For more information about this fan cut edition, please check the video description! If you like this fan cut upscale, please come check out my other channel where I post upscales of rock/heavy metal concerts! www.youtube.com/@NecramoniumVideo
@dirkusmaximus926823 күн бұрын
They were later there than expected, so…
@bartcouprie49866 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.
@maartenvandam3446 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.
@iainmclean7020Ай бұрын
I had the privilege of working as an extra and security stand in on the film as a 20 year student between 1st and 2nd year at Uni. A month based in Deventer and mixing with all the drama and the stars shooting the film. I had an amazing day floating down the Rhine in a wooden boat at Nijmegen and stood in uniform behind Robert Redford and Ryan O'Neal as they shot a short scene that took all day! I recall the awe in the faces of all on the set when Olivier was there and how charming Liv Ullmann was with everyone.
@RobertGorry3 күн бұрын
No way 5h5s proper interesting to now you wer ther wen thy films it good movie
@YITV2 күн бұрын
How proud to see our dear Norwegian Liv Ullmann a legend
@kennetheustaquio8860Ай бұрын
i was ten years old when i watch this film in Cebu City,Phil. As a young kid i always like to watch war movies and this movie was one of my my unforgettable movies together with The Wild Geeese, Battle of the Bulge, and the Longest Day. thanks for sharing this great movie.
@kevinmolato69229 күн бұрын
I'm from Cavite. My Daddy raised me watching the same movies together with all the uncles and my grandfather. Everyone was so proud of our family's PMA lineage.
@UnusSedLeo-w5lАй бұрын
I remember how big this movie was, in 1977. I was 8 years old and this was the talk of the town, eh, country. A cast full of great names, the region of Deventer being full of cast, crew, support, more people, etc. This was all made without AI, without computerised footage. Analogue greatness we will never see again.
@adamferguson8781Ай бұрын
Great movie, well said
@bloodynoobtubenameАй бұрын
Funnily enough, I was 8 years old when Saving Private Ryan came out, which caused a similar stir, so I can relate in a way. I've never actually watched this movie before until now, but it's amazing how many big stars are in it. It's an extremely well shot movie.
@flemwadАй бұрын
100% spot on
@paulpaulsen730926 күн бұрын
" It's an extremely well shot movie.", ... it is, @@bloodynoobtubename, good, solid film making ...
@traviskeeler565522 күн бұрын
Me too. 8 years old. We used to sneak into the Theaters on Yonge St. in Toronto that played movies all day, back to back for $2 and watch ALL the great films of the day. This one..."Force Ten from Naverone" etc. Great memories.
@janusz4695Ай бұрын
Who else noticed that the only wise, forward-looking and very skeptical general was the Polish general Sosabowski? And anyone interested in history knows that he was made a scapegoat and blamed for the failure of the entire Market Garden operation, even though he commanded only 2,000 Polish paratroopers, not the army. After the war, he earned his living as a manual worker in a factory in England, because the British deprived him of the right to a war pension. Great English allies.
@ar912727 күн бұрын
10/10
@lf220824 күн бұрын
Indeed true. In recognition of not only this, but the fact that the Polish went into action anyway despite all of this, and suffered *heavily* for it, the Dutch somewhat recently (2006) bestowed some of the highest honors possible on Sosabowski and the Polish Brigade. I live a couple 100 meters from the Arnhem bridge and would say that their sacrifice is not lost on the Dutch people.
@Stitchmax24 күн бұрын
Stanisław Franciszek Sosabowski CBE.
@janusz469524 күн бұрын
@@lf2208 I know Arnhem because my father fought there. Right outside Nijmegen. There he was seriously injured and stayed in hospital for half a year. He was supposed to be blind, but miraculously he regained his sight. He always wanted to go to Nederland, to Nijmegen, but he was not allowed to do so. I was there for him. He had fond memories of the Dutch because they took care of him. Greetings from Poland.
@daisydrapeza547824 күн бұрын
@@janusz4695BRAVE, COURAGEOUS AND FORTRIGHT GENERATION...
@islander780Ай бұрын
My neighbours dad was at Arnhem. Salute them all and work toward ending wars.
@leehighland5435Ай бұрын
My Grandad was a paratropper who thought at Arnhem, all his friends died there. I remember him tellling me about this crazy officer who wore a bowler hat and umbrella. When the film came out, everything he told me about how they escaped that night matched the film, apart from the bowler hat, but a search reveals indeed that officer (Digby Tatham-Warter) also wore a bowler hat.
@SusanPearce_HАй бұрын
Did he comment on the blasted orchestra following them around?
@andrewh5457Ай бұрын
My late dad was there, never got to visit with him, but for my 60th birthday, my son took me.
@adambane1719Ай бұрын
What a coincidence. My coworkers girlfriends best friends aunties hairdressers sons principals neighbors wifes father in laws uncle was at Arnhem too. It really is a small world !
@david-joeklotz9558Ай бұрын
When I was a kid I met a paratrooper that was at Arnhrem. I really appreciate it now. I was just too young at the time to grasp or ask pertinent enough questions
@fotoreporter.vienna5 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.
@jarkogonzo74324 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.
@kobiimpraim483816 күн бұрын
This was truly the best combined arms movie ever made. We had airborne drops, supply airdrops, air support, artillery support, mechanized infantry, tank support, engineer support, and sappers on the other side. Ground assaults, urban warfare, defensive and offensive lines of contact, plus counter attacks, escape and invasion maneuvers, and up close enemy perspectives and so much more with occupation and resistance perspectives. This movie had it all. Hands down a favorite. I like to splice in "The long days dying" as a supplement to an already great film.
@leetester9170Ай бұрын
A friend of my family fought at oosterbeek. He had some really interesting stories to tell. He was wounded and captured and spent the remainder of the war in a POW camp. I went to Arnhem for the 65th anniversary and I’ll never forget it.
@paulking80554 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.
@bobbyperu4683Ай бұрын
Who else went to see this on the big screen as a kid and with their dad? Great stuff, great times, great film, great memories.
@karlp8484Ай бұрын
Apart from being one of the best war movies ever made, I'm blessed by being able to speak Dutch and German, which makes it even better for me. Lol.
@samtheeagle799Ай бұрын
Sounds like collaborator talk to me ...
@AndyKroetАй бұрын
@@samtheeagle799hoe kun je dit nou zeggen ! Das kann man nicht sagen ! How can you say this ! En ik spreek ook Frans en een beetje Spaans ! En ik collaborer met helemaal niemand ..ik spreek gewoon mijn talen..
@adambane1719Ай бұрын
That sounds like a fahrt made in Heaven !
@karlp8484Ай бұрын
@@samtheeagle799 Guilty.
@user-ii1iy8fz1dАй бұрын
❤ blessed or burdened? 😂❤ Joke, know some Deutsch ❤
@lesscotford1419Ай бұрын
In memory of my uncle. Flight Sergeant. Sidney Henry Longworth. 21. Army Air Corps. Co Pilot in one of many Horsa Gliders evolved that September day. He came home much to his Mums joy. These times must never be forgotten and never apologised for. If not for them...
@Pona1234Ай бұрын
Respect and gratitude to your uncle from the Netherlands
@lesscotford1419Ай бұрын
@@Pona1234and many thanks to you for the acknowledgement
@myriaddsystemsАй бұрын
Be proud❤
@lesscotford1419Ай бұрын
@@myriaddsystemsI am, very. He passed away when I was in junior school. I know one thing, I'd be a very different person if he had lived longer. Very strict, very regimented, very tough. I loved him dearly.
@vanmanrick118 күн бұрын
My father who has passed away grew up close to Arnhem told me of seeing the parachutes. He found a shell casing and kept it until he died. When he seen this movie you could tell he was reliving his youth.
@jonathanmeliton1679Ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this epic film. They don't this make anymore.
@adambane1719Ай бұрын
Yes! They definitely don't this make anymore. Very astute point Jonny boy !
@Chebab-ChebabАй бұрын
@@adambane1719Piss don't take the. He appreciative being was.
@raymonddimech373922 күн бұрын
thank f
@vinniemoran7362Ай бұрын
The film's screen writer William Goldman wrote a bestseller where a long chapter is devoted to the making of "A Bridge Too Far". It was a very difficult film to make, especially since interest in WWII movies had died down by the late '70s. When one considers the challenges Attenborough faced in getting the film made, it's a frigging masterpeice. Name of the book is "Adventures In The Screen Trade".
@GDFILMPROMOTIONSLTDАй бұрын
thanks for highlighting the book
@andrewflindall9048Ай бұрын
There is also a standalone 'making of' book, I think by Goldman. It's here somewhere...
@Dunbar074029 минут бұрын
I also recommend Major John Frost's account of the parachute drop and subsequent action in Arnem, in his memoir "A Drop Too Many". The film only documents his injuries and capture by the Germans. In reality, Frost escaped from hospital two weeks after the withdrawal from the North bank of the Nederrijn river. He made it back to allied lines and was promptly flown back to England, where he got a taxi straight to London. He found himself at Piccalilli Circus still dressed in the same bloodstained and scorched battle fatigues he wore the day he was captured at Arnem.
@Digmen1Ай бұрын
The planes taking off at 34:00 is amazing. No cgi there!
@TheClanAdventuresАй бұрын
Yes but a lot of other special effects are being used.
@OneofInfinity.Ай бұрын
And what a cast complimenting the practical effects.
@thomasvandevelde8157Ай бұрын
And don't forget the paradropped camera crews!
@Elitist20Ай бұрын
'To have that material under my command...'
@adamferguson8781Ай бұрын
Thanks for the upload of an incredible movie. I just wish some of the Western Youngsters of today learn history like this.
@benben162Ай бұрын
Ok the casting in this one is Crazy good.
@Colonel_MarАй бұрын
Fine job you did here. Making a war classic more alive. Thank you for your effort.
@Amrah75Ай бұрын
The scale of this movie is epic. No CGI back then, just all planes, tanks and men. Demonstrates how lazy movie making has become.
@glennyoverbeekАй бұрын
Not lazy but greedy, how much of a budget would all this cost today.
@Amrah75Ай бұрын
@@glennyoverbeekI suppose the equivalent of what it cost back then. When you have a budget of 300 mil this could be done but is easier to green screen and CGI it in. Lazy. But I get what you're saying.
@OneofInfinity.Ай бұрын
@@glennyoverbeek Both: "minimal effort" is their mantra in current times.
@kitwarjri7086Ай бұрын
Ur right..the amount of people n Weapons n Aircraft used for this film is inasane..Todays movies with green screen looks fake since we r already knew thats not real unlike the old movies where the stuntman n evn actors hv to do dangerous stunts themselves..
@myriaddsystemsАй бұрын
CGI is such a poor excuse for decent film-making
@bxanchezoАй бұрын
Thank you so much for this tremendous effort of you of sharing this amazing piece of cinema. It’s very sad to remember that the war your ancestors fought wasn’t about PEW-PEW, live satellite imaging, drones and CGI… those guys fought teeth and nails, in the dark, outgunned, outnumbered, starving, etc just to accomplish their missions… and many of them didn’t made it through and this picture reflects that ultimate sacrifice they made, so we can have freedom. Thanks again.
@fedup3449Ай бұрын
So do you think we have the freedom that they fought and died for?
@lyndoncmp5751Ай бұрын
@@fedup3449We are far more free and with greater benefits than back then.
@ministryofanti-feminism1493Ай бұрын
@@lyndoncmp5751 Very naive.
@beeldlvrАй бұрын
Wat een groot offer hebben de mensen geleverd voor onze vrijheid, iets om ons ook vandaag bewust van te zijn...
@lyndoncmp5751Ай бұрын
✌️Cheers, and here's to the Dutch revolution at Liverpool FC. 👍
@rupertbear6883Ай бұрын
have you seen what they did with our 'freedom'
@ministryofanti-feminism1493Ай бұрын
Had the Dutch government declared itself neutral in 1939, as the Swiss, Spanish, Swedish and Turkish did, they would never had seen war. But not only did they refuse to do this, they had agreements with the British and French governments to allow their troops passage through their territory. The Germans were aware of this.
@IThee-hw8oj29 күн бұрын
They did, but let's also thank the Russian people. They had the most suffering.
@martinfox3478Күн бұрын
@@ministryofanti-feminism1493 Yes, why didn't everyone declare themselves neutral and let "someone else" do the fighting and resistance? Maybe the Dutch government had morals and thought that fascists, murderers and war mongers should not be appeased.
@davidmitchell8380Ай бұрын
A BRIDGE TOO FAR from Richard Attenborough is one of the greatest war films that I've ever experienced in a movie theater in my life
@lollypop333100Ай бұрын
yes, the artillery barrage to the German anti-tank positions in the wood near the Dutch border was pure horror to me as 16 year old back then...now i can see why Monty won at El Alamein with his opening barrage...there were no trenches in the dessert, no woods to hide and Afrikakorps general Stumme died of a heart attack
@RD-ft7jsАй бұрын
Tak...film był lepiej zrobiony niż ta beznadziejna, rzeczywista, operacja...😅😅😅
@stuartbarrow6052Ай бұрын
I seen it in The Odeon Swansea with my parents when I was 11. Awesome film.
@namenloser419Ай бұрын
@@lollypop333100 yes and the german gun hits only 1 tank,great joke again.
@lyndoncmp5751Ай бұрын
@@lollypop333100Von Mellenthin said Montgomery's greater emphasis on artillery as soon as he arrived in North Africa was a great shock to the Germans, and changed the type of fighting from then on. Montgomery got rid of mindless tank charges which the Germans were able to deal with via their 88mm guns.
@tectorama10 күн бұрын
An amazing film, and not a bad edit. I went to the cinema with my father to watch this when it was first released. My wife and I went to the Netherlands in 1994, and visited the site of the old bridge, the cemetery at Oosterbeek, where the Dutch children lay flowers every year, and the Hartenstein hotel which is now The Airborne Museum. You couldn't make this film today, as those in charge would have to be black women.
@GosWardHen9816 күн бұрын
One of my dad's elder brothers joined the special units in late 1942 & trained as a Paratrooper. On this day he was lucky, he wasn't picked to go to Holland, I stead they went to Norway a little later & served in Palestine until 1948 fighting the Israeli forces. He passed in 2006 aged 83. ❤ RiP uncle Albert...
@swansong007Ай бұрын
I find it amazing this film was directed by Richard Attenborough. What a monumental achievement. Can’t imaging how many sleepless nights he had wondering how the next day shooting would go. Brilliant film.
@tonnywildweasel8138Ай бұрын
Excellent !! Thanks for all your hard work, I appreciate it a LOT 👍 Greets from the Netherlands 🇳🇱, TW.
@jimmatthews1889Ай бұрын
1977 star wars & A bridge to far , what a year to go to the Cinema as a 12 yr old boy
@rsautosiowАй бұрын
first time seeing it and this movie well good
@viclimited9081Ай бұрын
Close encounters of the third kind
@viclimited9081Ай бұрын
@@jimmatthews1889 .......Rocky..? ......niah...76 I know but they were still in line round the block in 77....
@MickeyHassanАй бұрын
After The Longest Day, this certainly was the best one.
@DT-wp4hk4 күн бұрын
Klik klak.
@_6079SMITHАй бұрын
My uncle was in one of the planes that landed at Arnhem, and he survived and passed away about 15 years ago.
@rossrockomurphy22778 сағат 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.
@johnallen8094Ай бұрын
My mums neighbour was a paratrooper that survived operation market garden his name was Derek Calder !
@adityabhaskare399214 күн бұрын
Have seen this movie 3-4 times and still I feel like watching it again, it has a special place
@RickL_was_hereАй бұрын
Dad was born in Holland June 2,1944. His family left at some point after that, not sure the timing but I really should ask. Now in Canada.
@rafalzych8031Ай бұрын
General Sosabowski was right. Great film.
@dimon44Ай бұрын
And he was deprived of his brigade command by Gen. Browning right after the market garden as he dared to disagree with these idiotic orders.
@lyndoncmp5751Ай бұрын
Sosabowski was all in favour of Market Garden. It was the previous plan Operation Comet he was not happy about. Market Garden strengthened the paratroop numbers by almost 3 times. This film is very inaccurate and skewed.
@lyndoncmp5751Ай бұрын
@@dimon44 Browning offered his brigade to be enlarged into a full division with the addition of British troops but Sosabowski rejected the offer. Browning didn't get rid of Sosabowski. Browning was himself got rid of out of the Airborne before the end of 1944 and had no jurisdiction over the removal of Sosabowski. Browning was already in Burma in an administration position in December 1944.
@dimon44Ай бұрын
@@lyndoncmp5751 thank you for all these insights, I was not aware of this context. Greetings from Poland.
@lyndoncmp5751Ай бұрын
@@dimon44You're welcome. Browning wasn't even the commander of First Allied Airborne Army. The American General Brereton was. Sadly this film is very inaccurate. Greetings back, from England. I am currently enjoying a Polish crime drama on Netflix, called Signs. Subtitled, as I like to hear the original voices and language. Best wishes. ✌️
@IanCross-xj2gjАй бұрын
16:00 Market Garden was a major failure of intelligence. 20:30 The Dutch resistance correctly identified the Panzer division at Arnhem. The whole operation was always doomed. Sadly, many brave men died. Lest we forget. Operation Berlin, the evacuation plan. Ironic title.
@dovetonsturdee7033Ай бұрын
The Dutch Resistance identified that the remnants of two SS Panzer Divisions were in the area, but that most of their armoured vehicles had been taken away for servicing and repair. Despite the 'errors' in the movie, there was no German armour in the Arnhem area.
@TributevideoАй бұрын
@@dovetonsturdee7033 There were tanks in the Arnhem area, there is more than enough photographic evidence for it.
@dovetonsturdee7033Ай бұрын
@@Tributevideo No, there were not. To quote from the 'Market Garden Archive' which knows something about the subject :- On Sunday September 17 1944, the first day of Operation Market Garden, two SS Panzer Divisions were located near Arnhem. In Apeldoorn, Dieren, Zutphen and Doetinchem about 7,000 SS soldiers were stationed from the 9th SS Armored Division Hohenstaufen and the 10th SS Armored Division Frundsberg. A day after the airborne landings, on Monday, September 18, the British first encountered tanks during the advance to Arnhem. For years everyone had the image that the tanks that emerged during the battles during the Battle of Arnhem belonged to those two armored divisions. The dozens of photos of destroyed German tanks in Arnhem and Oosterbeek seem to confirm the image that the presence of the two heavily armed SS Panzer Divisions proved to be disastrous for the British airborne troops. However, that is not the case. General Bittrich, in command of the two German divisions, stated after the war that his troops had almost no tanks left during the Battle of Arnhem. Almost all of his tanks and Sturmgeschütze had been destroyed by the Allies during the battle at Falaise. At the start of the airborne landings, Bittrich had a total of five tanks and Sturmgeschütze , three of which were deployable. Most of the armored vehicles where he also had access to, came from the 9th SS-Aufklärung-Abteilung of Sturmbahnführer Viktor Grabner. Incidentally, the column of more than twenty Grabner vehicles was completely shot on Monday 18 September by the British soldiers at the Rhine Bridge. The few tanks that Bittrich had at the start of the fighting were deployed for the first time on Monday, September 18, against the battalion of John Frost at the Rhine Bridge. Until then, tanks played no role in the fighting in Arnhem. By the way: the two tanks that general Bittrich deployed against the men at the bridge on September 18, were both destroyed by British anti-tank guns. So where, then, did the rest of the dozens of tanks during the Battle of Arnhem come from? The answer to that begins with Field Marshal Walter Model. Model was the highest German commander in the Netherlands. Coincidentally, he had taken up residence in Oosterbeek. After the airborne landings, Model fled to the headquarters of General Bittrich in Doetinchem, 20 miles north east of Arnhem. Model, who was known for his improvisational talent, ordered from Doetinchem to send all possible armored units that the Germans could mass to the Netherlands. Tank units were put on trains across Germany via Blitztransporte . These Blitztransporte meant that the tank trains were given priority over all other train transport. Even German tank units from Denmark and Austria were sent to the Netherlands. They were not only sent to Arnhem. Some of the German tanks were sent to North Brabant, south of Nijmegen, to prevent the Allies from sending troops and equipment to the north. In addition to tanks, Model also sent dozens of Flak units, artillery units and mortar units to the fighting in Arnhem to deal with the British airborne troops. The presence of so many heavy weapons in Arnhem and Oosterbeek therefore had nothing to do with the presence of the two German armored divisions. They were the result of the rapid reaction of the German army command in order to defeat the British at Arnhem. Moreover, the British Intelligence Officer, Brian Urquart, portrayed as 'Major Fuller' in the movie, in a disgracefully false manner, also stated that there were few, if any, tanks. His prime concern was that the experienced staff of the two SS divisions might react to the attack in far more rapid and effective a manner than allied planners had expected. He was, of course, correct. You probably won't believe me, but perhaps instead you might refer to the archive I mentioned at the top of this post instead?
@TributevideoАй бұрын
@@dovetonsturdee7033 There were tanks from Kampfgruppe Möller in Arnhem and Oosterbeek.i have personally spoken to veterans, who have fought tanks in Oosterbeek and Arnhem. There are photographs to prove tanks were destroyed in the city. The movie Theirs The Glory (also on my channel), shows the very same tanks they destroyed. Just because Bittrich stated he ALMOST had no tanks does not mean some were there. Of course he would say there were not his tanks, he lost the war and was ashamed for it!
@dovetonsturdee7033Ай бұрын
@@Tributevideo I never considered eith Brian Urquart, nor the historian Cornelius Ryan to have been particularly ardent nazis, yet they say the same thing as the Archive. Of course there were a significant number of tanks and SPGs involved in the battle later, as a result of Model's intervention, but that doesn't mean that they were there on 17 September, and that Allied Intelligence was in error. Certainly, the supposed photographs in the movie, allegedly shown by 'Major Fuller' to Browning, did not exist, at least in so far that they were not taken in the Arnhem area. I will not argue with you, but will simply say that I do not accept the allegations in the awful movie of typical Limey incompetence with regard to the tanks claim, any more than I would accept the 'drinking tea' insult created so that a major US star, Robert Redford, could 'strut his stuff.' Perhaps you might view a very detailed analysis? : battledetective.com/casefiles19.html ( The Lost Aerial Photos.of Arnhem ) Which goes into considerable detail.
@markmitera4521Ай бұрын
This has always been one of my favorite WWII movies.
@malgorzatalange9202Ай бұрын
I like Gene Hackman as Gen Sosabowski. General ended up as a factory worker in England.
@tomaszwidawski2712Ай бұрын
An excellent interpretation. Gene Hackman nailed it perfectly🙂
@albertopiergiorgi598019 күн бұрын
@@tomaszwidawski2712 @tomaszwidawski2712 Pięknie pojechał z tą inteligentną mniejszością. Ta rola Hackmana to taki mały pomnik Generała.
@ketch-fv2eiАй бұрын
Great film so sad so many people die for the stupidity of so called leaders.
@myriaddsystemsАй бұрын
I cannot believe the massive undertaking that this film must have been- an operation Market Garden in itself
@THEOUTCASTSCREATIVEАй бұрын
I did a fancut of this movie, but added loads of scenes and cut some others, regraded and rescored some parts
@IanCross-xj2gjАй бұрын
You did an excellent job. This is a memorable war movie. A fine tribute to those brave men eighty years on.
@bxanchezoАй бұрын
Terrific job mate! Absolutely fantastic! Thank you so much for your effort!
@piotrzaniewski1726Ай бұрын
CHWAŁA WIELKIEJ ....POLSCE .!..........gen SOSABOWSKI miał rację
@hiramabiff201720 күн бұрын
I never knew this was a re-make. " Theirs Is the Glory " was a 1946 version I caught on tv the other day. It was quite well made for it's time.
@DavidSmith-fs5qjАй бұрын
It’s hard to believe now but the Narrator got it all wrong. To claim that the Second World War was in its fifth year and still going Hitlers way it nonsense. Hitlers failure to take Moscow and the shattering defeat at Stalingrad marked the turning point of the war.
@psalmno.51Ай бұрын
You make at least two great points and even "artistic licence" can barely account for the loose words used here. But we forget that films like this are entertainment first and accurate second, or even last. There's a free film on KZbin about the development of the Bradley Infantry Fighting Vehicle and arguments rage in comments there about the accuracy of it. It makes me laugh, but some folk are not for laughing!
@mortenfrosthansen8425 күн бұрын
The war started in 1939 and in 1944 d-day happened.. but the russians didn't enter Poland and Germany until 1944
@KrisCorby-iv8dg17 күн бұрын
Yeah, its a movie dude!...🙄😒
@xenaluck5 күн бұрын
that was the other front. this story is about this front. The eastern front can be considered another war altogether history has now shown that the Eastern Front had no good guys just 2 different evils.
@psalmno.515 күн бұрын
@@xenaluck You make a great point and I've read Anthony Beevor's opus Stalingrad twice and I still don't know who to feel most sorry for. I've also read Adam Zamoyski's 1812, Napoleon's Fatal March on Moscow twice. There too, my "loyalties" are divided.
@alexanderfleming3338Ай бұрын
I like this version better! Great job making it more accurate.
@RedStarRogueАй бұрын
"Airborne Troops running for the bridge in the open road has been removed" I liked that scene though....I play that music in my head whenever I'm running for the bus stop.
@rogerlynch527925 күн бұрын
Fun Fact Back in those days AUDREY HEPBURN was living in AHRNEIM together with her mother in her Grandparent´s house there. She had rejected a role in the movie because it was to traumatic to her.
@Mr.BassmanАй бұрын
This movie is a true classic, incredible cast (most legends combined in one place ever?) and the whole thing is very well done, a bit off historically but it's a great movie. My favorite war movie of all time.
@pauldelves39423 күн бұрын
Wow…..just wow. Thanks for this. Hope springs eternal…👍👍
@katyalacrua6793Ай бұрын
Great cast👏👏
@muzaffarmohamed83548 күн бұрын
Really, it was an awesome, well produced war movies. Now in enhanced HD format Beautiful
@glennhorvath879Ай бұрын
Eisenhower's name translates to Iron Fang (Hauer). That must have given some Germans a few chills.
@patrickrose1221Ай бұрын
Haven't seen this for years, thanks 😉👍
@injashiranАй бұрын
Both my grandpas, contributed to the Norwegian resistance at great peril..(They both survived;but never wanted to talk about it...)
@myriaddsystemsАй бұрын
My god he's still alive "orderly". That had me in floods of tears😢
@venkatrammohangovind4092Ай бұрын
Great generalship was not shown by F. M. Montgomery but by Lt. General Wilhelm. Beitrich of German army as soon as he heard that there was heavy allied air bombardment in arnem area and simoultaneously Montgomery s forces attacked in North he immediately ordered available S. S. Panzer Division to hold and defend the arnem bridge with full might. His action was saved the day for germans.
@andrewflindall9048Ай бұрын
To be fair, it was difficult for Monty to show great generalship when he'd been sidelined from the operation. At least until Ike needed a fall guy when it turned out he'd jumped in a bit too early to take the credit for winning the war.
@AverageWagie202427 күн бұрын
It wasnt even Montgomery's operation. He had no authority over the 1st Allied Airborne Army.
@tourismfopa437610 күн бұрын
A few years ago I drove with a friend from Leiden to see the bridge because of this movie.
@ovedj333Ай бұрын
A stellar cast and a stellar movie, unashamed to show raw human emotion and religious sentiment!
@sverrearnes7769Ай бұрын
One of the best war movies ever. But I could see they have removed scenes. Which is quite a crime-
@steli8unz318Ай бұрын
All those German soldiers with the double bolt….. I didn’t know they had so many electricians in their ranks.
@butchespere167523 күн бұрын
Saw this movie 40 years ago. It has so many moments that stays in your head long after you exited the movie house. That scene involving James Caan fulfilling his promise to a fellow soldier that he won't let him die is one of them. And then that explosive scene that followed the shout, "Ordnance, commence! Fire!!!"
@RubyMarkLindMillyАй бұрын
The Spitfire wingwaggle is fantastic 👌 ❤
@myriaddsystemsАй бұрын
Yeah I noticed that too
@Chanty_lly2 күн бұрын
@1:50:11 best part :]
@RubyMarkLindMillyАй бұрын
Superb film so close yet so far.....
@Swampy-CamelАй бұрын
Can’t believe you have cut some of the best bits out!
@Swampy-CamelАй бұрын
@Pumpanddump-o6v nope
@TributevideoАй бұрын
@Pumpanddump-o6v It never happened in real life, they never put him on sick leave. That's why I cut it out.
@moscuadelendaestАй бұрын
@@Emdee5632 that's the whole point of a re-cut, what do you mean?
@moscuadelendaestАй бұрын
@Emdee5632 "I could also cut up a movie and delete scenes because I don't like them" That's exactly the point.
@ahmedkadiri112714 күн бұрын
It's an all time classic without a doubt.
@Neil-dl3keАй бұрын
What agreat film with astella cast all those brave lads who fought and died will wonder why they bothered if they could see the state of england now
@ultimathule1000Ай бұрын
quite.
@binder946Ай бұрын
long live the king ❤🎉❤❤🎉
@fedup3449Ай бұрын
@@binder946 are you elfin joking?
@binder946Ай бұрын
@@fedup3449 no the war was to preserve his majesty gov from overthrow by fascist hordes from Germany
@jotape1960Ай бұрын
All these fantastic film was made with JUST analog technology. Sometimes I wonder... Is the digital technology really necessary???
@GazBurgess-c2pАй бұрын
First time watching this it's brilliant
@norastorgarlensiu1979Ай бұрын
Not full film.
@Rainer23810 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 😊
@based-24Ай бұрын
This one and Private Ryan are my favourite WWII movies
@stoobydootoo4098Ай бұрын
I read a Readers Digest shortened version of this story. But, I felt it was abridged too far.
@subhasishsingh7860Ай бұрын
50:30 This scene was in 1977.... truly ahead of its time 🔥🔥
@milosmevzelj5205Ай бұрын
Good old movie, but where is german general Student? His was saying "If only once I could command such great force of air armada" at allied landing.
@TributevideoАй бұрын
They made General Bittrich say it at 41:37.
@milosmevzelj5205Ай бұрын
@@Tributevideo Thanx for this classic. After the book this is next fine old work about Market Garden. Greetings from Slovenia.
@glennorris7397Ай бұрын
Thank you for uploading this film. Wow, this movie has not aged well. It is quite corny, indeed.
@TechnikMeister228 күн бұрын
137,000 Dutch civilians were killed in operations after D Day in WW2, mostly involving Market Garden. This excludes about 30,000 Jews who were sent to concentration camps. Allied losses in Market Garden comprised 17,000 dead or wounded and 6,500 captured. The loss rate was 60%, vastly more than D Day. Everything the Polish general predicted came true. Every flaw in Montgomerys plan came true. He never gained Churchill's or Eisenhower's confidence again. The Allied push north was postponed until the Scheldt Estuary was secured. The only benefit was that the Germans used up a lot of valuable fuel which would prevent their success a little later in the Ardennes. Eisenhower was criticised by the press in using the 82nd and 101st Airborne too much and too soon after D Day. They were sent back to France to rest. I recommend reading Arnhem by British historian Antony Beevor and David Websters book on the 101st Airborne, Parachute Infantry.
@andrewflindall904818 күн бұрын
That would be the Montgomery who got the first big formal surrender of Germans in NW Europe? It was never a matter of Eisenhower's confidence in Montgomery, it was because Montgomery showed up Eisenhower's lack of battlefield competence
@AlasdairMorrison-z8m12 минут бұрын
Battle of the Bulge?
@AverageWagie202427 күн бұрын
Market Garden was a failure because of the Americans mostly. General Brereton botching the airborne operation and General Gavin failing to capture the Nijmegen Bridge on day 1 like he was ordered to.
@Bruce-1956Ай бұрын
'Joe's bridge', named after Lieutenant Colonel Joe Vandeleur is on the Belgium/Dutch border at Lommel.
@TributevideoАй бұрын
It's not he original one though, it has been rebuild, but in it's old likeness, and reopened in September 2004, on the 60th remembrance of Market Garden!
@wsattlerАй бұрын
The bridge scene doesn't make sense, the Germans first send lightly armored vehicles, even no armor vehicles which are stopped by small arms fire, later a German tank just drives across the bridge as if on a Sunday drive.
@andrewflindall9048Ай бұрын
The bridge was held for 3-4 days (depending how you count it). Different German units came in at different times. The timescale suffers a bit, even in a 3hr film
@lyndoncmp5751Ай бұрын
It's silly because in real life no Germans tanks crossed the bridge until after all paratroop resistance stopped. No German tanks came from that side of the river anyway.
@MariusSzarwilloАй бұрын
Erwim Rommel: 'First you make plans, and later you meet enemy in the field'.
@7777maestegАй бұрын
When I first seen it, it was unusual for a movie to be over two hours (not like these days) so I called it a film too far!😂
@rowbearly6128Ай бұрын
"Saw it." You aren't speaking German ,so speak English properly mate.
@nickmansfield1Ай бұрын
@@rowbearly6128 Colloquialisms.
@rowbearly6128Ай бұрын
You sound like a f&ckwit, nobody will take you seriously.
@SignalMARK13 күн бұрын
Wer alle zwei Minuten Werbung erträgt, hat hier einen schönen dreisprachigen Film.
@pagedown419515 күн бұрын
Great cast
@caspar9794Ай бұрын
Some movies call to be seen in cinema, like this, a Sunday afternoon, wooden seats cushioned with red velvet, people smoking in the hall in the intermission, chatting in low voices in rain damp coats, bicycle lights in the pockets for the ride home.
@LuisLopez-zh9khАй бұрын
Walther Model alone probably had more actual combat experience than 2/3rds of the actual allied Generals.
@lyndoncmp5751Ай бұрын
True. Conversely, also more experience in losing battles and ground.
@LuisLopez-zh9khАй бұрын
@@lyndoncmp5751 None of the British and American Generals would have lasted 3 days in the Soviet Union. It was simply war on a vastly different scale
@kieranororke620Ай бұрын
@@LuisLopez-zh9khYes, it was on a vast scale which is why so many German generals died there, failed at their task and were captured. The scale of the eastern front didn't help the Germans either; it didn't help anyone.
@lyndoncmp5751Ай бұрын
@@LuisLopez-zh9kh Actually the Caen area in Normandy saw the densest concentration of German armour ever deployed in WW2. More panzer divisions and battalions per mile than anywhere on the Eastern Front, yet the casualty rates of the allies were FAR lower than the Soviets were suffering repeatedly.
@KKohlАй бұрын
The best war movie ever with a galaxy of famous stars n based on a true story. Action packed with intriguing battles n captivating scenes.
@digdougedyАй бұрын
Lot's of good bits missing from this "Fan cut edition"...
@TributevideoАй бұрын
read the video description why.
@streamofconsciousness5826Ай бұрын
52:29 translation, "anyone with three limbs left and one eye get back on the guns" What a nightmare watching that coming at you. 2:41:30 from all that to a cart full of sheet. never bemoan your fate. And when he drove through town for the ceasefire....
@paulinecolraine4726Ай бұрын
Let us not forget😢such courage and selflessness RIP
@MrTmn2401Ай бұрын
No ! Not Rest in Peace. Dont you ever use that again. Let them live in our hearts, forever.
@adambane1719Ай бұрын
@@MrTmn2401 RIP
@Some_Guy_619 күн бұрын
People often blame Montgomery for this. But he was barely involved.
@tedzawistowski473112 сағат бұрын
I believe he sold the idea to Eisenhower and the prime minister. He should bear a lot of the responsibility----and then for the British to say 'oh well'---are you kidding me?
@bonnieboulter9486Ай бұрын
One of the best WW2 FILMS. Based on Cornelius Ryan's book. Along with "The Longest Day". Devastating losses of British soldiers. What sacrifices.
@donjjcarroll22637 күн бұрын
Wednesday, November 13, 2024. My first viewing, great production.
@jamesdiaz7936 күн бұрын
WOW. I have been watching the film for almost half a century and it inspired me to become a paratrooper.
@lookedgood8466Ай бұрын
Brilliant! If possible, please do more "Fan Cut Edition" of classic World War II films. Perhaps "Patton" could be a candidate. Many thanks.
@RickL_was_hereАй бұрын
Good movie. The cast....
@Blog4JusticeАй бұрын
28:20 I thought that voice sounded familiar: actor Paul Copley (here: Private Wicks) later plays Matthews in the Hornblower TV series.
@jorggruhl709Ай бұрын
@@Blog4Justice … and was part of the Downton Abbey cast later on. He has the talent to make a supporting role very lively. I like the man and his works. Besides. There are many actors, who became renown in the following decades. Alun Armstrong or Michael Byrne, who also had a part in the first episode of Hornblower - The even chance.
@Blog4JusticeАй бұрын
@@jorggruhl709 Ah yes, Captain Keene. He earlier played Major Nairn in the Sharpe series. Didn't spot him in this film, though; I'll keep a look out for him when I watch it again.
@siddharthsharma6004Ай бұрын
I have watched this classic 254 times ..
@grahamhavercroft4203Ай бұрын
One of the best war films up there with the Longest Day D day film