Check out my Western Playlist: kzbin.info/aero/PLQHhQlj8i5doFNPAVpvMK4x_0goHHNGHs Or Dollars Trilogy: kzbin.info/aero/PLQHhQlj8i5dph8lKnVDfDPmz05NfX4SEH
@e.d.20964 ай бұрын
@@jenmurrayxo Not a traditional western, PAINT YOUR WAGON. Gold rush comedy/musical/western. Clint Eastwood sings a love ballad! Where else are you going to see that!
@geraldmcboingboing74014 ай бұрын
One of my favorite John Wayne westerns is The Sons of Katie Elder (1965) and one of my favorite John Wayne non-westerns is Island in the Sky (1953). Great reaction as always, Jen!
@williambowman23264 ай бұрын
John Wayne was the biggest action , box office star of the post WW2 era. He is most associated with Westerns and war movies but he made one of the great romance movies that was the best loving tribute to the romanticized Ireland, The Quiet Man
@PsychedelicChameleon4 ай бұрын
There is a sequel, also starring John Wayne, called "Rooster Cogburn", but most people don't like it.
@toyota420xp4 ай бұрын
Wished you would have watvhed the new true gritt
@michaeltrueblood25454 ай бұрын
"The Shootist" Absolutely
@davidrichards65094 ай бұрын
The Shootist was John Wayne's last movie and EVERYONE on the set EXCEPT John Wayne KNEW at the time it was his last movie. Ron Howard is fond of telling the story of his time with John Wayne making this movie. Opey has said that everyone seemed terrified of John Wayne but he approached him meekly and humbly asking if the great cowboy movie star would help him practice some lines. Apparently John Wayne took an immediate liking to the polite and repsectfully reverent "kid" and would often express his desire to make another movie together.
@melenatorr4 ай бұрын
The book is good, too.
@bazkeen4 ай бұрын
Definitely. One of my favourite John Wayne movies 👍🏻👍🏻
@thomast85394 ай бұрын
Could not agree more, but she should probably watch a few more westerns before watching Wayne in his swansong role.
@neilmcdonald91644 ай бұрын
So often famous actors end on a bad film...thankfully JW didn't.🎩
@Paul-lf1bq4 ай бұрын
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence is my favourite
@andrewgrossman49824 ай бұрын
SAME! What a terrific film.
@chrpike14 ай бұрын
Excellent western. You can’t lose with Jimmy Stewart.
@william1611youtube4 ай бұрын
YES! I forgot to mention that in my earlier comment. Wayne & Jimmy Stewart were magic together, and Lee Marvin was (IMHO) the most hateful villain in any western ever made.
@RetiredSailor604 ай бұрын
Add Donovan's Reef to your list. It's not a western, but still a fun movie
@melenatorr4 ай бұрын
And I'll add "The Quiet Man".
@chrisl98134 ай бұрын
While you can't go wrong watching True Grit as your 1st John Wayne movie, I have to say The Cowboys remains my favorite and is a must watch for any fan...
@thomast85394 ай бұрын
I agree. I love the writing and Wayne's acting in True Grit, but sometimes Mattie being so strong-willed, is just too much for me. I think The Cowboys is one of Wayne's top 5 westerns along with The Shootist, Rio Bravo, She Wore A Yellow Ribbon and North To Alaska. I guess it just depends on what role his fans want to see from him because many many really like Liberty Valance and The Searchers, but for me, neither of those great films are part of his top 5 westerns. I think Wayne is just too 2 dimensional in those roles, whereas he really comes to life in the 5 I've chosen.
@scottjo634 ай бұрын
But don't watch it too soon. Watch a few other John Wayne movies before watching The Cowboys. Reason, Bruce Dern. He became the most hated actor ever for playing the bad guy.
@alancockrell60024 ай бұрын
John Wayne's best movie is The Quiet Man.
@jacobjones52694 ай бұрын
The Searchers is the great American film, Jen.. And the Duke as Ethan Edwards is quite possibly the greatest performance of all time.. I recommend it highly..
@Dillpicks954 ай бұрын
One of the best Westerns ever. John Wayne’s performance was fantastic, he even won an Oscar for his role in this and definitely check out the remake.
@joelwillems40814 ай бұрын
@@cvonbarron His character was written that way.
@andrewpetik20344 ай бұрын
This is one of my mom's favorites....
@VorchaKali4 ай бұрын
My personal favorite John Wayne flick is BIG JAKE but this one is very good as well.
@NecramoniumVideo4 ай бұрын
The remake is not bad as well.
@CollideFan14 ай бұрын
He should have got an Oscar from his better Westerns, Red River and The Searchers which Jen should watch
@johnduncan67604 ай бұрын
Several years back I went on a few dates with Kim Darby who played Maddie. She told me a few stories of this movie. She was an 18 year old at the time with a baby. Wayne would come over and cook for her during the shoot. Also Glan Campbell used to sing for the group on the bus over to the location.
@3dbadboy14 ай бұрын
The Texas ranger was Glen Campbell, who was quite a singer in his time, and he sang the opening song.
@RetroClassic664 ай бұрын
12:55 This was filmed in Ouray County, Colorado, both in and near the town of Ridgway.
@Majoofi4 ай бұрын
Even though Rooster is known to have True Grit, it's really Mattie who has the Grit.
@touriewright54284 ай бұрын
Awesome reaction as usual :) Yes John Wayne did do other character types but is best know for westerns some of my favorites are Big Jake, McClintock, Rio Bravo (1959) and 7yrs later made a similar movie called El Dorado ((1966) both are fun, the Sons of Katie Elder which I put in the Mother's Day category and one of my all time favorites is The Quiet Man. Him and Maureen O'hara did a few films together and they certainly had very good chemistry.
@tackysum4 ай бұрын
Saw this movie in the theater with my mom and aunt when I was a kid and loved it. The audience actually applauded at the end. The character of Rooster is very different from the western roles that "Duke" typically played which was strong, no nonsense, and typically in his westerns a loner who got the girl in the end (sometimes). He got his start making films in westerns but also played modern day roles, particularly WW2 era films. Some of my favorites: Stagecoach, Rio Bravo, Red River, In Harm's Way, Back to Bataan, McClintock, The Quiet Man, The Searchers and his final film The Shootist. Hard to believe but the man appeared in over 200 movies in his long career. You should definitely check out the remake with Jeff Bridges and Hailee Steinfeld (she does a better job portraying Maddie IMO).
@williampage6224 ай бұрын
My great grandfather was a deputy federal marshal who worked for Judge Parker. Listen to Rooster’s cats name, Sterling Price, my great grandfather was Sterling Price MacLaughlen.
@vermithax4 ай бұрын
"My grandpa used to do that!" This confirms Jen was raised in an old timey cabin the woods.
@OhArchie4 ай бұрын
Now you need to watch "Rooster Cogburn", with John Wayne and the legendary Katherine Hepburn.
@edwardleonetti24924 ай бұрын
"Sheriff, Mr. Cogburn!"
@BulldogMack700rs4 ай бұрын
Awesome the Rooster Cogburn that doesn't mumble all the way through the movie lol, hopefully this is the start of a long beautiful journey. The Cowboys and The Shootist are magnificent.
@randy78314 ай бұрын
watching this brought back so many memories of watching John Wayne movies with my dad. The Duke was my dad's favourite actor and over the years I bought him more than 100 of his movies on dvd and vhs and we watched them all, some quite often. miss you dad.
@brockmiller5744 ай бұрын
I love the language in this film. It's brilliant.
@danielgibson79484 ай бұрын
I loved to watch John Wayne movies with my Grandpa. This, the sequel Rooster Cogburn, and McKlintock are my favorites.
@njw58694 ай бұрын
“Quigley down under “ is a great “western “ with Tom Selleck . I think you would love it .
@mcgilj14 ай бұрын
I do love the reveal of Lawyer Daggett, aka "Piglet". I can never unhear it and wouldn't have it any other way.
@thomast85394 ай бұрын
She draws him like a gun.
@scottjo634 ай бұрын
Juror #1
@thomast85394 ай бұрын
Jen, I heard your comments about Clint's stoicism in his westerns. I heartily agree, but you need to see him in Two Mules For Sister Sara, Joe Kidd and especially The Outlaw Josey Wales. That will give you a more rounded opinion on Clint's characters in his earlier westerns. Some will tell you to also check him out with Lee Marvin in Paint Your Wagon. I suppose you should watch that one as well, but I would save it for a rainy day. It isn't quite the usual fare for either actor or for those that really like westerns.
@Kd_95624 ай бұрын
John Wayne was my grandfather’s favorite and this was one of his favorites of Wayne. I recommend El Dorado, Rio Bravo, Mcklintock, Big Jake, The Man who Shot Liberty Valance, and Stagecoach
@nealsterling81514 ай бұрын
I grew up watching these movies and i still love them!
@g.docswift92924 ай бұрын
You should watch Rio Bravo. Best movie ever. The Quiet Man is also a must-see, if you want to see the Duke in a wildly different sort of role.
@ashleywetherall4 ай бұрын
Wayne got his Oscar for this film. But he really should have gotten it 14 years earlier for The Searchers. The Remake of True Grit is excellent but has a very different tone. For John Wayne movie's I would also recommend The Cowboys and Red River.
@williambowman23264 ай бұрын
All good movies. My parents told me that he should have won for The Sands Of Iwo Jima. That’s the Wayne blockbuster that resonated with the post war audience.
@melenatorr4 ай бұрын
Possibly, plotwise, the newer one is closer to the book; but the book has a wry, dry, wise humor that the newer version lacks; there's humor here, which I like. It isn't the book's humor, but that kind is almost strictly the kind that only fits in the intimacy between the book and the reader. The rather stylized dialogue we have here is an echo of the book. I like both movie versions, and the book as well.
@thomast85394 ай бұрын
I respectfully disagree. His character in The Searchers is too rough and stern throughout the whole damn film. We don't get to know why Uncle Ethan was such a hard man at all, only that he was and we just had to accept it. SPOILER ALERT (kinda) I understand there is a allusion to Ethan having loved a woman that didn't become his wife, but we never fully know if that is true or the main reason for him being such a grump. At least with Rooster, we learn all we need to know from his own mouth and his actions. Plus, Rooster was a very funny man and caring as well, even though he could be just as tough or good with firearms as Uncle Ethan. BTW, wholly agree with you about True Grit remake and The Cowboys. One more thing, and I know it may be hard to hear, but Giant was a better western with a better story than The Searchers and it deserved its Oscar nomination that year.
@williambowman23264 ай бұрын
@@thomast8539 Giant is a great film and is unjustly overlooked by so many and may be the best George Stevens movie( and that’s saying something) But I don’t recall anyone classifying it as a Western. I am a Texan and for the Baby Boomers and parents, it was the movie about the “ modern” Texas and its rise to national and international influence. It has many elements of a classic American Western. Interesting thought. BTW it’s much better than 80 Days , the 1956 Oscar winner .
@thomast85394 ай бұрын
@@williambowman2326 I get what you are saying, and others have said similar things, but I don't think that westerns just have to be about stories before the frontier closed. After all, Big Jake, The Shootist, Tom Horn and The Wild Bunch all take place after 1900 when the frontier had been closed for a decade. Plus, even The Life & Times of Judge Roy Bean starts before 1900, but ends well after that, when oil is booming, just as oil plays a huge role in Giant. But, again, a lot of purists have their idea of westerns and I get that.
@benwerling28434 ай бұрын
The music for this was composed by Elmer Bernstein, who also composed music for The Great Escape, The Magnificent 7, and even Stripes! He's one of the Greats, like Jerry Goldsmith, whom I know you love and appreciate.
@robphillips17974 ай бұрын
John Wayne was mostly a western star, but you would love The Quiet Man, which is an Irish love story.
@harveylee514 ай бұрын
@robphillips The Quiet Man was director John Ford's tribute to his own Irish heritage and John Wayne had some Irish ancestry as well , it plays every St Patrick's day 🍀 True Grit use to play all the time as well when i finally watched it all the way through i did really enjoy it .
@robphillips17974 ай бұрын
@harveylee51 Thanks for the info! I didn't mention any of John Wayne's war movies or The Conquerer, because they aren't as popular. What do you think of Rio Bravo? I love it, but I'm kind of an old square.
@Impeach444 ай бұрын
Hataryi 👍
@BulldogMack700rs4 ай бұрын
@@robphillips1797 Victor McLaglin was awesome and in a bunch of John Ford westerns opposite the Duke, a very interesting man in his own right.
@christianemden76374 ай бұрын
I wholeheartedly agree that Jen would love the quiet man.
@mlong19584 ай бұрын
The second one, "Rooster Cogburn" is fantastic as well.
@ChrisReise4 ай бұрын
25:42 I didn't realize how many "Star Trek" guest stars there were in this film. Maddy was Miri, the lawyer who was yelling at Rooster before he met Maddy was the husband who protected the salt vampire in "The Man Trap", this guy here who opened the door played one of the Earps in "Spectre of the Gun" and you are about to meet Maddy's lawyer, Dagget, who played that one examiner guy in "Wolf in the Fold".
@jsharp31654 ай бұрын
And Tom Chaney is played by Jeff Corey, who was the leader of 'The Cloud Minders'.
@Turok2794 ай бұрын
It’s hard to appreciate how big a star he was back in the day. But for over forty years he was considered the manliest movie star . Around 1940 to 1980. He was in over 150 movies , most of them westerns. A few great ones include El Dorado , 1966 ,The Cowboys , 1972 , Big Jake , 1971. These and many more you would enjoy.
@willardchi25714 ай бұрын
He also played a wide variety of other roles: WWII soldier, detective, ship and ferry boat captain--and once (thankfully) even laughably miscast as Genghis Khan.
@Gutslinger2 ай бұрын
150?! I was just thinking about how I would like to buy all the John Wayne movies that I can on blu-ray. I won't be able to do that with 150 of them. Lol
@beatmet23554 ай бұрын
I once spent the night where this film was shot in CO. Beautiful country. The log they sat on by the creek was still there and it was also where the showdown at the end happened.
@AlbertHuebsch4 ай бұрын
John Wayne did a lot of westerns. He also did a lot of war movies but these weren't his only types of roles. He played a cop in several movies. He played an African big game hunter in the movie Harari. He also played a fire fighter who specialized if fighting oil rig fires. He has also played a lawyer in at least one movie. He also played a retired boxer who moved back to his native Ireland in a movie Called The Quiet Man (my favorite John Wayne movie of all time by the way. Out of all of the roles he played however the one that was the greatest stretch for him acting talent wise was playing Genghis Khan in the movie The Conqueror.
@catherinelw93654 ай бұрын
Lonesome Dove, a tv miniseries, is the quintessential American western (Starring Robert Duvall). Enjoyed your reaction! This and The Quiet Man are my favorite John Wayne films. The Quiet Man is a departure from westerns. Wayne plays an Irish-American who goes back to Ireland. Directed by John Ford, who did westerns, it was filmed on location with beautiful cinematography of the Irish countryside.
@willardchi25714 ай бұрын
"Lonesome Dove" is one of the greatest westerns. "The Quiet Man" was a snoozefest. I hated it.
@Gutslinger2 ай бұрын
I just looked up Lonesome Dove and saw that it's from 1989, and Duvall looks old in it, especially compared to True Grit. Blows my mind how he could look that old back then, before I was born, and he's still alive today, 35 years later. Man has been blessed with long life, like Eastwood and Gene Hackman.
@richcarrCCC4 ай бұрын
That was no stunt double jumpin' that fence in the closing scene. God how I loved John Wayne, like so many, I so wanted him as my father seeing as I didn't have one.. True Grit sits alone in cement atop my list of favorite westerns just above the tie for 2nd between Silverado and Tombstone. God bless Marion "The Duke" Morrison may he rest in splendor and the joy he deserves.
@mcgilj14 ай бұрын
Great Western of which Wayne was in many.. The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence, Rio Bravo, The Sons of Katie Elder, El Dorado, The Shootist (another stand out performance), and The Cowboys. For a non Western check out The Quiet Man a gentle romantic comedy drama with the fiery Maureen O'Hara.
@JosephStanley-w8c4 ай бұрын
After more the 100 movies, he won an Oscar. At his acceptance speech, he said if he had known, getting over weight, playing a drunk and putting a patch on his eye would get him an Oscar. He would have done it 40 years earlier. Check out his "Quiet Man" for a romantic comedy.
@xortab4 ай бұрын
"Rio Bravo" (1959) is by far my favorite John Wayne film. It's especially good if you want to hear great music and singing. The legendary western character actor, Walter Brennan, is at the top of his game in this role.
@OldWestGunslinger-vs9mx4 ай бұрын
John Wayne heroes (with some exceptions such as his characters in The Searchers and Red River) are excellent examples of positive masculinity. He can be stoic and gruff but typically only when the occasion calls for it. Most of the time he is good natured and has a soft place for people in need. He is tough without being heartless. He may not always be in command of the situation, but he's usually in command of himself. Ultimately the main difference between a John Wayne hero and a Clint Eastwood hero is you must peel away the layers to see Clint's heart of gold where as the Duke's heart of gold is readily available to all but his enemies.
@Adam_Le-Roi_Davis.4 ай бұрын
Great reaction, Jen, thank you. There's a follow up to this film with John Wayne, "Rooster Cogburn" 1975 which is well worth reacting to. Other John Wayne Westerns I recommend are: "Stagecoach" 1939, "Fort Apache" 1948, "Rio Grande" 1950, "The Searchers" 1956, "Rio Bravo" 1959, "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance" 1962, "How The West Was Won" 1962, "McLintock" 1963, "The Sons of Katie Elder" 1965, "El Dorado" 1966, "The Shootist" 1976. John Wayne's non Westerns: "They Were Expendable" 1945, "The Sands of Iwo Jima" 1949, "The Quiet Man" 1952, "The Longest Day" 1962, "In Harm's Way" 1965. There are many more by him but these are the ones that I suggest as his best, Jen.
@jbdragon32954 ай бұрын
I like The War Wagon also. Ya, Rio Bravo is good. The Sons of Katie Elder is really good. It's a good list. El Dorado. I've seen these many times and the others also.
@Adam_Le-Roi_Davis.4 ай бұрын
@@jbdragon3295 Yes, War Wagon is another great one, he did so many it's difficult to narrow them down.
@mikemartin80884 ай бұрын
Great list! I would add Flying Leathernecks a good one for 1951.
@Adam_Le-Roi_Davis.4 ай бұрын
@@mikemartin8088 Thank you. Yes, another good one, he did a lot of great films, it's hard to think of them all.
@mazza41904 ай бұрын
The Man Who Shot Liberty Vallance. John Wayne, Lee Marvin, James Stewart and a young Lee Van Cleef.
@GeorgiusAgricola-pn4cr4 ай бұрын
I love Lee Van Cleef! He was so bad in the 'The Good, the Bad and the Ugly,' especially when he shot the bedridden guy through the pillow and chuckled. But his biggest opponent had to be 'The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms' which he dispatched from atop the roller coaster.
@andrewgrossman49824 ай бұрын
@@GeorgiusAgricola-pn4cr I feel like he's been in half the Westerns I've seen. His start was in High Noon.
@andrewgrossman49824 ай бұрын
Yep. my favorite Western. The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance also kinda goes beyond just being a Western, too.
@RobertStallings-kx5ug4 ай бұрын
and Strother Martin (who also appeared in True Grit)
@cesarsobrino73984 ай бұрын
Great reaction. Other J Wayne's westerns that deserve to be watched are The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, The Searchers, Rio Bravo, The Undefeated, and El Dorado
@brossjackson4 ай бұрын
John Wayne recs: The Quiet Man (not a western), The Searchers, Stagecoach, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, Rio Bravo.
@willardchi25712 ай бұрын
Quiet Man and Liberty Valance were snooze fests. And stagecoach, both the original and remake, also bored me.
@jackmessick28694 ай бұрын
Other great John Wayne westerns: Stagecoach Red River The Searchers Hondo El Dorado The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance He also performed in a "Cavalry Trilogy" in the late 1940s and 1950s. All worth watching. The Coen Brothers remade True Grit in 2010. Hailey Stanfield did a great job in it as the orphaned daughter.
@dirtygrunt4 ай бұрын
My favorite John Wayne westerns are Big Jake and his final film The Shootist.
@eknapp494 ай бұрын
To the recommended John Wayne list that is developing here, I would add the three movies of the so called “cavalry trilogy;” “Fort Apache,” “She Wore a Yellow Ribbon,” and “Rio Grande.”
@HankD134 ай бұрын
Always loved John Wayne. My dad has a blurry photo of him having a drink (in a crowd) with John Wayne from 1962 when he was at the Norfolk Hotel in Nairobi. He was there filming "Harari!".
@guitarbo14 ай бұрын
I'm afraid I always get teared up getting to the last scene "Come and see a fat old man sometime!" I used to have a good old friend/coworker named Joe in Orlando, FL. that was a lot like Rooster. We had a lot of good times before he passed away 🍺
@Bill-v6f4 ай бұрын
The actor that played Tom Chaney was the head administrator in the episode , the Cloud Minders
@jeffthompson96224 ай бұрын
If I remember correctly, Jen, Kim Darby was 21 when she played the 14 year old Mattie Ross. Hailey Steinfeld was about a year younger than the character in the later film based on the same book by James Portis.
@RobertStallings-kx5ug4 ай бұрын
Kim Darby got her start in television (including playing the title role in a 1966 Star Trek episode). en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miri_(Star_Trek:_The_Original_Series)
@jarrodnewman05144 ай бұрын
Alright... a little True Grit trivia... Kim Darby was on her first marriage while filming in 1968. She divorced in 1969. She was married a year later in 1970. It, too, was a short lived marriage...divorced in the same year. She had one child with the former husband. Glen Campbell wasn't the first choice to play La Boeuf. Elvis Presley was first pick but his casting agent wanted him to have top billing over John Wayne...which the producers declined. So Glen Campbell got the part. R.I.P. Rhinestone Cowboy. John Wayne did his own stunt jumping the fence at the end of the film. It was an unscripted act. Not bad for having one lung. His left lung had been surgically removed in 1964 due to cancer. He still played Rooster in the film sequel 5 years later. But due to failing health issues, was not able to play Rooster a third time for the made-for-TV film in 1978. He died on 11th of June, 1979.
@thomast85394 ай бұрын
I thought it was always Colonel Parker that blew Elvis' chance to be with the Duke in this film. Either way, its a damn shame because Elvis woulda been good here. Nothing wrong with Glen Campbell, but Elvis could actually act when he wanted to and I think he woulda stepped up his game for the role. Top billing always seems like such a stupid thing to lose a film over.
@theaikidoka4 ай бұрын
I was born in 1980 and first started watching this movie on VHS in the early 90's. Back then I thought it was a great adventure movie, but as I got older I started to enjoy different characters for different reasons. Rooster is capable and relentless, La Boeuf is a braggart but true-hearted and funny, and Maddie is smart and resourceful. I think watching the remake soon would be an excellent idea, not just because it's an outstanding movie, but to compare the differnt approaches while you still remember the first.
@robertritchie88294 ай бұрын
There's something inviting about westerns, everything's so bright especially when you're used to living under rain most of the time. I barely recognised Robert Duvall, never seen him that young.
@LoneWolf-k1m4 ай бұрын
I didn't see anyone else answer the question "What's that on the horse?" Sweat Horses will overheat if run too hard and too long. If a rider pushes hard enough they die of heart failure. Rooster road the horse to death to save the girl. Extreme since back then they were worth a lot of money but is was either her or the animal.
@catherinelw93654 ай бұрын
One thing that bothered me is why didn't he get another horse so each had a ride? When he killed Ned Pepper, Pepper's horse was just standing there, next to his body.
@geoffsamuels51974 ай бұрын
The Quiet Man is a must see for John Wayne. As is Rio Bravo, The Searchers, The Longest Day, Stage Coach and The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.
@LoneWolf-k1m4 ай бұрын
One big difference you will see between the spaghetti westerns is the way violence is shown. A lot of JW's movies were shot under the Hays Code so you don't see a lot of blood, torture, or seeing the gunshot and the person hit in the same frame. Also I loved the way language was used in this movie. On the surface it looks like just some big words. But unlike modern storytelling where we use a lot of slang and words with many different connotations, the words weren't so much big or fancy but very unambiguous. No "You better watch out," or "I'll get you one way or another" or "I'll F^&* you up". There was not a lot of ways you could misunderstand "I mean to kill you in one minute, Ned. Or see you hanged in Fort Smith at Judge Parker's convenience. Which will you have?" Also, it was the word "Hanged", not "Hung". I don't think a lot of people today know the difference.
@Gutslinger2 ай бұрын
Big words? I don't see no big words. Those are just plain statements. And what's the difference between those last two words?
@stefanfalke80414 ай бұрын
Here are a few more movies The Duke made which are really excellent not all are westerns but you will love them all, "The Searchers, Rio Bravo, Stagecoach, Reap the wilde wind, flying Tigers, The were expendable, Red River, Fort Apache, She wore a yellow Ribbon, the fighting kentuckian, 3 Godfathers, Sands of Iwo Jima, Flying Leathernecks, Rio Grande, The Quiet man, Hondo, The Conqueror, The Barbarian and the Geisha, The Alamo, Wagon Train, The Commancheros, McLintock, The Sons of Katie Elder, The War Wagon, Hellfighters, The Undefeated, Chisum, and Rio Lobo.
@truthguide17424 ай бұрын
John Wayne did primarily Westerns including US Cavalry Fort Apache, Rio Grande, She Wore A Yellow Ribbon. His second most movie genre was military. Such as In Harm's Way, Green Berets, The Sands of Iwo Jima, Horse Soldiers, The Flying Leathernecks, The Longest Day, and plenty more. He played an oil well firefighter in Hell Fighters. Other parts he played a private detective, American boxer of Irish descent who returned to Ireland The Quiet Man. The Duke's films are a deep dive into a rabbit hole.
@bigalthetank4 ай бұрын
For more John Wayne: Big Jake, The Sons of Katie Elder, The Quiet Man, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, Rio Bravo. All great!
@socalpaul4874 ай бұрын
"Rooster Cogburn", "The Cowboys", "The Shootist", "Big Jake", "Rio Bravo", "El Dorado" are great JW movies. Other westerns "Shane", "Pale Rider", "Quigley, Down Under", "Open Range", "Lonesome Dove", "The Magnificent Seven" 1960, "Little Big Man", "The Outlaw Josie Wales", "Silverado", "Support Your Local Sheriff"
@seantlewis3764 ай бұрын
In 1969, True Grit was intended to be John Wayne's swan song, but he made a few more movies in the early 1970s. His real swan song was The Shootist in 1976. It was the absolute best "farewell" any legendary actor could give. He knew he was dying at the time, and poured everything he had into it. After seeing this movie, I read the novel. One of the great things about this is that even though the novel was written in the 1960s, the language of all of it is phrased in the ways that novels of the late 1800s were written in the time. Glendon Swarthout did a great job with it, and the film adaptation was very accurate to the book.
@ianbuckley23474 ай бұрын
These scene where Rooster faces off with the four bad guys on the plain is one of my favourites in all of cinema. I get chills when he puts the reigns in his mouth and gallops towards them all guns blazing. Brilliant. Great reaction as always Jen. Glad you liked it and I'd love you to react to some other classic westerns.👍
@kevinlewallen47784 ай бұрын
Hi, Jen. Elmer Bernstein wrote a bunch of excellent film scores. I believe he studied with Aaron Copland. This film is a classic.
@3dbadboy14 ай бұрын
He did The Great Escape and The Magnificent Seven.
@ConstantineFurman4 ай бұрын
Harold Ramis once told Bernstein that his score for "Ghostbusters" was better than the movie deserved.
@MGower44654 ай бұрын
6:02 Actually, in the time this movie is set, dinner and supper were different things, not two words for the same thing. Both refer to the evening meal. A dinner is often heavier fare and served very shortly after the end of the workday. Eating earlier provides time for digestion before turning in. Supper is served much later in the evening, and consists of lighter fare as a concession to the eater turning in comparatively soon after.
@JamesLachowsky4 ай бұрын
I was born and raised in Arkansas as was the author of True Grit, Charles Portis. I can tell you that we ate breakfast first thing in the morning, then dinner at noontime and supper in the evening. Dinner was generally the main meal of the day.
@scottjo634 ай бұрын
19:16 this scene I recall way back when, everyone in the theater applauded. Her character was so well hated back in the day.
@georgeplimpton94294 ай бұрын
I saw this in the theater when I was 9 years old. My favorite John Wayne movie. It took 55 years before I found out what he meant by keeping one chamber empty so he won't shoot his own foot off. Since the hammer on that type of pistol rests right on the back of a bullet when it's not cocked, they leave one empty while carrying it, and have THAT chamber be the one under the hammer while walking around or riding their horse, because if it's ON a live round, being hit or dropped CAN make it fire. And you don't want it firing when it's pointed at your own foot. 🤣 They call it "the cowboy load."
@kellahella52864 ай бұрын
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.
@lynnturman81574 ай бұрын
John Wayne was in a lot of different kinds of movies but his westerns were his most popular. He was also in a lot of WW2 movies that were very popular in their day.
@antoniolugo374 ай бұрын
The Searchers, Red river, 3 Godfathers, She wore a yellow ribbon, there are many John Wayne western movies you must watch
@DoerOfThings84 ай бұрын
The best western ever is a miniseries starring Robert Duvall, Tommy Lee Jones, and Danny Glover, called "Lonesome Dove". Well worth a watch if you'd like to try a different kind of western with some truly iconic actors and characters and tons of heart.
@janescribner82584 ай бұрын
Speaking of Robert Duvall, he portrays Lucky Ned Pepper in True Grit! Lonesome Dove is a masterpiece.
@cliffgraham98924 ай бұрын
John Wayne did a little bit of everything - Hatari (a romatic comedy), Trouble along the way (sports), Tycoon (action) without reservations (screwball comedy in the vein of it happened one night), the three godfathers (christmas), Island in the Sky & the high and the mighty (disaster movies in Airport category), legend of the lost (sort of an Indy Jones type), the barbarian and the Geisha (true story of teh first US ambassador to Japan), Brannigan and McQ (dirty Harry), Blood Alley (sort of an African Queen type). but his impact goes way beyond his acting. Wayne was the first actor to start his own production company to find and develop material. He is in the stuntman hall of fame for developing most the techiniques they still use to film fight scenes. And he was the first major star to go public with his health issues using it to raise awareness about Cancer. He in fact coined the term "the Big C" to refer to it.
@ChicagoDB4 ай бұрын
The remake is actually pretty good also…which is rare nowadays.
@OptimusPrime754 ай бұрын
@@cvonbarron The remake was closer to the story in the 1968 novel. But not superior.
@JamesLachowsky4 ай бұрын
At least the remake didn't make the Oklahoma hills look like the Rocky Mountains.
@FJB9654 ай бұрын
The remake SUCKS!!@
@mattb89614 ай бұрын
@@OptimusPrime75 Everyone says it’s closer to the story but it’s not. The only thing the original gets right is Mattie losing her arm and the final shootout. A lot of the scenes and dialogue in this one is way closer to the book than the remake.
@marieoleary5274 ай бұрын
Other John Wayne classics: Red River; the Searchers; The 3 Godfathers; The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance; She Wore Yellow Ribbon; Shepherd of The Hills; The Cowboys; The Quiet Man, The Shootist. There are many others, you should have fun viewing all his movies😊
@Shootingstarcomics4 ай бұрын
The 3 Godfathers is on my yearly Christmas movie watch list.
@lethaldose20004 ай бұрын
Jen you were hilarious in this reaction having flashbacks of Granpa Murry. Maybe your Granpa was copying John Wayne's movie style. --------- Drinking moonshine over the shoulder straight from the jug.
@petequesada29364 ай бұрын
Most might say The Searchers and although The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence is good, two movies stand out - The Shootist and my FAV "The Cowboys"!
@flynn-wp3ek4 ай бұрын
Yes, absolutely more John Wayne reactions. Stagecoach, The Searchers, Rio Bravo, The Quiet Man, Sons of Katie Elder, Fort Apache, She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, The Cowboys, 3 Godfathers. Take your pick!
@OptimusPrime754 ай бұрын
John Wayne (Born Marion Robert Morrison in 1907) was an amazing American Western icon. But yes, he did other genres as well. Some of his best films IMHO are True Grit, McLintock! Donovan's Reef, Rio Grande, The Quiet Man, The Shootist, Rio Bravo, The Sons of Katie Elder, Big Jake, McQ, Trouble Along The Way and The Searchers. Four of those films featured Maureen O'Hara, with whom Wayne starred in five films with. Wayne had actually been offered the role of Dirty Harry, which he turned down and later regretted doing so. So yes, Jen, I highly recommend watching many more John Wayne films. :) BTW, he did a sequel to True Grit which is a fun watch as well, Rooster Cogburn (...and the Lady.)
@harryrabbit28704 ай бұрын
"The Big Country" with Gregory Peck and Charlton Heston, "The Tin Star" with Henry Fonda and Anthony Perkins, "High Noon" with Gary Cooper, "Stagecoach" with a very young John Wayne...ask your Patreon supporters what they think of those movies. They are all fun to watch and great movies to boot. Enjoyed your reaction, as usual.
@petersonchan92504 ай бұрын
@13:00... now it's probably all condos Lol 🤣🤣 My aunt and uncle also always called it "supper" 😊
@abramsalinas10044 ай бұрын
After this one he made Chisum in 1970, Big Jake in 1971 and The Cowboys 1972 after this film. The Shootist being his last film ever, 1976. Great watch along.
@williambrownlee99784 ай бұрын
john awayne variety pack. A Quiet Man (Romance), McClintock (Comedy Western) and In Harms Way (War). Many more. But these would be a good start.
@CarolinaCharles7774 ай бұрын
While it's in a lot of movies, you NEVER want to suck the poison out with your mouth. I learned that while stationed at Ft. Irwin, CA.
@georgeheilman42434 ай бұрын
I saw this in my youth and loved the performances, and decided to read the book it was based upon afterwards. That too is certainly worth a read, especially for character perspective, if you ever get the chance.
@daleclark23764 ай бұрын
That young man, Moon. That was Dennis Hopper.✌️
@jasnycal4 ай бұрын
Rio Bravo, The Searchers, He is the GOAT of Westerns
@richardw644 ай бұрын
His later films reflected his age, compared to the early films which were your standard gunfighting movies. He also went to England as a detective in the movie Brannigan.
@John-yj7io4 ай бұрын
Glen Campbell was better known as a singer and one of the most talented guitarists of his time. BTW that was Campbell singing the movie's opening song.
@Qochoc4 ай бұрын
My personal favourite John Wayne western is “Big Jake” and the Dukes two sons were in it, one played one of his sons in the movie and the other played his grandson (first wife and third wife)…his other movie sons were the singer bobby vinton (blue velvet) and Chris Mitchum, Robert Mitchum son….its about a team of bad guy kidnappers vs John Wayne and friends and family
@brucecsnell4 ай бұрын
Big Jake is also my favorite Wayne film -- and one of my favorite westerns. Just watched it again a couple of weeks ago and it still satisfies.
@anonymes28844 ай бұрын
This is John Wayne in older, more avuncular mode. "The Searchers" arguably features the role of his with the most edge (and is held by many to be one of, if not, _the_ best of the Western genre). "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence" is also great and "The Shootist" was his last movie and in some ways serves as a reflection on his own career (in that sense it's like a less revisionist "Unforgiven"). (as well as the remake BTW, the original novel of "True Grit" is well worth checking out too IMO - it's related by Mattie herself in, for my money, one of the most entertaining narrative voices in fiction)
@frankrossi69724 ай бұрын
Wayne’s Oscar for “True Grit” was a consolation-prize Oscar. He should’ve been nominated and won for “The Searchers,” and the Academy knew it. Forget remakes and stick with classic Wayne. Essentials include “The Searchers,” “The Quiet Man,” “Rio Bravo,” “McClintock,” “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance,” and “Red River.” (The John Wayne western persona was born in “Stagecoach,” and this also was his first of many collaborations with John Ford; their films often felt like they were in the same universe, often using the same supporting actors, but I always felt the film was overrated, probably because it was The First). His specialties were westerns and military films (e.g., “Sands of Iwo Jima,” “She Wore a Yellow Ribbon”). My favorite is “The Quiet Man,” in which he plays an American boxer who moves to his native Ireland later in life to retire, and shenanigans ensue. Many view it as John Ford’s love letter to Ireland, but it’s required viewing, best around St. Patrick’s Day.
@vernmeyerotto2554 ай бұрын
You should watch "The Shootist." Probably one of John Wayne's best films.
@p-51d954 ай бұрын
You should also watch the 2010 version of "True Grit". Very different feel to it. Also good. Also, "Open Range" (Costner and Duvall) "Rio Bravo" (Another John Wayne movie)
@markjone6714 ай бұрын
John Wayne was known mainly for westerns but he did do other movies too. The romantic comedy The Quiet Man is one of his most popular films and Hatari, which was another romantic comedy with a score by Henry Mancini who wrote the theme to The Pink Panther. He also made two cop movies in the 1970's McQ and Brannigan. Brannigan was filmed in England. Wayne's final film was the western The Shootist which he made with James Stewart. True Grit was so popular it spawned two sequels, the very entertaining Rooster Cogburn which had Wayne reprising his role from the original film and True Grit, A Further Adventure which was made for television and starred Warren Oats in the John Wayne role.
@HenryInHawaii4 ай бұрын
The Searchers is considered one of the finest westerns of all time, and perhaps John Wayne's best performance
@jackmessick28694 ай бұрын
While mostly performed in Westerns and War films, there is The Quiet Man, The Voyage Home, Island in the Sky, and The High And The Mighty. The Quiet Man is actually a Romantic Comedy-Drama. He also had a part in the scandalous-for-the-1930s Baby Face.
@tomhoffman43304 ай бұрын
Saddle Up, 'Pilgrims'🤠We're Riding with THE DUKE!👍
@FloridaMugwump4 ай бұрын
@@tomhoffman4330 He only called one guy "Pilgrim" in one movie. Get over it already. It's not his catchphrase
@tomhoffman43304 ай бұрын
@@FloridaMugwump I'd always thought it was...🤷♂
@e.d.20964 ай бұрын
@@tomhoffman4330 How's it going today, Tom?
@tomhoffman43304 ай бұрын
@@e.d.2096 Hey Eric👋Sorry We didn't get to Talk much in Chat. I'm doing OK, slow day / conserving My Energy. How are Y'all doing?
@e.d.20964 ай бұрын
@@tomhoffman4330 I'm good (we're) 👍 when did this come on? (and you said nothing to me, maybe I can help in some way? )
@JohnBarnes02104 ай бұрын
The Lawyer was Jack The Ripper (and other names) in Star Trek: The Original Series that framed Scotty for murder.
@pricemoore20224 ай бұрын
Awesome reaction of my favorite movie!!!!!😊😊😊😊😊
@KayQue-s3r4 ай бұрын
Yes, John Wayne was mostly a Western actor. Some of his greatest from earlier; "Stagecoach" (1939), "Red River" (1948), "The Searchers" (1956), & the greatest western of all time "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance" (1962) with Jimmy Stewart & Lee Marvin
@deeanna33354 ай бұрын
Glen Campbell,-LaBoeuf- sang the theme song to True Grit. At the time of this movie, he had a very popular tv variety show.
@jimmywalker48844 ай бұрын
On a personal note, I live an hour west from Ft Smith and thirty minutes east of the town built around the McAlister store. Plus the there is a state park close by that is supposed to be a place outlaws would hide before Oklahoma became a state. Also the old courthouse in Ft Smith is still standing in is open to the public. The jail below the courthouse can be walked through.