@@IS-vy2yh If they had gone with the Americans they may have had a chance but then they could never return home because they'd either be killed or sent to the Gulags
@@angelhare8374 I've read interwiev of a crew member about their trip to St.Petersburg to the movie premiere, and the man said that there were 50 of them and they liked the movie, despite inaccuracies. He said that they packed all the emergencies that happened on the submarine during it's whole service time, into a single mission, and there weren't confrontation between the captain and deputy. I think what happened is part of the men who serviced on the submarine liked the movie, other part didn't, hence some hear about angry letter from them, some that they liked it.
Personally my favorite scene is when they’re welding. Totally improper equipment, being bombarded by massive radiation and the guys just laying a bead because that’s what was needed
@@magosdominus4027 That's just a very common misconception.. Virtually all of the Waffen-SS units that dealt with anti-partisan activity, prisoner allocation, camp guard etc were the non-European units; see over 2,000,000 conscripts from Eastern-Europe (over 1M from the Red Army including defected Generals & officer's)/Africa/Middle East/Asia-India/Spain/Turkey/Italy and more, joined the Waffen-SS. The European/German men of the SS, were (for the most part) highly motivated, well trained, patriots who joined to be with the best, who joined to combat the spread of Bolshevism (which as we saw literally took over half of Europe, North Korea, Vietnam, Cuba, Rhodesia). They also weren't going around just slaughtering a bunch of old men, women, and children, they weren't going around murdering suspected Jews while the Soviets were advancing.. There were small-specialized units tasked with what I mentioned earlier, for the most part the Waffen-SS was really not much different than the Wehrmacht, just those men were often more driven ideologically, had more faith and passion for National Socialism. An SS unit in particular (that gives the rest a 'bad name') is the 13th Waffen Mountain Division of the SS "Handschar" (1st Croatian) which mainly operated in Yugoslavia against partisans; or you have the Muslim-Turks who were also tasked with similar operations. These men were not cut from European cloth, give them weapons and uniforms and they have power, power they don't know how to responsibly hold, so shit like executions or messing with villagers would happen (not from Germans and not if they were legitimately some innocent civilians). The point I'm trying to make is, the (European) Waffen-SS was essentially the 'special operations forces' of the Third Reich, reserved for highly motivated and committed men of Germany (volunteers only) who strived to to serve and protect their nation and all of Europe (and ultimately the entirety of Western Civilization) from what's happened the last 75 years...
@@CommanderLongJohn they where normal people too, they just had different beliefs, same with us, we all have normal lives, but everyone has different beliefs, and thats what causes war
@@CommanderLongJohn the last german unit to surrender in the fall of Berlin was the 33rd waffen grenadier division "Sturm Battallion Charlamagne". they were one of the foreign volunteer SS units (french) and the interesting thing is that they had no warcrimes on their record at all (that I can find, I am open to new data if anyone else knows of any warcrimes they commited). they fought to the end in the battle of berlin, less than 200 managed to surrender and no more than 30 surviving the reprisals from russian and french forces to return home years after the war ended.
@@AnikaJarlsdottr Indeed, some of the last men defending Berlin from destruction and Communism were French, how's that for irony 👀? Just like the majority of their German/European counterparts, virtually no war crimes were committed by them as well.
Hotel-class was a new model of submarine, but it was made with exactly the same hull as a previous type of diesel powered missile submarine that was already in service, elongated slightly to fit a nuclear drive section that was exactly the same as another submarine that was already in service. So taking k-19 straight down to max test depth straight out of the box was a reasonably safe gamble, every part of her was already a proven in-service design.
I love that they portray the external scenes without sound. In reality, these boats sounded like garbage trucks falling off cliffs. We could hear them from almost 100 miles away if they were making any speed, and literally could detect crew flushing toilets at standard operational ranges.
This movie has a very close plot to WW2 submarine movie, Run Silent Run Deep. Clarke Gable and Burt Lancaster. Captain who knows boat and crew, replaced last minute by an older, senior captain. Friction results but, his harsh methods and constant drilling pays dividends
I mean it's smart to test your ship but going to crush depth was an unnecessary risk but hey he's on the ship to so I guess the man's got some balls to
It ruptured due to shitty welding in coolant pipes. These kinds of test, albeit less dramatic than a movie portrays, are common and part of completing a subs normal sea trials. So they will go to the lowest operation dept, do emergency ascent and descent, and simulate battle damage etc as part of the subs certification.
This is by far not the best scene, not even close to it . The best scene in this movie is where the captain asks the different compartments to dive , and they reply they are ready to sacrifice their lives fir the mother land.
I am of the personal opinion that this movie has so many amazing ong moments it is nearly impossible to call one of them the best. Like the very end in the graveyard for example.
@@romanramon4147 It may not be accurate but its nice to the ear to listen ... like ASMR ...something about the way he puts the intonations and the texture of the voice...
This movie is how I got to know of crush depth. That is why when the titan incident happened and people asked if there were any survivors I laughed my ass off.
I guess if the crew are shown that they can perform at that level straight out of the box, then normal day-to-day operations will seem well within their comfort zone after doing thar?
Looks like the captain was on a personal mission to sink his new boat............Im sure the real captain was more aware and took a more measured approach............Slamming through the ice while moving forward would most likely shear the conning sail clean off...............
This was reckless af but you can't fault his logic. The crew was lacking confidence and drills can only do so much because theres always that sense that there is no real danger. So he had to put them in a situation where there was real risk and in the end they felt that sense of accomplishment when they successfully completed their objective. Had the reactor accident not happened later the crew probably would have gotten along better than it had up to that point.
I wish we could get a USS Thresher film, although it would have an even sadder ending than this film, although it's the reason for the SAFE SUB program which did a lot for Submarine standards and safety in the US.
No, the best scene is each compartment sounding off as "Manned and Ready," "We are with you, Captain," and "Ready to Serve the Soviet Union." Now don't get me wrong, I'm no Communist. I'm a dyed in the wool Lithuanian brought up in a rabidly anti-communist household, but I know and appreciate heroes when I see them. Though they are actors, these men were real people... true heroes. They represented the spirit of self-sacrifice in servitude to one's nation. They understood that their lives are nothing and their country is everything. They were, in that moment, only Russians. Hail to them, and may the memory of their ultimate sacrifice never be forgotten. That goes for the Germans, Italians and Japanese (among others) over two decades before this Cold War U-Boat misadventure, and all fighters everywhere. They were warriors who either died fighting or returned home with a piece of themselves missing... mentally or physically. Kamikazes (human aeroplane bombs) and Sakura Pilots (human glider bombs). Kaiten Pilots (human sea bombs) and Banzai Chargers, (brave cannon fodder)... Japanese women and children being trained to fight the Allies with bamboo poles. 12 year old German kids holding Karabiners and Panzerfausts taller than they were. The French and Dutch Resistance, the enormous casualties of the Red Army... you name it. All warriors on all sides deserve our undying respect. *NO MORE BROTHER WARS!*
Comrade NB I was. Because I have compassion and empathy even for my political enemies. If Fascism is Cancer then Communism is Rabies. This must be understood in context. When Lithuania was part of the Eastern Bloc of the USSR (CCCP) we suffered tremendously. We have nothing but contempt for the past. In fact, the only decent period we had until independence in 1991 was when the Nazis "liberated" us. All over the Baltic Fatherland there were banners in German and Lithuanian/Latvian/Estonian saying "Lithuania Stands with the Führer!" and "Hail Our Liberators and the Führer Adolf Hitler!" and the Wehrmacht convoys entering our cities were greeted with veritable MOUNTAINS of fresh wildflowers. These men, these Nazis, as bad as they were, were still heroes in the eyes of most Balts because ANYTHING was better than Communism and if we're going to be occupied, we'd rather it be by the Wehrmacht than by the Red Army. After all, anyone flushing out the Communist rats - the folks who perpetrated this filthy injustice on our homeland - were seen as heroes. Unlike nations such as Belarus, Ukraine, and Kyrgyzstan, the Baltic States (Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia) have no romanticized memories of the "good old days" of the Soviet Union, because they were the bad old days for us. Our Lenin Statues are gone, our Stalinist architecture was demolished, and the painful history of our bondage to Communist Dictatorship was interred to the history books. Each hammer and sickle was obliterated like the Swastikas at the end of WWII during German Denazification. Why do these other, shittier countries pine for the days of the USSR again? Because they couldn't make capitalism work in their countries. They failed, we flourished. Balts and Slavs are just that different. I don't wish these counties any ill will, but it's immediately apparent that living in the Baltic States is better than like living in the Balkans or the rest of the Eastern Bloc. Lithuania has something like 10% unemployment. Compare that to the unemployment in, say, Moldova. These folks are nostalgic for BREAD LINES because the crony capitalism that exists there has bankrupted the country and now there isn't any bread line because there's no bread in town because many towns are nearly fully abandoned and have no proper shop anymore, never mind a bakery. Now, if they're lucky, a truck filled with goods and basic sundries stops in town once or twice a week and they sell things out the back of the truck. This is what your ideology has done to nations. Buoyed them up from nothing only for all the ballast to be blown one day when the paper house collapses. Then poof... ghost town. So call me crazy but communism ain’t my cup-o-tea.
@Comrade NB no matter how much you try to skirt the issue, you’re a communist. Your entire ideology is an abject failure. The real ghost towns are in the rest of the Eastern Bloc. Lithuania is a Baltic paradise. Belarus is a shitty country. This is evident on its face. Explain. “Just look at the UK and the US.” What, two of the greatest nations in the world? Okay, I’m looking. I see action. I see progress. I see the future. The countries that the USSR “rebuilt” are still using donkey carts, save for a few who were steadfast enough and careful enough to rebuild in their own image. Are there Soviet building still around? Yes. Should we dynamite the country and rebuild from absolute scratch? No one is above just putting “under new management” on an old Soviet building in Lithuania. Now they’re almost all replaced and rebuilt. The surrounding nations are still using decrepit Soviet train stations and whatnot and the difference is prosperity is evident. The Baltic States are better countries to live in than pretty much anywhere in Eastern Europe.
In the film, there is a mutiny. In real life there wasn't, but the captain was worried about one and had all but a few of the small arms thrown overboard.
Personally, I think one of the best scenes in the movie is right after this. When Ford's character tells the other captain "you will be in my report for leaving your post." The following brief exchange between the two is fantastic.
IIRC the real reason was bad welding habits - the sparks from welding were falling on the cooling pipes, causing invisible damage that caused the leak.
If the boat's maximum operational depth is 300 meters, then 20 year old German U-Boats have them beat. U-175 was on an uncontrolled dive to 315-320 meters before surfacing.
That’s not how it works. A normal category airplane for example is certified to a maximum of 3.8Gs. It is designed for 5.7Gs and the manufacturer usually puts in a bit beyond that. But this is for a brand new aircraft. It is expected that it will lose strength as it ages due to fatigue and damage and repairs.
@@calvinnickel9995 Bridgr glass is removable, and is removed for under ice operations or cold water ops. Reason why Russian submarines even have a flying sail bridge is becouse they operate in Arctic often. The watchstanders on bridge , during surface operations dont have to be exposed to dangerous foul weather.
This was about a LOCA on a Soviet submarine. _K-19_ was a Hotel-class ballistic missile submarine. Compared to a Delta-III or a modern Borei-class, the Hotels were not very capable boats. Unlike the American George Washington-class SSBNs, early Hotels had to surface before they could launch. Their missiles were also liquid-fueled, whereas the American Polaris A1 was two-stage solid-propellant; Polaris also saw service with the Royal Navy. While it is true that the Soviets had the first operational ballistic missile submarines in the form of three modified Zulus (and about 24 purpose-built Golfs), it was the United States that fielded the first true ballistic missile submarine: USS _George Washington_ (SSBN-598). The Hotels weren't much more capable than their diesel counterparts, but they had one real improvement over the Golfs. While the Golfs were diesels, the Hotels were nukes, i.e. nuclear-powered. The best Marine movie be _Full Metal Jacket_ (1987).
Harrison fords character must of been an intimidating individual in real life. Ready to die for the motherland with no hesitation... likeeee "lets try it" we need to see if we can it lol
@@WednesdayAddamsMW do you think he was like a balsy guy like he was in the movie. Constantly pushing the submarine to its limits like it was in the movie? Or was that fir drama affect
This was a movie that captured true heroism. To the unsung heroes whose names we may never know.
Some "heroes" cause the problems and another heroes have to solve it.
@@noble_lemon Indeed, they died for nothing just testing another machine made for killing humans... Ironic.
@@IS-vy2yh If they had gone with the Americans they may have had a chance but then they could never return home because they'd either be killed or sent to the Gulags
@@zerogbot23 there were no gulags in USSR after Stalin died.
@@igvc1876 Interesting, however gulag or not they most definitely would have been shot or sent to prison
This is an extremely underrated history movie
I agree. CRIMINALLY so!
No it isn't. It's mostly BS. Go out and read actual accounts of these events .
@@Yarr001 I heard they wrote a letter to the producers asking them not to release it as they considered the movie an insult
That's what I heard
Because the director is Kathryn Bigelow. No wonder the film is so good.
@@angelhare8374 I've read interwiev of a crew member about their trip to St.Petersburg to the movie premiere, and the man said that there were 50 of them and they liked the movie, despite inaccuracies. He said that they packed all the emergencies that happened on the submarine during it's whole service time, into a single mission, and there weren't confrontation between the captain and deputy.
I think what happened is part of the men who serviced on the submarine liked the movie, other part didn't, hence some hear about angry letter from them, some that they liked it.
My grandfather served 4 years on the USS Sculpin (SSN-590) in the late 60's and he said he went through drills like this.
Who knew Master Qui-Gon and Han Solo served together?
Indiana Jones and Oskar Schindler as Seabies!
Years ago you served with my father in the war against Capitalist Imperialism. Help us Qui-Gon Jinn, you’re my only hope. - Ben Solo
Just finished the movie, and it was incredible. Truly heroic.
Harrison Ford and Liam Neeson in a great film? Count me in!
not quite as good as das boot
Han Solo And Qui-Gon Jinn Team Up
/Indiana Jones and Bryan Mills. 😛
Dang! I would have put my original comment down here if I knew.. 🤦🏽♂️🤣🤣🤣
Dude how fkin scary would it be to hear that big ship moan and groan then those places of steel just smashing in. Gawd damn
Personally my favorite scene is when they’re welding. Totally improper equipment, being bombarded by massive radiation and the guys just laying a bead because that’s what was needed
Putting Indiana Jones and Oskar Schindler in a Russian sub is basically this movie's plot
Plus putting Han Solo and Master Qui-Gon in Soviet's chain of command
@@roelmd8907 Dudes, it's Rick Deckard and Bryan Mills! 🤣
1:53... At 300 meters (984 feet) just happens to be K-19s maximum operational depth. the outside water pressure is around 440 PSI.
Been deeper then that
@@scottterry1659 This sub is from the 60's todays subs go below 500m
This boat means life, Comrade Schindler!
Respect to all who served in the forces no matter what flag it was for! We all bleed red.
Bet you wouldn't say the same thing about Wehrmacht and Waffen-SS veterans...
@@magosdominus4027 That's just a very common misconception.. Virtually all of the Waffen-SS units that dealt with anti-partisan activity, prisoner allocation, camp guard etc were the non-European units; see over 2,000,000 conscripts from Eastern-Europe (over 1M from the Red Army including defected Generals & officer's)/Africa/Middle East/Asia-India/Spain/Turkey/Italy and more, joined the Waffen-SS. The European/German men of the SS, were (for the most part) highly motivated, well trained, patriots who joined to be with the best, who joined to combat the spread of Bolshevism (which as we saw literally took over half of Europe, North Korea, Vietnam, Cuba, Rhodesia). They also weren't going around just slaughtering a bunch of old men, women, and children, they weren't going around murdering suspected Jews while the Soviets were advancing.. There were small-specialized units tasked with what I mentioned earlier, for the most part the Waffen-SS was really not much different than the Wehrmacht, just those men were often more driven ideologically, had more faith and passion for National Socialism. An SS unit in particular (that gives the rest a 'bad name') is the 13th Waffen Mountain Division of the SS "Handschar" (1st Croatian) which mainly operated in Yugoslavia against partisans; or you have the Muslim-Turks who were also tasked with similar operations. These men were not cut from European cloth, give them weapons and uniforms and they have power, power they don't know how to responsibly hold, so shit like executions or messing with villagers would happen (not from Germans and not if they were legitimately some innocent civilians). The point I'm trying to make is, the (European) Waffen-SS was essentially the 'special operations forces' of the Third Reich, reserved for highly motivated and committed men of Germany (volunteers only) who strived to to serve and protect their nation and all of Europe (and ultimately the entirety of Western Civilization) from what's happened the last 75 years...
@@CommanderLongJohn they where normal people too, they just had different beliefs, same with us, we all have normal lives, but everyone has different beliefs, and thats what causes war
@@CommanderLongJohn the last german unit to surrender in the fall of Berlin was the 33rd waffen grenadier division "Sturm Battallion Charlamagne". they were one of the foreign volunteer SS units (french) and the interesting thing is that they had no warcrimes on their record at all (that I can find, I am open to new data if anyone else knows of any warcrimes they commited). they fought to the end in the battle of berlin, less than 200 managed to surrender and no more than 30 surviving the reprisals from russian and french forces to return home years after the war ended.
@@AnikaJarlsdottr Indeed, some of the last men defending Berlin from destruction and Communism were French, how's that for irony 👀? Just like the majority of their German/European counterparts, virtually no war crimes were committed by them as well.
- I love you.
- I know.
- 300 meters is close to the crush depth.
- I know.
Dang!! Missed this one as well.. See my original comment up top. 🤦🏽♂️🤣🤣🤣
Its You Rachel. Youre the Blade Runner
Hotel-class was a new model of submarine, but it was made with exactly the same hull as a previous type of diesel powered missile submarine that was already in service, elongated slightly to fit a nuclear drive section that was exactly the same as another submarine that was already in service.
So taking k-19 straight down to max test depth straight out of the box was a reasonably safe gamble, every part of her was already a proven in-service design.
I love that they portray the external scenes without sound.
In reality, these boats sounded like garbage trucks falling off cliffs.
We could hear them from almost 100 miles away if they were making any speed, and literally could detect crew flushing toilets at standard operational ranges.
Men with fish know their shit!
I've watched the movie. Actually, there's external sound (so this video... Edited?)
I can't stop laughing at "these boats sounded like garbage trucks falling off cliffs"
@Comrade NB Not underwater, Comrade.....
@Comrade NB Please specify what you're asserting. It's getting a bit muddy.......
This movie has a very close plot to WW2 submarine movie, Run Silent Run Deep. Clarke Gable and Burt Lancaster. Captain who knows boat and crew, replaced last minute by an older, senior captain. Friction results but, his harsh methods and constant drilling pays dividends
Turut berdukacita sedalam dalamnya atas tenggelam nya KRI Nanggala 402. Semoga para awak kapal Husnul khatimah. Aamiin
I mean it's smart to test your ship but going to crush depth was an unnecessary risk but hey he's on the ship to so I guess the man's got some balls to
"it's a family tradition" was one of the most profound quotes. Jamey and I saw this.
This and Das Boot are great submarine movies
Dude literally just pulled the sub through his ass with this scene. No wonder the reactor ruptured
It ruptured due to shitty welding in coolant pipes. These kinds of test, albeit less dramatic than a movie portrays, are common and part of completing a subs normal sea trials. So they will go to the lowest operation dept, do emergency ascent and descent, and simulate battle damage etc as part of the subs certification.
Yep. Similar shitty welds led to the loss of USS Thresher in 1960.
The best scene is the cementary scene at the end.
The accents 🤣 Liam's just going full Ballymena hey boy.
He’s from Armagh
Leia: *I love you!*
Han: 1:10
The difference is that he says it to Qui-Gon
@@ralphp224 But there is ice after all, in both cases.
I sense a strong disturbance in the Force!
This is by far not the best scene, not even close to it . The best scene in this movie is where the captain asks the different compartments to dive , and they reply they are ready to sacrifice their lives fir the mother land.
I am of the personal opinion that this movie has so many amazing ong moments it is nearly impossible to call one of them the best. Like the very end in the graveyard for example.
I wouldn't do squat for the Mother land
Love Harrison's Russian accent.
It’s horrible
@@romanramon4147
It may not be accurate but its nice to the ear to listen ... like ASMR ...something about the way he puts the intonations and the texture of the voice...
I just trust anything anybody says on the internet annonymously as long as it's said with conviction and has an acceptable amount of likes
Спасибо американцам,и всему актерскому составу за фильм.
СССР был моей Родиной,которой я горжусь по сей день.
This movie is how I got to know of crush depth. That is why when the titan incident happened and people asked if there were any survivors I laughed my ass off.
It’s a typical submarine movie trope. It started with Das Boot and continued with Hunt for Red October, Crimson Tide, U-571, etc.
@@calvinnickel9995 das boot? We dive at dawn and above us the waves had this
Could the outer hull of a submarine really buckle like that without failing completely?
this would not happen at the first place, the outer hull holds no pressure
I guess if the crew are shown that they can perform at that level straight out of the box, then normal day-to-day operations will seem well within their comfort zone after doing thar?
Those were the days we serve😊
Looks like the captain was on a personal mission to sink his new boat............Im sure the real captain was more aware and took a more measured approach............Slamming through the ice while moving forward would most likely shear the conning sail clean off...............
This was reckless af but you can't fault his logic. The crew was lacking confidence and drills can only do so much because theres always that sense that there is no real danger. So he had to put them in a situation where there was real risk and in the end they felt that sense of accomplishment when they successfully completed their objective. Had the reactor accident not happened later the crew probably would have gotten along better than it had up to that point.
This film is the best of the best in the world.today or in the future!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Pray for Nanggala 402 submarine ⚓🇮🇩 🙏
Lovely Film
I wish we could get a USS Thresher film, although it would have an even sadder ending than this film, although it's the reason for the SAFE SUB program which did a lot for Submarine standards and safety in the US.
Han solo got to meet qui gon gin, thats nice
saya ke sini karna KRI Nanggala tengelam di laut Bali....
ada yg satu server.!
No, the best scene is each compartment sounding off as "Manned and Ready," "We are with you, Captain," and "Ready to Serve the Soviet Union." Now don't get me wrong, I'm no Communist. I'm a dyed in the wool Lithuanian brought up in a rabidly anti-communist household, but I know and appreciate heroes when I see them.
Though they are actors, these men were real people... true heroes. They represented the spirit of self-sacrifice in servitude to one's nation. They understood that their lives are nothing and their country is everything. They were, in that moment, only Russians. Hail to them, and may the memory of their ultimate sacrifice never be forgotten.
That goes for the Germans, Italians and Japanese (among others) over two decades before this Cold War U-Boat misadventure, and all fighters everywhere. They were warriors who either died fighting or returned home with a piece of themselves missing... mentally or physically.
Kamikazes (human aeroplane bombs) and Sakura Pilots (human glider bombs). Kaiten Pilots (human sea bombs) and Banzai Chargers, (brave cannon fodder)... Japanese women and children being trained to fight the Allies with bamboo poles. 12 year old German kids holding Karabiners and Panzerfausts taller than they were. The French and Dutch Resistance, the enormous casualties of the Red Army... you name it. All warriors on all sides deserve our undying respect.
*NO MORE BROTHER WARS!*
Comrade NB I was. Because I have compassion and empathy even for my political enemies. If Fascism is Cancer then Communism is Rabies. This must be understood in context. When Lithuania was part of the Eastern Bloc of the USSR (CCCP) we suffered tremendously. We have nothing but contempt for the past. In fact, the only decent period we had until independence in 1991 was when the Nazis "liberated" us.
All over the Baltic Fatherland there were banners in German and Lithuanian/Latvian/Estonian saying "Lithuania Stands with the Führer!" and "Hail Our Liberators and the Führer Adolf Hitler!" and the Wehrmacht convoys entering our cities were greeted with veritable MOUNTAINS of fresh wildflowers.
These men, these Nazis, as bad as they were, were still heroes in the eyes of most Balts because ANYTHING was better than Communism and if we're going to be occupied, we'd rather it be by the Wehrmacht than by the Red Army. After all, anyone flushing out the Communist rats - the folks who perpetrated this filthy injustice on our homeland - were seen as heroes.
Unlike nations such as Belarus, Ukraine, and Kyrgyzstan, the Baltic States (Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia) have no romanticized memories of the "good old days" of the Soviet Union, because they were the bad old days for us. Our Lenin Statues are gone, our Stalinist architecture was demolished, and the painful history of our bondage to Communist Dictatorship was interred to the history books. Each hammer and sickle was obliterated like the Swastikas at the end of WWII during German Denazification.
Why do these other, shittier countries pine for the days of the USSR again? Because they couldn't make capitalism work in their countries. They failed, we flourished. Balts and Slavs are just that different. I don't wish these counties any ill will, but it's immediately apparent that living in the Baltic States is better than like living in the Balkans or the rest of the Eastern Bloc. Lithuania has something like 10% unemployment. Compare that to the unemployment in, say, Moldova.
These folks are nostalgic for BREAD LINES because the crony capitalism that exists there has bankrupted the country and now there isn't any bread line because there's no bread in town because many towns are nearly fully abandoned and have no proper shop anymore, never mind a bakery. Now, if they're lucky, a truck filled with goods and basic sundries stops in town once or twice a week and they sell things out the back of the truck.
This is what your ideology has done to nations. Buoyed them up from nothing only for all the ballast to be blown one day when the paper house collapses. Then poof... ghost town.
So call me crazy but communism ain’t my cup-o-tea.
@Comrade NB no matter how much you try to skirt the issue, you’re a communist. Your entire ideology is an abject failure. The real ghost towns are in the rest of the Eastern Bloc. Lithuania is a Baltic paradise. Belarus is a shitty country. This is evident on its face. Explain.
“Just look at the UK and the US.” What, two of the greatest nations in the world? Okay, I’m looking. I see action. I see progress. I see the future. The countries that the USSR “rebuilt” are still using donkey carts, save for a few who were steadfast enough and careful enough to rebuild in their own image. Are there Soviet building still around? Yes. Should we dynamite the country and rebuild from absolute scratch? No one is above just putting “under new management” on an old Soviet building in Lithuania. Now they’re almost all replaced and rebuilt. The surrounding nations are still using decrepit Soviet train stations and whatnot and the difference is prosperity is evident. The Baltic States are better countries to live in than pretty much anywhere in Eastern Europe.
"Compartment 9 serving the Soviet Union comrade Captain"
crazy captain, i'm surprised there was no mutiny
You want a mutiny? Look up Valery Sablin.
In the film, there is a mutiny. In real life there wasn't, but the captain was worried about one and had all but a few of the small arms thrown overboard.
The best scene was when saarsgard saves everyone
He’s such a good actor
Great movies
Personally, I think one of the best scenes in the movie is right after this. When Ford's character tells the other captain "you will be in my report for leaving your post."
The following brief exchange between the two is fantastic.
Captain has had too much vodka
Compartment one manned and ready.
U N D E R A T E D
If that really happened this captain was the culprit to damage the nuclear reactor shokking the K19 againt the ice .
IIRC the real reason was bad welding habits - the sparks from welding were falling on the cooling pipes, causing invisible damage that caused the leak.
Bad welding abounded during this era of submarine construction. USS Thresher was lost due to bad welds on seawater pipes in 1960.
300 meters? And I thought 200 was scary enough.
Han Solo and Qui-Gon Jinn in a submarine from The Empire.
The guy behind looks like tarantino!!!
I don’t think the writers really understand how a submarine works.
le plus géant des aventures sur ce film k19 qui raconte le kidnapping de la militaire soviétique vers les horizons américain remarquable histoire
If the boat's maximum operational depth is 300 meters, then 20 year old German U-Boats have them beat. U-175 was on an uncontrolled dive to 315-320 meters before surfacing.
Soviet shit. This and many over subs were hastily & poorly build. Like Soviet/ Russian junk in Ukraine today.
Maximum operational depth means safe operating environment, Subs can go 400-500m even
That’s not how it works.
A normal category airplane for example is certified to a maximum of 3.8Gs. It is designed for 5.7Gs and the manufacturer usually puts in a bit beyond that.
But this is for a brand new aircraft. It is expected that it will lose strength as it ages due to fatigue and damage and repairs.
Why would the sail deform? THe sail is not part of pressure vessel and is normally flooded when submerged.
For dramatic effect.
Yeah… the bridge glass would shatter first.
@@calvinnickel9995 Bridgr glass is removable, and is removed for under ice operations or cold water ops. Reason why Russian submarines even have a flying sail bridge is becouse they operate in Arctic often. The watchstanders on bridge , during surface operations dont have to be exposed to dangerous foul weather.
This movie gets the real K-19 (Hiroshima) incident so wrong that there’s only to occasionally watch it when when I need white noise.
You will be TAKEN (to 250 meters)
The new gta 5 experience
This seems like necessary quality training.
The best american film about our marines
This was about a LOCA on a Soviet submarine. _K-19_ was a Hotel-class ballistic missile submarine.
Compared to a Delta-III or a modern Borei-class, the Hotels were not very capable boats. Unlike the American George Washington-class SSBNs, early Hotels had to surface before they could launch. Their missiles were also liquid-fueled, whereas the American Polaris A1 was two-stage solid-propellant; Polaris also saw service with the Royal Navy.
While it is true that the Soviets had the first operational ballistic missile submarines in the form of three modified Zulus (and about 24 purpose-built Golfs), it was the United States that fielded the first true ballistic missile submarine: USS _George Washington_ (SSBN-598).
The Hotels weren't much more capable than their diesel counterparts, but they had one real improvement over the Golfs. While the Golfs were diesels, the Hotels were nukes, i.e. nuclear-powered.
The best Marine movie be _Full Metal Jacket_ (1987).
Americans always move the goalposts so they win.. lol.
3 times the deputy captain try to save the ship but the captain ignore him such a shame because 1 man decision blow entire flet
I wanna see the scene, Where some of the sailors are doing the Russian dance in the sub.
Harrison fords character must of been an intimidating individual in real life. Ready to die for the motherland with no hesitation... likeeee "lets try it" we need to see if we can it lol
Vostrikov (Harrison Ford) is a fictional version of Nikolay Zateyev, the boat's real commanding officer during the incident depicted in the film.
@@WednesdayAddamsMW do you think he was like a balsy guy like he was in the movie. Constantly pushing the submarine to its limits like it was in the movie? Or was that fir drama affect
@@mikeramahi9885 Zateyev probably _was_ as ballsy as depicted.
Ottimo film bravi attori !
Hopefully after Chernobyl and Death of Stalin directors will never bother having actors do accents.
Anyone else catches the Return of the Jedi reference? (Or was it Empire Strikes Back?)
It was ESB.
I have a bad feeling about this.
Hey his job was to test the boat
Rupture 's sealed captain
And where is the scene about the attack against the US agressors?
Movie name please
I likemovie
Хан Соло и Оскар Шиндлер спасли мир от ядерного пепла
Не это Квай Гонн Джин.
I can't understand anybody with their thick Russian accents.
What was the point of being so reckless?
I don't think this was the beat scene
K-19: The Widowmaker (2002)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
i got Free Gift Cards from
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ライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!この日のライブ配信は、かならりやばかったですね!1万人を超える人が見ていたもんね(笑)やっぱり人参最高!まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもの再編ありがとうです!この日のライブ配信は、かならりやばかったですね!1万人を超える人が見ていたもんね(笑)やっぱり人参最高!まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした!今後は気を付けないとね5). .
!💖🖤❤#今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!#この日のライブ配信は、#かならりやばかったですね!#1万人を超える人が見ていたも ん(#笑)#やっぱり人参最高!#まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした
#今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!
#この日のライブ配信は、
#かならりやばかったですね!
#1万人を超える人が見ていたもん( #笑)
#やっぱり人参最高!
#まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした #垃圾
En español
This is not the best scene imo
Indiana Jones and the League of Shadows
le plus géant des aventures sur ce film k19 qui raconte le kidnapping de la militaire soviétique vers les horizons américain remarquable histoire
f you
K-19: The Widowmaker (2002)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
i got Free Gift Cards from
WHATCH NOW 💜 bit.ly/3CTeXdC?gU3ocmL 💜
ライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!この日のライブ配信は、かならりやばかったですね!1万人を超える人が見ていたもんね(笑)やっぱり人参最高!まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもの再編ありがとうです!この日のライブ配信は、かならりやばかったですね!1万人を超える人が見ていたもんね(笑)やっぱり人参最高!まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした!今後は気を付けないとね5). .
!💖🖤❤#今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!#この日のライブ配信は、#かならりやばかったですね!#1万人を超える人が見ていたも ん(#笑)#やっぱり人参最高!#まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした
#今後は気をライブ配信の再編ありがとうです!
#この日のライブ配信は、
#かならりやばかったですね!
#1万人を超える人が見ていたもん( #笑)
#やっぱり人参最高!
#まさかのカメラ切り忘れでやら1かしたのもドキドキでした #垃圾
le plus géant des aventures sur ce film k19 qui raconte le kidnapping de la militaire soviétique vers les horizons américain remarquable histoire
le plus géant des aventures sur ce film k19 qui raconte le kidnapping de la militaire soviétique vers les horizons américain remarquable histoire
Eh bien, on est d'accord ! Mais est-ce qu'il est vraiment nécessaire de le dire autant de fois ? ( je rigole, mais .... )
le plus géant des aventures sur ce film k19 qui raconte le kidnapping de la militaire soviétique vers les horizons américain remarquable histoire