What a pleiad of great actors in one film!! And the film itself, is absolutely great.
@leeashley19028 сағат бұрын
2:41. I didn’t know Edmure Tully fought in the Jacobite Rebellion.
@agustsafari47219 сағат бұрын
Must watch too, Moore burton and harris in Wild geese
@GermanGreetings12 сағат бұрын
This film is historical itself. And the quality is outstanding
@mathewdewsbury945615 сағат бұрын
5:33 😂
@BeeHive828220 сағат бұрын
wow
@AnthonyTobyEllenor-pi4jqКүн бұрын
10,000 good men went in but only 2,000 came out, a terrible waste of manpower on a fools errand !
@mikeheineman2357Күн бұрын
We want Married With Grandchildren
@mikeheineman2357Күн бұрын
Still in 2024 Al Bundy is still the goat
@threetreasures769819 сағат бұрын
Absolutely!!
@DarkRobx2 күн бұрын
They dont make films like this anymore
@Strada0982 күн бұрын
The artillery carpet shelling the terrain coming toward the Germans from German perspective looks truly frighting indeed. But i did not know they already had Leopard 1 tanks in WWI 🙂
@leeashley19022 күн бұрын
0:23. That insult was both brutal and violating at the same time.
@panam4redd6 сағат бұрын
those are synonymous
@tylernelson1522 күн бұрын
That half a tank of gas is the best joke ever
@threetreasures769819 сағат бұрын
Yep, that one and the, “I want a ballon”. 😂
@joebombero12 күн бұрын
My nephew was married to a Polish woman. She loved this film except for Gene Hackman's portrayal of her beloved General Sosobowski. She would have preferred a British actor, as Hackman is always slouching and mumbling. Sosobowski would have always had a rigid posture. She kept laughing seeing Hackman, "He is just so, so... American!"
@drcgeorge13 күн бұрын
Si un herido en la cabeza sobrevive a ese viaje en jeep, nada ni nadie puede matarlo.
@Calligraphybooster3 күн бұрын
It makes you realize how big the luxury of hindsight is…
@ashleyhouse96903 күн бұрын
Might have been a good idea to include the closed subtitles.
@TributevideoКүн бұрын
Click on CC.
@rossrockomurphy22773 күн бұрын
"Fantastic isint it?, Just once to have that material under my command" Dont know what it was about that line but always stayed with me.
@Solarsystemrdffdfyyhh4 күн бұрын
Came home around 1 in the morning turned on mtv set my vcr haha remember that and bam what’s this young ones? Damn, I couldn’t stop watching! Greatest show ever! Oh and Motörhead was the second coming! You missed it! Having god perform on your show was epic!
@pedroRodriguesMD5 күн бұрын
WHY DID YOU CROSSED THE ROAD ? xD
@davidspence45645 күн бұрын
Who every wrote these scripts needs an award brilliant brilliant brilliant
@Chanty_lly5 күн бұрын
@1:50:11 best part :]
@AntonSnyman5 күн бұрын
Great movie
@TheSml20126 күн бұрын
Impossible to watch. Too many annoying ads
@Tributevideo4 күн бұрын
Use uBlock Origin on chrome or firefox.
@pauldelves39426 күн бұрын
Wow…..just wow. Thanks for this. Hope springs eternal…👍👍
@phoenixfox33796 күн бұрын
Sadly I can tell some good parts have been cut out. why?
@robbielingga65306 күн бұрын
Rule Britannia !!
@baz_cram7 күн бұрын
Al Bundy = GOAT status
@jarkogonzo74327 күн бұрын
For example, Patton considered Montgomery a bad or even very bad commander - and he was probably right. The British had at least a few much better generals who would have been much better suited to command the 21st Army Group. My favorite is General Harold Alexander, perhaps also Claude Auchinleck (I know, but at least he was able to learn from his mistakes).
@jarkogonzo74327 күн бұрын
Montgomery was a pompous buffoon who became a British national hero only because he managed to win the battle of El Alamein, where he had a huge numerical and equipment advantage over the Germans. And Churchill believed then that he had finally found, after a long series of defeats, a brilliant commander. Montgomery commanded worse than his American colleagues on average, as can be seen from the course of the Battle of Caen. He also had a nasty habit of blaming his subordinates for failures. When the attack failed in the first phase of the Falaise Pocket, he blamed the Polish Armoured Division for it. However, when after two days the Poles managed to break through and encircle the Germans in the Mont Ormel area, he never publicly praised the Poles for it.
@jarkogonzo74327 күн бұрын
General Sosabowski was a very experienced officer, he had already fought in World War I, and then in 1939 he commanded his infantry regiment well. That is why he understood that Montgomery's plan was based on the too risky assumption that "everything will work out", whereas it was enough for one element of the puzzle to go wrong and the whole operation would end in failure. And so it happened. Sosabowski was the only officer who dared to openly criticize the plan, for which he was later stripped of command of the 1st Polish Brigade.
@andrewflindall90483 күн бұрын
Gosh, the more you say stuff the righter you become. In 1940, Montgomery - a very experienced officer - commanded a division and got it back to Dunkirk in good order, having fought all the way back from Belgium (not that he was alone in that, of course). He had a lot more in common with Sosabowski than you claim.
@humbertoflores25452 күн бұрын
@@andrewflindall9048but Montgomery prooved to be an incompetent..
@freddieclark2 күн бұрын
The problem with that is that Montgomery created a plan called operation Comet. He was not in charge of MG, Eisenhower had taken over as Commander of all Allied troops and Montgomery reverted to Commander of 21st AG. He had no command over the Allied Airborne Army or its use and deployment during MG. If you want to point fingers, then Brereton (American) Commanded the AAA and approved its disposition and use during MG. Browning dithered about, and Gavin dropped the ball n taking the Bridge at Nijmegen on the first day.
@freddieclark2 күн бұрын
@@humbertoflores2545 No , he didn't, Perhaps you are thinking of Brereton who was actually in charge of First Allied Airborne Army and made several dubious command decisions that doomed the Market plan. Also Browning and Gavin must share some responsibility for faffing around on the Groesbeek Heights instead of taking the Nijmegen bridges at once. If you think a bridge too far was historically accurate, I suggest you place too much faith in Hollywood.
@andrewflindall90482 күн бұрын
@@humbertoflores2545 Well, that told me...
@DT-wp4hk7 күн бұрын
Vitesse. Indeed a bridge too far
@paulking80557 күн бұрын
When I was an apprentice in 1981, my mentor named Arthur Sole was a participant. He survived the glider drop and managed to escape. Even in senior years when I worked with him, he was still a tough man. I won't forget Arthur.
@petuser18 күн бұрын
isnt it funny all the comments on here slaggin the brits off, i dont know we even bothered listening to you all, should have let you be speaking german now
@samminallah8 күн бұрын
Good stuff
@ryanjohnson34148 күн бұрын
You'd think Marcy would've learned that Al kept rounds in the chamber lol
@fotoreporter.vienna9 күн бұрын
Der erste Film zu diesem speziellen Thema hieß die Brücke von Arnheim...
@fotoreporter.vienna9 күн бұрын
In diesem Film haben fast alle Schauspieler mitgewirkt, ihn auch so ernsthaft darzustellen, alle die in den 70ern Rang und Namen hatten waren dabei und haben bei den sicherlich unglaublich schwierigen Dreharbeiten ihr Bestes gegeben um diesen Film wahrhaftig zu machen. Viele von denen sind mittlerweile gestorben oder vergessen, in meiner Seele bleiben sie existent.
@fotoreporter.vienna9 күн бұрын
Für mich einer der besten Filme über Krieg, ja und auch ein wenig Menschlichkeit in all dem Grauen... sogar auf deutscher Seite...
@JorgeReyes-mq6le9 күн бұрын
Big women would be offended now
@threetreasures769819 сағат бұрын
May be but funny is still funny! Btw, all these years later I am now a big woman and I still find Al’s putdowns hilarious!
@beelzeboss429 күн бұрын
Just realised Peg was Leela in Futurama
@pedroRodriguesMD5 күн бұрын
Yup
@pedroRodriguesMD5 күн бұрын
Still is. And the mother in Sons of Anarchy
@bartcouprie498610 күн бұрын
I remember my brother and I watching this movie on TV at our house in Wellington, New Zealand years ago, and our mother walked in. She looked at the screen and said "I remember that day, I'd never seen no many planes!" We had allowed ourselves to forget for a moment that she lived in Holland during the occupation. I have never forgotten it since.
@maartenvandam3449 күн бұрын
It's commemorated every year with a parade from the Belgian border all the way to Arnhem of some surviving vehicles and some now very old veterans.
@tyrannicalgod606410 күн бұрын
Glory to the Bonnie prince
@thesecdef486510 күн бұрын
I love how Jefferson just stands behind Marcy cracking up when all roasts her
@Jacob-xq9vg9 күн бұрын
Right?
@paulkillick52710 күн бұрын
Montgomery what a prize hunt !!! No wonder Patton hated him
@donjjcarroll226311 күн бұрын
Wednesday, November 13, 2024. My first viewing, great production.
@jamesdiaz79310 күн бұрын
WOW. I have been watching the film for almost half a century and it inspired me to become a paratrooper.
@octoman_games11 күн бұрын
"Hey Bundy! I'm having steak for dinner, what are you having?" "If I was the mailman Id'e be having your wife!"
@muzaffarmohamed835411 күн бұрын
Really, it was an awesome, well produced war movies. Now in enhanced HD format Beautiful
@patrickrobinson54513 күн бұрын
Great movie!
@Rainer23813 күн бұрын
@Tributevideo great job, you made an awesome movie into an even better movie. i woud kindly ask if it is possible for you to do the same cut of the movie with the german translation, this woud be very cool and awesome. thx for this fan cut master piece. greets from germany 😊