I just have to say this: Syntell is the best person to watch movies with when he's already seen it. you give absolutely nothing away and make sure the other person gets a true first-time experience. thanks for this amazing reaction! 🥰
@ramondwilliam13073 ай бұрын
@the_nikster1 I thought he did see it for the first time lol.
@ramondwilliam13073 ай бұрын
He had me convinced, because I thought he saw it for the first time.
@deanna7773 ай бұрын
So we'll never know when it's an authentic reaction. That's not good.
@pablozee63593 ай бұрын
Excerpt for the part where he pointed out the hammer could be in the Bible.
@lavinder113 ай бұрын
@@deanna777He said in the beginning that it’s a first time watch for the guest. She even took 30 seconds to talk about it.
@jennithebombdiggity793 ай бұрын
The redemption was Red's, not Andy's. Andy never lost hope. Red had forgotten it. Andy helped to remind him that there is more to this world than the walls they were surrounded by. It's even the last line in the whole movie, "I hope....". TEARS!!! Its such a beautiful movie. There's a reason that it is one of the best movies ever made. And, can we take our hats off to Mr. Stephen King? The man is a master storyteller, no matter the genre. This is one of those movies that, if you're channel surfing and you run across it, you have to watch it, no matter what part you catch it on. It's even called being "Shawshanked". Soo good. New sub here. Thanks for the great reaction.
@johnherrera5093 ай бұрын
@@jennithebombdiggity79 Frank Darabont should also get credit for adapting a novella into a full feature along with great dialogues and good direction, which in another director, hands, The result would have been mediocre
@jennithebombdiggity793 ай бұрын
@@johnherrera509 I wholeheartedly agree. He is also a genius. I just point out Mr King because he’s soo synonymous with horror, that it’s just worth noting that he is soo much more than just that. But I do agree with you. Completely.
@BruteStrength992 ай бұрын
@@jennithebombdiggity79 red was a child killer. He lost hope because he didn't deserve it
@googlee88822 ай бұрын
@@BruteStrength99 shut up
@jennithebombdiggity792 ай бұрын
@@BruteStrength99 okay….
@charlesh7963 ай бұрын
I am a combat vet and at times I feel kind of down but I found both of you . I haven't felt this good in a long time. Thank you for this and may God bless you both.
@L.L.Cool.T3 ай бұрын
Thank you for you service, Charles
@charlesh7963 ай бұрын
@@L.L.Cool.T thank you for your thoughts. It means a lot to me
@butterflyjessica13 ай бұрын
@@charlesh796 💕🙏🏼
@Smokie_6663 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service, @chalesh796. Always keep your head up!
@firbolg3 ай бұрын
I completely agree with you. I'm a former military EMT with PTSD and this is my feel good channel.
@KelliFranklin3 ай бұрын
The word gets thrown around but I think in the case of The Shawshank Redemption it is definitely a masterpiece. Stephen King is a gifted storyteller and this movie is so well made and so well acted. I think this movie is a masterpiece.
@sreyangovender34043 ай бұрын
I concur. Transcends the screen
@probablyaddictedtoyoutube3 ай бұрын
Agreed. It has stood up against the test of time very well
@msdarby5153 ай бұрын
@@KelliFranklin It takes Frank Darabont to translate it from the written story to the screen. Most of King's stories didn't do well as a movie. But let Frank write the screenplay and it's gold. Same goes for Green Mile. I just wish King and Frank had connected for more movies.
@jerryfick6133 ай бұрын
@msdarby515 absolutely right. Many directors have tried to adapt King's works. I have heard that King feels that he discovers the stories rather than write them. This director seemed to be able to allow the stories and characters to lead the action.
@L.L.Cool.T3 ай бұрын
I don’t even have to watch a clip, whenever I see a poster or still shot from this movie, I just swell with tears over how good this story is.
@notthatbirdman3 ай бұрын
She hit the nail on the head. When people ask me what the best movie ever made is, I always say.. "I don't know, I haven't seen every movie". What I do know, is that Shawshank is a PERFECT film. That's the best way to describe it. I've seen a lot of good movies, but I don't think I've ever seen another perfect one. Thanks for the video.
@PeteGeorge3 ай бұрын
I acted in Shawshank for two months, the summer of 93. Great experience! 😮🎉❤😊
@mariai95492 ай бұрын
Not you again, So what? no one cares...after reading it 30 times.
@kryss20562 ай бұрын
@@PeteGeorge who did you play?
@robertparker62802 ай бұрын
@@mariai9549 37 people do (at the moment), it looks like you don't.
@Alison-ZRT3 ай бұрын
So pleased you loved this movie. It always makes me cry at the end. True friendship
@kathyastrom13153 ай бұрын
I love imagining the legend of Andy Dufresne spreading across the New England prison system as various prisoners from Shawshank are released and then later end up in another prison in the region like Tommy. They would share stories of the Shawshank library and the man who created it, and the amazing tale of his innocence and escape.
@joeconcepts55523 ай бұрын
After many watches of the movie I noticed that when Brooks is talking about committing a crime, he says “so they’ll send me back home.” But Red only says “so they’ll send me back.” A little hint that he is not in the same state of mind as Brooks was.
@shifty76293 ай бұрын
Similarly, when Brooks is released the camera is pointing back towards the prison. His home. When Red is released the camera is pointing outwards, towards freedom. So many neat little touches like that which can easily be overlooked, even after multiple watches.
@YanaKiramman3 ай бұрын
One of the best movies in the history of the movies! ♥
@deandeany9113 ай бұрын
I watch alot of reaction uploads and loved this one. You guys are cool and I could see you almost cry at times which prompted me to write this for having decent hearts. Big thumbs up from the UK 👍
@TheHumanPalindrome3 ай бұрын
This is one of my all time favourites. Thank you both for such a wonderful reaction. Stephen King is such an underrated writer, critics sometimes look down their noses at “genre authors” but in my opinion he’s a modern day Dickens.
@andyquin53863 ай бұрын
The Shawshank Redemption didn't do well at the box office, but when you factor in that it was released at the same time as Pulp Fiction, The Lion King, Forest Gump, Four Weddings and a Funeral, it makes sense. '94 might be the best year ever for movies.
@paulinegallagher782112 күн бұрын
Four Weddings is very overrated, but it had all the ingredients of a movie a million women wanted to see.
@McZorr01013 ай бұрын
In an interview around one of the anniversaries of the release of The Shawshank Redemption, director, Frank Darabont said the he had been asked why there has never been a Director’s Cut of the film. The answer is revealing, because it was Castle Rock Entertainment who he ended up getting a production deal with the company was already bought into doing justice to Stephen King film adaptations, after all it was Rob Reiner who set up the company and named it after the fictional town in Stand By Me, Reiner’s adaptation of the King Novella, The Body. When Darabont came to shoot Shawshank Castle Rock were very hands off the shooting and editing process, they did not insist on edits when the film came in around 20 minutes longer than expected, they just accepted that it was as long as it needed to be. So Darabont’s answer to the “Director’s Cut” question was that the original cinema release WAS the Director’s Cut.
@tcraigg45633 ай бұрын
Brooks...his name is Brooks. 😀
@infiad12753 ай бұрын
🤣 You wouldn't think it would matter that much but after 20 times of hearing "Booksie"......I wanted to scream, "It's Brooks!! It's frickin' Brooks!!" 😆😆😆
@tcraigg45633 ай бұрын
@@infiad1275 🤣🤣🤣 same!!
@joeconcepts55523 ай бұрын
From now on I’ll think of him as Booksy.
@Noonesbusiness-n1i2 ай бұрын
@@tcraigg4563 it even showed brooks on the area he carved his name and they still kept missing it but I think it was because he was in the library that they thought it I just know how they continued with the wrong name when it showed it craved in the beam
@camperp1953 ай бұрын
I guess i just miss my friend,does me every single time
@user-blob3 ай бұрын
Me too.
@catfishandcoleslaw3 ай бұрын
This has to be one of my top 5 reactions of all time and I’ve seen at least 50+ of them. You really dissected it well- and emotions just took over. Phenomenal job, guys!!
@craigfowler70983 ай бұрын
Simply the best movie ever made - prove me wrong. Emotional rollercoaster, dark moments, sad moments, funny moments, exciting moments, moving moments and exquisite pure joyful moments. Perfect acting, superb storyline, fabulous narration and beyond belief screenplay and directing. Need I go on? I have seen this over 100 times and still find it fascinating and heartfelt movie You could say I am a fan. Subscribed.
@kathyastrom13153 ай бұрын
I love how you pointed out how Andy had grown as a person in Shawshank. His very first instinct when he saw the records, especially that specific opera album, was to listen to it for himself, but he then recognized that he could share that freedom he found in music with the entire prison population. He implemented that sharing immediately, knowing he would pay a price for it. That scene of everyone listening to the music is one of the most beautifully shot images of 1990s cinema.
@Serai32 ай бұрын
I find it interesting how many people instantly assume that Andy is guilty simply because he isn't blubbering and weeping. Not everyone drowns in tears when bad things happen, and it's very self-centered to assume that everyone must react the way you would.
@jerodast2 ай бұрын
Not even self-centered necessarily, even a lack of self-awareness is all it takes. You don't even know how you'd react for sure. People forget that while the jury and the audience are hearing the grisly details for the first time, the accused has gone through it so many times they've grown cold to it, replaced by mind-numbing bureaucratic legal process and growing existential dread that a crime you didn't do could end your life. Being on trial for your life is a shock. You aren't going to perform on command. From recent times I think of Amanda Knox, who if you want to put it a certain way "was convicted by the Italian courts for not seeming emotional enough her roommate was murdered".
@nathanielhorrigan21813 ай бұрын
I absolutely loved this reaction. You two are such good people and I hope you both have nothing but success and happiness in life
@johnrogan97293 ай бұрын
Quickly becoming one of my favorite channels. Great, smart reactions. Thanks for such good content.
@mikebalzano21082 ай бұрын
Yup it was the 60’s but it also was Buxton Maine and I’ve lived in Buxton Maine and that area most of my life and I never saw any bad feelings against any man anywhere in my home state so Red had nothing to worry about. As far as I know Maine is still a friendly place to live for anyone and after 70 years I still live here. Nice reactions guys thank you.
@mayrad5307Ай бұрын
I’m late to the party, love this movie, so you all can come full circle--awesome! Thank you for what you do! Keep doing what you’re doing!
@Mus1c1luv3 ай бұрын
This is one of the most comprehensive, well-thought, reactions of Shawshank that I've seen. Good job, you two! Thank you!
@leroystea80693 ай бұрын
The message of hope is such a powerful thing. Even in this time and day with all that we face. This is my wife's favorite movie and mine. Thank you for sharing♥
@mrozay6073 ай бұрын
Anyone else screaming "It's BROOKSIE!!" 😂
@vabeachkevin16 күн бұрын
@@mrozay607 the whole time!
@Lespaul13100Ай бұрын
Really like your channel, Syntell! Subbed! Shawshank is one of my fave movies! William Sadler is a local where I live, met him a few times. Great guy, and an awesome Mandolin player as well!
@Infamous19913 ай бұрын
Its such a pleasure to watch this movie again with you guys thank you
@WillShakes4233 ай бұрын
I think it was fitting that he hid the hammer in the Bible. He knew a warden who thinks he's God would never think to look through it. Plus you gotta love the fact that he hid it in the book of _Exodus_ of all places. 29:24-29:27 "At least I know the poster'll keep me busy, keep my mind at ease." You were right, bro. The poster _did_ keep Andy busy, just not in the way we thought it would. And I still love that about the movie.
@pablozee63593 ай бұрын
I’ve never seen a single reactor make the Exodus connection. I’m not even a Christian and that jumps off the screen.
@kathyastrom13153 ай бұрын
This film had been my first exposure to the older pre-rehabilitation era American prison system in films. This year, I had an interesting project that took me even further back. In February, a genealogy website started a crowdsourcing project to create profile pages for every African-American listed in the 1880 US census. I grabbed my home county in Illinois that included Joliet, where I grew up. The prison there that you see in the beginning of The Blues Brothers was first built back in the mid-1800s, so the 1880 census included the prison. It was fascinating to see how the census taker organized his tally by where the men were employed in the prison-the buggy shop, the repair shop, and other various mini-businesses where the prison was profiting from their free labor.
@bayleafdoor3 ай бұрын
So much I love here. Shawshank Redemption has always been one of our favorite movies & we love Morgan Freeman & Tim Robbins.
@ThirdEye...3 ай бұрын
Morgan Freeman deserved an Oscar for this Role!
@michaeltrivette17283 ай бұрын
@@ThirdEye... dude please. Let’s get real. Morgan Freeman deserves an Oscar just for existing.
@RyneMurray233 ай бұрын
This is one of my favorite movies of all time. You go through all of the emotions during this film.
@mitchmatt60023 ай бұрын
Been a pleasure to watch this wonderful film along with you both - it's been one of my faves for years and never loses its power to move me! Always cry when Red reunites with his much-missed friend! Great reactions, Syntell and Cortney! 💙
@Asmrluvr82 ай бұрын
One of my favorite movies! I enjoyed your reactions so much, thank you. Thank you. Thank you! 🙏🙏🙏
@MsChicoroАй бұрын
Bring back Ms. Wright, please. She's fabulous with you. The combination was magical: you, her and the movie.
@chandlermorgan7083 ай бұрын
10/10 The Shawshank Redemption One of the finest films made in recent years. It's a poignant story about hope. Hope gets me. That's what makes a film like this more than a movie. It tells a lesson about life. Those are the films people talk about 50 or even 100 years from you. It's also a story for freedom. Freedom from isolation, from rule, from bigotry and hate. Freeman and Robbins are majestic in their performances. Each learns from the other. Their relationship is strong and you feel that from the first moment they make contact with one another. There is also a wonderful performance from legend James Whitmore as Brooks. He shines when it is his time to go back into the world, only to find that the world grew up so fast he never even got a chance to blink. Stephen King's story is brought to the screen with great elegance and excitement. It is an extraordinary motion that people "will" be talking about in 50 or 100 years.
@kathyastrom13153 ай бұрын
When Andy asks Hadley if he trusts his wife, he’s doing it because he is actually protecting Hadley’s interests. Andy knows that f he were in Hadley’s shoes and trusted his wife with a windfall, she and her golf pro lover would have run off with the money. He is really being a good banker looking out for his potential client.
@dianaruman87232 ай бұрын
It was also an opening line that guaranteed Hadleys attention.
@ricksanchez27602 ай бұрын
Bros is not lying. Digging a ditch with a shovel/pickaxe and elbow grease is gnarly work
@j.woodbury4123 ай бұрын
Director Frank Darabont wanted the movie to have a more ambiguous ending, with Red on the bus on the way to Mexico, but the studio said the audience wanted to see Red and Andy reunited, so Darabont came up with a compromise with Andy and Red reuniting as the camera pulls away. Jeffrey DeMunn (the Prosecuting Attorney at the beginning of the movie), William Sadler (Heywood), and Brian Libby (Lloyd) all appeared in "The Green Mile", another movie based on a Stephen King novel, directed by Frank Darabont and taking place in a prison. Tom Hanks was offered the role of Andy Dufresne, but turned it down so he could take the lead role in "Forrest Gump", and James Cromwell was offered the role of the Warden, Sam Norton, but turned it down in favor of Bob Gunton. Both Hanks and Cromwell appeared the following year in "The Green Mile" as Prison guard Paul Edgecomb and Warden Hal Moores, respectively. Several real life prison guards offered to meet with Clancy Brown and help him make his performance more convincing, but he turned them down because he didn't want his performance to reflect negatively on either of them. James Whitmore was given the role of Brooks Hatlen because he was director Frank Darabont's favorite character actor. I think this was Whitmore's last movie before he died. Allan Greene was director Frank Darabont's agent and friend who died of AIDS before the movie came out.
@etiennebrownlee40713 ай бұрын
Oh my gosh, that last scene was so satisfying to watch. It was the punctuation mark, like a farewell kiss, or a postscript in a love letter. I could feel the rage of the audience when they saw an open ended Shawshank..
@j.woodbury4123 ай бұрын
@@etiennebrownlee4071 Yes!
@jerodast2 ай бұрын
Just a note, unless I'm misunderstanding it wasn't "the following year", the two films were released 1994 and 1999. But yeah the "Darabont-verse" has a lot of recognizable faces :)
@j.woodbury4122 ай бұрын
@jerodast it probably was. I am not good with dates.
@foosterOG3 ай бұрын
I love this reaction! I appreciate your insights at the end. One of the best movies ever made!
@tcraigg45633 ай бұрын
This is one of my favorite movies. I watch it every time it's on TV.
@ralphiecifaretto89613 ай бұрын
That's what happened to me. I was halfway thru the movie and one of the people i was watching it with have array the ending. But I still loved it because the journey was so good. Wish I could go back and see it fresh.
@comeoninmycoop3 ай бұрын
Louse=lice ; mouse=mice... Great reaction!
@jontastic3 ай бұрын
Good people always use their privilege to help those without it. Red helped Andy and others. Andy helped many too. It’s nice to see a true bro friendship develop so far. ❤
@Spazzmatazzz3 ай бұрын
Go to his lawyer? He was allowed no telephone access and all outgoing mail in prisons is monitored. I've watched tons of reactions to this movie and you guys NAILED it! New subscriber!
@donkunes86302 ай бұрын
the movie is considered by many one of the best ever made , there is an actual town Zihuatanejo on the western Mexican coast . Mt daughter vacationed near there . The movie helped with the town's already popular beaches.. to think all of the dialect , actions of the movie were created by the mind of one artist , Stephen King . There are many forms of art and I hope all appreciate them
@hcrot273 ай бұрын
The picture of Morgan Freeman at the parole hearing is his son and also the prisoner at the beginning saying “we’re reeling them in.”
@Threeone33 ай бұрын
@@hcrot27 seriously? WOW
@JackRazz13 ай бұрын
"You dusty with yo' cheeks out" literally made me spit my drink out. LOL! Well-played!
@blackbirdcorvis3 ай бұрын
One of Stephen King’s best.
@killianlpc3 ай бұрын
The most amazing thing about this film is it wasn't really a box office success, but when it went to VHS Video rental the word got around and it became an utter cult classic watched by millions, it is one of the the greatest films of all time. Great reaction we could see you were genuinely moved by it. Incredible to think also that it was only a Steven King short story called Rita Hayworth and The Shawshank Redemption and became this epic film. A film of true hope conquers all, a beautiful ending on the beach after all they had been through with a glorious panoramic shot from above.
@jerodast2 ай бұрын
My proudest moment working at Hollywood Video was trying to come up with a suggestion for a pretty intense high-frequency customer, and it came out he hadn't seen Shawshank. I stumbled a little explaining what made it so phenomenal but he took the suggestion. Came back a few days later practically wordless, nodding, like "THAT is an all time movie".
@ChubbyChecker1822 ай бұрын
07.00 ish... yes, a fantastic shot. The whole film is beautifully filmed, so many beautiful shots. This was one of the Great Cinematographer Roger Deakins early movies, and along with the visuals the sound and music from Thomas Newman also is absolutely fantastic in setting the mood and tone in Shawshank, its perfection.
@robertparker62802 ай бұрын
To me what makes this movie so good, is how subtle time changes. Movie doesn't tell you, the characters do, or see them age a bit. Example: Jake, seeing at the start we see him as a baby, grows into an adult.
@phogue13 ай бұрын
I have never thought about the line about him being a closed book. Great observation.
@manuelkatsos51043 ай бұрын
Can't believe this classic didn't win the Oscars for best picture
@TradeVibeLive3 ай бұрын
Red is really the silent friend who just gives and gives, and he doesn't expect anything from anyone, he just likes seeing people around him thriving. He is the main character in the story, but between the short story, the script, the shooting, and the editing then Andy became the main character, because he is the one that things happen to, meanwhile Red is again just the silent hero. But when its all said and done we all remember red again as the guy telling the story, the real protagonist. Thats how Stepehn King intended it I think.
@red16wolf3 ай бұрын
Call "Brooks" "Booksie" is crazy 😅😂
@joepegel3 ай бұрын
"I hope." The best final line of any movie ever.
@moniquestam871015 күн бұрын
Well, apart from enjoying your reaction, the two of you are the prettiest people I've seen in a long time, love from the Netherlands
@WarrenProudSouthAfrica8 күн бұрын
You guys are damn good judges of a movie This is the best movie of all time. You guys did Awesome. Keep on keeping on ❤
@bobcarr264914 күн бұрын
Anywhere you get respect can be home, sometimes it's all that defines home.
@stallion783 ай бұрын
If you notice when Brooks gets out the prison is behind him. And when Red gets out the world is in front of him
@ChirumboloFilm3 ай бұрын
I used to work in a second run movie theater back in the day, so for about 10 years I got to see every movie that came out for free. It was a great time for me since I’m such a movie buff. This movie was one of the films I watched then but it stands out from every other film I saw there for a weird reason (maybe?). At about 3/4 through the movie someone seated a few rows behind me cleared their throat and snapped me out of a sort of trance I didn’t know I was in. I was so tuned in and absorbed in the story that I completely forgot I was in a movie theater with other people! I’ve lost myself in movies before, but never like that. I’ll always consider this movie to be one of the best films ever made if not the best. It’s just an all around masterpiece.
@kenhughes1363 ай бұрын
Saw this movie theatrically, like 14 people in there. No one saw this att he Movies. One of the best, word of mouth films ever.
@Karadjanov3 ай бұрын
Andy being a closed book was a give and take and he never stopped being one it is who he is. It estranged him from his wife and did not win him the sympathy of the jury but on the other hand it helped him endure the first years of prison and helped him hide his plan from everyone including his best friend which enabled him to escape in the end.
@etiennebrownlee40713 ай бұрын
I think institutionalized is the coping mechanism of people to find a comfort zone in a state that you are in right now. If you give man comfort, he will forget his goal... While on the other hand, Andy quietly stayed focused on his goal till the end. He did not fall into the traps of becoming institutionalized.
@keshhan64122 ай бұрын
"...hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies." That simple sentence gets me every time.
@Zen-pc8vl3 ай бұрын
My two favourite reactors, love you guys... Much love from Australia...
@WiseGuy56743 ай бұрын
“This part gets me every time! Every time it gets me!” I guess this wasn’t a ‘first time reaction’.😎😉
@unclelarry32072 ай бұрын
Great reaction! Thanks for sharing.
@MusicalZombie3 ай бұрын
One of the best movies that has ever been created about hope and friendship. Thanks for watching. :)
@keithcharboneau33317 күн бұрын
Getting the ballistics marks from bullets is a science that began in the 1890's but truly matured around 1920, this takes place in the 1940's so YES they did have the ability and DID collect ballistics information at crime scenes.
@bettybaby637 күн бұрын
Great reaction. This one is definitely top 5, many would argue top 3 Just amazing all around. Funny thing…it was a hit of a sleeper, not doing much during its initial release.
@Simdoog3 ай бұрын
Did you notice the sound of a harmonica when Red is moving along that rock wall towards the tree?
@nupefromdaville3 ай бұрын
I love this movie and I love this so much! Two of my favorite people! Fantastic!
@michaelnadler5963 ай бұрын
In the book this is based on, Morgan Freedman's character, Red, is Irish. 16:34
@tuturpena3 ай бұрын
One of the best things about Andy is that he saved Red's life with and even seeded the idea before he got out.
@carriesmith7423 ай бұрын
1:06:19 I never noticed Albert Einstein's glee at the Warren's downfall!
@juliant3 ай бұрын
Andy Dufrane was such a good guy that when the system put him in prison, he had no intention of breaking out. He was just gonna serve his time, but God had other plans for Mr Dufrane.
@SparksDrinker3 ай бұрын
@@juliant That was pretty messed up of god to have Andy’s wife and Tommy killed.
@juliant3 ай бұрын
@SparksDrinker if GOD is above all which he is, then all life and all death is a part of his plan.
@cullenarthur88793 ай бұрын
@@juliantyeah, like giving cancer to babies. You're stating what you believe as a fact.
@Fred-vy1hm3 ай бұрын
@@juliant It's spelled Dufresne and that's quite the leap crediting god for his salvation, if there is such a thing as a "god" then he was also responsible for all the horrors Andy endured, but I suppose you as a Christian will use the old "mysterious ways" trope to explain that contradiction.
@juliant3 ай бұрын
@@Fred-vy1hm i'm not going debtate my beliefs or religion with you. That's my personal view and you can have yours. end of discussion on my end.
@jdm10663 ай бұрын
"That's just a SHITTY Pipe Dream!" -Red Andy then escapes through a Shitty Pipe....
@joedirt6883 ай бұрын
Hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies.
@robertcrundwell27822 ай бұрын
Afternoon. Although set in Maine, the prison used was the Ohio State Reformatory in Mansfield, Ohio. The large main building and Cell Block 1 are now a Museum. They offer tours, can be used for special occasions, and offer overnight cell accommodations for the brave. ( haunted ) The street scenes were primarily N. Main St where the shop owners agreed to have their stores redone to fit the time period. Many still look the same. The halfway house is the Bissman Building, and still looks the same today. (It was a beer distributor, hence the name "Brewery") The store was the E and B Market on 4th Street which has been torn down. I was fortunate to be an extra con in the yard scenes. The premiere was held at Mansfield's Renaissance Theatre, a restored 1929 movie palace, before New York and Los Angeles. I volunteered working the theatre restoration. The prison was also used in the movie "Tango & Cash” and was the Russian cell block in "Airforce One". An interesting side note: In the bad winters, crows from 7 or 8 counties move into Mansfield by the hundreds due to large granaries that used to be between town and the prison. Brook's crow was a natural. The passage of time from the unfiltered Chesterfields to the filtered cigarettes offered Tommy by the warden, and the subtle aging of everyone is superb. Many people miss the subtlety of when Brooks left the prison, you see the prison through the gates, and when Red left you are looking forward over the fields toward the town. And they don't notice when the warden opens the Bible and finds the cut out, that it is the book of Exodus! I am 75 now with Parkinson's and don't get to attend movies very often. I enjoy the reaction videos on KZbin.
@jasonhughes31523 ай бұрын
I truly enjoyed this, thank you❤
@Tiggermk43 ай бұрын
Thanks for another fun reaction. For me, one of the greatest ever movies. I love the last line. “I …hope.”….(p.s.Also it’s funny how you bleeped fart and not Sh.t.)
@hunglui41463 ай бұрын
The music Andy was playing over the prison yard is by Mozart. There's a great movie about his life: Amadeus. It showed his career in the 18th centry. Thank you for reaction. This is one of my favorite movies.
@mildredpierce45063 ай бұрын
The old guy’s name was Brooks not Booksy
@kosk113483 ай бұрын
"First time watching!" Also "This ending gets me every time!"
@captainsplifford3 ай бұрын
In general, Stephen King adaptations are better than most, because he writes in *such* an evocative manner, but this is one of the very best. From the writing to the casting to the score to the direction, it was pretty much perfect.
@rebeccablackburn94873 ай бұрын
This one and the green mile are the best!
@2232Serena3 ай бұрын
This movie is one of the best I've ever seen.
@jeanb.5405Ай бұрын
Red opens the envelope: "Look how he looking around like who see me?" LOL exactly what I was thinking because I was feeling I would have done the same darn thing.
@recifebra33 ай бұрын
Great reaction!! One of the best reactions i've seen
@evelynne2846Ай бұрын
I bought Lucky Strikes around 1966 for 50 cts a pack and you didn't have to be 18. I can't imagine how much they cost in 1941 25 years earlier. But then EVERYTHING was cheaper. #1 favorite movie of all.
@frenchkjfan93 ай бұрын
I adooored your reactions, super endearing, I relived my own reaction when I first watched Shawshank redemption...
@doubleexoticokay3 ай бұрын
you two did an awesome job. love you both, much!
@Noonesbusiness-n1i2 ай бұрын
Seriously the best reaction to this movie ❤
@joec89032 ай бұрын
The one thing I wanted to point out that was ironic, that right when you guys mentioned the harmonica, a few seconds later when Red got to the rock wall you hear the harmonica being played for the first time EVER in the movie! And I think it was put there intentionally at that moment to represent that Red was finally going to be free.
@brandonbrooks8983 ай бұрын
How did they even enjoy this movie!? They talked and did play by play the whole time! How did you hear anything happen?
@danlincoln89873 ай бұрын
One of the greatest endings, if not the greatest ending ever to a movie in my opinion... This real prison is in Mansfield, Ohio and it's called Mansfield reformatory. You could actually go there every Halloween. They have a haunted prison and it's pretty amazing. Of course you get to see some parts from where the film was, There's also a Shawshank prison tour where they take you to film locations, I think the crazy thing about this movie it completely bombed in the theater. It was nominated for best picture but lost to Forrest Gump but it became a classic once it came out