American Watching : Lakshya

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  • Опубліковано 22 січ 2024
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 27

  • @sn5847
    @sn5847 5 місяців тому +16

    In general, Indians do not think the Army is a step-down. On the contrary, they respect the armed forces. There are villages, that prepare children for the army. But then, it is the life risk that makes most protective parents from non-army backgrounds get worried over children, particularly when it is the only child.
    *There are examples across the globe of Marching songs during war or difficult times - to keep the spirit of soldiers intact

  • @BhootBhagao-bg7ej
    @BhootBhagao-bg7ej 5 місяців тому +8

    1. I live in an urban Indian city and I see youngsters prepare for the military in the morning.
    I tried to get into military 2 times and failed both times.
    2. It is not a step down but it is looked as an inconvenience for urban middle & upper class because of regular redeployments.
    3. Men & women are complementary, none is better than the other ( 23:10 ) it's just western necessity that women join the workforce.
    4. The women are not just appreciated but welcome in the indian military but we must recognise that our enemies will not be chivalrous to our women and won't even spare their bodies after death ( historical facts - Indian women committed 'jauhar' to avoid the disrespect). The women soldiers must respect this fact and serve our nation accordingly.
    5. 29:40 this happened only because USA refused to give us satellite information about the infiltrators' positions ( hence ISRO developed further to be self sufficient in the technology).
    6. I didn't watch further than 34:00

  • @RaviAdhav
    @RaviAdhav 4 місяці тому +4

    The war part of it is not fictional. The climb was real. Its based on the Kargil war.

  • @mohdsuffian3477
    @mohdsuffian3477 5 місяців тому +9

    Gem of a picture whoever recommend this thankyou and thanks for reacting on it

    • @nandishhegde9025
      @nandishhegde9025 5 місяців тому +5

      Thanks, I did😅. Good for scribbler to be reacting to quality movies

  • @adityaroy7216
    @adityaroy7216 5 місяців тому +5

    Go for "URI: The Surgical Strike" next. One of the finest army movies.

  • @Vikasbhai7
    @Vikasbhai7 2 місяці тому +2

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ the 3rd most handsome hunk in the world is Hrithik Roshan and a best actor with best body ❤❤❤❤❤❤।।। All in one ❤❤❤❤❤।।। Lots of love for Hindi cinema bollywood only ❤❤❤❤

  • @death_parade
    @death_parade 5 місяців тому +3

    5:55 If you've only just noticed his eyes, then there is no way you've realized yet that he has three thumbs- 10:52, oh you already noticed that.
    10:12 Same here. I see someone do a dance move and I try to do the same and it feels like I've suddenly forgotten how my joints move 😅
    13:05 Well, my family is not _that_ well off so I can't say for certain, but its mostly people from military families or ones that are dwell in villages but have an ancestry that used to be the warrior class of older kingdoms and empires that want to join the Army. And even in sons and daughters of Generals, who are well off almost to the extent shown in this movie, do regularly choose an Army career.
    That said, for a well-off businessman's son (like in this movie), it would be a little odd for the son to join anything other than the family business. Even the Army. Its just something that never crosses the mind when you are meant to be one of the heirs to a family business.
    17:18 Exactly. As a kid I never understood the reason behind these goofy looking drills. But as I grew older, I understood that when the blood is pumping and you have an adrenaline rush, you're not going to be able to think things, you just react with muscle memory. And now you compound this with the fact that you have to train an entire group of individuals to have a similar style of muscle memory and at the end of it, they must all be able to do each drill to perfection. No exceptions. So the drills can't be too complicated, I mean you can't be teaching them advanced hand-hand combat skills in Basic Infantry Training. Got to build the minimum amount of skill first that'll allow them to best the enemy in at least 70% of the situations. Beyond that, you can train few select ones with a more advanced skillset.
    AFAIK, all Indian Infantry Officers and some from Artillery, Armoured, etc are supposed to go through the Commando Course to build up those advanced skills. The rest, like the ones in logistics, only go through Basic Infantry Training and then keep that minimum standard intact throughout their decades of service.
    22:42 You are not weird for thinking that throwing your hat up in the air is odd. In Indian traditions, "throwing someone's turban in the air" is a metaphor for gravely insulting a person. In Indian traditions, the eldest male in a household is traditionally made to wear a turban (different from the Sikh turban), and although I can't directly translate all the words related to the ceremony, but suffice it to say that turban is what marks a person as the head of a family. And it is during the 11 days of mourning following the death of that head of family that his sons are all given the turbans, because only now is there family considered separate. This tradition of joint families is still strictly adhered to in most Indian families. So throwing your turban in the air is absolutely frowned upon.
    As an example of just how serious not following this tradition is considered: recently, the Rajputs of Ayodhya district in India finally started wearing their turbans again after a 496 year gap. Because 496 years ago, a major temple (about as major as the Vatican is for all Christians or the Kaaba is for all Muslims) was demolished and a mosque was built on top of it by invaders. So these Rajputs took a sacred vow to not wear turbans (among other things) until that temple is rebuilt at that exact spot again. They fought countless battles over the centuries and finally yesterday, that temple was opened again. So no member out of that entire community wore turbans for 496 years until yesterday.
    23:41 This entire part about women joining or not joining the workforce is a lot more complicated than this situation presented here. Even before the age of automation, our grandmothers used to do all the household chores and then used to run mini cottage industries from within the homes. While the males tended to the fields or went off into administrative jobs or did their own business. So it is not as if women couldn't do more work outside of household chores due to lack of automation. Though automation has certainly made things a lot easier these days.
    The entire question in the last 1000 years has been whether to allow women outside of the extended family circle's set of homes in a village or whether to allow them outside the village. Why not? Because of a very good reason: Foreign invaders. They targeted our women frequently. And they were ruling over us (talking about the days before the Brits colonized us). Nowadays, it is not considered dangerous anymore for Indian women to step outside their homes, so now, in this era of peace, the talk has shifted to "allowing women in the workforce" but some are still holding on to the old ways considering them to be "traditions" when in reality those aren't our traditions, it is just something we had to resort to in order to protect our families in times of foreign occupation and subjugation.
    34:54 That part really hurts me. Blaming your own soldiers and calling them warmongers. I read and think about geopolitics a lot and I don't always like what USA is doing as a nation on the world stage, but that doesn't mean I hate American soldiers for it. A soldier is a soldier, no matter the uniform. How can a person, especially someone like me who didn't have the courage to join the Army, speak ill of someone like a soldier that has seen combat? And then I see civilians who don't possess even an ounce of honour and courage of conviction that a soldier has and I see such civilians denigrate soldiers, just makes my blood boil.

  • @Prateeks007
    @Prateeks007 5 місяців тому +3

    Next reaction plz
    -Shershan
    -Major
    Both movies based of real life story of soldiers..

  • @mohitagarwal7375
    @mohitagarwal7375 5 місяців тому +2

    Fighter is another patriotic movie of Hrithik Roshan

  • @rahulsinghshah4840
    @rahulsinghshah4840 5 місяців тому +3

    movie name is 26/11

  • @rahulsinghshah4840
    @rahulsinghshah4840 5 місяців тому +4

    the Attack of 26/11

  • @Lukydeb
    @Lukydeb Місяць тому +2

    Good movie

  • @supersapien5124
    @supersapien5124 5 місяців тому +3

    Malaikkottai valiban trailer

  • @mohdsuffian3477
    @mohdsuffian3477 5 місяців тому +4

    12:05 its the movie "war" worth watching it

  • @saurabhjoshi9314
    @saurabhjoshi9314 5 місяців тому +3

    Still U haven't watched the salaar?
    Netflix

    • @el_scribbler
      @el_scribbler  5 місяців тому +3

      no I just arrived back from India. will get to it in a bit

  • @rahulsinghshah4840
    @rahulsinghshah4840 5 місяців тому +6

    watch 26/11
    it based on real story

  • @doki1146
    @doki1146 5 місяців тому +4

    Watch "Kirik Party" please

  • @doki1146
    @doki1146 5 місяців тому +4

    19:05 in India whatever parents build its for this children's
    that's what they always same anyway 😅😅😅

    • @el_scribbler
      @el_scribbler  5 місяців тому +2

      Yes I have been told that

    • @doki1146
      @doki1146 5 місяців тому +2

      @@el_scribbler it's kind of like a warning 😅😅
      when I get old if you treat me well you will get all this if you don't you are screwed 😬😵