He recognized the war was coming to an end and his side, Germany, was going to lose. So he acted in his own interest and made that deal. Cheers!
@vii92848 ай бұрын
right. his king was in check
@deeteenw8 ай бұрын
He got a little bit more than he bargained for though :-)
@paratus048 ай бұрын
I also took his strangling of Bridgette as taking out his anger at the realization he was going to have to switch sides on one of those responsible.
@TheDylls7 ай бұрын
Coco Chanel felt that way when the war first broke out and shacked up with a Nazi REAL quick 🙊
@perrycarters31134 ай бұрын
I also feel like Landa isn't so much strictly antisemitic so much as just very arrogant and proud of himself, as well as highly intelligent and socially aware and a complete and utter cold-hearted bastard of a mercenary, loyal to the highest bidder. Which, having seemingly grown up in Germany, is the Nazi regime, which seemed poised to become the dominant force in Europe, if not the world. In Nazi Germany, it also pays to be antisemitic, obviously. So when he's seeking to intimidate the farmer, he justifies anti-semitism and the German supremacy, as well as remarks on being proud of his nickname to further cement to the farmer that he is cornered. With the Basterds, being antisemitic is more likely to cause them to clam up out of spite, so he adopts the opposite stance; he's just a man following orders and doing his job as a detective, and he's dismissive of his nickname as the Jew Hunter. The Nazi 'bid' for his loyalty has run dry; if the Allies have battle lines within a single night's drive from Paris, France, then D-Day has already come and gone. He, like many others, know Germany has already lost the war and he's looking for the exit, but he doesn't plan to just retire in disgrace and go into hiding. It seems like from the moment we see him at the cafe with Shosanna and Zoller, Landa has already given up his loyalty. There's no way he orders Shosanna a glass of milk and stares her dead in the eyes the way he does and DOESN'T know who she is, but he was interested to see if she would crack under the pressure. She doesn't, and he leaves, no longer drawing any suspicion to her or her story. Then we come to why he killed Bridget. Landa's role is almost like a game to him, filled with moves and countermoves. He respects people like Shosanna who play the game well and are able to pass scrutiny. That's why, when he approaches Bridget and the Basterds at the theater, he breaks down in laughter. Because this-THIS-weak, pathetic, flimsy excuse of subterfuge was poised to shatter the "almighty" Nazi regime? Their Italian is godawful, Bridget's cover story is nonexistent and their accents are atrocious. Was the regime he had served so dutifully REALLY so ineffectual that, without his interference, THIS was going to be its deathblow? This move is so desperate, so devoid of real intelligence, that the mere fact that it wasn't countered by the dozen layers of security around the premiere is laughable. He has some fun at their expense, pokes and prods at their accents and linguistic skills, then sends two subordinates into the theater to make sure that whatever plan they have can be carried out, and is sure to keep Aldo Raine, their leader, aside so he can be captured and used to facilitate Landa's defection. He then takes Bridget aside to interrogate her, have some more fun and see how far she tries to take the charade. However, unlike the Basterds, Bridget is not part of any military command structure. She cannot be ordered to support the story of Landa's long-term defection and betrayal. Additionally, she serves no purpose anymore. And she ruined his fun of the game by ending his cat and mouse early by simply surrendering, so he kills her.
@thenewtowncryer4 ай бұрын
You two are good watchers, reactors, commenters and editors!!!
@thenewtowncryer4 ай бұрын
Update: you two are amzinG watchers, reactors, commenters and editors!!! I'm gonna scan your library and hope to see some more amazinG reactionZ!!!
@I_ll_beer_back8 ай бұрын
Christoph Waltz's performance as Hans Landa is one of the best acting performances I have ever seen. I would even say it is as brilliant as that of Sir Anthony Hopkins as Hannibal Lecter in THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS. Christoph Waltz achieved worldwide fame not only for his brilliant performance as Standartenführer Hans Landa in INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS, but also in the role of bounty hunter Dr. King Schultz in DJANGO UNCHAINED, both directed by Quentin Tarantino. Waltz received - more than deserved - the Oscar and several other awards for these two roles.
@azazello17848 ай бұрын
Anthony Hopkins really overstayed his welcome.
@robling19378 ай бұрын
Apparently Inglourious Basterds almost didn't happen because Tarantino was only willing to cast someone who was fluent in French, German, English, and Italian, and no one he saw impressed him. Christoph Walt'z was a very late audition.
@kevinslayzak12148 ай бұрын
You obviously respect Hopkins as the bomb just like I do.....fun fact....he binge watched the AWESOME series Breaking Bad and was so impressed with Brian Cranston and the rest of the cast he wrote a personal letter to him, and them,and it was of the highest praise.. coming from Dr Lecher that's impressive.....you can find the letter on Google im sure....🤘🔥
@OhioOwns7 ай бұрын
even Anthony Hopkins learns from Daniel Day-Lewis :)
@Bhavyo6 ай бұрын
Im even more impressed Tarantino made Till Schweiger look like a decent actor 😀
@brandonmartin088 ай бұрын
The reason for Landas milk and cream obsession is because jews are not allowed to consume it without it being “kosher”. It’s a test.
@ignoremychannel6977 ай бұрын
It’s not a test he know who she is he waned to disrespect her .
@timnordstrom73835 ай бұрын
Specifically, jews cannot eat anything from a pig for example, and since during the war, cow fat used for cream/ice cream became so scarce they had to use pig's fat instead. So, you can imagine not alot of jews got to eat cream during the war in france.
@waynecanning41228 ай бұрын
I love these two ladies. They keep it 100% real. Loved when Ryl said of the underground bar scene, “They’re gonna have to slaughter them all!” They just call it as they see it from the perspective of the characters. They even sympathize with the bad guys sometimes. Great reactors.
@yebro46367 ай бұрын
They keepin it 55th street
@アキコ200321 күн бұрын
I wouldnt say sympathizing with nazis is "keeping it real" but...whatever you say 😅
@ADV_UA8 ай бұрын
- Why is this guy so obsessed? - This is Hitler. I laughed 😂
@MitchClement-il6iq8 ай бұрын
He was going off because of his cocaine eye drops.
@cinrok16 ай бұрын
It’s interesting watching these two soft spoken and thoughtful ladies watch and review this intensely violent and suspenseful movie. Nice reaction 😊
@kenyonsgirl4158 ай бұрын
Ooooh I clicked with a quickness!!! Such a badass movie, one of Tarantino’s best
@hbk-hotboy7138 ай бұрын
Have you seen the DeathProof movie lol?
@YoureMrLebowski8 ай бұрын
clicked _and_ commented quickly indeed.
@kenyonsgirl4158 ай бұрын
@@hbk-hotboy713yup a much different Kurt Russell than Tombstone lol
@hbk-hotboy7138 ай бұрын
@@kenyonsgirl415 straight classic 👌🏾 lol
@gingerbaker_toad6968 ай бұрын
I love them all, but Inglourious Basterds and Django Unchained are the all around biggest and "best" Tarantino movies for me, but i really do love them all
@phantasmbunny7 ай бұрын
29:31 I remember the first time I watched this movie, and when he held up the three fingers when ordering drinks, I was like, “NOOOO!” Pretty early in level 1 German class, our teacher taught us that Germans use the thumb to count as 1, thumb and forefinger for 2, and so on. So his doing that is a dead giveaway that he’s not German.
@The10folks8 ай бұрын
One of the most intense opening sequences in movie history.
@adampare80888 ай бұрын
I saw an online poll that Hans Lander got voted a top 5 villain of all time. So there you go.
@kuhpunkt8 ай бұрын
Landa.
@MsAppassionataАй бұрын
Who were the other 4?
@adampare8088Ай бұрын
@MsAppassionata It's been few years since I saw it but of course Darth Vader and I'm pretty sure Hannibal Lecter. Other 2 I forget
@MsAppassionataАй бұрын
@@adampare8088 Ok thanks.
@panamafloyd14696 ай бұрын
Shoshanna's escape in Part 1: Distance, distance, distance. I grew up (with guns) in the Southern US..Landa didn't take the shot because a pistol is horribly inaccurate at long range. The thing that still raises the hair on my neck all these years later is that when the film was new, my GF who spoke French told me that "Adieu" is kind of like 'good-bye', and "Au revoir" is more like 'see you later' (I'm sure if you ladies grew up in Africa or the Caribbean, you already know that). Waltz was amazing in this film. He really speaks all those languages! I wish I could do that. Oh, and Pitt's attempt at a Southern US accent isn't the worst I've heard. I wonder if Tarantino made him go "over the top" with it on purpose.😆
@jellybeaner30037 ай бұрын
"bro go back inside they don't like you" had spitting my drink 😂
@Tommybn115 ай бұрын
Saludos desde la República Dominicana excelente video
@kylespeirs65104 ай бұрын
Love your reactions girls.
@saecula23916 ай бұрын
@ 27:37 ... :we in germany showing a 3 with thumb, index finger, middle finger .. daumen, zeigefinger, mittelfinger .. 🙂
@vii92848 ай бұрын
"that meeting went to _sht_ " 🤣
@NameOptional-p9u8 ай бұрын
Hans Landa is one of the greatest villians in film.... well just in my opinion. Dude is super smart, and charming, yet evil. If he wasn't evil, you would really enjoy his character. Christoph Waltz nails that character.
@MsAppassionataАй бұрын
Villainy with a smile. 😊
@brandongardnep33618 ай бұрын
Yes been looking forward to this reaction
@jeffreiland74638 ай бұрын
The end of he movie took place in 1945 and it was pretty obvious by then that Germany couldn't win. Landa was looking for a way out. I've read a lot of officers did the same. Many going to South America, I believe.
@Renoistic8 ай бұрын
Quite a few surrendered to the allies as well, not in such a spectacular fashion as in the movie though.
@jamesodonnell36368 ай бұрын
Some acclaimed non-fiction books, including America's Nazi Secret (Loftus) and The Nazis Next Door (Lichtblau) document how several thousand senior-level Nazis were rescued by the United States and folded into the U.S. national security apparatus and elite power circles (which explains why the U.S. largely picked up where the Third Reich left off, committing one holocaust after another targeting non-white people in Korea, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, the Global South, the Middle East...).
@JalimRabeikkkkk7 ай бұрын
Did some of them moved to Argentina? That would explain why they're so racist.
@ganymeade2757 ай бұрын
Would have been 1944, shortly after D-day but before Paris was liberated, assuming the general course of the war followed the real history.
@petertofte756318 күн бұрын
The smart ones surrendered to the west. There they could get smuggled out and work against any socialist movements (like the guy who shot Che in Bolivia). Generally any nazi commanders who surrendered to the soviets were either put against the wall or held for the Nuremberg trials. We thank the soviets for there glorious sacrifices destroying fascism in 20c Europe.
@SgtWicket8 ай бұрын
The German method of holding up three fingers is an example of a shibboleth, a unique custom that identifies a specific people. The origin of the word is a biblical story in which the pronunciation of the word shibboleth was used to identify and kill members of a specific Hebrew tribe, which struck me as kind of ironic.
@vovindequasahi8 ай бұрын
I'm surprised your comments haven't gotten more likes. Good knowledge there!
@chandie52988 ай бұрын
Tarantino is highly intelligent... far more than people assume due to his very casual and approachable manner during interviews etc. His films are full of very interesting details like the one you've discovered. It was without a doubt intentional. Hans Landa killing Hammerschmit as a traitor while he is upping her level of being a traitor is a discussion of how the elite (from power or money or political position) are above the law....they know this and for them the hypocrisy is not a problem. They believe they are naturally better than the masses and above the law and that the rabble who don't fall in line with the established social contract should pay a high price. Frederick Zoller is not a bad person. (amazing considering this film is a fantasy revenge film against nazis by a writer/director who is jewish). NOTE: Tarantino specifically shows that all German's are not stereotypical evil nazis.... this is shown in a few characters in this film. Tarantino's characters are multi-faceted. Some embody an idea or concept while other characters are human beings.... even the good ones with human frailties and flaws. Zoller is a "Prince Charming" character. He is a german soldier and only a nazi because the nazi's took over the govt. He is shown to be a very different type/quality of person when compared to Hellstrom and Goebells etc. I very highly suspect that Zoller does not hate jews. He is simply a soldier and fighting in a war in which his country is involved. He shows some negative emotion (various descriptions of the specific emotion are voiced) while watching himself killing other soldiers in the propaganda film. Zoller and Shoshanna would have likely become a couple had times been different. Zoller is just a young man... he is shown to be brave and charming. He has the quality of humility.... he is a human and not without flaws. Given a situation with specific stressors he can be boastful in defense of himself but he is shown to be humble. When the woman he has fallen in love with does not return that emotion and dismisses him...he reacts in anger during that moment and that is never seen as part of his natural state during the film. Who among us (real human beings) don't fall short of our own expectation of ourselves at times when we are emotionally compromised and weak? Shoshanna, after shooting him... watches the film for a brief moment and sees the scene where he is exhausted but bravely defending himself against huge odds (much like herself). In this instance, (and emotionally compromised because she was placed in a position in which she had to shoot him) she let's her guard down and the feelings that have grown in her toward him show themselves. They are two people caught up in a horrible situation by mechanizations larger than themselves. There is a lot of "mirroring" between these two characters. They both had to do what they had to do when put in bad situations...and that does not mean that they felt good about it or were proud of it. In fact, they both felts horrible and wish the events had never taken place. I could go on and on like this about the entire film...and continue for these two characters. Suffice it to say.... Tarantino's writing is even better than he's given credit for ...and he's given a lot of credit for great writing. Tarantino is so much more than great dialogue with lots of cursing and lots of violence. His films (a large portion of them anyway) are deep and multifaceted but most people don't examine them very deeply....instead just enjoying the ride.
@vovindequasahi8 ай бұрын
@@chandie5298 Except the part when Zoller almost forces his way on her.
@chandie52988 ай бұрын
@@vovindequasahi ... agreed... I added the part about being human, frail and flawed. Also, posturing doesn't mean that he would have gone through with it.
@vovindequasahi8 ай бұрын
@@chandie5298 Kudos!
@TheDylls7 ай бұрын
"Au revoir, Shoshanna!" is still one of the most chilling lines I've ever heard
@coot19258 ай бұрын
This is the first movie I saw Christoph waltz in (hans lander). I immediately became a fan of his work. What an amazing actor. Typical Tarantino movie, lots of twists with a quirky feel. My dad fought in WW2 and his battalion captured some German soldiers. One of them, a big Sergeant who was a teacher gave my dad his address and asked if he would let his wife and kids know what's happened to him. My dad had his foot blown off and whilst recovering in hospital he wrote to the guys wife with a return address. They kept in touch until my dad died 10 years ago. He came to my dads funeral and cried. A lot of ordinary German soldiers didn't like the Nazi's. ✌🏻❤🇬🇧
@mikemenelik81938 ай бұрын
That´s a very touching story ! Christoph Waltz received an Oscar for this performance and for "Django Unchained". 2 Oscars with Tarantino movies !⭐
@kuhpunkt8 ай бұрын
Landa.
@alexakuto8 ай бұрын
that is actually a genuinely touching story between an american soldier and a german soldier... would make for an interesting movie idea or at least a novel with that ending
@coot19258 ай бұрын
@@alexakuto you could be right. My dad was English not American, although he was transferred into a Scottish regiment called the black watch. They were one of two regiments that the germans feared the most. The other regiment was the gurkhas. I've been to quite a few funerals in my 62 years, but my dads was both the best and the saddest. Two of his remaining mates from his regiment stood up in their regimental uniform which being Scottish consisted of kilts and told funny stories about my dad and some of the more terrifying moments. They made us laugh and then cry. The most moving thing though was when they hugged the crying German soldier who had been through the same horror as them and was treated so kindly by my dad. So thank you for your kind words and I hope that our wonderful countries can stand together to fight off the enemy that has been allowed to just walk in by our feeble governments. How I wish Winston Churchill was here today. ✌🏻❤🇬🇧
@harpergras8 ай бұрын
Glad you reacted to this one. A great movie.
@LLMAXG8 ай бұрын
30:31 Great word play "Max will Nazi/Not see him again" 😂😂
@waRr3nxx8 ай бұрын
One of the best openers to any movie. Period.
@Bhavyo8 ай бұрын
Wanted to write something similar. Absolute masterpiece. Waltz is also the perfect actor for Hans Landa.
@MitchClement-il6iq8 ай бұрын
It's funny because it's a homage to good the bad ugly beginning.
@vovindequasahi8 ай бұрын
This is such an awesome movie!! Love your reactions!
@Renoistic8 ай бұрын
Lander is one of the slimiest and still funniest villains I've seen in a long while. If the allies would have won the war and he didn't have a deal with them, he would have been executed after the post-war trials. He was smart enough to see where it was going and took the opportunity.
@kuhpunkt8 ай бұрын
Landa.
@johnwest58378 ай бұрын
Yes the German noticed how the officer put up his fingers,done mostly by Americans and the English.
@Apple-International8 ай бұрын
35:54 LOL best part of the movie when he points at this lap 🤣 just shut up and show me your feet loool
@wheelmanstan8 ай бұрын
probably the creepiest villain ever.. so evil and so smart and so powerful and so..in love with it, his performance totally blew me away when I first saw it, him just standing there making fun of their inability to speak the language they were faking in a building filled with nazis, haha can you imagine how scary that would be?
@Charles-yt5ve8 ай бұрын
"Marrrgareeeetayyyy". LOL.
@Heikos018 ай бұрын
Ancora. And put more music into it!
@kevinmassey11648 ай бұрын
Great film
@robling19378 ай бұрын
Fun fact, guess what other Jewish American actor was originally cast as the "Bear Jew"? None other than Adam Sandler. Just imagine him going Happy Gilmour on a Nazi's head with a baseball bat instead of a golf club. So bummed it didn't work out.
@krautgazer7 ай бұрын
Yeah, that would have been freaking great! Another famous rumour of a legendary casting that unfortunately never happened in Tarantino movies is that apparently Tarantino wanted Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love to portray the drug dealer and his wife in Pulp Fiction.
@robling19377 ай бұрын
@krautgazer I hadn't heard that one, but I saw Sandler on a podcast or radio show and he confirmed he was originally cast in that role, but couldn't do it because of filming conflicts.
25:20 "the meeting is compromised." -Jyn abort! abort!
@michaelthompson87558 ай бұрын
Great reaction as usual, ladies !!!!
@RoadDoug8 ай бұрын
As always, you girls are perfect. ❤❤
@YoureMrLebowski8 ай бұрын
7:49 scalps
@johannsen-g8dАй бұрын
Thanks! 😄
@jimborghini27618 ай бұрын
Such a good Quarantino flick.
@dragonage21128 ай бұрын
That's Tarantino learn how to use spell checker it's not that difficult then again maybe it is for you!👎
@jimborghini27618 ай бұрын
@@dragonage2112 Quinton Tarantino, i know. I've always just called him Quarantino out of laziness.
@twizzm.8 ай бұрын
The firsr react channel that got the point of stiglitz being whipped on the back scene was because thats how it felt to him playing charades. Others think its somethint that happened to him before lol
@jeffreydavid67948 ай бұрын
I know! It's so obvious. Some people are stupid. These girls are smart reactors.
@mcbeezee21208 ай бұрын
If the ending to that "bar scene doesn't scream "Tarantino", I don't know what does...😄
@josephmurphy52517 ай бұрын
Excellent reaction, girls! It's an incredible film.
@patrickmichaelmolen64168 ай бұрын
Good watching a movie with you two ladies
@MartinBeerbom7 ай бұрын
"The rotten eggs in one basket" is a quote from the great movie "The Great Escape", though in this film it is said by the Nazi commandant about the newly built POW camp where they put all the escape artists from other camps (the rotten eggs), which then promptly start working on the Great Escape (based on true events).
@steffe6896 ай бұрын
Pink thrasher 😍 Love the reaction!
@bakercarl85187 ай бұрын
Love how they went back to portray this movie.
@tanelviil91498 ай бұрын
at 49:15 .....wrong lol that mark can easily be removed or you can extend it , make the swastika into something else. also the swastika is an old symbol In Hinduism, the right-facing symbol (clockwise) (卐) is called swastika, symbolizing surya ('sun'), prosperity and good luck, while the left-facing symbol (counter-clockwise) (卍) is called sauvastika, symbolising night or tantric aspects of Kali. My point is that the swastika is not only a symbol for the nazi flag it is far older than that.
@kuhpunkt8 ай бұрын
Are you serious now?
@infiad12758 ай бұрын
@@kuhpunkt Hopi Indians used it. Buddhists use it. Heck it was even on American road signs before the war. The Nazis hijacked the symbol. We've found that symbol going back thousands of years.
@tanelviil91498 ай бұрын
@@kuhpunkt Just educate yourself.
@kuhpunkt8 ай бұрын
@@infiad1275 I know that the Nazis hijacked it... that doesn't mean you can now walk around with a swastika on your face and have people think "Ohhh, look, a guy with a symbol for piece. What a great dude!"
@kuhpunkt8 ай бұрын
@@tanelviil9149 Educate myself about what? You think I didn't know this? Your argument is just ridiculous. You know what the symbol is associated with today...
@donniedraco43103 ай бұрын
Jyn has a sinister smirk at the start of this video
@spatula0city7 ай бұрын
11:36 You two would really like The Zone of Interest if this is the sort of questions you are asking yourselves.
@vinnieh15737 ай бұрын
Love the both of you☺😘
@carloscanchehernandez8558 ай бұрын
Mi película favorita de Tarantino.
@Teddy-zr8yv8 ай бұрын
La mía es los 8 más odiados
@auerstadt068 ай бұрын
"I been chewed out before."
@Nitedawg18 ай бұрын
I guess since it is in an alternate reality it could be 1945 at the end of the movie but in reality it should be June of 1944, about 11 months before Germany surrendered in real life. They are still occupying France and made a remark about the allies just landing in France.
@xxklesx14 ай бұрын
And everybody knows the war is lost at this point.
@Nitedawg18 ай бұрын
I don’t know what’s so hard to understand about Landa. When Germany was winning the smart way to profit and get ahead was to act like a devoted nazi, when the allies were clearly going to win he switched sides. What is so complicated about that?it is completely in character for him, very smart, very shrewd, very perceptive, and one step ahead of everyone else the entire time.
@bewilderedbeest8 ай бұрын
Yes, Landa was never a true believing Nazi. He's an amoral opportunist, serving whomever is in power. After WWII, many Nazis went to work for the United States. Someone like Landa could easily get a job with the CIA, helping the US fight communists in the Cold War. Sadly, Landa probably prospered after the war, and never paid for his crimes. The swastika can easily be removed by a plastic surgeon.
@NatPat-yj2or7 ай бұрын
People are not very smart these days. This movie went entirely over their heads. It sad.
@marty6945Ай бұрын
I agree. The fact that Landa was above all a pragmatist and not a fanatic is not able to understand at the end of the film a surprising number of reactors.
@BouillaBased8 ай бұрын
Where JoJo Rabbit can kind of let you forget the setting, this film keeps the Third Reich right in your face the whole time. And I can really appreciate that Tarantino got to go full film nerd in this movie.
@kmvoss8 ай бұрын
Great reaction.
@jbwade56768 ай бұрын
Yay❤❤❤❤❤
@avp59648 ай бұрын
Hol'up you didn't have a bandana thought Jyn was replaced haha!
@obscillesk8 ай бұрын
When this came out, a buddy of mine at work told me that during the hitler massacre scene, he looked around the theatre and every guy he saw of roughly WW2 era age in the audience had a real *hard* grin on their face
@megatwingo8 ай бұрын
I doubt that. You are aware, that this end of Hitler in the movie didn't happen that way in reality?
@infiad12758 ай бұрын
@@megatwingo You're aware of fantasy right?
@megatwingo8 ай бұрын
@@infiad1275 Reading and understanding. Not two of your strong sides...
@obscillesk7 ай бұрын
@@megatwingo .... I'm not sure what you think you read, but you didn't. I'm well aware that Hitler shot himself. What does that have to do with WW2 vets appreciating how they maybe would've liked it to have gone?
@OhioOwns7 ай бұрын
and water is wet, my man
@user-im2ex9zw6j8 ай бұрын
i think near the end of the war in europe it was becoming clear to everyone but hitler that the nazis were going to lose. he was looking for a way out because he knew even if he survived the war justice would find him if germany lost
@user-im2ex9zw6j8 ай бұрын
and virtual hug
@timlois8 ай бұрын
Hello J&R Squad!!!
@matttorrence29008 ай бұрын
Jyn is a skater?
@muninraven33277 ай бұрын
I know I'm late but Ryl: "If you look calm, you're chill, if you look too calm; you're a psycho!". Now that is a good rule of thumb to live by. Sure there are exceptions, but if the aim of the game it to not die... then stick to the rule of thumb, and be someone alive to later apologize. 👍👍👍
@andrewreiber76918 ай бұрын
I tried watching but I’m 15:00 minutes in and there’s been 4 ad breaks already. I know it’s not these young ladies fault but that’s just ridiculous.
@OscarMoreno-cg1og7 ай бұрын
It seems to escape everyone that the American soldier who didn't speak Italian nailed the accent "Domoinic De Coco".
@normie27167 ай бұрын
And the one with the "best" Italian goes _Ker-ek-tow._
@OscarMoreno-cg1og7 ай бұрын
@@normie2716 lol, you are ker ek tow.
@thgeremilrivera-thorsen95567 ай бұрын
Great reaction! For another fantastic dose of Christoph Waltz, you must watch Django Unchained next! This time he plays the good guy. And he does it fantastically!
@phillipmullineaux96412 ай бұрын
Landa was in Django and Alita battle angel, and James Cameron is thinking of a sequel!😮😮😮 Ironically, America did have a German born actress, I believe heddy Lamar, who not only was a spy, but invented the beginning of WiFi and also three axis/gimble targeting systems for planes and tanks and subs, that gave us a huge advantage. Bear jew is Eli Roth, a great horror director! He did s movie called Clown, I dare u to watch and review here! The restaurant lunch scene, very sneaky of Landa. Everything he offered her to eat or drink was non Kosher! Tarantino first written and directed film was his best, reservoir dogs. But he also had parts, creds, writing in a TV show Alias, and movies the classic True Romance, Desperado, El Mariachi, Dusk til dawn, Death proof, and some others. The original came out in the 70s. The assistant to Churchill? Mike Myers, Wayne's world 1-2, Austin Powers trilogy, So I Married an Axe murderer!
@reservoirdude928 ай бұрын
Jackie Brown may be Tarantino's best film, but Inglourious Basterds is his best screenplay, WITHOUT QUESTION.
@wheelmanstan8 ай бұрын
Please watch High Noon or Shane. They're two of the greatest Westerns ever made. Top quality. Thanks! Oh and Paths of Glory is a phenomenal war film. Unique. I highly recommend.
@MsAppassionataАй бұрын
Just curious- Have you seen “Tombstone” and, if so, what did you think of it?
@wheelmanstanАй бұрын
@@MsAppassionata Tombstone is great. It's a bit of an anomaly as far as westerns go because it's a blockbuster that's over the top with action but it's also still a great western tale that's still pretty historically accurate. If there's one western basically anyone can like it's Tombstone. It has everything a western needs.
@MsAppassionataАй бұрын
@@wheelmanstan My favorite westerns are “Tombstone”, “The Magnificent 7”, and the two you mentioned.
@terenceharris94328 ай бұрын
During WWII there were many love affairs that took place between men and women of enemy forces. Every German did not support Hitler's cause or take his stance on genocide. This includes members of his military forces. It was then as well as in today's modern warfare, fairly common for relationships to bloom from when the persons countries are at war with one another.
@kuhpunkt8 ай бұрын
"Every German did not support Hitler's cause or take his stance on genocide." You might want to rewrite that sentence. It's "Not every German supported Hitler..."
@TheNeonRabbit7 ай бұрын
39:37 Landa knows that Germany is losing the war and that, as the "Jew hunter" he'll probably get prosecuted and hung as a war criminal. It would definitely be a good plan for him to make a deal that would grant him immunity and guarantee his pension.
@zeigbert17438 ай бұрын
Sí correcto.
@Britton_Thompson8 ай бұрын
It's a very entertaining film, but a laughably preposterous story. The 'Inglorious Bastards' were a real US special forces group composed of Jewish Americans recruited from exiled German Jews living in America, but in real life they were dropped on an Italian mountainside in a winter storm in 1942 and most were captured by German forces rightaway. Luckily, because they were captured in Italy, and Benito Mussolini wasn't an anti-Semite who participated with Hitler in the Holocaust, the Inglorious Bastards were turned over to the Italians and kept as Allied POWs instead of being sent east to the gas chambers the way other Jews were. They were eventually liberated by General George Patton during his conquest of Italy in 1943. Also, the Hitler depicted here is nothing like the real one. He abhorred national leaders who covered themselves in medals and grandiose wardrobe such as capes. That was something his subordinates- such as Herman Goering -would've done, but not Hitler himself. He also didn't talk about the Holocaust or request updates on it's progress during the war. He primarily concerned himself with winning the war itself since he considered himself more of a military leader than a statesman, and he didn't want the Holocaust discussed openly. He knew not everyone in his cabinet would agree with it, so he delegated it to the SS. There were higher-ups within the Nazi govt that Hitler denied the Holocaust to when asked about it. Most say he wanted to keep it top secret, others argue he wanted it to be "out of sight, out of mind" to assuage any guilt he may have had. Lastly, Hitler would've never gone to Paris to watch a movie. If he wanted to watch a movie, he would've had a copy delivered to him to watch in his private theater.
@kuhpunkt8 ай бұрын
Don't you like fun?
@YoureMrLebowski8 ай бұрын
2:39 *sigh* 🙂
@jamesodonnell36368 ай бұрын
Not only do people who commit atrocities believe they are worthy of love and happiness, most of them seem to believe in the righteousness of their cause and their own benevolence. Consider the modern analogs to Hitler and how arrogant and pleased with themselves they appear: The Clintons, George W. Bush, Benjamin Netanyahu, Adam Schiff, Joe Biden, Dick Cheney, et al. The difficulty for most mainstream people in affluent, privileged countries seems to be recognizing our leaders for what they are. Today, everyone knows Hitler was bad -- but most Westerners fail to acknowledge the genocidal atrocities routinely committed by our leaders. Only history will correct the record and recognize the millions of victims.
@CrispyChips0078 ай бұрын
"Once were warriors" you wont regret it
@MitchClement-il6iq8 ай бұрын
Holy lol, jus a heavy movie.... Jake the muss!
@ziusthefirst53878 ай бұрын
War is hell ladies war is hell.
@86leewis8 ай бұрын
And in asia its the exact opposite. You use the pinky, ring, and middle finger
@AW11-e4h8 ай бұрын
Number one problem is,we’re in a Fn basement ✌️
@jayvillanueva38708 ай бұрын
Can u guys react to the last episode of young royals plzz
@TheDylls7 ай бұрын
The Bear Jew was originally written for Adam Sandler
@Kronicdice238 ай бұрын
God I love this movie!!! The young lady sitting in the black on our right made a very interesting Comment at 11:10 in about the German not deserving love because of the things he does. What a beautiful comment, psychologically speaking very interesting. That’s really interesting because that’s how we see it and I completely agree with you, but from their perspective, they believe they’re doing the right things therefore, they believe they should be loved. I’ve always found that interesting because life really is just a matter of perspective, there really is no right and wrong.
@azazello17848 ай бұрын
Occupying other countries is never the right thing.
@sawanna5087 ай бұрын
There is right and wrong. Not noticing you are wrong dosn't make it right.
@chito22948 ай бұрын
Who would you rather have chasing you? hans landa (inglorious basterds) or anton chigur? (no country for old men)
@pook3048 ай бұрын
Hans shit Anton is a whole nother kind of nightmare he's completely ice cold and how he flips a coin and it's not a option to not choose a side to let fate and a side of the coin decide your fate is terrifying to me for one. 2nd I'd damn sure would hate to be one he's contracted to hunt down and execute cause he's calculated in how he does things he's scary intelligent and intuitive picks up on any little detail to figure out his targets location or probable and approximate whereabouts. The fact that he will go the length of going through your family or all of those who you love to lure you out as a means of making you fall into desperation which desperate people make irrational errors and loose logic in thinking. Anton to me is honestly the most terrifying villain like character ever written into a movie and the portrayal of him was even more frightening ruthless motherfucker. Hans tho he's cold blooded he did have basically the entire German army at his disposal and he uses Hitler's grip of terror that he held on millions of people which lots of officers did use in them days as means to find out anything they damn well wanted. That isn't as bad to me but it is terrifying on Hans part that in the days of the nazis there were fuckers like him actually out there. To use power as means to commit evil shit is a sinister kinda thing to do Hans he would be scary to be running from but his narcissist arrogance for me I would use against one like Han where Anton he was just a monster nothing but a psychopath mindset and I think a couple of general principles makes him my choice to be fearful of put it this way if he was after me I'd make sure I would try and get a very solid fail proof plan out together hopefully I could be able to dictate the flow of setting it in motion to execute with perfection and precision to lure him in and put him down in one motion. Cause another opportunity wouldn't happen with a guy like that.
@Fa__timaaaa8 ай бұрын
Hans… at least I know I could possibly offer him something to save myself. No negotiating with Anton.
@positivelynegative91498 ай бұрын
Germans count 1 with the thumb, then 2 with thumb + index finger, etc...
@8kai128 ай бұрын
No they dont
@infiad12758 ай бұрын
@@8kai12 They certainly do. So do the French.
@8kai128 ай бұрын
@@infiad1275 I'm neither and I count like that so...
@sawanna5087 ай бұрын
@@8kai12 No one claims Germans and French are the only ones in the world counting like that. ( I am Asutrian).
@8kai127 ай бұрын
@@sawanna508 I got my test results back and it turns out I'm gay.
@chrismartino35198 ай бұрын
One thing you gotta remember when watching the movie, the French girl doesn't know German.
@ПавелКольцов-г9с7 ай бұрын
Like many things in this film, the label on the forehead does not have much meaning, purely for entertainment purposes. At a minimum, you can expand the scar by turning it into an indefinite spot.
@viviansoto4247 ай бұрын
While the film's story and characters are not entirely based on true events, there were real military units, like X-Troop and the American counterpart, that consisted of Jewish soldiers and focused on intelligence gathering and infiltrating Nazi operations.
@meheuck8 ай бұрын
There are many allusions in this story to actual film history, which, for obsessive movie lovers, is catnip. The soldier, Frederick Zoller, and the movie he stars in, are basically an evil inversion on one of the biggest American heroes of WWII, Audie Murphy - he had killed the most Axis soldiers during his tour of duty, and when the war was over, played himself in a successful biopic about his service. After that, he starred in westerns and other action movies. And like what's hinted about Zoller in this movie, Murphy was privately fighting trauma about the experience and wasn't comfortable about being a celebrity hero, but kept acting because it paid well. During WWII, the Nazis' minister of propaganda, Joseph Goebbels, did spend a lot of the government's money to produce an epic dramatic film that was intended, like this movie's fictional NATION'S PRIDE, to make German citizens feel patriotic. It was called KOHLBERG, about a small village of resistance fighters defending their town in a war from the 19th century. Actual soldiers were even diverted from battle to play extras in the film, which bothered the military because at the time of shooting, their manpower and resources were getting stretched. When it was ready for release, however, all the good cinemas in Germany had been bombed by the Allies, so it was premiered in Occupied France. But none of the High Command were there for the event. Nitrate film is indeed extremely flammable; I've personally burned some in a safe setting. (it was scrap film that was deteriorating anyway) Nitrate was long replaced by safety film since the 50s, so movies don't go out that way any more, but there are still some surviving prints of films from the 20s to the 40s on nitrate stock that have to be kept in very special safety conditions. There are a few theatres in the world that can still run them, again under very strict conditions, and if you're ever lucky to watch one, they do have a special look to them that safety film hasn't been able to copy. Hugo Stiglitz is named for a real actor from the '70s, who had a German parent, but is dominantly Mexican. He is still alive and still acting.
@TD-mg6cd7 ай бұрын
I chuckled at your reaction to the scalping. Ryl is aghast and cringing. Jyn is watching it all, and grinning. Be careful Ryl!
@JynxRyl7 ай бұрын
Lmfaoo I’m a real savage bro 😈
@Smoothjazzsundays7 ай бұрын
As a Jew, this movie hits different.
@thenewtowncryer4 ай бұрын
Many reasons why he let her go...I think it's the same reason why the Basters always let one Nazi go...so they will tell the rest and the hype will be spread.
@christopherglock72398 ай бұрын
German higher thinking Yeahhh Right!!! Justice maybe but plea barging huhhh 😮
@brianvernon2498 ай бұрын
Did you notice Baron Zemo from Marvel as a young love-struck fascist sniper?
@scottdetter8 ай бұрын
He knew it was her when he walked into the restaurant. He pushed her shoulder down when she tried to stand up.
@thefinestgames7 ай бұрын
Damn, Jyn lookin finer than ever. 👀
@NatPat-yj2or7 ай бұрын
Loser
@mediaondisplay30898 ай бұрын
It's so hard to watch anything about nazis in the year 2024 and not think about current events. 😪 🇵🇸
@toddkindron85068 ай бұрын
Would you be an SS cop if you were in a similar situation? Im asking for a friend. Just kidding, I'm American. But I advocate for no more war. It's stupid.
@Studioustomcat97 ай бұрын
We all actually can understand a Nazi mind, they are the same as us, different environment. At least most of us, most people that conform to our societies norms, would very likely be a card carrying Nazi back then in Germany