No, but it's not but certainly inspired by. Star Wars would have happened without this movie
@SaturnCanuck4 күн бұрын
@@johnnydubya8071 Oh, let's see, NO!
@johnnydubya80714 күн бұрын
@SaturnCanuck wrong again that's twice you want three
@moises_munoz4 күн бұрын
I agree with you
@AmericanActionReport4 күн бұрын
Recently, I've seen four videos that were presented as a collection of movies that changed movies forever. The other three fell into the "movies-I've-really-liked" category. This video delivered what it promised and did it very well. Your video was rich, educational, and enjoyable. Thanks.
@ProDataMine4 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching 🙂
@bakatareish5 күн бұрын
Not sure how The Great Train Robbery, 1903, used Internet forums to "build intrigue," and I don't really see it's connection to "found footage" or horror...
@ProDataMine5 күн бұрын
Thanks for your comment!
@karlostj46835 күн бұрын
It stole all the bullet points from "The Blair Witch Project". Copy+Paste error?
@neville30595 күн бұрын
It was at this point I swiped left.
@stantheman9072Күн бұрын
@@richard-t3z Nope. It’s just the most blatantly obvious error in an entire list indicative of simplistic work and shallow analysis. But then again, it’s 7 minutes on YT trying to make a case for 20 films of varying quality and impact. Of course it’s going to be a mile wide and a half-inch deep, with lots of gaps. The creator should have picked a theme common to all the films and showed how a change (i.e. in technology) evolved film production over time. He might have been on to something interesting.
@SaturnCanuck4 күн бұрын
I'm sorry, where is 2001? I mean come on, that changed cinema forever!
@johnlone2075 күн бұрын
Metropolis (1927) by Fritz Lang should be in everyone's list.
@moises_munoz4 күн бұрын
Only two movies are not from US. I don’t know, where is Melies A trip to the moon, Kurosawa’s Seven Samurais in this list?
@mobyhead15 күн бұрын
You're aware the internet didn't exist in 1903, right? DNF, do your homework.
@subraxas5 күн бұрын
I thought that 'Kung Pow: Enter the Fist' would be on the list. 🙂
@kirkhensley58705 күн бұрын
Only Odkerk could give us, "I thought you looked familiar. Sorry, I didn't recognize you without crap in your pants." _Swinging the chain...swinging the chain....
@subraxas4 күн бұрын
@@kirkhensley5870 😀 😀
@PeliculaCinema4 күн бұрын
I would also add: 'Rashomon' (1950) Japan for multi-POV storytelling, 'Breathless' or 'A bout de souffle' (1960) France for jump cut innovation, and concur with other comments regarding '2001: A Space Odyssey' (1968) USA with its Super Panavision 70 and Todd-AO technologies. With Dogme films of the late 1990s, I would add the Danish 'Festen' or 'The Celebration' (1998) with insistence on movies being shot on location, camera hand-held and all sound diegetic. There's also German Expressionism like 'The Cabinet of Dr Caligari' (1920) for its stark, visual distortions which would later influence Hitchcock. Brazil's 'City of God' or 'Cidade de Deus' (2002) provided visceral hyper-realistic storytelling which also could contrast with Fellini's '8 +1/2' (1963), a dreamlike artifice on the creative process in making movies. Film noir, post WWII is a great influence with films like 'Double Indemnity' (1944) as well as the screwball comedies of the 1930s, like 'Bringing Up Baby' (1938) paving the way to romantic comedies decades later. Musicals like 'Singin' in the Rain' (1952) and low-budget independents like 'Easy Rider' (1969) paved the way for, most recently, 'Wicked' (2024) and non-linear films like 'Pulp Fiction' (1994), ‘Memento' (2000), ‘Irreversible’ (2002) France and ‘Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind’ (2004).
@ProDataMine4 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching, your comment is very interesting
@ricknorman7193Күн бұрын
What? No King Kong, (1933). You've GOT to be kidding! That film revolutionized everything!
@adhocrat14 күн бұрын
1903: One of the first viral marketing successes 1999: One of the first viral marketing successes hmmm
@karlostj46835 күн бұрын
Why are you showing the poster and photos from "The Bicycle Thief" (1904) when talking about "Bicycle Thieves" (1948)?
@owenmcwilliams92715 күн бұрын
How do you leave out 2001?
@AlainDugas-j9g7 сағат бұрын
How about King Kong, Metropolis, Nosferatu, cabinet of dr. Caligari?
@unkyduck5 күн бұрын
What a load of trash. The Great Train Robbery benefitted from internet virality ? Does NO human get close to these before they are published ?
@gcollier464 күн бұрын
2001????? Without which 100's of film never happen
@PaulChamberlain-g1u5 күн бұрын
Internet was not available back in 1905
@karlostj46835 күн бұрын
You missed "Terminator" (1984).
@alanartme121 сағат бұрын
UMMMM....YOU FORGOT "THE ROBE" the first widescreen film in color...that may have changed Cinema a little bit???....Don't you think??