The sinking of Blücher - The King's Choice (2016)

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 16. 01. 2017
  • A clip from the Norwegian movie "The King's Choice" where the Norwegian crew of the 'Oscarsborg' fortress sinks the German heavy cruiser 'Blücher' during the opening hours of the invasion of Norway in april 1940. English subtitles can be turned on for this clip.
    I claim no copyright whatsoever, all of the content belongs to Nordisk Film and the rest of the people involved in the making of the movie.
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 6K

  • @rfletch62
    @rfletch62 Před 7 lety +10175

    "No warning, no hesitation. These are enemies".
    "What if we're wrong"?
    "At my command...Fire".
    Leadership does that.

    • @PlacidDragon
      @PlacidDragon Před 7 lety +1263

      yeah, he was under enormous pressure, to put it mildly.
      Standing orders at the time was to fire warning shots (as to not provoke anyone), his garrison was extremely undermanned (they had 3 guns, but only crew for 1 of them. He split that crew into two, and filled the "manual labor" tasks with anything he could get his hands on, even cooks), so they managed to man two of the three guns.
      He is said to have uttered "i'll either be decorated or court martialed" as he gave the order to open fire. He was also very close to retirement, talk about ending your career with a bang...lol
      Definitely a tough cookie :)

    • @PlacidDragon
      @PlacidDragon Před 7 lety +350

      uuuh, are you slow or something ? Which part of "standing orders" is unclear to you ? You've obviously never been in the military... people have a tendency to get shot (or put in prison if they are lucky) if they violate orders and it leads to something of this magnitude.
      At that point, he did not know if the ships were German, British, French, etc. He followed his gut, and good thing that he did.. but he went against orders, and he was under investigation several times after the war for the incident (he was vincidated).

    • @PlacidDragon
      @PlacidDragon Před 7 lety +222

      Yes, the shells weight several hundred kilo's each, so the lack of experienced personell meant that the ship would be well outside of the arc of fire before they'd have a chance to reload. The third gun of the battery, while loaded and ready to go, never got to fire because they did not have the manpower to man it.

    • @Adam7510
      @Adam7510 Před 6 lety +202

      "It is a priviledge of the commanding officer to take responsibillity on himself"
      In Poland we know that.

    • @PlacidDragon
      @PlacidDragon Před 6 lety +136

      Yes, but as you say in your next post, "orders are orders". The order was crystal clear, warning shots only. If he had obeyed orders, the campaign for Norway would likely had looked very different.
      And speaking of British, as history has shown, the Germans only just beat the British in invading Norway. Britain had drawn up plans for taking Norway and Sweden (Plan R 4) so they could deny Germany raw materials (primarily Swedish iron ore).

  • @klub5158
    @klub5158 Před 4 lety +11402

    “Is it an enemy ship?”
    If a warship is coming into your harbor silent as the grave and completely blacked out. Chances are he’s not coming to throw you a surprise party.

    • @Princeofmellon
      @Princeofmellon Před 4 lety +1290

      no they where definetly planning a suprice party, the heavy caliber kind

    • @FEDEXLuchs
      @FEDEXLuchs Před 4 lety +366

      but its my bday :(

    • @ian_b
      @ian_b Před 4 lety +205

      And if they are, it's their own fault they get shot at!

    • @xHDdjuTrAXx--XIIX-
      @xHDdjuTrAXx--XIIX- Před 4 lety +90

      I think a suprise is actually the point

    • @sorrowangel47
      @sorrowangel47 Před 4 lety +33

      actually germans were not here to attack them , but just to pass this acces to the sea .........

  • @BastuGubbar
    @BastuGubbar Před 2 lety +5968

    The oscarsborg fortress had been relegated to a training facility, and it was manned by a mix of pensioners and new recruits, it's commander was 64 years old. The guns were older than most of the men and the torpedoes had been manufactured in a country that stopped existing 22 years earlier. The man in charge of the torpedoes had retired 13 years earlier and was called in as reserve as the new guy was sick.
    And they sunk a cruiser that was so new that it still had a new car smell on the toilet seats.

    • @deflydefly5276
      @deflydefly5276 Před 2 lety +175

      the irony

    • @buttersstotch7981
      @buttersstotch7981 Před 2 lety +333

      Well, if you think about it, Ukrainians are shooting Russian helicopters down with 9K32M Strela-2 MANPADs from DDR, a country which haven´t existed on 32 years.
      (The missile system is even older, from 1974, and originally made in USSR.)

    • @interpl6089
      @interpl6089 Před 2 lety +173

      @@buttersstotch7981 Yes, but the Consistent Factor is Russian Equipment is Equally Old and Crap as 9K32s

    • @buttersstotch7981
      @buttersstotch7981 Před 2 lety +22

      @@interpl6089
      I agree but even tough Blücher was brand new, it was still just made from steel and had no warning systems, unlike Russian aircraft, so there is that balancing factor

    • @hondacivic8222
      @hondacivic8222 Před 2 lety +57

      @@buttersstotch7981 it's not a good comparison in any capacity

  • @Mister_Kourkoutas
    @Mister_Kourkoutas Před 3 lety +4904

    “Gunner, you see that cruiser?”
    “Yes sir?”
    “I don’t want to.”
    “Understood sir!”

    • @lancegideondiokno1774
      @lancegideondiokno1774 Před 3 lety +48

      *"I L D"*

    • @dvdmr9981
      @dvdmr9981 Před 3 lety +18

      badass

    • @Kiraaa92
      @Kiraaa92 Před 3 lety +53

      Two old 28 cm (11 in) coastal guns, Hello there.

    • @hazmatt3250
      @hazmatt3250 Před 3 lety +12

      @@Kiraaa92 “you are an old one”

    • @Lorddesructo
      @Lorddesructo Před 3 lety +45

      @@hazmatt3250 even more funny is the torpedoes they used were from a country that no long had a navy or access to the ocean.(Austria)

  • @utsaar
    @utsaar Před 4 lety +10475

    Can we all just appreciate the fact that they sank one of Hitler's newest heavy cruisers with a fortress manned with recruits and a 64 year old commander and with 50 year old torpedoes?

    • @boogie153
      @boogie153 Před 4 lety +861

      At this distance they would have hit with a bow and a arrow....

    • @dank_lord
      @dank_lord Před 4 lety +1261

      German engineering can only be beaten by other german engineering

    • @dank_lord
      @dank_lord Před 3 lety +348

      @Yoda the joke is lost in you, isn't it?

    • @dank_lord
      @dank_lord Před 3 lety +236

      @Yoda not my fault you don't know a well known joke

    • @paulmoffat9306
      @paulmoffat9306 Před 3 lety +287

      The torpedoes would have been only 20 years old, left over from WW1, at most.

  • @agskytter8977
    @agskytter8977 Před 5 lety +7713

    In the beginning of the 70'ies I was in a guided tour on the Oscarsborg Fort. The guide served on one of the guns during the battle. He told an amusing story of the hours after the ship was sunk and the fortress came under heavy air attack. One of the running ordonances, a private soldier, was almost hit by an axe that slammed into a wall only inches from his head. A bomb had hit a shed with tools. He reported to the CO: "The Germans are out of bombs! They have started throwing axes from the airplanes!" :-)

    • @elementallynx493
      @elementallynx493 Před 4 lety +191

      Oh that's grand!!! 😂

    • @BeastEvan
      @BeastEvan Před 4 lety +44

      Was it a enemy ship that they sunk

    • @elennapointer701
      @elennapointer701 Před 4 lety +468

      @@BeastEvan The Blucher, one of Hitler's brand-new, state-of-the-art heavy cruisers. It went from being commissioned to being upside-down on the bottom of the Oslofjord in three days.

    • @abcdecghijklmn
      @abcdecghijklmn Před 4 lety +56

      Fucking nazis

    • @pokeypokey3494
      @pokeypokey3494 Před 4 lety +233

      @@BeastEvan Yes. It was Blucher. It was supposed to go into Oslo and capture the King and the goverment. But when it was sunk the King and the goverment managed to escape to England with the gold reserve. The people at Osvarsborg didnt even know if it was british or german. They just took the chance.

  • @douglasdaniel4504
    @douglasdaniel4504 Před 3 lety +3346

    When the searchlight picks out the Blucher, running dark, it's like the reveal of a stealth monster in a horror movie. Gives me chills.
    A lot of people in a situation like this, where you're not sure what's going on and you're used to peace and not sure if war has started, would hesitate and not react in time. The commander here did his job.

    • @glenchapman3899
      @glenchapman3899 Před 3 lety +113

      Yeah I think I would have had a pretty serious bowel motion if I had been in charge of that searchlight when it found the Blucher

    • @douglasdaniel4504
      @douglasdaniel4504 Před 3 lety +73

      @hickspaced Hmm, I wouldn't call a heavy cruiser 'harmless'. Yes, a narrow fjord is a bad place to try to run past fortified batteries, but it was hardly helpless. And if the Norwegians had let it get past them up the fjord Oslo would have been under the Blucher's guns, so that was an outcome to be avoided at all costs.

    • @hagamapama
      @hagamapama Před 3 lety +63

      @@glenchapman3899 you mean like the soldier at 1:15 who decided his supper needed to make a return appearance?

    • @glenchapman3899
      @glenchapman3899 Před 3 lety +7

      @@hagamapama Exactly lol

    • @SumoSuperemo
      @SumoSuperemo Před 3 lety +9

      I totally agree man and actually I feel, there is much more horror here.

  • @Minimeister317
    @Minimeister317 Před 9 měsíci +240

    "Ingen advarsel, ingen nøling, dette er fienden" which translates to "No warning, no hesitation, this is the enemy" gives me the most insane chills every time I watch this.

    • @rogerwilco2
      @rogerwilco2 Před 6 měsíci +8

      Norwegian is just about close enough to my native Dutch that I can understand it and that makes it hit home even more.

    • @wantsomeoreos3467
      @wantsomeoreos3467 Před 5 měsíci +1

      ​@rogerwilco2 are there any Norwegian words that are similar to dutch?

    • @TheHaematopus
      @TheHaematopus Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@wantsomeoreos3467 If you know Norwegian and German you can basically read Dutch; it's like a mix of those two.

    • @TorBarstad
      @TorBarstad Před 2 měsíci +1

      I get chills too.
      I'm probably being overly pedantic, but a more precise translation of what he says would be: "No warning, no hesitation, these are enemies".

    • @Ettolrach2
      @Ettolrach2 Před měsícem +1

      Birger Eriksen actually said "visst fanden skal der skytes skarpt.
      Enten blir jeg stilt for krigsrett, eller så blir jeg krigshelt. Fyr!"
      which translate into: damn sure shall it be shot with sharp!
      Either I will be court-martialed or I will be a war hero. Fire!

  • @Wisconsam2117
    @Wisconsam2117 Před 5 lety +11498

    Can we just all admit that the first 45 seconds are just masterfully done pieces of cinematography? A search light hitting something in the dark to dead silence is just foreboding as hell.

    • @summitap1
      @summitap1 Před 5 lety +385

      Yes, unfortunately this scene was the best part of the entire movie. The rest was... slower

    • @badlaamaurukehu
      @badlaamaurukehu Před 5 lety +156

      Pure cinematic perfection in all its silent glory.

    • @Lunaraia
      @Lunaraia Před 5 lety +436

      Great Cinematography, but I give the scene a slight negative score for forgetting Colonel Birger Eriksens somewhat famous line that he said as he gave the order to open fire, said line, when translated, went something along the lines of "Either I will be decorated or I will be court-martialed, open fire" which is not mentioned in the movie, even so it sets the scene quite well indeed.

    • @mthef10
      @mthef10 Před 5 lety +69

      Wisconsam 217, watching that in a cinema with a good sound system is something I’ll remember forever.

    • @mrdojob
      @mrdojob Před 4 lety +123

      That searchlight beam being broken by something unknown was chilling. Great thought went into it.

  • @dkamouflage
    @dkamouflage Před 4 lety +6163

    Fun Fact: The commander of the Torpedo Battery was sick at the time of the action, and so command of the battery during the battle was left to an officer who had actually retired 13 years prior, but was recalled to service due to rising tensions.
    Thanks to his intimate knowledge of the old torpedo systems--which he had previously manned during the last world war--he was able to use them to great effect despite the fact that they had been designed by the Austro-Hungarian Empire, *a country which no longer existed.*

    • @CMaldonado1690
      @CMaldonado1690 Před 4 lety +261

      dkamouflage speaking about after sale support...

    • @ColoradoStreaming
      @ColoradoStreaming Před 3 lety +395

      Meanwhile the US had brand new shit torpedoes that were duds half the time but Command refused to listen to the sailors who reported them not exploding.

    • @KillerSpoon575
      @KillerSpoon575 Před 3 lety +85

      @@ColoradoStreaming gotta love history sometimes

    • @DoctorChained
      @DoctorChained Před 3 lety +17

      @@ColoradoStreaming bullshit. Japan's long lance torpedos were the best of their time

    • @ColoradoStreaming
      @ColoradoStreaming Před 3 lety +174

      @@DoctorChained I was talking about USA torpedoes. Japan's Oxygen torpedoes were very advanced for sure.

  • @Atesz222
    @Atesz222 Před 3 lety +2103

    Can we stop to appreciate how masterful the directing is? The beginning is dead silent and creepy. Then as you start to see the ship's silhouette the music even adds to the atmosphere. I love it.
    I've never even heard of this movie, gotta check it out.

    • @SoidSnake
      @SoidSnake Před 3 lety +40

      The Norwegian title is "Kongens Nei" the English title is "The King's Choice"

    • @Atesz222
      @Atesz222 Před 3 lety +34

      @@SoidSnake I watched it last week, amazing movie

    • @eoppen
      @eoppen Před 3 lety +13

      The music is reminiscent of the _Jaws_ theme.

    • @jout738
      @jout738 Před 2 lety +7

      Yes first it was big fog, unitil Erikssen spots the ship and then immediately orders to fire it to take down, so Erikssen did not need to be scared of the ship, when he’s not scared of the ship, if they take it down, but maybe he is scared, if they let it pass without shooting it.

    • @Teutathis
      @Teutathis Před 2 lety +31

      They even got the hit sequence on the Blücher correct. This is pure history and no embellishment.

  • @reidflemingworldstoughestm1394

    "The sinking of what?"
    "The Blücher."
    _Horses whinny in terror_

  • @toasty5605
    @toasty5605 Před 4 lety +6351

    When the Fortress opened fire, the Windows of nearby houses shattered. Gives you some idea of how much firepower those guns had

    • @shotguncleric
      @shotguncleric Před 4 lety +445

      @IJN Yamato Must've been fun on training days
      *windows explode inward*
      off in the distance...
      "Prøvebrann!" (test fire!)
      lol

    • @ikethefrontliner5899
      @ikethefrontliner5899 Před 4 lety +158

      11 incher mate it a Krupp gun too that more than enough

    • @AtlantaTerry
      @AtlantaTerry Před 4 lety +405

      I don't believe Microsoft had invented Windows yet.
      Houses with windows are another matter.

    • @sbrmilitia
      @sbrmilitia Před 4 lety +53

      Terry Thomas best comment ever

    • @7seaslp
      @7seaslp Před 4 lety +145

      The irony is that they were German guns...

  • @sierra118boy
    @sierra118boy Před 5 lety +5269

    too bad they didn't include his iconic quote:
    ''Damn straight we're firing live ammunition.
    Either I will be decorated, or I will be court-martialed. Fire!''
    -Birger Eriksen

    • @bjrnmadsen1724
      @bjrnmadsen1724 Před 4 lety +258

      He said thatto a messenger from the torpedo battery that wanted a written statement telleing them that they would not fire warningshots first . so that words would have been before this scene. but yes, they should be taken in.. one of those great quotes ..

    • @Outside85
      @Outside85 Před 4 lety +20

      Well.. thats because they weren't Texans.

    • @denfantatsiskaraggsockan9782
      @denfantatsiskaraggsockan9782 Před 4 lety +65

      same was said at the battel of midskog , norwegan maned a road block and the germans opend fire , a norwegan rider come in the middel of the figth and they told him to get f away from here , dont you see they are shooting , the scaerd rider awserd but they arent firenig live amo rigth ?

    • @GefreitervonAdler
      @GefreitervonAdler Před 4 lety +82

      And I think the quote about the torpedoes were:
      Torpedo battery phones.
      "Skal det torpederes?" ("Shall there be torpedoing?")
      And Eriksen replies:
      "Det skal torpederes!" ("There shall be torpedoing!")

    • @ArkBlanc
      @ArkBlanc Před 4 lety +45

      @@GefreitervonAdler "Visst fanden skal der skytes med skarpt!"
      "Enten blir jeg stilt for krigsrett, eller så blir jeg krigshelt. Fyr!"

  • @timmygomez6007
    @timmygomez6007 Před rokem +245

    Perfectly illustrates the chain of command. The 2nd Officer voices concerns and gives the colonel all the information and relays each command without hesitation

  • @ragzaugustus
    @ragzaugustus Před 4 lety +657

    And he was only six months from retirement.
    This isn't a joke, he literally was.

    • @seneca983
      @seneca983 Před 3 lety +49

      And wasn't the torpedo battery commander brought back from retirement just before this?

    • @majormojo9830
      @majormojo9830 Před 3 lety +47

      @@seneca983 literally the same time the ships were spotted

    • @just-dl
      @just-dl Před 3 lety +57

      The Blucher was 6 minutes from retirement....

    • @Alex462047
      @Alex462047 Před 3 lety +7

      Well, he took his job seriously. Probably didn't give a damn if they did court-martial him.

    • @andrewgillis3073
      @andrewgillis3073 Před 3 lety +16

      Training the cadets was literally putting him out to pasture before retirement. No one expected Germany to invade when he was appointed. Then high command sort of forgot who was commanding the fort until the Blucher was reported sunk. Oberest Eriksen survived the war and died in 1958.

  • @chubbycakes6446
    @chubbycakes6446 Před 4 lety +3802

    Blucher: *exists for less than a week*
    Erikson: Im about to end this ships whole carrer

  • @monicajewinsky
    @monicajewinsky Před 3 lety +1403

    Some interesting facts:
    The Blücher was carrying many of the troops and Gestapo agents needed to occupy Oslo, and its sinking delayed the German occupation to the point where it allowed the Norwegian king, Haakon VII and his government to escape.
    After the ship had disappeared from the surface, large quantities of oil floated up and covered the close to two thousand sailors and soldiers fighting for their lives in the freezing water. The oil rapidly caught fire, killing hundreds more Germans.
    Birger Kristian Eriksen, the Oberst ( A rank equivalent to Colonel) in charge of the fort, was 64 years old by the time of the battle, and was 6 months from retirement.
    The commander of the torpedo battery in the fort, Kommandørkaptein Andreas Anderssen, had been a pensioner for 13 years before being called back into service a month previously.
    While the Norwegians were supposed to have taken all the Germans prisoner, they instead focused more on caring for the wounded and dying.
    Sources: Wikipedia

    • @alexh3974
      @alexh3974 Před 2 lety +85

      She also burned so badly as because of occupation, they had stowed extra kit, ammo and such for the troops on deck.
      The hits not only hit the ship but ignited the supplies on decks too.

    • @seawolf4846
      @seawolf4846 Před 2 lety +66

      @@alexh3974 Not helping was that the second shot slammed into pretty much her Seaplane hangar, which was also where the kit was being stored. The fire initially started was bad, but things probably weren't helped when the avgas detonated, which is the gigantic fireball that belches upward from the ship a few seconds after the second 11-inch shell hits.

    • @traceywelsh6405
      @traceywelsh6405 Před 2 lety

      Indeed, they needed that sweet sweet gold and Hitler wanted to be rich

    • @ThatGuy-eu2vt
      @ThatGuy-eu2vt Před rokem

      fun fact : men burning to death while fleeing for their lives

    • @billkallas1762
      @billkallas1762 Před 11 měsíci +8

      Surprisingly, only 300 died in the battle and sinking.

  • @leszas872
    @leszas872 Před 3 lety +159

    "But colonel, what if we're wrong?"
    "Then either I'll be decorated or be court martialed. On my command, fire!"

  • @Anglomachian
    @Anglomachian Před 4 lety +342

    "Either I will be decorated, or I will be court-martialed. Fire!"
    - This badass in the video.

    • @hagamapama
      @hagamapama Před 3 lety +6

      He nearly did both. He got decorated for his act in saving the government, but almost got court martialed for surrendering Oscarsborg a few days later after heavy bombardments rendered further defense pointless.

    • @LethalOwl
      @LethalOwl Před 3 lety +18

      @@hagamapama He got court martialed by the new fake government once Germany put in Quisling as their puppet. He got decorated after the war.

    • @Megadad60
      @Megadad60 Před 3 lety +5

      The video regretfully also omitted another punch-line from the fortress commander, Maj. Birger Eriksen. On being asked whether they should use live ammunition, he replied: (bad translation from Norwegian: "Hell, yes, of course, sharp ammunition is to be used" (Visst fanden skal der skytes med skarpt)

    • @blacktiger974
      @blacktiger974 Před 2 lety

      @@Megadad60 a slightly better translation: "Damn straight we're firing live ammunition"

    • @user-en3uv4nh1y
      @user-en3uv4nh1y Před rokem

      Shame that they didn't include that awesome quote

  • @lafeelabriel
    @lafeelabriel Před 7 lety +3841

    Guns might be antiques, but a 280mm (11in) gun at that range is going to hurt, a lot.
    No cruiser in the world armored enough to withstand that sort of fire power.

    • @AlexSDU
      @AlexSDU Před 7 lety +525

      "... of that magnitude!"

    • @HrothgarHeavenlight
      @HrothgarHeavenlight Před 7 lety +50

      Mayby beside american Alaska.

    • @lafeelabriel
      @lafeelabriel Před 7 lety +300

      Not even the Alaska class, they had pretty bad armor for their size.

    • @timber_wulf5775
      @timber_wulf5775 Před 6 lety +98

      Lafeel Abriel Armor is only as strong as its angle Germany had Turtleback armor layouts on all of their ships except Destroyers, Torpedo boats, (maybe the Graf Zeppelin had Turtleback maybe not) and Carriers, This gave them an advantage against close range brawling so only an HE shell from a 280mm gun could really do anything at close range as an AP shell would ricochet off of the armor or go completely through the ship

    • @callsignsoviet978
      @callsignsoviet978 Před 6 lety +163

      also torpedoes
      and yes age doesnt matter as long as the shell reaches its destination with enough speed.

  • @Miralee01
    @Miralee01 Před 3 lety +317

    The amazing part of this is the historical accuracy. Not many movie makers are so careful in their details. Versus the documented historical battle they have tweaked only a bare 2 or 3 details at most. Add on top of that then the sheer phenomenal cinematography is breath taking.

    • @seawolf4846
      @seawolf4846 Před 2 lety +19

      Not to mention it is condensed somewhat. But yeah, accuracy wise, it's spot on.

    • @SebHaarfagre
      @SebHaarfagre Před rokem +15

      Yeah all I can think of is that it implies the ship sank faster than it did.
      The hits are where they were, the sequence is spot on, the general anxious mood is spot on; this could/would mean war with either Germany or GB, none of them good.
      They miss the quote "Either I'll be decorated or I will be court martialed". He was martialed under Quisling iirc and decorated after the war.

  • @feonor26
    @feonor26 Před 3 lety +319

    Many years later there was a documentary where survivors of Blücher and men serving on Oscarsborg met up at the fortress. It was heartwarming to see that they could be friends so many years after where they previously were enemies.

    • @guyfromthe80s92
      @guyfromthe80s92 Před 2 lety +2

      Link?

    • @feonor26
      @feonor26 Před 2 lety +4

      @@guyfromthe80s92 I'll see if I can find it even tho I doubt it. It was sent on the norwegian state channel NRK.

    • @RichardGjerdin
      @RichardGjerdin Před rokem +2

      @@feonor26 Still waiting😂🎉

    • @talamioros
      @talamioros Před 10 měsíci +4

      ​@@RichardGjerdinwell he did doubt it

    • @Bob-fh4ht
      @Bob-fh4ht Před 8 měsíci

      rip, sill no sign

  • @Pittbullkay
    @Pittbullkay Před 5 lety +2111

    A man who was equally brave as Birger Eriksen, was Leif Welding-Olsen. He was the captain of Pol III, an old whaler used as patrolship. When he spotted the first german warship in the Oslofjord, he rammed his little ship into the torpedoboat Albatros and bravely demanded their surrender. The Albatros then set fire on Pol III and captain Leif Welding-Olsen got hurt and drowned, as the first fallen norwegian. The german captain on the Albatros later gave his tribute to the brave captain.

    • @raghuresh17
      @raghuresh17 Před 5 lety +101

      Selfless acts like this inspire one's countrymen to raise up and defend .

    • @falloutworldrecord
      @falloutworldrecord Před 5 lety +56

      Actually, it's the Albatros that demanded Welding-Olsen's surrender. Still, a man of great courage. Go read his Wikipedia article, it's short and very interesting.

    • @tube1062
      @tube1062 Před 5 lety +140

      Another battle took place off the western coast of Norway the day before, where the British destroyer HMS Glowworm engaged the German heavy cruiser Admiral Hipper (this vessel was also part of Operation Weserübung or Invasion of Norway, and was the sister vessel of the Blücher). You can read the write-up on Wikipedia but it's worth mentioning that Lieutenant Commander Gerard Broadmead Roope, was awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross, thus becoming the first VC recipient of the Second World War. The award was justified, in part, by the recommendation of German Captain Hellmuth Heye, who wrote to the British authorities via the Red Cross, giving a statement of the valiant courage Roope had shown when engaging a much superior ship in close battle. Goes to show you that not all German commanders behaved like they were related to Darth Vader...

    • @bespalovss
      @bespalovss Před 4 lety +23

      @@tube1062 remember this British lieutenant who assaulted a German destroyer with machine-gun armed yal? Also posthumously awarded by recommendation of destroyer's captn.

    • @parjei
      @parjei Před 4 lety +27

      Agree. They should have told more about the incidents in the hours before the German fleet reach Oscars Borg Fortress. The attack from Pol III and the battle at Rauøy Fort is pretty crazy to. Leif Welding-Olsen opened fire against the German fleet with a antique steam driven whale boat with a 76 mm canon welded on deck. The German torpedo boat Albatros was actually the boat that rammed in to Pol III and demand captain Welding-Olsen and his crew to surrender. Still the crew at Pol III started to adjust their main canon that resulted in the German counter attack with heavy machine guns that perforated the Pol III that burst into flames. And as you said Captain Leif Welding-Olsen died. He was the first fallen Norwegian in battle in the WW2 and
      obviously a pretty hardcore hero... :-)

  • @BIGZGaming-hl2ip
    @BIGZGaming-hl2ip Před 6 lety +784

    So goes the saying: "A ship's a fool to fight a fort" -Nelson

    • @MrBernt1968
      @MrBernt1968 Před 5 lety +51

      Thats why Nelson negotiated a seize fire at the battle of Copenhagen.
      The forts where unharmed and ready to fight

    • @sirboomsalot4902
      @sirboomsalot4902 Před 4 lety +5

      Admiral Farragut: Hold the craps I give about mines

    • @b-17gflyingfortress6
      @b-17gflyingfortress6 Před 4 lety +4

      Dunno man it was a surprise attack for the ship

    • @deeznoots6241
      @deeznoots6241 Před 4 lety +8

      Bernt Nielsen not that the forts at Copenhagen stopped the Royal Navy copenhagenizing(yes it’s a real term, look it up) the Danish Navy twice

    • @DomWeasel
      @DomWeasel Před 4 lety +5

      @@deeznoots6241
      These days it means to make a city more bicycle friendly...
      And the 1801 Battle of Copenhagen the term doesn't apply. The second battle was a joint army and navy operation and the navy didn't engage the forts; they just bombed the civilian population into surrender.

  • @S0RGEx
    @S0RGEx Před 2 lety +42

    History doesn't repeat itself, but it often rhymes.

  • @creforce
    @creforce Před 2 lety +149

    The one thing that was to "old" to be considered a threat did the most unthinkable for the german navy. even for a swede this historic scene is kind of a pride feeling for my nieghbor country, and the cinematography is just stunning

    • @grahamstrouse1165
      @grahamstrouse1165 Před 2 lety +11

      Those Krupp guns may haver been old but an 11" gun is an 11" gun. If hit hits you at point blank range, it's hurt... :-)

    • @lordbeaverhistory
      @lordbeaverhistory Před 4 měsíci +1

      No matter how old it is, it can still put 280 mm shells and powerful torpedos into the ship

  • @fludblud
    @fludblud Před 7 lety +5998

    A hundred year old fort manned by recruits and pensioners armed with 50 year old Austro-Hungarian weaponry destroyed a warship so new its crew was still finishing training.

    • @SMGJohn
      @SMGJohn Před 7 lety +1065

      It was actually hit by old vintage Great War torpedoes aimed by eye sight in pitch darkness.
      If Norway mobilised and actually went to war for real, historical experts think Germany could lost hundreds of thousands of troops if not half a million, it would be like invading Switzerland, the mountains are your worst enemy and the cold weather makes everything harder.

    • @henrywatson3229
      @henrywatson3229 Před 7 lety +243

      SMGJohn if the soldiers had better training then I think norway would have been able to stand against for real

    • @10995
      @10995 Před 7 lety +435

      would have been just like Finland during the Winter War, defensive on their home turf. Invaders beware.

    • @curemyinsomniatonight9808
      @curemyinsomniatonight9808 Před 7 lety +85

      Then why didn't they fight for real?

    • @10995
      @10995 Před 7 lety +212

      because the soldiers were poorly trained when the germans invaded.

  • @Vulture1738
    @Vulture1738 Před 3 lety +1555

    Blücher: exists
    WW1 coastal turret: no

    • @flopsinator5817
      @flopsinator5817 Před 3 lety +123

      Oscarsborg actually predates ww1. Hell it even predates Germany...

    • @givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn3935
      @givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn3935 Před 3 lety +50

      Blucher still exists, it is deep down and upside down, full of drowned and burnt murderous Nazi invaders.

    • @lille0le502
      @lille0le502 Před 3 lety

      @@flopsinator5817 u mean the nazi party?

    • @flopsinator5817
      @flopsinator5817 Před 3 lety +40

      @@lille0le502
      No, I mean Germany as a unified state.

    • @raymartcarreon6069
      @raymartcarreon6069 Před 3 lety +2

      I think all of oskarsborgs weapons are pre-dreadnought ironclad era...

  • @arts6821
    @arts6821 Před 3 lety +58

    No matter how many times I've watched this, whenever the searchlight hits the ship I still get the chills.

  • @davidwroblewski7215
    @davidwroblewski7215 Před 3 lety +77

    I love how Erikson is just there like a father overlooking their kid. Sodem: "right that's about everything we can do" Erikson: "and what about the torpedoes Sodem...?"

  • @TheGrenadier97
    @TheGrenadier97 Před 7 lety +2202

    "No warning, no hesitation. These are enemies."

    • @gig2238
      @gig2238 Před 7 lety +89

      not every german soldier was a nazi...

    • @lulzalfest
      @lulzalfest Před 7 lety +122

      clean wehrmacht myth in effect here!

    • @wanrazul
      @wanrazul Před 7 lety +39

      Every German is a nazi, then and now. Except now they're using the EU...

    • @kocayurekliadam2063
      @kocayurekliadam2063 Před 6 lety +10

      wanrazul thats right

    • @pettersoderberg6903
      @pettersoderberg6903 Před 6 lety +83

      wanrazul Have you ever actually met a german? There are eighty million germans alive today and you think every single one of them is a vehement nazi?

  • @BHuang92
    @BHuang92 Před 3 lety +2890

    1:31
    Gun #1 hit Blücher 's rangefinder
    1:42
    Gun #2 landed a devastating shot near Blücher's aircraft hanger, starting a major fire
    1:49
    Fire igniting stored explosives lighting up up the whole hanger and severely crippling the ship's fire-suppression
    2:01
    Drøbak's offshore 15 cm batteries seen at Blücher's starboard side opens fire
    2:19
    Two land-based vintage Whitehead torpedoes launched, first one hitting below Blücher's midship
    2:33
    Second torpedo hits engine room, flooding further cripples the already stricken Blücher
    At 07:30 am, Blücher listed and finally sank with significant casualties

    • @Cordman1221
      @Cordman1221 Před 3 lety +383

      It's kind of funny to think that the Norwegians managed to sink a completely brand new German heavy cruiser with weapons that were outdated when WW1 began.

    • @givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn3935
      @givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn3935 Před 3 lety +237

      It’s not the dog in the fight, it’s the fight in the dog. The Norwegian people said no to Nazi Germany.

    • @Jpdt19
      @Jpdt19 Před 3 lety +139

      Excellent spot on the batteries on the other side thank you. Didn't notice the flashes in the distraction of the fires though I knew they had fired.

    • @givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn3935
      @givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn3935 Před 3 lety +60

      @@Jpdt19 The 6" (I think) batteries severely damaged the Armoured Ship Lutzow, another unlucky name.

    • @sirboomsalot4902
      @sirboomsalot4902 Před 3 lety +75

      I’m still impressed by how accurately they depicted Blüchers sinking.

  • @Elthenar
    @Elthenar Před 2 lety +25

    The detail is fantastic. At about 2:00 you can see the 15cm artillery batteries open fire from the hillside

  • @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684

    That is one of THE most ominous, suspenseful and masterful pieces of cinematic warfare I have EVER seen. What a powerful recreation of that astounding event !!!

  • @cximines
    @cximines Před 4 lety +756

    "There is no time. Distance, 1200 meter!" damn what an educated, calculated shot, he figured that out from eyeballing it in the fog at night from the distance of one single searchlight across the river.

    • @kawafahra
      @kawafahra Před 4 lety +264

      that´s why its called an educated guess. He knows the territory, therefore knows the markers.

    • @mikem9001
      @mikem9001 Před 4 lety +156

      He knew the distance to the island that the ship was sailing past.

    • @fludblud
      @fludblud Před 4 lety +163

      No need for calculation, he wouldve had all the ranges of the fjord's landmarks memorised already.

    • @TomasMisura
      @TomasMisura Před 3 lety +29

      There is stated that the distance was measured by orograph.

    • @TomasMisura
      @TomasMisura Před 3 lety +6

      @Nightshade We apologize, but sometimes it's difficult to recognize emotions behind words :)

  • @ToaGatanuva
    @ToaGatanuva Před 6 lety +363

    "Our instruments show 1800 meters, sir"
    "Bullshit! They are just passing Småskjær!"
    "Sir, we're still awaiting confirmation."
    "There is no time. Distance, 1200 meter!"

    • @thatguyonyoutubemk2746
      @thatguyonyoutubemk2746 Před 4 lety +9

      He mentions "kopas" after the word confirmation.
      Kopas was the shore battery across the water from Oscarsborg nearer to the search light.

    • @SuperChuckRaney
      @SuperChuckRaney Před 4 lety +54

      @@thatguyonyoutubemk2746 you can see Kopas firing at about 2:00 behind the ship

    • @thatguyonyoutubemk2746
      @thatguyonyoutubemk2746 Před 4 lety +14

      @@SuperChuckRaney I didn't notice that lol, too focused on the ship.

    • @RobbertHoek
      @RobbertHoek Před 4 lety

      @@SuperChuckRaney i didnt see that untill you pointed it out. i found it strange that i didnt see any fire coming from that side because writings about this battle state that the ship was peppered by the batteries on that side of the water aswell

    • @cubismo85
      @cubismo85 Před 3 lety

      @@RobbertHoek From what i remember they only had some 40mm bofors on that side, merely a nuisancef for the warship. On the same side the only 2 civilian casualties was reported, 2 women. Perhaps they wouldnt have died if they didnt used those guns.

  • @victoriacyunczyk
    @victoriacyunczyk Před 3 lety +25

    This is one of the best naval scenes I've seen in any film. Well done to the producers.
    The soundtrack is also perfect for this scene.

    • @Ulvetann
      @Ulvetann Před 3 lety +3

      Last time a 'simple scene' gave me this much immersion, was watching 'Das Boot', and/or 'Stalingrad'.

  • @ophthalmophobicnpc8002
    @ophthalmophobicnpc8002 Před 3 lety +18

    1:22 The way he says "On my command" and then looks at his watch is so badass

  • @hansmelbye1804
    @hansmelbye1804 Před 7 lety +1558

    I remember in the theatre I was just waiting for the ship to appear. When I the ship finally appeared I got chills running down my spine, it was like seeing the shark fin in Jaws. The sound of the artillery batteries firing felt so massive and powerful.

    • @solbergsindre
      @solbergsindre Před 7 lety +15

      My thoughts excactly!

    • @nexern3211
      @nexern3211 Před 7 lety +8

      Hans Olafsen Melbye same here ;D

    • @NickKiwiFreak
      @NickKiwiFreak Před 7 lety +80

      My Grandma lived in Drøbak in the 40s and she said it was very quiet then suddenly the lights was flashing in the fjord the germans was screaming the whole night until the morning. Very chilling for me to "see" what she saw

    • @asgeiriversen3864
      @asgeiriversen3864 Před 7 lety +3

      du er overalt er du ikke det ..

    • @KevinbodiNo
      @KevinbodiNo Před 7 lety +3

      Norwegian Royalist Jeg liker å tenke at du er HMS som sitter og ser på CZcams-videoer.

  • @LabRat10101
    @LabRat10101 Před 6 lety +3082

    Welcome to Norway.

    • @vloplob
      @vloplob Před 5 lety +182

      The invitation was accepted.

    • @pesshau6508
      @pesshau6508 Před 5 lety +117

      vloplob
      Joking aside, you could, in a sense, say that the Norwegian government sent out invitations to everyone. In the wake of the Altmark incident, foreign minister Koth basically announced to the whole world that we would not put up a fight against a superior intruder. This defeatist attitude did not go unnoticed in Berlin and London.

    • @Andrey5433567
      @Andrey5433567 Před 5 lety +4

      Nice

    • @artificialgravitas8954
      @artificialgravitas8954 Před 5 lety +20

      Alt-History: the sinking of the hood - The King's [other] choice (2016)

    • @jussim.konttinen4981
      @jussim.konttinen4981 Před 5 lety +21

      This movie is now on Finnish TV. It is absurd to criticize the choices of the most advanced country in the world. There was a different situation in Finland, and it was not really a choice (a log in the rapids). Imdb's people gave 7.2 stars, I would give 8 stars. Truly a vivid and thrilling movie.

  • @taiko1237
    @taiko1237 Před 2 měsíci +8

    No matter how old it is, an 11-inch shell is still an 11-inch shell, and it _will_ ruin your day if it hits you.

  • @Foolnation
    @Foolnation Před 2 lety +13

    Those batteries sound absolutely orchestral. The first one give a thick bellow, while the second one, after the order is given, gives you a slight moment of anticipation and then cracks and crashes. Perfect cinematography.

  • @Minimeister317
    @Minimeister317 Před 4 lety +2292

    As a Dane, I love these accounts of how Norway basicly just gave Hitler the middle finger for 2 months straight.

    • @Anonymous8830
      @Anonymous8830 Před 3 lety +151

      considering that the Danes gave up after, what? 6 hours? Or was it more?
      To be fair, the king was allowed to remain king, was even treated as such. Dude even went horse riding in Copenhagen on a daily basis. He had no issue with the Germans being there.

    • @JakobFredse
      @JakobFredse Před 3 lety +110

      @@Anonymous8830 saying that is really half the story

    • @cameronmcallister7606
      @cameronmcallister7606 Před 3 lety +364

      @@Anonymous8830 Denmark's army was never going to win an engagement with Germany, rather, Denmark immediately went into "Fuck you, Nazis" mode and refused to hand over their Jews since unfortunately all the documentation had been lost in a tragic paper bin fire.

    • @SebHaarfagre
      @SebHaarfagre Před 3 lety +128

      @@Anonymous8830 Uh, didn't he ride around with a Jew star to provoke the Germans? Also, these two kings were brothers (or at least cousins). They both risked outright execution, depending on Germany's occupation policy.
      "He had no issue with the Germans being there." If you're gonna be an ignorant asshat, go somewhere else.
      Regards from Norway.

    • @Pow3llMorgan
      @Pow3llMorgan Před 3 lety +217

      @@Anonymous8830 Norway is basically a defender's paradise while Denmark is a semi-large, flat sandbar.

  • @VersusARCH
    @VersusARCH Před 4 lety +1379

    "Dolphins have returned to Venice canals due to Covid19 lockdown"
    Meanwhile in Oslofjord: 00:25

  • @jeffsanders1609
    @jeffsanders1609 Před 3 lety +19

    1:52 Everyone: Runs for cover
    Colonel Eriksen: I need a better view

  • @eliazarcone
    @eliazarcone Před rokem +38

    At 2:01 and onwards you can actually see the 5 mm batteries on the other side of the fjord that open fire on the Blücher. Extremely accurate movie

  • @sillyone52062
    @sillyone52062 Před 7 lety +1008

    The Blucher had been in service for four days. The DKM hadn't even made the first payment yet!

    • @timber_wulf5775
      @timber_wulf5775 Před 6 lety +116

      sillyone52062 I hope you had insurance

    • @themechanic.9545
      @themechanic.9545 Před 4 lety +23

      Four Days and they haven't got their pay yet. Those fools have ONE JOB.

    • @cptcrogge
      @cptcrogge Před 4 lety +12

      @@timber_wulf5775 We have insurances for everything in Germany :D

    • @NikoChristianWallenberg
      @NikoChristianWallenberg Před 4 lety +63

      Not true. There was nothing wrong with Blücher's crew. The ship was not still finishing training - they had completed their training on the ship over the last 8 months - prior to being stationed on the ship they had already been training on other ships and were even familiarizing themselves on Admiral Hipper, which was identical to Blücher. Blücher survived the initial damage and sailed past the coastal defenses beyond their their firing arc - damaged and on fire, but still very much afloat: the ship had taken on some water causing a list of 18 degrees, but this was not a problem, since majority of the ship's bulkheads were holding - problems were the fires. The crew fought the fires hard, but they eventually spread to one of the ship's 105mm magazines, which exploded; causing the ship's fuel stores to catch on fire while rupturing the bulkheads which by that point had held. At that point there was nothing that could be done to save Blücher, with order to abandon ship being given. Were the fires prevented from reaching that 105mm magazine, Blücher was still repairable - that did not happen, but it is worth pointing out. There was nothing wrong with Blücher's crew.

    • @NhatHuyNg
      @NhatHuyNg Před 4 lety +17

      @@NikoChristianWallenberg they couldnt contain the fire, thats what wrong with them.

  • @hazmatt3250
    @hazmatt3250 Před 3 lety +217

    Blucher coming in all sneaky sneaky, Nordic coast guard like “so you’ve chosen death”.
    For real though, the soundtrack in this clip was so ominous and fitting. It was essentially the musical representation of the commander’s hunch being correct and the realization setting in on all of the defenders that “we are now at war with one of the most aggressive nations on the planet.” This is such an overlooked theater of war here in America.
    Edit: I just realized the composer is the same guy who does the music for Battlefield 1 and V.

    • @SebHaarfagre
      @SebHaarfagre Před rokem +12

      The Norwegian campaign from the German side, or Weserubung, meant they had 600 000 military personel stationed just in Norway at the highest. That's quite a lot of manpower that could had been used elsewhere. The German war machine vastly outclassed Norway's equipment, from personal to support and vehicles/planes, but the Norwegian held for 2 months even after a great initial communications disruption by the Germans, and afterwards they were heavily disrupted by partisans and Norwegian commandos.
      There's a lot of interesting things happening here. Also, from the British side, these events in Norway literally was the cause of and unprecedented change of parliament in its history.
      I could write pages on Chamberlain and his incompetence as well as the brass pre-Dunkirk, the proceedings in the houses, and Churchill being the "lesser" of two evils for Norway...

    • @highball5550
      @highball5550 Před rokem +1

      Agreed, the brass do everything right. Everything from the ominous beginning as the score builds not only in tension but arm rest gripping anxiety as it only grows further in volume portraying the fear and awe striking power that is these cannons facing off against state of the art technology. When I first watched this scene in my World War II history class I got anxious chills from the music alone. Well done to the composer!

    • @Nighthawke70
      @Nighthawke70 Před 10 měsíci +5

      "Here, let me pop a Whitehead for you."

  • @mwnciboo
    @mwnciboo Před 3 lety +128

    *Kriegsmarine* "Its an Obsolete old fort"
    *Oscarsborg* "I've waiting along time for this moment - GET REKT!"

    • @richardcurry4912
      @richardcurry4912 Před 2 měsíci

      No fortress with 11 inch working guns is obsolete. It is highly unlikely the Kriegsmarine said that.

  • @robertblake9892
    @robertblake9892 Před rokem +16

    One of the best and and most accurate battle reenactments I have ever seen-feels like time travel.

  • @divinemoments5344
    @divinemoments5344 Před 7 lety +1003

    The colonel's orders are the very definition of competence.

    • @thehummermeister8992
      @thehummermeister8992 Před 6 lety +56

      He did the right thing

    • @somethingawful100
      @somethingawful100 Před 6 lety +200

      When an unknown warship tries to approach your territorial waters, much less your capital, with lights turned off and unannounced... Hell yes you shoot. And they had already gotten reports from other posts being under attack as well.

    • @dclark142002
      @dclark142002 Před 6 lety +109

      Indeed. It was abundantly clear that something was happening...and a ship without navigational beacons coming up a channel that you know is being attacked by the enemy...is almost assuredly an enemy warship.
      The only real question is which country (Germany or Britain) sent the warship. Given the fact the Norway had already determined to defend its neutrality...even that didn't matter.

    • @zombieguyproducion
      @zombieguyproducion Před 5 lety +21

      @@Requestcykor This was right outside the capital..

    • @abelkhan196
      @abelkhan196 Před 5 lety +8

      Yea not like the other coward generals, who surrendered before the germans landed.

  • @kameins
    @kameins Před 6 lety +345

    Sinking Blücher is very important for Norwegian, because Blücher carried more than 800 Wehrmacht soldiers to attack Oslo, and also carried lots of document, including the list of Storting (Norwegian parliament) members who would be arrested after occupying.

    • @Ola-rc7hm
      @Ola-rc7hm Před 5 lety +1

      *Norway

    • @TheWoollyFrog
      @TheWoollyFrog Před 5 lety

      @@Ola-rc7hm
      *Norge

    • @TheWoollyFrog
      @TheWoollyFrog Před 5 lety +3

      @@Ola-rc7hm I was just joking. But you could have also corrected the sentence by saying "Norwegians". And, even so, his comment has many grammatical mistakes.

    • @evanhunt1863
      @evanhunt1863 Před 4 lety +1

      Talk about throwing a wrench in the gears.

    • @cllrkeithmartin
      @cllrkeithmartin Před 3 lety

      The gestapo were on board.

  • @Krinkov
    @Krinkov Před 3 lety +142

    Colonel Eriksen woke up that morning, in the twilight of his career, never expecting that he would soon commit his country to war with the biggest power in Europe. The weight of that decision to fire must have been staggering, he knew exactly what this meant.

    • @Servellion
      @Servellion Před 2 lety +6

      Probably wasn't that heavy. There was a blacked out brandnew heavy cruiser from Germany in the fjord with no warning. That alone is an act of war.

    • @drankrur
      @drankrur Před 2 lety +4

      I believe he is quoted to be said "Tomorrow we are either heroes or traitors" or something to that effect.

    • @NemoBlank
      @NemoBlank Před 2 lety +15

      When the enemy comes, you kill him or surrender. He didn't want to surrender, even though many of his superiors were dithering, issuing contradictory orders and demanding that he fire useless 'warning shots,' theorizing that Nazi aggression could be deterred by noise. He saw an enemy that the fort was designed to deal with and used his weapons as designed. Later, he surrendered when his fortress was confronted by forces that it was not designed to resist, seeing no reason to kill his men uselessly. After the war these same superiors, stung by their own ineffectiveness and deflecting like mad, had the gall to attack him, saying that he had surrendered too easily after some time under under aerial bombardment. That fort long predated the airplane and had no air defenses. The Germans certainly weren't going to try to sneak another cruiser past him.

    • @Elthenar
      @Elthenar Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@NemoBlank The decision to fire may have been a stressful but it wasn't really a tough decision to make. His second may not have realized it but the Colonel knew he wasn't committing Norway to war. The war had already started and he was simply launching a fast and aggressive defense.

    • @dclark142002
      @dclark142002 Před 8 měsíci

      @@Elthenar, indeed. The jamming of the radios was already evidence that a war had begun.
      The right course was definitely shooting back.

  • @NotAFirefighter1
    @NotAFirefighter1 Před 4 lety +257

    How on earth was he able to run up to the wall so fast with balls that big dragging after him, what a fucking legend

    • @ws2228
      @ws2228 Před 4 lety +2

      Special underwear?

    • @watonemillion
      @watonemillion Před 2 lety +6

      This comment is also legendary

    • @mariossahamis3969
      @mariossahamis3969 Před 2 lety

      New speed record... He supparsed even the American roadrunner...How someone cry beep beep in Norwegian ?

    • @Engie_Boi
      @Engie_Boi Před rokem

      @@mariossahamis3969 beep beep, i'm norwegian xD

  • @ShadowKayvaan
    @ShadowKayvaan Před 6 lety +1415

    For all you Game of Thrones fans, the battery commander is Tormund Giantsbane's father.

    • @Beowulf-eg2li
      @Beowulf-eg2li Před 6 lety +74

      Nice fact!

    • @hadnils
      @hadnils Před 6 lety +38

      As a Norwegian, I can confirm this fact!

    • @bonohf
      @bonohf Před 5 lety +1

      no u

    • @Axemantitan
      @Axemantitan Před 5 lety +44

      It took me a moment to realize that you meant the actor's father, not the character's father.

    • @dainironfoot5198
      @dainironfoot5198 Před 5 lety +55

      @Axemantitan
      "So Tormund, you said you had a plan up your sleeve?"
      "Yes, I'd like you to meet my father!"
      "What's so special about him?"
      [Massive explosions appear in the middle of the wight army, decimating it in minutes]

  • @retardedpineapple9461
    @retardedpineapple9461 Před 2 lety +16

    imagine being the ships captain and out of nowhere a searchlight lights up in ur face and you realize ur fucked

    • @gunnar6674
      @gunnar6674 Před 2 lety +1

      The German ships had been illuminated with searchlights further out the fjord, and used their own searchlights to blind German patrol vessels.

  • @avengermkii7872
    @avengermkii7872 Před 3 lety +131

    Norway: We're a neutral country
    Also Norway: Yeetus Fetus Deletus.

    • @andmos1001
      @andmos1001 Před 3 lety +12

      Main reason for the fortress where because we separated from Swedish rule 40 years prior, and feared an attack from Sweden at the time of building this fort.

    • @fedda9999
      @fedda9999 Před 3 lety +4

      hippity hoppity get off my property

    • @ilmatar6608
      @ilmatar6608 Před 2 lety

      Also Norway: Occupied by Germany

    • @richardcurry4912
      @richardcurry4912 Před 2 měsíci

      Indeed, just before the British could, as they planned.

  • @the_changerang
    @the_changerang Před 3 lety +160

    Great film, the only thing I'm saddened by is they didn't include Commander Eriksen's legendary quote. When Eriksen gave the order to fire, he was asked if they could get in trouble for possibly shooting an Allied ship (they didn't know it was German until they fired back). Famously, Eriksen stated: "Either I will be decorated, or I will be court-martialed. Fire!"

    • @hagamapama
      @hagamapama Před rokem +24

      Basically saying "either way, I'll be taking personal responsibility."

  • @matiashogden1240
    @matiashogden1240 Před 6 lety +689

    «I’ll either be court martialed, or become a war-hero»

    • @andmos1001
      @andmos1001 Před 5 lety +34

      Matias Hogden he got the Krigskorset med Sverd, the highest military award in Norway

    • @nelsondx8054
      @nelsondx8054 Před 5 lety +53

      It's "either I will be decorated or I will be court-martialed, fire!"

    • @matiashogden1240
      @matiashogden1240 Před 5 lety +7

      @@nelsondx8054 Oh my apologises, was going off memory

    • @seneca983
      @seneca983 Před 3 lety

      @@andmos1001 The French also gave him Croix de Guerre.

    • @silentdeath7847
      @silentdeath7847 Před 3 lety

      well, he got both xD

  • @thamirivonjaahri6378
    @thamirivonjaahri6378 Před rokem +16

    No matter how many times I see this scene, it always sends chills not just down my spine, but straight down to thumbs on my feet.

  • @brutusbarnabus8098
    @brutusbarnabus8098 Před 3 měsíci +4

    This was a superbly accurate cinematic recreation of the Battle of Drobak sound. Cross check it against the historical records and you will see how well they did. Fantastic scene in this movie. Almost like going back in time and witnessing it firsthand.

  • @still_guns
    @still_guns Před 5 lety +277

    Enemy cruiser destroyed!
    435 512 credits, 5 000 EXP, 321 Free EXP
    2 hits to citadel, 2 torpedo hits, 1 ship sunk
    Back to Port Battle on!

    • @user-ro9zf9kz1h
      @user-ro9zf9kz1h Před 3 lety +1

      @Nightshade no the naval addition is so bad i quit playing it after 2 hours. Plus the grind wall that is too huge. I have played both for years and in the end i chose wows because it feels less grindy than wt.

    • @LoisoPondohva
      @LoisoPondohva Před 3 lety

      @Hail Hydra naval warthunder is bad thought.
      Server issues, broken damage models, lack of balance.
      And that's coming from a player with three fully spaded naval trees.

    • @user-ro9zf9kz1h
      @user-ro9zf9kz1h Před 3 lety

      @Hail Hydra warthunder is not balance, unrealistic pen model, shells that exist are ignored, America Abram do not have depleted uranium armor, worst of all, that bloody akula ruined helicopter gameplay with its VT atgm.

    • @troutwarrior6735
      @troutwarrior6735 Před 2 lety +1

      @@user-ro9zf9kz1h Literally every MBT in the game has fudges stats. You think that the leopard 2 and Leclerc have such weal UFPs? Gaijin screws everyone but the Russians 😁

    • @jout738
      @jout738 Před 2 lety

      No its not back to the port, when you can countinu playing, when your ship is still not destroid.

  • @fabianzimmermann5495
    @fabianzimmermann5495 Před 4 lety +150

    This scene is just so awesome. The silhouette of the Blücher showing up in total darkness in the searchlight and the soundtrack kicking in is just amazing. This is a great movie scene.
    I also recommend watching this scene with earphones.

    • @pacz8114
      @pacz8114 Před 3 lety +1

      It's just so like awesome how they make these movies. Like all the awesome gunfire and blowup sounds and like hundreds of people dying and stuff and the cool awesome soundtrack kicking in. I recommend watching this scene with photographs of the brave men who sacrificed their life trying to save a country from evil fascists.

    • @themanformerlyknownascomme777
      @themanformerlyknownascomme777 Před 3 lety +4

      fun fact, that shadow behind Blucher was a much more dangerous vessel. That shadow was the pocket battleship Deutschland, fortunatly for the fort's crew, Deutschland and the rest of the flotilla thought that Blucher had struck mines instead of torpedoes and they pulled back.

    • @fabianzimmermann5495
      @fabianzimmermann5495 Před 3 lety +1

      @@themanformerlyknownascomme777 As far as I'm aware, Deutschland was hit by a few 6 inch shells from the other coastal artillery cannons and retreated because of that. Also the ship had been renamed to Lützow at that time.

    • @themanformerlyknownascomme777
      @themanformerlyknownascomme777 Před 3 lety

      @@fabianzimmermann5495 ya, the vessel came under some minor fire, and I am aware of the renaming, I just call her by her original name A) out of habit B) not to confuse her with the Admiral Hipper Class

    • @fabianzimmermann5495
      @fabianzimmermann5495 Před 3 lety

      @@themanformerlyknownascomme777 Yeah, ships with two names are confusing. You made it very easy to understand which ship you meant. Also, after her renaming, she apparently wasn't able to get a good time, judging by all the damage she took by enemy attacks or accidents, so calling her by her first name is probably the better thing to do.

  • @AugmentedGravity
    @AugmentedGravity Před rokem +7

    I still come back to this scene. Such an amazing piece of cinematography.

  • @AmphiStuG
    @AmphiStuG Před 2 lety +12

    Love the cinematics and sound design they gave this scene, the dead silence of the start with only coast bells and naval search lights, the tense build up in the music as the officers and gun crews to prepare to fire at a ship they did not know whether it was friend or foe, the eruption of both the music and visuals as both the war and the first battle commencing. The sight of a massive state-of-the-art Battle cruiser slowly floating through a fjord being fired upon at all sides, bursting into flame with it's armaments cracking into action with it's crews panicking, the mix of both the screams and cries of the sailors on board as well as the blast of the horn from the ship as if the ship itself was screaming in pain. and the silent woosh of the killing blow to the massive beast of war.
    Simply *chef's kiss*.

  • @jdjaneway
    @jdjaneway Před 4 lety +89

    The growing pulse of the orchestra in this scene is brilliant. Perfectly matching the firing of the batteries, so powerful.

  • @firingallcylinders2949
    @firingallcylinders2949 Před 3 lety +75

    0:56 idk why but the conversation to set the range sounds freakin awesome in Norwegian.

    • @Princeofmellon
      @Princeofmellon Před 3 lety +29

      The Norwegian defense has what we call, the Defense language or "Forsvarsspråket" it's something every serving man has to learn to some degree, and the introductory words are;
      "Words can be powerful as weapons, and language is what makes the tool we have to
      communicate. With simple grips and proper grammar, you avoid the recipients misunderstanding
      or get confused. Correct and comprehensible language is especially important in the Armed Forces, where clear
      Commands, clear messages and correct information are essential for operational capability.
      The language standard helps you to write correctly, easily and comprehensibly for recipients in and
      outside the Armed Forces"

    • @guardsmanlars6797
      @guardsmanlars6797 Před 2 lety +3

      Welcome to norway my friend. Du er velkommen

    • @firingallcylinders2949
      @firingallcylinders2949 Před rokem

      @@Princeofmellon That's awesome, thanks for the info!

  • @gunnar6674
    @gunnar6674 Před 2 lety +83

    1940: Ancient weapons manned by fresh recruits sinks freshly commissioned flagship cruiser.
    2022: Fresh anti-ship missile battery sinks very old flagship cruiser manned by idiots.

    • @mrgoldplayz9133
      @mrgoldplayz9133 Před 2 lety +7

      You shouldn't disrespect anyone like calling them idiots they were brave men too you know there were innocent men on that ship just following orders

    • @gunnar6674
      @gunnar6674 Před 2 lety +32

      @@mrgoldplayz9133 Depends how Article 33 of the Rome Statute is applied. "Just following orders" isn't always an excuse.

    • @KimoFest
      @KimoFest Před rokem

      Oh hey, Captain Obvious! What do you expected? An old ship to counter a new missile that was made to destroy ships they already have some data on?
      Besides, almost all soldiers should be idiots then since they are following orders, right?
      *cough* *cough* USA invading middle east *cough* *cough*
      Not pro-russian btw.

    • @jesusalfredofernandezcruz1833
      @jesusalfredofernandezcruz1833 Před rokem +4

      This Is about to the sinking of the russian ship Moscú??

    • @jenesus6220
      @jenesus6220 Před rokem +14

      @@jesusalfredofernandezcruz1833 The Moskva wasn't sunk; it was promoted to submarine! 😁

  • @flowahpawah5397
    @flowahpawah5397 Před měsícem +2

    I just love the fact that this absolute mad man Eriksen, was asked if they were really going to shoot with live ammunition. Eriksen answered yes, before adding: "Either I will be court-martialed, or I will be a decorated war hero. FIRE!''

  • @solbergsindre
    @solbergsindre Před 6 lety +256

    Fun fact: the guy portraying the fortress commander is Erik Hivju, father of Kristofer Hivju who portrays Tormund Giantsbane in Game of Thrones.

  • @WestTNConfed
    @WestTNConfed Před 3 lety +112

    Those 11 inch guns were vintage Krupp guns manufactured in Germany and imported in 1890. They got a taste of their own (grandpa's) medicine.

    • @johnlavery3433
      @johnlavery3433 Před 3 lety +5

      Those guns were older than the Norwegian state

  • @sjum
    @sjum Před 3 lety +21

    The cost of building Blucher was the same as five times Norways defence budget. (at that time)

    • @LoudaroundLincoln
      @LoudaroundLincoln Před 2 lety +1

      Ha. Really?
      I'd say that's priceless, but it obviously isn't.

    • @sjum
      @sjum Před 2 lety +1

      @@LoudaroundLincoln True story 👍

  • @garbagebanditdayz819
    @garbagebanditdayz819 Před rokem +5

    The tension in the beginning of this scene is fantastic. The faint yet distinct shape of Blücher as it enters Drobak Sound and passes the lighthouse illuminating the ships massive superstructure. Just perfect

  • @AugmentedGravity
    @AugmentedGravity Před 6 lety +96

    Shows you how important "local knowledge" and experience is.

    • @The_Daily_Tomato
      @The_Daily_Tomato Před 5 lety +3

      The torpedo defenses were however a closely guarded secret and the Germans deemed the guns, powerful but old and thus payed them little mind on top of having been told that they would face no resistance :)

    • @onrr1726
      @onrr1726 Před 3 lety

      It would probably would have been no surprise if Eriksen fished them vary waters like so many others who lived and worked in the area that knowledge alone would be priceless in knowing when to make an educated guess and or be able to determine an exact location such things become only second nature over time.

  • @mikebrown1926
    @mikebrown1926 Před 6 lety +322

    My father in law, now deceased, was a gunner in the U.S. Army coast defense artillery in the 1930s. He served in various batteries in Washington State, California and Panama. He told me that it took a well trained crew almost ten minutes to reload those heavy guns, because the shells had to be raised from an underground magazine, rolled to the gun on hand carts, lifted to the breech with a crane, then rammed home. Then the powder charges had to done the same way. With an untrained crew, I think that the commander of the Oskarborg fortress knew that he had only one shot per gun.
    By the way, my father in law transferred to the Army Air Corps just before WW II and was a flight engineer on B17s during the war. He flew many missions over Europe. He retired in the 1950s. He was quite deaf when I met him, as are most gunners, and when he died he had a box full of the latest types of hearing aids, but the didn't really help him. And he never complained, he said it was his small price to pay for freedom.

    • @bjrsherino7085
      @bjrsherino7085 Před 5 lety +6

      Mike Brown salute to him!

    • @artificialgravitas8954
      @artificialgravitas8954 Před 5 lety

      Think of price payed by those below, though they may not have thought so at the time: anything to get rid of Nazis and thanks for that marshall plan, much better than Versailles

    • @belfast4893
      @belfast4893 Před 5 lety

      Damn, everyone have a blood related war veteran now don’t we 😒

    • @mikebrown1926
      @mikebrown1926 Před 5 lety +7

      @@belfast4893 I can't speak for everyone, but my grandfather fought in the US army World War I and was wounded at St Mihel in September 1918. His sons, my father fought Guadalcanal and Okinawa, and my uncle landed at Normandy. A second uncle was too young for WWII but volunteered for service and was wounded in the Korean war. I served eight years in the US Navy from August 1965 until November 1973, and that included Vietnam. My father in law, mentioned above, was a career soldier, as I said, and two of my brothers in law served in the army and navy. And yes, I am most certainly blood related to those men.

    • @hugookok2517
      @hugookok2517 Před 5 lety

      @@mikebrown1926 That naval cannon has 2 barrels, and the third explosion is probably ammunition storages exploding..

  • @johnwheatley5641
    @johnwheatley5641 Před 3 lety +92

    This film really introduced me to the bravery of the Norwegians in the war. I’d never heard of King Haakon before this but read up on him now and came to the conclusion he was awesome! Been looking at the Norwegian war effort and resistance too, you don’t hear much about it here in Britain, but it’s really inspiring stuff. More proud of our shared heritage in the fight against the Nazi’s.

    • @teovesen
      @teovesen Před 2 lety +6

      I've always thought the Norwegian resistance was admirable and epic, but this movie fave me real insight to how fucking terrifying it was, (spoilers ahead i guess) but when in one scene, you have to watch and old man with back pain, run out of a train together with his crying grandchildren while actively dodging bombs .... It was terrifying! And on several points, i genuinely shed a tear over pride for beeing Norwegian! U love this movie.
      There is also an amzing video from "Freia" one of the sponsors of the movie, showing the premier viewing of this movie in an old folks home, for people who were actually there! Terrifying and touching.

    • @KyrreStalsberg
      @KyrreStalsberg Před 2 lety +2

      My great-grandfather fought the germans in the battles of Gausdal. He told my father he was scared.. Didn't say much more about it, but he did say that the german troops screamed "wir sind freunde" when they stormed. If you want to read about norwegian bravery in the war, read some books about the sailors ("norske krigsseilere" in norwegian). Those stories are crazy. Those guys did not get what they deserved after the war. Brave people, and I think the english are pretty grateful for what they did.

    • @HydroSnips
      @HydroSnips Před 2 lety +4

      Not forgotten. Every year there is the giant Christmas tree in Trafalgar Square, a present from Norway to the British people for their comradeship during the war. The first was 1942 (how it got smuggled across I don’t know) but became regular tradition from 1947.
      King Haakon and his govt set up their govt-in-exile in Windsor. Norwegians fought in the RAF and had their own squadrons which later became the RNAF, they fought in 10th (Inter Allied) Commando, the RNN fought alongside the RN and it was a Norwegian ship, the Svenner, that was the only warship sunk on D-Day in an E-Boat attack while guarding the eastern approaches to the beaches from Le Havre. And then there’s their Resistance which is an epic by itself.
      Having seen their own homeland fall those that could came here and stood with us when we most needed them and fought on right through to the end while their families lived in fear and suffered at home. “Gratitude” is an understatement :)

    • @kingdesktogoosegoosetime1259
      @kingdesktogoosegoosetime1259 Před 2 lety +1

      @@teovesen Hehe Denmark only lasted 6 hours hehe......

    • @j.t1984
      @j.t1984 Před rokem +1

      How was he awesome? He - together with his government - left the country with all the nations riches, after having completely destroyed our military and our ability to fight. Of course they didn't leave without ordering Norwegians to fight against an unbeatable foe due to aforementioned reasons. All while being on their way to comfort in London.

  • @djolley61
    @djolley61 Před 3 lety +5

    Had to watch this again. The music in this scene is masterful, the increasing volume really build the tension.

  • @lailasolum4599
    @lailasolum4599 Před 7 lety +286

    That is what saved the king of Norway and his family

    • @DroopyPenguin95
      @DroopyPenguin95 Před 6 lety +67

      Laila Solum Not only the royal family, but also our government and gold reserves :)

    • @spetfire1
      @spetfire1 Před 6 lety +5

      True, but some time After they sunk Blücher, an other ship came And Norway didnt win that one

    • @lavrentivs9891
      @lavrentivs9891 Před 6 lety +21

      Santa Claus There were several ships steaming up the fjord when Blücher did, but it is so narrow that they couldn't go all at the same time. Also, the Luftwaffe bombed the fort into submission before the next attempt.

    • @dogsnads5634
      @dogsnads5634 Před 5 lety +1

      Well you could mention the British Royal Navy as well...

    • @tash4943
      @tash4943 Před 5 lety +5

      So it would have been better if they were captured and used to "nazify" the norwegian people?

  • @kkhagerty6315
    @kkhagerty6315 Před 4 lety +322

    Those guns where put there in the First World War by Austria-Hungary
    The empire strikes back

    • @seneca983
      @seneca983 Před 3 lety +30

      "Our cruisers can't repel firepower of that magnitude."

    • @Elthenar
      @Elthenar Před 3 lety +16

      @@seneca983 More like, the Empire strikes itself.

    • @Volnas97
      @Volnas97 Před 3 lety +23

      Guns were German. Torpedoes were Austrio-Hungarian.

    • @olegbochkis5680
      @olegbochkis5680 Před 3 lety +6

      Empire shoots itself in the Bluher

  • @rokairu0-216
    @rokairu0-216 Před 2 lety +8

    Fun fact: the person who made the soundtrack for this movie (Johan Söderqvist), also did the soundtrack for Battlefield 1 and V

    • @Spudtron98
      @Spudtron98 Před rokem

      Yeah, that actually makes sense now that I hear it.

  • @Arvidus89
    @Arvidus89 Před 3 lety +24

    Norway may have lost, but the sinking of the Blücher was a middle finger that left a sore mark on Nazi Germany's psyché for the rest of the war

    • @FimbongBass
      @FimbongBass Před 2 lety

      yeah it showed that germans have still yet to master the sea

    • @DD-qw4fz
      @DD-qw4fz Před 2 lety

      @@FimbongBass "yeah it showed that Germans have still yet to master the sea" you do realize the Germans managed to conquer Norway via SEA INVASION on the doorstep of the most powerful navy in the Atlantic, and all that with only a fraction of naval power available compared to the Royal navy. Its in many ways a more daredevil victory than the invasion of France.
      Germany secured its critical iron ore supply and that kept it in war for the next 5 years...but yeah they lost a capital ship -slow clap for the allies-

    • @ikecampbell2221
      @ikecampbell2221 Před 2 lety +1

      @@DD-qw4fz Yeah, especially since the British helped by sending some ships over. Their navy was still fucked tho. Those dudes shouldn’t have been able to even touch the Blücher but they full on sunk it

    • @youraveragescotsman7119
      @youraveragescotsman7119 Před 2 lety +3

      @@DD-qw4fz
      Norway was invaded without an official declaration of war, and was invaded before the UK could send it's fleet out in force. Even then, they managed to massacre half of Germany's Destroyers, which are quite important for future naval operations.

    • @kirgan1000
      @kirgan1000 Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@youraveragescotsman7119 In what future sea battel will 6? destroyer make a difference?

  • @AudieHolland
    @AudieHolland Před 3 lety +125

    The actual history and personal story of the commander in charge of that battery is so surprising.
    But it just so happens to fit the classical older warrior called back out of retirement.
    Edited *again:* Oops, the commander in this scene was the fortress commander, Birger Eriksen.
    He was also rather old. Almost 65.
    The regular commander of the torpedo battery was ill so Andreas Anderssen, having been in retirement for 13 years, was called out of his bed when the suspicious flotilla of ships was spotted approaching the coast. He donned his old uniform and was taken by boat from his house in the nearby village to the fortress.
    The torpedo battery was rather old - but so was Anderssen!
    He had trained as a recruit on the torpedo battery in 1909, over 30 years before.

  • @VersusARCH
    @VersusARCH Před 5 lety +1308

    Wisitt ze Norway zey said... Lowely fjords, hozspittable volk zey said...

    • @andmos1001
      @andmos1001 Před 5 lety +84

      280 mm gun and torpedoes tends to say how welcome one really are

    • @matiashogden1240
      @matiashogden1240 Před 5 lety +13

      Ya went to the wrong fjord (which isnt even a fjord, idiots decided to name it as such anyways)

    • @margraveofgadsden8997
      @margraveofgadsden8997 Před 5 lety +12

      The writer of this comment has been sacked.

    • @guardsmanlars6797
      @guardsmanlars6797 Před 5 lety +7

      Lenge leve kongen

    • @balder2597
      @balder2597 Před 5 lety +3

      Wrong fjord at the wrong time lol

  • @Thaddios
    @Thaddios Před měsícem +3

    A very good example of "Fuck around and find out"

  • @nunyabidnez2729
    @nunyabidnez2729 Před 2 lety +16

    Like Ukraine, Norway punched way above her weight. She never gave up, even in exile. H7 and CX -- extra points if you know what those letters mean.

    • @misterwhipple2870
      @misterwhipple2870 Před měsícem +1

      Haakon the Seventh, King of Norway, and Christian the Tenth, King of Denmark. If you're from Minnesota, there's nothin' to it . . . by the way, CX was not exiled and he toughed out the Occupation.

  • @shaun_b
    @shaun_b Před 4 lety +66

    "Either i will be decorated or i get court martialed, **FIRE** "
    -Birger Eriksen

  • @kcharles8857
    @kcharles8857 Před 4 lety +43

    I've watched this several times. It never gets old.

  • @gregoryclark8217
    @gregoryclark8217 Před 3 lety +10

    I really like how the filmmakers made sure that the shells and torpedoes hit in the right locations on the ship.

  • @westrim
    @westrim Před 3 lety +21

    The ship feels like a wounded, stricken beast, flailing out with scattered gunfire as it tries to seek out who hurt it, then bellowing from the mortal wound of the torpedoes.

    • @iangraham6887
      @iangraham6887 Před 3 lety

      The second shot already would’ve gutted the ship with the fire it started. Yes the guns were old but they were effective up to 11km. 530lb shells at 2200ft per sec at at range of 1200 meters would’ve crippled any ship including the tirpitz, Bismarck and the Yamamoto class. The movie really makes it look like a mighty beast being killed. Like st George killing the dragon.

    • @5000mahmud
      @5000mahmud Před 2 lety

      @@iangraham6887 The Guns could not penetrate the battleships at these ranges. Blucher had 3 inch's of armour max which was not enough, and it was not hit in the armour anyway. It was hit in an area that started a fire in the unarmoured aircraft hanger and would've survived with proper damage control and no torpedo impacts.

  • @marcjones1411
    @marcjones1411 Před 4 lety +68

    "Welcome to Norway. Please now bugger off."

    • @moritamikamikara3879
      @moritamikamikara3879 Před 3 lety +4

      "Uhh, excuse me. Could you give me directions to Oslo?"
      "Yeah, it's back the way you came" *Clicks 280mm fuck off cannons*

    • @littlejimmy8744
      @littlejimmy8744 Před 3 lety

      @@moritamikamikara3879 Very funny process to curb stomp Norway.

  • @Foralltosee1623
    @Foralltosee1623 Před 4 lety +46

    Colonel Briger Eriksen, Commanding Officer of Oscarsborg Battery "Either I will be decorated, or I will be court-martialed. FIRE!"
    I'm sorry but fuck off that's badass, shame it wasn't included.

    • @AllCentaur
      @AllCentaur Před 3 lety +3

      It should have been, seriously, there should’ve been an award for straight badass lines and him given a few hundred for that

  • @colbeausabre8842
    @colbeausabre8842 Před 2 lety +9

    "At 04:21 on 9 April, Eriksen gave the Main Battery guns the order to fire at the lead ship of the unknown flotilla forcing its way towards Oslo. Upon giving the command, Eriksen was questioned. He responded with his now famous response; "Either I will be decorated or I will be court martialled, Fire"
    It's called LEADERSHIP, folks

  • @KlLLERROBOT99
    @KlLLERROBOT99 Před 3 lety +4

    This entire scene is done beautifully well. One of the best scenes I’ve seen in a war movie in years

  • @GiordieTN
    @GiordieTN Před 5 lety +169

    I think the cannons in the movie are the same that actually sunk the ship, this scene was shot in the same fort

    • @AshtonmartinVids
      @AshtonmartinVids  Před 5 lety +95

      Yes, it was filmed on the real location.

    • @Outside85
      @Outside85 Před 3 lety +8

      Not quite sure its the same guns, the fortress came under heavy air bombardment after the Blücher's sinking and knocking out those guns would have been the one and only goal of the German bombers. I quite like to imagine however that the Germans might have restored them afterwards, or the Norwegian state after the war.

    • @twauster
      @twauster Před 3 lety +49

      @@Outside85 The guns in the movie are the exact same guns they used in the wee hours of 9 April 1940. The guns were intact after the fortress surrendered, despite the Luftwaffe bombing.

    • @nilswaage7626
      @nilswaage7626 Před 3 lety +17

      Fun fact, though I'm unsure how true it is: One of the cannons had at some point during its service fallen into the ocean, so they hoisted it up and called it Moses. Only fitting, they named its "brother" Aron.

    • @feonor26
      @feonor26 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Outside85 The guns are there still to this day, I recommend a guide tour at the fortress.

  • @BDNeon
    @BDNeon Před 4 lety +267

    "Hold on, I gotta take this call."
    "Go for Alpha Adolf!"
    "Whoa whoa whoa, slow down."
    "What do you mean they blew up the Blucher?!"
    "AH $%#&! *&#@ a @#^#$%& %%&"
    "Well who's 'They'?!"
    "What the hell is an Oscar Mayer Fortress?!"

    • @kossakken
      @kossakken Před 4 lety +21

      love the robot chicken reference!

    • @Soundwave3591
      @Soundwave3591 Před 4 lety +34

      "That thing wasn't even fully paid off yet! do you have any idea what this is going to do to my credit?!"

    • @mwnciboo
      @mwnciboo Před 3 lety +14

      @@Soundwave3591*KM HQ* "Fuck! Its gone? No way...It is NEW!...Jesus we were going to use it for Surface Raiding. I mean the Royal Navy could never Cope with Surface raiding...I mean they cannot be everywhere can they? Their fleet isn't that big is it? Well shit...We will need to use the Bismarck when she is ready. I am telling you Surface Raiding is the strategy that win us the Naval war! Best we send all our Destroyers somewhere safe like Narvik for a few weeks"

    • @MikeJones-qn1gz
      @MikeJones-qn1gz Před 3 lety +27

      "Ok ok so whos left?.... ARE YOU SHITTING ME!? WELL WHERE ARE YOU? Wait a minute you're still sitting outside the Fjord waiting for air support?"
      "Heh must be fucking cold."
      "NOW GET YOUR ASS TO OSLO OR ILL MAKE SURE YOU END UP IN THE U-BOAT FLEET!"
      "Oh jeez hes crying... XD"

    • @seanw9541
      @seanw9541 Před 3 lety

      Fucking hell I love this so much! LMMFAO

  • @TraustiGeir
    @TraustiGeir Před 6 měsíci +2

    I will never get tired of this scene: Brilliant editing, soundtrack, acting and special effects.

  • @Twiggyay
    @Twiggyay Před 3 lety +17

    Sent shivers down my spine watching this. These men are heroes.
    Dette portretterer mennene som bygde og forsvarte landet vårt. Stolt nordmann.

    • @hanzen5174
      @hanzen5174 Před 2 lety

      det elendige forsvaret av landet var en skam. det er få som får godkjent.. noen av unntakene var gjengen i denne hendelsen, gutta på skauen og krigs seilerne. hvor krigs seilerne uten tvil hadde den største påvirkningen på utfallet av krigen. behandlingen de fikk i etterkant sier mye om norge

  • @AdurianJ
    @AdurianJ Před 4 lety +174

    After Blucher was sunk the Korpås 15cm battery (on the land side of the Fjord) won an artillery duel with the Lützow (second ship in the line) causing heavy damage to she ship and knocking out her forward 28cm turret.

    • @road-eo6911
      @road-eo6911 Před 3 lety +10

      Although she (Lützow) was named "Deutschland" during that time, the original Lützow was supposed to be an Admiral Hipper-class light cruiser, she was then sold to the Soviet Union as Petropavlovsk (although only partially built)

    • @AdurianJ
      @AdurianJ Před 3 lety +6

      @@road-eo6911 no she had just been renamed before the invasion

    • @jesusalfredofernandezcruz1833
      @jesusalfredofernandezcruz1833 Před rokem +1

      Lutzow, one of the Three Poket Battleships.
      My favorite one of the Three always would be the Admiral Graf Spee.

    • @sylquinn4075
      @sylquinn4075 Před rokem

      The reality was that as the Blucher was being struck by the torpedoes was when Lutzow was hit and forced to reverse course.

    • @JamesWhite-lj3jm
      @JamesWhite-lj3jm Před 9 měsíci

      Thought it was "Bruno", the after turret that was knocked out.

  • @abnurtharn2927
    @abnurtharn2927 Před 7 lety +497

    That is one of our greatest war heroes. Colonel Birger Eriksen, commander at Oskarborg fortress

    • @JuergenGDB
      @JuergenGDB Před 6 lety +17

      Actually you have more..... they were Vikings of old... But this does not surprise me.... no offense to those that live in Europe and not starting anything political of sorts, but damn..,.. Europeans have forgotten how the fuck they got their in the first place.... now Islam will be your religion, and your culture will be forgotten.

    • @mikeggg5671
      @mikeggg5671 Před 6 lety +3

      Surely a determined officer, no doubt. Imagine how much greater we would have been had you not fought us! We could have thrown the Russians off, taken Archangel, and stopped Communism in its tracks.

    • @kreigdernier9553
      @kreigdernier9553 Před 6 lety

      mike ggg naziism gave a 30 year lease on life to communism

    • @mrgoob76
      @mrgoob76 Před 6 lety +4

      JuergenGDB i am going to corect you here.... WESTERN europe will be forgotten.... eastern europe and the slavics and balts will not.... they have a VERY long memory and have not forgotten how they were treated by muslims.
      as it is the polish and the Hungarians are getting pissed off and riled up again and defiant
      if anything is what is going to happen the Slavs are going to step in and save western Europe from itself..... AGAIN and not even get a thank you like the last time they did in 1683

    • @mikeggg5671
      @mikeggg5671 Před 6 lety +2

      Binko Binev you are obviously misguided. And also evil if you wish to exterminate all people. That is wrong. Without doubt.