Men's entire existence, from the beginning, is a state of war. We, as the "War Stories in Kino," are trying to convey this state of existence as it is shown on the silver screen. Rather it is with battle scenes, training or skirmish scenes; rather with more of a cultural and aesthetic approach, such as "rituals" or the very reflection of life or the war. In time, we will be focusing on creating more narrative perspectives with different kinds of content. Please enjoy the channel and be sure to subscribe.
I love how Paul’s friends (more inexperienced soldiers) handle there rifles differently compared to kat (somebody who’s gone into combat more) Paul’s friends cycle the bolt the wrong side and cover the iron sights with there hands but kat operates the rifle more effectively and efficiently. Prob just me tho
Completely wrong. Vlad tricked the boyars into a confession. Only the elderly and infirm were impaled. The rest were force marched for three days, and were worked to death, rebuilding Poenari Castle.
Omg...it was WW1 ...curiosity...I called it full battery syndrome...need change...obstacles...but in present days ...Ukraine..Israel...so unnecessary casualties..when live is beautiful and to short..if compared..to....omg....
Every step of the way they "process" this village is almost identical to what the Dirlewanger Brigade, Einzatsgruppe and other Nazis did in the USSR during WW2, a thousand years after this. Raid > Separate > Take slaves > Burn the rest in a barn. Definitely some Come & See inspiration behind this scene. A whole millennium, and the same shit happens, it's crazy. Even today, people would revert to this within a week if the conditions were right.
So the Germans threw a fit over the US using shotguns, but when the first tanks rolled out no one was like “how is that fucking fair?” The actors are very talented, it’s as if they are truly looking at mythical creatures, demons, nightmares.
This scene does not show what Vlad Tepes actually did to those messagers. In reality, because he was very offended, he had them hats nailed on their heads! Yes! He nailed them hats on their craniums!
I hate this scene and I hate this film. It is a Hollywood interpretation. To have the Bruce almost begging his men to follow him is an insult to a very brave man who did not just have to fight against the English but what would normally constitute a scottish civil war at the same time. Wallace Robert the Bruce and the black Douglas were brave men who lead a quarreling people against huge odds to form a nation. They deserved better.
Cris Bale in my book is one of our best actors by far. American Hussle he turns into this guy, The one where he is a p.o.w. blew me away. Hostiles is brilliant. He is just brilliant in everything he does.🙏
This is false. They were not empaled. They were chained and brought into the mountains to build a castle fortress for him in the cold of winter. They were forced to labor until their clothes fell of their bodies with wear and tear, until they all died of exposer to the elements. Do your research please before you lead masses of people astray. Have a nice day. Shalom.
Stories about Vlad the impaler seems to be particularly prone to exaggeration.. my understanding is that he was a just ruler but treated some opponents harshly to make an example.
i was a child when i first watched this maybe 8 or 9 and i legit was inconsolable when William died and this scene made me an even bigger blubbering mess