Dang, this left out one of my favorite lines. “Why aren’t they trying to kill us?” Steve:”We’re in the spirit world asshole, they can’t see us.”
@toochangz8 ай бұрын
Love reaction videos but they often miss the popular lines cause they aren't aware. Dirty steve saying "uh huh" when Billy gasses him up is one of the other big misses
@csxanatos6538 ай бұрын
Those are the best lines... I love this movie. Was 17 when it came out, and these were the cool kids
@slaaneshhedonite70688 ай бұрын
I love these movies. I have three western posters in me ManCave. Young Guns 2 (better poster), Silverado and my personal favorite Tombstone I’m not sure if you did Tombstone yeet but if you haven’t , rectify that at your earliest convenience. 😉
@stevechapasko52448 ай бұрын
"Is that poop?" No Cassie it is not "poop", they are stones. Good lord you are so cute.love your content keep it up.
@Doctor_Omega8 ай бұрын
"Hey dog - did you see the size of that chicken?!?"
@mattjamison4848 ай бұрын
15:59 No, that character played by Sam Rockwell in "The Green Mile" was only called "Billy the Kid" as a nickname because he was an outlaw like Billy the Kid. He even gets angry when called "Wild Bill" because "Wild Bill Hickock" was a lawman.
@seecha89708 ай бұрын
So Emilio Estevez and Charlie Sheen are biological brothers and not step brothers. The story behind their different last names is that when their family immigrated to the US from Spain, their dad, Ramón Antonio Gerardo Estévez, decided to change his name because he felt a Spanish name would result in him not getting work in the industry due to racial prejudices. So Ramón Antonio Gerardo Estévez, legally changed his name to Martin Sheen. Emilio opted to keep his ancestral name while his younger brother, Charlie opted for the legal name.
@ebbhead208 ай бұрын
Martin Sheen never changed his name. His drivers licence and passport still say Carlos Estevez. Its just his stage name. These days he regrets using it,.. I wish I'd had the guts to have kept it. My dad didnt like that i stopped using my real name.. That's a big regret today.. Quote MS.
@bryanstoudenmire8 ай бұрын
A pugilist is a Boxer
@blanketstarry77258 ай бұрын
@@bryanstoudenmire ...which is how a Pug got its name. A Pug has a flat nose, like boxers with their all to common broken noses. ...just kidding. There is no relation between a Pug and a pugilist.
@BoondockRoberts8 ай бұрын
@@blanketstarry7725 hah, you remind me of the other day I convinced a coworker that SCUBA diving was invented in Cuba (submersing Cubans)
@r.b.ratieta61118 ай бұрын
Emilio told David Letterman that he practiced saying it for a few days before deciding that "Emilio Sheen" sounded completely stupid to him. (Read More) EDIT: Martin Sheen was sitting next to him on the show and started laughing pretty hard when Emilio mentioned this.
@Jesse_At_NewMexico8 ай бұрын
Funfact: After the Lincoln County War Susan McSween became known as the 'Cattle Queen of New Mexico' as she was one of the richest female cattle barons (baroness) in the history of the United States. I've visited her gravesite at White Oaks New Mexico (ghost town) cemetery numerous times. Now you have to watch 'Young Guns II' to see how this saga finally concludes 😀
@Ron-d2s3 ай бұрын
You mean YG3... right?
@purplep60703 ай бұрын
@@Ron-d2sNope, YG2 concludes the known "True" story. 3 will be pure fiction. Hopefully it will still be awesome, if they ever actually get it made.
@Ron-d2s3 ай бұрын
@@purplep6070 YG2 was the tall tales of Brushy Bill. He implied that Chavez died and that he out lived Doc. TRUTH is, Chavez was an old man on a reservation when he went, and Doc made it back east to became a full-time teacher. Emilio has been working on getting YG3 going for decades and it may finally happen... WITH Chavez. Also Arkansas Dave DID lose his head south of the border, but it was many years later.
@SpOoNmAn3658 ай бұрын
For those of us who grew up in the 80s with this, it's a classic. The younger group of up and coming actors, the soundtrack....we loved it and still do. Regulators, mount up!
@pdcookstar8 ай бұрын
we had 3 channels in the U.K. and I had a betamax and only tape i had was rambo first blood. Seen that movie over 100 times before i was 16.
@toochangz8 ай бұрын
PALS
@SpOoNmAn3658 ай бұрын
@@pdcookstar when Rambo comes on, I stop everything and watch it for the 2,000th time. Masterpiece
@kubwell38568 ай бұрын
Growing up on cable and HBO I saw this film 100 times and loved it. I have seen a few reactions to it and it doesn't seem to have the lasting power with modern audiences. Neither does ET though and that was the highest grossing film of all time when I was young.
@Jimbozinya8 ай бұрын
Gen X here, an absolutely agree.
@chrispruett818 ай бұрын
You would love Young Guns 2 even more! Btw.. Emilio is working on Young Guns 3 right now :)
@BarryRackley8 ай бұрын
Fun fact: The actor, (Patrick Wayne), playing the part of Pat Garrett was the actual son of legendary actor "John Wayne".
@purpleslog8 ай бұрын
Was he also in his dad’s great western Chisum? That one had Billy the Kid and Pat Garret too.
@jefferywarburton21168 ай бұрын
@@purpleslog He was in Big Jake playing a son of Wayne's character.
@jollyrodgers72728 ай бұрын
...and in McLintock!(1963) as Dev Warren, suitor of McLintock's daughter Becky. and a bit part in DONOVAN'S REEF(1963) as an Australian Navy Lt.
@purpleslog8 ай бұрын
@@jefferywarburton2116 I knew he was in Big Jake . I love that movie. “Where’s the money…DADDY?” Smack!
@CrymSyN0078 ай бұрын
@@patrickcromwell7554 you are mistaken..that is patrick wayne...google Young Guns cast
@TheNotoriousCheeto8 ай бұрын
This movie follows Billy the Kid and his role in the Lincoln-County War. The reason they paused when Billy met Pat Garrett is because in real life, Pat and Billy were associates, even friends. But Billy became an outlaw, and Pat became a sheriff. In the end, Pat Garrett earned fame for being the man who killed Billy the Kid.
@BillyBillyBixby8 ай бұрын
We have to get her to watch "La Bamba", a Lou Diamond Phillips classic.
@ThorKCade8 ай бұрын
NOT MY RITCHIE!!!! 😭 But seriously, I think Cassie would really enjoy it.
@joelwillems40818 ай бұрын
He's amazing in "Stand and Deliver" as well. One of those inspirational teacher films.
@EmoryEdmunds8 ай бұрын
I'm a huge Waylon Jennings fan. So thankful he gave up his seat on that plane. The world lost a lot of talent that day. 😥
@toochangz8 ай бұрын
So sad, Lou was great in that as well
@randall-king8 ай бұрын
La Bamba is a terrific film. I cry every time.
@toochangz8 ай бұрын
Love how Billy told Sherriff Brady and Murphy to reap the whirl wind
@bad-people65104 ай бұрын
Reap the whirlwind of dying in your bed of cancer, which is what actually happened to Lawrence Murphy.
@JCG525778 ай бұрын
The most unrealistic thing in this film is that Charlie Sheen is the only one that didn’t take the peyote!
@timlubbers28848 ай бұрын
He didn’t need to, his stuff was better … 😂
@ebbhead208 ай бұрын
Well, he was running on tiger blood at the time so i get it... 😎
@LiesThatBind8 ай бұрын
He was already winning!
@tudyk218 ай бұрын
Lol😂
@frankhansen24388 ай бұрын
Heathens
@jp38138 ай бұрын
Young Guns II has an epic orchestral score by Alan Silvestri (Back to the Future, Predator, Forrest Gump, Polar Express, Avengers, etc...) w/ rock songs during the end credits by Jon Bon Jovi (Blaze of Glory album featuring Jeff Beck, Elton John, Little Richard, etc...).
@sixx788 ай бұрын
Young Guns 2 is my favourite western of all time. Probably because my mom got me a VHS copy and I didn’t own a lot of them at the time so I watched it over and over.
@rickpedia67248 ай бұрын
VHS tapes used to cost a lot of money. I totally get what you're saying.
@leemires53158 ай бұрын
Young Guns 2 is one of those rare cases where the sequel is better than the original. So many quotable lines, Blaze Of Glory by Bon Jovi was an epic song for a movie.
@johnnyskinwalker40958 ай бұрын
@@rickpedia6724 There was something when I was a kid called "Columbia house". It was something you could subscribe to and there was one for books and one for movies. The deal was they would send you a catalog of all the movies on VHS they had. You would pick like ten movies and they would send you these ten movies. And you then only had to buy 5 from them for the next three years. A few of my friends were in that as well. It was an incredible deal. And since movies on VHS cost so much back then, it ended up being pretty affordable. Can you imagine, for kids, it was a dream come true.
@tnetennba67828 ай бұрын
Young Guns 2 is a better film. I'm sure Cassie would enjoy it more.
@Ranid-eq6so8 ай бұрын
Then you need to watch more Westerns.
@chrisphillips59808 ай бұрын
I love this movie and the sequel, they're two of the most watched movies my brother and I have seen growing up and continue to do so when we get time to see each other over the years. I hope Cassie will get to watch part 2 as well.
@WhiteWolfTraveler18 ай бұрын
“He ate and laughed, drank and laughed, rode and laughed, talked and laughed, fought and laughed, and killed and laughed.” Quote from The Authentic Life of Billy the Kid, written by Pat Garrett.
@YouDontKnowMe2011.98 ай бұрын
That book has been proven to be 98% BS.
@NullVoid-rm7jm4 ай бұрын
This movie actually has a lot less inaccuracies than it looks like by the way. Most of these scenes are at LEAST based on stories about Built The Kid. Whether they were true or not. A lot of the scenes that look like they never happened are actually true historical fact. In fact, one of the only unrealistic things about this movie is that Billy comes across as proud that he killed all the men he did, in real life it's said that every man he killed haunted him. I actually found a whole website that compares the movie to actual historical record when I was 13. I'm only going off of my memory, but I know for a fact that a lot of these things actually happened
@ryandeffley76528 ай бұрын
Young Guns has one of the best opening sequences of all time. It's shot and edited masterfully with an epic guitar track that sets the tone.
@jason420808 ай бұрын
Let's Not also to forget the Famous "Regulator Depiction Moto/Quote" was used in Warren G's song "Regulate".
@BoondockRoberts8 ай бұрын
Love the theme but those colt new service revolvers (massively anachronistic) being used by one of the actors (not sure which) will never not annoy me.
@ct68528 ай бұрын
Hair Metal radness. Slash would approve.
@sartanawillpay79778 ай бұрын
@@BoondockRoberts The actors were not able to shoot quickly enough with single-action revolvers. In "The White Buffalo" they did the same thing when Charles Bronson had to fire quickly while lying down on bunk on a passenger train.
@rossibrennan57548 ай бұрын
Emilio Estevez is in a couple of really fun movies, Stakeout and Another Stakeout, from around the same era, late 80s/early 90s I think. His banter and chemistry with Richard Dreyfuss is up there with Riggs and Murtagh in the buddy cop genre
@donaldwantola58008 ай бұрын
Young Guns 1 & 2 are based historical events of the Lincoln County War and Billy the Kid. The movies have several historical inaccuracies, Tunstul wasn't an old man, it leaves out Murphy's business partner Jimmy Dolan, there were close to 40 Regulators.
@Hard-R-Energy8 ай бұрын
Yeah, but while not perfect, it's considered the most accurate portrayal of Billy the Kid and the Lincoln County War ever put to film.
@jamesrein6488 ай бұрын
I thought Young Guns 2 was incredible the story is amazing and leaves you wondering
@rpnp28 ай бұрын
@@jamesrein648 Yeah I liked Young Guns 2 alot more
@larrypope51428 ай бұрын
I own a home in New Mexico outside Lincoln County and have pictures of Billy the Kids grave. And yes it does say “pals” on it. In fact, so many people have tried to steal his tombstone, it’s got an iron cage around it now.
@RonnieG8 ай бұрын
Jimmy Dolan shake and bake. The air up there.
@HandleTakenlol8 ай бұрын
Charlie and Emilio's father Martin Sheen did a pretty good western in 1979 called "Eagles Wing". He also starred with his son Emilio,who also directed, in a movie called "The Way". Warning, this one will break your heart.
@McPh17418 ай бұрын
The actor who plays Charlie was in a good 80s movie called “3 o’Clock High”. He plays a wimpy kid that ticks off the new kid at his school and has to fight him after school is out. Most of the movie is him trying to get out of it. It’s pretty funny and actually has a deeper meaning at the end.
@tinocontreras51058 ай бұрын
wasnt heath ledger the bad guy. i seen it but its been a looooong time so i dont really remember.
@scorpiouk59148 ай бұрын
Noooo! That was Richard Tyson who also played the baddie in " Kindergarten Cop".
@scorpiouk59148 ай бұрын
Casey S. was also a member of Kiefer's gang in "Stand By Me" (1986).
@tinocontreras51058 ай бұрын
@@scorpiouk5914 that's right
@nefariousmex23528 ай бұрын
Funny Movie
@ChrisReise8 ай бұрын
Now you need you watch "Young Guns II" as it gives you more insight on Billy the Kid's story.
@reactingtoacting8 ай бұрын
Although the whole Brushy Bill angle is BS
@rexbanner89998 ай бұрын
@@reactingtoactinghow so?
@bad-people65104 ай бұрын
@@rexbanner8999 Presumably that he was lying. Because he did exist. Whether he was actually Billy is a matter for debate. I take more exception to that movie killing off Chavez and Doc because both of them lived well into the 20th century and died of natural causes. Just like in this one Billy didn't actually kill Lawrence Murphy, but at least the timeframe was closer.
@jaccilowe38428 ай бұрын
Pat Garrett shows up. Cassie: Why was that so awkward?
@bmriverrat118 ай бұрын
Hahaha right 😂
@anonymes28848 ай бұрын
Oh you killed me ! Totes awks ! :)
@alexramage48408 ай бұрын
Like people who start with Episode 1 - “Anakin Skywalker, meet Obi Wan Kenobi” “What’s the big deal?”
@billrules87168 ай бұрын
If only she knew! lol
@odgjr8 ай бұрын
@@alexramage4840 I hated that. It felt so forced.
@LeonWick5268 ай бұрын
Historians say that this movie was more historically accurate than most movies about Billy The Kid. Perhaps a reaction to Young Guns II next?
@Rollin_L4 ай бұрын
That's not high praise. In fact, it is far removed from actual history, as most all BTK films have been.
@billtisch36988 ай бұрын
I looked through the comments and didn't see anybody else mention this yet: Billy the Kid wasn't really left handed. In the photo of him his holster is on the left side, but it was actually printed mirror-image due to the photography method used at the time. This was only recently discovered.
@ruggerobelloni47438 ай бұрын
Good point. Paul Newman's version was called "The left handed gun".I had pictures taken in Banner Elk N.C. in '77 in a shop that used the old camera, had to sit still a long time holding a banjo and I did come out left handed on a sepia tone metal plate.The first Billy I saw on screen was Robert Taylor, truly handsome but twice his age.The Outlaw by H.Hughes was made to show off Jane Russell's body and the plot is fake.
@JackChurchill1018 ай бұрын
I know "it's personal preference" but isn't there a strong case for people riding with the holster on the opposite side to their dominant hand in a reverse grip position, and reach across?
@Rocket13778 ай бұрын
i@rageagainstmyhatchet To cross draw, the gun would have to be pointing backwards in the holster on the opposite hip. That was not the case with Billy, so he had to use a normal draw from the hip.
@ruggerobelloni47438 ай бұрын
@@JackChurchill101 If I am not mistaken Wild Bill did that with two guns , crossing his arms to draw, or It might be a movie gimmick to create momentum...
@anonymes28848 ай бұрын
@@JackChurchill101 I don't really see it (in the mostly mythical "quickdraw" it'd be slower and otherwise it's basically irrelevant for wearing _one_ gun). If you carried _two_ pistols though then you may well wear your second gun that way (because then it's already setup to quickly grab with your shooting hand _after_ your first gun is empty) and maybe that was more common in the days before speed loaders etc.
@victorclemente-mt4to8 ай бұрын
Young Guns is among the best westerns ever!!!!! They don’t give tons of backstory because it’s not needed. Most know who Billy the Kid is, he’s literally the most famous American outlaw and the Lincoln County war is infamous,
@lbh0028 ай бұрын
I love the movie "City Slickers." It's not an actual western, but it is fun, smart, and funny.
@butter77348 ай бұрын
Agree 1 and 2 are good.
@LegoGBlok8 ай бұрын
also with a deeper meaning, its not just a funny comedy
@coachmark828 ай бұрын
You’re right, that’s more Cassie’s speed….
@EmoryEdmunds8 ай бұрын
Loved Jack Palance in that!
@dazediss66298 ай бұрын
So theres another movie which explains the relationship between Billy & Pat and little more. Basically this movie focuses on the business disputes between the English & Irish entrepreneurs; Tunstall, Murphy, and Dolan. After their deaths & the Lincoln county war; Billy is a wanted man for murder. But he’s in an area where he’s loved, in and around Arizona & what would become New Mexico. The main thing to remember is Billy lived from 1859-1881, and was an east coast criminal. He was from NYC originally. He moved to the southern states because of the lawlessness, he knew that he could profit from effectively being a psychopath, the same as a lot of criminals at that time. Keep in mind that New Mexico didn’t become a US state until 1912. Nobody knows the true version of the events which happened, but the one certainty is that the people of New Mexico & Arizona used to love Billy. They would feed him, house him, harbour him from the law. Because they didn’t like the idea of the Union of the USA. They were all confederate supporters and many would have relatives in the confederate army. They didn’t like the entire hierarchy from president, to state governors, to US Marshall’s, to local law enforcement. So the fact that Billy was fighting against all of that after the Lincoln county wars was music to their ears. He was their hero. The relationship between Pat & Billy is complicated and Pat’s book “the authentic life of Billy the Kid”, is one of the only credible sources to go off of. In the book he details how it really was the Wild West, and that you could see a man shoot another man one week and be trialled as a murderer, then the same man could murder a different man the next week and be wearing a badge and it would be totally fine. The truth is that the area was simply in chaos and that the general consensus down there was that they didn’t like anything which represents the Union. Pat was an outlaw himself for a time, until he was hired to hunt down Billy - effectively a bounty hunter with a badge and was an acting sworn US Marshall. He found Billy the night he was “killed” in Fort Summer, New Mexico; whether or not Pat killed Billy is always a topic of debate. The account says that there was an argument between the two in Spanish and shots were fired. A body was recovered and said to be that of Henry McCarty (Billy the Kid), the body was buried and overnight the inscription appeared on the headstone “pals”. All of the above is a matter of fact; what is up for debate is who is in that grave. There are generally two accounts. One being that Pat killed Billy like he was hired to do, and buried him accordingly. Then Pat inscribed the word onto the headstone out of respect for both his friend & eventual adversary. The other account and generally the more romanticised version of events is that Pat found Billy, faked a confrontation in Spanish so that a lot of the third party eyewitnesses couldn’t translate, then killed a random boy around the age of 21 and staged the assassination of Billy. The inscription is then said to have been written on the grave by Billy himself to show respect to his old friend Pat for letting him go, as long as he vowed to vanish and never return. This theory is backed up by multiple people having claimed to be Billy the Kid in later life; most of these have been immediately disproven. 1948 a Texas man named “Brushy” Bill Roberts had claimed to be Billy the Kid; and sought a pardon from the courts as he didn’t want to die with the guilt of what he’d done. There is still a Billy the Kid museum in Hico, Texas where Brushy Bill had liver & died. The dates of when he arrived in the town did actually correlate to when Billy was last seen in New Mexico. Brushy Bill also was open to exhuming graves of his mother and the body in Fort Sumner and to provide DNA himself to prove his identity. But New Mexico governor Thomas J. Mabry had refused this and stated that enough chaos and murder had been caused by this man in his life, and he wasn’t about to add more to that list by digging up bodies long after his death. The other suspicious facts surrounding his “death” were the DNA evidence provided by Lincoln County in the investigations. They provided Bonney’s blood samples which provided no conclusive evidence and thusly disproving Pat Garrett’s generally accepted version of events. Lincoln county was sued from 2007-2014 by amateur historians. The lawsuit ended up costing Lincoln County over $300,000.
@blytheguy75108 ай бұрын
A western you gotta see is Quigley Down Under. You'd absolutely love it. It has everything: adventure, heartbreak, laughs, romance, and more!
@chuckg38188 ай бұрын
Absolutely. Definitely needs to watch with Carly.
@blytheguy75108 ай бұрын
@@chuckg3818 agreed.
@johnmosley93768 ай бұрын
Good movie but the Roy lady drives me nuts.
@blytheguy75108 ай бұрын
@@johnmosley9376 that must make it hard to walk around like that.
@Metzwerg748 ай бұрын
AAAND... Alan Rickman....
@finishin.my.coffee87808 ай бұрын
The real-life John Tunstall was only about 4 or 5 years older than the other guys. Young Guns 2 goes deeper into the story of Billy and his relationship with Garrett (played by William Peterson from the show CSI). A man named Brushy Bill Roberts came forward in the 1950s, claiming to be Billy The Kid, saying he wanted a full pardon for the 21 men he killed. The movie starts out in the 50's, with Roberts telling the story to a reporter. Christian Slater had become a huge star in the time since the release of Young Guns and he's also in it. James Coburn, who once played Garrett in another western is in it. Jon Bon Jovi has a tiny cameo in it as well as writing the lead single from the soundtrack. Jeff Beck lends a hand to the soundtrack as well, providing guitar tracks. You're right, there is a scene in YGII where Billy ends up in jail, but escapes. In my opinion, it's just as good, if not better. Some say it's even better than the original.
@V01t28 ай бұрын
This, Young Guns II and Tombstone are my favorite westerns
@tomcody22038 ай бұрын
You're serious? Then I assume that you haven't seen much of the real classics. "Young Guns" isn't bad, but nothing compared to movies like "The Searchers", "Red River", "Rio Bravo", "The Magnificent Seven", "The Professionals", "Once Upon a Time in the West", "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly", "El Dorado", "Shane", "Vera Cruz", "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon", Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid", "The Wild Bunch", "The Outlaw Josey Wales" etc. etc. etc. One of the last, truly epic westerns was Kevin Costner's "Open Range".
@benn4548 ай бұрын
@@tomcody2203 Let people enjoy the things they like, snob.
@V01t28 ай бұрын
@@tomcody2203 I grew up watching movies of the 80s and 90s movies. I might have forgotten to mention "Pale Rider," but yeah... What I've listed is all I can testify to.
@escapetheratracenow98838 ай бұрын
@@V01t2 I'm with you on that, but I love the Spaghetti Westerns and the Magnificent Seven too.
@ruggerobelloni47438 ай бұрын
@@tomcody2203 You are listing some true classics, I can only add two more: Stagecoach and Liberty Valance. High Noon Is in a different style, but It has Coop. After watching all the films you mention one gets picky and not so easy to please!
@mitchellbeston10338 ай бұрын
Young Guns 2 wraps up this story and is worth watching.
@MichaelW9698 ай бұрын
Estevez is actually the family surname. Martin Sheen changed his name many years ago, Charlie did too, Emilio did not.
@ResidentPetrolhead8 ай бұрын
Apparently Martin Sheen never legally changed it: He uses Martin Sheen professionally, but he said his driver's licence, passport, etc. are still and have always been under the name Ramon Estevez.
@tinocontreras51058 ай бұрын
but remember charlie went back to carlos estevez lol, during his tiger blood winning phase
@themakkoning8 ай бұрын
Martin used a stage name because the US is known for being bigots and racists especialy in the 1950s when martin started going by sheen. Good on emilio for using his real faminly surename.
@jmhaces8 ай бұрын
@@ResidentPetrolhead I'm pretty sure I've read that it's the same thing for Charlie Sheen. His professional name is Charlie Sheen but his legal name is Carlos Estevez. They have another brother who's a photographer who is named Ramon Estevez like their father.
@toochangz8 ай бұрын
Estevez is their mother's name, not Sheens
@JaRyCu8 ай бұрын
This and Young Guns 2 are the only Westerns I've ever watched and enjoyed. I remember being a teen when YG2 came out and it introduced me to Bon Jovi through the soundtrack... 30 years later and Bon Jovi is still my all-time favorite band. This movie is a classic.
@ramstrong19618 ай бұрын
Keifer and his father Donald Sutherland are Canadian. Donald played in "Kelly's Heroes" (WW2) with Clint Eastwood.
@TheCrazyCanuck4208 ай бұрын
Oddball is worth the price of admission
@jaquesshugossen93988 ай бұрын
Donald Sutherland is AMAZING as Oddball.. Woof Woof.. And in the same "genre" he also played "Hawkeye Pierce" in 1970's movie of "M*A*S*H" which is also a great film in it's own righth.
@anonymes28848 ай бұрын
I still occasionally use "Always with the negative waves Moriarty !" in conversation :). A WWII movie that's absolutely _steeped_ in the 60s.
@brianjones79078 ай бұрын
@@jaquesshugossen9398 He was also in The Dirty Dozen , originally it was only a small part with not many lines but Clint Walker let him have a lot of his lines in order to boost up the part ....
@jaquesshugossen93988 ай бұрын
@@brianjones7907 That is right! I think he was quite the comedian there too :-) He has a very "infective" smile and laugh. When he smiles and laughs, you just have to do the same.
@mikepaulus47668 ай бұрын
Emilio had a house in my town in Montana. One night my friend and I were walking out of the hardware store and a guy I didn't recognize held the door open for us. My friend did recognize him. He looked different because he had the lambchop sideburns he grew out to film Young Guns. He was a nice, regular guy, drove a Toyota pickup.
@alejandroacosta12278 ай бұрын
Fun fact Billy the Kid is originally from Hell's kitchen New York but in his travels he'd go back and forth from the US to Mexico that's why he was so fluent in Spanish.
@stuartlynn-q8q8 ай бұрын
Found myself in Lincoln county last year. Then found John Tungstals store looking the same as the late 1880s and realized I was standing where Billy had been and sheriff Pat Brady's great great grandson was picking up his mail just yards away from where Pat was shot by Billy. It was surreal
@matthewtarpley76138 ай бұрын
Cassie, check out the 1990 version of the movie Flatliners. Keifer Sutherland is in that one as well, he plays a VERY interesting character in that, that is all I will say about that without spoiling it.
@Osprey8508 ай бұрын
Good suggestion. She likes Grey's Anatomy, so a movie about adventurous medical students may be up her alley.
@jaquesshugossen93988 ай бұрын
I thoroughly enjoyed "Flatliners" when I saw that back in 1990 in theatre, and I know there are some that may not like this as much as maybe the newer one, but I feel the 1990 version, yes has a great cast but there are a lot of layers to it. Also can't wait for the reaction to "Young Guns II". IF She likes or enjoys "Grey's Anatomy"; Would she enjoy "Mary Shelly's Frankenstein" with Robert De Niro?
@josepharnold13458 ай бұрын
This was a western for teen boys. It did it’s job. Men my age now instantly recognize the call lol. “Regulators!” That and “Wolverines!” from Red Dawn are instant transportation words for us.
@thomast85398 ай бұрын
Mount up !!!
@DaveMiller28 ай бұрын
A pugilist one who fights with his fists. Pugilism is an old fancy word for boxing, basically.
@LegoGBlok8 ай бұрын
and pugilists also fought with bare hands (at first) before !boxing gloves! was invented
@DaveMiller28 ай бұрын
@@LegoGBlok And bare knuckle boxing even after gloves were invented.
@LegoGBlok8 ай бұрын
@@DaveMiller2 Indeed. But those fights were considered illegal
@Paul-goallin8 ай бұрын
Fisticuffs 😂
@SFOlson8 ай бұрын
You beat me to. I was going to explain it, but I thought I’d check the comments first.
@managementconsulting55058 ай бұрын
Happy to see you went into western movies. Concerning Billy the Kid, I advise you to watch another movie, "Chisum" (1970) with John Wayne. Billy the Kid and Pat Garett are 2 characters in this movie, where John Wayne is splendid
@KSDVLmom8 ай бұрын
I think this is the fastest I clicked on a video. I've literally been trying to get someone to react to this movie for years!!!
@mikeydubbs85652 ай бұрын
4:32 Henry “The Kid” McCarty was not only wicked well read, but fluent in Spanish by age 15, and was beloved by Chicanos and Mexicans alike, who gave him plenty of places to lay low as an outlaw
@30AndAWakeUp8 ай бұрын
Young Guns 2 is a great & tells more of the Billy the Kid story.
@c.willharden95898 ай бұрын
In Young Guns 2 you'll understand the Pat Garrett situation. And why that introduction was meaningful.
@jamesburrows62268 ай бұрын
Been waiting for young guns 2. Must be close. This will be great as well.
@Katarn19118 ай бұрын
For a great western check out Rio Bravo. A classic western starring John Wayne and Dean Martin. Plus it has a nice love story as well.
@sithlordkaeyl218 ай бұрын
‘Young Guns’ and ‘Young Guns 2’ are two of my favorite movies. I’ve seen them both a couple million times since I first saw them in theaters.
@toochangz8 ай бұрын
"Where taking these sons of witches up to coppy town mountain to blow their brains out, WHADDAYA SAY STEVE?!" "Ugh huh haha" I may be horrible, but that always makes me laugh
@RetrofanFilms8 ай бұрын
This ranks as one of my favorite westerns; up there with The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976), Unforgiven, and Tombstone (1993). Interesting fact: As others might have stated, Tom Cruise has a cameo here in Young Guns. He played one of the "Murphy Men" who gets shot at the end. Years later, Emilio Estevez returned the favor to Tom by appearing uncredited at the beginning of Mission: Impossible (1996); he played Jack, a member of Ethan Hunt's team. Hope that you will react to Young Guns II (1990); as well as maybe doing a music video reaction to the song "Blaze of Glory" by Jon Bon Jovi. He even has a very short cameo in that film as well, but that's another story...
@EmoryEdmunds8 ай бұрын
I've been beggin for Josey Wales for months! Lol It's my favorite all-time western.
@td8118 ай бұрын
@@EmoryEdmundsmine too! It’s a bummer no one reacts to it
@duanetelesha8 ай бұрын
@@EmoryEdmunds I would say Pale Rider in the same category, two of Clint Eastwoods best.
@EmoryEdmunds8 ай бұрын
@@duanetelesha yep, another great one!
@kevinwestrom47758 ай бұрын
Jack Palance played the older bad guy mob boss in charge of the mafia in Gotham City, in the 1989 Batman movie; Terrance Stamp played the villain Zod, in the Superman II movie, as other Kryptonians opposite to Superman; Terry O'Quinn has been in so many movies & tv shows.
@BouillaBased8 ай бұрын
Charlie Sheen's "fargin' lie" line reminded me that you should see Johnny Dangerously. If you don't, it's "Fargin' War!"
@tinocontreras51058 ай бұрын
you farggin ice holes
@tinocontreras51058 ай бұрын
peter boyle as the mob leader
@Testibus008 ай бұрын
Fargin' sneaky bastages.
@rcgamer8 ай бұрын
Fargon Iceholes!
@steveleslie21708 ай бұрын
My mom called me that once... once.
@josephandreano27088 ай бұрын
"Hopefully they're the good guys." 🤣🤣🤣🤣 Still so optimistic. Not having her dreams crushed like Bobby Brady (The Brady Bunch) meeting Jesse James.
@repsolgoose9398 ай бұрын
Finally you gotta watch part 2 also
@brichan18514 ай бұрын
Third movie. Also a great watch. Thank you. Wait til you see Young Guns II. It’s even better! Not the same kind of music. The best western ever made is Tombstone. I cannot WAIT to see your reaction to that! Val Kilmer is BRILLIANT in it. One of the greatest roles in all cinema history.
@robertfalcon60838 ай бұрын
Classic 80’s!! Loved this in highschool!!! Part 2 theme song was song by Bon Jovi! Blaze of Glory!!!!!
@toochangz8 ай бұрын
Charlie's "we regulate this property" Regulators speech is the intro for the famous Warren G and Nate Dogg song "Regulators"
@jrobwoo6888 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching one of my favorite westerns. Emilio Estevez and Charlie Sheen also starred together in Men At Work.
@chrisretzlaff28958 ай бұрын
Charlie and Emilio barely look related, but you put a picture of Martin Sheen next to them they both look like him, mind blowing
@jaquesshugossen93988 ай бұрын
Men at Work is great, with one-liners and quotes and such great scenes... AND it has diversity! ;-)
@frmthefuture8 ай бұрын
this movie holds the honor of being just about the most historically accurate telling of billy the kid and the regulators ever to be put on film. during the making, the director had a new mexico historian [paul andrew hutton] on set, to make sure what was being filmed was right [sets, costumes, plot, script, etc]. by the end of it, the historian stated young guns was, "the most historically accurate of all Billy the Kid films as of June 1990." one of the more glaring "changes" was tunstall's age. when he was killed, tunstall was just 24years old- only a few years older than billy himself. this was because the director felt the audience wouldn't seriously take a group of guys like the regulators following orders from someone far younger than them [all but billy were in their 30s and 40s].
@phillipribbink69038 ай бұрын
It's a Western based very loosely on real events. In real life there were more than eleven Regulators at the Blazer's Mill Gunfight where Brushy Bill Roberts and Dick Brewer died. The killing of Joe Grant the arrogant gunfighter that Billy takes the bullets of his gun. Happened later in the Kid's life after the Lincoln County War ended. Charlie Bowdre and Doc Scurlock in real life were brother in laws, they had married a pair of Mexican sisters who's father was also involved in the Lincoln County War, on the Tunstall-McSween side. (In fact Doc and Charlie first met Billy when they hired him to work in a Cheese Factory they ran in Arizona). The McSween House fight lasted for five days and their were 50 on the side of the Regulators spread throughout the town of LIncoln. Though they were still outnumbered by the Murphy-Dolan faction. It got worse when the Army showed up on the side of the Murphy. The fight ended when the Regulators trapped in the McSween house tried to sneak out in the middle of the night. Alexander McSween was killed in the ensuing gun battle, he was a pacifist and thus didn't have a gun. Murphy also didn't meet his end at Billy's hand either, he died of cancer instead.
@Stubbies20038 ай бұрын
Yeah just due to time constraints you will see that a lot in movies. Another great example is from Tombstone where Virgil and Morgan look like they were both shot in the same night whereas in real life they were shot just shy of three months apart from each other.
@kellerperdue15138 ай бұрын
It's still one of my favorite Westerners. I saw it as a kid, and it was the first western I really liked. Now that I'm much older lol I like a lot of different westerners, but this one is the one that started it for me.
@chunkhenderson18788 ай бұрын
Did you guys see the size of that chicken!
@Out-Cast758 ай бұрын
Love that part.
@rickpedia67248 ай бұрын
I saw a rabbit that size back in 1979 while tripping on acid. I believe!!
@Marterrin8 ай бұрын
I had a pizza jump of a traffic light and chase me up a street.......aaaahhh the good old day.
@Katc12308 ай бұрын
That is my favorite line from a movie ever!
@mrbaddog47498 ай бұрын
Mine was Fried.
@YouDontKnowMe2011.98 ай бұрын
This is one of the best westerns ever. Historically, it's pretty close to what actually happened. Not exact, but pretty close. This portrayal of Billy the Kid is almost spot on. He was a unique person. He was intelligent, funny, and extremely loyal, but he was also a killer. His desire to avenge Tunstall was accurate. He had a closeness to Tunstall that was never really explained. There were well over 40 regulators, not just the handful portrayed in the movie. Murphy worked with a man named Dolan. They indeed had a monopoly on the cattle business in Lincoln County. There's arguements that Tunstall and McSween were just as ruthless as the Murphy / Dolan faction, but it's my opinion based on what I've read that the M/D faction was the bad guys in this whole ordeal. Dirty Steve is a conglomeration of several Regulators and isn't necessarily a real person. The others were. The shootout at the end is pretty accurate. The house was set ablaze and the Regulators escaped. McSween was shot down, but not by a Gatling gun. Murphy died in bed from cancer. Billy didn't shoot him. Overall, the movie was accurate with a few dramatic licenses taken. Young Guns 2 was less accurate and not as entertaining. The death of Billy the Kid is surrounded with discrepancies, and it's my opinion that he was not killed by Pat Garrett who was proven to be a liar. His book, "The Life of Billy the Kid" was proven to be almost complete BS. I think Billy survived and was indeed Brushy Bill Roberts...But that's a whole other story.
@chaserz42018 ай бұрын
Gotta let you know Cass...the guy in Green Mile just called himself Billy the kid...he wasn't William h. Bonnie. Can't wait for your reaction to young guns 2
@rizipt8 ай бұрын
That was Wild Bill. I thought she might have been talking about Buffalo Bill from Silence of the Lambs. Either way it was a miss.
@chuckg38188 ай бұрын
It was William Wharton in The Green Mile that called himself Billy the Kid....had a tattoo of it. He got pissed off if anyone called him Wild Bill....a "two gun plainsman who got shot in the back of the head."
@josephkruse34028 ай бұрын
It was driving me crazy that she thought Billy the Kid was a murdering pedophile.
@brianjones79078 ай бұрын
@chaserz4201 ,, William H Bonnie was`nt William H Bonnie his real name was Henry McCarty ...
@dannykent61908 ай бұрын
Actually correct that he did end up in jail at one point though, so she failed successfully.
@tvdroid228 ай бұрын
This one made me a fan of Emilio Estevez. You know he's Charlie Sheen's brother, right? Another western based on actual historical characters. Pugilist: essentially, a boxer. If the soundtrack threw you in this one, II will as well. Even has some stuff from Jon Bon Jovi.
@sinnncere16808 ай бұрын
One of my favourite westerns of all time! Lou Diamond Phillips was the reason why I started collecting knives!
@davesteller63018 ай бұрын
Loved him as Henry Standing Bear in Longmire
@jacfalle278 ай бұрын
In regards to Kiefer Sutherland, one mark of a good actor is when they can make you both love and hate them in different roles. Shows their range instead of just being typecast in a particular character role.
@davesteller63018 ай бұрын
I agree
@feldweible8 ай бұрын
The Best Scene is when the bounty hunter, played by the fantastic "Brian Keith", comes after them.
@MrPagan7778 ай бұрын
"Let's dance!"
@thomast85398 ай бұрын
Since you like that scene (and so do I), I suggest you check out Tom Horn (1980) with Steve McQueen. There is a scene when Horn asks a rustler if he got Horn's note and things don't go exactly to plan, it kinda reminds me of the scene here with Brian Keith.
@pickmeasinner8 ай бұрын
What an excellent movie to react to. A forgotten gem I don't think I've seen anyone else do a reaction to! Young guns 2 was my favourite though if i remember correctly.
@80smoviesfan8 ай бұрын
Charley: We work for Mr. Tunstall as regulators. We regulate any stealing off his property - we're damn good too! Mr. Tunstall's got a soft spot for runaways, dareless, vagrant types. But you can't be any geek off the street, gotta be handy with the steel, if you know what I mean, earn your keep.
@Stubbies20038 ай бұрын
Derelicts not dareless.
@nightmaster55938 ай бұрын
Young Guns is so incredibly awesome! I'm so happy you watched it
@brianyoung64778 ай бұрын
Young guns 2 goes into more detail of Billy the Kid
@Johnny_Socko8 ай бұрын
IMO Young Guns II is the better film, at least from a filmmaking standpoint. I was surprised how much I liked it when it came out.
@davesteller63018 ай бұрын
More about his relationship with Pat Garrett.
@rayhunter-o3w8 ай бұрын
I saw Young Guns at the movie theater. At this point in my life I regret that I paid to see this, but didn't see Unforgiven or Tombstone or even Silverado in the theater. I missed a lot of movies back in the 80s and 90s and even the 00s. I'm glad I get to experience them now with some of my favorite movie reacting people.
@Sir_Osis8 ай бұрын
Crazy story. When I was a teenager, a friend and I went to see this movie at the theater. When we came out, the police had everything roped off as there had been an actual shooting just outside the front door of the theater while we were in watching the movie. It was crazy surreal. Especially after watching Young Guns with so much make believe gun violence.
@lynchmob728 ай бұрын
a "Pugilist" is a person that fights using there hands ... like a Monk, or a boxer. Now .. Young Guns II is a MUST.
@sartanawillpay79778 ай бұрын
St Francis of Assisi was deadly! 🤠
@rickpedia67248 ай бұрын
The woman Charlie goes to see is actually his mother. He knows it, she doesnt. Thats why he just wants to hug her, he's scared and wants his mom. True story.
@rcgamer8 ай бұрын
That's what I always assumed about that also.
@evilbrad38 ай бұрын
I never thought of that
@SurvivorBri8 ай бұрын
Young Guns is an underrated franchise. A bunch of young, new actors on the rise in a western. This was when westerns weren't much of a thing anymore. The sequel is just as good. Another movie that I think you would really enjoy is City Slickers. It's a comedy / quasi-western starring Billy Crystal. It also stars Jack Palance who played Murphy in this. Quite possibly his finest performance that won him an Oscar.
@BondFreek8 ай бұрын
Charlie Sheen's real name is Carlos Estevez. This is one of the rare movies that the two brothers actually act together.
@noway33728 ай бұрын
They also did working men were. They were the garbage collectors and found the dead body.
@jamesporter75878 ай бұрын
Men at Work
@Stubbies20038 ай бұрын
@@jamesporter7587 Aww lookie here. Looks like somebody threw away a perfectly good white boy.
@toochangz8 ай бұрын
Holy mother of popcorn This is one of my favorites, love PIP for doing this!!!! Best reaction show ever!! WISH I HAD CAUGHT THE LIVE
@annmariemills15548 ай бұрын
Pat Garrett was played by Patrick Wayne, who is John Waynes son❤😊
@chrisretzlaff28958 ай бұрын
And Patrick's nephew is the swagger in the suit in The Mandalorian
@JayStar-yj9pu8 ай бұрын
Anyone who doesn't understand the shootout between Buckshot Roberts and the Guns, need only refer to the Clint Eastwood film Unforgiven. The topic of an experienced gunfighter calmly picking apart the more frantic and unfocused opponents is what we see as Roberts took his time and the Guns panicked and missed.
@dragonflysurgeon8 ай бұрын
This was fairly historically accurate but for a few things. Tunstall wasn't old , but in his early 20s. But the Lincoln County war part is pretty accurate
@sartanawillpay79778 ай бұрын
Young Guns is not alone in this error. Most Billy the Kid films make him out as an older man, so he is more believable as father figure to the Kid.
@nathanjacobus35778 ай бұрын
The character from the movie The Green Mile, was William "Wild Bill" Wharton, played by Sam Rockwell. The fictional character was an admirer of Billy the Kid and would occasionally refer to himself by that name. But he was not actually THE Billy the Kid, nor was he related to him in any meaningful way.
@magicmike71988 ай бұрын
If you felt that the interaction between Billy The Kid (Emilio Estevez) and Pat Garrett at the village dance was weird, it's because he will be the one who famously killed Billy by shooting him in the back. This is also why the dialogue that follows where Billy says that he will one day be more popular than him is prophetic. This is also why, later in the film, Pat Garrett surprises Billy from behind by starting a conversation... and Billy tests him by turning his back and asking him: "Are you my friend?" to which Pat replies that he is... I must have seen this film about thirty times. I remember being shocked to see Charlie Sheen and Terence Stamp's character die so quickly. That year (1987), Keifer Sutherland also played a vampire in ''The Lost Boys''. What an actor! A comboy-poet in this film and a bloodthirsty vampire in the other. And we believe him in both of them. For me, the funniest scene is near the end when Billy shoots a star cowboy (Charley Crawford). -Billy: Hey Peppin!i -Peppin: I'm hearin' you, Billy! -Billy: I see you've got Charley Crawford down there with you! -Peppin: Yeah, we got a whole lot! Billy proceeds to shoot Charley Crawford. -Billy: Hey Peppin', Charley Crawford ain't with you anymore! The scene that follows where the group attempts to heroically escape is poignant. The sequel is not as good but still worth it... especially for the Jon Bon Jovi song and the score by the great Alan Silvestri.
@magicmike71988 ай бұрын
@@SimonRiley752 My memory is what it is but isn't that a little bit the plot of the second ''Young Guns''? Well, maybe not the plot itself but one of the ''punchline'' of the film?
@MrPagan7778 ай бұрын
Left out some of my favourite lines: "Who are them?" "They William... they are the boys of the dregs." "Oh... a pugilist!" "That's something ain't it!" "He's up and dancing with a pretty lady, while we're all standing here pulling our tally-whackers!" "Well! The belted earl has spoken!" "Did you guys see the size of that chicken?!"
@johncampbell7568 ай бұрын
In real life, Billy the Kid (Emilio Estevez) was killed by Pat Garrett (Patrick Wayne). Charlie and Emilio are brothers. Marton Sheen is their father. Martin's real last name is Estevez. They have a sister who is an actress as well. I used to deliver to Lou Diamind Phillips. A really nice guy. A pugilist is a boxer. People shoot huns in the air. The bullets have to come back down at some point. This is not an accurate Billy the Kid story. In The Green Mile, Sam Rockwell was playing a guy who called himself Billy the Kid, but was not the Billy.
@ChrisReise8 ай бұрын
12:47 Nope, not poop. It's Peyote, a small, spineless cactus which contains psychoactive alkaloids, particularly mescaline.
@tyrannicaltypomichaeltester8 ай бұрын
You WILL LOVE part two
@Chris-ji4iu8 ай бұрын
Not sure how many "Lincoln County War" movies there are, but 'Chisum' with John Wayne is another good one.
@TrthBHld8 ай бұрын
I remember laughing a lot when we saw this as youngins. Now I laugh cause I feel and sound the same as you when recently watching it again. Funny how some of us change.
@EndlessMike19878 ай бұрын
Also, according to historians, Billy and Dick actually got along really well and there was no power struggle between them. They all followed him without question
@LeeWinstead19628 ай бұрын
This movie was literally based on the actual Lincoln County War
@gravic008 ай бұрын
still one of the coolest intros for me as a kid lol...i would get so hyped over the music
@RebeccaVaughn8 ай бұрын
If you're interested in trying Australian "westerns," The Man from Snowy River and Quigley Down Under are ones I grew up with (had an Aussie grandma).
@rexoid08008 ай бұрын
The Billy the kid in the Green Mile you are thinking of was just a criminal who used the name as he wanted to be an outlaw. He was not the real Billy the Kid.
@br1anv1c0r38 ай бұрын
Best Western ever....
@MatthewFierros8 ай бұрын
Young Guns II is also pretty good. Some new characters were introduced one played by Christian Slater another by Alan Ruck from Ferris Bueller day off
@goyasolidar8 ай бұрын
Fun fact: Tom Cruise was actually in this film. He was on set one day and the director stuck him in the climactic end battle as one of the soldiers, disguised behind a fake mustache and sideburns.
@jaymeswheeler8 ай бұрын
Fun fact when you stick Tom Cruise in the back, two things happen 1. you don't need to disguise him because he's too short and you can't see him And 2. He gets revenge. Nobody stabs Tom Cruise in the back.
@idahohermit46348 ай бұрын
I had forgotten all about that!
@tinocontreras51058 ай бұрын
@@jaymeswheelerthere were a few big actors in this one. Just really hidden behind mustaches and hats lol. I forget who but I seen it on a KZbin video
@trevburnard8 ай бұрын
Just came down here to say that!
@Billy-zv6gv8 ай бұрын
@@jaymeswheelerHehe! He's short! So what revenge did he get? 🗡️❓🔪🤔
@SNAPS3D8 ай бұрын
Loved the reaction Cassie. Another one I wish Carly was here for but,... Anyway this movie/story was based loosely on the real life story of Billy the kid and the Lincoln County cattle war. This is my favorite 80's western film. I loved this movie and it's sequel. PLEASE do a reaction to "Young Guns 2" as well. It has a little more humor to it than this one, but it also explains some the parts you were confused by in this film. Mostly the Pat Garrett, "awkward moment".