"what's in the box?" is such a classic line. i saw this in the theater, sitting in the front row b/c it was so packed. When Sloth guy breathed, my friend jumped out of the chair and ended up on the floor going "OMG, OMG".
This script went around Hollywood for years because no one wanted to make it into a film. It was known as “the head in the box” script. Saw this opening night at the Mann Chinese Theater on Hollywood Blvd, 500+ people, had to stand in the back the whole movie. No one left. I’ve heard other people mention seeing this in theaters and half the crowd walking out.
Interesting note: Morgan Freeman & Brad Pitt didn't know the Sloth victim was a real actor under prosthetics, they thought it was a dummy. So when the victim coughs, that's actual terror on Freeman & Pitt's faces.
According to Fincher, the guy was a very skinny actor, and when he met with Fincher to appear in the film, Fincher joked that maybe he could lose some more weight when it was time to film. The guy thought he was serious, and actually lost even more weight for the role.
When the film was released, the studio went to tremendous lengths to keep secret that Kevin Spacey was playing the killer, to the point of one commercial including the scene where he calls the detectives, with another actor's voice dubbed in. He'd just started becoming recognized as a talent to keep an eye on after The Usual Suspects, though of course, these days seeing him in this role hits hard for a quite different reason.
Even though this film is highly impossible, I give the writer and diector a lot of leeway with it because Seven serves as a great and creative allegory for the 7 cardinal sins and how they can manifest themselves in modern days. It's also a great conversation starter or a way to open people up to self-examination. All humans are sinners, and our sins fall into categories. I doubt that more than a handful of people have ALL 7 sins, and I doubt that more than a handful possess ONLY 1 sin. When I use a term sinless, what I mean is that no 1 sin shows itself in an obvious and detrimental way, but ALL people show sin at some time or another or have sinful thoughts. My sins are wrath, sloth, and greed. Fortunately, there are laws and social consequences that keep my anger and negativity in check at least in speech and action, but my thoughts... holy crap I'm an angry woman.
This movie upset me! 😡That ending. And the killer basically wins in the end and David has to go to prison for doing something anyone in his shoes would have done
Morgan's character has *seven* days until his retirement and he and his partner are investigating *seven* deaths which link to seven deadly sins. I love how they incorporate the movie's title to three different scenarios in this film.
I just recently watched the Clint Eastwood film Mystic River (which he directed, not starred in) and I HIGHLY recommend it. Sean Penn, Kevin Bacon, and Tim Robbins give incredible performances!
One of my favorite parts of this movie is the fact that it was John Doe taking pictures of Mills in the hallway after they found sloth. Mills got very angry at him and that's when he knew he could use him as wrath.
And why he intruded into Mill's apartment and killed his wife. He was goading people into who he wanted to represent "Wrath". And he found that in Mills.
Man I was hurt when it was revealed his wife was a victim, especially her being decapitated. And you saw the flash of her face before Mills shot him 😪. Gwyneth Paltrow was a new face then. Seven will never get old, one of the best suspense thrillers of all time, still holds up after all these yrs. Cant believe this was 26 yrs ago, I was 19 yrs old. Love the conversation as always 👍🏽🔥🔥🔥🔥
My older sister took me to see this for my 16th birthday and it was so frickin good . during the sloth scene when he springs up' my sister got scared and chucked half of her popcorn over the people sitting behind us,& to make it worse I was also frightend and let out a loud Fart 🤣
Watch that scene again and you can clearly see the Sloth actor's real arm next to his body, giving him three arms. It's something that can not be unseen.
@@largonius yep, me either. I just find that seeing "GREED" in blood on the floor and immediately getting "seven deadly sins" from that a bit suspicious 🧐
He's also in the Steven Segal movie "On Deadly Ground" with a then Billy Bob Thornton before he lost all the weight. Played a great side villain in that movie.
Brad Pitt’s characters arm being in a sling and injured wasn’t part of the original script. During the scene where Pitt is chasing Spacey through the streets, Brad Pitt accidentally slipped and put his arm through the windshield of a car, severely injuring himself. From that point on, he had to wear a cast and sling, so they wrote it into the script that his arm was hurt.
The scenes before Mills fell off the fire escape but after Pitt injured himself, he wears his watch over his cuff to help cover the cast under his sleeve.
@@YoungYahtz94 In Beverly Hills Cop, Paul Reiser's character Jeffrey is in the locker room where Inspector Todd is chewing Axel's ass out for taking the impounded cigarette truck. When inspector Todd tells Jeffrey to butt out, Jeffrey says, _"This is not my locker."_ A great line!
Very interesting discussion on gluttony. In the olden days, the idea of gluttony and overindulging in food would often mean that others would have to go without, which is why it's a sin. All the sins are perversions of love: gluttony, lust and greed coming from excessive love; sloth is the absence of love; and wrath (revenge), envy and pride result in the love of seeing harm done to other people.
After the masked teen-slasher killers were overused thoughout the 80s, in the 90s psychological crime thrillers were the thing. The Silence of the Lambs & Se7ven became the classics but there are some more really good ones out there, in addition to some okay ones and some not so good. I always liked CopyCat starring Sigourney Weaver. Saw it as a double feature with 12 Monkeys, it was the last time we were at a drive-in.
I remember seeing both of those in the theatre as well. You’re so right. The days of the supernatural killer or ghost killers was over and it was all about psycho serial killers. To add, Judd Nelson in Relentless was also one of them. Then the women had their day, with SWF and the follow ups to those. I think I saw every one of them. Lol!
Legends of the Fall is awesome! It appears at first glance to be just a chick film but it is so much more. Has war, bootlegging, fights, bears & cowboy stuff to name a few. Meet Joe Black is really good as well. True Romance is another great film/cast with Pitt
Check out Lucky Number Slevin, if you haven't seen it. A really good, underrated movie. I'm surprised people haven't been reacting to it. (Note: Not a typo; it's Lucky Number SLEVIN, with an L)
Guessing the ending is not such a bad thing. It means the movie makers are telling a good story. I'm glad you guys loved this movie. Your reactions were great!
That film was so disturbing that I told myself I'd never watch it again, but I just made an exception for your reaction to it. I think the most amazing thing about it is that throughout the whole film you never even see a murder until the end, and the climactic ending revolves around nothing more than a cardboard box that you never even see into. It's what is left to your imagination throughout the film that makes it so disturbing. In my humble opinion.
You are exactly right. I’ve heard people say this is a gory movie. It isn’t. Not an ounce of gore is shown. It’s talked about. It’s shown in photos. But we never see any. It’s all in the imagination, which makes it much more terrifying.
Hey guys , i just wanted let you know something very important. Kevin Spacey wasn't at the top of his carrier when that movie came up. He was not really known. Also Usual Suspects came up after Se7en. Kevin Spacey got his role in Usual Suspects because of the success of Se7en. Finally it is those 2 movies that made Kevin Spacey in top pay actor in Hollywood. Im 47 years old today, and i would like to say Bravo to both of you, cause when i saw the movie in theater i really really forgot about his wife and couldn't predict the twist. To this day Se7en is still the movie that stroke me for his final twist. I was shocked for days. Something you 2 didn't talk about or perhaps didn't realize is that the bad guy WON at the end... Everything happened as he planned it.
“You’re only alive because I didn’t kill you. I spared you. Remember that detective, every time you look in the mirror at that face of yours, for the rest of your life.....or should I say, for the rest of what life I’ve allowed you to have” -John Doe; knowing David Mills was about to shoot an unarmed suspect in police custody, handcuffed on his knees.
A Low Down Dirty Shame, The Players Club, All About The Benjamins, Blue Streak, Best Man, Best Man Holiday, Think Like A Man 1&2, Just Wright, Money Talks, Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins, Barbershop trilogies, A Thin Line Between Love & Hate, School Dance, Freedom Writers, Blade, Roll bounce, Lottery Ticket, Waist Deep, Django, B.A.P’s, You Got Served, Save the Last Dance, What’s love Got to do With It. All the fast and furious, Hansel & Gretal(2013), Undercover Brother, Get Rich or Die Tryin,
@@Alissandre_Iskander Ik they just posted blade and money talks so I always update it when they post the video. I also posted this list on the blade video but took it out bc they posted it.
I LOVE THIS MOVIE SOOO MUCH 😭 Fincher created my dream Gotham world coz it’s so fucked up and Matt Reeves’ “The Batman” has taken huge inspiration from this movie and others like this and I’m so excited to see The Riddler be like John Doe in this movie … beyond excited ! And awesome job piecing it all together guys
Here is a piece of trivia. Brad Pitt wore a cast half of the movie, because during the chase scene he actually tore a tendon and fractured his arm in real life.
I recently found your channel qnd love the reactions, truly. But you need to remember that when watching older films/clasics in their own right, a lot of the tropes, trends and usual predictions started with them; those were the first to use those twists and turns that help you NOW guess them as what you could expect
I taught at a college where a fellow teacher - a minister - would use this film to talk about ethics and the seven deadly sins. Still wonder if I should have sat in on a class.
Lengthy read but fascinating analysis of the film's themes: Apathy is the biggest theme of the film. Many discussions within the film allude to it. Aside from the obvious apathy speech Somerset (Morgan Freeman) gives to Mills (Brad Pitt) in the bar, but also when Somerset explains how the first thing women are taught in rape prevention class is to not yell "help" because no one responds to "help" but instead to yell "fire" (as Somerset put it "in a big city, minding your own business is a science"). People in big cities are apathetic to any one stranger's individual suffering but a fire can spread to multiple buildings which affects everyone, which is why people respond to "fire". Throughout the film, Somerset repeatedly mentions how much he hates the city. All his years on the force has caused him to be cynical, jaded and apathetic. Particular example: all the noise, police sirens, screaming and crime that he hears outside his apartment window keeps him up at night which is why he uses a metronome, to drown out the noise. He has become apathetic to the crime going on just outside his place-- the metronome is symbolism for Somerset's apathy. Also, note, right after Mills denounces Somerset's apathy speech in the bar ("I don't think you're quitting because you believe in the things you say, I think you want to believe them because you're quitting"), Somerset goes home that night and destroys the metronome. Mills's words really affected him causing Somerset to care at least a little bit again, which is why he destroyed the metronome (i.e. his apathy). And John Doe's words during the car ride "Only in a world this shitty can we say these were innocent people. We see a deadly sin on every street corner and we tolerate it. We tolerate morning, noon and night." APATHY. Also, many characters, even minor ones, are super judgmental and have little sympathy for people's suffering. Like when the SWAT team raids the apartment of the mummified sloth victim tied to the bed, the lead SWAT cop (played by Bob from "Office Space") says to him "you got what you deserved"-- but then when he's alive and taken to the hospital, the doctor says "he's experienced about as much pain and suffering as anyone I've encountered... and he still has Hell to look forward to." To me, it was always such a bizarre thing for a doctor to say given their Hippocratic oath and their duty to care but ya know... APATHY. THE LAWYERS: The lawyer that's punished for greed, as John Doe put it "this is a man who dedicated his life to making money by lying with every breath he could muster to keeping murderers and rapists off the streets." That lawyer didn't care about justice or morality. Also, John Doe's lawyer has virtually no emotion while he's blackmailing the cops with John Doe's plea bargain. Either they agree and John Doe pleads guilty or if they don't agree, John Doe will plead insanity. The lawyer says "with the extreme nature of these crimes, I could easily get him off with such a plea." The lawyer seems quite apathetic to justice and the victims of the case while he, as Mills puts it, sits there in his $3000 suit (indicating he's much like the slain greedy lawyer). He also says to them "if you don't agree to my client's specific conditions, these two bodies will never be found" to which the black district attorney (Richard Roundtree) retorts "at this point, I'm inclined to let them rot" -- APATHY. Also the lawyer in the same scene: "My client would like to remind you that two more people are dead. The press would have a field day if the police didn't seem to concerned about finding them and giving them a proper burial." THE SMALL BUSINESS OWNERS: The proprietor of the whorehouse is questioned by Mills in the glass interrogation room. Mills asks him "you didn't see anything strange or suspicious, anyone with a package under their arm?" He responds with "everybody coming in there has got a package under their arm, some people have suitcases full of stuff". The man "sees nothing" and questions nothing. Mills then asks him "do you like your job, the things you see?" To which he responds, "No, but that's life, isn't it?". He doesn't like it, but he tolerates it because it's a living. APATHY. Also the owner of the S&M leather shop who designed the knife strap-on costume is asked disgustedly by Somerset "you actually made this for him?" The owner replies "yea, so what, I made weirder shit than this." APATHY This might be reading too much into it but the pizza shop where they meet the FBI agent with the library files. Somerset mentions that the pizza shop must have had "at least 50 health violations last inspection". They clearly don't care about standards and safety. APATHY. And for some reason, the city didn't even shut them down. Did the health dept simply tolerate it? More apathy?? Also, the real estate agent that sold the "subway" apartment to Mills and his wife. The man was a scumbag who only cared about selling the place and obviously didn't care about their discomfort. APATHY. And also, the sloth victim's landlord was just happy that the rent was always paid on time and that there were no complaints from or about that tenant. He never bothered to ever check up on him. APATHY. DETECTIVE MILLS: Also notice Mills is the only character that "cares" in the film. As Somerset sarcastically asks him, "you want to be a hero and you're gonna make a difference?" Mills, the only character who supposedly "cares" gets punished the most in the film; his whole world gets turned upside down by the end. Mills, the man and his philosophy on life, is destroyed-- and he will undoubtedly become as jaded and cynical as Somerset. Mills's own words to John Doe in the car, "I don't see you as a Messiah. After 2 months, no one will remember this. No one will care. You're a movie of the week, you're a fucking T-shirt at best." Also, when Mills tells the story of when he fired his gun in the line of duty, he remembers how he felt during the incident but can't remember the name of his fellow cop that was shot-- this was after he witnessed the first few murders. I think this was supposed to signify the small but subtle beginning of the erosion of Mill's sympathy. But I could just be looking too much into it. Also, again, note at the end of the film when Mills is put into the back of the police cruiser, the captain (Lee Ermey) says to Somerset "don't worry, we'll take care of him"-- which pretty much means the department will cover up the incident. Even though Mills murdered a suspect, the captain and the rest of the police department is APATHETIC to his crime (Mills's sin of wrath will go unpunished). The film is just swimming with apathetic characters and I'm sure there's other examples that I haven't mentioned. But goddamn, what a script! It seems like no line of dialogue or detail is accidental or wasted. It all serves a purpose and contributes to the story's themes.The film is almost sickening and revolting given the themes and how effective it is at conveying them; the screenplay is astonishingly literary. It's a brilliantly written masterpiece. How it didn't get nominated at the Oscars is baffling. I highly recommend watching this video which explores the film in greater detail: ruclips.net/video/uKSDctC2o-s/видео.html
It also makes you think about the people who run law enforcement, medicine and heatlh, and etc. in real life. Are they doing what they choose in their careers out of passion and care? Or are they doing this for something else that's not even positive. If there's one lesson I've learned is that you can't better yourself or even the world by being apathetic, less sympathetic and empathetic, and hateful. People get their rears kicked or worse, a lot of people somewhere can tell stories. But you can't help yourself if you kick yourself down and bring others with you just because life has shown you people that for some messed up reason, they make your life not look so good and that's just me going easy on this paragraph.
This movie was very unique when it came out. Just the way it was filmed for starters. It was like film noir on crack. And while the plot and the way it is filmed might seem somewhat predictable and formulaic today, it really wasn't when it came out.
For the longest time after seeing this movie as a child, it was nearly impossible for me to be in a situation with presents involved and not hear Brad Pitt ask, " *What's in the box??* " It could be a *reeeal* mood killer.
This movie has my favorite opening and ending credit songs. Opening with Nine Inch Nails “closer (precursor)” and ending with David Bowie’s “Hearts Filthy Lesson”
Yes!! Se7en!! What a classic! The sloth victim still hunts me and that ending… man… For years I wanted to see inside the box but Brad’s face says it all… and that speech of John Doe ummm got me thinking that he actually has a point as horrible as it sounds; Brad, Morgan and David Fincher at their best! Awesome reaction! 👍🏼
I actually have a mandella effect of the eyes peering over the top of the box (or rather, the interior shot at an angle where it would kind of look like that), and I'm glad that's not actually in the movie.
Im pretty sure Ive heard Gwyneth say in an interview that she kept her prop head. So they must have intended on showing it in the movie. Maybe it got cut for censorship or maybe David Fincher thought it would work better tension wise to not show.
Octo, with your big audience, you could be a great influence to many in being physically healthy, keep up the good work, and outstanding reaction again.
Found you guys about a month ago and subscribed, keep up the good work. It's so nice to see great young men like you doing such a diverse array of content. Love you guys!!!
Ill never forget, i was 13 years old, convinced my mom i wanted to see this movie real bad so i convinced her by coming with me. The first murder scene with the spaghetti guy, i was just so grossed out that i walked out of the room and went into the next room, i could'nt tell you what movie it was, i was still just shocked by what i just saw...... And when my mom sat next to me, she just giggled at me lol! I was watching Freddy and Jason movies when i was at this age, but man i was not ready for this gruesomeness.... (But now im a huge fan of this movie :D)
I remember we used to have movie night with the family, Seven was one of those movies . So captivating and eerie, Brad and Morgan were so good. The end was so good but SOOO messed up and sad. When Kevin Spacey was revealed, he wasnt a house hold name then , though his face was familiar.
Reaction was fun, but the talk you two had after the film was great. The self reflection viewers have after watching this movie is overlooked. For me, mine was Envy. I never thought of myself as envious to any extent but after watching this flick for the first time, I did realize I can definitely be the victim of Envy.
Borderlands 2 has my favorite Easter egg in a video game ever. At a point in the game you can search small cardboard boxes around the zone and one randomly will have a gun in it. That guns name "Gwen's Head".
This is the gold standard of the ultimate creep factor. The audience in my cinema was not prepared for the final scene...I saw people crying and sobbing as they went into the lobby. This was and is a great movie...especially for Paltrow,Pitt and Freeman.
Fun fact: Denzel Washington turned down the role of Mills, which went to Brad Pitt. He has since deeply regretted it. Also, the studio wanted a different ending. Pitt & Freeman said “hell no,” and both threatened to walk if the studio changed it. 1995 was a huge year for crime thrillers. This stood out.
You should watch Brad Pitt's wildly goofy performance in the Coen Bros. film, Burn After reading. And also watch Morgan Freeman in the incredibly awesome and well-cast movie, Lucky Number Slevin.
Saw it in the theater. Don't want to give anything away in case some haven't seen it, but that scene where he's hiding in the closet, WOAH!!! I did not see that coming
@@maximillianosaben I remember Brad talking about agreeing to do that movie after losing to QT in poker, he was so drunk he didn't remember signing a contract, QT didn't waste time
John Doe didn't SPARE David Mills at any point in the film. He had him pegged as Anger/Wrath quite some time ago before he held that gun to him. Remember, this action Doe took started a year ago before the start of the movie (physically at least, who the heck knows when he started planning it). He kept Mills alive to complete his allegorical masterpiece which was at that point missing lust, pride, envy, and wrath. It's mind-boggling how much detail went into this story. Of course this story is absolutely impossible because of all the variables, but nonetheless I love it all the same.
I was too young when I saw this and the outcome left a scar on my psyche, so I've honestly never watched it again. It's impossible to forget. Thanks for the cool video.
Love watching you two react to these movies, man! And yes, you definitely predicted some of the stuff, but keep in mind that's because those kinds of twists aren't new anymore, so I feel like new viewers catch shit that we missed, like this one or in the Sixth Sense, because those ideas were fresh then; unexpected, ya know? But now, they're starting to become standard, and in some cases tropes. But these were the originals, the movies that did it first, and did it so well!
I remember seeing THE USUAL SUSPECTS for the first time, and right at the beginning a dark, faceless figure whispers, "How you doin' Keaton?" "12:30." And ""Ready?". I turned to my friend and said, "I hope it's not important that I know that's Kevin Spacey's voice." 🤪
I'll never get over what this film did to me. First saw it when I was in high school. I hated it the first time...except that I had to try one more time seeing the praise. The second time, I found it was not as gruesome as my imagination made me think, and the closing lines struck me. Third time, I realized what was the point and contrast of the characters. Now, it is among my top 10. btw - Agreed. I have had trouble with weight before, but I had it due to medications. Also, I remember someone mentioning gluttony is not always about eating a lot. It can be about worshiping food...like the rich who are obsessed with impressing where and what they eat.
I have really been enjoying yalls reactions!!! I recommend The Life of David Gale! It was actually a very underrated film in my opinion. Kevin Spacey is a shit person but damn a great actor which sucks. But for real watch David Gale!
The stupendous Kevin Spacey is much better known now than he was when SE7EN was made. Most viewers would now recognize his distinctive voice. He always kills dark and sinful roles. You might enjoy seeing him play a more sympathetic character than usual in MARGIN CALL,
Se7en is one of the last major projects done by fx extraordinaire Rob Bottin, who worked on John Carpenter's The Thing, Legend, Total Recall, and Robocop. He switched careers a couple years after that. A video slideshow with his narration is available on RUclips of all the polaroids taken for the sloth scene and after a while it does get extremely unsettling looking at the photos. Apparently the dead bodies were extremely disturbing to the point that they couldn't really film much of them, which is both a relief and a shame because Bottin did an excellent job on them.
@@cfwalker ruclips.net/video/wbI_FQI9si8/видео.html Here's the slideshow. Not much to be found of his work in Se7en otherwise, as far as behind the scene stuff, I mean.
I'm not a doctor, and this was just my own personal experience but exercise helped me so much. I started exercising and was to the point where I didn't need my depression medication anymore. As I said, I'm just sharing my own experience but that's just what worked for me personally. I appreciate you both sharing your stories with us
I actually agree with you, I started working out like 4 months ago and I've lost 30lbs now; I genuinely feel so much better not only physically but mentally as well. It definitely works!
@@OctoKrool It's like you're working out your issues at the same time. I've had a few moments of clarity at the gym as well. Like if I'm stuck on a story idea, I've randomly come up with solutions while working out too 😂 Congrats too!! It's liberating and amazing. I lost weight and was almost at my goal weight but I was injured at work so I had to postpone my exercise so I gained the weight back in that time. I started exercising again though and have been for the last month and I've missed it. It helps me sleep better since I have insomnia, it motivates me to eat better, helps with my asthma and so on. The key is focusing on the mental and health improvements as your wins instead of the numbers on the scale
@@deadsetondreams1988 same here, it's like the answers to things your questioning or thinking about come so much easier; I've been feeling far more positive about stuff now 😂
@@OctoKrool I love to hear that so much! We all love your positive, bubbly selves doing the hardest task that there is to do on this planet. Which is one of my favorites to do as well 🤣 Enjoy those movies but enjoy taking care of yourselves as well =^_^=
"what's in the box?" is such a classic line. i saw this in the theater, sitting in the front row b/c it was so packed. When Sloth guy breathed, my friend jumped out of the chair and ended up on the floor going "OMG, OMG".
This script went around Hollywood for years because no one wanted to make it into a film. It was known as “the head in the box” script.
Saw this opening night at the Mann Chinese Theater on Hollywood Blvd, 500+ people, had to stand in the back the whole movie. No one left. I’ve heard other people mention seeing this in theaters and half the crowd walking out.
Interesting note: Morgan Freeman & Brad Pitt didn't know the Sloth victim was a real actor under prosthetics, they thought it was a dummy. So when the victim coughs, that's actual terror on Freeman & Pitt's faces.
Wow
According to Fincher, the guy was a very skinny actor, and when he met with Fincher to appear in the film, Fincher joked that maybe he could lose some more weight when it was time to film. The guy thought he was serious, and actually lost even more weight for the role.
Thanks for the info.
John mcginleys reaction was also real
Poor guy l
I suffer from ALL of the 7 deadly sins in one form or another.
When the film was released, the studio went to tremendous lengths to keep secret that Kevin Spacey was playing the killer, to the point of one commercial including the scene where he calls the detectives, with another actor's voice dubbed in. He'd just started becoming recognized as a talent to keep an eye on after The Usual Suspects, though of course, these days seeing him in this role hits hard for a quite different reason.
I feel you bruh
I think the other actor you're referring to is none other than David Fincher himself
He was a great actor. Too bad he likes little boys too much. 🤦🏻♂️
awesome actor....too bad he got caught up in the Hollywood shenanigans
Nowadays they'd have gave it away in the first trailer
In my opinion this is one of the best films ever made
levels ahead of fight club imo
@@killar1one Fight Club is also a great fucking film and this as well i don't think we can compare these two masterpieces with each other.
Even though this film is highly impossible, I give the writer and diector a lot of leeway with it because Seven serves as a great and creative allegory for the 7 cardinal sins and how they can manifest themselves in modern days.
It's also a great conversation starter or a way to open people up to self-examination. All humans are sinners, and our sins fall into categories. I doubt that more than a handful of people have ALL 7 sins, and I doubt that more than a handful possess ONLY 1 sin. When I use a term sinless, what I mean is that no 1 sin shows itself in an obvious and detrimental way, but ALL people show sin at some time or another or have sinful thoughts.
My sins are wrath, sloth, and greed. Fortunately, there are laws and social consequences that keep my anger and negativity in check at least in speech and action, but my thoughts... holy crap I'm an angry woman.
@@killar1oneYeah, nah.
They are equally good.
The ending to this movie still sits with me. Very disturbing.
It's right up there with Silence of the Lambs as one of the best thrillers ever. Haunting story, haunting music...just spectacular.
I showed the film to a friend and then for a week after that I teased her with "what's in the boooxxxxx??"
This movie upset me! 😡That ending. And the killer basically wins in the end and David has to go to prison for doing something anyone in his shoes would have done
One of the greatest twists in film history.
@@cavaughngrace1488 I doubt he did any real time for that. But his life is almost certainly ruined nonetheless.
Masterpiece…..Kevin Spaceys monologue in the back of the car is amazing
The part where he gets emotional, saying we tolerate a deadly sin on every street corner...gets me every time.
I happen to agree with what he says 😅
36:04 "Ernest Hemingway once wrote: The world is a fine place and worth fighting for. I agree with the second part."
Fincher hated that line, but the studio forced his hand because they thought having the movie just fade to black would be too depressing.
@@thedude3288 it is pretty corny but it’s definitely fitting
@@PeteWeberFAN42 I dunno, I kind of like it. It gives it a kind of bleak, 70's ending feel.
@@artvandelay3840 I actually kinda like the line too
"For sale: baby shoes, never worn"
Morgan's character has *seven* days until his retirement and he and his partner are investigating *seven* deaths which link to seven deadly sins. I love how they incorporate the movie's title to three different scenarios in this film.
And all ends on the sunday, the seventh day...
Good points! I didn't notice that.
That's pretty obvious and is the point of the film.
I just recently watched the Clint Eastwood film Mystic River (which he directed, not starred in) and I HIGHLY recommend it. Sean Penn, Kevin Bacon, and Tim Robbins give incredible performances!
Yeah it's a good one
One of my favorite parts of this movie is the fact that it was John Doe taking pictures of Mills in the hallway after they found sloth. Mills got very angry at him and that's when he knew he could use him as wrath.
And why he intruded into Mill's apartment and killed his wife. He was goading people into who he wanted to represent "Wrath". And he found that in Mills.
Man I was hurt when it was revealed his wife was a victim, especially her being decapitated. And you saw the flash of her face before Mills shot him 😪. Gwyneth Paltrow was a new face then.
Seven will never get old, one of the best suspense thrillers of all time, still holds up after all these yrs. Cant believe this was 26 yrs ago, I was 19 yrs old. Love the conversation as always 👍🏽🔥🔥🔥🔥
My older sister took me to see this for my 16th birthday and it was so frickin good . during the sloth scene when he springs up' my sister got scared and chucked half of her popcorn over the people sitting behind us,& to make it worse I was also frightend and let out a loud Fart 🤣
Lol
LOL : "" D
fake story...smh.
"THAT GHOUL IS ALIVE" is one of the funniest things i've ever heard
Watch that scene again and you can clearly see the Sloth actor's real arm next to his body, giving him three arms. It's something that can not be unseen.
Man! You guys were on fire on guessing the points and twists of the story before they came around Respect!
Se7en is a masterpiece! #WhatsInTheBox!?
yeah I think they knew a little too much. Not buying it.
@@MoMoMyPup10 Seems to be the case with most reactors, not sure if i should feel suspicious or dumb lol
@@largonius yep, me either. I just find that seeing "GREED" in blood on the floor and immediately getting "seven deadly sins" from that a bit suspicious 🧐
@@MoMoMyPup10 I totally agree.
@@MoMoMyPup10 Yeah. I thought it was too on the nose when they were calling out shit.
OMG I’ve seen this movie long ago and just realized that the police chief is R. Lee Ermey from Full Metal Jacket! I don’t why it just now clicked
He also is in Texas ChainSaw Massacre, and is the voice of Sarge in Toy Story... RIP DI.
@@obdiane ...and Mayor Tilman in Mississippi Burning.
@@gregall2178 I forgot about that one!! Thank you.
He was a Actual Drill instructor in the Army so he was a perfect fit for his character in FMJ
He's also in the Steven Segal movie "On Deadly Ground" with a then Billy Bob Thornton before he lost all the weight. Played a great side villain in that movie.
Brad Pitt’s characters arm being in a sling and injured wasn’t part of the original script. During the scene where Pitt is chasing Spacey through the streets, Brad Pitt accidentally slipped and put his arm through the windshield of a car, severely injuring himself. From that point on, he had to wear a cast and sling, so they wrote it into the script that his arm was hurt.
The scenes before Mills fell off the fire escape but after Pitt injured himself, he wears his watch over his cuff to help cover the cast under his sleeve.
Underrated line from the captain: "This is not even my desk."
Ermey improvised the line. The phone at the desk started ringing and he quickly answered it to try and save the take . The man was a treasure
Isn’t that from Beverly Hills cop ? Or a similar line
@@YoungYahtz94 In Beverly Hills Cop, Paul Reiser's character Jeffrey is in the locker room where Inspector Todd is chewing Axel's ass out for taking the impounded cigarette truck. When inspector Todd tells Jeffrey to butt out, Jeffrey says, _"This is not my locker."_
A great line!
You guys should check out Phone Booth with Colin Ferral. It is a great and underrated movie
definately an underrrated movie
One of my favorites!
Yes sir lol
Yes. That one haunts me like 'Duel'.
🤙🏽💯🔥😎
One of the absolute greatest 3rd acts of all time chills every time says Somerset says “John Doe has the upper hand”
Thank you for knowing his name...they keep saying field lol
Love this movie. You guys should do Primal Fear with Ed Norton.
Yes!!!
oh heck yeah!
nope maybe 8 months from now but there are so many more movies that would create better facial and emotional reactions.
That's a good movie!
Yes!
"What's in the box" is one of the greatest things to come out of this film. Its been meme'd and repeated in a thousand different situations.
It was such an experience to see this opening night in a dead theatre back in September 1995.
Maaaan I'm sure!
So many good movies to go see in the theatres in the 90s: Jurassic Park, Silence of the Lambs, Six Sense, etc. No spoilers and I was shook each time.
This is one of my favorite films. The cinematography is amazing the city is always raining and dark, also the music is brilliant also.
I agree - the visuals and design in this movie is goddamn perfect. It has all the atmospherics that gum shoe detective 40s wished they had.
“Smoke em in the head…it’s done” 😂😂😂y’all been watching too many hood flicks!!! 😂😂😂
Se7en is an amazing pick.
Great movie!
Zodiak is a similar movie with robert Downey Jr, jake Gyllenhaal, and mark Ruffalo
Very interesting discussion on gluttony. In the olden days, the idea of gluttony and overindulging in food would often mean that others would have to go without, which is why it's a sin. All the sins are perversions of love: gluttony, lust and greed coming from excessive love; sloth is the absence of love; and wrath (revenge), envy and pride result in the love of seeing harm done to other people.
I've never thought about it that way, very interesting!
Me every time my wife orders a package from amazon... "WHAT'S IN THE BOX?!?!?"... she's pretty over it...
The guy handcuffed on his knees guarded bye 2 police officers "has the upper hand" …chills!
There is a great film theory on RUclips that "Seven" is actually set in Gotham City before Batman showed up.
Who did the video?
That’s a kinda cool idea
RUclips is full of whackjobs
Why I do feel like it’s by matpat
Replace John Doe with the Riddler and both detectives with Batman and it works.
1:03-1:10 Hilarious 😂 that you guys tried to pronounce Seven with the actual number: 7.
Sesevenen.
Lmao i was dying. Se sev en en.
I have always called it "Sesevenen".
After the masked teen-slasher killers were overused thoughout the 80s, in the 90s psychological crime thrillers were the thing. The Silence of the Lambs & Se7ven became the classics but there are some more really good ones out there, in addition to some okay ones and some not so good. I always liked CopyCat starring Sigourney Weaver. Saw it as a double feature with 12 Monkeys, it was the last time we were at a drive-in.
I remember seeing both of those in the theatre as well. You’re so right. The days of the supernatural killer or ghost killers was over and it was all about psycho serial killers. To add, Judd Nelson in Relentless was also one of them. Then the women had their day, with SWF and the follow ups to those. I think I saw every one of them. Lol!
@@Ivy94F Didn't thought about Relentless in years! It has such a great cast (not so many big names but alot of familiar faces).
I miss drive-ins🥺
Last time I was at the drive-in, we saw a double feature of Prince of Egypt and Chicken Run, back in the early 2000s
This and Legends of the Fall are two of my fave Brad Pitt movies!
Yes love that movie I’m gonna comment too so maybe they will do it! 😎
Troy so underrated.
For me it's Moneyball and Meet Joe Black.
@@chefskiss6179 Yessss Meet Joe Black !
Legends of the Fall is awesome! It appears at first glance to be just a chick film but it is so much more. Has war, bootlegging, fights, bears & cowboy stuff to name a few. Meet Joe Black is really good as well. True Romance is another great film/cast with Pitt
"THAT GHOUL IS ALIVE!!??" Dude, that had me in tears!! I love you guys!! 😆😆😆
I could never unsee the fact that he literally looked like a ghoul lol
HAHA!! Yup. I freaked first time watching that!!
This is a brutal and disturbing film and it doesn’t get enough praise for being such a brilliant and horrifying masterpiece too
Best film of it's kind of the decade. Up there with silence of the lambs
Check out Lucky Number Slevin, if you haven't seen it. A really good, underrated movie. I'm surprised people haven't been reacting to it. (Note: Not a typo; it's Lucky Number SLEVIN, with an L)
If you haven't seen Fallen with Denzel Washington, John Goodman and Donald Sutherland. Please do.
That movie is awesome and doesn't have nearly the following that it should have.
Such an underrated film.
I saw it in the cinema when it came out it was so good
@@kirstygunn9149 same
7 years in Tibet is a hidden gem with Brad Pitt. I think you will like it
lol. it's god awful. i like brad pitt but he was terrible in seven years in tibet. his accent was wretched.
I love that movie
Guessing the ending is not such a bad thing. It means the movie makers are telling a good story. I'm glad you guys loved this movie. Your reactions were great!
Seeing this in 1995 in the cinema, was shocking but a great film! Thank you for this reaction guys
I'm just noticing that the police chief is the actor who played the drill sergeant in 'Full Metal Jacket' (1987).
That film was so disturbing that I told myself I'd never watch it again, but I just made an exception for your reaction to it. I think the most amazing thing about it is that throughout the whole film you never even see a murder until the end, and the climactic ending revolves around nothing more than a cardboard box that you never even see into. It's what is left to your imagination throughout the film that makes it so disturbing. In my humble opinion.
You are exactly right. I’ve heard people say this is a gory movie. It isn’t. Not an ounce of gore is shown. It’s talked about. It’s shown in photos. But we never see any. It’s all in the imagination, which makes it much more terrifying.
@@rpg7287 About as gory as it gets is seeing the blood pouring down the side of Mills face after the alleyway altercation with Doe.
Yes, I've never watched this movie again! It scared the hell outta me 😂
Hey guys , i just wanted let you know something very important. Kevin Spacey wasn't at the top of his carrier when that movie came up. He was not really known. Also Usual Suspects came up after Se7en.
Kevin Spacey got his role in Usual Suspects because of the success of Se7en. Finally it is those 2 movies that made Kevin Spacey in top pay actor in Hollywood.
Im 47 years old today, and i would like to say Bravo to both of you, cause when i saw the movie in theater i really really forgot about his wife and couldn't predict the twist.
To this day Se7en is still the movie that stroke me for his final twist. I was shocked for days. Something you 2 didn't talk about or perhaps didn't realize is that the bad guy WON at the end... Everything happened as he planned it.
American Beauty is another great Kevin Spacey movie.
Spectaaaacular.
One of my all time favorite movies! Just a great cast, incredible acting, great story and pacing...
Great Movie!
The twist ending....😱😱 OMFG!! It made my jaw drop! My brother and sister and took me to go see this film!
The negotiator is also a great movie with Kevin Spacey and Samuel L. Jackson
“You’re only alive because I didn’t kill you. I spared you. Remember that detective, every time you look in the mirror at that face of yours, for the rest of your life.....or should I say, for the rest of what life I’ve allowed you to have”
-John Doe; knowing David Mills was about to shoot an unarmed suspect in police custody, handcuffed on his knees.
"Was he force-fed the spaghetti until death?" Best quote 😂
A Low Down Dirty Shame, The Players Club, All About The Benjamins, Blue Streak, Best Man, Best Man Holiday, Think Like A Man 1&2, Just Wright, Money Talks, Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins, Barbershop trilogies, A Thin Line Between Love & Hate, School Dance, Freedom Writers, Blade, Roll bounce, Lottery Ticket, Waist Deep, Django, B.A.P’s, You Got Served, Save the Last Dance, What’s love Got to do With It. All the fast and furious, Hansel & Gretal(2013), Undercover Brother, Get Rich or Die Tryin,
yes, we get it... you can stop posting this on every video now
@@stefanforrer2573 umm no.
They did react to Money Talks fairly recently, iirc... Blade was reacted to very recently.
@@Alissandre_Iskander Ik they just posted blade and money talks so I always update it when they post the video. I also posted this list on the blade video but took it out bc they posted it.
One of my favorite movies ever!
I LOVE THIS MOVIE SOOO MUCH 😭 Fincher created my dream Gotham world coz it’s so fucked up and Matt Reeves’ “The Batman” has taken huge inspiration from this movie and others like this and I’m so excited to see The Riddler be like John Doe in this movie … beyond excited ! And awesome job piecing it all together guys
Here is a piece of trivia. Brad Pitt wore a cast half of the movie, because during the chase scene he actually tore a tendon and fractured his arm in real life.
Love those small moments. "This ain't even my desk". LOL
I recently found your channel qnd love the reactions, truly. But you need to remember that when watching older films/clasics in their own right, a lot of the tropes, trends and usual predictions started with them; those were the first to use those twists and turns that help you NOW guess them as what you could expect
Morgan freeman’s son played the fingerprint technician.
"WHAT'S IN THE BOX!?! WHAT'S IN THE BOX!?!"
I taught at a college where a fellow teacher - a minister - would use this film to talk about ethics and the seven deadly sins. Still wonder if I should have sat in on a class.
Lengthy read but fascinating analysis of the film's themes:
Apathy is the biggest theme of the film. Many discussions within the film allude to it. Aside from the obvious apathy speech Somerset (Morgan Freeman) gives to Mills (Brad Pitt) in the bar, but also when Somerset explains how the first thing women are taught in rape prevention class is to not yell "help" because no one responds to "help" but instead to yell "fire" (as Somerset put it "in a big city, minding your own business is a science"). People in big cities are apathetic to any one stranger's individual suffering but a fire can spread to multiple buildings which affects everyone, which is why people respond to "fire".
Throughout the film, Somerset repeatedly mentions how much he hates the city. All his years on the force has caused him to be cynical, jaded and apathetic. Particular example: all the noise, police sirens, screaming and crime that he hears outside his apartment window keeps him up at night which is why he uses a metronome, to drown out the noise. He has become apathetic to the crime going on just outside his place-- the metronome is symbolism for Somerset's apathy. Also, note, right after Mills denounces Somerset's apathy speech in the bar ("I don't think you're quitting because you believe in the things you say, I think you want to believe them because you're quitting"), Somerset goes home that night and destroys the metronome. Mills's words really affected him causing Somerset to care at least a little bit again, which is why he destroyed the metronome (i.e. his apathy).
And John Doe's words during the car ride "Only in a world this shitty can we say these were innocent people. We see a deadly sin on every street corner and we tolerate it. We tolerate morning, noon and night." APATHY. Also, many characters, even minor ones, are super judgmental and have little sympathy for people's suffering. Like when the SWAT team raids the apartment of the mummified sloth victim tied to the bed, the lead SWAT cop (played by Bob from "Office Space") says to him "you got what you deserved"-- but then when he's alive and taken to the hospital, the doctor says "he's experienced about as much pain and suffering as anyone I've encountered... and he still has Hell to look forward to." To me, it was always such a bizarre thing for a doctor to say given their Hippocratic oath and their duty to care but ya know... APATHY.
THE LAWYERS:
The lawyer that's punished for greed, as John Doe put it "this is a man who dedicated his life to making money by lying with every breath he could muster to keeping murderers and rapists off the streets." That lawyer didn't care about justice or morality.
Also, John Doe's lawyer has virtually no emotion while he's blackmailing the cops with John Doe's plea bargain. Either they agree and John Doe pleads guilty or if they don't agree, John Doe will plead insanity. The lawyer says "with the extreme nature of these crimes, I could easily get him off with such a plea." The lawyer seems quite apathetic to justice and the victims of the case while he, as Mills puts it, sits there in his $3000 suit (indicating he's much like the slain greedy lawyer). He also says to them "if you don't agree to my client's specific conditions, these two bodies will never be found" to which the black district attorney (Richard Roundtree) retorts "at this point, I'm inclined to let them rot" -- APATHY. Also the lawyer in the same scene: "My client would like to remind you that two more people are dead. The press would have a field day if the police didn't seem to concerned about finding them and giving them a proper burial."
THE SMALL BUSINESS OWNERS:
The proprietor of the whorehouse is questioned by Mills in the glass interrogation room. Mills asks him "you didn't see anything strange or suspicious, anyone with a package under their arm?" He responds with "everybody coming in there has got a package under their arm, some people have suitcases full of stuff". The man "sees nothing" and questions nothing. Mills then asks him "do you like your job, the things you see?" To which he responds, "No, but that's life, isn't it?". He doesn't like it, but he tolerates it because it's a living. APATHY. Also the owner of the S&M leather shop who designed the knife strap-on costume is asked disgustedly by Somerset "you actually made this for him?" The owner replies "yea, so what, I made weirder shit than this." APATHY
This might be reading too much into it but the pizza shop where they meet the FBI agent with the library files. Somerset mentions that the pizza shop must have had "at least 50 health violations last inspection". They clearly don't care about standards and safety. APATHY. And for some reason, the city didn't even shut them down. Did the health dept simply tolerate it? More apathy??
Also, the real estate agent that sold the "subway" apartment to Mills and his wife. The man was a scumbag who only cared about selling the place and obviously didn't care about their discomfort. APATHY. And also, the sloth victim's landlord was just happy that the rent was always paid on time and that there were no complaints from or about that tenant. He never bothered to ever check up on him. APATHY.
DETECTIVE MILLS:
Also notice Mills is the only character that "cares" in the film. As Somerset sarcastically asks him, "you want to be a hero and you're gonna make a difference?" Mills, the only character who supposedly "cares" gets punished the most in the film; his whole world gets turned upside down by the end. Mills, the man and his philosophy on life, is destroyed-- and he will undoubtedly become as jaded and cynical as Somerset. Mills's own words to John Doe in the car, "I don't see you as a Messiah. After 2 months, no one will remember this. No one will care. You're a movie of the week, you're a fucking T-shirt at best." Also, when Mills tells the story of when he fired his gun in the line of duty, he remembers how he felt during the incident but can't remember the name of his fellow cop that was shot-- this was after he witnessed the first few murders. I think this was supposed to signify the small but subtle beginning of the erosion of Mill's sympathy. But I could just be looking too much into it.
Also, again, note at the end of the film when Mills is put into the back of the police cruiser, the captain (Lee Ermey) says to Somerset "don't worry, we'll take care of him"-- which pretty much means the department will cover up the incident. Even though Mills murdered a suspect, the captain and the rest of the police department is APATHETIC to his crime (Mills's sin of wrath will go unpunished).
The film is just swimming with apathetic characters and I'm sure there's other examples that I haven't mentioned. But goddamn, what a script! It seems like no line of dialogue or detail is accidental or wasted. It all serves a purpose and contributes to the story's themes.The film is almost sickening and revolting given the themes and how effective it is at conveying them; the screenplay is astonishingly literary. It's a brilliantly written masterpiece. How it didn't get nominated at the Oscars is baffling. I highly recommend watching this video which explores the film in greater detail:
ruclips.net/video/uKSDctC2o-s/видео.html
I agree with you 99.99% on this... except for one little difference.... when I see "
It also makes you think about the people who run law enforcement, medicine and heatlh, and etc. in real life. Are they doing what they choose in their careers out of passion and care? Or are they doing this for something else that's not even positive. If there's one lesson I've learned is that you can't better yourself or even the world by being apathetic, less sympathetic and empathetic, and hateful. People get their rears kicked or worse, a lot of people somewhere can tell stories. But you can't help yourself if you kick yourself down and bring others with you just because life has shown you people that for some messed up reason, they make your life not look so good and that's just me going easy on this paragraph.
The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo and Gone Girl are also really good David Fincher movies.
While his version is good, I kind of prefer the original GWTDT ;-)
Now Zodiac.... damn...
Love to see a Girl With the Dragon Tattoo reaction!
100% incredible movies!!!!
...and Zodiac, Fight Club, The Social Network, Panic Room, etc.
@@thefilmeffect6089 "The Social Network" is very bad and boring. Totally overrated movie.
This movie was very unique when it came out. Just the way it was filmed for starters. It was like film noir on crack. And while the plot and the way it is filmed might seem somewhat predictable and formulaic today, it really wasn't when it came out.
For the longest time after seeing this movie as a child, it was nearly impossible for me to be in a situation with presents involved and not hear Brad Pitt ask, " *What's in the box??* "
It could be a *reeeal* mood killer.
You guys are watching fire movies. How have you gone so many years without watching these classics lol
This movie has my favorite opening and ending credit songs. Opening with Nine Inch Nails “closer (precursor)” and ending with David Bowie’s “Hearts Filthy Lesson”
Still of my favorite thrillers. Messed me up the first time
Yeah it messed up too so badly
Lol
Yes!! Se7en!! What a classic! The sloth victim still hunts me and that ending… man… For years I wanted to see inside the box but Brad’s face says it all… and that speech of John Doe ummm got me thinking that he actually has a point as horrible as it sounds; Brad, Morgan and David Fincher at their best! Awesome reaction! 👍🏼
I actually have a mandella effect of the eyes peering over the top of the box (or rather, the interior shot at an angle where it would kind of look like that), and I'm glad that's not actually in the movie.
Im pretty sure Ive heard Gwyneth say in an interview that she kept her prop head. So they must have intended on showing it in the movie. Maybe it got cut for censorship or maybe David Fincher thought it would work better tension wise to not show.
They actually do show what's in the box, but it's a split second frame/ shot. It happens right before Mills fires his weapon.
Octo, with your big audience, you could be a great influence to many in being physically healthy, keep up the good work, and outstanding reaction again.
We need judgement night in a poll for fridays
Yes
Hell yeah!
Found you guys about a month ago and subscribed, keep up the good work. It's so nice to see great young men like you doing such a diverse array of content. Love you guys!!!
These guys and _It's Mr, Video_ are the best reactors.
Ill never forget, i was 13 years old, convinced my mom i wanted to see this movie real bad so i convinced her by coming with me. The first murder scene with the spaghetti guy, i was just so grossed out that i walked out of the room and went into the next room, i could'nt tell you what movie it was, i was still just shocked by what i just saw...... And when my mom sat next to me, she just giggled at me lol! I was watching Freddy and Jason movies when i was at this age, but man i was not ready for this gruesomeness.... (But now im a huge fan of this movie :D)
Great story, lol
@@Buugzy stop being an troll. Get a life
@@sweetkiss119 are you smoked out?
@@Buugzy I wish haha
@@sweetkiss119 smoked out on deez nuts
I remember we used to have movie night with the family, Seven was one of those movies . So captivating and eerie, Brad and Morgan were so good.
The end was so good but SOOO messed up and sad. When Kevin Spacey was revealed, he wasnt a house hold name then , though his face was familiar.
I think Doe just assumed the prostitute was "diseased", she wasn't actually trying to infect people.
I haven’t watched Se7en in SO long and it was really fun watching it with you guys ❤️
It's crazy. I have this movie on 📼, 📀, and digital. I love this movie. What's in the box?? Priceless!!
I saw Seven in the theater and the suspense was killing me. An excellent movie.
Reaction was fun, but the talk you two had after the film was great. The self reflection viewers have after watching this movie is overlooked. For me, mine was Envy. I never thought of myself as envious to any extent but after watching this flick for the first time, I did realize I can definitely be the victim of Envy.
Took half a second to click on this when I got the notification.
“Just Cause” is another movie that has a good tremendous twist...
oooooohhh Yeah!!!! That's a Great One.
Borderlands 2 has my favorite Easter egg in a video game ever. At a point in the game you can search small cardboard boxes around the zone and one randomly will have a gun in it. That guns name "Gwen's Head".
This is the gold standard of the ultimate creep factor. The audience in my cinema was not prepared for the final scene...I saw people crying and sobbing as they went into the lobby. This was and is a great movie...especially for Paltrow,Pitt and Freeman.
Fun fact: Denzel Washington turned down the role of Mills, which went to Brad Pitt. He has since deeply regretted it.
Also, the studio wanted a different ending. Pitt & Freeman said “hell no,” and both threatened to walk if the studio changed it.
1995 was a huge year for crime thrillers. This stood out.
Love at the end of each video when you guys get into a "you know what? I've learned something today". 😆
You should watch Brad Pitt's wildly goofy performance in the Coen Bros. film, Burn After reading.
And also watch Morgan Freeman in the incredibly awesome and well-cast movie, Lucky Number Slevin.
Saw it in the theater. Don't want to give anything away in case some haven't seen it, but that scene where he's hiding in the closet, WOAH!!! I did not see that coming
Brad Pitt in Snatch , couldn't understand a word he said
@@thawk6792 - That movie was one of the reasons Tarantino wanted to work with him in Inglourious Basterds.
@@maximillianosaben I remember Brad talking about agreeing to do that movie after losing to QT in poker, he was so drunk he didn't remember signing a contract, QT didn't waste time
If you haven’t watched it, I highly recommend the movie Fallen (1998) with Denzel Washington and John Goodman.
John Doe didn't SPARE David Mills at any point in the film. He had him pegged as Anger/Wrath quite some time ago before he held that gun to him. Remember, this action Doe took started a year ago before the start of the movie (physically at least, who the heck knows when he started planning it). He kept Mills alive to complete his allegorical masterpiece which was at that point missing lust, pride, envy, and wrath.
It's mind-boggling how much detail went into this story. Of course this story is absolutely impossible because of all the variables, but nonetheless I love it all the same.
I was too young when I saw this and the outcome left a scar on my psyche, so I've honestly never watched it again. It's impossible to forget.
Thanks for the cool video.
You guys would love the movie Frailty, it'll blow your minddd
Love watching you two react to these movies, man! And yes, you definitely predicted some of the stuff, but keep in mind that's because those kinds of twists aren't new anymore, so I feel like new viewers catch shit that we missed, like this one or in the Sixth Sense, because those ideas were fresh then; unexpected, ya know? But now, they're starting to become standard, and in some cases tropes. But these were the originals, the movies that did it first, and did it so well!
The 7 in "SE7EN" is just a "V" on its side.
I remember seeing THE USUAL SUSPECTS for the first time, and right at the beginning a dark, faceless figure whispers, "How you doin' Keaton?" "12:30." And ""Ready?". I turned to my friend and said, "I hope it's not important that I know that's Kevin Spacey's voice." 🤪
I'll never get over what this film did to me. First saw it when I was in high school. I hated it the first time...except that I had to try one more time seeing the praise. The second time, I found it was not as gruesome as my imagination made me think, and the closing lines struck me. Third time, I realized what was the point and contrast of the characters. Now, it is among my top 10.
btw - Agreed. I have had trouble with weight before, but I had it due to medications. Also, I remember someone mentioning gluttony is not always about eating a lot. It can be about worshiping food...like the rich who are obsessed with impressing where and what they eat.
I have really been enjoying yalls reactions!!! I recommend The Life of David Gale! It was actually a very underrated film in my opinion. Kevin Spacey is a shit person but damn a great actor which sucks. But for real watch David Gale!
I would bet you guys weren't REALLY ready for SE7EN, am I right ?
Great movie.
WHAT'S in the BOX!
The stupendous Kevin Spacey is much better known now than he was when SE7EN was made. Most viewers would now recognize his distinctive voice. He always kills dark and sinful roles. You might enjoy seeing him play a more sympathetic character than usual in MARGIN CALL,
I just wached for the first time today.What a final🥺🥺🥺🥺
L.A Confidential is another incredible 90's thriller. For while it was my favorite movie
Se7en is one of the last major projects done by fx extraordinaire Rob Bottin, who worked on John Carpenter's The Thing, Legend, Total Recall, and Robocop. He switched careers a couple years after that. A video slideshow with his narration is available on RUclips of all the polaroids taken for the sloth scene and after a while it does get extremely unsettling looking at the photos. Apparently the dead bodies were extremely disturbing to the point that they couldn't really film much of them, which is both a relief and a shame because Bottin did an excellent job on them.
Could you link to the video? That would be interesting to see!
@@cfwalker ruclips.net/video/wbI_FQI9si8/видео.html
Here's the slideshow. Not much to be found of his work in Se7en otherwise, as far as behind the scene stuff, I mean.
@@BloodylocksBathory Thanks!
Lmao why is curtis making me laugh and the movie is just called seven 😂😂😂
You should watch another two Morgan Freeman’s movies: “Kiss the Girls”, “Along Came a Spider”
the full length dvd uncut version is a must have just for the closing titles with David Bowie's ''the hearts filthy lesson'' playing.
The credits running backwards skews another unconventional and creepy angle to the closing titles.
I'm not a doctor, and this was just my own personal experience but exercise helped me so much. I started exercising and was to the point where I didn't need my depression medication anymore. As I said, I'm just sharing my own experience but that's just what worked for me personally. I appreciate you both sharing your stories with us
I actually agree with you, I started working out like 4 months ago and I've lost 30lbs now; I genuinely feel so much better not only physically but mentally as well. It definitely works!
@@OctoKrool It's like you're working out your issues at the same time. I've had a few moments of clarity at the gym as well. Like if I'm stuck on a story idea, I've randomly come up with solutions while working out too 😂
Congrats too!! It's liberating and amazing. I lost weight and was almost at my goal weight but I was injured at work so I had to postpone my exercise so I gained the weight back in that time. I started exercising again though and have been for the last month and I've missed it. It helps me sleep better since I have insomnia, it motivates me to eat better, helps with my asthma and so on. The key is focusing on the mental and health improvements as your wins instead of the numbers on the scale
@@deadsetondreams1988 same here, it's like the answers to things your questioning or thinking about come so much easier; I've been feeling far more positive about stuff now 😂
@@OctoKrool I love to hear that so much! We all love your positive, bubbly selves doing the hardest task that there is to do on this planet. Which is one of my favorites to do as well 🤣 Enjoy those movies but enjoy taking care of yourselves as well =^_^=