Green Beret reacts to Platoon

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  • @vbboyd
    @vbboyd11 ай бұрын

    The Vietnam war era was a lot different than it is today. My late uncle was a Marine Corps Colonel who was a helicopter pilot in Vietnam and some of the war stories he would tell you would just blow your mind. So you really can't compare the Vietnam war era to what it is like in today's military. Oliver Stone the writer and director served in Vietnam and was a decorated combat soldier so I think he had a pretty good grasp of what it was like to personally experience the Vietnam war first hand and I think he tried to convey all of that to the viewing audience in this movie.

  • @Adam-fl9uc

    @Adam-fl9uc

    11 ай бұрын

    which stories? That ones about throwing viet cong out of a flying helicopter?

  • @BourneCreations

    @BourneCreations

    11 ай бұрын

    I'm glad you wrote this. I was going to. I love this channel, but at times it hurts to see just how little institutional knowledge has not been passed down over the years. When I was in, we studied the past to learn from it, and yes it's a different time and we were fighting different enemies but to have no knowledge of Oliver Stone, Tunnel Rats and what was "normal" in Vietnam is rough. But it's good to see more recent members who find moral issues with the characters in the film. It shows that some good attitudes came out of the mistakes from Vietnam.

  • @vbboyd

    @vbboyd

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Adam-fl9uc I don't feel like discussing those things in a public open forum like this.

  • @patrickthomas8890

    @patrickthomas8890

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Adam-fl9ucRead up on the Hanoi Hilton, Bouncing Betty mines, punji sticks, and how the Viet Cong used children (among a mountain of other horrific things Viet Cong and N Vietnamese regulars did) to get a clearer picture

  • @jonathanramos8414

    @jonathanramos8414

    11 ай бұрын

    Salvador was also pretty good. It was also the same year as platoon. Oliver stone directed too. James woods plays a war correspondent covering the salvadoran civil war 1979-1992.

  • @iamtesting3824
    @iamtesting382411 ай бұрын

    if my memory is correct Oliver Stone himself was in the war

  • @jvsuperdudebro8112

    @jvsuperdudebro8112

    11 ай бұрын

    You are correct

  • @rafaelalodio5116

    @rafaelalodio5116

    11 ай бұрын

    Stone probably put all of his traumas on this movie, probably exaggerated, but still.

  • @ralphalvarez5465

    @ralphalvarez5465

    11 ай бұрын

    Stone patterned the character of Chris after himself. He was in the 25th Infantry Division (Tropic Thunder) in Vietnam and had quit college like Chris. Also in 1981, we had a sergeant that was a veteran of the 173rd Airborne Brigade (Vietnam). He had a Silver Star, Bronze Star, CIB and battle star on his jump wings (Operation Junction City). He was also a Tunnel Rat in Vietnam that had severe PTSD. God bless you Staff Sergeant James King, where ever you are! AATW!!

  • @keithdudley9199

    @keithdudley9199

    11 ай бұрын

    I think he was in the army but shared the Battle field with the Marines somehow. I think they were doing sweep and clear like the army finds the enemy and marines kill em

  • @KahinAhmed72

    @KahinAhmed72

    11 ай бұрын

    ⁠@@ralphalvarez5465Thanks for sharing the info. What does AATW stand for, by the way?

  • @oboogie2
    @oboogie211 ай бұрын

    A word about Willem Dafoe's character, Sgt. Elias. In the scene where Taylor comes back from profile after being wounded, and King takes him down into the bunker where "the Head" hang out and Elias is in a hammock; Elias is not gay, he's just really stoned. The character of Elias was based on a real sergeant that Oliver Stone really respected and served under briefly in a LRRP unit. He was native American, but I don't recall what tribe (doesn't matter), and had two or three tours of combat tours in Vietnam under his belt by that time. He was killed in a friendly fire incident about a month after Stone went to another unit.

  • @FNGACADEMY

    @FNGACADEMY

    11 ай бұрын

    sounds like an amazing human

  • @oboogie2

    @oboogie2

    11 ай бұрын

    @@FNGACADEMY well, he certainly seemed that way to Oliver Stone. Stone did a podcast with Joe Rogan some time back pushing his book Chasing the Light (worth reading) where he discusses the various Platoon characters that he based on real people he knew there during his two tours (or rather one extended tour), and you can tell the admiration he still holds for that guy and the sadness he still feels over hearing he was killed. He said he combined his experiences in three or four different units- and dramatized, obviously, for the movie- into the movie's platoon. I saw that movie in the theater when it came out shortly before I shipped out for Ft. Jackson for basic. What a mindset to go in with. lol! I really enjoy the channel Buck (and Able and the rest of the gang) and the thoughtfulness and just fun comic relief (and without all the "everyone who ever wore the uniform is a super ninja!" BS). Keep it up and pass my thanks to all for the entertainment!

  • @NoLeftTurn54321

    @NoLeftTurn54321

    11 ай бұрын

    @@oboogie2 I saw the movie when it was first released here in Australia and a couple of years later read the book written by Dale Dye based off the screenplay. In the book there's some more backstory to Elias' character which draws on his Native American heritage as well as a relationship he forms with a girl while on RnR in Hawaii - from the book's point of view definitely not gay but just a chill, professional, competent warrior.

  • @kxkxkxkx

    @kxkxkxkx

    11 ай бұрын

    A word about the Hollywood actors: they're all gay ☝️ Also Oliver Stone is a KGB agent 🚩

  • @ODoyle.K

    @ODoyle.K

    8 ай бұрын

    i could be wrong, but i dont think the guys were speaking to dafoe being a gay character in this movie, they were discussing his role in boondock saints. he was just one of those weirdo dudes who you run into in the military in platoon.

  • @spins321
    @spins32111 ай бұрын

    Sometimes I forget how young you guys are. Having grown up in the 80's, the Vietnam war was still polarizing and the vets had craaaaazy stories.... I joined the Marines in 94, and there were still quite a number of guys that served in Vietnam, and they were straight up about what it was like. Atrocities still happened in Iraq and Afghanistan, of course, but Vietnam was next level.

  • @NoelleMar

    @NoelleMar

    11 ай бұрын

    I mean it was interesting even how much things had changed since World War II, which was of course different. But there were fewer concerns about how many civilians were killed, for sure…

  • @tbdog99
    @tbdog9911 ай бұрын

    There's an interview with Oliver Stone somewhere on KZread where he says every character in Platoon was based on someone he knew who really existed. There WAS a Sargent Barnes, and a Bunny, etc...not the same names, but the exact same people.

  • @ralphalvarez5465

    @ralphalvarez5465

    11 ай бұрын

    In the movie, these guys are living through a green hell and will hold on to the devil himself (Barnes) to survive. Like Anthony Quinn Jr character said, "Only Barnes can kill Barnes" and he ran the platoon while the Lieutenant didn't care. Elias reported the civilian killing to Dale Dye's character and that's why Barnes shot Elias. A couple of days later is the big battle where the colonel is killed by the NVA suicide bomber into the TOC. Today's Army is a different beast than the US Army in Vietnam. Letter writing was the only communication, no emails or cell phones. You could say that you would go against the tide but research what happened to the Huey pilot and door gunner that tried to report the My Lai massacre. That was over 300 civilians that were brutalized and killed. Only Lt Calley was convicted and given a life sentence while was later reduced to house arrest. Captain Ernest Medina got off scot free and he was the C/O. Different rules of engagement and "body counts" and "search and destroy" were realities.

  • @ollikuhta9127

    @ollikuhta9127

    11 ай бұрын

    Yeah when the filming of Platoon was done (before it was shown to the public) Oliver Stone showed it in a private viewing to his former platoon mates. They had a platoon reunion. And the characters in the movie were people in the reunion (not everyone was present of course, but like dozen people) It's mentioned in one commentary in KZread, there's even black&white footage of the reunion

  • @MikeStarrPSN
    @MikeStarrPSN11 ай бұрын

    If I am not mistaken, in Vietnam, there were US units called Tunnel Rats, usually of small postures, whose primary job was to infiltrate and clear these tunnels. They were badass. Guys, I just remembered a movie, which I hope you may review someday; it is a Russian film called "9th Company", and it is about Russian soldiers during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. I think it is a good movie, and I am really curious about your opinion. Great video, as always; I enjoyed it a lot (while drinking beer with you). Cheers.

  • @FNGACADEMY

    @FNGACADEMY

    11 ай бұрын

    ill check it out, i would not want to be a tunnel rat lol

  • @PlastoJoe

    @PlastoJoe

    11 ай бұрын

    @@FNGACADEMY The Viet Cong would absolutely booby trap the shit out of their tunnels.Years ago I used to work with a Vietnam vet, and he would tell stories of his friend who was a Tunnel Rat. They'd go down with only a 1911, a flashlight, and maybe a knife. His friend was super fucked up when he came back home. Drug addition, PTSD, the works.

  • @dsumner1234

    @dsumner1234

    11 ай бұрын

    @@FNGACADEMY He's correct. "Tunnel Rats" were guys units would send into tunnel systems to check them out. Usually they'd have a flashlight, pistol, and rope tied to them to pull them back out. If you've seen Forest Gump, you'll see him being sent into a tunnel to check it out after they toss in a couple of frag grenades.

  • @fx7447

    @fx7447

    11 ай бұрын

    My dad spent his first tour as a tunnel rat with the 919th corp of engineers. He was 5'7" 135lbs back then, so he was the perfect choice for that job.

  • @jakester455

    @jakester455

    11 ай бұрын

    Check out the interview with a tunnel rat on the podcast "Warriors: In Their Own Words." They originally tried blowing the tunnels with TNT but it wasn't effective, the tunnels were too complex with too many drops and turns. They mostly did go in alone because the tunnel rat's shoulders rubbed both sides of the tunnels. A second soldier would only be able to report back that the the first tunnel rat got killed. And they mostly went in WITHOUT a flashlight and some preferred to only use a knife because a .45 would deafen them in a tunnel. The tunnel rats were so serious about their business that they would only eat fish and rice during their whole deployment so the Vietcong and the NVA wouldn't smell them. And yes there were booby traps but the tunnel rats would find and disable them. Balls of steel.

  • @ViperChief117
    @ViperChief11711 ай бұрын

    Everything about Platoon is damn near perfection. Easily one of the greatest War films ever made next to Black Hawk Down or Saving Private Ryan. Glad you guys reviewed this one. Lol

  • @FNGACADEMY

    @FNGACADEMY

    11 ай бұрын

    agreed 100 percent

  • @ViperChief117

    @ViperChief117

    11 ай бұрын

    @@FNGACADEMYDefinitely goes up there in my top ten war movies of all time anyway. Lol

  • @merikano2985

    @merikano2985

    11 ай бұрын

    It was definitely a much needed war movie that a lot of Vietnam veterans watch and go: "Yup, that's how fucked up it was over there. Nice to see Hollywood finally get it right!" The village massacre was based off the My Lai massacre where a large US force killed half a thousand Vietnamese civilians including infants and gang-raped women. One LT that took part killed 22 singlehandedly and he was the ONLY one who served any jail time - sentenced to 20 years of house arrest. His sentence was then commuted once Nixon came into office, meaning he served 3 and a half years prison time total. And if that isn't messed up, there were three American soldiers who tried to protect the civilians (just like Elias). Those three dudes ended up being branded as traitors by several US politicians. It wasn't until decades later did today's US military thankfully exonerate them and recognized the three as heroes, not traitors. And here's why shit like My Lai was important on a strategic level, even though the American soldiers who got a way with what the rest of the world called a war crime the massacre did a lot of damage to the war effort turning the US population against the war and ended up hurting soldiers who survived Vietnam. Unlike WW2 vets, Vietnam vets were unfairly treated like monsters when they came back home. Calling them baby killers and throwing dog shit at them, when in reality the vast majority had nothing to do with anything like that. Remember the movie Rambo? And strategically when the Vietnamese did their Tet Offensive and tried to fight the US conventionally (and got their asses kicked because they were trying to fight the Americans on America's terms) it still was a strategic victory for North Vietnam. Because it showed to the anti-war American public just how far the NVA would go to achieve victory. Add in that the South Vietnamese government was corrupt as hell: one South Vietnamese general was working for the North Vietnamese held a position that oversaw nearly all US Special Forces operations - MACV SOG (you know the Special Forces unit that took 100% casualties?). Mix in how most of the US forces were draftees that didn't want to be there in the first place (or were lifers like O'Neil - the doctor from Scrubs - who would do six months on the front lines then get reassigned to a REMF unit away from the fighting leaving one less NCO to train the FNGs) and it was only a matter of time until the war effort collapsed. There was just no way we were winning that war. Still the majority of Hollywood Vietnam movies like to depict what happened there as something else - and there are several accounts of badass snipers and green berets and seals that kicked ass and took names and make for great movies. But don't kid yourselves. Look at Platoon not as an anti-war movie but a cautionary tale of what happens when the US picks fights it doesn't fully understand. As for Oliver Stone? Who do you think taught the actors that thousand yard stare we see when they found the tortured body of their friend? Charlie Sheen and Johnny Depp said that Oliver Stone gave them chills when he showed them how to look when recording that scene. That Oliver Stone had this look in his eyes that you knew under no uncertain terms he could kill you in an instant with no hesitation. Platoon, the story that needed to be told because of how Vietnam affected the lives of so many people and not to tell it is not only dishonorable but dangerous for future generations of soldiers if today's military was the same kind that led the fight in Vietnam.

  • @juicev25

    @juicev25

    11 ай бұрын

    @@merikano2985 Very well said.

  • @ImperialMJG

    @ImperialMJG

    4 ай бұрын

    Nah, this is better then all of those.

  • @MrKedab
    @MrKedab11 ай бұрын

    the scene with Willem Dafoe in the tunnel - he's a 'tunnel rat' - usually the smallest guy (and the one with balls of steel) would be sent down into the tunnel to check it out - there was no way to get anymore troops in there. they always went alone. i've been in the tunnels at Cu Chi - now made larger for tourists like me, and i'm only 5'7" and it was still claustrophobic AF

  • @AhHereWeGo

    @AhHereWeGo

    11 ай бұрын

    The tunnels of cu chi are always tight

  • @FNGACADEMY

    @FNGACADEMY

    11 ай бұрын

    @@AhHereWeGo LMAO!

  • @MrKedab

    @MrKedab

    11 ай бұрын

    @@AhHereWeGo haha!

  • @eduardoandres5989

    @eduardoandres5989

    11 ай бұрын

    @@AhHereWeGo i visited the place in 2014 and met one of the matriarcs of the region called Munchma Cu Chi

  • @nordan00

    @nordan00

    11 ай бұрын

    @@AhHereWeGoThey ain’t always tight! Sometimes they’re like mayonnaise! Of course, I do got a little hollyhonker! So…

  • @ExUSSailor
    @ExUSSailor11 ай бұрын

    Whatever you think about him, and, his films, you have to give Oliver Stone credit. He enlisted in 1967, volunteered to go to Vietnam, and, won a Bronze Star, Purple Heart, and, several other medals. He was no POG.

  • @FNGACADEMY

    @FNGACADEMY

    11 ай бұрын

    total G no doubt

  • @mandingogrande9243

    @mandingogrande9243

    11 ай бұрын

    Facts he went to Yale and dropped out of the same class Bush, Trump and Clinton were in and enlisted

  • @KahinAhmed72

    @KahinAhmed72

    11 ай бұрын

    @@mandingogrande9243 What?! That's crazy!

  • @KahinAhmed72

    @KahinAhmed72

    11 ай бұрын

    @@scottspencer6899 Person Other than Grunt (Anybody who’s not in the infantry). It’s usually told to someone who doesn’t work in a combat job. Which isn’t bad, militaries need more than infantry soldiers to function efficiently.

  • @rgbenge7580
    @rgbenge758011 ай бұрын

    I served with some Vietnam era veterans when I came into the Army in the early 80s. Most said this movie put all of the worst things that happened into one story. This stuff happened, but not nearly as much at one time and one place.

  • @tylerblalack6684

    @tylerblalack6684

    7 ай бұрын

    That's almost every movie lol. This one fit a 10 guys' 12 month deployments into 2 hours.

  • @chumpzilla000
    @chumpzilla00011 ай бұрын

    The guy going in the tunnel by himself was known as a tunnel rat. Usually, the smallest guy because the tunnels were very small.

  • @ebannaw
    @ebannaw11 ай бұрын

    I was in 3-2 SBCT. Deployed to Iraq with them, did my time honorably and was discharged - I wanted to move on with my life. We were also deploying to Afghanistan, but I ETS'd before deploying. My friends understood and wished me luck, and I as well to them. Then Robert Bales happened - he murdered 16 Afghans. War crimes still happen, but you're right, they're not the norm.

  • @NoelleMar

    @NoelleMar

    11 ай бұрын

    And they’re not the norm only because people have fought so hard for that to be the case. We see around the world and throughout history how enormous groups of people can have “no morals” and refuse to step in to stop atrocities, and even participate in them.

  • @EziekKiel

    @EziekKiel

    10 ай бұрын

    @@NoelleMar Yes, that's very true. We are much better today than in the past. Although those participating in the Russian war machine are certainly an exception. Russian forces committing one war crime after another. Murder, rape, execution, and even the freaking kidnapping of young children. Genocide. They have no morals or shame. Imagine the kind of person who would shoot a little girl point blank in the head as she's begging for her life. A Russian soldier admitted to doing exactly that during a podcast/interview. Sickening.

  • @SpicyMilk_ttv
    @SpicyMilk_ttv11 ай бұрын

    Thank you all for everything yall do, have done and continue to do. Your commitment to assist new soldiers and the transparency you bring from your channel has impacts you can only imagine on peoples lives. Platoon has always been one of my favorites and a movie that stood out to me in my life because my grandfather was an SOG in Vietnam. Part of a sniper team from my understanding and the little I know about his term of service. From the few stories I got from him before he passed, this war was an unimaginable horror that most people nowadays cant even fathom.

  • @bradkasler5536
    @bradkasler553611 ай бұрын

    The "Lets do the whole village" scene was based on a real event called the "My Lai" massacre.. Over 500 villagers were killed on a mission sometime in 1968. This is one of the reasons why returning soldiers were referred to as "baby killers".... I don't think this was a regular occurence at all, but look up the incident...It will give more context to the movie.

  • @FNGACADEMY

    @FNGACADEMY

    11 ай бұрын

    I read a book on it.. but dude clearly made himself out to be the hero... Ranger talking about ripping peoples heads off...

  • @cailinmaxim
    @cailinmaxim11 ай бұрын

    Grew up in a garrison city in Australia and a few of my friends parents were Vietnam veterans, many of the stories i was told when drinking with them were truely horrific as to what they went through and many didnt want to be there as they were drafted. I really hope that one day you get a chance to review "Danger Close: The Battle of Long Tan". Based on real events and does a great job of telling the story without over doing it hollywood style.

  • @shameless1047
    @shameless104711 ай бұрын

    These guys have obviously never spoken to any Vietnam vets that were really in the shit. Spoken to a few that said, platoon is the most realistic to what they experienced over there

  • @rosswatson3993

    @rosswatson3993

    4 ай бұрын

    I don't think they ever said it's not realistic. They just kind of sour on how bad it makes our military look. Not that those things didn't happen, it's just a real bummer of a movie. Not a bad movie by any stretch, just a completely different look at the war in Vietnam.

  • @rosswatson3993

    @rosswatson3993

    4 ай бұрын

    Should mention these two guys, just like everyone else nowadays SIGNED UP THEMSELVES to join the military. They weren't DRAFTED like many in the Vietnam War. Different motivations for sure.

  • @RevStickleback
    @RevStickleback11 ай бұрын

    One big difference between Vietnam and later conflicts was that many of the soldiers were conscripts drafted in, not people who joined as a career. They really didn't want to risk being killed, or see their buddies killed, for a war that meant nothing to them. And there really was some horrible stuff, worse than this film, that happened out there. Over 500 villagers at My Lai massacred, for example.

  • @alexbaum2204

    @alexbaum2204

    8 ай бұрын

    That's certainly one of the major differences. Another would be who we were fighting against. The Vietnamese had never done a thing to us nor ever posed a single threat. This was a proxy war against Russia, China, and communism. Back in the 60's, before globalization had really sunk its fangs in, the third world good and truly existed. Southeast Asia was an entire region of third world countries. To say they were undeveloped would be a massive understatement. There's a line in the movie right before they go into the village where he talks about how it had probably stood there untouched for hundreds of years. Well, it probably had never seen western people either. No use for money, total subsistence, next to no education or literacy. Absolute poverty, but not in a way that really mattered so much - they grew and raised what they needed. And then the French came and then the Americans. And they brought modern warfare. But in a place of an extreme environment that they were experienced in and we were not. We were fighting against people who had nothing, but could often put us in our place because it was their backyard. We really had no business being there. Over 50 thousand of our young men were lost for no reason. Over 2 million of their people were lost simply for trying to decide their own future. It sucked. The darkest conflict we've ever been involved in. I'd really like to think it is something we learned from. These two guys do not seem to understand that at all.

  • @RevStickleback

    @RevStickleback

    8 ай бұрын

    @@alexbaum2204 I do think there is tendency among many to assume Vietnam is/was almost entirely a rural country, because of the depiction of it in war films and reports. You get tourists there now complaining that they haven't seen much of 'real Vietnam ' because they haven't seen loads of straw hut villages. Even back then though, there were major cities. Full Metal Jacket is maybe the only one that shows urban warfare.

  • @alexbaum2204

    @alexbaum2204

    7 ай бұрын

    @@RevStickleback there absolutely were cities. Saigon, Hue, Haiphong, Hanoi, Vinh. All thriving cities. But much of Vietnam was rural. In fact, the vast majority of it was. If you look at the forest cover of the entire region, more than 70% of it was covered in unbroken, VIRGIN forest. It was no joke. And the inland villages in Vietnam, particularly along the borders of Cambodia and Laos were about as far flung as one could imagine. Again, back then before globalization, these villages were all but completely cut off. Perhaps some would be sent to the big cities to work and, if very lucky, study. But most subsisted off the land. Not much changed in that part of the world in rural areas between World War 2 and then. In WW2, our GI’s were encountered by people in Melanesia who had never seen outsiders. The same can be said of those who walked into villages in the Vietnamese hinterland. That is not to say that these young men came into these villages and inflicted great amounts of harm. I believe that while this did indeed happen, and probably with much greater frequency than our other armed conflicts, it was not commonplace. We often gave medical aid, tried to make allies, and in some cases helped to train them in tactics against NVA and Vietcong, who were also quite brutal towards them in many instances. But it would have been an absolute absurdity for so many of our soldiers, many of whom would have had absolutely no idea where Vietnam even was before going, to have these encounters. One of the many absurdities of that war. Bending and blurring the lines of reality far beyond what any psychedelic might have done. To be choppered into these remote areas from a base or even a base in a city. To run patrol there and even engage in combat - in this surreal contrast to the world they knew at home and the more modern and cosmopolitan cities of Vietnam (or Thailand and the Philippines if coming back from R&R) m, only to be choppered back to something once again recognizable. Well, if that alone didn’t play cruel tricks on their minds, I don’t know what would. I’ve never been in combat. But I have indeed roughed it for months on end in the bush in that part of the world. Far eastern Indonesia is still largely undeveloped, and the encounters one has there are still quite surreal. To say you’re an outsider is missing the mark entirely. It is a beautiful yet harsh environment where we, as westerners, are completely out of elements. One depends on local knowledge to make it through. I spent time in Vietnam along what would then have been the Ho Chi Minh trail. It is still thick jungle. And all I could think is what it must have been like and felt like 60 years ago. The challenges would have been enormous, seemingly insurmountable. I’ve said it many times, and I’ll say it again: we asked far too much of those brave, young men back then. We should not have been there and they should not have had to go through what they did. But, as ever, my undying respect will always go to them for doing what they did. And I would say that of both sides. They have all my respect.

  • @RevStickleback

    @RevStickleback

    7 ай бұрын

    @@alexbaum2204 One of the tragedies of it all is that Vietnam pretty much turned it's back on communism in a little over a decade after the war ended. Other than gaining independence from France, which would have come anyway, it was for nothing...not that remaining communist would have been a good thing.

  • @alexbaum2204

    @alexbaum2204

    7 ай бұрын

    @@RevStickleback I mean, it is still a socialist country. I don’t think any country will ever truly be communist. It’s a lofty goal that ignores the innate tendencies of human beings. I’ll tell you one thing, though: it was one hell of a mountain to climb to get out of the situation they were in after the war. In the mid-80’s they were one of the poorest countries on the planet. Now? Well now they appear to be doing very well. That was through sheer grit and determination. They are very hardworking people who rose up against the odds to rebuild their nation. I have a lot of respect for them.

  • @sketchygetchey8299
    @sketchygetchey829911 ай бұрын

    Both Oliver Stone and Dale Dye, if memory serves correctly, had some clashes while working on this movie. But something that really stood out in the making was how lost in thought they were in making the village scene.

  • @FNGACADEMY

    @FNGACADEMY

    11 ай бұрын

    i can imagine they clashed... lines were crossed.. but it turned out so great

  • @Jessie_James850

    @Jessie_James850

    11 ай бұрын

    Vietnam veterans and even ex soldiers from Stone's platoon were angry at him because he realy gone too far. He basicly put in the movie all the worst things that US soldiers ever did in 'Nam in one platoon. I think he knew what Hollywood producers want,and he delivere it for money and fame.

  • @aarondrennan5650
    @aarondrennan565011 ай бұрын

    The 30th anniversary of that film was a little while ago, one of the actors did a documentary with interviews from the actors and their experiences during the filming and post production. Kieth David who plays “King” said he was eating dinner in a restaurant about a week after the movie released and a patron approached them and told him that he incapsulated the black soldier in Nam. When vets come up to you like that… you played the part good and he did. Dad was a Vietnam vet.

  • @Alfeco-dm7uk
    @Alfeco-dm7uk9 ай бұрын

    Tour of Duty was a military drama television series based on events in the Vietnam War, broadcast on CBS. The series ran for three seasons, from September 24, 1987, to April 28, 1990, for a total of 58 one-hour episodes.

  • @happynowfarms
    @happynowfarms11 ай бұрын

    I chose the Army instead of the Marines in 86 after this movie came out. I was 17 and grew up in Southern California and Colorado in the 70's. The diverse backgrounds of the Grunts drew me in. Yes it was a horrible war that brought out the worst in some Soldiers. As an American who had relatives who fought in Vietnam and WW2 and grew up in their shadow, I joined the Infantry to make the world a better place and serve my Country. Was very idealistic when young, now very skeptical and practical about war using it very rarely.

  • @jakester455
    @jakester45511 ай бұрын

    Sean... Dude... You showed an astonishing lack of knowledge about the Tunnel Rats. LOL

  • @jeffp3415
    @jeffp341511 ай бұрын

    I had a co-worker that was a tunnel rat in Viet Nam. Probably about 5"4" and 150#. We went pheasant hunting once at a company meeting, after we flushed the first birds and starting shooting, he turned and walked back to the cabin without saying a word; we all knew enough not to ask.

  • @kylehannin_
    @kylehannin_11 ай бұрын

    Yet another great entertaining video 👌🏼🤣🤣 love the dynamic between all the guys in the group.

  • @PaddyInf
    @PaddyInf11 ай бұрын

    The Claymore thing still gets me. On platoon commander's division there there was a student who had a magnificent ND with a claymore. The triggers we use only have to be hit once but he thought it was one of the 3 clack ones in the movie. He decided he would 'prime' by doing 2 presses after setting up so he would only have to press it once when needed. It was the best day.

  • @EziekKiel

    @EziekKiel

    10 ай бұрын

    Jesus dude he must have SHIT HIS PANTS lmao! Why did they get rid of the 3 action triggers? Seems like a good safety measure for things like this. "Priming" the claymore my goodness lmao. Such a smart lad!🤣

  • @RevStickleback
    @RevStickleback11 ай бұрын

    One of the consequences of this was was to trigger the rise of the murderous Khmer Rouge in Cambodia, next door. The film "The Killing Fields" covers that in another movie that also won awards, and is definitely worth checking out, even if it isn't so much a war movie, as a movie showing the impact of war. The actor in the lead role lived through it, and said the depiction of the Khmer Rouge regime was too tame, which will seem quite the claim if you watch it.

  • @user-oh6eg4ny3h

    @user-oh6eg4ny3h

    11 ай бұрын

    Yes i agree with you. in the Vietnam war every side had a roll in creating the Khmer Rouge. The north Vietnamese worked with the communist in Cambodia with the Ho chi min trail. This gave them power and influence to the Khmer Rouge The US made things bad in Cambodia when they dropped bombs into Cambodia to destroy the Ho chi min trail and the chao only made the Khmer Rouge rise to power. After the Vietnam war the US was even helping the Khmer Rouge against Vietnam and even trained them just to destabilize Vietnam. They also worked with China to help the Khmer rouge stay in power against Vietnam China made things worse by invading Vietnam for Vietnam destroying the Khmer rouge and gave aid to Cambodia. China was bascially best friends with pol pot the mass murder dictator So I agree with you this war in Vietnam only made things worse by creating the Khmer rouge.

  • @06dking
    @06dking11 ай бұрын

    They had very complex tunneling systems. Including bunks, medical unit, command centers, ammo depots, etc

  • @nativepangea
    @nativepangea11 ай бұрын

    Best understated scene Sgt. Elias carrying the Pig for one of his men. Also the interpreter in the village is Johnny Depp in his first role, he seems so sympathetic and innocent very well played.

  • @evie-roseclayton158
    @evie-roseclayton15818 күн бұрын

    Those in recent years have volunteered, so many were conscripted and didn’t want to go, the grunts was out in the field for a large part of the tour, 50/60 patrol were not unheard off, people who go to war are not monsters, but a war in a jungle when you don’t really see the enemy, booby traps everywhere, enemy has tunnels and pop up behind you when you think it’s been cleared, fear, watching your friends dying, and combat fatigue causes monsters. I respect all veterans of all wars, nobody should expect people to see and do the things they experienced. If we changed the rules and politicians who create these wars go to war in the first wave, then those that profit from war next, that’s how you obtain world peace

  • @anthonyramirez9003
    @anthonyramirez900311 ай бұрын

    Another bit of trivia I read, is that scene where Charlie Sheen and Kevin Dillon are confronting the "One Legger". Well, he truly was disable and was blind because he was too poor to have the surgery to restore his eyesight. When Both, Sheen and Dillon found out. They paid to have his eyes operated on and he was able to see again.

  • @FNGACADEMY

    @FNGACADEMY

    11 ай бұрын

    damn i hope that is true... incredible

  • @mattperry5789
    @mattperry578911 ай бұрын

    One thing to keep in mind is the director Oliver Stone, served in Vietnam

  • @FNGACADEMY

    @FNGACADEMY

    11 ай бұрын

    which is terrifying that he was likely portraying real world scenarios

  • @johnydsmithson6834

    @johnydsmithson6834

    11 ай бұрын

    ​​@@FNGACADEMYThere's a 'making of Platoon', it was filmed in sequence, so as characters died, their actors were abruptly flown home without saying goodbyes, per Oliver Stone. Oliver also stated every character was a real grunt he served with, including the atrocities and heroism portrayed. Cheers thanks for the reaction.

  • @christopherherbst8966
    @christopherherbst896611 ай бұрын

    FINALLY!!! I've been waiting for this one !

  • @chadchaddy69
    @chadchaddy692 ай бұрын

    I’m not military and to old for selection but you guys keep these conversations going because they are very important and gives civilians more than you know! Great work

  • @matthewmalleus7135
    @matthewmalleus713511 ай бұрын

    Charlie/Chris 'froze up' because he is new and had never made contact and half asleep. Everyone is asleep. Everyone thinks they'd be all Rambo and be naturally blowing away enemies on first contact, but you never know what you'll do until you're in the moment. That's the only time that happens to him. The film is based on Oliver Stone's and Dale Dye's experiences, both did multiple tours as an infantryman in Nam.

  • @nativepangea
    @nativepangea11 ай бұрын

    Saw this in '87 in GTMO outdoor concrete bleachers next to The Stoplight. There were a few helo fly overs during the flick, awesome times! I was one of the few Coasties surrounded by Marines, to which you would have thought a comedy was being played with all the laughter from those guys.

  • @FNGACADEMY

    @FNGACADEMY

    11 ай бұрын

    i can imagine! what a cool experience!

  • @FNGACADEMY
    @FNGACADEMY11 ай бұрын

    What do you guys want to see next?! hit that email list to keep up on our ventures! we appreciate you all! www.thefngacademy.com/

  • @ericsantucci6934

    @ericsantucci6934

    11 ай бұрын

    I really recommend checking out a film called The Great Raid. Really underrated WW2 film about the raid on a Japanese POW camp to free American POWs.

  • @snowbear163

    @snowbear163

    11 ай бұрын

    Brooklyn's Finest. It's a cop movie. Same director as Den of Thieves, Terminal List, Training Day, The Equalizer. Might be the best cop movie I've ever seen and I'd like a cop's take on what happens in the film. It's got everybody in it. Ethan Hawke, Don Cheadle, Richard Gere, Wesley Snipes, it's a loaded cast and I love it. Snipes was in the movie right after he got out of prison for tax evasion and played a guy who just got out of prison.

  • @Chaos31

    @Chaos31

    11 ай бұрын

    Hamburger Hill needs to be on the watch list.

  • @vbboyd

    @vbboyd

    11 ай бұрын

    Here are some movies you can do, Patton, is good that is for historical reference and then Gettysburg that is another really cool movie but if you really want to do a truly massive historical epic then do Waterloo. That is a terrific film. Or hey 1917 would be an absolutely awesome movie for you guys to do a review on. That movie is effing awesome. Or even better yet go really super historical and do the new Napoleon movie when it comes out this Thanksgiving. I realize that historical stuff may not be your strong suit but it would be fun to see how you guys would react to some really cool historical movies. I don't think it would hurt for you to go outside of your comfort zone just a bit. But hey you are Green Berets going outside of your comfort zone is your stock in trade. Oh yes, "the thin red line" and Saving Private Ryan. Jocko Willink did some of these historical movies and the guy was nothing short of awesome in his perspective on it all. Oh yes and "A Bridge Too Far" would be another really good historical film. kzread.info/dash/bejne/gXWOubqOm9XQgMY.html kzread.info/dash/bejne/ZXiXuayrqq6Wp7g.html kzread.info/dash/bejne/iWp1w66xppioYKg.html

  • @thatguyoverthere2288

    @thatguyoverthere2288

    11 ай бұрын

    Aliens

  • @jackrankin5986
    @jackrankin598611 ай бұрын

    Great video guys this was the best one in a while. Just wish they were longer. Maybe you guys could start a patreon or something and start uploading longer or unedited videos just so we can get more content. Still my favourite KZread channel out there you guys rock

  • @alexsoma3720
    @alexsoma372011 ай бұрын

    Love these reaction videos! Keep 'em coming guys! 😂👏👍

  • @swim2dtop85
    @swim2dtop8511 ай бұрын

    The scene of William Dafoe going into the Tunnel was probably due to him being the selected "Tunnel Rat" for the platoon. Tunnel Rats were selected due to being the smallest in the platoon and cable of getting into hard places. This was a practice during the Vietnam War.

  • @DP-2019
    @DP-201911 ай бұрын

    The towel that Charlie Sheen was using was used to block the mosquitos. On the scene with the artillery barrage on their position, it wasn’t WP, part of the HE fragments struck his radio/battery, causing the battery to leak onto the radio operators back. Saw this movie at the base theatre in ‘87 while stationed on Camp Schwab, Okinawa. The terrain on the movie looked exactly like the Northern Training Area (NTA), the dense jungle and triple canopy made the heat oppressive with zero air-flow.

  • @totoroutes5389
    @totoroutes538910 ай бұрын

    The scene when the u.s. soldier murdered the civilian and held the child at gunpoint is referencing a village massacre that happened in that war.

  • @Iraia_Roberts
    @Iraia_Roberts11 ай бұрын

    The actors in platoon were portraying alot of guys who were drafted. Vietnam meant nothing to them. Oliver Stone served in Vietnam, so you can't get a better director than a guy who experienced Vietnam for real. No matter what modern soldiers think of the movie, this was real.

  • @odameclement2325
    @odameclement232511 ай бұрын

    Really happy that finally you did an episode on this movie, thank you very much. Hope 🤞 to see more episodes on Vietnam war movies.

  • @okiejay
    @okiejay26 күн бұрын

    My late father in law was a combat veteran that served in Vietnam in the infantry. He never talked about the war, but once told me that Platoon was the closest movie that he'd ever seen to what it was actually like over there. He passed away earlier this year. All the Agent Orange shit they sprayed over there gave him liver problems.

  • @sethzuern37
    @sethzuern3711 ай бұрын

    Pretty sure Stone and Captain Dale Dye (the military advisor) had flash backs on set

  • @10Cnote
    @10Cnote11 ай бұрын

    Dale Dye was a Marine Corps Captain in Vietnam and trained all the actors so that’s why they looked that way, they were like Vietnam vets. Some of Oliver Stone’s buddies from Vietnam met the actors after and said they had that same look in their eyes as their friends did

  • @macguffinvirtualproduction6183
    @macguffinvirtualproduction618311 ай бұрын

    Able’s getting cinematic with his angles! Top notch dude!!!

  • @intricateinc8566
    @intricateinc856611 ай бұрын

    Are we not calling it Beers and Breakdowns? Absolute classic iconic film. Always enjoy watching these reviews.

  • @sjeb1967

    @sjeb1967

    11 ай бұрын

    Didn't notice it till u said 👍🤣

  • @FNGACADEMY

    @FNGACADEMY

    11 ай бұрын

    of course we are!

  • @intricateinc8566

    @intricateinc8566

    11 ай бұрын

    @@FNGACADEMY I heard you say it, just expected it in the title. This movie was hella dark watching it as a kid. Enjoyed the breakdown gentlemen.

  • @edgardabre2670
    @edgardabre267025 күн бұрын

    A generals son, smart and signed up as a private in Vietnam to "See what was really going on" - he saw, he lived it

  • @MrJrv1993
    @MrJrv199311 ай бұрын

    You guys should do a video on The Deer Hunter. Another fantastic Vietnam movie that shows the horrors and transformations the characters go through from beginning to end.

  • @marcmeinzer8859
    @marcmeinzer8859Ай бұрын

    Some people believe that the only army general who could have run the Vietnamese conflict better than Westmoreland was General Gavin who retired in 1958, was JFK’s ambassador to France, and who knew the leading French generals left over from their Indochina fiasco. He rejected the concept of search and destroy in favor of an enclave strategy which would have opted for baiting the North Vietnamese into mounting suicidal mass offensives against heavily fortified coastal enclaves. He also believed that Ho Chi Minh could have been successfully negotiated with. His book was titled CRISIS NOW by James M. Gavin. He was the CO of the Second World War 101st Airborne Division, as portrayed by Ryan O’Neal in the film A BRIDGE TOO FAR about the Operation Market Garden fiasco in the Netherlands, which was the largest airborne assault in history.

  • @billswindle8311
    @billswindle831111 ай бұрын

    The scene where Barnes holds a little Vietnamese girl with a gun to her head and her reaction is as real a scene in the movie as it gets.

  • @verdonix1976
    @verdonix197611 ай бұрын

    I’m sure this has been said already, but one big difference was in Vietnam everyone was drafted, but today everyone’s a volunteer.

  • @KahinAhmed72

    @KahinAhmed72

    11 ай бұрын

    Not true, *not everyone* was drafted.

  • @verdonix1976

    @verdonix1976

    11 ай бұрын

    @@KahinAhmed72 you’re missing the “forest for the trees” to point out semantics. The point is that much of the reason GIs portrayed from that era are portrayed in the way they are is because they didn’t want to be there. YES, there were some volunteers, but all in all the military was drafted in that time. Therefore the “tone” of the military was that of a group of folks who didn’t want to be where they were and they acted accordingly. They were pissed at the Govt. and they were not blinded to the sentiment stateside… therefore you had some really exaggerated instances of crappy humans. Whereas, today, you have a 100% volunteer force that chose to be where they are and save for a few outliers who forgot when they enlisted for school that they might have to fight a war…. Everyone remembers that either they or their parents signed up to punch back after 9/11. Changes the demeanor and overall morale when you chose yo do something over being forced to.

  • @robertsmith4681
    @robertsmith468111 ай бұрын

    Happy you guys got around to reviewing one of the better known movies about the Vietnam war. Have you considered going thru some of the iconic ww2 movies such as "A bridge too far" ?

  • @FNGACADEMY

    @FNGACADEMY

    11 ай бұрын

    for sure we will! Gonna get up to speed on my history first though lol

  • @sirguys2469
    @sirguys246911 ай бұрын

    Dude, when I saw you questioning the efficacy of them sending one man into the tunnels, I couldn't believe that as a special operator you had no knowledge of the work of the tunnel rats in Vietnam. There's a book called "The Tunnels of Cu Chi" which is about just one of the many tunnel systems the Vietnamese had. They had false tunnels, several exits/entrances and even ways to grow vegetables underground. Tunnel rats were chosen because of their stature. They were usually small, like the Vietnamese. Also, not only was platoon based upon Oliver Stone's Vietnam infantry experiences, but one of the advisors, Capt. Dale Dye, USMC (retired) was an infantry officer in Vietnam, and played the officer who ordered the drop of ordinance when their positions were being overrun. Vietnam was a jungle war, with many who were drafted and thrust into combat with the minimal training necessary (at one point boot camp was shortened). It ain't the desert war with a volunteer army.

  • @neonblack211

    @neonblack211

    11 ай бұрын

    yeah, wern;t weren't they all vounteers also?

  • @sirguy8613

    @sirguy8613

    11 ай бұрын

    @neonblack211 from what I understand, yes.

  • @Sebuin
    @Sebuin11 ай бұрын

    LMAO, that "Steve Irwin's ghost line, I know is going to hit my head whenever I see a "don't fuck around with the animal" moment.

  • @heycowild8814
    @heycowild881411 ай бұрын

    Loyal as ever. See u next week.

  • @darrellseike3185
    @darrellseike318511 ай бұрын

    They had to recon the holes to find out what resources it contained. If it had a hospital it usually indicated there was more than just a company nearby. Possibly a regiment. If it was small with only cooking spaces and sleeping quarters, it was probably just a local VC unit. You could also capture useful intel on units nearby such as units involved in the area as well as schedules, locations and possibly the locations of other "pit stops" for NVA infiltrating from the north.

  • @Chamber_xo
    @Chamber_xo10 ай бұрын

    There’s a making of platoon called brothers in arms. Oliver stone, made them not shower for weeks and after a day shooting would go get drunk, but he also orchestrated it chronological when you died in the movie you would immediately leave no goodbyes, which has an affect on the remaining actors, which gave them a sense of losing a brother.

  • @Gracc112
    @Gracc1125 ай бұрын

    The depiction of the "tunnel rats" is spot-on. They would send one guy in there with a .45 or a .38, and no hearing protection. I don't remember why they cleared tunnels like that but it is true.

  • @yamaharider58
    @yamaharider5811 ай бұрын

    Lotta guys already addressed it but very surprised you hadnt heard of the Tunnel Rats. Figured that would be something GBs had studied on. Also gotta remember tactics and procedures in the 2000s and 2010s was a lot different than how we were adjusting on the fly to how the enemy fought in the jungle in the 60s

  • @martinbruce6651
    @martinbruce665111 ай бұрын

    The scene with the towel over his head was if you watch it he was trying to not get bit by ants and the vc walked up on him.

  • @1lthrnk
    @1lthrnk9 ай бұрын

    Hiding under a blanket, that’s kinda like “Cops” dude hiding under a plastic baby pool

  • @ollikuhta9127
    @ollikuhta912711 ай бұрын

    "Fragging" (killing an upopular own side officer) really happened, it became more common towards the end of war. According to wikipedia "Documented and suspected fragging incidents using explosives totaled 904 from 1969 to 1972, while hundreds of fragging incidents using firearms took place, but were hard to quantify as they were indistinguishable from combat deaths and poorly documented." They threw a M26 grenade at a sleeping officer usually (thus the name), because it was hard to prove who threw it. Also I think Vietnam War was a bit different, because lot of the men were drafted. So they were not there because they enlisted, unlike Oliver Stone who actually volunteered. Many were forced there. That's why also drug abuse, low morale and fragging took place. USA gave up drafting after Vietnam War, probably because it went so poorly In fact, Russian soldiers have been fragging or otherwise attacking their officers in Ukraine. In one incident, they drove over officer's legs with a tank, because they didn't like his orders. Lot of them don't want to be sent to the meat grinder, to die for Putin's pointless dream

  • @isabelralph5391

    @isabelralph5391

    9 ай бұрын

    Yes, it certainly did. One of my mom's many friends in Vietnam almost got killed by his own sergeant. He found him on top of a hill picking off villagers in a field. When he questioned what he was doing, his sergeant turned around and aimed his rifle (?) at him and threatened to kill him. There were a lot of angry and messed up people in that war.

  • @bleekskaduwee6762
    @bleekskaduwee676211 ай бұрын

    I wish they had something like this to help people get selected when i was going to give it a try

  • @MikeDodds
    @MikeDodds11 ай бұрын

    I served in D co 2/502 Infantry from 86 to 89. I remember going out on FTXs and being so sleep deprived that we would start hallucinating!!! There was a sandbag on the ground next to our hummer and I would have bet a paycheck that one of my privates dropped their pro mask!!! On that same exercise, I was pulling security sitting in the torrent on the TOW. There was a full moon so the shadows were everywhere. Out of the corner of my eye, I thought I saw someone reaching for my weapon, I whipped around and slammed my arm down on a shadow and scared the shit out of everyone in the vehicle!!! Good stuff. 😂

  • @KB-nx1rr
    @KB-nx1rr11 ай бұрын

    Thank you for doing platoon. The first war movie I ever saw at 10 years old

  • @5burowz
    @5burowz11 ай бұрын

    One of my faves. Oliver sure does make some good films.

  • @michaelbotello7020
    @michaelbotello702011 ай бұрын

    Bro the angle setup is 🔥

  • @americanpatriot8786
    @americanpatriot878611 ай бұрын

    Thaw towel over his face was to keep the bugs from biting him so much it was common practice to close it when you breath in and open when you exhale.

  • @marklower007
    @marklower00711 ай бұрын

    Imagine the tunnel at the other end is some Vietnamese dude just dutch ovening it non stop😂

  • @scottthomas4779
    @scottthomas47797 ай бұрын

    All time great movie, but Stone definitely crammed every stereotype and horror story that was ever told into it. The scene with the starlight goggles and the enemy soldier appearing slowly from behind the tree is terrifying. One of my favorites for sure.

  • @SLIDESPOT
    @SLIDESPOT11 ай бұрын

    Elias was small enough and familiar enough with those tunnels that he was the best person to send down.

  • @pontiacGXPfan
    @pontiacGXPfan4 ай бұрын

    I almost forgot Tom Berenger(Sniper) was in this film alongside Johnny Drama and Forest Whitaker and McGinley(Point Break) and Keith David(Clockers)

  • @xStrych9x
    @xStrych9x8 ай бұрын

    as my dad pointed out to me in his own personal stories of the time, these were mostly draftees and back then they were drafting everyone and anyone. he served with draftees that he knows without a doubt did not have all their mental faculties. he told me that every unit seemed to have their 'bunny' and soldiers like my dad just gave them a wide berth and just hoped they didn't get placed on ambush or guard duty with them as they seemed to have a knack of getting others around them wounded or killed but somehow always walk away unscathed themselves.

  • @wellthen.......9384
    @wellthen.......938411 ай бұрын

    My grandfather was a tunnel rat Vietnam

  • @FNGACADEMY

    @FNGACADEMY

    11 ай бұрын

    your grandfather was a total stud than

  • @charlize1253
    @charlize125311 ай бұрын

    A lot of the good stuff that you guys (professional volunteers) learned about discipline, leadership, and morale was learned from the mistakes of the Vietnam era (when most soldiers were draftees). There's a fascinating book by Lt Col. Dave Grossman called "On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill in War and Peace" that dives in great detail about what the military learned from that era that it then taught you guys in your later era.

  • @Daveyd325
    @Daveyd32511 ай бұрын

    Amazing guest

  • @88scotteeee
    @88scotteeee11 ай бұрын

    I believe they had some claymores set by trip wire as a last resort defense just incase this happened? Or atleast to a flare?

  • @10Cnote
    @10Cnote11 ай бұрын

    Great camera angle guys, it makes the audience feel part of the action, Family Guy style lol

  • @samporche
    @samporche11 ай бұрын

    Keeping with the ‘Nam topic…would it be too troublesome to ask you to review Siege at Firebase Gloria?

  • @JosephDawson1986
    @JosephDawson198611 ай бұрын

    The towel was to keep the mosquitoes at bay not to hide. He was an FNG on this patrol

  • @hershh4227
    @hershh422710 ай бұрын

    i love how the movie is based on Oliver stones time in country during the Vietnam conflict most tunnel rats preferred to go in alone easier to move around

  • @deadman123x
    @deadman123x6 ай бұрын

    Believe it or not, this was the movie that stuck the most with Vietnam vets when it came out, there’s multiple clips of Vietnam veterans being interviewed on their reception of Platoon. This movie was the one that allowed many civilians that once spat at Vietnam War vets to understand and accept their service, along with the veterans.

  • @WFORacer
    @WFORacer11 ай бұрын

    Much respect to the warriors who complete Q course. 💯💯💯👏👏👏🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @nevanbarar
    @nevanbarar11 ай бұрын

    Great review guys! I’ve been loving your videos!! I’d be interested to see what you guys all think about the movie “The Siege of Jadotville” it’s about a group of Irish soldiers who’d never been in combat before who were deployed to the Congo by the UN in 1961. I think you’d be able to give a very unique perspective to the film. Another recommendation which I’d be particularly interested in hearing what you have to say about as SF guys is the series “S.A.S: Rogue Heroes” it’s basically the story of the first specially designated SF team and the development of SAS innovations and tactics during WWII as they were pushing the axis forces out of North Africa.

  • @chadhankins6835
    @chadhankins683511 ай бұрын

    Kevin Dillon was so good in Entourage bc that basically was his real life before that role, his brother Matt Dillon WAS a much more acclaimed actor than he was, at least up to then, so he was basically playing himself in that role, I assumed that it may have played a part in why he was cast, or retroactively informed how they wrote the character after he got the role.

  • @DP-eo5xd
    @DP-eo5xd11 ай бұрын

    I think the key difference between Vietnam eta and now is that you had a ton of draftees back then that did not want to be there for a war that was very unpopular. After this war the US went to a full volunteer force. Fragging did occur in Vietnam mostly by lower ranked fragging officers

  • @gri7
    @gri711 ай бұрын

    Tunnel rat with even a GI Joe character in the 80s LOL

  • @jhilal2385
    @jhilal238511 ай бұрын

    A good one to watch is "We Were Soldiers" (2002) about the 1965 Battle of Ia Drang. It is based on the book "We Were Soldiers Once . . . And Young" by General Hal Moore (Lt Col. and battalion CO during the battle) and reporter Joe Galloway. Hal Moore, Joe Galloway, and Battalion Sgt Major Plumbley all were on hand as technical advisors during the filming. In a "its a small world" side note, in the original "Lethal Weapon", Danny Glover's character tells Mel Gibson's character that the banker that they just questioned is an army buddy who saved his life in Ia Drang in 1965, and 15 years later Mel Gibson is in a movie about Ia Drang.

  • @RicktheCrofter
    @RicktheCrofter11 ай бұрын

    Many many years ago I read the preface to a book called, if I remember it correctly, ‘Company Commander.’ The author, a former army captain, claimed to have been the commander of Oliver Stone’s company. He wrote that nothing that happened in the movie ever happened in any of his platoons.

  • @kxkxkxkx

    @kxkxkxkx

    11 ай бұрын

    Oliver Stone is completely full of sh!t at all times ☝️

  • @ChuckG92
    @ChuckG9211 ай бұрын

    Come on guys, you're telling me you've never heard of the tunnel rats? Ballsy dudes.

  • @tombakabones274
    @tombakabones27411 ай бұрын

    21:34 they were doing all that but some platoons may only have one guy small enough to fit down in the hole cuz you got to remember the Vietnamese were a lot smaller than the average American and unfortunately it was one of the few ways that we could actually engage the enemy and possibly get Intel and stuff like that and even if you fill in the hole they're just going to take it back out the same way they done the tunnel the first time Victor Charlie (Viet Cong) and Nathaniel Victor (North Vietnamese regular) we're a very driven adversary there was no all-or-nothing there was just all for them

  • @oboogie2
    @oboogie211 ай бұрын

    On the subject of tunnels and tunnel-rats; yes, the tunnels were very often booby-trapped: with arrows or spears on trips and springs, trapdoors and punji sticks or tethered cobras, grenades, tear gas whatever was useful. Tunnel-rats were all volunteers and got special privileges for it. They were sent in alone because (A) the spaces were so confined that another person couldn't really help and would just hamper quick escape or be a liability, and (B) why risk losing two men as opposed to one when you're not going to gain much of anything more by sending two? However, command wanted to know where tunnels went, what was in them, and and caches found accounted for and destroyed. Some of the complexes, I have heard, particularly around Cu Chi and the Parrot's Beak, were just massive, complete with whole hospitals, large mess kitchens, classrooms, etc. The VC/NVA were a crazily resourceful foe.

  • @georgerankin6362

    @georgerankin6362

    11 ай бұрын

    To add to this comment, there's a book, 'The Tunnels of Cu Chi' by Tom Mangold, which describes the ingenious complexity and enormity of the tunnel system dug by the VC/NVA. The VC/NVA soldiers acquired two howitzers which were dismantled and buried only to be unearthed, reassembled, fired a few times, and then disassembled and reburied before American troops arrived to attack the firing position. Their boobytrap game was strong and horrifying, as well.

  • @oboogie2

    @oboogie2

    11 ай бұрын

    @@georgerankin6362 yeah, tunnel rat is not a job I regret not ever having. Given the choice, I think I'd rather volunteer to pump shit out of airplanes and scrape birdshit off the wings up at Thule as an E-2 for an entire enlistment. And I hate the cold!

  • @davidchico9574
    @davidchico95747 ай бұрын

    Yes, tunnel rats went solo. It’s all here in this epic book-The Tunnels of Cu Chi: A Harrowing Account of America's Tunnel Rats in the Underground Battlefields of Vietnam

  • @edm781
    @edm7812 ай бұрын

    P.S. Tunnel Rats was a very real & necessary thing. 37 years ago I read an in depth interview with a legit Tunnel Rat. There were complex tunnel systems all over the country. They had to try to root them out. It was discovered much after the event that there were even tunnels underneath a Bob Hope USO show well with in "safe" green zone areas.

  • @SamBeig-ly4jp
    @SamBeig-ly4jp11 ай бұрын

    I think y’all should do greyhound. It’s a WW2 movie about protecting civ ships with supplies across the ocean from German U-Boats. P.S. Thank you for everything y’all do and I hope you know you make this world a better place. -S.B.

  • @ryankeyes3101
    @ryankeyes310111 ай бұрын

    Most NVA soldiers the Americans fought against were surprisingly well trained to join the NVA you had to have 3 years of experience fighting with the Vietcong then you will be sent back to North Vietnam or u would be sent to either North Korea, China, or Russia to be trained the training was short it only lasted 120 days but it was really intense.

  • @tombakabones274
    @tombakabones27411 ай бұрын

    18:40 that was the life of a tunnel rat in Vietnam smallest guy in the unit you get a 45 and a flashlight down the hole you go you're in pitch black darkness by yourself barely any room to breathe no room to turn around with punji pits venomous snakes guys hiding in corners ready to pounce on you and stab you or shoot you I do not envy that job one bit much respect to those guys because that takes a big ass pair of steel balls f*** the brass

  • @stemmenfratarnet
    @stemmenfratarnet10 ай бұрын

    Being a tunnel rat would be a horrible job bro. Tight spaces, venomous snakes and spiders, and all you got is a flashlight and a 1911. I’ll take my chances with marching up to Hanoi Hannah to rid her of the 7 year itch.