this is so bizarre ive never seen old hollywood outtakes before and i find it surreal to watch them to go from perfect silver screen immortals to real fallible people in the same second
@@GoodKingMort it's partially true, a higher percentage of people used to dream in black and white, while less people had dreams in color this is in part because of the influence of TV, but some people did dream with colors and some people still dream in black and white I used to dream in black and white most of the time a few years ago so clearly there's more to it than just TV
Unocualqu1era Yeah , that makes sense : by following that logic pepole in before audio would have read their dreams , and before video they would have just heard ...
I love how people today think of “nuts” as such a pure, old-timey thing to say, when it’s literally no different than us saying “balls” lol These are really fun! I’ve never seen classic bloopers before!
At that time, method acting wasn't applied yet. So, the acting looks really theatrical and it's easy to forget they were really people (unlike today where we see life-like interpretations). But seeing them cursing and going out of character shows they were real people , and that's awesome
Method acting still isn't widely applied. The reason why the acting looks theatrical is because it simply is. Theatre acting and film acting are very different from one another, because of the way live sound works. However back then we didn't really know the difference and more importantly a lot of these actors were theatre actors or had come from theatre or were taught by theatre actors.
@@alexmilchev5395 Alex Milchev Plus, movie acting begun to change with the apparition of the actor studio and Strasberg who adapted the Stanislavski's method. It was popularised thanks to James Dean for example, so my statement didn't mislead anything : method acting wasn't applied and wildly known, so the acting method was still theatrical looking
@@zztopz7090 It's an old Euphemism. To say you had a baby in the restroom, is to confess to having dumped a massive load in the toilet. As in it was so big, you slapped it on its ass and named it.
This is gold! You always see how the 30's 40's and 50's portrayed themselves as an innocent, wholesome, Leave it to Beaver-type era. Hard to believe that people actually swore then. I wonder if anyone has actors from this time dropping f-bombs.
actually they did back in 1927 -30 were the talkies are going to emerged. but in 1934 they ban the swearing word in movie and that is called hays code.
I didn't know that old movies like these had bloopers, I assumed they never made mistakes Edit: wow this is my most liked comment, thank you! You guys rock!
It’s so wild seeing people who are probably long dead be captured on film being so.... human. Just being their self, laughing with their colleagues, fallible humans. I wonder what it’ll be like watching vlogs, let’s plays and pod casts in the future when we’re all gone, future generations might be able to familiarise themselves with dead people more than ever before. Just wild.
Time is scary. I really liked the people in this. But knowing that they all are gone is scary. They we're all laughing... Now they're gone. Like they never existed, only a few pictures and film footage to their memory now. We'll all be there soon.
@@Zapper1993 Lol! The made-up accent they used was called mid-Atlantic (not trans-Atlantic as the other poster said) and was meant to be somewhere between a British and American accent, which puts you in the middle of the Atlantic.
Politically correct and offended by everything bruh... no one took offense... I was simply stating what I felt was more commonly used. What are you on?
And its with this you realize that these people are basically as normal as we are today and don't actually sound like square enix kingdom hearts characters with intonated and deliberate dialogue Kingdom hearts characters are actually stilted...
@@FF18Cloud Ohhh, I think I know where I went wrong. You're just referring to their voices and the way they sound when they talk opposed to actual vocabulary
At 1:57 Betty Davis meant she wanted it to be the last take by saying "I want it to be the last one! She had probably done the take singing a few times before.
Warner Bros. put together blooper reels every year for some time, which I assume all these clips are from. Sometimes you'll notice some extra comical sound effects were added in a few of these scenes. Originally, of course, such things would only been shown to a select group of people in the studio itself, and NEVER shown to the public!
That's not true. Warner Bros. as you said put these blooper reels out every year. They were called: "Breakdowns of 1939", 1946, etc. And they were shown in theatres in between double features. So yes, the public did get to see these on a regular basis.
@@hardyharharhar6392 The fact that these bloopers were shown in theaters makes this even more fascinating. Funny how you couldn't say these words in movies back then but you could hear them in blooper reels being shown in the same theaters where the movies played!
Yes this is what I noticed most of them were not joking but really frustrated and tired. I imagine it was a really harsh buisness as was so expensive and you were very dispensable if you made too many mistakes.
@@MASTEROFEVIL I don't think so, movie budgets are way up nowadays. It's just that when you mess up as an actor you are wasting your collegues and the crew's time
I said "ball sack!" As an expletive the other day. Didn't realize my 7 year year old was in the room. He DIED. Then I had to explain, and chastise myself, and tell him not to say that. But the laugh it got from him.... it took everything in me not to laugh with him.
Ohhhh my God!! 😂🤣 That is hilarious and adorable... I would have found it incredibly difficult to laugh as well! Gosh, my future kid is gonna be a sailor mouth I don't think I'd be able to prevent that 😅😂
It's so weird to think they're actually human, and mess up, and have less than neutral reactions. It is so weird to me how modern they must've felt, how in the moment everything was, and how in future generations will have the same misconceptions of us. This is so interesting and disorienting!
I had this weird "is that Errol Flynn??" moment, not really knowing many old movie stars, and then I checked the description and realized that it was, in fact, Errol Flynn as Robin Hood and I am now disproportionately proud of myself XD
The cost is likely why they all seem so serious, too. Today when an actor flubs a line, they laugh it off. Tape is cheap. But in the film days, flubs cost money!
I have never seen old hollywood outtakes before, thank you for uploading this. All these great actors, you forget that they are human and they mess up sometimes.
That was very fun and endearing. Funny cos it makes the delivery of their lines while acting seem more natural, as they talk in the same manner when they aren't. Beautiful.
I have always found it difficult to like classic movies because the actors sounded a bit theatral. Thank you for this video, it has opened my eyes a bit about that, and it was hilarious to watch !
This was during the era post RP English (now commonly known as BBC English) - which had been created for Radio in London so people could understand the news over the horrible wires- and was brought to the US and then "fixed" for the American ear. All actors had to learn various skills including how to speak in the American RP voice. In fact a few were actually taught RP English such as Grace Kelly to get rid of the horrid Philadelphia accent. They were also required to learn to ride horses, shoot guns, ski, dance, sing, use proper etiquette for the time etc... as standard protocol in the Studio system.
As someone that's been directing a project with voice actors, the very loud producer laugh when a scene messes up is very real and I do it all the time
I love this. It kind of shows how actors have always been messing up since the dawn of cinema. It makes these old actors seem a bit more real and human too.
Carole Lombard was probably the champion swearer of the group. Check out the My Man Godfrey bloopers. She could, and would, out-swear most men. And yet she was a great person, very down-to-earth. The people she worked with, in front of and behind the camera, loved working with her.
It’s so weird that I never considered this because of how cartoony and dramatic old movies are. Their portrayals are so untouchable, it’s easy to forget they’re all still actors.
this is so bizarre ive never seen old hollywood outtakes before and i find it surreal to watch them to go from perfect silver screen immortals to real fallible people in the same second
Bogie's still the coolest even when he's muffing his lines.
Read their autobiographies. They’re fascinating.
It's just acting lol
Boagie gets so angry when he misses his lines. A true professional!
Ikr
"If I only knew the line, how beautifully we could play this scene!"
Ha! My favorite 🎥🎬
6:07 for future preference 😉
Best one. 10/10.
dhgemein2 lmao
what movie is it?
So, they were human after all.
+Master Blackthorne It's fake
@@smackyay wrong
the video was a paid actor.... o wait i-
It's just a ploy by the government
AHAHAHAH i was about to sayy that🤣🤣
it’s so weird to think that the actors saw the set in color
Joniness +1 knowledge
@@Joniness that can't be true can it?
@@GoodKingMort it's partially true, a higher percentage of people used to dream in black and white, while less people had dreams in color
this is in part because of the influence of TV, but some people did dream with colors and some people still dream in black and white
I used to dream in black and white most of the time a few years ago so clearly there's more to it than just TV
Unocualqu1era Yeah , that makes sense : by following that logic pepole in before audio would have read their dreams , and before video they would have just heard ...
@@Joniness I figured this was just some bullshit but I looked it up. It's true holy shit, I cannot believe that
I definitely need to add "aw nuts!" to my use of profanities
And perhaps your menu as well.
J.J. What the fuck is wrong with your brain?
@@sna1466 LMAO
Nuckin futs
I was actually noticing all the "jesus christ's" My Great grandmother (circa 1898-1997) used to say that when she swore. Nanny Football!!!!
"If I only knew the line now, how beautifully we could play this scene."
I saw it just as I read this comment.
where is it?
edit: nvm i just saw it !! 😅
5:50 I love how sassy she gets but still tries to stay respectful. “Now look Tyler I gotta see if you don’t mind!”
I keep replaying it cuz i like imagining tylers face lmao
Reminds me of Lisa Kudrow for some reason
Her voice sounded so much like Shelley Long
Ik I wouldn’t have been able to stay that composed I would’ve either gotten mad or cried lmao
I think it's Jane Wyman, Reagan's first wife.
"I'm a physician.... I'm a surgeon goddammit!!!!" 😂I could watch this over and over, I love it.
Dammit, Jim!
read this just as it came up! lol
Love it 😅😅
Imagine a surgeon one day comming to work like: im a physician
@@terryrose4804 I can not believe you committed suicide.
"Help me. Help me...Dear God, help me, I'm caught on his buttonhole."
that was cute..lol
Time stamp?
Luna T 4:22
Julia Julia they said BUTTONhole, not..
Renee was here thanks
I love how people today think of “nuts” as such a pure, old-timey thing to say, when it’s literally no different than us saying “balls” lol
These are really fun! I’ve never seen classic bloopers before!
I was today years old when i realized "nuts" probably alot of the time was meant to be testicles and not peanuts.
i used to say it when i was little and my grandparents always got mad at me, now i know why
We still say nuts today...
@@digitaldrvgs same
"balls" is one of my favorite "swear words"
Usually, it's something like "holy balls!"
I love Jimmy Stewart's blooper. "Oh, you're following me, I didn't know that!"
More shows what a professional he was I think, less of a "blooper."
5:32
he’s so wonderful! i almost called him George Bailey by accident
He thought he was just going to walk off camera and then took a double take when the camera moved 😂
"I just had a baby in the ladies room" I can't 💀💀
that one had me fuckin dead 😂😂
Your profile name is killing me lmao
@@Tokmurok ^
That was an expression back then for taking a huge shit 😂😂😂
@@akio_kuro We should bring it back.
At that time, method acting wasn't applied yet. So, the acting looks really theatrical and it's easy to forget they were really people (unlike today where we see life-like interpretations). But seeing them cursing and going out of character shows they were real people , and that's awesome
Method acting still isn't widely applied. The reason why the acting looks theatrical is because it simply is. Theatre acting and film acting are very different from one another, because of the way live sound works. However back then we didn't really know the difference and more importantly a lot of these actors were theatre actors or had come from theatre or were taught by theatre actors.
@@alexmilchev5395 I know, I'm an actor, and I made a short-cut but that's basically what I was saying
@@MrPOKER725 I'm also an actor. You are misleading people who might not be as educated on the matter as we are.
@@alexmilchev5395 Okay Jesus, the World is a better place with your concern 🙂
@@alexmilchev5395 Alex Milchev Plus, movie acting begun to change with the apparition of the actor studio and Strasberg who adapted the Stanislavski's method. It was popularised thanks to James Dean for example, so my statement didn't mislead anything : method acting wasn't applied and wildly known, so the acting method was still theatrical looking
Bette Davis proclaiming she just took a massive dump in the ladies room was comedy gold!
I think she said she had a baby. Is that Betty Davis?
@@zztopz7090 euphemism
@@zztopz7090
It's an old Euphemism. To say you had a baby in the restroom, is to confess to having dumped a massive load in the toilet. As in it was so big, you slapped it on its ass and named it.
@@waterdamnaged good god hahahaha
Time stamp?
"Don't put your hair back!"
"Now look, I gotta see if you don't mind"
"No no no no, she got the point."
Was she talking to Howard Hughes?
@@jefolson6989 I'm pretty sure she says "Seiler", as in Lewis Seiler.
This is gold! You always see how the 30's 40's and 50's portrayed themselves as an innocent, wholesome, Leave it to Beaver-type era. Hard to believe that people actually swore then. I wonder if anyone has actors from this time dropping f-bombs.
Censorship creates false illusions of history and people.
Type in "Kay Medford swearing" in the search engine. She drops the f-bomb on before a live audience.
Got that in my favorites list! Love that video!
actually they did back in 1927 -30 were the talkies are going to emerged. but in 1934 they ban the swearing word in movie and that is called hays code.
rockabillylaker One of the joys of silent era is all the swearing- if you can lip read
I will never not be in love with the trans Atlantic accent
Trans accent
Lucky Luke what
Lucky Luke what
Lucky Luke what
Lucky Luke what
I didn't know that old movies like these had bloopers, I assumed they never made mistakes
Edit: wow this is my most liked comment, thank you! You guys rock!
I'm not so surprised that the bloopers existed as I am that their footage has survived to this day.
@@Vox-Multis yeah that's pretty cool too
Seriously my grandpa would always say some bullshit like "old movies were recorded in 1 take"
Same, it's so insane 😂 Now I am extremely curious how may my favourite old movies had looked like in situations like this.
Nah, they did hundreds and hundreds of takes for most scenes. Surprised some of the backup film reels survived for us to see.
"Oh you're following me, ohhh I didn't know that."
Even when he's screwing up, Jimmy Stewart had the innocence of a puppy.
I just read your comment when it happened lol
5:35
He is so Cute, which Movie is it?
It’s so wild seeing people who are probably long dead be captured on film being so.... human. Just being their self, laughing with their colleagues, fallible humans. I wonder what it’ll be like watching vlogs, let’s plays and pod casts in the future when we’re all gone, future generations might be able to familiarise themselves with dead people more than ever before. Just wild.
Time is scary. I really liked the people in this. But knowing that they all are gone is scary. They we're all laughing... Now they're gone. Like they never existed, only a few pictures and film footage to their memory now. We'll all be there soon.
Ok, dude, I'm just here to watch a fun video not to get an existential crisis. lol
the volume in this bus is ***astronomical***
Leon Wagner 910 AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH
*cries in the corner
I love hearing the crew laughing with them behind the camera
6:08 who is this? "if i only knew the line, how beautifully could we play this scene?"
Laurence Olivier?
@@alfmac7886 Nope, Paul Muni, Academy Award winning actor.
@@OuterGalaxyLounge Ahhh yes.. The Good Earth and Juarez spring to mind!
How he passes the blame to the president at 7:02 😂
That was the most interesting one because they really enjoyed!
The presidents face 😂😂😂
That had me laughing hard lmao
I love their accents. They sound so sophisticated.
many people actually didn't speak in the trans atlantic accent naturally, they used it to sound more sophisticated
@@loserqt3480 mid-Atlantic
@@jenniferpearce1052 what, you mean the language of Atlantis?
@@Zapper1993 Lol! The made-up accent they used was called mid-Atlantic (not trans-Atlantic as the other poster said) and was meant to be somewhere between a British and American accent, which puts you in the middle of the Atlantic.
@@jenniferpearce1052 Dude Trans-Atlantic is name of the accent, it's also known as Mid-Atlantic but it's the same thing
4:19 "who the hell am I" lol
That guy's laugh is so similar to mine
2:33 sounded like it was actually part of the script
it reminds me of mccoy in star trek “i’m a doctor, god dammit!”
I really enjoyed this. The algorithm is weird, but this was nice.
Didn't think I will ever witness an old Hollywood bloopers LOL this is surreal
"GOD DAMMMIT!" was a very popular curse phrase back than...
It still is
Still is though
MASTER-OF- EVIL I feel like “shit” is more popular than goddamn it
@@ohuhokay8441Yes, it is. The point is, "Goddamn it" is still popular. Just trying to explain, don't take offense.
Politically correct and offended by everything bruh... no one took offense... I was simply stating what I felt was more commonly used. What are you on?
"The main thing is I gotta-" *SMASH* 9:26
Kanye's Roblox It sounds like the fucking table shatters
It sounded like when in Tom & Jerry they hit each other
*nukes Hiroshima*
@5:41 when Eleanor Parker says “I haven’t said my line yet” followed by that cute smile of hers is the most adorable blooper I’ve seen. Too cute 🥰
Knowing Bette Davis swore just as much I do does my heart all the good in the world.
Why?
Aglaya Majorem Why not?
@@aglayamajorem9546 makes her more human and relatable. We don't get many situations of these actors being candid in some way
personal fav has to be 6:10, suave as hell HAHAHA
2010:
2011:
2012:
2013:
2014:
2015:
2016:
2017:
2018:
2019:
2020: *Hello there*
Yeah, imagine, my reassurance that this was a good idea for a video just took a decade XD
General Kenobi
Funny
You are a bold one.
Via Margutta 51 I love how you're STILL HERE A DECADE LATER
9:03 my new stock answer at work.
Lmaooooo
“If I only knew the line now, how beautifully we could play this scene.” Hands down the classiest, most elegant blooper of all time.
Leave it to Paul Muni, a classy guy!
Betty Davis is priceless, she definitely should've had more comical roles.
At 5:41, when she says "I haven't said my line yet." That was like hot and adorable at the same time.
sorrowfool thank you! I couldn’t understand what she said.
Who is she?
Everyone in these scenes can be described as such, honestly.
5:41
@@ok2298 thank you
4:54 I’m obsessed with the “oh honey” after the actress messes up her lines 😂
It's so eye opening to see that general American mannerisms haven't changed all that much.
The same indications of sarcasm, sassiness, and frustration
The frustrated mouth noises are so relatable 😂
And its with this you realize that these people are basically as normal as we are today and don't actually sound like square enix kingdom hearts characters with intonated and deliberate dialogue
Kingdom hearts characters are actually stilted...
Wait what
Am I missing an entire dimension of KH or just missing the point?
@@Spooknie lol
Sora...Donald...and Goofy...
...
...
...
Don't tell me you've heard it said A DIFFERENT way...
@@FF18Cloud Ohhh, I think I know where I went wrong. You're just referring to their voices and the way they sound when they talk opposed to actual vocabulary
FF18Cloud Yeeeeeeaaaaahhh, you need to get out more. Kingdom Hearts is a rather niche reference in the grand scheme of things.
I love Ann Sheridan calling her co-star a schmuck.
I think it was Errol Flynn.
And she wasn't wrong.
6:48 i hope they kept that in XD so cute
At 1:57 Betty Davis meant she wanted it to be the last take by saying "I want it to be the last one! She had probably done the take singing a few times before.
6:49 I’m so glad he caught her!
Warner Bros. put together blooper reels every year for some time, which I assume all these clips are from. Sometimes you'll notice some extra comical sound effects were added in a few of these scenes. Originally, of course, such things would only been shown to a select group of people in the studio itself, and NEVER shown to the public!
That's not true. Warner Bros. as you said put these blooper reels out every year. They were called: "Breakdowns of 1939", 1946, etc. And they were shown in theatres in between double features. So yes, the public did get to see these on a regular basis.
@@hardyharharhar6392 The fact that these bloopers were shown in theaters makes this even more fascinating. Funny how you couldn't say these words in movies back then but you could hear them in blooper reels being shown in the same theaters where the movies played!
"Now look Tyler I gotta see if you don't mind" 🤣🤣🤣
It's interesting to see how they get frustrated so easily. During those days bloopers must cost extra and so they weren't so funny.
Filming a movie costed a lot more money back then
Yes this is what I noticed most of them were not joking but really frustrated and tired. I imagine it was a really harsh buisness as was so expensive and you were very dispensable if you made too many mistakes.
@@MASTEROFEVIL I don't think so, movie budgets are way up nowadays. It's just that when you mess up as an actor you are wasting your collegues and the crew's time
@@inkusaido i think she was talking about back then
@@Haru_Misu I know, but money budgets are way up nowadays, so movies didn't cost a lot more back then. Well depends how you look at it really
I said "ball sack!" As an expletive the other day. Didn't realize my 7 year year old was in the room. He DIED. Then I had to explain, and chastise myself, and tell him not to say that. But the laugh it got from him.... it took everything in me not to laugh with him.
Ohhhh my God!! 😂🤣 That is hilarious and adorable... I would have found it incredibly difficult to laugh as well! Gosh, my future kid is gonna be a sailor mouth I don't think I'd be able to prevent that 😅😂
My condolences.
BALSAC is one of my favorite authors!
It's so weird to think they're actually human, and mess up, and have less than neutral reactions. It is so weird to me how modern they must've felt, how in the moment everything was, and how in future generations will have the same misconceptions of us. This is so interesting and disorienting!
It'll happen less so considering the growth of improv and Really Human Characters, I think.
I had this weird "is that Errol Flynn??" moment, not really knowing many old movie stars, and then I checked the description and realized that it was, in fact, Errol Flynn as Robin Hood and I am now disproportionately proud of myself XD
I think 06:49 is my favorite. Though 07:37 also cannot be denied!
do you know what movie 07:37 is from?
06:49 is such a good save too! He caught her fairly well lol.
@@JuliaBambooliaASMR Right? Went right in there and saved the day lol.
where is it from
I love that they still sound like they’re in character.
Hahaha "I'm a physician! I'm a surgeon, god dammit!" XD
Wow! I never knew bloopers for the classics existed!
Of course they do! Film is expensive. You don't just throw out reels of film, even if they are bloopers.
The cost is likely why they all seem so serious, too. Today when an actor flubs a line, they laugh it off. Tape is cheap. But in the film days, flubs cost money!
EarlyARs true
Love Bette Davis and her foul mouth!
But she just had a baby in the lady's room so you have to cut her some slack.
Davis was a notorious "potty mouth" because her cursing ran the gauntlet of many, many swear words. She was no "lady".
@@danielfronc4304 a lady can swear.
Ahead of her time!
Don't we all
3:56 that scream 🤣😂😂
“I’m a physician… I’m a surgeon, goddammit”
I didn't know people acted like this back in that time. Makes them way more relatable.
Yes. It really humanizes them all.
06:08 (crickets chirping) "If I only knew the line how beautifully we could play this scene..." :-D
I’d just like to add that in order to edit movies back then, they had to literally CUT the film tape and glue it back together. God what a hassle
Most of the times I thought the "Goddamnit" was just part of the script
5:13 her facial expression is so modern like a youtuber's when she cracks up 😂
When the girls say "nuts", that's just too cute. ^^
'Nuts' was slang for testicles. It's the equivalent of bollocks or balls today.
Dizz nuts!
3:57 i'M SCREAMING OMFG
😂🥺
Nice
THE SOUND EFFECTS ALDKDKDK
@@gingahsnixx I KNOW BAHAHAH ITS SENDING ME
😂😂
that one footage of Carole Lombard is the most precious of all!!!
Ana Grant I think I saw three with her
@@stvp68 there is only one actually, at 8:40
@@stvp68 nvn there's two, the one before the last too
What does she say?
@@laragrossi8300 I forgot to something something lol I don't understand either
I have never seen old hollywood outtakes before, thank you for uploading this. All these great actors, you forget that they are human and they mess up sometimes.
That was very fun and endearing. Funny cos it makes the delivery of their lines while acting seem more natural, as they talk in the same manner when they aren't.
Beautiful.
3:53 that was the classiest "god dammit, I'm sorry" I've ever heard
5:44 this girls iconic omg
anyone know who is the actress and the flim ?
@@wendylai6563 Eleanor Parker and Voice of The Turtle I believe
This has become my favorite video ever
“I just had a baby in the ladies room”
ARMYYY💜💜💜
“I’m a surgEON GOD D A M M I T !!”
That made me laugh harder than it should have.
These old movies and their bloopers really be a guilty pleasure of mine
5:50 "now look Tyler I gotta see" 🤣 I dunno why I find that so funny
The use of "nuts" is my favorite. I hear that one so often in classic Hollywood bloopers.
I have always found it difficult to like classic movies because the actors sounded a bit theatral. Thank you for this video, it has opened my eyes a bit about that, and it was hilarious to watch !
That is because of the transatlantic accent they were taught to use, not quite British yet without the various regional accents of America.
This was during the era post RP English (now commonly known as BBC English) - which had been created for Radio in London so people could understand the news over the horrible wires- and was brought to the US and then "fixed" for the American ear. All actors had to learn various skills including how to speak in the American RP voice. In fact a few were actually taught RP English such as Grace Kelly to get rid of the horrid Philadelphia accent. They were also required to learn to ride horses, shoot guns, ski, dance, sing, use proper etiquette for the time etc... as standard protocol in the Studio system.
isn’t it crazy how we all were recommended this video 9 yrs after it was made?
When Claude Rains says God Damn it sounds so eloquent his voice is pure heaven
As someone that's been directing a project with voice actors, the very loud producer laugh when a scene messes up is very real and I do it all the time
I wish that here was a list of all this movies in order
2:32 the origins of Dr. McCoy
I'm a surgeon not an actor!
YESSS i’m a doctor, dammit!
This is one of the best things on the Internet
Why did it when she slammed the tea pot down sound like a door being busted through
omfg 😂😂😂😂
It's actually surprising how much like modern people they sound when they're out of character
"I'm a physician no, I'm a surgeon goddammit" had me rolling on the ground
"Now look tyler, i gotta see, if you dont mind"
Tom Kennedy: "Mr Bennett? I'm Geh, uhh G.. G. Who the hell am I?"
I love this. It kind of shows how actors have always been messing up since the dawn of cinema. It makes these old actors seem a bit more real and human too.
1:14 "These New York women are certainly... nuts!" "Oh, I don't think so!!?" 😂
Carole Lombard was probably the champion swearer of the group. Check out the My Man Godfrey bloopers. She could, and would, out-swear most men. And yet she was a great person, very down-to-earth. The people she worked with, in front of and behind the camera, loved working with her.
Being an enormous movie buff l must say, thank you from the bottom of my heart! It was so enjoyable l watched it twice! ♥️👍🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
9:12 what was that unholy sound haha
I've always found "nuts" to be a hilarious thing to blurt out.
It’s so weird that I never considered this because of how cartoony and dramatic old movies are. Their portrayals are so untouchable, it’s easy to forget they’re all still actors.
Exactly. Like characters in a book, and like you said, “untouchable “ - such a great word to describe their portrayals.
“If I only knew the line now, so nicely we could act this scene.”
-"Mr. Brennant?"
-"Yes"
-"I'm co-coae-the hell am I?"
It's great how their reactions to the other actor screwing up are so much more genuine than their acting.
8:40 Claudette Colbert and her whistle and "yes monsieur" oh my God.