Enjoyed this war movie.Good cast,plenty of action and beautiful scenery around the coast of Malta. That was a dangerous mission to undertake but they accomplished it brilliantly.Thanks for screening ❤
James Franciscus, 1970. The production/ cinematography is superb. When they were still trying to make the images clearer, instead of the current trend of making every shot murky, dark, and fuzzy so they don’t have to produce good imagery. This reminds me of the early bond films in many ways.
James Franciscus was very handsome and a pretty decent actor! In all the war movies, especially the older black and white movies, the English always threw in a snobbish remark against the American soldiers. One thing I liked is, the Americans never retaliated when they produced their war movies and Englishmen were included, which showed maturity!❤
@@marjorjorietillman856 Come to think of it, you're probably right. I do seem to remember that Admiral King, USN, was an Anglophobe. I never heard why but I did hear or read that he really hated the Brits.
I could have sworn it was Charlton Heston, so was looking for the name in the credit roll, but saw James Franciscus. Did a search and the two do look alike.
This is not the average war film, it is a sobering film showing the brutal reality of the physical conflicts plus the destructiveness of the inner conflicts and resulting mental illness and breakdown of relationships.
Most of this film was acted in Malta. I can recognise every scene, I was born in Malta and live in Malta and in my childhood I roamed on every bit of Maltese land shown in this film.
@@fernandofierro7958 Well, I was born in Malta, then at the age of 16 left Malta and stayed many years abroad in other countries including 16 years in England, then after many years, I returned back to Malta. Sooo I do not think that makes me , " Sooo your a Malta 🇲🇹 kinda of a guy or girl" One cannot take things for granted or make such relations, as in the case of your own name, " Fernando Fierro " where I suppose there is nothing made of " iron" or " metallic" about you.
@@tryarunm Yes, it was a beautiful island, but now it is being ruined by too much building and overpopulation and too many tourists and traffic forced on us,
The type of movies I grew up on as a kid. For the time they were amazing~Man, imagine, all those model makers employed. The British were always portrayed as upper class sophistication and chivalry with duty to country and fellow man.... The sheer amount of snow white cloth by the truck load... wow.
I like the way everyone points loaded guns at each other, and uses pistols as pointers. Almost like none of them had any firearms training. Great upload. Worth the watch.
When I was a kid, my uncle, a ships gunner in the Navy, in WWII, would sometimes get drunk and talk about war at sea. He would sometimes cry. He brought back a rifle from the war. A British 303.
I have a Enfield number 4 mark 2 and a number 5 mark 1 in my collection I have other WW2 weapons but my favorite is a Steyr manufactured 1944 98k sniper my second is my springfield1903a4 sniper
The radio controlled glide bombs were top secret during the war. Dropped from a bomber out of range of ship then remote controlled to it's target. One glide bomb could sink a ship. When first used the allies didn't realize what happened
If only the Brits were smart enough to draft McHale the Skipper & Gilligan. The Germans woulda been laughing so hard they wouldn't been able to hit the broad side of the barn and probably everyone else involved too.
One certainly sank the Dido class Cruiser HMS Spartan, 29th January 1944, while she was off Anzio; hit abaft the funnel and went clean through her. My uncle, aged 19, was killed in the sinking. @@alexhayden2303
I'm sure I read somewhere that the E Boats were running diesel motors, so nowhere near as flammable either. Brit MTB's and MGB's were floating bombs (See Op Chariot for details).
Years ago I read a book about torpedo boat vs torpedo boat battles in the Mediterranean Sea during WWII. I can't remember the title or author. Can anyone be of assistance?
This was made when movies had class. You can tell because the romance scenes have oboe music as background. Not that cheap "bow chicka bow wow" crap in 70s movies.
Having watched the original version, there's quite a bit been cut. Is this because RUclipss seniors? Everything to protect us from anything that won't make a U certificate.
It's Unbelievable that a movie about the Naval battles that raged during Guadalcanal operation has Never been made. Many major battles were fought between the U.S. Navy and the IJN navy in the Solomon Islands 1942/43 Savage Nightly battles were fought trying to stop the "Tokyo Express" from resupplying the Japanese on Guadalcanal. In fact 4 U.S. Sailors died for every one Marine, during that fighting.
Maybe because the U.S. Navy and other Allied ships did not perform too well in those battles? A Japanese submarine fired one salvo of 6 torpedoes in late 1942, as part of all those battles for Guadalcanal. That single salvo of 6 torpedoes: A. Sunk an American aircraft carrier. B. Sunk an American destroyer. C. Damaged an American battleship so badly, that it had to slowly crawl back to the U.S., to lick its wounds. What a great movie would be about this subject alone !
@@FlorinSutu Or the Battleship USS Washington Under the command of the U.S. Navy's Admiral Lee, Sunk The IJN Battleship Kiroshima, at night with Radar directed 16 inch guns. Each Side lost 24 major capitol ships. Each side lost around 350 aircraft. However, the Japanese lost the Island and the bloody campaign and five times as many men.
The Japanese were superb night fighters. Their ship captains were trained to immediately fire with out orders. They had a super torpedo with a 22 mile range. Out torpedo only worked hf the time.
Thanks for posting this good movie! According to the closing credits, it was actually filmed in Malta. I like that scenic realism. The personal troubles of the characters was also realistic. The movie makers also didn't sugar coat the battle scenes. Characters got hurt and killed on both sides. This movie was well done, but without any unneeded extra stuff.😊 My eyes are very light sensitive, so I have the brightness on my tablet set to about halfway. This is usually enough, but I should have made it brighter for this movie, as the nighttime sea scenes were too dark on the halfway setting. At least I didn't have to watch it on my smart phone's tiny screen. That thing died at the beginning of February. After discussing things with my computer geek brother, I got a 10 inch tablet with one of those rugged kid covers. We both feel that anything smaller wouldn't be as nice a viewing size, and anything bigger would be awkward and clunky to handle. It's great for watching any kind of movie, including old war movies like this one. Alright, alright, for those who may be curious, the kid cover is a nice tropical blue.😂
gas engines were lighter and faster pt boats were made of plywood and top secret. nothing was faster on the water and speed kills we learned that from the Germans.
@@ianturpin9180 PT boats went in for the kill at 3/4 throttle by the time the target ship had calibrated speed and position so they could target the PT they had already let go their torpedos turned about and were running at full speed making a hit from artillery impossible. A lucky shot would have been the end of the Pt regardless of engine because it was made of plywood.
What was the name of the series where James Franciscus was a blind man, a detective I think. It was on during the late 60s or the early 70s. Does anyone remember the name of the show?
Every time I watch an American or English war movie, I wonder why it took 6 years to defeat the Germans in World War II. Just the fact that the machine guns of the British seem to be more effective than the 2cm guns of the German fast boats. Well, a little fun fact for all history enthusiasts, neither the Fritz X bomb nor the HS 293 glider bomb were used before August 1943. So much for realism in this movie.
The problem is Devil runs the world. He is lier and murderer. This is the reason why Hitler got the power, but Christ was executed as "blasphemer" and "rioter" by denunciation of clergy. That's why we've got the Gospel about the God's kingdom. Jehovah would put everything in order. The dead will be resurected and we'll meet our beloved ones again! :-)
If you like PT Type boats I highly recomend two books published by Squadron. Schnell Boats in Action and PT Boats in Action. Very informative. Lots of detail, pictures and color schemes. Both out of print but could possibly be found or ordered through used book store. Worth it.
submachinegun, rifle, pistol, revolver? . . . 9 mm - so were Lugers, one of the Nazis' most recognizable sidearms, a semi-automatic pistol. @@williambean8211
"geraldmiller5260," I noticed that too and thought 'typical.' However, 45:53 - 46:01, how refreshing to see American commando Jeffords' resourcefulness when he strips a magazine from the dead Nazi soldier's submachinegun immediately after removing his gun's depleted magazine. [How SLOPPY and CARELESS of the sound effects editor who includes the sound of the metal of the empty magazine hitting the hard cement but not metal-on-metal with the insertion / reloading.] Realistically, in addition to the UNLIMITED rounds of available ammo, I'll wager in a real firefight like we see here -- repeatedly -- the indiscriminate 'spraying' of a full magazine's capacity from left to right, up and down, ALL OVER -- repeatedly -- would have been replaced with wise, deliberate SHORT BURSTS of well aimed shots..
Great movie shame it was another'we need an American in charge movies' but to be fair the British won in the end . . . . did anyone else see the blue parasailing parachute taking off during the attack
I found the gun battle on the island ludicrous. The way they were waving those sub-machine guns around you would think they thought they were magic wands. If they were twenty feet away they would be lucky to hit a barn door. Instead they were 50 feet or more. You can fire from the hip, but it must be a stable hold. Recoil alone would knock the gun into the air from the way they manoeuvred. Did they really have an armourer and adviser for this film? Whats with the model boats they used in some of the scenes? They obviously did it on the cheap.
Fritz X and the HS 293 were the two most used glide bombs used by the German Luftwaffe during WW II. It was the first use of stand off , remotely piloted amart bombs.
HS=293 was not a glide bomb. It was a rocket powered miniature plane with radio control. It only took the Brits a few months to figure out how it worked and jam the radio signals.
I believe the Mistel 'piggyback system' was successful one time. The US used war weary bombers controlled by AZON on sub pens. Not sure of success rate. Joseph Kennedy's oldest son was killed in this experiment!
I never knew what an "E Boat" was until just two days ago. The "E Boats" were all electric U Boats that could charge their batteries via a snorkel at periscope depth, and could stay submerged for many days. If the Germans had mass produced these Boats, they would have won the war. They were much more expensive than the regular Type VII C Boats were. They could dive deeper, and run faster submerged than any other subs could.
E-boats were as you see in this old movie. The Germans called them S-Boats (Schnellboote, or 'fast boats'). All diesel-electric submarines, on all sides, in WW2 could charge their batteries at periscope depth and remain submerged for days if necessary. Yes, Germany did build 118 advanced type 21 diesel-electric U-boats, each with a pair of MAN diesel engines and three times the usual battery capacities. They were optimized for operation submerged, but they were still just diesel-electrics. This new class arrived too late, but no matter. As we had cracked their naval codes we were sinking them as fast as they hit the Atlantic. We sank most of the German submarine fleet and, in total, killed about 30,000 German submariners. The majority simply vanished, ambushed by patrol aircraft.
If the Germans would have had that big number of sentinels planted everywhere and doing nothing, they would not have had soldiers available for the front lines.
Where can I get one of those submachine guns that have the worlds smallest 1000 round magazines? I can see the need for it when it takes 150 rounds to drop a German soldier 20 feet away 🙄🤦♂️
3:07)US citizens were transferred to the US military. I knew a man who went to the Army from the Canada Army commandos. He joined 1939. 23:21)Under siege, but the booze got through. 57:41)The Waffen-SS officer and the sub title said M16 instead if MI6. Ministry of Information. 1:09:42)The subtitle read OBERSTERNBACKFUHRER, The correct spelling is OBERSTURMBANNFUHRER. That was said.A Senior Assault Unit Leader. One rank below the Standartenfuhrer rank worn by the senior Waffen-SS officer.
@@michaelhewitt258 Used for "medicinal purposes". A RAF squadron, in Africa, traded with an USAAC unit. Scotch for flight gear. Mostly flight jackets. All branches of their military were poorly supplied. Several US units became their unofficial Quartermaster.
Lucky for the British troops and the Maltese, Hitler's didn't want to use his paratroopers again to take Malta like they did with Crete mainly because Hitler assumed such an assault on the island would be a failure.
... Picasso (?) "you influence the (art)work, the work influences you" - removing a nipple from any work of art is childish, and biologically and psychologically sterilizing,.. why must it always be about the victorian age - being safe from reality,...
@@robertbruce7497 Maybe because most movies coming out of the U.S. at that time had, what I would call, "gratuitous" nudity which had absolutely NOTHING to do with the plot.
☘️🌼./. 🇺🇸✈️✈Thank you FEATURE FILM 🎞 with great show videos film war combat USA 🇺🇸 American and England 🏴 from 1945 new🌎war combat number 02 to 1953 new🌎with Germany 🇩🇪 very good the best today . Thank you so very good ❤👍🇺🇸🚀
Many at OKH thought that any link up with the 4th panzer Armee (Panzer Gruppe 4)with Rommel’s Panzer Armee Afrika (which the Afrika Korp was a part of)in the Caucasus as fanciful at best and nearly impossible logistically…elements within OKW however thought of the possibility of just such an operation….but Der Fuhrer was more concerned with the Caucasian oil fields than any idea of such a grandiose maneuver,also by the time of the first battle of El Alamein Rommel’s Forces was at the end of its tether any chance of even reaching the Suez Canal was out of the question….
Wow...I saw this as a CBS movie of the week back in the 70s, when I was about 8 or 9 years old. I thought it was so great back then. (I remember this well because we couldn't say "hell" in my house.) But, looking at it 50 years later, it is painfully primitive, low budget filmmaking. Lots of rear projection screen shots...along with enough plastic model work to make a Godzilla movie! Still...it was a kick seeing it after all these years.
Enjoyed this war movie.Good cast,plenty of action and beautiful scenery around the coast of Malta. That was a dangerous mission to undertake but they accomplished it brilliantly.Thanks for screening
❤
James Franciscus, 1970. The production/ cinematography is superb. When they were still trying to make the images clearer, instead of the current trend of making every shot murky, dark, and fuzzy so they don’t have to produce good imagery. This reminds me of the early bond films in many ways.
James Franciscus was very handsome and a pretty decent actor! In all the war movies, especially the older black and white movies, the English always threw in a snobbish remark against the American soldiers. One thing I liked is, the Americans never retaliated when they produced their war movies and Englishmen were included, which showed maturity!❤
@@marjorjorietillman856 Come to think of it, you're probably right. I do seem to remember that Admiral King, USN, was an Anglophobe. I never heard why but I did hear or read that he really hated the Brits.
James Franciscus sounds just like Larry Hagman.
I could have sworn it was Charlton Heston, so was looking for the name in the credit roll, but saw James Franciscus. Did a search and the two do look alike.
@@StofStuiver wow! I don't see much resemblance, but the general shape of their faces is the same. Same grimace and smile expressions too.
It's cool to see the immense old fortifications of Malta that were built by the Knights of St. John.
"How the Maltese suffered in WW2"? Please read The Kappillan of Malta by Nicholas Monserrat. Sums up so much. My spelling is deplorable.
@@darylburnet8328I'm not a spelling or grammar cop. Very brief overview of the book's perspective, please.
@@JohnRodriguesPhotographer Read it a Long timeago in the 70's,
My cousin was a Spitfire Pilot stationed at Malta, R.I.P.
This is not the average war film, it is a sobering film showing the brutal reality of the physical conflicts plus the destructiveness of the inner conflicts and resulting mental illness and breakdown of relationships.
War Is Hell on Earth 😢
☮️🫂❤️🔥🇨🇦
Most of this film was acted in Malta. I can recognise every scene, I was born in Malta and live in Malta and in my childhood I roamed on every bit of Maltese land shown in this film.
This movie taught me where Malta was in relation to the Med... After nearly 50 years. It's my intention to visit and explore too.
Sooo your a Malta 🇲🇹 kinda of a guy or girl
You have a beautiful home island. Love those stone buildings.
@@fernandofierro7958 Well, I was born in Malta, then at the age of 16 left Malta and stayed many years abroad in other countries including 16 years in England, then after many years, I returned back to Malta.
Sooo I do not think that makes me , " Sooo your a Malta 🇲🇹 kinda of a guy or girl"
One cannot take things for granted or make such relations, as in the case of your own name, " Fernando Fierro " where I suppose there is nothing made of " iron" or " metallic" about you.
@@tryarunm Yes, it was a beautiful island, but now it is being ruined by too much building and overpopulation and too many tourists and traffic forced on us,
The type of movies I grew up on as a kid. For the time they were amazing~Man, imagine, all those model makers employed. The British were always portrayed as upper class sophistication and chivalry with duty to country and fellow man.... The sheer amount of snow white cloth by the truck load... wow.
Portugues
I like the way everyone points loaded guns at each other, and uses pistols as pointers. Almost like none of them had any firearms training. Great upload. Worth the watch.
Then in combat, they never aim. Just shoot full auto from the hip, and never run out of ammo. LOL
A very under-rated war film. Thanks for posting.
When I was a kid, my uncle, a ships gunner in the Navy, in WWII, would sometimes get drunk and talk about war at sea. He would sometimes cry. He brought back a rifle from the war. A British 303.
I have a Enfield number 4 mark 2 and a number 5 mark 1 in my collection I have other WW2 weapons but my favorite is a Steyr manufactured 1944 98k sniper my second is my springfield1903a4 sniper
i had a british 303 years ago, very good rifle
I'm retired from the royal navy I know how your uncle feels .
The radio controlled glide bombs were top secret during the war. Dropped from a bomber out of range of ship then remote controlled to it's target. One glide bomb could sink a ship. When first used the allies didn't realize what happened
Didn't one go down the funnel of KG 5? (Off Anzio?)
@@alexhayden2303 One did destroy a turret on the HMS Warspite.
If only the Brits were smart enough to draft McHale the Skipper & Gilligan. The Germans woulda been laughing so hard they wouldn't been able to hit the broad side of the barn and probably everyone else involved too.
It was an ingenious wicked weapon capable of sinking any type of ship except a heavy battleship over 40,000 tons.
One certainly sank the Dido class Cruiser HMS Spartan, 29th January 1944, while she was off Anzio; hit abaft the funnel and went clean through her. My uncle, aged 19, was killed in the sinking. @@alexhayden2303
The E boat was bigger and better armed then our PT boats, the Germans made a magnificent but deadly fighting machine in these death boats.
I'm sure I read somewhere that the E Boats were running diesel motors, so nowhere near as flammable either. Brit MTB's and MGB's were floating bombs (See Op Chariot for details).
See@@timgrenville-cleave2848
No
Years ago I read a book about torpedo boat vs torpedo boat battles in the Mediterranean Sea during WWII. I can't remember the title or author. Can anyone be of assistance?
also far more seaworthy
This was made when movies had class. You can tell because the romance scenes have oboe music as background. Not that cheap "bow chicka bow wow" crap in 70s movies.
This was released in 1970 - so probably only just escaped it!
@@dolvaranI think the person conflated romance with porn.
When you chop a movie down, you f*** up a good movie!
Especially when it's badly chopped. The fighting scenes in Sicily were so jumpy.
Having watched the original version, there's quite a bit been cut. Is this because RUclipss seniors? Everything to protect us from anything that won't make a U certificate.
Censors perhaps, not old people ?
So glad 1 American could show the Royal Navy how to get the job done !
(That's sarcasm by the way)
Sarcasm? Really? How unBritish!! Shame!.
Unless the American is the hero, the Yanks won't watch it and it won't make any money. It was always thus...
Many British films used to rent a yank to star in a film so they stood a reasonable chance to sell to the Yanks although a B or C lister never an A .
Great music by Frank Cordell, who also did "Mosquito Squadron" and "Khartoum". Elizabeth Shepherd was in "The Tomb of Legeia" with Vincent Price.
Great. Movie. And. Perfect. 🎉🎉🎉 💯💢💢💫💣
Still a good movie in 2024! Thanks for uploading.
It's Unbelievable that a movie about the Naval battles that raged during Guadalcanal operation has Never been made. Many major battles were fought between the U.S. Navy and the IJN navy in the Solomon Islands 1942/43 Savage Nightly battles were fought trying to stop the "Tokyo Express" from resupplying the Japanese on Guadalcanal. In fact 4 U.S. Sailors died for every one Marine, during that fighting.
What is the UN Navy??
Oh I see! IJN. Misread it.
Maybe because the U.S. Navy and other Allied ships did not perform too well in those battles?
A Japanese submarine fired one salvo of 6 torpedoes in late 1942, as part of all those battles for Guadalcanal. That single salvo of 6 torpedoes:
A. Sunk an American aircraft carrier.
B. Sunk an American destroyer.
C. Damaged an American battleship so badly, that it had to slowly crawl back to the U.S., to lick its wounds.
What a great movie would be about this subject alone !
@@FlorinSutu Or the Battleship USS Washington Under the command of the U.S. Navy's Admiral Lee, Sunk The IJN Battleship Kiroshima, at night with Radar directed 16 inch guns. Each Side lost 24 major capitol ships. Each side lost around 350 aircraft. However, the Japanese lost the Island and the bloody campaign and five times as many men.
The Japanese were superb night fighters. Their ship captains were trained to immediately fire with out orders. They had a super torpedo with a 22 mile range. Out torpedo only worked hf the time.
J'ai passé une très bonne soirée merci film très agréable
I've always loved that movie. I am very glad that you had it. Thanks very much for the great entertainment 😀
I love those machine guns that never need reloading. Master Chief, USN Ret.
Thanks for posting this good movie! According to the closing credits, it was actually filmed in Malta. I like that scenic realism. The personal troubles of the characters was also realistic. The movie makers also didn't sugar coat the battle scenes. Characters got hurt and killed on both sides. This movie was well done, but without any unneeded extra stuff.😊 My eyes are very light sensitive, so I have the brightness on my tablet set to about halfway. This is usually enough, but I should have made it brighter for this movie, as the nighttime sea scenes were too dark on the halfway setting. At least I didn't have to watch it on my smart phone's tiny screen. That thing died at the beginning of February. After discussing things with my computer geek brother, I got a 10 inch tablet with one of those rugged kid covers. We both feel that anything smaller wouldn't be as nice a viewing size, and anything bigger would be awkward and clunky to handle. It's great for watching any kind of movie, including old war movies like this one. Alright, alright, for those who may be curious, the kid cover is a nice tropical blue.😂
Well anybody with the gift of sight can see that it's Malta 🙈
Great. Movie. Nice location great looking cast. Thanks for upload
The modelmaking is top notch. Bravo!
It would be nice to see the opening credits. I know James Franciscus, but who else was in it?
If they only have a couple boats seaworthy out of 9 they should have plenty of extra sailors for the boats. Even with casualties.
I like this film because one of the actors In Malta is also in the TV show Crossroads with Meg Richsrdson played by Noel Gordon
He was also gay, bent as a nine bob note... But I don't think it showed.
I saw this as a kid mid 70s...thanks for the memories.
The German E boats had a huge advantage over us and UK torpedo boats. They had diesel engines.
gas engines were lighter and faster pt boats were made of plywood and top secret. nothing was faster on the water and speed kills we learned that from the Germans.
@@Theodorussfo yes but one incendiary she'll in the right place and BOOM. That doesn't happen with diesel.
@@ianturpin9180 American PT boats had self sealing fuel bladders like the aircraft.
@@ianturpin9180 PT boats went in for the kill at 3/4 throttle by the time the target ship had calibrated speed and position so they could target the PT they had already let go their torpedos turned about and were running at full speed making a hit from artillery impossible. A lucky shot would have been the end of the Pt regardless of engine because it was made of plywood.
They lost.
I love these films. The late Jame Franciscus does 100% to make this film a masterpiece. Is Hell Boats on DVD?
Nice upload, thanks for sharing
That was a pretty good movie.
Its great to watch films like this. The young actors were all fit and handsome!
And women not all look like kardasian ducks
@@WimvdBrink quackquack
What was the name of the series where James Franciscus was a blind man, a detective I think. It was on during the late 60s or the early 70s. Does anyone remember the name of the show?
Every time I watch an American or English war movie, I wonder why it took 6 years to defeat the Germans in World War II. Just the fact that the machine guns of the British seem to be more effective than the 2cm guns of the German fast boats. Well,
a little fun fact for all history enthusiasts, neither the Fritz X bomb nor the HS 293 glider bomb were used before August 1943. So much for realism in this movie.
The problem is Devil runs the world. He is lier and murderer. This is the reason why Hitler got the power, but Christ was executed as "blasphemer" and "rioter" by denunciation of clergy.
That's why we've got the Gospel about the God's kingdom. Jehovah would put everything in order. The dead will be resurected and we'll meet our beloved ones again! :-)
These special effects made me wonder when Godzilla would make it's appearance.
Magnificent movie!
Love Maltese background.. See you in 'Crossroads.' 😊
If you like PT Type boats I highly recomend two books published by Squadron. Schnell Boats in Action and PT Boats in Action. Very informative. Lots of detail, pictures and color schemes. Both out of print but could possibly be found or ordered through used book store. Worth it.
Also Vosper MTB in Action.
Thanks! Appreciate it👍
Very good film! On a par with "The Guns of Navaronne" and "Operation Crossbow."
Good movie
Excellent movie.
Boy I sure like these "full" movies... as opposed to the, other kind ??? The un-full ones I guess.
Best actor is the geezer from Crossroads Motel,and James Franciscus
Excellent movie. One of the best of the ww2 movies.
The Navy has the best looking uniforms,I especially love the shorts!
What about the legs just below?
Amazing guns that do not need reloading.
Battery powered
@@vonlouie77 Ok or require recharging. :)
The British guns were mainly 9 mm.
submachinegun, rifle, pistol, revolver? . . . 9 mm - so were Lugers, one of the Nazis' most recognizable sidearms, a semi-automatic pistol. @@williambean8211
"geraldmiller5260," I noticed that too and thought 'typical.'
However, 45:53 - 46:01, how refreshing to see American commando Jeffords' resourcefulness when he strips a magazine from the dead Nazi soldier's submachinegun immediately after removing his gun's depleted magazine. [How SLOPPY and CARELESS of the sound effects editor who includes the sound of the metal of the empty magazine hitting the hard cement
but not metal-on-metal with the insertion / reloading.]
Realistically, in addition to the UNLIMITED rounds of available ammo, I'll wager in a real firefight like we see here -- repeatedly -- the indiscriminate 'spraying' of a full magazine's capacity from left to right, up and down, ALL OVER -- repeatedly -- would have been replaced with wise, deliberate SHORT BURSTS of well aimed shots..
This was a great movie to watch, great location
The famous five go fighting!!!
Great War movie
Fort St Rocco and Kalkara is very beautiful and storyline is awesome.
Love 🎥's
A common failing of military movies: they have no clue what a military haircut looks like.
Not just that. The movies back then, tended to be lazy about 1940's women's hairstyles. (Non existent)
Yeah. Even in the Barber of Seville they cocked it up.
If they are preparing for a critical mission and only have 3 boats, why would the ever go attack a German convoy?
Pure rubbish
Love Malta!
Good movie 🎉
What a film that is fabulous!
Nice movie, professional actors, nice storyline. Excellently made.
Great movie shame it was another'we need an American in charge movies' but to be fair the British won in the end . . . . did anyone else see the blue parasailing parachute taking off during the attack
I was on Malta a while, Hellfire base .a real rock .
good movie, first time ive seen it
. . . = Ce film aussi en langue > FRANCOPHONE < Merci .
this film = also in French language = would be great! An admirer of Switzerland.
Thanks ❤my dad fought in Korea
Fantastic movie~ another unknown great one. My Dad was US Navy WW 2 Pacific - light signalman. Marshall Islands
My father was also at the Marshall Islands CAMPAIGN
DD629 USS ABBOT
ANTI AIRCRAFT GUNNER
SMALL WORLD
In my life as a Mariner no place impressed me like entering Veleta.
In real life they went into combat with vest on.
Good movie, appreciate the upload.
I found the gun battle on the island ludicrous. The way they were waving those sub-machine guns around you would think they thought they were magic wands. If they were twenty feet away they would be lucky to hit a barn door. Instead they were 50 feet or more. You can fire from the hip, but it must be a stable hold. Recoil alone would knock the gun into the air from the way they manoeuvred. Did they really have an armourer and adviser for this film? Whats with the model boats they used in some of the scenes? They obviously did it on the cheap.
Arty Film types are rarely Gun nuts, an exception is Milius and Red Dawn and The Wind and the Lion.
The under carriage coming down scene was from the 1944 William Wyler film Memphis Belle but the the aircraft shown landing was a C47/DC3!
Thank you so so much. You tube the amount of commercials aren't even worth watching the movie. There's so many of them.
Agreed. RUclips would rather turn off viewers than turn down the number of ads. Money, money, money - that's all it's about today.
The words ludacris and rediculous come to mind after watching this.
The only real saving grace is the beauty of Malta.
"Ludacris and rediculous"? Are you having a stroke?🤪
Good upload, thanks.
Great movie!
Thanks for posting 👍
Great movie. When did this come out?
1970
@@maverick9895 Thank You for the information
Fritz X and the HS 293 were the two most used glide bombs used by the German Luftwaffe
during WW II. It was the first use of stand off , remotely piloted amart bombs.
HS=293 was not a glide bomb. It was a rocket powered miniature plane with radio control. It only took the Brits a few months to figure out how it worked and jam the radio signals.
@@neoconshooter Sorry I meant to say smart bombs.
@@neoconshooter Did the germans eventually fo to wire guiding control systems?
I believe the Mistel 'piggyback system' was successful one time. The US used war weary bombers controlled by AZON on sub pens. Not sure of success rate. Joseph Kennedy's oldest son was killed in this experiment!
I've not heard the term "stand off bomb" for years.
My grandpa was a commander of a PT boat RCN WW2
Lest we forget
I never knew what an "E Boat" was until just two days ago. The "E Boats" were all electric U Boats that could charge their batteries via a snorkel at periscope depth, and could stay submerged for many days. If the Germans had mass produced these Boats, they would have won the war. They were much more expensive than the regular Type VII C Boats were. They could dive deeper, and run faster submerged than any other subs could.
E-boats were as you see in this old movie. The Germans called them S-Boats (Schnellboote, or 'fast boats'). All diesel-electric submarines, on all sides, in WW2 could charge their batteries at periscope depth and remain submerged for days if necessary.
Yes, Germany did build 118 advanced type 21 diesel-electric U-boats, each with a pair of MAN diesel engines and three times the usual battery capacities. They were optimized for operation submerged, but they were still just diesel-electrics. This new class arrived too late, but no matter. As we had cracked their naval codes we were sinking them as fast as they hit the Atlantic. We sank most of the German submarine fleet and, in total, killed about 30,000 German submariners. The majority simply vanished, ambushed by patrol aircraft.
If the Germans would have had that big number of sentinels planted everywhere and doing nothing, they would not have had soldiers available for the front lines.
Where can I get one of those submachine guns that have the worlds smallest 1000 round magazines?
I can see the need for it when it takes 150 rounds to drop a German soldier 20 feet away 🙄🤦♂️
Loved it
Nothing like a little air raid to get everyone in the mood.
Cmdr. Niles from Warship good show
3:07)US citizens were transferred to the US military. I knew a man who went to the Army from the Canada Army commandos. He joined 1939.
23:21)Under siege, but the booze got through.
57:41)The Waffen-SS officer and the sub title said M16 instead if MI6. Ministry of Information.
1:09:42)The subtitle read OBERSTERNBACKFUHRER, The correct spelling is OBERSTURMBANNFUHRER. That was said.A Senior Assault Unit Leader. One rank below the Standartenfuhrer rank worn by the senior Waffen-SS officer.
Priority in War
The booze getting through 😁
@@michaelhewitt258 booze and hookers😂
@@michaelhewitt258 Used for "medicinal purposes". A RAF squadron, in Africa, traded with an USAAC unit. Scotch for flight gear. Mostly flight jackets. All branches of their military were poorly supplied. Several US units became their unofficial Quartermaster.
MI = Military Intelligence. Not MOI.
@@dolvaran MI5 spies on people in England. MI6 spies on the rest of the world. Civilians.
Lucky for the British troops and the Maltese, Hitler's didn't want to use his paratroopers again to take Malta like they did with Crete mainly because Hitler assumed such an assault on the island would be a failure.
Okay, I'll be the creep that points out that somebody cut out the beach scene with the gratuitous nipple slip.
... Picasso (?) "you influence the (art)work, the work influences you" - removing a nipple from any work of art is childish, and biologically and psychologically sterilizing,.. why must it always be about the victorian age - being safe from reality,...
@@robertbruce7497 Maybe because most movies coming out of the U.S. at that time had, what I would call, "gratuitous" nudity which had absolutely NOTHING to do with the plot.
More information about production of these movies would be appreciated; date released, studio, actors, director, etc.
try wikipedia or imdb
That was a fun romp!
P t boats rock
They're called MTB (motor torpedo boats). You're thinking of the US Navy who call them PT boats (Patrol, Torpedo).
Abandon ship without life jackets .Now there's a good idea . Fony old film.😊
Good movie!!!
☘️🌼./. 🇺🇸✈️✈Thank you FEATURE FILM 🎞 with great show videos film war combat USA 🇺🇸 American and England 🏴 from 1945 new🌎war combat number 02 to 1953 new🌎with Germany 🇩🇪 very good the best today . Thank you so very good ❤👍🇺🇸🚀
Never heard of a convoy in the Channel. Several single boats has passed through.
Many at OKH thought that any link up with the 4th panzer Armee (Panzer Gruppe 4)with Rommel’s Panzer Armee Afrika (which the Afrika Korp was a part of)in the Caucasus as fanciful at best and nearly impossible logistically…elements within OKW however thought of the possibility of just such an operation….but Der Fuhrer was more concerned with the Caucasian oil fields than any idea of such a grandiose maneuver,also by the time of the first battle of El Alamein Rommel’s Forces was at the end of its tether any chance of even reaching the Suez Canal was out of the question….
exellent all around effort
yes Malta is an nice place to visit
It's on my bucket list.
Good one-TY
Hate the way Franciscus returns a salute. It’s like he’s throwing a grenade - amateurish.
Ramming a steel-hulled E-boat with a wooden PT Boat not a good idea
Wow...I saw this as a CBS movie of the week back in the 70s, when I was about 8 or 9 years old. I thought it was so great back then. (I remember this well because we couldn't say "hell" in my house.) But, looking at it 50 years later, it is painfully primitive, low budget filmmaking. Lots of rear projection screen shots...along with enough plastic model work to make a Godzilla movie! Still...it was a kick seeing it after all these years.
Odd that the Royal Navy used lieutenant not “leftenant” in Malta?
It was only the yank that said it incorrectly.