Yeah, I loved that he had the time and inclination to make the announcement! Guess thats the sign of a true salty dog, no simple scream and gurgle for him.
Just saw this classic for the first time, and while mostly good, that shipwreck came off as very forced dramatically. I'm not knocking the limited effects of that time, but the overall direction of that sequence just didn't work for me.
And yes, I laughed out loud at "Agh! He got me!" (I was reminded of Yosemite Sam in a WB cartoon.)
The war is not meant to be won... it is meant to be continuous.
Yeah absolutely hilarious! That scene alone makes the entire film worth watching.
BTW in tribute to this film it is reported that Spielberg was going to have Quint say the same line upon his death scene in Jaws but decided to cut that out and go with something more heavy handed....:-)
yes that was funny. probably not as much at the time of it's release. james remar in "48 hours" was not just the funniest but maybe the best death scene in history. it was meant to be ridiculous. a villain so arrogant he can't believe he has been shot. classic.
"everybody wants to go to heaven but nobody wants to die"
isn't it amazing how far movies have come? How on earth could anyone think this is still a great movie when movies 100000000 times better exist? I mean, the action sequence was the only good part, even in todays standards. I was impressed by that, but back then people were impressed by the whole movie because thats as good as it got back then. They didnt know how much better was possible. I had to stop and think whether or not that was a joke, or what he exactly meant by "agh he got me!".. and then I remembered it is a 1930's movie and yes he was just eaten by a shark, haha
No, the truly amazing thing is the paradox of evolution; as we become more technologically advanced, the collective intelligence of our species plummets.
Thanks for spoiling it for the rest of us, IDIOT.
"...if that was off, I'd be whoopin' your ass up and down this street." ~ an irate Tarantino
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Isn't it amazing how far movies have come? How on earth could anyone think this is still a great movie when movies 100000000 times better exist? I mean, the action sequence was the only good part, even in today's standards. I was impressed by that, but back then people were impressed by the whole movie because that's as good as it got back then. They didn't know how much better was possible.
People in eighty years time will be looking back at today's mega-budgeted CGI tent-pole blockbusters and saying the exact same thing.
And incidentally, in my humble opinion The Most Dangerous Game is still a great movie.
I agree. Well not great but I thought it was still quite a good movie. Like I said, the main action sequence was very well done, and the movie itself kept me intrigued. But back in the first half of the 20th century movies had a lot of such lame scenes that just wouldn't pass the final cut in any movie today.
That was the best part of the movie, without a doubt. The captain utters his death line hilariously. And of course, it's followed by the main character refusing to climb the debris he was holding on to (safe spots are for pùssies), and swimming for god-knows-how-many miles towards the island in those shark-infested waters (I guess he had a shark-repellent bat spray).