My father, died about 7 years ago, was a Vietnam veteran, hated this movie. He was able to watch all other Vietnam movies because it was too far off of reality. We were soldiers was too real for him.
Respect and regards for your father. I understand to a certain point, my own dad worked for private and public companies for France during 70's and 80's in Africa, and saw quite a chunk of dark things there. He quited his job because he couldn't endure it anymore. All our childhood and teenage years, my siblings and I were forbiden to watch movies like that, or talk about war and death, because it made him angry all the time. He was "rethinking" about what he witnessed back there.
Sorry to burst your bubble , but those two death scenes depict the actual last words both of the soldiers said. Another common last words from soldiers is crying out for their mother! Sorry you do not approve of the last words these soldiers chose, but they are historically accurate.
I could see myself saying I was glad to died for my country. Especially when dying, I would like to think I made the right choice. And even though I no longer serve, I still think it's a noble way to go.
Yeah, saw a soldier on my first tour whom was shot 7 times. He could barely speak and all he kept asking for was for his wife. Cliche but it really happens.
Sure, but that’s not his point. People really fart too, but that’s no reason to show everyone farting all of the time. His point was that, as a movie scene, it has been done a thousand times. It may have had a dramatic effect at one time, but we’ve all seen it so many times now, it no longer carries any dramatic weight. It’s kind of like the slow motion scene of someone hollering, “Nooooooo!”, just when his buddy is being shot or blown up. People probably actually do that in war, but it’s been so overdone, that I wouldn’t include it in any war film I was shooting. That scene lost its dramatic effect many years ago and so does the, “tell my wife I love her” cliche. Just leave it out or maybe do something different, like “tell my wife I forgot to take out the trash”. At least you’ll get a laugh.
According to eye witnesses the two “cliche” death scenes are what was reported to have been said by the dying soldiers. That part is actually historically accurate perhaps to a fault.
My young (and VERY stupid) nephew was complaining loudly about how "unrealistic" the death scenes in old western movies are. I asked him "How many people have you seen die, let alone die from gunshots?" When he couldn't answer I had to follow up with "Then you wouldn't really know whether it's realistic, or not. Would you?" Remember that he's exceptionally dumb, so I couldn't just leave that last question unasked. I then decided to rub it in further, by showing him data that revealed that most people who are shot will die from blood loss caused by the bullet, not from the shock of being shot, as the movies would have us believe. At the end of all of that, I finally got him to admit that maybe the "unrealistic" old westerns were actually more realistic than the modern movies, when it comes to deaths by gunshot.
I agree with you there like she's lived under a rock for so damn long she's never heard of racism she hasn't heard of you know the South having a white drinking fountains only yet she acts like she hasn't even heard of the civil Rights movement I agree with you this is what pisses me off throwing this racial bulshit in there for absolutely no damn reason
I was an American Infantryman who fought two tours in Iraq - my first during the surge to retake mosul in 07-08... I watched a friend of mine slowly die after being ripped apart by a roadside bomb, and due to how hard the enemy was hitting us, we were unable to get air extract and all reinforcements from the Fob were having trouble getting to us. Him and I were pals as we were the young guys - both naive, patriotic 19 year olds, believing wholeheartedly we were fighting the good fight. I knelt by him, trying to distract him from what we all knew was immenent but refused to admit. As my buddy laid dying, shaking from the blood loss, with the medics trying feverishly to keep him conscious... He opened his eyes, seemingly staring off into the heavens, and said "I'm proud that I died fighting for America." Despite our best efforts to lie to him and tell him he was going to be ok, and despite the Docs trying their best to defy death, he soon passed from this world unto the next... I know from an outside perspective it may seem cliche to make a declaration of loyalty to the country that ultimately cost you your life, but it's not uncommon for a soldier to take solace in his death, believing he died for something greater.
I respect you not only as a fellow veteran but also as someone who understands. Me and pal of mine had been stuck together since boot and he got shot in the neck because he lost his cool and tried to run during our first firefight, so I had to watch him die because we couldn’t get to him because we were under heavy fire.
@@thetute59 Yeah, he's sentimental about buddy, not about guys he killed. Plus, I disagree with the term "patriotic war". Everybody knows bullshit excuses for Vietnam, Afghan & Iraq. Right now we are hearing bullshit excuses for Venezuela and Iran.
@@thetute59 I don't care about soldier's last words. They die for nothing. I have no respect for anybody, who participated in aggression on foreign country. I agree with Minty, who found some scenes as pathetic and unneeded.
While I respect the research History Buffs did for this, having been around my share of dying and injured people as an EMT, people absolutely think of their loved ones when they feel the end is near.
Oh definitely, it’s not nearly as cliche as people think. The two “cliche” death scenes in the movie are not cliche at all. They were the guys actual last words.
Charles Chapman, this information about the Americans dying on their backs and the Japanese dying face down is rather interesting. Where did you read that?
The bits where he criticizes the “cliche” deaths is unwarranted as those were directly in the book and the family scenes are very literally relatable to people from that time. My parents, uncles, aunts, and grandparents all enjoyed those scenes because that’s what things were like for a lot of American families back then.
Yes, but "back then" they were fed a John Wayne impression of the war. So, the "tell Laura....I love hor" is horribly cliched. Apart from the shivering , theyre highly idealised death scenes.
@@Walker-ow7vj Eh,,,,,,,NO, No they didnt. Some might have said something like that 5 minutes before they died, but people generally die unconcious, gibbering or screaming, suffocating or convulsing. You never hear a death rattle in a movie. They only say "TELL......LAURA ....I LAVE HOR " and slip away with perfect timing in very bad movies.
As someone who actually knew Hal, his depiction was rather accurate. I knew him as an old man and watched his decline following his wife's passing. He never cared about himself, his focus was always the well being of those around him. The man was a legend and I'll take out anyone who says otherwise.
I went into the army in 1980 to 83. I am from the south. There was a guy from Wisconsin he told me he never met a black person in his life until he joined the army.
I was in the Army from 1972 to 1975, and I had never had any contact with any black people until I was in the Army. I am native american, and I can tell you that I was not treated well and although it was nowhere near as bad as it had been a generation before me--it still stung. When I was younger, I did not even know that some of the names they called me were supposed to be hurtful. Until I went home and asked what they meant. Thereafter, I chose to ignore them, and chose to be like my dad who fought in WWII and Korea, and he ignored all the denigration. So I joined the Army in 1972....the rest is history and cannot be changed. I regret none of my choices.
My friend who fought in Nam said that at least 25% of the soldiers were totally illiterate. One of his white buddies from West Virginia actually thought that black men had TAILS, until they all took showers together. Welcome to the USA...
People tend to forget that blacks only make up about 13% of the population here, mostly in urban areas. I grew up in a rural area outside of Detroit, yet almost never saw a black person until I started taking jobs closer to the city.
My uncle was there... He watched this film with me and said the only thing they had wrong was the way everyone was standing up and running around. The grass was over 6ft tall and you couldn't see more than a few feet most of the time. After the fighting started it became easier to move due to the grass being worn down. But all in all it was a great movie showing what it was actually like in combat.
That's what I didn't like about this movie was how everyone just stood up and ran around in the open. When bullets fly over your head you fucking hit the ground or hide in whatever hole you can and everyone yells "where the fuck did that come from?!" . I still loved the movie but, goddamn...
Chris Stevens my uncle was there as well. I have not watched this knowing that one of those young men is a representation of him.. actually in all I had for Uncle’s there just at different times but one in this battle.
“Tell my wife I love her” and calling for their mother are the most common last words for soldiers in Vietnam I believe, so it actually has a point in the movie and not really something to complain about tbh.
About the two soldiers were killed who said "Glad I could die for my country" and "Tell my wife I love her".....I hate to burst your bubble but that is exactly what those two soldiers said before they died. The Lt. and 1st Sgt. of the "Lost Platoon" were the first casualties of the battle and their words were heard from those who were with them when they died. Sorry the Historical accuracy of their last words on this planet was too much for you.
Robert MacLean He was probably irritated bc they did a whole scene for the two mens deaths Making it too cliche Could of been more humble with the filming making and made them a quicky For example emphasize the "Wife" scene n' then the boy who cries "Country" could of been subliminal Maybe overhead in the background So vidid only true readers of book would of caught it
I've talked to dozens of Vietnam veterans for a documentary. They all say that soldiers almost always call for their wife or mother before their death. It's not cliche, it's an absolute truism. They also all, to a man, name this movie as the best and most accurate Vietnam War movie that has been made.
You do a great job of assessing historical accuracy and how well a film captures the"feel" of a conflict. That is why I subscribe. But you have revealed, in this review, your Achilles heel. You have zero empathy, and little understanding with which to temper that lack of empathy, of why men fight and how they react when faced with their own death. Soldiers are not mercenaries. We need to truly BELIEVE that our deaths mean something. We fight for each other, yes, in the moment. But we GO to war for those kids, and it needs to be addressed, however clumsily, in the movie. When a spouse or sibling is informed of the untimely death of a loved one, they often react with the exact same inarticulate denial as the wife in the movie. I've been unlucky enough to be present on six such occasions, and I am here to tell you, that reaction is VERY true-to-life. You need to learn that often things are cliche because they are universal. Climb down out of your ivory tower once in a while, and experience life. Experience history being made, and you will understand why these three kinds of scenes MUST be in a movie. Then, feel free to critique how well or poorly they are done, but never again say they don't belong. They absolutely do.
Just wanted to point out that I know that the "I'm glad I could die for my country" and "Tell my wife I love her" scene is a real cliche. however in the book it is what those 2 soldiers actually said when they died. It may have seemed cliche, but I think they were just trying to be as close to the book as possible... Some things from the book would have been too over the top and unbelievable, and too gruesome for the audience. I recommend the book to anyone who's into military history. Its one of the best I have ever read.
+Alexander Banas When you say "he" do you mean the movie's director, the book's author, or this channel's narrator? Since the book was written by two of the guys there, I believe they did their research. Since they were also consultants to the movie's director, I understand he took a few "licenses" to make it an action movie (the final "Charge" up the hill with the helicopter gunship swooping in, for example) but I believe the director also did a very good job of trying to get it (mostly) right. I do have issue with many of the criticisms History Buffs levels, but he does sound kind of young, so growing up in a different world gives one quite a different perspective.
+TheSheepDogPatriot1776 I would imagine that. If it shocks us as spectators. To those who actually were there it must have trigered a go back to that hell. My deepest respect for those men and many kids 17/22 years old. Know we have a generation that has feelings that can't be hurt and chase Pokémons. God save us if we have a Holly war here in Europe.
What I took from your review of "We Were Soldiers" is that you have never been in a war zone. I served in Vietnam during the Tet Offensive before volunteering to relieve troops sent to S. Korea in response to the Pueblo hi-jacking, Operation Combat Fox. I received a minor injury, approximately a 2" x 1/2" piece of meat gouged out of the center of my back. A couple of days later I had to return to the base hospital to have my bandage changed. I couldn't go back to work as I was on pain meds. The night before there was a major firefight. As I walked down the sidewalk along the hospital there were a never ending row of the large laundry baskets like hotels & commercial laundries use filled to overflowing with blood soaked sheets. So much blood! Inside the hospital where they changed my dressing were seemingly endless rows of stainless surgical tables. I'm 76 now & I still can't get those images out of my mind. So take a breath before "laughing" at the death scenes & complaining about scenes of home corny or not.
From 21:00, to 23:38, you become desensitized to the feelings conveyed by dying soldiers and the families awaiting their return. It is infuriating to hear someone mock characters presented as realistic human beings for using (admittedly) clichéd responses when they are genuine. That being said, this is still a decent review, and it led to further discussion in the comments, which is good.
Not to mention those were the actual last words of those men as they were dying in a jungle thousands of miles from their families. He really should have read the book and researched the battle more.
In fairness, post 1975, any movie using “tell my wife I love her”, or some other traditionally cheesy line should be universally panned for including that line in a dying scene unless used in real life (ironically in this case). Granted I’m sure 99% of the UA-cam comments quoted the 1 guy in the comments who actually read the book, most of the people probably thought the same of that scene or agreed until they read the comments, then decided to have a pussy fit. Then again, I didn’t agree with the part he said about the black chick acting, but I also get the cultural difference between a dude who hasn’t had any impact of direct war in his direct sphere of socialism and a black American woman who knows what soldiers with a flag coming to her door means... so I’m not planning him that much for it.
23:05 I work in Casualty Affairs for the Army, and this is a 100% realistic reaction to notification. Happens all the time, people are at once in shock and disbelief, and are expressing denial while also not knowing what to actually say. So it just comes out as head-shaking and "uh-uh". Absolutely accurate.
Thanks for you're service on this Memorial Day! I have some questions...what kind of vehichle do you show up in? Uniform? Do you come with someone else? Do you need to be an officer? Any interesting stories?
@@TM-bn8pv Thank you. Okay, so to try to address your questions, which are all good: 1. The vehicle will be whatever we can get. We will try to provide a government vehicle (usually a sedan) to the notification team, but if it's a late-night or really-early-morning notification, and the motor pool is closed, they may end up just going out in their own personal vehicle. We try to minimize that happening, but sometimes there's just no way around it. Timely notification takes priority over being choosy about the car they drive. 2. Class A Army Service Uniform, 100% of the time. We will never send a team to do notification wearing anything less than their full dress uniforms. 3. The notifier always has a Chaplain (military version of a priest or minister) to go with them. It is a mandate from the DOD that a Chaplain always goes along. There are occasionally exceptions where we might be permitted to send a notifier with another Officer or NCO who isn't a Chaplain, but those exceptions have to come from Department of the Army. 4. Not necessarily. The basic requirements are that notifiers (and assistance officers) must be Sergeant First Class+, Captain+, or Chief Warrant Officer 2+, so senior NCOs and Warrants can be notifiers as well. The more important requirement is that they are equal to, or greater in rank than the deceased soldier. 5. Tons of stories, far more than could fit in the comments section of UA-cam lol. Every case is unique, and has its own special circumstances that we have to deal with, or family situations that make things difficult. But dealing with the unique challenges of each case is why we're here, and it's an honor and a privilege to be given the opportunity to help a soldier's family through the worst time of their lives.
@@henrym.2156 Thank you for responding! Especially on Memorial Day, this has to be a day that will be tough for some of those families, but also those that will celebrate their family or friends who sacrificed for the greater good. Tough job but a really meaningful job to have...to never know the reaction to being someone that can provide a family member some support. It's tough now for sure, just cant imagine it back in WW2/Vietnam wars. Despite the loss, I love the tradition of the notification. I dont know if you could do it any other way. One last couple questions: 1. Do you stay with the families/family member for awhile (if they want somebody or are alone at the time), and provide comfort (hugging, and things like that you see in movies)? 2. Do you handle most of the lost soldiers arrangements for burial and viewing/funeral and anything else that goes into the post notification process for the family so they can grieve and not worry about that? 3. If you are notifying a family member or doing any other arrangements at the time, what is the day to day work? 4. What is family is not home or wherever else you think they are to notify them? 5. If the lost soldier has no family left, I'm guessing someone needs to be designated such as a friend? Last question, and I truly appreciate you answering my first set. And if you dont want to reply, no harm.... 6. What if the name of the soldier killed has been released by the media or some other entity before the notification process? How do you adjust for that situation? Thank you! And again I truly thank you for you're service and wish you a happy Memorial Day.
@@henrym.2156 i've just noticed there is a movie called "The Messenger " with Woody Harrelson in it. Have you seen that and is it a realistic portrayal of your work?
@@TM-bn8pv I have. It gets a lot right (family reactions, the impact on the person doing notification, the dangers of getting too personally involved), but it gets *a lot* wrong, too. There is formal training that soldiers go through to be considered qualified to perform a notification, a Staff Sergeant is too low a rank to be a notifier, a chaplain would be in attendance, and the notification team normally spends time at the family's house after the notification to answer questions, and fill out some paperwork. All in all, it feels like a Hollywood producer got their hands on an outdated version of the Army regulation for Casualty Affairs and jumped head-first into making a movie without understanding half of it.
i can see what you identify as cliches throughout this movie, however the dying words of the american soldiers such as "i'm proud to die for my country" and "tell my wife i love her" are historically accurate. These words were actually uttered by these men as they died. Read Lt.General Harold G Moore's published and well known account of the battle. That these men would say such things is historically unsurprising for the time. Remember this is 1965 and these were idealistic WASP young men. This is early Vietnam war. Subsequent conscripts may well have not been so endoctrinated or "all American". These young men of '65 were however an elite and by and large the sons of military families, so their dying utterances are perfectly natural given the time and their backgrounds. It was Lt.Herrick who stated "i'm proud to die for my country" and this young man meant it. Its only subsequent films and a changing historical perspective that make such statements seem cliched. The changing interpretation and character of this war needs to be considered quite closely to gain an understanding of its historical message.
Or at least that is what Harold G Moore said were their last words... They may very well have said it, and all power to them if that is the case... But it is still pretty cheesy, and it is not helped by the way the way it is shot. If you like that stuff, or believe that it is important then fine, personally I almost always skip that part, because I feel that it degrades an otherwise really good film, to some sort of propaganda...
9:40. Wow.This happened over 50 years ago. But to him its as clear as yesterday. He still remembers the casualty's name and that his wife was expecting... Sad stuff. Really sad stuff.
My job while in Nam was that of a photographer. When the movies photographer tried to pick up the feet of a badly burned man and the skin came away, I had to get up and leave the theater. All I wanted to do was to get home to safety. It sticks with you, forty, fifty or more years.
I was with B2/7 on The Mang Yang Pass when two A1E Sky Raiders crashed almost on our positions. I was detailed to recover "GI" material and found the body of one pilot. I could not pick him up because he was still very hot and I had not brought gloves. I was ordered to take up security while they put the body in my poncho. A few hrs. later I was told I had to re-enlist or go home. Captain Dyduryc did offer me promotion to E-4 but that was all. I did not re-up and Rescorla just grinned real big when I gave him my last salute.
@macsikar Mackay dude what these men did was far from greatful. This war was pointless or how they dropped everything on the vietmen. I'm cracking a joke about the whole tell my wife I love her. I feel sorry for you folks do know the difference between a joke and an insult.
@@kaedynbingham6829 why are you blaming the soldiers? I'm blaming high command. Troops follow orders and yea Ik they got drafted. But some wanted to fight and protect the war. You completely missed my point. America has ruined that land for what seems forever. And all vietnam wanted was to be it own nation. Again this war was only to stop commies from developing in Europe. Plus even the troops did unspeakable things which again America has caused.
None of the heartfelt moments in the movie are farcical , they are as true as the early sixties, and for those of us who lived them, we feel then, we do not laugh.....
23:02 That scene actually moves me to tears each time I watch it. In my opinion, the realization of her husband's death and the following denial to accept it comes across very real, very human.
I have to agree, as a Marine, I had to go along with the I&I and the chaplain a few times. It is the most heart wrenching display, she played it perfectly. Everyone reacts differently. Some have incredibly extreme reactions and some have none at all, trying to keep their composure.
I've seen a few people die in my time, unfortunately. The times that I've been there when the wife is informed can be varied from what this actress portrayed to a simple lost stare, emotionless. We even had one wife who started laughing, thinking it was a joke being played on her, until reality set in.
Those soldiers actually said those cliche things as they were dying, though. You also have to remember this was 1965. Most people still were true believers and assumed their government wouldn't lie to them. Lt. Herrick was cut from that cloth, and absolutely said "I'm glad I could die for my country" before expiring. Because it's what he believed in. This is a well done video, but even the most cursory research would've shown this. The scenes in question occur early in the book, and it's apparent that you simply didn't bother to read it.
I worked with one of Hal Moore’s daughters and had the privilege of meeting the general once. You didn’t like the scenes with the children, but it is true that he was a great family man that lived his wife and kids. Part of the power of the movie is showing that the general is not some two dimensional war monger. He cared about his family and his men.
While I agree, based on what you and others have said, that the criticism of 'fluffy' scenes is perhaps a bit too harsh, I also think that the overall sentiment is valid: it's all a bit too much (as in overdone), and could have been done better in a scaled-down, more focused manner. Like the letter-writing Vietnamese soldier; that poor sod got remarkably little screen time for the remarkable impression he made.
@@janbadinski7126 I don't want the fluff? Perhaps I was unclear, but I don't really care for it; I really do think it's 'overdone'. Perhaps Gen. Moore is/was a very loving, dedicated family man; great. I'm just saying that that could have been shown just as well in a more succinct manner that didn't make so many of us's toes crawl. It's not the fact I've got a problem with, it's the excessive amount of screen time it's given.
They could have at least done it in a way with humanity and not something that looked like a propaganda short for a concerned group of citizens promoting an idealized notion of the ideal nuclear american family.
To be fair to the referenced American arrogance about air superiority: The North Vietnamese's resilience is borderline miraculous. The fact that they were able to sustain the kind of damage and casualties they did and keep fighting is a testament to their remarkable bravery and hard work. I wouldn't say America was arrogant. I would say the North Vietnamese were shockingly tough.
I’d wager a mix of both. American commanders in particular ranged from misguided to completely deluded, but I would agree that it would be disingenuous to the Vietnamese’ bravery and stubbornness to simply act like it was entirely American failure against an equally bad enemy as opposed to the complicated reality.
Yes, the freedom fighters of Ho Chi Minh were hot shit, fighting a war of liberation against the Pentagon is not a walk in the park. I always thank them for their service to their country.
All of those generals were young officers in WWII and Korea. They had seen Normandy, Anzio, Tinian, Iwo Jima, Okinawa… of course they firmly believed America was an undefeatable military power. They watched the America of their childhood go from the Great Depression to the industrial leader of the world. They saw their military go from still using horses and biplanes to fully mechanized infantry and nuclear weapons. That arrogance had been cultivated by 25 years of explosive growth on top of victory in a generational war. A general in 1965 had stayed in the military through the post-war draw down, the economic boom of the 50’s, and rise of the Cold War. He’s not wishy-washy about America and it’s place in the world. The kind of man who rises to flag rank in that environment is by his nature arrogant about America. Of course they would not and could not see the Vietnamese as a real military threat.
Steven Rose well, if you remember just before the full training segments, the young officers were examining and playing around with a minigun that was shooting dummy rounds. And the first time Moore was trying to put some covering fire for his men that were placed at the base of the mountain that the NVA were based at, those two Huey’s had the Rocket pods that were just becoming standards on most Huey’s at the time, in a short moment reaction response to experience from a few previous skirmishes.
RIP to Captain Thomas Metsker, who gave up his seat on an evac chopper to one of his soldiers who was injured worse. After hopping off the chopper he was shot and killed right then and there. A fellow alumni of The Citadel, and a national hero, he will forever be remembered
Singing Bingo and other songs in the car was how you kept your little crotch goblins busy on road trips. We did this in the 1970s. This is an actually slice of Americana for the period.
@Full Blooded American Mutt - Yep, loved interacting with the truckers. We played Eye Spy and other games. This was more important when the speed limit was 55 mph as trips got painfully long. Thanks President Nixon.
@The TacomaKid Or Mexican nationals(not talking about illegals either, Mexican truckers carrying loads to Oklahoma distribution hubs. Look up NAFTA superhighway)
I used to sing with my kids in the car all the time. I am not sure why you felt it was necessary to criticize this. Wait until you have children of your own. If you do have children then they must really think rides with you are very boring.
I’ve watched about a dozen of your reviews and this is my first serious disagreement with you. I was 5 years old when I watched my dad go out the door to Vietnam (I'm guessing I was about the same age as Gen. Moore's youngest when he deployed). I appreciated the kids being depicted as they were in the film, especially the youngest. At that age, trying to understand why dad has to go to this war half way around the world is not easy (I had a similar conversation with my dad that Moore had with his daughter). My dad completed his 13-month tour and came home in one piece. The scene where the black woman received the telegram about her husband being KIA, I think, drove home just how badly prepared the US Army was for this battle from a morale and support standpoint.
Happy Being Miserable he had an excellent part in the recent Ken Burns documentary about the Vietnam war, he was essentially pressed into service by the CO that day.
I remember watching this film in history class. My teacher was a Vietnam vet. He wasn't in this particular battle but he said that when men died they always cried for one of two people: their wives or their mothers.
Mother's touch cold as day. Women's touch make men quiver Men in boats shot to shit Thinking of the love ones Reminds them of joy, Interrupted by the sounds of War.
@@logie3020 WTF? That is your response? Four things I am willing to die for: 1. My child 2. My wife 3. My country 4. My faith Why introduce a lame poem into a serious conversation about one's mortality and the validity of one's final words? Not cool, man.
@@johngalt6752 that was a poem about soilders dying not the beach thinking of love ones in their last min in this trash earth. I have nothing but respect for those who traded their lives just for me to tell you to fuck off. Your not cool and neither is the American government for having this conflict in the first place. War is the undeming truth that without it we would be moving shit.
@@CPTdrawer22 still didn't take away the fact America has done some terrible things to people in the past. But that's history yeah I've never fought but don't get me wrong here I love the false freedom that we have. Your still goingon about freedom but to this day in your country you will be shamed for even bring up freedom of speech America is a joke.
@@logie3020 Happy to butt in on this one. What peaceful nation do you hail from so I can search for the terrible things it has done... hypocrisy. And, how much freedom do you need? You can only have so much before you're infringing on the freedom of others hence there are limitations....
23:02 Im gonna have to disagree on you with this scene in particular. She perfectly captures all the 5 stages of grief in the matter of seconds. I dont think it unlikely someone would react this way when told of their husbands death.
My grandfather served in Korea. He never talked about it either. When I came home from my first Iraq tour we had so much more in common and after that he opened up, it also gave me a chance to talk to someone who understood.
Having seen both sides in person. 1. People who are in their final moments do think mostly of loved ones. 2. The woman making noises and being very emotional when faced with the death of her husband. That is a very normal reaction. 3. If you are going to criticize something you should study what you are criticizing before you make yourself look ignorant.
I also thought the lady's reaction was absolutely realistic. Denial. The problem with the guy thinking about his wife was not the scene per se, but that it has been done to death and often spoofed. They should have known how people would react to it and shouldn't have included it. It is like killing the good guy's family in an action movie - such a cliche that the last time I simply turned off the movie. The last action hero made fun of it 25 years ago and they still use it.
Exactly, the sergeant that was dying and talking about his wife was in the dance scene. As he is dancing with her, he is singing to her and clearly loves her dearly. He has facial scars suggesting a prior war perhaps Korea. This review mocks him and his sacrifice.
@@ralphalvarez5465 No, it mocks the scene where the movie decides to shit on him by making everyone roll their eyes. It doesn't matter if he really said it. We're not watching the actual guy actually dying. We're watching a movie, where they decided to include "tell my wife I love her" v2742.35.8, even though that line was stupid the second time it was put in a movie already.
Had to deliver the news to a mother her son was passed on from a car accident... She virtually had the same response as the lady at the door... She kept repeating Ya'll stop lying to me at least 20 times and her husband finally downstairs and held her she told him we were lying to her... Thus that scene was very real life to me... I delivered bad news as a police chaplin over a 100 times and each was a different experience with the person at the door...
I think it's hard for people to understand trauma if they have never been through it themselves and only seeing it in movies. My best friend was murdered when I was 18 and when his brother told me on the phone I just broke down and threw up in the toilet. Up until that moment if I ever saw someone throw up in a situation like that I thought it was kind of done for the movies. I try not to judge people who haven't been through something like that I just look at them as they are a bit naive and innocent.
Jimmy, when I worked as a cop I did a number of death notifications. I'll second your statement that some people just stand there and refuse to accept the news and just say "No". Seen it myself a few times. The scene was perfectly reasonable. I like this guy's reviews but sometimes he tries to be a bit too smart for his own good. For instance, he hates the scene with the kids in the car singing. I was a child of that era, and on long trips that what we did to pass the time. There were no portable DVD players, no cell phones, and not even FM radios in most cars. We sang songs like that with our parents until we got tired and fell asleep in the back seat, which is what our parents were trying to achieve. Cheers, and thanks for your service as a police Chaplain. I've seen you guys do great things in my time on the street.
This was one scene that got right the gut wrenching emotions expressed when being told of a loved ones unexpected death. I experienced it twice with 2 of my sisters. They were aged 31 and 54 and died years apart. The first I dropped the phone and just stared at the ceiling totally numb. My wife asking me what;s wrong and I literally could not answer. The second time complete different response. A complete cerebral calm came over me which allowed me to step into the middle of a chaotic situation and become the voice of reason to help the rest of my family to make the necessary decisions in the aftermath. Her reaction was as real as it gets.
"If you're gonna have to do a death scene, then do it in an original way" You mean stray from the source material? The very thing you crap on movies for? Soldiers die, and I'm their final moments, are certainly not poets, they think of home, their wives, kids and their country, doesnt take an enlisted man to know that.
Nicky will always be pissed at America until we apologize for rejecting his mentally unstable King and Class System, where certain people are born superior to others and deserve ridiculously lavish lives at the expense of their subjects. I would be pissed too, just from the emotional pressure of trying to retain and defend a belief in that system.
Draftees accounted for about 25% of all US Vietnam soldiers. Most were volunteers. As to those death scenes, that is how they happened. If it's over the top, well, talk to history.
Guys volunteered for many different reasons from patriotism to boredom at home. One of the many reasons to enlist was the hope that by enlisting and not waiting to be drafted they had a better chance of not being sent to Vietnam but to Germany, Korea or even remaining stateside, Some did it to avoid being put into the infantry or a combat support outfit but would be trained into a non-combat MOS. A friend of mine"back in the day" had some accounting credits and thought he was "too valuable" to be made a grunt and shipped to "the NAM". He was partially correct. He was sent to a military finance and accounting unit-in SAIGON. True story...
@@GFSLombardo "Guys volunteered for many reasons from patriotism to boredom at home." Lmao imagine being a bit bored at home, signing up to the U.S. Army and then going through the hell of Vietnam just screaming "I DIDN'T SIGN UP FOR THIS!"
@@snorf525 I know a couple guys that signed up because they were bored and ended up in Afghanistan... kinda a common theme for a young 19 year old men to do I guess haha.
I agree with the comments below by Mr. Campbell. I was a corpsman in Vietnam in 1965. Most ground troops were average age of 18 to 20. I have heard soldiers crying for thier mothers as they lay dying from terrible wounds that could not be treated properly fast enough. Tramatized men with legs blown off. Abdominal wounds impacting the major organs, kidneys, liver, stomach, intestines shredded, but amazingly still alive for a few minutes. Calling out names of people in thier lives, before they received multiple grains of morphine. My training was to put the morphine syrette hypodermic needle through his shirt collar and bend it over, and with my marker make a big M on thier foreheads. These symbols would tell the medics and doctors at the field hospital this man has had morphine. The idea being to communicate the message, "careful don't overdose this patient." When one sees thier first real traumatic foot amputation from a marine stepping on an antipersonnel mine, it is horrible. That's when the idea runs like the speed of light through your head, "they didn't train us enough." But you do your job and the image in your head never goes away.
The death scenes that upset you so bad were real according to the book lt. Herrick said "At least I got to die for my country." and the sgt who died right after him said "tell my wife": Sorry there last words were to cheesy and "patriotic" for you
It's amazing he didn't bother to actually read the book, seeing as its the single most comprehensive piece of history on the battle having been written by the commanding officer and the only journalist to actually be there who interviewed the survivors, including from the NVA side. Like wtf, it's just disgraceful he'd attempt to critique the historical accuracy of the movie without reading the damn book its based on!
killing people in the name of your country is no more patriotic than killinh people in the name of religion is righteous and to die for your country so it can expand its own influence to people who dont want it is blind faith to a tyranical government and its agenda. patriotic should be fighting for and protecting your country and that is only possible when it is defensive fighting. if you invade you are killing that countries citizens which is no different than someone breaking into your home and killing your family so they can steal your money to feed their own family. quit with the brainwashed patriot act.
Stop being so over-dramatic, guys. He's talking about how the film represents these events. And he's right. The scenes are cliched and detrimental to the immersion. The film often feels authentic but is punctuated by moments of emotional cheesiness that don't work cinematically. The very fact that there is so much debate about it and so much people who feel the need to justify these scenes in the comments is a proof that these scenes are cinematically bad.
21:26, those two death moments I think went over History Buffs head. It wasn't simply the cliche, the tone and way he the first man delivered the line "I'm glad I died for my country." was so heartbreaking. These kids really thought they were going all out in service of their country. A whole generation raised on the heroics of WW2 and the war stories of Korea. What a fool I would have been alongside them.
@notrius7754 Oh. The votes of your master class are the only ones that actually determine the conditions of your life. Your empire exists to serve the holders of Capital. You rabble are there to live and die making profits for the already wealthy. That's why you don't have universal healthcare. It's also why your taxes went up.
@@primusvsunicron1 I agree with you for the most part but the author of the book was Galloway (The journalist) with the help of Lt. Gen. Moore and other witnesses. So as much as it is a cliche, I'm okay with it since it wasn't just placed in the movie out of nowhere but taken out of the novel and made into a scene.
You answered your own question. Why even ask. Why not just say "In the book that soilder does say "tell my wife I love her." " you are hereby an official gay boi.
Listen. I love your videos but the lines in here, when the men died, are accurate. Word for word quotes. They asked for their mom’s. (Saving Private Ryan). It was better than all of those other movies. Way better. This movie was exact. Even the costumes were painstakingly built.
History Buffs clearly didn't read the book...of course, the movie also omitted the second part of the battle at LZ Albany where the US forces moving from X-ray to Albany were overrun and accounted for 70% of the US casualties in the battle. Even more terrible fighting than what the movie portrays since the NVA and Americans were scattered in pockets fighting against one another within just a few meters on one another. Soldiers could hear the screams of their comrades at night begging to not be executed and then singular gunshots...brutal, brutal stuff. I would urge anyone who is interested to read Hal Moore's "We are soldiers still" which chronicles his research efforts with the Vietnamese and their reception of "We were soldiers, once and young". He went back to Vietnam with many of his former soldiers and the Vietnamese gathered many of their veterans of the battle to meet them...an extremely powerful book about healing and an understanding that combat soldiers have, regardless of nationality, for one another that the people they fight for have no idea about.
I saw a documentary from a former marine who went back to Vietnam and met up with former nva soldiers. He gave speeches at museums and was amazed at how the US forces had been depicted in an unbiased way . He got gifts from the locals but was called names by tourists . He even saw graves and memorials dedicated to US service personnel. It's something common among service people after a war has ended at least from what I've seen and read . My grand farther was the same. He never hated the Germans. A friend who liberated belsan camp didn't hate Germans. Hated Nazis. His division even found German regulars beating on camp guards and locals because of their disgust . It's how they discovered the camp.
I read that book i have it on my shelf few feet from me. I still remember how horrified i was from that one scene. Also i remember how one of those soldier who was executed was shot in the eye and woke up later and crawled back behind enemy lines.
TBH, I've been present during traumatic grief. The reaction shot of the Black American woman is spot on. TBH 2: in the Unit, the same actress portrayed essentially the same scene, making her the go to for newly widowed black woman. Also, the vital role played by Rick Rescorla was totally ignored. Also, there was a sequel LZ Albany. Coming to a theater near nobody.
Yeah, it's kinda dubious to portray the battle as an American victory, when at best it was a stalemate - the Americans took a solid kicking during the trek to LZ Albany. Both sides incurred roughly 50% casualties - and given the disparity in means could reasonably be considered a tactical defeat for the US.
@@onylra6265not really a stalemate. The US lost 3/4 of the fighting force at Albany, it really only shone light on the difference between a battalion commander being in the thick of things, with good, solid leadership from his immediate subordinates, and a command that intermingled a few good leaders with a commander who was naive or afraid of taking rounds..... C company I believe was in a column when the ambush started? And the front two companies were in good formation, but their leadership was 4-500 meters away with the B.C. ....LZ X-ray showed what highly motivated and well-led men could accomplish against a force at least ten times their own.
Not to mention that LZ X-ray was the last time a Colonel was deployed by America into a field battle. LZ Albany was a major blunder by the US forces trying to save fuel and machinery over human lives. The men were not even screening an advance. They were sacraficed due to poor military decisions by top brass.
“It sounds like I am nitpicking but this is so cliche!” This statement would have been correct if it wasn’t for the fact that they actually said them in the book. Womp womp womp.
evac slived yes, even though it actually happened and that man actually said that, but no, just because it’s cliche now, it has to be cringe that he said that
@Claudia Juarez they did what they were ordered to, you never know, maybe he was drafted, and if he wasnt maybe he just wanted to help the american troops, war is bad no matter what, but sometimes, you do what you have to
@Claudia Juarez BECAUSE HIS COUNTRY TOLD HIM TO GO YOU ILLITERATE DEMOCRAT FOOL. There is no such thing as individual discretion in this situation. Obviously you have never soldiered.
They went with these takes because they were bringing in the whole human experience that you were too dense to see, instead you ridicule these scenes..... oh well, guess you need some whining to feel like you have criticized an did not say too much good about a film.. (keeps your credibility up [in your own mind] perhaps?) PS... we LOVE this movie, so much better then the other Vietnam movies that just show psycho, weirdness as norm...BS
Having been in the jungles in Vietnam I think people underestimate how brutal the heat would have been on top of all the other carnage. It is suffocatingly hot and humid there. I was drenched in sweat just walking around looking at some ancient temples in a t-shirt and shorts. I honestly dont know how it was possible to send a bunch of westerners into the jungle in all that heavy gear and have them run around in battle. They must have lost a lot of soldiers just to heat stroke and dehydration.
Most of the Vietcong and NVA were city dwellers as well. The jungle was foreign to almost all involved. The farm boys on both sides tended to handle it better. This is from an Interview I saw with an NVA vet.
As a Vietnam war veteran who spent one year in the Central Highlands in Vietnam the Vietnam war was a total waste of life. Not just Americans but those that I saw of the Vietnamese. Look at it today now we are trading partners with Vietnam . I still love my country but I would never send my boys into a war like Vietnam. I was awarded the bronze star with the V for valor . Most of my friends don’t even know that I served because I never talk about it. Why would I unless you were there you would never understand the horrors of war. God Bless
Just wanted to say cheers for your service mate, also that its sometimes forgotten that us aussies fought along side you yanks in Vietnam, my dad fought there and he never says a word about it. We have a long history of fighting together and i hope we never have to again but im sure we will have to do it all again soon the way the world is going. This beer i dedicate to you my brother :)
jcims80; Thank you for your service - whether drafted or volunteer, it's appreciated. I assume you came home from your year in Vietnam, to a political reality very different than when you left. That was unfair to many returning soldiers, but it was what it was back here in the World. "...a total waste of life..." - I can tell you that the precursor, Korea, was even more so, and the Western Front of WWI as well. When literally zero difference is made in either territory gained (important to Generals and politicians) or number of lives lost while defending or attacking said territory over and over - it is a waste beyond measure in lives lost.
Semper Fi. Thanks for your service. However if you think that standing by and allowing the creeping expanse of international socialism isn't worth your life, might I suggest that your friends made the ultimate bet in the opposite direction, and you don't value their sacrifice enough. And if you personally don't think fighting against international socialism ( Communism) is important, please "retire" permanently so the Communist enemy can't retain your skill through the duress they will place your family under.
I'm sorry those boys couldnt think of more interesting things to say when they died. Those two death statements actually happened and that's actually what they said. I respect your channel a lot, but you dropped the ball on this one. Those men weren't poets, and they're entitled to whatever cliches they wanted.
The men, yes. Not the movie. If you put lines like that in your movie, then don't be surprised when people roll their eyes. In a movie, those lines are beyond stupid, and he is talking about the movie.
@@OWnIshiiTrolling The movie is based on historical fact. Nick would RAIL on the movie if they changed the -actual spoken words- as he has done in previous reviews. This one he just completely missed the mark.
@@thereddhare I think changing the actual words is useful to avoid silly tropes. If anything, he should have been clearer about what exactly his criticism is. I don't think he is criticising what anyone actually said. If you get shot and die in a war, you can say whatever you want. I wouldn't clown on anyone for doing that. The critcism seems to be specifically about how that comes off in a movie, where those lines have been done to death. Changing that coud have improved the movie, if done well, and I think that is valid point. The movie portraying real events doesn't make it not a movie, and that has to be considered when writing the script.
To change the truth for pure entertainment and money is to dishonor the fallen. People who run from hide or change the truth are hurting themselves and or the people closest to them. This has been the problem with the average person. The truth only hurts once. A lie can last forever.
9:25 I’ve lived in Rigby, Idaho my entire life. To hear the man in that interview say that he witnessed such things happen to a fellow soldier from my hometown really hit hard. R.I.P and know that you’re sacrifice has not gone unrecognized!
I live in Buenos Aires, Argentina, I'm now 34 and since age 8 I was an avid investigator of the Vietnam War of Liberation, how Ho Chi Minh and his freedom fighters walked the extra kilometre, put their lives on the line to save their country from hi-tech enemies. Tales of heroism, sacrifice and bravery I counted in the scores! I always thank the Vietcong for their service.
23:20 I know a LOT of black people where I'm from and I can tell you that a lot would react that way when speechless after tragic news. People from where I'm from, even myself, speak and react that way sometimes.
For me, that reaction was spot on. Could be a cultural difference maybe? Perhaps Blacks in Britain react a bit differently to bad news (perhaps less outward expression of denial, or something?) I could be way off of course but that was my first thought.
I really like this movie because it's the only Vietnam War film that doesn't have an agenda. There's no stereotypical "Vietnam War was bad, you guys!" storyline thrown about.
Well the reason why the sentiment is actually very verifiable. As in there was a lot of people who agree with the notion that the Vietnam war WAS bad. That doesnt mean we cant appreciate the sacrifice and service of those brave young men. So just to clear this up. YES the Vietnam war was bad, there was absolutely no point to it. It was a waste of life, tax payer money, and an absolute waste of Americas Reputation but we can appreciate the courage and sacrifice of the US Military
For a historic review, you missed the chance to document another true hero of the battle, Rick Rescorla, a Lieutenant Platoon Leader, and whose photo adorns the cover of the book by the same name. Hal Moore described him as "the best platoon leader I ever saw". Rick, a Cornishman from England, deserves a film of his own, having led a storied life he died in the Twin Towers during 9/11, where he was credited with saving the lives of of over 2000 Morgan Stanley employees, before re-turning to check everyone was safely out the building, whereupon the building
They did unveil a Statue to Rick Rescorla a while back legend. Had seen action before Vietnam in Africa. He was from Hayle same district I was born and raised in. Brave guy saved many lives on 911.
Rick Rescorla also died on 9/11. I think he was a security guard or something. They said he had a bullhorn and was leading people down the stairs before he died.
Going to add my voice to those saying the "the tell my ___ I love her/them" thing is absolutely real. My theory has always been that it got used once in a movie because it was used in a book before that. Whoever made that movie thought it would be a good thing to use to humanize the soldiers or show the atrocity of the waste of life that war is. But it's a real thing, and the word "heartbreaking" doesn't begin to cover it.
actually when i was a little kid i remembered always playing with my dads combat boots on together with our neighbours kids inside a military division. and yes we sang when we travel i still remember it so clearly like it was yesterday. and when i saw this scene it made me remember what my family was and how my mom was always worried everytime my dad goes into combat operations and yes we also pray together as a family like this in this movie.
@@jakethesnake3593 that might be the most accurate description of him I’ve heard. He’s well versed in history but my god does he seem ignorant about Americans. He also seems to not have children based on his comments about the scene with the children
@@garreTTU2023 I said much the same a lack of understanding of the average American and how they responded to the great events around them and a lack of understanding of what it is to have children or to empathize with them.
Yes we did. Well said. The narrative critique was done by a person that wasn't raised by a generation that had the same family values that were portrayed in this film and because of that it is too campy. However, for those that were raised like this, we take it as a fond reminisce.
My father was a 2nd Lt who trained with Hal Moore at Ft Benning. I was 3. He was promoted to 1st Lieutenant during that tour, following that battle. He has trained Alpha platoon (the "lost" platoon) and would have lead them in combat, had a captain not usurped his command. The Captain needed "his ticket punched" to proceed rapidly up the chain of command. That captain was the fool who chased the NVA kid and got his platoon cut off from Col Moore's main force. He actually did say that he was glad to be able to die for his country. Apparently the deaths of his men, due to his foolishness was lost on him. In any case , my father was the S2 Air, back at LZ Foxtrot, and survived the battle. He was there when casualties were brought in and actually threw buckets of water across helicopter floorboards to wash out the blood, but he lived. Back home, I Did run around the house wearing my Dad's jump boots. We had moved down to Georgia from Wisconsin. My Mother was clueless about discrimination. The Officer's Wives Club is a fixture on every Army post. It's a catty little chat circle, but since their families are usually a great distance away, they are the only thing that passes for family in military surroundings. I actually appreciated the renditions of family life portrayed in the movie. War affects more than just the troops in the field. You my find it innane, but our behaviors were always measured by how my father's career was affected. Lastly, I'd like to mention that Denial is the first stage of grief, and your derision of the way that officer's wife began her grieving defines your character far more than it defines hers. I own two autographed copies of We Were Soldiers. One was my Dad's, signed by General Moore and Joey Galloway. The other is mine, signed by Joey Galloway after my Father's death in 2003. The initial battle referred to in the movie is only half the story, the other half involved the withdrawal of the troops. The choppers couldn't evac the troops en masse. They had to march.
I just wanted to say I can't agree enough about what you have said in your comment. My Dad also was an Air Cav Platoon Sargent in 68-69 B-Company 2-7th Cav. He was in a very similar battle were they were almost overrun. His company commander a Captain now Retired General Barry McCaffery had Joe Gallaway ride with him as a war correspondent as he commanded the 24th Mech Division in Desert Storm. They became friends and I was able to also get my book signed by Joe Gallaway and Hal Moore as I went with my Dad to many reunions in DC for Veterans Day. I grew up around these men hearing their stories of what they went through. McCaffery is a lot like Hal Moore and an amazing leader who I have no doubt if he did not take over my Dads Company I don't think I would have ever been born as my Dad might have never made it home from Vietnam. I have learned that most people do not really understand what Combat Vietnam Vets really went through and also what the families went through. We Were Soldiers Once and Young was the book my Dad gave to me when I was 14 and said you want to know what it was like when I was in Vietnam. Read it and you will have an Idea. It's the best book iv ever read about the Grunt in Vietnam and it changed my life forever. For anyone that has just watched the movie you really need to read the book as if you think LZ X-Ray was bad you will not believe how bad LZ-Albany was. The Movie is the best of what's out there but the book is 100% real as it can get. I very proud to be the son of a Combat Vietnam Vet and very thankful to all that served there country and more importantly each other. As my Dad would say Garryowen!
@@jeffgast7215 Thanks for your kind and passionate comments. Our troops did the best they could in a politically dysfunctional situation. I'm glad our fathers had some great leaders to help bring them home.
It was a LIEUTENANT that chased that kid...I beleive it was Lt. Henry Herrick not a Captain..a Capt. commands a Company, ..it was 2nd platoon Bravo Company that was cut off after chasing that kid..the CAPTAIN commanding Bravo was Capt. John Herren and Lt. Henry Herrick led the Lost Platoon into a disaster... Thanks to your family for their service!!
Being a Military brat in the 1960's we spent as much time as possible together and moving to the new duty station while in the car for long drives we did not have any thing but songs and road games. And when dad deployed we didn't know what would happen. And when i served my family moved with me alot.
Having personally informed a widow and having held soldiers in their last moments, I can tell you, this movie, did wonders to capture the emotional intensity and denial that manifests itself. If you’re not familiar with the process of the gut wrenching and chaotic nature of informing someone’s spouse of their passing, please, please, don’t take the piss. Especially as you’re a smug civilian
And I agree, nurses, police, firefighters etc certainly do. I think the problem with soldiers who served in Iraq/Afghanistan had it compressed down into a small time frame Death isn’t the main factor in ptsd It’s the constant fight and flight on a daily basis and the emotional numbing/depression that comes with dealing with that
Maybe you should have read the book.... Those cliche lines of death were what those soldiers actually said. I like you Nick, but sometimes you are the one who jumps to generalizations and misconceptions and Hal Moore was a family man, so I don’t know what you expected his kids to be like...
I think it's more about how the death lines were said that what was said. He never said he had a problem with Hal Moore having a family, he has a problem with the acting and portrayal of the children. the writing, acting and presentation for them was awful. they lack even the most basic characterisation and nuance and are very one dimensional.
Nick does focus on how important it is that we see that the Vietnamese soldier is humanized yet Hal Moore as a family man is trivialized. Why is that? I thought the kids were fine and showed a idealized normal family where the youngest is a bit spoiled and gets away with stuff the older children would be scolded for.
I truly enjoy your videos, sir. But I do have to argue one of the cliches you didn't like. My youngest daughter loved running around our house in my combat boots while wearing one of my beret. I have plenty of pictures of her doing so. I do need to be a little biased and say she was completely adorable while she did it. This was a very common scene to see. All the little kids did this while living on base, it did not matter which branch or installation. She loved the military life style and being an "Army brat". One day she still remembers 8 years later was promoting me. I do understand it's a cliche. But it's a lifestyle that the whole family has to embrace. Since it happens so frequently it did turn into a cliche. Please do not take this as negative criticism, sir, I just wanted to convey my personal experience I had with my children and fellow soldiers and their families. I look forward to all of your videos. Keep up the great work.
I had pictures of my daughter wearing my K pot when she was just a toddler. She was way cuter than the kids in the movie. (okay, so I'm biased. She's my kid after all.) Unfortunately, the ex wife kept the pictures so I have no idea where they are today.
Absolutely, I would constantly put on my dad's combat boots, and his hair, or field jacket or other things and run around pretending. It is all kids can do. We understood more than most adults realized, and pretending was a coaping method employed by most brats without them even knowing it.
thanksfernuthin You hit the nail on the head. I really do think that Europeans think these real life events are just cliche movie tactics. Whether it be wives and kids crying when a soldier leaves, or racial tension, etc, they don’t get it. It really did happen. Just because these things have been done to death in movies doesn’t make that any less true.
I'd like to say some Europeans understand . I loved it when my grandad would teach me to march or salute . I remember him teaching me how to bark orders properly which I use while at work and need to shout for something . I've even given air cadets a lesson on how to salute properly . The nco asked if my family were RAF . Grandad fought 6 squadron DAF crossed north Africa 5 or 6 times on the front line squadrons . Peace and good will.
The story that is told in the book is even more incredible than the movie. After this battle Moore basically took his force and saved another battalion that was in the mire. Moore was an incredible officer and leader
If you've never been in combat and heard what men say when they're dying you wouldn't understand. After 31 years I have heard men cry for their mothers, God, to tell my wife im sorry and I love her to the young kid that ask If he's going to heaven. Dis the death scenes but what would you say knowing you're dying? Jmo and experience.
sometimes he's clueless...but I like him in spite of that..........I was a carrier sailor at the end of the war, 18 and scared......take care .........wiley coyote
Hardest thing I ever had to do was lie and tell a guy he'll be ok it looks alot worse than it is... hunts me in my sleep to this day. I lied and he knew it.
As cliché as the whole "tell my wife i love her" thing may be, there is a reason it is used so often. Because it is rather often the last words and last thoughts of many soldiers. Put yourself in the mindset of the average infantry grunt. You've just been sent into a battle, you've been shot, you know death is iminent and the one thing you keep thinking about in those moments is that you won't get to see the woman you love ever again. There's a man next to you, trying his hardest to save your life, and may be your best chance of being able to find some closure. You want to tell her that she means the world to you, that you wish you had more time, that you're sorry you couldn't come home. But time is just about up, so you say the one thing you really need to. You tell him to bring a simple message to her that can convey all that in just three words, "i love you". This is what most men, married ones at least, that are mortally wounded think of. It's a cliché and commonly used because it happens alot more than you'd think.
Vietnam was the first war with reporters embedded in combat troops. Seeing people killed on TV every night had a chilling effect. Not sure how WWII would have played out if Normandy or Stalingrad was broadcast live.
the true difference in WW2 compared to Vietnam is that back in WW neither side had its hands tied behind theyr back by being restricted to purely military targets ... one of key ways in defeating an enemy is food, fuel, ammunition and other materiel disruption best achieaved by bombing the shit out of the industrial complexes. Not only that but the Vietnam was constantly receiving supplies and arms from foreign sources that simply could not be severed unless you would be willing to go to war with the suppliers. Unable to destroy the supply both domestic and foreign means all US had left as option was to score bodies ... and they were REALLY good at it, the fun fact is if US wasnt forced to pull out it was only matter of time until they achieved victory, sadly the glaring weakness of western political system showed its teeth and forced them to withdraw making all who died up to that point lay down theyr lives for nothing. Vietnam was decided by politics not military might both during with politics dictating the rules of engagement and after when soldiers were simply called off from conflict they were winning ...
Vietnam wasn't broadcast live. Military censors could review the footage. North Vietnam did get strategically bombed despite what the above poster says. Heavily over Christmas 1972. Turns out Joe Public doesn't like hearing how his govt is using his tax dollar to bomb heavily populated areas at Christmas time. Bombing civilians never breaks a nation's will to fight, if anything it galvanises it.
@Sonny Pickering problem here is the countries "under the American yoke" tend to grow into economic superpowers and theyr communist counterparts always lead themselves to economic ruin and brutal dictatorial regimes ... id say being occupied by Americans is much more prefferable than ending up occupied by Russia or China ... from personal experience as im from country that WAS occupied by Russians for decades ...
@Sonny Pickering from what i read its opposite, the Tet had the NV on the ropes and all it would take was a little push to have them keel over but as military was hamstrung by idiotic politicians they couldnt finish the job ... You have to realize the war in Vietnam was fought using only fraction of Amaerican standing military and literally sabotaged from the inside by the government ... you cant do that, you cant use this, you cant have more men, you have to stop we are waiting if they are ready to negotiate ... no they arent fine you can start over again because we just gave the enemy time to put themselves together ... and i think those "resistance fighters" came to regret that they didnt lose the war in the end ... communism is an ugly beast that tends to devour its own in absence of external enemy...
While I can understand your dislike of the wives and children scenes, you kind of have to have gone through it to understand the heartache. My dad served two tours in Vietnam, and shortly after was sent to Okinawa for two years. I didn’t really get to know my dad until after he retired.
You sir, have never seen a person in shock react. I love your channel, I respect your comments normally, however on this matter you are way off base. I have seen family members after being notified of horrific news react very much the same way as depicted. I have seen worse. stepping back and responding in the negative is pretty much a base line response.
You're right. I love this channel, but he got this one fucked up. Hollywood adds a lot of dramatic effect, that's true, but sometimes it's needed: and this is one of those times.
Come on i think you are missing the point. If someone says one cliche dying line then sure but why it has to be instantly followed by another it just takes you out of the previous moment. Might as well had a third guy telling please water my house plants
@@Jebu911 sir. You are missing the point. Those are actually things that happen! Cheese or not. I’ve seen grown men call for their monies. I’ve seen a man (this one didn’t die he just lost his foot) talk about how shamed he was because what he was doing. (He was a drug addict long story short. He lost his foot during a burglary and while I attended him he told me all about his errors). Very cheesy stuff for someone who wasn’t there
@@toddkorson8207 You are still missing the point as we are talking about film making here. You don't see half the squad simultaniously taking a shit in the jungle either even tho that happened too.
the real events of hacksaw ridge were too unbelievable for the movie, so they reduced the number of people he saved and the close calls he experienced.
Wasn't a fan of Hacksaw Ridge. Seems he returned to the old 'don't let any sense of reality get in the way of a story'. As soon as I saw someone firing a BAR one handed whilst holding half a corpse as a shield I thought 'oh come on!'
Your critique of the death scene by the young officer who said "I'm glad I could die for my country" is misguided. His character was portrayed as "gung ho" from the start. During training, Sgt.Maj. Plumley told Col. Moore "that one--the strong one--wants to win medals". The directors made a point of letting us hear the young officer exhort his mean to be the best company in the unit. His line just before death is an epiphany that the work, training, and sacrifices of military life was all for naught because he effectively died in the first salvo of the first battle. I thought the actor was genius in his conveyance of the irony that the young and energetic leader died at the onset of the first engagement. You may wonder why I'm telling you this: Imagine spending two FULL years of your life in military training to be snuffed out within two minutes of combat. THAT was what the young officer realized at this death. He-sure as shootin'--wasn't "glad to die". As a US wartime vet, my interpretation certainly wasn't that the character was "dripping with patriotism" over his death. That was spectacularly dignified and retrospective remorse, maybe even sarcasm that his life's effort resulted in his immediate death at the first opportunity to prove himself in battle. Personally, I felt it was one of the best written and best acted death scenes I've ever seen in a war movie making an honest attempt at historical accuracy. I think overall you do a very good job with your critiques, but your evaluation on this scene is what we call a swing and a miss in the US. Keep up the [otherwise] great work though.
I think this is a case of what happens when is civilians try to understand the military mindset. We can get glimpses of it, learn their lingo, love their dark humor, even empathize with them when they suffer after coming home, but because we've never signed the contract and gone through the training, let alone experienced war first-hand, we'll never understand how they truly function. Especially in a time like today, where military folks volunteer to dive headfirst into hell, rather than be conscripted for service.
Douglas Munro died saving marines in WW2 his last words were “Did we getting them all off” referring to getting pinned down marines of a beach at Guadalcanal. So yeah I can believe that.
This movie is definitely one of my top favorite war films for a few other reasons. The scene where Hal Moore's wife picks up that stack of telegrams off her front porch then delivers them to the unfortunate families. It very well illustrates how wars are not just fought on the battlefield or in a different country, but the wars are also fought back home. How many wives, husbands, daughters, sons, uncles, grandpas, grandmas would wait for either their soldier in the flesh or that piece of paper that confirms their soldier is no longer breathing. The song that plays during that scene just makes it much more epic. The other reason is after the battle, the conversation between Moore and Galloway with tears in their eyes for their fallen brothers and the reality sets in about what they just went through and why they survived but their brothers didn't. Then Galloway walks away, and Moore just starts to tear up. This scene always tears me up. The bond between battle hardened soldiers is a bond stronger than family bonded by blood because they fought for each other.
The lines "Tell my wife I love her," and "I'm glad I died for my country," aren't clichéd. I've read reports that said "Tell my life I love her," is the most common last-line for real soldiers. "F*ck," "Sh*t" or "Yep I'm dead," or words to that effect are also very common. Not sure about the "I love my country," thing, but it wouldn't surprise me if that is also common among dying men. Soldiers who volunteer are typically highly patriotic, which is one of the reason Western militaries oppose conscription. They from experience that conscripts make bad soldiers (not always of course, but often).
Craig Sinclair Conscripts need to be well motivated, today, with many people opposed to war and conflict and the military, the only worthy soldiers are volunteers.
It's so weird because my father a veteran said the combat scenes looks gaudy. He said no man were dumb enough to shoot while standing unless he needs to move. In fact the main casualties from the Vietnamese side were due to air strikes (American air power were effective) and many of those guerrillas died due to their refusal to move under fire when air strikes came or getting shot for moving when air strikes came. They were afraid to die as any American. This made the stupid guy who charged in with a bayonet quite hilarious to watch. Their formation was usually quite disorganised too and that lead to many units got isolated and destroyed easily. No such nice advance formation as in the movie. Their understand of tactics were poor and the only reason the war ended as such was American and South Vietnam leaders forgot war is a political tool, not a game.
+Duy Linh Chu Ha Was your father also in this battle? I think at the beginning the NVA leaders did stick with such human wave tactics, because they showed to be very effective against the French. As you see in the movie, the soldiers are indeed very frightened but were told that their sacrifices were nessecary and noble to gain independence. After such horrible loses, the leaders saw that they had not much against such superior firepower in open battles and did rethink their tactics. There is also a difference between the NVA (regular soldiers) and the Vietcong (guerilla troops mostly operating in the south). Btw.: What does your father think about the war? I once met a Vietnamese catholic, who said that it was best when Americans were in Vietnam and they fled when the Communists won because they ruined the land.
+Duy Linh Chu Ha I wouldn't really say that the war was treated as a game, but more as a single theatre of a much broader conflict. At the time the US and South Vietnamese leaders had to find a way to fight against the NVA and VC without pushing into North Vietnam or completely destroying North Vietnamese bases and facilities because of the Russian and Chinese advisers who were often near these places. They were afraid that it would trigger a more direct, and all out war with Russia and/or China if one of their advisers was killed. They also underestimated the large number of US citizens who were ideologically aligned with the communist forces, and would seek to undermine the US military effort in Vietnam.
+Mike Mac if they were concerned with those advisers they wouldn't have made excursions into Cambodia. MACV SOG missions had uncovered many of these advisers and their search and destroy won't let them get away that easily. The main problems were the Southern government budget wasn't managed well and the economy relies too much on foreign aids due to the war effort. The city dwellers enjoyed many economic achievement but the same couldn't be said about the rural folks many of whom were unsympathetic to the cause of the South. Corruption was one thing but Washington obsession with the enemy and victory, conveniently ignoring the process of building a proper sustainable system in the South brought it down after they left. This still lingers in subsequent conflicts, they just never learn, young men and women continue to pay the price.
Dunno, the movies he’s done all have the common theme of being America’s shitty wars. Band of Brothers review on the other hand... kinda disproves this argument. We shouldn’t have fought Vietnam, Ho Chi Minh quoted Jefferson in his first declaration and petitioned for US aid. We fought against an independence movement and lost. Check out the ken burns documentary or read some books.
@@debohancock4716 except those films are fairly historically accurate. Are you trying to claim many more recent Hollywood war films are historically accurate, because if you are you'd be the first person who wasn't on DVD commentary to lay that praise on them
@@shrekfanboy5446 Completely agree with your point - although could argue that he isn't even anti mel gibson because of the master and commander review. Just think he's anti "hollywood" and mistakenly calls out the dying words here not realising its true to the novel (they are admittedly both extraordinarily cliché)
The most film’s heart-wrenching moments, for me, were the deaths of Jack Geoghegan and Jimmy Nakayama. Both men were deprived of the chance to know their respective children. Also, RIP Lt. Hal Moore
Love these videos, but the "tell .... that i love them" happens a lot when someone is about to die and they want their loved ones to know that they were the last thought than ran across their minds before dying
The scenes with the kids are easy to relate to if you have kids of your own. And from the standpoint of a fellow father, it helps relate with the character and understand better what he has to lose and what his family will lose if he dies. Without the kids, he's just another soldier in a uniform.
Also, the movie just shows kids being kids and the family having a good time together and there's nothing forced or badly written about it, I'm sure people like you would attest to that.
@@vigil2150 Agreed... I feel that the maker of this video really showed his lack of life experience with that bit. Also, his impulse to laugh at a reaction of denial to hearing her husband was killed I also found rather disgusting. I'm not sure how you can feel anything other than sadness, empathy, and a pit in your stomach at that scene.
Old post but as a person from a military family and a large one (5 kids) that moved around a lot when we were young. That scene of them singing and passing the time as they arrived to Fort Benning takes me back to my own childhood because that’s exactly how we were when we PCSed to the SAME POST. This reviewer can say whatever but the emotional hooks in this movie are broad and appeal to more than his small view.
I was coming to say this. As a young father, I still remember when something like this wouldn’t have moved me, but having a kid of my own made the kids’ scenes mean more to me. The children do add depth to Moore and they really do the stupid funny things like run around in your shoes or sing songs in the car in real life. Thought he missed the mark on that
@Sean Patterson if the US soldiers wanted to protect their families why were they in Vietnam? the Vietnamese did not attack the US. The US invaded to destroy an opposing ideology.
The Viet Minh did not defeat the Japanese in Vietnam. All they had been doing were guerilla operations until the Japanese surrendered in Indochina to the Allies.
Ah, the Allies? Vietnam as Wasn't exactly a joint effort compared to ww2. Japanese constricts were hired by the American government and the only other Western nation to help the Americans when the French pulled out was Australia. Other than that... that was it.
In Full Metal Jacket Lee Ermey's performance of the drill sergeant was authentic. He improvised the scenes based on his experience as a drill sergeant in the marines during the Vietnam war.
Bosse Linder his main complaint is that they’re trying to show how he has a what we now would consider “cringy” 60s family. It makes him seem like the kind of person who give Tora Tora a one star because it wasn’t suspenseful enough.
He screwed up with his goodfellas review too. Michael francese the crime boss have an interview about goodfellas and what was fact and fiction. This kid said the scene while they were in prison eating lobsters and living like kings was legit. An actual la cosa nostra crime boss confirmed that the scene was bs.
I worked on the movie in California... Fort Hunter-Ligget is where they filmed the Vietnam scenes. Moore picked it because it looked much like the North central highlands of vietnam. I had the pleasure of meeting Hal Moore and his beautiful wife. They were such a cute couple!
The part where the guy is dying and he says to tell his wife he loves her and you call it cliche, did you ever stop to consider that maybe whoever that was actually said that
My APUSH teacher's father used to come in to talk about Vietnam, he was at this battle, was an incredibly haunted man, had to dig 3 bullets out of his legs cause the medics couldn't get to him through the fire, and laid in the field for 8 hours with a mangled leg, I respect this man with the fullest extent possible
My APUSH teacher was a Vietnam vet and, whenever we got to that unit, he said it’s always the hardest era to teach without tearing up. I had to stay after class for some help and he’d often share with me his experiences as he knew I had a particular fascination with military history.
@@brittanyanderson8195 definitely not his best work. His analysis regarding racism, I highly reject. Why wouldn’t a white military wife experience disdain when a black military family can’t wash their phucking clothes! His arrogant stupidity is disgusting and laughable.
This, indeed, is the most powerful movie I have ever watched. Mel Gibson should have won an academy award for this. As noted in many comments below, this is likely the most accurate movie ever made of this conflict. The interjection of the family scenes, in my mind only added to the depth of the movie. This was not an action movie for entertainments sake. Without the inclusion of the family scenes, it would not have been balanced. It added to the humanity of the movie, just as the Vietnamese soldier writing in his diary added to it
10:56 You might be surprised to learn that many young military wives are first experiencing the outside world. Give her the benefit of doubt -- she had probably come from the Northern States, where segregation wasn't as prevalent or outward. I spent 20 years in the US Army, and I have TONS of stories of having to educate young couples on the "dangerous outside world." Many fellow vets would probably agree.
absolutely; I bet half of the wives back then couldn't have pointed out Vietnam on a map, much like many dependas can't find Afghanistan. Hell, I bet even my own mother would've had a slightly rough time picking out Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Iraq when my father was fighting in the Gulf War. I know it can be considered so "foreign" that it would be outside of one's situational awareness as compared to a domestic issue, but unless one is directly involved, one can live in relative ignorance. For example: would anyone in South Dakota care about a refugee or illegal immigration crisis?
You are right she was from a well off family and daddy's little princess. Before she got married the hardest thing she ever had to deal with was a broken nail or a bad hair day. I doubt she was allowed to watch the news it might upset her. She may very well not have had any idea what it was like down south.
@xNAJAFx The newspapers might cover discrimination, but they wouldn't necessarily have details. Someone not from the South would never have run into this kind of thing. It is entirely believable that such a person might misinterpret that sign. (I grew up in NJ during the sixties & seventies.)
@xNAJAFx but if she and her husband came from "Wyoming", Whites Only and No Coloreds signs would never be seen. Segregation was mainly a southern thing. She would only know if she really watched the national news about it. People from different places misinterpret all kinds of customs. I had a friend from England visit and he wanted to go inside Sonic Drive In to get a table to sit down and eat.
Have you read “We Were Soldiers Once...And Young” @History Buffs? Those “USA patriotic death scenes” that “made you cringe...yeah those in themselves were based on the actual soldiers final words, soooo yeah. In the other films you were speaking of, yeah they were cliches, but in this film, those were said soldiers’ real last words. I literally just finished the book for the second time.
heathen_fxdb I’ve watched several videos on this Channel and it seems to be more and more apparent that it is less of a historical analysis of films and more of a basic movie review channel of historical movies.
Jake Szetela I’ve been noticing that myself. Like why even bother with 13th Warrior? Anyone who knows Norse mythology and has read Beowulf can tell you it’s less of the former and mostly the latter.
I was a boy in military family moving from base to base, dad went to Korea, and Vietnam twice, Waited for him to come back. This exactly the 1960s military family experience i lived through. exactly in we we solders movie.
My mother grew up in Seattle, WA and knew nothing of segregated bathrooms and water fountains until she and my dad took a trip to Georgia just after they were married in 1964. She said she was it was the stupidest thing she ever saw, all sewage goes to the same place. So, as a "history buff" maybe you shouldn't be so eager to jump to conclusions.
@@JosephDawson1986 not at the same level they did in the South. And the reason isn't because of less racism up North or any horse shit like that. It's because there weren't as many blacks living in the rural areas up North. Black people were and still are a part of the social fabric of the rural South in many places. While there were and are black neighborhoods in a place like Atlanta similar to Harlem in New York City it was far more common for black people to live out in the country and end up rubbing shoulders with whites down South. Besides that girl looks like somebody who grew up in the suburbs and I guarantee that the places she shopped and went had so few black people in them that there was no need to segregate things.
@@ashleighelizabeth5916 that accent is straight up NYC so most likely she came from Long Island and if thats the case she grew up around plenty of black folk there. They would have been the help but being the 60s they would have been working along side Irish and Italian families who been in NYC since the Civil War and then ofcourse all the vsrious Europeans. I remember a picture my uncle had of him in the Queens area and there was a sign in a store that read read Help wanted: and then used a slur for Blacks, Jews and and italians need not apply. In 1963.
I believe it is important that they included the home scenes. Without seeing his life, we would forget he was a person and just see a soldier/robot. We do the same when we memorialize someone. They become a legend and they loose the simple human side we all know that makes the legend like us. Also, it is always strange to see the juxtaposition of the worlds, battlefield and home. When a soldier is away, he misses everything about being home. Being in battle is so different to the way of life we all take for granted.
I think this film needed to show the families of the freedom fighters too. Those Vietcong and North Vietnamese troops were not fighting for a cheque, they were protecting their people, sources of food and independence. As an American follower of the George Washington doctrine I always thank Ho Chi Minh and his troops for their service.
The idea that some people didn't know there were race relation issues as egregious as they truly were isn't shocking. Many people in the North, and Pacific North West weren't touched by the horrible race relations as they saw in the South. Being a child in the 70's, I've met soldiers that had never seen actual black people... they weren't racists, they were never exposed to other cultures. And the idea of showing how the families were faring back home was very poignant... while Americans were dying in Vietnam, their families back in the States had to deal with not knowing... and in some cases, not being able to deal with the facts of their husbands being killed. You act like back in the 60's we had the internet and instantaneous access to information. We had 4-8 channels on TV, the print in news papers, and the periodicals. Our information on what was going on in the world could be 3 to 10 days old by the time we got it.
@@Megadog33 You're missing the point, in order to have race relations problems, the place you grew up had to have multiple races. Knowing segregation existed does not make it "real" to you and her misunderstanding the sign is perfectly plausible to able to imagine a person not immersed in politics.
I agree with this. It is entirely possible, depending upon where the soldiers previous posting had been (in fact if he was fresh out of USMA even) that the woman in question had never been to a place or seen a business that had such a practice like that.
My mother was also totally unaware of how race relationships as she was born in the late 40s. It was not till she married my father in Arizona that she get her first hint of it. She was like the woman in the movie and my father was half Filipino and was an officer in the military. He had to go to Georgia for training in the early 60s and because of his dark completion many thought he was black. My mother grew up on a farm in Colorado and New Mexico. She dated when she was a teen a fellow student who was black. There was no issue where she grew up. It was not like today where you had a TV in every room of your house where you see the news daily. But she was very shocked at the treatment when she was in Georgia where my father got stationed for a few years. My father would become a Captain and many of the men he trained when he was stationed in California would got to Vietnam. When it came to his over seas post he was sent to South Korea and his best friend was sent to Vietnam. So yes some people did not know how bad race relations were. So one should not be shocked.
Apparently this dude has never been around American military families! That was exactly how it was in the early 60's when you moved from base to base as a family.
Women of that age did not concern themselves with either politics or Civil Rights News. With only three channels to choose from the usually spent time with family until something they wanted to watch came on usually at 8:00 in the evening, or at 7:00 in the evening on Friday when Jonny Quest came on. The original.
@@shinjaokinawa5122 This is very true unless the subject slaps you in the face like in the scene where the officers wives were discussing their laundry. That was a very realistic scene from the Sixties in an officers wive's meetup.
Yes its definitely believable a spouse from a northeastern state whose never seen segregation would be shocked by it at a Army base in Georgia or one of the carolinas, he definitely just does not understand the north-south dynamic of the US
@@andrewbossert2395 the south should leave again, and wall themselves off this time. Then they can become the next N Korea and die off like the morons they all are and the rest of the world can finally have a chance at peace and prosperity.
In 1974, at the age of 4, we went to my Nan's to watch tv, additionally, we had to leave the house to make a phone call from the telephone box that was a quarter of a mile away. We did get a black and white tv when I was 6 or 7, I think. I found that scene, especially considering her accent, perfectly fine.
One thing I'd like to mention is the "coloured laundry" lady isn't completely impossible--Her accent reveals her from being up north, about Noo Yark Sity or so, where segregation didn't really exist. Being a transplant because of the army, she was probably adequately domesticated enough not to "bother her pretty head" about politics or racial matters. Women just weren't thinking about that sort of thing back then--While it's unlikely she would be THAT naive, I would say it's not physically impossible.
My father, died about 7 years ago, was a Vietnam veteran, hated this movie. He was able to watch all other Vietnam movies because it was too far off of reality. We were soldiers was too real for him.
Best wishes to you and your late father.
k
My father was also a Vietnam vet and said this movie was the most real one he'd seen too.
Clementine Schälchen damn
Respect and regards for your father. I understand to a certain point, my own dad worked for private and public companies for France during 70's and 80's in Africa, and saw quite a chunk of dark things there. He quited his job because he couldn't endure it anymore. All our childhood and teenage years, my siblings and I were forbiden to watch movies like that, or talk about war and death, because it made him angry all the time. He was "rethinking" about what he witnessed back there.
Sorry to burst your bubble , but those two death scenes depict the actual last words both of the soldiers said. Another common last words from soldiers is crying out for their mother! Sorry you do not approve of the last words these soldiers chose, but they are historically accurate.
I could see myself saying I was glad to died for my country. Especially when dying, I would like to think I made the right choice. And even though I no longer serve, I still think it's a noble way to go.
The most common last words for people dying, whether soldiers in theater or for people dying in their bed, is for their mother.
jeff camp that’s true some soldiers cry for there momma
@@TheGreatLegend007 I've seen Saving Private Ryan so I can confirm this as true.
@@Eminem12378 lol shutup
Yeah, saw a soldier on my first tour whom was shot 7 times. He could barely speak and all he kept asking for was for his wife. Cliche but it really happens.
That's the difference between people that went to battlelines and people that just sat on cushions. I am sorry for your losses. Regards from France
My wife would be the one I'd be thinking of, not going to lie
@@VideoHostSite shut up
Layer
Sure, but that’s not his point. People really fart too, but that’s no reason to show everyone farting all of the time. His point was that, as a movie scene, it has been done a thousand times. It may have had a dramatic effect at one time, but we’ve all seen it so many times now, it no longer carries any dramatic weight.
It’s kind of like the slow motion scene of someone hollering, “Nooooooo!”, just when his buddy is being shot or blown up. People probably actually do that in war, but it’s been so overdone, that I wouldn’t include it in any war film I was shooting.
That scene lost its dramatic effect many years ago and so does the, “tell my wife I love her” cliche. Just leave it out or maybe do something different, like “tell my wife I forgot to take out the trash”. At least you’ll get a laugh.
According to eye witnesses the two “cliche” death scenes are what was reported to have been said by the dying soldiers. That part is actually historically accurate perhaps to a fault.
That's why I'll never watch one of this jackhole's videos again until he apologizes. F-him. Why don't you apologize Nick?
My young (and VERY stupid) nephew was complaining loudly about how "unrealistic" the death scenes in old western movies are. I asked him "How many people have you seen die, let alone die from gunshots?" When he couldn't answer I had to follow up with "Then you wouldn't really know whether it's realistic, or not. Would you?" Remember that he's exceptionally dumb, so I couldn't just leave that last question unasked.
I then decided to rub it in further, by showing him data that revealed that most people who are shot will die from blood loss caused by the bullet, not from the shock of being shot, as the movies would have us believe. At the end of all of that, I finally got him to admit that maybe the "unrealistic" old westerns were actually more realistic than the modern movies, when it comes to deaths by gunshot.
Exactly to both comments
@@Raz.C they do die after going into shock blood loss leads to shock it's called hypovolemic shock.
I agree with you there like she's lived under a rock for so damn long she's never heard of racism she hasn't heard of you know the South having a white drinking fountains only yet she acts like she hasn't even heard of the civil Rights movement I agree with you this is what pisses me off throwing this racial bulshit in there for absolutely no damn reason
I was an American Infantryman who fought two tours in Iraq - my first during the surge to retake mosul in 07-08...
I watched a friend of mine slowly die after being ripped apart by a roadside bomb, and due to how hard the enemy was hitting us, we were unable to get air extract and all reinforcements from the Fob were having trouble getting to us.
Him and I were pals as we were the young guys - both naive, patriotic 19 year olds, believing wholeheartedly we were fighting the good fight. I knelt by him, trying to distract him from what we all knew was immenent but refused to admit. As my buddy laid dying, shaking from the blood loss, with the medics trying feverishly to keep him conscious... He opened his eyes, seemingly staring off into the heavens, and said "I'm proud that I died fighting for America." Despite our best efforts to lie to him and tell him he was going to be ok, and despite the Docs trying their best to defy death, he soon passed from this world unto the next...
I know from an outside perspective it may seem cliche to make a declaration of loyalty to the country that ultimately cost you your life, but it's not uncommon for a soldier to take solace in his death, believing he died for something greater.
I respect you not only as a fellow veteran but also as someone who understands. Me and pal of mine had been stuck together since boot and he got shot in the neck because he lost his cool and tried to run during our first firefight, so I had to watch him die because we couldn’t get to him because we were under heavy fire.
That's sad, but you get paid to do the job. When you go to war, expect some death.
@@thetute59 Yeah, he's sentimental about buddy, not about guys he killed. Plus, I disagree with the term "patriotic war". Everybody knows bullshit excuses for Vietnam, Afghan & Iraq. Right now we are hearing bullshit excuses for Venezuela and Iran.
@@thetute59 I don't care about soldier's last words. They die for nothing. I have no respect for anybody, who participated in aggression on foreign country. I agree with Minty, who found some scenes as pathetic and unneeded.
cyco1980 as you sit safety in your house writing UA-cam comments
While I respect the research History Buffs did for this, having been around my share of dying and injured people as an EMT, people absolutely think of their loved ones when they feel the end is near.
So true, and he was saying it’s cliche like what!
Things are cliche for a reason
Oh definitely, it’s not nearly as cliche as people think. The two “cliche” death scenes in the movie are not cliche at all. They were the guys actual last words.
@Wayne Smith Sure. Zero. Right.
as a retired combat vet..... fucking Eh!
And the kids' scenes are right out of my childhood as a military family.
The "Tell My Wife I Love Her" actually happened, read the book.
Yeah, I bet it's been said many times in real life.
Maybe.
...and, "I'm glad I could die for my country" was in the book too.
Charles Chapman
Charles Chapman, this information about the Americans dying on their backs and the Japanese dying face down is rather interesting. Where did you read that?
The bits where he criticizes the “cliche” deaths is unwarranted as those were directly in the book and the family scenes are very literally relatable to people from that time. My parents, uncles, aunts, and grandparents all enjoyed those scenes because that’s what things were like for a lot of American families back then.
Yes, but "back then" they were fed a John Wayne impression of the war.
So, the "tell Laura....I love hor" is horribly cliched.
Apart from the shivering , theyre highly idealised death scenes.
@@olliephelan that’s what the soldiers said tho when they died
@@Walker-ow7vj
Eh,,,,,,,NO,
No they didnt.
Some might have said something like that 5 minutes before they died, but people generally die unconcious, gibbering or screaming, suffocating or convulsing. You never hear a death rattle in a movie.
They only say "TELL......LAURA ....I LAVE HOR " and slip away with perfect timing in very bad movies.
@@olliephelan How many people have you watched die?
@@YungBeezer
You tell me why it matters and Ill tell you.
As someone who actually knew Hal, his depiction was rather accurate. I knew him as an old man and watched his decline following his wife's passing. He never cared about himself, his focus was always the well being of those around him. The man was a legend and I'll take out anyone who says otherwise.
Otherwise
@@bringuspetscop2pyro349 got him
@@ethanstum7798 hell ya
@@wyshbon who are you talking about?
@@wyshbon he’s talking about the movie and how accurate it was. He made no real mention of actual family members. Relax.
I went into the army in 1980 to 83. I am from the south. There was a guy from Wisconsin he told me he never met a black person in his life until he joined the army.
I was in the Army from 1972 to 1975, and I had never had any contact with any black people until I was in the Army. I am native american, and I can tell you that I was not treated well and although it was nowhere near as bad as it had been a generation before me--it still stung. When I was younger, I did not even know that some of the names they called me were supposed to be hurtful. Until I went home and asked what they meant. Thereafter, I chose to ignore them, and chose to be like my dad who fought in WWII and Korea, and he ignored all the denigration. So I joined the Army in 1972....the rest is history and cannot be changed. I regret none of my choices.
My friend who fought in Nam said that at least 25% of the soldiers were totally illiterate. One of his white buddies from West Virginia actually thought that black men had TAILS, until they all took showers together. Welcome to the USA...
ChiP2sumP Thank you for your service sir.
People tend to forget that blacks only make up about 13% of the population here, mostly in urban areas. I grew up in a rural area outside of Detroit, yet almost never saw a black person until I started taking jobs closer to the city.
Being from Wisconsin.. that seems odd.. Milwaukee is a very "diverse" city, for instance
My uncle was there... He watched this film with me and said the only thing they had wrong was the way everyone was standing up and running around. The grass was over 6ft tall and you couldn't see more than a few feet most of the time. After the fighting started it became easier to move due to the grass being worn down. But all in all it was a great movie showing what it was actually like in combat.
That's what I didn't like about this movie was how everyone just stood up and ran around in the open. When bullets fly over your head you fucking hit the ground or hide in whatever hole you can and everyone yells "where the fuck did that come from?!"
. I still loved the movie but, goddamn...
Chris Stevens my uncle was there as well. I have not watched this knowing that one of those young men is a representation of him.. actually in all I had for Uncle’s there just at different times but one in this battle.
Nor did the movie deal with that sharp grass, Called elephant grass(?)
Thanks for sharing that
My dad was there too. Watching this movie was part of his rehab, he had blocked the whole thing out do to PTSD.
“Tell my wife I love her” and calling for their mother are the most common last words for soldiers in Vietnam I believe, so it actually has a point in the movie and not really something to complain about tbh.
In any war it's true.
Yeah, that's an universal thing, the freedom fighters of the Vietcong would also do that after realising they had little time left.
@@Kriegerdammerung And we see at the movie's end, the grieving widow (or perhaps sweetheart) of an NVA soldier.
@@NickB1967 That must be an extended version, in my country I never watched that finale.
About the two soldiers were killed who said "Glad I could die for my country" and "Tell my wife I love her".....I hate to burst your bubble but that is exactly what those two soldiers said before they died. The Lt. and 1st Sgt. of the "Lost Platoon" were the first casualties of the battle and their words were heard from those who were with them when they died. Sorry the Historical accuracy of their last words on this planet was too much for you.
You may ask who my source is? Retired Gen. Hal Moore.
Robert MacLean
He was probably irritated bc they did a whole scene for the two mens deaths
Making it too cliche
Could of been more humble with the filming making and made them a quicky
For example emphasize the "Wife" scene n' then the boy who cries "Country" could of been subliminal
Maybe overhead in the background
So vidid only true readers of book would of caught it
Robert MacLean
Just shooting two scenes of the same similarity really throws off a movie
Especially one that is supposed to be sad
Robert MacLean
Hope I didnt burst your bubble
Sorry that the director wanted to pay tribute to those fallen soldiers by putting them in the movie. Hope I didn't burst your bubble.
I've talked to dozens of Vietnam veterans for a documentary. They all say that soldiers almost always call for their wife or mother before their death. It's not cliche, it's an absolute truism. They also all, to a man, name this movie as the best and most accurate Vietnam War movie that has been made.
Dave Merlino I agree.
There was no heroic final charge in the book, that bayonet charge was a total bs.
You do a great job of assessing historical accuracy and how well a film captures the"feel" of a conflict. That is why I subscribe. But you have revealed, in this review, your Achilles heel. You have zero empathy, and little understanding with which to temper that lack of empathy, of why men fight and how they react when faced with their own death.
Soldiers are not mercenaries. We need to truly BELIEVE that our deaths mean something. We fight for each other, yes, in the moment. But we GO to war for those kids, and it needs to be addressed, however clumsily, in the movie.
When a spouse or sibling is informed of the untimely death of a loved one, they often react with the exact same inarticulate denial as the wife in the movie. I've been unlucky enough to be present on six such occasions, and I am here to tell you, that reaction is VERY true-to-life.
You need to learn that often things are cliche because they are universal.
Climb down out of your ivory tower once in a while, and experience life. Experience history being made, and you will understand why these three kinds of scenes MUST be in a movie. Then, feel free to critique how well or poorly they are done, but never again say they don't belong. They absolutely do.
Makes no sense at all your comment James, the first guy is acknowledging that so why the hell you say ''You need to learn'' ? wtf.
At the brink, is when a human will tell all that he loves or what he hates the most.
Just wanted to point out that I know that the "I'm glad I could die for my country" and "Tell my wife I love her" scene is a real cliche. however in the book it is what those 2 soldiers actually said when they died. It may have seemed cliche, but I think they were just trying to be as close to the book as possible... Some things from the book would have been too over the top and unbelievable, and too gruesome for the audience. I recommend the book to anyone who's into military history. Its one of the best I have ever read.
Yes. We were soldiers once and young and Black Hawk Down are perhaps the greatest books on modern war I've read. The movies are good too.
I was going to post this as well. Having read the book a couple times, I do remember this being actually said.
+Alexander Banas When you say "he" do you mean the movie's director, the book's author, or this channel's narrator? Since the book was written by two of the guys there, I believe they did their research. Since they were also consultants to the movie's director, I understand he took a few "licenses" to make it an action movie (the final "Charge" up the hill with the helicopter gunship swooping in, for example) but I believe the director also did a very good job of trying to get it (mostly) right. I do have issue with many of the criticisms History Buffs levels, but he does sound kind of young, so growing up in a different world gives one quite a different perspective.
+TheSheepDogPatriot1776 Saving Pvt Ryan at Omaha the guy with his gutts beside him in the sand. 😞
+TheSheepDogPatriot1776 I would imagine that. If it shocks us as spectators. To those who actually were there it must have trigered a go back to that hell. My deepest respect for those men and many kids 17/22 years old. Know we have a generation that has feelings that can't be hurt and chase Pokémons. God save us if we have a Holly war here in Europe.
What I took from your review of "We Were Soldiers" is that you have never been in a war zone. I served in Vietnam during the Tet Offensive before volunteering to relieve troops sent to S. Korea in response to the Pueblo hi-jacking, Operation Combat Fox. I received a minor injury, approximately a 2" x 1/2" piece of meat gouged out of the center of my back. A couple of days later I had to return to the base hospital to have my bandage changed. I couldn't go back to work as I was on pain meds. The night before there was a major firefight. As I walked down the sidewalk along the hospital there were a never ending row of the large laundry baskets like hotels & commercial laundries use filled to overflowing with blood soaked sheets. So much blood! Inside the hospital where they changed my dressing were seemingly endless rows of stainless surgical tables. I'm 76 now & I still can't get those images out of my mind. So take a breath before "laughing" at the death scenes & complaining about scenes of home corny or not.
From 21:00, to 23:38, you become desensitized to the feelings conveyed by dying soldiers and the families awaiting their return. It is infuriating to hear someone mock characters presented as realistic human beings for using (admittedly) clichéd responses when they are genuine.
That being said, this is still a decent review, and it led to further discussion in the comments, which is good.
Not to mention those were the actual last words of those men as they were dying in a jungle thousands of miles from their families. He really should have read the book and researched the battle more.
In fairness, post 1975, any movie using “tell my wife I love her”, or some other traditionally cheesy line should be universally panned for including that line in a dying scene unless used in real life (ironically in this case). Granted I’m sure 99% of the UA-cam comments quoted the 1 guy in the comments who actually read the book, most of the people probably thought the same of that scene or agreed until they read the comments, then decided to have a pussy fit.
Then again, I didn’t agree with the part he said about the black chick acting, but I also get the cultural difference between a dude who hasn’t had any impact of direct war in his direct sphere of socialism and a black American woman who knows what soldiers with a flag coming to her door means... so I’m not planning him that much for it.
23:05 I work in Casualty Affairs for the Army, and this is a 100% realistic reaction to notification. Happens all the time, people are at once in shock and disbelief, and are expressing denial while also not knowing what to actually say. So it just comes out as head-shaking and "uh-uh". Absolutely accurate.
Thanks for you're service on this Memorial Day! I have some questions...what kind of vehichle do you show up in? Uniform? Do you come with someone else? Do you need to be an officer? Any interesting stories?
@@TM-bn8pv Thank you. Okay, so to try to address your questions, which are all good:
1. The vehicle will be whatever we can get. We will try to provide a government vehicle (usually a sedan) to the notification team, but if it's a late-night or really-early-morning notification, and the motor pool is closed, they may end up just going out in their own personal vehicle. We try to minimize that happening, but sometimes there's just no way around it. Timely notification takes priority over being choosy about the car they drive.
2. Class A Army Service Uniform, 100% of the time. We will never send a team to do notification wearing anything less than their full dress uniforms.
3. The notifier always has a Chaplain (military version of a priest or minister) to go with them. It is a mandate from the DOD that a Chaplain always goes along. There are occasionally exceptions where we might be permitted to send a notifier with another Officer or NCO who isn't a Chaplain, but those exceptions have to come from Department of the Army.
4. Not necessarily. The basic requirements are that notifiers (and assistance officers) must be Sergeant First Class+, Captain+, or Chief Warrant Officer 2+, so senior NCOs and Warrants can be notifiers as well. The more important requirement is that they are equal to, or greater in rank than the deceased soldier.
5. Tons of stories, far more than could fit in the comments section of UA-cam lol. Every case is unique, and has its own special circumstances that we have to deal with, or family situations that make things difficult. But dealing with the unique challenges of each case is why we're here, and it's an honor and a privilege to be given the opportunity to help a soldier's family through the worst time of their lives.
@@henrym.2156 Thank you for responding! Especially on Memorial Day, this has to be a day that will be tough for some of those families, but also those that will celebrate their family or friends who sacrificed for the greater good.
Tough job but a really meaningful job to have...to never know the reaction to being someone that can provide a family member some support. It's tough now for sure, just cant imagine it back in WW2/Vietnam wars.
Despite the loss, I love the tradition of the notification. I dont know if you could do it any other way.
One last couple questions:
1. Do you stay with the families/family member for awhile (if they want somebody or are alone at the time), and provide comfort (hugging, and things like that you see in movies)?
2. Do you handle most of the lost soldiers arrangements for burial and viewing/funeral and anything else that goes into the post notification process for the family so they can grieve and not worry about that?
3. If you are notifying a family member or doing any other arrangements at the time, what is the day to day work?
4. What is family is not home or wherever else you think they are to notify them?
5. If the lost soldier has no family left, I'm guessing someone needs to be designated such as a friend?
Last question, and I truly appreciate you answering my first set. And if you dont want to reply, no harm....
6. What if the name of the soldier killed has been released by the media or some other entity before the notification process? How do you adjust for that situation?
Thank you! And again I truly thank you for you're service and wish you a happy Memorial Day.
@@henrym.2156 i've just noticed there is a movie called "The Messenger " with Woody Harrelson in it. Have you seen that and is it a realistic portrayal of your work?
@@TM-bn8pv I have. It gets a lot right (family reactions, the impact on the person doing notification, the dangers of getting too personally involved), but it gets *a lot* wrong, too. There is formal training that soldiers go through to be considered qualified to perform a notification, a Staff Sergeant is too low a rank to be a notifier, a chaplain would be in attendance, and the notification team normally spends time at the family's house after the notification to answer questions, and fill out some paperwork. All in all, it feels like a Hollywood producer got their hands on an outdated version of the Army regulation for Casualty Affairs and jumped head-first into making a movie without understanding half of it.
i can see what you identify as cliches throughout this movie, however the dying words of the american soldiers such as "i'm proud to die for my country" and "tell my wife i love her" are historically accurate. These words were actually uttered by these men as they died. Read Lt.General Harold G Moore's published and well known account of the battle. That these men would say such things is historically unsurprising for the time. Remember this is 1965 and these were idealistic WASP young men. This is early Vietnam war. Subsequent conscripts may well have not been so endoctrinated or "all American". These young men of '65 were however an elite and by and large the sons of military families, so their dying utterances are perfectly natural given the time and their backgrounds. It was Lt.Herrick who stated "i'm proud to die for my country" and this young man meant it. Its only subsequent films and a changing historical perspective that make such statements seem cliched. The changing interpretation and character of this war needs to be considered quite closely to gain an understanding of its historical message.
I think to a British observer it would seem like inconceivable cheese. We're used to a bit more blunt candor from our war heroes.
Yeah but facts are facts.
Perhaps so Mr. Spencer, but really the presenter should have done his research. Kind regards, Andrew Grundy
Or at least that is what Harold G Moore said were their last words...
They may very well have said it, and all power to them if that is the case... But it is still pretty cheesy, and it is not helped by the way the way it is shot. If you like that stuff, or believe that it is important then fine, personally I almost always skip that part, because I feel that it degrades an otherwise really good film, to some sort of propaganda...
Doug Spencer I don't know if you can consider that as not candor.
*”write an original death scene”*
People dying: yeah you’re right I’ll die a different way this time
9:40. Wow.This happened over 50 years ago. But to him its as clear as yesterday. He still remembers the casualty's name and that his wife was expecting... Sad stuff. Really sad stuff.
True Officer. True and Trough.
+Kalle Cederström That was the photographer.
The primary victims are the soldiers. Hillary has no clue.
My job while in Nam was that of a photographer. When the movies photographer tried to pick up the feet of a badly burned man and the skin came away, I had to get up and leave the theater. All I wanted to do was to get home to safety. It sticks with you, forty, fifty or more years.
I was with B2/7 on The Mang Yang Pass when two A1E Sky Raiders crashed almost on our positions. I was detailed to recover "GI" material and found the body of one pilot. I could not pick him up because he was still very hot and I had not brought gloves. I was ordered to take up security while they put the body in my poncho. A few hrs. later I was told I had to re-enlist or go home. Captain Dyduryc did offer me promotion to E-4 but that was all. I did not re-up and Rescorla just grinned real big when I gave him my last salute.
Forgive the soldiers' inability to be witty in death.
"You know. I always hated that fucking Lt. To much spitting"
*dies*
*cracks joke*
"Wow what an asshole"
@macsikar Mackay dude what these men did was far from greatful. This war was pointless or how they dropped everything on the vietmen. I'm cracking a joke about the whole tell my wife I love her. I feel sorry for you folks do know the difference between a joke and an insult.
Logie you act like they had a choice about going to war. You realize there was a draft right? Fight or prison. Your two options take it or leave
@@kaedynbingham6829 why are you blaming the soldiers? I'm blaming high command. Troops follow orders and yea Ik they got drafted. But some wanted to fight and protect the war. You completely missed my point. America has ruined that land for what seems forever. And all vietnam wanted was to be it own nation. Again this war was only to stop commies from developing in Europe. Plus even the troops did unspeakable things which again America has caused.
None of the heartfelt moments in the movie are farcical , they are as true as the early sixties, and for those of us who lived them, we feel then, we do not laugh.....
23:02 That scene actually moves me to tears each time I watch it. In my opinion, the realization of her husband's death and the following denial to accept it comes across very real, very human.
I don't think he's had a lot of interaction with African American women either. I thought it was done exactly right!
I have to agree, as a Marine, I had to go along with the I&I and the chaplain a few times. It is the most heart wrenching display, she played it perfectly. Everyone reacts differently. Some have incredibly extreme reactions and some have none at all, trying to keep their composure.
@@ashleighelizabeth5916 exactly this
I've seen a few people die in my time, unfortunately. The times that I've been there when the wife is informed can be varied from what this actress portrayed to a simple lost stare, emotionless. We even had one wife who started laughing, thinking it was a joke being played on her, until reality set in.
Thank you for saying this .
Those soldiers actually said those cliche things as they were dying, though. You also have to remember this was 1965. Most people still were true believers and assumed their government wouldn't lie to them. Lt. Herrick was cut from that cloth, and absolutely said "I'm glad I could die for my country" before expiring. Because it's what he believed in.
This is a well done video, but even the most cursory research would've shown this. The scenes in question occur early in the book, and it's apparent that you simply didn't bother to read it.
hearing him talk about jim nakayama gets me everytime man....every freakin time....
the way he rubs his hands, it's heartbreaking man.
@@sidvyas8549 sahi baat hai
You can tell he’s reliving that moment feeling mans flesh on his hand.
Joe Galloway is one my biggest heros.
Joe Galloway is a man who was never meant for war, he was a reporter, a civilian picked up a rifle and fought, he was a hero.
I worked with one of Hal Moore’s daughters and had the privilege of meeting the general once. You didn’t like the scenes with the children, but it is true that he was a great family man that lived his wife and kids. Part of the power of the movie is showing that the general is not some two dimensional war monger. He cared about his family and his men.
That is cool that you met him.
While I agree, based on what you and others have said, that the criticism of 'fluffy' scenes is perhaps a bit too harsh, I also think that the overall sentiment is valid: it's all a bit too much (as in overdone), and could have been done better in a scaled-down, more focused manner. Like the letter-writing Vietnamese soldier; that poor sod got remarkably little screen time for the remarkable impression he made.
that's great
Or rather it WOULD be great, if it were true.
@@janbadinski7126 I don't want the fluff? Perhaps I was unclear, but I don't really care for it; I really do think it's 'overdone'. Perhaps Gen. Moore is/was a very loving, dedicated family man; great. I'm just saying that that could have been shown just as well in a more succinct manner that didn't make so many of us's toes crawl. It's not the fact I've got a problem with, it's the excessive amount of screen time it's given.
They could have at least done it in a way with humanity and not something that looked like a propaganda short for a concerned group of citizens promoting an idealized notion of the ideal nuclear american family.
To be fair to the referenced American arrogance about air superiority: The North Vietnamese's resilience is borderline miraculous. The fact that they were able to sustain the kind of damage and casualties they did and keep fighting is a testament to their remarkable bravery and hard work.
I wouldn't say America was arrogant. I would say the North Vietnamese were shockingly tough.
I’d wager a mix of both. American commanders in particular ranged from misguided to completely deluded, but I would agree that it would be disingenuous to the Vietnamese’ bravery and stubbornness to simply act like it was entirely American failure against an equally bad enemy as opposed to the complicated reality.
Yes, the freedom fighters of Ho Chi Minh were hot shit, fighting a war of liberation against the Pentagon is not a walk in the park. I always thank them for their service to their country.
Should of nuked them to hell..
All of those generals were young officers in WWII and Korea. They had seen Normandy, Anzio, Tinian, Iwo Jima, Okinawa… of course they firmly believed America was an undefeatable military power. They watched the America of their childhood go from the Great Depression to the industrial leader of the world. They saw their military go from still using horses and biplanes to fully mechanized infantry and nuclear weapons.
That arrogance had been cultivated by 25 years of explosive growth on top of victory in a generational war. A general in 1965 had stayed in the military through the post-war draw down, the economic boom of the 50’s, and rise of the Cold War. He’s not wishy-washy about America and it’s place in the world. The kind of man who rises to flag rank in that environment is by his nature arrogant about America.
Of course they would not and could not see the Vietnamese as a real military threat.
'for every one Vietcong soldier you kill, you've created 20 more Vietcong soldiers'
I see all the hate in comments, and jesus, I gotta say.
Read the book next time before you do a review of a movie it's based on.
I have the book. The second half, talking about the next 3-4 days of fighting after the Helicopters took the 7th out...
Now THATS a snafu!!
Steven Rose well, if you remember just before the full training segments, the young officers were examining and playing around with a minigun that was shooting dummy rounds.
And the first time Moore was trying to put some covering fire for his men that were placed at the base of the mountain that the NVA were based at, those two Huey’s had the Rocket pods that were just becoming standards on most Huey’s at the time, in a short moment reaction response to experience from a few previous skirmishes.
Steven Rose also, I don’t disagree with your statement in the slightest.
It’s true with the early months and years of the war.
RIP to Captain Thomas Metsker, who gave up his seat on an evac chopper to one of his soldiers who was injured worse. After hopping off the chopper he was shot and killed right then and there. A fellow alumni of The Citadel, and a national hero, he will forever be remembered
Thank you for sharing his story. A true hero.
RIP to a true hero. He was played by Clark Gregg who also played Agent Coulson in the Marvel movies!
Metsker's daughter would go on to marry Galloway.
Singing Bingo and other songs in the car was how you kept your little crotch goblins busy on road trips. We did this in the 1970s. This is an actually slice of Americana for the period.
@Full Blooded American Mutt - Yep, loved interacting with the truckers. We played Eye Spy and other games. This was more important when the speed limit was 55 mph as trips got painfully long. Thanks President Nixon.
@Full Blooded American Mutt we always played the alphabet game on trips back to Cleveland from NC, we usually got stuck on Q
@The TacomaKid Or Mexican nationals(not talking about illegals either, Mexican truckers carrying loads to Oklahoma distribution hubs. Look up NAFTA superhighway)
I wasn't born in the US, but I remember singing Bingo with my kids ffs!
I used to sing with my kids in the car all the time. I am not sure why you felt it was necessary to criticize this. Wait until you have children of your own. If you do have children then they must really think rides with you are very boring.
I’ve watched about a dozen of your reviews and this is my first serious disagreement with you. I was 5 years old when I watched my dad go out the door to Vietnam (I'm guessing I was about the same age as Gen. Moore's youngest when he deployed). I appreciated the kids being depicted as they were in the film, especially the youngest. At that age, trying to understand why dad has to go to this war half way around the world is not easy (I had a similar conversation with my dad that Moore had with his daughter). My dad completed his 13-month tour and came home in one piece. The scene where the black woman received the telegram about her husband being KIA, I think, drove home just how badly prepared the US Army was for this battle from a morale and support standpoint.
Watching that vet break up over what he saw... damn.. that hit home.
He's not a vet but a photojournalists still deserves respect though guy was in the shit a lot
@@texasPITBULL54 Ain't no noncombatants today, son.
@@texasPITBULL54 Joe Gallagher. God bless him.
@@texasPITBULL54 he picked up a rifle that day and killed some of the enemy, he is a Vet for sure despite his occupational status.
Happy Being Miserable he had an excellent part in the recent Ken Burns documentary about the Vietnam war, he was essentially pressed into service by the CO that day.
I remember watching this film in history class. My teacher was a Vietnam vet.
He wasn't in this particular battle but he said that when men died they always cried for one of two people: their wives or their mothers.
Mother's touch cold as day. Women's touch make men quiver
Men in boats shot to shit
Thinking of the love ones
Reminds them of joy,
Interrupted by the sounds of
War.
@@logie3020 WTF? That is your response? Four things I am willing to die for: 1. My child 2. My wife 3. My country 4. My faith
Why introduce a lame poem into a serious conversation about one's mortality and the validity of one's final words?
Not cool, man.
@@johngalt6752 that was a poem about soilders dying not the beach thinking of love ones in their last min in this trash earth. I have nothing but respect for those who traded their lives just for me to tell you to fuck off. Your not cool and neither is the American government for having this conflict in the first place. War is the undeming truth that without it we would be moving shit.
@@CPTdrawer22 still didn't take away the fact America has done some terrible things to people in the past. But that's history yeah I've never fought but don't get me wrong here I love the false freedom that we have. Your still goingon about freedom but to this day in your country you will be shamed for even bring up freedom of speech America is a joke.
@@logie3020 Happy to butt in on this one. What peaceful nation do you hail from so I can search for the terrible things it has done... hypocrisy. And, how much freedom do you need? You can only have so much before you're infringing on the freedom of others hence there are limitations....
23:02 Im gonna have to disagree on you with this scene in particular. She perfectly captures all the 5 stages of grief in the matter of seconds. I dont think it unlikely someone would react this way when told of their husbands death.
@Elvira Dela Cruz well in that case mmmMm mmMm 😶😐mmMm
Mmm mm *finger snaps
Just..... no. This performance is just bad. She just seems to go from sassy to sad in an instant.
@@tylermcneeley3136 Sometimes the death of a loved one hits you in that exact manner.
Nah man no one does that people usually find in themselves a place to put it but nothing like the reaction we saw in the scene yes and a no
I don't understand how basic human emotions in last moments or when met with information of losing a significant other can be cliche.
General Hal Moore passed away this past weekend at the age of 94. Thank you for your service sir. RIP.
Rest in peace General Moore. A true gentleman.
"Thank you" for what? What has he done for you? Protect muh freedom? Vietnam was never a threat to the US or Europe.
one day after my birthday :(
My grandfather served in Korea. He never talked about it either. When I came home from my first Iraq tour we had so much more in common and after that he opened up, it also gave me a chance to talk to someone who understood.
rest in peace you earnt it
Having seen both sides in person. 1. People who are in their final moments do think mostly of loved ones.
2. The woman making noises and being very emotional when faced with the death of her husband. That is a very normal reaction.
3. If you are going to criticize something you should study what you are criticizing before you make yourself look ignorant.
Exactly !! It's a fact of Denial and loss of Words!
I also thought the lady's reaction was absolutely realistic. Denial.
The problem with the guy thinking about his wife was not the scene per se, but that it has been done to death and often spoofed. They should have known how people would react to it and shouldn't have included it.
It is like killing the good guy's family in an action movie - such a cliche that the last time I simply turned off the movie. The last action hero made fun of it 25 years ago and they still use it.
Dang English snobbery
Exactly, the sergeant that was dying and talking about his wife was in the dance scene. As he is dancing with her, he is singing to her and clearly loves her dearly. He has facial scars suggesting a prior war perhaps Korea. This review mocks him and his sacrifice.
@@ralphalvarez5465 No, it mocks the scene where the movie decides to shit on him by making everyone roll their eyes. It doesn't matter if he really said it. We're not watching the actual guy actually dying. We're watching a movie, where they decided to include "tell my wife I love her" v2742.35.8, even though that line was stupid the second time it was put in a movie already.
Had to deliver the news to a mother her son was passed on from a car accident... She virtually had the same response as the lady at the door... She kept repeating Ya'll stop lying to me at least 20 times and her husband finally downstairs and held her she told him we were lying to her...
Thus that scene was very real life to me... I delivered bad news as a police chaplin over a 100 times and each was a different experience with the person at the door...
Yeah, reviewers don't understand how individual reactions can be in stressful situations...
I think it's hard for people to understand trauma if they have never been through it themselves and only seeing it in movies.
My best friend was murdered when I was 18 and when his brother told me on the phone I just broke down and threw up in the toilet. Up until that moment if I ever saw someone throw up in a situation like that I thought it was kind of done for the movies.
I try not to judge people who haven't been through something like that I just look at them as they are a bit naive and innocent.
Jimmy, when I worked as a cop I did a number of death notifications. I'll second your statement that some people just stand there and refuse to accept the news and just say "No". Seen it myself a few times. The scene was perfectly reasonable.
I like this guy's reviews but sometimes he tries to be a bit too smart for his own good. For instance, he hates the scene with the kids in the car singing. I was a child of that era, and on long trips that what we did to pass the time. There were no portable DVD players, no cell phones, and not even FM radios in most cars. We sang songs like that with our parents until we got tired and fell asleep in the back seat, which is what our parents were trying to achieve. Cheers, and thanks for your service as a police Chaplain. I've seen you guys do great things in my time on the street.
This was one scene that got right the gut wrenching emotions expressed when being told of a loved ones unexpected death. I experienced it twice with 2 of my sisters. They were aged 31 and 54 and died years apart. The first I dropped the phone and just stared at the ceiling totally numb. My wife asking me what;s wrong and I literally could not answer. The second time complete different response. A complete cerebral calm came over me which allowed me to step into the middle of a chaotic situation and become the voice of reason to help the rest of my family to make the necessary decisions in the aftermath.
Her reaction was as real as it gets.
@@PPISAFETY I did/still do notifications, and I can confirm. Women lose it. Men go into problem solving mode.
Stay safe.
"If you're gonna have to do a death scene, then do it in an original way"
You mean stray from the source material? The very thing you crap on movies for? Soldiers die, and I'm their final moments, are certainly not poets, they think of home, their wives, kids and their country, doesnt take an enlisted man to know that.
Nicky will always be pissed at America until we apologize for rejecting his mentally unstable King and Class System, where certain people are born superior to others and deserve ridiculously lavish lives at the expense of their subjects. I would be pissed too, just from the emotional pressure of trying to retain and defend a belief in that system.
Completely right
Draftees accounted for about 25% of all US Vietnam soldiers. Most were volunteers.
As to those death scenes, that is how they happened. If it's over the top, well, talk to history.
Guys volunteered for many different reasons from patriotism to boredom at home. One of the many reasons to enlist was the hope that by enlisting and not waiting to be drafted they had a better chance of not being sent to Vietnam but to
Germany, Korea or even remaining stateside, Some did it to avoid being put into the infantry or a combat support outfit
but would be trained into a non-combat MOS. A friend of mine"back in the day" had some accounting credits and thought he was "too valuable" to be made a grunt and shipped to "the NAM". He was partially correct. He was sent to
a military finance and accounting unit-in SAIGON. True story...
@@GFSLombardo "Guys volunteered for many reasons from patriotism to boredom at home." Lmao imagine being a bit bored at home, signing up to the U.S. Army and then going through the hell of Vietnam just screaming "I DIDN'T SIGN UP FOR THIS!"
@@snorf525 I know a couple guys that signed up because they were bored and ended up in Afghanistan... kinda a common theme for a young 19 year old men to do I guess haha.
There's nothing more boring than being on deployment, at least for the typical soldier.
You literally copy and pasted someone else's comment from 2+ years ago lmao
I agree with the comments below by Mr. Campbell. I was a corpsman in Vietnam in 1965. Most ground troops were average age of 18 to 20. I have heard soldiers crying for thier mothers as they lay dying from terrible wounds that could not be treated properly fast enough. Tramatized men with legs blown off. Abdominal wounds impacting the major organs, kidneys, liver, stomach, intestines shredded, but amazingly still alive for a few minutes. Calling out names of people in thier lives, before they received multiple grains of morphine. My training was to put the morphine syrette hypodermic needle through his shirt collar and bend it over, and with my marker make a big M on thier foreheads. These symbols would tell the medics and doctors at the field hospital this man has had morphine. The idea being to communicate the message, "careful don't overdose this patient." When one sees thier first real traumatic foot amputation from a marine stepping on an antipersonnel mine, it is horrible. That's when the idea runs like the speed of light through your head, "they didn't train us enough." But you do your job and the image in your head never goes away.
You really can NEVER get enough training sadly... war is hell, any any rational, healthy mind is not designed for it.
Thank you for your service sir god bless
@@kinagrill agreed
@@kinagrillwar is not hell, because in hell, only the guilty are punished
And what is the criteria of being guilty? according to the bible for example, I'm going to hell for not being a believer.@@ntfoperative9432
The death scenes that upset you so bad were real according to the book lt. Herrick said "At least I got to die for my country." and the sgt who died right after him said "tell my wife": Sorry there last words were to cheesy and "patriotic" for you
It's amazing he didn't bother to actually read the book, seeing as its the single most comprehensive piece of history on the battle having been written by the commanding officer and the only journalist to actually be there who interviewed the survivors, including from the NVA side. Like wtf, it's just disgraceful he'd attempt to critique the historical accuracy of the movie without reading the damn book its based on!
Thank you for pointing this out. I was going to do the same.
Who thought those last words were too cheesy and “patriotic” for them? Also why is “patriotic” in quotation marks?
killing people in the name of your country is no more patriotic than killinh people in the name of religion is righteous and to die for your country so it can expand its own influence to people who dont want it is blind faith to a tyranical government and its agenda. patriotic should be fighting for and protecting your country and that is only possible when it is defensive fighting. if you invade you are killing that countries citizens which is no different than someone breaking into your home and killing your family so they can steal your money to feed their own family. quit with the brainwashed patriot act.
Stop being so over-dramatic, guys. He's talking about how the film represents these events. And he's right. The scenes are cliched and detrimental to the immersion. The film often feels authentic but is punctuated by moments of emotional cheesiness that don't work cinematically.
The very fact that there is so much debate about it and so much people who feel the need to justify these scenes in the comments is a proof that these scenes are cinematically bad.
21:26, those two death moments I think went over History Buffs head. It wasn't simply the cliche, the tone and way he the first man delivered the line "I'm glad I died for my country." was so heartbreaking. These kids really thought they were going all out in service of their country. A whole generation raised on the heroics of WW2 and the war stories of Korea. What a fool I would have been alongside them.
Just to get spit on and called a "Baby Killer" when they returned home.
@notrius7754 They were serving Murican imperial interests in Asia. Which is service to America and a democracy where only the rich vote.
@notrius7754 Oh. The votes of your master class are the only ones that actually determine the conditions of your life. Your empire exists to serve the holders of Capital. You rabble are there to live and die making profits for the already wealthy.
That's why you don't have universal healthcare.
It's also why your taxes went up.
@notrius7754 Cuba has better health outcomes than the U.S.
@notrius7754 Every world health ranking that isn't funded by American corporations.
Did you read the book. That Sargeant really did say "Tell my wife, I love her"
kevin peine not all autobiography books are accurate
kevin peine,
And the correct spelling of that rank is: ' Sergeant '.
@@mck1972 stupid autocorrect thanks for pointing that out
@@primusvsunicron1 I agree with you for the most part but the author of the book was Galloway (The journalist) with the help of Lt. Gen. Moore and other witnesses. So as much as it is a cliche, I'm okay with it since it wasn't just placed in the movie out of nowhere but taken out of the novel and made into a scene.
You answered your own question. Why even ask. Why not just say "In the book that soilder does say "tell my wife I love her." " you are hereby an official gay boi.
Listen. I love your videos but the lines in here, when the men died, are accurate. Word for word quotes. They asked for their mom’s. (Saving Private Ryan).
It was better than all of those other movies. Way better.
This movie was exact. Even the costumes were painstakingly built.
History Buffs clearly didn't read the book...of course, the movie also omitted the second part of the battle at LZ Albany where the US forces moving from X-ray to Albany were overrun and accounted for 70% of the US casualties in the battle. Even more terrible fighting than what the movie portrays since the NVA and Americans were scattered in pockets fighting against one another within just a few meters on one another. Soldiers could hear the screams of their comrades at night begging to not be executed and then singular gunshots...brutal, brutal stuff.
I would urge anyone who is interested to read Hal Moore's "We are soldiers still" which chronicles his research efforts with the Vietnamese and their reception of "We were soldiers, once and young". He went back to Vietnam with many of his former soldiers and the Vietnamese gathered many of their veterans of the battle to meet them...an extremely powerful book about healing and an understanding that combat soldiers have, regardless of nationality, for one another that the people they fight for have no idea about.
I saw a documentary from a former marine who went back to Vietnam and met up with former nva soldiers. He gave speeches at museums and was amazed at how the US forces had been depicted in an unbiased way . He got gifts from the locals but was called names by tourists .
He even saw graves and memorials dedicated to US service personnel.
It's something common among service people after a war has ended at least from what I've seen and read . My grand farther was the same. He never hated the Germans. A friend who liberated belsan camp didn't hate Germans. Hated Nazis. His division even found German regulars beating on camp guards and locals because of their disgust . It's how they discovered the camp.
I read that book i have it on my shelf few feet from me. I still remember how horrified i was from that one scene. Also i remember how one of those soldier who was executed was shot in the eye and woke up later and crawled back behind enemy lines.
TBH, I've been present during traumatic grief. The reaction shot of the Black American woman is spot on. TBH 2: in the Unit, the same actress portrayed essentially the same scene, making her the go to for newly widowed black woman. Also, the vital role played by Rick Rescorla was totally ignored. Also, there was a sequel LZ Albany. Coming to a theater near nobody.
Yeah, it's kinda dubious to portray the battle as an American victory, when at best it was a stalemate - the Americans took a solid kicking during the trek to LZ Albany. Both sides incurred roughly 50% casualties - and given the disparity in means could reasonably be considered a tactical defeat for the US.
@@onylra6265not really a stalemate. The US lost 3/4 of the fighting force at Albany, it really only shone light on the difference between a battalion commander being in the thick of things, with good, solid leadership from his immediate subordinates, and a command that intermingled a few good leaders with a commander who was naive or afraid of taking rounds..... C company I believe was in a column when the ambush started? And the front two companies were in good formation, but their leadership was 4-500 meters away with the B.C. ....LZ X-ray showed what highly motivated and well-led men could accomplish against a force at least ten times their own.
Not to mention that LZ X-ray was the last time a Colonel was deployed by America into a field battle. LZ Albany was a major blunder by the US forces trying to save fuel and machinery over human lives. The men were not even screening an advance. They were sacraficed due to poor military decisions by top brass.
“It sounds like I am nitpicking but this is so cliche!”
This statement would have been correct if it wasn’t for the fact that they actually said them in the book.
Womp womp womp.
Arif Akyuz it doesnt mean its not cringe as fuck
So what? It was still poorly done
It is correct, it's still technically cliché.
written by a man who may have been a witness to the battle but maybe not atleast one of the deaths.
evac slived yes, even though it actually happened and that man actually said that, but no, just because it’s cliche now, it has to be cringe that he said that
My uncle did three tours. He said this is the only movie that "Got it right".
@Claudia Juarez they did what they were ordered to, you never know, maybe he was drafted, and if he wasnt maybe he just wanted to help the american troops, war is bad no matter what, but sometimes, you do what you have to
Claudia Juarez Not best to assume the moral character of an individual you don’t personally know.
Claudia Juarez The same way you are, without knowing. Now stfu moron.
@Claudia Juarez BECAUSE HIS COUNTRY TOLD HIM TO GO YOU ILLITERATE DEMOCRAT FOOL. There is no such thing as individual discretion in this situation. Obviously you have never soldiered.
Claudia Juarez stfu moron.
21:40 "I know it feels like I'm nitpicking here"
That's because you are.
👍
Me eating a burger, I know it looks like I'm eating...
I. Think that's the fucking point.
It is shitty writing tho
They went with these takes because they were bringing in the whole human experience that you were too dense to see, instead you ridicule these scenes..... oh well, guess you need some whining to feel like you have criticized an did not say too much good about a film.. (keeps your credibility up [in your own mind] perhaps?) PS... we LOVE this movie, so much better then the other Vietnam movies that just show psycho, weirdness as norm...BS
Having been in the jungles in Vietnam I think people underestimate how brutal the heat would have been on top of all the other carnage. It is suffocatingly hot and humid there. I was drenched in sweat just walking around looking at some ancient temples in a t-shirt and shorts. I honestly dont know how it was possible to send a bunch of westerners into the jungle in all that heavy gear and have them run around in battle. They must have lost a lot of soldiers just to heat stroke and dehydration.
Most of the Vietcong and NVA were city dwellers as well. The jungle was foreign to almost all involved. The farm boys on both sides tended to handle it better.
This is from an Interview I saw with an NVA vet.
As a Vietnam war veteran who spent one year in the Central Highlands in Vietnam the Vietnam war was a total waste of life. Not just Americans but those that I saw of the Vietnamese. Look at it today now we are trading partners with Vietnam . I still love my country but I would never send my boys into a war like Vietnam. I was awarded the bronze star with the V for valor . Most of my friends don’t even know that I served because I never talk about it. Why would I unless you were there you would never understand the horrors of war. God Bless
Just wanted to say cheers for your service mate, also that its sometimes forgotten that us aussies fought along side you yanks in Vietnam, my dad fought there and he never says a word about it. We have a long history of fighting together and i hope we never have to again but im sure we will have to do it all again soon the way the world is going. This beer i dedicate to you my brother :)
Welcome home.
jcims80; Thank you for your service - whether drafted or volunteer, it's appreciated. I assume you came home from your year in Vietnam, to a political reality very different than when you left. That was unfair to many returning soldiers, but it was what it was back here in the World. "...a total waste of life..." - I can tell you that the precursor, Korea, was even more so, and the Western Front of WWI as well. When literally zero difference is made in either territory gained (important to Generals and politicians) or number of lives lost while defending or attacking said territory over and over - it is a waste beyond measure in lives lost.
Thank you for your service sir
Semper Fi. Thanks for your service. However if you think that standing by and allowing the creeping expanse of international socialism isn't worth your life, might I suggest that your friends made the ultimate bet in the opposite direction, and you don't value their sacrifice enough. And if you personally don't think fighting against international socialism ( Communism) is important, please "retire" permanently so the Communist enemy can't retain your skill through the duress they will place your family under.
This episode doesn’t hold up to the rest of your excellent work. Where is the history of the actual event?
Agreed it's more of a review than actual historical factchecking
It's also his 5th video.
Not everyone is perfect.
its a pretty old video. 2015 old. cut him some slack.
I'm sorry those boys couldnt think of more interesting things to say when they died. Those two death statements actually happened and that's actually what they said. I respect your channel a lot, but you dropped the ball on this one. Those men weren't poets, and they're entitled to whatever cliches they wanted.
The men, yes. Not the movie. If you put lines like that in your movie, then don't be surprised when people roll their eyes. In a movie, those lines are beyond stupid, and he is talking about the movie.
@@OWnIshiiTrolling The movie is based on historical fact. Nick would RAIL on the movie if they changed the -actual spoken words- as he has done in previous reviews. This one he just completely missed the mark.
@@thereddhare I think changing the actual words is useful to avoid silly tropes. If anything, he should have been clearer about what exactly his criticism is. I don't think he is criticising what anyone actually said. If you get shot and die in a war, you can say whatever you want. I wouldn't clown on anyone for doing that. The critcism seems to be specifically about how that comes off in a movie, where those lines have been done to death. Changing that coud have improved the movie, if done well, and I think that is valid point. The movie portraying real events doesn't make it not a movie, and that has to be considered when writing the script.
Amen brother
To change the truth for pure entertainment and money is to dishonor the fallen. People who run from hide or change the truth are hurting themselves and or the people closest to them. This has been the problem with the average person. The truth only hurts once. A lie can last forever.
9:25 I’ve lived in Rigby, Idaho my entire life. To hear the man in that interview say that he witnessed such things happen to a fellow soldier from my hometown really hit hard. R.I.P and know that you’re sacrifice has not gone unrecognized!
I live in Buenos Aires, Argentina, I'm now 34 and since age 8 I was an avid investigator of the Vietnam War of Liberation, how Ho Chi Minh and his freedom fighters walked the extra kilometre, put their lives on the line to save their country from hi-tech enemies. Tales of heroism, sacrifice and bravery I counted in the scores! I always thank the Vietcong for their service.
@@Kriegerdammerungso what does this have to do with anything
@@dakotabynum5137 Everything, you silly
I've gathered cattle all over Idaho. The bugs there are insane... seen hordes of mosquitos in hill city that literally blot out the sun. Brutal place.
23:20 I know a LOT of black people where I'm from and I can tell you that a lot would react that way when speechless after tragic news. People from where I'm from, even myself, speak and react that way sometimes.
I agree. The point of that scene was she was trying as hard as she could to stay strong, while refusing to accept what she knew to be absolutely true.
Alot of "as a black guy...." vibes from this
Im married to a black latina woman and I can TOTALLY see this happening
For me, that reaction was spot on. Could be a cultural difference maybe? Perhaps Blacks in Britain react a bit differently to bad news (perhaps less outward expression of denial, or something?) I could be way off of course but that was my first thought.
I really like this movie because it's the only Vietnam War film that doesn't have an agenda. There's no stereotypical "Vietnam War was bad, you guys!" storyline thrown about.
Well the reason why the sentiment is actually very verifiable. As in there was a lot of people who agree with the notion that the Vietnam war WAS bad. That doesnt mean we cant appreciate the sacrifice and service of those brave young men. So just to clear this up. YES the Vietnam war was bad, there was absolutely no point to it. It was a waste of life, tax payer money, and an absolute waste of Americas Reputation but we can appreciate the courage and sacrifice of the US Military
@@moisesmontecillo7570 It's a shame a lot of people couldn't make this distinction back then. Would have been fewer soldiers spat on.
@@fester2306 agreed
For a historic review, you missed the chance to document another true hero of the battle, Rick Rescorla, a Lieutenant Platoon Leader, and whose photo adorns the cover of the book by the same name. Hal Moore described him as "the best platoon leader I ever saw". Rick, a Cornishman from England, deserves a film of his own, having led a storied life he died in the Twin Towers during 9/11, where he was credited with saving the lives of of over 2000 Morgan Stanley employees, before re-turning to check everyone was safely out the building, whereupon the building
Yea a true hero
Real human bean/ burrito
No one is born cool, except.. *Rick rescorla*
They did unveil a Statue to Rick Rescorla a while back legend. Had seen action before Vietnam in Africa. He was from Hayle same district I was born and raised in. Brave guy saved many lives on 911.
Rick Rescorla also died on 9/11. I think he was a security guard or something. They said he had a bullhorn and was leading people down the stairs before he died.
Going to add my voice to those saying the "the tell my ___ I love her/them" thing is absolutely real. My theory has always been that it got used once in a movie because it was used in a book before that. Whoever made that movie thought it would be a good thing to use to humanize the soldiers or show the atrocity of the waste of life that war is. But it's a real thing, and the word "heartbreaking" doesn't begin to cover it.
actually when i was a little kid i remembered always playing with my dads combat boots on together with our neighbours kids inside a military division. and yes we sang when we travel i still remember it so clearly like it was yesterday. and when i saw this scene it made me remember what my family was and how my mom was always worried everytime my dad goes into combat operations and yes we also pray together as a family like this in this movie.
I do love history buffs, becuase he knows so much abour history. but yes, as someone else says, he had a lot to learn about americans.
@@jakethesnake3593 that might be the most accurate description of him I’ve heard. He’s well versed in history but my god does he seem ignorant about Americans. He also seems to not have children based on his comments about the scene with the children
@@garreTTU2023 I said much the same a lack of understanding of the average American and how they responded to the great events around them and a lack of understanding of what it is to have children or to empathize with them.
Yes we did. Well said. The narrative critique was done by a person that wasn't raised by a generation that had the same family values that were portrayed in this film and because of that it is too campy. However, for those that were raised like this, we take it as a fond reminisce.
@@psiwaverebirth1 exactly.
My father was a 2nd Lt who trained with Hal Moore at Ft Benning. I was 3. He was promoted to 1st Lieutenant during that tour, following that battle. He has trained Alpha platoon (the "lost" platoon) and would have lead them in combat, had a captain not usurped his command. The Captain needed "his ticket punched" to proceed rapidly up the chain of command. That captain was the fool who chased the NVA kid and got his platoon cut off from Col Moore's main force. He actually did say that he was glad to be able to die for his country. Apparently the deaths of his men, due to his foolishness was lost on him. In any case , my father was the S2 Air, back at LZ Foxtrot, and survived the battle. He was there when casualties were brought in and actually threw buckets of water across helicopter floorboards to wash out the blood, but he lived. Back home, I Did run around the house wearing my Dad's jump boots. We had moved down to Georgia from Wisconsin. My Mother was clueless about discrimination. The Officer's Wives Club is a fixture on every Army post. It's a catty little chat circle, but since their families are usually a great distance away, they are the only thing that passes for family in military surroundings. I actually appreciated the renditions of family life portrayed in the movie. War affects more than just the troops in the field. You my find it innane, but our behaviors were always measured by how my father's career was affected. Lastly, I'd like to mention that Denial is the first stage of grief, and your derision of the way that officer's wife began her grieving defines your character far more than it defines hers. I own two autographed copies of We Were Soldiers. One was my Dad's, signed by General Moore and Joey Galloway. The other is mine, signed by Joey Galloway after my Father's death in 2003. The initial battle referred to in the movie is only half the story, the other half involved the withdrawal of the troops. The choppers couldn't evac the troops en masse. They had to march.
I just wanted to say I can't agree enough about what you have said in your comment. My Dad also was an Air Cav Platoon Sargent in 68-69 B-Company 2-7th Cav. He was in a very similar battle were they were almost overrun. His company commander a Captain now Retired General Barry McCaffery had Joe Gallaway ride with him as a war correspondent as he commanded the 24th Mech Division in Desert Storm. They became friends and I was able to also get my book signed by Joe Gallaway and Hal Moore as I went with my Dad to many reunions in DC for Veterans Day. I grew up around these men hearing their stories of what they went through. McCaffery is a lot like Hal Moore and an amazing leader who I have no doubt if he did not take over my Dads Company I don't think I would have ever been born as my Dad might have never made it home from Vietnam. I have learned that most people do not really understand what Combat Vietnam Vets really went through and also what the families went through. We Were Soldiers Once and Young was the book my Dad gave to me when I was 14 and said you want to know what it was like when I was in Vietnam. Read it and you will have an Idea. It's the best book iv ever read about the Grunt in Vietnam and it changed my life forever. For anyone that has just watched the movie you really need to read the book as if you think LZ X-Ray was bad you will not believe how bad LZ-Albany was. The Movie is the best of what's out there but the book is 100% real as it can get. I very proud to be the son of a Combat Vietnam Vet and very thankful to all that served there country and more importantly each other. As my Dad would say Garryowen!
@@jeffgast7215 Thanks for your kind and passionate comments. Our troops did the best they could in a politically dysfunctional situation. I'm glad our fathers had some great leaders to help bring them home.
It was a LIEUTENANT that chased that kid...I beleive it was Lt. Henry Herrick not a Captain..a Capt. commands a Company, ..it was 2nd platoon Bravo Company that was cut off after chasing that kid..the CAPTAIN commanding Bravo was Capt. John Herren and Lt. Henry Herrick led the Lost Platoon into a disaster... Thanks to your family for their service!!
@@jeffgast7215 You are thankful that your dad went to Vietnam? Why? That was a senseless war, you shouldn't really be thankful for that. Lol
Danimal is your dad a Cav Scout
Being a Military brat in the 1960's we spent as much time as possible together and moving to the new duty station while in the car for long drives we did not have any thing but songs and road games. And when dad deployed we didn't know what would happen. And when i served my family moved with me alot.
Having personally informed a widow and having held soldiers in their last moments, I can tell you, this movie, did wonders to capture the emotional intensity and denial that manifests itself.
If you’re not familiar with the process of the gut wrenching and chaotic nature of informing someone’s spouse of their passing, please, please, don’t take the piss.
Especially as you’re a smug civilian
you know civilians know what its like dealing with death more than soldiers families right?
@@narcissa1112
Is that your subjective experience?
Or are you drawing on a reference study?
And I agree, nurses, police, firefighters etc certainly do.
I think the problem with soldiers who served in Iraq/Afghanistan had it compressed down into a small time frame
Death isn’t the main factor in ptsd
It’s the constant fight and flight on a daily basis and the emotional numbing/depression that comes with dealing with that
Christ man, your nitpicks were that a movie that has good historical accuracy portrays human reaction to tragedy... accurately.
You suck
@Alexis Versa says the dipshit with your real name out
@@marbl3d45 says the angery anime man
@@nuttmc4803 check your grammar dipshit
@@marbl3d45 why are you so angry?
Maybe you should have read the book....
Those cliche lines of death were what those soldiers actually said.
I like you Nick, but sometimes you are the one who jumps to generalizations and misconceptions
and Hal Moore was a family man, so I don’t know what you expected his kids to be like...
Winaska cry
SweetBro HellaJeff cry
Even so, those lines were still cliché.
I think it's more about how the death lines were said that what was said.
He never said he had a problem with Hal Moore having a family, he has a problem with the acting and portrayal of the children. the writing, acting and presentation for them was awful. they lack even the most basic characterisation and nuance and are very one dimensional.
Nick does focus on how important it is that we see that the Vietnamese soldier is humanized yet Hal Moore as a family man is trivialized. Why is that? I thought the kids were fine and showed a idealized normal family where the youngest is a bit spoiled and gets away with stuff the older children would be scolded for.
I truly enjoy your videos, sir. But I do have to argue one of the cliches you didn't like. My youngest daughter loved running around our house in my combat boots while wearing one of my beret. I have plenty of pictures of her doing so. I do need to be a little biased and say she was completely adorable while she did it. This was a very common scene to see. All the little kids did this while living on base, it did not matter which branch or installation. She loved the military life style and being an "Army brat". One day she still remembers 8 years later was promoting me. I do understand it's a cliche. But it's a lifestyle that the whole family has to embrace. Since it happens so frequently it did turn into a cliche. Please do not take this as negative criticism, sir, I just wanted to convey my personal experience I had with my children and fellow soldiers and their families. I look forward to all of your videos. Keep up the great work.
Military myself, but as a kid id run around with my dads pc. Its your dad mom hell my brother used to wear my military jacket around the house
I had pictures of my daughter wearing my K pot when she was just a toddler. She was way cuter than the kids in the movie. (okay, so I'm biased. She's my kid after all.) Unfortunately, the ex wife kept the pictures so I have no idea where they are today.
Absolutely, I would constantly put on my dad's combat boots, and his hair, or field jacket or other things and run around pretending. It is all kids can do. We understood more than most adults realized, and pretending was a coaping method employed by most brats without them even knowing it.
thanksfernuthin You hit the nail on the head. I really do think that Europeans think these real life events are just cliche movie tactics. Whether it be wives and kids crying when a soldier leaves, or racial tension, etc, they don’t get it. It really did happen. Just because these things have been done to death in movies doesn’t make that any less true.
I'd like to say some Europeans understand . I loved it when my grandad would teach me to march or salute . I remember him teaching me how to bark orders properly which I use while at work and need to shout for something .
I've even given air cadets a lesson on how to salute properly . The nco asked if my family were RAF . Grandad fought 6 squadron DAF crossed north Africa 5 or 6 times on the front line squadrons .
Peace and good will.
The story that is told in the book is even more incredible than the movie. After this battle Moore basically took his force and saved another battalion that was in the mire. Moore was an incredible officer and leader
Moore had nothing to do with Albany
If you've never been in combat and heard what men say when they're dying you wouldn't understand. After 31 years I have heard men cry for their mothers, God, to tell my wife im sorry and I love her to the young kid that ask If he's going to heaven. Dis the death scenes but what would you say knowing you're dying? Jmo and experience.
Cliches have to start somewhere...
sometimes he's clueless...but I like him in spite of that..........I was a carrier sailor at the end of the war, 18 and scared......take care .........wiley coyote
Hardest thing I ever had to do was lie and tell a guy he'll be ok it looks alot worse than it is... hunts me in my sleep to this day. I lied and he knew it.
As cliché as the whole "tell my wife i love her" thing may be, there is a reason it is used so often. Because it is rather often the last words and last thoughts of many soldiers. Put yourself in the mindset of the average infantry grunt. You've just been sent into a battle, you've been shot, you know death is iminent and the one thing you keep thinking about in those moments is that you won't get to see the woman you love ever again. There's a man next to you, trying his hardest to save your life, and may be your best chance of being able to find some closure. You want to tell her that she means the world to you, that you wish you had more time, that you're sorry you couldn't come home. But time is just about up, so you say the one thing you really need to. You tell him to bring a simple message to her that can convey all that in just three words, "i love you". This is what most men, married ones at least, that are mortally wounded think of. It's a cliché and commonly used because it happens alot more than you'd think.
I think its just that particular phrasing thats a cliche, the dramatic "tell my wife i love her!" before a character dies is a cliche
@@nickthehatmansmoviehouse2538 Well there really isn’t a better way of putting it I think.
@@nickthehatmansmoviehouse2538 There might be a reason why they are cliches. Possibly because they're true.
@@nickthehatmansmoviehouse2538
yep,
3 in a row.
Vietnam was the first war with reporters embedded in combat troops. Seeing people killed on TV every night had a chilling effect.
Not sure how WWII would have played out if Normandy or Stalingrad was broadcast live.
the true difference in WW2 compared to Vietnam is that back in WW neither side had its hands tied behind theyr back by being restricted to purely military targets ... one of key ways in defeating an enemy is food, fuel, ammunition and other materiel disruption best achieaved by bombing the shit out of the industrial complexes.
Not only that but the Vietnam was constantly receiving supplies and arms from foreign sources that simply could not be severed unless you would be willing to go to war with the suppliers.
Unable to destroy the supply both domestic and foreign means all US had left as option was to score bodies ... and they were REALLY good at it, the fun fact is if US wasnt forced to pull out it was only matter of time until they achieved victory, sadly the glaring weakness of western political system showed its teeth and forced them to withdraw making all who died up to that point lay down theyr lives for nothing. Vietnam was decided by politics not military might both during with politics dictating the rules of engagement and after when soldiers were simply called off from conflict they were winning ...
Vietnam wasn't broadcast live. Military censors could review the footage.
North Vietnam did get strategically bombed despite what the above poster says. Heavily over Christmas 1972. Turns out Joe Public doesn't like hearing how his govt is using his tax dollar to bomb heavily populated areas at Christmas time. Bombing civilians never breaks a nation's will to fight, if anything it galvanises it.
@Sonny Pickering problem here is the countries "under the American yoke" tend to grow into economic superpowers and theyr communist counterparts always lead themselves to economic ruin and brutal dictatorial regimes ...
id say being occupied by Americans is much more prefferable than ending up occupied by Russia or China ... from personal experience as im from country that WAS occupied by Russians for decades ...
@Sonny Pickering from what i read its opposite, the Tet had the NV on the ropes and all it would take was a little push to have them keel over but as military was hamstrung by idiotic politicians they couldnt finish the job ...
You have to realize the war in Vietnam was fought using only fraction of Amaerican standing military and literally sabotaged from the inside by the government ... you cant do that, you cant use this, you cant have more men, you have to stop we are waiting if they are ready to negotiate ... no they arent fine you can start over again because we just gave the enemy time to put themselves together ...
and i think those "resistance fighters" came to regret that they didnt lose the war in the end ... communism is an ugly beast that tends to devour its own in absence of external enemy...
Kevin Moore During WWII Ernie Pyle accompanied infantry units into combat. He was killed doing this.
While I can understand your dislike of the wives and children scenes, you kind of have to have gone through it to understand the heartache. My dad served two tours in Vietnam, and shortly after was sent to Okinawa for two years. I didn’t really get to know my dad until after he retired.
You sir, have never seen a person in shock react. I love your channel, I respect your comments normally, however on this matter you are way off base. I have seen family members after being notified of horrific news react very much the same way as depicted. I have seen worse.
stepping back and responding in the negative is pretty much a base line response.
You're right. I love this channel, but he got this one fucked up. Hollywood adds a lot of dramatic effect, that's true, but sometimes it's needed: and this is one of those times.
Come on i think you are missing the point. If someone says one cliche dying line then sure but why it has to be instantly followed by another it just takes you out of the previous moment. Might as well had a third guy telling please water my house plants
@@Jebu911 sir. You are missing the point. Those are actually things that happen! Cheese or not. I’ve seen grown men call for their monies. I’ve seen a man (this one didn’t die he just lost his foot) talk about how shamed he was because what he was doing. (He was a drug addict long story short. He lost his foot during a burglary and while I attended him he told me all about his errors). Very cheesy stuff for someone who wasn’t there
@@toddkorson8207 You are still missing the point as we are talking about film making here. You don't see half the squad simultaniously taking a shit in the jungle either even tho that happened too.
@@Jebu911 I agree. One of us is missing the point. Enjoy.
I move for History Buffs to review Hacksaw Ridge. This is my first petition.
the real events of hacksaw ridge were too unbelievable for the movie, so they reduced the number of people he saved and the close calls he experienced.
RandyNewmanFan
Damn!
they had to bring back the movie because he saved to many Damn men!
Please do Hacksaw Ridge and please tear that shitty movie apart. Biggest pile of garbage I've ever seen.
It's Mel Gibson! You know you want to!
Andy Mehrts Think he'll fall for it?
Wasn't a fan of Hacksaw Ridge. Seems he returned to the old 'don't let any sense of reality get in the way of a story'. As soon as I saw someone firing a BAR one handed whilst holding half a corpse as a shield I thought 'oh come on!'
Your critique of the death scene by the young officer who said "I'm glad I could die for my country" is misguided. His character was portrayed as "gung ho" from the start. During training, Sgt.Maj. Plumley told Col. Moore "that one--the strong one--wants to win medals". The directors made a point of letting us hear the young officer exhort his mean to be the best company in the unit.
His line just before death is an epiphany that the work, training, and sacrifices of military life was all for naught because he effectively died in the first salvo of the first battle. I thought the actor was genius in his conveyance of the irony that the young and energetic leader died at the onset of the first engagement.
You may wonder why I'm telling you this: Imagine spending two FULL years of your life in military training to be snuffed out within two minutes of combat. THAT was what the young officer realized at this death. He-sure as shootin'--wasn't "glad to die".
As a US wartime vet, my interpretation certainly wasn't that the character was "dripping with patriotism" over his death. That was spectacularly dignified and retrospective remorse, maybe even sarcasm that his life's effort resulted in his immediate death at the first opportunity to prove himself in battle. Personally, I felt it was one of the best written and best acted death scenes I've ever seen in a war movie making an honest attempt at historical accuracy.
I think overall you do a very good job with your critiques, but your evaluation on this scene is what we call a swing and a miss in the US. Keep up the [otherwise] great work though.
And what we call this entire comment where I'm from is saying many words amounting to fuck and all, Yanky Dan.
I think this is a case of what happens when is civilians try to understand the military mindset. We can get glimpses of it, learn their lingo, love their dark humor, even empathize with them when they suffer after coming home, but because we've never signed the contract and gone through the training, let alone experienced war first-hand, we'll never understand how they truly function.
Especially in a time like today, where military folks volunteer to dive headfirst into hell, rather than be conscripted for service.
Douglas Munro died saving marines in WW2 his last words were “Did we getting them all off” referring to getting pinned down marines of a beach at Guadalcanal. So yeah I can believe that.
This movie is definitely one of my top favorite war films for a few other reasons. The scene where Hal Moore's wife picks up that stack of telegrams off her front porch then delivers them to the unfortunate families. It very well illustrates how wars are not just fought on the battlefield or in a different country, but the wars are also fought back home. How many wives, husbands, daughters, sons, uncles, grandpas, grandmas would wait for either their soldier in the flesh or that piece of paper that confirms their soldier is no longer breathing. The song that plays during that scene just makes it much more epic.
The other reason is after the battle, the conversation between Moore and Galloway with tears in their eyes for their fallen brothers and the reality sets in about what they just went through and why they survived but their brothers didn't. Then Galloway walks away, and Moore just starts to tear up. This scene always tears me up. The bond between battle hardened soldiers is a bond stronger than family bonded by blood because they fought for each other.
The lines "Tell my wife I love her," and "I'm glad I died for my country," aren't clichéd. I've read reports that said "Tell my life I love her," is the most common last-line for real soldiers. "F*ck," "Sh*t" or "Yep I'm dead," or words to that effect are also very common. Not sure about the "I love my country," thing, but it wouldn't surprise me if that is also common among dying men. Soldiers who volunteer are typically highly patriotic, which is one of the reason Western militaries oppose conscription. They from experience that conscripts make bad soldiers (not always of course, but often).
Craig Sinclair Conscripts need to be well motivated, today, with many people opposed to war and conflict and the military, the only worthy soldiers are volunteers.
They are cliche, but cliche things happen in real life.
It's so weird because my father a veteran said the combat scenes looks gaudy. He said no man were dumb enough to shoot while standing unless he needs to move. In fact the main casualties from the Vietnamese side were due to air strikes (American air power were effective) and many of those guerrillas died due to their refusal to move under fire when air strikes came or getting shot for moving when air strikes came. They were afraid to die as any American. This made the stupid guy who charged in with a bayonet quite hilarious to watch. Their formation was usually quite disorganised too and that lead to many units got isolated and destroyed easily. No such nice advance formation as in the movie. Their understand of tactics were poor and the only reason the war ended as such was American and South Vietnam leaders forgot war is a political tool, not a game.
+searchandscan This is meant to be a joke right
+searchandscan Yeah, air superiority was tremendous
+Duy Linh Chu Ha Was your father also in this battle? I think at the beginning the NVA leaders did stick with such human wave tactics, because they showed to be very effective against the French.
As you see in the movie, the soldiers are indeed very frightened but were told that their sacrifices were nessecary and noble to gain independence.
After such horrible loses, the leaders saw that they had not much against such superior firepower in open battles and did rethink their tactics.
There is also a difference between the NVA (regular soldiers) and the Vietcong (guerilla troops mostly operating in the south).
Btw.: What does your father think about the war? I once met a Vietnamese catholic, who said that it was best when Americans were in Vietnam and they fled when the Communists won because they ruined the land.
+Duy Linh Chu Ha I wouldn't really say that the war was treated as a game, but more as a single theatre of a much broader conflict. At the time the US and South Vietnamese leaders had to find a way to fight against the NVA and VC without pushing into North Vietnam or completely destroying North Vietnamese bases and facilities because of the Russian and Chinese advisers who were often near these places. They were afraid that it would trigger a more direct, and all out war with Russia and/or China if one of their advisers was killed. They also underestimated the large number of US citizens who were ideologically aligned with the communist forces, and would seek to undermine the US military effort in Vietnam.
+Mike Mac if they were concerned with those advisers they wouldn't have made excursions into Cambodia. MACV SOG missions had uncovered many of these advisers and their search and destroy won't let them get away that easily. The main problems were the Southern government budget wasn't managed well and the economy relies too much on foreign aids due to the war effort. The city dwellers enjoyed many economic achievement but the same couldn't be said about the rural folks many of whom were unsympathetic to the cause of the South. Corruption was one thing but Washington obsession with the enemy and victory, conveniently ignoring the process of building a proper sustainable system in the South brought it down after they left. This still lingers in subsequent conflicts, they just never learn, young men and women continue to pay the price.
I love your videos, but jeez man, it seems like everytime theres a Movie about American military history, you go from “History Buffs” to “Cinema Sins”
Dunno, the movies he’s done all have the common theme of being America’s shitty wars. Band of Brothers review on the other hand... kinda disproves this argument.
We shouldn’t have fought Vietnam, Ho Chi Minh quoted Jefferson in his first declaration and petitioned for US aid. We fought against an independence movement and lost. Check out the ken burns documentary or read some books.
Troy G what do you mean by “anti American hack” it was stupid for America to fight this war
@@debohancock4716 except those films are fairly historically accurate.
Are you trying to claim many more recent Hollywood war films are historically accurate, because if you are you'd be the first person who wasn't on DVD commentary to lay that praise on them
@@shrekfanboy5446 Completely agree with your point - although could argue that he isn't even anti mel gibson because of the master and commander review. Just think he's anti "hollywood" and mistakenly calls out the dying words here not realising its true to the novel (they are admittedly both extraordinarily cliché)
Troy G shut up yankee
The most film’s heart-wrenching moments, for me, were the deaths of Jack Geoghegan and Jimmy Nakayama. Both men were deprived of the chance to know their respective children. Also, RIP Lt. Hal Moore
Love these videos, but the "tell .... that i love them" happens a lot when someone is about to die and they want their loved ones to know that they were the last thought than ran across their minds before dying
Yeah, but not the cliche everything stops and the battlefield goes quiet while something gets whispered into someone's ear.
@@freneticness6927 ill give you that, but this is a movie🙂
The scenes with the kids are easy to relate to if you have kids of your own. And from the standpoint of a fellow father, it helps relate with the character and understand better what he has to lose and what his family will lose if he dies. Without the kids, he's just another soldier in a uniform.
Also, the movie just shows kids being kids and the family having a good time together and there's nothing forced or badly written about it, I'm sure people like you would attest to that.
@@vigil2150 Agreed... I feel that the maker of this video really showed his lack of life experience with that bit. Also, his impulse to laugh at a reaction of denial to hearing her husband was killed I also found rather disgusting. I'm not sure how you can feel anything other than sadness, empathy, and a pit in your stomach at that scene.
Old post but as a person from a military family and a large one (5 kids) that moved around a lot when we were young. That scene of them singing and passing the time as they arrived to Fort Benning takes me back to my own childhood because that’s exactly how we were when we PCSed to the SAME POST. This reviewer can say whatever but the emotional hooks in this movie are broad and appeal to more than his small view.
I was coming to say this. As a young father, I still remember when something like this wouldn’t have moved me, but having a kid of my own made the kids’ scenes mean more to me. The children do add depth to Moore and they really do the stupid funny things like run around in your shoes or sing songs in the car in real life. Thought he missed the mark on that
@Sean Patterson if the US soldiers wanted to protect their families why were they in Vietnam? the Vietnamese did not attack the US. The US invaded to destroy an opposing ideology.
The Viet Minh did not defeat the Japanese in Vietnam. All they had been doing were guerilla operations until the Japanese surrendered in Indochina to the Allies.
Well said mien fruend.
The allies actually employed Japanese soldiers to help combat the VM to great effect,
Ah, the Allies? Vietnam as Wasn't exactly a joint effort compared to ww2. Japanese constricts were hired by the American government and the only other Western nation to help the Americans when the French pulled out was Australia. Other than that... that was it.
That is incorrect, South Korea had troops there in 1965.
You managed to misspell both "Mein" and "Freund".
In Full Metal Jacket Lee Ermey's performance of the drill sergeant was authentic. He improvised the scenes based on his experience as a drill sergeant in the marines during the Vietnam war.
Rest in peace Hal Moore 1922-2017.
Matthew Arenson he died 1 day after my birthday
22:40 major Hal has seven kids movie gives Hal’s character seven kids
History buffs: the kids are there to make us like Hal
It's not that he has kids thet bugs him. It's how the kids are acting.
Bosse Linder his main complaint is that they’re trying to show how he has a what we now would consider “cringy” 60s family. It makes him seem like the kind of person who give Tora Tora a one star because it wasn’t suspenseful enough.
He screwed up with his goodfellas review too. Michael francese the crime boss have an interview about goodfellas and what was fact and fiction. This kid said the scene while they were in prison eating lobsters and living like kings was legit. An actual la cosa nostra crime boss confirmed that the scene was bs.
scentless apprentice yeah they would live in comfort, but not luxury.
I worked on the movie in California... Fort Hunter-Ligget is where they filmed the Vietnam scenes. Moore picked it because it looked much like the North central highlands of vietnam. I had the pleasure of meeting Hal Moore and his beautiful wife. They were such a cute couple!
Originally, Mel declined to do this movie, until they told him the VC were Englishmen in disguise.
Bart Something 🤣
Bart Something ha - I was about to write that!
@@karlenhelder Thanks... I'm glad I didn't have to write that.:-)
I didn't get it at first.. but it clicked lol
Those Englishmen can't speak our language of the tree though
The part where the guy is dying and he says to tell his wife he loves her and you call it cliche, did you ever stop to consider that maybe whoever that was actually said that
My APUSH teacher's father used to come in to talk about Vietnam, he was at this battle, was an incredibly haunted man, had to dig 3 bullets out of his legs cause the medics couldn't get to him through the fire, and laid in the field for 8 hours with a mangled leg, I respect this man with the fullest extent possible
My APUSH teacher was a Vietnam vet and, whenever we got to that unit, he said it’s always the hardest era to teach without tearing up. I had to stay after class for some help and he’d often share with me his experiences as he knew I had a particular fascination with military history.
Why because he got shot in a country he wasn't suppose to be in? Foh
@@ramerefauntleroy4881ok edge lord
Pretty sure those two death scenes you’re making fun of. Actually happened that way. And I used to walk around in my dad’s boots
The black wife's emotion was very real. Her mutters were basically saying don't hand me that letter because my husband's name ain't on it.
As the husband of an African-American wife I find that scene to be very realistic. You’re misunderstanding or ignorant of African-American culture.
@Erby Lopez it's very much so something you'd hear in a black household when given bad news. This wasn't the best history buffs take. That's for sure
@@erbylopez6003 yeah doubt it’s being ignorant
@@brittanyanderson8195 definitely not his best work. His analysis regarding racism, I highly reject. Why wouldn’t a white military wife experience disdain when a black military family can’t wash their phucking clothes! His arrogant stupidity is disgusting and laughable.
This, indeed, is the most powerful movie I have ever watched. Mel Gibson should have won an academy award for this. As noted in many comments below, this is likely the most accurate movie ever made of this conflict. The interjection of the family scenes, in my mind only added to the depth of the movie. This was not an action movie for entertainments sake. Without the inclusion of the family scenes, it would not have been balanced. It added to the humanity of the movie, just as the Vietnamese soldier writing in his diary added to it
10:56 You might be surprised to learn that many young military wives are first experiencing the outside world. Give her the benefit of doubt -- she had probably come from the Northern States, where segregation wasn't as prevalent or outward. I spent 20 years in the US Army, and I have TONS of stories of having to educate young couples on the "dangerous outside world." Many fellow vets would probably agree.
absolutely; I bet half of the wives back then couldn't have pointed out Vietnam on a map, much like many dependas can't find Afghanistan. Hell, I bet even my own mother would've had a slightly rough time picking out Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Iraq when my father was fighting in the Gulf War. I know it can be considered so "foreign" that it would be outside of one's situational awareness as compared to a domestic issue, but unless one is directly involved, one can live in relative ignorance. For example: would anyone in South Dakota care about a refugee or illegal immigration crisis?
You are right she was from a well off family and daddy's little princess. Before she got married the hardest thing she ever had to deal with was a broken nail or a bad hair day. I doubt she was allowed to watch the news it might upset her. She may very well not have had any idea what it was like down south.
@Projekt:Kobra He was an officer, not just a soldier. He was an academy graduate too.
@xNAJAFx The newspapers might cover discrimination, but they wouldn't necessarily have details. Someone not from the South would never have run into this kind of thing. It is entirely believable that such a person might misinterpret that sign. (I grew up in NJ during the sixties & seventies.)
@xNAJAFx but if she and her husband came from "Wyoming", Whites Only and No Coloreds signs would never be seen. Segregation was mainly a southern thing. She would only know if she really watched the national news about it. People from different places misinterpret all kinds of customs. I had a friend from England visit and he wanted to go inside Sonic Drive In to get a table to sit down and eat.
Have you read “We Were Soldiers Once...And Young” @History Buffs? Those “USA patriotic death scenes” that “made you cringe...yeah those in themselves were based on the actual soldiers final words, soooo yeah. In the other films you were speaking of, yeah they were cliches, but in this film, those were said soldiers’ real last words. I literally just finished the book for the second time.
heathen_fxdb I’ve watched several videos on this Channel and it seems to be more and more apparent that it is less of a historical analysis of films and more of a basic movie review channel of historical movies.
Jake Szetela I’ve been noticing that myself. Like why even bother with 13th Warrior? Anyone who knows Norse mythology and has read Beowulf can tell you it’s less of the former and mostly the latter.
heathen_fxdb cry
SweetBro HellaJeff cry
SweetBro HellaJeff cry more
I was a boy in military family moving from base to base, dad went to Korea, and Vietnam twice, Waited for him to come back. This exactly the 1960s military family experience i lived through. exactly in we we solders movie.
Did your father tell you of his experiences?
My mother grew up in Seattle, WA and knew nothing of segregated bathrooms and water fountains until she and my dad took a trip to Georgia just after they were married in 1964. She said she was it was the stupidest thing she ever saw, all sewage goes to the same place. So, as a "history buff" maybe you shouldn't be so eager to jump to conclusions.
Yeah but that accent is definitely East coast New York or New Jersey and they definitely had segregated facilities there too.
@@JosephDawson1986 not at the same level they did in the South. And the reason isn't because of less racism up North or any horse shit like that. It's because there weren't as many blacks living in the rural areas up North. Black people were and still are a part of the social fabric of the rural South in many places. While there were and are black neighborhoods in a place like Atlanta similar to Harlem in New York City it was far more common for black people to live out in the country and end up rubbing shoulders with whites down South. Besides that girl looks like somebody who grew up in the suburbs and I guarantee that the places she shopped and went had so few black people in them that there was no need to segregate things.
@@ashleighelizabeth5916 that accent is straight up NYC so most likely she came from Long Island and if thats the case she grew up around plenty of black folk there. They would have been the help but being the 60s they would have been working along side Irish and Italian families who been in NYC since the Civil War and then ofcourse all the vsrious Europeans. I remember a picture my uncle had of him in the Queens area and there was a sign in a store that read read Help wanted: and then used a slur for Blacks, Jews and and italians need not apply. In 1963.
Your mother is probably a pin head 🤣😂
@@JosephDawson1986 That’s sad.
I believe it is important that they included the home scenes. Without seeing his life, we would forget he was a person and just see a soldier/robot. We do the same when we memorialize someone. They become a legend and they loose the simple human side we all know that makes the legend like us. Also, it is always strange to see the juxtaposition of the worlds, battlefield and home. When a soldier is away, he misses everything about being home. Being in battle is so different to the way of life we all take for granted.
I think this film needed to show the families of the freedom fighters too. Those Vietcong and North Vietnamese troops were not fighting for a cheque, they were protecting their people, sources of food and independence. As an American follower of the George Washington doctrine I always thank Ho Chi Minh and his troops for their service.
The idea that some people didn't know there were race relation issues as egregious as they truly were isn't shocking. Many people in the North, and Pacific North West weren't touched by the horrible race relations as they saw in the South. Being a child in the 70's, I've met soldiers that had never seen actual black people... they weren't racists, they were never exposed to other cultures. And the idea of showing how the families were faring back home was very poignant... while Americans were dying in Vietnam, their families back in the States had to deal with not knowing... and in some cases, not being able to deal with the facts of their husbands being killed.
You act like back in the 60's we had the internet and instantaneous access to information. We had 4-8 channels on TV, the print in news papers, and the periodicals. Our information on what was going on in the world could be 3 to 10 days old by the time we got it.
Megadog I’m sorry but the guy you were talking to deleted the comments. What was he saying?
Megadog thanks
@@Megadog33 You're missing the point, in order to have race relations problems, the place you grew up had to have multiple races. Knowing segregation existed does not make it "real" to you and her misunderstanding the sign is perfectly plausible to able to imagine a person not immersed in politics.
I agree with this. It is entirely possible, depending upon where the soldiers previous posting had been (in fact if he was fresh out of USMA even) that the woman in question had never been to a place or seen a business that had such a practice like that.
My mother was also totally unaware of how race relationships as she was born in the late 40s. It was not till she married my father in Arizona that she get her first hint of it. She was like the woman in the movie and my father was half Filipino and was an officer in the military. He had to go to Georgia for training in the early 60s and because of his dark completion many thought he was black. My mother grew up on a farm in Colorado and New Mexico. She dated when she was a teen a fellow student who was black. There was no issue where she grew up. It was not like today where you had a TV in every room of your house where you see the news daily. But she was very shocked at the treatment when she was in Georgia where my father got stationed for a few years. My father would become a Captain and many of the men he trained when he was stationed in California would got to Vietnam. When it came to his over seas post he was sent to South Korea and his best friend was sent to Vietnam. So yes some people did not know how bad race relations were. So one should not be shocked.
Apparently this dude has never been around American military families! That was exactly how it was in the early 60's when you moved from base to base as a family.
Women of that age did not concern themselves with either politics or
Civil Rights News. With only three channels to choose from the usually
spent time with family until something they wanted to watch came on usually at 8:00 in the evening, or at 7:00 in the evening on Friday when Jonny Quest came on. The original.
@@shinjaokinawa5122 This is very true unless the subject slaps you in the face like in the scene where the officers wives were discussing their laundry. That was a very realistic scene from the Sixties in an officers wive's meetup.
Yes its definitely believable a spouse from a northeastern state whose never seen segregation would be shocked by it at a Army base in Georgia or one of the carolinas, he definitely just does not understand the north-south dynamic of the US
@@andrewbossert2395 the south should leave again, and wall themselves off this time. Then they can become the next N Korea and die off like the morons they all are and the rest of the world can finally have a chance at peace and prosperity.
In 1974, at the age of 4, we went to my Nan's to watch tv, additionally, we had to leave the house to make a phone call from the telephone box that was a quarter of a mile away. We did get a black and white tv when I was 6 or 7, I think. I found that scene, especially considering her accent, perfectly fine.
One thing I'd like to mention is the "coloured laundry" lady isn't completely impossible--Her accent reveals her from being up north, about Noo Yark Sity or so, where segregation didn't really exist. Being a transplant because of the army, she was probably adequately domesticated enough not to "bother her pretty head" about politics or racial matters. Women just weren't thinking about that sort of thing back then--While it's unlikely she would be THAT naive, I would say it's not physically impossible.