    @amigosmineiros8626 4 года назад

    Filme muito bom pena que não foi traduzido para o português

  • @dd1530
    @dd1530 3 года назад

    Please add English or German subtitles!

  • @ricke276
    @ricke276 5 лет назад

    In this day and age, John Brown would have been excused and released after a couple of years because he had a bad childhood!

    • @AleadaA
      @AleadaA 5 лет назад +2

      John Brown saved many slave's lives as he ran the underground railroad and he brought a light on the problem of slavery and helped Lincoln and the Republican Northern States get involved in the Civil War. Because of this he was a hero! Christianity and many other ideas on that day were very harsh as was child rearing and child labor laws. These were much more violent times in World History, we cannot go back and place our current values on these people, Society evolves and it is best to understand - look at history though the lens of the people who lived it.