The knife to the brain reminded me of an article I saw in the eighties where a kid ( I think 12? ) was riding his bike on his parent farm, fell off and landed on a harvester. Imagine a drum with spikes. One of the spikes goes into his forehead. He pulls himself off. Gets taken to hospital. Scan shows wound path leading most of the way through his head, between the two hemispheres of the brain. Ends up being fine. No permanent injury.
Also reminds me of a story of a guy working on the railroad. Tamping down some black powder with a iron rod. When the gunpowder goes off and the iron rod hoes right through his brain from under his chin and right out the other side if I remember correctly. The doctor could literally touch his fingers together, through the guys head. The guy survived the injury but due to the part of his brain that regulates the intensity of emotions(or it was something like that) he could no longer control his own emotions and would just explode in a rage at the smallest things and such.
@@jacthing1 Phineas Gage. He was well liked by his community before his injury, upstanding guy. Afterwards he was reclusive, hot-tempered, and committed petty crimes, iirc from psych class in high school. The frontal lobe may not be the most important for physical survival, but the person Phineas was, for all intents and purposes, died when that rod went through his head. He no longer possessed the neurological capacity to maintain his identity.
Humans are very adaptable to serious bodily pain. It's crazy. What should be a 1 hit ko, we sometimes survive and what clearly shouldn't kill us sometimes does.
Humans strength comes from invention and tool use and teamwork on a massive scale, plus our endurance can be pretty good. The fragility saves energy and materials that can be used elsewhere. Like, a hermit crab saves the cost building their own shell by reusing one. We do the same with clothes and weapons.
Suggestion: Fight scene diagnosis of Monty Python and the Holy Grail - The Black Knight. Is it really but a scratch? Edit: NO WAIT! BETTER IDEA! The entire scene of "The Tale of Sir Lancelot" from *thunk!* "message for you sir..."
@@Colopty -- the shocking part is that there are quadruple amputees in the real world who have survived truly unbelievable injuries. With the black knight, the real fun would be describing how a trauma/surgical team might manage to keep him alive.
I can finally admit that I draw an unhealthily high proportion of my knowledge on wounds and injuries from these videos of yours than the books i ought to be studying as a med student.
1. V was chemically altered in that facility, not just tortured, so his physical body is a bit more resistant to those things, in particular basicaly immune to shock/pain. 2. He was wearing a fullplate chest (where all the bullets hit), though not enough to fully stop modern guns it would reduce velocity. 3. He did die, much later, but he did.
That's what I thought. He was experimented on so he's physically enhanced to a certain degree, but he's immune to shock and pain given the torture he's been through.
On the 2nd point that might actually be a hard maybe. Depending on if it's hardened steel and what type round they're using you could actually deflect some pistol rounds.
@@gma5607 Creedy's revolver appears to be either a .357 or a .40 S&W, and the pistols are likely standard issue police pistols, probably either 45 acp or 9mm.
@Freerefill I'm not an expert, but most modern day armor is made from kevlar plates. As I understand it, the plates are shatter when struck by a bullet, spreading the force across a wider area, keeping the bullet from penetrating. This means that most armor stops being effective after one or two shots. But there is another problem. Even if the armor prevented any of those bullets from penetrating, the force they generate still gets transferred into the body. A single shot can be powerful enough to bruise or even break ribs. In case like this, it would probably be like getting hit by a car about 60 times in a row. Again, not an expert, but I would expect all of his ribs to be broken, deep tissue bruising, internal bleeding, etc.
Due to your videos, I've been incorporating more trauma and trauma diagnoses into my novel. There's a torture scene where the protagonist lists the injuries the antagonist will suffer before they're, well, suffered. The torture has to stop early to ensure they don't kill the antagonist and instead can get back to him a few days later. Thanks to your videos, you've made these few chapters more thrilling than they'd be otherwise!
I also love this movie, first saw it on I think one of the BBC channels, its funny because I was thinking of going to to toliet and saying to myself I'll go in the break but it was BBC no adverts till the end it was worth not missing a minute.
My biggest contention with this scene has always been with the beginning. People who are shot usually don't fall down (unless they realize they have been shor, but that is a whole different conversation) because the bullet passes through them. If the bullet is stopped by any form of armour then the interia of the arrested bullet must go somewhere. V has either had dozens of penetrative bullet wounds or he would be throuwn off of his feet by the dispersed force of dozens of arrested bullet impacts.
Keep in mind, during this scene V was wearing ballistic trauma plates all over his torso and had pretty good body armor under his stylish duds and STILL suffered fatal injuries. He actually dies a few minutes after this scene.
Theres a few fight scenes in the show Hannibal, it would make me so happy if you did a rapid diagnosis of them!! V for vendetta is also basically my favorite movie so i screamed when i got the notification for this!
I haven't watched V for Vendetta in a really long time, so this brought back quite some nostalgia. But, y'know, I'd love to see you take on a more comedic action film, just to gauge how ridiculous cartoon violence can be: and my vote would go to any Bud Spencer & Terence Hill film, "Who finds a friend, finds a treasure" in particular. Considering how silly the fights in these movies are, I think a quick little look beyond would be interesting.
:O I’m just finishing my Speech A&P course and I’m way too excited for recognizing/ understanding some of the structures & muscles you mention now! Yaay!
I have realised that I'm even less of a fan of violent movies when they're paused and explained lol. I want to watch EVERY video you do but I'm leaving this one half way through before I get sore muscles from cringing ;) Didn't realise I was so sensitive to that stuff! I'll see you in the next vid! (disclaimer: depends what the next vid is lol)
Lots of people ask, "How did V survive all those gunshots?!" For starters, he didn't. V manages to limp his way to the railway, bleeding the whole way, before ultimately dying in Evie's arms. Secondly, the reason he didn't die outright from the barrage was because he had a bullet-resistant chest plate under his costume, and he takes it off after he kills Creedy. You can see the dents from multiple gunshots, and some blood from a few shots that the plate couldn't completely mitigate. Furthermore, all the shots were aimed at V's center of mass, his torso, where the plate was. Not sure what would happen if they aimed for his head, if his mask was bullet resistant or not. Ultimately, it's at least realistic that he could briefly survive given those circumstances, though he absolutely would, and does, die without immediate medical care.
Any of the fights in Daredevil or Punisher would be great to see, specifically the hallway fight scene for Daredevil and the prison fight scene for punisher. Nice video as always!
Considering Creedy and his men went to meet V secretly there's little chance that medical attention would be called, let alone able to get to get to them in time.
On the knife to the head: by the alignment it's definitely hitting left hemisphere. Plus he is going to have severe facial palsy. Btw highly entertaining! Stellar work
The way he says "well with enough luck and an urgent emergency operation, death can be avoided" I'm imagining a series where instead of the expert killer we follow a doctor doing his best to save all the unimportant characters he tries to kill. He'd be like "come on man, stop doing such a good job, I want to leave a trail of death, not of 'urgently recovered and miraculously saved' patients"
So cool to see you back :) Hopefully you will be able to finish Cells at Work and the cliffhanger from episode 12, so you can be ready for season two starting in January 2021!
I think you missed the chest armor V was wearing, and removed as he left the scene. He's bleeding, which suggests some of the rounds penetrated the armor, and those that didn't may well have broken ribs and causes some awful bruising...
Awesome video Doc... But there are a couple of things that you might have missed in your first viewing of V for Vendetta... V was a test subject, a scientific experiment so to speak, think Captain America's Super Soldier transformation, done grittier, in conditions rivaling the worst concentration camps in WW2. V acquired, a healing factor that allows him to regenerate from massive injury in seconds, as well as an incredible resistance to physical injury, add a massive increase to his strength, speed, and reaction time.and what you witnessed in this scene is not just a fight but a symphony of destruction. This entire scene happened all in a split second (think about that, literally a split second), but was slowed down so that we could see the details of V's gruesome retribution... This being said V is impacting his opponents with force well above that of a normal man which is why his knives slice through his opponents bones like a hot knife through butter (V didn't just slice through the pectoral muscles of his opponent I think he actually cut through the collarbone and ribs as well), this combined with the incredible speed of the attacks, just overwhelm his opponents, and is the reason why you see them go flying. When assessing the violence inflicted by superhumans, one must also consider physics to the extreme in these instances... I can't even imagine witnessing these types of injuries as a Trauma doctor trying to save that person's life. Yikes... I wonder if DC actually realized how violent this film was. Ty for the video, you are doing an AWESOME job. Johnathan Static
i don't know what's harder to believe, that someone who's killed so many people would think a shallow slash across the chest would be lethal at all, let alone immediately, or the fact it actually was. but, what would i know, he's killed more people than me. great video :)
Oh Dr. Hope, please never cease to amuse us with these RFSTD videos. As always, very very educative, but gee, I pretty much cringed through the whole video.
I love your analysis Doc. I want so bad the music in the background when is fight time. You can analyse some fight of Kick Ass for example, or scott pilgrim.
Interesting, I would have thought the guy with the knife in the shoulder was one of the less-serious immediate injuries. I'm not sure if this is better or worse than the mostly-blunt-force-trauma stuff you've had up until now.
In the book (yes there is an audio book of the movie) the troops are using lower velocity rounds for some reason, and V is wearing a ridiculously heavy metal coat he can only move around in due to his super human strength. In fact, the book notes that most shits that penetrated his armor came from the heavier rounds from the handgun, which was using extremely heavy slug rounds.
this man just casually describes a detailed anatomy of any body part..... granted he's a doctor and went to med school.... I still envy him... I studied so hard man....
I'd love to see a sequel of a film, where they have taken a look at one of the Sicknotes Rapid Fight Scene Trauma Diagnosis and used for some of the characters of that scene to come back and describe the carnage. This kind of scene, where the audience expects everyone to be stone cold dead, but most of them actually having a fighting chance to survive, if they get medical attention quickly enough. Maybe a V-2, where we see a man with difficulties coordinating his hand movements, as the connection between the two halves of his brain has been severed, while another with wheezy breathing is describing the scene.
I think one of the other things to take into account it all of these casualties suffered penetrating injuries in a sewer. The risk of infection complicates treatment significantly.
Subbed after your diagnosis of the Batman warehouse fight. This channel is awesome. May i suggest doing a video on any of the Rocky films. Stallone had to have taken some damage from Dolph Lundgren or Mr. T.
I would have liked to have heard your views on V's injuries when shot with his makeshift "armor" tactic. And what if any protection to the vital organs this would have in real life scenarios.
Basically you'd need an entire hospital's ER just to patch up this fight scene and they'd literally have to be standing outside the door in order to save most of them and most of them will probably not make it anyway. Basically this scene would be a lesson in triage for a hospital.
To those who find the idea of someone living through a knife to the brain implausible, I cite the case of Phineas Gage, a 19th century railroad construction worker who had a meter long tamping iron driven through his skull and left frontal lobe in an accident involving dynamite exploding prematurely. _And he lived._ Not for a few days, not for a matter of months, but for 12 years after the accident.
Love this series!!! Who knew my thirst for medical knowledge and bloody violence could be sated so easily? Suggestion: John Wick. Any movie, they're all essentially one massive fight scene. Might be a long one though, cause he kills somewhere in the region of 300 guys throughout the trilogy.
In the neck slit, if V had been trained in that move, he'd have transected both the trachea and oesophagus as the knife left the neck - it more or less rips the whole structure out just above or below the cartilaginous parts of the voice box (if you hit that, your blade can sort of jam in the wound...)
Me analysing this scene: "hmmm, yes. Stab."
Also snap.
Trama Krispies
Stab, Crackle, Pop
Me analysing this scene: "oh, he ded, so is that guy, and that other guy, yeah they all are dead."
@@LeoPelozo Well, the head knife guy might survive.
Dagger dagger dagger?
What's the diagnosis, Doctor?
Well the technical term is "fricken not good."
The doc enjoyed all this bloody mayhem way too much ^^
"There are a lot of things a body would rather do than die." ~Sir Terry Pratchett, Thud.
Discworld!!!!!!!
Rapid trauma fight scene diagnosis on cohen and the silver horde scenes lol
GNU Terry, Geez I miss him. Thankfully the Discworld will live on, as will his amazing quotes!
The knife to the brain reminded me of an article I saw in the eighties where a kid ( I think 12? ) was riding his bike on his parent farm, fell off and landed on a harvester. Imagine a drum with spikes. One of the spikes goes into his forehead. He pulls himself off. Gets taken to hospital. Scan shows wound path leading most of the way through his head, between the two hemispheres of the brain. Ends up being fine. No permanent injury.
Also reminds me of a story of a guy working on the railroad. Tamping down some black powder with a iron rod. When the gunpowder goes off and the iron rod hoes right through his brain from under his chin and right out the other side if I remember correctly. The doctor could literally touch his fingers together, through the guys head. The guy survived the injury but due to the part of his brain that regulates the intensity of emotions(or it was something like that) he could no longer control his own emotions and would just explode in a rage at the smallest things and such.
@@jacthing1 Phineas Gage. He was well liked by his community before his injury, upstanding guy. Afterwards he was reclusive, hot-tempered, and committed petty crimes, iirc from psych class in high school. The frontal lobe may not be the most important for physical survival, but the person Phineas was, for all intents and purposes, died when that rod went through his head. He no longer possessed the neurological capacity to maintain his identity.
I am once again requesting the "punisher prison fight scene" from daredevil season 2.
Love this series, keep up the good work.
Can recommend the Indonesian movie "The Raid" and "the Raid 2" fight scenes. They are great martial arts films.
I was just about to comment this.
Hell yes.
The hallway fight in The Raid would be an hour long episode, at least - I dunno If Dr. Hope has time given that the second wave of COVID is upon us.
@@Grizabeebles
Right.
Well it really is up to Dr. Hope.
He can break it up to a few videos if he wants.
Yes, yes and yes. The Raid would be perfect
"The night comes for us" i'd also put on that list ;) Made by almost the same people ...
It's disturbing how easily it is for someone to kill someone, why are humans so fragile
Watch out for them doctors, man. They know a hundred ways to kill someone... with a tongue depressor.
Humans are very adaptable to serious bodily pain. It's crazy. What should be a 1 hit ko, we sometimes survive and what clearly shouldn't kill us sometimes does.
Great scene in "Cellular" about that, too.
Humans strength comes from invention and tool use and teamwork on a massive scale, plus our endurance can be pretty good.
The fragility saves energy and materials that can be used elsewhere.
Like, a hermit crab saves the cost building their own shell by reusing one. We do the same with clothes and weapons.
Humans are so fragile because we'd be even worse dicks than we already are if we weren't so easy to kill.
The 'one take' hallway fight from the first season of Daredevil would be a great subject for this type of breakdown!
Suggestion: Fight scene diagnosis of Monty Python and the Holy Grail - The Black Knight.
Is it really but a scratch?
Edit: NO WAIT! BETTER IDEA!
The entire scene of "The Tale of Sir Lancelot" from *thunk!* "message for you sir..."
I am going to go with "No."
"Hmm. Yes. Near TOTAL body dismemberment. Somehow the victim is still conscious, suggesting deep shock." 😂
Definitely an idea for april fools.
@@Colopty -- the shocking part is that there are quadruple amputees in the real world who have survived truly unbelievable injuries.
With the black knight, the real fun would be describing how a trauma/surgical team might manage to keep him alive.
I'd like to hear his thoughts on the Killer Bunny scene 😂
Movie loving me: I love it
Anime loving me: when are you going to be finishing the cells at work series
He'll probably finish Cells at Work when season 2 airs.
Please do this for the Kingsman church scene
Freeeeee biiiiiiiiirrrrrrrd
Yeeees
"Using the Glasgow Coma scale"
Irn Bru has ruined our lives
I wish all movies traditionally played heavy metal during fight scenes like this channel does
Absolutely love V for Vendetta. I'm in the mood to watch it now.
I can finally admit that I draw an unhealthily high proportion of my knowledge on wounds and injuries from these videos of yours than the books i ought to be studying as a med student.
1. V was chemically altered in that facility, not just tortured, so his physical body is a bit more resistant to those things, in particular basicaly immune to shock/pain.
2. He was wearing a fullplate chest (where all the bullets hit), though not enough to fully stop modern guns it would reduce velocity.
3. He did die, much later, but he did.
That's what I thought. He was experimented on so he's physically enhanced to a certain degree, but he's immune to shock and pain given the torture he's been through.
According to cannon, he has superhuman strength and a minor healing ability.
On the 2nd point that might actually be a hard maybe. Depending on if it's hardened steel and what type round they're using you could actually deflect some pistol rounds.
@@gma5607 Creedy's revolver appears to be either a .357 or a .40 S&W, and the pistols are likely standard issue police pistols, probably either 45 acp or 9mm.
@Freerefill I'm not an expert, but most modern day armor is made from kevlar plates. As I understand it, the plates are shatter when struck by a bullet, spreading the force across a wider area, keeping the bullet from penetrating. This means that most armor stops being effective after one or two shots. But there is another problem. Even if the armor prevented any of those bullets from penetrating, the force they generate still gets transferred into the body. A single shot can be powerful enough to bruise or even break ribs. In case like this, it would probably be like getting hit by a car about 60 times in a row. Again, not an expert, but I would expect all of his ribs to be broken, deep tissue bruising, internal bleeding, etc.
Due to your videos, I've been incorporating more trauma and trauma diagnoses into my novel. There's a torture scene where the protagonist lists the injuries the antagonist will suffer before they're, well, suffered. The torture has to stop early to ensure they don't kill the antagonist and instead can get back to him a few days later.
Thanks to your videos, you've made these few chapters more thrilling than they'd be otherwise!
Hey I'm in that movie.
I don’t see or hear about V enough :(. Love this, the incredulity of it made me lauuggghhhhh
I’m sure he’d say: very good Dr Hope
The Equalizer could be an interesting movie to analyze from your perspective, lots of injuries and potential casualties.
I second that.
I also love this movie, first saw it on I think one of the BBC channels, its funny because I was thinking of going to to toliet and saying to myself I'll go in the break but it was BBC no adverts till the end it was worth not missing a minute.
I love how my favorite channel is talking about one of my favorite movies
Daredevil corridor scene would be fantastic to cover in this series!
My biggest contention with this scene has always been with the beginning. People who are shot usually don't fall down (unless they realize they have been shor, but that is a whole different conversation) because the bullet passes through them. If the bullet is stopped by any form of armour then the interia of the arrested bullet must go somewhere. V has either had dozens of penetrative bullet wounds or he would be throuwn off of his feet by the dispersed force of dozens of arrested bullet impacts.
I’m with you. The best graphic novel and the film did an excellent job. Your posts are so good, incredibly interesting.
"Ideas are bulletproof" 🤣 Love it!
The Punisher's fight in prison in Daredevil season 2 would be fun to watch you perform trauma diagnosis on! :D
Can I ask you kindly to finish the last episode of cells at work.
I love that series. When it popped up i was like what is this....this is awsome lol
God. Why am i enjoying the medical terms describing the violence so much!
Keep at it!
and throughout the whole thing V's facial expression never changes.
Keep in mind, during this scene V was wearing ballistic trauma plates all over his torso and had pretty good body armor under his stylish duds and STILL suffered fatal injuries. He actually dies a few minutes after this scene.
These segment names are just great
This UA-cam series is brilliant! Please keep it up!
Iron man 3 fight seen when he uses his improvised weapons. Please do that one 🙏 it looks really cool. Btw love this series ❤️
That'd be very interesting
Theres a few fight scenes in the show Hannibal, it would make me so happy if you did a rapid diagnosis of them!! V for vendetta is also basically my favorite movie so i screamed when i got the notification for this!
I haven't watched V for Vendetta in a really long time, so this brought back quite some nostalgia.
But, y'know, I'd love to see you take on a more comedic action film, just to gauge how ridiculous cartoon violence can be: and my vote would go to any Bud Spencer & Terence Hill film, "Who finds a friend, finds a treasure" in particular. Considering how silly the fights in these movies are, I think a quick little look beyond would be interesting.
:O
I’m just finishing my Speech A&P course and I’m way too excited for recognizing/ understanding some of the structures & muscles you mention now! Yaay!
I have a light blood fobia, and watching this is really hard...but...I...can't....stop....very good analysis
Dont worry, he just kept hitting their capri sun pouches and they fell over due to the sadness of no capri sun
the analysis of fight scenes is really fascinating
If we're doing fight scenes, can you check the fights from the two Sherlock Holmes movies?
Discombobulate
I love these videos. On an unrelated note, your hair looks great. Soft and this sun-kissed highlights suit you
I'd love a RFSTD on the fight scene from anchorman.
I have realised that I'm even less of a fan of violent movies when they're paused and explained lol. I want to watch EVERY video you do but I'm leaving this one half way through before I get sore muscles from cringing ;) Didn't realise I was so sensitive to that stuff! I'll see you in the next vid! (disclaimer: depends what the next vid is lol)
Love the series! Can't wait to see what Dr Mike does with the concept!
“How not to pierce your belly button” 😂😂😂 Love it!.....also....please do cells at work final episode! Also thank you!
Lots of people ask, "How did V survive all those gunshots?!"
For starters, he didn't. V manages to limp his way to the railway, bleeding the whole way, before ultimately dying in Evie's arms.
Secondly, the reason he didn't die outright from the barrage was because he had a bullet-resistant chest plate under his costume, and he takes it off after he kills Creedy. You can see the dents from multiple gunshots, and some blood from a few shots that the plate couldn't completely mitigate.
Furthermore, all the shots were aimed at V's center of mass, his torso, where the plate was. Not sure what would happen if they aimed for his head, if his mask was bullet resistant or not.
Ultimately, it's at least realistic that he could briefly survive given those circumstances, though he absolutely would, and does, die without immediate medical care.
Any of the fights in Daredevil or Punisher would be great to see, specifically the hallway fight scene for Daredevil and the prison fight scene for punisher. Nice video as always!
You might enjoy the Seinfeld episode “the junior mint” it involves a surgeon
Plus, of course, all the ones who don't die immediately are left lying in a sewer with open wounds. Chances of infection approaching 100%
Considering Creedy and his men went to meet V secretly there's little chance that medical attention would be called, let alone able to get to get to them in time.
This is one of my favourite movies so thanks for the analysis. : )
Damn dude I always figured Mr Creed died instantly, but you have given it some new contexts.
Always appreciate your insight
On the knife to the head: by the alignment it's definitely hitting left hemisphere. Plus he is going to have severe facial palsy.
Btw highly entertaining! Stellar work
Was NOT expecting the guy with the knife in his forehead to be one of the ones that could have survived.
Ok, that was fun to watch. A clear explanation of why you never bring a gun to a knife fight.
Finally someone talking about my favourite movie
The way he says "well with enough luck and an urgent emergency operation, death can be avoided" I'm imagining a series where instead of the expert killer we follow a doctor doing his best to save all the unimportant characters he tries to kill. He'd be like "come on man, stop doing such a good job, I want to leave a trail of death, not of 'urgently recovered and miraculously saved' patients"
We use to call it the fatal triangle. Excellent information like always.
So cool to see you back :) Hopefully you will be able to finish Cells at Work and the cliffhanger from episode 12, so you can be ready for season two starting in January 2021!
I think you missed the chest armor V was wearing, and removed as he left the scene. He's bleeding, which suggests some of the rounds penetrated the armor, and those that didn't may well have broken ribs and causes some awful bruising...
Awesome video Doc...
But there are a couple of things that you might have missed in your first viewing of V for Vendetta...
V was a test subject, a scientific experiment so to speak, think Captain America's Super Soldier transformation, done grittier, in conditions rivaling the worst concentration camps in WW2.
V acquired, a healing factor that allows him to regenerate from massive injury in seconds, as well as an incredible resistance to physical injury, add a massive increase to his strength, speed, and reaction time.and what you witnessed in this scene is not just a fight but a symphony of destruction.
This entire scene happened all in a split second (think about that, literally a split second), but was slowed down so that we could see the details of V's gruesome retribution... This being said V is impacting his opponents with force well above that of a normal man which is why his knives slice through his opponents bones like a hot knife through butter (V didn't just slice through the pectoral muscles of his opponent I think he actually cut through the collarbone and ribs as well), this combined with the incredible speed of the attacks, just overwhelm his opponents, and is the reason why you see them go flying.
When assessing the violence inflicted by superhumans, one must also consider physics to the extreme in these instances... I can't even imagine witnessing these types of injuries as a Trauma doctor trying to save that person's life.
Yikes... I wonder if DC actually realized how violent this film was.
Ty for the video, you are doing an AWESOME job.
Johnathan Static
i don't know what's harder to believe, that someone who's killed so many people would think a shallow slash across the chest would be lethal at all, let alone immediately, or the fact it actually was. but, what would i know, he's killed more people than me. great video :)
Oh Dr. Hope, please never cease to amuse us with these RFSTD videos. As always, very very educative, but gee, I pretty much cringed through the whole video.
I love your analysis Doc. I want so bad the music in the background when is fight time. You can analyse some fight of Kick Ass for example, or scott pilgrim.
Yeah nice
Interesting, I would have thought the guy with the knife in the shoulder was one of the less-serious immediate injuries.
I'm not sure if this is better or worse than the mostly-blunt-force-trauma stuff you've had up until now.
I love these videos. Thank you Dr.
Loved the video!! I also want to place my request for the Ip man vs 10 black belts scene!! An analysis of that would be great!
The dagger in the forehead was the great surprise 🤣
In the book (yes there is an audio book of the movie) the troops are using lower velocity rounds for some reason, and V is wearing a ridiculously heavy metal coat he can only move around in due to his super human strength. In fact, the book notes that most shits that penetrated his armor came from the heavier rounds from the handgun, which was using extremely heavy slug rounds.
this man just casually describes a detailed anatomy of any body part..... granted he's a doctor and went to med school.... I still envy him... I studied so hard man....
I know someone else had commented this already but I really like to see this.
The Raid 1 and 2 please.
People can criticize this movie all they want but I dont care this is by far my absolute most favorite movie
I'd love to see a sequel of a film, where they have taken a look at one of the Sicknotes Rapid Fight Scene Trauma Diagnosis and used for some of the characters of that scene to come back and describe the carnage. This kind of scene, where the audience expects everyone to be stone cold dead, but most of them actually having a fighting chance to survive, if they get medical attention quickly enough.
Maybe a V-2, where we see a man with difficulties coordinating his hand movements, as the connection between the two halves of his brain has been severed, while another with wheezy breathing is describing the scene.
Amazing video!!
I have a suggestion, the church scene on Kingsman, man that's an awesome action sequence with a great guitar solo
Also remember that after V kills Cready, he reveals he's wearing body armor. It didn't save him, but it protected him enough for this.
6:25 it's easy to forget because of his pretty normal build, but V is a super soldier and may be strong enough to completely ignore the ribs.
For any video of this kind of analysis, Home alone 1 and 2 is a must.
Love to see Dr Hope analyse some of Jackie Chan's fight scenes, or bloopers
"Be warned tho, it does contain lots of nasty injuries"
That's... why I'm here
This is so much more interesting than my anatomy class
Great videos! I’d love to see you do one on the gym fight from the Punisher season 2.
So bloodthirsty, so educational. What more could we ask for 👌
I could sit here hearing doctor hope for all my life and i won't care 😌
I think one of the other things to take into account it all of these casualties suffered penetrating injuries in a sewer. The risk of infection complicates treatment significantly.
In old Hero Games terms, " a speed 7 in a world of speed 2s, and V saved his Phase 12 action until everyone else had theirs"
Me and the boys still out here waiting for the final cells at work episode
Love this series! Please review any episode of Critical (sky one). Thanks!
V was wearing body armor also, in addition to having superhuman stamina, which is why he survived the barrage.
Subbed after your diagnosis of the Batman warehouse fight. This channel is awesome. May i suggest doing a video on any of the Rocky films. Stallone had to have taken some damage from Dolph Lundgren or Mr. T.
I would have liked to have heard your views on V's injuries when shot with his makeshift "armor" tactic. And what if any protection to the vital organs this would have in real life scenarios.
Found you today. Your channel rocks!
Basically you'd need an entire hospital's ER just to patch up this fight scene and they'd literally have to be standing outside the door in order to save most of them and most of them will probably not make it anyway. Basically this scene would be a lesson in triage for a hospital.
To those who find the idea of someone living through a knife to the brain implausible, I cite the case of Phineas Gage, a 19th century railroad construction worker who had a meter long tamping iron driven through his skull and left frontal lobe in an accident involving dynamite exploding prematurely. _And he lived._ Not for a few days, not for a matter of months, but for 12 years after the accident.
Good choice - my favourite film too
you should react to IP man vs ten black belts. great fight scene with nasty injuries
Tony Jaa's stairwell fight scene or the broken bones scene. The others, anything from any of the Raid movies or Joe Taslim's Warehouse fight scene.
Love this series!!! Who knew my thirst for medical knowledge and bloody violence could be sated so easily?
Suggestion: John Wick. Any movie, they're all essentially one massive fight scene. Might be a long one though, cause he kills somewhere in the region of 300 guys throughout the trilogy.
In the neck slit, if V had been trained in that move, he'd have transected both the trachea and oesophagus as the knife left the neck - it more or less rips the whole structure out just above or below the cartilaginous parts of the voice box (if you hit that, your blade can sort of jam in the wound...)
After 5 minutes of the video: "We have already saw the first 3 seconds of the fight"
I suppose it would be a bit redundant to do a rapid trauma diagnosis of "Help yourselves, everybody; there's no fighter escort."
I would love to see the Deadpool/ Cable fight in the Ice Box in Deadpool 2!
Yeah awesome