Vietnamese Girls React | Full Metal Jacket | (first time watch)

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 3,2 тыс.

  • @bakedAK85
    @bakedAK85 10 месяцев назад +1314

    I think a few things were lost in translation here. This movie is an anti war movie. It wasn't meant to glorify the war but to give a harsh view of the reality of the war. There's a lot of sarcasm thats misinterpreted as genuine statements. Joker , when he said he wanted to be the first kid on his block to get a confirmed kill, he was being sarcastic. He doesn't believe what he's saying. He doesn't believe in what's going on in Vietnam, the mission. He's being cynical.

    • @Hater20X
      @Hater20X 9 месяцев назад +160

      Yea Joker thinks the reporters question is stupid. So he gives a stupid sarcastic answer.. like " wtf do you think I'm doing here?. That I wanted to come here to kill Vietnamese people for glory?"

    • @MrPhooey442
      @MrPhooey442 9 месяцев назад +61

      For sure. I hated that it was interpreted in an offensive way but completely understand why it was. Misunderstandings suck.

    • @carlosbaja678
      @carlosbaja678 9 месяцев назад +16

      Much like STARSHIP TROOPERS and LOOK WHO'S BACK, this "anti-war" movie got me and my generation a war "hard on" This movie motivated a new generation of killahs

    • @jan_kisan
      @jan_kisan 9 месяцев назад +35

      @@carlosbaja678 well... i frankly can't understand how someone can watch this and think that war is cool. perhaps something was very wrong with your perspective to begin with, but i hope now you look at it critically.

    • @carlosbaja678
      @carlosbaja678 9 месяцев назад +19

      @@jan_kisan War was always here. Before man was, war waited for him. The ultimate trade awaiting its ultimate practitioner.

  • @MichaelHill-we7vt
    @MichaelHill-we7vt 9 месяцев назад +439

    When the girls both said together "It's Saigon!" without hesitation.......a testament to how superbly made the movie was.......what they thought was Saigon was in fact a derelict industrial site in London, where the film was shot.........director Stanley Kubrick wouldnt travel abroad so the entire movie was shot in the UK...... it's very convincing, though, isnt it???

    • @MrROKinROK
      @MrROKinROK 8 месяцев назад +27

      Taking nothing away from the filmmaking team, I'm not sure how much these girls' reaction to that scene is the testament you proclaim. Their frame of reference for 1960s Saigon would probably be the same as Kubrick's set designer's; namely, photographs of the city from the 1960s. These ladies probably have only seen it in text books or magazines.
      Some perspective: How much extra credence would you lend a filmmaker's vision of his 1960s Vegas period piece based on a similar "seal of approval" of a couple of UNLV students? Would their reaction be a testament to the fact that the filmmakers got 1960s Vegas right?

    • @thatonescrambler
      @thatonescrambler 8 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@MrROKinROKbased

    • @TheSpookiestgoose
      @TheSpookiestgoose 8 месяцев назад +7

      Bro said we’re not going to Vietnam, we have Saigon at home!!😡

    • @logicbomb2614
      @logicbomb2614 8 месяцев назад +3

      Well though a lot of this was filmed in England it was mostly the heavy combat in the end that was filmed in England, lot of the rest of the location stuff was shot abroad in Thailand, Phillipines and I think that one scene on the street one their only onlocation in nam.

    • @MakerInMotion
      @MakerInMotion 8 месяцев назад +3

      It shows how much clout Kubrick had earned by that point in his career too. He asked that Vietnam be recreated from scratch in London and the executives were like "Right away, Mr. Kubrick."

  • @chrisbrent7487
    @chrisbrent7487 8 месяцев назад +72

    All the bodies in the pit covered in lime were Vietnamese people that worked with the South Vietnamese government in positions of authority. The NLF and NVA had lists and when they entered Hue they executed them. They weren't killed by the Americans.

    • @rexmann1984
      @rexmann1984 2 месяца назад +2

      Yup, most of them would rather be alive than free.

  • @ianrastall
    @ianrastall 10 месяцев назад +1074

    There's a lot of irony here. Kubrick isn't really pro-war. He's very anti-war.

    • @hollywood3695
      @hollywood3695 10 месяцев назад +71

      But yet this movie recruited a boatload of Marines.😂😂😂

    • @ianrastall
      @ianrastall 10 месяцев назад +94

      @@hollywood3695I understand that, dude. But this is Kubrick. Of course he's going to make it exactly how it was. From what I understand, this is, in fact, that one that stood the test of time, even more than Platoon. If you've ever thought of reading Short Timers, that was a really good book.

    • @EvanSchatz
      @EvanSchatz 10 месяцев назад

      ​​@@hollywood3695it's definitely a pitfall of this type of movie - my cousin showed me this movie when i was a teen and i think it was a big part of turning me into my peacenik self, but I could see how it would fire up some other dudes

    • @bazil83
      @bazil83 10 месяцев назад +35

      @@hollywood3695 A Clockwork Orange encouraged many copycat crimes, but it was obviously never intended as such - it was a negative comment on society. As a result, Kubrick himself pulled the film, it was only unbanned after his death in '99 (or shortly thereafter).

    • @riphopfer5816
      @riphopfer5816 10 месяцев назад +24

      I know for a fact that *A Clockwork Orange* was available for rental on VHS in the mid 90s. I know this because my best mates and I first watched it in 8th grade, and I graduated in ‘99. As for copycat crimes-where on Earth did all these copycats find grand cockenbalz sculptures with which to beat people to death?

  • @8967Logan
    @8967Logan 8 месяцев назад +7

    It was funny at the end when these two ladies acknowledged that Vietnamese women fought for the country, but earlier they asked how the helicopter door gunner could shoot women and children. It was because the women and children were soldiers fighting for their country. The "smart" attack by the Vietnamese during the Tet holiday was a breach of a peace agreement that the North had made, kind of like when they broke the agreements made and invaded the sovereign state of South Vietnam which cause the government of South Vietnam to ask the US for military aid. It was not an invasion; the US was asked for assistance. Lastly, North Vietnam didn't win their invasion and conquest of South Vietnam until after the US left following the Paris Peace Accords. Again, in breach of the agreements North Vietnam invaded and toppled the South Vietnamese, they did not defeat the American military. We weren't even there anymore. They should probably also thank the Chinese and Russians that were backing North Vietnam, after all China is where Ho Chi Mihn was hiding during the world.

  • @briana1773
    @briana1773 10 месяцев назад +1667

    The Americans were fighting alongside the South Vietnamese against the communist North Vietnamese. It wasn't Vietnam vs America. It was South Vietnam vs North Vietnam and the US sided with South Vietnam. Australia, New Zealand, the Philippines, and others fought on the side of S Vietnam as well. The N Vietnamese were backed by China and the USSR.

    • @stuka80
      @stuka80 10 месяцев назад +5

      A civil war that the US had no business getting involved in, expanding a regional war and dragging a bunch of countries along with them. They did the same in China/Taiwan and Korea, fortunately for the Vietnamese, they won the war and kicked the Americans out of their country and unified it, saving them the fate that China and Korea are suffering from to this very day.

    • @VadulTharys
      @VadulTharys 10 месяцев назад +140

      @cannibalteddy6846 Very true had the US not propped up the south and worked for a national referendum instead of a war, the people would have voted for one nation, and the "communists" would have won because they were very popular with the common people.

    • @eq1373
      @eq1373 10 месяцев назад +91

      @cannibalteddy6846.....according to N Vietnam

    • @unclebounce1495
      @unclebounce1495 10 месяцев назад

      @@VadulTharys False. This was classic evyl communism, which still needs purged from the world in every place it remains - a cancer of criminality on all forms of human civility. All they did was rig the election for their "constitution" and banned opposing Viet factions. They wanted to conquer, and ho chih ming was occupied by the chinese army and forced/controleld at first. The US was original, under the evil Franklin Commie Roosevelt, on the side of Viet Minh and tried to peacekeep/advocate on their behalf and defended them against the allied powers. The CIA even aided them with their commie usurpation by assassinating Ngo Ding Diem, who was anti-commie pro-nationalist. ultimately, though, Europe started the war. Then Viet Minh revealed their true evil colors and immediately funded commie revolutions in neighboring countries (and immediatel went for typical commie expansionism via Laos and Khymer). The opposing factions united to form south vietnam to repel communism. USSR and China immediately supplied Viet Minh and USA withdrew their support and joined the more fair and humane south vietnamese. Thus the Invaders from the north started the war immediately after WWII (indochina war) then feudal local wars with viet factions then wars with neighboring countries, all as the puppets of USSR/China to continue the expansion of global communism. Went the US withdrew, the next years saw what they always see under evyl commie rule, hundreds of thousands of imprisons, enslayvements, and executions/genocides, and all the "new government" votes (totally democratic) bannedd everyone but the commie faction, and then they followed Mao's recipe and immediately did forced redistribution of the "rich" while also killing the middle class and even upper lower class (until it was all redistributed to people in their original Viet Minh faction, which was the whole point all along- hostile theft by thieves, commie 101). ho chih Ming later apologized for the "aggressive" and "incorrect" targeted of landholders.. but of course most were already dead and the land wasn't returned, so it was a fake apology.
      Sadly, the propaganda machine, not the opposition's forces, cost us that war. Politicians interferred and constantly hamstringed the military, which drug it out and opened the door for all sorts of political corruption. Saying we lost a fight when we're not allowed to fight back is a joke. Evyl paid off politicians created a conflict to grab land and resources, profit off of the anarchy and war, and exploit the black markets created by the anarchy, just like what is happening today in Ukrayne and Palestyne. Same evyl politicians sticking their nose where it doesn't belong because they want to cut deals.

    • @HeyitspaIac
      @HeyitspaIac 10 месяцев назад +60

      ​@@eq1373and the CIA and DoD

  • @gazoontight
    @gazoontight 10 месяцев назад +266

    In the interview scene, Joker is making jokes. He is making fun of the official attitude. When he says that he wants to be the first kid on his block with a confirmed kill, he is using a line from old television commercials. Companies used to advertise toys by telling the children to be the first kid on their block to own the toy.

    • @Movie.Munchies
      @Movie.Munchies  10 месяцев назад +110

      Ok I am happy at least he wasn't serious when he spoke those things

    • @procrastinator6902
      @procrastinator6902 10 месяцев назад +23

      That's not exactly what's going on. Joker's entire character is about "duality of man". How no man is one sided, neither entirely good or evil. It's why he makes that statement and also why he wears a peace symbol, but also has "born to kill" written on his helmet cover.

    • @gazoontight
      @gazoontight 10 месяцев назад +36

      @@procrastinator6902 I remember the television commercials. Joker was joking.

    • @gazoontight
      @gazoontight 9 месяцев назад +17

      @@wirebrushproductions1001 That's true. But that same line came from television commercials for toys in the early 1960s.

    • @Mottleydude1
      @Mottleydude1 9 месяцев назад +11

      @@Movie.MunchiesNo, he wasn’t serious at all. That’s why they call him Joker. 😊
      He was being ironic. You know? Like British humor where you laugh three days later. 😅

  • @mactek6033
    @mactek6033 4 месяца назад +5

    My first roommate in college was Vietnamese. Stevie Nguyen. He was a crazy kid and very opinionated. He hated my poster of a tropical beach with palm trees because it reminded him of Vietnam. After he watched Full Metal Jacket, he asked the guys in the dorm to cut his hair like the soldiers in the film. I remember questioning him if this is really what he wanted to do, but he was adamant. His older brother was not happy when he found out.

  • @rustneversleeps85
    @rustneversleeps85 9 месяцев назад +203

    The Vietnamese soldiers during the Tet offensive scene are actually one of the many "suicide squads" that attacked American troops at the time. That's why they run into the American base just shooting, without seeking cover.
    It was mentioned in the earlier scene how American targets have been overrun by suicide squads lately, and the men around the table sort of let out a disillusioned moan because it's the worst case scenario. So during the Tet New Year, that's what Joker and his group get to experience first-hand.

    • @davisworth5114
      @davisworth5114 8 месяцев назад +2

      No suicide squads at Tet.

    • @jayslomine4280
      @jayslomine4280 8 месяцев назад

      @@davisworth5114wrong
      What do you call the attack on the embassy then?
      It was suicide and they knew it

    • @jb7483
      @jb7483 8 месяцев назад +17

      ​@davisworth5114 you are wrong, or you never heard of the 19-man suicide squad that seized the courtyard of the U.S. Embassy and held it for six hours until an assault force of U.S. paratroopers landed by helicopter on the building's roof and routed them.

    • @JML6988
      @JML6988 3 месяца назад

      Based on the Tet attack, we know the movie was set in early 1968.

    • @R.Tafolla
      @R.Tafolla 3 месяца назад +1

      @@davisworth5114no war in Ba Sing Se

  • @vincentlecornu201
    @vincentlecornu201 10 месяцев назад +529

    My father was one of these guys. He was marine infantry in South Vietnam in 1969. He spent 9 months in a hospital in Japan for burns he received. He self-medicated his PTSD with drugs until he cleaned up in the 1980s. My parents' marriage didn't survive, so I was the child of a busy working mother. The effects of the Vietnam War had a tremendous impact on Gen X in the U.S.

    • @WillsChild
      @WillsChild 9 месяцев назад +46

      A shit war that took too many good lives on both sides!

    • @JASmith-oy8db
      @JASmith-oy8db 9 месяцев назад +15

      Very insightful, fellow Gen Xer. I've thought a lot about how we were affected by my dad's hard experiences as a Marine '67-'71.

    • @bretcantwell4921
      @bretcantwell4921 9 месяцев назад +13

      Gex X (68 vintage) who grew up military and have a keen awareness of military history. I had a Marine vet coworker who did a deployment and I asked when. He said, "69-70" and I just replied with "ooof".

    • @freddieNyack
      @freddieNyack 9 месяцев назад +6

      Yes.......We survived that madness.

    • @Steve-gx9ot
      @Steve-gx9ot 9 месяцев назад +1

      Not ZKUST GEN X. BUT ALL!@

  • @Short_Round1999
    @Short_Round1999 9 месяцев назад +92

    The man playing the role of the drill instructor in the beginning is a real Vietnam veteran who fought in the Vietnam war. He was brought on to be a consultant for the film, but somehow he ended up being the actor because what he was teaching was how he was actually trained when he was in boot camp and Kubrick loved it cuz it was real

    • @ianpalmer1482
      @ianpalmer1482 9 месяцев назад +12

      He was actually a Senior Drill Instructor in the actual Marine Corps.

    • @davisworth5114
      @davisworth5114 8 месяцев назад +4

      Wrong, he said it was not real and that he would be court-martialed for driving Pyle mad.

    • @gogogoooooooooo
      @gogogoooooooooo 7 месяцев назад +8

      @@davisworth5114Which adds to the realism to the build up of Pyle killing him. Every military training, especially basic training, to this day uses Full Metal Jacket as a direct reference on how to NOT treat soldiers as drill sergeants/instructors. It doesn’t mean this never happened though.

  • @JaiOfficial2795
    @JaiOfficial2795 10 месяцев назад +120

    To clarify on your thought that Pyle might've become the leader after killing the drill instructor. He would've definitely either spent life in prison or been put to death.

    • @ogeazyd5604
      @ogeazyd5604 10 месяцев назад +43

      I actually said out loud, “PROMOTED?? HE JUST KILLED HIS COMMANDING OFFICER LOL”

    • @BigMoore1232
      @BigMoore1232 10 месяцев назад +6

      During war things get even worse for committing any kind of crime so yea he could most definitely have faced a death penalty. If he would have been an officer most definitely you're dying. He is a gunnery Sargent which is a senior non commissioned officer so who knows.

    • @tommcewan7936
      @tommcewan7936 10 месяцев назад +20

      What's really tragic about Pyle is that there's a good chance he's intended to represent one of "McNamara's Morons;" the USA was having such difficulty training enough men to fight in Vietnam that General McNamara made the controversial decision to drastically lower the mental health and intelligence requirements necessary to be passed fit for service. These mentally substandard servicemen had triple the casualty rate of everyone else when sent into battle. In the film, it's pretty obvious from the start that Pyle is woefully out of his depth and should not be there; you can't force a person to learn what their brain simply doesn't have the capacity to understand.

    • @prismpyre7653
      @prismpyre7653 10 месяцев назад +3

      You're right of course-- in bootcamp. But you think soldiers don't kill their COs in the field? And get away with it, sometimes? It's not for nothin' they put that in "Platoon"

    • @JaiOfficial2795
      @JaiOfficial2795 10 месяцев назад +10

      @@prismpyre7653 no, american soldiers definitely do not kill their COs in the field 💀 you maybe referring to specific incidents in the past, but that is so beyond rare lmao

  • @OneThousandHomoDJs
    @OneThousandHomoDJs 10 месяцев назад +238

    2:35 -- yep, that scene was real. The actors went in that day NOT knowing they'd be getting the haircuts that day. The looks on their faces are genuine.
    My dad was at Quantico during this era, and he says the portrayal of the gunny was not an exaggeration. R Lee Ermey was just really good at it, having actually done that job for years.

    • @solarchos4352
      @solarchos4352 9 месяцев назад +33

      Interesting side note: R Lee Ermey was actually a retired Sergeant, but after this movie came out the U.S. Marine Corps _officially_ promoted him to the rank of Gunnery Sergeant SOLELY because of his role in this movie.

    • @bretcantwell4921
      @bretcantwell4921 9 месяцев назад +11

      ​@@solarchos4352This also wasn't his first role as a DI. He was going to acting school in the Philippines when they were casting for The Boys in Company C. He was brought in as junior DI but was so good he was "promoted".

    • @gabrielesolletico6542
      @gabrielesolletico6542 9 месяцев назад

      Interesting.@@solarchos4352

    • @Saltpork305
      @Saltpork305 9 месяцев назад +11

      @@bretcantwell4921 The original drill instructor for the film ended up being the door gunner in the helicopter scene. The 'well trained VC' guy.

    • @jomamma1750
      @jomamma1750 9 месяцев назад +4

      My Dad told me that Ermy was the exact DI that he got in the Air Force. It seemed so real to him that it freaked him out a bit. Excellent acting.

  • @joshuamcdowell1460
    @joshuamcdowell1460 10 месяцев назад +13

    We didn't invade Vietnam 😂😂😂 we were brought in to help South Vietnam defend itself from North Vietnam, which was invading the South and committing genocides and horrible other warcrimes. And the North Vietnamese government was doing the same to its own people. With support from China, which is also known for massive human rights violations towards its own people. The side that tricked civilians, women and children, into blowing themselves up, was not the good guys.

    • @indridcold3762
      @indridcold3762 10 месяцев назад +3

      They have no clue

    • @FranzFerdinand76
      @FranzFerdinand76 Месяц назад +2

      It's a matter of perspective. To the average Vietnamese person, north or south, who really didn't care about the political machinations behind the whole thing, America was just another foreign nation invading their land. They just fought a war with French colonists, so to them it was just more of the same. Perspective is important. No different than a British person living in the 1700's thinking American's were nothing but a bunch of ungrateful rebels that didn't want to pay their taxes.

  • @cavecookie1
    @cavecookie1 9 месяцев назад +163

    The scene at the end, after Joker kills the helpless sniper in a twisted act of mercy, when he gets the "thousand yard stare" always gives me chills...every time. So much said in those few silent seconds. Matthew Modine absolutely nailed that whole scene...in fact, the entire cast was outstanding throughout the movie.

    • @drijam2106
      @drijam2106 9 месяцев назад

      'helpless' sniper?! Can y'all tell this silly goose is a liberal? Wounded, yes, not helpless, she killed at least what, 2?

    • @stegwise
      @stegwise 9 месяцев назад +5

      if i remember correctly Modine created that ending after weeks of psychological torture from Kubrick. He and Kubrick had been close during the filming and Kubrick had asked Modine for an ending to the film. when Modine hesitated, Kubrick became cold and broke off the friendship suddenly. then Kubrick entertained endings from some of the other cast members which somewhat enraged Modine and inspired him to present this ending, that it was Joker that has to kill the girl in cold blood, that he is ultimately unable to escape the consequences of war. Kubrick immediately accepted this contribution without question.

    • @cavecookie1
      @cavecookie1 9 месяцев назад +5

      Thanks for the info! Kubrick was notorious for tormenting his actors. He put Shelley Duvall through hell during the filming of "The Shining". Made for some outstanding performances.@@stegwise

    • @drijam2106
      @drijam2106 9 месяцев назад +5

      @@stegwise Not saying this is not true, however, Kubrick was not the type to ask cast members for an ending, lol, what Director even does that, he was a man that had the cast do endless takes.

    • @stegwise
      @stegwise 9 месяцев назад

      you can look it up pretty easily. i think i heard the story either in the Leon Vitaly documentary or in an in depth youtube doc about the film.but a simple google search returned several articles. my take on the story was that just in the exact way that he manipulated performances from exhausted actors he also manipulated Modine into providing a better ending and into having the guts to stand up to the director, asking all the other actors to provide endings and they all had one at the ready (good or not) as a way of taunting Modine.@@drijam2106

  • @NefariousKoel
    @NefariousKoel 10 месяцев назад +232

    Found out, a few years ago, I have a second cousin who is half Vietnamese. He had been looking for his biological father, an American, for a long time. After his DNA test showed he's related to our family, he contacted us to see whether my (then deceased) dad was the father. My sister and I were very curious as to whether we had a half-brother. Unfortunately the details of my dad's service in Vietnam didn't quite match up with what his mom had told him, so it was a more distant relative of ours. Poor guy had been looking for his soldier father, who had told his mother he would take her back to the US with him, for decades. Just disappeared. Probably died over there. Anyway, our cousin told us a bit about his childhood when the war ended. He said right after the war, when the South fell and the re-education camps started, she had to dye his hair black (it was brown-ish) because she was terrified they'd take him away and he'd be .. disappeared.
    I think he eventually emigrated to the US.

    • @dragonsword7370
      @dragonsword7370 9 месяцев назад +5

      Dang, well if he's in the States, and he sounds like a bad person, you could meet up sometime in the future. In the flesh as it were. I don't mean to be disparaging of the man but I don't trust people much and I can get a decent read on a person even through a video screen. But that's a lot of trust in someone you barely know to meet together. I hope your future relationship with him and his family goes well!

    • @yezz-_-3570
      @yezz-_-3570 9 месяцев назад +1

      So did you do a DNA test? That's the only certain way to find out. There's quite a good chance that at least someone was lying about something.

    • @NefariousKoel
      @NefariousKoel 9 месяцев назад +6

      @@yezz-_-3570 He contacted us due to our DNA test, and was a 2nd cousin. Nothing suspect about it, didn't ask for anything. Just looking for his biological dad he never found. Which, apparently, was a distant relative we never knew.

    • @yezz-_-3570
      @yezz-_-3570 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@NefariousKoel oh I meant your parents or his mother could've lied, I never thought he was lying haha.

    • @EvilGeoff61
      @EvilGeoff61 8 месяцев назад +5

      @@NefariousKoel - if you and he are 2nd cousins, your father could not have been his father. Technically speaking, your relationship with the 2nd cousin's father would be "first cousin once removed". Siblings of parents are the "aunts and uncles", the children of those siblings are first cousins. The children of those first cousins are then second cousins to each other. Second cousin" means ONE of your parents was 1st cousins with one of his parents. Also, since first cousins of parents are usually in the same general age range/generation as one's parents, many families use "Aunt Fanny" or "Uncle Percy" to address those cousins, even though they are not siblings.
      SO... Who has a first cousin/"uncle" that served in Vietnam during the right time frame? Doesn't have to be your father. Your mother could have the 1st cousin who was the DNA donor for your new found 2nd cousin.
      As far as we have been able to determine, DNA doesn't lie. But, people are people, and being people, they often do. It isn't exactly uncommon for troops stationed overseas to lie about certain activities when they come home/get out. The dad may have been stationed one place, but R&R'd elsewhere, or had several temporary assignments while having a single location listed as their permanent duty station. Or, someone lied to the Vietnamese mother so her information wasn't 100% spot on. ALSO not uncommon. Or maybe an aunt/uncle had an illegitimate child outside of the view of the family, who then became the DNA donor for your new second cousins.
      I hope they are able to further trace their ancestor, if for no other reason, having a more accurate medical background for their own health.

  • @TheBuckMuscles
    @TheBuckMuscles 9 месяцев назад +44

    I love that you pointed out which actors were not native Vietnamese speakers.

    • @JML6988
      @JML6988 3 месяца назад

      I watched an old WW2 era movie that was set in Guam. The actor supposedly speaking native Guamanian, was not actually speaking the language. Rather, he was speaking Tagalog. But American audiences wouldn't have known.

  • @Manetho72
    @Manetho72 9 месяцев назад +127

    Congrats, the lady on the left caught one of the most important yet overlooked parts of this movie. Animal Mother is what Private Pyle would have been if he had lived. And you caught it the first time you watched it!
    The girl on the right had Joker figured out. Jocker wasn't a killer and only killed the sniper because he had to, as well as putting her out of her misery. He wasn't a sociopath like Animal Mother.

    • @Hay-x7p
      @Hay-x7p 8 месяцев назад +5

      Animal Mother was the hero of Canton. The man they call Jayne.

    • @Manetho72
      @Manetho72 8 месяцев назад

      @@Hay-x7p ?

    • @Manetho72
      @Manetho72 8 месяцев назад

      @@Hay-x7p ?

    • @russell_szabados
      @russell_szabados 8 месяцев назад +1

      Awesome insight. I didn't catch that connection.

    • @XSRKRXSRKRXSZKZXSZKZ
      @XSRKRXSRKRXSZKZXSZKZ 7 месяцев назад +6

      These girls makes much more sense than other movie reactors

  • @Frank_San_Nicolas
    @Frank_San_Nicolas 9 месяцев назад +57

    Wow I never thought I'd ever find out that girl does not speak Vietnamese well from actual Vietnamese girls! Great to hear commentary from all sides.

    • @batalorian7997
      @batalorian7997 9 месяцев назад +5

      I believe that actress was actually from France

    • @gogogoooooooooo
      @gogogoooooooooo 7 месяцев назад +4

      @@batalorian7997Yeah, even the very simple words were not pronounced well. No idea what she said except bu qua (too big) and em chiu (I can handle it). Definitely sounds like a native English speaker.
      The pimp actor is definitely Vietnamese. Both his broken English and Vietnamese were spot on.

  • @RustyHall-y6n
    @RustyHall-y6n 10 месяцев назад +193

    Thi and Hella, I hope I got your names right. I cherish your reactions. One of the first words you used to describe the film was “dehumanizing” and that is exactly what Stanley Kubrick wanted the audience to understand. He and many westerners hated the Vietnam war. So you might consider this an antiwar film not a war film. I have been married to a Vietnamese war refugee for 26 years. Her family nearly starved to death AFTER the war because her dad fought for South Vietnam alongside Americans. They probably wouldn’t appreciate you two rooting for the communist Vietnamese but I understand how you are just taking pride in your people. It’s honest and primal to be tribal. It’s complicated but i still think your analysis is sweet and thoughtful. I recommend Ken Burns Vietnam documentary if you want a more complete and fair explanation of that time in world history.

    • @Movie.Munchies
      @Movie.Munchies  10 месяцев назад +64

      *Chi and Hela, thank you for your nice comment!

    • @808INFantry11X
      @808INFantry11X 9 месяцев назад +16

      ​@@Movie.Munchiesbeen in the United States Army and the United States Navy this how Basic was its hard because it's to get folks ready to go to war. Trust me the Marine Corps is on another level in terms of mindset.

    • @jayjayjames2332
      @jayjayjames2332 9 месяцев назад +1

      Honestly it seemed like they have been taught that the Vietnam war was the US vs Vietnam. It wouldn't be surprising for a communist country to dabble in quarter truths. I came away with the impression that they didn't even know South Vietnam existed.

    • @treycantrell8590
      @treycantrell8590 9 месяцев назад +29

      It does break down to tribal pride. I'm a Marine corps veteran and a native American. They deserve that pride because we left the war. Unfortunately we allowed politicians to dictate the war. In the end 2 Vietnam's turned into one. We unfortunately didn't keep on pushing and kept on listening to noncombatants. I oppose the civilian deaths, but ultimately we had superior tactics as soon as we could figure something out. It is literally because the people who were on drugs and thought communism was ok that we lost

    • @rantroom2023
      @rantroom2023 9 месяцев назад +9

      I have to agree with you. I am guessing they are from the North. I got married in Tam Ky in 2001 near Da Nang. I learned that the anti Ho Chi Minh people still call the city Saigon. In Canada some still fly the old flag

  • @timoterava7108
    @timoterava7108 9 месяцев назад +102

    The commentators didn't understand, that the Vietnamese civilians in the mass grave had been murdered by the North Vietnamese.

    • @Front-Toward-Enemy
      @Front-Toward-Enemy 8 месяцев назад

      Probably because they have been taught that dead civilians must mean that the Americans killed them.

    • @meganoob12
      @meganoob12 7 месяцев назад

      yep, because these people refused to be "re-educated" meaning they refused to become communist.

    • @Stratigoz
      @Stratigoz 24 дня назад +1

      American propaganda.

    • @Silly81
      @Silly81 4 дня назад

      @@Stratigoz Exactly

  • @gazoontight
    @gazoontight 10 месяцев назад +167

    What the others did to Pyle is called a blanket party. It’s the group punishing someone who keeps making trouble for everyone else.

    • @Movie.Munchies
      @Movie.Munchies  10 месяцев назад +74

      That was such a horrible scene to watch

    • @Mottleydude1
      @Mottleydude1 9 месяцев назад +54

      @@Movie.MunchiesIndeed it was but it was also one of the most important scenes.
      Kubrick split this movie into two parts for good reasons. It was his goal to show how dehumanization is used in war.
      In the first part is the first step in dehumanization as we watch these young men being dehumanized into soldiers willing and able to kill. Leonard Lawrence (AKA Gomer) exemplifies this degradation of these young men’s moral fiber that ultimately leads to Leonard’s insanity and suicide.
      Then Kubrick shows us the second step of dehumanization which is the dehumanization of the enemy which ultimately plays out as the dehumanization and death of a 13 year old school girl who was left behind to die so the stronger soldiers could live to fight another day.
      These two examples of how the methods of dehumanization are used in war are horrifically brought home to us by the suicide of a fat, simple minded, country boy and the death of a prepubescent school girl. Both of which are extremely shocking.
      Kubrick certainly drives home the horror of such dehumanization with both scenes brilliantly and in a manner that leaves your nerves raw and abused. As it should. This is probably the best movie ever made about the horror of war.

    • @samualszatmary
      @samualszatmary 9 месяцев назад +8

      Code red comes to mind

    • @thefinerthingsinlife4557
      @thefinerthingsinlife4557 9 месяцев назад +5

      Another great movie! A Few Good Men!@@samualszatmary

    • @davisworth5114
      @davisworth5114 9 месяцев назад

      @@Mottleydude1Only assholes took part in blanket parties. They should have had a blanket party for Sgt. Hartman, for being a profane sadist who drove Pyle to madness, murder, and suicide. I'm a Vietnam veteran and find this a very mediocre portrayal of the war and the characters in the real war. Watch "The Anderson Platoon" for the most realistic, grunts' eye view of the war.

  • @florianb.9521
    @florianb.9521 10 месяцев назад +109

    The drill instructor was a real marine sergeant. His name R. Lee Ermey.

    • @URangryX
      @URangryX 10 месяцев назад +20

      R. Lee Ermey was a great guy who took an especial interest in the Second Amendment (Personal ownership of Firearms) during the end years of his life. He was even sponsored by Glock at one point. He was a very bold, kind-hearted man and loved America.

  • @SFforlife
    @SFforlife 9 месяцев назад +121

    What a unique experience to see this film with two Vietnamese women. Much of this movie is very anti-war and actually very critical of it but in a sarcastic way. Such a horrible horrible conflict. Senseless and sad. Everyone involved was affected for the worse. Great review though, you two are always so smart and have great insight.

    • @e4jasperi
      @e4jasperi 5 месяцев назад +4

      But I kind of feel bad that all the irony was missed by them.

  • @curtischase2126
    @curtischase2126 10 месяцев назад +34

    Interesting reaction video from current Vietnamese generation. The scene with the dead Vietnamese covered in lye, they misunderstood as they were killed by Americans instead of “their side”.
    Also, I never thought about it but current Vietnamese view Vietnamese-Americans as traitors.

    • @attackmaster519
      @attackmaster519 9 месяцев назад

      @@uncleho1945The VC started and waged a civil war against the government of South Vietnam, and when they were too weak to continue going were supported by a North Vietnamese invasion of the South. This also included helping to overthrow the governments in Laos and Cambodia, installing pro-Communist governments, and using their nations as springboards to launch attacks into the South.
      Why are you pinning all 3 million deaths on the victims of the war? The South Vietnamese Government and her allies were the defenders, not the aggressors. If you break into my house and start trying to kill me, and during the struggle other people get injured, why is the blood on my hands? The damage would not have been caused if the home invader didn't break-in.
      Also, what the fuck is with the "" around the massacres at Hue? Is the murder of 10,000 innocent people not a massacre to you? Never mind the fact that the numbers are wrong, as the current accepted death toll for Communist war crimes in Hue are somewhere between 2 to 6 thousand, not 10,000 ( I know that makes the Communist technically look better, because its killing less people. But the truth is important, even if I don't like who it supports)

    • @demianperez1182
      @demianperez1182 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@uncleho1945ye and there's still many unedetenated bombs in Cambodia, and I kinda feel guilty about that I hope the people the best of luck❤

    • @simontide6780
      @simontide6780 9 месяцев назад

      ​​@@uncleho1945No one arguing about US crimes but Vietnam commies killed millions of people in Cambodia. U just brainwashed

  • @chicagoartistjon_3000
    @chicagoartistjon_3000 10 месяцев назад +87

    I think in your analysis of the joker character you were both right. He even talks about it when he is being questioned by the officer about the peace button and born to kill on his helmet. He responds I don’t know I think it’s about the duality of man. Joker is being pulled both directions. Cold brutality and helping people.

    • @makhnovist
      @makhnovist 9 месяцев назад +4

      Its the jungian thing

    • @johngeiger3770
      @johngeiger3770 9 месяцев назад

      When Joker meets Animal Mother everything makes sense. Polar opposites/kindred spirits.

    • @mattdouglas1050
      @mattdouglas1050 9 месяцев назад

      Dude, just because they only show snippets of the movie and their reaction to it doesn't mean they didn't watch it all. They got it. They talk about it at the end of the video. I thought the movie itself was letting the audience question whether Joker had humanity left or if the experience had turned him into a psychopath as well.

  • @83fleafan
    @83fleafan 8 месяцев назад +64

    The "singing" while running is called a "cadence", it keeps them in sync as they run/march.... Also ensures that they keep the breathing up.

  • @jackwalsh6758
    @jackwalsh6758 10 месяцев назад +47

    32:27 Thi was right. Animal Mother and Leonard are both big guys that talk like they're a bit slow at times.
    I think Animal Mother represents the marine that Leonard could have been.

    • @griffinrhodes2089
      @griffinrhodes2089 10 месяцев назад +13

      Well, there's also the parallels of "McNamara's Morons" which was a unit US conscripts with low IQs were put in, more so, Leonard, than Mother. It was kind of inhumane.

  • @alanmcclure9546
    @alanmcclure9546 10 месяцев назад +48

    You said it as well as I have ever heard, "In war nobody can keep the hands clean." So well said! Blessings

  • @rm2kking
    @rm2kking 9 месяцев назад +9

    My grandfather was a mini gunner in a helicopter. And yes he does feel awful about all the people he shot. But it was kill or be killed.
    The copter got shot down by a missile. The pilots last thing to do was to land it safely as he could, even while burning alive. They tried to save him but he was burnt to death from the missile.
    That man is a hero, and my grandfather had his name engraved in a plaque, to remember him forever.
    If it wasn’t for that man I wouldn’t be here today.

  • @MarkyMark8484
    @MarkyMark8484 10 месяцев назад +58

    My dad served as a sharpshooter in the Vietnam war and told me stories that i would never want anyone to experience. He also said boot camp was pretty similar to this movie. Things were a bit different back then. Great reaction from you both.

    • @HollywoodMarine0351
      @HollywoodMarine0351 10 месяцев назад +10

      Sharpshooter is a rifle or pistol marksmanship qualification and not a occupation unless you are confusing with 0317 MOS: Scout Sniper.

    • @MarkyMark8484
      @MarkyMark8484 9 месяцев назад +3

      @HollywoodMarine0351 Yes you're right. I had to reclarify that with my dad. He had the sharpshooter medal.

    • @HollywoodMarine0351
      @HollywoodMarine0351 9 месяцев назад

      @@MarkyMark8484 YUT! 👍

    • @tylerfreal6472
      @tylerfreal6472 9 месяцев назад

      nam vets always say sus stuff that unless its complete fairytails i give the benefit ofthe doubt @@HollywoodMarine0351

    • @davidreed6264
      @davidreed6264 9 месяцев назад +1

      Alot different than the boots today

  • @ddave7026
    @ddave7026 10 месяцев назад +44

    The Vietnam war had started, my uncle and his classmates had just graduated high school. In the parking Lot they had taken off the caps and gowns and taking pictures etc. The buses were there waiting to take them to boot camp. When this movie came out we went to see it. He couldn't even sit through 10 minutes of it. It just brought back such horrible memories for him

  • @TellTheSpartans
    @TellTheSpartans 8 месяцев назад +6

    I don't imagine the Vietnamese are told about what the NVA did to the civilian population while it held Hue in 1968.

  • @Ewilds
    @Ewilds 9 месяцев назад +24

    The Vietnam war was not a war between Vietnam and the United States. It was a war between North and South Vietnam; North Vietnam was Communist and wanted to reunify Vietnam into one country. The NVA and Viet Cong fought against the American forces and the South Vietnamese forces, the Army of the Republic of Vietnam. U.S. forces never invaded North Vietnam with ground troops, which made it difficult to fight the war to a resolution.

    • @2005wsoxfan
      @2005wsoxfan 8 месяцев назад

      Having China on their border helped a lot too.

    • @Front-Toward-Enemy
      @Front-Toward-Enemy 8 месяцев назад +1

      If anything, you could say that North Vietnam were the invaders. They invaded South Vietnam first.

  • @willmartin7293
    @willmartin7293 10 месяцев назад +84

    It is so interesting to hear your perspectives, Chi and Hela. To answer a couple of your questions, the word "Head" in the Marines and Navy means bathroom. And the term "Drill Instructor" is the teacher of the recruits. 👍😊 Also, the Marine boot camp scenes are very accurate. It was exactly the kind of recruit training that I experienced. Although at the end of training, we did not shoot our Drill Instructor.

    • @AceMoonshot
      @AceMoonshot 10 месяцев назад +8

      At the time, this version of the drill instructor was kind of over the top. A much more accurate version is from The Boys of Company C. The same actor played the DI. Kubrick saw him in that film and told him to amp it up almost into parody. In Boys of Company C the DI is still a hard ass but more realistic.
      Funny thing is, a lot of later DI copied their behavior based on Full Metal Jacket.

    • @willmartin7293
      @willmartin7293 10 месяцев назад +21

      I went to Marine boot camp in July 1973, and I can vouch that the portrayal of the Drill Instructor in this movie is exactly what I experienced. The acting was not an exaggeration or "over the top."@@AceMoonshot

    • @PropperNaughtyGeezer
      @PropperNaughtyGeezer 10 месяцев назад +5

      "we did not shoot our Drill Instructor." 🤣 I thought it was part of the training.

    • @willmartin7293
      @willmartin7293 10 месяцев назад +8

      The end of the boot camp scenes in Full Metal Jacket is the only unrealistic part of the movie, because live ammo is strictly monitored on the rifle range by the DI's and the range coaches. There is no way Pyle would have been able to steal 20 rounds of ammo and keep it secret all the way to the last night of recruit training. Plus, the only time you have a magazine is during 2nd phase when you're at the rifle range and learning basic infantry tactics which ends a month before graduation. Lastly, you turn-in your rifle about a week before graduation, so Pyle would not have had ammo, a magazine, or a rifle during that last night of boot camp. @@PropperNaughtyGeezer

    • @georgeconway4360
      @georgeconway4360 10 месяцев назад +4

      The battle was in Hue Tet Jan 30, 1968 to late February. The initial reaction by the USMC was to send two infantry companies 300 to support the MACV and ARVN in Hue. They were not aware the VC and NVA had moved 10,000 troops around and into the city. 2,800 to 6,000 civilians killed, 142 Marines killed, Army 1st CAV 68 Killed. Suggest the book Hue 1968 by Mark Bowden tells the story by interviews of participants on both the NVA and U.S.A. side.

  • @jonnym4670
    @jonnym4670 9 месяцев назад +11

    1.1 million North Vietnamese and Viet Cong fighters. 50,000 Americans and 250,000 South Vietnamese died in this war
    from the sounds of it they never learned it was a civil war and we backed the South and China backed the North both sides were brutal but it was the North attacking the South we were helping defend not invading
    sounds like their government really feed them a false history about the war

  • @drakeswarchannel2530
    @drakeswarchannel2530 10 месяцев назад +252

    Excellent work ladies! Analyses of this movie from your perspective is very much appreciated.
    The scene at 31:40 was of South Vietnamese civilians who were ordered by the NVA to come for political re-education. They were victims of the North Vietnamese, not the Americans.
    The soldiers had become desensitized to death and a percentage would later suffer PTSD as a result.

    • @dduff1921
      @dduff1921 10 месяцев назад +51

      Yeah I was going to say there may have been a misunderstanding here. I also think this is not the only thing that was misunderstood.

    • @drakeswarchannel2530
      @drakeswarchannel2530 10 месяцев назад +1

      Yep. you are on point .@@dduff1921

    • @ArtofFreeSpeech
      @ArtofFreeSpeech 10 месяцев назад +33

      Yeah, seemed kind of obvious they were never told about the NVA atrocities and war crimes--not that I would expect their country to admit them, but...

    • @davidarnold9324
      @davidarnold9324 10 месяцев назад +32

      @@ArtofFreeSpeech
      They also kept saying that America invaded their country and never mentioned that we were there helping to defend the South Vietnamese from the North Vietnamese. America never invaded North Vietnam and many South Vietnamese fought alongside us and live in America now after they had to escape from the collapse of South Vietnam. I think it was a collosal mistake that America got involed in the war and it was conducted in a completely incompetent way; like most of our wars since; but I feel like these very nice young ladies have a distorted view of the history. Though I thoroughly enjoyed hearing their reactions to the movie!

    • @ryutsureit7651
      @ryutsureit7651 9 месяцев назад +12

      @@davidarnold9324 Both American and Vietnam propaganda makes it hard for either of them to get a clear view of the war. All sides view themselves as the heroes and the others as the villains and teach it that way. That's why Americans and Vietnamese have distorted views on history. To Americans, they are helping; to Vietnamese, they are invading. You would consider it invading if France actually came to support the South in the that civil war but France would say they are just helping America

  • @Marcus-p5i5s
    @Marcus-p5i5s 10 месяцев назад +88

    My uncle was sent to Vietnam for the war. He married a very educated and beautiful Vietnamese woman from Saigon. Fluent in French & English too. Was my favorite aunt.

  • @irish66
    @irish66 9 месяцев назад +12

    "In war, nobody can keep their hands clean," could be a tagline for the movie.
    FYi. The entire movie was filmed in england, and the guy who played the drill sgt was one in real life.

  • @AstroXeno
    @AstroXeno 10 месяцев назад +87

    Vietnam wasn't a popular war in America. It was the first one that was the first one that was reported daily on the TV news- World War II and Korea were shown in weekly news reels (with a lot of Rah Rah fanfare) 40% of the people who went to Vietnam (and 60% of the casualties) were draftees. The Tet Offensive (depicted in this movie) was a military disaster for the North Vietnamese, but it also turned public opinion in America against the war, because people suddenly saw that victory was not just around the corner as they had been being told.
    If you're interested in more movies about the Vietnam War, Platoon and Apocalypse Now are two of the most popular ones.
    Tigerland and Hamburger Hill are also very good, but not as well known.
    I haven't seen Born on the 4th of July, but I know it's about a guy who goes to Vietnam and becomes a peace activist after he comes home.
    Most movies about Vietnam aren't intended to show the war in a positive light, but if you're interested in seeing what a piece of pro-war propaganda looks like, watch The Green Berets.

    • @DerekHarrison-ue9vv
      @DerekHarrison-ue9vv 10 месяцев назад +9

      Born on the Fourth of July is a good movie about US Marine Ron Kovic, played by Tom Cruise.Kovic like so many US serviceman turned against the Vietnam war.The treatment of veterans in hospitals in this movie is particularly harrowing.World War Two is celebrated,Korea is forgotten and Vietnam still haunts,especially when you see veterans at the memorial in Washington.

    • @chandie5298
      @chandie5298 10 месяцев назад +6

      I liked the Apocalypse Now Redux version (although I think many don't) because I think the scenes with the french family add a lot of depth....and also historical significance because apparently, many people don't know about the involvement of France.

    • @rayhunter-o3w
      @rayhunter-o3w 10 месяцев назад +4

      The girl in the pink top looks like she has some French or American ancestry.

    • @jimb9063
      @jimb9063 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@chandie5298 Yes, only saw that version for the first time a couple of yeras ago.
      Britain and France still trying to give up their addiction into the post WW2 era, rehab's hard, old habits die hard.
      Britain, with help from Japanese troops, started to take control of Indochina after WW2, in order to help put France back in charge. It was felt that Britain needed a strong France to help carry the burden in post war Europe, since Britain was bankrupt. Of course to Britain, a strong France meant colonies, obviously, it's still all fine.
      The US gets most stick for this one, some deserved, obviously. They were only the ones holding the poisoned chalice at the end though.

    • @chandie5298
      @chandie5298 10 месяцев назад +2

      @ERRATAS0344 yes and the question of the free stuff to the taliban is.... was it due to incompetence or done on purpose

  • @gggooding
    @gggooding 10 месяцев назад +31

    This is definitely the most *fascinating* reaction I've seen the Full Metal.
    Thank you, y'all, for your perspective and commentary. 👏👏

  • @DJScootagroov
    @DJScootagroov 9 месяцев назад +25

    The NVA lost most battles. The NVA was known to be very resourceful and highly motivated but poorly trained. The US soldiers on the other hand were well trained and equipped but had poor moral, most were conscripts who didn’t want to be there. In the end, north Vietnam won because America ran out of will to fight.
    Vietnam proves that in war you don’t have to win. You just have to not lose.

  • @manticore4952
    @manticore4952 10 месяцев назад +126

    You can tell they never learnt about any NVA atrocities because they were really surprised at the grave scene.

    • @jackwalsh6758
      @jackwalsh6758 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@emilianosintarias7337😂

    • @tbone35453
      @tbone35453 10 месяцев назад

      I don't think they understood it. They seemed to think that they were killed by American troops.

    • @Cheepchipsable
      @Cheepchipsable 10 месяцев назад

      Funny how someone isn't more kind to invaders after 30 years of warfare...🤔
      It's not well known but the US was meant to make war reparations to the Vietnamese, but of course they reneged on that.

    • @tbone35453
      @tbone35453 10 месяцев назад +60

      You're ignoring the point made by the OP. You can condemn American involvement in Vietnam, while also condemning the atrocities committed by the North Vietnamese and the VC. Most Americans are well aware of the My Lai massacre and Rolling Thunder and the devastation it caused. The Vietnam War and the US administrations that waged it are enthusiastically criticised and condemned in America. The Vietnamese government, however, does not tolerate criticism and Vietnamese children are not taught about well-documented communist barbarity, as is evident from this video. That's the point.@@Cheepchipsable

    • @procrastinator6902
      @procrastinator6902 10 месяцев назад +41

      ​@@tbone35453 Yeah My Lai was nothing compared to what the VC and NVA did to civilians in places like Hue or Bín Ðình

  • @MrHws5mp
    @MrHws5mp 9 месяцев назад +22

    Fun fact: the combat scenes in this movie were filmed on a disused airfield in Great Britain. That's why, amongst other things, the helicopters look slightly wrong: they're the British version of the American ones actually used in Vietnam, but they were still available in Britain, whereas the American ones were rare by the time this was filmed. There's also an old British truck in there which probably looked suitably 'foreign' to an American audience, but stands out a mile to any British military geek.

    • @hawkeye4id
      @hawkeye4id 7 месяцев назад +1

      Always wondered why no Huey's

    • @MrHws5mp
      @MrHws5mp 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@hawkeye4id Well the US Marines used piston-engined Sikorsky S-58s in Vietnam longafter the Army went over to Hueys. The Westland Wessex seen in the movie was a British turboshaft-powered version of the S-58.

  • @alienlovearts
    @alienlovearts 9 месяцев назад +11

    Thank you for sharing a modern Vietnamese perspective on this film. Most enlightening and at times very moving.

  • @Spikeelsucko
    @Spikeelsucko 10 месяцев назад +243

    I didn't realize you ladies were Vietnamese until you said so, that really puts this reaction over the top! It's rare to be able to get the exact opposite perspective on these kinds of events (and places, you recognizing Saigon immediately was really cool) and watching this video with you was a privilege :)

    • @Spikeelsucko
      @Spikeelsucko 10 месяцев назад +28

      also I guess its relevant that my father is a Vietnam vet and has always had fond feelings for the country and people despite the war. funny how that turns out sometimes right?

    • @TruthHurts2u
      @TruthHurts2u 10 месяцев назад +29

      That says something for the production designer since they never filmed in Vietnam.

    • @Spikeelsucko
      @Spikeelsucko 10 месяцев назад +10

      @@TruthHurts2u I mulled over mentioning the fact that it wasnt actually on location but I figured my basic point still came across- but to what you said if anyone is going to find a good set designer it's probably gonna be Kubrick!

    • @TruthHurts2u
      @TruthHurts2u 10 месяцев назад +15

      @@Spikeelsucko I figured as much. Everybody knows it was not filmed in Vietnam. I too found it very cool the girls recognized immediately where they were supposed to be. I was about to comment about that fact but saw you mentioned it so I thought I'd highlight the quality of the production design.

    • @Spikeelsucko
      @Spikeelsucko 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@TruthHurts2u sure! My vet dad and I have watched it together, and he always made a point of the fact they would see that big smiling guy in advertisement posters all over the place and had nicknames for each one like "Smilin' Jack" and "Tommy Toothpaste", and they would be used to quickly determine which neighborhood you were in or approaching while in town xD

  • @BatFan1
    @BatFan1 10 месяцев назад +13

    In past wars american soldiers were always portrayed as being heroes, the Viernam war changed that and some started to see them as monsters, and this movie kinda showed those remorseless killers some soldiers had transformed into. Platoon is another Vietnam war movie released around the same that also shows the ugly slide of the soldiers.

    • @4Kandlez
      @4Kandlez 10 месяцев назад

      @TheGovernor2003 I guess the Nazis and Japanese were your heroes in WWII then

    • @davisworth5114
      @davisworth5114 8 месяцев назад

      How much remorse would you have for an enemy that looked just like civilians and killed your friends with mines, snipers, ambushes, and you never saw them? Platoon showed both brutal and compassionate soldiers, dummy. These young men were betrayed by their country, they were put in an atrocity-producing environment where the enemy blended in and looked like the civilians. Then they came home to A-holes like you who hated on them, correct? Platoon was a metaphor for GIs in Vietnam, some hated the war and knew it was wrong, some were believers. By the time I left in Nov. 68, Americans were murdering each other, OK?

    • @kingcosworth2643
      @kingcosworth2643 3 месяца назад

      The main reason for the hatred towards soldiers of the Vietnam war was specifically because of the amount of communists now in positions of power. A negative spin was put on the war through media and a portion of the population accepted this narrative. The west didn't need to be involved in the war admittingly, but the war was happening with the west or not. It was a revolutionary war, communists vs the traditionalists. The west supported the traditionalists, China supported the Communists.

  • @purozentu
    @purozentu 9 месяцев назад +13

    Ever heard of the massacre at hue? It was the most deadly massacre in the entire Vietnam war and it was committed by the peoples army of Vietnam and the Vietcong and the current Vietnamese government still denies it even happened

    • @Antares2
      @Antares2 9 месяцев назад +3

      Ever heard of My Lai?

    • @purozentu
      @purozentu 8 месяцев назад +5

      @@Antares2 the death count of my lai is 500 the death count of the massacre at hue is over 6,000 plus the north Vietnamese government helped the Khmer Rouge come to power during the Cambodian civil war who killed over a million people so clearly while both sides did awful things one of them did way worse things to the people of indochina and it’s not the Americans and their south Vietnamese Allie’s

    • @hayther4590
      @hayther4590 2 месяца назад

      @@purozentu Wait what? The Northern government put down the Khmer Rouge.

  • @lawrencenull
    @lawrencenull 10 месяцев назад +135

    You have to remember the Vietnam war was a proxy war. Vietnam was having a civil war, America supporting the south and China supporting the north. At that time it was not a single Vietnam.

    • @ArtofFreeSpeech
      @ArtofFreeSpeech 10 месяцев назад +55

      Yeah, I found it interesting that China was not considered to be "invading" but the US was. I guess the "winner" writes the history books. I imagine if South Vietnam had defeated the North Vietnamese, we'd be seeing two girls talking about communist China as the invaders. I mean, it's not like the US ever had any intention of taking over Vietnam anymore than France had the intention of taking over the United States in our revolutionary war.

    • @davidburton9690
      @davidburton9690 10 месяцев назад +25

      @@ArtofFreeSpeech After US involvement ended, there was also a shooting war between Vietnam and China. Vietnam invaded Cambodia and fought the Khmer Rouge that were supported by China. So then China invaded Vietnam but failed to stop their invasion of Cambodia.

    • @MatthiasAI
      @MatthiasAI 9 месяцев назад +12

      @@ArtofFreeSpeech ya if the USA public opinion wasnt so bad about the vietnam issue it could have also turned into something like north/south korea which was a similar battle of the area in a way.

    • @ArtofFreeSpeech
      @ArtofFreeSpeech 9 месяцев назад +16

      @@MatthiasAI right.... very similar, and you sure don't hear the South Koreans calling the Americans "invaders."

    • @haroldsullivan2036
      @haroldsullivan2036 9 месяцев назад

      @@ArtofFreeSpeechthe South Korean government was an occupation government set up by the U.S.

  • @HemlockRidge
    @HemlockRidge 9 месяцев назад +15

    The US military NEVER lost a battle in Vietnam. But the US Politicians lost us the war. Absolutely insane. The men were sent out into combat with one arm tied behind their back. So they just gave up being human, and took their frustrations out in horrid ways. It was a horrid war. The communist forces could be just as bad. The US sent medical teams out into remote villages, and inoculated the people, especially the children. After they left, the NVA, or the Vietcong would come in and cut off the inoculated arms as a warning to not deal with the Americans. The city assaulted at the end was Hue City.

    • @kylesfeetlover4425
      @kylesfeetlover4425 8 месяцев назад

      Haha butthurt, Viatmese stomped u

    • @BPD1586
      @BPD1586 8 месяцев назад

      Should've never gotten involved in the first place...

  • @Tom-c5m7g
    @Tom-c5m7g Месяц назад +1

    Marine Corps veteran here. 28:50 made me tear up. I love you, fellow human beings. War is a Racket

  • @Marcus-p5i5s
    @Marcus-p5i5s 10 месяцев назад +81

    My cousin was in Vietnam and remembers the North Vietnamese Army (NVA) murdering tens of thousands of South Vietnamese villagers who didn't want the communists to take over. Many tortured before being killled.

    • @Mustanaamio7
      @Mustanaamio7 10 месяцев назад

      It was US that committed the worst atrocities. They had no right to be there.

    • @zarathustra8643
      @zarathustra8643 10 месяцев назад +4

      owned

    • @plutoisacomet
      @plutoisacomet 9 месяцев назад +5

      Your information seems a bit off aka incorrect.

    • @Xenomorphasized
      @Xenomorphasized 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@plutoisacomet It's common knowledge the NVA and Vietcong murdered civillians. Every party involved in the Vietnam war killed civillians, that's the sad reality of war that has been the case since the beginning of society.

    • @donrichter3523
      @donrichter3523 9 месяцев назад +5

      @plutoisacomet, no you are incorrect

  • @Flastew
    @Flastew 10 месяцев назад +22

    Most Americans did not support this war. This movie does show a lot of what did happen. Great reaction young ladies. I hope you keep doing reactions together, you are so cool together.

    • @mikerodgers7620
      @mikerodgers7620 9 месяцев назад

      Left-wing didn't support it. Most left-wing people are anti American and some are Communists.

    • @jamesclancy8091
      @jamesclancy8091 8 месяцев назад

      I don't think you can speak for most Americans.
      The difference between Korea and Vietnam is the liberals caused America to abandon the South Vietnamese so the North, supported by China and the USSR defeated the defenseless South.

    • @l337pwnage
      @l337pwnage 8 месяцев назад

      Americans support whatever the media tells them to support. The elites were not in favor of that particular war, so they had the media get that message out to the public.

    • @davisworth5114
      @davisworth5114 8 месяцев назад +2

      Totally wrong, most Americans supported the war until Tet.

    • @mikerodgers7620
      @mikerodgers7620 8 месяцев назад

      The Left-wing didn't support the war. The Left-wing movement is always unpatriotic. They call that jingoism.@@davisworth5114

  • @seanobrien116
    @seanobrien116 9 месяцев назад +32

    The first part of the movie where the characters are in boot camp is 100% accurate. Ask any Marine.

    • @davisworth5114
      @davisworth5114 8 месяцев назад +2

      Totally wrong, hitting recruits was against the law and any racial insults in the civil rights era would have led to riots. Sgt. Hartman was a sadist, dummy. He drove Pyle to insanity.

    • @GasLitAndFloating
      @GasLitAndFloating 8 месяцев назад

      well your just the shit that comes when a DI dose not hit a punk if your fucking up bad enough corrective measures are taken - oh this was Draft too they will be less likely to turn him away he was not a volunteer @@davisworth5114

    • @bobhope369
      @bobhope369 8 месяцев назад +5

      That's correct that's how it was then.
      And as far as the counter remark that it was against the rules or law to hit someone or that racist remarks blah blah... This was for one drafted soldiers and second of all it was common then.
      Had a soldier who would not shower as required and the group took him to the showers and stripped him down and showered him with soap and wire brush and just because he was bleeding and everything else it didn't stop till it was decided lesson was learned. So don't tell me such didn't happen. You wasn't there

    • @ahoyforsenchou7288
      @ahoyforsenchou7288 8 месяцев назад +7

      @@davisworth5114 Na, blacks weren't as fragile back then. In fact, nobody was as fragile.

    • @bobjames3748
      @bobjames3748 8 месяцев назад +3

      Army was the same, lots of cussing, lots of breaking down individuals. We had a guy who went AWOL, we had a ex Marine get his arm broke in escape and evasion training by Drill instr. We didn't have Emery.

  • @the98themperoroftheholybri33
    @the98themperoroftheholybri33 10 месяцев назад +57

    If you want another vietnam war movie, try the Mel Gibson movie "we were soldiers".
    Its quite a fair depiction from both sides of the conflict because it was made from descriptions and stories of men who were actually at the battle

    • @GeorgiaDawgAthens
      @GeorgiaDawgAthens 8 месяцев назад +2

      IRT @the98themperoroftheholybri33
      U.S. Marine here, '68 - '91. Don't like Mel Gibson and didn't see the movie but I read the book. Holy f###!!!
      I normally read every page of a book from the first page through the last. As I began to read the names of the soldiers listed in the pre-what-ever-it's-called section, I said f### this (too long) and began reading the intro and the first chapter. Before I reached one-third of the way through the book, I stopped and said to myself, "When I finish this book, I'm 'gonna' return to that list of names and read them from back to front (Z to A) because (2) the guys at the rear need to be acknowledged first for a change and (1) every damn one of these soldiers need to be acknowledged for their participation in this fight. And I did. I not only read each name, I paused for each one and reflected on their individual actions, if they were explained in the book, From a lush jungle environment, not a blade of grass nor tree limb was exposed due to the heavy fighting (bullets expended) through that area.
      As we would say in the naval establishment, Bravo Zulu to these soldiers. You've earned that "splice the mainbrace" or extra ration of rum.
      Semper Fidelis!

    • @studley2436
      @studley2436 8 месяцев назад +3

      I'll second that. We were soldiers was a much better depiction of a part of that war without glorifying war. It was honest about the reality of it.

    • @mikeserot1410
      @mikeserot1410 8 месяцев назад +3

      What's interesting about We Were Soldiers is that General Hal Moore and the NVA Commander became friends after the war and both said they respected the other immensely.

    • @mikeserot1410
      @mikeserot1410 8 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@GeorgiaDawgAthensI'm not a fan of Mel Gibson either but there's something different about the film.

  • @georgebernal7130
    @georgebernal7130 9 месяцев назад +75

    Great job ladies. I am a retired soldier, and my uncle went to Vietnam, and I cannot talk to him anymore and hearing your reaction one the Vietnamese side was something I have never heard. Keep up the great work. It is helpful to hear all perspectives on any war.

    • @Mottleydude1
      @Mottleydude1 9 месяцев назад

      @@phila3884We know. I grew up during the American War there. I was born in 1961 so I was 14 when it ended. I had several Uncles and some friends around 5 years older than me who served in the war. I still personally know a lot of veterans who served and fought in the American war.
      My favorite Uncle served during the time frame of this movie. He went to Paris Island in South Carolina for basic training in the Marine Corps as was shown and he was involved in the fighting during the Tet Offensive.
      After he had completed his service he came back to the U.S. and was spit at by war protesters. He hung up his uniform and went to college and did not speak about his service and eventually became a Doctor.
      In the late 1990’s he was able to travel back to Vietnam with some fellow veterans. While in Vietnam they were allowed to visit some of their old battle sites and to grieve for lost comrades. Most important they were able to make some reconciliation with the Vietnamese People. That meant a lot to my Uncle. He was shocked. He was expecting to be treated with hostility but it was the exact opposite. He was treated with a lot of respect and deference. He even got drunk with some old NVA veterans.
      It did his soul a world of good to return to Vietnam.

    • @andreww1225
      @andreww1225 9 месяцев назад +8

      @@phila3884funny southern Vietnam asked us to be there

    • @nicholasbrown4109
      @nicholasbrown4109 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@andreww1225 southern Vietnam lost, of course the winners call it the American war

    • @demianperez1182
      @demianperez1182 9 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@nicholasbrown4109many southerners supported the North mostly because of the US stupidity so ye

    • @dersuddeutschesumpf5444
      @dersuddeutschesumpf5444 9 месяцев назад +11

      ​@@andreww1225 Southern Vietnam was ruled by a clan regime that violently repressed their own people and was unpopular even in south Vietnam. In other words, the war was completely in favor of the people of Vietnam and the US had no business being there and impeding that

  • @tossedburrito9028
    @tossedburrito9028 8 месяцев назад +39

    During the Vietnam War, Drill Instructors had less time to train their recruits, so they went harder on them, in order to get them ready. They were scrambling to save as many lives as they could.
    R. Lee Ermey who played Hartman was a former D.I himself.

    • @davisworth5114
      @davisworth5114 8 месяцев назад

      More bullshit, all basic training was nine weeks. Scrambling to save as many lives as they could??? Who was? The US government didn't care about GI lives, if they did, they never would have lied to us about the purpose of the war. Vietnam veterans were shunned and shamed when they came home, no one cared about us, you dope!

    • @mortsims
      @mortsims 8 месяцев назад +3

      my brother in law was in the marines well after vietnam. he said this movie was exactly what basic training was like.

  • @SteinMeister72
    @SteinMeister72 10 месяцев назад +17

    If the NVA were the good guys, why did so many South Vietnamese flee the country in 1975?

    • @teodormihailov1322
      @teodormihailov1322 3 месяца назад

      Cause usa stop paying them for boycotting the unification of the country

    • @montanus777
      @montanus777 3 месяца назад

      because they were traitors. why did french, belgian or dutch collaborators after WW2 tried to get away from their own countrymen? 😉

  • @riphopfer5816
    @riphopfer5816 10 месяцев назад +6

    In basic training , the idea is that you will be broken down as the person you were, and rebuilt into a war machine: a man who can kill without feeling pleasure nor feeling remorse, who can fit perfectly like a cog into the larger machine of your unit and always put the Mission Objective ahead of any personal concerns.
    These days, Drill Sergeants aren’t allowed to swear at you like R. Lee Ermey (it’s seen as unprofessional); however, the program is still the same, and it produces the finest professional soldiers the world’s ever seen, so…They’re doing something right.

  • @danor6812
    @danor6812 9 месяцев назад +4

    It's not about the Vietnam war. It's about the men that were sent to fight in it. When the Tet offence started, they did just run in like that. They were called sappers. They had explosives strapped to their bodies. They were sent in before the main forces were to attack. They hoped the sappers would clear out machine guns and major defenses before the main attack. The short war scenes are because they have to show the war was happening. But the movie was about the men, not the war. Them singing the theme to the Micky Mouse Club song at the end. Is to show that they are still young, but the innocence they had when they learned to sing that song. That innocence is gone now.

  • @hollownation
    @hollownation 10 месяцев назад +19

    You might find it interesting to know that most of the second half of the movie was filmed in London because Kubrick wanted to stay home. They had to import palm trees which they struggled to keep alive because it was winter in the uk

    • @Shadamachaeon
      @Shadamachaeon 9 месяцев назад +1

      Ironically, due to climate change, London now has Palm trees.

  • @jamestheyounger8895
    @jamestheyounger8895 9 месяцев назад +37

    If you want to react to a great Vietnam War film then watch "Platoon". The movie is about the experiences of the director, Oliver Stone, in the 25th Infantry during the war. It depicts the many atrocities of the American military against the Vietnamese peoples and the struggle of the main character with what he was seeing as well as the death that was around him. I highly recommend that you react to it on this channel. Great reaction by the way.

    • @davidreed6264
      @davidreed6264 9 месяцев назад +4

      Or the Deer Hunter

    • @llongone2
      @llongone2 8 месяцев назад +2

      But Full Metal jacket is wayyyy better than Platoon. Deer Hunter is somewhere in the middle.

    • @jamestheyounger8895
      @jamestheyounger8895 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@llongone2 No one was arguing which one is better. Full Metal Jacket is a great psycological thriller but not very realistic. Kubrick never fought in Vietnam. Stone actually served and fought in the war. Platoon is based on what he lived through or stories he heard from within his battalion. Each is a masterpiece in it's own right.

    • @Derna1804
      @Derna1804 7 месяцев назад

      Platoon isn't realistic either.

    • @jamestheyounger8895
      @jamestheyounger8895 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@Derna1804 how is that?

  • @steveoliver8422
    @steveoliver8422 8 месяцев назад +82

    The way these two women can both cheer for their countrymen (good for them) and express such sympathy for the American soldiers is heartwarming.

    • @dorianleakey
      @dorianleakey 8 месяцев назад +25

      The bit where the guy gets blown up by the trap and they proudly say something about how good they are at laying traps is quite funny, like if you visit their house one of the many IEDs they set could blow an arm off. I know that wasnt the intention, but they make it sound like a hobby.

    • @ericgollinger367
      @ericgollinger367 8 месяцев назад +2

      Uh. Like Mad Magazine, Spy vs Spy?

    • @dynomitejec
      @dynomitejec 8 месяцев назад +4

      @@ericgollinger367 that made me laugh cause they are even wearing black and white! Coincidence I think not.

    • @kylesfeetlover4425
      @kylesfeetlover4425 8 месяцев назад +12

      Truly kindhearted women, considering the war crimes their people faced.

    • @TheRetroManRandySavage
      @TheRetroManRandySavage 8 месяцев назад +5

      @@kylesfeetlover4425 The north Vietnamese weren't exactly angels either.
      They committed the kind of war crimes that would make Hitler vomit.

  • @hanni38390
    @hanni38390 10 месяцев назад +6

    Pyle is mentally challenged that's why he smiles a lot and has trouble functioning. Mentally challenged people were purposely drafted and they were called "McNamara's Morons." They were not expected to survive but to act as cannonfodder so better soldiers could push through.

  • @Short_Round1999
    @Short_Round1999 9 месяцев назад +7

    The singing while running is called, cadence, it’s basically what you were saying. It helps running to the beat so everyone is running at the same pace in the same stride, left foot then right foot. It shows great unity among the company

  • @willmartin7293
    @willmartin7293 10 месяцев назад +36

    Kubrick made this movie to be an anti-war film, so many of its scenes in Vietnam are negatively exaggerated to support his anti-war philosophy. If you and Hela would like to see a Vietnam War movie that presents a fair representation of both sides, then I recommend you watch "We Were Soldiers." It gives a view of the war from both the American and Vietnamese perspective. 🤔 Also, if you would like to see a very good comedy, then I recommend "Office Space." Anyone in the world who works in an office will relate to that movie. Lastly, I am very impressed with your English proficiency. Both of you girls are having a very sophisticated conversation and your English is impeccable. 👍😊 Your English teachers would be very proud of you. 👍❤

    • @Movie.Munchies
      @Movie.Munchies  10 месяцев назад +10

      Thanks so much!

    • @willmartin7293
      @willmartin7293 10 месяцев назад

      You're very welcome. I hope you have a lovely day.@@Movie.Munchies

    • @luisdawnfinder3188
      @luisdawnfinder3188 10 месяцев назад

      @@Movie.MunchiesDefinitely watch Office Space, it's very funny :)

    • @VadulTharys
      @VadulTharys 10 месяцев назад +12

      @@Movie.Munchies The difference is the movie We Were Soldiers is a true story told by those who were there, it does not try to paint the Vietnamese as weak or evil. One of the most powerful lines in the movie is from Lt. Col. Nguyen Huu An "Such a tragedy. They will think this was their victory. So this will become an American war. And the end will be the same... except for the numbers who will die before we get there."

    • @HollywoodMarine0351
      @HollywoodMarine0351 10 месяцев назад

      @@Movie.Munchies​⁠​⁠I recommend you watch Oliver Stone’s 1986 war movie “Platoon” and tell us what you would rate Johnny Depp’s Vietnamese.

  • @wildhias6195
    @wildhias6195 10 месяцев назад +10

    Am I wrong or do you actually no very little about this war? Do you even know that it was basically a civil war in South Vietnam?

    • @indridcold3762
      @indridcold3762 10 месяцев назад +3

      Sad man.

    • @kilodeltanegative
      @kilodeltanegative 19 дней назад

      You're not wrong, communist education system works that way. Sadly....They aren't even tought that they signed a treaty and then went against it. A lotta people think US lost the war, but the thing is the Saigon evacuation came like 2 or 3 years after the treaty and it was just the United States embassy. North Vietnam lost the war with the US, but at the end of the day, it was a civil war and America didn't need to lose more people. This is coming from a person from a post-communist country, so do with that information whatever the hell you want.

  • @sun_beams
    @sun_beams 8 месяцев назад +4

    The helicopter pilot talking about shooting women and children was foreshadowing Jokers showdown with the sniper. He's incredulous that anyone would shoot women and children and he ends up killing a woman child before the end of the movie. It's so tragic.

  • @NorthernThaiGardenGuy
    @NorthernThaiGardenGuy 9 месяцев назад +13

    I live in Thailand, but I am from the US. I grew up in the 80's and had many Vietnamese friends. I have not yet visited Vietnam but my Father did back in 2016 and said it was some of the most beautiful and kind people he had ever met and that the war museum in Hanoi was truly honoring to both sides of the war.

  • @seanburke997
    @seanburke997 9 месяцев назад +10

    This movie is a masterpiece of film making that explores some deep parts of the American experience in Vietnam and America in general. It does so in a a subtle and unusual fashion and perspective.
    It's a haunting film that stays with you a long time, and really needs to be watched multiple times to get the most out of it, it is a complex film that gets better as you explore it.
    I was very interested to hear your experience of the film, both as younger viewers, and as Vietnamese persons.
    Thank you for sharing your viewing, I enjoyed it

  • @christoffsimply3179
    @christoffsimply3179 10 месяцев назад +46

    I lost my father to that war. I have heard about that war all my life. I have seen movies like this all my life. I have felt bad about it all my life. I want to thank you for reacting to this movie many decades later. None of us can undo what happened. Thank you. Love and respect.

    • @atomfallen2409
      @atomfallen2409 9 месяцев назад +6

      My mom lost a cousin r.i.p and my uncle was shot in the head.he lived but was never quite the same after

    • @iwilldrownyourinfant5377
      @iwilldrownyourinfant5377 9 месяцев назад

      Out of curiosity I genuinely wanna know if that affects you in any way while watching a war movie. Does it make war films even more upsetting? Like I feel like I’d be too repulsed just to watch a film about the war knowing how close to home it’ll hit. I’m not trying to offend or anything just curious

    • @christoffsimply3179
      @christoffsimply3179 9 месяцев назад +5

      @@iwilldrownyourinfant5377 No. Not repused by war movies. I've always been anti-war politically but he died when I was 6 years old. Most of the impact was in losing the bread-winner in the family and not have a male role model as I grew up. I feel terrible about what happened to the people of Vietnam though. That part stayed with me. Thanks for asking.

    • @davisworth5114
      @davisworth5114 9 месяцев назад +2

      God love you, son. I was there too, Tet 68.

  • @raythornton8578
    @raythornton8578 10 месяцев назад +51

    You’re trained like this to break you down and realize you’re nothing without the men around you. Then you’re built back up into a team. As a two tour veteran of Vietnam I look back fondly at the training.

  • @meximic5141
    @meximic5141 9 месяцев назад +8

    This movie focuses on how wars affect individual people more than grand scale politics. For example it shows how different people cope with war you have the crazy guy who enjoys killing. You have Pyle that kills himself because he couldn't handle the stress. And joker is most soliders that just does what he needs to do to survive but has to live with those actions.

    • @twelvecatsinatrenchcoat
      @twelvecatsinatrenchcoat 8 месяцев назад

      Pile didnt do that cause he couldn't handle the stress, he did that because "I am in a world of shit."

  • @GH-cp9wc
    @GH-cp9wc 9 месяцев назад +4

    A lot of this movie went WAY over their heads. It's interesting to see the propaganda view of the war from the other side. They totally didn't catch that the civilians were murdered by the NVA or that it is an Anti-War movie.

  • @jimmyj5035
    @jimmyj5035 10 месяцев назад +8

    Missing In Action 2: The Beginning shows what the American and South Vietnamese Soldiers experienced as Prisoners of War under the North Vietnamese Army. Missing In Action 3 shows exactly what the Children of the American Soldiers and the South Vietnamese people experienced at the hands of the North Vietnamese Army as well

    • @ArtofFreeSpeech
      @ArtofFreeSpeech 10 месяцев назад +2

      Heck, I would recommend the Hanoi Hilton to give an idea of how the NVA committed war atrocities and violated the Geneva convention.

    • @ArtofFreeSpeech
      @ArtofFreeSpeech 10 месяцев назад +2

      @Gimil38 Sure, but the way the ladies talked, it seemed they were unaware of NVA atrocities. Also, when the USA commits atrocities, it's world news. Just look at Abu Ghraib. Everyone hears about it. The soldiers are punished--even when the US was the victor. When other countries do it, it's mostly swept under the rug (unless they lose the war).

  • @Killjoy170
    @Killjoy170 9 месяцев назад +6

    Vietnam did not win militarily, but you made US forces loose enough men that the war became unpopular, so politically we lost here in the US. Then we withdrew when it was no longer a war that was wanted by the people of the US.

  • @jeffb1880
    @jeffb1880 10 месяцев назад +35

    My father was in basic training during the Vietnam war but luckily never got shipped to Vietnam. The training WAS this difficult. Drill instructors were not supposed to hit men but my father said they did anyway. BTW, one of the reasons soldiers were trained this way during the Vietnam war is because a famous study came out after World War 2 that showed that many American soldiers either didn't fire their gun during battle, or purposefully fired at the ground. So the Pentagon wanted to make sure this didn't happen during the Vietnam war so they tried to teach them to fire "automatically" so they wouldn't vacillate during battle. I think this movie tried to make the point that this kind of training went TOO far in dehumanizing the enemy and led to some atrocities on the American side. This movie IS essentially an antiwar film.

    • @dgray3771
      @dgray3771 9 месяцев назад +3

      It is not the only reason the drill instructors were this hard. Another reason is the cut in time for the preparation of the conscripts. They hated that they had to send troops into combat unready. And did the best they could by being harder.

    • @dersuddeutschesumpf5444
      @dersuddeutschesumpf5444 9 месяцев назад

      God forbid your conscripted draftees refuse to murder men fighting for the independence of their people in a war your men don't even have a stake in anyway. Wouldn't it be terrible if they kept any moral fiber

  • @luvlgs1
    @luvlgs1 10 месяцев назад +19

    the Vietnam War was on American TV every night. it was a very controversial war over here too, especially as more of our boys came back dead or wounded. so sorry for all you've lost. frankly, i can't even imagine what it was like, living there at that time. i think the movie did a good job representing so many aspects of that crazy war. i had a laugh when you guys were rooting for the "bad guys" in the battle scenes but that's natural. you had a unique perspective on this movie and it was a pleasure to watch. keep on rockin

    • @dgray3771
      @dgray3771 9 месяцев назад

      In the beginning, it was more of a policing and training operation to help the South Vietnamese. But turned into an all-out war when it became clear the South was never going to survive on its own. The decision to quit was the right one. After all, this was not an American affair and it became one.

  • @timyoungquist8785
    @timyoungquist8785 9 месяцев назад +9

    I think Hella(I hope that is the correct english spelling) has it right when she says this is a game. For the Americans it was a game of survival, since they were not allowed to win it. As some have pointed out, this was an anti-war movie, and I agree with it, we should have never been there in the first place. I am impressed with your empathy for portrayed enemy deaths as well as your own. If you do any more war movies, I suggest you have Hella with you, I love her gamer insights.

  • @Waterford1992
    @Waterford1992 10 месяцев назад +5

    40:06 The Vietnamese soldier did not betray Vietnam as he is a soldier in the South Vietnamese Army (ARVN) which was its own country and asked USA for military support against the invading Communist forces from North Vietnam

    • @TruthHurts2u
      @TruthHurts2u 10 месяцев назад +3

      History is told by the victor. From the North Vietnamese perspective he was a traitor. And that's what they were taught, the winners perspective.

    • @Mustanaamio7
      @Mustanaamio7 10 месяцев назад +1

      People who support invaders (Americans) are definitely traitors.

    • @Waterford1992
      @Waterford1992 10 месяцев назад

      @@TruthHurts2u Or maybe these 2 are so very ignorant of there own country's history and yeah maybe they are really brainwashed by their commie government

  • @TheNadzed
    @TheNadzed 10 месяцев назад +7

    I admire your bravery in reviewing this film, thanks for your honesty

  • @JoeyJoJoJr0
    @JoeyJoJoJr0 8 месяцев назад +5

    When you first saw Animal Mother, and said "He looks like Pyle", I had thought for a long time how Animal is the "reincarnation" of Pyle - "Born Again Hard". They are both "crazy" and unstable, but yet completely opposite of each other: Pyle was weak and dies young; Animal is strong and continues to live. Pyle was a follower that depended on others; Animal is an independent leader. Pyle was the guy sneaking treats from the mess hall; Animal is the guy jumping first in line to get laid. etc. etc. I had always wondered if Kubrick wrote it like that, repeating the overarching theme of the "duality of Man".

  • @roarinfireball
    @roarinfireball 9 месяцев назад +6

    The scene where Private Laurence “Private Pyle” gets in trouble for smuggling a jelly donut is a very common thing.
    When I was in Navy boot camp; one of the recruits in my division hid a pack of trail mix in his A&B drawer. My whole division got punished while he was forced to eat the trail mix.
    After that event; my 1st Recruit Division Commander nicknamed that individual Scrumptious.

  • @roscoebower4347
    @roscoebower4347 10 месяцев назад +6

    You girls need to educate yourselves better about the war in your home country. The biggest error I heard you guys say was that the United States invaded Vietnam. We were asked for help from the democratic government of South Vietnam against the Chinese backed communist government of North Vietnam.

    • @montanus777
      @montanus777 3 месяца назад

      which "democratic government"? you mean the dictator and US-puppet diem? so much for the education ...

  • @martin5561
    @martin5561 7 месяцев назад +2

    I just want to say that the USA did not invade Vietnam. After the fall of French Indochina Vietnam was divided into North Vietnam and South Vietnam. North Vietnam invaded Laos and soon after attacked South Vietnam. South Vietnam was supported by the US and North Vietnam by SSSR and China. So the USA was helping South Vietnam as this was their mission to stop spreading communism - like they did during the Korean War. Of course, there were war atrocities committed by both sides and many civilians were murdered. War is hell...

  • @loszhor
    @loszhor 9 месяцев назад +7

    23:14 I love how upbeat she is when she says "whore"!

  • @lousygeek
    @lousygeek 10 месяцев назад +35

    As a very well watched and reviewed movie, you girls give some very unique perspective, highly entertaining. Being Vietnamese definitely helps, for example one of you quickly spot out the prostitute was not actually a Vietnamese, more likely a Cambodian, Thai or Philippine, is very interesting, the crew just grabbed some random girls and thought they could get away with that, busted.😀

    • @bdsman64
      @bdsman64 9 месяцев назад +8

      We were bombing Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. It would be not too surprising to find refugees from all over the region. There were also different ethnic groups through out the area with their own languages.

    • @americanandpinay
      @americanandpinay 9 месяцев назад +4

      Papillion Soo is a mixed French-Chinese actress born to a French Ambassador and Chinese model

    • @yaboi-km2qn
      @yaboi-km2qn 8 месяцев назад

      from what i could find, she was british. the whole thing was filmed in england so she'll be a local extra.

  • @jlee2383
    @jlee2383 9 месяцев назад +7

    It is truly incredible watching the sniper scene with you two girls. The basic takeaway is the same- war is hell. But after watching this movie with American friends my entire life, your reaction to it is so different, as you fear for the life of the sniper but we fully understand the desire for payback. And it makes sense why the reactions are different, but… ugh… it is exactly why all war is so tragic. Thank you so much for this video. I just pray there is no war to divide us in the future but only peace and understanding to unite us.

  • @WhatDayIsItTrumpDay
    @WhatDayIsItTrumpDay 9 месяцев назад +7

    The drill segeant was played by R Lee Ermy who was a former real life drill sergeant, so that's why he was perfect for this role. In fact, a lot of what he said was improvised (not scripted).

  • @MartinGutierrez-od3jt
    @MartinGutierrez-od3jt 10 месяцев назад +5

    I think what the movie was trying to express is how horrible war is once you actually experience it, like in the film 'come and see', before Joker (a naive kid) killed anyone he was taking this as an adventure and he was anxious to get his first kill but once he experienced actual combat, saw death in front of him, war showed him why it isn't an adventure and why it isn't any glory on it like he was told, it was shoven in his face how horrible that is once he nearly got killed and he had to kill the girl at close distance (the closest you are to your victim the more difficult it gets the action of kill, that is one of the reasons why air force and artillery members are less afected by PTSD and they are mathematically more effective at killing than infantry personel), seeing her pain and sufering erased that joy he had at the beginning. Also it showed how different people deal with the realization of the horror of war, how some deny it, how some try to stay away from it, how others embrace it and go mad and how Joker choses to rationalize it and shove the pain inside him, but undeniably war experience takes a toll on you. Thank you girls for bringing your point of view on this film it is very appreciated by me as a westerner.

  • @sirethanthegreat4069
    @sirethanthegreat4069 3 месяца назад +1

    I started watching you all and I didn’t know you were Vietnamese until recently. I feel happy because I’m also Vietnamese but I live in the US. This movie reminds me of my grandpa. He was an officer in the South Vietnamese Army during the war. He passed away in 2020. Nguyen Dinh Bao, a famous officer who is also a family member of mine, was in the war too.

  • @andrewward5891
    @andrewward5891 9 месяцев назад +11

    I was interested that you both said the young lady negotiating her services with thd Americans wasnt Vietnamese (maybe from Laos or Cambodia). This movie was actually all filmed in England (Kubrick hated to travel). So they probably weren’t too picky on whether an actor was actually Vietnamese

  • @williamjones6031
    @williamjones6031 10 месяцев назад +5

    I can only speak from post-Vietnam US Navy.
    1. There are always more than one CC in boot camp (at least in the Navy) where partially recruits can't be abused. Verbal abuse is one thing but physical was a NO GO.
    2. Vincent D'Onofrio played the Bug in MIB and had to put on 50lbs for this role
    3. Hardman was out of control. Others outside his recruits would have noticed and he would have been held accountable.
    4. "I don't know, but I've been told. Eskimo pussy is mighty cold." was used in my Navy recruit company in 1981.
    5. In the US Navy real live ammo was always accounted for, and Pyle wouldn't have had it on his person in the head.
    6. The lights in the head are always lit. (lighting I suspect).
    7. "Blanket parties" were a real deal. We didn't have one because we didn't have a Gomer Pyle.
    8. The hooker in Saigon is just distracting them so the motorcycle guys can steal the camera. I saw that happen in the Philippines.
    9. "I wouldn't shit you, you're my favorite turd" I've used that before.
    10. Even by Hollywood standards, Kubrick went overboard with excessive bloodletting.

  • @sajuarosam3854
    @sajuarosam3854 9 месяцев назад +3

    My uncle did not wish to be in your country. He was drafted. He would have been perfectly happy to never set foot over there.

  • @OroborusFMA
    @OroborusFMA 10 месяцев назад +4

    I once read that the US expended 50,000 rounds of M-16 ammunition for every confirmed enemy kill in Vietnam. This movie, if nothing else, gives you a sense of that.

    • @twelvecatsinatrenchcoat
      @twelvecatsinatrenchcoat 8 месяцев назад

      The firefight is also metaphor of the war. First of all, they're literally lost. We have no idea what they're doing. They seem to have no idea what they're doing. The Vietnamese fire one bullet at one target, they respond by firing thousands at nothing because it's the only thing they can do. And in the end it's just a little girl, there's no glory, no heroics, just suffering and shame.

  • @michealdrake3421
    @michealdrake3421 9 месяцев назад +9

    27:00 The North Vietnamese Army, like most communist regimes, was very fond of what was called "human wave" attacks. The US, for a variety of reasons, had both the will and the resources to highly train and equip its soldiers, making them valuable assets. The NVA's training, by contrast, was mostly about getting as many soldiers as possible and desensitizing them to battle, then turning them loose on the enemy (the US, in this case) in huge numbers in hopes of simply overwhelming American troops with the sheer number of soldiers. Unarmored, with little to no air or armor support, and with substandard weapons, they were ordered to simply charge, all at once, straight at the American lines.
    We had armor. We had trenches. We had machine guns. We had air support and napalm, literally liquid fire that sticks to everything. The NVA's whole strategy was to throw more human canon fodder at us than we could kill. It was horrifying and it's a big part of why so many American veterans of Vietnam are so messed up. In many cases they were forced to use machine guns and flame throwers to massacre young men and even teenagers by the dozens. Often times they charged our lines unarmed, counting on being able to pick up the weapons dropped by their fallen comrades, only to be slaughtered by artillery and machine guns without ever even getting to fire a single shot.
    To the NVA their soldiers were nothing more than disposable bullet sponges. It's a tactic they inherited from the Soviets, who in WWII would send troops into battle unarmed with instructions to pick up the weapons dropped by earlier waves running headlong into German machine guns, because they had more soldiers than guns. It cost them more to build an AK-47 than it did to train and equip a soldier, and it showed.
    And the saddest part is that Vietnam didn't stand to gain anything from this. Your country was a puppet in a much larger conflict. The Soviet Union wanted to spread communism, just to have more communist countries, and they got Vietnam to fight America for them so they wouldn't have to, because they knew they couldn't win that fight.
    Thousands and thousands of young Vietnamese men were slaughtered like animals for the political ambitions of of the Soviet Union because they were too scared to fight America themselves. It's sad, disgraceful, and abominable, and all for nothing.

    • @padajsiloinepravdo6299
      @padajsiloinepravdo6299 8 месяцев назад

      It's pretty much debunked myth that the Soviets always used human wave attacks . They only sent their troops to battle unarmed in the very early days of ww2 when the Germans took them by surprise and invaded them and at the time they were not well prepared for a war . Why don't you go read a book written by some actual Soviet military historians. The NVA had more tactics and arming than just being bullet sponges . You have watched too many movies. Total nonsense
      No the sad thing is that US empire didn't want to allow true Vietnamese independence they prevented it by funding the French’s colonial war but when that failed they decided to get involved . The U.S. but wanted them to be a puppet like the south. Ho chi minh tried everything to befriend the US and seek peace and independence for Vietnam nonviolently but each time he was rebuffed and ignored . Also Even the CIA admitted in their classified documents that Ho Chi Minh was insanely popular in the south and if any free election had happened he would have won .
      The Vietnamese were fighting a for their independence. The U.S. were just another foreign invader and what the US did was straight up evil napalming , bombing using agent orange which killed 100,000 civilians . Most American civilians could see what they were doing is wrong which is why most opposed the war. It was the US that was fighting for nothing. The Vietnamese were fighting for freedom .

  • @aegisprotection4969
    @aegisprotection4969 9 месяцев назад +12

    I enjoyed watching a Vietnamese reaction. I have a Vietnamese friend who immigrated to the US. I met her at a firing range. She saw me using an AK and asked if she could fire it. Because she was taught how to use it in school.
    That made me think.
    Watching your reactions reminded me of her.
    There is a lot of dark humor in the movie that is very ironic and sarcastic. It is not just military but medical professionals who laugh to avoid crying.
    I would not have caught the improper dialect. Thank you for that. Once you mentioned it, I spotted it. She was too deep in her throat, i think?
    The Vietnam War was a mess caused by a lot of nasty stuff going on around the world. There were atrocities on all sides.
    The only solace that I keep is it probably kept the US, China and USSR from blowing up the world.
    If you want a movie reaction, i have 4. Veteran experience: Dog, with Channing Tatum. Lost City for a comedy. Bullet Train for a comedy. Love Actually for a romantic comedy..
    I definitely enjoyed hearing a different perspective on the movie.
    The Hmong experience is also interesting, to me.

    • @twelvecatsinatrenchcoat
      @twelvecatsinatrenchcoat 8 месяцев назад +1

      I've seen videos of them still having kids today bayonet straw dummies. Little kids too, like 8. I think it's more like an independence day pageantry thing than training but it was wild to see.

    • @aegisprotection4969
      @aegisprotection4969 8 месяцев назад

      @@twelvecatsinatrenchcoat For the most part, the Vietnamese get along well with people from the US. I have heard several say that their country's biggest mistake was winning.

    • @twelvecatsinatrenchcoat
      @twelvecatsinatrenchcoat 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@aegisprotection4969 I've heard that too. They seem very gracious about it, which is fair seeing as they won 😅 We actually have good relations with Vietnam now, they've always been more nervous about China than us. That's part of why this war was such a tragedy, they came to us for help before they went to the Chinese. Ho Chi Min even tried to get a letter to Woodrow Wilson at the Paris Peace Conference at the end of WWI, asking for America's help in ending French Colonialism. Wilson never got the letter.

  • @ChaplainDaveSparks
    @ChaplainDaveSparks 9 месяцев назад +4

    I’m a bit confused. You keep mentioning *_”us”_* - you do realize that there were both South and North Vietnamese fighting against each other. Eventually the Americans, Australians, and even some Chinese and Soviets got involved, too.
    BTW, the military theory behind _BASIC TRAINING (“boot camp”)_ was to _tear down_ a recruit, then remake him in the military’s image. That’s why all the hazing from the Drill Instructor.

  • @dredlord47
    @dredlord47 9 месяцев назад +17

    The reason for the drill Sargent being so harsh is specifically to mentally and emotionally break every single man he's training so he can build them back up from rock bottom stronger than they were before.
    Part of the idea is also to make the training worse than the fighting so that they won't be shocked by it.

    • @davisworth5114
      @davisworth5114 8 месяцев назад +1

      How can you make training worse than war, you fool?

    • @dredlord47
      @dredlord47 8 месяцев назад

      @@davisworth5114 Observe the training regime of the United States Marine Corps.
      Additionally, 90% of war is marching and sitting around doing chores.
      Training consists on 9 months to a year and a half of constant stress designed to get you used to being in a higher stress environment than the remaining 10% of the time you'll be "fighting."
      You can't truely get someone used to fearing for their life without actually trying to kill them, but you can get damn close.

    • @user-PaulSean
      @user-PaulSean 7 месяцев назад

      @@davisworth5114 As reasonably as you can without killing any recruits. "Shark attacks" by Drill instructors (3 or 4 screaming in your face while you have to keep composure and do tasks they tell you to do) are similar to the chaos of war where you have to think quick and let your training kick in.

  • @connorcureton7334
    @connorcureton7334 10 месяцев назад +4

    It amazes me how little you know about your own country, america didn't invade vietnam they joined the south Vietnamese to to down the north vietnamese/ viet konk and their communist backers. The north Vietnamese killed thousands of Vietnamese men, weman and children. North vietnam started that war and communism is the reason your country is still suffering. I'm not american but even i know the americans we're there to help your people.

    • @danielpeckham5520
      @danielpeckham5520 10 месяцев назад

      America didn't invade Vietnam? What are you talking about? Their military was all over Vietnam for years shooting up the place and bombing the countryside. Regardless of their reasons, there is no denying the American military invaded.

    • @HarryJarrell
      @HarryJarrell 9 месяцев назад +1

      Vietnam is not suffering, it is a relatively successful country.