When I was a little boy, my grandpa told me about WW2 when I was asking him. He was a medic at eastern front. He told me that we (german) an the russian medics helped eachother. He came back to Germany in 1947. So.... no more war please.
The USSR during that period of time did not abide by the Geneva convention which states that as long as a medic does not participate in the battle, it is a war crime to shoot it. Often medics of the RKKA and RKKF were armed just as well as their fellow infantry because they were targets for the Germans, and visa versa. Only in the western front and the African campaign were there rules that medics were not allowed to be shot at. In reality the Russian and Germans hated each other deeply. The only time i can think of where a soviet/German medic helping their enemy is when either the medic or the patient are prisoners. Your story could still be true, it is impossible for me to entirely disprove it nor prove it happened, war is scary, and sometimes the unexpected happens.
Ganz egal was so mancher klugscheißender Kriegsexperte hier an negativen Kommentaren vom Stapel lässt, lasst euch nicht beirren, ihr habt einen guten Kurzfilm gemacht. Alles ist authentisch dargestellt. Neider werdet ihr immer haben........ Ich sage Daumen hoch👍
Thank you... I saw the SS insignia only after medical treatment, and I thought to myself, ‘if he wasn’t a medic...” then, I was so glad the healed man spoke up and the officer listened. Danke!
@@donjorge8329 The Gulag was a huge prison where working hands were used free (no any gas chambers, stoves for burning people, mass killings) That was the difference
@@NewEurope-v4m gulag was not a ,,huge prison,, it was a huge working camp for prisoneres. In Gulag were mass killings and after the war (WW2) many german soldiers, which were captured by Soviets were in Gulags starved to death or killed by soviet soldiers, during WW2 so many captured soviet soldiers by Germans in concentration camps were not so much killed. Gulags were much worse than concentration camps !
@@Mar1an163 >>>In Gulag were mass killings - could you provide the facts please >>>were captured by Soviets - do you mean german soldiers that were destroying Soviet's cities, villages, hijacking to Germany millions Soviet civilians? >>German soldiers wouldn't kill medics During WW2 85 000 Soviet medics were killed - it's official fact of Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation The medic's median average lifespan on the battlefield was 41 seconds
Not bad for a zero budget job, but the jeep is obviously the pride and joy of someone' collection. The uniforms are brand new and spotless, spread a bit of grime and dirt around next time, so it looks as if they've been working hard and fighting at least. Maybe a splash of fake blood or tomato sauce on the 'wound site' too.
Thanks for the comment. Your remark is very fair. Indeed, for the next film, we will think about "aging" the uniforms and possible traces of blood. ;-)
a little strory from the big History....That could be real in WW2 storm ! well played, coherent, and perfect unifroms..What esle ? ............thanks for sharing ; )
Nice story. But, two things really could have been improved on. Neither involves moralizing or picking on one side or another. I don't know if anybody pointed this out or not but, not only did that 'medic' not know how to use an axe, (nitpicky here. There was a real possibility the medic might NOT have known how to use an axe.) but, he hadn't the first CLUE about how to treat a minor wound or tie a bandage!! And that was basic first aid taught to ALL GI's. That sloppily loose way he wrapped that bandage really detracted from the story for me.* His uniform was brand spanking new so it would stand to reason his 1'st aid supplies would have been full. He would have first cleaned the wound even if all he could do was pour a little water over it. Then he may or may not have used a morphine syrette but, I doubt it. Those were for serious wounds or for patients freaking or in great pain. The wounded soldat was neither.Next, keeping to that era, he would have sprinkled it liberally with sulfa powder, for the film, baking soda could have been used. Then he would have placed a bandage- though, considering it was not bleeding, presumably stopped, the medic would most likely have simply folded the ends of his gauze wrap over a few times, and placed it on top of the wound holding it in place, he then would have made about 4 or 5 FIRM wraps around the leg. No WAY would hee have put a tourniquet on anything like that. Too dangerous in itself! He would have cut the gauze off, then torn it lengthwise down the middle, then bringing one end around the reverse way bring the two ends together and tying them in a knot directly over the wound. * Although, I have to admit, I once had a medic tie a bandage on me that was literally that bad, that loose and sloppy so I had to redo it myself! Therefor, it could have happened but, as a rule, no.
@@LtGhost-tb3kq I get you but, the fault does not lie with the actors but, the direction. I understand "low budget" but, a few hours in a local public library would have supplied all the information needed. As for tying a bandage, Heck! There are so many free sources for such information there's simply no way to excuse it. For that matter, they could simply "Google" everything needed. THAT"s why I picked on these items. It's not like you actually had to be there for such knowledge or anything like that.
My father was an officer in the U.S Army in World War II and again in Korea. He was one of the first to liberate Buchenwald and again at Mauthausen. He had a tough job to control the soldiers he commanded since many, if not most, wanted to shoot every SS member in these camps and elsewhere. German troops in the regular Army were another story. Dad seldom spoke of his experiences in the war but he always had a revulsion towards those who were in the SS.
Same with my grandfather! He was even somewhat ‘protective’ of the Wehrmacht because he saw them as good soldiers and good people from his personal experience, BUT HE DESPISED THE SS AND WOULD LOSE HIS SHIT AT THE MERE MENTION OF THEM...also from experience. He never shot wounded or captured Wehrmacht, but when I asked him if he did that to the SS, his answer was, ‘we didn’t take them prisoner. I’ll tell you that much!’
@@MichaelGeary-m8y I heard that word once myself when I locked my keys in the car by accident, it was from a high strung young German woman...I was touring her and her female friend around the state...40 years ago. I found out that day she had a hot temper. Anyway, I went to a nearby business and got a wire coat hanger and got the door open.
Many Europeans of the time had little experience with automobiles . They weren't common or easy for the average pre WW2 German to acquire. From Britannica: _The German automobile industry suffered from the dislocation of World War I and Germany’s subsequent economic difficulties. The major developments of the 1920s were the merger of Daimler and Benz in 1926, after the founders of those firms had died (their bitter rivalry for the distinction of being the inventor of the gasoline automobile made any such union during their lifetimes unthinkable), and the entry of General Motors onto the German scene through the acquisition of the Adam Opel company in 1929. The Germans were ardent admirers of Henry Ford and his methods, which they termed Fordismus, but Ford never succeeded in becoming a power in the German automotive world. During the 1930s the Nazi regime sought to emulate Ford by undertaking mass production of a low-priced car, the Volkswagen, but the onset of war interrupted this project._
There is one UA-cam video one here with a actual American Veteran explaining after he was hit in the shoulder by a German sniper it felt like a ball bat hit him ,, long story short a German medic found him and patched him up and he said that's all he remembered because apparently so much blood loss and trama , but he ended up at a aid station and he wished he would've gotten the medics name so he could thank him for saving his life all these decades later.
Muy bueno , Subtitulo Español SS-Untersturmfűhrer (Subteniente) 🇩🇪 y SS-Rottenfűher , le perdonaron la vida al Paramedico 🇺🇸 EE. UU. Que curo la heria de su adversario.👍.
The average Soldier would have driven straight through it going like hell thinking ambush the entire time. The other average Soldier might have wheeled around it at the fastest his jeep would take him through or away from this obstacle. Only a numbnut would have stopped as this one did. Glad he did stop. It made for a good movie.
Being a medical person during the Gulf War, I think it is safe to say that the medic driving did not necessarily have the experience to know the danger of a fallen tree. A front-line medic, sure. But we don't know that. He could have been just someone picked to deliver some meds (like I got picked a couple of times).
I would agree with you for sure. I was never in combat. Just taught that pop up road blocks had to be dealt with in certain ways. Engineers like us put them there for reasons. So did the other side's Engineers. One thing for sure. the Medic was doing his job. Perhaps he should have had some shotgun type escort . Still , this was a movie. No disrespect at all to the fine folks in the medical departments. Peace.
I am sure there were acts of kindness and mercy during WW2 because the war covered such a vast area and so many millions of people. Not likely among the SS Troops but the average German soldier more likely.
Eine Sprengfalle an dem Baumstamm wäre eine gute Idee gewesen, ein guter Überraschungsmoment... natürlich nur in einer anderen Szene wenn man ihn nicht gebraucht hätte oder bei einem anderen Trupp der Amis...
Nice mini film story. The American did not sound like he was from Dallas Texas or Cincinnati Ohio. Not even from Tupelo Mississippi. Possibly anywhere in Europe though.
Ich finde die Idee, also die Handlung, sehr gut! Die Umsetzung ist auch gelungen. Nur Details fehlen mir ein bisschen. Zum Beispiel die Uniformen können dreckiger/benutzter aussehen.
There is always a guy to point an . to the i.... Forget them. Just take the correct critisize to help you to improve. Well done guys. A short movie about what the medics have done from every side. I suggest you, documents of Feltown (UA-cam), based on real pictures, real stories, and show how enemies medics have been able to save lives together... Wathever was the colour of his uniform. It has been the case of my grandfather, in the battle of Colmar (winter 44). He dilingented his service as surgeon as well for french, but also germans (even waffen ss!!!). There are warriors... Which are hoolywood well presented. There are the "little hands", medics, food and ammo suppliers, and so many who are now totally forgottent despite their huge efforts in WWI and WWII.
The medic is wearing the patch of my late father's outfit the 95th infantry. I still have the wool shirt he was wearing when he was shot and wounded in fraulatern germany during blistering house to house fighting the bullet went between the 2 bones of his forearm and only bled a little but really messed up nerves going into the carpel tunnel
@@stevezarbock8733 you’re right, my father was in B Company he came ashore on Omaha Beach 100 days after D Day invasion, drove in the Red Ball Express for 30 days then rejoined his outfit and entered combat in the French Lorraine Sector then into Germany thru Saarlaturn and into the town of Fraulaturn where he was shot and wounded Dec 9 1944 and was medivacked out a few days before the Battle Of The Bulge came down around his outfit
The way the 'American' medic said "oh shit" didn't really sound right. I suppose that when a English speaking actor trys to speak in German, most German people will notice that it doesn't sound very realistic..! I hope you don't take my comment too seriously, but the rest is good and an interesting video.
Dear M/s.Northgruppe,25 years ago I read that one German tank would hermetically seal itself, get electric power from another German tank,on the bank,cross the river on it's track,and not swim. Then the tanks would reverse their roles. Could this be true?
I was going to work(I come from Scotland)and on a few occasions past a fully restored willys jeep just parked in a drive. Also there is a guy with a kubelwagen and PAK 37.
A German solider ready to shoot a captured enemy solider that did nothing but obey their commands. If he did shoot him like that i would think and personally believe he would be in a lot of trouble from German military police or turned in by witnesses .
@@akbarimahroza6397 thank-you very much brother ,,,,go ahead and fuck everyone that comes in your way ,that's for what you are here on earth......thanks again.
The equipment and uniforms always look brand new in these short flicks.
Yes, but at the time the uniforms and equipment were not old.
@@nordgruppeassociation6130 Although true, they still would be beaten up and tattered from months or even years of being worn
The Jeep looked as if it had just rolled off the assembly line.
Re enacters. Just re enactment peeps.....
When I was a little boy, my grandpa told me about WW2 when I was asking him. He was a medic at eastern front. He told me that we (german) an the russian medics helped eachother. He came back to Germany in 1947. So.... no more war please.
Wow, so in reality German and Russian medics is help each other
I was think the Eastern Front medic isn't like Western Front
Эмир Шафриансях There was even a law that said you can’t shoot medics even if they are your enemy.
The USSR during that period of time did not abide by the Geneva convention which states that as long as a medic does not participate in the battle, it is a war crime to shoot it. Often medics of the RKKA and RKKF were armed just as well as their fellow infantry because they were targets for the Germans, and visa versa. Only in the western front and the African campaign were there rules that medics were not allowed to be shot at. In reality the Russian and Germans hated each other deeply. The only time i can think of where a soviet/German medic helping their enemy is when either the medic or the patient are prisoners. Your story could still be true, it is impossible for me to entirely disprove it nor prove it happened, war is scary, and sometimes the unexpected happens.
Like Franz stigler... and others.
@@ArcticWolf00Alpha0 An incredible story
also dieser Film wird sicher noch einen Oscar bekommen. glänzende Schauspieler, alle Achtung !Und alles so aus dem Leben gegriffen. Ein Wahnsinn !
Der Film ist super! Sehr gut gemacht! Da kann man nichts mehr sagen! 👍🇩🇪🇩🇪🇩🇪
My grandfather was an American jeep driver in WWII. He got lost one time and got shot at, but survived.
Don James
Ganz egal was so mancher klugscheißender Kriegsexperte hier an negativen Kommentaren vom Stapel lässt, lasst euch nicht beirren, ihr habt einen guten Kurzfilm gemacht. Alles ist authentisch dargestellt. Neider werdet ihr immer haben........ Ich sage Daumen hoch👍
Thank you... I saw the SS insignia only after medical treatment, and I thought to myself, ‘if he wasn’t a medic...” then, I was so glad the healed man spoke up and the officer listened. Danke!
I was expecting this to be kinda bad but...it was amazing is there a part 2?
No, we don't have a second part. But we'll make a new short film when it's possible...
👍👍
Green screens - where the americans get their jeep back again???🙃😃
Zuđjmk0šgnbčya🇭🇷
Amazing short film! I was expecting the American to resist the capture and drive away in the keep wounded
Well done for this short film eventhough this unlikely to happen the way it shows. No point in point out the errors. A good short film.
US soldier: Do you have a Jeep licence?
Einfache geil wie ihr mit dem Uniformen und so genau ins Detail gegangen seit
I like this film very much
Danke, sehr gut
Everybody sure looked freshly bathed and laundered, including the Jeep.
Simple, they are re enactors. ...
Great film
Sehr gut gemacht 👍🏻💪🏻
Excellent! Full of suspense & a strong story.
I hope the emerican soldier find his way back to his camp 1 like = 1 prayer for the emarican medic so he can safe ly get back to his platoon or camp
German soldiers wouldn't kill medics. They just forced them to help there fallen comrades.
right
and what about KZ Auschwitz-Birkenau?
@@NewEurope-v4m What about the gulags?
@@donjorge8329 The Gulag was a huge prison where working hands were used free (no any gas chambers, stoves for burning people, mass killings) That was the difference
@@NewEurope-v4m gulag was not a ,,huge prison,, it was a huge working camp for prisoneres. In Gulag were mass killings and after the war (WW2) many german soldiers, which were captured by Soviets were in Gulags starved to death or killed by soviet soldiers, during WW2 so many captured soviet soldiers by Germans in concentration camps were not so much killed. Gulags were much worse than concentration camps !
@@Mar1an163 >>>In Gulag were mass killings - could you provide the facts please
>>>were captured by Soviets - do you mean german soldiers that were destroying Soviet's cities, villages, hijacking to Germany millions Soviet civilians?
>>German soldiers wouldn't kill medics
During WW2 85 000 Soviet medics were killed - it's official fact of Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation
The medic's median average lifespan on the battlefield was 41 seconds
A well made video. Nice ❤️👍❤️
Not bad for a zero budget job, but the jeep is obviously the pride and joy of someone' collection. The uniforms are brand new and spotless, spread a bit of grime and dirt around next time, so it looks as if they've been working hard and fighting at least. Maybe a splash of fake blood or tomato sauce on the 'wound site' too.
Thanks for the comment. Your remark is very fair. Indeed, for the next film, we will think about "aging" the uniforms and possible traces of blood. ;-)
a little strory from the big History....That could be real in WW2 storm ! well played, coherent, and perfect unifroms..What esle ? ............thanks for sharing ; )
Klasse kurzfilm ambush jeep
If you ask me silence is a good way to build up tension not dramatic music
Nice story. But, two things really could have been improved on. Neither involves moralizing or picking on one side or another.
I don't know if anybody pointed this out or not but, not only did that 'medic' not know how to use an axe, (nitpicky here. There was a real possibility the medic might NOT have known how to use an axe.) but, he hadn't the first CLUE about how to treat a minor wound or tie a bandage!! And that was basic first aid taught to ALL GI's. That sloppily loose way he wrapped that bandage really detracted from the story for me.* His uniform was brand spanking new so it would stand to reason his 1'st aid supplies would have been full. He would have first cleaned the wound even if all he could do was pour a little water over it. Then he may or may not have used a morphine syrette but, I doubt it. Those were for serious wounds or for patients freaking or in great pain. The wounded soldat was neither.Next, keeping to that era, he would have sprinkled it liberally with sulfa powder, for the film, baking soda could have been used. Then he would have placed a bandage- though, considering it was not bleeding, presumably stopped, the medic would most likely have simply folded the ends of his gauze wrap over a few times, and placed it on top of the wound holding it in place, he then would have made about 4 or 5 FIRM wraps around the leg. No WAY would hee have put a tourniquet on anything like that. Too dangerous in itself! He would have cut the gauze off, then torn it lengthwise down the middle, then bringing one end around the reverse way bring the two ends together and tying them in a knot directly over the wound.
* Although, I have to admit, I once had a medic tie a bandage on me that was literally that bad, that loose and sloppy so I had to redo it myself! Therefor, it could have happened but, as a rule, no.
J. Go. Okay, I gotta say, this is a “Short Film” with a low budget, and with actors that probably don’t have basic medical knowledge
@@LtGhost-tb3kq I get you but, the fault does not lie with the actors but, the direction. I understand "low budget" but, a few hours in a local public library would have supplied all the information needed. As for tying a bandage, Heck! There are so many free sources for such information there's simply no way to excuse it. For that matter, they could simply "Google" everything needed. THAT"s why I picked on these items. It's not like you actually had to be there for such knowledge or anything like that.
Well, these guys at least knows how to shoot a jeep. He gives the better perfomance
Hervorragend alle Ihre Filme! Ich bin ein treuer Anhänger. !!
Ich gratuliere dir
Alberto Gavric pozdrav g. Gavriću. Dali znate odakle potiče vaše prezime?
Cooler Channel gefällt mir 👍🏼👍🏼
My father was an officer in the U.S Army in World War II and again in Korea. He was one of the first to liberate Buchenwald and again at Mauthausen. He had a tough job to control the soldiers he commanded since many, if not most, wanted to shoot every SS member in these camps and elsewhere. German troops in the regular Army were another story. Dad seldom spoke of his experiences in the war but he always had a revulsion towards those who were in the SS.
Same with my grandfather! He was even somewhat ‘protective’ of the Wehrmacht because he saw them as good soldiers and good people from his personal experience, BUT HE DESPISED THE SS AND WOULD LOSE HIS SHIT AT THE MERE MENTION OF THEM...also from experience.
He never shot wounded or captured Wehrmacht, but when I asked him if he did that to the SS, his answer was, ‘we didn’t take them prisoner. I’ll tell you that much!’
Very good touch, when the German is trying to figure out the shift pattern on the jeep, I think the medic had a smile on his face too...LOL
Haha :)
Funnier yet, there would be a large brass plate with a plain diagram of shift patterns right in front of him on the dash.
and he was cursing -- scheise! -- which made me laugh. Good touch!
@@MichaelGeary-m8y I heard that word once myself when I locked my keys in the car by accident, it was from a high strung young German woman...I was touring her and her female friend around the state...40 years ago. I found out that day she had a hot temper. Anyway, I went to a nearby business and got a wire coat hanger and got the door open.
Schoenes video bin erst jetzt auf euch gestossen. ..habe aber abboniert und gucke weiter ... Super job
epic!! really enoyed that man!!
U guys are the best love u
My great grandfather was a medic in the British army and he was captured by the Japanese
Great video! Except, as if a German would have issues with driving a stick shift vehicle..
The Don Of BGF Mako Flatty he’s used to German smoothness and quality
German quality made by russian pow.
Many Europeans of the time had little experience with automobiles . They weren't common or easy for the average pre WW2 German to acquire.
From Britannica:
_The German automobile industry suffered from the dislocation of World War I and Germany’s subsequent economic difficulties. The major developments of the 1920s were the merger of Daimler and Benz in 1926, after the founders of those firms had died (their bitter rivalry for the distinction of being the inventor of the gasoline automobile made any such union during their lifetimes unthinkable), and the entry of General Motors onto the German scene through the acquisition of the Adam Opel company in 1929. The Germans were ardent admirers of Henry Ford and his methods, which they termed Fordismus, but Ford never succeeded in becoming a power in the German automotive world. During the 1930s the Nazi regime sought to emulate Ford by undertaking mass production of a low-priced car, the Volkswagen, but the onset of war interrupted this project._
Interesting concept. I liked this. Well done guys.
Trop beau le aide du soldat en disent "stop" incroyable
Nice Truck, 1/4 Ton, 4X4 - G503 (Willys MB or Ford GPW).
Très bon jeu d’acteurs surtout l’américain !
Merci pour ce compliment :-p
There is one UA-cam video one here with a actual American Veteran explaining after he was hit in the shoulder by a German sniper it felt like a ball bat hit him ,, long story short a German medic found him and patched him up and he said that's all he remembered because apparently so much blood loss and trama , but he ended up at a aid station and he wished he would've gotten the medics name so he could thank him for saving his life all these decades later.
Bien joué les gars ! Surtout au niveau de la musique, j'ai cru reconnaître celle d'un "Village Français".
Merci Jonas! Oui c'est ça :)
i like the story. so sad we have wars.
Bastard Hitler
@@elviras4378 He's dead. But yeah, stupid wars
I Loved It
it was amazing...
Alors la je dit bravo ! Touchant et on voit que même a la guerre n'importe quelle camp est humain, bien joué !
Xabak
Great video!
Intéressant
...the humane side of WW2... 👍😇
Muy bueno , Subtitulo Español
SS-Untersturmfűhrer (Subteniente) 🇩🇪 y SS-Rottenfűher , le perdonaron la vida al Paramedico 🇺🇸 EE. UU. Que curo la heria de su adversario.👍.
The average Soldier would have driven straight through it going like hell thinking ambush the entire time. The other average Soldier might have wheeled around it at the fastest his jeep would take him through or away from this obstacle. Only a numbnut would have stopped as this one did. Glad he did stop. It made for a good movie.
You're right ... but it was just a small amateur film with limited resources :-)
Being a medical person during the Gulf War, I think it is safe to say that the medic driving did not necessarily have the experience to know the danger of a fallen tree. A front-line medic, sure. But we don't know that. He could have been just someone picked to deliver some meds (like I got picked a couple of times).
I would agree with you for sure. I was never in combat. Just taught that pop up road blocks had to be dealt with in certain ways. Engineers like us put them there for reasons. So did the other side's Engineers. One thing for sure. the Medic was doing his job. Perhaps he should have had some shotgun type escort . Still , this was a movie. No disrespect at all to the fine folks in the medical departments. Peace.
but also a true SS will never kill an unarmed medic
Soldaten...wie andere auch?
War richtig gut vielleicht ein bisschen verwackelt aber sehr gut gemacht macht weiter so
Liked it
Das war ein guter kleiner Film. Ich mochte es sehr.
I am sure there were acts of kindness and mercy during WW2 because the war covered such a vast area and so many millions of people. Not likely among the SS Troops but the average German soldier more likely.
The average Wehrmacht soldier was a gentleman.
Why did he stop?! That’s why there was poles on the American jeep those poles are so the driver is safe when they hit something!!!!!!
That pole isn't going to help him get over a tree.
That was for traps where a wire was used not a log boomer
Nice one,well done.
Quite good!!!
Eine Sprengfalle an dem Baumstamm wäre eine gute Idee gewesen, ein guter Überraschungsmoment...
natürlich nur in einer anderen Szene wenn man ihn nicht gebraucht hätte oder bei einem anderen Trupp der Amis...
Attempting to kill the medic after he help their buddy. That's really low.
Well , the SS-sergeant try to kill medic because he will think the medic gonna leak their position , but luckily an SS soldier prevent that
I was stationed in Germany for 2 years, I spent a lot of time in the countryside. There were a lot of forested dirt roads it was easy to get lost.
Nice mini film story. The American did not sound like he was from Dallas Texas or Cincinnati Ohio. Not even from Tupelo Mississippi. Possibly anywhere in Europe though.
Super vidéo 😁
Vid so cool I love it so cool🤘🤘🤘🤘🖒🖒🖒🖒👍👍
Thanks!!!
Nordgruppe Association I love your vids keep it up
I made videos to they ww2 to
The German soldier was not seriously hurt ... :))
This is a great short film because it's true
An sich ist der Film gut nur ist es unrealistisch dass der Jepp nicht dreckig ist
nice jeep
This is a good short movie
Ich finde die Idee, also die Handlung, sehr gut! Die Umsetzung ist auch gelungen. Nur Details fehlen mir ein bisschen. Zum Beispiel die Uniformen können dreckiger/benutzter aussehen.
macht weiter so Videos 👍🏻👍🏻
I don't care what side a Medic is on you should never shoot a Medic unless he is a treat.
Good movie😁😁😁😁
There is always a guy to point an . to the i.... Forget them. Just take the correct critisize to help you to improve.
Well done guys.
A short movie about what the medics have done from every side. I suggest you, documents of Feltown (UA-cam), based on real pictures, real stories, and show how enemies medics have been able to save lives together... Wathever was the colour of his uniform.
It has been the case of my grandfather, in the battle of Colmar (winter 44). He dilingented his service as surgeon as well for french, but also germans (even waffen ss!!!).
There are warriors... Which are hoolywood well presented.
There are the "little hands", medics, food and ammo suppliers, and so many who are now totally forgottent despite their huge efforts in WWI and WWII.
The medic is wearing the patch of my late father's outfit the 95th infantry. I still have the wool shirt he was wearing when he was shot and wounded in fraulatern germany during blistering house to house fighting the bullet went between the 2 bones of his forearm and only bled a little but really messed up nerves going into the carpel tunnel
You have a real historical and sentimental piece! keep it there carefully!
By such videos, we try to preserve the memory of these brave soldiers ;-)
Ur father is a Hero
My brother- in - law, Ed Bradley was in the 95 th division. They were known as " the Iron men of Metz".
@@stevezarbock8733 you’re right, my father was in B Company he came ashore on Omaha Beach 100 days after D Day invasion, drove in the Red Ball Express for 30 days then rejoined his outfit and entered combat in the French Lorraine Sector then into Germany thru Saarlaturn and into the town of Fraulaturn where he was shot and wounded Dec 9 1944 and was medivacked out a few days before the Battle Of The Bulge came down around his outfit
Cool
The way the 'American' medic said "oh shit" didn't really sound right. I suppose that when a English speaking actor trys to speak in German, most German people will notice that it doesn't sound very realistic..! I hope you don't take my comment too seriously, but the rest is good and an interesting video.
My english accent was ever bad ! :-)
Kevin Sigard I hope that you don't take offence at my comment, it was light hearted..! A very interesting short film. 😀
not at all ... it makes me laugh because my English teachers have always said that my accent was horrible ... it just confirms :-D:-D:-D
nice
A música é linda demais !!!
RTL will seine Schauspieler zurück
the famous German pistols always gives me chills when i see them, God why did you create people, good movies though
Gut gemacht aber die Uniformen schauen zu neu aus.
Azerygb
Gut gemacht
Good video.
Why tf is their so many dislikes?
Unknown Stahlhelm I was wondering the same thing
How,on earth,could the german captor drive an american jeep easily on reverse?
Good question.... xD
@@nordgruppeassociation6130 Thanks for the reply.
Dear M/s.Northgruppe,25 years ago I read that one German tank would hermetically seal itself, get electric power from another German tank,on the bank,cross the river on it's track,and not swim. Then the tanks would reverse their roles. Could this be true?
How did you get that jeep
It's simple, the jeep belongs to one of the German actors of this film ;-)
I was going to work(I come from Scotland)and on a few occasions past a fully restored willys jeep just parked in a drive. Also there is a guy with a kubelwagen and PAK 37.
Kevin Sigard is it the one that is driving it?
those 2 Germans are so nice, they get the medic to treat their wounded friend and let him away :D
I think the Germans would have simply shot the medic if they weren’t gonna interrogate him, in most cases.
👍👍👍👍👍👍
A German solider ready to shoot a captured enemy solider that did nothing but obey their commands. If he did shoot him like that i would think and personally believe he would be in a lot of trouble from German military police or turned in by witnesses .
War takes all including emotions but gives nothing ,,,,there must be peace everywhere ,,,,,,,,,,jai shri krishna 🙏🙏🙏
Jatinder Manhas fuck shri kreshna
@@akbarimahroza6397 thank-you very much brother ,,,,go ahead and fuck everyone that comes in your way ,that's for what you are here on earth......thanks again.
To
Bei der SS gab es kein "Herr" da hieß es nur" Untersturmführer Wittmann"
;-)
Nahkampftag
So schauts aus...
Nahkampftag I
ARSCHLOCH PASST BESSER.!!!
Ja, genau!
“Herr Oberst” gab es sicher
to jest prawdziwy bohater takich lubię
Nice piece.
Diesen Jeep baue ich gerade in 1:8
ドイツ兵の敵兵を使ってでも仲間を治療しようとすると仲間思いの優しさ…
東條英機閣下
Well done m8
A lot of SS only worn the uniforms but still had a human heart.
How do you say WELL DONE in German?