great video but title does not cover the contents at all.. what happened, was it an accident?
@DouglasSalguero-qh2sd15 сағат бұрын
Fooville?
@VersusArdua16 сағат бұрын
The balls it must take to not even flinch as a fucking HOUSE basically falls on you is insane.
@Puluo78918 сағат бұрын
How BaAaAD Can i Be
@Signaman-z9dКүн бұрын
I love him still. He never gets old because he was our escape from the drudgery and poverty of the 60s 70,.in ireland. Comedy is the medicine that allowes the mind to wander away from the anxiety of trying to survive in a unfriendly atmosphere with the possibility of conflict hanging over our planet. A distraction that can make us laugh is priceless. It would be a sad place if we couldn't laugh. If we survive they might stop us laughing because it offended someone. I'm way of track sorry.😊
@張瑞昇-i5oКүн бұрын
❤ Father ❤
@raimohuttunen3519Күн бұрын
Pretentious to say at least. But I feel the film's visual group would do miracles with Ellis's Glamorama into a film.
@SayingHelloFrump-c8rКүн бұрын
Physical comedy, perfected way back then and never bettered.
@MrJm323Күн бұрын
1:10 ..."Ultimately dying of heart failure, alone, and accepting the very welfare payments she despised." Uh, yeah, people do die -- she wasn't immortal. (Is there something particularly significant that "heart failure" would be the immediate cause of an 77 year-old's death? Was that a moral failing of some kind?) She wasn't alone; it's true that her husband did precede her to the grave; they didn't have children, but she still had followers who visited her practically every day or every other day. So, sorry! She wasn't "alone." The "welfare payments" she received were HER ENTITLEMENTS, drawn on an account she paid into -- which she (as well as everyone else compelled to report their income) was COMPELLED to pay into. She was supposed to relinquish that, because she was opposed to being threatened with imprisonment for failing to pay into it?!?....It's utterly bizarre that it is the VICTIMS of theft -- moreover the ones who vocally OPPOSE the compulsory nature of the system -- who are told (by whom? by the perpetrators of the theft -- those who SUPPORT the coercive aspect of the system!) that they cannot GET THEIR OWN MONEY BACK!!! The ones who OPPOSED the compulsory system are the ones MOST ENTITLED to be compensated.
@colinpurssey9875Күн бұрын
In the early 1960's there was a "Twilight Zone" episode featuring Buster involving one of the favourite themes of creative fantasists , time travel . The episode was brilliant , primarily due to Buster's comedic genius . Even then at an advanced age he manifestly had lost none of the theatrical flair and idiosyncratic facial expression that endeared him to millions decades earlier . Recommended viewing !
@FiawordweaverКүн бұрын
Brilliant
@theelittlestbirdКүн бұрын
uh yeh, michael fassenebender is a fucking nazi
@SP-ny1fkКүн бұрын
Christians perceive the snake as evil.
@heatherstevenson8834Күн бұрын
That line from Mean Girls fits so well after that Notebook scene. I mean, we were all thinking it!
@olaveivindКүн бұрын
Never let things be forgiven, there is always something scary around the next corner.
@randomjackson574Күн бұрын
watching monsters being born.
@ytzpilotКүн бұрын
The Notebook became an American Icon delivered by two Canadians 😂
@patrickjones3826Күн бұрын
So many beautiful shots of Austin and Central Texas!
@Jorejaha-c7hКүн бұрын
Momoa: you totally ignored Ronon Dex.
@josgeusens4637Күн бұрын
Find something else to cover up words like fuck and pussy instead of just the lame old annoying beep.
@Falconer22Күн бұрын
Beautiful video
@yourmama3515Күн бұрын
I wish someday, somewhere, i met Mel & we talk about everything. Mel G is Based, fuck your hatred against him
@Falconer22Күн бұрын
Ive always had a tremendous amount of respect for Mel Gibson, even though his troubled period. This film and how he treated RDJ sky rocketed my respect for him. True blue, our guy.
@mrvomit101Күн бұрын
2:30 I know I'm not the first to say it, it meant an odd/strange, or even sometimes shady kind of fellow.
@SassyglbeautyКүн бұрын
12:08 It is a shame more comedies don’t get Oscar recognition. This performance is absolutely stellar. I mean, that’s incredible acting for real.
@anthragestormrider2493Күн бұрын
Fabulous editing for the McAdams sequence, well done.
@4TugboatsКүн бұрын
I recall his small role in "It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World" where he was directive Sergent Culpepper (Spencer Tracy) captain of the Santa Rosita California police department, in his attempt to escape fourteen nuts in two cabs, who were after him to get $350,000 00 away from him. Even that short clip was so characteristic of Keaton's style. He was one of the greatest who can never be replaced . All of the greats are now in the History books.
@Edi_JКүн бұрын
Jason Momoa - you somehow forgot that he was in Stargate Atlantis as "the tough guy not a beach boy" for FOUR YEARS before being "the mainstream"?
@Tom-ex3pvКүн бұрын
The rotating set was used by Fred Astaire long before Stanley Kubrik used it in 2001.
@honsou1978dkКүн бұрын
10:19 most guys have dreamed of having that from Amanda.
@CocoWantsACrackerКүн бұрын
I knew the name, but had no idea what he had done. Watching this video made me root for him and I when in the end you said he (as far as we know) was happy, it brought a tear to my eye. It was a shame he got punished so severely for one flop after doing such great things. I doubt he would have risked such an expensive stunt again for another movie. That said, I feel there was a lesson there: bigger budgets and more impressive stunts are not something to rely on for the success of your movie. The big studios clearly did not learn this lesson come 2024.
@Maddin1313Күн бұрын
He made one movie that bombed, and they didn't let him have control over any movie again. Modern Hollywood is pumping out trash and those directors and writers just keep going.
@fintan9218Күн бұрын
This film had so much potential with the cast and ideas for the plot. It just went overboard with the pretentiousness, whispering, and certain plot points. Its really a shame, I just see the potential for a much better film with not all that much changed.
@Skibbityboo0580Күн бұрын
Hard agree. I made it about an hour in, and I had to stop watching.
@CreatorsMZКүн бұрын
I think a lot of people would agree with you, fintan and Skibbity... I usually don't love the plots of Malick movies the way I love the plots of other movies. Generally Malick's are quite abstract. Not much there. But some of the performances are second to none, and in this case Fassbender scares the hell out of me
@Skibbityboo0580Күн бұрын
@@CreatorsMZ Fassbender is amazing in this movie. I just think they went too abstract for a really cool concept. I really did like your analysis of Cook by the way. I will sub for more of your content.
@CreatorsMZКүн бұрын
@@Skibbityboo0580 A 100% backable POV! Thank you for sharing your thoughts on the video ☺
@fintan9218Күн бұрын
@@CreatorsMZ Completely agree, Fassbenders perfomance was what kept me watching. I remember watching a video on here years ago with a bunch of celebrities, and Christopher Plummer was talking about how he wouldn’t work with Malick anymore. He basically said Malick desperately needs a writer but refuses, and so his scripts are always overly pretentious and hurt the films. That’s definitely the same feeling I have, not that he cant write he just isnt usually the best fit to write for his films and they leave the actors with endless dialogue they need to humanize and make sound real. Fassbender did about as good as one could do with the dialogue, but this film could have been great with “better” writing. At least thats my opinion.
@chinchillahats49072 күн бұрын
I don’t like dr seuss the person for many reasons. But I am extremely thankful his books and authors who wrote like him, like shel silverstein. They made reading possible and enjoyable for me as a kid since I had a learning disability and struggled with reading
@alexanderdiaz23402 күн бұрын
This was worse than I though
@gregoryreese84912 күн бұрын
0:55 Better than "born *as a result* of a one-night-stand," I suppose.
@mikemay83342 күн бұрын
This man was gifted. Not many people would have the imagination nor the guts to do what he did. Every trade has its geniuses, and he was the one who made the movie industry great. Now a days we have pathetic excuses for actors who aren’t even good enough to be mentioned in the same sentence as this great artist.
@cadillacblue34122 күн бұрын
We still Love you Buster...:)
@whyyes64292 күн бұрын
Im cummin!
@rsd37192 күн бұрын
On the surface, House is an awful show. A brilliant Dr. that is kind of an asshole to everyone. But Hugh Laurie single-handily carries that role, it would be so easy to mess it up. I'm not saying he's the only one who could do it, but he is the only one that did it. Although I bet Christoph Waltz would nail it also, frankly It'd be a pretty funny SNL skit having him do a Dr. House.
@TheTSense2 күн бұрын
"Even Jane could think of that". The message here is that Jane might not be very smart. However, if the person reading this already beliefs all women aren't very smart, they are going to read that and not what is actually written. There are men in China and eating with sticks is more common there than here. This isn't racism, the critics are trying to whitewash their culture
@JohnOLooney3 күн бұрын
he was a genius and paved the way for all the modern films that followed.
@Floats7363 күн бұрын
This is a very well produced summary of Rand's ideas, but the title is a bit misleading.
@ladyrose32853 күн бұрын
@4:26 the US Navy had FUBAR = "Fouled" up beyond all recognition 🤣🤣
@richiesindani64713 күн бұрын
whats the piano tune called at 0:23?
@gasdoc47893 күн бұрын
Boring, stupid, worthless, no entertainment value whatsoever. AVOID!!
@-MurderHouse-3 күн бұрын
Well I knew he did some controversial stuff but I had no clue about this
@willdwyer67823 күн бұрын
Lionel Richie used the rotating room stunt in the music video for Dancing on the Ceiling in 1986.
@Folkmoot3 күн бұрын
The Mr. Beast level thumbnail lol
@misterwhyte3 күн бұрын
The falling house wasn't Keaton's idea but Roscoe Arbuckle's idea. The gag can seen for the first time in Arbuckle's "Backstage" in 1919, with a piece of set looking like a house falling on Arbuckle. Keaton, a close friend of his, had a supporting role in the film. Granted, Keaton is the one who made the gag famous by building up on it, but let's give credit where credit is due. Arbuckle is also the one who convinced Keaton to make movies, back when it was still considered somewhat shameful for an established stage actor.