JEREMIAH JOHNSON (1972) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @tomrideout7977
    @tomrideout7977 Год назад +238

    I worked on this movie. I helped build the town that is in the beginning of the movie. It was built on the banks of the Green River in Utah in the town of Dutch John. We just built false fronts of buildings, not the whole buildings, I have visited Dutch John numerous times since to fish the Green River and always make it a point to walk up to where the town used to be. All that is left now are a pile of rotten boards and several rocks circles for fires which are now full of empty beer cans and bottles. I was allowed to dress up in era costume and walk with the townspeople when they shot that village scene. It was a favorite time in my life!

    • @wishbone54
      @wishbone54 Год назад +5

      I've been to Dutch John when I worked in Rock Springs. People there I met were very nice.

    • @thecityman1910
      @thecityman1910 Год назад +6

      Great story. Good for you. Always nice seeing people talk about their glory days and sounds like that was yours.

    • @benridge6570
      @benridge6570 Год назад +1

      Thanks for sharing, we live close to Canada, Montana border. A little bit of a mountain man. With a good wife, very blessed, wach your back trail. Great movie. My wife gives me a hard time when I put it on.😅

    • @douglorimer5985
      @douglorimer5985 Год назад +4

      Wow

    • @redclayscholar620
      @redclayscholar620 10 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you for helping make one of my family's favorite movies.

  • @steveturner3999
    @steveturner3999 Год назад +172

    I saw this in the theater when it was first released. It is still my favorite movie. ‘’You’ve come far pilgrim. Feels like far.’’ What an understatement.

    • @looneygardener
      @looneygardener Год назад +1

      She lucked out. Lol

    • @Jonno2summit
      @Jonno2summit Год назад +6

      Same for me. I saw it in the theater as a kid and it has always been my favorite movie.

    • @warpet2011
      @warpet2011 Год назад +5

      @@Jonno2summit I as well saw this in 1972 when it 1st came out, Valencia Theater, Evanston, IL.

    • @MichaelRobertson-i8f
      @MichaelRobertson-i8f 2 месяца назад

      When I took my girlfriend to a drive in movie theater when I was young she got so upset that all I did was watch the movie which I gladly made her forget about over the next hour. Those were some of the Best days in my life. When I was 23 I became a Respiratory Therapist because of a discussion I had with one when I was in traction for a back injury. There was a 200 to 1 ratio of women to men and if you took into account the gay men and those men already married the ratio was 350 to 1 . What else can I say.

    • @JamesGardner-lr3ro
      @JamesGardner-lr3ro 2 месяца назад +1

      @steveturner3999 saw it too when it first came out in the theater...been my favorite movie of all time ever since...

  • @Jim-Mc
    @Jim-Mc Год назад +358

    "She weren't no trouble," is low-key one of the saddest most romantic lines in film.😥

    • @legslark
      @legslark Год назад +46

      Mountain man speak is always understatement. They both knew it meant she was wonderful!

    • @susanalexander6721
      @susanalexander6721 Год назад +21

      Breaks my heart every time. 😢

    • @Elmer.Mcscrotum.
      @Elmer.Mcscrotum. Год назад +11

      He loved his family.

    • @SIXSTRING63
      @SIXSTRING63 Год назад +9

      No, she weren’t no trouble. Her death and the boys death were big trouble on his soul which the Crow tribe soon found out how much trouble. One of the greatest vengeance retribution movies ever made. The Outlaw Josey Wales was definitely in the same ballpark in the revenge department. I think Clint might have borrowed a little of the idea for Josey Wales from Jeremiah Johnson. Robert Redford is one of the best actors of the past 60+ years. For me Jeremiah Johnson is his finest film with Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid second, at least films guys like. My wife likes Barefoot in the Park and The Way We Were. I did enjoy Barefoot, Roberts comedy side was very good in that film.

    • @JamesGardner-lr3ro
      @JamesGardner-lr3ro Месяц назад +1

      Such a sad line..so simple....so sad

  • @susanalexander6721
    @susanalexander6721 Год назад +99

    Cassie you chose a movie much loved by a lot of people. Glad you have learned to never judge a fim by its age. Some of the greatest lines ever written.

    • @peghead
      @peghead Год назад +4

      In my opinion, the absolute best Western sound track, I found a CD copy of the sound track a few years back.

    • @Hal09i
      @Hal09i Год назад +9

      A few years ago I was just one of a few people left in a building right before a major holiday break. It was cold and snowing. As I was heading out, I passed a cube of a fellow worker, also getting ready to leave. We exchanged a few words and as I turned to leave he said out of the blue, "watch your top knot"... now I promise you there was not a person within 300 miles who would know the reply to that...I said, "watch you'rn" and turned and made way back home...

    • @mountainman4969
      @mountainman4969 4 месяца назад

      Ride due west of the Sunset And turn left at the Rocky Mountain!

  • @tbmike23
    @tbmike23 Год назад +263

    A lot of veterans have done the same thing, both my grandfathers did, which is why this is such a compelling human story. His soul was wounded by war, he wanted to get away from everything to find peace, but instead conflict chased his every step, so he had to find peace within himself instead.

    • @l.piloto7964
      @l.piloto7964 Год назад +14

      Deeply accurate and wise.

    • @patbrewer4205
      @patbrewer4205 Год назад +12

      My dad was in the Pacific Theatre during no WW II but he was armed with no a hammer and saw he said the Marines would be fighting at one end of a runway while they the Seabees were at the other end repairing the runways and clearing the trash

    • @williammcpeak8800
      @williammcpeak8800 Год назад

      I had an uncle who was a SeaBee, rebuilt the airfield on Tinian, He was good natured but you could see the stress and melancholy in his face.@@patbrewer4205

    • @mirozen_
      @mirozen_ Год назад +9

      @@patbrewer4205 Your comment got me thinking how my dad spent WW2 in the Pacific Theater as well, though he was "repairing" marines (at both Iwo Jima and Okinawa). He was 18 years old and a corpsman! 😊Gotta say that those Seabees were serious badasses!!! When I was growing up it seemed like most every adult male of my dads age was a WW2 veteran. I think that war being an experience shared by so many made it a little easier for them to handle the experience, but both my dad and uncle (a marine in the Pacific) saw and experienced things that I can only say I'm glad to have avoided.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Год назад +4

      Yeah that's what I was wondering. I assumed he wanted the mountain life to get away from war and conflict. Then it just followed him there.

  • @martiantexan7632
    @martiantexan7632 Год назад +216

    "Was it worth the trouble?"
    "What trouble?"
    Big life lesson right there, distilled to purity.

    • @marieantoinette1360
      @marieantoinette1360 Год назад +8

      Perfection

    • @bboynton8
      @bboynton8 Год назад +11

      seeing and hearing this as a 11 year old boy made an impreddion that has lasted a life time

    • @andaimhineach4131
      @andaimhineach4131 Год назад +8

      What a world we would have if that type of attitude could return, en mass!

  • @Cadinho93
    @Cadinho93 Год назад +128

    If you want to find more about John "Liver-Eating" Johnson, you can Goggle him. Good article on him. He died in 1900 and buried in the Veterans graveyard in L.A., CA. After the film came out, a group of 25, 7th graders, fought and won, on having his body moved from L.A. to Cody WY. Robert Redford was one of his pallbearers, when they reburied him. Two Books about him are "Crow Killer" and "Liver-eating Johnson".
    Also, it's a 50 year old film and it still holds up beautifully!

    • @nightfall902
      @nightfall902 Год назад +4

      Both excellent books, totally different stories and both better than this film.

    • @stefanlaskowski6660
      @stefanlaskowski6660 Год назад +6

      I read them both many years ago. Excellent reads.

    • @nightfall902
      @nightfall902 Год назад +4

      @@stefanlaskowski6660 I'm pretty sure Johnson had a big hand in promoting his own story. Back then it was all word of mouth, sharing stories that got bigger with each telling...including Johnson telling his own "big fish" stories. Funny the film made no mention of his time with wild west shows.

    • @thedink5
      @thedink5 Год назад +2

      Johnson began one of the Old West’s most brutal vendettas.
      The murder of his wife and unborn child sent Johnson into a rage and changed the trajectory of his life. People living in the region - Native Americans and white mountain men - started finding the bodies of scalped Crow warriors.
      Not only were these victims scalped, but their livers had been cut out. As the body count piled up, some of the other mountain men learned of Johnson’s one-man vendetta against the Crow people and put two and two together: Johnson was hunting and killing Crow warriors.
      And he was eating their livers. Without onions! They began calling him Liver-Eating Johnson.

  • @barrywentworth4472
    @barrywentworth4472 Год назад +73

    The older one gets, the more a person understands this great film.

    • @christopherseverett
      @christopherseverett 6 месяцев назад +5

      I've appreciated it since I was a teenager. Great movie.

    • @gsbealer
      @gsbealer 5 месяцев назад

      73 here, and I have loved this movie since it came out in 1972, 3 years after I graduated high school.
      Also, since I was at UCLA I’ve been partial to the Crow.
      “Watch your topknot.” = Don’t get scalped!

    • @Jason-mm3ef
      @Jason-mm3ef 2 месяца назад +1

      I remember watching it as a kid with my grandpa, not really knowing what was totally going on. Then watched it up north with my friends a couple years ago and i couldnt believe i didnt remember the movie. One of my favorites.

  • @brianashe
    @brianashe Год назад +54

    "A tribe's greatness is judged by how mighty their enemies be" love that quote

    • @marioarguello6989
      @marioarguello6989 10 месяцев назад +2

      Not the most accurate statement, but one can see how a savage would think it is.

  • @meganpierce9977
    @meganpierce9977 Год назад +86

    I grew up with this movie. It’s one of my dad’s favorites. To me this is a nostalgic type movie. Thank you for giving it a chance. Love it. ❤️

    • @Chris-ov1et
      @Chris-ov1et Год назад +2

      Great movie. One of the first movies my father took me to.

  • @jamiegagnon6390
    @jamiegagnon6390 Год назад +141

    When Jeremiah passed through the grave site the first time all of the dead skulls were looking at the sky. When he came back they were all facing the trail he would have to use. That is how he knew bad things had happened.

    • @Dularr
      @Dularr Год назад +42

      His wife beads are also there

    • @skylinerunner1695
      @skylinerunner1695 Год назад +28

      I appreciate you pointing that out, as I'd missed that despite multiple viewings. Thanks

    • @skylinerunner1695
      @skylinerunner1695 Год назад +12

      @@Dularr damn, that just made the entire scene fall into place for me, as before now I merely figured he just felt a sense of dread. Appreciate it.

    • @kevinlaw6185
      @kevinlaw6185 Год назад +10

      @@skylinerunner1695- Same. I've seen the movie many times, and never noticed either of those details.
      Thanks, @jamiegagnon6390

    • @squatchnasty234
      @squatchnasty234 Год назад +11

      I've seen this movie many times and never noticed. You just blew my mind. Thank you

  • @davidgabrielsen2139
    @davidgabrielsen2139 Год назад +8

    I saw this in the theater with my first love, Theresa. She watched the movie on my shoulder and would look away and bury her face in my shoulder when things got intense and cried when he got back to the cabin. She was a very pretty blonde like you, 18 at the time. Thanks for the memory.

  • @AnthonyMartin-k8m
    @AnthonyMartin-k8m Год назад +7

    When he lays the bodies of his family by each other in that bed and covers them like he's tucking them in, it nails me no matter how many times I've seen it.

  • @leenagel3605
    @leenagel3605 Год назад +11

    I was born in SW Missouri, the Ozarks. We lived way back in the hills on a homestead. We had a few conveniences, but pretty much raised our own meat and veggies. This was in the 70s. I'm 60 years old now and not very good health, but I live alone and much like that. Jeremiah Johnson was one of my top 5 movies. My Dad and I would catch it on tv and Dad would say" Pay attention, he knows what he's doing. " Dad was born not 7 miles from where I'm sitting. He grew up during the great depression. I learned a lifetime from him.

  • @belzec2618
    @belzec2618 Год назад +58

    I grew up on the reservation and this is one of my favorite movies. A Man Called Horse, Winter Hawk, Grey Eagle, The Outlaw Joesy Wales, Tombstone, Young Guns, and my all time favorite Is The Good, The Bad and The Ugly. Also the Cowboys was a personal favorite, I miss being young. It would be a blessing to turn back time and be with family watching my hero’s.

    • @purpleslog
      @purpleslog Год назад +10

      Wow…a man called horse is a little remembered gem!

    • @jefferywarburton2116
      @jefferywarburton2116 Год назад +5

      The mountain men, Will Penny,

    • @petermcculloch4933
      @petermcculloch4933 Год назад +5

      Black Robe, Windwalker and a A Man Called Horse are my favourite first nation movies.

    • @clevelandcbi
      @clevelandcbi Год назад +1

      Grew up watching these with my grandpa in the 80's. You've got great taste. He didn't wanna give a "way too modern" Young Guns a chance, but ended up laughing his butt off and loving it.

    • @mr.knowitall6440
      @mr.knowitall6440 Год назад +5

      Josey Wales is another favorite of mine as well.
      Chief Dan George's performance is such a classic! 🤙😎

  • @WhiteWolfTraveler1
    @WhiteWolfTraveler1 6 месяцев назад +5

    My favorite aspect of the movie is the circular structure of the plot. He meets Paints His Shirt Red, Bear Claw, Crazy Woman, Del Gue, Swan. Once Swan is passed he encounters Del, back to Crazy Woman’s cabin, Bear Claw, and ends with Paints.

  • @vraspir123
    @vraspir123 Год назад +68

    It always struck me that as the movie ends he starts meeting people in the reverse order of how he met them in first part of the movie, sort of unwinding it to how he started.

    • @esteban1820
      @esteban1820 Год назад +11

      Same. I love the symmetry of that. Took me a couple of watchings to notice that (or maybe I got older). It has that great arc of early contempt "He says, You fish poorly" to the respect at the end from the Crow chief and the others.

    • @skylinerunner1695
      @skylinerunner1695 Год назад +7

      solid screenplay construction, and like life, we end where we start

  • @keithwilson6060
    @keithwilson6060 Год назад +74

    Movies in this era were much more pensive, unlike the non-stop manic action demanded today. The contrast is indeed stark.

    • @RichFrye
      @RichFrye Год назад +3

      the actors are not strong enough to keep focus,,, they have to rely on shock and awe

    • @wishbone54
      @wishbone54 Год назад +5

      Sadly, neither is the audience.@@RichFrye

    • @christopherseverett
      @christopherseverett 6 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, this movie is character driven and absent all the CGI BS garbage pawned off on audiences today. If TikTok is your main source of entertainment, your attention span is TOO short to handle this iconic movie.

  • @hailesmith7243
    @hailesmith7243 Год назад +69

    Three Days of the Condor is one of Robert Redford's best films. You should check it out.

    • @mega00760
      @mega00760 Год назад +3

      it's his best and Fay's

    • @zrx1100zz
      @zrx1100zz Год назад +4

      ​@@mega00760I agree with Three Days of The Condor and I'll add to that The Hot Rock, and Brubaker...... As for Faye Dunaway for me it's a slam dunk The Thomas crown affair..... That was some major league chemistry between those two and a great storyline 😎🥃

    • @esteban1820
      @esteban1820 Год назад +6

      That great scene at the end with RR and Cliff Robertson, "How do you know they'll print it?" The look of doubt from Redford, brutal.
      I think we know the answer if it happened today.

  • @cyradus
    @cyradus Год назад +23

    19:25 This meme will live on in internet culture forever. Thank you, Robert Redford. The sideways posture, the zoom...that is the epitome of a "nod of approval".

    • @Cylox5
      @Cylox5 11 месяцев назад +2

      until now i thought that was Zach Galifianakis ......

  • @paulmartin2348
    @paulmartin2348 Год назад +64

    Robert Redford starred in a movie, "The Last Castle", in 2001 that I think you would love. He is a good bit older but it's just a great movie. Thank you for another great reaction Cassie. 😄

    • @boardmandave
      @boardmandave Год назад +8

      Yes I second that love that movie it's on Netflix

  • @bcccc132
    @bcccc132 Год назад +19

    The slow pace of the movie is to help show the isolation, loneliness and vastness of the wilderness. Great reaction. Keep that open mind when it comes to these classic movies and it will serve you well pilgrim.😉

  • @laurogarza4953
    @laurogarza4953 Год назад +105

    "Touched" is an expression that means one has lost their mind. In this case the trauma was too great for the woman and her small boy was so traumatized that he never spoke again.

    • @LiberPater777
      @LiberPater777 Год назад +14

      "Touched by madness"
      Some Indians didn't mess with those who weren't all there mentally. Bad medicine/juju doing so, so to speak.

    • @leefischer5814
      @leefischer5814 Год назад +2

      ​@LiberPater777 Thunderbirds and Wakinyan was near, catching a glimpse of a Thunderbird meant you became Heyoka... Man who laughs historically, eats grass, and walks on all fours.

    • @clutchpedalreturnsprg7710
      @clutchpedalreturnsprg7710 Год назад +1

      @@LiberPater777 " Don't mess with " Joe Boo's rum. "

    • @Mottleydude1
      @Mottleydude1 Год назад +2

      The older actor who played Bear Claw is Will Greer. After this he acted in a made for TV movie called “The Homecoming”. It was about a poor family living in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia during The Great Depression. It’s Christmas time and the family is waiting for the patriarch of the family who is away from home looking for work to support his family.
      That Movie spun off into a TV series called “The Waltons” that was one of the most popular TV series in the 70’s.
      It’s about the only program on TV that explored life in America during The Great Depression. That era now is just history in books kids might read about today and not really understand just how difficult life was during that time in the 1930’s.
      I’m in my 60’s now and both my parents were children during the Great Depression and often spoke about how everyone was poor back then and how hard families had to work just to put food on the table. My Grandparents were emotionally scarred for life by the Great Depression.
      Anyway my point being is I recommend watching The Homecoming. It’s a very heartwarming Christmas story during a truly difficult time.

    • @clutchpedalreturnsprg7710
      @clutchpedalreturnsprg7710 Год назад

      @@Mottleydude1 I remember that it was also the plot for the movie " Spencer's Mountain ".

  • @roberthealy3551
    @roberthealy3551 4 месяца назад +2

    Life is hard for it's duration.
    What is joyful, love and good is like the seasons. They begin and end, and we just live thru them the best we can.
    (I smile at my chemo treatments.)

  • @imahoare4742
    @imahoare4742 Год назад +74

    I'VE WAITED SO LONG FOR THIS! One of my favorite movies of ALL TIME!
    This movie, along with the book Hatchet got me into survivalism, outdoorsmanship and self reliance as a kid.

    • @numbersasaname2291
      @numbersasaname2291 Год назад +4

      At the same time that this movie came out, the US was also experiencing the John Denver, hikey climby, Colorado/Utah-centric subculture movement. We had just left Vietnam and we (American society) was divided and lost, and this movement sprung up from that recentering/come to terms with our recent past movement. Like you, I got caught into it.
      Our uniforms were hiking boots, jeans, and flannel shirts with the sleeves rolled twice up our arms. We invested our money in Kelty packs, NorthFace sleeping bags, and just about anything from REI (when it still had a heart) and Gander Mountain. And this movie helped give that movement flavor.
      I went to Alaska for the first time to backpack the Bush for two weeks, alone, as a 17 year old one year after I saw this movie, in part because of this movie. I had a layover in Seattle, so I opted to extend the layover for a day and go into the city (actually I had to make a pilgrimage to REI - the original, 3 story warehouse that was on Capital Hill). College, then the military, then more college and eventually I went back to Seattle where I could still find that movement. I’m still there, but its flavor is gone. The subculture of this movie only lives now in memory - and crazy, boring old men. 😊

    • @imahoare4742
      @imahoare4742 Год назад +3

      Judging by how many young homesteaders, survivalists and outdoorsmen I've seen online and IRL in just the last 3 years, the movement is still there, people, disillusioned with the state of things, still want to get out and see what they can see and live out on their own terms.

    • @craigbabin7940
      @craigbabin7940 Год назад +3

      hey someone else read hatchet? i learned you can cut an airplane with an axe and that moose are to be feared :)

    • @philsexton4565
      @philsexton4565 Год назад +1

      @@craigbabin7940 My Side of the Mountain another good one along the same lines. Both are excellent books

  • @Dougfrilled
    @Dougfrilled Год назад +12

    I love his ‘proclamations’ “I shall call you, Caleb.” I guess when you’re living life like that, you can it make up as you go.😂

  • @chuckvt5196
    @chuckvt5196 Год назад +48

    Great review! Robert Redford has stated that this is his favorite movie that he ever did.

    • @warrenrosen132
      @warrenrosen132 Год назад +2

      His best. Inevitability of war, no escape from conflict, revenge.

    • @ironbrigade6872
      @ironbrigade6872 Год назад +2

      Redford built his home in Sundance, Utah. Many of the mountain scenes were filmed in the area before the town of Sundance was built.

    • @wishbone54
      @wishbone54 Год назад +3

      It's my favorite movie he ever did too.

  • @fungfrancis7156
    @fungfrancis7156 6 месяцев назад +3

    So sad, so lonely, yet so beautiful. I was a teenager when I first saw this movie in 1972. I feel young again...

  • @cleekmaker00
    @cleekmaker00 Год назад +11

    "Watch your Topknot" means keep an eye out, so's you don't get scalped. "Because you are... Touched" means that The Crazy Woman went mad because of her grief over losing her girls. The Crow probably killed them, but because she's crazy the Crow think she's now possessed by evil spirits.
    Many men went into the uncharted wilderness Lewis and Clark explored, driven by the lucrative Beaver trade and their good prices, being used back East and in Europe for expensive hats and coat collars. Same with Buffalo.
    Actor and musician Tim McIntire wrote the music and sang the Theme. He had a few roles in Film and TV.

  • @Bikedueder
    @Bikedueder 5 месяцев назад +2

    I am 56 now, but used to be allowed to stay up late sometimes when there was a good movie on TV, back when I was a kid. I watched this more than a few times with my Dad, up past my bedtime, back in the early to mid 70's. Still one of my favorites to this day.

  • @jamesa4793
    @jamesa4793 Год назад +41

    We appreciate you doing this one. My dad watched this with his brothers in theaters when he was 9.

    • @SIXSTRING63
      @SIXSTRING63 Год назад +1

      Same age as me when this came out. My dad loved this movie and I watched it with him my first time seeing it.

  • @danomalley2473
    @danomalley2473 Год назад +6

    I remember seeing this when it first came out. I was 12 years old. What a great film. Still holds up after all these years.

  • @brettfromla4055
    @brettfromla4055 Год назад +31

    I believe Robert Redford’s Hollywood debut was in a 1962 episode of The Twilight Zone called Nothing in the Dark.
    A wonderfully acted episode with great writing, that showcased a young Redford’s talent. I feel it’s definitely worth a watch.

    • @Fan_Made_Videos
      @Fan_Made_Videos 3 месяца назад

      Yes. He was the Grim Reaper. I think it echoed into inspiration for "Meet Joe Black" decades later.

  • @danielfields7829
    @danielfields7829 11 месяцев назад +1

    I watched this movie in the late 70's, when I was still very young and it is still one of my favorite movies...

  • @vikingraider1961
    @vikingraider1961 Год назад +8

    Delle Bolton was so sweet in this - the smile of pride that she gives him when he pulls the full trap up.

  • @gumbomudderx7503
    @gumbomudderx7503 Год назад +19

    This was one of my dad’s favorite movies. I’ve watched it more than a couple times with him. It sure brings back memories.

  • @jimmyd486
    @jimmyd486 Год назад +20

    This movie along with "The Outlaw Josey Wales" are tied for my favorite westerns. If you havent watched that one you should. At the end of this movie, the iconic scene of the Indian chief raising his hand in friendship and then Jeremiah Johnson coming to the realization of what it was and reaching back with every fiber of his being is just a masterful piece of directing and acting. You can see the desire in Robert Redford's face for the truce and him reaching out to grab it as if he will never let go, and the scene grabs at your emotions because you want it for him to.
    This was a great choice for you to watch and please consider also doing "The Outlaw Josey Wales" which is similar in that it is a story of a man who looses everything but finds peace at the end.

    • @crazychase98
      @crazychase98 Год назад +3

      "Govorments dont live together people do" that and "there is iron in your words and so it shall be life" really good quotes

    • @2war2bray
      @2war2bray Год назад +2

      You have good taste in movies. Those are my two favorite Westerns.

  • @lfyoung
    @lfyoung 5 месяцев назад +2

    One of the greatest movies ever and one of my favorites

  • @McPh1741
    @McPh1741 Год назад +44

    Such a great movie. This was one of my dad’s favorites when I was a kid, still is. And now, one of mine. Redford was in another good movie a few years later called “Three Days of the Condor” that I think you would like.

    • @glennledrew8347
      @glennledrew8347 Год назад +2

      Indeed. Condor is easily in my top 10 fave movies. And I've seen a few. I hope The Kernel Kween gives it a look!

    • @attorneyrobert
      @attorneyrobert Год назад +2

      Yes! Good recommend. Redford is amazing in Condor.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Год назад

      Was this filmed in tandem with Butch Cassidy? Looks like they used a lot of the same locations and sets.

    • @McPh1741
      @McPh1741 Год назад +1

      @@user-jb8qq9fk6m It's alright. Max Bob Sydow has a good ring to it.

  • @v4pilot331
    @v4pilot331 2 месяца назад +2

    @35:05 My Father used to play this movie on Sunday's... all of us children would watch, while He would nap.

  • @michaelcooley4553
    @michaelcooley4553 Год назад +18

    Great film written by John Milius. The young girl hiding in the corn crib was future country star Tanya Tucker.

  • @reality1958
    @reality1958 Год назад +36

    A perfect follow up movie to this would be “The Outlaw Josey Wales” starring Clint Eastwood. Clint said it was his favorite western he ever did

    • @petermcculloch4933
      @petermcculloch4933 Год назад

      Black Robe would be a perfect follow up.

    • @michaelmccoy8059
      @michaelmccoy8059 Год назад

      DEFINTELY

    • @michaelmccoy8059
      @michaelmccoy8059 Год назад

      I love the historical fiction. Being a civil war enthusiast I like the reference to many of the gorilla fighters if the civil war like Bloody Bill Anderson and Quantei

    • @michaelmccoy8059
      @michaelmccoy8059 Год назад

      Bill Quantrel referenced was the leader of a guarilla Fighting group including Frank and Jessie James

    • @SIXSTRING63
      @SIXSTRING63 Год назад

      @@michaelmccoy8059 John Wayne references Captain Quantrel in True Grit when arguing with Glen Cambell’s character over who they each fought with during the war.

  • @alpha1481
    @alpha1481 Год назад +8

    The hand signal at the end. The offering and accepting of a truce. He could live in peace.

    • @PiraticalBob
      @PiraticalBob Год назад +2

      In recent years I joke that Paints-His-Shirt-Red had no problem sending other braves to attack Johnson, but when faced with the man himself, quickly offered a truce.

  • @jeremiahstukes9484
    @jeremiahstukes9484 Месяц назад +1

    this movie is truly a beautiful piece of cinematography

  • @TheIrishWolf94
    @TheIrishWolf94 Год назад +80

    You just know Cassie is gone cry like never before. It's a heartbreaking movie, based on a true story. But it's still a great movie.

  • @matticusvalentinkole3605
    @matticusvalentinkole3605 Год назад +7

    I loved this movie as a kid. Not overly dramatic just good steady storytelling as it narrated the journey of man weary of the world and the need to test his limits. Strong movie from first to last

  • @johnroberts8093
    @johnroberts8093 Год назад +4

    One of the best films I've ever seen. Great story, great actors and acting,great scenery and what an atmosphere it all sits within. Brilliant!
    🙏🇬🇧🙏

  • @organizedanarchy2745
    @organizedanarchy2745 Год назад +19

    Fantastic. This film is like life with so much tragedy. It brings me joy. I'm glad you've found it.

  • @landail5681
    @landail5681 Год назад +22

    This is one of my father's favorites, and always reminds me of him growing up hunting, fishing, and fur trapping. My mother and I jokingly say that if he hadn't met her he would have been another "Bearclaw" living in the wilderness. 😄
    Info tidbit for you Cassie, the "smell" Jeremiah spoke about teaching Caleb how to trap; it's a lure usually made with the oils and other glandular excretions of the animal you're trying to catch. Trust me, they stink to high heaven but they DO work. 😂

  • @SolarTiger
    @SolarTiger Год назад +27

    this movie has always been considered one of the first to have a relative sympathetic view towards native Americans problems...came out around the time of the Wounded Knee uprising

  • @TheMikeman1971
    @TheMikeman1971 5 месяцев назад +3

    This movie make me feel so sad so much heartache and loss For innocent people !

  • @haydenlindquist7006
    @haydenlindquist7006 Год назад +16

    Such an amazing movie. My absolute favorite and it’s my tradition to watch it the night before deer bow season opens. Bear Claw is hilarious

  • @LawdyLawd
    @LawdyLawd Год назад +1

    I saw that at the theater in my hometown in 73ish, I can now put the DVD in, and it still brings back memories and feelings of a 10-year-old small-town boy. 👍✌

  • @My-Name-Isnt-Important
    @My-Name-Isnt-Important Год назад +9

    This is one of my favorite films, among a few others. I usually watch this around late fall or early winter. Very relaxing and calm film, but a film I feel that fits me. Enjoying solitude and relying on yourself, and continuing even when faced with hardship and loss.

  • @holographic6378
    @holographic6378 7 месяцев назад +2

    "Watch your top knot." Is an expression essentially meaning don't get scalped.

  • @rte4634
    @rte4634 Год назад +4

    I first saw this in the theater when i was 9 years old with my Uncle and cousin. It was PG back then. Anyway, it stuck with me after all of these years. I have fond memories because of my family. Still watch it every now and then

  • @Syphered08
    @Syphered08 Год назад +2

    One of my favourite films of all times

  • @lawrencemyers3623
    @lawrencemyers3623 Год назад +5

    The Crazy Woman was played by Allyn Ann McLerie, a character actress with film credits such as "All The President's Men" and "The Way We Were". She also did a alot of TV work, including playing Gordon Jump's wife on "WKRP In Cincinnati". She's gone now, passed away back in 2018, aged 92.

  • @thedink5
    @thedink5 Год назад +3

    Afterward, Johnson returns home by the same route and notices that the graves are now adorned with Swan's blue trinkets; he rushes back to the cabin, where he finds both Swan and Caleb have been killed. Johnson sets off after the warriors who killed his family and attacks them, killing all but one, a heavy-set man

  • @stephw1702
    @stephw1702 Год назад +13

    This film never fails to remind me of my grandpa. While Grandma usually selects what is watched on tv at their home, Saturdays are reserved for his westerns, especially John Wayne films. This is his favorite and is the only DVD he owns.

    • @DrForester54
      @DrForester54 Год назад +1

      Same here. Except the last time I got to watch a western with my grandpa was nearly 23 years ago. I think of him often, especially when I watch movies like this.

  • @Jonno2summit
    @Jonno2summit 6 месяцев назад +2

    My favorite line from the movie, that's never said at any time in a complete sentence: "Can't cheat the mountains, Pilgrim. The mountains got its own way". That is the full sentence, yet it is never said completely during the movie - only in parts at different times. That's a real cool sneaky Easter egg.

  • @doubleDD274
    @doubleDD274 Год назад +12

    A beautiful movie because of everything you said. You get the feeling of life as a mountain man. Nature at its finest. A look back in time at another era and lifestyle. I absolutely love this. Seeing it on the big screen was totally immersive. I saw it twice in the theaters and many more times on TV. Great reaction. I like that you're honest about not knowing if you liked it or not. It is an unusual film and that makes it all the better for me. (P.S. the little girl in the corn hide near the end is a young Tanya Tucker.). Thanks!

  • @nopenahman7380
    @nopenahman7380 Год назад +3

    Niiiiice! I've been waiting for this! Jeremiah Johnson is one of my all-time favorites.

  • @jcastromex
    @jcastromex Год назад +4

    Hey Cassie, an overture is a piece of music for the orchestra to play at the beginning of an opera or ballet. The word comes from the French word for "opening" because it "opens" the show. Overtures usually have tunes which are going to be heard during the opera or ballet. In this way it prepares the audience for what is to come. They usually run approximately 5 minutes.
    The intermission's original purpose was pretty practical. Back when movies were projected from reels of film, the intermission gave projectionists time to switch between reels without forcing the audience to sit in a dark, silent theater. It also let's people run to the bathroom to relieve their bladders after drinking gobs of giant-sized movie theater sodas. 🤡
    Intermissions range in time but I think they also run about 5 minutes in length. 🎥

  • @barryscott8041
    @barryscott8041 11 месяцев назад +2

    My favorite line in this movie is when Jeremiah says to the boy, "Nothing wrong with quiet." ....taking all pressure off the kid, and letting him just be himself

  • @clutchpedalreturnsprg7710
    @clutchpedalreturnsprg7710 Год назад +3

    Saying " Lincoln Logs " made me so happy.

  • @cjpreach
    @cjpreach 6 месяцев назад +2

    Snow falling from a tree branch and squelching the fire is directly out of Jack London's story "To Build a Fire."

  • @Elmer.Mcscrotum.
    @Elmer.Mcscrotum. Год назад +14

    He wanted to escape the the pitfalls and troubles of everyday life and escaped to the mountains. But no matter where you go, the troubles will always be there, if people are there.

    • @peghead
      @peghead Год назад +1

      You're right, in the scene near the end when Bear Claw happens upon him, it seems Jeremiah almost misses life 'down there' when he asks "would you happen to know what time of the year it is", as if it's relevant, Bear Claw is slightly taken aback, seems as if he regrets his choice to be a 'Mountain Man' 'cause it weren't no differnt' than the normal trials and tribulations of life in general.

  • @IAMCAVE
    @IAMCAVE Год назад +2

    Filmed in Utah, that so impressed Redford that he bought property on Timpanogos mountain and named it Sundance. Now a world famous film festival held annually.

  • @johnortmann3098
    @johnortmann3098 Год назад +5

    Mountain men were trappers in the early 1800s when beaver pelts were high value to make felt hats. They tended to know one another because they would attend an annual rendezvous, where they could sell their pelts and get into all sorts of mischief.
    The stuff the boy was sprinkling on the beaver-trap set was castorium, which beavers secrete to mark their territories. A beaver, smelling the scent of a strange beaver would investigate and get in the trap.
    "Watch your topknot." Don't get scalped.
    This version is actually pretty sanitized. They called him "Liver-eating Johnson" because supposedly he ate the livers of the Crow he killed.

  • @tudyk21
    @tudyk21 6 месяцев назад +1

    I just found your channel, bc of Jeremiah Johnson.
    It's a movie I have watched dozens of times. 🙃
    Your reaction is so adorable!🙂

    • @tudyk21
      @tudyk21 6 месяцев назад

      A good "companion movie" to J.J. is "The Mountain Men", with Charlton Heston.
      It is also based on history/ a mountain man's diary.
      There is a "love interest" in it, too, but it's not nearly as tender as the story between JJ and Swan.

  • @ThistleAndSea
    @ThistleAndSea Год назад +9

    One of my all time favorite movies. 😊Thank you, Cassie! 💕

  • @garybradford8332
    @garybradford8332 Год назад +7

    Redford was at the height of his popularity when the following year he made "The Way We Were" with Barbara Streisand. One of his earliest appearances was in a Twilight Zone episode in which he plays Death/The Grim Reaper. He also made a film with Jane Fonda called "Barefoot in the Park" before launching into mega star status as the Sundance Kid.

  • @thisishowthetruthdies684
    @thisishowthetruthdies684 Год назад +25

    Great pick. This is one of the rare movies that gets you directly in the soul. Maybe one day you'll do Three Days of the Condor, also by Pollock and Redford or Spy Game because we know you love Brad Pitt.

    • @markphillips3746
      @markphillips3746 Год назад +1

      Three Days of the Condor! Absolutely!

    • @skylinerunner1695
      @skylinerunner1695 Год назад

      Downhill Racer and Electric Horseman

    • @chrisgilbert9076
      @chrisgilbert9076 Год назад +1

      I was just going to recommend 'Spy Game'. An older Redford, but he lost none of the charm and intelligence and wiliness that he has portrayed in so many of his films.

    • @sophiamarchildon3998
      @sophiamarchildon3998 Год назад

      Just don't watch "Sneakers" (1992). Even though it's rated 7.1 on IMDb, with Robert Redford, Dan Aykroyd, Sydney Poitier, and Ben Kingsley, ... it's not worth it. The movie aged so quickly, and in a bad way. It had some decent ideas, even good ones at times. It simply lacks "coherence". From the techno nonsense, to the convoluted, ridiculous plot of the later half, the potential was lost in duct-taped, wayward/cliché, underthought execution. Could've been a classic, if only someone had a proper global vision for it, from start to finish.

  • @luvadane
    @luvadane Год назад +1

    Wow! Someone actually listened to one of my comments! Thanks! Hope you enjoyed it!!

  • @johnvandenberghe6621
    @johnvandenberghe6621 Год назад +4

    First time I seen this was back in 1974 when I was 10 years old when it came on TV and me and my Dad watched it together...I loved it and was in awe of the setting and of course Robert Redford was so well known back then....It was pretty mature movie for my age but that is what made it fascinating for me ........ one of the "classics" for me....

  • @MrGadfly772
    @MrGadfly772 Год назад +2

    "It was slow but okay" .... you're learning patience, thats terrific!

  • @MuncleJim
    @MuncleJim Год назад +5

    I love that you are watching this movie. I have only seen one other person react to this one.
    This is one of my personal favorites and still have a memory as a 10 year old boy seeing this movie at the Dundee theater in Omaha NE.
    I saw many movie as a child, some I remember but most I don’t, this one however, left an impression that endures to this day.
    Such a simple story of a man trying desperately to make his way in an oftentimes cruel world but still manages to find some piece and beauty in the simple things.
    I hope you enjoy it as much as I did. 0:30

  • @nahnotsomuch2292
    @nahnotsomuch2292 10 месяцев назад

    It's funny she mentions falling asleep to this movie on a Sunday afternoon. That's exactly what it is to me. They used to play this movie on the matinee TV movies on the weekends when I was a kid. Fell in love with it the first time I saw it. Still love it today.

  • @cbretschneider
    @cbretschneider Год назад +7

    Good choice and great reaction. So many great films were made in the 70's and this is a classic American western film. I'd love to see more reactions from you to more 70's classics. Clint Eastwood's, The Outlaw Josey Wales is a good followup to this film. It has a somewhat similar tone: a man on his own, out in the wild west. 🥂

  • @briansorensen5102
    @briansorensen5102 9 месяцев назад +1

    "Liver Eating Johnston". Still one of my favorite characters from history. Crazy Woman Creek is still one of my favorite places. Nostalgic, I know. And my 50 cal Hawkin is one of my favorite possession.

  • @thomast8539
    @thomast8539 Год назад +9

    So glad you are finally getting to this great western. So many more await.

  • @charger70s
    @charger70s 4 месяца назад +1

    "His mountains, his peace, his great hunts and his young bride, with all that it should have been different."

  • @airgunfun4248
    @airgunfun4248 Год назад +5

    A W E S O M E!!! One of the deep down all time greats. Can't wait to watch you watch it. CLASSIC!

  • @woldds
    @woldds 3 месяца назад +1

    Favorite Line - "You have done well to keep so much hair when so many's after it"

  • @brianoden1798
    @brianoden1798 Год назад +6

    Oh wow!!! I've been waiting for you to watch this movie ! This is great! One of my favorite movies of all time !!

  • @sjd5750
    @sjd5750 Год назад +2

    Another great movie filmed around this time, in kinda in the same style, is "Little Big Man" w/Dustin Hoffman. One of my favorites..Hoffman is somewhat of a Forrest Gump figure, who is thrown into some historical events, with characters like Wild Bill Hickok, and General Custer..It has some harsh parts to it, but also very touching, and very funny scenes, as well...A criminally under-rated film, in my view!..It's 2:20 min...It starts out with Hoffman (as present day, Jack Crabb) incredibly made up as a 121 year old man, in a nursing home, being interviewed, since he is the only living person left who lived through (and an integral part of) the times of Custer, Little Big Horn, and the Wild West...Such an incredible acting job by Hoffman..Wait'll you see the make-up job they did on him to make him appear to be 121!..Amazing!!..Please consider reacting to it, Cassie.

  • @gus9225
    @gus9225 Год назад +11

    "You cook good rabbit pilgrim".
    "I aint never seen'em, but I hear the Andes is nothing but foothills compared to the Rockies"
    Just a couple of quotes that I will always remember from this wonderful movie.

    • @imahoare4742
      @imahoare4742 Год назад +4

      "You've come far pilgrim..."
      "...feels like far."

    • @kaboulscabal4816
      @kaboulscabal4816 Год назад +4

      @@imahoare4742
      "Were it worth the trouble?"
      "Ha? What trouble?"
      Is one of my favorite exchanges in the movie, given the way Redford delivers his response and the way Will Geer ever so slightly changes his expression in acknowledgement.
      Love that scene.

    • @williammcpeak8800
      @williammcpeak8800 Год назад +3

      "Twernt Mormons"

    • @kaboulscabal4816
      @kaboulscabal4816 Год назад +1

      @@williammcpeak8800 Are you all right?

    • @Orv129
      @Orv129 Год назад +1

      Whenever anyone asks me where I'm going, I always say Same place you are. Hell in the end.

  • @chadcrossgrove9662
    @chadcrossgrove9662 4 месяца назад +1

    The real Jeremiah Johnson was one of the longest living mountain men on record, having lived to his 80s. In his lifetime, it's estimated he killed some 1200+ natives with 300 of them being Crow in single combat. He was a cannibal, known to eat the livers of his adversaries and had a particular knack for taking scalps.

  • @THOMMGB
    @THOMMGB Год назад +5

    I read an interview that Robert Redford gave about Jeremiah Johnson where he talked about trying to catch a fish in the winter stream. He said they only did one take and he was glad he had no lines as that water was so cold, he could not have gotten the line out. This is a favorite movie of mine that I love dearly. How about Three Days of the Condor soon?

  • @davidreyna7712
    @davidreyna7712 Год назад

    Thank you for posting this. I've been a fan of this movie for decades. When asked what's one of my favorite westerns, this is it. Fantastic movie.

  • @blackwolf6082
    @blackwolf6082 Год назад +3

    One of my all time favorite movies

  • @amysilknitter8928
    @amysilknitter8928 Год назад

    This is my dad’s favorite movie and I love it just for that reason. We would watch it maybe once a year. I can’t remember a time I didn’t know every moment of this movie. It will always be near and dear to my heart long after my dad is gone.

  • @007videovixen
    @007videovixen Год назад +4

    I think my favorite Robert Redford "look" is the one he had in "The Way We Were". It was a great movie.

  • @dougb.2722
    @dougb.2722 Год назад +2

    Jeremiah Johnson was a real man, his life as a mountain man is set in 1800's. This film was extrodinary. I first watched
    it in a theater when it came out. I was just a 11 yrs. The movie is one you can't take your eyes away from.

  • @larryairgood4320
    @larryairgood4320 Год назад +5

    "3 Days of the Condor" (1975) is a spy thriller co-starring Faye Dunaway that moves along nicely, so it might be the Redford film that you are looking for (young handsome Redford, good action, some romance, good director). Otherwise, maybe a new direction wold suit you, like the 1981 essentially true story of 2 runners in the 1924 Olympics which was nominated for 7 Oscars including Best Picture, "Chariots of Fire" (1981).

  • @JC-rb3hj
    @JC-rb3hj Год назад +1

    One of my five favorite films, has been since I saw it in 72'. Redford has a quality unlike anyone else in film and it was never on display more than in Jeremiah Johnson. A big thumbs up!

  • @MrBelmont79
    @MrBelmont79 Год назад +17

    One of my all time favorite films. The mountain men opened up the west for the rest. They had to be tough physically and spiritually to survive in the wilderness. I envy them for they saw the continent untouched in all its glory. ✋🏻

    • @servantprince
      @servantprince Год назад +2

      And skinned all the animals

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Год назад +2

      Kept thinking: they would be so screwed if he twisted his ankle bad or something like that. One stray axe swing and they're pretty much SOL.

    • @flatebo1
      @flatebo1 Год назад +2

      The continent hasn't been "untouched" since people first settled in the Americas millennia ago. Humans have always modified their environment to better suit themselves. It's just that people with less means to change the landscape can only do so much.

  • @timcary5907
    @timcary5907 Год назад +2

    Thank you for watching this movie. It is one of I and my father's favorites. Another great one from Robert Redford is "The Last Castle" which provides lessons in character, loyalty, integrity, honor, courage, and self-sacrifice. Let your father know that he has great taste in movies and you do him proud.

  • @masamune2984
    @masamune2984 Год назад +8

    The fastest I have ever clicked on a PiB video. This is my fathers favorite movie, and became mine, through him. Some random trivia: Jeremiah is wearing “Swan”’s clothes when he gets his revenge, and the beads on the skeleton (according to the book at least), were either hers, or reminded him of hers. Also, she was pregnant, which makes it even more tragic. This was partially filmed on Robert Redford’s own land, and the actress for “Swan” was the very last to audition. I love this film, tragedy and all. Thanks for giving this film a chance and watching it, Cassie! PS Papa Popcorn does indeed have great taste, as do you and the rest of the fam 🙂