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FULL METAL JACKET (1987) | INDIAN FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION 

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Hello guys, here is our reaction and review on FULL METAL JACKET (1987) | INDIAN FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE! Watch&Share!
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30 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 193   
@TampaCEO
@TampaCEO Год назад
The entire first half of the movie was mostly unscripted. R. Lee Ermey was an actual drill instructor with years of experience. Once they decided to put him in the movie, they just let him "do his thing" and film it. The results were absolutely incredible. This is why most Marines will state that the "basic training" scenes in this movie were more realistic than any other movie. R.I.P. R. Lee Ermey.
@Etereys
@Etereys Год назад
As a Marine veteran, I can confirm this. 👍 The humor was 💯 realistic, as it was part of the barrage of tactics the bootcamp drill instructors used to make the recruits develop self-control. The most difficult situations concerning controlling natural urges to laugh were the chain reaction giggles that only ONE recruit failed to contain. THEN it was all over, and the platoon was BACK OUT in the sand pit for PT corrections. 😉😅
@mikegrasty5521
@mikegrasty5521 Год назад
It sure as shit was!! That flick gave me flashbacks!!! 😅👍🏿
@charlieeckert4321
@charlieeckert4321 Год назад
The buzz cut at the beginning of the movie served two purposes. It did take away their individuality and it also was a health measure. There were many men, usually 40 or 50 in a platoon, and they were in close quarters. It prevents lice from spreading through the unit.
@OcotilloTom
@OcotilloTom Год назад
That's about how it was. I served 20 years in the Marine Corp and two combat tours in Vietnam. The first tour as a machine gunner (0331) in 1965-66 and the second as a Platoon commander (0369) in 1970-71. I retired after 20 years and had a 30 year career as a California police officer ( Marin County). What I learned in the Marine Corps has helped me all my life. I highly recommend it to anyone needing direction and wishing to learn self discipline . Tom Boyte GySgt. USMC, retired Bronze Star, Purple Heart
@moomakemoney
@moomakemoney Год назад
Thank you for your service.
@bayareathrasher666
@bayareathrasher666 Год назад
I thank you.
@jeffsherk7056
@jeffsherk7056 Год назад
Thank you for your service, as a Marine and as a civilian
@NathanShike-xy4ec
@NathanShike-xy4ec Год назад
Thank you for your service sir!!!!!!!!
@NathanShike-xy4ec
@NathanShike-xy4ec Год назад
Ya'll paved my way through the corps
@lazyidiotofthemonth
@lazyidiotofthemonth Год назад
The scene where Joker shots the Sniper is supposed to show the moment Joker gets the thousand yard stare.
@philmullineaux5405
@philmullineaux5405 Год назад
I am ex army. In the military before the 1990s, the goal of drill sergeants was to remove people from service, to see how mentally weak they were. So the way the drill sergeant treated them, in my mind, was quite accurate. Our basic training class started with 240 guys. About 100 graduated.
@gabrielesolletico6542
@gabrielesolletico6542 Год назад
Were you a drill seargent too? Sorry for asking, I'm just curious.
@philmullineaux5405
@philmullineaux5405 Год назад
@@gabrielesolletico6542 no. But ended up friends with many, during my career. I also went through in the 80s- I was part of the very first, all airborne/ranger/ special forces, basic training company. Back when drill sergeants put hands on u, got right in ur face, used every dirty name and insult they could, at u. Starvation and sleep deprivation were normal. Beat downs were normal. Pitting soldiers against each other, was normal. Our starting basic training class had I think about 240 trainees. I think about 100 graduated.
@that.ll_do_pig
@that.ll_do_pig Год назад
@@philmullineaux5405 😳
@BusterCherry1
@BusterCherry1 Год назад
Love how much you guys loved that opening scene! It's a jaw dropper if you've never seen it before!
@rexracer3221
@rexracer3221 Год назад
R. Lee Ermey who played the drill sargent was originally just a technical advisor for this movie, but he had such a commanding presence and funny says that they gave him a part in the movie... RIP R. Lee Ermey, he really added a lot of needed realism.
@formatique_arschloch
@formatique_arschloch Год назад
I knew that he was a marine, but never knew that! Thanks and greetings from Finland.
@patmcgroin6916
@patmcgroin6916 Год назад
Ermey basically ad libbed much of his dialogue and Kubrick encouraged it. Initially the guy who was the psycho side gunner of the helicopter was supposed to play Hartman. The basic training was supposed to be like 15 minutes, but Kubrick rewrote the movie because he LOVED what Ermey was doing...
@arthurplane9682
@arthurplane9682 Год назад
I know you are both interested in the American Civil War also. I would reccomend two for your enjoyment. "Glory", and "Gettysburgh". Please take them into consideration. Both are well done and thought provoking. Thanks and Enjoy! 😁
@SimoExMachina2
@SimoExMachina2 Год назад
I always assumed that Pvt. Pyle was one of the so called "McNamara's Morons", which was a goverment program around that time trying to find a place and meaning to those lacking in intellect, in the service of the military. The idea was that the military lifestyle would teach them the vital skills they would need to survive in life. Pyle wasn't exactly the "sharpest tool in the shed".
@t0dd000
@t0dd000 Год назад
I was in the army for a decade. This was pretty much my basic training experience.
@gabrielesolletico6542
@gabrielesolletico6542 Год назад
"This was pretty much my basic training experience WHAT???!?". :)
@iKvetch558
@iKvetch558 Год назад
One of the very interesting things that is unsaid about this film is the way it portrays a very real program that the US Military ran from 1966 to 1971 called Project 100,000...Private Pyle is clearly meant to represent it, though Kubrick and D'Onofrio have never specifically stated that, as far as I can find. As more and more US troops were sent to Vietnam, the DoD calculated that they would not have enough to both escalate the war and meet their needs elsewhere. So Project 100,000 was initiated to see if the normal standards for IQ and physical/mental fitness to be inducted into the US Military could be broadened at all...to see if people who did not meet the old standards could still be turned into useful soldiers/sailors/airmen/Marines etc....the program was variously nicknamed "McNamara's Folly" "McNamara's Morons" and "McNamara's Misfits." 🖖💯✌
@jeffburnham6611
@jeffburnham6611 Год назад
Yes, and those people were volunteers and not draftees.
@iKvetch558
@iKvetch558 Год назад
@@jeffburnham6611 I believe it was a mix of 54 percent volunteers and 46 percent draftees...at least that is what the easily available sources indicate.✌✌
@gabrielesolletico6542
@gabrielesolletico6542 Год назад
Thank you! I've never heard of this!
@danmiller4064
@danmiller4064 Год назад
Check out Platoon, written and directed by Oliver Stone, based on his experience in Vietnam. Great movie and stacked cast. Most vets of that war say most realistic depiction.
@J4ME5_
@J4ME5_ Год назад
Oh yes the dualities of the universe life and war. Much like joker's peace symbol and born to kill writings this entire movie is ambiguous and vague. A masterpiece
@MrUndersolo
@MrUndersolo Год назад
Joker and Pyle (Matthew Modine and Vincent D'Onofrio) were good friends and Matt got the job for Vincent (he was working as a bouncer and trying to find acting jobs). The rest is history.
@robertjewell9727
@robertjewell9727 Год назад
I don't find the first part particularly hilarious although I understand what you mean, but find it increasingly oppressive as it moves on and the second part feels like an isolated apocalypse. It's a brilliant film in which the writer/director is revealing war as absolute madness.
@garethlloyd4731
@garethlloyd4731 Год назад
Full metal jacket is a great film but if you want to watch the best Vietnam war film and probably the best war film of all time ( until saving private ryan came along ) then watch " Platoon " won a few Oscars and had a very young Charlie Sheen and Jonny Depp in it , very tense very gritty , very realistic
@thejamppa
@thejamppa Год назад
Platoon, Apocalypse Now Redux, Born on the 4th of July, Hamburger Hill and Casualties of War are very good films telling different aspects of the war. The horror of the battles, war crimes, life of injured veterans etc.
@NoelMcGinnis
@NoelMcGinnis Год назад
The role that put R Lee Ermey in the spotlight and solidified his career. He wrote most of his own dialogue and ALL of the demotivational lines. He was an actual drill instructor in the Marines and I would love to see some real footage of him when he was training real cadets. His role isn’t so much acting (in this movie) as it is just him being a real drill instructor for the camera. 😂 He was amazing. He is definitely missed. He can do serious roles like he did in the movie Se7en and hilariously funny roles like in Saving Silverman.
@jeffsherk7056
@jeffsherk7056 Год назад
The sad part about the beginning of this movie is that Joker, and Gomer Pyle, and the other guys were most likely draftees. Last time I saw this movie, I didn't believe the Marines drafted anybody, but I looked it up and found that during the Vietnam war the Marines did indeed draft people at times.
@PrinceOfTheCity1
@PrinceOfTheCity1 Год назад
There’s always been drafts for every war except for the last 40 or so years.
@jeffburnham6611
@jeffburnham6611 Год назад
No, Gomer Pyle and Joker would have been volunteers and not draftees. The first lottery draw for Vietnam took place in 1969. The 2nd half of the movie involves the Tet Offensive, which happened in 1968.
@jeffsherk7056
@jeffsherk7056 Год назад
@@jeffburnham6611 Thanks so much for letting me know when the first lottery draw was. I didn't know that, and your information really helps me understand the movie better.
@skindianu
@skindianu Год назад
I think the character of Pyle was supposed to depict a wave of draftees known as "McNamara's Morons. The Pentagon was running out of options for drafting young men, so the bar for entry into the military was lowered, resulting in the drafting of low IQ men, who would normally be disqualified from service. The result was a disaster as many of these men, who should have never been away from their homes and families, were put into combat units, many of them with no more of a mental capacity of a child. Not many of these men survived their deployment whether they were killed by the enemy or even killed by "friendly fire".
@papaeiche8322
@papaeiche8322 Год назад
@@skindianu I scrolled down the posts to see if anyone would mention M&Ms. Glad to see someone did, over a 100,0000 of them. They also cut the basic training time down to 8weeks. Criminal, those boys were just cannon fodder.
@philmullineaux5405
@philmullineaux5405 Год назад
Animal Mother was actually the best most real soldier...even telling the reporters, how to win the war.
@Dnichols619
@Dnichols619 Год назад
This movie is very different from other American War movies. Mostly because there is NO patriotic mythologizing. Makes it feel more real. Scared the shit out of me the first time I saw it. Doc J's death was awful.
@gnarl12
@gnarl12 Год назад
Also see Hamburger Hill
@moomakemoney
@moomakemoney Год назад
I apparently had an uncle that return from Vietnam, never spoke another word the rest of his life. I never knew my father or his family directly, only through stories my mother told me, or genealogy online. I still believe the politicians at that time had no intention of ever winning that war. Quite the opposite.
@cobracurse
@cobracurse Год назад
In order to win a war, you have to occupy and control territory. This is why "search and destroy" tactics (as utilized by the Americans in Vietnam, the Soviets in Afghanistan and later, the Americans in Afghanistan) ultimately don't work in the long run. With "search and destroy" tactics, you pretty much go into a place and kill/drive away enemy combatants, only to withdraw all of your troops after a battlefield victory has been achieved. As soon as you leave, a group of new and/or surviving enemy combatants simply come back to occupy the same place, and it would be like the battle never took place at all.
@koanikal
@koanikal Год назад
It's not shown in this movie, but you have a few different Drill Instructors in Marine boot camp. The Senior Drill Instructor is the "nice" Drill Instructor (Gunny Hartman here is the Senior Drill Instructor). Due to time constraints, they wouldn't be able to show all 3 or 4 drill instructors doing their own thing in their own way in this movie, so Senior Drill Instructor GySgt Hartman embodies them all for dramatic purposes. A Drill Instructor is pretty much never a Gunnery Sergeant, but R. Lee Ermey, a retired Marine who actually did spend time as a drill instuctor, at the time had the rank of Gunny, so that's the rank he played in the movie. Normally it's Sergeants and Staff Sergeants (and VERY rarely Corporals), and Gunnery Sergeants are the Company Gunny. Back to what I was talking about though, The Senior Drill Instructor is the "nice" one you ABSOLUTELY don't want to upset, then you have your over the top mean as fuck Drill Instructor, and one that's still mean, but a little more loose and makes jokes a lot (but if you laugh at those jokes, you'll pay hard). It's a formula. The comedy from these drill instructors is intentional. One of my favorite threats from Drill Instructor Sgt Bishop was "oh you want to play games? I've got more games than Milton Bradley" lol. If you laugh, you're screwed. It's a way to teach you to maintain discipline regardless of the situation. I've always found this part of the movie fairly realistic, but nowhere near as bad as it can get in real life boot camp sometimes. It was honestly worse than this depiction when I was in Marine boot camp in 1993, but they didn't show some of the more extreme shit in this movie (other than punching Joker in the gut and choking Pyle). I love that you guys found Hartman's lines funny, cuz that's how it is, it can get hilarious, but YOU CAN'T LAUGH lol. So hard not to do
@1MahaDas
@1MahaDas Год назад
This film although well done is not a good representation of how this war progressed or how it became a real tragedy for Americans. A better film reflection of the War in Vietnam is the motion picture 'Platoon' directed and written by Oliver Stone.
@seasickviking
@seasickviking Год назад
Joker had no choice but to participate. If he didnt take part, he could have been used as a witness to what happened, which means he could've been their next target.
@silentc1015
@silentc1015 Год назад
What I like about full metal jacket reactions is that some people are completely horrified by the drill sergent but other people like you two (and me) find him and that scene hilarious
@brandonshepherd7477
@brandonshepherd7477 Год назад
Marines.
@raphaelpaz8476
@raphaelpaz8476 Год назад
The soap in the towel they are giving Pyle a blanket party
@tomg6318
@tomg6318 Год назад
you got drafted during the Vietnam War you had to go
@jazzmaan707
@jazzmaan707 Год назад
Great reaction, in breaking down the movie into 2 parts. I went through Basic Training, and you have to go into it with a positive attitude. We had 2 people in our group, that had no clue what was going on, and they washed out (flunked out) of Basic Training. Basically, they were what we called, "momma boys," and never took responsibility for themselves or their actions.
@jondishmonmusicandstuff2753
What you have to understand is not everyone is cut out for being broken down and them built back up for the services. Some people break and that's what happened here.
@greenpeasuit
@greenpeasuit Год назад
Another military related movie that I think you will enjoy is Men of Honor. It is based on a true story and stars some great actors.
@mr.imperial8721
@mr.imperial8721 Год назад
Lol marines...not army.
@jasonligon5937
@jasonligon5937 Год назад
In bootcamp they are trying to break you down to then build you up to be one cohesive unit. Pyle was a slacker and the whole platoon was being punished every time he made mistakes. I served myself. Messing up isn't an issue. Not trying or caring and messing up is serious. Because it's a direct correlation to the battlefield. You not caring and messing up kills someone. It's not just your life, but your platoon's as well.
@NewGuyMedia-xe7bm
@NewGuyMedia-xe7bm Год назад
He wasn't a "slacker"... he was clearly mentally disabled....
@usmcrn4418
@usmcrn4418 2 месяца назад
I’m an Iraq war veteran.. ALL war.. sucks. I can’t believe that even after WWI and WWII, we’re still fighting wars. WTF? All I know it that the ones who start and facilitate the wars become pretty damned scarce when it comes down to actually laying your ass on the line and fighting the war. Makes me wanna puke! 🤮
@mrfisher1072
@mrfisher1072 Год назад
I like this man's sense of humor lol
@williamjones6031
@williamjones6031 Год назад
1. There are always more than one CC in boot camp (at least in the Navy) where partially recruits can't be abused. Verbal abuse is one thing but physical was a NO GO. 2. Vincent D'Onofrio played the Bug in MIB and had to put on 50lbs for this role 3. Hardman was out of control. Others outside his recruits would have noticed and he would have been held accountable. 4. "I don't know, but I've been told. Eskimo pussy is mighty cold." was used in my Navy recruit company in 1981. 5. In the US Navy real live ammo was always accounted for, and Pyle wouldn't have had it on his person in the head. 6. The lights in the head are always lit. (lighting I suspect). 7. "Blanket parties" were a real deal. We didn't have one because we didn't have a Gomer Pyle. 8. The hooker in Saigon is just distracting them so the motorcycle guys can steal the camera. I saw that happen in the Philippines. 9. Favorite character: Mother because he's nutz 🤪 10. Even by Hollywood standards, Kubrick went overboard with excessive bloodletting.
@vendicepartners
@vendicepartners Год назад
What a refreshing review!
@walterblackledge1137
@walterblackledge1137 Год назад
If you liked this film, the first film Lee Ermey was in is called "The Boys in Company C" Its worth watching.
@DeliaHale-oy2vh
@DeliaHale-oy2vh 3 месяца назад
Your reaction to the first quarter was slapping your hands together or on your body and nervously laughing. This too me is false bravado. You’ve never done anything hard in your life.
@DanielFrost21
@DanielFrost21 Год назад
The opening scene is one of the most iconic in movie history. Matthew Modine (Joker) and Vincent D'Onofrio (Pyle) were friends before the movie was made. In fact, Modine helped D'Onofrio get the part of Pyle.
@coryfrey6199
@coryfrey6199 Год назад
watch Saving Private Ryan next......it made vets cry....war is hell.
@jeffreyjones8321
@jeffreyjones8321 Год назад
M-16s were notorious for jamming (feed jams especially). That's why they would bang the magazines against their helmets; to make sure the first round was seated all the way to the back of the magazine.
@patrickholt2270
@patrickholt2270 Год назад
Pyle is an example of real soldiers who were recruited for the Vietnam War after US Secretary of Defence MacNamara lowered the educational standards for admission into the Army and Marines so that young men could be recruited from hospitals and special schools for the mentally handicapped. Thousands were signed up by recruiting sergeants who didn't understand what they were signing, and really weren't capable of fighting, because their situational awareness and reaction times were too poor. They hardly knew why they were there or what they were supposed to be doing, and they suffered a terrible casualty rate as the result. The reason was because the US Congress had agreed a law to conscript a set number of young men every year - the draft - and they needed more than that because US casualties turned out to be higher than expected, leaving units shorthanded unless extra "volunteers" could be found somehow. Asking for a larger draft would have looked bad, and risked refusal by Congress, as well as signalling to the world that the US was losing. So poor educationally subnormal/mentally handicapped/retarded/learning difficulties/special needs - whatever euphemism is imposed - were sacrifced for the sake of MacNamara and President Johnson's careers.
@zeigbert1743
@zeigbert1743 Год назад
My favourite Nam movie is Apocalypse Now and my favourite Kubrick film is A Clockwork Orange.
@matthewstroud4294
@matthewstroud4294 Год назад
Ap Now is definitely the best of the bunch of the Vietnam movies. My personal pick for best war movie of all time is Patton.
@nightstrike90
@nightstrike90 Год назад
It is because of this movie I have personally used "If it Short-Dicks every Cannibal on the Congo* in my life 😂😂😂
@magnusmagnusson8302
@magnusmagnusson8302 Год назад
another movie i totallly got wrong i never thought this was a comedy:)
@blanketstarry7725
@blanketstarry7725 Год назад
Yeah, that was weird.
@magnusmagnusson8302
@magnusmagnusson8302 Год назад
@@blanketstarry7725 well it seems its funny see someone getting humilating yelled at slapped and beated up,, i just didnt know it was funny,, always learning something everyday:)
@blanketstarry7725
@blanketstarry7725 Год назад
@@magnusmagnusson8302 Right! different cultures, I guess
@jeffreyjones8321
@jeffreyjones8321 Год назад
pvt pyle didn't volunteer. all these kids were drafted/conscripted. They had no choice.
@usmcrn4418
@usmcrn4418 2 месяца назад
This lady is absolutely beautiful.. is she a sister? Cousin? Both of you are good souls.
@davisworth5114
@davisworth5114 Год назад
During the Vietnam era, it was illegal to strike a trainee and racial slurs were totally forbidden, Sgt. Hartman was an amusing sadist who drove an unfit trainee to madness, murder, and suicide.
@tbob8212
@tbob8212 Год назад
Watch The Sands of Iwo Jima. Semper Fi also Kelly's Heroes
@philmullineaux5405
@philmullineaux5405 Год назад
Removing a person's hair, removes individual personality.
@terryconnelly484
@terryconnelly484 Год назад
I'm sure you know that he was an actual drill sergeant....I have a friend who is a drill sergeant who is the sweetest guy ...but I've never seen him In action I don't want to
@shaunmount130
@shaunmount130 Год назад
You might like Passchendaele 2008.
@efjefe
@efjefe 10 месяцев назад
Mu pops told me yeah ot was that way. What happened? Im embarrassed by what things become.
@penoyer79
@penoyer79 Год назад
the Vietnam war movie you must watch that is focused on the Vietnam war is "Platoon"
@jeremystevens6640
@jeremystevens6640 Год назад
I am writing this to help out the loud guys and this video and this channel with the algorithm ✌️❤️😚☺️
@asiahenry7798
@asiahenry7798 Год назад
You should check out The Deer Hunter. Great movie about how war effects people.
@betterd9160
@betterd9160 Год назад
Deer hunter was the most traumatic movie I’ve seen.
@Boomerbox2024
@Boomerbox2024 Год назад
Younmentioned that "He came" but we had a draft at the time which compelled young men to enter the military against their will. it is highly unlikely that Pvt Pyle volunteered.
@matt88876
@matt88876 Год назад
the gunner in the helicopter was going to be the Drill Instector until R Lee Ermey took the role
@EdmontonRealEstate01
@EdmontonRealEstate01 Год назад
Have you two reacted or seen Platoon? If not, consider responding to that movie.
@davidmc1489
@davidmc1489 Год назад
17:15 if you arent picturing peter griffin right now.....your wrong
@JLH111176
@JLH111176 Год назад
probably wasn't think of that kind of motivation
@Dinosaur_Ice
@Dinosaur_Ice Год назад
The fact that you loved the training scenes so much is funny to me because that for sure traumatized me as a child
@TomorrowWeLive
@TomorrowWeLive Год назад
Another great Vietname War movie is Apocalypse Now.
@rmhanseniii
@rmhanseniii Год назад
What a strange reaction….it’s not a comedy
@randallbollinger9625
@randallbollinger9625 Год назад
A lot of it is freakin hilarious
@rmhanseniii
@rmhanseniii Год назад
@@randallbollinger9625 I don’t think it was funny to the enlisted men.. that’s the way it was back then, after all they were training them to fight in a war and many of them weren’t coming back.
@simon_a.j.7255
@simon_a.j.7255 Год назад
I think you guys mistakenly thought this movie was a comedy
@ronsmith5572
@ronsmith5572 Год назад
Your laughter shows your ignorance a comedy this is not
@Ben1122us1
@Ben1122us1 Год назад
Yeah we had people when I was in Basic Training literally snap.
@mattthemarine46
@mattthemarine46 9 месяцев назад
It’s not the army!! It’s the Marines
@ashokmorar
@ashokmorar Год назад
Great reaction ya'll 😄. Great Vietnam movies to react to: Apocalypse Now Platoon and Tropic Thunder 😁
@tsogobauggi8721
@tsogobauggi8721 Год назад
Casualties of War
@ericew576
@ericew576 Год назад
People were forced to join the army, not everyone wanted to be there.
@usmcrn4418
@usmcrn4418 Год назад
This is the U.S. Marine Corps.. not the ARMY! 😎
@orion7326
@orion7326 2 месяца назад
That matters only to Americans. For all other countries, when on soil you're army, on water you're navy and in the air you're airforce. The vietnamese didn't care if the americans were marines or infantry. American with gun = fair game. Same in Afghanistan. Those afghan villagers didn't discriminate at all. Any american with a gun = easy target.
@usmcrn4418
@usmcrn4418 2 месяца назад
@@orion7326 true.. point taken. None of our enemies do. They, like we, see a simple solution to a complicate problem and it makes it easier for small minds to negotiate if they lump everything and everyone into broad categories. So yes Sir, I agree with you on this point. Thanks for clearing the water!
@orion7326
@orion7326 2 месяца назад
@@usmcrn4418 Lol. Small minds that pumped the best of your best right back into their mom's lap 😂 Now agree with me on this too. 😂
@betterd9160
@betterd9160 Год назад
This whole movie was filmed in England
@jameslamountain7035
@jameslamountain7035 Год назад
I like you people and your reaction. Are you a couple?
@constantino7917
@constantino7917 Год назад
12:40 lol suddenly it's not so funny anymore
@matt88876
@matt88876 Год назад
the drill instructor was a real DI and he ad-libbed all his lines
@ruarimccandless7982
@ruarimccandless7982 Год назад
Watch Braveheart you'll love it 😁
@betterd9160
@betterd9160 Год назад
Kubrick is my favorite
@raphaelpaz8476
@raphaelpaz8476 Год назад
damn this reaction and the good parts where taken out especially basic training beginning scene
@randyburrill2340
@randyburrill2340 Год назад
I love your guys reaction!
@philmullineaux5405
@philmullineaux5405 Год назад
Peter Griffin does the best version of, Surfin Bird!
@betterd9160
@betterd9160 Год назад
Deer hunter will break you
@Cultivation420
@Cultivation420 Год назад
This guy giggling is hilarious 😂.
@DaviDamir
@DaviDamir Год назад
welcome to basic mk ultra
@TheThiagorhis
@TheThiagorhis Год назад
React a brazilian movie City of God
@bobgable2691
@bobgable2691 Год назад
There was a draft in the Vietnam war
@longfootbuddy
@longfootbuddy Год назад
i like your shirts
@paulbooth8516
@paulbooth8516 Год назад
Television and technology: Vietnam would be the time period. That visualization changed. If one civilian is killed on camera. Has more weight. Than hundreds of thousands of civilians killed off camera.
@paulbooth8516
@paulbooth8516 Год назад
Future: because of this. “Smart, precision, weapons where developed”. The power of communication. Will always be the battle ground. Spending exorbitant amounts of development. As opposed to carpet bombing. Has proven to be a frivolous exercise. If you don’t have the ability to communicate the extent of energy used to protect non-combatants.
@rjayshelp7430
@rjayshelp7430 Год назад
brilliant introduction from her... just great.
@bolt-o-zaurus4316
@bolt-o-zaurus4316 8 месяцев назад
It's so Indian.
@vangannaway1015
@vangannaway1015 Год назад
Apocalypse Now
@bernardroth7200
@bernardroth7200 Год назад
I love this dude
@danielkarlsson258
@danielkarlsson258 Год назад
Even you laughed at Pyle for the first part of the movie... Not ok. He tried.
@johnmac3410
@johnmac3410 Год назад
I see why y'all were laughing so hard. This scene always makes my day even though I had to endure something like it in Navy bootcamp. R.Lee Ermey made this movie unforgettable with his Don Ricklesesque put downs. FMJ has withstood the test of time because of the Gunny, and I believe it will be a classic long after I am gone.
@garycollins7750
@garycollins7750 Год назад
Private Pyle was broken that’s what caused him to snap but he was likely someone who wasn’t psychologically fit to even be sent into combat. Joker made the comment about the phony tough himself and the crazy brave Animal Mother. Joker talked a big game but pushed he wasn’t as tough as he thought he was. You should read up on Project 100,000 in which men were drafted who weren’t mentally or psychologically fit for the military. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_100,000
@evolve1837
@evolve1837 Год назад
4"57 - The guy that played the drill Sargent was actually a MARINE drill Sargent and that is the only position he tried for. Another thing his lines were not scripted. The director just told him what they wanted and followed his actions with the camera.
@bdesaw
@bdesaw Год назад
Agreeing with Bob Freiday. I served in the US Marine Corps and this is the most honest and true rendition of USMC boot camp - I have ever seen in a movie. My drill instructors said most of these words - and it was not uncommon for the DI to holler (when needing a volunteer) "Give me one motivated baby-killer!" - sadly - I remember responding once "Sir, one motivated baby-killer reporting as ordered Sir!" Not my proudest moment - but what they are teaching 17 year old kids to believe :(
@gabrielesolletico6542
@gabrielesolletico6542 Год назад
This was a good reaction! Thank you for sharing with us! When will you upload the "The two Tower" movie, from "The Lord of the Rings" trilogy, reaction?
@Mr.Ekshin
@Mr.Ekshin Год назад
To hit a moving target, you have to shoot ahead of it. The faster the target, the further ahead of it you must shoot. This is called "Leading the target". He asked the helicopter doorgunner, "How can you shoot women and children?!?". The guy answered, "It's easy... you just don't lead them so much"... meaning they don't run as fast as the men. He didn't take the question as "How can you do such a terrible thing?", he took it as "How do you do it?"
@philmullineaux5405
@philmullineaux5405 Год назад
A Stanley Kubrick film...any of his are great! This is not a true story but does show the insanity of wars, particularly the wars, where no one really knows, why they are fighting. The best of these types are Catch 22, Paths of Glory(Kubrick) hamburger hill, Platoon, Heaven and Earth, and the most satyrical two--- Apocalypse Now, and the masterpiece, Dr. Strangelove.
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