Decemberists on Senate Square Broken by Grapeshot

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  • Опубликовано: 15 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 2,7 тыс.

  • @vadimanreev4585
    @vadimanreev4585 Год назад +3181

    In the interregnum of December 14 [O. S. December 26], 1825, a group of officers raised an uprising against the autocracy. They wanted to establish a republic in Russia, or a constitutional monarchy and destroy serfdom (almost eighty percent of the inhabitants of the Russian Empire were almost in the position of slaves) The uprising was suppressed, the leaders were hanged, other officers were either sent to hard labor or to the Caucasian war as privates. Soldiers who participated in the uprising were beaten to death with shpitsruten (a standard metal ramrod for muzzle-loading firearms.)
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    • @serene_actual
      @serene_actual Год назад +68

      Damn...

    • @adamhall5298
      @adamhall5298 Год назад +204

      Just another normal day in Russia

    • @vadimanreev4585
      @vadimanreev4585 Год назад +339

      @@adamhall5298 Not true. We recall the USA, for example, the veterans' march on Washington in the summer of 1932, or the Ludlow massacre in 1914. The path to the kingdom of freedom, in any state, goes through blood.

    • @adamhall5298
      @adamhall5298 Год назад

      You're comparing apples with pears. Look at the outcomes, Russia is still stuck at kleptocracy level with complete disregard for human life and dignity. The US is a deeply flawed democracy.

    • @vadimanreev4585
      @vadimanreev4585 Год назад +118

      @@adamhall5298 It is you who have no concept of the flow of history. Are the USA and the Russian Federation cast in bronze? Haven't they been changing all this time? One moment: in the history of the United States, the civil war of the north with the south and Karl Marx, the founder of scientific communism, writes a welcome letter to Lincoln: "Dear sir!
      We send congratulations to the American people on your re-election by a huge majority.
      If the moderate slogan of your first election was resistance to the power of slaveholders, then the victorious battle cry of your second election reads: death to slavery!
      From the very beginning of the titanic struggle in America, the workers of Europe instinctively felt that the fate of their class was connected with the starry flag. Wasn't the struggle for territories, which marked the beginning of this harsh epic, supposed to decide whether the virgin soil of vast spaces would be given to the labor of a migrant or disgraced by the footsteps of a slave overseer?..." Another moment was the October Revolution in Russia and for the first time in the world the rights of workers to work, rest, treatment and study were legislated.

  • @therealsunken
    @therealsunken 2 года назад +3998

    Imagine after years of battling against Napoleon then you had to go through this

    • @kitkat47chrysalis95
      @kitkat47chrysalis95 2 года назад +179

      you'd be surprised what the lack of food will do to a people

    • @CoffTheBirb
      @CoffTheBirb 2 года назад +748

      @@kitkat47chrysalis95 my brother in Christ, Decembrist uprising had nothing to do with food

    • @runlarryrun77
      @runlarryrun77 2 года назад +24

      Ikr I'd have probably just gone home.

    • @WissHH-
      @WissHH- 2 года назад +110

      @@CoffTheBirb nothing? The endemic poverty and continue famines sure nothing related

    • @CoffTheBirb
      @CoffTheBirb 2 года назад +658

      @@WissHH- do you really know anything about this historical event? It wasn't a peasant uprising or a mass mutiny among the conscripted soldiers, but rather an attempt of coup performed by a very tight and secretive group of military officers at the day of Nicolas I's coronation. It was caused primarily by the lack of political freedom, violently stern standards of military discipline and consistent incompetence of the previous emperor. Neither the officers who staged the coup, nor the elite soldiers of leib guard regiments were "starving". They were demanding freedom, education and respect, not food- and that's one of the reasons why they were absolutely ignored by the general public and easily overwhelmed by loyalist forces.

  • @GmodAdict
    @GmodAdict 2 года назад +7487

    One of the best depictions of field artillery I’ve seen. Nothing about this scene comes out as “Wilhelm scream”. No exaggerated and dramatic jumping when artillery strikes the line, no Platoon-esque “falling dramatically from gunfire”. The grapeshot fires, and your line is torn apart a dozen men at a time, as though they’d been hit with a sledgehammer at high speed. Meanwhile you’re standing there, praying to every god there is that you not get hit…gruesome, visceral, and absolutely realistic

    • @Vanishingink4
      @Vanishingink4 2 года назад +24

      Do you mean a jackhammer? Instead of a sledgehammer.

    • @mackenzieblair8135
      @mackenzieblair8135 2 года назад +37

      Other than the wet sponging and the guns not being depressed enough.

    • @Yaivenov
      @Yaivenov 2 года назад +180

      @@mackenzieblair8135 Wet sponge was done to extinguish any residual embers in the bore. Very much a real thing.

    • @mackenzieblair8135
      @mackenzieblair8135 2 года назад +148

      @@Yaivenov The sponge creates a vacuum which deprives any existing embers of oxygen. To create a proper seal the sponge needs to be dampened; not soaking wet.
      A wet sponge is incredibly dangerous. It increases the risk of misfires and can create clumps of smoldering powder encapsulated in soaking wet powder which can then cook off the next powder charge.
      I’ve shot 19th century artillery many times and studied the manuals and loading procedures of the period.

    • @Yaivenov
      @Yaivenov 2 года назад +36

      @@mackenzieblair8135 vacuum doesn't do what you're suggesting. You need to quench/cool the combusting material. Also at this point the powder charges are themselves encapsulated in waxed paper/lead foil.

  • @HunterKiller762
    @HunterKiller762 3 года назад +1317

    To cannon, all men are equal.

    • @ethanramos4441
      @ethanramos4441 3 года назад +7

      Not really to cannon

    • @TheAngelOfDeath01
      @TheAngelOfDeath01 3 года назад +70

      @@ethanramos4441 Yeah, to cannon... it knows not friend from foe... it only does what its told to do when loaded and ignited.

    • @ethanramos4441
      @ethanramos4441 3 года назад +33

      @@TheAngelOfDeath01 Oh I see I forgot it’s a quote from Napoleon

    • @Caesar88888
      @Caesar88888 2 года назад +32

      @@TheAngelOfDeath01 Napoleon meant that cannon knows not aristocrat from peasant as far as I know, cannon doesnt care if you are rich or poor

    • @TheAngelOfDeath01
      @TheAngelOfDeath01 2 года назад +5

      @@Caesar88888 Yeps, that's the inspirit of the French Revolution way of putting it, but you are quite right.

  • @G1Bryce
    @G1Bryce 2 года назад +3913

    Revolutions are romantic, until you're actually in the revolution

  • @HingerDingerDerginTV
    @HingerDingerDerginTV Год назад +52

    The metal sound when the cannons are going off really makes you feel the brutality of war. Just an observation.

    • @StumpfForFreedom
      @StumpfForFreedom 11 месяцев назад +3

      The audio and visuals are quite beautiful.

  • @UCSPanther20
    @UCSPanther20 2 года назад +2038

    Another place where grapeshot was used was in Lyon after the French army suppressed the Girondist uprising. Dissatisfied with the slowness of the guillotine and conventional firing squads, the Revolutionary tribunals decided to try using grapeshot for mass executions of suspected Girondist rebels. It was abandoned after soldiers were forced to finish off the surviving condemned with swords, knives and bayonets, and subsequently refused to carry out any more grapeshot firing squads.

    • @TESkyrimizer
      @TESkyrimizer 2 года назад +102

      Damn I feel like I read about that too before. Absolutely brutal. Not as brutal as the shit that went down in the Vendee but still terrible.

    • @jdlamb4212
      @jdlamb4212 2 года назад +224

      It's amazing how often in history someone has thought "it's taking too long to kill all these people!"

    • @cat_city2009
      @cat_city2009 2 года назад +1

      Hell yeah dude.

    • @cat_city2009
      @cat_city2009 2 года назад +10

      @@TESkyrimizer
      Vendee rebels had it coming.

    • @pierren___
      @pierren___ 2 года назад +4

      Napoleon used it in 1795 in Paris

  • @peterlynchchannel
    @peterlynchchannel 2 года назад +2327

    In a situation like that on the battlefield there was some serious psychology at play. The artillerymen knew that if they ran or surrendered, the attacking infantry would be content to seize the position. If the artillery fired, then it would be a fight to the death against a much more numerous enemy hell bent on revenge.
    Battlefield stories are full of reports of artillerymen being bayoneted and sabered as their position is overrun.

    • @gidi3250
      @gidi3250 2 года назад +245

      Civilians who where their also reported hearing the officers telling the men that they wouldn't fire the cannons since both sides are russians and we saw how that turned out.

    • @karandullet380
      @karandullet380 2 года назад +1

      Which movie is it?

    • @formgrya6927
      @formgrya6927 2 года назад +19

      @@karandullet380 Union of Salvation, it's in the description

    • @peterlynchchannel
      @peterlynchchannel 2 года назад +4

      @@karandullet380 It's called, "Union of Salvation".

    • @hankkingsley9300
      @hankkingsley9300 2 года назад

      Shoot byden

  • @IowaMoss
    @IowaMoss 3 года назад +664

    The metallic retort of the cannon was perfect, as was the imagery of the impact.

  • @theodoreroosevelt2154
    @theodoreroosevelt2154 Год назад +806

    My favorite part of this scene is the rising tension. Before the guns are fired, you can see and hear the moral weight of what is about to happen. The man running with the canister shot in his hands is nervous, the spectators are anxious of what might happen. The rebel officers are trying to rally their men with words that “they won’t dare fire at us”. Best of all, when the order to fire is given, the men do not fire immediately. They stand still, and refuse to fire until the officer has to do it himself and takes the first shot. Why should they shoot at their fellow countrymen? HOW could they shoot at them with such a horrible weapon? With this incredible weight on their shoulders, the men either freeze, or refuse to fire. Unfortunately when the first cannon goes off, it is already too late and the other cannon crews follow their grim orders.

    • @vadimanreev4585
      @vadimanreev4585 Год назад +47

      In nineteen ninety-three, a mirror situation turned out. The tank soldiers refused to shoot at the Supreme Soviet of Russia, and then the Yeltsin authorities bribed officers to form crews for tanks from them, which shot the Supreme Soviet.

    • @gromovboris
      @gromovboris Год назад +7

      это прекрасный комментарий, описывающий мои наблюдения

    • @FighteroftheNightman
      @FighteroftheNightman 11 месяцев назад +7

      Dude narrated a 4 minute clip like he's the only one that got it

    • @TheLike_Button
      @TheLike_Button 11 месяцев назад +6

      Seems like a good solution. If only we implemented it today against protesters on roads

    • @theodoreroosevelt2154
      @theodoreroosevelt2154 11 месяцев назад +11

      @@FighteroftheNightman Congratulations on making a condescending comment, you get a cookie for that one. Open wide!

  • @thomassmith8140
    @thomassmith8140 2 года назад +600

    The sad part, most of these soldiers killed would have been Veterans of the Napoleonic Wars.

    • @ИнИс-щ8д
      @ИнИс-щ8д Год назад +121

      Veterans of the Napoleonic Wars were on both sides. For example, general Miloradovich, the hero of the war of 1812, was killed by Kakhovsky, one of the leaders of the Decembrist movement.

    • @Random_person-di9um
      @Random_person-di9um 6 месяцев назад +2

      I say that every time I think about war

    • @wrtltable
      @wrtltable 6 месяцев назад +10

      The saddest thing is that the soldiers were not rebels at all. The officers simply took advantage of their official position and led their soldiers out under buckshot without explaining anything to them.

    • @HoangNguyen-rw6wf
      @HoangNguyen-rw6wf 5 месяцев назад +10

      @@wrtltable What worst the officers leader that was suppose to exacuted the coup got cold feet even the one that only had one job to kill the Tsar and then they just go for a walk or go back without informing the other officer who already going with the coup alongside theire soliders.
      At least the soldiers had their chances to go back to their barrack and thing will never happen until the officers screw that up.

    • @MrBubblecake
      @MrBubblecake 5 месяцев назад +3

      Most of these soldiers were idiots. Standing in a tightly packed formation against a cannon and not even returning a single shot despite their entire platoon being armed. They could have fell back to the buildings, split up and used them as cover and fought an urban warfare setting, but I guess that would require an IQ higher than 80

  • @Bayan1905
    @Bayan1905 2 года назад +1493

    I used to own a piece of US Civil War grapeshot. It was about an inch or so in diameter and was made of iron. These cannons look a bit smaller, the 6 pounder being one of the most common size guns during the Napoleonic era, so I imagine that's what these would have been, so the grapeshot would have been something like an inch in diameter or close to it. The grapeshot would have been devastating on anything it came into contact with.

    • @LoveVP_
      @LoveVP_  2 года назад +162

      During Napoleonic war leib-guard used 12 pounder cannons. So, in this scene decemberists was shot by 12 pounder cannons.

    • @mackenzieblair8135
      @mackenzieblair8135 2 года назад +36

      Canister shot used approx 1-inch diameter iron balls.
      Grapeshot was significantly larger and primarily used by naval guns.

    • @Sspectator
      @Sspectator 2 года назад +22

      You owned a heckin ball of iron 1 inch in diameter?! That's like, le awesome, dude.

    • @XIIOSRS
      @XIIOSRS 2 года назад

      no shit

    • @lemmdus2119
      @lemmdus2119 2 года назад +7

      Actually it’s Canister shot. It’s full of musket balls.

  • @troydodson9641
    @troydodson9641 2 года назад +429

    While I really appreciate the depiction of grapeshot, it's actually the reaction of the people that get me to fall in love with this scene. I can feel my own heart race as the first shot is being loaded up. Officers give assurance to the men, another's breathing is picking up, spit is being swallowed and the soldiers stiffen while the onlookers are shaken by the sound of the order. Be it the crowd and even the guy holding the fuse, I bet jitters are high, "oh God, is this really happening?"
    I'm going to have to look up the history on this, and watch this movie. Thanks

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape 2 года назад +7

      Anyone else here after reading the "as the founding fathers intended" copypaste?
      "Tallyho lads!"

    • @troydodson9641
      @troydodson9641 2 года назад +5

      @@kishascape No, but now I'm curious
      Edit, watched it, loved it

  • @difenol5750
    @difenol5750 2 года назад +1032

    In fact, the rebels did not stand unanswered, this is how it really was:
    A volley of blank charges was fired at the square, which had no effect. The first volley was fired above the ranks of the rebellious soldiers. The rebels responded to the first volley with buckshot with rifle fire, but then, under a hail of buckshot, the flight began. According to the eyewitness of those events, V. I. Shteingel: “It was possible to limit ourselves to this,
    but Sukhozanet fired a few more shots along the narrow Galerny Lane and across the Neva to the Academy of Arts, where more of the curious crowd fled! Crowds of rebellious soldiers rushed to the Neva ice to cross to Vasilyevsky Island.
    Mikhail Bestuzhev tried on the ice of the Neva to again form soldiers into battle formation and go on the offensive against the Peter and Paul Fortress. The troops lined up, but were fired from cannons with cannonballs. The cores hit the ice, and it cracked, many drowned.

    • @FemboiSupremacy
      @FemboiSupremacy 2 года назад +13

      I thank you for your information

    • @kyle18934
      @kyle18934 2 года назад +37

      oh man, I could believe it. loaded with gear and heavy clothing. plus it is so cold. that would be a bad a bad way to go, but i guess that's better than dying from grapeshot in the belly

    • @difenol5750
      @difenol5750 2 года назад +21

      @@kyle18934 death from grapeshot is instant, unlike frost and ice.

    • @guypierson5754
      @guypierson5754 2 года назад +67

      @@difenol5750 Sometimes, if you take a grape to the chest or head. But a leg or arm? You lose the limb and die in agony over the next two minutes. Stomach shot that doesn't hit your spine? Maybe days to die, all the while in terrible agony. Drowning is quick and painless by comparison.

    • @TheTuttle99
      @TheTuttle99 2 года назад +30

      @@difenol5750 there are probably many more wounded than instantly killed by the grapeshot. Being shot isn't just an off switch, and there's more places you can be shot and survive, than shot and killed

  • @WellReadRedneck
    @WellReadRedneck 2 года назад +217

    - Что ты собираешься делать, стрелять в меня из пушки? - Цитата человека, расстрелянного из пушки.

  • @dinokyle5690
    @dinokyle5690 3 года назад +320

    This represents the complete brutality of canister shot or grapeshot at close range.

    • @Frankszky1923
      @Frankszky1923 2 года назад +11

      Complete brutality of every regime russia has had in any time.

    • @K25_the_first
      @K25_the_first 2 года назад +22

      @@Frankszky1923 what has that to do with his statement

    • @Voron_Aggrav
      @Voron_Aggrav 2 года назад +8

      @@K25_the_first the fact that Russia never had a government that wasn't brutal or inept, usually both
      And "Close Range" for a grapeshot is easily 50-100 metres, absolutely mental to think how powerful such a Shotgun is when it's a 12 Pounder gun, though I believe the one used here is like a 3 pounder

    • @tinkerstrade3553
      @tinkerstrade3553 2 года назад +11

      Humans still use anti-personnel munitions, such as cluster bombs. The brutality hasn't changed, only the method of delivery.

  • @ethanramos4441
    @ethanramos4441 3 года назад +917

    It Also shows how brutal Grapeshot was

    • @carlnico7331
      @carlnico7331 3 года назад +9

      Yes

    • @adampay8906
      @adampay8906 3 года назад +89

      Turn your cannon into a giant shotgun, the whole first rank of troops is dead. If you're in the second rank you'd begin to wonder if you actually want to be there.

    • @NaughtyNovaroo69
      @NaughtyNovaroo69 3 года назад +13

      The ideology of shooting a weopen round that splinters into mutple small projectiles to effectively kill mutple and injury dozens of others is just like having a flame thrower and Molotov cocktails and etc
      Not only it's a brutal way to kill and injure but strikes fear knowing how savage and barbaric it is then compared to simole clean bullets to kill and even injury more

    • @erichvondonitz5325
      @erichvondonitz5325 3 года назад +5

      @@NaughtyNovaroo69 its a good thing it works for close ranges

    • @Waakrissos
      @Waakrissos 3 года назад +9

      Exactly! Not just ground exploding, but people falling like dominos. I love how they made it look realistic.

  • @chrishamilton7516
    @chrishamilton7516 2 года назад +374

    1:50 BEHOLD the luckiest man to ever exist.

    • @DalionHeartTTV
      @DalionHeartTTV 2 года назад +75

      Considering he would later either be arrested and executed, or would die on the ice shortly after this scene, I wouldn't consider him all that lucky.

    • @bottlerocket2528
      @bottlerocket2528 2 года назад +3

      Wind of ball might actually kill him

    • @konstantinosnikolakakis8125
      @konstantinosnikolakakis8125 2 года назад +45

      @Dalion Heart Only five Decembrists were actually executed. About 80 were transported to Siberia. The rest were sent to fight the Turks in the Caucasus.

    • @崔莱
      @崔莱 2 года назад

      dude probably shitted himself as he looked around right there

    • @magniwalterbutnotwaltermag1479
      @magniwalterbutnotwaltermag1479 9 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@konstantinosnikolakakis8125that's even worse...

  • @vadimanreev4585
    @vadimanreev4585 Год назад +106

    From the memoirs of Nicholas the First (popularly nicknamed Palkin): "...Having left for the square, I wanted to see if there would be an opportunity, surrounding the crowd, to force surrender without bloodshed. At that time, a volley was fired at me; bullets whistled through my head and, fortunately, none of us were wounded. The workers of St. Isaac's Cathedral started throwing logs at us from behind the fences. It was necessary to decide to put an end to this as soon as possible, otherwise the riot could be communicated to the rabble, and then the troops surrounded by it would be in the most difficult position."

    • @bigj1905
      @bigj1905 3 месяца назад +3

      This moment 100% impacted Nicholas. The rest of his reign was marked by a very authoritarian rule (even for the time) and the violent suppression of many rebellions.
      I think this uprising told him very early on that the best way to silence a revolutionary is with grapeshot.

    • @vadimanreev4585
      @vadimanreev4585 3 месяца назад +1

      @@bigj1905 This tsar, Nicholas the First, led the Russian Empire to defeat in the Crimean War of 1853-1856. Progress was in full swing all over the world, and Russia became like a foul-smelling swamp.

    • @thomasfucillo
      @thomasfucillo Месяц назад +3

      @@vadimanreev4585 tragic that what followed the “foul swamp” of tsars were 80 million murders. The greatest horror story in world history.
      The Tsars were benevolent and king in comparison.

  • @damelyngdoh2370
    @damelyngdoh2370 2 года назад +132

    The canister rounds are absolutely realistic. No fancy explosions on impact, but gives he'll to close infantry formations

  • @smnoy23
    @smnoy23 3 года назад +256

    These guys have some damn fine discipline, I'd have run asap after the dude next to me got gibbed.

    • @montaguegray7486
      @montaguegray7486 3 года назад +69

      id have run at first day training when they told me i had too stand in a line and get shot at by some other blokes in a line

    • @SobaYatai
      @SobaYatai 2 года назад +14

      @@montaguegray7486 become skirmisher then lol

    • @janchovanec8624
      @janchovanec8624 2 года назад +29

      Those are the guys who fought off and beaten Napoleon's Le Grande Armee.

    • @capscaps04
      @capscaps04 2 года назад

      @@montaguegray7486 what´s so different about today battlefield where you can also et shot by another squad of men.

    • @artemis7271
      @artemis7271 2 года назад +28

      @@capscaps04 Because modern warfare conventions don't involve standing still in a wall of meat literally taking turns shooting at each other?

  • @donaldfeger91
    @donaldfeger91 9 месяцев назад +14

    Wow Im traumatized just watching it!
    This needs to be shown in the theaters and on tv to remind people of awfulness of war ! I have so much respect for the people who came before me!

    • @vadimanreev4585
      @vadimanreev4585 9 месяцев назад +3

      We are all standing on the shoulders of giants. Thousands of years of defeats and victories, scientific discoveries and obscurantistic oblivion have created the current civilization

  • @Tret64
    @Tret64 11 месяцев назад +145

    The actor who plays the Tsar does a great expression of “I don’t want to do this, but I have to” , especially at 0:33 and 2:24.

    • @JayzsMr
      @JayzsMr 6 месяцев назад +15

      He was the best actor in the movie in my opinion, great charisma and presence.
      He captures the aristocratic presence perfectly

    • @Cavemanner
      @Cavemanner 3 месяца назад +2

      And the look he gives after the Decemberist leader fired at the retreating officer was a pure "why did you DO that". He really managed to exemplify how apprehensive the Tsar was in this moment.

  • @timthewarlord2304
    @timthewarlord2304 Год назад +36

    1:51 look at one guy survives one grapeshot Volley, wounded a little, covered in blood, loses his hat and is still standing. What are champion

  • @bakkudeku
    @bakkudeku 2 года назад +170

    Never count on your enemy's mercy or decency, it's a potentially fatal move.

    • @svetchannel2998
      @svetchannel2998 Год назад

      Именно благодаря этому через 100 лет победят большевики и устроят ад на Земле, прямо или косвенно убив десятки миллионов моих соотечественников, а их наследники будут править до сих пор. Либералы-февралисты, свергнувшие императора, посчитали что большевики не посмеют разогнать зарождающийся парламент, если они сами себя разоружат и распустят боевые подразделения, что они и сделали. Конечно большевики только посмеялись над этим и с помощью банд пьяных матросов Петрограда просто разогнали всех, а тех кто упорствовал расстреляли.
      Если вы считаете себя силами добра - сражайтесь, вы не имеете морального права позволять себе быть мягким, так как зло беспощадно и подло.

    • @maxwellsope1080
      @maxwellsope1080 11 месяцев назад +10

      They were their brothers in arms as this is after the Napoleonic wars. Also the grape shot was used in small quantities with the intent to break up the rebel lines. If this was a real war Vs a foreign enemy the grape shot would have been devastating.

    • @krashd
      @krashd 18 дней назад

      They did not think they were enemies.

  • @jish55
    @jish55 2 года назад +2857

    Honestly, this has to be one of the greatest battles ever put to film. You can just feel the raw terror of it all, seeing the brutality put in place, watching the blood spray out, the people being shot at with grapeshot. I'd put this scene up there with scenes like the first battle in Saving Private Ryan it's that well done.

    • @Gigas0101
      @Gigas0101 2 года назад +71

      Seems a bit more like a slaughter and a route at this point, but I haven't seen the whole film yet. Agreed wholeheartedly on the quality of it, though!

    • @ManabiLT
      @ManabiLT 2 года назад +24

      Hacksaw Ridge did a great job. It's quiet, then all hell breaks loose. Bullets flying everywhere, artillery landing, and absolute, total chaos. It took me a few seconds to realize it was chaotic on purpose: That's what real battles are like.

    • @aopt471
      @aopt471 2 года назад +41

      this is not a battle

    • @patrickneumann1245
      @patrickneumann1245 2 года назад +8

      @@ManabiLT Oder auch der Kampf um die Fabrik aus dem Film Stalingrad von 1993

    • @simonnachreiner8380
      @simonnachreiner8380 2 года назад +32

      First off Waterloo
      Second off Zulu
      Third and finally this isn’t a battle this is field artillery opening up on a peaceful demonstration.

  • @samuelfriden
    @samuelfriden Год назад +38

    Incredibly good looking uniforms

  • @ryanweeks8186
    @ryanweeks8186 2 года назад +51

    The soldiers should’ve known they were in trouble when they heard the epic music...

  • @RoberttAvro
    @RoberttAvro 2 года назад +54

    My God, I truly feel for every soldier over the millennia who has died just standing there in position. Can you imagine the millions who have been mowed down over the centuries by arrow, cannon fire or so many other weapons? War is truly hell.

  • @carlhicksjr8401
    @carlhicksjr8401 Год назад +31

    One of the better depictions of grape shot I've seen on film as a reenactor. But if it were real it would be far, FAR bloodier and gruesome... as in body parts flying everywhere 'gruesome'.
    However, I do appreciate the movie showing how a battery load of grape would eviscerate battalions whole companies at a time.

  • @eiserneregenschaft7165
    @eiserneregenschaft7165 2 года назад +944

    Guys, before you say anything, just remember that these are commanders that have been educated in a hundred years of linear combat. They know why they stand rank and file against enemy cannons.

    • @catsandporn
      @catsandporn 2 года назад +65

      So why do they not shoot back? Is this what you do in linear combat?

    • @w_od9611
      @w_od9611 2 года назад +266

      @@catsandporn because they are too far to shoot it's either a bayonet charge to take over the artillery or stay and get mowd

    • @joeleonard9965
      @joeleonard9965 2 года назад +133

      @@w_od9611 Then why not a bayonet charge? Or marching forward? If you don't have artillery also, how can you assume this goes any differently if you don't close the distance? It just doesn't make sense...

    • @k.n7849
      @k.n7849 2 года назад +241

      @@joeleonard9965 Beacuse it is harder to maintain proper advance under such an artillery fire. Taking the facts that they didn't have cavalry for atack against artillery brigades + Tsar had guard cavalry and infantry battalions which could easily repell any atack from rebel side.

    • @HoangNguyen-rw6wf
      @HoangNguyen-rw6wf 2 года назад +98

      @@joeleonard9965 Beside they are outnumber. What ever they do they it will not work. If the Tsar have only artillery then it fine to charge. But that not the case, they don't even have calvary. If they broke square formation they are an easy target to get pick up by Calvary. If they got shot by grape shot or infantry first.

  • @THEsinnrz-cg1cf
    @THEsinnrz-cg1cf Год назад +121

    Damn the courage of the guy at 2:13 to look around, see the entire group around him dead and to walk up and take the solider infront of hims place is js crazy, even if it was standard for all soldiers back then

    • @Sold7
      @Sold7 Год назад +2

      yeah, and imagine how brutal it was in a real battle, this was a revolution

    • @vadimanreev4585
      @vadimanreev4585 Год назад +12

      When they talk about the brutality of the Bolsheviks in the twenties of the twentieth century, you need to understand that the majority of the country's population approved of their actions. Because the people, for three hundred years of slavery, have suffered grief.

    • @jurgeeen
      @jurgeeen Год назад

      @@vadimanreev4585 no, it's a lie. Even most the revolution supporting part of the society the majority supported social-democrats, which even won the soviet election, so Lenin and Trotsky just dismantled soviets by the brutal force of Petrograd Revolutinary Comitee, lol. Bolsheviks were nothing more but a red ISIS supported by the minority of the most cruel psychopaths

    • @samarmstrong6569
      @samarmstrong6569 Год назад +10

      ⁠​⁠​⁠@@vadimanreev4585lmao, your source? Nearly half the county was against the Bolsheviks. Serfdom was horrible but that doesn’t mean that the majority of the county wanted the brutality and terror the Bolsheviks inflicted to happen. You can’t make generalizations for people in times where you haven’t lived without proof.
      “Bolshevik seizure of power was not universally accepted” (Wikipedia)
      Tambov Rebellion (Wikipedia)

    • @vadimanreev4585
      @vadimanreev4585 Год назад +9

      @@samarmstrong6569 My dear man! To refute you do not need to bother yourself much. The Tambov uprising took place in Russia and covered several tens of thousands of people. There were already a hundred million people in Russia at that time. So not all of Russia rebelled. How did the Ukrainian population feel about the Bolsheviks? More people joined the Red Army than the white one, and after twenty years of Soviet rule, NINE million Ukrainians fought in the war with the fascists in the red army, and no more than two hundred thousand people joined the Fascist.

  • @vurrunna
    @vurrunna Год назад +211

    Everything about this scene is obviously incredible, but perhaps my favorite part is the music. It's intense, it's visceral, and it's modern-an aspect that makes the scene feel so much more real and tangible. You get the sense that this isn't just something that happened long ago, but that could be happening right now. Truly phenomenal film-making.

    • @lupohutchington269
      @lupohutchington269 Год назад +3

      Actually happens in almost every protest

    • @lupohutchington269
      @lupohutchington269 Год назад

      With tear gas and rubber bullets

    • @michaelgreenwood3413
      @michaelgreenwood3413 Год назад +3

      Russians have a lot of practice doing this to their own people. Especially over the past year and a half.

    • @lukasmadrid1945
      @lukasmadrid1945 Год назад +3

      the music is pretty much the only thing i dont like about this scene, generic and doesn't really do the scene justice

    • @gigachadov8156
      @gigachadov8156 Год назад +10

      ​@@michaelgreenwood3413brainwashed. an American tells a Russian about what is happening in Russia, because that’s what he was told on CNN😂😂😂

  • @NoTimeAllTime
    @NoTimeAllTime 2 года назад +70

    The rank and file soldiers, who had large numbers cut down by grape shot and then had more drown in the frozen river they retreated to, were not in the coupe itself and in fact were told that the man they thought was the Czar was being usurped by his younger brother.

    • @richarddevine8391
      @richarddevine8391 2 года назад +3

      This!

    • @sherlocksmuuug6692
      @sherlocksmuuug6692 2 года назад +8

      Which is unfortunate because Constantin had privately abdicated in favour of his brother, but that wasn't publicly known yet (Constantin was still in Warsaw). That's why the soldiers thought they were doing a counter-coup against Nicholas' coup.

    • @Qumielhan
      @Qumielhan Год назад +3

      @@sherlocksmuuug6692 "Privately abdicated" is whatever was concocted after the event, since the loser would not dare contending it. It would be like miraculously discovering the men you stole a car from had privately donated it to you free of charge a bit earlier, how convenient.
      Especially since most of the previous century in Russia was called 'An Era of Palatial Coups' with inheritance wills of the emperors forged. Basically those soldiers indeed participated in a counter-coup that was mythologized long after the events to keep up the appearances.

  • @Baribrotzer
    @Baribrotzer 2 года назад +66

    Shostakovich's 11th "The Year 1905" has a similar scene depicted musically - the Russian army firing into a crowd of demonstrators with Maxim Guns. Absolutely chilling music.

    • @andro7862
      @andro7862 2 года назад +9

      Russia moment.

    • @Lucas_07-PL
      @Lucas_07-PL 2 года назад +3

      @@andro7862 Exactly lol.

    • @bjorneisenseite9025
      @bjorneisenseite9025 2 года назад

      Which movie?

    • @Baribrotzer
      @Baribrotzer 2 года назад +5

      @@bjorneisenseite9025 It wasn't a movie. In fact, there is no movie. It was a symphony - written in 1957, and sometimes described as "a film score without the film". The version on Naxos by the Liverpool Symphony, with Vasily Petrenko as conductor, is particularly good.

  • @gabrielvaino4673
    @gabrielvaino4673 3 года назад +319

    This scene blew me away.

  • @aaronmarks9366
    @aaronmarks9366 10 месяцев назад +7

    Jesus, grapeshot may as well be a fucking machine gun

  • @SmilingIbis
    @SmilingIbis 2 года назад +20

    It wouldn't take a lot of grapeshot to make me run like hell. These guys have brass balls!

  • @hiredmurderer6228
    @hiredmurderer6228 2 года назад +77

    How the fall and the brutality of the impacts make this scene unique

    • @kirgan1000
      @kirgan1000 2 года назад +10

      It is still "sanitized" nobady screams in death pain for a long time, call for there mothere, or scream in horror of the wound they have taken, I have get un-maned (groin hit) they all die "relatively" fast and silent.

    • @gnas1897
      @gnas1897 Год назад

      ​@@kirgan1000 The only (almost) completely non-"sanitized" war movie is Come and See. Nothing comes close to that.

  • @lucasgroves137
    @lucasgroves137 10 месяцев назад +11

    God I wish those hats were still in style.

  • @canadaero
    @canadaero 2 года назад +39

    When the lieb guard runs, you know it’s fucked up

  • @jackashmore
    @jackashmore 2 года назад +313

    2:13 the balls you have to have in that situation, like that dude took the meme “oh no, anyway” to heart. All his boys just dropped around him and he’s like “gotta get back in position”
    Edit: man the keyboard warriors really came out on this one “it’s your duty” stfu ya nerds y’all be sippin

    • @PRubin-rh4sr
      @PRubin-rh4sr 2 года назад +26

      its ingrained in them, you just stand

    • @TheHolyRomanEmpireGaming
      @TheHolyRomanEmpireGaming 2 года назад +34

      It was your duty to stand, you stood for what you represented. He may have regretted his choices but he wasn’t going back.

    • @blecao
      @blecao 2 года назад +12

      After all this are no raw conscripts this is the russian imperial guard, the more discipline men of the russian army and quite some veterans of the napoleonic wars

    • @pyerack
      @pyerack 2 года назад +9

      Nah bro his brain is probably hearing white noise from the shock.

    • @kspfan001
      @kspfan001 Год назад +2

      In moments like this you can't think and without training will default to your instincts. Hence why soldiers drill & train over and over.

  • @whatintheworld6413
    @whatintheworld6413 2 года назад +21

    Russian warfilm always Amaze me with it's accuracy. Not like Hollywood war film

  • @ZGundam83
    @ZGundam83 Год назад +10

    I just realized that, in 2 years, it will be 200 years since the Decembrist Revolt

  • @LastHussar1812
    @LastHussar1812 Год назад +8

    "They won't dare to shoot us!"
    NICHOLAS I: Bazinga!

  • @charlessaint7926
    @charlessaint7926 2 года назад +20

    I like they included the metallic ring when the cannons fire. It's accurate and something you don't get firing just blanks.

  • @radiopinkzeppelin2
    @radiopinkzeppelin2 2 года назад +24

    I don't think I'm familiar with a better depiction in cinema of what grape was like until probably Scott's Napoleon epic

  • @jeanpark4420
    @jeanpark4420 11 месяцев назад +12

    Whoever produced/directed this movie should provide some lessons on movie making to Ridley Scott.

    • @flankerpraha
      @flankerpraha 10 месяцев назад

      Andrei Kravchuk. I've not seen this movie yet but I saw two other movies directed by him. Honestly I didn't like them much (that's why I'm still hesitating with watching this one) but I have to admit that they were done very professionally from the technical side.

    • @dicecorporation
      @dicecorporation 7 месяцев назад

      The outset was different. One was set to do his own interpretation of a historical events while the other was set to do anglo-saxon propaganda. There was never a chance

    • @LordGeneralOHara
      @LordGeneralOHara День назад

      ​@dicecorporation GOD SAVE THE KING GOD SAVE OUR GRACIOUS KING GOD SAVE OUR NOBLE KING LONG TO REIGN OVER US SEND HIM VICTORIOUS HAPPY AND GLORIOUS LONG TO REIGN OVER US OH LORD OUR GOD ARISE.....
      SCATTER OUR ENEMIES AND MAKE THEM FALL, CONFOUND THEY'RE POLITICS FRUSTRATE THEY'RE KNAVISH TRICKS
      ON HIM WE FIX OUR HOPES! GOD SAVE US ALL!!
      🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🇮🇲🇮🇲🇮🇲🇮🇲🇮🇲🇮🇲🇮🇲🇮🇲🇮🇲🇫🇰🇫🇰🇫🇰🇫🇰🇫🇰🇫🇰🇮🇴🇮🇴🇮🇴🇮🇴🇮🇴🇮🇴🇮🇴🇻🇬🇻🇬🇻🇬🇻🇬🇻🇬🇻🇬🇻🇬

  • @caiusballad4162
    @caiusballad4162 Год назад +18

    Incredible scene! the uniforms and the atmosphere is gorgeous in every ways!

  • @MM-cn8uu
    @MM-cn8uu Год назад +71

    The subtitles in this video are not always accurate. E.g. at 0:29 he actually says: "Let me take the guilt for this blood", at 3:47 the officer shouts not just "Follow me", but "Follow me! To Neva!" (a river in St Petersburg - it was frozen at the time, and the officer hoped to cross the ice with the troops to capture the Armoury on the other bank and retry the offensive), at 4:07 soldiers shout not "Run", but "Run to Arsenal!" (Armoury) and "Until the victory, lads!"

    • @Pan_Z
      @Pan_Z Год назад

      Thank you

  • @user-ym4ok2qt9n
    @user-ym4ok2qt9n 2 года назад +79

    officer: Glory to Constantine and the constitution!
    soldiers: what is a constitution?
    officer: well... uh... that's Konstantin's wife
    soldiers: aha., glory to Constantine and the Constitution!

    • @Tounushi
      @Tounushi 2 года назад +16

      Quickly read up on it, they wanted to make the empire into something more akin to a mix of the UK and USA. Constitutional monarch; 12 sovereign States within the empire by economic lines, all with access to a sea or major river system and their own legislatures; division of powers; two legislative houses, etc. And Konstantin as emperor.

    • @lordkfc1297
      @lordkfc1297 2 года назад +21

      @@Tounushi they were too hasty, those kind of reforms must start slow or otherwise you meet the bullets and the powder

    • @Tounushi
      @Tounushi 2 года назад +12

      @@lordkfc1297 And in Russia, any hint of reforms is usually met with bullets and powder.

    • @lordkfc1297
      @lordkfc1297 2 года назад +27

      @@Tounushi It matters little that they were in Russia, if you tried to change from absolute monarchy to a constitutional one you would either need a revolution or be very careful on what reforms you propose so you don't take to much power from the king in one go

    • @cornbeefcommie7519
      @cornbeefcommie7519 Год назад +3

      ​@@lordkfc1297 Ah yes the reforms must start slow to the point that you are the only last european country to reform and it came very late.

  • @March7th1990
    @March7th1990 2 года назад +21

    Survive the Napoleonic war but not in the Hands of their Countrymen

  • @michaelgreenwood3413
    @michaelgreenwood3413 2 года назад +307

    While the rest of the movie might be crap and innaccurate... this isn't. This is exactly how horrific it is to be on the receiving end of grapeshot.

    • @majorchungus
      @majorchungus 2 года назад +30

      I remember when I grapeshotted 50 men, this is accurate.

    • @Tugboatpb
      @Tugboatpb 2 года назад +2

      Is the movie bad?

    • @evilbabai7083
      @evilbabai7083 2 года назад +56

      @@Tugboatpb it's historically inaccurate and has poorly written characters. There was a 1.2H comedy review of it (only in Russian, unfortunately) which is much more enjoyable than this move. So, yeah, battle scenes are great, everything else sucks big time.

    • @Tugboatpb
      @Tugboatpb 2 года назад +7

      @@evilbabai7083 damn that sucks. I've greatly warmed up to this era of history and want to watch more of it. The cinematography of this scene is excellent

    • @evilbabai7083
      @evilbabai7083 2 года назад +36

      @@Tugboatpb yeah, that's a common problem of mainstream movies in Russia since "Cinema Fund" was established - they make a good presentation to get money and then make a shallow lazy cash grab of a movie that eventually flops at the box office. And sometimes it's not only bad, but even offensive, misrepresenting historical events and portraying it's figures in absolutely disgusting fashion, twisting their actions and motivation. Quick tip - if you see movie reviewed by BadComedian, skip it or watch the review instead.

  • @fence03
    @fence03 Год назад +7

    “They won’t dare shoot us!”
    The loyalists: “Bet”

  • @VadimKudim
    @VadimKudim 11 месяцев назад +4

    Famous last words, "They won't dare to shoot"

  • @spooky_lxix9042
    @spooky_lxix9042 3 года назад +50

    Ah yes giant shotgun

  • @lrl2394
    @lrl2394 2 года назад +90

    Have to wonder what would have happened had they convinced their men to charge the cannons before they began firing, still many would die from the cannons but if they had reached them it would have been interesting to know how things could have gone

    • @radziwill7193
      @radziwill7193 2 года назад +38

      They would have been killed by superior musket fire and bayonets.

    • @lrl2394
      @lrl2394 2 года назад +3

      @@radziwill7193 is this based on the numbers from the actual event, I don’t know a lot about it but it does seem interesting. Movie makes it look fairly even but that could just be artistic liberty

    • @HansenDing
      @HansenDing 2 года назад +120

      @@lrl2394 yeah they didn't have the numbers. This is based on the real events of the Decemberist uprising where they were hugely outnumbered. If they actually fought they would have been crushed. Their only bet was to stand there and hope the army wouldn't dare shoot at their own officers and veterans.
      The Decemberist story was a tragic one. They were essentially officers and veterans who marched through Europe to defeat what they were told was the tyranny of Napoleon, only to realise that France was much more liberal and prosperous than Russia. They wanted reforms but due to how autocratic and conservative the Tsarist administration was, they were convinced an armed uprising was the only solution and grew desperate, resorting to a series of suicidal coup and mutiny attempts.

    • @gidi3250
      @gidi3250 2 года назад +13

      They where heard telling their men that the loyal troops wouldn't shoot on them since they are all Russians and cannons proved that wrong.

    • @pizzaki582
      @pizzaki582 2 года назад +40

      @@HansenDing jesus man, sounds like russia every few decades

  • @LordValorum
    @LordValorum Год назад +10

    "They won't dare to shoot us"
    That didnt age too well

  • @OkamiThunder
    @OkamiThunder 7 месяцев назад +3

    I imagine that receiving grapeshot from a cannon while holding formation is probably just one the most horrifying situations to be on a battlefield. Every muscle in your body and your mind just screaming at you to run and take cover. And you can't even watch what happens you simply blink and the men on your left and right all fall crumpled to ground like dolls having their strings cut. You raise your rifle to fire back but you can't see your targets anymore the cloud of gunfire from the cannons and your men returning fire leaves the field shrouded in a haze while death and terror are all around you.

  • @comradecat3678
    @comradecat3678 5 месяцев назад +3

    Can confirm the new grapeshot ability for the Dawi in Warhammer 3 tears through even the most heavily armored chaos troops

  • @KazBodnar
    @KazBodnar Год назад +4

    I can't believe they filmed this back in 1825

  • @VLFBERHTwolf
    @VLFBERHTwolf 5 месяцев назад +5

    1:47 *WHOA! That was close,* he thought.
    2:10 *My hat!*

  • @patrioticjustice9040
    @patrioticjustice9040 3 года назад +381

    1:56 Is it just me or does Russia seem to have a long history of its citizens dying unnecessarily?

    • @zhukov7923
      @zhukov7923 3 года назад +94

      Who the hell even stands in the way of a military standoff, especially when they see cannons lining up.

    • @patrioticjustice9040
      @patrioticjustice9040 3 года назад +140

      @@zhukov7923 Probably the closest thing they had to excitement back in the day. They used to make spectacles out of executions; watching a man hang for piracy was the equivalent of going to the movies.

    • @erichvondonitz5325
      @erichvondonitz5325 3 года назад +65

      @@zhukov7923 probably didn't have a clue that they were using grapeshots instead of the normal ball shot

    • @kekero540
      @kekero540 3 года назад +18

      Because Russia has been ruled by totalitarian and parasitic despots and nobles since its very inception.

    • @Phoenix8492
      @Phoenix8492 3 года назад +104

      @@zhukov7923 this kind of warfare was so far removed from civilian populace that it was a spectacle to many of this time, something very, very heavily romanticized by artists and propaganda. In one of the earliest battles of the American Civil War it was observed that people had settled on a nearby hillside to picnic as _spectators_ to the battle; they very quickly ran when the hill itself began to take musket and cannon fire.
      Even today we experience this effect; there are many stories from the US military of 18 year-olds soiling themselves in Iraq and Afghanistan because their entire perceptions of war and combat came from Call of Duty.

  • @Russian_Bot_
    @Russian_Bot_ 2 года назад +167

    Can you believe this really happened? Like this was a regular occurrence during this time period. The testicular fortitude it must’ve took to stand in a fucking straight line and just get peppered with grape shot is astounding.

    • @paddyopatrick2941
      @paddyopatrick2941 2 года назад +9

      Walking slowly to maintain cohesion toward an entrenched enemy position walk 60ft infront of them unload 2 volleys point blank stick a sword on your gun and charge.... idk how they charged with their balls hanging so low.

    • @christophdollis1955
      @christophdollis1955 2 года назад +25

      Well it didn't really happen this way. The rebels were fired at with blanks and didn't respond. Then they were fired at over their heads with live rounds and the Decemberists replied with aimed shots. Then they were hit with with live rounds, including grape, slaughtered, fled, tried to regroup on the ice, and the ice was hit with canon balls. You can imagine what happened next.

    • @moogiibat5845
      @moogiibat5845 2 года назад +5

      @@christophdollis1955 I guess the Movie needed to cut for budget and time reasons, you can only put so much in hour 30 minute. Wish they made extended version for non cinema releases with more scenes and details, I'll pay for those.

    • @christophdollis1955
      @christophdollis1955 2 года назад +17

      @@moogiibat5845 I was a bit annoyed that this movie showed the Decemberists just stupidly standing there after being hit with grape shot repeatedly. In fact, they fired the first aimed shots.

    • @moogiibat5845
      @moogiibat5845 2 года назад +2

      @@christophdollis1955 Well, they did fire and fataly wounded the cavalry that charged before the artillery scene. They do look stoic tho.

  • @Tearex_01
    @Tearex_01 Месяц назад +3

    Wow this screen is better than certain movie that came around 2023 😅😅

  • @danilsmith7292
    @danilsmith7292 2 года назад +23

    I just love how the people on the sides are watching this like if it's a SPORTS event! 🤣🤣

    • @Indoor_Carrot
      @Indoor_Carrot 2 года назад

      Public executions were a common spectacle back then. Not too surprising they'll be here to watch this

    • @090giver090
      @090giver090 2 года назад +8

      There were no TV and internet back then, y'know ;)

    • @Друг-р4з
      @Друг-р4з 2 года назад +3

      People living the moment

    • @JayzsMr
      @JayzsMr 6 месяцев назад +1

      This is actually historically accurate, many battles had spectators in the past

    • @davidcox3076
      @davidcox3076 5 месяцев назад

      @@JayzsMr First Battle of Bull Run. Have a nice picnic while watching the Army of Northeastern Virginia get pimp slapped.

  • @reynaldoflores4522
    @reynaldoflores4522 7 месяцев назад +2

    Their discipline is phenomenal. As men fell, their comrades on either side simply closed in to reform the lines.

  • @williampanagopoulos656
    @williampanagopoulos656 Год назад +3

    Just the SOUND of it firing...

  • @Red0543
    @Red0543 2 года назад +17

    Grapeshot is one of those “so simple yet so devastating” inventions. I mean at the end of the day all you really do is to dump a bunch of small metal balls into a cannon. The result, however, speaks for itself….
    The gods help whatever poor bastard that found themselves on the receiving end of that barrel…

    • @krashd
      @krashd 2 года назад +4

      A cannon with grapeshot is basically a shotgun that has been scaled up 50 times.

    • @AlexSDU
      @AlexSDU Год назад +2

      Sometimes you don't even need small metal balls. Just nuts, bolts, nails and such will do too.

  • @heakhaek
    @heakhaek Год назад +9

    I never sae this movie but from the scenes I know I just love the look. It captures how brutal line warfare actually is. I just love how they show grapeshot is just as much a psycological weapon as it is to kill and maim.

  • @AustinAOkay
    @AustinAOkay 2 года назад +13

    Was looking for a scene that used canister/grapeshot. Hollywood focuses on the long range cannon balls but once the enemy was in range, they would employee the dreaded grapeshot. A Shotgun on steroids!

    • @090giver090
      @090giver090 2 года назад

      Picket's charge scene in "Gettysburg" showed artillery switching from shells to canisters as enemy went closer and its effects quite well. Without gore for age restrictions considerations of course.

    • @7hunderingGod
      @7hunderingGod 2 года назад +1

      @@090giver090 there are even a few commands you hear during Pickett's charge for the union artillery to load double canister.

  • @svetozarboroevicvonbojna4702
    @svetozarboroevicvonbojna4702 2 года назад +8

    That’s canister
    Grapeshot was used more on ships and it was was too Big to make such a spread and damage as shown
    But this is a accurate representation of canister

  • @Brian_541
    @Brian_541 Год назад +3

    Essentially a giant shotgun……appears extremely effective

  • @albaraqahtani
    @albaraqahtani 11 месяцев назад +2

    This is the most accurate portrayal of linear warfare i’ve ever seen.

  • @johnerwin9024
    @johnerwin9024 Год назад +7

    Powerful. Also love the costumes/scenery. Effects of this still living with us -

  • @TikisPlayhouse
    @TikisPlayhouse 2 года назад +59

    I forgot about grapeshot being used in cannons like that, it seems like it was extremely effective.

    • @alexmag342
      @alexmag342 2 года назад +7

      Grapeshot was very rarely used that close, being the only times was if an artillery position was being charged and possibly overrrun by infantry or cavalry and would only have been one single volley, and formations didn't positions themselves directly in the line of fire of cannons while standing still.
      This movie is pure fantasy on a real event, at least the fight, the partial infiltration of the officer corps by masonic Judas puppets is accurate, and that the soldiers look confused about what's going on and that they didn't know that they were in fact being led in rebellion by foreign infiltrators and a handful of indoctrinated traitors, the rebels officers, is also accurate.
      The masons praying to God is almost has bad as the formations being grapeshoted, as its inaccurate as they were and are all godless anti-european degenerates, and this is no exaggeration, the forefathers and creators of Marxism after their other artificial ideology, liberalism/republicanism failed miserably and was rejected and fought against uninamously by the populace in every country, so they took to infiltration, subversion and destabilization, and indoctrination(by infiltrating academias), all financed by their banks, corporations, and masonic puppet state(USA and England, the latter post 16882, the former since its creation)

    • @jdlamb4212
      @jdlamb4212 2 года назад +16

      ​@@alexmag342 are your circuits frying

    • @LordVader1094
      @LordVader1094 2 года назад

      @@alexmag342 Least deranged Portuguese

    • @bobbyhill1110
      @bobbyhill1110 2 года назад +3

      @@alexmag342 smartest Portuguese

    • @salter1630
      @salter1630 2 года назад

      @@alexmag342 least schizophrenic monarchist

  • @starlightdragon2665
    @starlightdragon2665 Год назад +8

    What's crazy; is that modern tanks have a grapeshot canister for their guns.
    I remember watching a video of an M1 shotgun canister and oh buddy it will pepper a whole field for a wide sweep.
    So to imagine that day and age when Grapeshot was the best anti infantry ammo they had; as wildly inaccurate as it was, god help the poor buggers it hit, because if it didn't kill you it would make you wish it did.

  • @A.P.1821
    @A.P.1821 11 месяцев назад +3

    Superb Russian production, far better than Hollywood ones.

  • @Otter-Destruction
    @Otter-Destruction 11 месяцев назад +4

    2:28 you could tell that wasn't his first time being on the wrong end of a cannon.

  • @typicalperson6389
    @typicalperson6389 2 года назад +7

    i love how only one contingent, the one at 3:44; stood still while others ran.

  • @utubeber1569
    @utubeber1569 2 года назад +4

    I've been looking for this dang movie, thank you man.

  • @bishopadhemaroflepuy8377
    @bishopadhemaroflepuy8377 Год назад +15

    1:44 Bro went from daring Russian commander to Lord Beckett in a span of about 0.2 seconds

  • @rexvictorhardrada
    @rexvictorhardrada Год назад +3

    The absolute balls on these guys to stand there for that many volleys is astonishing

    • @serahloeffelroberts9901
      @serahloeffelroberts9901 Год назад +2

      The infantry at that time were drilled to keep formation no matter what. Whether it was musket fire, cavalry or cannon fire they knew if they broke formation they would be easily picked off

    • @rexvictorhardrada
      @rexvictorhardrada Год назад +1

      @@serahloeffelroberts9901 yeah, way different from today's battle doctrines.

    • @vadimanreev4585
      @vadimanreev4585 Год назад +1

      @@rexvictorhardrada Tactics on the firing line are dictated by the development of the economy, and, accordingly, by technology.

  • @EzioAuditore
    @EzioAuditore 2 года назад +7

    The generals rank depended on the length of their sideburns

  • @krashd
    @krashd 2 года назад +4

    Suddenly have a real urge to play Empire: Total War.

  • @Plaguepancake674
    @Plaguepancake674 10 месяцев назад +3

    1:26 I love how chill that drummer is lol

  • @HigHrvatski
    @HigHrvatski 2 года назад +74

    Russia has a tendency to make very corny movies about war, like they are action movies.
    But when they go realistic they never disappoint.

    • @Dan-jp8jr
      @Dan-jp8jr 2 года назад +3

      Best war movie I've ever seen was a Russian/Belarusian movie called brest castle

    • @firebolt00
      @firebolt00 2 года назад +1

      @@Dan-jp8jr indeed that is a great, and horrifying movie about the outbreak of WW2 in the USSR

  • @thejollyjohnson9015
    @thejollyjohnson9015 3 года назад +35

    I think I would of started shooting back if I was the other guys...

    • @jadestar554
      @jadestar554 3 года назад +8

      rip to your grandma but I'm better....

    • @IsaiahRichards692
      @IsaiahRichards692 3 года назад +4

      They were out of musket range!

    • @thejollyjohnson9015
      @thejollyjohnson9015 3 года назад +2

      @@IsaiahRichards692 bullshit if they shoot in volleys someone's bound to hit

    • @IsaiahRichards692
      @IsaiahRichards692 3 года назад +2

      @@thejollyjohnson9015 But see, they Czar’s army has grapeshot, so…

    • @thejollyjohnson9015
      @thejollyjohnson9015 3 года назад

      @@IsaiahRichards692 well you see the past is the past. No helping them boys out now

  • @CannedLizard
    @CannedLizard 2 года назад +2

    Man, you can just say you dislike their music, you don't need to go to these kinds of extremes.

  • @dmitriyrozhdestvenskiy2826
    @dmitriyrozhdestvenskiy2826 6 месяцев назад +3

    Imagine yourself being a Soldier who carried on 1805-06 campaign, the Patriotic War of 1812 year against Napoleon, coming to Paris and being shot here at the capital (formally) of the Russian Empire by your mates with the cartrige, as some junior officers told you something about "the Constitution", liberty, things that are wrong and you need to be here to "fix it". 😪🤧😩😫😵☠️💂❤❤❤

    • @wrtltable
      @wrtltable 6 месяцев назад +1

      The soldiers did not understand at all what the conspirators wanted from them and why they were there. They ignored all the beautiful words about the constitution and freedom and simply followed the orders of their officers as usual. However, for some reason, none of these conspirators freed their serfs. So they wanted freedom only for themselves.

    • @dmitriyrozhdestvenskiy2826
      @dmitriyrozhdestvenskiy2826 2 месяца назад

      ​@@wrtltableindeed. Ironically, the most of the soldiers though the word "The Constitution" (or "Konstitystiya" in Russian) meant the wife of the Constantine - the second brother of Alexander I - the middle brother who meant to take the throne by rights (but he refused and went to Poland).

  • @Petitmoi74
    @Petitmoi74 11 месяцев назад +5

    After the disaster of Ridley Scott's Napoleon, even if it's not related, I'm so disappointed that we didn't get a movie like this.
    With, among other things, realism and colour (I'm tired of modern movies with grey filters, might as well go back to the days of black and white films).

    • @aaronmarks9366
      @aaronmarks9366 10 месяцев назад

      Man, Napoleon was so disappointing. Although I'll give them credit for having a brutal grapeshot scene there, with the peasant woman crawling away from her own severed leg.

  • @LazyLifeIFreak
    @LazyLifeIFreak 2 года назад +3

    These shell types didn't go away, oh no no, not by a country-mile. The 120mm gun found on the Abrams has a similar round just much-much larger and far more deadly.

  • @XxKINGatLIFExX
    @XxKINGatLIFExX Год назад +2

    The worst part about this is the pained breathing of all the injured men. It's horrible.

  • @breadtoast1036
    @breadtoast1036 Год назад +2

    this is so tame compared to what actual grapeshot would do to a man turn this into rated R+

  • @mariuseles1664
    @mariuseles1664 3 года назад +7

    I think this is Mihailo Miloradovich in the start of the video? Legend of Napoleonic wars. Gubernator of Sanktpetersburg?

    • @andreylyutikov8348
      @andreylyutikov8348 3 года назад +7

      Unfortunately, no. Miloradovich was shown earlier in the movie. Kahovskiy (the man in the hat asking about the constitution in the beginning) shot him, and the general was carried away.

    • @mariuseles1664
      @mariuseles1664 3 года назад +1

      @@andreylyutikov8348 Thanks. My high school theme was Napoleonic wars.my personal interest was Serbian generals in Russian army,

    • @andreylyutikov8348
      @andreylyutikov8348 3 года назад +1

      @@mariuseles1664 in the beginning of the video that was Alexander Benkendorf

    • @mariuseles1664
      @mariuseles1664 3 года назад

      @@andreylyutikov8348 I know, greatest worts he said. "Is it from rifle?

  • @lukaskaelin6249
    @lukaskaelin6249 3 года назад +16

    From the handbook of how not to stage a successful Coup de grâce.....step one: do this........

    • @spitfirexo1646
      @spitfirexo1646 3 года назад +11

      *coup d'etat.
      coup de grace is a completely different thing

    • @janchovanec8624
      @janchovanec8624 2 года назад

      It was a protest, not replacing a government, more of a strike.
      No violence was envisioned.
      All the violence was sewed.

    • @michaelgreenwood3413
      @michaelgreenwood3413 2 года назад +1

      @@spitfirexo1646 Well, they certainly got coup de gras'd

  • @sgtbrown4273
    @sgtbrown4273 Год назад +4

    this is why you don't give up your arms as civilians.

    • @quakeknight9680
      @quakeknight9680 Год назад +1

      Im looking forward to Russians becoming Libertarian

  • @johnmcclain2848
    @johnmcclain2848 19 дней назад

    That tactic of just standing there doing nothing was incredibly effective

    • @Vadim-p1d
      @Vadim-p1d 15 дней назад

      Before the cannon fire, the rebels repulsed the cavalry attack. The leaders of the rebels missed the pace of surprise and were pinned down in the square by three times superior forces.
      They had a chance to address the people directly, they sympathized with the rebels, but the leaders of the uprising were afraid of an uncontrollable riot

  • @Ace5.0
    @Ace5.0 Год назад +1

    Pretty gnarly depiction of grapeshot

  • @pparker768
    @pparker768 2 года назад +9

    Never take a hat to an artillery fight