True story. A Lancaster Bomber suffered a similar fate as Mother and Country does here. Amazingly, the tail section glided to the ground like a mini airplane, and the gunner emerged without serious injury. He was able to pass on the story of a heroic crew member who tried to free him as the plane was burning and breaking up.
I think you are maybe confusing the story of Andrew Mynarski, for whom the CWH Lancaster is named after. The Lancaster they were in was shot up and burning. While everyone else was bailing out Mynarski saw the trapped tail-gunner and fought through the flames to try and save him. He did everything possible despite the flames raging around him, but was unable to free his friend and was forced to bail out. Unfortunately his chute was damaged by the flames and he died from the fall. The plane didn't break up, the whole thing glided to earth in flames and crashed throwing the gunner free. The gunner was captured and years later when he recounted the story of his friend trying to save him, Mynarski was posthumously awarded the VC.
This scene certainly is effective. Luke, young and hot-headed, grows up in a matter of seconds. The look on Danny's face speaks volumes. Then there is the disturbing radio noise. Finally, Dennis notices Luke's change in behaviour. Great stuff.
It's the rookies, they got the rookies, Memphis Belle to Mother and Country, come in, the radio operator screaming turning into white noise is truly scary
I saw the film with my son, who was about 13. I never saw him so still while watching the movie. When he saw Mother&Country cut in two by the German fighter, he literally yelled out. It was very quiet in the car on the way home from the theater.
I use to work with a retired army sgt who was a gunner on a B-17 in the med durning WWII. 12 O'c lock high was a regula TV show at the time and we would sometimes talk about the show. He said the biggest problem he had with the show, you see then with no gloves on.. it was as cold as -60
art carney holly crap, I talked to a older gentleman who was on a bomber and he told me if it was snowing or raining when the bomb Bay doors open the Rain or snow wound swirl around in the bomber.
I was lucky enough to be in this film, and I got the chance to fly in one of the B17s. We walked across the narrow walkway with the bomb bay doors open and it looked so frightening from only 800 ft We had to lean out of the waist gunners positions and wave to everyone below as we flew low passes over the film set as if we were returning crew overjoyed at surviving another mission
"Hell's Angels" of the 303rd Bomb Group was the first US bomber to complete 25 combat missions on 13 May 1943. The "Memphis Bell' completed her 25th. mission on 17 May 1943.
Dr. Lareme yup, but they didn't wanna send her on a war bond tour because of her name. Rhe record however has been officially corrected. 303rd is my favorite group. Think of those guys alot, even have a moment of silence every January 11 for my god fathers crew that didn't come back.
That last “oh God, I’m gonna DIE!” from Mother & Country sounded absolutely terrifying; literally seeing your death coming and being powerless to stop it from happening is an awful way to die.
In reality he'd remember this moment for the rest of his life and it would probably be his lasting memory of the war. "Yeah i remember the war, those boys in Mother & Country didn't stand a chance..."
There were so many violent bomber stories from veteran crew interviews - recall one about the B-17 pilot who had his head and the canopy partly blown off, the blood freezing and disabling the top turret. The movie was a more Norman Rockwell version of the air war.
To think that these kids saw this every day. 25 of these missions and you get to go home. In fact, that’s the reason the Memphis Belle got so famous. Because she made all 25 missions but statistically there was very little chance of survival. 67,000 American bomber crews never made it home. 47,000 RAF crews were killed as well. Over 110,000 kids snuffed out because of a maniacal dictator. And to think we always wondered why our dads and grandfathers never talked about the war.
@@purplehaze9977 You mean the people who looked the other way and supported a leader who rounded up 9 million of their neighbors and put 6 million of them in ovens and used the rest as slave labor to build their war machines and infrastructure just because they were not Aryan? Don’t start none. Won’t get none. That’s war.
I’ve seen ground combat in Iraq, but this would be absolutely horrible in comparison. I couldn’t even imagine being a sitting duck 10,000-20,000 ft up like that. No thank you! A big Salute to those who had to go through this.
Had an uncle who was a B-17 navigator...and the sole survivor of not only his crew but the entire nine-ship formation that went up unescorted on a night strike only to be bounced by the Luftwaffe over the North Sea: one minute he was sitting at that little desk in the nose under the cockpit and the next he was falling through the sky. The only other person who managed to get out of any of them didn't survive the boat ride back to shore. Also went aboard another B-17 before the pandemic that went down hard with no survivors a little over two weeks later. Good thing I was too big to fit anywhere other than in the cockpit and too stingy to shell out the $400 or so for a ticket to ride in the thing.
@@jac6995 Everything I said is 100% accurate. There is in fact not a cellphone in sight and these people are in fact as immersed in the moment as a human could possibly be. What ever your personal feelings are here doesn't really have any impact on anything. Good luck and stay safe.
@@doriandundee9906 Yeah because I'm sure modern soldiers are on their cell phones when flying planes and in gun fights lol. These people weren't "living in the moment" because they didn't have cell phones, it was because their lives were on the line and there was no time for petty distractions regardless of what they were.
First saw this movie when I was a little kid and I thought it was the coolest thing ever. There's nothing cool about war, RIP all those brave souls that laid down their lives so we can have freedom.
diffancences is that the tail gunner can rotate on avro lancaster b-17 has a tail that cant rotate as much lancasters also didn't use belly gun turret or a chin gun also upper turret is in the middle near the tail
MS_ B Its true that if a plane goes into a complete nose dive like that the Gs will pin the crew to the inside of the aircraft,but as for screaming into the radio? that wouldnt of happened.
And what does a soldier look like? Truth is, Matthew Modine looks like the vast majority of soldiers and Marines I ever knew. Especially the officers. You ever see Audie Murphy? Look at his pics before the war. Does he look like a soldier to you? He looks like a short kid, barely an adult. You should Google what Audie did during the war. Not bad for a guy who doesn’t look like a soldier.
Samuel Fuller, the writer/director of The Big Red One, refused to let John Wayne be involved with it, calling him (direct quote) "a symbol of the kind of man [he] never saw in war." Luke Skywalker and Lewis Skolnick from Revenge Of The Nerds were more plausible infantrymen in an active war zone to a live-fire combat veteran than The Duke was.
@@amandajo4u yes there would be. I never have watched the full movie. It accurately portrays what happened to crews, but not to the Belle. Also, that's a G model by the name Sally B.
Почитайте сколько наших молодых пацанов 18-20 лет направляли свои сбитые самолёты в гущу врагов,поезда,танки,шли на таран на другие самолёты... Сколько их шли на свою смерть ради жизни других
Just remember today's world are built on those deaths. A good question to ask yourself how many people died for this place when you go somewhere, something I ask myself in the Washington DC area.
They suffered the 2 highes casualtie rate behind the U-Boat service, thy loses were horrific 32,000 kill or capture out of a force of 40,000 not even the kamikaze were close to that loss rate
To be fair and honest, if those were bf 109 f's, their guns would be on the nose and if they were on the wings, I think they would just be gunpods because the gunpods wouldn't in the wings but sticking out somewhere on the tip if I were to guess
TH3 PLA1NP1L0T 1 30mm cannon in the spinner, two20mm machine gun in the nose, 20 or 30mm cannon in underwing pods, dependent on availability, bf109G bomber hunters.
+Augustus Trumpus Diabeetus Titleist what's not true.. co-pilot Luke Sinclair real name James Verinis didn't leave his seat in combat, he bravely sat next to Captain Dennis Dearborn real name Robert Morgan and did his job. .
+Augustus Trumpus Diabeetus Titleist yes of course it was, the film however is fictional, the crew in the film all completely fictional. tail gunner in the film Clay Busby was fictional the real gunner was called John Quinlan and he worked in a carpet shop before the war, he didn't lose the family farm in a card game.. radio man Danny Daly wasn't wounded in combat and his name was really Robert Hanson.. The Belle returned from her 26th and final combat mission completely undamaged with all engines running strong and all her guns in place..
+Augustus Trumpus Diabeetus Titleist not one crew member in the film is real.. the events of the final combat mission are not real.. the only thing about this film that is real is the name of the aircraft.. Bomber Val Kowlowski didn't lie about his qualifications when joining the air force his name was really Vincent Evens.
I'LL MAKE SURE EVERYONE REALLY REALLY KNOWS WHAT BEAUTIFUL IS....NATTY WILL SAY 🧐🧐🤔🧐🤔🧐🤔🧐🤔 OMG they are so BEAUTIFUL.................SO PERFECT LOOKING SO PRETTY........ KOLOVANI
Youngsters don't seem to realize war is all horrendous. It's not cool, it's not a video game,and no amount of training can save you when your insides pour outside. War is all shit and it all sucks. Don't forget.
The modeling of the post collision effects was poor. That forward section is either going to rear upwards in a stall and fall off on one wing, or plunge nose down almost the instant the tail feathers depart. Also, where's the trail of innards knocked loose, fragments of structure, oxy bottles and the like? And yes screaming was heard from time to time, but more often silence. The first thing you do at the start of bailing out is disconnect the radio plug. Then you and the guy next to you are trying to get out, helping each other as that comes up.
Funnily enough, when the chips are down, that hero bullshit goes out the window. They were rookies, so didn't know what to do. They were panicking and probably fighting each other to get out. Don't pretend you know when you don't.
Dont know really. Seen a few stories that suggest the Copilot could leave and take care of something on an ad-hoc basis. The copilot generally wasn't a technician or medic so his usefulness would probably be less than another member of the crew but needs must. Lancasters don't even have a copilot so it wouldn't seem out of the norm for a copilot to leave his station to repair something, help a wounded colleague or fight a fire etc.
True story.
A Lancaster Bomber suffered a similar fate as Mother and Country does here. Amazingly, the tail section glided to the ground like a mini airplane, and the gunner emerged without serious injury. He was able to pass on the story of a heroic crew member who tried to free him as the plane was burning and breaking up.
falconeaterf15 how do you line?
falconeaterf15 how do you know?
Nick Martin me too
There's a famous photo of a B17 falling out of the sky to the ground, with one wing totally gone.
I think you are maybe confusing the story of Andrew Mynarski, for whom the CWH Lancaster is named after. The Lancaster they were in was shot up and burning. While everyone else was bailing out Mynarski saw the trapped tail-gunner and fought through the flames to try and save him. He did everything possible despite the flames raging around him, but was unable to free his friend and was forced to bail out. Unfortunately his chute was damaged by the flames and he died from the fall. The plane didn't break up, the whole thing glided to earth in flames and crashed throwing the gunner free. The gunner was captured and years later when he recounted the story of his friend trying to save him, Mynarski was posthumously awarded the VC.
This scene certainly is effective. Luke, young and hot-headed, grows up in a matter of seconds. The look on Danny's face speaks volumes. Then there is the disturbing radio noise. Finally, Dennis notices Luke's change in behaviour. Great stuff.
It's the rookies, they got the rookies, Memphis Belle to Mother and Country, come in, the radio operator screaming turning into white noise is truly scary
It's hard to describe, but they got the second-to-second combat down...
What they found out, was that the war in the sky was as dangerous as in the trenches.
I saw the film with my son, who was about 13. I never saw him so still while watching the movie. When he saw Mother&Country cut in two by the German fighter, he literally yelled out. It was very quiet in the car on the way home from the theater.
This movie is not for a 13 yr old.
@@brrrlak
Yeah because 13yr olds are not aware of death or wars.
I was literally 9 when granny let me watch this!!! How dare you? I grew up with the great escape, battle of Britain and bridge over the river kwai!
i remember watching this when i was 5, the scream was just freighting, still gives me chills till this day.
Good god that scene is horrifying.
Yeah. Very horrible.
And scenes like that were repeated hundreds of times. 😢
Bomber crews had to witness and become victims of scenes like this throughout WW2.
The guy on the radio heard the last words and screams
@ it's so unfortunate we've just witnessed the real life version of this at Dallas
This scene was actually disturbing when I first saw it...
It is still etched into my brain
3C-FD same here think about it every so often
saw it as a kid, always stuck with me.
It should have... as it did for me too.
Pause where the bf 109 slits the b 17 in half and you see one of the waist gunners falling out
I use to work with a retired army sgt who was a gunner on a B-17 in the med durning WWII. 12 O'c lock high was a regula TV show at the time and we would sometimes talk about the show. He said the biggest problem he had with the show, you see then with no gloves on.. it was as cold as -60
art carney holly crap, I talked to a older gentleman who was on a bomber and he told me if it was snowing or raining when the bomb Bay doors open the Rain or snow wound swirl around in the bomber.
art carney I'm pretty sure the mention that in the movie
Remember watching this movie as a kid, getting chills on this scene with their screaming knowing there was nothing they could do.
Even the veterans now have largely passed, too.
At least they’re meeting up, with old friends.
I have nothing but admiration.
Old friends and ex enemies a considerable number of allied and axis pilots after the war become close friends or even best friends
I was lucky enough to be in this film, and I got the chance to fly in one of the B17s. We walked across the narrow walkway with the bomb bay doors open and it looked so frightening from only 800 ft
We had to lean out of the waist gunners positions and wave to everyone below as we flew low passes over the film set as if we were returning crew overjoyed at surviving another mission
Sure
Cool I love the movie
This is what they mean when they say "Be careful what you wish for..."
It was disturbing hearing thier screams over the radio while watching the plane go down
@Curious what were they doing on the radio?
@Curious maybe so but they'd surely be trying to save themselves rather than pressing a button so the other planes can hear their screams.
"Hell's Angels" of the 303rd Bomb Group was the first US bomber to complete 25 combat missions on 13 May 1943. The "Memphis Bell' completed her 25th. mission on 17 May 1943.
Dr. Lareme yup, but they didn't wanna send her on a war bond tour because of her name. Rhe record however has been officially corrected. 303rd is my favorite group. Think of those guys alot, even have a moment of silence every January 11 for my god fathers crew that didn't come back.
That last “oh God, I’m gonna DIE!” from Mother & Country sounded absolutely terrifying; literally seeing your death coming and being powerless to stop it from happening is an awful way to die.
I watched this movie in ROTC class, and the mid air collision part gave me chills when they were screaming
In reality he'd remember this moment for the rest of his life and it would probably be his lasting memory of the war.
"Yeah i remember the war, those boys in Mother & Country didn't stand a chance..."
Doomed to hear those screams
The G force would prevent any of the crew from moving, making bailing out nearly impossible
They say during an exchange at leas two bailed out.
Jett Tyler
Yes but the point is, it was only two.
2:19
The two side Gunner were immediately crush by a bf-109
@@MurasameLigerGZ They may have been the two who got their chutes open.
In a spin, or in the tumble they should have shown the forward section develop.
There were so many violent bomber stories from veteran crew interviews - recall one about the B-17 pilot who had his head and the canopy partly blown off, the blood freezing and disabling the top turret. The movie was a more Norman Rockwell version of the air war.
To think that these kids saw this every day. 25 of these missions and you get to go home. In fact, that’s the reason the Memphis Belle got so famous. Because she made all 25 missions but statistically there was very little chance of survival.
67,000 American bomber crews never made it home. 47,000 RAF crews were killed as well. Over 110,000 kids snuffed out because of a maniacal dictator. And to think we always wondered why our dads and grandfathers never talked about the war.
Yeah they got killed when they bombed 550 000 civilians..... poor bastards
@@purplehaze9977 You mean the people who looked the other way and supported a leader who rounded up 9 million of their neighbors and put 6 million of them in ovens and used the rest as slave labor to build their war machines and infrastructure just because they were not Aryan?
Don’t start none. Won’t get none. That’s war.
@@patton303 Germany and japan(abomb) in ww2, korea and vietnam(agent orange), afghanistan und iraq.... Peace and fremdom for the world
@@patton303 you do realize creamation od dead bodies is still a thing right? Anyways... France was the one who really started ww2 back in 1918
Also factor in how many died on both sides cause of tech problems with their planes in air or heading home or the crashes
THAT radio noise.. Disturbing..
*THAT RADIO NOISE..
*That radio NOISE..
*That RADIO NOISE..
@@mazrio128Sorry Mr Grammar Nazi
Merci et respect à tous ces équipages !
If you watch closely at 2:20 you can actually see one poor guy falling down with the debris.
It’s true,
😮
Yup i seen him 😮
The one thing that i find disturbing in these scene is the screams of the crew in the B-17 bomber "mother and country" as they were falling
In my opinion , this is the one of best picture ever made for WWII, actually I see it repeatedly.
I agree.
My deepest condolences to the crew of Mother And Country. Very sad indeed
This was what I thought of when I first saw the video, so sad.
Dying in a plane crash must be one of the most scary death possible. Thinking of it gives me nightmares.
I know... so sad...
WolfieTheAnimator my father was a ball turret gunner on a B17 called. Dora D.
he never talked about the War but a few months before he passed away...
Did he see something like this happen during his service?
One story he did tell me. Was he saw the ball. Turret of another B17 drop out of the plane at 12000
.......I..I have no words.....
I’ve seen ground combat in Iraq, but this would be absolutely horrible in comparison. I couldn’t even imagine being a sitting duck 10,000-20,000 ft up like that. No thank you! A big Salute to those who had to go through this.
"I got one! I got one!... AHHHHHHHH" " memphis belle to mother and country come in" "AHHHHH OMG AHHHHHHHH!!!!!!"
That plane literally meant "if you shoot me down might as well take out a whole bomber plane then"
As Kid this scene Always scared the hell out of me.
So much better than Masters of the Air.....So is 12 O'Clock High.
2:20 movie predicted the recent crash instead of 109 it was p-63
its haunting hearing those poor men screaming over the radio as their B-17 goes down.
Had an uncle who was a B-17 navigator...and the sole survivor of not only his crew but the entire nine-ship formation that went up unescorted on a night strike only to be bounced by the Luftwaffe over the North Sea: one minute he was sitting at that little desk in the nose under the cockpit and the next he was falling through the sky. The only other person who managed to get out of any of them didn't survive the boat ride back to shore.
Also went aboard another B-17 before the pandemic that went down hard with no survivors a little over two weeks later. Good thing I was too big to fit anywhere other than in the cockpit and too stingy to shell out the $400 or so for a ticket to ride in the thing.
Not a cellphone in sight, just people living in the moment.
Seriously? I dont think that comment makes much sense here.
@@jac6995 Everything I said is 100% accurate.
There is in fact not a cellphone in sight and these people are in fact as immersed in the moment as a human could possibly be. What ever your personal feelings are here doesn't really have any impact on anything.
Good luck and stay safe.
@@doriandundee9906 Yeah because I'm sure modern soldiers are on their cell phones when flying planes and in gun fights lol. These people weren't "living in the moment" because they didn't have cell phones, it was because their lives were on the line and there was no time for petty distractions regardless of what they were.
Cannot imagine what hell these men went through over the skies of Europe!
2:19 I GOT'EM WOO HOO *Enemy plane crashes into bomber*
Luke Sinclair was shocked.
First saw this movie when I was a little kid and I thought it was the coolest thing ever. There's nothing cool about war, RIP all those brave souls that laid down their lives so we can have freedom.
_"Memphis Belle_ to _Mother And Country,_ come in!"
"Ah, yes, afraid we won't be making our rendezvous over Bremen today. Awfully sorry, old boy!"
Another sad thing is the co-pilot is blaming himself, when this could have happened with any trained gunner.
2:16
Luke: I got him. I got him! Woohoo! Woohoo! **Gets shocked** *AAAAAHHHH!!!!*
actually he said "NOOOO!!"
God bless and keep there souls 💙
This is what Red Tails or Masters of the Air don't have: a poignant and disturbing segment like this one
2:36 and 3:08 so horrifying until Eric Stoltz turns the radio off
Es waren zu viele , unsere Jungs haben heldenhaft über den Wolken für uns gekämpft
Die haben den aber ganz schön Feuer unter Popo gemacht! 😅😅😅
Trotzdem ist Krieg eine Verschwendung von Ressourcen!
2.40 the cries from the german civilians in their basements during a bombardement of a civil oldtown would have been more disturbing.
The cries from the Jews in the Nazi death camps were worse you Nazi sympathizer.
The moment he realised war ain’t a game
I remember the plane severing the tail ! It was nice to have 5.1 Dolby!
That scream is very authentic. It is the price one has to pay for renown
Luke: What am I suppose to do, spit on him?!
diffancences is that the tail gunner can rotate on avro lancaster b-17 has a tail that cant rotate as much lancasters also didn't use belly gun turret or a chin gun also upper turret is in the middle near the tail
Как фильм на русском назвается, что бы скачать и посмотреть? Вроде стоящий...
Мемфисская красавица
Can anybody catches what the Mother And Country radioman was screaming? Was he pinned down and can't bail?
MS_ B Its true that if a plane goes into a complete nose dive like that the Gs will pin the crew to the inside of the aircraft,but as for screaming into the radio? that wouldnt of happened.
Hi, guy! What is the name of this movie?
Memphis Belle
The Dallas's Air Show Crash 2022
What about it?
2:19 if you pause at the time the debris is falling you can see one of the waist gunners
Imagine if someone you knew was on that plane....
You'll never convince me that Matthew Modine could have ever been a soldier. A hair stylist maybe, but a soldier never.
Rick Roscoe Seen Full Metal Jacket lol?
"Your not a writer your a killer"
"A killer yes sir"
And what does a soldier look like? Truth is, Matthew Modine looks like the vast majority of soldiers and Marines I ever knew. Especially the officers. You ever see Audie Murphy? Look at his pics before the war. Does he look like a soldier to you? He looks like a short kid, barely an adult. You should Google what Audie did during the war. Not bad for a guy who doesn’t look like a soldier.
@@soldat2501 Yeah. It was a silly comment. Most soldiers are kids, back in WW2 and it still holds true today. Wars are fought by the young folks.
Samuel Fuller, the writer/director of The Big Red One, refused to let John Wayne be involved with it, calling him (direct quote) "a symbol of the kind of man [he] never saw in war." Luke Skywalker and Lewis Skolnick from Revenge Of The Nerds were more plausible infantrymen in an active war zone to a live-fire combat veteran than The Duke was.
Watched that over and over as a kid damn I never got over that
Too hear a man die over the radio
This is a great movie. One of the best movies about the brave men that fought the Germans over the skies of Europe.
At 25,000 feet, you wouldn’t be taking your oxygen mask off in an unpressurized plane. Also, some 17’s did collide with each other during missions.
Also, there would be vapor trails.
@@amandajo4u yes there would be. I never have watched the full movie. It accurately portrays what happened to crews, but not to the Belle. Also, that's a G model by the name Sally B.
2:16 Lucas: I got him I Got Him WOO-HOO WOO-HOO
And this is a true story, now that’s scary
0:57 I I’m just peachy lieutenant,I’m singin the “when Harry met sally” soundtrack I’m doin just fine
"What am I supposed to do spit on em?'
Name of the movie please
Memphis belle
Почитайте сколько наших молодых пацанов 18-20 лет направляли свои сбитые самолёты в гущу врагов,поезда,танки,шли на таран на другие самолёты... Сколько их шли на свою смерть ради жизни других
А что за фильм?
Just remember today's world are built on those deaths. A good question to ask yourself how many people died for this place when you go somewhere, something I ask myself in the Washington DC area.
Would have volunteered .
Just for one O them Jackets !
25% of RAF bomber crews survived the war without injury. Just 1 in every 4.
Around 50% died.
They suffered the 2 highes casualtie rate behind the U-Boat service, thy loses were horrific 32,000 kill or capture out of a force of 40,000 not even the kamikaze were close to that loss rate
Dallas…
Great film, with respect from Russia.
you screen recorded a movie.... why did you not just throw it into an editor and pull the clip
Название фильма?
メンフィズベル
To be fair and honest, if those were bf 109 f's, their guns would be on the nose and if they were on the wings, I think they would just be gunpods because the gunpods wouldn't in the wings but sticking out somewhere on the tip if I were to guess
TH3 PLA1NP1L0T 1 30mm cannon in the spinner, two20mm machine gun in the nose, 20 or 30mm cannon in underwing pods, dependent on availability, bf109G bomber hunters.
They act like they haven't seen anything like this before. If this the end of their tour, they would be somewhat use to it by now.
it's all fiction.. the story and the crew.. fictional characters, nothing more.
+Augustus Trumpus Diabeetus Titleist what's not true.. co-pilot Luke Sinclair real name James Verinis didn't leave his seat in combat, he bravely sat next to Captain Dennis Dearborn real name Robert Morgan and did his job. .
+Augustus Trumpus Diabeetus Titleist
yes of course it was, the film however is fictional, the crew in the film all completely fictional.
tail gunner in the film Clay Busby was fictional the real gunner was called John Quinlan and he worked in a carpet shop before the war, he didn't lose the family farm in a card game..
radio man Danny Daly wasn't wounded in combat and his name was really Robert Hanson..
The Belle returned from her 26th and final combat mission completely undamaged with all engines running strong and all her guns in place..
+Augustus Trumpus Diabeetus Titleist
not one crew member in the film is real.. the events of the final combat mission are not real.. the only thing about this film that is real is the name of the aircraft..
Bomber Val Kowlowski didn't lie about his qualifications when joining the air force his name was really Vincent Evens.
Was there ever a bomber gunner that became an "ace" 5 aircraft shot down ,either same gunner or same plane?
2:20 bomber got cut in half
Did they ever recover the body's of those pilots or nah?
2:20
NO!!
WHY THEY AREN’T BAILING OUT
Oof
G forces basically pinning them in.
@@loyalpiper yea true
2:23-2:24 that part Made laught (The mamá face)
I'LL MAKE SURE EVERYONE REALLY REALLY KNOWS WHAT BEAUTIFUL IS....NATTY WILL SAY 🧐🧐🤔🧐🤔🧐🤔🧐🤔 OMG they are so BEAUTIFUL.................SO PERFECT LOOKING SO PRETTY........ KOLOVANI
Maybe that’s the meaning of “killing two birds with one stone”.
That why the veterans say it's was a flying coffins.
2:19 watch in 0.25 speed and you see the waist gunners fly out
I saw the gunner fly out and its horrifying to see the gunner fly out
One express elevator to Hell. Scary.
Youngsters don't seem to realize war is all horrendous. It's not cool, it's not a video game,and no amount of training can save you when your insides pour outside. War is all shit and it all sucks. Don't forget.
I CAN'T STAY DOWN .............. IMPOSSIBLE..............................NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA by KOLOVANI
2:37 I've heard some static. Can anyone tell me what it says?
Oh god oh god help help ahh ahhhh ahhh pretty much
I was terrified when that 109 hits "Mother & Country".
1234 SHOW by KOLOVANI
2:20 you can see the crew.
NATTY WILL SAY 🧐🧐🧐🧐🧐🧐🧐🧐🧐🧐🧐🧐🧐🧐🧐🧐🧐 AUNT NICHOLE IS HELPING BEST SHE CAN.......2023.......Xoxo 💋💋💋💋💋💋💋💋💋💋💋 KOLOVANI
The modeling of the post collision effects was poor. That forward section is either going to rear upwards in a stall and fall off on one wing, or plunge nose down almost the instant the tail feathers depart. Also, where's the trail of innards knocked loose, fragments of structure, oxy bottles and the like? And yes screaming was heard from time to time, but more often silence. The first thing you do at the start of bailing out is disconnect the radio plug. Then you and the guy next to you are trying to get out, helping each other as that comes up.
It's a movie, shitbag. Enjoy it and move on.
Funnily enough, when the chips are down, that hero bullshit goes out the window.
They were rookies, so didn't know what to do. They were panicking and probably fighting each other to get out.
Don't pretend you know when you don't.
Picky, picky y y y.....!!
welp my grampa was in the ack ack anie is the as mother and country he was a radio operatar
Sorry I don't understand what you meant, but it sounds interesting.
great film.😰
Question: with the chance the pilot could be killed or wounded, a copilot wouldn't be allowed to leave his position?
Dont know really. Seen a few stories that suggest the Copilot could leave and take care of something on an ad-hoc basis. The copilot generally wasn't a technician or medic so his usefulness would probably be less than another member of the crew but needs must. Lancasters don't even have a copilot so it wouldn't seem out of the norm for a copilot to leave his station to repair something, help a wounded colleague or fight a fire etc.
0:52. this messer had to destroy their cockpit
NATTY WILL SAY OMG THEY ARE SO BEAUTIFUL xoxo 💋💋💋💋💋💋 KOLOVANI
2:20 war thunder fails
ua-cam.com/video/UWQvvnGWn6s/v-deo.html memphis belle reference scene at 5:31
does anybody know if the pilots or tripulation had parachutes
Yup, but due to space restrictions they were only worn for bailing out... not much good if your tail's gone bye bye