Can you imagine veterans of the Napoleonic Wars hearing this in the 1880s when it came out, with the actual cannons kabooming and the church bells.. must have given them one hell of a flashback and some PTSD. Those poor bastards..
@@Piece-Of-Time soldiers and anyone who have ever been in combat throughout time have always had it. They just don’t know what to call it. We call it PTSD now. There have been accounts during antiquity dating back to ancient Assyria of soldiers having trouble adjusting back to civilian life after coming back home from years of deployment. Like trying to reconcile things they have done while on campaigns, or having flashbacks, etc. So yeah, it’s always been a thing with everyone. We as a society are somewhat lucky that we are addressing it but sometimes it’s still not enough. Remember, combat from before was more brutal because it’s mostly hand to hand, you can actually see the other person’s expression while you’re killing him. That’s so traumatizing.
@@sathvikraomp2006 there were people alive in the 1980’s that were survivors of the Titanic disaster and the First World War. So yes it’s very plausible to conclude that there were veterans alive in the 1880’s that survived the Napoleonic Wars, especially the battles in 1812. There were teenagers and probably some adolescents that served on both sides so yes, some of them would still be alive in the 1880s.
As a history student, I've learned to respect nations across the world. Russia is very admirable in the fact that they have great resolve. I pray the current conflict in the Ukraine doesn't escalate.
russia today isn't the russia that defeated napoleon...that russia has all the glory, putin's russia is an embarrassment for the war of aggression it started and for the fact that its army is laughably weak (what we've seen so far)...gone are the days of the sleeping dragon that other nations feared of waking up
Je suis allé voir ce film avec ma sœur ainé au Kinoparama à la Motte Piquet à Paris en 1968, j'avais 13 ans. C'était long et très très chiant, je dormais sur la moquette pendant les scènes d'amourette du jeune officier et je me réveillais uniquement pour voir ces scènes de batailles trop courtes à mon gout
Yes, it is a soviet movie by Sergey Bondarchyuk. It was called "War and Peace"(Война и Мир). The movie was based on the Leo Tolstoy's novel "War and Peace"
bomb shots.......the ringing of Orthodox bells ........marseillaise.......God save the king......what could be better than what could combine all this under one composer's bow?
THE BEST OVERTURE OF THE WORLD
The horse stunt work is incredible ...
Слава во веки веков!!!
Can you imagine veterans of the Napoleonic Wars hearing this in the 1880s when it came out, with the actual cannons kabooming and the church bells.. must have given them one hell of a flashback and some PTSD. Those poor bastards..
I don't think PTSD was a thing back in the day
@@Piece-Of-Time soldiers and anyone who have ever been in combat throughout time have always had it. They just don’t know what to call it. We call it PTSD now. There have been accounts during antiquity dating back to ancient Assyria of soldiers having trouble adjusting back to civilian life after coming back home from years of deployment. Like trying to reconcile things they have done while on campaigns, or having flashbacks, etc. So yeah, it’s always been a thing with everyone. We as a society are somewhat lucky that we are addressing it but sometimes it’s still not enough. Remember, combat from before was more brutal because it’s mostly hand to hand, you can actually see the other person’s expression while you’re killing him. That’s so traumatizing.
@@aljayalfonso2589 thank you for this information, now I understand
Literally no veteran of 1812 war would be alive in 1882(The year of first public performance of this overture)
@@sathvikraomp2006 there were people alive in the 1980’s that were survivors of the Titanic disaster and the First World War. So yes it’s very plausible to conclude that there were veterans alive in the 1880’s that survived the Napoleonic Wars, especially the battles in 1812. There were teenagers and probably some adolescents that served on both sides so yes, some of them would still be alive in the 1880s.
As a history student, I've learned to respect nations across the world. Russia is very admirable in the fact that they have great resolve. I pray the current conflict in the Ukraine doesn't escalate.
Hah you wish
@@vlkan1150 Yeah.....
russia today isn't the russia that defeated napoleon...that russia has all the glory, putin's russia is an embarrassment for the war of aggression it started and for the fact that its army is laughably weak (what we've seen so far)...gone are the days of the sleeping dragon that other nations feared of waking up
@@warbossgrotsmasha23 Amen to that! GOD SAVE THE TSAR!
Это не конфликт ,это война
3:02 fucking epic
True damn see how they are organized
The camera work too. Makes us question, is this movie really 60 years old
I'm the only one who gets high like a horse gets into bit of music?
3:02 "Wait for the boat"
buddy dont comment this, serious its not funny, its saturated, no one will play the game and fezezen dont like it
@Dodogamer12475 Quarter of comments are like this and you only commenting to me?
@@Kuzeyman09 too lazy to do the stuff
Yeah acceptable
This is just... AWESOME.
Bonne Anne (happy new year)
We getting out of the Catacombes with this one🗣🗣🗣🔥🔥🔥
Man, you guys are everywhere
welp i hope you will see the boat soon
@@imBlank_08 I broke my legs on the boat and someone shot me with a blunderbuss :c
We had no defenses : O
FORWAARRD🗣🗣🗣🗣💯💯💯💯
La mejor overtura
"defend this bridge until we sound the bells"
Je suis allé voir ce film avec ma sœur ainé au Kinoparama à la Motte Piquet à Paris en 1968, j'avais 13 ans. C'était long et très très chiant, je dormais sur la moquette pendant les scènes d'amourette du jeune officier et je me réveillais uniquement pour voir ces scènes de batailles trop courtes à mon gout
2:55 THAT SOLDIER IS USING A MOSIN NAGANT!!! hahahahaa
That guy form the future 💀
3:01
When the charge meter is already full
"CHARGEEE!!! 🗣️🗣️🔥🔥🔥"
2:56
Historical inaccuracy. There were no boltaction rifles present such as this mosin nagant 90/31 during the napoleonic wars.
3:01 wait for the boat
Славься Русь. славься
la revolución francesa como olvidar un evento turbulento
Guerras napoleónicas
@@KaneTanakaOtaconsecuencia casi directa de la revolución
WE ESCAPING THE CATACOMBS THIS ONE 🗣️🔥🗣️🗣️🔥🔥
Was this a Soviet movie?
Yes, it is a soviet movie by Sergey Bondarchyuk. It was called "War and Peace"(Война и Мир). The movie was based on the Leo Tolstoy's novel "War and Peace"
@@anokuno2960 There was a Hollywood version of Tolstoy's book in the 1950's staring Henry Fonda.
bomb shots.......the ringing of Orthodox bells ........marseillaise.......God save the king......what could be better than what could combine all this under one composer's bow?
The horses were doing front flips
2:57 is bro using a mosin in 1812
1:04 friendly attack?
Friendly fire is possible, especially in a fight as chaotic as this
One of them could also try to run away
Славься во веки веков русский воин сберегший драгоценное наше отечество 🇷🇺🇷🇺🇷🇺🇷🇺🇷🇺🇷🇺🇷🇺🇷🇺🇷🇺🇷🇺🇷🇺🇷🇺
you mean motherland
You decalred war on France at this time 😅
@@NewYoyo2A to stop napoleon for invading whole europe
@@ErnstLinder89Fatherland*
🙏🙏🤝🤝
3:02🇷🇺:GET ON THE BOAT🇫🇷:GUYS WAIT FOR THE BOAT
buddy dont comment this, serious its not funny, its saturated, no one will play the game and fezezen dont like it
@@Dodogamer12475 O K
poor horses
Виват!
Скинь ссылку на фильм если не трудно
Война и мир 1956
И война и мир 1967
Zagzurka Roundshota
So why a russian music turned into french music? I know i know russia defeated the french but how? Or maybe im just wrong
La garde se retire!!!🗣️ 2:33
да здравствуют крестьяне пбившийся
ACOJONANTE................
the greatest war ever