Emotionally Wrecked By THE PATRIOT | First Time Watch | Movie Reaction | Mel Gibson | Heath Ledger

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  • Опубликовано: 3 июл 2023
  • For the first time, Achara watches the historical American drama, The Patriot (2000). A film about a heroic leader (Mel Gibson - Braveheart, Lethal Weapon (1987), Mad Max (1979), Signs, & We Were Soldiers) who leads a militia again the British forces during the American Revolutionary War.
    This film also stars: Heath Ledger (Batman The Dark Knight, Brokeback Mountain, 10 Things I Hate About You, & A Knight's Tale), Jason Isaacs (Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, The Death of Stalin, A Cure for Wellness, Event Horizon & Peter Pan (2003)), Skye McCole Bartusiak (Don't Say a Word & Boogeyman (2005)), & Lisa Brenner.
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Комментарии • 307

  • @austinfry5977
    @austinfry5977 Год назад +120

    Jason Isaac's performance in this film is one of the absolute best 'villian' performances in cinema.

    • @rrmemphis427
      @rrmemphis427 Год назад +10

      I've said for years, in real life he seems like a really nice guy but plays a great villain in movies.

    • @hellowhat890
      @hellowhat890 Год назад +12

      Fun fact:
      When the creators of Avatar: The Last Airbender were looking for an actor to play Commander/Admiral Zhao, they said that Zhao was inspired from Tavington's character in this film because they loved Jason Isaacs' performance. So, they asked their casting agent to look for someone who could fulfill that kind of villain role.
      She delivered on that request by getting Jason Isaacs himself. XD

    • @boomataco
      @boomataco Год назад +6

      He should have been the grand inquisitor in live action

    • @drumaticpageofmusic4148
      @drumaticpageofmusic4148 Год назад +1

      @@hellowhat890that’s awesome. I haven’t seen it and I didn’t know he was in it, or that Zhao was based on Tavington, but that’s cool

    • @drumaticpageofmusic4148
      @drumaticpageofmusic4148 Год назад +1

      @@boomatacoEXACTLY. Although the guy they got was pretty good

  • @wadeschalk4599
    @wadeschalk4599 Год назад +43

    "You're MY child!" such an underrated line

  • @DELANOdutch
    @DELANOdutch Год назад +39

    “Papa don’t go”
    Gets me every time!
    😂

  • @MikeyWilliams1998
    @MikeyWilliams1998 Год назад +62

    The final pistol shot was for Thomas, the gut stab was for Gabriel, and the stab in the throat was for Benjamin.

  • @joshuanelson8594
    @joshuanelson8594 Год назад +38

    I had seen this movie so many times, but after my oldest child was born, that scene was Susan's speech for the first time calling her dad put a lump in my throat... such an unintentionally emotional scene.

    • @daerdevvyl4314
      @daerdevvyl4314 Год назад +14

      No, I'd say it was intentionally emotional.

    • @sibat82eg
      @sibat82eg Год назад +1

      ​@daerdevvyl4314 yeah I'd have to agree they knew what they were doing with that scene.

  • @boomataco
    @boomataco Год назад +19

    This movie was so well written

  • @thunderstruck5484
    @thunderstruck5484 Год назад +9

    Here’s how great movies were back then, I went to see Gladiator but they said the copy they had was messed up so instead I watched the Patriot, and watched Gladiator the next week, so many good to great movies at the theater every week, thanks again!

    • @codyschale263
      @codyschale263 10 месяцев назад

      Wow, 2 of the greatest movies back to back, universe was spoiling you my friend. Now it's like every 2 years we get a descent movie if that.

  • @friendzenterkolkata
    @friendzenterkolkata 11 месяцев назад +6

    This might be Jason Isaac's greatest film performance. I literally clapped when I saw Tavington dying for the first time, long back in the early 2000s :)

  • @gggkoking8843
    @gggkoking8843 Год назад +18

    The other day as i was watching this movie, my son and his friend walked in. They are both 15 years old. I wanted to check how good they are teaching kids these days about history. So i asked my son's friend who the red coats were. When he told me that they were germans, that's when i knew that this country was in trouble 😵‍💫.

    • @falsenostalgia-shannon
      @falsenostalgia-shannon 4 месяца назад

      Ooof. What state? Education varies so much. I have a 10 year old and a 16 year old, and they certainly know who the redcoats are! I won’t give school all the credit though; I’m a history nerd so they learn this stuff from an early age listening to me ramble. (I’m “that wife/mom” who makes her husband and kids watch war movies and shows.)

  • @aaronboone8097
    @aaronboone8097 Год назад +22

    Mel Gibsons acting was so damn good in this movie. You believe that his children are really his children in this movie

  • @davidstephens8543
    @davidstephens8543 Год назад +11

    Two moment in the movie that gut me every time. 1) When Martin's daughter pulls away from him when he tries to hug her... just tears my heart out. And THEN, that heart gets stomped into the ground when she runs to him crying, "Don't go!" Brilliant. 2) When the racist colonial (Dan Scott played by Donal Logue) tells the slave, Occam (played by Jay A. Jones) as they are preparing for battle, "I am honored to have you with us. Honored." It shows the spirit of what the war was SUPPOSED to be about. It is a shame that more of THAT sort of spirit was not kept from the war.

  • @michaelgallagher5519
    @michaelgallagher5519 Год назад +4

    Seeing Benjamin’s wagon ( flanked by the family dog ) returning home to his farm, family , ( and especially Susan ) was such a euphoric joy after all they had been through ! ❤️

  • @randallshuck2976
    @randallshuck2976 Год назад +34

    Gibson took a number of stories surrounding the Revolutionary officer Francis Marion (Swamp Fox) and the British officer Banastre Tarleton in the running battles in South Carolina. They really pumped it up on both sides however Marion had learned the indigenous methods and tactics during service in the French and Indian wars. Tarleton was considered brutal even by the standards of the day. Gabriel was his father and a brother but I don't know of any of his children by that name. Marion has been credited as the father of guerilla warfare. He never had more that 50 to 70 men but he kept a large part of the British army in the south off balance and stuck trying to catch him. It made a big difference to Washington's campaign in the north and Cornwallis loss in the south.

    • @jamesstrickland517
      @jamesstrickland517 Год назад

      My grandfather was named after him Francis Marion Strickland, I have seen the Strickland forest in S.C. and the family came from the Pendleton Distric of S.C. near the Georgia border depending on the census and the border survey depended on which state they were in.

    • @wonderweasle2212
      @wonderweasle2212 Год назад +1

      Florence sc

    • @dansmart3182
      @dansmart3182 Год назад

      It's kinda sad how Tarleton is viewed. The one massacre he was involved in happened when he was injured and his men charged. After which they tried to surrender. The us turned it into a huge propoganda campaign.
      Just like Simcoe in Turn Washington's spies. He wasn't a mustache twirling villain... heck he was instrumental in abolishing slavery in Canada.

    • @oldscratch3535
      @oldscratch3535 Год назад

      I grew up on the SC/GA border. On Marion Avenue...lol.

    • @TD-mg6cd
      @TD-mg6cd 7 месяцев назад

      Decades ago there was a Disney series titled THE SWAMP FOX. Leslie Nielson played Marion. John Sutton played Tarleton. Tim Considine played Gabriel.

  • @philmullineaux5405
    @philmullineaux5405 Год назад +19

    The tall guy is Adam Baldwin. Even since as a teen in the movie,My Bodyguard, and his near perfect role as Animal Mother in Full Metal Jacket, the guy has never done a bad movie!

    • @AmorphisBob
      @AmorphisBob Год назад +8

      or bad TV show

    • @HollowPoint_762
      @HollowPoint_762 Год назад +4

      @@AmorphisBob plays in my absolute favorite TV show "Chuck" lol

    • @jgood005
      @jgood005 Год назад +4

      @@AmorphisBob so true, RIP firefly

    • @brettwilliams5712
      @brettwilliams5712 Год назад +1

      Idk pretty sure he killed somebody irl... I'd consider that bad
      My bad you said adam

    • @friendzenterkolkata
      @friendzenterkolkata 11 месяцев назад

      He did a cameo for his buddy Nathan Fillion in Castle and he was absolutely brilliant in that!

  • @ladyhotep5189
    @ladyhotep5189 Год назад +87

    Technically Mel is American. RIP Heath Ledger

    • @jeffburnham6611
      @jeffburnham6611 Год назад +21

      Born in New York. Definitely an American by birth.

    • @gideonp9762
      @gideonp9762 Год назад +4

      I was gonna say my whole life has been a lie lol

    • @willthorburn1985
      @willthorburn1985 Год назад +4

      Yeah Mel Gibson spent much of his youth and trained in the arts in Australia with his early roles there....I don't think he has Australian citizenship

    • @rickyderby
      @rickyderby Год назад +4

      Bruh, wdym “technically”😂😂😂😂. He IS American

    • @feardabeard7635
      @feardabeard7635 Год назад +6

      And a Patriot. 🇺🇲

  • @saaamember97
    @saaamember97 Год назад +10

    Mel Gibson is American by birth. Born in Peekskill, NY and grew up in Australia starting at age 12. His dual-citizenship is actually America and Ireland.

    • @peterharrison5833
      @peterharrison5833 Год назад

      Thanks for the info. Also, like the Hap Arnold USAAF patch.

  • @chasehedges6775
    @chasehedges6775 Год назад +21

    Such a good movie and 2000s classic.

  • @barrylindon5483
    @barrylindon5483 Год назад +1

    It was a very sweet intro of you Achara,it madr our hearts warmer❤
    I saw this movie the first time when i was younger,and rewatchimg it with you Achara,was a true pleasure.

  • @johnny05100
    @johnny05100 Год назад +11

    This movie rules

  • @RobertLesliePalmer
    @RobertLesliePalmer 10 месяцев назад +1

    I am a former U.S. Army Captain, and the tactics of the period were required by the weapons. Muskets lacked range and accuracy, so it was necessary to mass the weaponry to achieve victory. Benjamin Martin, the “Ghost,” is loosely based on Francis Marion, the “Swamp Fox.” Tavington is loosely based on Banastre Tarleton, who actually survived the war. If you want to see more of his evil, watch the movie, Amazing Grace.

  • @nihsreyasaramchandra7162
    @nihsreyasaramchandra7162 2 месяца назад

    You're amazing Achara, such a good heart... ❤ I always watch your reactions... I never watch a single person's reactions, but you're powerful alone! ❤

  • @twohorsesinamancostume7606
    @twohorsesinamancostume7606 Год назад +15

    Battles were fought in lines like that because the weapon at the time was the Musket, which didn't have any rifling. Rifles did exist but they were hard to make and gunpowder at the time burned pretty dirty, leaving a thick film that you would have a very hard time cleaning out of any rifling in the middle of a battle.
    Muskets were inaccurate so your best bet at hitting anything is to mass your troops together and organize them into lines so that you could fire in volleys. Even so you saw the result, an entire line would fire and maybe a handful of men would be hit.

    • @peterharrison5833
      @peterharrison5833 Год назад +1

      Yes. Also, something I read years ago about the muskets of the time was that they were good to about 40 yards. So....line up in a row within site of the enemy, load your weapon, and be ready for the order to fire. Then duck....

    • @meminustherandomgooglenumbers
      @meminustherandomgooglenumbers Год назад +2

      The other reason for standing in lines is cuz horses will refuse to charge an unbroken line. But if one guy is missing, then the horses will crash right thru instead, and that’s when cavalry starts to wreck everything.

  • @sactyb
    @sactyb Год назад

    Thank you Australia for two special gifts of our lifetime

  • @QuantumFlux_22
    @QuantumFlux_22 Год назад +8

    I watch this movie a couple times a year but always on the 4th of July. More people should watch these patriotic type movies that remind us of where we started. Happy Independence Day everyone!

  • @texasrattlesnake31637
    @texasrattlesnake31637 Год назад +1

    Incredible Movie & reaction Achara!

  • @mattparksmusic
    @mattparksmusic Год назад +1

    Really nice reaction video Achara!

  • @jasonhager524
    @jasonhager524 Год назад +2

    “Have you ever wondered what happened to the 56 men who signed the Declaration of Independence?
    Five signers were captured by the British as traitors, and tortured before they died. Twelve had their homes ransacked and burned. Two lost their sons in the revolutionary army, another had two sons captured. Nine of the 56 fought and died from wounds or hardships of the revolutionary war.
    They signed and they pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor.
    What kind of men were they? Twenty-four were lawyers and jurists. Eleven were merchants, nine were farmers and large plantation owners, men of means, well educated. But they signed the Declaration of Independence knowing full well that the penalty would be death if they were captured.
    Carter Braxton of Virginia, a wealthy planter and trader, saw his ships swept from the seas by the British Navy. He sold his home and properties to pay his debts, and died in rags.
    Thomas McKeam was so hounded by the British that he was forced to move his family almost constantly. He served in the Congress without pay, and his family was kept in hiding. His possessions were taken from him, and poverty was his reward.
    Vandals or soldiers or both, looted the properties of Ellery, Clymer, Hall, Walton, Gwinnett, Heyward, Ruttledge, and Middleton.
    At the battle of Yorktown, Thomas Nelson Jr., noted that the British General Cornwallis had taken over the Nelson home for his headquarters. The owner quietly urged General George Washington to open fire. The home was destroyed, and Nelson died bankrupt.
    Francis Lewis had his home and properties destroyed. The enemy jailed his wife, and she died within a few months.
    John Hart was driven from his wife’s bedside as she was dying. Their 13 children fled for their lives. His fields and his gristmill were laid to waste. For more than a year he lived in forests and caves, returning home to find his wife dead and his children vanished. A few weeks later he died from exhaustion and a broken heart. Norris and Livingston suffered similar fates.
    Such were the stories and sacrifices of the American Revolution. These were not wild eyed, rabble-rousing ruffians. They were soft-spoken men of means and education. They had security, but they valued liberty more. Standing tall, straight, and unwavering, they pledged: ‘For the support of this declaration, with firm reliance on the protection of the divine providence, we mutually pledge to each other, our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.’”
    Michael W Smith

  • @757optim
    @757optim Год назад +14

    A pretty good representation of the sacrifices made by those who won our independence from the most powerful nation on the planet. Success was far from guaranteed. In fact, it was very unlikely and improbably won.
    (The William Tavington character is influenced by Banastre "the Butcher" Tarleton and Benjamin Martin by Francis "Swamp Fox" Marion.)
    Happy Independence Day.

    • @wiseguy01
      @wiseguy01 Год назад +2

      No it is not lol, this movie is revisionist historical fantasy at its worst.

    • @paulcarfantan6688
      @paulcarfantan6688 Год назад

      Good movie but don`t forget that three foreign countries helped Americans a lot in gaining their independence, France, Spain and the Netherlands.Mostly France, I mean look at the battle of Yorktown. Comte De Rochambeau, Amiral De
      Grasse and of course Marquis De Lafayette,three important friends of America back then.

  • @angelamayo8832
    @angelamayo8832 Год назад +2

    I want to see more reactions from just Achara. Everyone is great. I just felt a lot of great input and vulnerability that I can connect with. Thank you!!
    Also, "yeah, not mad about it" was my favorite comment!

  • @antesarabas-qx8hl
    @antesarabas-qx8hl Год назад +7

    I like this move 😵😵😵❤❤

  • @OhArchie
    @OhArchie Год назад +10

    A great reaction and a wonderful summary, well delivered!

  • @rescuetweak
    @rescuetweak Год назад +2

    Thanks for the great reaction. There is an excellent short, under 10 minutes I think, piece by Paul Harvey about the Price paid during and in the aftermath of this conflict. by those who fought on the American side.

  • @bradleyd6000
    @bradleyd6000 Год назад +3

    33:55 That scene breaks me every time.

  • @JordanCesaroni93
    @JordanCesaroni93 Год назад +8

    Happy 4th of July! 🇺🇸

  • @philmullineaux5405
    @philmullineaux5405 Год назад +10

    The evil guy has done many great movies including the captain in Blackhawk Down and in Fury.

  • @Chamomileable
    @Chamomileable Год назад +5

    You might recognize the "tall guy" redcoat who sells out his neighbors as Adam Baldwin. He's in Firefly and Full Metal Jacket. He also has occasionally done VO work for DC as Superman.

  • @josephheitzmann7745
    @josephheitzmann7745 7 месяцев назад

    The man who Played Mr Wilkins, who told of where Benjamin Martin’s Family was as well as threw the torch under orders was Played by Adam Baldwin, who had a small role in “Independence Day “ got his start in the 70’s movie “My Bodyguard” where a bullied teen hires him to protect him.

  • @bbwng54
    @bbwng54 Год назад +11

    A very popular film that is mostly historically inaccurate. Tavington is a caricature of Banastre Tarleton, who never burned a church filled with people. The concept of "no quarter" (eg "Tarleton's quarter") was characteristic of warfare when no quarter was given to an enemy who refused to surrender. Atrocities were performed by both the Americans (Pyle's defeat, end of King's Mountain) and the British (Waxhaws). The resemblance of Mel Gibson to Francis Marion is thin- Marion did live in the swamps around Snow's island and did recruit small numbers of men of different backgrounds.

  • @SoCalPatriot81
    @SoCalPatriot81 8 месяцев назад

    PHENOMENAL movie!

  • @shainewhite2781
    @shainewhite2781 Год назад +7

    Happy July 4th!

  • @theylied1776
    @theylied1776 Год назад +1

    Mel Gibson is actually an American who moved to Australia when he was 10.

  • @lucasrokitowski8707
    @lucasrokitowski8707 7 месяцев назад

    Just 70 years later there was a civil war which puts a sad note on this.

  • @adambrown3918
    @adambrown3918 Год назад +10

    For historical perspective:
    1. The Patriot - 2000 ( takes place 1776 Charleston, South Carolina )
    2. Last of The Mohicans - 1992 ( takes place 1757 Upstate colonial New York )
    3. The Mission - 1986 ( takes place 1750 Argentina/Paraguay Igauza Falls )
    I consider the trio as companion films as they foster a sense of how difficult and brutal colonial life was for everyone. Please add the other two to your watch lists. Thank you. 😊❤

    • @paulcarfantan6688
      @paulcarfantan6688 Год назад

      Good choices and there`s a fourth one:
      4. Yorktown - 1976 ( takes place 1781 in Virginia )

  • @shadowmane55
    @shadowmane55 Год назад

    love this movie

  • @muzikman4399
    @muzikman4399 10 месяцев назад +1

    Mel Gibson is an American not Australian. He was born in Peekskill NY but moved to Australia when he was twelve with his parents.

  • @ironman0917
    @ironman0917 Год назад +6

    Mel Gibson's character is very loosely based on a man very well known here in South Carolina. His name was Francis Marion. The "Swamp Fox". His guerrilla tactics tied up and harassed the British Army for a couple of years here in SC. The Colonel Tavington in the movie is loosely based on Colonel Banastre Tarleton, a Dragoon, under the command of Lord Cornwallis. Tarlton is well know as being very ruthless and cold blooded. The final battle scene in the movie is based on an actual battle. The Battle of Cowpens, near the small town of Chesnee, South Carolina, which was a victory for the Americans, and the turning point in the Revolutionary War. Francis Marion was not at this battle, but Tarlton was. Also, Field Marshal Erwin Rommel of the 2nd World War, studied the tactics of Francis Marion the "Swamp Fox" and applied some of them in WW II and hence was to be known as the "Desert Fox". Playing off of Marion's "Swamp Fox" name.

    • @wiseguy01
      @wiseguy01 Год назад +3

      He was also a pretty vicious slave owner whose slaves ran away from him and fought against him on the side of the British. Also copied most of his guerilla warfare tactics from Native Americans whom were fighting like that for centuries before the Europeans invaded their lands. Tell the whole story.

    • @jaycounterfeit9756
      @jaycounterfeit9756 Год назад

      Wrong 😂😂

    • @oldscratch3535
      @oldscratch3535 Год назад

      @@wiseguy01 None of that negates anything he did.

    • @wiseguy01
      @wiseguy01 Год назад

      @@oldscratch3535 nothing he did changes that he is evil

  • @TD-mg6cd
    @TD-mg6cd 7 месяцев назад

    The final battle is representative of The Battle of the Cowpens. The setting is different, but the tactics were the same. It was one of the first American implementations of "defense in depth".

  • @Tony41christ
    @Tony41christ 6 месяцев назад

    Colonel Tavington was my favorite character. He understood the harsh reality that in order to be successful in war you have to be brutal. Even if that means taking the war to the civilians who are helping aid your enemy. There was nothing wrong with Tavingtons tactics.

  • @robertlehnert4148
    @robertlehnert4148 Месяц назад

    Adam Baldwin (NO relation to the more famous Baldwin clan) who played the Loyalist Captain Wilkins is best known for playing Jayne in the television series _Firefly_

  • @antesarabas-qx8hl
    @antesarabas-qx8hl Год назад +3

    Happy birthday America love you from I Iraq❤❤❤❤💙

  • @rsirari
    @rsirari Год назад

    i was 12yrs old when i first watched this movie!!!!! now i am 30!!!

  • @AW11-e4h
    @AW11-e4h Год назад +3

    Happy birthday America 🇺🇸🤘🤘

  • @tomkelly8774
    @tomkelly8774 Год назад +1

    This movie is a masterpiece as are several mels movies,,,I like your reaction.,, You're pretty good. Do you take requests? How about " legends of the fall" or Brave heart.

  • @BlyatBlaster
    @BlyatBlaster Год назад +2

    39:34 this is so symbolic. The tattered flag pulled off the field after a crushing defeat. And when Gabriel retrieved it the soldier remarked, “It’s hopeless. It’s a lost cause.” Which had twofold meaning. One, that the flag was beyond repair. And two, that the Cause, the Cause of Liberty, was lost.
    But Gabriel patched the flag. He saved the tattered lost cause. And that flag is the symbol of hope for the Cause of Liberty. And it’s that symbol and hope that gives Benjamin the strength to keep fighting.

  • @daveyoung9628
    @daveyoung9628 Год назад +1

    Just loved your reaction 🇺🇸

  • @johnscott4196
    @johnscott4196 22 дня назад

    You don't need help doll, you are the best

  • @jedi-monkey
    @jedi-monkey Год назад +1

    Best thing I heard all day. Americans give it to the brits played by 2 Australians. Classic! 😅

  • @mpdw3j
    @mpdw3j 11 месяцев назад +1

    “Played by two Australians”, I knew Heath Ledger was Australia 🇦🇺, but I was so confused and had to Google Mel Gibson to confirm he was American 🇺🇸 and I wasn’t crazy 😂.

    • @shirindashti5158
      @shirindashti5158 2 месяца назад

      Mel Gibson was I believe born in America but then family moved to Australia when he was 12 then moved back.

  • @DeAnne1233
    @DeAnne1233 8 месяцев назад

    A large scale duel at ten paces; we added snipers to the mix.
    The goal of a duel was to bravely face your opponent and be a more accurate shooter than they are.
    Winners were the ones left standing, especially if you brought more men.
    Gun and sword duels are tribalism with weaponry when diplomacy fails, whether mano e mano or en mass.

  • @ridleysaria
    @ridleysaria Год назад +2

    One of the things I liked about this movie was how it showed corruption on both sides of the conflict. Benjamin already had his demons. Cornwallis was arrogant but had a sense of honor… but the conflict eventually caused him to betray his own code. Even Gabriel strayed when he sought revenge against Tavington. He went against his own ideals and failed to stay the course. But that’s war, it’s not always so black and white.

  • @tvdroid22
    @tvdroid22 18 дней назад

    Fun. Yeah.

  • @jeffsherk7056
    @jeffsherk7056 Год назад +1

    Almost 200 years of experimentation went into developing the infantry tactics that pertained during the Revolutionary War. As others have said, the muskets they used were able to hit a man-sized target at 75 meters or closer. The long lines of men firing their weapons in unison was, in effect, a human-powered machine that fired a mass of projectiles in a pulse every 15 seconds or so. it was advantageous for opposing armies to close the distance between them as rapidly as possible so that their first volley would score the most hits, and result in the greatest damage to the enemy facing them. Well trained soldiers could load and fire four shots per minute, and when several lines of men each of 100 guys standing shoulder to shoulder learned how to fire their weapons in unison, in rapid succession, then their rather inaccurate weapons could have a devastating effect on the opposing army.

  • @scottsager440
    @scottsager440 Год назад

    July 4th, 4th of July are both appropriate, but more accurately "Independence Day".

  • @nedzed3663
    @nedzed3663 Год назад +6

    After his youngest son was shot I remember seeing the look on his face going "oh I recognize that classic homicidal Mel Gibson expression. Some folks are going to die"

  • @wesgillhamii_pde
    @wesgillhamii_pde Год назад

    Anyone else still have their VHS copy of this movie?

  • @Brian25091
    @Brian25091 Год назад +5

    A Roland Emmerich film. The same guy who does a lot of disaster movies, the man who brought us Stargate (movie not tv series) and Independence Day movies.

    • @DeerBoy736
      @DeerBoy736 Год назад +3

      This movie is certainly a disaster so he was true to himself with this one.

    • @cpj93070
      @cpj93070 Год назад +3

      And also a German, who seriously has the gall to label that Brits locked colonists in Churches and set them on fire, while his own countrymen did exactly this at Oradour-sur-Glane in WW2.

    • @coffeeveins
      @coffeeveins Год назад

      @@cpj93070 Not just that they had Brits do this, but Tarleton, who was a real soldier. While he had a reputation for being ruthless to enemy soldiers did nothing like what the film showed him doing to women and children/civilians(the city of Liverpool actually wrote the studio at the time on the families behalf to complain about how the film slandered their ancestors). I actually didn’t realize until the comments that so many held it in such high regard. It was a bit of a joke along with movies like U-571 and Michael Bay’s Pearl Harbour for how loose they played with history among most of my friends and family at the time(I’m normally fairly forgiving of a bit of embellishment for dramas sake, except when it takes away real heroes accomplishments or stains the memories/records of real people).

    • @paulcarfantan6688
      @paulcarfantan6688 Год назад

      @@DeerBoy736 Well your comment is a real disaster to be sure, unlike the movie.

    • @TheAaronChand
      @TheAaronChand 3 месяца назад

      Also the accents of the American colonists should still sound English or Dutch since a lot of the American settlers where of Dutch heritage

  • @scarecrowman7789
    @scarecrowman7789 Год назад +1

    Colonel tavington what a guy!

  • @dianeritthaler7792
    @dianeritthaler7792 Год назад +4

    Great movie❤

  • @danielh.5116
    @danielh.5116 3 месяца назад

    You all MUST watch hacksaw ridge!!!

  • @losrajvosa0078
    @losrajvosa0078 11 месяцев назад

    Jason Isac nail the villian role here BIG TIME.

  • @pduidesign
    @pduidesign Год назад +22

    A “teenager” was something that was only created in the mid-20th century. Back in 1776 you were a child and then an adult. You were viewed as an adult when you were 13-15 (which is when you would get married). The majority of the American continental army was made up of boys who were younger than 18 years old. Think about that. We owe our country and our freedoms to a bunch of brave teenage boys who averaged 15 years old!!!

    • @desecrator09
      @desecrator09 Год назад +1

      The sad truth is that in some of the less developed countries even today, those are their ages. Not all of them of course but some.

    • @pduidesign
      @pduidesign Год назад

      @@desecrator09 so true. So many Americans think the rest of the world is like the west and have no idea the horrors that go on everyday.

    • @TheAaronChand
      @TheAaronChand 3 месяца назад

      Teenagers where considered adults in the 18th century at least in Old world countries such as Western countries and there settler colonies such as America Australia Canada Mexico Argentina Domnican Republic Venezuela Bolivia Columbia Ecuador Peru Panama Brazil Honduras Florida. Texas New Mexico Arizona California which where Spanish Colonies at the time. And in India Egypt Iran than called Persia Arab countries Afghanistan etc

    • @TheAaronChand
      @TheAaronChand 3 месяца назад

      In fact Lord Cornwallis after losing at Yorktown would go on to become Governor General of India and Ireland. My family was from India orginally and still living in India during the 18th century. Cornwallis unlike in America Cornwallis would be successful. As Governor General. Laying the foundation of Brtish Empires rule of India and Ireland.

  • @HarleyLimited
    @HarleyLimited Год назад +1

    Mel Gibsib was born In New York USA

  • @endless013
    @endless013 Год назад +1

    0:25 played by 1 Australian and an American, Mel is from New York.

  • @brut1ful828
    @brut1ful828 Год назад +1

    Great movie, Great reaction 👍

  • @guapo_mike2910
    @guapo_mike2910 Год назад

    Let me just get achara solo content, let’s make that happen 😁

  • @dgirl786
    @dgirl786 Год назад +16

    Love revisiting all these classics. Please consider adding Jodie Foster's 'Panic Room' (2002) to the list. Ta. 🧡

  • @she_who_dares9713
    @she_who_dares9713 Год назад

    Oh man. I absolutely loved this movie. :)

  • @jonathanphillips3612
    @jonathanphillips3612 Год назад

    It’s called a Tomahawk Darlin lol

  • @kyleshockley1573
    @kyleshockley1573 Год назад +7

    @15:40 There's no denial. Their savior was tortured and crucified by both local and imperial power; they knew all too well what the world had in store for them. That they showed reverence in a time like that speaks to more than what we could probably muster for ourselves today.

    • @-crixusdingess6562
      @-crixusdingess6562 Год назад +1

      The irony of this comment can't be measured with any instrument known to man.

    • @kyleshockley1573
      @kyleshockley1573 Год назад +1

      @@-crixusdingess6562 The ambiguity of this comment can't be measured with any instrument known to online bots.

    • @paulcarfantan6688
      @paulcarfantan6688 Год назад

      @@kyleshockley1573 The worthlessness of your comment can`t be measured by any instrument known to mankind.

  • @casco3683
    @casco3683 Год назад +2

    Young heath ledger..

  • @Katana2040
    @Katana2040 Год назад +1

    Brilliant work, Achara! Cheers!

  • @kevinstrade2752
    @kevinstrade2752 11 месяцев назад

    To quote Thomas Jefferson about slavery, " It was like holding a wolf by the ears, you didnt like it but you didnt dare let it go" Our economy was agricultural depended upon slavery. Letting them go in 1783 would have destroyed what little economy we had. Many did want to do just that but the economic pressure made slavery a necessary evil for the time. Not until the industrial revolution of the 1820's and on did slavery begin to become obsolete, especially in the north. The south however having better climates, still held on to an agricultural economy. The slavery issue would be resolved during our civil war far more brutal than the revolutionary war.. The south argued that states should determine the slavery issue and felt the topic becoming more federal in which they were outnumbered, hence secession triggering our civil war. As Shelby Foote a famous civil war historian put it in simple but effective terms, before our civil war it was the United States are, afterwards it was the United States is....Though it took 90 years to finally free slaves, we did and our founding ideals began to catch up, they still are today. Hope this perspective helps from an American who is a student of history

  • @todddecann2483
    @todddecann2483 5 месяцев назад

    The reason they stand face to face is muskets were horriby inaccurate

  • @timesthree5757
    @timesthree5757 5 месяцев назад

    Dad see's red the whole time.

  • @abdulpowell
    @abdulpowell Год назад +1

    Happy independence day Achara 🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤

  • @lahire4943
    @lahire4943 Год назад +3

    Actually, half the army besieging Yorktown was French, the siege was a French idea and the French fleet had to defeat the British at the battle of the Chesapeake to arrive at Yorktown.
    Also, French troops had been fighting the British since 1778 not only in North America but all over the world, and the French almost invaded England itself.

  • @GameDjeenie
    @GameDjeenie Год назад

    The burning church scene... That is why we always need to build an escape tunnel first when building anything... lol jk...

  • @rodneybrewer7246
    @rodneybrewer7246 Год назад +2

    Never ever underestimate the love between a daughter and father, js 😊

  • @MrBenedictus25
    @MrBenedictus25 Год назад

    Mister malfoy is the Villingen again

  • @Sifirela
    @Sifirela Год назад +3

    15:30 -- Faith can help you with any hardships. Christians are led to praise and to look for the good news even in troubling times. It's not that they're delusional to know what's happening, they're just praying for the souls of those men who were hanged and for their safety. While it seems strange to others, it does give many great comfort knowing despite everything, at least there is hope even if it's minuscule to help you take each day one at a time. At least you're alive, you know? At least you're well while evil takes a hold of the land once again. The battle of good and evil is very real.
    Also God is peace, so they find comfort in their Savior Jesus Christ and know that He won't forsake them/will give them comfort in their time of need. Many can say what they want, but until they really experience the true nature of God and His only Son...every one of them will find it stupid and ridiculous...But it really is not at all that way.

  • @NoLuvvv-gz8xg
    @NoLuvvv-gz8xg Год назад

    👊🏻

  • @Gutslinger
    @Gutslinger 7 месяцев назад

    15:37 Strange how?. Majorly in denial of what? Lol

  • @maghnas20
    @maghnas20 3 месяца назад

    Actually when he asked about Ohio it wasn’t just a state but the entire Midwest region at that time

  • @sacredbeastzenon
    @sacredbeastzenon 11 месяцев назад +1

    It's funny that some believe Mel Gibson is Australian.

  • @thomasben5735
    @thomasben5735 Год назад +2

    Mel Gibson is American born in NY

    • @mikesmicroshop4385
      @mikesmicroshop4385 Год назад

      Mel actually has dual citizenship, but not the way that you would think! He has both Irish and American citizenship, and is an Australian permanent resident!

  • @willcall8506
    @willcall8506 Год назад

    13:51.
    Weapons of that era were horribly inaccurate. The only way armies can effectively do damage to each other is if they have loads of those guns firing off close together.
    Also they HAD to stay together, they didn't have radios. All they had to relay commands were trumpets/bugles, drums & fifes/flutes.

  • @jb2839
    @jb2839 Год назад +2

  • @-Knife-
    @-Knife- Год назад +1

    Fantastic film for America Day!

  • @kerndalealbano2063
    @kerndalealbano2063 8 месяцев назад

    Lone survivor next . Reaction

  • @ARMY-ep6fz
    @ARMY-ep6fz Год назад +1

    When I went to iraq the first time and came back home my daughter was only 3. So she forgot who i was and ran from me scared. Broke my heart into piece's. But it didn't take long for her to remember me again. Then I left and went again. Being a solider is very hard on a normal family life. On my 4 th trip i was hit by a large IED and lost my eye and 48 other wounds that's a hole other story for a child to see.