The Monuments Men: They're not blanks (HD CLIP)
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 26 июл 2021
- The Monuments Men: They're not blanks
What’s happening in this “The Monuments Men” movie clip?
We are introduced to the team of the Monuments Men. We have Seargeant Richard Cambell (Bill Murray), an architect; Lieutenant Jean-Claude Clermont (Jean Dujardin), director of design at the Chalet School of Fine Arts; Sergeant Walter Garfield (John Goodman), a sculptor; etc.
Rent or buy “The Monuments Men” here: apple.co/3rkgEf0
What’s the “The Monuments Men” movie about?
Based on the true story of the greatest treasure hunt in history, The Monuments Men is an action drama focusing on an unlikely World War II platoon, tasked by FDR with going into Germany to rescue artistic masterpieces from Nazi thieves and returning them to their rightful owners. It would be an impossible mission: with the art trapped behind enemy lines, and with the German army under orders to destroy everything as the Reich fell, how could these guys - seven museum directors, curators, and art historians, all more familiar with Michelangelo than the M-1 - possibly hope to succeed? But as the Monuments Men, as they were called, found themselves in a race against time to avoid the destruction of 1000 years of culture, they would risk their lives to protect and defend mankind's greatest achievements.
Credits: © 2014 Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Like this video if you want to see more episodes and tell us what you thought in the comments below.
Don't forget to turn on notifications to catch our next videos!
Keep up with us on Facebook!
Binge Society | / bingesociety
Binge Society - Action | / binge.society.action
Binge Society - Comedy | / binge.society.comedy
Binge Society brings you the best of your favorite movies and TV shows! Here you will find iconic scenes, moments, and lines from all the films, characters, celebrities and actors you love. As movie fans, we give you content we know you will enjoy!
#monumentsmen #artlovers #militarytraining #blanksbullets #team Развлечения
"It's a good thing I'm fluent in French!"
*He was not, in fact, fluent in French.*
He was speaking Canadian French, and everyone in France was like "horrible!"
@@garmenlin5990 duh. Canadian French has always been horrible. It’s like a tourist practicing a knock off version of a beautiful foreign language, before going to said country and hearing the locals criticize your poor interpretation of the language
@@georgecampbell9638 Ah so Canadian French is like American English, always nice to hear the big apple doesn't fall far down the maple tree.
@@velianlodestone1249 More like that scene in Hot Fuzz when talking to that weapons collector played by David Bradley
@@velianlodestone1249 Exactly - both are dialects that some stuck up Europeans like to pretend are inferior.
Despite those dialects coming from Europeans living in the new world.
Gotta love when world conquering countries still feel the need to assert their dominance even after they've given up their empires. Shows lots of mental and emotional growth.
The movie is enjoyable because you can tell the actors all had fun making it. Sometimes that's enough.
Yeah this was a Clooney “one for me” movie.
Sort of like ‘Kelly’s Heroes’, a mostly fun romp based somewhat on historical facts.
1:41 I've seen his artwork. It is actually decent. Not bad (though nothing extraordinary). A critic, untold of who painted the works, noted that the artist was inconsistent in the way he painted individuals as compared to buildings and said he had "a profound lack of interest in people". Another who knew who painted them suggested he might have been accepted to an architectural school lol
probably because his main focus was the architecture. if youre gonna paint your subject youre not gonna spend a lot of time doing the background stuff
There are some accounts from people who knew him early in life, long before he got into politics. It seems he was a pretty tortured soul, prone to bouts of passion and melancholy in equal measure, and preferred to spend his time away from people, aside from a few close friends. Despite his dislike of people, he had a strong sense of civic duty, and was present on the frontlines in WWI as a corporal. I have a feeling that a lot of the horrible things said of him as a person are merely people verbally pissing on his grave as a sort of post-humous humiliation ritual, as opposed to things that actually have a basis in reality.
@@Hedonophobia And Stalin and Mao killed well over 100 million, yet they seem to have quite a few sympathizers. Fickle indeed.
@@Hedonophobia What is there to misunderstand? lmao
@@Hedonophobia Why is Hitler exempt from understanding when Mao and Stalin are not?
Blanks go bang. Bullets go crack. The difference is due to the bullet leaving the barrel as opposed to a blank explosion with nothing blocking it.
bullets will only crack if they are supersonic
@@AlexLintonUK Good thing they were using m1 carbines so they would be supersonic.
Would this differentiation by sound be effective at the range shown? They were, what, 5 yards away? Less?
You only know that if (a) someone tells you or (b) you've been around firearms before
this is actually not quite accurate. Blanks go bang. Bullets go crack *and bang*
The crack comes from the bullet passing you. with slower bullets it can also be more like wizzing by. the bang comes from the chemical explosion that excellerates the bullet.
In combat at range you hear the crack first and the bang later, that is why you need to listen for the direction of the second sound to know from what direction you got shot at.
Can't believe I haven't heard of this movie before, especially with such a star cast.
critics hated it of course, but I found it to be a damn fine movie
@@PolPotsPieHole it's pretty good when it comes to the history and the art.
It had a quiet birth death upon release.
@@geobloxmodels1186 absolutely Mark Felton is history king
I really enjoyed this film, and as you say, it has a top notch cast. The history of the Monuments Men with the artworks they recovered makes for some fascinating reading.
The movie is pretty good. High class actors too.
Like the character says in the clip, this film is “not bad, but it’s not good either”.
@@GK1976A j
@@GK1976A h
High class actors? Lol
0:25 I've been to that memorial/museum, it's amazing. They were collecting stuff to put in it even before the war was done, and bc of that, they have soo many awesome genuine artifacts, tanks, guns, planes, bombs, its amazing.
Having done many years as ex infantry in reserve Civil Affairs, I can tell you they are dumb enough to not recognize blanks compared to real bullets.
How do you like the Civil Affairs mission overall? I imagine it was quite a change of pace after the Infantry, but still intensive of course.
How would you differentiate blanks from bullets at that range?
@@michaelccozens It’s pretty simple… when you fire a bullet it breaks the speed of sound and gives it a sonic crack that’s recognizable from miles away.
@@michaelccozens bullets passing that close would make a snap or hissing sound
Stupid civilians not having military training or knowledge of firearms!
Presenter: "Hitler's stealing art from France"
Frenchman: "This is why he didn't bomb Paris."
Englishman: "But he bombed London"
Frenchmen: "Yes, I know..."
LMAO
Burn
I mean, he's not wrong.
That's an insult to the French: Hitler knew it didn't matter because he'd never get to London to steal it, and the British would actually safeguard their art anyway.
@@nemo6686 What are you talking about? When you think of art and culture, do you think Paris or London? They’re not even in the same league.
The Germans didn’t bomb Paris because they didn’t need to. The French government declared it an open city. France was clearly defeated so why waste the bombs especially when you have to clean up after?
@@kirishima638 Have you ever actually been to Paris or London, or are you just going on what TV and movies tells you to think?
As to the Germans not bombing Paris because they didn't need to as the French surrendered, thanks for repeating what I said in a slightly different way.
My first reaction was that the guys shooting live rounds did not have a berm to stop the bullets hit something a kilometer further away, only a few sparse trees.
They're M1 carbines, and it's a movie. I wouldn't think about it too hard.
Doesn't seem like there's anything a kilometer beyond but woods and overgrown fields, so it should be fine.
As long as you know exactly what’s in the direction you’re shooting you don’t need a berm. Plus the 30 carbine round isn’t anything like modern high ballistic coefficient bullets that will keep traveling for 1km. Your maximum effective range is 100yds with military manuals suggesting not to shoot over 50yds if you can help it. By 300yds the bullet has lost so much energy that is almost in the dirt if you fire from 5 feet off the ground. 300yds is about .25km for the metric users
@@ethos5639 The M1 carbine was given sights that went up to 300 yards, and training in its use was done up to 300 yards.
@@wbertie2604 Okay but if you understand the ballistics of the round you know bullet drop is about 50 inches (4ft) at 300yds. It has a pretty flat trajectory out to 100yds and if you’re a damn good shot you might be able to get hits out to 200yds. Besides training on a static range with wind socks and all the ammunition you’re ever gonna need is nothing like combat. It builds good discipline but you aren’t gonna hit anything in actual combat at 300yds unless you get lucky. The Lee Enfield rifles in WW1 had sights that went to over 1300 meters. Just because it’s there doesn’t mean it ever actually gets used.
"It's a good thing I'm fluent in French!"
It's also a good thing you have a Frenchman in your squad XD
That French-British pun was funny.
We love to hate each other
They bombed london ! ... yes I know 🤣🤣 they were my 2 favourite characters 😔
not a pun
How is that a pun?
I love how that one guy's facial expression slowly changes after being told they are live rounds and not blanks.
John Goodman. Despite being well past his prime, this should still be known name today. And this is coming from someone who is really bad at keeping track of actors real names.
I don't want to burst your bubble of ignorance, but this was a FICTICIOUS film, not real life.
@@Demun1649 I don't wanna fucking burst your bubble of ignorance but if you looked at the comment from a logical point you would realize how I was complementing the fucking ACTING christ almighty...
He didn’t know that when he got up and walked right over to them😂
"I love how I noticed the same joke everyone else did."
Can't believe they've made a movie about the monument men!
I didn't know they existed until a few years ago and now there is a movie!
I learned from a documentary a few months back that people make way too much of a thing that he was rejected from art school. The Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna was extremely difficult to get into, the average individual that was accepted it was their third time applying for entrance. He only applied once and probably wouldn't have been shocked he wasn't accepted at his age and skill the first time...the shocking thing was even though panel that reviewed his portfolio rejected him, they were so impressed by his technical skills when it came to his work painting/drawing buildings that they got him into the Vienna's Imperial Academy of Architecture. He accepted but never attended(no known reason to why).
"You're out of your depth, Donnie!"
MARK IT ZERO!!
At the 12 second mark it is me firing on this range, I walk away behind the guy firing the colt 45. Monuments Men was a great film to work on, we were looked after well by the production company. Being personally directed by Clooney was kind of cool I guess.
wait wasn't the director eastwood?
Too bad they couldn't get your face! Still cool
@@balcorn9211 I always wondered about that, I was right in front of the camera, my brief was to walk off shot as it paned down the range, the other guys I was working with got some good in screen shots. It was fun, a good job.
@@oliviersavard8676 George Clooney was the director
That scene always cracked me up
Always bugged me when he says "The WWI memorial." Nobody called it WWI during WWII.
The phrase WW1 was coined before WW1 even ended, when people were already predicting a second Great War.
According to Wikipedia “The term ‘World War I’ was coined by Time magazine on page 28b of its June 12, 1939 issue.” Best as I can find until that time WWI was referred to as “The Great War.”
@@kbrown4ou I've heard of others referring to it as a World war before 1939
Incidentally if any of you wanna see a great World War One Museum check out the one in Kansas City, you can even go to the top of the memorial.
@@kbrown4ou nvm i change what i said a recently declassified navy document from 1920 asks that the great war be refered to as the first world war from then on
High movie and high class actors and acting. My all time favorite
Only someone in India would describe these actors as high class actors... you are from India right?
the only person missing is Brad Pitt, then you got yourself an Ocean’s 14 movie.
Think that's why he was left out, or may be Ocean's 9.... can't remember how many were in this gang ..
Brad Pitt was already in France fighting with his Sherman tank.
This was a very underrated movie
at the time I didn't give this movie to much thought....it was good. now that every movie is an avenger god I miss it
Such a good movie.
I always forget how much I love this goddamn film.
Me too. I’m so glad that I was in school to do an assignment on this movie that day.
Great movie. Funny, good filming, good writing.
I agree
Ah yes absolutely no recoil on those revolvers
George Clooney is a decent actor here.
I didn't realize it was him because he didn't act like George Clooney.
Is that Robert Crawley? The Earl of Grantham
It wasn’t because there was art in it that Hitler didn’t bomb Paris. He didn’t bomb Paris because the French had already stopped fighting.
Didnt the German commander refuse Hs orders to burn Paris before surrendering in 1944.
he stands up in the middle of a live fire exercise
good movie
One of my favourite films
Same
When my dad and his air force friend went through basic training, they would still fire live bullets as you crawled
That scene felt like a oceans film
“So you mean to say…I just stood up with real bullets flying over my head…”
Love John Goodman.
Omg the well, "yes but no" meme
My favorite scene is Murray and Balaban at the German officer's cabin, when the German looks down and Murray has his 45 on the table.
Cool
I Like This Version of Groundhogday
If you like this movie you should check out “the men who stare at goats” it has the same vibe as this movie and is absolutely amazing.
I watched as much of it as I could stand. It's an insane film.
"It belongs in a museum"
-A.H.
I love how all the old actors get together for movies like this. Seagal is terrible about it.
Yeah.. I'm so willing to believe the US military is going to round up a bunch of 50+ year old guys and send them into combat as some sort of elite unit.
You know this actually happened, right? They were art critics and historians attached to specific units in search of works stolen by the Nazis
@@CodaMission He means Seagal movies, not this one. :D
“Fatly” walking around corners, and limp-wristedly shooting a gun.
@@ricepresident2990 Yup that's Seagal alright lmao. When he ever decides to actually stand up
@@blueboigaming5189 I'm actually going to second that assessment of Seagal. Anyone can fire a weapon. Children in Africa do it on the daily, its not manly. But unfortunately, a lot of guys do it to look tough, and Stephen Seagal is one of them. Dude bugs the shit out of me
Hmm george clooney probably likes the uniforms. being in the catch 22 series lmao
ah, at 2:27 there are the Flevopolders, which fell dry in the 1970ties. Miraculously appearing in a 1940ties map yet again.
They still fire above you with live rounds in basic, it’s hella fun
He's Jason Bourne, of course he's fluent in French!
Hitler is not from Linz. I have been to Braunau am Inn, and it is one of the creepiest places in the world by far imho.
No sooner did I arrive than some Austrian asked me if I'd like to see where Hitler was born and where his family sat in church. He was a folk hero to her. Might have been a relative for all I know. Never went back.
*Alex Baldwin* Wait.. these aren't blanks?
Not funny.
lol "this is why Hitler didn't bomb Paris"
"but the bombed London!"
"I know."
Like the difference between someone shooting at you and bullets that just happen to be passing by. A snap or Crack vs a whistle.
YEs they are teenager But no they are not blanks try not to get shot in the meantime i love that part
2:06 BUUUUUURRN!!!!
what the hell are these comments
Ooyyyeeauhhh
I don't think I could ever function effectively under the rigid structure of military organizations, but it would be fun to see how well I could handle the physicality of basic training. For a 32yo I'm pretty fit. I think it would be a satisfying challenge. As a swimmer I don't spend most of time on land-based exercise; it would be fun to do something more generally functional. I mean I love swimming but as a human I do live on... the land. Seems like an important environment to uh... be prepared for.
They aren't blanks? Well they kinda are, the rifles and revolvers have no recoil that's a dead give away.
The french men :
Comment est votre blanquette ?
"This is why he didn't bomb Paris."
Yeah, it's also why he didn't blow up the navy.
They let the British do that instead.
@@ReptilianLepton Well the alternative was an even bigger German navy, and as the only thing standing between Germany and European hegemony, Britain vetoed it. With bombs.
@@Lorgar64 Germans didn't have a surface fleet, and the theoretical addition of the french ships still doesn't come anywhere near achieving naval superiority over the British, especially given that the Germans were suffering a critical fuel shortage for the entire war.
@@supershutze1944 "Britain had a big navy, therefore it didn't matter if the Germans received an extra fleet at no cost."
Christ, please never manage a war. And what's wrong with destroying German assets in the second world war?
@@supershutze1944 See, that's the thing... they did have a surface fleet, and it was a fairly capable one despite its smaller size. Would it match the British fleet of 1940? No, not at all. But look at just how much one ship would tie up for the Brits. It doesn't matter if all the other guy has is a rowboat and a rocket launcher, if they're capable of inflicting any damage to your fleet, or most importantly, your supply lines, you have to respect it.
It always bother me at 0:07 you can clearly see him jump onto the floor and then duck.
I remember watching this in art class during 8th grade
Australian Army Wanted Me to be a Colonel in the Military Police and had I Accepted the Direct Appointment I’d have been exempted from all Field Training, Fitness Training, Fitness Testing, Medical Examinations and Psychological Evaluations forever.
Even with all those Concessions going for Me and much more besides I decided to remain an Officer of the Crown within the super secretive Australian Department of Defence.
Good scene. Except that the National World War 1 monument is in Kansas City, not in St. Louis.
Crazy part about this is, if what he says about blanks is true, they're firing just out into the blue.
No birm in sight.
Why did this all of a sudden show up in my recommended?
bill murray and john goodman in one film?
never assume!
Oceans 7
WW2 edition.
Oceans '44
Back when the army used live ammo
that invasion map :(
I will never understand people who watch movies based on the actors that are in it.
Story does not matter now all of the sudden? LOL
except they were blanks, because it was in a movie. #JohnGoodmanDidNothingWrong (I really hope there isn't some thing he actually did wrong that I didn't hear about)
one day this will age like milk, probably.
Matt Damon is fluent in French because he was based in Paris as Jason Bourne many years ago
Or may be from reading French books while working as a janitor in Good Will Hunting....
He is Private Ryan and fought in France during ww2 😉
Odd that the Limey and the Frenchman get bumped off fairly early in the film just leaving the Americans to take the final credit. Hmm.
Seems accurate to American film making
My father trained at Fort Pickett in Virginia during the War. They had a similar obstacle course they went through, but they had to craw down hill , through mud, while .30 caliber machine guns shot over their heads and explosives (probably grenades) were set off nearby. At the bottom of the hill was an ambulance and it was used occasionally when someone stuck their butt up. This was the greatest generation and they were very tough.
they still do this lol did this 3 years ago homie
It's called live fire exercises. They still do it because it's good military training to get actual experience and get acclimated to live rounds, explosions and the danger of all it.
Had the French guy have a mas 36 would have been the icing on the 🍰
This film has a Medal Of Honor esque plot where soldiers are recruited into the OSS which was back then the WW2 precursor of the CIA and going into occupied Europe behind enemy lines to save important art from being destroyed by the Nazis
Never seen or even heard of this movie, which is a shame since they spent a TON of money on the cast.
Another movie about art and war in WW2 : "A castle in hell". It does not end well.
big belly no mud?
its funny because its true alota times the people who stood up would get shot and more than likly die on the spot there were a few deaths' that way in basics
He was actually pretty good artist when it came to architecture, the reason he failed is an architecture was not popular at the time, portraits and characters, mostly faces were “in” when Hitler 10 at Art school I need ever got very good at painting them, because he enjoyed buildings in different architecture‘s.
is it just me that finds this extremely cheesy? like just step onto the basic training course here is 70yr old ww1 vet Bob Bill
I'm also fluent in French.
But i don't know a single word of the language.......
They wouldn’t be crawling with a clear line of sight to the shooters, there would be sandbags and/or a burm to make sure the only way you got shot was by standing up like an idiot
annoyed me more thant id like that they called it the ww1 memorial before the second war was over
IT's so hypocritical to hear the British accuse someone of art theft.
For an untrained eyes, it's decent. But if you look closely, even the perspective of the lines doesn't add up with the current angle/perspective of the architecture. For an example; if you look at a window in an angle you would probably see the other side of the window as big where the farther side of the window looks small. Hitler on the other hand would just draw straight up square.
Walter from the Big L
lol
...this was an excuse for the old guard to take a trip to Europe, wasn't it?
:40 teenagers did not exist then.
حلووو
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Would it be stealing if you conquered the land? Thought those were spoils of war.
The Soviets sure didn't give back what they took then.
One thing you have to admire about the Germans was how they tried to avoid damaging priceless works and art. in WWI the Kaiser even expressly forbidden the Zeppelin raids from attacking landmarks and important locations.
ww2 oceans 11
That's what Alec Baldwin said
The WW1 Memorial is in Kansas City, not St. Louis
There's also one in St. Louis and many other States.
But the national WW1 museum is in KC and that’s probably what they’re referring to. I didn’t know there was one in STL as well
0:24 big issue with this statement. No one during WW2 referred to the the first world war as WW1. It was still known as the The Great War back then
This is actually a misconception. The term "First World War" occurred as early as 1917, before the Great War was even over.
Other terms considered were "The German War" (which was rejected for giving the Germans too much credit) and "The World War" (which wasn't likely to last) so British writers settled on "The First World War".
@@HellbirdIV Don't forget "The War to End All Wars" which is was also called at the time. Little did they know...
This is a good movie if your into history especially ww2, but i can see why it flopped hard in theaters its all over the place and jumps around to much not to much action either