6:37 The other kid could have still drawn the game by not taking Josh's knight, but he did and put his King on the long diagonal putting himself into a skewer check when Josh gets his own Queen. The other kid took the knight because he thought he was winning when in fact he could only draw at best by that point which fits his arrogant personality.
Its called . " Let 's make a YT vlog and capitalise on well known hollywood star performances. See how many likes and subscribers we get and make a bit of cash".
i have some of my greatest memories of my baby brother who was taken from us in 85 at 16 laughing his balls off during the whole movie/ can’t ever go wrong with uncle rodney
I love Deborah Kerr, she elevated the movie so much, hee and Cary's chemistry was sizzling with a great banter going on. The performance Deborah gave in the final scene was brilliant, when she says Nicki "oh darling, dont look at me like that" had me bowling with tears. She looked breathtakingly beautiful and wish the both of them had more scenes in the movie. 🤩💕
Great Review and fun fact, I was at the Stanford Theatre (in 2014) watching a silent film, "Poisoned Paradise" 1924-with Clara Bow and there was a "wall of jericho" scene where the two leads were sharing a hotel room and they hung a sheet to separate the two single beds (the scene and comedic moments was very reminiscent of "It happened one night")
Thought it was kind of boring, the dialogue was awkward and breaks a lot. Maybe I'm just used to quicker dialogue where the banter between characters is how we would measure their chemistry, but as they don't express their passion physically... I don't get it. Loved Deborah Kerr's wardrobe and found it hard to believe Cary Grant as a down and out painter.
I love these movies from this time period. This is called acting that you see here, they use their facial expressions and body language to tell the story, some things are implied and you have to feel the emotional exchange between two people who love each other so much that they don’t want to hurt the other one. When he finally figures it out that she can’t walk he realizes she loves him so much that she will live with a broken body and a broken heart so as not to be a burden on him being stuck with a cripple. Only two years before they came out with the shots to prevent polio and every time your child or young adult got sick you feared that it was polio and that they would be crippled, then it was 1962 when the oral polio vaccine was developed.The very first time I saw this movie my mother and I both cried like babies and I was 10 years old and watched many romantic movies and lots of westerns. Mom and I loved anything with Cary Grant in it. He was such a good looking and very classy man. He was good looking even when he got old. Back in the 50’s and 60’s scripts were developed around the acting, the script, the scenery and making the audience be drawn into it. Now movies are loud, foul language, gaudy and seemed to want shock value. I don’t think that I’ve gone to a great movie in a very long time.
I am glad you mentioned that they do NOT love each other, and Freddie is a better choice. You get it!!!!! I am amazed how many people - MOST people - do not get the point of the story. People want Eliza and Henry to be lovers??? No!!!! That is the whole point of the movie! It was the whole point of the play, and the original myth! She STOPS BEING AN OBJECT! She becomes independent of him, he cannot control her anymore. In the original myth, Pygmalion sees women as just objects to be controlled or admired. He has to learn that women are people too, they are not perfect statues and are not subject to his whims. Women are real, And because of that, if Eliza married Henry she would be miserable, she would be his toy again, to ignorantly use. That would be awful. Do people really think that is healthy? No wonder there are so many unhappy relationships in the world. Bad romances train people to make bad decisions. People who think Eliza should marry Henry, or think that Henry has changed, should be forced to watch the movie again and again until they see what he is like. What is nearly as bad as making them be lovers (but not quite as bad) is the modern view that Eliza should throw Henry's slippers at him, or wear them herself, to express dominance. Don't they get the point of the story? Dominating others is wrong, that is the whole point. The story ends when they are friends. Equals. Mature. Emotionally healthy. Well, Eliza is emotionally healthy anyway. Henry is not a man who changes. But she is now mature enough to accept that and still enjoy hs friendship, without unrealistic expectations, and without hating him. That is healthy. They are NOT lovers. There is NOT a power struggle. Eliza has blossomed into a complete and healthy human being. She is everything she should be. She no longer fetches slippers. Men and women can be friends without being lovers. And without being master and servant. Without being rivals. Modern people seem to have forgotten that, and that causes us much unhappiness. The point of the ending is that they are now equals. Henry asks for his slippers, and Eliza smiles and does not get them. Why is that not obvious? She comes back because they are now friends who can respect each other and appreciate their differences. She comes back because she wants him to be happy. But not at the cost of dominating her. he likes her face, so she will be around. That is the kind, mature, loving thing to do. But she will NOT fetch his slippers. She will NOT be his trophy wife half his age. Men and women can be friends and like each other without sex. They can be friends even though they might drive each other mad at times. Like my ex and myself! I totally admire her, but we cannot stand being together for more than a day or so. That is OK. We both admire each other's strengths but we are very different people. Maybe that is why I like My Fair Lady. I am like Henry, and my ex is like Eliza. And that is fine. A healthy world is where people can respect each other even when they are different. What happens next (after the play ends) is so obvious that George Bernard Shaw did not have to write it - why state the obvious? He thought the audience would get it. But it drove him crazy that audiences did NOT get it. He said that audiences were so used to bad romances that they could not think for themselves. So Shaw wrote a big essay explaining exactly what must happen next. Eliza and Henry remain lifelong friends: she visits him every weekend. But they are ONLY friends. Eliza marries Freddy. Yes, he is not a hero or a genius, but he is a genuine nice guy and not totally dumb either. They buy the flower shop, They struggle financially at first but Henry helps them out. That is what friends do. They gradually made the flower shop a success. It is a happy life, fulfilling, with friends and love and all the things Eliza dreamed of when she was a flower girl. it is a happy ending, and it is REAL. This is what a real happy ending would look like. I am glad that you recognised the central point of the movie - she should not marry Henry!!!!!!!!!!!
That's how i came to see It from sleepless in Seattle the scene where the sister is watching this movie 😭 she's crying and mentions an affair to remember 💙🎗️💙 thank you i enjoyed you video. Thank you you Love 👆
I agree with Jeri. That IS a dumb line. IMO that line is actually a crock of shit. It would be nice to see it remade with actors who have better chemistry--and remove that line. Sorry Erich Segal. But I call BS. I had to laugh at Jeri's "Listen, if you're going to be a romantic film and you're on a list of top hundred you have a standard to uphold." Agree 100% You tell em, Jeri!
i'm sorry but I disagree with your assertion that she is well known just for her "celebrity". She was a great actress who won many aWARDS. See beyond the media press
@@ratingthelist8738 i've tried reading about it was it because the movie was suspenseful and because it was a film noir the movie is about sex lust and desire and the hot weather is pointing out the movie is lustful
I have to say, I laughed so hard watching this. Jerri was cracking me up! Like, tell us how you really feel. 🤣I read Wuthering Heights in high school. Hated it. Absolutely hated it. But what's funny is I loved Jane Eyre and have re-read it many times. Also loved the film adaptations of JE. To me, those two books were very different. Tone still kind of dark in JE, but overall it had a happier message. Not sure if it was a difference between the sisters (Emily with WH and Charlotte with JE) or simply the books themselves. I agree that there were no likable characters in WH, but in Jane Eyre, there were more than a few--Jane herself being someone you rooted for. But I digress. I tried to watch one of the film adaptations of Wuthering Heights (I don't think it was this one) and I. Just. Couldn't. Stopped part way through I was so bored. So all this to say I agree with your assessment of this film (and book). Also loved the comment about needing to take ghost lessons from Patrick Swayze. 👍
Well maybe I’ll read Jane Eyre this year. I try to read one or two classics a year so you’ve convinced me to check it out. Thanks for enjoying our show! Yeah I have zero poker face 😂
I very much disliked this story. Reading the book was not easy. In the book she encouraged him to be mischievous. Not a romance, Heathcliff is codependent and Catherine is manipulative. Definitely, gothic fiction. One of the greatest disappointments for me.
Talkies was a big killer of comedic actors in particular, Laurel & Hardy & The Our Gang crew being two rare exceptions, & The Marx Brothers being the outstanding example of the other end of that stick, exposing them to the fame silence was keeping them from.
Dubbing voices in musicals back in the day was more common than most think. Marni Nixon, for example did the overdubbed voices for the lead female characters in My Fair Lady, West Side Stiry, The King & I and others, also doing parts, such as Marilyn Monroe’s high notes in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.
You’re digging too deep for a common Sensical vein in this one that, much like Bringing Up Baby, isn’t meant to exist in real time, & like Baby, you just go with the flow, which to me is a funny romp.
Stewart actually left WW2 as a Colonel, the highest rank of any enlisted movie star, very few of which saw any action outside of entertaining the trooos, while Stewart was daily physically leading his men into serious battle, attested to by the men he lead only, for he, like most real hero’s, never talked about it.