Every time anyone asks Munny a question, throughout the whole movie, any time he gives his opinion, he says "I guess" or "I reckon" or "I suppose" When Little Bill tells him he'll meet him in hell, Munny just says "Yeah."
The only time Will has regular dialog is him with the kid, his family and Ned. He does open up to the whore he feels he slighted with the scar comment.
It always seems to me that Will, having seen the Angel of Death in a fever dream, takes on the role and aura of the Angel of Death on that fateful night at Greeley's saloon. Having wreaked vengeance upon the men of the town, he departs with a final word of warning. In a cold voice, he threatens to come back and kill every one of them if they cut up any other woman, and the music swells, deep and grim, evoking a sense both of fear and awe at some terrible and mysterious power. In that moment, he seems the embodiment of the avenging spirit, as if a Fury, an ancient god of vengeance, has possessed him and speaks through him. The townspeople, awestruck at what they have witnessed, watch him ride off, disappearing into the storm and darkness.
When they refuse to shoot him as he rides away... it's just like English Bob said: "I can assure you, if you did, that the sight of royalty would cause you to dismiss all thoughts of bloodshed and you would stand... how shall I put it? In awe."
He spent the whole movie explaining how he was a changed man.... yet, the movie is called "Unforgiven". The whole point of the movie is to show the difference between the glamorized stories of the old west and the reality of it. The kid was raised on stories from his uncle, and he thought it would be a glorious life until he saw what killing someone actually was. The writer was searching for those glamorous stories to write about, then he couldn't even watch when Ned was being whipped. You had were right on point during the jail scene when Bill told him what really happened to Two Gun Corkren. You said it was like he just saw his hero die... in reality, he saw his glamorized fantasies die. He thought he was writing true accounts of the west, but he was printing lies in his book.
Also, Bill and the townsfolk think themselves civilized and above all the "assassins". Yet, they covered up a horrific crime against the prostitute because they make money off the cowboys and do not think of the prostitutes as real human beings. Ned was an accessory but instead of giving him a proper trial they tortured him to death. Deception all around.
Reactors often don't really get this movie. It's not about enjoyable bloody fantasy violence. It's about the real-life physical, emotional, and spiritual consequences of beating, shooting, and killing people. Munny thinks he has crawled his way out of hell only to be pulled right back into it after fooling himself into thinking that he is killing for a good reason. Ned, realizing the horror of what they're doing and unwilling to give up his humanity, wisely stops himself before falling into the abyss once again. The kid, to his great fortune, gets a shocking wake-up call that puts him back on the right path before it's too late, and he's probably the only character in the movie to have gained from the experience. As for the prostitutes, they are by no means a positive force in the story, as most viewers mistakenly assume -- their bloodlust and thirst for revenge (especially the vile Strawberry Alice) draw the worst killers in the west to their town to commit coldblooded murder, egging them on with sex and money, and the result is a horrific bloodbath of death. The only one not burning with hatred and clamoring for revenge is the angelic Delilah, silently suffering from the knowledge that she is the indirect cause of it all and too weak to speak out against it.
Excellent points. I said a lot of the same things in my own comment. But you neglected to mention the true hero of the story, Little Bill. Here is a man who was just preparing for what he hoped would be a peaceful retirement when Strawberry Alice lured a literal legion of bounty hunters and murderers for hire to the town where he was building a house and planning to retire. If this was the modern day, he could have called on neighboring police departments for mutual aid, or even asked the governor to deploy the National Guard, but in 1880s Wyoming, he had no such options. It was just him and his deputies. So he can't be blamed for employing harsh and brutal measures, like making an example of English Bob. Little Bill did what he had to do to protect his town and his own property. That said, Little Bill definitely erred when he abstained from whipping Quick Mike. Quick Mike assaulted and disfigured Delilah, inflicting pain and jeopardizing her livelihood, so a flogging and a fine would have been the appropriate punishment, especially in a frontier situation where more sophisticated means of criminal punishment are unavailable. Little Bill lost sight of that momentarily, which is a failing in his judgment, but it by no means makes him a villain. The real villain is the bloodthirsty Strawberry Alice who demanded the death of two men, one of whom was completely innocent. Will, Ned and the Kid are neither the heroes nor the villains, they're just side characters who the writer chose to focus the story on, ala Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. It would probably be best to classify them as ascended extras.
Clint Eastwood had to convince Hackman to be in this movie. Hackman abhors violence and didn't want to be in it. Eastwood told him that's exactly why he needed to be in this movie - because it's literally a statement about anti-violence
@benjauron5873 The cowpoke tried to murder or disfugure a woman, and destroyed her abilty to earn a living for the rest of her life for giggling at him. That's a villain.
Gene Hackman is an evil sheriff in another great western called *The Quick and the Dead.* A+ supporting cast. Leonardo Dicaprio, Russell Crowe, Sharon Stone, and more. Highly recommend.
One of the best reactions to this movie I've seen dude. You had the same perspective on everything that happened in the movie that I did. The whiskey is the magic potion for him. Everyone in this movie was not just good or bad..they were all grey. The human reaction. Most real depiction of an incident in the wild west.
37:46 "I'm just a writer,.." "letters and such?" lol, one of my favorite lines. 😂 this is an amazing film, one of Eastwood's best. one of my favs, glad you checked it out! another great reaction! 👍
Which is part of the reason why I believe all that stuff about Munney killing all those innocents was just stories he put out himself to intimidate people.
It's amazing how much embellishments people will add to a story, whether for intrigue or just from ignorant assumptions. I had a situation similar at work a few years ago. I worked for a company that did package delivery and a driver got injured when an elderly lady hit his vehicle. He was in the cargo hold and the impact made him fall down and he struck his kneecaps and shoulder on the bulkhead and floor. Obviously, very painful. He thought he may have broken something so he asked a bystander to call his dispatcher because he was in too much pain. The bystander tells the dispatcher his legs are broken. The dispatcher tells his manager his legs were crushed. The manager tells the on road support his legs were severed. The support member tells an assistant to inform an operations manager, and that was me. The story I heard was from a frantic, panicking, teary-eyed assistant telling me that the driver was crushed between two vehicles, his body was sliced in half and there are body parts, blood and guts everywhere and he probably died. I had to get on a conference call with one of the VPs of North American operations and update them with the condition of all parties involved after we find out what hospital they were transported to. I was sweating bullets, only to be informed from dispatch that it was only a fender bender, and he's already been discharged from the hospital with minor bruising that would heal up in a few days. There was a long pause and the VP thanked us for wasting his time. I held a meeting with all the people who relayed the story and tried my best to remain calm while explaining that in the future to focus on factual details and to ask questions when getting information about incidents moving forward.
What made this such a good movie is that it mixes up who's a good guy hero and who's a bad guy. Just like real life. Little Bill was a lawman trying to keep assassins out of his town, he killed Ned but probably didn't mean to he was beating a confession out of him. Ned was a good guy but it was the kid who didn't want to leave him behind in the saloon, Ned was out the window and gone lol Munny was a heartless murderer when he wanted to be. Ned couldn't kill the young cowboy crawling away, but Munny did. The thing that made him a hero was loyalty to his partner Ned. Which is what got the young cowboy killed, just being loyal to his dumbass partner.
He didn’t take the shot because as he got older he saw the brevity of life and didn’t have it in him to kill another human being. His conscience caught up with him. Even Will (Clint Eastwood after hitting the one guy with his rifle shot had empathy for the dying man’s thirst and let his buddy bring him a drink of water. Will needed alcohol to desensitize himself (liquid courage) to go on his killing sprees.
Hey Mr. Video, I just wanted to say this is my first time catching one of your reactions and I really enjoyed it. I subscribed and gave you a thumbs up. Keep them coming and I will keep watching. I subbed and gave this a thumbs up. Eastwood acquired the script for this movie and held on to it for many years because he wanted to play the lead and the part was clearly made for an older man, so he had to wait until he was old enough to play it. Eastwood directed several good movies but his direction of this masterpiece finally gave him the recognition he deserved. I HIGHLY recommend Million Dollar Baby and Mystic River if you haven't caught either of them.
I saw this in the theater when it was new. From the time Bill was riding into town at the end the theater was dead silent. It was only broken by some nervous laughter when Bill told the writer to pick up the rifle. Certainly one of the best westerns ever made.
Gene Hackman is such a great actor. His characters are always so well portrayed and thoughtful, from crazy like Bill here to comedici in The Birdcage with Robin Williams, then The French Connection, Lex Luthor and on and on. Love him! ❤
I live in the Indiana town where a lot of Hoosiers was shot, I including the home "Hickory" gym scenes. Literally everyone said Gene and Dennis Hopper were the absolute sweetest gentlemen on the planet. They ate dinner at the local diners and never turned anyone away who wanted an autograph or just to chat. Barbara Hershey, on the other hand, treated everyone like dirt. Former long-time librarian (102 at the time), went on a 5 minute rant about her lmao.
Unlike most of Clint's movies, at least this one doesn't have a completely depressing ending. LOVE his movies, but the sad endings have gotten old to me. Jmho
Leo, I think you'd LOVE Young Guns. Nonstop action and lowkey hilarious 😂😂😂 Amazing cast as well. Emilio Estevez was the perfect choice for Billy the Kid.
@@LN-Lifer Why would I be sarcastic? It is a poor movie, it is badly written, with numerous poor actors. It received very poor critical reviews, and NONE of the actors have ANY truly impressive roles in movies to their name since the release of Young Guns in 1988....and most have been totally forgotten or ignored. The director and screenwriter have done nothing but cr@p since. It is a terrible movie and a poor cast of actors, with no sarcasm whatsoever intended on my part.
I've never seen anyone comment about one of the greatest details of this movie. When the shotgun doesn't go off Lil Bill flinches in fear, then he draws and fires (just like he was gloating about to Boshant, saying how fast he could draw and fire accurately), but Lil Bill was frightened being that close to death and he misses. It's ironic because he was enjoying having Boshant idolize him for being so tough and formidable, but in the end he was no different. He actually was afraid himself, probably without his badge and his deputies. It's a fantastic revelation of reality which the concept of the movie I think was proving. How men act until the moment comes, and some don't really measure up even when you think they would. Also how others have a predisposition to even something as brutal as killing, which is deep down what Will Muny had and was disgusted by.
This is a great movie! You decide on more, The Searchers or The Cowboys, both with John Wayne. My favorite of all time, Shane, with Alan Ladd. All Classics!!!
Leo: " I KNEW THAT YOU CAN'T KILL A MEXICAN!" Me: 🤣🤣🤣👍🏽 Gotta watch more Westerns!... Open Range next please... 👍🏼 Or Young Guns I & II Or Dances With Wolves Or 3:10 To Yuma Or Shane Or The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance Or The Dollar Trilogy Or The Missing Or.... Well, 🤔 There's a lot of good ones anyways... Lol Point is... More Westerns Please.. 🤠
It’s because you usually talk through the intro casting 😂 don’t get me wrong. It’s awesome seeing your face when you’re like “oh dang they’re in this movie?!” It’s wholesome. My favorite moment in this movie is when bro is flaming English bob. And he releases the bullets. A revolver back then? Carries 6 bullets. Only five fell to the ground. Meaning the chamber that was going to fire was an empty slot. “You were right not to take it bob. I would’ve killed you.” Then everything about Williams last descent into his old ways was amazing! The way he just started drinking finding out his best friend was dead. Wolf how they did all this movie. And the background of why Clint wanted the movie made. Keep up the content Leo!
Grew up watching all the old black n white western movies never thought much of it at the time but sure am glad i did now. Amazing movies and actors . Remember Charle's bronson and and all the others .
The end of the days of the Wild West. Between Will, Ned, Little Bill, and English Bob, the world had just moved on from the men they had used to be. Despite them all initially acting in ways they thought were the right thing to do, damn near everyone did the wrong thing in this movie, if not everyone.
That cowboy you thought you recognized when Munny killed the first cowboy was in White Chicks (FBI Agent) and Night at the Roxbury with Will Farrel and Chris Kattan.
I watched this in the theatre when it was released..........I remember being impressed someone so old made this happen. And that was 32 years ago and he is still here!🤣😂
I think that after having watched a couple videos of yours, you would have a hayday with watching the good the bad and the ugly. That movie or another Sergio film is amazing.
That is an absolutely awesome reaction. You know, even if Clint Eastwood and Morgan Freeman are 101 years old now, I would pay just to watch them play checkers after what they've done together throughout their lives.
@@IDieHardForever I totally understand, it’s a stressful movie and made me feel anxious a lot of the time but I think that’s what I enjoyed about it especially being such a different character than what we’ve seen from Sandler before. I’d def suggest finishing it when you get a chance
Someone had brought up a point I never thought of: Munny rides a white horse, which for the entire movie is disagreeable & does not allow William to mount him easily. Once Munny becomes death at the end, the pale horse is agreeable & William mounts him with ease. A great biblical reference I did not catch for 32 years.
Some other really good westerns are mclintock, el dorado(1966), Shane, true grit (1969),magnificent seven (1960), Sergeant Rutledge is a fantastic movie
This is essentially a spiritual continuation and ending of No Name from the Money Trilogy, where he is essentially tired from his actions as being the rough Grim Reaper but still enough to evoke vengeance. Clint Eastwood is practically ending it with a bang and masterfully well done.
You killed me at the end when bill said “i don’t deserve to die like this.” And you said “Yes you do” 😂 bro you should definitely react to Tombstone next!!!!
I think the barkeep had it coming despite being unarmed. He made a choice to display a corpse in front of his saloon. He implicitly said that he was okay with killing, and as such made himself fair game.
Best line in the whole movie is…… “He should armed himself if he’s going to decorate his saloon with my friend”
“I’ve killed about everything that walks and crawls. And I’m here to kill you little bill.”
My personal one.
Tons of other great lines too, but yes that was the best one and the best scene
Best line is after the Kid says "well, I guess he had it coming."
After a pause, Clint answers "Kid, we all got it coming. "
@@jonpevehouse so many goated lines in this movie and in my favorite Clint Eastwood movie Outlaw Jose Wales, probably my favorite western🔥
My favorite is "deserves got nothin to do with it"
Every time anyone asks Munny a question, throughout the whole movie, any time he gives his opinion, he says "I guess" or "I reckon" or "I suppose"
When Little Bill tells him he'll meet him in hell, Munny just says "Yeah."
Excellent catch 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Oh shit.
Will's last stop was the only certainty in his life.
Bill didn’t ask a question
@@L1VE3V1L At 25:40 Bill asks a couple of questions.
The only time Will has regular dialog is him with the kid, his family and Ned. He does open up to the whore he feels he slighted with the scar comment.
Ned didn't take the shot because he realized he's no longer capable of killing people he just doesn't have it in him anymore
Morgan Freeman is one of my all time favorites. Such an amazing actor.
@@scottmoore1614 Everyone in this movie was top notch. Everyone, Eastwood, the Kid, Ned, the hookers, skinny, English Bob, even the biographer.
"You can't kill a Mexican" 😂😂😂
Glad you reacted to this movie, it's a classic. One of the greatest in Clint Eastwood's repertoire
😂😂😂
Absolutely amazing performance from Morgan Freeman and Clint Eastwood, Gene Hackman too... My favorite modern western, love it Great pick Leo!
It always seems to me that Will, having seen the Angel of Death in a fever dream, takes on the role and aura of the Angel of Death on that fateful night at Greeley's saloon. Having wreaked vengeance upon the men of the town, he departs with a final word of warning. In a cold voice, he threatens to come back and kill every one of them if they cut up any other woman, and the music swells, deep and grim, evoking a sense both of fear and awe at some terrible and mysterious power. In that moment, he seems the embodiment of the avenging spirit, as if a Fury, an ancient god of vengeance, has possessed him and speaks through him. The townspeople, awestruck at what they have witnessed, watch him ride off, disappearing into the storm and darkness.
When they refuse to shoot him as he rides away... it's just like English Bob said:
"I can assure you, if you did, that the sight of royalty would cause you to dismiss all thoughts of bloodshed and you would stand... how shall I put it? In awe."
you didn't even mention the pale horse...
@@bobfenster3690 I think of Pale Rider every time I see the end of this movie. I wonder if it's the same horse?
He spent the whole movie explaining how he was a changed man.... yet, the movie is called "Unforgiven".
The whole point of the movie is to show the difference between the glamorized stories of the old west and the reality of it. The kid was raised on stories from his uncle, and he thought it would be a glorious life until he saw what killing someone actually was. The writer was searching for those glamorous stories to write about, then he couldn't even watch when Ned was being whipped. You had were right on point during the jail scene when Bill told him what really happened to Two Gun Corkren. You said it was like he just saw his hero die... in reality, he saw his glamorized fantasies die. He thought he was writing true accounts of the west, but he was printing lies in his book.
Also, Bill and the townsfolk think themselves civilized and above all the "assassins". Yet, they covered up a horrific crime against the prostitute because they make money off the cowboys and do not think of the prostitutes as real human beings. Ned was an accessory but instead of giving him a proper trial they tortured him to death. Deception all around.
“Guess they had it coming.”
“We all got it coming, kid.”
"We all HAVE it coming, kid."
“Hell of a thing killing a man. Take away everything he’s got, and everything he’s ever gonna.
Ned never took the shot because he developed a sense of morals in his old age. He had a conscience at that point.
Reactors often don't really get this movie. It's not about enjoyable bloody fantasy violence. It's about the real-life physical, emotional, and spiritual consequences of beating, shooting, and killing people. Munny thinks he has crawled his way out of hell only to be pulled right back into it after fooling himself into thinking that he is killing for a good reason. Ned, realizing the horror of what they're doing and unwilling to give up his humanity, wisely stops himself before falling into the abyss once again. The kid, to his great fortune, gets a shocking wake-up call that puts him back on the right path before it's too late, and he's probably the only character in the movie to have gained from the experience. As for the prostitutes, they are by no means a positive force in the story, as most viewers mistakenly assume -- their bloodlust and thirst for revenge (especially the vile Strawberry Alice) draw the worst killers in the west to their town to commit coldblooded murder, egging them on with sex and money, and the result is a horrific bloodbath of death. The only one not burning with hatred and clamoring for revenge is the angelic Delilah, silently suffering from the knowledge that she is the indirect cause of it all and too weak to speak out against it.
Excellent points. I said a lot of the same things in my own comment. But you neglected to mention the true hero of the story, Little Bill. Here is a man who was just preparing for what he hoped would be a peaceful retirement when Strawberry Alice lured a literal legion of bounty hunters and murderers for hire to the town where he was building a house and planning to retire. If this was the modern day, he could have called on neighboring police departments for mutual aid, or even asked the governor to deploy the National Guard, but in 1880s Wyoming, he had no such options. It was just him and his deputies. So he can't be blamed for employing harsh and brutal measures, like making an example of English Bob. Little Bill did what he had to do to protect his town and his own property. That said, Little Bill definitely erred when he abstained from whipping Quick Mike. Quick Mike assaulted and disfigured Delilah, inflicting pain and jeopardizing her livelihood, so a flogging and a fine would have been the appropriate punishment, especially in a frontier situation where more sophisticated means of criminal punishment are unavailable. Little Bill lost sight of that momentarily, which is a failing in his judgment, but it by no means makes him a villain. The real villain is the bloodthirsty Strawberry Alice who demanded the death of two men, one of whom was completely innocent. Will, Ned and the Kid are neither the heroes nor the villains, they're just side characters who the writer chose to focus the story on, ala Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. It would probably be best to classify them as ascended extras.
Clint Eastwood had to convince Hackman to be in this movie. Hackman abhors violence and didn't want to be in it. Eastwood told him that's exactly why he needed to be in this movie - because it's literally a statement about anti-violence
@@benjauron5873 Very interesting!
@benjauron5873 The cowpoke tried to murder or disfugure a woman, and destroyed her abilty to earn a living for the rest of her life for giggling at him.
That's a villain.
@@Alvin-1138 Indeed. And a flogging and fine would have been the appropriate punishment. Did you not read what I wrote?
I love the moment when Will Munny grabs the whiskey bottle and starts drinking. That's the moment we know the Devil has just woken up.
Gene Hackman is an evil sheriff in another great western called *The Quick and the Dead.* A+ supporting cast. Leonardo Dicaprio, Russell Crowe, Sharon Stone, and more. Highly recommend.
That's movie is great, I'm surprised it doesn't get talked about more. Gene Hackman pretty much plays the exact same character.
@@SirGriefALot because it was too campy , but now it's almost a cult classic . i do love it . the town clock
directed by Sam Raimi
Poor movie. Several good actors wasted.
Yes sir!!!!
"I guess he had it coming."
"We all got it coming kid."
For me, that's the best line in the whole film
When Will walks into the saloon at night in the dark, rain, and the thunderclap on cue. Brilliant scene. The Angel of death.
I saw “Unforgiven” in theaters when it first came out. During that scene I don’t think I breathed for a couple of minutes.
Love Clint Eastwood. My Dad would always watch his westerns growing up. Acting or directing you can't go wrong. Great reaction Leo
Recognize English Bob? He was the first Dumbledore in Harry Potter. Richard Harris, a great actor. RIP
One of the best reactions to this movie I've seen dude. You had the same perspective on everything that happened in the movie that I did. The whiskey is the magic potion for him. Everyone in this movie was not just good or bad..they were all grey. The human reaction. Most real depiction of an incident in the wild west.
37:46 "I'm just a writer,.." "letters and such?" lol, one of my favorite lines. 😂 this is an amazing film, one of Eastwood's best. one of my favs, glad you checked it out! another great reaction! 👍
Good choice my dude. I tear up every time the kid finally realizes what it means to take a life
Love how the injuries to the woman just keep getting exaggerated. From cuts and bruises to missing body parts 😂😂😂
Which is part of the reason why I believe all that stuff about Munney killing all those innocents was just stories he put out himself to intimidate people.
It's amazing how much embellishments people will add to a story, whether for intrigue or just from ignorant assumptions.
I had a situation similar at work a few years ago. I worked for a company that did package delivery and a driver got injured when an elderly lady hit his vehicle. He was in the cargo hold and the impact made him fall down and he struck his kneecaps and shoulder on the bulkhead and floor. Obviously, very painful. He thought he may have broken something so he asked a bystander to call his dispatcher because he was in too much pain. The bystander tells the dispatcher his legs are broken. The dispatcher tells his manager his legs were crushed. The manager tells the on road support his legs were severed. The support member tells an assistant to inform an operations manager, and that was me. The story I heard was from a frantic, panicking, teary-eyed assistant telling me that the driver was crushed between two vehicles, his body was sliced in half and there are body parts, blood and guts everywhere and he probably died.
I had to get on a conference call with one of the VPs of North American operations and update them with the condition of all parties involved after we find out what hospital they were transported to. I was sweating bullets, only to be informed from dispatch that it was only a fender bender, and he's already been discharged from the hospital with minor bruising that would heal up in a few days. There was a long pause and the VP thanked us for wasting his time.
I held a meeting with all the people who relayed the story and tried my best to remain calm while explaining that in the future to focus on factual details and to ask questions when getting information about incidents moving forward.
it's like the telephone game. This explains how exaggerated and romanticized the Wild West was and even the same portrayal through movies.
36:58
I've seen many reactions to that line. But this was the best 😂
Rip Ned, he didn't deserve that 😅
What made this such a good movie is that it mixes up who's a good guy hero and who's a bad guy. Just like real life. Little Bill was a lawman trying to keep assassins out of his town, he killed Ned but probably didn't mean to he was beating a confession out of him. Ned was a good guy but it was the kid who didn't want to leave him behind in the saloon, Ned was out the window and gone lol Munny was a heartless murderer when he wanted to be. Ned couldn't kill the young cowboy crawling away, but Munny did. The thing that made him a hero was loyalty to his partner Ned. Which is what got the young cowboy killed, just being loyal to his dumbass partner.
He didn’t take the shot because as he got older he saw the brevity of life and didn’t have it in him to kill another human being. His conscience caught up with him. Even Will (Clint Eastwood after hitting the one guy with his rifle shot had empathy for the dying man’s thirst and let his buddy bring him a drink of water. Will needed alcohol to desensitize himself (liquid courage) to go on his killing sprees.
Hey Mr. Video, I just wanted to say this is my first time catching one of your reactions and I really enjoyed it. I subscribed and gave you a thumbs up. Keep them coming and I will keep watching. I subbed and gave this a thumbs up.
Eastwood acquired the script for this movie and held on to it for many years because he wanted to play the lead and the part was clearly made for an older man, so he had to wait until he was old enough to play it.
Eastwood directed several good movies but his direction of this masterpiece finally gave him the recognition he deserved. I HIGHLY recommend Million Dollar Baby and Mystic River if you haven't caught either of them.
Guns in the old west usually don't have a safety. Cowboys riding horses leave the pistol's first chamber empty to prevent accidental discharge.
You always make me smile with your narrative ways
This is in my top 3 favorite movies...glad to see you react to it! 😊
I saw this in the theater when it was new. From the time Bill was riding into town at the end the theater was dead silent. It was only broken by some nervous laughter when Bill told the writer to pick up the rifle. Certainly one of the best westerns ever made.
Gene Hackman is such a great actor. His characters
are always so well portrayed and thoughtful, from crazy
like Bill here to comedici in The Birdcage with Robin
Williams, then The French Connection, Lex Luthor and
on and on. Love him! ❤
Young Frankenstein...
I live in the Indiana town where a lot of Hoosiers was shot, I including the home "Hickory" gym scenes. Literally everyone said Gene and Dennis Hopper were the absolute sweetest gentlemen on the planet. They ate dinner at the local diners and never turned anyone away who wanted an autograph or just to chat. Barbara Hershey, on the other hand, treated everyone like dirt. Former long-time librarian (102 at the time), went on a 5 minute rant about her lmao.
this and Mississippi Burning are my favorite Hackman performances.
Watch Pale Rider, an often overlooked Clint Eastwood Western.
This movie tombstone and open range top three Western movies in my book, but you can’t count the John Wayne universe
This guy is the stuff of joy and laughter and great vibes! Thanks man
This is one of my favorite movies ever good reaction, man
Unlike most of Clint's movies, at least this one doesn't have a completely depressing ending. LOVE his movies, but the sad endings have gotten old to me. Jmho
"We all have it comin, kid"........best line from my favorite Western. Wonderful reaction. Thanks for sharing.
You're absolutely killing it!!
Awesome film, so glad you made your way to it. This is by far my favorite film reaction you've done,
Leo, I think you'd LOVE Young Guns. Nonstop action and lowkey hilarious 😂😂😂 Amazing cast as well. Emilio Estevez was the perfect choice for Billy the Kid.
*Talking to a horse* "Hey dog, did you see the size of that chicken?"
@@justindearmond1"Hey Chavez, why ain't they shooting at us???"
- *"We're in the spirit world, asshole. They can't see us!!!"* 😂😂😂
Terrible movie and a poor cast of poor actors.
@@USCFlash
Hope you are being sarcastic
@@LN-Lifer Why would I be sarcastic?
It is a poor movie, it is badly written, with numerous poor actors.
It received very poor critical reviews, and NONE of the actors have ANY truly impressive roles in movies to their name since the release of Young Guns in 1988....and most have been totally forgotten or ignored.
The director and screenwriter have done nothing but cr@p since.
It is a terrible movie and a poor cast of actors, with no sarcasm whatsoever intended on my part.
I've never seen anyone comment about one of the greatest details of this movie. When the shotgun doesn't go off Lil Bill flinches in fear, then he draws and fires (just like he was gloating about to Boshant, saying how fast he could draw and fire accurately), but Lil Bill was frightened being that close to death and he misses. It's ironic because he was enjoying having Boshant idolize him for being so tough and formidable, but in the end he was no different. He actually was afraid himself, probably without his badge and his deputies. It's a fantastic revelation of reality which the concept of the movie I think was proving. How men act until the moment comes, and some don't really measure up even when you think they would. Also how others have a predisposition to even something as brutal as killing, which is deep down what Will Muny had and was disgusted by.
What the hell, I like this Mr. Video! Smart and analytical!
Whole movie is amazing, but from the outhouse to the final panoramic shot , next level.
I cant recommend subscribing to this mans patreon enough. Worth it 100%
This is a great movie! You decide on more, The Searchers or The Cowboys, both with John Wayne. My favorite of all time, Shane, with Alan Ladd. All Classics!!!
Leo: " I KNEW THAT YOU CAN'T KILL A MEXICAN!"
Me: 🤣🤣🤣👍🏽
Gotta watch more Westerns!... Open Range next please... 👍🏼
Or Young Guns I & II
Or Dances With Wolves
Or 3:10 To Yuma
Or Shane
Or The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
Or The Dollar Trilogy
Or The Missing
Or.... Well, 🤔 There's a lot of good ones anyways... Lol
Point is... More Westerns Please.. 🤠
It’s because you usually talk through the intro casting 😂 don’t get me wrong. It’s awesome seeing your face when you’re like “oh dang they’re in this movie?!” It’s wholesome.
My favorite moment in this movie is when bro is flaming English bob. And he releases the bullets. A revolver back then? Carries 6 bullets. Only five fell to the ground. Meaning the chamber that was going to fire was an empty slot.
“You were right not to take it bob. I would’ve killed you.”
Then everything about Williams last descent into his old ways was amazing! The way he just started drinking finding out his best friend was dead. Wolf how they did all this movie. And the background of why Clint wanted the movie made.
Keep up the content Leo!
*munny
Silverado, open range and the cowboys 1972. I love all your reactions but it’s nice to see a variety too😊
Grew up watching all the old black n white western movies never thought much of it at the time but sure am glad i did now. Amazing movies and actors . Remember Charle's bronson and and all the others .
The end of the days of the Wild West. Between Will, Ned, Little Bill, and English Bob, the world had just moved on from the men they had used to be. Despite them all initially acting in ways they thought were the right thing to do, damn near everyone did the wrong thing in this movie, if not everyone.
That cowboy you thought you recognized when Munny killed the first cowboy was in White Chicks (FBI Agent) and Night at the Roxbury with Will Farrel and Chris Kattan.
He's hilarious and was in scary movie too. I know he reacted to that.
FRIENDS, we need to introduce this man to the beauty of Tarantino films, I have only seen OUATIH on his channel.
Mr. Video, you’re the 🐐, love you bro
Western suggestion -
3:10 To Yuma
Starring Russell Crowe and Christian Bale
YOU BACK? One of the best westerns Let's Goooooo!
One of the best movies ever made!!! If you haven’t seen Clint Eastwoods movie Gran Torino it’s also a great movie.
Moral Grey Area… that’s Unforgiven. Absolute masterpiece 👍
❤💯... I'd really love it if they'd make a prequel to this revealing more about money's past!
They call this an "anti-western," so technically you still haven't seen a western on the channel.
There is a Japanese version of this film, also excellent.
I need a prequel to this movie. (William Money). Or any of Clint Eastwood movies he directed.
Clint was holding for years and this is what it was. The movie Absolute Power is another banger with Clint and Gene but, sad to say no Morgan.
Heyyyy this movie is one of the best one of my favorites!!! My favorite Clint Eastwood movie is outlaw Jose Wales!!! U gotta watch it Leo!!!
This is the greatest western of all-time!! One hell of a film
One of the top 3 best westerns of all time, hands down!
Man this movie is fricken legendary
legendary movie with 2 GOAT actors!
I think you need some ‘The Outlaw Josey Wales’ to be examined next.😎
"you can't kill a Mexican" 😂😂😂
"And burn your house down." He cold. 😶
I watched this in the theatre when it was released..........I remember being impressed someone so old made this happen. And that was 32 years ago and he is still here!🤣😂
I think that after having watched a couple videos of yours, you would have a hayday with watching the good the bad and the ugly. That movie or another Sergio film is amazing.
Clint Eastwood has so many great westerns
This is the culmination of all Clint Eastwoods Western characters.
Brilliant film. Love westerns, especially The Man With No Name trilogy
That is an absolutely awesome reaction. You know, even if Clint Eastwood and Morgan Freeman are 101 years old now, I would pay just to watch them play checkers after what they've done together throughout their lives.
One of my favorite movies of all time
Uncut Gems 🙏🏽
Never finished that movie. I found it frustrating. Worth another shot?
@@IDieHardForever I totally understand, it’s a stressful movie and made me feel anxious a lot of the time but I think that’s what I enjoyed about it especially being such a different character than what we’ve seen from Sandler before. I’d def suggest finishing it when you get a chance
@@Tac0maAr0ma right on bet
Someone had brought up a point I never thought of: Munny rides a white horse, which for the entire movie is disagreeable & does not allow William to mount him easily. Once Munny becomes death at the end, the pale horse is agreeable & William mounts him with ease. A great biblical reference I did not catch for 32 years.
Ned just wasn't a killer anymore. The years made him soft.
lol i love how call someone who is no longer a murderous savage "soft"
did you watch the end of the movie?
It was the sobriety, not the years.
Nice reaction man
Some other really good westerns are mclintock, el dorado(1966), Shane, true grit (1969),magnificent seven (1960), Sergeant Rutledge is a fantastic movie
Ned had "changed his evil ways", and couldn't just murder someone anymore.
Great movie bro.
“Yeah, I’ve killed women and children.” One of the craziest lines in movie history.
This is essentially a spiritual continuation and ending of No Name from the Money Trilogy, where he is essentially tired from his actions as being the rough Grim Reaper but still enough to evoke vengeance. Clint Eastwood is practically ending it with a bang and masterfully well done.
one of the best westerns ever clint eastwood is great and a great director
One of the best westerns ever imo!
🏆One of the BEST westerns
Picked a winner
Ned was no longer a killer, he wasn't willing to pay the price on his soul anymore
Mr video met his match with little bill!
The amazing thing about this movie is that there's no "good guys". Every character is a sinner.
This is probably my favorite western.
You killed me at the end when bill said “i don’t deserve to die like this.” And you said “Yes you do” 😂 bro you should definitely react to Tombstone next!!!!
The movie Tombstone has so much build up throughout the movie and is based on true events! You won’t be disappointed!
great film...thanks for watching......next cowboy movie i recommend is Open Range.
Clint wanted to make this 10 years earlier but waited to get older to play the part.
‘Said the duck’ 😂.
I think the barkeep had it coming despite being unarmed. He made a choice to display a corpse in front of his saloon. He implicitly said that he was okay with killing, and as such made himself fair game.
Quigley Down Under is a great western so is any other Clint Eastwood movie.
You have to see The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly now!
Ned knew he was still who he was. He wanted to change and did learning love.... but he was still the same William Muney
I always felt bad for Sally Two-trees. Sucks to be right about something like that.