The Aviator (2004) First Time Watching! Movie Reaction!

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TBR Schmitt

TBR Schmitt

Күн бұрын

The Aviator (2004)
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00:00 Intro
03:05 Reaction
39:18 Outro & Discussion
49:09 THANK YOU!
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Пікірлер: 622
@Bringmethehorizondude
@Bringmethehorizondude 10 ай бұрын
Fun fact: Blanchett won the Oscar for best supporting actress and it was the first time someone won an Oscar portraying a fellow Oscar winner.
@thefallofoscar
@thefallofoscar 10 ай бұрын
Leo really should have won the academy award for this
@stsolomon618
@stsolomon618 10 ай бұрын
I agree
@Natedawgg84
@Natedawgg84 10 ай бұрын
Tough competition that year. Jamie Foxx won for his potrayal of Ray Charles that year.
@joshuahermanson341
@joshuahermanson341 10 ай бұрын
That's why his standing ovation lasted so long for The Revenant. They all knew he should've won long before that.
@DanVillainFilms
@DanVillainFilms 10 ай бұрын
Good lord, yes. Then Wolf of Wall Street. He “shoulda done been had” several Oscars before he was finally recognized by the academy.
@lexkanyima2195
@lexkanyima2195 10 ай бұрын
​@@DanVillainFilmsbut long overdue
@Nay-kp6uu
@Nay-kp6uu 10 ай бұрын
Katherine Hepburn said one of my favorite quotes. "I don't care what anyone says about me, as long as it's not true"
@aleatharhea
@aleatharhea 10 ай бұрын
The African Queen is a fantastic movie starring Kathryn Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart, directed by the great John Huston. Bogart won the Oscar for his role. Cate Blanchett did an excellent job impersonating Hepburn.
@3DJapan
@3DJapan 10 ай бұрын
That was one of my moms favorite movies, we watched it a number of times.
@bonkyb8587
@bonkyb8587 10 ай бұрын
John Huston's son, Danny, plays Jack Fry in this movie.
@aleatharhea
@aleatharhea 10 ай бұрын
@@bonkyb8587 cool fact, thanks!
@diogenescat
@diogenescat 10 ай бұрын
The African Queen is also based on a true story, although the liberties taken with the truth were pretty sizable.
@rabbitandcrow
@rabbitandcrow 10 ай бұрын
You guys need to watch some Katharine Hepburn movies - one of the actresses of the 20th century. The Philadelphia Story, The African Queen, The Lion In Winter so so many.
@dtnetlurker
@dtnetlurker 10 ай бұрын
Howard Hughes was an absolute aviation genius. Many of the design features and innovations of aircraft he created are still in use today. He was also a decent film maker despite his OCD causing huge cost over-runs. His biggest legacy is in commercial air travel. His push to make TWA (Known today as American Airlines) a success despite overwhelming odds and deep state corruption, made it more affordable for the common man to travel. After Howard Hughes, air travel wasn't just for the rich anymore. That is his biggest legacy.
@RobertMorgan
@RobertMorgan 10 ай бұрын
Also Hughes communications still dominates the commercial satellite market and now Baker Hughes tool STILL holds the patent and is the world's premiere maker of oil drill bits and oilfield services, the core business that made them billions in the first place. Interesting that all those businesses as well as airlines weren't selling people a product, it sold people the ability to do something they couldn't before, communicate, drill, experience film, affordable travel.
@leonagnew895
@leonagnew895 10 ай бұрын
But didn't he hire engineers to design 'his' planes? It looks to me that he was the leader of a bunch of very talented people realising his vision.
@lavinder11
@lavinder11 10 ай бұрын
​@@leonagnew895He was the visionary. You need these people to organize workers.
@leonagnew895
@leonagnew895 10 ай бұрын
@@benbennington8859 Wouldn't a genius design they're own ideas rather than pay someone else to do it? When Da Vinci conjured up some fantastic invention, he'd go and design it. Draw it. Howard Hughes didn't do that.
@peterj4741
@peterj4741 10 ай бұрын
⁠I mean, you could say the same of Steve Jobs and many others
@JKM395
@JKM395 10 ай бұрын
Hughes is one of the most interesting men you can find. An absolute genius, who unfortunately had obvious problems. This is one of those films that should be better known than it is. They did a great job of showing us a difficult man to understand.
@unwokeneuropean3590
@unwokeneuropean3590 10 ай бұрын
I have seen documentaries about him even before this movie was on.
@Maverick25ish
@Maverick25ish 10 ай бұрын
whats funny is this movie only shows you half of howard hughes life, another movie could easy be made a part 2 about the rest of his life, he acheived so much more after where this movie finishes, and his condition got a lot lot worse@@unwokeneuropean3590
@JKM395
@JKM395 10 ай бұрын
@@unwokeneuropean3590 There is an absolute ton written about him. Fascinating man.
@peterj4741
@peterj4741 10 ай бұрын
It was a hit when it came out
@marcella6969
@marcella6969 10 ай бұрын
I have suffered from OCD all of my life (I am now 63) and this is the most accurate depiction of the mental illness I have ever seen. It is very disturbing for me to watch; it feels like a demon is taking over control of your mind.
@darensparks
@darensparks 10 ай бұрын
It is the best look into ocd ever on film I completely agree. As good as it gets has it's moments depicting this mental illness but nothing encompasses it like The aviator does.
@Jack-zd3vr
@Jack-zd3vr 9 ай бұрын
I never had strep throat but I have ocd
@Serenity113
@Serenity113 3 ай бұрын
I remember seeing in theaters with my older sister. Afterwards, she told me that she realizes that lot of the "tics" that Howard would do in the film, the spelling of words, the immense hate of people touching her food, etc she did it too and that maybe she had a mild case of OCD(if that is a thing?).
@marcella6969
@marcella6969 3 ай бұрын
@@Serenity113 Could be. Sometimes there's a thin line between OCD and just being meticulous.
@Heritage367
@Heritage367 10 ай бұрын
Howard Hughes essentially evented the modern adjustable hospital bed while recovering from his airplane crash. He was so uncomfortable, he began to sketch out a better design.
@mikecaetano
@mikecaetano 10 ай бұрын
Howard Hughes developed the flush head rivet which decreased the drag on metal airplane surfaces. You can see the influence of the racers he designed on WWII fighter planes. The Hughes H-1 racer is now part of the collection at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC.
@jasonsabbath6996
@jasonsabbath6996 10 ай бұрын
As others have said, this is one of the most accurate portrayals of mental illness ever! As a lifelong sufferer of OCD and someone with both bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, not being able to trust tour own mind can be very terrifying! It makes day to day activities almost impossible at times. I absolutely LOVE this movie and can't even tell you how many times I've seen this movie.
@dylantindall5573
@dylantindall5573 10 ай бұрын
'I wonder how much of this was even true.' A great biographic movie, but Hughes' life was even more extraordinary than portrayed. One of the most bizarre and fantastic lives of the twentieth century.
@shanenolan5625
@shanenolan5625 10 ай бұрын
Thanks guys. ( the hearing is accurate you csn find the footage). Actually several thing he he did are still around. The military still use his heracles. ( there are several version's of it ) his Lockheed ( lockhead martin ) was one of his companies. The Hughes corporation still exists. He was the first billionaire. His father's company invented the drill bit , he sold it eventually, his kater life , he bought up casino's in las Vegas. The Japanese zero fighter ( was designed by him the stole the plans ) mitsutizi. I think they call it the c57 ( heracles) they use it for troop, tank and artillery transport. He would have these episodes regularly. He ended up in onebof his hotels in Vegas. ( the images of the butler type people with gloves ) they were like his future. He would also disappear, escape, no money just the clothes he was wearing, and he would hitchhike. , long hsir snd beard , looked like a homeless man . Apparently there was a truck driver thst always stopped for him and took care of him .( howard never told him who he was , but left him millions in his will ) actually there is a movie about it . He lived untill the 70s .
@cameron120587
@cameron120587 10 ай бұрын
And this movie gives you a bit of a reason why Stan Lee based Tony Stark and Howard Stark on Howard Hughes
@angelohernandez6060
@angelohernandez6060 10 ай бұрын
Hughes was needed not for the success of his aircraft but for the push in technological research and engineering. He had a brilliant mind that sadly failed him at the end. And yes, Blanchett's performance was spot on. Watch some of her films, she seems to play her parts with alot of her own personality in them.
@Bringmethehorizondude
@Bringmethehorizondude 10 ай бұрын
Growing up I watched this movie atleast once a week as a kid and everytime I felt like I saw something new that I hadn’t noticed before. I really love this movie and I think it’s one of the more unique Scorsese movies and Leo absolutely nails this role .
@taztaztaz
@taztaztaz 10 ай бұрын
the film Tucker directed by Francis Ford Coppola was a great biopic, fairly accurate , about the man who revolutionized the auto industry.. Jeff Bridges did a fantastic job in his portrayal
@robertocarbonvarela6387
@robertocarbonvarela6387 10 ай бұрын
"Tucker" is amazing (and visually stunning). Definitely, one of the most underrated Coppola movies.
@willgeary6086
@willgeary6086 6 ай бұрын
Love the film, love the car, seen one in person too, even more in impressive in real life.
@haroldlipschitz9301
@haroldlipschitz9301 10 ай бұрын
Glad you guys enjoyed this - I saw it 3x in the theater back in the day! The 1946 Beverly Hills crash was indeed real, with a catastrophic failure of the right engine at low altitude, but the movie slowed down the crash sequence for dramatic effect. In reality he clipped a couple power lines and then plowed through the roofs of three mansions. It's incredible that he survived , the XF-11 must have been a tough airframe. And yes, he did subsequently spend four months in his screening room, pissing into bottles and seeing no one.
@Johnny_Socko
@Johnny_Socko 10 ай бұрын
What helped the production and the VFX crew was that the neighborhood in Beverly Hills is almost exactly the same as it was back then, so they could visit the actual impacted houses and streets, and model everything accurately.
@Spooky1862
@Spooky1862 28 күн бұрын
@Johnny_Socko Indeed! The plane came to rest I think at 809 N. Whittier Drive in Beverly Hills. In a strange twist of fate, this was directly adjacent to the site of ‘60s rock star Jan Berry’s (Jan & Dean) career-ending automobile accident in 1966. Jan Berry’s father was one of Howard Hughes’ top engineers-who helped Hughes build the Hercules flying boat.
@Heritage367
@Heritage367 10 ай бұрын
One last comment: as crippling as his OCD had become, that insane attention to detail is what allowed him to triumph in the Congressional investigation. That and tremendous willpower, which he always had. Great movie, one of my personal favorites.
@eliasb8
@eliasb8 10 ай бұрын
47:44 Another incredible Biopic would be the 1982 movie called Gandhi! It is an inspirational story of how a London College graduated lawyer from India lead a peaceful rebellion to achieve independence from the British colonial empire without shooting a single bullet!! I sobbed like a baby on this movie! 😭 This movie was nominated for 11 Oscars but only won 8!! 😉 This movie won Best Actor, Best Director, and Best Picture amongst others...
@nationaltrails9585
@nationaltrails9585 10 ай бұрын
One overlooked biopic is Patton (1970) about WWII Army General George S. Patton. A collaborative screenplay by Francis Ford Coppola and an Academy Award winning performance by George C. Scott (Dr. Strangelove). Not so much a biopic also is The Bridge On The River Kwai (1957) directed by David Lean (made prior to Lawrence of Arabia). Cards in the table, another reactor has done one, but she has not decided on posting it or keeping it on Patreon (seems like not a good fate for such a prodigious film). :)
@deborahcornell171
@deborahcornell171 10 ай бұрын
4 time Oscar winner Katherine Hepburn was still a marvel even in her older years. Two of her most famous & beloved classic films are 1981's "On Golden Pond" with equally legendary Henry Fonda (& his daughter Jane Fonda)... And 1967's "Guess Who's Coming To Dinner" with 2 more legends, Sidney Poitier & Spencer Tracy. Yes, the same Spencer Tracy depicted in "The Aviator". Their legendary love affair (that word is used a lot when talking about these people, & rightfully so) had lasted decades & this movie was particularly poignant seeing them together as an elderly couple. Their talent is very much on display in this film as well as their love for each other. It would be so great for you to react to either, or better yet, both of these great films. Btw...that love affair was scandalous in the early years as Spencer was married & he & his wife were Roman Catholic. In those days, for many people, divorce was not an option. In spite of the situation Spencer & Katherine were devoted to each other & went through a lot together, including her nursing him through terrible bouts of alcoholism & illness. Articles, books, documentaries...they've been the subjects of many. 💙💫💙💫💙💫💙💫💙💫💙💫💙
@brianharper1611
@brianharper1611 10 ай бұрын
I saw this twice at the cinema back in 2004. I have OCD though not nearly as bad as Hughes did and this was the first movie I ever saw that captured it in the most realistic way. The darkness that can loom over you because of it. The depression and anxiety that it can cause is devastating. As Good As It Gets covers it well too, but in a more humorous way.
@darensparks
@darensparks 10 ай бұрын
Exactly, as good as it gets has it's moments but nothing encompasses the madness of it like The aviator does.
@travismorris9303
@travismorris9303 10 ай бұрын
TWA became a very successful airline, Hughes Aircraft provided successful aircraft to the military during WWII and into the Vietnam era. The company was bought by General Motors and then Raytheon. Bottom line is despite his mental health and physical health issues, and some spectacular fails...Howard Hughes was very successful.
@carloslionel1653
@carloslionel1653 10 ай бұрын
This is in my Top 10 Favorite movies. The Howard Hughes story is fascinating, and yes he did survived several bad plane crashes, including the XF-11 that nearly killed him, 95% of what was portrayed in the movie was true.
@Bunch007
@Bunch007 10 ай бұрын
The 3rd place movie on the Poll is one of my Favorite. The Color of Money is great!
@msmilder25
@msmilder25 10 ай бұрын
For the first 52 minutes of the film, scenes appear in shades of only red and cyan blue; green objects are rendered as blue. This was done, according to Scorsese, to emulate the look of early bipack color films, in particular the Multicolor process, which Hughes himself owned, emulating the available technology of the era. --- thank you Wikipedia
@msmilder25
@msmilder25 10 ай бұрын
Similarly, many of the scenes depicting events occurring after 1935 are treated to emulate the saturated appearance of three-strip Technicolor. Other scenes were stock footage colorized and incorporated into the film. The color effects were created by Legend Films.
@ck_idgaf1680
@ck_idgaf1680 10 ай бұрын
Well, the thing is 'Kate" (Katherine Hepburn) could adapt to any social situation. She was always known as the 'brightest' person in the room and very social. Hughes was the opposite. Hepburn did her best to accomodate, but he got worse as he got older. And yes, this film is very accurate, he did crash his plane in a neighborhood (there are old pics and articles), he did lock himself in his home and piss in jars, and etc, they did a good job of the truth.
@zedwpd
@zedwpd 10 ай бұрын
She was private.
@jonalberts980
@jonalberts980 10 ай бұрын
Her accent eventually made him angry because it wasn't that thick in private, according to one of his later girlfriends.
@harveybojangle475
@harveybojangle475 10 ай бұрын
Louis B. Mayer was a producer and co-founder of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM Studios). Jack Warner was one of the co-founders of Warner Brothers Pictures (along with his brothers Harry, Albert, and Sam).
@yg713
@yg713 10 ай бұрын
If you want to see another movie where Howard Hughes is a character but not the main one please check out "The Rocketeer" from 1991. It's a great movie with a fun story and you get to see a club similar to the ones you saw in this one.
@Johnny_Socko
@Johnny_Socko 10 ай бұрын
Yes!! Such a fun movie!
@robertocarbonvarela6387
@robertocarbonvarela6387 10 ай бұрын
"The Rocketeer" is so good! It was extremely underrated when it came out and really deserved much more recognition.
@chuckshingledecker2216
@chuckshingledecker2216 10 ай бұрын
I came here to recommend The Rocketeer as well! Saw in the theater and it is such a great yarn of a film! “It will fly” is my favorite line in the movie. (For those who know, know.)
@Uriahjw
@Uriahjw 10 ай бұрын
Howard had a head injury from the plane crash that burned him. The trauma to the frontal lobe of his brain went undiagnosed, which progressed his issues. Towards the end, he would stay in his penthouse in Las Vegas. I had read that he died in the air while going overseas for treatment. A fitting end to a man meant to fly. You must watch the documentary of his life it was so insightful. Also, the model maker for the planes was an aeronautical engineer. When asked why he didn't have duplicates of his models in case one crashes, he replied, "My models don't crash." He was meticulous in all the measurements and weights of each plane. He's a master of his craft.
@mickeyrube6623
@mickeyrube6623 10 ай бұрын
The first time I saw this film, I assumed Scorsese and Co. kept the movie as close to using only confirmable, real events as they could. I assume this because there were and still are SO MANY more insane and even crazier stories about Hugh's life and eccentricities that weren't in the movie. Growing up, I heard so many things. And this film only cover half of his life; keep in mind his sickness only got worse and worse til death😢...
@noelyap9847
@noelyap9847 10 ай бұрын
The color grading was designed to mimic the color technology available during each time period. Hence the early scenes with blue grass and turquoise peas were due to the early two-strip Technicolor process, which only had red and blue.
@MM-hc1cq
@MM-hc1cq 10 ай бұрын
This is not correct. No infrared or cross processing was used. Just custom made Luts to emulate two process and three strip Technicolor used on scans of standard negative film.
@noelyap9847
@noelyap9847 10 ай бұрын
@@MM-hc1cq I don't think I said anything about infrared or cross processing, did I?
@GregoryWalsh
@GregoryWalsh 10 ай бұрын
I was afflicted with severe OCD when I was a teenager and the doctor who managed the psychiatric ward where I was treated consulted on this film. Aside from some creative license taken by Scorsese, like the hallucinations which are not a real life symptom of OCD, it’s one of the most accurate and harrowing depictions of the disease I’ve ever seen on film. The tragedy of Hughes’ life is that OCD is today a highly treatable and manageable mental illness through medication and behavioral therapy and had he been born a few decades later he might not have had to suffer as much as he did.
@Johnny_Socko
@Johnny_Socko 10 ай бұрын
I think if Hughes were able to be assessed by modern medicine, he would have had multiple diagnoses in addition to OCD. He very famously suffered from paranoia. I don't know whether he also had hallucinations, but the experiences of people around him suggest that he may well have. It's very sad that there was little to no treatment for such conditions back then.
@sparky6086
@sparky6086 10 ай бұрын
Scorsese wasn't taking dramatic license. Hughes had more problems than just OCD. The hallucinations didn't come from his OCD. It was some other madness, perhaps related to his plane crash injuries or the drug use, because of those injuries, or another mental malady which was made worse by those factors along with getting older..
@Britcarjunkie
@Britcarjunkie 9 ай бұрын
@@sparky6086 It's been said that he had injuries that medical technology of the period couldn't diagnose, and that's what aggrivated his other problems later in life, as well as not having been treated properly for some of his known injuries. As a result of this, he also started the Hughes Medical Institute - a non-profit, and, I believe due to his anger over the previous senate hearings over the Hercules, he sold Hughes Aircraft to the institute - making a for-profit business the entity of a non-profit organization, which REALLY pissed off the I.R.S. to the point they took him to court - and Hughes won!!! 🤣😅😂
@javix2013
@javix2013 10 ай бұрын
The first version of Scarface from 1932 was produced by Howard Hughes, that's how it is. Al Pacino liked that movie and the actor's performance so much that he wanted to do the remake and imitate that actor.
@markhamstra1083
@markhamstra1083 10 ай бұрын
Yes, Hughes really did crash the XF-11 like that - there is a lot of accurate historical detail in that sequence.
@msmilder25
@msmilder25 10 ай бұрын
Some bits about Hughes: he took ownership of RKO Pictures in the 1940's; in the 1960's he enjoyed his stay at the Desert Inn so much in Las Vegas, he bought the hotel-casino...and would later buy the Sands, Frontier, Silver Slipper, Castaways and Landmark making him the largest employer in Nevada; the film did a good job showing his flying exploits, he flew around the world in 1938 in just 91 hours (setting a record); the Hercules (Spruce Goose) was harbored in Long Beach, California near the Queen Mary until 2020, when it was moved to McMinnville, Oregon at the Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum (I visited it in Long Beach when I was a child in the 1980's); besides Ava Gardner & Katherine Hepburn, other notable celebrities Hughes dated include: Joan Crawford, Bette Davis, Yvonne De Carlo, Olivia de Havilland, Hedy Lamarr, Ginger Rogers, Gloria Vanderbilt, Mamie Van Doren, Gene Tierney...quite the slate.
@CaesiusX
@CaesiusX 10 ай бұрын
I recommend the true story of *Tucker: **_The Man and His Dream_* (1988) by *Francis Ford Coppola.* *EDIT:* One of my favorite films is 1938's *_"Holiday"_* starring *Katharine Hepburn* and *Cary Grant.* But she has a lot of great films.
@RMBittner
@RMBittner 10 ай бұрын
As a fan of classic Hollywood, it breaks my heart a little that you didn’t know the stars represented in this movie. They made some of my favorite films of all time. So I hope you’ll check out some of the work of Katharine Hepburn, Spencer Tracy, and Ava Gardner.
@Heritage367
@Heritage367 10 ай бұрын
You mentioned the color at the beginning is unusual; Scorsese replicated two-strip (red-blue) bipack color during the era when only that existed. What your eye is missing is the green part of the light spectrum. Later, when three-strip (red-green-blue) Technicolor is invented, the color appears more normal because green is now integrated into the spectrum. Edit: bipack color was missing green, not blue. Fixed my post.
@stsolomon618
@stsolomon618 10 ай бұрын
Howard Hughes Hell's Angels is one of the films that inspired Stanley Kubrick to be a filmmaker. Another Scorsese film I recommend is Color of Money. Katherine Hepburn recommendation: Philadelphia Story and Guess who is coming to Dinner. Hughes produced the first Scareface film in 1932.
@brickm
@brickm 10 ай бұрын
Guess Who's Coming To Dinner is my favorite Kate Hepburn/Spencer Tracy movie. I highly recommend it.
@stsolomon618
@stsolomon618 10 ай бұрын
@@brickm One of my favorite Sidney Poiter films as well.
@brickm
@brickm 10 ай бұрын
Yessss! I agree!
@stsolomon618
@stsolomon618 10 ай бұрын
@brickm recommend watching In the heat of the night
@Hogtownboy1
@Hogtownboy1 10 ай бұрын
GWtoD doesn’t age well
@srenjrgensen1468
@srenjrgensen1468 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for another great reaction to one of my personal favourite movies of all time! 😊👍 You asked for other great biopictures and I immediately thought of the following 5 movies, that are all amazing movies: 1. "Malcolm X" (Denzel Washington). 2. "Cinderella Man" (Russell Crowe). 3. "Amadeus" (I don´t remember the main actor´s name, but the movie is about Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart). 4. "Schindler´s List" (Liam Neeson). 5. "JFK" (Kevin Costner). I hope, that this small list can be helpful you and for all movie fans out there. 😇👍💯
@dggydddy59
@dggydddy59 10 ай бұрын
Good for Samantha for pronouncing Martin Scorsese's name the same way he himself pronounces it and not the way everybody else does.
@eliasb8
@eliasb8 10 ай бұрын
47:44 Another great Biopic is the 2005 Cinderella Man with Russell Crowe. What an inspirational story of a boxer during the Depression! Well worth watching!
@Fatsatan
@Fatsatan 10 ай бұрын
Absolutely! Cinderella Man is a fantastic movie, a must watch!!
@williamshelton4318
@williamshelton4318 10 ай бұрын
The aerial scene with Toccata and Fugue and the Beverly Hills crash were spectacular in the theater. This was one of very few movies I went to more than once.
@leob4403
@leob4403 3 ай бұрын
Oppenheimer was a bore by comparison
@3DJapan
@3DJapan 10 ай бұрын
When I did B&W photography in school one thing we learned is that in B&W a beautiful blue sky is ugly, just solid grey. Clouds make it much more interesting.
@keng4847
@keng4847 10 ай бұрын
Katherine (Kate) Hepburn was one of the legendary stars of Hollywood history. She won 4 Oscars for BEST ACTRESS (1934/ 1968/ 1969/1982) and altogether received 12 Oscar Nominations for Best Actress. Her 4 Oscars is the most won by any actor. Her 12 Oscar nominations were the most for any actor before she was surpassed by Meryl Streep. The Man Hepburn leaves Howard Hughes for in this movie was Spencer Tracy, who was also one of the legendary movie stars of Hollywood history. And Hepburn-Tracey became one of the legendary acting teams in Hollywood history. Hepburn and Tracey starred in 9 films together, most of which are considered to be classics. Katherine Hepburn was as big a personality/ Star as Howard Hughes was, and she was famous for her upfront, colorful, bold personality.
@angelohernandez6060
@angelohernandez6060 10 ай бұрын
Yeah, Hughes really did crash that plane in a residential area of LA. It almost killed him. I think after that was when they started tougher restrictions on air traffic over populated areas.
@ThomasKnip
@ThomasKnip 10 ай бұрын
To put Howard Hughes into perspective: In the James Bond movie "Diamonds are forever", the streets and outdoor shots in Las Veges were made mostly possible due to the okay from Hughes (who was even more eccentric and recluse by then), who owned several hotels. Legend is, he asked for a film roll of the movie as "reimbursement".
@cleekmaker00
@cleekmaker00 10 ай бұрын
Another excellent Reaction, folks! Everything was pretty much spot on with this film, other than the fact that he got much worse in his later life. Take a look at "Melvin and Howard". Actually, Hughes Aircraft Company has left a large legacy in the Aerospace industry. The Hughes 500 family of helicopters (now the MD 500 family) is one of the most popular and recognizable helicopters today; they built the Galileo space probe that went to Jupiter, and the development of the AIM-120 AMRAAM air to air missile. Biopic? In a way... The Right Stuff.
@Cosmic86x
@Cosmic86x 10 ай бұрын
DiCaprio did a spectacular acting job (actually like always). Cate Blanchett really nailed it as well, her Katherine Hepburn portrait was fantastic (intelligent, sassy, funny and seductive)! 21:26 I am quite certain that was Cary Grant.
@catherinelw9365
@catherinelw9365 10 ай бұрын
It is Cary Grant. He’s listed in the cast. Spencer Tracy is not. Grant was good friends with Hughes and introduced him to Hepburn.
@glennlesliedance
@glennlesliedance 10 ай бұрын
For a Katharine Hepburn movie, I recommend The Philadelphia Story (with James Stewart and Cary Grant) followed by the musical interpretation High Society (Grace Kelly, Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, Celeste Holme); both great movies.
@JasonMoir
@JasonMoir 10 ай бұрын
Hepburn is an acting legend. And Hughes was definitely an odd person, especially as he got older.
@JonNo86
@JonNo86 10 ай бұрын
Fun fact: The band Nine Inch Nails got their name from Howard Hughes' autopsy report. He was found dead in that film room with long hair, surrounded by piss jars, and he had nine inch long fingernails.
@mahadali2739
@mahadali2739 10 ай бұрын
Katherine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy star in “Look Who’s Coming To Dinner” with Sidney Poitier. Its a popular classic and would be a good movie to react to.
@MrDavidcairns
@MrDavidcairns 10 ай бұрын
You ought to see the Hughes Scarface, the best film he produced. The Pacino movie has an onscreen dedication to it, such was their respect. Very different, but very similar in many ways. The strange colour here is an imitation of two-strip Technicolor, and then midway through it switches to three-strip (so the grass stops being blue), colour processes from the early and mid-late 30s.
@coreyhendricks9490
@coreyhendricks9490 10 ай бұрын
Leonardo DiCaprio is amazing in anything he starring in, cool reaction as always Schmitt & Samantha, you both take care
@TheAdventurer1
@TheAdventurer1 10 ай бұрын
Cate Blanchette's portrayal of Katherine Hepburn is masterfully spot on. Just felt she should be recognized in these comments.
@jeffreyjeziorski1480
@jeffreyjeziorski1480 10 ай бұрын
The clenched jaw New England accent as Cate described it.
@roboct6
@roboct6 10 ай бұрын
With 12 Academy Award nominations and 4 wins, Katherine Hepburn remains one the finest actresses of all time.
@hulkhatepunybanner
@hulkhatepunybanner 10 ай бұрын
*actor/actors
@RonaldBeam
@RonaldBeam 10 ай бұрын
It was nominated for eleven and won five.
@kirstenwatkins8998
@kirstenwatkins8998 10 ай бұрын
@@hulkhatepunybanner she's an actress tho?
@williamr3840
@williamr3840 10 ай бұрын
'Bringing Up Baby' :0)
@artofalmost9479
@artofalmost9479 7 ай бұрын
@@RonaldBeam He's talking about Katherine Hepburn's oscar nominations and wins, not the movie.
@misja4122
@misja4122 10 ай бұрын
Have you guys seen 'Saving Mr. Banks'? It's sort of a bio-pic about the creation of the Mary Poppins movie. It's an amazing film with Tom Hanks and Emma Thompson, so I would highly recommend it!
@NetanelWorthy
@NetanelWorthy 10 ай бұрын
I also like with this, that not many people realize, is the film that they use for the time periods is the film that was used during those time periods. This is why the tone of the film, visually, changes. It gets more complex with colors. As time goes on.
@bonkyb8587
@bonkyb8587 10 ай бұрын
Probably not. Though you can, through processing and printing tricks, mimic old film stocks or aged film (color shift). Old film from that era would be age fogged so heavily as to render it unusable. No contrast left in it. Be really muddy looking. Scorsese is using IR stock in some scenes (crazy colors) and cross-processing in others (desaturated).
@yourcrookedface
@yourcrookedface 10 ай бұрын
poppa tbr and mama sam here to save my saturday night
@calebcarcagno7547
@calebcarcagno7547 10 ай бұрын
You guys should watch Howard Hughes' 1932 film, "Scarface." The 1983 film "Scarface", with Al Pacino, is a remake of that film. The story is, of course, very similar, but is about a gangster in Chicago during prohibition, rather than a drug dealer in Miami.
@bettybaby63
@bettybaby63 10 ай бұрын
Fantastic film all around. Never thought about why they ended when they did. I remember when he died. So many crazy stories swirling around him in his last years. A complete hermit. Great analysis.
@turbulentlobster
@turbulentlobster 10 ай бұрын
Howard Hughes continued to push and develop and be batshit for nearly another 30 years after this movie ends. He played a huge role in the transformation of Las Vegas from a wild west town run by gangsters into the civilized, corporate city it is today (this began when the Desert Hotel tried to force him to check out of his room after several months, and so he just bought the whole hotel). Hughes Aerospace developed the Maverick and AMRAAM missiles still used by the US military, and also the Galileo probe that explored Jupiter. Hughes Electronics developed DirecTV. In the 70s, he built the Glomar Explorer, a ship to mine manganese nodules off the bottom of the ocean, a scheme which was clearly whackadoodle. It was later revealed that he was lending his eccentric reputation to the CIA to provide a cover story for the real mission, which was to secretly salvage a wrecked Soviet submarine.
@seanfenton8371
@seanfenton8371 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for reacting to this. One of my favorite movies and a great period piece. When they gave Scorcese a "make up" Oscar, it should have been for this movie, not "The Departed".
@leob4403
@leob4403 3 ай бұрын
Departed is great in its genre
@jamesmoore4003
@jamesmoore4003 10 ай бұрын
Howard Hughes is someone I’ve admired…for what he accomplished in aviation. And military tech. To name a couple of things. A true American icon
@bigbow62
@bigbow62 10 ай бұрын
Well done guys another great reaction ! I have 2 classic movies for you... The 1st one is Katherine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy in this zany😅 romantic comedy called... Pat and Mike (1952) If you like history in movies you will love Jimmy Stewart in... The Spirit of St. Louis (1957) The amazing New York to Paris flight over the Atlantic Ocean
@TheTcwalton
@TheTcwalton 10 ай бұрын
Another biopic Hughes centered movie is 2016's Rules Don't Apply. The character of Hughes also makes an appearance in Tucker(1988) and The Rocketeer (1991). All three get my recommendations. Other biopics: Patton (1970) Man On The Moon (1991) Spartacus (1960) Ed Wood (1994) All four are highly recommended. Other Martin Scorsese recommendations: Mean Streets (1973) Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore (1974) After Hours (1985)
@alainvachon6255
@alainvachon6255 10 ай бұрын
Great movie! I was working at Montreal city hall when they shoot the movie. They used the main hall (completely transformed) for many scenes and the rumor was that Leonardo DiCaprio had a bedroom set up on the fourth floor so he could stay there during the shooting.
@EntertheDragon76
@EntertheDragon76 10 ай бұрын
Two Eastwood directed films to consider. American Sniper & Sully. He did J. Edgar with Leo too but i've not got round to watch that one. Nice to see a small Isla cameo (pun intended) too. As always great reaction guys.
@UkePlayah
@UkePlayah 10 ай бұрын
First, congrats on your family addition! The reaction was great as usual, thanks. I worked in IT for The Walt Disney Co. back when they owned The Queen Mary and Howard Hughes' Spruce Goose which is now in Seattle (I think). So I was very intrigued to see this movie when it came out and was impressed as you two were. I now live in Las Vegas where there is still the Hughes name on business buildings out here. Keep up the great channel.
@johnfisher8843
@johnfisher8843 10 ай бұрын
I love this movie and soundtrack, it’s Hollywood as it’s finest, a big and talented production. thank for watching this.
@Joe-qe1zm
@Joe-qe1zm 10 ай бұрын
As a person who has OCD and anxiety and being diagnosed at an early age watching this in theaters with my mom when she was alive was very therapeutic for her. At the time she did not understand OCD but after watching this she started understanding better especially the hand washing scenes even today there’s times where I wash my hands so often that my knuckles would bleed as well as the Webbing between my fingers
@andreaschmall5560
@andreaschmall5560 9 ай бұрын
The guy Hepburn fell in love with was none other than legendary actor Spencer Tracy and their lifelong love affair is legendary as well. They made several films together and very worth watching.
@StephenLuke
@StephenLuke 8 ай бұрын
They're a legend!!!
@athos1974
@athos1974 10 ай бұрын
A couple of highlights. I saw the Spruce Goose plane (Hercules)when it was on display in LA. It was gigantic, amazing it actually flew. Ava Gardner has been mostly forgotten by people today. She was a very attractive movie actor from North Carolina. There is still a museum in her hometown. Great costumes and props from her career. If you are driving on I95, and have the time, stop for a visit. It's worth your time.
@Britcarjunkie
@Britcarjunkie 10 ай бұрын
I wish they'd make a sequel to this film, because the point where they ended, Hughes was just kicking things into second gear! You two REALLY need to learn about that man, and his accomplishments. He went on to do so much more later in his life, despite his problems. His first film, "Hells Angels", won one of the very first Academy awards. The scenes you see of the film being screened, are from the actual film: it was shot in black & white, but he had flames in several of the fires "colorized" - another cinematic first. And yes, he did design the first underwire bra for Jane Russell (another first), and as he was laying in the hospital after the XF-11 crash, he designed the modern hospital bed, because he was in so much pain, he couldn't get comfortable. And yes he is on film, telling that Senator where to go! You should see that as well. Also, the film of the Hercules being moved to Long Beach for assembly, was real film. (A note: he kept the Hercules stored in a climate controlled hanger in the L.A. harbor, and it remained there - ready to fly at a moment's notice, until Hughes died. That's why, when Evergreen bought the aircraft, they were considering flying it to Oregon.) Hell, he's also one of the people responsible for making Las Vegas what it is today! He had his hand in everything. Hell, he even built a ship for the CIA, for the purpose of raising a sunken Russian nuclear submarine, from unheard of depths! (Look up the Hughes Glomar Explorer) What you see in this film, is pretty much all true, the good parts, and the ugly parts, but he didn't let the ugly parts stop him, and friends that worked for him said the fastest way to get fired by Howard Hughes, was to say "It can't be done.". EDIT: A few more tidbits about the man himself (I did a bio on him in high school): he died on his private jet, enroute from Mexico to Texas, and he DID have a will, but the corporation that was overseeing his "empire" had other plans, and basically made the will vanish. I recall that Hughes remembered everybody that had ever helped him throughout his life, including the gardener that pulled him out of the XF-11 wreckage, and he had large checks sent to all of those people - which brings up another film about Hughes, called "Melvin and Howard" (and, the remains of the brothel where this story started, just burned down within the last few years, sadly).
@GeneralZodFDNY77
@GeneralZodFDNY77 10 ай бұрын
I hope enjoying Cate Blanchett's turn as Katherine Hepburn makes you guys want to dive into Kate's films. I grew up on her films as they were always on TV in the 70s and 80s and she really was awesome. "Bringing Up Baby", "Adam's Rib", "The African Queen", and "Guess Who's Coming To Dinner" just off the top of my head as some of my faves.
@stvdagger8074
@stvdagger8074 10 ай бұрын
The apple guy is Spencer Tracy, nominated for 9 academy awards and winner of two. He and Kate Hepburn had a covert relationship until his death, 26 years later, although he never divorced his wife.
@Jrofosho
@Jrofosho 10 ай бұрын
Finally! Someone is reacting to my favorite movie of all time.
@williamshelton4318
@williamshelton4318 10 ай бұрын
There really should be sequels, because there is so damn much to Howard Hughes’ life. There are a few other movies about Hughes, directly or indirectly. (The Hoax is worth checking out.) Plus that Simpsons episode where Me. Burns goes crazy.
@jeffreyjeziorski1480
@jeffreyjeziorski1480 10 ай бұрын
Simpson, hey? Good man???
@Johnny_Socko
@Johnny_Socko 10 ай бұрын
"Melvin & Howard" depicts one of the more bizarre chapters of Hughes' elderly life.
@sparky6086
@sparky6086 10 ай бұрын
Instead of the "Spruce Goose", Mr Burns had the "Spruce Moose"!
@123haninhk
@123haninhk 10 ай бұрын
I feel like you need watch Katherine Hepburn's films because she was amazing. I'd recommend The Philadelphia Story. She was very MODERN compared to other actress from her era. She wore pants, she was independent, she was eccentric, she played sport, probably fit more in the 21st century.
@bonkyb8587
@bonkyb8587 10 ай бұрын
Yup. They need to do a deep dive into Golden Era films. The Screwball comedies are a great way to get in. They hold up well and "Philadelphia Story" is my favorite. I prefer "Holiday" over "Bringing Up Baby" in the Grant/Hepburn lineup.
@SlideRiceFC
@SlideRiceFC 10 ай бұрын
@@bonkyb8587 Seconded. I'm a huge Hepburn fan and I think you nailed my top two picks. I would love to see those on the channel. I always see "Bringing Up Baby" recommended to people and while I devour anything with Grant and Hepburn and love it, it is over the top and I shudder to think of anyone being introduced to Katharine Hepburn by that film. I'd probably throw "Desk Set" into the mix. I seldom see it mentioned and it probably won't land on anyone's must see movie list but it's a fun little movie that I probably enjoy for the plot as much as the Heburn/Tracy pairing. Who doesn't love a good "technology/automation is coming for our jobs!" story?
@bonkyb8587
@bonkyb8587 10 ай бұрын
@@SlideRiceFC For Halloween and Grant, "Arsenic and Old Lace." I'm starting to see reactions for it. Finally. My fave Tracy/Hepburn is "Woman of the Year."
@codymoe4986
@codymoe4986 10 ай бұрын
One of my favorites, thanks for the reaction. A suggestion for another biographic film is "Cinderella Man" starring Russell Crowe... portraying James J. Braddock, a Depression era prizefighter. An excellent film, great story told, fine acting performances, all around... Have a good one...
@1wwtom
@1wwtom 10 ай бұрын
Hughes's H1 racer is in the Nat'l Air & Space museum in DC. He pushed Lockheed to build the Constellation airliner for TWA which he owned was faster than the Douglas DC-4 other airlines used on cross country flights. The only problem with the Hercules was that WW2 was over before it was done. Hughes aerospace was also among the leaders in the early communication sattellites. Yes he was in the forefront of Aviation in many ways.
@shawng.1073
@shawng.1073 10 ай бұрын
Here are a few of my favorite bio-pics you may find interesting: Lincoln (2013) played by Daniel Day-Lewis, dir. by Spielberg, Bonnie & Clyde (1967) played by Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway, Almost Famous (2000), based on the director, Cameron Crowe's early life as a music journalist in the 70s, Amadeus (1984) best picture winner about Mozart, Saving Mr. Banks (2014) one of Tom Hanks' many portrayals of a real person (I think he's up to 9 or 10 now). This time it's Disney. Kevin Costner is great as District Attorney Jim Garrison, investigating the Kennedy assassination in JFK (1991). You've already done A Beautiful Mind and Hacksaw Ridge, so this should get you started.
@ainsleyperry5192
@ainsleyperry5192 10 ай бұрын
TBR, The lady on Howard Hughes arm at the premier of his film was the famed Jean Harlow. ( The first Blonde Bombshell). A little throw away line in Alfred Hitchcock's film "Vertigo" where reference is made of a bra designed by an aircraft engineer. TWA is now American Airlines. By Hughes standing upto Pan Am and Congress we have the airline travel industry we see today. In these early day's Howard Hughes mind was working on 4 different level's at once. At the trial he showed he was the brightest man in the room. At 21:26 in the film the person sitting in the chair is susposed to be Cary Grant. Great review. Cheers, Chris Perry.
@loganblack5325
@loganblack5325 10 ай бұрын
Good reaction! Since you are interested, you can find his senate testimony online.
@PelosiStockPortfolio
@PelosiStockPortfolio 10 ай бұрын
Hughes aircraft company made a lot things that are still around. The presence it had in southern california was massive. Its space division was bought by Boeing in 2000, the only division that I know still running under the name is Hughes Research Labs (HRL) in malibu. As an aerospace engineer you should look up its history and legacy
@tonyyul703
@tonyyul703 10 ай бұрын
KATE BLANCHETT nailed the role as Katharine Hepburn.... When they heard her speak as Katherine, it gave the crew goosebumps... She was that good
@jimiewilliams7623
@jimiewilliams7623 10 ай бұрын
The film is not underrated. It's considered to be one of, if not the best Scorsese film. It was critically acclaimed, nominated for many awards, grossed over 200 million dollars at the box office, and Cate Blanchett won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. In the many years since it's release, it has been overshadowed by some of DiCaprio and Scorsese's more recent collaborations, but it is not underrated. Many think it's Martin Scorsese's best film.
@BDogg2023
@BDogg2023 10 ай бұрын
The film was so hyped when it came out, I kept myself from seeing it, which I regretted years later after I finally did.
@dizzynikki5912
@dizzynikki5912 10 ай бұрын
Awsome Movie... Great Reaction..
@brianowens8198
@brianowens8198 10 ай бұрын
"Wyatt Earp". With Kevin Costner is worth checking out. Completely different story than " Tombstone" portrayed. Also "The Right Stuff" is a great movie about the Mercury astronauts.
@Mattical1980
@Mattical1980 10 ай бұрын
I've had a soft spot for Cate Blanchett's Katharine Hepburn ever since this movie came out. I can't explain it.
@alberttaylor2754
@alberttaylor2754 10 ай бұрын
Hi Mommy Samantha, you look fantastic, can't wait for little Schmitt. Praying for the beast for you, TBR and baby Schmitt. Best Wishes!!🥰😘
@Drax514
@Drax514 10 ай бұрын
As an aviation nut, as a history nut, this is one of my most favorite movies ever. I also think it holds tremendous value just from a purely cinematic perspective. One of Scorsese's most unique movies I think, and yeah. I love the coloring and they way everything is shot, it's just so damn good. Spend some more time looking up some of the people involved in this movie, like Juan Trippe for example. There's just so much going on. You guys are awesome for reacting to this, I think it's the only one on youtube perhaps? Huge props.
@richardb6260
@richardb6260 10 ай бұрын
Howard Hughes was the richest man in America for nearly 20 years. His name was synonymous with the word "billionaire". In his later years he became a recluse. Rarely leaving his penthouse in Las Vegas. The 1971 James Bond movie "Diamonds are Forever" has a character named Willard Whyte played by Jimmy Dean who was based on Howard Hughes.
@auntvesuvi3872
@auntvesuvi3872 10 ай бұрын
Thanks, TBR! Thanks, Samantha! ✈ As a cinephile, I love this one. Yes, Mr. Hughes founded RKO Pictures. You really must watch some *Katharine* *Hepburn* stuff! Try BRINGING UP BABY (1938), THE PHILADELPHIA STORY (1940), THE AFRICAN QUEEN (1951), SUDDENLY LAST SUMMER (1959), GUESS WHO'S COMING TO DINNER (1967), THE LION IN WINTER (1968), ROOSTER COGBURN (1975) and ON GOLDEN POND (1981). That bluish grass was a nod to early two-toned technicolor. #TBRSchmitt #MartinScorsese #TheAviator #TheAviator2004
@zmani4379
@zmani4379 10 ай бұрын
Nice reaction - I think in a way this film is like a biopic of Scorsese himself, driving his creative energy thru all the commercial logistics - he made a beautiful doc about this, Personal Journey thru American Movies - some nice films about Hughes include Demme's Melvin and Howard, w Jason Robards, and The Hoax, w Richard Gere - Hepburn dominated Hollywood for 40 years; see Philadelphia Story, Bringing Up Baby, Little Women, Adam's Rib, African Queen - then her brilliant later blossoming in Long Day's Journey Into Night, Lion in Winter, Trojan Women, Love Among the Ruins, Glass Menagerie - Meryl Streep is still trying to match Hepburn's record of 4 Oscars (Streep and Kinuyo Tanaka are the only actresses I can think of who can match the scale of Hepburn's career) - re biopics, it's a tricky subject because almost any film based on non-fiction could tie in - Citizen Kane is the ultimate biopic, I guess, tho he's fictional, but based on Hearst, and Welles himself; Mank is a magnificent companion piece - other great biopics include Passion of Joan of Arc, Persepolis, American Splendor, Mishima, 1927 Napoleon - some traditionally listed at the top include Amadeus, Lawrence of Arabia, Malcolm X - Spielberg's Lincoln fits into that mold, as does Nixon - Scorsese did some other important biopics, including Raging Bull and Last Temptation of Christ - IMO, Scorsese's very best work overall is still his earliest: Mean Streets, Who's That Knocking, and Taxi Driver - my suggestions may seem eclectic, and likely won't be voted high on your polls, if they even appear, but that's my two cents
@sabalos
@sabalos 10 ай бұрын
Malcolm X (1992) should go on your list of biopics. Denzel Washington's best performance in Spike Lee's best movie
@Natedawgg84
@Natedawgg84 10 ай бұрын
Agreed 💯 Percent!
@bullhawk.
@bullhawk. 10 ай бұрын
I love the variety of movies you react to, big fan!
@ironman20740
@ironman20740 10 ай бұрын
I thought Leo should have won the Oscar for best actor
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