Casablanca (1942) Movie Reaction | FIRST TIME WATCHING | * THIS IS STUNNING * | Film Commentary

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  • čas přidán 16. 07. 2024
  • * P.S. I realise "Play It Again Sam" isn't the correct quote
    We'll always have movies...
    This is such a beautiful film in every way, so thank you for the this recommendation. I had no idea that some of the well-known quotes I knew of were from this!
    NOTE: Some things I had to censor in this, due to CZcams not liking it. I've also had to remove some segments that were "copyright claimed"... so apologies for the weird cuts in certain parts
    TIMESTAMPS
    0:00 Intro
    1:34 Reaction
    48:36 Review & Trivia
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Komentáře • 272

  • @chadtravis7832
    @chadtravis7832 Před rokem +54

    A script that ages like a fine wine. Classic.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Před rokem +5

      It truly does Chad! Very much a classic that I wish I'd seen before now. Thank you for watching!

  • @Hayseo
    @Hayseo Před rokem +25

    In the scene where Rick says “it’s December 1941” and asks Sam what time is it? Is to remind the audience that this movie takes place before Pearl Harbor, and Americas entrance into the war. Also when Rick says, “I’ll bet they’re asleep in New York, I’ll bet they’re asleep all over America”, Is to remind the audience that Pearl Harbor was a sneak attack and America was asleep i.e. not paying attention to world affairs.

    • @dalelatham2718
      @dalelatham2718 Před rokem +8

      At the beginning of the movie, you can see the date on the check Rick is writing and it's Dec. 1, 1941. Most people never notice that.

    • @tenzinphil
      @tenzinphil Před měsícem

      By December 1941, the Italians had been defeated in North Africa a fewweeks earlier, this is why the Italian police chief at the beginning of the movie is ignored and made to look like an idiot!
      So throughout 1942 Rommel raged across North Africa trying to do what the Italians did not do, but was defeated at El Alamein. Then he was forced into retreat right back across North Africa.
      Then just as this movie was about to be released Gen Patton invaded North Africa through Morocco. This was the US Army's first major engagement with the Germans and they booted Rommel out of North Africa altogether.
      So everyone in the US would have been aware of all this, but had little idea of the refugee trail to Casablanca. Thus the movie represents all the reasons for why the US was involved in the war.
      When the French National anthem was sung and drowned out the Germans it represented the voices of freedom loving people around the world!

    • @IAMCAVE
      @IAMCAVE Před 3 dny

      Americans did not want to be embroiled in another war. But the attack on Pearl galvanized the country to action.

  • @HenryCabotHenhouse3
    @HenryCabotHenhouse3 Před rokem +16

    Watch it again and notice that Lazlo is always in light, Strasse is in shadow, and Rick is half and half, either lit from one side or with Venetian blinds casting shadow stripes, etc. This is a visual representation of the morality of the various characters. The airport beacon is constantly sweeping the town as if a light seeking truth.
    Also, the couple at the very beginning looking with longing at the plane are the couple who win the money at the roulette table. Casablanca has so many little details that one gets new things out of it with each watching.

  • @dsmdgold
    @dsmdgold Před rokem +35

    Some historical context that would have been known to the original audience. After Germany occupied northern France a puppet government was installed in the town of Vichy. Vichy was famous for it's mineral springs springs, so much so much so that "Vichy Water" became the generic name for mineral water. The puppet government was headed by the World War I hero Marshall Philippe Petain. In the opening scenes it is Petain's portrait that the man fleeing the police is shot. The cross found on his papers is and on the ring Victor is shown in Rick's is the Cross of Lorraine, which was a symbol of the French Resistance. It wasn't a secret symbol but was used as graffiti and the like to make a public statement. As such it would be a symbol recognized by the original audience.
    Louis's throwing the Vichy Water in the trash is his moment of transition. He is no longer sitting on the sidelines, but has decided to join the fight.

    • @stratiogesdux
      @stratiogesdux Před rokem +11

      Superb detail. People in the 40's would recognize these references. I grew up in the 50's so WWII was still fresh and I understood them too. Today, most people barely know where France is.

  • @leftcoaster67
    @leftcoaster67 Před rokem +38

    The part where Ilsa says "God Bless You.." you know damn well she meant I love you. And it kills me every time.

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Před rokem +2

      That line tells us a lot more than that, as Lazslow is obviously a communist. It shows that Ilsa is not fully following the Bolshevik party line, unlike her husband. It is implied that all the main protagonists are one form of communist or other, as this was true of all resistance leaders during WWII.

    • @etaoinbshrdlu
      @etaoinbshrdlu Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@annaclarafenyo8185 I do not see Lazslow as a communist. There were a lot of people who were not so inclined in Eastern Europe, even after the war. It mostly did not go well with them unless they escaped. There were French Resistance fighters who were not communist, but some of them were deliberately betrayed to the Germans by them.

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Před 11 měsíci

      @@etaoinbshrdlu The resistance fighters who were "not communist" were "non-USSR socialists" like George Orwell, they would be ideologically similar to USSR socialists, but wary of the totalitarian party structure. All the resistance fighters were communists in comparison to a modern movie hero (or most modern persons), with no exceptions.

    • @stevesullivan8705
      @stevesullivan8705 Před 10 měsíci +4

      "God Bless You" was how she ended the note at the train station.

    • @jnagarya519
      @jnagarya519 Před 10 měsíci

      Sure -- after having kicked him in the balls in Paris -- and repeatedly doing so in Casablanca instead of finally providing Rick the explanation he deserved.

  • @user-mg5mv2tn8q
    @user-mg5mv2tn8q Před rokem +13

    The whole point of the movie is Rick Blaine's character arc, from "I stick my neck out for no one" to "It doesn't take much to see that the problems of three little people don't amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world", i.e., tending to one's personal problems is less important than tending to the problems plaguing the world at large. This mirrors the arc of the United States at the time, going from an aggressively neutral country that regarded the war as " those people's problem", to becoming a major force in helping to fight tyranny and evil.

  • @757optim
    @757optim Před rokem +16

    Rewatch the rigged roulette scene. You're suspicion of Ilsa was funny. While they can be lost on most contemporary audiences, the political realities portrayed in "Casablanca" were happening in real time in 1942.

  • @Dej24601
    @Dej24601 Před rokem +35

    Director Michael Curtiz ( pronounced cur-TEEZ) was known for his great use of shadows and chiaroscuro and action scenes. He was from Hungary and during this filming, he was trying to get family members out of German occupied lands. In addition to many cast members who were refugees from occupied countries or had family still in danger, many crew members were also from similar backgrounds.
    While filming, the Allies were not winning the war and there was a real worry that the Nazis might win. This increases the tension and worry everyone feels.
    Critic Roger Ebert has made a scene by scene commentary/analysis of this film which is very informative and entertaining and can be found on CZcams.

  • @francoisevassy6614
    @francoisevassy6614 Před rokem +14

    Thank you so much for your commenting this beloved movie, one of my top favourites.
    I am a French elder woman and I highly appreciated your remark about the beauty of our language !
    When you discovered that the quotes you already knew came from this film, my heart was rejoicing.
    Actually, when I was in college - in France, college is from eleven to fifteen year old pupils - we had a cine-club every other week, and all my class had the same reaction as yours, but it was about a musical score and the movie was « The Third Man » (Carol Reed 1949, starring Joseph Cotten, Trevor Howard and Orson Welles), one of the greatest movies ever, too : we all knew the music, but we didn’t know where it came from !
    I recommend you to watch this movie, I promise you will enjoy it very very much ; and I would be glad if you told me you also knew its music.
    Thanks from France 🇫🇷

  • @melenatorr
    @melenatorr Před rokem +17

    The believe that Victor is dead is planted in the flashbacks, a couple of times:
    * Ilsa reminds Rick no questions.
    * Ilsa tells Rick that there had been a man in her life but that he is dead.
    * Ilsa's entire behavior as Rick plans their escape from Paris and their marrying tears is an indication to us that something is ripping at her, and viewers are often as blind and forgetful as Rick himself is.

    • @kingbeauregard
      @kingbeauregard Před 11 měsíci +4

      Early in the film when Laszlo is first mentioned, I think it's Rick who makes a passing comment about how he was reported dead once or twice. They layer it in so smoothly that you don't know it will be a plot point.

  • @user-tr9de6gm8k
    @user-tr9de6gm8k Před 10 měsíci +11

    I like that your reaction to this movie was over an hour long. You gave this movie the time it deserved.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Před 10 měsíci +4

      Thank you so much, I always like to give it the time it's very well deserved. Filmmaking is a process that really needs to be appreciated and like yourself, I love films! Plus, it gives you guys the time to enjoy it with me too.

  • @SteamboatW
    @SteamboatW Před rokem +6

    Marie LeBeau who played Yvonne was herself a refugee from france, and she was the last surviving actor from "Casablanca".

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Před 11 měsíci +1

      Oh wow! I did NOT know that, thank you so much Steamboat! Yvonne was a quirky little character and Marie played it well. It's such a shame then that we have no surviving members of the cast, seeing as Marie passed in 2016... such a wonderful cast too

  • @lcassamas
    @lcassamas Před rokem +26

    I’ve seen “Casablanca” in the theater many times, and when Victor Lazlo leads everyone in the cafe in singing “La Marseillaise” the audiences invariably break out into cheering and applause. It’s an even more amazing film to watch as part of an audience.

  • @BigGator5
    @BigGator5 Před rokem +10

    "How can you close me up? On what grounds?"
    "I'm shocked! Shocked to find that gambling is going on in here."
    "Your winnings, sir."
    "Oh, thank you very much."
    Fun Fact: In 2006, the film's script was named "Best Screenplay of All Time" by the Writers Guild of America.
    Location Location Fact: Rick's Cafe was one of the few original sets built for the film, the rest were all recycled from other Warner Bros. productions due to wartime restrictions on building supplies.
    The Rest Of The Story Fact: Some years ago in a shop dealing with historical documents, a photo still from this film was found, showing Rick sitting at the chess board. Accompanying the photo was a letter from Humphrey Bogart to a friend in New York, indicating a specific chess move. The document dealer explained that the chess game in the movie was a real game Bogart was playing by mail with his friend during the course of filming.
    Historical Fact: Conrad Veidt, who played Maj. Strasser, was well known in the theatrical community in Germany for his hatred of the Nazis, and his friendship with Jews. His wife, Ilona "Lily" Prager, was Jewish. He was forced to flee his own country when he learned the SS had sent a death squad after him. Veidt only played film villains during WWII as he was convinced that playing suave Nazi baddies would help the war effort.
    Movie Magic Fact: Because the film was made during WWII the production was not allowed to film at an airport after dark for security reasons. Instead, it used a sound stage with a small cardboard cutout airplane and forced perspective. To give the illusion that the plane was full-sized, they used little people to portray the crew preparing the plane for take-off. Years later the same technique was used in Alien (1979), in the "space jockey" scene, with director Ridley Scott's son and some of his friends in scaled-down spacesuits.

  • @PerfectHandProductions
    @PerfectHandProductions Před rokem +29

    This movie is fantastic, I absolutely love it. It's a genuine timeless classic.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Před rokem +1

      It certainly is! It's one of the greats. Thank you for watching, Perfect Hand!

  • @jamesweekley1087
    @jamesweekley1087 Před 11 měsíci +17

    No one ever said, "play it again, Sam". That is possibly the most famous misquotes of all time.

    • @kennethcrist443
      @kennethcrist443 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Second probably being "Beam me up, Scotty!" which was also never said, but often misquoted.

    • @strettoasino9006
      @strettoasino9006 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Along with most of the Bible...

    • @diamon999
      @diamon999 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Yep, blame Woody Allen

    • @markvargus6519
      @markvargus6519 Před 3 měsíci +1

      So true, the actual quote is "You played it for her, you can play it for me. Play it Sam."

    • @Caambrinus
      @Caambrinus Před měsícem

      Not a misquotation; 'Play it AGAIN , Sam' signalled the importance of 'Casablanca' to Wood Allen's clueless shmuck character.

  • @tonym362
    @tonym362 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Interesting fact, Dooley Wilson (Sam) was actually a drummer, not a piano player. He was a good singer. But he had done a few other movies & Bogart wanted him. So they had him just hit the keys & the music was dubbed.

  • @TTM9691
    @TTM9691 Před rokem +8

    PS. What you were saying about the German Jews appearing in the movie; you have to remember, this is just as the USA enters World War II, and although it was known about what was happening in Germany to Jewish people, the full extent of it was NOT known, so that might have had something to do with it.

    • @flarrfan
      @flarrfan Před rokem +4

      It was actually set in the first week of December 1941, as Bogart metaphorically muses, I'll bet they're asleep all over America. At the end of the week, America woke up. Pretty good edit, but you left out one key line, from Lazlo: "This time I know our side will win." By the time the film was released in '42, that was a line that resonated with American audiences...

  • @DV80s
    @DV80s Před rokem +14

    Casablanca is my favorite film of them all.
    Vichy were the French government that was in charge after Germany took over France, so I guess Louie was rejecting that French Na26i puppet government by tossing the bottle, beside the fact it was water and not wine.

  • @jnagarya519
    @jnagarya519 Před 4 měsíci +2

    "Asleep all over America" was a reference to the isolationism that existed until the attack on Pearl Harbor.

  • @warner13faulk28
    @warner13faulk28 Před rokem +9

    a lot of the actors had immigrated to the United States because of the war, so they became very emotional during that music
    scene in the bar.

  • @brettv5967
    @brettv5967 Před rokem +7

    Just the absolute best film ever. Amazing cast, perfect dialogue, stunning cinematography. It’s got everything.

  • @robertguttman1487
    @robertguttman1487 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Paul Henreid (Victor Laszlo) also was a real refugee and he, too, had worked in Britain during the 1930s prior to emigrating to Hollywood. One of films in which he appeared in Britain was the 1930 version of Goodbye, Mr. Chips" which, although released by MGM, was actually produced entirely at the Denham Studio in Britain.

  • @visaman
    @visaman Před rokem +17

    You didn't have to censor the words, there are 100 reactions to Casablanca, and, they've never had any problems with those words. I mean you can't have a WW2 movie without them.
    Interesting note this movie was produced during the War, and was set just a few days before Pearl Harbor, The US was still neutral at that point.

    • @nac5901
      @nac5901 Před rokem +3

      Hence the line about everybody sleeping all over America

  • @coolaunt516
    @coolaunt516 Před 9 měsíci +2

    After Major Strasser is shot, notice the exchange of glances between Rick and Louie. If either one of them tells on the other, they both go down, and they know it. So Louie solves the problem by "rounding up the usual suspects."

  • @francisgruber3638
    @francisgruber3638 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Early on, Captain Louis says to Rick, "I'd like to think you killed a man; it's the romantic in me." At the end, Rick does in fact kill a man in front of Louis. And on cue, he gets all romantic... or bromantic, as the case may be, given the beginning of their "beautiful friendship".

  • @susansokoloski2233
    @susansokoloski2233 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Ingrid Bergman is one of the greatest actors of all time. She was already bigger than Humphrey Bogart at the time and is credited with being the first actress to make Bogey appear as a truly romantic lead (yes, that includes later films with Betty Bacall which benefited not only by their clandestine relationship, but by that image created by Ingrid's performance of adoring Rick...and Bogey's acting reflection of that adoration. Bogey was distant and inhappy throughout the filming. The performance and popularity made Bogey's already long but fairly unimpressive secondary character career to that point and launched him into true A movie leading character roles. There is so much more than you mentioned and I have here. Look deeper. It is a complex story worth knowing. The timing of the Casablanca filming and release was wildly coincidental to the Casablanca conference involving the 3 main Allied country leaders and came under investigation by US intelligence agencies...but all deemed the original story and later movie was truly coincidence with real life Allied events.
    I enjoyed this. Thanks for yourvreaction. I really appreciate astute younger folks finding enjoyment and history through these classic movies.

  • @okay5045
    @okay5045 Před rokem +4

    Ilsa was and still is madly in love wuth Rick but she deeply admired Victor.
    She had to have him decide what was best.

  • @hannejeppesen1809
    @hannejeppesen1809 Před 11 měsíci +5

    Ingird Bergman really loved Rick. You are making her out to be a conniving female, I don't think she was. She loved Rick, and also Lazlo perhaps in different ways. Her love for Rick was pure passion and chemistry, if you have ever experienced that, you will know it is hard to resist. Her love for Lazlo was more admiration because of who he was.

  • @kirkdarling4120
    @kirkdarling4120 Před rokem +2

    I had not noticed the shadow of the "parrot" behind Signor Ferrari's head before. It actually looks like the Maltese Falcon, a movie also starring the same actor, Sidney Greenstreet, Humphrey Bogart, and Peter Lorre filmed only a couple of years earlier.
    This may be the most quoted movie of all time. Wait, I just asked ChatGPT, and it agrees.

  • @brettv5967
    @brettv5967 Před rokem +7

    There is a Rick’s Cafe in Casablanca. I went there for a drink several years ago when visiting Morocco. The decor is somewhat similar to what you see in the film, including the small lights on the tables with beaded lampshades. And they have the movie playing in an endless loop near the bar. It’s touristy kitch, but it was fun.

  • @donkfail1
    @donkfail1 Před rokem +12

    Another top tier Bogart movie is the classic PI-noir The Maltese Falcon (1941). Also with Sydney Greenstreet and Peter Lorre in roles that seem similar to the ones they play in Casablanca and Mary Astor is great as the scheming femme fatale client.
    This was the first movie directed by John Huston. Fantastic start!

  • @leftcoaster67
    @leftcoaster67 Před rokem +9

    Subtle, unspoken plot and it was inferred but never stated. Annina (Played by Joy Page), the young Bulgarian wife. If her husband couldn't come up with the money. She was going to sleep with Renault to get the exit visas. Hence why Louis said to Rick. "I'll be in tomorrow with a breathtaking blonde. And it will make me very happy if she loses...".

  • @60secthebaptist9
    @60secthebaptist9 Před 11 měsíci +2

    late to the party but Rick never actual say's "Play it again Sam"
    During the after hours scene the following exchange occurs
    RICK - "what's that you're playing?"
    SAM - "Oh, just something of my own..."
    RICK - "Well stop it. you know what I want to hear"
    SAM - "no I dont..."
    RICK - "you played it for her, you can play it for me."
    SAM - "well I dont think i can remember..."
    RICK - " If she can stand it, I can. play it"
    The whole "play it again Sam" thing is a construct of celebrity impersonators of the day.

  • @grimreaper-qh2zn
    @grimreaper-qh2zn Před rokem +5

    He never ever said "Play it again Sam" You totally misread Illsa. You need to understand the Vichy French Government that collaborated with the Nazis.

  • @marleybob3157
    @marleybob3157 Před rokem +4

    Something you missed - "Here's looking UP at you, Kid." Humphrey Bogart was only 5'8" (1.71 m) as Ingrid Bergman was 5'10" (1.78 m). Paul Henreid, who played Laszlo, was 6'3" (1.93 m). Humphrey Bogart used very special shoe lifts that made him look taller. Specifically, he added external platforms to the sole to gain a few inches in front of the cameras so he could have the same height with Ingrid Bergman. With these wedge shoes, “Bogie” not only gained 7 centimeters in height, but also reached a height of 1.90 m, which allowed to capture images where Bogart was taller than Bergman and could look at the actress from above. The effect that is well seen in the final sequence when Ilsa Lund and Rick Blaine kiss at the airport. One of the most legendary kisses in film history.

  • @InvidiousProductions
    @InvidiousProductions Před 9 měsíci +3

    I have a feeling the bird in shadow is a nod to The Maltese Falcon. It came out the year before & starred Humphrey Bogart, Peter Lorre & Sydney Greenstreet.

  • @Lepidopray
    @Lepidopray Před 11 měsíci +3

    I think they had to be careful with the suggestion that Captain Renault was sleeping with women in exchange for exit visas. But the quip that got by the censors was when the Hungarian woman said she was there with her husband, and Rick says Captain Renault is getting broad minded. 😂

  • @jollyrodgers7272
    @jollyrodgers7272 Před rokem +6

    Nice Trilby (makes you look more like Bond) - Fedoras were in style, not Trilbies. Victor is neither German nor French, but Czech - and Ilsa is Norwegian. Claude Raines as Capt. Renault was nominated for an Oscar, and should've won. You really need to study the causes of World War parts One AND Two -- we are in a similar world as 1914 right now! Vichy Water was French - the Vichy Gov't. was on the side of Nazi Germany. You should check out another classic Bogart film and has Lauren Bacall's film debut at 19 years old, loosely based on a Hemingway novel (and some of the screenplay rewritten by Hemingway) is TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT (Warner Bros., 1944), directed by Howard Hawks, a fishing pal of Hemingway who insisted he could take Hemingway's worst novel and make it a great movie.

  • @arturocostantino623
    @arturocostantino623 Před rokem +5

    Both Peter Lorre and Conrad Veidt were both refugees.Veidt gave all his money from the movies to the resistance.

  • @ToABrighterFuture
    @ToABrighterFuture Před rokem +3

    The roulette scene is underappreciated.
    Remember early on, where the one guy's trying to sneak out on a fishing boat? "Bring 15,000 francs, in cash." Right?
    Let's assume Jan's playing his roulette chips at 5 francs each. He puts six of them (30 francs) on 22, en plein, and hits. That pays at 35 TO 1, which is 36 FOR one, when you include the underlying bet. 30 francs times 36, is 1,080 francs.
    Most tables won't let you to bet en plein for more than 100 chips, which is why you see Rick signing off on authorizing a 216-chip bet.
    1,080 times 36, is 38,880 francs: enough for both of the newlyweds' exit visas, with nearly 9,000 francs on top.
    And the thing is, JAN IS NEVER GOING TO KNOW WHY THAT REALLY HAPPENED, which is what makes Rick's actions that much more quietly impressive.

  • @Ceractucus
    @Ceractucus Před rokem +3

    What Waterlewis said: but for clarification when France was conquered the Southern part of it was allowed to rule as a puppet state.
    Also, in the beginning, when the man with out of date papers was shot he died next to a poster of Petain.
    Ilsa was really still in love with Rick, but was never in love with Victor. This is explained a bit subtly when she goes to see Rick the last time.

  • @flarrfan
    @flarrfan Před rokem +7

    Sequel to Casablanca? Anyone who proposed it would be told by any studio, "You'll regret it, maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but soon, and for the rest of your life."
    And when you mentioned more classics coming, I subbed you!

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Před rokem +3

      Haha yes, I would love that to have been a reply from a studio to the idea. It's a perfect quote for that!
      Yes, a lot more to come and I can't wait to see them. Thank you for watching and for subscribing Kent! It's very much appreciated and welcome to the channel!

    • @redcaddiedaddie
      @redcaddiedaddie Před rokem +1

      I've read that, years ago, Madonna was floating an idea around Hollywood that they REMAKE 'Casablanca', starring her w Ashton Kutcher as Rick; apparently it didn't get much traction!(LOL!)... at least they didn't put her against a wall & shoot her!!

    • @InvidiousProductions
      @InvidiousProductions Před 9 měsíci

      There was a short lived tv series of Casablanca made in the 1970s starring David Soul as Rick. I hadn’t seen the original movie when it was on, so could not make a comparison. I don’t think it would be viewed favourably.

  • @walterlewis1526
    @walterlewis1526 Před rokem +81

    Vichy was the capital of "Free France" ruled by the fascist General Petain. Claude Rains throwing away the bottle (Vichy was known for their sparkling water) symbolized him joining the resistance.

    • @jimglenn6972
      @jimglenn6972 Před rokem +18

      Actually, Free France was the name of the “government in exile” in London and later in Algiers. The part of France governed by Vichy was called, confusingly, the “Free Zone”. Metropolitan France was occupied by the Germans and the Italians but other parts were still “Free”, like the French Caribbean islands. There is a Bogart movie about that. Vichy was chosen because it was small but had lots of hotels for people to “take the waters” so the hotels were converted into government offices. At the start of the movie, a man runs from the police and is gunned down in front of a portrait of Marshal Petain who was the German puppet in Vichy.

    • @hetmanjz
      @hetmanjz Před rokem +7

      As already pointed out, you're mixing up "Free France" with the so-called "Free Zone."

    • @Bfdidc
      @Bfdidc Před rokem

      @@jimglenn6972 Petain had been the savior of France in WWI, only to serve the Germans in WWII.

    • @TheAndroidBishop
      @TheAndroidBishop Před 10 měsíci

      Wow thank you for explaining that. This shit confounded me my entire life

    • @MsAppassionata
      @MsAppassionata Před 8 měsíci

      Thanks to all of you for those little tidbits of info. I didn’t comprehend some of that stuff. It was before my time, even though I’m no spring chicken myself. 😊

  • @dansdiscourse4957
    @dansdiscourse4957 Před rokem +5

    The line about people being asleep all over America implies that the movie is set just before December 7, 1941, before Pearl Harbor woke America up from its isolationist slumber.

    • @kirkdarling4120
      @kirkdarling4120 Před rokem +1

      And Sam saying "my watch stopped" indicated that he and Rick were existing in limbo in Casablanca.

  • @user-tr9de6gm8k
    @user-tr9de6gm8k Před 10 měsíci +3

    You were doing so well until you missed hearing Ilsa say that she heard Victor was dead. She loved Rick.

  • @MsAppassionata
    @MsAppassionata Před 8 měsíci +1

    Peter Lorre was a very talented character actor. Some of his other films included “M” (great German film), “The Maltese Falcon”, “Mad Love”, and two Hitchcock films (“The Man Who Knew Too much” - The 1934 version and “The Secret Agent”).

  • @xbubblehead
    @xbubblehead Před rokem +4

    Another foreshadowing often missed is that when Rick and Ilsa are dancing in Paris it is to the song "Perfidia", which is a lament of someone losing their lover to another.

  • @DelGuy03
    @DelGuy03 Před 11 měsíci +2

    I think no other movie has spawned so many immortal quotations -- not even quotations really, because aside from "Play it again, Sam" (which you've noticed that nobody actually says intact), people will say "here's looking at you, kid" or "I am shocked, shocked I tell you" or "beginning of a beautiful friendship" without being aware they're quoting anything. In all our literature, maybe only Hamlet surpasses it in that respect.

  • @DawnElicia
    @DawnElicia Před 11 měsíci +3

    I think that Ilsa is in love with Rick. She loved Victor when she was young. If you notice she never tells Victor she loves him or kiss him. I feel when Rick says he here’s looking at you kid is Rick saying I love you.

  • @richardcramer1604
    @richardcramer1604 Před rokem +4

    The reason he threw that bottle in the garbage is because it said Vichy Water, meaning it was a product of the collaborationist Vichy France. Which in a way is quite funny because until he allowed Rick to get away with killing the German he worked for Vichy France (Casablanca was ruled as a Vichy France Colony) .

  • @tuckerplum8085
    @tuckerplum8085 Před 11 měsíci +3

    It's funny that you mentioned "It's a Wonderful Life." William Edmunds (the actor who plays the owner of the bar "Martini's" in "It's a Wonderful Life") is also in "Casablanca." He plays one of the patrons at "Rick's Cafe" in one of the very first scenes. He says the line: "It leaves at one tomorrow night. And bring 15,000 francs in cash."
    (Around the 5:05 timestamp of your video.)

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Před 11 měsíci

      Oh my god, yes it is! That's amazing that I'd said about the film and didn't spot him. Great eye! He plays a great part in "It's A Wonderful Life". Thanks for letting me know and prividing the timestamp, as it saved me having to trawl back through. Thanks Tucker!

  • @williambourne5425
    @williambourne5425 Před rokem +3

    An element of the film, that made it so suspenseful, was the love triangle between Rick, Elsa and Victor. Normally in a Hollywood movie two of the people, the leading man and the woman are obviously meant to end up together. The third character is usually shown with some flaw or attitude that makes them an unsuitable mate.
    In Casablanca, all three leading characters are shown to be equally heroic and desirable choices. Thus making it more difficult for the audience to decide who ends up flying off together and who gets left behind.

  • @elunedlaine8661
    @elunedlaine8661 Před rokem +7

    You might enjoy ' '12 Angry Men' from 1957

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Před rokem +1

      Eluned! You must have known, I watched it recently, so keep an eye out for it on the channel. loved it. I treated it as if we were detectives piecing together the case, which was enjoyable too. Thank you for the recommendation!

  • @SomeRandomOldFatGuy
    @SomeRandomOldFatGuy Před rokem +6

    The way you do reactions is perfect. Your commentary, your actual interest in the shows, the costumes, matching your video color to that of the show, the editing style - its all perfect. Dont change a thing.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Před rokem +2

      Honestly, thank you so much! That means more to me than you know. I have a passion for great filmmaking and loving the way something is crafted so beautifully. I do always try to improve where I can though, whilst still keeping the core the same.
      Yes! Thank you, I'm really glad the outfits get noticed. I try to look the films/shows up without spoiling anything haha. It's the same thing with the lights behind me too, which will be colour co-ordinated to the film as best as I can. Like red for horror or blue for sci-fi etc. I'll probably end up getting it wrong though with the colour blindness haha. I'm also so happy that someone pointed out the editing too. I could just do simpler editing, but as a Video Editor too, I feel like it involves everyone in the story and helps to emphasise certain points as I go too.
      Thank you so much!

  • @thequietrevolution3404
    @thequietrevolution3404 Před 11 měsíci +3

    "Play it again, Sam" was never used in this movie. However, it was satirized in a film using it as the title starring and directed by Woody Allen. It pays homage to "Casablanca" and is hilarious.

  • @barrycohen311
    @barrycohen311 Před 10 měsíci +3

    It's crazy, but it is pronounced "Van N-Eyes." Like eyes but with an N in front. When my wife moved to be with me in California, she pronounced it "Van Noise." So you get a pass on that one. It is a close suburb of L.A. but retains its own name. People consider it as part of LA. Nice reaction in any case.

  • @sweisbrod6109
    @sweisbrod6109 Před 5 měsíci +3

    The director's name is pronounced as "Cur-tees".
    Many of the actors in the bar scenes were political refugees from European countries.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Před 5 měsíci

      Thank you for this! I had been wondering, so it's always good to find out the correct pronunciation. Also, that's so interesting to find out. See, that's the kind of informatino I love finding out! Much appreciated and thanks for watching!

  • @xbubblehead
    @xbubblehead Před rokem +3

    As far as the refugees taking German parts, one remembers that Werner Klemperer accepted the role of Colonel Klink in "Hogan's Heroes" despite being a Jew whose family had fled Germany, but only on the condition that Klink would never win.

  • @davidlionheart2438
    @davidlionheart2438 Před rokem +5

    Conrad Veidt, who plays Major Strasse, was a major star of German cinema in the 20s. He fled Germany for England in the early 30s appearing in many films there. In the late 30s he came to Hollywood and played virtually nothing but Nazis until his most untimely death in April 1943. He was very vocal in saying that it was his pleasure to portray Nazis on film in order to show the whole world how vile they truly were. He was a man of true honor and principle who, quite literally, put his money where his mouth was: he loaned his entire personal fortune, which was considerable, to the British government for the war effort. I highly recommend that you see him as the Grand Vizier Jaffar, maybe his most memorable villain, in Alexander Korda's ultra-epic 1940 production of "The Thief Of Bagdad". It's a wonder to behold!

    • @TTM9691
      @TTM9691 Před rokem +2

      Conrad Veidt was in Hollywood before the 30s, he was in Hollywood in the silent era. "The Man Who Laughs" is a FANTASTIC classic, made in Hollywood, starring Veidt. "The Beloved Rogue" with John Barrymore is another great one that he's in. That's just off the top of my head. He had been in Germany in the silent era, including "Cabinet Of Dr. Caligari" from 1921. But by the mid-late 20s, he was working out of Hollywood. He might have left Hollywood when sound came in, like Emil Jannings and Paola Negri and lots of other foreign actors but he was definitely a known Hollywood actor during the 20s.

    • @davidlionheart2438
      @davidlionheart2438 Před rokem

      @@TTM9691 He was not in Hollywood permanently during the 20s. Only sporadically for specific films.

  • @subitman
    @subitman Před rokem +3

    When Capt Renault said "Round up the usual suspects", it reminded me of a crime movie: The usual suspects. It's a clever who done it movie.

  • @leftcoaster67
    @leftcoaster67 Před rokem +5

    What I love about this movie. There is good/evil/self interest, and even the scumbags are entertaining.

  • @willschoebel9256
    @willschoebel9256 Před 11 měsíci +2

    The "Play it again Sam" actually wasn't a line in the movie, though everyone insist it was.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Před 11 měsíci

      Thank you Will. I hadn't realised that until watching it and finding out about the quotes at the end in the trivia. I loved finding out many that I did know were from this! Thank you for watching

  • @rpg7287
    @rpg7287 Před rokem +9

    Now you’ve seen Citizen Kane and Casablanca. These are two of my favorite movies from the 40s. Now it’s time to watch, what I consider, the best movie from the 40s: The Third Man. Trust me. It’s a masterpiece.

    • @TTM9691
      @TTM9691 Před rokem +1

      Fantastic movie. Excellent choice. I was talking to someone and we were talking about Paul Henreid, how neither of us liked him as an actor, and how he didn't think much of Bogart during the making of "Casablanca". We speculated about what it would have been like if another actor with Bogart's charisma and "gravitas" had played Lazlo, what that would have done to the dynamic of the movie. Then we started to speculate which actors of that period could have done it.......and we arrived at Orson! Imagine Orson as Lazlo! That would have made the love triangle much more complicated! Joseph Cotten could have played that role as well. Those were the only two names we could come up with. Anyways, "Third Man" is a great choice!

    • @rpg7287
      @rpg7287 Před rokem

      @@TTM9691 you’re right. It is difficult trying to come up with another actor to play Lazlo. I don’t know if Orson Welles would be right. But I do think Joseph Cotten could do it. He would have made a good Lazlo. He would have to don some type of accent to be a Czechoslovakian.

  • @ericbogerd5306
    @ericbogerd5306 Před rokem +4

    If you haven't already seen them (unlikely, based on your stated enjoyment of classics), may I recommend several other Bogart films: The Maltese Falcon, The Big Sleep, To Have and Have Not, and Key Largo. Although featuring three different protagonists, Casablanca/To Have and Have Not/Key Largo form a loose trilogy for many people, with Bogart playing somewhat similar characters before, during, and after WWII. To Have and Have Not also features the delightful first film (of four) costarring Lauren Bacall. If you want to round out their collab, the fourth film is Dark Passage. All four are great films, although The Big Sleep is probably the best.

  • @macroman52
    @macroman52 Před rokem +4

    I doubt General DeGaulle's signature meant diddly squat to any officials in French Morocco, which was under the rule/authority of "unoccupied France", i.e. ruled from the town of Vichy in southern France., by Marshall Petain who signed an Armistice with Germany. I suppose the script-writers can not say the letters of transit are signed by Marshall Petain because so few people would know who he was. DeGaulle headed a "government-in-exile", i.e. a "resistance: or Free French government "based in London.
    And that explains the bottle of Vichy water, at the end (the town of Vichy has natural spring water). Captain Renault threw away the "Vichy government" , the government of collaborators to join the Free French.

    • @Venejan
      @Venejan Před 8 dny

      If you listen closely, it's actually General Weygand, although a lot of people think they hear DeGaulle and that's even sometimes shown in subtitles, even though, as you correctly state, DeGaulle's signature would be utterly useless at that time.

  • @desperateambrose5373
    @desperateambrose5373 Před rokem +3

    I've lost count of how many times I've watched this movie. My all-time fave.

  • @AshBadger
    @AshBadger Před rokem +7

    They released this a little early to try to convince America to join the war efforts. Rick going from cynical to resistance fighter is symbolic.

    • @SueProv
      @SueProv Před rokem +2

      This was released in 1943 after the war started for America. It was made in 1942 also after the war started not released early

    • @AshBadger
      @AshBadger Před rokem +1

      Sorry, my bad. I should have been more specific. Casablanca was originally planned to be released in early 1943. Instead, it was released in late November 1942 to coincide with Operation Torch, which was the 1st mass involvement of U.S. forces in the North African theater and first major U.S. victory in WW2. It was the 1st successful joint mission between Britain and the U.S. and overlooked as a major turning point of WW2.

  • @kingamoeboid3887
    @kingamoeboid3887 Před rokem +2

    Robert McKee considered this the best script ever written. He wrote Story that’s about storytelling principles and how it works in context. He also wrote Character and Dialogue.

  • @philowens7680
    @philowens7680 Před rokem +10

    I enjoy your reactions and your "discovery" of classics like Casablanca. Might I recommend "The African Queen" to you? I am certain you will enjoy it.

    • @flarrfan
      @flarrfan Před rokem +2

      And another great star turn by Bogart in the movie that invented film noir, The Maltese Falcon...

  • @thomastimlin1724
    @thomastimlin1724 Před rokem +3

    Will you stop with the "Play It Again Sam?" Bogart NEVER said that. it's a total myth people created...and comedian Woody Allen perpetuated that myth with his stupid play and movie of the same name. Thank a lot Woody. “If she can stand it, so can I. Play it!” Madeline L. as Yvonne, she was the last cast member to pass away about 2015 in her 90's. Famous Quotes from this movie younger folk don't usually know: "I stick my neck out for nobody" "Here's Looking at you kid" "Round up the usual suspects" and "This is the beginning of a beautiful friendship," "is that cannon fire? Or is that my heart pounding." I am impressed you knew "Of all the Gin joints in all the towns in all the world, she walks into mine." We used to say that as a running joke in college when someone came back from class and some of us were sitting around. always happened to someone new. It was often used in sitcoms. The cutting out of words is ridiculous, it's rewriting the language of history and therefore history. Censorship and banning books. No wonder history is doomed to repeat itself. "Nazi, Reich, Concentration Camp"...NEVER FORGET what those bastards did to innocent people, especially the Jews! If youtube doesn't like it then they are no better than Hitler and the Nazis. If you don't know who Ingrid Bergman was, you will never forget her after this. Good work on this, you get it...

  • @davidintel
    @davidintel Před 11 měsíci +2

    Hard to believe an 80 year movie can still stir the emotions! Great cast, script and wonderful scenes!! My favorite movie ever, it's timeless.
    Great review, glad you could get into it.
    Subscribed and Liked =)

  • @joebombero1
    @joebombero1 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Ilsa never says "I love you" to Lazlo. She clearly admires him, feels obligated to him, but there is no romantic feeling. I lose track how many times she says it to Rick.

  • @deckofcards87
    @deckofcards87 Před 10 měsíci +4

    The most classic Hollywood ending ever! I enjoyed Casablanca on first viewing, but I seem to like it more with each viewing as the years go by... as if the characters are old friends. It has that peculiar magic about it. Some other films with this effect are The Godfather, The Third Man and Singin' In The Rain.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Před 10 měsíci

      Definitely! Even the end of film crane shot too, masterfully done, revealing what it does. I can imagine it's a great movie to re-watch. Technically I've done that when editing! Most definitely agree with these older films having characters that seem like friends. For me, in other films Cary Grant is someone I find that a lot with. Seems like he would be great to have as a friend. It does have that magic though! Ooh yes, I've not seen any of those other than Singing In The Rain, which is a favourite of mine and I agree! So friendly and inviting, plus great fun!
      Thank you for watching Sofa Cat

  • @barrycohen311
    @barrycohen311 Před 10 měsíci +1

    It's one of those weird inaccurate tropes. They never once utter "Play it again Sam" during this film. Bogart only says- "Play it Sam." :-)

  • @GrinningDwarf
    @GrinningDwarf Před 4 měsíci +1

    Nice reaction. I love that you give it the time it needs.
    You asked "What was the reason for this war?" You need to watch the 10-part miniseries Band of Brothers, especially the episode titled 'Why We Fight.'

  • @garysatterlee9455
    @garysatterlee9455 Před rokem +7

    The director, Michael Curtiz ( pronounced: "Cur-TEEZ" ) was one of the most prolific and divergent directors of all time. Be sure to check out his other films - MYSTERY OF THE WAX MUSEUM, ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD, CAPTAIN BLOOD, and WHITE CHRISTMAS to name just a few.

  • @DMWolFGurL
    @DMWolFGurL Před 11 měsíci +6

    Victor, was the girl heard of growing up. She met him and she became a great fighter because of him and she married him. She thought it was love but it was just admiration and infatuation. She met Rick and truly fell in love, that was who she was meant to be with, but Rick saw the bigger picture that without Ilsa, Victor couldn't survive. Rick sacrificied his own happiness for humanities sake.

  • @arjaylee
    @arjaylee Před rokem +4

    The evil symbols that are in a movie, need to be seen todaY TO REMIND US OF THWE EVIL. Otherwise people today don't recognize what may be flying down their street.

  • @steve8510
    @steve8510 Před rokem +8

    "Play it again Sam" is never actually said in the film but became the signature line

    • @thomastimlin1724
      @thomastimlin1724 Před rokem +1

      “If she can stand it, so can I. Play it!”

    • @ToABrighterFuture
      @ToABrighterFuture Před rokem +1

      Same way Dirty Harry didn't say, "Do you feel lucky, punk?"

    • @Hexon66
      @Hexon66 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Because of the Woody Allen play and movie, in 1969 and 1972 respectively, with that title.

    • @steve8510
      @steve8510 Před 11 měsíci

      @@Hexon66 In play before that according to both my grandparents

    • @rollomaughfling380
      @rollomaughfling380 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Did you post this without actually watching the video? He goes into this.

  • @artbagley1406
    @artbagley1406 Před rokem +1

    Thank you very much, Marty, for reacting to this movie, one of the best EVER made. Has anybody ever mentioned that you resemble Rowan Atkinson? At certain angles, and when you make certain facial expressions, RA just pops out under that chapeau of yours! "And then the war came" you observed; it's another reverb from "It's A Wonderful Life." Also noted was a slight perking up your posture and eyebrows when "the battle of the bands" began; one of the most moving, patriotic scenes in a dramatic movie. Lots of cinematic "history" in this film. Will look for other of your reactions! Great job!!

  • @luisalbertocalla6649
    @luisalbertocalla6649 Před 4 měsíci

    I just saw the best reaction to this wonderful movie. One of my favorites. Your explanation was impeccable and the data you provided was very interesting. Greetings from Tandil, Argentina! 🇦🇷🤗

  • @lauramiller4939
    @lauramiller4939 Před 10 měsíci

    Rick helped the young couple because the wife confessed that she'd caved to Luis (Claude Rains) to let him have his way with her in exchange for exit visas and would never tell her husband (explains why Luis complains to Rick about interfering in his '"romances),
    Also, lol, Van Nuys is pronounced VAN NIZE (I grew up in Southern California). Great review!

  • @robertguttman1487
    @robertguttman1487 Před dnem

    Few movies are so much "of their time" than this one is. There is so many things in the film that would have been so obvious to audiences at the time that they would have needed absolutely no explanation, but which audiences today seem not to understand at all. For example, in the opening scene a fugitive is shot dead by the police beneath a large poster. That poster shows the image of Marshal Philippe Pétain, the French general who surrendered to the Germans in 1940 and who became the head of the new German-backed collaborationist French government. The symbolism of the man being shot dead beneath the image of Pétain would have been obvious. Afterwards, in the Cafe, Berger shows Victor Laszlo a ring with a symbol concealed inside it, which Laszlo clearly recognizes as some sort of "secret code". Actually, that symbol was the "Cross of Lorraine", which was the insignia of the "Free French" who were still fighting on the Allied side. Rick frequently makes a point of the fact that he is "neutral". After Peter Lorre is arrested a character who is clearly British says to Rick, "I hope you'll do more for me when my times comes", to which Rick replies, "I stick my neck out for nobody". In fact, at that time there was a considerable "isolationist" movement in the United States which was determined to keep the country out of the war. At one point Rick states that "It's December 1941" and that "people are asleep all over America". The story takes place in December 1941, at which time WW-II had been going on for 2 1/2 years, at which time the United States was still neutral although, clearly, not destined to remain so very much longer. In the final scene Captain Renault tosses a bottle of water into a trash can. The label on the bottle clearly reads "Vichy", which was a French town famous for producing mineral water, but which also happened to be the seat of the pro-German French collaborationist government. The final line is clearly symbolic of how, in December 1941, the formerly-neutral United States finally did align itself with the Allies. The significance of all of those allusions would have been perfectly obvious to audiences in 1942, but seem to go right over people's heads today. It is also interesting to note that this film is concerned largely with European refugees and that many of the actors appearing in it actually were refugees, including Peter Lorre, Paul Henreid and Conrad Veidt. The latter agreed to accept his role only if they allowed him to make the character irredeemably evil because he actually had known people like that, and he certainly succeeded.

  • @bluefriend62
    @bluefriend62 Před rokem +6

    Love your reactions to the classics--More, please! Some I often recommend are All About Eve (1950), Cabaret (1972), Sunset Boulevard (1950), The Philadelphia Story (1950) and A Streetcar Named Desire (1951), just to name a few!

    • @TTM9691
      @TTM9691 Před rokem +1

      Every one of those are fantastic. "A Streetcar Named Desire" and "Sunset Boulevard" are particularly great films that I'd love to see Marty's reaction to, but as soon as I say that I feel guilty about not saying the same thing about the other three, which are also all top shelf classics. (although I must admit for Fosse, "All That Jazz" is the one I'm most dying to see a reaction to! i just watched "Cabaret" this past weekend, actually!)

  • @Gort-Marvin0Martian
    @Gort-Marvin0Martian Před 29 dny

    The greatest film about love ever. Think about all the different examples of love displayed in this film.
    Loved your details on the filming itself. Lighting, framing and etc.
    As we say in Texas; y'all be safe. Everybody!!!

  • @readyourhead
    @readyourhead Před 3 měsíci

    I love your style and cannot wait to see what we'll all watching next. Again, your style, suit, hat, black n white, reaction & awesome trivia into is top notch. I had such a great time watching this grand film with you & through your eyes and perspective. Take Care!

  • @LeighMet
    @LeighMet Před rokem +2

    Yes she knows Rick!!

  • @charrid56maclean
    @charrid56maclean Před 10 měsíci +2

    New sub. Love the classic film reactions. The Bad Seed, A Womans Face and The Maltese Falcon are 3 great old films. Oh when the letter is all wet, I always took it as the letter itself was crying😢

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Před 10 měsíci +1

      Hi Richard! Thank you so much for subbing and welcome! Oh fantastic, I'm glad you love the classics too. Ooh, I've heard of the first and the last, but not seen any of those! I've just added all 3 to my list. It's ever-growing, but I promise I will eventually get around to all of them. I hope you're well!
      That's a great interpretation of the letter being wet! I never thought of it that way. I always love hearing others thoughts on these things.
      Have a wonderful day and thank you for watching!

  • @Briansgate
    @Briansgate Před 5 měsíci +1

    I like that you did the trivia bits at the end.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Před 4 měsíci

      Thank you Brian! Im glad you liked the trivia segment, I like to do that to delve further into it. I hope you enjoyed the rest, thanks for watching

  • @mildredpierce4506
    @mildredpierce4506 Před rokem +3

    Another old movie you might be interested in is Alfred Hitchcock’s Dial M for murder Ray Milland and Grace Kelly or Rope with James Stewart.

  • @mildredpierce4506
    @mildredpierce4506 Před rokem +3

    Do you like vintage type stuff? and into black-and-white movies? Are you my long lost son?
    I too have a fondness for vintage things and old movies. I am especially fond of film noir but I like old movies in general. A couple of times I have attended the Hollywood film noir festival. It was fantastic

  • @katherinedinwiddie4526
    @katherinedinwiddie4526 Před 11 měsíci

    First time watching you was 12 angry men. Love your reactions. Ingrid is one of my favorite actress. She also stars in a mystery Gaslight and Notorious. Many more.

  • @mikematusek4233
    @mikematusek4233 Před 11 měsíci

    Film Noir goes to war. Famed lines started here: Usual Suspects, Here's Look at you kid, Of all the Gin Joint..., The start of a beautiful friendship. Word has it that Bogie only got the role because Ronald Reagan became unavailable. Then as Time goes by, but Bergman was on another movie. Cross, Double Cross. and triple cross.

  • @SueProv
    @SueProv Před rokem +3

    😂Philadelphia Story is 1940.

  • @etaoinbshrdlu
    @etaoinbshrdlu Před 11 měsíci

    You did a great job, and got a lot of things right, even though the film throws so much at you so fast. Thanks for giving everyone all that extra "bonus" info! Books have been written about this movie. As you noted, it was personal for many of the actors. Even Michael Curtiz, a Jew, , the director, who actually fled Paris, like Rick! as the Germans came in in 1940. So did "Yvonne" and her RL husband a Jew,, the actor who played the croupier! The last two fled by car, then bicycle, then on foot. They all escaped through Portugal. "Carl", the waiter, had a sister in a concentration camp as this was shot, and she died there before the end of the war. "Strasser" was not Jewish, but had been a public anti-Nazi in Germany, and fled to avoid arrest. As I said, it was personal for them!

  • @carlossantiago9955
    @carlossantiago9955 Před rokem +3

    Great review of one of my favorite "Wartime" films. As an "aside"...if you're looking for recommendations in the "Sci-Fi" genre...can I suggest two: 1968's "The Power" (starring George Hamilton) and 1970's "Colossus: The Forbin Project" (starring Eric Braeden). The later perhaps being relevant to today's headlines on Artificial Intelligence.

  • @hannejeppesen1809
    @hannejeppesen1809 Před 11 měsíci

    Neither Bogart or Ingrid Bergman ever said "Play it again, Sam". the quote is "Play it, Sam.. Play "As time goes By".

  • @AddSerious
    @AddSerious Před rokem +1

    Never been to your channel before but ANYTIME someone watches Casablanca the 1st time I make a point to check them out... had a good time, subscribing

  • @calme-dx2dp
    @calme-dx2dp Před rokem +2

    Marty, you should review *MARTY* it's a good movie.