History Buffs: Saving Private Ryan

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  • @thejamo4183
    @thejamo4183 Před 3 lety +10083

    The reveal about the 2 "German" soldiers actually being Czech conscripted soldiers blew my mind.

    • @thezeitos469
      @thezeitos469 Před 3 lety +1121

      I was wondering the entire time, why I (as a german) couldnt understand what they were saying and thought it was just the general noise being too loud

    • @matejpolak4117
      @matejpolak4117 Před 3 lety +544

      Oh yeah, they’re saying that they didn’t kill anyone and telling the americans to not shoot.

    • @matejpolak4117
      @matejpolak4117 Před 3 lety +178

      Oh, nvm. They said it in the vid

    • @vas2763
      @vas2763 Před 3 lety +601

      And made me very sad. I am from Czechia and i was stunned, to hear my language at this.

    • @timokohler6631
      @timokohler6631 Před 3 lety +300

      To be fair, hypothetically they could also have been Germans from Czechia speaking Czech, hoping that the Americans would spare them.

  • @johnadams5489
    @johnadams5489 Před 4 lety +2761

    From what I read, some Veterans of D Day actually got up and walked out when they saw the Omaha Beach Landing re-enactment. Not because it was wrong, or phony, it was SO REAL that they didn't want to re-live it and walked out. Unbelievable.

    • @janetmiller2160
      @janetmiller2160 Před 4 lety +68

      Very believable

    • @TomKaren94
      @TomKaren94 Před 4 lety +48

      You're right... that's unbelievable. I don't believe it.

    • @MichaelLeBrun1
      @MichaelLeBrun1 Před 3 lety +218

      While watching the movie in the theater, the guy behind me started laughing at the scene where the soldier reaches down and picks up his amputated arm. I turned around to see what kind of person would react this way. What I saw was not a person who thought the action was funny. What I saw was a person reacting that way due to sheer terror. Yet, we got to watch this scene from a comfy theater seat and not the exploding, horrifying, blood-soaked sands of Omaha Beach. As accurate as this movie's scene surely was, in actuality the event was far worse than anyone not actually there could possibly imagine.

    • @cocalicoman
      @cocalicoman Před 3 lety +106

      TomKaren94 ever see the Joe Rogan Clip talking about it? I forget who the guest was but his great grandfather had to leave the theater because “he smelled diesel”

    • @Falcrist
      @Falcrist Před 3 lety +75

      While no movie can ever present the shear SCALE of the horrors of D-Day, this movie gave an accurate depiction of one part of it.
      I remember hearing about vets having to leave the theater because it was... a little too close.

  • @johnstevens9673
    @johnstevens9673 Před rokem +693

    This movie came out just a month before my grandfather passed away. He was on Omaha Beach on D Day. I took him to see this an was very effected by the opening scene telling me that it was almost exactly like what happened. I have always been grateful that we got to share this experience together. He said the forgot to show the large rock walls they had to climb.

    • @kevinhulvey7018
      @kevinhulvey7018 Před rokem +38

      Shout out to your grandfather. I think some of the beaches were more of a sandy hill type while other landing areas had the sheer cliff like your grandpa had to climb

    • @jameskemp9960
      @jameskemp9960 Před rokem +39

      Damn you took grandpa into a flashback

    • @johnstevens9673
      @johnstevens9673 Před rokem +25

      @@jameskemp9960 Yeah had no idea it would have this effect but at the end he was happy he saw it and the rest of the world had a some type of idea what they actually did on dday.

    • @ghostfeller8028
      @ghostfeller8028 Před rokem +38

      Your grandfather perhaps was at Pointe du Hoc, where Rangers scaled a 100 foot cliff while under fire from above, in order to destroy German artillery batteries which were threatening the beach landing zones. I offer a tip of the proverbial hat to your grandfather, as that was no small accomplishment.

    • @johnstevens9673
      @johnstevens9673 Před rokem +25

      @@ghostfeller8028 Exactly Pointe du Hoc, was a bit different then the sandy hills of Utha Beach. The Rangers here had to climb in some cases 100 foot rock walls with nothing more than a rope shot up from the beach, while under gunfire the entire time. In the movie they blended both locations into one. The big guns the had to take out were at the large rock walled beaches of Omaha Beach while Utha Beach had the large open stretches of sand these poor guys had to cross to take the beach. Either way at both locations the gunfire was the most intense. The British and Canadian beaches of Gold, Soward, and Juno were also heavily fortified.

  • @foldervtolvr
    @foldervtolvr Před rokem +462

    My dad has a friend who’s father fought in WW2. And they have their father’s letter that he sent the day before D-Day. The letter is absolutely haunting because the father survived, but he was convinced that this was the last his family would hear from him. And in the lower corner, there is a single tear stain. The man was crying as the weight of the D-Day invasion was sinking in for him. And he ends the letter with: “I have one job, to make it up a beach. But that may be the last thing I ever do.”

    • @Azoria4
      @Azoria4 Před rokem +18

      Damn that’s an awesome piece of history

    • @vincentfiore7588
      @vincentfiore7588 Před měsícem +2

      What a story brother, your friends father is a brave man and a hero.

  • @albe4695
    @albe4695 Před 4 lety +2458

    I remember my mother taking her father to see this movie in the theater. My grandfather was on the beach at Normandy and was in a bastard unit in Europe. He cried and clasped my mother's hand which was not his character. He said that he felt like he had been taken back and no movie had ever captured that. He was one of the few American units to liberate of Dachau. He passed away in 2000. His name was Deward Pepper born in 1920 Halifax N.C moved to the Raleigh orphanage in N.C. then willingly drafted.

    • @nickcivetta2
      @nickcivetta2 Před 4 lety +91

      alice wiley rip to a hero. God bless

    • @wwfix3224
      @wwfix3224 Před 4 lety +90

      We thank him for his service

    • @RubyBandUSA
      @RubyBandUSA Před 3 lety +58

      Americans and the Allied countries are indebted to your grandfather. It is a debt we can never repay.

    • @bobi_77z
      @bobi_77z Před 3 lety +17

      i am so sorry for your loss at least you can be proud that your grandad fought in the biggest war ever (i think)

    • @sent7127
      @sent7127 Před 3 lety +32

      This was the only movie that truly depicted the horrors of war and didn't romanticize it. Your grandfather was truly a part of the greatest generation. May he rest in peace.

  • @casualromp
    @casualromp Před 3 lety +2264

    My father had a friend whose father had landed on Omaha Beach. He showed his father the movie and right after the beach scene he turned to him and asked, "Was it that bad?" He replied, "Worse."

    • @devinosland359
      @devinosland359 Před 3 lety +287

      I remember a relative of mine ( i cant remember exactly who, they were extended family) served in WWII and was one one of the beaches, i also cant remember which beach specifically, i didnt know too much about him. The family was going to watch the movie and he was all too excited to tear it apart and look at hollywood bullshit and all that and how they didn't care about what people went through back then. He watched the start of the movie and was nitpicking about really anything he could but when they got to the beach landings, he had to step out of the room. He came back some time later and watched in silence except for telling a few stories related to certain things in the movie.

    • @ricopablo4397
      @ricopablo4397 Před 3 lety +331

      my friend’s grandfather told us that this scene (which he could never watch entirely in a single go) is the closest thing to what he saw and experienced, and even then it wasn’t even close to the horror of what actually happened.
      he said it was significantly more crowded. there were dead men every 3 feet, men with limbs blown off, pieces of human bodies strewn everywhere, blood everywhere.
      he said the thing he remembers most vividly was the “smell of death.” human carnage. burning bodies. vaporized blood. and the smell of feces, which came not from (understandably) frightened soldiers, but from an automatic bodily response during and after death, or blown out of the body and into the air by mortar explosions that ripped people’s insides out.
      absolutely fucking horrifying.

    • @mediocremaiden8883
      @mediocremaiden8883 Před 2 lety +18

      I believe it

    • @mediocremaiden8883
      @mediocremaiden8883 Před 2 lety +30

      @@devinosland359 Show some respect....God and their fellow soldiers only know the horrors they must have seen....Marching for, fighting to the death knowing there's a good chance they will not leave that beach alive. So, maybe, learn the names of the beaches where these men sacrificed their lives for Freedom.

    • @silentlamb21
      @silentlamb21 Před 2 lety +25

      a movie can only do so much to make us experience the scene. The glimpse at the dread these soldiers must have felt at their impending doom and the desperate situation they were in, with the almost sure knowledge that they were walking to their death is just that. A glimpse..

  • @JR-ly2pu
    @JR-ly2pu Před rokem +608

    The veterans affairs (VA)had to designate a special 24/7 caller hotline when this movie hit theaters. They were flooded with calls of WW2 veterans having PTSD flashbacks after seeing this movie. Those men who stormed the beaches and the paratroopers who jumped in are heroes. It was an absolute privilege and honor earning my jump wings and serving in the 82nd airborne. I salute these men🫡

    • @JR-ly2pu
      @JR-ly2pu Před rokem +22

      @Patrick O'Brien it’s okay buddy you meant to type “yes”. See it’s not so hard. I did it for you.

    • @ninong7258
      @ninong7258 Před rokem +4

      goddamn! Kind of sad because they ya kno, got PTSD once again

    • @TheTyronecus
      @TheTyronecus Před 11 měsíci +9

      ​@Patrick O'Brien it took me a whole 3 seconds to find an old article online. They absolutely opened a Saving Private Ryan hotline.
      You are obviously a troll or don't know how to Google. Either way, yes.

    • @juicewar3805
      @juicewar3805 Před 11 měsíci

      @@JR-ly2puno

    • @blahblah2779
      @blahblah2779 Před 11 měsíci +1

      I find this very difficult to believe.
      The VA has no issue seeing homeless veterans hungry on the streets, forcing them to go through a list of requirements before they can even get as much as a piece of bread.
      Now you're saying they willingly created a hotline to help them? 😂

  • @jerometaperman7102
    @jerometaperman7102 Před rokem +291

    That scene where Mother Ryan collapses on the porch when she sees the chaplain gets me every time. She knows it's bad and the sad part is, she doesn't know how bad.

    • @adriennekulcsar7734
      @adriennekulcsar7734 Před rokem +5

      ..........ripped my guts out !!!!

    • @Mcrochev1994
      @Mcrochev1994 Před rokem

      She'd probably died on the spot hearing 3/4 sons are dead and 1 is missing.

    • @rc59191
      @rc59191 Před 10 měsíci +9

      No joke dude at least they were all delivered at once I couldn't imagine having to go through that 3 times in a row.

    • @ianfraser6161
      @ianfraser6161 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I felt my heart break watching that scene.

    • @nickh7777
      @nickh7777 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Assuming of course that they gave her the news of the 3 brothers on THAT trip to see her. In her case (if you had a choice) would you rather have the one trip or multiple trips?

  • @lucash5025
    @lucash5025 Před 5 lety +5885

    that czech soldiers detail was amazing

    • @AtrolinK
      @AtrolinK Před 5 lety +190

      it gave me chills

    • @jh565bb
      @jh565bb Před 5 lety +359

      It showed that the allies werent always the 'good guys'.

    • @dlakodlak
      @dlakodlak Před 5 lety +292

      Yeah, I'm Czech. I don't like this movie much but this scene, this fucking scene, has stayed ingrained in my memory ever since.

    • @rylandavis2976
      @rylandavis2976 Před 5 lety +114

      @@jh565bb it's hard to be good with how brutal the Nazis were. You have no idea if they are lying or if they are about to whip out a gun and shoot both of you. Would you take chances and put you and your brothers lives on the line like that. It is a hard choice to make and war is fucked but none of the allies wanted this.

    • @jh565bb
      @jh565bb Před 5 lety +137

      @@rylandavis2976 Sadly neither did the Germans, only Hitler and his lot wanted this. The German army tried to kill him a few times. Sadly both sides did this. In this situation they were wrong as the guys had surrenderd and they were under no Orders to shoot POW's, but it wasn't uncommon for men on all sides to kill POW's if they had an objective or lacked the facilities to hold them. I doubt these men would have been lying had they been real though, as not many Germans could speak Czech. The allies and the axis were just as brutal to each other sadly, it was war and many soldiers were traumatised and angry. That being said there were also many stories of both sides showing respect and even risking their lives to help individuals out.

  • @TheFacelessStoryMaker
    @TheFacelessStoryMaker Před 3 lety +2920

    I think one of the more emotional parts is a medic Wade tending to a wounded GI and is happy he stopped the bleeding only for the GI to be shot in the head and killed with Wade yelling at the Germans to give them a chance. Absolutely horrific.

    • @mako88sb
      @mako88sb Před 3 lety +321

      Listen to that scene again. Wade and the others are actually trying to save the battalion surgeon. I always thought that didn’t make sense since the battalion surgeons would have stayed on board the troopships and waited for the worse off casualties to be brought there. This scene gives you a pretty good idea how knowledgeable Spielberg is about the invasion. I read a book awhile ago and it’s mentioned in that there actually was a battalion surgeon who insisted he be included in the first wave as he strongly felt he would be able to save more lives that way. Unfortunately, although the circumstances weren’t mentioned, he was killed shortly after landing.

    • @JetEngine787
      @JetEngine787 Před 3 lety +16

      He was shot in the head by an American GI to get him to stop treating a dead man and take cover at the shingle.

    • @boredguy6970
      @boredguy6970 Před 3 lety +69

      Man the frustration that was going through Wade's head must have been unbearable . I can get grumpy by much much much tinier problems than that . If I was inches away from saving the lives of another comrade and a german just takes him out , I would want to curbstomp every single gẻman soldier I see .
      But war is war.And such a way of thinking and behaving would have been childish.

    • @averagejoe6617
      @averagejoe6617 Před 3 lety +23

      @@JetEngine787 what???

    • @JetEngine787
      @JetEngine787 Před 3 lety +12

      @@averagejoe6617 Watch the scene again. Miller tells his guy to " get him off the beach", so he shoots the dying guy in the head to get Wade to stop wasting his time and staying in the kill zone

  • @Sam-ch9mn
    @Sam-ch9mn Před 2 lety +1079

    I watched this film last week. I’m ex military, 67 years old and a cynic but I bawled my eyes out towards the end. For Spielberg to generate such emotion is a masterclass in storytelling. Yes he had good factual material to work from and he made the most out of it without turning it into parody. Great story, great film, great acting and great direction. I will never forget it.

    • @222aint
      @222aint Před 2 lety +19

      thank you for your service

    • @livethefuture2492
      @livethefuture2492 Před 2 lety +25

      If you liked this, you should definitely watch Band of Brothers, it's widely considered one of the best historical shows ever made. And was also made by Spielberg and tom hanks, with much the same style.

    • @guilhermefaveri5177
      @guilhermefaveri5177 Před rokem +8

      Thank you for your service sir. Accurate commentary.

    • @Sam-ch9mn
      @Sam-ch9mn Před rokem +10

      @@livethefuture2492
      Thank you. On your recommendation, I will give it a try.

    • @Mr..Malice
      @Mr..Malice Před rokem

      @@Sam-ch9mn how do you like it so far? :)

  • @Mr47CRO
    @Mr47CRO Před 2 lety +259

    Can't believe no one talks about the scene where the German soldier slowly inserts the knife into that American soldier while shushing him all the while his comrade is too afraid to act. That scene made me feel 5 feelings simultaneously. It was by far the most intense scene i ever saw and felt.

    • @lol_linewire9482
      @lol_linewire9482 Před rokem +19

      Sharing because I realize im not alone, I saw this scene when I was young with my dad and I cried watching the knife scene and ever since it has -genuinely, traumatized me and is one of my first thoughts every time I see anything related to private Ryan.

    • @psell8628
      @psell8628 Před rokem +16

      @@lol_linewire9482 yes that scene was more horrifying to me than anything from the D-Day landings

    • @michaelgoldstein8516
      @michaelgoldstein8516 Před rokem +9

      I actually have to stop the movie before it gets to that scene because I can’t watch that scene anymore. It just enrages me too much.

    • @stevedavenport1202
      @stevedavenport1202 Před rokem +2

      That is the scene that haunts me the most.

    • @bearcatXF
      @bearcatXF Před 11 měsíci +3

      ​@@michaelgoldstein8516That's why Spielberg made the movie: It's anti-German propaganda 80 years-on and still being pushed.

  • @shkim652
    @shkim652 Před 4 lety +894

    14:06 The Asian man in a Nazi uniform is known as a Korean man conscripted by Japanese, captured by Soviets in Manchuria, sent to a Gulag and later to the Eastern front to fight against Nazis. Then, he was captured by Nazis and sent to Normandy together with other Soviet POWs. Later he became a US citizen and died in the US. What a story.

    • @YingJwo
      @YingJwo Před 4 lety +51

      SH Kim Great story with a movie based on it called My Way.

    • @63Baggies
      @63Baggies Před 3 lety +10

      There's a story worth telling...

    • @Crunchysopa52
      @Crunchysopa52 Před 3 lety +4

      wow

    • @samuraijackoff5354
      @samuraijackoff5354 Před 3 lety +15

      We never see a Asian based history movies on the Vietnam war or WW2

    • @ryleeroseborough7885
      @ryleeroseborough7885 Před 3 lety +18

      Kind of like in WW1 when the French colonial Africans were fighting in Belgium because a Serbian nationalist shot an Austrian noble in Bosnia

  • @zappykoenigg2801
    @zappykoenigg2801 Před 3 lety +1962

    The soldier picking up his dismembered arm is an image that has been in my head for my entire life.

    • @jakublulek3261
      @jakublulek3261 Před 3 lety +194

      It reminded me of one story that my grandfather told me about his unit, fighting in Market Garden. Guy broke his ankle during landing but fought on. Was wounded in a face by grenade but fought on. Had his left hand blown off but he just rest his Lee rifle on a broken wall and fought on. Germans caught him when he was trying to reload with his remaining hand. Surprisingly, he survived and lived well into his 80s.

    • @Vin-sv9fm
      @Vin-sv9fm Před 2 lety +73

      It's the guy holding his own entrails for me, i remember wanting to rewatch the movie but that scene came up in my mind and i was horrified 😂

    • @Teboski78
      @Teboski78 Před 2 lety +101

      Yeah he was in shock. It’s not like he would be able to do reattach that arm. People do weird things when they’re in shock that seem rational to them

    • @beatzbyreefah
      @beatzbyreefah Před 2 lety +41

      Yeah that's big facts especially if you saw this movie when a first came out like for the rest of my life I've always remembered that and the guy crying for his mother was guts out I got never ever forgot that. That is a testament to how good this movie is he is right this is probably the only movie that accurately show the horrors of war in particular world war II cuz even right now I'm sitting here thinking could you imagine all this s*** going on around you and probably within the last 60 to 90 seconds you had your arm on your body and now you're looking for it and everything's happening so fast and it's so chaotic you don't even know why you're looking for your arm you just know that it's gone and you need to find it you don't even have time to comprehend the fact that the closest person who can possibly reattach your arm is far far away and you're probably going to be a one-hour man for the rest of your life that is a powerful ass scene

    • @Someguy6571
      @Someguy6571 Před 2 lety +18

      @@beatzbyreefah That's if he doesn't die from the massive blood loss and the probability he will most likely be shot or blown up since he isn't paying attention to people trying to finish what they started with his arm.

  • @Fatalstar08
    @Fatalstar08 Před rokem +119

    My grandfather lost 3 brothers in WW1 and his young sister in WW2. He was the only surviving member of my great grandparents' family. My aunt wrote about it in her book, The Flowered Box Stories.

  • @monty5692
    @monty5692 Před 2 lety +275

    IMHO one of the best bits of acting in this movie is Ryan's mother when the car comes to give her the terrible news - we don't hear a single word from her, but the way she collapses on the porch ABSOLUTELY captures the physical impact - as far as we can even begin to understand it - of the realisation that they were bringing the terrible news of the loss of one (or, as it turns out three!) of her precious sons. Brilliant. Massive credit to the unnamed middle-aged lady that played that role.

    • @thepodcastcrew1113
      @thepodcastcrew1113 Před 2 lety +27

      I have to agree and was doing a bit of reading about The Sullivans brothers and when the naval officer comes to tell them both the mother and father there, and the navy officer says, "I have some news for you about your boys" and the father (Tom) asks "Which one?" and the officer replies "I'm sorry all five." Like I can't imagine the world shattering realisation that this would cause someone

    • @monty5692
      @monty5692 Před 2 lety +9

      @@thepodcastcrew1113 - absolutely!!! Impossible to imagine how crushing that moment must have been! 😭

    • @mako88sb
      @mako88sb Před rokem +3

      @@thepodcastcrew1113 There’s a 1944 movie titled The Fighting Sullivans about them. The way it’s portrayed in the movie starts with a Father Francis visiting as he often did. He appeared to just be on a social visit until he delivers the devastating news pretty well the way you mentioned. Looks like they decided on that instead of the way you read it. If it had been a naval officer showing up they would have known right away bad news was coming. Of course nobody could imagine just how bad.

    • @damienkakoschke3099
      @damienkakoschke3099 Před rokem +6

      Absolutely agree. Everything you need to know we get from her performance, while also giving us a real emotional reason for the mission to find the last son.

    • @marieroberts5664
      @marieroberts5664 Před 4 měsíci

      In one of the real life situations, after the second time (that woman also had several sons fighting) the telegram messenger refused to deliver another death notice. That poor woman also fainted.

  • @trevg7253
    @trevg7253 Před 4 lety +3884

    Veterans said the only thing you missed in that movie was the smell

    • @jakemakes
      @jakemakes Před 3 lety +485

      I read that the veterans consulted said (about storming the beaches) that the only innacuracies were that in real life it was worse, and that the men were all too old.

    • @steventapp1375
      @steventapp1375 Před 3 lety +37

      Jake Makes which men? The men in the war or the actors?

    • @jakemakes
      @jakemakes Před 3 lety +288

      @@steventapp1375 The actors were all too old. In real life the average age soldiers was 25 I believe

    • @jakemakes
      @jakemakes Před 3 lety +333

      @@steventapp1375 Actually scratch that just looked it up the average age was 20.

    • @MiguelTyson
      @MiguelTyson Před 3 lety +34

      Jake Makes that’s crazy

  • @mrmanmania
    @mrmanmania Před 6 lety +5119

    Wow after all these years of watching this movie countless of times, they weren't speaking german and that they were actually Czechs. That blew my mind.

    • @emils4049
      @emils4049 Před 6 lety +198

      I just realized it last week when I saw it again with subtitles [speaking czech]
      Before that I thought it was actually french they where speaking hahah

    • @blockboygames5956
      @blockboygames5956 Před 6 lety +46

      Same. That blew my mind.

    • @TheYea123456789
      @TheYea123456789 Před 6 lety +163

      I knew it instant...but im german so i should have. Right?

    • @illiminatieoverlordgurglek140
      @illiminatieoverlordgurglek140 Před 6 lety +131

      Being Dutch and speaking German I knew they weren't speaking German and not being SS I figured they were probably conscripts from some occupied area. I just never knew they were Czechs. I always thought they might be Hungarians or Bulgarians or something.

    • @CrazyeyesDark
      @CrazyeyesDark Před 6 lety +288

      Yup, conscripts from Czechia. I am Czech, and they said something along the lines of "I'm Czech, I didn't kill anyone." That was a particularly upsetting part to me and my countrymen.

  • @adammiller4122
    @adammiller4122 Před rokem +56

    Saw this movie in theaters with my dad when I was about 10. He’s a stoic type who never shows much emotion, and I’ll never forget how blown away I was that he cried at the end. Years later as a grown man, I understand.

  • @jwilliams3170
    @jwilliams3170 Před 7 měsíci +24

    My dad went and saw this movie in theaters several times when it came out. He’s a college history professor that teaches American history so it makes sense that he would be borderline obsessed with this movie. One of the times he went and watched it, he sat behind two older couples, both husbands being of appropriate age to have served during WW2. He says that when the opening battle sequence happened, both men were desperately clutching their wives’ hands. Both were crying by the time the battle scene has ended and the camera pans across the beaches littered with dead bodies. Then by the end of the movie, both men were crying. After the movie, he heard the men discussing it and it turns out both men had been apart of the Omaha beach landing and both men repeated several times how realistic it was. As an adult who works in law enforcement, I can’t claim to understand their experiences, but after seeing something in a movie that nearly perfectly recreated an event that was particularly traumatizing for me, I did experience the desperate clutching of my wife’s hand. Those men were heroes and I can’t even imagine how horrific it must have been to actually be there.

  • @squamish4244
    @squamish4244 Před 7 lety +649

    As a Canadian, I feel proud that our small country was one of the three nations whose forces landed at Normandy on D-Day, alongside the heavyweights.

    • @TheGiantKillers
      @TheGiantKillers Před 7 lety +93

      3? I think the Australians, Belgians, Czech, Danes, French, Greeks, Dutch, New Zealand, Norwegian and Polish would fancy correcting this natural but incorrect assumption. That's before you include the West Indian, Indians [and soon to be Pakistanis], Algerians, Moroccans, Libyans, Egyptians, South Africans, Irish and Spanish fighting in the British & French armies. And there's other nationalities I'm sure I've forgotten.

    • @squamish4244
      @squamish4244 Před 7 lety +34

      UlsterGroundhopper
      Sigh. Yes, I know that. But ours was one of three that were specifically designated to take part in the landings. The others were all included under the British flag.

    • @squamish4244
      @squamish4244 Před 7 lety +22

      *****
      Only 36 million people. And we feel it next to the behemoth to our south. The rest of the world thinks it is bad watching the craziness of the US election, but I'd say only Mexico is more on edge.
      We had 10 million people at the time, although we had a million people in the military during WW2 and the fifth largest navy.
      Canada has a very heavy impact on the world in two ways: food supply and natural resources.

    • @drfeeelgoood5815
      @drfeeelgoood5815 Před 7 lety +4

      valar small country? Canada is the second largest country in the world behind Russia..

    • @Gabriel-ic3sr
      @Gabriel-ic3sr Před 7 lety +23

      +WaKaWaKa Whisky He's talking about population

  • @BRICK8492
    @BRICK8492 Před 5 lety +7971

    So Forest Gump served in World War 2 AND Vietnam? Now that's a true American hero.

    • @GFSLombardo
      @GFSLombardo Před 5 lety +438

      John Wayne apparently fought in every war USA ever fought, through Vietnam, sometimes on both sides. Hanks is a pussy in comparison.

    • @Subscribesful
      @Subscribesful Před 5 lety +167

      Yeah he was also Russian. Heard he had difficulties getting a jazz dude's autograph....

    • @richardmerrifield7581
      @richardmerrifield7581 Před 5 lety +18

      is that really the best joke you could come up with?

    • @desertlizard4723
      @desertlizard4723 Před 5 lety +47

      “7.62 millimeter FULL METAL JACKET

    • @zachphillips9414
      @zachphillips9414 Před 5 lety +65

      He also charmed the pants off Nixon and won a ping pong competition.

  • @titandragon753
    @titandragon753 Před 11 měsíci +24

    I grew up in the Australian military. My father and Uncle were both in The Battle of Long Tan in Vietnam, artillery. Both in charge of seperate guns ( Charlie & Echo). Thankfully both survived and came home. My grandfather served in WW2, first in Egypt and then in South Africa training the local men there, preparing them in case Hitler ended up invading their country. His brothers served too in different places across the globe. They all came home safely too. And my great grandfather and his brothers served in WW1, all coming home safely. We are a very lucky family. When so many others never made it home.May they rest in peace.

    • @manavshah8335
      @manavshah8335 Před 6 měsíci

      that is such an insane family history you got their mate, stay safe and take care

  • @jeremystuart6559
    @jeremystuart6559 Před 2 lety +86

    There actually was a mission like this during the Vietnam war where a high ranking pilot was shot down and many attempts were made to save him, eventually the rescued him but they lost so many people and helicopters trying to do it. The pilot later said that if he new the price that would have been paid he would’ve denied any rescue attempts. This latter brought up a controversial topic about how many people should be risked to save another.

    • @michaelshaff4095
      @michaelshaff4095 Před rokem +3

      Bat 11 with Gene Hackman.

    • @valhallaproject9560
      @valhallaproject9560 Před rokem +1

      @@michaelshaff4095 Bat 21. Movie was awful but the book was spot on. Navy SEAL Tom Norris was the leader of the mission to rescue LTC Hambleton. Tommy later won the MoH.

    • @javiermori1710
      @javiermori1710 Před rokem +1

      Iceal Hambleton was guys name i think. He had very high clearence and knew alot so he was a priority to rescue. Navy seal eventually rescued him on small boat at night thru enemy lines. Incredible story.

    • @valhallaproject9560
      @valhallaproject9560 Před rokem

      @@javiermori1710 SEAL was Navy Lieutenant Tommy Norris along with his Vietnamese counterpart. They dressed like Vietnamese and rowed a small boat up the river to a rendezvous point that had been passed to Hambleton. Tommy was awarded the Navy Cross for the mission. His Vietnamese counterpart was awarded the US Silver Star. Hambleton was a nuclear weapons systems specialist hence the very highest clearance. He would have been warmly welcomed into a prison in Moscow. Book BAT 21 is best source.

    • @mnxs
      @mnxs Před 10 měsíci

      There's actually a video here on CZcams about this incident, Bat-21, by the excellent military aviation history channel Paper Skies. Can highly recommend. (Just search Paper Skies Bat-21)

  • @ericmoritz2905
    @ericmoritz2905 Před 4 lety +2336

    "Never, for a second, do we look down on the men who were too terrified to move."
    Very well said, Sir, given the circumstances.

    • @marcandersen94
      @marcandersen94 Před 4 lety +92

      Except for Upham...Upham was really an annoying character and a coward.

    • @TheDelethar
      @TheDelethar Před 4 lety +40

      Marc Andersen and what most beta men that were forced to be there would act like, killing and war isnt for everyone

    • @marcandersen94
      @marcandersen94 Před 4 lety +17

      @@TheDelethar
      Correct.
      But this is a Hollywood production and Upham is annoying and a coward. I really don't like him in the film.
      But of course you are right about war isn't for everyone.

    • @simonyip5978
      @simonyip5978 Před 4 lety +190

      The US military did several surveys into the behavior of the frontline troops and the rear area support troops.
      I'm not sure of the exact facts and figures, but the vast majority of combat troops (of most countries) either put their heads down and didn't try to fight, or they would fire their weapons in the general direction of the enemy, but without even trying to aim for specific targets.
      Something like 10-15% of the frontline combat riflemen actually actively particpated in the fighting. The others would only fight when it was absolutely necessary or if they were ordered to fight by their officers and NCOs.
      The only exceptions in recent history are probably the Imperial Japanese Army and Navy and the elite units like the German Waffen SS, the British and American airborne and marines, Gross Deutschland Division, and special forces (whose personal are chosen for their aggressiveness and determination etc).
      The point is, we should stop trying to criticize people who behaved in a particular way, in circumstances that the vast majority of us have never experienced.
      Even trained soldiers who were not experienced infantry (such as drivers, mechanics, technical support and logistical specialists were not always able to cope with the fear and the hardships and the brutality of front line combat.
      During the various occasions when the German forces were surrounded by the Soviets in Russia, the German commanding officers usually tried to either evacuate the non combatants if possible, or tried to keep the experienced fighting troops away from those from the support and non combat units, because the German Army knew by experience that only fully trained and fully motivated troops would have any chance of breaking through the encirclement and reach friendly lines, so even trained soldiers who were members of the logistics and rear area support units were not expected to be able to go into close combat unless they had been fully trained in infantry tactics.
      All men want to be heroic and brave and noble, but until we have been in positions like the situations depicted in war movies, and we have proved ourselves in combat, none of us are in a position to judge others.

    • @boyaintright3317
      @boyaintright3317 Před 4 lety +128

      @@TheDelethar "Most beta men"?? What a ridiculous fucking comment.

  • @jimmym9947
    @jimmym9947 Před 5 lety +2219

    I am a Czech national, so when i watched the scene with the Czech conscripts, i had to rewind and watch it several more times, because i could not believe i hear my own language in a Hollywood movie

    • @kr0n0sthetitan23
      @kr0n0sthetitan23 Před 5 lety +127

      You were not the only one.

    • @democratjoe
      @democratjoe Před 5 lety +111

      You're not wrong. I'm American and speak about a dozen words of Czech which has to be 1200% more than the average.

    • @chrisscerbo5731
      @chrisscerbo5731 Před 5 lety +28

      I remember that scene and think it was mess up but they were German and they were the enemy so o well its war they did worse to our guys surrendering but after this video I feel bad for them. all that I've learned about this war i forgot all about the some of the people that the germans forced in there ranks. @Jimmy the movie anthorpod great Czech war hero movie held out in that church for a month. and hit one of the highest ranking Nazi's. yeah great Czech heroes and story

    • @trains70
      @trains70 Před 5 lety +52

      I knew it wasn't German but the Czech girl I later dated pointed out they were Czech, not happily though.

    • @Dusan56
      @Dusan56 Před 5 lety +27

      Chris Scerbo Chris, you got so many things wrong. Czech did not sundered to Germany, but was forced to comply with Munich dictate, which was signed by Germany, France and England. So after that Germans created "protectorate" state in former Czechoslovakia. At that moment Slovakia created independent country and was never fully occupied by Germans. However there were Germans army in Slovakia. Especially after August 1944 when Slovak army upraised .... Also one of soldiers who killed Heindrich was Slovak not Czech. His name was Gabcik. Cheers

  • @michaeladolph7134
    @michaeladolph7134 Před 9 měsíci +5

    My grandfather (German Wehrmacht) fought in France against the French and he always told me how frightening it was and how scared all the "normal" soldiers were... He was a pow until around 4 years after the war in France.... Even so many years later he had tiers in his eyes when talking about ww2. It was horrible for both sides.

  • @larrysevigny589
    @larrysevigny589 Před 2 lety +46

    This movie had special meaning to me for many reasons. The one I keep thinking about is I was going through a very rough patch in my life and a really good friend came over and said he had a surprise for me. Knowing I’ve always been a bit of a history buff he (Ian Marston) took me to the show to see the movie for the first time. My yr long GF had moved out and I was in the dumps and Ian knew the movie was what I needed. It shocked me out of my slump and back into myself. I bring this up because Ian died of colon cancer about a yr later. He was in his 20s. It’s hard not to watch the movie and not think of my dear old friend.

  • @umpdaddy1
    @umpdaddy1 Před 4 lety +1503

    When I saw the movie when it first came out, there were old men in the audience that were crying. It was as moving a moment as I've ever had in my life.

    • @robertmaxwellbell9405
      @robertmaxwellbell9405 Před 4 lety +128

      Yep, I saw it in Florida as a kid. There is a large retirement community here obviously. The theatre about emptied out during the Normandy scene. They came back a few minutes later. I guess it was a "been there, done that" moment for them

    • @tucsonbandit
      @tucsonbandit Před 4 lety +80

      same. Saw it opening weekend and there were groups of older men wearing their hats that have what formation they served in during the war and they had tears in their eyes when I saw them leaving the theater and I heard at least one say he never thought he would ever see anything like that depicted on film.

    • @w3r0ification
      @w3r0ification Před 4 lety +2

      Bunch of sissy boys

    • @LexTalionis6
      @LexTalionis6 Před 4 lety +76

      @@w3r0ification alright tough guy I'm going to ask you a simple question. How would you react if you watched a movie and it made you relive some of your darkest memories? Memories that you never forget and haunt you every second of every day

    • @w3r0ification
      @w3r0ification Před 4 lety

      Si vis pacem, para bellum grow a pair

  • @StoneCanyonCreatives
    @StoneCanyonCreatives Před 4 lety +845

    I had no idea that those two who surrendered were Czech. It really adds another level to that moment. 10/10.

    • @jennifergruber3963
      @jennifergruber3963 Před 4 lety +39

      The part about conscripts was true; even Koreans were found in Normandy in Nazi uniforms.

    • @dawsonindustries
      @dawsonindustries Před 4 lety +40

      @@jennifergruber3963 german uniforms* they were wermecht troops not waffen ss

    • @xtzyshuadog
      @xtzyshuadog Před 4 lety +11

      Additionally, the Axis soldiers deployed were more in the 25-34 age range, while the Allied soldiers sent to Normandy were a bit younger than that. The Axis soldiers had older equipment in these beaches than in other places as well, owing to how few expected an Allied invasion here.

    • @Steez51
      @Steez51 Před 4 lety +12

      @@jennifergruber3963 I was just going to post that. Koreans, captured by Japanese, captured by Russians, captured by Germans and finally Americans. What a story they could tell.

    • @frodorob
      @frodorob Před 4 lety +23

      It was really obvious to me that they weren't speaking German (I speak French and some German, some Spanish) but beyond that I couldn't identify the language. I suspect that Spielberg wrote that scene with the expectation that most Americans would make the same realization, that it wasn't German. He overestimated us. Most Americans are too insular to bother learning any other languages, and it further contributes to our reputation as too prideful to consider ourselves part of the world. Our loss.

  • @JakeTrimble-bx3lx
    @JakeTrimble-bx3lx Před 10 měsíci +4

    I’ve seen loads of WWII documentaries and films, but this movie takes the cake.
    You see the story of battle unfold with characters that you may have only known for 2 minutes ripped away by machine gun or mortar fire. Screaming for their mother or refusing to move forward out of the realest fear they have ever felt.
    You see Americans who have just been through the horror of taking Omaha take that trauma out on those who were forced to fight against them.
    You see what it’s like to be suddenly pinned down by an enemy you can’t even see.
    You see the conditions some poor civilians were left in as fighting raged on around them.
    You see war. I wish more movies like this existed.

    • @JakeTrimble-bx3lx
      @JakeTrimble-bx3lx Před 10 měsíci

      Not to mention the scene with ryan’s mother. Even after seeing this movie at least 6 times, that scene is heart wrenching and I cry every time. *Knowing* that your worst fear as a parent has come true, and not knowing how bad has got to be torturous.

  • @hannekevankeulen494
    @hannekevankeulen494 Před rokem +19

    Many many years ago when I was still a teen, hurrying about my day and running into the grocery store, an elderly gentleman struck up a conversation with me and showed me the photo he took during D-Day. He was a photo journalist who was there to take pictures, and was in the middle of it. The photo he showed me was impactful - this film opened my eyes to how even more momentous that moment was - and how amazing it was for me to have the chance to meet that man and see his photo. My grandparents hide Jews, and my great-grandfather helped train English sailors to cross the channel (we're from the Netherlands). My family history couldn't have continued to me today if not for the valiant efforts of the British, Canadians, and Americans to free the occupied nations of Europe. Some of us will never forget.

  • @VolpeWhereAreYou
    @VolpeWhereAreYou Před 4 lety +4427

    I have been to Omaha and Utah beach many times. Each time I visit I never see the war vets get too close to the beach.

    • @dj62394
      @dj62394 Před 3 lety +455

      Was there yesterday, very true. You don’t see them walk the beach. I completely understand.

    • @matthewmatthew9485
      @matthewmatthew9485 Před 3 lety +85

      Which are the best months to go visit. I wanna go when weather is good stable.

    • @livethefuture2492
      @livethefuture2492 Před 3 lety +61

      @@matthewmatthew9485
      well obviously you cant go now...

    • @matthewmatthew9485
      @matthewmatthew9485 Před 3 lety +34

      @@livethefuture2492 why not pal? not sure the beaches will be closed lol.

    • @livethefuture2492
      @livethefuture2492 Před 3 lety +37

      @@matthewmatthew9485
      has the lockdown opened up in your country?
      if so which country are you from?

  • @Neo2266.
    @Neo2266. Před 4 lety +808

    Yeah that Czech scene made me drop my jaw, I am Czech and that just hit too damn close to home.
    The shock you experience when you understand what they're saying while you're watching the scene for the first time, and the fact that most people under youtube videos also can't distinguish German from Czech just gave me this feeling of despair that i can't really describe

    • @Neo2266.
      @Neo2266. Před 4 lety +9

      Digital Dynamics Software
      What? No! What the hell’s with you? I was describing how this makes you feel

    • @Neo2266.
      @Neo2266. Před 4 lety +13

      Digital Dynamics Software
      And there’s other people, people that don’t even know czech exists, people that wouldn’t know a slavic language from a germanic language

    • @user-sx4yu3nw4j
      @user-sx4yu3nw4j Před 4 lety +26

      My German language skills are basic at best, and my Slavic language skills are even worse... but I did recognize it as *not* German; I just couldn’t put a finger on exactly what I was hearing.
      I’ve had the good fortune of visiting your beautiful country multiple times; Česky Krumlov, Pilsen, Chodová Planá, and of course Praha; and I look forward to returning again.
      Na zdraví! 🇨🇿

    • @wildgazer3784
      @wildgazer3784 Před 4 lety +10

      When they spoke I knew it wasn't German at least.

    • @90enemies
      @90enemies Před 4 lety +10

      @CegeshI don't understand what you're saying but hell yeah everyone do the freak! sounds pretty fucking rad for a dance move ain't it

  • @anthonymarinucci325
    @anthonymarinucci325 Před rokem +20

    As a war veteran, i will say... most people have no idea what it takes, the sacrifices, the toll... it takes everything. And this is a beautiful tribute

  • @opticfloyyyd
    @opticfloyyyd Před 2 měsíci +3

    My grandfather was in Vietnam, even so, he told me he can’t watch Saving Private Ryan due to the sounds, mostly the bullets and screaming.
    My great grandfather landed on Normandy.I never met him, of course. But he left notes and writing to all of his descendants. I read it every time I can. The sheer emotion I get from seeing his handwriting falter and mess up as he writes amazes me. These men are heroes and were a different breed than me.
    29th infantry
    23rd infantry

  • @karlclarke
    @karlclarke Před 4 lety +1081

    my Grandad survived the war but strangely it did take his life later, as he eventually died from gangrene in 1975 he got the gangrene from shrapnel from the war decades before in WW2, he was a brave little Scotsman

    • @Bfizze
      @Bfizze Před 4 lety

      What's gangrene

    • @petahthegregwaa6480
      @petahthegregwaa6480 Před 4 lety +58

      Glentoran fans it’s an infection that causes necrosis, the tissue begins to die and rot, it’s not pretty at all. It’s what you get tetanus shots for. To prevent it.

    • @Lucy_Ferrr
      @Lucy_Ferrr Před 4 lety +6

      @@petahthegregwaa6480 some how you managed to be even more confusing in your explaination

    • @sirgalahad1376
      @sirgalahad1376 Před 4 lety +14

      How did he die from gangrene in 1975 from a wound sustained in 1945?!

    • @petahthegregwaa6480
      @petahthegregwaa6480 Před 4 lety +13

      The Amazing Question that’s an amazing question

  • @angeladaley
    @angeladaley Před 4 lety +564

    My Great Uncle was there, he actually had to walk out of the beach scene because it was so accurate. His only criticism was you couldn't see shit because there was so much smoke and debris in the air. But, despite his flashbacks he was honored that they did their best to show the horror of that day.

    • @swifty8224
      @swifty8224 Před 4 lety +17

      Angela Daley my great grandad was in the navy during the war but died when I was young and I didnt know he was a soldier until I was 11 I wish he was still alive I want to sit and talk with him about his experience during the war

    • @samtownend6744
      @samtownend6744 Před 4 lety +19

      @@swifty8224 I think many veterans of World War 2 don't like to talk about what happened, my grandfather certainly didn't

    • @patrickohare3677
      @patrickohare3677 Před 4 lety +15

      I work in the care home where many of the residents took part in WW2 in some way. A couple are even old enough to remember parts of WW1. some of the stories I hear are incredible! I've spoken to Navy vets who were in the pacific, D-Day vets, Ex pilots and its a privilege to hear their experiences.

    • @jasminet1981
      @jasminet1981 Před 4 lety +1

      Patrick O'Hare Do you have something I can contact you on?

    • @JP-ml1xe
      @JP-ml1xe Před 4 lety +3

      My grandfather flew a B-24 Liberator Bomber. I remember some planes were touring and he took me to see it when they got close to where we lived, I was maybe 9 or 10 yrs old. I remember touring the plane but I can't really remember any of his stories. He died when I was 13 and I'm 30 now. I wish I had listened so much more.

  • @tescomealdeal9901
    @tescomealdeal9901 Před 2 lety +18

    I remember watching this as a young boy with my Great Granddad, he told me before he died just a few years ago that he got up and left when the DDay section occurred because, despite the fact that Sword was not as bloody as Utah, his American Friends told him in brutal detail and said that he was lucky to be British on that day.
    Rest in Peace to all men that fought on that day, on that beach.

  • @fdvdsfk
    @fdvdsfk Před 11 měsíci +4

    Watching this on June 6, 2023. The reality of D-Day and this war will never be forgotten. Appropriate thanks for the men who served could never be applied.

  • @Evanarix
    @Evanarix Před 4 lety +1887

    The scene when the mother sees the car coming and comes outside, her legs shake and she slowly kneels on the floor that breaks me every single time.

    • @hddun
      @hddun Před 4 lety +60

      Very sad. Even to lose one young child in any situation is bad enough but to lose all your sons as many families did in WW2. One of the worst aspects of WW2 dead was the notifications that went out by Telegram...that is just too terrible...

    • @kw0s
      @kw0s Před 4 lety +3

      The mother part looks good. However, what is the chance of a camera that was there? Plus sound-man? Proper light, proper focus? Maybe a director? Good acting = staged.

    • @antonioricci5465
      @antonioricci5465 Před 4 lety +84

      kw0s No shit it’s a movie

    • @hddun
      @hddun Před 4 lety +2

      ​@@antonioricci5465 Hey, it made KwOs cry---she should have gotten an Academy Award for her acting as the distraugh Mother...LOL!

    • @bitterbutter1000
      @bitterbutter1000 Před 4 lety +13

      I was on Omaha Beach in 44. It was hard watching my men getting chewed up and spat out by the Germans.... But we knew we had to fight on for Stalin.

  • @paulmakinson1965
    @paulmakinson1965 Před 4 lety +1140

    I grew up in Lebanon during the civil war. On one occasion, I was fired at with a Dushka machine gun (12.7 mm). I managed to run and hide behind a stone wall, some people around me got hit and were shredded. When I saw the scene in "saving private Ryan" where they are fired at as they are trying to get off the landing crafts, I had a flash back of that incident in Lebanon. The film rendered perfectly the sound of the heavy bullets flying, the sound they make when they hit something, the feeling of helplessness. I wanted to throw up.

    • @jimijimo3289
      @jimijimo3289 Před 4 lety +137

      I hope you're doing well friend, I can't imagine the weight of the trauma you have to carry.

    • @liamkennedy7498
      @liamkennedy7498 Před 4 lety +7

      MAD LAD

    • @katieann4242
      @katieann4242 Před 4 lety +7

      THE CIVIL WAR!!!! wow, I hope your life has been long and prosperous.

    • @sirboomsalot4902
      @sirboomsalot4902 Před 4 lety +20

      Katie Ann Just to be sure you are being sarcastic, right?

    • @katieann4242
      @katieann4242 Před 4 lety +4

      @@sirboomsalot4902 No he literally said he grew up during the civil war how am I being sarcastic.

  • @DingoNovember
    @DingoNovember Před 3 měsíci +3

    They earned the title “American greatest generation”. Their stories inspired many generations and many to come, not only American but the whole world

  • @yeniczek
    @yeniczek Před 11 měsíci +14

    BTW, one of the Czech soldiers is played by a well-known Czech actor and stuntman, Martin Hub. He also appeared in Titanic and more :)

  • @personanongrata7862
    @personanongrata7862 Před 3 lety +1193

    I remember watching this movie as a kid. I felt the horror. I was afraid of death.
    .
    War is about old men talking, and young men dying.

    • @michaelsimpson3574
      @michaelsimpson3574 Před 3 lety +46

      Or, poor people killing other poor people to make rich people richer

    • @livethefuture2492
      @livethefuture2492 Před 3 lety +17

      watching this movie, and many other war movies, and just learning about history in general, rather made me realize the Importance of life, and living one's life to its fullest. as captain miller said 'earn this'.
      i would say, not to be afraid of death, but rather take this as inspiration to do something meaningful in your life, and hopefully do some good in the world. cuz after all that's all that matters in the end.

    • @santaboy4818
      @santaboy4818 Před 3 lety +2

      I've seen this as a kid too although I wasn't scared watching this as I should be, I've watched many war movies with gritty bloody scenes especially this one yet none of that gore scare me, but the only thing that scares me in movies are horror ones
      In fact, one horror scene is enough to scare me so much I refused to continue watching any horror movie but not war movies.

    • @muertolamento
      @muertolamento Před 2 lety +11

      "War is when the young and stupid are tricked by the old and bitter into killing each other."

    • @gaylebordeaux7632
      @gaylebordeaux7632 Před 2 lety +2

      @@muertolamento remove the stupid part……show respect nothing more!

  • @mattmobily1975
    @mattmobily1975 Před 4 lety +722

    I'll never forget my grandfather having to leave the theater during the opening scene.

    • @garywillingham3644
      @garywillingham3644 Před 3 lety +40

      This may be stupid to ask but i Presume it was to difficult for him to watch I wasnt even there and it was hard to watch

    • @joelruizrascon1714
      @joelruizrascon1714 Před 3 lety +15

      I cryed at the beggining It sucks when you understand the meaning nd the purpose of these poor people .. true meaning of a heroe to give their life in order to have peace ..

    • @Aureus_
      @Aureus_ Před 3 lety +3

      @@joelruizrascon1714 It hurts to see men got through such pain

    • @florianmaschke269
      @florianmaschke269 Před 3 lety +14

      My grandfather fought for over three years on the eastern front. He never spoke about the war. It was tabu to even bring it on. He died in 1999 at the age of 91 years. He was a Anti-Tank-Gunnery NCO ( I can't translate it otherwise...) and destroyed russian tanks by the dozens. His war journal was filled with grief, anger and hopelessness. He described the horrors of the war. The burning tanks, the screams,the cold, the smell everything. It must have been horribile.
      I was a soldier myself and was stationed in former yugoslavia for six months. I served as a medic and had no combat duty. I consider myself lucky and cannot grasp the horrors which the soldiers back than went through. German, American, French, British etc.. it doesn't matter. War is terrible. Let us hope that mankind will someday evolve from this nonsense.

    • @Aureus_
      @Aureus_ Před 3 lety +4

      @@florianmaschke269 I agree
      War is terrible
      Respect to your grandfather

  • @beesechurger929
    @beesechurger929 Před 10 měsíci +3

    My grandfather fled Prague as a young man during the Nazi occupation. Watching the scene of the conscripted Czech men makes me wonder what would have happened to him had he not escaped to Australia. Our family possibly wouldn't even exist. Crazy to think of. Great video!

  • @jurtra9090
    @jurtra9090 Před rokem +9

    RIP to Tom Sizemore. Thanks for all of your movies and performances.

  • @alec4672
    @alec4672 Před 3 lety +399

    I think an old veteran put it best one time in an interview "the plot isn't true, but the stories sure are"

  • @ksav4330
    @ksav4330 Před 3 lety +2033

    They made us watch this film in history class. Must've been like 12-13 years old. Shit was horrific. One kid passed out and a couple of others cried

    • @jayden8636
      @jayden8636 Před 3 lety +186

      The scene with the guy that’s holding his guts in was terrible for me lol

    • @nicculessman4069
      @nicculessman4069 Před 3 lety +105

      WashYourHands yeah, when I was around 10 I came across the scene and the guy with his entrails calling for him Mum freaked me out. Could not get it off my mind

    • @ralof2777
      @ralof2777 Před 3 lety +44

      nicculess man same except I was way maybe 6 or 7. I was on CZcams looking at Ww2 vids and then I saw the beach clip. I almost vomited when I saw the guy calling for his mom

    • @lieshtmeiser5542
      @lieshtmeiser5542 Před 3 lety +28

      "They made us watch this film in history class. "
      Haha...fail.

    • @lieshtmeiser5542
      @lieshtmeiser5542 Před 3 lety +3

      @kronk " didn’t bat an eye"
      Didnt get a bit teary when Wade cried for mumma?

  • @Enorbs96
    @Enorbs96 Před 2 lety +37

    The scene that stuck with me as a kid was the stabbing scene. The way the knife is driven in slow is so visceral and I could feel the sense of helpless horror wash over me. Absolutely terrifying way to die.

  • @DingusBellWingus
    @DingusBellWingus Před 2 lety +34

    Jackson the sniper was using a 30.06 M1903A1 which can shoot roughly 600 yards with only needing to aim barely any higher. So I am pretty sure he could do that.

    • @BenJamin-rt7ui
      @BenJamin-rt7ui Před rokem +5

      Drops over 90 inches at 600 yards.

    • @mnxs
      @mnxs Před 10 měsíci +2

      ​@@BenJamin-rt7uisorry, I'm neither a shooter nor particularly knowledgeable about ballistics, but that sounds like a fairly flat trajectory to me?

    • @crunch.dot.73
      @crunch.dot.73 Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@@mnxsthat is flat, Idk what he is on about

    • @jimhager1897
      @jimhager1897 Před 9 měsíci +1

      The question is whether its flat enough to pass through a scope that's ~1" wide. I know its absolutely possible at various distances and elevation differences but still very unlikely.

    • @Kurt_Steiner
      @Kurt_Steiner Před 9 měsíci

      Absolute rubbish....he's even struggling with the parallex...and the sights he used wasn't even the proper sights used for that gun...

  • @themillenial28
    @themillenial28 Před 3 lety +548

    The subtle way how captain miller whispers “Earn this” in Ryan’s ear gets me everytime

    • @ItsameAlex
      @ItsameAlex Před 3 lety +5

      what does he mean

    • @ryanalving3785
      @ryanalving3785 Před 3 lety +79

      @@ItsameAlex
      He means to live a life that is worth the cost payed to save it, in bodies and blood.

    • @themillenial28
      @themillenial28 Před 3 lety +56

      @@ItsameAlex Captain Miller wants to remind Ryan that he and other soldiers sacrificed their lives just to save him and everyday he wakes up he must live his life to the fullest, like he gotta earn everyday he lives. That’s what I think he meant. Pardon for my incorrect English if any.

    • @ItsameAlex
      @ItsameAlex Před 3 lety +6

      @@themillenial28 thanks a lot guys

    • @webleypug
      @webleypug Před 3 lety +10

      kunal kaklij - For years I'd always wondered what Miller whispered (didn't get a computer 'till 2012). But yeah, it's pretty profound. I think your interpretation & reply to @itsamealex was spot-on.

  • @HumanScourgeYT
    @HumanScourgeYT Před 4 lety +1880

    I have so much respect for the soldiers who fought in this. My great grandfather landed in Normandy after the invasion and was caught and imprisoned by the Germans while trying to liberate France after catching grenade shrapnel in his back. He was imprisoned in a German PoW camp named Oslag-6. He was one of the few in his group to survive. He ate things like grass soup and rats. Went into the Army weighing 195 lbs, and came back weighing only 75 lbs. I cannot possibly imagine the suffering he felt as his comrades were executed in front of him. He survived though, made it home and met my great grandmother and went on to have 8 children, 7 boys and one girl, who was my grandmother. He had a long career working with Crouse-Hinds in Syracuse, NY. All in all, he was awarded 2 Purple Hearts as well as Marksmanship medals for his combat group. In the late 80s, he developed spider cancer due to the metal stuck in his body. He passed away a few years before I was born, and not a single week goes by where I do not wish I could have met him. With the state of our nation today, I often think about how angry he would be to see what’s going on, after sacrificing so much. I will never allow this mans story to not be told as long as I am still alive. His name was Clifford Brown Sr. and he will always have my honor and respect.

    • @davids1854
      @davids1854 Před 4 lety +30

      Rip

    • @jimjohnston5092
      @jimjohnston5092 Před 4 lety +49

      Dan, I had two uncles in WW2 - One fought in Europe, the other did the island hopping in the Pacific. They both came back, married, had a family (my cousins) and got on with their lives. I know now that they suffered from PTSD, but back then, they knew little about it (It was called battle fatigue or shell shock) Yet, they were men who were cut from a different cloth. Somehow they found a way to get through it and lived normal, productive lives. So, how do I know it was PTSD? Because neither of them would speak of their time in the war - EVER. They put it behind them. I can only suppose that they both considered that they did what had to be done - and they did it. It was war and they did their part in helping to bring it to end. And, no, they too would not be happy about the state of our nation today.

    • @HumanScourgeYT
      @HumanScourgeYT Před 4 lety +33

      Jim Johnston thank you for sharing. I asked my Aunts and Unclesif my great grandfather ever talked about his experiences, and his story is much the same, he never did much until his later years in life. I agree with you, these men were cut from a different cloth. I think that’s why I admire my great grandfather’s story so much, because he had a completely different mindset due to his experiences than I do because of mine. I never went through the kinds of horrors your uncles or my great grandfather went through, yet they were able to adjust and have a career and support their families. I am a single 31 year old white male with no children or spouse, and I have job hopped my entire life. What is my excuse? I have none, yet I feel completely unable to do the kinds of things he was able to achieve. Now, this doesn’t mean I am unhappy about my situation, as I am a musician and music is my passion, and I don’t see the point in marriage or having children in this day and age, yet I still feel a sadness because I am denying that almost primal urge to start a family. Geez, I may have gone onto a tangent here but the point is, his experiences and his story mean a lot to me, and despite his suffering and most likely PTSD due to his experiences, I can’t help but admire the man and others like him as an example of what I wan idealistically. However, we all know that having classic ideals in 2019 is almost a sentence for disappointment. I don’t know what I am trying to say here.... Guess I just wish I knew that my life mattered. I have never had a great cause to contribute to. I have never felt as if I am truly a part of this world, when that is all I desire.

    • @jimjohnston5092
      @jimjohnston5092 Před 4 lety +6

      @@HumanScourgeYT I'm going to reply to what you've said here, but not right away. I'm going to give it some thought. You will hear from me.

    • @HumanScourgeYT
      @HumanScourgeYT Před 4 lety +2

      @@jimjohnston5092 i patiently await your response

  • @HadToChangeMyName_YoutubeSucks
    @HadToChangeMyName_YoutubeSucks Před 10 měsíci +12

    A ship was named The Sullivans for those brothers, it launched in 1943, she earned nine battle stars in World War II and another two more during the Korean War. She was recently in the news when as a museum ship her hull was breached and she partially sank. Donations would be appreciated.

  • @clifton4566
    @clifton4566 Před rokem +3

    13:35 Thanks for pointing that out. The fact that they included that detail and never addressed it makes it even better.

  • @jeremyletourneau9647
    @jeremyletourneau9647 Před 5 lety +2378

    And this lost the Oscar to Shakespeare In Love?! This is why I never paid any attention to the awards again after that

    • @mena94x3
      @mena94x3 Před 5 lety +54

      Preach.

    • @ryansmith406
      @ryansmith406 Před 5 lety +10

      Words of truth

    • @placeholder8768
      @placeholder8768 Před 5 lety +9

      ShotgunShell Why do you think that?

    • @placeholder8768
      @placeholder8768 Před 5 lety +54

      ShotgunShell so, basically you believe that the movie is horrible just because of a few minor inconveniences and your political opinion, completely ignoring the fact that the movie is a brilliant movie, all history and politics aside?

    • @HyphyJuice916
      @HyphyJuice916 Před 5 lety +53

      @ShotgunShell German soldiers did have shaved heads. Whether is was required or not, I don't know but being a skinhead had nothing to do with this though. I've seen pictures of my great grandpa in uniform and his head was shaved as a German soldier. Not sure how you managed to bring skinheads into this movie since they didn't even exist back then. To say this movie is shit really makes it hard to take anything you say seriously since this is considered one of the greatest war movies ever made. Veterans of WW2 praised this movie and many even said it's the closest representation to their experience of the war.

  • @basementdwellercosplay
    @basementdwellercosplay Před 2 lety +1008

    I remember watching the Czech soldiers scene with my family. I speak German so when it happened my sister asked,"Was that what they said". I couldn't understand a word so I just replied," I don't think they were really speaking german". I thought they were speaking fake German or a different language, but what they actually said fits so much better and is an extra touch of history.

    • @JJ_5289
      @JJ_5289 Před rokem

      Hitler was running out of actual german soldiers by this time in the war. He took soldiers from every country they conquered

    • @seronymus
      @seronymus Před 11 měsíci +9

      Are you really a basement dwelling cosplayer

    • @seronymus
      @seronymus Před 11 měsíci +4

      @Him it's a simple question and, regardless, my waifu is Tomoko Kuroki.

    • @GriffinatorOriginal
      @GriffinatorOriginal Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@seronymus Honestly pretty good choice.

    • @seronymus
      @seronymus Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@GriffinatorOriginal Thank you very much - I'm also fond of Hex Maniac (Tomoko but thicc), Kikuri from Bocchi the Rock, Misato from NGE, Rin and Mama Raikou and Mordred and JInako from Fate, Darjeeling from Girls und Panzer, most of the Chainsaw Man girls, a lot of girls from gacha like Girls Frontline and Blue Archive and Kantai Collection, the girl from Netoge, Annie from AoT, vampire girl from Call of the Night, and many many more! I have wide taste with common themes haha

  • @Gamble661
    @Gamble661 Před 2 lety +17

    Our neighbor when I was growing up, who lived across the street from me almost my entire life, was at Omaha Beach on D-day, first wave in. I never even knew that until he was in his 80's because he never mentioned that he was even in the war until a British friend of my mothers was visiting and my mom mentioned that he was a WWII vet. The two of them talked for hours.
    My neighbor passed away just this past year so he did have the opportunity to see Saving Private Ryan. When I asked him if the landing sequence was accurate he said pretty much, except that in reality it was much worse! Our British friend passed away five years ago; The Greatest Generation, not many of them left now.

  • @RunItsTheCat
    @RunItsTheCat Před 2 lety +50

    10:15 To be fair to the movie, if the enemy sniper was at 450 yards and also aiming towards Jackson, then his scope would also be pointing up at a similar angle as the bullet's downward descent.

    • @foamfpsguy6316
      @foamfpsguy6316 Před 2 lety +4

      Oh good point, that makes it entirely plausable!

    • @foamfpsguy6316
      @foamfpsguy6316 Před 2 lety +3

      Oh good point, that makes it entirely plausable!

    • @thepodcastcrew1113
      @thepodcastcrew1113 Před 2 lety

      Didn't think about that fact

    • @chicdaddy1492
      @chicdaddy1492 Před 2 lety +4

      didn't the marine sniper carlos hathcock famously make that shot in real life during the vietnam war? i don't know the distances though

    • @david-468
      @david-468 Před rokem +1

      @@chicdaddy1492 if that’s “white feather” yes he did, I believe it was only 200 yards but still an incredible shot

  • @Darthoblivion24
    @Darthoblivion24 Před 3 lety +1191

    My Grandma knew the Sullivan brothers as children and she was devastated when she heard they died, I don't blame her, hearing that five of your childhood friends were gone...

    • @Darthoblivion24
      @Darthoblivion24 Před 3 lety +25

      Oh I'm well aware, I just had to comment about how my Grandma knew them hahahaaha.....

    • @MrKirbanator
      @MrKirbanator Před 3 lety +10

      @@Darthoblivion24 They were from Waterloo Iowa, my home state here.

    • @Darthoblivion24
      @Darthoblivion24 Před 3 lety +19

      @@MrKirbanator Yes, so was my Grandma, that's kinda why I made the comment.

    • @carlosig1879
      @carlosig1879 Před 2 lety +4

      aw man that sucks 😦

    • @rickyhargenrader5997
      @rickyhargenrader5997 Před 2 lety +16

      I go to school with a guy who’s related to them he told us in class he had a movie named after some of his relatives named “the fighting Sullivans” I didn’t realize it was of historical importance.

  • @MrMairu555
    @MrMairu555 Před 5 lety +715

    My [British] grandfather went ashore on Sword Beach, at Arrowmanches. My father took him to see the movie, and said he didn't watch the first 10 minutes, but just closed his eyes and listened. He said it's the first time he'd ever seen him cry.
    I proudly visited Normandy with him several times before he passed away, and have the highest respect for all of the Allied servicemen regardless of nation. It's so sad that many like to bicker about "who saved who's ass", rather than appreciate what people like my grandfather stood up for. I imagine most have never even spoken to a veteran of any conflict, let alone visited the battlefields, and cannot imagine the current generation ever standing up the way they did! Without exception, every serviceman I have spoken to has had nothing but respect for other service personnel, and rather than having a pissing contest about it all, we should respect them all too.

    • @rovanthur5719
      @rovanthur5719 Před 5 lety +53

      I always see history portraid by the allies seeing them as the good guys everytime never see what the soldiers of the Wehrmacht went through , my great grand father died in france 1940 i only know him by what my grandmother told me and by a bronze placket in a town in austria, and never gets one soldier of the Wehrmacht portraid as a person who just wanted home , who just wanted to see their family again always just as nazi scum.

    • @michaellipham6344
      @michaellipham6344 Před 5 lety

      just stop writing long comments it's CZcams cares about you

    • @GeorgiaBoy1961
      @GeorgiaBoy1961 Před 5 lety +17

      I had an experience not unlike yours. When I saw "Saving Private Ryan," there were a few elderly gentlemen in attendance who were obviously very moved by the film, especially the first ten minutes or so of the movie. My respect for those men, the ones who were there, knows no bounds.

    • @snarfmcgillicutty2616
      @snarfmcgillicutty2616 Před 5 lety +12

      You're right. The allies did much together, not alone.

    • @benjamindunne8132
      @benjamindunne8132 Před 5 lety +20

      @@rovanthur5719 That's a sad truth of soldiers who fought on the wrong side. The Nazis were pure evil, the SS were pure evil that's pretty clear. But the German squaddie/pilot/tank crew? No different from their British/French/Canadian/American counterparts.

  • @Gunbudder
    @Gunbudder Před 2 lety +10

    My friend is a film maker and has a bunch of props from Saving Private Ryan. A TON of rubber rifles and other generic WWII props were made for this movie, and they basically went into circulation to be used in various other WWII movies or documentaries. It's pretty fun to play around with the rubber rifles used during filming

  • @viabum
    @viabum Před 2 lety +3

    I just had the most unholy revelation today. Robert Rodat, the original screenwriter of Saving Private Ryan, is also the screenwriter of Mel Gibson's The Patriot. I unearthed a 1997 dated draft of Saving Private Ryan a couple of years ago, and oh boy, was it full of trite gungho shenanigans and cheesy wise-cracking New Yorker dialogue. I can only imagine Spielberg, Hanks, and others deserve the praise for what makes this film stand head and shoulders above the rest.
    Credit where credit's due, I think Rodat came up with the bobbing in and out of the water coming up the beach from the Higgins boats, and I gotta admit, that's some of the most immersive filmmaking I've seen.
    I love this channel and look forward to every new upload. Keep up the excellent work.

    • @imw4497
      @imw4497 Před 2 lety +1

      I read that Spielberg originally intended the movie to be very action-y similar to something like Indiana Jones, but after interviewing ww2 veterans, he found out that it would be inappropriate.

  • @omarvelez3867
    @omarvelez3867 Před 7 lety +179

    Just to think, all Eisenhower has to say was "Martha!!!" And Hitler would have been like "Why did you say that name?!?!?" And WWII would have ended much differently!

    • @mic7able
      @mic7able Před 7 lety +9

      He should've said 'Two balls'! Then Hitler would've said "I used to have two balls also...." Then they'd have fucked. Or something. Probably.

    • @mic7able
      @mic7able Před 7 lety

      +Yo Dav yeah... Like I say "I used to have....."

    • @888nevik
      @888nevik Před 7 lety

      +Mick G. no he never had two balls

    • @ellisthomson4692
      @ellisthomson4692 Před 7 lety

      +888nivek When he fought in WW1 he got shot in those parts

    • @psuedosect9287
      @psuedosect9287 Před 7 lety +4

      +888nivek It's a theory it hasn't been proven since no one has gone digging in hitlers pants recently

  • @kingzriot976
    @kingzriot976 Před 5 lety +2972

    All of a sudden everyone in the comments is a professional sniper

    • @Chromefall
      @Chromefall Před 5 lety +124

      Sniping is a good job, mate
      -TF2 Sniper

    • @xvander1
      @xvander1 Před 5 lety +69

      you dont actually need to know ANYTHING about being a sniper to know how physics work and mathematical problem solving. The shot taken is not 'impossible' but also not possible.. Doesnt make sense, but it would not come down to the individuals skill cap, but more of pure 100% LUCK. LIke Chris Kyle's longshot. He even admitted he did not intend to hit a target, but more of was just playing around and sent out a round, that just happened to hit! it was a freak of nature kinda thing.

    • @ethanelephants4740
      @ethanelephants4740 Před 5 lety +34

      X-Cal you don’t even have to know about physics, every marine know that this shot is possible because it has already been done. No expertise required or experimentation is needed.

    • @migmadmarine
      @migmadmarine Před 5 lety +1

      yep,opinions are like bungholes..

    • @mojorizen7
      @mojorizen7 Před 5 lety +3

      Yeah this kind of INTERNET material always attracts the smartest guy in the room types. Its as funny as it is nauseating.

  • @docsmodels5470
    @docsmodels5470 Před 2 lety +10

    One other thing to note, there's a scene early on in the beach landing where medics are treating wounded. One medic catches a round in his canteen. If you pay attention he is immediately pulling out a bandage for himself, as the water running from the hole in the canteen turns to blood from his wound behind it

  • @tamararutland-mills9530
    @tamararutland-mills9530 Před rokem +19

    Saving Private Ryan does a great job in portraying the real soldiers and conditions of WW2. I Thank God for all these brave soldiers (in real life of course). We are enjoying the freedoms that they died trying to provide- the millions of unknown allied soldiers. Thank you with all of my heart. May your reward be great in heaven.

  • @nomadequipment2177
    @nomadequipment2177 Před 4 lety +1449

    And yesterday in a coffee shop I heard some woman say "who cares about history?"😖

    • @TheThinkTanksKid
      @TheThinkTanksKid Před 4 lety +177

      You can't help those who choose to stay ignorant.

    • @thomaschia2261
      @thomaschia2261 Před 4 lety +112

      "Ernie prepares to commit a hate crime"

    • @gianlozano102
      @gianlozano102 Před 4 lety +90

      Somebody send her to 1944 Normandy and ask her again.

    • @squidface4381
      @squidface4381 Před 4 lety +63

      She probably has the REAL hardest job ever.... being a mom.

    • @danstewart42
      @danstewart42 Před 4 lety +22

      what a moron

  • @miaouew
    @miaouew Před 4 lety +1106

    And the award for ACTOR PLAYING HITLER WHO LOOKS THE LEAST LIKE HITLER goes to...the dude from this video.

    • @theyoutubeguy1
      @theyoutubeguy1 Před 4 lety +18

      Exactly. Like wtf was that?

    • @caneface87
      @caneface87 Před 4 lety +88

      Introducing: Randy Hitler, Adolf’s awkward little brother!

    • @shishirgurung4427
      @shishirgurung4427 Před 4 lety +6

      go watch Kill Hitler on Netflix. there's a real contender there

    • @krisfrederick5001
      @krisfrederick5001 Před 4 lety +37

      Watch Downfall if you haven't heard of it. Holy Shit, you forget you're watching a movie and not in the bunker. It's actually done by the Germans too, which is kind of shocking and rare. So deal with the subtitles.

    • @RB-nt6zx
      @RB-nt6zx Před 4 lety +50

      @@krisfrederick5001 Haha, I feel like every second german film is about World War 2. The actor Bruno Ganz did however recieve heavy criticism for depicting Hitler as a human and not a monster. He and the director were certain, that if we forget that Hitler was a human, we don't expect that any other human could commit such atrocities again - and are in danger of repeating the past.

  • @johnsteele2986
    @johnsteele2986 Před 2 lety +35

    Fritz Niland was NOT sent straight home, he fought through the rest of the Normandy campaign and returned to England with his unit.
    He chuted up for at least one more of the cancelled missions before Market Garden before the army finally got around to sending him home.
    There is a photograph of him geared up for this cancelled jump.
    Mark Bando has written extensively about this in his 101st Airborne in Normandy book.

  • @derekchin6242
    @derekchin6242 Před rokem +4

    I love this movie. The last bit at the cemetery makes me tear up every single time "Tell me I've led a good life...tell me I'm a good man", and I've seen the film at least 5 or 6 times. The Greatest Generation.

  • @DIAZ702
    @DIAZ702 Před 3 lety +682

    “Please don’t shoot me! I am not German, I am Czech, I didn’t kill anyone! I am Czech!" 😢 what he say... what he say...

  • @Imtavin15
    @Imtavin15 Před 4 lety +459

    It's very rarely mentioned that these heros that landed on the beaches had two choices, win or die. There was no evacuation plan in place or even possible in the scenario. Crazy brave if you ask me.

    • @jjrj8568
      @jjrj8568 Před 4 lety +20

      it was a brilliant plan to begin with and a masterpiece of logistics and mass-coordination. Of course there were going to be casualties, but securing the beaches in less than 12 hours was expected. Getting to Caen was the hard part.

    • @Redbird-dh7mu
      @Redbird-dh7mu Před 4 lety +19

      JJRJ 85 it was always going to be a risky plan, in fact, I would say it was a horrible situation with a great plan and great execution. A lot went into D-Day, counter intelligence, planning, logistics, coordination, and more all had little room for error. It is unfortunate though, because no matter how great the plan was, it still couldn’t avoid running into machine gun fire.

    • @jjrj8568
      @jjrj8568 Před 4 lety +10

      @@Redbird-dh7mu yes, some parts of it still reeked of WW1; i will never understand why the navy didn't obliterate the bunkers at the beaches; word is out they wanted them intact for the allied troops (to face german counter-attacks, which happened).
      Also, Normandy was less fortified than the calais-dunkirk areas; other than Omaha, casualties were "tolerable" (high command thinking), and the work of the 101 behind enemy lines was priceless. There were far more casualties in the push towards Caen, and then at Holland, the Ardennes or at Lorraine, or northern Italy, which the Allies never liberated.

    • @hddun
      @hddun Před 4 lety +2

      Yes Sloan. My dad was US Navy--Pacific War. At Iwo Jima he shuttled men, supplies, ammo, and vehicles up to the beaches which were under heavy cannon fire for over 4 days. And to make for huge PTSD--he had to bring the wounded back to a hospital ship. No protocol, the wounded were quickly loaded any which way to get them out and my Dad's boat away...

    • @rodafowa1279
      @rodafowa1279 Před 4 lety +3

      @@jjrj8568 They did bomb/shell the beach fortifications before the landings. The bombs landed too far inland. The ships couldn't get too close, for risk of running aground and being hit by artillery. Same thing happened in the Pacific. Only difference there was the Japanese had dug tunnels and made bases inside of mountains to avoid the bombings/shellings.

  • @manzell
    @manzell Před rokem +11

    The only thing that kind of annoys me is the compression of beach space at Normandy. It's depicted that the machine guns are right on top of the landing craft to the point where even attempting to land would be utter madness, when it was really 200-600 yards away.

    • @nelsonwilliams6006
      @nelsonwilliams6006 Před 9 měsíci

      Bro thats what i was saying to myself. Like they were literally too close to miss why would America even try to do it. Didn’t know they were actually way farther away

  • @TXCryptic
    @TXCryptic Před rokem +7

    It truly brings tears to my eyes when history is told in such a way. To know exactly how much each of these men gave, and how the gave their lives. How it makes them more than just numbers on paper or dots on maps. War is hell.

  • @ayrton56612
    @ayrton56612 Před 4 lety +501

    In that year, Saving Private Ryan, The Thin Red Line and Life is Beatiful all lost the oscars best picture award to Shakespeare in love. Just let that sink in. Original movies like the Truman Show and American History x were not even nominated.

    • @Naita2183
      @Naita2183 Před 4 lety +75

      You can thank Harvey Weinstein for that

    • @___axg96___63
      @___axg96___63 Před 4 lety +35

      Then again, how many other films were tossed aside for some Hollywood nonsense?

    • @bentline
      @bentline Před 4 lety +49

      "Tale about a fictional relationship between William Shakespeare and a young woman who poses as a man in order to star in one of the writer's plays." Feminism + Transgender + Jewish female in lead role = LGBTQ wet dream.

    • @a.hollins8691
      @a.hollins8691 Před 4 lety +12

      Shakespeare in Love is a goddamn masterpiece you troglodyte.

    • @bentline
      @bentline Před 4 lety +10

      @@a.hollins8691 love your response. 😂

  • @thegman7523
    @thegman7523 Před 3 lety +363

    The guy calling for momma while holding his entrails gets me every time! :(

  • @ProudGirlDadX2
    @ProudGirlDadX2 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Just seeing these clips gives me chills and goosebumps. My grandfather fought in WW2 , my father in Vietnam and myself in the Iraq/Afghanistan conflict. It would be ludicrous if I even acted like I could ever be half the man that either of them were. But they never held that against me

  • @theworstactionhero9186
    @theworstactionhero9186 Před rokem +9

    I remember having this movie on VHS when I was a kid and the time it took to rewind it was unreal

    • @tmnt10000
      @tmnt10000 Před 8 měsíci +2

      What other format would you have it in when it came out?
      DVD's didn't come out and/or get popular til a couple years later

  • @TheBeatKeeper
    @TheBeatKeeper Před 7 lety +110

    13:33 : Wow... Spielberg left that in there without letting the audience know. How interesting.

  • @natanl1567
    @natanl1567 Před 7 lety +2502

    Aww... one of the most capable? You flatter me dear sir.

    • @daveromaine5655
      @daveromaine5655 Před 7 lety +22

      LOL

    • @chrisbolland5634
      @chrisbolland5634 Před 6 lety +120

      B Oates...
      I hate people who say that about Rommel. Watch the Desert Fox.
      Now Sir Rommel! I don't envy you.
      Sorry Hitler made you commit suicide.

    • @MrWoWgaming
      @MrWoWgaming Před 6 lety +87

      B Oates fuck you, you have no idea who rommel is. hes a respectable german commander even though im dutch and nazi's ruined my family in ww2. go read about rommel dickstain.

    • @gruffyddgozali
      @gruffyddgozali Před 6 lety +11

      Guderian was the best by far

    • @poptoe11
      @poptoe11 Před 6 lety +58

      sksmasine do some research on him. he was against Hitler's policies. and even winston Churchill had a fantastic amount of respect for the man. Sadly he was forced to commit suicide by a cyanide pill.

  • @photlam9769
    @photlam9769 Před 2 lety +78

    Even though this doesn't have to do with the European theatre my grandpa served in the Pacific, he was in the Philippines when his buddy was shot in the side and the bullet went through the buddy into my grandpa's liver and down into his leg, his buddy died right there in his arms. This is all I'm going to say because this is getting me emotional but his story should be known even if it's on a CZcams comment

    • @maxmitchell8472
      @maxmitchell8472 Před rokem +7

      That is tragic thank you for sharing may he rest in peace.

    • @ayezz2811
      @ayezz2811 Před rokem +3

      May he rest in eternal peace. Thank you for letting the story be further known

  • @chrislondo2683
    @chrislondo2683 Před rokem +6

    My grandfather-in-law was a mechanic on board LST-534 at Gold Beach carrying British troops. His ship would land a day after the landings.

  • @77thNYSV
    @77thNYSV Před 3 lety +635

    This comment is a little late but-
    Having served in the US Army, don't underestimate how stupid top Army brass can be.

    • @bobbycv64
      @bobbycv64 Před 3 lety +30

      I was USN and I agree with you 100%. Only 1 US Navy Battleship could have pin pointed each pill box with a 16" Cannon. WHERE WAS THE LEADERSHIP? Eisenhower failed our Troops, should of had ONE US BATTLESHIP on the Scene, not Destroyer Tin Cans who were in harms way. FINALLY BEFORE ANYONE TRIES TO GET WISE: Naval Caliber (Cannon) is measured as the Length of the Barrel / Bore, so 16" * 50 means the barrel is 67 feet long. Not the same as Army Caliber (Small Arms) which is only the bore width. MORE INFORMATION: North Carolina Class BB55 - BB60 - had 16 /45s where the Iowa Class BB61 - BB64 had 16 / 50s. Many died because of stupidity.

    • @kochan1147
      @kochan1147 Před 3 lety +22

      You haven't seen WWII Japanese commanders. They were actual dumbasses spending skilled soldiers to suicide.

    • @kkandsims4612
      @kkandsims4612 Před 3 lety +11

      @@bobbycv64 I wanna understand this but I can’t it’s to smart for me 😂😂

    • @63Baggies
      @63Baggies Před 3 lety

      Would you still have enlisted knowing that?

    • @LtGhost-tb3kq
      @LtGhost-tb3kq Před 3 lety +13

      @@kochan1147 That was because of their honour. How do you think they lasted so long? They weren’t stupid, it was just how they were told to be. Even the men would do it, because they believed it was honourable.

  • @49erfanoz
    @49erfanoz Před 4 lety +365

    I loved the sniper in this film ,and the part on the beach where hes dragging a guy , an explosion happens, he looks back and hes dragging half of the guy has always stuck with me. War is hell and this is the kind of memories you come home with if you do go to war. Great movie and a snub for an oscar of all time

    • @codeysnow2980
      @codeysnow2980 Před 4 lety

      ✊🙏

    • @yourmotivation453
      @yourmotivation453 Před 4 lety +11

      and that medic try to save a guy, but that guy get shot again.

    • @vinay4358
      @vinay4358 Před 4 lety +2

      war is war
      and hell is hell
      war is hell for the innocent people caught in the chaos

    • @XxSwaggaJacksonxX
      @XxSwaggaJacksonxX Před 4 lety +1

      "People sleep on Barry Pepper"- Spike Lee

    • @sargestriker2770
      @sargestriker2770 Před 4 lety +1

      Absolutely. Best movie of the Decade.

  • @tophyl7558
    @tophyl7558 Před rokem +12

    My grandfather was at Omaha beach! Miss you PaPa (Bronze star)

  • @Beachpc419
    @Beachpc419 Před rokem +3

    The movie Saving Private Ryan truly has a very accurate depiction of WWII and The DDay / Operation overlord. ( my father landed on Omaha Beach. He was 19 , but never mentioned the landing).
    Before he passed he did talk a little about the landing.
    But the movie " The Longest Day " is an epic movie concerning DDay/ Operation Overlord. It covers the landing ,on the beach as well as the glider drops , air drops. Also it shows the British , Canadians , and French.
    Both are good and have historic accuracy.

  • @HistoryBuffs
    @HistoryBuffs  Před 7 lety +457

    I can't believe my Saving Private Ryan review is on the front page of Reddit/movies! That's so awesome! Thanks to everyone who just subscribed today. I'm crossing my fingers but History Buffs might be going viral again. Wish me luck :)
    www.reddit.com/r/movies/

    • @meltz911
      @meltz911 Před 7 lety +2

      Do you already know what you'll be covering upon your return? If so, can you please tell us? Enjoy your vacation!

    • @adamcrockford5640
      @adamcrockford5640 Před 7 lety +1

      good luck I just subscribed :D

    • @liquidpebbles7475
      @liquidpebbles7475 Před 7 lety

      thank you

    • @antonydi
      @antonydi Před 7 lety +3

      Can you do Gallipoli or The Water Diviner ?

    • @Joldroyd100
      @Joldroyd100 Před 7 lety

      man your awesome sause for sure blue ribbon

  • @LuizBarrosPoa
    @LuizBarrosPoa Před 5 lety +302

    That scene where the mother watches the priest getting out of the car and falls apart. That is the genius of Spielberg. No words, no close-ups, just message.

    • @fajaradi1223
      @fajaradi1223 Před 5 lety +13

      Yeah ... Which mother wont do that? A very heartbreaking scene.

    • @RodrigoBorgia
      @RodrigoBorgia Před 5 lety +28

      In fact this is the most disturbing scene. The dead don´t feel anything, the living do the suffering.
      From the last conflicts, especially the Balkan wars, there are many fathers, mothers, sons and daughters left alone, wandering around in this world like living dead. They can´t die, but they don´t want do live. Spoke to many of these people in during a report. Every day they are living the same day, when their and the life of their familly ends.

    • @rightpa
      @rightpa Před 5 lety +16

      Plus, notice she is not centered in the shot. As she leaves she walks past several pictures on her right, including all 4 of her boys in uniform. She will never look at those pictures the same way again.

    • @gpgpgpgp1000
      @gpgpgpgp1000 Před 5 lety +1

      I agree, that was a great scene.

    • @barfingcoyote210
      @barfingcoyote210 Před 5 lety +5

      ALOT miss the placard(sign) in the window with the gold stars. It is significant, it shows that she has already been through it .
      Knows the message walking up the steps,
      Hits her knees weeping.
      My god the suffering never spoken of.

  • @earlhuff7847
    @earlhuff7847 Před rokem +4

    My grandfather served in North Africa and Italy where he was wounded at Monte Cassino. He would not talk about it and my grandmother would get extremely upset at me if I asked. It would bring back the nightmares. While he was never in Europe this movie gave me an idea of what he saw and dealt with. I never cry but did in this movie. The bravery and courage and also outright fear brought me to tears of what my grandfather had been through. I always respected him but this movie brought on a respect that I cannot form the words for. I don't care about the small inaccuracies. It was a great movie

  • @77mpickett
    @77mpickett Před 2 lety +2

    I always loved the bangalore torpedo explosion sequence

  • @SunflowerSocialist
    @SunflowerSocialist Před 6 lety +2356

    Given saving private Ryan is historical fiction, with fictional characters, locations and events within a larger historical context, I think it’s really an incredible film historically speaking.

    • @mako88sb
      @mako88sb Před 6 lety +93

      I know Spielberg borrowed from some of the soldier's memoirs. For example, Hal Baumgarten mentions in his book about the battalion surgeon for the 116th Regiment who decided he should be in the first wave since his skills would probably be needed. Unfortunately, he was killed during the battle. He incorporated this into the film by having Wade working on a wounded man and being told to move on to someone he could help. Wade answers back that he's working on the battalion surgeon.
      Also might interest you to find out that the actual Captain of "C" company, 2nd Rangers(played by Tom Hanks in SPR) was Ralph Goranson aged 25. After exiting the landing craft, he felt numerous hits until he made it to some cover. He counted 9 bullet holes in his gear and clothing but was miraculously untouched. Then a German greande landed at his feet and he just barely got out of harms way. The events shown on the landing are a bit contrived due to time constraints but he did lead his men on an assault that took out a key German weapons nest that was decimating the troops on the beach. He's widely considered the first man to make it up to the bluffs that were so instrumental in taking Omaha Beach. He survived the war and passed away in 2012 aged 93.

    • @omarabe26
      @omarabe26 Před 6 lety +60

      +Logan Bradley Lay off the edge mate.

    • @protonjones54
      @protonjones54 Před 6 lety +54

      @Logan Bradley
      America liberated Europe. Twice. You can bitch all you want, but facts don't care about your feelings.

    • @agoodchristianpilot159
      @agoodchristianpilot159 Před 6 lety +8

      Brendan Davison actually the movie is based on a true story. I only know that because my friend was in the navy

    • @edgyedgar9424
      @edgyedgar9424 Před 5 lety +6

      +Leonardo's Truth Wut.

  • @TheGreatWar
    @TheGreatWar Před 7 lety +3217

    Nice!

  • @ramprire
    @ramprire Před rokem +7

    7:46 For this part, a lot of the criticism actually came from Britain itself (obviously being unrepresented in a very historic moment). However, this was actually known at the time of filming: it was not done by accident, nor for intentionally misrepresenting.
    The problem was that they (Spielberg) WANTED to use British LCAs and British sailors operating the craft but they could not find any usable ones, nor recreate them. They did have sea worthy American LCM and LCVP boats ready to use, so in order to maintain some consistency, they made them crewed by Americans.

  • @LordBloodraven
    @LordBloodraven Před 5 lety +2145

    My neighbor growing up was a Sherman tank driver at the end of WWII and served in Korea. He said if this situation ever happened, it would have been far more effective to disseminate this information across the front rather than send 8 men on a rescue mission. The name would have been issued to officers and NCOs and instructions would have been to get the order for his extraction out by word of mouth to any other officers and NCOs met during the invasion.

    • @lsusmuggler
      @lsusmuggler Před 5 lety +66

      DarkLight523 tanks aren't normally dropped behind enemy lines

    • @joe18425
      @joe18425 Před 5 lety +34

      Snaggle Toothed yeah it would be quite a long boring movie

    • @neilanderson891
      @neilanderson891 Před 5 lety +35

      There was a lot of communications being sent back and forth, a lot did not get delivered. And there might be German mis-information being inserted into the mix. When I watched the film, I thought it to be a foolhardy mission. The group tracking Private Ryan would surely get killed by Germans or friendly fire. Unrealistic, right?

    • @LordBloodraven
      @LordBloodraven Před 5 lety +20

      Snaggle Toothed and Neil Anderson: you both made excellent points. It would've been a dull movie and our lines of communication lacked the 100% guarantee of success. Radios were regularly damaged or lost during airborne deployments (those damned leg bags).
      This is why disseminating the message through the NCOs and officers would have been best: there were nearly 1.5 million Allied troops invading Normandy on D-Day.
      I tried to calculate how many NCOs and officers would've been out there, gave up and decided to just call it a *shitload of badasses.*

    • @Adamant_Consternation
      @Adamant_Consternation Před 5 lety +31

      The actual saving of Private Ryan is what completely killed the the movie for me. The characters even point out how stupid the plot is.

  • @JimJWalker
    @JimJWalker Před 5 lety +147

    PFC Joseph Foster Walker 101st Airborne, dropped on Normandy, buried at Arlington Cemetery, passed tonight 26 years ago 6-28-1992. Miss ya Dad. Truly the greatest generation.

    • @AKLsamuel2005
      @AKLsamuel2005 Před 5 lety +5

      Sorry for your loss Mr. Walker, and I also am thankful for those wonderful men (and the strong women who kept the country going at home). Tough as grit indeed.

    • @j0kkeX
      @j0kkeX Před 5 lety +2

      A true hero

    • @captainpigeon0522
      @captainpigeon0522 Před 5 lety

      Jim Walker rip my man

  • @codyh9175
    @codyh9175 Před 7 měsíci +2

    The knife fight is genuinely so real and terrifying that I haven't seen this movie in a while because of it. A masterpiece but man some of it is too real

  • @alexandrabinks2944
    @alexandrabinks2944 Před rokem +5

    Please make a video on "All quiet on the western front" - such a brilliant film!

  • @DrPlatypus1
    @DrPlatypus1 Před 3 lety +881

    And Shakespeare in Love won Best Picture over this masterpiece. Not that the Academy Awards mean anything, it just astounds me that this film didn't win every award it was nominated for. Fantastic video, love this channel!

    • @lahasainaypayaso3386
      @lahasainaypayaso3386 Před 3 lety +32

      Because of fücking Weinstein.

    • @jimmymelendez1836
      @jimmymelendez1836 Před 3 lety +28

      I was just mortified that the owie gooey Shakespeare movie won. This is a well done piece of cinema. I had no desire to see Shakespeare in Love.

    • @k1productions87
      @k1productions87 Před 3 lety +14

      it is possible that many people's visceral gut reaction had a negative impact. One can appreciate the movie on a technical level, but in the same breath say "I hated this movie" not able to fully vocalize why. Its not the plot, its not the structure, its not the characters, its just a physical and emotional response to how horrifying it is.
      While this works in the favor of horror movies, as some people strive for that kind of reaction,... movies like this are a completely different animal, and there is no real "desire" for a moviegoer to see THAT kind of violence. The horrors of war touch a different nerve than horror films, in a distinctly different way.
      I am not saying this justifies it losing to a sappy romance, I'm merely saying I understand how that decision could have potentially have been made. I don't agree with it, I just understand it.

    • @kevinc8955
      @kevinc8955 Před 2 lety +18

      That's the thing, Oscars used to mean something, but that virtue-signaling decision was the start of their long fall from grace that led to where they are today. Ignored, horrible ratings, and can't even find people willing to host them anymore. One of the few times where "get woke go broke" is actually true.
      You can market products with your wokeness and profit, but once you start handing out awards for it over more deserving candidates, that's when people tune out.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před 2 lety +4

      The mid section of the movie is mediocre and drags. Should have been edited down at least half an hour. The characters aren't engaging enough when there is no action on screen (Zulu, The Great Escape, Kelly's Heroes is how you present characters).
      Hardly any of the dialogue is memorable, nevermind iconic.
      The film is revered for the first half hour and little else.