Saving Private Ryan opening cemetery scene

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 31 май 2014
  • Steven Spielberg and John Williams have you weeping within 3 minutes of the start of this film. Masterful.
  • КиноКино

Комментарии • 2,8 тыс.

  • @guillaumek8029
    @guillaumek8029 Год назад +282

    I'm french, and i remember when i was a kid i wanted to see this movie. One evening of June, my dad allowed me to watch it with him. I felt uncomfortable when he suddenly started to cry at this scene, i didn't really understand what was going on. He said: "These were Americans. All these men, that we don't know, died so we can be free and have a normal life". I'm 30 now, and it's my turn to cry at the scene and feel the heavy weight of eternal gratitude.

    • @user-oh4kt4sv8x
      @user-oh4kt4sv8x 6 месяцев назад

      Funny bc from what I’ve seen and heard you French don’t like us fuck yall

    • @ronshouse4205
      @ronshouse4205 6 месяцев назад +23

      Returning the favor from 1781, Battle of Yorktown, when George Washington's army was augmented with Comte de Rochambeau's army and Comte de Grasse's fleet.....the USA wouldn't have happened without French support, and the liberation of France in 1944 wouldn't have happened without US and UK troops

    • @YaleBulldogs94
      @YaleBulldogs94 5 месяцев назад

      Dude shut up. So fake and gay

    • @gonzostrangelove6107
      @gonzostrangelove6107 4 месяца назад +12

      My country's oldest alliance is with yours. I hope it will always be so.

    • @xxk4rilsxx
      @xxk4rilsxx 4 месяца назад +11

      🇺🇸 🇫🇷 ❤

  • @009Armo
    @009Armo 7 лет назад +3361

    Saving Private Ryan is one of those films you need to watch once a year

    • @minhajnizam5090
      @minhajnizam5090 6 лет назад +71

      minimum 3 times a year

    • @paleface171
      @paleface171 6 лет назад +92

      Or a movie everyone should watch, at least once in their lives.

    • @davidsnider7708
      @davidsnider7708 6 лет назад +82

      Yes, and should be required viewing in High Schools

    • @aaronford5446
      @aaronford5446 5 лет назад +15

      twice every 6 months

    • @patrickmodell5350
      @patrickmodell5350 5 лет назад +19

      every US student should watch it as a senior as well

  • @williampurvis2887
    @williampurvis2887 3 года назад +1015

    The fact the French dedicated this part of their land in respect of how many died gives me the chills. I hope one day I will make the trip to Normandy and see these graves for myself, and make an attempt to read each name that is put on the graves. It’s the smallest thing I could do anyway.

    • @robertmalone1487
      @robertmalone1487 2 года назад +39

      It's quite an experience, especially when most of those that died were actually brought back to the states. Only those whose families elected so were buried there. When I went you were not allowed to walk on the grass/graves.

    • @kcsnow9447
      @kcsnow9447 2 года назад +16

      +
      "Could do" says all about you, good sir. You clearly get it. I hope I do too. Some who have been to this place say it's the most beautiful spot on earth. I imagine it is.
      I've never visited Europe, and though I've had a list of places I would like to visit should I ever travel the pond, that list has dwindled over time. And were the list shrink down to only one? This would be the one.

    • @rinischreuder491
      @rinischreuder491 Год назад +6

      Took my son (15) there today on our vacation as a lifelesson and part of the education for me as a parent to him. I thank all the men who came to save us and also the familymembers who made it possible that their loved ones could come overseas to those they didn't know but knew they needed their help. I (we) thank you all and will be forever in our hearts.

    • @pm764
      @pm764 Год назад +5

      @@robertmalone1487 I was there this afternoon, about half of the graves do not allow circulation around but the others are authorized,the place is beautiful

    • @saltychips7627
      @saltychips7627 Год назад +3

      I'm with brother. I don't think there are many good men left

  • @Scatman1776
    @Scatman1776 2 года назад +244

    This was the greatest generation. They saved the world, they must never be forgotten.

    • @davidcahill4670
      @davidcahill4670 7 месяцев назад

      I mean, that's also the generation that systematically murdered over 6 million people and saw the rise of totalitarian regimes that killed well over 100 million more. And they raised the baby-boomers...
      They've already been forgotten. There are nazi rallies in the US today. What greater slap to the face of the few living WWII veterans can there be than the growing and open denial of war-crimes by the Japanese and the growing american nazi movement?

    • @k.k.9011
      @k.k.9011 6 месяцев назад +4

      I agree!

    • @KS-qr1ry
      @KS-qr1ry 6 месяцев назад +6

      World sucks right now, we’re forgetting them.

    • @Scatman1776
      @Scatman1776 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@KS-qr1ry You’re right. It’s more important to recognise the seven million different genders and respect peoples pronouns than give thanks to the millions of people that laid down their lives and gave their blood so that we can enjoy the freedoms we do today.

    • @michaelryan6947
      @michaelryan6947 13 дней назад

      Many are but the likes of you, me and folk who post on here, were remembering and honouring. To hell with the ones who dont. 👍🏻​@@KS-qr1ry

  • @bigtoad45
    @bigtoad45 5 лет назад +1557

    My dad served in WW2. Took him six months to relearn how to walk again after being blown out of his Sherman. I joined the navy in a feeble attempt to honor his memory. Love you dad! We will meet again..

    • @ellisonhamilton3322
      @ellisonhamilton3322 3 года назад +67

      My father and all my uncles were combat veterans of WWII. They all survived. A miracle IMO. They all saw heavy combat. How on earth they all made through to war's end alive is something even they could never fully comprehend. They knew how fortunate they were.
      They were ALL wonderful men.
      Wonderful husbands, fathers, uncles, patriots of our nation. We will NEVER know a remarkable generation like that again.
      They are all gone now and I miss them badly. I hope we are both reunited with our fathers in the hereafter. May God keep them and grant them peace.

    • @jeremynewcombe3422
      @jeremynewcombe3422 2 года назад +28

      @@ellisonhamilton3322 Yup. My great grandfather was on the Eastern Front from 1941 to the Germany's surrender in 1945. There was only a 6% chance that he would make it to the end. That 6% chance is what allowed me to be alive and writing this today.

    • @ellisonhamilton3322
      @ellisonhamilton3322 2 года назад +9

      @@jeremynewcombe3422 Kinda like winning the lottery. Really!
      Yes, the statistical probability that my dad and all his brothers would end up in both the European and Pacific theatres of operation and be combat veterans AND all survive is beyond my calculation.
      They were grateful and so am I.

    • @Panos_shoryuken
      @Panos_shoryuken 2 года назад +4

      Cool story kappa

    • @dawnblue4839
      @dawnblue4839 2 года назад +12

      God bless your dad and the other Dads that fought.

  • @gkm072159
    @gkm072159 7 лет назад +1525

    Three minutes and fifteen seconds and only one word of dialog . . . "Dad". Absolutely brilliant. A real lesson for today's directors and cinematographers. Sometimes less is more.

    • @Schattengewaechs99
      @Schattengewaechs99 5 лет назад +58

      Well said! Modern directors often forget what film actually is: the art of moving imagery! Today‘s films are more like captured dialogues.

    • @jegatheshkumar5818
      @jegatheshkumar5818 3 года назад +20

      And one can feel the emotion in his voice when he calls out "Dad!"

    • @paravecchiavince9685
      @paravecchiavince9685 3 года назад +10

      Same thing on the raft. No dialogue except the orders from the boat driver and the superior officers

    • @mansourbellahel-hajj5378
      @mansourbellahel-hajj5378 3 года назад +12

      How do they want to corrupt the current generation using sexual content instead of teaching them the principles of sacrifices of past generations.

    • @mydogskips2
      @mydogskips2 3 года назад +21

      No, the real lesson here is to get someone as great as John Williams(if that's even possible) to compose the background music. Yes, of course the visuals matter, and it was very well done by Spielberg and the actors, but the true power here comes from the music underlying the scene, without it, at least half of the emotional resonance would be lost.

  • @dexterellis7818
    @dexterellis7818 3 года назад +335

    I imagine that this was Ryan's first visit back to France since 1944. His memories totally overwhelm him.

    • @ns7353
      @ns7353 3 года назад +10

      thats Arlington national cemetery.

    • @raterus
      @raterus 2 года назад +66

      @@ns7353 That's not Arlington National Cemetery, it's the American Cemetery in Colleville-sur-Mer, France.

    • @FrostyyMcToasty
      @FrostyyMcToasty 2 года назад +9

      @@ns7353 that's the Colleville Cemetary, bud.

    • @youtubecreators384
      @youtubecreators384 2 года назад +3

      @@ns7353 I see people have already corrected you. Don't worry about it. I made the same mistake for years until I really started reading into history.

    • @FazeCaliph
      @FazeCaliph 2 года назад +6

      @@youtubecreators384 I could understand, but they show the French flag which should easily indicate this isn't Arlington.

  • @RetroRichie
    @RetroRichie 3 года назад +436

    When the camera pans back in the cemetery to reveal the endless memorial field. You just cant hold back the tears. This Movie is so powerful. Lest we forget...

    • @captainjacksparrow9728
      @captainjacksparrow9728 2 года назад +10

      yes this movie is so powerful it always has been and it always will be forever and that is a promise

    • @jeroenvandenberg5750
      @jeroenvandenberg5750 6 месяцев назад

      Indeed:
      "Nèvah was só much ówed- bý so many -...to so few"

  • @imthechamp100
    @imthechamp100 8 лет назад +1732

    every time he falls to his knees I always get watery eyed. truly a tear jerker indeed. rip to those brave men who fought in in ww2

    • @Bluenose352
      @Bluenose352 6 лет назад +38

      96tmac What gets me, is the ending. When he comes to attention, and salutes.

    • @johnigarcia7505
      @johnigarcia7505 5 лет назад

      cactusmac So Do I

    • @cherylannemason
      @cherylannemason 5 лет назад +29

      Spielberg was absolutely right to begin and end in the cemetery--much as the young Private Ryan may have appreciated the sacrifice of Captain Miller and his squad, it was only as an older man and a grandfather that he could truly appreciate having the life they never would.

    • @jameshammer6068
      @jameshammer6068 5 лет назад +16

      The opening and closing scenes make me cry every time

    • @jameshammer6068
      @jameshammer6068 5 лет назад +9

      I was a cook in Vietnam, it was my friend Alan's turn to go out that nite, he never came back, there but for the grace of god

  • @ruslanbutsenko470
    @ruslanbutsenko470 2 года назад +28

    These soldiers protected America and made history.They will never be forgotten
    Thankyou for your service!!

  • @cardinalRG
    @cardinalRG 7 месяцев назад +16

    Most critics felt that this movie’s beginning and ending were tacked on, out of place. They were wrong. Spielberg was making two points-first, that those who went through World War II were still around, among the old folks around us. The movie honors not only those who perished in the war, and had died since its end, but also those who were still with us.
    Second, notice that the man’s family walks behind him, separated, which symbolizes that while they support him, he is alone in the direct remembrance of something they’ll never go through. It’s a brilliant, meaningful touch.

    • @joeaustin4472
      @joeaustin4472 6 месяцев назад +2

      Absolutely correct on all counts, well said 👍

  • @PrimalElf
    @PrimalElf Год назад +64

    One of the greatest war movies of all time
    Thank you Steven Spielberg

    • @Mav86asian
      @Mav86asian 10 месяцев назад +3

      The greatest of all time.

    • @PrimalElf
      @PrimalElf 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@Mav86asian One of the greatest

    • @FutaCatto2
      @FutaCatto2 8 месяцев назад +3

      That is why I did not like movies such as Dunkirk and Hacksaw Ridge. Both of those movies do not have the same impact compared to Spielberg's movies.

    • @PrimalElf
      @PrimalElf 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@FutaCatto2 like this three

  • @jakethemuss3
    @jakethemuss3 7 лет назад +1226

    The greatest generation. God Bless them. They fought for our freedom.

    • @xxxxxx5868
      @xxxxxx5868 7 лет назад +54

      jakethemuss3 Correct. These days the hardest thing that kids and SJWs have to do is "OMG my iPhone is 2%, I suffer so much LOLOLOL"

    • @212th
      @212th 7 лет назад +49

      CrazySpinach 79 Sadly our generation is a bunch of pussies. A surprising number have a total disregard for human sacrifice

    • @Lagerfeld2008
      @Lagerfeld2008 7 лет назад +9

      a false freedom, as we can see 70 years later here in Germany.... ..missing the oldschool Goverment those Veterans fought

    • @brmbkl
      @brmbkl 6 лет назад +1

      what's a SJW?

    • @sonofizzy
      @sonofizzy 6 лет назад +9

      "Social Justice Warrior"

  • @simple-commentator-not-rea7345
    @simple-commentator-not-rea7345 5 лет назад +42

    This movie is FULL of amazing acting, but I think Harrison Young (The actor playing Older Ryan in this scene and the Ending), also deserves credit. In this scene, with no dialogue, he had the difficult task of delivering strong emotion through just movement and expression, and he did NOT disappoint.

    • @k.k.9011
      @k.k.9011 6 месяцев назад +3

      I agree. He is too often overlooked. He set the tone for the movie!

  • @charles1203
    @charles1203 4 года назад +281

    When you’re a vet this scene hits you extra hard. To visit the grave of someone you served with who inspired you.

    • @LindaMerchant-pm8vn
      @LindaMerchant-pm8vn 10 месяцев назад +5

      To honor the wounds of war the ones who never made it home fought and died for the nation

    • @joeghio2010
      @joeghio2010 5 месяцев назад +2

      It really does. I served 15 years in the Infantry myself with multiple deployments and buried quite a few of my friends. It never really gets easier.

  • @MichaelF144
    @MichaelF144 23 дня назад +3

    My great Uncle was on Omaha Beach. All he ever said about it was "just keep going." What he meant was no matter what you see, just keep running. He described the scene as "a sea of red." He was on a tank destroyer in the second wave. He passed away in 1992 from a very bad heart. I only saw him a few times in my life. But he certainly was larger than life itself. Thank you to all who served in World War II. May you be an example of this great nation and what freedom has meant to so many throughout the ages. Most sincerely and respectively, Michael

  • @DeltaSniperZRR
    @DeltaSniperZRR 8 лет назад +1839

    If you can, you must visit just once in your life this cemetery, and all the other cemeteries in Normandy. I visited almost every military cemetery in Normandy a few years back. American, British, Canadian, German and some others, to pay respect and see all those graves of brave men with the age of 16 till around 40 years old, fighting and dying for their country.

    • @magetaaaaaa
      @magetaaaaaa 7 лет назад +33

      I've been to Fort Snelling ( friend and both grandparents buried there. ) and Fort Rosecrans ( was in the area for work ). There is a feeling of great sadness and respect that washes over you when you visit these places.

    • @martinstuart4629
      @martinstuart4629 7 лет назад +5

      Lt Mojo Risin if you can't go to Arlington.

    • @rossenator101
      @rossenator101 7 лет назад +7

      Lt Mojo Risin I once saw the traveling Vietnam wall. God bless their souls.

    • @mercian7
      @mercian7 6 лет назад +6

      My Brother has been to Normandy three times ..it is my shame that I have not

    • @mrbokke81
      @mrbokke81 6 лет назад

      Mojo Risin what's the name of this cemetery and where is it?

  • @georgetunstill2341
    @georgetunstill2341 5 лет назад +71

    My dad was a WWII and a Korean War vet. When I was a child I would ask him what he did during the war. He became very tight lipped and either didn't said a word or he would say, "You don't want to know." After going into the military myself and seeing "Saving Private Ryan" I understood why.

  • @thomasmorel1447
    @thomasmorel1447 3 года назад +24

    I was born in Normandy. 20 miles from this cemetery. There are no word to describe what I feel when I saw him walking and that you saw all the crosses. All those young men who gave their life.
    An infinite gratitude to all those who fought to give back our freedom.

    • @xxk4rilsxx
      @xxk4rilsxx 4 месяца назад

      🇫🇷 🇺🇸 ❤

  • @Amanda_Zamora
    @Amanda_Zamora 5 лет назад +79

    To all those who died, served, and defended our country as well as around the world thank you.

  • @warrenchambers4819
    @warrenchambers4819 8 лет назад +82

    That is some tough ground to walk. When my daughter was 16 she took a trip to France. As she grew up I had taught her a lot about WW2 and the sacrifices many Allied soliders made on D-Day(5 men died from my home town/Great Uncle commanded a LST on 6/6/44) Before she left to go I told her to call me when she got to Normandy. I don't think it really sank in with her what dad was talking about until she walked that ground. When she called me I could hear it in her voice that she understood.

    • @CathieSoli
      @CathieSoli 7 лет назад +1

      My folks visited my brother when he was in Germany back in Dec. of 1980. They went to France. My mother said they saw "the bloody road to Verdun.". My dad and his brother served in WWII and both of my mother's brothers.

  • @brantfrans8595
    @brantfrans8595 6 лет назад +382

    One of the most powerful opening in movie history.

  • @chrispile3878
    @chrispile3878 3 года назад +67

    Such a powerful scene.... I'm shedding tears now.

    • @captaincharek3559
      @captaincharek3559 2 года назад +6

      yes this is such a powerful scene in saving Private Ryan it always has been and it always will be forever and that is a promise

    • @nicolelawless9942
      @nicolelawless9942 2 месяца назад

      @@captaincharek3559
      Come and See’s ending where Floyra is gone in the crowd is more powerful than this and i hope to have a dream ending where all the characters I’ve loved from every war movie rejoin me with Ryan among them. That would be an emotional finale to my 12 year anniversary with the war fast approaching. Come and See ends my 13 year journey with the war just like that and all my war movies rejoining me for this anniversary will be a emotional celebration

  • @trevorjensen2706
    @trevorjensen2706 4 года назад +239

    Fun cinema fact. Listen to how well-synched John Williams matches the sound to the picture. At the 2:02 mark, as the tracking shot pans left, each gravestone that enters into the frame, is highlighted by a snare roll, timpani and bass drum hit, and the French horn. This is sort of a reverent hint that Williams is giving to the audience.

    • @rithvikmuthyalapati9754
      @rithvikmuthyalapati9754 2 года назад +14

      Bro, it's John Williams. He is the Einstein of music composition

    • @gonzostrangelove6107
      @gonzostrangelove6107 2 года назад +10

      Reminds me of one of the greatest lines I ever heard from a film critic:
      "You didn't notice, but your brain did."

    • @marcoanonymous8434
      @marcoanonymous8434 2 года назад +3

      this movie is full of those little moments.
      The sandwich Cpt. Miller spots when he enters the telegraph station, a few days after the landing.
      The looks that Dennis Farine gives Tom Hanks explains what he encountered in German resistance.
      The bosom of the lady in the purple woollen sweater.

    • @binoyperera4161
      @binoyperera4161 Год назад +1

      Brilliant

  • @brettfavreify
    @brettfavreify 8 лет назад +655

    I think this opening scene is the best scene in the movie. If this doesn't put a lump in your throat on what that generation sacrificed......

    • @Bluenose352
      @Bluenose352 6 лет назад +16

      brettfavreify The ending gets to me. When he's "telling" Capt. Miller he hopes he did everything right. Then comes to attention, and salutes.

    • @dontommasino6882
      @dontommasino6882 5 лет назад +5

      I'm crying like a baby. Just watched this clip and scene got the 100th time.

    • @michaelmorse4444
      @michaelmorse4444 5 лет назад +4

      @@Bluenose352 i feel the same way even though i never fought in a war. I hope Im doing everything right.

    • @wyattfamily8997
      @wyattfamily8997 5 лет назад +5

      brettfavreify, Should be mandatory it be shown at each College on their first day.

    • @Elly3981
      @Elly3981 5 лет назад +1

      @@wyattfamily8997 I used to find reading about WWII in history books and seeing black and white footage of it at school boring but this movie brought it to life in a way that made me feel like I was seeing it through the eyes of the people who actually lived through it and my whole outlooked changed.

  • @ScoCoda
    @ScoCoda 8 лет назад +267

    I cry every time Ryan walks into the memorial and you see all the crosses and stars, the only scene that made me cry

    • @SideEffects297
      @SideEffects297 7 лет назад +27

      Im not american, but this hits me

    • @jodywilke4642
      @jodywilke4642 5 лет назад +4

      I cried throughout the whole movie. Especially the beach landing, when the men were so scared, and getting shot and blown up, and crying for their mothers, like frightened children.😢💒

    • @charlesveg
      @charlesveg 5 лет назад +2

      The ending, where he steps back and salutes, gets me every time also. It says so much so eloquently. Thank you, all who served and serve today. We must try every day to earn it.

    • @jodywilke4642
      @jodywilke4642 5 лет назад

      charlesveg I agree. After reading all the stories about men who survived D-Day, on the 75th Anniversary last week, I don't know how any of them made it off that beach. They were SO brave--and they said, We were just doing our job." God Bless our military, and let's never forget what they did for us, and continue to do.😔💒🗽

    • @sudaev
      @sudaev 5 лет назад +3

      ....You mean all the crosses and one star...

  • @jamesrippy1161
    @jamesrippy1161 4 года назад +57

    Saving Private Ryan is one the few & rare movies that makes grown men cry 😭 they’re eyes out.

  • @toastecmo
    @toastecmo 3 года назад +54

    I am retired Navy. Had the same experience at the USNA cemetery 10 years ago. I was alone (on a business trip) and it was hard. No one outside of the service will understand the inner pain of the veteran when recalling his fallen comrades.

  • @saetmusic
    @saetmusic 5 лет назад +95

    I can hardly watch 30 seconds of Saving Private Ryan without tearing up.

  • @georgeofhamilton
    @georgeofhamilton 6 лет назад +1614

    People seem to forget about the twist in "Saving Private Ryan": People assume that this old man in the cemetery is Capt. Miller-unless they notice the 101st Airborne Division pin on his jacket. It's only at the end, when Miller dies, that we realize that this old man is Pvt. Ryan.

    • @Elly3981
      @Elly3981 5 лет назад +119

      You know, that's what I thought when I first saw this movie too but then I realize that since Miller is quite a bit older than Ryan, he would have been close to 100 years old if he had survived the war. My guess is that Ryan was in his early 20s so it wasn't hard to figure out that the old man in the cemetery 50 years later was him.

    • @2steelshells
      @2steelshells 4 года назад +108

      Also I might add,I think Ryan is a metaphor for us that survived,or came in later generations,to fullfil Capt Miller's request to earn this sacrifice.

    • @sewerchickenfilms6445
      @sewerchickenfilms6445 4 года назад +7

      @@2steelshells no thats not what the writers intended at all lol there is nodes meaning behind the characters its just good story telling

    • @georgeofhamilton
      @georgeofhamilton 4 года назад +8

      @@Elly3981 How do you know this scene was fifty years later?
      Also, I'd figure Miller could've been thirty-two or something, which isn't very old.

    • @indy_go_blue6048
      @indy_go_blue6048 4 года назад +27

      It still confuses me in a way. Why is Ryan having memories (or flashbacks) of what others experienced on D-Day. His memories would be of the "Band of Brothers" variety. Still, a good movie.

  • @oledahammer8393
    @oledahammer8393 3 года назад +32

    My Uncle was 82nd Airborne on D-Day, he managed to survive that and the Bulge. How any of those brave soldiers made it home is truly a miracle. This movie and Band of Brothers should be required in EVERY high school curriculum.

    • @scottpoupore9727
      @scottpoupore9727 5 месяцев назад

      My grandfather was same as well as 101st in battle of the bulge. Never got to meet him

  • @eduardotirado839
    @eduardotirado839 4 года назад +951

    This movie should be part of high school curriculum.

    • @DEthe5150
      @DEthe5150 4 года назад +37

      I remember watching it during my Junior year in high school, around this time ten years ago.

    • @reptiliandiplomat5458
      @reptiliandiplomat5458 4 года назад +95

      Pfft with our education system now They'll call this movie dangerously "Nationalistic" and may offend students with German decent...

    • @deadlybladesmith3093
      @deadlybladesmith3093 4 года назад +12

      @@reptiliandiplomat5458 exactly

    • @Chambers-ie8ie
      @Chambers-ie8ie 4 года назад +5

      Yeah like who tf isn’t giving the kids this masterpiece man

    • @CamTaylor22
      @CamTaylor22 3 года назад +13

      It was for my high school. I never saw before but thanks to my US History teacher it's now one of my favorite films.

  • @kitchentrout5867
    @kitchentrout5867 8 лет назад +205

    This scene was shot so well. The camera zooming in on old Ryan's face summarizes the whole movie. The look on his face. He'd seen horrible things no one should have to see and had witnessed the true darkness and evil of humanity in his younger years. One of the greatest films of all time.

  • @lucasmathis5808
    @lucasmathis5808 7 лет назад +68

    One of the most heartbreaking scene in this great movie. As a French I will forever be grateful for these young people who have come and died and saved my country and so many people from tyranny. This cemetary in Colleville with it's neverending lines of white crosses is a unique place that sorely reminds us the price of Freedom.

    • @JWilliamsLangley
      @JWilliamsLangley 2 года назад +9

      And we in the USA need to remember once it was France 🇫🇷 that sent soldiers, officers, supplies, and ships so we could change from guerilla war to fielding a military that could win independence. French infantry and artillery was at Yorktown and French ships drove off the Royal Navy.

  • @Rawzillaa
    @Rawzillaa 5 лет назад +109

    This scene is very personal for me. It takes me back to when my family took a trip to France and went to one of the cemeteries with our grandfathers, both veterans. The amount of emotion that was expressed without words or gestures was beyond measure. It seemed as if my grandfathers didn’t even notice the rest of us because their time overseas during the war was coming back to them and it was as if they were back in 1944. This scene will always be dear to me.

  • @jaredomalley1208
    @jaredomalley1208 2 года назад +50

    At 1:51 it really pulls at my heart strings. Such an amazing score in this movie, it really needs more recognition.

    • @Goetterdaemmerung86
      @Goetterdaemmerung86 11 месяцев назад +2

      Truly is, almost like a slow funeral march

    • @jeroenvandenberg5750
      @jeroenvandenberg5750 6 месяцев назад +1

      As a big classical ROMANTIC music lover I will tell you that Mr.Williams was inspired by and has literally stolen some great Brahms(1833-1897)scorelines 😊-which dóesn't bother me in the slightest.
      As we say in dutch;"Beter goed gejat dan slecht bedacht"
      The first minute is absolute f. genius.At 0.43 is like sliding into a huge nasty depression -knowing there's no way back in the short run.
      Like Winston once remarked:"When you're going through hell....-kéép going"

  • @darkphoenix4568
    @darkphoenix4568 9 лет назад +647

    I just visited the D-Day cemetery this week. I am becoming a soldier soon and I felt the awe, silence, sadness, but pride when walking in that cemetery. Not many people from the U.S. get to see this. That is sacred ground. I feel the aura to this day and it is something I will never forget.
    EDIT: I will be enlisting in 6 weeks or so.
    EDIT 2: I am swearing in the Army in a couple days and will be training at Ft. Jackson.
    EDIT 3: I am now in the 101st Airborne Division. The same division on his chest. Who knew. I am proud to be serving with a band of brothers and a legacy.

    • @darkphoenix4568
      @darkphoenix4568 8 лет назад +10

      I was able to see some of Germany, but only Triers. Its in the Rhineland. I saw Michael Wittman's grave though.

    • @wysoft
      @wysoft 8 лет назад +7

      +Sullivan Walsh I visited years ago shortly after 9/11. It was a very quiet place, very peaceful. Fitting for those who rest there. Stood by the cliff for a long time and just listened to the ocean.
      At the time Americans were very unpopular in France after Afghanistan and Iraq kicked off, but Normandy was one place where I was treated well.

    • @darkphoenix4568
      @darkphoenix4568 8 лет назад +1

      ***** Thanks. That's me in ROTC. I will be trying out for OCS instead.

    • @guitarreilly
      @guitarreilly 8 лет назад +1

      +Sullivan Walsh good luck sir everyone is in debt to you for life ! x

    • @darkphoenix4568
      @darkphoenix4568 8 лет назад

      John Collins Your dad is a hero. He fought his best and fought honorably. A soldier's honor is very important. He did die at a medium age but died telling a good tale.

  • @SLYSPYHIWAY90
    @SLYSPYHIWAY90 8 лет назад +341

    Such a great scene , A man compelled to say thank you to the men who saved his life and allowing him to prosper and have a family . Hoping he did them justice by being a good man . A reminder of the value of life and freedom I didn't expect this scene , caught me by surprise .

    • @SideEffects297
      @SideEffects297 7 лет назад +7

      IKR!! it gets me everytime!! And I'm not American

    • @brucekilby9957
      @brucekilby9957 3 года назад

      This Movie is Speilbergs best and the opening scene is so Sad,the ultimate respect to Capt Collins for how he lead him in battle and how fragile Collins was himself after witnessing warfare first hand.Ryan is man enough to thank another man for his life.

  • @saltonan8753
    @saltonan8753 4 года назад +35

    My wife went to Normandy 3 years ago, most emotional experience of my life. Looking out at English Channel and seeing so many young men that would never see home again! God Bless Them

  • @user-jj3tw1sr7o
    @user-jj3tw1sr7o 3 года назад +51

    When I saw this movie for the first time in the theater there were a group of male teenagers in the row in front of me. At the end of the movie they were all crying like babies. This movie's best gift was showing that generation the sacrifice that the Greatest Generation made for this country and all of us. The greatest war movie ever made.

    • @captainjacksparrow9728
      @captainjacksparrow9728 2 года назад +2

      yes this is the greatest war movie ever made it always has been and it always will be forever and that is a promise

    • @maximogimenez9238
      @maximogimenez9238 Год назад +2

      I agree 100 %¡

    • @petercdowney
      @petercdowney 10 месяцев назад

      When I got to the end of Saving Private Ryan, I stood up and saluted.

    • @tusharkumar8750
      @tusharkumar8750 9 месяцев назад

      @@captainjacksparrow9728 Dunkirk

  • @Bones116
    @Bones116 7 лет назад +283

    this scene makes me cry like a baby. thank you from across the pond. we will always be brothers

  • @knuckledragger549
    @knuckledragger549 7 лет назад +162

    My dad was in WW2 443rd AABTN.
    To all that serve, ever have, ever will.
    A profound thank you.
    Last night my family and I slept in peace.
    God bless Y'all.

    • @mikeh5377
      @mikeh5377 7 лет назад +1

      Thank you to your father. and like he said, all that ever served or will serve, thank you. I will never have the privilege to serve alongside you, but I would do so in a heartbeat if I could.

    • @sonofizzy
      @sonofizzy 6 лет назад

      God Bless your dad, you and yours.

    • @brantfrans8595
      @brantfrans8595 6 лет назад

      Your father and all his friends are true heroes. God bless them.

    • @pricefieldforever8705
      @pricefieldforever8705 6 лет назад

      Michael B. Porter thank you for your father's service.

  • @thehalfbloodprince5279
    @thehalfbloodprince5279 3 года назад +33

    Bruh I remember I've seen old folk wearing WW2 Veteran caps and had tickets to watch this amazing film. They walked out of the theater during the opening scene and I can not blame them at all.

  • @douglasb.1238
    @douglasb.1238 5 лет назад +11

    One of the best movies ever made....

    • @captaincharek3559
      @captaincharek3559 2 года назад +4

      yes saving Private Ryan is one of the best movies ever made it always has been and it always will be forever and that is a promise

  • @LSPig
    @LSPig 7 лет назад +163

    This movie is a masterpiece.

    • @captainjacksparrow9728
      @captainjacksparrow9728 Год назад +1

      yes this movie is a masterpiece always has been always will be forever and that is a promise

  • @SkeletonModel91
    @SkeletonModel91 7 лет назад +117

    The most epic opening scene to a movie hands down.

  • @afcjonny1
    @afcjonny1 3 года назад +17

    This is the most powerful scene in the entire film, god bless them all

    • @captainjacksparrow9728
      @captainjacksparrow9728 2 года назад +5

      yes this is the most powerful scene in the entire film it always has been and it always will be forever and that is a promise

  • @Tehui1974
    @Tehui1974 4 года назад +84

    WW2 was arguably the biggest event in human history. It's significance still resonates with us 75 years later.

    • @garyt19651
      @garyt19651 Год назад +9

      and 99.9 % of people unfortunately don't get the wise words you have just written

    • @superpieman5773
      @superpieman5773 Год назад +8

      @@garyt19651 most do, humanity is good, the people in charge never got the memo

    • @The21stCentury_Guy
      @The21stCentury_Guy 10 месяцев назад

      It’s sad that 10 years from now they’ll probably be 1,000 or 500 WW2 vets left. :(

    • @ForeverTCB
      @ForeverTCB 10 месяцев назад

      @@The21stCentury_Guyless

    • @prince-solomon
      @prince-solomon 6 месяцев назад

      Not in human history, but in the 20th century for sure, even though it was basically WW 1.5. History is long...veeeery long.

  • @vkanthems6744
    @vkanthems6744 3 года назад +47

    My great-grandfather didn't fought in World War II. He fought in World War I as a german soldier. He never told anyone about his time at war, except he wrote it in his diary. He managed to visit Verdun before he died, he passed away in 1986, few months after loosing his wife.

  • @miltiades490
    @miltiades490 6 месяцев назад +4

    I had 12 family members that fought in World War II. The last one just passed away in 2021. One cousin named Mack died on Okinawa. His younger brother, who himself is a Korean War vet, that is still alive has never forgotten him. Thinks about him every day and still tells his stories. I teach history and one of my biggest lessons to my students is that events like this to us end when we flip the page and start a new chapter. But for those involved, it is their whole life for the rest of their life. It consumes them and makes them who they are. It shapes them and their character. It never goes away. It is not a page to flip over and be done with. It becomes their whole book...

  • @leraygun
    @leraygun 4 года назад +192

    I love the 'really...now?' disapproving look the wife gives her husband at 0:58 when he snaps a photo of his father, Ryan, walking. So subtle, and to me is telling of how out of touch future generations were of what those men went through, so much that even Ryan's own son was so obliviously unaware he was being inappropriate that his wife had to remind him, as they usually do.

    • @matthiasbreithaupt1391
      @matthiasbreithaupt1391 2 года назад +24

      I never noticed that. Very subtle detail. Good eyes Raymond Lee. Good call!
      My father was in the Third Wave on Omaha Beach on this day. The only thing he ever said to me directly about it, well into my adult years, was, “If you hear the other fellow shoot, … he missed.”

    • @leraygun
      @leraygun 2 года назад +3

      @@matthiasbreithaupt1391 thank you for your reply and for sharing that. I can't imagine the impact it must have had on him. What did your father mean by that line? Was 'the other fellow' referring to the enemy?

    • @DATo_DATonian
      @DATo_DATonian 2 года назад +5

      @@leraygun A bullet travels faster than the sound made by the shot. There is an old expression, "You will never hear the bullet that kills you." Yes, Matthais' "other fellow" was a reference to the enemy. I also want to applaud you on the fine catch regarding the look the wife gives her husband. You are exceptionally observant. I also missed that.

    • @BlahKDubstep
      @BlahKDubstep 2 года назад +1

      I noticed that too

    • @ilovebeinagirl
      @ilovebeinagirl 2 года назад

      @@DATo_DATonian He is observant. While I did notice the wife's look when he snapped the photo, I missed the bigger commentary that his action made which Raymond Lee pointed out--it was just a good way to illustrate how oblivious the next generation would be since they didn't have to make those types of sacrifices/had those war experiences that their parents did.

  • @perdog9859
    @perdog9859 Год назад +17

    Even after all these years, this opening scene is just as emotionally gripping as when the movie first came.

    • @arnoldhernandez1910
      @arnoldhernandez1910 10 месяцев назад

      I saw that at the age ov 9. Greatest change in my life.

    • @mnwthnoname
      @mnwthnoname 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@arnoldhernandez1910fr

  • @archerpiperii2690
    @archerpiperii2690 6 лет назад +38

    A masterpiece of an opening.

    • @captaincharek3559
      @captaincharek3559 2 года назад +7

      yes this opening is a masterpiece it always has been and it always will be forever and that is a promise

  • @billydobbins9113
    @billydobbins9113 6 лет назад +23

    This was the most highly appreciated movie of all time.this was also the movie that made you understand the life some of us are liveing at the moment.

  • @73funkfest
    @73funkfest Год назад +3

    Salute to present soldiers of war: retired, active, inactive, veterans, disabled and deceased. Rest in Heaven Gramps, Dad, and one of my Uncles from U S Army (1991, 2009, and 2010)

  • @williamc.1198
    @williamc.1198 2 года назад +2

    So many have given so much. We must never forget their sacrifice and honor them and their memory! God bless America and her heroes!

  • @rockgod6180
    @rockgod6180 8 лет назад +489

    this scene makes me bawl like a baby, God Bless our troops!

    • @daviddickson2492
      @daviddickson2492 8 лет назад +16

      The scene at the end where they refocus back to James Ryan as an old man is just as tearful if not more so. He asks his wife to tell him that he is a good man. He wants and needs reinforcement to fulfill John Miller's request to "earn it"... or something like that.

    • @scoutngem
      @scoutngem 8 лет назад +4

      So true! Great comment!

    • @alex-ragnarson3482
      @alex-ragnarson3482 7 лет назад +12

      God bless America, without you, our beautiful France shall be dead... Thank you for your sacrifice to save us.

    • @kynareth3605
      @kynareth3605 7 лет назад +2

      Alex77 77 Give Russia a big thanks

    • @64MDW
      @64MDW 7 лет назад +2

      Shut up and screw Russia...the only Russians in France were fighting for the Germans.

  • @FirstGunnerySergeant
    @FirstGunnerySergeant 8 лет назад +335

    Respect and honor for all the unknown heroes!
    They are unforgotten.

  • @jaygee6738
    @jaygee6738 5 лет назад +39

    I remember seeing this film on Labor day weekend (sunday night) in 1998. I spent the entire evening in silence. No TV, radio.. anything. I was so shocked at the brutality of it all. Finally something that showed it all out as it should have been.

    • @girl1213
      @girl1213 10 месяцев назад

      It took over 50 years. But by then we were ready to see the truth. So many of those men have gone. Their stories untold but their grief respect.

  • @johnhopes7747
    @johnhopes7747 3 года назад +2

    My brother and I visited this place - even as Australians we were shocked and in awe at the same time. I hope the USA realise that despite the Corona virus there was a generation that teaches you and us in the Pacific to never give up , always fight and NEVER give in

  • @willkeene661
    @willkeene661 5 лет назад +5

    Never has a movie given me such a variety of emotions. Sadness, feeling of loss, fear, pride, anger, and a bit of humor. Wonderful movie.

    • @captaincharek3559
      @captaincharek3559 2 года назад +4

      yes saving Private Ryan is a wonderful movie it always has been and it always will be forever and that is a promise

  • @peterberry6553
    @peterberry6553 6 лет назад +13

    One of the best films ever made. Gorgeous music. Made me cry and I never ever cry.

  • @moow950
    @moow950 5 лет назад +21

    Excellent casting. The old guy really resembles his younger self.

  • @christined2495
    @christined2495 5 лет назад +23

    June 6 D Day 75th Anniversary brought me here as well, although I watch this movie, and Band Of Brothers a few times a year.
    God Bless The Greatest Generation 🇺🇸💙🇺🇸

    • @charlesveg
      @charlesveg 5 лет назад

      Same here. Amen. I'm 65 and our parents truly were the Greatest. God bless all who served and all who serve today. We will never fully earn it but we must try.

  • @Brandon-ch2ot
    @Brandon-ch2ot 10 лет назад +72

    Imagine just being there. the shivers up your back...everything you got to hold back your tears.. all the regrets.. all the love you have weighing on your shoulders just leads up until this point where he shows everything.

    • @eidius1989
      @eidius1989 10 лет назад +3

      I was there actually, last year.

    • @discover_hypnosis
      @discover_hypnosis 9 лет назад +2

      eidius1989 I went there in 1995. It was so humbling! I didn't realise the scale of the loss until I saw all those countless white crosses. Heartbreaking!

    • @eidius1989
      @eidius1989 9 лет назад

      B White what?

    • @Brandon-ch2ot
      @Brandon-ch2ot 9 лет назад

      His comment must've got deleted

    • @richardhall9815
      @richardhall9815 9 лет назад +1

      Just watching this scene sends shivers down my back! The entire movie is overwhelmingly powerful. Moreover, I actually got to go there when I went to France in 2009. Being there and seeing the sight of all those crosses... is like no other feeling in the world. But I couldn't imagine being there on June 6, 1944.

  • @SuperMessenger101
    @SuperMessenger101 8 лет назад +200

    At 3:11 is my great Uncles tomb Stone on the left. Met his brother/ my other great uncle (who was airborne) at a family reunion and being able to meet him was an experience I will never forget,

  • @palmergriffiths1952
    @palmergriffiths1952 4 месяца назад +1

    This scene chokes me up everytime I see it. My Grandfather was a Veteran of WWII. He wasn't at Normandy But he was in Southern France and The Italian Campaign as a member of The First Special Service Force. When this came out in Theatres My Dad tried to get him to go But he Wouldn't. I guess it would bring back too many bad memories. He passed away in 2008

  • @SolidAvenger1290
    @SolidAvenger1290 2 года назад +2

    Two years after this great film came out, my grandfather passed away from cancer in 2000. He enlisted in 1942 (age 20-21) & served in the 5th Ranger Battalion that trained in Tennesee. Eventually shipped out to Britain in late 1943/early 1944 in preparation for Operation Overlord. Trained in Special Cliff Operations in the Highlands of Scotland in early 1944 alongside his fellow Rangers (plus other Allied/UK Special forces) before D-Day.
    On June 6th, 1944, he subsequently climbed the cliffs of Point du Hoc. He had to carry his BAR into battle in rough terrain under heavy fire, search & eventually destroy the German Howitzers that greatly saved thousands of his fellow countrymen on the beaches. As history goes, the Rangers had to traverse miles of the French countryside for the repositioned guns after hours of naval & air bombardment prior to the invasion forced the Germans back from Point du Hoc. My grandfather was one man out of 75 men (out of 225 Rangers, 67% of the unit were wounded or killed) who was able to reach the top of Point du Hoc & keep on fighting beyond the Longest Day. Played a part of Operation Cobra in the breakout out of Normandy.
    Into the battle of Saint-Lo in July 1944, he got wounded when a piece of mortar shrapnel hit his leg (from his calf to above his ankle) & took him out of action. The 29th Infantry Battalion alongside another American division with small groups of Army Rangers (intermix of the remaining 2nd & 5th Ranger Battalions) took massive losses from German artillery destroying the town. My grandfather would have met his end at Saint-Lo, but thankfully he had a guardian angel over him.
    Over the years, I was told by my father & my aunt that after he got wounded, my grandfather was saved by a Sherman Tank Crew from the 747th Independent tank division that came to support the 29th Infantry division to take the ruins of Saint-Lo & were attempting to gather all the wounded GIs during the course of the battle. It's still very unclear how many were saved on that day alongside my grandfather, but as a result of them saving lives, the Sherman Tank Commander was the only casualty while gathering up the wounded men under heavy fire.
    Due to their courageous actions, my grandfather lived, was able to go home to raise a family, & eventually serve as a police officer/sergeant for nearly 25 years until he retired in 1978. He got the Bronze Star for his heroic actions on D-Day & 2 Purple Hearts in the Fall of 1944. In both civilian life & his long days in law enforcement, he had to take small amounts of morphine (inside a capsule attached to a sliver neck chain around his neck) every day due to the wounds he received in the war until his last days on this earth. A reminder of the sacrifices he made in the defense of America, her people & the liberation of Europe.
    My grandfather's mother was a German immigrant & orphan who came to America in the 1890s when her homeland (early German Empire) was facing some social destabilization. My grandfather had no ill will against the majority of the German troops he fought against in the Liberation of France. He always respected the Germans (the Wehrmacht/cousins) for their military leadership, combat efficiency & historical discipline. He absolutely hated the Nazi idealogy, who only represented Hitler & a few thousand people in the SS divisions that committed the Holocaust.
    Like everyone else who first watched the movie, I began to truly understand & greatly appreciate the sacrifices my grandfather & the millions of soldiers made in WWII. That includes the common German Soldier (non-SS/Nazi) who fought not for Hitler, but for their family & their country.
    This film will always be one of my favorite films about WWII despite some of its flaws. I always got emotional at the end of the film when Miller tells Ryan that "Earn this" & it cuts to Ryan asking his wife if he was a good man. My grandfather never ever saw Saving Private Ryan in the last years of his life (did like the movie The Longest Day), but like most veterans, he would have attempted to avoid seeing the horrors of war again.
    I am immensely grateful to have known him before his passing & I am proud to be his grandson. This is a story I like to share with those who have first watched this film and Band of Brothers. If I had to create a book/movie title to describe his WWII story it would be called "Liberation at the Gates"

  • @kernmw10
    @kernmw10 9 лет назад +60

    The greatest generation. We have so much to learn from them. Thanks to all soldiers, past and present, who have served.

  • @filmflim
    @filmflim 7 лет назад +12

    Such a powerful opening, a film made by a master at the peak of his cinematic storytelling. Even more significant on this Memorial Day. My undying respect to all who fought and died, for our nation and every nation.

    • @captaincharek3559
      @captaincharek3559 2 года назад +4

      yes this is such a powerful opening in saving Private Ryan it always has been and it always will be forever and that is a promise

  • @izicwindsor7987
    @izicwindsor7987 4 года назад +16

    That look in his eyes near the end, every true veteran I know has that same look including me. Until you've lived it then have the nightmares you'll never understand.

  • @ElectricSoul828
    @ElectricSoul828 Год назад +6

    I always cry during the opening scene. This movie is a classic.

  • @joelmccall6328
    @joelmccall6328 6 лет назад +11

    These men and women are heroes if wasn't for these brave souls the world would be a different place..thank you all for your great sacrifice...

  • @gillesguillaumin6603
    @gillesguillaumin6603 7 лет назад +42

    Thank you in the name of all the Frenchmen. Thank you for the Freedom you gave back to us. Thank you for the blood you lost on our land. Thank you for giving us the Freedom to our children to grow in peace and happiness. THANK YOU. Maybe it is only a movie, but heavy of sens and symbolic for us.

    • @amandawhisnant622
      @amandawhisnant622 7 лет назад +3

      Gilles Guillaumin you need to watch the fortieth anniversary speech on here made by pres Reagan at normandy. he mentions FreeFrance

    • @natskivna
      @natskivna 6 лет назад +4

      We are united as brothers in our common goal of liberty, freedom, and peace...and an overwhelming desire to create and maintain a world worthy of the sacrifice of so many before us for our children and all future generations.
      The sons of America, England, France, Canada, Netherlands, Belgium, Poland, Russia, Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, Norway, Denmark, Finland, Greece, Yugoslavia Luxembourg, and so many others are not forgotten.

    • @paulzammataro7185
      @paulzammataro7185 5 лет назад

      @@natskivna Mexico also.

    • @anunusualironiccircumstanc2246
      @anunusualironiccircumstanc2246 5 лет назад +2

      Shame you’ve given, what has been earned by millions of lives from your very own country and others, to foreign invaders. My country too is suffering. We have only a politician’s to blame.

    • @potato511
      @potato511 5 лет назад +6

      Hey the French helped America during the American Revolution. So thank you

  • @mattkershner8714
    @mattkershner8714 4 года назад +6

    Just got done watching it 12/14/19 still gets me teared up at the end! And the beginning!!! Who still thinks one of the best movies ever made?

  • @justinneill5003
    @justinneill5003 5 лет назад +3

    In the UK we wear the red poppy on Remembrance Sunday, it represents those that grow on the fields of Flanders but it commemorates not only those who fell in WW1 and WW2, but in all wars. Last summer I visited a small church in a tiny Austrian village in the Alps and was struck by the faded photographs in a glass case at the entrance. They were of young soldiers wearing Germán uniforms who died in WW2. They were sons and husbands from that village, innocent people from farming families who neither knew nor cared about politics but were caught up in the maelstrom of war created by a madman. A mother’s grief knows no borders.

  • @billy62108429
    @billy62108429 6 лет назад +9

    This is a incredibly moving scene, gives me shivers. We owe them respect. Imagine running on the blazing field of battle into enemy gun fire and mortars, imagine the courage that would have god damn taken.. We owe these men and others our freedom.

  • @oldschoolm8
    @oldschoolm8 19 дней назад +2

    I watched this damn movie recently and it only took these first few moments to reduce me to tears! I’ve never served in the military, but it’s part of my family. Thank god I’ve never had to go to a graveyard to remember my own. God bless these brave men who sacrificed so much for our freedom and way of life.

    • @nicolelawless9942
      @nicolelawless9942 14 дней назад +1

      I’ve always visited the war dead in my cemetery every remembrance week and I leave one or two years on their graves. I even hugged the graves as I was hugging them from up here and I think they felt it. I’m literally crying my heart out as I celebrate the 80th anniversary of D-Day

    • @oldschoolm8
      @oldschoolm8 13 дней назад

      @@nicolelawless9942 I made sure to remind myself that 06/06/24, 80 years ago today, there were were young lads that never came home to their mothers, their fathers, their girlfriends, their wives, their brothers, their sisters, their buddies to help free the world from tyranny and oppression. It’s a debt that can never be repaid. God bless you brave bastards!

  • @angelocataldo5375
    @angelocataldo5375 3 года назад +8

    When I See This scene it just brings tears to my eyes. Just beautiful

    • @captaincharek3559
      @captaincharek3559 2 года назад +5

      yes this scene is just beautiful in saving Private Ryan it always has been and it always will be forever and that is a promise

  • @prkycck4445
    @prkycck4445 4 года назад +14

    Even knowing this scene is fictional im tearing up quite a bit. Such a well made movie.

    • @OddBallPerformance
      @OddBallPerformance Год назад +1

      The scene may be fictional, but the character Ryan portrayed here could easily be any real soldier that served in that war, and so we sympathize and grieve for all of them.

  • @andrewbonning6615
    @andrewbonning6615 8 лет назад +25

    I can only imagine what must of gone through a veterans mind seeing such a sight, and wondering why he was picked to live when so many weren't. the music cuts me deep.

  • @thomasskapnit4479
    @thomasskapnit4479 3 года назад +7

    This movie makes me proud to be American.

  • @randymcelravy5498
    @randymcelravy5498 4 года назад +12

    I still get teary eyed Everytime I watch this movie. God bless the United States of America and all that have served and are presently serving. Thank You!!!

  • @broncodeviltexas
    @broncodeviltexas 7 лет назад +1056

    They saved us all. My wife is from Hungary and she wouldn't be here if those guys didn't
    invade. Thanks to the greatest generation.

    • @gnosticbrian3980
      @gnosticbrian3980 6 лет назад +43

      The Soviet Red Army liberated Hungary and paid, by far, the largest price for defeating fascism.

    • @shifty2129
      @shifty2129 6 лет назад +39

      They paid they heaviest price because of how they decided to fight the war. If US didn't invade Russia would've been defeated by Japan and Germany.

    • @thatkeepskillingyouintitan64
      @thatkeepskillingyouintitan64 6 лет назад +45

      As the commies chased out the nazis from hungary after 1945 hungary is invaded by commies and we had them here for 45 years (the last russian soldier left hungary in 1990)
      The revolution in 1956 was a nightmare
      My grandpa killed 4 russians during that year to defend his country and family
      If it weren't for him
      I wouldn't be here :)

    • @hennggueljuancarlos8603
      @hennggueljuancarlos8603 6 лет назад

      Damn that's deep

    • @griggsgibs3933
      @griggsgibs3933 6 лет назад +4

      bronco devil not to crash any party here but Hungary fought along side Germany in Russia

  • @martinishot
    @martinishot 9 лет назад +763

    I am glad this movie was made 15 years ago and not today. A Private Ryan opening scene today would depict this man's grandchildren completely oblivious to him, texting their friends, and taking selfies.

    • @martinishot
      @martinishot 9 лет назад +3

      D GW But my sad vision of this opening scene if made today is not of these grandchildren oblivious to anyone related to them besides their grandfather.

    • @dutifuleagle4332
      @dutifuleagle4332 9 лет назад +73

      Sad but true. You are entirely correct. I would never hope I would do that, but honestly my generation scares me when they do stuff like that. There are so many disrespectful people at these cemeteries nowadays. My family went to the Arlington Cemetery and there was a woman talking loudly on her phone and laughing. Luckily a ranger yelled at her and kicked her out.

    • @z8ph0d
      @z8ph0d 9 лет назад +31

      martinishot That's what Gran Torino is about. Clint Eastwood fought for his country and his people, then returned and raised his family to the best of his ability, only to have a two generations of shameful brats who think he's worth nothing more than his possessions.
      That movie is exactly what you're talking about.

    • @dgw9051
      @dgw9051 9 лет назад +11

      ***** You don't have to respect the cause or think it is worthwhile or just. A soldier risking his or her life, months and years far away from home to follow orders given by a government who is democratically elected deserves respect and will get it from me that's for sure.

    • @alfalfa852
      @alfalfa852 9 лет назад +39

      martinishot If I had a dollar for everytime someone criticized the younger generation I'd be able to afford a house in the economy the baby boomers destryed

  • @dtrix10kc
    @dtrix10kc 4 года назад +5

    Watching this in 2020. God bless the greatest generation of which my dad was a part. A WWII veteran who fought in the Pacific as well as the Korean Conflict.
    We owe these guys a debt of gratitude that can never be repaid. They fought and died so that we could be free. Thank you for your service gentlemen.
    ::up and saluting::

  • @Jackregala1
    @Jackregala1 5 лет назад +255

    Who’s gonna be watching this June 6, 2019

    • @abysswalker2115
      @abysswalker2115 5 лет назад +5

      thejackregala watching it on base, at the on post theater today

    • @aprilliauy6287
      @aprilliauy6287 5 лет назад +2

      I'm watching it right now and it's my country's (Philippines) independence day, June 12.

    • @aprilliauy6287
      @aprilliauy6287 5 лет назад +1

      @Hammerschlägen M hahaha no. There's no such thing. We/Some celebrate independence day by going to "Libingan ng mga Bayani" (cemetery for our country's heroes) and light some candle to pay respect and/or by simply watching historical movies. You can eat balut whenever you want.

    • @aprilliauy6287
      @aprilliauy6287 5 лет назад +2

      @Hammerschlägen M it's a pleasure. Glad to share ☺

    • @tonystephenthorpe
      @tonystephenthorpe 5 лет назад +3

      i was there on 5th of june 2019, paying respects to those who gave everything . i was lucky to have a quick chat with a R.N veteran, who was on the beach on the 6th.

  • @carlwilliams9642
    @carlwilliams9642 7 лет назад +21

    Good gosh! The part where he falls to his knees gets me every time. In the context of the film we don't even know that that's Pvt. James Ryan being overcome with emotion when seeing the grave of Capt. John H. Miller. That could be any WW2 veteran be overcome with emotion at the sight of his fallen comrade's grave.

  • @loganironside343
    @loganironside343 6 лет назад +3

    Thank you Thank you Thank you for serving our country all the sacrifices you made will never go unnoticed.... SALUTE

  • @brianoconner3090
    @brianoconner3090 Месяц назад +2

    This scene gets me everytime. It is easy to say that one should go to war, but the horrors of it is something will hit you for the rest of your life.

  • @gregorbegger9291
    @gregorbegger9291 4 года назад +3

    I love how this film opens.

    • @captaincharek3559
      @captaincharek3559 2 года назад +4

      I also love how this film opens too I always did I always have I always do and I always will forever and that is a promise

    • @gregorbegger9291
      @gregorbegger9291 2 года назад +2

      @@captaincharek3559 same with the ending. I just love they’re connected

  • @zacharyperez2427
    @zacharyperez2427 5 лет назад +7

    I love how you can tell what the tone of the movie is just from him walking ahead of his family, perfect movie

    • @captaincharek3559
      @captaincharek3559 2 года назад +4

      yes saving Private Ryan is a perfect movie it always has been and it always will be forever and that is a promise

  • @PresidentPixel
    @PresidentPixel 3 года назад +7

    This is one hell of a film, I am usually very picky with my movies and barely watch many but this one had my attention the entire run. This film is doing more than simply telling a story, it is art.

  • @Delboy-hi1ld
    @Delboy-hi1ld 4 года назад +1

    One of speilbergs truly great masterpieces. Amazing film. Tom hanks just superb

  • @hanniy9220
    @hanniy9220 2 года назад +14

    Saving Private Ryan (1998)
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- i got Free from here
    WHATCH NOW ☛ j.mp/2VQo2EG 💜
    `All Subtitle Available'
    ライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!この日のライブ配信は、かならりやばかったですね!1万人を超える人が見ていたもんね(笑)やっぱり人参最高!まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもの再編ありがとうです!この日のライブ配信は、かならりやばかったですね!1万人を超える人が見ていたもんね(笑)やっぱり人参最高!まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした!今後は気を付けないとね5). .
    !💖🖤❤#今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!#この日のライブ配信は、#かならりやばかったですね!#1万人を超える人が見ていたも
    ん(#笑)#やっぱり人参最高!#まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした
    #今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!
    #この日のライブ配信は、
    #かならりやばかったですね!
    #1万人を超える人が見ていたもん( #笑)
    #やっぱり人参最高!
    #まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした #垃圾

  • @kevn420
    @kevn420 4 года назад +10

    The first few horns make me tear up because it makes me realize how many soldiers gave their lives to keep freedom alive

  • @YankeesFan0620
    @YankeesFan0620 3 года назад +4

    This scene always reminds me of my grandfather. He fought in the Pacific Theater as part of an AA battery. He walked the same way when he was older and wore the same windbreaker. It was always difficult talking with him for school projects. Whenever i interviewed him, we would need to take breaks because it was difficult for him to relive those memories. I miss those conversations and hope that I can pass on to my children the respect I have for him. Miss you Grandpa

  • @AKASH-rl7vb
    @AKASH-rl7vb 3 года назад +2

    This epic movie makes us feel that war is always bad....Great movie I have ever seen

  • @EnterpriseXI
    @EnterpriseXI 3 года назад +1

    VERY EMOTIONALLY POWERFUL SCENE. I just burst into tears and all I could do was salute those FALLEN soldiers civilians weather it be a man or woman or child of any race

  • @rubinachilles5943
    @rubinachilles5943 6 лет назад +12

    This is so epic, every time i watch this i got tears in my eyes...