Blood Diamond (2006) ♡ MOVIE REACTION - FIRST TIME WATCHING!

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  • Опубліковано 2 тра 2024
  • Thank you for watching my reaction as I watch "Blood Diamond" for the first time! ♡
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    #moviereaction #firsttimewatching #blooddiamond
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 275

  • @heron6764
    @heron6764 Місяць тому +70

    Diamonds are kept artificially scarce and only a measured amount are released every year. The cost of a finished diamond is about seven dollars a carat. One of the biggest scams the world has ever seen.

    • @TheLaFleur
      @TheLaFleur Місяць тому +7

      I read about that, I'm pretty sure is common knowledge that the De Beers are the ones keeping the prizes high and had been also accused before of dealing with blood diamonds. So yeah, I would avoid their diamonds like the plague if I ever have the need to buy one

    • @DaemonKeido
      @DaemonKeido Місяць тому +5

      @@TheLaFleur If all finished diamonds were put on the market at once currently, you could buy them with your pocket money for handfuls of finished stones.

    • @body_by_depuy
      @body_by_depuy Місяць тому +4

      It's one of the reasons they try so hard to convince people that laboratory created diamonds somehow mean less when given because they weren't mined, despite the fact that the lab diamonds are of a higher quality and clarity because the creation is controlled.

    • @tileux
      @tileux Місяць тому

      No. That was the case. But not any more. In the 90s the russians hit huge diamond deposits under the melting permafrost in siberia and the canadians hit a huge deposit at slave creek. In addition, the CSO - de beers cartel company - had been under indicted by the USA for cartel conduct and other crimes for years and had effectively been locked out of the US market. The canadians and russians flooded the market and the cso did a deal with the US justice department and agreed to shut down the cartel. So there is no price fixing in the diamond markets now. But de beers’ advertising (including the line ‘diamonds are forever’ that inspired the james bond book title) was so ubiquitous that the prices for diamonds are still out of line with supply.

    • @tileux
      @tileux Місяць тому +1

      @@body_by_depuyyou cant actually make a lab diamond as big as the biggest natural diamonds. Diamond is highly pressurised carbon. Its almost impossible - and prohibitively expensive , even if you could do it - to create the pressure required to make large diamonds.

  • @666johnco
    @666johnco Місяць тому +44

    The Civil War in Sierra Leone ended in 2002 when the anarchy became so bad that the UK did its only ever direct military intervention in a former Colony, an operation that began in 2000. I will mention that at the same time as this was occuring 'The Second Congo Civil War' also known as 'The Great War of Africa' broke out between 1998-2003, called that because of the number of Dfrican countries that were drawn in. 350000 died in the fighting and an excess death estimate of 5.4 million exists though it is disputed,. Mines run by militia with forced labour still exist in the DRC. Edit now the main thing is lithium for electric car batteries.

    • @AhHereWeGo
      @AhHereWeGo Місяць тому +7

      Lithium, cobalt, dysprosium, terbium, etc. and a large amount of them are Chinese owned.
      This is why I laugh in the face of anyone saying electric vehicles are better for the world

    • @nickmitsialis
      @nickmitsialis Місяць тому +3

      @@AhHereWeGo And the Chinese don't give two sh/ts about things like 'guilt' or 'racism' or 'colonialism'--there is a docco called 'Empire of Dust': the Chinese listen to the Congolese make excuses about how they can't do things because of ....The Chinese guy just say We (China ) didn't have any Infrastructure and you did--and you squandered it!'

    • @tileux
      @tileux Місяць тому +6

      The worst excesses in congo relate to cobalt - a key ingredient in advanced weaponry and historically highly sought by the west and the soviet union.
      But just for the record, the great war of africa - which has killed over 4 million africans in and around Congo up to around 2010 and continues today - has nothing to do with the west. That war is solely the product of inter-tribal animosities and fights over the right to resources. Africans are - sadly - no different to westerners in that regard.
      Some of the countries involved in the great war of africa did, and still do, fund themselves via mining but they do not have the expertise to operate those mines themselves. Blaming western miners in the region for what happened, and is still happening, in the great war of africa is like blaming macdonalds for paying taxes that are used to make weapons in the west.

    • @BlackStudies
      @BlackStudies Місяць тому +3

      @@tileux
      The ongoing conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has deep roots in the country's colonial past. The brutal exploitation and repression under Belgian colonial rule from the late 19th century until 1960 set the stage for instability and violence that has plagued the DRC to this day:
      During the colonial period under King Leopold II and then the Belgian state, the Congolese people suffered immensely from forced labor, massacres, mutilations, and other atrocities as the colonizers extracted valuable resources like rubber and ivory.[4] An estimated 10 million Congolese died from colonial abuses between 1880-1920.[1][11] This decimated and traumatized the population.
      The Belgian colonizers also intensified ethnic divisions, favoring some groups like the Tutsi over others. When the Belgians hastily granted independence in 1960, it left the DRC ill-prepared for self-rule, with only 16 university graduates in the entire country.[4] Chaos and civil war erupted within days of independence in 1960.[14]
      Cold War powers like the U.S. and Soviet Union then vied for influence, backing different factions and fueling ongoing instability.[14] The corrupt, Western-backed dictatorship of Mobutu Sese Seko from 1965-1997 further impoverished the country.[4]
      When the 1994 Rwandan genocide spilled over into eastern DRC, it reignited ethnic tensions and led to the First and Second Congo Wars, which drew in multiple neighboring countries seeking to exploit the DRC's mineral wealth.[15] Over 5 million died in the wars from 1996-2003.[17]
      So in summary, Belgian colonialism left a legacy of underdevelopment, ethnic strife, and a corrupt system of resource extraction that has made the DRC vulnerable to ongoing violence by armed groups and interference by foreign powers. Resolving the current conflict will require addressing these deep-seated issues with roots in the colonial past.[2][10]
      Citations:
      [1] [PDF] Ending Foreign Exploitation of Mineral Resources in the Democratic ... ww1.odu.edu/content/dam/odu/offices/mun/docs/4th-drc.pdf
      [2] "The Resource Curse in the Congo" by Erin Nichols digitalcommons.morris.umn.edu/horizons/vol5/iss2/6/
      [3] [PDF] Violence linked to natural resource exploitation - ohchr www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/Documents/Countries/CD/FS-5_Natural_Resources_FINAL.pdf
      [4] DR Congo: Cursed by its natural wealth - BBC News www.bbc.com/news/magazine-24396390
      [5] Congo Crisis - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congo_Crisis
      [6] [PDF] Colonialism and its Socio-politico and Economic Impact www.qurtuba.edu.pk/thedialogue/The%20Dialogue/12_3/Dialogue_July_September2017_311-320.pdf
      [7] The Global Exploitation of Congo Must End - Jacobin jacobin.com/2023/02/democratic-republic-of-the-congo-war-colonialism-exploitation-resources-intervention-history
      [8] [PDF] Congo Crisis, 1960-65 - Old Dominion University ww1.odu.edu/content/dam/odu/offices/mun/docs/crisis-two-congo.pdf
      [9] Congo: Colonialism through Dictatorship, 1400s-1997 enoughproject.org/blog/congo-colonialism-through-dictatorship-1400s-1997
      [10] History of the Democratic Republic of the Congo - Britannica www.britannica.com/place/Democratic-Republic-of-the-Congo/History
      [11] Lasting effects of colonial-era resource exploitation in Congo - VoxDev voxdev.org/topic/institutions-political-economy/lasting-effects-colonial-era-resource-exploitation-congo
      [12] republic of congo's natural resources press.un.org/en/2001/sc7057.doc.htm
      [13] The Colonial Legacy and Transitional Justice in the Democratic ... www.accord.org.za/ajcr-issues/the-colonial-legacy-and-transitional-justice-in-the-democratic-republic-of-the-congo/
      [14] The Congo, Decolonization, and the Cold War, 1960-1965 history.state.gov/milestones/1961-1968/congo-decolonization
      [15] A guide to the decades-long conflict in DR Congo | News - Al Jazeera www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/2/21/a-guide-to-the-decades-long-conflict-in-dr-congo
      [16] Conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo | Global Conflict Tracker www.cfr.org/global-conflict-tracker/conflict/violence-democratic-republic-congo
      [17] Colonial rule, dictatorship, civil war | BMZ www.bmz.de/en/countries/democratic-republic-of-the-congo/historical-background-56144
      [18] Democratic Republic of the Congo - Britannica www.britannica.com/place/Democratic-Republic-of-the-Congo/The-Congo-crisis
      [19] History of Colonization and Exploitation in the DRC - Gala www.learngala.com/cases/cobalt-electric-vehicles/6

    • @Azeyral
      @Azeyral Місяць тому +1

      @@AhHereWeGo We need to change for electric vehicles anyway... But the best thing is to reduce our production and consumption to avoid to use materials from bloody conflicts. Reducing vehicle weight is an other priority, as like developing public transportation, reducing our travels etc. Mines are the worst industry considery to violation of human rights of course. Nations must work to make legislate and UN must change its capacity to stop conflicts... I know there are some utopian propositions there but this is the best scenario in my opinion.

  • @roosterblood
    @roosterblood Місяць тому +49

    The ending where Leo dies is where I grew up. It's a lot more suburban than it looks. Most of this was filmed in KwaZulu-Natal

    • @English_MoFo
      @English_MoFo Місяць тому +7

      Leo dies? I’m 3 minutes in😡

    • @roosterblood
      @roosterblood Місяць тому

      @@English_MoFo 😂😞

    • @potterj09
      @potterj09 Місяць тому

      @@English_MoFo lmao bru.

    • @dallesamllhals9161
      @dallesamllhals9161 Місяць тому

      @@English_MoFo Hey! Don't belive 'em! He only dies in The Departed(2006)...wait....and in Titanic(1997) 😛

  • @David_C_83
    @David_C_83 Місяць тому +18

    As soon as I saw this reaction I had to click on it. It's among my favorite movies, there's so many emotions that come from it. I think it's impossible not to cry at the whole scene on the cliff, both Archer letting them go while admitting he thought about stealing from them as well as the call to Maddy. If it's not oil or diamonds it's something else, there will always be "rare" materials as long as someone can make a profit out it.

  • @jonathang9705
    @jonathang9705 Місяць тому +7

    My favorite Leo DiCaprio movie, and Jennifer Connelly was beautiful and talented as always. I think Danny Archer is one of the more enigmatic, complex and memorable characters in film and he really struck a chord with me. He suffered trauma and loss at a young age ,was forced from his home, then found another home in the army but wanted a better, more peaceful life for himself and an escape from the conflict and violence of Africa. He had become so numb and desensitized by what he had experienced that he was willing to do whatever he had to to get what he wanted and didn't care who got hurt in the process, but in the end showed he was a good man by sacrificing himself for the good of others.
    His end was really emotional, he was so close to getting free to that new life he dreamed of. At least he had someone to share his final moments with and didn't die alone.
    RIP Danny Archer. "Rhodesians Never Die"
    p.s. I'd highly recommend watching "A Beautiful Mind" with Jennifer Connelly and Russell Crowe. She won an Oscar for her performance.

  • @wesleyy2502
    @wesleyy2502 Місяць тому +50

    Can't believe Leo didn't win an Oscar for this.

    • @8301TheJMan
      @8301TheJMan Місяць тому +3

      This and "The Departed" came out the same year are were what finally convinced me that Leo was a legit brilliant actor. He was great in pretty much everything he was in prior to this, but similar to Brad Pitt - for the longest I refused to see him as anything but as a teenybopper heart throb, but eventually, like with Pitt, I eventually was forced to recognize how great of an actor he truly was. And it was these two movies that did it for me. What's hilarious to me was the fact that imo, both the films "The Departed" and "Blood Diamond", as well as Leo's performances in both of them were better than both the film "The Revenant" as well as Leo's performance in it - an yet it was "The Revenant" performance that manage to actually get him the oscar. Hounsou also was simply brilliant in this film too, and if Leo didn't win anything for this - than he damn well shoulda. But the Oscars have been shown to be bs the last few decades anyways, between Leo not getting one for either of these films, Val Kilmer not getting even nominated for one for playing Doc Holiday in "Tombstone" or in Morison "The Doors," or Brad Pitt nit getting one for his performances in "The Assassination of Jesse James..." or in "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button", are only jut a few examples of the many ridiculous oscar snubs over the years and yet it seems to somehow be a more and more frequent occurrence as time goes on. But of the many examples i can think of, Leo not getting one for this film is especially egregious imo.

    • @krayzy932
      @krayzy932 Місяць тому +2

      I would have probably picked Leo over Forest Whitaker that year, but I think Will Smith deserved it more than both of them. He was great in The Pursuit of Happyness.

    • @8301TheJMan
      @8301TheJMan Місяць тому +1

      @@krayzy932 Though i completely agree with you that Will Smith was phenomenal in "The Pursuit of Happiness", (and a billion times more deserving of the oscar than the role where he did win it - that being "Ali"), and Forest was certainly brilliant as well - however i still think Leo's performances in this or in "The Departed," (which both came out in the same year), were more brilliant than Smith's or Forest's performances. But the end of the day, art is entirely subjective. There simply is no such things as an objectively better performance" because as humans we are incapable of not allowing or pre-existing opinions, world views, and as well as your personal life experiences impact the way a person interprets or critique any work of art. which ever medium that the subject work of art is in. Whether it be in film, literature, comic-books, music, painting, sculpting, or performance art (like dancing or acting), regardless - there's simply no objective standards to rate/review art. And even if there were, we are incapable of applying those standards objectively/consistently. So in other words there's no way to prove which of these performances were better - we only have our own personal opinions one way or another.

    • @crazyvideos188
      @crazyvideos188 Місяць тому

      Forest deserved it though.. for me personally that performance was amazing

    • @8301TheJMan
      @8301TheJMan Місяць тому

      @@crazyvideos188 Like i said in an earlier comment, even though i personally believe Leo's performance in this as well as in "The Departed," (which came out in the same year), were better that Forest's, it wasn't by a whole lot - and Forest's certainly was brilliant imo. So at the end of the day, it's not the biggest of snubs, cuz there were so many great performances that year, and any one of them deserved an oscar. It sucks that they had to all come out in the same, cuz there were plenty of years both before and even more so - since that oscar season that didn't have a single film and/or performance that was as good as any of the top four imo, that being Leo in those two films i mentioned, Will Smith in "The Pursuit of Happiness," and Forest in "The Last Scotsman". It just annoys me more so simply because i believe Leo in "Blood Diamond and "The Departed were without question his best performances of his whole career, and when he finally got the oscar it was for Revenant, which both as a film itself, as well as his performance wasn't close to as brilliant as these two films were. That's just my opinion though.

  • @Thatonedude2345
    @Thatonedude2345 Місяць тому +12

    A highly underrated movie.

  • @Fred-vy1hm
    @Fred-vy1hm Місяць тому +11

    Jennifer Connolly is a great actress and a timeless beauty, you might know her from the movie A Beautiful Mind for which she recieved the best supporting actress academy award. P.S. a good alternative to African sourced stones are Canadian or polar bear diamonds from mines in the Northwest Territories, called that because there is a tiny polar bear laser etched on each cut stone specifically to assure the consumer that they aren't "blood" diamonds.

  • @Harkness78
    @Harkness78 Місяць тому +14

    Directed by Edward Zwick, who also directed The Last Samurai. Check out his American Civil War movie "Glory" if you like both of those films!

    • @dallasyap3064
      @dallasyap3064 Місяць тому +1

      I loved glory, been a long time since I watched it, but I still remember some parts of it. It's a must watch movie.

  • @chazbeiler8903
    @chazbeiler8903 Місяць тому +15

    Crazy how just yesterday I wanted to look up movie reactions to this and you are watching it let's gooo

  • @cmbtking
    @cmbtking Місяць тому +18

    Great movie. In college back in 2009 I did a 10 page report on the blood diamond trade and the use of child soldiers, and we had to make a 2 minute video to go with the paper, so I used the scene from this movie where they make the kid shoot the guy for the first time as the opening scene to my video.
    Got 110% on that project cause it made my teacher cry.
    If you own real diamonds, you've now seen where pretty much all of them come from, and what happens to get them.

    • @DestinyAwaits19
      @DestinyAwaits19 Місяць тому +1

      Not all diamonds are conflict diamonds. Even the movie admits that.

    • @cmbtking
      @cmbtking Місяць тому +1

      @@DestinyAwaits19 good thing I never said that either

    • @billthomas478
      @billthomas478 Місяць тому +1

      Except for the ones from Canada

    • @aphextwin5712
      @aphextwin5712 Місяць тому +1

      ⁠@@cmbtkingNo, you didn’t say “all of them”, you said “pretty much all of them”, a statement many might interpret as 90+%. What number you can find is that about 20% of diamonds come from artisanal miners; conflict diamonds as depicted here come from artisanal miners. Their condition are often pretty bad but outright civil war doesn’t affect them all.
      Of course, you could label all diamonds mined in countries without democracy and bad human rights as ‘dirty’ but then such labels would apply to a lot of oil and gas as well.

  • @J.Castle
    @J.Castle Місяць тому +12

    Next movie similar to this u should watch, tears of the sun. 😢

  • @jonathanbergh167
    @jonathanbergh167 Місяць тому +4

    Also, look up the Rhodesian Bush War to get some of the back story of the main characters' military career and why it made him so good in conflict.

  • @craigmorrice6032
    @craigmorrice6032 Місяць тому +6

    Yes, yes, yes finally a blood diamond reaction. Today is a good day, thank you. It is a powerful movie.

  • @ByronJames7
    @ByronJames7 25 днів тому

    I'm glad you enjoyed this. The composer who scored the music for this film, James Newton Howard, was my dad's best friend growing up and through adulthood. It was one of his many film projects that stuck with him through the years.

  • @crazyvideos188
    @crazyvideos188 Місяць тому +14

    Djimon was amazing in this movie.. shouldve won an oscar..... he is great in everything...

    • @HouseNHaunted
      @HouseNHaunted 26 днів тому

      The Island and Never Back Down are great!

  • @EBRoyJr
    @EBRoyJr Місяць тому +6

    It is a wild ride. Heartbreaking what humans do to each other.

  • @potterj09
    @potterj09 Місяць тому +3

    I had a brief time as a teenager living in Johannesburg for 2yrs in the mid 90's. Every adventure into the city was like an exercise in survival. Capetown was far nicer at the time. Sure teaches you to look over your shoulder lol.

  • @EBRoyJr
    @EBRoyJr Місяць тому +6

    It's called Blood Diamond for a reason.

    • @McPh1741
      @McPh1741 Місяць тому +3

      But like the one guy said, at least they didn't find oil.

  • @r2474ever
    @r2474ever Місяць тому +10

    Movies like this (and so many others) that makes one wonder how in pluperfect heck it took until The Revenant for Leo to get his Oscar…

    • @petercollingwood522
      @petercollingwood522 Місяць тому +1

      Yeah. Should have gotten it for this if any.

    • @920WASHBURN
      @920WASHBURN Місяць тому

      Should have got one for Gilbert grape

    • @shayrup7
      @shayrup7 12 днів тому

      ⁠@@petercollingwood522watch The Last King of Scotland and then you’ll see why Forest Whittaker won it. That year was tough for the academy award. So many top performances. This film is one of my all time favourites, but the award went to the right person.

  • @hinesmaster99
    @hinesmaster99 Місяць тому +5

    He actually does a great accent, had to watch twice with the subtitles on but I finally understood. That's why I call my bruv instead of bro now, it freaks them out.

  • @hinesmaster99
    @hinesmaster99 Місяць тому +4

    Make sure you have tissues because it's a tear jerker into real world!
    Possibly D.H. best role in a movie, Leo was second best the time I watched this film.

  • @SteveSmith-wq4gp
    @SteveSmith-wq4gp Місяць тому

    One of my favourite DiCaprio roles. Such a legendary actor.

  • @howtocookazombie
    @howtocookazombie Місяць тому +8

    Suggestion: "Lord of War" from 2005.

    • @James_Ford4815
      @James_Ford4815 Місяць тому +1

      Nicolas Cage is great in it , and he is one of the few actors where all of his movies are highly re-watchable no matter how bad the movie is , he just has a it factor where it's fun to watch him act

  • @seefitch4601
    @seefitch4601 Місяць тому +1

    Omg! Wow! I love this film!
    Jennifer Connelly is my favorite actress of all time.
    Thanks Kamilla!
    I absolutely loved your Forrest Gump reaction! That was my favorite film for 25 years until Logan came out.

  • @wmont9169
    @wmont9169 Місяць тому +2

    I hadn't watched this movie before so glad I did now. Thanks for posting.

  • @dylanpierce8493
    @dylanpierce8493 Місяць тому +5

    "Why is this happening?!" TIA

  • @Sam11747
    @Sam11747 Місяць тому

    Arnold Vosloo's character, Colonel Coetzee, was loosely based off of one of the founders of a real company called 'Executive Outcomes' that did training and direct action in Sierra Leone, cause the Sierra Leone military was in disarray and needed lots of help. Executive Outcomes got a mostly bad rap in the movie though, cause the company did stop the fighting but when the United Nations made Executive Outcomes cease operations the fighting started again.

  • @blunt2416
    @blunt2416 Місяць тому +3

    Pleasantly surprised to see this one picked. This actually came out the same year as the "The Departed"....leo was busy.

  • @sasapetroski981
    @sasapetroski981 Місяць тому +1

    This movie is so good, can watch every day

  • @666johnco
    @666johnco Місяць тому +3

    Also Kamilla for knowledge purposes rather than reaction consider the 2010 film documentary 'Blood in the Mobile' made by a Danish director which covered the use of Conflict Minerals from the Congo in the mobile phone industry, as stated in my other comment thats now moved on to different minerals being used to make batteries for electric cars.

  • @lonestarpiper4917
    @lonestarpiper4917 Місяць тому +1

    This is one of my favorite films. Top 5 for sure. Everyone is perfectly cast in this movie.

  • @rkw2917
    @rkw2917 Місяць тому +1

    I've never bought a diamond in my life and never will

  • @JordanCesaroni93
    @JordanCesaroni93 Місяць тому +3

    Such a great movie… and such a concerning and real topic. The story tells so much about what is happening over there in the diamond trade.

  • @airborngrmp1
    @airborngrmp1 Місяць тому +2

    I really like this movie, despite the heavy subject matter. The casting is just outstanding too, I've always liked Djimon Hounsou and this was probably his best performance - if not for Gladiator. Leo and Jennifer Connelly just smolder across every scene together, but the pace is so fast, so inevitably tragic, that it's rarely in doubt they won't make it out together.
    Heavy and intense action. Great film, great acting.

  • @chrisking6667
    @chrisking6667 Місяць тому

    I saw this film on a first date at the cinema. Rebecca.
    I tried my hardest not to cry but when he died on the hill I couldn't help it.

  • @EBRoyJr
    @EBRoyJr Місяць тому +3

    Great reaction. Another good movie about Africa is The Ghost And The Darkness...true story.

  • @McPh1741
    @McPh1741 Місяць тому +1

    I just thought of another good movie with similar atmosphere. "Tears of the Sun" starring Bruce Willis. It also takes place in Africa during a civil war. I don't how aware you of Bruce Willis' decline in health, but many people believe the onset injury he sustained during the making of "Tears of the Sun" was the beginning of his mental decline. It's truly sad to see him now.

  • @tyroneloki5131
    @tyroneloki5131 Місяць тому

    he should have won an Oscar here

  • @drewp5007
    @drewp5007 Місяць тому +1

    Leo and Djimon were both nominated for oscars for this movie and i think should have won but didnt

  • @ChosenMan-be8mz
    @ChosenMan-be8mz Місяць тому +5

    It always gets me when Danny sees his blood dribbling into the dirt as a callback to what the colonel said at the start of the film about why the Earth is so red in that part of the world 🩸 😢

    • @dallesamllhals9161
      @dallesamllhals9161 Місяць тому

      There's blood all over the world

    • @ChosenMan-be8mz
      @ChosenMan-be8mz Місяць тому

      @@dallesamllhals9161 well aware of that was simply remarking how it was cool the director made it come full circle ⭕️ and yes plenty of places and land have had blood spilt over them but they do not always have red earth otherwise the soil over the Somme would be as red as a poppy

  • @lolmao500
    @lolmao500 Місяць тому +2

    I used to work with an immigrant from the Congo, she had to flee the war, lived in a refugee camp for many years and she saw most of her family murdered in front of her when a rebel group attacked the camp and basically murdered every man in the camp and kidnapped the kids to brainwash them and use them as soldiers. Years later she found her son that had been kidnapped. The world is a screwed up place, people in the west have zero idea whats its like out there... they whine about paying too much money for netflix or traffic, these are not real problems, not even close.

    • @billthomas478
      @billthomas478 Місяць тому

      I've lived in a few different countries and I fully agree with you. People in the West, especially America and Canada, have absolutely no idea how the world really is.

  • @JasonJrake
    @JasonJrake Місяць тому +1

    If you research it carefully, you can buy diamonds that are from ethically run mines…but to be safe you can just stick to other gemstones. Most are cheaper and better looking.

  • @tome2294
    @tome2294 Місяць тому

    FYI. Jennifer Connelly= Jennifer Con-ally. She has been in many movies. Has always been one of my favorites.

  • @fabgg_
    @fabgg_ Місяць тому

    One of my favorite movie ! can't believe you reacted to it, so cool. Thx for the video

  • @jakemasters2674
    @jakemasters2674 8 днів тому

    I know it is a movie but damn what a shot with an AK. At the train tracks

  • @outsideriehl
    @outsideriehl 3 дні тому

    Archer doesnt have many accents he just has a south African accent and speaks Krio to Commander zero

  • @McPh1741
    @McPh1741 Місяць тому +1

    Great movieand great reaction. I'm not a big Leo fan but he was good in this. Jennifer Connelly was as well and looking beautiful as always. Djimon Hounsou and Arnold Vasloo are awesome in everything they do. I like movies that are set against the backdrop of a country in turmoil. The element of anarchy and societal collapse really adds to the atmosphere. I've also thought that being a photojournalist covering an event like this would be amazing. The story you can tell with photos. I was a kid in the Philippines living on Clark AIR Base when President Marcos was overthrown in 1986. He was brough to Clark AB to be flown to Hawaii. My Dad has a picture of Marcos and his wife being escorted to the plane, taken by my uncle, an Air Force photographer at the time. He couldn't have been more that a couple feet away from them when he took it. A brief moment in the history of a country captured by my uncle. I've always thought that was cool. if you are interested in other movies that have a similar setting and feel as "Blood Diamond" may I recommend:
    Under Fire (1983)- Starring Nick Nolte and Gene Hackman. It's a fictional story that takes place during the real Nicaraguan Revolution in 1979.
    Salvador (1986) Directed by Oliver Stone, starring James Woods. It's about the real life experiences of journalist Richard Boyle and his time covering the civil war in El Salvador. It's very graphic, very brutal and heartbreaking, but I think you'll like it.

  • @andyc1318
    @andyc1318 Місяць тому

    This is a movie that people need to see. Incredible movie and reaction as always Kamil.

  • @srottfaen
    @srottfaen Місяць тому +1

    That countdown reminds me a lot of a mushroom trip I've had.

  • @enochz2056
    @enochz2056 Місяць тому +1

    I've been wanting to watch this movie again.

  • @tonydeluna8095
    @tonydeluna8095 Місяць тому +2

    Badass movie! I hope you’ll enjoy it! Have a great weekend ❤

  • @LovelyBeachCoast-us1ec
    @LovelyBeachCoast-us1ec Місяць тому

    I am writing this to help out kamilla and this video and this channel with the algorithm 🥰

  • @user-vc5rp7nf8f
    @user-vc5rp7nf8f Місяць тому

    it is quite silly, for people in developed parts of the world to cherish and value these stones so much. most people don't even question it.... the meaning or validity of them, they just accept it as a necessary part of an engagement. it's bad enough that one ring costs thousands (if not tens of thousands of dollars), but the fact that it cost someone their life, or indirectly fuels a cycle of violence in some part of the world is crazy. i don't know why people even want them, it's literally just a rock. you're better off spending paying a craftsman for a bespoke, handmade ring without a diamond than a ring with one.

  • @paveilmikhail3550
    @paveilmikhail3550 Місяць тому

    It's one of my favourite movie that I recommend to mostly everyone.

  • @jeh58
    @jeh58 Місяць тому +1

    Been married for 30 years, but when me & my wife saw this movie we agreed to never buy diamonds again.

    • @BigBoss-sm9xj
      @BigBoss-sm9xj Місяць тому +1

      I am not married but when I do get married I will do the same

  • @CoolBreezeX11
    @CoolBreezeX11 Місяць тому

    19:46 "What a fiesta" killed me🤣🤣

  • @Filmfiend27
    @Filmfiend27 Місяць тому

    Another movie in a similar vein is Lord of War. About a weapons smuggler who sells guns to various factions across the world including the diamond warlords of Africa.

  • @dallesamllhals9161
    @dallesamllhals9161 Місяць тому

    22:28 Yes They are! And this one's from 2006 = I'm to OLD for that SoMe shit(Dear 2024+) 😞

  • @nothernmonkey8612
    @nothernmonkey8612 Місяць тому

    Djimon hounsou is in 2 of my favourite movies DEEP RISING it's my favourite creature feature and BIKER BOYZ another forgotten gem 💎that people have forgotten about

  • @dean93arr
    @dean93arr Місяць тому +1

    One of underrated movies.. not a lot of reaction of this movie.. i suggest another underrated gem, The Guardian (coastguard movie), i hope your patreon suggest this, you wont regret..

  • @user-mn8xf7rq8x
    @user-mn8xf7rq8x Місяць тому +1

    I forgot all about this movie. Great choice!

  • @gerardschnueriger5624
    @gerardschnueriger5624 17 годин тому

    Good choice, very good movie!

  • @-----REDACTED-----
    @-----REDACTED----- Місяць тому

    TIA
    Also nothing changed. Check out Coltan, for example. We are inextricably linked to this.

  • @J.Castle
    @J.Castle Місяць тому +1

    Those farmers and fishermen, their parents. Were survivors. Worthy of life. 😡

  • @natecloe8535
    @natecloe8535 Місяць тому

    I remember when this came out it felt like a weird miss on a dartboard. At the time the focus on Africa was in between 2 popular stages in America. Both of them were bad. The first one was this very strange and very short period. Where every effing celebrity on the planet was asking for people to donate and help because of Idi Amin. He was a war Lord that specifically kidnapped children to make them soldiers. And he'd been doing it for 20 years and nobody cared...until suddenly EVERYBODY cared. For God sakes I vividly remember watching George Clooney talking about raising money to SEND A STRIKE FORCE to save these kids in like Sierra Leone or somewhere.
    I have absolutely no idea what happened with that because that lasted maybe 3 weeks or a month and then you never heard about it again. And that might partly be because the next big focus on Africa came around. Which is the blood diamond situation. This movie is pretty Dang old. And it came out well before anybody started doing anything to help that situation. At least not in a global public way.

  • @caciquenica2482
    @caciquenica2482 Місяць тому +1

    It's a violent world, you should watch Machine Gun preacher based on a true story also related to Africa

  • @kylespeirs6510
    @kylespeirs6510 Місяць тому

    Girl love your reactions ❤❤

  • @pedroV2003
    @pedroV2003 Місяць тому +7

    Jennifer Connelly has been around for a very long time and has been in many excellent movies but 'Top Gun' is NOT one of the better ones IMO. Try
    A Beautiful Mind
    House of Sand and Fog
    Requiem for a Dream
    The Hot Spot
    Inventing the Abbotts
    Mullholland Drive
    Pollock

    • @yuketage6708
      @yuketage6708 Місяць тому

      +1 for Requiem for a Dream

    • @pedroV2003
      @pedroV2003 Місяць тому

      @@yuketage6708 absolutely brutal film brilliantly executed and acted. Would love to see Kamilla react to it.

  • @joshuacordero8163
    @joshuacordero8163 Місяць тому

    La realidad es que mundo es así. We live in imperfect society but we are blessed to be in the America and Western Europe. We are shield from the horrors of life is really outside of our borders. A life where any day bad things could happen to you or your children, where the one with the better weapons is law. I am glad you saw Blood Diamonds Kamilla, it’s tough to watch but important to know!!

    • @BlackStudies
      @BlackStudies Місяць тому

      America and Western Europe are _the cause_ of these horrors.
      There are several ways in which Africa's colonial past continues to influence and shape many of the conflicts seen on the continent today:
      1. Artificial borders: The borders of most African countries were drawn by European colonial powers in the late 19th century with little regard for pre-existing ethnic, cultural, and linguistic boundaries. This forced different groups together into single states, sowing seeds for future conflicts. Many civil wars and secessionist movements in post-colonial Africa have stemmed from these arbitrary colonial borders.[2][5]
      2. Extractive economic models: Colonial powers set up economies in African colonies focused on extracting natural resources like minerals, oil, rubber, etc. to export to Europe. This established a pattern of resource extraction rather than local development that persists today. Competition for control over valuable natural resources continues to fuel many conflicts in resource-rich African countries.[1][3][4]
      3. Weak institutions: Colonial administrations did not invest in building strong local governing institutions. After independence, many African states inherited weak state capacity, making them vulnerable to coups, civil wars, and separatist conflicts. The lack of robust institutions makes it harder to manage diversity and resource competition peacefully.[4]
      4. Stunted economic development: The colonial extraction model prevented economic diversification and left many African economies dependent on commodity exports. This has made it harder to achieve sustained development, reduce poverty and inequality - factors that can feed into conflicts.[3]
      5. Foreign intervention: The colonial scramble for Africa in the 19th century made the continent an arena for foreign powers to compete for influence. Today, foreign powers still intervene in African conflicts to secure access to resources and markets, sometimes exacerbating local tensions.[1]
      So while the era of formal colonialism ended in the 1960s-70s, its legacy in terms of borders, institutions, economic structures and geopolitical rivalries continues to shape the landscape of conflict in 21st century Africa in significant ways. Overcoming this colonial inheritance remains an ongoing challenge for African states and societies.
      Citations:
      [1] But it's been more than 50 years! How Africa's resource conflicts are ... www.diis.dk/en/research/but-its-been-more-than-50-years-how-africas-resource-conflicts-are-still-rooted-in
      [2] List of conflicts in Africa - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_conflicts_in_Africa
      [3] Overcoming the colonial development model of resource extraction ... www.brookings.edu/articles/overcoming-the-colonial-development-model-of-resource-extraction-for-sustainable-development-in-africa/
      [4] The Resource Curse, Colonialism, and The Hypocrisy of Western ... georgetownsecuritystudiesreview.org/2022/04/01/the-resource-curse-colonialism-and-the-hypocrisy-of-western-climate-leadership/
      [5] Endogenous Colonial Borders: Precolonial States and Geography in ... www.cambridge.org/core/journals/american-political-science-review/article/endogenous-colonial-borders-precolonial-states-and-geography-in-the-partition-of-africa/132D6CBDE92946D14CCC64E59A94D3D2
      [6] Full article: The new scramble for Africa in a post-colonial era and ... www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/21665095.2024.2306387
      [7] A history of resource plunder - Africa Is a Country africasacountry.com/2021/04/a-history-of-resource-plunder
      [8] Are colonial-era borders drawn by Europeans holding Africa back? www.aeaweb.org/research/are-colonial-era-borders-holding-africa-back
      [9] The Dividing of a Continent: Africa's Separatist Problem - The Atlantic www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2012/09/the-dividing-of-a-continent-africas-separatist-problem/262171/
      [10] 7. Armed conflict and peace processes in sub-Saharan Africa - SIPRI www.sipri.org/yearbook/2022/07
      [11] Conflict in Africa | Perspectives on History | AHA www.historians.org/research-and-publications/perspectives-on-history/summer-2016/conflict-in-africa-the-historical-roots-of-current-problems
      [12] Are Africa's colonial borders holding it back? - UA-cam ua-cam.com/video/WxX-acnrd9c/v-deo.html
      [13] Colonial roots of current conflicts - Argia www.argia.eus/en/argia-astekaria/2839/egungo-gatazken-sustrai-kolonialak
      [14] [PDF] Inequality and natural resources in Africa - UNESCO en.unesco.org/inclusivepolicylab/sites/default/files/analytics/document/2019/4/wssr_2016_chap_09.pdf
      [15] Root Causes of Conflicts in Africa Must Be Addressed beyond ... press.un.org/en/2023/sc15249.doc.htm
      [16] Extractive colonial economies and legacies of spatial inequality cepr.org/voxeu/columns/extractive-colonial-economies-and-legacies-spatial-inequality-evidence-africa
      [17] Africa: Conflicts, Violence Threaten Rights - Human Rights Watch www.hrw.org/news/2023/01/12/africa-conflicts-violence-threaten-rights
      [18] European Colonialism in Africa Is Alive - Project Syndicate www.project-syndicate.org/onpoint/europe-africa-colonial-era-lasting-effects-by-stelios-michalopoulos-and-elias-papaioannou-2021-07
      [19] How Distrust of Government by Marginalized People Fuels Conflict ... www.imf.org/en/Blogs/Articles/2024/01/25/how-distrust-of-government-by-marginalized-people-fuels-conflict-in-africa

  • @LovelyBeachCoast-us1ec
    @LovelyBeachCoast-us1ec Місяць тому

    please everyone don’t forget to hit the like button and the share button and copy the link it helps kamilla a lot 🥺🙏

  • @Denden-mx9gl
    @Denden-mx9gl Місяць тому

    I hope beast of no nation is on the list too.

  • @billthomas478
    @billthomas478 Місяць тому

    Another one to check out is *Lord of War"

  • @pedroV2003
    @pedroV2003 Місяць тому +1

    It's a good movie. Could stare at Jennifer Connelly all day long. The lady is absolutely stunning.

  • @juneclark553
    @juneclark553 Місяць тому +1

    Can't wait

  • @middlegrounds109
    @middlegrounds109 Місяць тому +1

    Hope your doing well. Great movie.

  • @cjperry2731
    @cjperry2731 Місяць тому

    Honestly.. we all want to watch Baywatch 👍
    😂

  • @dallasyap3064
    @dallasyap3064 Місяць тому

    Been awhile since I last saw this, but once again it reminds that whenever there's valuable resources in an area (especially in poor, undeveloped, unsecured, easily influenceable countries like in Africa), there will be instability and chaos, bcoz people and greedy corporations would want to have a piece of it for free or at extremely low price. Africa has been plagued by colonialism since the 19th century, several European countries occupying, mining, stealing its resources while oppressing the people and committing torture, harassment, murder, massacre against them etc etc.

  • @randallwilliamson3838
    @randallwilliamson3838 Місяць тому +68

    I get aggravated with the people who complain so much about America when you see things like this. Step outside of America and see just how bad the rest of the world is. Not saying America is perfect, but you can damned sure live a good life in America.

    • @t.dig.2040
      @t.dig.2040 Місяць тому +1

      I have worked with many people who work as expatriates, just so their kids can experience life away from the States.

    • @BlackStudies
      @BlackStudies Місяць тому +7

      This is EXACTLY the reason why I despise this movie. Conflict minerals are a problem ENTIRELY rooted in Western colonization. This IS NOT a problem of Africa's making as this film would have you believe. To rob a country of its wealth, its political borders, its economy, its language, and its culture and then turn around and talk about how good you have it here after having stolen African resources and labor is downright offensive and racist.

    • @AhHereWeGo
      @AhHereWeGo Місяць тому +3

      Things that happen in this movie are the reality.
      Western life is an anomaly that can end at any time

    • @petercollingwood522
      @petercollingwood522 Місяць тому

      @@BlackStudies Pull your head out you imbeciel. You literally don't know shit.

    • @bobjimonlyhughcanpreventfl342
      @bobjimonlyhughcanpreventfl342 Місяць тому

      @@BlackStudieswesterners have exploited the atrocities Africans are willing to commit on each other …like many cultures in history.
      For example during the years of the Atlantic slave trade it was known as a non African if you stayed more then a couple days you were likely to die of disease so white men stayed to the ports for a LONG time. The slave trade wouldnt have been possible without recourse rich / influential tribes exploiting lesser tribes. This is the history of mankind

  • @mikeaninger7388
    @mikeaninger7388 Місяць тому +3

    I swear you could put Jennifer Connelly in a trash bag and she’d look gorgeous

  • @kkbae2327
    @kkbae2327 17 днів тому

    Tears of the sun! Please watch tears of the sun!

  • @crimsonjedi
    @crimsonjedi Місяць тому

    Please Google how many slaves are in India. Which is the highest in the world. I live in America, and my coworker from India tells me stories, and it's just crazy. Be thankful for you have and are aloud to have. Always love your reactions. you're sweet and empathetic.

  • @y2k029
    @y2k029 Місяць тому

    Every time she tears up I'm tears up too stop it 😆 🤣 😢😢.... this movie is brutal..congrats you survived

  • @MattyNoNose
    @MattyNoNose Місяць тому

    If you want to see a really crazy film thats beautifully done, watch Beasts of no Nation.

  • @tyroneloki5131
    @tyroneloki5131 Місяць тому

    never heard of Jennifer, ow no. now we must watch her films
    labyrinth and a beautiful mind

    • @shatterquartz
      @shatterquartz Місяць тому

      But only try Requiem for a Dream if you are prepared for a traumatic experience.

  • @joumasepoes88
    @joumasepoes88 Місяць тому

    Bru is actually broere. It is Afrikaans for brother.

  • @NoName53761
    @NoName53761 Місяць тому

    Another must watch and thought provoking and based upon true events is the movie Hotel Rwanda

  • @MoMoMyPup10
    @MoMoMyPup10 Місяць тому

    Some of the greatest movies are so heavy to watch that it's tough to watch them more than once or twice, even in an edited reaction video. I need to space this one out between watches because it's that heavy.

  • @EBRoyJr
    @EBRoyJr Місяць тому +1

    That was a nice intro.

  • @billthomas478
    @billthomas478 Місяць тому

    Another movie about issues in Africa that is good but never gets attention is "Shake Hands With the Devil".

  • @juanchavez3271
    @juanchavez3271 Місяць тому

    i recomend you, "amores perros" is a the best mexican`s movie,

  • @MoMoMyPup10
    @MoMoMyPup10 Місяць тому

    Is it possible that the "potato sack" can save the last dance for me? 🤤🥳

  • @Rebellen007
    @Rebellen007 Місяць тому +1

    Solid film!

  • @thetankgarage
    @thetankgarage Місяць тому +6

    Your necklace might not be a diamond, but we all have smartphones. They use minerals mined under the same conditions depicted in this movie. There's no escaping it. The best I've been able to do is never buy a smartphone; however, I've still received hand-me-downs for free from family and friends. I also drive a very old car and will always aim to keep it that way. Additionally, I don't own any tablets. I'm not claiming to have solved the issue; I still buy an expensive computer every six years. This is just to illustrate that even as someone who is actively trying to avoid this, there's never a point where it feels like it's enough.
    On a complete sidenote. Over the years I have completely conflated this movie with Body of Lies(2008). There's probably some The Kingdom(2007) right next to it in my head as well. I'd say both movies are very similar in tone or style, at least from memory

    • @666johnco
      @666johnco Місяць тому

      In 2010 there was a documentary released called Blood in the Mobile which covered the militia run mines in Congo and the fact that no phone maker could verify that they were not using conflict minerals to make cell phones.

    • @DavidLopez-qi8hb
      @DavidLopez-qi8hb Місяць тому

      Yup, cobalt mines.

    • @tankgurl6589
      @tankgurl6589 Місяць тому

      Body of Lies is one of my all time favourite films. It's so underrated, but is incredibly directed and the complexity of the story is just unreal. So well made, would recommend to anyone who has an interest in the intelligence sector

  • @cheebees
    @cheebees Місяць тому

    Great movie and reaction. Nowadays it changed from diamonds to lithium deposits for batteries. So we can be happy we dont have real diamonds, but are people going to give up their phones and battery devices until more ethical practices?

  • @JerryLokomus
    @JerryLokomus 20 днів тому

    There's another movie with the same main actor: AMISTAD.

  • @RudyandLandonshow
    @RudyandLandonshow Місяць тому

    Do Beast Of No Nation next.

  • @mikealvarez2322
    @mikealvarez2322 Місяць тому +3

    You are right Kamilla, there are so many issues facing humanity, yet our universities and intellectuals keep focusing on injustices that took place generations ago. My country, the US, has gone completely mad as it heads towards self-destruction.

  • @Cenforge
    @Cenforge Місяць тому +1

    Bravo.

  • @atuuschaaw
    @atuuschaaw Місяць тому