Classic Movie they do not make movies like this anymore !!!!Just purchase the Criterion version. Awesome Movie!!!!!!!
@extremely_reactionary13 күн бұрын
Now their slogan is "Dharma - People - Socialism" Commies used Buddhism to steal money from people
@toddcarney652715 күн бұрын
A friend dragged me to see Cry Macho in a theater, and we had a great time. I mean, it was hilarious, but we had a great time.
@withnothingtosaypodcast14 күн бұрын
Cry Macho is definately a different sort of Clint, and if you can take it for what it is, or maybe for what its not, you can have a good time
@ZGundam8315 күн бұрын
I’m listening to the audiobook, which is almost 37 hours long. I’ve found the miniseries almost word for word to the book. However, I noticed a few scenes are a combined from different parts of the book. For example. The scene in this video. What the Cavalry Captain says to Dish, is actually said to Gus and Call in an earlier part the book. However, the part where the scout spits on Dish, hits Newt, and subsequent fight with Call goes as read in the book.
@jnagarya51917 күн бұрын
Ernst L_U_bitsch. I believe he was Hungarian -- US immigrant because of the rise of Hitler.
@xxpandahaloxx22 күн бұрын
I work for regal and we have the movie posters for this movie but we’re not actually showing it lol
@withnothingtosaypodcast21 күн бұрын
It's wild that we live in a world where they actually went through all the effort to market this piece and then last minute just decided, nah, nevermind, forget it, we'll just bury it instead
@williamtseng22 күн бұрын
everything you guy said was right EXCEPT christopher nolan’s tenet. no, wb did not screw nolan over. tenet had a full theatrical release and wasn’t released on hbo max until much later. nolan’s issues with wb came much later with the release of Dune when it had the same day streaming release. nolan was wb’s golden child and wb listened to whatever nolan wanted.
@withnothingtosaypodcast21 күн бұрын
Thats somehow even more admirable. Someone who's willing to walk away from one of the biggest companies in the world, who in many ways made Nolan, because they no longer aligned with his love of cinema. I hear talks of WBs trying to win him back, and I'm interested to see how Nolan reacts
@griffinoconnor152322 күн бұрын
You should have been able to guess it purely off of “A horror movie in an AirBNB”
@withnothingtosaypodcast21 күн бұрын
Okay, yes, that's true, IF, you've seen this movie before, which I never have. Though obviously Andrew has
@LibertyBellBroadcast22 күн бұрын
What happened? The stupid and incompetent communist dictators realized that economic communism does NOT work; it NEVER works. That's why they abandoned it in the Đổi Mới Reforms in 1988 and replaced it with capitalist economy. For Vietnam to be one of the top ten economies, we need to complete the Reform by completely replacing communism.
@ClarkKent7123 күн бұрын
Hard to make a lot of money when it's only released in a handful of cinemas.
@withnothingtosaypodcast23 күн бұрын
Somehow WBs ego is even bigger than his greed
@davecongalton285823 күн бұрын
Can you remind me ONE MORE TIME how old Clint Eastwood is? All you guys do is repeat and repeat and repeat.
@withnothingtosaypodcast23 күн бұрын
Oh yea, sure thing, he's 94
@jimmyrade781522 күн бұрын
I mean, the channel name is “with nothing to say”
@withnothingtosaypodcast21 күн бұрын
@@jimmyrade7815low expectations, that's the key
@sparkfadingspark23 күн бұрын
This is crazy, I remember seeing the trailer for this movie and thought it looked good, but kinda forgot about it. I'm in Australia and I just went to search if it is in any cinemas near me...not only is it not in cinemas, it doesn't even have a release date in Australia. While it isn't unusual for us to maybe have a smaller movie released a few weeks or a month after the US (aka anything not a major blockbuster) there is still usually a release date announced well in advance of the US release. But there is nothing! Like, I can see release dates for movies coming out all throughout next year, but not for this. That really is so weird and disappointing for a Clint Eastwood movie with huge star power in it, including Toni Collette who is one of Australia's biggest actresses to find success overseas.
@ClarkKent7123 күн бұрын
It's streaming on Prime but you have to pay extra for it.
@sparkfadingspark23 күн бұрын
@ClarkKent71 thanks for the heads up! So weird that it just got shunted to streaming, but at least I know where to find it now!
@withnothingtosaypodcast21 күн бұрын
Streaming is better than nothing, that's for sure, but a legend of the theater and cinema deserves a sign off worthy of such a career
@andrewjones484123 күн бұрын
I saw this in the cinema in the UK, I think it had a pretty wide release, but not sure how long for (it wasn't that long), or maybe I was just lucky with it being shown near me.
@withnothingtosaypodcast23 күн бұрын
Couldn't find this anywhere, hate to see it go straight to streaming in US. Clint deserves better
@PhinPhan3923 күн бұрын
Solid video, well thought out and relatable. The only bit I would strongly caution against is believing the vast majority of people who make films for a living are less passionate about the craft than your peers. The majority of people working in the film industry love the work. There's just a well publicized minority that are in it for the money, fame or power. For every loathsome producer or arrogant actor, there are hundreds of movie loving crew members and actors.
@withnothingtosaypodcast21 күн бұрын
Yes! Absolutely! 100%! There are so many increible filmmakers, myself included, who are lucky enough to make some sort of living in this industry. I think it's just often easier to see, and be infuriated by, those at the top who just don't care for the craft that they're making, and forget about all the hundreds of other people, who love movies, who made it happen.
@denisefabian583024 күн бұрын
I've been to both Matewan AND Thurmond (where it was filmed). It is an amazing movie; John Sayles is a so underappreciated as a storyteller.
@withnothingtosaypodcast21 күн бұрын
Crazy how much of his work just disappeared into the ether. Deserves a lot better than he got
@denisefabian583021 күн бұрын
@@withnothingtosaypodcast Eight Men Out (excellent); Passion Fish (excellent)
@denisefabian583024 күн бұрын
MATE-WAN.
@thejamesbrothersband549124 күн бұрын
I was surprised how close the book was when I finally read it. Watched to show a lot as a kid
@50Nobody5024 күн бұрын
right up there with the dumbest and most ridiculous movies ever made. A turd of the highest order.
@withnothingtosaypodcast24 күн бұрын
Like a turd floating in the wind
@Adolf_Catler_15925 күн бұрын
Wtf ... you speak fake news
@hunter477925 күн бұрын
I have never even heard of this movie.
@withnothingtosaypodcast25 күн бұрын
You need to watch this NOW. Your life will be changed forever
@withnothingtosaypodcast28 күн бұрын
How's your Barnes and Noble?
@vicnighthorseАй бұрын
Kids, most of us saw Fargo as adults when it came out in '96. You are the ones late to the party.
@howkel29 күн бұрын
I see this a lot. This forgotten movie or that forgotten movie. When no, it's not forgotten. It's being discovered. By people who weren't there for the original run.
@withnothingtosaypodcast26 күн бұрын
I was 0 years old when this movie came out. I can remember watching it on VHS when I was far too young with my dad. Didn't realize how great it was until I was so much older
@bentighe4811Ай бұрын
"Minnesota Nice" didn't always mean condescension or passive-aggressiveness. It used to just mean nice. At some point the definition was changed by cynical people, and that's a shame.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
Despite all the cynics, i still think the midwest is the nicest place in the world
@ChadWork1Ай бұрын
Lost is on Netflix now too, with no ads.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
I need to watch this now
@ChadWork1Ай бұрын
@@withnothingtosaypodcast Yeah I'm on the 6th season, and they are old school seasons with many episodes.
@withnothingtosaypodcast26 күн бұрын
Miss the days where a season had like 50 episodes and there were half a dozen seasons at least! I recently went to a talk with Cobie Smolders (How I Met Your Mother) and she talked about how when she was getting started there were 140 pilot episodes a season (February-May). This year there was 7
@ChadWork1Ай бұрын
Most DVD players uprez the picture to 1080 for your TV, and it looks pretty good
@ScraggIesАй бұрын
There's no such name as Brahbrah
@aygtetsАй бұрын
DVDs are 720p, 480p would look atrocious 😂 480p was more like old school KZbin and internet streaming. Digital files before we had bandwidth and storage space.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
I promise to forget this immediately
@nake89Ай бұрын
You are probably mistakenly referring to the width. When we are discussing 480p, 720p or 1080p. We are always talking about height of the video. And DVDs were indeed 480p. DVDs have never been 720p. 720p and above was called HD. DVDs were never in the HD era. HD era started with blurays, HDTVs and soon after HD streaming.
@WalkoffGrandslamАй бұрын
Im not crying. Im just cutting some onions.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
Its just been raining on my face
@WalkoffGrandslamАй бұрын
@withnothingtosaypodcast im just thinking of a friend who you don't know who is dying.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
Thats right, dying
@JesseHenderson-xc2kgАй бұрын
Most modern DVD players upscale, still Blu-ray quality, bit its fine.
@komeenАй бұрын
A Serious Man is wild underrated. Oh, and first comment!
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
Way too much of their work is underrated! Honestly, we just watched Hudsucker Proxy for the podcast, first wat h for both of us, and it is by far one of the most underrated movies of the 90:
@angelpayan4229Ай бұрын
Just watched this, so glad you just made a video on this.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
Grateful we could be of some service! If you got any suggestions, we'd love to hear them
@Robert-sm5cbАй бұрын
I've always thought it interesting how the film presents Hackman's character against Alain (the French drug kingpin). We don't get much, but Alain seems to have a fuller, internal life. He has a girlfriend in Marseilles, who at least likes him enough to buy him an expensive gift before he leaves for New York. He has his hitman Pierre kill a guy, but seems dispassionate about it; just business and he seems to enjoy life, particularly food, given the scenes presented in the piece. Whereas Hackman's Doyle seems to lack any kind of fulfilled life, has exactly one one-night-stand in the course of the film and hates the people he's after, particularly the Italians because they have more than he does and they're Italian. Definitely some class-rage on his part. The only other person who dies (spoiler alert to anyone reading this comment), is the FBI agent attached to the case who says time and time again that Doyle got a cop killed before and will again and it's a genuinely shocking death when it comes. I don't think it paints cops in anything like a good light; the heroin dealers seem almost likeable by comparison.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
There is a certain stoicism in Alain. Hackman's problem is his inabiliity to accept the world for what it is. He is obsessed with trying to change what cannot be changed. Allain's happiness comes from a sense that there are things we can do, and things we can't, and what we can't, why bother worrying about? But Hackman can't accept this. He's a cop. It's his job, he believes, to administer justice. But alas, justice is never complete, and so, because his happiness relies on such justice, he too can never be happy.
@Robert-sm5cbАй бұрын
@@withnothingtosaypodcast Very good points and Hackman's character definitely feels a sense of personal injustice that these wise-guys are doing better than him. I see what you mean.
@frankb821Ай бұрын
Thanks for this video, and congratulations on your film fest win!!! I just finished my first short film (5 years in the making...called "Myths After Midnight") and posted it on KZbin on 11/24. I am THRILLED to have 150 views in only 3 days, which is more than I ever thought I'd get. It's like pushing your baby out into the world and hoping somebody notices. But I gave up on the idea of making money long ago...since I thankfully already have a full time job, but the creative urges will never stop, and so I'm grateful for this format to release since it would have been impossible getting anybody other than nuclear family to watch 20 years ago.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
We are at this incredible, and very strange, moment in history, where we have democratized film, anyone can do it, and yet to "make it", because it is so easy to make a film, is actually harder than ever! The fact that we have platforms like KZbin where we can celebrate all of the amazing work we're out here trying to do is incredible, and I am so grateful to be part of this community. I am definately going to give Myths After Midnight a watch this week and we will be talking about it on the podcast soon! Keep making great art
@frankb821Ай бұрын
@@withnothingtosaypodcast Thanks for the support brother. My movie is quite silly, but it was a good opportunity to get better at using Premiere Pro :). Your channel is stellar...and will inevitably grow in 2025. Happy Thanksgiving, man!
@OakViewFilmsАй бұрын
I’m 32 years old, trying to be a filmmaker, and sadly it’s costed me a lot. Lost a ton of friends, my own family doesn’t believe in me, sank a lot of money and have little to show for it, and worst of all, I let my relationship slip with the greatest girl I could have ever asked for to get my career going (we remained friends afterwards but our friendship has been on the rocks for a while). While most of my colleagues were getting married, starting successful careers, and traveling the world, I was trying to become a filmmaker, with not much success and even if I did make it, no one will be around to see it except me. It’s definitely been a lonely journey…
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
The road of the artist can be miserable, terrible, and horrifically lonely. I've seen a whole lot of people give everything to the art and all for seemingly nothing. But know there are people that love you. We love you. Because you make art. Because you're willing to do whatever it takes. It's a struggle trying to have a family, a career, and be an artist all at the same time. I certainly see a lot of my own friends with much more successful careers than my own. And more than once I've wished that life for myself. But that's not fair. It's not fair to you. To them. To anyone. We're artists. Our job is to create. Even if it destroys us. Try reading Govt Cheese by Stephen Pressfield. And the Tao Te Ching. These got me through some really tough times.
@MartinOettingАй бұрын
The experience with my first feature-length film (a documentary) is that the real job (!) begins when the film is almost done: You need to become the marketer and number one salesperson of your film. Then it is in your hands if people will actually see it.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
Impatience always get in the way, for me, when it comes to selling. By that point I've spent so long with a film that I just want to get on to the next one. But no doubt this is vital to the filmmaking process, and without that ability to sell, or at least the ability to want to, things become a whole lot harder. I think sometimes we assume the job is done when the movie is made, when we have our final cut. And for many, that's where they want it to end. But you're right, if you put in the time to make the film, why not put in the time to get people to actually see it?
@IlyaPodnebesmiyАй бұрын
A photographer I know entered the film industry in this way. He directed the short film Purgatorium. He won the Cannes Film Festival. Then he found an investor who gave him about $ 12,000, and began shooting a full-length film "Inspiration". I took it off. Then he began filming the second part called "Atonement", which already starred actors of the first magnitude. Now he is a fashionable and famous director. In their region, of course, not nevertheless.
@IlyaPodnebesmiyАй бұрын
Pugratorium, by the way, is available on KZbin.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
That's incredible and I hope that can be the path for every artist. Or at least there is some path there. I think what I see in so many artist, myself included, is this long widning path with no end in sight. It's scary. It's terrifying. And far too often it goes nowhere. But we should celebrate all those that make it, and I'll give the film a watch
@sikliztailbunchАй бұрын
Just do art for the sake of doing art. That´s where generative AI-techbros zone out. It is a great statement. But also a sad testimony, because the fact, that this has to be pointed out to begin with makes it all to obvious that the world we live in makes it less and less rewarding for people who choose to be artists. And maybe it has always been that only a small fraction of artist have ever been really sucessful over a long period of time. And artsts have always been displaced by new creative technologies. Displaced by other artists, not REplaced by hyper-productive, soulless machines on an industrial scale in the very central process of creation itself.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
Yeah it's tough. All we ever wanna do, artists, at least, is make art but we're trapped by all of the responsibilities of art that make the very making of art so challenging. Rent. Utilities. Food. All the things we unfortunately have to have to live. Sometimes I wish we could live in a Marxian Utopia where everyone is just out there making art and we can all make a decent living doing it. I don't think 99% of us artist want to be millionaires, at least that's not why we're artist. We just want to be able to live a decent life and make art while doing it.
@sikliztailbunchАй бұрын
@@withnothingtosaypodcast Unconditional Universal Basic Income FTW!! The AI-Tech-Companies owe that to us.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
Robots may take over but we'll all be long dead UBI is ever put into effect
@peytonyoungman1140Ай бұрын
There's not a moment to laugh, especially when it comes to this Ghibli film.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
It tears you apart and theres not a single moment to breathe
@LEMON_2UАй бұрын
Ive also never used amazon
@waynemcauliffe-fv5yfАй бұрын
Thanks fellas i`ve always wanted to see this one. I`ll have too. My Dad always taught me to hate scabs .
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
Don't fight the scabs. Fight the system that made scabs possible
@waynemcauliffe-fv5yfАй бұрын
@@withnothingtosaypodcast Never pick a scab it will never heal
@FrithonaHrududu02127Ай бұрын
Here's the thing.....unless im willing to give up my spot in the union to a scab than I can't exactly fault him for wanting to work. The guys that irk me are guys that will be making close to union rate and make more (in the check) on prevailing wage jobs....but then turn around and bash unions....the very people they have to thank. Those are cases where the union itself could do a much better job of organizing. The go to is still the stick....maybe salting the job.with union apprentices to try to catch them in violations etc. That backs contractors and their workers into a corner....now they gotta fight that corner. But you started in the center of the ring...so why move backwards. You can always use the stick later.
@waynemcauliffe-fv5yfАй бұрын
@@FrithonaHrududu02127 Stick together for better wages. Stand with your mates not the bosses
@FrithonaHrududu02127Ай бұрын
@waynemcauliffe-fv5yf trust me that's a lesson that I don't need to be taught. My best friend and I faced down a murder case together at 18.
@ChrisLeRoseАй бұрын
My heart is broken every day. You'll have to try harder than that.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
Challenge accepted
@vercygarpezАй бұрын
watching this while working on my script bruhh
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
Never stop writing
@FrithonaHrududu02127Ай бұрын
And the real life sheriff was THE. FUCKING. MAN.
@FrithonaHrududu02127Ай бұрын
Dude..."Matewan's" freaking awesome. I'm a union guy from a union family. This movie makes me feel stuff.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
I'd be much more concerned if it didn't
@FrithonaHrududu02127Ай бұрын
@withnothingtosaypodcast We actually watched this movie at a Labor Guild , labor history class.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
The world needs more people like you
@FrithonaHrududu02127Ай бұрын
@withnothingtosaypodcast That's very kind of you to say. The world is kinda short on ExCon,Union,Vegnn,Pro-Gun one child rule proponent, widowers.
@Geese-farting-in-the-windАй бұрын
Forget shorts. Nobody ever made any money out of shorts. You have to make a no budget feature (Clerks, Following, Blair Witch, Erazerhead, etc.) and the goal has to be to make a profit. So the film has to be good. You have to sell it for more than it cost to make. Then you reinvest this money and make another. Slowly, you'll start to earn enough to pay people, and earn a living. HOWEVER, you have to start when you are young... once your friends, your crew, your cast, have proper jobs, kids and mortgages, it becomes increasingly difficult to ask for favours.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
I almost completely agree when it comes to shorts. You'll never make money. Almost no one will ever see them. But what working on shorts has taught me, though I only direct features, is that is where you build your community. All those who are willing to work, for little, for nothing, for free. And as someone with both a mortgage and my first kid on the way, yeah, it's a hell of a lot harder. But you make it work. You got to. And it can happen at any age. Take the book Govt Cheese as a great example of a late blooming artist. Not to mention the average age of a directorial debut is well above 30. You just gotta keep making, no matter what
@Geese-farting-in-the-windАй бұрын
@@withnothingtosaypodcast I hope you're right. I'm over 60. And a complete failure. Despite working 6 days a week, doing everything I possibly can in order to get that first feature off the ground. I've been trying ever since I was about 27 (and just out of film school). I've had a few jobs here and there, got close, money falls through. I've worked on lots of shorts and a few features (in various roles), even sold a few scripts (that never got made). I just about get by as a script editor. But I've never earned enough to live on, let alone raise a family. Over 60 and I still live like a penniless student. Mostly because I've never made that all important first feature film (nor given up and got a proper job). Hopefully one of these days, before my eyesight and my health go completely. A few more years, then I'll throw in the towel and start writing novels. But you're right of course, shorts are a good way to learn and great place to experiment, and try crew members out. Just don't hang around too long making shorts. Otherwise you'll turn out like me and I wouldn't wish that on anyone. 😂
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
@@Geese-farting-in-the-wind Your art has made the world a better place. Too many artists die unknown, but that doesn't make their art any less. Not the most reassuring of feelings, I know. And mo one wants to be the unknown artist, but its better than having never created at all. It's time to make that feature. If I can help, tell me how, and I will
@fartingduck5316Ай бұрын
i've never used amazon
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
How?
@fireball43Ай бұрын
I think most filmmakers underestimate what it takes to create an image. It's too easy with digital and people in high school are pumping out 2-3 feature films during the summer, it's crazy. There's a reason most filmmakers don't make great stuff until they're 30+ years old. Plus, even if something wins in a festival, it doesn't mean anything. The bar is so low. In fact, I've found that it gives filmmakers confidence that makes them plateau. It's so easy to create great films today but the ease with which it comes means people don't put in time for each of the elements. Not trying to be a hater, but I see this in stuff like Sir Mel Haze, lighting with very little character, fairly flat, shot with ease on digital, and B&W to hide the bad lighting. If you had shot a short film with more planning, it would have been 10x better. There's so many feature films like this but few short films with A1 craft. Take a look at Gawx iPhone footage, it looks as good as most mirrorless cameras because he understands where the dynamic range and ISO is limited and how to color grade. Sorry for the long ass comment and I really like ur vids which is why I'm commenting at all, not outta hate.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
I could not agree more! The digital era is a two sided sword, in which on one hand we've democratized the art of cinema, but on the other, so little time is taken to actually care about the work. While I admit my first feature Sir Mel Haze was no masterpiece, that came after half a decade of making short films, and it was an undertaking that took years to make. I think there's something fundamentally different about making a feature, and I don't think you can learn that art from the short film. Like a short story vs a novel, their different art forms, and should be respected for what they are. My first feature was a cupmination of everything I had learned in my first 25 years, and I hope this next feature, More Beautiful Than Death, will be everything I've learned in the past 30. We've got a long way to go before we make "great" art, or even good art, but we just gotta keep trying!
@swashyhimselfАй бұрын
image? Funny that's what you find important in films
@fireball43Ай бұрын
@@swashyhimself Film is every part of the medium, not just the writing. I’ve seen plenty of screenwriters try to make stuff by themselves and very rarely does it actually translate to a good film. The image matters because it is the story unless you want people talking and explaining back and forth. Your film is certainly very pretty and conveys a story from the visuals. Imagine if it was just a wide perspective with the iso cranked up and some shoplight blasting in front of the actors.
@swashyhimselfАй бұрын
@@fireball43I've seen a lot of technically impeccable snore fests too. But you're right it is the whole medium.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
I think the moment we get lost in talking about the image, the writing, the lighting, etc. we miss out a bit. Yall are right, it's a medium that requires everything and more. The only question should really be, does this move the story forward or not. If it does, it's successful, if not, it's not. Story is everything
@abhiishhekkАй бұрын
pyaasa was a disaster when it came out critics hated it , audience never went to see it , the director of the film guru dutt also used his own money he was bankrupt after the film and so depressed and devastated that he never made a film again and after 7 years he died of sleeping pill overdose , alleged suic...e and melencolia . and The police report at the time of his death in 1964 mentioned that Guru Dutt was found dead with his eyes half-open and hands gesturing, as if to say “freeze” in cinematic parlance. you should check out his "kagaz ke phool" another master creation of his , that he made before pyaasa and that film is about filmmaking and director actor relationships.
@withnothingtosaypodcastАй бұрын
It's so heartbreaking to see artist such as this, Tati is another who comes to mind, who are far and above some of the greatest of their generation, and their forgotten, looked over, ignored. So many end their lives in poverty. We may be too young to respect them in life, but hopefully we do a bit in death. And for all those struggling artists out there, here's hoping we can make a difference.
@abhiishhekkАй бұрын
@@withnothingtosaypodcast such beautifully articulated thought.
@GrinninPigАй бұрын
It's just "mate" Wan like a brit would call you mate