Who's your fav in this: Connery, Costner, De Niro, Garcia? Crime Playlist: kzbin.info/aero/PLQHhQlj8i5dqlmiIFyVb3oMZkOwoQAJsz
@Ian-xx1xb5 ай бұрын
That's a tough question but I'd go with de niro he plays the bad guy so well
@tomhoffman43305 ай бұрын
Connery, Hands-Down...nobody-else was More Bad@$$ than 'Malone' in this Movie!👍
@daveking93935 ай бұрын
Connery... There endnth' the lesson...
@bryanfox54575 ай бұрын
Connery steals every scene he’s in. I had never heard of Andy Garcia before seeing this in the theater, but he certainly became a favorite!
@wills.3645 ай бұрын
Connery and De Niro
@joeb53165 ай бұрын
Men wore sleeve garters because period shirts weren't made with a lot of size variety. The garters helped fit sleeve length to a person and also kept the cuffs clean.
@cshubs5 ай бұрын
This'll help me understand every bartender in every Western!
@kschneyer5 ай бұрын
I never knew that!
@Tigermania5 ай бұрын
TIL :)
@positivelynegative91495 ай бұрын
And for when they needed to roll their sleeves up.
@Mongo615 ай бұрын
all point pens hadn't been invented yet and people had to use inkwells.
@Dillpicks955 ай бұрын
The score by Ennio Morricone is a masterpiece and Sean Connery won his first and only Oscar for his role in this, well deserved he was fantastic.
@petersvillage74475 ай бұрын
Yesh.
@Mongo615 ай бұрын
Morricone did literally hundreds of movie scores and I haven't heard a bad one yet.
@brianjones79075 ай бұрын
@Dillpicks ,, he was robbed of another one in 1990 for "Indiana Jones & The Last Crusade" , should have been Nominated & Won the Best Surpporting Actor ..
@SilentBob7315 ай бұрын
"Timothy Dalton should win an Oscar and beat Sean Connery over the head with it!!!" --Andrew Wells.
@lexkanyima21955 ай бұрын
@@brianjones7907beating Denzel Washington ? Hell no
@paulstroud26475 ай бұрын
Brian DePalma asked Bob Hoskins (Who Framed Roger Rabbit) if he would take the part of Capone if RDN backed out, as he was undecided at the time. Hoskins said yes, but never heard back and then read that De Niro had got the role and thought no more about it. Then one morning he got a letter from DePalma saying thank you for your help, here's a cheque for $200k. Hoskins rang him and said 'if there's any more parts you don't want me for, I'm available...' 🙂
@freddiefan19734 ай бұрын
Never heard that story. Does sound like something Bob Hoskins would say lol Just for staying available for however long he waited to hear back he got paid $200k? Where can I get a deal like that? lol
@CarolinaCharles7775 ай бұрын
That dual focus shot is called a split diopter shot. One of De Palma's signature shots.
@CarolinaCharles7775 ай бұрын
Connery basically won the Oscar because he was being honored for all his work, really. Similar to why Michael Caine won for Hannah and her Sisters the year before. Big stars who never won prior, so they honored them with supporting awards. Also The Untouchables was a big hit both critically and at the box office.
@pablosonic8925 ай бұрын
Tarantino, who adores DePalma, uses this shit time to time. Most famously in Reservoir Dogs.
@JaguarDave545 ай бұрын
I think Citizen Kane was the first if not one of the first movies to use that lens.
@CarolinaCharles7775 ай бұрын
@@JaguarDave54 Interestingly, Welles employed a technique called Deep Focus, keeping everything within the frame in focus.
@JaguarDave545 ай бұрын
@@CarolinaCharles777 i certainly could be wrong but I recall it had that same blur between the two actors while they were both in focus and the background was sharp as well. Used when Kane and Susan were in Xanadu and she was about to leave him was the most prominent memory I have of it.
@8967Logan5 ай бұрын
A lot of great scenes in this movie by phenomenal actors, but when Kevin Costner says, "Did it sound anything like that?" gets me every time.
@ad61video5 ай бұрын
"Brush my hair, 30s foreplay." Great remark Jen! 😂
@justinedse84355 ай бұрын
@warlockEd73 Chill out. What in the heck are you talking about?
@mikerhodes84545 ай бұрын
"He's in the car." - A very "James Bond" line about a man who just killed Sean connery.
@johncasamassa28405 ай бұрын
I always thought he got off easy. MFer killed Sean Connery!
@russelturner57715 ай бұрын
Right!
@SilentBob7315 ай бұрын
"Now THAT was pretty James Bond." --Chandler Bing
@BDogg20235 ай бұрын
“He’s in the car.” Love this movie. Was my favorite film when it came out when I was a teen. 15 years later, when I finally got promoted and had my own office working at Paramount, I got a framed limited edition movie poster from the archives to hang on my office wall. Now retired, it hangs in the hallway of my house.
@UtopiaBlue685 ай бұрын
That is so frigg'n AMAZEBALLS!! WELL DONE!!
@Biorythym5 ай бұрын
30:11 Frank Nitti (the bad guy thrown off the roof) actually lived to 1943 (57 years old) after being indited for Hollywood extortion he walked to a rail yard and attempted to commit suicide. It took three bullets to do so, one simply shot his hat off, referenced when Ness shot it off his head
@gawainethefirst5 ай бұрын
Right…😏 He shot at himself three times, and missed twice. Edit- the conspiracy theorist in me, finds suicide difficult to believe in this case given that Nitti was about to face the judge for racketeering and extortion, His codefendants were already unhappy with him, there were rumors that he was going to turn states evidence, and the shot that ended up killing him caught him behind his right ear.
@haydenlindquist70065 ай бұрын
This is my favorite movie ever. Brian de Palmas directing, Kevin Costner in an early role holding his own with titans of the industry, and Sean Connerys masterful acting. The music score. So damn good
@TheMarcHicks5 ай бұрын
"I hope this guy doesn't get killed"....and with that I immediately got teary.
@YolandaAnneBrown957265 ай бұрын
IKR?
@cshubs5 ай бұрын
Nitti was played by Billy Drago, whose son Darren played the gentlest character in TV history, Ed on Northern Exposure, the best show ever. Best. Show. Ever.
@waynezimmerman19505 ай бұрын
He was also the villain Jon Bly in the Bruce Campbell tv series: The Adventures of Brisco County Jr. (1993-94)
@cshubs5 ай бұрын
@@waynezimmerman1950 Pale Rider.
@Jessica_Roth5 ай бұрын
Drago was a scene-stealing delight as Barbas, the demon of Fear, in the original "Charmed" TV series.
@mikearmstrong84835 ай бұрын
Despite his menacing looks and demeanor, Drago was said to be always jovial on set, ready with a laugh or a joke, and was well liked by cast and crew.
@JOSH-lw2jv5 ай бұрын
He also played "Black Hand Kelly" in the last good film of the *"TREMORS"* franchise: *"TREMORS 4: The Legend Begins".*
@DougRayPhillips5 ай бұрын
"Mrs. Ness" was one of Patricia Clarkston's first roles. She never takes lead roles in mainstream films, but always shines. She has one Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination. The guy who was whacked at the black tie dinner was the supervisor of the place behind the Post Office that got raided. Capone was just making an example of him, even though nothing was his fault. (The baseball bat thing is vaguely based on how Capone once executed two guys who were conspiring to kill him and take over his operation.) You cans assume that the Mountie leader deliberately sabotaged the arrest at the bridge by firing early. That he was on Capone's payroll and had divided loyalty. The police captain "Mike" (Richard Bradford) has divided loyalty too. He's working with Capone and allowing his own men to get killed when necessary. And yet he's also feeding insider info to Malone. Must be hard to be a cop, sell out, but still have a conscience.
@Joughy5 ай бұрын
And let's not forget Patricia Clarkston played the Warden's sick wife in, "The Green Mile"
@DougRayPhillips5 ай бұрын
@@Joughy She's in The Dead Pool (Dirty Harry Part 5), across from Eastwood. She's in Shutter Island. And about 100 other IMDb credits.
@thomashiggins93205 ай бұрын
That was one of my favorite scenes in the film. These two old Irish cops, hard as nails, beating the crap out of each other in a dirty alley. 😁
@JDelwynn5 ай бұрын
@@Joughy She's always going to be Tammy 1 from Parks & Rec to me
@izzonj5 ай бұрын
I've always found her to be absolutely gorgeous.
@sean-ito_kel13365 ай бұрын
In real life... It was the judge's idea to switch the juries. Apparently he had a reputation for being one of the few judges who couldn't be bought by the mob.
@divemonkeys5 ай бұрын
This movie is very entertaining, but mostly fiction.
@lordofhousestewart18215 ай бұрын
This is class all over, Ennio Morricone's fantastic score, Brian De Palma on fire, Costner, De Niro and Connery, Script by David Mamet and wardrobe by Giorgio Armani ...its fantastic
@NoelMcGinnis5 ай бұрын
"Ok.... oof. Black tie off!" 😂 Those moments are why I watch you Jen.
@UtopiaBlue685 ай бұрын
🤣🤣
@jenmurrayxo5 ай бұрын
😂😂
@k1productions875 ай бұрын
@@jenmurrayxo You totally need to sell shirts that say "Oh frig! Oh frig! Oh frig!" lol
@lethaldose20005 ай бұрын
@@k1productions87I would buy those shirts for sure
@donaldb15 ай бұрын
The scene with the baby carriage here, is itself a reference to a very famous scene from the classic silent communist movie _Battleship Potempkin._
@markhamstra10835 ай бұрын
How’d they get the communists to shut up long enough to make a movie?
@randallshaw96095 ай бұрын
@@markhamstra1083 Missed the 'silent' part about the movie, huh?
@Billy-zv6gv5 ай бұрын
Said scene had been spoofed by OJ Simpson in slo-mo beginning of Naked Gun 33&1/3 as well. RIP Nordberg 😉
@markhamstra10835 ай бұрын
@@randallshaw9609 Silent communists, not silent movie. It’s right there in the OP. 😜
@ewenwindham84075 ай бұрын
I think there's a distinct nod to Sam Peckinpah as well, I think.
@normlee65665 ай бұрын
The mob guy who had his head beaten in by Capone was the same guy who was in charge of the liquor stash house in the post office that was raided ("you got a warrant? "). That is why Capone killed him and to send a message to his other minions.
@DarrenEden-ub4vj5 ай бұрын
In real life the guy Capone killed stole money from Capone at least that is the way I heard it.
@lexkanyima21955 ай бұрын
@DarrenEden-ub4vj but was it betrayal ?
@todub78129 күн бұрын
@@DarrenEden-ub4vj History guy said he killed two of his guys because he found out they were going to try and take over his business and snuff him out. Says he beat them nearly to death with a bat and then had them shot. Straight Gangster...
@kevinL54255 ай бұрын
In answer to your question, the thing around the arm is a sleeve garter. Instead of rolling up your sleeves when doing something messy like pouring drinks and washing dishes, you would pull the sleeve up and the garter would keep it there, away from your hands while they work. I didn’t know this until a few weeks ago when I noticed the bartender in Unforgiven so asked an AI what it was.
@Adam_Le-Roi_Davis.5 ай бұрын
I just gave this a watch all the way through, Jen. This was a big film on its release, it's a great film which doesn't get the recognition that it deserves these days. Great acting around, I think the reason that De Niro didn't get the Oscar was because he's played very similar characters before and given similar performances, "Once Upon a Time in America" (a great film which I recommend you react to), "Goodfellas", etc, etc, where as Sean Connery was excellent in all of his scenes in this, just my opinion of course. Films which I recommend with each actor: Andy Garcia: "Confidence" 2003, "Things to Do in Denver When You're Dead" 1995, "When a Man Loves a Woman" 1994, "Jennifer 8" 1992, "Hero" 1992, "Dead Again" 1991 (supporting actor not as a star). And of course the "Godfather" Trilogy. Sean Connery: "The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen" 2003, "Finding Forrester" 2000, "The Rock" 1996 (I can't remember if you've reacted to this or not, Jen), "Rising Sun" 1993, "The Name of the Rose" 1996, "Outland" 1981, "The Man Who Would be King" 1975, "The Offence" 1973, "The Anderson Tapes" 1971, "Marnie" 1964 (Hitchcock film), "The Frightened City" (Film Noir) 1961, "Hell Drivers" 1957. Kevin Costner: "The Highwaymen" 2019, "MacFarland, USA" 2015, "Mr Brooks" 2007, "The Guardian" 2006, "Open Range" 2003, "The Bodyguard" 1992, "JFK" 1991 (I can't remember if you've reacted to this or not, Jen), "Field of Dreams" 1989, "No Way Out" 1987 (this is a great political thriller, which I highly recommend). There are many more from each of these actors but I feel that these suggestions give a good overview of them all.
@paulymar59965 ай бұрын
Jen Murray: "Never stop fighting until the fight is done!" KZbin Administrator: "What?" Jen Murray: "You heard me KZbin!"
@mark_p3005 ай бұрын
"Here endeth the lesson."
@k1productions875 ай бұрын
"You're nothin' but a lot of talk and a plaque. You're NOTHIN' but a lot of TALK and a PLAQUE! YOU'RE NOTHIN' BUT A LOT OF TALK AND A PLAQUE!!!!"
@mark_p3005 ай бұрын
@@k1productions87 Badge. Nothing but a lot of talk and a badge. 😅
@k1productions875 ай бұрын
@@mark_p300 yeah, but she's a KZbin personality, so she gets a plaque rather than a badge :P
@mark_p3005 ай бұрын
@@k1productions87 hahaha, gotcha
@kamen20115 ай бұрын
The music in this movie is top notch. This is one of those movies that no matter how many times I watch it, I feel the same way I did when I first saw it. One of my all time favourites. Also, fun fact: any one seen drinking on screen dies.
@susanliltz38755 ай бұрын
I think they gave Sean an Oscar because he’s always great and also for his whole body of work combined !!!
@petersvillage74475 ай бұрын
What, even Zardoz?
@raymccaw5 ай бұрын
@@petersvillage7447Especially Zardoz! Yeah, it was more of a lifetime achievement award than anything else.
@petersvillage74475 ай бұрын
@@raymccaw Ah, but he hadn't made The Avengers by then, had he? But I'm not arguing - Sean Connery was the kind of figure who deserved that kind of recognition just for being him.
@cashflowhustles5 ай бұрын
And he absolutely KILLED this role! Very well deserved Oscar.
@kevinlewallen47785 ай бұрын
As a teen, Morey Amsterdam, who played Buddy Sorrell on The Dick Van Dyke Show, worked in a Chicago speakeasy run by Capone. Carl Reiner, who created the Van Dyke show, wrote the Sorrell character as a version of his close friend, Mel Brooks.
@earnestmb25 ай бұрын
It's *very* loosely based on history. Capone and Ness never met and the trial happened in Atlanta. Just to name a couple of things.
@laudanum6695 ай бұрын
Charles Martin Smith who plays "Oscar Wallace" is such a great character actor. He's one of those actors who shows up in a film you are watching and you say "Oh yeah that guy, I like him". He plays the lead actor in a film called "Never Cry Wolf" a great movie.
@izzonj5 ай бұрын
Never Cry Wolf is a really wonderful and criminally overlooked movie. The only one I know if where Charles Martin Smith is the lead (and practically, only) actor.
@jeffreywettig53025 ай бұрын
Loved Never Cry Wolf because it came out shortly after I read the book when I was a kid. Lived Farley Mowat, and loved his sailing books later in the life! Charles Martin Smith had many memorable roles, but yes, not many leads.
@christianwise6375 ай бұрын
He was also one of the many leads in George Lucas' American Graffiti
@Thewingkongexchange5 ай бұрын
One of my favourite films, ever since I was a little kid. Such a great ensemble of acting and film-making talent, especially David Mamet and Ennio Morricone both killing it with dialogue and score.
@Jessica_Roth5 ай бұрын
JEN: "I hope [Wallace] doesn't get killed." ME: Yeah, hope in vain. (quietly) "Touchable". (Realizing that I've started to choke up) 37 years, and I still get a thing in my throat. And that, my friends, is art. (Single tear coming out of my eye as I type this. Jeez.)
@gawainethefirst5 ай бұрын
Frank Nitti (the guy in white) actually was never thrown off a roof. He actually took over Capone’s Chicago syndicate. He died in the 40s, reportedly taking his own life prior to being indicted for racketeering.
@iggtastic5 ай бұрын
I didn't know that Nitti took over Capone's organization. That makes Nitti's being in charge of the Chicago crime syndicate in Road to Perdition make sense.
@laurakali65225 ай бұрын
Andy Garcia is so good in this. A great little movie with him is City Island.
@gerstelb5 ай бұрын
The Cuban who always seems to end up playing Italians.
@christopherdeguilio63755 ай бұрын
Steal Big Steal Little...much hated...I love
@laurakali65225 ай бұрын
@@christopherdeguilio6375 will have to check it out.
@Area51byDaveReale5 ай бұрын
Nice ending. Ness does his job, packs up his things and just walks out on to the street for home. A quiet hero.
@ThePloppy5 ай бұрын
Years ago I had a good friend that worked at an upscale nursing facility in Rockford, Illinois. She talked about one very elderly patient who claimed to be one of the "Untouchables". And that period was the only thing he talked about. She thought he was just delusional but when he died there was a large article in the newspapers and on TV news about him. I wish I could remember his name. He'd have likely been included in this movie.
@danimation885 ай бұрын
them ambushing the bridge on horseback is one of the most underrated heroic scenes ever.
@vincegamer5 ай бұрын
Great seeing, but I found myself wondering how is it that all of them know how to ride horses?
@GeorgiusAgricola-pn4cr5 ай бұрын
I knew Jen was in for a good time when just the opening credits got her excited! I like Andy Garcia as MVP--his accuracy with his revolver saved the day. And of course I love Morricone's score, especially the way the music reached a crescendo as Costner walked away from the police station at the end. As for historical accuracy, this sometimes gets picked apart like Braveheart, but the public loves a great action flick.
@Jessica_Roth5 ай бұрын
It's nowhere near the bad joke that "Braveheart" was, IMO. Don't even get me started on that one…
@GeorgiusAgricola-pn4cr5 ай бұрын
@@Jessica_Roth Okay, I won't! :-)
@stealthimaster85835 ай бұрын
The Untouchable was also a TV show in the 50s with Eliot Ness played by Robert Stack who you saw in Airplane as Capt Rex Kramer and hosted Unsolved Mysteries among many other roles.
@e.d.20965 ай бұрын
Classic! Excellent crime drama. The scene where Capone bashes the head in on his henchmen. The very next scene is of a mother a daughter saying their nightly prayers, so powerful. Truly, good verses evil. An amazing transition. This is film making at its finest! Thanks Jen, I was waiting for this one. 😊
@CarolinaCharles7775 ай бұрын
More random info: This was Patricia Clarkson's first film and she was only supposed to shoot a few scenes and she was done. However, she was struggling financially and had college debts. So Brian De Palma convinced Paramount to keep her around another month so she could get paid more. That's really the only reason she's in the courtroom scene at the end.
@kathyastrom13155 ай бұрын
In addition to the big-name actors here, you have also seen before the actor Jack Kehoe, who played the bookkeeper who testifies at the end. He played Kid Erie, Hooker’s friend and fellow conman in The Sting. He’s the one who gets his nose broken in the grifters’ bar by the Joliet cop Snyder.
@RetroClassic665 ай бұрын
25:35 This scene with the babycart and the steps in the train station was inspired largely by one of the most celebrated scenes in silent film, the Odessa Steps sequence, involving the massacre of civilians, in Soviet filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein’s 1925 silent epic film BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN.
@vincentsaia65455 ай бұрын
One of my favorite movies. DeNiro found a tailor of the real Al Capone and had him make all the suits he wears in the movie.
@robertrouse45035 ай бұрын
That train scene was based on a scene from 1925's "Battleship Potemkin". It's one of the greatest scenes ever.
@michaeleberly73515 ай бұрын
The scene with the child is borrowed from “The Battleship Potemkin” which was a Russian movie released in 1926 by Sergei Eisenstein.
@Jessica_Roth5 ай бұрын
Eisenstein's other classic is "Alexander Nevsky" (1938). Apparently it's on KZbin right now. Go watch it!
@MrGpschmidt5 ай бұрын
Patricia Clarkson, Ness' wife, was the wife of the warden in THE GREEN MILE, Jen. The split shot you refer to is known in the biz as the split diopter shot is a cinematic technique that achieves a unique visual effect by using a special lens filter. This filter, the split diopter, is a half-circle of glass that attaches to the camera lens. It essentially splits the focus of the lens, allowing for two distinct focal planes within a single shot. Indeed Connery won his sole Oscar for this film. And yes the train station staircase was parodied in NG 33 1/3 but airlifted from the silent classic BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN. Directed by the vastly underrated Brian DePalma (in league with Spielberg, Coppola, Scorsese et al) with all the stops pulled with a stacked cast, epic score and signature series costume design. RE: Costner - this film cemented his stardom in Hollywood - now you need to see the film that made him a star, which just preceded this film's release, NO WAY OUT, a neo-noir remake co-starring Sean Young and Gene Hackman.
@blortmeister5 ай бұрын
No Way Out? Nah, mate. Phantom of the Paradise. De Palma at his batsh*t crazy best.
@sartanawillpay79775 ай бұрын
@@blortmeister No Way Out for Costner not De Palma.
@blortmeister5 ай бұрын
@@sartanawillpay7977 Quite right. I was just so locked on De Palma I wasn't thinking straight. Costner is pretty great in No Way out. But if you haven't seen Phantom it really is batsh*t crazy. And a fantastic soundtrack by Paul Williams at his coked-out best--and he plays the lead. Alternately, De Palma's Body Double is really unhinged noir.
@wingedbuffalo46705 ай бұрын
Patricia Clarkson also played the role of Herb Brooks' [Kurt Russell's] wife in the movie "Miracle" about the 1980 Team USA Olympic Hockey Team.
@aquapuppy98385 ай бұрын
Okay, so, "I thought maybe she had ordered a parasol," was not on my bingo card.
@The.Android5 ай бұрын
Don't know if you noticed the actor playing the DA in the film was Clifton James who played the annoying loud mouth Southern Sheriff J.W. Pepper in two of the Roger Moore James Bond films. He was uncredited in this film despite the fact he had a few lines and was an established actor.
@user-Chris.Alger115 ай бұрын
Yes, I noticed that too. Didn't know his name though. ; )
@bryanrhenderson65105 ай бұрын
A cops rule is “Go home with the same amount of holes you went to work with”.
@lennyvalentin64855 ай бұрын
Yet being a cop, even in a country as violent as the U.S. isn't exactly the most dangerous job there is. Being a construction worker and a bunch more occupations has a higher mortality rate.
@petersvillage74475 ай бұрын
The first and only time in my life where a film was completely sold to me, had me convinced it was going to be brilliant, just by the opening credits.
@bradsullivan24955 ай бұрын
When he became Safety Director in Cleveland, one of his main jobs was trying to find a serial murderer known as The Torso Killer. He never did.
@caldwellkelley30845 ай бұрын
Oh Yeah! Jen is going to have a great time with this movie! Cosner, Connery, and Deniro were on point with this one! I know you enjoyed this!
@pablosonic8925 ай бұрын
Al Capone did not die in jail, as is wildly assumed. He was released early after serving for good behavior. But, he was incontinent and driven mostly mad from untreatable syphilis. For which there was no cure at the time. Technically, he died of cardiac arrest in 1947.
@jollyrodgers72725 ай бұрын
Never knew anyone who thought Al died in jail. I worked with a guy for years until finally found out his great uncle was Al Capone. His grandfather was the youngest of his brothers, changed his name to Hart and was a cop - known as Two Guns Hart.
@SwordmasterKane5 ай бұрын
11:32 "Must have been a rat." I thought so, too, the first few times I watched this movie. But the guy who got his head bashed in was actually responsible for the liquor shipment that Malone and Ness raided as their first tour of duty. It's very subtle, so it is easy to miss.
@EliCross5 ай бұрын
Connery won the Oscar mostly because of his long career and popularity and also because the movie was a huge hit at the time. Denzel Washington got his first Oscar nom that same year (as did Morgan Freeman) and he says that before their category was announced, Connery walked out on the stage to present another award and the audience gave him a spontaneous standing ovation. Denzel said he thought, "Oh ****! Well, I'm definitely not winning!"
@Mr_Mijagi5 ай бұрын
One of my altime favorite movies. Another score of Ennio Morricone which I can highly recommend (and the fantastic movie as well) is „Once upon a time in America“. „Deborahs Theme“ makes me cry every time.
@johnhammonds51435 ай бұрын
For each major actor, here's another movie! For Costner, Dances With Wolves. For Connery, The Hunt For Red October. For Garcia, Ocean's 11. And for DiNiro, Awakenings.
@jenmurrayxo5 ай бұрын
The Hunt for Red October and Ocean's 11 trilogy are on my channel!
@elizabethparker45115 ай бұрын
Definitely watch "Awakenings"!!! It has Robin Williams in it too.
@lexkanyima21955 ай бұрын
@@jenmurrayxowatch JFK, The Bodyguard.
@Dr_Jekyll775 ай бұрын
Ok. I repeat once more.......'Once Upon a Time in America '!!!!! Who's with me??!?!
@KP-rm8eg5 ай бұрын
Yes! I agree 200%
@asciishallreceive38715 ай бұрын
But which version? The 3 and a half hour one or the longer version? 🙂
@rubensalvador94225 ай бұрын
And Once Upon A Time in the West.
@juvandy5 ай бұрын
And a Fistful of Dynamite
@isabelsilva620235 ай бұрын
@Dr_Jekyll77 I could not agree more.
@RetroClassic665 ай бұрын
11:30 In 1987, when I saw this in the theater, two elderly black women got up and walked out at this scene. The violence was seriously shocking and unnerving.
@lexkanyima21955 ай бұрын
What ?
@ThomasStClair-zr2lb5 ай бұрын
The reason for the little band around the arm of the barman early in the movie is because shirts used to be made pretty much one size fits all and that included very long sleeves. If you wanted the shirt cuffs to sit at the correct length you wore a garter on each arm to hold the sleeves up so they didn't slide down and get dirty.
@BobMartinsback5 ай бұрын
My father wore them all his working life, right up to the 1980s, you can still buy them today, though like braces, I think it's more for fashion reasons.
@pauldryburgh63465 ай бұрын
Stardust is a fun fantasy where de Niro excels in my opinion.
@GruffyddFO45 ай бұрын
If she hasn't seen it yet, that one is right up Jen's alley.
@elizabethparker45115 ай бұрын
Yes! I live Stardust, and DeNiro is fantastic!
@GraemeCampbellMusic5 ай бұрын
I’ve said before, but I love the way that you make a point on reacting to the music and sound design too. Really important aspect of movies and you always bring out stuff I hadn’t thought about. I saw this one when it came out and hadn’t seen it since so it was cool to watch it again.
@jonjohns655 ай бұрын
You say, "Burn" every once in a while, and I lol every time 😂 - also, I so enjoy your love of music...
@jenmurrayxo5 ай бұрын
😂 Thanks Jon!
@professorjedi10245 ай бұрын
The train station/stair scene is an homage to the Sergei Eisenstein film "Battleship Potemkin" and the Odessa Steps scene. It is very famous in film history and many filmmakers have re-created it for their films :)
@socalpaul4875 ай бұрын
Sometimes The Academy gives an older actor an award based on their entire body of work, not on their best performance.
@thomashiggins93205 ай бұрын
That said, this was a pretty spectacular performance by Connery.
@daveking93935 ай бұрын
Such a great flick. I really don't think I've watched too many people react to this. This is going to be excellent because you usually do a great job editing. Thank you so much for sharing
@Ian-xx1xb5 ай бұрын
Dmytro edited this one he always does excellent edits 👍
@positivelynegative91495 ай бұрын
5:24 "Burn." 🤣🤣🤣
@thejoshman38435 ай бұрын
"Midnight run" is deniros best movie nobody ever heard of.
@Estrada725 ай бұрын
Great movie
@BDogg20235 ай бұрын
With a soundtrack by Danny Elfman, one of his first.
@eugeneshadwell65965 ай бұрын
Midnight Run is a movie 'nobody ever heard of'? It's generally regarded as a classic!
@BenChanNYC5 ай бұрын
I was about to recommend it as well! Glad to see that it's definitely "heard of." It's just a FUN movie, as opposed to his more dramatic stuff. (before he started doing a bunch of comedies)
@coldwhite42405 ай бұрын
DeNiro is surprisingly good with comedy in two great films: Midnight Run is one, and Analyze This is the other. Both are well worth reacting to!
@BulletTooth5045 ай бұрын
Jen: "Case dismissed." Indigo Montoya: "I don't think that means what you think it means."
@edwinpayne22315 ай бұрын
That's "Case Closed" Jen.
@xander666445 ай бұрын
Btw... Andy Garcia has a big role in Godfather Part 3!
@mjhart685 ай бұрын
Costner and Connery, what a combo!
@gawainethefirst5 ай бұрын
I remember watching this movie for the first time with my mother. A certain scene came on, and she inhaled so sharply I thought she was going to pass out.
@fatcatblinddog5 ай бұрын
I freakin love the Untouchables. I am from Chicago. That “bar“ is in Wrigleville, that’s the area of the north side of Chicago where Wrigley Field is located. I was on set the day they filmed the exteriors of that scene. It was an amazing set design. Turned the clock back in Chicago that day. Also, I’m sure somebody mentioned this but the scene at Union Station, the train station scene, is a homage to Battleship Potemkin, a famous Russian film from the 1920’s.
@Lone-wolf-19825 ай бұрын
Can't watch this now, but I'm leaving a like anyway. This was one of my favorite movies growing up, I know you'll like it Jen.
@wademchenry15605 ай бұрын
The Rambo accountant made me think of "American Graffiti".
@THOMMGB5 ай бұрын
That was the character, Toad in American Graffiti. He was also the astronomer who was killed at the beginning of Deep Impact. And he played a scientist in the Jeff Bridges movie, Starman.
@ChicagoDB5 ай бұрын
@@THOMMGB - and great in “The Buddy Holly Story” also
@wademchenry15605 ай бұрын
@@THOMMGB Toad ! That's it.
@lethaldose20005 ай бұрын
HEy Jen, I guess the reason Capone didn't think paying taxes was a big deal was the fact that he had such a huge level of hubris in all his activities from being so above the law. ------- The other thing was paying taxes was a relatively new endeavor. It was only implemented in 1913 to offset the anticipated loss of alcohol tax when prohibition was to become law. ------- So by 1926 when Capone became super wealthy he was used to not paying taxes. As many have said, "He picked the hill he coffee to die on."
@richardmark91615 ай бұрын
Quite often Academy members will take the opportunity to give an Oscar nomination to an older actor because they have been overlooked for their past accomplishments. My personal opinion is that out of all of the nominated performances Sean Connery did legitimately merit the award. The other gentleman in the best supporting actor category were also phenomenal. With the exception of Vincent Gardena in MOONSTRUCK, they were relatively younger actors at the time who obviously had the potential to be nominated in the future. It didn’t hurt that THE UNTOUCHABLES was hugely successful, and profitable. WINNER SEAN CONNERY The Untouchables NOMINEES ALBERT BROOKS Broadcast News MORGAN FREEMAN Street Smart VINCENT GARDENIA Moonstruck DENZEL WASHINGTON Cry Freedom THE 60TH ACADEMY AWARDS 1988 Monday, April 11, 1988 Honoring movies released in 1987
@lethaldose20005 ай бұрын
“Mr. Ness!!!! I do not approve of your methods.” -------- “Yeah, well you’re not from Chicago.” ------- Chicago's history of corruption and underhandedness is legendary. Just ask former Illinois governor, Rod Blagojevich. -------- He knew how to throw down with the best of them and get things done.
@troy34bronze5 ай бұрын
Bob Hoskins (Rodger Rabbit) was originally supposed to play Capone. The director wanted DiNero but he wasn’t available at first. But when his schedule freed up the change was made. Hoskins still go some money under his contract.
@Pixelologist5 ай бұрын
Jen, you need to watch the old Sergei Eisenstein silent film from 1925 called Battleship Potemkin - in particular, the Odessa Steps sequence in Act IV. Brian DePalma recreated that sequence almost shot for shot when he did the Union Station stairs sequence here in The Untouchables.
@sartanawillpay79775 ай бұрын
De Palma's homage to that film also explains why sailors show up on the stairs during the shootout.
@lethaldose20005 ай бұрын
Jen, you weren't prepared for Connery to bite the dust. Taken out by the assissin in the clean white suit.
@GruffyddFO45 ай бұрын
The guy who played Frank Nitti, Billy Drago, was really fun as the main antagonist in the tragically short-lived TV show The Adventures of Brisco County Jr., starring Bruce Campbell. If you haven't seen it, I highly recommend it.
@TerryParr5 ай бұрын
Such an awesome movie! The way Capone was acting in the court also reminded me on someone else who was sleeping during his trial.
@mikechen80755 ай бұрын
If there is a Oscar for reactions, you should be the winner. Robert Dinero was really skinny when he asked to coming for a screen test, so the director was skeptical about the given the part to Robert, so Robert gained around 80lbs so he can do the part.
@Dillpicks955 ай бұрын
Absolutely she gets my vote every time.
@Milosh1115 ай бұрын
Big reason I enjoy Jen's reactions very much is her always paying attention to a movie score, and she's also musically educated so she always has some nice little comment about that aspect of a movie... Anyway, Ennio Morricone was one of the greatest composers and Once Upon a Time in West is a big favorite of mine; but I'd also recommend pretty much everything he did for Leone, Argento (Stendhal Syndrome score is extremely eerie) and Tornatore, plus his score for The Mission (another De Niro movie btw).
@XenoTheProducer5 ай бұрын
I remember I first got to watch this a good while back, when I was still in secondary school. Funny thing is, it wasn't even for anything relevant like a history class or something...It was a Higher Maths class. 😂
@LogicalNiko5 ай бұрын
The arm bands are called sleeve garters. In the 1880s-1930s shirts would generally come in very few sizes unless you were wealthy enough to have your shirts tailor made. So in general most shirts were oversized. To not have your cuffs extend past your wrist you would use a sleeve garter band to keep the sleeve lifted up and in place. Towards the end of this time (in the 1930s and 1940s) sleeves of appropriate length were much more common and affordable, but the sleeve garter then became a fashion accessory.
@kwebb1217655 ай бұрын
This movie was a hit and made Kevin Costner and Andy Garcia famous, as well as providing Sean Connery with his big comeback.
@phohead5 ай бұрын
I saw this before it came out, in what was called an audience screening. They handed out cards after the movie with numbered and lettered questions about each scene. As well as I can remember nothing was changed after I saw the official release.
@kdub38715 ай бұрын
My dad was the one who turned me on to the old B&W tv show of the same name prior to this hitting the theaters. This was the last movie that I saw with him before he passed so it's forever a "dad" movie to me whenever I mention it to younger generation movie "goers."Great reaction and thank you once again for going where no other reactor has gone before by reacting to a movie that others don't. Lastly in case it hasn't been mentioned Ness and Capone never met face to face.
@vincentsaia65455 ай бұрын
I saw this when it was in the theaters and it was the first time I heard an Ennio Morricone score.
@terryv20065 ай бұрын
This movie really feels like old school Hollywood. The best actors and fantastic script. Not a computer in sight.
@edfrancis665 ай бұрын
Maybe it's a different time, but everyone I know was blown away by Connery's performance when this was released. From his first scene to his last breath, he felt like a badass but worn-out Chicago cop not wanting to get involved, then proving he still had lots to give. Well worth the Oscar! And what a score ❤
@phillcollins35805 ай бұрын
10:57 Jen "If I'm at a Black Tie event with Al Capone" put the black tie on then .... 11:27 Jen cringes and off comes the black tie Living the moment in the movie, keep it up. Fun review, thanks
@brovold725 ай бұрын
Side note, but I notice that Costner holds a handgun with both left and right hands in many scenes (including the final action scene, in a bit of creative in-continuity) I'm guessing he's a lefty/slightly ambidextrous. Oh and in 'Silverado' he/his character shoots with both.
@chrisinfiesto8355 ай бұрын
“Okay; black tie off......” 💯😂🤣😂🤣😂
@StoneKendricks5 ай бұрын
"Once Upon A Time In America" (1984) is considered one of Morricone's best scores. It should've won the Oscar for that year, but the studio neglected to submit it to the Academy for consideration due to a clerical error. It's another gangster movie starring Robert De Niro.
@jollyrodgers72725 ай бұрын
Robert Stack played Eliot Ness in THE UNTOUCHABLES tv series (1959-1963), and I used to say up late with my dad (and the line, "Rico, Rossman, Youngfellow - Cover the rear exit!"). Really groundbreaking stuff with topics like prostitution, narcotics addiction, murder and violence - drawing tons of negative press. Ayn Rand even wrote an article defending the series as detailing good guys/bad guys and the need for heroes in a good vs evil world.
@curtisbailey785 ай бұрын
Someone may have already answered this, but the little arm bands on "old-timey outfits" are called sleeve garters, and they were used to adjust the length of the sleeves. Back then, most shirts were not made in a variety of sizes like we're accustomed to now, so you'd either have to get them tailored, which was expensive, or use more economic methods like the sleeve garters.
@DelightLovesMovies5 ай бұрын
I love the Untouchables. I grew up watching it so many times with my dad who loved it too. The music, the acting, the clothes, all add up to an unforgettable experience.
@TheBTG885 ай бұрын
The guy who got hit with the bat was the one running the bootleg operation in the Post Office.
@jchighlander37215 ай бұрын
This movie was a gigantic hit when it came out. The reason you see all these stars together in one movie is because most of them weren't famous yet. When the movie was made, Connery and De Niro were the only actors in the cast that most people had ever heard of. This is the movie that made Kevin Costner a star, as well as Garcia, Charles Martin Smith (Agent Wallace, the accountant), and Billy Drago (Nitti).
@StoneKendricks5 ай бұрын
"The Mission" (1986) is another of Morricone's iconic scores. It's sometimes used in commercials, and I think few people realize it originates from this movie. Also stars Robert De Niro.