NOTHING could've prepared me for FULL METAL JACKET | First Time Reaction!

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  • Опубликовано: 15 янв 2025

Комментарии • 824

  • @vincentsaia6545
    @vincentsaia6545 4 месяца назад +439

    R. Lee Ermy was an actual former Marine drill instructor and all the insults he was yelling at the recruits were improvisations.

    • @ComeOnIsSuchAJoy
      @ComeOnIsSuchAJoy 4 месяца назад +23

      He also played a prototype version of this character in the underrated Vietnam War film, "The Boys in Company C" (1978).

    • @WilliamLucas-hy8mx
      @WilliamLucas-hy8mx 4 месяца назад +5

      He was also beautiful AF

    • @mattsmith1318
      @mattsmith1318 4 месяца назад +19

      I'm sorry but technically this statement is incorrect. The Marine Corps doesn't use drill sergeants they have drill instructors❤
      He's the only Marine to be promoted after being discharged and not posthumously
      Semper Fi

    • @vincentsaia6545
      @vincentsaia6545 4 месяца назад +10

      @@mattsmith1318 The terminology was incorrect, not the statement itself. Thank you for the correction.

    • @meu02136
      @meu02136 4 месяца назад

      Oh really?!?!?! That’s brand new information!

  • @martinholt8168
    @martinholt8168 4 месяца назад +283

    I played the drinking game for every time Addie said, 'Okay.'
    I'm in rehab now.

    • @montylc2001
      @montylc2001 4 месяца назад +7

      LOL!

    • @zman8184
      @zman8184 4 месяца назад +7

      You noticed that too?

    • @adamarens3520
      @adamarens3520 4 месяца назад +14

      You’re just lucky to still be alive really 😂.

    • @claymccoy
      @claymccoy 4 месяца назад +11

      I died of alcohol poisoning.

    • @JTRocks1
      @JTRocks1 Месяц назад

      Good for you, @martinholt8168, I hope rehab is working out for you. 🙂

  • @torbjornkvist
    @torbjornkvist 4 месяца назад +101

    This movie was shot in its entirety in England. The Vietnam scenes were made at a large former gas plant in London. The plant was prepared for demolition and Kubrick got permission to shoot the shit out of the place. They got palms and vegetation from Asia. A masterpiece.

    • @shaomongoloid
      @shaomongoloid 4 месяца назад +8

      The most brilliant outdoor set design. Much more expensive movies try to recreate exotic locations domestically or even abroad in different replacement countries, but they almost always never get it right.

    • @hollownation
      @hollownation 4 месяца назад +7

      Not only that but it was the middle of winter and freezing cold, so much so that the palm trees kept dying 😂

    • @Badco1948
      @Badco1948 4 месяца назад +3

      Kubrick did an excellent job of making scenes believable Vietnam, right down to the three legged concrete electrical poles. I never made it to Hue City in my travels, but am told there were not many multistory buildings at the time. I was in and around Danang and at that time the tallest building in town was maybe 4 stories.

    • @Fusilier56
      @Fusilier56 4 месяца назад +3

      All the training parts were filmed at RAF bassingbourn royston kent..I did my own training there.

  • @RoGueNavy
    @RoGueNavy 4 месяца назад +28

    I had the honor of meeting R. Lee Ermey, (Gunnery Sergeant Hartman), a few years before he died. A true gentleman, a pleasure to talk to; he autographed anything and everything the fans brought, and didn't charge them for admission, autographs or photos. I still have the challenge coin he gave me, and the photo of us together. I treasure them. He served in the Marine Corps for eleven years, and then worked tirelessly for military causes for the rest of his life. He contributed so much, for so many years...then thanked me for the 4 piddlin' years I spent in the Navy. That hit me like a ton of bricks.

    • @SteelCurtain024
      @SteelCurtain024 Месяц назад +1

      Thank you for your service mate!🤘🏻😉

    • @RoGueNavy
      @RoGueNavy Месяц назад

      @SteelCurtain024 thank you for the support, Brother!

  • @CarlosRamirez-wb7zu
    @CarlosRamirez-wb7zu 4 месяца назад +109

    If Kubrick scars you, stay away from Clockwork Orange.

    • @childlessdoggentleman746
      @childlessdoggentleman746 4 месяца назад +9

      Clockwork Orange is a masterpiece, and I absolutely agree with you. Unless you are prepared for a truly sick film, do not watch. Much of the violence is of a sexual nature. The movie is based on Anthony Burgess' novel of the same name. It is an anti-violence film that is ultra-violent. It presents a fascinating argument about rehabilitating criminals.

    • @ratmackay
      @ratmackay 4 месяца назад +1

      I would not say that it's about rehabilitating criminals...that's a gross oversimplification and a bit like saying that Psycho is a story about a mother/son relationship.

    • @childlessdoggentleman746
      @childlessdoggentleman746 3 месяца назад +5

      @@ratmackay I thought that Psycho was about the hazards of showering.

    • @roberto2568
      @roberto2568 3 месяца назад +2

      also, moon landing* hahhahaha

    • @marxman00
      @marxman00 3 месяца назад

      Kubrick scars you alright

  • @johnhammonds5143
    @johnhammonds5143 4 месяца назад +74

    If you want to get scarred for life, go for the Stanley Kubrick trifecta and watch A Clockwork Orange.

    • @Viraxii
      @Viraxii 4 месяца назад +5

      That would scar Addie for life

    • @bubhub64
      @bubhub64 3 месяца назад +4

      Yes...yes...she should watch a little bit of "the ol' in and out," and then "try the wine!"😃

    • @spencergwin9454
      @spencergwin9454 3 месяца назад +1

      That's the movie that came to mind when she (or they) mentioned scarred for life

    • @michaelshelton5488
      @michaelshelton5488 2 месяца назад

      And Eyes Wide Shut

  • @beldavius
    @beldavius 4 месяца назад +64

    I had the pleasure of being on a rifle squad during a national shooting match with R. Lee Ermey back in 2011. We spent the entire day together shooting the match. Despite being in a national level match, he stopped for every person that approached him for a photo or autograph. He was a super nice guy, and very funny, too as well as a pretty decent shooter! RIP Gunny!

    • @Tacomaguy458
      @Tacomaguy458 4 месяца назад +5

      its a very different persona for him but you should watch saving silverman. pretty funny movie but Ermey was the high school football coach that does goofy funny stuff thru it all. very different role for him but he did it perfectly.

    • @tinorodriguez4705
      @tinorodriguez4705 2 месяца назад +2

      He also played the green army men on Toy Story

  • @iKvetch558
    @iKvetch558 4 месяца назад +174

    I have never seen it specifically stated by Kubrick anywhere, but Private Pyle is a clear representation of a real program that the Defense Department ran in the 1960s. It was called "Project 100,000" and it was a test to see whether the mental and physical parameters for serving in the US military could be widened to make the pool of potential service people larger. Between escalation in Vietnam and all the other military commitments of the Cold War in those days, the military was concerned about a shortage of people to serve. So they started testing whether recruits who were normally just a bit below the normal standard for IQ, or emotional stability, or physical fitness could be turned into effective military personnel. The same program probably would have led to Forrest Gump being recruited and serving in Vietnam.
    One of the nicknames that was used for the program was "McNamara's Morons".

    • @bravejango12
      @bravejango12 4 месяца назад +19

      I'm shocked that Forest Gump wasn't made an officer seeing as how he had a college degree.

    • @64MDW
      @64MDW 4 месяца назад +1

      Really? Did you ever wear a uniform,? Or are you so very, very smart?

    • @Zeeell
      @Zeeell 4 месяца назад +9

      @@64MDW What's that supposed to mean? Do you know what the ASVAB tests for?

    • @somersetcace1
      @somersetcace1 4 месяца назад +7

      @@bravejango12 His drill sgt did say he was a genius and would be a general one day. 😏

    • @iKvetch558
      @iKvetch558 4 месяца назад +7

      @@bravejango12 As noted by others, Forrest would have had to take the ASVAB, which I believe is not just about aptitude testing, but also about IQ testing...so he would not have scored high enough to be an officer, regardless of his degree.

  • @richardlukesh5807
    @richardlukesh5807 4 месяца назад +67

    Kubrick's A CLOCKWORK ORANGE (1971) is way crazier in the "scar me for life" department. LOL! 🥛😬

    • @LordVolkov
      @LordVolkov 4 месяца назад +9

      Everyone loves a bit of the old ultra-violence me droogie 😉

    • @harvey4512
      @harvey4512 4 месяца назад +2

      Probably not addies film

    • @harvey4512
      @harvey4512 4 месяца назад

      ​@LordVolkov bit like Taxi Driver having a Ultra Violent and sex

    • @flarrfan
      @flarrfan 4 месяца назад +5

      But a film with important themes that any would-be cinephile needs to see...

    • @yellow01umrella
      @yellow01umrella 4 месяца назад +1

      50 years later and people are still not ready for it.

  • @jxg5448
    @jxg5448 4 месяца назад +11

    8:13 "Either Leonard is gonna get kicked out soon, or he's gonna end up saving all of their lives. I don't know, I don't know what's gonna happen."
    No, no you don't know what's going to happen.

    • @THC_allan
      @THC_allan 3 месяца назад +3

      lmao exactly what i said

  • @Ocrilat
    @Ocrilat 4 месяца назад +42

    The Pyle gets slapped' scene is made so much more effective because the slap was real, not trickery. And being a real slap was Vincent D'Onofrio's(the actor playing Pyle) idea.

  • @OcotilloTom
    @OcotilloTom 4 месяца назад +31

    That's about how it was. I served 20 years in the Marine Corps and two combat tours in Vietnam. The first tour as a machine gunner (0331) in 1965-66 and the second as a Platoon commander (0369) in 1970-71. I retired after 20 years and had a 30 year career as a California police officer ( Marin County). What I learned in the Marine Corps has helped me all my life. I highly recommend it to anyone needing direction and wishing to learn self discipline .
    Tom Boyte
    GySgt. USMC, retired
    Bronze Star, Purple Heart

    • @supobostarman
      @supobostarman 3 месяца назад +4

      Thank you for your service sir!

    • @adamhafiizh8984
      @adamhafiizh8984 3 месяца назад +1

      to think we're the last generation to speak with someone like you,damn

  • @jaysonpida5379
    @jaysonpida5379 3 месяца назад +6

    What will amaze you is that Kubrick filmed the entire movie in-and-around London. He made England look like Vietnam. The palm trees were 'brought-in' and the destroyed city (which was the Battle of Hue) was a London factory facility that was being demolished. By this time in his career he didn't leave London anymore...so if you wanted to make a movie with him you had to go to London.
    Paths of Glory is another masterpiece anti-war movie by Kubrick.

    • @johnfellows2867
      @johnfellows2867 3 месяца назад

      The factory was the former Beckton gas works, the O2 arena now stands there.

  • @PUNKinDRUBLIC72
    @PUNKinDRUBLIC72 4 месяца назад +32

    Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange will scar you more than the Shining!

    • @daytrippingcalifornia3270
      @daytrippingcalifornia3270 3 месяца назад

      Fucked up movie. I liked it when I was a kid. Now it makes me puke. No joke.

    • @AaronSarg
      @AaronSarg Месяц назад

      A lil ol in out in out my droogies!

  • @jasonegeland1446
    @jasonegeland1446 4 месяца назад +5

    This movie is beyond good. One of Kubrick's absolute finest.

  • @kevinc3427
    @kevinc3427 4 месяца назад +4

    Most vets I know, including myself, like this movie about the military and war the best. For whatever that's worth.

  • @Charly_Dont_Surf
    @Charly_Dont_Surf Месяц назад +1

    My father was a NAM vet and absolutely loved this movie. May they both rest in peace.

  • @countgeekula9143
    @countgeekula9143 4 месяца назад +3

    Brilliant film and possibly my favourite Kubrick. Saw it first in the theatre back in '87 and made a big impact. And gave us the awesome R Lee Ermey as an actor. RIP.

  • @maximillianosaben
    @maximillianosaben 4 месяца назад +44

    I know it's shocking to say, especially to someone after watching this movie for the first time, but R. Lee Ermey is absolutely hysterical (in this movie, and otherwise) and was just a darn treasure in every role he played. Watch him in Saving Silverman and you will only ever smile when you see him on camera.

    • @paulhewes7333
      @paulhewes7333 4 месяца назад

      "Really? Me too!"

    • @mattsmith1318
      @mattsmith1318 4 месяца назад +2

      He was perfect as the sheriff in the Texas Chainsaw Massacre remake.. Creepy!

    • @maximillianosaben
      @maximillianosaben 4 месяца назад +3

      @@mattsmith1318 - Amen. He was arguably more unsettling than Leatherface in that movie.

    • @DerekHarrison-d5d
      @DerekHarrison-d5d 4 месяца назад +1

      Always makes me laugh that nobody notices that Sgt Hartman has his hat on when he goes in to the head(toilet) to reprimand Pyle.😸

    • @maximillianosaben
      @maximillianosaben 4 месяца назад

      @@DerekHarrison-d5d - Pretty sure everyone notices. But we all just inherently know not to talk about things behind his back, or to his face for that matter.

  • @almyska467
    @almyska467 3 месяца назад +2

    R Lee Ermey was originally hired on this film as a military advisor. He went to the Director and stated that the way the actor cast as the DI wasn't doing it right. R Lee had been a Marine DI. So they asked him to demonstrate. They stood him up and told him to do his thing while the crew threw things at him. After several minutes of that, they re-cast him as the DI.

  • @connorp8408
    @connorp8408 4 месяца назад +68

    Her villian arc continues hahaha

    • @orangeandblackattack
      @orangeandblackattack 4 месяца назад +2

      And I love it! What a great journey we are on with Addie!

    • @cyclone8974
      @cyclone8974 4 месяца назад

      I mean a great way to start is BS movies that people think is basically a documentary.
      Watch actual Vietnam Vets eyes roll when watch this crap.

  • @gottagetitgaming7759
    @gottagetitgaming7759 Месяц назад +1

    My dad is a Marine and was in Vietnam and has said this movie was the closest to what boot camp was like then, but the real thing was even worse. Glad to see you made it through the movie and I love that you don't get all offended as many people your age do these days, which is why I love watching your reaction videos.

  • @jimmythundarrsdrumcoverser492
    @jimmythundarrsdrumcoverser492 3 месяца назад +2

    "I don't know if now is time for jokes" I then spit out my coffee~

  • @MsUltrafox
    @MsUltrafox 3 месяца назад +2

    The Serg role was meant for another actor but Lee wanted it and he made sure he got it by doing his normal Dill instructor job.
    And Kubrick loved it so much and hired Lee on the spot and gave the actor another part in the movie.
    That actor can be seen as the door gunner.

  • @michaelshelton5488
    @michaelshelton5488 2 месяца назад +1

    Happy birthday Marines!

  • @GeraldTodd-r4z
    @GeraldTodd-r4z 4 месяца назад +4

    During the first half of this movie Lee Ermey the Drill Instructor was a real DI in the Marines and was working as a technical expert on the film. He tried to get the actions across to the actor who was going to play the DI but Stanley Kubrick saw how well he did it Stanley hired Ermey for the role and he let Ermey freelance all the BS he yelled at the recruits without a script. I was in the Navy and our bootcamp was nothing like this. My older brother was in the Marines and he said this movie was very realistic. I'm glad I went in the Navy.

  • @firemedic5100
    @firemedic5100 4 месяца назад +5

    Stanley Kuberick had already cast the roll of the drill instructor to Tim Colceri, who then played the helicopter door gunner, and R. Lee Ermey, originally a technical advisor was cast as Gunnery Sergent Hartman. And the rest is history.

  • @Aperdedor1
    @Aperdedor1 4 месяца назад +8

    I still can’t believe Pyle is now Kingpin in the MCU lol

    • @ryantrone4140
      @ryantrone4140 15 дней назад

      Why can't you believe that? just curious....Vincent Donofrio has been in a number of credits over the years. Have you seen him in Adventures in Babysitting? ha

    • @Aperdedor1
      @Aperdedor1 15 дней назад

      @ I’ve seen him in everything. I love him as an actor. It’s just crazy

  • @feudist
    @feudist 4 месяца назад +46

    An overlooked movie that stars D'Onofrio is "The Cell". Also stars Jennifer Lopez. He plays a truly monstrous serial killer who goes catatonic when captured. Lopez plays a therapist using an experimental technology to literally enter his mind to locate a kidnapped girl. Visually stunning, thematically horrific.

    • @trulybtd5396
      @trulybtd5396 4 месяца назад +6

      The cell is truly underrated. Maybe because they tried to bennifer it into mainstream

    • @Bodyknock
      @Bodyknock 4 месяца назад +1

      I wasn’t much of a fan of The Cell, but D’Onofrio was definitely one of the better parts of it. 👍

    • @LordVolkov
      @LordVolkov 4 месяца назад

      Tarsim Singh makes beautiful movies but they can be strange. The Cell is so twisted but really gorgeous.

    • @AbeVicious
      @AbeVicious 4 месяца назад +1

      Most likely cause Jennifer is in it.

    • @tvdroid22
      @tvdroid22 4 месяца назад +1

      He was brilliant in Men In Black.

  • @GMDTurbo
    @GMDTurbo 4 месяца назад +17

    2:39 Ironically, you're not wrong. R. Lee Ermey wrote 150 PAGES of insults just for this role. RIP Ermey. Absolute legend.

  • @JoeD0403
    @JoeD0403 4 месяца назад +38

    The foot locker thing is real. Drill Sergeants HATE seeing one unlocked. When my dad went to Parris Island for boot camp, someone left theirs unlocked and everything was dumped out the window. Then he had to bring everything back in one item at a time as fast as he could.. to the second floor.

    • @AddieCounts
      @AddieCounts  4 месяца назад +8

      Woah!

    • @mattsmith1318
      @mattsmith1318 4 месяца назад +6

      I got punished one night for not sounding off to a drill instructor after lights out. He made me scrub the deck with my rifle kit toothbrush but didn't tell me when I could quit so after an hour I went and found some pickup from another platoon who barely spoke English and convinced him that he needed to relieve me😂
      I have no idea how long he spent scrubbing that floor but I still feel kinda bad about it..😅

    • @JoeD0403
      @JoeD0403 4 месяца назад +3

      @@mattsmith1318 Doing that as a recruit is bold. A friend joined the Navy and actually read all the rules and learned about passing orders to subordinates. Whenever he was told to give someone pushups he would find someone with a lower rank and tell them to do it. He was a corpsman assigned to a Force Recon unit so he hated Navy officers. Thought they were lazy and out of shape.

    • @megiloth3634
      @megiloth3634 4 месяца назад +6

      MCRD San Diego, when we first met our Drill Instructors, anything and everything was dumped out of our sea bags or footlockers onto the deck and swiftly kicked by the tornado of DI's in to random piles all over the squad bay. It was always fun trying to find your $h1+ afterwards.

    • @west6843
      @west6843 4 месяца назад +2

      one of my buddies left his unlocked and when they all came back from a march the entire barracks was turned over. not just his area. beds tossed upside down and everything.

  • @reconsoldier135
    @reconsoldier135 4 месяца назад +30

    oh Addie, you poor sweet child...lol
    this movie is such a classic, believe it or not as a veteran parts of this movie make me miss my time in the service

    • @jkhoover
      @jkhoover 4 месяца назад +2

      I didn't see this movie before joining the Army. I didn't know where all of my drill sergeants got their lines until way after I was out of basic.

    • @megiloth3634
      @megiloth3634 4 месяца назад +2

      Good times and bad times. I actually preferred being in Desert Storm because we had a purpose. When we got back, it was playing games. Lots of working parties, guard duty, inspections, police calls, getting written up for dumb $h1+
      30 years later, I certainly don't regret joining the Corps in high school, but man those 4 years felt like 20 sometimes.

    • @reconsoldier135
      @reconsoldier135 3 месяца назад

      @@jkhoover oh I had seen this a few times when I went to basic, it was kinda funny watching the drill sergeants trying to act like R. Lee Ermey when you could tell that's not anything close to who they really were

  • @JarkkoToivonen
    @JarkkoToivonen Месяц назад +1

    Masterpiece I’ve seen this hundreds of times

  • @meowpeep385
    @meowpeep385 Месяц назад +1

    ".. ok.." lol .. as a Marine vet, we love this film.

  • @realBkay
    @realBkay 4 месяца назад +13

    U want to b scarred?
    A CLOCKWORK ORANGE

  • @thekenjensen
    @thekenjensen 4 месяца назад +3

    Marine Gulf War vet here. We Marines find humor in some unexpected places. Even now, decades later. Also, amazingly, this movie always makes me miss bootcamp.

  • @carlhicksjr8401
    @carlhicksjr8401 Месяц назад +1

    If you think **you** aren't prepared, just think about how WE felt. 🤣
    In the spirit of full disclosure, I'm a US Army veteran and did my time in the 80s. But I think I can speak for my fellow ground pounders and ruck humpers when I say that you NEVER forget the day the Drills get a hold of your ass. It was over 40 years ago for me and I still remember it like it was 10 minutes ago.

  • @Badco1948
    @Badco1948 4 месяца назад +1

    I was in Vietnam as a Corporal of Marines. The movie captures the flavor of Vietnam service very well, but is fictional on a lot of details. The screenplay was made from a novel by Gustav Hasford titled "The Short Timers." It contains a lot of Marine Corps memes of the time combined with a lot of pure fiction as to particular incidents in the movie. If you want to review a Vietnam movie that is more battle oriented, I'd recommend "We Were Soldiers."

  • @OldDominion80
    @OldDominion80 4 месяца назад +14

    You want some more scaring? A Clockwork Orange by Kubrick is shall we say, a good bit of "Ultra Violence"

    • @NiersFloater
      @NiersFloater 4 месяца назад +2

      And the contra point in Kubrick movies would be "2001 Space Odyssey" - deep movie and only one lunatic in it (kind of)

    • @LordVolkov
      @LordVolkov 4 месяца назад +2

      Well said me droogie!

    • @txlyons2937
      @txlyons2937 4 месяца назад +1

      I'm worried that film would destroy what little innocence Addie has left.

    • @AaronSarg
      @AaronSarg Месяц назад +1

      I'm singing in the rain....

  • @mikecarew8329
    @mikecarew8329 4 месяца назад +19

    Other Kubrick films to watch: (1) Eyes wide shut with Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman (2) 2001: A Space Odyssey (3) Dr Strangelove (4) A Clockwork Orange.

  • @prescott7333
    @prescott7333 4 месяца назад +18

    I couldn't imagine sweet innocent Addie watching Full Metal Jacket.😊
    Thanks for the reaction,Addie.You're a legend!❤

  • @MrSiriusAB
    @MrSiriusAB 4 месяца назад +17

    "Private Pyle, whatever you do dont fall down, that would break my fuckin heart" 😭😂

  • @carlosspeicywiener7018
    @carlosspeicywiener7018 4 месяца назад

    Hi Addie. Thank you for coming around and brightening an otherwise very bleak day. Your presence and disposition are very relaxing.

  • @davidedwards1705
    @davidedwards1705 4 месяца назад +2

    3:23 The previous scene is what is known as Tearing Down. The Drill Instructors job is to destroy your preconceptions so they have a blank slat to imprint you War Instructions onto. It looks harsh sure a small percentage of recruits will quit and very very few do harm to themselves or others. The remainder become hard soldiers.

  • @craigwhip
    @craigwhip 4 месяца назад +22

    The beating pvt. Pyle endured during boot camp is called a "blanket party". It happened to a guy in my company during boot camp, but, to a lesser degree.

    • @LordVolkov
      @LordVolkov 4 месяца назад +2

      Did you order the code red?!

    • @craigwhip
      @craigwhip 4 месяца назад +4

      @@LordVolkov Actually, during boot camp, it's called a blanket party, only after boot camp is it called a code red.

    • @LordVolkov
      @LordVolkov 4 месяца назад

      @@craigwhip 🤔 Interesting distinction

    • @mattsmith1318
      @mattsmith1318 4 месяца назад

      I remember some kid got caught with crackers and they torched the whole Platoon; a few of them gave him a beatdown..

    • @megiloth3634
      @megiloth3634 4 месяца назад +2

      I went to San Diego MCRD in 1989...and blanket parties never happened, because they are not authorized forms of discipline or keeping with the highest traditions of the United States Marine Corps... wink wink

  • @tqmoosey
    @tqmoosey 2 месяца назад

    Congrats on 100k! 😇 Thank you for the reaction, awesome!

  • @chrismillington2729
    @chrismillington2729 4 месяца назад

    Thx Addie, well done for making it through this, best of luck to hitting 100K, Kind regards Chris...

  • @y2k029
    @y2k029 4 месяца назад

    Lol😂watching Addie reactions are priceless..what a good sport she is

  • @LarryFrieson
    @LarryFrieson 4 месяца назад

    Thank you Addie. I feel like your reactions to this film were genuine, and the best I’ve seen on the Internet. My dad served in Vietnam, and he told me that this movie was one HUNDRED percent real. If you watch some behind the scenes, you’ll love it. More of this movie is real than you might think. The opening scene is 100% real. The actors didn’t know what they were in for, and hadn’t met R. Lee yet. The graduation scene is also very real, when they’re marching, and they all snap their heads forward; that is 100% real, after all the filming and work that R. Lee did with the actors. Also, the “you’re bouncing” that he says is also 100% real, as R. Lee was really marching them. Finally, Stanley threw the script away when R. Lee shifted into DI mode and just improvised all the lines, etc. Thank you again Addie, I loved your genuine reaction and your 4 or 5 jump-scares. That made me smile! :)

  • @alextan1478
    @alextan1478 4 месяца назад +17

    Let's give Addie a round of applause for surviving Full Metal Jacket (1987) as her SECOND Stanley Kubrick movie. 👏👏 This is my second favorite Kubrick movie after The Shining (1980). My girlfriend's dad also likes this movie too. I get a good laugh from the entire platoon marching around the barracks and singing "This is my rifle, this is my gun. This is for fighting, this is for fun." while holding their rifles, by the stock, on one hand and their crotches on the other. I even wake up every morning to the sound of Hartman's reveille. Just like The Shining, I own this movie on DVD in 4:3 Full-Screen format, which is also the full aspect ratio of the original camera negative as Stanley Kubrick intended.

  • @keefriff99
    @keefriff99 4 месяца назад +2

    Hoo boy, you’re in for it now, Addie. 😂

    • @darthken815
      @darthken815 4 месяца назад

      Man, her face when the D.I. made the skull-f🤬🤬king comment. 🤣🪦

  • @Gr8Buccaneer
    @Gr8Buccaneer 4 месяца назад +23

    A Clockwork Orange would be different...very different...

    • @flarrfan
      @flarrfan 4 месяца назад

      Strangelove and 2001 are the other essential Kubrick's...Clockwork's first third is very disturbing but essential to understanding the last two-thirds and the movie's important themes.

  • @lordwilksy
    @lordwilksy 4 месяца назад +3

    Waaaay more intense than 'Private Benjamin'

  • @webuser5748
    @webuser5748 4 месяца назад

    What I love about FMJ reactions on youtube is seeing how the cut jumps straight to 18:08 and for some reason the reactors are all like "yeah I better remember to cut that out" loool

  • @Arsolon618
    @Arsolon618 26 дней назад

    "Scars in different ways" is a perfect way to describe Stanley Kubrick's body of work!

  • @samuraiwarriorsunite
    @samuraiwarriorsunite 4 месяца назад +1

    Vincent D'Onofrio definitely believes in the method acting technique. He still holds the record for gaining the most weight for a role, over 70 lbs.

  • @mikerhodes8454
    @mikerhodes8454 4 месяца назад

    My dad was in the Marines at the time this movie took place and he said he's never seen a more accurate depiction of boot camp anywhere.

  • @mattsmith1318
    @mattsmith1318 4 месяца назад +8

    Fun fact they already had the drill instructor cast for this movie and R. Lee Ermy was only supposed to be a consultant but he was determined to earn that role and did!
    His lines were almost exclusively improvisation.
    Semper Fi
    (The Marine Corps Motto, Latin for Always Faithful)

    • @longfootbuddy
      @longfootbuddy 4 месяца назад +1

      you will put me in this movie.. i will be in your picture!

    • @kevinhennessey3189
      @kevinhennessey3189 4 месяца назад +2

      The guy shooting thr machine gunner in the helicopter was supposed to play Gunny Hartman.

    • @mattsmith1318
      @mattsmith1318 4 месяца назад

      @@kevinhennessey3189 "Don't lead 'em as much" is one of the most 😳 lines in the movie..

  • @Pianodean
    @Pianodean 4 месяца назад +13

    10:34 "This feels so ominous." I was screaming..."BUCKLE UP, ADDY!"

  • @MultiPowermaster
    @MultiPowermaster 4 месяца назад

    Lol Addie I love you, if there's ever a meet up please let me know. Your my fav celeb. My kids tease me how many times can I watch the same person watch different movies lol

  • @samthompson1612
    @samthompson1612 4 месяца назад

    Not even related to the movie, but I just want to say that I've loved watching your plant grow in the background over the years! It started off so small and now it's past the top of the video! Good work!

  • @thomascamara8398
    @thomascamara8398 4 месяца назад

    Great reaction, really enjoyed it, You were sincere, funny, and articulate..

  • @nielgregory108
    @nielgregory108 4 месяца назад +26

    Did you notice?? ONLY 2 ACTS!! One of the very rare movies you will EVER see to only feature 2 acts. 99.9% of movies are written in 3 acts.

    • @rustincohle2135
      @rustincohle2135 4 месяца назад +1

      Well, it's not really a movie with a traditional plot. It doesn't even really have a plot. It's meant to be a study of the effects that military training has on the psyche. From training to combat.

  • @kevinmassey1164
    @kevinmassey1164 4 месяца назад +22

    I think youre ready for A Clockwork Orange

    • @AbeVicious
      @AbeVicious 4 месяца назад

      🙏🏽

    • @longfootbuddy
      @longfootbuddy 4 месяца назад

      apparently no reactors are ready for a clockwork orange

    • @AbeVicious
      @AbeVicious 4 месяца назад +1

      @@longfootbuddy lame

  • @marvinsarracino116
    @marvinsarracino116 4 месяца назад

    Great reaction Addie! I luv how open you are to listening to some of the drill instructors cadence songs especially the "this is my rifle this is my gun" song... Addie 'i mean it is catchy'! Haha lol and it is catchy! Thanks for sharing Addie ❤️💛

  • @michaelshelton5488
    @michaelshelton5488 2 месяца назад

    That's one hell of a sniper to be that accurate with iron sights and no scope

  • @AbeVicious
    @AbeVicious 4 месяца назад +8

    What's next, A Clockwork Orange?

    • @Stogie2112
      @Stogie2112 4 месяца назад

      I will never suggest that film to any reactor. It's a brilliant film, but it's just too brutal.

    • @AbeVicious
      @AbeVicious 4 месяца назад +1

      @@Stogie2112 if they're really film buffs. Nothing should be off limits

    • @Stogie2112
      @Stogie2112 4 месяца назад

      @@AbeVicious ... Yes, you're right about that. I am biased by my desire for others to enjoy the films I recommend, and not to be traumatized!

    • @AbeVicious
      @AbeVicious 4 месяца назад

      @Stogie2112 it is what it is🤷🏽‍♂️ I know they're not real buffs as this is all for monetary value.

  • @jordonvh91
    @jordonvh91 4 месяца назад

    Your stunned expression throughout the first barracks scene made my day.

  • @tpnproductions6520
    @tpnproductions6520 4 месяца назад +5

    Definitely continue the kubrick train check out Dr. Strangelove (1964) one of kubricks earlier films and also one of James Earl Jones earlier films. R.I.P James Earl Jones and Stanley Kubrick 🕊♥️

    • @shawnmiller4781
      @shawnmiller4781 4 месяца назад

      His first actually
      He got the job when Kubrick saw him in a Shakespeare in the Park performance of Othello.
      George C Scott also was picked up from the same production for the film

  • @philmullineaux5405
    @philmullineaux5405 4 месяца назад

    U gotta type in here, how R Lee Ermy got the part in gull metal jacket! He's done lots of great movies. Like Se7en. His first movie was also as a drill sergeant in the great movie, Boys in Company C! One of the cheats he did to get the part? He typed, single spaced, back and front, 20 sheets of insults dialogue and gave to one of the assistant directors!😮😮😮

  • @captzero007
    @captzero007 Месяц назад

    @13:20 "Are we going to see that they have the stare by the end of the movie?"
    Yes. Rafterman definitely... and Joker's "war face" too. When they're standing around the dying sniper.

  • @adamplace1414
    @adamplace1414 4 месяца назад +3

    0:30 Addie needs to see 2001 A Space Odyssey then, and as soon as possible!

  • @twoheart7813
    @twoheart7813 4 месяца назад +1

    I remember buying the VHS version of this movie and it came with a mini movie poster which I still have. Both my dad and brother went through Marine boot camp so I've heard all the stories. My brother hated fire watch which is how Leonard was caught with the rifle, he said that duty was spooky as hell.

    • @boynamed_sue
      @boynamed_sue 4 месяца назад +1

      I hated Firewatch as well. Lost precious sleep!

  • @peterarmstrong6928
    @peterarmstrong6928 Месяц назад

    Your facial expressions are priceless 🌹🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🤟

  • @friscosgreatest415
    @friscosgreatest415 4 месяца назад

    Had me dying at “sounds like a deal” 😂

  • @timboxall8936
    @timboxall8936 4 месяца назад

    I remember this being shot back in the at the old Beckton Gasworks down the road from where I lived in London. We'd sneak down there as nippers and watch it being filmed. Bloody freezing & miserable it were, a proper British winter!

  • @guitarman8462
    @guitarman8462 4 месяца назад +14

    " A Clockwork Orange " Kubrick

  • @washtubdysthe9221
    @washtubdysthe9221 4 месяца назад

    Great reaction! you are doing great imo

  • @USMC2673
    @USMC2673 4 месяца назад

    As former marine, I love watching reactions to the boot camp portion of this movie.

  • @dpsamu2000
    @dpsamu2000 2 месяца назад

    There's a lot of duality, and change represented in this movie. Joker, and Cowboy are similar in height, build, and they both wear glasses. Sometimes it's represented magically. Gomer Pyle is the biggest recruit, and changes into a killer. Animal Mother is the biggest in the squad, and is introduced as the most reliable killer. As if Pyle has magically changed into Animal. His helmet reads a line from the Bhagavad Gita "I am become death". It refers to Vishnu urging the prince to do his duty to impress him changes into his many armed form saying "I am become Death. The destroyer of worlds". (It's also what Oppenheimer, head of the Atomic bomb project, says he thought after the first bomb test). Animal has the biggest gun and many other weapons' on him, many arms. What was he before he became Death? Gomer Pyle.
    Another scene of magical change everybody missed for all the years since the movie came out. They are all firing on a building. They stop firing, and there is a montage of shots of the men listening. During that listening montage the point man's ammo magazine is magically not in his gun. They change their magazines, and the magazine is back in the gun. He drops the magazine out of the gun, and fumbles getting another in missing the first enemies that run out. The whole scene is about changing magazines focusing particularly on the point man, and his magazine. But nobody catches on he has a magical disappearing, and reappearing magazine. The point is it's about duality, and changes that only perceptive people notice.
    There's more to this that involves me personally, Kubrick, Richard Feynman, quantum mechanics, dark matter, and sorcery, as well as many other things but I won't go into details here.

  • @StoneKendricks
    @StoneKendricks 3 месяца назад

    "Congratulations on not being a maggot anymore" 🤣🤣🤣

  • @riptide6161
    @riptide6161 3 месяца назад

    Intense, accurate, and unexpected are appropriate words to describe this movie. #1 "War flick" of all time.
    Side note: Many of the scenes in this movie were taken from a book I read decades ago from interviews of former Vietnam Vets. When I first watched this movie, 25% of what I saw was what I read in that book (can't remember the title). You could cobble together another movie (or three) from the other 75% of the stories.

  • @dougfisher1266
    @dougfisher1266 4 месяца назад

    I went to USMC boot camp while FMJ was still in theatres. We all literally relived this movie. We had a Pyle, I was Smiley, and it was intense. 2/4 of our Drill instructors were "removed" for violence to recruits around week 10. I would not trade that experience for anything!

  • @chipbrown4337
    @chipbrown4337 2 месяца назад

    She is so cute/ pretty /adorable/that I was too distracted watching her 😂😂

  • @Flint-xt2zw
    @Flint-xt2zw 4 месяца назад

    This was considered a training film when i was a kid. My dad was a drill instructor in the army around this same time.

  • @jeffburnham6611
    @jeffburnham6611 4 месяца назад

    Everytime I see the opening sequence of the haircuts, I remember my own experience arriving at MCRD in the 1980's. Then meeting the Senior and his 3 other DI's, and the 11 weeks of nearly non-stop mind games and verbal abuse, the creative ways of inflicting pain through PIT sessions (Personal/Platoon Incentive Training). Thanks, Addie, for not laughing at the one-liners from GySgt Hartman, as nearly all other reactors do. When you're face-to-face with that Smokey pressing into your forehead, it's fear going through you and not that it's funny.

  • @jakemonster001
    @jakemonster001 4 месяца назад

    You endured that movie like a champ Addie!

  • @RedmoonIndustries
    @RedmoonIndustries 4 месяца назад

    Ronald Lee Ermey was an American actor and U.S. Marine drill instructor. He achieved fame for his role as Gunnery Sergeant Hartman in the 1987 film Full Metal Jacket, which earned him a Golden Globe nomination for Best Supporting Actor. He was also a United States Marine Corps staff sergeant and an honorary gunnery sergeant.
    Ermey was initially hired by the production only as a technical advisor. His intense familiarity with the role had perfected his delivery and fluency of improvisation to a level you could not hope to discover in a professional actor, no matter how many takes they were given.
    Seeking authenticity for the war movie, Director Kubrick allowed Ermey to write, edit and improvise his own dialogue. His was the only performance in a Kubrick film that had a significant proportion of improvised dialogue, with Ermey writing more than 50 percent of his dialogue.

  • @giodagrate5369
    @giodagrate5369 4 месяца назад +22

    Joker gets the 1,000 yard stare at the end. A difficult movie to watch, but an important one nonetheless.

    • @cyclone8974
      @cyclone8974 4 месяца назад

      Why it's total BS. It was made to slander the Vets so people could feel justified in abandoning South Vietnam.

  • @TomCat777
    @TomCat777 4 месяца назад +7

    R. Lee Ermy who plays the Drill Sergeant was really in the Marines and was allowed to ad-lib his lines during shooting. He first did what was scripted but also improvised his lines on takes and they tested much better on dailies, so the director let him come up with his own lines.

  • @FollowingGhost
    @FollowingGhost 4 месяца назад

    The door gunner on the helicopter was the original actor to play the drill instructor. When R. Lee Ermy got the part he was given the gunner's scene.

  • @andersonberry6261
    @andersonberry6261 4 месяца назад +1

    I love your channel long time.

  • @realBkay
    @realBkay 4 месяца назад

    Yeah Adds, this is a classic!!

  • @michaelcoffey1991
    @michaelcoffey1991 4 месяца назад +1

    @Addie thank you and your patrons that continue to put some of the best films of all time in front of your eyes :). Stanley Kubrick is a top 10 director for many and a top 25 director for almost every cinema fan. I Hope you watch all his films in time as well as my favorite Alfred Hitchcock. Perhaps in 2025 you could do a poll for your patrons to see if you should add like a AFI (American Film Institute) top 100 movies of all time. This film pulls no punches of the horror f war, conformity and what our hero soldiers go through that so many of us could never get through. It was a fun reaction to see.

  • @lucentaunisage
    @lucentaunisage 4 месяца назад

    Watching reactors during the Gunnery Sargent's monologue cracks me up, I think I basically know every word thanks to many samples of that dialogue in music, etc.

  • @garmisra7841
    @garmisra7841 3 месяца назад

    There are a lot of movies that show the horrors of war but this one is best at showing the absurdity. I understand why a lot of vets like this film because I"m sure they experienced plenty of the absurd aspects of warfare or being in the military.
    The little VC girl sniper set out a honey pot - she didn't kill 8-ball and Doc J with her first shot so she could pick more off when they tried to retrieve the first two.

  • @Cifer77
    @Cifer77 4 месяца назад

    Oh HELL YEAH!
    This movie is quite the experience

  • @kdawg2446
    @kdawg2446 2 месяца назад

    Fun fact so when Ermy's character says the bit about the reach around Kubrick yelled cut and asked what that was and R. Lee Ermy had to explain it Kubrick eventually said ok lets keep it.

  • @shogunn2517
    @shogunn2517 4 месяца назад +13

    R. Lee Emery was brought on as a technical advisor to help the actor who was hired as the Drill Sargent but since he did it so much better they decided to keep him. He had a pretty amazing career. His role in Saving Silverman was out of the box.
    But that's what they had to do. They were trained to break recruits. Not the way Private Pyle did but they had to test them, get them to laugh, get them to cry get them stressed in all sorts of ways because, frankly they were sending them off to do not very nice things that normally sane people are not conditioned to do. They have to train you, not just physically but change you mentally as well.
    Of course it made coming back to normal next to impossible without the same sort of help that got you there in the first place.

    • @iKvetch558
      @iKvetch558 4 месяца назад

      The story is even sadder than that...Tim Colceri was the actor who was going to play the drill sergeant, so Kubrick was keeping him separate from the rest of the cast...that is where Spielberg got the idea to keep Matt Damon out of the boot camp in Saving Private Ryan. So Kubrick had Colceri in a hotel rehearsing while Gunny Ermey was working with the rest of the cast on set, and that is when R Lee won over Kubrick and got the part. As a consolation prize, Tim Colceri got to play the door gunner on the chopper that said that you don't lead women and kids as much when you shoot them.
      There is a great video about How One of the Most Tortured Kubrick Actors Lost his Starring Role on this channel called CinemaTyler...ruclips.net/video/ovGLJwx0u5E/видео.html

    • @shogunn2517
      @shogunn2517 4 месяца назад +1

      @@iKvetch558 thanks for the info. Didn't know.

    • @drayman101
      @drayman101 4 месяца назад

      Another thing worth pointing out is that while they do train you by "breaking you down to build you back up", they also single out individuals for good and bad, the weakest link is singled out and then built up by the entire group.
      I went into Navy boot camp back in 2010, and it's very tame compared to what other services go through in boot camp, and even more so than all of them were back in the time the film takes place. There was still plenty of yelling in people's faces and such, but there were strict limits on what they could and couldn't do. Physical contact during training for any reason was strictly off-limits by this point.
      During my time in training (both in boot camp and after, in the fleet), I was always singled out because I'm an awful runner... so whenever we were training cardio, I set the pace, and the entire group had to build me up and make me improve, led and guided by the drill instructors and recruits with leadership roles. It's effective, and more importantly shows what can be accomplished when the group works as a whole to improve the weak link instead of turning on them like what happens in the film. Everyone has different strengths and weaknesses, and learning to work together to get the most out of a group is just as important in boot camp as the physical training, if not more so, as it is fundamental in every other facet of training.

  • @kingspanky2794
    @kingspanky2794 4 месяца назад

    I love your reactions 😂