Cam's 'wtf is that thing' comment about the credit card machine did me in. Not only did it make me laugh but also made me feel old as dirt, lmao. You guys give the gift of laughter everytime. Love it and thank-you!
@@dr.burtgummerfan439 yeah, some of the references are lost on younger viewers, but the reactions are still great. Love seeing them react to and appreciate the classics!
Some of us were expecting it at the time because of Hughes' Ferris Bueller ending the year before. I would say John Hughes was a pioneer except for Airplane!
The chemistry between Steve Martin and John Candy was amazing. You don't see that many "on the road"" movies with actors that were picked so well for parts like that. I think maybe "Tommy Boy", "Dumb and Dumber" and "Midnight Run" are close but these two guys were the best.
John Candy was always an amazing comedic performer and actor. This movie showed off just how fantastic a dramatic performer he could be. Every time he starts talking about his wife at the end I break down. Loved this movie and John Candy. Steve Martin's great too of course.
John Candy was a legend. We will never see anyone perform the way he did. That connection was forever lost when he passed away. Not only that, he was also a very humble human being. RIP John.
That credit card machine was one of the small ones in the early 80s. You literally imprinted the credit card numbers onto three pages, with two pieces of carbon paper. You had the customer sign it, then called the credit card company and got a verification number you wrote on it, as well as the TTL amount, and what was purchased. Then you gave the customer the first copy, threw away the two carbon pages and you were done. Took about five or ten minutes. But the book keeper still had to mail the next copy for payment, and save the last copy in case the payment didn't come.
The cashier was supposed to fill out what was purchased in general. Gas, groceries or whatever. Also match the signature on the back of the card and refuse it if it wasn't signed, or didn't match. Once in a while when you'd call, the credit card co. would ask you to cut the card in two and mail it to them. It was their property, not the card holders and could be taken back at any time. I sent a few in that I revoked for them and always received a $50. reward. Now of course they just push a button and all the machines world wide will refuse the card. But back then they instructed the cashier to refuse the card or revoke it. Talk about some upset customers, but $50. was two days pay back then.
@@tomemig7465 Oh god... matching signatures. I'd forgotten about that ! Teen age me rarely did that, especially during holidays. And we were never told to seize the card. $50 sure would have tempted me though, if I'd known.
@@user-lv6rn9cf8m They did. The last time I remember using one was in a college bookstore in 1998 but I've probably seen them after that, maybe in the 2000s
The late great John Candy always touches hearts in his movies. Check out " Cool Runnings" The Great Out doors" or Uncle Buck...plus many more. we lost him way too soon in 1994...
Yes, you're right (1:06:30): the reason for the R rating is all the f-bombs in the tirade at the car rental counter, which they were not willing to take out.
Fun fact: the guy on the intercom at the Wichita airport that you said, “his spirit animal is a sloth.” That was Ben Stein, former speechwriter for President Richard Nixon. He became an actor. He was in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off and the teacher.
Excellent analysis guys. But yeah, the "fuck" scene where he's totally unhinged is hilarious and the only reason it had an R rating. Otherwise pg. Also, a post credits scene was not invented by Marvel. If you haven't seen it yet watch another John Hughes movie called Ferris Bueller's Day Off. Hughes dominated comedy in the 80s.
*Ferris Bueller's Day Off* (1986) has a particularly famous and funny post-credits scene, but the earliest one in a general release movie is apparently in *The Silencers* (1966).
It says a lot about John Hughes. Willing to take a big financial hit by keeping that scene the way it was written and garnering that R rating, just because it is an awesome scene.
C/Z, Two more Steve Martin movie classics where he is hilariously amazing..”The Jerk” and “The Man With Two Brains” . Love to see you add these to future comedy polls
John Hughes made 6 films about grownups in 1987 throughout the 1990’s, his transition from all those 80’s teenage flicks that ruled the movie box office and put Hughes on the map of teenage movies. I LOL watching this movie and it surprisingly had a lot of heart and it made me cry too. It took me a while even years hahaha to realize Planes, Trains, and Automobiles is a Thanksgiving movie & NOT a Christmas movie. The movie was released in November 25, 1987. Thanksgiving Day, starring two comic geniuses from my generation, Steve Martin and John Candy. I grew up in the 70’s. I’d always nicknamed John “the candy man” cuz of his last name. John passed away in 1994. R.I.P John BTW: I did not call John “candy man” after that horrifying 1990’s Candy Man movie!!! Oh gross!!! Have fun watching this holiday comedy. 😆😆😆
You kids make me laugh! I enjoy watching you guys crack up OR freak out in a serious movie. I hope you guys get to your 10,000 subs. I'm a flight attendant, I should make an announcement and tell all the people on the plane to subscribe to your channel.
Awh man, first watched this movie with my mate around this time 4 years ago after a return trip from hell, took us 3 days to get back to Ireland from Rome. Anything that could go wrong, did go wrong. We planned on taking the train to London then fly back to Dublin. Got on a train to Milan, realised we left belongings back at the hotel, got back to hotel, grabbed our stuff, got on the wrong train, had to last minute find accommodation for the night, finally get back to Milan the next day and i wish I could say that was the last mishap but it just went on and on..... Anyway, coincidentally this movie came on, I think 2/3 days after we got back home, we sat down to watch and never have I related to a movie so much 😂 although it really put things in perspective, no socks in sinks, no spooning, no attacks of the groin area, no burning cars, in comparison, our trip was a mild inconvenience! 😂
@@titanz1029 yeah i looked it up cuz i was curious, looks like itd be fun done in stages, spend a day or 2 in each location, might try it sometime, not sure if id pick it over flying if i was returning home though lmao
I was so proud of you for finding post credit scene in airplane. Never saw that before on a reaction video. It was probably the first one. First one i saw in theater
You guys are so lucky to have grown up with cells phones, GPS, Uber, etc. Him getting left in the car rental parking lot was the kind of thing that happened a lot back in the day.
Most people favor Uncle Buck as John Candy's favorite character I love Del Griffith the most, such a beautiful soul who means well and just wants to be liked and accepted for who he is, him and Steve Martin are great together, the airport/rental car scene is probably one of my favorites in movie history it's comedy gold
Ok, I'm 57 and watched this in the theater when it was released. I have also watched it many times since. For the first time today after watching your reaction I found out there was a post credit scene. Thanks for that, loved your reactions!
hey guys, the first ever post credits scene was in 1966 in the movie The Silencers and had a few in the 70s and 80s, ( my fav was Young Sherlock Holmes) tell the moaners to feck off :)
2 things that should merit mention...the cameo by Kevin Bacon, and the fact that Dell was played by a great John Candy, that you guys seem unfamiliar with. He played mostly supporting roles in tons of movies, and sadly died of a heart attack at 43, seven years after this film release. Kevin Bacon's cameo was a result of Kevin Bacon and John Candy both being in another John Hughes film...She's having a baby shot just prior to this. It was the man Neal was racing to the taxi cab at the start.
The credit card machine was also used in Airplane, through the pilots window.....it was a nightmare to use in retail stores...always took time while you had a line of customers
It was interesting when one of yous (sorry, first video of yours I've seen) mentioned the idea of Neil cheating in the last scene. Obviously it was meant as a joke, but actually, in the original script, there was subplot where his wife is suspicious that Del doesn't actually exist and was made up by Neil to cover up the fact he was cheating. If you listen carefully, you can hear that she is suspicious of him in an early scene: 'I don't understand what Wichita has to do with a snowstorm in Chicago.' Then, at the end, when she finally acknowledges Del Griffin by name, that was supposed to be her finally accepting that Neil wasn't cheating. I think Hughes was right to cut that subplot since it would have messed with the tone of the final scene.
46:10 Fun fact: In the original script, she DID think he was cheating on her and made up the stories about Del. That's why she was "a wreck." When Del walked through the door, she realized that her husband had been telling the truth. Bringing Del home literally saved his marriage.
SO glad someone else knows that. It adds a new level of poignancy to when she says "Hello Mr Griffiths" as she realises she had nothing to worry about all along as Neal was telling the truth. Never understood why they filmed it as scripted but decided to cut the sub plot in editing.
They really should have kept that subplot in. Or at least the diet version of it, it would help make that end all the sweeter as you see Neil come home to a loving family and wife who's got that sense of relief that her hubby is still faithful, and Del who now has a kind of found family for the holidays
One of the greatest endings, and the perfect Thanksgiving movie. Raise a glass to John Hughes for THIS one, it's never going to go away, like It's A Wonderful Life. PT&A is eternal.
That scene at the car rental... 😆 I am usually a patient person, but if there was no car in the rental spot and I had to make my way to the ticket counter; plus the lady was discussing her Thanksgiving plans... That would anger me too. When I rent a car now I chuckle inside remembering this scene lol
There is a message to this movie!! You never know why two people can be serendipitously brought together. If he would have caught his plain. They may never have met! I believe this is true in resl life not just movie's!!
Zay said ’that was funny’ to the best line in the movie. Also, emotional faces in the end made this my favourite reaction video yet. Love from Finland.
in the race to the cab scene with Kevin Bacon, Kevin happened to be filming a different movie at the time (She's Having A Baby), and the same chase scene appears in that movie from Kevin's perspective.
Those old school credit card processing devices always fascinated me as a kid... Sometimes store workers allowed me to slide the thing over the card....
I loved the eighties comedy movies. There are a few from that era that everyone needs to watch. "Stir Crazy" "Arthur" "Blues Brothers" "My favourite Year" to name a few. Great reaction to a great comedy .
There's a post credit scene on Ferris Bueller too. That's the only one I remember off the top of my head. I love watching this movie even though I know the result. It always brings happy tears.
Watched this when it was first released and still laughing along with Cam & Zay , a classic, Other work from these two Steve Martin in DIRTY ROTTEN SCOUNDRELS is comedic genius and John Candy in COOL RUNNINGS based on a true story maybe his best work
You guys just watched my ALL TIME FAVORITE MOVIE. Looked like you guys enjoyed it. Glad to see that. Fun to watch it again with you guys for the first time.
Having been a teenager in the 80s, my friends and I almost always stayed to the end to see if there after credit scenes. There were quite a few but it wasn't every movie.
C'mon people SUBSCRIBE!!! I can't tell you how many times I've rewatched the "Airplane" scene when Cam loses his fucking shit with an ever increasing uncontrolled volcanic HOWLING SCREAM of laughter. Just saw you'd posted this reaction, heard in the quick preview that awesome hilarious HOWL and my bad mood is already better. Subscribe!! Cam & Zay will make ya smile!
Awesome Reaction..... This is a Classic Holiday Movie...... Post Credits Scenes....... They go back to atleast the 1966 movie "The Silencers".... I THINK the 1968 movie "Bullitt" had a couple scenes during ending credits, The 1977 "Smokey and The Bandit" movie had Out-Takes and Bloopers during the closing Credits..... Even the 1979 "The Muppet Movie" had a scene after/during the Closing Credits........ I am sure there are others I'm not remembering at moment......
I'll always remember this movie because it was the very first movie that I and my buddies got to watch at the very end of our nine weeks of Army Basic Training. Those nine weeks of constant stress, physical and mental hell were all released in laughter so hard and deep while watching this movie at the base cinema. I never knew just how powerful and rejuvenating laughter could be until that day. Then we had two days off before doing nine more weeks of military police training at the same base with the same Drill Sargent's. That segment of our training was just as stressful both physically and mentally. I'm so glad that we were able to let go and laugh so hard at this movie. It'll always be one of my favorite movies just because of that!
Not a credit card machine. It's called an imprinter, it rubs the image of the card's raised lettering onto a receipt with an original and carbon copy. This would have been a bit old fashioned at the time in 1987, electronic card readers were around since the 70's but didn't become common until the 80's.
Boys… back in the day credit card machines were sub-analog. You made a carbon copy of the card along with the signature & charge amount… MAIL it to the credit card company. THEN they would pay you 😄 Also, anytime I reference something that no one else knows, I immediately think of that three coins in a fountain song 🤣🎤 ALSO, also, there’s a deleted subplot where the wife DID think Neal was having an affair… that’s why she was so distressed when they spoke & why she was so relieved to see that Del was real.
I’ve seen this movie a million times and never knew there was a post credit scene glad you guys laughed so much with an older movie esp when isiah said his parents recommended it
One of my favorite comedies of all time. So glad to see it has aged as well as I think it has. My other favorite comedy of this era is Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, which also has Steve Martin. Just comedy gold.
There's was a subplot to the movie that got cut out where Neal's wife thinks Del Griffith was a made up person and that possibly Neal is cheating on his wife. This explains why she's so relieved to meet Del at the end. Really good movie.
Yes, that's a credit card machine. That's why your card has raised numbers on it. So that roller passes over it and leaves an impression on a carbon copy receipt. One for you and one for the merchant. That's how you made a credit card purchase before the internet. The merchant would mail their receipt to the credit card company and they would reimburse the merchant. You had to have good credit and earn a certain level of income to be able to have a credit card. They were status symbols. There were no debit cards then. There were ATM cards but you couldn't use them at point of purchase. They were only for withdrawing cash from an automatic teller machine.
John Candy is a national treasure. RIP
Yes! A Canadian national treasure!
Stay safe, stay sane, stay Strong
🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦
International treasure
He’s a human just like you and me.
So is Steve Martin. Great comedic chemistry between the two.
Gone way too soon
Cam's 'wtf is that thing' comment about the credit card machine did me in. Not only did it make me laugh but also made me feel old as dirt, lmao. You guys give the gift of laughter everytime. Love it and thank-you!
Yup.
Reactors say the same thing in "Airplane!"
@@dr.burtgummerfan439 yeah, some of the references are lost on younger viewers, but the reactions are still great. Love seeing them react to and appreciate the classics!
I worked at a motel one summer and used that machine. That is why the name and number etc. are embossed on the card so it marks the carbon paper ..
We all felt old at that point. Back in the day indeed...
lol Yep that was a credit card machine. It made an imprint on carbon copy paper.
There was no internet back then to connect to the credit card machine, so you had to take those papers to the bank like checks to get your money.
Their Gen Z is showing.
The first, last and only film my family is allowed to put on during Thanksgiving. Such a wonderful story about personal growth and empathy.
Holy crap. I'm 46 and have watched this countless times but I've never seen the post credit scene before. Thanks for that. 😀
59 here. 😂😍
Some of us were expecting it at the time because of Hughes' Ferris Bueller ending the year before. I would say John Hughes was a pioneer except for Airplane!
49 and same here.
“She’s small but she’s strong, her first baby came out sideways, she didn’t scream or nothing.”
“What a little trooper.”😂😂😂
Planes don't run out of Wichita 😂😂
John Candy…the name speaks volumes…a total legend
I loved this movie when it came out. My favorite line was "Those aren't pillows!".
Mine is "WHY would I put it there!!!!"
Among my favorite lines was: "He's drunk! How would he know where we're going?"
Looooooooool 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Mine too!!!
The chemistry between Steve Martin and John Candy was amazing. You don't see that many "on the road"" movies with actors that were picked so well for parts like that. I think maybe "Tommy Boy", "Dumb and Dumber" and "Midnight Run" are close but these two guys were the best.
John Candy was always an amazing comedic performer and actor. This movie showed off just how fantastic a dramatic performer he could be. Every time he starts talking about his wife at the end I break down. Loved this movie and John Candy. Steve Martin's great too of course.
Summer rental john candy
He was also known as one of the nicest actors. People that knew and works with him had nothing but stellar things to say about Candy. Gone too soon
"The guy who played Del Griffith". That is John Candy sir.. SAY HIS NAME, FOR HE IS A LEGEND.
John Candy was a legend. We will never see anyone perform the way he did. That connection was forever lost when he passed away. Not only that, he was also a very humble human being. RIP John.
Guess y’all gonna have to watch Uncle Buck after this.
One of the funniest most wholesome movies ever, RIP John Candy.
Another great comedy movie with Steve Martin is "Dirty Rotten scoundrels"
Yes!! I was coming to say this!! OKLAHOMA! OKLAHOMA! OKLAHOMA! OKLAHOMA! 😂😂😂
@@dawnburris6412 🤠
Agreed, and another good movie with Steve Martin (he wrote it too) is Bowfinger. A different kind of comedy, but really funny and original.
@@DelGuy03 Bowfinger is hilarious!
But "The Jerk" tops them all.
That credit card machine was one of the small ones in the early 80s. You literally imprinted the credit card numbers onto three pages, with two pieces of carbon paper. You had the customer sign it, then called the credit card company and got a verification number you wrote on it, as well as the TTL amount, and what was purchased. Then you gave the customer the first copy, threw away the two carbon pages and you were done. Took about five or ten minutes. But the book keeper still had to mail the next copy for payment, and save the last copy in case the payment didn't come.
Was that on the accounting end? I never wrote down items purchased, just had them sign and gave them the top copy. Some customers wanted the carbons.
The cashier was supposed to fill out what was purchased in general. Gas, groceries or whatever. Also match the signature on the back of the card and refuse it if it wasn't signed, or didn't match. Once in a while when you'd call, the credit card co. would ask you to cut the card in two and mail it to them. It was their property, not the card holders and could be taken back at any time. I sent a few in that I revoked for them and always received a $50. reward. Now of course they just push a button and all the machines world wide will refuse the card. But back then they instructed the cashier to refuse the card or revoke it. Talk about some upset customers, but $50. was two days pay back then.
@@tomemig7465 Oh god... matching signatures. I'd forgotten about that ! Teen age me rarely did that, especially during holidays. And we were never told to seize the card. $50 sure would have tempted me though, if I'd known.
I wasn't born in the early 80's and still remember them clearly so they must have lived on into the mid 90's at least
@@user-lv6rn9cf8m They did. The last time I remember using one was in a college bookstore in 1998 but I've probably seen them after that, maybe in the 2000s
Saw at the theater, when Del turns into the Devil I couldn’t stop laughing, so funny such a classic! Thanks Guys!
John Hughes used that again in Home Alone in the basement with the sink.
The airport rap scenes broke me up. Steve Martin can really play the man at his wits end.
I was a kid, watching it on Brazilian tv, dubbed, in the 80s.
That scene almost ended with my life, i could not breath so hard i was laughing
Pillows and devil are my favorite scenes!!!!!
I think you are ready for a John Hughes marathon-Ferris Buellers Day Off, Vacation, Home Alone….
The late great John Candy always touches hearts in his movies. Check out " Cool Runnings" The Great Out doors" or Uncle Buck...plus many more. we lost him way too soon in 1994...
Yes, you're right (1:06:30): the reason for the R rating is all the f-bombs in the tirade at the car rental counter, which they were not willing to take out.
Fun fact: the guy on the intercom at the Wichita airport that you said, “his spirit animal is a sloth.” That was Ben Stein, former speechwriter for President Richard Nixon. He became an actor. He was in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off and the teacher.
Cool Runnings is not only a great movie starring John Candy but also based on a crazy true sports story!
John Hughes directed a number of really excellent movies. He had a real talent for this sort of movie. Him and Chris Columbus.
Excellent analysis guys. But yeah, the "fuck" scene where he's totally unhinged is hilarious and the only reason it had an R rating. Otherwise pg. Also, a post credits scene was not invented by Marvel. If you haven't seen it yet watch another John Hughes movie called Ferris Bueller's Day Off. Hughes dominated comedy in the 80s.
Airplane had post credits and that predated FBDO.
*Ferris Bueller's Day Off* (1986) has a particularly famous and funny post-credits scene, but the earliest one in a general release movie is apparently in *The Silencers* (1966).
It says a lot about John Hughes. Willing to take a big financial hit by keeping that scene the way it was written and garnering that R rating, just because it is an awesome scene.
C/Z, Two more Steve Martin movie classics where he is hilariously amazing..”The Jerk” and “The Man With Two Brains” . Love to see you add these to future comedy polls
little shop of horrors
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels
The Jerk!!! 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
John Hughes made 6 films about grownups in 1987 throughout the 1990’s, his transition from all those 80’s teenage flicks that ruled the movie box office and put Hughes on the map of teenage movies.
I LOL watching this movie and it surprisingly had a lot of heart and it made me cry too.
It took me a while even years hahaha to realize Planes, Trains, and Automobiles is a Thanksgiving movie & NOT a Christmas movie. The movie was released in November 25, 1987. Thanksgiving Day, starring two comic geniuses from my generation, Steve Martin and John Candy. I grew up in the 70’s. I’d always nicknamed John “the candy man” cuz of his last name. John passed away in 1994. R.I.P John
BTW: I did not call John “candy man” after that horrifying 1990’s Candy Man movie!!! Oh gross!!!
Have fun watching this holiday comedy. 😆😆😆
John Hughes nearly invented the post-credit scene. That being said, four words: "Ferris Buehler's Day Off."
You kids make me laugh! I enjoy watching you guys crack up OR freak out in a serious movie. I hope you guys get to your 10,000 subs. I'm a flight attendant, I should make an announcement and tell all the people on the plane to subscribe to your channel.
Ever gotten sock-waving passengers? :)
@@lepuuttelu Oh a lot worse!! Trust me! LMAO!
Awh man, first watched this movie with my mate around this time 4 years ago after a return trip from hell, took us 3 days to get back to Ireland from Rome. Anything that could go wrong, did go wrong. We planned on taking the train to London then fly back to Dublin. Got on a train to Milan, realised we left belongings back at the hotel, got back to hotel, grabbed our stuff, got on the wrong train, had to last minute find accommodation for the night, finally get back to Milan the next day and i wish I could say that was the last mishap but it just went on and on..... Anyway, coincidentally this movie came on, I think 2/3 days after we got back home, we sat down to watch and never have I related to a movie so much 😂 although it really put things in perspective, no socks in sinks, no spooning, no attacks of the groin area, no burning cars, in comparison, our trip was a mild inconvenience! 😂
wait.... is there actually a direct train from Rome to London? How did i not know this???
@user-ih8vc3yh7d not direct, we had to change twice, we got Rome-Milan, then direct Milan-Paris, then got the Eurostar to London.
@@titanz1029 yeah i looked it up cuz i was curious, looks like itd be fun done in stages, spend a day or 2 in each location, might try it sometime, not sure if id pick it over flying if i was returning home though lmao
This was a great movie with so much heart. John Candy and Steve Martin were at their best here and thanks so much for watching it.
The woman behind the rental car counter was also the assistant principal in “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off”.
I was so proud of you for finding post credit scene in airplane. Never saw that before on a reaction video. It was probably the first one. First one i saw in theater
You guys are so lucky to have grown up with cells phones, GPS, Uber, etc. Him getting left in the car rental parking lot was the kind of thing that happened a lot back in the day.
That man's spirit animal is a sloth. 🤣😅🤣😅🤣 That actor has the same role in every movie he is in.
It is always fun for me as an old guy, to have younger people discover this and like it.
When you consider ratings, give a higher rating to rewatching.
Most people favor Uncle Buck as John Candy's favorite character I love Del Griffith the most, such a beautiful soul who means well and just wants to be liked and accepted for who he is, him and Steve Martin are great together, the airport/rental car scene is probably one of my favorites in movie history it's comedy gold
Ok, I'm 57 and watched this in the theater when it was released. I have also watched it many times since. For the first time today after watching your reaction I found out there was a post credit scene. Thanks for that, loved your reactions!
hey guys, the first ever post credits scene was in 1966 in the movie The Silencers and had a few in the 70s and 80s, ( my fav was Young Sherlock Holmes) tell the moaners to feck off :)
2 things that should merit mention...the cameo by Kevin Bacon, and the fact that Dell was played by a great John Candy, that you guys seem unfamiliar with. He played mostly supporting roles in tons of movies, and sadly died of a heart attack at 43, seven years after this film release. Kevin Bacon's cameo was a result of Kevin Bacon and John Candy both being in another John Hughes film...She's having a baby shot just prior to this. It was the man Neal was racing to the taxi cab at the start.
probably the greatest thanksgiving themed item to do a reaction on is the turkey drop episode on a tv show called " wkrp in cincinnati".
👍
Ferris Bueller has a post credit scene that Deadpool parodied.
The credit card machine was also used in Airplane, through the pilots window.....it was a nightmare to use in retail stores...always took time while you had a line of customers
Actor in post-credits was William Windom - a wonderful actor!
This film is one of the truest depictions of the "working homeless."
It was interesting when one of yous (sorry, first video of yours I've seen) mentioned the idea of Neil cheating in the last scene. Obviously it was meant as a joke, but actually, in the original script, there was subplot where his wife is suspicious that Del doesn't actually exist and was made up by Neil to cover up the fact he was cheating. If you listen carefully, you can hear that she is suspicious of him in an early scene: 'I don't understand what Wichita has to do with a snowstorm in Chicago.' Then, at the end, when she finally acknowledges Del Griffin by name, that was supposed to be her finally accepting that Neil wasn't cheating. I think Hughes was right to cut that subplot since it would have messed with the tone of the final scene.
46:10 Fun fact: In the original script, she DID think he was cheating on her and made up the stories about Del. That's why she was "a wreck." When Del walked through the door, she realized that her husband had been telling the truth. Bringing Del home literally saved his marriage.
SO glad someone else knows that. It adds a new level of poignancy to when she says "Hello Mr Griffiths" as she realises she had nothing to worry about all along as Neal was telling the truth. Never understood why they filmed it as scripted but decided to cut the sub plot in editing.
@@dabe1971 I heard the original cut of the film was like 3 hours long so they decided to cut the sub plot where Neil’s wife thinks he’s cheating.
They really should have kept that subplot in. Or at least the diet version of it, it would help make that end all the sweeter as you see Neil come home to a loving family and wife who's got that sense of relief that her hubby is still faithful, and Del who now has a kind of found family for the holidays
There was also some deep scenes with John candy giving a great emotional performance that got cut.
@@gpk1982thank god!!!!Hackneyed, unimaginative overused - jealous wife.
One of the greatest endings, and the perfect Thanksgiving movie. Raise a glass to John Hughes for THIS one, it's never going to go away, like It's A Wonderful Life. PT&A is eternal.
That scene at the car rental... 😆 I am usually a patient person, but if there was no car in the rental spot and I had to make my way to the ticket counter; plus the lady was discussing her Thanksgiving plans... That would anger me too. When I rent a car now I chuckle inside remembering this scene lol
Zay's shirt looks like it was inspired by The Big Lebowski
One of the first post credit scenes I remember is Ferris Bueller’s Day off
There is a message to this movie!! You never know why two people can be serendipitously brought together. If he would have caught his plain. They may never have met! I believe this is true in resl life not just movie's!!
Who ever requested this, thank you. Excellent choice and underrated.
YEAH! Post-credits scene!
Everyone do the Steve Martin Dance
three other thanksgiving movies: home for the holidays, dutch, and pieces of april.
Zay said ’that was funny’ to the best line in the movie. Also, emotional faces in the end made this my favourite reaction video yet. Love from Finland.
Another comedy that is similar in how the chaos (and laughs) builds up is The Money Pit with Tom Hanks.
Educating those non post credit knowing fools, one movie at a time haha. Nice one lads, enjoyed that 👍
Today I learned that John Candy is "that guy." Fucking brilliant. Love you guys.
in the race to the cab scene with Kevin Bacon, Kevin happened to be filming a different movie at the time (She's Having A Baby), and the same chase scene appears in that movie from Kevin's perspective.
1:08.30 Nobody ever notices the name of the book Dell is reading at the airport....😂😂🤣
Those old school credit card processing devices always fascinated me as a kid... Sometimes store workers allowed me to slide the thing over the card....
I loved the eighties comedy movies. There are a few from that era that everyone needs to watch. "Stir Crazy" "Arthur" "Blues Brothers" "My favourite Year" to name a few. Great reaction to a great comedy .
Arthur...I havent seen a reaction to this one yet.
You might consider watching "Roxanne", which is my personal favorite of Steve Martin's movies.
John Candy aged 43..sad,but obesity,alcohol and smoking caught up…John and Steve were fantastic
You absolutely must see "Uncle Buck" with John Candy
There's a post credit scene on Ferris Bueller too. That's the only one I remember off the top of my head. I love watching this movie even though I know the result. It always brings happy tears.
JS John Hughes is one of the Best Writers/Directors of all Time. Alot of his movies are Iconic and stand the Test of Time.
Watched this when it was first released and still laughing along with Cam & Zay , a classic, Other work from these two Steve Martin in DIRTY ROTTEN SCOUNDRELS is comedic genius and John Candy in COOL RUNNINGS based on a true story maybe his best work
This is the GOAT road trip type movie. Great Thanksgiving watch
You guys just watched my ALL TIME FAVORITE MOVIE. Looked like you guys enjoyed it. Glad to see that. Fun to watch it again with you guys for the first time.
Having been a teenager in the 80s, my friends and I almost always stayed to the end to see if there after credit scenes. There were quite a few but it wasn't every movie.
The guy who broke in their hotel room was the Pizza Guy, looking for his tip 🍕
That was a deleted scene doing the hotel sequence.🎞🎞
Bringing Down the House with Steve Martin is great too.
One of my all time favorite movies. Thanks for your reaction.
C'mon people SUBSCRIBE!!! I can't tell you how many times I've rewatched the "Airplane" scene when Cam loses his fucking shit with an ever increasing uncontrolled volcanic HOWLING SCREAM of laughter. Just saw you'd posted this reaction, heard in the quick preview that awesome hilarious HOWL and my bad mood is already better. Subscribe!! Cam & Zay will make ya smile!
Awesome Reaction..... This is a Classic Holiday Movie......
Post Credits Scenes....... They go back to atleast the 1966 movie "The Silencers".... I THINK the 1968 movie "Bullitt" had a couple scenes during ending credits, The 1977 "Smokey and The Bandit" movie had Out-Takes and Bloopers during the closing Credits..... Even the 1979 "The Muppet Movie" had a scene after/during the Closing Credits........
I am sure there are others I'm not remembering at moment......
Plenty of 80s flicks had post credits scenes. John Hughes also did it in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off. Not sure what people are talking about.
This is one of my FAVORITE movies and I've seen it countless times. I never knew about the post-credit scene until your video. Thank you!
Great reaction guys! You guys should react to Adventures in Babysitting (1987). It’s a PG-13 teenage movie. Very funny
Saw that in the theatre. Loved it!
You guys would love Midnight Run with Robert De Niro and Charles Grodin. Seems Like Old Times is another funny one.
I'll always remember this movie because it was the very first movie that I and my buddies got to watch at the very end of our nine weeks of Army Basic Training. Those nine weeks of constant stress, physical and mental hell were all released in laughter so hard and deep while watching this movie at the base cinema. I never knew just how powerful and rejuvenating laughter could be until that day.
Then we had two days off before doing nine more weeks of military police training at the same base with the same Drill Sargent's. That segment of our training was just as stressful both physically and mentally. I'm so glad that we were able to let go and laugh so hard at this movie. It'll always be one of my favorite movies just because of that!
Not a credit card machine. It's called an imprinter, it rubs the image of the card's raised lettering onto a receipt with an original and carbon copy. This would have been a bit old fashioned at the time in 1987, electronic card readers were around since the 70's but didn't become common until the 80's.
Boys… back in the day credit card machines were sub-analog. You made a carbon copy of the card along with the signature & charge amount… MAIL it to the credit card company. THEN they would pay you 😄
Also, anytime I reference something that no one else knows, I immediately think of that three coins in a fountain song 🤣🎤
ALSO, also, there’s a deleted subplot where the wife DID think Neal was having an affair… that’s why she was so distressed when they spoke & why she was so relieved to see that Del was real.
I’ve seen this movie a million times and never knew there was a post credit scene glad you guys laughed so much with an older movie esp when isiah said his parents recommended it
"Armed and Dangerous"...John Candy, Eugene Levy, Meg Ryan, Robert Loggia...very funny...
Greatest Thanksgiving movie ever made. I watch it every year before football
One of my favorite comedies of all time. So glad to see it has aged as well as I think it has. My other favorite comedy of this era is Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, which also has Steve Martin. Just comedy gold.
Guys, so much fun watching people see this national movie treasure for the first time! Awesome reaction!
All these years, although I found it so funny, I never understood why Steve Martin's voice was so high pitched when he got in the car. Now I know 😂😂
There's was a subplot to the movie that got cut out where Neal's wife thinks Del Griffith was a made up person and that possibly Neal is cheating on his wife. This explains why she's so relieved to meet Del at the end. Really good movie.
Yes, that's a credit card machine. That's why your card has raised numbers on it. So that roller passes over it and leaves an impression on a carbon copy receipt. One for you and one for the merchant. That's how you made a credit card purchase before the internet. The merchant would mail their receipt to the credit card company and they would reimburse the merchant. You had to have good credit and earn a certain level of income to be able to have a credit card. They were status symbols. There were no debit cards then. There were ATM cards but you couldn't use them at point of purchase. They were only for withdrawing cash from an automatic teller machine.
Not a holiday movie but a great comedy-The Big Lebowski.
Every day is a holiday when the Dude abides.
😂😂😂i love this film makes me laugh hysterically every viewing...especially when John Candy gets his jacket stuck on that car seat
This is the first time I've known there was a post credit scene in this movie.
I haven't seen this movie for years! Hilarious reaction guys 😂 You should also watch ”The Jerk” with Steve Martin, another classic 💖
This is one of my all time FAVORITE movies for sure !
Your reaction made me subscribe, genuine and honest reaction
I still miss John Candy.
Ferris Bueller's Day off started the post credit scene trend. Not going to swear that it was the first one, but it definitely started the trend.
Fyi boys. NY and Chicago are if different time zones. That's how you can leave NY at 600 and get to Chicago at 645.
In the 1980 movie Being There with Peter Sellers there was an extended outtake scene at the end which might’ve been one of the very first
Which undermined the ending. I think Sellers might've even blamed that for costing him the Oscar.
@@doughbafett didn’t undermine it for me I loved it. You can go tell Rafael