Warning

 

Close
Confirm Action

Are you sure you wish to do this?

Cancel Confirm
AR15.COM
11/29/2005 7:43:02 AM EDT

I finally picked up my own copy.

If you don't have it, GET IT!  Excellent movie!


"Well, Pilgrim, were it worth the trouble?"

"Eh?  What trouble?"
11/29/2005 8:38:42 AM EDT
[#1]
"March is a green, muddy month down below. Some like it. Farmers, mostly."

"Elk don't know how mant legs a horse has."

"You have done well to keep so much hair with so many after it."



I had a pair of these boots made. Everyone laughs at 'em until it snows and snows and snows....
11/29/2005 9:34:27 AM EDT
[#2]
if you like "Jeremiah Johnson", you should buy "The Mountain Men".  Great movie, both staples in my collection.  The Mountain Men
11/29/2005 9:39:30 AM EDT
[#3]
I just watched it last night while walking on the treadmill.
11/29/2005 8:17:04 PM EDT
[#4]
Why does his rifle have sooo much recoil??

I own both a .50 and a .54 and neither are that bad.
11/29/2005 10:18:31 PM EDT
[#5]
"Didn't put enough dirt down..saw it right off."
11/30/2005 2:14:51 AM EDT
[#6]
Where you headed?
Same place you are Johnson...Hell, in the end.



ETA....when Jeremiah was coming back thru the Crow burial grounds, what tipped him off that his "family" was in danger? That was one question I had since the first time I saw it many years back...
11/30/2005 8:24:51 AM EDT
[#7]

Quoted:
Where you headed?
Same place you are Johnson...Hell, in the end.



ETA....when Jeremiah was coming back thru the Crow burial grounds, what tipped him off that his "family" was in danger? That was one question I had since the first time I saw it many years back...



I've wondered about that too.

Maybe he was expecting to be attacked the whole time and was wondering why they hadn't come after him.  Suddenly he realized that in retaliation for violating something sacred to them, they would desecrate something sacred to him.

Just speculation.
11/30/2005 8:28:38 AM EDT
[#8]

Quoted:
if you like "Jeremiah Johnson", you should buy "The Mountain Men".  Great movie, both staples in my collection.  The Mountain Men



+5

You can't own one without the other.  And if you like those two, you should go out and purchase the Lonesome Dove series.
11/30/2005 8:55:09 AM EDT
[#9]

Quoted:
I've wondered about that too.

Maybe he was expecting to be attacked the whole time and was wondering why they hadn't come after him.  Suddenly he realized that in retaliation for violating something sacred to them, they would desecrate something sacred to him.

Just speculation.



Makes sense....seeing as how the party he was escorting mentioned they have been watched since they got in the area.

Thanks Brohawk...that makes more sense now.
11/30/2005 8:48:28 PM EDT
[#10]
This is very interesting.

We all hate Redford’s politics…..

But we almost all just love this movie.
12/1/2005 3:16:20 AM EDT
[#11]

Quoted:
This is very interesting.

We all hate Redford’s politics…..

But we almost all just love this movie.




Kinda like watching Sigourney Weaver use all those guns in the Aliens movies.  

In an interview she said she is afraid of guns and the feeling of power they give you.  Well, honey, if you don't think you can responsibly manage that power, you should stay away from them.  My 15 y/o daughter does just fine with them.
12/2/2005 12:11:10 PM EDT
[#12]
I love that movie. I must have seen it 30 times. We watch it the first night in Elk camp every year.

"It was only a .30, but damn, it was a Hawken."

"I, Hatchet Jack,
Being of sound mind & broke legs,
Do hereby give my bear rifle to who ever that finds it."



12/2/2005 3:52:59 PM EDT
[#13]
"It is a good rifle and kilt the bear that kilt me."
12/2/2005 4:01:39 PM EDT
[#14]
watch your top knot, watch yern
12/6/2005 5:23:26 PM EDT
[#15]
1 of my favorites. It would have been harsh but I often think it would have been good to have lived back in those days when you could just go claim a nice piece of land in the forests.

My question is it seems they could have gone around the burial ground to some degree rather than through the middle of it.

Also dale seems to be an experienced mountain man when him and jeremiah meet, he knows hatchet jacks and all. But the last time they meet and he has long hair he says I ain't never trapped before and seems to have some hesitation saying something about it and jeremiah says "you will do well".




12/6/2005 6:41:00 PM EDT
[#16]


Del Q might have been a mountain man provisioner or some other trader or hunter instead of an actual trapper.

And the Crow graveyard is just a plot device. Jeremiah Johnson is supposedly based on a real fellow, "liver eating johnston".
I would love to find out if any of the movie was true.

Another great script by the master, John Milius.

12/6/2005 6:54:56 PM EDT
[#17]
"Skin this un pilgrim ... and I'll bring you another'n"
12/6/2005 8:52:11 PM EDT
[#18]
Two books (at least) served as inspiration for the film:

Crow Killer by Raymond W. Thorp & Robert Bunker, claims to be "The monumental true saga of the greatest Mountain Man of the West, who swore revenge on an entire Indian Nation. A fantastic man... now the subject of the tremendous Warner Bros. film Jeremiah Johnson."  The New York Times called it, "The authentic best!"

and

Mountain Man by Vardis Fisher, billed as "The book that was the inspiration for Jeremiah Johnson." In the section titled To The Reader, the authors state (in part), "Readers familiar with the history of the American West will be aware that Sam and Kate are drawn in some degree from John Johnston, the "Crow-killer," and Jane Morgan, whose family was slaughtered on the Musselshell. Though these two persons actually lived they are today almost completely lost in legends."
12/6/2005 8:53:05 PM EDT
[#19]

Quoted:
"Didn't put enough dirt down..saw it right off."



beat me to it!  

awesome flick.
12/9/2005 8:17:17 PM EDT
[#20]

Quoted:
Why does his rifle have sooo much recoil??

I own both a .50 and a .54 and neither are that bad.




Must be that wimpy liberal playing Johnson

Alvin
12/9/2005 8:19:20 PM EDT
[#21]

Quoted:
"Didn't put enough dirt down..saw it right off."



My dad use the last part of this all the time...  Or did, back when I saw him on a regular basis.  
12/9/2005 8:21:21 PM EDT
[#22]

Quoted:
Two books (at least) served as inspiration for the film:

Crow Killer by Raymond W. Thorp & Robert Bunker, claims to be "The monumental true saga of the greatest Mountain Man of the West, who swore revenge on an entire Indian Nation. A fantastic man... now the subject of the tremendous Warner Bros. film Jeremiah Johnson."  The New York Times called it, "The authentic best!"

and

Mountain Man by Vardis Fisher, billed as "The book that was the inspiration for Jeremiah Johnson." In the section titled To The Reader, the authors state (in part), "Readers familiar with the history of the American West will be aware that Sam and Kate are drawn in some degree from John Johnston, the "Crow-killer," and Jane Morgan, whose family was slaughtered on the Musselshell. Though these two persons actually lived they are today almost completely lost in legends."




Both are excellent books,
I heartily recommend both. Try to read mountain man first then Crow killer.

Alvin
12/9/2005 8:24:00 PM EDT
[#23]

"What's on the spit?"

"Grown partikular?"

12/9/2005 8:26:49 PM EDT
[#24]

Quoted:

Quoted:
if you like "Jeremiah Johnson", you should buy "The Mountain Men".  Great movie, both staples in my collection.  The Mountain Men



+5

You can't own one without the other.  And if you like those two, you should go out and purchase the Lonesome Dove series.



JJ and LD are great BUT The Mountain Men was a great disappointment

Alvin
12/9/2005 8:28:22 PM EDT
[#25]

Quoted:
"Skin this un pilgrim ... and I'll bring you another'n"



Beat me to it.  
12/9/2005 8:28:47 PM EDT
[#26]
Don't forget "Man in the Wilderness" starring Richard Harris and John Huston.  The Harris character was a true survivalist.  IMHO the best movies were made before digital technology.  Both the writing and directing were better without the blue screen technology.
12/10/2005 6:01:01 AM EDT
[#27]

Quoted:
Don't forget "Man in the Wilderness" starring Richard Harris and John Huston.  The Harris character was a true survivalist.  IMHO the best movies were made before digital technology.  Both the writing and directing were better without the blue screen technology.




+1

Alvin