My grandfather William was there. He was born in 1887. He has runned and runned on many battlefields of WW1. He was a survivor. Italian front, Alpini Fiamme Verdi. Rip. MV
My grandfather ben giaquinto was over there.he was a riifleman in the 78th division. He fought in thery. Su saint marie and the arragon forrest. He was an italian immigrant and won his us citizenship for his service in the army. He came home married my grandmother had 8 children 24 grandchildren. He died in 1969 and i do miss him still.
This movie gave a very deep insight into how horrifying WWI really was. I cringe everytime I see him put his hand into the enormous hole in the corpse.🤢
After he cuts his hand on the wire, he looks at it and worries about a possible infection. Then after his hand goes into the corpse, he looks at it and accepts that it will more than likely get infected and it’s not worth worrying about something that could kill him in the long run when there are many more things right now that could kill him in an instant.
@@myroadrashownzThey're both SO good! 1917 goes into the small tragedies of war, and how every person that died is a real human being with a story. And it's told through such an artistic viewpoint. Just directing and editing perfection. All is Quiet on the Western Front focuses more on the overall pointlessness of war, and how propaganda tricks young men into fighting for politicians. And is filmed a bit more "traditionally." As you said, both are fantastic war movies with similar messages - and they go about it in unique ways. We really got two of the best war movies back to back. And they both feel unique enough to stand on their own. I feel like both should be mandatory for high school classes to watch. People need to understand what happened in history.
my great-great-grandfather Carlo worked as a doctor in an Austro-Hungarian hospital in 1916/1918, in his diaries he often wrote about the suffering of those poor soldiers... inhuman screams... crying... poor people..
we can't imagen what they went trough, im a WW2 collector/history lover, but i always had way more respect for the soldiers in WW1, the living conditions and combat was so much worse and yet WW2 was already a brutal piece of history, but WW1 was even worse in my opinion
I keep on wondering, in the real world, what happened to this land today? Is it a populated area now? Or still a barren land with100 years ago war remnants?
It depends on where this is supposed to be located. There are hundreds of square miles in France, Germany and Belgium that are uninhabitable because of the toxins, ammunition and disease that still are there buried in the soil.
Many areas of the former front line are still contaminated with heavy metals and chemicals from poison gas. I have been to Verdun a few years ago, and around the town, the whole overgrown battlefield still has these moonlike craters with trees and grass. During the battle back then, many small villages were completely destroyed. They officially still exist and you can visit them, but you won´t see any buildings there, just a memorial chapel a footpath, the rest is a bunch grassy craters. On top of the old fortresses are no trees, just grass, and that makes the view much more impressing. On Fort Douamont for example, there was a crater so big, if i had jumped into it, i would have needed a ladder to get out of it. Also, there are still lots of remnants laying around. In a small village a few kilometers north of Verdun, there is a private museum owned by a dutchman who started collecting all the leftover weapons and materials that was abandoned back then. I can highly recommend to visit that.
@@moose1986 Id don't think no mans land is uninhabitable because of the "disease". The black plague is still present everywhere around us but we are well fed and healthy enough so that our immune system keeps it at bay. It's the toxins leaking into the soil from the ammo, mines and chemical weapons that are poisoning the land.
My great great uncle fought there a English sergeant major he brought a french bayonet home what he found on the mud and gave it to my grandad then he gave it to me
"1917" is the title of movie. Google will find it easy by request "1917 the movie" If there is problem to find movie by it's title look by year it was created 2019, director Sam Mendes, actors George MacKay and Dean-Charles Chapman.
🫡 thanks for sharing. You can really see how many people were affected by these wars in these comments. Hopefully we never see a war on this scale ever again
Not really, yeah it show cased certain aspects but that movie wasn't about WW1, had they decided to have her spend more than a few minutes on the front lines maybe it would've done better, but it didn't capture much save for a few shell shocked soldiers, a couple hundred civilians fleeing the fighting and a man screaming from losing his leg
Todo ese cambalache a plena luz del día?. Con puestos de escucha enemigos, francotiradores, patrullas y observación permanente sobre la tierra de nadie?..."" 🤔
Fosil fosil berasal dari tulang nelilang hewan dan manusia di makam habis bahkan fosil dari hewan dan tumbuh tumbuhan untuk di nemtukanjdi DELTA DARATAN DI MAKAN HABISS masuk sampai ke dalam perut perutnya bajkam tikamg nabi hewan di makam habiss habisannnn sampai ke dalam tumamg rusuknya baik rusik depam bajkam sampai rusik nelakang serta tilamg PUNGGUNG ATAU TIMAMG NELAKANGNYA JADI timang igaaaa 🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈
My grandfather William was there. He was born in 1887. He has runned and runned on many battlefields of WW1. He was a survivor. Italian front, Alpini Fiamme Verdi. Rip. MV
He fought in the worst war for the worst reasons, but his surviving must’ve had a reason. Must’ve been a good man
@@nextube_owner l. . .
;/0😊Touch and hold a clip to pin it. Unpinned clips will be deleted after 1 hour. 😊😊😊😊
😊😊
Mon grand-père était sur le front en Italie mais c'était a la 2em guerre mondiale et il a réussi à revenir heureusement.
@@nextube_owner89
My grandfather ben giaquinto was over there.he was a riifleman in the 78th division. He fought in thery. Su saint marie and the arragon forrest. He was an italian immigrant and won his us citizenship for his service in the army. He came home married my grandmother had 8 children 24 grandchildren. He died in 1969 and i do miss him still.
Saludos y respeto a la memoria de tu abuelo. De un nieto de italiano de la región de Ancona, sobre el Mar Adriático..."" 🖐️🇮🇹 🇦🇷
This was sad because some of my relatives fought in WW1 and WW2 and it’s disgusting how traumatic world wars are
This movie gave a very deep insight into how horrifying WWI really was. I cringe everytime I see him put his hand into the enormous hole in the corpse.🤢
Watch All Quiet on the Western Front, it's just as good and showcases the HORRORS of World War I.
After he cuts his hand on the wire, he looks at it and worries about a possible infection. Then after his hand goes into the corpse, he looks at it and accepts that it will more than likely get infected and it’s not worth worrying about something that could kill him in the long run when there are many more things right now that could kill him in an instant.
@@myroadrashownzThey're both SO good!
1917 goes into the small tragedies of war, and how every person that died is a real human being with a story. And it's told through such an artistic viewpoint. Just directing and editing perfection.
All is Quiet on the Western Front focuses more on the overall pointlessness of war, and how propaganda tricks young men into fighting for politicians. And is filmed a bit more "traditionally."
As you said, both are fantastic war movies with similar messages - and they go about it in unique ways. We really got two of the best war movies back to back. And they both feel unique enough to stand on their own. I feel like both should be mandatory for high school classes to watch. People need to understand what happened in history.
0:32 i can feel the flies
U r welcome, sir!
my great-great-grandfather Carlo worked as a doctor in an Austro-Hungarian hospital in 1916/1918, in his diaries he often wrote about the suffering of those poor soldiers... inhuman screams... crying...
poor people..
As horrific as the battlefields of WWII were, the killing fields of WWI seem to have been much worse.
as they say "ww2 was more deadly but ww1 was far more brutal"
we can't imagen what they went trough, im a WW2 collector/history lover, but i always had way more respect for the soldiers in WW1, the living conditions and combat was so much worse and yet WW2 was already a brutal piece of history, but WW1 was even worse in my opinion
Hey I’m a ww2 collector aswell, but ww1 was way more gruesome and horrible
No wonder I’m very close with the war and Remembrance Sunday means a lot
2:30 and he dies of infection.
Straight facts
love u Screen Bites for so nice clips
Sorry , I´m from Germany .
The look by 2:35 makes my granpa shiver !
The british equipment is very modern during this war. Nothing moves
Explain plz
What?
When your the last two new born turtles to get too the ocean
I keep on wondering, in the real world, what happened to this land today? Is it a populated area now? Or still a barren land with100 years ago war remnants?
It depends on where this is supposed to be located. There are hundreds of square miles in France, Germany and Belgium that are uninhabitable because of the toxins, ammunition and disease that still are there buried in the soil.
@@moose1986ive been there and ive also been to verdun where things have ofcourse grown back but the landscape still has as many craters as the moon
It's uninhabitable due to the extensive use of chemical warfare
Many areas of the former front line are still contaminated with heavy metals and chemicals from poison gas. I have been to Verdun a few years ago, and around the town, the whole overgrown battlefield still has these moonlike craters with trees and grass.
During the battle back then, many small villages were completely destroyed. They officially still exist and you can visit them, but you won´t see any buildings there, just a memorial chapel a footpath, the rest is a bunch grassy craters.
On top of the old fortresses are no trees, just grass, and that makes the view much more impressing. On Fort Douamont for example, there was a crater so big, if i had jumped into it, i would have needed a ladder to get out of it.
Also, there are still lots of remnants laying around. In a small village a few kilometers north of Verdun, there is a private museum owned by a dutchman who started collecting all the leftover weapons and materials that was abandoned back then. I can highly recommend to visit that.
@@moose1986 Id don't think no mans land is uninhabitable because of the "disease". The black plague is still present everywhere around us but we are well fed and healthy enough so that our immune system keeps it at bay.
It's the toxins leaking into the soil from the ammo, mines and chemical weapons that are poisoning the land.
You had to be the most blessed and luckiest man alive to come back home from world war 1 with your limbs intact and your sanity just slightly in check
The poor horses,they didn't start a war.
My great great uncle fought there a English sergeant major he brought a french bayonet home what he found on the mud and gave it to my grandad then he gave it to me
Doing a recreation of this for my GCSE lol
Nadie en una guerra, cruza un caballo muerto y mira hacia atrás poniendo cara de asco porque hay mal olor . Esa escena la hago tomar de nuevo.
Probably best that you don't direct movies then.
No man land is a good guy in the battlefield over the death star
What?
Excellent
I saw this movie it was really intense
thanks
thanks
Thanks
Thanks
@@radricdavis8508
Nnmjnbnnnmmmm
Every war is a crime on the Humanity
Speaking as if you were ever in one young man
Not exactly
What is the name of this movie?
"1917" is the title of movie. Google will find it easy by request "1917 the movie"
If there is problem to find movie by it's title look by year it was
created 2019, director Sam Mendes, actors
George MacKay and
Dean-Charles Chapman.
If only there were a clue somewhere
My mother's grandfather was in ww1 .I am an Indian but in 1944 india was under British rule
He was born in 1878
🫡 thanks for sharing. You can really see how many people were affected by these wars in these comments. Hopefully we never see a war on this scale ever again
What has 1944 got to do with it?
@@BobBobson-q5iI know well done. you know a bit of easy history that I can find by typing”who was ruling India in 1944”.
Wonderwoman did a good job
Not really, yeah it show cased certain aspects but that movie wasn't about WW1, had they decided to have her spend more than a few minutes on the front lines maybe it would've done better, but it didn't capture much save for a few shell shocked soldiers, a couple hundred civilians fleeing the fighting and a man screaming from losing his leg
That was a movie about a science fiction character, what these guys experienced was something real.
اداء وتمثل رائع خيالي يستحق مليون نجمة
Blake
how do you upload movie clips without a copyright??
Anyway, cut-proof gloves are crucial...
Not if you want to fire your rifle
1:34 + 2:29 = ☠️
I'm not dead nor do I have two dead horses mine are missing
movie name
It's literally on the title
If only there were a clue somewhere!
FFS
So tiring these adds are.
You sound like the Chinese guy from Empire of Dust.
This comments section is a bit of a laugh lol
👍👍
Каска тарелка
Todo ese cambalache a plena luz del día?. Con puestos de escucha enemigos, francotiradores, patrullas y observación permanente sobre la tierra de nadie?..."" 🤔
There are no enemy, that's the whole premise of he movie.
World War 2
Started in 1939. 22 years after the time this movie is set.
dress watch in utilities no thanks
Not a dress watch
George Michael
George Mackay actually
Not a rat in sight...lots of cliches though.
Fosil fosil berasal dari tulang nelilang hewan dan manusia di makam habis bahkan fosil dari hewan dan tumbuh tumbuhan untuk di nemtukanjdi DELTA DARATAN DI MAKAN HABISS masuk sampai ke dalam perut perutnya bajkam tikamg nabi hewan di makam habiss habisannnn sampai ke dalam tumamg rusuknya baik rusik depam bajkam sampai rusik nelakang serta tilamg PUNGGUNG ATAU TIMAMG NELAKANGNYA JADI timang igaaaa 🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈
Very very bad, useless helmets, belong to 1000 years ago
What?
What?
Во имя чего и ради чего умирали сотни тысяч молодых людей в той войне. Я этого понять не могу .
А сейчас ради чего, понимаешь...
Imperialism and empire building. Invading your neighbours etc.