O Brother, Where Art Thou? | Canadian First Time Watching | Movie Reaction | Review | Commentary

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  • Опубликовано: 15 янв 2025

Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @Cadinho93
    @Cadinho93 Год назад +495

    Fun Fact: George Clooney sent the script and a recorder to his southern preacher grandpa to read all of his lines, so he can learn the script without reading it and also to learn the accent authentically. His grandpa started the recording with, "well George I don't know if we talk like this, but I'll give it a go." After they wrapped the movie, Ethan Coen asked him why he removed all the curse words. His grandpa had switched all the curses with "darn tootin" and other PG phrases. So his grandpa is technically one of the only people to edit a Coen brothers script.
    Also, I love how they make Delmar's character consistent after he gets baptized. You can tell really did believe what happened there and tried the rest of the movie to do his best.

    • @orbislame
      @orbislame Год назад +49

      I’ve always loved that they let that moment be genuine for Delmar.

    • @TennSeven
      @TennSeven Год назад +4

      If I recall correctly they did steal a car though at some point after Delmar was baptized, and he didn't seem too bent out of shape about that. I felt like that didn't fit in with his behavior in the rest of the movie (like leaving money for the pie).

    • @clevelandcbi
      @clevelandcbi Год назад +3

      One of the best behind the scenes/fun facts I've ever read. Thank you!

    • @patrickholt2270
      @patrickholt2270 Год назад +6

      That's adorable. And period appropriate for God fearin' folk.

    • @nickinskeep
      @nickinskeep Год назад +7

      My buddy named his big, dopey basset hound after Delmar and it was the perfect fit for that dog lol

  • @BryanAlaspa
    @BryanAlaspa Год назад +341

    The most famous legend is that the blues musician Robert Johnson met the Devil at a crossroads and sold his soul in exchange for being a legendary blues musician. Considering people still play his music to this day, who knows, maybe he did.

    • @marctowersap8018
      @marctowersap8018 Год назад +26

      Crossroads (the Ralph Macchio version, not the Brittney Spears version) was based on this legend as well (as well as the song Devil Went Down to Georgia). It's not a bad movie, loved Steve Vai playing in it!

    • @chart6454
      @chart6454 Год назад +23

      It was actually Tommy Johnson who claimed that. Robert Johnson’s song “Crossroads” confused the matter.

    • @HollywoodandWine101
      @HollywoodandWine101 Год назад

      So famous that universal adapted it for a haunted house.

    • @kokemon84
      @kokemon84 Год назад +2

      A Baroque musician had a similar story. It's not that unique

    • @HaganeNoGijutsushi
      @HaganeNoGijutsushi Год назад +1

      ​@@kokemon84you mean Tartini?

  • @jculver1674
    @jculver1674 Год назад +310

    This movie was filmed in rural Mississippi, and snakes were a constant issue on the set, so the filmmakers hired a local man who used a golf club and a bag to get rid of them. When they asked him what his job title was, he replied, "an idiot".

    • @VoluntaryistJapan
      @VoluntaryistJapan Год назад +10

      Lol I hope this is true.

    • @TheJabbate1
      @TheJabbate1 Год назад +25

      Also, filming started right after a rain storm so all the plants were vibrate green. So they added the sepia tone in post to give it it’s dusty look.

    • @nathanhall9345
      @nathanhall9345 Год назад +8

      @@TheJabbate1 Wasn't it one of the first movies to use color grading in this way?

    • @brandonthesteele
      @brandonthesteele Год назад +3

      ​@nathanhall9345 I learned recently that Jason X of all things was the first film made which incorporated that technique. O Brother was released first, though.

    • @noracola5285
      @noracola5285 Год назад +4

      I had that job once, when I was in Mississippi around that same time, but all I used was a shovel. Six bucks an hour. Should've worked on a movie instead.

  • @todd8398
    @todd8398 Год назад +132

    There was an actual bank robber from this era named George "Babyface" Nelson. He died in a shootout with police, after his car broke down while escaping one of his bank heists.

    • @gregghelmberger
      @gregghelmberger Год назад +23

      Although the Babyface Nelson in this movie is wholly fictionalized. The movie takes place in Mississippi, whereas Nelson focused on the Upper Midwest. He was also dead three years before this movie was set (the movie is set in 1937, whereas Nelson was killed in suburban Chicago in 1934). What the movie gets right, though, is that Nelson was a raging, out-of-control psychopath who killed many people -- he still holds the record for most FBI agents killed by any one person.

    • @michaelw8262
      @michaelw8262 Год назад +9

      @@gregghelmberger Pappy O'Daniel was also a real governor, but in Texas not MS.

    • @ohadm6038
      @ohadm6038 Год назад +3

      Pappy O'Daniel and his rival were both real politicians from that era as well

  • @choomah
    @choomah Год назад +226

    The broken rock was mainly used on railways, the gravel ballast under the track. As well as building materials and road construction.

    • @VoluntaryistJapan
      @VoluntaryistJapan Год назад +16

      And once again - this comment section is gold.

    • @JBjopa8
      @JBjopa8 Год назад +3

      ​@@VoluntaryistJapanso true

    • @badger1296
      @badger1296 Год назад +7

      Let's not forget driveways and gravel roads. When rainy season comes on dirt only roads, cars will get stuck in the mud.

    • @NotSoFast71
      @NotSoFast71 Год назад +9

      But the act of breaking rocks with picks and sledgehammers was a punishment. You’d be sentenced to “20 years of hard labor” or such. Not just sitting around in a cell. It’s a hard, tiring, and hot activity to break rocks all day long. The threat of it was to keep prisoners in line or they’d be put on the chain gang and be forced to do backbreaking work all day.

    • @bryondavis2173
      @bryondavis2173 Год назад

      ​@NotSoFast71 you're 💯 correct the odd thing was prisoners lived longer because of the so called exercise 🙄 the cell confinement was actually harder cause the day drug by ..not that anyone got fat a sassy in prison back then ( very poor nutrition) but there were alot of smokers and bad lungs as well . I read somewhere that the labor helped clear the lungs...not sure if that's true though

  • @dnllrnt
    @dnllrnt Год назад +283

    Bonafide is just another way of saying someone is established and genuine.

    • @ehbiscuit
      @ehbiscuit Год назад +27

      word etymology coming from bona + fide or "in good faith"

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 Год назад +25

      Genuine. The real deal.
      I’ve also heard bona fides (pronounced “fee-deez”) to mean one’s qualifications or credentials, sort of like a curriculum vitae.

    • @theaikidoka
      @theaikidoka Год назад +5

      @@MarcosElMalo2 Yes, as in present your bonafides. Proof of authenticity.

    • @terrysperman304
      @terrysperman304 Год назад +4

      It's a term gold diggers use, lol.

    • @theaikidoka
      @theaikidoka Год назад +4

      @@terrysperman304 It's a term people with credentials use. What are you talking about?

  • @jesseh8554
    @jesseh8554 Год назад +306

    Believe it or not. Tim Blake Nelson can actually sing pretty well. He recorded some songs for the Ballad of Buster Scruggs

    • @JoeSnow84
      @JoeSnow84 Год назад +12

      Great cowboys musical :)

    • @stefanforrer2573
      @stefanforrer2573 Год назад +12

      also, him and turturro both actually sing in this one... clooney and the guy playing the kkk leader were the only ones that didn't iirc

    • @kathyastrom1315
      @kathyastrom1315 Год назад +14

      His singing in this film got him some major money with the royalties from the soundtrack sales.

    • @clh35
      @clh35 Год назад

      @@stefanforrer2573 When did the KKK leader character sing? I don't understand that part of your comment. I mean, I'm pretty sure the actresses playing the sirens didn't sing their parts. Goodman didn't sing. Root didn't sing. I think the only ones who DID maybe sing are Nelson, the little girls, and the gravediggers (not Turturro).

    • @hectorsmommy1717
      @hectorsmommy1717 Год назад +12

      @@clh35 He sang "O Death" at the beginning of the rally. The song is an old one by Ralph Stanley and his version was used on the soundtrack. Wayne Duvall (cousin of Robert) played Homer Stokes but did no singing.

  • @TheKamilkrawczak
    @TheKamilkrawczak Год назад +173

    It was the first digitally colour corrected film to give it a sepia-tinted look. The actual set was "greener than Ireland".

    • @woeshaling6421
      @woeshaling6421 Год назад +21

      Yes, the first color graded movie. A little unconfirmed trivia is that the movie Jason X (friday the 13th) was color graded a year earlier, but got shelved until 2001. Sort of a fortunate coincidence to have a Coen brothers get that accolade instead of a slasher, if this was true

    • @BlueEyedSexyPants
      @BlueEyedSexyPants Год назад

      I always thought What Dreams May Come was the first to use digital color correction. It was the first do digital something or other.

    • @VoluntaryistJapan
      @VoluntaryistJapan Год назад +3

      Man, this comment section is gold.

    • @ryanforesta1803
      @ryanforesta1803 Год назад +2

      ​@@woeshaling6421Learned this fact from RLM such an interesting turn of events

    • @donkfail1
      @donkfail1 Год назад

      Didn't the Coen brothers also make a movie that they wanted to be black and white, but had to make it in colour? The DVD release featured a black and white version that they had converted in some process so it really looked like it was shot that way too.

  • @martinholt8168
    @martinholt8168 Год назад +271

    I always thought George Clooney, like Cary Grant, worked better as a comedic actor than a romantic lead.

    • @cjcoake
      @cjcoake Год назад +23

      This is why George and Simone need to react to Soderbergh's Out of Sight, in which Clooney is both, and which is easily his career-best role.

    • @notabritperse
      @notabritperse Год назад +9

      ​​​@@cjcoakeSeconded ... hugely! Clooney is phenomenal. Jennifer Lopez does her best work in that film. Great support from Don Cheadle, Ving Rhames, Steve Zahn, Albert Brooks (!), and Dennis Farina. PLUS, an all-time great reprises his character from Jackie Brown; he just plays it ... dumber.

    • @VoluntaryistJapan
      @VoluntaryistJapan Год назад +7

      I don't like George Clooney. But he is so believable in this role, and absolutely lovable, that I dare say this is the real George Clooney in his heart of hearts. Or he sold his soul to the Devil? ;) I dunno.

    • @AuspexAO
      @AuspexAO Год назад +5

      He's got a great line delivery for tough guy roles too. I always thought it was a shame that From Dusk til Dawn was his only chance to be a hardened criminal. I think ER kind of type cast him for a while. Then he started directing and we got to see less and less of him.

    • @clh35
      @clh35 Год назад +3

      @@notabritperse Lol, he was kinda dumb in Jackie Brown, too. Those movie were released like 6 months apart, so it's cool that he was able to do both. They should put him in future seasons of the new Justified series, since it's all part of the Elmore Leonard universe.

  • @MegaTurkeylips
    @MegaTurkeylips Год назад +36

    The flooding scene was Odysseus apologizing to Poseidon for mocking him and Poseidon allowing him to go home.

  • @TerryNationB7
    @TerryNationB7 Год назад +87

    30:23 'Are there any more movies like this, that take really old stories and do a modern day adaptation?'
    My first thought is The Warriors (1979). A modern retelling of Anabasis by Xenophon. The text told of Greek mercenaries stranded 1,000 miles behind Persian lines trying to fight their way back home. The movie tells the story of a New York gang. The 'ultimate director’s cut' integrates a new intro to the movie that describes their plight specifically linked to the Ancient Greek story to make it clearer.

    • @RexFuturi
      @RexFuturi Год назад +9

      Come out and play-ay!

    • @markl1839
      @markl1839 Год назад +5

      The Warriors is probably the closest comparison to this. It's not particularly a direct adaptation, more of taking the core conceit and building around it. O Brother has more direct lines to The Odyssey, but it's obviously not one-to-one throughout.

    • @TimDickinson
      @TimDickinson Год назад +2

      And it's a FANTASTIC film.

    • @WeirdTangent
      @WeirdTangent Год назад +3

      Not the same, but what about _10 Things I Hate About You _

    • @jeffmolina4989
      @jeffmolina4989 Год назад

      or she's the man

  • @hectorsmommy1717
    @hectorsmommy1717 Год назад +69

    Fun fact: the clan rally "dance" and the way the trio infiltrated is an homage to "the March of The Winkies" in Wizard of Oz when the 3 reach the Witch's castle to try and rescue Dorothy. Not everyone picks up on that but it is obvious when you compare the two.

    • @seattlecryptid
      @seattlecryptid Год назад +2

      I thought so! I thought it reminded me of the song the henchmen were singing outside of the witches' castle.

    • @stevem7192
      @stevem7192 Год назад

      Also the term "Wizard" comes from the founder of the Klan, Nathan Bedford Forrest. He was known as the "Wizard of the Saddle" because he was a cavalry commander in the Civil War.

  • @willjohnson8446
    @willjohnson8446 Год назад +35

    From a mythical perspective, the theme song is perfect for this movie. The name Odysseus (aka Ulysses), literally means “bringer of pain”.
    He causes suffering to everyone including himself, so he’s literally a man of constant sorrow.

  • @dagfizz7804
    @dagfizz7804 Год назад +87

    I was forced, against my will, to study Latin for four years in school, including translating long passages from Homer into English. I never thought it would be of any use later in life. Then this movie came out and I had the overwhelming sense that one of life's purposeful circles had been drawn to completion. Now, I'm just begging for the Coen Brothers to follow this up with The Oresteia Trilogy.

    • @DopeSauceBenevolence
      @DopeSauceBenevolence Год назад +1

      Qui custodet historia? Vtre Felix, bro.

    • @debbyemerson3877
      @debbyemerson3877 Год назад +9

      I do believe we all start any story relating to Latin class with "which I was forced to take against my will" 😅

    • @bradmcmahon3156
      @bradmcmahon3156 Год назад

      @@debbyemerson3877 yes, two years compulsory in my school, most did three and some crazy kids did five but I got out after two by switching to an art class. I'm bad at art but worse at Latin (eheu!)

    • @robwalsh9843
      @robwalsh9843 Год назад +1

      Also comes in handy when watching Tombstone

    • @wermagst
      @wermagst 11 месяцев назад +1

      So you in your Latin lessons you translated ancient Greek?

  • @Exobably
    @Exobably Год назад +15

    There are some blink and you'll miss it moments where they say characters' full names, like Menelaus Pappy O'Daniel, or Ulysses Everett McGill, to further make that Odyssey connection. Glad y'all liked it! Love this one.

  • @anthonyleecollins9319
    @anthonyleecollins9319 Год назад +40

    The title comes from Sullivan's Travels, which was a movie about a Hollywood director trying to make a move called "Oh, Brother, Where Art Thou?"
    The movie theater scene here is a direct reference to a scene in that movie, where prisoners are allowed to see a movie.

    • @melanie62954
      @melanie62954 Год назад +7

      I was looking for this comment before I made it myself! Sullivan’s travels is sadly a mostly forgotten comedy these days.

    • @melanie62954
      @melanie62954 Год назад +5

      And the author of the book that Joel McRae’s character was wanting to adapt was was Sinclair Beckstein, a portmanteau of Upton Sinclair, Sinclair Lewis, and John Steinbeck. All great depression-era novelists.

    • @auerstadt06
      @auerstadt06 Год назад +4

      The Coens are big fans of Preston Sturges, who had a streak of hit movies in the early '40s. They also paid tribute to him in "The Hudsucker Proxy," which features witty, fast talking characters.

    • @leonh.kalayjian6556
      @leonh.kalayjian6556 Год назад +3

      Loved Sullivans travels where the lead character goes off four times on his adventure.,.

    • @EShelby2127
      @EShelby2127 Год назад

      The Veronica Lake Hair Brush scene, would kill George! @@leonh.kalayjian6556

  • @dnllrnt
    @dnllrnt Год назад +30

    "Ain't this a geographical oddity! Two weeks from everywhere!"

    • @poyerdude
      @poyerdude Год назад +3

      One of my favorite lines in the movie. Great delivery by George Clooney.

    • @alvarhanso6310
      @alvarhanso6310 3 месяца назад

      Definitely a standout line. Another favorite is when Pete and Everett argue about stealing from Cousin Wash, Pete exasperatedly shouts "That don't make no sense!" Everett responds with, "Well, Pete, it's a fool that looks for logic in the chambers of the human heart." And, of course, the greatest put down ever put down on film, Pappy O'Daniel saying to Junior, "Thank God your mammy died givin' birth to ya, if she'da seen ya, she'da died of shame!" then gleefully greets Stephen Root's radio station manager. Too many classic Coen Brothers lines missed on first viewings. Those guys know how to turn a phrase.

  • @jacksonconley5117
    @jacksonconley5117 Год назад +59

    Man I’m impressed with all the parallels George found to the Odyssey.

    • @kirbyculp3449
      @kirbyculp3449 Год назад

      The idea for the movie is from Preston Sturgis' movie Sullivan's Travels. Please enjoy that too. The brothers worked in several parallel scenes from ST.

    • @timlanteigne298
      @timlanteigne298 Год назад +2

      His constant musings about it got annoying fast.

    • @redcardinalist
      @redcardinalist Год назад +13

      @@timlanteigne298 to you maybe, not to me. It's things like that, that make their reactions so good. The ehitre movie is based on the Odyssey (something that clearly clearly went right over your head...🙄)

    • @thespecialneedsgroup
      @thespecialneedsgroup Год назад +4

      I actually had a literature class in college where we studied this film and its parallels to the Odyssey. George pointed out at least one (hiding under the sheep) that I'm pretty sure the professor missed.

  • @TampaCEO
    @TampaCEO Год назад +8

    12:40 - "People just buy one song." Actually, even when I was young (back in the 1970s), you could buy a single record called a 45, or an entire album called a 33 (those are the RPM speeds you needed to play them at). Thanks for another great reaction.

    • @garybradford8332
      @garybradford8332 Год назад +1

      You could but there would be another single on the B side when you flipped it over. Sometimes the B side outperformed the intended hit song on the A side.

    • @patmacmanus
      @patmacmanus Год назад +1

      In the 30s records were 78 RPM and each side had only one song.

    • @garybradford8332
      @garybradford8332 Год назад +1

      My first record player had 78 rpm setting.@@patmacmanus

  • @ptittannique5621
    @ptittannique5621 Год назад +30

    6:30
    Tommy Johnson was an actual blues guitarist who would travel from town to town in the Delta, as depicted in the movie. He wrote Canned Heat Blues, for instance, after which the band "Canned Heat" named itself. The "selling his soul at the crossroads" in exchange for guitar chops is an old blues legend--many, many players have been attached to it. Most famous of them would be Robert Johnson, although he never claimed to have done so himself; he was only said to have sold his soul in exchange for his skill after his premature and tragic death (most likely by strychnine poisoning), when he was 27. The tune played around the camp fire is Hard Time Killing Floor Blues, by Skip James--another fantastic guitarist from the 1920s and 1930s, who then got rediscovered during the blues revival of the 60s.
    All of these folks are well worth looking into!

    • @johnplaysgames3120
      @johnplaysgames3120 Год назад +3

      Making Robert Johnson the first member of the infamous 27 Club.

    • @ShinyAvalon
      @ShinyAvalon 11 месяцев назад

      Actually, if he was poisoned, some think it was more likely naphthalene from dissolved mothballs (which was a common way of poisoning others in the South). Strychnine kills much quicker. As it was, the naphthalene may only have killed him because it caused his ulcer to hemorrhage. What's _more_ terrible is that the man who owned the plantation he was at wouldn't pay for a doctor because Robert Johnson wasn't an employee of his. Johnson might have been saved, if not for racism and capitalism.

  • @zhivik
    @zhivik Год назад +25

    George got most of the references to the Odyssey correctly, except maybe Stephen Root's character (the blind radio station manager), who refers to Homer. Meanwhile, Tommy Johnson is a reference to Robert Johnson, one of the greatest blues musicians in history, whose talent was sometimes attributed to a deal with the Devil - it is an urban legend at this point. The actors are indeed dubbed, except Tim Blake Nelson, who is the one who performs “In the Jailhouse Now” (the first song they perform with fake beards).
    I cannot express how happy I am this film won the poll, it was the best in the selection by a wide margin.
    Edit: I forgot to mention films that reinterpret an older story in a modern setting. Here are a few examples:
    “10 Things I Hate About You" - based on Shakespeare's “The Taming of the Shrew”
    "Cruel Intentions" - essentially a reimagined "Dangerous Liaisons", an 18th century novel by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos
    "Easy A" - a modern version of "The Scarlet Letter" by Nathaniel Hawthorne
    "The Lion King" - it is loosely based on "Hamlet", though without Hamlet's personal troubles
    "My Fair Lady" - it is loosely inspired by George Bernard Show's "Pygmalion"
    "West Side Story" - this is essentially a retelling of "Romeo and Juliet"
    "She's the Man" - again a play by Shakespeare, this time "Twelfth Night"
    "O" - Shakespeare is here again, this time with "Othello"

    • @timhibbard4226
      @timhibbard4226 Год назад +1

      My Fair Lady and Pygmalion are both set in the same time period, but inspired by the original Ancient Greek myth of the same name.

    • @zhivik
      @zhivik Год назад +1

      @@timhibbard4226 Of course, I should have referred to the original Greek myth rather than to George Bernard Shaw's work. Well, you could throw in "She's All That" as a modern work example.

    • @crystalleewatson9888
      @crystalleewatson9888 Год назад +1

      they definitely need to do My Fair Lady! it's a classic, even tho I'm not super fond of musicals

    • @rigger151
      @rigger151 Год назад

      And Romeo and Juliet with Danes and DiCaprio

  • @RonJomero
    @RonJomero Год назад +56

    Hands down my favorite Coen Brothers movie. Gets better each time I watch it. I'm glad you two gave it a go!
    As for movies of modern adaptations of older works, the only one I personally know of is a movie written by (and starring) Steve Martin that is based on Cyrano de Bergerac called "Roxanne." It's a pretty solid romantic comedy even if you don't know any of the source material.

    • @Dabbleatory
      @Dabbleatory Год назад +4

      Yes! Came here to say Roxanne was a good example, and a fun movie.

    • @OrganicAlkemyst
      @OrganicAlkemyst Год назад +1

      Another Steve Martin movie based on an old story is "A Simple Twist of Fate". It is a retelling of Silas Marner by George Eliot. Good movie but Roxanne is better.

  • @samworf6550
    @samworf6550 Год назад +22

    20:40 The klan scene is another departure from Odyssey - it's largely based on the Winkies march from The Wizard of Oz, with similar chants and prominent marching sounds, and even includes the heroes stealing three uniforms so they can infiltrate the march and save one of their companions

    • @janedoe5229
      @janedoe5229 Год назад

      I also think the flood scene is similar to the tornado scene in Wizard of Oz.

    • @spgetter
      @spgetter 27 дней назад

      It's virtually a frame by frame reference t o that scene, with the three popping up from behind and the bushes, the feet of the guards being dragged under them, the third one holding his hat as he comes out from them, and then the clumsy way they join the procession.

  • @williamivey5296
    @williamivey5296 Год назад +23

    As others said, Nelson can sing. In an interview he commented that the other two tried, but "it was sad".

  • @fuelman1391
    @fuelman1391 Год назад +32

    This is tied with "Raising Arizona" as my favorite Coen brothers movie. I grew up listening to bluegrass, so this soundtrack really brought me back to my childhood. It's not only a great retelling of "The Odyssey", it's also a great showcase of Depression-era America. As for other adaptations, "William Shakespeare's Romeo+Juliet" is fantastic. And I will second "Roxanne", with Steve Martin. It's such a great movie!

  • @takewithfood
    @takewithfood Год назад +10

    I really love the way this film blends so many mythological figures and concepts into something familiar without it feeling stale or predictable, or out of place in the time and setting of the story. The Sheriff (played by Daniel von Bargen) is a blend of Poseidon, the Christian Devil, and a nod to Walking Boss Godfrey, "The Man With No Eyes", from Cool Hand Luke, another film about convicts on a chain gang. And yet he still feels iconic in his own right. Just a brilliant movie all around; it was so fun to see you guys watch it.

    • @treetopjones737
      @treetopjones737 Год назад

      Original SNL satire of Cool Hand Luke: "What we have here is a failure to communicate bilingually." Bill Murray gets a beating for not speaking French.

  • @I_Use_Soap
    @I_Use_Soap Год назад +152

    Papists are Catholics, you're right George. It's used as a bit of a slur sometimes.

    • @timhibbard4226
      @timhibbard4226 Год назад +34

      Definitely at that time, there is a reason that we didn’t have a Catholic President in America until the 60’s.

    • @bfdidc6604
      @bfdidc6604 Год назад +25

      @@timhibbard4226 And even then it was controversial.

    • @colonelkurtz8607
      @colonelkurtz8607 Год назад +7

      this topic would be a good segue into "gangs of new york"

    • @richarddefortuna2252
      @richarddefortuna2252 Год назад

      A "bit" of a slur? More of an out and out slur, meant to demean Catholics.

    • @chris...9497
      @chris...9497 Год назад

      Have to remember the Klan was in the Baptist South, and Baptists were a specific flavor of Protestant.
      The Klan hated/hates Catholics, Jews, and 'coloreds' and the word 'colored' meant non-white (so, Black, Asian, and Native American). The Klan didn't consider Catholics to be Christian.

  • @CineRam
    @CineRam Год назад +79

    Shakespeare has been adapted into modern-times movies a few times. The ones that I recall are "Ten Things I Hate About You" (The Taming of the Shrew) and "My Own Private Idaho" (Henry IV & Henry V). There's also an adaptation of Richard III but the setting is alternate-history Britain in the 1930s--Ian McKellan and Robert Downey Jr are in the cast.

    • @tylerfoster6267
      @tylerfoster6267 Год назад +8

      I would really like to see 10 Things I Hate About You on the channel.

    • @brom00
      @brom00 Год назад +4

      The one that pops into my head is Macbeth with Patrick Stewart. Set in the 60's in Romania.

    • @jculver1674
      @jculver1674 Год назад +13

      There was also Romeo + Juliet with Leonardo DiCaprio, and a modernized Hamlet with Ethan Hawke.

    • @benschultz1784
      @benschultz1784 Год назад +10

      Clueless was based on a Jane Austen novel

    • @DonDuracell
      @DonDuracell Год назад +6

      Othello was also turned into a movie with Julia Stiles with the simple title O.

  • @vivectelvanni
    @vivectelvanni Год назад +4

    we thought
    you
    was a toad.
    I was a kid in the South when this came out. Believe me when I say this was one of the most popular things in the WORLD. We watched it in school on the days before ANY holiday break, everyone knew the songs, everyone said the quotes. It cannot be explained how much of a cultural staple this is/was. Glad one of my favorite channels got to this gem!

  • @LogicalNiko
    @LogicalNiko Год назад +2

    Odysseus is Ulyssess Everett McGill. He was the Leader, Vain/Proud, On a quest (treasure / wife ), and quick-witted. Pete represents the crew that mutinies. Delmar represents the foolish crew. George Nelson is the Cattle of the Sun God as he was part of the crew for a short time, kills cows, and gets electrocuted (Zeus's lightning). Tommy is Athena helping with their way at a cross roads. Penny is Penelope, who has suitors, believed Odyssues was dead, and makes a task to earn her love. Soggy Bottom Boys is the Beggars Disguise. The Sirens are themselves. Baptism Fellowshop are the Lotus Eaters that all mindlessly follow along, including the crew. The Sheriff is kind of a Hadies/Poseidon stand in. Big Dan is the Cyclops who nearly gets stabbed in the eye, kills some of the crew, has a club and beats them up. Pappy O'Daniels is King Menelaus of the Greeks who is fighting Homer Stokes (Trojans). Homer Stokes and the Klan are the Greeks. Vernon represents Penelope's suitors. Everett's daughters is Telemachus who thinks their father is dead and tells them of the suitors. The blind man is Tiresias and possibly homer as the writer/teller of the tale.
    Showing the Big Dan get impaled in the eye by the flag would also be very violent for a PG-13 movie and isn't very much in the Coen's style. So turning to see the cross fall and implying death was a bit more fitting.

  • @michaellimerick3294
    @michaellimerick3294 Год назад +29

    The crossroads guitar player was based on a true story about one of the first blues musicians and a song he made called crossroad blues

    • @cshubs
      @cshubs Год назад +7

      I think you mean myth, not "true story?"

    • @goldenageofdinosaurs7192
      @goldenageofdinosaurs7192 Год назад +9

      Yep, Robert Johnson..

    • @diatarussoulbane
      @diatarussoulbane Год назад +6

      Robert Johnson. I think it's important to cite the father of modern blues.

    • @alanhembra2565
      @alanhembra2565 Год назад +2

      @cshub - where you there? How do you know it’s not true?

    • @subliminallime4321
      @subliminallime4321 Год назад +2

      ​@@diatarussoulbanehe's not the father of modern blues. Nobody knew who he was until decades after he was dead. By then Muddy Waters had already invented electricity, the 3 kings were already famous, & Chuck Berry had already recorded Johnny B Goode.

  • @gerstelb
    @gerstelb Год назад +1

    30:33 Well, “really old” is a matter of perspective. There aren’t many modernized versions of stuff as old as the Odyssey, but for more recent stuff, there’s “Clueless” which is based on “Emma,” “Roxanne” which is based on “Cyrano de Bergerac,” “Rent” which is based on “La Bohème,” “West Side Story” which is based on “Romeo and Juliet,” etc.

  • @thejamppa
    @thejamppa Год назад +19

    My late widowed mother loved this film. This and Out of Sight (1998) mostly because of George Clooney. I have such fond memories of this film and this will always have special place at my heart.

  • @baskervillebee6097
    @baskervillebee6097 Год назад +18

    Gravel for roads.
    Pappy O'Daniel was a real Texas Governor.
    Union Station was the group who sang for the Soggy Bottom boys.
    Charles Durning who plays Pappy O'Daniel, was the governor who "Danced A Little Sidestep" in Best Little Whorehouse.
    Tennessee Valley Authority still produces electricity. They flooded a bunch of land to build the hydro plant.

    • @Madbandit77
      @Madbandit77 Год назад +2

      A WW2 vet and an Oscar nominee, Durning was in another Coen Bros' film, "The Hudsucker Proxy".

    • @baskervillebee6097
      @baskervillebee6097 Год назад +1

      @@Madbandit77
      Home For The Holidays with Holly Hunter and Robert Downey Jr.
      But I love when Mr Durning danced in Best Little Whorehouse. 🙂

    • @barn_ninny
      @barn_ninny Год назад +1

      Durning was in a ton of stuff, including The Sting. Can't remember if these guys have watched that or not.

    • @liduck52
      @liduck52 Год назад

      @@barn_ninny Also Jessica Lange's dad in Tootsie.

  • @dwightlee4315
    @dwightlee4315 Год назад +7

    Not only was it fun for the references to Homer, but also a display of a music that is almost dead and gone. Love that film.

  • @Jolly4jc
    @Jolly4jc Год назад +2

    Dan Tyminski is a guitarist in Alison Krause's band, and the vocalist for "Man of Constant Sorrow." He recalls that when he took his wife to the premiere of the film, he was telling her "you know I'm not actually in the movie, right? You're just going to hear my voice coming out of George Clooney."
    To which his wife instantly replied "Well, that's always been my fantasy."

  • @redted12345
    @redted12345 Год назад +22

    One of the best Coen brothers films with the best soundtrack! Used to listen to the cd all the time when I was a kid.

  • @kermitcook8498
    @kermitcook8498 Год назад +2

    Glad George was able to make connections. I had no idea what to look for in this movie until they gave us the MASSIVE clue in the credits. It made my experience so much more pleasurable. I wish there were more of these movies. It's like if Weird Al was a movie concept guy. I love it. Stunning as ever,Simone.

  • @sntxrrr
    @sntxrrr Год назад +11

    This was the first Hollywood movie that was completely digitally color graded from start to finish. Roger Deakins did the cinematography and worked for 6 months to figure out how to digitally color the movie to get the desired look. He got an Oscar for his work.

    • @sergeantbigmac
      @sergeantbigmac Год назад +6

      Id just like to add the important distinction; Deakins was NOMINATED for the Oscar for this film. In fact hes been nominated for so many Oscars without winning that it became a sortve inside joke. He got up to damn near 20 before winning if I remember right lol. But he never actually got an Oscar until Blade Runner 2049 and then 1917 was his 2nd I think.

    • @sntxrrr
      @sntxrrr Год назад +2

      @@sergeantbigmac You are right, my bad.

  • @DoctorSportello
    @DoctorSportello Год назад +18

    I’ve found people either love this movie or hate it, no in between. I happen to love it!

    • @0okamino
      @0okamino Год назад +16

      I don’t think I even know anyone who hates this movie, and I don’t think I want to know them, either.

  • @robertpearson8798
    @robertpearson8798 Год назад +10

    This is probably my favourite Cohen Brothers movie and George’s explanations of some details that I wasn’t aware of made it even better. Stephen Root has got to be one of the best character actors working today. Two other films that come to mind that you should watch are “Cool Hand Luke” (chain gang reference) and “Deliverance” (reference to flooding at the end.)

  • @rcrawford42
    @rcrawford42 Год назад +2

    The governor who pardoned them was played by Charles Durning, who was a dance instructor and great character actor. Another of his big roles was as another southern governor in "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas". Which isn't what it sounds like.

  • @fenix6297
    @fenix6297 Год назад +7

    The chain gang appears to be making gravel.
    I had an officer I worked with in the military and prior to getting his commission, he was a guard at the military prison at Ft Leavenworth.
    According to him, they would have prisoners sentenced to "hard labor" meaning they had to work, even if there was no productive work available. Again - according to him - they had a huge gravel mound in the yard and the prisoners sentenced to hard labor would have to move it basically just with shovels and wheelbarrows to the other end of the yard. After they finished, they would move it back.
    Not sure if a similar situation is happening here.

    • @Stevarooni
      @Stevarooni Год назад +3

      "Turning big rocks into small ones." For gravel, and field-clearing.

    • @BigRiggBlues
      @BigRiggBlues Год назад +3

      In this case, I believe they are breaking down the gravel in place as a means of creating a road. Rural roads during this time period were often just gravel that was broken down then covered with a top layer of tar to hold it together.

    • @fenix6297
      @fenix6297 Год назад

      @@BigRiggBlues That makes sense. I didn't know that.

  • @heyheyjk-la
    @heyheyjk-la Год назад +33

    I think this was the first Coen brothers film I didn't immediately love, having seen them all in theaters on their original release, but it's grown on me over the years. Seeing this, and knowing how much you've loved all the other Coen brothers films you've watched, I'll make the request/plea again for you to watch "Raising Arizona", a live action Looney Toons comedy with my favorite Holly Hunter performance and one of my favorite Nicolas Cage roles, plus it's the first time John Goodman appeared in one of their film; "Barton Fink" starring John Turturro and John Goodman and maybe my favorite of the Coens' films; "Miller's Crossing" which has John Turturro's first role (and he's fantastic in it) with them in a 1920's gangster film, also featuring Steve Buscemi's first time working with them, and also stars Gabriel Byrne ("The Usual Suspects" and "Hereditary"); and then Tim Blake Nelson (who plays Delmar in 'O Brother ...') stars in the first segment of "The Ballad of Buster Scruggs", an anthology film of shorts the Coens did all based in the western part of America after the Civil War. It also features Stephen Root, Tom Waits, Harry Melling ("Harry Potter"), Liam Neeson, and Brendan Gleeson, among loads of other actors. Also, I love how George says it's been a long time since he's read "The Odyssey" and then seems to remember 95% of it! It was great having his commentary on the adaptation, especially for those who can't remember 0.01% of it!

    • @0okamino
      @0okamino Год назад +1

      I totally forgot that they hadn’t reacted to _Raising Arizona_ yet. I think they’d have great time with that.

    • @fredfredburger5150
      @fredfredburger5150 Год назад +3

      Raising Arizona is a treat.

  • @tylerfoster6267
    @tylerfoster6267 Год назад +41

    If you remember Fargo's notorious text identifying it as a true story, the story that this is based on The Odyssey. is the kind of thing that gets them labeled as trolls. Although the movie is credited as being adapted from Homer, the Coens later said that they weren't sure if they'd even read it. And who knows which version of events is true? Either way, it's pretty funny.
    Simone is correct at the end about the repeating dialogue. That is a hallmark of Coen Brothers films. For instance, "that rug really tied the room together," or how many times Walter says "This is what happens, Larry! This is what happens when you f--- a stranger in the ass!"
    Holly Hunter is actually a recurring player in the Coens' filmography. She was someone the Coens considered for the lead in their first film, Blood Simple, but she was committed to a play and wasn't available, so she recommended her roommate, Frances McDormand for the part instead. After meeting on the film, Joel and Frances got married the same year, and are still married to this day. Meanwhile, they would get to cast Hunter as the second lead in their second movie, Raising Arizona.
    Also, as a nod to the fact that Joel worked on The Evil Dead with Sam Raimi, and then the three of them wrote Raimi's disowned second film Crimewave and the Coens' underappreciated masterpiece The Hudsucker Proxy, the cabin that they go to at the end is meant to look just like the Evil Dead cabin.
    As I will say with every Coen video until you get through them I definitely hope to see more of their movies on the channel. In particular, the early stuff has some gems that don't get reacted to often, like Blood Simple, Miller's Crossing, and the aforementioned gem The Hudsucker Proxy. Those three, in particular, I really hope you do. (Hudsucker Proxy is a great New Year's Eve movie...)

    • @Hexon66
      @Hexon66 Год назад +6

      Well, it is definitively based on The Odyssey (the terms 'based' or 'adapted' can be argued). But it clearly follows elements, as evidenced by George's speculations throughout. And by "who knows which version of events is true", do you mean the Coens' account of the film's origins, or The Odyssey itself? Because the latter, though generally based on real events, is largely fiction.

    • @mrwomby5007
      @mrwomby5007 Год назад +3

      Can I put in a good word for Crimewave? I know it was a critical and commercial disaster but I loved it. So much so that I bought a DVD copy from Korea, as I couldn’t find any other one.

    • @dvsreed
      @dvsreed Год назад +1

      The Hudsucker Proxy.........a great movie with a terrible title....probably didn't help with the box office

    • @christhompson2006
      @christhompson2006 Год назад +4

      "You know, for kids"

    • @tylerfoster6267
      @tylerfoster6267 Год назад +1

      @@Hexon66 I meant whether they actively based it on The Odyssey or if they only did it based on a secondhand understanding of The Odyssey.

  • @samhand8270
    @samhand8270 Год назад +2

    The way the Coen Brothers do comedy is just so amazing. They have 100% confidence in their audience to catch all the subtle humor and irony, probably knowing that a lot of people aren’t going to catch everything on the first watch. Even in their non-comedies, they don’t dare spoon-feed their audience with unnecessary explanations or predictable story arcs and just let the stories and characters speak for themselves. Their films all have so much wit and authenticity, which is a quality you rarely see in movies nowadays.

  • @timothysugiura323
    @timothysugiura323 Год назад +49

    Miscegenation is the relationship between people considered members of different races. So when he was saying they are miscegenated he is saying they are mixed race which in the 30s would have been a bigger thing. Still a thing now I can say from personal experience but much worse back then.

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 Год назад +14

      In the 30s, it was a criminal offense and I’m some places it would have been an excuse to be lynched before you saw the inside of a courtroom. Those laws stayed on the books until the civil rights movement, although by that time they weren’t being enforced outside of the South. Still, it’s interesting that my parents married illegally by the laws on the books, and I was a product of that “officially” unlawful marriage.

    • @BEBruns
      @BEBruns Год назад +4

      In the ‘30s and ‘40s miscegenation was explicitly forbidden by the Motion Picture Code (along with any mention of drug use or “sexual perversion,” I.e. homosexuality). Interracial marriage was illegal in about a third of the states of the US until 1967.

    • @DopeSauceBenevolence
      @DopeSauceBenevolence Год назад +2

      Misc + Genes

    • @grumble2501
      @grumble2501 Год назад

      Yeah this was a pretty nasty part of the history of the former confederate states after the civil war, along with the klan and lynchings and segregation.

  • @MisoSilly
    @MisoSilly Год назад +9

    This movie made me love George Clooney. I already loved the rest of the cast, especially John Goodman ❤

  • @brianwarren2042
    @brianwarren2042 Год назад +4

    Clooney took singing lessons for weeks and actually sang during shooting which is why his facial expressions match the song so well.

  • @michaelweinacht7811
    @michaelweinacht7811 Год назад +1

    21:30 It was indeed a Catholic/Papacy reference, the KKK were Protestant extremists who hated Catholics. This also comes up in Blazing Saddles, when they say they stampeded cattle "through the Vatican".

    • @eshuorishas9987
      @eshuorishas9987 3 месяца назад

      Perfect time for RUclips to show me this comment. I was just about to google it.

  • @Nick_CF
    @Nick_CF Год назад +4

    I love this movie so much. As a roots player and massive music history buff this movie is LOADED with history. Tommy Johnson, all the traditional music, Ramblin Bob, hinting at the payola scheme in the budding music industry, Baby Face Nelson and on and on. It is insanely accurate and detailed and that isn't even talking about the Odyssey stuff.

  • @falcychead8198
    @falcychead8198 Год назад +1

    30:23 "Forbidden Planet" is based on Shakespeare's "The Tempest."

  • @timhibbard4226
    @timhibbard4226 Год назад +4

    Yesssss! This is one of my all time favorites and I was so psyched to see it win that poll.

  • @njt2347
    @njt2347 Год назад +2

    The XXX on the bottle of moonshine represents that the shine has been through a three step distilling process rendering it more smooth and stronger than the regular process.
    One movie that does a modern day interpretation of old material is Roxanne starting Daryl Hanna and Steve Martin. It is a loose retelling of Cyrano de Bergerac

    • @treetopjones737
      @treetopjones737 Год назад

      Aside from the dangers of the contaminants that may be found within the moonshine, the high alcohol content of moonshine also poses risks, such as alcohol poisoning and liver disease. If someone drinks moonshine, the people around them must understand the signs of methanol poisoning and alcohol poisoning.

  • @maximillianosaben
    @maximillianosaben Год назад +35

    The Coen Bros. loved making George Clooney the biggest idiot they cvould every time they worked with him, and gosh darn if he doesn't crack me up in every one of their movies! Burn After Reading is my favortie Coen Bros. personally anyhow, and he is so darn funny in it (especially with the secretive project he's working on in the basement).

    • @mournblade1066
      @mournblade1066 Год назад +7

      Yeah, _Burn After Reading_ is absolutely sublime. Probably MY favorite Coen Bros. movie, too.

    • @nolanrussell6326
      @nolanrussell6326 Год назад +4

      Burn After Reading is very underrated

    • @la_beatrice
      @la_beatrice Год назад +2

      Brad Pitt in Burn After Reading is hilarious as well. They should watch it!

    • @mournblade1066
      @mournblade1066 Год назад +1

      @@la_beatrice Oswald Cox? I wanted you to know your shit is secure.
      -and-
      You think that's a Schwinn?!?

  • @SirsMadamsEntertainment
    @SirsMadamsEntertainment Год назад

    13:39 … that sound is from playing a saw with a violin bow

  • @courtneywallace871
    @courtneywallace871 Год назад +3

    Certainly George Clooney’s best role/performance. Love, love love this movie.

  • @selardohr7697
    @selardohr7697 Год назад +1

    Miscenigated: mixed race
    Movies made from old stories: "Cluless"/ Jane Austin's "Emma" "Warm Bodies"/ "Romeo and Juliet"

  • @TheNeonRabbit
    @TheNeonRabbit Год назад +17

    Most of the shooting locations looked too green and Lush for the depression-era dust-bowl vibe they were going for so they shot it on film, converted to digital, desaturated the color and then moved it back to film

  • @scalefree
    @scalefree Год назад +1

    the guitarist at the Crossroads is Robert Johnson who sold his soul to the Devil in exchange for his talent. he went on to record an album that started the Blues.

  • @mattstanford9673
    @mattstanford9673 Год назад +6

    This movie is a masterpiece. I know it's a term that's thrown around often, but I genuinely think this movie fits. It's infinitely quotable, the soundtrack is fantastic, and the casting was perfect.

    • @mattstanford9673
      @mattstanford9673 Год назад +4

      Gopher, Everett?

    • @mattstanford9673
      @mattstanford9673 Год назад +3

      Tim Blake Nelson absolutely killed it as Delmar.

    • @mattstanford9673
      @mattstanford9673 Год назад +4

      "Well ain't this place a geographical oddity? Two weeks from everywhere!" X'D

  • @joelcarlin6661
    @joelcarlin6661 Год назад +1

    Really old stories in a modern adaptation? Spike Lee's "Chi-Raq" is an ancient Greek tale done entirely as rap verse. Absolutely stellar, and very moving. This is my first time commenting, but I have been a loyal fan for YEARS. You guys are GREAT!

  • @timhibbard4226
    @timhibbard4226 Год назад +7

    I heartily endorse all of the mentions and suggestions of 10 Things I Hate About You.

  • @DarksideSleemo
    @DarksideSleemo Год назад +1

    I watched this when I was really young and I didn't really know much about The Odyssey at the time. Watching it again here with you guys was really cool.

  • @burgeeburger9328
    @burgeeburger9328 Год назад +11

    Chris Thomas King’s version of Hard Time Killing Floor Blues is beautiful

  • @rcrawford42
    @rcrawford42 Год назад +2

    In the 1930s pretty much every record was a single. They were larger than 45 RPM singles, but not as large as an LP and had to be played at 78 RPM.

  • @CarlosRamirez-wb7zu
    @CarlosRamirez-wb7zu Год назад +7

    The Devil, Tommy, and the crossroads is a separate myth, mixed into this movie. There's actually a movie called Crossroads, starring Ralph Machio (the Karate Kid, I can't spell it,) that explores the myth further.

  • @matthewcastleton2263
    @matthewcastleton2263 Год назад +1

    Everett McGill is Odysseus (his first name is Ulysses, which is the Roman version of Odysseus)
    Delmar and Pete are soldiers who wandered with Odysseus from Troy back to Ithaca
    Big Dan Teague is the Polyphemus, the cyclops
    Pappy O'Daniel's first name is Menelaus (King Menelaus), but he is more similar to Zeus
    Sheriff Cooley is both Poseidon and the Devil/Hades (with his dog being Cerberus)
    The Blind Seer is Tiresias
    Mr. Lund, the blind radio station manager, is Homer
    Penny is Penelope
    Waldrip is the Suitor(s) of Penelope
    The sirens are the Sirens

  • @artboymoy
    @artboymoy Год назад +4

    My only exposure to the Odyssey was a 2 part movie that was shown on TV starring Armand Assante. It was pretty cool. Especially when he got back home. recommended viewing if you can.

  • @tgriffin8179
    @tgriffin8179 Год назад +2

    George was on it when he mentioned hubris as Odysseus’ issue. Here the tragic pride is embodied in the hair fixation. It is through the pomade that the hounds of Hell are able to keep finding our crew. At the end when Everett humbles himself, it is washed away and he is free. Loved all George’s insights- great react both of you…keep’em coming!!

    • @kirbyculp3449
      @kirbyculp3449 Год назад

      I read that brothers converted to Christianity.

  • @crimsonknight7011
    @crimsonknight7011 Год назад +4

    The girls referred to the guy trying to take his wife as a suitor which is what happened in the Odyssey, there were numerous suitors trying to marry his wife

    • @artbagley1406
      @artbagley1406 Год назад

      Odysseus' wife's name in "The Odyssey" is Penelope; Ulysses' (Clooney's) wife's name in the movie is "Penny," a usual nickname for ... Penelope!

  • @darkwing0o0rama
    @darkwing0o0rama Год назад +3

    Regarding old stories set in a different setting: several of Akira kurosawa’s films are adaptations of Shakespeare plays in feudal Japan

    • @kh884488
      @kh884488 Год назад

      Throne of Blood is awesome

  • @jonathancain1646
    @jonathancain1646 Год назад +1

    The first time I saw this movie was on VH1 where they were doing "Pop Up Video" for movies so it explained all the Odessey connections throughout.

  • @parallaxnick637
    @parallaxnick637 Год назад +3

    Spike Lee's Chi-Raq is a loose adaptation of the Lysistrata by Aristophanes. While I always hesitate to recommend this movie to those unfamilar (it's REALLY dark) Angel Heart is basically a modern retelling of the play "Oedipus the King" by Sophocles.
    The Coens like to put Devil=like characters into their movies. Like the Lone Biker of the Apocalypse in Raising Arizona and Charlie Meadows in Barton Fink.

  • @RaymLovesEggs
    @RaymLovesEggs Год назад +1

    Running Scared (2006 film): an action thriller that contains themes and allusions to the Brothers Grimm stories and other fairy tale archetypes.

  • @martin43427
    @martin43427 Год назад +4

    In terms of movies like O’ Brother that reinterprets old literature into this new stylization would be another Coen Brothers film, A Serious Man (2009), which is black comedy that loosely resembles the Book of Job. (Though the Coen brothers deny thinking of Job while writing it but it’s hard to believe them at their word at times.) It’s one of their best movies and plays into their more absurdist sense of humor but is equally funny.

  • @gregoryhurst8483
    @gregoryhurst8483 Год назад +2

    I love how they put Robert Johnson, the great blues man into the story with his famous “crossroads reference

  • @fallenhero3130
    @fallenhero3130 Год назад +6

    You guys should watch SULLIVAN'S TRAVELS (1941). This movie has many references to it, including the title and a lot of the visual iconography.

  • @tonygriffin_
    @tonygriffin_ Год назад +1

    6:23 - This is meant to be Robert Johnson, the 1930's Blues guitarist and songwriter. The crossroads shot from above is a nod to the legend that he became so good becuse he met the devil at a crossroads and sold his soul in exchange for his abilities. He died at 27 - though his great music lives on.

  • @GoroScornshard
    @GoroScornshard Год назад +3

    This isn't even the only Odyssey based movie set in the south to exist. There's also cold mountain with Jude Law and Nicole Kidman.

  • @jubbbs
    @jubbbs Год назад +1

    George Clooneys singing voice is performed by Dan Tyminski. He's one of my favorite musicians and also plays in Union station.

  • @mikeduplessis8069
    @mikeduplessis8069 Год назад +13

    The Cohn brothers said the film was based on The Odyssey, except they had never read the Odyssey. But that didn't stop them.

    • @markl1839
      @markl1839 Год назад

      They claimed they had read the graphic novel adaptation, but that was it.

    • @DopeSauceBenevolence
      @DopeSauceBenevolence Год назад

      Neither did Homer, it’s an oral history bro.

  • @Farwell3d
    @Farwell3d Год назад +2

    So, funny story: the Coen Brothers later claimed they've never read The Odyssey, and they just did versions of the parts they knew/that everybody knows.

  • @williamozier918
    @williamozier918 Год назад +3

    The soundtrack for this movie is amazing!

  • @kitkompo
    @kitkompo 8 месяцев назад

    my grandpa was my father figure in my life and i love sharing this movie with him. it was one of the few moments we shared joy while watching a movie we both love.
    i love this movie. ❤😂

  • @SilentBob731
    @SilentBob731 Год назад +11

    Tim Blake Nelson is great in this, but "The Ballad Of Buster Scruggs" is definitely his best movie.

    • @mournblade1066
      @mournblade1066 Год назад +2

      Regarding Buster Scruggs, I saw someone write, "I've always wondered what a Chaotic Evil bard would be like" (referring to the class in Advanced Dungeons & Dragons). Truer words never written.

    • @yermatedave4930
      @yermatedave4930 Год назад +1

      His work as "Looking Glass" in the Watchmen mini was also stellar. He credits his acting lessons in maskwork for the strength of his performance.

  • @jimbrentar
    @jimbrentar Год назад

    yes, people used to let pies cool down on the windowsill, and occasionally they'd get stolen

  • @ivanmendoza7582
    @ivanmendoza7582 Год назад +3

    George Clooney actually had a distant relative read his lines to him because he had a pretty thick accent so Clooney used his

  • @dannagy546
    @dannagy546 Год назад

    The singer who actually sang "Man of Constant Sorrow" is Dan Tyminski of the group Union Station, famous for their collaboration with Alison Krauss

  • @scipio7837
    @scipio7837 Год назад +15

    The soundtrack is a must have... EPIC compilation.

  • @artao5
    @artao5 Год назад

    You got it Simone. Chain gangs were the machine that turned rocks into gravel. For things such as train track ballast and road beds. Generally the rocks would get dropped off where the gravel was needed, and then broken down in situ.

  • @jrobwoo688
    @jrobwoo688 Год назад +3

    “Dang! We’re in a tight spot.”
    Please watch the 1994 film Clerks. Clerks is a comedic take on Dante’s Inferno. The Devine Comedy

    • @jrobwoo688
      @jrobwoo688 Год назад

      IMDB says this of Clerks ;
      Clerks is loosely based on "The Divine Comedy" by Dante Alighieri. There are nine breaks in the movie to represent the nine rings of hell.

  • @paulcochran1721
    @paulcochran1721 Год назад +1

    Dan Tyminski is the singing voice of George Clooney. He is a member of Alison Krauss's band Union Station, She also sings on the soundtrack.

  • @greenbeech3055
    @greenbeech3055 Год назад +3

    Robert Johnson was an actual blues musician, who claimed he once sold his soul to the devil in exchange for his talent.

    • @davidcann2405
      @davidcann2405 Год назад +1

      The legend is actually about Tommy Johnson as told by his brother LaDell. Robert Johnson wrote a song about it
      so everyone thinks it was about him.

  • @HelloXrancidkitteh
    @HelloXrancidkitteh 7 месяцев назад

    for the song recording scene, George Clooney wasn't lip singing. although it wasn't his voice we hear in the movie. He wanted it to look real, so he actually sang the song into the can that whole scene and later, they edited to actual vocalists over.

  • @rg3388
    @rg3388 Год назад +4

    Klan scene is a very literal WIZARD OF OZ reference. Gillian Welch is heard singing on the soundtrack as she is seen onscreen asking for the boys' record. As for modern films based on old stories, with only seven basic plots, everything is a remake of something.

  • @JohnBelcher-v7z
    @JohnBelcher-v7z Год назад +1

    Dan Tyminski was the singer on Man of Constant Sorrow, just saw him in concert the last week

    • @0okamino
      @0okamino Год назад

      Mrs. Tyminski was extremely pleased to learn that her husband’s voice would be coming out of George Clooney’s mouth. 😄

  • @RobertDPore
    @RobertDPore Год назад +4

    To explain the racist jargon you were confused by, "papist" is indeed a slur against Catholics, and "miscegenating" refers to white and black people having children together.
    The "Devil's" outfit is inspired by a prison guard from the 60's movie "Cool Hand Luke", which could to some extent be best described as the "Anti-Shawshank Redemption."

  • @EazyDuzIt187
    @EazyDuzIt187 Год назад

    My dad loved this movie. I remember sitting down with the family on the old bubble screen, watching it..miss you da'. Everyday. 🕊

  • @7rollface
    @7rollface Год назад +3

    This film is the entry point for many people getting into bluegrass. Worked on me.