Top 20 Most Accurate War Movies
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- Опубліковано 28 кві 2024
- War isn't an easy thing to portray accurately. For this list, we’ll be looking at films that truly capture the grit, gore, and pain of modern warfare.There will also be a few spoilers. Our countdown includes "Hacksaw Ridge", "Full Metal Jacket", "Paths of Glory" and more! Were there any war movies left on the cutting room floor of this list? Let us know in the comments below.
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Were there any war movies left on the cutting room floor of this list? Let us know in the comments below.
Were there any war movies left on the cutting room floor of this list? Let us know in the comments below.
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Ok
the fact that tora tora tora isn't on this list makes the rest of it invalid.
The Battle of Waterloo!!! Saw it as a teenager. Forty five years later, it’s still impactful.
I personally believe that Gettysburg (1993) should have made the list.
Midway
The D-Day scene is a major example of why they say “You can take a man out of the war, but you can’t take the war out of a man”
my father in law was on sword beach (British) on D-day, he said it was pretty close to his experience
That's why Rambo said it too.
The Normandy scene is very intense and it took me a week to get past the beach scene, it calmed down so much
A neighbor and D-Day vet the only thing missing was the smell!
Which war were yall fighting in?
Movie Stamps:
0:41 All Quiet on the Western Front (20)
1:34 The Thin Red Line(19)
2:34 Hacksaw Ridge(18)
3:30 Master and Commander(shortened to save time)(17)
4:30 Rescue Dawn(16)
5:24 Full Metal Jacket(15)
6:25 Lone Survivor(14)
7:26 Paths of Glory(13)
8:29 Stalingrad(12)
9:27 Downfall(11)
10:19 Dunkirk(10)
11:19 Das Boot(9)
12:24 1917(8)
13:28 "We were soldiers"(7)
14:23 Glory (6)
15:21 Come and See(5)
16:25 Platoon (4)
17:34 Black Hawk Down(3)
18:32 Letters from Iwo Jima (2)
19:49 Saving Private Ryan(1)
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Thak you very much
Gigachad
Eastwood telling the story of Iwo Jima from both perspectives in two completely different films shot nearly simultaneously and released back-to-back is one of the most brilliantly ambitious pieces of film-making I can remember.
Wow! how was the reception to these two movies? Never heard of them here in India!
Eastwood is a legend for all the best reasons.
With the Saving Private Ryan D-Day scene, you know it’s accurately recreated when veterans walk out of the theater because it reminds them too much of the real thing
3 of my great-uncles (2 in WWII Pacific theater, 1 in WWII European theater) and my grandfather (Korean War special operations) did just that.
Except bullets don't act like that under water, I believe.
we all heard the stories but I still don’t get why they would wanna go see it 😵💫
@@coco2.2 I think it's akin to that Stan Lee scene in the Avengersfilm where he, a WWII vet (he really was one) scoffs at Thor warning him about a certain alcohol and drinks it (for the humor, of course).
@@lisakaz35 I dont remember the exact working distance, but they tested this in a TV show once. The bullets stop after 1 or 2 meters, so you can survive being shot if you dive deep enough.
Bro the original "all quiet on the western front" had ACTUAL GERMAN WAT VETS both direct,star and play as the background characters. The original movie was so powerful that the NAZI REGIME BANNED IT. The original all quiet on the western front SOLOS NO QUESTION.
It shows are poorly researched this channel is
I think all quiet on the western front should be top 3. Gruesome and it really shows how war is hell
Sorry but if you refer as the "original" movie to that of 1930 (the novel from E. M. Remarque was just written in 1929), that is really a very fine and "powerful" classic but an American production (Universal Studios) casting american actors... (Lew Ayres and Louis Wolheim as leading actors) and directed by Lewis Milestone... some real veterans were actually used only as advisors or for background roles in mass scenes..
Agree.😀
@@dylansalazar1226 top 4 all American. of course.
I think "Das Boot" was the best war movie, every single moment was a sense of mystery and horror. Not much fighting actions but the fear of sunken to the ocean floor made audience very uneasy!
I’m shocked that Waterloo, Tora Tora Tora, or Gettysburg didn’t make the list, all 3 are incredibly accurate, especially Tora Tora Tora
The charge of the Scots Grey's in Waterloo will never be seen in that form on screen again. They were actual Cossacks riding as the extras.
I was going to name all of these myself. Never seen Waterloo, but Tora Tora Tora, Gettysburg, and Gods and Generals are ones that should have been on the list or at least considered more heavily.
A bridge too far is also a great and historically accurate film.
Waterloo, Zulu, Zulu Dawn, Sink the Bismark, The Dam Busters, The longest Day ,A Bridge too Far, The Heroes of Telemark to name but a few
@@crunkwhitey59 Gods and Generals is about as historically accurate as 300.
The Thin Red Line is highly underrated actually, the combat scenes are absolutely stunning.
"Downfall" is absolutely stunning. Few films have ever portrayed Hitler on screen beyond just the portrait on the wall of generals desk. It's so intimate you forget you're watching a film and not a documentary, or even in the room yourself. The fact that it was actually made by the Germans themselves lends it an authenticity that can't be matched by anyone else, almost an admission of guiltiness. It's on par with Saving Private Ryan in every way. "When Trumpets Fade" is also great, BUT it had the misfortune of being released the same year as SPR. We have to mention Band of Brothers, it's not just a show, it's a 12 hour SPR.
I agree that downfall is a great film . Remember that Hitler was played by a Swiss actor...
@@MrPomdownunderwho did the best portrayal of Hitler out of anyone ever
Him being Swiss isn’t relevant
Das boot always be the most accurate ww2 movies all the time and you can't change my mind
Damn near perfect if you ask me!
absolutely
Should be more movies from the Germans perspective
@@williamsnell2078 There are plenty, but not usually in English nor do they receive the amount of promotion and media coverage of Hollywood films.
Kind of invalidates the whole list that it's put so low
None of those even comes close to "Die Brücke" (The Bridge) from 1959. It's based on the Novel of the same name, written by Gregor Dorfmeister, describing his experiences when he was 16 and a Member of the "Volkssturm" (a hastily recruited Militia with little or no training, mostly used as cannonfodder).
If other war movies told you about honor, glory and what-not to be found on the Battlefield, this one won't tell you the opposite, it will pound it into you to the point you'll tear up after it shows a blackscreen and the message appears:
'This event occurred on April 27, 1945. It was so unimportant that it was never mentioned in any war communique.'
god bless you.
One movie that could also be mentioned about normal people put in war (crimes) situation I would mention is the movie Hasenjagd (Quality of Mercy). Ordinary people volunteerly or forced to hunt down Russian POW's after a mass escape from Mauthausen Concentration Camp.
I appreciated that Jarhead subverted expectations by not having much violence depicted on screen, compared to most war movies, and this portrayal is rather realistic.
Other than the dark humor, I liked that movie a lot and even people who've I've spoken to online who are veterans have seen the film and they all agreed that it's as realistic as you can get.
that was not on the list
@@Ziko577you can't have military without having dark humour.
@@Ziko577 Dark humor is part of military culture.
That was my thought exactly. Jarhead was masterfully made. I wish it had found a spot on the list. I get they were going for movies that accurately depicted the brutality of combat. But that's not every warfighter's experience.
I woud've included the movie 'Gettysburg' on the list. It's amazing!
Just like Platoon, Dale Dye served as the military technical adviser for Saving Private Ryan as well as for the miniseries Band of Brothers in which he also played the character Colonel Sink.
And made LOT Mohicans one of my favorite movies ever thanks to his expertise
He also used his training group for the making of "the Great Raid" which he portrayed General Kruger.
I had the pleasure of meeting Capt. Dye during a joint military exercise a few years after he retired from active duty.
@@Grandizer8989
And then Oliver stone nailed the 9/11 movie decades later, i love his movies because they’re so accurate
As a veteran that served in the Marines as a radio operator in Viet Nam in 1967/68 I watch movies about Nam and judge them for accuracy like I suppose many vets do, Most movies get a lot of life {and death} pretty accurate. The one area they fall short in is the age of the warriors. Most movies the actors are in there late 20s or 30s. The vast majority of soldiers were 18 to 20. Much younger than portrayed. Try to picture kids that young thrown into that chaos. I am thankful every day I am here. So many didn't get a life at all. Semper Fi.
Welcome home
@@NateWhitelock thanks
Honorable mention: My Way (2011) after the ending, you can start up Saving Private Ryan and it’s perfect.
Saving Private Ryan should’ve won Best Picture. Period
You got that right. When Shakespeare in Love was announced the winner, I damn near threw up my dinner.
Absolutely. 🙌 Its that simple and why it did not two words: Harvey Weinstein. 😠
@@roxy5588 He had something to do with it?? 😲😲
@@timothyivey5497 so did my grandpa. He was there in real life
Not Weinstein in Love.
Thank you for adding letters from iwo jima. I only ever watched it once but it always stayed with me. The horrors and bravery as well as blind obedience...all of it. It was such a good film.
Honorable mentions: Valkyrie, Enemy At The Gates and Battle Of Jangsari
Enemy at the Gates is not historically accurate, more a piece of Cold War propaganda. The initial part where only half the Soviet soldiers even get guns when storming the Germans may be good drama, but it has nothing to do with reality. The basis is a description of how Russian soldiers had to share rifles while training before getting sent to the front. Nor were the Soviets quite that quick to shoot their own troops for retreating.
The Norwegian 1948 war movie Kampen om tungtvannet (Operation Swallow: The Battle for Heavy Water)
is the most realistic war movie ever. They even used some of the saboteurs playing them selves in it. Even the filming location was also filmed where the real thing happened.
I know Fury wasn’t on the list but I remember seeing it in theaters and a veteran started having flashbacks. He started shouting “no! no!” during the scene when the Germans overtook the tank. He was escorted out by his family/friends. It shook the whole theater up so bad that the manager offered everyone a refund or free tickets for another showing.
Youch... 😬😬😬
I can already imagine how that scene brought back a LOT of painful memories of his experience... I hope he's doing okay. 😬
We who've never served just don't know or understand.
This is in my top 3 war movies.
My 2nd most favourite war movie after Saving Private Ryan. Fury was just wow
@@gouravsingh520...Fury was completely unrealistic in it's story line. The implied forced sex scene, the combat scenes, the tank all alone scene. It was complete hogwash which is why so many veterans groups have trashed it. For non military people it's great Hollywood entertainment however. As a Marine Veteran my top list includes both war movies and tv series including Saving Private Ryan, Generation Kill, Band of Brothers, Midway ( the original version ), Full Metal Jacket, Gettysburg, Tora, Tora, Tora, Das Boot, The Pacific, We Were Soldiers, Downfall, Lone Survivor ( even though the ending is completely false and isn't what happened ), Letters from Iwo Jima, Black Hawk Down, Patton, Platoon, The Thin Red Line, and We Shall Not Grow Old all in no specific order.
Honourable mention: Greyhound. The sea battle scenes has my retired father who's a former navy captain got nostalgic while watching the movie.
The patriot is actually pretty realistic too
Loved that movie.
Regarding accuracy Saving private Ryan should never be on first place because after the really astonishing filming of the invasion at D-Day the movie becomes more or less ridiculous in some scenes. Sad but true.
of course, i do not however think the scenes are ludicrous - at all - in any way ... having said that the requisite shilling for the holocaust fable - well it was relatively understated. in my comment above i only mention the first 30 minutes tho ...
My grandad was there on D-day, he was a royal engineer. He cried whilst watching saving private Ryan, it was that accurate
My Great grandfather was one of the few soldiers that survived the battle of the bulge
Only 27 minutes into the film. From then on its just regular Hollywood.
interesting factoid: when the movie came out, the VA had to provide emergency extra staffing to their phone help lines because a ton of WWII vets were triggered and needed to talk to someone
@@orgefen1300 that's a true story too for finding the soldier name.
@@orgefen1300
I got through the first 30 minutes of Saving private Ryan and I was forever traumatised by it, I recently watched in January 2024 and I’m a very sensitive 21 year old me who has a very soft spot for the war but after being traumatised by Come and See (1985), I knew my bonding with the war was fading away quickly but I did convince the war not to leave my side and it didn’t in the end. I love you war and those who died
"When Trumpets Fade" is an underrated and brilliant movie about the horrors that the Americans faced in the Battle of the Hurtgen Forest. Well worth watching for any War Buff. Very accurate and authentic.
I mentioned this film here, too before seeing your entry.
Definitely missed on The Outpost. As an OIF/OEF vet, this was the movie that really took me back. Also, an incredible look at PTSD struggles.
Thinking the same thing. Shows everything you want from a war movie.
Could not agree more, The Outpost is a criminally underrated movie that deserves much more praise than it gets!
I'd add in, even as an honourable mention, The Wind That Shakes the Barley. Very accurate depiction of the Irish War of Independence and Civil War
Yes! Very much second that.
Gallipoli deserves a mention. The arrival of the ANZACs on Turkish soil in 1915 combined with the sense of adventure that most Aussie soldiers saw war as makes for a truly powerful feature. Mark Lee and Mel Gibson were superb in selling the story.
It's remarkable that this film is not mentioned here, as well as Danger Close, and the Odd Angry Shot.
@@paulboger3101 Odd Angry Shot is phenomenal. Although, I'm not surprised that an Australian film misses out. We miss out on a lot unless it's something really mainstream.
@@rhiannonelizabethirons It’s always the Americans can only tell war stories. They seem to forget there is the rest of the world.
Gallipoli again. Anything to mention the Aussies who were not in NORTH West Europe on the ground which bugs then no end. Give us a break.
My Grandad Dennis was a War Hero,in World War 2 all over the world he was a Paratrooper.He was A War Hero,he saved a little girl from being killed.We all really Love Our Precious Grandad,Lot's OF LOVE & Hugs😍💙😇💞❤🤗😘🤗😘🤗😘 🙏🙏🙏
Still baffles me that Saving Private Ryan lost the Oscars to Shakespeare in Love. One where Gwyneth Paltrow got an award when she had only eight minutes of screen time. Now I love Paltrow for her acting as Pepper in Iron Man and in other films. I think me being unsettled by the award is stemmed from Saving Private Ryan being robbed at the Oscars that year.
At least Spielberg won Best Director, so it wasn't a total loss. BTW, it should have won Best Picture.
Gallipoli and Kokoda should be on this list.
it wasn’t Gwyneth Paltrow that had such limited screen time, but Dame Judi Dench. She won Best Supporting Actress with the 8 minutes of screen time. She was so good, but it felt like the other nominees got cheated.
I liked Shakespeare in Love. But Saving Private Ryan should have won, no question. The lasting impact of the film is a testament to just how good it is.
Another reason to hate Harvey Weinstein. He made sure that S in Love won
@@seatonmeade5282 and Danger Close.
“Only the dead have seen the end of war.”
- George Santayana
Saving private ryan in my opinion, will always be THE pinnacle of war movies
It set a very high standard
Jaw dropping depiction. Even modern war movies dont come close to this movie.
@@Necr0Mancer666 The opening 20 minutes of Saving Private Ryan is a rare instance where Hollywood actually tones down the chaos in comparison to the actual event and not the other way around
Most overrated war movies ever made.
The opening D-Day depiction was a masterpiece but the rest were average Hollywood war movies.
@@LeeRenthlei Ryan is easily the most overrated war movie. The entire premise is so removed from reality that it may as well be science fiction.
It's too bad that Band of Brothers is a mini-series and not a movie, since that is one of the best depictions of military life on film. This list leans towards recent films, which is understandable since CGI and other recent improvements add to the realism compared to older films. I would add the films "Battle of Britain" for its amazing aerial sequences, "Fury" for its use of historic vehicles, and "Decision Before Dawn" for using actual locations (and destruction) in Germany right after the war.
Winter War.
Unknown Soldier.
Tali Ihantala 1944.
Unknown Soldier is indeed a good one, both old and new version, but sadly they are series. But I would vote for that.
For a movie I would vote for one like
Siege of Jadotville
The East
My Way
17:52 I love these archetypes in war movies. Especially knowing the fact that there are actual people like that, who're so used to the firefights, that they appear as if they're just garbagemen on regular work day. Lt. Spiers in Band of Brothers is another great example of this.
I can't believe Stalingrad 1993 is so low. Do a goddamn historical analysis of entire fight scenes. The first scene is simply beautiful, the soldiers walk in visible groups, as platoons, the scene itself shows the entire battalion and beautifully (although not but) the fate of most German battalions in Stalingrad, the problem of fighting for the Germans. Soldiers also take covers, use smoke grenades and grenades in general, there is even a radio station and a hierarchy with a captain aka battalion commander and artillery and also showing another problem of fighting in Stalingrad, artillery attacks often attacked and German positions because the Soviets tried to be as close to the Germans as possible, an average of 50 meters from them.
Also the film shows and focuses on the wounded, field hospitals and mainly them. Also on the illnesses of the soldiers late in the film.
Well and more.
Sorry, but I don't understand how it got on All Quiet on the Western Front list at all, because this movie has nothing to do with the historicity of fighting. And Stalingrad? Should be #1 or behind Saving Private Ryan.
R Lee Ermey was a drill instructor at MCRD Parris Island, SC, not in Vietnam.
Sam Peckinpah's Cross of Iron is compelling. It's told from the perspective of the German soldier on the Russian Front in the later stages of WW2
Im surprised why Unknown Soldier is not on the list!
The 5 minute Dunkirk scene in Atonement is allegedly more historically accurate than the movie Dunkirk.
They need a list like this for television miniseries. Gettysburg, Gods and Generals were amazingly accurate for the Civil War. Band of Brothers and The Pacific are on equal footing with Saving Private Ryan.
"Band of Brothers" was amazing. Also, "Generation Kill" was a good portrayal of Marines in Iraq.
Tora, Tora, Tora!
Gods and Generals? Not trying to be a dick but totally absolutely historical garbage, southern revisionist bs, sorry…I do love Gettysburg though
Saving Private Ryan is pure propaganda. Highly entertaining propaganda but it’s not at all historically accurate. Ranking it with Band of Brothers and the Pacific is an insult to them.
Have you ever seen either version of The Dawns Gere Are Quiet? The origina is prebabaly the better of the two.
I was in the First Infantry Division when Saving Private Ryan came out. The commander had us go as a unit to watch on base.
I only watch it for the Normandy scene and it’s so accurate. The movie gives me Call of Duty WW2 vibes
I was in the 1st Armored Division when it came out.
I served in the Big Red One in Desert Storm.
@@jamesr4464 Germany or Ft. Riley?
Missing the unknown soldier.
Funny that I saw nearly every movie on this list except Master and Command. That would be on my list of movies to watch.
I did a history project for Saving Private Ryan in high school. Here's some facts about there D-Day scene/real battle as well.
1) PTSD and the sea sickness was beyond truthful.
2) Of the 1,500 extras, some were part of the Irish Army Reserves
3) 20-30 amputees are seen within the D-Day scene. All of whom lost there real limb(s) in a real war.
4) Two of those landing boats were at the real battle.
5) Charles Schulz (creator of Charlie Brown) both fought at Omaha beach.
6) The movie was inspired by a similar true story of the Niland brothers. Their names were Fredrick (the brother James Ryan resembles) and Edward, Robert, and Preston. Edward's plane was shot down, Robert died by a heavy gun fight, and Preston shot and killed the next day as well. However, when the war ended in 1945. Preston was found alive and held captive at a Japanese POW camp. He safety made it back home.
Those are some facts that I learned about Saving Private Ryan's DDay that I wished to share
here's my honorable mentions:
Taegukgi
The Unknown Soldier
The Longest Day
Taegukgi should be top 5
Although a fictionalization, "Twelve O'Clock High" deserves at least an honorable mention. There's only one battle scene in the film, as it mostly focuses on an Allied air base and the effects of the war on the soldiers.
I love war films because some of my family has fought in the wars in American history. Numbers 19, 18, 16, 15, 12, 8, 7, 6, 4, 2, and 1 are my favorites.
Great work, guys!
This list is missing Danger Close, the battle of Long Tan and the truly excellent Beneath Hill 60, two brilliant Australian films
Gallipoli and the Odd Angry Shot as well.
Missing a great accurate war movie on this list.
Tora Tora Tora.
That film is about as accurate as you can make it.
And it has scenes that are not acted like where a plane goes off course and plows into other planes the men in the scene are truly running for their lives.
I would have to add a movie called"The Boys of Company C " to the list. It had Stan Shaw and F Lee Emery and was pretty accurate in it's telling of the Vietnam War
Great list! Two things: One, I'm glad you didn't have Apocalypse Now on your list. Though it's a very good movie, I feel like it's a psychological thriller, not a war movie. And two, I feel like Fury should have been somewhere there, but at the same time, I don't know which ranked movie it would replace.
Fury apparently sucks. I liked it, but many critics say it’s incredibly unrealistic
“The Battle of Britain” should be on here. Fantastic historic piece about the RAF defending the skys
My dad was one of the Chosen Few survived the battle at Chosin, Korea (ask a Marine). I took him to see Apocalypse Now at the Cineramadome Hollywood when it opened and afterwards he got as far as the car before he broke down. First time I saw him cry; first time he opened up about wartime. Later he would find healing in a band of brothers survivors group called the Chosen Few, which he would even become President of and deliver the press covered Keynote Address at Riverside National (Arlington West) one Memorial Day. Years later I took him to another war movie: Saving Private Ryan. When it was over he put on his sunglasses before exiting the theater and said - and I have never fogotten this:
"I think that's the closest you civilians will ever come to experiencing real warfare."
To his son...
With out question, (To Hell And Back) based on real life exploits of Audie L. Murphy during
WW II. Should at least be in the top 5 of all time. A true and well done story, book then movie.
Standing 5'- 6" tall, and 140lbs he was turned downed by the Marines and Navy because of his
size upon trying to enlist. Was accepted as an rifleman (U.S. Army) 1/15th 3rd Infantry Division.
He became the most decorated solider of WW II and recipient of the (Congressional Metal Of
Honor.) If you have never seen this movie, I highly recommend you do. I possitivly feel it will not
only impact you, but then feel like I, why it should be rated as one of the best of all time. Thanks.
Hamburger Hill was a brilliant Vietnam movie based on the actual taking of a hill.
It was ruined the character of Doc played by Courtney Vance. The character ruined the film.
After Full Metal Jacket in the 80's, my stepfather's abuse included changing my name to Numb Nuts. Still, I love R. Lee Ermy!
I miss "Cross of Iron". I saw it with my father and he was fighting on the East Front. He said "So it was there"
For someone who loves history and war film I seen all these😂
I think The Outpost should be on this list. It’s incredibly accurate to the Battle of Kamdesh and how the soldiers had to continually adapt to the awful situation
Agreed, that was an awesome movie.
Re Platoon. It allowed me to clarify where the term “Going Postal” came from to a young kid in his twenties. He had seen Platoon. I explained that at the end of the movie when he got on the helicopter, four or five days later he could have been getting off a plane on the west coast, with a train or bus ticket to his home town. Where he could use his ten point veteran’s preference to land a job at the Post Office. No counseling, no wind down, their two year draft commitment was done, and they just got dumped out into the population. So after a few years later someone would give them a bit too much grief, and they would wig out and shoot their supervisor, and a few other people they had any grievances with.
Kajaki is well worth a mention for this category, great film that many have missed
Waterloo (1970) deserves a top 10 spot!
My dad is an Afghanistan veteran, and he says that Black Hawk Down is very accurate in how it depicts urban warfare.
Black hawk down incident took place in mogadushu, somalia africa,
@@lordgallo4213 I know that. What I'm saying is that Dad likes how he urban combat in depicted.
My uncle participated in the Ia Drang battle with 1st Air Cav. His helicopter was shot down but all on board survived. He had already 14 years of service and wanted to complete 20. But that battle made him change his mind and he didn't re-up. RIP soldier.
The Danish film, April 9th (2015) is also extremely realistic. It covers the actions of a single Danish bicycle company that was ordered to delay the Germans during their invasion of Denmark for as long as possible. It is one of the most accurate and intense movies depicting small unit action that I've ever seen.
You missed Fury. I saw that as. Regal Veterans Day free movie, and though I wasn’t in close combat, it gave ME feelings of PTSD. I wrote to regal about how I felt this was inappropriate for Veterans Day, as those with real PTSD would be traumatized.
Fury was good but most of these movies were better
Sam Fuller’s “The Big Red One” deserves to be included.
You missed “When Trumpets Fade”, a 1998 film about the Battle of the Hurtgen Forest. Probably one of the most forgotten battle of WWII.
In addition to "Glory" which was an amazing Civil War movie, I would have included "Gettysburg", which did a great job of showing key moments from both sides of that epic battle.
Danger Close about the battle of Long Tan in 1966 during the Vietnam War is a fairly accurate portrayal. I've read a few accounts and the events in the movie are pretty much how it was. During the battle the L1A1 rifles were so fouled that the diggers had to cock them for every shot.
Come and See feels almost like a horror movie, the use of natural lighting and the general feel is just so different. There is no heroic "save the villagers" moment or anything like that. It's just all a gallery of grotesque actions that men take against each other in times of war.
this will laways be my number one. I have worked with modern genocide survivors whose families were killed in the same manner in the 80s
come and see shook me to my core when I first watched it. Great movie but oh my it's a tough movie to watch
I’ve finally watched it after persuading myself not too. I’m shaken right now and very traumatised by it, i hope i don’t last out later today
@@aidanberk3333
The way the lead character Floyra I now love aged to 40 by the end. I’ll never forget it
Good list.
Very good video, I enjoyed watching it. I do, however, miss the movie “The Deer Hunter”. Not many action scenes in it, but I think it shows the insanity of the war. And some of the brutality. 👍
The most glaring omission is Sam Peckinpah's 1976 masterwork: "CROSS OF IRON".
The original Dunkirk film is good; The Cruel Sea is also a really hard watch and one of the first films to show characters change as the film progresses.
and theirs was the glory.
Saving Private Ryan, Platoon, & Full Metal Jacket these are the most accurate War Movies I've ever seen.
Not that I'm saying you aren't so, but unless you've fought in a theatre of war, can one really rate something as "accurate"?
Man, Kubrick's B&W is so beautiful.
Enemy at the gate & windtalkers need to be on this list
Where's Tropic Thunder?!?
Wow, you're hilarious.
That’s a classic
Jarhead should be on this list
Saving Private Ryan was truly a masterpiece. But there's a lot of movies that weren't mentioned like The Hunt for Red October, U-571, Guns of Navarone, Valkyrie, Casualties of War and Unbroken
There’s been a recent avalanche of great European/ UK war movies in the last few years. Bombarbardment, Operation Mincemeat, and Narvik are very good.
Incredible that even 25 years on, and in a time where audiences appreciate more realism in war/historical films, Saving Private Ryan is still considered the benchmark.
To have left off Gettysburg, A Bridge Too Far, and Waterloo is perplexing.
After I watched Saving Private Ryan, it was about 2 or more years before I could watch it again. It is definitely a movie that must be watched several times. It takes that many to really catch all the little things in the film. Each time you must survive that first 30 minutes. How those men did that I will never be able or want too understand. There are many great films on this list I really liked Platoon. Yet I think you did a good job on the order.
2 movies I'm surprised that didn't make the list:
Midway (1976 or 2019 versions) &
Tora Tora Tora (1970)
"The Bridge on the River Kwai" (1957)
They need to make more movies like this. Black hawk down and Saving Private Ryan are absolute gems
letters from iwo jima is such a powerful movie and so underrated. i wish more could see it
Let’s not forget the movies of, Schindler list, the pianist, and the hurt locker
Every war movie is Oscar worthy and true legit.
you must not watch many movies
@@jimbo9208 you must not get the joke 🤣
@@jimbo9208 ohh yes i did
I wish American Sniper was at least an honorable mention. To me it gave a view on the effects that modern day war has on these brave men who go out and put there lives on the line for us. The end of the movie had me in tears as I watched the real footage of the salute and recognition of him after his tragic death in 2013. He will forever be remembered, loved and appreciated for his service.
there is this movie i saw in the charge channel it is about a rebel leader that gets caught by united states military in a town in yugoslavia at the end of the movie and a soldier calls to say they caught the rebel leader he says he did not find gold but he was lying the gold was there the united states military took it for themselves i forgot the name of the movie somebody help me out here
Waterloo should be in this list, the formations were made perfectly and no CGI as well. Piece of art
"Decimated" has a very specific meaning. In the Roman Republic Army, decimation was a punishment used for capital crimes of large formations of troops. If a cohort (480 soldiers) was convicted of treason, cowardice or any other capital crime, it was divided into groups of 10. Each group drew lots to determine which member would be killed by the other nine members. It was common to prolong the agony before sorting the troops, to replacing a daily ration of wheat with a ration of barley. The unit was also bivouacked outside the fortifications usually built into an army camp. Then, the groups of 10 would be formed and the victim was chosen in each group. The other soldiers, through stoning, clubbing and/or stabbing, would all participate in executing the condemned.
Decimation is not just the pummeling of a large portion of a force, but was done as a punishment for the condemned and the executioners. The condemned would lose their life for all the members of the group and the experience of the executioners would act as a deterrent against a repeat of the crime again. The unit would also be 10% smaller. The loss of life that the British would have endured at Dunkirk would have been much larger than 10% and the casualties would have been inflicted by the direct action of the enemy and not by the comrades of those who would have been killed.
Also, this list concentrated on movies about the last century and a half of warfare. Looking further back are movies like "The Patriot" and "Gladiator" that also showed the horrors of war in those time periods.
The one mini series that struck a deep nerve with me was the Pacific. Not because of all the technical authenticity, etc. It's the 'extinguishing of one's soul' after weeks of combat that these actors got right! Rotten chow, crotch rot, monkey ass, scabies, lice, ringworm, immersion foot...you get it. Intermittent mail, sole of your boot is coming off and the foot of your last sock tore off. Then there's the smells. Rotten flesh, mold, mildew, open bowel, blood and infection. You want to cry and you can't. Try scream, nothing sounds. I could of gone the rest of my life without remembering that.....
Thank you for putting Stalingrad 1993 and Downfall in this list, I loved both of those movies I have been waiting for someone to mention Stalingrad 1993 an underrated masterpiece. And Saving Private Ryan is a movie that will go down in history as the greatest EVER war movie! It was too good to win Best Picture at the Oscars and yes it absolutely should have won.
I disagree about SPR. After the first half hour or so it's pretty mediocre. None of the characters and writing are special. It's just one action scene after another peppered by clichéd unimpressive talky parts.
@@lyndoncmp5751
It’s probably the most nerve wracking war movie I’ve watched and during the tank scene, I didn’t think they would make it but they do
When I was in the Army my first sergeant had us watch Glory for a EO class.