Darkest Hour (2017) - Saving Dunkirk Scene (4/10) | Movieclips

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  • čas přidán 29. 05. 2018
  • Darkest Hour - Saving Dunkirk: Churchill (Gary Oldman) pleads with his war council on the proper strategy over the crisis at Dunkirk.
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    • Darkest Hour (2017) | ...
    FILM DESCRIPTION:
    The fate of Western Europe hangs on Winston Churchill in the early days of World War II. The newly appointed British prime minister must decide whether to negotiate with Hitler or fight on against incredible odds. During the next four weeks in 1940, Churchill cements his legacy as his courageous decisions and leadership help change the course of world history.
    CREDITS:
    TM & © Universal (2017)
    Cast: Gary Oldman, Stephen Dillane, Ronald Pickup
    Screewriter: Anthony McCarten
    Director: Joe Wright
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  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @boodyjacob9322
    @boodyjacob9322 Před 4 lety +2945

    Halifax: Hundreds will die.
    Churchill: Thousands.

  • @minhtrungle9117
    @minhtrungle9117 Před 4 lety +5059

    "I will take full responsibility."
    "Really?"
    "Really! Yes Sir! It is the reason, I sit in this chair!"
    This is why Churchill sat in that chair, and Halifax didn't.

    • @AntPDC
      @AntPDC Před 4 lety +266

      Exactly. Viscount Halifax was an appeaser, and appeasement is never a good thing.

    • @wyattpeterson6286
      @wyattpeterson6286 Před 4 lety +162

      @@AntPDC People like Halifax just don't understand that sometimes painful decisions need to be made for the greater good.

    • @Wickedonezz
      @Wickedonezz Před 4 lety +15

      @@AntPDC appeasement did prevent war

    • @user-dr4qu9sv3m
      @user-dr4qu9sv3m Před 4 lety +6

      They are like bunch of children arguing while I was in Dunkirk .... but on the wrong side

    • @RetractedandRedacted
      @RetractedandRedacted Před 4 lety +146

      @@Wickedonezz Appeasement is how the second world war started in the first place.

  • @rougebaba3887
    @rougebaba3887 Před 4 lety +1810

    Whoever it is playing Chamberlain, he looks the part to near absolute perfection. He didn't say a word in this clip, but the resemblance is amazing.

    • @chrisholland7367
      @chrisholland7367 Před 3 lety +67

      This was an outstanding film ,there are some great examples of Britons in the right place at the right time Churchill was one of those Britons 🇬🇧

    • @WaxingRadiance
      @WaxingRadiance Před 3 lety +22

      Ronald Pickup is his name. RADA trained with a list of credits going back to the 60's.

    • @ephelduath610
      @ephelduath610 Před 3 lety +6

      Remember him from Sherlock Holmes series where he played Barrymore

    • @tazindayanslothrop68
      @tazindayanslothrop68 Před 2 lety +2

      Seriously: Absolute perfection, he does display it.

    • @46FreddieMercury91
      @46FreddieMercury91 Před 2 lety +5

      Another likeness in another film...
      Edward fox playing general horrocks in " a bridge too far"
      Had to do a double- take

  • @jaypoole8056
    @jaypoole8056 Před 2 lety +434

    "Really! Yes, sir! It is the reason I sit in this chair!"
    Churchill was essentially calling Lord Halifax a backseat driver and a coward. Lord Halifax was favored by all to be PM after Chamberlain's ousting, but he didn't want the job, so it fell on Churchill. Churchill was saying "Yes, I will take responsibility and you won't as it always has been because you should be sitting in this chair but you aren't...I am."

    • @serenity5755
      @serenity5755 Před 2 lety +21

      Also, it's not that Halifax didn't want the job, he wouldn't have been approved by the coalition government at the time (comprised of Whigs - Labour - and Tories - Conservatives). The Labour party wanted Churchill to be PM.

    • @AWABPW
      @AWABPW Před 2 lety +4

      Backseat driver, coward, dare I say, a sympathiser?

    • @demonprinces17
      @demonprinces17 Před 2 lety +4

      Dunkirk was to be a failure and Churchill to get the blame then chamberlains people go back to power, but didn't work out that way

    • @Legba85
      @Legba85 Před 2 lety +1

      @@demonprinces17 no it didn’t! Churchill and Dynamo was a huge success!

    • @demonprinces17
      @demonprinces17 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Legba85 but chamberlains people thought it would fail

  • @liambarrett9210
    @liambarrett9210 Před 3 lety +559

    Nicholson died in a prisoner of war camp in 1943 not truly knowing the impact he and his men had on saving over 300,000 men at Dunkirk and therefore keeping Britain in the war, he and his men truly are heroes. 🇬🇧

    • @GreatPolishWingedHussars
      @GreatPolishWingedHussars Před rokem +30

      They wouldn't have had this darkest hour and also the disaster of Dunkirk if they hadn't betrayed Poland in 1939. This betrayal of Poland in 1939 was not only dishonest but it was also a military stupidity of truly monumental dimensions. The opportunity to fight a brief, localized war against Germany was therefore lost in September 1939. In hindsight, also lost were the opportunities to save millions of lives and to have prevented the creation of conditions that led to the Cold War. As General Ironside the Chief of the British General Staff stated in 1945, after much of Europe was in ruins and 50 million have died, "Militarily we should have gone all out against the German the minute Germans invaded Poland. ... We did not ... And so we missed the strategical advantage of the Germans being engaged in the East. We thought completely defensively and of ourselves.
      After the war German military commander Alfred Jodl said that "if we did not collapse already in the year 1939 that was due only to the fact that during the Polish campaign, the approximately 110 French and British divisions in the West were held completely inactive against the 23 German divisions." German General Siegfried Westphal stated that if the French had attacked in full force in September 1939 the German army "could only have held out for one or two weeks." Franz Halder Chief of the German General Staff of the Army documents this fact in his war diary. "The Wehrmacht had been on the verge of a military logistical catastrophe in the Polish campaign. The happy ending after a few weeks saved her from having to stop the fight because of insufficient ammunition." For all that reasons the Germans had lost the war because Germans were not prepared for a two-fronts war! The French and British would only have had to attack massively in the West as agreed and the war would have ended quickly with a victory for Poland, France and the British! But instead of massively attacking as was agreed, they betrayed Poland and holed up cowardly in the bunkers. Instead of attacking, they did the cowardly so-called Phoney War.
      In 1939 there was a good opportunity for a relatively quick victory against Germany. Because the Germans were too weak for a two-front war. For victory over Germany the British and French should have only acted according to the plan worked out with Poland for the event of a German raid on Poland. Three tactical main actions in the event of a German-Polish war contained the agreements with the British and French:
      1. France immediately carries out an air campaign according to a pre-determined plan.
      2. As soon as part of the French troops are ready (on the third day or so), France will progressively launch offensive actions with limited targets.
      3. As soon as the main effort of Germany was directed against Poland, no later than 15 days after the German attack France with British support would begin with the bulk of its troops an offensive action against Germany.
      If, according to this plan the British and French had massively attacked the Germans in the west the victory would be certain because Germans were not prepared for a two-fronts war.
      But instead Poland was betrayed!

    • @thegazza478
      @thegazza478 Před rokem +2

      @@GreatPolishWingedHussars poland strongest country

    • @GreatPolishWingedHussars
      @GreatPolishWingedHussars Před rokem +1

      @@thegazza478 Do not exaggerate! Leastways Poland was the strongest country in Europe 600 years ago. Because Poland was the strongest country in Europe in the 15th century, because Poland was actually the only empire in Europe throughout that century. But since Poland has started an extreme rearmament program, in a few years Poland will be militarily the strongest NATO country in Europe of conventional armed forces.

    • @Jefffrrry
      @Jefffrrry Před rokem

      @@GreatPolishWingedHussars You can go back further. In 1938/39 the Allies sacrificed Czechoslovakia, first gave away parts of the country to Hitler to secure "peace in our time" and then the rest of it. Czechoslovakia was ready to mobilize over 1 million men within a week to fight for Sudetenland, and it would've held on in mountain forts with allies' help in the air and on another front. But France dishonored the alliance and 1.5 years later the Germans drove czech-produced tanks into Paris. And we can go back even further to at least 1936 when Hitler blatantly violated the WW1 peace treaty and marched into Rheinland... and France with Britain just watched it happen. At that time Germany had a fraction of its 1939/40's army, France had the strongest military on the continent with the means and just cause to stop Germany in its rearmament tracks.
      That being said, we have the power of hindsight, they didn't. We are talking about a time period mere 20 years after the most devastating war the world had seen up until that point. A war where millions of young men were senselessly sent to their deaths and tens of millions more died during the 2nd most deadliest pandemic that was able to spread so easily because of that war. Every democratic country was trying to avoid another such catastrophe at any cost and thought they could actually avoid it by appeasing the dictator. They thought wrong. And they had to pay for that mistake, but sadly they made the rest of the world pay for it too (ofc the most blame goes to the 3 mustache c***s Hitler, Stalin and Hirohito, should go without saying, but one never knows).

    • @mykeplays912
      @mykeplays912 Před rokem

      @@GreatPolishWingedHussarsI agree that Germany was not ready for a 2 front war, one of the reasons he made the Molotov Ribbentrop pact with Stalin. However, I feel you are underestimating Germany’s capabilities and overestimating the allied capabilities. For one, the Allies needed time to mobilize. They had to mass troops and prepare them to go in to fight. If they didn’t, and had gone in quickly and unprepared, there likely could’ve been a result similar to Tannenburg in WW1. Also, the French army, while a bigger size than the Germans at that time, was in a worse shape with rarely inspected troops and still using obsolete technology such as horses at this point. At that point, while they could have been effective, I feel it is not so much a betrayal so much as caution. I do feel in the surrounding months however, they should have fought. Their inaction nearly doomed them all

  • @wt8012
    @wt8012 Před 6 lety +1902

    Gary Oldman's performance in this was second-to-none.

    • @temjam01
      @temjam01 Před 6 lety +67

      Gary Oldmans performance in everything he does is second to none. IMO.

    • @ilfarmboy
      @ilfarmboy Před 5 lety +56

      he did win an oscar for this

    • @jimmy2k4o
      @jimmy2k4o Před 4 lety +19

      Brendan Gleason and John Lithgow did fantastic Churchill’s
      But yeah I think Oldman was the best.

    • @Jared_Wignall
      @Jared_Wignall Před 4 lety +5

      Doug Williams and about time too. This should’ve been about his fifth or sixth Academy Award. He’s one of the most overlooked actors when it comes to awards.

    • @jimmy2k4o
      @jimmy2k4o Před 4 lety +3

      Jared Wignall not as overlooked as Leo Dicapprio.
      He should have at least 5 oscars by now.
      Gilbert grape
      Basketball diaries
      Catch me if you can
      Blood diamond
      Django
      Wolf
      Revanent

  • @chilliard120
    @chilliard120 Před 6 lety +2868

    Halifax is just salty bc he's not sitting the Iron Throne

    • @ericburns5125
      @ericburns5125 Před 6 lety +29

      Chilliard2000 I hated Halifax I always thought that he was a spy for Hitler

    • @shaboopie12
      @shaboopie12 Před 6 lety +66

      But it's his by right!

    • @Schwedeballz
      @Schwedeballz Před 6 lety +8

      Heard he throws a mean BBQ

    • @coolbrando1
      @coolbrando1 Před 6 lety +28

      THE IRON THRONE IS MINE BY RIGHT!

    • @schwakyl000
      @schwakyl000 Před 6 lety +37

      Nah he’s just pissed John Adams didn’t vote for him as President.

  • @TheLastOfTheFinest80
    @TheLastOfTheFinest80 Před 6 lety +1366

    You have to give maximum props to whoever did the make up in this movie, because Gary Oldman look totally unrecognizable.

    • @LittleB2007
      @LittleB2007 Před 6 lety +110

      That "whoever" (makeup designer Kazuhiro Tsuji) won all the awards for this movie, most deservedly

    • @patrickfarrell1491
      @patrickfarrell1491 Před 6 lety +4

      TheLastOfTheFinest80 yes

    • @dum1127
      @dum1127 Před 5 lety +13

      I think it was Gary who knew him and recruited him.

    • @sbraypaynt
      @sbraypaynt Před 5 lety +3

      Yeah
      You have to give max props to the makeup artist
      Not the actor
      No the only reason this is gold is because he looks like him
      Nothing to do with his phenomenal acting.....
      Jesus

    • @alalalala57
      @alalalala57 Před 4 lety +20

      @@sbraypaynt So congratulating the make up artist is a sin now is it? Bloody tool

  • @wyattpeterson2095
    @wyattpeterson2095 Před 5 lety +2736

    Some people just can't accept that victory requires sacrifice.

    • @alanb9443
      @alanb9443 Před 3 lety +459

      Yes but it’s easier to say that when your not the one being sacrificed.

    • @carleygranillo9711
      @carleygranillo9711 Před 3 lety +54

      alan B Exactly

    • @briliantkastanja2897
      @briliantkastanja2897 Před 3 lety +195

      @@alanb9443 I would gladly die if my death can save 300.000 lives of my countrymen

    • @ashleymcintyre4716
      @ashleymcintyre4716 Před 3 lety +46

      Whole story leading up to this moment isn’t that simple. On paper Churchill looked mad in this moment.

    • @Tuning3434
      @Tuning3434 Před 3 lety +32

      @@briliantkastanja2897 Unfortunately those odds are hardly ever apparent on a confused mess that is a battlefield. It's hindsight that can determine if a sacrifice was pointless or made the real difference. I have always have mad respect for those VC winners, whether they survive or are awarded posthumously.

  • @brandonkey181
    @brandonkey181 Před 5 lety +577

    Gary Oldman is so damn good. I cannot imagine a better performance!

    • @ericburns9132
      @ericburns9132 Před 5 lety +16

      So happy he won the Oscar for this he definitely deserved it

    • @Larrikins54
      @Larrikins54 Před 4 lety +6

      Hear hear. I watch this over and over. Churchill was not Australia's friend and he had a lot of flaws but he was the man of the moment. Oldman was just breathtaking.

    • @janesgems7
      @janesgems7 Před 2 lety

      @@Larrikins54 He was the hero we needed

    • @GreatPolishWingedHussars
      @GreatPolishWingedHussars Před rokem

      They wouldn't have had this darkest hour and also the disaster of Dunkirk if they hadn't betrayed Poland in 1939. This betrayal of Poland in 1939 was not only dishonest but it was also a military stupidity of truly monumental dimensions. The opportunity to fight a brief, localized war against Germany was therefore lost in September 1939. In hindsight, also lost were the opportunities to save millions of lives and to have prevented the creation of conditions that led to the Cold War. As General Ironside the Chief of the British General Staff stated in 1945, after much of Europe was in ruins and 50 million have died, "Militarily we should have gone all out against the German the minute Germans invaded Poland. ... We did not ... And so we missed the strategical advantage of the Germans being engaged in the East. We thought completely defensively and of ourselves.
      After the war German military commander Alfred Jodl said that "if we did not collapse already in the year 1939 that was due only to the fact that during the Polish campaign, the approximately 110 French and British divisions in the West were held completely inactive against the 23 German divisions." German General Siegfried Westphal stated that if the French had attacked in full force in September 1939 the German army "could only have held out for one or two weeks." Franz Halder Chief of the German General Staff of the Army documents this fact in his war diary. "The Wehrmacht had been on the verge of a military logistical catastrophe in the Polish campaign. The happy ending after a few weeks saved her from having to stop the fight because of insufficient ammunition." For all that reasons the Germans had lost the war because Germans were not prepared for a two-fronts war! The French and British would only have had to attack massively in the West as agreed and the war would have ended quickly with a victory for Poland, France and the British! But instead of massively attacking as was agreed, they betrayed Poland and holed up cowardly in the bunkers. Instead of attacking, they did the cowardly so-called Phoney War.
      In 1939 there was a good opportunity for a relatively quick victory against Germany. Because the Germans were too weak for a two-front war. For victory over Germany the British and French should have only acted according to the plan worked out with Poland for the event of a German raid on Poland. Three tactical main actions in the event of a German-Polish war contained the agreements with the British and French:
      1. France immediately carries out an air campaign according to a pre-determined plan.
      2. As soon as part of the French troops are ready (on the third day or so), France will progressively launch offensive actions with limited targets.
      3. As soon as the main effort of Germany was directed against Poland, no later than 15 days after the German attack France with British support would begin with the bulk of its troops an offensive action against Germany.
      If, according to this plan the British and French had massively attacked the Germans in the west the victory would be certain because Germans were not prepared for a two-fronts war.
      But instead Poland was betrayed!

  • @BloodyFlowerFilms
    @BloodyFlowerFilms Před 3 lety +96

    I like to think that The King’s Speech, Dunkirk, and Darkest Hour take place in the same movie universe. Whenever I watch one, I’m thinking “and Gary Oldman is fighting the political while Hardy is fighting an air battle while Firth is dealing with his stutter”.

    • @Legba85
      @Legba85 Před 2 lety +7

      I believe Dunkirk is an indirect sequel to Darkest Hour. We see what Churchill was going through to save 300,000 soldiers while Tom was fighting to give those soldiers time to get away. And don’t forget Mark Rylance. The man in the boat with the other boatmen moving to save those troops.

    • @arthurcurry2003
      @arthurcurry2003 Před 2 lety +5

      Great movies

    • @Phineas1626
      @Phineas1626 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Three amazing films, but The King’s Speech is hard to beat.

    • @battlep0t
      @battlep0t Před měsícem

      Someone's actually edited Darkest Hour and Dunkirk into one film

  • @mizi3180
    @mizi3180 Před 6 lety +2869

    Tom Hardy and Gary Oldman played crucial roles in the evacuation of British troops from Dunkirk. Were it not for Hardy's badass flying and Oldman's political pull, the Germans would have decimated the Brits.

    • @Dr._Atom
      @Dr._Atom Před 6 lety +102

      Sir Grumpsalot yeah, I'd love to imagine they're in the same cinematic universe 😊😊

    • @thecinemichael
      @thecinemichael Před 6 lety +248

      And don't forget Benedict Cumberbatch as Alan Turing, who cracked the enigma code haha.

    • @-RunninNGunnin-
      @-RunninNGunnin- Před 5 lety +39

      What about Cillian Murphy? :D

    • @u.h.forum.
      @u.h.forum. Před 5 lety +14

      And that bloke from that band

    • @sr7129
      @sr7129 Před 5 lety +22

      Justin Bailey Dunkirk= the border of Germany.
      Ladies and gentlemen, someone needs a geography class, in addition to some common sense.

  • @clarkewi
    @clarkewi Před 2 lety +73

    Oldman won the Oscar. And you can see why. My God what a performance.

    • @GreatPolishWingedHussars
      @GreatPolishWingedHussars Před 8 měsíci

      They wouldn't have had this darkest hour and also the disaster of Dunkirk if they hadn't betrayed Poland in 1939. This betrayal of Poland in 1939 was not only dishonest but it was also a military stupidity of truly monumental dimensions. The opportunity to fight a brief, localized war against Germany was therefore lost in September 1939. In hindsight, also lost were the opportunities to save millions of lives and to have prevented the creation of conditions that led to the Cold War. As General Ironside the Chief of the British General Staff stated in 1945, after much of Europe was in ruins and 50 million have died, "Militarily we should have gone all out against the German the minute Germans invaded Poland. ... We did not ... And so we missed the strategical advantage of the Germans being engaged in the East. We thought completely defensively and of ourselves.
      After the war German military commander Alfred Jodl said that "if we did not collapse already in the year 1939 that was due only to the fact that during the Polish campaign, the approximately 110 French and British divisions in the West were held completely inactive against the 23 German divisions." German General Siegfried Westphal stated that if the French had attacked in full force in September 1939 the German army "could only have held out for one or two weeks." Franz Halder Chief of the German General Staff of the Army documents this fact in his war diary. "The Wehrmacht had been on the verge of a military logistical catastrophe in the Polish campaign. The happy ending after a few weeks saved her from having to stop the fight because of insufficient ammunition." For all that reasons the Germans had lost the war because Germans were not prepared for a two-fronts war! The French and British would only have had to attack massively in the West as agreed and the war would have ended quickly with a victory for Poland, France and the British! But instead of massively attacking as was agreed, they betrayed Poland and holed up cowardly in the bunkers. Instead of attacking, they did the cowardly so-called Phoney War.
      In 1939 there was a good opportunity for a relatively quick victory against Germany. Because the Germans were too weak for a two-front war. For victory over Germany the British and French should have only acted according to the plan worked out with Poland for the event of a German raid on Poland. Three tactical main actions in the event of a German-Polish war contained the agreements with the British and French:
      1. France immediately carries out an air campaign according to a pre-determined plan.
      2. As soon as part of the French troops are ready (on the third day or so), France will progressively launch offensive actions with limited targets.
      3. As soon as the main effort of Germany was directed against Poland, no later than 15 days after the German attack France with British support would begin with the bulk of its troops an offensive action against Germany.
      If, according to this plan the British and French had massively attacked the Germans in the west the victory would be certain because Germans were not prepared for a two-fronts war.
      But instead Poland was betrayed!

  • @drake128
    @drake128 Před 2 lety +12

    I watched this knowing my Great Grandfather Walter Drake was at Dunkirk waiting for rescue, i willed them on forgetting I was watching a film. My sons existence is through this sacrifice and I'm forever thankful.

  • @drpapa26
    @drpapa26 Před 5 lety +612

    0:41: Stannis Baratheon is having reservations about unnecessary sacrifices? I can't believe I am seeing this.

    • @kevinhorgan2770
      @kevinhorgan2770 Před 4 lety +6

      drpapa26
      Weally I’ve weservations he sounds like a deviant bbc announcer .

    • @lost7149
      @lost7149 Před 4 lety +4

      They didn't have kingsblood that's why

    • @gaybowser4648
      @gaybowser4648 Před 3 lety

      That Stannis was a butchery.

    • @kbflorida888
      @kbflorida888 Před 3 lety +2

      drpapa26 thanks, I saw him but couldn’t remember his “name”. Lol

    • @RealD8
      @RealD8 Před 2 lety +2

      I love these random GOT connections/references

  • @smartamateur
    @smartamateur Před 5 lety +891

    REALLY, YES SIR!
    IT IS THE REASON (slams chair) "I" SIT IN THIS CHAIR!

  • @Mercenary-st8ge
    @Mercenary-st8ge Před 5 lety +76

    He even got that occasional barely understandable (to me) stutter to a point. Give Gary Oldman an award because that is some dedicated acting

  • @jpserret1
    @jpserret1 Před 4 lety +82

    Gary Oldman, brilliant in every role he does.

    • @realar
      @realar Před 4 lety +6

      Even as a freaking peacock.

  • @samfisher2306
    @samfisher2306 Před 6 lety +529

    What a great actor. I was finding it hard to believe it was Gary in this movie. Method Acting on a whole new level imo

    • @AlbertRamizq
      @AlbertRamizq Před 5 lety +18

      It wasn't method acting.

    • @timothyhouse1622
      @timothyhouse1622 Před 5 lety +17

      Alberto Ramizq it was "acting" and Oldman is one of the best. You just have to watch Bram Stoker's Dracula to see that.

    • @DC-zi6se
      @DC-zi6se Před 4 lety +17

      Gary isn't a method actor. He belongs to the very rare breed of actors like Philip Seymour Hoffman and Joaquin Phoenix.

    • @aydinzirh5510
      @aydinzirh5510 Před 4 lety +3

      Method acting is widely known as being your character 24/7. However method acting is actually just using real memories to trigger your emotions rather than made up memories. So it is very very common for actors to be “method” - “method acting” is what people think DDL does.

    • @Talis7212
      @Talis7212 Před 4 lety +6

      Gary Oldman himself has said he's never really been in a method actor. Other actors often say he'll break into song and dance or joke around between takes, going right back into being himself

  • @mitchellmurray5892
    @mitchellmurray5892 Před 6 lety +455

    1:26 to 1:44 - Oscar clip

    • @Infernal460
      @Infernal460 Před 6 lety +4

      Mitchell Murray For which actor ?

    • @jakethefinn2353
      @jakethefinn2353 Před 6 lety +22

      Infernal460 Oldman Duh!

    • @Maxisamo1
      @Maxisamo1 Před 6 lety +17

      "REALLY YES SIR!!! It is the reason *slams chair* I SIT IN THIS CHAIR!!!!"

  • @dusty4459
    @dusty4459 Před 5 lety +270

    While i will take no part away from the Royal Air Force and the miracle that they pulled off, we must not forget the other reason why Hitler chose not to launch operation Sea lion and that was the simple fact that the Royal Navy held overwhelming power of the sea throughout the war.

    • @bobpage6597
      @bobpage6597 Před 5 lety +67

      There was also a reason the majority of the fleet was kept at Scapa Flow, beyond the range of effective German bombers. The fleet was only to sail in significant force IF the Germans mounted an actual attempt at invasion, in which case the Royal Navy would have decimated any landing attempt. That's why, without control of the air, the Royal Navy would always pose an insurmountable risk to any attempt at invasion. If the Luftwaffe had control of the air, then the danger of the Royal Navy is hugely mitigated. Ships at sea without air cover are easy pickings, as we found out with the loss of HMS Prince of Wales and HMS Repulse in Singapore.
      Germany's problem also was the shortage of amphibious capable craft. They literally did not have the MEANS to get an invasion force of the size needed to subdue Britain across the Channel. Add to that, the UK had essentially turned itself into an island fortress at this period. Even if an initial landing was by some miracle for the Germans successfull, it still needs to be kept supplied, and then the long slog inland and north would begin. Towards the end of the Battle of Britain, the UK was actually beginning to outproduce the Germans in the number of fighter aircraft we were making, and given that losses for the Luftwaffe were unsustainable, the tide had turned against the Germans significantly. For them, the situation had become a veritable stalemate. While the UK did not have the means to invade continental Europe on her own, the Germans likewise did not have the means to knock the UK out of the war. Hitler by the end of the Battle of Britain was already looking East, where the majority of his Army was gathering for his invasion of the Soviet Union.
      Just my input haha :)

    • @dusty4459
      @dusty4459 Před 5 lety +5

      @@bobpage6597 Quite right, especially on the landing craft.I think they had barges that could be towed and maybe 2 or 3 actual landing craft.

    • @davidzof
      @davidzof Před 5 lety +5

      @@bobpage6597 This precious stone set in a silver sea
      Which serves it in the office of a wall
      Or as a moat defensive to a house,
      Against the envy of less happier lands.

    • @chrisholland7367
      @chrisholland7367 Před 4 lety +7

      Hugh Dowding was holding back on sending large numbers of spitfires and hurricanes because he knew the battle for Britain was on the cards .
      "The battle for France is over, the battle of Britain is about to begin "

    • @aland317
      @aland317 Před 4 lety +1

      Overwhelming power throughout the war... ??? It's called a World War for a reason...where was the RN in the Pacific...??,

  • @harrypalmer8808
    @harrypalmer8808 Před 2 lety +5

    This War Room still exists, practically as it was left at the end of WW2. It is a simple room underneath a Government Office in Whitehall (i.e. it isn't an underground bunker). The room is "tended" by the Imperial War Museum. On a documentary about "underground London" a curator showed the narrator of the programme Churchill's chair. On the right-hand armrest there is a round dent caused by Churchill hammering his signet ring into it. On the left-hand armrest there is a half-moon shape where he dug his fingernail. Difficult days.....

  • @Hans-hy5jp
    @Hans-hy5jp Před 2 lety +88

    Can we just take a minute to appreciate Gary Oldman's impression of Churchill's speech? Like he's managed to find a middle ground between a coherent English accent and Churchill's speech impediment lol it's great.

    • @GreatPolishWingedHussars
      @GreatPolishWingedHussars Před 8 měsíci

      They wouldn't have had this darkest hour and also the disaster of Dunkirk if they hadn't betrayed Poland in 1939. This betrayal of Poland in 1939 was not only dishonest but it was also a military stupidity of truly monumental dimensions. The opportunity to fight a brief, localized war against Germany was therefore lost in September 1939. In hindsight, also lost were the opportunities to save millions of lives and to have prevented the creation of conditions that led to the Cold War. As General Ironside the Chief of the British General Staff stated in 1945, after much of Europe was in ruins and 50 million have died, "Militarily we should have gone all out against the German the minute Germans invaded Poland. ... We did not ... And so we missed the strategical advantage of the Germans being engaged in the East. We thought completely defensively and of ourselves.
      After the war German military commander Alfred Jodl said that "if we did not collapse already in the year 1939 that was due only to the fact that during the Polish campaign, the approximately 110 French and British divisions in the West were held completely inactive against the 23 German divisions." German General Siegfried Westphal stated that if the French had attacked in full force in September 1939 the German army "could only have held out for one or two weeks." Franz Halder Chief of the German General Staff of the Army documents this fact in his war diary. "The Wehrmacht had been on the verge of a military logistical catastrophe in the Polish campaign. The happy ending after a few weeks saved her from having to stop the fight because of insufficient ammunition." For all that reasons the Germans had lost the war because Germans were not prepared for a two-fronts war! The French and British would only have had to attack massively in the West as agreed and the war would have ended quickly with a victory for Poland, France and the British! But instead of massively attacking as was agreed, they betrayed Poland and holed up cowardly in the bunkers. Instead of attacking, they did the cowardly so-called Phoney War.
      In 1939 there was a good opportunity for a relatively quick victory against Germany. Because the Germans were too weak for a two-front war. For victory over Germany the British and French should have only acted according to the plan worked out with Poland for the event of a German raid on Poland. Three tactical main actions in the event of a German-Polish war contained the agreements with the British and French:
      1. France immediately carries out an air campaign according to a pre-determined plan.
      2. As soon as part of the French troops are ready (on the third day or so), France will progressively launch offensive actions with limited targets.
      3. As soon as the main effort of Germany was directed against Poland, no later than 15 days after the German attack France with British support would begin with the bulk of its troops an offensive action against Germany.
      If, according to this plan the British and French had massively attacked the Germans in the west the victory would be certain because Germans were not prepared for a two-fronts war.
      But instead Poland was betrayed!

  • @joshuagrover795
    @joshuagrover795 Před 4 lety +178

    The British and French garrison in Calais held off the Germans for three bloody days in hand to hand combat, which gave the trapped allied forces at Durkirk time to prepare its defences and evacuation. Respect to the defenders of Calais for their heroic fighting and sacrifice. 🙌😥🥀

    • @englishandturkce4513
      @englishandturkce4513 Před 4 lety +4

      @Joshua Grover..... they knew that the Dunkirk encircled men who were more in number would be saved and that they had to die for the British and Third French Empires!

    • @connery801
      @connery801 Před 2 lety +1

      It was are fight fight

    • @MomMom4Cubs
      @MomMom4Cubs Před rokem +2

      I'm an American, and a child of the Reagan era, and I'm still in the debt of the brave warriors that made evacuation possible. Without that, Turing cracking Enigma, American involvement, the fail-whale that was Mussolini, literally NONE of it would be worth a pisshole in a snowbank if not for the great sacrifice of men (and women) almost a century ago.

    • @yevgeniyaleshchenko849
      @yevgeniyaleshchenko849 Před rokem +1

      @@MomMom4Cubs Also without sacrifice of nations of former soviet union, including UKRAINIANS (who made up huge part of the soviet army) who gave their health and lives fighting fascists. You're also in a debt to modernday heroes, our Ukrainian soldiers fighting off modernday fascism while you're safe in the other part of the world.

    • @yevgeniyaleshchenko849
      @yevgeniyaleshchenko849 Před rokem

      @@englishandturkce4513 oh shut up, there were no french and british empire then, there was one wannabe empire which is third reich.

  • @PetrolHeadBrasil
    @PetrolHeadBrasil Před 2 lety +26

    2022 - we need another Churchill, because things are getting bad....

  • @veskovarbanov
    @veskovarbanov Před 5 lety +41

    "It is the reason I sit in this chair" wow

  • @Grandmaster_Dragonborn
    @Grandmaster_Dragonborn Před 3 lety +60

    1:22 There’s just something so satisfying about Churchill of all people calling Hitler a maniac.

  • @ArcangelGamingEntertainment
    @ArcangelGamingEntertainment Před 6 lety +1323

    Absolutely fantastic film.
    Churchill did all he could to save the free world.

  • @stevenpeeven3169
    @stevenpeeven3169 Před 2 lety +10

    It was nice of Churchill to let in a cameraman to film this briefing for us all to see decades later

    • @Feroxing12
      @Feroxing12 Před rokem

      you can find original minutes from these 1940 war cabinet meetings.

  • @johnbanks4761
    @johnbanks4761 Před 3 lety +34

    the only one that had the spine, the resolve, the determination to do what needed to be done

  • @spinlok3943
    @spinlok3943 Před měsícem +1

    I love how 50% of Stephen Dillane's acting career involves being yelled at by Winston Churchill.

  • @sithvsjedi9696
    @sithvsjedi9696 Před 11 měsíci +2

    "
    01:38 "Really! Yes sir! It is the rrrr..reason I sit in this chair!" 🤣😅. Amazing. What a moment

  • @lennycam1775
    @lennycam1775 Před 6 lety +239

    Churchill saw right through halifaxes tricks

  • @alanbobbymcguire5099
    @alanbobbymcguire5099 Před 2 lety +3

    The reason behind this scene in all its dignity. Is the reason I can comment 78 years later from my front living room in Edinburgh.

  • @jcrossan1351
    @jcrossan1351 Před 5 lety +39

    Fantastic man I am so proud that he served for out country in the most devastating war in the history of our planet may god rest his soul

  • @zekeedwards7904
    @zekeedwards7904 Před rokem +9

    Oldman is an absolute masterclass of acting I have no words on how good he is

  • @ghost7344
    @ghost7344 Před 2 lety +7

    Love at 2:05 how he started putting the question, due to the "historian noter" writing every words that was spoken in that room, in order to turn the people against him.

  • @Oldag75
    @Oldag75 Před 2 lety +5

    Gary Oldman was... PERFECT.

  • @BritishBriggsy
    @BritishBriggsy Před 4 lety +27

    Such a powerful scene - What fantastic triumphs Churchill ensured.

  • @PrimalElf
    @PrimalElf Před rokem +7

    One of the greatest performence's of all time
    Thank you Gary Oldman and Joe Wright

  • @leshmahagow364
    @leshmahagow364 Před 5 lety +113

    Do you notice how the Navy officers always look chilled. 🤔
    Because they know ... dispute the drama
    They'll win

    • @ccg8658
      @ccg8658 Před 5 lety +17

      @Les H Mahagow "It takes 3 years to build a ship but 300 years to build a tradition" (Mountbatten I believe, in reply when asked why RN vessels ALWAYS engaged the enemy more closely, whatever the odds).

    • @joshuagrover795
      @joshuagrover795 Před 4 lety +5

      @@ccg8658 Admiral Andrew Cunningham (1883 - 1963)

    • @Insperato62
      @Insperato62 Před 3 lety +2

      Don't forget the Merchant Navy. Look up Operation Pedestal. When the broken backed 'Ohio' crawled in to Valletta the Royal Navy Commander in Malta insisted on giving the merchantmen a salute.

    • @thomast8539
      @thomast8539 Před 3 lety +1

      The RN was not so chilled when the Bismarck sunk the Hood. They ended up putting everything available into harm's way to secure a victory over that menace.

    • @daneelolivaw602
      @daneelolivaw602 Před rokem

      G E T R E K T
      Big Daddy USA, didn't enter the war for anothe eighteen months or more after this event, and Bid Daddy USA had a much SMALLER NAVY than the U.K. until 1942.
      And then the U.S. only entered the war because if Britain had fallen the U.S. would have had enemies on both sides of their coast.
      COWARDS?, Britain and the Commonwealth were fighting on their own since 1939. What a disgusting Coward you must be.

  • @sjr999r
    @sjr999r Před 2 lety +17

    Watched this in the cinema…..a truly epic film. Gary oldman is masterful

  • @tmb446622
    @tmb446622 Před 4 lety +13

    Gary brought his A game as always in this movie but in this movie, his acting is on a whole other level.

  • @jonnnyren6245
    @jonnnyren6245 Před 5 lety +33

    1:38-1:44 oh my Gary Leonard Oldman what brilliance you have bestowed.

  • @MD71061
    @MD71061 Před rokem +3

    My father was one if those soldiers in Calais but he was "luckly" enough to survive the never ending brutal German onslaugt and became a POW. When he got home and recieve his medals for his service, he threw them on the ground when he recived them in the ceremony and told the heirarcy officers - "you lets us all down" . Lucky his sister was there to pick them off the ground as he walked out. I still have those medals.

  • @dc4296
    @dc4296 Před 5 lety +45

    Stannis considering peace talks ?
    That's unheard of !

  • @sempermilites87
    @sempermilites87 Před 4 lety +18

    That music that lightly starts playing at 1:58.....really makes the rest of this scene shine so well. It shows how high the military and political stakes were for Churchill.
    EDIT: YES! Just found out what song that was. It's called "History Is Listening," and damn is it good!

  • @alexrobert2000
    @alexrobert2000 Před 3 lety +9

    “ Victory cannot be achieved without sacrifice Mason” Viktor Reznov- voiced by Gary Oldman who also played Winston Churchill in this

  • @samkresil6011
    @samkresil6011 Před 5 lety +14

    This is the clip I ALWAYS watch from the trailer and it stuck in my head for a while and it was truly brought out.

  • @wildgoose5964
    @wildgoose5964 Před 4 lety +11

    A masterclass in acting by all concerned.

  • @paulself8698
    @paulself8698 Před rokem +2

    Went to the beach at Dunkirk last week - an emotive experience.

  • @nickn8302
    @nickn8302 Před 4 lety +5

    Look at the subtle power move at 1:12 when Winston puts his hands on his hips, flaring his elbows and raising his shoulders! Great attention to detail.

  • @scotthamp384
    @scotthamp384 Před 2 lety +9

    I need to watch this all the way. This clip definitely proves that Gary Oldman was good as Churchill

  • @jasonjones5357
    @jasonjones5357 Před 5 lety +15

    What a man and thank god he did what he did

  • @samosullivan1744
    @samosullivan1744 Před 2 lety +4

    The music in this is spine-tingling!
    Dario Marianelli is a genius!

  • @richardmelvin3800
    @richardmelvin3800 Před 3 lety +5

    Never forget the british and french soldiers who thought to the end at calais to help evacuate Dunkirk. They are always overlooked in the story of Dunkirk.

  • @harshgorasia6501
    @harshgorasia6501 Před 6 lety +11

    So interesting how the actor playing Halifax also played the painter who was commissioned to do a portrait of Winston Churchill played by John Lithgow in The Crown TV Show. Pretty sure it was in the same year too, both amazing performances and to me Lithgow portrayed an aging Churchill amazingly

  • @brfreitas11
    @brfreitas11 Před 3 lety +4

    01:38 If you close your eyes, you can still hear a bit of Reznov in him

  • @johnharrington1800
    @johnharrington1800 Před 10 měsíci +1

    What superb moviemaking

  • @englishman9020
    @englishman9020 Před 3 lety +2

    Gary Oldman is a superb actor he can play anyone

  • @chrisnasif4156
    @chrisnasif4156 Před 2 lety +6

    Gary Oldman truly is the Winston Churchill of the acting world.

  • @johnmartlew5897
    @johnmartlew5897 Před 4 lety +44

    The only reason anyone can claim to have won that war is because Churchill didn’t lose it in ‘39-‘40. I believe he is the greatest statesman of modern history.

    • @Larrikins54
      @Larrikins54 Před 4 lety +1

      Spot on. He didn't lose it.

    • @trentinfield7903
      @trentinfield7903 Před 3 lety +2

      I disagree. He had tremendous flaws. But he had the biggest balls. People drastically underestimate the preparations and triumph FDR directed and finessed.

    • @joemckim1183
      @joemckim1183 Před 3 lety +2

      The US invasion of Europe would've never worked if they didn't have Great Britain as a staging ground for D-Day. If Halifax had his way US would've had a much harder time getting into Europe. With the Germans not having to fight a 2 front war in Europe they could've totally focused on invading Russia.

    • @trentinfield7903
      @trentinfield7903 Před 3 lety

      Joe McKim try this. Totally synchronized, unthinkable total Nuclear strike. 1945..

    • @joemckim1183
      @joemckim1183 Před 3 lety

      @@trentinfield7903 You don't want to win the entire war based on nuclear weapons. I mean at least when we used it on Japan they were on the brink of defeat but were too stubborn to give up. The nuclear weapons more or less just convinced them to finally throw in the towel. And the nuclear weapons of the time they had to be dropped from a bomber plane. Japan was an island nation so you didn't have to fly that far into occupied territory to drop the bombs. But do you think that in 1945 they would've been able to protect a bomber all the way to Germany through occupied territory without the bomber getting shot out of the air ?

  • @jamieholtsclaw2305
    @jamieholtsclaw2305 Před 2 lety +1

    I keep coming back to this scene.

  • @DFD542
    @DFD542 Před 2 lety +8

    "I take full responsibility"
    Imagine hearing that in modern British politics

    • @DFD542
      @DFD542 Před rokem

      @G E T R E K T I was really talking about the words not the person saying it.
      I don't think he has no.

  • @Hugging_Cactus
    @Hugging_Cactus Před 2 lety +5

    the movie is remarkably well done. every time i watch, i catch something new.

  • @mikeevans5810
    @mikeevans5810 Před 5 lety +4

    had to love Winnie's backbone when facing utter annihilation, he was great, yes, really

  • @craigster1573
    @craigster1573 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Gary Oldman is amazing

    • @vezkup6331
      @vezkup6331 Před 11 měsíci +1

      what gary oldman?all i can see is Winston Churchill playing Gary Oldman

  • @Peter-fq2rq
    @Peter-fq2rq Před 4 měsíci +1

    The scene after this one where Nicholson hopelessly reads the order and looks up to the sky makes me cry man. I can’t IMAGINE the weight of, in essence, being told “I’m sorry, but it is time for you and your men to die for your country. No one is coming to save you. Thank you for your sacrifice.” Gives me the shivers!

  • @henrikknightingale
    @henrikknightingale Před 3 lety +29

    And today they wanna tear his statue down. This man saved Europe

    • @josefstalin3394
      @josefstalin3394 Před 3 lety

      Hey I saved Russia and people did the same to me

    • @josefstalin3394
      @josefstalin3394 Před 3 lety

      @D. K. No from someone that openly wanted to exterminate every slav

    • @josefstalin3394
      @josefstalin3394 Před 3 lety +1

      @D. K. The Soviets didn't do a racially motivated genocide nor wanted to. They took down the Polish army, took down the fascists, took down the capitalists, but at no point did they want to exterminate a race

    • @travisbickle4360
      @travisbickle4360 Před 3 lety

      Soviets and US saved Europe. Otherwise Churchill was screwed. Also they forced Britain to give up its Colonies

    • @mine9120
      @mine9120 Před 3 lety +5

      @@travisbickle4360 To be fair, the brits did a fair bit themselves almost on par with what the US did. For example, they did a great job in Africa fighting the Italians and Germans. And they also played a major part of holding the Japanese in Asia. Also british and Canadian forces actually outnumbered American troops on D day.

  • @AndrewGyyz
    @AndrewGyyz Před rokem +3

    A masterpiece of a film and nothing less.

  • @sophiakiedrowski587
    @sophiakiedrowski587 Před 2 měsíci

    Even through the heavy makeup, you can still hear Gary Oldman’s iconic voice

  • @DevSolar
    @DevSolar Před 2 lety +5

    0:55 -- And this right here was what Hitler was hoping for all along: Strong-arming Britain out of the war. No naval blockade, no involvement of the USA, no entanglements with the British in North Africa, the Balkans, Greece, or Crete, both the Marine Nationale and the Regia Marina intact instead of sunk at Mers-el-Kébir and Taranto respectively... and suddenly the idea of Germany managing to defeat Soviet Russia by the end of 1941 does not look *that* far-fetched anymore.

  • @mygoogleemail2063
    @mygoogleemail2063 Před 3 lety +3

    Even in that moment of extreme pressure Churchill could sense the trap.
    That's the reason he sits in the chair.

  • @richardhall9815
    @richardhall9815 Před 2 lety +3

    Chamberlain and Halifax were such defeatist snobs (whose very actions prior to the war led to the very situation they now found themselves in). When the next boat arrived from Dunkirk, they should've packed the two of them on it on its way back to Dunkirk, dropped them off there and left them there. It would've done the Empire a great service.

    • @landsea7332
      @landsea7332 Před rokem

      The Munich Crisis has been heavily debated . If you look at military spending , Hitler started spending in 1933 , while Britain didn't start spending until 1936 . As kiwi fighter pilot Alan Deere said , thank goodness Chamberlain gave us a year to equip with spitfires , otherwise we'd be flying gloster gladiators .
      There is a growing consensus that Chamberlain was buying time for Britain to rearm .
      .
      Had Britain and France gone to war in support of Czechoslovakia in 1938 , the Luftwaffe would have gained air superiority within days .

  • @TheBombayMasterTony
    @TheBombayMasterTony Před 5 lety +2

    Excellent acting, Oldman.

  • @DarkKnight_______
    @DarkKnight_______ Před 2 lety +2

    One of my favorite scenes in the movie.

  • @gasket1966
    @gasket1966 Před 4 lety +6

    When everyone wanted to make a deal with the ememy 1 man stood up and said hell noo

  • @nodinitiative
    @nodinitiative Před 6 lety +189

    And of course, only Stannis dared to challenge Churchill and only Stannis did not want to sacrifice 4000 good men in a needless slaughter.

    • @Schwedeballz
      @Schwedeballz Před 6 lety +7

      nodinitiative no he did that at the blackwater.

    • @rajamufti6698
      @rajamufti6698 Před 6 lety +2

      and don't forget of the attempt of boltons

    • @iratepirate3896
      @iratepirate3896 Před 5 lety +2

      He only needed twenty good men.

    • @OmegaTrooper
      @OmegaTrooper Před 5 lety +2

      He is the One True King

    • @jovalin5939
      @jovalin5939 Před 5 lety +15

      Stannis wouldnt have considered peace talks with Hitler.

  • @DinoJake
    @DinoJake Před rokem +2

    Remember - this was back in 1940. Well before anyone outside of Germany knew about the Holocaust and the true scope of Hitler's madness. As far as Hallifax and Chamberlain knew, Hitler was just another dime-a-dozen conqueror - ambitious and bloodthirsty, yes, but surely reasonable enough to accept terms of surrender. Churchill was one of the few who saw right away what Hitler really was, and knew that to surrender to him was to surrender to death.
    EDIT: I have recently been informed that the Holocaust didn't actually begin until AFTER 1940, so I hereby stand corrected.

    • @tallesttreeintheforest
      @tallesttreeintheforest Před 3 měsíci

      no one in germany knew it, because it had not started yet. everything related to what is known as the holocaust started after this event.

  • @gamma4053
    @gamma4053 Před 9 měsíci +1

    This is Churchill's 'Der Untergang' scene

  • @Nounismisation
    @Nounismisation Před 5 lety +10

    Bloody hell! Imagine having to make that sort of decision.

    • @mrblack888
      @mrblack888 Před 4 lety

      It's really a very easy decision, if the sacrifice of 4000 will get you 50,000 of your men back then there is nothing to decide. In the event it got back more than 200,000.

    • @armyartilleryman3895
      @armyartilleryman3895 Před 4 lety

      @@mrblack888 Over 300,000 made it back. To me. hell of a damn victory right there

    • @keithrose6931
      @keithrose6931 Před 3 lety

      @@mrblack888 50 thousand people maimed or killed is not an "easy decision " . Logical NOT easy .

  • @pepepotamo5634
    @pepepotamo5634 Před 4 lety +5

    My god, what temper had this Churchill.

  • @jjrj8568
    @jjrj8568 Před 4 lety +2

    For the record, Churchill wanted the Gallipoli campaign to be a FULLY naval campaign, with all guns blazing, utterly destroying the straits' defenses all the way up to Istanbul, not a messy land invasion; he was largely unsupported and ignored, and look how that went, utter defeat and shame by Dec-Jan 15/16

    • @englishandturkce4513
      @englishandturkce4513 Před 4 lety

      @JJRJ 85 My second country is Turkey and even though I’m mostly Turkish and Churchill tried to knock us Ottoman Turks out of the war, I know that Churchill was inexperienced at the time and when in WW2, I see him as the saviour of the world because this time, he knew what to do as he learnt from his mistakes in mid-1915-Early 1916 of the Gallipoli Campaign!

  • @davidwicks7543
    @davidwicks7543 Před 7 měsíci

    Just acting at its finest. It doesn't get better than this.

  • @LeathanL
    @LeathanL Před 4 lety +7

    Stephen Dillane deserves an Oscar for all the work he did replacing his "R"s with "W"s. "Pwime Ministah...I have Weservations". @:40.

  • @KennethNicholson1972
    @KennethNicholson1972 Před 4 lety +8

    Amazing performance by a true master of his craft.

  • @DylanTreadway56
    @DylanTreadway56 Před 4 lety +9

    1:37 “thousands”

  • @robertstraw9881
    @robertstraw9881 Před 5 lety +7

    Ricky Gervais was offered the role of Churchill before Gary Oldman. Can we have a comedy version of darkest hour with Churchill in his chair “vis a vis, yeah, I can win this war AKA for you.”

  • @marshmallow3251
    @marshmallow3251 Před 4 lety +5

    Chamberlain looks really sick in this scene

    • @joshuagrover795
      @joshuagrover795 Před 4 lety +3

      Chamberlain at this point in May 1940 was dying from cancer, he would pass away in November 1940, that why he looks frail.

  • @silasleal646
    @silasleal646 Před 4 lety +8

    I SIT IN THIS CHAAAAAAAAAIR

  • @joliecide
    @joliecide Před rokem

    Gary Oldman put on an acting clinic with this film.

  • @michaelrchan
    @michaelrchan Před 5 měsíci

    I love how he smells the trap.

  • @bakewell7284
    @bakewell7284 Před 5 lety +22

    BOY! how we need a man like this today in 2018!

    • @hinayuzuna5848
      @hinayuzuna5848 Před 3 lety

      He would Despise England today

    • @landsea7332
      @landsea7332 Před rokem

      Who could have imagined , that when you wrote this in 2018 , that a pandemic would hit ,
      and that with all the pandemic politics , we need him even more in 2022 ?
      .

  • @TheAwesomeDarkNinja
    @TheAwesomeDarkNinja Před 4 lety +34

    Has someone spliced Darkest Hour and Dunkirk yet?

    • @lost7149
      @lost7149 Před 4 lety

      Yes

    • @joemckim1183
      @joemckim1183 Před 3 lety +3

      You don't really need to splice them together. Just watch Darkest Hour then watch Dunkirk. They're essentially two parts of the same story.

    • @infinitepowerTF
      @infinitepowerTF Před 3 lety

      @@joemckim1183 Exactly 👍.

  • @mergingmarky8274
    @mergingmarky8274 Před rokem +1

    Saw Dunkirk finally, So Great 👍

  • @user-jp7fj5lq8y
    @user-jp7fj5lq8y Před 3 měsíci

    When he says I take full responsibility and says really!? And Winston YES SIR THAT IS THE REASON I SIT IN THIS CHAIR, I just like wow this Is the kind of a leader every country should have to be strong and protect

  • @superdumpfback4041
    @superdumpfback4041 Před 5 lety +3

    Churchill rants xD
    Very good movie btw

  • @bunnyboy9408
    @bunnyboy9408 Před 6 lety +9

    Love him

  • @PhilBeckman-rn6sx
    @PhilBeckman-rn6sx Před 3 měsíci

    The great Gary Oldman- Amanda Seyfried. So true Amanda, so true.

  • @georgiewilliams1952
    @georgiewilliams1952 Před 2 lety +2

    My great grandad fought in Dunkirk