History Buffs: Gettysburg

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  • Опубліковано 30 тра 2024
  • Step into the grandeur of the American Civil War with the epic historical drama, "Gettysburg." With its meticulous attention to detail and a stellar ensemble cast, the film vividly brings to life the pivotal battle, offering a captivating experience that will enthrall both history enthusiasts and movie lovers.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 10 тис.

  • @kempodle4665
    @kempodle4665 5 років тому +7579

    *the civil war but every time Lincoln fires a general it speeds up*

    • @sonofjack6286
      @sonofjack6286 4 роки тому +326

      It would be at 5000 speed.

    • @VS-et4pn
      @VS-et4pn 4 роки тому +191

      I rarely laugh out loud, but this comment made me do it

    • @citizenfoffie7605
      @citizenfoffie7605 4 роки тому +154

      It would end in 1861

    • @otlayr3030
      @otlayr3030 4 роки тому +51

      It would be over in the blink of an eye.

    • @miffedmax6775
      @miffedmax6775 4 роки тому +75

      top 5 fastest wars in history

  • @hughjass5156
    @hughjass5156 3 роки тому +3955

    The fake beard budget for this movie must have been immense.

    • @plkrtn
      @plkrtn 3 роки тому +177

      And yet still not enough, looking at how fake they look.

    • @springyslinky2190
      @springyslinky2190 3 роки тому +428

      to be fair the facial hair from that time looked impossible to begin with, like I have no idea how those men ate without smearing food everywhere

    • @misanthropicservitorofmars2116
      @misanthropicservitorofmars2116 3 роки тому +146

      @@springyslinky2190 with class good sir!

    • @Zamolxes77
      @Zamolxes77 3 роки тому +174

      @@springyslinky2190 As a fellow bearded and moustache fellow, I concur !
      I believe the clean shaven look only gained prominence after ww1, when soldiers had to shave their facial hair in order for their gas masks to make proper seal with their faces.

    • @StealthySpace7
      @StealthySpace7 3 роки тому +39

      Longstreet’s never fails to get a chuckle out of me

  • @SKBottom
    @SKBottom 9 місяців тому +170

    I was a member of the band in this film. Saxton's Cornet Band.
    It was so unbelievably hot that summer that we filmed. Band members and reenactors were going down left and right.
    They had trailers and provisions for the actors, but nothing for us.
    Martin Sheen found out about it and absolutely ripped the director a new one.
    Before you knew it, we had tents, water, Gatorade, fresh fruit, everything we should have had all along.
    I was always a fan of his acting, but for the rest of my life, I knew I would also be a fan of Martin Sheen, the man.

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 4 місяці тому +5

      A good guy!

    • @siddmic
      @siddmic 5 днів тому +1

      He’s been known to do that. I can’t remember the movie, but he once threatened to quit because of how the gaffers were being treated.

  • @Shadowgunner785
    @Shadowgunner785 2 роки тому +455

    I'm not gonna lie, to hear that the entire cast were war reenactors who volunteered their time and even brought their uniforms, guns, and even cannons just to make this film a success, it literally brought tears to my eyes.

    • @peacemaker1985
      @peacemaker1985 Рік тому

      No it didn’t stfu

    • @peacemaker1985
      @peacemaker1985 Рік тому

      You’re the reason our generation sucks

    • @poppyonline4034
      @poppyonline4034 11 місяців тому +1

      I know. That was just amazing to hear.

    • @nbenefiel
      @nbenefiel 9 місяців тому +9

      We were in Gettysburg on the 3 and 4 of July. The place was full of reenactors , their tents, their gear and their shops. It was almost like being there in 1863.

    • @nbenefiel
      @nbenefiel 8 місяців тому +1

      @@TheDogGoesWoof69 Yeah, the freedom to own other human beings

  • @edmundcarter2610
    @edmundcarter2610 4 роки тому +4952

    Proud to say I was one of the re-enactors in the film. One important note that I am very surprised he didn’t mention here is that despite how well made the film was, it is almost bloodless. The only scene where blood is shown is when General Reynolds was killed, otherwise it doesn’t make an appearance. The lack of blood, the suffering, and complete dismemberment of bodies made this movie somewhat inaccurate in terms of practicality. Whereas the movie Glory was the opposite.

    • @wyldbill100
      @wyldbill100 3 роки тому +246

      THANK YOU for your dedication to this pivotal time in American History. I've been to Gettysburg on multiple occasions; as well as, other Am. Civil War battlefields. Perhaps I should keep quiet but you are indeed correct about battle carnage...and often what happened to human corpses at night AFTER such battles. Pretty grisly.

    • @thalivenom4972
      @thalivenom4972 3 роки тому +225

      but a gorefest wouldnt have had the dignity this does. no one thinks a cannonbal ripping men apart is a clean thing, and the music adds emotional weight too. this helps keep it more about the moral side, and less about the red mist.

    • @normdunbar2943
      @normdunbar2943 3 роки тому +143

      Is the story true of the re enactors taking a break after filming on Little Round top and being approached by an old soldier who appeared to be dressed in genuine civil war union uniform, had a sulphurous smell about him, and gave the re enactors two rounds of genuine 1863 era ammunition, then disappeared in front of them? I've heard the tale, but would love to know the REAL story.

    • @waltertaljaard1488
      @waltertaljaard1488 3 роки тому +8

      Ridley Scott would have known how to portray that.

    • @ConnorNotyerbidness
      @ConnorNotyerbidness 3 роки тому +229

      To be fair the lack of blood was probably due to rules in place by the national park
      Spilling fake blood over this preserved battlefield would be a big no no.

  • @markaltenhoff4049
    @markaltenhoff4049 4 роки тому +2691

    Lee: "You understand what I mean?"
    Soldier: "Yes Sir!"
    History Buffs: " Unfortunately, General Ewell didn't understand what Lee meant."

    • @fierce_history
      @fierce_history 4 роки тому +77

      I laughed WAY too hard at this.

    • @MASTEROFEVIL
      @MASTEROFEVIL 4 роки тому +3

      Ha

    • @listenchump4041
      @listenchump4041 4 роки тому +61

      Yup ^^, Lee was used to let Jackson fight his thing as he saw it, so his replacement Ewell wasn't used to Lee's extremely vague and changing orders, which were given orally and not by writing.

    • @strategicgamingwithaacorns2874
      @strategicgamingwithaacorns2874 4 роки тому +108

      @@listenchump4041
      Lee: General Jackson, do the thing!
      Jackson: Yes sir! [kicks ass]
      Post-Chancellorsville...
      Lee: General Ewell, do the thing!
      Ewell: What thing?
      Lee: THE THING!

    • @listenchump4041
      @listenchump4041 4 роки тому +23

      @@strategicgamingwithaacorns2874 Haha! If you are interested in the subject, I recommend JCF Fuller's book ''Grant and Lee, a study in personality and generalship'', or Ed Bonekemper's books on the Civil War.
      Lee was a profoundly good man, profoundly Christian who sometimes open thought that things happening were the making of God. He cared tremendously for his men. This being said, he was often overly agressive and his army sustained extreme casualties that they could not sustain. He was lucky to have some men like Jackson and Longstreet. Often, he was saved by Northern general's incompetence. Hooker froze at Chancellorsville, McClellan was good at organizing but not at attacking. Lee only had to remain on the defensive on his own ground and with short supply lines, so the Confederacy could try and hold until the North grew tired, but he tried to invade the North, and that cost him dearly. Lee was a product of previous times, sometimes forgetting the new state of weaponry with increased accuracy and power.

  • @adonisparts1343
    @adonisparts1343 3 роки тому +74

    Imagine being the ghost of a soldier who died in Gettysburg just chilling there in peace and suddenly the battle starts all over again...

  • @MorimotoRei
    @MorimotoRei 2 роки тому +234

    My father was a reenactor in Gettysburg. The passion that the reenactors had is what made the film so real. For example, the scene where Lee comes out and the southern army starts cheering was completely unscripted. It was the first time the reenactors had seen Martin Sheen in full costume. If you look at his face, you can see how surprised and even scared Sheen was.

    • @markbeckens
      @markbeckens 7 місяців тому

      The South doesn't like the war is over or that they lost. They still honor traitors.

    • @jean6872
      @jean6872 5 місяців тому

      Martin Sheen was too small for the part.

  • @iowaclass5657
    @iowaclass5657 5 років тому +3781

    I think we can all agree that facial hair peaked during that period. Those beards are positively glorious!

    • @davehoffman4659
      @davehoffman4659 5 років тому +301

      And don't forget sideburns are literally named for one of the generals, Burnside.

    • @nora22000
      @nora22000 5 років тому +126

      It was, shall I say, the absolute epitome of testosterone displays. On the face and on the battlefield.

    • @hobied62
      @hobied62 5 років тому +145

      Did you notice the higher your rank the more facial hair a race to promotion?

    • @stephenvince9994
      @stephenvince9994 5 років тому +30

      @@nora22000 Yeah but how does that explain all the gimps with beardy wierds walking around at the moment. Not 3 micro grams of Testosterone between them.....

    • @nora22000
      @nora22000 5 років тому +19

      @@stephenvince9994 You, my friend, are absolutely spot-on! Looks like all their testosterone went into producing the beards. Could it have been as bad with the war dudes?

  • @16montana24kobe
    @16montana24kobe 6 років тому +656

    "It makes sense they rationalise this the way they do. And how do they go about this"
    *Enter most stereotypical British soldier in cinematic history+a cup of tea*

    • @eugeneflynn7435
      @eugeneflynn7435 6 років тому +14

      Great stuff. As a newer viewer to HB, I had thought about suggesting both Gettysburg as well as Gods and Generals for your consideration. You beat me to the punch.
      A couple small points. First, the word Lee uses is "practicable", not "practical". It's certainly what he says in the movie, and I believe it is the word used in Longstreet's memoirs.
      The other point has to do with the root causes of Lee's miscalculations in engaging the Union troops entrenched on the high ground. I've read that he was suffering from severe dysentery (the "runs") leading up to and during the battle. This would have dehydrated him, made him physically weakened, and most likely adversely affected his judgment. Lee may have also suffered a a all stroke or heart attack in the days or weeks leading up to the battle. (Don't recall the source, and this may not have been proven.) In any event, he effectively and explicitly let go of the rope when he told Longstreet on the morning of the second day of battle (if memory serves) that "it is in God's hands now". Dereliction of duty much?
      As a fan of historically accurate movies, I was delighted to have found HB, and will be donating to your work. Keep your reviews coming!

    • @realhorrorshow8547
      @realhorrorshow8547 6 років тому +65

      As a Brit, let me assure you that we are always able to conjure up tea in a crisis.

    • @azzwort
      @azzwort 6 років тому +26

      If you ever get the chance, read Freemantle's book "Three Months in the Southern States" he is REALLY like that. The only thing they got wrong was that he looked like a hobo by the time he joined Longstreet's camp, he was wearing a borrowed brown dusty coat and no one believed he was British til he spoke and showed his credentials.

    • @GlennonNelson
      @GlennonNelson 6 років тому +12

      As far as I read, Director Ronald Maxwell made the choice so there was no confusion on screen at all that Col. Arthur Fremantle was foreign. In one of the deleted scenes, which is in the extended version, Col. Fremantle is shown in the Confederate camp dressed more like he described himself to be during the Battle of Gettysburg.

    • @SantomPh
      @SantomPh 6 років тому +12

      "the British Empire was built on cups of tea." Lock,Stock and Two Smoking Barrels

  • @littletweeter1327
    @littletweeter1327 Рік тому +137

    I really love how Tom Berenger portrayed General Longstreet. Really, every role was played perfectly. This movie is a masterpiece that every American needs to see.

    • @mikegillettify
      @mikegillettify Рік тому +2

      Agreed!

    • @nbenefiel
      @nbenefiel 11 місяців тому +3

      Jeff Daniel’s Chamberlain was wonderful. Everyone in Gettysburg was perfect. We went to Gettysburg a few years ago. It was truly amazing.

    • @Ken-fh4jc
      @Ken-fh4jc 7 місяців тому +1

      Jeff Daniels as Chamberland was always the stand out character.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 5 місяців тому

      there's more to Chamberlain's story then what was depicted in these two films in which played a key role@@Ken-fh4jc

    • @wyattcole5452
      @wyattcole5452 5 місяців тому

      I’m reading the books first, also you’ve seen Gods and Generals right?

  • @FattoCattoGo
    @FattoCattoGo 2 роки тому +51

    20th Maine Charge: When bringing a knife to a gunfight is the best move you can make.

    • @phantomJK
      @phantomJK 2 роки тому +1

      I saw a comment years ago that went something like this: "that face when you realize bayonets were invented to bring a knife to a gun fight". Now i know that's not actually true, but it still makes me laugh.

  • @whatdothlife4660
    @whatdothlife4660 4 роки тому +2428

    Lee gave the order "if it is practical" because he was so used to leaving orders up to Stonewall Jackson's best judgement.

    • @joeschembrie9450
      @joeschembrie9450 4 роки тому +433

      The orders you give to an intelligent and experienced person can leave room for judgment. The orders you give to a person of lesser intelligence and experience had better be as specific as possible.

    • @badguy1481
      @badguy1481 4 роки тому +128

      I think the word was "practicable". Different meaning (i.e."...take the hill...if it is possible").

    • @HalfLifeExpert1
      @HalfLifeExpert1 4 роки тому +120

      Jackson had been dead for about a month by that point. I suppose it was an old habit of Lee's to be a little understated like that, but he did screw up by not explicitly ordering Ewell to take Culp's Hill.

    • @alanarc1
      @alanarc1 4 роки тому +14

      @@badguy1481 that is my recall also, and it is a blunder not caught here.

    • @tomcoyle9703
      @tomcoyle9703 4 роки тому +101

      Lee’s communication style was terrible. He was very gentile and indirect. For the early part of the war, he had guys like Stonewall Jackson who understood his idiosyncrasies. Ewell was in his first battle as corps commander. When he served under Jackson, Jackson gave him very direct orders. Therefore, he was not used to this communication style by Lee.
      The lesson here is if you have something specific you want, be specific. If you want a leader to use their initiative, let them do that and live or die with whatever decision they make. Communicate so that you are not misunderstood.

  • @LordyT34
    @LordyT34 4 роки тому +504

    "Let's fix bayonets"
    I wonder how they managed to run with balls that big

    • @hivicar
      @hivicar 3 роки тому +1

      A good primer was any previous battles they'd been in which were mostly gory. An extra boldness comes when thinking of what the Rebels could do to them, like at Fredericksburg.

    • @Meme-zc4cw
      @Meme-zc4cw 3 роки тому

      I generally have to make a wide stride myself.

    • @lexevo
      @lexevo 3 роки тому +2

      It helped that they were going down hill.

    • @yinmaungthant4872
      @yinmaungthant4872 Рік тому

      I'm no expert, but I assume gravity may have helped considering the direction they were running in.

  • @jk5496
    @jk5496 3 роки тому +605

    "Why you fighting?"
    "Free the slaves, preserve the union"
    "I fat for my rats"

    • @nulle.k
      @nulle.k 3 роки тому +6

      Someone else wrote this.

    • @jk5496
      @jk5496 3 роки тому +17

      @@nulle.k 1. learn to spell 2. how would i have known this when i havent even seen the comments

    • @nulle.k
      @nulle.k 3 роки тому +22

      @@jk5496 1. I already know how to spell and don't know what just happened there but I fixed it. 2. You aren't supposed to know, that's why I'm telling you.

    • @jk5496
      @jk5496 3 роки тому +5

      @@nulle.k well i dont think that person 1. Cares and 2. Knows because this has 3 likes and there probaly has hundreds

    • @calvincameron354
      @calvincameron354 3 роки тому +2

      Lmao

  • @jedimaster833
    @jedimaster833 Рік тому +35

    Despite what people say about the fake beards, it’s actually pretty cool that the directors of the movie made the actors look almost exactly as the real people.

  • @gavinwilliamson7481
    @gavinwilliamson7481 6 років тому +790

    My God, Arthur Freemantle is so stereotypically British in real life, I love him! A British army officer riding off the back of his queen's prestige just so he can strut around an ex-colony to watch the locals fight each other? Why? Because he wanted to and damn it that is THE *BRITISH WAY!*

    • @JuanKuzov
      @JuanKuzov 6 років тому +14

      can i have some thigh slapping to concur! (preferably your own)

    • @herman1850
      @herman1850 6 років тому +19

      His book is well worth reading, too! :) He meets all the great generals: Bragg, Johnston, Beauregard, Longstreet, Lee.

    • @weldonwin
      @weldonwin 6 років тому +47

      And naturally, he does so, with a cup of tea in hand and wearing a bright red uniform, so everyone can see him from a mile out

    • @King_George_VI
      @King_George_VI 6 років тому +56

      Thekais Tzar War and combat is no excuse for not drinking tea properly! ;) lol

    • @donfelipe7510
      @donfelipe7510 6 років тому +40

      European powers were intensely interested in the American Civil War and the new technology like trains, telegraph signals and rifled muskets and artillery being used in warfare for the first time. The Prussians especially made a lot of notes in their copy book then used what they had learned against the French.

  • @littoww
    @littoww 4 роки тому +522

    I love how that brit just came to the battle to watch it like a movie, with a bucket of popcorn and a beer

    • @tobyoneil1969
      @tobyoneil1969 4 роки тому +33

      Pelpington I believe in the movie he actually did walk around with a cup of tea just watching stuff.

    • @RamonRodriguez-hq7vn
      @RamonRodriguez-hq7vn 3 роки тому +3

      @@tobyoneil1969
      During my cadet years, one of my peers/friend did a report on the 'Killer Angels'.

    • @annieoakley2925
      @annieoakley2925 3 роки тому +26

      People did that. They'd go out for a carriage ride with a picnic lunch and stop on a bluff above the battle site and just watched.

    • @misanthropicservitorofmars2116
      @misanthropicservitorofmars2116 3 роки тому +11

      @@annieoakley2925 in the beginning of it. Things got more tense as the war progressed

    • @goodatmoincroft9856
      @goodatmoincroft9856 3 роки тому

      @@misanthropicservitorofmars2116 wouldn't have known if you didn't say.

  • @RobertEWaters
    @RobertEWaters 3 роки тому +467

    Actually, Washington itself was strongly defended. It's doubtful whether Lee could have taken it if he had won at Gettysburg ,especially given the losses he took there.

    • @gae_wead_dad_6914
      @gae_wead_dad_6914 3 роки тому +19

      Question is: would have he won if he decided to flank the enemy instead, and go for washington instead of fighting in Gettysburg?

    • @k1productions87
      @k1productions87 3 роки тому +24

      As well-defended as Washington itself may have been, how long could those defenses have held to a constant siege or war of attrition, should supply lines have been cut off or routed. If the Confederate Army entrenched around Washington and received consistent resupply convoys (likely requiring another force to intercept any convoys bound for Washington) could they have held out, even if strongly defended?

    • @Apis4
      @Apis4 2 роки тому +40

      The answer is NO.
      Nothing would have changed.
      Washington was the Capital, as it is today, which made it important....what is more in important is that when the US attacked Canada and kicked of a war with them and Britain, the Canadians DID get to Washington, and burned the Whitehouse down. Ultimately, the US can be considered to have lost that one. Canada was not brought in the Union, and Washington was sacked.
      It would beggar belief if the Union left Washington, the Capital, which had suffered once before in War, undefended save their Eastern army.....it would be thoroughly unbelievable in the extreme in fact.
      We do not, however, have to believe it.... because Lee and his army seemed to be the only ones who DID... as it was NOT THE CASE.
      Had they fallen back and redeployed to Washington, they'd have found formidable force. Obviously the Union Army at Gettysburg would indeed chase them, and then the Confederates would have nowhere to go, and no hope of anything but immediate surrender, or destruction.
      They'd have Union forces in front of them, in Washington, and they'd have Union forces behind them, chasing from Gettysburg. The advice to redeploy was based on the same belief that caused Lee to stay and fight.... that the Union had no other forces, this was it, Washington was undefended. Thus, one could argue, on one hand, stay, fight, break the Union Army, and the path to Washington is open, and on the other, withdraw, redeploy, and circumvent Gettysburg, march on Washington, and ambush the chasing Union.
      When Washington is actually heavily defended, and there is significant Union presence in the city, that plan fails.
      You force the Union Army at Gettysburg to chase you, in the hopes of getting far enough ahead, you can entrench and ambush as they ride in to your trap.....your back is exposed to the Union forces in Washington, who march out and slaughter you from behind. You forget the Union forces at Gettysburg, march on Washington and find it not so undefended and lay siege, the Union Army at Gettysburg is now at your back and they roll on you from behind and slaughter you.
      The whole thing fails.
      In actuality, there was really nothing Lee could have hoped for in that sense to win.
      Even had he won Gettysburg, his army would have been savaged and depleted. It would be an army which might, MIGHT, be able to take a relatively undefended Washington DC......but it would be in no position to fight another Gettysburg on the outskirts of the city due to it being actually far more heavily defended than he anticipated. Had he NOT fought Gettysburg, the above pincer would happen. No need to say had he fought Gettysburg he'd lose, for fought it he did, and indeed de he lose.
      Even retreating would have spelt doom, as what Grant was doing in the West, the Union could use this Army to do in the East, and in this case, the whole Confederacy would essentially be in a giant Union pincer.
      For this campaign by Lee to have saved the Confederacy, either Grant would have had to be losing, and the Mississippi not at risk of falling to Union Control, allowing much greater planning, and much greater presence of Confederate forces, including materiale and reserves, OR Washington be truly undefended, and he circumvent Gettysburg.
      With those things not being so, and this being a last roll of the dice move, put together as desperate gamble, in a sense, there is not much which could have changed the outcome.

    • @k1productions87
      @k1productions87 2 роки тому +5

      @Paul Thomas Well... to be fair to Hannibal, he was denied reinforcements. Also the rules of war a the time demanded that after so many decisive defeats, Rome should have surrendered. But they didn't. Hannibal didn't anticipate such and occurrence, nor Carthage abandoning him.

    • @Ulfcytel
      @Ulfcytel 2 роки тому +24

      @@k1productions87 Lee would have found himself pinned between Washington's defences and Meade's larger army in his rear. Disaster.
      Longstreet's plan was actually to sidestep towards Washington then fight a tactically advantageous defensive battle on ground of their choosing in order to defeat Meade. However, not sure the latter would have taken the bait, even then. He just had to keep his force in being and Lee would be forced either to commit to battle (as he did) or, eventually, retreat.
      The biggest danger for the Union would then be political pressure forcing Meade to fight at a time and place he didn't want to.

  • @Nekulturny
    @Nekulturny 3 роки тому +70

    I love the way Martin Sheen delivers lines. Hes such a wonderful actor.

    • @mako88sb
      @mako88sb 2 роки тому +6

      Yes. First time I watched this I didn’t have a very favourable opinion of him portraying Lee. Just wasn’t someone that came to mind to play that role. He did such a good job that I actually now think his performance is better than Robert Duvall’s in Gods & Generals. Strange as Duvall was one that did come to mind who I thought should of been in Gettysburg.

    • @Ken-fh4jc
      @Ken-fh4jc 7 місяців тому

      I don’t like the dumb southern accent he used. It sounds almost cartoonish.

  • @saintdenis11
    @saintdenis11 6 років тому +5008

    "Its over General Lee, I have the high ground."
    -General Kenobi

  • @steveg3843
    @steveg3843 4 роки тому +602

    Jeff Daniels went from Gettysburg to Dumb and Dumber in one year. He deserves an Oscar.

    • @nowthisnamestaken
      @nowthisnamestaken 4 роки тому +5

      Fighting for the slavers was dumb and dumber

    • @moomyung9231
      @moomyung9231 4 роки тому +28

      I saw Gettysburg first, so I was very surprised watching Dumb and Dumber.

    • @WhiteCamry
      @WhiteCamry 3 роки тому +1

      @@nowthisnamestaken SMH!

    • @nowthisnamestaken
      @nowthisnamestaken 3 роки тому +1

      @Gayle Elizabeth Oh yeah I do.
      I get the feeling that Jeff Daniels isn't the man in the little picture wearing all that rebel gear... oops

    • @nowthisnamestaken
      @nowthisnamestaken 3 роки тому

      @@WhiteCamry FTA

  • @jocko774
    @jocko774 2 роки тому +68

    I've watched this film almost every year since it was released and one tiny cool detail I'd like to point out is when Pickett says the line " I have no Division" Look at the Character....Pickett has no hat on, he has no horse, and he doesn't have his saber.....and of course no Division. The General truly was stripped of everything.

  • @troutwarrior6735
    @troutwarrior6735 2 роки тому +50

    It always amazes and horrifies me that you can already see here, in 1863, the factors that made ww1 so devastating. And to think that the world had 50 years to improve weaponry . . . really gives you a perspective on how horrific the Great War was.

  • @GeneralKenobiSIYE
    @GeneralKenobiSIYE 5 років тому +932

    You cannot defeat the HIGH GROUND!
    "It's over, Lee! I have the High Ground!" - General Meade
    "You underestimate my power, good Sir." -General Lee
    "Don't try it!" -Meade

    • @HolyknightVader999
      @HolyknightVader999 5 років тому +26

      Well, there is a reason why it's the most common military advantage of all, and why Lucas put it there in Episode 3.

    • @trexoil7774
      @trexoil7774 5 років тому +2

      old ben ? that u

    • @adamfrederick5682
      @adamfrederick5682 4 роки тому +2

      He is the senate

    • @MaiNerys426
      @MaiNerys426 4 роки тому +4

      Impressive. Most impressive.

    • @tscream80
      @tscream80 4 роки тому +13

      Bragg at Chattanooga: "It's over, Grant! I have the high ground!"
      Grant: "Hold that whiskey my critics keep saying I've been drinking." ;)

  • @kendrickvickers2610
    @kendrickvickers2610 4 роки тому +1292

    "They even bring their own canons." Im here thinking that some dude just has a canon in his house so that he can fire canister when a random dude breaks in

    • @swaghauler8334
      @swaghauler8334 4 роки тому +67

      It's much more sinister. They take those cannon out and have SHOOTING MATCHES against each other with them (GOOGLE the North, South Skirmish Association). Black powder, Civil War-era cannon are not the only ones either. GOOGLE D-Day Conneaut Ohio and look at the images of all the guns that attend that FREE [to attend] reenactment every year. The German 88mm and Russian 76mm are FULLY FUNCTIONAL guns (as are all the 37mm AT guns)!

    • @brycepatties
      @brycepatties 4 роки тому +321

      >Own a musket for home defense, since that's what the founding fathers intended.
      >Four ruffians break into my house.
      >"What the devil?" As I grab my powdered wig and Kentucky rifle.
      >Blow a golf ball sized hole through the first man, he's dead on the spot.
      >Draw my pistol on the second man, miss him entirely because it's smoothbore and nails the neighbors dog.
      >I have to resort to the cannon mounted at the top of the stairs loaded with grape shot.
      >"Tally ho lads" the grape shot shreds two men in the blast, the sound and extra shrapnel set off car alarms.
      >Fix bayonet and charge the last terrified rapscallion.
      >He Bleeds out waiting on the police to arrive since triangular bayonet wounds are impossible to stitch up.
      >Just as the founding fathers intended.

    • @SonicBhima
      @SonicBhima 4 роки тому +92

      Although it slightly predates the Civil war, Cassius Marcellus Clay, a politician from Kentucky, who published an Anti-Slavery newspaper, DID have two four-pounders in his office, and stated:
      "I purchased two brass four‐pounder cannons...and placed them, loaded with shot and nails, on a table breast high; had folding doors secured with a chain, which could open upon the mob, and give play to my cannon...I furnished my office with Mexican lances, and a limited number of guns"

    • @TitusCastiglione1503
      @TitusCastiglione1503 4 роки тому +4

      Bryce Van Velson how does this comment not have more likes

    • @flyingfish5054
      @flyingfish5054 4 роки тому +25

      darn concealed-carry bump stock muskets with high capacity magazine clips

  • @TrentWalker
    @TrentWalker 2 роки тому +229

    I'm fightin' for my rats! See me at time stamp 19:35 of this video. "Gettysburg" was the very first movie I acted in and it lead to me getting a part in "Gods and Generals." I'm forever grateful to the director Ron Maxwell and the casting director Joy Todd. It was an experience I'll never forget.

    • @brazenlilhussy5975
      @brazenlilhussy5975 2 роки тому +2

      'Im fatting for my rats' you mean? 😁. Great job man. Great scene!

    • @highjumpstudios2384
      @highjumpstudios2384 2 роки тому

      Hey congrats man!

    • @Zooooch1989
      @Zooooch1989 2 роки тому +2

      Hey, I saw this movie for the first time last week and the first thing I googled is if you were the guy from Jericho and Band of Brothers. Love your work man!

    • @klientproby
      @klientproby 2 роки тому +1

      What did that line mean, "I'm fighting for my rats?" Did he mean, children? Sorry, not an American here, so didn't quite get the meaning of this line.

    • @fascinatedbyeverything
      @fascinatedbyeverything 2 роки тому +17

      @@klientproby He’s trying to say “rights”, it’s just his accent is so thick it sounds like “rats”….which confuses the Union guy at first too.

  • @trynnallen
    @trynnallen 11 місяців тому +13

    I was attending grad school at a local college about 2 years after the movie was made. When commencement came my roommate introduced me to his godmother - a nun at the Seminary- She took us up to the cupola of the Seminary and told us about being on the phone with a gentleman out of California. She recalled this was about the 1st or 2nd day of shooting and musket fire could be heard through the open window. The gentleman asked what was going on and she responded that they were filming on the battlefield for a movie. He asked if they needed reenactors and she said yes and read off the number from the flyers that had been plastered on the campus and elsewhere. He pardoned himself, hung up, called her back 20minutes later and asked if they could resume their call in person, as he and his gun crew were going drive across the country with their cannon, limber, and did they know where know where they could rent four horses? They ended up driving clear across the country to take part in the film. And yes they were able to rent horses from the film crew once they should that they could care for the animals. It took them 35hrs of near constant driving.

  • @ArgieGrit
    @ArgieGrit 4 роки тому +1951

    "We can't run away. If we stay we can't shoot, so let's fix bayonets"
    What a Chad

    • @saheliumd7182
      @saheliumd7182 4 роки тому +101

      Chadberlian

    • @taurusreborn2571
      @taurusreborn2571 3 роки тому +96

      He ended up winning the Medal of Honor for the charge at Little Round Top, and became the governor of Maine shortly after the war

    • @Marsproject11
      @Marsproject11 3 роки тому +34

      @@taurusreborn2571 Pretty sure he was also the president of the college he worked at at some point as well.

    • @sharpsvilleBill
      @sharpsvilleBill 3 роки тому +17

      @@Marsproject11 Bowdoin College

    • @bf1255
      @bf1255 3 роки тому +6

      I’m sorry, I should probably know because I’m only 30 but what’s a “Chad”

  • @Hubert_Cumberdale_
    @Hubert_Cumberdale_ 5 років тому +1400

    Picket's charge is a foreshadowing of what's to come in WW1

    • @solinvictus39
      @solinvictus39 5 років тому +190

      I think the siege of Vicksburg is a better example of the trench warfare you see in WWI.

    • @roileybauer
      @roileybauer 5 років тому +149

      Longstreet believed that a defensive, digging-in method of warfare was a better choice. Almost everyone else around him thought it was a horrible idea, so he pretty much pretty much predicted how war would change 50 years later.

    • @Hubert_Cumberdale_
      @Hubert_Cumberdale_ 5 років тому +43

      @@solinvictus39 I'm gonna have to look up the siege of vicksburg now.
      Edit: I agree with you, the siege of Vicksburg is very much like WW1.

    • @helavor
      @helavor 5 років тому +5

      Dan Carlin ftw

    • @danielortman2534
      @danielortman2534 5 років тому +3

      Hubert Cumberdale that was what the Civil War was

  • @thatonecanadian86
    @thatonecanadian86 2 роки тому +96

    I love the one scene that shows how much General Longstreet didn’t want his men to die. He couldn’t bring himself to commence the attack because he knew it was suicidal

    • @jackmessick2869
      @jackmessick2869 2 роки тому +18

      and it actually went that way. Longstreet just nodded his head and couldn't bring himself to give the foolhardy order directly.
      The nice parallel in this film is how Buford in the beginning explains the futility of some military operations where he could already see the outcome, put had to participate ("make it fail" he says). But this time, it is Longstreet who must do that; he sees the folly but must participate.
      The other great performance is how Stephen Lang as Pickett goes from jolly gentlemen's club bon vivant, all up for the glory of war, to devasted commander who learns the grim reality. War is all hell, and there is no reforming it.

    • @007ndc
      @007ndc Рік тому +2

      He knew that it was going to be the Rebel version of Fredericksburg slaughter

  • @WilliamJohnwon1522
    @WilliamJohnwon1522 Рік тому +7

    A great film, virtually a 4 hour documentary about Gettysburg.

  • @haynes1776
    @haynes1776 5 років тому +1037

    General Pickett: General Lee, "I have no division". Hearing this makes your blood chill.

    • @corndog5227
      @corndog5227 5 років тому +17

      Jay Barker that isn’t actually true, casualties are different from death. 9 thousand(probably MANY more after due to wounds) died at Gettysburg while 50k something around that died at nam

    • @power966
      @power966 5 років тому +6

      It made me laugh.

    • @jacobsanders8079
      @jacobsanders8079 5 років тому +31

      God bless those boys, confederate and yankee alike. Too many lives lost.

    • @michaelholt1480
      @michaelholt1480 5 років тому +19

      @@BradWatsonMiami 😑you high cause he didn't even come close to what you said

    • @michaelholt1480
      @michaelholt1480 5 років тому

      @@power966 I'm sure you did😐

  • @jwiking62
    @jwiking62 6 років тому +2374

    "It's useless confederates, we have the high ground!"

    • @ccody-long6915
      @ccody-long6915 6 років тому +189

      "You Underestimate our power!"

    • @jwiking62
      @jwiking62 6 років тому +66

      Charlie Theanteater
      WE HATE YOU!

    • @KitteridgeStudios
      @KitteridgeStudios 6 років тому +58

      I AM the confederacy!

    • @jwiking62
      @jwiking62 6 років тому +54

      P.S.
      May the constitution be with you.

    • @Charok1
      @Charok1 6 років тому +14

      This is a historical channel. The high ground is not a joke.

  • @basilmoncrief9583
    @basilmoncrief9583 2 роки тому +37

    I'm a hard-core Civil War buff and a National Park Service volunteer. I must say this was a great review of a great movie. Well done, Nick!

  • @JEFFREYcjones-xg2cy
    @JEFFREYcjones-xg2cy 8 місяців тому +8

    I was a CIVIL WAR re-enactor in this movie.... mostly in the Picketts charge scenes...I spent a week portraying both UNION and CONFEDERATE soldiers...it was hot July as I recall... it was great fun to see the special effects. We used all our own uniforms and equipment....We were fed like kings.

  • @HarperSanchez
    @HarperSanchez 6 років тому +2279

    As a southerner, I respect the non-biased approach to this movie and your review. Of course the conflict was sparked by the issue of slavery, but to the illiterate and uneducated, poor southern farmers that fought and died in the war, it was as simple as a foriegn army invading their homeland. You could also break down exactly who owned slaves in the south, since they were not easily afforded by farmers that were not wealthy. Most of the Confederate soldiers that fought never benefited from slavery, but all they had to be told was "the Yankees are invading!" and they were off. An interesting example of how the facts of the matter can be easily manipulated when the people can neither read nor write. It reflects a lot of similar situations in history and even some today.

    • @Charok1
      @Charok1 6 років тому +60

      It's like wars of any "civilized" time period. Many of them are fought by people that are not directly affected by what they are supposedly fighting for. It's rich people that decide they want something and get many poor people killed.
      You can see the stupidity of the "common man" who feels honored to reinact where his kin fought. It is so easy for a few to control so many because they are idiots.
      Lee seems really stupid to not just go to DC.

    • @TheAiurica
      @TheAiurica 6 років тому +119

      Also keep in mind that in those days, especially in the South, people never walked too far away from their homes. Mostly knew only their native small town, neighouring towns, probably some big city closer to them, and only a few, the "elite" of that small town knew something about their state capital city. Other states look as foreign to them as any other foreign country. (- Where are you from? - Tennessee. And you? - Maine. I've never been in Tennessee. - Nor I ever been in Maine.).
      And "Yankees are coming!" sound as scary as "Redcoats are coming!"
      Only after the Civil War, they all got some sense of being part of something larger than their own state: The United States of America.

    • @Shadowman4710
      @Shadowman4710 6 років тому +36

      + Chris Walker Just "going to DC" was a bit more complicated than you make it sound. The Confederates had the same problem the Union had had for over 2 years. The terrain in the region between the two capitals was heavily traversed by rivers and mountains, which channel armies into bottlenecks which were easily defended by entrenched armies. Lee was pretty much obligated to approach Washington in an oblique manner.

    • @ehjaybee85
      @ehjaybee85 6 років тому +52

      Great perspective, one question though, I understand that most weren't slave owner but almost every farmer at least rented slaves during harvest season and I don't think this is any better...

    • @smizdeazy
      @smizdeazy 6 років тому +84

      Harper Sanchez they were so poor and illiterate that they couldn't even read or write. That is of course if you ignore the thousands and thousands of letters home, journals and diaries the men wrote, much of which has been published. These are some of the richest sources of insight into why men on both sides fought. Thank God they wrote or else we would have to rely on Gettysburg and people like you romanticizing the war and guessing what people's motivations were without reading anything from the period itself. A "non-biased" approach is exactly what is wrong with so much. People pass off memories of the war as history, the two are different.

  • @robertnorman6380
    @robertnorman6380 6 років тому +2810

    Pretty good video of Gettysburg. I was there as one of the reenactors. 17 of us came from Calif to participate in the scenes for Pickett's Charge, and it was awesome. We have a little screen time, and as it turned out, the VHS graphic cover (no CD's yet) featured our exact unit in a closeup! I have a 6 foot cardboard stand-up of that cover still, which video rental stores used in their displays. I met Sheen, the late Richard Jordan (Armistead), Morgan Shepard (Trimble, and also the film's narrator). Sheen was very kind and came up to us with sharpie in hand for autographs. As another has posted, the cheering scene for Lee (Sheen) was not scripted. It was spontaneous by all of us when we first saw Sheen, who was not scheduled that day. I know some have criticized Sheen in the role, but I will say that, in my opinion, Sheen was not well then. (And neither was Lee in 1863, heart troubles.) But the favorite of everyone was Stephen Lang as Pickett. He was an excellent horseman and was always charging around to rally the reenactors during the slow times. I was also an extra in Gods and Generals and met Lang and Jeff Daniels there. Both excellent gentlemen. And yes, we were paid at the end of the week. $50. That was the max allowed. Local (PA or VA guys) got less. Wish all you history buffs could have been there. You have not lived until you have marched behind a fife and drum corps in woolen uniforms.

    • @verdatum
      @verdatum 5 років тому +80

      Excellent insight. My high school teacher was a reenactor in Andersonville. I could totally see myself getting into reenactment. I just wish it wasn't a hobby so devoid of women. I have too many hobbies as is that only guys get into.

    • @Brae182
      @Brae182 5 років тому +58

      verdatum It is a tragedy that women are left out of historical reenactment, but we have to keep a level of realism in those types of events

    • @roboknight
      @roboknight 5 років тому +24

      @Robert Norman -- Congratulations. Sounds like the opportunity of a lifetime. Although I did see many re-enactors at the 150th anniversary of the first Battle of Bull Run. They did not look too excited to be marching in wool uniforms in 103F heat. That was brutal. I never looked up the weather for the 21st of July 1861, but as awful as the battle was (Gettysburg too), I was hoping it wasn't 103F.

    • @VagabondCrazyDiamond
      @VagabondCrazyDiamond 5 років тому +39

      Thank you for your contribution and spirited involvement.
      I reenacted once in a generic, 3-day event in a ferry in northern California. I happen to be a person of color, so, it wasn't exactly 'historically accurate', hahaha, but, I'm glad to have tasted the life of an American Civil War soldier.
      It was an experience to die for.

    • @henryb9720
      @henryb9720 5 років тому +17

      stellvia hoenheim stellvia hoenheim
      I was there at the 150th, I started chanting for Robert E Lee in the aftermath, and the crowd of us started thereafter, ‘LEE, LEE, LEE LEE’, it wasn’t any different then nor now. I ‘took a hit’ at the wall, and saw what became of our ‘army’ in 2013, it was awe inspiring and made me realize the dedication we take in our craft to portray these men. As long as we remember what we are here for, there will always be a remembrance for this battle, and the others, in history. I pray that the future generations will at least look to us or read about what happened that fateful and somber day on both sides. History took a true shade of crimson that day if anything

  • @Comicsluvr
    @Comicsluvr 2 роки тому +20

    This film was SO well done! Even the final day, when Pickett was asking General Longstreet if they should attack, who couldn't even speak and simply nodded.

  • @waynecoulter6761
    @waynecoulter6761 Рік тому +7

    I know two people who were a part of the movie. One, a soldier that I served with at Fort Polk named Nichols was a rebel soldier. The other, Bob Marsh, who played the band director leading the band in the scene were Chamberlain's brother gives Chamberlain the news about the deserters voting to pick up the rifle, was my Battalion Intelligence Officer in the Ohio National Guard

  • @sgtn00dle
    @sgtn00dle 3 роки тому +993

    Legend has it the Confederate Army was ultimately defeated because of an utterly confusing command structure due to Lee calling everyone else “Sir” all the time

    • @erikwilson2682
      @erikwilson2682 3 роки тому +28

      Seems unlikely.... longstreet was a very capable general, stonewall would have gotten to both round tops and had the yanks in full retreat...a.p.hill beast... Forrest,mosbey,jeb stewart.... the south was stacked with great leadership... that confederate dollar wasn't worth dogshit....the north was scared to death.....beauragard should have attacked washington Early.... lincoln wanted Peace...at any cost

    • @Byerly2k20
      @Byerly2k20 3 роки тому +106

      @@erikwilson2682 Wooosh

    • @aperson325
      @aperson325 3 роки тому +128

      @@erikwilson2682 why......do people type.....like this....

    • @SirNarax
      @SirNarax 3 роки тому +22

      @@Byerly2k20 That went so far over you need a plane to shoot it down.

    • @erikwilson2682
      @erikwilson2682 3 роки тому +12

      @@aperson325 it creates more of a space between,than a single period. sorry to annoy you with that...I'll work on it...........

  • @Sweatymilkshake
    @Sweatymilkshake 6 років тому +199

    My dad and I are both Civil War resonators, and my dad is actually in this movie, I wasn't born yet. Hes got pictures of him and his artillery unit on set hanging on our wall. I hope i have the chance to do something like that someday.
    And yes, we still have the cannon.

    • @nicolas44991
      @nicolas44991 6 років тому +15

      damn now i'm jealous, must be awesome to say that you own a cannon from that era

    • @IronClad292
      @IronClad292 6 років тому +6

      Awesome !! Wish I could have been in the movie as a extra.

    • @bobclover4634
      @bobclover4634 6 років тому +2

      Is that meant to say reenactor or is a resonator something else?

    • @matthewjones12181
      @matthewjones12181 6 років тому

      Cpt Napkin that's cool! No farb right?

    • @cv4809
      @cv4809 6 років тому

      Cpt Napkin Is it a real XIX century cannon?

  • @mattzoll609
    @mattzoll609 5 місяців тому +3

    Gotta love Jeff Daniels. From colonel Chamberlin to Harry Dunne and in between helping a bus full of people not get blown up. Wow, what a guy!

    • @bradcouch457
      @bradcouch457 5 місяців тому

      I was mad that his character in Speed got killed off.

  • @gabegood8989
    @gabegood8989 2 роки тому +69

    Sam Elliott's voice is like butter.. it makes everything better

    • @tootsla1252
      @tootsla1252 Рік тому +1

      Sexiest man alive at any age. And nobody sits a horse like that man.

  • @jecfilms3686
    @jecfilms3686 5 років тому +721

    Im watchimg Gettysburg at Gettysburg while watching this video about Gettysburg.

    • @littleluke2005
      @littleluke2005 5 років тому +79

      Gettyseption?

    • @chasemurraychristopherdola7108
      @chasemurraychristopherdola7108 5 років тому +7

      Wait are you watching the movie Gettysburg because it’s my favorite movie of all time

    • @rowmagnvs
      @rowmagnvs 5 років тому +4

      Did you also insert a Gettysburg up and in your Gettysburg?

    • @Peaceful_Gojira
      @Peaceful_Gojira 5 років тому +7

      Were you born in Gettysburg at the Gettysburg Hospital, by a Gettysburg born-bred Nurse/Doctor?

    • @mrvulture8981
      @mrvulture8981 5 років тому

      @@chasemurraychristopherdola7108 i own the DVD its damn amazing. My favorite historical movie ever

  • @niknelson2464
    @niknelson2464 6 років тому +216

    It brings a tear to my eye to hear how production for this movie happened. The fact that it was a project of passion, the volunteers who brought their kit and time, and the strict adherence to detail is amazing. This is how a historical film should be made!

    • @jorklind
      @jorklind 6 років тому +7

      I remember a friend of my mom at the time was a re-enactor with her husband. He was part of this production and I heard was invited (uniformed, as a part of themeing) to the premiere.

    • @Samm815
      @Samm815 6 років тому +11

      It's a shame not many reenactments are found in other settings. I would love for a world war 1 or 2 reenactment group.

    • @ME-hm7zm
      @ME-hm7zm 6 років тому +1

      Agreed! It really helps spread the accuracy load out - a ton more eyes to catch slips.

    • @TigerRifle1
      @TigerRifle1 6 років тому +1

      Except they are all cleaner, fatter and older than the average soldier.

  • @mole7601
    @mole7601 3 роки тому +65

    As a Canadian, I absolutely love this movie.
    Thank you for presenting an unbiased view on an unbiased film.

    • @jackasslawyer
      @jackasslawyer 2 роки тому

      This film and review are so incredibly biased. Why don't you try reading the Confederate CONSTITUTION

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 4 місяці тому

      A great movie.

  • @laurenlanterns4376
    @laurenlanterns4376 2 роки тому +19

    Also, the score in this movie DOES NOT get enough credit. It’s beautiful. Especially how when Longstreet learns they won’t have enough guns to support Pickett’s charge. The music gets louder and louder as the realization of a death charge hits Longstreet

    • @ntfoperative9432
      @ntfoperative9432 Рік тому +2

      I still hum the music that played during the Charge of the 20th Maine

    • @laurenlanterns4376
      @laurenlanterns4376 Рік тому

      @@ntfoperative9432 as you should

    • @iamnotyu5548
      @iamnotyu5548 7 місяців тому

      Listen too it often. Sadly it's getting harder to find on streaming services

  • @Rory_Herbert
    @Rory_Herbert 3 роки тому +2019

    My wife's relative, George Crawford Platt, was awarded the Medal of Honor after Gettysburg for, after fierce hand-to-hand combat, he prevented the Union Flag from falling into the hands of the enemy. He has a bridge named after him in Philadelphia which stands to this day.

    • @samuelalzate8573
      @samuelalzate8573 3 роки тому +87

      Awesome history in your family. You should be proud and never forget it.

    • @thomasbrennan6303
      @thomasbrennan6303 2 роки тому +27

      I would be pretty proud of that.

    • @kingdingaling2469
      @kingdingaling2469 2 роки тому +17

      That’s So Dope.

    • @jjquinn2004
      @jjquinn2004 2 роки тому +14

      Wow, that's something; I know that bridge in Philly.

    • @warrenedye8853
      @warrenedye8853 2 роки тому

      @@samuelalzate8573 00000⁰000

  • @alexlaws5086
    @alexlaws5086 3 роки тому +260

    Chamberlain: "Fix bayonets."
    His subordinates: o_o

  • @phil20_20
    @phil20_20 7 місяців тому +5

    Lee was sick and probably had a fever. I think that explains a lot about his thinking those few days. I was up for soldier of the week with a fever and I couldn't get anything right. Platoon leader was pissed. 😂

    • @phil20_20
      @phil20_20 7 місяців тому +1

      P.s. I didn't sign up for it, I was volunteered, so I really wasn't up on things already.

  • @trickshotbros.7050
    @trickshotbros.7050 Рік тому +20

    Lee made many blunders during the battle but to his credit while making their exit he rode around the columns and said “ it’s my fault today boys not yours”

    • @whatwhat98
      @whatwhat98 Рік тому +8

      That's something you don't see these days. A superior office admitting and taking responsibility for his mistakes and decisions.

    • @jerimiahhamby4790
      @jerimiahhamby4790 7 місяців тому +5

      He was a leader. Something many leaders, most actually, lacked my experience. Accountability.
      A leader says “let’s do this” and leads from the front.
      If the mission is successful. A leader says “look what my people did”
      If the mission fails, a leader says, “I failed”
      Too many leaders, especially officers, I served with failed in that. Too many

  • @johnhughes5109
    @johnhughes5109 6 років тому +269

    I'm so glad you used the real confederate flag, the stars and bars, and not the dixie flag people seem to think is the confederate flag.

    • @ralphdougherty1844
      @ralphdougherty1844 6 років тому +8

      John Hughes The dixie flag was the national flag as of 1863...It's both

    • @Hopeofmen
      @Hopeofmen 6 років тому +8

      John Hughes Agreed. Most people think that the Dixie flag was the flag of the CSA, which always grinded my gears.

    • @thefrenchkiwi9435
      @thefrenchkiwi9435 6 років тому +2

      Thank you CGP gray.

    • @16montana24kobe
      @16montana24kobe 6 років тому +3

      Corentin Bellanger CGP Grey said it was pretty much the flag in everything but name

    • @dublinjake
      @dublinjake 6 років тому +2

      *the original confederate flag. The latter was adopted shortly before the Battle of Gettysburg. At least that's what Wikipedia tells me.

  • @matthewsnow6004
    @matthewsnow6004 4 роки тому +601

    Can we talk about how this movie was based off the Pulitzer Prize winner book: "The Killer Angles" and it's in fact pretty much word for word? Seriously, I swear it's the most direct translation from page to screen I ever seen

    • @jjclark1313
      @jjclark1313 4 роки тому +61

      Yes! I just finished "The Killer Angels" a couple of days ago. Incredible book. It's pretty clear that the History Buff hasn't read the book from his comments regarding the slave. If he had, he would have realized that that scene was about Chamberlain's reaction to the slave rather than about slavery itself.

    • @SantomPh
      @SantomPh 4 роки тому +64

      one hell of a geometry book, that Killer Angles.

    • @canaanclb
      @canaanclb 4 роки тому +8

      I had seen the movie countless times, so when I finally read the book, I was suprised at how faithfully they adapted it.

    • @MMorbid
      @MMorbid 3 роки тому +4

      It's a great book. Michael Shaara was a literature professor i think, and his goal was to write a history similar to what Shakespeare did with his history plays. It is a fantastic book.

    • @BrianKAngus
      @BrianKAngus 3 роки тому +20

      I was a reenactor in this movie in 1992. They gave us T-shirts that read "The Killer Angels" which I still have. They changed the title because they thought fewer people would watch the movie with the original title.

  • @kaniac5768
    @kaniac5768 7 місяців тому +4

    I always loved Lee remarking on how Meade was a Pennsylvania man first for a brief second he remembers him as the man and maybe friend before snapping back into general mode

  • @clivedavies5618
    @clivedavies5618 Рік тому +14

    It's well worth reading Michael Shaara's novel "The Killer Angel's that the script for "Gettysburg" was based on - it gives valuable insights into the actions and the key characters.

    • @Cyber_Noot
      @Cyber_Noot 10 місяців тому +1

      Just started the book two days ago. So far I'm impressed at the author's effort to give those insights to various leaders. His writing style is perfect for it, and it shows just how much research he had to have done to achieve it. I'm not even finished with it and already can't recommend it enough.

    • @JDoe-gf5oz
      @JDoe-gf5oz 9 місяців тому

      The novel should get the majority of the credit for how good the movie was since they took most of the dialogue verbatim from the book and even translated internal monologue into onscreen dialogue. Combine that with the amazing score and you have a masterpiece.

    • @seronymus
      @seronymus 8 місяців тому

      ​@@Cyber_NootI'll have to check it out, got any other book recommendations?

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 4 місяці тому

      A great novel!

  • @JoelJames2
    @JoelJames2 5 років тому +618

    "Sir! We're out of ammunition! We have to surrender!"
    "Great! Perfect time to get our cardio in! Fix bayonets boys, we move in 5!"
    My headcanon of what happened ^

    • @GhostBear3067
      @GhostBear3067 5 років тому +59

      Alternatively...
      "Sir, we are out of ammunition, we must surrender!"
      "What do you think your bayonet is for, you idiot?! FIX BAYONETS!! CHARGE!!!"

    • @Nocturnal85
      @Nocturnal85 4 роки тому +24

      Makes me proud to be a Mainer and see how brave my fellow Mainers were.

    • @kingjonstarkgeryan8573
      @kingjonstarkgeryan8573 4 роки тому +7

      Would also be perfect for the Imperial Guard in 40K, though add a blam for the guy who suggested surrender.

    • @charliewardgames8678
      @charliewardgames8678 4 роки тому +1

      JoelJames2 😂😂😂

    • @CRob172
      @CRob172 4 роки тому +3

      @@Nocturnal85 yeah as a michigander our role at Little Round Top is pretty bad, the 16th Michigan (in the same Brigade as the 20th Maine) would become confused and 2/3rds of the regiment fell back and Colonel Strong Vincent the Brigade commander had to rally the regiment and loss his life as a result. At least we have the 24th Michigan basically almost sacrificing itself to cover the rest of the Army of the Potomac during the 1st day and Custer leading his Michigan Brigade against Stuart during the Cavalry battle the third day.

  • @otlayr3030
    @otlayr3030 4 роки тому +276

    20th Maine Officer: "Sir, we've got no ammunitiom, we're outnumbered, and the enemy is charging again!"
    Chamberlain: *snickers* "...Those poor bastards."

    • @normdunbar2943
      @normdunbar2943 3 роки тому +1

      @Covert Puppytwo Fix Bayonets, FIX!

    • @Dana-nv4ej
      @Dana-nv4ej Рік тому

      They’ve got us right where we want them

  • @rlevitta
    @rlevitta Рік тому +17

    I’ve always thought that Lee’s mistake at Gettysburg was assuming that his Generals were capable of performing like Jackson, who had just been killed at Chancellorsville. Lee became used to giving non specific orders to Jackson, relying on him to use his initiative to do whatever Lee asked him to do. Had his famous “if practicable“ order to Ewell had been given to Jackson, I have no doubt it would have been done.

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 4 місяці тому

      Stonewall would have made it a different battle.

  • @calmchugh2601
    @calmchugh2601 7 місяців тому +3

    I went to Gettysburg on my way to Annapolis for a visit of the Naval Academy. The thing that shocked me the most was the sheer size of the battlefield. My mom and I were there for 2 hours and we only managed to see the battlefields around the museum

  • @TheKira699
    @TheKira699 5 років тому +406

    A friend of mine was a Confederate Reenactor Casualty in Gettysburg. He played the same 'dead' role in Gods and Generals.

    • @izzimichaels2892
      @izzimichaels2892 4 роки тому +47

      safe to say his movie career is dead?

    • @chrissinclair4442
      @chrissinclair4442 4 роки тому +11

      At Gettysburg I think the tour guides were talking about how correct some of the stuff in the movie was, but how incorrect Gods and Generals was.

    • @izzimichaels2892
      @izzimichaels2892 4 роки тому

      @@chrissinclair4442 theres scene in "Gettysburg" where a white van passes by in the background (its been edited out since but it was in the original release)

    • @chrissinclair4442
      @chrissinclair4442 4 роки тому +2

      @@izzimichaels2892 life happens.

    • @razzledcroaker3678
      @razzledcroaker3678 4 роки тому +14

      @@chrissinclair4442 Gettysburg is a fantastic movie, but Gods and Generals is essentially neo-Confederate propaganda without a lick of truthfulness in its delivery.

  • @callmedave1280
    @callmedave1280 3 роки тому +293

    "We fitein fo are rats"
    "Your what?"
    "Are rats"

    • @frankielancaster7133
      @frankielancaster7133 3 роки тому +18

      Doesn't matter how hard or how much fun . or how many speech lessons you have, no one can fake a southern accent.

    • @richhartnell6233
      @richhartnell6233 3 роки тому +34

      @@frankielancaster7133 If you spend enough time in the south you get one for real

    • @ink3539
      @ink3539 3 роки тому +7

      @@richhartnell6233 Some accents can really take you by surprise in that peculiar way, you'd be stating "I haven't got an accent !"... with that precise accent

    • @tonyt2588
      @tonyt2588 3 роки тому +4

      A little TOO stereotypic. Nobody anywhere says rats for rights. The "a" is must softer, and sounds like the ice cream "i" instead of the phony rats sound. Ice cream rights instead of yankee rats.

    • @javilorenzana
      @javilorenzana 3 роки тому +3

      Ar rats te ewn dem slevs!

  • @zacharywilbur3459
    @zacharywilbur3459 Рік тому +5

    As a young lad I loved this movie for its large scale battles and would watch them over and over again. As an adult I can’t believe how much this movie does justice to history while being entertaining

  • @obi-wankenobi1233
    @obi-wankenobi1233 3 роки тому +14

    I dread to imagine how this fellow would react if he saw the movie 'Gods and Generals', made by the same director.

    • @LOTR22090able
      @LOTR22090able 2 роки тому +1

      It's over Lee! I have the high ground!

  • @theherbman2101
    @theherbman2101 3 роки тому +469

    Fun fact about this movie: they didn't fall at random intervals during the battles, in their cartridge pouch each time they took a shot they were to look for a marked cartridge, if it was marked they would fall after they shot it.
    Another fact: during the picketts charge scene (and subsequent artillery scenes), it took ~19 days to film it (from what I can remember), and the amount of cannons firing caused to rain heavily turning the fields into swamps and making conditions miserable and somewhat accurate of the conditions
    (Thanks to my old history teacher who was actually a volunteer in said movie for sharing his experiences and stories)

    • @skunkape2
      @skunkape2 2 роки тому +22

      Thant's really cool as I always wondered how they decided who died and who didn't.

    • @Dock284
      @Dock284 Рік тому +2

      Nice. Unlike other movies they actually has a system. In other movies like Waterloo they do just have random ppl fall at random intervals.

    • @flaviomonteiro1414
      @flaviomonteiro1414 Рік тому +2

      I'm curious how cannon fire can cause rain?

    • @theherbman2101
      @theherbman2101 Рік тому +11

      @@flaviomonteiro1414 it's due to the chemicals in gunpowder, similar to a process called cloud seeding

    • @angriff69
      @angriff69 Рік тому +3

      Thank you (and that teacher of yours) for sharing, amazing!

  • @MrMoron231
    @MrMoron231 4 роки тому +1832

    “I fight for mah raights”
    “your what?”
    “Mah rats”

    • @Robertz1986
      @Robertz1986 4 роки тому +96

      @Chas Stack Yeah, the idiot protesters against him.

    • @CocoaButtah
      @CocoaButtah 4 роки тому +275

      Why do you guys make everything political. Pathetic.

    • @AS-rh7mg
      @AS-rh7mg 4 роки тому +41

      @@CocoaButtah Seriously.

    • @d_4492
      @d_4492 4 роки тому +101

      @@CocoaButtah mainly the liberals i see in the comment section always wanting to include tRuMP in irrelevant places regarding him.

    • @Boooooooooo541
      @Boooooooooo541 4 роки тому +73

      @@Robertz1986 Got a Trumptard here

  • @nbenefiel
    @nbenefiel 11 місяців тому +4

    We went to Gettysburg on July 3&4. The city was full of reenactors. It was phenomenal.

  • @Crabbiy
    @Crabbiy 2 роки тому +29

    Longstreet: "If we move south to Washington we win!"
    Lee: "But the enemy is here..."

    • @Jamhael1
      @Jamhael1 2 роки тому +1

      Lee literaly did a "But MoooOM..."

  • @crispycritterz
    @crispycritterz 4 роки тому +484

    "General Lee.... I have no division..."
    That brings a tear to my eye every time I hear it.

    • @antoniusbritannia8217
      @antoniusbritannia8217 4 роки тому +52

      Pickett never forgave Lee.

    • @thatonefordf-1502
      @thatonefordf-1502 4 роки тому +6

      Same here bud

    • @MaxxCoyote
      @MaxxCoyote 4 роки тому +23

      Tears of joy are always the best.

    • @ogami1972
      @ogami1972 4 роки тому +11

      It should, and Lee should have been charged with war crimes. Am 4th generation Texan, for the record.

    • @BlackMonolithEntertainment12
      @BlackMonolithEntertainment12 4 роки тому +36

      @@ogami1972 what war crime did he commit? all he did was lose a battle and made a mistake with wrong intel and the belief the union's forces weren't as strong as he thought and it would have been an easy fight. generals with wrong intel are responsible for mistakes. it would not be the first time a leader didn't listen to his advisers on a battle.

  • @warrenlehmkuhleii8472
    @warrenlehmkuhleii8472 5 років тому +2069

    Waterloo: I am the best historical movie ever.
    Gettysburg: Hold my beard.

    • @mrvulture8981
      @mrvulture8981 5 років тому +22

      I have not watched waterloo because i cant find it anywhere but Gettysburg is damn awesome

    • @rogu658
      @rogu658 5 років тому +10

      @@mrvulture8981 Its on youtube

    • @mrvulture8981
      @mrvulture8981 5 років тому +5

      @@rogu658 waterloo is not in youtube

    • @mrvulture8981
      @mrvulture8981 5 років тому +20

      @@rogu658 oh never mind. I thought you mean as like you can buy it. Well thanks for telling now i know what i Will be watching today

    • @rogu658
      @rogu658 5 років тому +4

      @@mrvulture8981 Np. I hope it was the correct version. Its been ages since i watched it

  • @jeffc9673
    @jeffc9673 Рік тому +19

    Martin Sheen was brilliant as Robert E. Lee. He was amazingly and made this film enduring.

  • @blaznskais2048
    @blaznskais2048 Рік тому +4

    About 10 yrs ago I went on a family trip to PA and we visited Gettysburg. Found out that a relative through my stepdad, fighting for the Union, and one through my mom, fighting for the Confederacy, where both there and survived. Had one of them died a whole generation possibly wouldn’t be alive. Weird how history impacts us sometimes.

  • @zorken123
    @zorken123 5 років тому +177

    I love how this series is basically tricking us into learning history. And it's doing a really good job at it.

  • @raptorpatton9970
    @raptorpatton9970 5 років тому +94

    One thing I like about Sheen's performance of General Lee was how he accentuated and enunciated everything he says. Lee was a proper, competent, focused man who spoke like he was reciting poetry or the Bible all the time. When you spoke to him, no matter who you were, you had his entire attention. This was a man in complete control of his own mind.

    • @raptorpatton9970
      @raptorpatton9970 4 роки тому +8

      @@Reiman33 And yes, he became over confident and made some really, really glaring mistakes. Even someone with one of the only impeccable records from West Point can fall into such traps. He was a brilliant commander, but the mistakes he made lost the war.

    • @solinvictus39
      @solinvictus39 4 роки тому

      Alot of history buffs don't like Sheen's portrayal because of Sheen's off-screen persona, but I think Sheen did a better job than Robert Duval (who I like better as a person) did in Gods and Generals.

    • @Redbird-dh7mu
      @Redbird-dh7mu 4 роки тому +1

      The Free Speech Zealot to be fair, Lee was given a bad hand from the start, Lee’s only hope for a victory would be to take the capital and gain as much Union ground as possible in the process. The South had only one advantage in the war, experienced and talented generals, the commanders of the Union were not quite as good and this left the Union in trouble for a while, hence why Lee had such an easy time in the beginning.
      However, the Union held every other advantage, they had more factories, they had more guns, they could replace lost equipment much faster then the South. Simply put, Lee’s only hope was taking a Hail Mary, the South only had one hope for a quick and easy war (which is the only war the South was in a position to win), which would be for Lee to not mess up once because recovery would be unlikely.
      Even though it may seem like the confederates were winning for a while, the truth is that they were never in a good position to win in the first place.

    • @maggiesmith2600
      @maggiesmith2600 4 роки тому +1

      Lee was from Virginia so I imagine his accent was similar to Randolph Scott's. Nothing exaggerated , just a soft slur. So Sheen is likely doing it correctly.

    • @82mccord
      @82mccord 4 роки тому

      Redbird7311 I think it was Shelby Foote who described the union as fighting with one hand behind its back. It was only a matter of time. I really think the only change of a confederate victory would have been Lincoln losing to McClellen and then agreeing to a negotiated peace. The chances of which were very high.

  • @georgeherod4252
    @georgeherod4252 Рік тому +8

    Bravo Nick, this is one of my favorite movies because of it's strong historical value. I visited Gettysburg in 2005 and stood in that copse of trees looking out at the field that the Confederates crossed. I had such a huge lump in my throat. I was almost in tears.

  • @cleverusername9369
    @cleverusername9369 2 роки тому +20

    The Union artillery barrage on July 3, 1863, is estimated to be the loudest man-made sound to have ever occurred in the entire Western Hemisphere to that date.

    • @TheLouisianan
      @TheLouisianan Рік тому +1

      I remember reading some of the plaques at the battlefield with excerpts from people's letters and diaries saying some men on the Confederate firing side had internal bleeding and became permanently near deaf from the artillery's fire. Must've been truly terrifying to experience that.

    • @ntfoperative9432
      @ntfoperative9432 Рік тому +1

      @@TheLouisianan apparently it was so loud people in Hagerstown could just barely hear it

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 Рік тому

      Louder than Trinity?

    • @BRTowe
      @BRTowe 3 місяці тому

      ​@jamesalexander5623 "Up to that date". Trinity was 80 years later.

  • @ethanramos4441
    @ethanramos4441 5 років тому +361

    Hey Nick, interesting fact after the Charge Pickett never forgave Lee. He said this 8 years later about Lee after the battle was “That old man had my division slaughtered”

    • @jeffburnham6611
      @jeffburnham6611 5 років тому +35

      @Ethan Ramos he never spoke of ill of President Lincoln as well. It was Lincoln that secured Pickett's appointment to West Point.

    • @BadWebDiver
      @BadWebDiver 5 років тому +24

      And apparently his wife was his biggest supporter in history, which is why it became known a "Pickett's Charge"; despite there actually being three commanders involved in it, under Longstreet.

    • @linksbetweendrinks7032
      @linksbetweendrinks7032 5 років тому +11

      So, not every southerner adored Lee.

    • @alabamaal225
      @alabamaal225 5 років тому +12

      Picket said that to John S. Mosby, who is said to have replied, "But he [Lee] made you immortal."

    • @ethanramos4441
      @ethanramos4441 5 років тому +5

      Alabama Al even so Pickett still hasn’t forgave Lee for what he did

  • @MrKrk221988
    @MrKrk221988 6 років тому +167

    I love the soundtrack to this film.

    • @Swarm509
      @Swarm509 6 років тому +2

      I regularly put it on at work when I need that push to get something done. Really gets you going.

    • @cgross82
      @cgross82 6 років тому +2

      Kevin King, interestingly enough, it was all recorded electronically without a live orchestra, which is pretty scary for professional musicians. But I do like the score, too!

    • @lawrencedockery9032
      @lawrencedockery9032 6 років тому +2

      +Kevin King It's so good. It was composed by Randy Edelman who also did the music for Angels in the Outfield.

    • @ehrldawg
      @ehrldawg 6 років тому

      No kidding !!

    • @rangers94ism
      @rangers94ism 6 років тому

      I completely agree. Holy cow

  • @stevenelson3515
    @stevenelson3515 Рік тому +12

    This movie, more specifically, the musical score, got me interested in the Civil War. The music just captured me, then the actual story drew me in to want to learn more and more. When I finally visited Gettysburg, it wasn’t a warm summer day in July. Rather it was a cold, blustery day in March. I was amazed by a few things. First, the movie gives a sense of a huge area over which the battle was fought when the area is much more compact. Second, I stood at the bottom of the hill where Pickett’s force assembled, then looked up the hill to where the Union cannons had been placed and was in awe of the bravery of the men who made the charge. The movie was incredibly well made. Unfortunately, The sequel (prequel, actually) was not very good at all.

  • @ChubbyAmadeusFan
    @ChubbyAmadeusFan 2 роки тому +8

    Thank you for another great video. I've visited Gettysburg at least 3 times and I'm humbled and awed by this great memorial. No graffiti or desecration on any monuments. It has been preserved well. I hope it stays that way.

  • @elphaba4674
    @elphaba4674 4 роки тому +206

    Imagine being one of those reenactment guys! You get to say for the rest of your lives that you were in Gettysburg! You got to be in a Hollywood film doing what you love! 👌

    • @moomyung9231
      @moomyung9231 4 роки тому +21

      Acting out on the real ground must've been awesome. When I went there we kind of jokingly reenacted the Little Round Top part and even that was awesome.

    • @elorfs300
      @elorfs300 3 роки тому +13

      A co-worker of mine was there on set, but his companies' scenes were cut. He said it was still an awesome experience, though.

    • @jaredfoogle2298
      @jaredfoogle2298 3 роки тому +8

      The reenactment group i was part of was in it! (wayyyy before i joined) There's a shot somewhere that my own dad was in. It still gives me goosebumps seeing it.

    • @MMorbid
      @MMorbid 3 роки тому +10

      I've met a few of them over the years at reenactments. One guy said he made it all the way to the stone wall in Pickett's charge. He said they randomly handed out papers telling them how far they would make it/where they would fall.

    • @AndrewAMartin
      @AndrewAMartin 3 роки тому +8

      @@MMorbid The son of a friend of my Dad was a reenactor and one of Buford's cavalry -- he got paid IIRC $400 a day, because he had a horse and all his tack, etc. He said Sam Elliott was perfect as Buford and was very fun to hang out with on set...

  • @macqnj107
    @macqnj107 3 роки тому +239

    An EXCELLENT review. I was the bugler riding with Buford (Sam Elliott). Making the movie was a life-time experience; I’ll never forget it. My father, a bugler in the US Cavalry when they still had horses, taught me to play as a pre-schooler and at the time of the filming I firmly believe that I was the only one in the country that could play a bugle at the gallop. I’m especially proud of the “Officer’s Call” I played while the courier is riding up to see Buford. Maxwell like my playing so much that they asked me back near the end of filming to make an open-air sound track of calls to be dubbed in during other scenes. He asked me to play “Charge” like you hear at football games; I refused because it hadn’t been written yet. BTW, the weekend they called me back was when they were filming the 20th Maine/Round Top sequences; the fife-and-drum kids also came back to make similar recordings likewise to be dubbed in. I have maybe 100+ photos I took on the set - some scenes that didn’t make to the final cut.

    • @toddbarkalow905
      @toddbarkalow905 Рік тому

      Awesome!

    • @donhaywood6542
      @donhaywood6542 Рік тому +1

      Lucky you!

    • @jbotkin47
      @jbotkin47 Рік тому +8

      I would love to see someone do an "Oral History of the Making of Gettysburg" and draw heavily (maybe exclusively) from the reenactors who were there, bringing this kind of experience and family history with them.

    • @mikegillettify
      @mikegillettify Рік тому +2

      @@jbotkin47 agreed to this! And if I am not mistaken, isn’t this summer the 30th anniversary of the movie’s release?

    • @mikegillettify
      @mikegillettify Рік тому

      @Duncan MacQueen! Thank you for sharing your experience.

  • @Benita59856
    @Benita59856 2 роки тому +5

    I have always loved Gettysburg especially because my dad met Martin Sheen when the movie when it was in theaters which only fuels my intellect even more. This truly is a movie that history buffs hold deer

  • @alistairbain6149
    @alistairbain6149 2 роки тому +53

    The order was “ ... if practicable” not “practical”. Similar meaning but with crucially different nuances,

    • @Swoosh_015
      @Swoosh_015 2 роки тому +2

      Practicable is like “possible” right?

    • @Sephazon
      @Sephazon 2 роки тому +5

      @@Swoosh_015 Indeed. Practical would be "is it useful to take" and practicable is "is it possible to take."

    • @Phoenix-Believer9668
      @Phoenix-Believer9668 Рік тому

      That makes much more sense, thank you.

    • @Dana-nv4ej
      @Dana-nv4ej Рік тому

      Yes, I agree with that, but still by Jackson’s reputation, he would’ve taken that hill, no matter what the cost no matter what the pronunciation

  • @treyb387
    @treyb387 4 роки тому +397

    What Robert E. Lee ACTUALLY said when he found out that George Meade was the newly appointed commander of the Army of the Potomac was..."I know George Meade, and that man will not make a mistake"

    • @andersonbowes7065
      @andersonbowes7065 4 роки тому +40

      What Lee knew of Meade was accurate. Meade was unproven and this was his first major skirmish in command of the Army of the Potomac. Per Lee's strategic style, he typically fought where he knew he had the advantage, or he didn't engage. He also typically didn't sit back and wait for the fight to come to him, he exploited the Union weakness. What Lee did know of Meade is that he was the opposite and thus far had proven to be timid. Buford truly was the hero of Gettysburg and had given Meade the high ground, allowing him to dictate the terms of the battle.

    • @refuge42
      @refuge42 4 роки тому +16

      Meade was known for his bookishness,...and I seem to remember he was called a damned google eyed snapping turtle. Mitch McConnells grandfather I could say.

    • @eugeneflynn7435
      @eugeneflynn7435 4 роки тому +16

      Jim Fuge General Meade is no doubt spinning at his comparison in any manner to Moscow Mitch.

    • @navindavoodi6065
      @navindavoodi6065 4 роки тому +4

      Jim Fuge “Mitch McConnell’s grandfather” LMAO

    • @rleroygordon
      @rleroygordon 3 роки тому +6

      Trey Baker Lee had already told his officers that he was afraid that one day the Union would field a general he couldn’t beat.

  • @thusspoke08
    @thusspoke08 6 років тому +346

    The Confederates would have won if they had not run out of S'more Schnapps

    • @Thespian821
      @Thespian821 6 років тому +31

      Sound of Sleep, not just that. They didn’t have Eric Cartman leading them.

    • @kaylew108
      @kaylew108 6 років тому +18

      Sound of Sleep LMFAO. "Sincerely, General Cartman Lee"

    • @Reyrocksall
      @Reyrocksall 6 років тому +20

      "I hate you guys. I hate you guys.... so very, very much"

    • @Jorendo
      @Jorendo 6 років тому +2

      I thought you were gonna say "The confederats would have won, were it not for the medling kids and their darn dog!"

    • @George-Hawthorne
      @George-Hawthorne 6 років тому +17

      Dear Union Generals
      Words cannot express how much I hate you guys. As we fight our way northward into the great unknown, only that one thing remains certain: that I hate you guys with every tired muscle in my Confederate body. We have taken Chancellorsville, and now I must lolly the men over to Pennsylvania. Because I will not stop until we have won it all, and you guys are my slaves. Because, I hate you guys. I hate you guys so very very much. Yours, General Robert E. Lee.

  • @billgambrel
    @billgambrel 2 роки тому +29

    This was a great movie! I just wish the 1st Minnesota Regiment would have been included in the movie somehow as this regiment was equally as important to the outcome of Day 2 as the 20th Maine regiment. If the 1st Minnesota didn't do what they did the battle would have been lost.

    • @spudsdavenport
      @spudsdavenport 2 роки тому +5

      @William Gambrel I agree with you about the lack of coverage of First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment. They were crucial to Union success on Day Two and Day Three (occupied space at/near The Angle, the focus of Pickett's Charge. In spite of loses suffered on D2, they countercharged when a breakthrough threatened). I disagree with you about Gettysburg being a great movie. As Siskel said, it is little more than Lost Cause Propaganda. Maybe not to the degree of Ted Turner's follow-up to this, Gods and Generals, but propaganda all the same. Why else leave out the defeat of two healthy rebel battalions at the hands of one depleted Union regiment of volunteers? if not to avoid tarnishing the golden aura of the soldiers of The Cause.

    • @rayflores2471
      @rayflores2471 Рік тому +4

      Have no idea why they are always overlooked, but they were sacrificed to buy some time to setup a line further back.

    • @user-st3vd5bf6g
      @user-st3vd5bf6g Рік тому +4

      More important. The 20th Maine had reserves that would have drove the exhausted 15th Alabama. The 1st Minnesota were very important.

    • @retriever19golden55
      @retriever19golden55 9 місяців тому +1

      Michael Shaara couldn't cover everything in his book unfortunately, it would've been several volumes. I've always wished he'd included the East Cavalry Field fight. A depiction of George Custer leading charges against Stuart's Invincibles, as the Union cavalry gave them their first decisive defeat would've done a lot to correct the public's perception of Custer. He was truly a courageous hero.

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 4 місяці тому

      Correct. Brave lads! I only wish Stonewall had been there.

  • @richardswartzbaugh929
    @richardswartzbaugh929 Рік тому +2

    I have been to Gettysburg three times and each time the goose bumps get bigger and the lump in my throat gets bigger. The movie gives me the same sensation and makes me want to go back again . I would love to see the old electric map that stirred me as young boy to love the history of the great battle that was fought there for three days.

  • @misanthropicservitorofmars2116
    @misanthropicservitorofmars2116 3 роки тому +436

    Every regiment who fought in that battle, from both sides, has a monument dedicated to them in the rough position they were on the line.
    Walking that battlefield today is special. It’s beyond amazing. History is kept alive in that town. The cannon balls and bullet holes in the buildings are preserved to this day. The fighting from the first day in Gettysburg, the holes are still there in the buildings. The lines are still manned by the regiments, with stone monuments in place of hundreds of men. You can walk Pickett’s charge. Walking from the confederate lines to the union lines on cemetery ridge.
    Maybe since I’m American I haven’t seen many historical battlefields, but I have been to Gettysburg. Maybe it is special, it feels special when you’re there. That’s all I can attest to.

    • @fdzaviation
      @fdzaviation 2 роки тому +18

      I'm betting it is one of those places where time stays still. Kinkda like the Grassy Knoll, 9-11 memorial, the 1985 Mexico City Earthquake, Stalingrad (volgograd) and many others. I definetly have to make this a bucket list item.

    • @Redmonsterracing
      @Redmonsterracing 2 роки тому +8

      It is truly a moving place to visit. I am from Vicksburg, MS and grew up visiting the park there, but as it was a completely different kind of battle, it doesn't convey the scope of the armies and the epic nature of the fight. Everywhere you go you can see the actual terrain and put yourself into the fight on both sides. I've been to several other fields and none are preserved like this. Antietam is also a moving visit, but it lacks the terrain that is so much of the story of the Gettysburg battle.

    • @acousticshadow4032
      @acousticshadow4032 2 роки тому +6

      Indeed. Gettysburg is a special place that everyone should see at least once. I can't get enough of it.

    • @neanderthalsnavel7411
      @neanderthalsnavel7411 2 роки тому +8

      I made the trip for the first time. The town is amazingly cool. Many civil war era buildings that are in use today. The battlefields are shocking. They look larger than I expected in some places and smaller in others. I could feel a great somber sadness there. And a living testament to what the Federal Gov't will do to you when given the opportunity. The museum is propaganda filled. Put on headphones and look at the artifacts. They tell the story all by themselves.

    • @celadoncylon4169
      @celadoncylon4169 Рік тому +3

      Having also been, I concur. The battlefield has an eerie stillness and the air feels heavy. Almost as if the war never ended on that field. I went in 2007 and there were a lot of people there, but the whole field was silent. We visiting Pennsylvania and went to Gettysburg because I love history and wanted to see it. I was so excited to get there, but it was nothing like anyone would expect. The colors of the grass and the trees and the rocks were visible but dull and dingy. There was no wind. There were no bird calls nor the buzzing of flies, bees, and wasps. The temperature was in the mid 80s in the middle of June but you didn't feel hot. There was no joy nor smiles. It was cold and somber. Walking the field along Pickett's charge and walking up to the hills and both the Confederate and Union encampments you could almost feel the fear and the anxiety. It truly is a moving site. Every American needs to go see it and try and catch a glimpse at what it was like for these boys and what it's like for our current men and women in the military and veterans dealing with PTSD.

  • @missdarkeyes
    @missdarkeyes 6 років тому +75

    "I'm fightin' fo' mah rats!"
    "For your what?"
    "Mah rats!"

    • @JuanCarlos-sq4vf
      @JuanCarlos-sq4vf 6 років тому +1

      missdarkeyes was he really saying that?

    • @missdarkeyes
      @missdarkeyes 6 років тому +26

      Juan Carlos he was saying "rights". It just sounded like "rats" 🤣

    • @brucetucker4847
      @brucetucker4847 6 років тому +5

      He sounded perfectly understandable to me. And southern accents are so charming, not like the nasal braying you get up north.

    • @simonhemingwaygmail
      @simonhemingwaygmail 6 років тому

      its pronounced rahts

    • @MaxxCoyote
      @MaxxCoyote 5 років тому +2

      The south tends to struggle with the English language.

  • @Bottlekiller
    @Bottlekiller 6 років тому +46

    "The by now mandatory call for the old intro to be reinstated"-post

    • @traceytaggart1740
      @traceytaggart1740 6 років тому +3

      Bottlekiller yes, bring back Escala’s “Palladio”! They probably wanted a little licensing money, but I think you can afford it now.

  • @croweman6515
    @croweman6515 5 років тому +179

    I have ancestors who fought on both sides of the war, my mother's side of the family has always lived in the south from Texas to Alabama, and my father's side of the family has always lived in the north, from Minnesota to Pennsylvania. May all who fought and died in that terrible war Rest In Peace, weather they were Union or Confederate.

    • @rollo216
      @rollo216 4 роки тому +11

      Theodicist Eddie Traitors? Losing side perhaps, but fighting for your state can never make you a traitor. As Lee says: “There was always a higher duty to Virginia.”

    • @jtmumo
      @jtmumo 4 роки тому +6

      Theodicist Eddie my guy, USS Grant freed his slaves the day of the 13 Amendment coming into action. Lee freed his own slaves before the war started. Both sides had slaves. Miss me w that bull

    • @AverageJoe___
      @AverageJoe___ 4 роки тому +1

      @@triggerme6144 Plus, US Congress passed a measure called the War Aims Resolution that stated the war was not about slavery, but to preserve the Union.

    • @lionofthecherubim4486
      @lionofthecherubim4486 4 роки тому +7

      @@jtmumo The every non disputed union state had abolished slavery on a state level. Every Confederate declaration of secession named the preservation slavery as the main issue

    • @lionofthecherubim4486
      @lionofthecherubim4486 4 роки тому +8

      @@rollo216 Fighting for your state, who is fighting for slavery, makes one a demented slaver.
      The confederacy is forfeit, as is the effort of all confederate soldiers .

  • @lelandframe1029
    @lelandframe1029 2 роки тому +13

    What I love about this movie is its SCOPE--its ability to show the THOUSANDS of Rebels crossing the fields in Pickett's Charge! You can read about it in history books and hear lectures in classrooms--but you can't really GRASP it until you can actually SEE it! It's the same with the battle at Little Round Top! It actually brought a tear to my eye to see Chamberlain's men charge down the hill to take the Rebels by surprise--even though I had read about it and heard descriptions of it in documentaries like Ken Burns' The Civil War! I still get a chill down my spine every time I see it! Just like the re-creation of the battle of Fredericksburg in Gods And Generals! I don't think I would have the courage to participate in such combat even if I had modern protective armor like a Kevlar jacket or a helmet! Those boys had NOTHING to protect them! No wonder there were 30%, 40%, sometimes 50% casualties in Civil War battles!
    They made better men back then, that's for damn sure!
    I'm also proud to say that my Great-Grandfather fought for The Union! 🇺🇸 I would have loved to have known him!

  • @NickyB0718
    @NickyB0718 Місяць тому +1

    I don’t know if a lot of people realize this was initially a made for tv movie. Crazy how great it is.

  • @OfficialRedTeamReview
    @OfficialRedTeamReview 6 років тому +1088

    I love Martin Sheen, the guy is without a doubt an amazing actor.

    • @chrisbanion
      @chrisbanion 6 років тому +36

      While I do admit that Martin Sheen is a fine actor I think it is obvious that he was miscast in this movie. Gettysburg is one of my favorite films, the directing, writing and acting was fantastic... except for Martin Sheen. Lee had a commanding and imposing presence as recorded by everyone who talked about him; both by stature and by strength of character. Martin Sheen is only 5' 7" while Lee was about 6' 2"... quite tall for that age. Lee also carried himself with a straight back while in the presence of other officers and didn't slouch or mope about.

    • @thearchivist7824
      @thearchivist7824 6 років тому +30

      My one gripe is that his Southern gentlemen's accent sounds like a fucking cartoon.

    • @OfficialRedTeamReview
      @OfficialRedTeamReview 6 років тому +5

      The Abyssal Archivist Lol I know. its hilarious

    • @Dudemon-1
      @Dudemon-1 6 років тому +15

      The portrayal of Lee was the most inaccurate thing about the film. He was made to look like a loon, instead of a brilliant man who might very well have been right on Day 2. Longstreet pouted and delayed moving, and then got lost..and even so, nearly took Little Round Top. If Lee's orders had been properly carried out, the day would have been theirs.

    • @TigerRifle1
      @TigerRifle1 6 років тому +1

      And yet Lee approves all of his delays.

  • @danielphipps415
    @danielphipps415 3 роки тому +148

    I am now convinced, that for the first time in the war, General George Meade, being slow and thinking clear, he outsmarted Gen. Lee, and won the battle of Getttysburg. I was at PA in 2019 with the wife, and saw the entire town and battlefield. I was moved to tears many times too. I strongly tell all, go see the battlefield for yourselves. You will be glad you went.

    • @JahBronee
      @JahBronee 2 роки тому +7

      I was there and it has an eerie presence to it.

    • @AleisterCrowleyMagus
      @AleisterCrowleyMagus Рік тому +4

      Yes, it is a stunningly beautiful place, and it does have an extremely eerie quality to it (I know it’s been considered for quite a long time the “most haunted” of battlefields, even more so than say the Somme or more contained battlefields like Culloden with its devastating losses and tragic effects for an entire culture). There is also an almost uncanny silence - even when lots of tourists are visiting and the sounds of the modern world drift by in general. I will never forget it.

    • @cl5470
      @cl5470 Рік тому +3

      Joshua Chamberlain's bravery is what saved the day.

    • @007ndc
      @007ndc Рік тому

      @@cl5470 and Gen. Warren realizing that Little Round Top must be occupied and held

    • @Dana-nv4ej
      @Dana-nv4ej Рік тому

      Well, when you think about it, when Grant traveled with the army of the Potomac, when he became General of all armies, he left mead in charge of the army although overtime, Meade became almost a figurehead

  • @Bambam1959.
    @Bambam1959. 2 роки тому +4

    As a man of the south, I LOVE their southern accents it feels really genuine

    • @__mindflayer__
      @__mindflayer__ 7 місяців тому

      You can’t tell me “fattin for my rats” is a real southern accent bro. We don’t talk that way.

  • @Gamble661
    @Gamble661 Рік тому +2

    It's called history, something that Gene Siskel obviously wasn't bright enough to comprehend. But then I've never paid any attention to critics, people who make a living criticizing the artistic endeavors of others while creating nothing themselves.

  • @Keyring7031
    @Keyring7031 6 років тому +281

    Your videos are honestly some of the best UA-cam has to offer, keep up the great work!

    • @iPodbunny
      @iPodbunny 6 років тому +1

      he deserves more subscribers! what a fuckin gem of a channel!

    • @tommytompkins4564
      @tommytompkins4564 2 роки тому

      WhenyouyouReinawarmendieitneedstostop

    • @tommytompkins4564
      @tommytompkins4564 2 роки тому

      @@iPodbunny youneedyourownchannel itcalledtrsshmouth

    • @tommytompkins4564
      @tommytompkins4564 2 роки тому

      Mychannelissomewtrirehatefulstuff

    • @tommytompkins4564
      @tommytompkins4564 2 роки тому

      Toallwhothanksleewasenfgoodhewasgod

  • @Thespian821
    @Thespian821 6 років тому +67

    Great job, Nick! Even though I’m a Gunslinger, I also have a great admiration for Civil War history and movies. Mainly because my ancestor was a sergeant in the Union Cavalry during the Civil War.
    Sergeant Peter Reising & the 14th Illinois Cavalry saw action in seven battles (including the Battle of the Cumberland Gap, and the Raid of Macon, Georgia). While in Georgia, his regiment was ambushed by Confederate guerillas and he was personally injured, captured, and spent 7-9 months as a POW in Andersonville, Georgia. It wouldn’t be until August of 1865, when he was rescued, mustered out of the army, and lived out the rest of his life as a quiet farmer in Illinois.
    Had he died either in battle or in Andersonville, It would've corrupted my entire family tree; preventing even my own birth. Kind of a scary thought when you think about it.