Doubt it. I am sure most millennials have no idea who John Wayne is. He will become more and more obscure over the next few decades, which hopefully translates to less knuckle dragging, woman slapping, "my way or the highway" douchbags.
+Richard Berry i dont think the world will ever forget true legends like john wayne and the greats from that time in movie history.... somethings people should be born knowing.... lol one of those is John Wayne was a Badass and a Great Actor... but yeah millennials alot of times dont look at the past... just forward to there futures most of that lot are hopes and dreams kind of people then the world forces them to grow up and shatters their dreams and hopes... (not saying all young people are like this mind you).... but most of the ones i have known tend to forget the passed...
One of my favorite John Wayne movies glad my Grandpa introduced me to Westerns as a kid even a 90's kid like me can appreciate good classics like these
I would watch their movies with my dad as a kid and only 34 years old now and still watch Eastwood or Wayne westerns when I can and Clint’ s cop movies
Fun fact and no joke. My adoptive dad was related to John Wayne/Robert Marion Morrison. And he could scare the skin off of people and animals. There was a boxer, the dog breed, after me when I was little and my dad yelled “GET OUT OF HERE!!!!”, at the top of his voice, and that dog sprang up in the air like a rabbit and “Ppppphhheeewwwww!”
They do exist ... they're just not filmed anymore. The gradual and insidious "pussification" of man started with the that useless Baby Boomer generation.
God I miss the Duke.One of the greatest western actors ever.He personified what being a man meant.Your word was your bond and you didnt break it for anything.Loved your movies John RIP.
Love them classics, watch them over and over. John Wayne gets my ultimate respect. Maureen O'Hara is right up there too, along with sooo many other greats. Grew up in a perfect time. 61 and going strong. Well, kinda......
There's an hilarious comedy sketch with John Byner & Lee Marvin on YT in which Byner as "The Duke" advises Lee to '...hold yer horses pilgrim...' & the duke himself is in the audience: Priceless!
I’ve been a fan of his since i was very little. Now im pretty old and still a fan. As a coincidence i just finished in harms way on dvd.... no one will ever replace him RIP
I always watch this or the commancheroes for a good laugh. Sometimes rio bravo too. Love how those movies can lighten the mood after something serious, or just make you laugh the whole way through.
It was my dad's favorite too... he used to quote it all the time but I never looked it up. Fast forward 10 years... he's no longer with us and I was watching old westerns with a family friend and finally saw this scene. RIP Pops and John
You gotta be a butthurt liberal and hate america to not like THE DUKE.He was everything the men ( if you can call todays males MEN) are not. Loyal tough honest and lovers of their country.RIP JOHN .
God I was born in the wrong century, that was a time when men were allowed to be men. Forget lawsuits etc., ya gotta beef with someone, handle it on your own. Have been a Duke fan for a long time, so many great scenes and quotes.
You and me both! I've always said I was born in the wrong century. I'd gladly give up phones, computers, etc... Common sense was a little more common then..
True story. Leo Gordon, who played the guy Duke pushed down the hill into the water? In the late '40s, he actually did time for armed robbery. And, from the Art Imitates Life file, he played a bank robber in Season 6 of "Adam-12." The episode was "Trouble in the Bank," originally aired 1-15-74.
Classic john wayne they don't make men like this anymore do they? Wayne made so many great movies with great lines and great acting the one and only larger than life the duke! Rip.........
cqtaylor Funny thing, this isn't the only time. Watch John Ford's "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance". That's the first time Wayne used "pilgrim". It's his nickname for Jimmy Stewart's character--and he says it so much in that movie it's drinking-game material.
the one thing john always did for his movies is that he didn't use stunt men. in a behind the scenes documentary he had stated that everyone was afraid to do the stunt, so he showed them how it was done. classic wayne.
SuperGrandmother3 he did use 1 in the shootist, but may have been for his age and health besides not knowing he had cancer, he was battling a very bad flu. they almost didnt finish the movie
He was stunt doubled every now and again for really dangerous stuff in his younger days and when he got older was doubled more frequently, but he did more of his own stunts than the average star and in this and HATARI! he didn't use one at all.
How many time's have we ALL had a "....the Hell I won't!" moment in life? Sometimes people just take thing's one step too far, & the next thing you know we're quoting The Duke. And.... Well, some people seem to insist on a dose of reality.
"Well that's not important right now. The important thing is that you don't draw that Hoglighter or this will be worse than Dodge City on a Saturday night"... Common sense triumphs the emotions in any situation like that
I loved all his movies!! It was movies like that, my parents could proudly take their kids to watch!! I really enjoyed it especially when it was at the drive in.
Yeah if I were in the same situation I'd have the same reaction; someone needs to teach you a lesson, but I won't... Like heck I won't, and gives him a big sock in the mouth.
The great badman Leo Gordon gets a lesson in manners from big John...this is a great movie full of fun and good humor....years before when Wayne was making the great western Hondo the only actor who was considered tough enough and big enough not to look foolish when tangling with Wayne was the same Leo Gordon...Gordon was much more that just a granite faced bad guy...he also wrote many screenplays and several successful novels. In his youth he spent fours years in either Folsom or Alcatraz, I can't really remember which, after being shot in the stomach while committing and armed robbery....So old Leo was the real thing!
That tough guy with the shotgun is the classic blue-eyed villain/actor Leo Gordon -- no second string man in Hollywood. When he wasn't acting he was a novelist & sold screenplays to production companies ("Tobruk" with Rock Hudson). He appeared with Wayne 3 times (Hondo, The Conquerer & McLintock). Appeared in many Gunsmoke, Bonanzas & Rifleman series' & the TV mini-series Winds of War & tangled with Clint Walker in The Night of the Grizzly. He also served 5 years in San Quentin. His last appearance was at the poker table in Mel Gibson's Maverick film. You'd have to be at least as big as The Duke to poke Leo Gordon. Leo had a reputation like actor Lawrence Tierney as a real tough guy in Hollywood. (Maybe you'll remember Tierney from Seinfeld -- he was Elaine's father who scared everybody).
P.S. Radar's impersonation in the T.V. series M.A.S.H. was about ten years or so too early, because the movie came out after the Korean conflict was over. ♡ T.E.N.
Vigilantes should be careful, especially careful they don't fuck up. Because they can create a vigilante willing to do worse and go further than them. I love Wayne's even temper here, I am not sure I would have been able to keep my cool once I got the shotgun away from him.
John Wayne really knew how to make a scene work; he never just went through the motions like he didn't care. He ALWAYS cared!
The man may be gone but the legend will live on forever.
Doubt it. I am sure most millennials have no idea who John Wayne is. He will become more and more obscure over the next few decades, which hopefully translates to less knuckle dragging, woman slapping, "my way or the highway" douchbags.
+Richard Berry I'm a millennial and a black man. I love Wayne. Particularly for his choice of words. Very smart man
Yeah, he's really obscure today 38 years after. What an ignorant comment...
To a generation that thinks that Leonardo DeCrapeo is a great actor it's hard to appreciate the true awsomness that was John Wayne.
+Richard Berry i dont think the world will ever forget true legends like john wayne and the greats from that time in movie history.... somethings people should be born knowing.... lol one of those is John Wayne was a Badass and a Great Actor... but yeah millennials alot of times dont look at the past... just forward to there futures most of that lot are hopes and dreams kind of people then the world forces them to grow up and shatters their dreams and hopes... (not saying all young people are like this mind you).... but most of the ones i have known tend to forget the passed...
One of my favorite John Wayne movies glad my Grandpa introduced me to Westerns as a kid even a 90's kid like me can appreciate good classics like these
Same here, my gramps was in ww2!
John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara worked so well together. She was always just as tough and strong willed as he was. Plus you gotta love that red hair.
The Duke and Clint, could watch their movies everyday and never get bored. They are 2 of a kind. Hollywood doesn't make them like that anymore
I would watch their movies with my dad as a kid and only 34 years old now and still watch Eastwood or Wayne westerns when I can and Clint’ s cop movies
Classic John Wayne there will never be another one like him he was truly unique 👍
Fun fact and no joke. My adoptive dad was related to John Wayne/Robert Marion Morrison. And he could scare the skin off of people and animals. There was a boxer, the dog breed, after me when I was little and my dad yelled “GET OUT OF HERE!!!!”, at the top of his voice, and that dog sprang up in the air like a rabbit and “Ppppphhheeewwwww!”
This scene is epic and it never fails to make me laugh. Love John Wayne!!!! Men like him don't exist anymore.
no men like that arnt allowed to be like this
donald Clevenger A real man doesn't allow others to dictate how he can "be". He does what he wants to do.
No they just end up in jail in now a days
+Ligeia0949 Generalities or specifics?
They do exist ... they're just not filmed anymore. The gradual and insidious "pussification" of man started with the that useless Baby Boomer generation.
One of the most memorable John Wayne scenes in his whole career.
And his career is full of memorable scenes.
NO, that WAS the most memorable. Beats all the others for a number of reasons.
@@NihongoGuy Really? It doesn't even come close to 'Fill your hands you son of a b*tch'.
@@SarthorS Gotta agree there.
no matter how many times i see this, i still lovewatching it :~))
God I miss the Duke.One of the greatest western actors ever.He personified what being a man meant.Your word was your bond and you didnt break it for anything.Loved your movies John RIP.
Yeah, a persona he acted but never lived.
somebody should belt you in the mouth but I won't, I won't, the hell I won't...... doesn't exactly sound like the man held his word does it?
@@adamsmyth1156
Buddy, you better look into his actual life.
Love them classics, watch them over and over. John Wayne gets my ultimate respect. Maureen O'Hara is right up there too, along with sooo many other greats. Grew up in a perfect time. 61 and going strong. Well, kinda......
No one can say “pilgrim “ like the Duke.
Peter griffin can
There's an hilarious comedy sketch with John Byner & Lee Marvin on YT in which Byner as "The Duke" advises Lee to '...hold yer horses pilgrim...' & the duke himself is in the audience: Priceless!
True
Touche' LOL (smile)
One of my all time favorite scenes. Sure miss Duke. They'll never be another one.!
One of the best scenes in movie history...A real Movie Star, and the genuine article...Miss ya, Duke...
I’ve been a fan of his since i was very little. Now im pretty old and still a fan. As a coincidence i just finished in harms way on dvd.... no one will ever replace him RIP
Admittedly, one of the most satisfying way to begin a fight.
I always watch this or the commancheroes for a good laugh.
Sometimes rio bravo too.
Love how those movies can lighten the mood after something serious, or just make you laugh the whole way through.
john wayne was the best their never be one like him ,to replace him as a man
and star
He was of his age.
Hard times make strong men. Hopefully our current hard times breeds a new generation of John Wayne's. The world needs it right now.
INDEED IKR
Aint that the fucking truth
There has been NO one before or since that could measure up to the "Duke"..I pray he is in heaven and at peace
I heard he converted to catholicism before his death so yeah I hope so too. Hope tonhsng out with him one day.
He seemed to be a nice and generous guy. I hope so he is just fine right now up there in Heaven.
This scene was my dads favorite of any movie. So glad he got me hooked on John Wayne movies at an early age.
It was my dad's favorite too... he used to quote it all the time but I never looked it up. Fast forward 10 years... he's no longer with us and I was watching old westerns with a family friend and finally saw this scene. RIP Pops and John
I'm just glad the Duke didn't lose his temper!
Me too
The hell he didn’t
@@mart2746 "Mclintock...grate party, but no whiskey... We go home"
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂lol g
How could anyone give a thumbs down for this movie?
How can you not like John Wayne
That guy John Wayne punched disliked the video.
You gotta be a butthurt liberal and hate america to not like THE DUKE.He was everything the men ( if you can call todays males MEN) are not. Loyal tough honest and lovers of their country.RIP JOHN .
Tom Wolak draft dodger like trump
i love ❤️ that part
John Wayne would've been a great President!!!
Ronald Reagan Became Solid President !!
God I was born in the wrong century, that was a time when men were allowed to be men. Forget lawsuits etc., ya gotta beef with someone, handle it on your own. Have been a Duke fan for a long time, so many great scenes and quotes.
Todd Salvati - it’s a movie. Go read some old newspapers. People went to court over bs all the time.
You and me both! I've always said I was born in the wrong century. I'd gladly give up phones, computers, etc...
Common sense was a little more common then..
Oh yeah, back before they cured polio and the consumption might getcha. Good times. The dentist must have been a hoot.
J B that’s only when they got caught
@@JB-uv4hm
Not so much on the absolute frontier
People did travel west faster than the government and its rules did
I've loved him for as long as I can remember.
John Wayne hadn't lost his temper in 40 years? Somehow that seems hard to believe.
He never lost it just put it over the side he always knew where it was!
Nope, he's known exactly where it was the whole time.
I'm sure he's lost his temper several times hell he's the Duke I mean that just speaks for itself
Probably his character in this film that hasn't lost his temper in 40 years.
Of course he never lost it. It's where it's always been.
This is one of my favorite scenes from Mclintock
The Duke will live forever
love this movie...very entertaining and lots of funny moments...
1:25 now, we'll all cAlm down."
maybe my favofrite line in movie history.
And what an iconic voice, I can't avoid to say.
True story. Leo Gordon, who played the guy Duke pushed down the hill into the water? In the late '40s, he actually did time for armed robbery. And, from the Art Imitates Life file, he played a bank robber in Season 6 of "Adam-12." The episode was "Trouble in the Bank," originally aired 1-15-74.
That is one of my favorite lines! Ever.... in anything!
That line set up a truly EPIC fight scene--in that mud hole!
Thus kicking off one of the greatest brawls ever filmed. 👍
Classic john wayne they don't make men like this anymore do they? Wayne made so many great movies with great lines and great acting the one and only larger than life the duke! Rip.........
I LOVE that scene!!!!
I love how he's the only dude to call guys "pilgrim" in a Western. An original. :-)
cqtaylor Funny thing, this isn't the only time. Watch John Ford's "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance". That's the first time Wayne used "pilgrim". It's his nickname for Jimmy Stewart's character--and he says it so much in that movie it's drinking-game material.
He also used the Pilgrim thing in an american cancer society spot in 1978
Me no pilgrim, kemo sabe-Tonto #THeLoneRanger
Clint Eastwood...Outlaw Josey Wales...So you say them there horses belong to them two pilgrims? (dead after trying to "arrest" Josey Wales).
Jeremiah Johnson, will geer calls redford pilgrim
Whoah Macklin good party No more whiskey We go home!
Now how come when I yell this at parties as I'm leaving I get confused looks?
GREAT PARTY! WHERE THE WHISKEY?
I love this movie! When I went down to Brazil it was on tv. There it’s called “When a Man is a Man”! An appropriate title!
Best scene ever!
i love john wayne
I grew up watching this movie many times..
This is what is wrong with people today they don’t watch or really know who John Wayne was
Don't you mean Marion Morrison? ;)
Their missing out on life lessons
Maybe actually doing the things he pretended to do....like actually fight for their country instead of being on a Burbank Soundstage.
@@adamsmyth1156 Oh their working on something alright......digging the nation an early grave. To hell with liberals
THEY ARE NOT ALOUD Too 😣 ITS SNOWFLAKE MILENIA NOW 😨g
the one thing john always did for his movies is that he didn't use stunt men. in a behind the scenes documentary he had stated that everyone was afraid to do the stunt, so he showed them how it was done. classic wayne.
SuperGrandmother3 he did use 1 in the shootist, but may have been for his age and health besides not knowing he had cancer, he was battling a very bad flu. they almost didnt finish the movie
He was stunt doubled every now and again for really dangerous stuff in his younger days and when he got older was doubled more frequently, but he did more of his own stunts than the average star and in this and HATARI! he didn't use one at all.
Chuck Roberson made a nice living doubling for Duke (and others). He had one of his biggest parts as the sheriff in this movie.
My life won't be complete till I steal this in a real life situation.
Yeah I'm kinda searching for it too... Lmao
Yeah I Haven't Lost My Temper in 40 yrs. Too. But the Hell I Won't.
That left hook was legit...god bless the duke
The hell I'll watch this again!
How many time's have we ALL had a "....the Hell I won't!" moment in life?
Sometimes people just take thing's one step too far, & the next thing you know we're quoting The Duke. And.... Well, some people seem to insist on a dose of reality.
"now well all calm down!" lol
"Well that's not important right now. The important thing is that you don't draw that Hoglighter or this will be worse than Dodge City on a Saturday night"... Common sense triumphs the emotions in any situation like that
+AJ Lanterman He said "hogleg" not "hoglighter." It's another name for a pistol.
+Robert Walker Sorry. Sometimes the way he says certain words may not register as thevright word
+AJ Lanterman That's ok. I had to rewatch that part twice with the volume on full before I could make it out.
And calmly knocks the guy down.
GREAT clip from an all around fun movie. Thanx for the post!
Great movie. Great cast. Plenty of humor.
I won't....the hell I won't watch this for hundred time has if was the first 😊
I loved all his movies!! It was movies like that, my parents could proudly take their kids to watch!! I really enjoyed it especially when it was at the drive in.
Just about any Duke movie, me and my dad would both gladly watch.... Oh they make movies like this any more. Sighs.
Mclintock is very funny his grandson was a good boxer
Awesome part of an awesome movie! My first western I ever saw with my grandpa this started all of it
Probably my all time favourite western right here and the scene that made me fall in love with it.
One of the best movies ever made
The best line of any John Wayne movie lol
I REALLY NEEDED THAT LAUGH!! xD One of The Duke’s best films! 🤣
Loved this movie...best line ever....the hell I won't! Oh yeah!
Classic John Wayne good manners
I miss those moments in life
Best movie fight scene ever! I especially love the indian's commentary.
Epic!
Leo Gordon, who John Wayne is backing up was an actual badass, perfect for this role
Yeah if I were in the same situation I'd have the same reaction; someone needs to teach you a lesson, but I won't... Like heck I won't, and gives him a big sock in the mouth.
Not one of my favorite John Wayne films but damn sure happy to see it online one of my favorite actors of all time
The lines GW used was used in a 'Pirates of the Caribbean' fanfiction, only Will was GW.
Great movie!
Dude had that punch coming the split second he first poked the duke in the gut with that double barreled shotty.
The guy with the shot gun appeared in Hondo and My name's nobody. He's so cool!
The qoute against haters
I miss the duke
Almost cried, I love the CLASSICS ;)
So cathartic.
Lol. I wonder if they knew how iconic the line would become the day they filmed it?
My daughters & I love this movie
Man with the shotgun is veteran character actor Leo Gordon. He also went on to write several movies usually credited as Leo V. Gordon.
Keith...Yes... a good actor, and a busy one... you see him all over the '60's and '70's...Movies and TV...
The great badman Leo Gordon gets a lesson in manners from big John...this is a great movie full of fun and good humor....years before when Wayne was making the great western Hondo the only actor who was considered tough enough and big enough not to look foolish when tangling with Wayne was the same Leo Gordon...Gordon was much more that just a granite faced bad guy...he also wrote many screenplays and several successful novels. In his youth he spent fours years in either Folsom or Alcatraz, I can't really remember which, after being shot in the stomach while committing and armed robbery....So old Leo was the real thing!
One best ones yet...the duke
That tough guy with the shotgun is the classic blue-eyed villain/actor Leo Gordon -- no second string man in Hollywood. When he wasn't acting he was a novelist & sold screenplays to production companies ("Tobruk" with Rock Hudson). He appeared with Wayne 3 times (Hondo, The Conquerer & McLintock). Appeared in many Gunsmoke, Bonanzas & Rifleman series' & the TV mini-series Winds of War & tangled with Clint Walker in The Night of the Grizzly. He also served 5 years in San Quentin.
His last appearance was at the poker table in Mel Gibson's Maverick film.
You'd have to be at least as big as The Duke to poke Leo Gordon. Leo had a reputation like actor Lawrence Tierney as a real tough guy in Hollywood. (Maybe you'll remember Tierney from Seinfeld -- he was Elaine's father who scared everybody).
Would be nice to see this stuff on TV/cable/netflix a little more . . .
Love the movie
One of the greatest the duke
I was 3 when this movie came out. I'am 57 now pilgrim!
Best fight scene of the whole god damn movie
Love it
Oh yeah! The mud pit thing! I remember that at the height of it the Indians were watching the action back and forth.
Long Live John Wayne 🇺🇸
Great John Wayne
Leo Gordon was the bully.
A great character actor.
And I don't think he'd have given up that shotgun quite so easliy. Oh well, it's entertainment.
this is really great quality
jhon wayne the best actor
cowboy that i ever see.
Excellent. ♡ T.E.N.
P.S. Radar's impersonation in the T.V. series M.A.S.H. was about ten years or so too early, because the movie came out after the Korean conflict was over. ♡ T.E.N.
May be the most telegraphed punch in movie history. All it lacked was the little circle windup at the back.
Vigilantes should be careful, especially careful they don't fuck up. Because they can create a vigilante willing to do worse and go further than them. I love Wayne's even temper here, I am not sure I would have been able to keep my cool once I got the shotgun away from him.
I love how he just takes his gun like it nothing lol