Saving Private Ryan (1998) REACTION

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024
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Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @laurenceholloway2359
    @laurenceholloway2359 2 года назад +636

    My grandfather practically raised me, and was the best man I ever knew. He would attend WW2 conventions yearly, and I would accompany him. As a child, I never understood why he would cry during the playing of Taps. I remember him turning the TV down when gunshots and explosions would occur onscreen. I saw Private Ryan in the theater, and wept for what he had to go through, and am eternally grateful to Spielberg for answering the questions that I had of that horrible, but necessary, time. We and our allies defeated true evil. My grandfather was a liberator at Buchenwald concentration camp, and saw for himself the twisted agenda of the Nazi regime. RIP Claiborne T. Holloway. I will always remember...

    • @sussybaka1762
      @sussybaka1762 2 года назад +26

      Sorry for your loss man your grandpa sounds like a real one

    • @jamesdonoughue4557
      @jamesdonoughue4557 2 года назад +19

      God bless your grandfather

    • @Gitano_Music
      @Gitano_Music 2 года назад +15

      I hope you can find peace and joy in his memory. We don't always get to choose the path we take, but as long as your grandfather has you to keep his memory alive, then he filled a greater purpose.
      I never served. My dad did, my brother did and my uncle did. I never ask them what it was like because I know that's something deep for them. But I always tell them that I try to understand by just being as supportive as I can and being an ear should they just need someone to listen to them.
      I saw a bumper sticker once that I liked. It said, "I wasn't there, but I care". That pretty much sums up how I feel.
      Peace and perseverance.

    • @princeofcats6883
      @princeofcats6883 2 года назад +5

      Total respect

    • @luketimewalker
      @luketimewalker 2 года назад +11

      Bless him. Thank you. From France.

  • @Mr.Ekshin
    @Mr.Ekshin 2 года назад +318

    Those women typing letters were not making things up... they were transcribing letters written by the officers, sergeants, etc. If someone died under your command, you were expected to write a letter to the soldier's family telling them what happened. The letters were often scrawled in pencil on dirty pieces of notebook paper, and sometimes even had blood on them. The Department of the Army would have them typed up on proper letterhead and sent to the family.

    • @richardpoynton4026
      @richardpoynton4026 2 года назад +15

      I lost an uncle (who I never got to meet, obv.) in WW2. He died of his wounds in a South African military hospital. All the parents got was 2 line telegram through the mail. Coldbooded/factual with just name, DOD. I don’t think the British put in as much effort and respect as the Americans did, it seems…..

    • @Mr.Ekshin
      @Mr.Ekshin 2 года назад +10

      @@richardpoynton4026 - Yup... in America, it's typically done as was shown here. A couple military officers, usually with a chaplain, priest, minister, etc, will show up to personally deliver the news to the family of the deceased soldier. And the Department of Defense tries to provide as much information as they can, telling what happened and where.
      For the families that live on military bases, there are support groups made up of the wives of soldiers, and they will also show up to help the wife and/or family of the deceased.
      To be honest, I'm not sure which is better. Personally, I'd rather absorb that news in private or with close family, than to have a bunch of strangers show up at my door expecting to come in my home and 'console' me.

    • @hoffieldj
      @hoffieldj 2 года назад +5

      An I complain about righting a report

    • @MWSin1
      @MWSin1 2 года назад +11

      @@Mr.Ekshin And with fuel rationing during the war, if a nice car pulls up to your house, it almost certainly isn't good news.

    • @Kjleed13
      @Kjleed13 2 года назад +5

      That explains when we see them typing we don’t hear their voice but the voices of their superior officer. That’s a nice added detail.

  • @blunxed1
    @blunxed1 2 года назад +104

    Blue: I really hope he doesnt die, hes my favorite
    Viewers: ....

  • @Tommy1977777
    @Tommy1977777 2 года назад +176

    KIA: killed in action. WIA: wounded in action. MIA: missing in action.

    • @chapo0815
      @chapo0815 2 года назад +21

      YOU FORGOT... POW: PRISONER OF WAR.
      NEVER FORGET.

    • @realburglazofficial2613
      @realburglazofficial2613 2 года назад +6

      The terms are universal and come out of the Geneva Convention. That way, any country signed up to the Convention can report their missing, dead, wounded and prisoners, both allied and enemy, and it is understandable by all.

    • @Blue-qr7qe
      @Blue-qr7qe 2 года назад +4

      @@jimmysmith5418
      Thanks for being our allie and standing with us on the battlefield.
      God bless all veterans today.
      We thank you for your service .
      That's for you as well, Australia, and you, Canada,
      Thank you for your service -

    • @LTrotsky21stCentury
      @LTrotsky21stCentury 2 года назад

      TOGNIADN = the only good Nazi is a dead Nazi.

    • @toddkindron8506
      @toddkindron8506 2 года назад

      Non factor.

  • @dave131
    @dave131 2 года назад +111

    " Tell me I'm a good man "
    That one hurts. Can just feel the decades of guilt for what they did. Needs to hear that he earned it.

    • @thetinpin
      @thetinpin 2 года назад +10

      That line breaks me every time I hear it. Instant weepy mess.

    • @lewis7515
      @lewis7515 2 года назад +7

      That's a misread: not guilt.
      He wasn't - and wouldn't have been - required to be guilty.
      What he needed to hear was that he had fulfilled a duty and moral obligation to live _in worthiness_ of the sacrifice... - that's, what he was asked to satisfy: not, to live his life in guilt.
      That's a very different kind of burden, that none of them would have placed on him - they were brothers.

    • @dannyt564
      @dannyt564 Год назад +1

      tears everytime

    • @Bill_the_curious
      @Bill_the_curious 3 месяца назад +1

      @@lewis7515 Lone Survivor is a really good film about the one soldier who was not killed in a battle. The sense of guilt is real. The dead do not want the living to feel guilt, but it is a human thing non the less.

  • @jeremyortiz2927
    @jeremyortiz2927 2 года назад +270

    Right before I went to Air Force Basic Training, I invited a coworker and good friend of mine to go see it when it came out in 1998. Mr. Paul Hyland was a WWII veteran and took part in the beach landings at Omaha with the 35th Infantry Division. I asked him if it was really like that and he replied "No. Not enough bodies." I'll never forget that. We kept in touch for the next several years even when I was deployed overseas. He was even able to come to my 1st reenlistment and he wore his WWII Class A uniform. It was pretty cool. He passed away in 2005 at the age of 81 and I miss him to this day and, as a retired combat veteran myself now, this movie means a lot more to me than it did back then.

    • @davidmoore1264
      @davidmoore1264 2 года назад +11

      God bless you and all of our troops. Thank you for your service.

    • @tfanboy7188
      @tfanboy7188 2 года назад +6

      imagine smelling the dead bodies and carrying 160 pound weight with walking slow because of motars and mines yet u could get shot and thinking this is my last step

    • @Ryan_Christopher
      @Ryan_Christopher 2 года назад +4

      I saw this twice too in ‘98. I went into DEP in October, then shipped off to Lackland in March ‘99.

    • @lendondain1
      @lendondain1 2 года назад +6

      I watched this movie in the theaters twice in 1998. My grandfather, a WWII vet, asked me if I thought he should go see it. By that time, there were already news stories about how PTSD hotlines were being overwhelmed by veterans who had seen the film. I remembered the tears in his eyes when he watched the movie "Memphis Belle." So, I had to tell him I really didn't think he should see it. I don't think he ever did.

    • @flobp2381
      @flobp2381 2 года назад +4

      35th ID didn't get to France until July 5-7th and went into combat less than a week later.

  • @SC457A
    @SC457A 2 года назад +98

    I recall being speechless for a while after leaving the theater seeing this movie. Just lost in thinking of what I just saw, and the range of emotions that I felt then, and honestly still feel watching it all these years later. This movie took the visuals to a new level. War movies are not for everyone, I understand that, but damn this is a masterpiece in my eyes.

    • @Utonian21
      @Utonian21 2 года назад +5

      Realistic war movies (especially movies set in WW2 like SPR) are important for everyone to watch. Because even though this film's plot is fictional, what it depicts is very real and people need to acknowledge the men who laid down their lives and the sacrifices that were made

    • @jacobdenise1648
      @jacobdenise1648 2 года назад +1

      I agree 100%. Only scene that was a bit tacky in my eyes was when the German sniper was shot through the scope of his rifle.

    • @nicholasholloway8743
      @nicholasholloway8743 2 года назад +2

      @@jacobdenise1648 a little but Carlos Halfcock (I believe) a Vietnam sniper, actually made such a shot on a Mercenary enemy combatant, one he trained no less.

  • @charlesmartinjr3971
    @charlesmartinjr3971 2 года назад +74

    "I'm not going to cry-"
    Yes, you will
    "-at the beginning of this movie."
    Oh, my bad. But, still, yes you will.

  • @apaheus
    @apaheus 2 года назад +102

    Band of Brothers is another Tom Hanks (as producer) presentation of WWII soldiers' experiences. It is based on facts and some of the original soldiers are interviewed before each episode. Quite moving.

    • @thetinpin
      @thetinpin 2 года назад +3

      BoB is an amazing series!

    • @danelkington3808
      @danelkington3808 2 года назад +4

      I love that series and watch the whole thing every Memorial and Veterans Day. The Pacific series is great too.

    • @chibangin007
      @chibangin007 Год назад

      Its forced because saving private Ryan was fiction. Vets were angry!

    • @aznninjahitman
      @aznninjahitman Год назад

      This was a thought I had too - follow up with BoB and The Pacific.

  • @joeschmoe665
    @joeschmoe665 2 года назад +125

    “What are these helmets for?” In that era, to deflect fragments. They have a much greater protection factor nowadays. But nothing is certain.

    • @darthsaren6519
      @darthsaren6519 2 года назад +10

      no they didnt get better in modern times, its kinda the same protection helmet wise. and they did protect against a direct bullet hit, but its kinda random , meaning it depends a lot on the distance on the shot and the angle of impact.

    • @mignonthon
      @mignonthon 2 года назад +1

      and recochet, it happens

    • @joeschmoe665
      @joeschmoe665 2 года назад +17

      @@darthsaren6519 I’ve seen them stop a 7.62mm round at close range on more than one occasion. Kevlar is much better than the old steel pots.

    • @realburglazofficial2613
      @realburglazofficial2613 2 года назад +5

      The way modern helmets are designed, they won’t _stop_ a bullet, but instead they ‘channel’ the bullet around the helmet and out the back,
      There are several different layers of Kevlar at different weave densities. A 5.56mm or a 7.62mm round will penetrate the first few layers but won’t fully penetrate the middle layers. The bullet is still travelling really quickly so the higher density layers ‘guide’ the bullet around the curve of the helmet letting it fly out the back through the lower density layers missing the head inside it completely.

    • @woeshaling6421
      @woeshaling6421 2 года назад +8

      at the start of WW1, most soldiers wore fabric caps. the amount of casualties from artillery bombardment, especially airburst shells were staggering. introducing metal helmets severely reduced head injuries

  • @lobachevscki
    @lobachevscki 2 года назад +38

    Upham was a young man put in an extraordinary situation. At the beginning of the movie you saw a lot of soldiers completely broken in the beach, unable to react, unable to defend themselves and others, probably next in line to die, but you judged Upham because you bonded with the rest of the characters and it hurt he was the one broken and unable to defend others when they needed him. Upham... was just another young guy like the ones at the beginning.
    You reaction is completely understandable, I will never criticize that, but wanted to make sure someone points that out because I think Upham is a character that reflects war in a way we dont usually want to think about it.
    The original movie didnt have subtitles in any language, in this DVD release they respected that by making the subtitles in german when needed. That was completely on purpose because you are in a war, you are not supposed to understand anything if you dont know the language. Someone will probably write about it in the comments, but look for 'Czech soldier saving private ryan' in Google to see what Im talking about.

    • @Foksuh
      @Foksuh 2 года назад +10

      So many folks seem to think getting into action is easy. Christ, no one knows how they'll handle it til they're in the middle of it. Some are able to function, others break. And even the toughest guys have a breaking point. it ain't a damn game, there's no reloads in life.
      And it's exactly how you said, displayals of breaking/freezing soldiers have always been rare, especially prior to this movie. Having someone like Upham with zero combat experience was important. And we see Ryan screaming and crying in the end too, not fighting.

    • @OtherSideOfMorning
      @OtherSideOfMorning 2 года назад +4

      Upham is supposed to represent the viewer, hance his inexperience, etc..

  • @scottvanhorn6219
    @scottvanhorn6219 2 года назад +35

    Trixy, when this first came out, I watched it with my girl friend. She was in tears when the shells hit some of the landing craft at the beginning, and was over come by the end of the beach scene. This movie changed her opinion of everything related to the service. I explained to her that most of the men there were drafted and had no choice in things happening around them. It was just the way things have always been for guys. She never again complained about a hair out of place or nail polish being messed up or clothing that doesn't fit seamless. She would always look at me and say she knew why I have no patience for war or any bully perpetrating war. When I explained these scenes were close to reality, but reality can get far worse; she got emotional. I can only say that she finally understood why guys who went to war came back different, saying most of those guys were only 18 to 20 years old. We both have great respect for all military people from any branch of service. I can honestly say this movie changed her for the better.

    • @Awesomewithaz
      @Awesomewithaz 6 месяцев назад

      Sure

    • @johannesvalterdivizzini1523
      @johannesvalterdivizzini1523 Месяц назад

      All of Miller's men were Rangers, Ryan's comrades were 101 Airborne----all volunteers who were extremely well selected and trained. No draftees

  • @standasebek5033
    @standasebek5033 2 года назад +40

    "Molotovs were always my favourite. I don't know why, I just like them."
    Almost every reaction we learn something slightly disturbing about Blue :-)

  • @SolidAvenger1290
    @SolidAvenger1290 2 года назад +11

    Thank you for your first personal reaction to this film. Two years after this great film came out, my grandfather passed away from cancer in 2000. He enlisted in 1942 (age 20-21) & served in the 5th Ranger Battalion that trained in Tennesee. Eventually shipped out to Britain in late 1943/early 1944 in preparation for Operation Overlord. Trained in Special Cliff Operations in the Highlands of Scotland in early 1944 alongside his fellow Rangers (plus other Allied/UK Special forces) before D-Day.
    On June 6th, 1944, he subsequently climbed the cliffs of Point du Hoc. He had to carry his BAR into battle in rough terrain under heavy fire, search & eventually destroy the German Howitzers that greatly saved thousands of his fellow countrymen on the beaches.
    As history goes, the Rangers had to traverse miles of the French countryside for the repositioned guns after hours of naval & air bombardment prior to the invasion forced the Germans back from Point du Hoc. My grandfather was one man out of 75 men (out of 225 Rangers, 67% of the unit were wounded or killed) who was able to reach the top of Point du Hoc & keep on fighting beyond the Longest Day. Played a part of Operation Cobra in the breakout out of Normandy.
    Into the battle of Saint-Lo in July 1944, he got wounded when a piece of mortar shrapnel hit his leg (from his calf to above his ankle) & took him out of action. The 29th Infantry Battalion alongside another American division with small groups of Army Rangers (intermix of the remaining 2nd & 5th Ranger Battalions) took massive losses from German artillery destroying the town. My grandfather would have met his end at Saint-Lo, but thankfully he had a guardian angel over him.
    Over the years, I was told by my father & my aunt that after he got wounded, my grandfather was saved by a Sherman Tank Crew from the 747th Independent tank division that came to support the 29th Infantry division to take ruins of Saint-Lo & were attempting to gather all the wounded GIs during the course of the battle.
    It's still very unclear how many were saved on that day alongside my grandfather, but as a result of them saving lives, the Sherman Tank Commander was the only casualty while gathering up the wounded men under heavy fire.
    Due to their courageous actions, my grandfather lived, was able to go home to raise a family, & eventually serve as a police officer (SGT) for nearly 25 years until he retired in 1978. He got the Bronze Star for his heroic actions on D-Day & 2 Purple Hearts in the Fall of 1944.
    In both civilian life & his long days in law enforcement, he had to take small amounts of morphine (inside a capsule attached to a sliver neck chain around his neck) every day due to the wounds he received in the war until his last days on this earth. A reminder of the sacrifices he made in the defense of America, her people & the liberation of Europe.
    My grandfather's mother was a German immigrant & orphan who came to America in the 1890s when her homeland (early German Empire) was facing some social destabilization. My grandfather had no ill will against the majority of the German troops he fought against in the Liberation of France. He always respected the Germans (the Wehrmacht/cousins) for their military leadership, combat efficiency & historical discipline.
    He absolutely hated the Nazi idealogy, who only represented Hitler & a few thousand people in the SS divisions that committed the Holocaust.
    Like everyone else who first watched the movie, I began to truly understand & greatly appreciate the sacrifices my grandfather & the millions of soldiers made in WWII. That includes the common German Soldier (non-SS/Nazi) who fought not for Hitler, but for their family & their country.
    This film will always be one of my favorite films about WWII despite some of its flaws. I always got emotional at the end of the film when Miller tells Ryan that "Earn this" & it cuts to Ryan asking his wife if he was a good man. My grandfather never ever saw Saving Private Ryan in the last years of his life (did like the movie The Longest Day), but like most veterans, he would have attempted to avoid seeing the horrors of war again.
    I am immensely grateful to have known him before his passing & I am proud to be his grandson. This is a story I like to share with those who have first watched this film,, Band of Brothers, or any content related to the summer of 1944.
    If I had to create a title to describe his WWII story it would be called...
    "Liberation at the Gates"

    • @Stingray8854
      @Stingray8854 2 года назад

      Awesome story about your grandfather. 🇺🇸

  • @mase7557
    @mase7557 2 года назад +21

    The cemetery that you see is above the beaches in Normandy, France where the landings occurred. There are 33,000 Allied servicemen buried there. The French citizens take excellent care of it in respect for what those soldiers sacrificed for them.

  • @pnwcruiser
    @pnwcruiser 2 года назад +42

    As a former soldier I can tell you it isn't the junior soldiers who cause wars. Most of them are young men who would never harm an innocent person under normal conditions. The megalomaniacs who all too often rise in government are the fundamental problem, IMHO. War is obscene, especially when innocent lives are destroyed.

    • @j.w.matney8390
      @j.w.matney8390 2 года назад +4

      Politicians start wars that they nor their children will have to fight. USN 1974-1978

    • @Bill_the_curious
      @Bill_the_curious 3 месяца назад +1

      Today we have another lunatic seizing power, unconcerned with how many countless deaths it will cause. More than one million already from Covid-19. His family came from Germany. The family name used to be Drumpf. And just like Hitler, this one has duped many to his side.

  • @Randy1337
    @Randy1337 2 года назад +30

    My grandfather was a WW2 veteran in Russia. As a German though. He told me stories you would not believe, if not told by a man who was actually there.
    50:47 American Soldier: "Hands in the air. Drop the weapons." (he says it multiple times) The German to his comrades:"I know this soldier. I know this man" American soldier:"Shut the fuck up!" German:"Upham." (this is not a German word, I think it is the name of the American soldier) after he shot the one guy, he told the others "Leave!"
    Greetings :)

    • @THOMMGB
      @THOMMGB 2 года назад

      Upham is the name of the soldier/writer/translator with the rifle. The German was trying to let Upham know that he knew him from earlier. He was the German soldier who was blindfolded and able to leave, to turn himself in to other American forces. If only someone had killed him then and there, Captain Miller and others would still be alive.

    • @sirpepeofhousekek6741
      @sirpepeofhousekek6741 2 года назад

      @@AdmiralEisbaer How the Hell did he survive?

    • @James-ll3jb
      @James-ll3jb Год назад

      Das ist richtig!😊

  • @kylehollens9655
    @kylehollens9655 2 года назад +8

    In Upham's defense, he was not a combat soldier. He was thrust into a situation for which he was not prepared. Nobody knows (including myself) how they would react in a combat situation until they are in it.

    • @garylister
      @garylister 4 месяца назад +3

      He was a typist, they were Rangers. So many people don't understand that.

  • @KillboyMetalhead
    @KillboyMetalhead 2 года назад +49

    As a Marine Veteran I want to say ‘Thank you’ for watching this movie. I wish more young people would. It really demonstrates the loyalty, courage, and cost that many have paid to protect whatever it is that’s important to you and me. There is a saying in the military: ‘the individual takes the oath but the family also serves’ I served and fought because I love this country and it’s wonderful people. Our country is in a bad place right now but we’ll get through it…together. Semper Fi!

    • @sullygaming1137
      @sullygaming1137 2 года назад

      Thank you for serving

    • @adamclark9004
      @adamclark9004 Год назад

      What are your thoughts on what the democrats are doing to our military?

    • @Bill_the_curious
      @Bill_the_curious 3 месяца назад +1

      "A soldier does not fight because he hates what is in front of him, but because he loves what is behind him."
      G. K. Chesterton

  • @obersmith
    @obersmith 2 года назад +40

    it is very easy to judge, and very hard to understand why Upham behaved like he did when that german soldier killed Mellish. Being (almost literally) frozen in fear is a real thing that happened to a lot of people in fights.

    • @Stingray8854
      @Stingray8854 2 года назад +18

      I believe you’re exactly correct. People tend to judge Upham as a coward, but he also ran out under fire to go get the ammo to begin with. And he came back, with the Germans all over the place. It’s been said that in combat, sometimes people can be extraordinarily brave at one moment, and frozen with fear the next. And probably most often, somewhere in between.

    • @cityraintunes
      @cityraintunes 2 года назад +3

      It's good of you to say that. It's true. We all react to massive trauma differently. Often we don't know how we will react until it's happening.

    • @johnochiltree1170
      @johnochiltree1170 2 года назад +8

      ‘I haven’t fired a gun since basic training.’
      -Upham
      He clearly wasn’t a combat soldier.

  • @jeffsetter213
    @jeffsetter213 2 года назад +14

    Even if you remove all of the innate human flaws that cause war such as greed, hatred & fear, as long as there is a limited supply of resources and/or unequal access to them... there will be war. This is a consequence of your instinct for self-preservation, which is nature, but nature that is not limited to humans. We just happen to be uniquely capable of acting on it.

  • @_Gopnik_Medved_
    @_Gopnik_Medved_ 2 года назад +38

    9:39 If you were wondering what those soldiers were saying, here is the answer: They said "Prosím, nestřílejte na mě, nejsem Němec, jsem Čech, nikoho jsem nezabil!" How English would be "Please don't shoot me, I'm not German, I'm Czech I didn't kill anyone! "

    • @lordmortarius538
      @lordmortarius538 2 года назад +4

      They were Czech conscripts (conscription is a forced military enlistment) sent to fight on the front, and were purposefully missing shots because they did not want to fight. It's sad, but also the Allies were under orders to take no prisoners for the first 3 days after the invasion. Just a terrible situation on both sides :/

    • @firingallcylinders2949
      @firingallcylinders2949 2 года назад +4

      @@lordmortarius538 Yea this was a very sad reality for many of the conscripts. Caught between 2 factions that wanted them dead.

    • @shanejur
      @shanejur 2 года назад +1

      Sure they didn't kill anyone.

    • @meridianline4022
      @meridianline4022 2 года назад

      @@shanejur its true...Omaha was actually made up of a shoddy german regiment supported by captured and conscripted men from Ukraine, Poland, and Czechoslovakia...most had never even fired at an animal let alone a person...and the german regiment was one of the worst in the whermacht, as Hitler never believed the invasion to come from Normandy, and so manned it with minimal troops and literally no armor or air support...if hitler had put more troops and armor in place at Normandy, its possible that couldve been a catastrophic loss to the expeditionary forces

    • @shanejur
      @shanejur 2 года назад

      @@meridianline4022 Give 'em MG ' forty-twos and they'll do pretty well

  • @bkazmer
    @bkazmer 2 года назад +6

    I was amazed at how realistic this movie was when I first saw it. I served in the Vietnam war and four of my high school friends died there. They were in other units, but my darkest memory was talking to a kid next to me, also 18 years old and as we were talking all of a sudden, I was covered with blood, bone fragments, and brain tissue. An enemy bullet killed him, and I never even got to know his name. I was so stunned as we never heard any gunfire. He died instantly and then all kinds of bullets were flying around on both sides. The suddenness of death was what struck me the most. It easily could have been me instead. Thar war was so unpopular back in the US that when I got home I was called all kinds of names and spit on many times. I think that was the rare one where the people of our country were so against our military being there. My dad and mom's family sent a total of 9 men to WWII and they all were unscathed and my dad was in Korea too. He commanded a combat engineering compay in both wars. I so admired my family for doing their part that I joined when I was 17 years old. And our war in Vietnam solved nothing at all.

    • @phamvietlong5409
      @phamvietlong5409 Год назад +2

      I think the problem with the Vietnam - American war is, despite whatever you wanted to call it, it was an invasion. In accordance with the 1954 Geneva Conference, Vietnam was supposed to be unified by July 1956 after the French colonial regime were to withdraw from Vietnam completely, if the US did not support Ngo Dinh Diem to establish an American-friendly establishment in the South.
      The war was a political move in opposition of China and the USSR in a larger chess game of the Cold War, nothing more. There was nothing that justifies you guys being there at all.

  • @blainesjustchillin3509
    @blainesjustchillin3509 2 года назад +36

    Definitely one the most accurate war movies. This particular storyline didn't actually happen, but it highlights how horrible war can be, but how men can prevail through the worst times.

    • @the-hard-problem
      @the-hard-problem 2 года назад +3

      The film draws inspiration from the story of an actual soldier named Fritz Niland and a U.S. war department directive called the sole-survivor directive "Special Separation Policies for Survivorship" that was put in place after all 5 Sullivan brothers died in the war.

    • @Zenon0K
      @Zenon0K 2 года назад +2

      @@the-hard-problem It was actually based on the Borgstrom and Sullivan families, but there were several cases of large amounts of brothers or cousins being killed back-to back-to back-back+. After the Nihlands they started differing some kids based on family service and forbade brothers from serving in the same outfits/theatres/ships.

    • @Kalashboy420
      @Kalashboy420 2 года назад +1

      @@Zenon0K if i am not wrong it is still a thing to this day.

    • @tfanboy7188
      @tfanboy7188 2 года назад +1

      @@Kalashboy420 yes it is a amendment

    • @camerapunk4109
      @camerapunk4109 2 года назад

      From some war historians the film is most accurate in the first 20 minutes. The whole mission thing coming to be is a wee bit stretched but that’s ok. The film had a narrative to tell its it did it quite wonderfully. Check out history buffs channel for more info.

  • @diegotavel5872
    @diegotavel5872 2 года назад +32

    That "Earn this" to Ryan, not was for him, was for all of us. All the people that now has the chance to live in a free world thanks to the sacrifices of American, British, Russian, Polish, French (and a big etc.) soldiers that made the ultimate sacrifice in the battlefield.

    • @borninjordan7448
      @borninjordan7448 2 года назад +7

      Canadians...

    • @mitchellbeston1033
      @mitchellbeston1033 2 года назад +4

      Agreed. That is the most important message of this movie.

    • @Snaakie83
      @Snaakie83 2 года назад +1

      @@borninjordan7448 Canadians! ❤️
      I'll be there this Friday, so our fallen Canadian brothers don't feel alone.
      ruclips.net/video/3lJe4r8BsJ0/видео.html

    • @borninjordan7448
      @borninjordan7448 2 года назад

      @@Snaakie83 Thanks.

    • @Anonymous-tm7jp
      @Anonymous-tm7jp 2 года назад +1

      Indians....
      The largest volunteer army that helped Britain even tho the brits were a**holes. Also 3 million Indians died due to british induced famine. They died of starvation so that the allied soldiers and people in the liberated countries don't have to.

  • @Nomad-vv1gk
    @Nomad-vv1gk Год назад +2

    During the Battle at Ramelle, Upham became shell shocked and was unable to save a .30 cal team from a German soldier because he was too frozen with fear to do anything about it. He carried all the .30 caliber ammo at the battle of Ramelle, but was unable to do his job because he was always either pinned down or too afraid to move.
    He signified the loss of innocence in war and thought that soldiers could be civil, but he later succumbed to the evils of war and made up for his cowardice when he shot Steamboat Willie for killing Miller even after the latter had shown Willie mercy earlier.
    Not only did Upham represent the loss of innocence of war but he also symbolized the "Every-man". His illusion of neutrality faded when he finally had to pick and side and kill Steamboat Willie, his character revelation being how he finally understood the horrors of war. It became clear that Upham had turned into a hardened and true soldier because of the whole experience. Upham's rank was Tech 5 Corporal (E-5), that meant he was technician in a specialty area. His was maps and translator, he was not a combat infantryman and was never trained for front-line duty. Gunnery Sergent Hartman explained it this way in the movie Full Metal Jacket:
    "It is your killer instinct which must be harnessed if you expect to survive in combat. Your rifle is only a tool. It is a hard heart that kills. If your killer instincts are not clean and strong you will hesitate at the moment of truth. You will not kill."

  • @trentrouse5991
    @trentrouse5991 2 года назад +52

    You should consider watching Band of Brothers its a true story and an amazing piece of cinema that is genuinely one of a kind

    • @rangerscloud
      @rangerscloud 2 года назад +4

      This, 100% this

    • @beachside1
      @beachside1 2 года назад +3

      I totally agree she should. Too bad she and most people cant find the movie The boy in striped pajamas. Its hard to find online for free

    • @timg2088
      @timg2088 2 года назад +2

      Absolutely! Not only was it a great movie but it was also incredibly realistic when it comes to the history behind Easy Company and the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment.
      Col. Dick Winters was a real life hero.

    • @jesse-4rm500
      @jesse-4rm500 2 года назад

      The PACIFIC is better.. but this blue hair freak doesn't deserve to

  • @Utonian21
    @Utonian21 2 года назад +2

    "It's like finding a needle in a stack of... needles"
    😂 love that quote

  • @atornblad
    @atornblad 2 года назад +10

    I remember seeing this in theater. It was the most powerful cinematic experience ever. The entire audience was just completely silent the whole movie, except for some people crying.

    • @OtherSideOfMorning
      @OtherSideOfMorning 2 года назад +1

      Same here. No one took a breath for twenty minutes and it took days to unclench my sphincter

  • @icysteve46
    @icysteve46 2 года назад +2

    "Solar panels "
    🤣🤣🤣
    You crack me up Trixy.
    We were taught to pull pin, release handle and count one thousand one,one thousand two, one thousand three then toss the grenade.
    So good call on that girl.
    Trixy it's not human nature that's the big lie.
    Your commentary at the end was priceless.

    • @icysteve46
      @icysteve46 Год назад +1

      @@jimmysmith5418 yeah I know. Trixy called them "Solar panels. "
      It tickled me funny bone. 😁

  • @waltdee1258
    @waltdee1258 2 года назад +26

    I have to say: You held it together for the first 15 minutes a lot better than I expected you to. There were seasoned veterans of every war from WWII to Afghanistan who had to leave the theatre because the shit got too real for them.
    And Omaha Beach was lesser fortified than Calais, directly across the English Channel, because the beaches chosen were a closely-guarded secret until the night before.

    • @ryeguy7941
      @ryeguy7941 2 года назад +7

      Didn't this movie come out in 1998 and we invaded Afghanistan in 2001.

    • @ArgonNoble
      @ArgonNoble 2 года назад +2

      @@ryeguy7941 Came to comment this.

    • @rollomaughfling380
      @rollomaughfling380 Год назад

      @@ArgonNoble And also Calais was not an Allied objective during Operation Overlord.

    • @k.dalpha9367
      @k.dalpha9367 Год назад

      Afghanistan / Iraq / Syria USA soldiers: Murderes and invaders who killed and tortured innocent people following orders by their genocides presidents Bush, Clinton and Obama

    • @Bill_the_curious
      @Bill_the_curious 3 месяца назад +1

      Patton gave a speech shortly before the invasion, further along the British coast closer to Berlin. This brief public appearance as staged to convince the Germans that he was obviously working on his invasion plans for beaches closer to Germany, and so Hitler refused to send more of his battle tanks, especially the Tiger tanks, further along the French coast. He held a lot of armor back, and still it was a massacre to land where we did. But it had to be done to stop some lunatic and his co-conspirators from turning the world into a slave society. A shame they gave their lives so another so-called Republican lunatic with no more integrity or morals than Hitler could do the same to America today.

  • @willmartin7293
    @willmartin7293 2 года назад +6

    It's always fun to watch someone when they learn the meaning of "FUBAR."

  • @arkenstar3979
    @arkenstar3979 2 года назад +45

    "There are other ways to resolve political conflicts.. come on.."
    Oh you sweet summer child...

    • @tonyyul703
      @tonyyul703 2 года назад +7

      sic vis pacem para bellum

    • @brianrogers7360
      @brianrogers7360 2 года назад +1

      @@tonyyul703 the motto used in the 9mm cartridge

    • @Kneb587
      @Kneb587 2 года назад +1

      The biggest problem is that for things to be resolved peacefully the people in power have to _want_ to work with others, and more often than not many leaders seem to be overly prideful and in worse cases selfish.

    • @wolfeyes9357
      @wolfeyes9357 2 года назад

      What a complete, ridulous statement!

    • @michaelmisczuk8149
      @michaelmisczuk8149 2 года назад +1

      There is only one thing for evil and that is absolute destruction.

  • @awlabrador
    @awlabrador 2 года назад +13

    “Is that the same dude that they let go?” Good eyes. Many people miss that or only catch it near the end.

    • @andreabianchi6156
      @andreabianchi6156 2 года назад +4

      But it's not though. The guy that stabs Mellish is not the guy they let go

    • @EdMarcelino
      @EdMarcelino 2 года назад +5

      46:22 - nope, it's not the same guy they let go. the one they let go is the one who killed the captain at 50:04 and the Upham kills him at 51:04

    • @JakobBerry
      @JakobBerry 2 года назад +1

      He does look a bit like him, but it's not him. I always thought they should have picked someone that looked more different. I've seen a lot of reactors making the same mistake.

  • @lendondain1
    @lendondain1 2 года назад +9

    I just watched this reaction, and it was the first reaction by you that I've ever watched. I just wanted to let you know that your intelligence, depth of understanding, and empathy for others (though not, perhaps, for Upham) really came through. Not many people your age would see as much as you saw in this movie or understand as much as you understood. I look forward to watching your other reactions.

  • @tonymoll6265
    @tonymoll6265 2 года назад +4

    It does me good to see a young person like yourself watch this and have the emotions that you showed. It's good to see what these men and women have done and it gives you such a great respect.

  • @donhimmelman1736
    @donhimmelman1736 Год назад +3

    one thing with Upham that you need to know is that soldiers like Ryan, Miller and the rest were being trained for many months prior to the landings. People like Upham were never intended to be in that role and they would rarely see combat as they would be more in the rear area designed to be helping with the general staff. These units if attacked by an enemy breakthrough in the front lines usually retreated and in most cases this turned into panic causing a rout of the rear areas.

  • @wanderingsoul986
    @wanderingsoul986 7 месяцев назад +1

    I know this is a reaction from 2 years ago, but this just popped up on and thought why not. Your reaction and facial expressions were so honest and real as were mine many, many years ago as a Marine. Thank you love...

  • @cesarvidelac
    @cesarvidelac 2 года назад +9

    I like you decided to watch this. Younger generations like mine and yours have no memory and precisely because war is such an absurd, this movie is so important. It's not the typical hero movie, shows the reality of war as many people don't want us to know. Hugs Blue

  • @markdaube507
    @markdaube507 2 года назад +2

    Back in 1999, my family took a tour around Europe on the way to a wedding in Germany. On the way we visited the beaches of Normandy, the museums, and the same cemetery you see in the movie. The emotions were palpable even though we didn't know anybody who died there. It was hard to speak and to this day, the cemetery scene still gets me because many of the graves have the words 'Here rests in honored glory a comrade in arms known but to god' , like the tomb of the unknown soldier at Arlington, Virginia. And, in military fashion, are perfectly lined up, vertically, horizontally, and at a 45deg. angle.
    The ruins of the gun emplacements are equally eerie, making it a wonder anyone survived at all.

  • @justsmashing4628
    @justsmashing4628 2 года назад +23

    On a roll Trixy 😊
    Please watch Schindler’s List next 😁

  • @Curraghmore
    @Curraghmore 2 года назад +12

    A lot of reactors confuse the soldier that stabbed Mellish (your favorite) with the soldier that they released earlier in the film, but they were not the same man. The soldier that stabbed Mellish looked different and wore a different uniform (he had an SS uniform), but the soldier that they released was a regular German army soldier, and he WAS the same guy at the end who Upham recognized just before he shot Tom Hanks, and then when the German remembered Upham and said his name, Upham shot him.

  • @Tommy1977777
    @Tommy1977777 2 года назад +8

    its a helluva thing to see combat for the first time. most of my memories are a blur.

  • @markldavis1
    @markldavis1 Год назад +2

    Trixy Blue... I have watched so many reactions to this movie that I forgot how many, I like your candid reaction. You fought the tears but your emotions were genuine.
    So many of my parents generation died in WWII. My Dad knew many that died on D Day. They were in two classes ahead of him in high school. He played Football with them. I only saw my Dad cry 3 times in the 63 years I knew him and watching this at the theater was one of them. I get teary eyed watching this movie each time, you are alone in your reaction
    I like your honesty and candidness

  • @muhest
    @muhest 2 года назад +5

    The scene where the mother goes to get the news she already knows what is, and has to sit down cuz her legs won’t hold her up anymore … get’s me every time. 🥺

    • @michaelstach5744
      @michaelstach5744 Год назад

      She should have won an Oscar

    • @luke-i1w
      @luke-i1w Год назад +2

      Me too. As a parent of 3 boys, I can't even imagine...

  • @brianhildreth9099
    @brianhildreth9099 Год назад +5

    I understand the frustration with Opham, but fear can paralyze. NOBODY can criticize unless you've been in that position. The horror they saw on a daily basis. More than 70 million lives were lost in WWII throughout the world. Devastating.

  • @deardeer5215
    @deardeer5215 2 года назад +22

    I like what you said that the measure of a man is what he does when the odds are against him. I couldn't agree more

  • @David_C_83
    @David_C_83 2 года назад +16

    Less crying than I expected but there were definitely some moments where you looked really sad. It gets us all at some point or another, particularly at the end. I think what makes this particularly sad is that even if the story isn't necessarily true there's still lots of people who went through events like these. As for Upham, I've seen so many reactions that I can't blame any of them, I can totally understand why people would be upset at him for not going up the stairs and helping but I feel like many of us would be equally scared to kill someone even in a war context, and you can't forget that before going on this mission he was a translator that had never even been in combat.

    • @robertparker6280
      @robertparker6280 2 года назад

      Agreed

    • @donhimmelman1736
      @donhimmelman1736 Год назад +2

      what people are witnessing is the stark reality of a soldier whos' sole duties was read maps and translate language. he was never really prepared for combat like the mainstay of troops. And at some point, it overwhelms their senses to the point of them freezing up or with some people completely going mad. notice how he had difficulty just trying to make his feet work trying to climb those stairs.

    • @James-ll3jb
      @James-ll3jb Год назад +1

      One never knows how anyone will act in such circumstances.

  • @danielmorency2242
    @danielmorency2242 2 года назад +11

    I imagine that helmets are more for protection against flying debris when you're close to an explosion...

    • @kennethbrugonone2359
      @kennethbrugonone2359 2 года назад +2

      Not so much "more" for debris. It offers protection in a general sense to all sorts of things that want to tap your skull to see what's inside. It offers some protection against bullets too. If a round hits straight into the helmet then there is a good chance you're a gonner. If the round hit at an angle the helmet can divert the bullet enough to save your life.

    • @HandleTakenlol
      @HandleTakenlol 2 года назад

      They wouldn't stop a direct hit but they would deflect a bullet better than your skull

  • @michaelpaz5052
    @michaelpaz5052 Год назад +1

    I've watched your reaction before, but I missed how beautiful your human nature is. Your feeling for human nature, human life is absolutely beautiful. You are a great human being! I'm in awe of you. You are a much better person than myself. Thank you for this reaction.

  • @chemaamusco6078
    @chemaamusco6078 2 года назад +17

    Ryan metaphorically represents that society that survive the second world war and that should have honored all those soldiers who sacrifice their lives to achieve it by making the world a better place.

  • @robwealer5416
    @robwealer5416 2 года назад +16

    The fish are stunned or killed by explosions in the water.

    • @vattmann1387
      @vattmann1387 2 года назад +1

      Very true, post storm it's worth checking the beaches for lobsters etc

  • @jkang5394
    @jkang5394 2 года назад +27

    With respect, please don't ever say that the soldiers died pointlessly.
    I understand where your heart is. I believe the vast majority of people are against war. I believe that most people are good and will agree that every avenue should be taken to resolve conflicts and disagreements peacefully without violence and death. However, as long as there are people like Hitler walking this world and decide to exercise tyranny, oppression and murder of innocents then there have to be people who are willing to stand against evil and fight to protect the good that they believe in for the sake of their loved ones.
    Like you said, it is beyond tragic that the cost for freedom and ridding the world of evil is so high but it was paid and will continue to be paid. What we should do now is honor the sacrifice by being grateful for everything we have and to live our lives as best we can by striving to be the best version of ourselves. If we do that, I believe we can be an overwhelming force for good and we can further help to reduce the occurrence of wars.

    • @josephamoraz7990
      @josephamoraz7990 2 года назад +5

      This girl just don't get it.

    • @jkang5394
      @jkang5394 2 года назад +1

      @@josephamoraz7990 it's ok not everyone will. Their hearts are in the right place. They just don't like seeing people having to kill each other

    • @anonimus5415
      @anonimus5415 2 года назад

      Una pregunta Capitán America
      ¿Crees que un loco es tirano y todos los demás como los alemanes simplemente le tienen miedo y por eso obedecen, o lo seguían porque querían?; crees que los estadounidenses querían ir a Europa a pelear o que eran obligados a ir?, crees que después de la guerra cantaron e hicieron el simbolo de la paz o que quedaron traumados y muchos se suicidaron?;
      No hay bien o mal; lo que para una persona es bien; para otra es mal y viceversa; ¿está bien matar para que un loco no mate?; ¿matar vos para que otro no mate?. Que hay de los ataques a suelo alemán?; eso era liberación o ataque ofensivo?. :)

  • @jhilal2385
    @jhilal2385 Год назад +1

    Upham shouts "Die Waffen niederlegen!" and "Hande hoch!" which means "you stop fighting" and "hands up".
    a good phrase to know in many languages:
    "Hands up" - English
    "Hande hoch" - German
    "Haute les mains" - French
    "Manos arriba" - Spanish

  • @Flastew
    @Flastew 2 года назад +4

    Love your reactions Blue. You are so honest with your emotions, the tears, the smiles, the laughter, and puffy lips are all so real. Thanks for sharing. I miss the ears though.

  • @bubblegumbabeface6629
    @bubblegumbabeface6629 Год назад +1

    The line Cpt Miller says "Earn this" is said vicariously, not only within the meta of the narrative but also to us. After taking us through a moment of hell of earth that this was we too should try to answer to that statement as well. Let's all earn it. Earn what was done for us by the fallen by living to make this world a better place. Earn this.

  • @cliveklg7739
    @cliveklg7739 2 года назад +33

    As upsetting as Upham's character actions are, they are there to show a different aspect of how people react to war in combat. Not everyone is as capable all the time. And it is interesting you don't see the same criticism of Ryan's character when towards the end of the fight he's just got his arms around his legs and is screaming.
    Suggest "The Fallen of World War II" Most don't know truely how huge of a cost WWII was.
    "An animated data-driven documentary about war and peace, The Fallen of World War II looks at the human cost of the second World War and sizes up the numbers to other wars in history, including trends in recent conflicts."

    • @NATIVESUNSETS65
      @NATIVESUNSETS65 2 года назад +6

      Upham's Character who did not come to Mellish's ( Who was Jewish) Aid when he knew he was being killed was a commentary about the U . S. not coming to the aid of the Jewish people being killed and persecuted by the Nazis's . The U.S. did not enter the war against Germany until a week after Pearl Harbor 1941 two years after Germany had started the war and persecution of the Jewish people. And just like Upham the U. S. let Jews that they knew were going to be killed , die .

    • @jayeisenhardt1337
      @jayeisenhardt1337 2 года назад

      @@NATIVESUNSETS65 Nobody back then cared and really even today still nobody cares. A new genocide about every decade since they started saying "never again." If we really were to compare you'd have to take Rwandan over German efficiency anyday. It's that simple. If Japan never attacked then we never would have had a reason to enter the war and would have left it as a European problem.

    • @Bill_the_curious
      @Bill_the_curious 3 месяца назад

      @@NATIVESUNSETS65 I think not a commentary. Te depth of the German killing of Jews was covered up in a number of sources. And starting a war to save the Jews was a severe change in the historical future of America. You don;t start a world war until you absolutely have to. And we did not do it to save America. America was fairly safe. We did it to save Europe. Beyond that The new York Times was pushing to protect Hitler. Time Magazine even made Hitler Man of the Year in one issue.

  • @savonel35
    @savonel35 2 года назад +1

    Hello beautiful souls, as a Vet to all the Men and Women who served in the Military Living Or Died.. I would like to tell you all I love you and thanks for your Contribution and God Bless You all for being my Hero

  • @armysapper12b
    @armysapper12b Год назад +4

    I served in the military for 21 years and deployed to the Middle East numerous times. The combat scenes don’t really bother me, it’s the ending that gets me every time. After losing friends and fellow soldiers, you hope that you live a life that honors their sacrifices. Society would also be better off if they had that mentality of honoring those that sacrificed everything so that others could live a life of freedom and opportunity, and living in a way that reflected those sacrifices.

    • @Bill_the_curious
      @Bill_the_curious 3 месяца назад +1

      As opposed to being a draft dodger calling American soldiers "losers", I agree with you 100%

  • @trayolphia5756
    @trayolphia5756 2 года назад +1

    My grandfather was considered too young and was denied joining the British military before the wars end.
    Before his passing, he got a chuckle, but a melancholy one from a meme I showed him, once which when he settled, commented it made him sad because it was TRUE and he himself had seen the change
    1944 - 18 year olds storm the beaches, some of them even VOLUNTEERING to charge into almost certain death, in order to help stop the spread of evil
    2019 - 18 year olds need a safe space because WORDS “might” hurt their feelings
    Oh what a difference three generations/75 years can make
    Rip grandpa, and a heartfelt salute to those who fought and died for free world that we had/have

  • @miketheviking_
    @miketheviking_ 2 года назад +6

    The reason Wade said to give more morphine when Upham said “tell us how to fix you” is because Wade knew there’s no way to explain to them everything that needs to be done and for them to know how to do it. The morphine not only is a pain killer but it also drops the blood pressure. Too much morphine will drop it low enough to become lethal. Wade chose the easier, quicker and relatively less painful death. Not only was it easier on him… it was also easier on the men… Something Captain Miller realized.

    • @lordmortarius538
      @lordmortarius538 2 года назад +3

      "one to see Heaven, two to go there" was the saying about morphine use in the war. It was more about how he knew there was no way he could be saved, they had him roll him up on his side to see where the bullet came out, and it was a liver shot, which he knew was fatal out in the field.

    • @rogerduncan2603
      @rogerduncan2603 2 года назад +1

      Closes respiratory rate also, that's the main way it kills, it gives a gentle
      goodnight for Irwin .

  • @Fibonaccisghost
    @Fibonaccisghost 2 года назад +1

    It's brave to watch this movie on a video for people to see. I saw it in theaters when I was 15 and was blown over by it and didn't speak for two days. Powerful movie.

  • @donnabruhn6907
    @donnabruhn6907 2 года назад +3

    I really hope we will never have this happen again. Americans wake up and pull together. Love and peace ✌️ 🕊️

  • @Sarcastro_78
    @Sarcastro_78 2 года назад +1

    I am from the USA. A good friend of mine did 6 comeback tours. r4 Afghanistan and 2 in Iraq. He told me about he and another soldier in his platoon had daughter's born on the same day. 3 days after both received the news of their children his friend was killed in action. My friend told me often, when he looks at his daughter he is so thankful and grateful to watch her grow up. Because his friend never met his daughter.

  • @Sir_AlexxTv
    @Sir_AlexxTv 2 года назад +22

    The most accurate reproduction of D-day, sadly, RIP boys.

  • @wesleypeters4112
    @wesleypeters4112 2 года назад +2

    The Sullivan Brothers were from Waterloo, IA.
    All five were serving on the light cruiser USS Juneau during the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal in 1942.
    After suffering severe damage from a torpedo from a Japanese destroyer, the Juneau pulled out of the battle and began the long trip to a nearby island for repairs. Juneau and two other damaged ships were spotted by Japanese submarine I-26 at around 11:00 am on November 13, 1942. Shortly afterward the sub fired a salvo of torpedoes, one which struck the already badly damaged ship. The blast broke the vessel in half, sinking in 20 seconds and taking 587 men with her.
    Roughly 100 sailors survived the sinking and for 8 days remained stranded in the ocean until rescue aircraft arrived. It is believed that at least two or three of the Sullivan Brothers were in the water but died from the elements overtime. By the time rescue arrived, only 10 men survived.

    • @realburglazofficial2613
      @realburglazofficial2613 2 года назад

      Wasn’t that the sinking where the survivors attracted sharks and were just picked off by an entire school of great white sharks?

    • @Bill_the_curious
      @Bill_the_curious 3 месяца назад +1

      @@realburglazofficial2613 The USS Indianapolis which carried the nuclear bomb materials across the Pacific. There were two men guarding the crate(s). One actual guard and one fake guard, the scientist, who was to handle the assembly of the warhead. The lone cruiser was considered to draw less attention from spy planes. Not a big enough target to send out a fleet against it. The mission was so secret however, that when it was sun by a Japanese submarine it was unnoticed for days, and many were eaten by sharks, or died from the exposure. A really sad event.

  • @bruceheckerman7343
    @bruceheckerman7343 2 года назад +3

    Tom also brought the guy who played the sniper to act with him in The Green Mile, so don't miss it!

  • @jeffstevens156
    @jeffstevens156 2 года назад +1

    My Father-in-law fought in WW2. My Dad was a lifer Marine. He was a three war Veteran. WW2, Korea and Vietnam. My Brother was a Marine. Vietnam fell a year before I was old enough. I took the Law Enforcement route. As an Officer!

  • @alexlim864
    @alexlim864 2 года назад +13

    21:38 Helmets are good for incidental hits, like ricochets or the odd bit of rock which might come flying through the air. They're not intended to stop direct bullet strikes.
    30:00 Sulfa drugs were the first antibiotics to be mass-produced, and the ones issued to soldiers in WW2 came in powder form. In wars prior to this, there were no antibiotics, so in some of those battles, as many soldiers died from infected battlefield wounds, after the battle was over, than actual soldiers who were killed during the battle itself.
    38:30 Yes, that is a dangerous place to be. High points, like tower belfries and the top floors of buildings, are some of the first things taken out by tanks and artillery, because they are excellent sniping and observation posts.
    47:09 Yes, Captain Miller had good aim. He taught baseball, after all.
    Wonderful reaction, watching a depiction of war that, for all its imagery, sound and effects, is still only a shadow of what the real thing is like. (A veteran who was at Omaha beach was once asked how accurate the opening sequence was. He replied: "Not enough bodies.") Yeah, war sucks, and acknowledge you for staying and watching all the way through.

    • @mrnice81
      @mrnice81 2 года назад

      Helmets are not just for the "odd" bit of rock but mostly for anything coming flying from close by artillery hits, so lots of rock and shrapnel. A 'funny' story from WW1 was that when the old hardened leather 'Pickelhaube' of the Germans was replaced with the steel helmet soldiers took the new helmet as a bad omen at first for some degree because numbers of wounded coming to the field hospitals with headwounds skyrocketet. Of course that meant it worked, those were all those who before would just have died instantly.

  • @Lord_Legolas_Greenleaf
    @Lord_Legolas_Greenleaf Год назад +1

    The letter that General C. Marshall reads is one from our beloved President Lincoln of the Civil War era. It's called "The Bixby Letter." There is some controversy about it. Just before that - when the Captain brings the 3 letters to the Colonel I.W. Bryce (3rd office) he talks about 'The Sullivan Brothers" - Only son's of Thomas and Alleta Sullivan. They all served on the same war boat, and all where killed; effectively wiping out that part of the family tree.

  • @TheGnolla
    @TheGnolla 2 года назад +4

    Don't be too hard on Upham. I don't much like the character, but he is the eyes and ears of the audience. He was never trained for combat, and he is caught up in some pretty intense action that tests elite soldiers like Rangers and Airborne troops. No one knows how they react in intense situations until they're actually in them. So Upham's actions and reactions are very believable.

  • @RogerThatImages
    @RogerThatImages Год назад +1

    @Trixey Blue - I saw this movie in the theater when it came out. When the movie was over, nobody got up for at least a minute and they entire audience walked out in complete silence. It was the only time I remember, nobody talking after a movie.

  • @tfanboy7188
    @tfanboy7188 2 года назад +3

    btw at 7:14 the reason the soldier took off his helmet is because when it is damaged if u keep it on still u would be guaranteed to die as it would shatter the helmet and the parts of ur helmet will go inside ur head and the bullet will be stronger because it moved through metal so it made it hotter which if it shoots even 1 inch inside ur head could dissolve some of ur major stuff like brain etc. But in this modern day a helmet can get shot about 3 times before u take it out

    • @colconn57
      @colconn57 2 года назад

      Just haven't got a clue really, have you?

    • @lostintechnicolor
      @lostintechnicolor 2 года назад +1

      He took off his helmet because he was in shock…

  • @jimflores9098
    @jimflores9098 2 года назад +2

    My Uncle was in the 101st Airborne 506th, just like the Ryan character. He was at D-Day, and somehow survived every battle after.

  • @Spookybozo
    @Spookybozo 2 года назад +10

    It’s scary when you realize that Telegram scene is based off what real mothers had to experience. Imagine your 4 boys going off to war, to save the world , and 3 of them never coming home again. That pain has to be one of the most excruciating pains to ever be experienced.

  • @lordmortarius538
    @lordmortarius538 2 года назад +2

    Helmets in WW2 were not bulletproof, they were more like hard hats, meant to protect soldiers from shrapnel and debris from explosions. The guy on the beach whose helmet deflected a bullet was extremely lucky, as the soldier next to him said, it hit at an extreme angle :P

  • @namco003
    @namco003 2 года назад +4

    You and Ellie have the best emotional "sad face". Magy has the best cry.

  • @alberto7514
    @alberto7514 2 года назад +1

    This is my all time favorite movie; maybe perhaps because I’ve been in that cemetery. That energy is overwhelming.
    Thank you for reacting to this.

  • @fakereality96
    @fakereality96 2 года назад +11

    Notwithstanding the artistic aspect of corporal Upham at the end, he really should have been positioned at the Alamo, and been the last one to blow up the bridge since he couldn't overcome his apprehension in combat. Just my two cents. : D

    • @Musabre
      @Musabre 2 года назад +2

      That'd have been the prescient move but they were never to know that he'd have such a paralysing breakdown mid-combat. In hindsight, he should totally have been the guy at the back again with the detonator, like he was during the machinegun nest attack.

    • @one_eyed_pete2462
      @one_eyed_pete2462 2 года назад +2

      @@Musabre maybe, or maybe he'd shit his pants and detonate the bridge with everyone still on the other side lol I wouldnt trust him to be holding to key to the only door I have to escape.

    • @PuppetierMaster
      @PuppetierMaster 2 года назад +1

      I respect Miller's leadership a bit too much if you're the guy for the job - do it. That's why he had Mike as back up. Miller was going to blow the bridge. His job, he's gonna do it.

    • @Bill_pierre
      @Bill_pierre 2 года назад +1

      @@one_eyed_pete2462 This.

  • @8triagrammer
    @8triagrammer 2 года назад +1

    The mom collapsing on the porch gets me every time.

  • @DanielRamosMilitaryWiz
    @DanielRamosMilitaryWiz 2 года назад +3

    46:20 No, that’s not the dude they let go earlier. He has a slight resemblance to him, but he’s not the same soldier. The German who shot Captain Miller at 50:04 is the one they let go earlier.

    • @namco003
      @namco003 2 года назад +1

      I was going to post the same, but came to make sure someone else beat me to it. I saw this in the theater/cinema and I thought the same for the longest time until I bought the DVD.

    • @batbrick3949
      @batbrick3949 2 года назад

      No, the soldier who shoots CPT Miller is the same one who stabbed Mellish. But he’s not the same one they let go earlier. Different uniforms, different actors.

  • @ComicswithDrew
    @ComicswithDrew 2 года назад +1

    I saw this in the theater. I had to leave halfway through the Normandy scene to keep from throwing up. I remember staring into the mirror in that restroom, white as a ghost. I was only able to return during the letters scene. Such a gut-wrenching film.

  • @71Splinter
    @71Splinter 2 года назад +4

    remember hearing stories of vets who saw this in the cinema, and has to leave because they smelt diesel as it was so real

  • @liszacharysmith
    @liszacharysmith 2 года назад +2

    My grandfather lost his little brother in this war! God bless all that paid the ultimate price!

  • @satinbarbi
    @satinbarbi 2 года назад +6

    It wasn't thousands. I wish it had been only thousands. The final death toll from that war from all causes on all sides was over 70 million dead.

    • @Mosern1977
      @Mosern1977 2 года назад +1

      Yeah, it's totally crazy amount. And still it takes the human population less than 1 year to replace that amount of people now.

    • @Bill_the_curious
      @Bill_the_curious 3 месяца назад +2

      That is tens of millions of human lives from birth to combat age. Fed, trained in language and many subjects, housed, medically cared for, decades of paperwork, and gone in a day. The cost is beyond measure. Stalin by historical estimates murdered at least 20 million Russians who opposed his insanity. And we have to start all over again with 70 million more.

  • @Nomad-vv1gk
    @Nomad-vv1gk Год назад +1

    Saving Pvt Ryan is not based on the Sullivan brothers. Fritz Niland became the basis for Private Ryan. He was dropped behind enemy lines on D-Day and spent five days in the French countryside, eventually earning a Bronze star in combat for taking a French. Robert Rodat first came up with the plot in 1994 when he saw a monument in a cemetery in Tonawanda, New York. The monument was to the Niland Brothers - 4 young American men who fought in the Second World War. When three of the Nilands were reported killed, the surviving brother - Fritz - was sent home. This inspired Rodat to write his movie. The average age of a U. S. troops armed forces personnel during WW II was 26 years old. Selective Service draft age range was 18 years of age to 45 years. The average age in Vietnam War was 22, not 19 as many think.
    In real life with the Nilands, it actually turned out later that another of the brothers was alive - he’d been held captive in a Burmese POW camp.
    Attempts to point out the "discrepancies" between the stories of Fritz Niland and James Ryan are often misguided, as Ryan is only based on Niland, and is not meant to be (or claimed to be) a completely accurate representation of him. The differences in the two stories seem to stem in part from the fact that the true story of Sergeant Niland and his brothers is often reported inaccurately. The character of Private James Ryan is a mixture of fact and fiction, with some of the fictional elements coming from the erroneous stories about the Niland brothers.
    The German credited as "Steamboat Willie"who was released by Capt. Miller is not the German who engaged and killed Pvt Stanley "Fish Mellish during hand-to-hand combat. "Steamboat Willie" was in the Heer (Army) of the Wehrmacht and the other was in the Waffen SS which was a paramilitary organization and not part of the Wehrmacht. Originally, the SS uniform differed from the Wehrmacht uniform-whereas the regular army wore field grey, the SS wore black, head to toe (although later the SS did adopt field grey and often wore camouflage pattern uniform. American troops were brown and they didn't wear jackboots. The lighting bolt SS insignia can be seen on the right collar lapel of the German as he passes Upham and reaches the bottom of the staircase.

  • @mlong1958
    @mlong1958 2 года назад +9

    You should watch Band of Brothers, a 10 part mini-series that tells the story of Easy Company, 101s Airborne , during WWII.

  • @maxwellalexander2962
    @maxwellalexander2962 2 года назад +2

    YUS finally.. Man I've been staring at this thing in their videos for a month waiting for it to unlock lol. Trixy is really cool and a lot of other words but I can't allow myself to simp no sir lmfao
    thanks for the videos lady, man it's strange I was starting to get used to the elf ears LOL

  • @twohorsesinamancostume7606
    @twohorsesinamancostume7606 2 года назад +13

    I'd say there's a valid justification to go to war. Like say... when one of the most brutal regimes imaginable that has no regard for human life whatsoever decides to start attacking it's neighbors. Stopping that kind of thing sounds extremely justified to me.

    • @firstlast9916
      @firstlast9916 2 года назад +1

      I think she meant that all countries should avoid war. Then there isn’t this back and forth justification of “revenge” and “self defense” and “retribution” and “freedom”. Every soldier that ever died thinks he was fighting on the right side of a war.

    • @CharlesMCFC
      @CharlesMCFC 2 года назад +1

      @@firstlast9916 yes but if one country decides to use the last diplomatic option available to them, war, then other countries can only choose to surrender, or fight back. I’m sure the Czechs would have rather fought Germany than surrendered to it.

    • @firstlast9916
      @firstlast9916 2 года назад

      @@CharlesMCFC yeah but that’s the Czechs justification for fighting a fight that Germany justified because of the sanctions that Europe imposed on Germany after WW1. I’m sure WW1 had a bunch of justifications too. It’s just endless back and forth nonsense.
      No different than two 4 year olds justifying kicking and punching each other in a playground. “Well he slapped me before I kicked him”. “But She called me stupid”. “Well he called me ugly”. And on and on it goes until somebody is seriously hurt. The only person that benefits from a war are politicians. Everybody else involved is a loser. Especially the dead soldiers.

    • @CharlesMCFC
      @CharlesMCFC 2 года назад

      @@firstlast9916 and your point is? The minute any one country or individual employs force, the only way out is force. Wagging your finger at the problem will never solve it. Look at Austria and Czechoslovakia. Didn’t save Poland, France or the USSR to bend over and give them to the meanie man to prevent an escalation to war. Only made him bolder.

    • @firstlast9916
      @firstlast9916 2 года назад

      @@CharlesMCFC my point is everybody is wrong. Self defense is the act of an idiot that didn’t think of leaving. WW1 caused WW2. What you say about invasions in WW2 can be traced back to WW1 invasions. Stop preparing for war. The worst saying in history is “in times of peace, prepare for war”. That saying has killed billions of people. But nobody ever stops saying it. Whoever says that is a blind soldier of hate.
      This is what we should go by as a species:
      “There is no greater illusion than fear, no greater wrong than preparing to defend yourself, no greater misfortune than having an enemy. Whoever can see through all fear will always be safe.” - Lao Tsu

  • @mikeaninger7388
    @mikeaninger7388 2 года назад +2

    The cost of freedom is high. To me, the moral is that the price was paid for ALL of us. And that we must live our lives in thanks to those who gave us our freedom, who laid down theirs. Live life like it’s a gift from them.

  • @Tommy1977777
    @Tommy1977777 2 года назад +5

    its tough watching an adorable little lady being saddened by these things. it adds to the already devastating events.

    • @jhanthony2
      @jhanthony2 2 года назад

      Adorable little lady? Super condescending.

  • @Tarantula_Fangs
    @Tarantula_Fangs 2 года назад +1

    If you guys are ever in the U.S. be sure to stop by "The Museum of Tolerance" in Los Angeles, CA and then "The National WWII Museum" in New Orleans, LA. Some of the best museums I've ever visited that will make you cry. Some of the most unique experiences you'll ever have.

  • @MrHws5mp
    @MrHws5mp 2 года назад +6

    The reason why war, or at least conflict of some kind, is inevitable is that, like it or not, it's baked into the reality of our situation. One human being has the physical capability to kill another human being, and thereby get their own way. Now this doesn't mean that violence is the _best_ way to resolve a conflict. It might, indeed, be the very _worst_ one, the one you should almost never resort to, but the fact remains that violence is ALWAYS an option, and everybody knows it, and that knowledge colours everybody's decisions, at every scale, from individuals to nations. All of the other ways of resolving conflicts of interest, negotiation, compromise, are good and better than violence 99% of the time and should absolutely be pursued to the maximum degree possible. But when they all fail, violence is always still there as an option, as eternal and unchanging as gravity. Violence works. It's a high-risk, high-cost strategy, but it works often enough that it's always on the table.

  • @markcain9312
    @markcain9312 2 года назад +1

    I remember going to see this with my grandfather when it came out. He left he theater after the opening battle crying like a baby. I had never seen him cry. He was always just this tough as nails Marine. He never would finish watching the movie. He said he was there and didn't need to see it onscreen like that.

  • @Pandaemoni
    @Pandaemoni 2 года назад +17

    One of the bigger inaccuracies in the movie was that almost all of the actors were too old. A Ranger captain like John Miller would have been around 25-26 on average, not 40 like Tom Hanks was. The average soldier would have been much closer in age to Trixie Blue herself, although there was a wide range, wars are generally fought by the young.

    • @lethaldose2000
      @lethaldose2000 2 года назад +2

      During WWII I believe that the officers were older than they are today. Not 40 years old but maybe 30-33. The trend of younger officers started furing the Vitenam war. So many officers were dying so fast the company leaders started becoming younger and younger.

    • @Fergus_0703
      @Fergus_0703 2 года назад +1

      It’s true that there are a lot of younger officers and troops due to the sudden expansion of the military at that time but that doesn’t mean that there are no older officers and troops.

    • @Pandaemoni
      @Pandaemoni 2 года назад +1

      @@lethaldose2000 Before they began shooting Saving Private Ryan, Steven Spielberg asked the film's histieical advisor, Stephen E. Ambrose (who wrote the book Band Of Brothers was based on) if there was anything, ANYTHING that should be changed to make the film more accurate. Ambrose responded with a "no" adding that there was nothing Spielverg wanted to hear. Spielberg was alarmed and demanded to know what Ambrose thought was inaccurate. After some hemming and hawwing Ambrose said "It's Hanks. We should get rid of him. He's too old. A ranger captain at Normandy would be in his late 20s, at most."
      Spielberg replied, “You’re a funny guy.”

  • @TerryYelmene
    @TerryYelmene 2 года назад +1

    that emotionally contorted face... defines the best possible reaction to SPR. thank you Blue.

  • @joshuacampbell7493
    @joshuacampbell7493 2 года назад +7

    Hey Trixy, watch Hacksaw Ridge after this. That movie will blow your mind.

  • @pnwcruiser
    @pnwcruiser 2 года назад +1

    One reason combat arms soldiers are treated roughly in training is to impart not just the mental and physical toughness they will need in combat but also a "warrior spirit". A service member trained to serve in a service specialty, such as an interpreter and map maker, would not get such training. This movie does a good job injecting such a character with Upham. That isn't to say there is anything wrong with differential training. All jobs are important in the military but they call for different abilities. In the US Army all enlisted personnel go through Basic Combat Training first, so they get a taste of it, but the great majority of service members are not combat arms soldiers rather they work in service and support specialties. BTW, this contrast is highlighted in another very well done war movie, "Fury" staring Brad Pitt as a tank commander, with his crew, in WWII.

  • @JamesASharp
    @JamesASharp 2 года назад +3

    Great reaction! This is a film that's capable of emotionally wrecking anybody. It's hard to find a reactor that likes Upham. And I don't blame any of them.

  • @RoberinoSERE
    @RoberinoSERE 4 месяца назад

    Times have changed drastically. In decades past no movie this realistic could be made to show what soldiers went thru and they would never want to explain and relive this to their families. This is why this movie was made 50yrs after D-day.