10 Insanely Accurate War Movie Details

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июн 2024
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Комментарии • 697

  • @dasquick
    @dasquick 10 месяцев назад +909

    I was Signal in the army. There is a part in We Were Soldiers, when Mel Gibson walks up to a group working on a long range radio, in the background you can see a guy stick his pinky in his mouth then swirl it on the inside of the connector of the hand set before plugging it in. I can tell you from experience that is the only way to get that thing to work, I've done it hundreds of times.

    • @Denzlercs
      @Denzlercs 10 месяцев назад +53

      As a saying in the military goes, “you’ve got to lick it before you stick it” to lubricate the rubber o-ring in the connection that seals and waterproofs it.

    • @jaimevalencia6271
      @jaimevalencia6271 10 месяцев назад +13

      We learned that in comms at basic 😂

    • @biffskeet762
      @biffskeet762 10 месяцев назад +27

      My commo SGT would kill you for this. "Keep your ******* bodily fluids out of my god **** equipment!" He was one of those old crusty marines who joined the national guard later and it showed. He was right though, and his method of using chapstick on the connectors is actually way better than spit for many reasons. I can't tell you how many butts got chewed for swabbing a spitty pinky into the radio but he NEVER let it slide in the six years I knew him. One of his biggest pet peeves and rightfully so. Like he said "You wouldn't want me drooling all over your equipment would you?" I was almost convinced I'd catch him in the arms room one day spitting into all of our NODs and giving us pinkeye out of spite.

    • @paulwee1924dus
      @paulwee1924dus 10 месяцев назад +2

      Signal was a German WW2 magazine!

    • @michaelbourgeault9409
      @michaelbourgeault9409 10 месяцев назад +7

      @@paulwee1924dus OP is indicating he was in the US Army Signal Corp back in the day, and therefore knows something of how to make radios work.

  • @JappeChristian
    @JappeChristian 9 месяцев назад +72

    Wardaddy's sweetheart grip is so much more meaningful if you watch the deleted scenes from the movie.
    In these scenes Wardaddy tells the young recruit/main character about his young days, where he got too drunk at a party and got into a fight. Seeking to flee from the police, he rushes his little brother and his girlfriend into his car and drives off. Being drunk, he crashes the car and both his brother and girlfriend is killed. This got him imprisoned and his life since then was full of crime. He only got out of prison, because he agreed to sign up for the army. This context also explains his willingness to die at the end of the movie. He does not want to survive the war, as he has nothing to return to in the USA, other than a town that hates him and probably a life of crime and prison.

    • @nwvfd22
      @nwvfd22 9 месяцев назад +6

      I hated that scene. As it's pointed out that Wardaddy's coat is old, his pistol and how he knew German before they went to war put in my mind he was a WW1 vet. I like that head cannon much better.

    • @rebdomine1
      @rebdomine1 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@nwvfd22 I like it too, I'm going to keep it instead of watching the deleted scene, thanks.

    • @blueeyeswhitedragon9839
      @blueeyeswhitedragon9839 3 месяца назад +5

      My Dad was in the Royal Canadian Air Force during WWII, and when the shot up aircraft returned from their sorties over Germany, the broken plexiglas was discarded and new windows and windscreens were replaced.
      My Dad would take pieces of the plexiglas and make small pieces of jewelry for my Mom, who was his sweetheart back home.
      There were some examples of scrimshaw and some pieces were worked into jewel-like hearts and broaches, which he either sent back to his girlfriend (Mom) in the mail, or brought back after he was released from duty.
      I don't say after the war ended, because he stayed on after the war, to help air supply food and medicine to the starving German people. This was before the famous Berlin air drop of food and coal to the Germans trapped in Berlin and isolated by the Soviet Union. He came home many months after the war ended, with his previous handmade jewels from WWII.

  • @SantomPh
    @SantomPh 10 месяцев назад +84

    9:10
    this explains the Band of Brothers scene where Doc Roe chews out Harry Welsh and Dick Winters for not putting morphine syrettes on the injured Moose. "I do not see one syrette on this man's jacket!" he yells.

    • @rithvikmuthyalapati9754
      @rithvikmuthyalapati9754 10 месяцев назад

      That makes so much more sense now

    • @themulattomaker2602
      @themulattomaker2602 10 месяцев назад +9

      "Three syrettes MAYBE? Were you TRYING to kill him?!"

    • @bigdaddy7119
      @bigdaddy7119 10 месяцев назад +21

      Yep! Former Combat Medic here, and I will say this much; a Medic can chew someone’s ass regardless of rank on certain things like this, and not get into a BIT of trouble either. Medics have a LOT of power in a field unit.

  • @donwild50
    @donwild50 10 месяцев назад +349

    The scene from Saving Private Ryan where the two Czechs were killed was very common on the Atlantic Wall fortifications. While there were very good German units in the area, a large segment of the German troops actually holding the beaches were cobbled together units of relatively untrained troops. Young men, PoW's who volunteered just to get out of German POW camps and some really surprising examples. There was a soldier taken at Normandy who was Korean. He had been conscripted by the Japanese earlier in the war. During skirmishes between the Japanese and the Russian army, he was taken prisoner by the Russians. They scraped out thier POW camps to fill out penal units, units who were given rotten or semi suicidal attacks on the Germans. Doing this, he was taken prisoner by the Germans...who tossed him into a throw together unit at Normandy...where he was taken prisoner by the Allies after D-Day. The guy had a real WWII experience. His name was Yang Kyoungjong. He was turned over to the Americans and eventually settled in the United States.

    • @HumanScourgeYT
      @HumanScourgeYT 10 месяцев назад +10

      Wow!

    • @u.s.1974
      @u.s.1974 10 месяцев назад +11

      Hi, this is a nice story with a happy end. But amongst historians there is doubt wheter this is all true.

    • @NYG5
      @NYG5 10 месяцев назад +14

      And then he gets drafted by the US for the Korean War ;)

    • @Eldanogrande
      @Eldanogrande 9 месяцев назад +2

      This story has floated around for a while, but it’s never been definitively proven true. There were numerous Japanese soldiers who fought in the Wehrmacht however.

    • @John333Scout
      @John333Scout 9 месяцев назад +6

      There is a movie about this i think its called Two Way and what is cool about the movie is each location they are in they speak the language of that place and it shows two rival Olympic runners 1 Japanese and the other Korean. The Korean get conscripted to fighting for Japan and he is then under the command of his running rival, then they both get captured together by the Russians go to gulags then are force in to penal squads in Stalingrad, then captured by the Germans and conscripted into the Wehrmacht just in time for the invasion at D-day to be captured by Americans. Cool watch

  • @shaunmattice6413
    @shaunmattice6413 10 месяцев назад +115

    What makes the scene from Valkyrie even better, is if you notice that Kenneth Branagh character is the last officer to put out his cigarette as the others quickly put they'res out. It really shows how the other officers have respects Hitler while Branagh character loathes Hitler.

    • @einundsiebenziger5488
      @einundsiebenziger5488 10 месяцев назад +9

      ... put theirs* out (they're = they are)

    • @JosephDawson1986
      @JosephDawson1986 10 месяцев назад +16

      Them putting theirs out quickly wasn't a sign of respect but rather of fear. Kenneth Brannagh's character does it slowly because he isn't afraid of him but he complies because on the flip side he is also very aware of Hitler's tendency for violence, such as having officers who displease him shot.

    • @stifflered
      @stifflered 10 месяцев назад

      @@JosephDawson1986 Wasn't it common knowledge that Hitler did *not* actually follow through on his threats of shooting his officers? In that famous speech in Downfall, which has been memed to death, Hitler even shouts that he should have been more like Stalin and actually killed his officers instead of just threatening them.

    • @stifflered
      @stifflered 10 месяцев назад

      And, just to follow-up, I immediately did a google search and found out about "Night of the Long Knives" where he purged Nazi leadership. Guess there's some truth to what you were saying JosephDawson1986

    • @samspencer582
      @samspencer582 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@JosephDawson1986 It shows what a bad ass Kenneth Brannagh really is.

  • @jamesking9807
    @jamesking9807 10 месяцев назад +66

    When we had to eat MREs in the field I'd be one of the few people to go for the tuna with noodles packet. But I'd eaten enough of them to know that not only did it come with the little bottle of Tabasco, it also had the coveted chocolate-nut cake. That's some good eatin'!

    • @salvadormendozaz5192
      @salvadormendozaz5192 10 месяцев назад

      My favorite was the spaghetti one !

    • @godfatherdon3392
      @godfatherdon3392 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@salvadormendozaz5192Which one?

    • @OsX86H3AvY
      @OsX86H3AvY 10 месяцев назад +3

      tuna was great - with tabasco - at home my cat loved it and then almost immediately hated it and hated me for it but then kept going back for more dumb shit she was

    • @Clonetrooper1139
      @Clonetrooper1139 10 месяцев назад +3

      Menu No. 11, Chicken and Rice.

    • @spudeleven5124
      @spudeleven5124 10 месяцев назад +1

      I was in service during the transition from C-rats to MREs (early 1980s). Believe me, they were a welcome, major improvement. A Vietnam Huey pilot friend of mine shared an anecdote with me. In the evenings after returning from missions and his Huey was still cooling down, they'd pierce the C-rat cans with the opener and then put them in the exhaust cone of the bird to warm them up. A generation later, my guys and I would tear the MRE mains open slightly, then put them on the hot surface of a hydraulic power supply behind the shop.

  • @juliuscheng5788
    @juliuscheng5788 10 месяцев назад +123

    Yes, this list is heavily biased towards land war movies - Master and Commander being the sole exception. I'm surprised Das Boot hasn't gotten more attention for the detail in it, especially since they re-created an entire Type VII on a gimbal to make the movie.

    • @joem3999
      @joem3999 10 месяцев назад +20

      Das boot is the best war movie ever made in my opinion.

    • @einundsiebenziger5488
      @einundsiebenziger5488 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@joem3999 Das Boot*

    • @bigbrowntau
      @bigbrowntau 10 месяцев назад +12

      The scene where one of the crew was washed overboard by a wave was an accident. The rest of the cast went through the man overboard drill so accurately, they left it in. They'd undergone training by veteran U-boat crew for months, and it really showed.

    • @paulboger7377
      @paulboger7377 9 месяцев назад +2

      Das Boot for sure.

    • @samspencer582
      @samspencer582 8 месяцев назад +3

      There is only two good WW2 movies ever made, Das Boot from 1981 and the Finnish Winter War from 1989. All the other war movies are crap. At least from the Allied side, only the Germans, Finnish and the Japanese can made good war movies.

  • @josephwest124
    @josephwest124 10 месяцев назад +61

    A bit of irony in a video about "accurate war movie details" and Agent Orange is described as a "pesticide" when it's more properly an "herbicide" or a "defoliant." "Pesticides" are generally used to describe chemical products designed to kill off animal pests (bugs, rodents, etc) while "herbicides" do the same for vegetation and a "defoliant" is one that specifically targets the leaves. (The primary use for Agent Orange was to cause trees to lose their leaves so that enemy targets could be more easily spotted from the air; it did, of course, also cause issues by killing off food crops.)

    • @edcarson3113
      @edcarson3113 10 месяцев назад +4

      No. Pesticide covers all; including herbicide,insecticide,nematicide, molluscicide, piscicide, avicide, rodenticide, bactericide, insect repellent, animal repellent, microbicide, fungicide, and lampricide.
      Weeds are a pest.

    • @teebob21
      @teebob21 10 месяцев назад +5

      Additionally, Agent Orange is simply a mixture of two commonly used herbicides, one of which is still used today. It is a mixture of equal parts of two herbicides, 2,4,5-T and 2,4-D. Agent Orange was first used by the British Armed Forces in Malaya during the Malayan Emergency.
      In mid-1961, President Ngo Dinh Diem of South Vietnam asked the United States to help defoliate the lush jungle that was providing cover to his Communist enemies. In November 1961, President Kennedy authorized the start of Operation Ranch Hand, the codename for the United States Air Force's herbicide program in Vietnam. The herbicide operations were formally directed by the government of South Vietnam. About 65% of the 2,4,5-T procured by the US military was contaminated with dioxins, a byproduct of its production due to improper chemical processing. Unfortunately, the dioxin contamination was not detected until FAR, FAR too late.
      Some Agent Orange researchers suspect that the contamination may have come from an Ivon-Watkins-Dow plant in New Zealand. Nevertheless, finding the source of the contamination may be impossible as the product was manufactured by Dow Chemical Company, Monsanto (no Bayer), Hercules (defunct), Thomson Hayward Chemical (defunct), Diamond-Shamrock, Hoffman-Taft (defunct), and the United States Rubber Company (now Uniroyal)...and effective April 1967, the entire American domestic production of 2,4,5-T was confiscated by the military.
      A 1969 report authored by K. Diane Courtney and others found that 2,4,5-T could cause birth defects and stillbirths in mice. This and follow-up studies led the U.S. government to restrict the use of 2,4,5-T in the U.S. in April 1970. On April 15, 1970, it was announced that the use of Agent Orange was suspended. Defoliation and crop destruction were completely stopped by June 30, 1971.

    • @iamchillydogg
      @iamchillydogg 10 месяцев назад +1

      My dad was a Marine company commander on the DMZ 67-68. The colonel sent him on patrol across the Cam Lo river into the DMZ and he said there wasn't a blade of grass. They were immediately spotted and mortared into retreating back across the river.

    • @darryltaylor4408
      @darryltaylor4408 10 месяцев назад

      Beat me to it I and probably a ton of other folks caught it🧸

    • @petrhanak862
      @petrhanak862 10 месяцев назад +3

      Well, it is same irony as "hurt lucker bomb defusing.. spectacular level of detail", while no EOD technician would not grab some wild wire and pull hard to uncover all bombs around him for spectacular aerial shots.

  • @zanethomas6865
    @zanethomas6865 10 месяцев назад +17

    One of my friend's dad was a medical doctor in Vietnam. He made it until the failed ambush in Platoon and said he had to leave the theater because his blood pressure was racing so much. War is hell!

  • @TraderRobin
    @TraderRobin 10 месяцев назад +37

    I liked, in the Hacksaw Ridge battle scenes, just how accurately they tried to get the actors falling down upon getting hit with head shots, how they would simply DROP to the ground, rather than putting on a big presentation, like so many of those silly scenes in war movies from yesteryear! This added an extra degree of realism to the scenes, which I thought was very well done.

    • @texasactual6025
      @texasactual6025 10 месяцев назад +3

      Totally agree. Schindler’s List gets that detail scary accurate as well.

    • @TraderRobin
      @TraderRobin 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@texasactual6025 Yes, it did indeed!

    • @iank5018
      @iank5018 10 месяцев назад +4

      Mel Gibson had to add some unrealism to the movie, as he thought that nobody would believe that Doss could have performed his heroic acts whilst as badly wounded as he actually was, so he underplayed his wounds.

    • @TraderRobin
      @TraderRobin 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@iank5018 I STILL cannot believe he managed to pick up, carry or drag, and then tie up, and lower 75+ wounded GIs (and some Japanese), all without getting hit by shrapnel, being blown up, or shot by snipers!

    • @gennymikel4296
      @gennymikel4296 8 месяцев назад +1

      I cried alot over that film. Mans ability to destroy other human beings is overwhelming.

  • @ChristopherSloane
    @ChristopherSloane 10 месяцев назад +49

    That fact Platoon used the 25th ID patch was a favorite amongst us 25th ID soldiers. Our Lieutenant useda scene from the movie of what a war crime was, the scene when the "NVA soldier" runs from the village and Barnes pops him in the back with one shot. Instead of us cringing at the scene, they cheered, so much for War crime lesson number one.

    • @timbernie
      @timbernie 9 месяцев назад

      John Kerry did that. Turns out a 16 yr old kid. Running away. And then made a movie of it for his drinking buddies....Till he tried to run for potus. War crime extraordinaire. Violates "Rules of Engagement" several times. Then claims a Purple Heart....Shot an unarmed civilian, shot in the back, shot a KID, made a film of it, And almost killed a Green Beret Capt. who fell off his boat as Kerry Fled the battle field. Then he deserted his crew and command to try and help family friends get elected in 1968. Does not have a DD-214. Just a letter of resigning his commission and a pardon from Jimmy Carter.

    • @guillaumepare9651
      @guillaumepare9651 8 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah seems nothing have changed. Worse part is don't say it because they're gonna be insulted. Go read the My Lai massacre to understand what is the army position on that matter.

  • @bigdaddy7119
    @bigdaddy7119 10 месяцев назад +40

    I can’t believe that Black Hawk Down wasn’t mentioned once here! One of THE most realistic scenes in it was where they were cutting up (impersonating the commander) with each other, and blasting the rock music while gearing up and getting ready to go out on the mission. That shit was spot on!

    • @j.chriswatson6847
      @j.chriswatson6847 10 месяцев назад +16

      How about the hot brass down the shirt from the mini guns? I have had more than a few hot brass burns in my 20 years.

    • @robertcalvert957
      @robertcalvert957 8 месяцев назад +3

      Agreed. As stylized as that movie is, the attention to detail in it was pretty remarkable. Even Delta being total ice cold rock stars was spot on. Lol

  • @NorthernWisconsinandStuff
    @NorthernWisconsinandStuff 10 месяцев назад +199

    I was in DEP when Saving Private Ryan came out. One of the activities we had to do was go see the movie with a bunch of WWII vets and their spouses. About a half dozen of them were actually at Normandy. It was so bad the theater stopped the showing and turned the lights back on. These grown old men, grandpas most of them, were sobbing. The Top in charge of the outing started talking to most of the men and the film was decided to be resumed. My barely a boot a$$ remembers thinking what the f, it’s just a movie. Well after two tours in Iraq as a devil pup and many years later I began to shake the hand of any WWII vet I met. Sadly most are on patrol now, but I still do the same for Korean and ‘Nam vets and may someday work the courage to do the same for Iraq/Afghanny vets. I remember in the talking exercise we had after the film was over many of the spouses had no idea what their loved ones went through. What a film.

    • @OakLawnSpeedShop
      @OakLawnSpeedShop 10 месяцев назад +30

      My grandfather carried a Thompson in WWII. I brought him over to watch saving private Ryan. It was the first and only time he ever told anyone what went on during his tour of duty. He had ptsd until the day he died 85. The worst of it was when he was laying cover fire a new guy in his platoon panicked and ran right into his line of fire. He said he still see the dudes face in his mind like it was yesterday. My two uncles and mother never had a clue. He was a bronze star recipient. He also told me he and his Sergeant caught the clap from some French girl. Gramps got busted to PFC from Corporal his Sergeant got busted to Corporal. RIP PFC Frank Papaleo

    • @NorthernWisconsinandStuff
      @NorthernWisconsinandStuff 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@OakLawnSpeedShop thank you for sharing. Quite the experiences he had. Those men showed their true caliber when they answered their country’s call.

    • @NorthernWisconsinandStuff
      @NorthernWisconsinandStuff 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@Whisper_292 I am just glad it was on the list. A lot of people look at it now as overrated and such, but they have to put themselves in the time it was released. Not a lot of vets were willing to share what they had experienced. I can’t really blame them. This and the work of many other’s, including the late Stephen Ambrose, allowed for many to come forward and we as a country are richer for them doing so.

    • @OakLawnSpeedShop
      @OakLawnSpeedShop 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@NorthernWisconsinandStuff Thank you Sir.

    • @JosephDawson1986
      @JosephDawson1986 10 месяцев назад +8

      As bad as WWII was, it is Vietnam my grandfather never talked about. He was in Europe Normandy and for a year into the occupation of Berlin. Left service got recalled for Korea and stayed in long enough for 'Nam. He would talk about how cold Korea was and it was somehow colder than Ardennes in winter during the Battle.of the Bulge.

  • @dirtyoldman3
    @dirtyoldman3 10 месяцев назад +9

    Not a single OIF/OEF veteran was consulted for the hurt locker. That garbage is universally hated by everyine in the GWOT generation

  • @dwaw13
    @dwaw13 6 месяцев назад +26

    The irony of starting a list of accurate war movies with the hurt locker is absolutely hilarious. Well done

    • @TheLettuce512
      @TheLettuce512 Месяц назад

      I should have scrolled down a little before I made the exact same comment. Well done.

  • @T0tenkampf
    @T0tenkampf 10 месяцев назад +37

    I still get choked up thinking about the two WWII vet aged men crying in the row in front of me as the Normandy Beach scene unfolded. I will never forget that.

    • @TheHiredGun187
      @TheHiredGun187 2 месяца назад +1

      When I was 18 I worked at a local steakhouse on the grill cooking steaks all night. My dad was the post adjutant for the local VFW and I kinda got volunteered by my dad to cook steak dinners for the guys during the summer. I had learned to respect my edlers a few years ago by my dad (that another story)
      Some of these guys who had been thru D-Day, Korea and Vietnam and experienced losses I could never imagined told me the stories they never told their their own spouses.
      I felt honored that these men thought I was adlt enough to understand...

    • @ciphergamingsouthafrica8502
      @ciphergamingsouthafrica8502 2 месяца назад

      Good

  • @YouHaveReachedBob
    @YouHaveReachedBob 10 месяцев назад +18

    The M1917 revolver was still issued during WW2. Would make sense to give them to tank units and other non-infantry troops.

  • @prestonwilson2773
    @prestonwilson2773 10 месяцев назад +19

    Fury as a former tanker in Army the fire commands in that movie were spot on as well

    • @SlinkyTWF
      @SlinkyTWF 3 месяца назад +1

      That stood out to me as well.

    • @KeithWestInLimeGreenLoafers
      @KeithWestInLimeGreenLoafers 2 месяца назад +2

      Yes, the chatter on the radio in the tank is spot on.

    • @wellmanator17
      @wellmanator17 Месяц назад

      When he yells out “ON WAY” nobody else watching with me knew but me what they were saying (im not a service member but ive been around to hear the talk enough) and it was satisfying to see the details like that which heightened the experiencefor me but not them unfortunately

  • @FHL-Devils
    @FHL-Devils 10 месяцев назад +51

    There have been plenty of movies that have disturbed me to some degree, I have never felt physically nauseous watching a movie before or since the opening sequence of Saving Private Ryan. A true masterpiece in showing and evoking the terror of ground combat.

    • @Denzlercs
      @Denzlercs 10 месяцев назад +5

      When Saving Pvt Ryan came out in theaters, my unit in the USMC went to watch it. The D-Day beach landing was so horrifyingly accurate that I was white-knuckle clutching the arm rests, as our amphibious mission was to make such landings and pay such high prices.
      Semper Fi

    • @dominicidecorvus
      @dominicidecorvus 10 месяцев назад +4

      Have you seen the new "All quiet on the western front" yet? To me, its just as disturbing.

    • @bloodyspartan300
      @bloodyspartan300 10 месяцев назад

      @@Denzlercs My step-Dad said pretty much the same after the flick was over. "47th Inf. Reg." A few things he did say, when he regained his speech after the tears stopped.
      Bullets don't travel that far down into the water.
      NO Officers ,No prisoners after they got off the beach. Their blood was up. If anything the beach was not red enough and More cries of men crying out for their Mama.

    • @jsmariani4180
      @jsmariani4180 10 месяцев назад +6

      Interestingly, I was turned off to the realism at one point when bullets shot into the ocean at an angle traveled three or four feet and still killed a soldier. Bullets lose their effectiveness surprisingly quickly in water (if not entirely deflected at shallow angles), especially rifle bullets.

    • @Denzlercs
      @Denzlercs 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@jsmariani4180 yes this is true

  • @prongs505
    @prongs505 10 месяцев назад +25

    DOW also was the main supplier for napalm. ;) Napalm sticks to kids. That's the message I think they were connecting to in that scene. Nice connect to Agent Orange though.

  • @hondohapp
    @hondohapp 10 месяцев назад +125

    The Hurt Locker is hardly the paragon of accuracy; it gets way too many details wrong to be included in this list.

    • @cgprojects3770
      @cgprojects3770 10 месяцев назад +36

      I think this is a list about the specific detail, not the whole movie. Tabasco !

    • @savage751
      @savage751 10 месяцев назад +2

      Also 9 movies with insane details doesn't have the same snap as 10 movies lol

    • @vulture27fm
      @vulture27fm 10 месяцев назад +9

      Was coming down here to the say the same thing. If anything its notorious in the military for having no basis in reality.

    • @teamtim87
      @teamtim87 10 месяцев назад +6

      Well, the list isn't "10 War Movies With Impeccable Detail Accuracy"

    • @AtalixZero
      @AtalixZero 10 месяцев назад +10

      The Tabasco in the body armor is accurate. The rest of the movie, contrary to the praise it got in this video, is not.

  • @Raghzor
    @Raghzor 9 месяцев назад +11

    Master and Commander is by far my favourite film ever made. From what I recall, larboard was changed due to it's similarities with starboard, as it could be misinterpreted during crucial moments, such as in a battle or in a storm, where commands could be muffled out by the noise.

    • @tonymartin7849
      @tonymartin7849 9 месяцев назад

      Google RUclips videos about the ship. (One might be 3d something something?) Gives you a crazily detailed of how sophisticated and slick the ship was built, laid out, and operated.

  • @shawnstorie
    @shawnstorie 10 месяцев назад +14

    It's interesting to hear about the sweetheart grips. I first learned about these when a buddy from work asked me to make a set of walnut grips for a Heckler and Koch .32 that he inherited when his Dad passed. His Dad had carried the firearm while serving and had replaced the original grips with sweetheart grips. The woman in the grips was not his wife and she had no idea who it was.

  • @perryshaffer8358
    @perryshaffer8358 9 месяцев назад +5

    About the morphine warnings in "Hacksaw Ridge": when I was in the US Army, our gas masks came with atropine autoinjectors in case of nerve gas attack. After use, we were to push the needle thru our left breast pocket flap and fold them over so that a medic wouldn't OD us by accident.

  • @franklugo6928
    @franklugo6928 10 месяцев назад +7

    I knew a few marines, some ego served before 9/11, some after, but they both told me about the real reason they keep the Tabasco handy. When it's their watch and they are just too tired to stay up, putting a drop off the sauce on your finger and running the inside of your nostril or eyelid will wake you up real quick.

  • @vojtechhoracek7704
    @vojtechhoracek7704 8 месяцев назад +2

    What the Czech conscripts are saying in that SPR scene is "don't shoot, I didn't kill anyone, I am not German, I am Czech, I didn't kill anyone -" The extras who were included in this scene are actual Czech stuntsmen. And yes, there were ethnic Czechs fighting in northern France on both sides - some forcibly conscripted by Wehrmacht, but the majority serving in 1st Czechoslovak Independent Armored Brigade Group which sieged Dunkirk in 1944.

  • @us0151mc
    @us0151mc 10 месяцев назад +6

    I wonder if anybody noticed in the hurt locker that Eldridge’s name tag holding his Tabasco is correct but on the helmet it says Eldrich.

  • @paulbooth8516
    @paulbooth8516 10 месяцев назад +5

    Tom Cruz is a 6’-4” blonde. Very accurate

  • @johnord684
    @johnord684 10 месяцев назад +21

    Master and Commader is the most accurate war movie ever made ,and a pleasure to watch.

    • @lea-anne9133
      @lea-anne9133 10 месяцев назад +5

      Amazing film😮

    • @lefthandedleprechaun8702
      @lefthandedleprechaun8702 10 месяцев назад +2

      Ive watched it 50 times on my vcr

    • @hejimony
      @hejimony 10 месяцев назад +2

      The novels are even more detailed and amazingly accurate.

    • @seanmalloy7249
      @seanmalloy7249 15 дней назад

      Except for the capstan on the Surprise, which is too large to be usable. The docent conducting the tour of the ship at the Maritime Museum said that it was the decision of the director, who didn't think a correctly-sized one would show up well on screen. (He also joked that you could tell whether a ship was originally British or American by looking at the capstan - British-built ships had square holes for the capstan poles, while America-built ships had round holes, to reduce the number of decisions American sailors had to make when putting them in.)

  • @anamericancelt6534
    @anamericancelt6534 10 месяцев назад +8

    I feel that Zulu should have been on this list too. Actual Zulu were cast as the Zulu warriors, many who were decendents from the warriors who fought in that battle.

    • @robirvine6970
      @robirvine6970 10 месяцев назад

      So? A decendant is no more realistic than any other actor that wasn't in the original battle

    • @anamericancelt6534
      @anamericancelt6534 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@robirvine6970 They weren't actors, they were Zulu tribesmen.

    • @T0tenkampf
      @T0tenkampf 10 месяцев назад +3

      people talk about how the Maui war dances are scary...the scenes in Zulu of all the warriors crashing their shields must have been terrifying IRL

  • @bigduke6764
    @bigduke6764 9 месяцев назад +6

    Very nicely done piece.
    Dow was a major producer of napalm and I always took the barrel in Apocalypse Now to be a reference to that. Kilgore's uses it and the film ends with it. Dow DID make Agent Orange but everything in the film is lush and green, nothing defoliated.

  • @georgeprchal3924
    @georgeprchal3924 10 месяцев назад +8

    Master and Commander also shows how in the Navy you had to be competent coming up as a midshipman, you couldn't purchase you commission like in the Army.

    • @MrErizid
      @MrErizid 10 месяцев назад +2

      RIP Mr Hollum.

    • @borismuller86
      @borismuller86 10 месяцев назад

      Yep and officers really did serve as young as 13.

    • @georgeprchal3924
      @georgeprchal3924 10 месяцев назад

      @@borismuller86 Lt Townsend.

    • @solicitr666
      @solicitr666 8 месяцев назад

      @@MrErizid Who at 30 still hadn't been commissioned

  • @Eldanogrande
    @Eldanogrande 9 месяцев назад +12

    I wrote my history thesis on Operation Valkyrie. That entire movie was doggedly faithful to historical fact. I’d like to know what he thinks the “wild liberties” with the truth were. No, it wasn’t 100% accurate, but it was closer than any other historical movies I’ve seen.

    • @removedot
      @removedot 9 месяцев назад

      probably in that they had to make Tom Cruise and other charchters at least somewhat likeable which is surprisingly hard even though they wanted to kill Hitler. Didn't many of them want Aristocrats (which i believe he was one of with the von name) to take over and some were even monarchists I think.

    • @samspencer582
      @samspencer582 8 месяцев назад

      @@removedot The Germans who wanted to kill Hitler was very likeable and they were the real heroes of WW2. Unfortunately Cruise played the real hero Stauffenberg and that is the only bad thing in this movie.

  • @joekrusec9066
    @joekrusec9066 10 месяцев назад +8

    Master and Commander was a great film at the time I saw it. But it really blew my mind after reading Patrick O’Brian’s novels of the same name (only got to novel three - the library didn’t have the rest of them)

    • @oldskoolgaming
      @oldskoolgaming 10 месяцев назад +3

      You have to read them all. My favourite book series, I have probably read the entire thing through at least 10 times. Except the last one which was never completed as O'Brian died while writing it. The NY Times Review of books called the series "The finest historical fiction ever written" and I agree. Each time through I notice details I didn't notice before. I loved Crowe as Aubrey in M&C

  • @k29king1
    @k29king1 9 месяцев назад +4

    Platoon is one of my favorite war movies. It also happens to include a friend and musician partner of my Father (who is a bassist) Corey Glover, also known as the lead singer of Living Color. I think I might be a little bias, I used to get to go to rehearsals for Living Color when I was a kid, it was awesome.

    • @cgh7337
      @cgh7337 9 месяцев назад +1

      He played Francis. It blew my mind when I realized (many years later) that he was the lead singer of Living Color.

  • @TimCorwin
    @TimCorwin Месяц назад +1

    Agent Orange got my dad nearly 50 years after he served in Vietnam in 2018. He was considered 100% disabled as he battled cancer that made it into his bones. He suffered through chemo and radiation just so he could be alive to see my daughter (youngest) be born. He made it four months after she was born. My older brother who is disabled (born 3 months early in 1978), me, and possibly my kids have to worry about health issues as we age.

  • @BrianHartman
    @BrianHartman 10 месяцев назад +6

    Hey, wait! In that Platoon clip, was that guy the head doctor from Scrubs‽

    • @johnstucker683
      @johnstucker683 10 месяцев назад +3

      Yes. Yes it was. John c McGinley I think

  • @JayneCobb88
    @JayneCobb88 10 месяцев назад +2

    We also used tobasco as a wake up trick. Fighting for days, you get tired, feel yourself drifting off, use the tobasco as an eye dropper and the pain wakes you back up again

  • @104thDIVTimberwolf
    @104thDIVTimberwolf 10 месяцев назад +11

    The M-1917 pistols (from both Colt and Smith and Wesson) were still in service and saw heavy use through the end of the war. Yes, the 1911 was standard and more common, but 1917s filled the gaps where supply of the Colt autos ran short. Many Soldiers still preferred wheel guns, so it is likely that War Daddy would have been issued the 1917 earlier in the war and kept it, or traded for it out of personal preference.

    • @NovemberDelta
      @NovemberDelta 10 месяцев назад +1

      I'm glad I scrolled down before typing all that out :) he didn't get that in the mail- tankers and tons of other support lines got m1917 revolvers 1911s were expensive and that's why grease guns instead of Thompsons were issued too- cheaper and did roughly the same- if you need it- things are probably looking real bad

    • @NYG5
      @NYG5 10 месяцев назад

      You could also have one mailed to you

    • @spudeleven5124
      @spudeleven5124 10 месяцев назад

      It has been suggested that given War Daddy's rank and maturity (and knowledge of German) that he was a Great War vet as well. This would also explain the Colt 1917.

    • @Rocketsong
      @Rocketsong 9 месяцев назад +1

      The USMC was still using M1917s in Korea. So, they were definitely still around in WWII.

    • @artemusp.folgelmeyer4821
      @artemusp.folgelmeyer4821 9 месяцев назад

      Ditto@@NovemberDelta

  • @robertbenson9797
    @robertbenson9797 10 месяцев назад +3

    Excellent point about the Smith & Wesson Model 1917 in Fury.
    During WWI, Colt was having trouble keeping up production of the M1911 .45 ACP semi-automatic pistol. As a stop gap measure, both Colt and Smith & Wesson rechambered their large framed .45 Long Colt revolvers to .45 ACP. Engineers at Smith & Wesson, invented a stamped steel 1/2 moon clip that held 3 rounds. Because.45 ACP is a rimless cartridge (made for semi-automatic pistols), a shooter could chamber six rounds in either the S&W or Colt revolver. When reloading, the shooter could eject all six spent shells and reload six more rounds. The 1/2 moon clips were engaged by the ejector star in the revolver for easy reloading.
    WWI ended so quickly after the US got large number of “boots on the ground” that the US ended up with large numbers of the S&W and Colt revolvers that were not issued. Between the wars, the US Post Office received large numbers of the revolvers. During WWII, new contracts for 1911 automatic pistols were started. The revolvers were issued to guards, factory security guards and other non-frontline personnel.
    However, large numbers of the revolvers appeared in combat in both the ETO and the Pacific. Some soldiers and Marines liked the simplicity of the revolvers over the automatic pistols.

  • @dilbertbob5420
    @dilbertbob5420 10 месяцев назад +4

    In the movie Hurt Locker, it showed the EOD detachment providing their own security while the technician is working. In real life, another unit is providing security, typically the unit that found the device in the first place.

    • @smorris410
      @smorris410 10 месяцев назад +3

      I think the Tabasco bottle in The Hurt Locker was the only accurate thing about the film. Blows my mind that they included that movie in an "Insanely Accurate" titled video.

    • @danielscrimgeour8812
      @danielscrimgeour8812 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@smorris410 have to love the EOD guy wielding the 50cal better than the special forces dudes

    • @removedot
      @removedot 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@danielscrimgeour8812 well the Barrett was intended more for destruction of equipment than as like a "sniper rifle"

  • @OcarinaSapphr-
    @OcarinaSapphr- 10 месяцев назад +34

    The Dunkirk scenes in 'Atonement' were probably the better representation for what it likely was; the beaches were crowded as hell- with bodies, people huddling for shelter where they could- people were waiting & dying, & it was a chaos I had not expected to see -- after seeing that, 'Dunkirk' itself was a bit of a letdown in that regard, though there was a lot to admire about its' accuracy in other areas- as you said...

    • @garysimmonds9636
      @garysimmonds9636 6 месяцев назад +1

      My two biggest critic's of "Dunkirk" is that there are much too few soldiers on the beaches and Tom Harry's pilot having an almost inexhaustible amount of ammo in his airplane. He would only have about 15 seconds worth.

    • @garysimmonds9636
      @garysimmonds9636 6 месяцев назад

      Criticism and Hardy. Bloody spellcheck.

    • @OcarinaSapphr-
      @OcarinaSapphr- 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@garysimmonds9636
      Happens to the best of us, my guy- no worries! 😃

  • @charlesmaurer6214
    @charlesmaurer6214 10 месяцев назад +7

    Tnt rough riders should be in this list. 2 of 6 canon made for the war was in the movie and the site for filming was matched in topo to inches. The director and producer themselves were amazed by how stuff just fell together to make it right.

    • @josephmckenna5760
      @josephmckenna5760 9 месяцев назад

      That movie is a gem. Too bad it doesn't have the popularity it deserves.

  • @Station27Steve
    @Station27Steve 10 месяцев назад +14

    Hurt locker was the fakest movie ever if you were enlisted lol. Tabasco sauce tho... Made everything better

    • @deana1938
      @deana1938 10 месяцев назад +1

      That's what I'm saying. All the MRE's taste like dog food smells, and we weren't supposed to put the Tabasco on everything? Instead , we used it in our eyes? I was an infantry support truck driver, missions every day, several times a day, and I never thought to Tabasco in my eyes. Believe I was tired af. 😫

    • @Station27Steve
      @Station27Steve 10 месяцев назад

      @@deana1938 Yeah the eyes thing tho. Never heard of that. BUT you can bet your ass if I had any left over, it was going on those wack ass crackers (if it didn't come with peanut butter)

  • @igorbarbosa4044
    @igorbarbosa4044 10 месяцев назад +6

    The hurt locker is not considered accurate by veterans

  • @jamesbrost1367
    @jamesbrost1367 7 месяцев назад +1

    Inglorious Bastards - "3" drinks, ordered with the pointer, middle, and ring fingers instead of how Germans count starting with their thumbs.
    I screamed "Oh $#17!" in the theatre when I saw it, and my friends were so confused. I'm glad they added the explanation.

  • @pounc007
    @pounc007 10 месяцев назад +3

    The hurt locker is the most innacurate military movies ever filmed. No soldier would ever carry tobasco like that.

  • @BrianRollinsVO
    @BrianRollinsVO 10 месяцев назад +16

    Agent Orange was an herbicide not a pesticide.

    • @FHL-Devils
      @FHL-Devils 10 месяцев назад +4

      ... it was an everything-cide ;)

    • @BrianRollinsVO
      @BrianRollinsVO 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@FHL-Devils touche

    • @llongone2
      @llongone2 10 месяцев назад +1

      technically, a defoliant.

  • @fo221
    @fo221 10 месяцев назад +3

    weird that when i watch actual EOD guys critique the Hurt Locker they talk of how highly inaccurate it is

  • @peterh3889
    @peterh3889 8 месяцев назад

    There’s been a thread of this sort of video in my watch lists recently and I’m loving it.. nice job here.. I’ll throw out the most realistic and accurate to detail depiction of war on the screen as ‘Band of Brothers’ ❤

  • @narsil1984
    @narsil1984 10 месяцев назад +11

    For the scene in Saving Private Ryan, it's more of a poignant extra bit of cruel irony than necessarily insanely accurate. I do find it somewhat alarming to reduce it to "oh, because they spoke [not german], now it's sad and bad". Executing prisoners is a war crime, whether they're fighting for a brutal dictatorship or not. German conscripts didnt have much more choice than czech, most soldiers in 1944 hadnt ever had the opportunity to vote in an election for or against the nazi, revolting against a 10+ year established dictatorship is easier said than done, especially from our lofty perspective of 80+ years later in our mostly safe democracies.
    Oh, also bears mentioning: while the Wehrmacht itself committed heinous crimes, not all units and much less all individuals did. If you take a random soldier, odds are he didnt do more than regular soldiering, same as most allied soldiers. Factor in that the western defenses on the atlantic wall didnt have the most combat potent units at the time, those being in the east, odds are your soldier in a bunker in Normandy was some 30-40 year old family man conscripted at one point or another. Outside of historical evidence for this, Ive heard some first hand accounts of this when I worked for a paper in uni: french people of the time I talked to and that lived in norman "front" cities had some choice words for british planes bombing their city and some positive anecdotes with 40 year old german soldiers bringing them medicine stolen from their barracks.
    This isnt to say - AT ALL - that the occupation was seen positively. Also, these realities in no way justify or "balance" german army or other war crimes. Id say that almost a century after the events, maybe it's time we viewed the events with necessary nuance and learned the right lessons from them instead of glorifying violence as long as it's directed at a perceived inhuman enemy - that becomes human only if they're from a "victim" nation somehow. War is hell, condemn war mongers, ideologues and populists in all their forms - and learn how to recognise them. That last bit gets easier when bad guys from the past arent made cartoonish in our look back.
    PS: it's glaringly obvious that people today cant recognise a nazi when he stares them in the eye, as demonstrated by the rise of right wing populism in most if not all western countries. Popular media and conversation - even casual - that makes "the nazis" unrecognisable is a small but real part of the problem.

    • @leehaelters6182
      @leehaelters6182 9 месяцев назад

      Yeah, what he said goes for me, too! Sword of Isildur, well written.

    • @removedot
      @removedot 9 месяцев назад

      I believe Fury at least hints on why this wasn't always the same latter especially with SS troops who were known to execute prisoners and often got the same in return

    • @ronstreet6706
      @ronstreet6706 Месяц назад

      @@removedot I was going to say the same, about the SS. Although the Wermacht obviously had Nazis in their ranks, most of the soldiers would be normal guys, mostly conscripts. At the end of the war, there was a place called Castle Itter. The place was being used to house highly regarded political prisoners. The SS tried to take the castle, but a force of Americans and Wermacht soldiers, plus the prisoners themselves held the castle until the Americans could send reinforcements.

  • @SSD_Penumbra
    @SSD_Penumbra 10 месяцев назад +31

    While it's not strictly a war movie, 2005's Lord of War has a scene where Nic Cage's character muses about the AK47 while handling one. That, and the AKs he inspects before that scene are all real Russian surplus AKs. It was cheaper to buy them than create mockups of them. He also accurately tests the weapon when dry-firing it because, as he puts it, "Its so easy, a child could use one and they do."

  • @JP-th8sq
    @JP-th8sq 2 месяца назад

    For Fury, the M1917 revolver was a pretty commonly found revolver up until the Vietnam war, it started in WW1 because there were not enough 1911s. They were issued and were pretty common to be issued to tankers and artillery personnel, which makes it arguably an even more accurate detail that not everyone would have an M1911 and some would have M1917 revolvers.

  • @TysoniusRex
    @TysoniusRex 10 месяцев назад +2

    You're completely wrong about the long history of the US military with tabasco sauce. We didn't start using it in 1990, it was long before then: I was in from '79 to '83 and we were already using tabasco sauce with C rations (Vietnam/post Vietnam era field rations) for spaghetti and meatballs in particular, which were absolutely disgusting and almost inedible without something to destroy your taste buds. Long before it was issued with MREs, we would steal tabasco sauce from the chow hall to for use in the field. Having said that, I agree: It's an essential component of any military ration.

  • @KenR1800
    @KenR1800 10 месяцев назад +3

    Another thing Master & Commander gets right are the ages of the midshipmen. Most started at around 11 or 12 years old (sometimes younger than that). Many films of this era have actors that are far to old.

  • @Jacob-xl8ou
    @Jacob-xl8ou 9 месяцев назад +1

    I like how doc Row says something about not seeing any syrettes on moose heyliger. another nice tibit even though i never see them do that any other time in the series

    • @Caroline-rv8wy
      @Caroline-rv8wy 7 месяцев назад

      You can see Doc attach syrettes to the wounded other times, it's just more subtle, and when Welsh is hit he writes an M on his forehead in blood.

  • @rpc717
    @rpc717 10 месяцев назад +5

    I'm pretty sure that was a barrel of napalm, not Agent Orange. Agent Orange literally came in orange barrels. That's where the name comes from.

    • @AVB2
      @AVB2 3 месяца назад

      Actually the drums were painted olive drab with a wide orange horizontal stripe in the middle of the barrel.

  • @ScoutSniper3124
    @ScoutSniper3124 2 месяца назад

    I had the privilege of conducting Pathfinder LZ operations on the same LZ that stood in for the battle during the movie We Were Soldiers. It's a small valley on Fort Hunter Liggett. Very cool to direct helos in and have squads disembark to take security.
    SSG. U.S. Army (Medically Retired) Infantry / Sniper / SOF Intel (SOT-A), multiple tours

  • @maxsmodels
    @maxsmodels 10 месяцев назад +1

    US tankers were often issued revolvers as were many secondary troops depending on the availability of 1911s.

  • @Falkriim
    @Falkriim 9 месяцев назад +3

    I think the “Elegy for Dunkirk” scene in “Atonement” was actually a better Dunkirk scene than the one in Dunkirk lol

  • @rmdodsonbills
    @rmdodsonbills 10 месяцев назад +2

    Tabasco sauce has been included in US Military rations since at least 1986 when I joined up.

  • @chrischuba5037
    @chrischuba5037 10 месяцев назад +4

    I bet "Letters from Iwo Jima" has lots of good examples, but I'm not enough of a wonk to list them out.

  • @LetsTakeWalk
    @LetsTakeWalk 10 месяцев назад +2

    Hurtlocker “attention to detail” overlooked the fact the Xbox 360 in it, that was released 3 years after the war.

  • @codenameajax7943
    @codenameajax7943 10 месяцев назад +2

    the hurt locker was treated as a comedy in the military.

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430
    @danielsantiagourtado3430 10 месяцев назад +3

    Love your videos guys😊😊😊❤❤❤❤❤

  • @rory4656
    @rory4656 Месяц назад

    i was gonna do a katrina care package thing when i was a kid but ended up sending stuff to the troops as part of my bar mitzvah project. it was awesome and i have met some of the vets i helped get items for to keep them close to home

  • @stephenhill6003
    @stephenhill6003 10 месяцев назад +10

    While not really a full blown war movie, 1992's Last of the Mohicans battle scenes are grisly realistic. Not so much in blood and gore, but in agonizingly painful deaths of men slowly dying on the battle field or on the trail.

    • @Rikolus8383
      @Rikolus8383 10 месяцев назад +3

      Great Movie: acting, historic feel, cinematography, musical score, compelling story.... all top notch.

    • @leehaelters6182
      @leehaelters6182 9 месяцев назад +1

      Besides making me feel totally immersed in that time, looking out upon the vast expanses of green and mountain terrain, completely convinced by the super cast, all of them, not least by Wes Studi and Daniel Day Lewis as the arch antagonists, it is the most romantic story I have ever viewed. Even more than Casablanca, sure. Not to mention my all-time most memorable scene, involving the covering fire that Hawkeye gives to the courier from the fort. The buildup of tension, the music, the utter faith the courier has in Hawkeye's marksmanship and judgement, the curiously quiet letdown at the end.

  • @justmebored2death
    @justmebored2death 10 месяцев назад +5

    how can you not include Tora, Tora, Tora

  • @almost_harmless
    @almost_harmless 10 месяцев назад +3

    Das Boot (the original) was pretty epic.

  • @gumpotronic
    @gumpotronic 10 месяцев назад +2

    Talks about Hurt Locker's attention to detail...Immediately shows Anthony Mackie's finger on the trigger.

  • @alucardonus
    @alucardonus 10 месяцев назад +2

    Stalingrad from 1993... Level of details about German Penal battalions (Strafbats) is great. As well as total lack of ideals and heroism. The characters of common soldiers of BOTH SIDES are displayed here as a mere conscripts without any ideology fighting war for reasons they dont know, with fear about their lifes...
    They call for ceasefire to get their wounded and then trade food with the enemy during this. They tried to stop beating of the POW. Later they are sent to penal squads to remove minefields and setting up impossible defences. All under command of corrupted officers... Amazing movie.

  • @roosar2001
    @roosar2001 9 месяцев назад +1

    A bit from wiki on War Daddy's S&W 45 Auto Rim revolver (take wikipedia for what you will): "After being parkerized and refurbished, most of the revolvers were re-issued to stateside security forces and military policemen, but 20,993 of them were issued overseas to "specialty troops such as tankers and artillery personnel" throughout the course of U.S. involvement in World War II." So, Ayer's may have intentionally shown War Daddy with the revolver as one of those 20,993 tankers that were issued an M1917 rather than an M1911.

  • @Big_Boss4269
    @Big_Boss4269 10 месяцев назад +3

    Hurt Locker is NOT realistic, active duty and vets literally walked out of the theatre

    • @vitorgaray
      @vitorgaray Месяц назад

      Generation Kill is what people should watch instead on terms of reality abou US war in Iraq.

    • @Jorgen03
      @Jorgen03 Месяц назад

      I’m a vet who went with other vets and we remained for the entire movie. I don’t know of any combat vet who goes to a Hollywood movie expecting a documentary.

    • @cascadianrangers728
      @cascadianrangers728 Месяц назад

      Agreed, it's not so bad I'd have walked out but it's pretty bad. Im an oef and oif veteran, have lots and lots of experience with eod and ieds and hurt locker is accurate in some of its details but it's not at all realistic and things didn't happen like that

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor5462 10 месяцев назад +1

    "You'll be court marshaled for that!
    "Naw, just chewed out. I've been chewed out before.

  • @renaissancemarinetv3536
    @renaissancemarinetv3536 9 месяцев назад +1

    if you find a war movie that is accurate in detail of uniform and weapons, you can almost bet that dale dye was part of that movie.

    • @shawnshoptaugh4907
      @shawnshoptaugh4907 5 месяцев назад

      Man, I read Hue 1968, and I was surprised to see him referenced as a combat correspondent, and they said he had Alfred E. Neuman on the back of his flack vest

  • @richardfeynman8843
    @richardfeynman8843 8 месяцев назад

    You just about covered the gamut of my favorite war movies. “Tora! Tora! Tora!” was another great one and my favorite war fiction, Sam Peckinpah’s “The Cross of Iron”, with James Coburn and Maximillian Schell I found to really have the ring of truth.

    • @richardfeynman8843
      @richardfeynman8843 8 месяцев назад

      I forgot to mention “Das Boot”. Realistic to the core. Read the book twice.

  • @andrewstrongman305
    @andrewstrongman305 10 месяцев назад +3

    You should probably have checked out Gallipoli before making this video. That movie was far ahead of it's time in it's attention to historical detail, and is arguably the best war movie made to this day.

    • @robertstallard7836
      @robertstallard7836 10 месяцев назад +3

      Not really - In fact, its been repeatedly slated for just how inaccurate it is.
      Below are just a few of the more glaring miltary inaccuracies, not to mention the many non-military ones (like Mel Gibson travelling to enlist on a railway line that hadn't then been constructed!)
      1/ The Battle at the Nek was not, as stated in the movie, a diversion for the British landing at Suvla; it was a diversion for an attack by New Zealand forces on Chunuk Bair.
      2/ The fourth wave of that attack in which the protagonist is killed, did NOT head off at the the insistence of senior officers, as portrayed (and certainly not senior British officers, as the accent of the actors implies, as the Nek was an entirely Australian affair!). In fact the attack was called off after the third wave. Unfortunately, about half the 150 men in the fourth wave attacked anyway, without orders, due to inexperience and over-enthusiasm, and many got themselves needlessly killed as a result.
      3/ The British were not "drinking tea on the beach" while Australians died for them, as Mel Gibson's character famously states! In fact, two companies of the Royal Welch Fusiliers suffered very heavy losses trying to get the Australians at the Nek out of the trouble they had got themselves into.
      4/ The distinctive "Australian accent" didn't emerge until after WWI. 40% of the Australian soldiers were British who had themselves emigrated only a few years before the war, or whose parents had. You would hear as many Birmingham, Yorkshire or Cockney accents as you would anything remotely resembling modern Australian. Being an Australian production, though, it was probably best to stick with the natural accents of the actors. No one wants another Dick-van-Dyke "Cockney" accent!
      5/ The vast majority of recruits were from the cities - insurance clerks, shop assistants and the like, with only a small minority being farm labourers as portrayed by the protagonist. Not an inaccuracy, but he is very untypical of most recruits. It was done, of course, to further build the myth of the carefree, bushwhacking, 'jackaroo' character that, sadly, even today, some Australians imagine the majority of the ANZACS to have been.
      No - I'm afraid that rather like the movie "Zulu", "Gallipoli" is a highly entertaining way to waste a couple of hours on a wet afternoon or after Christmas lunch, but HUGELY inaccurate and not to be taken seriously.

  • @Swearing0000
    @Swearing0000 5 дней назад

    Forgotten Weapons last episode explained that 35,000 S&W model 1917’s (like the one in Fury) were never issued by the time WWI ended and were issued during WWII.

  • @stephencannon3140
    @stephencannon3140 10 месяцев назад +3

    2001 “Behind Enemy Lines”….ejection sequence….not the hitting each other and not the flying off route that got them in shot down but the ejection sequence from when the Ejection command is given…..the explosive bolts, leg restraints cinching up….after that started going sideways …literally and figuratively. The rocket motors for the ejection seats are specifically designed so that one crew member goes left and one right to avoid hitting each other. Been almost 25 years so not sure exactly what direction, but I believe it was pilot up and to the left and back seater up and to the right. The handle, and slo motion framing to show more than just pulling the ejection handle was actually reasonably authentic. For the F/A-18 at least and probably most modern tactical aircraft, the headrest is the parachute. When it has to be packed knot the headrest it is first folded then sent over to the station flight equipment shop. That is also the long room you see in all the movies to spread out the parachutes out for inspection and repackaging. After folded usually spends a night or two in a hydraulic press to flatten it enough to fit in the head box.

    • @bob_the_bomb4508
      @bob_the_bomb4508 10 месяцев назад

      That’s good to know. Shame they messed up all the Landmine scenes…

  • @kayleegoins9838
    @kayleegoins9838 10 месяцев назад +9

    The mention of "Saving Private Ryan", brought back a memory. Not long after it came out, I was having a conversation with our neighbor who had just seen it. She said.. "I was a nurse during the Korean war, and the blood and guts in "Saving Private Ryan" was almost too much for me!"

  • @WardenWolf
    @WardenWolf 3 месяца назад

    Wardaddy's revolver is an S&W Victory model, not a personally-owned sidearm. These were used both by the British in .38 S&W Long (.38/200 by their designation) and the US Navy and Marines in .38 SPL. His appears to be the .38 SPL model, given the longer cylinder flutes. This actually makes a lot of sense; such a revolver would have been fairly easy to acquire. And since they took standard S&W M&P grips, there was a well-known pattern to follow.

  • @marcanthony1680
    @marcanthony1680 5 месяцев назад

    One little nitpick: Agent Orange wasn't a pesticide. It was a defoliant. Most of the time when it was sprayed it was mixed with diesel to make it stick to the leaves long enough to kill them. I lived on several firebases (Birmingham, Bastonge and Rakkasan) in I Corp. with the 1/83rd. Field Artillery and got sprayed with the stuff several times. DDT was the pesticide they handed out to us.

  • @darrengilbert7438
    @darrengilbert7438 Месяц назад

    Actually, agent orange came in a barrel with an orange stripe on the barrel. There was also an agent purple that had a purple stripe on the barrel, and those colored stripes were how the defoliant got their common names. There were several different defoliants used in Vietnam, and they all had a specific color to differentiate, which was which.

  • @taylormoore5098
    @taylormoore5098 Месяц назад

    It's weird that they would add such a detail as War Daddy's pistol grip, while also completely re-naming his tank from "In The Mood (1, 2, or 3)" to "Fury".

  • @orionred2489
    @orionred2489 10 месяцев назад +2

    How would the speed of sound make the sound louder? I'd presume the non-compressability of the water would make the explosive force carry farther.

    • @Partstim
      @Partstim 10 месяцев назад +1

      Sound disperses over distance. If it travels faster in a different medium, like water ... it'd be like being closer to the source. If sound travels 4x faster in water, it'd be like being 4x closer in regular air. LOUD

    • @orionred2489
      @orionred2489 10 месяцев назад

      @@Partstim No... the expanding shell of sound would still dissipate the same amount, just faster. So it WOULDN'T make it louder. It's the compressability.

  • @TheSaltydog07
    @TheSaltydog07 9 месяцев назад

    This production is frenetic.

  • @eviloverlordsean
    @eviloverlordsean 9 месяцев назад +2

    A lot of vets (my father and uncles included) always claimed that war movies were always going to be inaccurate bu11$hit because they would never be able to capture the smell of an actual combat zone or rear area. That being said, my opinion is that "1917" makes a pretty good attempt, especially when the two privates have to traverse water and corpse-filled shellholes in no-man's-land... pretty gritty, but also pretty true to memoirs of the vets who served (Sassoon, Graves, Blunden, et al).

  • @amazingtexashistory
    @amazingtexashistory 8 месяцев назад

    Tabasco Sauce- Not just for MREs. That little bottle was in my Vietnam era C-Rations. Not in every box, but often enough to have some on hand.

  • @zDerezzed
    @zDerezzed 9 месяцев назад +3

    For every detail done right in The Hurt Locker, there are 3 that are wrong. Which is odd, considering the same director was responsible for Zero Dark Thirty, which is renowned for its very accurate, though brief, military sequence.

    • @ginmar8134
      @ginmar8134 7 месяцев назад

      God, I HATED THL. I was in roughly the same area and at the same time as the movie was set in and the scene with the sniper rifle ended my attempt to finish the bloody thing.

    • @JasonFightsCrime
      @JasonFightsCrime 4 месяца назад

      The Hurt Locker was hot garbage. Since my wife and I were both EOD techs, we watched it. She left after about 15 minutes. I thought it would stop being cowboy BS and start getting good at some point. Then it ended.
      It was horrible.

  • @sluggo0202
    @sluggo0202 10 месяцев назад +1

    The Hurt Locker has so much wrong with it that the tabasco sauce is probably the only correct detail.

  • @McPh1741
    @McPh1741 10 месяцев назад +1

    War Daddy having the 1917 Smith would have been much of an issue. Like you said, several people had weapons sent to them and his revolver is chamber for 45 acp same as the Colt 1911.

  • @letecmig
    @letecmig 4 дня назад

    Regarding 'Czech conscripts' in Saving private Ryan. Not really 'historical accuracy', but rather an inside joke by Czech stuntmen who worked on SPR!!!:)
    Let me explain: Spielberg contracted team of Czech stuntman from Barrandov Studios in Prague to do most of the stunts in SPR. The 'Czech conscripts' speaking Czech in the scene are really Czechs! From that team- they were asked to do this small role with 'line in German', they chose to do a joke and said 'I am Czech, I did not kill anybody'.
    The guy who says the line is leader of that CZ stuntman team Petr Jakl (a legend in CZ as he basically founded the profession in CZ in 1970s and worked on basically every CZ movie where stunts were required, plus landed some small recognizable roles in the process from 1970s-1990s)

  • @matthewnewell4517
    @matthewnewell4517 10 месяцев назад

    Note, UK 24-hour ration packs also come with a small bottle of tabasco sauce. I've seen red and green bottles.

  • @chrisholmgren1595
    @chrisholmgren1595 10 месяцев назад

    Master and Commander had a scene with ship sailing in some weather with a guy crapping through the netting at the head of the ship, hence the term going to the head.

  • @jayluck8047
    @jayluck8047 9 месяцев назад +1

    The author of “The Hurt Locker” claimed in an interview that she coined the term. I don’t know it’s origins, but I did hear Sly Stallone use it in the movie “Demolition Man” years earlier.

    • @forrestlindsey3947
      @forrestlindsey3947 8 месяцев назад +1

      She didn't coin the term: we used it in Vietnam - it meant that someone was or would be in a world of pain if they did something, as in "you'll be in a hurt locker if you use that trail".

  • @rogerhack3750
    @rogerhack3750 10 месяцев назад +1

    10 insanely accurate warmovie details.
    Starts with the hurt locker.
    Yeah, no, you fucked up immediately there....

  • @ryabow
    @ryabow 3 месяца назад

    3:52 and if anyone would like to walk around the HMS Surprise, you can tour her at the Maritime Museum of San Diego.

  • @garypasquill2355
    @garypasquill2355 10 месяцев назад +1

    Platoon, before sheen's character shoots barnes he racks the bolt to make sure the gun is loaded.

    • @shawnshoptaugh4907
      @shawnshoptaugh4907 5 месяцев назад

      Yeah, wasn't that a thing with the AK platform, that the bolt didn't stay open on an empty magazine?

  • @Romany1111
    @Romany1111 10 месяцев назад +2

    1:04 Tabasco: possibly the crudest, least interesting spice condiment ever offered up. Of course it's American.

    • @T0tenkampf
      @T0tenkampf 10 месяцев назад +1

      yes, developed by French immigrants...ya goofy

  • @nigelgreen9369
    @nigelgreen9369 10 месяцев назад

    I like to the the Hurt Locker was what Hawkeye was doing post Endgame and also why he lost his hearing. Posing as part of an expert army disposal team seems on form.