This Marine Changed How Tom Hanks and Other Actors Prepare for War Movies

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024

Комментарии • 61

  • @AARP
    @AARP  9 месяцев назад +4

    Watch our final episode of "Reporting for Duty," and meet the Air Force veterans turning our nation's heroes into music stars: ruclips.net/video/fSZovLyrsvA/видео.html
    You can watch the entire 14-part series here: www.aarp.org/reportingforduty
    AARP is honored to fight for issues that are important to nearly 4 million AARP members who have served in America’s military and their families. Veterans have given their all for this country, and they deserve supportive services to help them live their best lives.

  • @patricksullivan7140
    @patricksullivan7140 2 года назад +38

    Capt. Dye has done so much for the War Movie genre, adding realism instead of movie star bravado from the old days. I salute you Capt. Dale Dye. Thank you for your service.

  • @jake5773
    @jake5773 Год назад +26

    As a veteran I really appreciate what Captain Dye has done for film making.

  • @rageinbull
    @rageinbull 5 месяцев назад +3

    Before Dale Dye veterans would watch war movies and constantly be annoyed by how inaccurate they were. He raised the bar.

  • @URangryX
    @URangryX Год назад +3

    Thank you for honorably and accurately reflecting our experience, from the nitty-gritty details of our uniforms, to the slang and code-switching that regionals and ethnicities and units had to do.
    It takes a dedicated professional to get this right! Captain Dale Dye is a HERO because he goes out of his way to understand the Man on the ground and in the air, the warfighter, the grunt, the admin back home....and to communicate their lived experience, language, culture, bravado, gestures, gear, and genuine emotions and motivation ACURATELY.
    Angelic.

    • @AARP
      @AARP  Год назад

      Thank you for you watching and for your feedback! Stay tuned for more Reporting For Duty episodes on our Channel!

  • @nathanadams8207
    @nathanadams8207 2 года назад +14

    Dale Dye has been ties to alot of damn good movies.

    • @goodthoughts2252
      @goodthoughts2252 2 года назад +3

      Or maybe a lot of damn good movies because they had a tie to Dale Dye. Either way great touch of behind the scenes history.

    • @rolfagten857
      @rolfagten857 Год назад +2

      He is also a great actor in "Casualties of war" and "Band of Brothers"

  • @SSGTStryker
    @SSGTStryker Год назад +5

    As a retired NCO, MTI and very occasional background actor, Captain Dye is definitely my biggest inspiration. Dream job is to work for his Warriors, Inc.

  • @lunachester3056
    @lunachester3056 2 года назад +9

    I think very highly of him, He's always come across as very "squared away" Historical accuracy has always mattered but it's missing in most Hollywood films before his involvement.

  • @natural-born_pilot
    @natural-born_pilot 2 года назад +17

    A great story and a super guy. Anyone with military background could tell when they first saw him in a movie he was real. When later reading his name in the credits and task he performed as consultant you instantly became aware of what made that film so authentic. One of my favorites was his role in ‘Siege of Firebase Glory’ as commander of the firebase under attack and being over run by the NVA he directs the arriving air support to drop all ordinance on his location coordinates. Heavy!

    • @rolfagten857
      @rolfagten857 Год назад +1

      Is that the one with Lee Ermy going to Vietnam?

  • @HartDoug
    @HartDoug 2 года назад +3

    I A B S O LUT E L Y Agree with the Sentiments expressed in this ‘clip’. I am NOT a Vietnam Veteran but I am what is known as a Vietnam Era Veteran. I was never in Vietnam but I did see it... Twice... as I flew over going to and coming from Thailand. Mr. Dye is absolutely correct about ‘what makes soldiers... warriors... ‘tick’...’ Couldn’t have expressed it to better myself! As a ‘retired soldier’, I greatly appreciate the ‘realism’ that he has added to ‘war films’!

    • @billsanders5067
      @billsanders5067 2 года назад

      Every combatant in every war was fighting for one thing and only one thing, the person standing beside him. If any REMF says otherwise then they are spewing 100% male bovine manure.

  • @HighWarlordJC
    @HighWarlordJC 2 года назад +6

    Starship Troopers is one of the greatest films I've ever seen. This guy reminds me of my boss (older gentleman, sets his sights on a goal and gets to work).

    • @lewistasso8866
      @lewistasso8866 2 года назад

      It could have been great if it wasn't for the bad script and acting.

  • @debbiespeckmiear819
    @debbiespeckmiear819 Год назад +1

    What a wonderful human being!!

  • @boigercat
    @boigercat 2 года назад +4

    What a beautiful story

  • @michaelcoleman7940
    @michaelcoleman7940 2 года назад +2

    Dale Dye: a lifetime friend.

  • @erikiversen674
    @erikiversen674 Год назад +1

    This film really grabbed me; being a military movie fan - and also thanking my lucky stars that I never had to go through the horrors of war... When I saw this video, I realized my appreciation for the immersive reality of the films that I loved most (Platoon, Private Ryan, Band of Brothers) - were all trained in military reality - by Cape. Dale Dye. The reality of his skillful training of actors brings honor and reality to the vets he is portraying. Has off to AARP for bringing this great perspective! Thanks for your service to our country!

  • @adamnevis7636
    @adamnevis7636 2 года назад +5

    Wow this is an incredible video!

    • @goodthoughts2252
      @goodthoughts2252 2 года назад +1

      And then there is a short with Johnny Depp telling a hillarious story off which he took great pride in - i searched Platoon its in the shorts.

  • @donfacundo2118
    @donfacundo2118 10 месяцев назад +1

    Salute to you Mr Dye🙂

  • @goodthoughts2252
    @goodthoughts2252 2 года назад +4

    Such an amazing story what a brilliant man.

  • @thiagogatti5146
    @thiagogatti5146 3 месяца назад

    Thank you, sir. Thank you for your services!!! I hope some day, someone decides to produce something like thoses movies telling about the FEB (Brazilian Expeditionay Force) in the WWII. Those men also deserve it.

  • @AirAssault7
    @AirAssault7 Год назад +2

    Good job Dale Dye. :)

  • @nicholasbcleghorn8008
    @nicholasbcleghorn8008 Год назад +1

    Excellent.

  • @tonyp173
    @tonyp173 26 дней назад

    Captain Dale Dye is the real deal. He honed his skills as mentor for actors as a Marine in combat. Read his book: "Running Through the Rain Drops." It's awesome.
    Personally, I'm proud of my own experiences as a Paratrooper in the 173d Airborne Brigade in 1968-69 in RVN. However, after reading his book, I wrote and told him that my time in Vietnam was more like an R&R in Vung Tau compared to his time in Hue during the Tet Offensive.
    God Bless America.

    • @AARP
      @AARP  25 дней назад

      Hi Tony! Thank you for your service!! - Melissa F.

  • @hydroreel2467
    @hydroreel2467 Год назад

    I have met this man yesterday Captain Dale Dye is a Missouri Military Academy Alumni now in the alumni hall of fame.

  • @joshuaarnold9219
    @joshuaarnold9219 4 месяца назад

    Amazing to hear how that works

  • @syntaxerorr
    @syntaxerorr 2 года назад +1

    Cool video. Was a little surprised when I scrolled down and it said AARP. That AARP? Can't wait till I'm 50 lol.

  • @lcutie36
    @lcutie36 2 года назад +11

    He’s in like all of those war movies playing cameos

  • @billsanders5067
    @billsanders5067 2 года назад +2

    I started paying attention to the small details when I watch war movies. For example men with long hair, sailors and marines saluting when uncovered and in doors, or when someone is told at ease and they go to parade rest. To really top it off, I have seen three movies were the American Flag had too many stars for the time period.

    • @paularubin4711
      @paularubin4711 2 года назад

      Disgusting isn’t it. I’ve seen the same. I’m a VETERAN. IM SHOCKED WE SEE AN OFFICER IN UNIFORM SMACKING GUM. WOULD NEVER HAPPEN IN MY TIME

    • @rolfagten857
      @rolfagten857 Год назад +1

      "A Raid on Rommel" (1971) is also so full of vehicle, military slang, and uniform errors that it seems like a comedy!

  • @AARP
    @AARP  Год назад +1

    Meet this Navy vet who ran into a fiery plane to save the passengers! ruclips.net/video/gaVjLEteiiM/видео.html

  • @shadowwolf9329
    @shadowwolf9329 2 года назад +3

    Anyone who has fought in a real battle can decern the difference between actual footage in a Hollywood war movie and the real thing. Hands down.

  • @RevEricHebert
    @RevEricHebert Год назад

    Good telling of a good story.

  • @deborahdufel1664
    @deborahdufel1664 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for your service. I have a few beta readers of my book and they have caught things that were downright wrong. Continue on, Sir.

  • @rolfagten857
    @rolfagten857 Год назад +1

    If only they had Dale Dye during the filming of the BBC series "SAS Rogue Heroes" (2022) ! It contains errors such as Reo trucks from Vietnam War in a 1941 British Army in North Africa, and Queens capbadge instead of the Kings capbadges. perhaps for the next seasons an idea to hire Mr Dye.

  • @laurenbardoner8903
    @laurenbardoner8903 Год назад

    This guy truly makes me smile. I love movies, and knowing one day I might join the armed forces he's inspiration.

  • @danteehan
    @danteehan 2 года назад +4

    Hotel 2/5, 1968.

  • @TJCooney
    @TJCooney 2 года назад +4

  • @BMF6889
    @BMF6889 6 месяцев назад

    I served 21 years in the Marine Corps as an infantry officer with 3 years in combat. My first real job out of college was as a Marine platoon commander in Vietnam 1968-69. And many years later I served two years in Latin America supporting the host nation's Army and Navy in counter-insurgence operations.
    I've seen almost all of the movies about WW II and Vietnam. Platoon was a joke. Deer Hunter was a joke. Green Berets was a joke. Full Metal Jacket was a semi-joke.
    But Hamburger Hill was close to reality. Band of Brothers and Pacific seemed close to reality.
    But I'm never seen a movie about Vietnam or the Korean War or about the bomber forces during WW I I that took horrific casualties. The 8th Air Force in WW II took more casualties than the Marine Corps in the Pacific during WW II yet Hanks and Spielberg made the Pacific which was a terrific account of the war in the Pacific, but nothing of the 8th Air Force that took even more casualties.
    I know what Vietnam was like. I was a platoon commander there from 1969-69, and it had no relationship with the movie Platoon. I was in El Salvador supporting the Salvadoran Army and Navy in counter-insurgency operations and the movie "Salvador" by Oliver Stone was a complete joke and had nothing to do with the reality on the ground there. The FMLN were not patriots fighting against the government. The government was not without major problems but the FLMN was no better.
    I haven't seen a Korean War movie that matches any of the documentaries that describe the war.
    I'm glad Captain Dale Dyer could train actors to be more like soldiers, but it didn't work in the movie Platoon or any of the other absurd movies on which he was technical advisor / trainer with the exception of Band of Brothers and Pacific.
    I haven't yet seen the Tom Hanks and whoever series "Masters of the Air" but in the few trailers I've seen there are minor technical inaccuracies that are so obvious they should have been easily caught in the editing. The B-17 machineguns in the series are not accurate. Even a novice like me caught the problems. The shots of the gunsights on the ball and top turrets were inaccurate.
    Dale Dyer is a great motivator and trainer of actors for military movies, but he doesn't care if the movie doesn't represent reality like "Platoon" or if it does represent reality like "Band of Brothers" and "Pacific".
    BTW, the actors in the movie "Platoon" despite Dyer's training bore no resemblance to the realities of Vietnam. It was nothing more than a bunch of actors that were military-like hippies running around like pre-Rambo than anything resembling anything I saw in Vietnam. Ditto the Deer Hunter movie -- totally BS.
    And the Rambo series was total BS as well, but at least an entertaining joke of the military.
    The only realistic Vietnam documentary I've seen was a very long time ago when a French team accompanied a Marine unit for about 30 days in combat. There were no actors or staged scenes. It was shot as it actually happened in real time included the deaths and wounded that happened. It's not like the movies.
    I will say this, the Vietnam scene in the movie Forrest Gump was mostly very real as I experienced Vietnam. Who would have thought. I don't know who was the technical advisor for those scenes, but he had to have been in Vietnam.

  • @luketimewalker
    @luketimewalker 5 месяцев назад

    "All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident."
    Arthur Schopenhauer
    Dream out Loud - From fool to savior.
    Captain, on top of my years of admiration for you, you have no idea what your testimony here means to me. I too, WILL have a 2 minute pitch.
    Cheers from Paris - where you have an incredible lookalike, photographer Yann Arthus-Bertrand who creataed Earth from Above, and with whom I've had the honor to work.

  • @dvig3261
    @dvig3261 2 года назад +2

    Even with the best teachers, Hollywood still regularly misses the mark, by a wide margin.

  • @kurtvonfricken6829
    @kurtvonfricken6829 2 года назад +2

    Too bad many of the beach obstacles in Saving private Ryan were backwards. Oh well!

    • @rolfagten857
      @rolfagten857 Год назад

      and black 101st airborne paratroopers boots.

  • @rickjones8735
    @rickjones8735 4 месяца назад

    Still remember our golf rounds ar Awase. Semper Fi brother

  • @larry1824
    @larry1824 2 года назад

    Dye does his best. Kubrick musta been a tough sell

  • @zeltzamer4010
    @zeltzamer4010 2 года назад +1

    0:05 What film is this from?

  • @wilhelmgeisler2124
    @wilhelmgeisler2124 2 года назад +3

    WHY IS DALE DYE ONLY A CAPTAIN AFTER TWENTY YEARS???

    • @lordkreigs1978
      @lordkreigs1978 2 года назад

      He spent 14 years as an unlisted man and a rose to the rank of master sergeant which is pretty damn high up there, Marines refer to master sergeant and sergeant majors as “Top”.
      Then he went through Officer candidate school and became a commissioned officer.

  • @Jackie1952
    @Jackie1952 Год назад

    He is a former Marine

  • @el_prezz
    @el_prezz Месяц назад

    colonel sink.

  • @benquinneyiii7941
    @benquinneyiii7941 2 года назад

    Boot camp

  • @PraiseChrist4Ever
    @PraiseChrist4Ever 7 месяцев назад

    AARP is woke
    Stay clear