It seems to me like he wants to say "I do not want to be part of this anymore! I have fulfilled my duties, but I do not want more fuel to keep doing what you want me to do. Make a prisoner of me, kill me but leave me in peace".
51 year old American Paratrooper here and I just wanted to say....Thank you Tommies for being hard as rocks!! You stood firm and helped save the world as we know it!!
Oh so God Bless you Americans, we would never have achieved it without your help, .....................62 year old English/British man here....my dad (Japanese POW...Singapore) could not thank you Americans enough who liberated him from Osaka prison camp, God Bless America and Trump
I totally agree. I showed this scene to my Yr13 students today after our Remembrance service at the academy and they were silent. You could have hear a pin drop !
Hermoso aunque suene cruel ,pero la valentía y el heroísmo no tiene presedentes en las guerras disen se pierde más que ganar la humanidad en realidad pierde,pero también gana hombre de hierro que contribuyen a futuro augurios gracias a sus experiencias
There's a very famous photo taken after Dunkirk of the Germans posing in front of a Spitfire that crashed on the beach after the evacuation. That very same Spitfire was recovered from the sand years later, restored to her original specification, and is the Spitfire you see in this film.
As a INDIAN I want give a honourable salute to brave British pilots during World War Two who made sure we never surrender we will die with brave heart. Biggest respect and huge salute from West Bengal India. Tears roll out from my eyes when I see this clip.💥💥💥💥💥
As a Brit I give honourable salute to the Indians who fought with us. And those who fought against for your independence, I salute their bravery. India is glorious.
As an AMERICAN I would like to give a salute to the brave Indians who fought alongside Britain until we could overcome our "America First" bull...t and get in the game.
My Dad was at Dunkirk, got torpedoed on the way back to Blighty, returned and fought the Nazis in Holland. Decorated by field Marshall Montgomery. Never ever talked about his experiences to us 4 kids but mum told us in episodes over the years. My dear Dad was never the same after the war with ptsd. Rest in peace Charles A Lane.
@@jeffreywright4656 Bollocks, it's a modern take on a historic truth. NOT a documentary mate. It had to have a wider appeal than that, besides , it was also, a commercial project.
This episode is based on a true event. The actual pilot escaped back to England. The wreckage of his plane was evident until fairly recently. Read the book 'Dunkirk' by Hugh Sebag Montefiore - it's all there. Excellent book.
Almost like the scene in 'Empire of the Rising Sun' when the British child in the (Philippine?) POW camp walks along the side of the Japanese zero, almost caressing it … the camp guard threatens him with a rifle only for the pilot to appear … the boy stands at attention, salutes the pilot … the pilot does the same in return and the camp guard loses heart - realizing that what is happening is about mutual love (of aviation), not about mutual rivalry (between nations). Excerpt from scene here: ua-cam.com/video/mFrGtlLH1Fw/v-deo.html
I had a picture of that same scene for my Facebook profile photo for almost 8 years. Changed it only recently when I resumed flying. I definitely agree with you, that scene alone is worth a thousand aviation movies. It captured the very soul aviators have and showed so intensely the class they belong to.. I just love that scene. Thank you for sharing.
@@finntastique3891 I have but it's been years. That scene always stuck in my mind, however. I was a kid but, even as a kid, I could identify with the boy's obsession with aviation...and respect the pilots for seeing, in the child, the beginning of the roots that had made them who they are.
A far more appropriate ending would have been a scene of HMS Shikari, one of the oldest and smallest destroyers in the Royal Navy, and the last vessel to leave Dunkirk, entering Dover with her last load of troops, her Battle Ensign flying and her guns elevated in token of a naval victory. Lt. Cdr. Richardson and his crew carried out seven round trips, bringing out 3349 men.
Thank you for highlighting this fact. As Ex-Navy, I actually get sick and tired of the RAF self-promotion machine. The reason we weren't invaded was actually because of the Royal Navy Home Fleet and NOT the bloody RAF! The Falklands is yet another perfect example of the Crabs stealing the limelight. Royal Navy, Royal Marines, and British Army fought the entire campaign gallantly, and yet all we fucking hear these days is about 1 bloody botched Crab Vulcan bomber sortie! 22 bombs - and only 1 on target! Well done!!!!
@@bugattieb110ss My pleasure. Although not connected with the RN, I too find the smug attitude of some aviation historians hard to take. 'Of course, the Royal Navy was kept safely out of the way at Scapa Flow' is the usual claim. Even a brief reading of the RN's Pink List for 16 September, 1940, reveals that the RN had 70 or so destroyers and light cruisers within five hours' steaming of Dover, and over 110 destroyers in total in Home Waters. There were, in additional over 500 smaller warships available in support.
@@dovetonsturdee7033 Totally agreed. Max Hastings writes superbly about his in several of his recent texts including 'Pedestal'. As well as contributing Sea Hurricane squadrons to the Defence of the UK, the presence of the powerful RN who had already damaged the Kriegsmarine badly in Norway) was the primary factor in Germany calling off Seelowe.
@@bugattieb110ss Mine was a Navy family, my brother 12 years in Royal Navy, to this day I still remember his Navy Number (excuse me as I am not saying that right) I cannot remember telephone numbers, but that number I have no problem with remembering. He kind of lied to join the Navy, I still have a handkerchief he bought me as a gift, has HMS Raleigh on it, He served on HMS Birmingham and a few others. One of my great uncles was on HMS Queen Mary, she is laying at the bottom of the ocean, Battle Of Jutland. I recently just acquired a picture of him from the Navy archives, he was only 19. I am old now but I loved the stories my brother would tell us when he was home on leave, some downright hilarious. Lovely memories. Respects to you.
There are lots of awesome and memorable scenes from good movies but that Spit gliding over the beach in low altitude with engine off will stay with me for a long time, I figure. Just outstanding!
@@hagamapama you mean when that Austrian let them go ? He was still hoping he could turn them ! Crazy F Was thinking that the english Celts were part of the Germanic Tribes ! Little dit he know they are Romanized and Act like Romans themselfs ! VAIN ! Or Just like loosing a soccer game ? Italy ! Nice show !
Perfect, absolutely perfect. Thank you for this mate 👍 My grandfather was an airman with the RAF, and I'm not ashamed to admit this edit choked me up. Thanks again.
Resident Elect and me mate made me proud to be British... I always have been , I live in Scotland after many years in England. I fear for our union because of a tyrant in Scottish parliament
Duncan Macmillan Scotland is my second home. A beautiful part of the British Isles, and I know deep down the majority of Scottish people won't let her achieve her selfish agenda 👍
For me, the most amazing and beautiful part of this is around 2:22 - the Spit lands safely at Nimrod's crescendo, jubilant, but then a harsh sinister note takes over just as the plane is plunged into shadow, hinting at its fate.
Stunning emotional scene. After helping the ground fellow soldiers with heroicity, the pilot find himself in a very risky situation. I can feel the loneliness of the pilot after the kindest act that anyone can be able to do. The music is awesome. It is one the best ending scene movie ever. I feel the loneliness as part of ourselves. Great film.
This scene is pur art, emotions and intense feels. The most beautiful plane ever made, the music, the landing sequence, the goodbye and the burning picture.. No words to describe it
Damn, I feel like crying every time I see this. It is very good without the words from Churchill's speech, but the speech also adds meaning to the scene: the kid reads "And even if...a large part of our island were subjugated and starving, our Empire beyond the seas, armed and guarded by the British fleet, will continue the struggle, until, in God's good time, the New World, with all its power and might, steps forth to the rescue and the liberation of the Old." The Tom Hardy character exemplifies what the whole nation was doing, providing an example to inspire the New World.
@Martin Kay Aaah, um, oh gosh, another loony who hates, well everything. Trump an idiot? (Tht'll be an elected idiot eh?). Maybe. An international laughing stock? Like Putin? Oh, sorry no one laughs at Putin do they, or they end up very dead. So: Trump and the ability to laugh at? Or Putin et al. ("Retardistan" ... um, no one calls the US by your imagined idiocy. Sorry. Out here we know how to tell shit from a shovel ... your oipinion is the "shit" in case you were wondering)
@Martin Kay Apologies, but your bizarre hatreds are ... bizarre. You don't like Trump? OK, fine, many US voters don't, but democracy does. Where you posting from? Do you have the democracy that you seem to despise the US for? Or are you stuck obeying orders?
For me Ferrier was the real hero. Forget how is he capturated. He was on a plane. He had the best weapon and the best scape way. He could returned any moment since his tank started to finish but he didnt. Other words. He choosed to stay.
The higher music pitch when the cockpit is open, coupled with the swoosh as he turns and the echoy cheer from the ground, as he flys over Dunkirk beach first. That part in the cinema....😯😯😯😯!! Amazing!!
This is the most intensive and emotional scene I have seen in my entire life. I can watch it without limits and I cry my heart out every time I see it 🥹. She speaks to me as a psychological cause. The man who sacrifices his own life to save humanity and dies after helping his brothers. Courage, bravery and this human mission is perhaps the meaning of life. And this variation is absolutely wonderful. Congratulations on this achievement.
I've seen Dunkirk on a big screen 4 times and each time it got to this scene I got this physical sensation of flying. It is beautiful on any screen, but on the big one it was pure movie magic.
I Absolutely Love this final scene. The pilot's Bravery and Dedication to the Ground Pounders. Hero, no doubt! I was tense the entire time he was cranking the landing gear. Then, the vessel that brought him back safely, could not become Compromised. Tragic, yet Beautiful all at once. Fighter Pilots are Angels watching over us.
When I saw this legendary aircraft to landing with that sun and these nature inviroment, I started to crying. My father was an aircraft engineer in the Greek Air Force told me that this engine was the diamond of the mechanic.
Dear RenegadeRouser, I am from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and must say that the combination you made was simply perfect. I showed it to muy two daughters and muy nephew, and all of us got sensibilised. You borowed to us, a lot of the fellings of sacrifice those soldiers and aviators made to us. Those guys were just fantastic. Whem I read a book, or see a documentary about that time, that moment of mankind, I see the good side of mankind, as well the bad side of us. It was a time of contraditions and antagonism of all of mankind. Those galants gentlemens gave their lives, health and dreams of a good life for them, for the next generations have a fair world taken from them. So ... what we, the next generations, have done. We, as mankind, still have the same contraditions and antagonism. I frequently think about the sacrifice they made, and if they gave their lives, dreams and health for nothing. I just think that us, regular people like those mem were, should select ours politicions better, all around the world. Keep doing this wonderfull and romantic job, about the beautifulls and romantics moments of the beautifull side of human race. Congratulations.
Thank you Sergio, love your comment and appreciate it. This video was actually nothing I had planned. I was just rewatching the movie and was looking for the soundtrack from the ending afterwards. I thought that the ending could turn out way more - great how you bring it to the point - romantic and moving by just letting Farrier land on the beach with this track playing, without any changes of scenes to the other characters. And it turned out to be really good. The scenery, Dunkirk from above, the raw emotions from the men on the beach and also Farrier, a beautiful sunset, all this in combination with the music creates an impactful feeling. It doesn't let us think about the cruelty of war and millions of dead people, it just gives us hope, hope for something better. This truly is romantic.
2:18 thank you for syncing this specific part of the music with the plane touching down just like it was in the movie! It was perfect timing and my favorite part of the whole sequence so I'm glad you kept it!! Great video :))
Puedo sentir la soledad del piloto como parte consustancial del ser humano. Es como una metáfora de la vida, un camino de obstáculos q se van superando y al final se consigue llegar, aterrizar, quizás sentirse realizado con las obligaciones cumplidas, (en este caso, por haber ayudado a sus compatriotas indefensos con gran heroicidad y sacrificios personales). Me emociono una y otra vez viendo este video. Maravilloso, como la vida misma. La música es realmente excepcional. Zimmer es un genio.
Heartbreaking yet powerful scene. Took my wife to see this on our anniversary. She was not amused at first but by this scene she was moved to tears and I was a bit choked up too. She bought me the book afterwards. Great movie but tough to watch. Heroes all of them.
Not English not Scottish not Welsh not Northern Irish....But British! this should swell the heart of every Patriot of our Country! Great Britain! over stated? no, never! love the people of our Island! so proud that our ancestors made this Victory possible......as aps, I LOVE this iconic plane and that Merlin engine!
@@newhuskytwenty I can speak on behalf of us that this is true however i go of the philosphy that the actions of the present are no reason not to be proud of the past, regardless of the amound of shit it is pulling today.
@Aryavrath_Bharath They were never shown because the Indians didn't play that much of a role at dunkirk, in fact during 1940 Europe India didn't play much of a role. Where you did play a huge role was in East Africa, North Africa, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia, but in key early battles of Europe like Dunkirk and the Battle of Britain, India did not play a significant role. thediplomat.com/2017/08/no-indias-army-did-not-play-a-significant-role-at-dunkirk/
I had a tear running down my cheek as soon as Fortis 1 turned his low on fuel Spitfire around & then pushed the throttle forward !!! In doing so knew he wouldn't be coming home :'(
Having lived in England for six years a looooong time ago, Elgar's "Nimrod" always gets me in the feels. I lost it during the movie because Zimmer totally sucker punched me with Nimrod when the Rescue Fleet Arrives.
I concur with the person who said in the comments this is an incredible scene from an incredible movie. I think the most beautiful part is when it is skimming along a couple of feet above the ground and he is manually hand-activating the wheels. The touchdown is as smooth as silk. I just find that incredibly poignant. Something in the honour, the down-to-earthness and the absolute beauty
I'm watching this as it has been announced that Queen Elizabeth has sadly passed away. Quite fitting the music and the mood currently in Great Britain at the moment. God Bless all that was lost in WW2 and God Bless the Queen and the Commonwealth. 🇬🇧
On my second viewing of Dunkirk I keyed-in on the aviation sequences featuring Farrier, Collins and Fortis Leader, Michael Caine. I'd always admired Tom Hardy's portrayals but here in this film he manages to understate the character's heroism with minimal but nuanced dialogue, gestures, facial expressions and vocal inflections. For anyone who might think that it is 'just acting' it's nowhere as simple as that. If everyone could act we'd not be ponying-up for movie and theater tickets and streaming services. What Tom Hardy brings to this film is something so intangible as to defy describing it fully.
Tom's Grandfather just like the millions of others from Britain and Ireland who fought in the Second World War, grew up with the stories. Tom's rather shy when talking about it, I think that's why his acting was perfect for the part, I think he was honoured to play a part in one of the most important parts of our history in the last century. Just think what this world would be like if Operation Dynamo failed.
Best film I've ever seen the end was amazing made me cry been to dunkirk our troops were heroes along with French who held back the germans against all odds what bravery I salute you all
I've always thought that the last 5 minutes are what make Dunkirk a truly great movie. The combination of camera work, music, and editing is a piece of art and one of those moments where cinema gets inside you and shakes your soul and spirit. The endings of The Dark Knight, The Dark Knight Rises, and Oppenheimer are equally beautiful and moving. Nolan is truly a master at creating epic climaxes.
It's amazing to see that how a WW2 pilot get huze respect from his fellow pilots and also landed his Spitfire at beach where he was ready to seperate his soul from his body with brave admirable heart and also burned his aircraft. Really anyone who can understand this clips with his own heart his tear automatically roll out. I want to give a honourable salute those British pilots who died with brave heart. Love from West Bengal India👮👮👮👮💥💥💥
I watch and/or listen to this video everyday. Sometimes I feel like I'm going to crash and burn in life. This video gets me in the right frame of mind everytime. Thanks so much for posting.
How so many have given their lives to freedom that today we all cherish the memory for those who died and for those who fought and live to tell their story. Your sacrifice to give us the freedom we have today. Thank you
I lose my shit everytime I watch this movie, brutal how it can embarrass a grown man by reducing him to tears, powerful scene, its the wizardry of Hans Zimmers ability to tune into the scene and deliver this stunning soundtrack. Brutal chapter and I for one am grateful for their efforts, thank you...
It's a shame they made a fictional film about Dunkirk, I wish they had tried to get at least some of the facts correct. Beautiful looking movie, however it's a disrespectful fictional film.
@@peterdemkiw3280 odd considering they had veterans at the premier whom were moved to tears by how "realistically" the movie captured the scenes on the beach..
We are very privileged to have a spitfire model displayed as a tribute to these brave aviators, and also to remember all the people in Salisbury and other areas who made these wonderful machines. It is right by Salisbury rugby club, where they made the spitfires in the war. Thank you to these brave aviators and mechanics too. Kathleen
This moment in history proves to me there is someone or something up there watching and helping the good guys. Dunkirk was a miracle and nothing less makes me cry a bit to all the nations who fought at dunkirk ❤️🇨🇵🇬🇧🇳🇱🇧🇪🇱🇺
Que hermosa escena de esta película y sobre todo la belleza de las líneas aerodinámicas del caza spitfire. Fue hermoso constatarlo al verlo en el museo de Hendon de la RAF junto a mis hijos apreciando al menos dos versiones de este hermoso caza inglés de la Segunda guerra mundial. Gracias por colocar estas escenas . Saludos desde Chile.
Masterful. This is what cinema is for: the astonishing synthesis of image, sound and story that is WAY more then the sum of its parts. I found this film all-encompassing; it is in my view culturally iconic.
I’m not a die hard brexiteer and really couldn’t care less if we are in or out , but watching this video somehow makes me feel that this little old island will work it out !!
@@kurumi394 It's called "I'm making a reference to the Dark Knight Rises which had Tom Hardy as the main villain Bane and at the beginning of the movie he crashes a plane"
Most of the episodes depicted in this film actually happened (including this landing) and can be read about in the book 'Dunkirk' by Hugh Sebag Montefiore. Some of the characters in the film are a merger of two or three characters. The Kenneth Branagh character is one such. The actual Royal Navy Officer returned to the beaches of Dunkirk to pick up more survivors, but the motor boat in which he was travelling was blown up.
3:14 The dialog should have been this: German Soldier: Was getting caught part of your plan, English flier? Farrier: Of course. German Soldier: You're a tough guy, huh? Farrier: For you.
My country , my people. Dunkirk a disaster ? No, more than this we found in adversity each other . No man could show greater love than this...to lay his life down for his friends ...we not only found friends , we became family.
@@Truetoo102 no, but I can read, I also know Apollo 13 didn't land on the moon despite not actually being with them, funny how information can be recorded for people that weren't there can know what happened. You know, 120,000 French soilders were taken off the beach and escaped to Britain, no one was pretending to be British to escape, 1/3 of the men on that beach were French, 26,000 men a day taken off, how amazing was that? Waves of German bombers (150+) bombed the beach every 20 minutes from dawn to dusk every day weather permitting, amazing bit of detail missed out from the film. Dunkirk town was completely on fire with only the town hall still standing, thousands of civilians killed. No one was leaving pies cooling on the window ledges. RAF flew over 2,200 sorties losing 100 aircraft and 87 pilots, the Germans lost over 250 aircraft shot down with 150 right over the beach, again missing from the film. Problem with this terrible film is future generations will watch this garbage thinking this is what happened at Dunkirk, that's very sad.
Thanks for showing this, the person that i am named after, my uncle Neville, transferred from the RAAF to RAF and was killed on a bombing raid when he was 20 in '43, before i was born. I do feel at last i do have a clearer picture of that time, thanks again for showing this.
The saddest part is something I never realised until reading further into what happened to those left behind at Dunkirk. Many of them were put into work camps. Starved, beaten, treated horribly in general. Many of them were also rounded up, taken to pits and executed en mass with machinegun fire. A lot of war crimes were committed upon the soldiers left behind at Dunkirk. Roughly 30,000-40,000 English and 30,000-40,000 French.
When my fuel tank is empty and my Spitfire is...ASHES...Then you have my permission to take me captive.
i love how he dont even acknowledge them lol
King Dain II Ironfoot Not me. Marines fight until there all dead.
It seems to me like he wants to say "I do not want to be part of this anymore! I have fulfilled my duties, but I do not want more fuel to keep doing what you want me to do. Make a prisoner of me, kill me but leave me in peace".
ola galeras da pulblicidade tudu gudi en pessoal
King Dain II Ironfoot was the
51 year old American Paratrooper here and I just wanted to say....Thank you Tommies for being hard as rocks!! You stood firm and helped save the world as we know it!!
Yes....because you wouldn't have the right to ask that question
thirtytrap
Well said sir. Great comeback.
Oh so God Bless you Americans, we would never have achieved it without your help, .....................62 year old English/British man here....my dad (Japanese POW...Singapore) could not thank you Americans enough who liberated him from Osaka prison camp, God Bless America and Trump
Thank you for your service.
thirtytrap thank you and God bless you. God bless US and Great Britain.
Farrier’s last dogfight, beach landing and capture is an incredible sequence in an incredible movie.
And it's based on a true event. The pilot escaped and made it back to England.
Farriers fine flying and Destroying his Supermarine Spitfire, Represents a Country not Surrendering to Cowardly Criminals. 🏴🏴🏴
I totally agree. I showed this scene to my Yr13 students today after our Remembrance service at the academy and they were silent. You could have hear a pin drop !
Hermoso aunque suene cruel ,pero la valentía y el heroísmo no tiene presedentes en las guerras disen se pierde más que ganar la humanidad en realidad pierde,pero también gana hombre de hierro que contribuyen a futuro augurios gracias a sus experiencias
Honestly pretty stupid though why didn’t he just water land and get picked up by one of the hundreds of boats in the water
There's a very famous photo taken after Dunkirk of the Germans posing in front of a Spitfire that crashed on the beach after the evacuation.
That very same Spitfire was recovered from the sand years later, restored to her original specification, and is the Spitfire you see in this film.
Proof?
@@alexcope8142 acknowledge the proof now that you asked.
I believe superbike Isle of Man TT champion Guy Martin helped with the project as well
guys respectfully agree with your request. 🤝🤜🤛
That's incredible Wonderful.
Emotional scene. The brits seeing the spit’s prop not turning, and they know he stayed til the end to help them out.
Glad you enjoyed the bloody show old chap
its as if he made a decision in time
“You don’t get into a Spitfire. You put it on”.
-John Romain, Pilot.
So what you're really saying is you can take the man out of the Spitfire but you can't take the spitfire out of the man?
I think the exact quote was, "you don't get into a spitfire, you strap one on and fly."
@@tdunphy13 good enough
Wasn't he the man who crashed the Blenheim!
Exactly!! Same with a Messerschmitt Bf-109!! Worse thsn a Spitfire for cockpit space!
Saw this on IMAX ... had tears in my eyes during this sequence ...
Was watching it in IMAX, too. What a great experience. I was totally terrified by the gun shots in the beginning, so incredibly loud.
The Velo In The Vale Yeah it really was something
@@RenegadeRouser I think that was on purpose, so we feel as scare as the soldiers trying to not get killed
Also the Stuka's Jericho
@@ivandres73 absolutely, poor bugger's, their ears would have been bleeding.
History will judge that DUNKIRK should have won the best picture Oscar over the unremarkable The Shape of Water.
bianchi1885 I'm glad it didn't as It's an honour now not to get an Oscar. You only get one for SJW rubbish.
Dunkirk had no acting nominations so it would've been weird to win . Shape of water was remarkable. I saw both movies. Both were great
Dunkirk is an epic, The Shape of Water is not. Both are good films, though.
shape of water overrated movie as well as del toro overrated director
Just goes to further prove there's some truth to the saying "Oscars aren't earned... They're bought."
As a INDIAN I want give a honourable salute to brave British pilots during World War Two who made sure we never surrender we will die with brave heart. Biggest respect and huge salute from West Bengal India. Tears roll out from my eyes when I see this clip.💥💥💥💥💥
As a Brit I give honourable salute to the Indians who fought with us. And those who fought against for your independence, I salute their bravery. India is glorious.
Fuck India
No one cares
TAKE CARE BROTHER. Let's hope We can all fight back this shit at the mo from Alan's Snack Bar.❤❤
🫡🦘🇦🇺👍
As an AMERICAN I would like to give a salute to the brave Indians who fought alongside Britain until we could overcome our "America First" bull...t and get in the game.
2:01 is genuinely the most beautiful shot ive ever seen in a movie
Agree with that
I agree
Watch Gravity (2013) and by the end, it's gonna be hard to decide.
It is remarkable
@@narkzonanyone who mentions Gravity among best movies must be an imbecile retard
Poignant as my dad was at Dunkirk and I read his diaries of the events before watching the film. Tears rolled. Thank you.
how old are u
respect to your dad
the one and only me 69
could you share his accounts ? I'm really interested to hear his view of dunkirk
My Dad was at Dunkirk, got torpedoed on the way back to Blighty, returned and fought the Nazis in Holland. Decorated by field Marshall Montgomery. Never ever talked about his experiences to us 4 kids but mum told us in episodes over the years. My dear Dad was never the same after the war with ptsd. Rest in peace Charles A Lane.
Truly the greatest generation around the world, thank you.
They deserved a better film than this dreadful attempt.
@@jeffreywright4656 Bollocks, it's a modern take on a historic truth. NOT a documentary mate. It had to have a wider appeal than that, besides , it was also, a commercial project.
too bad everyone older than 18 is called a boomer
Mahabharata anyone??? Stop this Christian calender peasantry
The most foolish or mad or psycho generation ever
I feel bad for Farrier. But I admire his courage to fight to the end.
Mabel Ƥιηєѕ For me he was the real hero based on 1 lógic. He could leave away in any moment since his tank started to get empty but he didnt leave.
Me too, it was just June 1940.
He had to spend the rest of the war in some shitty German POW camp.
Sad.
This episode is based on a true event. The actual pilot escaped back to England. The wreckage of his plane was evident until fairly recently. Read the book 'Dunkirk' by Hugh Sebag Montefiore - it's all there. Excellent book.
I still don't get why he didn't eject on the beach were the British were.
@@JohnnyLouisXIX Dude use your brain what happens when you unload a car in front of someone going at probably 100 km/h
That moment when he was looking at his burning ship broke my aviator heart to pieces.
Almost like the scene in 'Empire of the Rising Sun' when the British child in the (Philippine?) POW camp walks along the side of the Japanese zero, almost caressing it … the camp guard threatens him with a rifle only for the pilot to appear … the boy stands at attention, salutes the pilot … the pilot does the same in return and the camp guard loses heart - realizing that what is happening is about mutual love (of aviation), not about mutual rivalry (between nations). Excerpt from scene here: ua-cam.com/video/mFrGtlLH1Fw/v-deo.html
I had a picture of that same scene for my Facebook profile photo for almost 8 years. Changed it only recently when I resumed flying. I definitely agree with you, that scene alone is worth a thousand aviation movies. It captured the very soul aviators have and showed so intensely the class they belong to.. I just love that scene. Thank you for sharing.
@@otyliciu The film is Empire of the sun, and the prison camp was in China. Very good film, by the way - watch the whole thing.
@@finntastique3891 I have but it's been years. That scene always stuck in my mind, however. I was a kid but, even as a kid, I could identify with the boy's obsession with aviation...and respect the pilots for seeing, in the child, the beginning of the roots that had made them who they are.
@@otyliciu Well said! All the best to you.
A far more appropriate ending would have been a scene of HMS Shikari, one of the oldest and smallest destroyers in the Royal Navy, and the last vessel to leave Dunkirk, entering Dover with her last load of troops, her Battle Ensign flying and her guns elevated in token of a naval victory. Lt. Cdr. Richardson and his crew carried out seven round trips, bringing out 3349 men.
Thank you for highlighting this fact. As Ex-Navy, I actually get sick and tired of the RAF self-promotion machine. The reason we weren't invaded was actually because of the Royal Navy Home Fleet and NOT the bloody RAF! The Falklands is yet another perfect example of the Crabs stealing the limelight. Royal Navy, Royal Marines, and British Army fought the entire campaign gallantly, and yet all we fucking hear these days is about 1 bloody botched Crab Vulcan bomber sortie! 22 bombs - and only 1 on target! Well done!!!!
@@bugattieb110ss My pleasure. Although not connected with the RN, I too find the smug attitude of some aviation historians hard to take. 'Of course, the Royal Navy was kept safely out of the way at Scapa Flow' is the usual claim.
Even a brief reading of the RN's Pink List for 16 September, 1940, reveals that the RN had 70 or so destroyers and light cruisers within five hours' steaming of Dover, and over 110 destroyers in total in Home Waters. There were, in additional over 500 smaller warships available in support.
@@dovetonsturdee7033 Totally agreed. Max Hastings writes superbly about his in several of his recent texts including 'Pedestal'. As well as contributing Sea Hurricane squadrons to the Defence of the UK, the presence of the powerful RN who had already damaged the Kriegsmarine badly in Norway) was the primary factor in Germany calling off Seelowe.
@@bugattieb110ss Mine was a Navy family, my brother 12 years in Royal Navy, to this day I still remember his Navy Number (excuse me as I am not saying that right) I cannot remember telephone numbers, but that number I have no problem with remembering. He kind of lied to join the Navy, I still have a handkerchief he bought me as a gift, has HMS Raleigh on it, He served on HMS Birmingham and a few others. One of my great uncles was on HMS Queen Mary, she is laying at the bottom of the ocean, Battle Of Jutland. I recently just acquired a picture of him from the Navy archives, he was only 19. I am old now but I loved the stories my brother would tell us when he was home on leave, some downright hilarious. Lovely memories. Respects to you.
There are lots of awesome and memorable scenes from good movies but that Spit gliding over the beach in low altitude with engine off will stay with me for a long time, I figure. Just outstanding!
Nimrod and a Spitfire by the sunset. How perfect can it get?
The only time you actually see any Germans is at the very end and even then their faces are blurry. A masterpiece this is indeed.
Story wasn't really about the Germans anyway, other than as a backdrop for the extraordinary evacuation
@@hagamapama you mean when that Austrian let them go ? He was still hoping he could turn them ! Crazy F Was thinking that the english Celts were part of the Germanic Tribes ! Little dit he know they are Romanized and Act like Romans themselfs ! VAIN ! Or Just like loosing a soccer game ? Italy ! Nice show !
@@markusbuelow7871 Give me some of that crack.
@@kanjakan Same, I want whatever that guy’s smoking.
As usual, 'time' is the main antagonist in Dunkirk too, like in so many of Nolan's other films.
Perfect, absolutely perfect. Thank you for this mate 👍 My grandfather was an airman with the RAF, and I'm not ashamed to admit this edit choked me up. Thanks again.
Wow, great that you like it, thank you 😄
Resident Elect and me mate made me proud to be British... I always have been , I live in Scotland after many years in England. I fear for our union because of a tyrant in Scottish parliament
Duncan Macmillan Scotland is my second home. A beautiful part of the British Isles, and I know deep down the majority of Scottish people won't let her achieve her selfish agenda 👍
@@residentelect she loves sailing on the Titanic
@Christine Ccolgate
Thank you ☺️
For me, the most amazing and beautiful part of this is around 2:22 - the Spit lands safely at Nimrod's crescendo, jubilant, but then a harsh sinister note takes over just as the plane is plunged into shadow, hinting at its fate.
In the original track I love the dramatic turn around 1:26, supported by the bass line in the background. That's my favorite part.
Stunning emotional scene. After helping the ground fellow soldiers with heroicity, the pilot find himself in a very risky situation. I can feel the loneliness of the pilot after the kindest act that anyone can be able to do. The music is awesome. It is one the best ending scene movie ever. I feel the loneliness as part of ourselves. Great film.
This scene is pur art, emotions and intense feels. The most beautiful plane ever made, the music, the landing sequence, the goodbye and the burning picture.. No words to describe it
What a shame that this epic movie did not win a single price! Masterpiece of filming and music!
What a shame this film was made.
Terrible disrespectful fictional nonsense.
@@peterdemkiw3280
That's why it's called a " Hollywood movie"
Yeah instead of Alexander Despla Hans Zimmer should win Oscar
Let's not forget the fact that he got at least 5 kills making him an ace.
An ace in a day to be exact
Its a film, its not true
Damn, I feel like crying every time I see this. It is very good without the words from Churchill's speech, but the speech also adds meaning to the scene: the kid reads "And even if...a large part of our island were subjugated and starving, our Empire beyond the seas, armed and guarded by the British fleet, will continue the struggle, until, in God's good time, the New World, with all its power and might, steps forth to the rescue and the liberation of the Old." The Tom Hardy character exemplifies what the whole nation was doing, providing an example to inspire the New World.
@Martin Kay Blimey - I didn't realise America was gassing people!
@Martin Kay IDIOT !!
@@tonyves ignore the prick
@Martin Kay Aaah, um, oh gosh, another loony who hates, well everything. Trump an idiot? (Tht'll be an elected idiot eh?). Maybe. An international laughing stock? Like Putin? Oh, sorry no one laughs at Putin do they, or they end up very dead. So: Trump and the ability to laugh at? Or Putin et al. ("Retardistan" ... um, no one calls the US by your imagined idiocy. Sorry. Out here we know how to tell shit from a shovel ... your oipinion is the "shit" in case you were wondering)
@Martin Kay Apologies, but your bizarre hatreds are ... bizarre. You don't like Trump? OK, fine, many US voters don't, but democracy does. Where you posting from? Do you have the democracy that you seem to despise the US for? Or are you stuck obeying orders?
For me Ferrier was the real hero. Forget how is he capturated. He was on a plane. He had the best weapon and the best scape way. He could returned any moment since his tank started to finish but he didnt. Other words. He choosed to stay.
He choosed to stay as opposed to choose because even third graders know choosed isn't a word.
Third graders of English bases? . English is just an aditional lenguage to me.
Not cool, Kyle. Not. Cool.
Kyle, you mean chose?
Well stated, Oscar. Best wishes.
The higher music pitch when the cockpit is open, coupled with the swoosh as he turns and the echoy cheer from the ground, as he flys over Dunkirk beach first. That part in the cinema....😯😯😯😯!! Amazing!!
I know right!
This is the most intensive and emotional scene I have seen in my entire life. I can watch it without limits and I cry my heart out every time I see it 🥹.
She speaks to me as a psychological cause. The man who sacrifices his own life to save humanity and dies after helping his brothers. Courage, bravery and this human mission is perhaps the meaning of life. And this variation is absolutely wonderful. Congratulations on this achievement.
Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.
Dunkirk is a cinematic masterpiece, this ending with the music, absolutely incredible, an unforgettable experience watching it in cinemas👏👏👏👏
I've seen Dunkirk on a big screen 4 times and each time it got to this scene I got this physical sensation of flying. It is beautiful on any screen, but on the big one it was pure movie magic.
3:10 is one of the best shots in a movie.
I Absolutely Love this final scene. The pilot's Bravery and Dedication to the Ground Pounders. Hero, no doubt! I was tense the entire time he was cranking the landing gear. Then, the vessel that brought him back safely, could not become Compromised. Tragic, yet Beautiful all at once. Fighter Pilots are Angels watching over us.
The scene where the Spitfire is gliding over the troops on the beach is just so acheingly beautiful it makes my heart ache. Per Ardua Ad Astra!
When I saw this legendary aircraft to landing with that sun and these nature inviroment, I started to crying. My father was an aircraft engineer in the Greek Air Force told me that this engine was the diamond of the mechanic.
Beautiful scene.. Beautiful music.. Beautiful spitfire..
This scene always touches my heart❤️ R.I.P. all those who lost their lives in two World Wars ...
Dear RenegadeRouser, I am from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and must say that the combination you made was simply perfect. I showed it to muy two daughters and muy nephew, and all of us got sensibilised. You borowed to us, a lot of the fellings of sacrifice those soldiers and aviators made to us. Those guys were just fantastic. Whem I read a book, or see a documentary about that time, that moment of mankind, I see the good side of mankind, as well the bad side of us. It was a time of contraditions and antagonism of all of mankind. Those galants gentlemens gave their lives, health and dreams of a good life for them, for the next generations have a fair world taken from them. So ... what we, the next generations, have done. We, as mankind, still have the same contraditions and antagonism. I frequently think about the sacrifice they made, and if they gave their lives, dreams and health for nothing. I just think that us, regular people like those mem were, should select ours politicions better, all around the world.
Keep doing this wonderfull and romantic job, about the beautifulls and romantics moments of the beautifull side of human race. Congratulations.
Thank you Sergio, love your comment and appreciate it. This video was actually nothing I had planned. I was just rewatching the movie and was looking for the soundtrack from the ending afterwards. I thought that the ending could turn out way more - great how you bring it to the point - romantic and moving by just letting Farrier land on the beach with this track playing, without any changes of scenes to the other characters. And it turned out to be really good. The scenery, Dunkirk from above, the raw emotions from the men on the beach and also Farrier, a beautiful sunset, all this in combination with the music creates an impactful feeling. It doesn't let us think about the cruelty of war and millions of dead people, it just gives us hope, hope for something better. This truly is romantic.
sergio pereira and we in Britain will not forget the 20 thousand Brazil's sons that fought for us
beautiful scene
beautiful spitfire
and an epic movie.
And beautiful music!
A bit artsy. But yeah.
You're a cute dog
German air force was is advanses more afecic then RAF In deed
Never seen a non-beautiful Spitfire... I mean, some of the clipped wing variations are odd but I just figure they're missing something.
2:18 thank you for syncing this specific part of the music with the plane touching down just like it was in the movie! It was perfect timing and my favorite part of the whole sequence so I'm glad you kept it!!
Great video :))
Puedo sentir la soledad del piloto como parte consustancial del ser humano. Es como una metáfora de la vida, un camino de obstáculos q se van superando y al final se consigue llegar, aterrizar, quizás sentirse realizado con las obligaciones cumplidas, (en este caso, por haber ayudado a sus compatriotas indefensos con gran heroicidad y sacrificios personales). Me emociono una y otra vez viendo este video. Maravilloso, como la vida misma. La música es realmente excepcional. Zimmer es un genio.
Hermosa escena no hay nada más grande que sacrificarce por los nuestros
Pars mi tmb representa el proceso que todos pasamos . O el ocaso de la vida!!!
Heartbreaking yet powerful scene. Took my wife to see this on our anniversary. She was not amused at first but by this scene she was moved to tears and I was a bit choked up too. She bought me the book afterwards. Great movie but tough to watch. Heroes all of them.
brings a tear to the eye..and some pride..and memories of so many who died so young for the greater good. Thanks
Not English not Scottish not Welsh not Northern Irish....But British! this should swell the heart of every Patriot of our Country! Great Britain! over stated? no, never! love the people of our Island! so proud that our ancestors made this Victory possible......as aps, I LOVE this iconic plane and that Merlin engine!
🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
You talking about the British empire i presume?
The people from your island is going to be an opressed minority because muslims are taken all over, are you proud of it too?
@@newhuskytwenty I can speak on behalf of us that this is true however i go of the philosphy that the actions of the present are no reason not to be proud of the past, regardless of the amound of shit it is pulling today.
@Aryavrath_Bharath They were never shown because the Indians didn't play that much of a role at dunkirk, in fact during 1940 Europe India didn't play much of a role. Where you did play a huge role was in East Africa, North Africa, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia, but in key early battles of Europe like Dunkirk and the Battle of Britain, India did not play a significant role.
thediplomat.com/2017/08/no-indias-army-did-not-play-a-significant-role-at-dunkirk/
beautiful! this editing is PRECISELY how the film SHOULD have ended - glad to know other people have the same feeling in their minds! bravo!
I had a tear running down my cheek as soon as Fortis 1 turned his low on fuel Spitfire around & then pushed the throttle forward !!!
In doing so knew he wouldn't be coming home :'(
Having lived in England for six years a looooong time ago, Elgar's "Nimrod" always gets me in the feels. I lost it during the movie because Zimmer totally sucker punched me with Nimrod when the Rescue Fleet Arrives.
cs3473 Yes, I didn’t even recognise Nimrod until the wheels touched and then I just lost it.,....
Such a beautiful soundtrack - putting “hope” to music! There is a buildup of hope throughout this wonderful movie - the climax is a real tear jerker!
This scene is etched in my brain after having watched the film. The magnificent Spitfire in all its glory played out to Nimrod- a beautiful thing
The magnificent Spitfire and Enigma Variations together give me goose bumps.
My favourite war film, the best score and the most iconic aircraft and wonderful piece of engineering. What a movie!
It's called honor and sacrifice in a worthy, just cause. Judging by some of the comments here, those, sadly, seem to be rare qualities nowadays.
Very, very true!! Lots of ignorance rampant here!!
Honestly one of the best landings and one of the most tearful movie endings ever.
I concur with the person who said in the comments this is an incredible scene from an incredible movie. I think the most beautiful part is when it is skimming along a couple of feet above the ground and he is manually hand-activating the wheels. The touchdown is as smooth as silk. I just find that incredibly poignant. Something in the honour, the down-to-earthness and the absolute beauty
Ese avión aterrizando en la playa es una de las escenas más emotivas del cine., sin palabras.
I'm watching this as it has been announced that Queen Elizabeth has sadly passed away. Quite fitting the music and the mood currently in Great Britain at the moment. God Bless all that was lost in WW2 and God Bless the Queen and the Commonwealth. 🇬🇧
The editing made it so peaceful and majestic
1:59 i love how you blended in the music, perfectly edited and creates eargasm
Thank you ^^
On full volume Variation 15 gives me goosebumps every time.
As an Aviationgeek, it makes me almost cry when I m looking at the beautiful Spidfire in flames. Brakes my heart.
The scene is even powerful without sound.
Music and image powerfull
On my second viewing of Dunkirk I keyed-in on the aviation sequences featuring Farrier, Collins and Fortis Leader, Michael Caine. I'd always admired Tom Hardy's portrayals but here in this film he manages to understate the character's heroism with minimal but nuanced dialogue, gestures, facial expressions and vocal inflections. For anyone who might think that it is 'just acting' it's nowhere as simple as that. If everyone could act we'd not be ponying-up for movie and theater tickets and streaming services. What Tom Hardy brings to this film is something so intangible as to defy describing it fully.
Well said.
Much appreciated, 'RR'.
Tom's Grandfather just like the millions of others from Britain and Ireland who fought in the Second World War, grew up with the stories. Tom's rather shy when talking about it, I think that's why his acting was perfect for the part, I think he was honoured to play a part in one of the most important parts of our history in the last century. Just think what this world would be like if Operation Dynamo failed.
Hauntingly beautiful, I'm moved by this scene every time I watch it.
Best film I've ever seen the end was amazing made me cry been to dunkirk our troops were heroes along with French who held back the germans against all odds what bravery I salute you all
the most majestic of scenes :)
I've always thought that the last 5 minutes are what make Dunkirk a truly great movie. The combination of camera work, music, and editing is a piece of art and one of those moments where cinema gets inside you and shakes your soul and spirit. The endings of The Dark Knight, The Dark Knight Rises, and Oppenheimer are equally beautiful and moving. Nolan is truly a master at creating epic climaxes.
When I watch this I always have a lump in my throat and a tear in my eye
Dunkirk Christopher Nolan
It's amazing to see that how a WW2 pilot get huze respect from his fellow pilots and also landed his Spitfire at beach where he was ready to seperate his soul from his body with brave admirable heart and also burned his aircraft. Really anyone who can understand this clips with his own heart his tear automatically roll out. I want to give a honourable salute those British pilots who died with brave heart. Love from West Bengal India👮👮👮👮💥💥💥
I watch and/or listen to this video everyday. Sometimes I feel like I'm going to crash and burn in life. This video gets me in the right frame of mind everytime. Thanks so much for posting.
Same to me
Me: * See this scene *
1. Lie down
2. Try not to cry
3. Cry a lot
Every one should have to learn a lesson from this movie never compromise with your duty and wrong judgement. You have to fight till the end.
I love how Hans Zimmer took Edward Elgar's 'Nimrod' and made it his own for this sequence. Brilliant adaption.
I can picture Farrier at Colditz plotting the Great Escape.
Suggest you read "Boldness be my Friend"
How so many have given their lives to freedom that today we all cherish the memory for those who died and for those who fought and live to tell their story. Your sacrifice to give us the freedom we have today. Thank you
I lose my shit everytime I watch this movie, brutal how it can embarrass a grown man by reducing him to tears, powerful scene, its the wizardry of Hans Zimmers ability to tune into the scene and deliver this stunning soundtrack.
Brutal chapter and I for one am grateful for their efforts, thank you...
It's a shame they made a fictional film about Dunkirk, I wish they had tried to get at least some of the facts correct.
Beautiful looking movie, however it's a disrespectful fictional film.
@@peterdemkiw3280 odd considering they had veterans at the premier whom were moved to tears by how "realistically" the movie captured the scenes on the beach..
We are very privileged to have a spitfire model displayed as a tribute to these brave aviators, and also to remember all the people in Salisbury and other areas who made these wonderful machines.
It is right by Salisbury rugby club, where they made the spitfires in the war.
Thank you to these brave aviators and mechanics too. Kathleen
Women cry at the end of "Titanic."
Men cry at the end of "Dunkirk."
... And Terminator 2.
I am a women and cried at both .
Ngl, when Hardy shot down the Ju87 whilst gliding and the men on the beach all cheered I teared up a bit.
kk so what ?
Kk so what ?
Make Britian Great Again!
This moment in history proves to me there is someone or something up there watching and helping the good guys. Dunkirk was a miracle and nothing less makes me cry a bit to all the nations who fought at dunkirk ❤️🇨🇵🇬🇧🇳🇱🇧🇪🇱🇺
Que hermosa escena de esta película y sobre todo la belleza de las líneas aerodinámicas del caza spitfire. Fue hermoso constatarlo al verlo en el museo de Hendon de la RAF junto a mis hijos apreciando al menos dos versiones de este hermoso caza inglés de la Segunda guerra mundial. Gracias por colocar estas escenas . Saludos desde Chile.
🇬🇧
Masterful. This is what cinema is for: the astonishing synthesis of image, sound and story that is WAY more then the sum of its parts. I found this film all-encompassing; it is in my view culturally iconic.
I’m not a die hard brexiteer and really couldn’t care less if we are in or out , but watching this video somehow makes me feel that this little old island will work it out !!
Therefore, if we're going to work it out then this correlates with being on our own so you think we're better out! ?
elizabeth evelyn , Hi , you got me , it was just to make us feel a little better that’s all x
@@aaronwilliamson8604 👍
@Ben Woodcock You are correct sir.
One of my most favourite movie scenes ever. Such a powerful scene.
"Now what's the next step of your master plan"
"......crashing this plane"
It's called "The subtle art of not giving the Nazis an advantage"
@@kurumi394 It's called "I'm making a reference to the Dark Knight Rises which had Tom Hardy as the main villain Bane and at the beginning of the movie he crashes a plane"
@@oscarjohnson2130 dear lord ! That's fucking hilarious.
The fire rises, brother
I’m 16. So far this is the only movie that had me leaving the theater still crying
masterpiece editing...many thanks RR
Nice to read that. Thanks, jonzi
~Truly a beautiful ending~ Good on ya mates!
Most of the episodes depicted in this film actually happened (including this landing) and can be read about in the book 'Dunkirk' by Hugh Sebag Montefiore. Some of the characters in the film are a merger of two or three characters. The Kenneth Branagh character is one such. The actual Royal Navy Officer returned to the beaches of Dunkirk to pick up more survivors, but the motor boat in which he was travelling was blown up.
a masterpiece of soundtrack. Honor to those who died for the freedom of humanity🙏
3:14 The dialog should have been this:
German Soldier: Was getting caught part of your plan, English flier?
Farrier: Of course.
German Soldier: You're a tough guy, huh?
Farrier: For you.
Hard times create tough men. Good times create soft men. Thank you for all your sacrifices, a generation with true grit.
Exactly
My country , my people. Dunkirk a disaster ? No, more than this we found in adversity each other . No man could show greater love than this...to lay his life down for his friends ...we not only found friends , we became family.
Great movie.. just loved it. Great cinematography. Great musical score.
A new Nolan movie always means a new awesome soundtrack ^^
Shame they never bothered with historical facts.. very poor film.
@@peterdemkiw3280 and you were there with them on the beach.
@@Truetoo102 no, but I can read, I also know Apollo 13 didn't land on the moon despite not actually being with them, funny how information can be recorded for people that weren't there can know what happened.
You know, 120,000 French soilders were taken off the beach and escaped to Britain, no one was pretending to be British to escape, 1/3 of the men on that beach were French, 26,000 men a day taken off, how amazing was that?
Waves of German bombers (150+) bombed the beach every 20 minutes from dawn to dusk every day weather permitting, amazing bit of detail missed out from the film.
Dunkirk town was completely on fire with only the town hall still standing, thousands of civilians killed. No one was leaving pies cooling on the window ledges.
RAF flew over 2,200 sorties losing 100 aircraft and 87 pilots, the Germans lost over 250 aircraft shot down with 150 right over the beach, again missing from the film.
Problem with this terrible film is future generations will watch this garbage thinking this is what happened at Dunkirk, that's very sad.
DUNKIRK was the movie to win the Oscars ....
Agree and it did
Beautifully done. Heros all. Great acting and directing.
superb editing of the clip, and the soundtrack music truly heightened the dramatic feel. truly appreciative of your post work.
Thank you ^^
Thanks for showing this, the person that i am named after, my uncle Neville, transferred from the RAAF to RAF and was killed on a bombing raid when he was 20 in '43, before i was born. I do feel at last i do have a clearer picture of that time, thanks again for showing this.
your edit is amazing!you coordinated the scenes with variation 15 exactly like i picture them in my head,outstanding work!
Thank you. That was the goal.
I loved this movie so much it was such a masterpiece to watch seriously art and sound
Michael Caine's voice Had A Cameo In 'Dunkirk' as the lead Spitfire pilot.
Seeing Dunkirk in IMAX was truly a one-of-a-kind experience. 3:09 will always be one of the most beautiful shots in any movie for me.
lovely cinematography !
Respect, They died for us. We always have to fight for the freedom. We never forget that
My God the Spitfire is a beautiful fighter plane!
The saddest part is something I never realised until reading further into what happened to those left behind at Dunkirk. Many of them were put into work camps. Starved, beaten, treated horribly in general.
Many of them were also rounded up, taken to pits and executed en mass with machinegun fire. A lot of war crimes were committed upon the soldiers left behind at Dunkirk. Roughly 30,000-40,000 English and 30,000-40,000 French.