The Magnificent Seven 2016 ‧ Western/Action ‧ 2h 13m Release date: September 23, 2016 (Canada) Director: Antoine Fuqua I couldn't find this scene anywhere, so i made it myself. I own nothing shown in this video.
I love the part when they are riding along and the Mexican is trying to make friends and he's like "ey maybe my grandfather kill your grandfather ey? Ahahaha" I believe we are bonding
You just have to wonder about all the psychotic brutes who once roamed the forests and the mountains during the days of the Old West. Guys who could hunt, shoot and stab as well as any professional.
I thought he said "Now that's part of MY story, ain't it?". It makes the same point, but to me it more drives home that he has regrets of what he has done.
“Now that’s part of another story, ain’t it?” Such a tiny line really opens up a lot for his character, both that line and the looks on both his, Sams and Goodnights faces tell me they all are haunted by something in their pasts.
"Now that's part of MY story, ain't it?" I think he said. Tha Denzels character confirms that it is. Mr Horne seem to have gone a bit native over the years, and he probably is ashamed of his part in destroying the Native Americans. And he does like that his Native killings are part of his story
I like how Horne was showing zero interest in any intros or small talk, just wanted to make sure nobody challenged his right kill the scumbags to get back his possessions. And I love how they wrote him having that high pitched voice, not the standard big burly dude voice.
Or could be deliberate to subvert expectations. I know someone who uses to say "you aren't truly alive until you've won your first 1 vs 10 street fight", and is no bluffing. That guy has a voice so high-pitched, they call him "Muppet" (seriously, guy sounds like Grover). The contrast betwen those two things is as unexpected IRL as it is in the movies...
0:10 That little smirk by Sam Chisolm when he says, "And that's Jack Horn's rifle?" means he knows what's about to happen to these two. Perfect acting by Denzel.
“Now that’s part of another story ain’t it?” That line, the way his voice breaks and the sad look he shares with Sam, breaks my heart a little, think of all the terrible things he’s seen and done. He no doubt regretted his past of killing, as the saying goes “You don’t kill someone without killing a part of yourself.” You get the sense that he didn't enjoy his life and lived with his guilt. Quite sad, he seemed like a good man, just lived in a cruel time and had the unfortunate fate of having to live cruelly as well. And also great how you notice Sam also regretted asking him that question, he realized it was quite insensitive of him to bring up such a terrible part of Jack’s past.
@@Kuwaitin08 And yet he still regretted collecting scalps, as did Chisolm clearly. It was a beautifully poignant scene. I loved this remake because it didn't' shy away from the realities. These men, flawed and with dark pasts still grew and learned and ended up dying for the light. For God and for goodness. Good always defeats evil and it often requires lesser forms of bad to do so. Both movies told the same story really, but the remake did it better. My dad who is in his late 60's even agreed. And he hates remakes.
I have re-watched this several times in slow motion and you are correct there is a little smoke trail and now I will never on see it thank you for pointing this out
I feel like Hollywood sleeps on Vincent D'Onofrio. The man's range is vast, and his talent huge. His roll as Kingpin is one of the best comic villain adaptions I've ever seen, and every scene he's in during this movie he steals.
Hollywood sleeps on a lot of 'character actors' but one thing about those kinds of actors...they usually always work. As an actor myself, I have huge respect for actors like him. Always fascinating to watch.
Sleeps? Wtf? He's had such an amazing career in general let alone since 2015 playing Kingpin. I'm sorry did you mean to make this comment about Vincent D'Onofrio?
I watch this scene and think about Vincent D’Onofrio from Full metal jacket to Dare Devil to this and can’t help but admire his commitment to character.
@@kronikclubby3289 Yeah. he's definitely one of those actors that can fade into a role. For most of Men in Black 1 he was the alien host running around casually decomposing.
Vince has such a presence that the entire group of gunslingers were watching him like he could kill em all without much thought. A bear wearing people clothes indeed.
This whole movie was incredible. This scene was a masterpiece in showing the human side of a legend like Jack Horne. This is a man who in another more peaceful life would've been that bear of a man who had a heart of gold. In this world however, he is someone who became a monster swallowed by vengeance and the unforgiving frontier. In a way he is a man feared by all. In this short scene, you see that 'monster' but at the end, you see the toll it took on his soul though a single line and a look. You see the pain in others in the group who had similar demons, who in another life would have similar hearts of gold. One of the best (if not THE best) scene of the whole movie.
One of the best western remarks ever. One of my favorites & Denzel Washington has always been one of my favorite actors of all time. The Magnificent Seven is one of the best movies ever. All the guys & gals in this movie were outstanding, a little humor here & there with plenty of action. Some of the best, long lasting gunfights ever in any movie. Great cast of characters. Great job to all & a great movie.
As a huge Denzel fanboy I am surprised to find he's only done 49 mainstream movies, I own 32 so far, 8 on Steelbook including this masterpiece. Excited for Equalizer 3. Sadly Washington has said he will be retiring from movies in the near future. It will be a sad day for cinema when that day comes.
This scene, the words at 1:56, and the accompanying music touches poignantly on the story of the man Jack Horne was based on. Jack Johnson aka “Liver-Eating Johnson”, or John Johnson, was a former sailor who moved west to become a hunter and trapper in what is now western Montana. In 1847 as a young man, he married the daughter of a Flathead Indian chief. She was killed by a Crow war party while Johnson was out trapping; upon returning home he found her bones and those of his unborn son. He swore vengeance and began an epic personal war against the Crow nation. A cunning and dangerous fighter (6’2” and 260lb, enormous for that time) he roamed the Montana territory, killing them where he found them. With knife, gun, or fists, he was unmatched, but as attested by eyewitnesses (and seen here) his favorite weapon was the tomahawk. Lightning quick, immensely powerful, and as direct and ferocious as an angry grizzly, his favorite move was to kick his opponent in the balls with a force that allegedly launched grown men into the air. As referenced in this scene, over 300 died at his hand; so great a scourge was he that the Crow sent 20 hand-picked warriors out in search of him. Ordered to remain on his trail and not return home until he was dead, all 20 warriors were killed in their turn by Jack, the last one 18 years after beginning their hunt. His feud and it’s origins became well known, and his prowess as a warrior and mountain man became legendary. His savage mark of vengeance was the removing and eating of his Crow enemies livers. On one occasion, he escaped captivity at the hands of the Blackfoot (who were planning to sell him to the Crow) by chewing through his rawhide bonds and knocking out the young brave assigned to guard him , while the others were partying outside the tepee in which he was held captive. Lacking food, he then bound the guard, CUT OFF HIS LEG at the hip and ran off into the snowy night with it as his only food. Days later he arrived stark naked at a trapper friend’s cabin, still carrying the leg, frozen but chewed up a bit. 25 years after starting his vendetta, he inexplicably met, and made peace with, the Crow and never troubled them again, nor they him. He never remarried, nor had any children. He trapped, prospected, and served briefly in the Army and later as a lawman in Red Lodge, Montana for some years as an older man. Despite his fearsome reputation, he was known as a decent and fair man, was very kind to children, and was loved by many. He died in 1900 at a veterans home in Santa Monica CA, where in old age he’d fancied the warm weather and the ocean. In 1974 his remains were reinterred in Cody, Wyoming, in the land he’d lived in and loved. Modern people may be mortified by his behavior and deem him an unreasonable psychopath, but he was simply an example of what happens when a decent but dangerous man with nothing to lose is deeply wronged. The fact that he never sought love nor companionship, even long after his wife’s death, is noteworthy in itself. His is not the only story of its kind. The old west was (to some extent, still is) populated by societal misfits. Their lives were marked by hardships, and often ended quickly and harshly in that unforgiving land. Therefore, whatever fleeting happiness they could create for themselves was hard won and fiercely defended. It’s possible that after his family’s deaths, Jack sought death himself, but in the way of the warrior, by taking as many of his aggressors with him as he could. It seems that he was just too tough for a violent death to claim. I hope he found his peace at the end after forgiving the Crow. May the earth rest easy on his bones.
D'Onofrio's Horne is probably a far closer depiction to the real "Liver Eating" Johnson than the other famous fictional version of him that has walked across the silver screen. Robert Redford's JEREMIAH JOHNSON from 1972.
That is absolutely fascinating story. You know what I have no desire to read more about this guy, Because I would hate to learn that any of this was not correct and this was just 1 of the coolest things I've ever read
Vincent D'onofrio is, whithout a doubt, one of the best actors of his time. Too bad he is so underrated. Hollywood is all about "who's in the club" first, talent last.
I don't know why, but when he says "well that's part of another story ain't it?" There's something heartbreaking about that, with the music and the look he gives.
Read up on the real settlers. They wasn’t on some corporate takeover the land shet, yet, when the tribes come at all angles based on men that are bad actors, well, you compromise. We’ve all been told lies to go to war.
I mean.. the Ameircan government literally put bounties on native American heads and didn't care where the scalps came from, men, women and children were murdered in thier thousands all for a few dollars.
That's how you write a badass female character. Plus she recruits the gang and also volunteers out of desperation to save the town, not based on a "i'm better than you!" whim.
Vincent D'Onofrio is such an outstanding actor! He deserves more recognition than he is given. His role in Men in Black still makes me bust up laughing when I watch it!
Fun fact: the location of this shoot is the exact building that was used for the 2010 version True Grit, scene where Maddie and the Marshall are chasing Tom Chaney into the Indian lands. This building has seen quite a few actors come through.
Thank you! I was 99% sure it was and was looking for a comment to confirm, but that’s definitely it, where rooster kicked the Native American kid off the porch for tormenting the donkey hahahah
Mountain Men had reputations as being more than a little "teched." Even in the Ballad of Buster Scruggs, the mountain man was a card shy of a deck. The smelled bad and talked to themselves. Legends have them as cannibals and teeth-steelers (gold prospecting in your mouth.) It's realistic that even killers would give such men a wide berth.
At 0:36 is the type of walk when a man eats at Taco Bell and is told the bathroom is out of order so he has to cross the street to use the one at Target...
D`Onofrio at his peak. At that time he also performed as the best Kingpin actor ever. "It`s funny isn`t it...? How one can be so wrong about oneself..." Waddaya mean?" "I mean that I was wrong...That I`m NOT the good Samaritan... That I am the man of ILL INTENT.... who sent the traveler on a route he should not have taken..." Makes me cry just remembering it....
My first recollection of seeing Vincent D'onofrio was in Adventures in Babbysitting as the young tow truck driver the little girl mistook for Thor, although I thought he played the role well I would never have imagined him becoming the incredible actor he is today, the list is very long and he can be a character actor he most certainly is very diverse. Love his work.
le fait que Vincent d'onofrio a des roles différents dans chaque rôle fais de lui un excellent acteur et aussi très bel homme de new York section criminelle a full métal jacket ou de dardevill a men in black c'est un homme extraordinaire
one of my fave characters in that new version, did not like they killed him of so badly "broke a rock on my head"...he is one of the only characters in film i believe..when someone says....the rock BROKE on THEIR head
The origins of the Magnificent Seven played by the new cast (spoilers warning!) 1. Joshua Faraday (Chris Pratt): Grew up living with his single mother (possibly widowed or divorced), knew a guy once who fell off a five floor high building, and devoted his life to gambling using card tricks and pranks to distract his enemies, as well as gaining affection from the ladies. Don’t mind if he died. It was an awesome way to die. 2. Sam Chisolm (Denzel Washington): Grew up in Wichita, Kansas where his family was lynched by Bogue’s men and was the best friend of Goodnight Robicheaux (Ethan Hawke) during the Civil War despite fighting on opposite armies. He later became a lawman and bounty hunter to maintain equal rights while looking for Bogue to avenge his family’s death. 3. Vazquez (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo): His grandfather served in the Toluca army during the Battle of the Alamo in San Antonio, Texas and possibly killed Ethan Hawke’s grandfather who also fought in that battle. Why didn’t he die in place of some of the others during the final battle? Well, at least he gunned down one of Bogue’s deputies into a coffin. That was cool to watch. 4. Billy Rocks (Byung-Hun Lee): Was born either in Korea as his actor is Korean or possibly Shanghai, China according to Chisolm in the movie. Was later deported to Texas to build the Union Pacific Railroad and befriended Ethan Hawke. The two traveled together like sidekicks with Billy performing as a prize fighting martial artists while Goodnight collected the money from the spectators. And fun fact, his character is a tribute to the Seven Samurai from Japanese director Akira Kurosawa, on which the original Magnificent Seven was based on. I’d like it if both he and Goodnight had lived (especially Billy, because he’s a minority). 5. Goodnight Robicheaux (Ethan Hawke): Was born in a family of all white wealthy plantation owners in the South of New Orleans who did not approve of his friendship with Sam Chisolm (a.k.a. Denzel). Later joined the Civil War to fight for the Confederate army and met his friend Chisolm again on the front lines fighting for the Union army of the North. Suffered from PTSD from watching innocent soldiers die on the battlefield and left home after the Civil War ended, later befriending Billy and the rest of the Seven led by his old friend Sam Chisolm. He then rejoined the battle to save the town of Rose Creek from Bogue’s army, overcoming his past traumas of not being a true hero under his family’s rule, thus giving him a character arc. 6. Red Harvest (Martin Sensmeier): An exiled outcast Comanche warrior who was told by his tribe that his path was different. Met his match with another Native American. Wish they had rejoiced like brothers instead. 7. Jack Horne (Vincent D’Onofrio): Not much is known about his past, but he does mention he had a wife once in one scene and most likely studied the Bible as he knows how to cite religious verses and is devoted to God. At some point he moved into the mountains to become a trapper which would explain his squeaky high pitched voice. He hasn’t talked to people in years, only animals (according to an interview with the director Antoine Fuqua). Would be great if he had worn a shot proof vest in battle under his shirt so he could return in a future sequel. I’d like that better. And trust me, I’ve watched this movie at least 20 times and haven’t forgotten their origin stories explained in the movie. Just for the record, I’ll add Emma too, the one who recruits them. 8. Emma Cullen (Haley Bennett): Learned how to fire a gun from her father back in her childhood and avenged her husband’s death by killing the villain Bogue while Chisolm kept him busy.