Old vs New: True Grit - Nostalgia Critic

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  • čas přidán 16. 06. 2024
  • With the recent remake out on DVD, see which film holds up as the better Western.
    Originally aired on 6/14/2011.
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Komentáře • 941

  • @Tracer_Krieg
    @Tracer_Krieg Před 8 lety +455

    Better title: The Duke vs The Dude.

  • @Abazigal
    @Abazigal Před 5 lety +91

    A big thing to note in the remake, is that the very second that Mattie pulls the trigger to shoot Chaney in cold blooded revenge, her life immediately goes to shit as it starts the series of dominoes that leaves her minus an arm, a horse and bitter and alone. Had she just captured him for the authorities instead of going vigilante, her whole life would have been different. Quite a direct "Don't do revenge, it's bad" depiction by the Coens but it really works.

    • @robbs808
      @robbs808 Před 4 lety +8

      Yep quite right, that is pretty much the moral of the whole story, it’s a wonderful story of tenacity, how justice is good and should always be sought, but if you allow your need for justice to build up into a desire for vengeance you’ll probably end up bitter and losing a part of yourself, hence the metaphor for that was Mattie losing her arm, she got her vengeance but she remained bitter and she lived a lonesome life, had she left it to Rooster and LeBeouf justice would’ve been still been served (for her and the family LeBeouf was working for) but her life would’ve been dramatically different.

    • @ricjaredpalandiano5055
      @ricjaredpalandiano5055 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Or to put the "Vengeance is bad" in a cooler way
      "Vengeance is an idiot's game." - Arthur Morgan.

    • @alvinyakitori8720
      @alvinyakitori8720 Před 6 měsíci +2

      How the fuck would she have captured him in that situation

  • @OmegaRockman
    @OmegaRockman Před 8 lety +108

    Seven Samurai vs. The Magnificent Seven. It has to be done.

    • @scantopup2226
      @scantopup2226 Před 4 lety +1

      I don't think so, both are about seven wariors fighting a battle but have differnt settings, one is in japan the other is in the old west. you have to take into account that not only will the villains be differnt but the story, characters and fighting style.

    • @grimnak26
      @grimnak26 Před 3 lety +2

      @@scantopup2226 Magnificent Seven is literally the remake of Seven Samurai its just a westernized remake

    • @ilbv5
      @ilbv5 Před 3 lety +2

      Not even a debate. Seven samurai is massively better in every way

    • @OdileOdile19
      @OdileOdile19 Před 3 lety +2

      Old vs new magnificent seven

    • @UglyAmerican0374
      @UglyAmerican0374 Před 3 lety +1

      Yojimbo vs Fist Full of Dollars would be a more fitting comparison.

  • @magesentron
    @magesentron Před 7 lety +211

    I felt the remake of True Grit taught an interesting lesson and framed the story in a more metaphysical way. The ending was intended to position John Wayne's Cogburn and the original True Grit as a retelling of this story, the "real" tale of Mattie making a terrible decision in the spirit of revenge and going on a quest to kill a man accompanied by two men who were like the two halves of what we consider a "old west cowboy". You had Rooster, who was the outlaw, the drunk, the gunslinger, the dangerous one, and you had LaBoeuf, the lawman and hero soldier. In the remake ending, Mattie goes to find Rooster at a Buffalo Bill Wild West traveling show, the precursor to Western films like you saw John Ford and Henry Hathaway make. We see the reality behind the tale that would go on to become the original film.
    That's why it seems like a shot by shot remake at times. It's intended to be the metaphysical "reality" behind the story that becomes the romanticized ending of the original. The Coen brothers were pointing out that the beauty and romance of wild west films are bathed in...cough...NOSTALGIA...and although reality if much rougher and the so-called "heroes" of the old west were men of mixed morality and deep flaws, it still showed that LaBoeuf could be a selfless icon of the law, while Cogburn could still be an almost superheroic, bigger-than-life cowboy hero of old, simply because their ultimate actions gave them that distinction, with Cogburn going beyond his own seeming capabilities to save Mattie's life from the snake bite. A man who we had been questioning as a broken down drunk turned out to be almost supernaturally iconic and LaBoeuf turned out to be a wounded hero who had to limp home with the death he was looking to accomplish. Mattie learned a powerful life lesson and the adventure helped define who she turned out to be as an adult.
    The whole story is a morality play, not for Mattie or the other characters, but for us as a modern movie audience. We live rough lives, but pioneers lived even rougher lives, and what we know as a "cowboy" or "old west gunslinger" or a "old west lawman" or an "old west spinster" or a "wild west revenge tale" are all far dirtier and less romantic than we could ever imagine and yet because it was REAL was far more epic and life changing than we could ever hope to imagine just watching a movie made about these men and women of lore.
    The movie challenges our own lives. Perhaps, one day, a filmmaker like Henry Hathaway will put our adventure up on the big screen, and wash away all the "True Grit" in favor of a better ending. Perhaps the men we worship in Westerns were based on men who were beyond our expectations, because they were real. The ending tips its hat at the Western genre, saying "ok, audience, these were the real people behind the legends."
    Finally, by Mattie finding Rooster having passed away, it puts a period on the end of the sentence. Mattie had gone on an adventure at the end of the "Old West". When she returned to find Rooster at the end, the "Old West" was over. It had faded into legend. Rooster Cogburn had faded into the stories of American folklore. The ending was like a love letter to the fact that myth takes over, and myths evolve from the stories of the real, only to become bigger and more sweeping because we see our own past in them.

    • @TheWolfElder
      @TheWolfElder Před 6 lety +21

      Robert Charles This comment belongs at the top of the list. This is the best thought out and written comment I've seen on a comment section in a long time.

    • @Rybread52
      @Rybread52 Před 6 lety +9

      The 2011 remake also follows the original book more closely

    • @joshuagraham967
      @joshuagraham967 Před 6 lety +5

      Robert Charles So, when can I read a book written by you or a movie that you write and direct? Damn, you have talent!

    • @hardcoreking52
      @hardcoreking52 Před 5 lety +12

      Your comment is so well put. It gives me a new perspective on both films. The old is a story and the new is the real story. The old being a folklore, passed from parent to child or told by a camp fire. People heard about what happened and passed it on.
      The new however is Mattie telling the story. She's the same age as she is at the end of the film, the story as been passed around. She is asked about what happened and she tells the real story. Not to discredit or disparage the story that people told, the old film, but to say that there was more to what happened.
      As in the legends about Rooster and LaBouef were true, but there was more to them then what people said. My life was saved, but I lost my arm, I never saw Rooster after that night, I avenged my father but what did I gain from it? To which people begin to tell Mattie's story.

    • @JakNekon
      @JakNekon Před 4 lety +5

      I am in no way arguing your point, because I seriously doubt I have the words to do so, and frankly, I agree with you. The modern Grit takes off the shine of the Old West and shows us the roughness underneath.
      And I would point out, I think that's why some people flat out prefer the original.
      Like a good deal of our current "remakes" or "re-telling" or "Reboot" or whatever "re" they want to do with older stories these days, a large number of the time people don't WANT their nostalgia or memories questioned. They don't want to think that King Arthur might've just been some jerk with a well made sword and Merlin was just a party magician in a time where making fire was "astounding", they want to believe in Excalibur and the Court Wizard.
      And frankly, the fact that we're talking about a western doubles down on that feeling. The US is a relatively young nation compared to say European or Asiatic countries, who have legends dating back centuries if not millennia. We have our Cowboys, our Gunslingers stepping out for gunfights at high noon, saloon brawls over Dead Man's Hand card games, and they're our little bits of legend and lore that we frankly know, deep down, we don't wanna know the truth about because we know the Heroes were probably just as bad (or maybe worse) than the "Bad" guys, that good things happened to bad people and vice versa, and riding off into the sunset was probably just a great way to get shot in the back.
      So while I applaud the Coens for what is a fantastic remake that deserves all the praise it gets, I can't help but side with those who enjoy the, let's say, finer Grit. I can't say either of them has a truly "happy" ending, but the original gives us the closest thing to it.

  • @dorkmax7073
    @dorkmax7073 Před 5 lety +225

    It's worth mentioning that the remake is much more faithful to the book, which wasn't afraid to paint the West as it was. Whereas the original has that total John Wayne rosy attitude that makes me roll my eyes

    • @HORSESNDOGS9
      @HORSESNDOGS9 Před 4 lety +5

      Didnt even know there was a book

    • @touristygull2059
      @touristygull2059 Před 3 lety +11

      J.A.C Lot of westerns have books. John Wayne’s last movie “the shootist” was also based on a book

    • @HORSESNDOGS9
      @HORSESNDOGS9 Před 3 lety +1

      @@touristygull2059 that's cool

    • @robertkostoroski3581
      @robertkostoroski3581 Před 3 lety +1

      You obviously didn,t read the book.

    • @floydvaughn836
      @floydvaughn836 Před 3 lety +3

      More faithful? Sorry, but no way.

  • @whatdoyousuppose
    @whatdoyousuppose Před 8 lety +96

    I auditioned to play Mattie in the remake back in 2009/2010 when I was in middle school. I guess I was bitter about not being cast because I still haven't gotten around to seeing it, dang I should've seen it by now! I think I still have a copy of the script used for the pre-read...

    • @brettjohnson536
      @brettjohnson536 Před 3 lety +23

      Even getting to the audition for a film with that budget is impressive. All of the most successful actors alive right now had plenty of rejections.

    • @TGIFrank
      @TGIFrank Před rokem +4

      Dang. You should've just prepped the wrong script and shown up in full makeup as Wednesday Addams like Hailee. Then we'd be reading her comment about you!

  • @ForgeBall
    @ForgeBall Před 8 lety +149

    The bear guy is obviously the living man's great-grandfather.

    • @MrManBuzz
      @MrManBuzz Před 8 lety +11

      +Snowy Owl Lmao I thought the exact same thing, when I heard his voice I had to pause the video because I couldn't stop laughing.

    • @jackmcglion8337
      @jackmcglion8337 Před rokem

      Yes, just yes.

  • @jonahhex6593
    @jonahhex6593 Před 8 lety +187

    But John Wayne did the gunspin with his repeater

    • @jonahhex6593
      @jonahhex6593 Před 8 lety +7

      +wildside316 in stagecoach in 1939 John Wayne pulled it off first then Connors followed then McQueen

    • @robalco8633
      @robalco8633 Před 8 lety

      shut up!

    • @carlwilliams6977
      @carlwilliams6977 Před 4 měsíci

      Yeah... He had plenty of time to practice it while the REAL leading Men were off fighting World War II.

    • @jonahhex6593
      @jonahhex6593 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@carlwilliams6977 bro posted a gotcha moment on a comment from 8 years ago on a Nostalgia Critic video no less. Dude, tf you doing here?

    • @carlwilliams6977
      @carlwilliams6977 Před 4 měsíci

      @@jonahhex6593 You're a moron so I'm obviously not your "bro". "TF am I doing here?". I'm "nostalgically criticizing" your hero, using a dose of reality. BTW, if you want to take the shortcut of using acronyms, you probably want to include all the letters!

  • @jabscha7051
    @jabscha7051 Před 4 lety +23

    Something I like about the new version is that the characters actually look like they're from the 19th century and not just people from the 60's in cowboy hats

  • @aanthirin
    @aanthirin Před 8 lety +44

    Let me guess...
    Old one?
    **Watches**
    Oh.

    • @baronsamedi4603
      @baronsamedi4603 Před 2 lety +1

      The new one is actually based on the book that both of the movies were based on it's line for line word for word out of the book

  • @EmmaBonn96
    @EmmaBonn96 Před 8 lety +102

    10:41 Sometimes the bear eats you

    • @PedroFelix456
      @PedroFelix456 Před 8 lety +1

      +DeaditeWheatley or in any place where you found yourself face to face with a savage killer bear

    • @MythicMario
      @MythicMario Před 8 lety +5

      +PedroFelix or Nicholas Cage in a bear costume

    • @PedroFelix456
      @PedroFelix456 Před 8 lety +3

      ***** and in other times the humor murders you

    • @MythicMario
      @MythicMario Před 8 lety +3

      +PedroFelix in Soviet Russia Humor kills you

    • @alexlagunas
      @alexlagunas Před 7 lety

      Bakorafanboy13 Sometimes there's a Cage in a bear.

  • @rachelk.6918
    @rachelk.6918 Před 8 lety +265

    Even though it's technically not a western, BLAZING SADDLES IS THE BEST WESTERN.

    • @MarioFanaticXV
      @MarioFanaticXV Před 8 lety +4

      Back to the Future III.

    • @skornie123
      @skornie123 Před 7 lety +1

      Hey where the white chicks at?

    • @rachelk.6918
      @rachelk.6918 Před 7 lety +4

      "Wire the governor and tell 'em I said... OWWW!"

    • @rachelk.6918
      @rachelk.6918 Před 7 lety +3

      Personally I consider it to be a comedy wearing a western like a jacket.

    • @ajbonine69
      @ajbonine69 Před 7 lety +1

      That's a great way to put it.

  • @hmm7917
    @hmm7917 Před 8 lety +109

    It always pissed me off that Mattie in the original had a haircut that is totally historically inaccurate. Like a pixie cut in the 1800s?? Yea okay

    • @coltonregal1797
      @coltonregal1797 Před 6 lety +4

      I hadn't watched either movie before I saw this video and I was very confused about that. Thanks for clearing it up.

    • @no_peace
      @no_peace Před 5 lety +3

      @HerrNilssonTheMonkey stow it

    • @edwchase
      @edwchase Před 4 lety +7

      what a weird thing to be pissed off about.

    • @Reagan1984
      @Reagan1984 Před 4 lety +1

      You gotta remember that American Westerns are a romanticized version of the west, they're historically innaccurate from the start.

    • @tripsadelica
      @tripsadelica Před 4 lety +5

      "Bowl" cuts were common in the old west and used to control hair lice so, despite the fact you think it is "modern" you are wrong.

  • @TheRamrod3001
    @TheRamrod3001 Před 8 lety +39

    this is the nostalgia critic at his best. Great to have him back.

  • @seanmyster6
    @seanmyster6 Před 8 lety +33

    I used to think I didn't like westerns very much, either; until I saw both the True Grit remake and Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid.

    • @edwarddore7617
      @edwarddore7617 Před 2 lety +1

      Don't forget: Unforgiven, Dances With Wolves, Tombstone, Bone Tomahawk (recent and disturbing), ect. I'm not the biggest Western fan, but there are some great ones.

  • @KP9393
    @KP9393 Před 8 lety +42

    "The new True Grit is newer, truer, and grittier."

    • @rhettgedies7467
      @rhettgedies7467 Před 8 lety +5

      +LoveOverlord
      Except that the new Rooster almost gives up midway through the film. Where's that "true grit" and tenacity? Not coming from The Dude apparently!
      The Duke's portrayal had unbreakable grit.

    • @bigguy4421
      @bigguy4421 Před 7 lety +12

      The title "True Grit" is referring to Maddie. The Girl. She proves she has true grit just as much as rooster and the guys and maybe even more.

    • @Christobanistan
      @Christobanistan Před 2 lety +3

      @@bigguy4421 That's what I really dislike about the 1969 version. The book was about the girl, yet since it was John Wayne they had to make it about him. The story got simplified and he became the focus instead.

  • @ashleyvanhammer3448
    @ashleyvanhammer3448 Před 7 lety +36

    As much as I generally loathe re-makes, I had to admit that the new True Grit was damned awesome.
    Howsabout some more horror in old vs new? Texas Chainsaw, Nightmare On Elm Street, The Blob or a little lighter fare- Bedazzled!

    • @KreyzMcKormik
      @KreyzMcKormik Před 5 lety +1

      The older ones all win

    • @thomaseubank1503
      @thomaseubank1503 Před 2 lety

      @@KreyzMcKormik Yeah pretty much

    • @sebastianemond5313
      @sebastianemond5313 Před 2 lety +1

      Old vs New, 3 Godfathers, another John Wayne movie, vs Tokyo Godfathers. Both are about three people trying to look after an infant near Christmas. Difference, one's a western with outlaws looking after the baby whose mother died in childbirth and they're wrongfully accused of murder, and the other is an anime film about three homeless people in Tokyo trying to find the mother of an abandoned baby.

  • @mallardduckjrh8048
    @mallardduckjrh8048 Před 5 lety +29

    I would to see an old vs new of:
    The Fly (1958) vs The Fly (1986)
    The Thing From Another World vs John Carpenter’s The Thing

    • @dedcaesar2325
      @dedcaesar2325 Před 4 lety +2

      The Blob (1958) vs The Blob (1988)

    • @edwarddore7617
      @edwarddore7617 Před 2 lety +1

      Invasion of the Body Snatchers.... only the good two. ;)

    • @hiramnoone
      @hiramnoone Před 11 měsíci +2

      The Thing pictures were too dissimilar to compare. Carpenter's film in essence was no remake, more of a Think, Invasion of the Body Snatchers hybrid. And a great piece of film making.

  • @reno.corona
    @reno.corona Před 6 lety +26

    I like both movies for different reasons. Even though story-wise the movies are almost verbatim, it's hard to make comparisons between each movies style. The John Wayne version is very much a John Wayne film; it's bright, it's charming, it has good action, and it doesn't get bogged down with dialogue. I also like seeing the relationship develop between Rooster and Mattie-- it's so endearing how he calls her "Little Sister," and it sets him up as this grandpa-like figure. The remake is dark, morbid, and dare I say, grittier! It doesn't paint a pretty picture of the old west, and wants to get as far away from the John Wayne take on westerns as possible. It explores a depth and sense of realism about what makes a hero, and what seeking vengeance for death really accomplishes. I don't think of either of these films being superior to the other. If you want a good old-fashioned western, good heroes and good action, go for the original. If you want complexity, darkness, and something that challenges the cliches of other westerns, watch the remake. Both are very enjoyable.

    • @gregzeigler3850
      @gregzeigler3850 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Yeah, but the Duke got an Oscar. However the Bridges' film is closer to the book that was written...

    • @lisanalgaib555
      @lisanalgaib555 Před 4 měsíci

      The 2011 Version is more realistic. Like the @jabscha7051 said: "the characters actually look like they're from the 19th century and not just people from the 60's in cowboy hats".
      That's what I like to see, when I watch a movie playing in the past. I want to experience, the mindset, the behavior, the looks and the way of talking from people of that time.
      I don't want to see modern people with 300 Dollar Haircuts in perfect clean costumes, playing for example people of the wild west.

  • @TheLazysketcher
    @TheLazysketcher Před 8 lety +24

    14:36 Now slowly, carefully... AGITATE THE HELL OUT OF THAT SNAKE!!!

  • @catherinetheegreat8742
    @catherinetheegreat8742 Před 7 lety +51

    The bear guy made me think of that nicolas cage scean where he dresses up like a bear.... anyone?

    • @johnbrewington2539
      @johnbrewington2539 Před 7 lety +13

      "I have removed the bees from his eyes, but I will entertain an offer for their honey"

    • @airmackeeee6792
      @airmackeeee6792 Před 6 lety +4

      HeLp_I_KpOpEd AnD_I_cAnT_gEt_Up "How'd it get burned? HOW'D IT GET BURNED, HOW'D IT GET BURNED?!?!?!!"

    • @gordonpeden6234
      @gordonpeden6234 Před 4 lety

      You mean "Tropic Thunder" and it was a Panda. :-))

  • @jacobdewitt2535
    @jacobdewitt2535 Před 6 lety +10

    I think some extra consideration should be given to John Wayne, as in 1964 he had a lung removed due to cancer. Yep, he did all the stuff in this movie missing a lung.

  • @tool4132
    @tool4132 Před 8 lety +11

    The soundtrack of the remake is sadly and largely unnoticed. I love that the majority of the soundtrack is old gospel hymns which is a great contrast to the dark tones of the movie. It's the subtle things like Mattie's theme song is "Leaning on the Everlasting Arms" that make me love this movie. The song is about relying and trusting in God and finding the peace and joy that comes from leaning on God which contrasts Mattie's unrelenting quest to find peace in vengeance, which as NC pointed out, ends up leaving her very bitter and seemingly joyless.

  • @FireofGia111
    @FireofGia111 Před 8 lety +19

    This is the only Old vs New I hadn't seen before.
    Ironically, this is my favorite John Wayne film.

  • @BlackTempleGaurdian
    @BlackTempleGaurdian Před 8 lety +28

    Quit playing around. Snake? Snake? Snake!

  • @tedthetonberry225
    @tedthetonberry225 Před 8 lety +3

    If there was anybody that stood out to me, it was the Bear Guy. He was just interesting when he walked in, he was interesting when he spoke and even interesting when he disappeared. I don't know why but for a character that shouldn't be remembered, I couldn't help but remember him the most.
    That and Rooster's reaction. "......You're not LeBoeuf..."

  • @AdamPaul222
    @AdamPaul222 Před 6 lety +18

    Love Love True Grit!!! Both of them are special!!! Now I must read the book!!!

    • @alexyoon-sungcucina7895
      @alexyoon-sungcucina7895 Před rokem +2

      My appreciation for the remake grew to the point where I felt compelled to read the book, which was well worth it and added further to my enjoyment. I would also recommend listening to the audiobook with narration by Donna Tartt. I am going to try to get to the original movie version, though based on some clips I have seen, it might be hard for me to appreciate it.

  • @amk4739
    @amk4739 Před 8 lety +26

    The Dude abides

  • @Salmon_Samurai
    @Salmon_Samurai Před 8 lety +45

    I think judging these movies together is unfair, but I have to agree.
    You gotta keep in mind John Wayne movies just have that feel, ya know? The "cowboy rides off into the sunset" feel. The ending, in context for both movies, fits both to a T as they're both completely different when it comes to tone. The John Wayne movie is that A-Typical Western flick your folks enjoy watching, while the True Grit of today is much darker and... Well, grittier.

    • @Dantheman-bw8hv
      @Dantheman-bw8hv Před 4 lety +6

      Maddie's horse had a darker death scene in the remake, and LaBeouf died in the original and lived in the remake. I enjoy the remake more

    • @michaelkeha
      @michaelkeha Před 4 lety +2

      Actually the remake is rather optimistic compared to a lot of old westerns that are well regarded mind you.

  • @sadlobster1
    @sadlobster1 Před 8 lety +148

    I think Jeff Bridges played the better Rooster

    • @murciadoxial8056
      @murciadoxial8056 Před 8 lety

      +sadlobster1 agreed

    • @sadlobster1
      @sadlobster1 Před 8 lety +3

      Not only that but the remake had a more realistic take on the story

    • @sirjedisentinel
      @sirjedisentinel Před 8 lety +5

      +sadlobster1 Yeah. I read the original novel, and I felt the remake better captured the novel.

    • @teisukone342
      @teisukone342 Před 8 lety

      +SirJedi Consular Yes. Thank you! I still like both movies...

    • @murciadoxial8056
      @murciadoxial8056 Před 8 lety +3

      Tei Sukone yeah. the duke will always be the duke, but he played the duke, the dude on the other hand played rooster coughburn

  • @benm5970
    @benm5970 Před 4 lety +3

    Something I love about these 2 movies is how they're so similar yet so different, they're almost scene for scene the same but because of the tones they feel completely different, the original feels like a fun popcorn action movie, something you'd put on, kick your feet up on the couch and watch with a big happy grin on your face, whereas with the remake you're on the edge of your seat in silence and whispering "Oh shit" whenever something intense happens, and so it kinda gives you a reason to wanna watch both versions every now and then, because they really do give you 2 different types of emotional experiences

  • @richardbenjamin5436
    @richardbenjamin5436 Před 7 lety +7

    the new rooster looks a lot like my dad's best friend, and lived the scene when he carries her all the way home in both films, but I love the classic more

  • @pipedream2556
    @pipedream2556 Před 3 lety +5

    It feels like the new film was made with the intention of making it earn the name True Grit as fully as possible, as opposed to the original where it felt like any other Western style name. Its a good film, but like any goody two shoes western it had rosy glasses and happy endings that romanticised that era too much for a name like True Grit to not feel over the top
    The remake seriously makes Mattie earn that respect from Rooster, and he from her, specifically BECAUSE the film doesn't shy away from the harshness, the cruelty, the... Well, grittiness

  • @RazEdits
    @RazEdits Před 8 lety +38

    I love western! And I'm an eastern XD my new favourite is Slow West (2015)

    • @rougeshadow1741
      @rougeshadow1741 Před 8 lety +2

      how about the good the bad and the ugly?

    • @RazEdits
      @RazEdits Před 8 lety +1

      Rouge Shadow Yes! That's my first western :D my step dad loves clint eastwood and got me into so many westerns

    • @rougeshadow1741
      @rougeshadow1741 Před 8 lety +1

      What's your favorite Eastwood film

    • @dfm6868
      @dfm6868 Před 8 lety

      Like Japan eastern or New York eastern

    • @RazEdits
      @RazEdits Před 8 lety +1

      +The Tiger of insainity Eastern... like Asia

  • @cielopachirisu929
    @cielopachirisu929 Před 8 lety +23

    Saddens me a bit that the Old lost. I'm a huge fan of classic Westerns that personally thinks that the modern Westerns kinda lost their teeth, but, it seems that New True Grit did it well.

    • @MrRondonmon
      @MrRondonmon Před 2 lety

      It did n;t lose because this jack leg stated it did, he's a nut.

    • @edwarddore7617
      @edwarddore7617 Před 2 lety +1

      Watch Bone Tomahawk. ;)

    • @JohnSmith-be1vl
      @JohnSmith-be1vl Před 4 měsíci

      I like the old version SLIGHTLY more, very slightly because both are great and in reality pretty much as good as each other, so I would suggest watching the new version, enjoying both the similarities and differences.
      I also would second 'Bone Tomahawk'.

  • @davidhoffman6980
    @davidhoffman6980 Před 7 lety +22

    The original had two scenes that were better than the remake: the court hearing, and the scene inside the dugout with the two house thieves. The original had better villains. In the original, we hear about Ned Pepper and his lip scar almost from the beginning of the movie and his reveal is kind of impressive. The character of Leboeuf is better in the remake, and him getting left behind with injuries, and never being seen again is more mysterious and dramatic. We think he probably didn't make it, but we'll never know. It feels more realistic. Additionally, in the remake, we really feel how far away from medical help Maddy is, and it feels realistic that she lost her arm. The remake should also win points for being a good remake and not just a shameless cash grab.

    • @hiramnoone
      @hiramnoone Před 11 měsíci +1

      shameless cash grab trading on the popularity of the original is likely how the remake was pitched and why it got made in the first place.

    • @hardcoreking52
      @hardcoreking52 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Book spoilers:
      Leboeuf survived in the book and retrieved Chaney's body.

    • @captainmarvelwilson508
      @captainmarvelwilson508 Před 4 měsíci

      @@hiramnooneThat is completely false. The Coen Brothers remade the movie to be closer to the original novel, not just for some boring old money.

    • @hiramnoone
      @hiramnoone Před 4 měsíci

      @@captainmarvelwilson508 Uh, huh. Of course they did. Muss be why they never cashed the checks.

  • @robertsutton1295
    @robertsutton1295 Před 2 lety +3

    The REAL reason the remake is the better movie is that the Western genre had gone through a rigorous deconstruction period and come out the other side well-tempered; better balanced, more nuanced. The impurities (the good guy always wears a white hat, never gets dirty, and always wins, riding off into the sunset with the pretty gal, singing a cowboy ballad) had been hammered out

  • @vaeius8568
    @vaeius8568 Před 8 lety +16

    I think I would actually love a review of Maverick.

  • @thefirstbourne149
    @thefirstbourne149 Před 6 lety +9

    Do you ever think about film technique when doing these old vs new? I mean...I haven't seen the remake or the old, but goshdarnit, the new one has 14-time Academy Award-nominated (and so far only 1-time winer) DP Roger Deakins on board. Cinematography in the Old West couldn't look better than that.

  • @markmeason1244
    @markmeason1244 Před 8 lety +11

    Oh wait this is before the Nostalgia Critic quit and almost bankrupted Channel Awesome.

    • @KumaoftheForest
      @KumaoftheForest Před 3 lety

      Back when reviewing films was EMOTIONAL for him and not just about the money

  • @DeadhunterThe
    @DeadhunterThe Před 8 lety +30

    I've got an idea for an Old vs New. "Our Man Flint" vs "The Avengers."
    No, not "The Avengers" as in "Marvel." "The Avengers" as in that James Bond parody movie with Uma Thurman where Sean Connery plays a villain trying to control the weather.
    They're both secret agent movies where in both, an intelligent man who hesitates to use firearms goes against a villain or a group of villains that are trying to rule the world by controlling the weather.
    Any takers?

    • @murciadoxial8056
      @murciadoxial8056 Před 8 lety +1

      +Jarrett Smith the nostalgia critic did a review of that one, and he trashed it

    • @TyrWolfsblood
      @TyrWolfsblood Před 8 lety +2

      +Jarrett Smith I don't think they'll buy this. In this section (old vs new) movies are compared to their remakes and these movies are not. "The Avegers" is the movie adaptation of the british tv-series of the same name from the 1960's to 70's I think.

    • @DeadhunterThe
      @DeadhunterThe Před 8 lety

      TyrWolfsblood Maybe so, but you see where I'm coming from, right? About how the stories of both movies are so alike?
      Heck, the two movies even have a scene where the main girls both endure a hypnosis session to become pleasure slaves to the villains.

    • @aanthirin
      @aanthirin Před 8 lety

      This was originally uploaded in 2011
      He won't listen

    • @TyrWolfsblood
      @TyrWolfsblood Před 8 lety +1

      Jarrett Smith
      Yes I totally see your point and would agree in terms of similarities in the story. The only problem (beside the fact that i don`t know if they are still willing to make new episodes of "Old vs New") is that beside some similarities in the story both movies are not related. It would be like comparing Tron to Johnny Mnemonic because both have virtual reality in it. And besides that as i saw it the story of "The Avengers" is more influenced by the storylines of the original series. There they even had an episode where a scientist could control the weather - at least he could make it rain at will.

  • @danielmonroe1722
    @danielmonroe1722 Před 7 lety +6

    I like the original better personally. John Wayne didn't sound like he had a mouth full of marbles & you could understand him when he talked, but to each their own

  • @natofato1
    @natofato1 Před 8 lety +44

    You need to review scooby doo 2 Monster unleashed, Yes it exists

  • @geekyfangirlstarwarshistor8630

    I’d like to see an old vs new between Kurosawa’s seven samurai and the western remake “the magnificent seven “ or Maybe Kurosawa’s Yojimbo vs A fistful Of dollars

    • @elfsieben1450
      @elfsieben1450 Před 3 lety

      Yojimbo in the fifties already had everything that would make Italo-Westerns great in the sixties - and more.

  • @GaijinGuy36
    @GaijinGuy36 Před 6 lety +9

    Even though I love old-school movies with actors that have been gone for a lot of years, I did really enjoy the new version. Jeff was really good. Hell, everyone made a damn good showing here!

  • @STIRRUPLEATHER
    @STIRRUPLEATHER Před 8 lety +37

    Maybe it's just because of where I live, or how I was raised, but this is literally the first time I EVER heard someone praise the remake for ANYTHING.

    • @SpedeVesku
      @SpedeVesku Před 8 lety +1

      +STIRRUPLEATHER Do you mean this particular remake or remakes in general? If it is the latter, google John Carpenter's The Thing.

    • @STIRRUPLEATHER
      @STIRRUPLEATHER Před 8 lety

      TheWolverine1987 No, I meant the Remake of True Grit. Everybody I know really bashed it. I had no idea some people liked it. I thought it was near Godzilla 1998 levels of hate train.
      As for remakes in general, I definitely have some I love. :D "The Thing" looks awesome, and I really want to see it, but I'm too scared LOL.

    • @teisukone342
      @teisukone342 Před 8 lety +27

      Seeing as this wasn't intended to be a "remake". but a retelling of the novel, I think the newer version is far superior. Even taking the book out of consideration the new one is much more compelling.

    • @Lone432345
      @Lone432345 Před 8 lety +3

      That just so happened to have most of the same dialog and scenes.

    • @kayleighbrown459
      @kayleighbrown459 Před 6 lety +9

      Really. I've never met anyone that didn't praise the hell out of it. Maybe it's a culture thing.

  • @AB-qr8ln
    @AB-qr8ln Před 7 lety +38

    do a magnificent 7 of new vs old, that would be a good one because both are the same but very different with a lot of great moments.

    • @elfsieben1450
      @elfsieben1450 Před 3 lety +1

      If you like The Magnificent Seven, you should also like Seven Samurai, the original Eastern that started it all, and also Parada, a European remake that takes place in modern times and features war veterans as private security guards.

  • @andycanoy863
    @andycanoy863 Před rokem +6

    The True Grit movie comparisons remind of the many times I often tell people who debate why the gritty, darker, more adult Batman films are better than the cheesy versions or others like it to not belittle those that like the campy versions more. The styles and tones are different but what is "better" in the end all comes down to preference. There's no scientific answer as to what's the better version. Some prefer one version over the other and that's okay. It's film and we should enjoy what we like regardless of the critics or general public's perception of it. Keep an open mind and be objective when discussing movies. If a movie has bad reviews but you like it that's okay. If a movie has stellar reviews but in your opinion is not as good as people say it is that's okay too. You're not weird. Don't take opinions and reviews of anything too seriously because your brain will get way too exhausted from overthinking. Its not a big deal. You're not gonna save the world if any form of media should be loved or hated by everyone.

    • @captainmarvelwilson508
      @captainmarvelwilson508 Před 4 měsíci +1

      This is the same reason why I do not prefer the overall dark take on Superman by Zack Snyder for the most part.

  • @ntcnetwork9934
    @ntcnetwork9934 Před 3 lety +3

    That’s funny. I never actually saw the remake’s ending as depressing. More bittersweet. I felt like she was satisfied with how everything went down, but it was still sad that she never saw Rooster again. But maybe that’s just me.

  • @coreymoore1288
    @coreymoore1288 Před 7 lety +8

    I kinda wish he would do an old vs new episode for Fargo. By that I mean comparing the movie to the tv series, of course. Idk I thought it would be interesting

  • @chrissimmons8660
    @chrissimmons8660 Před 5 lety +2

    It was really fun to see a movie that takes place in my home state of Arkansas, or at least mentions the locations that aren’t actually visited. Whenever they mentioned a city I knew exactly where they were talking about, it just helped me get into the story much more easily. Fort Smith, Little Rock, Dardanelle, Jonesboro, Pine Bluff, etc. They even mentioned Monroe, Louisiana, the twin city of my Mom’s hometown (which is West Monroe). True Grit will probably always be special to me because very rarely do I find any kind of story that takes place in Arkansas and the surrounding area, not to mention the fact that it’s just a great story (American classic novel and two great movies).

  • @LovlyHorror
    @LovlyHorror Před 8 lety +5

    Yeah, well, that's just like, your opinion man. Which I'm in total agreement on.

  • @CrypticWzard
    @CrypticWzard Před 5 lety +5

    The main thing I liked about the 2011 versions is that it actually follows the book more closely. It's always been a thing with me, when I see movies that are supposed to be based on a book but don't follow the book hardly at all. I hate that. Both movies here do follow the book fairly well, but the ending in the 2011 version was the same as the book's ending.

    • @captainmarvelwilson508
      @captainmarvelwilson508 Před 5 měsíci

      It came out in 2010, but yeah, I think the movie is better as an adaptation and highlights the gritty nature of the Old West.

  • @nicholassoland8025
    @nicholassoland8025 Před 4 lety +7

    I love John Wayne performances but the new one was pretty damn good

  • @tumppuman
    @tumppuman Před 5 lety +4

    Personally I feel that the remake is so much better that there was really no point comparing. And it seems I was right.

  • @charlietheanteater3918
    @charlietheanteater3918 Před 5 lety +6

    One thing the remake did do much better than the original was the death of Tom Chaney. In the original his death didn’t feel satisfying, Rooster just kills him and rescues Mattie.
    In the remake Mattie shoots Chaney, which is much better. It’s after her all her fight, and he killed her father so it’s much more fitting.
    Besides that I feel like I’m in the minority here but I like the original a lot more than the re make.

  • @Mad77max77
    @Mad77max77 Před 7 lety +7

    I just watched the new one, it was a great movie !
    I wasn't expecting that ending, though...

  • @lincolnnoronha4128
    @lincolnnoronha4128 Před 8 lety +21

    Poor, poor Arya Stark...

  • @brandonleague3641
    @brandonleague3641 Před 2 lety +3

    I saw the remake in the theater with my cousin. Back in the good old days. And absolutely loved it.
    I TOO feel the remake is the superior product.

  • @Becktastic01
    @Becktastic01 Před 5 lety +5

    They're both good. The remake is more like the book though. I love the book.

  • @18Gingasoldier
    @18Gingasoldier Před 8 lety +32

    I haven't seen either film yet, but I'm thinking of seeing both :3

  • @LockeWick
    @LockeWick Před 8 lety +21

    I actually rarely enjoy Westerns and the 2011 True Grit as well as the 2007 3:10 to Yuma have been the only two Westerns that I absolutely adore.

    • @LockeWick
      @LockeWick Před 8 lety

      Dallas Cowboys For Life I don't really count Django as a Western, it is too stylized with Tarantino flare (which I adore) for me to say it is a true Western. I have yet to watch any of Clint Eastwood's western films.

    • @thomas1910
      @thomas1910 Před 8 lety

      +John Klein Wow, true western and you haven't seen any? Most of his style is homage to spagetti westerns!

    • @DavidRYates-bx9qg
      @DavidRYates-bx9qg Před 8 lety

      I think the 2007 3:10 to Yuma was amazing. Not as big a fan of True Grit, but maybe I need to replay it.
      Watching this made me miss Red Dead Redemption.

    • @JigglePhysics3000
      @JigglePhysics3000 Před 8 lety

      What about No Country For Old Men?

    • @formulaarena9193
      @formulaarena9193 Před 7 lety +2

      This x10. I feel Django is way overrated and the styling of the film put me off.

  • @tovolume
    @tovolume Před 5 lety +3

    I agree with Nostalgia Critic, the new True Grit is a re-adaptation to the book

    • @kamdan2011
      @kamdan2011 Před 5 lety

      Mister Who, that goes without saying.

  • @alexandriawilliams8227
    @alexandriawilliams8227 Před 5 lety +2

    I like how honest you seem in this; many who did it better videos go back and forth between movies so you don't know who will pull out on top. You just pick which ever deserves it with no regard to keeping it even and that is refreshing.

  • @darthmaul4870
    @darthmaul4870 Před 7 lety +10

    Sometimes I fantasize that Clint Eastwood and John Wayne are in an epic gunfight.
    Also, Mattie in the old True Grit looks like 2013 Justin Bieber

    • @ellnats
      @ellnats Před 3 lety

      true but at least shes better looking, HEYOHHHHHHH!!!!!!!

  • @douglasmiller5640
    @douglasmiller5640 Před 6 lety +43

    I really hope I'm not the only one here who agrees with NC that the 2011 version was better.

    • @moracha1971
      @moracha1971 Před 5 lety +1

      Douglas Miller I Think The 2011 Version Is Better.

  • @josephbarrett2425
    @josephbarrett2425 Před 8 lety +1

    Can we talk about how fucking incredible the score in the remake is?

  • @aajiv1748
    @aajiv1748 Před 5 lety

    The essence of both the Hathaway and Coen brothers films is the Portis novel. The Hathaway version because it uses the Protis story. The Coen brothers improve on the Hathaway version buy not only using the Protis story but adding the spirit and , yes, the grit of that novel. The Coen version has more authentic historical setting density to it too. It true the Coen version's ending is more like the Portis novel.

  • @TheDisneyLover58
    @TheDisneyLover58 Před 8 lety +32

    John Wayne is my chuck Norris. You don't mess with him.

  • @gossamer999
    @gossamer999 Před 6 lety +4

    11:52 I dunno why but that line makes me laugh every time.

  • @nateds7326
    @nateds7326 Před 6 lety +2

    You can realky tell which one is better by listening to the soundtracks back to back.

  • @michaeld8280
    @michaeld8280 Před 4 lety +2

    I really love both films and the original is one of the most iconic films in the genre. The ending of the the remake pushes it over the top for me. Its just so damn empty, exactly how revenge often turns out being.

  • @00WhiteBlade
    @00WhiteBlade Před 8 lety +5

    9:07
    you did not just say matt damon'd'

  • @iowaclass5657
    @iowaclass5657 Před 7 lety +4

    I disagree with the choice for the girl. While the drive for vengeance was slightly more interesting, it also made her really one-dimensional. Yeah, it was cool that she was so driven for revenge, but that's all her character is. That's all there is to see. The older version had a character that was more complex and relatable, and changed as the movie went on.
    Overall, I also disagree with the overall choice. I felt that the new version took itself way too seriously and exaggerated a lot of the emotions, though this was due mostly to the girl. I like the new one, but I personally found it a lot less entertaining and was actually somewhat depressed by it. It felt too modern, I could tell this was made in the 21st century. I don't mean that as in the camera work and picture was better, I mean that like most modern movies, it felt like they tried to hard to make every character overly complex. A drunk is a drunk, and drunks get angry, but how angry is subject to the drunkard. John Wayne's drunk obviously held it better, he's a big guy, and I felt like his level of emotion when drunk was more in accordance with how a drunk his size would act.
    That's my two cents.

    • @kamdan2011
      @kamdan2011 Před 5 lety

      Iowa Class, Steinfeld’s portrayal of Mattie worked because she ends up being a spinster at the end with a missing arm. It was to show how a drive for vengeance can lead a person to a distant and cold lifestyle.

  • @TheSmart-CasualGamer
    @TheSmart-CasualGamer Před 4 lety +1

    I really can't pick between Campbell and Damon. I cannot do it, as they do it in COMPLETELY different ways, and both do it brilliantly.

  • @elianne4753
    @elianne4753 Před 8 měsíci +1

    The original is a classic, but the remake is definitely superior in terms of book faithfulness, acting, casting, & cinematography. Plus, young Hailee gave one hell of a performance.

  • @roguechevelle
    @roguechevelle Před 7 lety +6

    The Duke will always be the best Rooster to me. I can't help liking his charm. I also genuinely felt he grew to care about the girl. And i'm sorry his scene at the end riding on his horse shooting is awesome and iconic.

  • @jasminegreentea2723
    @jasminegreentea2723 Před 8 lety +6

    "La-buff"

  • @DavidAWA
    @DavidAWA Před 8 měsíci

    "To seek revenge may lead to hell, but everyone does it, if seldom, as well" - Sweeney Todd

  • @Alejandroigarabide
    @Alejandroigarabide Před 4 lety +2

    0:06 STAAAAATUE OF BIG DOG WITH FLEAAAAAAAS
    Good luck unhearing that one.

  • @TheChaosDragoness
    @TheChaosDragoness Před 8 lety +3

    Quarters in the Big Lebowski Jar from this review alone: 7

  • @scantopup2226
    @scantopup2226 Před 5 lety +3

    I like to think the bear guy is nick cage's character from the wicker man later in life and that rooster is roy from r.i.p.d while he was alive

  • @Moonshinedave1
    @Moonshinedave1 Před 3 lety

    This might best explain how I feel about this: The song "sound of silence" by Simon and Garfunkel, although it is the exact same song, with the exact same lyrics, I love Simon and Garfunkel's version, by no lesser extent I like Disturbed version, I don't compare the two, because I love 'em both. If you understand that, then you understand how I feel about both True Grit movies.

  • @joshuapatrick682
    @joshuapatrick682 Před 5 lety +3

    I feel like the points the old version won were pity points so it wouldn't be a washout....the acting of the originals in Ned's gang is so wooden including Duvall himself that it actually takes you out of the film and I saw this as a kid because it was one of my grandpaw's favorite westerns and therefore favorite films.I grew up loving it but the retelling was so powerful that it quickly became my favorite version. The Coens know how to craft a western which gives you a feeling somewhat like an existential crises where you yearn for something like that but at the same time are terrified of it. All good westerns do, whether modern or antiquated.

  • @maggiehatt2358
    @maggiehatt2358 Před 8 lety +7

    The old true grit is WAY BETTER to me!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @GidiMuijtjens
    @GidiMuijtjens Před 7 lety +4

    6 Big Lebowski jokes in 1 movie (7 if you count this as an actual joke itself) well played.

  • @TJMcDonough
    @TJMcDonough Před 9 měsíci +1

    Here's mine.
    Best Story: 2010
    Best Mattie: 2010
    Best Supporting Cast: 2010
    Best Villains: 2010
    Best Rooster: 2010
    2010 version dominates.

  • @bobbyellis5006
    @bobbyellis5006 Před 6 lety +2

    It's pretty apt that this is a review down by the Nostalgia Critic because there sure are a ton of people looking at this through nostalgia tinted glasses.

  • @thegamingprovince4697
    @thegamingprovince4697 Před 6 lety +17

    True grit with John Wayne will always be my favorite

  • @shadowman2192
    @shadowman2192 Před 7 lety +19

    Doug definitely got it right with this one.

  • @Dynakirby63
    @Dynakirby63 Před 5 lety +2

    Six years later, the murderer got so drunk he wiped up half the universe's population.

  • @josephdannivitz1167
    @josephdannivitz1167 Před 4 lety +2

    As strange as this is about to sound, as much as I like both performances, I liked Hailee Steinfeld's performance over Kim Darby's for the exact opposite reasons. Whenever I thought of Kim Darby as Mattie Ross, I always thought of her as just stubborn and resilient, no more, no less. Whenever I thought of Hailee Steinfeld's Mattie Ross, I always remembered how three-dimensional she was, and how she was far more than just stubborn and resilient.

    • @bOmBAsTiK
      @bOmBAsTiK Před rokem +2

      Yes, it was a very-layered, Oscar-worthy performance

  • @izzyrose2424
    @izzyrose2424 Před 8 lety +51

    The girl from the remake crazy hell bent on revenge kinda left a sasuke uchiha vibe xD

    • @levesteM
      @levesteM Před 8 lety +10

      +Izzy Rose And they both lost their left arm in the end

    • @user-di2jp4vm1u
      @user-di2jp4vm1u Před 8 lety

      I said the same thing lol

    • @mrwindupbird101
      @mrwindupbird101 Před 8 lety

      +MrDoverfield Hey at least she didn't become a terrorist for a bit lol

    • @Lone432345
      @Lone432345 Před 8 lety +2

      I didn't find the little terminator wannabe compelling at all.

    • @blixer8384
      @blixer8384 Před 7 lety +2

      Frankly I liked her.

  • @rhettgedies7467
    @rhettgedies7467 Před 8 lety +9

    I grew up on the original, and I personally didn't like the remake. I've heard it's closer to the book, but I'll always take The Duke over The Dude (it's definitely one of my favorite John Wayne films hands down) as Rooster.
    Wayne's Cogburn also has literal "true grit" and tenacity. Bridges' literally almost gives up midway (plus, I do remember getting frustrated with Bridges' mumbling. He was so hard to understand half the time!).
    And though some films hollow or depressing endings leave an echoing message that is fitting (_Snowpiercer_), I forgot how the remake ended until watching this video. It apparently left me feeling nothing and forgetting it.
    So again, it's personal bias, it's not like NC wasn't showing it either.

    • @toddlewis8715
      @toddlewis8715 Před 8 lety +4

      +Rhett Gedies
      I actually liked the True Grit remake, but I agree the Duke is always the best. While I liked Jeff Bridges Rooster Cogburn, he did annoy me with his incoherent mumbling. The duke does many things, but annoy is not won of them.

  • @sorenthefilmbrony
    @sorenthefilmbrony Před 5 lety +1

    Big Lebowski references: 1:02 1:52 2:44 5:57 10:38 10:59

  • @iowaclass5657
    @iowaclass5657 Před 7 lety +1

    I disagree with the choice for the girl. While the drive for vengeance was slightly more interesting, it also made her really one-dimensional. Yeah, it was cool that she was so driven for revenge, but that's all her character is. That's all there is to see. The older version had a character that was more complex and relatable, and changed as the movie went on.

  • @cedricgist7614
    @cedricgist7614 Před 2 lety +5

    Liked your comparison. Not surprised at your conclusion because the quality and impact of the 2011 version surprised me when I first saw it. I saw a bootleg copy of the new one and was so impressed that I vowed to buy my own copy full price. Just accomplished that recently via CZcams.
    I really didn't expect much from the Coen version: probably watched it to marvel at their audacity.and ridicule their quirkiness. I was dead wrong. They studied the novel (which I still have not read) and lovingly exerted themselves in adhering to the storyline. I liked that Arkansas dialogue in both films.
    I know many felt that John Wayne received lifetime achievement recognition with the Oscar he won for playing Cogburn. It was a good story and I think he did step outside his comfort zone in taking the role - if only in mouthing the stilted dialogue.
    Jeff Bridges didn't just approach Wayne's performance - he made Cogburn his own.
    The revelation for me was Hailee Steinfeld. I think Kim Darby was considerably older than the heroine in the novel - and I accepted her as I did Judy Garland in "The Wizard of Oz."
    Hailee Steinfeld looked like the 14-year-old she was playing - and the maturity she displayed was amazing. I'm glad you scoffed at her playing a supporting actress: she carried the movie
    All told, the 1969 version is a classic - and the Coen Brothers remake in no way takes a backseat to the original. I meant to mention Carter Burwell's score. He based it on two hymns I am well familiar with - "Hold To God's Unchanging Hand," and, "Leaning On the Everlasting Arms." I picked up on both of them as they played at points. It seems strange, since Mattie Ross became such a bitter woman, but the music and message fit the film for me. Even now, tears begin to well in my eyes when I watch these clips and hear the music. Thanks for your comparison review.

  • @Skullkid20999
    @Skullkid20999 Před 8 lety +22

    I wasn't aware it was remake when I first saw it. Now I see this is a remake done RIGHT!

  • @natdanae5945
    @natdanae5945 Před 4 lety

    I watched this movie for the first time today and I loved it, but I still wanted to see someone rip it to shreds. Searched for cinemasins and got this. NOSTALGIA CRITIC NEVER DISAPPOINTS

  • @robertreisner6119
    @robertreisner6119 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I saw the 1969 movie of True Grit in an Anchorage movie theater and seen it on T.V several times over the years. I am a John Wayne fan and remains as one of my favorite movie actors. In 2011 I saw the Coen Brothers True Grit movie. I think that the 2010 version was more authentic for the viewers. I keep watching this movie quite often and enjoy the later movie the most. Great job by all actors especially Forrester who practice doctoring for those who will stand still for it. So my vote is for the later version.