*CASABLANCA* First Time Watching MOVIE REACTION

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Enjoy my reaction to the movie Casablanca (1942)! 📼 Sync up your copy with mine + we can watch together at: / casablanca-1942-97923899
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🎞️ Reaction edited by the fantastic Steph G!
00:00 Intro
00:10 Casablanca Commentary
31:18 Casablanca Movie Review

Пікірлер: 617

  • @jenmurrayxo
    @jenmurrayxo4 ай бұрын

    Did you know how it would end? 1940-50s Playlist: kzread.info/head/PLQHhQlj8i5dotFJl59gM2R0DW8hFkFTJH 1960s Playlist: kzread.info/head/PLQHhQlj8i5dorCvtMHpADNPESdOswQPUN

  • @Adam_Le-Roi_Davis.

    @Adam_Le-Roi_Davis.

    4 ай бұрын

    Yes, Jen, I did know the ending, but only because I've seen it umpteen times. I love this film, Rick does the noble thing in the end, at great cost to himself. The film, 'The Usual Suspects' got its name from this film, as the Policeman says, "I'll round up the usual suspects" after Rick shoots the German officer at the end. I'm really impressed by you, Jen, your taste in Champagne is excellent, Veuve Clicquot is one of the best and my personal favourite.

  • @FightingTorque411

    @FightingTorque411

    4 ай бұрын

    No, and nor did the film makers while producing it. As was usual at the time, the script was frequently rewritten during filming; in the scene where she finally explains herself, Rick says "It's a story without an ending" and Ilsa replies "I don't know, you'll have to think for both of us" - a delightful meta joke, as they literally hadn't decided the end of the story!

  • @cantstandsnomore

    @cantstandsnomore

    4 ай бұрын

    It hasn't! Wait until you see "The African Queen". Even though they don't say it, Rick must work for the U.S. government. He's been known to run guns, aiding other war efforts. The sequel to "Casablanca" is "The African Queen". The movie stars Humphrey Bogart (who won the Academy Award for Best Actor, his only Oscar) and Katharine Hepburn with Robert Morley, Peter Bull, Walter Gotell, Richard Marner and Theodore Bikel. Think of it this way, time has gone by. So much time has passed that movies are in color now. Rick, if that's his real name, is deep in Africa now. He's dodging the Nazis on his small boat, creating havoc were ever he can. Enjoy the movie! kzread.info/dash/bejne/o3Z5q8ullaq3eps.html

  • @PsychedelicChameleon

    @PsychedelicChameleon

    4 ай бұрын

    Casablanca was largely conceived in 1941, near the beginning of American involvement in the war. It was filmed in the Summer of 1942. When filming began, roughly only the first half of the script was written, as FightingTorque411 implied. Those were times when the fate of the war was favorable to the Axis powers, so no one could say how the movie or the war would end. I suspect that this is why the last scene is so hopeful, not because people knew how the war would go, but because they were trying to be encouraging in an otherwise very dark and not-very-hopeful movie.

  • @jimmywalker4884

    @jimmywalker4884

    4 ай бұрын

    Not the first time. Yes the 100th time of watching it. So many great one liners in this movie.

  • @lionlyons
    @lionlyons4 ай бұрын

    Thumbs up if you understand the symbolism of Louis dropping the bottle of water in the bin at the end.

  • @cvonbarron

    @cvonbarron

    4 ай бұрын

    Yes, it symboized his rejection of the puppet government in VIchy.

  • @josephpaul4548

    @josephpaul4548

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@cvonbarronHe asked for a thumbs up. You failed.

  • @Music--ng8cd

    @Music--ng8cd

    4 ай бұрын

    @@cvonbarron Vichy drinks water, real Frenchmen drink wine

  • @cvonbarron

    @cvonbarron

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Music--ng8cd Right.

  • @AI_Image_Master

    @AI_Image_Master

    4 ай бұрын

    There was another quick symbolic moment when Louis says Germany Appreciates and then quickly says Vichy. Also in the beginning when they shot the man running away in front of a Poster of Marshall Petain saying he keeps his promises. Powerful symbols at the time in the movie but lost today.

  • @genghispecan
    @genghispecan4 ай бұрын

    "...no one is to blame, so I demand no explanation..." Wow. Lazlo is such a class act.

  • @Thewingkongexchange

    @Thewingkongexchange

    4 ай бұрын

    Victor Lazlo is TOO nice - I want a sequel where we explore his heroin addiction or something lol

  • @bluebird3281

    @bluebird3281

    4 ай бұрын

    @@ThewingkongexchangeHe is a deep cover double agent sent to America to assassinate FDR

  • @SgtTechcomDN38416

    @SgtTechcomDN38416

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@ThewingkongexchangeA heroin addiction wouldn't affect how nice or not he is.

  • @AddSerious

    @AddSerious

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Thewingkongexchange there is in book form, "As Time Goes By"

  • @Thewingkongexchange

    @Thewingkongexchange

    4 ай бұрын

    I meant to say perfect really@@SgtTechcomDN38416

  • @rextside
    @rextside4 ай бұрын

    Sometimes old movies are called "timeless" I don't think it's ever been more true than this movie.

  • @Deathbird_Mitch

    @Deathbird_Mitch

    4 ай бұрын

    Although it is clearly set at a particular time and place it could be anytime and anyplace.

  • @kevincerda6666

    @kevincerda6666

    4 ай бұрын

    Some movies I think you’d love , if you haven’t seen them… “Scaramouche” “Seven Brides for Seven Brothers” “Royal Wedding” “The Kid From Brooklyn” “Court Jester” “The Inspector General”

  • @scottmcnulty70

    @scottmcnulty70

    4 ай бұрын

    It could be rewritten for any time and place that has a war like this going. You only have to replace things like the bottle of Vichy water. As a writer, I can only say that I wish I had written it.

  • @markr.devereux3385

    @markr.devereux3385

    3 ай бұрын

    When I a 71 yr young man watching CASABLANCA it still affects me. Something very special that only a great motion picture made during the 1940s can elicit. It's history.. star power...dialogue...romance can't really top this b&w B- movie. Timeless is my favorite genre.

  • @gordonbartlett1921

    @gordonbartlett1921

    2 ай бұрын

    You are right --- and that's why I hate seeing great films cheapened by given the "My Reaction to" BS. All that is is a cheap way to get themselves on KZread by "piggybacking" off a classic.

  • @Billinois78
    @Billinois784 ай бұрын

    "Why is it that when Bogey drinks in the daytime, he looks sophisticated, but when I do it, all I hear is 'Get off our little league field'!? - Bill Corbett

  • @Jeff_Lichtman
    @Jeff_Lichtman4 ай бұрын

    My favorite scene in the movie is the singing of La Marseillaise. It's at that moment that we first see how powerful Victor can be. Up until then, we only knew of his reputation. To add to it, most of the actors were Europeans who had fled the Nazis. In particular, Madeleine Lebeau, who played Yvonne, had fled France in 1940 and went to Lisbon, where she and her husband (who played the croupier) obtained visas to Chile. They stopped in Mexico on their way there, where it was discovered that the visas were forged. They were stuck until they got temporary Canadian passports, which they used to get to the U.S. The similarity of Yvonne's story to her own was not lost on Madeleine Lebeau. Her tears in that scene were real. And in the context of the story, Victor's actions reminded Yvonne that she was French, and that cozying up to the Germans would be a betrayal of her country (just as the Vichy collaborators had betrayed France). Humphrey Bogart was in so many great movies: The Petrified Forest, High Sierra, The Maltese Falcon, To Have and Have Not, The Big Sleep, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, Key Largo, The African Queen, The Caine Mutiny, Sabrina. To me, he's the epitome of a movie star. Ingrid Bergman was a great actress, and was one of the true beauties of classic Hollywood. Some of her best movies are Gaslight, Spellbound, and Notorious. Unfortunately, her career was derailed because she had an affair with an Italian director while married to someone else, and the bad publicity made Hollywood producers reluctant to cast her. If such a thing happened today, I doubt there would be such a strong reaction by the American public. Actress Isabella Rossellini is Ingrid Bergman's daughter. I'm glad that you commented that Casablanca isn't just a romance. As Rick said, "The problems of three little people don't amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world."

  • @rcrawford42

    @rcrawford42

    4 ай бұрын

    "Treasure of the Sierra Madre" has a special touch for me -- Bogart runs into Gandalf. Well, the voice of Gandalf in the Rankin Bass versions, John Huston. Who directed it AND had a small role. It also features an extremely young Robert Blake.

  • @treetopjones737

    @treetopjones737

    4 ай бұрын

    Part of it translated: "Tremble, tyrants and traitors The shame of all good men Tremble! Your parricidal schemes Will receive their just reward Against you we are all soldiers If they fall, our young heroes France will bear new ones Ready to join the fight against you"

  • @davidcorriveau8615

    @davidcorriveau8615

    4 ай бұрын

    a bit of trivia for you Jeff, Ms Lebeau (Yvonne) was the last listed member of the cast to pass away. She was 92. At the time of the movies release she was 19.

  • @rickbruner5525

    @rickbruner5525

    4 ай бұрын

    Major Strasser was played by Conrad Veidt who fled Germany with his Jewish wife.

  • @markr.devereux3385

    @markr.devereux3385

    3 ай бұрын

    Humphrey BOGART is my favorite movie star. Equalled by maybe CARY GRANT

  • @duanelavely5481
    @duanelavely54814 ай бұрын

    My uncle, who died before I was born, was a B-26 bomber pilot. He had flown all of his required missions, was grounded, scheduled to go home, got married to an English girl, was on his honeymoon when he was called back in to service for D-Day. He was given a "green" crew & shot down over Paris. His flight jacket caught fire & he burned while parachuting to the ground. He was in a hospital for a week or so before he died on the day that the allies entered Paris. The Germans had fled several days before taking all of the medical supplies including any pain meds with them. The French buried him in a private cemetery in Paris. A co. rep. for North Amer. Aircraft tracked down where he was buried & sent his body home to Texas. I wound up enlisting in the USAF & volunteering for service in Vietnam. This movie has effected many people who were effected by WWII.

  • @rcrawford42
    @rcrawford424 ай бұрын

    A year before this, three of these actors -- Bogart, Peter Lorre, and Sydney Greenstreet -- were in "The Maltese Falcon". Another classic that's worth seeing. Peter Lorre is an institution all to himself, an iconic voice and an incredible actor, despite getting sidekick and horror roles mostly. His debut was in the German film, "M", as a serial killer being hunted by the police and organized crime.

  • @davidnaas8366

    @davidnaas8366

    4 ай бұрын

    The three were also in "Passage to Marseilles", along with Claude Raines. Greenstreet and Lorre together in "The Mask of Demetrios." Hollywood knew what worked back then!

  • @TheManInTheLongBlackCoat
    @TheManInTheLongBlackCoat4 ай бұрын

    Movie Fact: many of the actors who played the Nazis were in fact German Jews who had escaped from Nazis. Such as actor Conrad Veidt, who played Maj. Strasser, who was well known in the theatrical community in Germany for his hatred of the Nazis, and his friendship with Jews (his wife was Jewish.)

  • @cvonbarron

    @cvonbarron

    4 ай бұрын

    True and Veidt was a highly respected actor in his native Germany.

  • @Cheryworld

    @Cheryworld

    4 ай бұрын

    Also the actress playing the pretty French prostitute. She was a French Jew,. My understanding is she came into the country on false papers, if she had stayed in France she would have been murdered in the camps

  • @johnyricco1220

    @johnyricco1220

    4 ай бұрын

    Conrad Veidt was also bisexual and had many gay friends persecuted by the Nazis.

  • @TheManInTheLongBlackCoat

    @TheManInTheLongBlackCoat

    4 ай бұрын

    Yes: even cross-dressing too, I read.

  • @Sp33gan

    @Sp33gan

    4 ай бұрын

    In another of his movies, The Man Who Laughs, Veidt played a twisted man, his face disfigured into a permanent smile. Comic book artist/writer, Jerry Robinson, used this as his inspiration to create Batman's eternal nemesis, the Joker.

  • @rcrawford42
    @rcrawford424 ай бұрын

    "The Germans wore grey. You wore blue." I hadn't caught that line before, but for some reason I love it.

  • @PsychedelicChameleon

    @PsychedelicChameleon

    4 ай бұрын

    You may be aware that in the American civil war the Rebel forces (separatists and pro-slavery) wore gray, and the Union forces wore blue. To some Americans, these colors are still symbolic of those forces and that conflict.

  • @wwoods66

    @wwoods66

    4 ай бұрын

    @@PsychedelicChameleon _Probably_ a coincidence. The German Army did wear gray uniforms.

  • @Anson_AKB

    @Anson_AKB

    4 ай бұрын

    @@wwoods66 yes, that would explain to mention the color grey, but they could select any color as the second color, and they didn't need to have that sentence in the movie at all. thus it might have been an unintentional coincidence, but when the screenwriters chose lots of dialogs and other details carefully for many scenes, lots of things could very well have been quite purposefully selected symbols too. ps: After reading another comment about the bottle of "Vichy Water" at the end (i never had noticed that label before and only thought of it as "just one more bottle of champagne"), all those small details seem to be even more on purpose and not just some coincidences.

  • @dant7677
    @dant76774 ай бұрын

    In college I used to organize a weekly movie night, and when our venue was about to close, I went out of my way to get my hands on a copy of Casablanca. (This was before streaming.) We had about twice the usual crowd, and it was super-unruly... until the film began. Everyone laughed and was moved at exactly the right times. At the closing line, they cheered. Aaand then suddenly the room went back to being rowdy and unruly. But for those roughly two hours, I'm telling you they were spellbound.

  • @shinyagumon7015
    @shinyagumon70154 ай бұрын

    I really like the subtle character arc of the Police Chief going from a vain, corrupt official working with the Nazis to regaining his patriotism and quite literally putting the Vichy Regime (basically the part of the French Republic that wasn't occupied because they allied themselves with the Axis) in the trash. It mirrors Rick's Arc nicely. Also, I disagree: This is a love story, but it's a tragic love story.

  • @PsychedelicChameleon

    @PsychedelicChameleon

    4 ай бұрын

    It's a love story, but it's not a romance story. It's sort of an anti-romance story.

  • @torontomame

    @torontomame

    4 ай бұрын

    Actually he figuratively put the Vichy regime in the trash. Sorry, I couldn't stop myself. 🙂

  • @paulhammond6978

    @paulhammond6978

    4 ай бұрын

    I think, it's not a romance film, because it's so much bigger than that. Sure, the love story is what makes you feel for the main characters, but the point of the film is the bigger situation and the larger cause, not just the personal happiness of the main characters.

  • @daverhoden445

    @daverhoden445

    2 ай бұрын

    Nah. If one of the men had to die so she could get away with the other then THAT would have been a tragedy Instead, one gets to make the heroic sacrifice, the other gets the girl, and both live. And the bad guys lose.

  • @SunderShould-Be-King

    @SunderShould-Be-King

    2 ай бұрын

    Casablanca is the greatest propaganda film of all time & that is a good thing. Observe when it was released.

  • @BouillaBased
    @BouillaBased4 ай бұрын

    So many reasons why this one is always so near the top of “best films of all time” lists.

  • @victorsixtythree
    @victorsixtythree4 ай бұрын

    It helps to know that the screenplay for Casablanca is based on an unproduced play that was written a few years earlier before the United States had entered World War II. So, the whole idea of the American Rick Blaine being neutral in all political matters was a commentary/metaphor for the U.S.'s position while War raged in Europe. By the time the movie was made, the U.S. had entered the War - actually I believe the play landed on the desk of one of the executives at Warner Brothers Studios only a few days or weeks after the bombing at Pearl Harbor and Warner Brothers quickly went ahead with making it into a movie.

  • @vorlon1

    @vorlon1

    4 ай бұрын

    Also, the movie takes place just before America entered the war, even though it was made after we were in it.

  • @hkpew

    @hkpew

    4 ай бұрын

    It's worth noting the full timeline here. The rights to the story were purchased in January 1942. (America entered the war in December of 1941, so this was only ~1 month later.) The movie was released in November 1942, so less than a year later and even less than a year after Pearl Harbor. That's pretty quick, even for those days. Actual US land combat in what sort of qualifies as the European theater (North Africa) began only in November of 1942, Casablanca's release was rushed in order to take advantage of the connection to real world events. @@vorlon1

  • @libertyresearch-iu4fy

    @libertyresearch-iu4fy

    4 ай бұрын

    I think many people in Europe knew more than you think.

  • @hkpew

    @hkpew

    4 ай бұрын

    This comment seems like a non sequitur to me. Who was saying anything about what people in Europe knew? Is there a different comment that you meant to reply to?@@libertyresearch-iu4fy

  • @panamafloyd1469

    @panamafloyd1469

    4 ай бұрын

    "..I bet they're asleep all over America." After my grandma explained the political situation at the time, I knew what that line really meant.

  • @chuck7190
    @chuck71904 ай бұрын

    Of all the KZread Channels in all the sites in all the world, Jen has to come streaming onto this one.

  • @curtismartin2866

    @curtismartin2866

    4 ай бұрын

    Your Likes and Subscriptions, Madam.

  • @magicbrownie1357
    @magicbrownie13574 ай бұрын

    The very Definition of a Classic Film. It's charming, funny, romantic, exciting, mysterious and witty. A perfect film.

  • @Chou-seh-fu
    @Chou-seh-fu4 ай бұрын

    Musical foreshadowing: In Paris, Rick and Ilsa dance to an orchestral version of "Perfidia". The English lyrics would probably be known to the 1940s audience: "To you, my heart cries out Perfidia For I found you, the love my life In somebody else's arms..."

  • @billolsen4360

    @billolsen4360

    4 ай бұрын

    Every romantic couple dances to Perfidia in these old films

  • @avlisk
    @avlisk4 ай бұрын

    I recall hearing that none of the cast knew the outcome because the script was still being written even as filming was happening. Ingrid didn't know which man she would end up with, so, she was told to play it right down the middle. It worked, because it wasn't clear to any of us watching. The "start of a beautiful friendship" line was even added in post since it hadn't been written yet for filming.

  • @cvonbarron

    @cvonbarron

    4 ай бұрын

    The iconic final line was actually written by the film's producer Hal B. Wallis. Also, the claim that the cast didn't know the ending is true, but, due to the production code of the time, there really wasn't any suspense, no way would the censors have allowed Ingrid Bergman's character to leave with Rick.

  • @rcrawford42

    @rcrawford42

    4 ай бұрын

    @@cvonbarron Well, not if Laslo were alive, anyway.

  • @Music--ng8cd

    @Music--ng8cd

    4 ай бұрын

    @@rcrawford42 True, but as this film is also propaganda, Rick would have to get over being neutral and get back to fighting the oppressors.

  • @VirtualBabe29

    @VirtualBabe29

    2 ай бұрын

    Ingrid actually knew she would end up with Victor. The Hayes office (Hollywood's morality police which was active from the mid '30s to the late '60s) would never have permitted a married woman to leave her husband for her lover. They also did not permit any suggestion that Rick and Ilsa had a sexual relationship when in Paris and they could only offer the subtlest hints that Renault was seducing refugees for exit visas.

  • @TheMess9898
    @TheMess98984 ай бұрын

    This is my favorite movie of all time. It is perfection. Everytime I watch it, I still feel it will end differently. ❤

  • @conureron3792
    @conureron37924 ай бұрын

    When I watch Casablanca, my mind begins to play Al Stewart’s “The Year of the Cat”: “On the morning from a Bogart movie, in a country where they turn back time. You go strolling through the crowd like Peter Lorre, Contemplating a crime.”

  • @shainewhite2781
    @shainewhite27814 ай бұрын

    "We'll always have Paris." Here's looking at you, kid." Louis, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship."

  • @shawnmiller4781

    @shawnmiller4781

    4 ай бұрын

    You winnings sir That is my least vulnerable spot I was misinformed

  • @Bfdidc

    @Bfdidc

    4 ай бұрын

    @@shawnmiller4781 "But make it ten. I'm only a poor corrupt official." Captain Renault has many of my favorite lines.

  • @terrygracy8345

    @terrygracy8345

    4 ай бұрын

    Renault damn near steals the show. Great part.

  • @christianemden7637

    @christianemden7637

    4 ай бұрын

    It‘s also the origin of „rounding up the usual suspects „

  • @wwoods66

    @wwoods66

    4 ай бұрын

    Like someone said about _Hamlet,_ "why do people think it's so great -- the script is just a series of clichés strung together!"

  • @markhellman-pn3hn
    @markhellman-pn3hn4 ай бұрын

    Humphry Bogart also played a captain in "The Caine Mutiny" ... a flawless performance

  • @trinaq
    @trinaq4 ай бұрын

    This movie has so many iconic lines, and the ending is bittersweet. "Louis, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship."

  • @richwagener
    @richwagener4 ай бұрын

    Because of what this film represents to me, my favorite line of the film is “Welcome back to the fight”.

  • @tommiller4895
    @tommiller48954 ай бұрын

    Walt Disney World's MGM Movie Park had an attraction called "The Great Movie Ride". It was a ride showing the History of movies using Audioanimatronic (Robot) Actors in famous movie scenes. One scene was the ending of Casablanca (the famous speech between Ilsa and Rick at the Airfield). When building the ride Disney Imagineers searched for a plane identical to the one in the movie. They found and purchased the actual plane from the movie! Sadly the ride was replaced by another attraction and I always wondered where that plane ended up.

  • @gokaury

    @gokaury

    4 ай бұрын

    And the plane in that ride was only the front half since the whole plane wouldn't have fit in that scene area. So they cut the backside off from the front. Do you know what happened to the back half? It can be found in the Disney World version of The Jungle Cruise.

  • @rpg7287
    @rpg72874 ай бұрын

    Of all the Jen joints of all the channels in all the world, she streams into mine.

  • @Nitedawg1

    @Nitedawg1

    4 ай бұрын

    Awesomely clever

  • @lanagorgeous9485
    @lanagorgeous94854 ай бұрын

    Many of the extras at Ricks including the young woman playing Yvonne "Madeleine Lebeau" , escaped the Nazi's . In June 1940, Lebeau and he husband Dalio (who was Jewish) fled Paris ahead of the invading German Army and reached Lisbon. So when they were singing the French National Anthem, "La Marseillaise", they weren't acting, those tears and emotions were real. Every time it gets to that part of the movie it brings tears to my eyes knowing what the went through in real life. It's a great movie and Ingrid Bergman was breathtakingly beautiful. It's just one of the greatest movies of all time! ❤

  • @richwagener
    @richwagener4 ай бұрын

    Laszlo represents Europe and Rick represents the US. The film was trying to shake the us from its pre-war isolationism.

  • @thomholbrook7286
    @thomholbrook72864 ай бұрын

    The phrase "Round up the usual suspects" is from this film. No good law official would have "usual suspects" as that speaks to lazy half assed police work, aka Renault. So today you hear it in the film and it's a known saying. Back then when Renault says it early on it was like a joke for the audience. And then the second time he says it to save Rick it flips from meaning lazy to kind of being heroic.

  • @shanenolan5625

    @shanenolan5625

    4 ай бұрын

    The movie the usual suspects gets its name from this

  • @victorsixtythree
    @victorsixtythree4 ай бұрын

    21:28 - The singing of La Marseillaise in the cafe gives me goosebumps - every time! And the scene illustrates one of the themes of the film - Democracy vs fascism. The people in the bar, many of them displaced refugees from across Europe (many of the actors in the film were real life refugees including Madeleine Lebeau who played Yvonne who we see tearfully singing the song), led by Victor Laszlo literally rise to their feet and unite to combat Nazi fascism. It reflects something Laszlo said earlier in the film: "What if you murdered all of us? From every corner of Europe hundreds, thousands, would rise to take our places. Even Nazis can't kill that fast." Also, the words of 'La Marseillaise" itself are particularly poignant (the English translation): "Grab your weapons, citizens! Form your battalions! Let us march! Let us march!" (And strains of La Marseillaise play over the closing titles, as Rick and Captain Renault walk off, determined to re-join the fight.) And the scene is a sort of microcosm of the whole film, showing the dynamics between the three main characters Rick, Victor and Ilsa. At first Rick is willing to sit back and allow the Nazis to sing, reflecting his stance to remain neutral and "not stick his neck out" for anyone. But Victor is a man of action and cannot sit by and do nothing. Yet Rick gives the band leader a nod letting him know he approves of them playing the song. Laszlo unites the people and together they stand up (literally) to the Germans. Meanwhile, we see Ilsa, who is torn between her feeling for the two men, watching the whole thing and we see in her eyes the love and admiration she has for Victor and also great fear because she knows this act of defiance will put him in greater danger.

  • @blueboy4244

    @blueboy4244

    4 ай бұрын

    'welcome back to the fight' is basically Europe talking to America...'bout time!'

  • @cvonbarron

    @cvonbarron

    4 ай бұрын

    That's all true, and the scene was actually conceived by studio head Jack Warner, who was Jewish.

  • @vermithax

    @vermithax

    4 ай бұрын

    For whatever reason, the older I get, the harder that scene hits me. So much emotion.

  • @billbabcock1833
    @billbabcock18334 ай бұрын

    This is my favorite Bogart movie. The Maltese Falcon is second place. This is also the best love story in my opinion. Not that I watch a lot of love stories but my wife did, so under duress I watched them too.

  • @texashookem22
    @texashookem224 ай бұрын

    The dialogue in this film is absolutely top tier.

  • @Thewingkongexchange
    @Thewingkongexchange4 ай бұрын

    "Sam play our song?" "Ding dong! The witch is dead, the wicked witch is dead....." "No Sam, the other one."

  • @briguy399

    @briguy399

    4 ай бұрын

    Naked Gun 2.5, baby ! Good one ! LOL

  • @bozarks7580

    @bozarks7580

    4 ай бұрын

    This is our hill, and these are our beans

  • @riksplace
    @riksplace4 ай бұрын

    at 67 yrs old this is probably my favorite movie.....brings a tear....

  • @geniusjohn8280
    @geniusjohn82804 ай бұрын

    You weren't watching closely enough; we saw him hide the papers in the piano.

  • @kevinL5425
    @kevinL54254 ай бұрын

    The plane in the fog at the end was actually a smaller than life model on the sound stage. They made it look larger by hiring “little people” dressed as mechanics to walk around it.

  • @shainewhite2781
    @shainewhite27814 ай бұрын

    Winner of 3 Oscars including Best Picture. The greatest romantic drama adventure ever made.

  • @rdawgo14
    @rdawgo144 ай бұрын

    For my money, the best screenplay of all time-- so many amazing lines.

  • @Thewingkongexchange
    @Thewingkongexchange4 ай бұрын

    Loads of iconic moments but the sing-off in the bar is the one that hits hardest for me.

  • @torontomame

    @torontomame

    4 ай бұрын

    In a world where the word "iconic" is misused to almost a criminal level, it's a joy to read it used properly. There truly are iconic moments in this classic.

  • @fidel2xl
    @fidel2xl4 ай бұрын

    Good reaction, Jen. But you also have to bear in mind that when this movie was made and released back in 1942, no one (including the filmmakers and actors etc) were aware of the extent of what was happening in World War 2 with regard to Germany's horrific treatment the Jewish people, and what exactly was going on at Concentration camps. The extent of those horrors wasn't really known to the rest of the world until the war ended years later in 1945 and afterward. So when the characters in this great 1942 movie lightly mention 'Concentration camps' etc, the enormity and the profound gravity of the horrors of what went on in those camps wasn't something that the world was remotely aware of at that time.

  • @rcrawford42

    @rcrawford42

    4 ай бұрын

    There were LOTS of hints and rumors around, though. Lots of people had escaped just ahead of the Holocaust, and got word of the fate of family they left behind.

  • @fidel2xl

    @fidel2xl

    4 ай бұрын

    @@rcrawford42 - Yes…but the extent of what was actually going on wasn’t fully known or understood by the general public. There were scattered rumors etc…but that time was so stressful to everyone, with wars raging everywhere, citizens drafted and deployed, many places occupied, food rationing, and people still going through Depression era economic hardships that was slowly ending due to full employment from weapons manufacturing and military employment, that people in general could barely fathom processing all the confusing oftentimes conflicting reports out there.

  • @PsychedelicChameleon

    @PsychedelicChameleon

    4 ай бұрын

    @@fidel2xl You are correct that the general public didn't know, but a large part of that was because of a lack of willingness to know. The information was there, even regarding the scale, but there was nothing really striking and available to give the emotional impact: no video, no reputable spies, no accounts from massive numbers of people. The same types of willing ignorance have continued on ever since regarding other topics, it's just that none of those other topics involved murder on such a massive scale. There was also a deliberate attempt to hide the truth on a massive scale by German authorities for years even before the war was in full swing. To this day, a significant portion of the American public are "holocaust deniers", and an even greater portion are doubters. Charlie Chaplin addresses this in a gentle and roundabout way in his 1940 movie "The Great Dictator", which I highly recommend.

  • @michaelb1761

    @michaelb1761

    4 ай бұрын

    The allied governments certainly knew, and not just rumors. A Polish officer snuck back into Polad and allowed himself to be captured. He then reported on what was happening in the concentration camp that he was thrown into and organized a resistance before escaping back to England. They knew full well what was happening. An interesting postscript, Stalin had him executed a few years after the war as a National Socialist sympathizer because he was a hero to the Polish people, and Stalin was worried he might lead a revolt.

  • @fidel2xl

    @fidel2xl

    4 ай бұрын

    @@michaelb1761 - Governments may have known…but the general public were mostly unaware. Remember, this was decades before the Internet, and television technology was still in its infancy. People (as in the general public) depended on ‘word of mouth’, letters, telegrams, radio, newspapers, and newsreels at the movies, to get news. And oftentimes, the news was weeks or months old. And added to the fact that society was upended with food rations, and bombings, and mass deployment of large portions of their populations, there was a general sense of stress, great uncertainty, and lack of reliable means of communications at that time. Again, this was only in 1942 that I’m referring to. There were of course concentration camps opened in the mid to late 1930s by the Nazis. But it really wasn’t until 1938 when the first execution officially occurred…and up to that point, the Nazis hadn’t yet began their insidious mass detainment into those camps until late 1938, and further into 1939. But the very first OFFICIAL mass killings (forced euthanasia) really began in 1941, just around the same time this 1942 movie was being produced. So, it is quite understandable that movies around 1941 and 1942 etc were unaware of genocide occurring in those camps, since the official start of the genocide was in 1941. And again…this was decades before the internet and years before live television became widely available etc. So it was only after the dust settled after the war, that the general public WORLDWIDE was made aware of the horrors.

  • @thomholbrook7286
    @thomholbrook72864 ай бұрын

    When the film was being made there was a fight behind the scenes as to who exactly was the male lead, Bogart or Paul Henreid (Laszlo). Part of the idea was whoever gets the girl is the top guy. They had to explain to Bogart, no, you don't get the girl but you lose her in a heroic gallant way that doesn't make you the loser. I don't know anybody who would think of Laszlo as the male lead. Lol.

  • @jdeamaral
    @jdeamaral4 ай бұрын

    If I had known you were watching Casablanca, one of the greatest movies of all time, I would have dressed up really nice. "We'll Always Have You Tube, Jen"

  • @thomastimlin1724

    @thomastimlin1724

    4 ай бұрын

    🤣

  • @RichardM1366
    @RichardM13664 ай бұрын

    A true romantic movie. This is the favorite of mine. Humphrey Bogart is iconic. You are entranced from beginning to end! It was a great experience to see it in a retro cinema. Peter Lorre also delivered a great performance. Ingrid Bergman Is a great addition to the cast. Top notch!

  • @gerardoalvarez4250
    @gerardoalvarez42504 ай бұрын

    This is THE MOVIE. Master class on filmmaking

  • @ToABrighterFuture
    @ToABrighterFuture4 ай бұрын

    Around 9:15: There's often a bit of menace underneath the polite words when international politics get involved. My dad was an Army officer, and our family was stationed in West Germany in the later years of the Cold War. Dad could occasionally arrange for the family to get orders for the Duty Train, which was a sleeper train that ran from Bremerhaven or Frankfurt in West Germany, overnight through East Germany, into West Berlin. Once in a very great while, he could get an additional set of orders authorizing us to visit East Berlin for a day. Military and civilians had to go through separate sides of Checkpoint Charlie, and on one occasion, my brother and I were turned back from the civilian side by an East German official with an attitude. We headed back toward the West Berlin side, but before we got there, a Soviet officer politely stopped us and asked, in flawless English if I remember correctly, what was going on. We explained what had happened, as best we could, and while that was going on, Dad (who'd spotted my windbreaker all the way from the East side) came around to assist. The Soviet officer, contra what you might have expected, was, while not exactly "friendly" in the Western sense, completely professional, which, I would learn decades later, wasn't a Soviet thing, but more of a Russian cultural thing. He talked to Dad for a few seconds, took one look at our documents, nodded, and walked us right back up to the East German officials. I didn't exactly catch what was said between them: there was lots of technical German going back and forth. But the Soviet officer never once raised his voice, and the East German officials went from animated to very, very quiet. They then asked us for our passports, which, when we had been briefed, we were told to never unhand those, ever, under any circumstances. My brother and I gave each other a look of, like, do we trust them? The Soviet officer spotted that, and said something like, "Relax, kids, they'll give them right back." He then asked the East German officials, in basic German that he knew we'd understand, to confirm that, and they started nodding like bobbleheads on a triple espresso. Once the paperwork was sorted out, and we gave a respectful "Danke schön" to the East German officials, the Soviet officer told us to enjoy our visit. I asked him how to say "thank you" in Russian. He seemed to fight back a smile, and said, "It's спасибо." (pronounced spah-SEE-boh). I said, "Well, spasibo, Sir." He did smile at that. "Пожалуйста. До свидания." He then did a smart about-face and headed back toward his post. My brother and I met Dad right past the checkpoint, and the rest of the day was incident-free. My point in all that, is that there was a certain...decorum is too polite, protocol is too harsh, so..."understanding?"...when it came to how individuals from opposing nation-states interacted in times of conflict. It seems to have become a bit of a lost art in the 21st century.

  • @vickirecord5534
    @vickirecord55343 ай бұрын

    I love that you are so aware of the context and politics of what is going on in Casablance. So refreshing after seeing so many "first time" watchers that have no clue.

  • @p-51d95
    @p-51d954 ай бұрын

    The movie was released Nov 28, 1942. Operation Torch, the Allied invasion of Vichy French Morraco occurred on Nov 8, 1942, so the theme of the movie was very timely to the audience. And remember, at the time no one knew how the war would turn out...

  • @caldwellkelley3084
    @caldwellkelley30844 ай бұрын

    Jen does a classic of classics! Claude Raines steals the show as Cpt. Louis Renault! Have a good time and thanks!

  • @kevinL5425
    @kevinL54254 ай бұрын

    One thing never said in the movie is “Play it again Sam”

  • @johnsavard7583

    @johnsavard7583

    4 ай бұрын

    No. He really just says "Play it, Sam. If she can stand to hear it, so can I."

  • @kingbeauregard

    @kingbeauregard

    4 ай бұрын

    Something else not said in the movie: "crap, I can't pick up a wi-fi signal ANYWHERE".

  • @seantlewis376
    @seantlewis3763 ай бұрын

    For about ten years, I had a long distance relationship with a British woman. We enjoyed watching movies, especially old movies. Casablanca is one of my favorites, but she refused to watch it with me. She said that the airport scene would be too much for her. For ten years, we were always saying goodbye at airports.

  • @kojiattwood
    @kojiattwood4 ай бұрын

    In my opinion, still the wittiest and most quotable script ever penned in Hollywood.

  • @kieronball8962
    @kieronball89624 ай бұрын

    Awesome reactions from Jen, to this superb piece of cinema. And one of THE most quoted movies, of all time. :)

  • @kevinL5425
    @kevinL54254 ай бұрын

    This wasn’t expected to be a huge hit. However, the allies invaded and captured Casablanca second week of November in 1942, so they rushed the production to release it November 26 to take advantage of the free publicity.

  • @veronica6325
    @veronica63254 ай бұрын

    WOW!!!! You understood Casablanca on multiple levels. None of the other reactors I watched saw beyond love story. Jen Rules!!! The others drool!!!

  • @scottmcnulty70
    @scottmcnulty704 ай бұрын

    The great thing about the writing is they withhold so much when they could just ease our discomfort with a simple conversation. A gem

  • @treetopjones737
    @treetopjones7374 ай бұрын

    A classic Bogie with Bacall noir film is "The Big Sleep" 1946 which is a cool Private Eye story that also has a scene of old Hollywood in it.

  • @PerfectHandProductions
    @PerfectHandProductions4 ай бұрын

    An all time classic! It's in my top 10, easily. What a great script full of wonderful characters. Glad you're finally seeing it.

  • @robertshields4160
    @robertshields41604 ай бұрын

    Years ago, I worked at a resort in New Paltz, NY. One year they had a film week and not only showed the movie but also had a couple of people who help make it. They had a nice lecture about what it was like making the film.

  • @dunringill1747
    @dunringill17474 ай бұрын

    Lots of iconic lines. Witty & clever dialog. Brilliant acting. There are so many reasons why this movie is such a masterpiece.

  • @daveautzen9089
    @daveautzen90894 ай бұрын

    I so adore this film. One of the best ever made! So many iconic lines and great moments. I finally saw this for the first time a couple years ago, and hated myself for waiting so long. I’ve watched every reaction here on KZread and no one has disliked it yet.

  • @thomholbrook7286
    @thomholbrook72864 ай бұрын

    So, every character in this movie represents the country they're from. Renault is French which was occupied by Germany. So he's sort of compromised and not exactly a great guy but he doesn't love the Germans, going against them when he has the chance. At the time America had not entered the war, thus Rick's neutrality at the start. Rick throwing in against the Germans at the end was a direct call for Americans to get behind the war against Germany.

  • @rcrawford42

    @rcrawford42

    4 ай бұрын

    And the dates of the events in the film place it right before and ending the day of Pearl Harbor.

  • @thedealer777
    @thedealer7772 ай бұрын

    TRIVIA: At the end of the movie, fog was added for dramatic effect in the studio. Casablanca is in the DESERT, there is NO fog there. The plane was a model, "miniaturized" to fit, and workers milling around it, were actually dwarfs (or midgets) to make it all look full-sized and real. Though "Play it again Sam," was NEVER a direct quote, the movie had some memorable lines: “I Came To Casablanca For The Waters.": "I'm shocked, shocked to find that gambling is going on in here!"; "Here's looking at you kid."; "We'll always have Paris." "Round up the usual suspects!"; "Louis, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship."

  • @DavidStebbins
    @DavidStebbins4 ай бұрын

    There are so many iconic moments in this film, from the many famous lines you recognized (and a few you didn't), to all the non-American actors, to the special lighting for Ingrid Bergman and all the tricks they used to make Humphrey Bogart look taller than Ingrid Bergman, when she was in fact a couple inches or more taller than he was. With the backdrop of the war, the story can't help but hit hard. This movie is truly a classic, one worth watching over and over.

  • @allenporter6586
    @allenporter65863 ай бұрын

    I love how you kept saying "I've heard that" Out of the AFI top 100 movie quotes, 7 come from Casablanca.

  • @bereldovlerner5557
    @bereldovlerner55574 ай бұрын

    Rick was not just worried about her safety, he was worried about the future of the world

  • @Darth_Nihilus_Sith_Lord
    @Darth_Nihilus_Sith_Lord4 ай бұрын

    One of my favorite movies of all time! Back when movies succeeded on the acting and great stories, and not special effects. Awesome movie! Awesome reaction Jen. ❤❤

  • @melvincain5012
    @melvincain50124 ай бұрын

    Wow! Can't belive it, my favourite film being reacted to by my favourite KZread reactor!!" 😍❤

  • @trevorworthey1420
    @trevorworthey14204 ай бұрын

    You're absolutely right; the war was going on when they made this movie. You've picked up on one of the most impressive things about CASABLANCA that's not so obvious to us 80 years on... the writers (as well as the viewers) had no idea whether we'd win WWII. They were filming in the summer of 1942, America (and the Allies) were losing. We hadn't yet invaded North Africa. Captain Renault symbolically discards the Vichy water, yet when the movie debuted the French in North Africa were still loyal to Vichy. And yet the movie's optimistic aura gives us today the sense that it was shown in retrospect. The most amazing line is Rick's poetic foreshadowing (beyond the plot timeline) "It's December 1941 in Casablanca; what time it is in New York. I bet they're sleeping, I bet all America is asleep." Of course, in less than a week from the end of the movie, America will be awakened in Pearl Harbor and dragged into the war. So amazingly brilliant.

  • @johnsavard7583
    @johnsavard75834 ай бұрын

    Incidentally, there was a news story a few years back, where some researchers took the script to "Casablanca", and put the title "Everybody Comes to Rick's" on it, to see if any studio in the present time would be interested in making such a movie. Their findings were that no one was, and no one recognized the script either!

  • @TuttleCapt
    @TuttleCapt4 ай бұрын

    What makes this movie so extraordinary is that it was just a standard conveyor-belt "studio system" production. A script is selected, a producer assigned to it, and the producer picks director, writers and most if the cast, and they crank it out in a few weeks. But in this case, everything aligned perfectly--IMO, literally. The direction (note the use of lighting and shadow to tell the story), awesome performances, crisp dialogue full of iconic (and telling) lines, and of course the plotting. It all came together to make truly "movie magic"!

  • @shuboy05
    @shuboy053 ай бұрын

    The latest version on DVD and Blu Ray has an excellent commentary track by the late Roger Ebert who talks all about the production details of the movie. Like the fact Dooley Wilson (Sam) was a famous drummer but not a trained pianist. So if you watch closely you'll notice he's just pretending to play the piano. Also Ebert lets out a big laugh when Capt. Renault closes the club ("I'm shocked, shocked to find that gambling is going on in here!"). That scene never fails to make me laugh.

  • @Rockaria23
    @Rockaria234 ай бұрын

    Another classic black and white film worth watching is 'Angels with Dirty Faces' from 1938. James Cagney is the main star, but Humphrey Bogart is in it too. It's a crime drama and is considered by some to be one of the finest films in Cagney's career, and a true example of brilliant American cinema 😊

  • @alfredroberthogan5426
    @alfredroberthogan542623 күн бұрын

    Two key moments missed here--Rick's nod approving the orchestra to play and Renault's oft-quoted line "I'm shocked, shocked to find gambling going on in here!" as the croupier tells him, "Your winnings, sir." He replies, "Oh, thank you very much."'

  • @miguelvelez7221
    @miguelvelez72214 ай бұрын

    This film still casts a spell. You could see our Jen getting wrapped up in the story and themes. It's lightening in a bottle especially if you know what a winding road the production was and how so much was done on the fly. Side note... Rick is like a lot of us. He's not inherently bad, but he's in a part of his life where the slings and arrows of existence have drained him of any idealistic zeal. He's sanguine about how the world works, or so he tells himself. Like many people he fought the good fight and didn't see much for his efforts. Combined with losing the love of his life he curdled inside. When the true depths of his depression become known to him, and when his mettle was tested despite personal loss, he chose to rejoin the fray in the fight against Fascist Authoritarians. And he also doesn't purity test Louis, his own past too checkered to have any moral high ground, all that matters is Louis has TRULY seen the light and the error of his complicity and he is now committed to fighting the good fight. Rick is one of the great fictional anti-Fascists and his story has lessons for all of us today.

  • @ilionreactor1079
    @ilionreactor10794 ай бұрын

    Every frame of this movie is a more beautiful photograph than I'll ever shoot. Some would make museum quality pieces.

  • @himbo754
    @himbo7544 ай бұрын

    "Casablanca" has great dialogue, which is why it is quoted so often.

  • @davidge5856
    @davidge58564 ай бұрын

    Credited with helping to turn the tide of American sentiment towards entering the second world war, Casablanca remains one of the most quotable movies of all time. Dragged a buddy to see it on the big screen once in college, and we were both blown away by how many lines we already knew - and how well it still holds up - still a classic!

  • @rubenoteiza9261

    @rubenoteiza9261

    4 ай бұрын

    B.S. After Pearl Harbor they didn't need anything else to "turn the tide of American sentiment against the war".

  • @thomasmcintosh390
    @thomasmcintosh3904 ай бұрын

    I often refer to this movie as the first 'mature adult film' I ever saw. Wildly entertaining and engaging on every level.

  • @had1toomany114
    @had1toomany1144 ай бұрын

    My last name is Bogart. People have been quoting this movie to me my entire life.

  • @thomastimlin1724
    @thomastimlin17244 ай бұрын

    The movie was based on an unsold play called Everybody Comes to Rick's, which you hear Captain Renaud say to the Nazi Officer as they are walking from the plane, early on in the movie.

  • @waterbeauty85
    @waterbeauty854 ай бұрын

    There was a TV special of "The American Film Institutes 100 Greatest Movies Lines," and "Casablanca" was the single movie with the most quotes, and Sidney Poitier (a great actor you should watch some time because his work was cinematically and sociologically significant) was the single actor with the most quotes.

  • @nevrogers8198
    @nevrogers81984 ай бұрын

    I love both Claude Rains and Peter Lorre btw. Both brilliant at bringing extra dimensions to supporting roles. Claude Rains was equally duplicitous and slippery in Lawrence of Arabia. Peter Lorre was the first to play Le Chiffre on screen in Casino Royale (as part of an anthology in 1954).

  • @seanbunker7054
    @seanbunker70544 ай бұрын

    It made me so happy to see you watching this. When I was a kid I saw this on late night reruns and I’ve watched it tons of times since. My love of movies, my desire to be a filmmaker, all came from me being a sleepy kid on my parents couch and having my mind just blown by seeing this

  • @Dontuween
    @Dontuween4 ай бұрын

    Conrad Veidt played one of the great villains of all time! Jen needs to check out more of his features, specially "The Thief of Bagdad" (1940), and perhaps some of his famous silent features such as "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari" (1920) & "The Man Who Laughs" (1928), the very movie that inspired the Joker in the Batman universe.

  • @davewhitehead5116
    @davewhitehead51164 ай бұрын

    Movie with the most quotable lines. Well done Jen.

  • @TheMess9898
    @TheMess98984 ай бұрын

    The director, Michael Curtiz, is a big influence on Steven Spielberg. You can spot similar shot composition and framing in their direction

  • @awall1701
    @awall17014 ай бұрын

    So pleased you reacted to Casablanca, plenty of CHAMPAGNE!

  • @yaddamop6309
    @yaddamop63094 ай бұрын

    Hi, Jen! I have been watching your Star Trek reactions and have seen you reacting to Casablanca! It's truly an amazing movie --- tight, crisp. The dramatic thrust of the movie is Ilsa saying, "One woman has hurt you and now you want to take it out on the whole world!" Like Kirk in Star Trek, Rick had let Ilsa go for the good of the world. I liked dropping by to watch with you! BTW, I played French Horn in concert band and orchestra, my mom was a music teacher and I majored in music, so yeah. No wonder your musical comments are spot on! Anyway, thanks for watching this movie. And right back atcha --- 🖖

  • @chipstercamarillo9373
    @chipstercamarillo93734 ай бұрын

    one of my favorite movies of all time. I still love a quote from Film critic Roger Ebert "If you ask me what's the best movie ever made is Citizen Kane. My favorite movie is Casablanca."

  • @tomhoffman4330
    @tomhoffman43304 ай бұрын

    Here's lookin' at You, Jen! 😉👌💝

  • @zziicckk01
    @zziicckk01Ай бұрын

    This film really holds up through time. Rick is, by far, one of the coolest characters in movie history... an icon to match the film.

  • @joeconcepts5552
    @joeconcepts55524 ай бұрын

    It is such a great move to not make the other man any less worthy. In fact, Lazlo is arguably the “better man” at least based on what we knew of Rick at the start.

  • @ThistleAndSea
    @ThistleAndSea4 ай бұрын

    Good one, Jen. I enjoyed rewatching this with you! Thanks for sharing it. 🙂

  • @randybass8842
    @randybass88424 ай бұрын

    So many great lines in this movie. "I'm shocked, shocked, that there's gambling going on in here."

  • @8967Logan
    @8967Logan4 ай бұрын

    I am going to point out something that I never noticed in 30 years of watching this movie. Another reactor recently pointed out the fact that Ilsa never tells Lazlo that she loves him, not once in the entire film, but she does tell Rick several times.

  • @vermithax

    @vermithax

    4 ай бұрын

    Yep. That's because she doesn't love Lazlo, at least not in that way. She admires him, cares for him deeply, and believes very much in what he's doing, but she isn't in love with him. Rick isn't the only one making a sacrifice at the end. Good stuff.

  • @katherinedinwiddie4526
    @katherinedinwiddie45264 ай бұрын

    Claude Rains is spectacular in a little movie titled "Notorious "

  • @spiveym
    @spiveym4 ай бұрын

    On AMC, Clive Owen is Sam Spade in "Monsieur Spade," and while he's not doing a Bogart impression, I think he's doing a great interpretation of him living in France, 20 years after the events of The Maltese Falcon. I never thought I'd say this, but I wouldn't mind seeing him play "Monsieur Rick" many years later.

  • @hjermsted22
    @hjermsted224 ай бұрын

    from wikipedia: "Casablanca was rushed into release to take advantage of the publicity from the Allied invasion of North Africa a few weeks earlier. It had its world premiere on November 26, 1942, in New York City and was released nationally in the United States on January 23, 1943."

  • @garyveacock8494
    @garyveacock84944 ай бұрын

    If you get to do The Maltese Falcon then you can watch The Cheap Detective from 1978 with Peter Falk you should get most of the jokes.

  • @massakastuono7870
    @massakastuono78704 ай бұрын

    This movie is really for Broken hearts...been there.. This movie is so good. They are such good actors.their eyes talk for them.. I have been to Casablanca in Morroco 5 times already..love there and you can t help it thinking of this movie while strolling the streets over there..Thank you thank you Jen...much love to you and your family.

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