Paddy Mayne trains the Free French 😲 SAS Rogue Heroes - BBC

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  • Опубліковано 11 вер 2024
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    Paddy Mayne’s training methods are a tad unconventional…
    SAS Rogue Heroes tells the adrenaline-fuelled origins of the fearless, reckless Special Forces unit, its legend forged among the mayhem of WWII. By Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knight.
    #SASRogueHeroes #BBC #BBCiPlayer
    Watch SAS Rogue Heroes on iPlayer bbc.in/3DN9bxK
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 662

  • @thepianist3344
    @thepianist3344 Рік тому +1220

    In real life, Stirling did not refuse to integrate the French. It was even quite the opposite : he asked De Gaulle to "borrow" French paratroopers in England. There were too few SAS men and he needed experienced men quickly. Nowadays there are English and French SAS, with the same motto (Who dares wins/Qui ose gagne). Incredibly brave men. Long live the Anglo-French friendship

    • @rudolftrost3534
      @rudolftrost3534 Рік тому +69

      Do NOT forget the Belgian S.A.S., friend. Our paratroopers are respected world-wide.

    • @rudolftrost3534
      @rudolftrost3534 Рік тому +24

      The Belgian S.A.S. (5th S.A.S.) became 1st Para and 3rd Para.

    • @kloic9334
      @kloic9334 Рік тому +10

      @@rudolftrost3534 only 1st para really kept the tradition

    • @nicolasvanhorton5043
      @nicolasvanhorton5043 Рік тому +13

      Here is a short excerpt from the Wikipedia article entitled: "1st Marine Infantry Paratroopers Regiment": "The 1er Régiment de Parachutistes d'Infanterie de Marine (English: 1st Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment) or 1er RPIMa is a unit of the French Army Special Forces Command, therefore part of the Special Operations Command.
      Heirs to the Free French paratroopers of the 3rd and 4th squadrons of the Special Air Service (SAS) founded in the United Kingdom during WWII, the 1er RPIMa is sometimes referred to as the "French SAS" and still uses the same motto as their British counterparts to this day: Qui ose gagne (French for "Who Dares Wins")."

    • @Balrog2005
      @Balrog2005 Рік тому

      ''Real life'' and BBC historical productions are at war...for those that are interested in this: READ THE BOOK, it is way better and free of woke stupidities.

  • @PBurns-ng3gw
    @PBurns-ng3gw Рік тому +631

    "Is there a French word for 'Initiative?'"
    "...Yes, it's 'Initiative.'"

    • @thepymes
      @thepymes Рік тому +63

      And that is the very joke they are making...

    • @Kitiwake
      @Kitiwake Рік тому +38

      A word that French gave to the English language.

    • @sammni
      @sammni Рік тому +5

      Humour or irony isn't a strong point Mr Burns is it? Lol 😂

    • @TommyGlint
      @TommyGlint 9 місяців тому +26

      Was it Bush who said to Blair that the problem with the French is, they don’t have a word for “entrepreneur”.
      It is only alleged that he said it, but still pretty funny.

    • @17MrLeon
      @17MrLeon 4 місяці тому +4

      @@Kitiwake Nope its from Latin

  • @davidmiles4678
    @davidmiles4678 Рік тому +293

    I’m from the U.S and I’m just now learning about Paddy Mayne. What an amazing individual more people need to be taught about this brave man.

    • @sammni
      @sammni Рік тому +12

      I'm from down the street where he lived.
      Read a book on him
      Some of the things he did would be hard to portray and put into a movie for reality purposes.

    • @burtan2000
      @burtan2000 Рік тому +9

      I'll learn about the war every day for the rest of my life and i doubt I'll scratch the surface. The number of men like this at that time was astounding. There were 4 time fewer humans and yet there seemed to be more great people.

    • @montecristo7602
      @montecristo7602 Рік тому +6

      Well nowadays it's a matter of lack of moral fiber. Too many fookin keyboard warriord than real men

    • @thebaron9059
      @thebaron9059 Рік тому +4

      Paddy Mayne had an amazing, heroic life. His death however was ridiculous in comparison! Although I'm sure he would laugh at the irony!

    • @ianbenson21
      @ianbenson21 Рік тому +3

      Also learn about MAD MITCH.....

  • @korgothofbarbaria2841
    @korgothofbarbaria2841 Рік тому +441

    Is there French word for initiative had me laughing out loud. 😂🤣

    • @elrerex255
      @elrerex255 Рік тому +40

      initiative
      /ɪˈnɪʃətɪv/
      ...
      Origine
      late 18th century: from French, from Latin initiare, from initium ‘beginning’.

    • @kellydalstok8900
      @kellydalstok8900 Рік тому +5

      It was supposed to

    • @alioshax7797
      @alioshax7797 Рік тому +16

      @@elrerex255 That was the very point of the joke, mate...

    • @didierprevost1160
      @didierprevost1160 Рік тому +41

      An American president (Bush junior if I remember well) said publicly (and very seriously) :
      "There is no french word for entrepreneur".
      Which is french word... seriously 🤔

    • @nunosantos485
      @nunosantos485 Рік тому +2

      Is there or isn’t there?

  • @chuckfinlay6093
    @chuckfinlay6093 Рік тому +152

    From the AC/DC sound track to Jack O’Connell accent it’s an Absolutely outstanding series and can not recommended it highly enough. 🇬🇧🇬🇧

    • @Stantheman848
      @Stantheman848 Рік тому +2

      The comedy accent? What about jack being about a foot and 10 stone smaller than the real Paddy Mayne?

    • @benlewis2475
      @benlewis2475 Рік тому +1

      Well said

    • @seankilburn7200
      @seankilburn7200 Рік тому +12

      @@Stantheman848 Would you really rather an actor be 6’4 or actually be able to act. In case you’re unaware very few people are that tall and even fewer are actors.

    • @sammni
      @sammni 8 місяців тому

      Jamie Dornan?
      @@seankilburn7200

    • @maryclaremayo6157
      @maryclaremayo6157 7 днів тому

      @@seankilburn7200 Alan Ritchson is 6'3" but no way could he be Paddy. He did play Anders Lassen in The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare.

  • @artisaprimus6306
    @artisaprimus6306 Рік тому +136

    I've enjoyed the series immensely. It shows how military regulations can be a deterrent to achieving victory. Real heroes that deserve recognition.

    • @davidrendall7195
      @davidrendall7195 11 місяців тому +18

      Military regulations exist to get five hundred thousand men, a hundred thousand vehicles and two million tons of equipment in the right place at the right time to achieve an objective which is shifting in time, place and confusion as another five hundred thousand men with guns try to stop you winning through. Special forces planning and training exist to get a handful of men onto a single well studied target in complete surprise, to effect the greatest effect before withdrawing faster than they arrived.
      Very different things, requiring very different skills, planning and regulations.

    • @JesusChrist2000BC
      @JesusChrist2000BC 10 місяців тому +2

      ​@@davidrendall7195Yeah and the regular military was failing at even that. Hence the opening scene where they they forgot to bring gas to refuel the trucks. Stirling realized the regular military was going to have the world speaking Japanese and German unless real men stood up and took charge.

    • @davidrendall7195
      @davidrendall7195 10 місяців тому +9

      ​@@JesusChrist2000BC By late 1941 when the SAS first got into action, the regular British armed forces in the middle east had: conquered Persia, Ethiopia, Syria, Lebanon, and Somalia, taken, lost and retaken Cyrenaica.
      Successfully defended Egypt three times, Palestine and Iraq once each, Malta and Tobruk countless times and unsuccessfully defended Greece.
      They had retaken air superiority over the desert and Malta, taken and held naval superiority in the Med, throttled Axis supply convoys to Africa. Held Turkey and Spain in check, fended off Vichy France and crippled Italy's ability to fund and prosecute their war without increasing German support and economic decline.
      The SAS destroyed a couple dozen aircraft.
      Yes a British army column did once mix up German litre marked fuel cans with British Gallon marked fuel tanks. Stirling wasn't actually there, that bit is storytelling. And the end result of this snafu was the incredible production story of millions of Jerry cans to British measurements, and stickers over fuel gauges showing both units.
      I think it's a story of great imagination and regular screw up.
      If you want a single viewpoint, ultra-narrow-front war fought without failure, you're playing FPS not TWW (total world war).

    • @ThePartisan13
      @ThePartisan13 8 місяців тому

      Any regulation to that degree is usually counter productive. You're trying to get thousands of people at a baseline of the same conditioned degree while ignoring the obvious point that people are different.

    • @davidrendall7195
      @davidrendall7195 8 місяців тому +4

      That was a composite story, Stirling wasn't present for that particular screw up, which only effected a single battalion of French troops. Out of about 200 battalions in the 8th Army.
      Any evidence of error isn't evidence of complete failure.
      Stirling wasn't motivated by the failures of others, but the failure of himself. He wanted action and hadn't seen enough to satisfy himself. He had shifted units in the hope of seeing action, and repeatedly missed it, while others saw all they could handle.
      A brilliant and charing officer, but driven by his own issues not the Army's. He later admitted as much.
      @@JesusChrist2000BC

  • @lazylad8544
    @lazylad8544 Рік тому +212

    The actors, the music, the action. Everything about this series is brilliant. Well done the bbc. ( one of your better programmes). Ps. I'm looking forward to series 2.

    • @cornelionsqween8028
      @cornelionsqween8028 Рік тому +6

      This show is so good! I need another season yesterday!

    • @pauladias2040
      @pauladias2040 Рік тому

      ✨ Steven Knight! One of the finest screenwriter ever!! 🎯💯🤘🏻

    • @robbas_krk1510
      @robbas_krk1510 4 місяці тому

      Combat scenes are too BS.

    • @lazylad8544
      @lazylad8544 4 місяці тому

      @robbas_krk1510 if your speaking from experience then fair enough however I enjoyed the series.

  • @rogerdou7226
    @rogerdou7226 Рік тому +42

    JACK O'CONNELL is so fantastic in this, I'll see every movie he makes from now on. I'm a fan for life!

  • @mrdrebin123
    @mrdrebin123 4 місяці тому +6

    1:35 really good observation.. because you can have good soldiers who carry orders, but when obstacles arrive they simply reply "We cannot follow your orders." The "Why" soldier will always find the fastest solution around obstacles, and he will also have the balls to question somewhat stupid orders or combat maneuvers which can the be resolved "In the now" instead of "in the after" When the stupid order has already cost lives. ALWAYS ASK WHY!

  • @DidierDidier-kc4nm
    @DidierDidier-kc4nm Рік тому +274

    the french sas (4'th sas ) and later 2RCP was one the most decorated french unit. it became 1RPIMA i recalled in 1994 former British and french sas came to visit our garrison at Bayonne , quite moving ! the first killed of d day was one the man of french sas Two days before D day .President D gaulle didn like to much french sas (they were too ''british'' according to him ) is for this reason they didn t have a lot of publicity right after ww2!! ''qui ose gagne ''

    • @angloirishcad
      @angloirishcad Рік тому +3

      'qui ose gagne', is that still their motto?

    • @DidierDidier-kc4nm
      @DidierDidier-kc4nm Рік тому +4

      @@angloirishcad yes it is

    • @angloirishcad
      @angloirishcad Рік тому +4

      @@DidierDidier-kc4nm Interesting, I read that De Gaulle refused to meet the French special forces who had fought so hard at Normandy after the battle or something like that...shocking if true

    • @sisamusudroka3000
      @sisamusudroka3000 Рік тому +9

      @@angloirishcad he was a politician through and through, aka a complete reptile

    • @DidierDidier-kc4nm
      @DidierDidier-kc4nm Рік тому +6

      @@angloirishcad yes is true even commando marine , it is what i read as well ,im not a big specialist of De Gaulle he came from regular infantry (WW1) and armour WW2 and was sceptical about new way of fight like paratroopers or SF especially when it come from British 🙂he had like lot of french(and british ) a hate love relationship between French and British although he was sincerelly sad when Winston CHurchill passed away . sorry to be long anyway. i have not yet watched this serie but for the men of my generation ,,British and French Sas and later 22 sas are the REFERENCE for us .

  • @JamesLaserpimpWalsh
    @JamesLaserpimpWalsh Рік тому +146

    Paddy Mayne was a big buggar in real life. He was like a rugby player. Brick 5hithouse by those days standards.

    • @unclescipio3136
      @unclescipio3136 Рік тому +27

      6'3" and 240 pounds of hard muscle. He was a brick shithouse by today's standards. For his generation, he was Goliath.

    • @leonardshumacker4595
      @leonardshumacker4595 Рік тому +6

      He was a homosexual too

    • @mawortz
      @mawortz Рік тому +13

      @@leonardshumacker4595 so?

    • @leonardshumacker4595
      @leonardshumacker4595 Рік тому +4

      @@mawortz just putting it out there

    • @plamenatanasov1091
      @plamenatanasov1091 Рік тому +4

      @@leonardshumacker4595 I highly doubt that.

  • @user-gk5rx6dn1u
    @user-gk5rx6dn1u 6 місяців тому +17

    Just found out last year that my grandfather was a sergent in the 3e régiment de chasseurs parachutistes. He was part of operations Snelgrove and Amherst. Never really spoke about it. Wasn't until someone writing a book on the subject tracked us down and sent us pictures of all his medals and missions that we found out. Kinda cool that there's a show on it now. definitely going to have to check it out.

  • @danielmcaloon4691
    @danielmcaloon4691 Рік тому +42

    The acting is next level the script is next level. I am watching it on SBS in Australia episode by weekly episode. This is one of the finest productions telling a heroic story I have ever seen.

  • @kumarsk21
    @kumarsk21 Рік тому +65

    The best show of 2022 absolute banger

  • @PF9O
    @PF9O Рік тому +29

    Awesome the huge weight and reputation that SAS has! World renowned.

  • @5aitama638
    @5aitama638 7 місяців тому +12

    Just learning about Paddy Mayne now, he's from my home town of Newtownards and we've a leisure centre named after him. Never knew about him until today but ultimately proud of him and what he's done motivates me to do big things.

    • @johnmccracken3473
      @johnmccracken3473 7 місяців тому

      You can visit his grave in Movilla Cemetry.

    • @danielvanr.8681
      @danielvanr.8681 6 місяців тому

      Pity that they had a Sassenach actor portray him here. Jack did his best, but it just doesn't sound completely Ulster to me. :(

    • @michaelshanahan4042
      @michaelshanahan4042 4 місяці тому

      You should be proud of him 😊

    • @skillerious5717
      @skillerious5717 Місяць тому

      Has a road named after him too. My grandfather was from newtownards and a member of Paddy's masonic lodge. He had many a fond drink with him. I have photos of the both of them together somewhere.

  • @christopherwatkins4005
    @christopherwatkins4005 Рік тому +45

    I absolutely loved this program

  • @tomconneely1361
    @tomconneely1361 Рік тому +42

    Reminds me of a high school PE teacher who threw cricket balls at us by way of encouragement.

    • @MrCardinal1965
      @MrCardinal1965 Рік тому +5

      Ahhh 1970’s schooling, thems were the days😉

  • @Briselance
    @Briselance Місяць тому +1

    "I have just divided you in that way."
    "Consider your demand disregarded, sir."

  • @tewkewl
    @tewkewl 3 місяці тому +2

    What is the mission is the first question in a team room. Amazed that they have captured the special operations mindset so well. They get the mission, the operators plan amongst themselves... then they execute. Things haven't changed in 80 years. The same kind of men with the same mindset required to do roughly the same type of job, but with better technology. Green Berets and Delta train exactly like this. really cool.

  • @alex_5958
    @alex_5958 Рік тому +103

    To say "Does the French have a word for initiative ? " is such ironic. The English word for initiative comes from the French. In French, it is the same word, because the English word initiative comes from the French. Since William the conqueror, around 25% of the English words come from the French. You can also read the motto of the English crown : "Dieu et mon droit", which is French (in French "Dieu est mon droit", which means "god is my right").

    • @benoitbvg2888
      @benoitbvg2888 Рік тому +24

      I think George Bush Jr. also once said something like "the problem with the French is that they don't have a word for entrepreneur".

    • @nicolasvanhorton5043
      @nicolasvanhorton5043 Рік тому +1

      Here is a short excerpt from the Wikipedia article entitled: "1st Marine Infantry Paratroopers Regiment": "The 1er Régiment de Parachutistes d'Infanterie de Marine (English: 1st Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment) or 1er RPIMa is a unit of the French Army Special Forces Command, therefore part of the Special Operations Command.
      Heirs to the Free French paratroopers of the 3rd and 4th squadrons of the Special Air Service (SAS) founded in the United Kingdom during WWII, the 1er RPIMa is sometimes referred to as the "French SAS" and still uses the same motto as their British counterparts to this day: Qui ose gagne (French for "Who Dares Wins")."

    • @angloirishcad
      @angloirishcad Рік тому +17

      It was a joke...English style...I believe the French call it 'sans-rire'

    • @ericgabeau8148
      @ericgabeau8148 Рік тому

      Merci Alex merci

    • @benoitbvg2888
      @benoitbvg2888 Рік тому +13

      @@angloirishcad It's a joke that sadly, a lot of people won't get (especially if this gets broadcasted in the US lol).

  • @davidsweeting6876
    @davidsweeting6876 Рік тому +88

    This is a nutshell is why the special forces are different from the rest

    • @Grayman58
      @Grayman58 Рік тому

      Excellent coment 🇬🇧

    • @ardshielcomplex8917
      @ardshielcomplex8917 Рік тому +1

      Oh really !

    • @ardshielcomplex8917
      @ardshielcomplex8917 Рік тому +4

      Absolute piffle, the more of these short excerpts I see of the movie the less I want to see it. Any Ex or retired Soldier, particularly Para, Royal Marine Commando, SBS or SASR will consider it with the same contempt I do.

    • @davidsweeting6876
      @davidsweeting6876 Рік тому +3

      @@ardshielcomplex8917 firstly it is not a movie, secondly I think you are completely missing the point, what sets them apart is to fully understand, to question, to never make assumptions based on what you are told, whilst some others in other units may do this, it is not typical.
      Also everyone knows stories have to be elaborated or adjusted to give an audience appeal, we all know Paddy’s character is far from the truth, but a not so angry Irish man that puts his arm around his men in tough times doesn’t have the same audience appeal

    • @christophermcmanus5103
      @christophermcmanus5103 Рік тому +6

      Or it's complete jingoistic bollocks and nothing like the special forces at all.
      One of the two for sure

  • @jimigrill
    @jimigrill Рік тому +28

    Amazing show, needs a part 2.

    • @michaelreeney81
      @michaelreeney81 Рік тому +4

      Season 2 filming next year

    • @jimigrill
      @jimigrill Рік тому

      @@michaelreeney81 No way 8o

    • @quineloe
      @quineloe 4 місяці тому

      @@michaelreeney81 is it done?

  • @lameplanet
    @lameplanet Рік тому +35

    Can't help thinking this show does a disservice to Paddy Mayne by portraying him as permanently drunken and unhinged. He was a highly educated man, a solicitor by trade who was capped for Ireland and British Lions rugby team. But the show makes him out to be a drunken lunatic who is out of control half the time.

    • @conradgibson5660
      @conradgibson5660 Рік тому +9

      Paddy was a quite gentleman. When put in a corner he thought back

    • @Stantheman848
      @Stantheman848 Рік тому +4

      Agree..m the whole show is a joke. Terrible script and awful acting.

    • @thepymes
      @thepymes Рік тому +14

      I respectfully disagree (a bit). Several times he is shown reading quietly by himself. His closest friend is a Catholic from Eire. He demonstrates a love of poetry. He speaks good French and, at the first opportunity, he chooses to look for Lt. Eoin instead of partying in Cairo with the rest of 'L' Detachment. Personally, I saw a complex individual who is shown to command the respect of all who served with him... even if he was a "mad Irishman"! ;)

    • @walboyfredo6025
      @walboyfredo6025 Рік тому +3

      In the same way that "Zulu" portrayed Hook, seems that they need to have an "anti-hero" in both depictions.

    • @doublep1980
      @doublep1980 Рік тому +7

      They basically portray him as a drunk peasant, who couldn´t get over the fact that his (supposed) lover died and was basically suffering from some sort of borderline syndrome.
      When in reality, he was a highly educated man from a rich family, who cared deeply about the men under his command. We also don´t really know if we was into men, but I guess the BBC has to fullfill a diversity quota and they need a "gay warhero" or something....

  • @StigaWorldCup
    @StigaWorldCup Рік тому +12

    Paddy Mayne
    The craziest Irish mad man since Stephen in Braveheart. He wasn’t right in the head. 😂😂😂

    • @Grubnar
      @Grubnar 10 місяців тому +2

      "MY island!"

    • @Paul630sqdrn
      @Paul630sqdrn 4 місяці тому

      Yes Hollywood t&£#@d that up too.

  • @gengis737
    @gengis737 Рік тому +30

    Historically inaccurate. French FFL at this early stage were mostly professional, legion and colonial troops from Pacific, black Africa and Northern Africa. They knew initiatives because handful of them did hold millions of square kilometers of desert, savanna and jungle without more than a lieutenant to make decision against hostile populations, on every aspect of military and civilian life. And these men were used to make bridges, roads, forts, out of nothing.
    Raiding the desert was a new thing for British in 1941. French conquered the desert 50 years before on camel's back and patrolled it since. In January 1941 Leclerc's column of 400 men and 1 gun started from Chad lake in black Africa, crossed 500 km of desert to Kufra in Lybia and conquered it.

    • @angloirishcad
      @angloirishcad Рік тому +4

      North Africa was new, but not desert warfare. The British army fought extensively in Arabia in the first world war, eventually crushing the Ottoman empire.
      Also, Britain launched the western desert campaign in June 1940 with Operation Compass, in which an entire Italian army group was destroyed. 138,000 prisoners taken.
      Don't worry its not well known in Britain either...but by summer 1941, there were some very experienced desert units.

    • @leod-sigefast
      @leod-sigefast Місяць тому

      How do you know it is inaccurate just from the sergeant asking if they had any initiative?!! They didn't answer yes or no!
      Plus, past colonial experience counted for nothing when fighting a modern, well-equipped army as in the Germans and Italians. A completely different proposition to fighting Berbers in the 1850s...as tough as that was.
      P.S. the British fought all across South African Veld 50 years earlier too. We all had colonial experience.

    • @gengis737
      @gengis737 Місяць тому

      @@leod-sigefast Check the raid to Kufra and defence of Bir Hakeim to understand how deep the French knew the desert and modern warfare.

  • @louispks
    @louispks Рік тому +10

    People on here complaining about Paddy's height WHO CARES. The guy Joe Pesci plays in Goodfellas he was 6ft 4 in real life, doesn't take anything away from Pesci's performance.

    • @Briselance
      @Briselance 4 місяці тому

      Had they hired a 1 m 60 actor to play the role of a 1 m 90 or 2 m character, this would have been a problem, though.

  • @amandawright7216
    @amandawright7216 Рік тому +55

    Blair Robert Mayne, was much much more than a heavy drinking, fighting Northern Irishman..
    A British Lion, a boxing champion a Qualified Solicitor a gentleman and an absolute hero to the people of his beloved Ulster.
    Ulster's Greatest Son.

    • @jameswilliams3241
      @jameswilliams3241 Рік тому +2

      All true and as crazy as a shithouse rat, God love him!

    • @Kitiwake
      @Kitiwake Рік тому +10

      Is that all?
      He was president of the Northern Irish law society also and widely known and self identified as an *Irishman" not as an Ulstermen.
      You apes

    • @jameswilliams3241
      @jameswilliams3241 Рік тому

      @@Kitiwake he was a true warrior poet in the old style who would have been sung of by the bards and would have been at home at the Cattle Raid of Cooley.

    • @Prospro8
      @Prospro8 Рік тому +1

      Yes, he was a complete Ulster gent of a type that's vanishing, the warrior bard. Even his photos show that. The actor playing him is clearly only familiar with stereotype Belfast 'Troubles' movies, and the riastartha of the Celtic warrior is not psychopathy. He was polite and elegant when sober!

    • @mabufang2217
      @mabufang2217 Рік тому +1

      @@Kitiwake read his book, your lying buddy boy

  • @matydrum
    @matydrum Рік тому +17

    Everybody praises (rightly so) the Americans paratroopers who were the first troops to jump on Normandy but not many people know that the first soldiers in uniform to jump for the invasion were the french SAS who jumped on Brittany 24 hours before that.

    • @kenreckless9845
      @kenreckless9845 Рік тому +11

      They also forget that of the 5 D-Day beaches, British Commonwealth forces hit 3 of them, the US 2 of them. Plus the British glider boys who hit Pegasus Bridge a good half an hour before the US 101st made their jumps into Normandy. A US-only affair it was not.

    • @Whoami691
      @Whoami691 Рік тому +1

      @@kenreckless9845 There is also an argument to be made that if America never entered the war then they would not have been needed for D-day. It's fairly long winded but in short, the US landings in North Africa actually beefed up Axis defenses in Northern France.

    • @timovangalen1589
      @timovangalen1589 10 місяців тому +2

      @@kenreckless9845 The Canadians hit Juno Beach, the second most heavily defended after Omaha, and pushed farther inland than any other landing force.

    • @seanlander9321
      @seanlander9321 4 місяці тому +1

      Ah yes, the 28 French who were part of D Day. Golly, what an outstanding effort.

    • @FucaBigGew
      @FucaBigGew 4 місяці тому +3

      @@seanlander9321 172, the others were in Italie on in the thousands paratroopers who landed on France, After the D day France was the second most deployed army of the allies, wash that big mouth before you talk with it, bet you cant give us 10 pull up sean.

  • @barryfaucett9360
    @barryfaucett9360 Місяць тому

    The best television series on tv. I’ve watched it 3 times waiting for season 2. The Casting is brilliant , the story line and photography is sensational and that sound track is just phenomenal!! 👍👍 just Farking WOW!!

  • @patrickwalsh6319
    @patrickwalsh6319 Рік тому +17

    That beard has to be the Grand Daddy of Roy Kean's beard, so it is.

    • @celticcheetah6371
      @celticcheetah6371 Рік тому +1

      My Da comes from County Down, where this character was from IRL, and Jesus but the actor NAILS that accent. Close my eyes and it sounds exactly like my Uncle Brian. Just with a great deal more swearing and less discussion of horses lol.

    • @patrickwalsh6319
      @patrickwalsh6319 Рік тому

      Grew up as Yorkshire Irish Catholic in Leeds. The voice was the sound bed of my youth of Uncles and Priests and Sunday Afternoons in the Irish Centre.

    • @BadAlBig
      @BadAlBig Рік тому +2

      @@celticcheetah6371 Blair ‘Paddy’ Main was a solicitor from Newtownards Co. Down in Northern Ireland

    • @celticcheetah6371
      @celticcheetah6371 Рік тому

      @@BadAlBig indeed he was. I asked Dad today if he knew anyone who actually knew Mayne, and sure enough my Grandad did haha. Apparently he was “entirely mad” according to my Grandad.

  • @McHugh1949
    @McHugh1949 Рік тому +14

    I read the book earlier this year and one of the SAS members, Roy Farran became a politician and cabinet minister here in Alberta Canada. I checked IMDB and don't see his name in the list of characters.

    • @alvarocardinale8910
      @alvarocardinale8910 Рік тому +1

      maybe he was SAS from the "division" of Sterling brother? 2nd SAS Regiment in Algeria??

    • @alvarocardinale8910
      @alvarocardinale8910 Рік тому +1

      yup... he was 2nd SAS regiment... from his Wikipedia: "However, he met up with an old friend which led to him attempting to join the new 2nd Special Air Service being formed near Algiers."

    • @alvarocardinale8910
      @alvarocardinale8910 Рік тому

      this series/season is about the 1st SAS regiment... thats why Roy Farran isn't on it.

  • @neilwilson5785
    @neilwilson5785 Рік тому +25

    This show was a pure joy.

  • @tewkewl
    @tewkewl 3 місяці тому +2

    No different than the modern Special Operations mindset. This is where it all started. Glad to see it is STILL going strong. The task and the training is so similar to Delta and the green berets. amazing. the mindset required. they have captured it accurately. i haven't seen this. But I assume he's forcing them to build their own jump towers?

  • @andrewgranger3370
    @andrewgranger3370 Рік тому +14

    I like the asking why part. There is a story that when Von Steuben was training the American Continental troops he said with European troops you explain to them what they are to do and they do it. With the Americans you have to explain what they are to do and why they are to do it.

  • @TheDiablotak
    @TheDiablotak Рік тому +20

    Really wish this show was streaming or available for purchase somewhere cause it looks amazing

    • @malcolmspence2869
      @malcolmspence2869 Рік тому

      I ordered it from a place in Denmark would ye believe...dvd. released 15th December

    • @RayMerrell68
      @RayMerrell68 Рік тому

      Like on here, you mean?
      Yeah, that would be great. They could advertise it in the top right corner of the page and everything! . . .

    • @TheDiablotak
      @TheDiablotak Рік тому +3

      @@RayMerrell68 I don’t live in the Uk and I don’t have a vpn so sadly I’m not able to stream it

    • @SgtMjr
      @SgtMjr Рік тому +2

      Showed up on Amazon Prime on Dec 11

    • @Litany_of_Fury
      @Litany_of_Fury 7 місяців тому

      Take to the high seas my friend.

  • @manueljosephcalma
    @manueljosephcalma Місяць тому

    Best explanation on understanding why to ask "why"

  • @mikeyoung7660
    @mikeyoung7660 Рік тому +4

    One of his favorite songs was come home Paddy Riley to Bally james duff by Percy French. Its a beautiful tune actually. I'm from Belfast but lived in Scotland for a few years in Stirling. I used to spend some time at Sir David Stirling monument in Doune. I hope someday I can get to Newtonards to see Paddy's monument. QS

  • @KeithBrown51
    @KeithBrown51 Рік тому +1

    "Colt 45 revolver!!!" Paddy Mayne

  • @greebo6549
    @greebo6549 Місяць тому

    1:35 profound words 👍

  • @gsd4me00
    @gsd4me00 Рік тому +12

    Sounds like he is channelling his best Windsor Davies impersonation.

  • @SyndicateBrink
    @SyndicateBrink 4 місяці тому

    Jack O’Connell never seizes to amaze

  • @robwalsh9843
    @robwalsh9843 3 місяці тому

    A scoped Lee-Enfield.
    Chef's kiss

  • @anoshya
    @anoshya Рік тому +6

    The SAS men look like Ralph Lauren models ..

    • @fds7476
      @fds7476 Рік тому +3

      Well, they’re French.

  • @JesusChrist2000BC
    @JesusChrist2000BC 10 місяців тому +1

    Just finished watching. Such a great show.

  • @peppermintshore
    @peppermintshore 4 місяці тому

    Damn i love this series. Watching the clock ticking waiting for series 2

  • @ereini0n
    @ereini0n Рік тому +3

    Loved it, especially how supportive they all were of the Jewish guy.
    Paddy didn't even target him, only shot at the German :))

  • @user-xb4pe1sv3w
    @user-xb4pe1sv3w 10 місяців тому +1

    André Louis Arthur Zirnheld, one of the best of them.

  • @benlewis2475
    @benlewis2475 8 місяців тому

    The more I read, the more I realise that though he was a total legend, he was also a total See you next Tuesday. No other way to achieve what he did.

  • @davehackett8848
    @davehackett8848 2 місяці тому

    Swimmin' tha beach at Ft Dix. Angry Drill with an m60.

  • @optimisticnihilist3417
    @optimisticnihilist3417 4 місяці тому

    Cook really pulled himself together after that business with the drug gang.

  • @ollywill1657
    @ollywill1657 Рік тому +13

    If you're gonna post clips of your shows, please have the decency to upload them in the aspect ratios they were shot in.

    • @liamdormon7822
      @liamdormon7822 Рік тому +3

      It looks the same on iplayer. The edges of the shot are squashed due to the camera lens

  • @kumarsk21
    @kumarsk21 Рік тому +2

    Mayne and his kar98 shooting 😂😂😂😂

    • @luuko656
      @luuko656 Рік тому +1

      Lee Enfield

    • @kumarsk21
      @kumarsk21 Рік тому

      @@luuko656 sorry Lee Enfield

  • @bobbobertbobberton1073
    @bobbobertbobberton1073 4 місяці тому

    People watching this might think he was crazy; Yup Paddy was.

  • @harbour9421
    @harbour9421 13 днів тому

    My only ripe with the series was Paddy was over 6 feet tall, British lion rugby player, university heavy weight boxing champion and Irish rugby player. The man who plays him in the series is 5 foot 8 and English with a poor accent. Otherwise a great series.

  • @infeedel7706
    @infeedel7706 Рік тому +1

    Such a good scene, great writing and I wonder how well based in fact?

  • @jimgreene951
    @jimgreene951 Рік тому +7

    Mayne was nothing like this character.

    • @daisybelle1025
      @daisybelle1025 Рік тому +5

      Did you know Mayne personally????

    • @Stantheman848
      @Stantheman848 Рік тому

      Agree. It was the worst casting in TV history. Why get this little wimp to play a giant?

    • @josephcolton2614
      @josephcolton2614 Рік тому +10

      @@daisybelle1025 Not necessary. Paddy Mayne is very well documented and whoever wrote the script for this series disregarded everything that is known about Mayne.

    • @denissewell
      @denissewell Рік тому +3

      Totally agree. Have read every book relating to Mayne the BBC characterisation was a disgrace. He was made out to be a loud mouth paddy. Whereas in real life he was shy and considerate not to mention well read, with a law degree.yes he did have drunken bouts as did many of his contemporaries and he was violent on occasions. He fought for a solid five years at the sharp end, nobody can sustain that level of attrition without some negative impact upon their character.

  • @laxamn8317
    @laxamn8317 4 місяці тому

    It's an arduous task to train these men

  • @markberman6708
    @markberman6708 Рік тому +7

    Epic times qnd epic men.

  • @davidoldboy5425
    @davidoldboy5425 Рік тому +22

    Paddy Mayne was an extraordinary man and soldier, built for fighting which he loved, he has been a hero of mine since I was a little boy, the woke brigade must loathe him lol?

    • @lewisturner5362
      @lewisturner5362 Рік тому +5

      Yes, we hate everything you like

    • @davidoldboy5425
      @davidoldboy5425 Рік тому

      @@lewisturner5362 Good, keep breathing

    • @RDSimonse
      @RDSimonse Рік тому

      Why'd we hate him? We'd love to shoot at ya 👍🏼

    • @davidoldboy5425
      @davidoldboy5425 Рік тому

      @@RDSimonse You couldn't hit a barn door

    • @Stantheman848
      @Stantheman848 Рік тому +2

      He was 6'4 and 240lbs. Why did they get a little wimp to play him.

  • @kenc9236
    @kenc9236 Рік тому

    That made so much sense to me it scared me.

  • @rlenik4488
    @rlenik4488 3 місяці тому

    Do you walk about with your eyes shut. Conway Square Newtownards, a 9ft statue dedicated to Blair Maine?

  • @JJMerelo
    @JJMerelo Рік тому +2

    Anyone knows about a Spanish, or Spanish subtitles version, of this clip? Would need it for an engineering class. Thanks!

  • @jmtproductions3650
    @jmtproductions3650 10 місяців тому

    Funny that "initiative" is the French latinized version, hence the scoff from the french SAS fella 🤣

    • @MrLantean
      @MrLantean 6 місяців тому +2

      English language has a lot of words with similar pronunciations with similar meanings with French, Spanish and Italian. It is actually the blending of Germanic Anglo-Saxon with Romance Norman French which is a form of French spoken by Normans, descended of Vikings who settled in Normandy France. It is estimated that perhaps 60% of vocabulary is of Romance origins. English however is classified as a Germanic language due to its Germanic grammatical structure.

  • @peterthygesen6788
    @peterthygesen6788 22 дні тому

    Is the dialogue about asking "Why?" true? I hope it was.

  • @cesaralarcon5228
    @cesaralarcon5228 4 місяці тому

    Even if the real life Paddy, didn’t curse as many mention he most definitely was In some way drunk or drinking

  • @Spudtron98
    @Spudtron98 Рік тому +4

    1:35
    This whole spiel is still very relevant today. Russian troops in Ukraine have been embarrassingly destroyed time and time again because their military discourages initiative, prioritising only following orders to the letter.
    For example, a Russian supply convoy is ordered to drive down a specific road to reach a destination. They are not told why, and they do not ask. Along the way, they encounter the burned wrecks of their predecessors, but they do not stop and try to find another route that avoids this clearly unsafe road. They were ordered to use this road, and that is what they will do. Thus, they are inevitably ambushed and destroyed by the same forces that had killed the last three convoys to come down that road.
    Meanwhile, back at the unit's command post, the officer who placed this order is himself unable or unwilling to change his strategy, because he was told to send stuff to that destination at any cost.
    Kherson Airport is littered with the wrecks of helicopters because Russian command had ordered there to be a certain amount of choppers stationed there at any given time. Ukrainian artillery would then shell the airport, destroying helicopters and other equipment. Rather than pulling their units back out of artillery range or seeking out and destroying those guns, the Russians instead just sent more choppers in to replace the ones that were destroyed, because they had to stick to the number that they were told.
    Top-down command structures are inflexible and _will_ fail in the face of adversity, because it is just plain unfeasible to micromanage an entire war to that degree. If you encourage your troops to _only_ follow orders, they won't be able to do jackshit in the absence of them.

  • @CodaMission
    @CodaMission Рік тому +18

    I must criticitize parts of this scene:
    It was a faux pas of the highest order to divide the Free French by ethnicity. The French military apparatus had a long history of accepting anyone in the ranks regardless of ethnicity because "French" was not a race, it was an achievement. Racism was absolutely a thing, but it was different to most Anglophone models because segregation wasn't a thing. Even today, it is against French law to count race or ethnicity in census data.
    Also, he should have known that they wouldn't think to question orders if he was going to be training Free French.

    • @azeezosho9459
      @azeezosho9459 Рік тому +11

      If you watched the series, the french commander actually mentioned that.

    • @worldcomicsreview354
      @worldcomicsreview354 Рік тому

      Cor, imagine if Britain didn't put race in the census.
      MInd you, everybody should just put "mixed". I mean, how can they prove you aren't? There might be some Roman and Viking in there...

    • @CodaMission
      @CodaMission Рік тому +2

      @@worldcomicsreview354 Different cultures have different methods of closing racial divides for the sake of the country. Whatever works

    • @drno4837
      @drno4837 Рік тому +2

      Dreyfus............................J'Accuse

  • @williamwallacedebruce9221
    @williamwallacedebruce9221 2 місяці тому

    What a Guy...

  • @grahamjordan1040
    @grahamjordan1040 Рік тому +7

    Let’s see now a secret hideout with deck chairs outside ,30ft scaffolding towers visible from the air and if that’s not enough to draw attention we now have two enormous flags flying over the secret hideout , oh and a women just turns up at the very secret hideout. 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @heycidskyja4668
      @heycidskyja4668 Рік тому

      Not meant to be a 'secret hideout'. It is the desert, after all.

    • @grahamjordan1040
      @grahamjordan1040 Рік тому

      @@heycidskyja4668 and no German aircraft ever flew over the desert duh 🤔

  • @gtsoul2
    @gtsoul2 4 місяці тому

    It's funny that the "30 feet height" part is never translated, just "build two towers".

  • @Towertrips
    @Towertrips 4 місяці тому

    Mayne was twice the size of Connell

  • @blairdawson9506
    @blairdawson9506 2 місяці тому

    What hard man like my old man

  • @thersbugb7362
    @thersbugb7362 7 місяців тому

    Tell me how buiding two Towers helps Defeat the ENEMY!!! Nahh make me a cup of tea BBC

  • @quineloe
    @quineloe 4 місяці тому

    and he would do it I expect. Mers-El-Kebir after all.

  • @EvanJamesPrior
    @EvanJamesPrior 27 днів тому

    Should be put down for that accent 😂😂

  • @dot2562
    @dot2562 8 місяців тому

    Paddy Blair mane😢😢😢😢

  • @rc59191
    @rc59191 Рік тому +1

    Isnt Paddy Mayne the drunk Irish dude that blew up like 100 German planes lol?

    • @andymattison9124
      @andymattison9124 4 місяці тому

      British not Irish. Although many brave Irishmen fought in the war, they returned to an Irish state which shunned them as pariah.

  • @trifelife89
    @trifelife89 Рік тому +8

    Was the real paddy mayne that unhinged? Find it hard to believe to be honest.

    • @patrickwalsh6319
      @patrickwalsh6319 Рік тому +6

      I have Irish uncles. I'm saying, probably not.

    • @jackbooth1710
      @jackbooth1710 Рік тому +10

      Apparently yes he is was pretty cracked.
      When they went to blow up German plains he went into the barracks and shot the pilots because he said it would take them longer to replace the men than the plains.

    • @Ellie-qv4pu
      @Ellie-qv4pu Рік тому +3

      @@jackbooth1710 honestly that was a spot on smart idea by Paddy.

    • @shack7631
      @shack7631 Рік тому +5

      There are numerous videos on UA-cam containing interviews with those served with Blair Mayne. The SAS: The Originals, is perhaps the best and contains the last interviews with those soilders who feature in this series. Going by what they all say this clip would be one Mayne's more level headed episodes. One described having Mayne in the unit as like having a pet lion.

    • @malcolmspence2869
      @malcolmspence2869 Рік тому +5

      Nah. No more than anyone with a skinful in them. He was an educated man. Solicitor from Queen's University no less. Liked to read.
      Just...north Africa in the early 40s was a harsh place. One had to be hard.

  • @stephenholland4057
    @stephenholland4057 Рік тому +21

    To think what a brilliant series that could have been made on the original SAS instead of this rock'n'roll rubbish

    • @paulvickers3800
      @paulvickers3800 Рік тому +1

      True, like the music but it don't go with second world war.. now if it was shot during Iraq or Afghanistan it be great, plus o Connell good actor but Paddy was 6ft4..

    • @mirkonavarra1517
      @mirkonavarra1517 Рік тому +6

      If you see what really happened in north africa and Mediterranean there is material for 100 beautiful series!! This one is just not well made

    • @Smokiejoe679
      @Smokiejoe679 Рік тому +1

      Cool it’s not for everyone but for some people it might be .

    • @ardshielcomplex8917
      @ardshielcomplex8917 Рік тому +2

      Yep, its a total PC- WOKE comedy charade.

    • @benlewis2475
      @benlewis2475 Рік тому +6

      Friend of mine, 8 years in the SAS loves it. I quote his exact words ‘AC/DC and the SAS...what’s not to love’. They don’t take themselves too seriously and can recognise when something has been made for a wider audience.

  • @Gurkha73able
    @Gurkha73able Рік тому +2

    Love the realism but I'm not sure they had rock n roll music in 1942

    • @walboyfredo6025
      @walboyfredo6025 Рік тому +1

      I think that the current SAS lads often play such music.

    • @Gurkha73able
      @Gurkha73able Рік тому

      @@walboyfredo6025 Paddy Mayne and David Stirling didn't listen to it though. It wouldn't come out for another 40 yrs

    • @walboyfredo6025
      @walboyfredo6025 Рік тому

      Think that the current SAS lads had an input on this. I don't think that a Vera Lynn or a Gracie Fields song could bring up a " Gun -Ho" type of feeling during training or going to battle.
      Yes I know that it 40 odd years head but as said the current SAS lads often play such music just before going to battle or during RnR.

    • @Gurkha73able
      @Gurkha73able Рік тому +2

      @@walboyfredo6025 doesn't need a gung ho soundtrack mate. Saving private ryan didn't, nor did Dunkirk

  • @TS50ER
    @TS50ER 3 місяці тому

    What mean he @ 2:22 ' get my goat'? He shoot goat with rifle?

    • @gwtpictgwtpict4214
      @gwtpictgwtpict4214 2 місяці тому +1

      It means it irritates him, winds him up, pisses him off. No idea where the phrase originates from.

  • @warswarrior
    @warswarrior Рік тому +3

    What happened to Stirling after he captured by German? Does the story will Continue or its ending here

    • @deluxgamer999
      @deluxgamer999 Рік тому

      Apparently they're looking to make a few more seasons so it'll pick up from there in S2.

    • @MikeBenko
      @MikeBenko Рік тому +8

      In real life he was sent to Germany, tried to escape 3 or 4 times but they kept catching him, he ended up getting sent to castle POW camp for especially annoying prisoners and was a prisoner until the end of the war.
      He was treated fairly well, most British, American and French POWs were (unless they were Jewish), tho him being a Baronet (nobleman) and son of a general etc might have had a lot to do with his fairly lenient treatment.

    • @worldcomicsreview354
      @worldcomicsreview354 Рік тому +1

      @@MikeBenko Colditz? There was a series about that prison in the 70's
      IRL some prisoners almost finished building a glider in an attic in which they were going to attempt to fly out, but they got caught just before it was finished. Years later a replica was tested with weighted dummies and did actually fly... sort of.

    • @ralphraffles1394
      @ralphraffles1394 Рік тому +1

      Paddy Mayne takes over as the boss and builds the SAS up to 1000 men, and leads them through Italy, France and Germany. He becomes the most decorated British soldier.

  • @paulowens6004
    @paulowens6004 Рік тому +8

    Paddy Mayne never used the F word or allowed his men to use it either. Plus the accent is crap. Rory McIlroy, Eamon Holmes, Gloria Hunniford, Mark Allen, Darren Clark, Van Morrison all from N.ireland and have all slightly different accent depending on the area they came from, but the accent used in the SAS programme is over the top big time. Paddy Mayne they say was (when Sober) was soft spoken.

    • @raggersragnarsson6255
      @raggersragnarsson6255 Рік тому +3

      Yes he was from Newtownards in North Down from a middle class family so his accent wouldnt have been so strong and harsh akin to a working class Belfast City type accent. Albeit the NI accent portrayed is the best I've heard on screen. Very realistic for once. Shame it wasnt the right one though.

  • @ailleurd
    @ailleurd 2 місяці тому

    English is french but with an incomprehensible accent....
    C'est vrai 😉

  • @JCchan99
    @JCchan99 Рік тому +2

    Wht is the pint of dividing them in fresh and non french? that is counterintuitive in team building.

    • @lordcrowther42
      @lordcrowther42 Рік тому +1

      The point wasn’t team building, they were already a team. It was demonstrate the concept of commanders intent, which is if you know the why behind something and what the end state should be you will be a lot more worried about getting to the end state then sticking to what your orders are.

    • @JCchan99
      @JCchan99 Рік тому

      @@lordcrowther42 That explains the WHY? part, but not the segregation.

    • @lordcrowther42
      @lordcrowther42 Рік тому +3

      @@JCchan99 could have just been an easy way to spilt them.

    • @alioshax7797
      @alioshax7797 Рік тому +2

      Because it was in the 1940s and pretty much everyone in the world was at least to some extent racist and xenophobic, so that's what the show tries to picture.

    • @walboyfredo6025
      @walboyfredo6025 Рік тому

      @@alioshax7797 Yeah, the Americans who often boast about " Liberty and Freedom" had a segregated Armed Forces.
      In the movie "1941", the part where the white soldier was covered in soot and the black solider was covered in flour. From which the "whitened" solider said to the "blacken" solider ".....hey....hey...GET TO THE BACK OF THE TANK!"
      That clip was to highlight the racism that occurred in U.S Army in WW2.

  • @CLHLC
    @CLHLC Рік тому

    With all due respect... this is like a random monday for me.

  • @simplysimon9868
    @simplysimon9868 Рік тому +30

    Loved the series and the acting. Mad men or rogues? It's been dulled down for TV and the snowflakes lol. Camera work also brilliant.

    • @MG-bs5mr
      @MG-bs5mr Рік тому +3

      I'm not sure that they wore lipstick or indeed any form of makeup.

    • @liammeech3702
      @liammeech3702 Рік тому +3

      What's been dulled down?

    • @benjaminallen3371
      @benjaminallen3371 Рік тому +18

      You could actually argue that it has been undulled for modern audiences. In reality, Paddy Mayne (Jack O'Connell) strongly abhorred cussing, and the Sofia Boutella character seems to just function as eye candy.

    • @simplysimon9868
      @simplysimon9868 Рік тому

      @@benjaminallen3371 Sophia's character yes is just that. Made a good spy though.

    • @StickWithTrigger
      @StickWithTrigger Рік тому +1

      Did you mean Rogues?

  • @johncalhoun9198
    @johncalhoun9198 2 місяці тому

    I understand that there were tahitians in the ranks as well

  • @steveyi2859
    @steveyi2859 10 місяців тому

    Talk about overblown actual results of all special ops in wars. Has anyone heard of a war won solely by them?

  • @tomaszskowronski1406
    @tomaszskowronski1406 10 місяців тому

    0:08 Poles will use themselves, thank you

  • @arbesterrebereb
    @arbesterrebereb Місяць тому

    Season 2 pls

  • @TellySavalas-or5hf
    @TellySavalas-or5hf Рік тому

    Maggot was the US army version of Paddy Mayne.

  • @josephlarmor550
    @josephlarmor550 Рік тому +2

    It does seem to have been a big hit, but I found it overblown, over-acted and factually questionable. The music of AC/DC etc did nothing for the script. Didn’t get past the second episode. Watch "Ice Cold in Alex", "The Dam Busters" and similar for war movies which built tension and atmosphere through quality acting and writing, without the need for constant swearing, sexual innuendo or a raucous soundtrack.

  • @samwallace7313
    @samwallace7313 Рік тому +20

    Apart from Brad Pitt that is one of the worst Northern Irish accents I've ever heard. BTW Blair Mayne never swore or cursed in his life, he hated it.

    • @ericericson4885
      @ericericson4885 Рік тому +8

      He did, a lot. Read up, lad. Just never around women.

    • @samwallace7313
      @samwallace7313 Рік тому +2

      @@ericericson4885 no he didn't and he'd have broke your jaw if you swore in front of him, lad. You'll be saying Jack O'Donnell's accent was good next, lad.

    • @sammni
      @sammni Рік тому +4

      I was always under the impression he didn't swear that often.
      But....
      50/50 on this one.
      Worst Northern Irish accent definitely belongs to Tommy Lee Jones on "Blown away"
      And I know you'll go and check it out. But be prepared to be horrified lol 🤣

    • @samwallace7313
      @samwallace7313 Рік тому +1

      @@sammni Tommy Lee Jones was rough but Brad Pitt is the worst I've heard. Can't remember the name of the film but Harrison Ford was in it. God it was bad lol

    • @kevinlewis3029
      @kevinlewis3029 Рік тому

      @@sammni I agree Tommy Lee Jones accent in blown away is shocking.

  • @richardthomas4471
    @richardthomas4471 Рік тому +2

    Paddy Mayne, a great Rugby International, was never like that portrayal… pure crap!

  • @airconditionedrelco7099
    @airconditionedrelco7099 10 місяців тому

    James Cook realy got his act together ever since quiting teen dramas

  • @davidgross316
    @davidgross316 Рік тому +1

    None of this was in the book

  • @iainbagnall4825
    @iainbagnall4825 Рік тому

    Urge to play Hidden and Dangerous 2 *intensifies*

  • @jamalalfraihat8523
    @jamalalfraihat8523 Місяць тому

    I could never take anyone wearing shorts like that serious