The Deer Hunter – The Deer Hunter (6/8) Movie CLIP (1978) HD

The Deer Hunter movie clips: http://j.mp/1L5icjc BUY THE MOVIE: http://amzn.to/rQc7RY Don’t miss the HOTTEST NEW TRAILERS: http://bit.ly/1u2y6pr CLIP DESCRIP…
BAD Hunting is dedicated to hunters from all around. We provide the best videos, articles and how to than any other site online. We are bad hunting… Big Animal Down. Successful hunters helping hunters be successful

15 Responses to The Deer Hunter – The Deer Hunter (6/8) Movie CLIP (1978) HD

  1. nicole mahramus October 26, 2013 at 1:51 am #

    Love, my family!

  2. fucu November 28, 2013 at 1:31 pm #

    cry every time 

  3. InnuMaccaband December 6, 2013 at 2:50 pm #

    It’s never too late to mend! Stop killing innocent creatures and go vegan!

  4. Eric Schutz December 10, 2013 at 1:22 am #

    Love this movie,,,if ya watch he goes from lefty to righty around 3:14

  5. William Raih December 30, 2013 at 3:33 pm #

    Deniro fails to shoot the great prince of the forest.

  6. Reactiv12 January 12, 2014 at 12:31 am #

    There’s something about this scene that summarizes the whole film. Haven’t
    figured it out yet….

  7. Steve Wilson March 8, 2014 at 9:55 am #

    In life sometimes it comes down to a single moment and what you do with
    that moment that matters- how good are you at what you do and relentless /
    mature. It is at that moment where you own it. It doesn’t mean you have
    to kill everything to be the man. Sometimes just owning the moment is
    enough other than ego or respect from others. To know you are at that
    level is enough as a man. It is in Maslow’s hierarchy at the top zone.
    Mike even tries to help Stanley earlier in the film by teaching him to
    take responsibility and carry your own weight- tough love. Stanley is a
    fool and it is shown by the basic fawn he wounds and chases into a pond- no
    skill – no ethics- no Hunter. He hunts only for ego and want’s others to
    like him- respect him. They laugh at him because he has no respect for
    himself or others and make stupid decisions and expects others to carry his
    weight. Mike on the other hand is strong and pushes himself and more than
    carries his weight and works at the Man level. Everything he does- he
    works for and earns – to the point he can easily kill and take the glory /
    accolades of his friends- the easy route, or know himself he is at the top
    of his game and respects the animal as he is really looking into the mirror
    at a reflection of himself- the best out there- and he has done enough
    killing to reach the point of savoring the value of life. At that point,
    he realizes he doesn’t want to kill something so beautiful and majestic- he
    has the power to let it live- his call – his decision at that point in
    time- savor the moment. Most of your high level combat vets reach a point
    of maturity when they say- enough- enough death, enough killing – enough.
    If you ask me what he really see’s- a reflection of himself on what the
    animal represents – a rare strong dominant creature who is at the top of
    it’s game in life and very few of it’s kind exist anymore. Let it live-
    enough- and he intentionally misses to drive it off.

    What Society or others think doesn’t matter. You are at the top of your
    game and that is enough- let it live- there are not many like this trophy
    buck alive to just put the head on the wall- it deserves that respect at
    the top of it’s game to get where it is. He is looking in the mirror at a
    reflection of himself and comes to term with true power- self
    actualization. He wasn’t hunting for the meat- it was the challenge and
    once he owned the moment- that was enough. When Stanley said earlier “I
    hooked him up with a beautiful read head…” that was foreshadowing…
    leading up until this point as well. Mike isn’t your normal sheep in
    society- he thinks for himself, takes responsibility and works at a very
    high level of performance- foreshadowing 2 is he is a Green Beret in the
    movie- “Quiet Professional”. Stanley is the exact opposite- loud mouthed
    and does everything for attention and takes no responsibility for any of
    his actions and expects the sympathy of others to get by in life- weak. In
    the movie’s end- it is Mike who has the strength and confidence to go back
    after his friend ” I Will Never Leave a Fallen Comrade.” and bring him
    back- even at the expense of his life- Selflessness. The Tragedy is you
    can’t save everyone who has made their own choices- no matter how strong
    and how good you are. “Walkens” dies because he refused to go back – as
    stupid as that sounds. He died a long time ago mentally damaged and
    probably was just waiting for the bullet to end his pain. Mike was strong
    enough to go back and that creates conflict of reality and Tragedy is the
    result. In the End, Mike was the only one Mentally strong enough where
    everyone else failed / broke. Mike represents the best part of our
    Humanity through Character Strength and Selflessness. If we had a lot more
    Mikes in the USA, we would be a better country. 

  8. commentguy721 March 17, 2014 at 4:16 am #

    Greatest movie of all time

  9. doug avila March 20, 2014 at 6:38 pm #

    I love this movie. But one of the big mistakes is the mountain scenes. It’s
    suppose to be in a town in Pennsylvania and when they go hunting, the
    mountains are the Cascades in Washington (filmed for those scenes).
    Mountains on the east coast are more rolling, not jagged like the Rockies,
    Sierras or Cascades.

  10. J Doe April 14, 2014 at 10:34 pm #
  11. Cameron Kelleher July 16, 2014 at 6:07 am #

    him yelling “OKAY!” may be the most significant phrase of the movie

  12. degree7 August 7, 2014 at 9:12 pm #

    Those mountains are beautiful! 

  13. Matthew Brando December 3, 2014 at 3:55 am #

    one of the greatest scenes in one of the greatest of all time!

  14. J Doe January 23, 2015 at 8:27 pm #
  15. Shining Trapezoid February 6, 2015 at 6:44 pm #

    Isn’t that an elk?

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.