THINGS TO COME (H.G. WELLS) 🎬 Exclusive Full Sci-Fi Movie Premiere 🎬 English HD 2023

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  • Опубликовано: 5 янв 2023
  • 🔴 Title: THINGS TO COME (H.G. WELLS)
    🔴 Summary: The story of a century: a decades-long second World War leaves plague and anarchy, then a rational state rebuilds civilization and attempts space travel. #sci-fi #sciencefiction
    YOP 1936
    Cast: Raymond Massey, Edward Chapman, Ralph Richardson
    Director William Cameron Menzies
    Writer H.G. Wells(novel "The Shape of Things to Come")
    🔴 Certificate: TV-MA
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    Tags: sci-fi movies english best movies 2023 English
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Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @AngelCatBaby
    @AngelCatBaby 3 месяца назад +7

    Good movie. 👍❤️. H. G. Wells was one of my favorite writers and authors. Many of the possibilities he imagined in his books, some have come true, such as the way humanity’s history repeats itself, as it does in this movie……hatred, jealousy, envy, greed, racism, egotistical values, etc., blinds humanity’s potential with ignorance into the possibilities of living in a better future and world. Until these barriers are overcome and left behind, humanity will be faced with and doomed into repeating the same mistakes and failures our ancestors made and that have haunted humanity throughout its entire history, over and over again. Isn’t it time to put the bickering and confusion behind? 😢🙏🏼

  • @user-io3th6lo9t
    @user-io3th6lo9t Год назад +320

    "We need to put an end to war before it puts an end to us". Those words always stuck with me and will always ring true.

    • @flashgordon6670
      @flashgordon6670 Год назад +1

      Well if it puts an end to us, the end of war will come thereafter.

    • @alessandroricci7294
      @alessandroricci7294 Год назад +7

      It is true, today, with nato country fast losing the hold they had on the Third World, and also for the destruction capabilities we have today, it is more true than ever.

    • @jayluce1650
      @jayluce1650 Год назад +15

      "I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones." 🤔
      -- Albert Einstein

    • @user-io3th6lo9t
      @user-io3th6lo9t Год назад +6

      @@jayluce1650 that is if there's anyone left to fight it.

    • @andrewrustad6922
      @andrewrustad6922 Год назад +8

      Wars been going on since Cain killed Abel, it won't end as long as there's two people, war will rage on. The price of sin is death, the price of war is greed.

  • @itisonlyadream
    @itisonlyadream Год назад +198

    I've seen this extraordinary film countless times over the course of my 80 years, but I had to take the time to watch this particular RUclips video, because this is by far the cleanest, sharpest print of this film I've ever seen. Every frame of this film is a feast for the eyes. I have the colorized version of this film on a Blu-ray disk and it appears to have been made from a print with more scratches and imperfections than this print. I recently, bought a high quality projector, and seeing this beautiful print of the film on a screen as large as the image would have appeared in a theater was an amazing experience. I felt like I had time traveled back to 1936 and was watching the film when it premiered in a London theater. There are only a few minor imperfections in the image here and there...... very few considering the age of the film. With very little restoration, using modern digital techniques, the picture quality would be as perfect as it was when the film was first shown, maybe even better.

    • @chipsramek3868
      @chipsramek3868 Год назад +3

      Pray Tell ...how does one improve on Perfect...remember it's a goal Not a destination ! :)-

    • @BostLabs
      @BostLabs Год назад +11

      Sir, I salute you. 63 here and have been a fan of H.G. Wells for most of my life.

    • @seigneurjesuistoipshaw.5359
      @seigneurjesuistoipshaw.5359 Год назад +2

      Rite-on my fellow being! 👁🫵🏼😇🙏❤️

    • @jeremywilson1155
      @jeremywilson1155 Год назад +3

      You got me about 30 years and this is the first time I’ve ever seen this film, historically kind of amusing and disgusting at the same time😱🤣

    • @larrypatterson3839
      @larrypatterson3839 Год назад +5

      You are mighty sharp
      To be 80 , not one
      type error, but who
      knows the future
      least he get it from
      above, the Holy Bible.

  • @ontheisland11
    @ontheisland11 7 месяцев назад +48

    The 'which shall it be?' speech is one of the greatest endings to any film ever made, and resonates even more more today as we grapple with what the purpose of life should be.

  • @GregZO6
    @GregZO6 10 месяцев назад +90

    A salute to the incredible intellect and creative genius of H.G. Wells.
    Unfortunately the story remains the same: Humanity is stupid, and there is always some evil jackass to take advantage of that.
    "Have a nice day"
    Thanks for the beautiful movie, all the best...

    • @kylethedalek
      @kylethedalek 3 месяца назад

      Everyone is a puppet.
      All scripted.

    • @QuiteSimplyMyChoice
      @QuiteSimplyMyChoice 2 месяца назад

      Freemason predictive programming.

    • @MinhThu-xn2bt
      @MinhThu-xn2bt 6 дней назад +1

      @@GregZO6
      If only Wells' last book 📖
      "Mind At The End Of Its Tether"
      is made into a movie !

  • @gerardosalazar161
    @gerardosalazar161 Год назад +95

    The Art Deco Atmosphere of the whole movie Is a feature not to be ignored; a big film from any angle, great actors, fantastic book and dreamy scenarios. What else can you ask for? A Master Piece! Thank you for posting.

    • @Wig4
      @Wig4 Год назад +5

      It is indeed ! Like Norman Bel Geddes designs. The design wave got called 'streamlining'. Geddes was active in the theatre/film set design, also world exhibitions.. etc. Not much of his work is left to this day.....
      (Annecdote: in the time I had lend out the book 'Horizons' (by N B Geddes) to a collegue of mine, and it was never returned. It's an unwritten rule with books that 'lent is given'... lol ... I had to learn over the years, never to lend out my books ...I lost almost a dozen in that way )

    • @joebudi5136
      @joebudi5136 3 месяца назад

      The set design is incredible.

  • @walterfristoe4643
    @walterfristoe4643 Год назад +34

    Damn, the movie left out my favorite quote from the book!
    " We look back through countless millions of years and see the great will to live struggling out of the intertidal slime, struggling from shape to shape and from power to power, crawling and then walking confidently upon the land, struggling generation after generation to master the air, creeping down into the darkness of the deep; we see it turn upon itself in rage and hunger and reshape itself anew, we watch it draw nearer and more akin to us, expanding, elaborating itself, pursuing its relentless inconceivable purpose, until at last it reaches us and its being beats through our brains and arteries... It is possible to believe that all the past is but the beginning of a beginning, and that all that is and has been is but the twilight of the dawn. It is possible to believe that all that the human mind has ever accomplished is but the dream before the awakening; out of our lineage minds will spring that will reach back to us in our littleness to know us better than we know ourselves. A day will come, one day in the unending succession of days, when beings, beings who are now latent in our thoughts and hidden in our loins shall stand upon this Earth as one stands upon a footstool, and shall laugh and reach out their hands amidst the stars."
    H. G. Wells, Things to Come
    🖖

    • @keiththompson-mg4yt
      @keiththompson-mg4yt Год назад +7

      WOW. That IS one hell of a speech. That's truly remarkable, and I thank you for contributing it.
      I read a few of his most popular novels when I was a kid, but had never heard of this one. And I had forgotten what a deep thinker and writer he was; it's too easy to recall only the more superficial aspects of his legacy, because they ARE really good stories, even just on the surface. I'm thinking maybe it's time to revisit him.

    • @donaldteuber8588
      @donaldteuber8588 5 месяцев назад +4

      Imagine this soliloquy being given by Ramond Massey and concluding with the immoral... "all of the universe or nothing which shall it be?..
      WHICH SHALL IT BE?

    • @appleandoranges1
      @appleandoranges1 Месяц назад +1

      Ironic that in our world we made it to the moon only 3 and a bit decades after the movie was made, while in the movie it was a century....

  • @frankfarago2825
    @frankfarago2825 Год назад +80

    My Hungarian dad (born in 1906) was involved in this production in the U.K. I believe it was in 1935-36. Since the producer Korda György was Hungarian, it was rather easy to get spot on his productions with a Hungarian background.

    • @flashgordon6670
      @flashgordon6670 Год назад +8

      Hooray for Hungary! Egershegerdred!

    • @jsl151850b
      @jsl151850b Год назад +3

      Did he work on 'The Man Who Could Work Miracles' also?

  • @ChrisBGramz4u
    @ChrisBGramz4u Год назад +19

    not sure what to think, when a movie almost 100 yrs old is better then most new ones.

    • @paulohagan3309
      @paulohagan3309 7 месяцев назад +4

      I'd suspect that's often been the case.

  • @donaldwhittaker7987
    @donaldwhittaker7987 Месяц назад +4

    This and metropolis are where it's at. Outstanding.

  • @paulharris7660
    @paulharris7660 Год назад +31

    Just to add, I think the young girl with her Grandfather is; Dame Anne Laura Dorinthea McLaren, DBE, FRS, FRCOG (26 April 1927 - 7 July 2007)[1] was a British scientist who was a leading figure in developmental biology.[2] Her work helped lead to human in vitro fertilisation (IVF),[3] and she received many honours for her contributions to science, including election as fellow of the Royal Society. Was her only movie

    • @zabdas83
      @zabdas83 Год назад +6

      Was she Fabian socialist and part of Order of the Eastern star?
      You should find out and if so look into their seedy past

    • @keiththompson-mg4yt
      @keiththompson-mg4yt Год назад +1

      @zabdas83 Isn't she one who started extracting adrenochrome from the pineal glands of children who were kidnapped and killed by the global elite, in their insatiable thirst for Satanic power?
      I do understand that a certain degree of fascination with crackpot, lunatic conspiracy theories is perennial. But don't you ever think this might be getting just a little out of hand here in recent years?

    • @Nickcooper625
      @Nickcooper625 Год назад +1

      Yes, it is her. One of my biggest regrets was not realising she was still alive in early 2007, when we did the UK DVD release (Network), as we could have sought her out for an interview. Sadly, she was killed in a car crash in the July.
      Wells actually wanted his neice to play the little girl, but McLaren was chosen instead (Wells was friends with her parents).

    • @Nickcooper625
      @Nickcooper625 Год назад +1

      @@zabdas83 Not everyone buys into nonsense conspiracy theories.

    • @rogueriderhood1862
      @rogueriderhood1862 5 часов назад

      @Nickcooper625 But enough do to make it depressing.

  • @peterjackgglithero2995
    @peterjackgglithero2995 Год назад +90

    I can hardly praise this movie highly enough !
    The photographic quality and the way it's coordinated, the power of it's imagination.

    • @handsomeman-pm9vy
      @handsomeman-pm9vy Год назад +8

      Outstanding for the time period.

    • @neville132bbk
      @neville132bbk Год назад +5

      @@handsomeman-pm9vy Yes, but the script writer is so stilted by what we expect now.

  • @rjmcallister1888
    @rjmcallister1888 Год назад +172

    The first 30 minutes or so of this is amazing. That HG Wells meddled too deeply in the project (a superior writer who knew nothing about making movies) made it less of a movie than it ended up being. And this one is a true classic, despite Wells' sometimes ham-handed dialogue. Great performances all through this, especially Sir Ralph Richardson's scene-munching turn as The Boss. Considering this was made primarily in 1935 (released in '36), marvel at the effects available at the time. There was nothing like it before, and the blueprint for many movies that came after. I have the full Criterion set this was taken from; excellent print.

    • @flashgordon6670
      @flashgordon6670 Год назад +10

      Where did they film the futuristic city and the space gun?

    • @hectorpascal
      @hectorpascal Год назад +8

      In the mid 1930's Wells was about 70 years old and like others, he knew well that a war in Europe was coming. Being vehemently anti-war, I think he saw this film as a way of more widely presenting his ideas for the positive social progress that could emerge from such a conflict. He had previously written on this theme in 1897 and 1931, as well as the fictional "discussion" in 1933, bearing the same title as the film. I very much doubt that Korda or Menzies would have allowed him too much freedom to meddle during production. In fact the film was heavily cut both before release and also in 1943. The dialogue is typically Wellsian - it should probably be viewed as a "Victorian" didactic style rather than "ham-handed". The whole film is more of a sermon than an entertainment.

    • @maxi-me
      @maxi-me Год назад +2

      Fantastic cinematography and then for some they tipped their hand and showed a scene that was all too obviously a toy tank in the sandbox @16:39 😅

    • @Nickcooper625
      @Nickcooper625 Год назад +5

      @@flashgordon6670 The Space Gun was a large model built on what would become the back-lot of Denham Studios (the land had been acquired, but the studio not yet built), where the two version of the Everytown square were also constructed, one complete for 1940, and the other ruined for the 1966 and 1970 sequences. The 2036 Everytown was all shot in the studio with hanging miniatures.

    • @flashgordon6670
      @flashgordon6670 Год назад +1

      @@Nickcooper625 Saddam Hussain’s super gun was supposed to be a space gun, there’s a film about it that I saw recently, not too bad. Doomsday Gun 1994 with Frank Lagella.
      I bet there’s a secret space gun somewhere, or more than one. That would explain all the UFOs, the black holes in our economies, all the missing gold and what keeps the world relatively peaceful, at least for now that is.
      If a broken 2 bit Middle East country could consider doing it, it must be done already by someone. Logically it would be underground in a silo with a concealed rooftop emplacement, the energy from the blast would be absorbed by giant springs and things. The gun could go back down on a bracket with sliders and the whole thing encased in within a giant hydraulic piston that contains the sound shockwaves and also doubles cooling the gun barrel. The gun barrel has electro magnets to aid the UFOs, either reducing, or completely eliminating the blast from explosive propellants and or compressed air is used instead, or in duo with electro magnets. Bung a few dudes in flying saucers and Bob’s your uncle.

  • @georgevavoulis4758
    @georgevavoulis4758 Год назад +17

    One of the best science fiction movies ever made with very powerful lessons for all

  • @walterfechter8080
    @walterfechter8080 Год назад +105

    "Wings over the world" -- Memorable dialog. This film is somewhat grim, but also quite prophetic and hopeful. I would like to dedicate this film in very loving memory of my grandparents -- both English -- both survivors of "The Blitz." Many thanks for posting this remarkable film!

    • @chipsramek3868
      @chipsramek3868 Год назад

      Bombed by Your own Government who wanted Israel to get it's own country ...You forgot to mention that fact !

    • @patrickmulroney9452
      @patrickmulroney9452 Год назад +2

      and the dictator called wings over his wits!

    • @flashgordon6670
      @flashgordon6670 Год назад +3

      “Both grandparents”
      You should have 4 grandparents, unless they were brother and sister who had an incestuous relationship?

    • @superduper9357
      @superduper9357 9 месяцев назад +7

      @@flashgordon6670 Most of us can understand that he is referring to his English side of the family, Remember no one likes a smart arse!

    • @flashgordon6670
      @flashgordon6670 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@superduper9357 Yes I know that I was just joking you dimlo.

  • @fhuber7507
    @fhuber7507 Год назад +20

    H G Wells and George Orwell were accurate in predicting the future....

  • @lindalanish9720
    @lindalanish9720 Год назад +23

    I believe everyone should see this great film. Living today in America, this film shows how wars sneak upon you. Let's keep looking around and notice the things that are around us. Listen to things around us. We can no longer trust everything people say, we must believe in their actions. We must remember our history of the the 20th century wars. The same causes of the last war is starting to become a cause for our next war. People who are greedy and want power that are willing to step on the backs of the weak and poor to obtain power over everyone are already here. They are already in our Congress. Are u people watching? They read history and they know what to do. Do you?

    • @bretthess6376
      @bretthess6376 Год назад +2

      They don't read history and they don't know what they are doing.

    • @keiththompson-mg4yt
      @keiththompson-mg4yt Год назад

      @bretthess6376 Agreed. We now have duly elected Representatives in Washington who believe in Jewish Space Lasers, and a cabal of the world's elite who kidnap children in order to harvest their pineal glands to obtain adrenochrome (among other even more nefarious purposes).
      No, they don't read history; most of them don't read, period, and they haven't a clue as to what they're doing. Those from that side of the aisle who did saw the writing on the wall immediately following the 2016 election and fled like their tails were on fire.

    • @bovnycccoperalover3579
      @bovnycccoperalover3579 11 месяцев назад

      They know history but like Hitler believe that it doesn't apply to the. Will their money and power save them death. Pride truly is the worse of the seven deadly sins.

    • @susannbasta2972
      @susannbasta2972 11 месяцев назад +2

      I do. I smashed my television 6 years ago.

  • @marklipson
    @marklipson Год назад +15

    What a frickin masterpiece. I've seen this about a half-dozen times. It gets better every time. This may be the best print I've seen. One of the few truly epic sci-fi sagas ever created...

  • @mikeat2637
    @mikeat2637 Год назад +85

    A groundbreaking film right up there with Fritz Lang's Metropolis. Looking back at what transpired after this film came out showed how prescient it was. An excellent cast of the greats of that era.

    • @netcurtains
      @netcurtains 9 месяцев назад +4

      Nothing like metropolis

    • @AuntLizzie
      @AuntLizzie 7 месяцев назад +2

      Fascinating. A good editor would have helped, but I loved the futuristic machines. It showed how history repeats itself too.🐏🐑

    • @phylis3917
      @phylis3917 7 месяцев назад +2

      Yes.

    • @MARK-gp9hb
      @MARK-gp9hb 6 месяцев назад +1

      Metropolis is nothing compared to this masterpiece, idk why people get so excited about Metropolis, it was always an obscure and niche film, most people didn't care about it until recently.

    • @netcurtains
      @netcurtains 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@MARK-gp9hb clueless

  • @SeldimSeen1
    @SeldimSeen1 Год назад +10

    The first scenes of the movie was eerily prophetic as England was at war in 1939.

  • @bobbythorman7421
    @bobbythorman7421 Год назад +28

    How prophetic this was at the time. How terrifying it would be for those few who lived through it to see this now.

  • @rickcourier8451
    @rickcourier8451 Год назад +20

    My first time seeing this classic film. Amazing! Wells was such a visionary. Remarkable. Thanks for sharing.

    • @beba9994
      @beba9994 Год назад +1

      H . G. Is my homie

  • @Drrrtclod
    @Drrrtclod 7 месяцев назад +11

    this film did predict the future in that it is full of people who enthusiastically spout their worldviews at eachother and refuse to conceive that anyone who disagrees should even exist, let alone be reasoned with. the sweet, stary-eyed, corny aesthetics are lots of fun to look at. five stars

  • @ladymecha8718
    @ladymecha8718 Год назад +68

    This movie made 3 years before World War 2, helps to realize the frame of mind of the era.

    • @Dularr
      @Dularr Год назад +9

      At the start of the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939)

    • @techpriest4787
      @techpriest4787 Год назад

      This movie is clearly anti war and rightfully so. That is why there were no flags or actual names of political powers I think. To avoid taking sides and just deliver the message. That is why we now have war too. Obsession over ideology. The Nazies rather quickly started their pro war moves as soon as they came to power in 1933. I am sure you could see it in their obsession that it could lead to war. The Nazie's view on Germany's treatment after WW1 was already known. I am sure you could pick up the scent of revenge...

    • @russward2612
      @russward2612 Год назад +5

      It depends on what part of the world you're talking about. Japan was already occupying mainland China.

    • @sailaway8244
      @sailaway8244 Год назад

      It was deep state programming for what was planned....notice the name's of the characters, The distributor and the movie companies name 🧐

    • @keiththompson-mg4yt
      @keiththompson-mg4yt Год назад +1

      ... But that's pretty much the definition of a regional conflict, not a world war, which simply had not yet begun.

  • @PointyTailofSatan
    @PointyTailofSatan Год назад +62

    The camera work. The music. The sets. Pure genius. What else can one say?

    • @handsomeman-pm9vy
      @handsomeman-pm9vy Год назад +5

      Outstanding for the time period.

    • @zantigar
      @zantigar Год назад +3

      @@handsomeman-pm9vy Beautiful in any period!

    • @chipsramek3868
      @chipsramek3868 Год назад +3

      @@handsomeman-pm9vy Why so caught up in that overused phrase ? It's great compared to almost anything Hollyweird has produced since 2010.

    • @clopper3753
      @clopper3753 Год назад

      Transformers was better.

    • @urbanurchin5930
      @urbanurchin5930 Год назад

      @@clopper3753 ......too bad that the story line of Transformers only appealed to nit wits.......

  • @DEPARTMENTOFREDUNDANCYDEPT
    @DEPARTMENTOFREDUNDANCYDEPT Год назад +267

    This movie was made when people still believed in the possibility of a human-built utopia. If the 20th century taught us anything it is that any utopia created by flawed human beings will inevitably require a long swim across an ocean of blood, and all attempted utopias descend into authoritarian rule.

    • @yashpatel261
      @yashpatel261 Год назад

      Bingo. Utopias require mass death and authoritarianism.

    • @dmjune1
      @dmjune1 Год назад +24

      The first sensible thing I've read here in the comments.

    • @Older_Mountain-goat_1984
      @Older_Mountain-goat_1984 8 месяцев назад

      Disagree:
      1. I think society descends into authoritarian rule because authoritarians seize control via aggressive force and\or brainwashing the masses to willingly allow themselves to become slaves, because they believe themselves to be free, and haven't grown up into autonomous adults because they mindlessly believe whatever they're told, including being too lazy to be responsible for their own lives, thus they willingly allow other to be responsible for them.
      And that the authoritarian nature of a society is well under way long before many realise it, thus sometimes, it's not that a society descended, it's just that people slowly begin to wake up from their social conditioning, when they cease operating from the emotions (as many are easily manipulated at the emotional level (fear and desire), and relalise they were always in a dystopia.
      2. I'd like to read of all these 20th century utopias you mentioned that you claim have all fell into ruin.

    • @jamesvanderhoorn1117
      @jamesvanderhoorn1117 8 месяцев назад

      Most people in 1936 didn't believe in a utopia. Lots of people now still do.

    • @niibarnorsaba
      @niibarnorsaba 8 месяцев назад

      Agreed. Do you think they descend into authoritarian rule? More like start with it. It’s just hidden.

  • @james_tiberius_kirk73
    @james_tiberius_kirk73 9 месяцев назад +9

    H.G Wells was a master storyteller and visionary. Sadly, he is gone and yet the would-be conquerors and war-mongers remain and sadly, they always will.

  • @gregwade7974
    @gregwade7974 Год назад +11

    Spine-chillingly accurate..

  • @RevanDBT
    @RevanDBT Год назад +10

    Best quality version I’ve seen of this film. Thank you for posting it!

    • @dtaylor939
      @dtaylor939 11 дней назад

      Isn't it a lovely movie?

  • @davebowles1957
    @davebowles1957 Год назад +20

    Wow, what a good movie. I'd never heard of it.
    For a movie released in 1936 the special effects are brillian, especially the futuristic part towards the end.
    Loved it.
    *spoiler alert*
    The futuristic part nailed it with the flat screen tvs, smartwatch, and those outfits the men wore I believe I've seen those on those weird designer runway outfits that men wear, lol.

    • @kenbritton8227
      @kenbritton8227 5 месяцев назад +1

      Ah , finally the date. I can't figure why the date is so often left out.

  • @hugh-johnfleming289
    @hugh-johnfleming289 Год назад +18

    One can only suggest this be seen in a Theater. I had that extraordinary experience, a good print at a good "house," some years ago. Such an elegant production...

    • @hyacinthlynch843
      @hyacinthlynch843 Год назад +2

      Yes absolutely, this movie has to be experienced on the big screen.

  • @patdoyle3686
    @patdoyle3686 Год назад +14

    Such an exiting movie in 2023 stands to reason in 1935 this movie on the big screen must have been awesome

    • @thomasgansevoort929
      @thomasgansevoort929 Год назад +4

      Hi PD, I have seen this on the big screen, and your right it is awesome full size. (Pretty awesome on the small one too). TG

  • @robingannaway8262
    @robingannaway8262 Год назад +9

    Had the privilege of seeing it on the big screen at the local museum, still relevant nearly a century after it was made.

  • @marknesselhaus4376
    @marknesselhaus4376 Год назад +51

    In my 66 years, this is the first time I have seen this movie. Really well done for its time. I would not mind flying the Auto-gyro near the end as it is a nice design even by today's standards and the way the space craft was lifted resembles the SpaceX Starship somewhat 🙂

    • @sgabig
      @sgabig 9 месяцев назад +3

      The thing at the end was just a cannon & SpaceX is a rocket

    • @savage22bolt32
      @savage22bolt32 7 месяцев назад +1

      I'm in your age group. I wish I saw this as a kid, and not today at 68.

    • @RaptorFromWeegee
      @RaptorFromWeegee 7 месяцев назад +1

      That was a totally unrealistic autogyro, just silly actually. Not at all like the flight envelope of a real autogyro

    • @jacketrussell
      @jacketrussell 7 месяцев назад +6

      First time seeing this film and I'm 69.
      Do I win?

    • @RaptorFromWeegee
      @RaptorFromWeegee 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@jacketrussell HEEeey, loooks like we have a winner, come right on up here, sir! Gene, tell him whats he's won!

  • @nedludd7622
    @nedludd7622 Месяц назад +2

    The book by Wells "Short History of the World" is well worth reading. It was advanced for its time.

  • @ericnelson3820
    @ericnelson3820 Год назад +15

    What a great early sci-fi movie. I enjoyed it immensely

  • @larryparis925
    @larryparis925 11 месяцев назад +18

    H.G. Wells published this book in 1933. Isaac Asimov published the Foundation story in serial form beginning in 1942. It seems to me that Wells had a huge influence on Asimov, in which the latter took not only the rise and fall of Rome , as is usually stated, for his inspiration for Foundation, but expanded on Wells' work of Things To Come. Don't know for sure... but there seems to be an influence.

    • @tim2015
      @tim2015 9 месяцев назад +6

      I think you may well be right. This is a connection which had not occurred to me, even though I read several of Wells's and Asimov's books many years ago.

  • @spmoran4703
    @spmoran4703 Год назад +11

    The sound track is amazing . The whole movie is amazing .

  • @robbinpapalucas4620
    @robbinpapalucas4620 8 месяцев назад +7

    Wells was an insider, he knew what the controllers planned for humanity 😮

  • @kokomo9764
    @kokomo9764 Год назад +6

    I have watched this film many times over the years. Outstanding!

  • @simonf8902
    @simonf8902 Год назад +5

    Relevant for 2023=

  • @steadmanuhlich6734
    @steadmanuhlich6734 Год назад +48

    I very much enjoyed seeing this classic film. Very impressive special effects before CGI was used. Loved (marveled) at the practical effects of tiny people running on huge sets, huge model buildings, and much more for set design. There are some interesting aircraft in the film too (both real and imaginary). Sadly, this film also made me think of our present day situation with a world fearing WW3 and recent pandemic, etc. Futurism is like that, with some dystopian ideas and some hope too. FYI: there is a wikipedia page devoted to this film which provides details on production, etc. Worth reading if you are interested in the film.

    • @BartholomewSmutz
      @BartholomewSmutz Год назад +3

      I was also impressed with the practical effects. There just isn't any movie magic in CGI effects, just sterile technology.

    • @abdul-kabiralegbe5660
      @abdul-kabiralegbe5660 Год назад +2

      Thanks!

  • @scottydouglass1892
    @scottydouglass1892 Год назад +29

    It amazes me how far in the future did our best science fiction writers see.

    • @handsomeman-pm9vy
      @handsomeman-pm9vy Год назад +1

      Outstanding for the time period.

    • @hydrolito
      @hydrolito Год назад +3

      Mary Shelley in 1818 foresaw bringing a body back to life using animal parts in Frankenstein. However ancient Egyptians thought gods came from another star system They also did some type of brain surgery. Some thought the pyramids might have been used as a transmitter or receiver. Also, there is something called The Bagdad battery. The ark of the covenant might have also been some kind of battery a person that touched it died. Although in movie Raiders of the lost ark they called it a radio.

    • @petersinclair3997
      @petersinclair3997 Год назад

      Not so sure about the ancient aliens thing. The achievements of the Ancient Egyptians goes beyond the Pyramids (I have been inside the Great Pyramid.). The Egyptians were advanced with animal husbandry and deliberately designing varieties of crops for different seasons. The afterlife for those, who lived good lives, was paradise in the Land of Reeds. The dead had to prove their virtue to a series of Gods. Anubis and Osiris measured the deceased heart on scale against a feather. Nothing extraterrestrial.

    • @keiththompson-mg4yt
      @keiththompson-mg4yt Год назад

      @petersinclair3997 Thank you for that injection of the rational.
      I'm nearly certain that we've excavated numerous fossils from the days when we lived in caves in Europe whose skulls showed evidence of trepanning. I'm not sure if that meets the definition of ancient brain surgery, or not. But then again, I don't know what the OP was referring to in that attribution.

  • @josemoreno3334
    @josemoreno3334 Год назад +17

    I bought a copy of this movie at a Dollar Tree store out hear in Arizona a few years a go.. The movie is a classic. Love watching it.

    • @allenjones3130
      @allenjones3130 Год назад +1

      A science-fiction masterwork, suitable for family viewing and dominated by Raymond Massey's outstanding performance.

    • @robinbrowne5419
      @robinbrowne5419 5 часов назад

      I'm watching it on RUclips but we have a Dollar Tree store here in Ottawa Canada where I usually buy batteries. Cheers :-)

  • @TheKeenTribe
    @TheKeenTribe Год назад +11

    Such a brilliant movie! So far ahead of its time!

  • @lilblackduc7312
    @lilblackduc7312 Год назад +3

    Beautiful copy of a timeless classic! Thank you...🇺🇸 😎👍☕

  • @markcreed9745
    @markcreed9745 4 месяца назад +2

    What a stunning film ! First time I've watched it and it's hard to believe it was made in 1936.

  • @1tarawho
    @1tarawho 11 месяцев назад +8

    Wells was way ahead of his time and I feel he somehow saw what the future held for humanity and wrote about it in his amazing books!!

  • @davidm9870
    @davidm9870 Год назад +6

    Great upload, thanks. Best quality version that I've seen....👍👍👏

  • @snarflatful
    @snarflatful Месяц назад +1

    I'm 67 and a huge film buff. Where has this film been my whole life?!

  • @NelsonStJames
    @NelsonStJames Год назад +28

    As a kid I always remember seeing stills from this film in magazines like Starlog and Famous Monsters of Filmland, and I can't believe that I finally got to see it in 2023! The design of this movie is incredible, and it's plot is epic and intriguing, and it makes one remember that at one time Science Fiction movies were really science fiction, but then I guess it helps to have your source material come from an actual Sf author.
    It's too bad we'll never see the original 117 minute cut.

    • @akunakii3782
      @akunakii3782 Год назад

      kidding? whats about this more scince fiction?

    • @Racistobama
      @Racistobama Год назад +2

      DItto. I still have some of my old Starlogs, the poor tattered things. Only in the last couple of years am I getting around to taking in and appreciating the classics.

  • @robertabrams8562
    @robertabrams8562 Год назад +5

    This is one helluva
    movie for 1936…and way ahead of it’s time for sure

  • @carmenmiranda652
    @carmenmiranda652 Год назад +5

    "This modern world is full of voices..." How appropriate!

  • @Debssssss
    @Debssssss Год назад +13

    British novelist H.G Wells was ahead of his times a man like this can only walk this earth but once 🌎.

  • @edwardprice140
    @edwardprice140 5 месяцев назад +4

    In 1936 That little plane at 33:30 was , and still is a bad ass design.

    • @davidmayhew8083
      @davidmayhew8083 Месяц назад

      The great 1939 World's Fair was right around the corner. All WHITE!!! The future made incarnate! Of course all utopia's are illusions.

  • @MichaelMcFerrin
    @MichaelMcFerrin Год назад +12

    At about the 16 minute mark,the part where the people were gassed to death is missing including the child plugging his nose with fingers. I have a copy of this in the collection. This movie is an introduction to one world gouvernment. Movie WAY ahead of it's time and excellent,,,, ,thanx!

    • @debravictoria7452
      @debravictoria7452 Год назад +8

      And mentioned involvement of free masonry

    • @riverraisin1
      @riverraisin1 Год назад

      Why is it ahead of its time?

    • @Nickcooper625
      @Nickcooper625 Год назад

      @@debravictoria7452 No, that's just a metaphor.

    • @joelbest2424
      @joelbest2424 11 месяцев назад +2

      Almost all of the initial attack on Everytown has been deleted. A shame.

  • @dabedwards
    @dabedwards Год назад +10

    THE MUSIC! THE MUSIC! Shame sound recording was still quite primitive, but you can hear its magnificence in various rerecordings of suites from this movie. Arthur Bliss rivalled Prokofiev in the quality of his film scores.

  • @frankmariani1259
    @frankmariani1259 Год назад +5

    Londoners at the viewing of this movie, laughed when seeing the bombing of "London." Little did they realize that in just a few years...

    • @dennisyoung4631
      @dennisyoung4631 Год назад

      And a few years after - the sudden *BANG!* of an arriving guided Vengeance missile!

    • @Nickcooper625
      @Nickcooper625 Год назад +1

      No they didn't (it's not actually London in the film). When it was re-released in 1943 audiences did laugh at the rather poor model shots of the enemy aircraft crossing the white cliffs of Dover, but the bombing scenes were greeted by silence.

    • @frankmariani1259
      @frankmariani1259 Год назад

      @@Nickcooper625 You mistook what I said.

    • @Nickcooper625
      @Nickcooper625 Год назад +1

      @@frankmariani1259 No, I recognised that you claimed something that wasn't true.

  • @johnkemas7344
    @johnkemas7344 7 месяцев назад +4

    How ironic this movie was produced in 1936, 87 years ago, and even though technology has advanced with leaps and bounds, mankind is still not anymore civilized. All we have learned to do is kill more efficiently, faster and with greater impunity. We actually made it to the moon in the 1960's but this movie saw this reality so far in advance it is amazing!! But we really aren't any better off than the people in this movie.

  • @ronaldstrange8981
    @ronaldstrange8981 6 месяцев назад +2

    Made the same year as me, 1936, so it must be very good. Regards from England, December, 2023.

  • @Paladin1873
    @Paladin1873 10 месяцев назад +3

    "science is a magnificent material force,
    but it is not a teacher of morals."
    - William Jennings Bryan

  • @richardcolton1009
    @richardcolton1009 Год назад +18

    shows u dont need cgi to tell a good story--this is brilliant!

    • @billhuber2964
      @billhuber2964 Год назад +2

      Heck yes Mr.

    • @handsomeman-pm9vy
      @handsomeman-pm9vy Год назад +2

      CGI sucks!

    • @seltaeb9691
      @seltaeb9691 Год назад

      Well it was CGI really, for instance from this period & carried on into the 60s, if a backdrop of a castle on a hill, they would paint that backdrop scene onto a sq metre of glass & then positioned it so the camera picked it out & it looked so real. Was used a lot in Tyrone Power swashbuckling movies etc right into big productions like Ben Hur. Then Ray Harryhausen & his stop motion that inspired Wallace & Gromit, they took it to another world that Ray wouldn't believe possible. Disney classic years was frame by frame of drawings. It's too easy now.

    • @handsomeman-pm9vy
      @handsomeman-pm9vy Год назад +3

      @@seltaeb9691
      No! CGI (computed generated images).

    • @richardcolton1009
      @richardcolton1009 Год назад +2

      @@seltaeb9691 just stop ok

  • @karinteves1412
    @karinteves1412 Год назад +8

    Incredible considering the film was made in 1936. Wells definitely had inside information of the scripted plan well in advance.

    • @robinleebraun7739
      @robinleebraun7739 11 месяцев назад

      I don’t think he had any inside information. The clues were there for anyone to see in the mid 30s’. Fascists telling huge lies that populations wanted to hear. We are in the middle of a similar situation right now in 2023. Fascists are rising again, scapegoating and lying and there are millions just swallowing those lies whole. Selling fear and anger.

    • @davidstevenson9517
      @davidstevenson9517 5 месяцев назад

      You whistle well, Robin!

  • @davidnoelfranks1124
    @davidnoelfranks1124 Год назад +3

    Two Great British Sc / Fi writers , Wells along with John Wyndham .

  • @alanfoster6589
    @alanfoster6589 8 месяцев назад +3

    Long ago, an enterprising promoter found out that H.G.Wells and Orson Welles were both going to be in San Antonio at the same time. He got them together in the studio for a brief chat, which is quite fascinating. Sound quality is excellent. Orson fanboying in the presence of the great H.G., talking about the film he was making at the time (Citizen Kane) and Welles chiding him about "that radio program". A present from Arthur C. Clarke. Wish I could post it here.

  • @josebenito15
    @josebenito15 Год назад +7

    It's weird... But it's also charming. I read about this film but I've not seen it until now.. Thanks so much for posting this film. 🎥🎥

  • @ivanleterror9158
    @ivanleterror9158 7 месяцев назад +1

    87 years old yet IMHO the special effects, sets, and such are equal to what we have today and without the use of CGI. And some of those items are here today.

  • @Makeyourselfbig
    @Makeyourselfbig Год назад +8

    "a rational state rebuilds civilization and attempts space travel."
    Didn't America and Britain used to be one of those?

    • @alisdairmclean8605
      @alisdairmclean8605 Год назад +4

      I know. Now look at us.

    • @michaelpettersson4919
      @michaelpettersson4919 Год назад +2

      Used to. Now it take private people like Elon Musk to attempt those things. If NASA yoes to Mars it be a quifk flag planting mission and then it will just fizzle out like the moon missions did.

    • @schaferhundschmidt1798
      @schaferhundschmidt1798 Год назад

      Yes, the British space program is such a success that no one has heard of it, unless you consider Richard Branson the British space program. 😏

    • @bretthess6376
      @bretthess6376 Год назад

      @@alisdairmclean8605 Us? There is no US.

  • @toastnjam7384
    @toastnjam7384 Год назад +9

    I became a fan of the Apocalyptic/Post-Apocalyptic genera when I first saw this as a kid back in the 60's. Like the model Streamline Moderne tanks. The next generation of tanks should be designed by movie art directors.

    • @garyfinn8772
      @garyfinn8772 Год назад +1

      Your wish will be coming truer sooner than you think believe me

    • @lowkeyliesmith3795
      @lowkeyliesmith3795 Год назад

      Everytown Ukraine and Russia!

  • @paulharris7660
    @paulharris7660 Год назад +6

    As a Child I watched Logan's run 1st, then as a younger man-watched this, and was impressed.

  • @timrasico7831
    @timrasico7831 Год назад +4

    This movie is still a powerful film!

  • @scronyx
    @scronyx Год назад +3

    I find the talk of a new world worder, freemasonry of science, the end of sovereign nation states quite interesting, yet so far have seen no other comment made on it. HG Wells would release a book titled The New World Order in 1940.

  • @cowboykelly6590
    @cowboykelly6590 Год назад +8

    This is a Fabulous movie, so good I got it on DVD . Worth it , all the way. I have a huge Collection of my Sci fi black and white movies . Better than any movie made today. Just my opinion though .🤠🖖

    • @michaelsigismonde7958
      @michaelsigismonde7958 Год назад

      Your opinion seems to be my opinion, too. H.G. Wells was perhaps the most fabulous sci-fi writer of all time. The Tom Cruise version of War of the Worlds was a much better rendition of the earlier one, with Gene Barry as the lead. My only complaint, a minor one, is that the scene should have been set in England instead of America, like it was in the H.G. Wells novel.

    • @michaelsigismonde7958
      @michaelsigismonde7958 Год назад +1

      Your opinion seems to be my opinion, too. H.G. Wells was perhaps the most fabulous sci-fi writer of all time. The Tom Cruise version of War of the Worlds was a much better rendition of the earlier one, with Gene Barry as the lead. My only complaint, a minor one, is that the scene should have been set in England instead of America, like it was in the H.G. Wells novel.

  • @patricktilton5377
    @patricktilton5377 Год назад +15

    When Stanley Kubrick approached Arthur C. Clarke about collaborating on a prospective science fiction film production, Clarke made a list of previously made SF films for Kubrick to see, THINGS TO COME being one of them . . . and Kubrick absolutely hated it. Kubrick, of course, was far more interested in depicting a future that seemed believable, for all its wondrous technological advances, and it's interesting to contrast the more realistic, mundane dialogue in "2001" with the stentorian declamations delivered by the Orators in this production. I can see why it wasn't Kubrick's cup of tea, but it has its place in the history of SF in films, and we have to be able to appreciate it for what it was, coming from an "old school" sensibility and generations removed from the more sophisticated visions of the Future we've gotten in subsequent productions. THINGS TO COME was not a film that sought to explore its subject with subtlety, that's for sure. Thanks for the upload.

    • @steadmanuhlich6734
      @steadmanuhlich6734 Год назад

      Thanks for sharing that info about Kubrick and this film. I liked your comments.

    • @grahamcoyne5317
      @grahamcoyne5317 Год назад

      Kubik added to the fear stricken society already barely reeling from one war to the next... if the truth was known to the masses the against communism would stop... after all, all wars are finaced(bankers). Without collateral no backing! Just let that sink in .... now we turn east, our attention the middle east and Asia. Let the dis-information of world government news add the fear.

    • @virgilwilliams2378
      @virgilwilliams2378 Год назад +1

      Well lease this film is way more interesting than Kubrick's 2001 Space Oddesy, which made me fall asleep.

    • @QuadriviumNumbers
      @QuadriviumNumbers Год назад

      @@virgilwilliams2378 No it's not!

    • @virgilwilliams2378
      @virgilwilliams2378 Год назад

      @@QuadriviumNumbers Uh.. The intro made me fall asleep.

  • @montbob100
    @montbob100 5 месяцев назад +2

    now we're living it.

  • @agath8a508
    @agath8a508 8 месяцев назад +3

    I am surprised and saddened by the fact that, often, the highly acclaimed HD-restorations of a film are mainly concerned with the images (good job!) while completely disregarding the audio.

    • @Harriet-Jesamine
      @Harriet-Jesamine 4 месяца назад

      👍
      Very good point, I've also noticed how
      Visuals seem to have a higher hierarchical position in film restoration than Audio.
      When you would expect them to be seen as ine overall interconnected whole.

  • @russward2612
    @russward2612 Год назад +14

    H G Wells gave us so much great literature. Like any science fiction writer, he was a prophet also. The world was not the same after his vision.
    For a very different take on his works, check out "Jeff Wayne's musical version of War of the Worlds" My favorite is the original with Richard Burton as the narrator. The one with Liam Neeson is good too.✌️🖖

    • @chipsramek3868
      @chipsramek3868 Год назад

      H G Wells was a Gatekeeper for the TRIBE. Sorry to burst Your bubble ... he was a Hollyweird sellout and communist at heart.

    • @crhu319
      @crhu319 Год назад

      Wayne's version inspired I think Ayreon "Day that the World Breaks Down".

    • @hectorpascal
      @hectorpascal Год назад +2

      In fact, Wells was less a science fiction novelist than a progressive social commentator. His comments on the problems of Western society eventually become his main preoccupation, and he also wrote comic novels about lower middle-class life. His short stories, as well as his non-fiction output, including works on politics, history and popular science, were an additional source of his prophetic ideas.
      (I also agree with you about the Jeff Wayne/Richard Burton recording!)

    • @cindy7911
      @cindy7911 11 месяцев назад

      @@hectorpascal , No one would have believed, that in the last years of the 19th century, human affairs were being watched from the timeless worlds of space. No one could have dreamed that we were being scrutinized, as someone with a microscope studies creatures that swarm and multiply in a drop of water. Few men even considered the possibility of life on other planets.....and yet across the timeless worlds of space, minds immeasurably superior to ours, regarded this world with envious eyes....and slowly and surely, they drew their plans against us....
      This was my favorite album as a young child in the 70’s and the above was written from memory.....I believe I still remember most of the narrative....and I am not even a native English speaker. Absolutely amazing ❤️

  • @christadauria4362
    @christadauria4362 Год назад +4

    Well I have heard about the famous classic sci- fiction author who wrote “Time Machine”, “War of the Worlds “ and others-H.G. Wells as I was younger at my age when I read the Classic Comics about novels by H.G. Wells as I remember so well. Good!

  • @handsomeman-pm9vy
    @handsomeman-pm9vy Год назад +6

    1936 SiFi in high definition. Wow!

  • @philiprife5556
    @philiprife5556 10 месяцев назад +3

    Surprisingly good special effects and futuristic sets for 1936. Overall I enjoyed this film, forgiving of its shortcomings.

  • @oldpanamacitybeach
    @oldpanamacitybeach Год назад +3

    The one thing that the movie got spot-on in its portrayal of the future is plastic. Plexiglas, and similar polymers, were all very new in 1936. Today, they are ubiquitous.

  • @kn9ioutom
    @kn9ioutom 7 месяцев назад +1

    GREAT CLASSIC MOVIE PREDICTING THE WORLDS FUTURE !

  • @mikehobart
    @mikehobart Год назад +13

    I think this is the clearest print of this movie I've seen on-line 👍

    • @cowboykelly6590
      @cowboykelly6590 Год назад

      Yes, it's nice and sharp . 🤠🖖

    • @handsomeman-pm9vy
      @handsomeman-pm9vy Год назад

      @@cowboykelly6590
      Outstanding for the time period.

    • @denizalgazi
      @denizalgazi Год назад +1

      Criterion did a fantastic digital restoration!

    • @Nickcooper625
      @Nickcooper625 Год назад

      @@denizalgazi Network in the UK remastered it first from the same print (held by the British Film Institute).

  • @aethellstan
    @aethellstan Год назад +4

    i've read the book and are just starting to watch the film. the book was amazing, hg wells was an absolute genius.

  • @hemming57
    @hemming57 Год назад +7

    Always loved the opening, Christmas, singing carols, everyone is happy and all around them are banners and newspaper headlines: WAR, WAR, WAR!

    • @bennorwood8433
      @bennorwood8433 Год назад +1

      Me too kind of wish they had more seems like that in some poster End of the world movies

  • @merryl55
    @merryl55 8 месяцев назад +2

    One of my favorite films.

  • @LaptopLarry330
    @LaptopLarry330 Год назад +5

    This version of “Things To Come” is a totally and completely different film from the heavily censored American version that I have watched on cable television. I am angry with the management of United Artists in the US that butchered this film in order not to allow the American film audience to realize how far behind they were in preparation for a coming Second World War, and all of the technological advances that were taking place in Europe. They did not want the American people to ponder about all the ideas that H.G. Wells was discussing and debating about in the film. I guess that US industry insiders thought that the film was promoting socialism and rebellion against the state, and had to heavily censor the film for that reason. I am so glad that the complete version of “Things To Come” is, at long last, finally available for viewing by American audiences, and for future generations of viewers to watch, learn from, and enjoy. Thank you very much for sharing this amazing film here on RUclips. :-) :-) :-) :-) :-)

    • @Nickcooper625
      @Nickcooper625 Год назад

      This is actually the 96m 31s print that was prepared for the American release*, but it seems that UA did cut it further. The version passed by the UK censors was 117m 13, but it was cut to 108m 41s for the London premiere, and then reduced further to 98m 06s for the general release.
      * Although part of the first bombing sequence is cut here for no readily apparent reason.

    • @joelbest2424
      @joelbest2424 11 месяцев назад

      The initial attack on Everytown has almost completely been deleted.

    • @lemdixon01
      @lemdixon01 8 месяцев назад

      Maybe they thought that Americans would notice the propaganda

  • @rogueriderhood1862
    @rogueriderhood1862 Год назад +5

    Arthur C Clarke recommended this film to Stanley Kubrick. After watching it, Kubrick said he would never watch another film recommended by Clarke!

    • @robinbrowne5419
      @robinbrowne5419 5 часов назад

      And then he went on to make Dr. Strangelove, the other great anti-war satire.

  • @davescott7669
    @davescott7669 5 месяцев назад +2

    The music is outstanding, Kudos to those involved in writing/ performing it

  • @Hillbilly001
    @Hillbilly001 Год назад +8

    Still after all these years, a great cautionary tale. Unfortunately, Wells was one of those writers, ie Verne, that his fiction has a tendency to become fact. Chilling to contemplate the possible fact with this tale. I think someone already mentioned Wars and rumors of Wars, but this also includes a pandemic from bio/chemical warfare. The older I get, the more this film gives me the willies. Probably a good thing Wells didn't envision nukes. Cheers

    • @keiththompson-mg4yt
      @keiththompson-mg4yt Год назад +2

      @paulceglinski7172 Sorry to be pedantic, but... I.e. means "that is". A lot of people confuse it with e.g., which means "for example". When I was a kid I perceived an easy way to always remember this: "Eg", if pronounced as a word, sounds like the first syllable of the way that most Americans pronounce the word "example", i.e. "egg-zample".
      Neither of these terms actually fits into what you were saying, but you probably intended e.g., as in "Wells was one of that group of writers, e.g. Jules Verne, who..." It's still a little awkward, but it essentially does work. "A la" would actually have been the perfect fit; if it had been in that place, then no other alteration to the sentence would've been necessary.
      Also, "biochemical" is a perfectly standard English word. It's not "bio/chemical".

  • @M4RC05V1N1C1U5
    @M4RC05V1N1C1U5 6 дней назад

    I lost count of how many times I watched this masterpiece!

  • @komradewirelesscaller6716
    @komradewirelesscaller6716 8 месяцев назад

    One of my all time favorite science fiction movies! And wow what a beautiful HD version!!

  • @alisdairmclean8605
    @alisdairmclean8605 Год назад +7

    The designs of some of the futuristic aircraft were spot on.

    • @mikehipperson
      @mikehipperson Год назад +3

      Elon has obviously watched it too except the Starship is a cannon shell!

    • @alisdairmclean8605
      @alisdairmclean8605 Год назад

      @@mikehipperson Yes very efficient since it imparts all the energy as an impulse but you would have to scrape the son and daughter of the floor at the end of the voyage.

    • @michaelsigismonde7958
      @michaelsigismonde7958 Год назад

      Sure was

    • @AbelMcTalisker
      @AbelMcTalisker 4 месяца назад

      @@alisdairmclean8605 Though if you ignore the look and listen a bit more to the description in the little girl's lecture its apparent the thing is a lot more sophisticated than a simple "gun".

  • @daviddavid5880
    @daviddavid5880 Год назад +10

    "The Gas of Peace". I still crack up.

    • @handsomeman-pm9vy
      @handsomeman-pm9vy Год назад +2

      Why not a gas of peace?

    • @daviddavid5880
      @daviddavid5880 Год назад +1

      @@handsomeman-pm9vy "Hey, you know that slaver clan you're trying to wipe out? Live and let live, bro. That's way too violent. We're just gonna knock you out, take all your weapons and let bygones be bygones..."

    • @rjmcallister1888
      @rjmcallister1888 Год назад +3

      "It is my gas. It is a bad gas".

    • @paulohagan3309
      @paulohagan3309 7 месяцев назад

      @@handsomeman-pm9vy I used to get that at the dentist's.

  • @ehughes8829
    @ehughes8829 8 дней назад

    A flat screen TV at 1 hr 13 mins. That's cool. 😊
    First time seeing this film, and it's great.

  • @cdrocrossdiscovery
    @cdrocrossdiscovery Год назад +2

    2036 - 13 years from now. Mister Wells would be so disappointed. And Amazed.

  • @dondecaire6534
    @dondecaire6534 Год назад +12

    The message is pretty clear but the sad truth is everyday people really have no control over whether war happens or not. It does a great job of how suddenly things can change. Progress comes with a price. You may nit always pay it but eventually you will. I think that was what they were trying to get across in this. I also find the timeline fascinating. The idea that by 2036 we would all live underground yet not have made it to space is interesting.

    • @hydrolito
      @hydrolito Год назад +1

      Caves often only change a few degrees in temperature from summer to winter so would be easier to heat and cool if lived underground.

    • @grahamcoyne5317
      @grahamcoyne5317 Год назад

      Please do not push an outdated agenda! If People ever bonded together, stop the fear, war would stop globally, people would have the power back... remember common law for the common people who make up 99% of this world. It is ours to take .... back. Please bestow ur fears and stand up... it takes but a few to make many.....

    • @dondecaire6534
      @dondecaire6534 Год назад +1

      @@grahamcoyne5317 Just being a realist, history sadly shows that your Utopian view has yet to come to fruition.

    • @petersinclair3997
      @petersinclair3997 Год назад

      @@dondecaire6534 If it comes to fruition. We open with war and end with insurrection brewing. Discontents not at peace with peace.

    • @riverraisin1
      @riverraisin1 Год назад +3

      Hard to conquer space when all resources were being used to conquer Earth.

  • @simonf8902
    @simonf8902 Год назад +4

    Mr CholmondelyWarner rules now.

  • @thibod07
    @thibod07 Год назад +1

    Wow! What an amazing movie! Thank you for placing it as part of my suggest watching! I never had the chance to watch that movie before! I will surely watch it again.

  • @cneterer
    @cneterer 9 дней назад

    I wasn't aware the Criterion Collection had this film. Everyone talking about how beautiful this print is: the Criterion Collection chooses classic films it thinks are of historical significance and puts them through a rigorous remastering in order to create a product which is as good as the day the films premiered. Their discs are expensive but worth the price. I love my copies of "The Third Man" and the Kordas' version of "The Jungle Book."