WE WERE SOLDIERS (2002) MOVIE REACTION!! FIRST TIME WATCHING!! Full Movie Review | Fourth Of July

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A HARROWING DEPICTION OF WAR & HUMANITY!! We Were Soldiers Full Movie Reaction Watch Along: / thereelrejects
with the 4th of July (Independence Day) right around the corner, John & Andrew Gordon reunite to give their First Time Reaction, Commentary, Breakdown, Analysis, and Full Spoiler Review of the Vietnam War Drama adapted from Harold G. Moore & Joseph Lee Galloway's Best Selling Book "We Were Soldiers Once...and Young: Ia Drang - The Battle That Changed the War in Vietnam" & starring Mel Gibson (Braveheart, Hacksaw Ridge, Flight Risk, Boneyard) as Lt. Col. Hal Moore, Madeleine Stowe (The Last of the Mohicans) as Julie Moore, Greg Kinnear (Little Miss Sunshine) as Maj. Bruce Crandall, Sam Elliot (Tombstone, Road House) as Sgt. Maj. Basil Plumley, Chris Klein (Election, American Pie) as 2nd Lt. Jack Geoghegan, Keri Russell (The Americans, Dawn of the Planet of the Apes) as Barbara Geoghegan, & Barry Pepper (Saving Private Ryan, True Grit, The Green Mile), along with Clark Gregg, John Hamm, Ryan Hurst, Marc Blucas, & MORE..
John & Andrew REACT to all the Best Scenes & Most Harrowing Moments including Arriving in North Vietnam, The French Foreign Legion, Moving into the Valley of the Shadow of Death, The Telegram, Valley of Death, Napalm Air Strike, Army Housewives & Beyond.
NOTE FOR KZread: All footage featured From "We Were Soldiers" is from a Fictionalized Historical War Drama Movie. Any & All References To Violence Or "Mature Content" Are NOT Real
#WeWereSoldiers #MovieReaction #HistoricalTuesday #DramaTuesday #VietnamWar #WarMovie #Historical #DramaMovie #History #MovieReaction #FirstTimeWatching #FirstTimeWatchingMovieReaction #KZreadrsReact
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  • @ReelRejects
    @ReelRejects24 күн бұрын

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  • @Eggmanrocks

    @Eggmanrocks

    24 күн бұрын

    i seen it in theater back in 2002

  • @Eggmanrocks

    @Eggmanrocks

    24 күн бұрын

    do a review on gettybury 1993

  • @LifeOfNigh

    @LifeOfNigh

    24 күн бұрын

    Can you PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE watch Good Morning Vietnam with Robin Williams. PLEEEEASE!?

  • @nothernmonkey8612

    @nothernmonkey8612

    22 күн бұрын

    You missed FREDDIE PRINCE JR in the prologue he was married to Buffy the vampire slayer. He was in the Scooby doo movie's as fred

  • @nothernmonkey8612

    @nothernmonkey8612

    22 күн бұрын

    May I suggest reacting to TO HELL AND BACK THE AUDIE MURPHY STORY. Audie was the most decorated American soldier of WW2 after the war he became a Hollywood actor making loads of westerns but he also got the part of himself in TO HELL AND BACK. So it's actually Audie Murphy playing Audie Murphy and that's why it's my favourite war movie 👍

  • @dastemplar9681
    @dastemplar968124 күн бұрын

    Critics panned this movie when it came out, criticizing for its “cheap and cheesy” dialogue. The real Hal Moore came forward and publicly apologized that his men lacked creativity and originality during their final moments. That got the critics to shut up.

  • @ScarriorIII

    @ScarriorIII

    23 күн бұрын

    Delivered like a true American. No bull.

  • @Nastyn1nja808

    @Nastyn1nja808

    23 күн бұрын

    ​@@ScarriorIIIhehehe a BOSS! LOL

  • @livetotell100

    @livetotell100

    23 күн бұрын

    The media are a bunch of A**holes. Through and through.

  • @adamr6794

    @adamr6794

    20 күн бұрын

    And the truth is that Henry Herrick said exactly those words.... I'm glad I could die for my country. And Carl Palmer one day before his 40th birthday who prophesized his death at X_Ray to Galen Bungham....tell my wife I love her. Hal Moore's response was perfect. War is delightful to those who have no experience of it

  • @thejamppa

    @thejamppa

    19 күн бұрын

    ​@@adamr6794 True. Only people who would consider war exciting are people not experienced it. Only one's who seek to use war to advance their benefit are people who do not risk themselves and send others to die for their ambition.

  • @TheTerryGene
    @TheTerryGene24 күн бұрын

    I am a 74 year old Vietnam vet and Army retiree. This film always hits me hard. I ask you to please see a film that Gibson directed (but did not star in), Hacksaw Ridge. It is the story of Desmond Doss, a pacifist who served with distinction as a medical corpsman during World War II. Like this film, it is a true story of incredible heroism and is every bit as outstanding as this film.

  • @TheOnlyHawkeye666

    @TheOnlyHawkeye666

    19 күн бұрын

    Absolutely!!! Amazing movie and Garfield was a force of nature in that role

  • @tysonthomas7094

    @tysonthomas7094

    16 күн бұрын

    My Uncle and father-in-law were Vietnam vets... thank you for your service. You deserve better than how our country treated veterans during that time. You are truly the heroes!

  • @garrettstiltner857

    @garrettstiltner857

    16 күн бұрын

    Thank you for your service sir. We’re forever grateful

  • @Nyx_2142

    @Nyx_2142

    6 күн бұрын

    "It is the story of Desmond Doss" No, its the ridiculous retelling of Desmond Doss full of typical Mel Gibson garbage. The exact garbage that Doss feared would be put into any movie made about him which is why he refused to cooperate with any director while he was alive. He somehow managed to exaggerate all of the events that happened around Doss, while also underplaying and excluding many of his very real feats. Its a fucking insulting movie if you have done even a bit of reading into the actual battle or the man himself. Portraying Doss as a hated greenhorn at that point in the war is beyond fucking stupid, he was already a veteran of several battles and well respected by the men he served with by that point. And that is only the tip of the iceberg for the stupidity of that movie.

  • @Sapherzz

    @Sapherzz

    21 сағат бұрын

    ​@Nyx_2142 wouldn't say it's an "insulting" movie. Yes by the time of the Maeda (Hacksaw Ridge) in 1945, Doss had already seen action in Guam and Phillipines during 1944, which he was awarded for. But he did go through suspicion, rejection and criticism for his beliefs at the beginning of his military career. So for me, I feel that Mel Gibson is blending two important aspects of Doss's life story into one film, with a little creative lisence in terms chronology. The biggest exaggeration of the film though is the size of the cliff - the Maeda was certainly not as high as the movie attempts to portray it, but again I feel like it was Gibson's way of emphasising Dos's efforts and the scale of the task his unit had to undertake. Hacksaw Ridge is by no means a perfect war movie, and has taken creative licence towards some of the factual aspects, but it's by no means an "insulting" movie.

  • @BuckyBarnesATL
    @BuckyBarnesATL24 күн бұрын

    As a 39 yr old OIF injured/Medically retired 82nd/XVIII Airborne Army Ranger. I appreciate you covering this. I doubt the channel would ever do ‘Band of Brothers’ but it’s amazing and you should watch it on your own time. 🫡

  • @StardustandMadness

    @StardustandMadness

    24 күн бұрын

    Agreed great series

  • @marlainalindsey3279

    @marlainalindsey3279

    24 күн бұрын

    I absolutely love Band of Brothers❤❤

  • @AriatiArmen

    @AriatiArmen

    24 күн бұрын

    I watched Band of Brothers. Oh God i cried like a baby with my boyfriend he cries so much too. ❤

  • @Crankshaft-cq1nd

    @Crankshaft-cq1nd

    24 күн бұрын

    Band of brother's, the pacific and generation kill are all great war series

  • @pamysue

    @pamysue

    23 күн бұрын

    Thank you for your service ✌💖😀

  • @wesdean9128
    @wesdean912824 күн бұрын

    This movie is so thought provoking. My dad is a Vietnam vet, but he never talked about anything from the war when I was growing up. Even when we watched other war movies, he never flinched. He had this almost haunted look to his eyes sometimes, but he never flinched. However, while watching this one, he broke down and cried like a baby. Afterwards, he said that fighting in the war was much worse than portrayed, but that it was closer to realism than any of the other movies had come so far. I can't even imagine silently carrying all that trauma around for decades without complaint for the sake of his wife and kids. My old man is one of the toughest men I've ever known! I have nothing but respect for the men of our military.

  • @anomalyg

    @anomalyg

    24 күн бұрын

    Amen! And God bless your father and all those who have served.

  • @StardustandMadness

    @StardustandMadness

    23 күн бұрын

    My uncle is the same. My mum says he was a very different man before the war. I can’t even imagine.

  • @boomer63

    @boomer63

    23 күн бұрын

    Please tell your pop thank you for his service 🥰

  • @MzQTMcHotness
    @MzQTMcHotness24 күн бұрын

    I was lucky enough to be an extra in this film! My Buddy was in the California national guard, and I was active duty army at the time. He told me about the shoot, and I joined the unit that played 1-7 Cav in Fort Hunter-Liggett. Two years later, I participated in the invasion of Iraq. Full circle, 25 years and a bunch of deployments in the army later, I’m a military technical advisor in Hollywood and I’ve worked on some amazing films. This film was truly a special project to work on. Especially since I’ve done so much training at Fort Hunter-Liggett since then. I’m glad you viewed this film. They do a much better job showing the home front and the contrast with the battlefield than most other films.

  • @sudsy7131

    @sudsy7131

    24 күн бұрын

    Thanks for your perspective. Pass it on.

  • @davidsizemore5642

    @davidsizemore5642

    14 күн бұрын

    I was an extra on that too! Only did the "Garry Owen" scene where they ran down the hill to the choppers. Was supposed to be in the "lost platoon", but some unit from Ft. Lewis was down doing training, so they got to do that. You were active down there.... Camp Bob?

  • @MzQTMcHotness

    @MzQTMcHotness

    14 күн бұрын

    @@davidsizemore5642 I was in the 2ID on leave at the time.

  • @davidsizemore5642

    @davidsizemore5642

    14 күн бұрын

    @@MzQTMcHotness Ah. Tracking.

  • @thedarkknight2221
    @thedarkknight222124 күн бұрын

    After the war General Moore worked on cleaning up the drug abuse problem and racial strife that were prevalent at the time in the 7th Division. His plan established Officer's Leadership Schools for company-grade officers and an NCO Leadership School for staff sergeants and below as well as issuing an "Equal Opportunity Policy". He backed up the policy with the promise to punish those leaders who discriminated based on race, ethnicity or creed. As a part of the reformation of division morale, he established several different athletic programs, including football, basketball, and boxing.

  • @Ryan_Christopher

    @Ryan_Christopher

    24 күн бұрын

    The 7th was his Regiment. The Airborne Division above him was the 101st, of Band of Brothers fame. They fly in helicopters to this day, while the 82nd Airborne continues to deploy via parachutes.

  • @Cpt.0bvious

    @Cpt.0bvious

    23 күн бұрын

    @@Ryan_Christopher If I'm not mistaken, 1-7CAV fell under 1st Cav (Airmobile), not the 101ABN (AAST). the 101ABN cav unit was Troop D, 3d Sqdn, 5th Cav

  • @jhilal2385

    @jhilal2385

    21 күн бұрын

    @@Ryan_Christopher After the war, he transferred to the 7th ID, with which he had previously served. Notice that he wears a 7th ID patch on his right shoulder throughout the movie. At the beginning of the movie he has 11th Abn on his left shoulder, then during training they all are wearing 2nd ID. During Vietnam, both 101st Abn _AND_ 1st Air Cav were Air Assault.

  • @scotthewitt258
    @scotthewitt25824 күн бұрын

    When Joe is doing the narration at the beginning about the Ia Drang Valley and he says the North Vietnamese soldiers that "died by our hands", he is being literal. He really did put down his camera and grabbed a rifle to defend the wounded soldiers in the medical area when the NVA overran the position. Joe and Hal Moore were life-long friends after the battle.

  • @lw3918
    @lw391824 күн бұрын

    Guys, my father participated in this battle. He came in the second wave of choppers. He ended up doing a tour and a half due to clerical errors. Came home with a purple heart and several other medals, including a commendation for the most jumps in his unit. And i couldn't get him to watch this movie.

  • @acdragonrider

    @acdragonrider

    13 күн бұрын

    🫡 💜 🇺🇸

  • @Alvan81

    @Alvan81

    3 күн бұрын

    But he already did..🫡🇺🇸

  • @buddystewart2020

    @buddystewart2020

    Күн бұрын

    @@Alvan81 ... Yeah, I don't blame the man, he already saw it.

  • @satineadiamond1
    @satineadiamond124 күн бұрын

    My uncle is a Vietnam veteran. Was under Moore and in that conflict. He didn't speak much about it other than Lt. Gen Moore a great leader and trained us well.

  • @acdragonrider

    @acdragonrider

    13 күн бұрын

    🫡 💜 🇺🇸

  • @hoshinoutaite
    @hoshinoutaite24 күн бұрын

    He and his wife, Julia, were instrumental in putting together a proper and official notification system for military casualties. Especially his wife, for obvious reasons. Others have elaborated on what Hal Moore himself did for his troops. Fort Moore, Home of the Infantry, has a name that it can wear with pride.

  • @npaulb
    @npaulb24 күн бұрын

    The scene with the cab driver is the one that hurts the most everytime i watch this movie. Wearing the army jacket you can assume he is a veteran too. He knows what he has. That poor guy

  • @newton2105
    @newton210524 күн бұрын

    That one scene with the guy’s legs after the napalm (if you’ve watched the movie, you know which scene I mean), still haunts me to this day

  • @AlexGonzalez-ye4fs

    @AlexGonzalez-ye4fs

    24 күн бұрын

    Yes

  • @Tac0maAr0ma

    @Tac0maAr0ma

    24 күн бұрын

    The most memorable scene from this entire movie all these years later still

  • @Dtaras420

    @Dtaras420

    24 күн бұрын

    Yup an the white phosphorus grenade hit as well

  • @diogosabino2545

    @diogosabino2545

    23 күн бұрын

    For real!!

  • @jakeb7087

    @jakeb7087

    21 күн бұрын

    Army Lt. Jimmy Nakayama did not survive his injuries. He died two days later from his wounds, never being able to see his newly born child in this world.

  • @jsbcody
    @jsbcody24 күн бұрын

    A couple years ago, I met with one of the survivors of the "Lost Platoon". Sgt. Savage wasn't the highest-ranking NCO left, he took command because he was the closest to the radio. The gentleman talked about how the Load Bearing Equipment was set up with dual canteens on their back sides. This meant that when they tried to get a drink later in the night, all their canteens were empty due to being hit by bullets. If a soldier raised above the ground by more than 10-12 inches, they were hit by rounds. The survivors of the Lost Platoon were placed on the line as reinforcements. Colonel Moore thought he was placing them in a quiet section of the line, but of course it was the section the enemy attacked right away. It was a constant chess game of move and react. Per the survivor, the only reason they made it through was Colonel Moore, Snake and the helicopters flying in and out, the officers and NCOS, their training, along with artillery and air to ground attacks by planes and helicopters.

  • @vancouvervixen4253

    @vancouvervixen4253

    22 күн бұрын

    Wow.

  • @dangarrett8676

    @dangarrett8676

    19 күн бұрын

    If I remember correctly Snakeshit and his guys were crash landing back at base left right and center. Crandall himself had something like 14 crash landings in this engagement

  • @ValmirTheGamer
    @ValmirTheGamer24 күн бұрын

    Thank you for reacting to this. My grandpa was a helicopter pilot in the battle of Ia Drang (this battle) and received a bronze star for his actions.

  • @scotthewitt258
    @scotthewitt25824 күн бұрын

    Sgt. Major Plumley might be the most "we gotta water this down or people will think we are exaggerating" human beings to ever draw a breath.

  • @jldog134

    @jldog134

    24 күн бұрын

    I got an Uncle who was at Fort Benning when Sgt Maj Plummey was there, he told me Sam Elliott got him down to a T.

  • @matthewperry9183

    @matthewperry9183

    22 күн бұрын

    Plumbey was in a club rarer then the MOH being a 3 war combat vet

  • @TheGoIsWin21
    @TheGoIsWin2124 күн бұрын

    So the guy who was on the radio talking to the aircraft is a specialist who's essentially a combination Forward Observer and Air Traffic Controller. Its one of the most demanding positions in the military, as you're required to both provide targeting information, making sure all the bombs are hitting the appropriate targets, AND directing and coordinating the aircraft so that they don't run into each other or anything like that. I was a Forward Observer when I was in the military and received some EXTREMELY light cross training on the subject, and its absolutely insane the amount of mental effort required to juggle all those moving pieces. Hes coordinating the planes, making sure they're not running into artillery, providing bombing target information, while under extremely heavy fire, as well as being fully aware that his performance could be directly responsible for the outcome of the entire battle. Absolutely legendary men, and an absolutely legendary performance in this particular battle.

  • @jakeb7087

    @jakeb7087

    21 күн бұрын

    My grandfather was a Forward Air Controller in 1972. He was a bit north in Da Nang. Such a difficult job.

  • @hidebehind2604

    @hidebehind2604

    15 күн бұрын

    Was he at Dong Ha? My step dad worked with marine fo,s. ​@@jakeb7087

  • @McBrannon1000
    @McBrannon100024 күн бұрын

    I ADORE the shot of Mel Gibson marching off the first time. We've seen him as a father figure; he puts that helmet on and he's a Soldier. Excellent visual storytelling. Also, they toned down how bad Jimmy Nakayama was burnt; in an interview Galloway explained that when he picked him up, he could feel his ankle bones crumbling.

  • @bakedAK85
    @bakedAK8524 күн бұрын

    Hal and Julie Moore were so influential to the development of the Army's family support structure that they renamed Fort Benning in Georgia in their honor. Fort Moore is the home of the infantry for the U.S. Army

  • @Kevc00

    @Kevc00

    16 күн бұрын

    Hal Moore was pure infantry as well, graduated near the bottom of his West Point class but managed to get an infantry posting and threw himself into it. Whatever people think about renaming stuff, that is one I think we can all get behind.

  • @ryanstraightedgebeast3858
    @ryanstraightedgebeast385824 күн бұрын

    Truly one of the most underrated war films. Saw it in theaters with my dad and my cousin.

  • @daringachne4364
    @daringachne436424 күн бұрын

    FYI, the real cornel Moore was actually heavily involved in the production to get the best accurate depiction of the war from his part so mell Gibson could be as accurate as possible playing him

  • @adambydand1214

    @adambydand1214

    14 күн бұрын

    You mean Lieutenant General Hal Moore. He retired at that rank.

  • @daringachne4364

    @daringachne4364

    14 күн бұрын

    @@adambydand1214 I'm referring to how they said his name in an interview talking about the movie and how heavily he was involved in making it accurate as possible

  • @IncandescentSmell
    @IncandescentSmell23 күн бұрын

    In Ken Burns documentary on the war, an elderly Joe Galloway is seen on camera describing PFC Nakayama’s burns and how is skin literally sloughed off his bones after the friendly fire napalm strike. It really happened. Absolutely haunting stuff.

  • @ga7654
    @ga765424 күн бұрын

    So many young men came back messed up...my son's father was a Vietnam veteran, and he had flashbacks up to the day he died in 1985. It was on that day he finally found peace.

  • @adamr6794

    @adamr6794

    18 күн бұрын

    Your son's father? How does that work?

  • @ga7654

    @ga7654

    18 күн бұрын

    @@adamr6794 we weren't married, so I can't call him my husband, but he is still my son's father. Too old to use the term "baby daddy" authentically, lol.

  • @casnova0471
    @casnova047123 күн бұрын

    As a military child seeing friends finding out about there parents death hurts so much

  • @corpusD
    @corpusD24 күн бұрын

    The person in the cover of Life magazine and on the cover of this book became a VP of Cantor Fitzgerald in NYC. He lost his life at the World Trade Center on 9/11 after telling all his employees to leave, and then he went around the rest of the offices to tell them to leave. He was still in the building when it collapsed.

  • @dragonfly2936

    @dragonfly2936

    20 күн бұрын

    Rick Rescorla was a helluva guy. He went back up those stairs singing welsh and never losing spirit. A true hero.

  • @corpusD

    @corpusD

    19 күн бұрын

    @@dragonfly2936 thanks, I could not remember his name, and did not have book near to refer to it.

  • @D.ZelaRose
    @D.ZelaRose24 күн бұрын

    I'm an Army Vet from OIF and still in the reserve. This movie has a special port in my heart as it classifies what humanity should be. the internal conflict. The connectivity we have with our "brothers/sisters" in arms. Love you both!

  • @jonmartin1167
    @jonmartin116724 күн бұрын

    One of the most powerful movies ever. The ending floors me. Mel looking over the horizon seeing hundreds of other hell holes they'd fight for like they just did. Must been awfully sobering and scary.

  • @BlyatBlaster
    @BlyatBlaster24 күн бұрын

    49:13 “It is well that war is so terrible, otherwise we should grow too fond of it.” - Robert E. Lee.

  • @andrewriley6862
    @andrewriley686224 күн бұрын

    I did 2 tours in Iraq in the infantry, in 2003/2004. This was the movie that we watched to motivate us before we left. To answer a couple questions, white phosphorus (willy peat) is usually used to melt equipment, but can be used against people. Also a m60/240 gunner has an assistant gunner and an ammo bearer as a gun team. Always remember, "The soldier, above all others prays for peace". A quote from General Douglas MacArthur. Love the channel and the reactions.

  • @twohorsesinamancostume7606
    @twohorsesinamancostume760621 күн бұрын

    To answer you questions on the history of Bugels on the battlefield, Musical instruments were used for a long time as means of conveying orders. They had a much better time of cutting through the noise of battle than the human voice did and you'd use specific tunes or drum rhythms to give orders and messages.

  • @thedarkknight2221
    @thedarkknight222124 күн бұрын

    Joe Galloway had honestly as important of a role in this battle as any of the other soldiers. We need a civilian’s perspective on the battlefield to show the people back home why war is never, NEVER the answer.

  • @alexfilma16

    @alexfilma16

    24 күн бұрын

    Agreed. Well said.

  • @scotthewitt258

    @scotthewitt258

    24 күн бұрын

    And, he really did protect the wounded soldiers from what I have heard!

  • @ianjardine7324

    @ianjardine7324

    24 күн бұрын

    In some cases war is the only answer however Vietnam was not one of those cases. It was a purely civil war caused by divisions within after the Vietnamese people had successfully rebelled against their French colonial masters exploited by both the Chinese communist government and the American government to fight a "low cost" proxy war. The south Vietnamese were largely controlled by the corrupt former burocrats who worked for the French while the NVA was a true grass roots force supplied and trained by Chinese advisors. Had it not been for the Chinese involvement and Americas obsession with fighting communism America could well have found itself supporting the other side. That's what the author hinted at when he said it was a war the Americans never understood. America and the west in general turned a blind eye to far too many of their " allies" crimes and brutality in order to oppose the red menace.

  • @rastiga9196

    @rastiga9196

    24 күн бұрын

    "Heeeey, Joe." Jimmy Hendrix

  • @APigsEye
    @APigsEye24 күн бұрын

    French Indo China was part of the French colonial empire that sought independence after WW II. The French were soundly defeated in 1954 at the battle of Dien Bien Phu (presumably depicted in the opening scenes of the movie). Communism was expanding rapidly throughout the world after WW II and the US sought to stop its progress. Known as the "domino effect" the US feared the takeover of countries one by one in Asia. After the defeat in 1954 France pulled out of the region. President Eisenhower, concerned about Viet Nam's takeover, sent a small core of military advisors to assist in the fight for dominance. This began the US involvement in the country which did not end until 1974 and 58,000 fatal casualties.

  • @waltshields5483

    @waltshields5483

    24 күн бұрын

    The opening scene with the French Mobile Group 100 happened at the Mang Yang Pass between Pleiku and An Khe and not at Dien Bien Phu. The French lost around 2000 men and all were buried at the top of the pass with all the graves facing France. I've been there.

  • @thejamppa

    @thejamppa

    19 күн бұрын

    Intrestingly: Ho Chi Minh first sought U.S. help to gain Vietnamese independence against France. U.S. didn't want to oppose France and DeGaulle, so they rejected. Soviet Union was willing to give weapons and training as long Ho Chi Minh would accept communism... Rest is history...

  • @user-gb9dg6jn2n

    @user-gb9dg6jn2n

    18 күн бұрын

    @@thejamppa More precisely, the US wanted the French to join NATO so didn't oppose DeGaulle's insistence on reclaiming its former colonies, though they didn't publicly agree or approve of that. That left Ho Chi Min, who fought with the Americans against the Japanese, only one place to go for help.

  • @scottdarden3091
    @scottdarden309124 күн бұрын

    The story, Joe Galloway tells the Colonel about his Great Grandfathers buying shoes in Galveston was true.

  • @AndrewAHynd
    @AndrewAHynd24 күн бұрын

    Considering some of the historical reactions that have been on this channel, I thank you John and you Andrew for do proper service to a movie such as this. the respect you showed the men, while still talking and enjoying the movie aspects of it, is how a true reaction should be, not one of jokes and laughter and satire, but one of respect and commendation. This is one of the best reactions this channel has ever done, and when it comes to historical movies, I hope and beg that it is you two for the majority of historical reactions, for you two are 100% pure class.

  • @chippewaguy4193
    @chippewaguy419324 күн бұрын

    1:15:39 one of the many reasons this war was so bloody is that American would take a hill or region from the NVA then “clean it up” then they would literally leave the hill/region they just captured to go fight for another and the NVA would just go back after the Americans left and refortify it and rinse and repeat. Theres horror stories of soldiers saying the fought to take a hill and months later would have to do it again. Was just a meat grinder.

  • @XA351GT
    @XA351GT24 күн бұрын

    When this movie came a co-worker who was in Nam when this movie was set said it was the most accurate war movie to what actually happened over there at that time.

  • @stevenspringer1599
    @stevenspringer159924 күн бұрын

    Madeleine Stowe will lead to "The Last of the Mohicans"

  • @88gschannel39
    @88gschannel3919 күн бұрын

    Alot of moments and scenes are tear jerkers, but that one line when Gibson said, "I dont know if I'll forgive myself....that my men died, and I didn't." Still hits hard

  • @robertbaldwin5636
    @robertbaldwin563624 күн бұрын

    I spent my entire adult life in the military. I have been in combat, I have seen the worst of people....but also the best. War is Hell. The war at home is the unimaginable hell. This film does an amazing job letting you FEEL both. From both sides of a conflict.

  • @dujuanespencer4298
    @dujuanespencer429823 күн бұрын

    Great reaction. My dad served in Vietnam. A war that was hated. Think about it, WW1 They came back as celebrated heros, WW2 The American troops really came back as heros. The Korean war. They were celebrated. But the Vietnam war. Which was not a win. And our soldiers returned home as villians, being spit on and called baby killers. There was no parade or celebration for them. Just PTSD, missing limbs and no real help returning back to civilian life. Very sad. The Vietnam war will always be near and dear to me.

  • @javix2013
    @javix201324 күн бұрын

    You have to see the 2 movies directed by Clint Eastwood about the battle of Iwo Jima: Flag Of Our Fathers and Letters From Iwo Jima, movies that Clint filmed one after the other, both came out in 2006, Flag Of Our Fathers narrates the US side of the conflict and Letters From Iwo Jima shows the Japanese side, that last movie I think is the best of the two, and was nominated for awards.

  • @andrewgordon7662

    @andrewgordon7662

    24 күн бұрын

    I would love to react to both of those films!

  • @StardustandMadness

    @StardustandMadness

    24 күн бұрын

    @@andrewgordon7662Flags of our Fathers is a great movie. I hope you get to react to it. I haven’t seen Letters From Iwo Jima.

  • @jonathanoriley8260

    @jonathanoriley8260

    7 күн бұрын

    Letters From Iwo Jima was fantastic and certaonly the better of the two films.

  • @FollowingGhost
    @FollowingGhost24 күн бұрын

    Trumpets, how you send messages before radios. The emblem on Col. Moore's helmet are leaves, oak leaves. The aircraft were evolving at a high rate. The prop driven plane was the forerunner of the A10 Warthog as far as protecting ground troops. This was on TV every night. We waited for the news to see what happened that day. You are correct, information was now being delivered like never before.

  • @josiahbrown1970
    @josiahbrown197024 күн бұрын

    My great uncle was a pilot for the First Cavalry and he showed me this movie when I was young, thank you for the reaction fellas. Btw he said the men sat on their helmets because bullets went through the heli like butter

  • @shag139
    @shag13924 күн бұрын

    The skin coming off with boots did happens for real as did basically everything in the movie. Listening to Joe Galloway relive that is haunting. That man can still see it, hear it, smell It, and feel the bones in his hands.

  • @deedeek75
    @deedeek7523 күн бұрын

    I'm so glad you watched this movie, it's one of my favorites! I don't watch it often because i usually cry through the entire movie. As a military brat, it's so nostalgic with the living on base and living through my mom and my sisters and I waiting and hoping that Dad came back safely from his deployment. I love that they took the time and showed what the families at home were going through. If you're a reader the book is excellent. I'm glad you guys enjoyed it and that you noticed all the little details that mean so much and make this movie so excellent.

  • @GodOfWar221
    @GodOfWar22124 күн бұрын

    You know the scene during the opening, where the bugler is shot in the neck. And at the end he is executed by rhe NVA. That soldier was played by the directors son. Whom was so disturbed by the sight of his son being “executed” in such a brutal manner, he had to walk off set for a moment.

  • @marooner-martin
    @marooner-martin20 күн бұрын

    Didn’t know France was involved? Bro that was their colony. They dragged us into that conflict. That’s such a crucial part to understanding Vietnam! 😭

  • @kevinotoole2285
    @kevinotoole228520 күн бұрын

    Listening to countless Vietnam veterans interviews most have mentioned this as being the only movie to portray it as what it was. It wasn’t all fragging their officers they didn’t like, smoking pot and doing drugs, drafting men wasn’t as common as we think a lot of men actually volunteered.

  • @toreyhassenfelt8448
    @toreyhassenfelt844824 күн бұрын

    My ex husband deployed 3 times to iraq at the height of the war the last thing i would say was " No medals, No flags" meaning dont do anything crazy to get medals cause back then you got those for really bad shit and of course no flag meaning i didn't want to be given a flag over his grave. Now thats what i say to my son. I spent years volunteering with Army wife organizations that Mrs. Moore helped found.

  • @jaimeantoniomangune5793
    @jaimeantoniomangune579324 күн бұрын

    i don’t recognize that agent phil coulson was in the film 😱

  • @DarthVader-ux4uk
    @DarthVader-ux4uk24 күн бұрын

    My grandpa was drafted in 1966 and by 1967 he was in country. He was in the tet offensive.

  • @architectrixsus9365
    @architectrixsus936524 күн бұрын

    Never clicked on a video so fast! Thank ya’ll for reacting to this one.

  • @TheRavencommander
    @TheRavencommander24 күн бұрын

    For the first time i know a thumbnails not clickbait. Let the emotions flow gentleman.

  • @mash9104
    @mash910424 күн бұрын

    This and hacksaw ridge are my favorite war movies

  • @donegalrediscovered3309
    @donegalrediscovered330924 күн бұрын

    Hal’s (Mel Gibson) wife is actress Madeline Stowe .. She starred with Brad Pitt & Bruce Willis in “The Twelve Monkeys”

  • @seanbinkley7363
    @seanbinkley736324 күн бұрын

    One thing that I appreciate about this movie (and that makes it unique as far as American made Vietnam War films), is that it spends a fair amount of time humanizing the NVA as well. The fact we see the battle from the North Vietnamese perspective (and especially their commander's perspective) is a great touch. The aftermath scene where the commander takes the American flag down and gives a short speech to his subordinate about how this battle is just beginning but "the end will be the same" apart from how many on his side will die to get there is extremely poetic and it foreshadows how ultimately the US continuing to invest so many of its own soldiers lives into this conflict didn't ultimately lead to the result it wanted.

  • @alexto137

    @alexto137

    24 күн бұрын

    agreed, the one war we should not have involved in 🫡🇺🇸

  • @seanbinkley7363

    @seanbinkley7363

    23 күн бұрын

    @@alexto137 Based on my own experiences (anecdotal for sure) as an American, I think I've never heard anyone (left, right, center etc.) outright defend America's involvement in Vietnam. There's nuances within the perspectives I've heard and differences of course between different people on different aspects of the war, but as far as the war itself, there's pretty universal agreement that we f'd up big time by getting involved.

  • @mckenzie.latham91

    @mckenzie.latham91

    20 күн бұрын

    He then puts the flag back like a headstone

  • @mckenzie.latham91

    @mckenzie.latham91

    20 күн бұрын

    ​@@seanbinkley7363i've lkterally heard rightwingers abd reliblcians say they shoudln't have left nd that the liberal pansies betrayed rhe war effort I have seen them have rhe same reaction to the pukk out of Afghanistan

  • @samurairex7825
    @samurairex782524 күн бұрын

    This movie always lives me in tears. I don’t care how you feel about your government but you have to respect any man willing to fight and die for his country. It takes balls to willingly put yourself in danger. I will always respect any soldier until he gives a reason not to

  • @anumeon
    @anumeon24 күн бұрын

    One of the greatest war movies ever if you ask me. If you like the movie. Then i recommend Ken Burns documentary series about the Vietnam war, we get to hear from Hal Moore and from Joe Galloway telling the real story. (He breaks down in tears talking about the trooper with the napalm burn)

  • @chucks9205
    @chucks920524 күн бұрын

    They recently renamed Fort Benning, Georgia (Home of the Infantry) Fort Moore (after Lieutenant General Hal Moore and his wife Julia. (Gibson and Madeline Stowe)

  • @diogosabino2545
    @diogosabino254523 күн бұрын

    The speech is iconic, that is a true leader!!

  • @scotthewitt258
    @scotthewitt25824 күн бұрын

    Bugles have been used for battlefield communication for centuries. Different "tunes" meant different things. Charge Advance Retreat et cetera Bugle calls were even used on military bases and outposts. For instance, "Tattoo" was played at night and was originally played to let the bartenders in the clubs on base know to "turn the taps to" {off} and stop serving for the night. "Taps to" became "Tattoo".

  • @jakeb7087
    @jakeb708721 күн бұрын

    This was so hard to get through.. My grandfather is on The Wall, killed late in the war (06/29/1972.) He was a Forward Air Controller flying for the 20th TASS (Tactical Air Support Squadron) out of Da Nang. He is credited with saving 51 men in a span of 20 minutes. 50 on the ground and his backseater. This war has effected my family in almost every way possible. This movie has honored men who fought and died in that war more than any other. If I ever have the privilege of meeting either of you two, or anyone involved with the movie, I would express my profound appreciation. This was hard to get through, but thank you for going through it with me.

  • @mjeid4835
    @mjeid483524 күн бұрын

    Second favorite war movie of all time behind hacksaw ridge

  • @OBIWANCANOLI77
    @OBIWANCANOLI7723 күн бұрын

    John you're a true empath, don't let anyone tell you that this is a bad thing. We need more people like you

  • @pamysue
    @pamysue23 күн бұрын

    I remember the war. I was young, but we had bracelets that had the number of POWs and we wrote letters to their families at school. I work for a vet who was a nurse (male) in Vietnam. This is one of his favorite movies. He worked on the planes that flew in and dead dropped to pick up injured. They picked everyone alive up, regardless of what side they were on, including civilians. There were at least 20 minutes, often much longer, from any doctors and they held those boys together as best they could. He lives with the side effects of the Agent Orange and suffers with what they call Sundowners Syndrome. I have so much respect for this man. My father was a Korean war veteran but rarely talked about it. So much respect for all of our troops. And yes, regardless of "sides" they are all someone's son, daughter, father, mother, brother, sister. If only the leaders would have a duel with each other and keep their citizens out of it. I bet there would be much less war. Also, I know Mel Gibson can be a hot button for people, myself included, but he is an amazing actor and always comes through in these kind of roles. Enjoyed your disscussion, ✌💖😀

  • @DerOberfeldwebel
    @DerOberfeldwebel24 күн бұрын

    Well, Colonel Morre is a) a Battalion Commander and b) there is literally no place he can be in that valley where he would not get involved in fighting. His opponent is a divisional commander, e.g. a general. THose guys are not supposed to be fighting, they got the bigger picture to take care of.

  • @scotthewitt258

    @scotthewitt258

    24 күн бұрын

    This. The battlefield was literally just like he described as a possibility. Smaller than a football field.

  • @adamr6794

    @adamr6794

    18 күн бұрын

    His opponent was a Colonel. Hal was a Lt. Col

  • @ChosenMan-be8mz
    @ChosenMan-be8mz24 күн бұрын

    One reason you get a different feel in this movie from other Vietnam movies like full metal jacket it’s because this movie is set at the start of the war when American feelings were optimistic whereas movies like full metal jacket is set later in the war where the views of soldiers were a lot more morbid And worn down and things like drug use were at an all-time high

  • @thatinvisibleguy173
    @thatinvisibleguy17310 күн бұрын

    You guys were man enough to film yourselves shedding tears for our men. Respect.

  • @GodOfWar221
    @GodOfWar22124 күн бұрын

    What I can appreciate about the scene with the NVA platoon moving in on the cutoff platoons position in the pitch dark. Is the sound of the heavy shaking breathing from one of the soldiers. It goes to show they were just as scared as our soldiers were.

  • @jbarrieorosco6985
    @jbarrieorosco698524 күн бұрын

    OMG. As soon as I turned on my phone, the notification came. I'm sooooooo happy that you guys are reacting to one of my favorite War movies of all time❤️💯

  • @mattcolton6268
    @mattcolton626824 күн бұрын

    An underrated gem of Madadine Stowe is Unlawful Entry with Kurt Russell and Ray Leota

  • @shawnsiref9271
    @shawnsiref927123 күн бұрын

    This movie is underrated. It was released at a time when war movies were experiencing a resurgence thanks to the success of Saving Private Ryan. In 2002, it was starting to fade, and audiences were tiring of them. Another underrated gem released that same year was Windtalkers. Worth checking out.

  • @michealharrison2977
    @michealharrison297724 күн бұрын

    The final charge did not happen, Another battalion from 7th Calvary was helicoptered in an they marched in to relieve them. Unfortunately they were ambushed at their LZ (LZ Albany) and they took more KIA than Moore’s battalion. We started the body count strategy and ten years later we lost the war

  • @LogicalNiko
    @LogicalNiko12 күн бұрын

    That is the General Electric M134 Minigun. It fires standard NATO 7.62mm x 51mm FMJ rifle rounds at a variable rate of 2,000-6,000 rounds per min. When equipped on the AC-47 it was known in vietnam as "Puff the magic dragon" as it breathed fire and turned anything in its crosshairs to a red smoke/mist... a.k.a. "The only thing that scared the VC". It's slightly older cousin which was much heavier was used in many fighter aircraft was the M61 Vulcan which fired the 20mm x 102mm round at 6,000+/min. That later lead to the GAU/8 Avenger which is the 30mm x 173mm that gives the A-10 its BRRRRRRP.

  • @donnypoker
    @donnypoker24 күн бұрын

    Great movie 4 stars. When the officers leave in the middle of the night. And when the wounded soldiers return to the states and no one greets them in the airport, won’t ever not hit me hard.

  • @michaelJ41887
    @michaelJ418872 күн бұрын

    Yall have earned a lifelong fan in me. Mad respect for your vulnerability in showing your emotions to the world. Secondly when yall said regardless of your dislike of Gibson, you respect his performance in this film. Takes a big man to be able to give kudos to someone they don’t agree with on many things 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @windi6
    @windi623 күн бұрын

    I worked crew on this at Fort Benning, GA. I have a ton of memories from it all.

  • @scotthewitt258
    @scotthewitt25824 күн бұрын

    During the Broken Arrow, you see all kinds of aircraft, from all branches. The A-1 Skyraider prop planes What looks like A-4 Skyhawks or a stand-in A-6 Intruders, probably off a carrier F5s Others I probably missed

  • @thesnazzycomet
    @thesnazzycomet10 күн бұрын

    Interesting to note Fort Benning where they trained in this movie (and real life) was then renamed Fort Moore after Colonel Hal Moore

  • @scotthewitt258
    @scotthewitt25824 күн бұрын

    "You wanna know how Custer felt? Go ask him."

  • @StardustandMadness
    @StardustandMadness24 күн бұрын

    Such a great movie. Looking forward to watching the video properly when I get home later!

  • @WarriorPoet01
    @WarriorPoet0123 күн бұрын

    My dad was in the Army and flew Bird Dogs in Vietnam until he got himself shor down (WIA - rescued). ANYWAY - one time, while at the airbase, there was a big commotion, with lots of people heading to the landing strip to meet inbound helicopters. The helos were emptied and my dad went to check out what had happened. He told me that, as he got close, he could see both pilots, crying. He said he just turned and walked away.

  • @truthguide1742
    @truthguide174224 күн бұрын

    Great review and reaction. You didn't politicize your take on the movie. You saw it as a strictly war movie with human elements. Soldiers follow a kill or be killed. They may not hate the enemy. But, they want to survive so hopefully can return home alive. I'd like to make a few movie suggestions, No spoilers except the major star, film title and release year. Ok war * Patton (1970) George C. Scott (WWII) * Battle of the Bulge (1965) Henry Fonda (WWII) * Battle of Britain (1969) 13 Top British stars (WWII) * Joyeux Noel (2005) Foreign film (WWI) * Midway (1976) Charlton Heston (WWII) * In Harm's Way (1965) John Wayne (WWII) * The Longest Day (1962) w/ 42 international stars (WWII) * Green Berets (1968) John Wayne (Vietnam War) * MacArthur (1977) Gregory Peck (WWII, Korean War) * To Hell And Back (1955) Audie Murphy (WWII) * Glory (1989) Matthew Broderick (Civil War) * Go For Broke (1951) Van Johnson (WWII) * Valkyrie (2009) Tom Cruise (WWII) * Twelve O'Clock High ( 1949) Gregory Peck (WWII) * The Hunt For Red October ( 1990) Sean Connery * Courage Under Fire (1996) Denzel Washington * Taking Chance (2009) Kevin Bacon (Iraq)

  • @curtishigareda8440
    @curtishigareda844024 күн бұрын

    Enjoyed this reaction... and am glad it was you guys that did it. Usually really enjoy the reactions on this channel, but recently tried watching the reaction to Glory and had to turn it off after a couple minutes. Making jokes during the opening Antietam scene and also during the following scene with the soldier getting his leg sawed off really didn't sit well with me. Some movies, particularly movies like this and Glory, deserve more respect. I'm glad you guys treated it well.

  • @CaptainDizzle
    @CaptainDizzle24 күн бұрын

    The song sung by the Scottish man is called Sgt Mackenzie

  • @johannesbowers7467
    @johannesbowers746720 күн бұрын

    Something you need to know about the timeline of this event in the Vietnam war.... The battle took place in 1965. The first Draft for US service in Vietnam took place Dec 1 1969. ALL these men were Volunteers. The Draftee element does not enter into the equation for another 4 years. Every new battle is fought with the lessons learned from the past. Every battle also teaches new lessons that must be applied to the next battle. It is a measure of your will to be able to carry forward in the face of these adversities, To save who you can and to accomplish what you must.

  • @dragonstarv8154
    @dragonstarv815416 күн бұрын

    My Uncle on my dad side was in Vietnam as a M-60 door gunner on the Hueys. His only words to me about his combat experience was that “there is nothing more terrifying than killing another man who is less than 10 feet away and won’t go down despite the rounds laid into them.”

  • @Ramblinrabbit24
    @Ramblinrabbit2421 күн бұрын

    That part where the little girls asks her dad what a war is, gets me all the time. I’m a disabled veteran and my 6 year old daughter asks me all the time why I have the problems that I do and it’s hard to explain how or why I’m not like all her friends dad. She’ll understand when she’s older but for now, it’s hard to explain to her.

  • @Padre_diego_longoose
    @Padre_diego_longoose20 күн бұрын

    I served as a cavalry scout for eight years. I was part of Garry Owen during OIF. It’s a trip being such a part of a unit’s history. It’s the best part of the military, how much they pass on history. I was a kid wearing that unit flash on my beret.

  • @CreeceMarquis
    @CreeceMarquis23 күн бұрын

    1:00:00 I highly recommend watching a video of the real Joseph L. Galloway talking about this moment during the battle. They shot this scene EXACTLY the way Joe described it... heartbreaking seeing him break down while talking about it. A sight like that would DEFINITELY haunt me for the rest of my life...

  • @paulcurlin2789
    @paulcurlin278923 күн бұрын

    The use of historically correct aircraft in this movie is fantastic. A1 Skyraiders, F100 Super Sabres, the Hueys and the naval aircraft just make me, an old Air Force member and airplane nerd, really happy 🙂

  • @themisfitbrigade
    @themisfitbrigade4 күн бұрын

    Specialist Jimmy Nakayama, he was from Rigby Idaho’s National Guard originally as a 2nd Lieutenant. He surrendered his commission to join the regular Army. His wife gave birth to a healthy baby, and Jimmy died 2 days after. Joe Galloway describes what he saw and encountered when he had to try picking up Jim, he described seeing two men dancing and screaming in the napalm and then said “That boy, is my nightmare” in a documentary he was apart of.

  • @danhollatz5944
    @danhollatz594422 күн бұрын

    I served in the Department of Corrections with one of the most Influential man, Curtis Klock he was there his squad had Mohawks and face paint. Scared the living daylights out of the VC.he was down to 3 rounds of ammo and his bayonet. His second tour was a tunnel rat. RIP my friend, I'll never forget you!

  • @Ajaws
    @Ajaws17 күн бұрын

    In college, I did a project and used this book as my basis. Galloway and Hal Moore wrote it together and the Vietnamese general Nguyen and Moore met each other after the war to speak and reconcile. Vietnam was the U.S.’ great mistake, and our reconciliation with Vietnam has been one of our best.

  • @mattofalltradez
    @mattofalltradez21 күн бұрын

    As a newer generation of veteran, these reactions really give us a feel for how civilians look at us while we are in a combat zone. Great reaction guys.

  • @mckenzie.latham91

    @mckenzie.latham91

    20 күн бұрын

    If the movie depicted the mai ling massacre or the mass rape by american soldiers during that war The reaction might be quite different. And neither Afghanistan or Iraq has done much to mprove the US armies image and reputation world wide As civilian killers.

  • @Ryan_Christopher
    @Ryan_Christopher24 күн бұрын

    34:08 "Danger Close" for 105mm artillery shells and similar ordnance is 600 meters. Meaning you are taking a huge gamble calling in a strike closer than 600 m from where you are. You had better stay down or get caught in the shrapnel yourself.

  • @fasttruckman
    @fasttruckman5 сағат бұрын

    Before the gun was invented, battles were fought with sticks, rocks, sharp rocks, and sharpened steel. Before guns, battles were a hand to hand up and close personal fight. When the battle was over and you were lucky to walk away, you walked away covered in blood.

  • @ToxicMinecraftV2
    @ToxicMinecraftV219 күн бұрын

    my grandfather was in the 3 deployments back in '65 to '70 as part of the sea bees and he passed last year. Thankfully he held onto alot of pictures from when he was there and I was able to see what it was through his eyes even tho he didnt want to share his experiences. RIP Pop Pop

  • @BitigoBlack
    @BitigoBlack24 күн бұрын

    1:38:53 Adapt or die. I don't know if yall mentioned this.... but that charge he led towards the enemy camp...was in a way.. just like Custer's charge and you see Gibson's eyes widen as he realizes the situation while running up that hill....a great moment. And then the cavalry.... saves their butts.

  • @peterschairer488
    @peterschairer48817 күн бұрын

    This is one of the last movies I was able to see with my dad before he died and I loved it.

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