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@StardustandMadness8 ай бұрын
Aaron, you guys are welcome here in Australia at any time! We’ll look after you. Australia and New Zealand are very different places despite being the same part of the world. Visit your friends in NZ, John - the wildlife you’re scared of are only here in Australia. Best Australian movies IMO are Strictly Ballroom (I think Baz Luhrman’s first movie), BMX Bandits (baby Nicole Kidman) The Castle, Crackers (Christmas movie) and Rabbitproof Fence (the only serious one on the list).
@Sgt-Gravy8 ай бұрын
Made like a kangaroo & hopped on into the movie 😂
@annaheeldawes86088 ай бұрын
I’m gonna be watching out for your reactions to crocodile Dundee 2 ( probably the better one) great reaction guys ❤️
@chrispile55538 ай бұрын
Fosters used to be Australia wide in the 90s. Now, it's an export product. We don't generally drink it here any more
@kartiksharma76748 ай бұрын
Please please watch the series of shorts for "Dundee 2018"!
@DanGamingFan24068 ай бұрын
"That's not a knife, THAT'S a knife." Such an iconic line. Also, Dundee and Sue's actors actually got married shortly after this. The chemistry was real.
@lucas.2.3.9.48 ай бұрын
Such an iconic line that you got wrong 😂
@lizmccarthy-edwards21158 ай бұрын
More like he left his first wife shortly after meeting Linda Kozlowski on set in 1986. It was one of the ugliest celebrity divorces in Australia. They finally got married in 1990.
@adventuresinlaurenland8 ай бұрын
@@lizmccarthy-edwards2115 that marriage was already over, it was their second go at it 😂
@lizmccarthy-edwards21158 ай бұрын
Uhh yeah. Still married though.@@adventuresinlaurenland
@Corvid768 ай бұрын
They were married years prior to this move. They made several movies together
@juliestogner25428 ай бұрын
Crocodile Dundee 2 is good too
@JuryRigged8 ай бұрын
Heck, even the third is good, if a bit of a stretch on the premise. And I like my personal headcanon that Denning (a henchman in Croc 2) can be be subject to Mick's friendly nature and go from goon to Mick's best mate Jacko.
@spencerarnold6698 ай бұрын
I think whats missed when watching this film today with cancel culture is the film is showing tolerance has to go both ways. In the film some of his views can be seen as sexist, racist, or transphobic (even for the 80's) but he doesn't know any better. He's a good person and means no harm by it and people get that, theres no malice to him saying some of these things its just ignorance. When things are explained he does he best to keep up and thats why people like him
@LetsGetitBoah8 ай бұрын
That and the trans was deceiving men into thinking she was a woman so he could have sex with them.
@Cyborganna8 ай бұрын
T H I S
@-M0LE8 ай бұрын
E X A C T L Y
@CatchBackNewss8 ай бұрын
100% agree. I'm about to state a similar sentiment
@nochannel1q23218 ай бұрын
Probably also worth noting that if the movie commentary survives twenty or thirty years a significant amount of it will be as this appears now.
@inarar53348 ай бұрын
The switch from razor to knife wasn't the first indicator Mick is a bit of a showman about how mystical he is. You both seemed to miss it, but when they're leaving and saying goodbye to Wally, Mick gets the time from Wallys watch, then pulls the "tell the time by the suns position" bit with Sue.
@clevelandcbi7 ай бұрын
My all-time favorite example is when he tries telling Sue that his buddy uses telepathy to navigate his way through the terrain. 2 seconds later there's a CRUNCH and *"Eww, I hate the bush!!"* 🤣🤣🤣
@MikePhillips-pl6ov6 ай бұрын
@@clevelandcbithey missed a lot, from talking almost non-stop through many of the jokes
@vabeachkevin8 ай бұрын
"They had bidets in the 80s?" LOL Bidets were invented in the 1600s
@RandomNPC0018 ай бұрын
younger people think the 80`s were the middle ages!
@jamedraa84728 ай бұрын
@@RandomNPC001 FACTS!! I just saw a reactor trying to figure out the time period for Pirates Of The Caribbean..... he thought it was the 1980's till he looked it up.
@terribanks86338 ай бұрын
Yes, even in the dark ages (80's) there were bidets. 😂😂😂😂
@arconeagain8 ай бұрын
Did you know this apparent fact off the top of your head, or did you have to google it?
@jamedraa84728 ай бұрын
@@arconeagain It's pretty well known. Most other countries have had them for centuries.
@Jordashian938 ай бұрын
Literally one of the best Australian Comedy Feature Films ever made to screen!
@aer713678 ай бұрын
The two lead actors actually fell in love while making this film and got married.
@MrKeychange8 ай бұрын
This is the element everyone forgets. How awesome is that?
@FrankieOver508 ай бұрын
They didn't just fall in love, he was married at the time. He left his wife of 23 years for her.
@catlisma56256 ай бұрын
@@FrankieOver50a quick google shows that is false :/ they had already divorced twice and he remarried his co star 4 years after his divorce
@FrankieOver506 ай бұрын
@@catlisma5625 according to his ex she divorced him the second time because he left her and the kids for Linda. They didn’t marry until 4 years later though.
@qwi23118 ай бұрын
It’s amazing how difficult it is for reactors to admit they laughed and had fun with a movie that was made in a different time. They always feel a need to apologize for laughing.
@LetsGetitBoah8 ай бұрын
It's really annoying to be honest.
@-M0LE8 ай бұрын
This generation has no hope
@ReelRejects8 ай бұрын
WE LITERALLY ADMIT THIS ACROSS THIS ENTIRE VIDEO lol
@blakenorman48228 ай бұрын
@@ReelRejectsyou literally have thin skin and are contributing to a weak society
@Tconl8 ай бұрын
And Dundee was not being offensive at any moment. He was just clearly naive and a bit unknown to the world. Context and thinking is difficult nowadays.
@NoelMcGinnis8 ай бұрын
The scene in the bar wasn’t dated at all. It was just realistic. Dundee had zero experience with any situation like that one and he dealt with it as logically as he could under the circumstances. He had no idea what political correctness was and had never heard of it.
@traceyreid45858 ай бұрын
Yes, good observation! In a way the film actually addressed the trans identity situation in quite an open way for the times, when those issues were really not known or part of everyday life as it is today for most ordinary people! Dundee had a morse positive interaction later at the party!
@LetsGetitBoah8 ай бұрын
Not to mention the trans was openly deceiving people try to get sex from them.
@-M0LE8 ай бұрын
Exactly these guys are too socially conditioned to have open minds
@alexp6018 ай бұрын
Some reactors really don't understand that the 70s, 80s, and 90s were different times, and people's mindsets were different. They can't really expect an 80s film to have modern sensibilities.
@jaychristie41058 ай бұрын
I was more offended that the trans person didn’t disclose the fact that they were not a cisgender man to Mick and intended to go back to their apartment for intercourse. But If a straight man is dishonest to a straight woman at a bar to try and get her to sleep with him, he is a predator, not a victim.
@nickgalea828 ай бұрын
It's still a fun movie all these years later. Growing up in Australia in the 80's, Paul Hogan was a huge deal because he was a very ordinary dude, a working class bloke who worked on the arch of the Sydney Harbour Bridge as a rigger and saw talent show called New Faces where the judges would be rude and nasty to the contestants, he thought they deserved the same back, went on the show and did so well that the rest is history. He had a very popular sketch comedy show on network TV called the Paul Hogan show that run from like '73 to '84, that he basically wrapped up to go all in making this movie. There's lots of clips and segments from the show on KZbin, it's fun, lowbrow humour, an Aussie Benny Hill in a lot of ways.
@nickgalea828 ай бұрын
Oh and the town that Walkabout Creek is set in is McKinlay, in Queensland. It's a throughfare town that people pass through on the way to mines and such, it's about 150 miles to the nearest city of any sort in Mt Isa and about 1000 miles inland from Brisbane. It's literally the middle of nowhere.
@StardustandMadness8 ай бұрын
The movie is fun but it hasn’t aged well. Very much like 80s John Hughes films. I was so ashamed to be Australian during those scenes while the guys watched. We have a wonderful LGBTQIA+ community here. They could easily cut that scene without making too much impact on the movie at all.
@nickgalea828 ай бұрын
@@StardustandMadness 100%, but I also look at it in the context of when it was made, unfortunately that's an era where cheap shots regarding LGBTQIA+ were pretty common in films, even up until well in the 90's the thought of men as women was used as cheap laughs in a lot of shows and movies and not just Australian ones. I look at this film as very much a piece of it's time, not just as a movie but also as a snapshot of that time in general, yeah there's a few bits that have aged poorly like a lot of movies of the day, but the cast and the performances as a whole are still charming and fun to me.
@jamescurfman32848 ай бұрын
@@StardustandMadness Come on. This movie is nearly forty years old. NOTHING from the 80's outside of Music has 'aged well'. The world is a completely different place now.
@StardustandMadness8 ай бұрын
@@jamescurfman3284 I do actually agree. The movie is fine for the time. Didn’t make it any less embarrassing (for me) to watch two of my favourite reactors cringe at it. I just hate that this is how much of the world still sees us because of movies like this. Taika Waititi calls Australia ‘New Zealand’s racist uncle’. So many of us are working so hard to change that opinion and then this kind of thing pops up and just fuels the fire that we’re all bigots. I didn’t mean to offend anyone. It’s just how I feel.
@angiedjenkins55708 ай бұрын
As a transgender woman and being from the particular time, I never had an issue with a comedic situation that Mick was in. He played to his character in the situation. Society has to stop sugarcoating situations for the sake of someone's social agenda. We can't be afraid to be exposed to a certain era and its beliefs of that time. It doesn't make it right from a certain view point, but if you write a character that responds by a way that goes against society because of that character's back story and not having been exposed to the outside world. His response was, well to be sure a natural one giving his naive nature in the story So please don't be too offended because we aren't all that fragile as human beings. And on a side note, you guys are doing a great job and thank you for your concern anyways.😊
@kissmy_butt13028 ай бұрын
As someone who started working in theater these guys would not survive all the friendly fire from fellow gays, trans and straight people. They would be running for the AE union steward only to be asked if this is their first stage show or movie. I got stories that would horrify ANYONE of ALL walks of life.
@Stogie21128 ай бұрын
We should stop sugar-coating comedy for the sake of someone's thin skin. One of the best qualities anyone could have is a good sense of humor, especially towards one's self. The "insult comedians" of the past, such as Don Rickles, were hilarious. Don Rickles was the master and everyone loved him. He poked fun at everyone as well as himself.
@MrKeychange8 ай бұрын
Excellent perspective. Also, the overlooked element is he wasn't put off by it. There was no judgement, no ick, no insecure projections. The scene ends with them all still hanging out. He had an immature/ inappropriate first response for sure, but his general nature was immediately inclusive.
@MrKeychange8 ай бұрын
@@kissmy_butt1302haha I'm a product of the East Village of NYC during its heyday. You're spot-on. I think what's missed now is that the key to everyone accepting each other is to have fun as a group and not be so uptight. I had all sorts of friends. It didn't occur to me to walk on egg shells or treat anyone differently. We're all people.
@whitejosh4448 ай бұрын
Thank you
@toodlescae8 ай бұрын
Reginald Vel Johnson (Gus the limo driver) played Carl Winslow in Family Matters. He also makes appearances in Ghostbusters as a cop and Die Hard as the cop Al who becomes friends with John McLane. The scene in the bar? First you're right it was the 80's. Second Mick is from a very small Australian town. How many cross-dressers or trans people do you think he's seen in Walkabout Creek? The man hasn't watched more tv than the intro to I Love Lucy in his life. He has no idea what's going on outside of his own remote area of Australia.
@vapoet8 ай бұрын
It's weird not to see him with a badge.
@Tconl8 ай бұрын
And if you are a guy pretending to be a woman unbeknownst to the other party you shouldnt be surprised when someone does something like this.
@vapoet8 ай бұрын
@@Tconl And if you do something like this, don't be surprised when you are convicted of sexual assault.
@Tconl8 ай бұрын
@@vapoet Lieing about your sexuality isn't good but assault is a bit pushing it.
@clevelandcbi7 ай бұрын
@@Tconl Yeah I'd feel 10x more assaulted if it touched an un-warned me in the dark. 🤣🤣🤣
@MasterKenobi18 ай бұрын
The first time I saw this decades ago I completely felt in love with Linda Kozlowski, she was beyond gorgeous
@Deathbird_Mitch8 ай бұрын
Someone described her as a cross between Sharon Stone and Meg Ryan.
@PhenomProductions-tn5fj7 ай бұрын
Sharon Stone was hotter imo
@-M0LE8 ай бұрын
The final subway scene is so wholesome and beautiful The director did a superb job throughout this movie
@maryrichardson13188 ай бұрын
Wally's hand gestures when he and Mick meet up are Wally's way of asking Mick if he "hit that".
@UtopiaBlue688 ай бұрын
And not in a violent kind of way either "for those who are unsure" in other words making out ... Lolz
@commanderkorra33168 ай бұрын
I don't understand how reactors keep missing that tbh.
@RVDDP25018 ай бұрын
Please react to Crocodile Dundee II, better than the first IMO
@DavidTennantforever8 ай бұрын
Just as I was telling my mum the difference between Alligators and Crocodiles, I got the notification for this video 😂😂😂
@Basedbeauty38 ай бұрын
HilArious
@alfredstimoli25908 ай бұрын
No alligators in Australia.
@jasonthompson16048 ай бұрын
One you see later, one you see in a while
@Basedbeauty38 ай бұрын
@@jasonthompson1604 hahaha , genius
@blakemcelrath548 ай бұрын
If you're offended by this movie you're the problem.
@TheCivicRepublicMilitary8 ай бұрын
You need to watch the second movie too
@clevelandcbi7 ай бұрын
Is the third worth a watch? Gave me bad vibes so I never gave it a shot.
@TheCivicRepublicMilitary7 ай бұрын
@@clevelandcbi same here
@clevelandcbi7 ай бұрын
@@TheCivicRepublicMilitary From reviews I've been reading, this seems to be a case of great minds thinking alike. Cheers 🥂
@LukasMoon918 ай бұрын
My guys, so many parts of the world are still SUPER conservative today! It totally makes sense that a man like him, who lives in a place like this, would be very confused by the western part of the world. I think the movie has a huge positive part filled with empathy and good messages. ❤☮
@ReelRejects8 ай бұрын
I would largely agree - it’s mainly the crotch grab / public humiliation that felt like it actively stepped OUTSIDE the overall sense of good nature (notably in the face of a new / different culture) that ties most of the rest of the movie together.
@cormaccurran99758 ай бұрын
Stop looking at films through woke eyes.respect old movies and don’t be shocked by them.
@TheFairyintheFishBowl8 ай бұрын
@@ReelRejectsI think he did that because a man dressed as a woman seemed absurd to him, so his response was equally so. Ultimately it was a man misleading him, so it was a fair response. Dundee is a man who understands the laws of nature, and the only way to put right in his mind what was going on was to check the sex of the person. It quickly cleared up his obvious confusion on what was happening. In his world, (the natural world), men are men, and women are women. The transvestite knew that he was naive and took advantage of that. There should be more empathy for Dundee - he was being taken advantage of - we seem to have lost sight of this reality. Im sorry this has happened to society, to men and women who were just minding their own business. I have lots of empathy for men in these situations. It isn’t fair at all.
@vilunar15988 ай бұрын
@@cormaccurran9975 Dude really?? It's not about being woke it's simply them expressing their uncomfortablity with people of a certain community being mistreated which is how it has been for years. I love the movie and aware he's ignorant but that shouldn't mean these guys should be allowed to feel about how he handled the situation
@clevelandcbi7 ай бұрын
^^^^^ It was definitely about being woke.
@CatchBackNewss8 ай бұрын
I get that times are different but you guys feeling untoward about Dundee's scenes with LGBT folk is very disheartening. He didn't show any malice or rude thoughts towards them. He just simply seemed confused and made sense of it how he could. I dont think he should be grabbing people either but his naivety is very telling in this movie. I hope you guys still liked the move!!
@clevelandcbi7 ай бұрын
Trying way too hard to hate on Dundee. That was embarrassing
@Mickey-19947 ай бұрын
Never expect common sense from woke liberals.
@JC-rb3hj8 ай бұрын
You guys, trigger after trigger after trigger. 😟😮😲
@AgtDaleChomsky8 ай бұрын
Any perceived prejudice in this film is from your perspective. You impute intention. The beauty of this film (why it's lasted) is in the fact that Mick isn't malicious. He's exploring, he's learning.
@timcarder21708 ай бұрын
From google/wikipedia: *"The bidet appears to have been an invention of French furniture makers in the late 17th century, although no exact date or inventor is known.* *The earliest written reference to the bidet is in 1726 in Italy."*
@nzstump01528 ай бұрын
The scene with the trans person was still a moral neutral for Dundee, the trans person was trying to get him to go back to her apartment an was hiding the the fact she was trans, he had every right to reject her publicly as she was trying to trick him publicly as well, he went to far, she knew she was potentially embarrassing him and he embarrassed her instead
@nzstump01528 ай бұрын
Tit for tat,
@Brianml778 ай бұрын
Hey, if you’re packing, you owe it to your potential date to be up front.
@TheFairyintheFishBowl8 ай бұрын
Exactly!
@TheStarcruiser4 ай бұрын
Too Right😂
@jasonfishell66388 ай бұрын
So glad you all got to this movie. Not just an amazing 80s film...it's an amazing film period. Favorite Australian...Wolverine himself, Hugh Jackman.
@StardustandMadness8 ай бұрын
Hugh and Deb used to have a property ten minutes from me. Not sure if they’ve sold it now they’ve split or if they will.
@Stogie21128 ай бұрын
39:52 "How are we going to handle this?" - Mick handled it with ease. 😆
@Lensmaster17 ай бұрын
I've seen several reactors recently who have a problem with the plot points where someone who is not married but in a dating relationship starts falling for someone else. But that happens all the time in real life. Someone is dating a person who's not really right for them and meets someone who is a better fit. You don't meet someone and that day decide that you must break up with your current relationship and start dating this person. Falling in love is a gradual thing. This movie is pretty realistic on that issue. She feels an attraction for Mick, but doesn't leave her boyfriend. She keeps emphasizing that she's in a relationship. She does kiss Mick spontaneously, but she doesn't sleep with him. That would be a conscious decision. Over time, she realizes that she does love Mick and not the other guy. It's not shown but insinuated that between the proposal and her going to the hotel to see Mick she had broke up with the boyfriend. I saw some other reactors watching The Wedding Singer getting upset that she was emotionally cheating on her boyfriend. No, she was falling in love and trying to figure out her emotions. If people are not allowed to experience their emotions, they're going to be stuck in unhappy relationships.
@RockPowerUSA8 ай бұрын
This movie was like this great ambassador for Australia to the United States at this time.
@jacob01Aus8 ай бұрын
You got quite an unrealistic view of Australia then
@Deathbird_Mitch8 ай бұрын
Yeah, this movie basically introduced Australia to the world. The Australian gov't based the next ten years of tourism adverts on this movie. That's one reason the Australians love this movie.
@RockPowerUSA8 ай бұрын
@@Deathbird_Mitch It's kind of amazing that Paul designed this. That was the key. This cool actor was actually the ambassador. This is what he wanted and he got it because of his charm.
@earthresident90228 ай бұрын
That's was handled completely correctly by Mick...haha u guys gotta be PC, he doesnt😂
@D.J.-8 ай бұрын
The fabric on the woman's outfit was literally just the alphabet. Each line was the next letter....ABCD...etc. A very 80's thing!
@greygorthegoateedgeek53508 ай бұрын
Personally I don't have a problem with laughing at scenes I find funny even while accepting attitudes have changed over time. I can host more than one idea at once.
@kingcalas2278 ай бұрын
“He’s dressed like thriller but it’s the bad video “ 😂😂
@ManChild19808 ай бұрын
The two main actors, Paul Hogan and Linda Kosawski are/were married in real life
@alickrozier37998 ай бұрын
Correction..... Got Married after this movie. And it is "Were" but not now. I knew thier was a 3rd Croc Dundee that was OK at the time, but in the last week found their IS a forth which is very recent. ` The Very Excellent Mr. Crocodile Dundee (2020) `.
@ManChild19808 ай бұрын
There is no correction to be made as we are not watching the movie in real time 🤣🤣🤣
@ManChild19808 ай бұрын
@@alickrozier3799 And that is not a fourth movie. It is a mock-umentary film with Paul Hogan playing a version of himself. Kind of like the recent Nic Cage film.
@nikkiplatt3168 ай бұрын
The bar scene is hilarious 😂.. it was a different time for sure, and it shows his ignorance to those things. We would never do something like that but he’s almost innocent about it.
@craiglee54608 ай бұрын
Totally. That scene could’ve been executed so much worse, but it was pretty chill considering the time it was made.
@joelk79238 ай бұрын
It wasn't just a different time, it was a *better* time.
@Rage_Harder_Then_Relax5 ай бұрын
Hardly. Not for me as a gay child/teenager
@TheStarcruiser4 ай бұрын
Well said!
@korybeavers65288 ай бұрын
There is nothing problematic about this movie, This is what it's like when you are naive and you learn about the world and you're honest about it. It feels like you want to be offended by something
@nochannel1q23218 ай бұрын
It'd be like finding someone smoking on a plane in the 1960s offensive because in the contemporary period it's completely absurd behavior.
@Mickey-19947 ай бұрын
They should've a problem with the man in the dress not telling Mick the truth.
@Rage_Harder_Then_Relax5 ай бұрын
@@Mickey-1994 Get over yourself. You are repeating yourself.
@Mickey-19945 ай бұрын
@@Rage_Harder_Then_Relax Don't get upset little lady.
@lizetteolsen32188 ай бұрын
Paul Hogan was a comedian before this movie happened. Came to entertainment later in life. He was a working class guy--think like Billy Connelly. Even during his interviews promoting the movie, he was very charming and quick wit. Very grounded. He and the lead actress actually got married and were together for decades. I think there is a sequel to this movie, but I never did catch it.
@Catdaddy19687 ай бұрын
What I find funny is people who wasn’t born in the 1980’s , judging 2024 standards to that timeframe, not saying the 1980’s had great standards but you shouldn’t judge “today’s standards” to something that happened 30, 40 or 50 years ago. What happens today may not be acceptable during the 1980’s the same as what happened in the 1940’s.
@MrPukestick8 ай бұрын
This takes me back. I just remember mum telling me how Paul Hogan left his wife for Linda Kozlowski, too young to understand she was berating them.
@joeykopack8 ай бұрын
People saying this movie does not hold up well, need to watch more reactions to this movie, the reactions I've seen to this movie, people love this movie and wish we would lighten up and make more movies like this, I saw one young woman say, this is the best Rom-Com ever!
@masamune29848 ай бұрын
I love you guys, but sometimes I wish you’d grow up, and realize not every cares about films being “dated.” It’s just a movie. What do you expect? Get out of your constantly-offended, “holier-than-thou” LA bubble: the real world is mature enough to handle random anachronisms; I wish you all were sometimes. Do you know what “jokes,” are, or does humor not exist in LA anymore? Rhetorical question..
@garysteinert80408 ай бұрын
US Navy stationed in NZ. Nothing like Australia.
@ReelRejects8 ай бұрын
What is the all-time greatest MOVIE KNIFE???
@J05H..8 ай бұрын
Ah awesome 🙌🏻 I loved this film as a kid…still do! You guys are doing some BANGING reactions 💪🏻
@parinthianquattropani90718 ай бұрын
Terminator 2. T-1000 and the foster father scene.
@Kaileigh_Broko8 ай бұрын
Rambo's knife is up there.
@misterray92038 ай бұрын
Night slasher knife from Cobra
@heathra688 ай бұрын
Rambo is definitely most iconic.
@richardb62608 ай бұрын
Kind of a Tarzan movie. The second half being "Tarzan's New York Adventure". Speaking of Tarzan, the most popular Tarzan, Johnny Weissmuller, also played a character called Jungle Jim in several films. Jungle Jim was originally a comic strip character that was created in the 1930s.
@MarcusSinclair28 ай бұрын
People weren’t so sensitive back in the day. Not like the pansies we have today.
@clevelandcbi7 ай бұрын
Exactly.
@Mickey-19947 ай бұрын
Very true and most millennials are not like these dips@its.
@jjrod29884 ай бұрын
Yeah, you should see how easy it is to trigger trumptards. All you gotta do a kneel down during an anthem.
@blacksheep_edge14128 ай бұрын
35:17 I'm not a New Yorker, but I can confirm for you that NYC still has a mounted police division that works Central Park. Lots of areas are not open to patrol cars, nor is it easy for officers on foot patrol to get around, just because the park is that big. So you still see horse riding cops as well as some cops being on bicycle.
@jaimeantoniomangune57938 ай бұрын
such a great film from the ‘80s 😀 please also watch: - last action hero (1993) - you don’t mess with the zohan (2008) - the hangover trilogy (2009-2013) - horrible bosses (2011) - horrible bosses 2 (2014) - point break (2015) - the magnificent seven (2016) - the vanishing of sidney hall (2017) - the kissing booth trilogy (2018-2021) - booksmart (2019)
@jamescurfman32848 ай бұрын
I would say watch the Original Version of The Magnificent Seven, first. That was a really good movie and there is GREAT REASON for it to get re-made for 2016.
@ScarlettM8 ай бұрын
59:45 - have you ever seen sheep dogs running over the backs of the sheep in a pen? That's why he did it, because the guy with the hat mentioned sheep.
@maryrichardson13188 ай бұрын
Now you must see the sequel.
@Catdaddy19688 ай бұрын
Love watching 90’s baby watching a 80’s movie, even though they wouldn’t survive the 80’s 😂😂😂😂
@ReelRejects7 ай бұрын
We’d just be different in the ‘80s. Obviously. Because it was a different time lol. Christ.
@Mickey-19947 ай бұрын
Older millennials love the 80s and we don't connect with these PC cupcakes.
@TheStarcruiser4 ай бұрын
Yep🤣
@jiminy13737 ай бұрын
I much prefer the honesty of the 80's, to the delusion bullshit of today. Problematic my arse.
@ReelRejects7 ай бұрын
It’s not a huge deal - it’s a product of its time, yes. If you can’t handle the simple acknowledgement of what has aged & how on a first time watch from 2024, I don’t know what to tell yaaaaaa
@poeslanding7 ай бұрын
It’s fine to be tolerant, as long as you’re not lying to somebody about what you are and trying to scam them like the first he/she did in the movie. It’s not offensive, it’s called comedy. Stop pushing all the BS segregation. People are laughing together. Unfortunately you younger generation have been conditioned to think everything’s offensive just about
@willythebluebear8 ай бұрын
European Gen-X here. The 80s were so much simpler... and people behaved better because otherwise they were checked immediately on the spot.
@adasga8 ай бұрын
Sue isn't cheating, she identifies as single.
@TheGodfather-bm3ow8 ай бұрын
Spoken from a woman's point of view smh.
@TheFairyintheFishBowl8 ай бұрын
Sue, your facetiousness seems to lost on some. Hilarious!
@leenorman8533 ай бұрын
I can't see how she was "cheating". Wouldn't cheating involve sex rather than just kissing? Surely she was just confused? Educate me please.
@JasonAkersMusic8 ай бұрын
Anyone else’s eyes roll in the back of their head listening to the discussion around the trans character? We get it, you’re very sensitive to the plight of the LGBTQIA+ community. No need to spend so long making us watch you self sooth from the trauma. It’s like a 40 year old film. Plus Mick has been shown to be cool with everyone in the film. I always took it like he’s literally never maybe even heard of such a thing in that small town and was kinda just astonished by the notion. Doesn’t mean he was a bigot. I bet if she had stayed, he would’ve talked to her, made a joke or two with his charm and buy her a drink. Maybe because I’m older and I was alive back then and I lived through all the changes in society that I understand more that although there has been hate, most people just are uncomfortable with things they don’t understand. They didn’t even touch on the whole AIDS thing. Lots of fear making people act awful bad back then. The stories I heard from gay friends in recovery in Boston when I went to school there were so sad. So many people died, and out of nowhere. No one knew what to do, or how to coup. Anyway, no hard feelings guys. I think that the majority of people understand there are gonna be things in old movies that aren’t cool today, and no one is gonna think you endorse that stuff just because it came up in a film you watched. The sequel to this is pretty good too. Very different type of dynamic, but still pretty good. Also, Paul and the lead actress married during the filming I think. They were married for a good long time.
@fester23068 ай бұрын
But if they don't virtue signal, how will they get their woke points?
@clevelandcbi7 ай бұрын
Ruined the entire reaction. Rolled my eyes all the way to Popcorn In Beds reaction. Best jump scare ever if you haven't seen it. At the croc, not the bulge.
@Mickey-19947 ай бұрын
They're pretty pathetic and the man in the dress should've been honest.
@TheStarcruiser4 ай бұрын
Overly sensitive this generation!
@Mickey-19944 ай бұрын
They're very soft like most libs.
@Rhymester21138 ай бұрын
The funniest part of the movie was the way they both reacted when Dundee touch his and her crutch. These days everyone is so sensitive and weak. No more jokes aloud. Grow some balls. It was the funniest part of the movie.
@ReelRejects8 ай бұрын
Yes lol. No more jokes allowed in the comedy we laughed at 90% of.
@juhagabrieltakkinen11318 ай бұрын
if you find anything in Dundee offensive then you are very much the problem with our current society. Now typically I love your reactions but this one is strike one on you, obviously I have no delusions as to that statement having any effect. But I do challenge you to take a look at your supposed offense taking view points. You cannot be offended by history looking at it from todyas cultural landscape because that is dishonest.
@ReelRejects8 ай бұрын
It was pretty much just the crotch grab / public humiliation moment that felt like it dipped momentarily out of the overall tone of good nature into something a bit meaner, perhaps uncalled for. Like in context of when it was made, I get this was just a “normal” kind of joke - and we acknowledge this in the reaction AND the review - but part of living with art is that times and context change & things can hit different in light of that. So in that sense, I don’t think it’s unfair in a First Time Reaction filmed in 2024 to acknowledge what might not have aged as well as most of the rest of what’s here. I think it’s silly to assert that you can ONLY watch an ‘80s move through the SPECIFIC lens of an ‘80s viewer and that’s the ONLY way to engage with art from that era (or whatever era it might be). And the irony is that, aside from that beat, we had a blast with the rest of the movie! Like, at NO point are we trying to “cancel” Dundee or remove the film from existence. I feel like we can hold two ideas in hand at once here?
@juhagabrieltakkinen11318 ай бұрын
Fair points all and I will concede I had a bit too much vitriol. However I still will argue this one point, first I will state that the joke itself was cringe af as it served zero purpose for the overall story and added no depth whatsoever to the character. So to my contention: the main character is shown to be a person from the outback totally disconnected from the modern world surrounded by gruff farmer and outdoors types with a fairly limited world view and knowledge. Then we are shown how Donk takes getting kissed by a man, even tho main character is supposedly his friend he is literally trying to knock him out cold. Now given that this is ever so quitley shown to be the typical response to anything out of the so called norm, when we are faced with the Gwendolyn scenario the audience is almost made to expect violent response. Yet that is not who Dundee is and having no clue how to approach the situation he goes for the grab. Whether or not it is a good move to go for, the character has no frame of reference as to how to act. And as for needing "specific" lenses to appreciate art that is not what I meant at all. I merely suggested that one cannot take normative standards from times past and judge them by todays standard, only to virtue signal. What can be done is to discuss the scene and try and understand the motivations thereof. In conclusion I do stand by my earlier statement of liking your channel and liking you all as reactioners, yet I can still find this type of virtue signaling massively obnoxious but as Ricky Gervais has said "Everyone is allowed to offend everyone and everyone is allowed to get offended". But I like your argument there and appreciate the response, thank you and I will keep enjoying your channel same as before. @@ReelRejects
@TheFairyintheFishBowl8 ай бұрын
@@ReelRejectsand what about poor Dundee buying drinks for someone and flirting with someone he had no idea was a man. When was he planning to tell him he was a man…? when he was naked in his bed??? But that’s okay??? Really??? Reverse the roles and make it a women who had been deceived and lied to by a man in whichever way …everyone would be up in arms. Not so? They would be cheering if the woman did what Dundee did to the perpetrator! Not so? I remember going out in the early 2000’s and a group of transvestites would always arrive at a certain point in the evening and zero in on drunk straight men. They told us in the bathroom they enjoyed messing with straight men in particular, it made them feel powerful - it was a game to them. They believed all straight men could be turned. I remember a drunk guy kissing one of them for hours - he had no idea. The look on his face when he found out was heartbreaking, he had literally been assaulted by those men. It was awful to see, and I will never forget how disgusting it was. Why are these poor men not protected!? That was assault pure and simple. Where do men go for help?? You have all been brainwashed, and I can’t believe that you can’t or won’t see this for what it is. You’re worried about the predator’s public humiliation instead - that’s how far we have deviated from the truth! Insane.
@leogem1777 ай бұрын
@@ReelRejects but you did really make an issue out of it and were quite demeaning rather than just comment how inappropriate and move on - his character is obviously unworldly and Gwendoline was tricking him. It wasn't saying this is what you should do in this situation it was a bit of an uncomfortable moment (and not just for these times! I remember watching it when I was a kid and feeling it was inappropriate but basically probably how he'd react) it was poking fun at his lack of worldlyness and rough, down to earth outback demeanour. I mean if I too was being picky you were poking fun of Australians a lot at the beginning (and even said something that sounded alot like Australia and New Zealand are the same thing!) - which could sound rather ignorant to people from that part of the world. No one is perfect!
@Mickey-19947 ай бұрын
@@ReelRejects The man in the dress should've been honest.
@jamesgreenhow1087 ай бұрын
CROCODILE DUNDEE 2 is twice the action, 2x the adventure, 2xthe romance and 10x the DANGER. The best sequel to any movie eve. But DUNDEE 2...May be the second best Australian movie ever. #1 QUIGLEY DOWN UNDER.
@davidbrown90157 ай бұрын
Many of us Aussies used to drink Fosters back in the 1970s & 1980s. I found it very similar to VB back when it was brewed here in by CUB. Carlton United Breweries. It has since changed and is brewed in different countries. From Wikipedia, "Foster's Group Pty. Ltd. was an Australian beer group with interests in brewing and soft drinks, known for Foster's Lager, now called Carlton & United Breweries since the company was renamed in 2011. Foster's was founded in 1888 in Melbourne, Victoria by two American brothers, who sold the brewery a year later. The company was renamed prior to sale to British-South African multinational SABMiller in 2011. Foster's wine business was split into a separate company, Treasury Wine Estates, in May 2011. In October 2016 Anheuser-Busch InBev acquired SABMiller, which ceased trading as a corporation, making the Foster's Group a direct subsidiary of the parent company. In June 2020, Carlton and United Breweries was sold to the Japanese beverage giant, Asahi Group Holdings."😎
@drewrayg8 ай бұрын
This is a classic 80’s film and I think it's charm holds up well. Just because things are a product of its time doesn't mean they handle things wrong; I would even argue that Dundee is a very progressive character. He's naive to life in the city but, he continues to grow throughout his experiences. He doesn't pass judgment on prostitutes, drug addicts, even the trans girl at the bar - he just didn't know not to grab someone's genitals. He even kisses the guy at the joint that makes him drop his beer. We don't know what we don't know - so given another month or two with meeting different types of people I have no doubt would be marching in pride parades.
@nochannel1q23218 ай бұрын
He's also not being racist. They stress over and over how isolated he's been in his life and how close he is to the Aboriginal people, including the friend specifically featured. Meaning he has like seen only white people or Aboriginal people and so when he's talking to the limo driver he's treating him the same way he'd treat anyone else and in his mind is probably going even further by asking questions about his relationship with society that would be entirely relevant if he were still in Australia. He likely wouldn't have realized there were people in the world with darker skin tones that weren't Aborginal.
@helenledwith70168 ай бұрын
I have to imagine that although she is clearly attracted to Mick, she is probably thinking that he will only be in NY for a little bit and then go back to the outback. It is only when she is faced with marriage and also seeing how Mick is affected that she decides to follow her heart.
@chrispile55538 ай бұрын
Fosters used to be Australia wide in the 90s. Now, it's an export product. We don't generally drink it here any more.
@farfaraway42857 ай бұрын
Definitely do the second movie, it’s also great, if not better.
@LarissaFay8 ай бұрын
I literally squealed seeing the thumbnail. Crocodile Dundee films are CLASSICS, such fun iconic films, all the fantastic memorable lines. Ahhhh ❤ Please please please have a reaction to 'Strictly Ballroom' It's a gorgeous film, maybe a Tara and Roxy reaction? Or John and Aaron? ❤
@StardustandMadness8 ай бұрын
Ohhh yes! Strictly Ballroom is one of my faves! And The Castle.
@rockwellknuckles94258 ай бұрын
It’s great when you two watch classic 80s/90s cult classics. Your perspectives together are hilarious.
@justonjenkins15898 ай бұрын
Calm down with the woke worries, Just enjoy the movie. People werent that broke up about it
@wipeout20987 ай бұрын
The reactors need to find their own impersonations of foreigners and their accents problematic next. ;)
@TheStarcruiser4 ай бұрын
100%👍
@joepowell70254 ай бұрын
Yes, a different time and a far better time.
@jetlee447 ай бұрын
It is 80's movie, 1986 to be exact
@samblustein19188 ай бұрын
I had the biggest crush on Linda Kozlowski growing up
@mrtim53638 ай бұрын
1. Richard had his eye on her father's newspaper empire more than on her. 2. Richards fate was sealed w/the crocodile incident & further confirmed by the, "That's not a knife" event... "Whenever I'm with you I feel safe"... It's not how manly he is. It's how he makes her feel. Richard never gave her that feeling & she likes it. & 3. Came of age in the 80's, They toned it (way) down for the film. Openly groped dance partners on the dance floor every weekend.
@StardustandMadness8 ай бұрын
I like your point about how she felt safe with Mick not being about how ‘manly’ he is. There are some men who just don’t make us feel that way. It’s not an actual ‘oh this guy is NOT going to attack me feeling’ or ‘my guy could beat any other guy to a pulp’, it’s so difficult to explain. It’s an emotional safety, I guess. Feeling free to be yourself without worrying he’ll walk out the door because you’re being open and honest with him.
@BobarissGish8 ай бұрын
You were definitely looking at this movie through a modern woke filter.
@nochannel1q23218 ай бұрын
I keep trying to get Casablanca cancelled because it has the nerve to show smoking. In a bar!
@mindyg70646 ай бұрын
Take note of the fact that, when showing the boat to Sue, Mick says things like 'the water was 20ft up the bank' and describes the croc in feet. This was done purely for the American audiences, because we don't use feet as a unit of measurement over here. It always sounds so jarring to me when I hear it- a true Aussie would have said: "The warta wuz farkin twenee meetas up th'bank!" 😆
@leenorman8533 ай бұрын
That's not true at all, but you're probably too young to remember. Australia only started to go metric in 1970, when the the Metric Conversion Act was passed. This movie was only made 10 years later, when many people were still thinking in Imperial because they had grown up with it.
@scottsheppard43328 ай бұрын
Nice one fellas ,,,, My last day of primary school back in 1986 , as a 12 year old we caught a bus into the city to watch this at the movies . Classic Aussie stuff
@emilysmith2598 ай бұрын
Also because you mentioned it made you uncomfortable, there are no scenes where Mick meets any LGTBQ+ individuals in the next movie. The plot does not involve a 'fish out of water' scenario like the first one. He's more or less adapted (in his own ways...) and the story goes somewhere else entirely. And it's a really good story so I highly recommend it! In the third movie - which is...ok. Not as good as the first two but still entertaining and a decent wrap to the story between Mick and Sue - Mick and a friend of his fresh from Australia accidently wander into a gay bar and quickly walk back out realizing their mistake. Mick takes a moment to explain the situation to his friend but does so with tact and respect - showing that he has grown quite a bit from his first days in New York. And it does make some sense (especially in the 80's) that a scene like that would be included. I mean how would someone who is completely sheltered from a modernized world handle a situation like that? In a bar in a modern city like New York, it's likely you'd come across someone with those characteristics. Clearly he didn't do it to be mean, he just didn't know and wanted to be sure. And it's that innocent naivety that makes him so charming and likable.
@MSinger44724 ай бұрын
Aaron quoting the Joker in the Dark Knight at the water buffalo scene took me out. People quoting that movie out of context is always so funny to me. Love that scene.
@hawkmaster3817 ай бұрын
Paul Hogan is a hilarious comedian from the 70's. He was Australia's equivalent to Benny Hill. Check out some of his funny videos here on KZbin!
@hellopaulie3 ай бұрын
This movie isn't at all problematic, it isn't dated in the least. Most people don't fall in line with the woke authoritarianism. You guys must live in an echo chamber. That transvestite was luring Mick to their place under false pretenses. Mick just wanted to know the truth; when he did, he just walked away and moved on. As should you.
@SRGots2 ай бұрын
My mom says the knife line every Thanksgiving when we're carving the turkey. 😂
@traydevon8 ай бұрын
Paul Hogan and Linda Kozlowski got married in 1990, four years after this movie. I'm sure they were probably fooling around when making Crocodile Dundee II (1988) since he divorced his previous wife in 1989. Hogan and Kozlowski actually stayed married for a long time; they divorced in 2014.
@charliemac64Ай бұрын
I was in the Navy when this came out, and I saw it in Perth, Australia in December 1986. That theater was rockin'. 😂😂😂 I knew of Hogan earlier than this movie through his syndicated-in-America TV show, "The Paul Hogan Show," produced in Australia. It was a sketch comedy kinda show, with a decidedly bizarre Australian bent. Most Americans didn't know who he was when this came out.
@michaelharris97608 ай бұрын
The best thing about this movie is knowing it led to a 24 year marriage in real life ❤️
@michele366188 ай бұрын
Their reaction is why we don’t have good movies anymore. Everyone feels guilty for laughing. Lighten up
@cormaccurran99758 ай бұрын
I agree with you and movies today are ruined with political correctness and I am really sick of it .i hope this wokeness ends because is ruining movies and shows and books
@commanderkorra33168 ай бұрын
I mean it's fine not to find something funny, but to be so sensitive to it sucks.
@cormaccurran99758 ай бұрын
I am sick of cancel culture .this film is amazing and Paul hogan ace and brilliant .I am sick how people react to films now it’s terrible.these two are examples of cancel culture with there shocked expressions.when I was growing up I was never shocked by the great movies I was looking at and was never thinking about political correctness.I wish I could go back to when nobody was shocked about movies and books.I want to see this culture war end I have al this political correctness.
@kristianeriksson58258 ай бұрын
A very rewatchable movie. The sequel is great too.
@itzbp99498 ай бұрын
You guys should definitely watch the sequel
@O.K.Beverly-zm2ks22 күн бұрын
Yall dont get that he was watching her because of the danger. She was acting badass and he was like..." yeah okay city girl." When folks are feeling themselves you just let them go and make sure they dont get hurt. He has to keep her alive its his job. These characters are real peop!e being portrayed not the over informed ignorant folks of today. This movie is much simpler than you are overanalyszing. Thats the appeal of the character and the series. When they overcomplicated the story the later movies got tired and just bad.
@ryanowen7527 ай бұрын
Fosters is DEFFIANTLY a American beer. we don't drink that here, we have a different beer for each state. ( For example in QLD it's XXXX Gold)
@berranari17 ай бұрын
XXXX is a great beer. XXXX gold is not as good. Fosters was Victorian, but I think it has been sold and was changed. It's true that people in Australia don't have Fosters Lager today, but it was around in the 1980s and through the 1990s.
@BigAl537507 ай бұрын
New Zealand is MUCH smaller than Australia, which is almost exactly the same size as the continental USA. NZ is about the same size as the UK. Very different countries. Kangaroos are so numerous in Australia that you have no hope of ever hunting them to extinction. To be fair, there are not very many idiots like those guys here. People who behave like that with guns get TOLD pretty damn firmly and soon.
@newton21058 ай бұрын
I remember my mom and aunt telling me they saw him at a restaurant one time in Carmel, California, and my aunt did an impersonation of the knife line out loud in the restaurant and his face turned bright red lol
@peternguyen82758 ай бұрын
FOSTERS is only an exported beer for international countries like England and USA. We dont drink it in Australia. It is not sold in Australia
@StardustandMadness8 ай бұрын
You can still get it but it’s not popular.
@berranari17 ай бұрын
This is true now, but back when they made the movie it was still popular in Australia. The product was changed and is not the same thing as it was which led to the Australian people no longer drinking it.
@carladams93458 ай бұрын
I've never seen anyone cry so much over the trans scene.
@LD_928 ай бұрын
Dude was upset for the rest of the movie cause of that 😂
@Rhymester21138 ай бұрын
I just shows how sensitive and weak society has become now. Him graping his crutch was the funniest part of the movie. But not these day. People are to sensitive these days. No jokes aloud.
@RandomNPC0018 ай бұрын
Dundee didn`t even do out of hate, just ignorance for a situation he never encountered before!
@bbbnnnlll8 ай бұрын
You seem to be pretty in your feelings about that.
@carladams93458 ай бұрын
@@bbbnnnlll ?
@carriesmith7428 ай бұрын
Best current Aussie on my list is Sarah Snook from Succession. LOVE HER! I LOVED this movie growing up! I STILL love it, despite what overly sensitive people may think. The sequel is just as good as the first, IMO.
@SimoExMachina27 ай бұрын
The sequel is equally good. I highly recommend it.
@maxpower71138 ай бұрын
"I see you've played Knifey-spoony before." Best joke to come out of this movie.
@virtuallyveronicka8 ай бұрын
So glad that you were able to see Mick Dundee in action, he’s such a lovable character. I recommend watching the 2nd film, you get more beautiful Australian outback. The 3rd film is meh, even Paul Hogan said it was a failed attempt. I’m glad these films exist, they are fun movies that take me back to growing up in the 80’s, and introduced me and a lot of others to the beauty of the Australian people and outback.
@jjkcharlie7 ай бұрын
"that mans a national treasure".
@ShoWulf8 ай бұрын
You guys missed the whole point of this romantic comedy taking two worlds and showing them both fall for the other in both their climates. Storytelling with a unique spin. That's not a highlight to you 2? In the age where everything is a remake or bland with hardly any creativity... Be more open minded with films before both of your births. Like think outside the box and stop feeling all censored. The more I listen to the review the more I want to click off. I'm sorry if you 2 really got that offended by one scene to be split on this. Weird. Still a classic tho. Good night y'all.