@@Martin_L478 yes, of course. I've read about how Kubrick was both pleased and shocked by the constant stream of insults and profanity that sarge improvised on the spot 😁
Ah, the memories. Bootcamp is deliberately designed to see how much stress you can handle. If you can't handle somebody getting in your face and yelling at you, most likely you won't react well when you have a lot of very determined people trying to kill you. Beyond that, you need to learn strict discipline and attenton to detail if you want to survive in combat. This is pretty realistic. Hartman was played by Lee Ermey who was an actual USMC DI from the Vietnam war era. The one thing they kinda missed is that it is actually worse. You typically have three sergeants assigned to each unit and they are all running around screaming at the recruits simultaneously. In theory, they can't physically hit you anymore. But otherwise it's pretty much the same.
During recruit training, you'd interact with the Assistant Drill Instructors more than the Senior DI; but he'd be there too, kicking people's asses and motivating the hell out of you.
Those exact lines were the exact same ones I heard, the same lines they used for decades. But to each new platoon they are brand new so it didn't matter
It's so funny to see some of the ladies reacting to Hartman. Boot camp is supposed to be a shock to your reality, and the DIs, CCs, or whatever are just trying to rattle you and break you down. They then build you back up and get you to work inside the system and part of the team. Personal accountability and attention to detail are big points too.
Hartman (R. Lee Ermey) was a vietnam drill sergeant and was a technical advisor , the original actor didn't work so Ermey was employed and addlibed that whole scene
After graduating boot camp we found this hilarious, there is a lot of truth in this portion of the boot camp portion of the movie. R. Lee Ermey had a lot to work with he was a real Marine Corps drill instructor during the Vietnam War. They didn’t have to write his lines they just let him go and recorder so they could write in the lines for the other actors.
@@cinema_reactions_hub The camaraderie and having to work together. people don't get that. I remember when we had to lock arms and do sit ups until the walls "sweat'.
You wouldn't be laughing in that room young lady. It feels different than any room you've ever been. Only a few have ever felt it and proud to be there.
R Lee Ermey was so good at this because he was a real Marine Corps Drill instructor during the Vietnam war. He originally was just a consultant on the film but after seeing him in action Stanley Kubrick decided to give him the role.
This was showing you what basic training for the Marines was like back in the 60s, this was the time of Vietnam war. They are not allowed to touch you or hit you anymore.
Yall need to understand something about this movie, that drill Sargent is R Lee Ermy and he is a real life Marine gunny Sargent he was doing what is normal to him he is not acting, that's exactly how he does it in the Marines
What is more interesting than what the NCO is saying is the reaction of the twinkle toes watching as they wince when he lets fly. The is and was designed to break you down from a pasty snowflake civilian into a soldier and honestly i doubt that many watching this would last a day. It was brutal, it was hard but once you learned it was for your benefit it got easier and finally you were what you had set out to be , a hardened killer who would fight and maybe die for your country and never ever leave a mate behind no matter what. Harden up snowflakes as this is the future, like it or not as we descend further into the makings of a war.
The good old days I remember being in the car watching this movie. We were laughing so hard.😂, if you didn't know that man's a legend in the corp. Semper Fi maggots
People watching don't seem to get that these men are about to go to war. What D.I. Hartman is saying and doing to them will never out weigh that fact. His stress is there to prepare them for bullets flying at them. He's not there to be nice nor will that help them.
@gamleskalle1 How about. I have second-hand embarrassment for these soft people, almost crying over words in a movie so they can pander to the lowest denominator to act like they care about mean words.
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You can always tell if someone is a veteran as they laugh during this scene.
@edwardpate6128 I thought the same thing. The creativity of the DI was golden
@@normadamousHe wasn't acting. He improv'd a lot of those lines.
12 weeks of this... water off a ducks back
@@Martin_L478 yes, of course. I've read about how Kubrick was both pleased and shocked by the constant stream of insults and profanity that sarge improvised on the spot 😁
Yeah, but they weren't laughing going through basic training, I know I didn't.
Ah, the memories. Bootcamp is deliberately designed to see how much stress you can handle. If you can't handle somebody getting in your face and yelling at you, most likely you won't react well when you have a lot of very determined people trying to kill you. Beyond that, you need to learn strict discipline and attenton to detail if you want to survive in combat. This is pretty realistic. Hartman was played by Lee Ermey who was an actual USMC DI from the Vietnam war era. The one thing they kinda missed is that it is actually worse. You typically have three sergeants assigned to each unit and they are all running around screaming at the recruits simultaneously. In theory, they can't physically hit you anymore. But otherwise it's pretty much the same.
During recruit training, you'd interact with the Assistant Drill Instructors more than the Senior DI; but he'd be there too, kicking people's asses and motivating the hell out of you.
Oh the Irony.
This is how weed out the candy asses that were watching this
He’s not mean…he’s necessary…who do you think protects you.?
On first viewing, he seems tough, but he was just trying to help them.
The entire scene was improvised. He was previously an actual drill instructor in real life.
before the movie he wrote PAGES of insults and not a single repeat
@@peedinkus389 Wow, interesting fact, thanks for sharing
The actor playing the helicopter door gunner was supposed to be the DI but Ermey was just too good so he went from consultant to being the instructor.
Those exact lines were the exact same ones I heard, the same lines they used for decades. But to each new platoon they are brand new so it didn't matter
Lol "he's so mean". People have gotten so so soft. Since the greatest generation every one has gotten weaker and softer.
It’s like … do you want to learn how to survive a war… or not.? Gotta be tough.
In real life, there are 3 of them screaming at you in the marine corp. One for each ear and one for your face.
Is it true?
@@cinema_reactions_hub Ya that's true
@@cinema_reactions_hub Yes, that's true. And they are Drill Instructors, NOT drill sergeants. Parris Island, 1989.
Thanks, fixed
I saw a private refusing to PT stand with 3 screaming like that, tears were streaming down his face lol
It's so funny to see some of the ladies reacting to Hartman. Boot camp is supposed to be a shock to your reality, and the DIs, CCs, or whatever are just trying to rattle you and break you down. They then build you back up and get you to work inside the system and part of the team. Personal accountability and attention to detail are big points too.
Canadian boot camp ‘85 was exactly like this but without the hitting, every Vet I know loves this scene and laughs their Asses off watching it.
BS! #usmcvet
I like Kubrick sense of subtle irony The last thing drill instructor Hartman has is a heart.
Hartman (R. Lee Ermey) was a vietnam drill sergeant and was a technical advisor , the original actor didn't work so Ermey was employed and addlibed that whole scene
I love how reactors have to act appalled by the slurs just so they dont seem racist.
After graduating boot camp we found this hilarious, there is a lot of truth in this portion of the boot camp portion of the movie. R. Lee Ermey had a lot to work with he was a real Marine Corps drill instructor during the Vietnam War. They didn’t have to write his lines they just let him go and recorder so they could write in the lines for the other actors.
The United States military - we live for our insults
My Motto has always been. Sticks and stones may break my bones... But I'm still kicking your ass.
Damn I miss bootcamp
I don't
@@JohnHill-bn5kn Why?
@@cinema_reactions_hub The camaraderie and having to work together. people don't get that. I remember when we had to lock arms and do sit ups until the walls "sweat'.
This brings back memories. 😆 lol
You wouldn't be laughing in that room young lady. It feels different than any room you've ever been. Only a few have ever felt it and proud to be there.
R Lee Ermey was so good at this because he was a real Marine Corps Drill instructor during the Vietnam war. He originally was just a consultant on the film but after seeing him in action Stanley Kubrick decided to give him the role.
He also.did a movie previous to full metal jacket called the boys in company c. It was basically the same roll as a drill instructor
This was showing you what basic training for the Marines was like back in the 60s, this was the time of Vietnam war. They are not allowed to touch you or hit you anymore.
I enlisted in 1975. This portrayal is very accurate.
Yall need to understand something about this movie, that drill Sargent is R Lee Ermy and he is a real life Marine gunny Sargent he was doing what is normal to him he is not acting, that's exactly how he does it in the Marines
What is more interesting than what the NCO is saying is the reaction of the twinkle toes watching as they wince when he lets fly. The is and was designed to break you down from a pasty snowflake civilian into a soldier and honestly i doubt that many watching this would last a day. It was brutal, it was hard but once you learned it was for your benefit it got easier and finally you were what you had set out to be , a hardened killer who would fight and maybe die for your country and never ever leave a mate behind no matter what. Harden up snowflakes as this is the future, like it or not as we descend further into the makings of a war.
Ah, the memories...
Great dialogue, acting and film.
All of it is real!
The good old days I remember being in the car watching this movie. We were laughing so hard.😂, if you didn't know that man's a legend in the corp. Semper Fi maggots
yep -- it's pretty much like that in boot camp ...
People watching don't seem to get that these men are about to go to war. What D.I. Hartman is saying and doing to them will never out weigh that fact. His stress is there to prepare them for bullets flying at them. He's not there to be nice nor will that help them.
they always skip the best part " how tall are you?" "5'9" " i didnt know they stacked #@$% that high"
“Why do they have to yell at them” lol you think if he says please in ASMR they’ll turn in to warriors?
MCRD San Diego, 1966. It was worse than this. Semper Fi to all my brothers and sisters.
Parris Island good times.
Oooo it's realistic because it's real. Oorah
I've been there, done that.
Why is there a random dude in the top right corner for the whole video??
He is supposedly reacting to these people reacting to the Full Metal Jacket scene
Yep, that's true :)
It's cringe watching these people cringe over this. Thank you God for me being Gen-X.
Cringe is a typical word for the weak generation. Cancel and pc too.
@gamleskalle1 How about.
I have second-hand embarrassment for these soft people, almost crying over words in a movie so they can pander to the lowest denominator to act like they care about mean words.
Hatred? What hatred is the Media Knights lady talking about?
women just dont understand this at all...
Millenials somehow got hypersensitive about words. No other generation gives a s***
Nowadays, nobody gets the Gomer Pyle (Private Pyle) reference.
ua-cam.com/video/65B8Uh1Q3Bo/v-deo.htmlsi=CyxtXoOqs-BYqKKu
Oh…he does NOT look down upon whops?? 😮💨 close one, I’m good then.