FORREST GUMP (1994) [REACTION] MADE US WANT TO BE BETTER PEOPLE! First Time Watching

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The Octobers

The Octobers

Күн бұрын

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Thanks for watching FORREST GUMP (1994) [REACTION] MADE US WANT TO BE BETTER PEOPLE! First Time Watching
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00:00:00 Intro
00:00:57 FORREST GUMP (1994)
00:59:59 Outro

Пікірлер: 683
@TheOctobersReact
@TheOctobersReact Ай бұрын
In the intro we said SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION (1994) was on the channel, and it was but we had to take it down for copyright purposes & are re-editing it! It will be out again soon!
@americanandpinay
@americanandpinay Ай бұрын
Forest Gump isn't just one of the greatest movies. It's one of the Greatest American stories ever told. This movie is one of the top 3 most perfect movies ever made in my opinion. It's just magical.
@Entac1165
@Entac1165 Ай бұрын
I watched it this morning before it was taken down! XD
@Awesomeman14
@Awesomeman14 Ай бұрын
React to these Comedies: (Real Movie) The Ringer, Date Night, Big Stan, Netflix Gabriel Iglesias: Stadium Fluffy, Netflix Jo Koy : Don't Make Him Angry, Starring Chris Evans Cellular
@johnnydee5638
@johnnydee5638 Ай бұрын
If you haven’t seen The Green Mile (another one starring Tom Hanks) yet, that would be a fantastic movie to react to next
@timhonigs6859
@timhonigs6859 Ай бұрын
Shawshank, Forrest Gump, and When Harry Met Sally make up my 3 favorite movies of all time. For most ppls top 3, remove Harry/Sally, and replace it with Green Mile. (Which is my 4th favorite movie) These movies are what I call complete movies, as they cover the complete range of human emotions, and take us for a ride, that leaves us better people after watching them. Thank you for watching, and sharing your first time with us
@urdad-dn1vv
@urdad-dn1vv Ай бұрын
The scene where Forest asks Jenny if his son is smart or "like me" is some of the best acting ive ever seen. Hanks is incredible and you forget you're watching one of the biggest actors of all time.
@frankcastle9991
@frankcastle9991 Ай бұрын
Indeed a long way from bosom buddies.
@gsquat
@gsquat Ай бұрын
To think, our "heros" are actually pedophile rapists.
@majbrat
@majbrat Ай бұрын
For sure. Makes me weep every time. So powerful.
@torontomame
@torontomame Ай бұрын
That stomps on my heart, every single time. His delivery of that line, and "Oh, Bubba ... no", when he finds Bubba get me. Such amazing acting to put SO much feeling into so few words.
@brettcloud8550
@brettcloud8550 Ай бұрын
The scene that tells the audience Forrest was very aware of his, let's call it "difference". And I don't mean that negatively. He just was different. But he was a pure soul who I wish I'd had as a friend in this life.
@shanecampbell7423
@shanecampbell7423 Ай бұрын
Since this film, Gary Sinise (Lieutenant Dan) has become THE Hollywood advocate for Veterans rights. He's done incredible things
@FeebLeofSpeech
@FeebLeofSpeech Ай бұрын
Absolutely. I met him in Baghdad in 2008, I went to the chow hall and turned around and he was standing right next to me. Really cool dude.
@jaydouglas8845
@jaydouglas8845 Ай бұрын
There are a lot of Hollywood actors advocating for veterans. Bradley Cooper, Mark Wahlberg, Kathy Griffin, and Jon Stewart.
@Sif3r
@Sif3r Ай бұрын
​@jaydouglas8845 not to the extent of Gary Sinise. If you take a look, you'll see why.
@Reclining_Spuds
@Reclining_Spuds 4 күн бұрын
Yes! To the extent he was Grand Marshall of the Rose Parade a few years ago. ✌️. ​@Sif3r
@chard2534
@chard2534 Ай бұрын
Jenny always told Forrest to run because that was her way to cope with the abuse. She ran to Forrest’s house at night. She ran to hide in the corn field. And then she used drugs to run away. When she left Forrest’s house in the cab, she finally said ‘I’m not running’. Even though she left Forrest because she didn’t feel like she was good enough for him, she had decided to stop running and go start a new life.
@flarrfan
@flarrfan Ай бұрын
"Sometimes you gotta put the past behind you before you can move on."
@JuanitoEsBonito
@JuanitoEsBonito Ай бұрын
I feel like people miss this when talking about how much they dislike Jenny as a person in this movie. There was very important change and development happening in just that one scene alone.
@Yugioh420
@Yugioh420 Ай бұрын
Leaving Forrest behind was also symbolic because Forrest was her safe haven, safe zone, whatever you want to call it. She stayed in her safe zone till she was ready to finally make the change to turn her life around, and the catalyst was her finally sleeping with Forrest, she "tainted" her safe zone while corrupting Forrest innocent with her version of love.
@meanlean3095
@meanlean3095 Ай бұрын
Jenny abused & hurt forest… She never deserved forest….
@aaronbeatdown
@aaronbeatdown Ай бұрын
I think with Jenny, she believed that a) she wasn't deserving of his love and b) that Forrest deserved better than her, because she saw herself as a broken person.
@jasonrd316
@jasonrd316 Ай бұрын
Durring that protest rally, Forest said "Sometimes when people go to Vietnam, they go home to their mommas without any legs. Sometimes they don't go home at all. That's a bad thing. That's all I have to say about that."
@paulhewes7333
@paulhewes7333 Ай бұрын
It was enough to make Abby Hoffman cry.
@williambryan3346
@williambryan3346 Ай бұрын
*Forrest 😁
@proosee
@proosee Ай бұрын
That fits Forrest, but I like the movie's version more: it somehow shows how society was divided about this topic.
@MyDevilishLullaby
@MyDevilishLullaby Ай бұрын
I love the "you're my girl" delivery. It's like the most obvious thing in the wold for Forest ♥️ Also, as for Jenny, there was a line in "the perks of being a wallflower" that best describes her: "we accept the love we think we deserve". That's why she was with total jerks and was running away from Forest all the time. She didn't think she deserves his love. You can't love anybody unless you love yourself first.
@flarrfan
@flarrfan Ай бұрын
That last time when she said she wasn't running...it was the truth, because as Forrest said later, "Sometimes you gotta put the past behind you before you can move on."
@williambryan3346
@williambryan3346 Ай бұрын
*Forrest 😁
@Ceractucus
@Ceractucus Ай бұрын
Hey, wonderful reaction! So nice to see it again. “You think Forrest makes Jenny feel inadequate?’ Yeah I do. Jenny was molested. In addition to the immediate trauma this causes, it creates feelings of not being worthy of someone decent. That can last a lifetime. I think in the case of our Jenny, having the kid brought her back to Earth and having a child cannot help but increase your self worth, especially if you are a good parent. She finally realized that she was worthy.
@seecha8970
@seecha8970 Ай бұрын
Took me a very long time to realize that "running" was Jenny's defense mechanism. It's the only way she has ever been able to protect herself. She ran to protect herself from her father. She told Forrest to run when the bullies threw rocks at him. She wanted Forrest to run if he got in trouble in Vietnam. So anytime she felt uncomfortable about a situation, or felt like she might let Forrest down, she ran. Whether it was to protect herself from being hurt or protect Forrest from being hurt by her, it was the only consistent thing she could do that has worked to protect her.
@torontomame
@torontomame Ай бұрын
Definitely. I've been learning about responses to trauma over the past couple of years, primarily about trauma related to sexual abuse. And I recognize so much of myself in her. The lack of self worth, the addiction issues, and the certainty that one doesn't deserve any love. So when love presents itself, you run. Because you don't think you're worth it, and because you don't want to hurt the person who loves you. She runs from Forrest because she loves him, and she thinks he's too pure for her to screw him up. But at the same time she only feels safe when she's near him. Part of her needs to be near him, but a large part of her believes she needs to stay away from him for his own good. I'm a lot more forgiving of her character now than I was when I was younger.
@meanlean3095
@meanlean3095 Ай бұрын
But yet she chose to ruin forest’s mental health…. Disgusting behaviour by Jenny imo….
@michaelf8702
@michaelf8702 Ай бұрын
​@@meanlean3095perhaps, but considering her childhood (being molested/abused), it was kinda predictable. She finally overcame it all when she became a mom. It's just unfortunate that Forrest got caught in the middle of all of it. But he ultimately 'saved' her by fathering her child. And honestly, as innocent as Forest was, I don't think his mental health was that bothered by it. He was sad, but he just kept on going on.
@akeisaabercrombie81
@akeisaabercrombie81 Ай бұрын
My new favorite reaction from y’all! I absolutely love this movie! Thank you for not villainizing Jenny; I have seen other reactions, and reactors have hated her! You both understand that she came from a traumatic home, which followed her through her life and she could not give Forrest the love that he wanted, because she didn’t have that love for herself! At least not until later in life!
@TheOctobersReact
@TheOctobersReact Ай бұрын
❤️ thanks for the kind words
@lou4073
@lou4073 Ай бұрын
“Do you think Forest makes her feel inadequate.” Excellent question.
@Jedicake
@Jedicake Ай бұрын
Love your empathy so much, Mrs October. Empathy is the single greatest emotion we have and it's a wonderful thing to share it with people.
@trequor
@trequor Ай бұрын
Empathy also has a dark side that no one talks about. When you can empathize with someone, you know exactly how to hurt them
@that.ll_do_pig
@that.ll_do_pig 9 күн бұрын
​@@trequoryou can know how to hurt someone deeply without being empathetic. _Most_ people with empathy likely wouldn't use that knowledge to hurt someone and if they did, they would feel quite guilty.
@zedwpd
@zedwpd Ай бұрын
Yes Jenny does know what love is. Because of her abuse as a child, she just didn't think she was worthy of receiving anyone's love; especially Forrest's.
@passionsquietrage
@passionsquietrage Ай бұрын
Mrs. O is correct, that's Sally Field who played Aunt May to Andrew Garfield's Spiderman. This is an iconic movie for a lot of reasons, Tom Hanks' performance really shows how talented he is as an actor. Gary Sinise(Lt. Dan) does a lot of work with the military and disabled veterans, he even formed The Lieutenant Dan Band to entertain them and donates proceeds from shows to various veteran support charities.
@jkhoover
@jkhoover Ай бұрын
He created the Gary Sinise Foundation which is what really gives a lot of money to veterans.
@TenTonNuke
@TenTonNuke Ай бұрын
Forrest is just so honest and open and genuine that people around him feel compelled to defend him. Like with Lt Dan. He almost wanted Forrest to shame him or mock him or run him down because he felt he deserved it, having failed his destiny. But Forrest was just like "You still Lt Dan" until Lt Dan finally accepted that he wasn't just some cripple. And when the girl called Forrest stupid, Lt Dan knew Forrest wouldn't defend himself, so he stepped in. Like someone threatening to kill a puppy. You're about to have everyone in town come to the defense of that puppy. Just by being himself, Forrest makes others around him better people.
@whipdan674
@whipdan674 Ай бұрын
I also think it's about the the fact that she was disrespecting a war hero, that didn't meant anything to Forest but Lt Dan knew of his value and he wouldn't accept some skank talking down on a man that put his life on the line to save others, including himself.
@chrishouseinc
@chrishouseinc Ай бұрын
That last sentence is the perfect thesis for the entire movie. Well said.
@notablezero8793
@notablezero8793 Ай бұрын
Tom Hanks is a Pedo 😂
@notablezero8793
@notablezero8793 Ай бұрын
:(
@notablezero8793
@notablezero8793 Ай бұрын
Turner and hooch if you like degz
@mimiwiz1
@mimiwiz1 Ай бұрын
Pretty sure Jenny died from Hepatitis (she wouldn't have looked that good with AIDS) Her whole life was wanting to be a "bird" and fly away from her issues. Free Bird was the song playing when she was going to jump from the balcony. She was too messed up, and saw Forrest as " all good" and she wasn't worthy. Definitely one of the 5 best movies, ever! Great reaction, thanks!
@americanandpinay
@americanandpinay Ай бұрын
Jenny died from Hep-C in the books, but, in the movie, she died from late-stage HIV. Hep-C was well documented by the 1980s, and they knew the causes of it were needle usage and sexual intercourse, while HIV had just become a public epidemic in 1982, the year Jenny dies, and they were still scared that people could get it from toilet seats and drinking after each other through saliva. I was in kindergarten in 1985. I remember the teacher yelling at us and sanitizing the water fountain between each of us getting a drink. In the scrapped movie sequel, Forest Jr. was going to pass away from AIDS because he had gotten neo-natal HIV through Jenny from at birth. Jenny having HIV or HEP-C creates a plot hole for some, but after the first sexual encounter we don't know anything of their sex life, or when she contracted HIV. HEP-C came from her drug usage in the book.
@davebcf1231
@davebcf1231 Ай бұрын
@@americanandpinay Hep C wasn't identified until 1989, so no.
@americanandpinay
@americanandpinay Ай бұрын
@@davebcf1231 It was first cloned in 1989. It was around long before that. It's known to have killed almost 1,000 people in 1982. Jenny dies in 1982. My exwife just died from it in 2020.
@davebcf1231
@davebcf1231 Ай бұрын
​@@americanandpinay Cloned in order to develop a diagnostic test so they could identify it. Just google when Hep. C was discovered. Peer reviewed papers say 1989. They knew there was a virus that was likely in the hepatitis family and was causing deaths before that, but they didn't know what exactly it was or how to diagnose it. They thought it primarily or possibly exclusively spread through blood transfusions early on. To say it was well documented 5 years before it had even been identified is just not true.
@LeviBulger
@LeviBulger Ай бұрын
It's definitely HIV. Robin Wright has even talked about it in interviews. When HIV was first found out about, it had a huge cultural impact which as we all know this film is as much about American culture as it is anything else. And Hep C was known about for much longer than 1989 😂. It was just called non A/B hepatitis because they couldn't confirm it scientifically until then. But they definitely knew it was another type of hepatitis than the other two that had been confirmed.
@reneerocha1796
@reneerocha1796 Ай бұрын
I also love “Greenbow, AlaBAMA!!!!”😅😂
@jannathompson2262
@jannathompson2262 Ай бұрын
I use that line as much as I can!!!❤
@notablezero8793
@notablezero8793 Ай бұрын
I bet I could colla up some of them greens.
@DavidStebbins
@DavidStebbins Ай бұрын
Great reaction. From Elvis to AIDS (or Hep C in the book), Forrest Gump is the story of a generation; the historical touchstones, the music, the traumas, and the philosophical questions we wrestled with. It's always fun for me to watch people react to this movie because I enjoy seeing which things they recognize (like Watergate) and which they don't (like the cultural opening of China and the beginning of the running/jogging craze). I was very happy when I found out there are high schools that use the movie to help teach recent American History.
@cabby26
@cabby26 Ай бұрын
Fun fact, zemeckis was asking hanks how Forrest should speak. So hanks said, well, let’s listen to the kid that’s playing young Forrest and see how he speaks. So he just imitated how the young actor spoke. The kid told him a story about what his dad did for work, so hanks just went with it.
@realdealelendil3535
@realdealelendil3535 Ай бұрын
This is one of the greatest movies of all time no question also if you don’t cry at least once during the movie there is something wrong with your heart. My favorite line is “sometimes I guess there just aren’t enough rocks”
@RyneMurray23
@RyneMurray23 Ай бұрын
It makes me cry every time young Jenny starts praying... Her dress is torn and her hair is messed up and it absolutely breaks my heart.. Jenny always loved Forrest but she felt tainted from her past and didn't want to hold him back. She knew Forrest shouldn't be around her lifestyle. He would've followed her anywhere and she couldn't let him ruin his life for her.👍🏼
@RoadDoug
@RoadDoug Ай бұрын
Oh my gosh! Mrs. October made me cry at the end. Great reaction. Jenny told Forrest if he ever found himself in trouble, just run! Jenny was the runner. After he asked her to marry him and she left, her running days were over. She got her life together. Love this movie and,I Love ya both.
@jamin7474
@jamin7474 Ай бұрын
i think the scene with Forrest and John Lennon was hinting that he gave John Lennon the lyrics for Imagine....Forrest was describing what it was like in Vietnam and Lennon was like "no possessions?...no religion too?" and thats pretty much how the song goes
@mena94x3
@mena94x3 Ай бұрын
*China
@FredtheFrisian
@FredtheFrisian Ай бұрын
If I had to name one term for this movie, it would be "Incomparable"; it's truly one of a kind. One of it's strengths to me are the understatements by Forrest; one of my favorites was "Sometimes I guess there just aren't enough rocks". On one hand life is easier for Forrest because things happen "for no particular reason". One of the lessons is that the love that Forrest receives from his mother is more important than his intellectual disability; you can see that when you look at Jenny, who doesn't know what love is. I'm not fond of ranking, but if I had had to choose a number one, this could be it.
@nancygodsey8312
@nancygodsey8312 Ай бұрын
His mama made sure Forrest had a good base to help him grow up without thinking everyone else was better than him.
@HardParking
@HardParking Ай бұрын
This is one of the greatest movies ever made
@CinWin516
@CinWin516 Ай бұрын
I just loved it when Mr. October affectionately comforted Mrs. October when she was crying. ❤❤❤
@esc0bert
@esc0bert Ай бұрын
One of my favorite movies. If only there more Forest Gumps in the world today.
@TheDaringPastry1313
@TheDaringPastry1313 Ай бұрын
I didn't notice it for a long time, but you know Lt. Dan really made his peace when you see that he showed up to Forrest and Jenny's wedding with a Vietnamese woman as his wife.
@otter3095
@otter3095 Ай бұрын
Octobers, I have watched this movie many times and seen many channels react to it. I have to say, watching you two today was by far my favorite to see. Your smiles, your laughter, your tears, your tenderness during sensitive moments, and finally your “ catching” several things others missed. It was a pleasure
@TheOctobersReact
@TheOctobersReact Ай бұрын
Wow, thank you! we appreciate you so much
@jannathompson2262
@jannathompson2262 Ай бұрын
I agree❤❤❤
@JordanJMyers
@JordanJMyers Ай бұрын
Honestly never gets old watching this. Classic.
@Berto2K
@Berto2K Ай бұрын
The ease of which they were able to weave his life through so many pop culture moments in the country is very creative.
@wildtime845
@wildtime845 Ай бұрын
This is one of those movies that once it appears on the tv you just have to sit and watch it all
@majbrat
@majbrat Ай бұрын
Wonderful, iconic movie. Tom Hanks is incredible in this. Stellar. Jenny did not feel clean and thought Forest deserved a better woman than her. Her childhood abuse fueled her lack of care for herself. The filmmaking is awesome, story is compelling, so many serious issues dealt with, behind so many funny moments. Just the most brilliant movie. The historical stuff is just so funny.
@therealdevfrm2nd317
@therealdevfrm2nd317 Ай бұрын
“Somebody get her a harmonica” is willlld 😂
@Fairygrl_TW
@Fairygrl_TW Ай бұрын
A masterpiece film. Brilliant how they placed him in all these historical film clips, flawlessly. Dont mess with Forrest's grl. His wave is to adorable. His innocence remains uncorrupted by the world so I think Forrest is the only one that knows what love is. Jenny loves Forrest, she just doesnt love herself. I was a young hippy at the ending of the Vietnam war.The Vietnam war and the treatment our boys received after being forced to fight, got me into activism at age 13. They had drafted kids to fight their unnecessary war to come home to bullying (called baby ki!!ers), abuse, left without care, murdered, etc. Thanx so much, Peace
@RobFMDetroit
@RobFMDetroit Ай бұрын
Since you mentioned it -- I have always contended that 1994 was the single best year for movies since I've been alive. Forrest Gump, Shawshank, Pulp Fiction, Ed Wood, Clerks, Speed, Leon: The Professional, The Crow, True Lies, Quiz Show, the Jim Carrey hat-trick (Ace Ventura, The Mask, Dumb & Dumber), Hoop Dreams, The Lion King, Hudsucker Proxy, Legends of the Fall, Reality Bites, Interview with the Vampire, The Paper, Four Weddings and a Funeral, Bullets Over Broadway... the list goes on and on.
@mena94x3
@mena94x3 Ай бұрын
100% agreed.
@alicestevens8291
@alicestevens8291 Ай бұрын
the adult perspective gives this new life. I saw it when I was little too and felt as most have that it was sort of this cliché Hollywood blockbuster and it's really not and it really is a cinematic masterpiece.
@Silky808
@Silky808 Ай бұрын
The scene on the army bus when Forrest says, “At first it seemed like I made a mistake”, if that is not the truest statement on every military member’s minds their first day of basic I don’t know what is.
@babybone95
@babybone95 Ай бұрын
1:13:50 “And as an American, I suck for not watching this” My favorite line from this reaction 😂
@BobTheSkull
@BobTheSkull Ай бұрын
Damn we had tears and snot. That's some real ass crying right there. Such a hard scene.
@BryanH63
@BryanH63 Ай бұрын
One of my all-time favorite movies... I still remember the first time I saw the Trailer, I knew it was going to be special. I start choking up whenever the movie starts knowing everything that it is in it. Such a special film.
@Belladonna313
@Belladonna313 Ай бұрын
You guys have just made my night 😊 my heart always breaks for Jenny tho. Just a hard life. Makes me grateful that although I didn’t have much growing up, I had a mama who loved me dearly ☺️
@procopiusaugustus6231
@procopiusaugustus6231 Ай бұрын
In the scene with John Lennon he’s basically inspiring the lyrics to Imagine, his most famous song. A
@shirleydurr411
@shirleydurr411 Ай бұрын
Forrest doesn't make Jenny feel inadequate but she feels she doesn't deserve hm. She keeps choosing men who were abusive like her father because she feels that's all she deserves.
@that.ll_do_pig
@that.ll_do_pig 9 күн бұрын
He does make her feel inadequate but not in any kind of intentional way. Just being his kind innocent self causes her to feel that way.
@reneerocha1796
@reneerocha1796 Ай бұрын
Thanks!Great reaction, guys. Loved watching with y’all. 😊😢😊 Jenny was a troubled soul who never felt safe except with Forrest. Abuse screws people up so bad. Classic example of an abused person (Jenny as a girl) & how it messes up every decision you ever make. Sweet Forrest…❤
@TheOctobersReact
@TheOctobersReact Ай бұрын
thanks so much! we loved this movie so much and thanks for the super thanks you’re the best !
@notablezero8793
@notablezero8793 Ай бұрын
Legendary
@notablezero8793
@notablezero8793 Ай бұрын
This kuntz donated $9
@notablezero8793
@notablezero8793 Ай бұрын
​@@TheOctobersReact😮
@fionnmaccumhaill3257
@fionnmaccumhaill3257 Ай бұрын
​@TheOctobersReact Jenny died of hepatitis C which there was no cure for until recently.
@Lights_Out.
@Lights_Out. Ай бұрын
Forrest Gump is such a bittersweet story. Truly a classic. Great reaction guys.
@nsasupporter7557
@nsasupporter7557 Ай бұрын
Yes, I could watch this movie everyday non stop and never get sick of it. I quote it on a regular basis
@CD-wp8dg
@CD-wp8dg Ай бұрын
The medal he won was the medal of honor. Generally awarded posthumously. That he would have the award while still alive would make him 1 of 1 in society at that time for at least another 40 years.
@eleegs
@eleegs Ай бұрын
Many variations of this story about two halves of the same person - the innocent side without attaachmnents - free to run and “float” and the other burdened with trauma and doubt. The They contintue to meet throughout the course of their lives until they merge (recall the conversation when Forrest describes how the sky and water merge). He and Jenny merge - create a new birth in their son - Jenny, the damaged half sheds and flies away free like a bird, leaving two halves behind - father and son. There are other stories with the same theme, but this one was told in such a unique fashion
@crazy_indian3921
@crazy_indian3921 Ай бұрын
This is one of those movies i can turn on and rewatch it over and over Such a good movie
@user-di6tt5cq6z
@user-di6tt5cq6z 4 күн бұрын
Sister, what a precious soul you have. Thank you for your reaction. 😢
@manzell
@manzell Ай бұрын
The part that gets me is when Forrest asks Jenny if his child is like him.
@bioniccorndog
@bioniccorndog Ай бұрын
This is one of my all time favorite movies for sure. The way it's told is like someone flipping through and explaining a photo album or scrapbook. Deeply personal and also steeped in life lessons. No doubt this movie played a big role in the way I think about honesty, loyalty and kindness.
@stevieb3077
@stevieb3077 Ай бұрын
Love the comment "he's got a terrible throwing motion." So true!
@jewmaxin1984
@jewmaxin1984 5 күн бұрын
Often when I've found myself in a rut or existential crisis, taking time to put this on and soak it in has honestly helped. A lot about Forest and his authentic nature, how he carries himself through any situation puts things in a manageable perspective that a lot of us often forget exists. Love your reaction, I also love the movie for the amazing music selection and soundtrack.
@johnplaysgames3120
@johnplaysgames3120 Ай бұрын
I feel like, at its base, "Forrest Gump" is about how our individual destinies are created by how we choose to meet the moments of our lives when they arrive (because we can't pick them), while also acknowledging that our stories may not be what we expect them to be. The idea of destiny comes up a number of times in the movie. Including: - When Forrest's mom is dying, they have a conversation where she says "I didn't know it, but I was destined to be your mama." Forrest asks her what his destiny is and she replies, "You'll have to figure that out for yourself. Life is like a box of chocolates, you never know what you're gonna get." She also tells him, "I happen to believe you make your own destiny" and "You have to do the best with what God gave you." - Lt. Dan is obsessed with what he thinks is his destiny -- dying on the battlefield like someone from each generation of his family did before -- and is miserable when he feels like his presumed destiny was taken from him. He says, "We all have a destiny. Nothing just happens. It's all part of a plan," and he concludes, "You stole mine from me!" When his destiny didn't go according to his plan/expectation, he sank into depression and was lost for a long time. He thought his destiny was gone instead of realizing that what he'd expected just wasn't his destiny. - When Forrest is talking to Jenny's grave at the end, he says, "I don't know if we each have a destiny, or if we're all just floating around accidental-like on a breeze, but I think maybe it's both. Maybe both is happening at the same time." This particular moment in the film, I think, is the filmmakers highlighting the movie's major theme. This is also symbolized by the feather blowing around on the breeze at the beginning and ending of the movie. That feather is us and the breeze is seemingly random events that happen to us as we live in this world. This is further emphasized whenever Forrest meets a significant historical figure along his path and then mentions afterward how the person was shot, had a heart attack, or met some other unexpected tragedy. No one is above the randomness of life. Life happens to you no matter who you are or how "important" you might be and, as his mama told him on her deathbed, "Dying is just a part of life." I think it's significant that both of the characters who spend the majority of the movie miserable -- Jenny and Lt. Dan -- are trying to force a destiny that they want (or think they deserve) instead of just living in the life that comes to them and allowing their destinies to evolve naturally. For Lt. Dan, it isn't until he finally makes his peace with his presumed destiny being "stolen" from him that he's able to find a new destiny and the happiness that comes with it, symbolized by his new legs and, symbolic of his making peace with his Vietnam years, a Vietnamese fiancée. Similarly, Jenny kept trying to chase something specific that she could never catch -- fame, happiness through drugs, changing the world through various "important" causes, the love of toxic men like her father, etc. -- and ended up running from thing to thing and finding herself miserable. It was meeting an unexpected event in her life -- having a child -- that finally allowed her to experience true, pure, unconditional love for the first time. Both that and another unexpected development of life, one she couldn't run from -- getting an incurable disease -- allowed her to finally be ready to step out of her toxic cycle, let go, and accept the pure, unconditional love that Forrest had been offering her their whole life. And, although it was brief, she finally found peace and happiness after she accepted the life that was coming to her instead of running for an imagined better one somewhere "far, far away from here." When she allowed herself to be a feather instead of wishing to be a bird, she was finally able to fly on the wind. Forrest, by contrast, just sort of let life happen to him and took it as it came, riding with each moment as he found it rather than trying to force it into some specific box or goal. As a result, he ended up in all these significant moments that, all together, made up the story of an incredible life (and a good chunk of American history). He became an important figure almost BECAUSE he wasn't trying to be important. He was just living his life as it happened and letting his destiny evolve naturally into whatever it would become. He didn't fight his story; he just lived it. Each character made their own decisions along the way, but each was also being buffeted along on the breeze of life. It's how they chose to react to those sudden shifts in the wind that made their lives and made them who they were. It all reminds me of the old quote (often attributed to John Lennon but originally said in a 1957 issue of Reader's Digest by Allen Saunders): "Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans." Also, the Matthew McGrory Quote: "I just like to take it as it comes, go where the wind blows me. I'm not going to plan." It also reminds me of the ending monologue of the song "Hi Ren" that came out a year or two ago. In it, speaking about the illness that derailed his life and kept him bedridden for 10 years until he was finally correctly diagnosed, Ren says: "It wasn't David versus Goliath. It was a pendulum, eternally swaying from the dark to the light. And the more intensely that the light shone, the darker the shadow it cast. It was never really a battle for me to win, it was an eternal dance. And like a dance, the more rigid I became, the harder it got. The more I cursed my clumsy footsteps, the more I struggled. So I got older, and I learned to relax and I learned to soften and that dance got easier." You can't control the world. Life happens to you and that creates the context in which you live. How you respond to those moments is what makes you the person you ultimately become. And those moments, all together, form the story of your life, which is often very different from the story you expected. So, in that way, Forrest was right when he wondered if we each have a destiny or if we're all floating around, "accidental-like," on the breeze and concluded "I think maybe it's both."
@Rayray-kj9cc
@Rayray-kj9cc Ай бұрын
What a beautiful movie!! I wanna give Mrs October a big hug! She has such a huge heart!!
@tentoesdownchristianity
@tentoesdownchristianity Ай бұрын
This is one of my 3 favorite movies. I grew up 25 or 30 minutes from where Bubba is from just to the north on the other side of Mobile. I think it's beautiful how this movie starts at home and ends at home.
@texadian3392
@texadian3392 18 күн бұрын
This was the first time that I've watched y'all BOTH react to something together. And not that I didn't love the solos...I definitely did! But your lady definitely adds something extra, and an added perspective for us girls. Love it!
@msgSharke
@msgSharke Ай бұрын
Can’t count how many times I’ve watched this but it’s been a LOT…… I still LOL a lot and weep in certain scenes. Never gets old, always uplifting and always has some very very deep moments. ❤❤❤
@Provoses
@Provoses Ай бұрын
Man I love this movie. It could play anywhere at any point and I’ll sit to watch.
@brettcloud8550
@brettcloud8550 Ай бұрын
Definitely one of those movies when you see it's on, you leave it on.
@cmudd9788
@cmudd9788 Ай бұрын
Fortunate Son being in a lot war movies has a lot to do with the fact that the song was written as a protest to the Vietnam War.
@raymondmanderville505
@raymondmanderville505 Ай бұрын
Tom Hanks has the ability of going from role to role & make the character so believable that you forget all the other characters that he’s played .
@reshaud81
@reshaud81 Ай бұрын
I first saw Forrest Gump in 1994 when it first came out. One of my top 5 favorite movies of all time!
@nsasupporter7557
@nsasupporter7557 Ай бұрын
Yes, I could do watch this movie everyday and not get sick of it. I quote it often
@TheRedPeril
@TheRedPeril Ай бұрын
The beauty of this film is you watch it at 15 and it’s a funny film, you watch it at 40 and it’s a sad film. How much depth and quality writing is needed to produce a film with so many levels!! Tremendous film and Tom Hanks is perfect.
@Yugioh420
@Yugioh420 Ай бұрын
It wasn't that Jenny was Using Forrest, Forrest was her safe place. She didn't want to taint it with her life or lifestyle. Once she did, she finally realized she needed to make some significant changes in her life, and to do so she needed to leave her safe zone, and she left the metal in hopes that Forrest would forget about her and her messed up world
@rebeccahanson6941
@rebeccahanson6941 Ай бұрын
Wow this is one of the best reviews of this movie I’ve ever seen. And I’ve watched several because I love this movie. So many people do not see the symbolism, they don’t think about Jenny’s past and how it affects her life and her relationship with Forrest. You guys caught everything and it was great.
@AppealToTheStoned
@AppealToTheStoned Ай бұрын
When this movie came out, it was a technical marvel. It was the first time most of us had ever seen video compositing like you see in the scenes (like with the Presidents) where they put Forrest into actual historical footage. There was also a lot of interesting technology that went into making Lt. Dan a paraplegic. I've seen this movie many times now, and it is still very impactful. It's hard to put a category on it, but it is beautiful.
@deanroddey2881
@deanroddey2881 Ай бұрын
If you haven't seen Contact, it's another great movie by the same director. He was doing good work back in those days.
@coryowen1949
@coryowen1949 Ай бұрын
A fabulous reaction to a truly iconic film. Thank you both. Masterful acting by Tom Hanks. When you watch a character and see only the character (not the actor playing the role), that is acting at its finest. Gary Sinese also teamed up with Tom Hanks again in Apollo 13; another great movie to check out if you haven't already. There was some spooky foreshadowing when Lt. Dan showed up for Forrest's wedding with titanium alloy magic legs "like they use on the space shuttle." Cheers!
@kevinpakkala3721
@kevinpakkala3721 Ай бұрын
One thing that came from this movie, Gary Sinise (Lt. Dan) became a really big advocate for disabled veterans. Very involved with the VA.
@bobbuethe1477
@bobbuethe1477 Ай бұрын
Tom Hanks didn't have a major role in "That Thing You Do" (1996) but he did write and direct it. It's one of my favorite feel-good movies.
@crazy_indian3921
@crazy_indian3921 Ай бұрын
That scene with jenny and Forrest in the room in college To fill you in The Octobers 😂,Forrest unloaded the first time 😅 thats why he was dizzy 😂
@Vlasko60
@Vlasko60 Ай бұрын
That was never obvious to me either, but yes, the bathrobe comment made it more clear.
@lavinder11
@lavinder11 Ай бұрын
Mr October knew LOL
@idea2go
@idea2go Ай бұрын
Interstellar and Gump --- you're on an awesome roll!
@jackiegood3686
@jackiegood3686 Ай бұрын
That was an incredible journey. Great reaction. I'm quite certain you two would really enjoy "Good Will Hunting"...Robin Williams and Matt Damon.
@johntnguyen1976
@johntnguyen1976 Ай бұрын
What a year for movies 1994…Shawshank…pulp fiction…gump. Amazing.
@robhax
@robhax Ай бұрын
One of my favorite lines is when he's talking about his namesake at the beginning... and, lol, every reactor I've seen talks over the part where his mom says it's a reminder that sometimes what people do just makes no sense
@jules3048
@jules3048 Ай бұрын
I was told something once that I’ll never forget and helped me understand my own life and Jenny’s too I think. We gravitate to what we feel is normal. It feels comfortable. And that can be good or bad if uv grown up r dealt w trauma. So a lot of time the reason we go back to ppl who treat us badly is cause it feels normal and comfortable to us even when it’s not to most ppl and shouldn’t be. I think once a person realizes that it helps u b present and make a conscious decision about wether u want to continue in that or if u want to go outside of ur comfort zone and get the benefits of that.
@testfire3000
@testfire3000 Ай бұрын
A terrific film! One of the things you don't hear much about is how this film changed our perception of history and media. The "new" technology of the day where they could actually add Forrest Gump on to famous news footage, such as George Wallace on the day they had the first black students at the school. I had seen that footage before and for them to be able to insert a new person into it was amazing. And then they had him talking to and shaking hands with Presidents of the United States. This was talked about in the news when the film came out that we would never be able to trust photos or video again. Hoo boy how little did they know how much was going to change. Now it is pretty easy for anyone to create a deep fake and create video of real people saying/doing things that never happened. It was a technical revolution in film.
@freeforall825
@freeforall825 Ай бұрын
The part of the movie where he runs across the country is based on a guy named Rob Pope. He was the first person to run across America 4 times, and has run for over 15,000 miles. A lot of people don't know that part is based on a true story because it's kind of overshadowed by the smiley face and the "S43t Happens" part.
@ShadowRyu
@ShadowRyu Ай бұрын
Alot of people miss one important thing. When he runs across country. He been told his whole life, if he ever had a problem, just run away. When Jenny left him that last time, it finally became a problem. Confusion, depression, he lost another person he loved. It took 3 years for him to realize that was one problem he couldn't run from 😢
@195511SM
@195511SM Ай бұрын
Jenny was also the 'Princess Buttercup' in 'The Princess Bride'.
@psycojuggalo1642
@psycojuggalo1642 Ай бұрын
This movie will bring the hardest gangsta to tears
@carriesmith742
@carriesmith742 Ай бұрын
LOVE this movie and saw it in the theater with my mom when I was 17! I cry EVERY TIME! 2:51 that is indeed the great Sally Field playing Forrest's mother. 17:35 you guys are the absolute CUTEST couple I've ever seen! You just make me smile. 1:15:54 Check out Tom Hanks in his first Oscar win from 1993 in "Philadelphia" with Denzel Washington. He won back to back Osca=s for Philadelphia and Forrest Gump.
@lorancehack5206
@lorancehack5206 Ай бұрын
Thank you both so much! You both cracked me up so much with Bubba! And got me choked up at the end when Mrs. October cried for Forrest & Jenny. Loved every moment with you guys!
@emilya4953
@emilya4953 15 күн бұрын
Loved y’all’s reaction so much. I’ve seen this movie countless times over the years…even saw it four times in the theater when it came out in 1994. Watching y’all enjoy it so much just breathed new life into it. That was the first time I’ve ever seen Mr O cry in a reaction and it melted my heart. Loved every minute and love y’all 💗
@ChicagoFaucet.etc.
@ChicagoFaucet.etc. 21 күн бұрын
Forrest Gump is the scariest horror movie ever for men. A man shows undying love for a woman. She proceeds to go off and have a debaucherous lifestyle of drugs and sex. Meanwhile, Gump suffers through war. After Gump comes home, Jenny has had enough of the partying life, and decides to stay with Gump. They have sex one time, and then she abandons him again. She only contacts him years later, after keeping his son a secret from him, when she is dying of a disease, and Gump is a billionaire. Only then is she okay with marrying him. Meanwhile, she might have passed the disease onto Gump and his son.
@creepybihon4451
@creepybihon4451 29 күн бұрын
Even the bus driver got her life together, first time we saw her she's smoking, at the end she's just chewing gum ❤
@libertyresearch-iu4fy
@libertyresearch-iu4fy Ай бұрын
My favourite line in this movies is when Forrest says: "I guess sometimes there's just not enough rocks."
@kateyork4071
@kateyork4071 Ай бұрын
"I wish I could've been there with you." "You were." ❤️😢
@joecarr5412
@joecarr5412 Ай бұрын
Little Forest ( Haley Joel Osment) will be in Sixth Sense with Bruce Willis few yrs latet😊
@RamsayboltonSnow
@RamsayboltonSnow Ай бұрын
I was a little kid when I first saw Forrest Gump and obviously movie was so good to me but being a kid I didn’t understand the story to well or the jokes. But as I watched it every year as I was getting older I obviously understood the jokes more and more and the story. It went from being more of a serious movie to me as a kid to comedy drama as a teen/adult . Was great growing up watching this cuz it was Iike a new movie to me each time 😅
@mamakat114
@mamakat114 Ай бұрын
I have watched this film extremely often since it came out. (Have it on VHS), and have watched a few reactors. Mrs. O, I haven't cried in years to it, but you got me blattin', you got a sweet husband there, cuz I wanted to hug you.😢
@butkusfan23
@butkusfan23 Ай бұрын
It’s easy to think Jenny was using him, but she was just damaged from so much trauma. When she would leave him, she wasn’t using him and taking off, she was getting scared and saving Forrest from herself.
@brandonhunter3036
@brandonhunter3036 Ай бұрын
One of my top 10 favorite movies of all times. Seen it 100 times I’m sure.
@teeheeteeheeish
@teeheeteeheeish Ай бұрын
One thing about Forrest that I realized, he's just someone who said yes to everything. Every opportunity that came around, he said yes and he went about his business.
@Vince-lq3ve
@Vince-lq3ve Ай бұрын
True, yet there were important exceptions to him saying yes. Lt Dan says don't go back into the forrest....Nope! Jenny says stay away from her....Nope! He was open to so much yet he was guided by his love for those close to him and knew when to say no.
@Raven5150
@Raven5150 Ай бұрын
Tom Hank's playing a simple autisic child is really close to what we actually think about our lives
@ryanw4842
@ryanw4842 Ай бұрын
Probably your best reaction video, love you guys 🎉
@lou7139
@lou7139 Ай бұрын
Very enjoyable reaction! I think Forrest proved that with a positive attitude, honestly and perseverence, you can achieve anything. People will be happy to work with you and help you along the way. I watched this movie when I was a kid 30 years ago and I always remembered that overarching theme and it made all the difference.
@shercahn
@shercahn Ай бұрын
The guy in the American flag shirt at the protest on the Mall is Abby Hoffman, famous protester. My Dad had a poster of him in his office.
@frogofbrass382
@frogofbrass382 Ай бұрын
For the scene of Forrest and Jenny dancing in the house together during New Year's Eve, the director told them the camera would be outside of the house looking in, and Robin Wright asked Tom Hanks how Forrest was going to dance. Hanks said, "What do you think of this?" and started the Forrest dance. Robin Wright has said she laughed so hard she peed in her costume.
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