True Stories (1986) - Dinner with the Culvers

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  • Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024
  • Excuse me, Mr. Culver. I forget what these peppers represent.

Комментарии • 56

  • @plathrop7737
    @plathrop7737 6 лет назад +53

    "Excuse me, Mr. Culver, I forgot what these peppers represent"

  • @9x19-i5s
    @9x19-i5s 2 года назад +14

    I’m watching this in my company’s break room on a Sunday morning.
    There really is no concept of the weekend anymore, you know it’s true.

  • @alisterfolson
    @alisterfolson 7 лет назад +25

    This movie was ahead of its time

  • @KeelyBurnMusic
    @KeelyBurnMusic 7 лет назад +50

    "There's no concept of weekends anymore!"
    I didn't really understand that line until I started working full time and co-workers started asking me "How was your weekend?," to which I can only respond with confusion- "but you were there, you know what I did!"

    • @nymets9559
      @nymets9559 6 лет назад

      KBMusic I work full time Mon-Fri

    • @MrBROTHERFELDER
      @MrBROTHERFELDER 5 лет назад +1

      I work for Ford Motor Co. Henry Ford pushed the concept of “The Weekend” so the workers would buy a Ford and take their families places.

    • @sirdeadlock
      @sirdeadlock 4 года назад +1

      Where I work, a weekend is whenever you happen to get two days off in a row.

    • @PeterJoll
      @PeterJoll Год назад

      It's even weirder when you do freelance work, as I've been discovering the past few weeks.

  • @PallaraZara
    @PallaraZara 12 лет назад +77

    - Do you hear music?
    - Something wrong with your sister?

  • @datrionthegreat2975
    @datrionthegreat2975 3 месяца назад

    Damn, this scene from 1986 is still so relevant to events today in 2024.

  • @MrPurofan1
    @MrPurofan1 13 лет назад +8

    @peninsulacheeks Totally. "There's no concept of weekends anymore!" gets me every time!

  • @mortimerjames218
    @mortimerjames218 6 лет назад +5

    God, i love this movie

  • @MrStrategyInformer
    @MrStrategyInformer 12 лет назад +8

    I miss Spalding Gray. :(

  • @PlsWaLuigiDomMe
    @PlsWaLuigiDomMe 5 лет назад +5

    I love this movie. Started my fetish for small American towns lol

  • @thekraemer1757
    @thekraemer1757 2 года назад

    So prophetic 34 years ago. Now its called disruption.

  • @smiller4659
    @smiller4659 Год назад +17

    I remember being a kid and thinking this was a movie I had discovered and that no one else knew about. I thought--and still do--believe it's unique and like nothing I've seen.

  • @xtallyx1
    @xtallyx1 8 лет назад +66

    " Linda, Larry, there's no concept of weekends anymore ! "

  • @peninsulacheeks
    @peninsulacheeks 14 лет назад +29

    Thanks for posting this!
    My favorite bit:
    Mr. Culver - "Economics has become a spiritual thing. I must admit it frightens me a little bit. They don't seem to see the difference between working and not working. It's all become a part of one's life. Linda, Larry! There's no concept of weekends anymore!"

    • @gisellegazda3884
      @gisellegazda3884 2 года назад +3

      That’s so true in regards to the weekends.

  • @paulaharrisbaca4851
    @paulaharrisbaca4851 6 лет назад +36

    I LOVE this film. Even though the culture we've created is a strange mutant of this.

    • @forestbirdgirl
      @forestbirdgirl 3 года назад

      IMHO this "culture" has spread all around the world

    • @juanmilanese
      @juanmilanese 2 года назад

      maybe it was a cautionary tale?

  • @schematalist
    @schematalist 11 лет назад +25

    Up there with the following:
    It's a multipurpose shape, a box.

  • @sethstaa
    @sethstaa 10 лет назад +31

    This movie keeps on giving in so many ways.

    • @matthewsutton3682
      @matthewsutton3682 7 лет назад +7

      This movie was an enormous influence on me as a teen in the mid-90s. I'm 37 in the 2017 and it's still influencing me.

  • @greenmanTN
    @greenmanTN 13 лет назад +65

    "They don't work for money anymore or to earn a place in Heaven, which was a big motivating factor once upon a time, believe you me."
    I love that line.
    "Middle class people have worked for large corporation like VariCorp, or for the government itself" is actually a VERY subversive statement. It implies that corporations and the gov't are so inextricably linked that when you work for one you might as well be working for the other.

    • @forestbirdgirl
      @forestbirdgirl 3 года назад +1

      and academia, and the churches, and the schools, and the hospitals, and the farms...on and on and on...

    • @jillybeancadney6229
      @jillybeancadney6229 3 года назад

      english plz... I want to understand this

  • @zobop
    @zobop 9 лет назад +16

    Miss you, Spaulding

  • @kathberry8
    @kathberry8 8 лет назад +41

    they tried to warn us of the impending doom, but had to present it in this playful manner, so they would not seem threatening to the planners...I always found this to be a highly prophetic work...I saw this for the first time around 1996 or so...'it's all true!'...

  • @blakespot
    @blakespot 12 лет назад +14

    This is the greatest and best film i the world.

  • @MarquisdeSuave
    @MarquisdeSuave 4 года назад +4

    Spalding Grey, the least Texan man in America.

  • @Pipsocle
    @Pipsocle 11 лет назад +7

    I actually shouted "HOLY SHIT THAT'S SPALDING GRAY" when he got his close-up

  • @Ultrabum1987
    @Ultrabum1987 6 лет назад +8

    This movie is a gem.

  • @souvenirdriver6776
    @souvenirdriver6776 5 лет назад +5

    one of the best scenes in one of my favorite movies

  • @DoomerDad
    @DoomerDad 10 лет назад +6

    RIP Spalding Gray

  • @gisellegazda3884
    @gisellegazda3884 2 года назад +2

    I can’t like this enough. One of my favorite scenes in one of my all-time favorite films.

  • @pedrova8058
    @pedrova8058 5 месяцев назад

    then we get Silicom Valley, Machintosh, Tesla and the Iphone 16 🙃

  • @bitterbeauty711
    @bitterbeauty711 6 месяцев назад

    Spaulding Grey was a talented writer and actor.

  • @nineteenthly
    @nineteenthly 6 лет назад +9

    This can be seen as either prophetic or a case of nothing new under the sun. Also, I could never work out why they didn't speak because they seemed to be on perfectly good terms.

    • @muffdiver240
      @muffdiver240 5 лет назад +4

      I believe you're overthinking it. The fact that they were on good terms, and yet inexplicably communicated exclusively through third parties, is what makes them amusing as a couple.

    • @GGoAwayy
      @GGoAwayy 4 года назад +3

      John Goodman's character explains to David at the fashion show that they haven't spoken (directly) to each other in years.

    • @venetiagentzler2324
      @venetiagentzler2324 2 года назад +4

      David Byrne based many of the characters on the odd , weird stories seen in Weekly World News, Star, National Enquirer, etc i the 80s. The guy who took out a billboard looking for a wife, the couple who didn't speak to each other for years because he refused to apologize, the lazy woman who never left her bed...

    • @nineteenthly
      @nineteenthly 2 года назад

      @@venetiagentzler2324 really? I had no idea but that makes a lot of sense. Thanks.

  • @justincase4812
    @justincase4812 Год назад

    Notice how the wife's endeavors are marginalized. Troubled family.

  • @BruceMOable
    @BruceMOable 11 лет назад

    pass the food with your right or left hand?

  • @richies6420
    @richies6420 4 года назад

    PRICELESS!!!!

  • @allenthompson1168
    @allenthompson1168 4 года назад

    True.

  • @allenthompson1168
    @allenthompson1168 4 года назад

    11

  • @xtallyx1
    @xtallyx1 11 лет назад

    Straaaaange.

  • @Beshrewed
    @Beshrewed 15 лет назад

    Hahahah, wtfffff!??!?!

  • @MsUrsulaHitler
    @MsUrsulaHitler Год назад +7

    Mr. Culver is a fascinating character. He always sounds kind of like a salesman giving a Powerpoint presentation, talking about PROGRESS and GROWTH, but his dialogue is peppered with these lines that are casually despairing. "Of course, nowadays not everyone is having kids, what with the end of the world coming up and all." In this scene he's like some weird wizard of commerce, making the dinner plates spin with a wave of his hand, but as powerful as he is and as confident as he sounds, there's this feeling like it could all come crashing down at any moment. He's devoted his entire life to business, and now, on some level he may not even understand himself, he's deeply unfulfilled and lost. He believes the planet is doomed and he probably senses that men like him are responsible for it, but he keeps on building and selling because that's all he knows.