As promised here is Part Two of my Midway review. Hope you guys enjoy it :) ● Check out our Merch! history-buffs-shop.fourthwall.... ● Follow us on Facebook: / historybuffslondon ● Follow us on Twitter: / historybuffs_
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@doodlenov3 жыл бұрын
The last segment is very important. It is frustrating to see that most people are unaware of what horrors the IJN and IJA actually committed.
@JimBrodie3 жыл бұрын
Not only that, it's only recently that Japanese curriculum is lessening the censorship and whitewashing of what they've taught about their own conduct in WW2. Because of it's shameful nature, there's still resistance.
@myfootinurass3 жыл бұрын
its something theyve never apologized for either. Shameful
@anadaere68613 жыл бұрын
@Raymond Tremblay Phillippines, actually And yes, I just did a quick google research and lo and behold Looks like the IJN is just as rotten as the IJA, I'm really trying to look for ways they aren't inhuman scum but damn, it's hard
@troodon10963 жыл бұрын
@@JimBrodie That's something I have to give credit to modern Germany for, they don't deny their past history or try to cover it up.
@anadaere68613 жыл бұрын
@@thedamntrain3467 both did warcrimes, but one did it with unholy passion
@GenkiGanbare3 жыл бұрын
The Yorktown's fire crews deserve two medals of honor all around for saving the Pacific war effort twice in the same year.
@matthewnewton88123 жыл бұрын
Twice in the same day.
@KaladinVegapunk3 жыл бұрын
Seriously, that's always been one of my favorite little key moments of the battle, I get why they couldn't show it..but it's so badass! Repairing it so fast like goddamn cyborgs like that and taking a second hit for the fleet haha It's like that, plus Rocheforts codebreaking, plus McClusky deciding to keep searching and happening upon the undefended fleet, best being a total boss, so many factors turned it around The navy did war games a lot post war recreating the midway scenario and every time the US lost Just shows how you can't account for everything, a blend of skill, luck, and the bravery of those first 4-5 waves of planes that got completely annihilated but bought time & caused all the chaos with the kido butais rearming and not being able to take in the cap
@KaladinVegapunk3 жыл бұрын
Also, really loved that scene at 3:05 where they hear where the fleet is coming from hahaha..Nagumos arrogant ass is so taken aback, and that Jr officer he yelled at for doing exactly that in the war game is standing there like fuuuuckk as he gives him that little glance.. hahahah
@KaladinVegapunk3 жыл бұрын
Also what's kind of hilarious is before Midway, Tojo was so cocky from the victories he'd written up demands for the apparent obvious eminent American surrender haha.. Where he'd demand India, Washington state, Alaska, Hawaii, and like most of south america hahahaha Like..sure buddy.
@BradyKaynee3 жыл бұрын
One thing to note about the Yorktown is that the ship was attacked by two separate air attacks... but survived both times. It wasn't a few days later that the American found the ship and try to tow it back to Hawaii for repairs... thinking it was savable and it was. It was until a Japanese submarine found them towing it back to Hawaii and finally sank it along with the USS Hammann.
@jasonlucas2328 Жыл бұрын
The author of "The Rape of Nanking" committed suicide several years after the book was published. During the book's research, she was traumatized by the pictures and horror of Japanese war crimes. Then, she frequently had nightmares. She told her family that never waking up was the only way to eliminate the fear and pain.
@Xpwnxage Жыл бұрын
Jesus Christ, that poor woman.
@Rivaldi53011 ай бұрын
Iris Chang's work did a lot to help bring acknowledgment of the abuses committed by the Japanese military in China worldwide. There's a statue dedicated to her in the Nanjing Massacre museum. If you ever visit Nanjing (which is an amazing city) I'd recommend going to the museum. It's really well crafted and has some of the best English language support for a museum I've been to in China. However, it can be difficult to experience due to the horrific nature of the topic.
@Ken-fh4jc11 ай бұрын
I’ve heard this story I can’t remember that poor woman’s name.
@philipkruger56310 ай бұрын
I read just a little of that book and put it down. It’s definitely not something you can forget
@edgaraquino232410 ай бұрын
....& if that was bad, read about the doings of Unit 731...Nanking was uncontrolled savagery, 731's was controlled, laboratory savagery....😢
@LocalGuardsman Жыл бұрын
The last segment can't be any more true. You know you're bad when even the Germans think you should take a chill pill.
@senseishu937 Жыл бұрын
People keep bringing up the Germans thought even the Japanese were crazy but when did that actually happen?
@ethanwhitehead2085 Жыл бұрын
@@senseishu937 The German embassy wasn't too happy about Nanking, but I think most of this sentiment came from John Rabe.
@stralabastro142 Жыл бұрын
The last part ruined the video showing his bias towards WW2, typical ignorant american, he's clearly not an historian.
@christiancleofas7451 Жыл бұрын
@@ethanwhitehead2085 true, and that is one off the rare instance that a swastika is used for good...and saved lives.
@swaminathanbalakrishnan1399 Жыл бұрын
@@ethanwhitehead2085 On the other hand, the Japanese saved a whole lot of Jews by inviting them to Shanghai. For some reason it also seems they supported the Polish government-in-exile.
@mxbr13563 жыл бұрын
I would love to see you reviewing “Downfall“ with Bruno Gans as Adolf Hitler
@no_one01-53 жыл бұрын
I second this!
@The_Stumbler3 жыл бұрын
I don't know why, but I read it as Bruno mars.
@dylantennant65943 жыл бұрын
Yes. It would be awesome to see another non Language accurate movie. I think the last one he did was Apocolypto.
@MozTS3 жыл бұрын
fegelein would fuck it up somehow
@dannyhiggins7113 жыл бұрын
🙌
@keitheppichphd67843 жыл бұрын
One big historical inaccuracy of the film is that the characters should have been chain-smoking in every scene.
@donwillman45873 жыл бұрын
The big thing I can't get over, and the reason I have yet to even see the film, was the totally inaccurate way the aircraft were flown. Dive bombers pull out at 1500 ft- most daring might go to 1000 ft. Certainly not low enough to scrape the ocean with a wing. Nor would they dive in such numbers. That's a good way to get caught in the shrapnel of your buddies bomb. And don't get me started on the Dauntless doing a hammerhead stall!
@redassassian3 жыл бұрын
Lol the anti smoker company you can thank for that
@OddHunter55043 жыл бұрын
Not really,i mean maybe in some scenes but definitely not the pilot’s as smoking affects the body at altitudes causing stuff like hypoxia
@nadolfc80083 жыл бұрын
@@donwillman4587 forgive me if I’m wrong I know some of it would have been played out for dramatic effect in the film however wouldn’t the inexperience of the pilots be a factor to an incorrect dive? As mentioned in the clip
@LupusAries3 жыл бұрын
@@nadolfc8008 No, because they know that the bombs fragments and explosive force will get you if you if you are to low. Frag pattern from a 1,500 lbs would be about 200-300 metres so about 600-930 feet, horizontally and about 200m/600 feet vertically. Nevermind that one asinine scene, where the pilot drops the bomb from basically horizontal attitude, if it doesn't go off it would more likely skip off the deck than penetrate as shown in the movie. As low as the pullout was in the movie his own bomb would've killed him.
@mohnjayer2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for pointing out how savage and brutal the Japanese were in WWII and how it’s gotten completely washed away in many people’s minds. It’s insane. In some ways, the Japanese were more sadistic than the Germans and most people have no idea.
@dutchhoke6555 Жыл бұрын
The scarey part is bushido was pretty much at the core of military training, to a man.
@lilmoeszyslak4810 Жыл бұрын
Unit 731 tells you everything you need to know about the mentality they had
@Jack-the-historian Жыл бұрын
@@lilmoeszyslak4810 bingo. Unit 731. Pure evil.
@TheRepentersChamber Жыл бұрын
@@lilmoeszyslak4810 As a moral case study, Unit 731 has always fascinated me. In a similar manner to research performed at concentration camps, data gathered at 731 facilities was (and arguably still is) crucial in the development of the medical field.
@harvestcanada Жыл бұрын
Emmet Till.
@luckydr26232 жыл бұрын
My grandmother kept telling the story of the Japanese invasion in the Philippines whilst carrying my two uncles who were still babies at the time. They had to cover their faces with charcoal residue and cover their breasts the best they can to avoid being raped and killed while traveling province to province undetected in the forests. Meanwhile, my grandfather was back in Bataan fighting and defending the island, unknowing if he was alive or dead, he survived the war btw. God, I could only imagine how horrifying it was at the time for our grandparents.
@rc59191 Жыл бұрын
My good friend of mine is Filipino her grandpa was a Filipino resistance fighter during WWII and showed us pictures of Japanese troops catching babies on their bayonets for fun. Crazy how my great grandpa fought the Japanese now my cousin and I both have a Japanese wife and family it's like the Japanese people back then were aliens compared to how they are today.
@Mannyhdz005210 ай бұрын
@rc59191 Yeah, the imperial japanese are nothing compared to how modern japanese are.
@DaveSCameron10 ай бұрын
Filthy actions!!
@matasa74638 ай бұрын
@@rc59191 The common people of Japan are so peace-loving because they don't want to see Japan return to that sort of madness again. That's why there's protests whenever Japan starts doing stuff that seems imperialistic and warmongering, such as force build ups. But that doesn't mean every Japanese thinks that way, and many don't know the full scope of the war crimes committed.
@juliusjohnson48297 ай бұрын
Our great grandfather's were getting after it with machetes and 45. Auto pistols in the middle of the night.
@Unpeth3 жыл бұрын
Roland Emmerich after watching History Buffs' previous videos: "I'll show him!" *shakes fist*
@makairidah83543 жыл бұрын
As a godzilla fan and a history buff I am double amazed by how much he improved that it hurts that i wanna watch this
@ELCADAROSA3 жыл бұрын
@@johnsouto5221, such as?
@NicoCalaRyu3 жыл бұрын
@@ELCADAROSA 10000 BC
@danielchipman89673 жыл бұрын
@@johnsouto5221 I'd say rather than several major mistakes, he made a few small choices in order to facilitate the story. Craig Symonds pointed some of these out on the 'Based on a True Story' podcast. According to him, if Emmerich told everything EXACTLY the way it was, a 100% accurate movie of Midway would be "a fifty hour movie", and that wouldn't be a commercially viable product. In Symonds' opinion, he thought Emmerich did a very good and pretty accurate job. If it's good enough for him, it's good enough for me.
@randalltaylor37003 жыл бұрын
Was it over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor?
@secretlyasian40092 жыл бұрын
As much as I love Japanese culture, I appreciate you calling out the part about the Imperial Japanese being givin the same honors as the American servicemen. I've never understood why Imperial Japan was given such leeway after the war compared to the Nazi's of Germany.
@Tom-bm2kt2 жыл бұрын
Because we nuked them. That gives them two passes: 1) keep your emperor, 2) rebuild your navy so long as we stay friends.
@Starwarroir2 жыл бұрын
@@Tom-bm2kt also the Soviet Union was nearby and Japan wasn’t exactly on good terms with them so the enemy of my enemy is my friend
@slyaspie49342 жыл бұрын
@@Starwarroir yeah Stalin got away with it lightly as well, due to fighting the Nazis. I think the whole world felt it was tired of war at the time and just wanted and end to it. Although that feeling didn't last long Also the Japanese pretty much said without keeping the emperor they wouldn't surrender, and no one wanted an invasion of Japan the allied death toll alone was estimated to be over a million men.
@Starwarroir2 жыл бұрын
@@slyaspie4934 yes they were preparing to train teenager to go into gorilla warfare mode. Attacking with sharpen bamboo. Basically almost no surrender it’s crazy
@slyaspie49342 жыл бұрын
@@Starwarroir yeah there's a quote from a marine that first landed on the Japanese beach after the surrender (I think it was Tokyo) but he literally describes how everywhere was gun emplacements, pill boxes, bunkers and trenches all with overlapping arch of fire, it would've been absolutely hell on earth had the invasion gone through, although to be fair the whole Pacific theatre was hell in paradise
@PoppaBear82 Жыл бұрын
My grandfather served in the Pacific, and two other wars, but he died with hatred in his heart towards the Japanese. I always wondered how a man could have so much hate, but the more I learn, the more I understand.
@thatguy22441 Жыл бұрын
We did a lot of nasty things in our history, but Imperial Japan was far, far worse. I've been called a "Western chauvinist" for having nothing but contempt and scorn for those who commit the war crimes Imperial Japan did. To which I answer "GODDAMN RIGHT!" Yes, I think I'm better than anyone who massacres civilians for fun.
@johnpohlson9860 Жыл бұрын
Dad was in the philippines in 45 and at Manilla, he hated the Japanese till the day he died.
@jasonlucas2328 Жыл бұрын
Once, I followed a friend of mine to visit her great-grandfather in a nursing home, who fought in the Pacific during WWII. Before we left, he told her that he never wanted a Japanese at his funeral.
@tra-viskaiser8737 Жыл бұрын
Until you know entirely what a person has gone through, you can never know the reasons for the hate they hold...
@lizc6393 Жыл бұрын
My grandpa was a Colonel flying B17's in the Pacific, exactly the same here. He was a gentleman, but it clearly pained him to hold his tongue if the nation/culture of Japan came up in conversation.
@obiwankenobi42522 жыл бұрын
9:05 I think it’s worth mentioning that the bombing groups from Enterprise and Yorktown struck the Japanese together by pure chance, having no communications with each other, having been launched at different times, and having taken vastly different paths
@swirvinbirds19718 ай бұрын
American chaos ruled the day. Sheer dumb luck combined with pure bravery.
@murasaki8486 ай бұрын
There was luck, but frankly the Americans threw the dice so many times that eventually they were bound to get lucky. They put themselves in the position to do so. The Japanese, on the other hand, had ignored the adage that "the enemy rarely goes along with your plans." The best rundown of the Battle of Midway I've seen is here on KZfaq. Look up "The Battle of Midway 1942: Told from the Japanese Perspective" by Montemayor. He lays out the timeline step by step of how the battle progressed along with photographic evidence to back up the illustrations. Two points: the flak they show in the movie Midway here is a bit too thick. The Japanese navy had two flaws that had significance in the battle. One was that their anti-aircraft fire was quite weak compared to US ships, so they relied a lot more on CAP cover, meaning the carriers really had to be their own defense. Second, and really significant for this and other battles is the US Navy was far better at damage control, which is why the Yorktown was so stubbornly hard to kill, even drawing off an entire enemy torpedo bomber attack because they saw a carrier that wasn't on fire and was making good headway and assumed it must be the Hornet or Enterprise. The major issue is the Kido Butai, for all it's strength, was not up to the huge task it had to undertake. It was asked to both keep pounding Midway and engage American carriers as they would supposedly be rushing into the area, and it was simply too much to ask, especially since they were running far ahead of Yamamoto's surface fleet and the landing ships and the American carriers were already in the area. The feint to the Aleutians was essentially a waste. They were establishing a worthless beachhead for a base of no operational use, taking away two escort carriers that could have reinforced the Midway operation and allowed the fleet carriers more time to ready the offensive strikes instead of servicing the CAP. Imagine the dilemma for the Americans if the surface fleet had been with the carriers and steamed on to pound Midway around noon using the Yamato's 18 inch guns, leaving the carriers to fly CAP and keep the strike planes ready for the American carriers. Frankly, the Japanese plan was tactically bad, the naval equivalent of putting the artillery out in front of the tank corps.
@basilmcdonnell98074 ай бұрын
And the Hornet's dive bombers didn't even find the target fleet. Went off out into empty space.
@TheIronArmenianakaGIHaigs3 жыл бұрын
I don't know why this film got so much hate from reviewers at the time. It's pretty good, a little bit embellishing but still pretty good :)
@cattledog9013 жыл бұрын
It is relatively "accurate" for a movie but the acting was unbelievably corny.
@aster1sk9893 жыл бұрын
I loved this movie for it's historical accuracy
@michaelterrell50613 жыл бұрын
@@cattledog901 It’s a historically accurate movie(no need for the quotations) and it had great battle scenes. That’s all that matters to me honestly.
@thibaudduhamel25813 жыл бұрын
Too much CGI, bad acting, overbearing music, quite ridiculous setpieces... Just compare the scene of the attack on Midway atoll with the original John Ford movies, it's night and day.
@QueueTeePies3 жыл бұрын
@@cattledog901 Also poor CGI. Pearl Harbor sets the standard very high for a 20 year old movie.
@ostrowulf3 жыл бұрын
Nick: "Thanks for your patience." Everyone: "Thanks for making the waits worth it."
@cleverusername93693 жыл бұрын
Same with Oversimplified
@matthewvandyke6753 жыл бұрын
what about the first midway and the enterprise was not that close to pearl during the attack
@Sou98C4S Жыл бұрын
Your ending about Japanese brutality are right on. The late PM of Singapore Lee Kuan yew witnessed all these brutality , same as my grandparents did in Singapore and Malaya
@Otterpawp Жыл бұрын
Reading the negative reviews of this movie is a pretty hilarious experience. Especially when so many say things along the lines of 'everyone knows this story' when I have met very few people who actually know what happened at midway. As a former sailor I was very impressed with how accurate they did everything and how tight they kept to the historic timeline on that day. For any interested in a warroom look at this I can't recommend youtube's Montemayor's review of this battle and the precursor battles.
@williamstocker5848 ай бұрын
Can’t take film critics serious at all they don’t anything they just like using big words and when it comes to history they are very clueless and ignorant
@m0redread2 ай бұрын
I feel that way about every documentary on Guadalcanal being about the ground invasion when the vicious month long naval battle is so much more interesting.
@hughculliton31743 жыл бұрын
'Bout time! As a kid at the Oshkosh Airshow I once actually met George Gay, shook his hand and had a 10 min conversation with him. The 50 y/o me keeps punching the shoulder of 13 y/o me to ask more questions!!! A true gentleman and a man who helped steer me in the direction of service in the Royal Canadian Navy. I still have the plastic model of the Dauntless I built after meeting him!
@huevos78263 жыл бұрын
as a 17 yr old Canadian cadet, I would have loved the opportunity to speak to the man :) glad you got to meet him
@suspiciouscanadian64783 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your service!
@ERAUsnow3 жыл бұрын
Only problem is that Ensign Gay flew a Devastator, not a Dauntless...
@johnmcginnis52013 жыл бұрын
You were lucky Hugh. Most men serving during WWII don't like to talk about it. My Dad's two uncles never talked about it even when I asked. One would just say "A terrible time best not repeated." I found out later their exploits. One received the Bronze Star as a bombardier the other the DSC as pilot for flying 'The Hump'.
@hughculliton31743 жыл бұрын
@@ERAUsnow Thanks for watching the gate!
@abelcheng20733 жыл бұрын
"If you still need convincing you can Google them yourself." Yeah I will spare my stomach thank you very much.
@logie30203 жыл бұрын
Very dark hearing about this I had no clue they imperial army was this insane. so far as to treat your own like dirt so they fight like dogs
@kingsweden46363 жыл бұрын
@@logie3020 yes a homie who thinks like me
@djkaibaxter4193 жыл бұрын
@@logie3020 its so much worse then shown in this video. the japanese killed over 20 million chinese, most civilian. Chinese cities had just as many deaths as entire countries and empires around the world. let that sink in.
@komandant_history3 жыл бұрын
I did not need convincing but i googled it anyway. Holy shit.... its horrific and appalling what the imperial Japanese empire did to POWs and civilians.
@Vin-sv9fm3 жыл бұрын
Don't do that man, i do it when i was 16, was scarred, and hated every imperial japanese that fought in WW2.
@joelspaulding5964 Жыл бұрын
It is difficult to overstate how incredibly well done this- and your other pieces- are.
@jackb2542 Жыл бұрын
As my father-in-law was on the USS Oklahoma on Dec 7th and my father was in the ETO from Normandy to the Bulge, your comments at the end of the video couldn't be more TRUE, as bad as the Nazis were, the Japanese atrocities are at least as horrific, if not more so. THANK YOU for shedding some light on what has been largely ignored by the historical media in the 80 years since. You are 1000% correct in your reporting!
@sfs20403 жыл бұрын
"B17 gets hit" *Is clearly a B 26 in the movie, which is historically accurate* Um...
@garnix56123 жыл бұрын
It isn't that historically accurate. Yeah, the main parts are right, but for example the performance of the Dauntless is overrated and many action-scenes are just silly.
@commandervex16263 жыл бұрын
Yeah It's very obvious it is, its possible that it really was a B-17 but they didn't have the CGI for any but I think people just call any American bomber B-17
@maximaldinotrap3 жыл бұрын
@@commandervex1626 The B-17s bombed high. Four B-26s did torp runs. Two survived. One of the two shot down tried to ram a carrier. Dude is elderly and can misremember shit
@MaxwellAerialPhotography3 жыл бұрын
Yeah that bugged the hell out of me through this whole video.
@rockyblacksmith3 жыл бұрын
@@MaxwellAerialPhotography That he got two numbers mixed up in his script once? I mean sure it's wrong but it's clearly just human error.
@jackl453 жыл бұрын
"Brave men, We are fortunate they have such bad planes" A wise observation by the Admiral.
@111doomer3 жыл бұрын
They also had bad tactics. Brave men can make bad planes work if they have good tactics. The converse is also true, brave men in good planes will struggle if their tactics are bad. The survivors learned and learned quickly. Upgrading to Avengers from Devastators also helped.
@katey1dog3 жыл бұрын
TBD DEVASTATORS were America's answer to England's Fairy Swordfish.
@gildor88663 жыл бұрын
It wasn't just the planes - it was even more so the torpedos and not just because they often were duds. The Mark XIII torpedo had a maximum speed of only 33 knots. The newer japanese carriers (Hiryu, Soryu and the Shokakus) could make 34 knots and simply outrun it. And even against the slowest carrier (Kaga with 28 knots) a hit was practically impossible if you were attacking from the rear. And of course any japanese carrier under attack by torpedo-bombers turned away from the attacking planes. For comparison: the japanese type 91 torpedo had a speed of 42 knots, the british Mark XII 40 knots .
@KarbonKopy3 жыл бұрын
@@katey1dog How dare you demean the Swordfish in such a way
@katey1dog3 жыл бұрын
@@KarbonKopy I will say the Devastator flew 100 mph faster than the Swordfish. Don't know if that makes a difference.
@rossdawgsbrokenspirit90384 ай бұрын
LOVE the focus on Japanese atrocities at the end NEVER FORGET
@jacobseymour89078 ай бұрын
the fact that last segment was even said is terrific. I'm so glad this video wasn't shot down and people are still able to see beautiful video once again you've knocked it out of the park.
@jamesmckenzie95513 жыл бұрын
“People in western countries are naive to what the Japanese did” except the Anzacs, the Australians and New Zealanders very much remember the atrocities, growing up my grandparents still spoke about what happened to their parents, uncles and aunties, their friends parents etc.
@LordInter3 жыл бұрын
in the uk my great uncle wouldn't have a Japanese car but my parents generation don't seem as agreeved
@abloodraven38563 жыл бұрын
Australian here; I'd say it's still pretty right. Back in my public schooling, I took history whenever I had the chance. Even when we were focusing on WW2, the only Japanese atrocity I was able to name was Nanking. Our curriculum barely had any focus on the pacific theatre. Most of what I know about Japanese atrocities today has been from my own research. I really wish it was taught a lot more in public schooling.
@blackbullet3213 жыл бұрын
@@abloodraven3856 And if memory serves me correctly, didn't they allow Japanese lessons in schools to stop any sort of animosity? I'm from public too, and I remember in Mordern History, we went over how much Hitler was a cunt and all that jazz. But no mention of Stalin, Mao, Mussolini (Lol what else to say), and next to fuck all about Japanese, apart from Kokoda, bombing of Darwin and a ships last stand. And that only lasted until the school changed it from Modern History to Law... None of my classmates were happy with it. Fuck public schools.
@danoarmstrong25973 жыл бұрын
I am not totally disagreeing with your comment, however, our family lost a great uncle who was in the coastal artillery, trapped in the Philippines in 1941. So, just saying it was not only the Anzac who suffered, but the Americans and the Dutch as well.
@kendyer87613 жыл бұрын
Unit 731 will make you sick with how terrible it was. The Japanese were arguably worse than the Nazis by a wide margin.
@rickyjohnbaldoque84333 жыл бұрын
The level of ferocity and destruction during the battle of Manila was so intense that it was oftentimes coined as the "Asian Stalingrad".
@rekt_xington90273 жыл бұрын
Wasn't it Asian Warsaw Asian Stalingrad being the Battle of Shanghai
@adampilot82753 жыл бұрын
@@rekt_xington9027 Maybe not. Like Stalingrad, Manila saw brutal street fighting. Shanghai (and of course Nanjing) were more like unfenced Auschwitz. Little resistance and lots of slaughter by the invader.
@ruedelta3 жыл бұрын
@@adampilot8275 No, Shanghai was Asian Stalingrad. The fighting lasted for 3 months and involved most of the ROC's elite german-trained and equipped troops. It was a meat grinder that resulted in around 50-90k Japanese dead and around 187k Chinese dead. But for Americans, the war started with Pearl Harbor, so this battle doesn't count. Neither did the Battle of Wuhan, which saw around 30k-200k Japanese dead and 254k Chinese dead and lasted for 4 months. The reason why Manila (1 month for 17k dead in total, not counting civilians) is bandied around as the bloodiest urban fighting in WW2 is because it suited MacArthur's propaganda team and made Stilwell look good in the face of an "incompetent" ROC. This is the problem with American propaganda... China constantly gets downplayed and ignored.
@adampilot82753 жыл бұрын
@@ruedelta Agreed. That is why I called Shanghai an Auschwitz without fencing and gates. The slaughter in China was truly off scale and many see the start of the Pacific War as Pearl Harbour without taking the invasion of China into account. I never realized Wuhan was so costly though. Thanks for the input.
@Kaiserboo18713 жыл бұрын
@@ruedelta no offense, but China only survived the Japanese onslaught was because of their immense geographic size and population. The Chinese front was the second deadliest front of WWII, but unlike the Eastern Front (which saw similar casualties numbers for both sides) the Chinese front was quite one sided in terms of casualties with China having way higher casualties than Japan (10 million for China vs. 3 million for Japan). Did the Chinese score some military victories, most definitely, but China could not have defeated Japan on its own.
@robertholmberg6485 Жыл бұрын
I loved the new Midway. I liked the old movie Midway, but it was not as historically accurate. If you haven't yet, do the old Midway.
@GunnyO326 Жыл бұрын
I always liked Charlton Heston and Henry Fonda movies.
@Thorston_the_Just Жыл бұрын
@@GunnyO326 Do you like movies with gladiators?
@jamesalexander5623 Жыл бұрын
@@Thorston_the_Just Yes! And I was in the USAF, so I have seen Grown Men Naked!
@nachonachoman Жыл бұрын
I like how historical Midway movie is so unbelievable, a fairly accurate movie is considered too Hollywood
@benjaminlee2522 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for including the bit at the end. As a history lover and a Korean American, I never learned about the atrocities in Asia during WW2 until my 20s (mostly right after the turn of this century). I didn’t understood the grumbles of my parents (born years after that war) and (especially) my grandparents until I visited a museum in S Korea dedicated to what happened during ww2. Unfortunately, American history gloss over those atrocities and seem to present more of the ones that happened in Europe (which are just as gruesome and justified in keeping those memories alive as well). Just wish more people knew about what happened in Asia as they do in Europe during that time. Sorry for rambling. Thanks for your videos; love movies and love history. Watching these videos do give me some happiness.
@solandri69Ай бұрын
If they're still around, talk to your grandparents if they're willing to recount their experience. I learned my grandfather (a doctor) was ordered to treat a Japanese commander for some injury. When he refused, to coerce him they raped his wife's sister and niece in front of him, then killed them. The people who committed that atrocity are long dead, so I don't hold it against modern Japanese. But like the Holocaust, it needs to be remembered.
@benjaminlee2522Ай бұрын
@@solandri69 hey, yeah, I wish I could. They all died when I was fairly young (and/or stupid) and before I started liking history. Thank you for sharing. That is a crazy story. My parents (maybe learned from older generations) had a bit of a grudge, at least for the government, but I don’t think they still do. I remember asking why and they did explain the history in a way that a young me could understand. When they were done, I could see it in their eyes that they were wondering why they made it personal. It didn’t help that I told them that there were Japanese kids in my class and they seemed cool. I agree; that side of the war doesn’t seem to be touched on as much as the European front.
@NecoLumi2 жыл бұрын
I am a Filipino. Our country got it really bad, with many of our losses in the war thanks to torture, starvation and the rape of our homeland. It's great to see people call out the evils of Imperial Japan. I have no hate for the modern Japanese people. I hate their government for denying that these things happened.
@MilkT0ast2 жыл бұрын
As a chinese guy, who loves Japanese culture, I get it.
@dyeus44642 жыл бұрын
Good to see a fellow Filipino history buff. Lets fill the gap on our history with the history of our neighbors.
@fahs2 жыл бұрын
I dont think they deny it.... they just refuse to talk about it. Just as bad I suppose.
@rc591912 жыл бұрын
My friends grandpa was a Filipino resistance fighter during the occupation. I saw the pictures of Japanese Soldiers murdering babies with their bayonets like it was a game. I'll never understand how people could do that to a baby they deserved a third nuke just for that.
@cardiv5zuikaku9442 жыл бұрын
@@fahs The problem is that they seem to depict the Japanese as the victim, not just refuse to talk about it.
@TheGideon883 жыл бұрын
as a malaysian, i'm really greatfull for the mention of japanese warcrime in south east asia at the end. I hold no grudge against modern day japan, but it's a history which long ignore in western perspective because of the cold war after ww2 . I would like to say thanks again, for the hard work and empathy put in to the video, and sorry for my poor english .
@troodon10963 жыл бұрын
I don't hold a grudge against modern Germany for the atrocities the Nazis committed either. But yes, what Imperial Japan did should be just as well known as what the Nazis did.
@hewhoyeet49533 жыл бұрын
9000 weh
@rhark253 жыл бұрын
Your English is fine...much better than my Malay :)
@ATAATX3 жыл бұрын
It was not ignored in the west. My dad was one of millions of westerners that despised the Japanese for the atrocities they committed to his dying day. There were also many movies and TV shows that let people know of Japanese cruelty, depravity and barbarism. But these days, you just to let it go. Forgive and forget. Modern Japan is not the same as the Japan of the WWII era.
@johnrammyespanola9693 жыл бұрын
The same with the philippines
@braedynhoward3644 Жыл бұрын
Today Japan is one of my favorite countries. I actually lived there for a large chunk of my childhood, about an hour from Hiroshima. I loved almost every aspect of the Japanese culture and people, but one thing was sad to see. They do not really ever talk about what their country did during world war 2. In fact, most of them are quite ignorant of what happened. The one thing they do know a lot about however, was the atomic bombs. We went to the museum in Hiroshima, and there was no mention of the war in the pacific, the murder of thousands of people throughout Asia, and war crimes, the only thing mentioned was the brutal Americas dropping bombs on them. Do I think the atomic bombs weren't that bad? No, it was brutal. I saw the pictures of the destruction and the only building that survived (oddly enough, the one the bomb fell on). But ignoring history is also disturbing. We even had a few elderly Japanese people flip us off because we were American. That was only a few though, most of the Japanese of all ages love Americans. In my opinion, it's not ok to not talk about the history of your country, the good and the bad. As an American, I still learned about slavery.
@AndyTaken Жыл бұрын
Completely right however a small note that they(Japanese) didn't kill "thousands" across Asia. They as documented had killed millions, China alone has an estimated 20million deaths during the 2nd Sino war. roughly 14m alone were civilians!!! This is excluding all the over nations and islands under Japan's occupation. To put that number into perspective London has just under a population of 9m people, so Japan killed every single person in London twice and that is just China alone there are claims that the number is closer to 50m as a total in China but that could be exagerrated.
@braedynhoward3644 Жыл бұрын
@@AndyTaken Yes, I am aware of the numbers. I have studied them a bit more since I wrote this comment. Thanks though, its very interesting and sad.
@AndyTaken Жыл бұрын
@@braedynhoward3644 fair enough, just wanted to ensure we don't down play the seriousness of it.
@selmevias1383 Жыл бұрын
"They do not really ever talk about what their country did during world war 2." Why would they? so they would become like white countries feverishly bashing themselves for past wrong, sacrificing their future in the process? No thank you.
@braedynhoward3644 Жыл бұрын
@@selmevias1383 My friend, there is a difference between ignoring, not teaching, and becoming ignorant about your countries past, and hating and beating on your country. I too disagree with the woke anti-white anti-America agenda. It is important for the US to teach about slavery... and how it ended and is no longer a US issue. Not ignore it, not overblow it.
@extremegaming927 Жыл бұрын
32:29 he’s a little too relaxed when explaining that
@benjaminhuynh53293 жыл бұрын
Side note to @History Buffs: the wargame scene is actually close to accurate. The account comes from the memoirs of Admiral Ugaki, who was the moderator of the war game. The movie transcribes it more or less from Ugaki’s account. The actual war game is condensed for the movie, and Yamamoto wasn’t involved. But the basis of the scene is historical fact.
@benjaminhuynh53293 жыл бұрын
And thank you for pointing out the Japanese war crimes.
@NishidateKitsune3 жыл бұрын
By your name, Sir, I'm presuming you to be Vietnamese. As a Malaysian, I'd just like to tell you that we too, remember what the Japanese had done to Malaya during that time. I fully agree that the war crimes must be highlighted and remembered for all time. Edit: And yes, you're right about the war game as well. I also know about that war game and had wanted to comment about it, but you beat me to it. :)
@hebl473 жыл бұрын
So both Japan and Germany accurately predicted their downfall with wargaming but proceeded to go ahead anyway? Interesting.
@Statalyzer3 жыл бұрын
There's two other possibilities though - one is that the "American" admiral in the games had engaged in what today we would consider metagaming, a failure to separate player knowledge from character knowledge. The other is that it was silly to end the test with the latter half of the battle unfought, so they added a carrier back to that to make it a reasonable situation to game out.
@hebl472 жыл бұрын
@Jens Nobel Well put. I know of course that they didn't *exactly* predict their downfall. But my comment was more in a joking manner (while containing the kernel of truth) and you can't exactly write a joke in you extend it with a detailed explanation.
@ernie51443 жыл бұрын
So i served in US Navy as a Aviation Machinist Mate and that story about AMM3 Bruno Gaido, i was completely surprised that they actually put that in the film... The Navy vet in me got so emotional because he is a hero in our community of Aviation Machinist mates
@suspiciouscanadian64783 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your service!
@louiss.w19443 жыл бұрын
Incredible
@Samm8153 жыл бұрын
Yikes, my grandpa was a navy machinist aboard the Princeton (the CV-37, not the one that sank at Leyte Gulf). I don't know if he worked on planes or in the engine room but considering he worked in the pit crew of a drag race I think he may have worked on planes.
@jeffreyjohnson33202 жыл бұрын
Gaido's bravery and shipboard promotion from Halsey occurred in February -- not at Midway, FYI. In fact, Halsey was not even at Midway. History Buffs does not mention this; don't know if the movie does.
@tsarbomba75852 жыл бұрын
@@jeffreyjohnson3320 The movie made it clear that Halsey was in the hospital due to shingles during Midway.
@techwiz81 Жыл бұрын
It’s funny that Roland Emmerich made this great and accurate film, then followed it up with Moonfall
@Shoelessjoe7811 ай бұрын
Hey Ben Affleck has his ARGO. Sometimes it just comes together.
@PatrickOMulligan7 ай бұрын
@ryankral3175 What bad films has Affleck directed?
@masstrapper7645 Жыл бұрын
That last segment is spot on. Think of where the world would be if things didn’t go as they did. 👍👍
@totalbro3 жыл бұрын
Glad he’s covering this. I thought the movie was surprisingly well done. Shout out to Cynical Historian for also covering this!
@dsl323 жыл бұрын
A hell of lot better then Pearl Harbor
@dagreatcow3 жыл бұрын
@@dsl32 yeah. The only thing that is good about that movie is the attack on Pearl Harbor
@itsblitz44373 жыл бұрын
@@dagreatcow not the Doolittle Raid?
@itsblitz44373 жыл бұрын
Seriously there are times Nick (History Buffs) and Cypher (the Cynical Historian) should really do a collaboration together on a historical movie.
@sandybell49133 жыл бұрын
Idk, the actual script and movie is pretty shit, and unless ur a history buff of a child it leaves the viewer confused and bored
@Kaiimei3 жыл бұрын
"Brave men. We are fortunate they have such bad planes." Nice to see that man respecting his opponent and that if their aircraft were of similar ability, he would be in a much worse position.
@jafr999992 жыл бұрын
I believe the actual quote was made by Japanese Admiral Chuinchi Nagumo who stated “They sacrifice themselves like Samurai, theses Americans”
@Viper-dn8ix2 жыл бұрын
@@jafr99999 Not sure if this was actually said by Admiral Nagumo, but it's a great line from the 1976 Midway film.
@direwolf62342 жыл бұрын
of course no american pilot going down would aim for a ship....
@teedepefanio49742 жыл бұрын
Now, the whole world knows. Back then, we were cutting our teeth as a nation.. ive seen a lot of heroes out there, in my time. Respect to those who fought superior armies, yet won.. To those before us, to those amongst us and those yet to come. Cheers, boys! 🇺🇲
@ernestcote33982 жыл бұрын
Those better planes came out in droves, with well trained pilots and he got his worse position.
@oliverhaake7552 Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for both videos, but especially for this last part about the war crimes. War movies should not only about tactics, strategy and sometimes valiant deeds, but also blunt murder and crime.
@plumbershack1692 Жыл бұрын
Your content is exceptional and I am amazed at your dedication to detail. My grandfather was a second division. USMC noncommissioned officer and fought at almost every pertinent South Pacific island. He survived until last year, and died at the age of 98. Great job sir. Keep up the good work.
@lixx00683 жыл бұрын
Love the ending commentary - IJN and IJA committed many atrocities Asian people still remember to this date.
@TMAC533 жыл бұрын
Very true. It is a shame that the Japanese government still doesn’t fully acknowledge the atrocities their military committed during the war.
@lucastark17843 жыл бұрын
That doesn't mean that their sailors shouldn't have this film partially dedicated to them. Both sides showcased extreme levels of bravery that you or I will never match. Honor the dead, regardless of the context. Recognizing valor isn't apologism.
@seankaneshiro20322 жыл бұрын
@@TMAC53 I mean neither the USA but we ain't gonna talk about that
@TMAC532 жыл бұрын
@@seankaneshiro2032 I mean... U Right
@All_you_need_is_love20182 жыл бұрын
Several of my family members in the Philippines were murdered by the Japanese during world war 2, including my uncle who was only 13 years old, my grandmother’s sister who was in her 20’s, and my great grandmother.
@Patterrz3 жыл бұрын
The Axis in WW2 doing so many War Crimes that it's impossible to even remember all of them
@hp72333 жыл бұрын
Its undeniable that the Axis Powers commited more war-crimes, but we cannot dismiss those commited by the Allies, especially at the Sicily Invasion and the cominterns treatment of POWs.
@gaminf67133 жыл бұрын
@@hp7233 True No one should be excused for their warcrimes
@itsdag67203 жыл бұрын
@@hp7233 And don't forget that Soviets were also technically allied and commited many war crimes, especially in Poland
@DarjeelingEnjoyer3 жыл бұрын
@@hp7233 Comparing Axis war crimes to Allied war crimes is like comparing someone getting their arm chopped off by the Mexican Cartel to a person getting stung by a wasp
@DMHightower3 жыл бұрын
Nazi Germany executed 6 million Jews. The Japanese executed 250,000 Chinesein ONE incident and 100,000 Phillipinos in one incident. I challengeyou to find a single incident where US forces killed 10,000 or 1000 innocents for simple retaliation or wanton slaughter. You may find stories of isolated cases where a dozen or a few hundred may have been killed, but to say US war crimes were just as bad as Axis or Russian war crimes is foolish and just plain wrong.
@silkysixx Жыл бұрын
For some reason, US veterans made uncharacteristic peace with Japanese their counterparts. For example, Pearl Harbour veterans from both sides have gathered at the base for commemorations.
@Commanderstevo Жыл бұрын
My favorite story is Nobuo Fujita. Look him up, one of the only people to bomb the contiguous United States from a submarine floatplane carrier, survived the war, and was invited by the people of a town in Oregon close to where he bombed. He brought his families 400 year old katana to present to the town as gift, as he was ashamed of his service to the IJN, and if the people of the town were to be hostile, his plan was to commit seppuku with the sword instead, however they treated him well and with compassion, which built this crazy relationship including him getting a letter of thanks from ronald regan. crazy life.
@dynamo1796 Жыл бұрын
@@Commanderstevo I think his attempt to mend relationships by acknowledging his wrong-doing and apologizing is worth celebrating. Many in Japan still deny their war crimes and that the atomic attack was justified. Japan in the 30s and 40s was an extremist nation, there was little chance of escaping service in civil or military service and Fujita, whether he believed at that time in the war or not, was always going to end up being involved somehow.
@solandri69Ай бұрын
I think a lot of US veterans (rightfully) view the average Japanese soldier or sailor as also being a victim of the Imperial Japanese government. There are similar stories with Allied and German veterans becoming good friends. And during WWI there was that impromptu Christmas celebration between German and Allied troops. With a few exceptions, wars are fought between governments. And the average soldier had no choice but to participate on the side of whatever country they happen to live in. So once they're freed of the government telling them to fight, they tend not to take it personally. It's different for victims of atrocities - there's no way for them not to take it personally.
@edwardcheang13912 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for being aware of the atrocities done by the Japanese empire in Ww2. As a Singaporean who had family who suffered at their hands I appreciate it
@theradiobox59653 жыл бұрын
I'm surprised that you didn't point out the fact that the movie acknowledged John Ford's presence at the battle and his insistence for his crew to keep filming.
@jimig.6883 жыл бұрын
That's a neat detail but the movie didn't properly acknowledge a bunch of important things.
@PhsykoOmen3 жыл бұрын
@@jimig.688 it has enough in it already, the rest is what history enthusiasts pick up on.
@jimig.6883 жыл бұрын
@@PhsykoOmen You're right actually but at least the flight to nowhere would've been worth a scene.
@anthtan2 жыл бұрын
So that’s accurate? He was there filming?
@thaisgomes36372 жыл бұрын
@@anthtan Yes!!
@powwowken27603 жыл бұрын
I love how the ship Yorktown is such an amazing character all on her own gets nearly sunk, her crew amazingly saves her, rebuilt in beyond record time for the decisive battle, nearly gets sunk again during said battle but is miraculously saved yet again, to the point where when she gets hit for the third and final time the Japanese don't even realize it was the same carrier they thought had already been sunk. Then if that wasn't enough even the surviving pilots kept flying from other ships. One of my favorite stories from the Pacific war, her crew were mad-lads of the highest caliber
@cravenlestat70063 жыл бұрын
Throwing this in but in the game Azur Lane a naval WW2 game with cute animated girls as the realistic ships here is Yorktown's first skill called Vengeance Upon taking damage: launches a SBD Dauntless squadron (damage is based on skill level); has a cooldown of 20 seconds. Once per battle, when Health falls below 20%: recovers 15% (25%) of max Health. Thought you might appreciate that because Yorktown was the ship and crew that never quit.Like you said the ship went down but the surviving pilots kept flying sorties.Also RIP to the destroyer Hammann that had no chance hooked to the side of the Yorktown for repairs when taking one of the 4 torpedo fired at Yorktown. 80 of Hammann's crew died the ship was split in half like a log.
@jacob49203 жыл бұрын
It's deeply appropriate that such a stalwart ship is named after the decisive battle of the American Revolution, where the British Surrender legitimized America's independence from England!
@selonianth3 жыл бұрын
And as a further point, Yorktown didn't even get sunk by the bombers and torpedoes. She was sunk the following morning by a submarine.
@redrebel123 жыл бұрын
My great Grandpa was On the USS Yorktown
@omnigeek97983 жыл бұрын
Which was why Gene Roddenberry originally wanted to name the starship in "Star Trek" after the Yorktown.
@Trex6745 Жыл бұрын
You won me over instantly by pointing out how horrendous the Japanese were during WW2. Their atrocities caused my grandpa to hate them to the day he died. They were awful people
@davidlewis8814 Жыл бұрын
Your comments regarding the atrocities committed by the Empire got me pushing the “subscribe” button. Thanks.
@thatguy22441 Жыл бұрын
Imperial Japan was even worse than the Nazis, in that Nazis considered genocide a chore, while the Imperial Japanese considered it R & R.
@jobonane3 жыл бұрын
I love it that woody Harrelson really looked like Nimitz.
@Geronimo_Jehoshaphat3 жыл бұрын
I just kept thinking he looked so much like Spencer Tracy.
@calvinlee18133 жыл бұрын
Initially when I heard he was Nimitz I scoffed but thinking of his blue eyes and had a moment of pause. Eckhard,Quaid and Harrelson all did well looking and acting as their historical counterparts.
@reesebn383 жыл бұрын
@@Geronimo_Jehoshaphat Oh my god I didn't think of that, but he sure does.
@jobonane3 жыл бұрын
@@Geronimo_Jehoshaphat yeah cant unsee.
@Peterscraps3 жыл бұрын
This is like a riveting audio book with high quality visual references. After seeing this I can't imagine how the movie will hold up after I buy it.
@yordlejay68203 жыл бұрын
I did Nott expect to see you here
@tenormdness3 жыл бұрын
The movie was great. I’ve glad he made this video. After watching the movie 4 times I went down the KZfaq rabbit hole about midway. So glad this finally showed up!
@darksideoftoast3 жыл бұрын
You have some great content, too.
@ghoulhaven77653 жыл бұрын
It’s great still
@ostwelt3 жыл бұрын
Exactly my thoughts. An hour of history then a few moments to say how accurate the film is. That's all I wanted to know! Should have been said upfront not make a documentary about the Pacific conflict and war crimes. LoL
@mcmoose64 Жыл бұрын
I believe that Emerich is also a history buff and this movie was something of a passion project for him .
@stephenh5944 Жыл бұрын
It was. Too bad it didn't make any money. Then he gave us Moonfall....
@rylansato8 ай бұрын
My guess for the reason he added the Japanese sailors was perhaps the requirement by the Japanese in order to use the Japanese actors for this. The Japanese do honor all their war dead which is why Yasukuni shrine is controversial.
@Chris8-03 жыл бұрын
I would love to see you breakdown "Ford vs Ferrari". The movie is great and It's pretty much every car guys favorite story.
@501ststormtrooper93 жыл бұрын
And then a Toyota Hilux roller in, all guns firing, absolutely demolishing the Fords and Ferrari’s
@mattchavis56213 жыл бұрын
This!!!
@SomethingoldenYT3 жыл бұрын
@@danielnormandeau2673 How is it not a historical movie? It's based on one of the most legendary showdowns in automotive history.
@pacoelizalde84913 жыл бұрын
@@SomethingoldenYT yeah but it’s kinda innacurate in a couple of big aspects. They left various lemans races where the gt40s were a faliure out of the movie to fit it into a reasonable amount of time for a movie
@lovelessissimo3 жыл бұрын
@@danielnormandeau2673 it is, though.
@KonstantineMortis132 жыл бұрын
I love how the Yorktown's fire crews changed Japanese strategy on two separate occasions. That's just cool, what heroes.
@garrettsweeney3945 Жыл бұрын
True, they were not called The Greatest Generation for nothing.
@GenSphinx11 ай бұрын
@@garrettsweeney3945 Sad that the latest generations can easily be called the worst generation.
@dardedar88 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for the quality content and especially that last part. In this and several other videos, you show an analytical and human response that is so refreshing. Paraphrasing stalin, but deaths are just a statistic, so thank you for that last part, especially to indicate the sentiment of the war alongside pure numbers.
@traviscook9773 Жыл бұрын
These videos are always amazing! Please keep them coming.
@reactionarymike43313 жыл бұрын
My fiancé is from the Philippines. Her grandparents were small children and they would flee into the forest to escape from the Japanese who tried to impale them on bayonets
@theotmt79063 жыл бұрын
My grandpa did that as well, after the dutch east indies was taken over, he moved to the city of Soerabaja to escape the japaneese.
@SAarumDoK3 жыл бұрын
@A R Have some respect.
@troyraymund82563 жыл бұрын
26:27 Thank you very much for pointing that out, I live in the Philippines and the scars of the Japanese invasion are still somewhat seen and it was offensive for me as one of my great grandfathers died fighting the Japanese near Manila with the Americans. Such dark times
@yulaviation38683 жыл бұрын
May he Rest In Peace. I have family members that dies in the Armenian genocide and I feel your loss.🙏
@johnc24383 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your comment. My Filipina wife and I visited the military cemetery in Makati where thousands of Americans are buried -- the largest overseas American military cemetery, by the way. There are also hundreds of Filipino fighters buried there, too. Greetings from Oregon, USA, from a retired U.S. Navy chief petty officer. Best wishes to you and everyone in the Philippines.
@Gitaxianjack3 жыл бұрын
I thank you for you grandfather, My great uncle helped liberate camp Cabanatuan and saw first hand the horror of the Japanese.
@troyraymund82563 жыл бұрын
@@Gitaxianjack may it never come a day that we have to do what they have done. Lest we forget.
@josephclark7814 Жыл бұрын
It was such a beautifully done movie. And the director let the true real history tell the story. There was so much incredible details that exaggeration was not needed.
@DanGoodShotHD Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for bringing attention to the atrocities of the Imperial Japanese military during World War II. It's something that has been overlooked for far too long.
@justinpark7453 жыл бұрын
I really do appreciate your dedication to accurately informing about Japanese imperialism. The horrors of the Japanese Empire is an evil that many have forgotten and your effort to shine a light on it is admirable. As a Korean-American, I was never given an extensive education on the subject, only on the war crimes committed by the Nazis. Only recently have I started to learn what Japanese imperialism has done to my people. Thank you for raising awareness of this often ignored aspect of history.
@robertmelvin52033 жыл бұрын
I agree. I rarely ever hear of the extreme monstrous acts committed by the Japanese; they seemed edited when compared to actual historic documentaries. Once you've seen the films and photos from "The Nanjing Massacre" along with other atrocities; you will not be able to forget.
@roxstix3 жыл бұрын
There are reasons why the older generations of Korean, Chinese, Philipinos, and others resented the Japanese until they died of old age. My father was forced to speak Japanese when he was young during the occupation in Korea. I love the modern Japanese people & culture, but I am glad the US dropped the bombs to end the war.
@Monsterdemo3 жыл бұрын
Hearing about the comfort women was appalling.
@elennapointer7013 жыл бұрын
Postwar Japan has done a hell of a lot to gloss over the Empire of Japan's war crimes. There's a lot of whataboutism, revisionism, minimalization and straight-up lying designed to instill in the next generation of Japanese children a sense of victimhood. Some of it pervades to this day, a sense that white imperialist gaijin stole a fairly-won empire from noble Japanese patriots. The war crimes are completely ignored in some cases, or explained away as "unfortunate events", as if the Rape of Nanking was just a small blemish on an otherwise honorable campaign.
@churblefurbles3 жыл бұрын
I find it funny this is said when its constantly brought up when we have statues to Lenin in places like Portland. Victors write the history, what's hard to believe is how naïve people are about that fact.
@Trades463 жыл бұрын
As someone who is ethnically Chinese & hearing stories from my older generation who actually suffered IJA war crimes as children, I thank you for the last 1/4 of the clip in bringing forward this issue. Nazi Germany is largely unquestioned today as being unquestionably evil, Imperial Japan has largely been romanticized, at least in Western society. Only in Asia where the scars of Imperial Japan still remains (e.g. China, Hong Kong, Philippines, Korea etc.) still seem to remember.
@James-sk4db3 жыл бұрын
It was so bad that even the Nazi diplomats were appalled and trying to save civilians from the Japanese.
@boxlflox90943 жыл бұрын
I think Western Societies romanticized the IJA because of both guilt for the treatment of Japanese people living in Allied nations (especially in the US) and because Japan became an ally during the Cold War. I don't want to downplay or excuse what happened to those that suffered. I just wanted to give clarification.
@tSp2893 жыл бұрын
I don't think we romanticise them at all. We do for their older (samurai) history, even though mass beheadings etc. were common back then too. I think we still condemn the WW2 era Japanese military, but maybe feel sorry for and forgive the civilian population. The cold war required quick rebuilding of enemies into allies, and Japan was especially obedient once defeated, and enthusiastically picked up a new, very different culture. It also almost entirely did away with its military and the culture attached to it. Also, the fact that so many of the victims of firebombing and nukes were children makes it hard to feel good about that. I do also think we kind of forget about Japan in Europe because Germany was so much more immediate and the scars of that war are everywhere: you can still see shrapnel holes in the lion statues on the embankment in London. Japan's the other side of the world, and the people they killed didn't look like us. People are usually shocked to hear just how evil their actions were though. I know I hadn't realised the scale of it until I listened to Dan Carlin's 10-hour+ podcast on the topic. Same's true for the Eastern Front. We (UK and US) kind of feel like we won the war, when the majority of the suffering and death was actually the Soviets. The numbers in the Sino-Japanese war are unbelievably large too, like the Yellow River Dam break that killed 1/2 million people minimum, Nanjing 300,000 etc. etc. .... it's just beyond an imaginable scale.
@MrFlunkorg3 жыл бұрын
It also doesn't help that Japan refuses to even acknowledge said war crimes occurred.
@Quincy_Morris3 жыл бұрын
Imperial Japan has not been romanticized in the west... Romanticizing the Sengoku and Edo periods of Japan is entirely different than romanticizing the imperial era.
@marksamuelsen2750 Жыл бұрын
It has always amazed me that the Battle of Midway was only 6 months after after the attack on Pearl Harbor. We came back pretty quickly.
@kenlodge3399 Жыл бұрын
I've got to admit that tho discovered your channel a year or more ago I typically don't comment, but, But, BUT in the case of all the follow-up info you provided, on the atrocities by the Japanese Navy, the segment was exceptional. You get a Big Fat WTG!
@Kopyrda3 жыл бұрын
About this strikingly accurate prediction of the battle during the japanese war games - another such a thing had happened in France before the war. General Pretelat was visiting the border in the Ardennes sector and he saw how weakly it was defended. He predicted that IT would take Germans 60 hours to reach the Sedan. Turned out, he was off only by 3 hours when IT really happened.
@RedmiRedmi-go6cl2 жыл бұрын
Terror man...🏋️😅hahaha🙄
@christophneuschaeffer74892 жыл бұрын
The most strikingly accurate prediction happened in 1919, when French Marshal Ferdinand Foch commented on the Peace Treaty of Versailles: “This is not a peace. It is an armistice for 20 years.“ As this is a quote taken from the memoirs of French Prime Minister Paul Reynaud, we only know that Foch said this shortly after the signing of the treaty. Thus Foch was off probably only by a month or two.
@samuelginting32132 жыл бұрын
@@christophneuschaeffer7489 Interesting, though I doubt anyone during the signing of treaty of Versailles saw it as a peace treaty, rather merely halting the revenge of the Germans
@Robbini02 жыл бұрын
@@christophneuschaeffer7489 Bismarck has been attributed to saying some damned thing in the balkans would start a great war, but I couldn't find whether that was around 1878 or 1888 or the maybe more famous '20 years after my death'.
@Kopyrda2 жыл бұрын
@Max Power Nah, you get it wrong - Maginot Line served its purpose, it's everything else that had failed. The main purpose of the Maginot Line was to divert the main enemy thrust away from the fortifications of the Maginot Line. It succeeded. Germans had attacked north of the Maginot Line, something French had excepted, but failed to take advantage of. Read about Dyle-Breda Plan.
@justinsublett58803 жыл бұрын
I’m VERY glad that you made a point to criticize the “moral equivalency” between America and Japan. There was no moral equivalency. You can absolutely criticize the United States for a lot of things. You cannot make an argument of moral equivalency in this scenario.
@DonnyStanley3 жыл бұрын
I don't think they meant it as a moral equivalency. I understand why it would make people u comfortable, but I don't think it's necessarily a bad thing to recognize the loss of life on both sides. You could argue that it is what makes us different from the Imperial Japanese.
@sugandhakohli3 жыл бұрын
@LibtardsStillCant SilenceMe10 Perfectly said
@NateGerardRealEstateTeam3 жыл бұрын
I grew up in the 70’s watching black and white war movies on Friday nights and can vouch that hatred for Japan was still alive and well. Although I appreciate and agree with Nick’s sentiment, I think the producers were trying not to reignite hatred from history, which I can get behind. Standing on the deck of the USS Missouri, I heard the story of a Kamikaze pilot who was unsuccessful in trying to damage the ship but who’s body lay on the deck. Her Captain gave him a military funeral to show that we have humanity. I think humanity is why that dedication was worded the way it was.
@errolmargiela12613 жыл бұрын
@LibtardsStillCant SilenceMe10 This was beautifully said and the most profound comment I've read on this.
@Activated_Complex3 жыл бұрын
@@DonnyStanley The dedication at the end is a symptom of American fears of being seen as jingoistic or engaging in exceptionalism. The trouble is that this sometimes slams headlong into the reality that, at certain moments in history, those young soldiers, airmen, sailors, and marines were unambiguously the good guys. Making moral equivalency arguments, essentially, revisionist history that gets picked up by the sort of people who really are trying to erase the history of war crimes. Without the context of the war crimes, these individuals have an easier time drawing impressionable young people in with the spectacle of fascism, and getting them invested to the extent that they will then go on to defend the indefensible because they like the sharp uniforms, the sleek airplanes, the intimidating battle standards and insignia. Or for that matter, the ceremonial edged weapons, be they daggers with foul inscriptions or ancestral swords pressed into service as instruments of torture.
@seantlewis376Ай бұрын
Fantastic video, and I'm glad that you included the end segment about the atrocities committed. I had relatives who served in the Pacific, and in Europe during WWII. I heard their stories while they were trying to talk me out of enlisting in the 1980s. It didn't work, and I now have my own stories to deal with.
@paulschumacher43082 жыл бұрын
This was an amazing pair of videos! Well done!
@faiyoake2 жыл бұрын
The thing with Doolittle saying they’re the first enemy to hit the home islands likely falls under the common man test. Would the common man of that era have known about the mongol invasions?
@PaulW502 жыл бұрын
I agree, although Doolittle (a Lieutenant Colonel with a Doctorate from the MIT) hardly counts as common man. Still plausible that he wasn't that educated in Asian history though, who knows
@faiyoake2 жыл бұрын
@@PaulW50 well common as a representative of his demographic
@thatblackguy-pj1hu2 жыл бұрын
@@PaulW50 well a lot of history taught in America is just western civilization. You get some of Chinese history in early world history, but much of Asian history was and still is not common teaching in American schools.
@aptaylor752 жыл бұрын
@@PaulW50 Yeah, but his education at both Berkeley and MIT was in Aeronautics and Engineering, not likely a big focus on the humanities. Maybe if he had gone to the Point he would have had a bit more military history.
@thepsychicspoon59842 жыл бұрын
Even if he knew it was BS, it was still encouraging to hear. Thats what he was going for. I figured the common man(the men he was talking to) more than likely wouldn't know that, or probably wouldn't even cared. You see, alot of those guys came out the great depression. So a accurate education on world history would probably be at a bare minimum if any at all. That generations value system is not at all like it is today. So really the only way to know something like that was if that person actively pursued it on their own. I suspect they were very few and very far in between. That went for most countries in that time period.
@stealthyfir79153 жыл бұрын
That one Japanese dude who predicted the Americans' positions must have been a time traveler trying to change the historical timeline.
@joerig963 жыл бұрын
Actually there was Japanese Manga and Anime talk about this, it titled *Zipang* , about Japanese modern self defense Navy battleship travel back to time when world world 2 Pacific theatre, they unavoided event that eventually changed history of Pacific theatre and east Asian countries in that time
@thatromanfella83773 жыл бұрын
@@joerig96 that seems like if a story came out about a german battleship went bsck to help the nazis win ww2 lmaooo
@philipbanks77303 жыл бұрын
If you read the histories around world war 2 the junior naval staff often managed to do things like this. They war gamed the grand plan that was meant to be attriting the American naval force over the Pacific via a series of quick sharp battles where the Japanese fleet elements would engage, destroy a few ships and then disengage. The theory being the better quality of materiel used would allow the IJN to control the place and tempo of battle. The junior naval staff hit on the actual strategy the American's used which was to jump past the defensive strong points as much as possible to then isolate them and render them useless without wasting energy destroying them. The junior staff often won the war games and proceeded to be told off for not fighting how the enemy actually would. "Kaigun: Strategy, Tactics, and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1887-1941" goes into quite a bit of detail as to how into their own bubble of thinking the IJN was.
@mjbull51563 жыл бұрын
Those wargaming sessions were trying out various scenarios and Japanese did not realize how badly their communications had been compromised. They thought the USN would have no idea they were.
@fearedjames3 жыл бұрын
@@mjbull5156 Yup, past infrastructure, people often forget how much this decided the war. In war over spaces this large with no ability to mass control the spave, if one side knows the others movements while the other one is blind, then the wars next to done. The only reason the US suffered any defeats or notable losses post gaining access over their transmissions was because the US navy was impressively incompetant. The movies scene was absurd. If an assumed competant navy had pulled the plan in a war game, the entire Japanese navy would of been wiped one sidedly, not just 3 carriers and no smaller ships. The results the US got were a complete embaressment for what realistically should of been a complete wipe.
@icemang.99813 ай бұрын
Great video, many thx for your work. The scene with the young japanese officer right from the academy was perfect. This young officer did as Tsun Tzu said: "Don't try to predict and analyze what your enemy will do or how he's going to react, always think about what he's able or capable to do !" Keep up your great work, greetings from Germany.
@AniwayasSong6 ай бұрын
Papa was a Marine, as are two of my three older brothers. I am a USMC Veteran. Hailing from a combination of Cherokee/Irish, war and conflict is part of my history that I/We never ignored. The horrors of WWII's Pacific Theater against the Japanese, and then Vietnam, always stayed with me. People today, unless they personally hail from a war torn region, don't have a clue what it's like to survive it. Sadly, history repeats itself, and until humanity chooses to remember and LEARN FROM all the harsh mistakes, we're going to continue repeating the mistakes. I saw the original 'Midway' (With Charlton Heston and others), in the theater when it came out. That was VERY impressive to us, and we talked about the Midway campaign/Others for months, after (I/We poured through every book we could get our hands on, via our Public Library system. Obviously, this was decades before the Internet even existed). Extremely well done Commentary with this! I look forward to perusing the rest of your video library for others! Thank you!
@IA-jo4ve3 жыл бұрын
The glorious moment when history buffs uploads..
@CluntWestwood3 жыл бұрын
Yes
@QuillStroke3 жыл бұрын
Heart skipped a beat when I saw the notification.
@erodoeht46663 жыл бұрын
The “They look tasty” part from the Japanese army vet disturbed me....they really were as bad if not worse than the Nazi in the European theater.
@ericgu90363 жыл бұрын
Definitely worse than the Wehrmacht
@linusorm3 жыл бұрын
Yeah honestly the fact that he admit's this and his skull wasn't fucking bashed in is infuriating.
@NoMuse133 жыл бұрын
Just casually interviewing a horrific war criminal
@someguy66513 жыл бұрын
@@ericgu9036 IDK man, the atrocities committed by the Wehrmacht in Warsaw, Stalingrad, Leningrad and Minsk are pretty bone chilling imo
@ericgu90363 жыл бұрын
@@someguy6651 yes, but the Wehrmacht never even was close to the number of civilians and destruction caused by the Japanese.
@johnmarymoncki3704 Жыл бұрын
Thank you especially for the last part. I am all about peace and making peace with our former enemies. But peace cannot be built by forgetting or distorting history. Cruelty and war crimes must be remembered both to honor the memory of victims and to maintain the truth about events. If we keep forgetting these than one day it will be resurfaced in the worst moment of animosity. To learn from history we need to be able to swallow it whole - especially in the peace time when nations and countries have the capacity to deal with it and work it through. I've been observing a tendency in the internet at least for people, at least from the Anglo-American circle to tend to comment WW2 events in the spirit of "war is hell" and "all have suffered equally". While individual combat experiences of soldiers on various fronts are very similar or in the essence the same, what some of these soldiers did to civilians or POW's and what their governments stood for was entirely different. And we owe it to ourselves to keep these differences in mind because these are the differences for which our grandfathers fought for, that's what made their war more meaningful and just. Lets not forget it of fear that the other side will feel hurt: it's not our fault that their great grandfathers took this or other way or did this or that and it's a burden they left for their grandchildren to accept and live with and deal with. While we make friends with our former enemies, lets keep making friends but remember history as it was. We owe it to the victims and we owe it to the good, healthy relations between nations of today because only relations built on truth - that good, positive and that bitter and painful and for one side also shameful can lead to the healthy relationship. I don't mean reminding Japanese or Germans on every occasion about the wrongdoings of their great grandfathers in history or to lecture them with every chance. Only just keeping it within proportion when the history for some reason - like a movie is being discussed and simply to stick to the truth as it was. And avoid such things as morally equaling both sides for the sake of today's relations. Mature, long standing relations can handle the bitter truth and move on.
@Mr_King_Cat8 ай бұрын
I rarely comment but I just have to say that this video was made extraordinary well. The commentary and music choices really lift it up a level.
@jttraina45163 жыл бұрын
This version of Midway ,despite it's theatrical license ,was about the MOST ACCURATE to date that I have seen,. I particularly like the part where they showed how the Nautilus "INADVERTENTLY" played such an important roll. Reassuring the pilots as to the possible location of the Japanese Fleet, due to the Japanese destroyer racing back to rejoin the fleet.. Also of great importance was the fact that although the Torpedo Bombers failed to score any real damage ,they brought the fighter cover down ,allowing the Dive Bombers a CLEAR FIELD OF OPERATION.
@thomasvontom3 жыл бұрын
I recall a older one. From the 70's I think. Been a while since I seen it. But I recall it being rather decent in accuracy.
@jttraina45163 жыл бұрын
@Edwin Arnold I watched it, Excellent film. Both in my opinion were excellent pictures, but this one I believe was a little more explanatory than the 70's one.
@jttraina45163 жыл бұрын
@Edwin Arnold I wasn't actually commenting on the entire content of the movie. I realize the FILM INDUSTRY dramatizes much of what they produce. The Only part I particularly liked was the POINT they made of the Nautilus's part in the movie. I felt they stuck pretty much to what we know about the battle. Even to the part where the TWO airmen picked up by the Japanese were THROWN OVERBOARD, with weights tied to them. These events as far as we know, REALLY DID HAPPEN.
@carlrood44573 жыл бұрын
@Edwin Arnold I've watched the 70's film many times and have always enjoyed it. However, they did feel the need to add a fictional subplot with Charlton Heston's character. It also used a lot of recycled footage from Tora! Tora! Tora! While I've never seen it confirmed, I've read that John Wayne was originally supposed to play Halsey, not Robert Mitchum. I tend to believe it, because Halsey has a line of dialog to Nimitz that is very reminiscent of a line Fonda's character said to Wayne in Fort Apache. Fort Apache: Lt. Col. Thursday: When you command this regiment; and you probably will, command it! Midway (1976) Vice Adm. William F. 'Bull' Halsey Jr. : You told me once, Chet. When you're in command, command.
@joeees77903 жыл бұрын
The "B17" that tries to crash into the carrier seems to be missing a few engines and has its wings in the wrong position (mounted above the fuselage rather than amid). Seems more like a B26.
@micahqgecko3 жыл бұрын
Yes, it was a b-26 in the movie and in real life. In the real life version of events, the b-26 bombers were actually conducting a torpedo strike.
@WarRaven383 жыл бұрын
Exactlly
@krystacn3 жыл бұрын
Was on my way to make that very comment. I kept hearing "B17" but what I was seeing was making my head puff up like an overfilled balloon 🎈 and was about to pop.
@cymorrow493 жыл бұрын
@@micahqgecko my observation as well. But even in the commentary by some vets (?) were saying B17 so I was very confused.
@bobc19113 жыл бұрын
It was a B-26 and there were only 4 of them. IIRC 3 were shot down and only 1 returned to Midway, badly shot up. The B26's made torpedo attacks - which they had never trained for or attempted before - and none struck.
@alkimia1791 Жыл бұрын
That last segment is insane dude. I have to talk about this. So I finished high school like 2 years ago now? I've honestly completely lost track at this point, but it doesn't matter too much. Now 20 years old, and I never knew of the Imperial Japanese war crimes. Now to be fair, I did end up leaving school when covid came around, and I moved to a place with no internet out in the country, but even when school started back up again, none of this came up. Now that I think about it, ZERO war crimes were brought up from either side in school. I was taught about the cause of the war, important figures throughout the war, that sort of stuff. But actual war crimes, important battles, all of that I learned on my own through research I did with my brother (who loves learning about history), and KZfaq videos like this. It's just insane to me that I really never knew about this stuff. How did it never come up?
@conorbulger6576 Жыл бұрын
“… and the Luftwaffe.” Made me laugh out loud at the end😂
@patrickkanas38742 жыл бұрын
Even with the inaccuracies this movie was significantly more accurate than Pearl Harbor and Red Tails
@samuelginting32132 жыл бұрын
I mean one was literally taking history as only background and focused more on romance so that's that
@felicitations35292 жыл бұрын
Red tails is an absolute joke as a historical movie But damn are its action sequences so outlandish you just sit there going “god damn”
@shinjaokinawa51222 жыл бұрын
@@felicitations3529 Try watching Fly Boys. Every German Pilot had a Red Triplane just like the Red Baron. Didn't the Red Baron get that name because of his red Triplane?
@javiermoretti18252 жыл бұрын
Red Tails was trash. Watch the original movie instead. The Tuskegee Airmen.
@michaellusk28562 жыл бұрын
Red Tails was pure Hollywood BS. On D-day, June 4th, 194, there was no Luftwaffe above the beaches, it had been decimated. The Red Tails did not arrive on the European front until late August/early September, 1944. Where did the Luftwaffe planes in the movie come from? Hollywood... no where else. LOL!
@katherineberger63293 жыл бұрын
The Navy really did not want to give Emmerich any help until he said, "I want to tell the story of Dick Best." After that point, he had all the help he wanted.
@yardennissan82072 жыл бұрын
is this real?
@mgrady74159 ай бұрын
Excellent recap by you at the end regarding the IJN crimes that sometimes may get overlooked. Fabulous job by YOU. Thank you.
@ryanreedgibson Жыл бұрын
Those boys are better men than I could ever be. I couldn't handle an air dive like that in peacetime, let alone with antiaircraft fire exploding around you. They will never be forgotten. It's crazy how midway was the mid-way battle where we scored victory after victory.
@oreroundpvp8963 жыл бұрын
I feel like Germany gets by far the most attention when it comes to atrocities committed even though Japan and the Soviets equally committed horrendous crimes.
@jessicamason25263 жыл бұрын
amen with this its no wonder there is consipiracy theories about hollywoods intentions too (tho i think most are without a doubt false its just something to think about)
@adamscott73543 жыл бұрын
The soviets did not outclass the Nazi Germans in war crimes, its just audacious that they an allied force and only there to expand their absolute control and committing war crimes in such excesses as reprisals, but no, it was not worse, its just that they did it yet are supposed to be on team "good guys" yet only end up the lesser of two evils
@oreroundpvp8963 жыл бұрын
@@jessicamason2526 based lol
@davidocall3 жыл бұрын
As did the Americans to be fair, and the Brits lol
@ajalvarez31113 жыл бұрын
@@davidocall “Equally”. Look it up.
@gravitycat0013 жыл бұрын
I just finished HBO's "The Pacific". Holy hell was it intense and moving. It'd be amazing if History Buffs did this series.
@M.R.BrickFilms3 жыл бұрын
Have you watched Band of Brothers?
@DanTheMan-lp2fk3 жыл бұрын
@@M.R.BrickFilms personally, i think the pacific is better
@ALL_that_ENDS3 жыл бұрын
So I should watch "Pacific?"
@jamesdewey32593 жыл бұрын
Both are well done and keep to the truth. Enjoyed both
@Mrdestiny173 жыл бұрын
@@ALL_that_ENDS whenever you have the time, yes. It shows just how harrowing the fighting in the Pacific is could get
@teia_tete_ia2 жыл бұрын
As a Korean American, how people just overlooks Japanese war crimes while shitting on Nazi Germans when both were equally beyond evil is unbelievable and just downright sad, so I'm really glad you pointed it out. It's truly disgusting how people (Koreans and Americans, civilians and soldiers) were tortured by the Japanese. I have nothing against modern Japanese people (besides their ignorance on history and unwillingness to admit the truth) but how the Japanese government denies history pisses me off.
@redrocket604 Жыл бұрын
It's because the West could care less about Asian countries, let's be real. Western society are more sympathetic to Jewish Holocaust victims and other European ethnicities than Asian victims of WW2. That's why they teach more about the Holocaust than the Japanese atrocities in school.
@comhaltacht3153 жыл бұрын
"Oh wow, Roland made a very historically accurate movie, how about that. It's nice to have a video end on a high note... wait never mind"
@Raven.flight3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, it was a bit like that wasn't it. I DO, however, think that Nick gave us valuable information that we can't be allowed to forget.
@iamhungey123453 жыл бұрын
I'd like to see him do "Hacksaw Ridge" one day, especially considering how he felt about Mel Gibson, the movie may surprise him.
@rattheninja28773 жыл бұрын
I’m pretty sure using depressing as an adjective for the ending is an understatement
@chrisc.26263 жыл бұрын
I was left with a stain of disgust on my face and a pit in my stomach after the end of this. It's so appalling.
@timedraven1173 жыл бұрын
9:00 Actually that's a myth and embellishment started by the Japanese, in Shattered Sword, an account of Midway from the Japanese perspective, they were about an hour way from actually launching. The myth was started by Nagumo and his staff to soften the blow of defeat by saying "We almost won, but we were hit right as we were launching." This myth was then continued in the anglo sphere by hilariously enough, failure to talk with Japanese historians, who dismissed this inaccuracy decades ago and were even like, "You got that from the Fuchida didn't you?" Indeed Fuchida's accounts proved to be, self serving or blame shifting. I'd recommend Shattered Sword, its a good read.
@solusanimefan3 жыл бұрын
Is that actually true? I had always heard that the main reason all the Japanese carriers burnt up even though many were only hit once or twice was because of all the ordinance that had been left around the hangars? Though it would make sense for it to also be true that the ships just sank due to poor damage control, the Japanese never had the damage control the US Had. With the strict command structure meaning if you were a gunner and you saw a fire, you kept shooting and assumed the control parties were alive to deal with it. Where as the more lax US, if you were a gunner and saw a fire, you stopped shooting and put the fire out first.
@timedraven1173 жыл бұрын
@@solusanimefan The difference between the flight deck and hangar is the hangar is typically under the flight deck and impossible to see from the outside of Japanese ships. (I remember an anecdote from Shattered Sword that a Japanese officer said that one of the carriers looked like a Daikon raddish, the entire stop of the ship ceased to exist the explosion was so bad) The flight deck is where you launch the fighters and that was what was said by Nagumo and others, they were literally about to launch. In realty they were still rearming to launch a coordinated simultaneous strike. In actuality the most that would be on the flight deck would be cap fighters being rearmed.
@Avatar23123 жыл бұрын
@@solusanimefan They had at best the CAP on deck. Because of switch and switch again and the time it took to take back the Midway attack group they had to be still in the hangar for at least another half an hour. If Japanese doctrine would have been just a bit more flexible (as well as Nagumo), they would have been able to get half their planes en route to the US carrier group. While it would not have changed the final outcome of the war, as the USA were outproducing Japan basically by mid 1942, the timeframe would have changed a lot.
@tbeller803 жыл бұрын
@@timedraven117 part of the issue with the Fuchida account is that the timing of the CAP recovery and the strike launch don't line up. The carriers couldn't do both at the same time. The logs for one of the carriers was found in an archive a few years ago and showed the deck to be empty except for some CAP still landing. The hangar was packed, but there was no strike force on deck ready to launch.
@bf9142ftw3 жыл бұрын
@@tbeller80 For further reference, check out a recent video on KZfaq by the channel Drachinifel, who had a Q&A with Parshalls
@glrider1002 жыл бұрын
I would truly, truly love to see the same treatment to the battle of Samar, and the bravery of Taffy 3. I mentioned this at work once, and one guy replied.. "But nobody would believe it actually happened."
@justicemeter347 Жыл бұрын
Nick: Agree 100% with your commentary and assessment of that final statement in the Midway movie, which attempted to note the bravery of BOTH sides in the battle. But the Japanese military, as you have so accurately elaborated, was brutal to an absolute criminal degree. While I loved the stellar accuracy of most of this movie by Roland Emmerich and his Team, that final comment makes me wince every time I watch this movie. My dad was a Navy veteran of the Pacific War, and he reviled the Japanese until his dying breath in 2011. Your commentary here bracketed precisely why he felt that way, given his own experiences in WWII. Really like the research you go to in your series, especially this one in the 2-part 2019 Midway movie. Great pieces of clarity and story telling to set the record straight. Thank you!
@particularbored60723 жыл бұрын
The Japanese flag painted on the deck was actually freshly painted. Ended up being a bright bullseye.
@shrek43163 жыл бұрын
Why did they paint that there, like it’s so stupid. Like why not reinforce that area of the ship that way if a dive bomber hits it they be like oh no, anyway
@dmjaxun98483 жыл бұрын
@@shrek4316 ...
@aws21043 жыл бұрын
@@shrek4316 Issue is that, A. they paint that there so the Japanese could identify themselves via the Big Red Dot, the rising sun, and it was reinforced, and B. The Japanese wanted their carriers to be fast and maneuverable, which is why the majority of their carriers were lightly armored, so they could have speed more then protection.
@paulocalinao22673 жыл бұрын
For a country obsessed with honor, they became the most dishonorable.
@zhshsG73 жыл бұрын
Well said.
@hyperx723 жыл бұрын
"Even in defeat my nephew is more honorable then you"
@Brandonhayhew3 жыл бұрын
What is even honor? When your in war, and in war men committed unspeakable atrocities
@paulocalinao22673 жыл бұрын
@@Brandonhayhew yeah, but the Japanese Emperial Army praised horrific warcrimes
@ThePathStrider3 жыл бұрын
As Klingons would say, "There is nothing more honorable than victory!"
@Petergalvan Жыл бұрын
It’s pure idiocy how the world thinks that all Asians get along, when in fact there is much hate towards one another. Japanese atrocity against Filipino, Korean, Chinese, Vietnamese went without punishment. You did a good job highlighting this. Thank you
@charleschoy2327 Жыл бұрын
There is Kama, pay now or pay later.
@MisterKnightly Жыл бұрын
Excellent work. Especially the last part, thank you for this.
@sharlin6483 жыл бұрын
The wargame thing really really did happen. A junior officer acting as the US carrier commander placed his ships roughly where they really would be and caught the Japanese carriers by surprise. It also highlighted the big flaws with the search plan the Japanese had that really did affect them in the battle. But because the Japanese had spent years practicing battles in wargames where their fleets were always handled expertly and the Americans always came in like cows waiting to be slaughtered, the move was declared 'impossible' and the damage to two carriers discounted and then scalred back so all three sunk ships survived.
@InTecknicolour3 жыл бұрын
a failure of imagination. and arrogance. two things that have cursed certain military leaders since the dawn of time.
@MegatronYES3 жыл бұрын
Oh we all LOVE playing games with those kinds of assholes
@noralockley88163 жыл бұрын
If memoir serves me right during the war game there was also a b 17 scored a hit on a Japanese carrier and the umpire ruled it could not happen.
@sharlin6483 жыл бұрын
@@noralockley8816 Yep! The Umpire was Yamamoto's chief of staff, Admiral Ukagi and if Ukagi did it, then the order came from Yamamoto.
@tbeller803 жыл бұрын
@@noralockley8816 at the IJN schoolhouse it was common to resurrect ships mid-battle if the loss crippled the battle plan.
@talleywa57722 жыл бұрын
I expected another "Pearl Harbor" from the trailers. Or at least a heavily embellished series of set pieces that would boil down to "Micheal Bay does WWII" but y'all got me interested in actually seeing it.
@deuces_shoeless2 жыл бұрын
The acting is incredibly cheesy in parts but this movie took me by surprise with it's accuracy and ridiculous action scenes.
@StreetLugeNetwork2 жыл бұрын
Its honestly a great movie. Very well paced and doesn't feel as long as it really is. And is a perfect precursor to the Pacific mini series that events start just a month after this movie ends
@takedakiwi2 жыл бұрын
Well I loathed "Pearl Harbour" with deep and abiding loathing, and I can assure you "Midway" is brilliant
@boogaleeboutte2 жыл бұрын
It's a Marvel version of WW2. It's a great looking movie but that's about it's only saving grace. Not as bad as Pearl Harbor but close.
@boogaleeboutte2 жыл бұрын
Actually after watching it again it is fairly true to the events. Just don't believe that torpedo bombers could out run 2 zeroes. LOL
@ethercruiser1537 Жыл бұрын
I knew about many of the atrocities by the IJA , but I had heard little or none of the atrocities committed by the IJN. So sad. Why has this not been told before?
@JB-yb4wn11 ай бұрын
It was told before, it's just that Americans don't read.
@mikeblitzen9 ай бұрын
read books. ijn subs would shoot survivors in rafts, rescue and them, tie them to railings and submerge, beat and behead survivors.
@SeanPONEIL2 жыл бұрын
I would have loved to have you as a history professor. I may have switched my major, and completed my education. You are an excellent teacher.
@histoky20103 жыл бұрын
History buffs is like Jesus nobody knows when he might come back
@oddjob9143 жыл бұрын
Gross
@moeextra20913 жыл бұрын
@@oddjob914 what
@PaulRudd19413 жыл бұрын
@@oddjob914 get your mind out of the gutter mister.