The fact that somone saw a space surrounded by high ground with no way out and thought to themselves "this is the perfect place for an outpost", is still appaling to me
happened once, it was the Battle of Dien Bien Phu, after the VC brought all of their artillery up the hill, the Frenchs were basically in a pan ready to be fired from everywhere.
@@themurphy7507 that was the North Vietnamese not Viet Cong. Viet Cong were paramilitary guerillas and the NVA was a legitimate standardized military force
To use the Soldiers as cannon fodder to provoke attacks on the base so that it gives an excuse to build up force protection allowing for more equipment, personnel and money.
Such a good movie. Loved the intensity that this actor brought to Carter. Classic example of a soldier who might not be the best in barracks, but is rock solid under fire when you REALLY need to depend on him.
The acting is crazy for this scene if u look closely at 2:00 and at 2:42 u can see flem being spit out (something u get when doing such strenuous activities that ur lungs decide to clean themselves mid exercise , especially during long runs etc) the fact that they added detail really emphasises the fatigue
Um, the actor was actually lifting and carrying that guy on the stretcher while running. No need to try to get fancy acting when you can have the actor actually engage in the physical exertion that will produce the actual strain and fatigue.
Haha, right? Had a bunch of that as a mortar dude from my 1SG. We’d take contact and run out to the tubes in our PT’s, get the guns up and ready to shoot and here he comes hollering that we’re not in proper uniform to shoot.
With how horrible real combat can be one of the things that would get me the most is having to run past a fellow soldier and friend, like they did, and not being able to stop and help either bc of helping another soldier first or bc you know that if you stop then both of you will be die. That would be something that would haunt you for the rest of your life.
Or when you come across a fellow soldier maybe even someone you know who is is in such bad shape and suffering so horribly that you quietly walk past them and put a bullet in their brain to end it because you cant stomach him calling for his mom and to just go home. You simply have no concept of what that does to a person to endure that emotionally. On one hand you are trying to be merciful and on the other hand you just killed that man who was begging for help and despretly just wanted to live and see his family. That doesn't even scratch the surface of the insanity of war. If you have never been to war then its like trying to explain colors to a person that was born blind. The best way i can describe it is: If you could reach out and touch insanity in its physical form... thats what war actually is. Insanity.
Whoever’s idea it was to put an outpost there deserved a court martial and a prison sentence. There was absolutely ZERO tactical advantage where they were.
Well putting bases on the top of mountains is much more difficult, in Afghanistan and similar mountainous countries its pretty hard to find a suitable peice of land that isn’t surrounded by mountains
The actor who played Carter stood out to me His performance was supreme and if we've learned anything of what Carter went through on that deployment, is that through all of it, he fully deserved the M.O.H for his dedication to his men, his actions during and after the battle, in spite of the fact that he felt detached from his brothers and ranking officers. Still he rose above all his challenges and proved himself to be a soldier of the highest standard, He took it so hard when Mace didn't make it i'm sure all the men did, but Carter especially. That is herosim.
@@Man77772 You might want to fact check yourself there. Ty Carter did not play an on screen part in the remaking of his experience at Cop Keating, though he was on set to help the actor who portrayed him who is Caleb Landry Jones.
I've read both books on this battle (Red Platoon and The outpost) and while they take some real liberties in the film - with time and a few other things, the grit of the fighting, the horror of war - and the absolute suddenness with which men just get dead is a cold slap in the face. This movie more or less flopped, I believe, because no one wants to see what we did to our soldiers in Afghanistan for so many years. So many lives wasted. But it's as good of a war film as you might ever see - anywhere.
Why? They went there knowing that they are wrongfully invading another country and might die. Its all OORAAH and celebrations when they are dropping air strikes on villagers though right?
That's what I was thinking. Is he a god damn sniper just popping perfect headshots, were there only three guys? Where's follow up shots, suppressive fire and changing cover if they are behind him?
@@Ilamarea if you shoot anyone anywhere in the torso they will drop like a rock. They dont keep standing and shooting like they do in your little COD game.
It's amazing just too short, about 30 min action . I would give it same tier A with Long than, 800 , Mosul and we were soidier. Black hawk dawn and SPR is SS 13 hours is S
Legit thought he was constipated in the thumbnail. I know this is a serious movie but it still lines up since the fight or flight response can do that to your guts 😂
The way they had to pry his hands of the stretcher is telling. Under extreme circumstances u can go into a zombielike state until something snaps u out of it
Larson the guy in the drivers seat of the HUMVEE was actually in that battle in real life. They used a few other actors in this movie that were actually in this battle in real life. I’ve seen mixed reviews of this movie and that’s their opinion but me personally I love this movie and have watched it a handful of times now and I see something new that I didn’t pick up on from the previous time I watched it. And I had a cousin who made the ultimate sacrifice in Afghanistan and I got really emotional at the end of this movie because I keep thinking about what my cousin must have been thinking before the end. Never got to meet his newborn baby son or see his wife one more time before they took him from us.
Those that go through the deepest, darkest pit of the human experience and come out alive on the other side have either one of two things happen to you. Either it makes you a stronger person having survived or it destroys you.
My Grandfather was a US Marine in the 1st MARDIV, G-2-5, and fought at Peleliu and Okinawa. He never talked about his time in the Pacific. He survived the war and worked the rest of his life until retirement. He retired on a Friday, came home with all of his cakes from the retirement party, and died of a heart attack Saturday morning (the next morning). The one thing I remember my Grandmother saying that day, was that he could at least now get peaceful rest. She never discussed it while he was alive, but confirmed that day that he never had a restful night. He was born in 1919, was 23 when he enlisted in 1942, and was 25 by the time he got to Peleliu. Came home in 1946 and worked until March of 1979. He was 60 when he passed. Spent 32 years keeping that pent up inside. I've often considered what makes these guys get through. Some would say the guys that were killed had it the easiest. My guess is the guys that live the longest have it the hardest. My Grandfather passed long before The Band of Brothers series was a thing. I hope that such outlets allowed those guys to get that burden off their chest and out of their minds. Though I agree with your comment, I think it missed one thing....I'd say it made these guys stronger and destroyed them, at the same time. God bless that generation for their integrity and strength and the sacrifices they made for us all.
watched it.. back covid and i can still remember what i felt. what a great film. i watched some essays or BTS footages after. they really got the brave mans that the actors are portraying to guide in most scenes
That’s extreme pt right there I remember running hills with the fattest of the platoon on a stretcher getting told do you wanna be the one who tells his family he’s dead
Dear Hollywood, the danger of a bomb blast is NOT restricted to the smoke plume, in fact a large munition like that would SHRED people 1/4 mile away, the shrapnel is razor sharp and anything from the size of a dime to the sole of a shoe. SSG. U.S. Army (Medically Retired) Infantry / Sniper / SOF Intel (SOT-A), multiple tours
It's called Triage. You save the one's who can make it and still fight. And you ask for forgiveness for the rest of of your life for the ones who dont. And when its your turn to enter the afterlife you spend the rest of eternity in penance. 2/5 HM3 USN.
Sadly, brave men fighting for their lives because of ineptitude of higher ranking officers. Why those men were there to begin with boggles the mind. The British had a very good way of operating in Malaya. ON every patrol, a senior officer from HQ had to be on it. Unsurprisingly, casualty rates plunged. Turns out senior officers were not that keen on going into combat.
Whats interesting is the guy leading the stretcher was a former marine and had never really bonded with anyone in the company, was always considered a kind of outsider and a dick, but when one of the guys got hit, he was the one who pushed the hardest to get him out of harms way. Just shows some things are deeper than the surface feelings.
Imagine being downed on the ground with few bullets in you ass and hearing your friend tell "woooahhhh, thats Griffin!" and then seeing him run around you under fire. Thats wild.
Im sure its a good movie but... He is clearly behind cover right? Then why is he shooting at something off in the distance that is clearly also very much so behind said cover, twice. He shoots at it, looks away, and shoots in the same direction again. Maybe theyre getting overrun or somethin idk I havent seen the movie just pointing out that the cover hes behind doesnt exactly seem that great lol.
Yeah, that wrecked my head because I wanted the camera to spin, but if he can see something and is shooting in that direction, then hes not behind cover. Makes a more dramatic shot, but fairly annoying.
Thank you for sharing what we go through. Definitely a had-to-be-there to understand but this might help civ’s get that we change and to please be tolerant of us.
This situation is absolutly chillout hollydays. No direct fire little to no morter. Nearly no one is lost. The radio is still working. Support is on the way. The car is still good cover. What do you need more???
The only way you're getting bombs dropped in 30 seconds of getting on Radio is if they were going to drop them anyway and it was a happy coincidence you got on the radio. I think the BONE dropped more bombd defending kurdish fighters than US fighters?
Back in the day our leaders led our soldiers on the front lines. Today's soldiers should resist fighting until this standard is brought back. Your generals all view you as EXPENDABLE
The fact that somone saw a space surrounded by high ground with no way out and thought to themselves "this is the perfect place for an outpost", is still appaling to me
happened once, it was the Battle of Dien Bien Phu, after the VC brought all of their artillery up the hill, the Frenchs were basically in a pan ready to be fired from everywhere.
@@technoverse101 this was a real event though mate. COP Keating
@@themurphy7507 that was the North Vietnamese not Viet Cong. Viet Cong were paramilitary guerillas and the NVA was a legitimate standardized military force
@@themurphy7507
French thought there was no way nva could get arty up the mountains. They disassembled then reassembled at the top.
To use the Soldiers as cannon fodder to provoke attacks on the base so that it gives an excuse to build up force protection allowing for more equipment, personnel and money.
Such a good movie. Loved the intensity that this actor brought to Carter. Classic example of a soldier who might not be the best in barracks, but is rock solid under fire when you REALLY need to depend on him.
iirc, I think some of these actors were actual veterans of the battle.
@@kingjules8744 Yeah Daniel Rodriguez plays himself.
I know a few of those. Awesome in combat, just not so much with time on their hands back in garrison.
@@trevor8049 how did you find out you were?
The actual MOH winner played himself. Can you imagine losing your friend and then ten years later you have to relive hearing the news all over again?
The acting is crazy for this scene if u look closely at 2:00 and at 2:42 u can see flem being spit out (something u get when doing such strenuous activities that ur lungs decide to clean themselves mid exercise , especially during long runs etc) the fact that they added detail really emphasises the fatigue
I wonder if "they" added that, or if he's just that good of an actor.
That's literally just spit from running, lifting, and shouting at the same time.
Your lungs don't clean themselves during exercise. You may have to blow a wad out of your nose during exercise but that's it
We did 7 hours of hardcore training 6 days a week, when I was a teen. I don't recall doing such thing at all.
Um, the actor was actually lifting and carrying that guy on the stretcher while running. No need to try to get fancy acting when you can have the actor actually engage in the physical exertion that will produce the actual strain and fatigue.
Unrealistic, there is no officer stopping him in the middle of the fight to tell him he needs to be wearing his blouse.
Haha, right? Had a bunch of that as a mortar dude from my 1SG. We’d take contact and run out to the tubes in our PT’s, get the guns up and ready to shoot and here he comes hollering that we’re not in proper uniform to shoot.
When did you shave last soldier LMFAO
so f*cking real
Dude got shot because he wasn't wearing his reflector belt. Now he's got a colostomy bag and an article 15.
Also ACH/ MICH helmets are so dorky looking. Military should have stuck with PASGTs. Much more badass.
With how horrible real combat can be one of the things that would get me the most is having to run past a fellow soldier and friend, like they did, and not being able to stop and help either bc of helping another soldier first or bc you know that if you stop then both of you will be die. That would be something that would haunt you for the rest of your life.
One of the first tips you learnnin spec ops is to have a short memory.
that's known as "the mission comes before the man"
@@lifeisa.smalllesson333 Or as Recon Marines would say "observe everything, admire nothing"
You’re trained and trained to do your job to not go for them cause the medic will unless you have to absolutely do it
Or when you come across a fellow soldier maybe even someone you know who is is in such bad shape and suffering so horribly that you quietly walk past them and put a bullet in their brain to end it because you cant stomach him calling for his mom and to just go home. You simply have no concept of what that does to a person to endure that emotionally. On one hand you are trying to be merciful and on the other hand you just killed that man who was begging for help and despretly just wanted to live and see his family. That doesn't even scratch the surface of the insanity of war. If you have never been to war then its like trying to explain colors to a person that was born blind. The best way i can describe it is: If you could reach out and touch insanity in its physical form... thats what war actually is. Insanity.
I thought he was pooping from the thumbnail 😂
My thoughts.😅
hahaha me too!
SAAAME xD
looks like he's squatting down constipated
pooping out a grenade maybe
Whoever’s idea it was to put an outpost there deserved a court martial and a prison sentence. There was absolutely ZERO tactical advantage where they were.
Probably some grabblers
Well putting bases on the top of mountains is much more difficult, in Afghanistan and similar mountainous countries its pretty hard to find a suitable peice of land that isn’t surrounded by mountains
Our leaders. Who don't have too bleed anymore
"It's a nice outpost, I'll Give You That. But it Gives You No Tactical Advantage Whatsoever"
They hopped in a barrel and said "We're all fish"
The actor who played Carter stood out to me His performance was supreme and if we've learned anything of what Carter went through on that deployment, is that through all of it, he fully deserved the M.O.H for his dedication to his men, his actions during and after the battle, in spite of the fact that he felt detached from his brothers and ranking officers. Still he rose above all his challenges and proved himself to be a soldier of the highest standard, He took it so hard when Mace didn't make it i'm sure all the men did, but Carter especially.
That is herosim.
Crazy chilling
Carter was himself. Carter played himself in the movie
@@Man77772 You might want to fact check yourself there. Ty Carter did not play an on screen part in the remaking of his experience at Cop Keating, though he was on set to help the actor who portrayed him who is Caleb Landry Jones.
I've read both books on this battle (Red Platoon and The outpost) and while they take some real liberties in the film - with time and a few other things, the grit of the fighting, the horror of war - and the absolute suddenness with which men just get dead is a cold slap in the face. This movie more or less flopped, I believe, because no one wants to see what we did to our soldiers in Afghanistan for so many years. So many lives wasted. But it's as good of a war film as you might ever see - anywhere.
Same with Kadgaki, an English film about Afghan war.
I think it flopped because they released it at the beginning of COVID
corona virus , this movie is a gem i watch it about once a week
Who else feels like our military leadership does not deserve to lead men as good as these?
It's always been like this. Liars get to live to become old and honest men die young.
specially Gral. Patton. He must be rolling in his grave.
Movie
The first time I saw this movie, I couldn’t see straight with all the onions that were being cut
Why? They went there knowing that they are wrongfully invading another country and might die. Its all OORAAH and celebrations when they are dropping air strikes on villagers though right?
That gentleman’s performance was incredible. I’m sure it’s that way with everything he touches. He did a fantastic job.
One of the best war movies made
The single shots are
Killing me
That's what I was thinking. Is he a god damn sniper just popping perfect headshots, were there only three guys? Where's follow up shots, suppressive fire and changing cover if they are behind him?
Why?.. when your ammo is short you preserve by single, accurate shots each time
@@johnwestervelt7454 Because he'd be fucking dead.
@@Ilamarea if you shoot anyone anywhere in the torso they will drop like a rock. They dont keep standing and shooting like they do in your little COD game.
@SkoolConnor that's entirely false, it's actually extremely surprising how many bullets a human body can take before they die.
This movie is so amazing, it's up there with Black Hawk Down, We Were Soldiers, and Saving Private Ryan for me.
It's amazing just too short, about 30 min action . I would give it same tier A with Long than, 800 , Mosul and we were soidier.
Black hawk dawn and SPR is SS
13 hours is S
@@TheNightblindnessL
The thumbnail led me to believe he was taking a dump in bucket during combat lol.
I thought he was pooping in the thumbnail. That's why I clicked.
Same
War does that to people too
Why would you want to see that?
Most people would be.
Legit thought he was constipated in the thumbnail. I know this is a serious movie but it still lines up since the fight or flight response can do that to your guts 😂
1:01 That would give me scary mixed feelings because you're glad help is coming but afraid it might accidentally kill you...
We survived. My brothers live in my soul forever
The way they had to pry his hands of the stretcher is telling. Under extreme circumstances u can go into a zombielike state until something snaps u out of it
Much respect to all men and woman who serve you keep me and my family free ❤🇺🇲
I'm not a veteran but I'd say this is the most authentic-feeling movie about modern combat I've seen.
Lmao how the fuck would you know then?
Larson the guy in the drivers seat of the HUMVEE was actually in that battle in real life. They used a few other actors in this movie that were actually in this battle in real life. I’ve seen mixed reviews of this movie and that’s their opinion but me personally I love this movie and have watched it a handful of times now and I see something new that I didn’t pick up on from the previous time I watched it. And I had a cousin who made the ultimate sacrifice in Afghanistan and I got really emotional at the end of this movie because I keep thinking about what my cousin must have been thinking before the end. Never got to meet his newborn baby son or see his wife one more time before they took him from us.
1:28 B-1 Lancer Pilot: X-ray i copy get your boys down we're gonna get close
Those that go through the deepest, darkest pit of the human experience and come out alive on the other side have either one of two things happen to you. Either it makes you a stronger person having survived or it destroys you.
My Grandfather was a US Marine in the 1st MARDIV, G-2-5, and fought at Peleliu and Okinawa. He never talked about his time in the Pacific. He survived the war and worked the rest of his life until retirement. He retired on a Friday, came home with all of his cakes from the retirement party, and died of a heart attack Saturday morning (the next morning). The one thing I remember my Grandmother saying that day, was that he could at least now get peaceful rest. She never discussed it while he was alive, but confirmed that day that he never had a restful night. He was born in 1919, was 23 when he enlisted in 1942, and was 25 by the time he got to Peleliu. Came home in 1946 and worked until March of 1979. He was 60 when he passed. Spent 32 years keeping that pent up inside. I've often considered what makes these guys get through. Some would say the guys that were killed had it the easiest. My guess is the guys that live the longest have it the hardest. My Grandfather passed long before The Band of Brothers series was a thing. I hope that such outlets allowed those guys to get that burden off their chest and out of their minds. Though I agree with your comment, I think it missed one thing....I'd say it made these guys stronger and destroyed them, at the same time. God bless that generation for their integrity and strength and the sacrifices they made for us all.
watched it.. back covid and i can still remember what i felt. what a great film. i watched some essays or BTS footages after. they really got the brave mans that the actors are portraying to guide in most scenes
Now I want to rewatch The Outpost for the 7th time
Rule of warfare : Build your base on high ground...
That’s extreme pt right there I remember running hills with the fattest of the platoon on a stretcher getting told do you wanna be the one who tells his family he’s dead
Oh wow. I just watched this yesterday, and it's an amazing movie. Lots of action and great acting, in my opinion.
I can't find that movie or series on my digital tv chaine.
netflix
We're not meant to live like this.
We don't want to live by each others misery, but by each others happiness.
Is this Squad 2? The graphics look amazing!
The actor who plays carter is going 110% and everyone else is giving 50% lol
I’m hooked on your content.
What is that thumbnail 😂
🤪
really made me think he was taking a shyt from the thumbnail
i was wondering when someone would say this 😂😂😂
Dear Hollywood, the danger of a bomb blast is NOT restricted to the smoke plume, in fact a large munition like that would SHRED people 1/4 mile away, the shrapnel is razor sharp and anything from the size of a dime to the sole of a shoe.
SSG. U.S. Army (Medically Retired) Infantry / Sniper / SOF Intel (SOT-A), multiple tours
Thank you @ScoutSniper3124! Don't forget to subscribe if you haven't already!
1:56 এটা কোন দেশের পতাকা ?? 😮
War is hell. And it continues even after.
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I can't imagine the heartbreak of having no choice but to leave one of your boy's dead in the street like that.
It's called Triage. You save the one's who can make it and still fight. And you ask for forgiveness for the rest of of your life for the ones who dont. And when its your turn to enter the afterlife you spend the rest of eternity in penance. 2/5 HM3 USN.
Sadly, brave men fighting for their lives because of ineptitude of higher ranking officers. Why those men were there to begin with boggles the mind. The British had a very good way of operating in Malaya. ON every patrol, a senior officer from HQ had to be on it. Unsurprisingly, casualty rates plunged. Turns out senior officers were not that keen on going into combat.
Movie name please
movie name
Great movie, I’m going to watch it again now.
This was a really good battle scene, good movie
The enemy was casually walking around firing their weapons in base completely fearless on top of all the other advantages they had.
one of the best movies ever for me at least
1:39 the look and that mans face...
Whats interesting is the guy leading the stretcher was a former marine and had never really bonded with anyone in the company, was always considered a kind of outsider and a dick, but when one of the guys got hit, he was the one who pushed the hardest to get him out of harms way. Just shows some things are deeper than the surface feelings.
my name is Griffin and to hear "woahhhhh, thats Griffin" and seeing a body lying there is so wild
Imagine being downed on the ground with few bullets in you ass and hearing your friend tell "woooahhhh, thats Griffin!" and then seeing him run around you under fire. Thats wild.
1:40 genuinely thought he was about to take a 💩
i thought this was a movie about a guy trying to poop in war
Playing Pavlov in VR can't be that much different.
Asaan hela camai jeng samel jeng getuk!
Thank you @LuxLux-k3o! Don't forget to subscribe if you haven't already!
The radio operator is making strategic and tactical decisions? lol yeah, right
he was playing the temp base commander - they were short handed because they were all getting dead.
@@SanDiegoHarry1 well, that actually makes sense.
I was a radio operator in the military long ago… so in guess that’s possible
@@JoeHeine It is what was in the book(s) - Bunderman was juggling lots of roles that day. Those guys came VERY close to all getting dead.
Thumbnail makes it look like he's pushing out a huge log lol
Awesome movie.
I've read the book and it made me bloody angry at the stupidity and arrogance of the senior officers who made these decisions.
Thumbnail is me after Taco Bell
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@@VVSFilms no
Shout out to the director of photography
These are true Warriors, Patriots, and Heroes 🫡
Hollywood's portrayal of Soldiers is embarrassing.
Im sure its a good movie but... He is clearly behind cover right? Then why is he shooting at something off in the distance that is clearly also very much so behind said cover, twice. He shoots at it, looks away, and shoots in the same direction again. Maybe theyre getting overrun or somethin idk I havent seen the movie just pointing out that the cover hes behind doesnt exactly seem that great lol.
Yeah, that wrecked my head because I wanted the camera to spin, but if he can see something and is shooting in that direction, then hes not behind cover. Makes a more dramatic shot, but fairly annoying.
anyone know what knife that is on his rig?
The medal of honour mini series on Netflix has awesome episodes on both guys how reciived MOH and a few more moh recipients from other past wars
Thank you for sharing what we go through. Definitely a had-to-be-there to understand but this might help civ’s get that we change and to please be tolerant of us.
OUTSTANDING MOVIE
SEMPER FI 🇺🇸
The world is on fire and hell is coming for me. God what a day to be in the infantry! Hooah!
Great movie..
Great film
GREAT MOVIE
Never are our military personnel "losers." NEVER.
This situation is absolutly chillout hollydays. No direct fire little to no morter. Nearly no one is lost. The radio is still working. Support is on the way. The car is still good cover. What do you need more???
May have to watch just to explain those shorts.
Why was he shooting from in front of cover? Hollywood doesn’t know anything about real combat.
Good movie
CLICK FOR THE THUMBNAI
This move was amazing
I'm going to go watch this movie again
I haven't seen this movie yet but I heard it called damage control because of how many positions we lost with the best defences and air support.
It’s like these guys shouldn’t have ever been there.
Look amazing.
Sick film. Starts a lil cheesy but the action is dope.
such a great film
Could use that camo netting around the house , shade and such, 85332,
that thumbnail is crazy
Great scene but the explosions would cause huge pressure waves. No one would walk openly through the position
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Battle hardened silkies right there.
If only you had a sergeant major or Lieutenant yelling at everyone over mustache hair or ear plugs it would be realistic.
INTENSE!!
Nope, not runnin' like that with bombs that big, that close...nope.
Running or not is irrelevant. Sitting still cannot protect you from overpressure if one lands that close.
@@BooDamnHoo pretty sure that's what I said, the video shows them running...
If anyone could tell me, when did BONE drop the hate? we were at the OP around 12-1400. I remember an A-10 and 81's but dont remember BONE.
The only way you're getting bombs dropped in 30 seconds of getting on Radio is if they were going to drop them anyway and it was a happy coincidence you got on the radio. I think the BONE dropped more bombd defending kurdish fighters than US fighters?
If the outpost is not mobile, or sufficient enough to pack up and leave quickly, it's a death trap.
Why'd it end so abruptly
im unsure if this is animated or real
the explosions are probably mostly animated, plane too, the rest should be real / practical effects.
the movie is great but when he looked up he looked like he was trying to drop a big one
💀
Back in the day our leaders led our soldiers on the front lines. Today's soldiers should resist fighting until this standard is brought back. Your generals all view you as EXPENDABLE
The dust bowl was hell.