WE WERE SOLDIERS (2002) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION

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  • Опубліковано 29 гру 2022
  • WE WERE SOLDIERS (2002) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 427

  • @lw3918
    @lw3918 Рік тому +269

    My father participated in this battle. I tried to get him to watch the movie. He said "don't need to, I was there". My father never really talked about the war. I have a picture of me about 2 years old with his actual "boonie" hat on my head. He's been gone 9 years now. I miss him a lot 😪

    • @frank5891
      @frank5891 Рік тому +8

      Your father was a hero. The world will always be thankful for his service. Americans keep the world free of evil men and that must keep being like that.

    • @lw3918
      @lw3918 Рік тому +5

      @@frank5891 His dad was one Normandy Beach that fateful morning also. I fact my father's side of the family has fought in every major conflict dating back to the Revolutionary War.

    • @JakeM794
      @JakeM794 Рік тому +3

      @@lw3918 You have an incredibly long line of courageous warriors in your family. I can only imagine the pride you must feel.

    • @lw3918
      @lw3918 Рік тому +4

      @@JakeM794 I do. I've also seen my fair share. But what they faced was far worse due to the lack of technology. They're the true heroes.

    • @ds--pu1tv
      @ds--pu1tv Рік тому +4

      My grandfather was in Vietnam as well, drafted at 18 years old he hardly ever spoke of the things he had to go through over there, being very young there was so much i wanted to ask him about it but deep down i knew that was a subject better left alone so i never questioned him on it the few things i do know about his experience were absolutely terrifying and unimaginable hell i wouldn't be here on this earth if it wasn't for someones sacrifice to save his life over there, i respect all veterans but Vietnam/WW2 vets have a special place in my heart respect to you and your father and thank you for your father's service.

  • @armynurseboy
    @armynurseboy Рік тому +31

    One of the company commanders in this battle was Rick Rescorla. He was a British immigrant who gained US citizenship and then a commission in the Army. After the war, he became the chief security officer for Morgan Stanly in NYC. He died on 9/11 in the South Tower collapse. He had evacuated all of his company's employees, but went back in to see if he could get more people out. Hero.

    • @Heywoodthepeckerwood
      @Heywoodthepeckerwood 6 місяців тому +2

      That is a great man. I did not know about him and his life.
      I’ll look him up and learn his story.

  • @Manolo0528
    @Manolo0528 Рік тому +76

    The two helicopter pilots, Bruce “Snakesh*t” Crandall & Ed “Too Tall” Freeman, each received the Distinguished Flying Cross for their actions in this battle. The DFC is 2nd only to the Medal of Honor. After this movie came out their medals were upgraded to the Medal of Honor.

    • @travisbaird5108
      @travisbaird5108 Рік тому +3

      They raised them uo to a medal of honor recently

    • @armynurseboy
      @armynurseboy Рік тому +1

      DFC is not 2nd only to the MoH. That would be the Distinguished Service Cross (DSC).

    • @Manolo0528
      @Manolo0528 Рік тому

      @@armynurseboy You’re right. I thought DFC was an equivalent of DSM but as it turns out there are several medals between DFC & MoH.

  • @samuel10125
    @samuel10125 Рік тому +33

    One thing I love about this movie is how they portray the enemy not as an incompetent, over exaggerated stereotype but as a well disciplined, smart and motivated.

    • @skibiditoiletthingamabobber
      @skibiditoiletthingamabobber 7 місяців тому +2

      Yea that's what I love about Vietnam movies especially "Danger Close" they portray the NVA as a smart, organized, and motivated enemy force that are well trained, well equipped, and use the terrain they know very well to their advantage

    • @michaelparks5669
      @michaelparks5669 6 місяців тому +1

      Mr Charles was no joke.

    • @Pedrogog
      @Pedrogog 5 місяців тому +2

      It's still a pretty shit movie though. Just an american propagandha.

    • @michaelparks5669
      @michaelparks5669 5 місяців тому

      @@Pedrogog screw you.....

    • @michaelparks5669
      @michaelparks5669 5 місяців тому +1

      @@Pedrogog IT IS A BRILLIANT MOVIE. LEAVE THE US .....

  • @mattyjay1711
    @mattyjay1711 Рік тому +52

    The beginning isn't basic training or boot camp. The training that they were doing was a work-up for deployment which is the training you do to prepare for the upcoming deployment. The housing you saw was on base housing. Officers will get better housing than the enlisted. If you were enlisted, your gonna be in the barracks with all the other dudes. Their is a reason why a lot of young guys get married real quick when they get out of basic, money and to get out of the barracks. And unfortunately, a lot of those marriages end up failing.
    As far as the logistics and paperwork goes, like your will, not sure how it was done back in the day, but in my experience, they would make sure all your paperwork is done, they make you go over it again and again and again because if something does happen to you, your information needs to be on point, because they need to notify next of kin and if that information is wrong, they are going to have a hard time getting hold of your NOK.

    • @mike09271974
      @mike09271974 Рік тому +3

      It takes a special kind of woman to put up with all the stresses of military life. If she can make it through it, she can handle anything. I was fortunate. Now I can't get rid of her... JK!!! She's awesome still after 21 years of service and 28 years of marriage.

  • @jonathanwelsh9103
    @jonathanwelsh9103 Рік тому +17

    “You tell them how my troopers died” That line hits me every time.

  • @chuckhilleshiem6596
    @chuckhilleshiem6596 Рік тому +31

    I am a combat veteran ( Vietnam ) you can not possibly know the good you have just done. Thank you for this and God bless you both

    • @mark-be9mq
      @mark-be9mq Рік тому +1

      Thank you and God Bless and Keep you.

    • @charleswoolley8367
      @charleswoolley8367 Рік тому +1

      As a military vet, it pains me when I think
      of those who returned, and how they were
      treated. Unlike the WWII vets, we didn't "win"
      in Vietnam. So you didn't hear of Welcome
      Home parades, jobs for the returning soldiers, etc.
      My hope is that, over time, they have received
      their recognition. Thank You for reviewing this.

    • @chuckhilleshiem6596
      @chuckhilleshiem6596 Рік тому

      @@charleswoolley8367 Thanks for your thoughts . I'm glad your home safe and I hope all is well with you. Welcome home my brother

  • @raffiliberty5722
    @raffiliberty5722 Рік тому +37

    Btw here's a cool story: My dad was a medic in he 101st airborne form 69-70 (yes same 101st in Band of Brothers). He did two deployments. One time they were dropped off in the Ashua Valley dong their typical recon and destroy missions when they got to a clearing and decided to rest up in at the edge still concealed. All of a sudden a new soldier who was attached with them began to dig FURIOUSLY for no reason. All this hardened vets looked at each other puzzled and they asked the guy "what are you doing"? to which he replied, "I was in the Ia Drang Valley!!" and he kept on digging.
    That battle you just saw in the movie was one of the largest engagements in a pitched battles of the whole war. There was too much firepower for the enemy to concentrate a division. Although the casualties were considered high for the US they considered it a success and it convinced war planners that this war can be won. Engagements never really happened like that afterwards except a few cases like the siege of "Kai San".
    The Vietnamese were not willing to lose and would throw as many men into the battle as they could. That's also why casualty figures do not dictate the outcome.
    Excellent reaction. My dad said that "Hamburger Hill" is the most accurate of all Vietnam films although "Platoon" gets most of the recognition.
    Enjoy and WATCH BRAVEHEART AND THE PATRIOT!!!!!

    • @Mozdk1
      @Mozdk1 Рік тому

      Braveheart is a much watch.
      This movie is brutal and realistic.

  • @yadarehey1130
    @yadarehey1130 Рік тому +21

    The scene where Joe Galloway carried Jimmy to the medivac chopper. The irl Joe said that was his nightmare. Or as the movie put it, “those who have seen war, never stop hearing the screams.”

  • @karlmoles6530
    @karlmoles6530 Рік тому +20

    My father was a Sergeant in Regimental Combat Team 31 in Korea, part of Task Force Faith. They were attacked by mass waves of Chinese soldiers at the Chosin reservoir. They were ultimately cut off and destroyed, they took 70% casualties. My father was one of the few who escaped at the end.

    • @wesdog8975
      @wesdog8975 Рік тому +2

      My Father was also at the Chosin. His Army Combat Engineer unit was building an airfield there at the time of Battle. On their tactical withdrawal towards Hungnam, the engineers had to build bridges to get across steep ravines and then destroy them so the Chinese could not use them.

    • @karlmoles6530
      @karlmoles6530 Рік тому

      @@wesdog8975 All great respect and admiration to your father.

  • @sandbagger57
    @sandbagger57 Рік тому +20

    I went to High School with one of the men who died. In Washington at the Vietnam Memorial, I paid my personal respects. I am glad I was able to do that. Seeing his name listed at the end of this movie was an emotional experience.

    • @frank5891
      @frank5891 Рік тому

      You have to be proud to be able to meet him. They all were heroes.

    • @Mellowhype503
      @Mellowhype503 Рік тому

      Stop your fucking laughing

    • @timp8843
      @timp8843 Рік тому

      What was his name?

    • @sandbagger57
      @sandbagger57 Рік тому

      @@timp8843 Richard Testa

    • @tafarajeke6564
      @tafarajeke6564 Рік тому

      @@sandbagger57 that's my grandpa

  • @mturker100
    @mturker100 Рік тому +7

    I got to meet Col. Moore at a dinner once. I immediately understood why his men would've run through hell and back for him. He was a natural leader, a perfect gentleman, and just a genuinely good man. I wouldn't question a single order he gave me. It was a great experience.

  • @alexamerling79
    @alexamerling79 Рік тому +7

    "If any of you sonsofbitches call me grandpa..." 😂

  • @kennethlane7645
    @kennethlane7645 Рік тому +7

    Yeah Broken Arrow back then was basically an emergency call to any and all available Aircraft for a unit that was in danger of being overrun.

    • @WaywardVet
      @WaywardVet Рік тому

      I remember Quick Reaction Force days from my time in Iraq. You could spend all day just napping or watching movies, annoyed at being confined to one room. But if a call comes in, all that pent up frustration comes out and holy hell you don't want to be on the receiving end when the cavalry comes in. Probably a welcome sight to the unit we're relieving but utterly terrifying to anyone else because you just got a whole new platoon just itching to let off some steam. As for mortars and air power... Yeah, you can hear it in their voice over the radio when they're ready to throw down some weight.

    • @TommyGlint
      @TommyGlint Рік тому

      Broken Arrow is official code word for a lost nuke. As I recall, Bent Spear means malfunctioning nuke. There might be others.
      It is certainly possible the Broken Arrow was used for the Ia Drang operation as code word, agreed upon for that specific ops, but it was never used by FACs as some universially (as in US armed forces) agreed upon code, as shown in the movie.
      It might be a term used now, thanks to movies and books, but I’ve heard several Vietnam War Forward Air Controllers say they never heard it before they saw Gibsons movie.

    • @adamr6794
      @adamr6794 Рік тому +1

      @@TommyGlint Well Hal Moore ordered FAC Charlie Hastings to call "Broken Arrow" . Moore specifically states exactly what the term means in 100's of interviews. So I'm going with that

  • @thisishowthetruthdies684
    @thisishowthetruthdies684 Рік тому +11

    Mel Gibson first came to prominence in a movie called Gallipoli, which is also about war. Like this, it also tries to put a human face to the casualty statistics. After the success of that movie and Mad Max, Hollywood tried to turn Gibson into a romantic lead with films like The Year of Living Dangerously, but he never quite took to it.

  • @AbolitionistPrivateer
    @AbolitionistPrivateer Рік тому +9

    The book this movie is from was written by the journalist portrayed in the movie, and the title is: "We Were Soldiers Once...and Young."
    It was on pretty much every Commander's Reading List when I was in the Army.
    Another that was on most lists was "The Killer Angels" which was made into the movie "Gettysburg"--which I recommend to y'all.

    • @trottheblackdog
      @trottheblackdog Рік тому

      Joe Galloway was a legend. He also ended up running a .30 machine gun in another US base that was attacked, under command of an officer named Charlie Beckwith.. the guy that founded Delta Force.

    • @rosshoppus333
      @rosshoppus333 Рік тому

      I’ve read the book twice. Wish I would have read the book before I ever saw the movie. But without the movie I wouldn’t have looked up the book.
      I book everyone should read is “Alone at Dawn” before they make a movie about it that messes it up.

    • @adamr6794
      @adamr6794 Рік тому +1

      @@trottheblackdog Great story about Galloway getting dropped into Plei Me and being put to work by Beckwith. That's where Galloway got his M-16 prior to the fight at LZ X-Ray. In truth Galloway already knew Moore and Plumley and all Plumley had to do was kick Joe and mock him "you can't take no pictures laying there on the ground, Sonny. ...So Galloway decides well we are probably all going to die here so I'll get mine standing next to this guy (Plumley) With that he won Plumley's respect. Something not so easily earned

  • @KM-et8wc
    @KM-et8wc Рік тому +1

    6:58 I do not know if this was already mentioned, but they are not in 'basic training' . Military members and their families typically change posts every 18-24 months (some stay at one place much longer). Combat units are ALWAYS training when not deployed.

  • @waltshields5483
    @waltshields5483 Рік тому +6

    My first "hump" was in the Ia Drang Valley where this happened. I hated that place then and I hate it still. A lot of blood was spilled on that ground. The scene where the French lost 2000 men happened at the Mang Yang Pass. The French dead were buried there facing France.

  • @danh8804
    @danh8804 Рік тому +2

    Mrs. Moore pretending to be a sleep so her husband would go was chilling and beautiful. As was him ringing the bell and waiting to be invited back to his family at the end.
    My father (USMC '66-'67) served in a different branch and two years after this but says that - hands down - this is the film that most accurately depicts combat in Vietnam, and it's not even close.

  • @tubbytimmy8287
    @tubbytimmy8287 Рік тому +3

    The dude is constantly oooOohing in every movie - it's like an air siren 🙉

  • @shannonparker4239
    @shannonparker4239 Рік тому +2

    That wasn't actually the end of that battle of the Ia drang. The Cav did "win" the initial battle, but had to march out instead of being air lifted. The column became separated/broken and took great losses. The book "We were soldiers once...and young" goes into great detail of it.

  • @nathanhillman2379
    @nathanhillman2379 Рік тому +10

    Since you have been watching a lot of war movies lately I thought I would recommend one of my favorites that always seems to be overlooked. "The Thin Red Line" is a great WW2 movie. It has a great A-list cast and is a beautifully shot movie. I think it's highly underrated which is why I highly recommend it.

    • @graphiccreek
      @graphiccreek Рік тому

      The big red 1 is another great classic

    • @frank5891
      @frank5891 Рік тому

      It’s a great movie true

  • @TommyGlint
    @TommyGlint Рік тому +2

    After the battle shown in the movie with Col. Moore’s 1st battalion, the 2nd battalion 7th Cav. under colonel McDade walked from LZ X-Ray to another LZ (LZ Albany) 4 km away, and was ambushed on the way.
    Cut up while strung out in a half mile long marching column, they lost double of what Moore’s 1st batt. did in LZ X-Ray.
    On another note, the Battle of Ia Drang made the US Army set up a system of 2 men casualty notification teams delivering the sad message to relatives. Before that, it was in fact sadly done by cab delivered telegrams.

  • @davidmatheny1993
    @davidmatheny1993 Рік тому +2

    One of my History professors in college was next door neighbors to Hal Moore(Mel Gibson's character) during his retired years in Auburn,AL.

  • @Locquiao93
    @Locquiao93 Рік тому +6

    Signs AND Braveheart need to be watched! Both great Mel Gibson movies and both in my all time top 5!

    • @mrdarkside4071
      @mrdarkside4071 Рік тому

      Another underrated movie and lost in time is "The Bounty" with Mel Gibson, Anthony Hopkins, Liam Neeson, Daniel Day-Lewis,Bernard Hill..such and ensemble cast..

  • @ingobordewick6480
    @ingobordewick6480 Рік тому +7

    "Remember the Titans" is one of the greatest movies regarding racism, I have ever seen. Would make totally scence for you both to do a reaction to it. Greets from Germany!

    • @frank5891
      @frank5891 Рік тому

      Remember the Titans it’s an amazing movie and Denzel Washington it’s for me the best actor ever

  • @wezzarogers423
    @wezzarogers423 Рік тому +5

    The Thin Red Line is another great one got a brilliant soundtrack

  • @doubleswords
    @doubleswords Рік тому

    7:15 My dad was in the military, (repaired helicopters in Vietnam), and we moved a lot of places. Every 2-3 years, it was a new army base. Each base had housing, playgrounds, sometimes schools and rec centers like bowling alleys or skating rinks. I lived in Germany for 3 years, playing youth soccer, climbing on helicopters that he fixed, playing in neighborhoods with other US children on the other side of a fence that bordered a German village. The first German I learned was how to order 1 beer and 1 soda from a tavern just outside the base. I even got to fish near a mothballed fleet of ships, sitting on a rusted out landing vehicle. ......Thanks for these reactions!

  • @JamesKenobi1138
    @JamesKenobi1138 Рік тому

    I glad you both enjoyed this movie, it’s my favorite war film. My father was a helicopter pilot in Vietnam in 1967 and was involved in combat although he was not this specific mission.

  • @markfoor4137
    @markfoor4137 Рік тому +1

    A couple of notes....First, This movie was based on a book written by Col. Moore and the photographer Joe Galloway. Joe Galloway won a Pulitzer Prize for the photos that he took during the battle for LZ Bayonet.

  • @waterbeauty85
    @waterbeauty85 Рік тому +15

    Col. Moore saying "You will watch the back of the man next to you, as he will watch yours. And you won't care what color he is, or by what name he calls God. They say we're leaving home. We're going to what home was always supposed to be" reminds me of something said by a combat artist from WW2 in a PBS documentary called "They Drew Fire." WW2 was the first war the U.S. military would cover so extensively with photography, but because the higher ups weren't convinced of photographs' ability to really convey the feeling of war, artists were also sent into combat with troops to sketch events as they happened and later make fully rendered drawings from them with the artists' perceptions and emotions imposed on the images. One of these artists recalled that, the closer you got to the fighting, the more discrimination would evaporate, and the soldiers would all take care of each other with no thought of ethnicity, religion or class. He summed it up saying something along the lines of "It was sort of like heaven. That sounds funny doesn't it? You wouldn't think it would be, but it was."

  • @raffiliberty5722
    @raffiliberty5722 Рік тому +5

    Also the opening is not basic training. Basic training is usually 9 weeks followed by advanced training for whatever job you chose which can go from 2 months to 2 years even! After that you get stationed at an actual post where you are with a unit of people who also did all your training. The beginning is that. A soldier never stops training. When it came to Vietnam it was all new to them in 1966 so they had to train train train before going downrange. When I was in, we would be training out in the swamps and woods and desert for half the time we weren't deployed.

    • @gopnik9967
      @gopnik9967 Рік тому +1

      yup, it was their deployment workup basically, movie based on an excellent book, and real events.

  • @jaje69
    @jaje69 Рік тому +1

    I'm glad you two enjoyed this movie. And agreed, a very emotional movie. I still get choked up watching it at a few scenes.

  • @jasonjohns2961
    @jasonjohns2961 Рік тому +1

    Joe Galloway was awarded a Bronze Star with "V" Device in 1998. Freeman - MOH awarded in 2001. Crandall MOH awarded in 2007.

  • @Blueqoose
    @Blueqoose Рік тому +1

    Vince my Uncle was a fly boy too. He actually took part in this battle of the Ia Drang. I'll talk more about it on Patreon. Thank you for watching this movie. You do my family a great service by watching this and the shared history of my family and other families tied into the blood of the US Military.

  • @MichaelPower212
    @MichaelPower212 Рік тому +4

    You might want to consider some other films with Mel Gibson which have a war theme:
    "Gallipoli" (1981) 7.2 IMBD
    "Braveheart" (1995) 8.4
    "The Patriot" (2000) 7.2.

  • @williambranch4283
    @williambranch4283 Рік тому +4

    Most accurate Vietnam War movie! A British mercenary fighting with the Americans in this battle, he was chief of security for the Twin Towers, and went down with the buildings still doing his duty on 9/11.

    • @armynurseboy
      @armynurseboy Рік тому +1

      Rick Rescorla was not a "British Mercenary". He was an immigrant who gained US citizenship after enlisting in the US Army.

  • @steveg5933
    @steveg5933 Рік тому +2

    Col. Moore and SgtMaj Plumbly are absolute legends. So says this old Navy Corpsman. (I was born just a few weeks after this battle) 2 uncles fought in this war. Mine would be some 30 years later. A good video to watch regarding this is Country Music group Big & Rich 8th of November (the official music video)

  • @P-M-869
    @P-M-869 Рік тому +2

    They were after basic training, They were in advanced training, preparing for combat. On Memorial Day, I also remember the Gold Star Mothers, Wifes and Families.

  • @VETdude382
    @VETdude382 Рік тому +2

    So, before the soldiers go out on a mission like this, the leaders will mark out grid coordinates as target reference points, rally points, way/check points, etc. If they make contact, they can use the grid coordinates they have already marked on their maps as a quick reference to call in artillery or close air support, or shift their fire and support into the general vicinity until they can mark the proper grid. It helps greatly in a stressful situation, so that you have a greater chance of saving your men and killing bad guys

  • @Crazy_Crusaderr
    @Crazy_Crusaderr Рік тому +1

    I subscribed to you guys because I love your reactions to military/war movies. Always a pleasure to watch a new one!

  • @philmullineaux5405
    @philmullineaux5405 Рік тому +2

    Mel got famous from Mad Max and Road Warrior! All his movies are great. He got super huge in, Lethal weapon!

  • @thepooaprinciple5144
    @thepooaprinciple5144 Рік тому

    I dont know if you know this or not, but the song they use in this movie...."Sgt.Mckenzie"...was written by a nephew of a war veteran I think from Vietnam in dedication to someone they loved who fought in the war, again....I cant remember which war, but that song was a tribute to them and everyone who served and sacrificed.

  • @dananderson5516
    @dananderson5516 9 місяців тому

    There was a show, belive it was called Day 1, a sort of take off of 60 minutes or 20/20. Back in the 90's, Col. Hal Moore and others went back to the battlefield and even met some of the Vietnamese they fought there. Worth watching...

  • @rollotomassi6232
    @rollotomassi6232 Рік тому +1

    It's specific training, not basic training. These are officers that are in Air Cavalry Troop (ACT) training, so they have good housing near the base.

  • @williambranch4283
    @williambranch4283 Рік тому +7

    Broken Arrow in this case means you can drop artillery or bombs closer than usual near your own troops, because they are overrun. Broken Arrow also means when you have lost control of a nuclear weapon in your custody.

    • @tuckervernon3791
      @tuckervernon3791 Рік тому +1

      As a Oklahoman, I'm conflicted on the term.

    • @williambranch4283
      @williambranch4283 Рік тому

      @@tuckervernon3791 Lived in OK for 24 years ;-)

    • @adamr6794
      @adamr6794 Рік тому +1

      Broken Arrow, in 1965, meant that the Men on the ground were about to be overrun and wiped out and the call meant that every available air asset would be redirected to that spot.

  • @robertgarcia6561
    @robertgarcia6561 Рік тому +2

    Just for clarification, the beginning does not take place during basic training. It was at a normal duty station, they were training up for the upcoming deployment. Training like that is a normal day to day thing in the regular army. Also yes, it's a hell of a thing to be 18 years old and sign your will.

  • @Curraghmore
    @Curraghmore Рік тому +5

    Thinking back to Major Winters and Easy Company in 'Band of Brothers', I'm sure he lost more than one man under his leadership from D-Day onward. Bear in mind that not every man killed in action was included in the tv series either.

  • @TheMajorActual
    @TheMajorActual Рік тому +2

    The Battle of Ia Drang happened in 1965. The M16 had only started to enter service a couple of years before that.....Also, there are military bases all over the US. When new units are being stood up, troops are transferred in from other bases or training depots; that's an everyday thing.

    • @TheMajorActual
      @TheMajorActual Рік тому

      Also: _Broken Arrow_ here, meant that an American unit was being overrun, which would cause as much airpower as possible to be directed to that unit's support...Later on, it became the code for a lost nuclear weapon.

  • @benjaminsarles6660
    @benjaminsarles6660 Рік тому +1

    Another good military perspective movie you guys might want to check out is, "Rules of Engagement". Covers a tiny bit of Vietnam and modern times fighting.

  • @edgarcia4794
    @edgarcia4794 11 місяців тому +1

    Col. Moore took it on himself to find the Vietnamese girl in the photo and give the diary to her. with a note complimenting her husband for his bravery and for her to know he died quickly without fear.

  • @happydog6537
    @happydog6537 Рік тому

    Love your reviews. Thanks for the entertainment. My pitbull loved your howling. Happy new year.

  • @MaaanImDead
    @MaaanImDead Рік тому

    First time viewer, One of my all time favourite movies is The Way Back on Netflix, I'd 100% recommend that, ( A Radioman deployed at a hot LZ would commonly live about 40 seconds before they were shot and killed )

  • @nancyjanzen5676
    @nancyjanzen5676 Рік тому +1

    Hal Moore read up about the battle with the French in the same place. He understood the enemies mindset.

  • @philmullineaux5405
    @philmullineaux5405 Рік тому

    The girl playing his wife was in one of my all time favorite movies, with Kevin Costner, Revenge. She was also in a great movie with Kurt Russell.

    • @Fred-vy1hm
      @Fred-vy1hm Рік тому +2

      Madeleine Stowe was one of the biggest star actresses of the 80's and 90's my personal favorite role of hers was the doctor in 12 monkeys.

  • @ml0723
    @ml0723 8 місяців тому

    The more I read about the battle the more impressive it is. Hal Moore led the first major contact with the enemy, using untested battle tactics, with a undersized battalion - he was short several hundred men - and he still took it to the enemy and forced them to retreat when it was a clear ambush as that area was a testing ground for newly arrived Vietminh. Oh and he only had a grand total of I think they said - 15 helicopters through the entire battle. That's insane.
    Fantastic movie - probably the only war movie that showed the realities of war and gave perspective for both sides in that terrible war.

  • @spaghetti9845
    @spaghetti9845 Рік тому

    My uncle flew hueys and cobras in 1st air cav during vietnam. He still has his cavalry hat and sabre. He was shot down twice, 2 purple hearts, distinguished flying cross and, bronze star.

  • @125steini
    @125steini Рік тому

    18:01
    Seriously, my dog woke up and started howling with you... 😂

  • @CrimsonRoseDancer
    @CrimsonRoseDancer Рік тому +5

    This wasn’t basic. Family’s are not allowed at basic. They moved to a new duty station which happens every three years or so. These men were infantry so they trained for battle all the time.
    Gen. Moore and the Vietnamese General had a sit down years later they were actually very like minded and had a lot of respect for each other. This movie is unique in that it doesn’t portray the Vietnamese as evil, their just soldiers like the Americans.

  • @Ramblinrabbit24
    @Ramblinrabbit24 8 місяців тому +1

    If no one has said it yet, these guys aren’t is basic training. The reason they have their families with them is because they’re at their post. That’s where they’re stationed. They’ve all already gone through their respective initial training. After someone gets to their unit or post, the unit still has to go through field training in preparation for their deployment. Trust me, training doesn’t stop after a soldier gets to their unit. lol.

  • @mikealvarez2322
    @mikealvarez2322 9 місяців тому

    One of my good friends and hunting buddies when I was much younger (late teens) did 2 tours of duty as a combat marine in Vietnam. He was wounded once, recovered, and returned to duty. He came back a changed person; short tempered & excessive drinking. He didn't talk much about the war, except funny things that happened. He died in 1997 of cancer, a victim of Agent Orange, the defoliant the government sprayed to kill the vegetation.

  • @iKvetch558
    @iKvetch558 Рік тому +10

    This is a really good war movie, and even though you still want to be aware of the historical inaccuracies in it, it is much closer to the truth than many of Mel Gibson other "historical" films...like Braveheart. The biggest thing that is not true is the big, heroic charge at the end, and there are other things wrong or overdramatized, but this is overall a really good effort. ✌

    • @janzeman3777
      @janzeman3777 Рік тому +1

      I agree but that's because Mel Gibson makes movies, not documentaries xD Braveheart is great

    • @iKvetch558
      @iKvetch558 Рік тому

      @@janzeman3777 You are correct, but a significant number of people do not know that...they think his movies are the "truth", so a reminder that some of his movies are way more "truthful" than others of his movies is still required. After all, so many folks think that William Wallace was born a peasant from seeing Braveheart...it is a great mostly fictional movie, you got that right, but lots of folks do not know it is mostly fictional. ✌

    • @janzeman3777
      @janzeman3777 Рік тому +2

      @@iKvetch558 yeah that's true but I don't know if it's the movie to blame or those people not checking the facts. There are some movies meant to rewrite history on purpose for sure yeah.

    • @trappedindc8678
      @trappedindc8678 Рік тому +1

      It’s a movie. They have to write a script that keeps people engaged. This one came close to telling the actual story.

    • @iKvetch558
      @iKvetch558 Рік тому +1

      @@trappedindc8678 You are absolutely correct, which is why I was so complimentary.

  • @shag139
    @shag139 Рік тому +8

    This is based on true story of Battle of Ia Drang valley. From the skin coming off with boots to broken arrow is all accurate. Here is an ABC 20/20 Special where Gen Moore goes back to Vietnam and meets with counterparts in the valley: ua-cam.com/video/vfS3Erh-IZU/v-deo.html

  • @ArmandoMartinez-zz5xt
    @ArmandoMartinez-zz5xt Рік тому

    The "experimental" parachutes were the "HALO" High Altitude Low Opening design.

  • @marine5480
    @marine5480 Рік тому +1

    I saw this in the theatre a few months before my first deployment. Probably not the best idea, but fortunately I never saw anything that intense.

  • @aubreyj1957
    @aubreyj1957 6 місяців тому

    They are at their “permanent” duty station in this case Fort Benning Georgia. Training occurs every day regardless of duty station.

  • @s.g.3898
    @s.g.3898 Рік тому +2

    I would recommend Lethal Weapon which is another classic Mel Gibson movie but its a lot more humorous. Braveheart is another war movie but more medieval. I love We Were Soldiers though :)

  • @Manolo0528
    @Manolo0528 Рік тому

    Joe may have been a news photographer but he wasn’t the only camera there. The Army had a video camera at the battle. There’s no sound but there’s video of the battle as it happens.

  • @MICHAEL-tz9ni
    @MICHAEL-tz9ni Рік тому

    the battle of the Ia Drang valley was the first large scale use of helicopters, and one of the first large scale uses of the M-16

  • @James-sc9pb
    @James-sc9pb Рік тому +3

    You need to react to the greatest war movie ever made, Apocalypse Now. This movie is a masterpiece and will absolutely blow your mind

  • @williambranch4283
    @williambranch4283 Рік тому +1

    During deployments of coworkers (USAF medics) to Iraq or Afghanistan (2001-19) ... they all came home safe. Our Chief of Medicine got a Bronze Star for courage under fire in Iraq.

  • @sonofkarma5461
    @sonofkarma5461 Рік тому

    DUDE their reaction on 29:00 was Priceless as that gnarly scene came into play😂

  • @SharonS-fn2ym
    @SharonS-fn2ym 4 місяці тому

    These are young officers right out of Officers Training School. Col. Moore was assigned to get them prepared to lead troops in battle. This was the first group of soldiers going into Viet Nam, before we were officially in the conflict. It was never classified as a war. The platoon that was stuck not only had to follow orders, but if they would have tried to sneak back, it only would they have led the enemy to the rest of the troops but also risked being shot by that Americans because of the darkness and high adrenaline.

  • @Plastikdoom
    @Plastikdoom Рік тому

    Ahh yeah epic movie, and story. About the last of the greatest generation that fought even in then. In the beginning of Vietnam, my grandpa wasn’t in this battle, but he fought in the pacific, korea and early vietnam, retired as an E-9 in the army, my mom and 3 uncles, one in my moms side, two on my dads side were navy vets, great uncle on my dads side, army in WWII also, USMC vet here, once to Afghanistan, twice in Iraq.

  • @trottheblackdog
    @trottheblackdog Рік тому

    Barry Pepper plays the character that wrote the book this movie comes from.

  • @markfoor4137
    @markfoor4137 Рік тому

    The actress playing Col. Moore's wife is Madelyn Stowe. She was in Last of the Mohicans.

  • @vince3307
    @vince3307 Рік тому

    If you liked this one something similar I’d recommend is Tears of the Sun starring Bruce Willis. It wasn’t very popular but it had a similar premise to this one where you see some of the horrors of war.

  • @Joe-qh4ft
    @Joe-qh4ft Рік тому +1

    7:00 they are 100% NOT in basic training. Family does NOT live on base in basic. The colonel is training his officers before they go into battle (in the most basic explanation). They have already went through basic to become officers. They are now at their unit.

  • @garethdiamond4024
    @garethdiamond4024 Рік тому

    This movie is definitely in my top 5 of all time war movies, u guys should do Remember the titans next please and thank u :)

  • @alexbrunner1900
    @alexbrunner1900 Рік тому +2

    It’s up there with some of my favorite war movies of all time.

  • @michaelevidente6300
    @michaelevidente6300 Рік тому

    Hi guys! Just saw your reaction to "We Were Soldiers". You may not have seen much of Mel Gibson as an actor in your reviews, but you did see a work of his as a director. You reviewed "Hacksaw Ridge" about 6 months ago. Mel Gibson was nominated for Best Director in the Oscars, Critics Choice, and Golden Globes for the movie. He won the Best Picture and Best Director Oscars for his movie "Braveheart". That is definitely something you guys should watch

  • @TheHulk2008
    @TheHulk2008 Рік тому

    My father did two tours in Vietnam. He saw some pretty heavy and graphic things. This was the only movie to make him cry.

  • @rescuetweak
    @rescuetweak Рік тому

    My best friend near Austin Texas has 16 kids, only one adopted. him and his wife are a couple of the happiest people I know, same with their kids most of which are now having their own kids.

  • @zboyjason
    @zboyjason Рік тому

    If you guys get a chance, and I know this is out of the scope of what you guys normally watch since this isn't a movie but look up some videos on Roy benavidez, he is a Medal of Honor recipient the Vietnam war.

  • @tduffy5
    @tduffy5 Рік тому

    The N. Vietnamese trumpet was the one they took from the French at Dien Bien Phu, 10 years before.

    • @adamr6794
      @adamr6794 2 місяці тому

      Now its hanging on display at the National Infantry Museum with Hal Moore and General An's helmets

  • @dillingerloffer29
    @dillingerloffer29 3 місяці тому

    My grandpa was in Vietnam in the marines. He had to go back home for rnr only like couple days to a week and the guy that replaced him got his entire squad killed and he was the one that survived and when he got back is when he heard about it and got replacements. From that day forward he never went on rnr again until his entire team went on rnr

  • @frank5891
    @frank5891 Рік тому

    Hal Moore died in 2017 with 94 y.o. like Lieutenant General. He graduated in West Point in 1945 first in his promotion.

  • @ranger-1214
    @ranger-1214 Рік тому +1

    This was Fort Benning, Georgia in the early 1960's so the racial issues were evident. Not basic training; there are all ranks and specialties necessary for the unit to function and they are training as a team now. Joe Galloway finally wrote the book, on which this movie is based, to detail the story Hal Moore wanted told about his men. Joe died on 18 August 2021. He was friends the rest of his life with Moore, Basil Plumley and Bruce (Snake) Crandall. Only COL Bruce Crandall is still alive today. Although a civilian, in 1998 Joe was awarded a Bronze Star medal with V-device for Valor for his actions at the Ia Drang with the wounded. After the movie was released, some 35 or so years after the battle, he received letters from Jimmy Nakayama's wife and daughter. His little girl had been born 10 days before Jimmy died in hospital, two days after he was burned. And so began many years of death and destruction in Vietnam, just like with the French at the opening of the movie. As a follow-up, the rest of the fight wasn't over as reinforcements had landed about 4KM away to move on foot to X-Ray - at the end the 2nd Battalion did a ground movement several kilometers to LZ Albany, and were ambushed but that is a whole other story should anyone want to look it up. A good account is here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Ia_Drang

  • @twohorsesinamancostume7606
    @twohorsesinamancostume7606 Рік тому +1

    The Vietnamese philosophy on war is that they don't care how many casualties they have to take, as long as their nation wins and there's some Vietnamese left, they've won.
    And you know what? It works. The entire point of war is to make it so costly for the other side to continue fighting that they quit, but how do you defeat an enemy that doesn't care what victory costs? The really wild thing is that the Vietnamese don't hold a grudge against Americans and you'll actually receive a pretty friendly welcome if you go there.

  • @charlesderosas5577
    @charlesderosas5577 Рік тому

    hamburger hill is a must watch also, criminally underrated.

  • @codyandrex152
    @codyandrex152 Рік тому

    21:42 By this point, the Lost Platoon already had too many wounded to move. Only a few guys out of 30 men are not unscathed. They couldn't move even if they wanted to. You would have to pull a Hacksaw Ridge where you low drag yourself and pull a body at the same time across enemy lines several times.

  • @dastemplar9681
    @dastemplar9681 Рік тому

    “Broken Arrow” is the phrase that interprets that an American unit is either likely or in the process of being overwhelmed. It calls for any air asset that is available and they are to shoot/drop everything at extreme danger close or even directly onto your position. It does take in the consideration that there will be friendly-fire casualties, but the intention is to either break the enemy’s assault or at least take the enemy down with the defeated American ground unit. It’s basically calling for ordnance directly on top of you and your position since you’re almost completely overrun by the enemy. It’s even an order that cannot be countermanded by anyone else. If you ever heard that phrase over the radio, you basically knew “shit just hit the fan”.

  • @dextermilo4668
    @dextermilo4668 Рік тому

    Good reaction!!!! If ya'll haven't seen him in Braveheart, that's a no-brainer. Also Remember The Titans!! Must Watch also!

  • @graphiccreek
    @graphiccreek Рік тому +1

    Short history lesson, the beginning was when the French were fighting in Vietnam and essentially failed when the US came into it and didn’t have much different results. In my opinion like most conflicts politicians were our downfall from lack of proper support

  • @Bshep1396
    @Bshep1396 Рік тому

    How do you edit out the title of the Book and Movie at the end?
    "We were Soldiers once, and young."

  • @Plastikdoom
    @Plastikdoom Рік тому

    Decent strategy old giap had, but he didn’t know we’re crazy enough to call in our own artillery and air support on top of our own positions, just to kill the enemy of all else failed, haha.

  • @hydratanksamari
    @hydratanksamari Рік тому

    How their describing Gibson is hilarious, old guy with blue eyes.

  • @annlykins4792
    @annlykins4792 Рік тому +1

    You two are so sweet! Love your channel ❤️

  • @maryslack6169
    @maryslack6169 5 місяців тому

    Commenting right off the bat one of ny all time favorites to watch based on true events. Theres a book written that this movie was based on

  • @jeffsherk7056
    @jeffsherk7056 Рік тому

    I love you kids. The first M-16s were accepted by the US military in 1964, and the battle depicted in this movie took place in 1965. The M-16 was quite new then, and many American soldiers were trained on the M-14, and did not get an M-16 until they arrived in Vietnam.