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I'm starting to think that most of the mis-quoted lines are from people who are paraphrasing the line in order for people to understand where the line is coming from. For instance, if you just say, "No, I am your father", most people probably wouldn't understand that it's from Star Wars (although it is a pretty famous example). But if you say, "Luke, I am your father", then people understand that you're Darth Vader talking to Luke Skywalker
No, it came from comedians and late night talk show host. The misquote started back then and then they did it in movies parodies. Then people because of the Rashomon Effect took it took far.
I am confused by the point of 17. Gremlins. There are 3 rules, one is the most important, specifically for the Mogwai (not to feed them after midnight). They still have the 2 other rules as Mogwai and Gremlins. The sunlight one does come in handy if your break the first two rules.
I was looking for someone else ago was bothered by this. Stripe (as a gremlin) went to the YMCA and jumped into the pool to make more. The sunlight ultimately killed the gremlins at the end of the movie.
@@adessa97 There is a very good reason the "after midnight" rule is so confusing. Humans edited the rule to after midnight instead of leaving it how it was said by Rixi (who created the rules for Mowgai).
One from Star Trek. “Beam me up, Scotty” This is an often heard quote. This was never said in any Star Trek. The closest instance of this being said was in Star Trek IV TVH, where Admiral Kirk says “Scotty, beam me up.”
Here's another misquote. In "The Wizard of Oz", one of the most iconic lines is often misquoted. When Dorothy and Toto arrive in Munchkin Land, many people believe they heard Dorothy say, "Toto, I don't think we're in Kansas anymore". However, the correct line is "Toto, I have a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore".
@@abegarfield7030 It's called the Mandela effect. It's like when people remember Darth Vader saying "Luke, I am your father", but he actually said "No, I am your father".
The other Oz quote everyone gets wrong is when the Witch of the West is sending out the Flying Monkeys. It's not "Fly, my pretties, fly!", it's just "Fly, fly!"
Regarding Gremlins, I think the fact that the other two rules about water and sunlight continue to apply to them after their transformation also helps people to misattribute the third rule as well.
But what constitutes, "After midnight?" It's always after midnight if you think about it. Is there a window of time where you can feed them? Is okay to feed them an hour or two after? And are timezones a factor?
@@cooltrainervaultboy-39 Gremlins 2 actually has a minor character ask that. It was even featured in TV spots. He straight up says, "It's always midnight somewhere," right before a gremlin bursts out of the console he's working at and attacks him.
@@cooltrainervaultboy-39 The actual rule is don't feed them when the moon is at it's highest peak. Humans changed the rule to midnight, which explains why the "after midnight" is so ambiguous.
Jason Vorhees is sometimes depicted (or referenced, such as "Christmas Vacation") as wielding a chainsaw. But he never uses one in the films. He only has them used against him, in parts 2 and 5 (even tho it is not Jason in part 5)
You don't think that that's just an homage to both Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Friday the 13th? There are people that desperately want others to be wrong to elevate themselves. But, an homage isn't rooted in a 100% accurate depiction.
I was so excited to see Indiana Jones here but then it was for the wrong reason! I would have swapped that for the title. Everyone always calls it: Indiana Jones & the Raiders of the Lost Ark. That's not right. They didn't start putting "Indiana Jones" in the title until the second one. The first one is just Raiders of the Lost Ark.
For marketing reasons Lucasfilm and Paramount, not Disney, changed the title of the film for the 1999 VHS THX release. This coincided with the release of the Young Indiana Jones Chronicles on VHS which also added chapters of the episodes including the original Indiana Jones trilogy. I think this is when a large portion of people realized that Temple of Doom was actually a prequel to Raiders of the Lost Ark as Temple was listed as Chapter 23 and Raiders as chapter 24.
@@noiamyourfather1104 That one has ALWAYS bugged me. The original Trilogy was: First Blood Rambo: First Blood Part 2 (co-written by James Cameron, btw), and then Rambo 3 So what happened to Rambo 2?
I have never once ran into someone who calls it "Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark." Not ONCE in my 46 years. It's always been called Raiders of the Lost Ark. Or simply just Raiders for the lazy people.
The 1925 silent film version of Ben Hur did have the death of a stuntman during a rehearsal of the chariot race. Singing in the rain did have difficulty filming the rain because of the lighting, and they had to use backlighting, which was very difficult to hide when Gene Kelly was dancing all over the place.
I don't believe anyone could still think Jason is the killer in the original "Friday the 13th" since 1996, and the iconic deadly pop quiz opening scene in "Scream".
No one does. Mojo is just lazy. ALL of these are famously well know. MAYBE 20 or 30 years ago SOME of these weren't as well known, but nowadays everyone knows these factoids (the original meaning of the term, i.e. an assumption or speculation that is reported and repeated so often that it becomes accepted as fact. Kind of like how the term "factoid" came to mean "little fact" by being used incorrectly for so long even though we already have a word for that: trivia.)
@@OldDemonToothDid you know that Mark Hammil and Robert Englund used to be roommates and are still close friends. That's my favorite weird little "factoid:* Luke Skywalker and Freddy Krueger are buddies!?!
I did, until I was at least in my late 20s. Never saw Friday the 13th, was only 10 when Scream came out, and was never all that interested in horror movies. So I knew bits and pieces about them through pop culture osmosis, but not the finer details. Like, I knew there were two killers in Scream and that one of them was played by Matthew Lillard; I knew there was a fakeout opening with Drew Barrymore, but I didn't even know there *was* a quiz in that opening, etc.
I've never seen Scream. I know Jason wasn't the original killer, but I watched the film. Consider that a 30 year old today would not have been around when the film came out, and likely has not seen it. They just associate Jason with Friday the 13th and would assume that he was the killer in the franchise, period, not knowing the history. What you believe doesn't matter, what actually is matters. The number of people I actually have spoken to who think that Chucky was created from the recent TV series and had no idea a movie franchise exists...it would shock you. Believe it or not.
“Not officially” haha. That is great. Friday The 13th 1 and 2 are classically non-consistent because Jason drowned in the first one as a boy. Jason is a fully grown man in part 2 very much alive. They never actually filled in the gaps where you wonder, “Was his mother fooled into thinking Jason died even though she was talking to his ghost? Or, was she just schizophrenic? Maybe Jason really was dead while Camp Crystal Lake’s curse gave everyone nightmares.” These are questions that nobody can fully answer….just the way horror fans love it!
@@benjaminA.stantonpun You don't have to die to drown. And probably yes, Pamela probably did "fool" herself as her son fended for himself in the wilderness. Remember Jason's drowning did drive her crazy. Apparently a really short trip.
[16:22] Jim Carrey mimicking Hannibal Lecture was one of his improvised moments in Cable Guy. You can see Matthew Broderick laughing and that was genuine. You'll notice Jim himself laughs when he first starts the impression. [edit] At [17:15] you show the wrong clip to go with the Casablanca misquote. The actual scene is when Humphrey Bogart has this exchange with Sam: Rick - "You played it for her. You can play it for me." Sam - "But, I don't think I can remember...". Rick - "If she can stand it I can. Play it!".
It's understandable with the Rocky thing. The outcome of the match is literally background noise. The highlight of the moment is that Rocky went the distance with the champ and I think the most important part is he desperately wants to share the moment with his true love. Rocky is really a love story. He wants to win the heart of Adrienne more than he wants to win the title. Its better that he didn't win
Plus that to those who have mostly seen the third and fourth movie, in which he's several times referred to as the champion, it can be easy to assume that he became the champion in the original movie, and that the second movie is somewhat obscure in comparison As for me, I was naive enough to watch "Rocky Balboa" first, then watched the original, and I assumed that Rocky won in the latter due to being called a champion in the former. It wasn't until years later that I finally saw Rocky II
I really liked the first one because of this. he didn't have to "win" when he already won in his own mind, doing what he wanted to accomplish. He went the distance, which is what he ultimately set out to do, to prove it to himself that he could do it. When Apollo said "There ain't gonna be a rematch", Rocky replied: "Don't want one." THAT proved it to me that getting the title wasn't what Rocky was after. Rocky did what he had set out to do, and was satisfied. Which is also why I never bothered watching the second one. Everything I read about it suggests to me that it was little more than Rocky 1.5, in that everything that should have/would have happened in the first one, happens in the sequel. He gets the title. He marries Adrienne and has a baby. He becomes more famous/well known. That's the logical outcome of the first one, really. The first true sequel (in my eyes, anyway) is the third one, where things happen that turn his entire world upside down, provide him with different challenges.
@elzibiel Well, I wouldn't say "Rocky II" is just an alternative version of the original. He gets married, but he also squanders most of his prize money (like most people who aren't used to handling huge sums of money), and he's way too uneducated and incompetent to do a regular white collar or blue collar job, so the stakes are raised: either he goes back in the ring (despite his health issues), or he falls into poverty with his now wife and new-born son. Apollo meanwhile is angry at people publicly shaming him for not "beating Rocky", and his kids now getting bullied in school because of it. He therefore demands a rematch and becomes more of a threat since he's way more serious than last time, but it's ultimately pride that leads to his downfall: he dominates Rocky throughout most of their rematch, and he could easily have won again by split decision if he just "danced around" during the last rounds. However, because he demands that he wins by knock-out, he tires himself out and gets knocked out himself, losing his title. On the other hand, his loss becomes a catalyst for him wanting to lift Rocky up again after the latter loses the title in the third movie So, while I will always prefer the original, I still respect "Rocky II" for what it does
@elzibiel I'm not really a fan of the second movie being referred to as Rocky 1.5. I've seen it referred to that multiple times and completely disagree. It's trying to tell 2 important stories. It continues to tell the love story of Rocky and Adrienne, reinforcing Rocky's love and respect for her. He won't even get back in the ring without her blessing. The other story is Apollo. You learn what makes him the champ and get to see "killer" Apollo. And like MorganKing95 said, he's much more of a threat and makes for a tougher fight for Rocky. And by the time of the fight, neither man can afford to lose. So I would say that Rocky 2 just builds on the things already established in the first movie. I strongly suggest watching it and deciding for yourself. I am biased, though. I love all the movies except for Rocky Balboa, so maybe I'm just a fan boy lol
I, for one, am happy to see the Mandela effect for Vader’s revelation mentioned. It’s such a small detail of magnified vitality. I’m also aware that, after reading a George Lucas bio called _I Am George Lucas,_ he was conflicted between making _More American Graffiti,_ which served as a sequel to the OG _American Graffiti,_ and _The Empire Strikes Back._ Both movies eventually came to pass, but remember this: sharp eyes and re-watches can catch otherwise easy-to-miss details.
It's because media satirizes the whole thing in a different way because probably sounds funnier and stuff! And we get the wrong idea about those lines and stuff happening in a movie or something else regarding this kind of media! Especially with internet those years its hard to follow many times,and you can easily forget important bits & dots in general!
The fact about Tim Burton not directing A Nightmare Before Christmas I tell that to people all the time they don't believe me they like to argue that one
Technically the same rules apply to Mogwai as well as Gremlins. Feeding a Gremlin after midnight is pointless since they already changed but I would recommend not feeding them at any time.
*The "Beach flashback" in "Airplane!" (1980) is parodying "From Here to Eternity" (1953), not "Grease" (1978)* *Also, "Lethal Weapon" (1987) should also be in the Action/Christmas genre debate, along with "Die Hard" (1988)*
Lethal Weapon doesn't count as a Christmas movie because it being Christmas is a coincidence and not integral to the plot. Christmas os however integral to the plot of Die Hard. It being Christmas is the only reason John McClane is in L.A. He came to spend Christmas with his family.
@@matts1166 Oo! I remember that thing being in the trai8ler for the movie. And, I believe, it was used to dispatch that PoS psychologist (or whatever he was).
@@BronyNumber4096 There was a trailer for Part 5 that had a chainsaw revving up, but that was a red herring, as it was someone else using it against the "non-Jason."
The Bad News Bears are in the same category as Rocky here. It was a lovable underdog story, but the Bears actually lost the title game to the dreaded Yankees.
Star Trek, The Orginal Series. Beam me up, Scotty. The precise qoatation are "Scotty, beam us up" said in the episodes The Gamesters of Triskelion and The Savage Curtin. While in the episode This Side of Paradise Kirk says "beam us up" and in the episode The Cloud Minders Kirk says "Mr. Scott, beam us up".
In the movie "Legend", Tim Curry did NOT play Satan/the Devil in spite of his very convincing appearance. He played Darkness, who was a child of the devil. That's the "father" he keeps talking to during the film.
He was a child of Mother Night and an unspecified "Father." You can interpret Father as being Satan if you need the movie to be a Christian parable. But, I don't recall any part of the setting indicating that it was a monotheistic world nor a Christian one. It's more probably that Darkness is the son of Night and Evil (or Chaos or some similar abstraction). Based the portrayal, it also isn't inaccurate to label Darkness a devil. Given the makeup and set design for Darkness, it certainly borrows from ideas of the Devil and Hell. So, people will conflate Darkness with Satan; however, there's no indicator that Darkness is the child of Satan. So, you're no more accurate than the people you're complaining about.
Ok the one about Singing in the rain, I would have been tipped off by the fact that the ground would have been covered in the milk. If they were expecting the Techno-color to pick up the "milk" droplets, it would have caught the milk on the ground.
@@Jalex0021 it didn't matter about their personal opinion on how the fight should've been called or if they thought Rocky deserved a win or draw... Everyone who's seen the movie knows Apollo was announced the winner of the fight and I don't know anyone who's seen the movie who remembers otherwise.
10:30 "The Take In Which He Was Fatally Wounded Was Not In The Final Edit Of The Film And Was Destroyed After An Investigation Into The Accidental Death" That's probably for the best that they didn't include that in the final editing of the movie, as it'd be akin to reliving Brandon's death all over again
The misremembered rumor about The Crow that gets me the most is that he's confused with a different actor on a different movie who was playing with a gun with blanks and was fatally wounded. People often cite that incident as this one and it angers me.
A second tragically early death for the family. I was due to see him at a Bruce Lee convention a couple of months later. Hid death appeared in the Sun on 1st April, so I waited until it was verified elsewhere before I could believe it. Like his father before him he had only begun to tap into his great promise as a film star and went out leaving his best role for us to watch posthumously. RIP.
8:59 The only Star Wars movies that George Lucas wrote and directed were the prequels and episode IV of the original trilogy He'd only wrote and directed episode IV and not "The Empire Strikes Back" and "Return Of The Jedi" because his stress levels while doing both jobs took a toll on him to the point where he'd almost had a heart attack
George wrote the original script for A New Hope but not the script used for shooting the movie. The shooting script was a collaboration between George, Gloria Katz, and Willard Huyck.
I think the best thing about jason not being the killer in the first one is that the twist works better only if you know about jason from outside the franchise.
When I finally watched the first movie I was surprised Jason isn't the killer but I was well aware of the character. And he doesn't wear the hockey mask until 3 (I think). People who watch videos like these will learn about the twists but if you haven't, then it is a surprise.
Another I hear is people referring to the Vulcan from "Star Trek" as Dr Spock. It is Mister Spock, not Doctor Spock. Part of the confusion comes from the fact that, in the 70s, when the original "Star Trek" was on TV, there was a best-selling book by a child psychologist called Dr Spock (Dr Benjamin Spock), who was one of the first to advocate against smacking children.
Surely the death in the chariot race was in the original, silent, Ben Hur (1925). Stunt work was a lot wilder back then, and in the briefest glimpse, you can even see a set hand (in modern dress) running to help the guy. Doesn't mean it's true, I admit. NB: 'Play it again Sam', Yes, Ingrid Bergman says the line you give, but the iconic mistake is from Bogart's later ultra-cynical line: "You played it for her, you can play it for me. Play it!"
I love how some will still argue the ghost in 3 men and a baby. Even though a child couldn't have dided in the house since the house scenes were filmed in a soundstage
I have a TV one. Mr T never once uttered the line "I pity the fool" during any episode of "The A-Team". He says variations of the line, but never that specifically. He said the line in "Rocky 3" and other things, but never in "The A-Team".
That line is a Mr T catchphrase not a B.A. Baraccus catchphrase. If I had to name a B.A. Baraccus line it would probably be "I ain't getting on no plane".
The Singing in the Rain one is interesting. The first time i heard it was in a Universal Studioa tour.... Surely *they* know of it's accuracy? Also, I always believed it was heavily watered down milk, not just milk
It was a rain machine and although they produce a realistic effect, realistic isn't always good enough. Milk was added to the water to make it more visible. It's the way the effect has always been achieved until very recently.
I wouldn't have thought that anyone believed that Rocky won the match in Part 1. The whole point of part 2 was Apollo being salty about only tying him in the first match as opposed to totally destroying him.
Who the hell thought Rocky won that fight in part 1? The results are stated in 1 and again in 2 to setup a rematch for the title…. I can see if there was a question of who one in that “secret match” at the end of part 3 but that got answered in Creed 1 🤷♂️
Stunt legend Yakima Canutt's son was noted on record in a dvd documentary on being almost killed during the chariot race "pop up" stunt scene in "Ben hur" (should also be noted that Heston and Boyd did 95% of their own chariot riding.)
Not knowing many of the staff behind most movies, and therefore being unaware of the costume designer Edna was supposed to be modeled after, I had always assumed she was inspired by Linda Hunt, most recently known as Hetty in NCIS Los Angeles.
@@thesovereign4218 Everyone has had a different amount of exposure to different aspects of various cultures, so it is only natural for there to be so many different varying opinions.
For titanic: even if the area of the door would’ve allowed Jack onto the door frame, weight likely wouldn’t have. If he’d have also gotten onto the door they’d both be in the water and they’d probably both die.
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, 1948. Everyone misquotes the famous line as "We don't need no stinking badges!" but the actual quote is, "We ain't got no badges. We don't need no badges. I don't have to show you any stinking badges."
IIRC Blazing Saddles uses the "Badges" misquote during Hedley's Recruitment Drive scene... -- if people were already misremembering the line and this was to make fun of the misquote... and give people a false source.. or if Mel got it wrong too who knows and to be clear as you cite Sierra Madre was in 1948... and Blazing Saddles was 74... so somewhere in 26 years with the Internet to help circulate the false line people still managed to mass it up
Mythbusters tested it and proved Jack and Rose could fit. However, the director or writer that was on Mythbusters said he didn't care Jack was meant to die in his story
which is weird because James Cameron brought it to the MythBusters to coincide with the re-release for the film's anniversary. Got the answer that both could have fit and then decided that he didn't care.
I love your videos! I just wish you could find other words for « however » « iconic, » especially within one video. It just gets a little monotonous. Also, since I’m being a Grammar Pill 😁, I’d might as well tell you that technically, however should be used elsewhere besides the first word in a sentence. (Okay, that’s my journalism training.) Like I said, I LOVE your videos. It’s because I watch so many that I pick up on multi-usage of single words.
I always thought it was funny Cable Guy referenced the scene from Silence of the lambs where the prison guard gets his face cut off... The actor that plays that guard plays the cop in Cable Guy
Charles Napier's character Lt. Boyle isn't the one who had his face cut off. Sgt. Pembry played by Alex Coleman was the one who got his face cut off. Lt. Boyle was the one hanging from the cell in the bloody eagle. And they weren't prison guards(corrections officers), they were police officers. Incidentally Charles Napier's greatest film role is of Tucker McElroy in The Blues Brothers Movie.
Edna makes me think that she may have been a superhero herself once but decided to design costumes in later time and keeping the past more quiet. Which makes me also think about Henrietta Lange from NCIS:LA
Aside from the reveal, there were hints during the movie that showed this. For starters, Jason's hockey mask had red markings while Roy's mask had blue markings.
These days, everyone and their grandmother knows that Frankenstein is the name of the doctor, not the monster. However, not as many people know that the hunchback assistant in the original film is named Fritz, not Igor. Ygor (with a "Y", not an "I") actually first appeared in Son of Frankenstein, played by Bela Lugosi, and instead of being a hunchback, he had a broken neck, having survived a hanging.
Apocalypse Now. Everyone always seems to quote Col. Kilgore as saying "I love the smell of napalm in the morning. It smells like victory" No, that is not what he said. This is what he said... "You smell that? Do you smell that?... Napalm, son. Nothing else in the world smells like that. I love the smell of napalm in the morning. You know, one time we had a hill bombed, for twelve hours. When it was all over I walked up. We didn't find one of 'em, not one stinkin' dink body. The smell, you know that gasoline smell, the whole hill. Smelled like... victory. Someday this war's gonna end..." He is not really talking about what napalm smells like, he is telling a story about the aftermath of a specific battle and how the smell took him back to that time. For his twisted mind it was a fond memory, like how a normal person might tell a story about how the smell of cookies baking reminds them of being in their Grandma's kitchen when they were a little kid.
Umm, sort of the entire point of Rocky is that he wins through his loss. He fights with actual integrity, and fights to the best of his ability, and loses the match. That's kind of what makes the movie so beautiful. He loses, but in the effort, he wins.
Agreed - the point was that he was the underdog who, through extreme dedication and training, competed against the best for the full 15 rounds and came close enough to have a split decision on points. No one thought he had a chance, and he came that close and therefore was a winner even though he lost the match. Hell, I haven't even SEEN the film and I know this.
In LifesBiggestQuestion has 1 vid if Titanic Jack lived, and its not so good. There's so many possibilities. A happy ending is 1that we hoped for. But there's also Jack having to enlist in WWI, the stock market crash of 1929, and WWII. U have to face reality of all that came after the sinking. Its really better to leave it as it is no matter how much we wish to change it.
The thing that I always found really silly with Gremlins (later on in life, not when I was a kid) was that it's always going to be "after midnight" somewhere on the planet. So is it actually related more to where the moon is in the sky compared to the location of the Mogwai? If so, then it must be a gravitational effect, because clouds and walls would prevent you from actually seeing it. Also, you can't fault people for thinking the Lion King said "Sex" when there was that Golden..."something" on the original cover of The Little Mermaid. There was absolutely NO mistaking what someone had slipped in there either, which is why they were recalled and the cover got changed.
@@andrewblanchard2398 The original VHS cover had a golden "tower" that looked too close to something else that it couldn't have been a coincidence. Those original tapes got recalled, and then Disney released a newer cover without it. Google "Little Mermaid Golden Tower".
So many nice facts😊We really think Rocky won,we know Indiana Temple and the Temple of Doom is prequel,bigger boat from Jaws is like you said.Vader really said:No,I am your father. He didn't say Luke.You're right about Lion King. When Simba lies down it really says SFX😊And I just saw it😀Maybe first time. Great number 1😀One of the most perfect and beloved movies ever😁
Thought Lucas still produced both Sequels and Wrote the story in empire strikes back and the shooting script for return of the Jedi, the sequel directors should get more credit for their work!
While I completely agree with you about Irvin Kershner directing The Empire Strikes back I have to disagree about Return of the Jedi. Kershner and Lucas butted heads alot during the entire production of Empire to the point that Kershner said he would never work for Lucas again and Lucas stating he would never hire kershner for another project. That is why Lucas turned to Richard Marquand to direct Return of the Jedi. Marquand was a new director, if Jedi wasn't his directorial debut it was definitely his highest profile at the time. Lucas walked all over him during production of Jedi and also oversaw the final edit of Jedi which Kershner refused of Lucas for Empire.
@@scottstark5528 i can understand that return of the Jedi isn't on the level of the first Two, but Lucas stated on the commentary of the film that he was grateful that he hired Marquand because he thought he nailed the dramatic scenes between Luke and Vader better than he could ever do himself, which obviously was the best part of the movie!
It's not commonly mistaken. The monster has been commonly referred to as Frankenstein for close to 200 years starting about 10 years after the original release of the book. The monster is never actually given a name in the book so society just kind of made a collective unconscious decision to refer to the monster as Frankenstein and the creator as Dr. or Victor Frankenstein. The monster is essentially Dr. Frankenstein's child and Europeans pass the family name on thus the monster inherited the name of its father Frankenstein. The monster has also been referred to or just strait up named Frankenstein in many properties since Mary Shelley's book came out.
@@timebleeder2814 you're right on those things but as you said the creature wasn't given a name and that Frankenstein was the name of the scientist that made it but it just feels like a mistake that people make, calling the monster Frankenstein
My guess is that Mogwai's procreate normally creating regular Mogwais, but the ones spawned from getting them wet are proto-Gremlins that become full Gremlins if they are fed after midnight.
@@Senjinone yes you can,it's referred as a TKO(technical knockout),in which a boxer can be declared knockout without physically being knockout and downed for a 10 count. This type can declared if either boxers last all the way till end of the match,or either boxers are unable to continue the match
The biggest one is from Casablanca. "Play it again, Sam". The actual lines are :- Ingrid Bergman saying :" Play it Sam. Play" As Time Goes By". Later, Humphrey Bogart says "You played it for her. Now, play it for me". So the two lines have been combined.
Another Friday the 13th misconception would be when depictions of Jason Voorhees have his weapon of choice being a chainsaw instead of a machete. Not only did Jason only use a chainsaw like two times at most throughout the franchise, but a chainsaw also defeats the whole purpose of him being a silent killer/murderer/whatever.
I have never heard of ANYONE who actually thinks Jason used a Chain Saw... outside of people in conversations like this trying to claim that there are people who think he uses a Chainsaw
The singing in the rain milk theory has some truth to it. Milk was added to water to make rain show up better on film n those days, but ut wasnt pute milk. It was literally a tiny amount. Like one litre of milk to 100 litres of water. Whether or not it was used in singing in the rain i dontknow but the likelihood is it probably wasused in similar proportion as above. But not full milk rain. Otgerwise it would be obvious on screen . It just had to be slightly murky enough to reflect light back to show up better on camera. Not pure white.
I can see where Vader's line is misquoted: _SOMETIMES the human ear thinks that the word "No" is really the name, "Luke"_ (Some inflections/accents cause certain words 2 sound like others)
Nah, it's just because it's misquoted so often that it's entered the cultural lexicon. And most people haven't seen the movie super recently and just misremember it. No one who actually hears the line is going to mistake it, but human memory is notoriously flimsy.
I'm surprised the whole "Han shot first" wasn't there. Han didn't shoot first in the original Star Wars; he was the ONLY ONE TO SHOOT. The original makes Han a more dangerous character that could betray Luke.
That singing in the rain myth used to be said on the tram tours at Universal studios in Hollywood. Pretty sure that's where most people even heard the rumor to begin with.
From Cool Hand Luke the line is often misquoted as "What we have here is a failure to communicate" when what is actually said is "What we've got here is failure to communicate.
The verdict they arrived to was that it was _plausible_ . It was shown that when they both got on the door they weighted it further down into the water which would have ultimately killed Jack and Rose due to exposure. The only way it could have stayed afloat was if they tied their lifebelts to the bottom and that's how MythBusters deemed it plausible. But let's get real-there's no way Jack or Rose would have had the presence of mind, much less the energy, to think of something like that.
Another misconception people get about The Incredibles is that they think Syndrome was right all along, which is not true. He was really a toxic, rejection intolerant fan who wanted to destroy all supers.
If I can't feed a Mogwai after midnight, then 1) what time can I start feeding it? And 2) according to which time zone? It's always midnight somewhere in the world. I know they asked that question in the sequel.
I've noticed that in some shows, witch i can't remember the name of. They have parodied the famous scene from the beginning of The Godfather and they've quoted the famous line "Ill make him an offer he can't refuse". But they've said it "Ill Make YOU an offer YOU can't refuse"
The seamless integration of music and production design in your video reflects your unwavering dedication to encapsulating the spirit of both eras, resulting in a mesmerizing and emotionally charged viewing experience. *DO YOU AGREE WITH ME*
Technically in Gremlins the gremlins still followed the same rules. Water made more of them so did food, thats why stripe jumped in the fountain at the end. Oh yeah and electricity kills them lol
And this is the "magical" Mandela Effect kids. Just a bunch of misremembered, misquoted, misspelled, or plainly invented things. Practice the mistake, and the mistake will become the law, albeit being wrong.
The rules appear to be the same for Gremlins as for Mogwai. We see in the movie both that when Gremlins get wet they spawn more Gremlins and that Sunlight kills them. The only question remaining is whether if you feed them after midnight, they become Mogwai.
A better one for Silence of the Lambs would be the blink, for some reason it's spread around that Hannibal didn't blink during his first interaction with Clarisse. He did blink, right before the hiss.
Is there a movie myth we were wrong for excluding? Let us know in the comments!
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Love your content
@@danielsantiagourtado3430I have watched Rocky on Netflix and I was bored beyond belief it's so slow moving and barely anything happens in the plot.
Should have included the Wizard of Oz and the munchkin hanging from a tree.
How do movie myths that were actually true!!
It seems like you could probably do a series out of both of those!!
@@montecorbit8280 I don't think that I know much of any that turned out to be real but it will definitely be interesting to learn about.
The dead muchkin in the Wizard of Oz is a pretty common myth.
That movie is like a breeding ground for Mandela Effects.
it was a bird in the background
I am aware of what it really is. The myth however was a munchkin hung himself. Just a myth no facts@@noiamyourfather1104
@noiamyourfather1104 that's what Hollywood wants you to believe
That's true
I'm starting to think that most of the mis-quoted lines are from people who are paraphrasing the line in order for people to understand where the line is coming from. For instance, if you just say, "No, I am your father", most people probably wouldn't understand that it's from Star Wars (although it is a pretty famous example). But if you say, "Luke, I am your father", then people understand that you're Darth Vader talking to Luke Skywalker
No, it came from comedians and late night talk show host. The misquote started back then and then they did it in movies parodies. Then people because of the Rashomon Effect took it took far.
No no it was Luke I am your father have it on vhs and that’s still the line. Luke I am your father.
@@corymarshbanks7143 Interesting, maybe I'll have to check my VHS as well
@@corymarshbanks7143 No you don't.
@@mogwaimofo wanna bet on that
I am confused by the point of 17. Gremlins. There are 3 rules, one is the most important, specifically for the Mogwai (not to feed them after midnight). They still have the 2 other rules as Mogwai and Gremlins. The sunlight one does come in handy if your break the first two rules.
But when exactly is after midnight?
And when is before midnight? This always got me.
I was looking for someone else ago was bothered by this. Stripe (as a gremlin) went to the YMCA and jumped into the pool to make more. The sunlight ultimately killed the gremlins at the end of the movie.
There are 4 rules. The 4th being eating a mogwai gives the person eternal life. And yes, that *is* canon.
@@adessa97 There is a very good reason the "after midnight" rule is so confusing. Humans edited the rule to after midnight instead of leaving it how it was said by Rixi (who created the rules for Mowgai).
One from Star Trek.
“Beam me up, Scotty”
This is an often heard quote. This was never said in any Star Trek. The closest instance of this being said was in Star Trek IV TVH, where Admiral Kirk says “Scotty, beam me up.”
Also, in TOS episode 'The Squire of Gothos' he said, "Beam me up, Mr Scott.".
@@Trev359 Also, "One to beam up, Scotty".
Many of these misquotes are from parodies or re-enactments that people forgot about.
Here's another misquote. In "The Wizard of Oz", one of the most iconic lines is often misquoted. When Dorothy and Toto arrive in Munchkin Land, many people believe they heard Dorothy say, "Toto, I don't think we're in Kansas anymore". However, the correct line is "Toto, I have a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore".
I miss Kansas, Toto. And Boston, Chicago, The Doobies, Foreigner, Styx. . .
Laughing
No one has ever got it wrong.
Where are you getting this from?
@@abegarfield7030 It's called the Mandela effect. It's like when people remember Darth Vader saying "Luke, I am your father", but he actually said "No, I am your father".
The other Oz quote everyone gets wrong is when the Witch of the West is sending out the Flying Monkeys. It's not "Fly, my pretties, fly!", it's just "Fly, fly!"
Regarding Gremlins, I think the fact that the other two rules about water and sunlight continue to apply to them after their transformation also helps people to misattribute the third rule as well.
Even this video got it wrong.
Only feeding them after midnight chases Mogwais to Gremlins.
Water makes them multiply and sunlight kills them.
But what constitutes, "After midnight?" It's always after midnight if you think about it. Is there a window of time where you can feed them? Is okay to feed them an hour or two after? And are timezones a factor?
@@cooltrainervaultboy-39 Gremlins 2 actually has a minor character ask that. It was even featured in TV spots. He straight up says, "It's always midnight somewhere," right before a gremlin bursts out of the console he's working at and attacks him.
@@cooltrainervaultboy-39 The actual rule is don't feed them when the moon is at it's highest peak. Humans changed the rule to midnight, which explains why the "after midnight" is so ambiguous.
Maybe if you feed a Gremlin after midnight it will be even worse
Jason Vorhees is sometimes depicted (or referenced, such as "Christmas Vacation") as wielding a chainsaw. But he never uses one in the films. He only has them used against him, in parts 2 and 5 (even tho it is not Jason in part 5)
You don't think that that's just an homage to both Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Friday the 13th?
There are people that desperately want others to be wrong to elevate themselves. But, an homage isn't rooted in a 100% accurate depiction.
I was so excited to see Indiana Jones here but then it was for the wrong reason!
I would have swapped that for the title. Everyone always calls it: Indiana Jones & the Raiders of the Lost Ark. That's not right. They didn't start putting "Indiana Jones" in the title until the second one. The first one is just Raiders of the Lost Ark.
what about rambo first blood it was only called first blood
For marketing reasons Lucasfilm and Paramount, not Disney, changed the title of the film for the 1999 VHS THX release. This coincided with the release of the Young Indiana Jones Chronicles on VHS which also added chapters of the episodes including the original Indiana Jones trilogy. I think this is when a large portion of people realized that Temple of Doom was actually a prequel to Raiders of the Lost Ark as Temple was listed as Chapter 23 and Raiders as chapter 24.
@@noiamyourfather1104 That one has ALWAYS bugged me.
The original Trilogy was:
First Blood
Rambo: First Blood Part 2 (co-written by James Cameron, btw), and then
Rambo 3
So what happened to Rambo 2?
I have never once ran into someone who calls it "Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark." Not ONCE in my 46 years. It's always been called Raiders of the Lost Ark. Or simply just Raiders for the lazy people.
I see it here and there with reaction videos on TH-cam.
The "dead person" in The Wizard of Oz is just a large bird.
An emu, IIRC. Apparently some "exotic" animals were in the background of some scenes to give the "set somewhere else" vibe.
The 1925 silent film version of Ben Hur did have the death of a stuntman during a rehearsal of the chariot race. Singing in the rain did have difficulty filming the rain because of the lighting, and they had to use backlighting, which was very difficult to hide when Gene Kelly was dancing all over the place.
I don't believe anyone could still think Jason is the killer in the original "Friday the 13th" since 1996, and the iconic deadly pop quiz opening scene in "Scream".
No one does. Mojo is just lazy. ALL of these are famously well know. MAYBE 20 or 30 years ago SOME of these weren't as well known, but nowadays everyone knows these factoids (the original meaning of the term, i.e. an assumption or speculation that is reported and repeated so often that it becomes accepted as fact. Kind of like how the term "factoid" came to mean "little fact" by being used incorrectly for so long even though we already have a word for that: trivia.)
@@OldDemonToothDid you know that Mark Hammil and Robert Englund used to be roommates and are still close friends. That's my favorite weird little "factoid:* Luke Skywalker and Freddy Krueger are buddies!?!
I knew it and when I watched scream for the first time I knew exactly what ghost face was gonna say
I did, until I was at least in my late 20s. Never saw Friday the 13th, was only 10 when Scream came out, and was never all that interested in horror movies. So I knew bits and pieces about them through pop culture osmosis, but not the finer details. Like, I knew there were two killers in Scream and that one of them was played by Matthew Lillard; I knew there was a fakeout opening with Drew Barrymore, but I didn't even know there *was* a quiz in that opening, etc.
I've never seen Scream. I know Jason wasn't the original killer, but I watched the film. Consider that a 30 year old today would not have been around when the film came out, and likely has not seen it. They just associate Jason with Friday the 13th and would assume that he was the killer in the franchise, period, not knowing the history.
What you believe doesn't matter, what actually is matters.
The number of people I actually have spoken to who think that Chucky was created from the recent TV series and had no idea a movie franchise exists...it would shock you. Believe it or not.
Another Friday the 13th misconception. That Jason was always undead (Jason was never officially undead till Jason Lives).
“Not officially” haha. That is great. Friday The 13th 1 and 2 are classically non-consistent because Jason drowned in the first one as a boy. Jason is a fully grown man in part 2 very much alive. They never actually filled in the gaps where you wonder, “Was his mother fooled into thinking Jason died even though she was talking to his ghost? Or, was she just schizophrenic? Maybe Jason really was dead while Camp Crystal Lake’s curse gave everyone nightmares.” These are questions that nobody can fully answer….just the way horror fans love it!
And that he teleport but nah he’s just jacked
@@benjaminA.stantonpun You don't have to die to drown. And probably yes, Pamela probably did "fool" herself as her son fended for himself in the wilderness. Remember Jason's drowning did drive her crazy. Apparently a really short trip.
Yea. He just popped out of the water after a long nap
@@chriswills936 Well, he can swim. Not really well, mind you...
[16:22] Jim Carrey mimicking Hannibal Lecture was one of his improvised moments in Cable Guy. You can see Matthew Broderick laughing and that was genuine. You'll notice Jim himself laughs when he first starts the impression.
[edit] At [17:15] you show the wrong clip to go with the Casablanca misquote. The actual scene is when Humphrey Bogart has this exchange with Sam: Rick - "You played it for her. You can play it for me." Sam - "But, I don't think I can remember...". Rick - "If she can stand it I can. Play it!".
Creed's victory in the first movie leads to one of my favorite lines in the second movie: "I won but I didn't beat him!"
It's understandable with the Rocky thing. The outcome of the match is literally background noise. The highlight of the moment is that Rocky went the distance with the champ and I think the most important part is he desperately wants to share the moment with his true love. Rocky is really a love story. He wants to win the heart of Adrienne more than he wants to win the title. Its better that he didn't win
Plus that to those who have mostly seen the third and fourth movie, in which he's several times referred to as the champion, it can be easy to assume that he became the champion in the original movie, and that the second movie is somewhat obscure in comparison
As for me, I was naive enough to watch "Rocky Balboa" first, then watched the original, and I assumed that Rocky won in the latter due to being called a champion in the former. It wasn't until years later that I finally saw Rocky II
I really liked the first one because of this. he didn't have to "win" when he already won in his own mind, doing what he wanted to accomplish. He went the distance, which is what he ultimately set out to do, to prove it to himself that he could do it. When Apollo said "There ain't gonna be a rematch", Rocky replied: "Don't want one." THAT proved it to me that getting the title wasn't what Rocky was after. Rocky did what he had set out to do, and was satisfied. Which is also why I never bothered watching the second one. Everything I read about it suggests to me that it was little more than Rocky 1.5, in that everything that should have/would have happened in the first one, happens in the sequel. He gets the title. He marries Adrienne and has a baby. He becomes more famous/well known. That's the logical outcome of the first one, really. The first true sequel (in my eyes, anyway) is the third one, where things happen that turn his entire world upside down, provide him with different challenges.
@elzibiel
Well, I wouldn't say "Rocky II" is just an alternative version of the original. He gets married, but he also squanders most of his prize money (like most people who aren't used to handling huge sums of money), and he's way too uneducated and incompetent to do a regular white collar or blue collar job, so the stakes are raised: either he goes back in the ring (despite his health issues), or he falls into poverty with his now wife and new-born son. Apollo meanwhile is angry at people publicly shaming him for not "beating Rocky", and his kids now getting bullied in school because of it. He therefore demands a rematch and becomes more of a threat since he's way more serious than last time, but it's ultimately pride that leads to his downfall: he dominates Rocky throughout most of their rematch, and he could easily have won again by split decision if he just "danced around" during the last rounds. However, because he demands that he wins by knock-out, he tires himself out and gets knocked out himself, losing his title. On the other hand, his loss becomes a catalyst for him wanting to lift Rocky up again after the latter loses the title in the third movie
So, while I will always prefer the original, I still respect "Rocky II" for what it does
@elzibiel I'm not really a fan of the second movie being referred to as Rocky 1.5. I've seen it referred to that multiple times and completely disagree. It's trying to tell 2 important stories. It continues to tell the love story of Rocky and Adrienne, reinforcing Rocky's love and respect for her. He won't even get back in the ring without her blessing. The other story is Apollo. You learn what makes him the champ and get to see "killer" Apollo. And like MorganKing95 said, he's much more of a threat and makes for a tougher fight for Rocky. And by the time of the fight, neither man can afford to lose. So I would say that Rocky 2 just builds on the things already established in the first movie. I strongly suggest watching it and deciding for yourself. I am biased, though. I love all the movies except for Rocky Balboa, so maybe I'm just a fan boy lol
I, for one, am happy to see the Mandela effect for Vader’s revelation mentioned. It’s such a small detail of magnified vitality. I’m also aware that, after reading a George Lucas bio called _I Am George Lucas,_ he was conflicted between making _More American Graffiti,_ which served as a sequel to the OG _American Graffiti,_ and _The Empire Strikes Back._ Both movies eventually came to pass, but remember this: sharp eyes and re-watches can catch otherwise easy-to-miss details.
It's because media satirizes the whole thing in a different way because probably sounds funnier and stuff! And we get the wrong idea about those lines and stuff happening in a movie or something else regarding this kind of media! Especially with internet those years its hard to follow many times,and you can easily forget important bits & dots in general!
Hell no.
I think the "Luke, I am your father!" misquote counts more as paraphrasing. It's said that way to highlight who is talking.
It's a Freudian slip, seeing that word in the sky. Those people have outed themselves😂
Shows where people's minds are - ie in the gutter.
The fact about Tim Burton not directing A Nightmare Before Christmas I tell that to people all the time they don't believe me they like to argue that one
In ET, he says “ET Home Phone”. Then baby Drew says “ET Phone Home”
the trailer caused the confusion
Technically the same rules apply to Mogwai as well as Gremlins.
Feeding a Gremlin after midnight is pointless since they already changed but I would recommend not feeding them at any time.
It'd be funny if they changed into something even worse.
*The "Beach flashback" in "Airplane!" (1980) is parodying "From Here to Eternity" (1953), not "Grease" (1978)*
*Also, "Lethal Weapon" (1987) should also be in the Action/Christmas genre debate, along with "Die Hard" (1988)*
Die Hard, one of the best Christmas movies.
Lethal Weapon doesn't count as a Christmas movie because it being Christmas is a coincidence and not integral to the plot. Christmas os however integral to the plot of Die Hard. It being Christmas is the only reason John McClane is in L.A. He came to spend Christmas with his family.
@@timebleeder2814 actually it's not Christmas movie. It's coincidence. It set up that way. Don't remember how. But it's awesome to watch😀
@@timebleeder2814
*You're right. The fact that the movie opens and closes with Christmas songs is purely coincidence.*
😁👍
The difference is, Lethal Weapon's Christmas was just background while Die Hard it was front and center.
When I saw Jason in the thumbnail I thought the myth of him using a chainsaw would be on the list.
what moron thinks jason used a chainsaw leather face uses a chainsaw not jason
He's only used a power tool once. Part 7. IT was a weed whacker outfitted with a circular saw blade.
@@matts1166 Oo! I remember that thing being in the trai8ler for the movie.
And, I believe, it was used to dispatch that PoS psychologist (or whatever he was).
@@BronyNumber4096 There was a trailer for Part 5 that had a chainsaw revving up, but that was a red herring, as it was someone else using it against the "non-Jason."
The Bad News Bears are in the same category as Rocky here. It was a lovable underdog story, but the Bears actually lost the title game to the dreaded Yankees.
Star Trek, The Orginal Series. Beam me up, Scotty.
The precise qoatation are "Scotty, beam us up" said in the episodes The Gamesters of Triskelion and The Savage Curtin. While in the episode This Side of Paradise Kirk says "beam us up" and in the episode The Cloud Minders Kirk says "Mr. Scott, beam us up".
In the movie "Legend", Tim Curry did NOT play Satan/the Devil in spite of his very convincing appearance. He played Darkness, who was a child of the devil. That's the "father" he keeps talking to during the film.
He was a child of Mother Night and an unspecified "Father." You can interpret Father as being Satan if you need the movie to be a Christian parable. But, I don't recall any part of the setting indicating that it was a monotheistic world nor a Christian one.
It's more probably that Darkness is the son of Night and Evil (or Chaos or some similar abstraction). Based the portrayal, it also isn't inaccurate to label Darkness a devil.
Given the makeup and set design for Darkness, it certainly borrows from ideas of the Devil and Hell. So, people will conflate Darkness with Satan; however, there's no indicator that Darkness is the child of Satan. So, you're no more accurate than the people you're complaining about.
@@VaultBoy13 In the original script it was Satan.
Ok the one about Singing in the rain, I would have been tipped off by the fact that the ground would have been covered in the milk. If they were expecting the Techno-color to pick up the "milk" droplets, it would have caught the milk on the ground.
I've honestly never met anyone who thought Rocky won the fight against Apollo in the first movie....
In fact Rocky II starts right after the fight and the whole point of the movie is how Rocky lost but "deserved" a win.
I've heard a lot of people over the years saying it was a draw, which is kind of understandable but certainly not a win.
@@Jalex0021 it didn't matter about their personal opinion on how the fight should've been called or if they thought Rocky deserved a win or draw... Everyone who's seen the movie knows Apollo was announced the winner of the fight and I don't know anyone who's seen the movie who remembers otherwise.
10:30
"The Take In Which He Was Fatally Wounded Was Not In The Final Edit Of The Film And Was Destroyed After An Investigation Into The Accidental Death"
That's probably for the best that they didn't include that in the final editing of the movie, as it'd be akin to reliving Brandon's death all over again
indeed...
it´s sad enough as it is...
judging by "the crow" he could givern us many great performances....
The misremembered rumor about The Crow that gets me the most is that he's confused with a different actor on a different movie who was playing with a gun with blanks and was fatally wounded. People often cite that incident as this one and it angers me.
@@Terahnee that one sounds like Jon Erik Hexum on the set of the TV series "Cover-up"
Rest in peace Brandon Lee. Buildings burn, people die but real love is forever.
Great movie star Gone too soon
A second tragically early death for the family. I was due to see him at a Bruce Lee convention a couple of months later. Hid death appeared in the Sun on 1st April, so I waited until it was verified elsewhere before I could believe it. Like his father before him he had only begun to tap into his great promise as a film star and went out leaving his best role for us to watch posthumously. RIP.
8:59
The only Star Wars movies that George Lucas wrote and directed were the prequels and episode IV of the original trilogy
He'd only wrote and directed episode IV and not "The Empire Strikes Back" and "Return Of The Jedi" because his stress levels while doing both jobs took a toll on him to the point where he'd almost had a heart attack
George wrote the original script for A New Hope but not the script used for shooting the movie. The shooting script was a collaboration between George, Gloria Katz, and Willard Huyck.
He can tell as many lies as he wants,
but it was his diet and lack of exercise that nearly caused
a heart attack.
I think the best thing about jason not being the killer in the first one is that the twist works better only if you know about jason from outside the franchise.
When I finally watched the first movie I was surprised Jason isn't the killer but I was well aware of the character. And he doesn't wear the hockey mask until 3 (I think). People who watch videos like these will learn about the twists but if you haven't, then it is a surprise.
I don't know anyone who thought Rocky won in the first movie.
Another I hear is people referring to the Vulcan from "Star Trek" as Dr Spock.
It is Mister Spock, not Doctor Spock.
Part of the confusion comes from the fact that, in the 70s, when the original "Star Trek" was on TV, there was a best-selling book by a child psychologist called Dr Spock (Dr Benjamin Spock), who was one of the first to advocate against smacking children.
Dr SPOCK
is why kids grew up
to be brats
Surely the death in the chariot race was in the original, silent, Ben Hur (1925). Stunt work was a lot wilder back then, and in the briefest glimpse, you can even see a set hand (in modern dress) running to help the guy. Doesn't mean it's true, I admit.
NB: 'Play it again Sam', Yes, Ingrid Bergman says the line you give, but the iconic mistake is from Bogart's later ultra-cynical line: "You played it for her, you can play it for me. Play it!"
I love how some will still argue the ghost in 3 men and a baby. Even though a child couldn't have dided in the house since the house scenes were filmed in a soundstage
I have a TV one.
Mr T never once uttered the line "I pity the fool" during any episode of "The A-Team". He says variations of the line, but never that specifically.
He said the line in "Rocky 3" and other things, but never in "The A-Team".
My mom constantly believes in that misconception
That line is a Mr T catchphrase not a B.A. Baraccus catchphrase. If I had to name a B.A. Baraccus line it would probably be "I ain't getting on no plane".
He did say it in Rocky III. In a pre-match interview at the rematch when asked if he hates Rocky he says, "I don't hate Balboa but I pity the fool."
@@Rockhound6165
You just repeated what the OP said in the last paragraph
I was kinda hoping that WatchMojo would make a video like this someday!
The Singing in the Rain one is interesting. The first time i heard it was in a Universal Studioa tour.... Surely *they* know of it's accuracy? Also, I always believed it was heavily watered down milk, not just milk
It was a rain machine
and although they produce a realistic effect,
realistic isn't always good enough.
Milk was added to the water to make it more visible.
It's the way the effect has always been achieved
until very recently.
If Jack and Rose tied their life jackets to the door, they could have been fine. Source: mythbusters
But neither had a reason to know that.
But was Jack wearing a life jacket? He sank when she let him go.🤔 I think only she had a life jacket.
Jack wasn't wearing a lifejacket.
@@pattierotondo1108There was a shortage of lifejackets on Titanic (a historical fact) making Jack not having one very conceivable.
several mythbuster cast members
have been arrested for
ASSAULT
DRUGS
at least 1 S*X CRIME
I wouldn't have thought that anyone believed that Rocky won the match in Part 1. The whole point of part 2 was Apollo being salty about only tying him in the first match as opposed to totally destroying him.
Who the hell thought Rocky won that fight in part 1? The results are stated in 1 and again in 2 to setup a rematch for the title…. I can see if there was a question of who one in that “secret match” at the end of part 3 but that got answered in Creed 1 🤷♂️
Stunt legend Yakima Canutt's son was noted on record in a dvd documentary on being almost killed during the chariot race "pop up" stunt scene in "Ben hur" (should also be noted that Heston and Boyd did 95% of their own chariot riding.)
My dads cousin Glenn Randall trained and drove the team of white horses ( Andalusian horses not actually Arabians).
Amazing video Rebecca from watch mojo,fantastic job.
Not knowing many of the staff behind most movies, and therefore being unaware of the costume designer Edna was supposed to be modeled after, I had always assumed she was inspired by Linda Hunt, most recently known as Hetty in NCIS Los Angeles.
Me too
Same here.
I always thought Edna was inspired by Fashion Editor, Anna Wintour.
@@thesovereign4218 Everyone has had a different amount of exposure to different aspects of various cultures, so it is only natural for there to be so many different varying opinions.
For titanic: even if the area of the door would’ve allowed Jack onto the door frame, weight likely wouldn’t have. If he’d have also gotten onto the door they’d both be in the water and they’d probably both die.
I would have bet my house that Tim Burton directed The nightmare before Christmas
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, 1948. Everyone misquotes the famous line as "We don't need no stinking badges!" but the actual quote is, "We ain't got no badges. We don't need no badges. I don't have to show you any stinking badges."
IIRC Blazing Saddles uses the "Badges" misquote during Hedley's Recruitment Drive scene...
-- if people were already misremembering the line and this was to make fun of the misquote... and give people a false source.. or if Mel got it wrong too who knows
and to be clear as you cite Sierra Madre was in 1948... and Blazing Saddles was 74... so somewhere in 26 years with the Internet to help circulate the false line people still managed to mass it up
Temple of Doom.. to My knowledge was cited/dated as a Prequel... because they didn't want to undo the 'Happy ending' from Raiders...
who didnt kno he loss in Rocky 1?????
Me because I've never seen it. Just random clips are quoted throughout pop culture and media.
Mythbusters tested it and proved Jack and Rose could fit. However, the director or writer that was on Mythbusters said he didn't care Jack was meant to die in his story
which is weird because James Cameron brought it to the MythBusters to coincide with the re-release for the film's anniversary. Got the answer that both could have fit and then decided that he didn't care.
I love your videos! I just wish you could find other words for « however » « iconic, » especially within one video. It just gets a little monotonous.
Also, since I’m being a Grammar Pill 😁, I’d might as well tell you that technically, however should be used elsewhere besides the first word in a sentence. (Okay, that’s my journalism training.) Like I said, I LOVE your videos. It’s because I watch so many that I pick up on multi-usage of single words.
Working on it!
It's never explained what happens when a Gremlin eats after midnight
they get fat
Indigestion, heartburn...
Yes no one Died in Ben Hur but someone was Dyed Blue in the movie by falling in the water, he was kept on staff until the Dye eventually disappeared.
I always thought it was funny Cable Guy referenced the scene from Silence of the lambs where the prison guard gets his face cut off... The actor that plays that guard plays the cop in Cable Guy
you mean murdock from the second Rambo movie charles napier
@@noiamyourfather1104
he's a space hippie
you HERBERT
Charles Napier's character Lt. Boyle isn't the one who had his face cut off. Sgt. Pembry played by Alex Coleman was the one who got his face cut off. Lt. Boyle was the one hanging from the cell in the bloody eagle. And they weren't prison guards(corrections officers), they were police officers. Incidentally Charles Napier's greatest film role is of Tucker McElroy in The Blues Brothers Movie.
@@andrewblanchard2398 funny because Charles Napier plays a space hippie in Star Trek TOS episode The Way to Eden.
Edna makes me think that she may have been a superhero herself once but decided to design costumes in later time and keeping the past more quiet.
Which makes me also think about Henrietta Lange from NCIS:LA
so true....
Jason Vorhees also wasn't the killer in Friday the 13th part 5.
Aside from the reveal, there were hints during the movie that showed this. For starters, Jason's hockey mask had red markings while Roy's mask had blue markings.
These days, everyone and their grandmother knows that Frankenstein is the name of the doctor, not the monster. However, not as many people know that the hunchback assistant in the original film is named Fritz, not Igor. Ygor (with a "Y", not an "I") actually first appeared in Son of Frankenstein, played by Bela Lugosi, and instead of being a hunchback, he had a broken neck, having survived a hanging.
Apocalypse Now. Everyone always seems to quote Col. Kilgore as saying "I love the smell of napalm in the morning. It smells like victory" No, that is not what he said. This is what he said... "You smell that? Do you smell that?... Napalm, son. Nothing else in the world smells like that. I love the smell of napalm in the morning. You know, one time we had a hill bombed, for twelve hours. When it was all over I walked up. We didn't find one of 'em, not one stinkin' dink body. The smell, you know that gasoline smell, the whole hill. Smelled like... victory. Someday this war's gonna end..."
He is not really talking about what napalm smells like, he is telling a story about the aftermath of a specific battle and how the smell took him back to that time. For his twisted mind it was a fond memory, like how a normal person might tell a story about how the smell of cookies baking reminds them of being in their Grandma's kitchen when they were a little kid.
I know it's TV but "Beam me up Scotty" was NEVER uttered on Star Trek TOS... EVER!
Umm, sort of the entire point of Rocky is that he wins through his loss. He fights with actual integrity, and fights to the best of his ability, and loses the match. That's kind of what makes the movie so beautiful. He loses, but in the effort, he wins.
Agreed - the point was that he was the underdog who, through extreme dedication and training, competed against the best for the full 15 rounds and came close enough to have a split decision on points. No one thought he had a chance, and he came that close and therefore was a winner even though he lost the match.
Hell, I haven't even SEEN the film and I know this.
@@Ashfold_Eberesche See it at least once. My *mom* made me watch it, and that's saying a lot.
He goes fifteen rounds without being knocked out by the world champion, a monumental feat.
In LifesBiggestQuestion has 1 vid if Titanic Jack lived, and its not so good. There's so many possibilities. A happy ending is 1that we hoped for. But there's also Jack having to enlist in WWI, the stock market crash of 1929, and WWII. U have to face reality of all that came after the sinking. Its really better to leave it as it is no matter how much we wish to change it.
Clint Eastwood is just an EMPTY CHAIR
The thing that I always found really silly with Gremlins (later on in life, not when I was a kid) was that it's always going to be "after midnight" somewhere on the planet. So is it actually related more to where the moon is in the sky compared to the location of the Mogwai? If so, then it must be a gravitational effect, because clouds and walls would prevent you from actually seeing it.
Also, you can't fault people for thinking the Lion King said "Sex" when there was that Golden..."something" on the original cover of The Little Mermaid. There was absolutely NO mistaking what someone had slipped in there either, which is why they were recalled and the cover got changed.
what about the
LITTLE MERMAID ?
@@andrewblanchard2398 The original VHS cover had a golden "tower" that looked too close to something else that it couldn't have been a coincidence. Those original tapes got recalled, and then Disney released a newer cover without it. Google "Little Mermaid Golden Tower".
The makers of Gremlins thought it was funny people took the rules that seriously. For them, it was a comedy just with horror elements in it.
"Well, hello Clarice" is what Hannial Lecter eventually says. "Hello Clarice" is never said in verbatim.
So many nice facts😊We really think Rocky won,we know Indiana Temple and the Temple of Doom is prequel,bigger boat from Jaws is like you said.Vader really said:No,I am your father. He didn't say Luke.You're right about Lion King. When Simba lies down it really says SFX😊And I just saw it😀Maybe first time. Great number 1😀One of the most perfect and beloved movies ever😁
Nah, Rocky's win took two movies.
@@gerardomalazdrewicz7514 cool,thanks
Thought Lucas still produced both Sequels and Wrote the story in empire strikes back and the shooting script for return of the Jedi, the sequel directors should get more credit for their work!
While I completely agree with you about Irvin Kershner directing The Empire Strikes back I have to disagree about Return of the Jedi. Kershner and Lucas butted heads alot during the entire production of Empire to the point that Kershner said he would never work for Lucas again and Lucas stating he would never hire kershner for another project. That is why Lucas turned to Richard Marquand to direct Return of the Jedi. Marquand was a new director, if Jedi wasn't his directorial debut it was definitely his highest profile at the time. Lucas walked all over him during production of Jedi and also oversaw the final edit of Jedi which Kershner refused of Lucas for Empire.
@@scottstark5528 i can understand that return of the Jedi isn't on the level of the first Two, but Lucas stated on the commentary of the film that he was grateful that he hired Marquand because he thought he nailed the dramatic scenes between Luke and Vader better than he could ever do himself, which obviously was the best part of the movie!
Also I think the name of the creature from Frankenstein is commonly mistaken
That's more of a literary misconception though, since it goes back to the original novel.
Oooo yeah... that's a good one!
It's not commonly mistaken. The monster has been commonly referred to as Frankenstein for close to 200 years starting about 10 years after the original release of the book. The monster is never actually given a name in the book so society just kind of made a collective unconscious decision to refer to the monster as Frankenstein and the creator as Dr. or Victor Frankenstein. The monster is essentially Dr. Frankenstein's child and Europeans pass the family name on thus the monster inherited the name of its father Frankenstein. The monster has also been referred to or just strait up named Frankenstein in many properties since Mary Shelley's book came out.
@@timebleeder2814 you're right on those things but as you said the creature wasn't given a name and that Frankenstein was the name of the scientist that made it but it just feels like a mistake that people make, calling the monster Frankenstein
@@arlfiftyfourtd8132 Literaly the true monster is Dr. Victor Frankenstein and not his creation.
If you're REALLY being technical, Mogwai don't turn into Gremlins, they spawn them...
There are also 4 rules to owning a mogwai.
My guess is that Mogwai's procreate normally creating regular Mogwais, but the ones spawned from getting them wet are proto-Gremlins that become full Gremlins if they are fed after midnight.
Technecly, their first fight end in a draw with Apollo winning by decision
No... You cant have a draw and a win... Apollo wins by decision.
@@Senjinone yes you can,it's referred as a TKO(technical knockout),in which a boxer can be declared knockout without physically being knockout and downed for a 10 count. This type can declared if either boxers last all the way till end of the match,or either boxers are unable to continue the match
The question isn't are we going to see "The Day The Clown Cried", it's "Should we see "The Day The Clown Cried"?"
The biggest one is from Casablanca.
"Play it again, Sam".
The actual lines are :-
Ingrid Bergman saying :" Play it Sam. Play" As Time Goes By".
Later, Humphrey Bogart says "You played it for her. Now, play it for me".
So the two lines have been combined.
And then Bogart snaps angrily at him, "PLAY IT!"
That is the _closest_ Bogart ever comes to saying his supposed "signature" catchphrase.
Doesn't help that Play It Again, Sam is a Woody Allen move from '72.
Another Friday the 13th misconception would be when depictions of Jason Voorhees have his weapon of choice being a chainsaw instead of a machete. Not only did Jason only use a chainsaw like two times at most throughout the franchise, but a chainsaw also defeats the whole purpose of him being a silent killer/murderer/whatever.
I have never heard of ANYONE who actually thinks Jason used a Chain Saw... outside of people in conversations like this trying to claim that there are people who think he uses a Chainsaw
@@TJ52359 It ain't just people. I have see this in several tv-shows as well.
The singing in the rain milk theory has some truth to it. Milk was added to water to make rain show up better on film n those days, but ut wasnt pute milk. It was literally a tiny amount. Like one litre of milk to 100 litres of water. Whether or not it was used in singing in the rain i dontknow but the likelihood is it probably wasused in similar proportion as above. But not full milk rain. Otgerwise it would be obvious on screen . It just had to be slightly murky enough to reflect light back to show up better on camera. Not pure white.
I can see where Vader's line is misquoted:
_SOMETIMES the human ear thinks that the word "No" is really the name, "Luke"_
(Some inflections/accents cause certain words 2 sound like others)
Nah, it's just because it's misquoted so often that it's entered the cultural lexicon. And most people haven't seen the movie super recently and just misremember it.
No one who actually hears the line is going to mistake it, but human memory is notoriously flimsy.
@@Ashfold_Eberesche this is true, on that last bit
I'm surprised the whole "Han shot first" wasn't there. Han didn't shoot first in the original Star Wars; he was the ONLY ONE TO SHOOT. The original makes Han a more dangerous character that could betray Luke.
The brief clip from Casablanca reminded me of why I fell in love with Ingrid Bergman.
She was a league of her own.
Always thought Edna was based on Linda Hunt....
That singing in the rain myth used to be said on the tram tours at Universal studios in Hollywood. Pretty sure that's where most people even heard the rumor to begin with.
From Cool Hand Luke the line is often misquoted as "What we have here is a failure to communicate" when what is actually said is "What we've got here is failure to communicate.
Don't know a single human in my lifetime who thinks Rocky won the first fight.
All of these are due to one of 3 things, people haven’t seen it, they misheard it, or they made some shit up.
yep
MythBusters proved that both Jack and Rose could both fit and survive on the door.
To quote James Cameron "Jack died because thats how I wrote it."
The verdict they arrived to was that it was _plausible_ . It was shown that when they both got on the door they weighted it further down into the water which would have ultimately killed Jack and Rose due to exposure. The only way it could have stayed afloat was if they tied their lifebelts to the bottom and that's how MythBusters deemed it plausible. But let's get real-there's no way Jack or Rose would have had the presence of mind, much less the energy, to think of something like that.
I think the confusion with Rocky is tht in Rocky II, Rocky and Apollo meet for a rematch which Rocky wins at the end (last man standing)
Another misconception people get about The Incredibles is that they think Syndrome was right all along, which is not true. He was really a toxic, rejection intolerant fan who wanted to destroy all supers.
anyone who think's Syndrome was "Right" is a Sociopath and needs to be medicated...
Jason never used a chainsaw
Ever
If I can't feed a Mogwai after midnight, then 1) what time can I start feeding it? And 2) according to which time zone? It's always midnight somewhere in the world. I know they asked that question in the sequel.
Classic plot holes...
It’s from the beginning of the day (midnight) until dawn. So yes it would change based on time zone.
I've noticed that in some shows, witch i can't remember the name of. They have parodied the famous scene from the beginning of The Godfather and they've quoted the famous line "Ill make him an offer he can't refuse". But they've said it "Ill Make YOU an offer YOU can't refuse"
The seamless integration of music and production design in your video reflects your unwavering dedication to encapsulating the spirit of both eras, resulting in a mesmerizing and emotionally charged viewing experience. *DO YOU AGREE WITH ME*
Dirty Harry actually does say it like jim said it in the mask , at the end when he get Scorpio
Thanks for the list
Technically in Gremlins the gremlins still followed the same rules. Water made more of them so did food, thats why stripe jumped in the fountain at the end. Oh yeah and electricity kills them lol
And so do microwave ovens and blenders.
the food rule is Moot once they 'level up'
And this is the "magical" Mandela Effect kids. Just a bunch of misremembered, misquoted, misspelled, or plainly invented things. Practice the mistake, and the mistake will become the law, albeit being wrong.
The Nightmare Before Christmas was the only one that surprised me. Some of the others were movies I couldn't care less about. Still a good video.
Edna Mode can you remind me of Linda Hunt especially from her Oscar win The Year of Living Dangerously
Rocky looses his fight in the first movie? You don't say!
The Edna Mode Pixar character in The Incredibles 1 & 2 dualogy is voice by director Brad Bird himself
The rules appear to be the same for Gremlins as for Mogwai. We see in the movie both that when Gremlins get wet they spawn more Gremlins and that Sunlight kills them. The only question remaining is whether if you feed them after midnight, they become Mogwai.
Everybody knows Jason is not the killer in the first Friday the 13th.
A better one for Silence of the Lambs would be the blink, for some reason it's spread around that Hannibal didn't blink during his first interaction with Clarisse. He did blink, right before the hiss.