APOCALYPSE NOW (1979) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION

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  • Опубликовано: 12 июн 2024
  • Enjoy my reaction as I watch "Apocalypse Now" for the first time!
    You can watch the full reaction here: bit.ly/4dDlgFE
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    //📖 C H A P T E R S
    00:00 - Intro
    02:43 - Reaction
    40:55 - Review
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Комментарии • 2,5 тыс.

  • @greypossum1
    @greypossum1 Месяц назад +371

    The fact that you were able to edit that down to under 40 minutes and still maintain much of the context, was a massive achievement on its own. Well done and thanks for this.

    • @clayf3522
      @clayf3522 26 дней назад +16

      Agree. A damn good editing. The only thing is I wish "The horror" would have been the original "The horror ... the horror" without editing out the second "the horror"

    • @theblackswordsman9951
      @theblackswordsman9951 26 дней назад +1

      Welp, probably cut down a lot more since it was taken down.

    • @melissadelong4290
      @melissadelong4290 8 дней назад +1

      Yeah, seriously good editing in this. Covered pretty much every major beat.

  • @CanadianSam999
    @CanadianSam999 Месяц назад +181

    the only movie I have seen in a theatre that, when it was over, the entire audience walked out in compete silence. Not a word uttered. Not even a whisper.

    • @bluesreign
      @bluesreign 26 дней назад +18

      Saw the movie in theater in 1979. Four months short of going into the USAF. When I walked out of the theater, I stopped at the edge of the sidewalk. I had just walked out of the jungle and wasn't sure what to do next.

    • @goldenageofdinosaurs7192
      @goldenageofdinosaurs7192 25 дней назад +8

      I saw this in the theater with my dad. I was 11 years old & needless to say, it left an impression on me.

    • @cineboy65
      @cineboy65 23 дня назад +3

      that was my experience
      when I walked out of the theater I felt like I was in some weird dream state

    • @erikbouchard8911
      @erikbouchard8911 22 дня назад +3

      Interstellar was a similar reaction from the audience when I went.

    • @MarkJ1776
      @MarkJ1776 19 дней назад

      Same thing with American Sniper. Most were wiping tears, too.

  • @paulp9274
    @paulp9274 Месяц назад +76

    Robert Englund tells a story about auditioning for this movie (he wanted to play Lance, the surfer). Coppola's casting director told him they were no longer looking for someone for that role, but he might fit for the space fantasy George Lucas was casting across the hall. And that was how Freddy Krueger auditioned to play Luke Skywalker.
    He didn't get the part, but he did go home to his roommate, Mark Hamill, and suggest that he have his agent set up an audition.

    • @CarloisBuriedAlive
      @CarloisBuriedAlive 2 дня назад +1

      So basically Robert Englund is responsible for both LucasFilm and NewLine lol

  • @dragnet42
    @dragnet42 Месяц назад +79

    The making of Apocalypse Now was famously a nightmare for Francis Ford Coppola. Long delays from the rainy season, Harvey Keitel getting fired, Martin Sheen having a heart attack, Marlon Brando playing a super fit special forces officer and turning up on set massively overweight. The documentary Heart of Darkness shows the insanity really bled into the real life production of the movie

    • @DemoDick1
      @DemoDick1 10 дней назад

      A Special Forces Colonel...who is also supposed to be dying of malaria. I’d love to see the look on Coppola’s face when they carried a 300lb Brando off the plane on a litter.

  • @user-gs4rv1sy5d
    @user-gs4rv1sy5d Месяц назад +296

    Robert Duvall is the G.O.A.T.

    • @Drax514
      @Drax514 Месяц назад +32

      CHARLIE DON'T SURF

    • @neilbath8133
      @neilbath8133 Месяц назад

      I love the smell of napalm in the morning!!!

    • @brandonshaw2120
      @brandonshaw2120 Месяц назад +13

      @@Drax514 'I use Wagner...scares the hell out of the slopes. My boys LOVE IT!'

    • @jacobjones5269
      @jacobjones5269 Месяц назад +20

      One of these days this war is gonna end…

    • @JM-er2yl
      @JM-er2yl Месяц назад

      I love the smell of napalm in the morning.

  • @wratched
    @wratched Месяц назад +671

    To quote Francis Ford Coppola at Cannes in 1979: "My film is not a movie. My film is not about Vietnam. It is Vietnam. It's what it was really like. It was crazy. And the way we made it was very much like the way the Americans were in Vietnam. We were in the jungle. There were too many of us. We had access to too much money, too much equipment, and little by little, we went insane."

    • @mikect500
      @mikect500 Месяц назад +52

      Hollywood didn't want America to fight communism. That's why this movie was made. Same with pretty much every Vietnam War movie except "The Green Berets"

    • @loganw6156
      @loganw6156 Месяц назад +12

      ​@mikect500 check out Rob ager's video essay "Killing Private Kraut" its an interesting essay on how Americans make war movies.

    • @CrazeeAdam
      @CrazeeAdam Месяц назад +23

      ​@@mikect500you can say what you want about communism.. You talk to a lot of vets from that war.. And you have to ask yourself.. "At what cost?" To stop communism.

    • @AliceBowie
      @AliceBowie Месяц назад +20

      ​@mikect500 But Apocalypse Now is anti-communist. John Milius hated communists, same guy who made Red Dawn. Copola didn't like them either, but his friends George Lucas and Stephen Spielberg loved communism.

    • @757optim
      @757optim Месяц назад +18

      Funny thing for Copolla to say, considering -
      "The screenplay, co-written by Coppola, John Milius, and Michael Herr, is loosely based on the 1899 novella Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad, with the setting changed from late 19th-century Congo to the Vietnam War."

  • @spextrekid9410
    @spextrekid9410 Месяц назад +69

    Your ability to empathize is your biggest asset. Never feel like you have to justify your sensitivity. It's a beautiful thing.

    • @guacmoleronin
      @guacmoleronin 13 дней назад +3

      Case and point: I've seen this film several times, and when she said "Those are little kids" around 10:21 It was the first time I'd noticed them as anything other than "background" or "enemy soldiers". An assumption that I will not soon forget making, as it mirrors the commanders as well.

    • @bogdanbotis1524
      @bogdanbotis1524 9 дней назад +1

      @@guacmoleronin that's such a deep and interesting point you make

  • @cousingoober
    @cousingoober Месяц назад +35

    this is the greatest horror film ever made. the constant sense of dread just wares you down and then it actually shows you real horror

  • @rollmops7948
    @rollmops7948 Месяц назад +408

    the young black 17years old kid on the boat, was (the 14 years old in reality) Laurence Fishburne (Morpheus from the Matrix)

    • @kevinquinn7645
      @kevinquinn7645 Месяц назад +58

      And one of the helicopter pilots is R. Lee Ermey, the Gunnery Sergeant from Full Metal Jacket.

    • @georgesykes394
      @georgesykes394 Месяц назад +15

      ​@@kevinquinn7645Oliver Stone is in the movie also as a LOCH pilot.

    • @harrymarshall
      @harrymarshall Месяц назад +12

      Im glad you mentioned this before the fourteen thousand others do 🎉

    • @edl653
      @edl653 Месяц назад +10

      Not many recognize Laurence as he is so thin and young looking. I did not know he was only14 years old, but that explains a lot. Amazing, I first saw this when I was working in a Movie City 10 at age 16 (saw it in pieces more than 10 times) a long time ago. I may have been older than him then, wow.

    • @osmanyousif7849
      @osmanyousif7849 Месяц назад

      How did nobody get arrested for hiring a minor? Man, Hollywood really has "their ways"....

  • @cedriceinarsson7218
    @cedriceinarsson7218 Месяц назад +96

    The people that put on shows were absolute heroes. Leaving their comfortable careers back home to spend months going from base to base to entertain the troops. If they were with the USO tours, it was a high-end show with great support. But thousands of people were non-USO performers, putting on independent shows or booked by military clubs, often responsible for their own protection. Several of them died.
    Maybe the most famous was Martha Raye. At home she was labeled a warmonger for going to Vietnam so many times, often at her own expense. When not putting on shows she worked as a volunteer nurse. She was wounded twice during these tours but kept going back. In 1994 she became the only civilian to be buried at Fort Bragg, home of the US Army Special Forces.

    • @autodex2000
      @autodex2000 Месяц назад +4

      Reaction videos are the lowest form of entertainment

    • @Lensmaster1
      @Lensmaster1 Месяц назад +9

      ​@@autodex2000troll

    • @stanleydavidlepretre4241
      @stanleydavidlepretre4241 Месяц назад +7

      @@autodex2000 I find people strutting around with an (unearned in my opinion) air of moral superiority hilarious. What's your biggest success in life? Besides the day your kindergarten teacher gave everyone who showed up a participation ribbon?

    • @autodex2000
      @autodex2000 Месяц назад

      All that incoherent rambling has nothing to do with my point. Reaction videos are moronic.

    • @autodex2000
      @autodex2000 Месяц назад

      There is no moral question. What I may have "achieved" in my life is irrelvelant. Real time reaction videos are lazy and her supposed insights are idiotic

  • @roadrunner3100
    @roadrunner3100 Месяц назад +34

    My brother was a movie theater manager and his theater showed this when it came out (back when many theaters had only one screen). He told me some Vietnam vets would come to see it but as soon it started, with the helicopters flying by is slow motions with the altered propeller sounds, a few would go back to the box office and ask for their money back because those images instantly brought back terrible memories. He always gave them a refund.

    • @TheKuLeR
      @TheKuLeR 11 дней назад +2

      I’ve read about this happening mostly with this film and The Deer Hunter. Both films were before my time, but even after this in the 80s into the 90s it was pretty easy to end up at a movie theater not fully knowing what you might be in for. Glad to know if they understandanly didn’t want to be there they at least got their $ back.

  • @JohnLeePettimoreIII
    @JohnLeePettimoreIII Месяц назад +73

    i'm 77 and did almost 2 tours before i was sent back to the world. i still carry the scar across my face and left eye that was my ticket home. i still carry the nightmares in my head.

    • @kd84afc
      @kd84afc 22 дня назад

      No war movie probably could come close to what you experienced in that unnecessary conflict. If any did Full Metal Jacket possibly or We were soldiers, but no one should have gone to Vietnam

    • @danielgalway8395
      @danielgalway8395 22 дня назад +3

      I’m glad you came home and I truly hope you’ve had a peaceful life since. I know that’s beyond generic to say but it comes from the heart.

    • @kashankhan6950
      @kashankhan6950 17 дней назад

      The US regime is still at it…

    • @andrewdoss8028
      @andrewdoss8028 11 дней назад +2

      Thank you, I’m sorry

    • @onylra6265
      @onylra6265 5 дней назад

      Don't patronize the guy with that 'war is icky' crap. What the fuck would you know about it?
      He did a year of that shit and went back for more, so it's fair to say his feelings are complicated. Plenty of Americans believed in what they were doing, at least in principle; pathetic and naive zoomers using vets' traumas to fucking soapbox totally ignorant notions of history is just fucking narcissistic. Be better.

  • @MichaelSiegel14
    @MichaelSiegel14 Месяц назад +277

    There's a documentary about the making of this film called "Hearts of Darkness". It was one of the most grueling and crazy shoots ever (IIRC, Sheen had a heart attack close to filming and Brando was massively overweight). It's amazing they made the film they did.

    • @rneelymedia9152
      @rneelymedia9152 Месяц назад +5

      Amazing doc.

    • @goldenageofdinosaurs7192
      @goldenageofdinosaurs7192 Месяц назад +11

      It’s why the ending of Tropic Thunder is so much fun as well!🤣

    • @AndrewTheVikings
      @AndrewTheVikings Месяц назад

      Yeah man and I can describe it as "hell". It was hell.

    • @JamesDavis-sh9gh
      @JamesDavis-sh9gh Месяц назад +10

      Saw it too Footage of the making of the film was by Francis' wife Eleanor Coppola, who passed away just last month.

    • @davidpeters44
      @davidpeters44 Месяц назад +3

      yeah, excellent documentary.

  • @robovike
    @robovike Месяц назад +536

    "Are they supposed to be doing this?" That's basically the question of the entire Vietnam war.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Месяц назад +15

      Because, yes, the USSR was supposed to be rolling over Hungary, Czechoslovakia, etc. That's considered 'okay' today.

    • @TylerD288
      @TylerD288 Месяц назад +3

      😂 Good one! And true.

    • @cyberiankorninger1025
      @cyberiankorninger1025 Месяц назад +23

      Peoples unfortunately take Apocalypse Now seriously.
      It is a great work of art but its still a work of fiction while many perfectly know that some do not.
      And real war crimes and violence on a massive scale do not look this beautiful with such an epic soundtrack blasting. That is always a problem with the big war movies or films touching difficult topics. Even Hotel Ruanda or Schindlers List are still way too beautiful in their cinematography and Apocalypse Now is certainly not approaching even that its more in the Full Metal Jacket territory mixing cool looks with great sounding one liners.
      Its a masterpiece of a movie put there is a problem with some part of the public thinking its history when its pop culture instead.

    • @harrybirchall3308
      @harrybirchall3308 Месяц назад +27

      @@RideAcrossTheRiver I mean the US had nukes pointed directly into Russia from their southern border by this point and was already in the business of helping reactionary forces in foreign governments kill or detain left-wing elements, most notably in Indonesia which amounted to a mass slaughter of innocent people. There's also the broad misconception that the USSR was directly involved with or controlling every communist political group the world over, which was not universally true at all but in retrospect the USSR has been painted at this red-scare style monolith. Well, it was at the time, but now in it's absence it's very easy to just wave our hands and dismiss it all.
      Not making excuses for it, but it's interesting how in the west we operate under the delusion that we've never lived in an empire. Our side was just better at providing luxuries, and the most important luxury sold to people was the mistaken belief they could live lives free of ideology, that the very carefully managed political systems we live under are just natural things we can decouple ourselves from. That we only ever "liberate", when it goes wrong we had "good intentions" but the other side "conquers" and "hates freedoms"

    • @fredfinks
      @fredfinks Месяц назад +5

      my old colleagues uncle was shot by a random passing helicopter while tending the field. They emigrated to Australia just in time to escape the north. You could die by your allies bullets. Devils advocate though, how the fuk do you tell the difference between north and south? war sux balls. major sweaty balls. we are so dumb

  • @55tranquility
    @55tranquility 23 дня назад +50

    When Willard, talking about home says "...I'd been there and it doesn't exist." This is some brilliant writing, he is describing the effect war has on the men sent to fight and how the horrors they experience changes them, that they can't relate to normal life despite it being all they desperately want. Home is now in the past, they are a very different person now - damaged by what they have seen, the innocence they once had has been stolen so going home can never feel the same.
    This is also a theme in Tolkiens work and the Lord of The Rings, he fought in WW1. Everything you fight for and even if you win, the cost of winning is so hard and takes so much - so finally when you get home, the thing you were fighting for no longer exists.

    • @basildave
      @basildave 18 дней назад +3

      Emphasized in "The Deer Hunter" as well...

    • @mimikurtz2162
      @mimikurtz2162 18 дней назад +1

      "damaged by what they have seen" or enlightened by it depends on the individual, perspective and opinion.
      They may be considered 'damaged' because they no longer surrender their freedom to society's norms. But is it the acquisition of knowledge that is damaging, or has society damaged us so that we cannot face the truth about ourselves?

    • @55tranquility
      @55tranquility 18 дней назад

      @@mimikurtz2162 do you mean in terms of on the one hand training men to kill and turning them into brutal warriors with orders to kill but at the same time trying to then enforce rules and laws of morality on those same men? Ie ‘charging someone with murder here, is like handing out speeding tickets at the Indy 500’ ? If you want soldiers to kill and win in war and train them to do so any ideas of morality are hypocritical as is punishing them for doing so, so like Kurtz you may as well ‘go all the way’. - yes i think that is part of it too.

    • @mimikurtz2162
      @mimikurtz2162 17 дней назад +1

      @@55tranquility All that is true but my point is less specific and underpins it.
      We are all born to be predatory, avaricious warriors, but society teaches us morals enforced by rules. We become 'civilised'. Our instincts are buried but they are not eradicated.
      Under stress such as in war the confinements of civilisation are loosened and our primal instincts are encouraged to re-emerge.
      That is "the horror" of the human condition as exemplified in Kurtz: to be simultaneously an instinct-driven beast and an enlightened person. To "crawl along the edge of a straight razor".
      I was asking whether we are 'damaged' by the erosion of morality or by its imposition over our natural state.

    • @55tranquility
      @55tranquility 17 дней назад

      @@mimikurtz2162 ah yes I see what you mean, yes that makes sense -thanks

  • @newmoon766
    @newmoon766 Месяц назад +30

    There is a documentary about the making of this movie. Coppola's wife says in an interview that it was like the story. "We went into the jungle and slowly went mad."

    • @onemancinema4642
      @onemancinema4642 23 дня назад +1

      Hearts of Darkness. A Filmmakers Apocalypse.

  • @Cadinho93
    @Cadinho93 Месяц назад +456

    "We train young men to drop fire on people, but their commanders won't let them write fuck on their airplanes because it's obscene." That's my favorite quote from the film. It shows you how ludicrous and hypocritical war is.
    Also, once you see the image of Martin Sheen's head emerging from a swamp, you'll notice thereafter how frequently that iconic shot is emulated in so many other films.

    • @loganw6156
      @loganw6156 Месяц назад +45

      "Charging a man for murder here was like giving speeding tickets at the Indie 500"

    • @harrymarshall
      @harrymarshall Месяц назад +6

      ,, language, please! 🥳🤣

    • @HerbertTwack
      @HerbertTwack Месяц назад +24

      It kinda show how ludicrous RUclips is, that they're happy with the severed heads, but Cassie had to bleep the F-word out of that clip.

    • @potterj09
      @potterj09 Месяц назад +2

      I used to quote this movie in the classroom during my highschool years. Even funnier there was a kid there called Kurtz. He graduated from the whole f'en program. 😅

    • @igloo2158
      @igloo2158 Месяц назад +7

      This is a very hard movie. Totally not for Cassie. It’s a masterpiece, but so not her thing.

  • @czarfore
    @czarfore Месяц назад +89

    After watching the movie you said you never wanted to watch it again. Willard says they were sending him on a mission and, when it was over, he'd never want another one. The horror.

    • @mimikurtz2162
      @mimikurtz2162 18 дней назад

      You (and she) think that watching a movie while cocooned in your sheltered, comfortable life equates to being Willard?
      "The horror" does not refer to the movie genre or Willard's mission. Nor is it the desolation and annihilation of war. It is the haunting nightmare of any human who is willing to explore the duality of human nature.

  • @mrcrhartman
    @mrcrhartman Месяц назад +11

    I hate that Coppola claims the alternate closing credits were footage of the set being detonated and not intended to depict that Willard called an airstrike on the village after leaving. In the theater, when I saw the film, that was 100% the ending that was being shown, and even in the now "alternate" ending footage which can be found on yo..tube, it is clear that shells are being dropped from the sky before the village bursts into flames bringing the film full circle to the napalm bursts in the beginning when Willard was drunk in Saigon waiting for this mission. In my mind, he always called in the strike on the village, and will always go back to that place of destruction in his mind after each mission like it's his own endless circle of hell. I loved every second of this film, it is a one of a kind experience.

    • @suprafrase
      @suprafrase 12 дней назад

      First time I saw this movie I was 12 years old (I'm 40 now) and I was supposed to be asleep in bed as it was a school night. It was shown late at night on BBC2 (I'm from the UK). I sneakily stayed up and watched it with the lights off and the volume down low, I was absolutely mesmerised. That version they showed on TV back then had the ending with the explosions going off as the credits rolled as if Willard had called in the airstrike after all like you said. Still in my top 5 movies of all time.

  • @derworfnet
    @derworfnet Месяц назад +12

    Its impressive how this movie starts off already crazy and gets more and more insane the farther the Boats gets upriver to the point that Kurtz' compound just _feels_ like *Hell*.

  • @MasterBiffpudwell
    @MasterBiffpudwell Месяц назад +42

    Dennis Hopper (the photographer/journalist) has always been very good at playing odd and/or insane characters in my small opinion.

    • @martymar1964
      @martymar1964 21 день назад +3

      Brando hated Hopper during the shooting and referred to him as a mutt.

    • @stephengamber7000
      @stephengamber7000 11 дней назад +1

      I think he didn't have to try that hard!

    • @davemort9166
      @davemort9166 11 дней назад +1

      He was also off chops

  • @jeffbezaire788
    @jeffbezaire788 Месяц назад +175

    Honestly, Cassie, the reason I continue to return to your channel is because you get so deeply involved with what you're watching. It's refreshing to see someone with so much humanity and sweetness react to all the good, bad, light, and dark things you see in these movies---it's a completely different experience from watching movies with my family or friends or on my own. And your reactions sometimes affect me, as well.
    There's plenty of ugliness in the world we live in and it's easy to become cynical about our increasing lack of humanity, to think that recovering our decency, compassion, and morality is a lost cause in modern society as we grow increasingly distant to each other. But you and Carly are a reminder that there are plenty of people out there who haven't fallen victim to the cold and ugly bitterness that has swallowed so many people these days. It's refreshing and hopeful.
    So thank you for getting so emotionally involved while watching these movies. Thank you for sharing your reactions and being sincere with them. Thank you for inviting Carly to share in some of the viewing experiences with you, because you two make a great team! It's a nice change, seeing your sincerity, especially in a vidscape of staged reactions; and it's also interesting, fun, and telling how you process information, what you pick up and miss, what bothers you and why, and how you try to discern what's coming next. You are a relatable person.
    After having watching "Platoon" and "Full Metal Jacket", I would have thought "Apocalypse Now" would be an easier watch for you, but it goes to show how you don't take for granted the horrors and waste of war, even if it is presented as a piece of entertainment; and your confusion, frustration, and the wretchedness you felt truly sum up the pointlessness of the Vietnam war and the macabre atrocities it produced.
    Thank you again for being you and for sharing your cinematic journeys with us! And thanks for bringing Carly on the road with you! Love you both!

    • @fastmonkey591
      @fastmonkey591 Месяц назад +7

      Same

    • @Shazam961
      @Shazam961 Месяц назад +5

      The same.

    • @mustlearnmore4884
      @mustlearnmore4884 Месяц назад +8

      Brilliantly articulated. Kudos 🙏🏼🔥💪🏼

    • @user-uy8wx4pk4h
      @user-uy8wx4pk4h Месяц назад

      You return because you're a simp

    • @JustinChristopher-ov7gw
      @JustinChristopher-ov7gw Месяц назад +7

      She's like a young adult when it comes to reality. But the more and more she watches movies like these, she becomes more like a seasoned veteran.

  • @tsogobauggi8721
    @tsogobauggi8721 Месяц назад +14

    "This is the end, beautiful friend. This is the end, my only friend, the end.
    It hurts to set you free. But you'll never follow me.
    The end of laughter and soft lies. The end of nights we tried to die.
    This is the end..."

  • @robertsmith4681
    @robertsmith4681 Месяц назад +15

    The "montagnards" is what the French nicknamed the various small tribes that live in the mountains of mostly modern day Cambodia. They often ended up organizing into militias and working with US assistance to keep the North Vietnamese Army from using their land as supply routes on their way to South Vietnam where the war was.

    • @StuartKoehl
      @StuartKoehl 21 день назад +6

      They were mostly Hmong people, and among our most faithful and effective allies in the war. They hated the North Vietnamese AND the Khmer with a passion, and wanted only to be left alone. The way we treated them, once we left Southeast Asia, was disgraceful, as disgraceful as the way in which we treated our Iraqi and Afghan interpreters five decades later.

    • @coby9282
      @coby9282 5 дней назад

      @@StuartKoehl Thats what super powers like the US do, wipe their arses with ppl that lost their purpose for them. It will be the same with the Ukrainians if Russia wins...

  • @calebwilliams7659
    @calebwilliams7659 Месяц назад +162

    That movie where Martin Sheen got ridiculously hammered in the hotel room, but Francis Ford Coppola said, "Let's just go with it", and Dennis Hopper was so high during the entire shoot he said years later he had no memory about making this movie. I guess there's no smell quite like coke in the morning.

    • @dmwalker24
      @dmwalker24 Месяц назад +27

      And yet his performance is the pure distilled essence of Dennis Hopper, and absolutely perfect for the film.

    • @loganw6156
      @loganw6156 Месяц назад +8

      ​@@dmwalker24definitely distilled

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Месяц назад +7

      Weirdly appropriate for this movie though. He nailed that part.

    • @ga7654
      @ga7654 Месяц назад +2

      That's Robert Duvall, not Dennis Hopper.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Месяц назад +16

      @@ga7654 Dennis Hopper was the photographer at the end.

  • @bharre
    @bharre Месяц назад +119

    I believe that Martin Sheen actually had a heart attack during the filming. Also, the local village was in the process of sacrificing the water buffalo, so Coppola asked if they could film it, and they agreed.

    • @onemancinema4642
      @onemancinema4642 23 дня назад +6

      Martin Sheen did indeed suffer a heart attack. He was chain smoking two packs a day. He really punched the mirror. All this right after Harvey Keitel had been fired from the lead role. Good times in the jungle

    • @Zwia.
      @Zwia. 23 дня назад +3

      Some of the crew have since admitted they asked the villagers to kill the buffalo and paid them for it.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 22 дня назад +1

      @@onemancinema4642
      "All this right after Harvey Keitel had been fired from the lead role"
      Didn't know about that.
      That would have made the 2nd Joseph Conrad adaptation he starred in after The Duellists in 1977.
      If you haven't seen The Duellists I highly recommend it - apart from being an overall great film, it was also Ridley Scott's first motion picture, and Pete Postlethwaite's debut acting role as an extra.
      Watching a screening of The Duellists at the Cannes film festival is what prompted the producers of Alien to hire Ridley as director, rather than the original plan for Roger Corman to direct it.
      Also the general look of Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves is based on the cinematography of The Duellists.

    • @somthingbrutal
      @somthingbrutal 20 дней назад

      then there was the time the prop corpses turned out to be real , if i remember right they found out before shooting the scene and didn't use them the making of this movie was just as insane as the war

    • @willbass2869
      @willbass2869 20 дней назад

      ​@@onemancinema4642 not only did Sheen have a heart attack but he did have an honest to God mental episode during the scene in his Saigon hotel room.
      You gotta remember the movie was not filmed in the same sequence as it appears on the screen. His hotel room breakdown occurred long after filming started and was delayed. He and the rest of the crew were all at wits end.
      Sheen cracked. Coopola saw the power of that and he was egging Sheen on from behind the camera.
      Yes, Sheen really did break the mirror and really sliced his hand open....that's real blood on the sheets

  • @seniordavidmanderson9232
    @seniordavidmanderson9232 24 дня назад +30

    D. Anderson, USMC, Hotel Company, 2dBn, 9th Marines, 3d MarDiv, 2/9/3, 68-69 Operation Dewey Canyon. In memory of 58,281 men including 8 women, all nurses, 16 clergy members and 160 Medal of Honor recipients who served in the Vietnam War and later died as a result of their service. We honor and remember their sacrifice.

  • @PrimeSportsNetwork
    @PrimeSportsNetwork Месяц назад +3

    "What...is...going...on?" is an excellent way to describe this great movie.

  • @JimJack-ng9yi
    @JimJack-ng9yi Месяц назад +109

    The girls dancing was a USO show to entertain the troops, Bob Hope made the USO shows famous during world war two

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Месяц назад +10

      That was Bill Graham in the film with a knock-off Creedence!

    • @Britcarjunkie
      @Britcarjunkie Месяц назад +11

      Hope took USO shows to Vietnam on quite a few occasions, and Raquel Welch was one of the stars that accompanied him.
      IIRC, two of the Bunnies in that scene were the actual Bunnies, and were re-creating the show they took part in - even wore the same outfits!

    • @losthor1zon
      @losthor1zon Месяц назад +1

      Yes - and I'm pretty sure the guy on stage with the dark hair was supposed to be Hugh Hefner.

    • @PHDiaz-vv7yo
      @PHDiaz-vv7yo Месяц назад +10

      Mmm… Colleen Camp 😍. She was on that stage too.

    • @KngFish
      @KngFish Месяц назад

      Cassie, you need to see Apocalypse Pooh. It's on RUclips

  • @Frey_2026
    @Frey_2026 Месяц назад +258

    I think it's funny how Cassie doesn't want to watch Nightmare on Elm Street, but she watches Seven, Zodiac, Apocalypse Now and in comparison, Nightmare on Elm Street is a straight up comedy lol

    • @Tim_Raths
      @Tim_Raths Месяц назад +12

      She has seen A Nightmare on Elm Street.

    • @brobbus0-dl6vl
      @brobbus0-dl6vl Месяц назад +21

      She has reacted to A Nightmare on Elm Street. Perhaps you meant The Exorcist, which I know she doesn't want to react to.
      Personally, I think Apocalypse Now is actually more disturbing thematically than The Exorcist, because it deals with the real "dark side" that exist in the human soul and people can reach under extreme circumstances. I never felt that The Exorcist was anything more than a horror fantasy.

    • @catelynstark9883
      @catelynstark9883 Месяц назад +1

      She should watch Jennifer Kent’s “The Nightingale”
      Unsettling but worth the one viewing female rage revenge thriller

    • @Tim_Raths
      @Tim_Raths Месяц назад +6

      @@catelynstark9883 No she should not because she will get nothing out of it.

    • @Drax514
      @Drax514 Месяц назад +5

      @@brobbus0-dl6vl I would say she's more afraid of the Exorcist because of her religion. Religion aint got shit to do with Vietnam, hence, why I think it's less intimidating.

  • @ogkevdc
    @ogkevdc 24 дня назад +9

    The “Roach” …Man he was so underrated… Dropping dimes with the m79 never gets old✌🏼

    • @kwantoon
      @kwantoon 14 дней назад

      He was snitching on someone with an M79 Grenade launcher? Not trying to be a know it all, but do you actually know the term "drop a dime" means?

    • @ogkevdc
      @ogkevdc 14 дней назад

      @@kwantoon You must be real old, real dumb… or maybe both. But that phrase has several meaning nowadays… this ain’t the 70’s slick

    • @MakoSucks
      @MakoSucks День назад

      @@kwantoon they're referring to the basketball term lol

  • @clayschuetz899
    @clayschuetz899 Месяц назад +7

    And it's a personal film for me , cause I worked with two women who were Cambodian, they lived through what the killing fields portrayed , they were young girls when it happened, one had tattoos on her shoulder that told the story of her father, the other told me about the escape as a little girl and after getting over the barbed wire, having to pull and wipe pieces of her cousin and best friend off of herself , there were tears in her eyes.
    She didn't cry much , she laughed at thing one normally doesn't, I realized at one point her laughter was a defense mechanism against her personal pain 😢 war truly is hell and a hell that never should have been created by man .

    • @johannesvalterdivizzini1523
      @johannesvalterdivizzini1523 25 дней назад +1

      I honestly never met anyone who had been in that War who wasn't dodgy. I knew VVAW (VN Vets Against War) guys who all had the most terrible stories to tell and were committed to ending it.

  • @andrewharrison5288
    @andrewharrison5288 Месяц назад +84

    There are two reasons Brando was shot primarily in shadow:
    1. It's ten times creepier, as you yourself experienced.
    2. Marlon Brando did not even attempt to get into anything resembling military-level shape (reports that he was 300 lbs are probably exaggerated, but he clearly did not look like an Army Special Forces colonel).

    • @user-bl4fj7qp8r
      @user-bl4fj7qp8r Месяц назад +5

      He looked more like 230 pounds on a 5’9 frame.

    • @artistamisto
      @artistamisto Месяц назад +6

      Nah I don't think it was because it was creepy. Francis wanted to hide his huge belly.

    • @Cosmo-Kramer
      @Cosmo-Kramer Месяц назад +4

      @@artistamisto It may've been to hide his gut, but Brando's size was not a surprise to Francis, he was that big when he cast him for the part. It's not like he had the body of a special forces officer when he was cast and suddenly ballooned up. Lol

    • @tristan7586
      @tristan7586 Месяц назад +5

      Agree, but then who is to say that a special forces colonel who's lost his mind wouldn't put on a few pounds and yet still be dangerous? :D

    • @Cosmo-Kramer
      @Cosmo-Kramer Месяц назад +2

      @@tristan7586 Exactly, it works.

  • @OldMan_PJ
    @OldMan_PJ Месяц назад +110

    To give you some idea of how insane the Vietnam war was: a close family friend was in the Army and because he was the tallest in his unit he was always told to take point (walk in front.) On a patrol he came around a group of trees and bushes and came face to face with the enemy. The only thing that saved his life was he fired first. However, when he shot the other person he hit a grenade and blew the other guy up and took a bunch of shrapnel. He also has a fear of flying because every helicopter he was ever on in the war was shot down. The last time he was riding on one it started to take fire and was shot down, the only thing that saved his life was he had enough of being shot down so as soon as it started taking fire he jumped out, every one else on board died. A last aside, they hated the Air Force because whenever they were called in they would drop the bombs on them instead of the enemy. He loved the Navy because their deck guns were far more accurate. Needless to say he has severe PTSD.

    • @Mrwhomeyou
      @Mrwhomeyou Месяц назад +6

      my dad was in the navy during that time 68-72, and he said they get called out and all he did was shot at trees

    • @PaulRodriguez-yt4nt
      @PaulRodriguez-yt4nt Месяц назад

      Jeez

  • @seadog915
    @seadog915 7 дней назад +2

    My oldest cousins were both in Vietnam, the oldest one told me that this movie was the closest representation of what he remembered. The younger one was a door gunner (Chinook) naturally his experiences were different. He told me "you have to remember that this is just a movie, the real thing was much worse." When they both left they were only 6 and 4 yrs. older than me. When they came back it seemed like a generation. Vietnam changed everybody's life. I never realised how much till I started getting old. I didn't have to go, lucky lottery.

  • @richardedenfield5167
    @richardedenfield5167 Месяц назад +8

    Listening to that tape playing of his mother when he was shot and killed on Mother's Day, hits a little harder. What an amazing masterpiece of a film. Still shocks. Still amazes.

    • @clarkness77
      @clarkness77 20 дней назад

      Props to chief in that scene. Real genuine look of horror

  • @markpekrul4393
    @markpekrul4393 Месяц назад +66

    Others have probably already noted this, but two Martin Sheen facts - he suffered a massive heart attack during filming and almost died, and in that scene at the beginning where he punches the mirror and his hand bleeds? That was no acting - he seriously cut his hand and was bleeding badly, but the cameras kept rolling and he went with it.

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 Месяц назад +4

      This is one of the movies where people dont generally call the trivia “fun facts”. Fun Fact: Martin Sheen had a heart attack during filming. 😆 It’s just so wrong!
      I’m glad you didn’t. “Fun fact” is such a dumb cliche for any film trivia. Salud!

    • @joshuamcdaniel6530
      @joshuamcdaniel6530 Месяц назад +4

      And he was actually drunk.

    • @acheronnchase6220
      @acheronnchase6220 Месяц назад +1

      That scene was on his birthday, too

    • @artistamisto
      @artistamisto Месяц назад +1

      Um I think the heart thing was already mentioned at least 4 times! One negative about youtube comments is everyone repeating the same thing. 🤡🤡🤡

  • @br1anv1c0r3
    @br1anv1c0r3 Месяц назад +38

    So impressed that Cassie read Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness before this. Kudos. And yes, this is not a war movie nor anything political. It is just an adaptation of the novel.

    • @brettmuir5679
      @brettmuir5679 25 дней назад +1

      I am late to the party and you said what I wanted to.
      Thank you
      There have been multiple movie versions of Heart of Darkness. This is an adaptation but it is the best one. If one wants to hold onto naivete, never read anything written by Joseph Conrad. If one wants to become a fully formed human you must read Joseph Conrad.
      .....so much credit to Cassie for reading before watching. Coppola deserves high praise for putting on film what the wordsmith Conrad conjured
      I love you Cassie. I am sorry you had to go through this experience but I have loved watching you mature.

    • @ianstopher9111
      @ianstopher9111 22 дня назад +1

      Heart of Darkness is not even Conrad's best. Nostromo is an absolute classic of modernism.

    • @kwantoon
      @kwantoon 14 дней назад +1

      Hearts of Darkness perfectly describes the context of what's going on in this movie. I love war movies, but it drives me nuts when I hear people refer to this as a war movie. Once I got a little older (not a kid) I started to understand what it really was. In my opinion it's a masterpiece and I'm surely glad that he was actually able to make it through the nightmare of producing it. We'll never see a movie like this ever again.

    • @fashizzlebadizzle6552
      @fashizzlebadizzle6552 8 дней назад +3

      Uh no. It is definitely political.

    • @DrClock-il8ij
      @DrClock-il8ij 2 дня назад

      Definitely a war movie and political.

  • @canoli62
    @canoli62 23 дня назад +5

    I think you sort of missed 1) the importance of, and 2) the meaning of Robert Duvall's character, Colonel Kilgore (Kill Gore). His key line begins with one of the most famous lines in any movie ever. "I love the smell of napalm in the morning..." And ends with the best half second of acting in the movie. When he says "One day this war is going to end" you can see the regret in his face and his shirtless body. The idea of peace deflates his chest... it literally makes him smaller. Kilgore stands in for every war monger in our society. The ones who thrive on war. The ones who love it. His role in this movie is to sum up perfectly the insanity of war and thinking that it is a means to an end. Rather, for Kilgore and those he represents, it is the end they seek. Watch that scene over again.

  • @timcarder2170
    @timcarder2170 Месяц назад +8

    The classical music piece the helicopters played on the loud speakers as they attacked, was *"Ride Of The Valkyries"* (first performed in 1870) from german composer Wilhelm Richard Wagner.
    *as per a quick Google search~*
    "This was originally used by Wagner to illustrate the majesty of a heavenward ascent. However, it appears in the film as an ominous precursor of destruction, “death from above,” a battle cry that will only be heard by the unsuspecting Vietnamese villagers when it's already too late."

    • @jrneal1220
      @jrneal1220 Месяц назад +1

      And of course the Valkyries took soldiers who died on the battlefield to Valhalla.
      Not too long after the publication of his book "Wagnerism," New Yorker music critic Alex Ross put out an interesting video essay that talks about the multilayered significance of Ride of the Valkyries being used in Apocalypse Now. As he says chillingly, "the German will to power gives way to God bless America imperialism."

  • @SeanHendy
    @SeanHendy Месяц назад +159

    There is so much to unpack from this film. That copious amounts of drugs were being taken during filming; that Brando was so out of shape that Coppola had to completely change how he shot Kurtz' part, deliberately using dark shadows and minimal lighting; that even after the release Coppola wasn't happy, hence the extended director's cut that exists; that filming was scheduled originally for 6 weeks, but instead took 16 months; the opening scene was unscripted, Sheen was drunk for real, and did cut himself for real on the mirror.

    • @thomast8539
      @thomast8539 Месяц назад +20

      And don't forget, Sheen nearly died from a heart attack making this film.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Месяц назад +21

      I think it kind of works that Brando was fat and all the locals surrounding him and the rest of the cast were thin. Fits somehow.

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 Месяц назад +5

      ⁠@@thomast8539 And Sheen was a replacement for Harvey Keitel.

    • @tinocontreras5105
      @tinocontreras5105 Месяц назад +1

      they said Sheen was having a nervous breakdown during that seen in the beginning

    • @tinocontreras5105
      @tinocontreras5105 Месяц назад +2

      @@MarcosElMalo2 harvey would have not been able to top Sheen

  • @ColKurtzknew
    @ColKurtzknew Месяц назад +91

    'I am aware of the charges against me but I am not concerned. I am beyond their timid, lying morality and so I am beyond caring."
    Masterpiece of filmmaking in every detail !!

  • @chasegallagher1326
    @chasegallagher1326 Месяц назад +6

    John Milius wrote the best script of all time with this movie. His military consultant for the screenplay was his good friend named Fred Rexer. He was involved with Operation Phoenix and had also personally experienced the story that Brando tells about the special forces and the vaccines. Milius based both the Willard character and the Kurtz character on Fred Rexer. Also taking influence from a guy tamed Anthony Poshepny, he was also in the Phoenix project, he worked under Ted Shackley and eventually went rogue and was notorious for collecting V.C ears and wearing them as a necklace. I think the main theme of this script that John was getting at was the insane and pointless nature of war, also the fact that the war in Vietnam (like all other wars) was never meant to be won. It was meant to be prolonged, remember, the first American military casualty in Vietnam was Peter Dewey of the OSS in 1945. The American military had a presence in Vietnam less than a month after the Japanese surrender in WW2. A major part of the war of course being profits from defense contracting and the weapons manufacturing that feeds the militarized economy that Eisenhower eventually would warn of in 1961. But, more importantly, the drug trade, the golden triangle was the most rich area for poppy fields. The CIA was smuggling massive amounts of heroin in through Vang Pao and using Batista’s Cuba and mob figures like Santos Trafficante as the liaison to bring it in into the United States. This explains the hatred for Fidel Castro, after his 1959 revolution he shut down not only the drug trade but also the casinos and houses of prostitution. We see this same trend of drug smuggling with the prolonged Afghanistan war. That area, known as the golden crescent, was also a rich poppy growing region. After the American invasion and occupation the opium production skyrocketed. Not to mention that Fox News segment with Geraldo Rivera where he literally interviews the marines who are protecting the poppy fields and say words to the effect of, “well we can’t let the Taliban profit off of the poppy fields.” So they bought up all the local sap scraping tools to make sure nobody else could collect the sap. But, I digress, this movie is absolutely amazing and filled with truth, the DOD refused to give any equipment or support to Coppola basically because of the fact that Milius used a real term “Terminate with Extreme Prejudice” which is just another way of saying assassinate and portrayed a real example of the CIA’s Phoenix program. The Phoenix program of course being the assassination, terrorism, torture, sabotage campaign run by Bill Colby and Ted Shackley that was specifically targeted at CIVILIANS, not military personnel, it started in 1967 and was responsible for killing 100,000+ civilians all throughout Indochina.

    • @wejw14
      @wejw14 25 дней назад

      "I think the main theme of this script that john was getting at was the insane and pointless nature of war"
      Milius was openly pro-war. Why do you think he had all those military friends in the first place?

    • @chasegallagher1326
      @chasegallagher1326 25 дней назад +1

      @@wejw14 Really, why does he explicitly say his film Red Dawn is an Anti-War film then?

    • @chasegallagher1326
      @chasegallagher1326 25 дней назад +2

      Milius said, "I see this as an anti-war movie in the sense that if both sides could see this, maybe it wouldn't have to happen. I think it would be good for Americans to see what a war would be like. The film isn't even that violent - the war shows none of the horrors that could happen in World War III. In fact, everything that happened in the movie happened in World War II."

  • @Tommy1977777
    @Tommy1977777 Месяц назад +6

    MACV-SOG was one of a few secretive units that operated during Vietnam. The Phoenix Project was a counterintelligence program that operated via assassination.
    Other elite units that operated were Mike Force, Tiger Force was another. Many of these were early forerunners to what would eventually become Delta Force.

  • @TheTomt50
    @TheTomt50 Месяц назад +29

    As you mentioned Cassie the movie is based loosely on Heart of Darkness. So, it is a critique of American expansionism rather than the original colonialism. So, don't assume what you're watching is the experience of soldiers in Vietnam. It is an allegory of so many themes of war and Vietnam: strangers in a strange land, hypocrisy, senseless killing, etc. It would be like reading the Iliad and assuming its about the Trojan War. Homer was writing about the folly of man and his desires. So too for Coppola.

    • @donpietruk1517
      @donpietruk1517 8 часов назад +1

      There's a lot of allegories to the Odyssey in this film as well. Willard's journey has parallels with Odyssey's journey home.

  • @LyraVega
    @LyraVega Месяц назад +40

    Since this film touched upon Cambodia, I would strongly recommend The Killing Fields (1984) starring a young Sam Waterston and the extraordinary Dr. Haing S. Ngor, an actual survivor of the Cambodian genocide depicted in the film. Another overlooked film related to the Vietnam War is Werner Herzog's "Rescue Dawn" (2006) and Herzog's documentary of the same subject, "Little Dieter Needs to Fly" (1997). I always enjoy and appreciate your reactions, Cassie!

  • @tsogobauggi8721
    @tsogobauggi8721 Месяц назад +8

    "This is the end, beautiful friend. This is the end, my only friend, the end.
    Of our elaborate plans, the end. Of everything that stands, the end.
    No safety or surprise, the end. I'll never look into your eyes, again."

    • @cherrypi_b
      @cherrypi_b 26 дней назад +2

      The Doors forever!

  • @joshlindig5853
    @joshlindig5853 26 дней назад +4

    So in this movie where the Vietnamese lady throws the grenade in the helicopter in her hat, that particular scene gave my grandfather flashbacks, he yelled out grenade and doe for cover beside his chair, and that’s the furthest he’s ever gotten into that movie he has since passed away, but it was still a scary moment

  • @Pthaloskies
    @Pthaloskies Месяц назад +24

    The depth of feeling you have when you react to these difficult movies is the reason we watch.

  • @algi1
    @algi1 Месяц назад +21

    My favorite fun(?) fact about this movie is that some of the narration is spoken by Martin Sheen's brother, Joe Estevez who has a very similar, almost identical voice to him. When he had problems reading the script, that's when he realized his drinking became a problem. He's a very prolific actor, he probably had more roles than Martin Sheen.

    • @SeenGod
      @SeenGod Месяц назад +2

      he was in Rollergator.. nuff said 🤘😂

    • @patjacksonpodium
      @patjacksonpodium 22 дня назад

      ​@@SeenGodRollergator is absolutely without question the worst movie Ive ever seen. Sitting through it is as close to madness as you can experience without going fullout, padded walls insane. Even with the boys from MST3K riffing it...its beyond brutal.

  • @claudioveliz9834
    @claudioveliz9834 Месяц назад +4

    "He's on acid, with a machine gun, ...which makes me a little nervous." Blessed be those who understate.

  • @albertbarnett6106
    @albertbarnett6106 Месяц назад +3

    He wasn't insane, he took war to its maximum conclusion. No remorse, no fear, no moral high ground, because no such things exist, it is a creation of leaders who justify evil to make war chivalrous. This was an antiwar movie.

  • @sparky6086
    @sparky6086 Месяц назад +88

    Now you can watch "The Deer Hunter". It'll cheer you up!

    • @mitchrogers4217
      @mitchrogers4217 Месяц назад +7

      😂😂

    • @duanewhitacre5995
      @duanewhitacre5995 Месяц назад +3

      Ha ha ha

    • @ColKurtzknew
      @ColKurtzknew Месяц назад

      Imagine her squirming through the POW and Russian Roulette scenes.

    • @Shawn-mo6dh
      @Shawn-mo6dh Месяц назад +5

      Well, there is a wedding in the deer hunter. And a love story. And actually deer hunting.

    • @ColKurtzknew
      @ColKurtzknew Месяц назад +6

      @@Shawn-mo6dh ..and a POW prison and a few Russian Roulette scenes.

  • @KngFish
    @KngFish Месяц назад +14

    Cassie, if Bob Duvall says it's safe to surf that beach, fhen it's safe to surf that beach!

  • @johnnyskinwalker4095
    @johnnyskinwalker4095 Месяц назад +3

    When near the end Cassie who was struggling with the situation and after Kurz's speach she said:"...yea you've got to take out this guy", something I have never seen her say before, I was like:"yes! she got the movie!". That's really the conclusion, there's no other possibilities. And Kurz also wants it:"The Horror....The Horror...!".

  • @kthx1138
    @kthx1138 9 дней назад +1

    I love the ending: Willard could've become the new Kurtz, the villagers' new God, but he gave it all up. It was the only way to come out of the heart of darkness into the heart of light, or at least relief, from the horrors of war, into peace.

  • @dan_hitchman007
    @dan_hitchman007 Месяц назад +76

    While this adaptation of Joseph Conrad's classic "Heart of Darkness" novel is a fictional story set during the Vietnam War, it does recreate the madness of war masterfully. The horror... the horror.

    • @paulleach3612
      @paulleach3612 Месяц назад +3

      Ah, the two things that keep this war veteran awake at night; the duality of man and (what my wife likes to call) spicy memories.

    • @timmooney7528
      @timmooney7528 Месяц назад +1

      This movie was blend of Heart of Darkness and The Odyssey. The crew faces several challenges along their journey

    • @jonhenry8268
      @jonhenry8268 Месяц назад +2

      The heart of darkness is not about Vietnam

    • @dan_hitchman007
      @dan_hitchman007 Месяц назад +2

      @@jonhenry8268 I know, I was saying that this film adaptation takes place during the Vietnam War, not that the book does.

    • @ujohnlynch2341
      @ujohnlynch2341 Месяц назад +1

      @@jonhenry8268 The movie draws its inspiration from the book, however.

  • @stretmediq
    @stretmediq Месяц назад +17

    Anyone who has ever flown on a Huey will never forget the sound of those rotor blades at the beginning of this movie 🚁

    • @willbass2869
      @willbass2869 20 дней назад

      Still.....haunting after 50+ years.
      Whoop whoop whoop

    • @JH-lo9ut
      @JH-lo9ut 8 дней назад

      That sound was made in a sound FX studio with a Moog modular, an old (and legendary) analog synthesizer.
      At the time they couldn't accurately capture the sound of an actual helicopter, because the noise would overload the recording equipment.
      Story told by synth expert Anthony Marinelli, who was in the studio when they made the sound.
      Check out his channel on youtube if you are interested in this kind of stuff.

  • @Caligula_Would_Grin
    @Caligula_Would_Grin 26 дней назад +4

    The pilot of their chopper during the Ride of the Valkyries sequence was R. Lee Ermey who played Sgt. Hartman in Full Metal Jacket.
    Also "I didn't get out of the goddamn eighth grade for this kinda shit." just might be my favorite line of all time.

  • @kalakritistudios
    @kalakritistudios 18 дней назад +1

    "You can't judge me"
    "Kill without judgment"
    and our Hero's eyes widen.

  • @jammiefortier1480
    @jammiefortier1480 Месяц назад +73

    you really are going out of your comfort zone with this. hope these folks appreciate how hard this is for you.

    • @maxsparks5183
      @maxsparks5183 Месяц назад

      Suck up.😖

    • @johnabbottphotography
      @johnabbottphotography Месяц назад +3

      I don't get why anyone would *want* her to see this. Its not her type of film. Why?

    • @LuminaryGames
      @LuminaryGames Месяц назад +3

      @@johnabbottphotography Its important to know the good and the bad of history. Only watching things that are plesent will give you a very shallow understanding of history.
      You can read about things all you want, but sometimes an uncomfortable movie can say so much more.

    • @johnabbottphotography
      @johnabbottphotography Месяц назад +2

      @LuminaryGames
      This isn't about wanting to teach someone history. This is about wanting to make someone uncomfortable.
      I know the difference. This isn't a historical film. This isn't too different from the Saw films since it's not based on actual historical events

    • @tinocontreras5105
      @tinocontreras5105 Месяц назад +4

      @@johnabbottphotography what, every movie she watches should be a rom com or cute and fuzzy bunny movie. she does reactions and polls on movies to watch. so she got through it stop being a gate keeper

  • @44excalibur
    @44excalibur Месяц назад +100

    The Cambodians didn't want the North Vietnamese using their country as a supply line into South Vietnam (called the Ho-Chi-Minh Trail), which is why they were so willing to become soldiers for Col. Kurtz.

    • @tileux
      @tileux Месяц назад +4

      You know the story itself is fiction, right? Based on joseph conrad’s famous story about the savage craziness that the belgian congo turned into.

    • @dmwalker24
      @dmwalker24 Месяц назад +22

      @@tileux Of course the story is fiction, but the underlying history of Cambodia's use as a supply route outside Vietnam isn't. US carpet bombing of Cambodia ultimately being responsible for the deaths of hundreds of thousands.

    • @44excalibur
      @44excalibur Месяц назад +6

      @@tileux Yes, I'm well aware of that. But Conrad's story was set in Africa, and Francis Ford Coppola relocated the story to the Vietnam War, and the invasion of Cambodia by the North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong that precipitated the Cambodian Civil War is what more than likely would have convinced Cambodians to swear allegiance to Col. Kurtz, who was fighting the North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong.

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 Месяц назад +13

      Those weren’t Cambodians. Those were Montagnards. The hill people of Vietnam. They were organized into Militias and lead by Green Beret teams.
      Kurtz was in command of a network of montagnard villages and militias which formed his army in the Vietnamese highlands BEFORE he slipped into Cambodia.
      Cambodia was a neutral country, although the South Vietnamese insurgents used the many roads and paths as supply lines. The was called the Ho Chi Minh Trail, named after North Vietnamese leader Ho Chi Minh.
      There were a lot of illegal incursions and bombing inside of Cambodia along the border, trying to interdict the trail. Of course the NVA and the Viet Cong were also using the Cambodian side of the border illegally in the first place. So 🤷🏻‍♀️.
      Kurtz was operating along the border, hit and run missions, crossing back and forth.

    • @44excalibur
      @44excalibur Месяц назад

      @@MarcosElMalo2 Thanks for the information.

  • @djsinjin
    @djsinjin 10 дней назад +3

    "not the civilians". that was the problem in Vietnam my dear. That is the problem in any war. There are ALWAYS civilians "in the way". Civilians usually pay the biggest price in any war.

  • @OuterGalaxyLounge
    @OuterGalaxyLounge 13 дней назад +1

    The Cinema Tyler channel's still-ongoing multi-year series about the making of Apocalypse Now is likely that best thing in RUclips history.

  • @cine_caro
    @cine_caro Месяц назад +81

    I love the smell of popcorn in the morning. It smells like victory.

    • @AaronLitz
      @AaronLitz Месяц назад +3

      I love the smell of popcorn in bed; smells like... _napalm._

    • @muddhammer7834
      @muddhammer7834 Месяц назад +1

      Perfect

  • @RoberinoSERE
    @RoberinoSERE Месяц назад +24

    “I am beyond their timid lying morality”

  • @O_Lee69
    @O_Lee69 8 дней назад +1

    This movie is not only about the madness of a war but also about the psyche of a man. One of my alltime favorites.

  • @bobmessier5215
    @bobmessier5215 Месяц назад +3

    Martin Sheen suffered a heart attack on this set and nearly died. He wasn't even nominated for an Academy Award.

  • @Adino1
    @Adino1 Месяц назад +12

    I wish I could feel the intensity Cassie feels when she watches movies. It reminds me of how I felt when I watched them when I was very young.

  • @stevesheroan4131
    @stevesheroan4131 Месяц назад +7

    I’m just glad that Cassie waited this long for this movie, because it obviously affected her deeply and had it been one of the earlier movies on the channel she may have never recovered. Before I even watched the reaction I felt sorry for her, but I couldn’t wait to see her reaction. I hope she knows how much the fans of this channel appreciate her enduring these tough watches.

  • @goldean5974
    @goldean5974 Месяц назад +5

    There was VERY little acting in this movie. Almost everything you see in this film was real and it took a huge toll on the cast and crew. The emotions were real. The injuries were real (Martin Sheen really did cut his hand open when he punched the mirror). Sam Bottoms was high out of his mind throughout the shoot. Lawrence Fishburne was only 14 when he started filming. Coppola very nearly committed suicide halfway through filming and was talked out of it by his wife. Sheen had a near-fatal heart attack. No one escaped this movie unscathed. I would highly recommend you watch the documentary Hearts of Darkness soon, as it goes into horrifying detail about how difficult Apocalypse Now was to make.

  • @dan1273
    @dan1273 Месяц назад +2

    To address what you said at the beginning, about deeply feeling for the characters and events in a movie, that's the point. That is the exact point. We tell stories for a variety of reasons, but most of those reasons are to pull at your emotions.

  • @rageagainstmyhatchet
    @rageagainstmyhatchet Месяц назад +25

    Bleak. Stark. Harsh.
    And yet moving and somewhat beautiful.
    It's not a true depiction of "the war" but it is art in cinema.
    A classic.

    • @dmwalker24
      @dmwalker24 Месяц назад +1

      It's an over-the-top representation of it. Like if you took the whole war, and synthesized a scenario composed of all the varieties of horror.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Месяц назад +1

      Yeah definitely not a typical war movie. More of an art film. Literary. Godfather was it's own Heart of Darkness in a way too.

    • @allengray5748
      @allengray5748 Месяц назад

      So what green 🟢d is saying,,, if take war,,, and imitate a idea of war,,, you can make a war movie 🍿🎥 I think 🧐 Ya. Maybe? ☮️

    • @t0dd000
      @t0dd000 Месяц назад +2

      It captures the essence of war.

  • @scottdarden3091
    @scottdarden3091 Месяц назад +26

    That's Robert Duvall "I love the smell of Napalm in the morning"😂😂😂

    • @TylerD288
      @TylerD288 Месяц назад

      No, it's "I love the smell of poontang in the morning."

  • @angelrogo
    @angelrogo 10 дней назад +2

    This movie is a tough pill to swallow.
    9:57 The man on the far left of the screen is Francis Ford Coppola.
    19:58 This is the perfect definition of the Vietnam War, and later in time it was known that this definition in this movie stung important Pentagon officials.
    In fact, the movie is a perfect compilation of what Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf (a veteran of Vietnam) defined as "Vietnam mistakes".
    The horror, the horror...

  • @ruicorreia8059
    @ruicorreia8059 26 дней назад +2

    “Charlie Don’t surf!” The Clash like it and named one of the songs on the Sandinista (1980) record after this quote from the movie. “Charlie don’t surf for his hamburger momma, Charlie’s gonna be a napalm star” sings Joe Strummer. Great song, great record, this movie’s a masterpiece. One of the best anti-war movies ever.

  • @tileux
    @tileux Месяц назад +14

    I love how people told you this movie is based on Heart of Darkness. While thats true of the plot, in fact, this movie owes more to the book, Dispatches by Micheal Herr. Widely regarded as THE best book on the experience of the vietnam war. Herr wrote Dispatches in a haze of mental collapse reinforced with drugs, so although Dispatches is a memoir he always called it a novel.
    Herr co-wrote the screenplay for apocalypse now, and all the great parts- including Willard’s monologues - were written by Herr. On top of that, most of the best scenes come from Dispatches. My favourite is the guy with the bloop gun, which i think you only meet in Redux
    Also the Redux version is the version that Coppolla wanted audiences to see: the filming of apocalypse now was famously a disaster, the production was in the Phillipines and hit by a hurricane. Coppolla’s wife made a ‘filming of apocalypse now’ documentary - which Tropic thunder famously satirises, although few people realise it. But the result was coppolla could only afford to release the movie he wanted people to see when he finally put Redux together.
    I think you have met Dispatches before. Stanley kubrick used it to make the movie Full Metal Jacket. Except Dispatches is a series of separate reports and not a full story so kubrick stitched the reports in Dispatches together in a way that didnt work. But, worse, all the best bits of Dispatches were already In Apocalypse Now, and those couldnt go into Full Metal Jacket. Which is why Apocalypse Now will always be the superior movie about the Vietnam war.
    When i was a young soldier, all of the senior guys around us were vietnam vets. Apocalypse Now was kind of a bible and most of us could recite long passages from the movie (something that, much to my delight, is accurately portrayed in the book and movie Jarhead, which is a memoir of Desert Shield/ Desert Storm). It saddens me that two of the most iconic movies about the vietnam war experience are based on the late michael herr’s book, Dispatches, and almost no-one now is aware of that.
    Ps many people comment about how young Laurance Fishburne - Mr Clean - was when this movie was made. That was actually a deliberate decision. One of the - many - famous lines in Dispatches goes ‘How do you feel when a 19 year old kid tells you that he’s gotten too old for this kind of sh.t?… they’d be looking back at you over a distance you knew you would never be able to cross’.

  • @timcook6566
    @timcook6566 Месяц назад +16

    I watched this with my dad a couple years after it came out. He was a USMC Vietnam Veteran. Growing up I never knew he did anything other than administrative duties. But when they were at bridge scene and the Captain left the boat to find the commanding officer, and the black soldier with cammo paint on his face fired a weapon in the air, my dad pointed it out to me and said “that’s what I carried over there!” It was the M-79 grenade launcher. I said that I thought he carried a pencil over there. He had a laugh at that and told me that he went out on long patrols. I later found out that he was Marine Force Recon before I was born

  • @chrisinfiesto835
    @chrisinfiesto835 Месяц назад +2

    “APOPalypse Now” LOL..... you kill it w/ the title graphics! 💯🔥🤙🏽😂

  • @darealtreegardner6165
    @darealtreegardner6165 Месяц назад +2

    As Franz Kafka wrote once to a friend about books: “I think we ought to read only the kind of books that wound or stab us. If the book we're reading doesn't wake us up with a blow to the head, what are we reading for? So that it will make us happy, as you write? Good Lord, we would be happy precisely if we had no books, and the kind of books that make us happy are the kind we could write ourselves if we had to. But we need books that affect us like a disaster, that grieve us deeply, like the death of someone we loved more than ourselves, like being banished into forests far from everyone, like a suicide. A book must be the axe for the frozen sea within us. That is my belief.”
    This movie is the the axe for the frozen sea within us.

  • @44excalibur
    @44excalibur Месяц назад +18

    Martin Sheen's character, Captain Willard, was a member of the US Army Special Forces assigned to MACV-SOG, or Military Assistance Command, Vietnam - Studies and Observations Group. Established on January 24th, 1964, it conducted strategic reconnaissance missions in the Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam), the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (North Vietnam), Laos, and Cambodia; took enemy prisoners, rescued downed pilots, conducted rescue operations to retrieve prisoners of war throughout Southeast Asia, and conducted clandestine agent team activities and psychological operations.

    • @elessartelcontar9415
      @elessartelcontar9415 Месяц назад +3

      And gave 'half a helicopter ride' to enemy POWs that refused to talk. After seeing that the other POWs usually talked.

  • @deejin25
    @deejin25 Месяц назад +5

    Watching a compassionate person like her almost tear her heart out watching this film is as gut wrenching as the film.

  • @craigoconnor6662
    @craigoconnor6662 Месяц назад +2

    "I feel it was so hard o make that movie." My friend, you have no idea. There have been documentaries made about how hard that movie was to make. It is an epic tale. If you read the wikipedia page about this movie, you will not believe it.

  • @TomTomTheLeprechaun
    @TomTomTheLeprechaun Месяц назад +1

    The way you watch a movie is a major part of your success. I truly believe that the viewers enjoy seeing a genuine reaction, especially now and days with so many fake over-reactors.
    I don't enjoy reaction channels, I don't care for them at all. You're a special case specifically because of how immersed you get and how genuine the reactions are, combined with a legend of an editor.
    Now and days, you're my favorite channel, I can't get enough content from you ❤

  • @Aggiebrettman
    @Aggiebrettman Месяц назад +34

    One of the most beautiful nightmares ever put to film. Mad genius filmmaking.

  • @44excalibur
    @44excalibur Месяц назад +7

    One of the helicopter pilots in Col. Kilgore's 1st Air Cavalry Division is played by real life former Marine Corps staff sergeant R. Lee Ermey, who would later go on to play Gunnery Sergeant Hartman in Full Metal Jacket.

  • @booqueefious2230
    @booqueefious2230 Месяц назад +1

    The farther you go "up the river" the crazier it gets
    Glad you finally did this. Its a trip

  • @jamesgarner8262
    @jamesgarner8262 23 дня назад +1

    “RUN, CHARLIE!”

  • @Robert_Douglass
    @Robert_Douglass Месяц назад +34

    10:47 "Any man brave enough to fight with his guts strapped on him can drink from my canteen any day!" Now that's a leader.
    12:01 Yep. That's Robert Duvall.

    • @PHDiaz-vv7yo
      @PHDiaz-vv7yo Месяц назад +14

      But the moment he hears that’s Lance Johnson the famous surfer and walks off with that canteen… I still laugh my guts out (bad choice of words- sorry)

    • @x-wing8785
      @x-wing8785 Месяц назад +1

      @@PHDiaz-vv7yo Yep. It's also worth to mention that you definitely should NOT give a water to a person who is wounded in the stomach. It causes terrible pain and almost certainly leads to death. Every soldier knows that.

    • @Robert_Douglass
      @Robert_Douglass Месяц назад

      @@x-wing8785 Depends. You trying to help him drink it or are you cleaning his wound?

    • @x-wing8785
      @x-wing8785 Месяц назад +1

      @@Robert_Douglass Given the context, I thought it was obvious that I was talking about drinking.

    • @Robert_Douglass
      @Robert_Douglass Месяц назад +1

      @@x-wing8785 Yeah, I figured that. I just felt I needed to point out the options.

  • @jordanmc9015
    @jordanmc9015 Месяц назад +13

    Lawrence Fishbourne was only 15. Dennis Hopper was high as a kite. Marlan Brando was in shadows because he gained so much weight before shooting they had to hide it somehow. What a trip

    • @user-bl4fj7qp8r
      @user-bl4fj7qp8r Месяц назад +1

      I like the idea of Kurtz becoming overweight and lazy. Because everyone is scared of him he just hangs in his layer all day long. 😂

  • @Phantomgreen29
    @Phantomgreen29 Месяц назад +1

    I appreciate the strides you've made out of your shell to watch movies like this, it's not easy and I hope that you keep a healthy distance from the trauma you see, it's easy for empathic people to absorb visuals and have it piece by piece change who you are. Don't let yourself reach that point.

  • @qasimmir7117
    @qasimmir7117 24 дня назад +2

    Colonel Kurtz isn’t a villain, he is an antihero. The thing is, in war, there are times when there is no place for one’s own humanity. A necessary insanity, savagery, and free from one’s own judgment in order to achieve the objective. Not always, but there are times. Kurtz and Willard know how primal and ruthless they are but they dislike it, they only do what they do because it had to happen. Unlike Colonel Kilgore who is dressed up as a hero yet enjoys the war, wipes out a village so he go surfing, and reminisces about the smell of ‘victory.’ He is the true villain.
    This is the point of the film, to show the hypocrisy in how America fought the Vietnam War, the effect it had on their conscripts, and how they were doomed to fail.

  • @neilvarma
    @neilvarma Месяц назад +34

    One of the greatest movies of all time !!

    • @goldenageofdinosaurs7192
      @goldenageofdinosaurs7192 Месяц назад +3

      One of my all-time favorites!

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Месяц назад +1

      Agreed. A very dark, weird, haunting classic.

    • @user-ih5jr8rt5q
      @user-ih5jr8rt5q Месяц назад +1

      it has a few issues that keep it from being masterpiece but it is great

  • @RetroClassic66
    @RetroClassic66 Месяц назад +9

    18:54 The man introducing the Playboy Bunnies here is the legendary Bill Graham, who was best known for being a rock & roll impresario and concert promoter, and who helped to establish bands like The Grateful Dead, The Jefferson Airplane, Big Brother and The Holding Company (whose vocalist was Janis Joplin), Santana, and many others who were based in the San Francisco Bay Area in California during the late 1960s and early 1970s.

    • @stephengamber7000
      @stephengamber7000 Месяц назад +1

      Wow. I never knew that - thanks for the tip!

    • @ilionreactor1079
      @ilionreactor1079 19 дней назад

      When I lived in the Bay Area, one night the lights flickered on and off several times. Soon after, we learned that was Graham's helicopter hitting some nearby high tension wires with all aboard lost. Kinda creepy. RIP.

  • @dmille1959
    @dmille1959 Месяц назад +2

    Command knew that Willard had lost this mind. They had to send a mad man to kill a mad man.

  • @crossbones13
    @crossbones13 Месяц назад +3

    "I feel like this whole room that I am sitting in now is just like filled with this uncomfortable 'ick' that I can't get out of the pit of my stomach."
    Cassie is just now realizing that she is on the her own path to the heart of darkness, sitting in her stronghold with her trophies on her wall, surrounded by her own loyal horde of "kernels" (Colonel Kurtz?) as she documents her thoughts and musings for her enraptured audience. How long before she appears in a video with a camo face paint and a raspberry beret?

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Месяц назад

      Baby Yoda will be her fist in command.

    • @crossbones13
      @crossbones13 Месяц назад +1

      @@ct6852 Well, I think Carly would be her hype-woman (filling the Dennis Hopper role) by continually plugging Cassie's socials (Patreon, Instagram, Like, Subscribe, etc.) while also offering her rambling introspections...

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Месяц назад

      @@crossbones13 Carly is nothing if not practical. Lol. This cracked me up.

  • @blakemeads9225
    @blakemeads9225 Месяц назад +15

    Kurtz is such a fascinating character to me. He is a man who truly understands war, and it completely ripped his soul apart.

  • @manuelacosta9463
    @manuelacosta9463 Месяц назад +13

    One of Coppola's masterpieces. It took quite the struggle to complete. Favorite segment is Colonel Kurz musing on how they are trained to kill yet not allowed to scribble curse words on their equipment. Because it's 'obscene'.

  • @Red_Finn
    @Red_Finn Месяц назад +1

    You have strong empathy. Thus you both enjoy movies, but on a deeper level you feel how the characters feel. It's art and it's wonderful.

  • @u.n.i.p.o.d
    @u.n.i.p.o.d Месяц назад +1

    I was 13 when I went with my parents to see Apocalypse Now. It was hard, for one so far removed, to comprehend at the time the true horror of what was the Vietnam War but leaving the theater my eyes were opened. "The horror." There was a 45 minute drive home and I don't recall anyone in the car saying much of anything, if at all. (Aug. '79)