Watching *HACKSAW RIDGE* for the FIRST TIME

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024
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    Watching HACKSAW RIDGE for the FIRST TIME
    #hacksawridge #firsttime #watching

Комментарии • 2 тыс.

  • @alexhefnerstvmovievault
    @alexhefnerstvmovievault  7 месяцев назад +1199

    this was one of the most beautiful, inspirational, sitting on the edge of my seat the entire time, movies I've ever seen! There are a handful of movies that you want to be a better person after watching; this was one of them. thank you guys for recommending this one to me! any other war/historical movies we need to check out?!
    love you all so much! thanks for watching!

    • @gorgooo5112
      @gorgooo5112 7 месяцев назад +20

      Band of Brothers maybe?

    • @GladysNjoki-uq5hn
      @GladysNjoki-uq5hn 7 месяцев назад +11

      It's always a pleasure Alex, loooove love your reactions,I rem watching this the first time I cried, a great watch very inspirational❤

    • @AHJR
      @AHJR 7 месяцев назад +19

      Yeah you should watch all quiet on the western front if you haven't watched it yet

    • @abelle-zuniga5654
      @abelle-zuniga5654 7 месяцев назад +15

      Unbroken I feel is another one of those movies

    • @colonelb
      @colonelb 7 месяцев назад +11

      Totally agree - this is one of those stories that needs to be told, and history is so much more interesting when it stops being about memorizing dates for a test and starts becoming about meeting the interesting people in history and hearing their stories.

  • @crazycrea1649
    @crazycrea1649 7 месяцев назад +4650

    This is one of the only “based on a true story” films where they had to nerf the main character to make him more believable he saved way more people in real life but they thought people wouldn’t believe it so they nerfed him

    • @jacobsampsonis7782
      @jacobsampsonis7782 7 месяцев назад +218

      Des is OP

    • @megaboy767
      @megaboy767 7 месяцев назад +385

      they were gonna say 100 people, but Doss said he doesn't remember saving that many. They ended up settling at 75

    • @craiglortie8483
      @craiglortie8483 7 месяцев назад

      @@megaboy767 actual count that the army got was 88. there was also a whole scene cut about the tunnels that they cut as "unbelievable". that was where the couple of "japs" where brought from.

    • @flashxdoe295
      @flashxdoe295 7 месяцев назад +366

      irl when he was on the stretcher he got off it so someone else could use it

    • @mage1439
      @mage1439 7 месяцев назад +144

      I'm pretty sure he was already a hero by the time they got to Hacksaw Ridge.

  • @typicalswine7779
    @typicalswine7779 7 месяцев назад +1804

    Fun fact for ya Alex, you questioned how much of it was real because it's "based" on a true story. Well, they actually left out a LOT of what Desmond did in his time in the military in order to make it actually be more believable to the general public. He had already been on 3 different battlefields before he hit Hacksaw Ridge, and the members of his company had huge respect for him already by the time he got to that point. When they went to look for his bible, it wasn't just an instant thing, they had such respect for Desmond that they looked for 3 days to find his bible and get it back to him.

    • @ryanmathison3608
      @ryanmathison3608 7 месяцев назад +40

      Wasn’t Doss in the 77th ID? The Old Bastards? Just watched another video on YT about them.

    • @typicalswine7779
      @typicalswine7779 7 месяцев назад +36

      @@ryanmathison3608 he sure was! 307th regiment, 77th division!

    • @andersonjoshua18
      @andersonjoshua18 7 месяцев назад +58

      The biggest thing they changed was him enlisting. He actually got drafted but he had a job that excused him from the draft but he went anyway.

    • @poseidenforceccj2528
      @poseidenforceccj2528 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@ryanmathison3608TFE I assume. And yeah, he was.

    • @PsychoMantis308
      @PsychoMantis308 7 месяцев назад +38

      My great grandfather was on Hacksaw with Doss and I wish he was alive to see this film. He died in 1995

  • @Tigerlilygurl1
    @Tigerlilygurl1 7 месяцев назад +1174

    The fact the creators of the movie actually TONED DOWN Doss's feats still blows my mind. The army's number showed Doss saved close to 150 people. Doss humbly disagreed stating it couldn't have been more than 50. They decided to compromise on the number of 75 saved. Just at Okinawa. He actually served a lot longer than that, all without carrying a gun, while starving due to being a vegetarian. He was eventually discharged because his legs got shredded. He contracted TB while in recovery as well. At least two japanese soldiers experienced weapon malfunction while attempting to kill Doss. Everytime they would aim at him and pull the trigger the gun would jam. Aimed somewhere else and fired, gun worked, aimed back at Doss, weapon jammed. Then all the reports of men refusing to go in to the field without Doss praying for them. One time, two squads, one consisting of Doss went out. The squad without Doss, not a single man returned. When Doss's squad returned, they asked how many they lost. They couldn't believe it when 0 casualties were reported from Doss's squad. Near the end when he was officially removed from active combat, in his final battle, his legs were so shredded he could no longer walk, and he ended up with a broken arm. He splinted his arm with a broken rifle barrel he found. And while crawling, he continued to treat injured soldiers. He consistently surrendered his own stretcher for other wounded men. Including one time they were carrying him off the field and he demanded the medics stop and take another soldier first. At one point, he lost his bible in the field and was heartbroken. The men in his squad went straight back to an active warzone and searched for 3 days to find his bible. Go watch the Conscientious Objector documentary on YT. If you are interested in Doss, it is the best source of info.

    • @ItsAlannaBanana
      @ItsAlannaBanana 7 месяцев назад +73

      That documentary is amazing, I highly recommend it too. The amount of humbleness this man had too, was as incredible as his feats.

    • @chrissyschnittert7574
      @chrissyschnittert7574 6 месяцев назад +18

      He’s has to be like a descendant of god or Jesus at least.

    • @АлександрКузьмин-ф5и
      @АлександрКузьмин-ф5и 6 месяцев назад +5

      😢🙏Saint

    • @mrbot8015
      @mrbot8015 5 месяцев назад +4

      You could just write the last sentences.... Don't have to write a whole essay just to tell us to watch a documentary😂

    • @Tigerlilygurl1
      @Tigerlilygurl1 5 месяцев назад +32

      @mrbot8015 Because I want people to have a basic understanding of this amazing hero. Not everybody will watch the documentary. Most everybody who reads this will appreciate the info, and some may be more compelled to go and actually watch it. Versus just saying "Hey, everybody should watch this."

  • @madison.w8615
    @madison.w8615 7 месяцев назад +424

    its funny Alex you said you were surprised Desmond didn’t get off the stretcher to help other wounded men… in real life he did. As he was being carried off he passed another soldier who was badly wounded and Desmond rolled himself off the stretcher and demanded the other soldier be taken first. While he waited for another stretcher, he crawled to another wounded soldier and helped him. This was also not the first battle Desmond had been in though it’s the one he’s most famous for, Desmond saved far more lives in other battles that the movie didn’t mention

    • @jasonnewman1118
      @jasonnewman1118 3 месяца назад +23

      It's crazy to think how amazing Desmond was. In the film it looked like he carried just like 20-30 men when in reality like the credits mentioned he carried 75 men down hacksaw ridge. They only showed that many because they thought people wouldn't believe it. Des was the real deal man. Incredible soldier.

    • @Mr-Noro
      @Mr-Noro 2 месяца назад +4

      @@jasonnewman1118 the army said he saved over 100, but he said it couldn't have been over 50, so they settled at middle ground 75

    • @jasonnewman1118
      @jasonnewman1118 2 месяца назад

      @Mr-Noro I heard about this. I actually do believe it but saving that amount of people is already absurd.

    • @Mr-Noro
      @Mr-Noro 2 месяца назад

      @@jasonnewman1118 Of course that's absurd, he was incredible, I was saying he could have been even more incredible that we think if the army was right

    • @MelHyde
      @MelHyde 20 дней назад

      Amazing

  • @sjholmesbrown
    @sjholmesbrown 7 месяцев назад +380

    39:20 Apparently a Japanese sniper interviewed after the war said he had Doss dead to rights in his scope multiple times, only to have his rifle jam each time he tried to take the shot.

    • @kernabrahambarrios8840
      @kernabrahambarrios8840 2 месяца назад +12

      Damn that gun...
      I remeber they are shes in the army, oml. That gun was unfaithful. XD

    • @insanity2477
      @insanity2477 2 месяца назад

      @@kernabrahambarrios8840English please?

    • @CacD47
      @CacD47 Месяц назад +2

      Those guns sucked because they weren't made in America.

    • @EXOH-le5vx
      @EXOH-le5vx Месяц назад +21

      God was protecting him that is the most amazing thing in the world

    • @JohnMarston-lo5qk
      @JohnMarston-lo5qk Месяц назад +1

      @@EXOH-le5vx not really lol

  • @TripleTapHK
    @TripleTapHK 7 месяцев назад +1282

    "But you didn't kill him?"
    "In my heart I did."
    That line hits so damn hard.

    • @PhilandSofia
      @PhilandSofia 7 месяцев назад +45

      For a Christian this is important. Many people will say “but I didn’t do it”; yet God sees and takes into account the thoughts and feelings, He does not accept the mediocre

    • @bonkey12
      @bonkey12 7 месяцев назад +13

      @@PhilandSofia As coming from someone who isnt religious, what you just explained is another jonestown. so being mediocre isnt being faithful? "yet god sees and takes into account the thoughts and feelings" The god you worship gave you the "free will" killing someone isnt the same as "i could"..... what you just said is pretty much.... i hate say it, but a cult mindset.

    • @PhilandSofia
      @PhilandSofia 7 месяцев назад +17

      @@bonkey12 ANSWER TO THE POINTS YOU MAKE:
      no one is killing or judging anyone for thinking about murder, Jonestown is a wild allegation.
      Mediocrity is self explaining, “half believing”, like when Peter was walking on water and he doubted for a second and started sinking, Jesus himself says “Oh man of little faith”
      Everyone has free will to perfect themselves, and God sees how much you “try” not how much you “achieve”.
      In a particular prayer we ask forgiveness for sins of “thoughts, words, actions and omissions” and the level of sin (venial or mortal).
      God doesn’t accept mediocrity into heaven, so when we die with venial sin we go to purgatory to atone and burn that off; if we die with mortal/capital unrepentant sin we go to hell.

    • @desertsn0wball
      @desertsn0wball 7 месяцев назад +6

      No one ever thinks or remembers that killing someone in your heart is a terrible thing to hold.

    • @jumbojumbo6866
      @jumbojumbo6866 6 месяцев назад +8

      @@bonkey12 a cult who teaches good in people's heart and you refer to the jonestown massacre about some dude who makes himself prideful by using his people as a classification to his own needs? dude read the history of jonestown and its people and the differences from them and the bible because the bible doesn't showcase jesus putting his people lower than him.

  • @DoubleAA_Editor
    @DoubleAA_Editor 7 месяцев назад +1781

    Hey guys, Editor here! I really hope you guys like the reaction! This is one of my favorite movies of all time and this honestly might be one of my favorite videos on the channel as well, so I truly hope you enjoy it!
    Much love!

    • @Kevin.Costner.
      @Kevin.Costner. 7 месяцев назад +9

      1 Seconds in Absolute Cinema Edits 🙌 ~ Martin Scorsese Meme

    • @quietlyworking
      @quietlyworking 7 месяцев назад +11

      👏Your edits are always great but this one is absolutely spectacular! You took one of the greatest movies and edited it while retaining all the feeling. Fantastic work @DoubleAA_Editor 🙏

    • @martinsandt1135
      @martinsandt1135 7 месяцев назад +3

      👍👊

    • @olliewalls1903
      @olliewalls1903 7 месяцев назад +5

      Keep up the great work man! Best editor ever 👊🏼

    • @Mustang_Chris
      @Mustang_Chris 7 месяцев назад +2

      I loved this, and your editing always seems top-notch quality.

  • @BilboSwaggeens
    @BilboSwaggeens 7 месяцев назад +756

    2:24 My man, your ancestors should be proud that you're able to live a relatively peaceful life. My grandfather served in the Vietnam war, and before he passed, he told me "If you never have to see war, I'll have done my job."
    He didn't fight so future generations would just keep it going. He fought so we wouldn't have to. Don't be ashamed of that, be proud of the foundations we're standing on.

    • @mage1439
      @mage1439 7 месяцев назад +27

      Absolutely. These men did what they needed to do for the future of the world, and would not want to think about their grandchildren having to go through what they went through.

    • @joshbull623
      @joshbull623 7 месяцев назад +12

      ​@@mage1439 Sadly, the truth of reality is that this pretty much will never be the case. My brother in law and uncle served in the Gulf War, then I got to go over during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, and now my nephew is over there in the Gulf with the Navy. 10 years before that was more or less the same too. Sorry, we don't call them wars anymore so we can lie and say "we haven't been at war since WWII": UN & or EU- NATO sanctioned operations. The future I fought so hard for looks a lot like the one my boomer parents left is all I am saying, things just move faster.
      It is such a horrible reality to realize that when you get back from that madness 1. You don't get to rest 2. VA and Congress seem almost intentionally trying to delete you and withhold benefits in favor for those who contributed nothing & 3. You will absolutely watch your children, nieces, and nephews go into the 'same', not to be confused with similar, but same madness in the same place as you did. Its so disheartening. I trained and deployed with members of the UK, Australia, & Canada(NATO, no surprise) and so I keep in touch with them and from what I can tell, it is not exclusive to the US so I don't even get to cling to that fantasy to try to feel better.

    • @zbanul10
      @zbanul10 7 месяцев назад +4

      Unfortunately we shouldn’t have gone to Vietnam and I respect all soldiers just not the power.

    • @bdoeden64
      @bdoeden64 7 месяцев назад +2

      Well said.

    • @lordkabal2010
      @lordkabal2010 7 месяцев назад +2

      Wow that literally brought a lump to my throat.....wise words....so powerful of words that they should be in all scriptures of religion

  • @bamachine
    @bamachine 7 месяцев назад +458

    Met Mr. Doss a few years before he passed, in the town where he retired, Piedmont, AL. I was doing some IT work at a hardware store there and he came in to buy something. The owner introduced me to him as a WW2 hero. Mr. Doss kind of "aww, shucks" about the praise. I meant to look him up that evening, when I got home but as often happens, you forget about these things. It was not until this movie came out and I saw it that I remembered wanting to look him up.

    • @alexhefnerstvmovievault
      @alexhefnerstvmovievault  7 месяцев назад +75

      Such a cool experience!

    • @davidnoel2977
      @davidnoel2977 3 месяца назад +11

      Respect. He was a true hero. Mobile, Alabama right here. I knew he was here in the state before he passed but I never got the opportunity to meet him. I bet it was a great experience to meet him.

  • @wandererthewolf
    @wandererthewolf 3 месяца назад +75

    I served in the Army as a Mortuary Affairs specialist for ten years. After my third tour I watched this movie in theaters by myself. At the end I started crying because all I could think was I saved no one, I just sent them home. There were these two girls that turned around and saw and started laughing at me. But it was okay because they didn't know. I just wish I could have saved one of the people I sent in a transfer case...
    I actually started crying again watching this...

    • @daymenpollet4202
      @daymenpollet4202 2 месяца назад

      Sorry to hear that and thank u for ur service. A shame that these maggots just laughed. They should have been the ones seeing what u saw and it would be the only way to make these poorons have some manners instead of growing up with a pillow.

    • @lunacouer
      @lunacouer Месяц назад +7

      There's families you helped find comfort and peace by getting their loved ones home to them. In a way, you were saving their lives. You did good and right by them. Thank you.

    • @wandererthewolf
      @wandererthewolf 27 дней назад

      @@lunacouer thank you

  • @1ivanesku
    @1ivanesku 7 месяцев назад +659

    Garfield said he tried to do what he did and really carry bodies into safety... he was completely fucked after 2-3 tries... imagine the superhuman power the real man showed!

    • @robertflores2282
      @robertflores2282 7 месяцев назад +15

      And he didn’t have the biggest frame either. Like how??

    • @thomassamuels710
      @thomassamuels710 7 месяцев назад +76

      @@robertflores2282yea but farm boy strength ain’t no joke.

    • @thanossnap4170
      @thanossnap4170 7 месяцев назад +65

      @@thomassamuels710 And adrenaline is a hell of a thing. Not downplaying Doss heroics in any way shape or form, though. Man was a superhero.

    • @angelguerrero7655
      @angelguerrero7655 7 месяцев назад +11

      Damn straight. Desmond Doss is what every man aspires to be. And how proud I am as an American to know he was that strong, not only for his countrymen, but also for the opposition; Rest in Peace Desmond. I can only hope to fulfill a fraction of what he's accomplished, and I'd be happy for that fraction. I hope we can meet past the pearl gates🙏🏽

    • @stormangelus6638
      @stormangelus6638 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@thomassamuels710AMEN!

  • @Ignis930
    @Ignis930 7 месяцев назад +543

    Fun fact:
    Desmond’s true number of people saved was over a hundred but he didn’t want to take the credit and they negotiated with him to bring the official number down to 75 so he would accept the award.

    • @PROVOCATEURSK
      @PROVOCATEURSK 7 месяцев назад +2

      It was not god´s perfect plan to save them therefore Desmond is burning in hell forever :)

    • @milkman9560
      @milkman9560 7 месяцев назад +39

      @@PROVOCATEURSKI’m an atheist but the Bible states that satan runs the world. And with god, u can overcome him. Desmond overcame war (satanic) and did god’s work (saving people)
      Quit being edgy Bruh

    • @melsuppatlol4565
      @melsuppatlol4565 7 месяцев назад +19

      ​@@milkman9560 lol he failed in trolling, god bless you man

    • @AdeptusCaeiusIII
      @AdeptusCaeiusIII 6 месяцев назад +9

      @@milkman9560 I normally respond to such responses with 'Don't feed the trolls', but that was comment jiu jitsu.

  • @thewillofd4417
    @thewillofd4417 7 месяцев назад +729

    I had to immediately click on this, genuinely one of my favorite movies of all time.

    • @Don_RB
      @Don_RB 7 месяцев назад +1

      Same mate

    • @1971tallica
      @1971tallica 7 месяцев назад +5

      Same clicked as soon as I saw it .

    • @Kevin.Costner.
      @Kevin.Costner. 7 месяцев назад +1

      Yemmy Get 1 more🥺

    • @jackphillips8492
      @jackphillips8492 7 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah it’s so underrated

    • @Mrnumber
      @Mrnumber 7 месяцев назад

      Same

  • @Mattywear1984
    @Mattywear1984 5 месяцев назад +39

    I knew the Doss's my entire life. My grandfather and Mr Doss built the church he attended on Lookout mountain where he lived. I was lucky enough to spend many weekends after church in their living room listening to him tell stories.

    • @DeeC5208
      @DeeC5208 5 дней назад

      That’s beautiful. It must have been wonderful and inspiring to know someone who was genuinely just a good person.

  • @Metzwerg74
    @Metzwerg74 7 месяцев назад +53

    the performance of that war torn dad.. is one of the best acting in recent movie history... in my opinion....
    you can really feel how he was shattered to see his son wear that uniform at the dinner scene
    like him and his friends, when they enlisted... young and proud and dashing....
    he already saw his son like his friends.. dead. and that hurt him even more than the memory of hs fallen friends...
    yet he went to help his son fulfill his dream, putting back on the uniform, that made him endure so much loss...
    it only shows, how much he really loves his sons.....
    he just is too torn to show that everyday.....

  • @Dwendele
    @Dwendele 7 месяцев назад +415

    Desmond's father was in WWI... the most horrific war in modern history. Easy to see his emotions around anything "war".

    • @igorpodemski9596
      @igorpodemski9596 7 месяцев назад +15

      I don't wanna be the kinda guy that will downput the horrors people must have went through during WW1 BUT WW2 was twice as bad and the death toll was a lot larger. Not to mention the people that had died in the death camps.

    • @Dwendele
      @Dwendele 7 месяцев назад +55

      @@igorpodemski9596 nah... WWI and it's trench warfare was truly horrific. Plus you have to remember the Spanish flu was devastating Europe at the same time.
      I'd fight in WWII conditions multiple times rather that have to be stuck in a muddy, rat, shit and piss infested trench with NO WAY to get even a tiny break for MONTHS sometimes from the conditions in addition to virtually non stop artillery barrages (which any war veteran will tell you is just about the most terrifying thing you can live through).
      OH.... and let's toss in chemical warfare on top of it all... Chlorine gas, which is a nasty way to go. Or Mustard gas, which is a blister agent. A couple droplets on your arm will raise a fluid filled blister on your arm, the size of a half an American football. Imagine that over any exposed skin, mouth, eyes, nostrils, and lungs... Downing you to death. Not even going to mention the nerve gas. Chemical biological and nuclear weapons detection and decontamination is what I specialized in, in the Army. That shit TERRIFIES me.
      Nope... I'd rather get sent to just about ANY other war than the trenches of WWI.

    • @igorpodemski9596
      @igorpodemski9596 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@Dwendele I ain't saying that it wasn't horrific. I'm saying that you saying that it was the most horrific war in modern history is objectively a lie.

    • @XXXTENTAClON227
      @XXXTENTAClON227 7 месяцев назад +32

      @@igorpodemski9596 this is a bit inaccurate. I understand the belief that WW2 caused more death but that was due to the massacres committed by Imperial Japan, Nazi Germany and the USSR. The comment above is still correct.
      To believe otherwise is to dismiss the significance of chemical warfare and mechanisation. There was initially no tanks, no “blitzkrieg”, in fact most European countries just surrendered due to the threats made by the German Luftwaffe.
      Consider the fact that Europe accomplished the same amount of death in WW1 as WW2, even though there was no genocide (excluding the Ottomans) or fascism, nor any dramatic change in borders.
      It’s no contest.

    • @Dwendele
      @Dwendele 7 месяцев назад +12

      @@igorpodemski9596 objectly a "LIE"? Hardly.... Ask any war historian, or even most veterans.
      Yes, more people died in WWII and the treatment of POW's and civilians was truly horrible. I am talking specifically about what the individual soldiers went through.
      So a lie? Absolutely NOT.
      I will meet you halfway and say WWII was subjectively worse.

  • @cjclark1318
    @cjclark1318 7 месяцев назад +176

    Desmond’s father’s character is the embodiment of a hurt person is capable of hurting people, the mother says he was a good man before the war and the war ravaged is soul, took away his brothers, took away optimism in life and left him with nothing but survivors guilt and grief fueled by alcoholism, but at the same time is a man capable of respecting and honoring his sons dreams beliefs and decisions that directly conflict with his own beliefs and fears…and Hugo weaving played the character brilliantly.

  • @GrumpyOldGuyPlaysGames
    @GrumpyOldGuyPlaysGames 7 месяцев назад +179

    The real Desmond Doss has been recognized as the greatest combat medic in the history of the US Army. This was not his first battle, but his last. Over his entire time in the Army he saved somewhere near 300 people. And while the officicial record says he saved 75 lives on Hacksaw Ridge, the actual number was closer to 150... its just that he only claimed 50 while several witnesses put the number at much higher. He really was one of the bravest humans to ever live.
    The hospital at Schofield Barracks in Hawaii was renamed after him, as was the municipal hospital of Lynchberg, Virginia. He's got a statue in his home town.
    Not bad for a kid who had balls so big he had to carry them in a wheelbarrow.

    • @PROVOCATEURSK
      @PROVOCATEURSK 7 месяцев назад +1

      It´s not brave when you think you get rewarded by dying. Or are the su1c1de b0mbears brave too?

  • @maingate7672
    @maingate7672 7 месяцев назад +83

    ''I'm surprised he didn't get off the stretcher and save people...'' That's just it, he did!

    • @juupajuu60
      @juupajuu60 6 месяцев назад +2

      I was gonna say, he actually did lol

  • @micheletrainor1601
    @micheletrainor1601 7 месяцев назад +43

    You might interest you to know that Desmond Doss had tuberculosis at the time of hacksaw ridge so he had to stiffle his coughing so as not to give away his location while finding injured soldiers he was diagnosed while in the V.A hospital and lost a lung to it. I highly recommend his autobiography as its absolutely incredible as they had to tone it down and base it on only one battle he was involved in. It took nearly 3 days to find his bible and his brothers in arms would not rest till they found it other battalions joined in the search because of what he did for them all. His story is still taught to recruits to this day to show what one man is capable of if he truly believes he can. Honestly read or listen to the autobiography it will absolutely blow your mind.

  • @alexanderthered5603
    @alexanderthered5603 7 месяцев назад +144

    Obligatory comment for this movie before I watch. He did so many amazing things that Mel Gibson chose to not add them into the movie because he felt the audience wouldn't believe it.
    In other words, this movie is the watered down version of what actually happened. His feats were that incredible.

    • @mage1439
      @mage1439 7 месяцев назад +24

      There was also the fact that Japanese guns would not shoot him. Now, if you want to say God or want to say it was because of how shoddy their equipment was, that's up to you, but it's a fact that Japanese soldiers have talked about having him in their sights and their guns not firing.

    • @alexanderthered5603
      @alexanderthered5603 7 месяцев назад +13

      @@mage1439 Yeah I have to give God credit for that honestly.

    • @epsome13
      @epsome13 5 месяцев назад +1

      As was said in john wick 2 " no matter what stories you have heard about this man, at best they have been watered down."

  • @jlgibson001
    @jlgibson001 7 месяцев назад +143

    Haven't seen if this has already been said in the comments. Desmond was told he'd rescued over 100 men that night. He didn't believe it. He said it couldn't have been more than 50. So, they split the difference when they gave him his medal, making the official number 75.

  • @joshuacraig6447
    @joshuacraig6447 7 месяцев назад +11

    As a veteran who was deployed to Iraq, I encourage to not feel bad for never serving. The thing you could feel is thankfulness for never having to go to war. I am thankful your grandfather did what he did so you could do what you do. I appreciate you, brother.

  • @CombatMonkey11B
    @CombatMonkey11B 5 месяцев назад +9

    As someone who retired from the Army, and served in combat as an Infantryman and on Specialized teams (Scout platoon reconnaissance etc..) I’ve always had a tremendous amount of love and respect for our medics. Medics saved my life at least 2 times (probably more, but 2 I definitely would be dead situations). They are always called “Doc” by the platoons, despite not being “Doctors.” You’ll be hard pressed to find grunts who don’t love their medics.

  • @TheGloryOfMan
    @TheGloryOfMan 7 месяцев назад +93

    He was not stabbed when playing dead, Alex. He checks himself to make sure, and he was okay....for the time being. Great reaction, glad you watched this one.

    • @DefileOdds
      @DefileOdds 7 месяцев назад

      I was about to say nobody tell him lol

  • @Khay-77
    @Khay-77 7 месяцев назад +173

    Easily my favorite Hugo Weaving performance. He should have been nominated for this, it's crazy he wasn't.

    • @crystalk98
      @crystalk98 7 месяцев назад +3

      He's fantastic in everything he's been in, but yes, I too think he should've been nominated for his role in this!

    • @rick-vista1612
      @rick-vista1612 7 месяцев назад +2

      Getting a nomination for Hugo Weaving would have meant to bump Jeff Bridges, Lucas Hedges, Dev Patel, Michael Shannon (my personal favorite that year) or Mahershala Ali (winner) out, its not crazy its just a top 5 list with no specific order except for number 1, I would have bumped out Lucas Hedges xD

    • @mindime1499
      @mindime1499 7 месяцев назад +1

      Agreed! The best effing performance I've ever seen of his

    • @PowerDiva
      @PowerDiva 7 месяцев назад +5

      This is a hill I've been willing to d** on since this movie came out. I know that means taking one of the other nominees out of the running. I'd be fine with taking any one of them out for Hugo Weaving (though to be fair, I didn't see Michael Shannon's performance that year). But I also would have picked Andrew Garfield over Casey Affleck, so my taste it seems is in the minority.

    • @Khay-77
      @Khay-77 7 месяцев назад +2

      @PowerDiva I agree, and Casey mumbles his way through 80% of his lines, and I enjoyed Andrew's performance way more in this than his.

  • @sheds
    @sheds 7 месяцев назад +60

    I actually was part of the same church Desmond was in (Seventh-Day Adventist), I met him quite a few times in church growing up. Super kind and nice person, this movie is amazing, and it still doesn't come close to depicting what an incredible person he was.

    • @PROVOCATEURSK
      @PROVOCATEURSK 7 месяцев назад +1

      Do they teach you to avoid heaven and sin with Satan on Earth for as long as possible?

  • @braddeicide
    @braddeicide 6 месяцев назад +13

    "The film omits his prior combat service in the Battle of Guam and Battle of Leyte. Doss was awarded the Bronze Star Medal for extraordinary bravery in both battles."
    He did it multiple times

  • @darrelllankford3014
    @darrelllankford3014 7 месяцев назад +13

    I served in the Navy Seabees. We went through a basic rescue course. That knot, the "bra" is still taught to this day. It supports the body weight by holding the legs and then circled around the chest to lower people down just like the movie

  • @illam9500
    @illam9500 7 месяцев назад +64

    If you pay attention to the first attack too you see that Smitty was born to be a soldier. He was the MVP there fr. From picking up a torso as a shield to get closer to the enemy, to blowing up the bunker when another soldier died trying, to going with Daws into the night to find other wounded. Guy was a beast

    • @lucsabourin1129
      @lucsabourin1129 5 месяцев назад +5

      He certainly was a bit of a sociopath, which is advantageous in war. As General Sherman once said, "war is cruelty. There is no point in reforming it. The crueler it is the sooner it will be over."
      There are reasons that aspd hasn't been selected out of our species; I believe warfare is among those reasons.

    • @illam9500
      @illam9500 5 месяцев назад +5

      @@lucsabourin1129 I feel like that's an unfair way people like to look at people like him. He had a pretty rough life too and that's easily how we can deduce his numbness. It's not like he was apathetic tho. He just knew how to turn off the switch and make himself either a little less or a little more human.

  • @mage1439
    @mage1439 7 месяцев назад +68

    No matter how many times I watch this movie I end up a blubbering mess by the end. The fact that the movie downplays the things Desmond did because nobody would believe the full extent of it is just amazing.
    Also, it's a war crime to intentionally target medics, but the Japanese in WW2 were specifically told to do exactly that.

    • @michaelatteberry6462
      @michaelatteberry6462 7 месяцев назад +3

      Not to excuse them but, the Japanese did not sign the Geneva Convention rules of war

    • @painvillegaming4119
      @painvillegaming4119 14 дней назад

      @@michaelatteberry6462to be fair this is a culture all about honor but you attack unarmed man is the opposite

  • @timstaska9418
    @timstaska9418 7 месяцев назад +17

    KP is kitchen patrol, basically it’s a punishment by making you get up earlier than everyone else and help the cooks in the kitchen by cleaning dishes, setting up, handing out food, clean up and all that. Generally used to punish soldiers that are in trouble for minor things or it can be used as an inconvenience to that soldier to change behavior.

  • @brandonbumby2356
    @brandonbumby2356 7 месяцев назад +7

    It was one of the few movies I genuinely cried. I've read so many stories about Doss and other war stories lost in time. To hear the bravery and selfless made me proud to serve. This movie is a small glimpse of heroism in the war.

  • @jamesh2401
    @jamesh2401 7 месяцев назад +69

    It didn't make your cut but when he's talking to his dad besides the graves, his dad says "and if by some miracle you survive, you won't be giving no thanks to God." Hugo Weaving absolutely nailed his role, that line is so powerful.

  • @lilychris811
    @lilychris811 7 месяцев назад +49

    Do you know how fn refreshing it is to hear someone say "You know I can't even have an opinion on that scene ~ that seems so complicated."

  • @3r1kofficial
    @3r1kofficial 7 месяцев назад +72

    Now hold on just a minute...I know y'all did NOT use Dylan's face to censor Private Hollywood's ass 🤣

  • @robertcrundwell2782
    @robertcrundwell2782 Месяц назад +1

    Hello, Alex. Former Navy Corpsman/Marine Medic here. Stationed in SE Asia 71-73 during Vietnam. Every time I see this movie, it brings back memories I have stored away. I really enjoyed your reaction.
    Please read Desmond's complete story to learn more about him. He actually saved closer to 120, but the Army settled on 75 because they thought people wouldn't believe the full amount.
    You mentioned him getting off the stretcher to save someone else. He actually did because the other soldier was worse.

  • @Cygnusart0843
    @Cygnusart0843 7 месяцев назад +10

    16:57 KP duty means "kitchen police" or "kitchen patrol". They work under the kitchen staff assigned to junior U.S. enlisted military personnel. "KP" can be either the work or the personnel assigned to perform such work.

  • @stoneybones4583
    @stoneybones4583 7 месяцев назад +37

    This is legit the only movie that makes me cry every time I watch it. Just the sheer sense of passion, emotion, and validation in your motives this movie/story portrays gets me

  • @ixix1460
    @ixix1460 7 месяцев назад +32

    I watched this movie two weeks ago and couldn't stop crying. It was such a good movie... I can't even put it into words...

    • @ozarkscarguy540
      @ozarkscarguy540 7 месяцев назад +3

      I won't get better any other time you watch it. I've seen it dozens of times and cry every single time.

  • @Matthew_Wood
    @Matthew_Wood 7 месяцев назад +57

    This is genuinely one of my favourite movies

  • @LostButMakingGoodTime
    @LostButMakingGoodTime 7 месяцев назад +29

    11 minutes in, and I’m confident declaring this your best reaction ever. Thank you.

    • @alexhefnerstvmovievault
      @alexhefnerstvmovievault  7 месяцев назад +7

      Same opinion after the full watch through?

    • @LostButMakingGoodTime
      @LostButMakingGoodTime 7 месяцев назад +6

      Yes. I love the emotion that the most powerful moments in good films bring out in you, but this was definitely next level. And deservedly so. Incredible portrayal of an amazing story. Thanks again.

  • @1971tallica
    @1971tallica 7 месяцев назад +79

    They actually down played what Desmond did , he actually did get off the stretcher for a more seriously wounded man, treated wounded, got shot in the arm and crawled 300 meters to safety on his own. That is just one of the many instances not shown. Also not show are the 2 previous campaigns he served in with those being Guam and The Philippines where he was awarded the bronze star for valor under fire while saving men's lives there as well. He was 100% prime example of The Greatest Generation !

  • @damianni5840
    @damianni5840 3 месяца назад +4

    I wanna become a nurse someday and this movie makes me want to help people more. It’s so moving and so true. There will never be a better feeling than helping others in need

  • @johnnyparsnips7641
    @johnnyparsnips7641 7 месяцев назад +63

    I'm not sure if it's just me, but I've watched this movie countless times, but only am I now just noticing, that in the opening sequence the voice of the soldier helping Desmond is heavily distorted and sounds like his Father.
    So even on (what he thought was) his death bed, he was still thinking of him

  • @odinravenghast1246
    @odinravenghast1246 7 месяцев назад +20

    My father fought in World War II and died just 7 years ago. I have his old army jacket, medals and even some things from the enemy. The stories that I could tell. It’s heart-renching and inspiring.
    You’re correct, Alex, we have no idea how good our life is.

  • @TheSilverJedi
    @TheSilverJedi 7 месяцев назад +25

    20:21 This is one of my favorite scenes in the movie. Given how severe his PTSD is, the strength and courage and love that it took to put that uniform back on is amazing. Maybe the first miracle done on behalf of Desmond’s conviction, to make his father do that even when he was so against his son’s decision.

  • @safespacebear
    @safespacebear 7 месяцев назад +4

    When he has his moment of doubt and prays for a sign and a moment later you hear "MEDIC!" always gets me

  • @VonRye
    @VonRye 2 месяца назад +2

    My great grandfather was an Army Medic in WWI. He won a Distinguished Service Cross (would have been a Medal of Honor but he didnt carry a weapon) for extraordinary heroism in action while serving near Brandeville, France, November 8 - 10, 1918. He showed utter disregard for his own personal danger in giving first aid to wounded and carrying them to a place of safety, under intense machine-gun and shell fire. I only met him as a baby, but I have loads of pictures from when he served.

  • @boomsoldier9267
    @boomsoldier9267 7 месяцев назад +36

    Fun fact: the division/ company that Desmond was in were called “the old bastards”. The fat electrician made a video about them.

    • @xtrmfc
      @xtrmfc 7 месяцев назад +2

      Glad you mentioned The Fat Electrician… His stories are fantastic… Everyone needs to check him out .. He tells a great story with his own comedic spin..

  • @baconsoup1864
    @baconsoup1864 7 месяцев назад +18

    I learned this story a little while ago and its one of my favorites. Its not considered a christian movie but i consider it one over most of them, Desmond Doss is a testament of never laying down your faith and God's will. People in the war that were on the other side of it testified to trying to fire at Doss and their guns jamming up, they would turn fire at someone else and it fire but when they aimed at Doss again they gun would lock up. Doss's testimony is one worth looking into because this story doesnt do it a justice. I love the way you talked about the resemblence between Doss and Christ because as we follow after God's heart and his will and believe and act as he tells us to we quite literally start to resemble Christ for others. Doss's story is up there with some of my favorites along with the preacher on the titanic who gave away his life vest to someone else and said "you need this more than i do, im not going under i know where im going" and he spent his last hours swimming around to all the people and making sure they were saved, and John G. Lake who went to people with the plague and healed them, people told him he was crazy but he challenged them and scientists on the field literally put some of the plagued tissue in his hand and watched it shrivel up and die. Truly remarkable what God can do through one person, never lay God down on the line of compromise and he won't let you go down without changing everyone around you.

  • @isndrde
    @isndrde 7 месяцев назад +35

    13:15
    Caught me off guard with the @Dylanisintrouble face on the butt of Hollywood that i legit had to double back and make sure i saw correctly 😂😂😂

    • @billygregory1547
      @billygregory1547 7 месяцев назад +2

      Same 😂but also like i’m confused are they like rivals when it comes to movie commentary channels or maybe just cuz they sorta look alike. Like i’m trying to figure out what’s going on there 😂😂😂

    • @ItsAlannaBanana
      @ItsAlannaBanana 7 месяцев назад +5

      @@billygregory1547people have pointed out that they look alike and it’s kind of become a joke on Alex’s channel, thus Dylan’s face in this video. 😂

  • @djquiz6425
    @djquiz6425 7 месяцев назад +12

    "The Conscientious Objector" is a documentary about Desmond Doss that tells his story even better than this movie. The interview clips of him at the end of the film are taken from that documentary, which can be found on RUclips btw.

  • @nathanielchapman1829
    @nathanielchapman1829 7 месяцев назад +3

    I still remember watching this in theaters with my wife and father in law. When it ended I just sat there for 15 minutes sobbing. They literally were cleaning around us and I had to contain myself. It has become one of my top three favorite movies of all time.

  • @acehole727
    @acehole727 7 месяцев назад +13

    KP stands for Kitchen Patrol, working in the Mess hall for duty usually in Basic training outside of basic there are people specific to that career field in the military.

  • @jamesw5353
    @jamesw5353 7 месяцев назад +15

    Absolutely one of the best true stories and movies of all time. Mel Gibson has some amazing movies and Garfield is such an amazing actor!

  • @stevethepirate2875
    @stevethepirate2875 7 месяцев назад +15

    "War is War and Hell is Hell, and of the two War is worse."- Hawkeye Pierce.

  • @ketchuppacket4437
    @ketchuppacket4437 7 месяцев назад +3

    this is the only movie that makes me cry every time I watch it. Couldn’t be more beautiful

  • @glesnietutty8444
    @glesnietutty8444 7 месяцев назад +3

    Im so glad you watched this movie I cried the first time all the way through. Desmond Doss was the epitomy of what these young medics did to save his fellow soldiers and he did it over and over until it was his turn to be saved
    Andrew Garfield was brilliant as Desmond Doss.

  • @Zankaroo
    @Zankaroo 7 месяцев назад +18

    I postponed playing Helldivers 2 to watch this. This movie is so good, Hugo makes me tear up with his performance as Desmond's dad. You can just see the pain in the man.

  • @AniwayasSong
    @AniwayasSong 7 месяцев назад +5

    Excellent 'Reaction' video Alex.
    USMC Veteran here, two Tours under my Cover (Middle East), and you've hit on practically everything this movie presents. They actually had to reduce all of Desmond's accomplishments, because he and they were so over-the-top extraordinary, the Producer/Director didn't think the audience would believe them to be true.
    A truly inspirational movie of an incredible Man who only wanted to help others, and proved he had the Heart to any and all who served alongside him.

  • @ravensdark99
    @ravensdark99 7 месяцев назад +7

    Biggest balls in the whole Pacific theatre right there.....that guy is the prime example of what someone with conviction is capable of..and like they say in the end..belief is not a joke...that is serious

  • @jessemasters1446
    @jessemasters1446 7 месяцев назад +3

    Yeah this movie is amazing. This one brings 100 percent of all the feels. One of my best friends told me that he was going into the military years ago. I was so mad at him, but he told me he was going as a medic. Thank the Lord he came back and I love him for his service. Thank you Alex for putting this out there.

  • @thetr00per30
    @thetr00per30 7 месяцев назад +5

    it is very important to their father's story that he was a marine and fought at the Batlle of Belleau Wood, look that battle up and it will explain everything. It is where the marines earned the moniker of devil dogs. What their father did and saw will shed light on where he is coming from.

  • @brennanhearn6342
    @brennanhearn6342 7 месяцев назад +17

    The Fat Electrician did a video about the division Doss was a part of. Absolute badasses, highly recommend watching the video. All older men, average age when they went to basic was like 33, they were older than the drill instructors...They were so badass that the marines referred to them as the 77th Marine Division, which I cannot stress enough is a humongous sign of respect, these guys were absolute badasses.

    • @prodigalmarine5772
      @prodigalmarine5772 7 месяцев назад +1

      As a formerly active duty Marine, true story.

  • @doncacique2769
    @doncacique2769 7 месяцев назад +12

    Desmond's unit was also known as the old bastards 77th, it was an experimental unit made out middle aged men, the military wanted to see if older men could be in battle just in case all the younger guys got killed, so they made the 77th just as an experiment and they ended up being the best unit out of all 😂

  • @doinkclown7020
    @doinkclown7020 3 месяца назад +1

    This is the only reaction of yours that I have watched multiple times. Just finished watching this one for the third time. Thanks for all you do homie.

  • @noellannaleah
    @noellannaleah 6 месяцев назад +1

    Every thing that ever happened to him in his life was literally preparing him for that moment, all the abuse, violence, rejection in the military, every bit of “injustice” As well as all the positive things, (of course) his faith, conviction, love. It’s interesting how we watch a character develop and we don’t want them to go through those extremely hard things and yet without them, he wouldn’t have been the man that he was. Through every trial he kept on choosing to be a better man. And without those trials, he wouldn’t have known what he was capable of.

  • @lukepardoe6634
    @lukepardoe6634 7 месяцев назад +14

    Top tier movie. Best war movie.
    1) Hacksaw Ridge
    2) Saving Private Ryan
    3) The Pianist
    4) Schindler‘s list
    5) Braveheart
    Honorable mentions: Jo Jo Rabbit, Blackhawk Down, The Patriot, We Were Soldiers, Jacob the Liar, Apocalypse Now, Full Metal Jacket, Inglourious Basterds, 1917, Fury, the boy in the striped pajamas, and Zero Dark Thirty

    • @joshua55727
      @joshua55727 7 месяцев назад

      0) Grave of the fireflies

    • @braedynlowder1994
      @braedynlowder1994 6 месяцев назад

      Don't forget about Platoon

    • @battleshipradiotv2005
      @battleshipradiotv2005 3 месяца назад

      War Horse. Very moving movie for me personally. Given how most times, animals were my only friends. Combine zat with ze horrors of war, moved me greatly when I first saw it. War can even be cruel to animals.

    • @hfwfilms7716
      @hfwfilms7716 2 месяца назад

      Lone survivor
      13 hours

    • @dhirojbasnet2494
      @dhirojbasnet2494 27 дней назад

      All quiet on the western front.

  • @redcaviar2503
    @redcaviar2503 7 месяцев назад +4

    You should definitely watch the “Unbreakable”Trilogy the performance is so good and the cast is chef’s kiss

  • @OrionStar22
    @OrionStar22 7 месяцев назад +9

    Alex! Idk if others mentioned but at 37:10 he literally saved a "blind" person. One of the best references I saw.

    • @TO-13
      @TO-13 7 месяцев назад

      Like Jesus, yes.

    • @av3nger3
      @av3nger3 7 месяцев назад

      Amazing Grace

  • @joybroman1102
    @joybroman1102 2 месяца назад +1

    This movie is so incredibly moving and inspirational.❤ I cry every time I see it.

  • @ajchad4174
    @ajchad4174 7 месяцев назад +1

    Desmond Doss is buried in my mamma's hometown. I had no idea growing up and now I catch my breath every time I drive on the Desmond Doss memorial way in Piedmont, Al.
    Such a great reaction, hun! Thanks for doing this one

  • @johnnieangel99
    @johnnieangel99 7 месяцев назад +44

    The movie actually does not show the actual number of soldiers saved by Doss. It is actuallly about 75 men.

    • @eatsmylifeYT
      @eatsmylifeYT 7 месяцев назад +13

      But some people say it was more like 150.

    • @Dwendele
      @Dwendele 7 месяцев назад +4

      It doesn't "show" it, but it said it in the captions at the end.

    • @ZackScroggins
      @ZackScroggins 7 месяцев назад +10

      Doss said no more than 50, the army said at least 150, they settled on 75.

  • @mark7s980
    @mark7s980 7 месяцев назад +21

    My drill sergeant thought my issues with him were because he was black. He filed a complaint with the company commander. When asked why I hated black people I told the sergeant "Just because you're racist doesn't mean I am.". Needless to say, they transferred me to another company. Lol
    The first wave of soldiers are brave. The second wave are even braver. Being willing to charge into fire after seeing what happened to the first wave.

    • @crystalk98
      @crystalk98 7 месяцев назад

      So why didn't you like him?

    • @mark7s980
      @mark7s980 7 месяцев назад +7

      @@crystalk98 he seemed to have some issue with me. From the moment I stepped off the cattle car he was on my ass about everything. No matter what I did he found fault. Top of my class and it still wasn't enough. Every sh*t detail that came along, I somehow got assigned. And he blocked every single pass. When I finally asked what his problem with me was, he called me racist and reported me. Gee, why would I have a problem?

    • @thor1829
      @thor1829 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@mark7s980 funny how one douchebag who doesn't like you can be the cause for you not advancing, despite clearly having passed the tests. This same shit happens in academia, where sometimes a single teacher not liking you can be the reason for you not passing courses.

  • @sample.text.
    @sample.text. 7 месяцев назад +3

    Desmond Doss was a true G.
    I love how someone in the comments says they nerfed him in the movie, because that's exactly what they did.
    Dude was a badass through and through.

  • @Zinferbuddy
    @Zinferbuddy 2 месяца назад +1

    Exactly. This movie had me in constant tears and I left wanting to be a better person. One of the best

  • @jacksonkerr2095
    @jacksonkerr2095 3 месяца назад +2

    16:50 "K.P." is a position in the Kitchen involving cooking, cleaning, doing dishes, and other tasks tied with the operation of the kitchen.
    17:35 In this scene Doss is threatened with a court-martial for not obeying orders to handle a rifle. During his training Desmond Doss was given a hard time about it by the other privates, but no charges were filed against him, no official action taken. However, if the military staff had been less understanding, this film depicts an entirely possible series of events which he could have gone through.

  • @Stevarooni
    @Stevarooni 7 месяцев назад +4

    Interesting fact I recently learned from The Fat Electrician...the unit Doss was in is Unit 77, "The Old Bastards", which was an experimental unit that had an average age of 33 compared with conscripts' average age of 23. Their Unit Emblem is a Statue of Liberty patch. Doss was 26 when he went up on the Ridge.

  • @prismatic9890
    @prismatic9890 7 месяцев назад +4

    This one is one of my all time favorites. So glad you reacted to it

  • @Bennerwoo
    @Bennerwoo 7 месяцев назад +6

    Finally I love this movie so much, it makes me cry every single time I see it

  • @msellers13
    @msellers13 2 месяца назад +1

    I watched the first half of this reaction in anticipation of the first shot you see actually go through the back of the dudes head that pops up. Reaction did not disappoint. Lmao

  • @erinmcmanis2304
    @erinmcmanis2304 3 месяца назад +2

    I was so impressed by Desmond Doss that when we had to do an essay in college about someone you saw as a hero, I did him. I was astounded how much was missing from the story.

  • @dariusdoesit
    @dariusdoesit 7 месяцев назад +5

    "13 Hours" one of my favorite war movies of all time

  • @aarontaylor1688
    @aarontaylor1688 7 месяцев назад +4

    I would have to say that "Saving Private Ryan," Full Metal Jacket" or "Heartbreak Ridge" would have to be among my favorite war movies.

  • @ozarkscarguy540
    @ozarkscarguy540 7 месяцев назад +6

    Now watch the Fat Electrician video about the Old Bastards. It's about the men who went up hacksaw with Desmond. They almost all in their 30s when they joined. Desmond was one of the youngest with them.

  • @paulharrison6568
    @paulharrison6568 3 месяца назад +1

    I personally dont like reaction channels but man you legitimatly add something to the experience bravo my man bravo.

  • @supersockmonkey16
    @supersockmonkey16 Месяц назад +1

    10:57 lmaooo i’m cracking up why did you put dylan’s face over that guy doing pull-ups 😂😂😂

  • @IamGrootOG
    @IamGrootOG 7 месяцев назад +10

    "OMG I got 'gooch' bumps" had me ☠️🤣

  • @deano5917
    @deano5917 7 месяцев назад +5

    Being from Okinawa, Hacksaw Ridge looks very different from what the movie shows

  • @clarkbarrett6274
    @clarkbarrett6274 7 месяцев назад +6

    Good on you for treating this story with respect (well some anyway). And good on your Grandpa for being a badass.
    My father, my 2 brothers and myself all served from Vietnam to Desert Storm, to Bosnia, to the Pentagon on 9-11 and Iraq. It's a noble job and one I am proud to have served in. The Army makes lots of mistakes, but it's still a better place, with a higher purpose, to be a part of than most.

  • @okaykatieokay4
    @okaykatieokay4 3 месяца назад +1

    I'm so glad that you watched this movie, Alex! Such a powerful story. And I think you would love 1917 and All Quiet on The Western Front as well.

  • @ReniRN7
    @ReniRN7 3 месяца назад +2

    Watched it 2 days ago, then found this video today. I love it.

  • @BabyJord02
    @BabyJord02 7 месяцев назад +5

    Absolutely amazing movie. I’m glad you’ve watched this. One of my favourite reactors and one of my favourite movies. Let’s goooo

  • @GrungeFreak
    @GrungeFreak 2 месяца назад +4

    Am I crazy or was that Dylan’s face😭 10:57

    • @thea_idris22
      @thea_idris22 Месяц назад

      I had to rewind it cus the first time I was like, wait was that Dylan or him. Cus I think they look KINDA alike not a lot but a little so when I went back I was like yea that's Dylan

  • @victorcervantes8548
    @victorcervantes8548 7 месяцев назад +4

    13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi is my favorite movie of all time.

  • @VadulTharys
    @VadulTharys 3 месяца назад +1

    About died laughing when he said he was surprised Doss did not roll of the stretcher to go save more when Doss actually did do that.

  • @Dkxjcjc
    @Dkxjcjc Месяц назад +1

    Most medics are like * smack in the face* don’t you die on me! But him * grabs and holds down* we’re gonna get your brother and you’re not dying today. You will live at least another day now.

  • @deadpool5928
    @deadpool5928 7 месяцев назад +7

    Hacksaw ridge is an amazing movie.