The Good, The Bad And The Ugly - Branston Bridge scene

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  • Опубликовано: 3 дек 2024
  • The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (석양에 돌아오다 - 속 석양의 무법자, Italian: Il buono, il brutto, il cattivo, literally "The good, the ugly, the bad") is a 1966 Italian epic spaghetti Western film directed by Sergio Leone and starring Clint Eastwood as "the Good", Lee Van Cleef as "the Bad", and Eli Wallach as "the Ugly". Its screenplay was written by Age & Scarpelli, Luciano Vincenzoni, and Leone (with additional screenplay material and dialogue provided by an uncredited Sergio Donati), based on a story by Vincenzoni and Leone. Director of photography Tonino Delli Colli was responsible for the film's sweeping widescreen cinematography, and Ennio Morricone composed the film's score, including its main theme. It was an Italian-led production with co-producers in Spain, West Germany, and the United States. Most of the filming took place in Spain.
    Among Westerns, Sergio Leone's "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" maintains its reputation as an iconic masterpiece. Released in the U.S. in 1967, the sprawling three-hour epic became a landmark of the spaghetti western sub-genre and solidified director Sergio Leone, composer Ennio Morricone, and star Clint Eastwood's legacies in Hollywood. It also notably features one of the most memorable scenes in all Westerns: the bridge explosion. At a pivotal juncture in the film, Blondie (Eastwood) and Tuco (Eli Wallach) scheme to blow up a strategic bridge point between the Union and Confederate army outposts and gain access to a cemetery where they believe buried treasure lies.
    Read More: www.slashfilm....

Комментарии • 216

  • @ANProductionsOfficialChannel
    @ANProductionsOfficialChannel Год назад +450

    The Captain is truly one of the most fascinating characters Sergio Leone ever put on screen. Hardly any screen time, but so memorable, deep, and sympathetic.

    • @Bernard_Chang
      @Bernard_Chang Год назад +45

      The Captain hung on painfully until his last breath to hear the good new, then stop fighting and leaving in peace.

    • @smileyfawler8454
      @smileyfawler8454 Год назад +49

      Yeah I always loved how he actually fought with his men instead of hiding behind them.

    • @talkaboutwacky
      @talkaboutwacky Год назад +34

      He really was a great character. I love his drunken banter he has with Blondi and Tuco. This movie was definitely an anti war movie

    • @uriel7203
      @uriel7203 Год назад +6

      Thinking the same

    • @rubensdeliz3068
      @rubensdeliz3068 Год назад +20

      A great soldier, patriot and totally tired about all those mess, called civil war.

  • @ladbeethoven9
    @ladbeethoven9 Год назад +151

    My favourite scene is when Clint comes upon a dying Soldier - a young man - Clint offers him a puff of his cigar and puts his coat over the young man. With Ennio Morricone's poignant music playing in the back ground it's a very moving scene.

    • @chrismorfas7515
      @chrismorfas7515 Год назад +11

      This movie was conceived as a prequel for the “Dollars” movies. Clint puts on the dying confederate soldier’s poncho so that at the end of this movie his character matches that of “Fistful.”

    • @JR-ly2pu
      @JR-ly2pu Год назад +9

      I just came to see that scene this morning while drinking my coffee. I randomly wanted to watch it. Great touching scene of compassion.

    • @HeatlerTFP
      @HeatlerTFP 23 дня назад

      Mine too

  • @mf5202
    @mf5202 Год назад +50

    This scene was pretty much a mini-movie within the movie. I forgot how darn good it was!

  • @talkaboutwacky
    @talkaboutwacky Год назад +243

    The Union Captain was barely in the movie but he’s one of the most memorable characters to me. He was instantly likable and clearly is a good man. I loved the anti war message in this film

  • @antonioallen440
    @antonioallen440 Год назад +11

    Glad the Captain was able to hear his dream come true !! Love this movie. RIP Dad. Was our favorite movie.

  • @rickysaucedo5002
    @rickysaucedo5002 Год назад +19

    Thank you pop for letting me watch this with ya as a kid. Rip father. Caballero para siempre

  • @ianfirth9300
    @ianfirth9300 Год назад +8

    I can't even tell you how many times I've seen GBU since January 1968.Never get tired of it made to say except for Clint many of the cast and crew have passed away. The film will stand the test when we are all gone. To all the people have posted here good luck where ever you are ❤Jack in Ottawa👋 Canada 🇨🇦

  • @bsully9219
    @bsully9219 Год назад +61

    The background music in this movie was a story in its self.Great score!

    • @michaelguardado
      @michaelguardado Год назад +8

      all the sad little trumpets make wanna cry for my fallen comrad and father

    • @devanshujoeldhali2334
      @devanshujoeldhali2334 Год назад +2

      ​@@michaelguardadomay they all sleep in peace

  • @wyrdwik4610
    @wyrdwik4610 Год назад +106

    I’m sure many directors, producers would have cut this interlude as being a detour just prior to the climax. Good thing Sergio Leone knew what he was doing. Great scene that adds so much to the film and the world of these characters.

    • @Thaylor-xp9pu
      @Thaylor-xp9pu Год назад

      O.

    • @Cheez_Doodlezz
      @Cheez_Doodlezz Год назад

      @@Thaylor-xp9puwhat does O. Mean

    • @Kessekom
      @Kessekom 8 месяцев назад

      We already got the war insert when they previously got taken prisoner. This second scene wasn’t needed

  • @christiandietz6341
    @christiandietz6341 Год назад +18

    Thank you for your brilliant performances! Rest in peace Eli Wallach! ❤

  • @MoonNightGod_23
    @MoonNightGod_23 Год назад +18

    I loved this part because im a history nerd and i love the union outfits,the muskets and navy colts

  • @ThaiThom
    @ThaiThom Год назад +31

    5:36 "Why not really blow it up, Captain?" --- My favorite line.

  • @michallowther4160
    @michallowther4160 Год назад +12

    My favourite moment in the film.....where the dying captain hears the bridge blown up and his little smile.....gives me goosebumps

    • @JimmySteller
      @JimmySteller 5 месяцев назад

      He outlived the bridge. It's amazing how invested we all get in that accomplishment for all the little amount of screentime that the captain's got.

  • @Edelweiss1102
    @Edelweiss1102 Год назад +134

    Fun fact: the explosion we see in the movie is actually the 2nd time the bridge was blown up. The first time it was blown up prematurely by Spanish staf due to some miscommunication before any camera was filming. And since it was all practical effects, they had to build the whole thing from scratch and shoot al the scenes again.

    • @oliverganley6178
      @oliverganley6178 Год назад +35

      Apparently Leone fired the crewman who caused the miscommunication. The local army offered to help them rebuild the bridge on the condition that the crewman be rehired.

    • @fredkeele6578
      @fredkeele6578 6 месяцев назад

      Just watched an interview clip with Clint. He explains the dangerous part of him and Eli being too close, so Leone used two doubles. Clint said assistant camera man almost got killed. Then said "Anytime you're ready C.B., but that was another story". Must be referring to the accidental blowing up 😂

    • @jazz3695
      @jazz3695 5 месяцев назад

      CGI be getting crazy

  • @vpat_patv
    @vpat_patv Год назад +91

    Observe the transition from just a small road route to a massive warzone from 0:53 to 1:15. I personally loved the transition phase there, anyone wouldn't have expected a warzone to be shown there. Brilliant thinking by the Director and Cameraman👍

    • @talkaboutwacky
      @talkaboutwacky Год назад +10

      So did I. It’s pretty amazing when the camera pans right and you just see how huge those trenches and fortifications are

    • @GordonLF
      @GordonLF Год назад +6

      One of the most memorable shots in the movie. And its magnificence invites the complicity of the movie goer since the dry Mediterranean landscape (filmed in Almeria, Spain) superbly mimics the backdrop of the Battle of Valverde between the Union and the Confederates in Rio Grande, New Mexico.

    • @ericaasen4512
      @ericaasen4512 3 месяца назад +1

      Especially with tuco saying how great his sense of direction is 10 feet from a major battlefield

  • @James-mz5vf
    @James-mz5vf Год назад +5

    Brilliant movie the good & the bad & the ugly, tuco thought he was to clever for blondie but blondie was always one step ahead of him. Loved the bridge scene where they tie the explosives to the bridge & they tell each other name of the grave. The captain was brilliant in film too

  • @nymalous3428
    @nymalous3428 Год назад +37

    I remember watching this scene as a little kid. I couldn't understand all of the significance of what was going on. My dad tried to explain it to me, and I got a little bit of it, but it wasn't until years later, when I looked back on it that I really got it.
    I've only ever seen this particular scene twice: that first time and again just now. I'm pleased that my memory of it from the first time matches almost exactly as this one... more than 35 years later. I've got a pretty good memory, despite the brain damage, but I think even as a kid I knew that something significant happened in that scene and so it stuck with me. Thanks for sharing it.

    • @m42037
      @m42037 Год назад +5

      Civil war was horrific, this seen is only a small bit...

  • @talkaboutwacky
    @talkaboutwacky Год назад +127

    I love how the Captain is able to die in peace when he sees that godforsaken bridge explode in a million pieces

    • @randymillhouse791
      @randymillhouse791 Год назад

      He didn't see it.

    • @neversaynever8484
      @neversaynever8484 Год назад

      he did hear it indeed@@randymillhouse791

    • @Cheez_Doodlezz
      @Cheez_Doodlezz Год назад +1

      @@randymillhouse791blud………..🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @CaptDestro
      @CaptDestro 5 месяцев назад

      @@randymillhouse791 He probably heard it.

  • @CountvonCount33
    @CountvonCount33 Год назад +62

    "Can you help me live a little longer Doctor? ... I'm expecting some good news"

  • @Hammer2k11
    @Hammer2k11 Год назад +80

    When an Italian film director makes a better Civil War scene than any American director.

  • @kingpetra6886
    @kingpetra6886 Год назад +9

    Captures the pathos of that war without losing it's edge or the hard felt sentiment on each side.

  • @edtrent3789
    @edtrent3789 4 дня назад

    Great movie, great music score, great cinematography, great acting, great story, and great directing.

  • @stevenklinkhamer9069
    @stevenklinkhamer9069 Год назад +5

    By far the most memorable, compelling, segment in this film one could argue. A stand-out scene for sure. The civil war as a backdrop added a lot to this film time, and time again.

  • @haroldishoy2113
    @haroldishoy2113 Год назад +14

    I will never know why but these Spaghetti westerns were so good.

    • @diegograssi9269
      @diegograssi9269 Год назад

      It was the genius of the director, beside his movies the other spaghetti westerns are pretty much low level movies

    • @TimBadger-w7d
      @TimBadger-w7d Год назад +3

      Acting

    • @bulldogsbob
      @bulldogsbob 9 месяцев назад

      Most of them were cRap out of of the Leone ones. There are exceptions like The Big Gundien and The Great Silence.

  • @michaelwernimont4410
    @michaelwernimont4410 Год назад +26

    Aldo Giuffre did such an excellent job in his short time portraying the Captain.

  • @JediPhoenix1976
    @JediPhoenix1976 Год назад +56

    Couldn't help but laugh at the look on Blondie's face when he realizes the crate he's hiding behind contains dynamite, and also that he's holding the cheroot a little too close to said crate.

    • @nitromartini1422
      @nitromartini1422 Год назад +1

      Also, you can shoot holes in dynamite and set it on fire and it won't go off. You have to use a blasting cap. Hollywood distorts everything for drama.

    • @tranz2deep
      @tranz2deep Год назад +1

      Tuco's wince when he caught on only helped.

  • @ericpajak8715
    @ericpajak8715 Год назад +1

    My favorite scene of this amazing master piece of a film, a true one.

  • @mitchellmelkin4078
    @mitchellmelkin4078 Год назад +8

    Pulitzer Prize winning novelist and film critic described this as the best Civil War battle scene yet filmed (his comment dates from 2003).

  • @GeneralMe100
    @GeneralMe100 2 месяца назад +1

    this battle scene is the best I've seen in any movie

  • @pedrobarata9237
    @pedrobarata9237 7 месяцев назад +9

    "Never seen so many men wasted so badly" - perfect summation of almost every war.

  • @MCMLXXXVICCXII
    @MCMLXXXVICCXII Год назад +10

    That was hella serious bridge boom. Tuco almost caught some stones with his ass there😂

  • @greenmtnman7714
    @greenmtnman7714 Год назад +26

    The scene just after this with the dying soldier really hit me hard.

  • @samxyx
    @samxyx Год назад +19

    I like how the captain told them to destroy the bridge, without telling them to destroy the bridge. He recognized only they could as outsiders. Although a stronger captain might have just done it anyways

  • @James-nl6fu
    @James-nl6fu Год назад +57

    The Captain reminds me how much simple humanity can always be found in the most terrible places.

    • @tranz2deep
      @tranz2deep Год назад +6

      I have a headcanon that the Captain knew full well these two maniacs were just guys hoping the cross the river (for whatever reason) and decided to show them exactly what they'd almost volunteered themselves into... what his war had deformed into. Guiding them right to the explosives? Come on...

    • @Nemo7The7Pirate7
      @Nemo7The7Pirate7 6 месяцев назад

      I personally never saw a commander go into battle like that and I'm a war veteran. Good man.

  • @nicknack3648
    @nicknack3648 Год назад +16

    Absolute brilliant! Genius

  • @LindaMerchant-bq2hp
    @LindaMerchant-bq2hp 3 месяца назад +1

    One of the greatist movies and western film ever❤

  • @brerrabbit9585
    @brerrabbit9585 Месяц назад +2

    Kinda 'borrows' from the end of 'The Bridge on the river Kwai', but it works beautifully.The Italians really knew how to make epic westerns . I wish they come back and replace all those CGI comic book films and endless 'franchises',sequels, and reboots!

  • @TruthLivesNow
    @TruthLivesNow Год назад +4

    This is a great section of the movie. I cannot think of the dynamics of these two characters in any other movie. Very Interesting!

  • @felipecardoza9967
    @felipecardoza9967 Год назад +9

    So, it takes an Italian director practically no time at all to sum up the tragedy of the "civil" war, as well as deliver an iconic movie to boot?

  • @MRHEEL-ys2rq
    @MRHEEL-ys2rq Год назад +10

    At least the Captain died with a smile on his face after hearing the good news

  • @tomcooper6108
    @tomcooper6108 3 месяца назад

    So many great scenes in this film. The Captain was so pivotal in showing what a brutal war this was. The greatest western ever made.

  • @yaufu2386
    @yaufu2386 2 месяца назад

    Movies within this Greatest Movie... An Epic Movie...

  • @riley4198
    @riley4198 Год назад +85

    Fun fact: it is said that Clint eastwood was nearly killed in this scene by a piece of debris.

    • @talkaboutwacky
      @talkaboutwacky Год назад +25

      That one chunk in the far right of that shot definitely would’ve killed him had his head been exposed . Tucos actor is lucky too, imagine if that rock hit him with his ass straight up like it was, lol

    • @Badhands55
      @Badhands55 Год назад +13

      They were both almost killed - very lucky they weren’t - Eli was almost killed filming several other scenes as well

    • @andrewdunne1735
      @andrewdunne1735 Год назад +10

      ​@@Badhands55Eli Wallack was an underestimated great actor,always played his role to perfection

    • @michaelmemmott1050
      @michaelmemmott1050 Год назад +3

      I was looking for this comment ha ha! Truly committed to the bit. I bet when they watched it after they breathed a sigh of relief. Great scene!

    • @Literallyryangosling777
      @Literallyryangosling777 Год назад +2

      ​@@andrewdunne1735he jumped from a moving train

  • @superhydra8873
    @superhydra8873 3 месяца назад +2

    It’s cool that the captain is almost directly telling them not to enlist, since unlike the rest of the men there, they have a choice to die or not. “Is it bad that I talk to volunteers the way I do? I’ve done a lot worse” is worse than blowing up the bridge according to the higher ups who don’t care about lost lives. Truly ahead of it’s time, sad that conscription wasn’t even abolished when this movie came out.

  • @underarmbowlingincidentof1981
    @underarmbowlingincidentof1981 Год назад +59

    16:57 that rock

    • @Bernard_Chang
      @Bernard_Chang Год назад +18

      A real fckng blast back form the 60's production!

    • @SharkIey
      @SharkIey 8 месяцев назад +3

      Roblox physics

    • @Hottamales555
      @Hottamales555 5 месяцев назад +2

      I know...Eli Wallach was probably like "I'm brave enough to be funny" and that rock came within 3 feet of changing his life.

  • @TheGood1862
    @TheGood1862 Год назад +2

    Greetings from Brazil

  • @michaelwernimont4410
    @michaelwernimont4410 Год назад +16

    I think this scene was based on the repeated attacks by both sides on the stone bridge at the battle of Antetiam ,Maryland in 1862. .during the Civil War. It is today known as Burnsides Bridge.

    • @fredrickhall7039
      @fredrickhall7039 Год назад

      Nope. This is more like the Vicksburg entrenchments though
      I never was there. But I was at Antetiam and that was farm country, very nice, but so pastoral now

    • @michaelwernimont4410
      @michaelwernimont4410 Год назад +3

      @@fredrickhall7039 But at Vicksburg there were no repeated assaults across a bridge,like there weee at Antietam. Its the repeated assaults across a bridge theme that I was referring to.

    • @GordonLF
      @GordonLF Год назад +6

      In the film, they are in New Mexico. The Battle of Valverde, Rio Grande. The Andalusian landscape, very arid Mediterranean, recreates it very accurately.

    • @sarahgough6015
      @sarahgough6015 2 месяца назад

      It’s arguably more reminiscent of the battles of the Italian front of WWI especially when you consider how the massive use of earthwork trenches, machine guns, human wave attacks and pointless loss of life brings to mind the battles of the Isonzo. Which makes sense as these are Italian produced films and the Italian experiences in the Soče/Isonzo River valley has left an indelible mark on the Italian memory of war.

  • @abboblue78
    @abboblue78 Год назад +7

    The Captain stole this scene , until Blondie noticed the dynamite whilst smoking 😅

  • @jonstensaas9077
    @jonstensaas9077 Год назад +2

    Definitely Sharon Eli Wallach play The Fantastic scenes in this great movie his facial expressions you are fantastic

  • @hungrymikepencetd5686
    @hungrymikepencetd5686 Год назад +1

    The best movie of all time

  • @justsomestreamer8315
    @justsomestreamer8315 9 месяцев назад +1

    Imagine being those guys on the cannons and the rolling machine guns just watching all your brothers rushing in to die in the battle.

  • @VictorCharlieAK47
    @VictorCharlieAK47 Год назад +10

    i never expected to see a war scene in this trilogy 😂 it's really a bizzare journey of blondie and tuco , from cowboy to soldier , cant see that happen

  • @nassermj7671
    @nassermj7671 Год назад +6

    The next scene was blondy kicking him down by
    his butt to wake him up, I was waiting for that.

  • @HAn-ie2zp
    @HAn-ie2zp Год назад +1

    Amazing scene!

  • @brandon-141x
    @brandon-141x Год назад +3

    I love this scene ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @Yonder27
    @Yonder27 Год назад +13

    The only thing that didn’t make sense was how close Tuco and Blonde were to over a thousand Union soldiers without seeing or hearing them. The perimeter being less than a football field away was a stretch but from where they left their horses was two mounds of sand that first was perimeter and over the second you could see the river below and a mile wide stretch of the Union army. Every Sergio Leone film I’ve seen was a masterpiece and I wish there could have been more.

  • @guinness77100
    @guinness77100 Год назад +1

    Top notch work on blowing up that bridge. I don't think that was a miniature.

  • @kuribayashi84
    @kuribayashi84 Год назад +1

    I knew an explosion was coming but I was unprepared for how powerful it was.

  • @jefftomasello3258
    @jefftomasello3258 Год назад +11

    Anyone see the car go by at 15:28 just above Clints right shoulder - Time Travelers perhaps?

    • @shahbaazkhan1196
      @shahbaazkhan1196 Год назад +4

      Yeah I saw that. You got a good eye for detail.👍

    • @yoyoyoc3po
      @yoyoyoc3po Год назад +7

      Probably just Marty Mcfly and the Doc

    • @TheGood1862
      @TheGood1862 Год назад +3

      you were probably the first to notice this friend

    • @TheGood1862
      @TheGood1862 Год назад +3

      a DeLorean for sure

    • @TF2Scout..
      @TF2Scout.. Год назад +1

      Back to the future vibes

  • @EM-wd2vg
    @EM-wd2vg Год назад

    Typically Leone, nothing and then everything…truly wonderful scene from a truly wonderful film.

  • @yaponetsa
    @yaponetsa Год назад +5

    16:58 Clint Eastwood was very close to death

  • @vectorm4
    @vectorm4 Год назад +1

    If you save your breath, I feel a man like you can make it.

  • @bennytrickett09
    @bennytrickett09 5 месяцев назад +2

    Look how close Emes came to the two stand-ins! Lethal... Eli Wallach nearly died three times during the making of the film 😮

  • @joco8290
    @joco8290 Год назад +15

    Why do explosions in these old movies sound and look so much more realistic than the ones in modern movies?

    • @crazyratpors
      @crazyratpors Год назад +15

      Because they are usually real

    • @tydshiin5783
      @tydshiin5783 Год назад +7

      If you look closely those are actual explosives, that's why there's so much smoke and less fire, and explosions usually just fly upwards and not spread itself around with fire

    • @dennisneo1608
      @dennisneo1608 Год назад

      Why do people not know the difference between than and then?

    • @joco8290
      @joco8290 Год назад +1

      @@dennisneo1608 English is not my native language.

  • @TheGood1862
    @TheGood1862 Год назад +1

    There's another rendition of "the Strong" that plays when blondie gives the wounded captain a drink during the Branston Bridge battle.I've been looking all over for it.

  • @ericwharton213
    @ericwharton213 Год назад

    Definition of doing a good thing for bad reasons. Also, "I've never seen so many men wasted so badly" is one hell of a statement

  • @danyalmemish6309
    @danyalmemish6309 Год назад +1

    Amazing that there were so many Gatling Guns portrayed in this scene, compared to reality

  • @dollarstone
    @dollarstone Год назад +11

    This scene utterly resumes to me that neither sides were to gain nothing from this except bloodshed. More than a million lives were breached early due to the Civil War, totally eclipsed by the World Wars that succeded, of which took only a fraction of casualties. This is usually what happened in most Civil War battles: no one declared winner, no viable way to prove who won either.

  • @James-pq7nf
    @James-pq7nf Год назад

    love this part

  • @stephanearthaud8308
    @stephanearthaud8308 Год назад +2

    Arts and littérature could be useful, when so true, ugly and good ! The good & the ugly, so well explained here ! Like in a chinese idéogramme !

  • @SharkIey
    @SharkIey 8 месяцев назад +1

    That captain is most good guy?

  • @bobbyfischerman4811
    @bobbyfischerman4811 Год назад +2

    “… but what I lack is the gutts”
    🔥bomb explodes🔥
    Captain doesn’t even move

  • @juangabrielmg2467
    @juangabrielmg2467 2 года назад +7

    Bom filme

  • @GazAce
    @GazAce Год назад +2

    Sergio Leone was the Picasso of Directors.

  • @franciscowashington2155
    @franciscowashington2155 Год назад +3

    Esse filme é muito bom 👍👍🙂

  • @sudheerammanoor7984
    @sudheerammanoor7984 Год назад +1

    Mr. captain scored everything that's it .

  • @phantim_othy571
    @phantim_othy571 Год назад +2

    Hmm...missing something 😊 No CGI

  • @isars3433
    @isars3433 7 месяцев назад

    9:03 amazing line

  • @James-pq7nf
    @James-pq7nf Год назад +2

    did you know the spanish had to blow up that bridge twice

  • @seekbalance6891
    @seekbalance6891 Год назад +1

    imagine the added cost to the production to film this scene... but the movie wouldn't have been the same without it.

    • @diegograssi9269
      @diegograssi9269 Год назад +1

      The cost was low because they used young spanish soldiers during their mandatory mil service, they also built the bridge twice because for mistake they blowed it up for mistake.

  • @deez9766
    @deez9766 10 месяцев назад

    Is the scene in the fellowship of the rings in lothlorien with gimli being startled by the elves inspired by this one? It looks like it

  • @florida9710
    @florida9710 3 месяца назад

    Great movie! But you just have to place your Gatling Guns at the choke points… along with artillery.😂

  • @llovagee
    @llovagee 2 месяца назад

    4:03 "Names Don't Matter" scene is cut 😞

  • @eugenerowland1262
    @eugenerowland1262 Год назад +2

    What happened to the untethered and unhobbled horses they rode in on?🤔

    • @poseidon3292
      @poseidon3292 9 месяцев назад

      Either they fleed by the around army patrol or they took them for carrying army's supplies and gathered them in a place with other working horses.

  • @Nemo7The7Pirate7
    @Nemo7The7Pirate7 6 месяцев назад +1

    The Ukrainian war vets sure would appreciate the bridge plot. Its actually the same, people still die in thousands for worthless board pieces at headquarters.

  • @wes2262
    @wes2262 9 месяцев назад +1

    Idk any battle this magnitude that took place in the southwest. This movie is so historically inaccurate but great at the same time.

    • @sarahgough6015
      @sarahgough6015 2 месяца назад

      Primarily because it’s an Italian production and their impression of war is still deeply haunted by memories of the First World War. Scenes like this were made with the horrors of the Isonzo in mind because that’s what the original Italian audience would naturally envision if you wanted to depict war as a hellish, pointless affair.

  • @goobi3780
    @goobi3780 Год назад

    17:10 Me finally dying in peace after watching Rockstar release GTA VI and a RDR1 Remaster

  • @husnainanwaar1992
    @husnainanwaar1992 Год назад

    how much did that bridge cost to build ?

  • @Marcus-mk1cv
    @Marcus-mk1cv Год назад

    I want some of that dynamite 😂

  • @JapatiYTP
    @JapatiYTP Год назад +3

    This looks realy new

  • @marcomeister4647
    @marcomeister4647 Год назад +5

    Is there somebody knowledgeable about law and history, who can explain the reason why blowing up the bridge was such a bad crime?

    • @whitelotus6230
      @whitelotus6230 Год назад +19

      both sides need it to travel across after the fighting is over

    • @warbossgrotsmasha23
      @warbossgrotsmasha23 Год назад +8

      bridges have always been tactical advantages in wars, whoever holds a bridge denies the other side access, in ww2 for example the germans attempted to blow important bridges to halt the allied advance into their territory, when an army crosses a bridge it is at its most vulnerable because it cannot deploy to face the enemy due to the bridge's narrowness, if you destroy a bridge you force the enemy to detour giving you more time to prepare while he finds a way to cross the river/chasm to get at you, you see why bridges are important?

    • @ThaiThom
      @ThaiThom Год назад +1

      Gotta keep the war going, there's money in it.

    • @Edelweiss1102
      @Edelweiss1102 Год назад +6

      There a saying: "amateurs study tactics, professionals study strategies, veterans study logistics". Bridges often have a high value in multiple perspectives. Whoever controls them can deny the enemy access to entire regions, or force them to into a choke point, fighting with a disadvantage. Bridges are also invaluable for logistics, crossing natural obstacles that otherwise demand long detours or complex construction works that can put a screeching halt to any military operations for weeks. I'm not familiar with the exact laws, but I certainly wouldn't want to be the culprit of such an action.

    • @Karpuffelstein
      @Karpuffelstein Год назад +2

      From the context I conclude that the captain had got orders concerning his mission there, forbidding him to blow up that bridge. So, the legal aspect of it is military discipline : always follow orders and do not disobey them..

  • @randymillhouse791
    @randymillhouse791 Год назад +1

    Unknown.

  • @moonpawooe7134
    @moonpawooe7134 Год назад

    They sure got in a pickle at the branston bridge

  • @malakyahmalla8009
    @malakyahmalla8009 Год назад

    Isn't this storyline about Robert E. Lee and the battle for independence? I'm not an American, but I recall hearing a preacher recounting some the events on the battlefield. Most notably, one of the captains had the war won peacefully, had it not been for the fact that he was a constant drunk!

  • @hisdudeness8328
    @hisdudeness8328 Год назад +1

    16:53
    Jesus Christ. It’s insane how close that piece of shrapnel came to hitting Clint and Eli, the director was a lunatic!

  • @HallyVee
    @HallyVee Год назад

    Captain Flasheart at 4:20, there.

  • @foxriver84
    @foxriver84 Месяц назад

    15:28 there is a car behind the trees

  • @jurgschupbach3059
    @jurgschupbach3059 Год назад +1

    Its Tuco's Ass who gives meaning to the scene

  • @Johnfranorge
    @Johnfranorge 5 месяцев назад

    They just dont make movies like this anymore!

  • @jtan2010
    @jtan2010 Год назад

    Captains aren't in charge of that many men

    • @sovietsnake2729
      @sovietsnake2729 Год назад +1

      If the higher officers are killed and more aren't easily brought in they can be