Little fun fact for you guys, the Actor who played Grandpa was actually a year younger than Dick Van Dyke.
@jamesedwards24833 ай бұрын
The Character Of The Child Catcher Is Always Ranked Among The Most Terrifying In Children's Movies!!
@puterboy23 ай бұрын
That quirky SOB?
@booksteer7057Ай бұрын
I only learned decades later that the man who played him, Robert Helpmann, was one of the most renowned ballet dancers of the 20th Century. 🤯
@susanliltz38753 ай бұрын
“MY FAIR LADY “ with Audrey Hepburn would be good for you to get a fancy hat to wear while you watch it!! Ps. You’ll also love the beautiful dresses!!
@lw39184 ай бұрын
Finally a reaction channel that dips into the 60's.
@muppetsstoogesfan14 ай бұрын
This was the last of the golden era of musicals. They stopped making movies of this kind after the mid 70s.
@LpMcQuack4 ай бұрын
My childhood just came flooding back..so excited to watch y'all's reaction
@larrydlam3 ай бұрын
Saw this in a theater when I was a kid. Forgot most of it except the main song.
@benjamansharer79693 ай бұрын
Back in the early 70s, when I was just a little kid, our weekends ended with Walt Disney on Sunday nights. When this aired on Disney one Sunday night, my siblings and our Grandparents watched this together. Such memories of a long time ago!
@matthewprince97054 ай бұрын
My favourite part is Sally Ann Howes (Truly Scrumptious) dancing like a music box doll for the Baron and Baronness! The choreography is amazing!
@allenruss29763 ай бұрын
Mine too
@shercahn3 ай бұрын
Add Bedknobs and Broomsticks to your list.
@shercahn3 ай бұрын
It's been forever since I've seen this and I didn't realize how many elements it shares with Mary Poppins.
@TheSwicker3163 ай бұрын
Yes, an excellent choice.
@timothybuchanan6623 ай бұрын
I showed this to my grandsons a year ago or so, they love it.
@BC-cp8nv3 ай бұрын
I’m giving away old age, but we used to sing the Chitty Chitty bang bang song in music class, when I was in 3rd grade. Of course we replaced the “c” in chitty with an “s”. We thought it was hilarious that we could sing bad words, lol. Good times.
@toddjackson31363 ай бұрын
Sometimes when I'm feeling a little cheeky I call my wife "Choochy Face", she usually rolls her eyes and groans but she also smiles . Every once in a while she will sing back "... and your my teddy bear " 😊
@sweetsweetconnie62333 ай бұрын
That childcatcher traumatized me as a kid LOL
@dumy1873 ай бұрын
_A Room With A View_ is a good movie set in the Victorian Era. The missus should love it.
@dumy1873 ай бұрын
It won a few Oscars, including Best Costume Design.
@tommiller48953 ай бұрын
The Music in the Movie was written by the Sherman Brothers who also wrote the music for Mary Poppins. They also wrote the infamous ear worm "Its a Small World" for the Disney Attraction. Professor Potts played Bert in Mary Poppins and Gert Frobe did play Auric Goldfinger in the Bond film. Ian Fleming based Chitty on a real, very successful racing car from that time period.
@BigGator54 ай бұрын
"How was India?" "India? I'll tell you something. I got up this morning and I shot an elephant in my pajamas." "How he ever got in my pajamas, I shall never know." "You've heard it before." Fun Fact: Theatrical movie debut of Heather Ripley. Casting Notes Fact: Lionel Jeffries played Dick Van Dyke's father, despite the fact that Dick Van Dyke is actually six months older than Jeffries. Blink And You'll Miss It Fact: In the scene where Baroness Bomburst (Anna Quayle) is falling into the water you can see the water churning where the helicopter drops the stunt man. Automobile Enthusiast Fact: The production used six cars, one of which was fully functional and roadworthy. The current owner of the Chitty car is Sir Peter Jackson. He could be seen near the WETA Workshop in New Zealand driving cast members of The Hobbit films around in the car while playing the main theme song through a sound system. Music Enthusiast Fact: This is the first non-Disney film to feature songs by Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman. Sally Ann Howes reported that despite the difficulty of the choreography of the song Doll On A Music Box (1968), she was able to film this in one take. he musical number Toy Dance (1968) involved having Dick Van Dyke on a two metre long piece of string and having puppet artists pull him around. In his book Keep Moving: And Other Tips And Truths About Aging (2015), Dick Van Dyke mentioned during the Toot Sweets (1968) segment, at 40 years old, he never bothered to warm up before a dance number. During filming, he felt something pop in his leg. He thought he had merely pulled a muscle, but soon after he couldn't walk without limping. He went to a doctor, who told him his whole body was full of arthritis, and within five years he wouldn't be able to get around at all without a cane or a wheelchair. Van Dyke responded to this prognosis by jumping up and dancing, which astounded the doctor. Almost 50 years later, in his brief role as Mr. Dawes Jr. in Mary Poppins Returns (2018), 92-year-old Van Dyke danced without any assistance.
@popculturallychallenged3 ай бұрын
We need to check out Mary Poppins at some point!
@BigGator53 ай бұрын
I would highly recommend it! 😄 Go in Peace and Walk with God. 😎 👍
@lnwolf413 ай бұрын
Yes that was the actor who played Goldfinger. Another movie she would love is "THEY GREAT RACE" stars Tony Curtis, Jack Lemon, Peter Falk and Natile Wood.
@markmorningstar53743 ай бұрын
Ha! I said that too, about suggesting "The Great Race". I have loved that movie since I was around 5 years old. My Dad used to let me stay up...late...very late, like 1 AM to watch (way before streaming...kids!), but I always fell asleep waiting for "The Pie Fight and The Montmartre Steps" scenes at the end! Tony Curtis said during the filming of The Great Race, they had the best catering spread of ANY movie in which he worked. Wow!
@bel410la3 ай бұрын
This movie was one of the best movies of my childhood. even tho it came out in 1968, even almost 40 years after it came out, 4 year old me was watching it all the time.
@bakersmileyface4 ай бұрын
I just thought about Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, searched it on youtube and saw that someone's about to watch it for the first time. This is gonna be the first time I've watched it since the early 2000s when I were just a kid, how nostalgic. Great British classic along with Mary Poppins.
@islandgreenstrong4 ай бұрын
I sent David and Toni a whole lotta movies in the mail and to try to pick from all of them was really really hard. Of all the ones I sent, I picked 4 movies...I gave them a little bit of info on each movie...giving no spoilers...and I told them they could watch a trailer on them if they wanted to. But, in the end, I left the decision up to them what to watch out of the 4 movies. I told them to surprise me. I actually thought from something Toni said at the last premier, I had figured out which movie it was...but I was wrong. This is a great surprise and I can't wait to talk about it tonight during this premier!! WOO HOO!! I watch this movie at least twice a year...it's one of my favorites. I have two favorite songs in this movie...Hushabye Mountain and Me Ole Bamboo. I've been frantically trying to find a beautiful music box with the song Hushabye Mountain to give to my new Granddaughter Maddi. OH, and I'm an absolute sucker for 🥰Dick Van Dyke😍...I follow him on Facebook. He's still a hoot!!
@chrisreulbach4 ай бұрын
This was a GREAT choice Dawne. 🥰🤩😘
@popculturallychallenged3 ай бұрын
Thank you Dawne! We hope you enjoyed our reaction! 😀
@belvagurr4033 ай бұрын
The song Old Bamboo is the same music as Mary Poppins’ Step In Time, the chimney sweep song. Written by the Sherman Brothers who wrote the Disney music.
@oliverbrownlow56152 ай бұрын
It's not exactly the same music, but it is very similar in style, and undoubtedly, it was a deliberate attempt to create a dazzling dance number that would compare with "Step in Time."
@phillipsmith50133 ай бұрын
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers is another great one, in my book. I love the songs and all the dancing in that movie.
@manueldeabreu19803 ай бұрын
Benny Hill as the toy maker was a real treat.
@candicelitrenta88903 ай бұрын
They would have that happen and the movie stopped so you could go get candy, popcorn or perhaps a bathroom break. They did that in older movies. They do that in the Great Race as well
@2971username4 ай бұрын
Finally a movie Toni can enjoy.
@learobinson44504 ай бұрын
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang & Smoky were the movies of my childhood. As a child of the 1970’s I scoured the TV Guide every time it arrived looking to see if they were going to be aired. The 3 stations we got on our tv usually showed them 3-4 times a year & I always made a point to watch them. My father was a mechanic & I helped my grandfather whenever he worked on our vehicles so the idea of a car that could float & fly really appealed to my imagination. I even had the Little Golden Book based on the movie.
@tomhoffman43304 ай бұрын
What a FUN Surprise rolling in tonight💝or should I say, "flying" in!😇I hope this wasn't too much trouble to Edit, being a Musical and all🎶I'm really looking forward to it and "Thank You" Dawne!👍
@adamkatt3 ай бұрын
Long before cable tv this was on every thanksgiving day. 70s/80s...
@SteveInScotland3 ай бұрын
This was a regular Christmas movie for years during my childhood, it’s so sweet and pure. I love when Truly is a music box with all her jerky clockwork movements and Dick Van Dyke is the puppet hanging on invisible strings. The car looks amazing too, I’ve seen it in at the National Motor Museum, in fact they had the James Bond white car, a Lagonda I think that went underwater with Roger Moore there at the time too.
@geoffmower87293 ай бұрын
Hi guys wonderful movie. Fun fact, in the dance scene in the factory, the bit where Dick Van Dyke was spinning around on a trolley he actually fell of on an earlier take and sprained a leg muscle. He pushed through and finished the dance scene. If you look carefully as he moves from the trolley you can see him limp.
@heatherspence38484 ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ what a fun community you have I had such a good time in the live chat Premier.
@candicelitrenta88903 ай бұрын
Get your hat and watch The Great Race with Tony Curtis, Natalie Wood, and Jack Lemmon with Peter Falk. It is a 60's film that is set in the time period when women were just being allowed to vote. It is a GREAT comedy of that time frame.
@susanliltz38753 ай бұрын
Yes!!!!👍 Dick Van Dyke the lead in this was “Bert” in “Mary Poppins “!!!!💕
@Demigord3 ай бұрын
It's nice to see a movie that was both easy and fun for T
@allenruss29763 ай бұрын
The reason Albert Brock is involved is because Ian Fleming wrote the book Chitty Chitty Bang Bang
@nebidiaswift52003 ай бұрын
So shocked to see this Thankyou for reacting to it!!! Literally in my family this and Oliver are our “family movie memories” I grew up on this
@mcgee2273 ай бұрын
My favorite movie as a child.
@kevmodee18663 ай бұрын
Hey guys!! This was my favorite childhood movie/musical!! It was so wonderful watching and using my imagination to go on a trip with them! Yes, I may be 58, but we've all go some child in us right? 😂😂 Thanks for the great watch as usual Toni and David! 💗
@popculturallychallenged3 ай бұрын
Our pleasure!
@jamesf.ryaniii79183 ай бұрын
The man who sold the car to him (Desmond Lewelyn) played Q the gadget inventor in James Bond films. The actor who played Baron Bomburst (Gert Frobe) also played Goldfinger.
@jdeang35313 ай бұрын
Makes sense since it was written by Ian Flemming.
@asterix78423 ай бұрын
Yes, Dick Van Dyke was in Mary Poppins. He also starred in a popular 60s sitcom. After Toni gets her hat and outfit, you can watch Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines (1965), set in the same time period.
@johnchrysostomon62843 ай бұрын
"... he's the guy who did the James Bond movies..." And this film was written by Ian Fleming who wrote James Bond Gert Fröbe - Baron Bomburst in this played Goldfinger in James Bond
@simonrobinson15662 ай бұрын
And the slide they try to escape on is the same one from You Only Live Twice. 😂
@ronweber14023 ай бұрын
This is the first movie I saw in a theater. I think I was six and we went with my mom and aunt. I have also sung You're my Chuchy Face to all of my dogs. It wasn't a dream it was a story.
@TheCpage663 ай бұрын
The child catcher scared the ever loving mess out of me when my parents took me to see this in the theater.
@jowbloe36733 ай бұрын
The child catcher is the only thing I remember about this movie, and they are NOT fond memories.
@gregschultz86393 ай бұрын
The world got sadder when Richard of the Sherman Brothers passed away last month. They wrote the songbook of our childhoods
@matthines47483 ай бұрын
Yay! One of my favorite movies when I was a kid.
@terrigail73 ай бұрын
Oh wow!!❤ love this movie! And now I'm singing all of the songs!!😁
@pjbarney95803 ай бұрын
very fun nostalgia movie... very forgotten classic
@JHowesitgoing1232 ай бұрын
Ian Flemming (the James Bond author) wrote this for his children.
@markraffety32463 ай бұрын
A fun movie. I recommend the original Dr. Doolittle with Rex Harrison and the musical 'Oliver!'.
@imikey5353 ай бұрын
Ian Fleming; who wrote the James Bond novels, wrote the book this movie is based on.
@JC-ke7mj4 ай бұрын
Thank y'all!
@otisroseboro56133 ай бұрын
A Great Movie,As Always Me & Katy Just Love Seeing Your Reactions To All These Great Movie's & See You Both At The Next One,Katy & Otis
@andreshernandez11804 ай бұрын
I was born after many of these classics were made, fortunately as a kid my dad showed me some of them like Mary Poppins or The Sound Of Music, sadly there were others I never knew about until I was an adult, this is one of those. I watched it for the first time as I taught my own kids about Mary Poppins and all that. It’s a great movie, I love it, but it doesn’t hit like the others do, it’s just nostalgia doing its thing, just like Christmas, I still love it but it’s not the same as an adult. See you later for the live stream 👍🏼
@cliffchristie58653 ай бұрын
It's a cute little inside joke that the most humorless character is played by Benny Hill.
@marktracy17213 ай бұрын
Oh come on don't be a kill joy This is a magical children's movie
@kevinerose3 ай бұрын
Oh great. This was my favorite movie growing up. I was so mesmerized by the Child Catcher. Creepy!
@BobPease11223 ай бұрын
One of my all time favorite movies ever.
@graywade92253 ай бұрын
Awww Toni... you're our little Chuchee face!
@camerachica732 ай бұрын
The house is Heatherden Hall - part of Pinewood Studios outside London. The Amazing Mr Blunden (1972) was also shot there as a backdrop along with many other films.
@katherinedinwiddie45263 ай бұрын
Oh boy! This takes me back. Love this movie! You two are awesome! Enjoy cause I sure will.
@cuerpo8693 ай бұрын
The Great Race 1965 is another great movie with cars of this sort..a fun movie if you haven't watched it yet with a great cast..
@MrBenedictus253 ай бұрын
I Loved this movie AS a Kid. I Watchers it in my native lanhuage German. I Always Watchers it when i was sick. My Patents Recorder it in VHS once
@sarahstardust3 ай бұрын
My sister and I watched this movie a lot when we were growing up! It's so silly and fun 😄
@tlm10115521 күн бұрын
That was Auric Goldfinger (Actor Gert Frobe). Truly's home with the swing was the Spectre Training Facility in the Bond Films. There is a Disney connection, the Sherman Brothers (who usually wrote songs for Disney movies like Mary Poppins) wrote the songs for this movie. On a personal note, I sat in the Chitty Chitty Bang Bang car when it was on display in a Museum. It pays to know the Museum Director. After filming the movie producers offered to sell the Car to Dick Van Dyke for $10,000. Today that car is worth millions of dollars!
@debbiethompson34603 ай бұрын
Love this movie! But, as a child, the Child Catcher scared the hell out of me!! When you watch a musical, you need to realize...music comes out of nowhere, everyone knows the song and everyone knows the dance. Just smile or laugh and enjoy!!
@j0hnf_uk3 ай бұрын
This and, 'Willy Wonka And The Chocolate Factory', are 2 of a number of films that encapsulated part of my childhood.
@the98themperoroftheholybri33Ай бұрын
I'm glad you guys didn't notice the dog which fell off the catwalk, it was an accident and the dog was actually hospitalised
@johnchrysostomon62843 ай бұрын
Australian ballet star Robert Helpmann plays the child catcher. He is so famous here that there are awards named for him - The Helpmann Award for Australian performing arts
@johnboydTx3 ай бұрын
❤ My Childhood favorite movie.. thank you for your reaction to this ✌️😋❤️
@MarkMcLT3 ай бұрын
This was so much fun! I saw it as a young kid when it first came out. I suspect I had the coloring book! I think of it as being in the same category as Dr Doolittle. I really didn't remember any of the plot except for the bit about the child-catcher. And of course, the theme song is impossible to forget! What a performer Dick van Dyke is!
@haydenlipczenko47753 ай бұрын
My favorite scene has always been the Baron's birthday party when Truly and Caractacus are disguised as the dolls.
@robertlangdon82263 ай бұрын
I first saw this at the drive in. It was a special night out and was the first time we kids had ever seen a hamburger. Was also the first time trying an ice cream in a cone !
@mark-nm4tc3 ай бұрын
Appropriate that Desmond Llewellyn is in this, 'Q' from the 007 movies, since this was James Bond creator Ian Flemings only children's novel. BTW, Baron Bomburst's castle is Neuschwanstein in Bavaria, it apparently inspired the Disneyland castle, now their logo.
@allenruss29763 ай бұрын
S&M Baroness is always a treat. Yes Truly is very scrumptious. It wasn't until I was an adult I recognized Benny Hill. Definitely a different role. My favorite childhood movie and still one of my favorites
@michaelcullen53083 ай бұрын
If you do happen to buy a big hat, another great British movie set around the same time is "Half A Sixpence".
@texasdustfart3 ай бұрын
Best non-Disney children's movie ever.
@ashleywetherall3 ай бұрын
Grandpa Potts was played by Lionel Jeffrey's who was actually 6 months younger than Dick Van Dyke. But Lionel was an excellent director. He made two British classic films. The Railway children 1970 and The Amazing Mr Blunden 1972, both are worth checking out..
@thomaswilkinson61013 ай бұрын
The Windmill House was for sale recently, beautiful!
@susanliltz38753 ай бұрын
I heard you mention “Mary Poppins “ Isn’t that a beautiful movie??!!!!💕
@Curraghmore3 ай бұрын
I think the child catcher was the first film character to scare me as a child, watching re-runs of this film on tv. You can see the signs of the story having been written by Ian Fleming who also invented James Bond. Lots of fancy gadgets and mechanical wonders, and a female character with a name like 'Truly Scrumptious'. Could have been the name of a Bond girl in any of the James Bond adventures. Plus of course Gert Frobe/Baron Bomburst was also Goldfinger.
@Demigord4 ай бұрын
It was only a few years ago when I realized the bad country wasn't the real country of Bulgaria, but a fictional one
@hollyodell40124 ай бұрын
It was Vulgaria 😊
@mablungblackhand36183 ай бұрын
This movie is fun, but Mary Poppins (1964) is arguably the greatest family movie ever made. 100% recommended.
@Ragnar60003 ай бұрын
The Great Race with Tony Curtis is also a Victorian ere film......and like Chitty Chitty Bang Bang it takes the viewer on a long adventure!
@76tennboy3 ай бұрын
So this is not technically Victorian era that ended in 1901 this is technically Edwardian era
@BranDZ73 ай бұрын
It's funny that the guy that created James Bond also wrote this, such different movies . And directed by the same guy that directed the godfather
@oliverbrownlow56152 ай бұрын
I'm afraid you're mistaken. Ken Hughes directed CHITTY CHITTY BANG BANG (1968), while Francis Ford Coppola directed THE GODFATHER (1972). But Francis Ford Coppola did direct a musical that was released the same year as CHITTY CHITTY BANG BANG. It's called FINIAN'S RAINBOW.
@drewo.1272 ай бұрын
That car was (and still is) my childhood dream car! (Until I discovered Herbie the Love Bug. At which point, both cars were my dream cars…and also Bumblebee from Transformers, as well as many other cool cars!)
@jamesedwards24833 ай бұрын
The Connection To JAMES BOND Goes Deeper Than Just Albert R. "Cubby" Broccoli!! The Original Story Was By James Bond Author Ian Fleming, And Desmond Llewellyn, Q From The James Bond Movies Is A Small Part In CCBB!!
@tonihooper354427 күн бұрын
Omg my fave movie of all time!
@susanliltz38753 ай бұрын
Hey the guy at the carnival the got the bad hair cut he’s the first one to get a “Mohawk “remember for a while it was the style..
@sylvanaire3 ай бұрын
I’ve seen this movie half a dozen times, maybe, and this is the first time I’ve noticed that that windmill that Professor Pots & his family lives in doesn’t have any sails on its arms & they are still going around anyway, lol. That castle you wondered if the Disney catle was modelled after is the Neuschwanstein castle in Bavaria (Southern Germany). Mad King Ludwig had it built in the late 1800s but only ended up living in it for less than 6 months.
@susanliltz38753 ай бұрын
Hey!!!! Dick Van Dyke just won 🏆 a Daytime Emmy (6-7-24)!! At age 98 he’s the oldest winner of a daytime Emmy!!👍💕
@popculturallychallenged3 ай бұрын
That's awesome!!
@mikealvarez23223 ай бұрын
A great Dick van Dyke movie. Love it.
@dcemerald703 ай бұрын
Thank you for reacting to this classic! I used to love watching this film and singing to it as a kid! Fun fact: They almost cast Julie Andrews (Mary Poppins) for the role of Truly Scrumptious but opted for Sally Ann Howes to avoid confusion I believe as Dick Van Dyke had portrayed Bert in Mary Poppins. I have to recommend these other great 50s-70s films: The King and I (1956), West Side Story (1961), Disney’s Pete’s Dragon (1977), Disney’s Pollyanna (1960), and Disney’s Swiss Family Robinson (1960). 👨👩👧👦🏎️🤴👸💛❤️🩶
@oliverbrownlow56152 ай бұрын
I believe Julie refused the role of Truly, opting instead to reunite with SOUND OF MUSIC director Robert Wise to make STAR! (1968), a bio-pic of musical comedy star Gertrude Lawrence. To my mind, it's the best Julie Andrews movie that most people have never seen.
@dcemerald702 ай бұрын
@@oliverbrownlow5615 found this According to Richard Stirling's 2008 book Julie Andrews: An Intimate Biography, Andrews grew tired of being type-cast and believed Truly was too close to Mary Poppins. So maybe we’re both right.
@oliverbrownlow56152 ай бұрын
@@dcemerald70 Around 1969, Julie and Dick Van Dyke were planned to star in a film adaptation of Bock & Harnick's Broadway musical SHE LOVES ME, based on the same story as the earlier movies THE SHOP AROUND THE CORNER (1940) starring Jimmy Stewart, and IN THE GOOD OLD SUMMERTIME (1949), starring Judy Garland. Unfortunately, the project was cancelled. Decades later, Julie and Dick were suposed to star in Stephen Schwartz's live-acrion TV musical GEPPETTO (2000), but around this time Julie had the fateful throat surgery that destroyed her singing voice, so the project went forward with other actors. However, Julie and Dick were reunited in a television special, JULIE AND DICK AT COVENT GARDEN, in 1974.
@skylaquinn2193 ай бұрын
That kid at the beginning probably didn't have parents as there was a lot of Orphans in that time, and some of them lived on the streets
@popculturallychallenged3 ай бұрын
Good point!
@Philipp-nk7pz3 ай бұрын
For the hats or dresses watch "The Great Race" with Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon. Around the same time period 😁
@mjr3203 ай бұрын
Knowing the words to a song u find weird, but super heroes and dinosaurs are more believable? but wow the memories truly came flooding back
@nathandyer4565Ай бұрын
It wasn't a dream it was a place when Caractacus Potts tells a story just after ending credits both places are real like United Kingdom, France, Turville, Buckinghamshire Hanworth, Middlesex Hambleden, Buckinghamshire and Vulgaria in Bavaria.
@Alexandertg19553 ай бұрын
Yes he was in Mary Poppens. 🙂 He also stared in the TV show of his name. The Dick Van Dyke Show.
@oliverbrownlow56152 ай бұрын
And in the musical, BYE BYE BIRDIE (1963).
@daveheesen91743 ай бұрын
Hard to believe this is written by Ian Fleming...the father of James Bond
@wolfmacleod3 ай бұрын
Great reaction, this gave me nightmares as a child,
@757optim3 ай бұрын
I thought it was Disney, too. Such a chitty movie. : )