Full Metal Jacket, the BEST Stanley Kubrick film?! (also that drill instructor was wild)

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Mary Cherry

Mary Cherry

Ай бұрын

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First time watching reaction review commentary mary cherry reactions #firsttimewatching #moviereaction #stanleykubrick #fullmetaljacket

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@MaryCherryOfficial
@MaryCherryOfficial Ай бұрын
“War is not (always) necessary” is what I meant/should’ve said. Please stop listing obvious examples of war and asking me whether I think it’s necessary or not. ✌🏽 ►for early access, bloopers, polls & UNCUT VERSION check ► patreon.com/marycherryofficial ► GAMING CHANNEL: www.youtube.com/@cherry_plays ► follow me on ✰www.twitch.tv/maryycherryy (LIVE STREAMS) ► VLOG channel VARY CHERRY: www.youtube.com/@varycherry ► DISCORD: discord.com/invite/3pxX7QqGW7 ► IG: instagram.com/maryycherryy/ ► TWEET ME: twitter.com/maryycherryy FAQ sheet: docs.google.com/document/d/1_FkcwQ0vPAAk53YVyo-ChXc9AuX1pn5gbctrOkX13xA/edit
@lawrenceallen8096
@lawrenceallen8096 Ай бұрын
If you want to understand why Marine training is so tough watch "The Pacific" miniseries. What these men are asked to do requires extreme toughness.
@jbwade5676
@jbwade5676 Ай бұрын
😊😊
@sonofkarma5461
@sonofkarma5461 Ай бұрын
Also Mary there is a Difference between the U.S. Army, and the U.S. Marine Corps (This movie is Focused on the Marine Corps) and another thing the Instructor was a SERGEANT not a Captain
@ronnyb5890
@ronnyb5890 Ай бұрын
another good one is goodmorning vietnam with the late Robin Williams, its based on a real story
@ronnyb5890
@ronnyb5890 Ай бұрын
those marines have been drafted, they did'nt volunteer for it, PT=Physical Training, full metal jacket means the bullit has a metal jacket for better penetration, pardon my french 😁 war is hell and training is very hard to make them as numb as possible, it makes them better killers
@magicbrownie1357
@magicbrownie1357 Ай бұрын
American Veteran here. R Lee Ermey's portrayal as Gunnery Sgt Hartman is the most accurate portrayal of an American Drill Sergeant in movie history. Hands down. Not judging it one way or another, just saying, it was ACCURATE.
@TheJerbol
@TheJerbol Ай бұрын
Being an actual drill instructor certainly helped
@sergiogonzalez1295
@sergiogonzalez1295 Ай бұрын
@@TheJerbol Right? IIRC they brought him in as a consultant and then Kubrick fell in love with his entire demeanor and said "Well, I guess you're an actor now".
Ай бұрын
He was an actual Drill instructor in the Corp.
@TheJerbol
@TheJerbol Ай бұрын
@@sergiogonzalez1295 I believe the story goes that Kubrick only cast him because he dressed up and came to set in character when he supposed to just be a consultant
@AnimeAftermath
@AnimeAftermath Ай бұрын
Although R. Lee Ermey was quoted as saying that Hartman was NOT supposed to be a good DI. Any DI worth their salt would've noticed Pyle's breakdown and Section 8'd him out of the Marines.
@coldflamebluedragon196
@coldflamebluedragon196 Ай бұрын
R Lee Ermey wasn’t just acting he was an actual Drill Sargent and he served 11 years in the Marine Corps. RIP R Lee Ermey
@theoverseer3552
@theoverseer3552 Ай бұрын
*Drill Instructor 🤦🏻‍♂️ this is the Marine Corps not the Army
@jamespfp
@jamespfp Ай бұрын
Lee Ermey also had a pretty good career as an actor (including voice-only roles) after leaving the military, and he didn't always portray military character types although he's clearly very good in that type of role. See also: "Mississippi Burning" as well as "Seven".
@elijahvincent985
@elijahvincent985 Ай бұрын
He was an actual legend. LOVED him as an actor.
@mamalannightshyaman
@mamalannightshyaman Ай бұрын
@@theoverseer3552mansplaining the mansplainer
@MotivationWeightLoss
@MotivationWeightLoss Ай бұрын
Moral Of The Story Women Got It Good 🤣
@t0dd000
@t0dd000 Ай бұрын
"I would just quit." That's the thing. You can't.
@bb.buchanan
@bb.buchanan Ай бұрын
The only way out is through it, or get sent to prison
@deckzone3000
@deckzone3000 Ай бұрын
​@@bb.buchanan Or just fail.
@LucianUchiha
@LucianUchiha Ай бұрын
Yes, you can. At any point in boot, you can refuse to train. During Vietnam, probably would have landed you in the brig for a few years, but you'd still be processed out. Even now they send you to a separations platoon and if the people running it feel petty, they'll draw out your separation just to force you to watch your old platoon graduate.
@t0dd000
@t0dd000 Ай бұрын
@@LucianUchiha Right. You can't steal either. Well, you can, but it might land you in the brig.
@troyporter6323
@troyporter6323 Ай бұрын
@@t0dd000 it will not land you in the brig in today's military you can leave at any point in basic training with no problems, after basic you are stuck.
@billbabcock1833
@billbabcock1833 Ай бұрын
Full metal jacket refers to a type of ammunition used by the military. The bullet is encased completely in a metal jacket.
@cypher515
@cypher515 Ай бұрын
And it's the only ammunition the military is allowed to use under the Geneva Convention in combat -- and I think that the idea that only one type of ammunition that it's 'legal' for soldiers to kill with is something several people have commented on. Though SEAL Team SIX and Delta Force use hollow point ammo a) because their mission is against terrorists, therefore unlawful combatants and b) because if they shoot a terrorist they don't want the bullet going straight through said terrorist to kill the civilian they're saving.
@jsmithers.
@jsmithers. Ай бұрын
​@@cypher515No.
@centeroftheuniverse7196
@centeroftheuniverse7196 23 күн бұрын
@@cypher515Pure lead and unjacketed are also allowed. As long as it is not designed to expand and fragment and cause unessesary digging trying to find pieces in thy flesh its fine by genevas. The copper jacket is just to reduce lead fouling in the barrel so you wont have to clean it more frequently.
@user-up6mn8cp8u
@user-up6mn8cp8u Ай бұрын
Mary: Pyle is gonna die Viewers: You have no idea
@Mr.Ekshin
@Mr.Ekshin Ай бұрын
Mary: OMG, I would just quit !! Viewers: Yeah... this generation is doomed.
@noracola5285
@noracola5285 Ай бұрын
@@Mr.Ekshin tbf they all should have quit
@Mr.Ekshin
@Mr.Ekshin Ай бұрын
@@noracola5285 - Boy are you gonna be in for a shock when they bring the draft back and include women.
@noracola5285
@noracola5285 Ай бұрын
@@Mr.Ekshin 1 no I won't 2 already served 3 I'm 50 years old 4 get bent
@Mr.Ekshin
@Mr.Ekshin Ай бұрын
@@noracola5285 - You seem awfully sensitive for someone who served back when I did in the 1990's. Was it the 'Peace Corps' you served in?
@greeneyesinfl9954
@greeneyesinfl9954 Ай бұрын
This was definitely an anti-war film by Kubrick. I graduated from Parris Island in 1986 and drill instructors never run out of material. This entire movie was actually filmed in England. PT Is physical training.
@jsmithers.
@jsmithers. Ай бұрын
No.
@8Smoker8
@8Smoker8 Ай бұрын
@@jsmithers. you're not special. Sit down.
@jsmithers.
@jsmithers. Ай бұрын
@@8Smoker8 Cry 🤡
@8Smoker8
@8Smoker8 Ай бұрын
@@jsmithers. Why? All I see is a pitiful weakling unable to make even the most basic argument. You don't make me sad little boy, you just disgust me.
@8Smoker8
@8Smoker8 Ай бұрын
@@jsmithers. No.
@jackmessick2869
@jackmessick2869 Ай бұрын
While you may not expect it, Mel Gibson's"We Were Soldiers" does show both sides of this war. It's visually brutal.
@uncleho1945
@uncleho1945 Ай бұрын
"both sides" lol'd
@MyLordRock
@MyLordRock Ай бұрын
Marine Here, R Lee Ermey is one the best Drill Instructors put to Screen, He was Real Marine Corps Drill Instructor During Vietnam and to this day is the only Actor that Kubrick gave carte blance to for his lines! I was lucky enough to run into him at the PX at Quantico Air Station, Nicest guy ever. RIP - Ronald Lee Ermey (1944 - 2018)
@captzero007
@captzero007 5 күн бұрын
I had an encounter with R Lee Ermey at the bowling alley at Mainside Camp Pendleton around 1998. He was s cool dude.
@Edd25164605
@Edd25164605 Ай бұрын
As an ex-servicemen, Every time you called Gunnery Sergeant Hartman (the drill instructor) a Captain, I felt a twitch in my eye 😄
@Dubroar
@Dubroar Ай бұрын
Same 😅
@neptunusrex5195
@neptunusrex5195 Ай бұрын
Civilian here but I was in JROTC in high school so I know a bit about military, but Gunny Sergeants (and E7s and ESPECIALLY E9s from other branches) are ranked as God, 😅
@karllong
@karllong Ай бұрын
same, the usual response for calling an nco sir in some branches will get you 'who are you calling sir, I work for a living'
@thefallofoscar
@thefallofoscar Ай бұрын
we can let it slide since she is an Aussie lol
@Edd25164605
@Edd25164605 Ай бұрын
@@thefallofoscar Very true 👍
@kevinhayes1656
@kevinhayes1656 Ай бұрын
At drill, instructor is a gunnery sergeant, not a captain
@JulianLopez-mh6be
@JulianLopez-mh6be 2 күн бұрын
For everyone watching he is a Drill Instructor.
@RoGueNavy
@RoGueNavy Ай бұрын
One of the greatest experiences of my life, was getting to meet Gunnery Sergeant Ronald Lee Ermey, USMC (Ret). He played Gunnery Sergeant Hartman, in the movie. He was an absolutely incredibly cool, laid-back guy, and even thanked me for the 4 little, piddlin' years I was in the Navy. I have a great photo of myself with him. He did so much great work for veterans and for the Marine Corps. He actually said that he played the role, to show how Drill Instructors should NOT behave. RIP, Gunny.
@IndependentConversations
@IndependentConversations Ай бұрын
My drill Sargeant father explained this to me perfectly in the early 80s there was serious reforms made across all military branches so you cannot be this extreme but in the Vietnam war and especially marines on their training island YES it was like that.
@AlaskanGlitch
@AlaskanGlitch Ай бұрын
I served with the USMC from 1972 until 1980, and the boot camp scenes from this movie are very accurately portrayed the way it actually was, with a few minor exceptions. Recruits were not allowed to be physically abused, although that did happen on rare occasions. Recruits also understood that boot camp was as much about preparing you mentally as well as physically. It only takes a few hours before you realize that the Drill Instructor is playing mind games to intentionally stress you out. The hardest part, I found, was keeping a straight face. The Drill Instructor insults can be extremely clever and hilarious, as R. Lee Ermey demonstrated. The "Blanket Party" depicted in the movie was also something that really happened. Recruits that were always screwing up and getting the rest of their platoon punished may experience a blanket party. Two recruits will throw a blanket over their intended victim and hold them down so they can't move, while the other recruits would insert a bar of soap into a sock, and then hit the confined recruit in order to send the screw-up recruit a message. It takes more than just a few screw-ups before a blanket party is warranted, because everyone screws up.
@shawnmiller4781
@shawnmiller4781 Ай бұрын
I’m going to say the “physical” abuse probably was more common the farther back in time you go
@chrism7395
@chrism7395 Ай бұрын
I wondered if that was why the Drill Instructor tells the recruit to choke himself
@TheCpage66
@TheCpage66 Ай бұрын
Had two guys in my platoon eat their Duraglit...they didn't last. Had another recruit just curl up on the 3rd Platoon parade deck and go into a catatonic state...The guy was from somewhere in South Carolina and Recruit Command got his Dad to drive up. Soon as the kid saw his Dad, he was suddenly fine. His Dad had to be restrained from going after him, as Dad had been a Vietnam vet. I helped pack his stuff up from the squad bay.
@AFMountaineer2000
@AFMountaineer2000 Ай бұрын
R. Lee Ermey has stated that if he ever saw another drill instructor acting like this he wouldve corrected the situation. And any good drill instructor wouldve noticed Pile's mental health.
@adgato75
@adgato75 Ай бұрын
Yeah, Pyle was 100% an obvious washout.
@jimiewilliams7623
@jimiewilliams7623 Ай бұрын
@@adgato75 No, he made it. He was just psychologically unfit because of the abuse and maybe a precondition to mental illness. Still, he obviously made it through training, and was very good shot. The gunner in the copter made it through bootcamp, and he's definitely psycho.
@neptunusrex5195
@neptunusrex5195 Ай бұрын
Project 100,000 aka “McNamara’s M o r o n s” was a program to allow recruits in that were below medical or mental requirements. It is a fan theory that Pile may have been one of these unfortunate recruits.
@crewchief5144
@crewchief5144 Ай бұрын
to be fair, Pyle had some boxes checked so the DEI division in the DoD passed him along. Oh, wait...1960's...nope...all of them were equally worthless to the folks pushing the war.
@sergiogonzalez1295
@sergiogonzalez1295 Ай бұрын
@@jimiewilliams7623 Pyle was def a Section 8 by the end, thanks to everything that happened. But, this was in the days where "Catch 22" became common knowledge. (You have to be crazy to serve, but they'll kick you out if you're crazy).
@adamskeans2515
@adamskeans2515 Ай бұрын
the actor who plays the guy you said "you hated" Adam Baldwin is really an amazingly cool guy. I met him at a comicon in Phoenix. He was in the room where they were signing autographs, and I didn't have any extra money to pay for an autograph, but I waited in line anyway to shake hands and express my thanks for their work. At the time, I had my son with me who was in his wheel chair and his name was Adam as well. I told him that I didn't have any money for photograph by I wanted to shake his hand and tell him what a fan I was, and he asked if he could give my son a picture and he hugged him. Adam loved the attention so much.
@RogunK
@RogunK Ай бұрын
"All they do is run and sing!" The reason for this is if you notice the cadence of the song always goes with the pace they are running/walking. It's to make sure everyone is stepping with their left and right foot at the same time and pace as everyone else in the formation.
@penfold7455
@penfold7455 Ай бұрын
"I don't know anyone in this film" Actually, you do know a few: Joker = Matthew Modine (Dr. Brenner from "Stranger Things") Sgt Hartman = R Lee Ermey (the voice of the lead toy soldier from "Toy Story") Pvt. Pyle = Vincent D'Nofrio (Kingpin from "Daredevil") Stars and Stripes officer = John Terry (Christian Shepherd from "Lost") Animal Mother = Adam Baldwin (Jayne from "Firefly")
@SelinaThereseKyle
@SelinaThereseKyle Ай бұрын
Vincent D'Onofrio also played Edgar in Men in Black
@Arkainjel
@Arkainjel Ай бұрын
Oh snap! That WAS Jayne!
@GarrettJayChristian
@GarrettJayChristian Ай бұрын
Plus Cowboy = Arliss Howard (Peter Ludlow in "The Lost World")
@SelinaThereseKyle
@SelinaThereseKyle Ай бұрын
@@GarrettJayChristian whoa!
@SelinaThereseKyle
@SelinaThereseKyle Ай бұрын
@@GarrettJayChristian Whoa!
@lukebarber9511
@lukebarber9511 Ай бұрын
Note: Australia made a TV miniseries about Australia's involvement in Vietnam, starring a young Nicole Kidman!
@shawnmiller4781
@shawnmiller4781 Ай бұрын
There also is a film called Danger Close that came out a few years back
@goodshipkaraboudjan
@goodshipkaraboudjan Ай бұрын
@@shawnmiller4781 Danger Close is so underrated.
@davidhutchinson5233
@davidhutchinson5233 Ай бұрын
I loved Anzac Girls. About the service of the nursing corps in WW I during the Dardanelle and European campaigns.
@goodshipkaraboudjan
@goodshipkaraboudjan Ай бұрын
The UK weren't involved in Vietnam. The only foreign boots on the ground were mainly from the US, Australia, New Zealand and Korea.
@davidsalinas1628
@davidsalinas1628 Ай бұрын
I believe the French were there from 1946-1954, but that is a whole other war in the same location.
@matthewcharles5867
@matthewcharles5867 Ай бұрын
The UK had raf planes fly missions in Vietnam targeting the hoe chi min trail as well as having a very limited number of troops on the ground who were seconded to Australian and American units. A sas team was also attached to work with the American's.
@michaelhodge6779
@michaelhodge6779 Ай бұрын
This film is about Jungian depth psychology. Starting in paradise, Paris Island, South Carolina and ending in Hell; literally the flames of war in Vietnam. Kubrick stated as much in a book interview and they outright said it in the middle of the film when Joker said, “It’s about the duality of man sir. The Jungian thing.” Private Pile is reincarnated in the second act as animal. If you study Carl Jung, the Swiss paychiatrist, who Kubrick was immersed in, you’ll understand what he said with this film.
@Snipergoat1
@Snipergoat1 Ай бұрын
A "paychiatrist?" Is that a comment about the price of mental health professionals? A Freudian slip regarding one of Freud's greatest rivals? How oddly appropriate.
@deckzone3000
@deckzone3000 Ай бұрын
Pyle and Animal are nothing alike.
@JamesGilburt-lb7sg
@JamesGilburt-lb7sg Ай бұрын
Hi Mary, it's great you've seen this war classic. The guy that played the Drill Instructor was an actual DI during the Vietnam War and he was originally on set as a technical advisor, but ended up getting the role. The 'Vietnam' scenes were filmed in east London!
@shawnmiller4781
@shawnmiller4781 Ай бұрын
The fellow that was supposed to be the drill instructor ended up being the door gunner that has the line “You just don’t lead them as much”
@shawnmiller4781
@shawnmiller4781 Ай бұрын
You should review the Australian film “Danger Close” since too few people are aware Australia, New Zealand, South Korea and believe it or not Spain where there as well
@sonofkarma5461
@sonofkarma5461 Ай бұрын
I didn’t think she would actually watch this But she Did, I am So glad she Did😄
@neptunusrex5195
@neptunusrex5195 Ай бұрын
American GI’s learned ALOT from the ANZACs about booby trap detection and how to neutralize them. Tunnel Rats may be famous American troops but they learned their craft from the Aussies and Kiwis
@slandon1977
@slandon1977 Ай бұрын
Mary, you might find this interesting - The guy who played "Animal Mother" played Jayne Cobb in Firefly.
@danielshea518
@danielshea518 Ай бұрын
He was also in the Movie " My Bodyguard"
@buddah1221
@buddah1221 Ай бұрын
he was also the XO on The Last Ship and a CIA agent in Chuck amongst many other things
@goodshipkaraboudjan
@goodshipkaraboudjan Ай бұрын
Also the guy who shot the alien in Independence Day.
@davidhutchinson5233
@davidhutchinson5233 Ай бұрын
Adam Baldwin.
@barrycohen311
@barrycohen311 Ай бұрын
@@danielshea518 Holy sh_t. I remember that now. Thx
@sreif78
@sreif78 Ай бұрын
The Vietnam movie holy trinity is full metal jacket, apocalypse now and platoon. All capture the utter despair and futility.
@5ilver42
@5ilver42 Ай бұрын
"if I didn't laugh, I would probably cry for them." That is actually a very crucial part of how men will cope with terrible situations like these. Things are so bad, that what else is there to do? You make fun of it. You make fun of everything. Dark and disturbing, horrible things, you make fun of it, because the alternative would be to succumb to weaknesses that could cost you your life and the lives of everyone around you.
@kevinhayes1656
@kevinhayes1656 Ай бұрын
Also, those songs that they sing when they are running are called cadences which are meant to give them a rhythm to run to
@kevinhayes1656
@kevinhayes1656 Ай бұрын
Also, Rambo was in the army. He wasn’t in the Marine Corps.
@nemojaimes902
@nemojaimes902 6 күн бұрын
R Lee Ermey was in multiple interviews for this movies promotion. He stated that during the Vietnam War he'd read the military news and scan the part for fallen soilders. He said he remembers ever marine he trained and saw hundreds of their names throughout the war. After the war he retired due to the toll of losing so many marines. R.I.P. Lee! A true gentle soul inside a hard shell
@isaiahbaker7475
@isaiahbaker7475 15 күн бұрын
Army vet here. The part at 13:17 is so accurate. When I was in I’ve seen our squad bays wreck for a wall locker being unlocked or for a rack not made correctly. Drill Sergeants and Drill Instructors will find ways to motivate trainees/recruits.
@dcanmore
@dcanmore Ай бұрын
the entire movie was filmed in the UK. Parris Island boot camp was a British Army base in Cambridgeshire; Vietnam city and battle was a former post industrial gasworks in east London; 'paddy fields' are the Norfolk Broads and the interiors were shot in London studios.
@danielstuart8852
@danielstuart8852 Ай бұрын
All the battle scenes were indeed shot at Beckon gasworks before it closed it was the largest gasworks in the world. Where the sniper scene is it is now a shopping park.
@Daveyboy100880
@Daveyboy100880 Ай бұрын
As far as I can see, there are only two shots in the movie that weren’t done in England - one shot of the graduation parade taken from the viewing stands, which was a stock shot of a real Parris Island graduation parade, and the aerial POV shot of flying over the misty jungle (not sure if that was a second unit shot or another stock shot). That Kubrick, man… he did the same with 2001 as well! Didn’t shoot a frame of it in space.
@Myndir
@Myndir Ай бұрын
@@Daveyboy100880 Same with the Moon Landings. All filmed in the UK.
@Daveyboy100880
@Daveyboy100880 Ай бұрын
@@Myndir 100%. Shot it on the Elstree backlot, right where the Overlook would stand 10 years later!
@josephamesdacey6442
@josephamesdacey6442 Ай бұрын
Nobody is ever prepared for that scene
@DanABA
@DanABA Ай бұрын
The Ken Burns documentary series on the Vietnam War is all you need. It's long, but very good.
@JS-wp4gs
@JS-wp4gs Ай бұрын
Its likely that pyle was conscripted specifically *because* he wasn't very bright. He'd be one of the thousands of 'mcnamaras morons' that were basically a test to see how useful people like him could be in combat, to get rid of them and to essentially be expendable cannon fodder. Started as a directive straight from the US secretary of defense at the time and isn't something they like talking about these days for obvious reasons. That said, a competent DI would have recognized that pyle was starting to crack and would have gotten rid of him specifically to prevent an incident like that happening You might want to look into the movie dr strangelove as well
@sterlingarcher9208
@sterlingarcher9208 Ай бұрын
R. Lee Ermey was just supposed to be an on set consultant for the actors since he was a Drill Instructor. The guy in the helicopter shooting civilians was supposed to be the drill instructor, but once Kubreck saw R. Lee Ermey running lines with the actors he switched to him burning the other guy.. You have to watch Kubreck's last film Eyes Wide Shut with Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman. Strange and buried with symbolism. Kubreck was known for doing take after take after take on every scene, sometimes 70-90 takes to get what he wanted... Cruise and Nicole were married at the time and married in the movie... interesting dynamic
@flamevandal
@flamevandal Ай бұрын
Good Morning Vietnam would be a great movie for this theme!
@jdc7923
@jdc7923 Ай бұрын
Mary: Clint Eastwood did a two-movie series about the battle for the island of Iwo Jima in WW2. "Flags of Our Fathers" was done in English, and done from the American perspective. "Letters from Iwo Jima" was done in Japanese, and done from the Japanese perspective on that battle.
@paulieluppino1856
@paulieluppino1856 Ай бұрын
21:47 ..."This war sequences, I wonder if they were actually shot in Vietnam"... No, they weren't. The entirety of the movie was shot in England, because Kubrick had the habit of never go longer than 10 miles away from his house... Guy's a fucking legend, indeed.
@blakemcelrath54
@blakemcelrath54 Ай бұрын
The thing about drill instructors is they're not supposed to be nice and friendly they're supposed to break you down so they can build you back up tougher as a Marine. And back then a lot of those guys didn't have a choice they were drafted into service and a lot of guys like joker joined that's how he became a journalist.
@kekibannmi6054
@kekibannmi6054 Ай бұрын
The primary method used is to become "the enemy" that will break you down and through teamwork and team moral you overcome his "tyranny"...once everyone can act as a unit, they can the "overcome" the DI by overperformance.
@Coco-oy5sm
@Coco-oy5sm Ай бұрын
It's a (fairly) uniquely American thing. A lot of militaries elsewhere take a much more restrained approach. Different strokes
@noracola5285
@noracola5285 Ай бұрын
It's how you produce mindless psychotic drones
@Jelperman
@Jelperman Ай бұрын
Marines were volunteers. Draftees went to the Army.
@fallenhero3130
@fallenhero3130 Ай бұрын
Australians served in the Vietnam War alongside the Americans.
@shawnmiller4781
@shawnmiller4781 Ай бұрын
As did the South Koreans, New Zealanders and Spain
@kevinpakkala3721
@kevinpakkala3721 Ай бұрын
This is the Boot Camp my dad went through when he joined the Marines at this time. Marines are very, very tough. He was in Vietnam as well. 20 yr veteran before he retired. I was looking to join the service when I was growing up, so my dad showed me this to show me what I was gonna get myself into. I to am a 20 yrs retired veteran now. So you can see my dad didn't talk me out of it.
@ahmedgunner15
@ahmedgunner15 Ай бұрын
The thought of Stanley kubrick sitting down with his typewriter and writing the "me love you long time" and other Vietnamese dialogue is hilarious
@kevinhayes1656
@kevinhayes1656 Ай бұрын
The idea is if you’re gonna break and snap, then they would rather you do it in that situation then before you got to a combat situation where you rescue life and potentially the life of somebody else
@jessiechen279
@jessiechen279 Ай бұрын
"He's so mean!"😂😂 I love the drill instructor, best line's in the movie.....Wish he'd done more...
@MRC_5000
@MRC_5000 Ай бұрын
100% agreed! when i was a kid i had a VHS with a trailer of "full metal jacket" (you know, in front of the movie xD) and because of r. lee ermey's awesome and creative insults, i thought this was a comedy.
@chrisherber1635
@chrisherber1635 Ай бұрын
USMC 2004 here…the drill instructor was mean (as they all are) but you could tell he cared. I had some drill instructors who didn’t even truly congratulate us when we graduated.
@neilturner216
@neilturner216 Ай бұрын
I visited Vietnam a few years back - lovely country and people. Met a Vienamese veteran who had fought alongside US forces - he shared some incites that callenged the usual narratives. Note, it's called the "Amercan War" in Vietnam
@Jessica_Roth
@Jessica_Roth Ай бұрын
Recommendations: "Apocalypse Now" (1979, d. Francis Ford Coppola) "Platoon" (1986, d. Oliver Stone) "Casualties of War" (1989, d. Brian De Palma) And for more Kubrick: "Dr. Strangelove" (1964) "The Shining" (1980)
@marine5480
@marine5480 Ай бұрын
We were soldiers is probably the most accurate one ever
@shawnmiller4781
@shawnmiller4781 Ай бұрын
Which is unusual for a Mel Gibson film
@Wes-vz8eq
@Wes-vz8eq Ай бұрын
A must watch
@shawnmiller4781
@shawnmiller4781 Ай бұрын
@user-yz1id7wc7q . She needs to watch Wall Street first But there are a couple of American pop culture references of the time that she won’t get
@Daveyboy100880
@Daveyboy100880 Ай бұрын
@user-yz1id7wc7qWar… it’s fantastic!
@redrick8900
@redrick8900 Ай бұрын
Platoon craps on that pretentious mess.
@rmb199886
@rmb199886 Ай бұрын
My grandfather was a drill instructor just like R. Lee in the beginning of the movie. He was a rough, tough SOB.
@johnbrewer8826
@johnbrewer8826 Ай бұрын
I watched this movie for the first time just before I went to Marine bootcamp and thought "no way." I watched it again after bootcamp and thought, "Yeah, that's pretty much it."
@1Tankmarine
@1Tankmarine Ай бұрын
Same here. That movie came out about 2 weeks before I went to P.I.
@saaamember97
@saaamember97 Ай бұрын
Another American Veteran here ..... A "nice talking" drill/training instructor was someone to fear! In fact, back in 1977, when I went through Air Force Basic Training, we had this "Vietnam Era" training Instructor (TI) who loved to mess with your mind, by talking real nice, real low, real slow, and only 4" from your face (He would often poke you in the eye or nose with the brim of his campaign hat). He unnerved everyone in the squadron. One trainee even begged for the TI to just go ahead and punch him, instead of talking to him.
@CainCorvinus
@CainCorvinus Ай бұрын
I'm a by-product of Vietnam. I'm mostly (24%) Vietnamese, the rest of me is baltic states, irish, german mix. My grandfather was a Staff Sergeant in the Vietnam War and knocked up a local; mid war, then again at the end of the war. My mother and uncle. My Vietnamese grandmother is dead now. My grandfather came out of the war mostly level headed. He loves seeing heads explode in movies and tv shows though. Greatest thing ever to him.
@robfinlay8058
@robfinlay8058 Ай бұрын
The UK wasn't involved in the Vietnam war, we refused to send troops.
@mxviii
@mxviii Ай бұрын
@@GrimmEnt. It was a war. Its just as common misconception that the US was at war. The war was between North Vietnam and South Vietnam, The US was there in support of South Vietnam, and their were strict rules in how the US were allowed to participate.
@mxviii
@mxviii Ай бұрын
@@GrimmEnt. it wasn’t our war. But it most definitely was a war
@mxviii
@mxviii Ай бұрын
@@GrimmEnt. it was a Cold War conflict. Vietnam was a colony of France. After WWII Europe was supposed to return all its colonial holdings back into sovereign nations. So the the US were there to help the French transition Vietnam into a sovereign government. Obviously the US wanted Vietnam to establish a democratic nation, but the majority of the Vietnamese elected for a communist regime with the support of China and Russia. This sparked a civil war between the democratic southern Vietnamese with the communist northern Vietnamese. The US stayed the support the south and China and Russia supported the north. Both major nations were diplomatically regulated on how they could interfere in the war between the north and the south without it escalating into a major global conflict thus turning the Cold War hot. That’s why the US was only allowed to provide very specific military support. The South just didn’t have the man power or the support to win the war, and eventually the US had to leave.
@NeilLewis77
@NeilLewis77 Ай бұрын
​@@GrimmEnt.There is a ken burns documentary called "the Vietnam war" that will tell you everything you need to know on the subject. It's quite something.
@barrycohen311
@barrycohen311 Ай бұрын
@@mxviii "It wasn't my war. You asked me, I didn't ask you." - John J. Rambo
@geoffreyclaunch2449
@geoffreyclaunch2449 9 күн бұрын
Saw this in the theaters when it came out. My dad, a Navy Vietnam veteran wanted me to see it since I'd been set on being a Marine since I was a kid. He leaned over to me partway through the movie, "You still want to be a Marine?" Damn right I still wanted to be a Marine. And there's not a day that goes by that I don't miss my Corps. That sais, the hilarity of watching people today apply modern standards, morals, and sentiments to previous eras provides no end of entertainment.
@ratherbewargaming3753
@ratherbewargaming3753 10 күн бұрын
Ronald Lee Ermey plays the drill Sergeant in this movie. He was actually in the USMC as a Staff Sergeant and a honorary Gunnery Sargent. He portrayed the drill Sergeant just like the drill Sergeants in the Marine Corps perfectly. They really are that extreme….. Hooorrrraaahhhhh
@rickymoranjr9609
@rickymoranjr9609 Ай бұрын
R.I.P. R. Lee Ermey
@iKvetch558
@iKvetch558 Ай бұрын
Oh boy...welcome to the Kubrick insanity version of Vietnam...it definitely makes an impression, doesn't it? I have never seen it specifically stated by Kubrick anywhere, but Private Pyle is a clear representation of a real program that the Defense Department ran in the 1960s. It was called "Project 100,000" and it was a test to see whether the mental and physical parameters for serving in the US military could be widened to make the pool of potential service people larger. Between escalation in Vietnam and all the other military commitments of the Cold War in those days, the military was concerned about a shortage of people to serve. So they started testing whether recruits who were normally just a bit below the normal standard for IQ, or emotional stability, or physical fitness could be turned into effective military personnel. The same program probably would have led to Forrest Gump being recruited and serving in Vietnam. The program had various nicknames including "McNamara's Misfits" and "McNamara's Morons" in honor of Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara.
@jonathanphillips5794
@jonathanphillips5794 Ай бұрын
Regarding your introduction, the UK did not get involved in the Vietnam War. It was one of the few times the UK openly disagreed with the Americans in a major conflict, leading to a diplomatic spat between Prime Minister Wilson and President Johnson in the late 60s.
@dannyrodriguez2383
@dannyrodriguez2383 Ай бұрын
All Kubrick movies from Lolita afterwards are all unique masterpieces. Each film has so many layers besides whats presented as a movie. Theres so much subtext in each movie, i have yet to see another director do what Kubrick has done. Please give each one a try
@iamamaniaint
@iamamaniaint Ай бұрын
Well said!
@horseshoe2blah201
@horseshoe2blah201 Ай бұрын
I was in the Marines and R. Lee Ermy was spot on in his role. You don't have one of his character during boot camp, you have 3 or 4 of them and they are all as intense as Lee was. That was back in the 80's. I'm not sure about today.
@cangaroojack
@cangaroojack Ай бұрын
Gawdayum! May i ask what the goal of being so intense and demeaning was? I ask without judgment, genuinely curious
@victorclemente-mt4to
@victorclemente-mt4to Ай бұрын
@@cangaroojack theres many reasons but the overall point is to break you down of who you were, so they can build you up as a Marine.
@horseshoe2blah201
@horseshoe2blah201 Ай бұрын
@@victorclemente-mt4to That is what fascinated Kubrick about the military as aa social institution. The mind control and dehumanizing aspect of it.
@Worrell057
@Worrell057 Ай бұрын
@@cangaroojack Join the Marines and you can ask that question to your Drill Instructors firsthand.
@chaost4544
@chaost4544 Ай бұрын
@@cangaroojack this has almost always been a thing in non-mercenary, organized nation state militaries. Erase the individuality so everyone can work as one cohesive thing.
@axr7149
@axr7149 Ай бұрын
A solid pick, even if my personal picks are more towards Kubrick’s earlier works to later ones. DR STRANGELOVE (1964) and PATHS OF GLORY (1957) are my personal favorites. Also, I heavily recommend 2 Vietnam War films directed by Oliver Stone (a veteran himself): BORN ON THE FOURTH OF JULY (featuring a career best performance by Tom Cruise) and PLATOON (which won Best Picture).
@magicbrownie1357
@magicbrownie1357 Ай бұрын
Paths of Glory is one of my all time favorite war films.
@davidcorriveau8615
@davidcorriveau8615 Ай бұрын
Paths of Glory is a very good movie about a very depressing and disturbing time.
@misterprecocious2491
@misterprecocious2491 Ай бұрын
What about Clockwork Orange?
@4yaears
@4yaears Ай бұрын
The amazing thing is this film was filmed entirely in and around London. Even the Vietnam scenes were all in England. Stanley Kubrick had palm trees flown in and they shot a lot of the battle scenes at an old gas works in East London about 20 minutes from where I live.
@strawdawgs78
@strawdawgs78 Ай бұрын
Hamburger Hill, Platoon, Born on the Fourth of July, the China Beach pilot. The best Vietnam movies are the ones made by people who were actually there.
@easy3088
@easy3088 Ай бұрын
I don't get the blurring of the guns. Guns are shown on youtube all the time.
@mickeykmiller
@mickeykmiller Ай бұрын
I guess they're offensive. lol
@redrick8900
@redrick8900 Ай бұрын
It often leads to demonetization.
@easy3088
@easy3088 Ай бұрын
@@redrick8900 KZfaqrs are not supposed to show Firearms or accessories if it is for the purpose of selling the firearm or accessory.
@vancelubben5300
@vancelubben5300 Ай бұрын
For the record, I was in the Army. And it is physically impossible to get live rounds off the shooting range. The drill sergeants are very strict over checking that
@neptunusrex5195
@neptunusrex5195 Ай бұрын
Not sure if anybody catches it but the scene with Pile on the firing line, when he switches magazines there’s still some live rounds left in it. This is presumably how he gets the magazine and ammo off the firing line. Only way that would happen is if the range officer was negligent or somehow missed it.
@Raven5150
@Raven5150 Ай бұрын
No wonder goner became king pin, he played Thor and a giant cockroach in a brand new edges suit
@rb2312
@rb2312 Ай бұрын
Good Film. the urban scenes were actually filmed in London. R Lee Ermey's was also technical advisor on "An Officer and a Gentleman" and helped Louis Gossett Jr with his portrayal of Sgt Foley. which won Louis Gossett Jr. an oscar
@teambanzai9491
@teambanzai9491 Ай бұрын
Private Pyle was played by the talented Vincent D’Onofrio. Amazing character actor. I would recommend watching him in The Whole Wide World (1996) with Renée Zellweger. He also plays the Marvel villain, Kingpin. The Vietnam War was a civil war, or a war of reunification, depending on how you look at it. The communist North versus a corrupt democratic South. America was slowly drawn into the conflict. It was first military advisors then it turned into a full commitment of combat troops and everything that came with that.
@timmooney7528
@timmooney7528 Ай бұрын
Hamburger Hill is my vote for a well made war film.
@oddish3022
@oddish3022 Ай бұрын
The Vietnam War was also referred to as the first televised War.
@bagontucks
@bagontucks 15 күн бұрын
My dad was in the Marines and went to basic training at Parris Island and made me watch this movie like all the time growing up.
@jrobwoo688
@jrobwoo688 Ай бұрын
This is a rough film to watch, but this is the point. War is H377.
@SteinMeister72
@SteinMeister72 Ай бұрын
I grew up with many children of South Vietnamese refugees in Northern California. They still hung the South Vietnamese flag in their homes and acted as though they were a nation in exile.
@PrimalRage-om8uz
@PrimalRage-om8uz Ай бұрын
it's because they are.. 😂😂😂 the North Vietcongs won, they was supported by communist China and communist Russia. the south Vietnamese lost who was supported by America, UK and France, democracy lost in that war. Same thing with the American civil war, the North won and the South Confederates lost, they fled into exile In the decade after the Civil War, roughly 10,000 Southerners left the United States, with the majority going to Brazil, where slavery was still legal. (Others went to such places as Cuba, Mexico, Venezuela, Honduras, Canada
@meanmax9663
@meanmax9663 Ай бұрын
United States Marine Corps veteran here. I love this movie, especially the boot camp portion. I served at Parris Island for my Marine Corps boot camp training in 1982, and this depiction is fairly spot-on with how boot camp was during my training.
@NibletoDerf
@NibletoDerf Ай бұрын
The actor who played Pyle also played Vic from Jurassic World.
@shawnmiller4781
@shawnmiller4781 Ай бұрын
This has often been referred to the best half a film about the military. Referring specifically to the boot camp scenes. That is complete a credit to Ermey
@bobblethreadgill4463
@bobblethreadgill4463 Ай бұрын
Mary, I joined the Marines in '75. There are many mechanisms in place with drill instructors that a mental deficiency would have been spotted in the first 10 days at the most. There were a couple of fellas in boot camp being discharged for certain problems. Pvt. Leonard Lawrence (Pyle) would not have made it to an obstacle course.
@Troph2
@Troph2 Ай бұрын
Not at that time, Look into Project 100,000, also known as McNamara's 100,000, McNamara's Folly, McNamara's Morons, and McNamara's Misfits.
@KthulhuXxx
@KthulhuXxx Ай бұрын
They weren't discharging many people during the Vietnam war, regardless of reason.
@andrew348
@andrew348 Ай бұрын
The draft had ended by 1973.
@georgeprchal3924
@georgeprchal3924 Ай бұрын
Forrest Gump probably has the most polite Drill Sergeant.
@Travelinmatt1976
@Travelinmatt1976 Ай бұрын
The soundtrack of this movie is amazing. The background music during Joker's firewatch is my favorite.
@iamamaniaint
@iamamaniaint Ай бұрын
I'm pretty sure Kubrick's daughter made that music. Talented family indeed!
@nochannel1q2321
@nochannel1q2321 Ай бұрын
Regarding if the Vietnamese ever asked for the help, they did. The South Vietnamese government requested aid and help in ever increasing amounts.
@NefariousKoel
@NefariousKoel Ай бұрын
It's surprising, the falsehoods people have learned and then repeat. I'd expect the false "US invasion" statement to come from someone educated in modern Vietnam, or another similar Com gov't, but not from someone outside such a place. Shaking my head in disappointed history nerd motions.
@barrycohen311
@barrycohen311 Ай бұрын
True, but the South Vietnamese Govt was very corrupt and somewhat of a US Puppet Govt. The CIA finally decided to whack President Diem.
@Unpainted_Huffhines
@Unpainted_Huffhines Ай бұрын
PT is "physical training".
@MaryCherryOfficial
@MaryCherryOfficial Ай бұрын
oh no wonder i didn't know what it was
@winstonmarlowe5254
@winstonmarlowe5254 Ай бұрын
Puddin' Taine
@Unpainted_Huffhines
@Unpainted_Huffhines Ай бұрын
@@winstonmarlowe5254 Whatever that is, I don't think Hartman would threaten to "puddin' taine" the recruits to death.
@JohnKelleher-xy1hv
@JohnKelleher-xy1hv 8 күн бұрын
He’s not a captain he’s a gunnery sgt. he’s a drill instructor.
@ericsierra-franco7802
@ericsierra-franco7802 Ай бұрын
I went through Parris Island in 88. The basic training sequence is incredibly accurate, however, even when I went through there was no open physical abuse of recruits. A Drill Instructor may take you into the Head(bathroom)and get rough with you physically (it happened to me), but the days of open and harsh physical abuse ended after the Vietnam War. For punishment they are going to make you do various calisthenics beyond the point of exhaustion. The other recruits taking out their frustrations on a specific recruit for a multitude of reasons (called a "Blanket Party") did occur when I went through and I'm sure it happens today as well.
@1Tankmarine
@1Tankmarine Ай бұрын
Same here brother. Jun 88, 2nd Bn.
@ericsierra-franco7802
@ericsierra-franco7802 Ай бұрын
@@1Tankmarine Graduated in April of 88, 1st Bn.
@spartansix2323
@spartansix2323 Ай бұрын
I was right behind you graduating Nov 88 A Co 1st Bn. PLT 1089.
@joshuacastaldi
@joshuacastaldi Ай бұрын
'BORN ON THE FOURTH OF JULY'. Since you are watching Vietnam's war films and you have already reacted to some Tom Cruise films i recommend you to watch this masterpiece.
@marshallprince2583
@marshallprince2583 Ай бұрын
America's involvement in Vietnam was an attempt to stop the spread of communism, which had led to a lot of chaos and violence in Russia, China, and Korea, already. America, being capitalist, was fearful of what might happen to our global economic and military influence should communism take a strong hold of the Asiatic region. The war was handled terribly. American boys were told they were going to be heroes, but they arrived in a land where, unlike WW2, you couldn't easily tell the good buys from the bad guys. This, coupled with the stresses of extreme guerilla warfare, led many American troops to take the violent approach to erring on the side of caution, and this only created more enemies among people who otherwise would have tolerated or even welcomed the Americans. Fast forward a few years, and you've got new soldiers coming into a country they were told they were saving, but the locals hate them because of what earlier Americans have done. The problem grew worse and worse. On top of this, it's the first war to be covered by reporters and journalists in the field. The American public could see the gruesomeness of war, and the blamed anyone in a uniform, no matter that individual's conduct in the war. Returning vets were spat on at the airport, called baby-killers and rapists. Also, for years, the US government lied to the public about the number of troops killed or missing in action, so morale wouldn't suffer. Journalists Woodward and Bernstein of the Washington Post discovered this and went public. This was the most poorly-managed war in American history. The waves of its consequences are still felt in parts of American society.
@AstroXeno
@AstroXeno Ай бұрын
During the late 80s, one of the trends in Hollywood was Vietnam movies. The three big ones from this era were Platoon, Full Metal Jacket and Hamburger Hill. Born On The Fourth Of July (Tom Cruise) and Casualties of War (Sean Penn, Michael J. Fox) were also from this era There were a slew of other, smaller ones, most of which were direct to video or made for HBO. I seem to remember one of those, called The Iron Triangle, which was told partially from the perspective of a VC fighter.
@MRC_5000
@MRC_5000 Ай бұрын
i somehow want to thank you for making this video. it was interesting - and also a little heart-wrenching - to see you genuinely react to all of this. i feel like i also experienced the movie in a new way. thank you! and yes, gunnery sgt. hartman... ngl, i saw a trailer for the movie as a kid and because of his hilarious insults (and the use of the song "surfin' bird" in the trailer), i thought this was a comedy. but r. lee ermey's portrayal is just iconic. i can't think of any other way to describe it. he really lived sgt. hartman.
@toecutterjenkins
@toecutterjenkins Ай бұрын
The DI s being brutal is an act of love, these DIs see how many boys they trained were dying in combat and they need to prepare them for chaos. They had no time for patience so they had to push them harder and harder . Moreover these guys were drafted so some weren't mentally or physically prepared for war.
@rmb199886
@rmb199886 Ай бұрын
The island they keep talking about is Parris Island off the coast of South Carolina. Such a beautiful place, I have had the pleasure of visiting a few times over the years.
@shawnmiller4781
@shawnmiller4781 Ай бұрын
Just don’t drink the water!
@AlbertHuebsch
@AlbertHuebsch Ай бұрын
They are doing that because one of the recruits referred to his rifle as a gun. In the military a gun refers to a shotgun, artillery,or naval ordinance. A soldier's shoulder fired weapon is a rifle. The only time guns are referred to is the above listed instances or as a general term for all projectile firing weapons.
@TerraZetzz
@TerraZetzz Ай бұрын
The donut scene was the best part. The Drill Instructor's reaction to it. lol
@benitocuevas5159
@benitocuevas5159 Ай бұрын
I went to Infantry basic training in 1981. While this was well after the end of the Vietnam War our Drill Sgts were all combat veterans. The training depicted in the film was spot on. Our Drills were just like R Lee Emery. While the physical abuse was not as severe as in the film the Drill did do some Wall to Wall and Woodline counseling from time to time. Since I volunteered for military service and the US Infantry I had no one to blame but myself.
@erosson27
@erosson27 Ай бұрын
The reason they look unhappy is cause they were drafted, unlike the current US military, back during the Vietnam war you could be drafted which means your number gets called and you're forced to go, like jury duty where you can die.
@MotoNomad350
@MotoNomad350 Ай бұрын
No one was drafted into the Marine Corps during the times represented in this film (up to Tet Offensive and battle of Hue in early 1968). The Corps didn’t take its first draftees until April 1968. Although the Corps took some draftees thereafter when needed to fill recruiting quotas, only about 10% of Marines were drafted during the entire course of the Vietnam war. The Army relied much more heavily on conscription.
@erosson27
@erosson27 Ай бұрын
@@MotoNomad350 I didn't know that, I thought all the branches relied on draftees, thanks.
@shawnmiller4781
@shawnmiller4781 Ай бұрын
@@erosson27The Navy , Coast Guard and Air Force not so much because they would get volunteers who where trying to avoid getting drafted into the army. There is a big difference between serving on a ship than on a jungle field site.
@julsarmijo7836
@julsarmijo7836 Ай бұрын
I had the privilege and honor to be a basic training instructor for prior service members from all branches coming into the US Army during the surge of 2005-2007. I met the most diverse, insanely funny, talented and patriotic people who loved serving so much they went through 2 basic trainings. Not many can or will do 1 let alone 2. Especially as intense as it was the 2nd tine around. But yeah, there are some crazies who only join to kill. Good video all around 👍
@pnwcruiser
@pnwcruiser Ай бұрын
When I went though Basic Combat Training (Boot Camp) in the US Army my training platoon had two nail chewing Vietnam combat vets as drill sergeants. They acted much the same way as the Marine drill instructor in this movie, although they were not allowed to strike us, but we quickly came to understand they weren't sadists they were in fact just doing their job. I didn't really care what they called us or how hard they worked us, I was there in part for the challenge, but I will note the lack of sleep was often tough to deal with. The drill sergeants had a short time to turn a bunch of soft American kids into soldiers, albeit still very green, and you don't do that with hand holding. They were in fact excellent NCO's and trainers.
@adm.petercowell9573
@adm.petercowell9573 Ай бұрын
Yes the guy in the chopper was representing the several men who were "cracked". Vietcong were an insurgent force who hid among the civilian population and attacked unexpectedly in ambushes etc. Thats why the guys comments about them all being VC. They weren't ofcause but it felt that way after a while for those stuck in country.
@michaelkost6060
@michaelkost6060 Ай бұрын
To contrast Lee Ermey’s hardcore Drill Instructor, Monty Python has a pleasant captain in the army, in “the Meaning of Life”….off you go!
@dedcowbowee
@dedcowbowee Ай бұрын
"A Tiger? In Africa?". Very underrated MP film!!
@jamesrowles9249
@jamesrowles9249 Ай бұрын
​@@dedcowbowee...err... maybe it escaped from the zoo!
@dedcowbowee
@dedcowbowee Ай бұрын
@@jamesrowles9249 Lol, I forgot that response,🤣
@SergioArellano-yd7ik
@SergioArellano-yd7ik Ай бұрын
He was a Sargent Major
@michaelkost6060
@michaelkost6060 Ай бұрын
No…he was a USMC Drill Instructor as a Staff Sergeant. SMs are Army.
@ronaldg9238
@ronaldg9238 Ай бұрын
I cant believe they had us watch this on the bus ride to USMC boot camp 😂😂
@DXChrisCross
@DXChrisCross Ай бұрын
A great film about the Vietnam war you should watch is We Were Soldiers. It shows both the battle from both sides, as well as the effects of the families back home. It really sheds light on the fact that both sides were humans just following orders, and not mindless killers. It's certainly a tear jerker.
@shawnofdanaukota3843
@shawnofdanaukota3843 Ай бұрын
Your country also participated in this war too. Try Danger Close: Battle of Long Tan.
@shawnmiller4781
@shawnmiller4781 Ай бұрын
A good film that brings light to the Australian and New Zealand participation
@Dant3sWasteland
@Dant3sWasteland 2 ай бұрын
Didn’t know I needed this reaction Such a handful of emotions in this film! New to Patreon, proud Melbournian here 😂 Keep doing you
@MaryCherryOfficial
@MaryCherryOfficial 2 ай бұрын
Thanks for the support😄
@user-my5hb6gj1y
@user-my5hb6gj1y Ай бұрын
@@MaryCherryOfficialfirst time i saw her respond to a comment . Chapeau to you sire
@MaryCherryOfficial
@MaryCherryOfficial Ай бұрын
Along with 2 other channels, editing myself, checking editors works, streaming on twitch, I do find the time to reply. Maybe I don’t respond to you cos you’re unkind? Example 1) cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/1007627386377994260/1227781893462949908/IMG_8884.png?ex=6629a7fe&is=661732fe&hm=2e57157ce981035ff2d3b84d60937cd7b42ccc519f053cabe8cbf2e1e04b95b1& 2) cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/1007627386377994260/1227781894066933841/IMG_8885.png?ex=6629a7fe&is=661732fe&hm=5d4031764779bbe684bd2c684f61eab396243bf011699254cafcc72cdc391ec0& 3) cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/1007627386377994260/1227781894553468989/IMG_8887.png?ex=6629a7fe&is=661732fe&hm=add944f9ee4fc35eee4c48be22205fcbc5a4744e156310125ce9525a7073b456& 4) cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/1007627386377994260/1227781895081955399/IMG_8886.png?ex=6629a7fe&is=661732fe&hm=9be3fd30f50249b1ea94c9f25c0ff7845be9bcb1b9f6cecf74cbab447eba4566& Have a nice day bmorg.
@chazvasquez2901
@chazvasquez2901 Ай бұрын
Heaven and Earth is a movie that shows the Vietnamese people side of the war
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