FIRST TIME WATCHING: We Were Soldiers (2002) REACTION (Movie Commentary)

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 228

  • @dastemplar9681
    @dastemplar9681 Год назад +78

    Critics at first were hard on this movie. Saying the dialogue was too cliched and cheesy. Then the real Hal Moore went public and apologized that his men weren’t being original or creative in their final moments.
    That got the critics to shut up real quick.

  • @benjaminsarles6660
    @benjaminsarles6660 Год назад +13

    The Vietnam Memorial Wall, while a simple piece of architecture, is so impactful and will hurt your soul seeing those names the first time you visit it. It really hits the word Memorial.

    • @Mobius118F
      @Mobius118F 6 месяцев назад

      Black marble this was chosen because when you can read your face will reflect at the same time everything about it is to remember whoever spends even the slightest second They Were Human. They Were someone kid. They Were the same as you.

    • @drunkenmmamaster419
      @drunkenmmamaster419 3 месяца назад

      Yeah i aint gonna lie i got tears in my eyes the first time i seen the monument in DC in middle school
      Both sides were there belive it or not which made it even sader

  • @virginiapudelko6280
    @virginiapudelko6280 Год назад +21

    Hal Moore was not only an excellent soldier but also an amazing husband and father. This true story of the first real battle involving Americans and the Vietnamese that drew us officially into the war is drawn from the real life actions and memories of the men that were there. As for the scene with the wives and the laundry discussion, the woman questioning the laundry only allowing white clothing is using a very deep accent for the northern part of the country, where those kinds of signs were not seen normally.

  • @lawrencedockery9032
    @lawrencedockery9032 Год назад +95

    Hal Moore (played by Mel Gibson) died in 2017 at the age of 94 having retired as a Lieutenant General. For his actions during the Battle of Ia Drang he was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross.
    Bruce Crandall (played by Greg Kinnear) is currently 90 years old and retired as a Lieutenant Colonel. For his actions during the Battle of Ia Drang he was initially awarded the Distinguished Service Cross but that was upgraded to the Medal of Honor by President Bush in 2007.
    Basil Plumley (played by Sam Elliott) died in 2012 at the age of 92 having retired as a Sergeant Major. After his retirement he ran the military hospital at Fort Benning for 15 years.
    Joe Galloway (played by Barry Pepper) died in 2021 at the age of 79. He co-authored the book (with Hal Moore) We Were Soldiers Once...And Young which became a bestseller in 1992. For his actions during the Battle of Ia Drang he was awarded the Bronze Star, the only civilian to win the award during the Vietnam War.
    Ed "Too Tall" Freeman (played by Mark McCraken) died in 2008 at the age of 80 having retired as a Major. For his actions during the Battle of Ian Drang he was nominated for the Medal of Honor but due to a clerical error by his commanding officer was deemed ineligible. He was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross but was eventually awarded the Medal of Honor by President Bush in 2001.
    One man who was in the book (he's actually the guy on the cover of the book) but not in the movie was a man named Rick Rescorla. Rescorla was originally born in Wales and served in the British Army before eventually moving to the US. Her served in Vietnam for a number of years earning a Silver Star, a Bronze Star, and a Purple Heart. After the war he became the head of security for Morgan Stanley at the World Trade Center in New York. He was killed during the 9/11 attacks as he went back into the towers to bring more people to safety

    • @douggetchess4732
      @douggetchess4732 Год назад +11

      Fort Benning was recently renamed Fort Moore in honor of Hal Moore.

    • @Scottie_S
      @Scottie_S Год назад +6

      Thank you Lawrence for posting this. I was close to compiling and posting that, but you saved me here! The story "We were Soliders Once and Young" written by Hal and Joe Galloway is quite the read.

    • @Mister_Belvidere
      @Mister_Belvidere Год назад +6

      Rick Rescorla was a hero on 9/11. He helped evacuate lots of people, and many more would have died that day if not for him.

    • @tonygreene3941
      @tonygreene3941 11 месяцев назад

      Seen an interview with Galloway, the pain of his interaction with the soldier after the broken arrow napalm attack he still carried with him. Horrific

  • @jonathancathey2334
    @jonathancathey2334 Год назад +2

    My Dad serviced in Vietnam, from '69-70. With the 173rd Airborne Brigade. He started out as a R.T.O. (radioman) , when he got a enough seniority in the platoon. He got rid of the radio ( a 25lbs target as he put it) . The Lt put my father as a pointman. For those that don't know what a pointman or point is. It's the first person in a patrol. As you can imagine my father has some interesting stories.

  • @rittherugger160
    @rittherugger160 Год назад +5

    Phosphorus.
    That's what kind of grenade that was. Nasty stuff.
    Great movie.

  • @davidrutherford6311
    @davidrutherford6311 Год назад +2

    I think one of the reasons that Command kept trying to recall Moore was the value his death/capture would have had. Lose a few hundred troops? That can be explained away. Lose a Colonel? Then you have to explain how that happened and why it happened.

  • @JohnThomas-xq6hb
    @JohnThomas-xq6hb 7 месяцев назад

    The head Vietnamese officer, was involved with the movie tell his side.

  • @SharonS-fn2ym
    @SharonS-fn2ym 8 месяцев назад

    These were the very first American troops in Viet Nam. The public knew nothing about it. The average age of an soldier was like 19-21. The “Whites Only” scene is realistic because back then, people in the north were not familiar with the discrimination because very few white people knew any minorities. It wasn’t prejudice, just unfamiliarity. I have watched this movie many times and I want to tell you I’ve enjoyed your reaction more than any I’ve seen.

  • @P-M-869
    @P-M-869 Год назад

    In Feb '63, my father was transferred from Syracuse, NY to Daytona Beach, FL. We drove down and it wasn't until we got into South Carolina did I figure out what a colored restroom was. They were all whitewashed white. We just weren't exposed to this.

  • @kervinmckellar2684
    @kervinmckellar2684 Год назад

    Red tails

  • @coyotej4895
    @coyotej4895 Год назад +73

    My Dad was with the 1st air cav out of Saigon from 72 till they evacuated. He was a Chopper mechanic and Door gunner. R.I.P. Sgt Desparois. Dad, Husband and son. My Hero.

    • @Vassil00
      @Vassil00 11 месяцев назад

      Our Hero.

  • @cyberpunkspacejams
    @cyberpunkspacejams Год назад +50

    If you're looking for more Mel Gibson, RANSOM (1996) is an overlooked, often forgotten, masterpiece from Ron Howard, who directed Apollo 13. It's an edge of your seat experience start to finish.

    • @eslimeyer5621
      @eslimeyer5621 Год назад +4

      Awesome movie!

    • @eslimeyer5621
      @eslimeyer5621 Год назад +1

      Personally, I love all Mel Gibson movies. I haven't watched a single one I didn't like aahhahaha

    • @budoboy1977
      @budoboy1977 Год назад +4

      I agree. Gibson and Gary Sinise are phenomenal in Ransom.

    • @notgivennotgiven7776
      @notgivennotgiven7776 Год назад +1

      Fatman was a good one too

    • @eslimeyer5621
      @eslimeyer5621 Год назад +1

      @@notgivennotgiven7776 oh ya

  • @edgarcia4794
    @edgarcia4794 Год назад +18

    Yes Col. Moore did send the book and photo back with a letter telling her that like his men her man had fought gallantly , and died quickly with no fear.

  • @kregmaffews
    @kregmaffews Год назад +19

    One of the best war movies ever made imo. Excited to watch!
    Edit: Jimmy Nakayama died 3 days later from his burns 😢

    • @drunkenmmamaster419
      @drunkenmmamaster419 3 месяца назад +1

      I know to think he had to live like that for 3 days with horrible burns all over his body .....
      Rip Jimmy

  • @lw3918
    @lw3918 Год назад +22

    My father participated in this battle. Part of the second wave of choppers.

    • @burstingwizard975
      @burstingwizard975 10 месяцев назад +1

      Your father's a hero. A lot of Vietnamese people were saved thanks to men like him

    • @garfnob4832
      @garfnob4832 8 месяцев назад +1

      but what was his opinion of how the movie portrayed the the events?

    • @KingDawg72
      @KingDawg72 8 месяцев назад

      @@burstingwizard975Really? How come?

  • @CorkKNIFE
    @CorkKNIFE Год назад +3

    "Whites only" was a Democrat/Southern thing, she moved from the north for that assignment, she was not familiar with that.

  • @darkglass1
    @darkglass1 Год назад +4

    Full Metal Jacket and Apocalypse Now are works of pure fiction. The people in this movie were real people, not characters. Yes there was some dramatization, but overall these simple characters were real people.

    • @maxsparks5183
      @maxsparks5183 Год назад

      Your point is well taken but not entirely accurate. There is at least one scene in Apocalypse Now that is in fact an accurate telling of an event that occurred during the Viet-Nam War as reported by Michael Herr in his groundbreaking book “Dispatches”. This is the scene at the Do Lung Bridge where they have “gooks on the wire” and call for “The Roach” to take ‘em out. Whoever the real life soldier was he was reported to be so damn good with the grenade launcher he didn’t have to be able to see the enemy. Hearing them was enough for him to determine how close they were (He’s close man, real close.”), their direction and the angle at which he needed to hold his weapon before firing. He used a painted up weapon as well, like in the movie. I suspect there were other scenes Coppola pulled from that book or other books. He didn’t just make all that up.

  • @Bhint320610
    @Bhint320610 Год назад +6

    This movie is severely underrated.

  • @VoicesfromtheSwamp
    @VoicesfromtheSwamp Год назад +11

    Thank you for sharing this. I was a kid during Vietnam so my memories are from a child's perspective. We lived in a military town, my Mother worked Civil Service on base. There was not a single kid that I knew who didn't have someone fighting in 'Nam. I watched a lot of young men leave, I saw far fewer come back. And those that did were never the same. This is a hard movie to watch because it is so factual. Most of the still shots shown after battle were the actual photos taken. Several photos won awards for the starkness & brutality they depicted. It's important for younger generations to see this and understand what really happened. War is brutal on both sides. Families are affected on both sides. And none of us will ever be the same after living through it.

    • @charleswoolley8367
      @charleswoolley8367 Год назад +4

      As a military vet, it pains me when I think
      of those who returned, and how they were
      treated. Unlike the WWII vets, we didn't "win"
      in Vietnam. So you didn't hear of Welcome
      Home parades, jobs for the returning soldiers, etc.
      My hope is that, over time, they have received
      their recognition. Thank You for reviewing this.

    • @VoicesfromtheSwamp
      @VoicesfromtheSwamp Год назад +1

      @@charleswoolley8367 They are still waiting for Welcome Home Parades

  • @alanrickles9285
    @alanrickles9285 Год назад +9

    I love that you're doing this. When they are driving to the airfield in the buses, I am actually on one of the buses. I was in basic training during the time that this was being filmed at fort Benning. I was on the 3rd bus and my drill sergeant was driving. They used a lot of trainees as extras in that movie.

  • @evolutionizer15
    @evolutionizer15 Год назад +20

    "I'll never forgive myself"
    "For what sir?"
    "That my men died and I didn't"
    That gets me every time 😢

    • @Gnossiene369
      @Gnossiene369 Год назад

      Yeah it's disgusting. Imagine that scenario in a purely profitable agenda. Crie and die. that's what americans are taught, and they follow it mindlessly. It's depressing.

    • @ingobordewick6480
      @ingobordewick6480 11 месяцев назад +1

      The taxi driver saying "I don't like this job, I'm just trying to do it." Gets me also ever feckin time.

  • @williamkerner3758
    @williamkerner3758 Год назад +4

    I have always thought this movie was kind of metaphor for this entire war. By which I mean there was virtually no plan for what a victory might look like. For a very long time the strategy was "search and destroy", meaning that if we could kill enough enemy soldiers, we would eventually win the war, without any emphasis on how we would clear the enemy out of the places where we just fought them.
    Notice how, at the end of the movie, the enemy general is right there where the battle was fought. So, sure, we killed a lot more of his guys than he killed of ours, but in the end, he was the one who was still there. And, since the Vietnamese civilians could predict that despite the fact that we killed a lot more of the Communists, the Communists would be the ones standing there in their communities at the end, the civilians never really got behind us and it all just assured that we would eventually be gone and the Communists would remain in the end.
    By the time that anyone in our government came up with an alternative strategy, the war was so unpopular in the US that there was no way politically we were going to keep at it, and so we withdrew.

  • @Thepitz2000
    @Thepitz2000 Год назад +14

    What made this movie for me is that they touched on how the enemy also felt and how they are as scared as anyone that would be in that situation.

  • @stephenmelone8589
    @stephenmelone8589 Год назад +4

    When my mother was little ,during the second world war , on the way to school she would see sashes in the Windows. They would have stars on the m representing family in their house that were in combat . The stars would be changed from red to gold as their loved ones died in war . She had the sashes memorized along her route to school . When a star would turn to gold she would cry and pray . TOUGH times .

  • @NOLAgenX
    @NOLAgenX Год назад +13

    This was a very good adaptation of the book I read for a Military Literature class back in college. Hal Moore and CSM Plumley were by all accounts the level of leadership that most leaders should strive for.

    • @RLKmedic0315
      @RLKmedic0315 Год назад +9

      And Joe Galloway is the type of journalist that all reporters should aspire to be.

    • @NOLAgenX
      @NOLAgenX Год назад +3

      @@RLKmedic0315 I agree. They don’t make them like him anymore. He was well-respected in and out of journalistic circles.

  • @chrisjohns4461
    @chrisjohns4461 Год назад +5

    Sometimes, when you’re surrounded by chaos and death, laughing keeps the horror and grief at bay long enough for some to survive.

  • @whitediggity
    @whitediggity Год назад +3

    That grenade is white phosphorus. It reacts with moisture and burns. You have to cut the burning parts off or it will just keep going. Nasty stuff.

  • @thomaseggle8886
    @thomaseggle8886 Год назад +7

    The book is something all in itself. There was another battle after this involving the reserves who followed Hal Moore after they left. That battle seemed worse but its raw and very graphic. Reading about men with multiple wounds who continue to fight is some of the most awesome examples of bravery and valor.
    I think the real Joe Galloway did a piece on the History channel "Vietnam in HD". Galloway gives an eerie and haunting narration about the "Broken Arrow" scene. The look on his face trying to explain the scene of the mortar man Jimmy who gets hit with friendly fire is just about the hardest but fascinating things to witness. You can see his trauma in his eyes and the way his hands start shaking. Definitely check that out for anyone wanting to learn a bit more about the battle.

  • @erwinquiachon8054
    @erwinquiachon8054 Год назад +5

    Did you hear that they renamed Fort Benning to Fort Moore? It is now named after a General that actually fought for, not against, The United States.

    • @obdiane
      @obdiane Год назад +1

      Also, Fort Hood changed to Fort Cacazos The post is named after Gen. Richard E. Cavazos, a native Texan, and the US Army’s first Hispanic four-star general. Formerly named Fort Hood for Confederate General John Bell Hood,

    • @erwinquiachon8054
      @erwinquiachon8054 Год назад +1

      @@obdiane Today, Fort Bragg was renamed Fort Liberty.

    • @danielrupp7578
      @danielrupp7578 Год назад

      Woke ass military leadership at it once again. What a shock.

    • @JTW12
      @JTW12 Год назад

      The fort is named for both the general and Mrs Moore.

    • @eq1373
      @eq1373 Год назад

      🙄

  • @charles7836
    @charles7836 Год назад +9

    I believe this is also a project of Randall Wallace, who was involved in Braveheart. It's not only an excellent film, but because I served in the 7th Cavalry, the Gary Owen reference holds special meaning.

    • @4325air
      @4325air Год назад +2

      Another GarryOwen Brother! I was with 3-7th 1977-1980. Schweinfurt, West Germany.

  • @lukenshazard127
    @lukenshazard127 Год назад +7

    This is my wife’s favorite war movie because it does show the wive’s side of the war. Really enjoy your reactions. So thoughtful and respectful.

    • @deiwi
      @deiwi Год назад

      If you like space stuff, you might like From the Earth to the Moon produced by Tom Hanks. It follows Apollo space program and there's a whole episode dedicated to astronaut's wives, something that no other movie dared to show.

  • @potterj09
    @potterj09 Год назад +4

    I was obsessed with this movie for awhile when it came out. The first time watching however I was with a friend, we'd been drinking a bit & a couple of scenes haunted me enough to ask him to pause it, especially that scene where it is pitch black under a canopy when the flare goes up & they engage at point blank. Horrific what those men went through. All sides.

  • @progunliberal
    @progunliberal Год назад +2

    Being that this was the first engagement in Vietnam, I feel like it comes across more like a WW2 movie. Because these guys weren't disillusioned yet by the politics of the war. They were the first of the field and didn't have the culture wars affecting them yet like you see in most other Vietnam movies that pick up a year or more into the war. These guys really went there feeling like they were the good guys, trying to liberate an oppressed people from a Communist regimen, and you get to see very quickly how different this sort of war was, both technologically and emotionally.

  • @donaldfisher749
    @donaldfisher749 Год назад +2

    Actually the woman's ignorance about whites only was still common , most segregation was still only in the south. Northern cities weren't as common to be segregated at the time

  • @zaphod43
    @zaphod43 Год назад +2

    Broken Arrow means we are overrun by the enemy, send all available aircraft to bomb our position.

    • @pablom-f8762
      @pablom-f8762 Год назад

      It is also an awesome John Woo movie.

  • @jima6545
    @jima6545 Год назад +5

    My dad was drafted at 18, '67-'68. Artillery scout with the 1st Infantry Division. Stories he shared outside of the combat really drove home the horror.

  • @aify5883
    @aify5883 Год назад +4

    Mel Gibson is one of our best exports to the world from Oz. Great film that he carried from start to finish imo.
    I 100% agree with you on the fact that this movie really portrays the soldiers as just cookie cut picture perfect people but I think what you also said beforehand that the film is supposed to be a memorial piece/documentary that focused on the sacrifices, rather than how Full Metal Jacket and Apocalypse Now are instead using the Vietnam War as a setting to tell a more complex story. Also this film depicts the first major battle of the Vietnam War so having the soldiers appear in an innocent way is sort of true for the most part as the war had just begun and a lot of the darkest incidents were yet to unfold historically speaking.

  • @facubeitches1144
    @facubeitches1144 Год назад +13

    One of the officers who played a key role in the battle - though not particularly featured in the movie - ultimately died on 9/11, helping people get out of the South Tower.

    • @adamr6794
      @adamr6794 9 месяцев назад +4

      Rick Rescorla is credited with saving 2,700 lives on 9/11

  • @tomwallace3103
    @tomwallace3103 Год назад +1

    And think approximately 58,000 Americans died in Vietnam in approximately 10 years. And over 50,000 Americans died at Gettysburg in one battle. Americans have paid for their and other peoples freedoms.

  • @scottdarden3091
    @scottdarden3091 Год назад +3

    Colonel Moore made sure Snake and Too Tall received the Medal Of Honor and I saw a video of Colonel Moore going back to Vietnam and meeting his counterpart the Vietnamese commander 😊

    • @adamr6794
      @adamr6794 9 месяцев назад

      ABC Day One "They were Young and Brave". Bruce Crandall took his own name off the table for the MOH to clear the way for Ed Freeman. Too Tall got his in 2001, Snake got his in 2007

  • @iamdclxvi
    @iamdclxvi Год назад +1

    I'm surprised you didn't put the " good morning " scene when Sam Elliot finally showed respect to that soldier.

  • @devoncooper8296
    @devoncooper8296 Год назад +2

    Great reaction. You really picked up on soMe important aspects.

  • @Mangoes95
    @Mangoes95 Год назад +1

    The combat scenes in this movie are amazing (and super accurate, both in realism and in historicity) but everything besides those are the cheesiest BS filled with such bad acting. Cringe

  • @iangraham6887
    @iangraham6887 Год назад +1

    They kept trying to call him in for "Briefings" as an excuse to pull their highest ranking officer out of danger. nobody back home would care if a lieutenant or a captain got killed. But losing a Lieutenant colonel in the first ever battle of the vietnam war wouldve been devastating to troop morale and home support for the war.

  • @jamesfischer2427
    @jamesfischer2427 Год назад +1

    34:40 Racism wasn't equal everywhere. Especially if the woman had lived in a small town that happened to have all white residents, then the concept of Racism may have been one that she never dealt with. There were national news stories covering the early civil rights movement at the time, but the national news on television was not as popular as it would become (especially during and after the Vietnam war).

  • @michaelatteberry6462
    @michaelatteberry6462 Год назад +1

    You forget that this was 1 battle while the other movies were over a long period of time. You do not flesh out full characters in a 3 day battle

  • @Britcarjunkie
    @Britcarjunkie 11 месяцев назад +1

    You really need to read up on Sgt. Plumley: while Col. Moore was a "cookie cutter"-type of person, the real Plumley was a holy terror, that even officers feared! His character was toned-down for the film, because they didn't think he would be beliveable! I've read that even in his 70's, recruits were afraid of him!

    • @adamr6794
      @adamr6794 9 месяцев назад +1

      Joe Galloway said at reunions 20 years after some guys were still trying to sneak by Plumley fearing that Plumley still carried a small notepad with their names in it for sins large and small.

  • @bluesrock1
    @bluesrock1 Год назад

    When asking that question about any war: Why? Remember, war is almost always a response to a political problem. In the case of Vietnam, a large portion of the politicians in the US Gov needed to make Communism terrify Americans to achieve their political goals.

  • @lungfulldrummer8921
    @lungfulldrummer8921 Год назад +1

    Clint Eastwood directed a couple of great war dramas. Flags of our fathers & letters from iwo Jima.
    Also recommend the thin red line. Its a slow burn. But beautifully shot.

  • @tomazroses6022
    @tomazroses6022 Год назад +1

    That chooper pilots were cap off.. Respect.

  • @alainorozco8032
    @alainorozco8032 Год назад +1

    Platoon and The Thin Red Line are great war movies to get into

  • @williambranch4283
    @williambranch4283 Год назад +2

    Best Vietnam War movie. I remember trying to explain war to my little daughter, because there was a bronze WWI soldier outside our library.

  • @kimarhironso437
    @kimarhironso437 Год назад +2

    In BCT they told us to always expect that the enemy could move twice as fast as you on their home turf. That way you aren't surprised by them being where they aren't supposed to. If you just assume that you have more capabilities than they do, and that will always let you maneuver more efficiently, then your setting yourself up for an L.
    I always thought this movie at least demonstrated that pretty effectively with the enemy troops being everywhere all the time.

  • @Anakinskywalkerfan1
    @Anakinskywalkerfan1 Год назад +1

    The way hal lead the soilders is very realistic

  • @markhagerman1837
    @markhagerman1837 Год назад +1

    When the wives deliver the letters, that gets me every time 🥹🥹

  • @deanmcandrew8050
    @deanmcandrew8050 Год назад +2

    @15.00 That’s Willie Pete!!
    M34 WHITE PHOSPHORUS Grenade!
    When Tetraphosphorus ignites it reaches 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit burning through the flesh, it has to be cut out with a blade!

  • @최미자-y8r
    @최미자-y8r 10 месяцев назад

    2컨드 23조병1대대 , 한사람의 카츄시져으호사 멜싲순이 판 인디안 헤두릐 경다을 지굼도 구때의.추럭괴 ㅏ 사징 몇다으류강딕하고 ㅛㅜ칠리주ㅘㄴ다

  • @twrampage
    @twrampage Год назад +2

    If you're interested in another movie in Vietnam focused on real events, I can wholeheartedly recommend Danger Close: The Battle of Long Tan.
    It follows Australian soldiers and uses the actual recorded transcripts of radio communications for the dialogue.

  • @alainvachon6255
    @alainvachon6255 Год назад +1

    You have to think about what the Viet commander say at the end, that Americans winning this first battle would just make the war a lot longer.

  • @mirandarights5566
    @mirandarights5566 Год назад

    Hamburger Hill,Boys in company C platoon and director's cut Apocalypse Now if you haven't watched I recommend

  • @that_ropin_TX_cop
    @that_ropin_TX_cop 2 месяца назад

    If you haven’t already you should watch the actual interview with Mr. Galloway. Specifically the part where he talks about Jim. That man lives that memory every second of every day.

  • @tomaskennedy
    @tomaskennedy 2 месяца назад

    2:36 The real "Snakeshit" & "Too-Tall" were both awarded the Medal Of Honour for their actions in the battle of Ia Drang Valley.

  • @Smokeater4444
    @Smokeater4444 6 месяцев назад

    Very good Pod cast , Took me A LOT of Years before i could watch this all the way through , just too real, BUT after my Kids & Grandkids saw it , they finally understood , Hand Salute from an Old Tired Veteran , Remember All gave some , BUT Some gave it all Vietnam 1972

  • @HaveMonkeyWillDance
    @HaveMonkeyWillDance Год назад

    They didn't happen to mention that the relieving company got slaughtered the next day, 100 dead. Disaster, the whole thing. Gibson sucks, Moore didn't.

  • @laurawallis7093
    @laurawallis7093 Год назад +2

    Thank you for this reaction. My dad is a Vietnam vet for the Australian Army.

  • @Mobius118F
    @Mobius118F 6 месяцев назад

    The call or Broken Arrow always gives me chills.
    I’mma air support guy and while due to reasons I can’t enlist.. If I ever did those two words would hang in the back off my head 24/7 with a darker feel than my own Suicidal thoughts(Relax I have pulled through their gone).

  • @robertlaube574
    @robertlaube574 Год назад

    We were soldiers once, and young.
    Madylin stowe,His wife is, straight beautiful.

  • @samzorn4656
    @samzorn4656 5 месяцев назад

    Can we just take a minute to appreciate Julia Moore's efforts? Her efforts and complaints regarding casualty notification in the aftermath of the Battle of Ia Drang prompted the U.S. Army to set up survivor support networks and casualty notification teams consisting of uniformed officers, which are still in use to this day.
    Also, the cabby asking for directions seemed to be wearing an older US military jacket, which was a part of the US military combat fatigues during WWII and the Korean War. So, for that cabby to deliver those telegrams to those families, knowing they bear the bad news that their husbands, sons, and brothers (who were also his "brothers-in-arms-once-removed", for lack of a better term) have been killed in the line of duty, must have been heartrending for him.

  • @clivegwyther5683
    @clivegwyther5683 Год назад

    The grenade that they threw was "Phosphorous". It burns right through. You cannot put it out with water etc, you have to dig it out as he did in this part.

  • @legohunter1020
    @legohunter1020 15 дней назад

    I watched this movie when it came out and thanks to that old guy with the pistol, anytime I play CoD on story mode, I almost always use the pistol first. 😅

  • @pamelalee1508
    @pamelalee1508 Год назад

    CI: this is a nightmares...
    Yes it was.. Vietnam was as many wars..a nightmare...
    Another such depiction is
    Hamburger Hill...
    Forced error by political agendas... something that should never have happened...
    Napalm is a 'gasoline' soap mixture that spreads and sticks.. I don't remember the correct ingredients..but think of adding water to dishsoap..how it grows with the force of the water.. napalm did that until it stretched itself out...
    The new weaponry of that war was hell all by itself...there truly were no wins/winners...
    😔🙏✝️💚...
    🌿🌿🌿

  • @pjbarney9580
    @pjbarney9580 Год назад

    fantastic movie... top 10 american war films. and top 5 mel gibson films.

  • @kennethcook9406
    @kennethcook9406 Год назад

    At about 15:12, that was "White Phosphorus."
    It burns hotter than a huge campfire in a small (grenade size) package.
    It even burns in water. In fact water makes it worse, if you know anything about Chemistry.

  • @haraldisdead
    @haraldisdead Год назад

    The ONLY good portrayal of the Vietnamese on film. They were no amateurs.

  • @PaulTurkov
    @PaulTurkov 5 месяцев назад

    I have question to author - may be, you can watching a Oliver Stone movie - the Platoon, with Charlie Sheen?

  • @garrymoore2161
    @garrymoore2161 Год назад

    As many former colonies of the European powers, such as the British Colonies in America, the Vietnames people fought a prolonged war to lose their identity of French Indochina and free themselves of French control.
    In the north of the country, the viet cong received arms, training, and socialism indoctrination held their own against the French. In the south, capitalist leaders arose and fought the French as the Republic of Vietnam.
    As the French pulled out, a civil war broke out between South Vietnam and North Vietnam.
    The South signed an alliance with NATO. The North signed an alliance with the Soviet Union.
    The first time the Americabs took military action instead of just military advisors, a battalion of several hundred U.S. Army soldiers with no military experience at all found themselves facing a division of over a thousand North Vietnsm Army soldiers who had come from years of combat experience led by a Commander with over two decades of experience fighting the French.
    It was a decisive victory fir the Americabs as would be every battle between the U S. Army and the NVA.
    The war was lost as the main stream media bought the war home in living color to Americans sitting down to their evening meal.
    For the first time, we saw men, women, and children being horribly wounded or killed.
    Check your history. The left leaning politicians ran on claims of stopping senseless violence. People began to protest our involvement in a war on the other side of the re world.
    U.S. forces could pursue the enemy as far as the border with Laos, Cambodia, or North Vietnam. Once across the border, the beaten NVA would resupply, get new recruits, and come back to fight again.

  • @brodie6222
    @brodie6222 Год назад

    "what kind of grenade was that?" A phosphorous grenade, burns underwater, and oxygen just makes it burn more. nasty things.

  • @Mr_Dumpty
    @Mr_Dumpty Год назад

    I have always loved this film but it has several scenes that have also always annoyed me. So many elements of this film are done so well but then you have scenes like the 'whites only' scene which is beyond cringeworthy; truly a film of its time (aka a typical Hollywood film, I suppose). One scene I have always adored and found incredibly powerful is that of Lt. Col. Nguyễn Hữu An pondering the results of the battle, whilst collecting the dead, before replacing the American flag in the shattered tree stump, destroyed by war. I've always sort of wished the film ended with that scene.

  • @gaoasaurusg2159
    @gaoasaurusg2159 Год назад

    @Caped Informer, in your wish to see a 'darker side of the characters' you fail to realize this was the very beginning of America's involvement in the Vietnam Conflict. The other movies that your reference take place after this. It was a very different theater then. My father served on a sub in the Pacific during WWII. My uncle served in the Korean War. Both of them said what made Vietnam different was that it was a ' Military Conflict' that started and continued without an official declaration of 'War'. On a side note, the Korean War has never officially ended. The armistice of 1953 was a 'cease-fire agreement' that created the DMZ ( Demilitarized Zone), but no peace treaty was ever signed.

  • @chriso5374
    @chriso5374 7 месяцев назад

    My Dad was there and received the Bronze Star with SGM Plumley and several other brave souls.
    He never said a word about it.
    God Bless our troops.

  • @JeremyCheuvront
    @JeremyCheuvront Год назад

    My friend was in this film. I love picking his brain about his experience

  • @Onlytheclouds
    @Onlytheclouds Год назад

    The soldier with the burnt legs was a real person. jimmy nakayama. Jimmy did not survive the wounds he sustained in the la drang valley.

  • @TheHulk2008
    @TheHulk2008 Год назад

    I like how they didn't show much arguments between White and Black because I mean it's the first time their at Vietnam there's not much to argue about yet . Plus all the crazy stuff you know agent orange, LSD and other garbage hadn't been introduced to the War. Because Vietnam was one of craziest Wars in U.S. History and yeah some crazy shit happened over there .

  • @tomaskennedy
    @tomaskennedy 2 месяца назад

    7:16 She was the little girl from the Jim Carrey version of The Grinch.

  • @airmobiledivision7759
    @airmobiledivision7759 Год назад

    The grenade which created the burning effect was a White Phosphorous or “Willy Pete” grenade. It utilizes chemicals which get stuck on the target and burn on contact.

  • @macmcgee5116
    @macmcgee5116 Год назад

    I always loved this movie. It stayed so true to the book, which according to historians was very accurate to actual events... HOWEVER... Hollywood had to have their say.
    There was NO heroic charge up the mountainside on day three. On that morning the Americans found that the enemy had simply melted into the jungle. Both sides claimed victory, but it was really more of a draw.
    Worse though, was after this part of the battle they evacuated Col. Moore's troops by helicopter, but some of the reinforcements had to march the 5ish miles back to base in sweltering heat. Along the way they got spread out in the jungle and were ambushed by a different enemy battalion, they were spread out and hidden by the jungle, so air and artillery support couldn't help them. The few who survived, did so by crawling on their bellies almost all the way back.
    The second battle was considered a different engagement so it obviously wasn't included. But I have always hated how Hollywood embellished the ending of the battle to make it look like something it wasn't. Still one of my favorite military history movies though.

  • @nicholasholloway8743
    @nicholasholloway8743 Год назад

    White Phosphorus Grenade, also known as "Willy Pete" and as Nathalie White says, it's nasty stuff

  • @Proteus2905
    @Proteus2905 Год назад

    How do you understand what cannot be understood? Can you find meaning in meaninglessness? You simply switch off large parts of your being. You put all those questions in a separate compartment in your mind, barricaded the entrance and shoved another cupboard in front of it...then you just keep going.

  • @ianbrown2533
    @ianbrown2533 Год назад

    Man, go read the book. So good. And you wanna know why SGT MAJOR was like that. Man went to every major battle

  • @catharsus21
    @catharsus21 Год назад

    i paused vid at your comment about what " BROKEN ARROW is .. the term " broken arrow " is used to indicate the code phrase to indicate an American combat unit was in danger of being overrun and outnumbered in this scenario .

  • @spaghetti9845
    @spaghetti9845 Год назад

    The guy burned by the napalm wouldn't have lasted more than a couple hours with those burns in a modern burn unit. It is unlikely he even survived the trip back to base.

  • @SmokinDroFrayser
    @SmokinDroFrayser Год назад

    They showed us this before Army basic training after 9/11

  • @harr77
    @harr77 Год назад

    Why did they have to put racial propaganda in the film? Yes every white person in America was aware of segregation and Jim Crow and what it meant. Kudos to this channel for knowing it was a bullcrap scene.

  • @Ailurophile1984
    @Ailurophile1984 Год назад

    15:00 That was white phosphorous (Willy Pete). Really really nasty stuff

  • @nicolasdixon9593
    @nicolasdixon9593 11 месяцев назад

    “Windtalkers”is a good war movie with Nicholas Cage

  • @urfrndjenn
    @urfrndjenn Год назад +1

    Segregated washrooms and such was only a thing in the Jim Crow south where this base was located. Likely she moved with her husband from an area of the country without Jim Crow so didn’t understand what it was.

  • @Heiryuu
    @Heiryuu Год назад

    I’ll admit today that scene with the confused wife that hadn’t experienced racism is a little hokey but you figure in the 60’s there are probably some towns out in the Midwest haven’t even seen what a black person looked like nevermind had to worry about enough black people to need segregation. The world before TV and internet was a strange place. I still agree it’s a little hokey, but I can honestly believe that it was possible for someone from some podunk town to be too ignorant to be racist.

  • @rebekahelliott5297
    @rebekahelliott5297 Год назад

    Man - Mel Gibson can deliver those war speeches with a genuineness and reality that will have you fighting back tears - if you haven't seen him in the patriot - you need too. The revolutionary War but what happened in the south while Washington fought in the north. A man who fought wars before and was ashamed of what he had done. A man trying to balance principles and single fatherhood. Looking in to the faces if his children as they witness with their iwn eyes the atrocities of war. If you haven't already watch it!

  • @TheHulk2008
    @TheHulk2008 Год назад

    At least these guys had back up . There's been many battles where one side was vastly outnumbered with nothing no reinforcements just on their own.