THE THIN RED LINE Clip - "Battle on the Hill" (1998) WWII Movie

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 6 вер 2024
  • THE THIN RED LINE Clip - "Battle on the Hill" (1998) WWII Movie
    In 1942, Private Witt (Jim Caviezel) is a U.S. Army absconder living peacefully with the locals of a small South Pacific island. Discovered by his commanding officer, Sgt. Welsh (Sean Penn), Witt is forced to resume his active duty training for the Battle of Guadalcanal. As Witt and his unit land on the island, and the American troops mount an assault on entrenched Japanese positions, the story explores their various fates and attitudes towards life-or-death situations.
    Release date: December 23, 1998 (USA)
    Director: Terrence Malick
    Buy the film here!
    www.amazon.com...
    SUBSCRIBE for more all the latest Movie Clips here: bit.ly/31ByDAf
    #TheThinRedLine #TerrenceMalick

КОМЕНТАРІ • 626

  • @urivinals8632
    @urivinals8632 Рік тому +497

    This scene gives you the feeling of the ‘clumsyness’ of the battle. That feeling when you realize war is not rambo, war is clumsy and fooly and less heroic than we think. This scene is probably the best close combat wwII ever filmed. Love it. Also gives me shivers.

    • @JPerry-jw9ik
      @JPerry-jw9ik 10 місяців тому +9

      Except for the end scene in SPR. Man that was legits.

    • @Schnuersenkelfon
      @Schnuersenkelfon 9 місяців тому +10

      Watch the factorybattle in the 1993 movie Stalingrad. Its also a pain in the a

    • @berehendra843
      @berehendra843 7 місяців тому

      😅

    • @azbestusa8107
      @azbestusa8107 6 місяців тому +4

      war is not holywood

    • @barrylyndon1556
      @barrylyndon1556 6 місяців тому +2

      In episode 7 of the miniseries "The Pacific" there is a great scene of close quarters combat you should check out if you haven't already.

  • @justanaussie2822
    @justanaussie2822 Рік тому +923

    As combat veteran. That was beyond realistic. That had me breathing hard. It’s just luck you survive. I’m 62 now. I’m blubbering like a baby.

    • @Yman83464z
      @Yman83464z Рік тому +65

      Thank you for your Service, Sir.

    • @nate78824
      @nate78824 Рік тому +22

      God bless you Aussie!

    • @shookn
      @shookn Рік тому +17

      Where did you see combat?

    • @NickoOutBush
      @NickoOutBush Рік тому +6

      Thank you for your service, @justanaussie2822

    • @Jonesyb90
      @Jonesyb90 Рік тому +9

      I’d love to know what made it so realistic? Where there any particular aspects?

  • @yveaux500
    @yveaux500 16 днів тому +5

    Most underrated war movie ever . Should be up there with all the classics. Hard to believe that pieces of garbage like Dunkirk and Hacksaw Ridge seem to make every top list but this one is usually overlooked.

  • @kevinomahoney
    @kevinomahoney Рік тому +380

    The Japanese actors did a great job. The whole thing is very convincing. Suspension of disbelief.

    • @CodytheHun123
      @CodytheHun123 Рік тому +26

      It tells the viewers they’ve been on the island a long time, perhaps since November. You could say the one guy even lost his shirt, or rather it rotted off.

    • @mchughcb
      @mchughcb Рік тому +4

      I thought they were Australians. Never can tell with movies filmed in Australia.

    • @j22563
      @j22563 Рік тому +3

      Very convincing. One guy gets a MG round to the chest and speaks like nothing happens

    • @God_Help_Me11
      @God_Help_Me11 Рік тому +7

      @@CodytheHun123or he took it off cause it’s hot as fuck in those bunkers

    • @CodytheHun123
      @CodytheHun123 Рік тому

      @@God_Help_Me11 or that. Lol

  • @bobbyricigliano2799
    @bobbyricigliano2799 Рік тому +273

    For a somewhat odd and unorthodox war film, this particular scene was one of the best close quarter combat sequences ever filmed.

    • @mikebersiks3280
      @mikebersiks3280 Рік тому +13

      Also incredibly true to the same scene in the book. The company tries a frontal assault and gets stopped cold and pinned down on the lower slopes but then some guys find a way up to the main Japanese bunker complex on top of the hill via a covered draw. The Lt played by John Cusack uses that covered approach to get them to assault the bunkers from the top down and clear the position that way

    • @lungeranon7645
      @lungeranon7645 11 місяців тому +2

      Agree. Watched this full movie many years ago. While parts of the film seemed to drift for me, this combat scene is was special and I was remembered it.

    • @jakubcygan8265
      @jakubcygan8265 11 місяців тому +5

      It's the best film that carries the label 'war film' ever made next to Apocalypse Now and Come and See.

    • @bobbyricigliano2799
      @bobbyricigliano2799 11 місяців тому +2

      @@jakubcygan8265 I'll agree to that. All three films are complicated and somewhat hard to follow, but magnificently done.

    • @SeverEnergia
      @SeverEnergia 10 місяців тому +1

      He was writing about a real battle. The refusal to attack thing actually happened!

  • @Kolohe8241955
    @Kolohe8241955 11 місяців тому +114

    What this clip doesn't show are the scenes right after their taking of the bunkers. The soldiers break down and display the pure, raw emotion of having survived such an intense experience. It was one of the most intense scenes in the movie.

    • @alexchristopher221
      @alexchristopher221 4 дні тому

      Most of the criticism was directed at the editing and length of the movie.

  • @theophanesantoniou8539
    @theophanesantoniou8539 Рік тому +172

    this unbelievably underrated and buried by critics movie, was probably the most beautiful poetic war drama hollywood ever produced. and the reason the critics buried this mastepiece is because it represented the human side of the american soldiers. they werent imaginary superheroes. they were real heroes with all their emotions.

    • @johnlucas6683
      @johnlucas6683 Рік тому +15

      Isn't this movie famous as well? The only reason it's not even more famous was probably coming out the same year and awards time as Saving Private Ryan.

    • @nukenfry
      @nukenfry Рік тому +21

      From what I recall, critics loved this movie. It just had the unfortunate release time as Saving Private Ryan.

    • @hawkeyeten2450
      @hawkeyeten2450 Рік тому +4

      I think that's why some people don't like WWII films like this, because it shatters the superhero fairytale. Force of Arms (1951) is another with this tone, although it's set in the European Theater. The main GI hero of the story, Pete, is stuck fighting in some of the worst combat of the Italian Campaign. He becomes fed up with the killing, fed up with losing friends, and fed up with seeing Italian civilians getting hurt by the Germans. He breaks down to the point where he doesn't know what he cares about anymore. Interestingly, while away from the front, he meets a young WAC officer named Ellie who similarly is screwed up mentally by the war (it's strongly implied her fiancé was killed in battle), and she is likewise heartbroken and angry. Their first meeting is not a fairytale love story, in fact it's an absolute clunker, she's cold and agitated and he's kind of insensitive. However, eventually they meet again, vent their frustrations and feelings to each other and it becomes apparent that these two might actually be exactly what each other needs. They begin to fall in love (when Pete manages to get leave), but both nearly die soon after when the Luftwaffe BRUTALLY bombs the Italian town they're staying in, destroying even an old church (which devastates Ellie). Then Pete has yet another bad battle experience where his officer is killed and he is badly wounded (by this point, he's barely staying sane). I won't reveal the full story or ending, but I will say this: It shows the heroes of World War II for what they really were: Men and women just trying to survive and remain stable-minded human beings amongst hell on earth.

    • @diollinebranderson6553
      @diollinebranderson6553 Рік тому +1

      ​@@hawkeyeten2450mate I think you've already revealed the full story

    • @hawkeyeten2450
      @hawkeyeten2450 Рік тому

      @@diollinebranderson6553 Oh trust me, it gets much wilder. I only revealed about half of it.

  • @dill-pickle423
    @dill-pickle423 Рік тому +295

    In the book that private with the pistol was said to have charged those emplacements because he was so afraid that he just couldn’t take it anymore, he had to do something. Weird the places bravery can come from. It’s very much like All Quiet on the Western Front, all the soldiers start off terrified but by the end they just don’t give a damn anymore and will charge trenches and machine gun nests without even thinking about it.

    • @rvhill69
      @rvhill69 Рік тому +47

      There a limit to fear. Once reached, all that remains is rage. A rage so great, you no longer care if you live or you die. It is said, the difference between a brave man and a coward how much fear. they can handle.

    • @dabda8510
      @dabda8510 Рік тому +29

      The actor showed it well with his eyes. Fear > too much fear to handle > rage

    • @thomasdragosr.841
      @thomasdragosr.841 Рік тому +12

      As Lt. Speirs told Private Blythe, "you are already dead..."

    • @9joecamel
      @9joecamel Рік тому +20

      That is The Thin Red Line, he no longer cared if he lived or if he died.

    • @NeilPower
      @NeilPower Рік тому +9

      @@rvhill69 That's why I love this scene. You can see fight or flight battling for control in his eyes until fight finally won.

  • @CodytheHun123
    @CodytheHun123 Рік тому +188

    Love this movie. Didn’t used to but once I started to understand it it became one of my favorites. The background music in this clip is incredibly haunting. You can apply it to anywhere in a Pacific War battle and it fits.

    • @mardukistotalyawesome9371
      @mardukistotalyawesome9371 Рік тому +7

      I saw this in the theater as a kid and hated it. Watched it 20 years later and it is a great movie.

    • @lungeranon7645
      @lungeranon7645 11 місяців тому +1

      @@mardukistotalyawesome9371Similar. I didnt quite hate it; but it was disappointing for me. I didnt understand and appreciate it what it was as I do now.

    • @benjamindroege8026
      @benjamindroege8026 10 місяців тому +3

      Totally agree. When I first saw it, I didn't really get it. But probably the best war movie ever made.

    • @bronze4871
      @bronze4871 9 місяців тому

      I totally agree

    • @CyrilSneer123
      @CyrilSneer123 7 місяців тому +1

      Yup far superior to Saving Private Ryan as that is just pure hollywood.

  • @delrey874
    @delrey874 Рік тому +175

    Very underrated film. Terrence Malick did his usual excellent job with this film.

    • @zmajodnocaja5088
      @zmajodnocaja5088 Рік тому

      insufferable meaningless film full of tedious pseudo-intellectual drivel.

    • @daniellap.stewart6839
      @daniellap.stewart6839 Рік тому +2

      The movie is just too slow man but the pacific campaing is way more interesting than europe that's why i think the pacific is superior to band of brothers

    • @christophed4579
      @christophed4579 Рік тому +12

      @@daniellap.stewart6839 I feel sorry for you for not understanding or rather feeling why this movie is one of the greatest movies ever done.

    • @BFVK
      @BFVK Рік тому

      @@christophed4579 I'm sorry that the existantial brain masturbation of the film make it so great for you.

    • @cavscout7113
      @cavscout7113 Рік тому

      @@christophed4579 It isn't. It is a very good movie and a very very good war movie but the non combat scenes are very slow. I found myself not really caring about the characters because of this. JMO.

  • @Amoore-vv9wx
    @Amoore-vv9wx Рік тому +65

    That sound of that Japanese ‘woodpecker’ heavy machine gun was perfect. A slow, methodical thump.

  • @rationalbasis2172
    @rationalbasis2172 Рік тому +51

    One of the best battle scenes in any U.S.-made movie.

  • @davidbowie5023
    @davidbowie5023 3 місяці тому +16

    Saving Private Ryan was a masterpiece. But The Thin Red Line was a beast, damn, cruel and brutal to the realistic level.

    • @Slim_Ch4rles
      @Slim_Ch4rles 2 місяці тому

      TRL is a deeper film with some of the most thought-provoking dialogue and acting you will ever see in a war movie while also having one of the most grounded yet authentic depictions of combat in a film I can think of. The emotional states it puts you in with its themes, score, camera angles, shot sequencing, and audio effects is what makes it so much more impactful and beautiful as a whole.
      That's not to say that SP Ryan is one dimensional or even inferior to TRL, it just has so many more emotions that it provokes on a human level while still being grounded in reality in a way that doesn't require me to suspend my disbelief for most if not all of the film

  • @joelgonzalez9248
    @joelgonzalez9248 Рік тому +21

    Best movie from 1999. I was a senior in High School. Know one I knew cared to go watch it with me. I went by myself, saw it. Then went to the movie theater again to watch it a 2nd time.

    • @abaddon4823
      @abaddon4823 2 місяці тому

      Same. I was a freshman

    • @hotcakesism
      @hotcakesism Місяць тому +1

      Yeah, i was a little bit younger but it left a deep impression. Not just the musical score and these superb action sequences but the slower, more contemplative parts as well. I actually couldn't tell Witt and Bell apart and i gotta say, Mallick does not make it easy to understand what's going on. But watching it since then, I've come to appreciate the character arcs that Witt, Bell, Staros, and Tall go through, as well as the island itself and the native people and how their relationship changes. Solid film overall, definitely one of my favorites.

  • @upperroomtoo
    @upperroomtoo Рік тому +107

    I read the book in 4th grade (1970) and was mesmerized by this chapter. The description on crawling through the grass and bullets clipping the grass right above their heads.

    • @Mottleydude1
      @Mottleydude1 Рік тому +4

      I have not read the book but saw the movie. I loved the opening line. “The closer to Caesar the greater the fear.”.
      Boy is that the truth.

    • @blockmasterscott
      @blockmasterscott Рік тому

      I read it last year, it was a good read.

    • @derfunkhaus
      @derfunkhaus Рік тому +1

      It's a good book. I'm impressed you read it so young. In 4th grade I was busy reading the "Alfred Hitchcock's Three Investigators" mysteries and the Hardy Boys adventures.

  • @connorcolebrook9800
    @connorcolebrook9800 Рік тому +30

    This movie's soundtrack really sells the evil in combat. So often action movies aren't scary. This shit was fear.

    • @thefabulousmula
      @thefabulousmula 3 місяці тому +3

      For me, the first scene when they came upon the limbless corpse really established that feeling of pure evil surrounding them

  • @grunthostheflatulent2613
    @grunthostheflatulent2613 Рік тому +122

    I was on workers comp for a month and the armour asked me if I would like to make some ammo for the film.
    I hand-made 5000 rounds of blank 7.7 jap ammo for that movie for their "woodpecker" MG, it took me about a week and a half to do it on a single-stage press...
    The director was told to be careful with the amount they used per scene.
    They blew it all off in half a day and then wanted another 5000 for the next day, I told them to fuck off...

    • @FeekyChucker
      @FeekyChucker Рік тому +36

      this should be in trivia on the IMDB page

    • @SmorgasLord
      @SmorgasLord Рік тому

      wow that's amazing, good that you told them to fuck off

    • @captainnutsack8151
      @captainnutsack8151 Рік тому +4

      Great story!

    • @JF-xq6fr
      @JF-xq6fr Рік тому +2

      Did you use Privi brass or reformed and trimmed 30-06 cases? I used to make blanks using Red Dot or 700x in 06, and they were flashy and LOUD. Load 7.7x58 too and consider it a very fine cartridge, and the Type 99 rifle very underrated.

    • @grunthostheflatulent2613
      @grunthostheflatulent2613 Рік тому +5

      @@JF-xq6fr I was given a mixed lot of once-fired .30-06 brass and RCBS forming dies as well as primers, I have completely forgotten the powder I was provided with or its load.

  • @CyrilSneer123
    @CyrilSneer123 7 місяців тому +8

    Love this movie, it's long, at times slow but it's like a poetic yet horrific dream and the action scenes are unmatched. I can see why Terence Malick is so well regarded even though he only makes the odd film every once in awhile.

    • @salmanedy
      @salmanedy 4 дні тому

      I would love to see a four hour cut of this movie

  • @SaintVodou
    @SaintVodou Рік тому +23

    Terrence Malick eases into this battle the way he eases into the movie: first with images of the island’s natural beauty, then with those of the human carnage and suffering to which nature is oblivious-making the carnage that much worse, because however important the battle is to us in the moment, nature will in time destroy any remaining traces of it.

  • @WillK1349.
    @WillK1349. 3 місяці тому +5

    Everything always felt so real in this movie from the acting to the kick back of the guns! How the m1 has kick and the carbine has such little, the colt jolting the man’s wrist back and the shotgun kicking upward to the wind blowing the dirt through the grass with the sun light glaring through

    • @hotcakesism
      @hotcakesism Місяць тому +1

      Yeah and i wish they had depicted the howitzers with the same level of detail, as it is they don't recoil, and if you notice that, it really takes you out of one of the earlier pivotal scenes. Maybe ILM or some other visual effects studio can fix that up and re-release it in theaters, I'd pay to see that.
      Seems a lot more likely than the mythical 5.5 hour studio cut, which could be amazing, especially if they could include new music from Hans Zimmer as well. What can i say, everyone's an "ideas" person, lol

  • @antonego9581
    @antonego9581 5 місяців тому +7

    this whole sequence is a masterclass in film editing. this movie is so underrated, overshadowed by Saving Private Ryan but IMO this is actually the better war movie in a lot of ways

  • @MrHotguy034
    @MrHotguy034 Рік тому +27

    very underrated war film. It was very well done.

    • @jmarty1000
      @jmarty1000 4 місяці тому +2

      I have heard it called the greatest war movie ever made.

    • @hotcakesism
      @hotcakesism Місяць тому

      ​@@jmarty1000i feel like I'd have to watch a lot more movies to say that, but right now it's the best one I've seen.

  • @pikiwiki
    @pikiwiki Рік тому +23

    this guy really knows how to do an action sequence. the humanity in the last sequence where the soldier doesn't shoot the Japanese emerging from cover is also an interesting touch

    • @DisHappah
      @DisHappah Рік тому

      this wasnt a movie about marines. these were soldiers of us army stationed in Hawaii

    • @pikiwiki
      @pikiwiki Рік тому +1

      @@DisHappah ah thank you. Should have known from the 25th infantry patch

    • @DisHappah
      @DisHappah Рік тому +3

      @@pikiwiki No problem. I guess it got my attention because I served in 25th ID myself as a mortarmen. good times.

    • @The_OneManCrowd
      @The_OneManCrowd Рік тому

      No WAY those Japanese would have surrendered in 1941. They would have fought to the last man.

    • @M50A1
      @M50A1 Рік тому

      @@The_OneManCrowd to be fair they wouldn't have surrendered in 45 either

  • @Conn30Mtenor
    @Conn30Mtenor 11 місяців тому +28

    This movie is 10x the film Private Ryan was. Way more visceral. "I'm going to sink my teeth into your liver...."

    • @myblacklab7
      @myblacklab7 4 місяці тому +1

      The book is more visceral, and more disturbing, but the movie is very different from the book.
      For instance, the book has a part where a couple of soldiers explore their sexuality with one another, and mixes that in with the combat experiences they are having, and there's nothing like that in the movie.
      You might like the book.

  • @Philmoscowitz
    @Philmoscowitz Рік тому +12

    The acting in this movie is off the charts!

  • @pedddler
    @pedddler Рік тому +39

    A grenade is the most terrifying weapon because unlike other weapons like guns, mashine guns, mortor rounds and even artillery shells which travel in straight lines, a grenade because of its small size can be thrown from any angle or direction making the receiving soldiers really hard to take cover.

    • @chestersleezer8821
      @chestersleezer8821 Рік тому +7

      True and in Vietnam US Soldiers were told to use grenades if they thought there was something and they could not see since the enemy will not know which the direction you are unlike shooting.

    • @pedddler
      @pedddler Рік тому +2

      @@chestersleezer8821 Agreed.

    • @charlesdixon552
      @charlesdixon552 Рік тому +4

      A grenade is the most terrifying? How about being cooked alive by a flamethrower?

    • @chestersleezer8821
      @chestersleezer8821 Рік тому +3

      @@charlesdixon552 That was mostly the Japanese soldiers though if you were toting one you would be a prime target from those Japanese soldiers. They learned to target the GI's with BAR's and Flamethrowers.

    • @charlesdixon552
      @charlesdixon552 Рік тому

      @@chestersleezer8821 Bar's were indeed nasty.....they were like a war world 2 m-60. However, as I stated, a flamethrower was the most terrifying weapon US infantrymen brought to the fight.

  • @YanusDV
    @YanusDV Рік тому +20

    4:19 the way he throws that grenade is flawless

    • @user-yy5jk1vp7j
      @user-yy5jk1vp7j 11 місяців тому +4

      If I throw a grenade, it will bounce off something and fall right in front of me.

    • @drewinsur7321
      @drewinsur7321 3 місяці тому +1

      i read somewhere this scene was sped up something like 12% but one thing im sure all the granades flying are CGI.. still awesome to see

    • @codymoe4986
      @codymoe4986 2 місяці тому +2

      @drewinsur7321...Why wouldn't they just throw inert replicas?

  • @flashnewlight1075
    @flashnewlight1075 Рік тому +12

    I'm Japanese, but this movie is well made
    The Japanese army self-destructed on an island to the south

  • @rpnvg
    @rpnvg Рік тому +33

    I *love* how this movie almost never gives the viewer an up close shot of the Japanese during any of the combat shots from the actual Marines' perspective angles. It's just so realistic. You often only see silhouettes of enemies when engaging/being engaged, in actual combat. Very rarely do you see anyone close enough that you can make out actual physical features.
    That's not to say hand to hand combat didn't happen. But many people do not realize that the overwhelming bulk of engagements were indeed at distances of 100-300 yards away. Often times, troops would find themselves shooting at a random shoulder and helmet that peaked above some grass at 200 yards out. Makes you wonder how many times different rocks were shot at, simply because they sort of looked like a soldier through the dense grass of Guadalcanal. Too many Hollywood movies make *EVERYTHING* so close and personal to keep Marveltard's attention spans in check.
    I know this film caught so much flak, when it was released, due to it's seemingly strange pacing. But the pacing is very realistic. Long bouts of quiet contemplation with extremely intense bits of actual combat.

    • @trubblman
      @trubblman Рік тому +3

      I think the soldiers were Army not Marines

    • @rpnvg
      @rpnvg Рік тому

      @@trubblman You are completely right, I got mixed up. It’s about the Army 25th Division reinforcing the Marines of Guadalcanal.

  • @sfoeric
    @sfoeric Рік тому +3

    Sadly, this movie never got the recognition it deserves.

  • @God_Help_Me11
    @God_Help_Me11 Рік тому +8

    Picture this, you’re a Japanese troop on Guadalcanal. At first, you have to fight Marines “recruited out of prisons and asylums”, that rip and tear through through your lines, and also pulverizing any friendlies. Although these guys fight with Bolt Action Rifles like how you do, they push you further and further into the jungles where you are forced to dig in, as your buddies fall like flies on the way. This continues for weeks up until men in more masses come, with better equipment than those Marines, and there you are on a hill trying to hold off from these soldiers for what feels like a longer period of time. You try surrendering just to be blown to shreds by a man with a shotgun.

  • @unrealassasination
    @unrealassasination Рік тому +13

    Beautiful philosophical movie

  • @JD0124
    @JD0124 5 місяців тому

    This is one of the most intense combat scenes I've ever seen. The first time I watched it, I swear I held my breath the entire time. I'm no combat veteran, but I'd have to imagine this was close to what it was like in the Pacific Theater. The chaos, the confusion, the terror. Death around any and every corner... a fanatical enemy that will commit suicide if that's what is required in order to take you out... split seconds can decide if you live or die.
    No heroes. Just men fighting to stay alive and keep their friends alive, if possible.

  • @kennethguzowski5939
    @kennethguzowski5939 11 місяців тому +2

    My dad was there. God Bless or forefathers. We honor them. And yes my father was 100% disabled

  • @prabowosubianto8024
    @prabowosubianto8024 Рік тому +23

    As a combat soldier, I understand why the Japanese soldiers look stupid. The fatigue factor greatly affects the battle. Lack of drinking water sources, malaria disease damaged the fighting strategy of the Japanese soldiers. They could only attack without thinking while screaming BANZAI...

    • @jacobpitts6846
      @jacobpitts6846 10 місяців тому +3

      IRL these guys were wounded and completely starved, most of them were near death anyways. Higher command gave the ones who could walk orders to retreat and they said nah we'll all die together up here. And that's what they did, almost to a man.

  • @c3aloha
    @c3aloha Рік тому +12

    I think this scene was based on Medal of Honor recipient Captain Charles Davis. US Army. James Jones was in his unit.

  • @freedomzvision
    @freedomzvision Місяць тому

    For me these are the most realistic battle scenes in cinematic contemporary history. So brave so sad. Peace and Love Forever. (Whatever that means....)

  • @PABeaulieu
    @PABeaulieu 6 місяців тому

    I watched this movie for the first time in the summertime of 1999, in the afternoon, on a rainy day, and I fell asleep on it. That's only when I rewatched it afterwards that I really enjoyed it.
    Just try to put yourself in the pants of an American soldier coming into a place that is such a paradise, but also a place turned into a living hell by a war.

  • @taistelutomaatti
    @taistelutomaatti 3 місяці тому +2

    During past twenty years of seeing this film, I never noticed that flash before at roughly 0:28

    • @Ashley_Yao
      @Ashley_Yao 9 днів тому

      What was that flash about? Can you please tell me

  • @yama9234
    @yama9234 Місяць тому +1

    In close-quarters combat like this, the advantage of every American soldier being equipped with an automatic weapon is immeasurable. Japanese on the other hand, the normal infantry was only equipped with bolt action rifles.

  • @robertpearson9137
    @robertpearson9137 Рік тому +3

    '98 gave us two great war films.

  • @geraldmiller8973
    @geraldmiller8973 Рік тому +5

    one of the best scenes in any war movie. and one of the best war movies. the realism is incredible. i am going to get a recording of this movie.

  • @Tchild2
    @Tchild2 Рік тому +7

    The intensity and realism of this scene and film is that you can feel the terror and horror as both sides felt it. The japanese were just kids like the US servicemen and both were thrown into the horrors of war and having to kill or be killed.

  • @jetthias972
    @jetthias972 7 місяців тому +2

    L'un des meilleurs film que j'ai vu , cette scène est incroyable

  • @mrbuck5059
    @mrbuck5059 6 місяців тому +1

    A T800 terminator went back in time to help me in WW2. He was my battle buddy. He got shot 8,950 times but cleared a whole division of Japanese by himself.

  • @dejiadeleye5697
    @dejiadeleye5697 Рік тому +4

    The adrenaline in these battles must be out of this world

  • @DonVitosLazyEye
    @DonVitosLazyEye Рік тому +5

    4:02 Is he dual wielding his M1A1 and his .45?!

    • @carljohnson9726
      @carljohnson9726 Рік тому +1

      Yup and honestly probably doable the m1 is like 4lbs

  • @kenegan7793
    @kenegan7793 Рік тому +15

    It's amazing how their helmets never fall off because they never seem to fasten them .

    • @mattrinck7503
      @mattrinck7503 Рік тому +7

      They didn't fasten them during the war either and they usually stayed on anyway. They were relatively heavy so I'm guessing it took a pretty good nudge to knocked them off.

    • @johnmarstonification
      @johnmarstonification Рік тому +13

      you can actually adjust the inside liner of these helmets so they stay snug on your head, fun fact the reason they never strapped there chinstraps is because there was a rumor that artillery blast shock waves would crush your wind pipe, or snap your neck. This was sort of a soldiers wise tale that am sure had a shred of truth.

    • @mattrinck7503
      @mattrinck7503 Рік тому +1

      @@johnmarstonification Thanks for clearing that up. I've never worn one before but have held one and remember it being heavier than it looked.

    • @arkybaldknobber8062
      @arkybaldknobber8062 Рік тому +6

      We had the same type helmet in Vietnam, 1968. None of us buttoned the chin straps . When you ran you had to hold onto your helmet with one hand, your weapon in the other, or the helmet would bounce off.

  • @superood1
    @superood1 Рік тому +6

    Those Marines who fought in the Pacific are as tough as they come. Semper Fi! 🇺🇸

    • @jamesmalone6617
      @jamesmalone6617 Рік тому +11

      This was the Army bubba

    • @jacobpitts6846
      @jacobpitts6846 10 місяців тому +2

      There were more army soldiers fighting in the Pacific than Marines. Crazy to think but all the big battles had tons of army troops or almost all army troops. Late Guadalcanal, the rest of the Solomons campaign, Okinawa, and the Philippines, that one in particular was the biggest battle of the Pacific and it was mostly army.

    • @Vsm426
      @Vsm426 7 місяців тому +1

      Sorry bro your so called marines pulled out of the island lmao

    • @Helghastdude
      @Helghastdude 3 місяці тому

      Marines were the spearhead, first to fight during the island hopping campaign. Army had to clear the rest of the islands

  • @user-cv8qe9ru8c
    @user-cv8qe9ru8c Рік тому +16

    My favorite sequences in a war movie. Jim caviziel played jesus himself and ill always remeber him as pvt witt

    • @Maxwell-bt9hp
      @Maxwell-bt9hp Рік тому +2

      Pvt Witt was something of a spiritual revolutionary himself. Blazes, what a film Malick crafted for us.

  • @cykeok3525
    @cykeok3525 Рік тому +5

    Doesn't matter what country you're from, please don't place your prepared defensive machine gun emplacements with boulders right in front of them, perfectly sized to provide defilade to infantrymen, within grenade throwing range :x
    Look at that field of fire at 2:27, there's actually more deadzone than clear!

  • @coolhand1964
    @coolhand1964 2 місяці тому

    It was unfortunate that this movie was released so close to 'Saving Private Ryan', it was unfairly compared and forgotten about by critics at the time. Yet each time I watch it, I pick up more insight into how the movie portrays the mixture of emotions relating to the human side of the combatants. They were not comic book heroes but instead scared individuals doing a job that had to be done. This scene in particular leaves you gripping your seat and out of breath, each time you watch it.

  • @69Boramir
    @69Boramir 5 місяців тому +2

    The biggest misfortune of this movie is that it was shot in the same year as Saving Private Ryan. Otherwise he would have won at least 2-3 Oscars

  • @aussiemilitant4486
    @aussiemilitant4486 7 днів тому

    In such a star studded line-up there are so many great individual performances, but my favourite has to be Elias Koteas... i think this and Fallen with Denzel Washington are his best films.

  • @sgtstedanko7186
    @sgtstedanko7186 6 місяців тому +1

    This movie loosely depicted the battle of Mount Austen towards the end of the Guadalcanal campaign. It was the Army that was put in charge of clearing out the remaining Japanese resistance in this sector of the island.

  • @jettz8571
    @jettz8571 Рік тому +3

    Best movie about war ever made

  • @johnbennett3269
    @johnbennett3269 7 місяців тому +1

    I think I love the sky as much as Terrence Mallick

  • @user-gc8cj5nk2n
    @user-gc8cj5nk2n 11 місяців тому +2

    Best war movie ever.

  • @Lock-Vlog
    @Lock-Vlog 9 днів тому

    The acting is so amazing u feel thats movie

  • @mattmannina1935
    @mattmannina1935 10 місяців тому +1

    the fact that a machine gun nest has its sight blocked by a giant rock sitting 20' in front of it is hilarious

    • @CyrilSneer123
      @CyrilSneer123 7 місяців тому

      There wasn't just one machine gun nest and have you ever heard of defilade?

  • @peterstricker1484
    @peterstricker1484 Рік тому +31

    This movie really hit me hard! Not shown in this clip the Americans finally capture one of the pill boxes and you see just how scared and phatically human the Japanese soldiers are and for that moment you don't want to kill them, you want to just hug them and say "lets stop this madness and just go back home to our families." But we are reliving this scene now in Ukraine and it will keep on repeating itself as long as humans need to kill each other. Jesus commanded us to "love one another" it's our only alternative.

  • @lowfatmofat2152
    @lowfatmofat2152 17 днів тому

    Pure emotional adrenaline aggressive momentum drive and 100% bravery.

  • @Johny40Se7en
    @Johny40Se7en Рік тому +3

    I've never seen this film, but that's gonna change soon. Looks incredible, not a in a good way obviously. When the soldier starts going into that shellshock trance about 1:54 and that truly ominous music kicks in, it really emphasises how haunting and crippling that condition feel be like... 😳🥶

    • @robscoggins
      @robscoggins Рік тому +1

      Interestingly, this soldier manages to overcome his paralyzing fear and fight; unlike the Pvt Hoppel character in Saving Private Ryan, who allows one of his squad members to be stabbed by a single German while he himself cowers at the bottom of the stairs.

    • @Johny40Se7en
      @Johny40Se7en Рік тому +1

      @@robscoggins Indeed. Great difference in portrayals and perspective.

  • @pipermac
    @pipermac 7 місяців тому

    I really like how Doll overcomes his fear and does his thing...I know it's only a movie, but it occurs to me how wars are won...so much more fulfilling than Upham from Saving Private Ryan...

  • @eldritchmorgasm4018
    @eldritchmorgasm4018 Рік тому

    Best thing, the music, dramatic, horror, or beautiful

  • @gateshoup
    @gateshoup 5 місяців тому

    This film has an incredible amount of detail

  • @jroker3938
    @jroker3938 Рік тому +3

    I was literally thinking about this movie today 😂😅

  • @7783DEATH
    @7783DEATH Рік тому +4

    The music is haunting. Just horror

  • @wyattmann8157
    @wyattmann8157 5 місяців тому

    I'd forgotten how good this movie is. The worst thing that could have happened to it was being released just after Saving Private Ryan.

  • @Sahilprakash1999
    @Sahilprakash1999 Рік тому +12

    5:05 US Soldier: fire in the hole
    Japanese Soldier: oh shit grenade get rid of it 💥

    • @leonardwei3914
      @leonardwei3914 Рік тому +3

      Technically these are supposed to be Soldiers of the 25th Infantry Division, not Marines.

  • @ronin6100
    @ronin6100 Рік тому

    Love it how the rushed those fully secured bunkers with handguns and grenades.

  • @jonny-b4954
    @jonny-b4954 4 місяці тому +1

    4:07 Actually a decent replication of Japanese MG's. They only had 30 round clips..... FOR THEIR MACHINE GUNS. Max. Just nuts. Meanwhile, American's had 250 boxes of belt fed.

    • @axelblack7950
      @axelblack7950 23 дні тому

      20 rounds * it’s a type 3 and it’s a copy of the French hotchkiss machine gun
      And their type 99 (LMG) had a 25 round magazine

  • @stargazerlaurent6780
    @stargazerlaurent6780 Рік тому +5

    This film actually captured something that the others never did. No catchphrases, no rousing music, no cartoon villains.
    Simply men murdering one another in paradise.
    Fuck Saving Private Ryan

  • @KeyKeeper86
    @KeyKeeper86 17 днів тому

    Extremely brutal depiction of hasty and clumsy fight. Little ammo means sidearm or reload. No time to reload means death. Haste, haste, haste

  • @flaviusaetius8358
    @flaviusaetius8358 Рік тому +4

    This movie Is vastly superior to SPR

  • @sclogse1
    @sclogse1 Рік тому +1

    Hope you guys buy the film or rent it. It's on another level. And the James Jones War trilogy of books is at the very top of my life reading, along with Joseph Conrad and Peter Matthesien. Do not pass go. Read them all in sequence.

    • @jmarty1000
      @jmarty1000 4 місяці тому

      "Matterhorn: A Novel of the Vietnam War" by Karl Marlantes is just about the finest book I've ever read by any author, of any genre.

  • @danielburgess7785
    @danielburgess7785 Рік тому

    Film can't portray the utter chaos of such minutes.

  • @jakubcygan8265
    @jakubcygan8265 11 місяців тому +1

    This film is so, so much better than Saving Private Ryan.

  • @user-cx4vz4nc3k
    @user-cx4vz4nc3k Рік тому

    It's one of the underrated films

  • @shumyinghon
    @shumyinghon Рік тому +5

    very well made sequence

  • @roubini74
    @roubini74 9 місяців тому +1

    some of the actors in this movies move on to become quite successful later in their career.

  • @user-oe3hs7bh1t
    @user-oe3hs7bh1t Рік тому

    The 1911 Colt 45 such a beauty ❤

  • @Philmoscowitz
    @Philmoscowitz 9 місяців тому

    That opening bombing? I think that's what's called "danger close." Goddamn!

  • @DrTWG
    @DrTWG 6 місяців тому

    Malick's film is superb . 'Film critics' are useless . The scene when John Savage loses it really struck me .

  • @JarodFarrant
    @JarodFarrant 7 місяців тому +1

    2:35 still scared butt went on to do his duty

  • @petarticinovic2710
    @petarticinovic2710 Рік тому +1

    Incredibly intense.

  • @user-xr9cb4gv2x
    @user-xr9cb4gv2x Рік тому

    M1 Garand and M1 Cabine ,Kings of WW2 battlefield rifle

  • @doubleedgedfist1535
    @doubleedgedfist1535 Рік тому +2

    Great film!

  • @williamfrankferge1957
    @williamfrankferge1957 2 місяці тому

    One fine movie they don't make them like they used to

  • @andrewstackpool4911
    @andrewstackpool4911 11 місяців тому

    An interesting point of this movie is it also shows the hard defence put up by the Japanese. This is rare in Hollywood productions,.

  • @acsrgaming9194
    @acsrgaming9194 7 місяців тому

    Those guys were on autopilot running off pure adrenaline.

  • @MW-eb1qh
    @MW-eb1qh 11 місяців тому

    I've only seen the entire movie twice. I want to buy the Criterion Collection version and watch it again. I do not recall all of this clip being in the version I saw. If they cut this scene from the movie and showed a shortened version that would be disappointing.

  • @angrytom1923
    @angrytom1923 Рік тому +1

    "Say a prayer for your pal on Guadalcanal."

  • @scottable4475
    @scottable4475 5 місяців тому

    Classic..if u aint seen this flick, see it!

  • @73joebrant
    @73joebrant 10 днів тому

    2:20 Beast Mode Activated

  • @miniredsatan
    @miniredsatan 8 місяців тому +1

    when this thing came out a friend saw it before me and said, man, that thing sucks. don't bother. i stupidly listened to him. years later i watched it (missed on big screen) and was like this thing is amazing. my now ex-friend was a fucking idiot.

  • @erroneous6947
    @erroneous6947 Рік тому

    I remember seeing this at the time. I think the reason o did t like it too well was the directing style. However the combat scenes are very good. I’ll have to watch the whole movie again.

  • @jamsohnson8579
    @jamsohnson8579 3 місяці тому +1

    How can young men like this ... ever be the same? How can we bring them back to society?

  • @azj_
    @azj_ Рік тому +2

    Can we talk about thumbnail of this video, it looks GOOFY AHH asf 😂

  • @veritaspk
    @veritaspk 11 місяців тому +1

    2:15 When you realize that if you stay here you will definitely die... that you have to do something... even if it's crazy.

    • @lost_legion_army9002
      @lost_legion_army9002 10 місяців тому

      Probably the best movie representation of fight or flight.