The Most Accurate Movies About The Old West
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- čas přidán 2. 05. 2024
- #oldwest #wildwest #movies
The Most Accurate Movies About The Old West.
The finest Western films transport viewers back in time, offering a few hours of immersion in the Wild West era.
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"Blazing Saddles" [*by, mel brooks] is the most accurate and authentic western movie ever made
Yes, particularly the toll booth (“go back and get a shitload of dimes!”). 😂
@@robvig60 Oh yeah… toll booth that is 8’ wide, in the middle of the prairie. Such a classic “make me spew my beer on my Bentley dashboard” for sure!!!
Tom Horn played by Steve McQueen was a great movie that was impressively accurate.
The computer generated narrative needs to be junked... AI stands for Artificial Ignorance.
I was going to say that
I refer to it as Artificial Stupidity, but I like yours better.
@@ernestitoe Also Artificial Incompetence, Artificial Ignorance.
A+ video!
Amazing topic and video, I will keep those films in mind when choosing my next Western film to watch!
I can't believe you mispronounced "cimarron..."
AI.
@@bradjohnson482 - Yup
“See Ma Run” … a movie about Jackie Joiner-Kersee’s kid watching her run back in the 1980’s
I can’t believe IT mispronounced “cimarron…”
The Narrator is A.I.
Virgil Walter Earp did not die in Tombstone as it is said here. He was wounded there twice: first at the legendary shootout near Fly's photo studio (= the so-called O.K-Corral gunfight), second 2 months later within an ambush. He died in 1905 in Nevada - - - 24 years after these events and unrelented to them.
"A Million Ways To Die In The West" is a very funny western movie, and at the same time, it shows how things might have been ( the dollar scene cracked me up no end ) The opening to this movie deserves much credit.
In the segment on Tombstone, you were talking about Doc Holliday while showing Johnny Ringo.
If only the filmmakers of the old had the tech of today
Virgil Earp doesn't die at in Tombstone at all, and in real life, Virgil did not die 2 months apart from Morgan Earp. Morgan was killed in Tombstone, Arizona in 1882 and Virgil who was shot in Tombstone Arizona, but didn't die, roughly 2 months b4 Morgan was killed, lived till 1905, when he died of pneumonia. So you were wrong twice, first saying the movie portrayed both being shot and killed in Tombstone, and then saying that in real life they were killed a couple months apart. What the movie did wrongly portray was them being shot on the same night. Also, as has already been noted in a comment b4 mine, you butchered the pronunciation of Cimarron, it is pronounced ( sim-Er-on). This is what you get when you use A I to narrate your video instead of a real person.
CIM-e-ron
I’ve never heard of a women fainting and Jesse James helping her. That is a tall tale Jesse James usually stayed on the horse guarding the escape route while frank James and a few other guys were in the bank. The assignation of Jesse James is to a accurate portrayal of Jesse James
Nice that you reviewed the 1960 John Wayne monstrosity that was “The Alamo”, but you totally ignored the 2003 version which, though there were some liberties taken no doubt (in particular the much-older age of the actor portraying Santa Ana), was far more attentive to historical accuracy & also covered events following the Alamo (Runaway Scrape, Battle of San Jacinto). Sheesh…
Kind of funny how just 600 or so ppl watch this video , i'm in good company : ) hah
Probably only 599 people. I watched it twice.
All movies are great but to be 100% accuraat is hard to be.... Because storytelling of these times and people that live there are not 100% honest. A movie brings a little bit of portrait of the west but keep the mind of the public open.
Most of the films aren't good picks for an accuracy check to begin with.
If The Alamo had no survivors, how do historians know what actually happened within the group of ‘Texacans’???
"No survivors"is misleading. According to the verifiable history, none of the men defending the Alamo survived, as the few who were still alive when Santa Anna took possession of it, were killed by his order, however there were a few women that were spared and they were allegedly told by Santa Anna himself, to tell what happened at the Alamo to the other Texians, in hopes that it would scare them into quit rebeling against Mexico. That actually had the exact opposite effect, as it inspired them to fight even harder to revenge those that were killed at the Alamo.
Ummmm..... a whole lot of Mexicans survived the siege of the Alamo. I bet at least one or two of them talked about it afterward. 🤔🤔
@@kenhawkins1033My point is simply… with all Texans killed, how could the remaining Mexicans possibly know the personal relationships between the Texans before the battle occurred? Maybe someone posted videos on Tic Tok. So what propagated these “rumors”?
@@samlindsey1078Great comment. I agree. Thanks for posting.
I grew up in central Texas (Georgetown). I remember my first presentation to anybody was an assignment to my 5th grade class and talk about the Alamo.. specifically how the phrase “Remember the Alamo” is so sacred in the history of Texas.
They're not documentaries, sheeze.
AI ruined it, thumbs down.
Is the narrator AI? So many mispronunciations! Cimarron, Co. (company), Lady Flaca (John Wayne also mispronounced)…
AI crap.