KyleKallgrenBHH

KyleKallgrenBHH

A look at culture, high and low, and why those differences are meaningless.

Casablanca | Cinema Ant1fa

Casablanca | Cinema Ant1fa

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  • @deogiriyadav8399
    @deogiriyadav83996 сағат бұрын

    Have u ever heard about..... Sardar udham.... Movie???

  • @workingorder2189
    @workingorder218914 сағат бұрын

    It’s funny cause it’s true. - Homer J. Simpson 1991

  • @arnonym9746
    @arnonym974616 сағат бұрын

    🥔

  • @michaeliv284
    @michaeliv28416 сағат бұрын

    Why is Mary Poppins god? The better question is "why not"?

  • @michaeliv284
    @michaeliv28417 сағат бұрын

    Hyde vs Dracula. That sounds amazing

  • @Lexivor
    @Lexivor22 сағат бұрын

    🥔🥔🥔

  • @thomassmurthwaite5004
    @thomassmurthwaite500423 сағат бұрын

    🥔

  • @kennethmatthew9638
    @kennethmatthew9638Күн бұрын

    Fuck superhero movies its saturated big corporate shit. But buckaroo banzai rules because it's more original it ain't fucking x-men

  • @JediJared-bs1wt
    @JediJared-bs1wtКүн бұрын

    4:11 Titus the original Cartman confirmed!

  • @JediJared-bs1wt
    @JediJared-bs1wtКүн бұрын

    4:33 ah!

  • @JediJared-bs1wt
    @JediJared-bs1wtКүн бұрын

    YMS did a good debunking of that Kimba myth

  • @JediJared-bs1wt
    @JediJared-bs1wtКүн бұрын

    I believe this was the inspiration for Lion King 1 1/2

  • @JediJared-bs1wt
    @JediJared-bs1wtКүн бұрын

    5:44 I thought that was the ocean until you said it was the sky

  • @JediJared-bs1wt
    @JediJared-bs1wtКүн бұрын

    Song at the end?

  • @JediJared-bs1wt
    @JediJared-bs1wtКүн бұрын

    18:49 according to Google he may have also been Jack the Ripper!

  • @JediJared-bs1wt
    @JediJared-bs1wtКүн бұрын

    Not to defend John Lennon too much but it’s a bit of an exaggeration to say he was an inveterate wife beater. He hit his first wife once and then immediately regretted it.

  • @JediJared-bs1wt
    @JediJared-bs1wtКүн бұрын

    Wait, may be a dumb question, but how do we not have records of his handwriting but we have records of his plays?

  • @JediJared-bs1wt
    @JediJared-bs1wtКүн бұрын

    The one thing this video taught me is that Independence Day, 2012, and 10,000 BC were made by the same guy.

  • @djoneforever
    @djoneforeverКүн бұрын

    It's very simple. Make 6 movies in different genre with the same actors then chop them up and place them randomly and use something to link them all together and call it reincarnation.

  • @MylaMinoki
    @MylaMinokiКүн бұрын

    It took me four years to realize the segway from plasticity using "bit of a stretch" was a pun. Thank you Kyle, thank you.

  • @NadiraJamal
    @NadiraJamal2 күн бұрын

    🥔

  • @Squalidarity
    @Squalidarity2 күн бұрын

    🥔🥔🥔🥔🥔🥔🥔🥔🥔

  • @hormiguero
    @hormiguero3 күн бұрын

    🥔

  • @annjohnson994
    @annjohnson9944 күн бұрын

    I love this film. Oldman and Roth are fantastic!

  • @TheSci-fiAnarchist42
    @TheSci-fiAnarchist424 күн бұрын

    Great video, I thought it was neat. 🥔

  • @kalka1l
    @kalka1l5 күн бұрын

    As someone who never watched the Simpsons beyond adjacent exposure, I enjoyed this much more than how those show glimpses made me feel.

  • @lorenpeterson5255
    @lorenpeterson52555 күн бұрын

    🥔

  • @stevethepocket
    @stevethepocket5 күн бұрын

    I do wonder what to make of your claim that humanity in general didn't start thinking of the end of the world as being a sudden, cataclysmic event until the Cold War. Because T. S. Eliot wrote about the world ending "not with a bang, but with a whimper" all the way back in 1925, and I always assumed it was meant to be a novel idea.

  • @stevethepocket
    @stevethepocket5 күн бұрын

    Wow. All these years later and you still threw in a reference to your appearance in that _Freddy Got Fingered_ video. No, I won't explain for the benefit of those who just got here. Let me have this.

  • @mossandthings2457
    @mossandthings24575 күн бұрын

    This play will be my last play of the season. Thank you so much for making this, I can never find any info about this play

  • @dylanb.8459
    @dylanb.84595 күн бұрын

    Sonichu willl be remember as a great work of art brut like Henry Dangers In the realms of the unreal or the oeuvre of adolf wolfli.. dont be rude

  • @mallarieanderson6439
    @mallarieanderson64396 күн бұрын

    Thanks for all you do 🤎🥔🍠🥔🤎

  • @Mario_Angel_Medina
    @Mario_Angel_Medina6 күн бұрын

    1:15:51 the worst part. That's a joke straight out of the book, they just changed Mickey and Donald for characters they didn't need to licence

  • @Mario_Angel_Medina
    @Mario_Angel_Medina6 күн бұрын

    I'm pretty sure people has done studies that concluded that Homer Simpson contributed to the negative image of power plants. Nuclear plants are like planes, they are the safest option because they're the most dangerous option and everybody knows it so they take the most precautions... unless you're Boeing, the mr Burns of aircraft manufacturing

  • @HeidiRipper
    @HeidiRipper6 күн бұрын

    🥔 excellent work as always

  • @StephSottile
    @StephSottile6 күн бұрын

    As a Simpsons nerd and a theatre actor/director, this was a lovely addition to the discourse. It only reinvigorates my want to direct this play 🥔

  • @gwenrose3211
    @gwenrose32116 күн бұрын

    Six years too late, but I think there's too much reading the science fiction elements as mere metaphor for a divorce or something. In my view it's a movie about suicidal ideation and self sabotage. The books are better though, much more there about ecology and such

  • @karolinamaas3299
    @karolinamaas32996 күн бұрын

    I go back to this video occasionally, it's a nice soothing thing to listen to. Thanks!

  • @erikleith4670
    @erikleith46706 күн бұрын

    dont care i love this film

  • @JoeKerr019
    @JoeKerr0197 күн бұрын

    33:49 my sides

  • @phishbill
    @phishbill7 күн бұрын

    Snarky hipster douchebags tend to miss the point.

  • @DodgerOfZion
    @DodgerOfZion7 күн бұрын

    I revisit this review from time to time. Ven continues to be awesome.

  • @KyleKallgrenBHH
    @KyleKallgrenBHH7 күн бұрын

    Ven might be the only reason I could get videos made. This channel wouldn’t exist without the help they gave me for years. I love Ven dearly. They’re going through a tough time right now

  • @DodgerOfZion
    @DodgerOfZion7 күн бұрын

    @@KyleKallgrenBHH They are, and I wish for them nothing but love, light, and healing in these coming days.

  • @christophermcguire27
    @christophermcguire277 күн бұрын

    Harfluer cost him half his army

  • @oswalddebruin
    @oswalddebruin7 күн бұрын

    🥔

  • @Wyrmknave
    @Wyrmknave7 күн бұрын

    It's orthoganal to the actual points presented but I really appreciate the craft that's shown in slipping those needle drops into the video

  • @JoeKerr019
    @JoeKerr0198 күн бұрын

    55:04 StePHEN king :P not steven :P

  • @mrs.wontkins9294
    @mrs.wontkins92948 күн бұрын

    Really impressive work there.

  • @JoeKerr019
    @JoeKerr0198 күн бұрын

    51:27 as a chilean.. Wooo!! Shoutout!

  • @Pineappolis
    @Pineappolis8 күн бұрын

    I'm almost a decade late with this - but I think your Shakespeare is one of meaning before meter. So many great Shakespearean actors, I think, fall in love, well likely first with a few of the individual pieces of his genius that speak most to them - but more concretely with his mastery of the poetic quality of plays of his day and so more often than not, they're delivered in a way that's astonishingly beautiful (and over which you can certainly overlay the required emotions...) ...and yet I finally realised why your version of the Chorus' speech from Henry V is my favourite that I've ever seen. You read it naturalistically, and it honestly knocked my brain sideways the first time I heard it because, while there isn't _that_ much archaic wording in that speech and it's not _that_ hard to parse anyway, there's still some and, for the first time, the entire speech was readily understandable without having to consciously parse it _at all._ That's just... more enjoyable an experience than a more poetic reading that makes the gears in my brain clash occasionally because the gear-clashing, somewhat ironically, is more disruptive of the gravitas the poetic approach creates than it would be of the more... intimate connection to the meaning behind the words created by the more naturalistic one. That makes perfect sense to me. There's far more to conveying meaning in real life than the words, the tone and dynamics with which you say them, and your body language. Varying stress and pacing _far_ more than a typical reading would allow has huge impact - your brain instantly registers, "someone expressing frustration that they can't do what they want to and what people would like so, in humility, asks the people to meet him halfway." You could have read it in Klingon and I'd have got that. Once you know the overall meaning, it's kind of staggering how easily a brain can fill in the specific meaning of words and phrases that aren't in your lexicon using the context of the ones that are. ...and the best part? The poetic quality isn't lost - a good poem _doesn't_ lose its beauty just because you don't read it with regimented stress and pacing. Parts of Tennyson's 'Ulysses' works so much better for me when not in close to rigid iambic pentameter pentameter, while some parts are quite the reverse - as we see in your reading when you revert to a more standard meter both to lead strongly into into the play and as the Chorus is thinking, "phew, I feel like they bought that." With great poetry, the aesthetics that _make_ it great are baked in and not easily damaged by the delivery. Just a thought I should have had a long time ago. Both this video and the Henry V one are long-time comfort viewing for me; this one because it's herniatingly hilarious and the Henry V one because the point you make about the ultimate emptiness of Henry's glorious rhetoric (at least in-story) kind of breaks my heart, in a good way, every time. That speech _is_ staggeringly inspiring and yet, "Henry's a fuckin' liar" is so painfully accurate - and that pain is never feels _not_ worth feeling for someone who so admires great rhetorical skill, detests sophistry and knows all to well that _no-one_ can spot sufficiently good sophistry _every_ time on the first listen.

  • @dolebludger7201
    @dolebludger72018 күн бұрын

    This makes me wanna reread crow cillers

  • @jacktayl
    @jacktayl8 күн бұрын

    15:41 Be Our Guest parody talking about the French.