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"Rough Riders" Garryowen

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  • Опубліковано 10 жов 2009
  • There are only a handful of war movies and/or historical films that portray the men that fight battles realistically, and two of them - both "starring" Theodore Roosevelt ("The Wind and the Lion" and "Rough Riders") - are by John Milius. "Rough Riders" is an unforgettable film on the events of the Spanish-American War and it is too bad that more movies cannot be like this or like films such as "Zulu", "Gettysburg", or "The Longest Day".
    In this brilliant outtake that shows the pathos of the departure to the front, the troops of Teddy Roosevelt's (Tom Berenger's) 1st United States Volunteer Cavalry fall in under the orders of Captain Bucky O'Neill (Sam Elliott) for the train ride east across the South to Florida (for embarkation to Cuba), discovering in the process that the wounds of the Civil War (or the War Between the States, to make everybody happy) have started to heal, all to the tune of Garryowen, stunningly sung by Elan Oberon (who happens to be Milius' wife).
    If there are DVDs that all Americans (hell, that all people everywhere) should own, this is one of them - don't miss other outstanding portrayals, notably Marshall Teague as Black Jack Pershing and Gary Busey, utterly outstanding in the role of Fighting Joe Wheeler.
    www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000...
    (Thanks to Hervé for all his work in creating this video)

КОМЕНТАРІ • 553

  • @Cracken1979
    @Cracken1979 12 років тому +114

    "Let's go, boys! We've got the damn Yankees on the run again!" former CSA general Wheeler (now a US general) confusing the enemy Spaniards for Yankees:D

    • @normalplayer7377
      @normalplayer7377 3 роки тому +1

      @Elian Juelz No one cares. That has nothing to do with the video

    • @KenanLikent
      @KenanLikent 3 роки тому +7

      Very cool fact

    • @zoologist1992
      @zoologist1992 3 роки тому +7

      Sort of. He was confusing the Spaniards by making them think the US soldiers were Confederates. A brilliant tactic if I may say so.

    • @armynurseboy
      @armynurseboy Рік тому +1

      @@zoologist1992 sort of. he was delirious from malaria....

    • @brucebostick2521
      @brucebostick2521 4 місяці тому

      FUCK that slave pusher, traitor & brigand, LETs GO U WOLVERINES!!

  • @logerbad19
    @logerbad19 11 років тому +116

    Let these soldiers be remembered and not forgotten! God bless America!
    -From Philippines

    • @patricklamshear6662
      @patricklamshear6662 4 роки тому +5

      Soldiers are used, abused,and treated like shit,it will never change.

    • @verdant2215
      @verdant2215 Рік тому +3

      @@patricklamshear6662 From "We need you!" To "We don't want you!"
      The Vet will always be yanked around in an endless game.

    • @ricknelms
      @ricknelms Рік тому

      ? After they were done in Cuba they came and subjugated the Philippines God Bless Emilio Aquinaldo

    • @tandemfandom1
      @tandemfandom1 Місяць тому

      Somewhat ironic view
      Wasn't long after Yanks kicked the Spanish out the Philippines before they used the Filipino people as target practice

  • @antares4s
    @antares4s 9 років тому +107

    It is often called by some as "The War that United a Country." North, South, West, Richman, Common man, Black, White, Indians, Latinos all fought for a brief time as One.

    • @antares4s
      @antares4s 8 років тому +8

      Leonardo's Truth
      Yea, Sam Elliot's character died December 16, 1863, so I guess he had to choose someone else. Trouble is Bucky O'Neil died on Jul 1, 1898. The moral is don't let yourself be by portrayed by Sam Elliot or you're a goner.

    • @badlaamaurukehu
      @badlaamaurukehu 4 роки тому +14

      And don't allow yellow "journalists" to start a war.

    • @CorsetLebelle
      @CorsetLebelle Рік тому +5

      And they fought to free another people from a European tyrant

    • @HooDatDonDar
      @HooDatDonDar 8 місяців тому

      Role of
      yellow press overrated.@@badlaamaurukehu

    • @outinthesticks1035
      @outinthesticks1035 4 місяці тому

      ​@@CorsetLebellebut ended up taking over that country themselves, until the people had another revolution

  • @tomzaccone4740
    @tomzaccone4740 9 років тому +48

    This lady has the face and voice of an angel. Love this movie.

  • @anthonyingersoll7290
    @anthonyingersoll7290 9 років тому +265

    I really like the last part where the little boy said that they are yankees and the confederate officer said no son they are americans.

    • @patrickgorman2070
      @patrickgorman2070 9 років тому +51

      Anthony Ingersoll A good message. I also played the Colonel of the 71st New York. The role of the old Reb was uncredited.

    • @cjs7553
      @cjs7553 5 років тому +28

      I liked your role as John Bell Hood in Gettysburg.
      "You should have let me go to the right."

    • @ukrainiansniper5916
      @ukrainiansniper5916 5 років тому +32

      Sadly we have forgotten this today....we are ALL AMERICANS but our politicians would rather we be at each other's throats than work together.....and both sides are wrong.....

    • @cannonrogmatt
      @cannonrogmatt 5 років тому +8

      Patrick Gorman you should have played Wheeler you would have been ideal for the part

    • @phoenicianussr9179
      @phoenicianussr9179 5 років тому +6

      Yeah, that was my fav part too

  • @westpointsnell1935
    @westpointsnell1935 9 років тому +55

    Boy this as an American makes my spirit rise..

    • @elmccoy54
      @elmccoy54 8 років тому +1

      Go to the library and get the book " the siege of Baler". And after that, talk to me everything you want about declare a war against a friend contry

    • @westpointsnell1935
      @westpointsnell1935 8 років тому

      Rufus Mccoy who is the friend country?

    • @elmccoy54
      @elmccoy54 8 років тому +1

      Spain was not a friend country?

    • @westpointsnell1935
      @westpointsnell1935 8 років тому

      Never said they were

    • @elmccoy54
      @elmccoy54 8 років тому +1

      Independence war, Galvez and his granaderos, the sello of florida...

  • @twshawgo
    @twshawgo 8 років тому +38

    Was thinking about my dad and my granddad today. Dad was a US Marine, WW2 Pacific, 42-45. Grandad was a Horseman and Trooper, 1st. United States Cavalry, Rough RIders. Theodore Roosevelt, Grandads Colonel, a time when men still had the vision of what's worth fighting for and damn be the politics of the profiteers. You fight for freedom, family, your comrades, country and honor. We've long since lost our way and the ability to see the rights and wrongs of things. God bless you and may God bless America

    • @michaelpalmieri7335
      @michaelpalmieri7335 5 років тому

      @Leonardo's Truth Amen and hallelujah to that! Those are my sentiments exactly. To try and turn an act of unnecessary aggression and imperialism (which it was) into some kind of holy crusade (which it wasn't) is beyond hypocritical -- it's an ABOMINATION, not to mention an insult to the memory of all the soldiers, sailors, marines, air force pilots, etc, who died needlessly because of all the phony wars we have fought just so corrupt war profiteers could line their pockets with money soaked in the blood of our troops. These crooks should be run out of this country, along with their equally venal abetters, by which I mean the oil-rich Arab sheiks, the international banking cartels, the professional hatemongers and warmongers, and the servile politicians who obey Wall Street.

    • @laughingsnake1989
      @laughingsnake1989 3 роки тому +1

      Leonardo's Truth so your saying ww1 and ww2 were not needed ?

    • @jimcovington8022
      @jimcovington8022 3 роки тому

      All this country needs is a president like TR - if you have not read Theodore Rex - do yourself a favor and do so!

  • @mikeggg5671
    @mikeggg5671 6 років тому +66

    It is almost hard to remember that there was a time in this country when the Army united us, instead of divided us. Old enemies, freed slaves, men and women, Americans all. How far things have come...
    God bless his Excellency Theodore Roosevelt, Colonel, US Volunteers. May this country see such camaraderie once more!

    • @michaelpalmieri7335
      @michaelpalmieri7335 4 роки тому +4

      Roosevelt was not a Colonel, but a Lieutenant Colonel. His superior, Leonard Wood, was a Colonel (he would later become a General), and, contrary to popular belief, he was the actual leader of the Rough Riders, while "Teddy" Roosevelt was only second in command.

    • @millardfillmore1331
      @millardfillmore1331 2 роки тому

      AND GOOD OL' STALWART MOTHER-IN-LAW FOR SOCIALISTIC MILITARISTIC MACHINATION!!!"ELEANOR ROOSEVELT~!!! LOL....NOT REALLY.......I JUST THOUGHT OF THE SNL SKIT...CRCA 1977 ......SOMETHING "WHAT IF IN HISTORY" IE "WHAT IF ELEANOR ROOSEVELT WAS A B-52....SO INANE IT'S FUNNY.....JANE CURTIN'S DEADPAN DELIVERY CLINCHES IT AS A MONUMENTAL MEMORIAL TRIBUTE TO THE FINEST MILITARY TRADITIONS AS ESPOUSED BY THE PINKO ROOSEVELTS....."THANK GOD FOR AL WALLACE " SAID TOUGH SOLDIER FRANKLIN D.

    • @jackthau5143
      @jackthau5143 2 роки тому +11

      @@michaelpalmieri7335 kind of
      Roosevelt was a LT. COL but right before the battle of Kettle Hill. Colonel Wood was promoted to General Wood, making Roosevelt a Colonel and the commanding officer of the Rough Riders.

    • @MrHalvnir
      @MrHalvnir 2 роки тому +1

      And God curse his cousin, Franklin Roosevelt, a mole Socio-Communist.

    • @BigOldScout
      @BigOldScout Рік тому +2

      When did the military ever divide us? Politicians, media and extreme idealists are the dividers.

  • @johnprovince5304
    @johnprovince5304 Рік тому +16

    I've had the honor of shaking hands with a 103 year old WWI veteran who shook the hands of Civil War veterans.

  • @Autobotmatt428
    @Autobotmatt428 9 років тому +79

    No matter how this war started it did help bring the country back together. the end scene really brings it home. The Old Reb says to his grandson "No. They're Americans!"

    • @patrickgorman2070
      @patrickgorman2070 9 років тому +14

      Matthew Arenson Thanks for noticing. A good message. I also played the Colonel of the 71st New York. The role of the old Reb was uncredited.

    • @AlphaWolf789
      @AlphaWolf789 9 років тому +13

      Matthew Arenson i'm not gonna lie man that brought a tear to my eye lol

    • @Autobotmatt428
      @Autobotmatt428 8 років тому +6

      Patrick Gorman
      Thank you for playing that part.

    • @richardkajander1126
      @richardkajander1126 7 років тому +3

      Numerous enduring scenes. This short one was one of the best (kid looks like my grandson). Think 4 ex-confederate generals served in the Spanish American War - T. Rosser, J. Wheeler, F. Lee & M. Butler with Joe Wheeler represented in this movie. Numerous lower ranks served in the army & navy. No surprise for some career officers. S-A War emulated Euro imperialism but one finds little fault in those served.

    • @jamescarroll5748
      @jamescarroll5748 6 років тому +3

      Patrick Gorman Whether it’s General Hood or this “Old Confederate” you do us Southerners proud Mr. Gorman. God Bless! Deo Vindice!

  • @zyzor
    @zyzor 5 років тому +92

    I always tear up when I see the three old wounded confederate veterans stand at attention and salute teddy Roosevelt as he passes by

    • @HooDatDonDar
      @HooDatDonDar 2 роки тому +13

      I heard there was a former confederate solider that got himself an officers commision, and fought in Cuba. He did well, but in one battle, when the Spaniards were routed, he forgot himself and shouted “At ‘em, boys! We’ve got the damned Yankees on the run at last!”.

    • @laughingsnake1989
      @laughingsnake1989 2 роки тому +4

      @@HooDatDonDar gen wheeler

    • @zyzor
      @zyzor 2 роки тому +2

      @@HooDatDonDar general Joe wheeler

    • @michaelfranklin4276
      @michaelfranklin4276 2 роки тому +11

      It's important to remember that Confederate soldiers were Americans too.

    • @zyzor
      @zyzor 2 роки тому +3

      @@michaelfranklin4276 teddy roosevelts own mother came from a slave owning Georgia family. His uncles were rebel blockade runners in the war. Teddy was half southerner.

  • @logerbad19
    @logerbad19 9 років тому +41

    This scene is just simply amazing. I could cry!

  • @schnertblatt
    @schnertblatt 5 років тому +18

    "Garry Owen" became the slogan for the 7th Cavary Regiment of the U.S. Army.

  • @mikeggg5671
    @mikeggg5671 Рік тому +13

    Is the armless and legless rebel soldiers who have gathered up the last remnants of their uniforms to salute fellow soldiers that gets me every time. I was a soldier myself, and I went to afghanistan. Fight a regular army, we did not fight men who actually look closely in the eye to give battle, so it's a much worse and horrible experience. But these men recognize that all social anim osity to send off the Young generation style. Truly moving

  • @billyshane3804
    @billyshane3804 2 місяці тому +3

    Teddy "Rough trader" Roosevelt. Leathered up and ready for the rough stuff.

  • @stormbringerr7806
    @stormbringerr7806 10 років тому +184

    Teddy Roosevelt....we could really use a president like him now

    • @iasimov4195
      @iasimov4195 8 років тому +5

      +Storm Bringerr We could use ANY president now.

    • @abrahamedelheit2424
      @abrahamedelheit2424 7 років тому +5

      Storm Bringerr AMEN, brother, AMEN.

    • @markmerzweiler4204
      @markmerzweiler4204 7 років тому +3

      The Republicans wouldn't support him...they made him VP to get him out of government.

    • @williamlydon2554
      @williamlydon2554 7 років тому

      A jingoistic man with a temper akin to a bear? No i wouldn't want him with a hand on the button. He was a good man for his times, but today there is more leadership them toughness..

    • @Adamguy2003
      @Adamguy2003 7 років тому +6

      Hell yeah!
      He'd annihilate ISIS!

  • @paulmowery4100
    @paulmowery4100 5 років тому +13

    whenever I hear the GARRYOWEN, I think of all the guy's I served with. US Army 75-80....Damned Onions

  • @michaeladinolfe6220
    @michaeladinolfe6220 9 років тому +15

    What an incredible voice on this lady!! What a gifted voice!!

    • @texashoosier5874
      @texashoosier5874 9 років тому +1

      Michael Adinolfe ....I believe the lady singing "Gary Owen" is the Director (John Milius) current wife, Elan Oberon, who was in a couple of "B-Movies" during her brief acting career. And yes, she did a very good job. - Texas Hoosier

    • @michaeladinolfe6220
      @michaeladinolfe6220 9 років тому

      Thank you for this information sir. She is certainly a gifted singer!

  • @EthanSurbaugh
    @EthanSurbaugh 11 років тому +27

    goddamn it Sam Elliot is a badass...

  • @ukrainiansniper5916
    @ukrainiansniper5916 3 роки тому +13

    Sam Elliot always portrays an NCO that most soldiers would follow to hell and back....and many an officer would be proud to have as an adjutant.

    • @ukrainiansniper5916
      @ukrainiansniper5916 2 роки тому +1

      @Ante Pavelic Sorry for the delay - Heroyam Slava my brother #Ukraine WILL RESIST...

  • @ReformedSooner24
    @ReformedSooner24 4 роки тому +41

    I like how it doesn’t just show the confederate veterans but shows Teddy Roosevelt, a New Yorker, saluting back.
    That’s what a country healing from civil war looks like. Yankees and Rebs saluting each other. Shaking each others hands, as Americans.

    • @southron2279
      @southron2279 3 роки тому +4

      It goes further than that also teddy's mother was southern and his uncles were in the confederate navy

    • @edwardcricchio6106
      @edwardcricchio6106 3 роки тому +2

      FrontLine Texan 21:The country wasn't really healing in 1898. This was the height of the movement known as The Lost Cause of the Confederacy. The former Confederate States were rewriting history at that time. The statues were popping up all through the South courtesy of the Daughters of the Confederacy. The textbooks used in most Southern schools did not mention a word about slavery as a cause of the war, rather the words, "States Rights" were used and taught to generations of Southern school children. We were a few year removed from the USSC ruling on Separate but Equal (Plessy v. Ferguson). Jim Crow was alive and kicking in 1898. They attempted to portray the Southern cause as a gallant effort, led by cavaliers, against an intrusive Federal Government. McKinley gave Wheeler the opportunity to join the US Army as a symbol of unity however not every former Confederate saw it that way.. A few years later there would be a reunion of West Point graduates and Wheeler attended, wearing his US Army uniform. James Longstreet and Edward Porter Alexander (2 former Confederate Generals) saw him approaching in that uniform and Longstreet said, "Joe, I hope Almighty God takes me before you for I want to be within the gates of hell to hear Jubal Early cuss you in the blue uniform." Doesn't sound like healing to me. I'm not a Northern liberal so please don't take this as some liberal post.

    • @ReformedSooner24
      @ReformedSooner24 2 роки тому

      @@edwardcricchio6106 but the height of resentment found in songs such as “I’m a good ol rebel” was fading as it was at its hottest in the years just after the war.

    • @HooDatDonDar
      @HooDatDonDar 2 роки тому

      That was only partly accepted, debate raged,but most Southerners had to concede that even if secession had been considered legal at the time, the Supreme Court had ruled it unconstitutional in Texas vs. White. So, if they claimed a constitutional right, they had been wrong. On that basis, that they had fought for what they thought was right, the quarrel was settled. And confederate vets saluted Roosevelt.

    • @michaelpalmieri7335
      @michaelpalmieri7335 Рік тому +1

      @@edwardcricchio6106
      Those Southerners did more than just create the myth of the "Lost Cause of the Confederacy," as well as rewriting the history of the Civil War by claiming that it was all about "States' Rights," rather than slavery.
      Their revised history also stated that the Reconstruction period following the war was a tragedy beyond belief, that it was completely punitive, that the South was mistreated by Northern authority, that the so-called "Carpetbaggers" from the North exploited the South for profit, but worst of all, the white people of the South insisted that their slaves were happy during their days on the plantations, that their masters were kind to them, that releasing them left them vulnerable to the slyness and dishonesty of the Carpetbaggers as well as "renegade" blacks from the North who supposedly encouraged the Southern blacks to seek revenge against the people who "owned" them, to terrorize the Southern whites, to keep them from voting, and even to ravish their women!
      This, the Southern revisionist historians insisted, was the reason that the white men of the South formed vigilante organizations like the Ku Klux Klan to protect themselves and their women and children from the ravages of the blacks.
      This distorted view of the past also formed the "historical" basis for a series of racist novels written by the Reverend Thomas A. Dixon, a bigoted minister.
      One of these novels was particularly inflammatory. It was called "The Clansman: A Historical Romance Of The Ku Klux Klan" (1905). It depicted the black people of the South (as well as the Northern "renegade" blacks) not just as beasts and rapists of white women, but as ignorant, simple-minded, and even "dirty." It describes vindictive black "mobs" with "onion-laden breath" mixed with "perspiring African odor." At one point, a white man declares that "for a flat-nosed, thick-lipped, spindle-shanked negro, exuding his nauseating animal odor, to yell in derision over the homes and hearths of white men and women, is an atrocity too monstrous for belief! The issue, sir, is civilization, not whether a negro will be protected, but whether society is worth saving from barbarism!"
      In the end, Dixon's Southern "civilization" is saved from "barbarism" by the KKK.
      Over a decade later, "The Clansman" would serve as the inspiration for what was considered the first real motion picture epic, D.W. Griffith's famous Civil War film, "The Birth Of A Nation" (1915). Like the novel, the film glorified the Ku Klux Klan, showing it as a heroic force protecting Southern whites from the "wicked Africans" (black people), who were shown as nothing but wild brutes.
      Despite its historical inaccuracies and its negative portrayal of blacks, the movie gained a bit of respectability when it was shown to President Woodrow Wilson, his family, and assorted guests, at the White House in Washington, DC. "It was like writing history with lightning," the President said after being awed by the film, "my only regret is that it is all so terribly true."
      Wilson's praise for "The Birth Of A Nation" wasn't really surprising, since he was a proud Southerner who not only believed the legends about the Southern "Lost Cause" and about Dixieland's mistreatment by the North and the blacks, but he also perpetuated the myths years before when, as a college professor, he wrote an American history book containing a passage about "a great Ku Klux Klan" being formed by Southern men out of a sense of "self preservation," especially "in the villages," where blacks "were the office holders."
      By the way, Wilson wasn't the only white Southerner who held a government office and praised Mr. Griffith's film. There was also Edward White, who was the Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court, where he became notorious for making rulings that weakened anti-trust laws. Thomas Dixon, the author of the novel that "The Birth Of A Nation" was based on, came to Chief Justice White's office one day and asked if he would like to see a new movie, but White turned him down, saying he wasn't interested. Dixon then appealed to White's Southern background, telling him that the film was about the horrors of Reconstruction, and about the South's "redemption" by the Ku Klux Klan. This remark immediately got the Chief Justice's attention. "I was a member of the Klan," he told Reverend Dixon, "many a night, I walked my sentinel's beat through New Orleans' roughest streets, with a rifle on my shoulder. I'll be there."
      Anyway, the film had a great impact on the American public at the time. It made people believe the false history that was being shown on their local movie house screens, it caused an increase in anti-black prejudice, and it convinced its audiences that black people were basically monsters at heart, who needed to be controlled.

  • @seanmccann8368
    @seanmccann8368 8 років тому +27

    A great Irish song.

    • @kathousel
      @kathousel 4 місяці тому

      Scottish isn’t it?

    • @SeamusButler
      @SeamusButler 3 місяці тому +1

      Garry Owen is Irish, adopted by many Irish regiments in European armies in the 1800's and the 7th cavalry in The USA .

  • @boogger250
    @boogger250 14 років тому +8

    Teddy saluting the old civil war veterans.... and the footage from 2:10 .
    Also "Grandpa their wearing blue they are Yankees" No they are americans !!!
    Priceless !!!!!!

  • @benjaminhoffman4563
    @benjaminhoffman4563 3 роки тому +5

    People dont realize "This Splendid Little
    War", reunited NORTH and SOUTH.

  • @mikeggg5671
    @mikeggg5671 6 років тому +6

    Wow. I am literally watching this right now, and I have spent a bit searching, and finally found it!

  • @patrickgorman2070
    @patrickgorman2070 9 років тому +8

    Got the last line in this piece. Watch to the end.

    • @archimedes6006
      @archimedes6006 10 місяців тому +1

      You got the last line, as well as the VERY best line. People all over are commenting about your performance, excellent job!

  • @ron6769
    @ron6769 13 років тому +7

    Hearing the strains of this song in hundreds of old westerns it was refreshing to hear it sung. Watching and listening to the men of the 7th Cav in the early 60s in German play this, carrying on the traditions of the 7th was inspiring.

  • @seantbr2019
    @seantbr2019 8 років тому +37

    I'd have to say this is one of most forgotten wars in American history the Spanish American war

    • @seantbr2019
      @seantbr2019 8 років тому +2

      +Eirikr Haakonson agreed

    • @raynaldlucios7000
      @raynaldlucios7000 8 років тому +1

      +Eirikr Haakonson not even your the Philippine american war which american soldiers executed 10 to 70 years old thinking they were the enemies burning villages and crops leaving the dead too rot

    • @seanjenkins2701
      @seanjenkins2701 7 років тому

      +Pat Aherne also ur how old and ur leaving retarded comments like that Im like at least a third ur age but u act like ur 12

    • @seanjenkins6947
      @seanjenkins6947 7 років тому

      Pat Aherne not to the degree that anyone would notice

    • @ukrainiansniper5916
      @ukrainiansniper5916 6 років тому

      Hey Leonardo isn't there an AntiFa protest you should be attending? What happened Soros' check didn't clear? Imperialists now live in the Kremlin and want to bring Ukraine "back to the reservation" but Donbass will never be surrendered....you need a lesson on what is imperialism and what is occupation and enslavement you DUPA

  • @tarheelarmistead8223
    @tarheelarmistead8223 5 років тому +4

    The Spanish-American war was what united the North and South once again, when in war-time, the soldiers fighting next to each other didn't care who was a former Union Soldier or Confederate, they were Americans fighting to survive, that's all that mattered to them.

  • @paultannenberg4432
    @paultannenberg4432 Місяць тому +1

    The face of the man walking up the ramp, looking for his love who didn't come to see him off.😢

  • @JohnSmith-st6dw
    @JohnSmith-st6dw 7 років тому +6

    Before there was a 7th cav, the fighting 69th was playing that Irish tune.Also Irish units all over the world were playing it.the town of Garryowen is in Limerick Ireland. Faugh a Balag,which means clear the way.

    • @zoologist1992
      @zoologist1992 2 роки тому

      No it isn't. Yes is not only in Munster, yet County Limerick to boot. However, it never has been and never will be associated with the city's glorious impenetrable walls.

  • @BrokeDownBob
    @BrokeDownBob 10 років тому +8

    I am a Vietnam veteran. The portrayal of combat in this film is about as accurate as you are going to get in a movie. As well you know, what can describe the smell of death? Of you friend screaming? I can't.

    • @stormbringerr7806
      @stormbringerr7806 10 років тому +3

      yes, also the most accurate battle (at least in medieval times) was in Kenneth Branagh`s Henry the 5th at agincourt.

    • @rfletch62
      @rfletch62 Рік тому

      Puke, shit, piss, burning rubber and cherry juice.

  • @phillipchappell6013
    @phillipchappell6013 7 місяців тому +1

    I vry everytime son run to dad sergeant . I had to goodbye to my dad and watch him march to a runaway for desert storm. But I still remember them coming down the same runway home they stuck the Colors out the top hatch. It wasn't a cheer our loves are homes, it filled pride too. We all knew we kicked Hussein's ass.. I watched a lot Vietnam vet stioop and thank my dad. I remember the surprise in their eyes when they out he was a Vietna vet too. This scene always bring that back.

  • @shellback1978
    @shellback1978 12 років тому +5

    "No son...they're Americans". Outstanding ....A number One.

  • @zyzor
    @zyzor 8 років тому +21

    Garryowen God bless our 7th cavalry!!!'nn

  • @willobi
    @willobi 12 років тому +7

    iam choked up with pride and a tear in eye .
    young boy .." but thay are wearing blue blue grand pa thay are yankies."
    old man.."No thay are amreicans"
    and iam british it makes me proud to have american family over there .

  • @rstarmann813
    @rstarmann813 7 років тому +6

    4-7 CAV Desert Storm. Garryowen Forever!!

  • @The2004Alamo
    @The2004Alamo 12 років тому +15

    2:20, seeing John Bell Hood say that puts a smile on my face (same actor who played him from "Gettysburg" and "Gods and Generals)

    • @DV1287
      @DV1287 3 роки тому

      Are you sure that’s hood?

    • @turboegon
      @turboegon 3 роки тому +1

      @@DV1287
      Yes this is Patrick Gorman. The Actor who played John Bell Hood in both Movies.

    • @DV1287
      @DV1287 3 роки тому +1

      @@turboegon lol same actor prob a different role. John Bell Hood died in 1879. The Spanish American war was in 1898. No way he lived another 20 years

    • @turboegon
      @turboegon 3 роки тому +1

      @@DV1287 I mean the actor not the role.

    • @DV1287
      @DV1287 3 роки тому

      @@turboegon then yes

  • @johnpatterson4816
    @johnpatterson4816 Рік тому +2

    Teddy Roosevelt was one helluva man!!

  • @seanjenkins2701
    @seanjenkins2701 7 років тому +13

    this movie is a masterpiece

  • @kingbushwickthe33rd
    @kingbushwickthe33rd 12 років тому +3

    Teddy Roosevelt 2012!!The most badass president ever!!

  • @brianallsopp69
    @brianallsopp69 Рік тому +1

    Mean while we fighting those great soldiers ( and bloody great marksman the Boers ) love from the UK 🇬🇧

  • @jspee1965
    @jspee1965 Рік тому +2

    That's some old school fighting men right there.

  • @GravesRWFiA
    @GravesRWFiA 7 років тому +3

    In fact in their training camps their song was 'we're gonna have a hot time in the old town tonight" changed to a hot time in old cuba tonight.

  • @jon-darma333
    @jon-darma333 8 місяців тому +1

    This clip rocks! The lady whose beauty only 2nds to her voice xewhose voice is hipnotizing and what the grandfather says to his grandson is a chill down my spine!

  • @leopard72
    @leopard72 10 років тому +2

    Thank you for your service, Bryant.Rue. I'm glad you are back home. I haven't fought in combat, but I have watched this movie and it is about like what my father, who fought on Okinawa in WW2 says it was. Unlike the movies, it's usually the bravest and the leaders who get killed first and the others have to join in quickly and that's the way in this movie. Thanks again.

  • @CodexandCo.
    @CodexandCo. 11 років тому +8

    Clearly you and I are some of the few who appreciate our history, for good and bad.
    Too much presentism these days.

  • @PaulCrombie
    @PaulCrombie 26 днів тому

    The sequence where Teddy - Tom Berenger in a knockout performance - returns salutes to the vets is accurate. Teddy did just that. And the cheering crowds are accurate too.

  • @johnnylackland3992
    @johnnylackland3992 6 років тому +4

    Geoffrey Lewis - one of my favourite utility actors.

  • @benerval7
    @benerval7 6 років тому +2

    As they load up...the lady in purple says good-bye to several Soldiers. Hmm...its still the same around Army bases today. Dependas gotta depend

  • @colarisaka
    @colarisaka 12 років тому +6

    Teddy had charisma, and he transcended regional animosities.... thank God, this war set the stage for thousands of US troops spilling into the trenches there in "La Belle France" at the critical time! Teddy set the stage for our US Navy chasing down the U-Boats... and he influenced his relative Franklin, when he, years later, sat down with a man named Winston! Teddy WAS an American! In the greatest aspects of what an American should be.

  • @RJM1011
    @RJM1011 13 років тому +2

    I must get this on DVD !

  • @arthoggard7500
    @arthoggard7500 11 років тому +1

    It real nice to have an song remember our fighting troops that went to cuba.ART H.

  • @PaulCrombie
    @PaulCrombie 26 днів тому

    The songstress nailed The GarryOwen in one take.

  • @colarisaka
    @colarisaka 12 років тому +3

    Roosevelt is well liked in the South, in spite of his NY heritage.

    • @theofficialphoenixtv5765
      @theofficialphoenixtv5765 4 роки тому

      Roosevelt was loved by all regions,races and peoples of America. Jackie Robinson's mother gave him Roosevelt as a middle name in honor of him

  • @722redtree
    @722redtree 10 років тому +56

    but they're wearing blue Grandpa, they are Yankees. No, they're Americans. :') ooh rah.

    • @patrickgorman2070
      @patrickgorman2070 9 років тому +5

      722redtree A good message. Thanks, it was worth doing just for that line. I also played the Colonel of the 71st New York. The role of the old Reb was uncredited.

    • @seanjenkins2701
      @seanjenkins2701 7 років тому +4

      +Patrick Gorman wait are u THE patrick goreman

    • @ukrainiansniper5916
      @ukrainiansniper5916 6 років тому +4

      @722redtree When did we as a country loose our way from that kind of sentiment? Damn the politically correct left - they are the one's to blame!

    • @michaelpalmieri7335
      @michaelpalmieri7335 5 років тому

      @@ukrainiansniper5916 *lose

    • @robwest9592
      @robwest9592 4 роки тому +1

      Still yankees

  • @Osk.S57
    @Osk.S57 7 років тому +3

    Great Irish tune. Used by the British army and then the Seventh Cavalry.

  • @brunz6667
    @brunz6667 5 років тому +5

    Me and the boys leaving Saint Denis to go fight in Guarma

  • @richardnajjar2202
    @richardnajjar2202 8 років тому +4

    It is interesting to see the logistics that was involved in moving US Volunteers and Regular Army regiments with all of their horses, wagons, artillery, caissons, weapons and supplies by rail, from all across the nation to staging areas and ports in Florida. The Spanish-American War was America's first trans-oceanic war of sorts, especially when the invasion of Spanish held Philippines is figured into the matrix. A lot of mistakes and lessons in logistics were made then, and learned in time for World War I just two decades later.

    • @jimstanga6390
      @jimstanga6390 7 років тому +1

      Richard Najjar Amphibious assault......just about the hardest thing to do....and they're trying it for the first time. If the Spaniards had been ready for them on the beaches of Daiquiri.....it could have been a blood bath...

  • @25FIREBALL
    @25FIREBALL 12 років тому +1

    guess i gott-a set the record stright..back in the late 60s i met a old soldier that went up san juan hill,,when he died he left me his gauntlets he wore during the charge,still have them today,,he also gave me some knowledge about good old teddy and his actuall involvement with the charge...he did not lead the charge as most historians think,,he was not all that close to the front line,,yes he did order the charge up san juan hill,,but lead it,,NO..i am 65,this guy was 90 in 65..

  • @KillerKane0
    @KillerKane0 10 років тому +5

    The singer is Elan Oberon, the wife of director John Milius.

    • @saburusakai
      @saburusakai 10 років тому +1

      I didn't know that. Thanx. Milius is the greatest of the directors. The only director that had the guts to make the original "Red Dawn."

  • @willobi
    @willobi 14 років тому +3

    at 2.24"they are americans!"
    iam english and that got me choaked up with pride for the americans.

  • @RobinPoe
    @RobinPoe 10 років тому +2

    I love this movie!

    • @patrickgorman2070
      @patrickgorman2070 9 років тому

      Robin Poe Me, too, even with the inaccuracy of the German machine gun. Still, a good message. I also played the Colonel of the 71st New York, by the way. The role of the old Reb was uncredited.

    • @RobinPoe
      @RobinPoe 9 років тому

      That's really cool. I heard they enlisted the help of re-enactors in the movie as well.

  • @darthroden
    @darthroden 14 років тому +3

    Wow a very good moment when the aged Confederates waved on the next generation of a United America (with BOTH Confederate and US Flags ironically)...they symbolism is great and its accurate to history when the Rough Riders went through the South on their way to Cuba.
    Interesting aside to this, it was in 1905 that President Theodore Roosevelt signed the executive order returning the captured Confederate battle flags from the US War Department Archives to the Southern States.

  • @patrickhealy2706
    @patrickhealy2706 Рік тому +1

    Teddy said this should be our national anthem

  • @patrickhealy2706
    @patrickhealy2706 Рік тому +1

    Teddy wanted this to be our national anthem

  • @wlbond008
    @wlbond008 6 років тому +1

    Greatest Movie ever made.

  • @malgremor85
    @malgremor85 7 років тому +1

    One of my "signature" tunes. I generally play it with Minstrel boy, which was actually the Rough Riders tune.

  • @armynurseboy
    @armynurseboy 6 років тому +2

    Gerryowen and glory!

  • @Charliecomet82
    @Charliecomet82 7 років тому +1

    "Grandfather, run to the river!" Little Big Man

  • @pt45g46
    @pt45g46 14 років тому +3

    Gen. John Bell Hood survived the Civil War to die in the 1870s or 1880s with his wife and at least one of his kids in a Yellow Fever epidemic, so, the actor Patrick Gorman must have been playing just an old Confederate colonel as the Rough Riders passed through the south in 1898 to Florida where they would take ship to Cuba.

  • @hartshornguy
    @hartshornguy 13 років тому +3

    the worst mistake they did was take this scene out of the movie, probably one of the most moving scenes in cinema, even the historical accuracy of confederate veterans is perfect.. if any video deserves 5-5 this is it

  • @garyowen9044
    @garyowen9044 2 роки тому +1

    When my myopia was socially acceptable. I carried eight pairs of spectacles into combat in 1990.

  • @millukemau
    @millukemau 13 років тому +1

    In the Fighting Seventh's the place for me,Its the cream of all the Cavalry;No other regiment ever can claimIts pride, honor, glory and undying fame.

  • @colarisaka
    @colarisaka 12 років тому +1

    Purely Hollywood fiction My Friend! The one legged Confederate is local legend here, the Rough Riders passed on the track behind the Old Soldier's Home in Biloxi, Ms. on their way to Florida, and then to Cuba, and other ex-Confederates may have lined the tracks there...but that line : Fiction!

  • @focusmedia4881
    @focusmedia4881 3 роки тому +1

    very interesting fact... an Irish song the original was written by Tom Berenger’s(Teddy Roosevelt) Great Great (maybe one more great) Grandfather in Ireland as a Irish drinking song words were eventually rewritten to work w the 7 th Calvery’s marching song.

  • @turboegon
    @turboegon 7 місяців тому +1

    Some of the actors played in the movie Gettysburg, like Tom Berenger, Mark Moses, Patrick Gorman and Sam Elliot. Both movies are great.

  • @joesparacino5329
    @joesparacino5329 7 років тому +2

    I just realized it's not just blanket roll; it's a shelter half too.

  • @briankiernansmith2433
    @briankiernansmith2433 7 років тому +4

    i love this! get stuck in boys, give 'em hell.

  • @Trainbrain1949
    @Trainbrain1949 10 років тому +5

    The final scene sums things up.

    • @AlphaWolf789
      @AlphaWolf789 9 років тому +1

      damn right man

    • @patrickgorman2070
      @patrickgorman2070 9 років тому +1

      Trainbrain1949 A good message for us, I think. I also played the Colonel of the 71st New York. The role of the old Reb was uncredited.

    • @AlphaWolf789
      @AlphaWolf789 9 років тому

      Patrick Gorman very true lol

  • @colarisaka
    @colarisaka 7 років тому +2

    I with this movie had shown 1890s dynamite guns. Supposedly the 1st USVC was supported by two.

  • @edwardcricchio6106
    @edwardcricchio6106 4 роки тому +5

    The casting of Gary Busey as General Joseph Wheeler was a huge mistake. Wheeler was 62 or so in 1898. They should have found an older man to play the part. Wheeler was the symbol that McKinley wanted to show the nation that the Civil War was finally over and the nation was fighting as one once again. Speaking of Union Blue, when James Longstreet saw Wheeler dressed in the blue uniform he remarked, "Joe, I hope God Almighty takes me before he does you, for I want to be within the Gates of Hell to hear Jubal Early cuss you in that blue uniform."

    • @patrickgorman2070
      @patrickgorman2070 9 місяців тому +1

      I was originally signed to play Wheeler, being close to the right age and though not 5'5" but 5'10" - but Milius wanted a star and didn't think I was quirky enough. Still, he wanted me in the film - I played the Reb Grandfather and a Yankee as the Colonel of the 71st NY that chased Teddy down the train tracks!!!

    • @edwardcricchio6106
      @edwardcricchio6106 9 місяців тому

      @@patrickgorman2070I remember you in the part of the Rebel Grandfather. Yes, you would have been a perfect Joe Wheeler. I thought Gary Busey did not really capture the essence of an older man who was asked to go out in the field and fight one more war. Thanks for letting me know the inside scoop.

  • @Nimgimmer1492
    @Nimgimmer1492 14 років тому +2

    I looked it up. It's not supposed to be Hood, since he died in 1879.

    • @patrickgorman2070
      @patrickgorman2070 9 місяців тому

      Right, I was just a Reb grandfather - and later, shaved the beard and played the Colonel of the 71st NY that chased Teddy down the train tracks after he absconded with my train!!! I was originally cast as Wheeler but Milius wanted a name, so....

  • @annamosier1950
    @annamosier1950 2 роки тому +2

    Nice

  • @layusgustavomiguel1266
    @layusgustavomiguel1266 5 місяців тому +1

    el soldado no combate al enemigo sabiendo lo te tiene al frente , sino lo que esta defendiendo detras.- LA LIBERTAD

  • @slickmicky54
    @slickmicky54 11 років тому

    I would love to walk down the aisle with that playing! The vicar would have a fit.

  • @CYBERVISIONSdotCom
    @CYBERVISIONSdotCom 8 років тому +2

    Yeah....NOT EXACTLY. Elan Oberon may be doing a stunning job (mostly) of LIP SYNCING the lyrics in "Garryowen", but it's not her. The singer is Debi Rogers; her voice and the music track is from an old album (cassette/CD (1989) called "Songs of the Seventh Cavalry". It's available here on YT under Aeolus 13 Umbra's channel (just search "Songs of the Seventh Cavalry"). Garryowen starts at around 16:56. If you're into old Civil War/post-Civil War tunes, it's definitely worth listening to, as it's definitely well-produced.

  • @briansheehan5256
    @briansheehan5256 3 роки тому +1

    The war where we were truly united as one.

    • @rogerlynch5279
      @rogerlynch5279 3 роки тому

      And the one the World sees as America´s first UNJUST RACIST ONE. Even Kipling had written a mock poem about the USA to this matter, called THE WHITE MAN´s BURDEN ( in German it is also famous: DIE LAST DES WEISSEN MANNES it is called here around - classical shool material )

  • @darthroden
    @darthroden 13 років тому +2

    @Sisyphus27
    Ah you ask an interesting question and there is a good answer to it.
    Some of the men who fought in the Spanish-American War were indeed Southern but that is only half of it.
    Southerners then (and in some cases now) share a dual loyalty in this country. We consider ourselves Americans first but also Southerners as a group and as a culture.
    Waving the Southern Cross is our way of honoring who we are as a distinct American people...though we wave the US flag more (or both at once).

  • @brandon7482
    @brandon7482 3 місяці тому

    Anyone interested in the Spanish American War, there’s an organization called the Sons of Spanish American War Veterans. There are two membership options, hereditary, for those who have family ties to the war, and associate, for those who are just interested in the history.

  • @arthoggard7500
    @arthoggard7500 11 років тому +2

    Garry owen is one most millitary songs that have an lot of history to it.Art H

  • @freeline39
    @freeline39 11 років тому +1

    In the movie " Bite the Bullet ", Gene Hackman's character says of ' the charge up San Juan Hill ' ... " charge ? we crawled up that bloody hill "

  • @PaulCrombie
    @PaulCrombie 26 днів тому

    Sam Elliott’s character - Buck O’Neill - was an Arizona lawman who resigned to join Teddy.

  • @josephkondrat7084
    @josephkondrat7084 2 роки тому +4

    The best line said: "No. They are Americans."

  • @TheMasterRhyme
    @TheMasterRhyme 11 років тому

    It's worth noting that the Spanish in Cuba and the English in South Africa, against the Boer; got the Concentration Camp model started !!!

  • @josephkondrat7084
    @josephkondrat7084 5 років тому +1

    To some the Spainish-American War of 1898 was like the Korean War of 1950, a forgotten war, except to those who lost someone in the war.

  • @saoirse2011
    @saoirse2011 9 років тому +1

    good tune.

  • @jurgenchristiansen6075
    @jurgenchristiansen6075 3 роки тому +7

    Gary Owen was meant to honor Custer and the 7th. It always will no matter where it is sung and played.

  • @gbujarhead6440
    @gbujarhead6440 7 років тому +18

    In 2016, we need Teddy Roosevelt.

    • @seanjenkins2701
      @seanjenkins2701 7 років тому

      hell yeah

    • @GravesRWFiA
      @GravesRWFiA 7 років тому +2

      instead we had teddy ruxpin.

    • @michaelc.6532
      @michaelc.6532 6 років тому

      2018 too sadly.

    • @michaelpalmieri7335
      @michaelpalmieri7335 4 роки тому +1

      Yeah, and we got stuck with Trump!

    • @edwardburlas6116
      @edwardburlas6116 3 роки тому +1

      @@michaelpalmieri7335 well now Americans are stuck with a dementia patient you liberal clowns cheated into office ! Enjoy his destruction of America! Who will you whine about now ?

  • @GorinRedspear
    @GorinRedspear 5 років тому +2

    Is that Patrick Gorman, the guy that played Hood in Gettysburg?

    • @patrickgorman2070
      @patrickgorman2070 Рік тому +1

      Yup, that was me. Also played the Col. of the 71st NY - but I was the original Wheeler until they decided they needed a star!!!!

    • @DamonNomad82
      @DamonNomad82 Рік тому

      @@patrickgorman2070 They should have kept you as Wheeler. I was always impressed by how well you portrayed Hood's courage in Gettysburg.