Saving Private Ryan: Captain's last words (HD CLIP)
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- čas přidán 2. 10. 2021
- Saving Private Ryan: Captain's last words
What’s happening in this Saving Private Ryan movie clip?
Miller (Tom Hanks), lying on the ground, shot and bleeding to death, tells Ryan (Matt Damon) a few last words and finally dies on the battlefield. Meanwhile, Upham kills the man who shot Miller and takes a German squad prisoner.
Rent or buy Saving Private Ryan here: amzn.to/3ujj8gi
What’s the movie Saving Private Ryan about?
Steven Spielberg directed this powerful, realistic re-creation of WWII's D-day invasion and the immediate aftermath. The story opens with a prologue in which a veteran brings his family to the American cemetery at Normandy, and a flashback then joins Capt. John Miller (Tom Hanks) and GIs in a landing craft making the June 6, 1944, approach to Omaha Beach to face devastating German artillery fire. Miller's men slowly move forward to finally take a concrete pillbox. On the beach littered with bodies is one with the name "Ryan" stenciled on his backpack. Army Chief of Staff Gen. George C. Marshall (Harve Presnell), learning that three Ryan brothers from the same family have all been killed in a single week, requests that the surviving brother, Pvt. James Ryan (Matt Damon), be located and brought back to the United States. Capt. Miller gets the assignment, and he chooses a translator, Cpl. Upham (Jeremy Davis), skilled in language but not in combat, to join his squad of right-hand man Sgt. Horvath (Tom Sizemore), plus privates Mellish (Adam Goldberg), Medic Wade (Giovanni Ribisi), cynical Reiben (Edward Burns) from Brooklyn, Italian-American Caparzo (Vin Diesel), and religious Southerner Jackson (Barry Pepper), an ace sharpshooter who calls on the Lord while taking aim. The film's historical consultant is Stephen E. Ambrose, and the incident is based on a true occurrence in Ambrose's 1994 bestseller D-Day: June 6, 1944.
Credits: © 1998 Paramount Pictures.
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#warmovie #battlefront #prisoners #battlefield #lastwords - Zábava
This movie and Band of Brothers are two of the most powerful war movies I’ve ever seen. It’s sad to realize that this generation of men are almost gone now, so few remain to tell their stories.
I think you need to include " The Pacific" on the list.
@@mikelonde9567 that was an epic series but it didn’t hit me like the other two......my grandfather fought in the pacific and two of my great uncles died there. The hell they went through was unbelievable
@@carvingboss7598 Agree 100% - these two with their respective endings have stayed with me for years (since Pvt Ryan was released). My grandfather served in pacific as well, but was clerical - I do have his Navy paperweight though. Really wish more Americans would take those lessons to heart.
Their stories will be told by people like you and many others who will see the ultimate sacrifice they have given so freedom can be achieved. Places like the internet will hold their actions for evermore to be shared for the world to see how their sacrifice yesterday is today's freedom.
Well... There is "a couple" of films from and about Eastern front.. But you, Americans, would not see them anyway.
My grandfather stormed Omaha Beach on D Day.....I had tears in my eyes during the opening scene just seeing what he might have experienced that day. He made it home in one piece and my mother was born in '46.
oh come on rebecca.....
@@icwinkler Whatever man....my grandfather was a great man and much loved by his family. Peace be with you.
My father was a POW in Germany on D DAY 6th June it was his 21st birthday they heard about it on a hidden radio in the camp said it was the best Birthday present he ever had , sure he would have liked to have told your grandfather that
Mackey Dirk I know, my Grandpa was with the 82nd that day, 25 years a soldier, through Italy, France and later on in Korea. Wounded but he always came home and raised his boy, my dad with my german grandma here in my hessian Hometown. I am glad to have known such a wonderful person in my life. I never knew what he did and just found out where he served a long time after he had passed away when I deciphered his uniform ribbons and medals.
I thank him for his service. My he rest with all our other soldiers.
The real tragedy of this movie is that Miller never did get to go home to be with his wife again. It’s why Ryan needed to know he was a good man from his own wife. That he had “earned this”.
Yes. but the trauma, guilt and his conscience would of taken their toll on him. The reflection he had on his own life and that of Lt Miller was very emotional to say the least.
He had to earn it for all the good men that died for him to get home safe.
@@dorahyeireann256 You mean Cpt Miller, right
@@reinerdykeman Yes, who you think I mean?
@@dorahyeireann256 Well you wrote Lt Miller when in fact he was a Cpt, don't worry we all make small mistakes
The ending of this movie, when he asks his wife to tell him he's a good man, always kills me.
me too
“ my mama told me life was like a clip of bullets, you never know which one might blow up a tank”
- Forest Blump
My mama told me...you better shop around.
I be blumping.
😂
Well he used a magazine so mama is also an idiot.
Jen-nai! Why’d you do everybody but me last Jen-nai!!!!!
Saw it when it was released with my Grandfather who fought in Europe.
Never fails to bring tears to my eyes.
RIP Gramps
Sorry to hear about your grandfather
What was your grandpa's reaction? Was he in shock?
They said many WWII vets had to leave the theater when watching this movie because it was so realistic. They were getting flashbacks and having anxiety attacks
@@dl30wpb I remember that. It was all over the news back in 98'.
I remember when it first came out in theaters. The entire theater was decorated with ww2 memorabilia. I remember feeling nervous as the landing craft got close to the beach. What a hell of a time to be alive.
I've seen this a hundred times, know exactly what happens. And still it gives me goosebumps. What a movie.
Same here and thats why i have always said its my favourite film of all time
Same Here
one of the saddest best war movies ever
Try The lost battalion
@@GhostImperator then go 😂😂😂
What’s the saddest worst war movie?
This is a really great movie, but it's a walk in the park if you compare it to "come and see"
Came here to say this. Ironically it was the first comment in my list.
Good thing Tom saved Matt Damon, the guy went on to have a hell of an acting career. Would have been a shame if he just Died in France
You do know this was acted right? Not a documentary? SHEESH. How can some be so obtuse and unbearably naive. I'd be so embarrassed to be like that.
😉
@@SisypheanSeas13 and you miss a joke
And you miss a joke
@@kohndoe9440 reverse uno card?
Then Matt Damon goes to Mars, and we have to go save him again!
1:21
Upham had probably the best character arc in the entire movie. And it shows you how the best of humanity gets lost in the worst of humanity - he was scared shitless the entire time, of taking a life, of watching people die, and finally it took realizing that generosity in war gets people killed that he goes "You know what? Fuck this". He breaks.
It's beautifully ugly, and I love it.
He was right the first time: executing an unarmed prisoner who was pleading for his life would've been a war crime, and is morally wrong. Then he let his buddies die because he was too afraid to get them the ammo, which I can sort of understand because he was basically a clerk who suddenly got dragged into a hellish battle. And finally he _did_ execute the same unarmed prisoner that he had defended earlier. I agree it's a great character. American war movies typically have the US troops being all Rambos against a bunch of morons and cowards. This movie is so good largely because it's much more realistic, and Upham is a good example.
@@ironcito1101 yeah, the only thing that's unrealistic is the mission itself
I found it as redemption. He killed the guy that killed Mellish after being too scared to initially.
@@BruceWayne-fj9bm sorry Batman, but different german - the guy who stabbed melish his fate is unknown in the movie. However if you meant the medic then i withdraw my statement
I feel like Fury's Norman Ellison is based off of Upham. Army typist with no combat experience recruited to fight on the front lines. There inaction got people, but by the end, the have to toughen up and face the realities of war.
So horribly believable when the light goes out of Miller's eyes. Such a brilliant actor.
He needs to be - Otherwise how could he hide his love of child molesting for so long? Jeffrey Dahmer was also a great actor i suppose?
i always wonder how do actors get their entire body and eyes still while playing dead
Too bad he went full woke!
Yes, he doesn't come off as a pedo in this movie at all.
I think Ryan did "earn this". He had the chance to be taken out of the battle and head home, but he disobeyed a standing order and stayed with his unit and fought until the relief came.
True
But the cost of cpts men
Good point
Sure but that statement is still a gift to Ryan. So much of us drift through life not willing to take the risks to be greater than ourselves.
If you have to live knowing you could have died or others died for you. Well you will think differently when deciding if you have the courage to ask a girl out or start a business. Whether or not your going to sleep in for that test.
That was more of a message to the audience as much as it was to Ryan. To live the rest of his life to the fullest
Grandfather was there. He was a medic. Would never talk about it nor would I ask. Was a great man. Bless all those who fight and die to protect our country. Amen!
A ty byś walczył?
Now America is fighting alongside the Ukrainian fascists. No memory at all
Proof?
@@5Ci0N Give me your account in Telegram or What's
Same here. My mom said that my Papaw was a medic and kept tight lipped about what he actually saw over there.
That has got to be the worst thing to hear from a dying captain who went so far to rescue the private. “ James, earn this” haunted the private for years, laden with guilt.
Exactly. Even in real time I thought that he was essentially blaming him for getting the whole platoon KILLED. Plus the 'wimp' commits a war crime and ends up with PTSD for the rest of HIS life! THANKS Private 🤬
@@christopherfritz3840 What You Mean?
@@jamesbarker2567 He's talking about Upham shooting the German after they'd surrendered.
until you realize that it was written into the script to speak directly to the person watching the film. Earn the life you have because other's died for you to have it.
@@52BLUE 🙏🙏
“James, earn this.” “Earn it!” This scene always tears me up. Best war movie ever made! Captain Miller…a bad ass to the very end…pulling his 45 ACP sidearm and shooting at the Tiger tank, but also a teacher and mentor to the very end! Captain Miller is the type of CO and leader I would fight beside thru the gates of hell itself! Tom Hanks is one of the best actors ever!
Best and most realistic war movies I’ve ever seen total tearjerker
I bald like crazy at start when he takes his family to cemetery.
All gave some, some gave all
(bawled)
@@sonofizzy no I'm American
@@joeblow1186 and its still bawled, not bald
@@joeblow1186 American justifying his bad spelling by stating he's American
The moment when Ryan realized that by selfishly staying, contravening a direct order, he got the Cpt. and his men slaughtered.
A really pointless effort was this, what was the point of bringing in there germans attention, to get attacked by german murrains with tanks, when they had to wait till evening for ammerican squad?
@@unknownuser5260 the film wouldn't be interesting otherwise.
@@unknownuser5260 in the pre-battle of Rammelle. You can hear them saying about the important of the bridges for Supply and cutting german rainforcement. 101st (from this film) task to secure hold points, including that bridge. So actually Ryan is in 2 position, they can defend the bridge until reinforcement arrive and deny the german attack to counter the invasion, or they actually heard the CO's order but letting Germans to take the bridge and secure initiative.
@@azravalencia4577 Yes, i heard it two, but germans were not coming to that bridge by then, it was american soldiers who managed to pull german in there
No, they not pull the Germans. The germans already on the run too Rammelle (its seen by how Willie still not taken as POWs). By then, they only pull the inevetable.
Earn it. Tell Myself that everyday when I get out of bed and think, for what. Nobody owes me nothing, I have to go get it.
An absolute classic, without any doubt. Such realistic scenes, believable emotions, triumph and tragedy. One of the greatest war movies ever...IMHO.
Dad was there. "Angels on their shoulders" brought him home.
What a Magnificent Movie and saw it on the Silver Screen, Amen.
I remember at the end of the movie, everyone in the theater just sat in silence for several minutes. You could have heard a pin drop. Just taking in what they just watched. I have never experienced anything like that at a movie. Chilling.
But Shakespeare in Love won Best Picture
Can we acknowledge how awesome Tom Hanks' death acting is? No cheesy gasp, and relaxing his eyes made it look real af.
Best war movie ever
i agree
You can say that again
Yes one of the best, also Hacksaw Ridge
Agree
Best ww2 drama : bob , the pacific
Miller: Never fight a land war in Asia. Don’t take any wooden nickels.
Never go to mars,or open the vacuum hatch in space station.
not even a dime?
I’m a doctor and I would still occasionally see people of this generation up until 10 years ago. They are so different than us. So much better.
This movie is really good. Thank you to those soldiers who sacrificed and dedicate in World War II. Only when there is peace in the world can you have the opportunity to enjoy what is a free and equal life. The United States thank you.
And no thanks to russians, who destroyed 70% of german Nazi army?
Humans overall are pathetic. Destroying their own homes and their own kind
@@user-oo8zt1sc1c Russia was the biggest loser in ww2 they lost so many men for their wrong political ideology
Who cares sbput Russia. Screw them. All the sacrifices our Fathers made to give us Freedom have all been Spat upon by this generation of spoiled brainwashed liberals.
America is being systematically destroyed from within
@@paulsheffield4729 thinkings like those is what make USA people some of the most ignorant citizens in the whole globe. You should be kinda respectful for other nations, specially, when talking about a brutal war like WW2, that took so many lives.
I think this was one of the best war movies ever made.
I was pregnant with my first baby when this film came out. It was a healthy pregnancy, but my mother and sisters saw the film and were so emotionally affected by it that they recommended I wait until after I had the baby to see the film. My dad was a Marine in WW II and I get every emotional about films like this.
As a German it's always a strange feeling to see this movie. On the one hand you know what's going on in German Concentration Camps, you identify with the allies and want this horror and madness to stop as soon as possible. On the other hand I can't help but think that it's my Grandfather they are shooting at (and who is shooting at them).
How incomprehensible is war, for common civilian, human, soldier?
My father served in WW2, he very rarely, and I mean RARELY...ever talked about what he saw. From the beginning of this clip to the very end....especially.....it tears me up inside and hits me like a bag of bricks and a baseball bat!!!!
Mine too
Tom Hanks is such a good actor I love him
This film will always be the best war movie that i have ever seen. I sat in a cinema here in Berlin back in 1998, and i have never experienced such a silent cinema, during the first half hour of a film. No one even breathed, including myself, as far as i could hear. I know that Band of Brothers is also extraordinary, but one is given a break in between episodes. Not in this film though. When i watch these clips, even after 23 years, i still have to come back down to earth afterwards
Are you German by any chance? You said you watched it in Berlin.
@@DestinyAwaits19 no i am english but speak german as i have lived here since 1988
In the movie Saving Private Ryan, Captain John Miller's last words to Private James Ryan are:
"James...earn this. Earn it."
These words are spoken by Captain Miller to Private Ryan as he lay dying, after leading his squad on a mission to save Ryan's life during the D-Day invasion of Normandy. The words are a reminder to Ryan of the sacrifice made by Captain Miller and his fellow soldiers to save him, and a call to action for Ryan to live his life in a way that honors that sacrifice. The phrase "earn this" can be interpreted as a challenge to Ryan to make something meaningful out of his life and to ensure that the sacrifices made by Captain Miller and others were not in vain.
The most gut wrenching movie I have ever seen.
I still hear people talk about this film year after year, that tells you enough about how good it was.
Still brings tears to my eyes 'earn this '
The strength of his conviction to fire at a tank with a .45 ACP will always be to me one of the most bad ass things I've ever seen a character in a movie do, dude truly was a trooper and being a teacher helped him become a natural leader in the army!!!..
Rangers lead the way
Great scene...it shows that as he started to go into shock, his natural instincts were to still go down fighting, no matter how futile.
Perhaps Miller thought he could kill the tank's driver. If the driver dies, the tank can no longer maneuver.
This truly was the Greatest Generation, long may we remember the sacrifices of these brave men and women, for centuries to come.
Did u just say brave women 🤣.
Only men fought in the war, stop disrespecting them
@@anujsinghania569 Females literally worked in the factories providing equipment if I do recall so they technically was apart of the war effort
@@shallsp1132 Last I checked, it was the men running the factories.
Besides, u can't compare brave men fighting on the frontlines, saving people while putting their lives on risk.
Or even field medics.
To factory workers, which I agree many men helped with that too, which was crucial.
Heck, even so many children fought in the war, or helped with war effort.
It's so weird, how even children are more brave and useful than those coward females. 😂
Thankfully in other countries, the females actually contributed something during war.
Like for example, one queen even cut her head, so as to motivate the king to win. I know extreme, but u get the idea. 😅
My grandfather had polio at the age of 12, spent a year in hospital and came out with a level of paralysis that prevented him from joining WW2. I remember as a kid turning to him and saying something along the lines of 'the one positive is you didn't have to experience that' - to which he replied 'No, I was devastated. All my friends went and I couldn't go along to try and protect them'. What a crazy time to be alive..
I've read articles of young men killing themselves in WWII because they were turned down for health reasons or something when trying to enlist.
the tragic brutality and the non sense of war rendered at un unprecedented stage, best war time movie ever
I was in the army when this movie came out. It was a humbling experience when the movie reminded me I walked among giants.
Best WWII movie hands down.
Some 30 years ago I was about to take an exit off Rt. 24 south in MA when I saw an old station wagon in the breakdown lane. As I passed by I noticed an Marine Corps sticker on the window and I saw an older gentleman sitting on a box on the passenger side front tire so I pulled over to see if he needed help.
He did....He couldn't use one of his arms very well to change the tire and so I did that for him.
He got shot up on Iwo Jima ....He told me he lasted all of 10 minutes.
I told him I was honored to help him and thanked him for his great service!
Poor guy was on his way to Rhode Island for his grand daughter's wedding and he went on his way with one of those pitiful dounut tires. If I had the money I would have bought a new one for him on the exit but I didn't.
I did however before he left give him my heartfelt thanks, a gospel tract and I prayed he'd make it safely to his destination.
I will never forget!
I'm 53 years old, have seen some stuff in my life, and have seen that movie many times. "Earn this!" still does, and always will, cause me to tear up. Amazing story about life...!!!
0:32 when the enemy tank is at 1HP
What a movie! I'll watch it 5 more times in my life, for sure.
What this video didn't show was how they looked at Miller's hand to see if it was still shaking. That part gets me every time. It's like a confirmation of what they already knew: he's gone. 😢
1 of the best war movie
I always try to remember Miller's words to Ryan for my own life. They are actually a life lesson. A way to put some order in your path. That's why Ryan asks (just after this scene) his wife about him being a good husband. He needed an external approval of the "earn this" line. It was a way from Miller to order Ryan to have a good and correct life. It was his legacy. Another thing is that Ryan could've asked that to his children or grandchildren but asking that to his wife was important to connect it with the life Miller was having (he was having a nice life with his wife). You could think that Ryan finally had the life Miller wasn't able to have after his death. A very important movie in my humble opinion in different ways. As said, this particular scene is very moving to me. Cheers.
Best movie ever. Hands down 🥲
One of the greatest movies ever made. Plain and simple
My all time favorite movie.
Excellent acting ever.
Love from Azarbaijan 🇦🇿
I could only watch this Film once, the Soldier Crying for his Mother really was too much to Bare…Heartbreaking is an Understatement….These Veterans/All Veterans Deserve the Highest of Honors and Appreciations….There will Never be a Generation like them again….
not just action movie. so heartbreaking.
When you see the movie for the first time, you only realize at that moment that it wasn't Cpt Miller you saw at cemetary in the first scene but Pvt Ryan and you understand his pain
These words. Do not forget them. Ever.
Such a great actor saying wonderful phrase. Everyone of us must earn the life all things we have. Thanks god for everything..
This scene changed my whole feeling about being an American. When this film came out, I had been living abroad for at least a decade, and was thoroughly alienated by how the country had evolved during those years, to the point that I no longer wanted to identify with being an American at all. I won't go into the politics of it; it really doesn't matter whether you get alienated on the left or the right, as so many people have done. But then I was watching this scene, identifying with the story you know the way you do. And when the lieutenant said "Earn this" it hit me. I realized that, we may not all have been personally rescued by soldiers fighting their way through hell to save us, but...if you are an American, you have received so much. There were so many advantages which I have received in life, from birth onwards, compared to the vast majority of people in the world. And how and why? Thanks to those who came before me. And I gladly took whatever benefits I could at every step along the way, education, job opportunities, social opportunities, a whole way of thinking and living freely...I never hesitated. The point was, as I sat there, I realized that I had RECEIVED all these benefits and advantages in life, by virtue of being an American. And it poured down upon me that, I could not UNreceive any of it. I could not NOT identify with any of it. I owed something for all that which contributed to my being who I am. I owed it to those who came before me, who saw to it that I had those opportunities and those freedoms and those values...to live up to them. To earn what had been so freely given to me. So, from then on, although returning to live on the mainland is not likely ever to happen for me. I've been too long away to re-adjust to the changes which have happened. Nonetheless, there is no question but that I assume my identity as an American and do my best, in my life as I live it, to stand for what is best about my heritage as I understand it.
It's lucky that there isn't many of these heroes left to see what has happened and continues to happen to the world they fought so hard for
Not really. History just repeats itself. We’ll return to having men like these and them go back to having what we have today. A never ending cycle
@@fyregus never!!! Just over a hundred years ago there was fourteen and fifteen year old kids doctoring their birth certificates so they would say they're old enough to fight for their king. Can you seriously see kids of today being as keen? There was a lot of conscientious objectors to the war itself but the country being worth fighting for was never an issue. Do you think many will be willing to give their lives protecting a country that tramples all over us all laughing manically when they do it?
Yes, we just had a Baby Hitler Trump in the White House that called POW veterans losers.
@@normancarter5419 coming from the uk I'm neither for or against Trump but you can't dispute that the country was in a much better place under him than it is now. Personally i think most people would benefit if neither Trump OR Biden run in 2024 and in all honesty i don't think either will
@@angelametcalfe9142 US Rep. Katie Porter (California) needs to be our next President, go look her up.
Great movie! Respect from Russia.
This movie makes me cry everytime
I watched this movie when I was just a little kid and I didn’t really know how to judge movie back then but what I remember what made this movie so powerful was Tom hanks’s brilliant acting
One of the best movies ever.
A glorious death, but Miller did Reiben dirty, instead of addressing him as the only surviving member of the squad, he is talking to Ryan to “earn it” despite meeting him only yesterday, while fighting alongside Reiben for 2 years.
There's even a scene where Reiben is protecting Ryan and Miller runs to them and says:"Ryan are you okay?" and Reiben says:"Yeah I'm fine too thanks a lot captain."
@@reacbeac8436 yep, i remember that. Reiben wasnt serious there, he was more of a joking mode, but yeah they really treated Ryan like a Golden child, to be protected at all costs.
This part i dont really get. At the point of the final battle where Jackson gets killed, Mellish dies, Wade and Capparzo already gone..... Why do they still continue the mission and protect Ryan? Who cares if they get him back alive?
The mission was B. S. from the start, and they all knew it
@@amare1cro cuz he's the only surviving son out of the family. He's the reason for this whole story.
The magic of two magical man in this gem(Saving Private Ryan) TOM HANKS & STEVEN SPIELBERG ✌😎
Excellent Tom Hanks 🥺👍👍👍
Sigo viendo esta escena y se me sigue haciendo un nudo en la garganta 🥺
Not a over the top, heroes with all guns blazing, saving the day and winning the war ending, but a honest, cold and bittersweet ending... the men who completed the mission ended up almost all killed...
Masterpiece 👍👍👍
UMA DAS MELHORES SENAS DO CINEMA QUE JA ASSISTI!
É verdade
He said: "Fat girls have the prettiest hands."
Actually they are scary.
@@wrightvcx2249 That's what Private Ryan said back to him.
Kind of a shame that their last words would be a disagreement.
🤣🤣
he said fat girls are hard to kidnap
GodDAM this movie is amazing.
TRUE HEROES
Does anyone else hear their grandfathers whispering this to us more often now?
03:11 My friend in the club giving me his last pill
Man Tom Hanks acting was flawless.❤
James had already "earned it." The Ranger's last words to him should have been, "Drive on!"
At 2:11 you can see that one of the Ryan´s paratrooper colleagues survived, when he comes from the left side near river. It's that guy with black goggles on helmet.
No generation will ever become as hardened or brave as these young men and women back then.
They gave their all and triumphed over pure evil and I hope that history never forgets that.
Dont bet on it . Plenty of combat Vets still around to defend the Constitution !!
@@johnmarlin4661 plenty of combat vets yes but not as many who came back from WW2 that’s for sure.
I don't know man look at our fore father's arguably a better generation.
@@andyaitken4243 most of these men were forced to be in that war. Thats why there was more vets back then. Today’s volunteer military is a very different circumstance.
Seriously, in a war that was fought only by men. Where wahmen ran away like cowards, u disrespect all the veterans by mentioning them?
Best war movie ever Made. Classic
Melhor cena de todas que já vi !
The scene with the coward on the stairs and the German soldier killing his friend is probably one of the hardest things to watch
So true
Because you'd run up and kick his ass ofc.
Nesse tempo lutava se com bravura, minhas continência à todos os herois.
To this day this movie is STILL my all time favorite ever.
One of the iconic endings combined music of all time!
Only Reiben and Upham Still Lives in Miller's Squad.
Yes, well technically only Reiben is part of the Ranger unit, Upham was from another unit on loan to Captain Miller.
After the scene when upham breaks and fails to supply the ammo I cannot watch it anymore... I honestly start crying... I know it's a movie, I know it's just a scene, but I can't stand it.
It was the one part of the movie I could NEVER get to grips with, one moment the cringing coward, next a vengeful warrior. Here in NZ, Upham of a different standard is a war hero. Check out Charles Upham, VC.
It is heartbreaking. It's also important to remember that even though they were called to serve, everyone serves differently. Upham wasn't an infantryman, he was a translator and a writer. He didn't even know what to bring out into the field and thought he could take his typewriter, and hadn't seen combat at all, hadn't fired his weapon since basic. So to expect him to be brave like the rest of them is difficult, and for the parts he did, he handled himself better than most.
Part of Spielberg's brilliance of this film was showing how everyone reacts to the moments that truly overwhelm them whether they are a soldier or not. Even Ryan at the end, who was a soldier, started to crumble and cry because they were overrun and he thought he'd be killed.
When I saw how Upham responded, I was furious, thinking christ fuck what a goddamned coward. Then you think about it, he was a translator, he'd never seen combat and now he's up to his ears in chaos...finally you say to yourself "you'd like to think your brave but until it hits the fan, you just don't how you'll react, do you?"
@@ericstanke3291 true tho, when in the company of brave men, you cannot do anything but become brave like them, because they're risking their life for you too.
Me too. But we get emotional because, although it's a movie, it is also a very good depiction of true-to-life events. And for those of us who understand the reality of such events, and their effect on the world, we feel it deeply.
"Ryan, why couldn't you just leave when we came!!!"
I just loved the way he looked at his .45 as that tank exploded. 😀 He didn't hear the air support yet.
Nice sharing Vidio dear ✋ greeting from Indonesian traditional gold finder friend 🇲🇨👍👍
My grandfather fought the Germans in Crete and came back in one piece...sadly I never got to to meet him as he died before I was born...my mother said how he described that bullets were literally flying a little further off his head...this movie shows how fragile human lives are and that Im damn lucky my grandfather came back...
Death in war....thats it. Earn it.
Total success in duty. saving and wining war at a time.
everytime I watch this clip will crying everytime!
I remember the first time I watched this movie my grade 8 teacher had us get our parents to sign a waiver to get permission to watch it. He knew it was a great realistic depiction of war and wanted us to understand what they went through for us. This was back in 2002. I love ww2 veterans.
0:34 when I was like 10yrs old I watch this movie not knowing the title of it then I tought 6 bullets from pistol is enough to destroy a tank, but now it came to realize that the plane destroyed the tank,,, I cant blame the director, its n amazing movie
This movie was stacked with great actors
Except vin disel
I always respected American for standing against the oppressor. Fast forward to 2021, I no longer think American soldiers know what they are fighting for ?
There’s no Little Round Top’s, Bunker Hill’s, Belleau Wood’s, or Normandy’s anymore. Gone forever are the days of pitched battles against an identifiable enemy. There will never be victory against ISIS, the Taliban or etc. because warfare has changed drastically. American soldiers can’t defeat an ideology.
You mean politicians
Right...have you heard the term 'blood libel' before? It had been a transparent excuse to murder people for money for centuries before it helped facilitate the Holocaust and the Second World War. Two of the three candidates in the 2020 US Presidential election were and are pushing it - and one's 'Independent' campaign was funded and run by the other, to steal votes from his main opponent. Then $250 million were stolen by the latter with a fake 'contest electoral fraud' fund. This is only part of a huge problem, but it might serve as a useful illustration of what's actually going on.
Armor piercing incendiary .45 rounds fo sure!
HEDP LOL
This movie is Amazing