"屁孩"、”娘砲“、“g a y” 砲會做的事就是穿耳洞,噁爛加三級,有礙觀瞻,看到就堵爛 ,可悲之人。 Male ear piercing ... Really disgusting , low standard ,unsightly,immature... undesirable behavior Shame on u Pathetic
@jackiebarker408214 күн бұрын
She is still a beautiful woman and well spoken
@marjmarsh217 күн бұрын
Where can we see Rain collector feature film in 2024?
@jameslasso169026 күн бұрын
11:16 audience laughing or smiling. two men in front with glasses are not amused.
@DjHousefromChicagoАй бұрын
One of the greatest by far. 👍🏼💪🏼🙏🏼
@DKR-1881Ай бұрын
Definitely going to read or even better, listen to his memoir book.
@rosemaryjessop4045Ай бұрын
We loved this film my mum and I. We never understood racism to us, it was a beautiful love story.
@Chertoff88Ай бұрын
Here in 2024 and he was right about streaming.
@ViragoRiver2 ай бұрын
Thank you, Loreane, for your heart and your openness to walking this road with Chris and others. The Joneses were my ancestors- they came over with the Tomlinsons from Alabama with some number of their own slaves. This matters to me and my family, too.
@Krissy-y9h2 ай бұрын
Katharine Houghton is very insightful, and well spoken. What a class act.
@Krissy-y9h2 ай бұрын
The movie has aged with the times. A beautiful young girl, and a handsome black doctor would definitely fall in love today. Opposites attract. The character of Joey was portrayed as a giddy, pretty, young woman who admired her doctor. I certainly see it as real.
@CoopyKat3 ай бұрын
I love Katherine Houghton in her interviews, she's such a beautiful person......this is now one of my favorite movies of all time!
@kv999903 ай бұрын
Love you, Katharine, but disagree. Joey was an absolutely wonderful sweetheart of a person who towered above racial prejudice. I actually don’t think she was unaware of the issues. That’s only part of what John fell in love with.
@pamelahall5173 ай бұрын
I agree with Katherine about her character. I was a kid when this movie came out and I wondered, HOW in the world did she land herself this guy? I guess in 1967 it took an accomplished, flawless black man to be worthy enough to marry a silly, clueless, privileged white girl. That's how it came across to me. I wish Katherine had got to play her as she wanted having more accomplishments and being a little more intelligent than just being rich and white. But ok, the movie was trying so hard to send the right message. I did like the movie. My favorite speech was Beah Richards telling Spencer Tracy what was what about love.
@roywilson45143 ай бұрын
“I had a lot of friends in the mafia” 😂😂😂
@MTknitter223 ай бұрын
The critics never gave Katherine’s portrayal of Joey the credit she deserved. They called Joey rather simple and naive and they did not understand what Sidney did about the character. Sorry, Joey was absolutely perfect and Sidney proved everyone wrong. Saying that Joey needed to prove her worthiness to marry Dr. Prentice greatly underestimates the character of Joey AND her fiancée.
@SailfishSoundSystem3 ай бұрын
"The false image of the American family." True words.
@jeremykoerner41004 ай бұрын
Friedkin speaks so very well. The "interviewer" is a painful, mush-mouthed, lout.
@justrosy54 ай бұрын
We need another film similar to how this one was written, but for women's rights as they're being attacked today. It can include the problem of racism as we're still dealing with it today too. It can also include the problem of poverty and homelessness and how poorly our politicians and lawmakers are dealing with it. I completely agree that a woman (of any color) should be shown as being accomplished and not being some flaky rich girl who relies on the color of her skin for her ability to move up in the world. Give her a desire to work in STEM. Yes, she can be nice, kind, thoughtful and fun, but also witty, intelligent, and forward-thinking, with progressive leanings that rub her parents the wrong way. One parent should be a liberal and the other a conservative, with the unique set of circumstances that comes with such a blending. She should be "undeclared" or otherwise "independent," regarding politics. She should be a humanitarian who has already done some things to help in the cause of homelessness during her teen years. To anyone who wants to make such a film, I ask the following of you: Show her parents telling her, as a 17 year old, "You can only go to the college we picked out for you if you want us to pay for it." That 4-year college should be in the same city and the parents should assume they can keep her at home, unwitting of the rules forcing her to live in a dorm anyway. Show how she's forced to agree to rat out any other female college student who sleeps with her boyfriend. Show how she's forced to work in the college laundry by the rules of the college itself that she has to have a job, and that's the only job left available on the campus. Show her raw, red hands, and show how she's struggling with sleep deprivation and being worn out at the same time in order to keep up with everything. Show her crazy roommate who lies to her about other students bad-mouthing her behind her back. Show how she gets treated by a male academic administrator who tells the technology instructors to use "subjective grading" to ruin her GPA and who changes the rules on her personally throughout a quarter where he teaches one of her core classes, so she can't get a decent grade in that class. Show what happens when her narcissistic parents advise her on what to do about all of that. Show her in her struggles to get a job in her chosen field after leaving school (graduated or not), and how she winds up having to live out of her car and do deliveries to make ends meet. She should have an Android WiFi phone (given her by her parents in her teen years) and a Skype account, at least at first, until she runs out of money even for that. Show her having to rely on social media and email for all her communications. She can use Starbucks' WiFi to use that phone setup to receive calls for interviews until she can't pay for a phone number anymore. She shouldn't have a PO box because she can't afford one, so she can't receive mail, even from the state, after she applies for welfare. Show her in her personal life, how it goes, and how she winds up as an unwed or even a formerly wed mother in a state that won't allow her to have an abortion after she finds out she's pregnant. Show what happens when she makes just $5 a month too much to qualify for her state's welfare programs that she still needs as she's still living out of her car and caring for a baby. Show her struggles to qualify for an apartment or to purchase a house, because that same income is too low to help her in either direction. Show how she can't meet all the expectations of HUD or other programs either. Show how she learns about narcissism, from advice given her first through friends she makes and later through KZbin videos (real-world professionals can be shown here, with their cooperation). Show her learning about how it starts with the narcissistic parents and bleeds over into how she interacts with narcissistic SOs and friends alike, and gets sucked in by them. Show her not learning about narcissism until it's too late to extricate herself from it in the case of her parents. Show her efforts to try to live through and deal with that situation. Show the impossible choices she's forced to make, for the sake of her baby. Should she accept money from her narcissistic parents, who contact her, offer her money, but also choose to believe crazy, horrible things about her that clearly aren't true, so they won't ask her to come live with them (and wouldn't treat her right even if she did), or should she have complete freedom from them and force her baby to continue living on the streets? Show how she's given no third alternative to choose. Show how her car dies and she can't afford to fix or replace it, then she winds up with a misdemeanor for "littering" with it, so now she has a "record" and owes fines she can't pay. Show what happens when a new, non-religious family takes up her cause, helps her as she helps herself, sets the right boundaries with her instead of the wrong ones, and how she finally gets up on her own two feet and is able to raise her child, first in an apartment and later in a cottage with a small back yard. The family should be non-religious in order to avoid putting one religion over another. Show her as she winds up having to decide whether she wants to marry someone (man, woman, other, of whatever race, doesn't matter here) or remain a single, strong, and independent woman. Show the SO as someone who has problems of their own (doesn't matter which), and again, the hard choices she has to make while, this time, not using her child as a deciding factor, but instead, just looking at her own personal needs going forward. Leave her choice ambiguous in the end, so the audience is forced to think about her needs and the problems her SO is dealing with, not on whether she should marry or not. Focus on what's wrong in our society today, especially in its attitudes towards women, the LGBTQIA+ community, and towards the poor and homeless - and on what we ought to be thinking, feeling, saying, and doing instead. Use the child to give the sermon in "Hors d'oeuvres" throughout the film, and then the "main course" and the "dessert" at the end. Show it all, the complexities of the life of a young woman of today, and do it with as much intelligence and care as "Guess who's coming to dinner?" was given. Yes, there should be lightness and wit, but also key-point elements thrown in, and a lot of truth that people of today don't tend to like to face, including what we can do about the problems that real people like her face every day. If any of the above elements can't be shown, then they should be discussed in enough detail to give the audience the clear view of what she's going through.
@barblucchesi95275 ай бұрын
In the last scene, when Spencer made eye content with Kate the feeling was so strong of the love they shared for so many years. THAT'S EVERYTHING ❤
@John_Mcgrane5 ай бұрын
Just 2.5 weeks later. Very tough indeed
@ConstantGardener-q9q5 ай бұрын
What an excellent interview both the actress and the interviewer provided such intelligent questions and answers. What a pleasant surprise.
@JAMESPATTERSON-mk9sr5 ай бұрын
Not the icon like her aunt but still a working actress .
@nativevirginian83445 ай бұрын
I’m glad she had a problem with her character, I thought she came off as more a love struck teenager than a mature person. Kind of grating really.
@davidfriscic30094 ай бұрын
Exactly. She was not well castcor the character was not well developed
@paulbrungardt98236 ай бұрын
I had an encounter with Anne Lockhart during 1993. She was attending an NRA celebrity shooting event in Orange County California. I was a volunteer driving a golf kart transporting people between ranges. I spoke with her about 15 minutes. She is even more charming in person. She has many interests--very intelligent.
@phillyGz16 ай бұрын
Great movie!
@ReneRamirez-d9h6 ай бұрын
May they all RIP EXTRAORDINARY actors and legends and icons. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️🎬🎬🎬🎬📺📺📺📽️📽️📽️📽️🎫🎞️ Katherine Hepburn died 2003 age 96 Spencer Tracy died 1967 age 67 Sidney Poitier died 2022 age 94 Isabel Sanford died 2004 age 86 Cecil Kellaway died 1973 age 82 Beah Richards died 2000 age 80 Roy Glenn died 1971 age 56 Virginia Christine died 1996, age 76 Barbara Randolph died 2002 age 60 Tom Heaton died 2018 age 78
@chinavaughan63836 ай бұрын
Why is this awesome film not available for sale in a digital format!!!!😠
@randomyoutuber05246 ай бұрын
Where’s Moises????
@joselourenco55426 ай бұрын
I cite John K as an influence for my animations (not as a person)!
@connievino42267 ай бұрын
Her famous Aunt got her the roll. Where did she go after? What did she do? Sad.
@treesong26617 ай бұрын
Where can I watch this documentary
@hayleyrobertson-k7b7 ай бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/fKfNgZx5ia5qbsU
@hayleyrobertson-k7b7 ай бұрын
:) this link is for Alex Peters :)
@wraithconscience7 ай бұрын
It wasn't "white people" causing the problem, it was DEMOCRATS (black and white) causing the problem. It was DEMOCRATS who had implemented 100 years of Jim Crow Laws, the last of which was abolished by Loving vs Virginia, a Republican mixed-race couple. The KKK was the terrorist wing of the DEMOCRAT PARTY, outlawed in 1871 by the Force Act (enacted by Republicans), the act which declared the KKK a terrorist organization. It was Republicans who enacted the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments to the Constitution, abolishing slavery, establishing citizenship of freed slaves and their descendants and establishing voting rights of freed slaves in perpetuity. Democrats didn't notice this. From 1868, the Federal Civil Service was integrated. Then, in 1914, DEMOCRAT President Wilson RE-segregates the Federal Civil Service ! (Wilson also opposed the Vote for Women, as did all DEMOCRATS.) The 1871 Force Act was only one of the original and real SIX CIVIL RIGHTS ACTS passed between 1868 and 1883. The 1964 so-called Civil Rights Act was just a hoax, setting up government welfare apparatus, designed to lure blacks into dependency upon the state. It worked. Thanks DEMOCRATS. The first Voter ID law was proposed by a black Democrat Congressman from Rhode Island in order to preserve the integrity of the black vote. This rare attempt has since been consistently squashed by other Democrats. Black-on-black crime is at an all-time high, especially in DEMOCRAT cities. Ninety-three percent of young black men killed are killed by other young black men, all Democrats living in majority Democrat cities. Public Schools have been dominated by DEMOCRATS for 75 years, and they are still failing our children. Champagne liberals from Connecticut might wish to "feel" good about themselves. Yet, the LEGAL and HISTORICAL record proves them to be consistently on the wrong side of history. If liberals would stop trying to "educate" everyone with their insane "enlightenments", they might have noticed that conservatives had solved these problems a whole century beforehand. In 1872, yes EIGHTEEN-Seventy-Two, black American Charlotte Ray passed the bar and was admitted to practice before the SUPREME COURT. Nineteen-seventy-two, DEMOCRATS are pushing Affirmative Action... Get the picture!
@kurtn48197 ай бұрын
You have to remember that in large parts of Europe mixed race (specifically black&white) couples were not especially looked down on. They could have moved to France and spent a lifetime with little concern. While it certainly was not that way everywhere, it was worst in America & a few others like South Africa. Great insight at 8:32 and her reaction & concern was legitimate as well. The truth was a mixture of the two. They had to tone her down to divert the focus to Sydney and the racial problems. While they touched upon it with all three couples, the issue was not gender issues. It was about racial ones and learning to separate truth from ignorance. Truth is we are all human & our hearts are interchangeable. Another interesting point was when the delivery boy comes dancing and then leaves with the young black girl. The two of them dancing together (etc) without a care in the world for the troubles their predecessors were grappling with, showing the generation gap and the changing attitudes. The scene almost goes unnoticed and is treated almost as a cameo of the future.
@yournamehere71828 ай бұрын
Love & miss you Bill 💕
@billjones85038 ай бұрын
You are a legend Bill!!!! If you only made The French Connection you'd go down in the annals of film making history for that brilliant work alone!
@Unta6268 ай бұрын
Please delete this.
@nightisright18738 ай бұрын
One fucking disgusting human being the diva of animation .It sucks that Clampett was friends with this guy .
@Hakspheenom8 ай бұрын
🤔 The dialogue between Poitier's character's mother and Spencer Tracey, were extremely powerful and pivotal.. a very close second to Tracey's dialogue in the final scene
@judyfowler20234 ай бұрын
The woman that played Poitier's mom in the movie was also with him in "In The Heat of the Night" movie
@gloriavillafana84438 ай бұрын
Definitivamente usted fue la mejor mi esposo y yo vimos la serie porque usted nos enganchó. Gracias ❤
@josephq22289 ай бұрын
💚2024✨sowing................🎶 🎠🌈🌈🌈💍🌈🌈🌈🔥 Daniel 12 Revelation 21 keeping the Faith 💜😎
@dileepkumar.s.navale21379 ай бұрын
Great madam ❤
@andreweggleston44109 ай бұрын
This movie is actually very good but I can see why it didn't get good reviews it's really very long and played out and it's basically about insanity and madness it's not only a horror movie and it's disturbing but it can be emotionally draining and the movie is very depressing but it's still a good movie but I can see why it got bad reviews and it can be really boring at times so people will either love it or hate I beginning to love it again I got this movie years ago I just revisited it again today but the performances were so outstanding from all the actors especially Lou Diamond Phillips I mean I never see acted like that before and it was very good playing a professor with obsession that leads to insanity madness and murder.
@davidpalmer71759 ай бұрын
WHY the F is this slob dressed like a basement dweller?
@fiddlyphuk64149 ай бұрын
Where he said to his Dad "You see yourself as a colored man. I see myself as a man." Well that didn't age well into 2024 thanks to obama and the democrats. They always will see a colored man as a colored man and will expect the colored man to remain on their political plantation.
@jamesdrynan9 ай бұрын
Mr. Friedkin is a skilled raconteur and a formidable director. I share his passion for all things Hitchcockian. For instance, in Psycho, there is a unique camera shot when the detective, Arborgast, is looking at the motel's registry book. Norman leans over to see the page and the shot is taken from below his throat. Totally weird. Very Alfredo.
@ainyc889 ай бұрын
No Veronica, you haven't got that role cause you were lucky, you got it cause your acting skills are amazing and no one could better bring Camila Vargas to the screen better then you did.
@MaeyaTVusa9 ай бұрын
Nice
@WilliamHerlihy-p4g9 ай бұрын
Sidney Poitier had the best year any actor ever had in 1967: not only GWCTD but also In the Heat of the Night and To Sir With Love. That's an amazing year!