Bear Grylls Reviews More Survival Scenes From Movies & TV | Vanity Fair
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- čas přidán 9. 06. 2024
- Bear Grylls is back once more to review the realism behind survival scenes in movies and television, including 'Those Who Wish Me Dead,' 'Revenant,' 'The Shallows,' 'Yellowjackets,' 'The Wilds' and 'The Mountain Between Us.' Bear rates each based on their believability and draws from his own life experiences.
Running Wild with Bear Grylls: The Challenge premieres July 25 on National Geographic.
00:00 Intro
00:28 Those Who Wish Me Dead
02:08 The Revenant
03:50 The Shallows
05:25 Yellowjackets
07:32 The Wilds
09:18 The Mountain Between Us
Director: Jackie Phillips
Director of Photography: Matt Krueger
Editor: Cory Stevens
Talent: Bear Grylls
Producer: Funmi Sunmonu
Line Producer: Jen Santos
Associate Producer: Omar Elgohary
Production Manager: Andressa Pelachi
Production Coordinators: Peter Brunette and Carolina Wachockier
Talent Booker: Paige Garbarini
Camera Operator: Oliver Lukacs
Audio: Kari Barber
Production Assistant: Eric Bittencourt
Post Production Supervisor: Marco Glinbizzi
Post Production Coordinator: Andrea Farr
Assistant Editor: Billy Ward
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Bear grylls is the type of guy in horror movies that checks out the noise instead of running and survives.
checking the noise and survives the attack
He's all about surviving, so he's going to do what is the best chance of survival... if it's finding the threat then that's what he will do, if it's running, that's what he will do...
@@amberhoward7807 yea I would say the opposite he would stay put because he's a survivalist
Bear was in in the special forces for 10+ years. He climbed Mount Everest when he was 23 years old and had a life ending injury that he recovered from. The experience this guy has in various climates and conditions is unparalleled. Not only to know what to do, but to experience it physically can carry more than reading it off a book. Yes his show was so called staged, but his knowledge on what to do and when outweighs the average persons ability to survive.
I thought he was 13 when he did that.
@@yates667 would that not make him the youngest to ever do it? 23 is more plausible, but for that reason alone -I believe you 😭
@@yates667 You thought someone climbed Mt Everest when they were 13 lol?
Or compared to somebody who is an actual survivalist that never faked anything he ever filmed?.....*crickets*
Staged, but the information is still just as valid
This guy looks like he knows a lot about survival. Someone should get him a show to survive in the wild areas.
They should call it, “Man vs. Wild”.
It would be interesting if they just dump him somewhere with almost no gear or food, and see if and how he makes it out.
He’s had several shows by now. Some controlled by producers to be bizarre. Some situations are real enough.
Low hanging fruit
@@redelfshotthefood8213 you missed the joke
the coach’s leg in yellowjackets wasn’t broken, it was completely smashed and shredded and essentially hanging onto his body by a thread 😭
I think the immediate amputation is what he was speaking about. Not even a second to gauge what was wrong with him and she comes in with an axe.
@@Boristheborat that and the fact that she didn't even make a tourniquet before chopping the leg... do that in a real situation and you will become the psycho of the group that might end up murder by the survivors..
yeah, but still. I don't think he would die if she didn't chop it off with an axe within like 2 seconds after seeing it lol. Take at least 5 seconds to think about it lmao
I feel like the fact that Misty cauterized it later should have also been included bc like yes, she cut it off but I think, in terms of the show and how long we know they were stuck, she saved his life.
There was a series about real life survival situations where a man's foot was only held on by a couple of tendons. He's still walking on it to this day.
You're not a Doctor, don't presume to know what can and cannot be done
literally coach Scott’s leg in yellowjackets wasn’t broken it was completely disintegrated .
Fr
Which changes none of the Grylls points.
yes but he still would've died. The coach would've died of blood loss and the following infection. I know they desinfected it but a huge wound in such a dirty environment would never heal like that.
'Sometimes you just get caught in this stuff' as if getting stuck in quicksand is an everyday occurrence
I mean, for the homie here it might as well be.
i’m no expert but there was definitely no fixing that leg in yellowjackets it was fully a pancake
It’s so weird seeing this guy now older, I remember being a kid and watching his survival shows
It dosent matter whether or not Bear has done these things to survive, the point is he KNOWS how to do these things if any of these situations ever arose in the real world.
Forget Man Vs Wild, Bear is a former SAS soldier, he’s been through the ringer with that alone.
Yeah, I always thought it was weird when people pointed out some things in Man vs Wild were faked or w/e, the show was about education, not drama.
@@styhl8023 it was the blatant misrepresentation that annoyed people.
@@thekingisdead6411 He's legit and I'm a fan but they really did try to play it off like it was all "real things that happened" and not staged so I can understand why it irked a lot of people.
Knowing how to do them and doing them are two very, very different things.
Whoever makes it to the apocalypse with Bear is a very lucky human 😂
Only if a hotel and room service is available
He'd probably eat u😁
Les Stroud > Bear Grylls
@@ZacBLive you know I’m not gonna fight you there, I honestly forgot to mention him 🤔
@@TheGrimTruth2 we get it man, it was 15 years ago, you aren't cool for knowing this, stop tryna be edgy. He was an SAS soldier who has an immense knowledge of survival. He faked only one of his shows, not that big of a deal, it was for education anyway.
I honestly love hearing Bear Grills stories, we really need more but thank you for this
Just one thing: amputation is required when the tissue is mush, or the bone shattered into small pieces. Else, the patient would die due blood loss or inflammation (not limited to the wound area).
Also, as soon as you remove the weight the time is ticking...
Compartment syndrome i also a concern
she should have made a tourniquet before the amputation, I guess, and maybe cauterize it after?
He's going on the assumption that they'll be rescued, though. He doesn't know they end up stranded for a year and a half on the show.
You are right that there's no way the coach would have made it if she hadn't amputated the leg, because unless he got to a hospital in a few days he'd have gone septic and died, and that's if he didn't lose so much blood he went into shock first!
Of course, he also might have been able to get to a hospital in a few days if not for another action Misty took!
And, in the real world, assuming that rescue is coming is the best way to care for someone in a wilderness first aid situation.
Movie:
Bear: "This is something I've seen several times and once it even happened to me when I was visiting the first century AD."
2 key points:
- Take antibiotics with you
- Wriggle like a seal*
Got it.
*Unless there are sharks ;)
You forgot to stay calm
I love how Bear can find the positive perspective in anything.
He was actually my first crush. I'd throw tantrums to change the tv channel and watch him.
Thanks Bear. I'm a big fan.
I was once caught in a beach rip current. They tell you not to panic and I've always thought "Yeh, of course. That's common sense".
But as I was being pulled out to sea, I realised that panic is exactly what you feel and it was creeping up on me. I no longer judge anyone in those situations. 😉
I clearly got out of it. Had a very strong friend with me who was only partly caught and we sort of human-chained it out (yes, didn't even follow the "how to get out of a rip current" advice).
That's crazy. I was in the exact same situation and i didnt know what a rip current was back then.
The panic when the floor disappears and salt water constantly gushing into my mouth everytime I tried to get some air to breathe was traumatising.
I was caught in one at eight years old with my brother and no one on the beach except a strange surfer guy just treading water way out in the deep, and he dragged me back in, my brother made his own way out somehow.
I got caught in one too, and I'm a very anxious person, I always tought I'd panic in a situation like this, but I could remain surprisingly calm. I was way pass the waves breaking line, so the water was calm, and I float really well, so I was able to breath properly, therefore, I could remember to swim aside and made it back just a bit tired.
truth about ur fake hero czcams.com/video/FpWwDgjcTHk/video.html
The thing that irks me the most when it comes to people hating on Bear or saying he's not as good as the other guy is that they have two completely different shows that just happen to be set in the same kind of place. Bear's show is about escaping brutal conditions if you have no chance of rescue. The other show (sorry, I can't remember his name or the shows name) was about staying put and surviving until someone rescued you. Both are important and educational, but each serves a different purpose.
Les Stroud, Survivorman (I assume, who you are referring to)
The actual difference is pretty obvious, Bear is American - making show for entertainment with little real life application. Les is Canadian, and actually wants to educate people.
@@XusernamegoeshereX bear is British what are you talking about
@@XusernamegoeshereX u dunce Bear is British
@@XusernamegoeshereX American? You donut he's British
@@XusernamegoeshereX you however, have no idea what you are talking about. Research is key before making such statements
There was no saving that leg in the yellowjacket scene.
Especially in that situation. He would've died anyways without professional medical attention.
Yeah, probably even if he'd promptly got to a hospital with a trauma team, they might not have been able to save the leg.
And, given that they end up in the wilderness without access to medical care for 19 months, he'd definitely have died in just a few days if she hadn't cut it off.
However, she's also the reason they ended up there for so long...
Let's talk about the fact that the characters are meant to be stranded in remote Ontario, yet are never bothered by mosquitoes 😝
Bear Grylls is always awesome and insightful.
amputating a leg with an ax happened in the swedish army (in 2007). One soldier got caught in a burning car after a crash - and his pal chops of his leg and got him out...
I don't care if anyone says his shoes are staged, this man really knows what he's talking about. Think of the countless hours and probably years he's been learning about stuff like this. He's very intelligent and educated in survival and natural disasters. Plus, if everything he did in every show was 100% real, he may lose his life or risk serious injury and then he can't educate more people and/or do what he loves
So you believe his shows are educational. Running though a lava field, jumping over boulders and drinking urine is not educational. It's stupidly dangerous.
About staging survival situations, there are appropriate ways of doing it. Les Stroud has been doing it for decades. Ray Mears been doing it for decades! It can be done.
some of his advices in his shows were actually recognized as bad advices that nobody should follow,
it’s either bad options or not the best most efficient ways to get out of situations. him spreading misinformation to such a big audience is so dangerous.
now it’s not to say he’s not educated or skilled cause he is and he did also give some great advices and educated people, but there was times where his advices weren’t the best to spread at all
If you really know what he was talking about it wouldn't have to fake it
No he doesn’t, almost every single actual survival expert has said if you listened to most of the nonsense Bear spouts you’d be dead within a week.
@@leoarc1061 he was in special forcers for 10 years tho
to be fair to the yellowjackets thing, misty is crazy so her just immediately going to amputation makes sense
Not sure why he gets hate... the premise of his show was "if you're in x situation, or x climate, do this, you can eat this, heres how to build a shelter." I don't remember them ever claiming he was going to be camped out in the wild the entire time. It was not the same kind of show as Survivorman.
Exactly! These survivalists do not live in the jungle with their family in real life! They film the show and leave. I don't know why people don't get it.
Les Stroud has bear grylls beat by miles
@@kevinjohnson7300 different styles, different experiences. I enjoy them both
He gets hate because he faked the scenarios on his show and actively spread misinformation to his audience. Following Bears example is more likely to get you hurt or killed than anything else.
he gets hate because he’s a hack
Thank you Bear. A very interesting and informative video.
don't question Misty's tactics
she died
@@GAMINGBLAZE no she didn't
My dad was in a motorcycle accident where his leg got pinned in between the bike and guard rail. He survived after my sister put a tourniquet on his leg. He lost the leg though.
I was caught in a ripe current for like 15 minutes a couple years ago.
I dove under a wave, next thing I knew I couldn’t touch the bottom anymore and turned around and I was like 80 yards off the break! I swam along the beach both ways but didn’t move an inch. I had to just float on my back and yell for help. Finally I spit in the water, saw it slightly drift one direction, and followed it out. As I finally hit sand again a helicopter came flying over me.
There's a place in Plymouth England called devil's point and there are some really viscous rip currents there
I've been caught in them several times
Once I had to get rescued by the police patrol boat that patrolled the naval dockyard
Back then I was a very strong swimmer and even I got in trouble swimming there
Mhmm! Rip tides can be a massive danger. Good on you for realizing you just had to float and of course glad you made it safe.
@@solomonkane6442 Why more than once? That's really taking the.
@@dionlindsay2 because as kids we always went swimming there
@@solomonkane6442 It may sound like a smarty pants question, but to me if there are viscious rip currents it seems strange to keep going back to them.
Any work that Bear narrates, I will listen
Finally A Part II !!
Hot ones interview was fun 🔥
Interesting, some of that advice, would really save you. The quicksand/bog I think is televised how to handle in the UK like safety around tides at beaches. This would be very useful school subject. I've had a deep cut on my leg and I didn't realise as it didn't hurt, it was just the gush of blood than I realised so I didn't really know how I got it. Same happened when I sliced the top of my middle toe I thought it was just a stubbing till I saw the blood, and the tip of my bone was sliced too. I found it useful that you do first aid, but it's good to update, because techniques get better. It good to know how to survive, as there are lot's of wild food's we have that we don't learn about anymore. My granddaughter has join the scouts, she loves animals and the outdoors. I wish I'd gone and sent my children there, but they do ok despite it.
If the movie The Martian had been about Bear Grylls, it would not have been a movie.
long live bear grylls
I love the way he talks
love how he says about setting the leg as if it wasnt flat mush
Regardless of what you think for his t.v show. This man was in the SAS. The best of the best
I freakin love this guy.
Small tip. Old man's beard (that white mos you find on old trees) have antibiotics in them.
Missed you Bear. Had enjoyed your previous survival but some things were only for the extreme trained, fit people, but entertaining.
my first ever inspiration is here !!!!!!
This man looks like he could stand a match against wild
He's still pretty cool n funny in my book .. 😆
He just is cool and funny AF
Bear is one of those people I've always looked up to and loved the knowledge he has
Bear Grylls is a tank
Legend
If quicksand is anything like peat bogs, best thing you can do is lay on your back to free your legs.
Interesting cool video thanks for sharing awesome
Basically. Compression is everything.
The coach’s leg was pretty much evicerated. ETA: OBLITERATED. Glad we’re taking time to correct my word selection in a comment I wrote before I had coffee or took my pills.
agreed, no way they would have been able to save that leg, it wasn't just broken it was like flattened - honestly surprised he didn't agree amputation was the best course of action there
Look up the meaning of eviscerated . . .
Obliterated
@@farflownfalcon1076 thanks for the correction
@@badcornflakes6374 thanks for the second correction.
Maybe a survival expert should review bear Grylls survival scenes
9:29, Ben is the new Jack.
He really said some times you just get caught in it like it’s a normal everyday thing for him
Bear Grylls should do the Daniel
radcliffe movie Jungle if he hasn’t already
childhood hero
I always tended to do a massive exhale when hitting cold water.. not sure why.
Say love to him and say compliment...
Interesting stuff
Would be awesome to see him Rate/breakdown the alone series. 😊
Can't wait for Bear to React to Alien vs Predator he'd be like -" I've been caught in this situation a lot many times "
sometimes even Chuck Norris asks Bear what to do 🤟😝
Why would you push the help away when your in quicksand?
when in doubt, wiggle like a seal
Bear Grylls drop your Letterboxd
Yellowjackets is the best show on tv!!!
la leyenda reacciona a peliculas un like
If he’s done being outside risking live he should do nature documentaries voiceovers
He is a true inspiration with the resilience hes shown in his life and the fact that he was in the SAS puts any argument to bed on weather or not hes an actual survivalist he was in the SAS hes the best of them all
what is going on?? didn't see Bear's face for years and now he's literally in every single video on YT
He has a new season of his show with celebrities. Probably promotion.
First clip witch movie??
I wonder what Bear thinks of the scene in Yellowjackets where...
...*spoiler*
...Van gets attacked by the wolf and has to have her face sewn back together by her teammate.
Bear Grylls is a beast
Yeah the only man you can trust in a wild area
Bring back Les Stroud for one of these!
Right? He's an actual expert not the fake one
@@trystantaylor9857 Les Stroud isn't that much of an expert. He has done a ton of questionable to down right stupid things on his show.
I wonder how Jocko would react in these scenarios
the shark bite seemed to be worsened by sewing in visible blood loss, why do lot use shirt material as a compression wrap
Yeap,CZcams algorithm have failed me.This video is 6 months old and it recommends me
did he not see the guys leg was basically paste at that point?
Let's be honest and we're assume there's zombie apocalypse, Bear will survive more than 90% of other survivor experts, dude is legit athlete' other survivors are often not in best shape.
Winter chills , bear grylls
If anyone drinks their own urine in any of these movies Bear will give it a 10/10.
A+
The guy is literally made of iron.
And are ppl really whining about TV shows? You know, things made for entertainment? Guy was an SAS reserve trooper who passed Selection, and has IRL done stuff that would kill most of us, many times in his life.
Stfu folks. Bear is mad legit and am absolutely suitable expert here.
i would trust with my life someone who did half of things bear did CZcams keyboard wariors hating him are probably couch potatoes
Selection for SAS 22 (full time) and SAS 21 (reserve) are completely different, the roles of SAS 22 & 21 are completely different and the risk involved in being part of SAS 22 & 21 are completely different.
I'd say people (and ESPECIALLY members of SAS 22) are within their right to be pissed off by the fact that he was advertised as "ex-SAS" with no clarification of his reserve status.
But I guess that's what losing the empire does to a nation, no respect for the armed forces anymore.
@@AnglosArentHuman I just looked it up. Dude they go through months of really hard training and several hard tests and then 2yrs of probation.
Maybe the SAS Proper might have an issue with it, but that stuff sounds like it would weed most ppl out trying for Reserve anyways.
@@shkotayd9749 lmao Which episode was it that he taught you to backpedal like this?
@@mechanomics2649 Where did I backpedal?
People who say his show Man vs Wild is stage and its not actually surviving. He's not challenging himself to survive like others survival shows but to spread awareness and teach people on how to survive and things to be careful of if and when you are ever face with those circumstances
So wiggle like a seal half the time got it
Well now she knows how it feels. Where's your door now lady
If i got a penny every time mr Grylls informed me you can survive by wriggling like a seal, idd have 2 pennies. Which isnt a lot but i love that it happened twice XD
TLDW: If you are in a survival situation, wriggle like a seal 🦭
regarding the Yellowjacket scene I would say that while they should have restricted the blood flow before and not after cutting the leg wasn't such a bad decision. In most cases stabilize would be a priority but for the brief second we see the leg it seams completely smashed, even when you are close to an hospital if a limb is totally destroyed, bones crushed, muscles teared, keeping it attached does more harm then good, first it could cause a crash syndrome that would likely be fatal without medical intervention, second it would 100% get infected. So if there is any structural integrity preserving the leg could be better but if it's minced meat loosely attached cutting the leg was the best option. While usually misty is pretty unhinged she seems to have decent medical knowledge and probably made a calculated choice, the rush was more to avoid pain than an irrational decision
How does one stabilise a completely crushed leg like the one in the Yellowjacket clip? Lmao.
Two options. 1) axe off their leg which will inevitably kill them very quickly regardless of when help comes. 2) Calm them, get fluids in, don't exacerbate and hope help comes and the person beats their incredibly slim odds at survival.
I wonder which option is best? Not hard mate.
Just use compression bro lmao
I felt so betrayed when i first found out quicksand hardly kills anybody and isn't scary at all
2:10 this guy !!! , bear doesn't recognize Leo 😯
But google says quicksand is more dense than a human and if stuck you would only sink to your waist
The "gasp" yeah.... I got into a car accident and right before impact I couldn't stop it. I just gasped and........smash. I'm fine car was totaled but that moment I still remember.
It's a funny sound, isn't it? When it happened to me it was a thin plasticy sound that made me realise how vulnerable the outer shell of the car was. Not nice.
I give this a 1/10. At no point did Bear attempt to drink his own urine
next: Lasagna react to 8 lasagna's left in the microwave clips
His take on The Revenant was kinda odd. In the book at least, he wasn’t some noble brave survivor, he was running on pure spite and nothing else lmao
Have 3 code (xiaomi, redmi, mi)
If the zombie apocalypse hits the world,
He is gonna save the humanity💯
We need dying light 3 where u play as grills
BEAR GRYLLS IS GOD