A BRIDGE TOO FAR Clip - "River" (1977) Robert Redford - WWII Movie
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- Опубліковано 14 жов 2024
- A BRIDGE TOO FAR Clip - "River" (1977) Robert Redford - WWII Movie
PLOT: An historic telling of the failed attempt to capture several bridges to Germany in World War II in a campaign called Operation Market-Garden.
CAST: Dirk Bogarde, James Caan, Michael Caine, Sean Connery, Edward Fox, Elliott Gould, Gene Hackman, Anthony Hopkins, Hardy Krüger, Laurence Olivier, Ryan O'Neal, Robert Redford, Maximilian Schell, Liv Ullmann.
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#ABridgeTooFar
Sean Connery, Michael Caine, Anthony Hopkins, Robert Redford, Gene Hackman, James Caan, Elliot Gould, Ryan ONeil, Laurence f'ing Olivier... that is one hell of a cast.
Don’t forget Hardy Kruger. Not a WWII movie without him.
Edward Fox as well. That cast next to Kellys Heores are just great.
Academy award winning - Maximilian Schell
Almost 1/3 of the budget went to salaries alone
At least seven Oscar winning actors starred in this movie.
My Dad took me to see this movie in the theater back in 1977. This was one of the most memorable scenes. He passed 6 years ago and I have wonderful memories of this shared experience.
Mine was the red Devil trying to retrieve a canister,with cheers of his company only to be killed ...in it only more Maroon berets
I'm sure it's only now that you can look back and laugh.
@@roybennett9284 こんなシーンも、有ります
捕虜に、ドイツ軍将校が、指す出す一枚のチョコレート
其れは、空中投下為れた補給物資
将校は、こう言いなから、手渡します
此は、君達の物だ、食べたまえ
複雑な顔の英国軍将校
分厚いチョコレートは、今でも、印象的
因みに、自分は、元自衛官
名前は、違えど、軍歴持ちです
爆笑
五年勤務
同年代とお見受け為ました
お互い、楽しい平和な時代を、送りましょう
敬礼
以上
awesome!
American warmongers!
A time when movies were actually shot and filmed on location ,real equipment, no CGI nonsense, such a great movie , and one hell of a cast too
With Cold War Leopard 1s filling in for both German and Allied armour, a historical accuracy flaw for which every movie made today would get ripped apart by critics. I understand appreciating an old-school classic but not to a point where it's elevated into nostalgic perfection to serve as a "bar" for anything made today. And last time I checked films are still being shot on location with real equipment. And just to clarify, I consider A Bridge too Far to be a very solid film providing interesting retrospective on the events depicted. But it was never perfect
@@jackiemortes With all due respect it is easy for you to criticise from you're computer but the reality is either you use leopard 1 tanks or you don't use any tanks at all
which is better ?
The fact is when you're making a film you can't just make everything magically appear sometimes you just can't get what you need and you have to do find alternatives
One of my favorite movies of all time. The cast is ridiculous.
I couldn't imagine going through that nightmare river crossing just to land and have to storm the bridge. One of the 82nd's finest moments.
A lot of people said this movie was Hollywood & inaccurate. My next door neighbour was in Arnhem & watched it, said the movie captured how it all unfolded beautifully. Brought the guy a lot of memories back. My own grandfather was on the left flank of 30 corps advance & said pretty much the same thing. They certainly were a different breed.
still inaccurate though.
@@Xyzabc998 It may be inaccurate but it probably captures the feeling how grand the initial operation was and how much of a mess it turned into. Everyone fighting in their small front to either capture an objective, defend till reinforcements arrived, or just trying not to get blown away. It may not be perfect but it tells us the story of just how crazy it all was during this.
We might scoff at this movie now with the special effects available, but think on this: Most of the WW2 equipment used was still operable and authentic. Many of the people in the films were veterans of the war themselves. No amount of "internet research" or even interviews of war veterans could match that.
This part is significantly inaccurate.
The British armour had taken the bridge 30 mibutes before the 82nd Airborne got there...
The part afterwards where the British stopped for tea was also nonsense..
@@Xyzabc998 oh shut it!
Every “ true story” movie isn’t completely accurate! Smh
I remember getting a DVD player from my dad for Christmas of 97. And this movie was the first one he got me to go with it. For a 12 year old kid I was super happy to get this movie and watch it in DVD format.
Captain Delbert Kuehl, the protestant captain of the 405th PIR, who crossed with the first wave (2:29), was a boyhood (and lifelong) friend of my father. He made 2 jumps into combat, Sicily and Market Garden, and went across the beach at Anzio, always with the first wave. I was in awe of him.
In 2010, while on a business trip to Dusseldorf, I spent a Sunday afternoon walking the Nijmegen bridges and the landing area on the north shore of the Waal River. (The jumping off point on the south shore is an industrial area I couldn't get to.) I was there in the Fall, close to the time of year of the actual crossing in September 1944. There was about 600 yards of flat, flat grassy field between the north shore and the dike. The movie suggests some terrain near the river behind which the Germans fired. I saw no such terrain features until the dike. So after they paddled across the river, they had to run 400-600 yards with no cover at all to get to the dike. Once they got to the dike, the foxes were loose in the hen house.
The movie isn't accurate in other ways...
The British tanks had taken the bridge single handed over 30 minutes before the US Paratroopers arrived...
An amendment: Captain Delbert Kuehl was the 405 PIR Chaplain.
I guess you mean the 504th?
@dogsnads5634
Give the Blue Devils of the 3/504 some credit. They went through hell to get to the other side of the river so your British guys in XXX Corps could relieve the British 1st Airborne but instead stopped for their tea party. They obviously needed the US paratroopers because they hadn’t made their way to Arnhem themselves so they called upon the best trained US Soldiers in the world at the time.
@@dogsnads5634 You failed to ask the question is why British tanks had took the bridge in the first place. It was supposed to be the Americans job soon as they landed by parachute. Gavin messed up.
This WW2 film on true events is the best I’ve ever watched and still is to this day. No modern take will ever do better FACT!!
The practical effects and choreography of this movie blow me away. War movies are rarely this ambitious now. The only thing that sticks out are the historical inaccuracies, which I understand for the sake of the narrative. For example, the 504th didn't make it to the road bridge right after crossing the Waal. The real story is even more incredible. After landing they were forced to cross several hundred yards of open field under fire from Germans positions on a 50-foot dike, then after a no-quarters fight at close range on the banks of the dike they split into groups with some paratroopers heading to Fort Hof van Holland (a 19th century fortress surrounded by moats) to disable German flak batteries, and the other to the railroad bridge where they captured MG-42s and turned them against SS troops retreating north across the bridge from the town of Nijmegen. 267 German bodies were counted on the rail bridge alone.
It wasn't until late afternoon that a small group of paras reached the road bridge to the east. They engaged with Germans firing from the girders, but were too few in number to take the whole bridge. It was later that evening when the tanks of the Irish Guards shot their way across and linked up with the small group of paratroopers.
In other words, they failed at their mission because they took too many casualties and not enough of them reached their objective!
BTW, why were they using rifles instead of paddles and why did they not do the crossing while still dark hoping to just arrive at daylight?
@@hillsane9262 No, they did not "fail". Their mission was to seize at least one of the bridges spanning the Waal to allow British armor to cross. They achieved that by clearing the railroad bridge. The road bridge was just a bonus. The main goal of the crossings was also to relieve pressure on forces attacking the bridges from the south, and in that regard they certainly succeeded.
>"why were they using rifles instead of paddles and why did they not do the crossing while still dark hoping to just arrive at daylight?"
It's a simple matter of logistics. The boats didn't arrive until daylight, and they couldn't wait around until nightfall since time was running out for the British paratroopers at Arnhem. And some soldiers were using rifles instead of paddles because not enough arrived in time for the assault.
@@redaug4212 At least the other poster didn't try to blame the failure of Market/Garden (of all people) Easy Company of The 506th for not getting to their bridge before it was blown....way back in the days of the Internet movie database (RIP!) the were actual threads on the discussion board for Band of Brothers and Bridge too Far trying to do just that. I'm inclined to quote Monty and say that "The Germans had a large part to do with it"
@@hillsane9262 losses were great on both sides - the americans lost as many as the germans during this battle....
@@nickmitsialis it's the unexpected placement of 2 panzer divisions in the Arnhem area and the decision to go through with the plan even after the Dutch resistance informed them. The highway for the XXX Corps was a single highway and progress depended on the capture of vital bridges, the failure to capture one bridge meant a delay and the British Airborne division was going to fight longer. It was a risky gamble that would have given the Allies a way around the Siegfried line. Perhaps one of the reasons this plan was chosen over trying to punch through the Westwall was that it gave the Airborne Divisions something to do.
My father fought with 6 Div in Normandy and volunteered for Market Garden with 1 Div as his original unit was 156 Bn. He broke a leg on a training jump days before Market Garden. I can still see him walking through the cemetery in Arnhem. He’d often pause in front of a headstone before moving on to the next.
In my opinion this is one of the best war movies ever produced.
4:22... When you hear the abrupt death scream of two kids and then see the young corpses of low ranking soldiers laying on the path carrying munitions you can't help but appreciate the subtlety of such a sensational movie.
Just mentioning: No kids (as on the beach) but regulars, and rather a stationary light MG nest, cf. the sound before Redford's character is throwing the grenade.
"well surely you didnt believe all that nonsense they told us, about the enemy being, what was it, mostly youth and old men?"
@@deadponic117 "what was it old men, children? Hmm" Dvd A BRIDGE too Far by Anthony Hopkins Chapter 16. Anthony Hopkins has one hell of a beautiful voice and accent! Would love to meet him one day!
That movie is almost 50 years old but the effects are still good and it has nothing lost of its thrill.
I respect all that's been said. I only came to get a james caan clip for my tribute, and this movie was a part of his movie career. From what i witnessed in the clip, and the cast, it looks like it is more then likely a great movie. I have never read the book either. But i will try to watch this beginning to end at some point in my life. thanks peeps.
I saw this in the theater when I was 7 with my Grandfather who was there with the 82nd.
Redford got paid far more than anyone else in that film for his brief appearance. I know it pissed off a lot of the other stars
And he didn’t even get a hair cut to look more 1940’s soldierly.
In 1977 he sold tickets, i would imagine a lot of women had no problem going with their husbands/boyfriends to see this film in theaters.
You missed the best line, imho: "What did you expect, Destroyers?" what a brave river crossing. 🙂
ahahah when they received the flimsy boat
"Whaddya looking for? Mermaids!?".
Ich bin am Niederrhein unmittelbar an der niederländischen Grenze zu Nimwegen aufgewachsen, und habe die Originalfilmaufnahmen 1976 der Luftlandeaktion der Alliierten in den Rheinniederungen miterlebt... Meine Mutter erlebte diese Szenen 1944 real, und bestätigte diese Brutalität des Krieges.
When I saw it in the theater, about half way thru Redford's Hail Mary! Full of Grace!, the whole boat started saying it!! About the time they got to shore, all the boats near him were also saying it!!!
My great grandfather was a paratrooper in WWII. He was with the 509th Parachute Infantry Regiment in North Africa and later the 3rd battalion 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment in the 82nd Airborne in Sicily. He was then sent back to England to prepare for Operation Overlord when he was transferred to the 101st Airborne and jumped into Normandy, and later jumped into Holland. He also participated in the Battle of the Bulge and Western Germany. He had made either 4 or 5 combat jumps during the war. Had he not been sent to Normandy right after Sicily, he probably would’ve participated in the Waal River Crossing. He survived and passed away in 2006.
Technician 4th Grade John J. Lower 1919-2006
I’d say The Longest Day, A Bridge Too Far, Tora! Tora! Tora!, and The Devil’s Brigade are the best of their time. There are more, but I can’t think of all of them off the top of my head.
After growing up seeing these war movies, one of the first things I noticed upon getting books is how much the Germans wore camouflage in reality. Later in the war you rarely saw the red helmet decal with the swasi. They were even given orders to paint over it, I believe.
true - the red and white and black decal of the regular army was removed but the ss often kept both decals even tho they were told to get rid of the red ones on the left side of the helmet.
RIP Hardy Kruger
Dan mam
I always think of him in "The Secret of Santa Vittoria"
Fantastic movie! The cinematography is brilliant and the only movie I know made about Operation Market Garden.
Wrong. There was one made right after the war called "There's was the Glory". English movie more about Arnhem.
Hmmm...HBO's Band of Brothers. Not comprehensively about Market Garden but a worthy treatment nonetheless.
You should watch " There's was the glory" basically made not long after ww2 ended and filmed in arnhem with the paras who fought on the day.....it's extremely well made.
Elite troops, superbly lead with the benefit of the M1 Garand and incredible bravery.
Redford playing mjr Julian Cook of 504 PIR, was very convincing.
- Cobb asaide !
- Cover!
Excellent.
Great movie.. I saw this movie and Star Wars in Vegas on vacation in 1977 because 11 yr old cannot gamble. My four brothers still talk about this great day for real manly movies.
It is interesting to note is that the rifle fired by the German at 4:06 is a Gewehr 98 - as evidenced by its straight bolt handle and Lange-Visier rear sight - which the Germans already replaced in 1935 with the Karabiner 98k.
Another thing to note is that the rifles at 3:05 and 3:40 appear to be Gewehr 98 rifles shortened to look like a Karabiner 98k, as the Lange-Visier rear sight is still present.
Source: IMFDB
It is entirely possible that shortages meant old stocks could have been used. We can see some old equipment being used in the Ukraine war even now.
What happened to the Mauser?
What is even more weird is that at almost at the end of the movie, when the able British soldiers are evacuated and only the wounded are present at the Dutch house, the Germans are slowly walking in to take them as prisoners. Notice that the Germans are armed with American M1 Garands...
Watched all sorts of "gung-ho" movie clips, from war movies made throughout the last 80-odd years, from John Wayne fighting off all sorts of foes in the jungles of the Pacific and Vietnam. Must say Robert Redford's scene "Hail Mary, Full Of Grace", from what I have heard talking to Vets of the last 80 years, comes closest to what soldiers are actually saying going into combat
82nd A/B Div. CO Brigadier General Jim Gavin "I'm sending two companies of men across the river by boat. I need a man with very special qualities to lead" / Major Julian Cook: "Go on, sir" / Gavin: "He's gotta be tough enough to do it and he's gotta be experienced enough to do it, and one more thing - he's gotta be dumb enough to do it."
I just saw a young Redford playing a small town gunslinger trying to make a name for himself in a black and white series with Henry Fonda playing a Marshal.
The UA-cam channel TIK history does a good break down on this battle. Having read the book as a kid and learning more since then, the move does a good job because if it covered everything the movie would be 10 hours long.
The British generals observing said that this river assault by the yanks was the most courageous act they had ever witnessed
I highly doubt there was a general any where near when this happened. But I could be wrong.
@@Kanovskiy There was what Kevin says is a true story remember it was British airborne troops that were cut off ahead they brought everything up they had to pound the Germans in the hope of reaching them I would bet there were more than one general there also its not like today general's were at the front with there troop or as close as they could be theres tons of stories of Rommel over running his own troops in France and nearly being caught by the French in 1940
I’m sure he meant the ones that witnessed the movie
General Ivor Thomas (probably the most exposed), as well as a dozen other British and American Generals were on the ground, in combat sectors, during the operation.
This was an era where high ranking commanders were commonly found in hazard.
just a real shame it was necessary in the first place.
My favorite WW2 movie.
R.I.P Sean Connery✝️🕊️☮️🇬🇧🏴
my favourite movie of all time
In the game Close Combat 2: A Bridge too Far, this map is brutal and I believe is the do or die for both sides.
Fantastic game.
Filmed on location at the Waal River at Nijmegen. Doesn't get much better than that.
Just like longest day movie classic movie, it has to be watched only in theaters to get the feeling
Who remembers the game in the PlayStation 2 I played it so many times that I would play it in the hard mode
Major Cook saved the day!
It's not often you see Robert Redford and Gene Hackman be in war movies. However there were few actors who actually were in WW 2.
RICHARD ATTENBOROUGH, RAF.
DIRK BOGARDE, Queen's Royal Regiment.
DENHOLM ELLIOTT, RAF.
ARTHUR HILL, RCAF.
HARDY KRÜGER, 38th SS.
PAUL MAXWELL, Royal Canadian Artillery.
LAURENCE OLIVIER, RAF.
A special mention should go to Michael Caine, although not a WWII veteran, did see extensive combat in the Korean War.
RW:Hail Mary full of Grace,was all i heard from this scene.
Likewise. In fact that's why i looked up this scene. He was so scared that's all he could get out. It was all he needed.
Fun Fact: Despite the large budget ($27 million), enormous cast of stars, and difficult on-location shoot, producer Joseph E. Levine was actually in the black due to pre-bookings and sales of distribution rights before the movie's release. A Bridge Too Far went on to make $50,750,000 worldwide.
I love how at 3:07 they have an actual kid, and a teen using a g98 from the first world war. Considering its near the tail end of '44 it fits pretty well, even tho Im pretty sure the ss stopped putting the red background swastikas on helmets a few years prior to this and just kept the ss runes in like '41 or '42
Oh no, at 2:21 Cliff Clavin - dead.
It's a little known fact there Sammy, that I was killed 38 years ago during Operation Market Garden...
One of the voices that the allied soldiers feared was the sound of a Tiger tank from Germany
Great Movie..👍
Hardy Kruger as "General Ludwig" is a mixture of Colonel Harzer of 9th SS and Brigadier Harmel of 10th SS.Apparently Harzer was unwilling to be portrayed,so they just made up a new character.
Btw this film was shot by Geoffrey Unsworth, who also shot Superman the Movie. This and Superman were some of the last projects he shot before dying in 1978.
Thanks for pointing this out. The very beginning of Superman The Movie has a dedication to Unsworth. The cinematography of both films is insanely good. Especially the scenes after Pa Kent dies, shot in Alberta.
The most accurate war movie ever made.
Completely agree.
except that as far as the story goes it is very inaccurate. Brillaint for 77 though.
@@Xyzabc998 It follows the well-researched (but pre-Internet) Cornelius book to the tee, is shot mostly on location, and is not inconsistent with the Robert Kershaw book It Never Snows in September. Of course they took a nearly week-long battle and distilled it to three hours, so it's not perfectly accurate, but for a Hollywood war film, it's the most accurate ever made. Costume design was pretty damn good, too. I can't think of another film that comes close.
@@zoso73 If it was accurate they would have had the US paratroopers reach the bridge and realise the British Armour had taken it 30 minutes previously on their own....
They might have also wondered why it took the 82nd days to take their day 1 objective which they could have taken in the first couple of hours when it was defended by 15 German reserve troops, instead they got pointlessly diverted for 2 days and ignored their main objective. A fact that remains unexplained to this day...
Sorry but it left out key facts and twisted others. This clip shows the 82nd having to cross the river while XXX Corps were having to fight to take the other end. This was day 3. The whole point of the plan was for the 82nd to take the bridge straight away on day one . They didnt try and prioritized the Heights nearby. A fact left out in the film.
I bet this inspired some of the battle scenes in "Saving Private Ryan" 20 years later.
This film was shot mostly in the Netherlands , the brige they used for Arnhem is in Deventer and is still there .
The Arnhem Bridge was later renamed John Frost Bridge.
That Catholic(?) American Major must've been really scared to death. He couldn't even finish reciting his "Hail Marys".
In Nagasaki, there are plenty of Catholic people. I am familiar with that prayer.
The historical Major was very scared. He said he kept saying the Hail Mary in rhythm with his paddling of the boat.
Hail Mary, full of grace, the lord is with thee. Blessed art though among women, and blessed is the fruit of they womb, Jesus.
Holy Mary, mother of God, pray for us sinners, now and in the hour of our death, Amen.
Oh my Jesus, forgive us our sins. Save us from the fires of hell. Lead all souls to heaven, especially those most in need of your mercy, Amen.
I pray this every day, but maybe if I was getting shot at and bombed, I'd have trouble making it past the first sentence just like that major did.
must be Irish-Americans or Italian-Americans.. back then they were devout
@@notcrazy6288 I say it every day also
He kept repeating it like that to calm his men down and keep them in rhythm so the boat gets to the other side faster.
6:32 The American Sherman tank has begun to run.......
6:45 The tank that runs on the bridge is the German Leopard tank. It's a shooting mistake.
日本語:橋を渡り始めたのはシャーマン戦車6:32、6:45にはレオパルド戦車が渡ってます。
One week to prepare the most important air assault never made ! As the wisdom man said : fail to prepare mean be prepare to fail.
A movie where the Good Guys.....loss..........
I was twelve when I saw this movie with my Dad, he being a USN sailor, wanted to show me what it would be like being in the US Army. Well, when I saw this movie I think I wept when that scene of the parachute re-supply came...After I asked, "what happened, what did he get??".
NOW, I did Enlist, but in the USN, for 20+ years....and proud to do it, But............. I will NEVER Forget what those Allies have done during the "Greatest Generation", and have seen the this movie several times now......I still get 'misty-eyed' during that same re-supply, though.
My dad took me to see this and at 8 years old I did not grasp that the film was about the biggest allied blunder in the European Theatre. To me it was just a movie about World War 2.
One of my favourite things about this film is how the Germans aren't portrayed as cackling comicbook villains , intent on destroying the world for no other reason than its own ends. Even Hitler thought he was doing good and his generals were hoping to benefit the German People. War is a terrible thing however you look at it and there's obviously bad eggs on all sides but at least this seemed more realistic.
That's a great point. We as Americans have lost sight of the steady diet of propaganda it takes to believe we, the Americans, who have been at war with someone more years than not for the last 200yrs, are always the good guys and everyone else is bad. Shit, yesterday's allies are today's enemies and they're evil until we decide to install them as leaders again, prop up their regime and pay for the rebuild.
War Like Nations, like Rome and Persia never last unfortunately
A BIDGE TOO FAR 👍👍👍👍👏👏👏👏📽📽📽📽📽🎬🎬🎬🎬🎬
Ah Goddammit...it was just getting to the best part!
Super star cast super movie very well produced war movie in the 70s I think. Pity it's not screened again in theaters in india
Pretty good movie. I saw it in theaters back in 1977 when I was 16. Loved it then, but even at that time I was disappointed that pretty boy Robert Redford did not get a military style haircut for this role.
It was a great movie (That airborne drop from authentic C47s was really an underappreciated highlight) but I think the 'all star cast' detracted from the story (though I'm sure they hoped these stars would put butts in seats). Maybe the 'modern' desaturated grainy subdued 'I wanna look like a newsreel' look has spoiled me but I found the 'ultra steady camera work and bright explosions, bright red blood etc seems 'tame' by comparison. That goes with my other favorite WW2 movie from the 1970s, Cross of Iron, a brilliant brutal movie with all of 'Sam's' tricks but again to bright and clear.
The book September Hope, covers the American side of Market Garden, including the time the 82d and 101 spent in Holland after the main operation.
There is also a History channel documentary on the battle with interviews with some Paratroopers that were there and made the river assault, including the Capt that argued with the Brit Tanker.
Does it explain why Gen Gavin fucked about waiting at Groesbeek Heights and lost all momentum and initiative?
@@JammyDodger45
You mean following the orders he was given to take the high ground?
I guess you would've done better?
@@robertmoran7024 - he was given 3 targets, to be exploited in sequence.
After capturing the GH he was to move to capture bridges over the Waal canal and so secure the route to Nijmegen.
He didn't do this, he sat his Division on GH for SEVEN hours. This allowed German reinforcements to arrive and derailed the planned link up with the Brit/Polish troops at Arnhem.
So in answer to your question, yes, I would have done better.
@@JammyDodger45
Good for you
@@robertmoran7024 - absolutely, but much better for all the troops I'd have saved.
Weird the version of this is missing the subtitles. For it's time, this movie was as good as it got for authenticity. None of the cliche horseshit one-liners you would usually see.
it's hard to be quippy when you're scared 'sh/tless'.
3:06 like six-year-old kid
Watch All Quite on the Western Front at the very end the one surviving German solider for that group has all 8-12 year olds under his command. But yes at the time frame of Market Garden various units might very well have had children with them.
There is now a bridge at that place called "De Oversteek" or as in English "The Crossing", every day at sunset at least one (Dutch) veteran will walk the "Sunset March", walking from Nijmegen to the other side. While crossing the bridge 48 pairs of streetlights will light up, one by one to remember those 48 Americans who lost their lives at this crossing.
ua-cam.com/video/tXhyFJ1j1oY/v-deo.html
RW:at the end of that clip it just shows how Americans and British could not cooperate or accomplish anything during that battle scene.😔
Tbh the answer from the tank commander was quite right, because hetold him "our infantry is still stuck fighting in the city, without protection we would be sitting ducks" which from the standpoint was right, since they drove in so many traps and lost so many vehicles allready that they have become way more cautious. Sending in the tanks without the infantry support was quite a gamble at that situation and yeah maybe they were wrong not to send in the tanks alone, but one could argue the battle was allready lost.
@@burnbobquist8999 rw:good deduction.
It's madness to fight such enven though it's movie....
If I had to place a blame on failure of market garden. Its not on planning, the plan was sound.
The failure was on logistics.
I think there is also problem in the planning
Because for the plan to work every side needed to succeed all of the bridges had to be captured.
If one wasn’t captured or got destroyed then that could ruin the operation.
Which is what happened.
There wasn’t room for alternatives if things went wrong
Was this the only movie that Anthony Hopkins did with Sean Connery?
Definitely the high-water mark of Operation Market Garden.
Remind me why the bridge didn’t blow? Did that guy just mess up or did the Allie’s cut the wires or something? Been awhile since I’ve seen this movie
one of the last great war/action movies before the constant scene switching and shaky/jumpin' around of the ADD parkinsons cameraman that has ruined these types of movies
So true.
Like sitting ducks in those boats.
The only minor thing wrong with this scene is that the Americans forgot to bring any ammunition with them. Not one cartridge belt between them.
That and the US paratroopers getting on the bridge before the British. In reality the British armour had taken the bridge 30 minutes before the 82nd got there....
@@dogsnads5634 well Ryan WAS Anglophobic
Robert Redford had major rank on his shoulders and lieutenant colonel rank on his helmet
This looks like it was the Saving Private Ryan of its day...
Yup, crossing rivers in combat is very hard. Even to this day.
Ran out of Motrin ...back is sore 😫 Goddd, I need the Motrin
Ah good ol Lieutenant Cliff Clavin
Interessante mesmo...A tenacidade dos EUA é 5 povo patriota!
Why do they put music in the middle of a battle?
great)
You have never prevailed
Hail Mary full of grace....does he not know the rest of that?...
Amen
How did you go from bridge at remargen to a bridge too far. Both great movies but please its a strech of the imagination to jump between them.
the funny thing about this movie is...you can saw Sherman tank using by germany..😂
Not unheard of
He needs to learn more of the prayer.
Americanos e Ianques juntos na batalha!
Few of the actors were knighted later years too
The lack of real German tanks for this movie was the only disappointment.
Heres the thing
こういう映画を今は作れないのかね。
This time will be different they say as they take to the field
How come the tanks weren't marked with a WHITE STAR?
The tanks are part of the British Guards Armoured Division, so they don't have the white star.
Cause those were British tanks. The white star was American decor
Just realized it now... XXX Corps rolling across the bridge made the entire river crossing unnecessary.
The WWII vets are dying off and there are only a few lefts, the next batch would be the Vietnam vets, I am a first Gulf war vet, our time will come.
I kinda doubt they'd be using their rifle butts as paddles. Highly inefficient, and I'm sure they had time to scrounge up some boards that would've been much better. Too great a chance of losing your rifle, or getting water and debris in the gun.
This may singlehandedly be the least intelligent comment ever made on youtube
Unfortunately, the actual assault was conducted with minimal resources...
"Soon it became apparent that a mere head-on assault on the German positions might take several more days. However, the Allies did not have that much time to spare in relieving the British troops in Arnhem. It necessitated capturing the north end of both bridges to isolate the German forces on the south bank. To accomplish this, infantry would have to cross the river under fire. The 3rd Battalion, 504th PIR crossed the Heumen bridge in the evening of 19 September, and set up camp in the Jonkerbos at 21:15. Brigadier General Gavin ordered Captain Julian Cook to find boats to cross the Waal. Initially, Cook had no idea where to get them. Eventually, canvas boats had to be transported from Belgium, delaying the Waal crossing by a day. Originally, these would be 32 boats, but underway a truck carrying six boats was destroyed, and so only 26 reached their destination."
It was relatively common for units crossing rivers with these boats to use their rifle buts as additional propulsion, given that the oars for the canvas boats were not always sufficient to provide 'enough' speed while under fire.
Per the actual account, rifles were used. And using the Hail Mary for cadence.
@@jackpavlik563 I would've used my hands before I used the tool that could save my life.... more surface area than a rifle butt too.
why not cross at night.