An old man replies, a young woman reacts...fair trade.
@ManOfMonismАй бұрын
Get yourself a book, Mindfulness Made Simple by Oli Doyle. Do what it says. Make a video about how it changes your life.
@tanelviil9149Ай бұрын
Are you hairy down there or not ?
@DrgnVid17Ай бұрын
Mary, if you were to read the graphic novel this is based on you would see that it's almost word for word, scene for scene the same. Chef's kiss.
@GlennWH26Ай бұрын
Mary, about that opening scene- Josh Harnett's character was a professional assassin hired by the *victim*. She wanted to die, but couldn't do it herself and didn't want to be alone when she died.
@SimoExMachina2Ай бұрын
How about that. I never knew. Was this in the graphic novels or just something you had to pick up?
@mattburgess5697Ай бұрын
I don’t think that’s true. That’s a common view because he says “I’ll cash her cheque”. But I take that as the cheque her death. That it’s a contract. He’s definitely a hired assassin though, that’s undoubtedly true.
@SimoExMachina2Ай бұрын
@@mattburgess5697 Yeah, this is what I thought when I heard the line.
@d-skullgaming696Ай бұрын
@mattburgess5697 well yeah, it's her check, as in the check she gave him.
@GlennWH26Ай бұрын
@@SimoExMachina2 The short story in the graphic novel has a few extra lines that makes it all clear. As does the title- "The Customer is Always Right. "
@joshuawood3055Ай бұрын
"Thats one damn fine coat you're wearing" has been a motto for me in every Fallout game ever
@FabioOsorio619Ай бұрын
Hahah brilliant
@0okaminoАй бұрын
That’s one damn fine set of Power Armor you’re wearing.
@jurgenschmidt2759Ай бұрын
The way the characters talk is straight out of the comic. It is not because they were not able to write them differently. They did this fully intentional.
@nimz8521Ай бұрын
Well, it's because the writer of the comic didn't write them differently.
@RetroSanctuaryАй бұрын
@@nimz8521 The comic is supposed to be written in the style of 1940s film noir with 1990s comic book violence. Albeit admittedly as time went on Frank Miller started to write everything in this manner, but that wasn't previously the case even up to the end of the 90s, and its likely that some of his later work may have been affected by his struggles with alcoholism.
@misterpricklyАй бұрын
Fun fact: the priest that Marv guns down in the confessional was played by Sin City creator *Frank Miller.*
@0okaminoАй бұрын
And Rutger Hauer as Cardinal Roark. Sin City sure had some talented clergy.
@nilesstarkАй бұрын
Fun Fact: The extended version reveals that John Hartigan's attorney was Lucille.
@white-noisemaker9554Ай бұрын
The charming assassin in the prologue that you were shocked by, he was hired by his own victim. He stated in his final line of that scene that she paid him by check and he'll cash it in the morning. She was tired of running from her past, so she hired a professional that she knew would bring her down gently, tell her he loved her, and stay with her until she died. It's implied his speciality is as a 'ladykiller', charming his targets to lower their guard, make them feel at ease, then killing them without cruelty. So when you see him at the end with Becky, it's a given that someone in Old Town wanted him to kill Becky, but he's trying to be nice about it by offering her a cigarette and letting her finish her phone call with her mother.
@Mansplainer2099-jy8psАй бұрын
_"She was tired of running from her past"_ That's the most likely interpretation but it's also possible she's choosing a "gentle" death because she's targeted and doesn't want to run.
@aternialaffsalotАй бұрын
The characters all speak that way because it's a homage to noir.
@artboymoyАй бұрын
Noir on crack.
@Mansplainer2099-jy8psАй бұрын
More hardboiled but it's a grey area. EDIT: Or, more accurately, I mean there is a grey area between the two.
@bensneb360Ай бұрын
Fun Fact: The swords used by Miho were owned by Quentin Tarantino and used in Kill Bill, he lent them to the production
@ThePartisan13Ай бұрын
What an honor
@CastofftheshoefollowtheGourd24 күн бұрын
If by lent you mean that Robert Rodriguez stole the swords much to Tarantino's surprise and amusement.
@AB-nk5wvАй бұрын
Sin City is such an underrated movie, I can’t find anyone who’s seen it so thank you for doing a reaction. Every actor was so amazing and there were so many awesome visuals especially Alexis Bledel’s eyes. It’s a nice twist to not have the happiest of endings sometimes.
@alancrofootАй бұрын
The opening sequence with Josh Hartnett was used as proof of concept footage that director Robert Rodriguez filmed to convince author Frank Miller that he could bring the graphic novels to the big screen.
@batbrick3949Ай бұрын
19:51 Not to get argumentative, but that is a myth. A woman being attacked has a much better chance of survival when she is armed. An attacker taking it from her and using it on her is unlikely. First, disarming a knife or a gun from someone is very difficult, even for a trained martial artist. If the attacker is so skilled he can disarm her, then he was going to win the fight, regardless. Second, an armed woman is a much greater deterrent than an unarmed woman. The attacker is far more likely to back off when he’s facing a knife or a gun, versus empty hands.
@GrimysticsАй бұрын
Guy it’s a movie. A movie based on comic books. Explain now how the x men women is not realistic
@CastofftheshoefollowtheGourd24 күн бұрын
If Jackie-boy was a cop were they also cops? Is she threatening cops with a knife? If she kills someone could she be charged with murder? In this corrupt town? Very likely, and she would know that. So that fear and indecision may impede her ability to defend herself.
@scottevil4531Ай бұрын
This was the movie that made me realize I could see Elijah Wood in other roles than Frodo.
@HappyHarryHardonАй бұрын
Who’s Frodo?
@EdilbertFernandoАй бұрын
@@HappyHarryHardon Why is Frodo?
@HappyHarryHardonАй бұрын
@@EdilbertFernando Are you, Frodo?
@rayloc420Ай бұрын
frodo of the nine fingers?
@Raven1669111 күн бұрын
Sir, this was his 'What if Frodo kept the ring'-arc.
@NoelMcGinnisАй бұрын
I think I could watch an entire movie about Marv's backstory.
@0okaminoАй бұрын
Or another graphic novel. Other than _The Hard Goodbye,_ we only ever got two short stories featuring Marv, which don’t go much further back either.
@TurnaboutАй бұрын
@@0okamino Right. Silent Night and Just Another Saturday Night. Though he also has a big meaty part in A Dame to Kill For.
@danielskinner5346Ай бұрын
Frank Miller once said there isn't that much difference between a cape and a trenchcoat.
@jacob4920Ай бұрын
The only real difference would be "sleeves." lol
@0okaminoАй бұрын
Well, with the coat, you get pockets. Those can be quite useful.
@silentjay01Ай бұрын
This movie's DVD has one of my favorite extra features. Under the audio commentary category, you can choose to listen to the audience recorded at its Alamo Drafthouse premiere. Its like watching the movie in a full theater from the comfort of your home. Plus, the crowd's reactions to the two times Hartigan takes away that Yellow Bastards "weapons" is so great.
@bluelagoon1980Ай бұрын
Oh, damn. Now I wish I still had a DVD player, that would be sick!
@raegorzАй бұрын
I went to see this movie 3 times in theatres when it came out. It was so incredible at the time to get a movie that was aesthetically pleasing to comic book lovers. Especially having it be from a dark gritty comic that until the movie was unknown to most.
@nsasupporter755728 күн бұрын
So did I, I loved this movie when it came out in 2005… I rented it from Hollywood video all the time when it came out on DVD, when DVD’s were still a thing
@doobiedubois5583Ай бұрын
I didn’t even think about that. Mickey Rourke as Hellboy would have been insane!
@theshakyproject2971Ай бұрын
"How did they used to do this?" The electric chair is still legal in a handful of states in America.
@0okaminoАй бұрын
“With a chair, and a lot of electricity” was my answer.
@dpcnreactions7062Ай бұрын
E Wood did this movie right after The return of the King to show everyone that he is more than Frodo!
@jacob4920Ай бұрын
Meh. He's still just a "silhouette" in this film. He'll always be Frodo. There's no escaping THE ONE RING! Mwaahahahaha!!!!
@paulnorgan8647Ай бұрын
the guy from harry potter /s
@radicaladzАй бұрын
Fun fact, not sure if anyone else has mentioned this: this movie has a lot of CGI in it obviously, mostly in terms of the backdrops and colour effects - the bar was the only thing actually on a built set - but also, because of all the people in this film and the logistical nightmare scheduling them to all be in scenes together would be, a lot of them are pasted together in post; as a result Mickey Rourke wasn't on set at the same time as Jessica Alba, Bruce Willis, Clive Owen or Britanny Murphy during the scenes he shot (in fact I'm 80% pretty sure none of them overlapped at apart from Murphy and Owen for the entire film, and they only did so because of their scenes in the middle sequence - they shot their scene together at the bar seperately), he and Elijah Wood were never onset at the same time and only fought one another's stunt doubles (the handcuff shot is pretty obviously comped together when you know what to look for) and Rutger Hauer who plays Cardinal Roark was the last actor cast and filmed his portion of the scene with Marv long after Mickey Rourke had wrapped his shooting scenes. Like, for being very early doors in terms of digital background replacement and comping actors together, there was a lot of ingenuity on display here in terms of replicating the style of the comic.
@jimtatro6550Ай бұрын
The greatest graphic novel movie ever
@wampatan9Ай бұрын
300 and Watchmen are up there too, IMO
@TheTangothraxАй бұрын
Watchmen, but this was pretty damn good
@nsasupporter755728 күн бұрын
@@TheTangothrax yes, Watchmen was under appreciated also
@axebeard6085Ай бұрын
It was a brilliant move for Robert Rodriguez to add Frank Miller (a writer/artist who created the graphic novel) as a co-director.
@JosephHernandez-u1nАй бұрын
The nazi symbol is actually an altered buddhist symbol which is why Miho's throwing stars look similar.
@jacob4920Ай бұрын
Yeah. I remember going to this movie with a girlfriend, and she asked why she's got a "Nazi Throwing Star." I tell her that before the Nazis, the Swastika was actually a Buddhist Peace symbol, and of course Adolf Hitler perverted that entire symbology, and turned it into something it's actually not. I feel sorry for the Buddhists, in that regard. Their own image got ruined by basically the worst human beings that ever lived!
@Metzwerg74Ай бұрын
and from many other older cultures...
@FuckYoutubeAndGoogleАй бұрын
It's not an altered buddhist symbol. It's a symbol that has been used in many cultures for significantly longer than buddhism has even existed.
@jsmithers.Ай бұрын
🤡@@Metzwerg74
@otterpoetАй бұрын
Frank Miller wasn't convince _Sin City_ could work. Rodriguez flew him to Texas and literally filmed the opening sequence The Customer is Always Right *that day.* That's a freakin' flex XD
@gamesswell2024Ай бұрын
Nothing is inappropriate in Sin City
@d4mdcykeyАй бұрын
Frank Miller is a proper GOD among comic book writers and artists. He has received every major comic book industry award there is to win and his unique combining of film noir and manga is incredible. For me one of his stellar talents is his writing style, it's the lean, mean, muscular, approach of pulp fiction noir and not a word is wasted. He also wrote the scripts for RoboCop 2 and RoboCop 3; for this film he earned a Palme d'Or nomination. Luckily Robert Rodriguez understood and appreciated his contributions to the genre going way back and gave him top billing as co-director on the Sin City film.
@grimmjowespada2422Ай бұрын
This is the version where Frodo never threw the ring into the lava.
@BabyMaharaja06 күн бұрын
You brought up some stuff about the Nancy/Hartigan storyline I never thought about 😮
@oscarrios6048Ай бұрын
You can literally have the book and movie together side by side.
@satriconАй бұрын
This is one of my all time favorite movies!! Its SO good, and visually so stunning. its pure art!
@dmthandmade5674Ай бұрын
Used to? The electric chair is still used in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Kentucky, Louisiana, South Carolina, and Tennessee
@sirraf23Ай бұрын
As it should be.
@Mansplainer2099-jy8psАй бұрын
@@sirraf23 _"As it should be."_ "Should" is a myth.
@cobbler88Ай бұрын
@@Mansplainer2099-jy8psExplain why "should" is a myth.
@Mansplainer2099-jy8psАй бұрын
@@cobbler88 You mean how. "Why" is a question of motive. You ask why someone wore the Halloween costume they did, you don't ask why the Sun emits radiation, the latter is a "how" question or "how it came to be doing so" question. "Should" is a fiction. Nothing in the universe is as it "should" be nor can anything be as it "should not" be. Stars and planets could simply have never formed and that would be equally valid to the current state of things.
@cobbler88Ай бұрын
@@Mansplainer2099-jy8ps That's a lot of calories burned to say absolutely nothing relevant, but I'm not surprised. When you've got nothing, shuffle those feet a little. Maybe no one will notice you're backpedalling. Perhaps next time, rather than getting out of your depth out of desperation to post SOMETHING, maybe just sit quietly at the folding table in the corner with the rest of the children and let the adults discuss, okay? Take care.
@axr7149Ай бұрын
There are a LOT of classic noirs worth exploring IMO. The best example is likely CHINATOWN (1974) (starring Jack Nicholson) which blends the classic and neo-noir genre conventions very well (and it is my go-to example of a perfectly executed film), followed very closely by THE MALTESE FALCON (1941) which is credited for starting the noir genre. Interestingly, the director of THE MALTESE FALCON (John Huston) himself acted in CHINATOWN. Other great films of the genre include CHAMPION (1949) (which merges noir with boxing), ACE IN THE HOLE (1951) (same director as DOUBLE INDEMNITY (1944)), and DETECTIVE STORY (1951).
@professorbugbearАй бұрын
The Lethal Weapon movies are a more modern Homage to Noir
@MrGpschmidtАй бұрын
Fantastic adaptation of Miller's graphic novel (helps that he also co-wrote/directed and even cameos - as the foul priest Marv kills in confessional) with a stacked cast (hello Rutger Hauer & Powers Boothe as corrupt, venal brothers in power!) and in case no one mentioned it yet - Tarantino only directed the sequence with Clive Owen 'chatting' with Benicio Del Toro in the car. Marv is arguably the coolest dude in cinema with a powerhouse turn by inspired casting by Rourke and Willis' neo-Bogart turn is a true treat. Carla Gugino is beyond fucking hot too. Knew you'd dig it Mary ;D (and yes all the bleak, b&w cinematography with non-stop rain and narrations are pure noir). For the record the way everyone speaks in the film is en pointe for film noir - hard-boiled, straight-forward - no bullshit/to the point. Trust me on that one (check out OUT OF THE PAST starring Robert Mitchum and any Bogart detective film like THE BIG SLEEP to see; and for a flip on valentine try Steve Martin in DEAD MEN DON'T WEAR PLAID directed by Carl Reiner).
@rickymoranjr9609Ай бұрын
R.I.P Britney Murphy and Michael Clark Duncan
@nilesstarkАй бұрын
Powers Booth as well.
@NandRАй бұрын
@@nilesstarkand Rutger Hauer
@nilesstarkАй бұрын
@@NandR Yep.
@mikemoss6045Ай бұрын
"Check it out we can take a comic book and turn the panels into cinema!" We were truly spoiled..
@coldflamebluedragon196Ай бұрын
One of the most visually unique films made of the 2000’s. Tarantino said Mickey Rourke was born to play this part. There is a theory that Miho and Kevin are an angel and a demon literally. Both don’t speak and are practically supernatural with their killing abilities
@ProtossWannabe1984Ай бұрын
3:35 It’s George Luz from Band of Brothers:)
@radicaladzАй бұрын
Also, his partner is Ron Swanson from Parks and Rec, believe it or not.
@0okaminoАй бұрын
He’s great as George Luz, though I still can’t help but to think of him as Endless Mike Hellstrom from _The Adventures of Pete & Pete._
@pizmeyre5055Ай бұрын
I watched this in the theater. When they reveal Elijah Wood as a killer I screamed out "Frodo! No!" Got a good laugh. :)
@raifordhodges8457Ай бұрын
Josh Hartnett's character at beginning and end of the story is a professional hit man - remember at beginning he states he will cash her check in the morning and never know what she was running from - this is Neo Noir pushed to the max - very very faithful to the comics from Frank Miller who played the priest getting shot in the Marv storyline - Great reaction - Good job - thank you for all you do
@7Anakin72 күн бұрын
0:31 That's the poster for the sequel
@anthonypra8899Ай бұрын
The story starts with a line and ends with the same line. Always found that interesting.
@RealRecognizeReelАй бұрын
That's the poster for the sequel.
@CaturdayNiteАй бұрын
The comics were great as well. Some shots are almost exactly reproduced. I remember an attempt to bring another, similarly styled comic to the screen, The Spirit, but it didn't go as well.
@Mansplainer2099-jy8psАй бұрын
The Spirit wasn't received as well but, once you understand the context, the movie gets a lot better.
@lord_haven1114Ай бұрын
It wasn’t so bad with hardigan and Nancy. She wasn’t naive at all, and he didn’t groom her or anything. She was genuinely in love with him and she was all he had for years. Ages are a bit odd but hey, she’s an adult so it’s okay.
@sk8erburdАй бұрын
Did you not catch the part at the beginning after he killed her when he said I'll cash her check in the morning meaning She hired a hit out on herself and Josh. Was the hit man hired to do it.
@ethantam9340Ай бұрын
Fun fact: Mickey Rourke and Elijah Wood never met on set despite sharing some fight scenes together, they only met during the film's premiere.
@FabioOsorio619Ай бұрын
People have been overlooking this movie and it’s about damn time for someone to react and appreciate it. Well done dear! 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👌🏾
@jasonfrank1273Ай бұрын
Nick Offerman is playing the large henchman Mr Shlubb it's a little hard to recognize him but it's one of his first acting roles
@0okaminoАй бұрын
Having read the comics, I never would have thought of casting him as Shlubb or Rick Gomez as Klump, but both turned out to be a great choice.
@Col_FraggАй бұрын
Mary, why haven't you reacted to "Mr. Inbetween" yet? I know you focus on films but "Mr. Inbetween" isn't just one of the best Australian TV series of all time. It's one of the best crime dramas of all time PERIOD.
@TheFlash60Ай бұрын
Frank Miller is one of my favorite comic book writers & artists. Here's some of his best work: Daredevil run(1979-1983) Daredevil Born Again Daredevil The Man Without Fear Batman The Dark Knight Returns Batman Year One Sin City The Hard Goodbye Sin City A Dame To Kill For(There are too many Sin City graphic novels to name) Ronin
@SkolneyVikingsАй бұрын
Tarantino directed the scene of Dwight hallucinating Jackie's dead body talking. The sequel A Dame To Kill For is okay, but not nearly as good as this.
@JayPadrigАй бұрын
Do me a big favor and watch THE SPIRIT (not the horse cartoon of the same name) but the superhero comedy in the same vein of Sin City. I thought it was supposed to be Sin City2, but that’s a different movie that isn’t quite as good as the first but it’s fine to watch…
@o0pinkdino0oАй бұрын
More from Robert Reoriguez - Desperado / Once Upon a Time in Mexico - Planet Terror
@danielskinner5346Ай бұрын
Plus, The Faculty and Battle Angel Alita.
@privateer9181Ай бұрын
Has anyone here ever watched the dark angel tv show..with jessica alba?
@cobbler88Ай бұрын
Yep. With that NCIS guy.
@tunabomber111Ай бұрын
18:15 Used to. Ummm. Several US States still use electrocution for capitol punishment. Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Kentucky, Louisiana, South Carolina, and Tennessee. Yes, currently.
@MaryCherryOfficialАй бұрын
😯😯😯
@biguy617Ай бұрын
The director of this movie, Robert Rodriguez, did one of my favorite Antonio Banderas movies Desperado.
@mycarispassatАй бұрын
Agree… goes well with a glass of piss warm chango 😬
@claytonbishop4021Ай бұрын
Despite appearing in all three of the major stories, Brittany Murphy filmed all of her scenes in one day. And Leonardo DiCaprio was originally up for the role of Roark, Jr., but eventually declined the role, which went to Nick Stahl. Uma Thurman, Sarah Jessica Parker, Ashley Judd, Carrie-Anne Moss and Naomi Watts were considered to play Lucille before Carla Gugino was cast.
@SlashGriever21 күн бұрын
So glad we didn't get Sarah Jessica Parker. ^^
@eddiejravannenАй бұрын
Frank Miller (the creator and also the priest in the confessional) has said that Kevin and Miho are demons. That's why they don't talk except to their masters. The cardinal for Kevin, and the twins for Miho.
@Mansplainer2099-jy8psАй бұрын
Interesting but makes you wonder why Miho is grateful to Dwight for him protecting her when she was younger. EDIT: And how Kevin can kill Goldie but I guess Miho's not around at that point. EDIT 2: And how Marv can kill Kevin.
@Raven5150Ай бұрын
Marv's not an X-Men he's an iron man villian
@richardcraig5824Ай бұрын
It's not a noir film, it a Frank Miller "dark graphic novel from Marvel comics"! It's nothing like Dawson"s Creek or any of that BS you said. It's a interconnected story with very different people and personalities!
@adrianmedina8973Ай бұрын
Is she going to do iron claw at all? I remember she put up a poll but idk if she said something about doing it or not.
@BKP526Ай бұрын
Jessica Alba is still a fine looking woman
@maxmaven398Ай бұрын
I always remember Dwight Schrute' three favorite B words. Bears, beets and blood.
@Wildboyz6913Ай бұрын
Way to go, Mary, for reacting to Sin City!!! Bruce Willis and Jessica Alba were awesome!!!
@Jordashian93Ай бұрын
The neo-noir film style does a great job of bringing the comics to life while still maintaining the comic book feel.
@traydevonАй бұрын
Sin City 2 is also worth watching…as is The Lost Boys (1987). 😂
@axebeard6085Ай бұрын
13:31 Being nice to a lonely person can inspire a lot of loyalty.
@toddwright7567Ай бұрын
Most times the weapon is used against the person trying to defend themselves with it? Sources?
@t0dd000Ай бұрын
Bruce Willis was 50 when this film came out. So … "pushing 60" is a bit of a stretch, but not a big stretch. :)
@skylinerunner1695Ай бұрын
The line about Kevin being 'filled with white light' by eating his victims is a direct quote from the notorious Japanese cannibal and necrofilliac Issei Sagawa, who spoke at length about 'eaiting their souls' and 'filling himself with their white light while consuming their flesh'. He infamously did this to Dutch student Renee Hartevelt in 1981 but through some legal loophole made it back to Japan where he became a celebrity of sorts.
@douglascampbell9809Ай бұрын
Pretty sure the first woman in the red dress with the green eyes hired her killer to end her own life. That's why he said he didn't know what she was running from.
@skylinerunner1695Ай бұрын
The unknown assasin who bookends the film is a hitman-for-hire. And the women he kills in the opening scene paid him to not only kill her (she was suicidal and wanted to go out on her own terms) but to also say that dialogue before shooting her. He shows up in the final scene because Rosario Dawson and company have engaged his services to kill the girl for selling them out.
@quixote6942Ай бұрын
To get funding for the film, they shot the opening scene (with the filters on). Showing that clip sold the investors!
@Rocket1377Ай бұрын
It also sold Bruce Willis. He watched the first 10 seconds, paused it, turned to Rodriguez, and told him, "I'm in."
@nodak81Ай бұрын
Marv's story is by far my favorite. Carla Gugino = ❤
@thefourty-yearoldgamer8289Ай бұрын
Nobody says no to Jessica Alba, i'm sure hahahahh!
@kurfsolbАй бұрын
Brittany Murphy was so beautiful.
@christophersimmons8709Ай бұрын
Another amazing reaction Mary ❤❤🔥🔥.
@Cthulwho69Ай бұрын
Open question. When did every internet person and Gen Z kid start saying "LETS GO" all the time?
@MadcapMattАй бұрын
I don't know if you ever rewatch any of these movies but this is the first movie I test any new TV with. I put the TV into vivid mode and test the contrast. Perfect for testing the brightest and darkest scenes, even without having HDR.
@Enrique-GarciaАй бұрын
Re: the dialogue, that's because Sin City is a sendup of noir movies of the 40s/50s, where everything is overly dramatized. And to be honest, I think the same is said of shows like Gilmore Girls and Dawson's Creek, it may start off as "writers can't write 16 year old dialogue" but because the fans are into it, it becomes the STYLE of the show. The dialogue is also (I believe) 100% word for word out of the comic books, as Frank Miller wrote them (Frank Miller being the co-director and he also played the priest that Marv kills in the confession booth). Robert Rodriguez was so enamored with Sin City that he actually used the books as the storyboards and the script, which is why some of the shots are so outlandish and some of the dialogue really doesn't work (like when Clive Owen spouts 2 whole lines of dialogue telling Jackie Boy his gun will backfire "AS" Jackie Boy pulls the trigger)
@Mansplainer2099-jy8psАй бұрын
_"Re: the dialogue, that's because Sin City is a sendup of noir movies of the 40s/50s, where everything is overly dramatized."_ That but even more a sendup of hardboiled literature.
@onepunchmantolkienfan5383Ай бұрын
I love this movie; this was my introduction to Devon Akoi and I am in love with Miho!
@PAULIEL.4 күн бұрын
THIS IS ONE OF THE GREATET MOVIES.
@dudermcdudeface3674Ай бұрын
Everything about this is great. The narration has constant beats of snarling fun. The music, the imagery. The only way to properly express this movie is "Yes."
@x3mslayerАй бұрын
Goldie: "My name is Goldie" Dwight Schrute enters the room: "IDENTITY THEFT IS NOT A JOKE!"
@richard_nАй бұрын
One of my top three favorite movies of all time.
@bellantwain21Ай бұрын
Amazing movie love the video Mary stay motivated Dream big 1 mill on the way
@lorivera94Ай бұрын
I really miss Brittany Murphy... 😔 Still miss her
@billhutchinson6318Ай бұрын
I always remember her from the movie Spun
@SimoExMachina2Ай бұрын
He is the Yellow Bastard, which funny enough, is the name of the Frank Miller comic story from which this story and character was taken. I actually had read this and some others at my local library as a teenager and when I saw these stories in a movie form, I really loved it. The sequel is kind of meh, but this first one is a such a well made movie. The best comic book adaptation to a film in my mind.
@marvinsarracino116Ай бұрын
I Luv this movie! So underrated! My favorite character is Marv! "Thats a mighty fine coat!" Thanks for sharing Mary Cherry 🍒
@I_WasHereАй бұрын
youre so quick to judge. you should slow your roll. take it in
@ernsthaft4331Ай бұрын
Did anybody recognize Benicio Del Toro? Everytime I watch this movie I still can't believe how strange they made him look.
@TheeGoatPigАй бұрын
Careful there, Mary. Your bloodlust is showing.
@earthienАй бұрын
FUN FACT: The entire movie was shot in a green room, as opposed to on-location. A lot of the scenes were CGI'd in. And even though Mickey Rourke (Marv) and Elijah Wood (Kevin) have a fight scene, they've never met until the premiere.
@robertbrown380Ай бұрын
The cinematography, the score, the love of the female form. What a movie.
@GonkThePowerDroidАй бұрын
Kevin/Elijah is a character that has a thing for chopping people up and when it happens to him he is loving every second of it (at least that is my interpretation of it). It was also great fun to see Frodo Baggins as Kevin.
@Funkywarrior47Ай бұрын
3:20 4:17 14:12 37:48
@nsasupporter755728 күн бұрын
The assassin at the beginning and end of the movie was played by Josh Hartnett