Flesh - "Nobody's Straight"
4:33
Жыл бұрын
Mulholland Dr - "Both Dreams"
8:51
2 жыл бұрын
Multiple Maniacs - "Lobster"
1:34
2 жыл бұрын
Wayne's World 2 - "Feel Naughty"
3:48
The Awful Truth - "Flat on His Puss"
5:37
Hairspray - "Our Souls are Black"
4:44
Thin Blue Line - "Chocolate Malt"
6:55
Westworld S2 - "Born to Fail"
6:56
3 жыл бұрын
The Brood - "I Disgust You"
6:10
3 жыл бұрын
Donnie Darko - "Into My Anus"
5:32
3 жыл бұрын
Polyester - "Coitus Interruptus"
6:14
Tenet - "Lost My Edge"
5:15
3 жыл бұрын
Money Pit - "Prostate Trouble"
7:07
3 жыл бұрын
Holiday - "Black Sheep"
10:02
3 жыл бұрын
Midnight Cowboy - "Lonesome"
9:32
3 жыл бұрын
Female Trouble - "Sugar Dumpling"
6:55
Marriage Story - "Half of Crazy"
4:11
Adventureland - "Intercourse"
8:33
3 жыл бұрын
Dr. Strangelove - "Bodily Fluids"
6:05
Isle of Dogs - "Dead Skeleton"
4:20
3 жыл бұрын
Booksmart - "Cornhole"
5:18
3 жыл бұрын
Ghost World - "Klansman"
6:17
3 жыл бұрын
Boogie Nights - "Evil Forces"
5:59
3 жыл бұрын
Bringing Up Baby - "No Slang"
5:07
4 жыл бұрын
Sylvia Scarlett - "Rolling Stone"
8:10
Пікірлер
@opinionminnion
@opinionminnion 2 күн бұрын
Beautiful bittersweet ending to the movie. When she sees Warren Oates coming home (to her) alone, she knows her husband is dead.
@WillScarlet16
@WillScarlet16 2 күн бұрын
There's a gorge in Vermont my family likes to visit every summer, and every time I jump off the rocks into the river I come up singing this song;
@AikoDaNardo
@AikoDaNardo 2 күн бұрын
after years and YEARS of remembering this scene i finally find the movie. saw this when i was still in the single digits.
@lessermook7608
@lessermook7608 5 күн бұрын
The Militants *turn: _[Startled]_
@compound00
@compound00 7 күн бұрын
She Cray Cray. Lol
@ritialydia
@ritialydia 9 күн бұрын
You know ... morons. Thank you.
@frankmasiello1325
@frankmasiello1325 11 күн бұрын
From the gorgeous music, the superb script, the sound design, the excellent cinematography, the memorable supporting work by McGiver, Miles, and Vaccaro, the brilliant direction by John Schlesinger and the great performances by Hoffman and especially Voight--whose Joe Buck is one of the finest pieces of acting ever put on film--this movie is a touching masterpiece and a time capsule of many of society's changes during the late 1960s. Midnight Cowboy is an unforgettable experience.
@harleyearl3289
@harleyearl3289 11 күн бұрын
What was the crunchy food that Mark Watney was snacking on? It wasn't potatoes. Was it granola or nuts? Seeds?
@EquuleusPictor
@EquuleusPictor 15 күн бұрын
What an incredible weird but ultimately "logical" horror/thriller, with some great plot twists. Cronenberg at its finest !
@alexalex13131
@alexalex13131 16 күн бұрын
Everyone in the cast some kind of idiot. Except maybe Tilda.
@svenjonsson4275
@svenjonsson4275 17 күн бұрын
The jokes in original verson makes you smile. Same jokes in Mel Brooks crazier verson makes you laugh ot loud.
@MondoBeno
@MondoBeno 17 күн бұрын
Was this movie as much a shock to British audiences as it was to Americans? Schlesinger (and other British directors) had been doing edgy material for years, topics that couldn't get past US censors.
@danielh5159
@danielh5159 18 күн бұрын
i just saw this tonight in nyc, such brilliance. now that's the lubitsch touch!
@niallreynolds7653
@niallreynolds7653 19 күн бұрын
Excellent edit - takes serious skill to take something new out of something old - still the same as original but different at the same time - good job (1st youtube comment ever)
@DavidEmerling79
@DavidEmerling79 19 күн бұрын
This is a great movie. Holly Hunter and Albert Brooks had great chemistry.
@atmos1x
@atmos1x 19 күн бұрын
You even burnt the bacon like I like and you don't lol
@quintus7581
@quintus7581 21 күн бұрын
This piece of music is completely misplaced, in a movie made for uneducated American audience. The Marsch was composed in 1866, before Germany even existed as a country. In fact it was intended to be played in a cavalry parade.
@WambliSka
@WambliSka 21 күн бұрын
Wow. Pretty funny too so maybe I’ll be laughing and crying with this one:)
@reinholdkorner6473
@reinholdkorner6473 21 күн бұрын
Barbara Bel Geddes ( Miss Ellie on Dallas) 👍🥰🥰
@kristoft51
@kristoft51 22 күн бұрын
I want to play this on an electric piano on a truck horribly, while annoying my colleagues
@AwesomeMullet69
@AwesomeMullet69 23 күн бұрын
What song is playing at the beginning of this clip?
@milou66
@milou66 24 күн бұрын
Thiis makes me tear up every singlie time i watch it. Except for the times when I'm actually crying.
@steelstreet79
@steelstreet79 25 күн бұрын
Just curious was Christopher Hewett Gay?
@jamiejoseph3298
@jamiejoseph3298 26 күн бұрын
1:51 dodge baaallll
@GWil-ey4if
@GWil-ey4if 27 күн бұрын
The first time I saw this movie I was 16 and had a terrible fever and it was 3am. Some things just can’t be replicated
@lisabrooks9362
@lisabrooks9362 29 күн бұрын
The funniest screwball movie ever made--with the best performance of any actress in that genre. The inimitable Irene Dunne. Her "Lola" character in the party-crashing scene is pure gold. "Lola" is my official alter ego.
@user-oi6ln4eq7b
@user-oi6ln4eq7b Ай бұрын
Fascinatingly depressing - is that OK? He starts out with a wealth of naive optimism and the sense of disillusionment gathers pace like an avalanche. Believing meeting Hoffman was the gateway to his dreams........but it's the opposite, sadly.
@peterschorn1
@peterschorn1 Ай бұрын
The I'M WALKIN HERE line was totally improv--Voight and Hoffman actually almost DID get run over. One of those magical moments that could only happen in New York!
@MgWj-kq8db
@MgWj-kq8db Ай бұрын
It was juvi lol
@slowbro-
@slowbro- Ай бұрын
Reminds me of MAGA in USA
@mariodupont2272
@mariodupont2272 Ай бұрын
Notre pauvreté le sentiment de l irremediable et de linnesperer
@brianpack369
@brianpack369 Ай бұрын
Bro just sticks his fingers in my man's brain hole!?
@MrJoosebawkz
@MrJoosebawkz Ай бұрын
is this an arg whats w the subtitles lmao
@michaelchrist5356
@michaelchrist5356 Ай бұрын
Donald trump is dawn davenport.prove me wrong
@anodyne57
@anodyne57 Ай бұрын
This film forever changed my way of looking at things, of framing the narrative of my own life. It showed me a way of conceptualizing my experience that I had no models for prior to its viewing. For better or worse, I've come to accept that Chris Marker was for me, an apostle of my time on this earth.
@davidmack4495
@davidmack4495 Ай бұрын
great movie....
@cathykinn4516
@cathykinn4516 Ай бұрын
So much better than the van sant thing 'Idaho.' But then John Schlesinger was a Far Better Director & everyone involved in this film had more Talent.
@BLANDMEDlA
@BLANDMEDlA Ай бұрын
"how'd you get in here??!" "I.. walked in..?: Black Dynamite said, slightly confused
@MsMC-vr1jd
@MsMC-vr1jd Ай бұрын
Best movie line! (My friends used to say "Don't f*ck w/the babysitter!" to me all the time when I worked as a nanny. 😂😂)
@mikemartin5749
@mikemartin5749 Ай бұрын
I can't believe how many people in the comments are assuming Margie cuffed him and put him in the car by herself. She radioed in that she spotted the car. The Coens assumed their audience is savvy enough to understand that a whole bunch of back up arrived on the scene. They don't need to show us every obvious moment to keep the story moving.
@YoungABBALover2046
@YoungABBALover2046 Ай бұрын
I wonder what their wedding would look like?
@billsblots
@billsblots Ай бұрын
I have often tossed out the phrase “my precious bodily fluids” to work mates after sipping from water fountain.
@geraldmoran6387
@geraldmoran6387 Ай бұрын
I always believed Ginger really did have a 'thing' for Fred...he was, of course, happily married for many years but even after his wife died in 1954... Fred and Ginger privately dated but Fred wasn't interested in getting married...afterall he had a young daughter to raise and a son in the airforce
@SomethingWittyRW
@SomethingWittyRW Ай бұрын
You think his logs would've become available to the public? Some of them are fucking hilarious, especially in the book.
@waynewhitson6914
@waynewhitson6914 Ай бұрын
"It Was Nice BEATING Yoy, Mrs. Fishpaw".
@brandontylerburt
@brandontylerburt 2 ай бұрын
Haha brilliant. It was the golden age of midnight movies! Once John Waters came to my town to introduce a screening of Serial Mom, and the theatre made it a double feature with Pink Flamingos. I think a lot of the audience didn't know what they were in for, because it was SRO for most of Serial Mom, but 20 minutes into Pink Flamingoes, everybody in the audience had walked out except for us and maybe eight other diehard fans.
@novemberalpha6023
@novemberalpha6023 2 ай бұрын
1:36 .... Surprising to see that Glineike Bridge got almost the same architecture as that of Howrah Bridge made by the British as a cantilever bridge between Kolkata and Howrah (India) in 1941 during the British colonial period. Only the Indian bridge is quite bigger.
@liubovlily4963
@liubovlily4963 2 ай бұрын
It’s interesting how this movie and 1949 movie have so many similar scenes. For example, when Laurie tried to hug her when she said: “I’d like to see someone try it” and she pushed him away and he rolled over. And when Amy and Beth were watching the ball sitting on the stairs and Mr. Laurence saw them and talked to them.
@DrRockso79
@DrRockso79 2 ай бұрын
I still have my Odorama card in my bookcase all these years later!
@Accountdeactivated_1986
@Accountdeactivated_1986 2 ай бұрын
One of the most underrated movies of all time. I love Chris Eigeman. He should have been a bigger star in his prime.