TOMBSTONE (1993) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION

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  • čas přidán 2. 07. 2024
  • Enjoy our reaction as we watch "Tombstone" for the first time!
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    0:00 - Intro
    5:52 - Reaction
    46:59 - Review
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Komentáře • 4,3K

  • @HoopleHeadUSA
    @HoopleHeadUSA Před rokem +2360

    Val Kilmer deserved an Oscar for this role. Absolutely iconic!

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 Před rokem +98

      2 One for each Gun!

    • @NecramoniumVideo
      @NecramoniumVideo Před rokem +80

      He had many more roles in the 90's that deserved a Oscar, like his portrayal of Jim Morrison in Oliver Stone's The Doors from 1991,

    • @Imyerda
      @Imyerda Před rokem +14

      Agreed 👍

    • @McShaganpronouncedShaegen
      @McShaganpronouncedShaegen Před rokem +101

      Val is to Doc what Heath was to Joker.

    • @telsat
      @telsat Před rokem +49

      @@NecramoniumVideo I liked Val Kilmer in The Saint

  • @sikiliflores4122
    @sikiliflores4122 Před rokem +541

    In an 1896 article, Wyatt Earp said “Doc [Holliday] was a dentist whom necessity had made a gambler; a gentleman whom disease had made a frontier vagabond; a philosopher whom life had made a caustic wit; a long lean ash-blond fellow nearly dead with consumption, and at the same time the most skillful gambler and the nerviest, speediest, deadliest man with a gun that I ever knew.”

    • @clevelandcbi
      @clevelandcbi Před rokem +87

      This is literally the most badass thing I've ever read.

    • @corytheobald2166
      @corytheobald2166 Před 11 měsíci +25

      @@clevelandcbi I concur!

    • @RazorBacksFan1980
      @RazorBacksFan1980 Před 10 měsíci +23

      He was a dentist. He moved (from somewhere, I forget... up north I think) to Denison Texas (not far from Dallas) to practice dentistry. Denison is not very far from my hometown. It's true. He was a dentist, which is how he contracted TB. He moved to the west due to the drier air, gave up dentistry and made his own way through gambling and fighting.

    • @clevelandcbi
      @clevelandcbi Před 10 měsíci +11

      @@RazorBacksFan1980 I thought that was how he got it too, but now I'm seeing comments saying he got it at 17 from his mother?? Did you catch that Tarantino made King Schultz in Django a former dentist too? I somehow missed that but my daughter caught it.

    • @msw8966
      @msw8966 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Iconic quotes

  • @DarthRaider520
    @DarthRaider520 Před rokem +308

    "You're no daisy at'all." Cold blooded thing to say to a man collapsing under your sidearm headshot. A blind shot. Hip fire. Greatest rendering of the old west I've ever seen in a movie. Val Kilmer was robbed the accolades he deserved for this. Probably one of the most memorable performances I can think of.

    • @beentheredonethat5908
      @beentheredonethat5908 Před 9 měsíci +5

      Well said! I do wish they hadn't used the hip shot though, no real gunfighter used such shots, that was for trick shooters, and even the best trick shooters would tell how they'd NEVER use a trick or hip shot in a real fight under any circumstances. I guess it worked well for the movie, who woykd knjw such things besides needs like me lol.

    • @DarthRaider520
      @DarthRaider520 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @beentheredonethat5908 that's actually good to know, thank you.

    • @jtoland2333
      @jtoland2333 Před 9 měsíci +6

      He may not have the statue, but we all know he was the real winner. He's the winner in our hearts! I hope he knows we feel that way. ❤

    • @BigTroyT
      @BigTroyT Před 8 měsíci +6

      @@jtoland2333 Exactly right. We all know he won, and deserved every bit of it and more.

    • @frankkinley6272
      @frankkinley6272 Před 8 měsíci

      DarthRaider520,
      I agree totally with what you said. I somehow wish the Academy could present Val with a lifetime achievement award.
      I know it's not the same, but they need to figure something out to try & makeup for the mistake.
      Hopefully someday they can reward Val with the recognition he so rightfully deserves. It was a masterpiece of acting. A+

  • @BigTomJeff
    @BigTomJeff Před rokem +326

    Doc replying “I got two guns… one for each of ya’s” is such a comically golden line that’s looked over

    • @airborngrmp1
      @airborngrmp1 Před rokem +23

    • @AlanG512
      @AlanG512 Před rokem +3

      I quote it all the time!

    • @patrickkanas3874
      @patrickkanas3874 Před rokem +10

      I once said that line after a night of drinking. My dad cracked up harder than I'd ever heard up till that point

    • @1perfectpitch
      @1perfectpitch Před rokem

      That's not what he said ya ignorant wretch. Ya not ya's He wasn't a yankee.

    • @1perfectpitch
      @1perfectpitch Před rokem

      That's not what he said ya ignorant wretch. Ya not ya's He wasn't a yankee.

  • @Cadinho93
    @Cadinho93 Před rokem +718

    "I'm your huckleberry."
    In my opinion, Val Kilmer's greatest role. His portrayal as Doc Holliday was what made this film. Also, Val Kilmer wasn't even nominated for a Best Supporting Actor Oscar, but he should have been.
    Also, the scene where Wyatt Earp (Kurt Russell) is wading through the river actually happened. There were a dozen men firing all over the place and Wyatt never so much as got grazed.

    • @ariochiv
      @ariochiv Před rokem +18

      Agreed. Amazing performance by Kilmer. He steals every scene he's in, and that's not a bad thing in this case.

    • @antoniochasten3192
      @antoniochasten3192 Před rokem +20

      Agreed. I saw this film in theaters when it was released in 1993. I was 22 and grew up on Westerns because I watched them with my grandparents. Loved this film then and now. Even to this day, 30 years later, that last scene between Doc (Kilmer) and Earp (Russell) still brings tears to my eyes. Such a great film.

    • @rightwired
      @rightwired Před rokem +7

      @@antoniochasten3192 I was an usher at a theater in 1993. I sold you popcorn, probably, but got to see this about 50 times...for free! lol sorry. it was the only benefit of the job!

    • @igloo2158
      @igloo2158 Před rokem +2

      @@antoniochasten3192 same here. Saw in theater at 22 lol. Maybe you were there!! 😂

    • @igloo2158
      @igloo2158 Před rokem

      @@akashenk never knew that.

  • @gjhoward
    @gjhoward Před rokem +106

    Fun fact: When Doc is spinning the cup, it's funny and terrifying because it's not a pistol but he mimicked Ringo's movements exactly... and Ringo knows it.

    • @johnfriday5169
      @johnfriday5169 Před 11 měsíci +13

      Focusing on the spinning let Doc not reveal his draw like Ringo did.

    • @mcartman89
      @mcartman89 Před 11 měsíci +8

      "Behold a pale horse... Who rides on it is death" the only real pale horse the actress rides on during the picnic scene. Hell and death follows.

    • @rcherry1978
      @rcherry1978 Před 11 měsíci +18

      Ringos gun twirling exhibition was an intimidation ploy to show he was the alpha he's aware of Holidays reputation with a gun but Holiday throws it back in his face by mimicking his moves with a cup as if to say I'm not impressed or intimidated by you

  • @mikephotos225
    @mikephotos225 Před rokem +103

    The rest of the story: Wyatt and Josephine Marcus were together for the rest of their lives. In his later years, Wyatt liked to hang around the movie studios in Los Angeles. A young prop man and aspiring actor loved to sit with Wyatt and listen to his stories. He was especially taken with the slow, measured way that Wyatt spoke, and adopted his way of talking. The prop man, Marion Morrison, became an actor and changed his name to John Wayne. So when you listened to the way that John Wayne talked, you were in a way listening to Wyatt Earp. Wyatt died in Los Angeles in 1929. Josephine lived until 1946.

    • @welcometothemovies9157
      @welcometothemovies9157 Před 2 měsíci +4

      And surprised Wayne didn't play Earp in a movie. Fonda played him in Darling Clementine

  • @Shiirow
    @Shiirow Před rokem +100

    "Doc" Holliday was in fact a doctor, he had a thriving dental practice until he contracted TB (aka a 'lunger') and had to close it. He ended up being a wandering gambler and gunfighter, in a vain hope of not dying of TB in some hospital bed. The end of the movie when he looks down at his feet and laughs saying "Ill be damned" meaning despite all his attempts, he didnt die with his boots on and instead died in a hospital bed. This is one of the reasons why he was so deadly a gunfighter, not just his speed but also his devil may care attitude, taunting people to go ahead and try to kill him.

    • @gourdguru
      @gourdguru Před 9 měsíci +13

      i love just how many potential "Suicide attempts" are in the film too.
      - the fight with bill bailey in the beginning, intentionally disarming himself and placing his loaded guns on the table, barrels facing himself, handles facing Bailey. he may as well have just pre-cocked it for him.
      - when he runs out of ammo in his primary pistol during the Corral shootout, he challenges that cowboy to shoot him, then intentionally misses(cowboy is at doc's 12 o clock, doc's whole arm is aiming for 2 : 30), he knew the fight was over, the earps were safe, and they'd light the cowboy up after the cowboy shot him.
      - the drunken gambling with Ike clanton, Morgan say he's been at it for hours, Ike just came in maybe an hour ago, and Morg tried to get him to call it a night but he refused. he refused because Ike was exactly the kind of person he'd been waiting for: uneducated, hostile, impulsive, easy to goad into a fight. that's why he lay's it on so thick with the spelling contest line and the "HWHY IKE, HWHATEVAH DO YOU MEAN??".
      - and then finally you have the duel with ringo. Doc just got told his health is deteriorated and he's now on a very limited timeline. he shoots ringo, once again saving Wyatt from danger, but Ringo's still alive and standing. He sees another potential opportunity to check out, and starts goading Ringo to shoot him but Ringo can't get his gun up and discharges his shot into the ground before collapsing. Doc's line "Your no daisy, you're no daisy at all" is both mocking him for losing and also is an admonishment of ringo's broken promise "I'll put you out of your misery". hence why doc repeated the line from their previous exchange, "say hwhen....", before they drew. he was reminding Ringo of his promise. Doc was hoping for a double KO.

    • @metadeth578
      @metadeth578 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@gourdguru doc was in colorado when ringo died!

    • @7Earthsky
      @7Earthsky Před 5 měsíci

      I thought Lunger was his real name LOL.....I learn more and more each time i watch that movie...Such a classic. :)

    • @metadeth578
      @metadeth578 Před 4 měsíci

      he usually shot the gun out of people's hand so he wouldn't get strung up or hanged!!

    • @williammoore1980
      @williammoore1980 Před 4 měsíci +2

      I have seen this movie I don’t know how many times. It was watched obsessively my first deployment, nearly 20 years after I got out I still feel compelled to finish it any time it’s on. And in all that time I never knew what “lunger” met. Appreciate you finally solving the mystery.

  • @brianmulligan3014
    @brianmulligan3014 Před rokem +113

    Best line ever, “hell, I got lots of friends” “I don’t”

    • @brianmulligan3014
      @brianmulligan3014 Před rokem +7

      A very quotable movie

    • @johnfriday5169
      @johnfriday5169 Před rokem +7

      I prefer;
      You ever seen anything like that?
      Hell, I never even heard of anything like that.

    • @samellowery
      @samellowery Před rokem +6

      Buck Taylor great actor and fine person he does artwork. If you notice he's wearing a square and compass of a freemason around his neck which would be a small nod to why he has lots of friends.

    • @michaeljames6817
      @michaeljames6817 Před rokem +10

      "I was just foolin' about"
      "I wasn't."

    • @ChrisBrown-or8ky
      @ChrisBrown-or8ky Před rokem +3

      I ain't easy and I ain't your kid

  • @need_to_chill4793
    @need_to_chill4793 Před rokem +267

    Doc Holliday was originally a dentist, hence the name doc. Val Kilmer 100% deserved an Oscar for this role, the best character to ever grace the screen. So glad you enjoyed soo much and hope you do more westerns, its an expansive genre that covers a lot of depth, especially if you watch the good ones.. loved the reaction as always 😁😁

    • @kangyuan
      @kangyuan Před rokem +1

      He was in love with his cousin, and she did become a nun.

    • @jp3813
      @jp3813 Před rokem +7

      Yes, Val deserved the Oscar that year. But so did Ralph Fiennes, Leonardo DiCaprio, Sean Penn, etc...

    • @avantegarde7797
      @avantegarde7797 Před rokem +1

      I always thought Val Kilmer absolutely stole this film right out from under Kurt Russell, who was quite good as Wyatt Earp, but Kilmer was just on another level. The height of his career.

  • @jefftucker9225
    @jefftucker9225 Před rokem +147

    This movie still holds up well after 30 years, it's a modern classic

  • @LoneWalker1995
    @LoneWalker1995 Před 7 měsíci +25

    The scene where doc spins the cup, is actually a dynamic moment. Ringo goes ahead and shows doc his speed with a pistol, but doc never shows him how fast he is.

  • @mikehigbee2320
    @mikehigbee2320 Před rokem +205

    "You called down the thunder, now you got it!" I love that line. I use it when I get frustrated with hard to open packages.

    • @frankgesuele6298
      @frankgesuele6298 Před rokem +15

      "Say when."
      Simple & deadly.

    • @jimmymckay73
      @jimmymckay73 Před rokem +4

      Those clamshell packages are the devils work 😂

    • @TheLevitatingFleem
      @TheLevitatingFleem Před rokem +2

      😭😂

    • @NickolaiVolkov
      @NickolaiVolkov Před rokem +6

      Hahahaha!!! I just might have to adopt the line for usage in the same scenario. Brilliant, sir! XD

    • @ricomusap614
      @ricomusap614 Před rokem +3

      You tellem I'm coming and hell's coming with me

  • @danielmatthews1522
    @danielmatthews1522 Před rokem +211

    The "I'm your huckleberry" was nothing until Val delivered it here in his iconic role. In a movie full of good actors doing good acting, it was primarily his character that took this movie from very good to all-time top tier in the Western genre.

    • @brycehiigel235
      @brycehiigel235 Před rokem +14

      It is actually Huckle Bearer. The Huckle is the handle on the casket. Bearer is the pallbearer.

    • @greggross8856
      @greggross8856 Před rokem +10

      @@brycehiigel235 No, it's not. "Huckle Bearer" would've made sense, but he actually said "huckleberry." Val Kilmer said as much, and it's in the script, which you can read online.

    • @brycehiigel235
      @brycehiigel235 Před rokem +2

      @@greggross8856 that’s what I thought at first. But from another reaction and listening closely you can really hear him say Huckle Bearer in on of his comments.

    • @Johnny_Socko
      @Johnny_Socko Před rokem +8

      Kilmer as Doc was one of the most magnetic performances I've ever seen. Every single shot of him evokes some kind of reaction in the viewer. And then he got to deliver the superb dialogue from Kevin Jarre's screenplay. Talk about lightning in a bottle.

    • @greggross8856
      @greggross8856 Před rokem +7

      @@slchance8839 In the script, it's huckleberry. And Val himself said that's what he said. I trust the script and I trust him.

  • @gonzostrangelove6107
    @gonzostrangelove6107 Před 11 měsíci +38

    What I have always loved, and it's so subtle, is that even after Doc says he doesn't want to play anymore, Wyatt deals the cards--and Doc STILL wins. Such a great touch.

  • @diamondwchamp
    @diamondwchamp Před rokem +46

    Charlton Heston's voice is so commanding and distinguished. Robert Mitchum was outstanding in narrating this movie. There were tons of Stars in this movie. Val Kilmer was the biggest hit in this movie.

  • @Cherokee9898
    @Cherokee9898 Před rokem +58

    “There’s no normal life, Wyatt, it’s just life. Get on with it.” One of my favorite quotes.

  • @kenlangston3451
    @kenlangston3451 Před rokem +78

    Johnny Ringo was played by Michael Biehn who played Kyle in the first Terminator movie.

    • @josephwalther5979
      @josephwalther5979 Před rokem +6

      And Michael and John Paxson we're both in the movie Aliens

    • @gregsager2062
      @gregsager2062 Před rokem +6

      @@josephwalther5979 Biehn also appeared in the second season episode of *The Mandalorian* "The Jedi". Cassie's also seen him as Commander Anderson in *The Rock* . By this point, I'm pretty surprised that she didn't recognize him in *Tombstone* .

    • @jenniferfoster1692
      @jenniferfoster1692 Před rokem +2

      And Hicks from Aliens! Also in The Rock and others.

    • @kenlangston3451
      @kenlangston3451 Před rokem

      @@gregsager2062 like they said it was the mustaches. Lol

  • @michaelalderman6815
    @michaelalderman6815 Před rokem +73

    For a somewhat quirky western you should watch “The Outlaw Josey Wales.” Released in 1976, it was produced and directed by, and starring Clint Eastwood. The cast includes the incomparable Chief Dan George as Lone Watie, who steals almost every scene he’s in. The movie makes a great effort to use props and costumes authentic to its time setting (mid 1860s); no Colt SSA revolvers and Winchester ‘73s, no Levi’s. Action sequences are very well done. The film also has a fairly sympathetic portrayal of Native Americans. You should watch it and “endeavor to persevere.”

    • @robgalloway48
      @robgalloway48 Před 10 měsíci +6

      "All I got is this piece of hard rock candy, but it ain't for eatin' it's for lookin' through."

    • @BigTroyT
      @BigTroyT Před 8 měsíci +3

      It's not for eatin', it's for lookin' through!

    • @robgalloway48
      @robgalloway48 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@BigTroyT my bad going from memory, haven't seen it in a while

  • @Pizza-bi1ey
    @Pizza-bi1ey Před rokem +75

    I've seen this movie about 47,285 times but watching it with Cassie and Carly was the best time 😘

    • @larryw.c.4544
      @larryw.c.4544 Před 10 měsíci +3

      I agree. I know they get paid for reacting to movies, but I still like to watch them.

  • @trogo24
    @trogo24 Před rokem +118

    What's funny is the most unbelievable scene when Wyatt walked into the creek with bullets flying, shoots and kills curly bill is actually pretty accurate.

    • @LordVolkov
      @LordVolkov Před rokem +5

      Pistols were wildly inaccurate before rifling and standard ammunition were commonplace, especially if using powder & ball or beyond 50ft. Wyatt uses a shotgun because he knows he won't miss with scattershot.

    • @rovhalt6650
      @rovhalt6650 Před rokem +4

      @@LordVolkov Doesn't matter. He still went out.

    • @jamescheddar4896
      @jamescheddar4896 Před rokem

      @@LordVolkov these were some of the only shootouts to happen like this

    • @johnpalmer3848
      @johnpalmer3848 Před rokem +7

      @@LordVolkov Most of these handguns had rifled barrels. Pretty much began in the percussion cap revolver era with the Patterson.

    • @jmanganella123
      @jmanganella123 Před rokem +6

      Actually Wyatts posse stumbled upon curly bills posse in the desert about 25 miles northwest of tombstone. Wyatt hit him with both barrels and about cut him in half. But lots of interesting facts about this story from the locals. Worth visiting. I am going there again tomorrow.

  • @tonyb6354
    @tonyb6354 Před rokem +103

    Wyatt Earp was a real person. In his life, he didn't so much as get a scratch. Amazing. Kevin Costner did a film about Wyatt Earp too. It shows Wyatt in his younger days and what shaped him into the man he became.👍

    • @footofjuniper8212
      @footofjuniper8212 Před rokem +9

      A few years ago, this movie was playing on the TV in the coffee shop at work. A co-worker in her 30s had no idea Wyatt Earp was a real person.

    • @pressman1788
      @pressman1788 Před rokem +8

      I thought Wyatt Earp with Kevin Costner was a great movie. Different than Tombstone but equally great in my opinion.

    • @Rick-bi9fw
      @Rick-bi9fw Před rokem

      Ots crazy how new york in the 80s was more dangerous than the wild west. Lol animals

    • @Timeisaflat_O
      @Timeisaflat_O Před rokem +7

      I don't always like Kevin Costner as an actor, but he is amazing in all the westerns he has done. Not a single miss, but Open Range is probably my favorite western. Probably a controversial pick over Dances With Wolves, but the shootout was too good.

    • @egads3696
      @egads3696 Před rokem +1

      Total tangent, but wasnt costner the villian in 3000 miles to graceland?i need to rewatch that.thats a kurt movie too aint it?

  • @funjuror
    @funjuror Před 10 měsíci +26

    The whole cast grew their own moustaches, no fakes, and Wyatt Earp's great-grandson was also in the film. (maybe great, great grandson) One of the best ways to film history, lots of facts with artistic license stimulating the watcher to read up on the details.

  • @JohnDavis-mu9je
    @JohnDavis-mu9je Před rokem +32

    It was a true story. The gunfight at the OK Coral actually happened in Tombstone Arizona. Throughout much of his later years, Wyatt Earp regretted his tainted reputation in some social spheres as being a heavy-handed lawman. He was bitter about that, and the life full of adversity which he lived.

  • @Mike-wr7om
    @Mike-wr7om Před rokem +110

    Doc's death scene resonates with such a sense of poignant beauty. It is both sad and beautiful. The friendship between Wyatt and Doc is beautiful, the way Doc recalls his one true love and how she was all he ever wanted is beautiful (makes you wonder if he turned to a life of crime as a way to fill up the emptiness left in his heart), and Doc's "philosophy of life" is beautiful ("take that beauty and run; don't look back"). It is, without question, one of my favorite scenes in any movie. Anyone else love that scene as much as I do?

    • @clutchpedalreturnsprg7710
      @clutchpedalreturnsprg7710 Před rokem +12

      Yes, much to his surprise Doc died with his boots off.

    • @BlanketMan
      @BlanketMan Před rokem +8

      Earp’s final words to Holliday always get me: Thanks for always bein’ there, Doc.
      I mean, what else could you ask of a friend?

    • @blueeyedcowboy8291
      @blueeyedcowboy8291 Před rokem +3

      @@BlanketMan same. True Friendship.

    • @christopherking4932
      @christopherking4932 Před rokem +2

      Love that scene so much as well.

    • @alaneskew2664
      @alaneskew2664 Před rokem +3

      It's also very poignant his last lines in the movie were Doc Holliday's actual last words, him looking at his feet and saying, "Well, I'll be damned, this is funny.". Doc Holliday always thought he would die with his boots on.

  • @jaredlackey9177
    @jaredlackey9177 Před rokem +62

    The shootout between Wyatt and Curly Bill is one of those rare events that had to be toned down by Hollywood because the real event was too unbelievable. (Another great one is in The Ghost and the Darkness, also Val Kilmer). Irl Curly Bill had a shotgun loaded with buckshot. He shot both barrels directly at Wyatt and missed him completely. Afterward, he had bullet holes all around him through his coat. He was already a legend, but the whole "immortal" thing propelled him into mythical territory.

  • @EMarvinJohnson
    @EMarvinJohnson Před rokem +12

    Interesting historical fact. Wyatt was the only one who wasn't actually shot at the O. K. Corral. Doc, Virgil, and the other brother were all wounded in that gunfight. On a side note, I met a descendant of Wyatt Earp. He was very proud. Wyatt Earp is my second most favorite historical figure.

  • @timmooney7528
    @timmooney7528 Před rokem +18

    The movie gets extra credit for the narration by Robert Mitchum and the appearance of Charlton Heston. The cameo appearance of Frank Stallone in the early scene with Doc was bonus. At first I thought it was his brother Sly Stallone. I saw an interview with Michael Biehn where he said the good guys and the cowboys were intentionally kept from socializing off screen. This was done to keep the tension or rivalry between the actors.

  • @BloodSportA2
    @BloodSportA2 Před rokem +156

    It's understandable to not recognize Kurt Russell, since he's technically co-starring with Kurt Russell's Mustache to really bring the character to life.

    • @dangauldin6497
      @dangauldin6497 Před 9 měsíci

      Kurtrussell also ghost directed this whole thing

    • @AudieHolland
      @AudieHolland Před 7 měsíci +1

      I heard his mustache went solo after this movie, which is why we never see them together again.

    • @doghousereilly3795
      @doghousereilly3795 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@AudieHollanduntil the hateful eight 😊

    • @catofthecastle1681
      @catofthecastle1681 Před 2 měsíci +2

      It is unforgivable for any living breathing female not to recognize Kurt Russell no matter the facial hair!

  • @michaeljmobley
    @michaeljmobley Před rokem +143

    So much acting talent in this movie. And everyone nails their role. From every villain to hero, they all just nailed it!

    • @zzz7zzz9
      @zzz7zzz9 Před rokem +11

      yup. powers boothe was amazing.

    • @jesseherrera6096
      @jesseherrera6096 Před rokem +5

      ​@@zzz7zzz9 Well....Bye

    • @Swearengen1980
      @Swearengen1980 Před rokem +1

      The one exception in this movie, IMO, is Morgan Earp. Paxton did fine, but I don't like that they made him kind of a pansy. I like the portrayal of Morgan in "Wyatt Earp" better where he was gung ho on killing them all.

    • @Shadowman4710
      @Shadowman4710 Před rokem +2

      @@zzz7zzz9 Of course he was even better in "Deadwood."

    • @alswearengen6427
      @alswearengen6427 Před rokem +2

      Let's give Stephen Lange his due. He did a phenomenal job as Ike.

  • @ACF5074
    @ACF5074 Před rokem +12

    This movie is actually my all-time favorite western. Absolutely fantastic. Really amazing film. And it has an all-star cast. Kurt Russel as Wyatt, Val Kilmer as Doc, Bill Paxton as Morgan, Sam Elliott as Virgil, Powers Boothe as Curly Bill, Michael Biehn (Terminator) as Johnny Ringo, Billy Zane (Titanic) as Fabian, Stephen Lang (Avatar) as Ike Clanton, Thomas Hayden Church (Spider Man 3) as Billy Clanton, Michael Rooker (Guardians of The Galaxy) as McMasters, Jon Tenney (Fools Rush In) as Behan, Dana Delaney as Josephine, Billy Bob Thornton as Johnny Tyler, Jason Priestly (Beverly Hills 90210) as Billy Breckinridge, the legendary Charlton Heston as Henry Hooker and Robert Mitchum as the narrator...it just keeps going - and yes, it is a true story.

  • @jamesweible5357
    @jamesweible5357 Před 8 měsíci +10

    The "good Cowboy" y'all love so much is the guy that kidnapped peter in Guardians of the Galaxy. They did such a good job of costuming in this movie that many actors went unnoticed even by their fans. There was a sitcom in the 90s my family watched, I think it was called Wings, which had one of these actors in it. But I was the only one to recognize him and only then because of his voice. He was the guy Doc winked at in the OK Corral. Has since been in a lot of stuff.
    A few things, for a man, getting slapped in the face, especially by another man is degrading and one of the quickest ways to trigger rage. So for Wyatt to slap the guy and he back down, it showed he was a coward, then coming back with a shotgun cemented it. Also that actor was Billy Bob Thornton.
    Doc Holliday was known for saying he'd die with his boots on (true or not), thinking his lifestyle would kill him long before the TB, so his last scene where he said "this is funny", was the irony of his life coming back in his last moment. All the times he should have died, and he died in a bed with his boots off. That's why he picked the fight with Ringo, he always hoped to meet someone who could best him and kill him before the TB got him. So his line of "You're no Daisy at all" calls back to when Ringo was picking a fight, and he said, "you're daisy if you do". Daisy being a western colloquialism for good/excellent.
    Virgil Earp was played by Sam Elliot, who WAS in A Star Is Born (the newest one) with Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper. He was even in a marvel movie, but unfortunately everyone forgets that movie exists.
    The historical accuracy of the movie has been debated since it came out, but it's agreed that it's MOSTLY accurate. It IS true that early western movie stars were at his funeral, and Tom Mix was known to be a hard man who never showed emotion, so for him to cry was something special. This movie does such a great job of using old terms, ideas, and language and putting them into a movie that stands the test of time.

    • @sorrowschism
      @sorrowschism Před 4 měsíci

      2 Marvel movies

    • @sterling557
      @sterling557 Před 26 dny

      William S. Hart was the other Western Actor mentioned as being at Wyatt's funeral. Hart was a legend in Western silent films, as famous as Chaplin and Mary Pickford, and of the most famous people in the US. Newhall CA north Los Angeles county is where a lot of his movies were filmed, and the town still hosts a yearly Cowboy Festival. He has a High School named after him too.

  • @ysmith494
    @ysmith494 Před rokem +39

    What people fail to realize was that when Jonny Ringo was twirling his gun, Doc Holiday was studying his drawing & handling techniques.

    • @angrydre7644
      @angrydre7644 Před 6 měsíci +14

      Yup, that's why Johnny wasn't laughing when everyone else was after. A drunk, sick, and tired Doc perfectly imitated his routine perfectly in one take after seeing it only once.
      Johnny Ringo figured out he picked a fight with a heavyweight early on. It's why he keeps trying to avoid him after.

    • @jordonvh91
      @jordonvh91 Před 5 měsíci +4

      @@angrydre7644 it's like walking down the street and you bump into someone and you start running your mouth "watch where you're going" etc. and you turn around to see Mike Tyson

  • @joshuaselvig6832
    @joshuaselvig6832 Před rokem +35

    Everything Doc says in this movie can be quoted. I love it. Shame Val didn’t get an Oscar for it.

  • @suebob16
    @suebob16 Před rokem +20

    Another western you need to react to is 1990's Quigley Down Under starring Tom Selleck and Alan Rickman. The title pretty much describes it as this is a western that takes place in 1860's Australia when it was still a part of the British Empire. The film was actually shot in Australia, which makes it even better. Plus you can never go wrong with Alan Rickman as the villain.

    • @BigTroyT
      @BigTroyT Před 8 měsíci +3

      You can never go wrong with Alan Rickman, period.

    • @sterling557
      @sterling557 Před 26 dny

      Meh. Forgettable in my opinion.

  • @MadTheDJ
    @MadTheDJ Před rokem +3

    It's never stated, but I like to believe that Doc went backstage after the show and invited Josephine and her troupe to The Oriental, just to mess with Wyatt. Like, he knows Wyatt has an eye for her and he isn't with the Earps when they're walking from the theatre to the saloon, so I think that's where he is while Morgan is talking about spiritualism. He then catches up to them at The Oriental and is like, "What would you do if *she* showed up here?" It's like, gee Doc, how did you know she'd turn up right then? Because you invited her, you madcap.

    • @jondorsey2043
      @jondorsey2043 Před 4 měsíci

      Lol fantastic i love it. Oh, Doc. 😅

  • @mauriciodelarosa2449
    @mauriciodelarosa2449 Před rokem +145

    “There’s no normal life Wyatt there’s just life. Now get on with it.” Val Kilmer stole the show in this movie. You should watch him in (1992) Thunderheart. I love it when you two sisters 🥰🥰 get together to react for us. ♥️

    • @adamskeans2515
      @adamskeans2515 Před rokem +9

      I also loved him in Real Genius, and Top Secret

    • @famebrightstudio451
      @famebrightstudio451 Před rokem +4

      totally agree on Thunderheart, overlooked gem that one

    • @MrBreezeLI516
      @MrBreezeLI516 Před rokem +2

      Thunderheart is a classic!!

    • @marthapackard8649
      @marthapackard8649 Před rokem +2

      Another vote for Thunderheart. Mr. Magoo says you should watch it.

    • @Arch3an
      @Arch3an Před rokem +2

      Thundeheart is one of my most favorite movies ever, definitely should watch.

  • @RichardFay
    @RichardFay Před rokem +82

    Doc wasn't a good guy, but he was better than the really bad guys. He was also dying of tuberculosis and he knew it; he took reckless chances because he didn't have anything to lose, and that made him dangerous..

    • @AlexG1020
      @AlexG1020 Před rokem +9

      He really was one of the fastest pistoleers and feared for it (same with Ringo). At the time being a 'fast draw' meant that someone was a hothead and would draw and shoot you at the slightest provocation, however :P

    • @lynnkain
      @lynnkain Před rokem

      Holiday left Georgia under a cloud. It was more than tuberculosis. I’ve read that there is suspicion he committed murder of some teens at a local swimming hole.

    • @sartanawillpay7977
      @sartanawillpay7977 Před rokem +1

      What made him truly dangerous was that he knew that he was dying and didn't really care if he got killed (he may have had a death wish), it made him very trigger happy and intimidating.

  • @knokname6466
    @knokname6466 Před rokem +18

    Love your reactions, Cassie. They're always a blessing.
    Some historical perspective... yes, the Earps were brothers, lawmen, their father a lawyer. This flick is fairly accurate with events, though some poetic license is taken (and allowed). "Going heeled" is an expression meaning to "always be armed". Doc and Ringo did not have the duel, though it is possible they did-- but written records indicate Doc was in another town. Some speculate Ringo committed suicide while drunk. Doc died of TB in Greenwood Sanatorium (Colorado) and Wyatt and Josie did live long lives, well into the 20th Century. For a more complete view of Wyatt's life, check out Wyatt Earp by Kevin Costner (perhaps a bit more accurate a history of Wyatt's family).

  • @diogosabino2545
    @diogosabino2545 Před rokem +4

    Fun fact: Kurt Russel is the real director of the movie!
    But because of the "Eastwood rule" he hired a ghost director to be the director in name only basically...
    It is really interesting, the rule was created after Clint Eastwood took the director position in The Outlaw Josey Wales (the movie is amazing by the way, you gals should react to it!)

  • @thetr00per30
    @thetr00per30 Před rokem +151

    The Scene where Doc meets Ringo in the Saloon is amazing. One of you mentioned you wanted a translation. It becomes even better when you hear it. Watch it again once you know the meaning at it becomes legendary. Doc says "En vino veritas"(in wine there is truth) implying he was drunk but not lying. Ringo responds "Age quod agis" ( Do what you are doing) basically telling him he is just a drunk. Doc counters "Credat judaeus apella, non ego" let the jew apella believe, Not I" Now this is great because he is quoting the ancient Roman poet Horace here, dismissing Ringo that a being a drunk is not what he does. Ringo smiles and taunts Doc by touching his fingers on the handle of his pistol and says invitingly " Iuventus stultorum magister " (Youth is the teacher of fools) Ringo is telling Doc he is a fool to think he is in the same league as him and he will teach him a lesson. Doc immediately, coldly and as matter of fact delivers the answer " In pace requiescat" ( Rest in peace) or It's your funeral my friend lol. Kurt Russel was basically the director of this film and he cut his own lines and screen time down because Val Kilmer as Doc Holliday made this film. One of my favorite movie scenes is when Doc is asked why he is out riding with Wyatt and Doc says Wyatt is his friend, Creek says I got lots of friends, Doc admits " I dont "

    • @doug3691
      @doug3691 Před rokem +16

      Thank you very much for that translation. That's got to be the best Latin cinema dialogue ever!

    • @YSongCloud
      @YSongCloud Před rokem +24

      Not to mention but the part that comes after that section of the scene in the bar between Ringo and Doc also fills in more of the details that Cassie and Carrie might not have picked up on. But Ringo then goes on to display his gun handling skills. Everyone is rightly impressed as it is quite a fancy display of speed and precision. However Doc then proceeds to do the exact same moves with his cup. You can see Ringo's face change through this from one of pride, to then slight annoyance, to then finally awes and even a bit of fright as he realizes that Doc is showing him up, but in a way only Ringo will truly understand. This is because, just with a single watch of what Ringo did, Doc is able to replicate each and every move perfectly and in the same order while also using something that is not as easy to control on a finger as a revolver since a cup is much less balanced, and while being visibly impaired. It's why Ringo from that point on was respectful and even fearful of Doc, knowing that if his skills were that good when intoxicated, they would be even better when sober and when he truly meant business.
      It's subtle things like that which make this movie so absolutely perfect.

    • @jocko774
      @jocko774 Před rokem +12

      Another thing that's great is When Doc is twirling the shot glass he learns Ringo's draw speed while not giving away his own, which helps him during the grove shootout.

    • @avantegarde7797
      @avantegarde7797 Před rokem +6

      The info you supply is great great great ~ And you are correct, the translation makes the scene sooooooooooooooooooooooo much better, and funnier. Thank you so much for that. And kurt Russell was right ~ Kilmer absolutely stole this movie right out from under him. Kilmer's finest performance, bar none-by a long shot.

    • @gourdguru
      @gourdguru Před 9 měsíci

      @@jocko774 holy shit, i've never put that together before, but you're absolutely right, ringo gave away the goods, but doc gave him nothing in return.....

  • @brians48now
    @brians48now Před rokem +87

    One of the actors most people miss is Charleton Heston. He was the old rancher whose house they used to put Doc in towards the end. Do an IMDB on him and you'll see some of the iconic movies he's done. The 10 Commandments is probably his most famous.

    • @samellowery
      @samellowery Před rokem +16

      Ben hur planet of the apes, the omega man, soylent green tons of great films.

    • @paulcochran1721
      @paulcochran1721 Před rokem +9

      And narrated by Robert Mitchum. Also has Buck Taylor, "Newly" from Gunsmoke.

    • @samuraienterprises9802
      @samuraienterprises9802 Před rokem +11

      The actor that no one notices/recognizes is the card dealer that Kurt Russell slaps is played by Billy Bob Thornton.

    • @boki1693
      @boki1693 Před rokem +1

      Dam I missed that and I have seen this a zillion times.

    • @boki1693
      @boki1693 Před rokem +4

      @@samuraienterprises9802 That I knew. :)

  • @gigga143
    @gigga143 Před 10 měsíci +8

    i usually much more of a rom com girl but Tombstone is one of my favorite movies of all time. it’s just so well acted all across the board, especially Val Kilmer and Kurt Russell. i randomly still say when i can fit it in convo “I’ll be your Huckleberry” or “You’re no daisy at all.” LOL greta reaction!

  • @RomanceFreak
    @RomanceFreak Před rokem +5

    Also, if you want to watch the extended version, there's a scene between Wyatt and Maddie they shouldn't have deleted that addresses them falling out of love and Wyatt's concern for her opium addiction. If you find it, watch it.

  • @RobinInnaHood
    @RobinInnaHood Před rokem +79

    Val Kilmers Doc Holliday is as iconic as Heath Ledgers Joker imo. Watched Tombstone for the first time in full last year and really made me appreciate the performance.

  • @MattsMovieReviews
    @MattsMovieReviews Před rokem +163

    Val Kilmer should have won an Oscar for his performance as Doc Holiday. Iconic!

    • @shiranuiaensland1442
      @shiranuiaensland1442 Před rokem +2

      Have you seen the nominated roles for that year?

    • @TBoNAtl
      @TBoNAtl Před rokem

      @@shiranuiaensland1442 That year was stacked. I think Val Kilmer should have at least been nominated but I don't know who I'd remove to give him a spot.

    • @shiranuiaensland1442
      @shiranuiaensland1442 Před rokem +1

      @@TBoNAtl And Val was not the only one snubbed that year for the same category.

    • @jakefavre
      @jakefavre Před rokem

      minus the iconic part

    • @brachiator1
      @brachiator1 Před rokem

      The studio dumped Tombstone into theaters without a lot of publicity or screenings for movie critics. Roger Ebert noted that he would have lobbied hard for a Best Supporting Actor nomination for Val Kilmer if he had seen the movie earlier than he did. Everyone thought that the Kevin Costner film about Wyatt Earp was going to be the bigger and more important movie.

  • @JP-1990
    @JP-1990 Před 6 měsíci +4

    Fun take:
    Doc is the Pale Horse, and Wyatt is the hell following after him.

  • @allenwhitmer8192
    @allenwhitmer8192 Před rokem +85

    Doc was actually a dentist for awhile , that's where the "Doc" came from. A movie you both would enjoy is Quigley Down Under. It's got Tom Selleck and Laura San Giacomo and Alan Rickman from Die Hard. It's got everything you guys love in a movie

    • @samellowery
      @samellowery Před rokem +7

      Yes Quigley down under is great and has a great score as well

    • @racheltrivett980
      @racheltrivett980 Před rokem +2

      And a nice love story 😊

    • @stan4800
      @stan4800 Před rokem +2

      I love Quigley Down Under, It's an incredible movie, and nobody has ever heard of it. What a shame.

    • @LordVolkov
      @LordVolkov Před rokem

      Some rough scenes of genocide in that one 😬

    • @dvsreed
      @dvsreed Před rokem +5

      Silverado would also be a good movie for their next western

  • @michaelwoods3651
    @michaelwoods3651 Před rokem +30

    I love the scene where Doc tells Wyatt why Ringo does what he does. In reality, Doc is talking about himself. He understands Ringo because they are very similar.

    • @Brirend
      @Brirend Před 8 měsíci +2

      Yeah, that is why Doc says earlier in the movie when he is talking to Kate
      "Yes, but there’s just something about him. Something around the eyes, I don’t know, reminds me of… me. No. I’m sure of it, I hate him."

  • @laudanum669
    @laudanum669 Před rokem +2

    The scene @14:45 the actor playing the dirty card dealer is Billy Bob Thornton. FYI: Wyatt lived until the age of 80, Morgan was 30 when he was killed at the Billiard Parlor, Virgil died at 62 due to poor health and Pneumonia, Doc Holiday died at the age of 36 from tuberculosis.

  • @jeffmcaree1347
    @jeffmcaree1347 Před 11 měsíci +4

    I’ve actually been to tombstone I’ve been in that birdcage theater. It’s amazing went to the boot hill there as well saw the graves of all the guys killed in the OK corral, including Fred White, that marshal that got killed by Curly Bill. And, like one of your other viewers, said Val Kilmer should have gotten the Oscar for that performance. And Johnny Ringo was found dead at the base of a tree, and they all speculated that doc killed him

  • @ThatGuyX2
    @ThatGuyX2 Před rokem +55

    Doc with the cup and his first confrontation with Ringo was so brilliant. Doc gauges ringos speed which hand and how he draws. That's why he was so confident the whole movie when everyone else was afraid of ringos reputation.

    • @gamerdog17
      @gamerdog17 Před rokem +17

      Also take into consideration that Ringo probably spent hours to perfect that spinning gun trick. Doc saw it ONCE and did it perfect with a cup. Everbody thinks that he is just messing around and laugh. But not Ringo, he knows that Doc is good and he don't think he can beat him.

    • @mustang4life
      @mustang4life Před rokem +16

      “That’s Latin Darlin’. Evidently Mr. Ringo’s an educated man. Now I really hate him” Such an underrated line in this ICONIC movie.

    • @paulpolpiboon9535
      @paulpolpiboon9535 Před rokem +1

      Huh, Interesting

  • @cpagano46
    @cpagano46 Před rokem +52

    Your sister and you crack me up while reacting to iconic movies that I can't believe you both have not seen prior. Keep up the good work ladies.

  • @Victorcreed85
    @Victorcreed85 Před rokem +7

    Such a great movie. I live in Texas so I’m not too far from Arizona. One of my favorite places i have been was Tombstone and Old Tucson in Arizona. Seeing the history and these actual locations in real life was amazing and left a mark on me. Doc was actually a Dentist in my hometown of Dallas. The Fair Park Natural History Museum, same area the State Fair is held, has one of his Dentist Chairs and some of his equipment on display. At the end of Tombstone, before Doc passes, he says “Ill be damned, this is funny,” Doc always said he would die with his boots on and in that scene he is obviously barefoot. In case it hadn’t been mentioned yet.

  • @RyanAllThingsPossible909

    Watching the opening, seeing both of you and general "uh oh a western" lol ... and I already know how blown away and pleasantly surprised you're going to be. Tombstone... definitely ... an all time popcorn movie

  • @robotech
    @robotech Před rokem +94

    I played as an extra in this movie. We didn't get paid, but they had catering on a daily basis and they fed us well. I even got to keep one of the movie props. I still have it in the attic somewhere.

    • @johnnyfive4436
      @johnnyfive4436 Před rokem +6

      Nice I think they pay the extra's now but they use to not do that even in 1993. But it's so cool. Was it a long day hot or cold? Did they film it in actual Tombstone?

    • @larryw.c.4544
      @larryw.c.4544 Před 10 měsíci +6

      Now that qualifies as a memory.

    • @gourdguru
      @gourdguru Před 9 měsíci +8

      @@johnnyfive4436 i can't answer to his film experience, but yes, they did film in arizona, mostly in Mescal, where there is an 1800s ghost town that is upkept and commonly used for filming(you've seen most of the film's version of downtown tombstone in a bunch of other movies, just with a different coat of paint).
      they may have filmed some shots in tombstone proper on the outskirts, but tombstone is still a functioning town and is basically a tourist trap town now, with historic downtown tombstone looking like Main Street in a wild west theme park. the OK corral still exists but is painted up and has a big OK corral sign, there are like 1930's era street lights smattered throughout downtown, pretty much the only part that's still mostly unchanged enough for filming would be the Boot Hill Cemetery(you can see it in the video at 12:21 as the earps enter town. "HERE LIES Lester Moore, four slugs from a .44, no Les no more" is a real headstone in the cemetery that belongs to a wells fargo clerk from the Naco, Arizona office. a man came in to collect a package and upon seeing the package was damaged became irate and shot Lester 4 times in the chest. Lester managed to return fire and killed his murderer before he fell to his wounds. Lester's grave is now one of the most wellknown headstones in America due to it's playful epitaph, whereas no one even knows where his killer is buried. take that, ya D*%kwad.)
      neat place to visit, it's like an open-air wild west museum.

    • @jtoland2333
      @jtoland2333 Před 9 měsíci +3

      What a great experience!
      I hate to admit it, but although I grew up in Northern Arizona, and loved history, I've never been to Tombstone. 😢

    • @unclejoker9975
      @unclejoker9975 Před 9 měsíci

      Johnny Cash also wrote a song that was inspired by this tombstone.

  • @ThomasCorp
    @ThomasCorp Před rokem +136

    A fantastic western, and a great film for you and your sister to watch together. Val Kilmer as Doc is the standout of the film. One of my favorite lines of his, if not my favorite is, “I have two guns. One for each of ya.” Of course, there’s also his great response of “You're a daisy if ya do.”

    • @GrandmaKeith
      @GrandmaKeith Před rokem +2

      And a true story

    • @StevenLMaldonado
      @StevenLMaldonado Před rokem +6

      He also spins his guns in opposite directions after the Two Guns line.

    • @ThomasCorp
      @ThomasCorp Před rokem +1

      @@StevenLMaldonado Yeah, I've noticed that. It is a nice little touch to the scene.

    • @lakeracer8453
      @lakeracer8453 Před rokem +4

      If you look closely, when he says, "...two guns, one for each of ya..." he spins them, one forward and the other backward. Val must have practiced a bit.

    • @the_bottle_imp
      @the_bottle_imp Před rokem +2

      I'm your huckleberry.

  • @partyshoes2917
    @partyshoes2917 Před rokem +1

    Some of those mustaches deserved Oscars

  • @vincecommando7575
    @vincecommando7575 Před 6 měsíci +2

    The opening is definitely my favorite scene in this movie. There's no beating around the bush. This movie gets right to the point of who the good guys are and who the bad guys are.

  • @Kevonutube303
    @Kevonutube303 Před rokem +68

    Doc was a Dentist, and yes, pretty much everyone feared him and his gun, even Ringo! Speaking of which one of the actors you missed Kyle Reese, John Connors father. The other "Mustache" Virgil, was Sam Elliot, and did in fact play a lot of these type roles thru out his career and so many more. Kurt Russell has made SO many good movies, you need to get caught up on. This movie had a ton of talented actors. Probably one of the best ever put together. Thanks so much for sharing. #2 in all the total polls..... Guess it's time for #1 huh?

    • @gregsager2062
      @gregsager2062 Před rokem +8

      The actor who played Kyle Reese in *Terminator* -- and Cpl. Hicks in *Aliens* , Commander Anderson (the leader of the Navy SEAL team that was shot up in the tub room) in *The Rock* , and Lang in episode 13 of the second season of *The Mandalorian* is Michael Biehn.

    • @jamescheddar4896
      @jamescheddar4896 Před rokem

      it was more because everyone knew about his condition and that he wasn't really afraid of dying faster

    • @md_vandenberg
      @md_vandenberg Před rokem

      Fun fact: Doc was a terrible shot. He participated in several shooting tourneys and basically came in dead last in all of them. He was not the man portrayed in this movie.

    • @michaelmachupa3854
      @michaelmachupa3854 Před rokem

      Also Michael Rooker and a young Billy Bob Thornton. It's a shame the Wyatt Earp movie had to follow this one.

    • @boki1693
      @boki1693 Před rokem

      Sam Elliot is also in the Spinoff series for Yellowstone.1883? It's starts of really good but gets a bit repetitive after a bit. Yellowstone is a "present day" western. It is pretty good, but can be a little repetitive too. As in the same sort of formula every season. "A" happens which cause character "B" to do something which causes "Event "C" an on and on. But the woman that plays Kevin Costner's daughter steals the show for me.

  • @loonee2n
    @loonee2n Před rokem +72

    If you want to stay on a Western line, one that I don't see many mentioning is Silverado. It was filmed a little earlier than Tombstone and it's the first movie I ever saw Kevin Costner in. It's jam packed with famous actors from that time. I put it right up there with Tombstone and right behind The Outlaw Josey Wales (Clint Eastwood).

    • @DelusionalNYC
      @DelusionalNYC Před rokem

      "Unforgiven" is an absolute must-watch Western

    • @TBoNAtl
      @TBoNAtl Před rokem +9

      Can't say enough good things about Silverado

    • @JonNo86
      @JonNo86 Před rokem +10

      Silverado is so underrated! Open Range still has to be my favorite western of all time though.

    • @Chris-ji4iu
      @Chris-ji4iu Před rokem +3

      Agreed. This is always at the top of my list for Westerns.

    • @loonee2n
      @loonee2n Před rokem +3

      @@JonNo86 Open Range is great but I wanted them to see the young Kevin Costner before suggesting it.

  • @christinehyde5448
    @christinehyde5448 Před rokem +9

    You two are so wholesome. I really love watching your reactions. Tombstone is a great movie

  • @sethmaki1333
    @sethmaki1333 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Michael Biehn has always been one of my favorite actors, and this is the movie that truly solidified that fandom.

    • @jondorsey2043
      @jondorsey2043 Před 4 měsíci

      Absolutely fuckin agreed. An underrated icon of 80's and 90's Hollywood. Remember him as the twitchy marine in The Abyss? James Cameron cast him every chance he got, rightfully so. Just so damn good.

    • @KarterLB
      @KarterLB Před 16 dny

      The turn he makes in the final duel with Doc. He changes from “I was just playing” to “let’s do it”. It’s one of the greatest acting moments ever. Underrated actor. One of the best

  • @wolffofwar
    @wolffofwar Před rokem +55

    Glad you finally got around to this. One of the best westerns ever. My step dad was the armorer on this movie and said Val Kilmer never broke role even, after the scene was finished. He was Doc for as long as he was on the set. Good stuff, thank you!

    • @ricomusap614
      @ricomusap614 Před rokem +2

      Lovely anacdote

    • @allthingsnerd.4484
      @allthingsnerd.4484 Před rokem +2

      Val is definitely a method actor. Interesting guy. Absolutely heartbreaking what he is going through.

  • @zanzibarwhite-
    @zanzibarwhite- Před rokem +61

    It's believed that the scene at the creek between Wyatt and Curly Bill happened almost exactly as depicted, which is astounding. As far as other westerns, The Magnificent Seven, and McClintock are both ones i think you'd enjoy.

    • @GorramT
      @GorramT Před rokem +10

      It’s not, no. What actually happened is the Earp posse set up camp like 50 ft from the Cowboys. Wyatt wandered off to piss and stumbled upon the Cowboys who were camped out down in a ravine near the creek. Wyatt said in his book he and Curly Bill just locked eyes for a second before Wyatt quickly aimed his double barrel and cut Curly Bill in half.
      The rest of the Earp posse quickly joined the fight. The cowboys were sitting ducks. There was never an ambush, just a lucky accident.
      Afterwards, Wyatt had over a dozen bullet holes in his trench coat but was never hit

    • @zhaley1980
      @zhaley1980 Před rokem +7

      The Magnificent Seven with Yul Brynner and Steve McQueen.

    • @PapaEli-pz8ff
      @PapaEli-pz8ff Před rokem +1

      @@GorramT This version works better for the film. I never expect 100% accuracy in films because the entertainment value is very important.. and in many cases more interesting

    • @TonyP7007
      @TonyP7007 Před rokem +3

      Agreed --- plus "Rio Bravo"

    • @lescook9021
      @lescook9021 Před rokem

      ​@@GorramTThank you for adding what is most likely the actual truth.
      So many don't bother to study their history.

  • @soonersmith4179
    @soonersmith4179 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Wyatt Earp got hired as a consultant for westerns in his last few years. A collage kid working a summer job (he had a scholarship to USC for football.. but ended up injuring his knee) asked his lots of questions, wanted to know the inside of the mind of an old west lawman. This kid was John Wayne

  • @royw-g3120
    @royw-g3120 Před rokem +1

    A "daisy" in southern vernacular at the time meant being the best at something, "huckleberry" meant a substitute for something the person really wanted.

  • @blastechee-3546
    @blastechee-3546 Před rokem +93

    This film has an amazing cast. Kurt Russell, Val Kilmer, Sam Elliot, Bill Paxton, Powers Boothe, Steven Lang, Jason Priestly, Charlton Heston, Terry OQuinn, Dana Delany, Billy Bob Thornton, Michael Biehn, all I can think of off memory.

    • @bibbitdubois
      @bibbitdubois Před rokem +6

      I keep waiting for them to recognize Michael Rooker. Cassie saw him in Days of Thunder also, but I don't know if they have ever connected him to Yondu.

    • @slchance8839
      @slchance8839 Před rokem +3

      ANd this was Jason Priestly when he was an A-LISTER, fresh off Beverly Hills 90210

    • @susanalexander6721
      @susanalexander6721 Před rokem +12

      Billy Zane, John Corbett, Michael Rooker. All can think of as far bigger names. Great casting.

    • @dahoss5405
      @dahoss5405 Před rokem +7

      There are a lot of really good actors in this movie, but the best of the best was Charlton Heston who played the small role of Henry Hooker who had the ranch where Doc Holliday had to lay up while he recovered.
      Heston played lead roles in the epic movies Ben-Hur, The Greatest Show On Earth, Planet Of The Apes, and as Moses in The Ten Commandments.
      Also Sylvester Stallone's brother Frank is in the movie, as well as Harry Carey Jr who plays Marshall Fred White.
      The movie is narrated by Robert Mitchum.

    • @JFinSD2
      @JFinSD2 Před rokem +4

      You forgot Billy Zane....who also played the title character in the Phantom and was also in Titanic and Michael Rooker who was the Cowboy who was disgusted with the killing of the priest early in the movie and later jumped sides from the Cowboys to Wyatt's side.

  • @RLKmedic0315
    @RLKmedic0315 Před rokem +57

    You should watch "Open Range" with Robert Duvall and Kevin Costner, it is highly underrated and based on your reactions to Tombstone I'm confident you will enjoy it.

    • @theripper121
      @theripper121 Před rokem +3

      Yes, Open Range is another great one...

    • @tempsitch5632
      @tempsitch5632 Před rokem +4

      Open Range is better than Tombstone.

    • @cesarnarro6013
      @cesarnarro6013 Před rokem +2

      I prefer Kevin Costner's Wyatt Earpe version better than Tombstone

    • @cesarnarro6013
      @cesarnarro6013 Před rokem +2

      ​@@tempsitch5632Open Range seems more realistic to me

    • @StephenLuke
      @StephenLuke Před rokem +1

      @@cesarnarro6013It's also a Disney movie, just like Tombstone.

  • @Coolrockndad
    @Coolrockndad Před 11 měsíci +2

    One of the most famous gun fights in the West was "The Gun Fight at The OK Corral" in Tombstone, Arizona.

  • @wyattmann8157
    @wyattmann8157 Před 5 měsíci +1

    The actor who played Ike Clanton is Stephen Lang, who played both General George Pickett and General Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson in _Gettysburg_ and _Gods And Generals_ respectively. He also played the blind man in _Don't Breathe._

    • @jondorsey2043
      @jondorsey2043 Před 4 měsíci +1

      And the senior military commander in Avatar also. Underrated actor, so good. Oh that's right he was in Don't Breathe!

  • @zhaley1980
    @zhaley1980 Před rokem +69

    A couple Kevin Costner westerns to add to the list: Silverado for a young Kevin, and Open Range for an older Kevin. Both great in my opinion.

    • @robertott1172
      @robertott1172 Před rokem

      Yes, for Open Range. I will check out Silverado.

    • @jayconant3816
      @jayconant3816 Před rokem +20

      Open range is prob the best modern western

    • @M4EOzzy
      @M4EOzzy Před rokem +4

      The only downside to Open Range is that it isn't 14 hours long just following the four men grazing their cattle before the events of the film.

    • @brezgatnik
      @brezgatnik Před rokem +2

      @@M4EOzzy extended cut or riot!

    • @ariochiv
      @ariochiv Před rokem +1

      I agree, both very good. Though I think the girls would appreciate Silverado more than Open Range.

  • @williamsummerson1204
    @williamsummerson1204 Před rokem +49

    Another amazing reaction from Cassie and Carly. This is my favorite western of all time. It's a travesty that Val Kilmer wasn't nominated for his role as Doc Holliday. "I'm your huckleberry " is one of the best lines in film history.

    • @happzy
      @happzy Před rokem +1

      He was definitely "in is prime" in this one

  • @josephheitzmann7745
    @josephheitzmann7745 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Doc Holiday was formerly a Dentist, he had a pension for gambling, I believe that this movie had such an iconic cast, and will always be one of my favorites

  • @NewbieInOttawa
    @NewbieInOttawa Před rokem +10

    You're all our huckleberries, ladies - you two dears make my day, love the reactions! ❤❤ Glad you watched this one, I haven't seen it in ages and it's a fine film, with tons (tonnes) of great actors.

  • @leroyd3480
    @leroyd3480 Před rokem +47

    Great reaction. Val Kilmer and Stephen Lang (Ike) were the two best roles to me. And watching you two not recognizing Kurt Russell was hilarious.

    • @TulkasMight
      @TulkasMight Před rokem +7

      You just blew my mind. Stephen Lang from Avatar is Ike! Holllllyyy hell lol

    • @fixfalcon2628
      @fixfalcon2628 Před rokem +3

      @@TulkasMight Stephen Lang is such a great actor, and he doesn't seem to age either.

    • @StephenLuke
      @StephenLuke Před rokem +2

      @@fixfalcon2628He’s also in Gettysburg (1993), Gods and Generals (2003), and Public Enemies (2009), you name it.

    • @clintizzo7693
      @clintizzo7693 Před rokem +1

      I can add that Slang is also a very nice person.

  • @AndrewKendall71
    @AndrewKendall71 Před rokem +71

    Part of the real story is the rumor that the brothers went from officers of the law to actually being pimps (Ike called Virgil a pimp in the bar, for example). That's also where the brothers would have gotten their "wives" in this telling of the story. They're common-law married. So, there was no need for divorce in the west with Maddie's drug problem - you see that all over the movie, the opium problem - Curly Bill, Maddie. Also, the picture Josephine was having taken right outside the OK Corral is depicting a famous real picture of her. For a change of pace, but still western, Quigley Down Under might be a good one.

    • @Kathleen927
      @Kathleen927 Před rokem +6

      Not true. Virgil went to his parents house in Colton, California. Both the dad and Virgil where in the city government. Virgil protected passengers as they came off the train there and went to the old hotel (train doesn't stop there anymore and the hotel is gone). He helped keep the hotel safe for guests and it was a respected place. Colton was a dry town and no gambling. But I did hear stories about San Bernardino having a red light district that may have attracted the Earps for fun evenings and card games. Virgil is buried in Colton. I was a resident of Colton for many, many years. The little city museum has about a third of it dedicated to the Earps. Decedent's live in the surrounding area and have special Earp days.

    • @robertcampbell8070
      @robertcampbell8070 Před rokem

      Morgan married Lou who was anything but a prostitute, and Virgil's wife Allie was a hotel waitress when they met. Mattie was the only one that was a prostitute.

    • @stan4800
      @stan4800 Před rokem +5

      Quigley Down under is a Great Movie.

    • @AndrewKendall71
      @AndrewKendall71 Před rokem

      @@Kathleen927 I'm glad to hear that. I think, in fact, the sources that were used in writing the screenplay for Tombstone were discussed in some "making of" show I watched. Seems I recall them saying it's "not clear" that they were pimps, but that's the story they decided to hint at in the movie because it's in the lore, whether verified or not. Glad it wasn't made really a central part of the telling. Glad to hear some clarification.

    • @AndrewKendall71
      @AndrewKendall71 Před rokem

      Also, kinda think Jason Priestly was originally hired to be Marshal Fred White who was a young man in real life at that time. When they changed direction, they kept him on (?). I think that's right. He'd have made a great Marshal White, adding pathos to his death at Curly Bill's hands. But it's hard to improve this nearly perfect film.

  • @RyanAllThingsPossible909

    When I think back this movie was one of the biggest, out of nowhere surprising movies ever. Westerns weren't big. Kurt Russell. Val Kilmer. They were "known" actors but no box office draw. I had never of Wyatt Earp before. And this movie hit.
    From the time you started polling movies to watch, I always mentioned this because it's a simple, pure, fun, dramatic, perfect paced summer popcorn movie. And it's based on REAL events. A REAL amazing hero. The man who went to Hollywood and helped actually create the Hollywood western genre. Full circle.

  • @erikbjelke4411
    @erikbjelke4411 Před 18 dny +1

    It's amazing that in a cast with Kurt Russel, Sam Elliot, Powers Boothe, and so many other talented, legendary actors, Val Kilmer turns in the best performance, and NOT by a small margin. For that matter, Bill Paxton and Michael Biehn get to show they can stand on even ground with these powerhouses. I love this movie!
    The Latin conversation is GREAT. I don't speak Latin, but TV Tropes has a good analysis, and a link to a better one. It goes something like this:
    Doc insults Ringo, Wyatt tries to smooth things over by saying Doc is drunk, and so shouldn't be taken seriously.
    Doc: "In vino veritas," which translates as "in wine, truth." Effectively saying "I may be drunk, but I meant what I said."
    Ringo: "Age quod agis," translating to "Do what you do best." What Doc does best is be a gunfighter, so Ringo's essentially saying "Bring it on."
    Doc: "Credat Judeas Appela, non ego." "May the Jew Appela, not I, believe it." Basically, "Tell it to someone who cares."
    Ringo: "Iuventus stulturom magister," "Youth is the teacher of fools," meaning "Let me teach you a lesson."
    Doc: "Pace in requiescat," translates to "May he rest in peace," meaning more or less "It's your funeral." This one is particularly interesting, if I recall correctly, because Doc switches up the order. Latin doesn't rely on word order the way English does, where "dog bites man" and "man bites dog" mean two very different things. Instead, the words change to show who's doing what. The phrase is normally, I believe, "In pace requiescat." Doc changing the phrasing slightly gives it a more aggressive air, less "may you rest in peace" and more "you WILL rest in peace," with the implication of "I will make sure of it."

  • @jp3813
    @jp3813 Před rokem +42

    Many people believe that Val Kilmer deserved the Oscar that year for this role. The nominees for Best Supporting Actor in the 66th Academy Awards were:
    Tommy Lee Jones as Samuel Gerard in "The Fugitive"
    Ralph Fiennes as Amon Göth in "Schindler's List"
    John Malkovich as Mitch Leary in "In the Line of Fire"
    Leonardo DiCaprio as Arnie Grape in "What's Eating Gilbert Grape"
    Pete Postlethwaite as Giuseppe Conlon in "In the Name of the Father"
    Other snubs include Ben Kingsley as Itzhak Stern in "Schindler's List", Sean Penn as David Kleinfeld in "Carlito's Way", certain actors in "True Romance", etc...

    • @MrZampanov
      @MrZampanov Před rokem +4

      Honestly, that's a really tough year to win that one. Sometimes it feels like someone was cheated, that is not one of those years.

    • @JeffKelly03
      @JeffKelly03 Před rokem +2

      Man that is a murderer’s row of performances. I would say Val should have been nominated ahead of Malkovich but when that was a really good performance.

    • @adamskeans2515
      @adamskeans2515 Před rokem

      @@JeffKelly03 true dat

    • @orarinnsnorrason4614
      @orarinnsnorrason4614 Před rokem

      That's one hell of a list though.

    • @realisticthought1781
      @realisticthought1781 Před rokem +2

      Makes you really wonder about Hollywood now and the crap they put out

  • @bghammock
    @bghammock Před rokem +49

    The cast in this movie was amazing. Val Kilmer was a power house and completely robbed by the Academy. The Doc / Wyatt scene at the end makes me cry every single time.

  • @gildavis8266
    @gildavis8266 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I can see that allot of comments here have cleared up many of the questions that you were asking. I simply add one more. John Henry "Doc" Holiday (1851- 1887) was from Griffen, Georgia and actually had his dental practice here in Atlanta before contracting Tuberculosis giving up his practice and moving out west for the dryer climate which could ease his condition.

  • @jamespfp
    @jamespfp Před 4 měsíci +1

    20:00 -- RE: "Everyone in this movie looks super familiar...."; Yep, and many of them are. The Cowboy guy in the red undergarments, Curly Bill, that's Powers Boothe for example, who played the F-15 pilot the Wolverines rescued in Red Dawn; and Johnny Ringo is being played by the guy who was Kyle Reese in the first Terminator film.

  • @Ringo3528
    @Ringo3528 Před rokem +69

    This is still a very good movie after 30 years

    • @cflournoy1529
      @cflournoy1529 Před rokem +6

      OMG!!!! It doesn’t even seem like this movie is that old!!!! And I saw it when it first came out😂

    • @josephwalther5979
      @josephwalther5979 Před rokem +2

      I'm shocked every time I think how old this movie is now

    • @sca88
      @sca88 Před rokem +2

      It's actually even better now since most films made now are sh*t.

    • @cflournoy1529
      @cflournoy1529 Před rokem

      @@sca88 You can say that again!!

  • @asmrhead1560
    @asmrhead1560 Před rokem +10

    Doc Holiday's "I don't" line gets me every time.

  • @wisenige
    @wisenige Před rokem +4

    Before Captain Jack Sparrow, there was DOC HOLLIDAY

  • @neighborlyfiend1484
    @neighborlyfiend1484 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Your question was "who runs this town?"
    The only answer that comes to mind is Master Blaster! 😂

    • @jondorsey2043
      @jondorsey2043 Před 4 měsíci

      You get a like for this reference. Well done lol.

  • @bryondavis2173
    @bryondavis2173 Před rokem +58

    You're a daisy if you do is also one of Val Kilmers great lines in this movie ...and when he tells Wyatt at the end that he was the only person who ever gave him hope 😢 every time that tear rolls down his face it gets me

    • @stevancarter1426
      @stevancarter1426 Před rokem +2

      "Live, Wyatt. Live for me." 😭😭😭😭😭

    • @ricomusap614
      @ricomusap614 Před rokem

      Me too
      I'm your huckleberry;

    • @Donizen1
      @Donizen1 Před rokem

      The line "This is funny" was Doc's last words. He always expected to die in a gunfight with his boots on. Dying in hospital without his boots on funny to him.

  • @michaelwatson266
    @michaelwatson266 Před rokem +39

    One of my favorite films and Val Kilmer's best performance in a movie.

  • @robertcenzer6679
    @robertcenzer6679 Před 5 měsíci +1

    They made a movie about Wyatt in Hollywood called Sunset. James Garner played Wyatt, Bruce Willis was Tom Mix. It's a nice followup to this.

  • @joe6096
    @joe6096 Před rokem +1

    This might be the greatest western movie ever made, even going back to the "golden age" of westerns in the 1940s and 50s. Val Kilmer's lines are one liners fans of this movie use in every day life to this day...... when I'm at work and the manager asks for volunteers on a project that I'm ready to work on I'll always go "I'm your huckleberry". The other line I like to use is "you're a daisy if you do"
    But yes the acting, the action, the cinematography..... it's all fantastic and makes this movie one of the all-time greats.

  • @Linerunner99
    @Linerunner99 Před rokem +41

    This wasn't just a great western... it was a great movie. Stacked cast turning out great performances all around. Glad you both enjoyed it so much.

  • @StephenLuke
    @StephenLuke Před rokem +24

    When I figured out this movie was based on true events, I did some research on who those characters were and this movie fascinates me in learning about the events of Tombstone, Arizona.

  • @leroyjenkins4115
    @leroyjenkins4115 Před 6 měsíci +4

    This movie is surprisingly accurate to real-life events.

  • @marcusvachon845
    @marcusvachon845 Před rokem

    @45:24 when Doc Holliday looked at his feet and said "isn't this funny", he was referring to his lack of boots. During this time, it was considered to be bad luck. A man "died with his boots on."
    "I'll be huckleberry" is the equivalent of a man asking another man "do you want to dance?" in the 1970s and 1980s. It was a challenge to fight. It was a common phrase in the deep south, Doc Holliday was from Griffin, GA, during the 19th century.

  • @Gryph00
    @Gryph00 Před rokem +29

    Tombstone is up there as one of my favorite movies of all time. The amount of future A-Listers hidden throughout that movie is incredible. And you mentioning True Lies during the intro. Yall in for a treat, both are fantastic. True Lies really put Arnold on a new level, of not just being "an action guy" and instead an actual actor. He's fantastic in it.
    Edit ; Another really good western that has a lighter motif than Tombstone but is up there is Silverado. With Kevin Kline and Danny Glover

    • @michellebarry1555
      @michellebarry1555 Před rokem +1

      Yes! Silverado! Great recommendation! Love that movie! Plus it has Kevin Costner who they love!

    • @Ashwgun
      @Ashwgun Před rokem +2

      Yes, True Lies is a great one, and Silverado is such a great western.

  • @whatareyoulookingat908
    @whatareyoulookingat908 Před rokem +15

    The laugh when Doc/Val winked at the Cowboys was worth the "like" all in itself. : )
    The reactions are superb but are even better when its the two of you.

  • @NateKyng
    @NateKyng Před rokem +1

    The conversation in Latin between Ringo and Holliday has implied meaning beyond it's literal translation, but in modern day English, it goes (loosely) as follows:
    Wyatt: He's drunk
    Doc: I'm more honest when I'm drunk.
    Ringo: You better watch your mouth.
    Doc: Tell it to someone who cares, I don't.
    Ringo: Maybe you need to be taught a lesson.
    Doc: It's your funeral.
    Tho Tombstone has always been a fave of mine! It's based on a true story, and the movie was filmed at Old Tucson in Tucson, AZ, which is about 70 miles north of the actual town of Tombstone, which still exists to this day and has many of its original buildings still standing, including the haunted Birdcage theatre!

  • @erikakagome7436
    @erikakagome7436 Před rokem +3

    i saw this when i was in 7th grade back in 2010 in my film class. its on my top 100 favorite films of all time. i recently started collecting vhs tapes because i found my old vcr and this was the first i watched! i quote from this movie all the time, especially quoting Doc. so glad you reacted to this! ❤

  • @junabrantes4373
    @junabrantes4373 Před rokem +34

    I really love how you two react to movies. Johnny was the guy in terminator, Kyle. He was also in the Rock, the leader of the SEAL team. Doc Holiday was a dentist.

    • @skeletor8212
      @skeletor8212 Před rokem +2

      He was also Corporal Hicks in Aliens

    • @scottknode898
      @scottknode898 Před rokem +3

      Michael Biehn was Johnny Ringo but he was in The Rock and was Kyle Reese in The Terminator in 1984. Michael Biehn was in Navy Seals in 1990 and Corporal Hicks in Aliens in 1986.

    • @ryanaromero
      @ryanaromero Před rokem +1

      He was also the crazy navy seal gone rogue in The Abyss...