THE PATRIOT (2000) MOVIE REACTION!! FIRST TIME WATCHING!! American Revolution | Full Movie Review!

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  • Опубликовано: 29 июн 2024
  • EXACTLY ONE MONTH TO INDEPENDENCE DAY!! The Patriot Full Movie Reaction Watch Along: / thereelrejects
    With the 4th of July just a month away, Tara Erickson & John Humphrey are back for another Historical Tuesday offering as they give their First Time Reaction, Commentary, Breakdown, & Full Spoiler Review for the Revolutionary War Film starring Mel Gibson (Lethal Weapon, Braveheart, We Were Soldiers) as Benjamin Martin along with Heath Ledger (The Dark Knight, A Knight's Tale, 10 Things I Hate About You) as Gabriel martin, Jason Isaacs (Harry Potter, Black Hawk Down, Peter Pan) as Col. William Tavington, Chris Cooper (American Beauty, Adaptation) as Col Harry Burwell, Tom Wilkinson (Michael Clayton, Rush Hour, The Grand Budapest Hotel) as Gen. Lord Charles Cornwallis, Adam Baldwin (Independence Day, Full Metal Jacket) as Capt. Wilkins, + Appearances from Gregory Smith (Everwood), a young Logan Lerman (Percy Jackson, Fury, Bullet Train), and MORE
    Tara & John REACT to all the Best Scenes & Most Rousing Moments including Tomahawk Massacre, My Sons Were Better Men, Before this War is Over, Papa Don't Go, The War Ends Today, No Retreat! , Benjamin Fights Tavington, & Beyond!
    NOTE FOR RUclips: All Footage Featured From "The Patriot" Is From A FICTIONALIZED Historical War Movie. Any & All References To Violence Or "Mature Content" Are NOT Real
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Комментарии • 779

  • @ReelRejects
    @ReelRejects  26 дней назад +13

    - Leave A *LIKE* On This Vid & *SUBSCRIBE* !! ruclips.net/user/TheReelRejects
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    • @jessetorres8738
      @jessetorres8738 25 дней назад +2

      1:08:35. This is the 1 part of the movie I can't stand. There was no point during the Revolutionary War where a church was burned with colonists inside as that would have been considered a war crime. The colonists were still considered British subjects, so him giving the order to burn the church like this would have likely ended his military career. & I get the film is portraying him as a villain, but there is only so much leeway I can give a historical fiction film before it's inaccuracy is hard to ignore.

    • @Corvid76
      @Corvid76 25 дней назад

      Please do this reaction again with Aaron Alexander and someone else that hasn't seen it.

    • @Corvid76
      @Corvid76 25 дней назад

      @@jessetorres8738 There's no evidence that it never happened. There's millions of unrecorded events throughout history.

    • @gothnate
      @gothnate 25 дней назад +1

      The fog you guys are seeing at 5:20 is just South Carolina in the early morning. SC, NC, and GA can all look like that in the mornings. Especially after a heavy rain the night before.

    • @shaner3d
      @shaner3d 25 дней назад +1

      Great reaction. Can’t wait for you to watch Braveheart

  • @wadeschalk4599
    @wadeschalk4599 25 дней назад +179

    "You're MY child!" is such an underrated line in this movie

    • @LadySophiaVelaryon
      @LadySophiaVelaryon 20 дней назад +2

      I agree 100%. I saw "The Patriot" in the theater in 2000, and that line by Mel gave me chills.

  • @Emmanuel_Lacombe
    @Emmanuel_Lacombe 25 дней назад +70

    The scene where Gabriel dies and Mel Gibson cries, Mel was actually thinking about how he’d feel loosing his own. Great acting! Great reaction guys!

  • @JakeMacAttack
    @JakeMacAttack 25 дней назад +155

    I’ve seen this movie over a dozen times
    And each and every time
    That little yells “Papa Don’t Go I’ll Say Anything”
    Hits me straight in the feels.

    • @priestpeace219
      @priestpeace219 25 дней назад +9

      I know, right? I felt like a broken man every time with that scene. And I don't even have kids.

    • @JakeMacAttack
      @JakeMacAttack 25 дней назад +9

      @@priestpeace219 Same. There’s just something about little girls and their fathers.
      That hits different than boys and there fathers.

    • @jamesbond99
      @jamesbond99 25 дней назад +3

      i have also saw this movie so many times because its an awesome movie with great actors

    • @NateMegOfficial
      @NateMegOfficial 25 дней назад +5

      It didn’t used to for me. Then I had two daughters and now it’s insta-ugly cry

    • @fubar1217
      @fubar1217 25 дней назад +6

      That line breaks me everytime

  • @tracerjames51
    @tracerjames51 25 дней назад +160

    “A shepherd must tend his flock….and at times fight off the wolves.”

    • @ReallyGoodandKind
      @ReallyGoodandKind 25 дней назад +13

      The movie where Mr. House, William Wallace and the Joker, team up to fight Lucius Malfoy and the leader of the Jun Tau crime organizations. But with muskets.

    • @hellfish2309
      @hellfish2309 25 дней назад +4

      The Dominion!

    • @scimbrelo
      @scimbrelo 25 дней назад +7

      Rip Rene auberjonois

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 25 дней назад +1

      @@scimbrelo Odo! I met him twice at Star Trek Conventions!

  • @V0ltron
    @V0ltron 25 дней назад +157

    You two haven't seen Braveheart?! Unbelievable! You MUST watch that movie! It is Gold!

    • @TaraErickson
      @TaraErickson 24 дня назад +8

      I know! We must for sure !

    • @DanV900
      @DanV900 22 дня назад +6

      FREEDOM!!!

    • @Waterford1992
      @Waterford1992 22 дня назад +2

      Pure comedy gold you mean!

    • @ps5392
      @ps5392 19 дней назад +1

      Braveheart is a MUST watch!

  • @BlyatBlaster
    @BlyatBlaster 25 дней назад +78

    40:05 so Mel Gibson’s character Benjamin Martin is based on a few real people. Dan Morgan, who was a veteran of the French and Indian War and commanded a pseudo special forces regiment during the American Revolution called “Morgan’s Riflemen” that functioned as scouts and guerrilla ranger light infantry. But he’s mostly based on General Francis “Swamp Fox” Marion who was actually from South Carolina like Benjamin Martin, and after he enlisted he was put in command of forces of the South Carolina Militia, again like Benjamin. And he engaged the British in what the Patriots called “irregular” warfare, what today we would call unconventional or asymmetrical warfare. He used guerrilla tactics and ambush maneuvers to harass the British even with significantly fewer numbers.
    He’s considered one of if not the father of guerrilla warfare and much of his military doctrine is still used by the 75th Rangers which are also sort of pseudo special forces.

    • @4325air
      @4325air 25 дней назад +3

      Excellent, accurate comment!

    • @theawesomeman9821
      @theawesomeman9821 25 дней назад +2

      And Jason Isaacs character is based on the Loyalist Tarleton.

    • @BlyatBlaster
      @BlyatBlaster 25 дней назад

      @@theawesomeman9821 Banastre “Bloody Ban” Tarleton.

    • @charlesmaurer6214
      @charlesmaurer6214 20 дней назад

      Don't forget the other group in the north that became the marines.

    • @4325air
      @4325air 20 дней назад +1

      @@theawesomeman9821 Actually, Tarleton was not a "Loyalist." That term pertained to colonists who remained loyal to George III. Tarleton was not a "loyal" colonist, rather, he was British officer deployed with his regiment from England. Educated at Oxford, he moved upward in rank fairly quickly. He later served in Portugal and Ireland, and was eventually elected to Parliament.

  • @smithwesson1896
    @smithwesson1896 25 дней назад +143

    Of course the evil Brit is played by Lucius Malfoy

    • @kimberlyjeanne9456
      @kimberlyjeanne9456 25 дней назад +12

      This character was worse than Malfoy imo, zero humanity

    • @15blackshirt
      @15blackshirt 25 дней назад +6

      He also voiced the Grand Inquisitor in Star Wars Rebels and Tales of the Empire

    • @nicolelessor97
      @nicolelessor97 25 дней назад +2

      Took me until today to realize 😮

    • @ser132
      @ser132 24 дня назад +3

      @@15blackshirt as well as Zhao in ATLA (a character inspired by his character in this movie)

    • @theguydudety
      @theguydudety 24 дня назад

      No way! That's incredible ​@@ser132

  • @ryanstraightedgebeast3858
    @ryanstraightedgebeast3858 25 дней назад +116

    The movie that put Jason Isaacs on the map.
    One of the greatest villains in cinema history. 🙌

    • @hellfish2309
      @hellfish2309 25 дней назад +3

      It would have been nice to have more nuance in a villain, BUT sometimes you just want a walk about it talk about it twot bad guy

    • @MrBoyYankee
      @MrBoyYankee 25 дней назад +6

      Never forget Doc D.J. from Event Horizon.

    • @scarecrowman7789
      @scarecrowman7789 25 дней назад +1

      Not a villain to us.

    • @blakemcelrath54
      @blakemcelrath54 25 дней назад +4

      He's actually based on a real historical figure named Tarleton The Butcher.

    • @scarecrowman7789
      @scarecrowman7789 25 дней назад

      @@blakemcelrath54 a Great War leader. A true patriot for king and crown.

  • @Jonathan_Collins
    @Jonathan_Collins 25 дней назад +254

    Mel Gibson literally kills the main villain with an American flag... this is the most American film ever.

    • @smithwesson1896
      @smithwesson1896 25 дней назад +13

      Technically it was his horse 🐎

    • @bryanreynolds8721
      @bryanreynolds8721 25 дней назад +10

      It is the most American film ever as in everything that happens is a complete fantasy made up to make the colonials look like the heroes and the British and loyalists look like the villains. In reality slaves were everywhere in the Caloinas in this era, and the war crimes were committed by the colonial militias.

    • @chadwickvon8019
      @chadwickvon8019 25 дней назад +48

      ​@bryanreynolds8721 pretty sure war crimes were committed by both sides just like in every war. It's war lol

    • @ReallyGoodandKind
      @ReallyGoodandKind 25 дней назад +36

      @@chadwickvon8019that guys thought process doesn’t go farther than “America Bad”

    • @herodaresfire4512
      @herodaresfire4512 25 дней назад +9

      He killed him with two bayonets.

  • @Coach-V
    @Coach-V 25 дней назад +27

    Tara and John FTW!!!
    I Need a Tara and John reaction to braveheart next historical tuesday!!!

  • @scarecrowman7789
    @scarecrowman7789 25 дней назад +19

    I’m a proud British man and loved watching this movie as a kid growing up in England. Great film, great soundtrack!

  • @andareon
    @andareon 25 дней назад +43

    I'm not American, but this is the most MURICA movie out there and I love every second of this classic. I must have watched it 10 times, such a good movie.
    And of course Jason Isaac being the villain is GREAT and having Heath Ledger is such a treat along the rest of the cast, which is so so great. Everything works in this movie,
    It's at times gripping, at times fun, at times horrifying, It makes you go through all the emotions while still being an "action & adventure epic", It's really a masterclass of a movie.

  • @Ladmia
    @Ladmia 25 дней назад +74

    Misconception is that Mel Gibson is Australian. He was born in New York. He holds dual American and Irish citizen through his parents, as well as Australian.
    This movie never fails to make me emotional.

    • @theawesomeman9821
      @theawesomeman9821 25 дней назад

      I thought he immigrated to America as a child from Australia?

    • @Ladmia
      @Ladmia 25 дней назад +1

      @@theawesomeman9821 nope. He was born in New York, and moved to Australia with his parents when he was 12.

    • @fullmoonprepping4024
      @fullmoonprepping4024 25 дней назад +1

      He is Australian. He is a permanent resident of Australia regardless of where he was born or his mother's lineage. His bio classifies him Australian.

    • @Ladmia
      @Ladmia 24 дня назад +2

      @@fullmoonprepping4024 sure he has permanent residency regardless if he hasn’t lived there in a long time. Most people’s misconception is that he was born there. His father moved them there at the onset of the Vietnam war to partly to avoid his sons from being drafted.

    • @user-bs6sg4ow8x
      @user-bs6sg4ow8x 24 дня назад +2

      If he holds dual citizenship, he is in fact Australian.

  • @BeDoCo1980
    @BeDoCo1980 25 дней назад +30

    I do not purport to be a sword expert, but the sword Tavington used to kill Gabriel and slice up Benjamin Martin is called a saber; specifically, a calvary saber. The bend in the blade is meant to facilitate cutting, especially from horseback.
    This was my introduction to Jason Isaacs and why I was excited when I learned he was cast to play Lucius Malfoy.

  • @wakebacon8301
    @wakebacon8301 25 дней назад +24

    Every soldier melted into musket ammo was a round fired in vengeance for his son. His sons memory literally tore flesh and bone in vengeance. EPIC!

    • @dalemcgathy4996
      @dalemcgathy4996 11 дней назад

      Technically the contentals were using early rifles the Kentucky long rifle mainly

  • @digitaladventurer2142
    @digitaladventurer2142 25 дней назад +22

    Issac does a great job at being the villain. This and his role as Malfoy really are some of his best performances IMO

  • @donizetebelinato2808
    @donizetebelinato2808 25 дней назад +40

    29:50 Very simple. Firstly, you need to stand up to load a muzzleloader such as a musket, which is long. Secondly, since muskets were slow to reload and had a limited effective range, massed firepower was crucial. And so was the timing of the volleys. Large formations of infantry soldiers grouped together for attacks, at least a percentage of the shots will hit the target.

    • @erickkirby
      @erickkirby 25 дней назад +1

      The formations were also leftovers from the melee combat of old, and it was easier to hear orders in tight formation. Even if you couldn’t hear, you could follow a bugle or someone who did closer to the officer.

    • @Flavius_Belisarius
      @Flavius_Belisarius 25 дней назад +1

      Also, since Cavalry was still a major component, those formations made it better to withstand charges.​@@erickkirby

    • @erickkirby
      @erickkirby 24 дня назад +1

      @@Flavius_Belisarius Indeed

  • @RiverRockXIII
    @RiverRockXIII 25 дней назад +19

    the amount of energy this started with i was like "oh no their hearts are gunna break XD"

  • @oldmovieman7550
    @oldmovieman7550 25 дней назад +12

    Mel Gibson is one of the greatest actors and directors of the modern era. He deserves a lot more credit than he gets

  • @generaljimmies3429
    @generaljimmies3429 25 дней назад +10

    28:20 In answer to your question the music and drums was actually a means of signaling to the whole army what the next move was going to be. Officers would be spread out within earshot of said music and would relay those orders to the men nearby.
    So whenever you hear the drums, know the the officers are actively giving out orders.

  • @gsarngad
    @gsarngad 24 дня назад +10

    As I recall from college, the smoothbore muskets used in the Revolution (and up through the mid-19th century) were accurate enough to hit a mass of men at about 100 yards and a well drilled soldier could get off about 3 aimed shots per minute. Which is why they used the tactics they did.
    I believe it's an evolution of the pike square that was used before firearms to protect the infantry against a cavalry charge. With the mass of men all stood shoulder to shoulder and several rows deep, they gave a greater density of blades (whether pikes or muskets with bayonets attached) than a cavalry force can achieve due to the space required for horses to maneuver. An infantry unit that doesn't break discipline ought to be able to repel a cavalry charge.

  • @elizabethduplat5998
    @elizabethduplat5998 25 дней назад +12

    This movie has a link to the French and Indian War. Makes sense to watch "The Last of the Mohicans" next.

  • @sarah.the.clumsy
    @sarah.the.clumsy 25 дней назад +7

    So, i know mel gibson has had his problems over the years. But as an actor, i have to say nothing makes me cry more that watching someone like mel gibson try NOT to cry.

  • @BlyatBlaster
    @BlyatBlaster 25 дней назад +11

    “And my men are excellent marksmen.”
    This is important. A lot of focus historically is placed on the conventional Continental Army, and militia is sort of looked down on. Even this movie does it to an extent. But my personal opinion, as a US history major emphasizing on the American Revolution, is that militia really won the war. Conventional army definitely played a huge part, but these backwoods trappers and rangers like Dan Morgan’s Riflemen, Ethan Allan’s Green Mountain Boys, and others fought the British in a way that the British didn’t know how to counter. The British were used to conventional warfare, open lines of infantry lobbing volleys of shot at each other being supported by cavalry. They didn’t know how to fight an enemy that wouldn’t fight you in the open.
    And Washington actually encouraged this. He would give bonuses to marksmen (mostly militia) who got confirmed officer kills. There’s even a tall tale of a British marksman refusing to shoot an American officer in because the officers back was turned and it would be “ungentlemanly” to shoot an officer in the back. And that officer turned out to be George Washington. Which sort of makes sense because Washington never liked leading from the rear. He was the Commander in Chief of all Patriot forces and he led from the front of the charge.

  • @Pacreincarn8ed
    @Pacreincarn8ed 25 дней назад +12

    Mel Gibson is incredible!! Braveheart is 100 % is best movie!! You guys have to watch!!

  • @troms2343
    @troms2343 25 дней назад +16

    The Colonel of the Dragoons, is based on Banastre Tarleton, known for Tarleton’s Quarter refers to a phrase coined during the American Revolutionary War, specifically after the Battle of Waxhaws on May 29, 1780. The phrase means “no quarter offered” or “brutal death at the hands of a cowardly foe.” This term was born out of the brutal treatment of Patriot prisoners by British Colonel Banastre Tarleton and his Loyalist troops.
    In the Review it reminds me: its better to be a warrior in a garden, then a gardener in a war

  • @c1ph3rpunk
    @c1ph3rpunk 25 дней назад +19

    His kids, especially the boys, would have known how to shoot from an early age, remember the very first scenes they were returning from hunting. Many Americans find it hard to believe that many Americans continue to learn those types of skills at an early age, I did, before I was 10. Live in a rural area growing up, you’ll learn. Drove a tractor on the road before a car, was legal at 14, and had to drive to grandpas to help, often. Between family and Scouts by the time I was 16 I had learned more than most do in a lifetime. Now imagine how much more pronounced that was in the 18th century, you better have grown up by 14.
    This film isn’t terribly accurate, historically, but as a period piece it’s well done. As an “American” movie, it’s one of the best.

  • @Brook11223
    @Brook11223 25 дней назад +45

    Gregory Smith who played Mel's onscreen son went on to appear in Everwood and became an accomplished director directing several episodes of Superman and Lois and other Arrowverse crossover episodes. The extended version has an extended scene with Adam Baldwin who gives information to Jason Isaac's character about where Mel's character would hide. Also RIP to the actress who played the youngest daughter that finally speaks when she tells her dad don't go.

    • @ReallyGoodandKind
      @ReallyGoodandKind 25 дней назад +8

      Damn I didn’t know that. I just thought she stopped being in movies I had no idea she died. RIP she was talented.

    • @spyingmenter087
      @spyingmenter087 25 дней назад +1

      he’s not really an accomplished director tho

    • @MrBoyYankee
      @MrBoyYankee 25 дней назад +3

      Gregory Smith came a long way from playing Bobby from Andre and Ephraim from Everwood.

    • @warriornico80
      @warriornico80 24 дня назад +4

      Y'all forgetting his greatest accomplishment, leading the gorgonites to a upset defeat of major chip hazard and the commando elite

    • @Brook11223
      @Brook11223 24 дня назад +1

      @@warriornico80 it was Phil Hartman's final theatrical film.

  • @KrystalAnn0688
    @KrystalAnn0688 25 дней назад +5

    This movie is better than Braveheart, I said what I said.
    This was my introduction to Heath Ledger. Loved him & his character so much I swore if I ever had a son I’d name him Gabriel.
    This was also my introduction to Jason Isaac’s. Hated him for YEARS because I could not separate him from this role. I of course love him now.
    If one does not sob when Susan finally speaks & when Gabriel dies, one is a robot.
    This is a stunning film, & my favorite performance of Mel Gibsons ❤

  • @bobbih6360
    @bobbih6360 25 дней назад +10

    Great reaction! Actually, Mel Gibson was born in the U.S., lived in New York, and his family moved to Australia when he was like 12 or 13.

  • @waterbeauty85
    @waterbeauty85 25 дней назад +19

    1:05:46 This scene always gets to me. It makes me especially sad because the actress, Skye McCole Bartusiak, died of an accidental drug overdose in 2014.

  • @BlyatBlaster
    @BlyatBlaster 25 дней назад +27

    28:34 I have an answer! Marching tunes, or pipe marches, needed to use specific instrumentation and be in a specific tone in order to carry better across the battlefield. Armies would use pipers to signal orders, different tunes meant different things. They would also be used like in this capacity we see here to help the soldiers keep time, marching to the tempo of the music.

    • @hellfish2309
      @hellfish2309 25 дней назад +5

      The same w/ some of the flags too: a lot of that was to signal formation movements that could be seen from across the field by the command

    • @scottbutcher379
      @scottbutcher379 25 дней назад +1

      Alot like the American calvary of later years used bugels to make different commands

  • @PeggyBball42
    @PeggyBball42 25 дней назад +25

    Susan makes me sob every time I watch this.
    Every. Time.

  • @ttsg5601
    @ttsg5601 25 дней назад +10

    Originally Harrison Ford was casts in the lead, but he dropped out. Ford felt the movie became a revenge movie more than a historical movie.
    The movie was nominated for three Academy Awards, cinematography, score-John Williams and Sound.

  • @popcornroulettereactions
    @popcornroulettereactions 25 дней назад +13

    Glad you guys didn’t accidentally watch the Mark Wahlberg movie!

  • @lawman977
    @lawman977 25 дней назад +10

    28:20 the song being played is The British Grenadiers marching song. Used by the British and the music is to communicate officers' orders over long distances and to large groups of soldiers

  • @drodge72
    @drodge72 25 дней назад +12

    This is a movie that doesn't give a fuck about your feelings or your "they can't kill this character" ideas. I grew up in north Carolina and a kid from my karate class got to go down to south Carolina and be an extra in this movie.

  • @brdsx5065
    @brdsx5065 25 дней назад +10

    It is still absolutely baffling that he played Joker, especially the way he did it. I remember laughing at the idea when it was announced, I was NOT right.

  • @marcusmcgill4423
    @marcusmcgill4423 25 дней назад +27

    RIP to the actress that played Gibson's daughter that wouldn't talk until she yelled his name for him not to leave to fight. Her death was ruled an accidental OD. I think she was only like 21 or 22.

  • @k.delpino1124
    @k.delpino1124 25 дней назад +10

    This was one of my faves of 2000.
    Coming from the duo who gave us Universal Soldier, Stargate and Independence Day.
    Fictional stories in a historical time have always been entertaining.
    Because filmmakers take the time to make the right approach and vision with some fiction involved.
    The story itself in the era of war for independence is just gratifying to see come to life.
    Mel Gibson of course on his A-game, being a man of peace and a force of nature all his own.
    The character of Benjamin Martin is an algamation of 4 real-life people who were soldiers/politicians in those times.
    Jason Isaacs as Tavington was great as an villain and you knew he was gonna get his in the end as all bad guys do.
    It's a great assembly of cast and filmmakers together.
    Along with the late Ledger, other actors have passed.
    Tom Wilkenson (General Lord Cornwallis), René Auberjonois (Rev.Oliver) and sadly, Skye McCole Bartusiak (Susan, Ben's youngest daughter) died at age 21.
    Other classics by Roland Emmerich:The Day After Tomorrow (2004), 10,000 B.C. (2008), 2012 (2009) and White House Down (2013).

  • @EndTheATF
    @EndTheATF 25 дней назад +5

    39:51 Cool factoid #2. The “ghost” is a reference to Francis Marion. Often referred to as the “Swamp Fox” who changed warfare in the Revolutionary War. The ambush tactics and guerilla warfare were highly effective in South Carolina. Very interesting history.

  • @DavidGonzalez-zl3dz
    @DavidGonzalez-zl3dz 24 дня назад +3

    Their dad points out they took breaks to swim but didn't even think to punish them in any way. Work got done, but kids will be kids, love that bit

  • @keltavuokko
    @keltavuokko 25 дней назад +7

    I cry every time I see Susan run after her father. This time was no different.

  • @V0ltron
    @V0ltron 25 дней назад +23

    We have a ton of Spanish moss in SC... but don't touch it unless you want small red "chiggers" insects that make you itch like crazy! For days. (Yes, they are actually called chiggers. It isn't a made up word.)

  • @ysmith494
    @ysmith494 25 дней назад +6

    The actor who shoots himself was played by, Leon Rippy.

    • @movieman82us
      @movieman82us 17 дней назад +1

      Yeah, it was not JT Walsh like John thought. Pretty sure JT Walsh had already passed away before this movie was ever in production.

  • @patriot2805
    @patriot2805 25 дней назад +5

    The battle at the end of the movie is known as the Battle of Cowpens. Tactically speaking it might be the most brilliant victory the Continental Army achieved in the whole war. It wasn't nearly as dramatic as the film makes it out to be, but it was that decisive.

  • @davidhasselblad3825
    @davidhasselblad3825 25 дней назад +4

    Having flutes and the music during war back then was indeed for morale. Most flute players and drummers were no more then children.
    And the standard of warfare was to march directly at each other. It’s how “gentlemen fight” which is lightly touched on when Mel and Cornwallis are talking about the way the militia fight using guerilla warfare tactics and killing the officers first in combat.
    And he responds saying as long as you are killing civilians we’re gonna keep doing it.
    And cornwallis said “this is not the conduct of a gentleman.”
    Which is a brief look into the idea of warfare. Guns turned the tides of war and in a newer world to them war had to evolve to a higher standard which is why they straight up just walked into each other. Because of the revolutionary war the Americans never lost the use of guerrilla warfare tactics, in fact expanding them with longer range and more accurate rifles. Utilized in the civil war spencer rifles were a destroyer of infantry.

  • @brocklyons558
    @brocklyons558 25 дней назад +6

    I vote The Postman with Kevin Costner down the road. Such an under rated movie!!

  • @fabianmorales4203
    @fabianmorales4203 25 дней назад +5

    You need to watch "we were soldiers." Starring mel gibson. Written and directed by randall wallace. Writer of braveheart and coincidentally, pearl harbor as well. It is excellent and you can play spot the actor throughout the flick. After you watch this one then check out hacksaw ridge. That was directed by mel gibson. A wonderful performance from andrew garfield. Then watch apocalypto. It is an intense film unlike anybyou have seen. Also directed by gibson, but takes place during mayan times. It is intense with a climactic chase scene. Just awesome flick

  • @Ultron2k15
    @Ultron2k15 25 дней назад +3

    Also an incredibly underrated score by John Williams. The main theme gets a lot of hype, but as a whole it's impressive.

  • @smithwesson1896
    @smithwesson1896 25 дней назад +17

    52:25 You guys missed a really good line from Mel.
    "If the conduct of your officers is the measure of a gentleman, I'll take that as a compliment."

  • @FollowingGhost
    @FollowingGhost 25 дней назад +4

    The rocking chairs were built by a Master craftsman near me. He built a total of eight, if I remember correctly. During filming, when the chair was supposed to break, the prop department couldn't get them to break because the builder simply built them the way he always did, to last.
    They resorted to cutting the supports to finally get them to break.

  • @popeye697
    @popeye697 25 дней назад +4

    That's not JT Walsh. JT Walsh died in 1998. This movie is from 2000 the actor in this movie is Leon Rippy and he's currently 74 years old

  • @katelynannis858
    @katelynannis858 25 дней назад +4

    *Super simplified* Military technology and theory hadn't changed much since the introduction of the cannon. The set up is like chess, where your pawns are important, but limited and expendable. Not until the first World War did the tech for offense change, but defense had not.
    *Historical accuracy* I give them a C. It has historical moments and the sets/costume/dates bring it up a bit. It really is a very fun watch and they change things to make it more cinematic.

  • @Knightowl1980
    @Knightowl1980 25 дней назад +9

    I wonder who wins ?
    Don’t care if this is historically inaccurate it’s such a great film. Action film in colonial America , historical fiction is always fun. I miss this Mel Gibson before his anti semitism
    -I love the cinematography of the movie, things are clean and vibrant and foreground but got this matte painting in the background

  • @ACNelson-officialchannel
    @ACNelson-officialchannel 25 дней назад +4

    Although Mel Gibson's character is fictional, the character is based on the historical figure Francis Marion, AKA The Swamp Fox. This movie was excellently made, in spite of the lack of historical accuracy. You definitely get engaged in the story. Awesome reaction!❤

  • @hinesmaster99
    @hinesmaster99 25 дней назад +5

    I think putting Tara & Andrew together for reactions is dangerous since they sense the future in all the reactions

  • @ReelRejects
    @ReelRejects  26 дней назад +14

    What are some other good Revolutionary War Films??

    • @Knightowl1980
      @Knightowl1980 25 дней назад +6

      Hamilton
      The crossing
      Johnny Tremaine
      1776

    • @thecircleandthesquare8980
      @thecircleandthesquare8980 25 дней назад +11

      it's a civil war movie, but Glory is amazing

    • @nerdwatch1017
      @nerdwatch1017 25 дней назад +3

      It’s not a movie but a mini series about the founding fathers writing un the Declaration of Independence the bill of rights. There is some big war stories in it though. It’s called John Adams I believe who is played by Paul Giamatti and he really nails it

    • @BenjaminWelty
      @BenjaminWelty 25 дней назад +2

      Not a revolution war movie but Gettysburg is a great movie to watch. It's often overshadowed by Glory (which also is a good movie). I suggest you watch both Gettysburg and Glory.

    • @proteuswest1084
      @proteuswest1084 25 дней назад +1

      Yeah, not a ton of Revolutionary War films out there, but John Adams miniseries is an amazing coverage of that time period.

  • @willcopeland275
    @willcopeland275 24 дня назад +3

    The brutal British officer was based off an real officer during the war but was never killed but after war returned to England to live a rich glorious existence to my knowledge

  • @HeatherVT8
    @HeatherVT8 25 дней назад +4

    Gah the HOLD this movie had on me when it came out! (I was in middle school) had the dvd. I love this movie! Now I haven’t watched it in like 10+, but recently re watched. I still stand by that I love this movie! And I have never cried more than this re-Watch 😭😭

  • @tonyb8895
    @tonyb8895 25 дней назад +9

    I actually liked this movie and haven't seen it in years. Thank you so much for doing this reaction.

  • @theveryworstluck1894
    @theveryworstluck1894 25 дней назад +3

    The cannoneers firing prior to the battles beginning are marking distances from where their artillery is posted up so they can fire more accurately once it starts to go down.

  • @tablaylock
    @tablaylock 25 дней назад +5

    The music and drums helped keep marching in sync and also served to relay general commands quickly.

  • @522abet
    @522abet 25 дней назад +6

    Great reaction as always! If you haven't already seen it, I'd highly recommend The Last of the Mohicans. A fantastic period film with the amazing Daniel Day Lewis. Definitely a must watch. I would absolutely love to watch your reactions to that film.

  • @Joellebee_
    @Joellebee_ 25 дней назад +3

    The scene with little Susan makes me cry every time. 🥲

  • @8967Logan
    @8967Logan 24 дня назад +2

    One of my favorite scene's when Gabriel's future wife stands up in the church and shames those men into living by their principles. That is a real woman.

  • @BlyatBlaster
    @BlyatBlaster 25 дней назад +7

    29:45 firing line style combat had a lot to do with the limited technology of the time. Muskets, and even early rifle (those are different, muskets don’t have rifling inside the barrel) were very inaccurate. So armies needed to be close in order to even be effective.
    But combat like this was also much more focused on outmaneuvering your opponent rather than killing then all off. There were entire battles in the American Revolution where only 2 or 3 dozen men were killed from both sides total. If you could outmaneuver and outflank your enemy you could take the field and drive them back without having to engage them for too long.

  • @AceMoonshot
    @AceMoonshot 24 дня назад +3

    Bundling was indeed a thing. They would both be sew into separate bags. And of course, the running joke of the time was about who had proficiency with knots etc.

  • @jimtatro6550
    @jimtatro6550 25 дней назад +3

    This was the final film I watched theatrically with my dad who passed away about 6 months later, because of that I will always love this film 😢

  • @ogitherat1
    @ogitherat1 25 дней назад +4

    The curved sword is a cavalry sabre. Great reaction !! thank you . Tara Erickson is my new crush 😍😍

  • @TimWuzHyaProductions
    @TimWuzHyaProductions 25 дней назад +2

    I remember the first time i watched this, it was in my 7th grade social studies class. My teacher was a cheeky fellow, (see what i did there?) because the class time was 45 minutes(?) we had to watch the movie in chunks, but i do remember one moment specifically he cut us off for the day. It was during the night scene at the sister-in-law's plantation. When Ben's family runs into the bushes, and we see the rifle barrel come up behind them, he cut us off right there, before we found out it was Gabriel behind them.

  • @marcmauhay
    @marcmauhay 25 дней назад +1

    1:18:56 Correct, the musical score for The Patriot was composed by John Williams.

  • @LadySophiaVelaryon
    @LadySophiaVelaryon 20 дней назад +1

    I saw "The Patriot" in the movie theater in 2000 and was mesmerized. It's a masterpiece. From the performances and storytelling to the cinematography, Brilliant. 👏🏽🇺🇸🎥

  • @totalbushleague3270
    @totalbushleague3270 22 дня назад +2

    Mel Gibson is an American-born Australian, so technically he is American. Although he holds Irish citizenship as well.

  • @jasonjackson7389
    @jasonjackson7389 22 дня назад +2

    I have great respect for all of Mel Gibson's movies the ones he directed and just acted in. He always puts in 100 percent and has great vision on how to tell a story.

  • @romanlovera427
    @romanlovera427 21 день назад +1

    Random fact: the guy who surrendered Cornwallis’s sword(Charles O’Hara) would also end up surrendering to Napoleon Bonaparte years later on November 23, 1793. While imprisoned in Luxembourg, he befriended Thomas Payne until he was exchanged in 1795.

  • @Bonk_rds
    @Bonk_rds 25 дней назад +2

    Even knowing how many different people and how many true events are condensed into one movie... I love this movie. Living at a site 20 minutes from 2 major battles (including Cowpens, the basis of the final battle) it has been around my whole life.

  • @KazyReed
    @KazyReed 25 дней назад +3

    The girl who played Susan, Skye Bartusiak, died so young at 21. It's tragic.

    • @jasongarcia1886
      @jasongarcia1886 20 дней назад +1

      Oh man that's sad what did she died from

  • @twylanaythias
    @twylanaythias 19 дней назад +1

    One detail which a lot of people aren't aware: The Seven Years War (known in the Americas as The French and Indian War) had only been over a few years before the American Revolution. That war had the French and most Native American tribes squaring off against the then-British colonies, which left France extremely divided in regards to those colonies fighting the British. The bad blood went both ways as France had previously agreed not to meddle in affairs between Britain and the Native Americans - an agreement which the French freely ignored once the war broke out.
    While France was debating whether to regard the new American colonies as their former enemies or as the enemies of their enemy, none of the colonist (neither the Patriots nor the Loyalists) were much inclined to think much of the French. Eventually (with the help of Benjamin Franklin's 'diplomatic expertise'), France finally decided to throw in against the British Empire, forging the relationship we hold with them pretty much to this day.

  • @Josh86_925
    @Josh86_925 24 дня назад +3

    Not to try to be all conspiracy, but it is pretty crazy how in the beginning of the film, Mel Gibson is weighing the chair and says " 9LBs/11oz," and then sits in the chair and it breaks. The movie also came out in 2000. It's probably just a coincidence

  • @anthonydean1743
    @anthonydean1743 25 дней назад +2

    This movie and The fifth Element were the first to DVDs I got with a DVD player for Christmas one year

  • @TD-mg6cd
    @TD-mg6cd 22 дня назад +1

    Leon Rippy was able to express both anger and dispair in his face, at the same moment.

  • @idgaffritp
    @idgaffritp 25 дней назад +1

    The concept of "the end justifies the means" is mentioned in "The Prince" by Niccolo Machiavelli.

  • @TheLDG1981
    @TheLDG1981 24 дня назад +1

    RIP Skye McCole Bartusiak - she played Susan. She passed away in 2014 from an accidental drug overdose. Sadly, same cause of death as her co-star Heath Ledger.

  • @DaddySturgill
    @DaddySturgill 25 дней назад +1

    Leon Rippy is the guy you thought was JT Walsh. Both amazing actors

  • @ccmaster86
    @ccmaster86 25 дней назад +1

    35:50 I choke up at this scene literally every time. Makes me wonder if I in that moment would be man enough to stand up and fight. Especially seeing the Fathers and Sons standing together, gets me every time.

  • @ummok6329
    @ummok6329 25 дней назад +3

    how this dude doesnt make a whistle sound every time he uses an "s" sound is beyond me

  • @onlyme219
    @onlyme219 25 дней назад +6

    I'm British and proud to be. That said kudos to America, we were wrong and you deserve your independence

  • @auslandermercury972
    @auslandermercury972 24 дня назад +1

    14:29 I absolutely love how intense Mel Gibson is in this movie. He tells his son to put the guns away, and it seems like he’s afraid, but he’s completely ready, as shown when he thinks his son is an intruder.

  • @randylewis5784
    @randylewis5784 25 дней назад +1

    Calvary saber is the type of sword they're using

  • @sammiebray1661
    @sammiebray1661 25 дней назад +1

    This is one of my favorite movies of all time. And Heath in this movie was just *chefs kiss*

  • @tonyngc
    @tonyngc 25 дней назад +1

    The standard issue muskets were not very accurate. Beyond 50 meters hitting what you're aiming at is iffy. So the soldiers formed up in firing lines and shot by volleys. So the winner was the one who could hold formation and reload faster until they got into range for the bayonet charge. The other popular weapon was the Pennsylvania or "Kentucky" rifle. With its rifled barrel, it was accurate to several hundred meters. Cannon fired either solid shot or hollow (filled with explosive) shell, or cannister/grape shot (iron balls about the size of golf balls) which turned the cannon into a giant shotgun.

  • @saaamember97
    @saaamember97 25 дней назад +1

    Actually, Mel Gibson was born in Peekskill, NY. So, that makes him an American.

  • @jameseyman9078
    @jameseyman9078 25 дней назад +1

    Every time i see a reaction with John, i always think that he would be a dope neighbor to live next to. Not sure why that comes to mind

  • @eighthdoctor
    @eighthdoctor 25 дней назад +1

    Great reaction you two! Seconding people's suggestions to watch _Braveheart_ and I've seen someone else mention _The Last of the Mohicans_ too, another great one. 🧡

  • @mack7882
    @mack7882 16 дней назад +1

    Tara and John other Gibson movies featuring war. Braveheart (starred and directed - fictionalized history of William Wallace), We Were Soldiers (starred - a fairly accurate historical telling from a battle early in the Vietnam war), Heartbreak Ridge (directed - the true story of Desmond Doss in WW2 - to me a true masterpiece).

  • @PlaylistsRUs
    @PlaylistsRUs 25 дней назад +2

    The most American film ever starred by two Aussies 😊

  • @TD-mg6cd
    @TD-mg6cd 22 дня назад +1

    Gun accuracy? You're thinking of muskets. The Martins are shooting rifles and are quite accurate for about 300 yards. The downside is that the rifle was much slower loading due to the difficulty getting the ball down the rifled barrel, which gripped the ball. It is questionable whether the boys would have the muscle to push it down. Muskets can be reloaded 3 times per minute, if you're good. Rifles? Maybe 2.

  • @MrBellsa61
    @MrBellsa61 25 дней назад +1

    The actor playing General O'Hara (usually seen alongside Cornwallis) is my go to reference point for a posh British accent. I have no idea how accurate it is, I just find it hilarious.