@@MilesCox-jg3zh It seems obvious that those gay hillbillies had raped men before and this had been agreed upon in advance. Earlier in the movie, it was implied that the toothless guy was watching from a distance when the four city boys arrived and set off on their trip. Apparently, he thought they were good-looking, so he went to tell the other hillbilly what he had seen, and they decided to start following them. The toothless guy left his partner to assess whether he also likes those men, and if he does, they will take action. And obviously, he liked them. The unspoken understanding between them was a clear sign of it.
On my 12th birthday I went to the park with some friends to celebrate. Some drunk lunatic with a baseball bat accosted us and ended up keeping us hostage for about an hour, threatening to kill the first one of us to try and get away. I will never forget the complete helplessness and fear we all experienced that day. It was awful and is burnt into my brain to this day. Luckily some passing adults stopped what was happening and the guy was arrested. This scene sends a shiver down my spine as it could happen to anyone at any moment. We're all one lunatic away from total chaos.
I was always a tough kid. Remember being 14 years old an some 30 something year old man tried to fight me. I ran and picked up a glass Coke bottle and chased him around the basketball court. Luckily, he was faster then me because I really did have all intentions of busting that bottle over his head. But, I had a situation like your two and a bunch of black kids ran the other group of young black men off.
That's probably why he played a corrupt "bad guy" sheriff in his next movie the following year in "White lightning". And then an A hole popular country singer/star who forgot where he come from in W.W and The Dixie dance Kings in 1975. To get that bad taste out of his mouth, so to speak.
Whoever did the casting for this movie deserves a ton of credit. If you switched Jon Voight and Ned Beatty's charecters during the squeal scene it wouldn't be half as funny.
@@StephenTrunkwalter It wasn't really funny, it was sick. If you've seen the unedited version. The person who did the screenplay and the guy who wrote the novel (Can't remember his name but he played the sheriff toward the end of the movie, and he was an English professor at the University of Georgia) wanted to portray just how disgusting rape really is. It's not about sex, it's about violence and control.
This has to be one of the bravest examples of film making in the history of cinema. Over 50 years later it's still largely ignored as a curiosity or cult movie.
anyone notice at :45 - the skinny one has been checking voight out and starts to follow him with that "i want to do him" stare - the other one stops him and just looks at him - doesn't say anything - but the look is him saying "be patient - you'll get him soon" - i have watched this movie 100 times and have yet to see that -
In the 70s, filmmakers really could use their environment to craft feel a lot more. It's an absolute shame to think of how uncompelling and oversaturated this scene would feel had it been shot in front of a green screen today.
LMFAO! I've got this image now of this but with romcom actors playing the mountain men... Say Billy Crystal and Steve Martin... Would have been a whole different movie for sure :D
The film was based on novel of the same name by James Dickey. The inspiration came from an actual canoeing trip that Dickey took in the Deep South. True to the story he got hopelessly lost, but some locals were really helpful and got him back on the right track. Unfortunately Dickey decided to turn the truth on its head and portrayed the locals as monsters, guess it makes a for a better book/film but slightly unfair on the good people of the rural South!
Yeah, but not ALL the locals are depicted as criminals or degenerates in this film. At the end, the local people are compassionate and helpful to the city guys.
booldawg New Jersey has the worst people in the world. I lived there in Morris County from 1975 to 1999. I know what I speak. Inhuman monsters without a soul.
Such a disturbing scene from this great movie. Makes you wonder how you'd react when faced with the same situation. Most would probably be like poor Ned Beatty trying to appease them, but you really need to be like Burt, prepared to kill or maim.
The way those two rednecks look at each other at :43 is chilling. They have decided, without saying any words, that they are going to kill Ed and Bobby.
Choreography here, of slow paced impending violence,-dialogue, body space invasion etc is absolutely exquisite! A total work of art! Truly still the most horrific scene in films ever!! Surely a strong case for Bill McKinney to get a posthumous Oscar for this ! Herb Coward ain't far behind. We shouldn't just concentrate on the fab Ned Beatty as victim.
If you ever read in Burt Reynolds autobiography the account of what really happened that day, you'll have a different understanding. That McKinney guy was a sick piece of work.
one of the greatest scenes in movie history and one of the greatest movies-Cowboy (the tall mountain man) was a local who had never acted before this-he basically adlibed it all-brilliant job
+Robert Tompkins Cowboy Coward had been a gunman in Wild West entertainment. He's also been doing more acting and is living the country life. Here he is having a visit with "banjo boy" Billy Redden. th-cam.com/video/LnXZ5ZOtl7o/w-d-xo.html
Poor Bobby. I bet when they went to bars back in Atlanta with the fellas, he was always chosen last. What a horrible time to be considered the more desirable one
Ovik2k it’s s look you need to constantly be aware of, and I don’t mean being in the woods or rape; if you ever see two dudes, anywhere in a city walking near you who are looking at each other like that you better be ready to react.
Funny you should say that. In James Dickey's novel he uses the words "a silent transmission of thought" to depict what was going on in that 'telepathic' exchange between THE MOUNTAIN MAN and the toothless hill billy; played by the great Herbert Cowboy Coward. Have you read the book? It was mandatory reading in highschool (no wonder I was taught by Jesuit priests) which at the time Indidn't think nothing of but years later it got me wonfering what's up with that making a freshman read such a novel. Hmmmm.
BURT REYNOLDS AUTOBIOGRAPHY page 169 "Boorman tinkered endlessly with deliverance and finally screened a long version in early 1972, it was a very private screening for cast members and a very small group of hollywood insiders. My best scene was a nearly 4 page soliloquy where i convince voight to climb up the mountain and kill the bad guy. when my scene ended the audience applauded. It was the best thing i ever did as an actor. After the screening Lee Marvin shook my hand and warned me this picture will make you a movie star. Imagine the silence when Boorman told me we're gonna have to cut that scene, "i have to take it out, it kills the movie, the audience have to be interested in Jon's character at that stage"
Exactly, it does happen to real people. Just to think that you could be out in nature with a buddy and suddenly two strangers show up out of nowhere. And accuse you of running a whiskey still.
@@jkdbuck7670 then you get lucky and one of them bums you while doing farm yard role play ..some people have to pay for that these dudes got it for free
Before his death,I had the pleasure of corresponding via email with Bill McKinney..He was the nicest guy and nothing at all like this character. He said that he didn't regret making the movie,but he didn't have any idea that people would still be talking about it after so many years.
Joe, we had a local DJ here, that would play love songs on the morning show, and drop clips of that scene in them periodically... Laughed my ass off...
JOHN JOHN I’ve been to Georgia before especially where it was very woodland. I’ve never heard that Georgia had the highest rape statistics. I always thought the highest rape statistics were in Alaska if we’re talking about states in the U.S.
It's amazing that this video was posted 16 years ago which was in the infancy days of youtube. Someone thought of posting a film clip of deliverance during that time.Never take this video down. This should stay forever.
Lamo, working at a gas station I get asked for directions a lot. Sometimes I repeat the destination they're looking for in that same tone. The hospital?!?!
I just rafted the Chattooga river last weekend up in North Georgia. That's where the movie was mainly filmed at. Tallulha Gorge I think also. Didn't hear no bajo though Lol.
BILL MCKINNEY .. the mountain man .. easily the world's greatest actor who no one knows by name. Used to work out at Golds Gym in North Hollywood and benched 425, squated 675, and dead lifted over 700. Also was a great singer. Had a voice that sounds like Frank Sinatra. Recorded a CD called Love Songs from Aintry just before he passed away.
Richard Fortebraccio .. please sir .. BIll McKinney is **NOT** a rapist. He was merely showing what real southern hospiltality looks and "feels" like. Making passion to your guests at gun point is being taken wayyyyyyyy out of context here. The toothless man, played by Herbert Cowboy Coward, is from the area and is still alive and kicking. Billy was one of the sweetest kindest and most gentle of souls. Please do not call him a rapist. He was a great actor who should have received an Oscar for this scene alone. Probably the most compelling scenes in all of cinematography. Have a few shots of white lightening then watch the movie. You'll come around to seeing the wisdom of the mountain man. A stillllllll?
I know it's just actors in a movie...but scenes like this always remind me how being armed can make a huge difference in the outcome. And politicians are always trying to convince us that we don't need guns.
This was actually the first time Ned had ever been on camera. Same with Ronny Cox (Drew). Perhaps had he had other roles previously, he would not have accepted this one.
“Sigh... Poor Ned Beatty. He can... (giggles) He can play as Rudy’s dad all he wants, but when we look at him, all we see is him getting RAMMED in the woods!”
I’ve been hiking all over Appalachia….and worked power lines as well up there….I’ve never met one person who made me feel uncomfortable and wasn’t friendly….just gotta watch out for the meth heads nowadays….
THIS is why I carry 2 guns whenever I'm out in the wilderness. Another thing, I would NEVER let anybody holding a shotgun approach me like that. I know it's just a movie, but still.
I don't know what he would do, but what will I do? Well, don't know, uhh, maybe be more f*cking alert! (to the situation) Also it's true what he said "its just a movie", but I as well, if someone approached me in the woods so nonchalant with a weapon (such as a gun), either run from there and get help or call the 'authorities' cause you don't know what this guy's intentions are. Or quickly before he has time to react, knock him out, or wrestle him to the ground and try taking the weapon away, actually don't try, do it and accomplish it, because if you failed there's no telling what will happen afterwards.
@@Wowzersdude-k5c I see your point. It is a stereotype that has become much less true today. But one thing remains and that is the clannish attitudes that persist, especially when dealing with outsiders. I've seen this personally while stopping in at a small town diner on a road trip.
@@aliamjon4423 Melanin deficient -- yes, sometimes that is the first thing that people notice when they see another person. It is very easy for racial bias to come to the surface.
That silent dialog going on in their minds when they look at one another and pause for a few seconds is scary as F---, and pure genius!
Yeah I picked up on that, he was telling him, "you know what to do."
@@MilesCox-jg3zh It seems obvious that those gay hillbillies had raped men before and this had been agreed upon in advance. Earlier in the movie, it was implied that the toothless guy was watching from a distance when the four city boys arrived and set off on their trip. Apparently, he thought they were good-looking, so he went to tell the other hillbilly what he had seen, and they decided to start following them. The toothless guy left his partner to assess whether he also likes those men, and if he does, they will take action. And obviously, he liked them. The unspoken understanding between them was a clear sign of it.
It was a game of “no blink”. Loser has to get with the big guy.
Thank you, Ned. One of the most classic scenes in cinema. No one else could have played it better. RIP.
Who ever said Ned Beatty was 'acting' in the role?
He gave a lot of rectal tears for the movie academy.
No one could’ve gotten a keeesterrd better.
@@larryhinze9314😂😂😂😂 wtf
The reference to pigs makes you wonder what the pigs on the farms of these two go through...day...after...day...
this made me legit sad
Those poor pigs
Jesus..... lolol
Wait, they said they fuck pigs?... I guess i missed that part 🤣🤣
koslowski's
On my 12th birthday I went to the park with some friends to celebrate. Some drunk lunatic with a baseball bat accosted us and ended up keeping us hostage for about an hour, threatening to kill the first one of us to try and get away. I will never forget the complete helplessness and fear we all experienced that day. It was awful and is burnt into my brain to this day. Luckily some passing adults stopped what was happening and the guy was arrested.
This scene sends a shiver down my spine as it could happen to anyone at any moment. We're all one lunatic away from total chaos.
Was he convicted ?
I was always a tough kid.
Remember being 14 years old an some 30 something year old man tried to fight me. I ran and picked up a glass Coke bottle and chased him around the basketball court. Luckily, he was faster then me because I really did have all intentions of busting that bottle over his head.
But, I had a situation like your two and a bunch of black kids ran the other group of young black men off.
I would've killed the sonofabitch
Do you guys ever talk about it ???
@@advancedchiropractic667
That's unsual for blacks to go against blacks for Whites or Asians
What a way for Ned Beatty to break into the movie biz with this being his first movie gig!!!
That's probably why he played a corrupt "bad guy" sheriff in his next movie the following year in "White lightning". And then an A hole popular country singer/star who forgot where he come from in W.W and The Dixie dance Kings in 1975. To get that bad taste out of his mouth, so to speak.
Whoever did the casting for this movie deserves a ton of credit. If you switched Jon Voight and Ned Beatty's charecters during the squeal scene it wouldn't be half as funny.
@@StephenTrunkwalter It wasn't really funny, it was sick. If you've seen the unedited version. The person who did the screenplay and the guy who wrote the novel (Can't remember his name but he played the sheriff toward the end of the movie, and he was an English professor at the University of Georgia) wanted to portray just how disgusting rape really is. It's not about sex, it's about violence and control.
@@StephenTrunkwalter But you're right. The acting was superb in that scene during the confrontation leading up to the assault.
Bill McKinney was one heck of a character actor. This scene wouldn't be half as realistic without him.
This has to be one of the bravest examples of film making in the history of cinema. Over 50 years later it's still largely ignored as a curiosity or cult movie.
Not really.
I'd be up to my nuts in guts
Chris finch bloody good rep
anyone notice at :45 - the skinny one has been checking voight out and starts to follow him with that "i want to do him" stare - the other one stops him and just looks at him - doesn't say anything - but the look is him saying "be patient - you'll get him soon" - i have watched this movie 100 times and have yet to see that -
I love the way Ned Beatty just rolls his eyes as soon as he hears "What the hell do you think you're doing?". We've all been there.
Ned Beatty was very popular back then. I mean, he had friends up the ass!
Have we?
Not to that extent brother.
@@jeffwright1722 he goes from such confidence to utter humiliation so quickly
“Jesus Christ here we go…”
You know there's going to be trouble the moment McKinney oddly caresses Beatty's face.
The sounds of nature make it even more eerie
In the 70s, filmmakers really could use their environment to craft feel a lot more. It's an absolute shame to think of how uncompelling and oversaturated this scene would feel had it been shot in front of a green screen today.
this movie is the greatest romantic comedy of all time.
Midnight Rider Lmfaoooo!!!! Rofl!!! 😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣 DAMNNNNN!!!!
LMFAO! I've got this image now of this but with romcom actors playing the mountain men... Say Billy Crystal and Steve Martin... Would have been a whole different movie for sure :D
@@jonedwards7019 and Danny DeVito and Arnold Schwarzenegger as the other two 😂
The musical version is lovely..such wonderful singalong songs.. " take yer pants down" and the romantic " what the hell do you think your doing "
Love at first sight.
“Well, this river goes somewhere. And that’s where we’re going, somewhere.” Most awkward line ever.
LOL yeah funny as fuck,pure nerves
Just trying to keep his butt virginity @ that point....
Got that right! Awkward and pathetic.
And after that eeeeeeeeeeeeeee!
Eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!
"well we uh require that ya get ya god damn ass up in 'em woods" what a line!
Hahaha I agree. What a line.
Wow ! No loud ( annoying ) background music. Just natural forest sounds.
This guy Jim at work says "how goes it?" every morning when work starts at 8:00. Someday I'll reply "what the hell do you think your'e doin'?"
😂😂😂😂
12 years then 3 replies come at once!!!
Wonder if he stroke his chin as well.
I wonder if he paid somebody to play a solo banjo after the "what the hell do you think your'e doin'?"
Probably get a direct escort to HR after that
The film was based on novel of the same name by James Dickey. The inspiration came from an actual canoeing trip that Dickey took in the Deep South. True to the story he got hopelessly lost, but some locals were really helpful and got him back on the right track.
Unfortunately Dickey decided to turn the truth on its head and portrayed the locals as monsters, guess it makes a for a better book/film but slightly unfair on the good people of the rural South!
Yeah, but not ALL the locals are depicted as criminals or degenerates in this film. At the end, the local people are compassionate and helpful to the city guys.
Fun fact: James Dickey played the sheriff in the movie.
booldawg New Jersey has the worst people in the world. I lived there in Morris County from 1975 to 1999. I know what I speak. Inhuman monsters without a soul.
booldawg if they were in WV or KY I’d believe the movie version !
Well...duh.
Such a disturbing scene from this great movie. Makes you wonder how you'd react when faced with the same situation. Most would probably be like poor Ned Beatty trying to appease them, but you really need to be like Burt, prepared to kill or maim.
Great acting in this classic scène
I always felt bad for Beatty. He was in a lot of great roles, but being raped by a hillbilly is his most famous scene.
Martin Roberts id rather die fighting
And he repaid that kind act by writing a book depicting the locals as creeps, that's good of him [not]…. ????
Igor Izhchenko - Why are you bringing up politics in a discussion about survival instincts?
The way those two rednecks look at each other at :43 is chilling. They have decided, without saying any words, that they are going to kill Ed and Bobby.
Just keester.
Just drop em boy 😝 Noticed the guy was smiling when he said it, must of been getting excited 🤣
Weirdo
*have
Don't know why I was expecting to hear the word "britches" instead of pants, as in, "Now you just drop them britches!"
"We require you get your god damn ass into those woods."
very funny
shit was hilarious.
that was scary line
Not those woods them Woods that's how southern people talk sorry it took 10 years to correct that
"Take it easy with that weapon you've got in your hand there."
"You too, shut up!"
Classic line: "Well we require that you get your goddamn ass up in them woods".....HILARIOUS!!!!
Nothing funny about backwoods buttrape
What about “You ain’t goin’ nodamnwhere.” 😂
He's gotta pretty mouth
It’s comforting knowing that I am not the only person that thought that line was hilarious
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 LMAO!!!!!!
Choreography here, of slow paced impending violence,-dialogue, body space invasion etc is absolutely exquisite! A total work of art! Truly still the most horrific scene in films ever!! Surely a strong case for Bill McKinney to get a posthumous Oscar for this ! Herb Coward ain't far behind. We shouldn't just concentrate on the fab Ned Beatty as victim.
Well described mate, impending violence permeates all through. But this scene. Far out
I think we can just let Ned have this one man
If you ever read in Burt Reynolds autobiography the account of what really happened that day, you'll have a different understanding. That McKinney guy was a sick piece of work.
Ol Fat Ned.
Thank God for Burt Reynolds and his bow and arrows.
one of the greatest scenes in movie history and one of the greatest movies-Cowboy (the tall mountain man) was a local who had never acted before this-he basically adlibed it all-brilliant job
+Robert Tompkins Cowboy Coward had been a gunman in Wild West entertainment. He's also been doing more acting and is living the country life. Here he is having a visit with "banjo boy" Billy Redden. th-cam.com/video/LnXZ5ZOtl7o/w-d-xo.html
They simply told Cowboy to act naturally.
@@97widerider He should have got a damn Oscar-no experience and he pulled that off. Amazing.
what a year in cinema 1972 was: The Godfather, Deliverance and A Clockwork Orange!
A Clockwork Orange was 1971
All great and timeless movies!!
@@mizofan Yup, and it’s going to be 50 years old in next December, can you believe that shit?
@@angelinacarl4667 A Clockwork Orange has dated terribly IMO
@@hugodrax71 it has but it's still a classic
The look Ned Beatty gives when the man says "What the hell do you think you're doing..!?" is brilliant acting!!
yup hes like here we go again shit
Poor Bobby. I bet when they went to bars back in Atlanta with the fellas, he was always chosen last. What a horrible time to be considered the more desirable one
the two country dudes look at each other at :45- I guess telepathically communicating, "Lets rape these guys" / "Yeah, okay"
Ovik2k it’s s look you need to constantly be aware of, and I don’t mean being in the woods or rape; if you ever see two dudes, anywhere in a city walking near you who are looking at each other like that you better be ready to react.
Funny you should say that. In James Dickey's novel he uses the words "a silent transmission of thought" to depict what was going on in that 'telepathic' exchange between THE MOUNTAIN MAN and the toothless hill billy; played by the great Herbert Cowboy Coward.
Have you read the book? It was mandatory reading in highschool (no wonder I was taught by Jesuit priests) which at the time Indidn't think nothing of but years later it got me wonfering what's up with that making a freshman read such a novel. Hmmmm.
The ‘Dirty South welcomes you’ motto: “Don’t say anything.... Just drop ‘em boy!”
Got a remake coming out Deliverance 2020 "Take off them little ol panties and that mask too "
@@steelermule "If we want stimulus we'll take yer stimulus"
BURT REYNOLDS AUTOBIOGRAPHY
page 169
"Boorman tinkered endlessly with deliverance and finally screened a long version in early 1972,
it was a very private screening for cast members and a very small group of hollywood insiders.
My best scene was a nearly 4 page soliloquy where i convince voight to climb up the mountain and kill the bad guy.
when my scene ended the audience applauded. It was the best thing i ever did as an actor.
After the screening Lee Marvin shook my hand and warned me this picture will make you a movie star.
Imagine the silence when Boorman told me we're gonna have to cut that scene,
"i have to take it out, it kills the movie, the audience have to be interested in Jon's character at that stage"
Your username is pathetic btw. Grow up
i'm in my mid 50's. this movie has always been in my 3 or 4 favorite movies of all time. i've always seen metaphors and great story lines.
Hillary Clinton
mine too its great cus of acting/realism
What metaphors do you see here? I'd like to know please
The thing that makes this more scary/ hard to watch opposed to anything supernatural, is that this sort of thing actually happens to people.
💩
And it happens every single day,and is far more likely to happen then anything supernatural..
Exactly, it does happen to real people. Just to think that you could be out in nature with a buddy and suddenly two strangers show up out of nowhere. And accuse you of running a whiskey still.
All the ' squeal like a pig " jokes " youde get.
@@jkdbuck7670 then you get lucky and one of them bums you while doing farm yard role play ..some people have to pay for that these dudes got it for free
As soon as Ned said how goezy he knew his butt hole was in jeopardy
Why sudden I in this fine movie?? Weeduuu skint dem sunzabitches!!!!
Before his death,I had the pleasure of corresponding via email with Bill McKinney..He was the nicest guy and nothing at all like this character. He said that he didn't regret making the movie,but he didn't have any idea that people would still be talking about it after so many years.
Joe, we had a local DJ here, that would play love songs on the morning show, and drop clips of that scene in them periodically... Laughed my ass off...
@@lonmcq7317 May Bill Mckinney RIP...Great actor and never forgotten.
@@lonmcq7317 if you are talking about the grease man,I listened to him online..he interviewed Ned Beatty..
Ahh neat
@@juliestrom412 Bill McKinney was cool..
Classic movie great acting and actors ,won't see these movies again
‘You done taken a wrong turn’ in highsight is one of the sinister lines in history
One off the Best films ever made
this must be some of that famous southern hospitality i here about
"Oh, you're in trouble." They just didn't know how badly....
This movie must have been the inspiration for Wrong Turn (2003).
When the guy brushed Ned’s cheek with his hand would’ve been my personal jump shot.
I'm a redneck too and if I had been Bobby I would have decked his ass!👊🏾
Burt saved the day great movie
Bill McKinney was fantastic in this film, frienghtenly great performance.
Later in McKinneys career he became a regular in Clint Eastwoods films.
R.I.P. Ned Beatty 1937-2021
You are right. Disturbing. But it goes on in San Francisco every day.
LMMMMMMFAO!!!!!!!!!!!....Stabbing some turds...
@@darkale658 oh he won't cut himself, you on the other hand...
No feces were harmed in the making of this film.
JOHN JOHN I’ve been to Georgia before especially where it was very woodland. I’ve never heard that Georgia had the highest rape statistics. I always thought the highest rape statistics were in Alaska if we’re talking about states in the U.S.
@JOHN JOHN u seem hurt
Bill McKinney.....Irish-American....Korean War veteran....Great Actor....God Bless You Sir!
I've heard the TSA now uses this clip as a training video.
"What do you require?" ...."We re-quire you get your gatdamn azz up there in them woods..." 💀
Tough
South KY ...only happens to people that WANT it in Louisville...
amazing acting from all4 so realistic brilliant movie
I typed in: "you ever have your balls cut off" and this is the first thing that popped up 😂 the world is a beautiful place
this scene made the whole movie, the acting is brilliant
It's amazing that this video was posted 16 years ago which was in the infancy days of youtube. Someone thought of posting a film clip of deliverance during that time.Never take this video down. This should stay forever.
But the aspect ratio is all off
They wouldn't of had the bollocks to pull this stunt if old Burt was there.
Or you for that matter
"ANTREE?!!" The funniest part ever.
hahahaha. I know. That was fucked up.
Lamo, working at a gas station I get asked for directions a lot. Sometimes I repeat the destination they're looking for in that same tone. The hospital?!?!
For some reason I always laugh at “Did he bleed? He bled!”
@@shanerose7204 I DO WONDER. HOWEVER. AS TO THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THAT REMARK!!!
That’s when you knew the shit was getting real
Rip Cowboy !!!
"we require that you get your goddamn asses up in them woods" its all over....
"This river don't go nowhere near Aintry!" It goes right up the ole Hershey Highway!
LMMFAO!!!!!!
You want to get to the Hershey highway? Take that bend over there.
@@JW...-oj5iw LMMMMMMMFAO
"Ned Beatty goes for his pants just a little too quickly for me."
Ned was a tease.
So you more hard to get type?
14 years ago maybe .😂
Oh boyoboyoboy! I knew it!!😂
He dropped his pants for Jackie Gleason in "The Toy" a few years later. 😅
He had a gun pointed at him and was probably banking on Lewis and Drew coming to the rescue. Which they did but unfortunately a bit too late.
'What the hell do you think you're doing?'
Love the way he just turns away thinking, shit.
---'
I'm with Lewis.
It's called southern hospitality friend 😕??
I just rafted the Chattooga river last weekend up in North Georgia. That's where the movie was mainly filmed at. Tallulha Gorge I think also. Didn't hear no bajo though Lol.
Great movie RIP BURT
sometimes you have to lose yourself before you can find anything...how so few words have meant so much thanks mr medlock
And that right there, is why cousins shouldn't fuck.
Meth - Not even once
stan salesman You are from NE Ga, aren't you, boy?
stan salesman nasty
Next time someone pulls into my driveway to turn around, I'm going to quote this scene. Lol
Gotta purdy mouth aint he 🤠🤠
Deliverance was written by James Dickey a great poet of that period, he does a cameo of a sheriff at the end of the film.
Yes, when he looks in the car window,
Don't come back up heah...
The most disturbing movie of all time!
Donovan Fuller Ugh, you can say that again. I'm still scarred o_o
***** The Human Centipede. Once you watch it you will never be the same. Ever.
Also: A Serbian Film. Reaching new levels of fucked up!
+Donovan Fuller movie line akata lol
naw, the human centipede has it beat easily.
Your mind is pure. That's good
I love the way you wear that 🤠 ha ha I bet that's the last time Bobby makes fun of how someone wears their hat!!
Someone needs to make a meme with pdiddy saying you sure do have a purdy mouth 😢😮😂
BILL MCKINNEY .. the mountain man .. easily the world's greatest actor who no one knows by name. Used to work out at Golds Gym in North Hollywood and benched 425, squated 675, and dead lifted over 700. Also was a great singer. Had a voice that sounds like Frank Sinatra. Recorded a CD called Love Songs from Aintry just before he passed away.
Richard Fortebraccio .. please sir .. BIll McKinney is **NOT** a rapist. He was merely showing what real southern hospiltality looks and "feels" like. Making passion to your guests at gun point is being taken wayyyyyyyy out of context here. The toothless man, played by Herbert Cowboy Coward, is from the area and is still alive and kicking. Billy was one of the sweetest kindest and most gentle of souls. Please do not call him a rapist. He was a great actor who should have received an Oscar for this scene alone. Probably the most compelling scenes in all of cinematography. Have a few shots of white lightening then watch the movie. You'll come around to seeing the wisdom of the mountain man. A stillllllll?
howd he lift all that when was only a little guy?
Notice how dude subtly copped a feel a few times on Ned Beatty.
Not a cell phone in sight. Just folks enjoying the moment!
@ :45 the 2 hillbillys do a "let's do this" look at each other
Ned Beattys best love scene.
I know it's just actors in a movie...but scenes like this always remind me how being armed can make a huge difference in the outcome. And politicians are always trying to convince us that we don't need guns.
And politicians are the first one's to stick it up our ass!
You need guns to shoot up a school. And the GOP politicians want that to happen.
Aintry!!!!??? Best line delivery ever.
Faster boi!
Burt got em
This was actually the first time Ned had ever been on camera. Same with Ronny Cox (Drew). Perhaps had he had other roles previously, he would not have accepted this one.
2:39 "I'll blow his god damn bawls off" makes me laugh every time
"Well, hell, I, I guess this river comes out somewhere, don't it? That's where we're goin', somewhere."
thanks for posting. i always wondered what led up to the next scene (but didnt want to see it again)
"Hold it, wait a minute".
"You ain't goin' no damn wher'"
So this is were south park got the Indiana Jones rape scene from XD
there’s another one?
@@shy_a619 Three in total. It was exaggerating the jokes on people of how bad Indiana Jones 4 was on a comedic level
“Sigh... Poor Ned Beatty. He can... (giggles) He can play as Rudy’s dad all he wants, but when we look at him, all we see is him getting RAMMED in the woods!”
It took a lot of courage to play that role. But, you too would get your buns busted had you been in a similar situation. Hahahaha
Rudy .. getting rammed .. sheen haim
Makes me pucker and keep my back to the wall every time is this!
RIP Bill McKinney. "This river dont go to Antry...you done taken the wrong turn...'
How prophetic
mesmerizing scene
The beginning of a beautiful friendship!
They definitely become really close before it’s over that’s for sure.
An all-time classic…👍👍👍
RIP Ned Beatty
This should be a tourist video for Texas.
Come to east Texas, boy we'll show you a good time!
Hollywood has no clue just how deep or dark the woods can really be.
This movie is a great example that they do
I’ve been hiking all over Appalachia….and worked power lines as well up there….I’ve never met one person who made me feel uncomfortable and wasn’t friendly….just gotta watch out for the meth heads nowadays….
Have you never watched Dracula "Children of the night, what music they make"
THIS is why I carry 2 guns whenever I'm out in the wilderness. Another thing, I would NEVER let anybody holding a shotgun approach me like that. I know it's just a movie, but still.
What would you do?
I don't know what he would do, but what will I do? Well, don't know, uhh, maybe be more f*cking alert! (to the situation) Also it's true what he said "its just a movie", but I as well, if someone approached me in the woods so nonchalant with a weapon (such as a gun), either run from there and get help or call the 'authorities' cause you don't know what this guy's intentions are. Or quickly before he has time to react, knock him out, or wrestle him to the ground and try taking the weapon away, actually don't try, do it and accomplish it, because if you failed there's no telling what will happen afterwards.
It’s a different time and they’re in the south. The term ‘serial killer’ hadn’t even been coined yet in 1972.
@@alexibarona5807 Maybe just out hunting?
@@alexibarona5807 You talk about these things like they would be easy. And call the authorities? lol. I guess you've never been to the backwoods.
I never want to go in the bush ever again without being armed to the teeth.
@@rr7firefly Maybe 50 years ago. Not so much now.
@@Wowzersdude-k5c I see your point. It is a stereotype that has become much less true today. But one thing remains and that is the clannish attitudes that persist, especially when dealing with outsiders. I've seen this personally while stopping in at a small town diner on a road trip.
@@rr7firefly it's not just country folk that have tight communities, same could be said for urban areas, especially if your melanin deficient
@@aliamjon4423 Melanin deficient -- yes, sometimes that is the first thing that people notice when they see another person. It is very easy for racial bias to come to the surface.
@@rr7firefly yes, and it's usually from black people
Oh you in trouble.. lmao
And this movie is pretty much a documentary of where I grew up. Imagine my shock when it was explained to me that it WASN'T.