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MOVIE REACTION Vertigo (1958) PATRON PICK First Time Watching Reaction/Review 

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Another movie reaction! Our Patron PeaceLoveHappiness picked a movie for us. Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo, about a ghost or an affair or a fear of heights or something. What on Earth is going on in this movie? Join us for the mystery fun!
Check out our Patreon! Full-length, advance versions of every one of our videos get posted there. Or you can just pick a movie for us like this one! Plus movie polls!
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5 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 176   
@johnmoreland6089
@johnmoreland6089 Год назад
She didn’t jump. She got scared by the nun and fell. This is a great film about obsession and how it destroys. One of Hitchcock’s masterpieces. Nice reaction guys. I highly recommend Psycho.
@captbunnykiller1.0
@captbunnykiller1.0 Год назад
I agree. She started back and tripped. Bad place to hang out while wearing heels.
@andrewcharles459
@andrewcharles459 Год назад
North by Northwest!
@billolsen4360
@billolsen4360 Год назад
The nuns should give some thought to closing that tower off to the public.
@BC-1
@BC-1 Год назад
It's a movie about redemption, about the obsession to recreate a past event we failed.
@photo161
@photo161 Год назад
...There actually is no tower there. As you must know, it was painted in...very effective...@@billolsen4360
@lynnturman8157
@lynnturman8157 Месяц назад
He didn't know Judy was Madeline until he helped her put her necklace on & saw it in the mirror. In that moment he realizes he's been played. And that's why he's not too happy with her at the end. And she truly loved him. That's why she tore up the confession letter & decided to stay instead of running away. Great job, guys!
@spagerrhowtaf8673
@spagerrhowtaf8673 Год назад
For much of its 128 minutes, “Vertigo” pretends to be at least two different movies than the one it is. It’s not a ghost story. It’s not even a murder mystery. It’s a tragedy - a cinematic opera - about a man so in love with the woman in his head that he can’t see the woman in his arms. It’s a movie about the ways we try to mold the people we love into the people who never loved us back.
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 7 месяцев назад
Excellent analysis
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 4 месяца назад
Well said!
@liteflightify
@liteflightify Год назад
Possibly my favorite movie ever. And since you mentioned David Lynch, this is one of the most influential movies on Lynch, especially on Mulholland Dr.
@ericolsen5798
@ericolsen5798 Год назад
As Gomez Addams once said, "What a lovely name, 'Lynch'."
@peteralbert1485
@peteralbert1485 9 месяцев назад
Yes! More than any other movies, I think "Vertigo" and "Mulholland Drive" capture the feverish blending of hope and terror that mark our most vivid nightmares.
@denniszenanywhere
@denniszenanywhere 2 месяца назад
My favorite film of all time.
@brandonflorida1092
@brandonflorida1092 Год назад
Judy didn't jump at the end. She was startled, backed away, and fell. Hitchcock has quite a lot of brilliant films. I'd advise you to watch "Psycho." It will blow your minds.
@marecku21
@marecku21 4 месяца назад
The reason he was so angry was because his ideal woman was a fake. The reason she resisted his changes is because she wanted him to love her, Judy, not the fantasy of Madeleine.
@antoinemozart243
@antoinemozart243 12 дней назад
In many Hitchcock movies, love is an illusion but in Vertigo it reaches precisely a....vertigo. Love for Madeleine is a construction but a so strong construction that Scottie is unable to destroy.
@mckeldin1961
@mckeldin1961 Год назад
I think Judy really did love Scottie, and she desperately wanted him to love her for her real self and not who she pretended to be in the past. Scottie's anger at the end has as much to do with the demolition of his ideal love as it does having been lied to. Really good pick up on the thematic importance of the title! The meta aspect of the movie involves Hitchcock himself molding his female stars to HIS liking (and presumably the male audience members). There is an unused ending (a bonus on the DVDs and Blu-rays)... Scottie is entering Midge's apartment while the two of them hear a news report on the radio about Gavin Elster's capture: completely anti-climatic!
@ericolsen5798
@ericolsen5798 Год назад
Regardless of the love she may have for Scottie, Judy is a guilty person who belongs in prison for accessory to murder.
@johnmoore2910
@johnmoore2910 Год назад
She did not jump. She fell trying to get away from the shadowy figure. And his vertigo is over.
@clairekane4157
@clairekane4157 11 месяцев назад
He doesn't fall in love with just any woman, or even more than 1 woman - he falls in love with her, no matter who she "is". ✌️💜
@Ceractucus
@Ceractucus Год назад
Gentlemen. This was a fantastic reaction! Was so nice to see people of a younger age (than me) appreciate this movie much the way I did when I was your age. Your reactions to the two biggest surprises was particularly fun. There is no official truth as to whether Judy fell or jumped and it is still debated to this day. But she did have to die according to the Hayes code. If you are not familiar the Hayes code was a moral standard placed on movies from 1934 to 1968. One of its rules was that anyone that committed a crime had to pay for it with a prison term, or their life. I've lived in the SF bay area for 53 years and I am happy to tell you that all but two of the locations this movie was shot in are still there. Ernie's closed in the 80s or 90s and same with the McKitrick Hotel. Mission San Juan Batista is the Mission they visited but there is no tower there. Two minor errors. The forest where Madeleine points to the redwood tree is Big Basin (SW of San Jose) and not Muir woods but that was a logical conclusion. I believe it was the foreground and not the background painted on to the that image, since it is the tower that is missing and the rest of it looked fine to the best of my recollection. Please watch more Hitchcock, and please watch more movies. Your series are great, but Catch-up packets deserves equal air time in my opinion.
@andrewcharles459
@andrewcharles459 Год назад
That wasn't a trial, it was a coroner's inquest.
@captbunnykiller1.0
@captbunnykiller1.0 Год назад
Wonderful movie. It has so many layers it keeps you wondering about many things.
@Dej24601
@Dej24601 Год назад
One of the great tricks that Hitchcock accomplishes is the change he makes the audience go through; Scotty is the victim in the first half, the audience identifies with Scotty and feels sorry for him. Then Scotty becomes the antagonist, the aggressor and the audience no longer identifies with him and becomes uncomfortable with his obsession. Many Hitchcock themes are about various obsessions but this film is unique because we the audience get drawn inside the mind of the person and feel his transformation from innocent victim to someone obsesses. However, at the end, he does seem free of his “vertigo” or “acrophobia.” The doctor and Midge had talked about the chance that another great shock might get rid of his problem, and the entire experience of finding out the truth and seeing Judy’s death shocked him out of his condition.
@lynnturman8157
@lynnturman8157 Месяц назад
Yeah, that's one interpretation. Personally, I think he jumps at the end (ten seconds after the camera stops). It follows the logic of the movie. He's been following her down, down, down, into insanity the whole movie. Why would he suddenly change & not do so at the end? But we'll never know because HItchcock doesn't show us what happens after he climbs out onto that ledge.
@bryanchase1127
@bryanchase1127 Год назад
Kim Novak who played Judy/Madeleine, was almost 25 years younger than Jimmy Stewart. Kim Novak is still alive at age 90. Tippi Hedren who played Melanie Daniels in The Birds is still alive at 93, and Eva Marie Saint who played Eve Kendall in North by Northwest is still alive at 98.
@TheCkent100
@TheCkent100 Год назад
And Doris Day, who played Josephine Conway McKenna in "The Man Who Knew Too Much" (also a HItchcock directed James Stewart film) lived to the age of 97, passing away in 2019 from pneumonia.
@ericolsen5798
@ericolsen5798 Год назад
I had the privilege to see Kim Novak and James Stewart while parking cars at a charity ball in 1988. Didn't get real close to either of them, but they were both very gracious to their fans.
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 7 месяцев назад
SO, HITCH OR SIR ALFRED DIDN'T HARM THEM, FINALLY ! THEY SURVIVE AND WELL !
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 7 месяцев назад
FINE ! @@ericolsen5798
@robertjewell9727
@robertjewell9727 Год назад
My friend Dorothy's dad composed the music for this film among many other Hitchcock films.
@Dej24601
@Dej24601 Год назад
Bernard Herrmann is unique among composers. His music can create tension as in Psycho, or suspense as here or be jazzy as in Taxi Driver or create lush romanticism as in The Ghost and Mrs Muir.
@ericolsen5798
@ericolsen5798 Год назад
@@Dej24601 Mr Herrmann was one of the unsung heroes of classic cinema.
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 7 месяцев назад
AND OTHER DIRECTORS TOO ! WHAT A MUSICIAN!
@Mr17051963
@Mr17051963 5 месяцев назад
Before CGI is where you find the real filmmakers. Now, with a big budget, everything is possible. 🎥🎞️
@reneescala7526
@reneescala7526 Год назад
Vertigo was Hitchcock's visual metaphor for time and memory and memory's relation to obsession and art.
@ericolsen5798
@ericolsen5798 Год назад
And his best movie prior to this was "Shadow of a Doubt."
@reneescala7526
@reneescala7526 Год назад
Maybe so but I wouldn't denigrate Rear Window.@@ericolsen5798
@YolandaAnneBrown95726
@YolandaAnneBrown95726 Год назад
So glad that you guys decided to watch "Vertigo". It's in my Top 5 Hitchcock films (Psycho, The Birds, Rebecca and North By Northwest).
@billolsen4360
@billolsen4360 Год назад
AND, Rear Window is exciting too. Hitchcock was really at the top of his game in the 1950's.
@BC-1
@BC-1 Год назад
1- Vertigo, 2- Dial M for Murder, 3- Rear Window, 4- Psycho, 5- The Rope.
@travistaylor5000
@travistaylor5000 Год назад
1. Rear Window 2. Dial M For Murder 3. North By Northwest 4. The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956) 5. VERTIGO
@antoinemozart243
@antoinemozart243 12 дней назад
1) vertigo.......by lightyears.
@TheBanner
@TheBanner 19 дней назад
Fun watching you guys watch this great movie 👇 There are at least two schools of thought on what Scotty knew and when he knew it. Many, if not most, people believe Scotty really believed this girl was just a look alike. That he became obsessed with recreating her. Obsessed to the point of psychosis. That is until he saw the necklace. Mine is another school thought. I believe Scotty suspected something from the first moment he saw Judy on the street. Yes, he had had a breakdown after Madeline's apparent suicide. But that's not unusual given the horror of the event. It is very believable that he would largely recover from that in one year. Hitchcock shows us throughout the film that Scotty never believed Madeline was possessed. Throughout the first half of the film, he was trying hard to prove that wasn't the case. Trying to find the real reason for her behavior. Remember, he tells Midge, "[Possesion] is what Gavin believes, NOT what I believe." When they're in the mission stable for the first time, he tells her "See there's a reason for everything. You're not possessed." Also, remember, he spent his life as a detective. A professional grounded by facts. He was a professional investigator. He would not be so easily fooled by a change of hair, makeup, and clothing. I'm sure he hoped that if Judy turned out to be a different girl, then perhaps he could fall in love with that girl. But as a detective, the resemblance was too great not to raise his suspicions. He feared if this were the same girl, then certainly, he had been duped and used somehow. The reason Scotty seemed so stressed and his behavior was so erratic was because he feared proving that worst-case scenario. BUT he definitely needed proof. So he tested her, duplicating the clothes and the hair, hoping she would break down and tell him the truth. But Judy was a good actress. She kept up the charade, so Scotty became more and more unsure. But Scotty was never psychotic. Never a pathetic simp, unrealistically obssessed with her... he was a man living in Terror that his worst fears about her might be true. And then, when he saw the necklace, that confirmed she was the same girl he had loved. The girl who used him, likely for profit. He was probably angry enough to want to throw her off the tower, but that isn't something Scotty would ever do. When they reached the top of the stairs, Scotty's harsh questioning gave way to a romantic kiss. He was probably wondering if having a relationship with this untrustworthy woman could be possible. HER DEATH Being fearful, dazed, and confused, I feel it's believable that Madeline would be so startled by the Nun that she would jump back reflexively, accidentally falling to her death from the tower. That leaves Scotty in a state of re-lived Horror. That's not a happy ending, but for me, it's a good ending that sets up the opportunity for Hitchcock audiences to explore so many unanswered questions posed by the film.
@johnmoreland6089
@johnmoreland6089 Год назад
One great plot point that you don’t see until the second time you watch the film is that in his first scene Elster says, “The things that spell San Francisco to me are disappearing fast. I should have liked to have lived here then. Color, excitement, power, freedom.” Then later the bookseller uses the exact same words when talking about Carlotta’s life when he says her husband “...threw her away. He had no other children. His wife had no children. So, he kept the child and threw her away. You know, a man could do that in those days. They had the power and the freedom.” So in his first scene Elster is in effect telling Scotty and the audience exactly what he wants to do with his wife (literally throw her away off the tower) but we don’t know it yet.
@stevenklinden
@stevenklinden Год назад
And this is reinforced by Scotty at the end, when he says to Judy/Madeline, "with all his wife's money and all that freedom and power". When you watch this movie several times, you start to find a lot of little repetitions like that, supporting the theme of doubles and of history repeating itself.
@frankmahovlich5099
@frankmahovlich5099 Год назад
"...I'd never go anywhere up high ever again.", or anywhere near a platinum blond ever again! 🤣 Poor Midge was obsessed with Scottie; Scottie was obsessed with Madeline. Two heartbreaking moments: when Scottie wants Judy to bleach her hair, she says, "Will you love me then?" up in the tower, when Scottie's voice goes weak & almost cracks when he says to Judy, "You shouldn't have been so sentimental." Really enjoyed both your reactions and discussion about the movie at the end. Jimmy Stewart and Kim Novak starred together in another movie in 1958 (totally different genre) called "Bell, Book and Candle", sophisticated & funny rom-com set in NYC. Kim's a modern day young witch who puts a spell on book publisher Jimmy. Great supporting cast of comic characters. The movie is said to have inspired 1960's BEWITCHED television series. Give it a watch & reaction!
@carlbaldasso
@carlbaldasso Месяц назад
I would venture to say that Scottie's "You shouldn't have been that [NOT 'so'] sentimental" is the most heart-breaking line in the whole film. But as I commented above, I also think Midge - who is as obsessed with Scotty as Scotty is with Madeline - has 3 heartbreaking moments: 1) When she sees Madeline leaving Scotty's apartment and says "Was it a ghost? Was is fun?" (just listen to Bernard Herrmann's sorrowful underscore) 2) Her "Stupid...stupid" line as she tears her hair out after Scotty sees her modified Carlotta portrait." 3) Midge walking down that lonely dark corridor and out of the picture after speaking to the sanatorium doctor. Honestly, this isn't really a who-dunnit, or a thriller. It's an opera about love and death and obsession; an opera without singing. Although Bernard Herrmann's MASTERPIECE of a score more than makes up for any lack of singing, IMHO. My all-time favorite score, in my all-time favorite film (plot holes and all).
@Jontor11
@Jontor11 Год назад
Great reaction guys! There are really some cool Hitchcock movies you have to watch. Like Rear Window, North By Northwest, Psycho, to just name a few... Hitchcock more or less invented the "cool" shot.
@billolsen4360
@billolsen4360 Год назад
Hitchcock started making silent movies, so he developed good skills in telling the story visually.
@carlosyamara
@carlosyamara Год назад
This is , in my opinion, a fantasy movie about men’s obsession with controlling women. Notice how when Scotty is following her in his car he seems to keep driving further and further downward, as if Hitchcock is showing us how Scotty seems to be falling further and further into this spell, that he’s not going to be able to get out of. The DVD release has an incredible commentary by none other than the great Martin Scorsese, this is one of his favorite films. Seeing you guys, experience it for the first time was so enjoyable, I loved how lost/confused/befuddled you both were with all the twists and turns. Great reaction, guys.
@zedwpd
@zedwpd Год назад
Hitchcock chose downward drives/filming because it's San Francisco and what is at the bottom of all hills in San Francisco? The Water, the city, and the View. If you're making a movie in SF are you going to film upward away from the water and city and just show the tops of hills? No. I think you are projecting.
@lynnturman8157
@lynnturman8157 Месяц назад
@@zedwpd Disagree. Carlos is spot on. Before he falls violently, he falls slowly, hypnotically. He's falling down into a spiral & doesn't even realize it.
@mildredpierce4506
@mildredpierce4506 3 месяца назад
Judy may have fallen from the tower when she saw the nun because she may have thought she was the angel of death coming to get her and she was trying to get away but fell to her death instead
@got2bjosh
@got2bjosh Год назад
Barry is back for S4 - the final season. First two episodes were good. As for Hitchcock, he has so many great films. Vertigo is definitely one of his top three masterpieces. We had to study it in film school for a variety of reasons. Yes, the color green is significant. North By Northwest is considered the first modern action film. A step up from the stiff historical epics, but a precursor to the blockbusters of the 70s. The plane sequence is iconic. Rebecca, Rear Window, Strangers on a Train, Rope, The Birds, and Psycho are just a few others must see films.
@mildredpierce4506
@mildredpierce4506 3 месяца назад
I love Arrested Development. As far as the condition vertigo, it has something to do with your inner ear which affects your balance. Car sickness is actually vertigo. When people feel dizzy from a car ride. if a person has problems with vertigo, they should be a front seat passenger whenever possible and look out the window and not down. If they can’t be a front seat passenger, they must not look down and read anything. They must always look forward or out the window. if they must look down, they must hide their peripheral view. Having your head down when you’re reading and seeing everything moving in your peripheral, causes vertigo. Amusement park rides that go upside down or too fast or in a circle faster than a merry-go-round, could cause vertigo. Vertigo could also happen at any time without warning. Vertigo could also last anywhere from a few hours to months. Sometimes eating fresh ginger, not tea or powder, but fresh ginger root can alleviate the vertigo symptoms. The person suffering from vertigo would need to take a few slices of the fresh ginger and chew it. It’s not pleasant, but it must be done. If possible, the juice of the ginger can be squeezed out with a garlic press and the sufferer can sip on the juice about a tablespoon should do it. Sometimes, during a bout of vertigo, it may be necessary to keep your head turned a certain way to alleviate the dizziness.
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 19 дней назад
Too late for giving your lessons to Scotty !!!!
@brianbutz3306
@brianbutz3306 2 месяца назад
I find it somewhat funny watching younger people reacting to this one. Particularly in how they impose modern interpretations of mental health and propriety. Surely this is a story about obsession, and guilt, but what is Stewart actually obsessed with? He developed a neurological condition from the guilt he felt from the death of a fellow police man who died trying to save his life. This is a man already suffering from severe trauma, and a woman he falls in love with exploited that trauma to conspire to murder. You guys seem to overlook that this guy was a top detective in San Fransisco. He was a puzzle solver, he was one of the "good guys", he's not the kind of guy who gets duped. Yet this gorgeous woman entered his life as the ultimate mystery, and used him as a patsy making him complicit in murder. He didn't see that coming. When Madeline faked her death, Scotty was institutionalized for the trauma it had caused him, not only for losing a woman he loved, but also in the guilt and shame he felt for not being able to stop her death. He failed at his job yet again. It seems bizarre to me that in the second half that younger people are so quick to judge Smitty's integrity in how he obsesses over Judy. She drove him to madness, yet younger viewers condemn him for acting so. Let's not forget that this woman took money to help a guy kill someone. I contend that Scotty's behavior meeting Judy initially was out of loss and romantic curiosity, but very quickly assumed the role of detective once more. In trying to make her look like Madeline he was trying to solve her murder and heal his trauma. I don't think he had the pieces together, but he knew he had been wronged, and was going to get it out of her one way or another. Again, I should mention he was institutionalized because he could not process what had happened the day of Madeline's death. To take someone's sanity who was already suffering from severe trauma, you'd have to expect that person to be incredibly volatile if you mess with his affections, his professional reputation, his sanity and make him an accessory to murder. There's also the element of Scotty recognizing his lost love. He was drawn to Madeline as the mystery she posed as Carlotta. He wanted to save her, it was the character's desperation that he was largely attracted to. When Judy began to resemble Madeline more through the traumatizing make-overs, her guilt caused an inner turmoil within her. When Scotty could recognize that turmoil, she became Madeline again and he wanted to save and love her once more. I do believe though that that wasn't his plan after their first meeting. He was on to her as a detective and wanted to know how he'd been done wrong. I don't think he had any intention of loving her again after his first visit as he had her figured out, but when she became as desperate as Carlotta, he couldn't help himself. I feel this is much more complex than modern audiences give it credit for. They are much too forgiving of the Judy character, and much too quick to judge someone making questionable decisions in an attempt to process trauma and achieve justice. I'm not judging your insights or suggesting you missed the point, I just find it curious how younger people instantly see Smitty as a creep rather than a victim, when he's clearly both. It was fun watching this with you. Many Of Hitchcock's films are among the best ever made. I feel "Rear Window", "Psycho", and "The Birds", are of the same caliber in terms of film making, suspense and psychological tension. "North by Northwest" is often heralded as one of his masterpieces, but I feel it's place in history is for being the first action/adventure film, and not a stand out as a Hitchcock movie. It has intense tension, memorable visuals and wild stunts, but so does virtually every action film from the 80's that owes homage to it.
@starlightperkins330
@starlightperkins330 Месяц назад
The nun frightened her and she backed up and fell out the window
@okay5045
@okay5045 Год назад
Hitchcock was called the Master of "Suspense". He built tension better than anyone who ever made movies. Please go down the rabbit whole with him. His early 30s 40s 50s movies all are great trust me.
@GarthKlein
@GarthKlein Год назад
I second that motion. Personally, I have great fondness for "The 39 Steps," "Foreign Correspondent" and "Shadow of a Doubt."
@angienoexiste
@angienoexiste 7 месяцев назад
Judy didn’t jump in the end, she fell, when she and Scottie are at the top of the building he’s pushing his way through “a test” to cure his vertigo, he becomes obsessed with the idea of suprassing the trauma of losing Madeline, that idealized woman that went from loving to having a twisted and toxic desire towards her, and in that spiral he pays a great price, he loses the woman he could’ve been happy with as well as his sense of love and desire become twisted, leaving a man whom we feel creeped out and not sympathizing. And with Judy, she never makes peace with the atrocity she’s done in the past, being complice of the murder of an innocent woman merely for her desire to be loved by the wrong man, in the end she falls again for it except this time it could’ve been the right one hadn’t been for the harm she’s caused in the past, and because of that when she’s most close to her happiness the divine judgment appears (symbolized by the nun) to remind her what she’s done and how there’s no escape from it.
@echocheck
@echocheck Год назад
Judy had to die at the end because she was an accomplice to a murder. The studio probably told Hitch that she had to be punished in some way.
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 7 месяцев назад
SIRE ALFRED KNEW PERFECTLY THE HAYES CODE ! NO NEED TO TELL HIM THIS OR THAT !
@reneescala7526
@reneescala7526 Год назад
The shadow of the nun was Death. And Stewart was cured of his vertigo. Hitch was a wild-eyed Catholic moralist. Everybody pays for their sins.
@BCTMarcus
@BCTMarcus Год назад
Nice reaction and I loved the "6th grada" trauma analysis at the end. I did miss Barbara Bel Geddes (the lady friend 'without benefits') in your edit though😉 'Madeline' was kinda Scottie's 'Carmen' and Midge was his 'Micaëla' (check out the story of the opera "Carmen" by Bizet, lol).
@ericolsen5798
@ericolsen5798 Год назад
Carmen is still the sexiest character in the history of theater.
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 7 месяцев назад
Novak is more a real "Norma" !
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 19 дней назад
Too late for this because in fact, we, opera lovers, use to say « the tenor is in love with the soprano but the baritone always disagrees »!!!!
@antrimlariot2386
@antrimlariot2386 6 месяцев назад
One of Bernard Hermann's musical masterpieces. The next one he would do is Hitchcock's Psycho.
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 4 месяца назад
I’m surprised that both guys did’nt say a word about the wonderful score Bernie Hermann composed for Vertigo
@peteralbert1485
@peteralbert1485 9 месяцев назад
Of all the reactions to this movie I've seen, this was one of the most fun to watch because you guys are whip-smart and manage to think just enough ahead to set up the next reveal with a legit "See? I thought so!" Of course I got a kick out your genuine the shock in the middle. And I bet Hitchcock would've enjoyed you expressing layers of increasing discomfort as Scotty drags Judy deeper into his rabbit hole: you feel your own queasy sense of being off-balance befitting the theme of "vertigo." I also share your grasp of the film's underlying point about the hopelessness & inevitableness of a messy ending that comes from basing a relationship on catastrophic deceit. We should feel queasily off-balance in our own complicit guilt as we empathize with Judy while Scotty forces her through changes, despite her role in Madeleine's murder and the abuse of Scotty's incapacity. We can understand why she yields to Scotty's maniacal oppression - guilt? love? both? - but it all makes this movie feel even more like an authentic, feverish nightmare. I think this is Hitchcock's best, most personal and most unsettling work. Unlike "Pyscho," "The Birds," "North by Northwest" or "Rear Window," there are no virtuous/victorious heroes here. Instead there's a crook (Gavin) who murders his wife and the two flawed leads (Scotty and Judy) who played dangerously with fire and got burned. The two truly tragic figures are the real Madeleine, of course, and Midge, whose selflessness & nurturing nature never get rewarded.
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 7 месяцев назад
SCOTTY'S RABBIT HOLE ! I love your expression !
@davidfox5383
@davidfox5383 Год назад
What a great reaction and discussion, guys! I've loved this movie for many years, but you gave me some fresh perspectives I haven't thought about before. I really hope you'll do some more classic films, especially Alfred Hitchcock. This one is my favorite, but as many others have suggested Psycho, Rear Window, North by Northwest and The Birds are all brilliant. Got my sub and notification turned on, can't wait to see what's next!
@jackmessick2869
@jackmessick2869 Год назад
Rear Window, Strangers on a Train, North by Northwest, Saboteur, Shadow of a Doubt, Notorious, The Man Who Knew Too Much, Rope, To Catch a Thief. Hitchcock's best. You've likely seen Psycho.
@raymeedc
@raymeedc Год назад
She was startled and fell, she didn’t jump.
@bernardgartenlaub4715
@bernardgartenlaub4715 Год назад
Wayne’s World discusses what may be the greatest movie ever made
@jaylewis5035
@jaylewis5035 11 месяцев назад
You two are freaked watching this with the lights on while talking to each other. Imagine watching this in a dark theater where there is no talking and the only impressions on your brain are coming from Hitchcock.
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 4 месяца назад
You’re right, they would be ousted of the theater
@antoinemozart243
@antoinemozart243 12 дней назад
The waves crashing while Scottie is kissing Madeleine is more than a romantic shot. Hitchcock has accustomed us with vivid sexual allusions. The Coit tower is one, the foam of the waves is another.
@mjh888
@mjh888 Год назад
Glad I found your video. It was great fun to watch two Vertigo virgins get deflowered. Thanks for posting. Especially since it’s my favorite film of all time. A complex movie to watch as you will see new things in it each time. One clue: notice the recurring imagery in the film to understand the deeper meaning of the story. Okay another clue: necrophilia. Enjoy!
@PerryCJamesUK
@PerryCJamesUK 11 месяцев назад
An inquest. A "trial" to determine cause of death.
@ramonacosta2647
@ramonacosta2647 Год назад
It's my understanding that in the book he murders her at the end. Obviously they couldn't have Jimmy Stewart murder her in the movie so Hitchcock changed the ending. In the remake I hope they stick to the original ending which makes more sense than her falling by accident.
@jeffbassin630
@jeffbassin630 Год назад
I agree with the previous comment. She was frightened by the nun. Great reaction to one of Hitchcock's classic films.
@marecku21
@marecku21 4 месяца назад
Some have survived a jump from the Golden Gate Bridge.
@donnaroo8042
@donnaroo8042 8 месяцев назад
"He's just falling in love with every woman who pays him any attention." *Barbara Belle Geddes enters the chat*
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 4 месяца назад
????
@donnaroo8042
@donnaroo8042 4 месяца назад
@@Fanfanbalibar She paid him all the attention he'd tolerate from her, but managed not to fall in love with her.
@patrickhahn5832
@patrickhahn5832 Год назад
Fun facts: Mission San Juan Bautista, where the mission scenes were filmed, doesn't have a tower. It was painted in as you guys noticed. A few percent (2% to 5% depending on source) of people who jump from the Golden Gate Bridge do survive, despite reaching a speed of 75 mph before hitting the water.
@billolsen4360
@billolsen4360 Год назад
Imagine the survivors are likely physically disabled afterwards.
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 7 месяцев назад
PLUS THE VERY LOW TEMPERATURE ! ONE PRISONER ESCAPED ALCATRAZ PRISON NOT FARAWAY, NEVER DIESCOVERED HIS BODY, DEAD OR ALIVE !
@MrMousley
@MrMousley 10 месяцев назад
If you search on RU-vid you can find the last scene of Vertigo that was cut to make the ending that we see now more ambiguous
@johnnehrich9601
@johnnehrich9601 Год назад
Hollywood at the time had the man and woman fall almost instantly in life-changing love at first sight - which caused lots of their audience to get into hasty and regrettable marriages when they tried to follow this meme, in an era of rare divorce. And older men were often matched up with much younger women - but almost never the other way around. Hitchcock also had a thing for the icy-cold blonde type for the female lead.
@robertcartier5088
@robertcartier5088 Год назад
Bird phobia: Yeah, I have that too, and it's directly related to having seen "The Birds" at a young age! And after learning that birds are essentially descendants of those few dinosaurs that survived the meteoric extinction, and having seen "Jurassic Park" a million times, I now feel somewhat justified in my fear... lol "The Birds" is a brilliant and disturbing film, and despite having scarred me for life, I still highly recommend it! ;-] Other Hitchcock films you just cannot die without seeing: Rear Window, The Maltese Falcon, North by Northwest, and Psycho. Those films are the reason you even know the name, Hitchcock!
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 19 дней назад
The Maltese Falcon isn’t a Hitch’s movie!
@robertcartier5088
@robertcartier5088 19 дней назад
@@Fanfanbalibar Absolutely correct! I must have mixed it up with something else... I always thought of the falcon being a "McGuffin", so I suppose that could be why I assumed wrong. ;-]
@erbaldwin1
@erbaldwin1 Год назад
David Lynch saw this when he was in junior high.
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 7 месяцев назад
SO HE IS A COPY-PASTE GUY
@glen1ster
@glen1ster 6 месяцев назад
Music composed by Bernard Herrmann
@michaelt6218
@michaelt6218 Год назад
Wonderful reaction, guys, thank you. Vertigo is probably my favorite Hitchcock, but there are SO many other great ones as well, as suggested in previous comments. I hope you'll check them out someday, and maybe even go back to some earlier Hitchcock classics, such as The 39 Steps or Notorious or Shadow of a Doubt.
@ericolsen5798
@ericolsen5798 Год назад
My best high school buddy got trained to be an electrician in the navy and did the job in civilian life for 30 more years after that. One of his jobs was climbing up radio and TV broadcast aerials/masts and replace the red lamp on top. Doing that job, he was sometimes 25 to 30 stories off the ground. I could never do that since I get vertigo in tall office buildings at that height. My friend always $50K more per year than I did, but he can have it!
@buddinganarchist
@buddinganarchist Год назад
The Birds is very scary.
@buddinganarchist
@buddinganarchist Год назад
Second favorite film of all time. If you do David Lynch try Blue Velvet.
@grosbeak6130
@grosbeak6130 7 месяцев назад
Guys you missed at the end what a lot of reactions miss at the end i.e. Scotty is standing at the top of the bell tower looking down, and he no longer has vertigo.
@wavwins
@wavwins 4 месяца назад
It’s cause they wouldn’t shut up the entire time
@diannerichardpratt3144
@diannerichardpratt3144 Год назад
Judy/Madelin was startled by the nun, backed up and fell. One way to end the movie was for Judy to die. Back in the old days movies were required to show that "Crime doesn't Pay". She confesses to detective Scotty that she was an accomplise to a murder. Scotty would have turned her in. Then she's off to the slammer.
@phillipdycaico5949
@phillipdycaico5949 6 месяцев назад
Judy sees the nun and thinks she is the ghost of the murdered Madeline.
@okay5045
@okay5045 Год назад
Notorious
@GarthKlein
@GarthKlein Год назад
How many recent films could raise so many questions? Hitchcock did not provide easy answers. I think the "vertigo" refers more to the audience reaction than to the plot.
@bryce253
@bryce253 Год назад
One of the most dysfunctional relationships in the history of mankind. 😅
@thegodlessvulcan
@thegodlessvulcan Год назад
Well now you gotta see "High Anxiety".
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 7 месяцев назад
OH STOP IT ! THERE IS ALWAYS A DUDE THAT MENTION THIS ZERO HIGH ANXIETY !
@imnotabotrlyimnot
@imnotabotrlyimnot 8 месяцев назад
What do you guys have against Midge?
@kimberlyjeanne9456
@kimberlyjeanne9456 Месяц назад
You guys should watch ROPE and Rear Window too!!
@robertshows5100
@robertshows5100 Год назад
Scottie removed all of her clothes and etc. while she pretended to be unconscious.
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 7 месяцев назад
AND??????????????
@amossmith6215
@amossmith6215 2 месяца назад
I forgot Ellen Corby was in here.
@jameshose5043
@jameshose5043 5 месяцев назад
nuns are creepy i’ve seen this movie dozens of times this, alien, shining, and believe it or not a room with a view i’ve seen those 4 about the same nbr of dozens of times - there are so many layers to this movie and the symbolisms are numerous in the vein of the shining
@capstan50g
@capstan50g Год назад
The issue with Judy's secret is that she's an accessory to murder and he's a former police detective. How can she come clean with him and stay out of jail? That's my take, at least. I enjoyed your discussion on the subject, too. I think my favorite Hitchcock film is North By Northwest, but I'll recommend Rear Window for you guys next. The thing to really watch for in a Hitchcock film is the direction.
@DerGeek
@DerGeek Год назад
Great reaction, subscribing now. The nun represents the darkness.
@Keyboardje
@Keyboardje Год назад
The last scene where he stands on the ledge... Well, at least he was cured of his fear of hights (Acrophobia) :D
@bluefriend62
@bluefriend62 Год назад
Excellent reaction and analysis, guys! Subscribed! More Hitchcock, please--Rear Window, North by Northwest, Psycho are all great.
@jwoodard29
@jwoodard29 Год назад
Vertigo can be found on lists compiled of the best films ever made, despite a plot that makes no real sense, and a big reveal given way too early; there are much easier ways to murder someone than the ridiculously complicated and risky scheme employed by the husband. Despite this, the film is a psychological masterpiece operating below the surface plot, and that deals with themes of obsession, longing, and especially the desire to overcome death itself. The sequence in the Empire Hotel where Judy walks out of the bathroom to be revealed as Madeline is one of the most powerful in all of film because Scotty feels like he himself has defeated death. In addition, the score and cinematography are among the best ever put on film. Rear Window is Hitchcock's 2nd best film, in my opinion.
@zedwpd
@zedwpd Год назад
No Scotty is not just a lonely guy who falls in love with anyone who pays attention to him. Midge? No. Girl from Salina? yes. Why? Not because she was any girl, because he was only in love with one women and he could feel it was her.
@arturocostantino623
@arturocostantino623 Год назад
You need to see Rear Window
@johnmoore2910
@johnmoore2910 Год назад
I was 11 or 12 when I first saw this in the theater. It had been released. And I remember being stunned that they could actually end a movie this way.
@reneescala7526
@reneescala7526 Год назад
The movie ended when Scottie was cured.
@jackmessick2869
@jackmessick2869 Год назад
You're head is spinning at the end of this, like YOU have Vertigo
@mckeldin1961
@mckeldin1961 Год назад
12 ANGRY MEN (1957) ... VERTIGO (1958) :) :) :)
@PerryCJamesUK
@PerryCJamesUK 11 месяцев назад
Try to disconnect with current social conditioning before attempting a classic film reaction. And all the outrage and judgments seemed to blot out the actual story from what you were watching, and you can't hope to understand something more complex than the cartoons that pass as films today. Vertigo is one of the best examples of what happens to a man when he lets his ego and his need to control his partner dictate his emotions, and even more so what it feels like for a woman who decides that to be loved she must give in to that same man's needs before her own self. The idea of Scotty's vertigo is a visualisation of his fear of not being in control. In the end it kills Judy, who falls to her death thinking that her victim has come to punish her.
@thetigerspot6863
@thetigerspot6863 Год назад
You guys are so dope. Love your chill energy and you have great insights into / knowledge of film in general 👍
@catch-uppackets2664
@catch-uppackets2664 Год назад
Thank you for watching! So glad you enjoy it :)
@paulklenknyc
@paulklenknyc Год назад
You need to record a follow up now that - hopefully - you’ve untwisted all your wacky wrong ideas about the plot! Great reaction throughout the movie; disappointing you had it so wrong!
@bryce253
@bryce253 Год назад
She couldn't confess because she was an accomplice in a murder.
@mildredpierce4506
@mildredpierce4506 3 месяца назад
A person attempts suicide and he doesn’t bother to call an ambulance or take her to the hospital?
@okay5045
@okay5045 Год назад
That was a coroner's inquest
@okay5045
@okay5045 Год назад
Watch the movie Notorious
@paulklenknyc
@paulklenknyc Год назад
Great reaction -- best Vertigo react ever -- see Psycho next... Try to stick with movies rather than episodes. lots of ideas for you. also see Be Kind Rewind -- do no research, you;ll be completely in love!!
@catch-uppackets2664
@catch-uppackets2664 Год назад
I saw Be Kind Rewind in the theater but it has been quite a long time now.
@geraldmcboingboing7401
@geraldmcboingboing7401 Год назад
@@catch-uppackets2664 Great reaction, Guys!!! You mentioned gaslighting, so why don’t you watch the movie, that was based on the stage play, which added a new meaning for gaslight to the dictionary by making it into a verb: Gaslight (1944) starring Ingrid Bergman and Joseph Cotten and Charles Boyer. Miss Bergman won her first Oscar for Best Actress for this film.
@julius-stark
@julius-stark Год назад
I love this movie. It's my second favorite (technically 3rd favorite) behind Hitchcock's North By Northwest and QT's Kill Bill. I saw this back when I was first discovering older films and the twist blew me away, did not see that coming at all.
@billolsen4360
@billolsen4360 Год назад
36:01 You got to know that a cop is going to hate you when you've set him up to pull off a murder and get away with it.
@photo161
@photo161 Год назад
While this heartwrenching love story was developing, you two were busy blathering away about the lousy movie you were trying to make. In order to react to a film you'd be well advised to watch it closely and with an open heart, at least in the crucial moments...
@johnnehrich9601
@johnnehrich9601 Год назад
The incredibly restrictive Hays Code from the 1930's was still in effect until it was replaced by the current letter rating in 1968. The code dictated so so much of what and how these old movies were allowed to show. In this case, she HAD to be seen punished for her crime of being an accessory to murder, so the death scene was probably the best way for Hitchcock to include it.
@hanzwind
@hanzwind Год назад
Judy thought the nun was the ghost of the murdered wife (and she fell).
@Fanfanbalibar
@Fanfanbalibar 19 дней назад
She wasn’t that stupid
@joebloggs396
@joebloggs396 Год назад
The extended alternate ending (on RU-vid) has him back with Midge.
@TheseDarkWoods
@TheseDarkWoods Год назад
Thank you! Great reaction to a true masterpiece...
@okay5045
@okay5045 Год назад
Curious how old are you two?
@catch-uppackets2664
@catch-uppackets2664 Год назад
34 and 33 currently
@scottshaw5271
@scottshaw5271 4 месяца назад
Please screen :"FEDORA" 1977...Billy Wilder...
@scarletshukla8294
@scarletshukla8294 Год назад
Pls react to euphoria
@artboymoy
@artboymoy Год назад
I've never seen this movie, but I'm just dropping in to say you should follow up with High Anxiety... :p
@scottshaw5271
@scottshaw5271 4 месяца назад
Watch "Black Narcissis"!!!!
@donbrown1284
@donbrown1284 Год назад
Did it bother you that the whole plot hinges on the unlikely point that the murderer would gamble his life that Scotty wouldn't make it up the tower to reveal the whole thing?
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