The dirty Harry series really made Clint Eastwood the star he was.
The reason was simple.
The 1970s were a period where liberals had taken over New York City and many other places and criminals went unpunished just as they are today. And the public was fed up with it.
And Clint whether by smarts or luck tapped into that with his movie dirty Harry where he became the punisher. He shot the bad guy he openly expressed his desire that the bad guy make the move that allowed him to kill him.
And the people were so hungry for justice in the world that they ate those movies up.
Thus the dirty Harry series are my favorite movies from Clint Eastwood even though he's made some wonderful movies since then.
If you've never seen dirty Harry I highly recommend you'll see it because we've gone back to another time where the liberals are leaving the criminals unpunished and it will resonate with you just like it resonated with the population in the 70s. And you'll also find many themes about feminism and other things that are addressed way back then.
When I was young I was a turd. I had an empty drywall mud bucket that was my timeout seat. My brothers called me "The Pail Rider". I watched the movie years later and got a huge confidence boost.
There is a book called "Facilitating Developmental Attachment". There is a chapter about a boy named Bill. That is my pseudonym to protect my identity.
You can absolutely have real experiences and also watch movies. You can watch Death To Smoochy and then go gather eggs from your chickens. You can recall your past life of being a children's show host while shoveling cow shit!! It will be great.
Says who? And even if that is true what is the problem with that if you are discerning in your intake? It kind of sounds retarded. Like I have watched tons of videos about fighting, shooting, and defensive driving but I definitely do not feel like I have been in the situations I saw on screen.
Children do not distinguish, that is for sure. I have 8 and it is probably in the 7-10 range when they realize movies are fake. My oldest are only 14 and 11, so I am extrapolating based on personal experience.
[ - ] Sleazy 1 point 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 16:06:40 ago (+1/-0)
So, it’s basically a trick. Our brains didn’t evolve to watch movies. Movies evolved to take advantage of the brains we have. One of the striking things about understanding movies is that you come into the theater with the brain that you evolved over three-and-a-half billion years to understand the real world and, for the most part, your brain just treats what it's seeing o.n the screen as if it were real.
If you start listening to filmmakers talk about what they’re doing or reading editing manuals, you quickly realize that there’s a hundred years of lore that’s captured in current filmmaking practice about perception and memory and emotion. Much of film’s power to immerse us in the action on screen is based on basic human traits that have evolved over eons of social interaction and shared experience, including what is described as the “mirror rule” and the “success rule.”
The mirror rule describes the powerful — yet often subconscious — compulsion to do the same thing that those around us are doing. It explains why our body language tends to mirror those around us, why we’re prone to laugh or cry, to smile or grimace as we watch someone else do the same, regardless of whether these actions are occurring in real life or on a movie screen.
The success rule tells us to “do what has worked” in the past. In real life, we’ve learned to duck when flying objects approach us, to prepare to fight or flee when faced with danger, and we bring these same habits with us when we experience a film. It’s the success rule that explains why moviegoers might find themselves ducking a bit in their seats when the Jabberwock’s head falls in Tim Burton’s film version of “Alice in Wonderland.”
You’ve got to do something a little extra to override those natural responses, and keep from responding in a way that would be appropriate if you’re outside a theater, but is inappropriate when you’re watching something that can’t reach out and touch you.
Film-making commandeers these and other human traits to make the film viewing experience so emotional, why it has such a surprising power to make us laugh or cry and how our brains struggle to draw the line between what is real and what we experience as real on the silver screen.
There are a lot of things that films can do that take the natural parameters that we experience in our everyday life and crank them up to 11, and that has the opportunity to make films that are more powerful, more engaging, more responsive than what we’ve seen before.
I just watched that movie last night, and holy fuck what an infuriating movie. It was anti-white pretty much all throughout. My hatred of the hmong or whatever people also exponentially grew. THD.
"The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly" Simply because they are so many great scenes and quotable lines. "You see, in this world there are two kinds of people, my friend. Those with loaded guns. And those who dig. You dig."
"Eef ju are going to choot, choot. Don' talk."
"The Outlaw Josey Wales" Same as above
and
"Unforgiven"
Little Bill Daggett: "Well, sir, you are a cowardly son of a bitch! You just shot an unarmed man!" Will Munny: "Well, he should have armed himself if he's going to decorate his saloon with my friend."
“Some years later, Mrs. Ansonia Feathers made the arduous journey to Hodgeman County to visit the last resting place of her only daughter. William Munny had long since disappeared with the children... some said to San Francisco where it was rumored he prospered in dry goods. And there was nothing on the marker to explain to Mrs. Feathers why her only daughter had married a known thief and murderer, a man of notoriously vicious and intemperate disposition."
"Pale Rider" was just okay. It was entertaining and told a good story, but compared to the bulk of his other work, it was not his best. I have nothing bad to say about it, just that if suffers by comparison.
"Fistful of Dollars" was also good, but was an almost scene-by-scene western retelling of Kurosawa's "Yojimbo", that had only been released a couple of years earlier. "For a Few Dollars More" was essentially just a sequel to that. Not bad. Just not best.
"Mystic River" started out with a good book with a good story, and Eastwood did good work with that.
It also solidified my opinion that if they would just keep Sean Penn in a quiet box somewhere remote, and only let him out to act in movies, he would be almost tolerable.
But then he has to go and open his fucking mouth in public without a script or a director, on almost ANY subject, and the overwhelming urge to strangle him with a lamp cord or beat his skull soft with a toilet plunger handle makes my hands itch.
[ + ] con77
[ - ] con77 0 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 14:07:23 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] zongongo
[ - ] zongongo 0 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 13:20:26 ago (+0/-0)
For A Few Dollars More, arguably has the best musical score.
Dirty Harry o/
[ + ] Crackinjokes
[ - ] Crackinjokes 0 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 11:55:22 ago (+0/-0)
The reason was simple.
The 1970s were a period where liberals had taken over New York City and many other places and criminals went unpunished just as they are today. And the public was fed up with it.
And Clint whether by smarts or luck tapped into that with his movie dirty Harry where he became the punisher. He shot the bad guy he openly expressed his desire that the bad guy make the move that allowed him to kill him.
And the people were so hungry for justice in the world that they ate those movies up.
Thus the dirty Harry series are my favorite movies from Clint Eastwood even though he's made some wonderful movies since then.
If you've never seen dirty Harry I highly recommend you'll see it because we've gone back to another time where the liberals are leaving the criminals unpunished and it will resonate with you just like it resonated with the population in the 70s. And you'll also find many themes about feminism and other things that are addressed way back then.
[ + ] NeedleStack
[ - ] NeedleStack 1 point 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 10:23:52 ago (+1/-0)
[ + ] ilikeskittles
[ - ] ilikeskittles 1 point 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 09:59:48 ago (+1/-0)
[ + ] inaminit
[ - ] inaminit -1 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 09:18:54 ago (+0/-1)
[ + ] Panic
[ - ] Panic [op] 0 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 11:49:24 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] RMGoetbbels
[ - ] RMGoetbbels 2 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 08:01:22 ago (+2/-0)
Zipperhead!
[ + ] Her0n
[ - ] Her0n 3 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 07:39:12 ago (+3/-0)
He exposes his pedo nature by kissing a 12 year old girl.
Be careful out there guys, even your heroes are doing the same as your enemies.
[ + ] oyveyo
[ - ] oyveyo 2 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 05:26:50 ago (+2/-0)
[ + ] Panic
[ - ] Panic [op] 0 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 08:54:47 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] UncleDoug
[ - ] UncleDoug 2 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 04:51:56 ago (+2/-0)
The Outlaw Josey Wales
Dirty Harry
Gran Torino
Hang 'em High
Escape From Alcatraz
Where Eagles Dare
Every Which Way But Loose
are all equally good.
[ + ] NoRefunds
[ - ] NoRefunds 1 point 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 13:23:56 ago (+1/-0)
Not really a client Eastwood movie, more of a Richard Burton movie.
[ + ] Rowdybme
[ - ] Rowdybme 1 point 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 03:56:05 ago (+1/-0)
[ + ] firestation7
[ - ] firestation7 2 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 03:48:10 ago (+2/-0)
My favorite Clint movie is High Plains Drifter.
[ + ] Panic
[ - ] Panic [op] 0 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 09:09:19 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] firestation7
[ - ] firestation7 0 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 15:17:25 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] DoughGoy
[ - ] DoughGoy 2 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 03:27:11 ago (+2/-0)
[ + ] Sleazy
[ - ] Sleazy 7 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 01:49:23 ago (+7/-0)
its all jew propaganda
[ + ] Panic
[ - ] Panic [op] 2 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 03:08:09 ago (+2/-0)
[ + ] Sleazy
[ - ] Sleazy 5 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 03:19:34 ago (+5/-0)
Once I learned that the human brain can not distinguish the difference between watching a movie and a persons own experience.
I decided to have my own experiences, thank you
[ + ] firestation7
[ - ] firestation7 3 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 03:50:17 ago (+3/-0)
[ + ] Sleazy
[ - ] Sleazy 4 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 04:16:56 ago (+4/-0)
[ + ] firestation7
[ - ] firestation7 3 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 05:09:56 ago (+3/-0)
You can absolutely have real experiences and also watch movies. You can watch Death To Smoochy and then go gather eggs from your chickens. You can recall your past life of being a children's show host while shoveling cow shit!! It will be great.
[ + ] doginventer
[ - ] doginventer 6 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 08:03:42 ago (+6/-0)
[ + ] firestation7
[ - ] firestation7 6 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 08:12:42 ago (+6/-0)
[ + ] Sleazy
[ - ] Sleazy 5 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 05:14:59 ago (+5/-0)
[ + ] Sleazy
[ - ] Sleazy 0 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 13:34:44 ago (+0/-0)
the fact is that your brain saves those memories of the movie as if they were something that actually happened to you
[ + ] firestation7
[ - ] firestation7 0 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 15:13:07 ago (+0/-0)
Children do not distinguish, that is for sure. I have 8 and it is probably in the 7-10 range when they realize movies are fake. My oldest are only 14 and 11, so I am extrapolating based on personal experience.
[ + ] Sleazy
[ - ] Sleazy 1 point 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 16:06:40 ago (+1/-0)
If you start listening to filmmakers talk about what they’re doing or reading editing manuals, you quickly realize that there’s a hundred years of lore that’s captured in current filmmaking practice about perception and memory and emotion. Much of film’s power to immerse us in the action on screen is based on basic human traits that have evolved over eons of social interaction and shared experience, including what is described as the “mirror rule” and the “success rule.”
The mirror rule describes the powerful — yet often subconscious — compulsion to do the same thing that those around us are doing. It explains why our body language tends to mirror those around us, why we’re prone to laugh or cry, to smile or grimace as we watch someone else do the same, regardless of whether these actions are occurring in real life or on a movie screen.
The success rule tells us to “do what has worked” in the past. In real life, we’ve learned to duck when flying objects approach us, to prepare to fight or flee when faced with danger, and we bring these same habits with us when we experience a film. It’s the success rule that explains why moviegoers might find themselves ducking a bit in their seats when the Jabberwock’s head falls in Tim Burton’s film version of “Alice in Wonderland.”
You’ve got to do something a little extra to override those natural responses, and keep from responding in a way that would be appropriate if you’re outside a theater, but is inappropriate when you’re watching something that can’t reach out and touch you.
Film-making commandeers these and other human traits to make the film viewing experience so emotional, why it has such a surprising power to make us laugh or cry and how our brains struggle to draw the line between what is real and what we experience as real on the silver screen.
There are a lot of things that films can do that take the natural parameters that we experience in our everyday life and crank them up to 11, and that has the opportunity to make films that are more powerful, more engaging, more responsive than what we’ve seen before.
[ + ] firestation7
[ - ] firestation7 1 point 8 monthsAug 26, 2024 08:51:37 ago (+1/-0)
[ + ] xmasskull
[ - ] xmasskull 2 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 01:32:02 ago (+2/-0)
[ + ] UrCoolerOlderBrother
[ - ] UrCoolerOlderBrother 8 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 01:26:20 ago (+8/-0)
[ + ] Peleg
[ - ] Peleg 1 point 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 08:48:14 ago (+1/-0)
Just why.
[ + ] oyy_veyy_goyy
[ - ] oyy_veyy_goyy 1 point 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 09:40:40 ago (+1/-0)
[ + ] NoRefunds
[ - ] NoRefunds 1 point 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 13:22:53 ago (+1/-0)
[ + ] BulletStopper
[ - ] BulletStopper 0 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 03:24:18 ago (+1/-1)*
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZhzYL_MuIq0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2AfGvFAay2A
[ + ] NoRefunds
[ - ] NoRefunds 0 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 13:22:17 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] BulletStopper
[ - ] BulletStopper 5 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 01:21:05 ago (+5/-0)*
"The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly"
Simply because they are so many great scenes and quotable lines.
"You see, in this world there are two kinds of people, my friend. Those with loaded guns. And those who dig. You dig."
"Eef ju are going to choot, choot. Don' talk."
"The Outlaw Josey Wales"
Same as above
and
"Unforgiven"
Little Bill Daggett: "Well, sir, you are a cowardly son of a bitch! You just shot an unarmed man!"
Will Munny: "Well, he should have armed himself if he's going to decorate his saloon with my friend."
“Some years later, Mrs. Ansonia Feathers made the arduous journey to Hodgeman County to visit the last resting place of her only daughter. William Munny had long since disappeared with the children... some said to San Francisco where it was rumored he prospered in dry goods. And there was nothing on the marker to explain to Mrs. Feathers why her only daughter had married a known thief and murderer, a man of notoriously vicious and intemperate disposition."
Same
(Bonus track: "High Plains Drifter" Western/Ghost story)
[ + ] DukeofRaul
[ - ] DukeofRaul 1 point 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 02:22:04 ago (+1/-0)
[ + ] BulletStopper
[ - ] BulletStopper 1 point 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 03:06:30 ago (+1/-0)*
Did you mean, "Pale Rider"?
"Pale Rider" was just okay. It was entertaining and told a good story, but compared to the bulk of his other work, it was not his best. I have nothing bad to say about it, just that if suffers by comparison.
"Fistful of Dollars" was also good, but was an almost scene-by-scene western retelling of Kurosawa's "Yojimbo", that had only been released a couple of years earlier. "For a Few Dollars More" was essentially just a sequel to that. Not bad. Just not best.
[ + ] DukeofRaul
[ - ] DukeofRaul 0 points 8 monthsAug 28, 2024 17:22:52 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] Smedleys_Butler
[ - ] Smedleys_Butler 7 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 01:11:58 ago (+7/-0)
As a director, Mystic River
[ + ] BulletStopper
[ - ] BulletStopper 5 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 03:14:43 ago (+5/-0)
It also solidified my opinion that if they would just keep Sean Penn in a quiet box somewhere remote, and only let him out to act in movies, he would be almost tolerable.
But then he has to go and open his fucking mouth in public without a script or a director, on almost ANY subject, and the overwhelming urge to strangle him with a lamp cord or beat his skull soft with a toilet plunger handle makes my hands itch.
[ + ] Smedleys_Butler
[ - ] Smedleys_Butler 5 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 08:02:54 ago (+5/-0)
[ + ] boekanier
[ - ] boekanier 3 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 01:09:20 ago (+3/-0)
[ + ] registereduser
[ - ] registereduser 4 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 01:06:33 ago (+4/-0)
[ + ] Belfuro
[ - ] Belfuro 2 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 00:57:05 ago (+2/-0)
Outlaw Jonesy Wales is my favorite.
[ + ] shitface9000
[ - ] shitface9000 4 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 00:21:04 ago (+4/-0)
[ + ] shitface9000
[ - ] shitface9000 6 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 00:18:26 ago (+6/-0)
[ + ] TheOriginal1Icemonkey
[ - ] TheOriginal1Icemonkey 2 points 8 monthsAug 25, 2024 00:15:04 ago (+2/-0)