M*A*S*H is just something else.

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Ashleigh Burton

Ashleigh Burton

13 күн бұрын

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@AdmiralJota
@AdmiralJota 11 күн бұрын
"This is so funny... in a really morbid, messed up way." Yup, that sums up MASH pretty well.
@Scary__fun
@Scary__fun 10 күн бұрын
That's what black comedies do, make fun of disturbing topics like death.. Airplane! the movie though is a parody of other movies so it's weird that Ashley thought they were similar.
@cwdkidman2266
@cwdkidman2266 3 күн бұрын
Alan Alda took over in season 4 and made MASH about HIM. During the 1972 Christmas break, most of the cast taped messages of hope and come home soon (in one piece) for the military still in Vietnam. Two who did not and loudly REFUSED were Alan Alda and Gary Burghoff. They felt that telling the soldiers and Marines in Vietnam that they hoped they'd come home soon was tantamount to supporting the War. Klinger coming on turned MASH into an unfunny ideologically liberal McHale's Navy that was wholly dedicated to the personage and career of Alan Alda. MASH the movie was extremely aware of the cruelty of the main characters. It was also extremely aware of operating a hospital just a few miles from the front. And it was aware of the "my career comes first, along with Army discipline" of Frank and Hot Lips. Alda vetoed the notion of having Duke or any white Southerners on the TV series who appeared in a decent light. Sorta like Neil Young refusing to do concerts in the South except for South Florida. So fuck him, too. I'm as progressive as the next guy but I don't like straw villains like white Southerners are only bad and are probably in the Klan shoved down my throat by quiche-eaters like Alda. The movie? Classic and more realistic and to the point than Saving Private Ryan. You just KNOW Spielberg tried to get a Black actor and an openly gay character in that squad of overaged overweight Rangers who defied physics with science fiction shots like the sniper made. MASH is about how the war, any war, fucks with your head until you're like Animal Mother in Full Metal Jacket. Who had a positive outlook. "Better you than me." Because that is how we the living must think to put the next foot in front of us and keep going. Even in a war of startling moral clarity like WW2.
@bpora01
@bpora01 11 күн бұрын
The MASH series that came out of this movie lasted like 5 times longer than the actual war.
@neilmcdonald9164
@neilmcdonald9164 11 күн бұрын
Close.3 times🎩
@erikerice9068
@erikerice9068 11 күн бұрын
Incorrect, do your research. The show lasted 11 seasons and 256 episodes. The real war lasted 1,128 days.
@MATTHEW-rp3kq
@MATTHEW-rp3kq 11 күн бұрын
as well it should be
@Vince1266
@Vince1266 11 күн бұрын
@@erikerice9068 The war actually NEVER ended. It's a cease-fire.
@erikerice9068
@erikerice9068 11 күн бұрын
@@Vince1266 well, if you want to be technical 🙄
@zainredding3476
@zainredding3476 11 күн бұрын
"..he could be on screen right now.." he's on screen right now.
@sdaniels160
@sdaniels160 11 күн бұрын
Bless your innocence, not getting the spearchucker reference.
@joedirt3449
@joedirt3449 11 күн бұрын
And in the south no less!
@dopebeets782
@dopebeets782 10 күн бұрын
Yet here you are with full knowledge of the term and you feel free to use it. Freakin racist
@ThreadBomb
@ThreadBomb 9 күн бұрын
@@joedirt3449 I think it was more of an Australian expression.
@thomasgriffiths6758
@thomasgriffiths6758 8 күн бұрын
I'm aware of the racial slur that it is but in the book as a way of deflecting he talks about his javelin throwing in school.
@TheWebcrafter
@TheWebcrafter 8 күн бұрын
@@ThreadBomb It's actually a derogatory term by American white person to describe an African American, unfortunately.
@OldMan_PJ
@OldMan_PJ 11 күн бұрын
The MASH TV show was my grandmother's favorite show. She was a nurse in WWII and the Korean War and worked in mobile hospitals like the one in MASH. She ended up getting released for medical reasons when a Korean soldiers invaded their camp and one of them came in their hospital tent and butted her in the spine with the back of his rifle. He turned his rifle and was going to bayonet her when a fellow nurse got her service revolver out in time and shot him. The crazy thing was they were trying to save the life of a Korean soldier at the time. She had so many stories to tell both from the wars and in civil life about helping save people's lives.
@Redfern42
@Redfern42 11 күн бұрын
How bad was her mobility impaired by the attack? I will assume she was not permanently paralyzed since you allude to a civilian career in the medical field...unless that was during the years between WWII and Korea.
@kellahella5286
@kellahella5286 11 күн бұрын
My father served in Korea and was seriously wounded. He wound up in a Swedish MASH unit. They weren’t speaking much English, he spoke no Swedish. they wanted to take his leg, he was having none of it. He won the argument. He watched the series MASH religiously. He found it somewhat cathartic.
@jean-paulaudette9246
@jean-paulaudette9246 11 күн бұрын
Maybe the Korean soldier they were working to save was a dickhead.
@tomstanziola1982
@tomstanziola1982 10 күн бұрын
She sounds like a strong, amazing woman!!! They all were in those days!!
@rock4u197335
@rock4u197335 12 күн бұрын
M*A*S*H stands for Mobile Army Surgical Hospital. FYI, Also the only actor that was both in the movie and T,V. series was Gary Burghoff who was Corporal Radar O'Reiley
@CasperC1451
@CasperC1451 11 күн бұрын
General Hammond G. Wood is also in both the movie and the show
@okay5045
@okay5045 11 күн бұрын
And radar was less of an innocent teddy bear in the movie.
@SurvivorBri
@SurvivorBri 11 күн бұрын
​@@CasperC1451and the guy who played Spearchucker. But he mysteriously disappeared after the first few episodes.
@Hobbes1025
@Hobbes1025 11 күн бұрын
@@CasperC1451 "Spearchucker Jones"" on the show (first season), was in the movie as another character.
@BusyBadger
@BusyBadger 11 күн бұрын
​@@Hobbes1025 Yep, Tim Brown played Hudson in the movie and was brought over to the TV series as Spearchucker Jones. Wish they would have kept him around for more than a handful of episodes, I always like both the actor and the character.
@ericwalker8636
@ericwalker8636 11 күн бұрын
One thing that's nice to see apparently go over Ashleigh's head is the idea that Spearchucker could have gotten his nickname for anything other than his athletic ability.
@stevenandcarminabeedle9089
@stevenandcarminabeedle9089 11 күн бұрын
Yeah 😒
@gazoontight
@gazoontight 11 күн бұрын
Definitely a double entendre.
@clarencewalker3925
@clarencewalker3925 11 күн бұрын
EVERYTHING goes over Ashleigh's head.
@gazoontight
@gazoontight 11 күн бұрын
@@clarencewalker3925 Sometimes I wonder whether she's putting us on or if she's really that naive.
@duanewhitacre5995
@duanewhitacre5995 11 күн бұрын
​@@gazoontight She's just from a different generation
@thequietrevolution3404
@thequietrevolution3404 11 күн бұрын
I was a Medical Technician in the Air Force during the Iraq War (2003-2007). We rotated from *Balad Air Base* via Ramstein, Germany to *Washington, DC.* One of the first things our Commanding Officer said to us was "I catch anyone joking around or doing anything similar to *MASH,* I'll court martial them on the spot." We were actually surprised he even heard of *MASH.* Needless to say, we made sure he didn't catch anybody doing anything. 😜 Great reaction!
@odysseusrex5908
@odysseusrex5908 8 күн бұрын
When I was in boot camp at Fort Knox in 1982, being the son of a career officer, I had some idea of the realities of military life. There were a lot of guys in the outfit though whose sole knowledge of the army came from old episodes of MASH. Boy did they get a shock.
@justusbraz
@justusbraz 11 күн бұрын
14:28 Lives are always at stake at a MASH. What you are seeing is them trying to cope with the absolute non stop horror of mangled bodies that they can't possibly save all of.
@annaclarafenyo8185
@annaclarafenyo8185 11 күн бұрын
What you are seeing is a drugged out director glorifying his stoner friends' idiotic lifestyle using the excuse of medical trauma to justify stoned out irresponsible behavior.
@timcarder2170
@timcarder2170 11 күн бұрын
As they called it in the TV series...*Meatball Surgery*
@pleutron
@pleutron 11 күн бұрын
ok Hawkeye
@JTSDAD67
@JTSDAD67 11 күн бұрын
@@timcarder2170 I gotta have THOSE RIBS!
@rosamariabest6069
@rosamariabest6069 2 күн бұрын
@@JTSDAD67 We want something else! We want something else! We want something else!
@rcrawford42
@rcrawford42 11 күн бұрын
"The Bickersons" was a radio show about a couple that spent the entire show cutting each other down with insults. The star was Don Ameche.
@michaelleoanrd194
@michaelleoanrd194 11 күн бұрын
And Jekyl and Hyde is a bloody book. From the 1886.
@RandomNonsense1985
@RandomNonsense1985 10 күн бұрын
aka Mortimer Duke
@odysseusrex5908
@odysseusrex5908 8 күн бұрын
@@michaelleoanrd194 Which has more than one famous movie based on it.
@jacquelinecallejas1390
@jacquelinecallejas1390 6 күн бұрын
@@michaelleoanrd194 That has been made into many movies and at least one Broadway musical. BTW in a version I saw on tv in the 70s Jack Palance played the lead and daringly for the time, it is made clear that Hyde frequents and physically abuses both Male and Female sex workers. I was a bit surprised at the time since it was on tv before there was such a thing as cable and almost anything even mildly LGBTQ was highly censored.
@SeanHendy
@SeanHendy 11 күн бұрын
More than a few decades ago, I was casevacced to a field hospital set up on an airfield. The 'ward' was in a large makeshift hangar, in the middle of which was a smaller tent setup which was the operating theatre, literally 10 metres away from my bed. A mysterious bug had taken hold in my foot, which within hours had swollen and was starting to die. I was given 24hrs to show signs of improvement or the only choice would be to surgically start removing bits of my foot. Had IV drips in both arms, one for fluids and antibiotics, the other with industrial strength painkillers which thankfully did the trick. About four or five days later i discharged myself, hobbled out, and hitched a lift back to my unit. Took more than 6 months to fully recover the feeling in my foot, after all the skin peeled off like a glove. During my stay however, a person was brought in having been shot with a large calibre round. I'll never forget seeing the surgeon's face as he walked out the back of the tent, past my bed, with the most disappointed look I've ever seen on the face of a human being, having lost the patient.
@yournamehere6002
@yournamehere6002 11 күн бұрын
Ironic how the overlapping dialogue was distracting to someone who talks over the dialogue.
@bg7893
@bg7893 11 күн бұрын
"Did they know he was taking drugs?" They gave Ho-Jon the drugs so he would fail the physical.
@keithdean9149
@keithdean9149 11 күн бұрын
They don't say it, but that is Ho Jon's body being taken away in the background of the poker scene.
@KevinCharley-er2go
@KevinCharley-er2go 11 күн бұрын
@@keithdean9149in the original script he's also the patient they were operating on when Radar brings in the blood he took from Henry
@randomjunk1977
@randomjunk1977 11 күн бұрын
"We have a lot of voices!" If there's a chaotic dialog scene with 3+ people talking over each other and no one standing out, it's probably a movie directed by Robert Altman.
@wendyrhps
@wendyrhps 11 күн бұрын
💯 🤣🤣
@NZBigfoot
@NZBigfoot 9 күн бұрын
Or an early 70's movie by Steven Spielberg...
@odysseusrex5908
@odysseusrex5908 8 күн бұрын
There's a very good scene like that in John Ford's *The Searchers.*
@rustincohle2135
@rustincohle2135 8 күн бұрын
@@NZBigfoot Spielberg only made 2 movies in the early '70s _(Duel_ and _The Sugarland Express)._ Which one are you talking about? Spielberg isn't known for overlapping dialogue.
@thomasmacdiarmid8251
@thomasmacdiarmid8251 7 күн бұрын
Since Shelley Duvall just died, Ashleigh should probably do one of her movies she did with Robert Altman, such as Nashville, Popeye, or 3 Women.
@janna-renee
@janna-renee 11 күн бұрын
As for the MASH TV series, it holds a special place in my heart. My grandfather was a WWII combat vet. By the early 1980s, he was enjoying his retirement. I was just a little kid. I didn't understand why he'd laugh his ass off at the MASH TV series. As an adult, I have seen the movie and the series, and I laugh just as hard. It helps me feel closer to my Pop-Pop.
@JKM395
@JKM395 11 күн бұрын
"Hot Lips, you incredible nincompoop" Freakin love this movie. Military humor is always a trip. When you live in a sea of death, you find humor where you can.
@courtneywallace871
@courtneywallace871 11 күн бұрын
Larry Linville as Frank Burns in the tv series is one of the greatest tv characters ever.
@Irene-ym7bx
@Irene-ym7bx 11 күн бұрын
Those snivelling lips or the stomping feet, absolute comedy gold
@user-qj6fk9px8l
@user-qj6fk9px8l 11 күн бұрын
Larry Linville WAS A GREAT CHARACTER ACTOR BEYOND MASH...... he played a cop several times; mob-connected thief that scared the hell out of you with his threats to a female character in the room; lawyers several times; accountants; a great spy controller for CIA; a Stazi-like colonel... Recurring roles on Rockford Files, Mannix, Barnaby Jones, Trapper John, Mission Impossible tv series, etc, etc
@nettiemac
@nettiemac 11 күн бұрын
Frank Burns eats worms. ;)
@curtis8966
@curtis8966 11 күн бұрын
I laughed at stuff from the movie during your review that I don’t remember laughing at before.
@turbopokey
@turbopokey 11 күн бұрын
@@user-qj6fk9px8lI remember “Trapper John, MD” and it was supposed to be the character Trapper from the tv show MASH after getting back home but many years later and recast. Was Larry reprising his Frank Burns role? Or was he playing a different character?
@MissMarchHare
@MissMarchHare 12 күн бұрын
The blond dude in glasses is Donald Sutherland. You'd love him in Kelly's Heroes.
@Eric-cp2kt
@Eric-cp2kt 11 күн бұрын
Keep them positive waves comin'!
@carlosspeicywiener7018
@carlosspeicywiener7018 11 күн бұрын
Woof woof!
@bobbrinkerhoff3592
@bobbrinkerhoff3592 11 күн бұрын
Oddball !!
@chadgillman
@chadgillman 11 күн бұрын
We need to get this movie in her line up for Veteran's Day
@simonfrederiksen104
@simonfrederiksen104 11 күн бұрын
Or in The Eagle Has Landed
@davidwalter2002
@davidwalter2002 10 күн бұрын
Don't feel bad for it not being your cup of tea, Ashleigh. Dark comedy (and especially wartime dark comedy) is not for everyone. It's also important to keep in mind the time frame of the movie. It takes place during the Korean War, but it was made during (and it's about) the Vietnam War. It's kind of difficult to get your head around that and appreciate the nuances if you're not from either of those times.
@ThreadBomb
@ThreadBomb 9 күн бұрын
I'd say the problem is that the movie is visually ugly, the sound is harsh, and the treatment of women, especially Hotlips, is pretty bad.
@rustincohle2135
@rustincohle2135 8 күн бұрын
@@ThreadBomb The visuals and sound make the movie.
@anomalysakawendy5096
@anomalysakawendy5096 7 күн бұрын
@Threadbomb So it's accurate to what it's depicting. As it should be.
@cwdkidman2266
@cwdkidman2266 7 күн бұрын
No. Right and wrong are right and wrong no matter the time or place. We absolutely CAN judge 1951 by 2024. Because we are perfect now. And we'll prove it in November by electing Hitler and his MAGA, I mean Nazi, followers. This video performance was scripted because it is too dead on. "He could be on the screen now" as he is on the screen now. Come on. This is professional wrestling. And everyone in Tennessee knows what "spearchucker" is. What an idiot for expecting us to believe that shit is real. "Oh! Too much blood in the operating room!" Jesus H. Christ.
@jacquelinecallejas1390
@jacquelinecallejas1390 6 күн бұрын
@@ThreadBomb I was trying to think of how to bring that up without having people tune out. Yes Hot Lips is hypocritical by sleeping with Frank, but given that half or more of the men are sleeping around on their wives the only excuse they have for treating her badly is because she wants military rules followed. Not saying they all had to be super sweet to her but rigging the shower to collapse to see her naked and all the guys waiting around to see was just cruel. You usually don't want your heroes to be cruel. The movie is good , don't get me wrong, but it comes from a POV where women were thought not to deserve respect and a lot of the football subplot is about her complaints being trivialized. I think the other reason this subplot was acceptable in the past is that her character symbolized the establishment during a time (the Vietnam Era) where the establishment was the VILLAIN , so the POV of the movie is you can do anything to her character and be on the side of good. They also reinforce the idea that Hawkeye and Pierce are good when the operate on the baby. Real life is however more complex and you CAN have a person do a good deed for one person and be a terrible person who harms other people if they feel like it.
@SG-js2qn
@SG-js2qn 11 күн бұрын
I think "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" will make an impression.
@jd-zr3vk
@jd-zr3vk 11 күн бұрын
The book was written by an army surgeon, who was drafted and sent to Korea. The book is more graphic than the movie. It is also hilarious.
@stevenandcarminabeedle9089
@stevenandcarminabeedle9089 11 күн бұрын
And just as random. You should check out American Daughter Goes to War by Winnie Smith. Excellent book. Not nearly as hilarious though. She was a nurse.
@Ranger1PresentsVirtualRealms
@Ranger1PresentsVirtualRealms 11 күн бұрын
Agreed, the book is far funnier than the movie (and I liked the movie). If you ever get a chance you might also find "M*A*S*H Goes to Maine" a good read as well. It involves the Finest Kind Fishmarket and Clinic' they start in Maine in honor of the "Finest Kind Pediatric Hospital & Whorehouse" that Hawkeye and Trapper go to after operating on the Congressman's son in Tokyo.
@richardcutts196
@richardcutts196 9 күн бұрын
@@Ranger1PresentsVirtualRealms There was a series of books after Mash goes to Maine but they were not nearly as good.
@danielcobbins8861
@danielcobbins8861 8 күн бұрын
Yep, Richard Hooker was his name (not his real name). Hooker was his golf swing, and professional ethics, at that time, prohibited the use of a doctors real name, on things outside of research papers. At the time that the last episode of the TV series was shown, his real name was revealed. Richard Hornberger.
@Elephant2024-wi2li
@Elephant2024-wi2li 11 күн бұрын
Fun fact: The M*A*S*H* TV series finale, titled "Goodbye, Farewell and Amen", aired on Feb 28, 1983 and received a 60.2 Nielsen rating. Making it the highest-rated telecast at the time. Those kind of numbers would be unimaginable today for a TV series.
@JL-sm6cg
@JL-sm6cg 11 күн бұрын
My favorite thing about that episode is that after it was done, the New York City water supply went almost to crisis mode because so many people held their bladders and bowels for so long they all went to the bathroom all at the same time, and the collective flush from all toilets did that.
@Elephant2024-wi2li
@Elephant2024-wi2li 11 күн бұрын
@@JL-sm6cg For real? Never heard that. That is totally wild.🚽
@CaptainFrost32
@CaptainFrost32 10 күн бұрын
​@@Elephant2024-wi2liIt actually was part of the data confirming the Nielsen rating. It made the news reports once confirmed.
@hectorsmommy1717
@hectorsmommy1717 10 күн бұрын
Isn't it still the most watched non-sports TV episode? Eliminate the Superb Owls and I think it is.
@stevesheroan4131
@stevesheroan4131 10 күн бұрын
@@hectorsmommy1717The “Superb Owls” must have been one incredible show to beat out M*A*S*H*. Best spelling mistake ever, lol.
@roykassinger6903
@roykassinger6903 9 күн бұрын
"This is funny, in a morbid, messed up way" nicely describes MASH.
@jeanine6328
@jeanine6328 11 күн бұрын
Just a tidbit here as to women wearing pants, as recently as the 90’s a company could require women wear dresses or skirts while the me. Wore suits. The women could not wear a pant suit. That’s the kind of stuff feminists were wrapping up the fight over. It was done by 2000, we have it pretty easy if we’re qualified now. The problem is the unqualified want standards lowered for them. Putting my soapbox away now. ✊ Girl power.
@gutz1981
@gutz1981 11 күн бұрын
Its amazing to think, the son of the director wrote the song as a joke as his dad said "Write a song that is kind sad and funny." and that song would go on to be the main theme of the long running tv series and the son made more money from this "joke" of a song did over the years than his father made for directing this film.
@DougRayPhillips
@DougRayPhillips 11 күн бұрын
Yup. But in the TV show, it's just an instrumental. Still a payday.
@MartinBeerbom
@MartinBeerbom 11 күн бұрын
The really funny thing is that the son only wrote the lyrics which weren't used on the TV series.
@ixadorillcasterthe3rd146
@ixadorillcasterthe3rd146 11 күн бұрын
He was also gonna sell the song in exchange for a guitar. Instead of royalties.
@sweeney60
@sweeney60 11 күн бұрын
As someone who survived a suicide attempt, I was amazed at how accurate the lyrics are. I think that kid had some darker feelings than he wanted to admit to.
@nccvball
@nccvball 11 күн бұрын
Robert Altman was the director. He wanted a silly song for John Schuck's funeral scene. Robert tried writing the song himself but could not. If I remember correctly, he asked his then 15 year old son Mike, while eating breakfast, if he could write something. Mike was done before breakfast was over. Robert thought so much of the song, he also used it as the theme song. It is estimated that Mike has received about a million dollars in royalty payments over the decades. His dad earned a flat 70K for directing.
@michaelpapp5518
@michaelpapp5518 11 күн бұрын
29:31 they were giving Ho-Jon the drugs to make him seem like a bad fit for the army. They were trying to protect their friend from becoming a soldier. Sadly, the Korean doctor saw through it.
@mokthemagicman
@mokthemagicman 9 күн бұрын
Cracks me up every time Ashleigh watches a movie, laughs and is completely engaged and having fun, then gives it a low score at the end.
@michaelm6948
@michaelm6948 9 күн бұрын
She's in way over her head watching films, from different periods, and her woke compass is thrown out of sync. If one of her present day sacred cows are mentioned, she gets confused, and has to figure a woke exit from the confusion.
@kenmott6387
@kenmott6387 11 күн бұрын
"How y'all got on the same shirt?" 😂 It's a uniform! They ALL wear the same shirt... lol
@dpcnreactions7062
@dpcnreactions7062 11 күн бұрын
I slapped my head when Ash said "I don't know what Donald Sutherland looks like so he could be on screen right now and I would know". Donald has been in most scenes for far.🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@Irene-ym7bx
@Irene-ym7bx 11 күн бұрын
And he is so difficult to recognise.....
@cindygray6009
@cindygray6009 11 күн бұрын
Yep! My first thought was, "He's the one that looks rather like Keifer Sutherland"
@thomasklausen4596
@thomasklausen4596 11 күн бұрын
Right, so - pull up a sandbag, story time. Some years ago, I made my living working on a movie lot. A sales rep (woman, millennial, rather cute) would show up about once per month with her company credit card and buy lunch for us in the "commissary" - Hollywood-speak for what's actually a nice restaurant right on the lot, with waiters and tablecloths. So we were enjoying lunch when Donald Sutherland walks in and sits two tables down. I nudge our sales rep slightly - seeing a star is why we're here, right? She has no idea. Who? I'm properly scandalized, start listing movies in a slightly exasperated whisper, and then, suddenly, the lightbulb goes on. "Oh! Kiefer's dad!" And that was the day I realized I'd aged a generation.
@johnmcnulty2705
@johnmcnulty2705 11 күн бұрын
I'm pretty sure she thought Tom Skarritt was Donald Sutherland until the very end.
@JoePa133
@JoePa133 8 күн бұрын
@@thomasklausen4596 So, a millennial girl hadn't seen _MASH, Don't Look Now, Klute, Kelly's Heroes, The Dirty Dozen,_ or _Ordinary People?_ Huh, fascinating story.
@vincentsaia6545
@vincentsaia6545 11 күн бұрын
Hot Lips was supposed to disappear after the shower incident but Altman was so impressed with Sally Kellerman he kept her in the film
@theterriblegamer1228
@theterriblegamer1228 11 күн бұрын
My Grandfather was a 20 year Navy veteran and served in both Korea and Vietnam. He hated the MASH TV show because he said it reminded him of the doctors he met. Most of them were drafted and acted unprofessional. According to him the show was an accurate representation of the shenanigans that occurred. He was 18 years old in 1952, Graduated early in December and enlisted. He spent a few weeks in boot camp and then 5 months in Korea patrolling until the armistice and then aided in evacuations for the remainder of his deployment. He retired from the Navy in 1973 as a Lieutenant. He served 3 tours in Vietnam and was involved in the Gulf of Tonkin incident that started that war. His ship was damaged and had to be towed. We have a picture of him holding a piece of shrapnel from a rocket that hit the mess hall on the ship. They offloaded the crew in the Philippines and the ship was towed to San Francisco before getting repaired. During that time he was reassigned to search and rescue of downed airmen in the gulf during the initial air raids before the ground invasion.
@felpawgaming8767
@felpawgaming8767 11 күн бұрын
I used to watch The M.A.S.H. TV series and when I found out that the M.A.S.H. theme songs is called "suicide is painless" and it actually has lyrics and I listen to it I was shocked. And then I finally saw the movie it really makes it all hit home more theme fits the show perfectly.
@pollyparrot9447
@pollyparrot9447 5 күн бұрын
The lyrics were written by Robert Altman's 14 year old son. They sound just like they were written by a 14 year old.
@Martman5150
@Martman5150 11 күн бұрын
Just wondering if KELLY'S HEROES was on that list. If not, it should have been.
@goldenageofdinosaurs7192
@goldenageofdinosaurs7192 11 күн бұрын
It definitely should’ve been in there!
@chairmanmeow2413
@chairmanmeow2413 11 күн бұрын
Always with the Negative ways
@Martman5150
@Martman5150 11 күн бұрын
@@chairmanmeow2413 He actually said, WAVES, like when people put out bad Karma. This was one of Donald's most insane roles. And what a cast.
@shallendor
@shallendor 11 күн бұрын
@@Martman5150 It is my favorite of that style of movies! Burning Bridges is also a fantastic song that i can't help but think of Kelly's Heroes, when i hear it!
@reesebn38
@reesebn38 11 күн бұрын
@@chairmanmeow2413 🤣
@w.p8960
@w.p8960 11 күн бұрын
You missed the fact that the dentist was hung like a horse
@Capohanf1
@Capohanf1 11 күн бұрын
NO he tried to kill himself with drugs not a rope!
@monacaravetta
@monacaravetta 11 күн бұрын
I once had a nice conversation with Tom Skerritt and I asked which film did he have the most fun acting in and he said "without a doubt, MASH. He said it was a nonstop kegger LOL!" When I asked which was the most important to him, he said ALIEN. Super nice guy.
@odysseusrex5908
@odysseusrex5908 8 күн бұрын
ALIEN's a good movie but, important? I wonder what he saw in it?
@mondegreen9709
@mondegreen9709 7 күн бұрын
@@odysseusrex5908 Probably the most important for his career.
@richardzinns5676
@richardzinns5676 11 күн бұрын
It's typical of a Robert Altman movie that some things become clearer on a second viewing, such as: Very early in the movie, when Hawkeye and Duke first arrive, they are warned off of trying to score with one particular female officer, but do not hear the actual conversations, so we do not know why. Only much later, when Hot Lips comes to complain to Colonel Blake after the shower incident, do we learn that the colonel is sleeping with that officer - a fact which also explains why he told her that an item he recently acquired was "sent to him," quickly restarting his sentence in order not to say that his wife sent it to him.
@MacDorsai
@MacDorsai 12 күн бұрын
Ashleigh. There are movies I love that didn't work for you. Conversely, there were 5 star movies for you that left me looking for the 40 minutes I didn't enjoy. My point is, as individuals, some things rock our world, some are a rock to the head. Never apologize for your honest opinion of what you like. I think I speak for all of us who watch your channel, we'd rather have your honesty than bowing to a perceived pressure to like something that a bunch of people like just because they are a bunch and you are one. Keep being refreshing and honest. That's what we love. Dolly would agree.
@johnnygood4831
@johnnygood4831 11 күн бұрын
Excellent comment. That is totally true. We like different things.
@Kanieht.L
@Kanieht.L 11 күн бұрын
Well said .... completely agree ...
@jenniferrussellstudio
@jenniferrussellstudio 11 күн бұрын
Hear, hear!
@stevenandcarminabeedle9089
@stevenandcarminabeedle9089 11 күн бұрын
THIS.
@2WarVet
@2WarVet 10 күн бұрын
AMEN
@user-ol4qz1cx3j
@user-ol4qz1cx3j 11 күн бұрын
As a medical professional who has served in the military, MASH is surprisingly accurate.
@lisaspikes4291
@lisaspikes4291 11 күн бұрын
One thing you have to know about doctors and nurses. We can talk about blood and body fluids and other stuff while we’re eating. It’s just shop talk for us. 🤣
@AI_Image_Master
@AI_Image_Master 10 күн бұрын
What is important about this movie is that it created a new style of film making that became prevalent in the 1970's. Of course it created one of the biggest TV shows ever. The final episode is one of the most watched TV shows ever and was watched by as many people that watched the Super Bowl.
@penfold7455
@penfold7455 11 күн бұрын
"I hear so many voices!" Welcome to the world of Robert Altman movies.
@KRAFTWERK2K6
@KRAFTWERK2K6 11 күн бұрын
Yup. THAT and a lot of tele-lens shots :)
@chefskiss6179
@chefskiss6179 11 күн бұрын
Had to scroll to double check no one already commented, literally word for word what I was going to comment, lol! Welcome indeed to the world of Robert Altman. 😂
@brads2362
@brads2362 11 күн бұрын
Robert Altman is one of the hardest directors to introduce newbies to because he's so his own particular voice that you have to get on his wavelength.
@Johnny_Socko
@Johnny_Socko 11 күн бұрын
"It seemed like stuff was happening just to happen." Yep, and that's another Altman trademark. (And although I love the ensemble nature of his films, I've never liked his over-use of zoom shots, I find it super distracting.)
@keithsimpson6563
@keithsimpson6563 11 күн бұрын
I'm hearing voices as well. Sincerely yours David Berkowitz ( aka Son of Sam )
@diegosuarez1563
@diegosuarez1563 11 күн бұрын
MASH was very controversial at the time. It was the first movie to actually show surgery, blood and guts in the operating room. Government higher ups didn't want the public to see all that, in fear that it would turn the public against the war.
@LaBlueStateGirl
@LaBlueStateGirl 11 күн бұрын
Just to be clear about which war we are speaking of, even though the war in the film is the Korean War, the movie was a thinly disguised Vietnam war protest picture.
@Fred_L.
@Fred_L. 11 күн бұрын
If I remember correctly it was also the first mainstream film (or one of the first) to include the word Fuck, the new MPAA rating system being introduced shortly before.
@stargazer1682
@stargazer1682 11 күн бұрын
And not for nothing; as the increased televised coverage of the Vietnam War - the first war to have that level of coverage - is said to have contributed to the war having far less public support than past wars; on account of the realities of the war being beamed to everyone's homes on a regular basis.
@reesebn38
@reesebn38 11 күн бұрын
@@LaBlueStateGirl Ya the Studio forced them to say Korean War.
@thomashiggins9320
@thomashiggins9320 11 күн бұрын
Specifically, the Vietnam War, although the film is set during the Korean War.
@Generic_guy_with_glasses
@Generic_guy_with_glasses 11 күн бұрын
Fun Fact the series finally of the show titled Goodbye, Farewell, and Amen had more viewers than the Superbowl of that year. You would like the show itself more than the movie I recommend watching it on your own time because it's got like 11 seasons.
@stevenandcarminabeedle9089
@stevenandcarminabeedle9089 11 күн бұрын
Same!
@JonS0107
@JonS0107 11 күн бұрын
Growing up during the Vietnam War era I can tell you this theme song stresses out a lot of people including myself. Even though the tv series based on the movie doesn't use the lyrics it still doesn't help.
@vincentsaia6545
@vincentsaia6545 11 күн бұрын
Robert Altman encouraged the cast to improvise. He put microphones on every actor including the background players and shot the movie in a wide angle lense so he could zoom in on anyone so the actors made sure to converse in character at all times
@glawnow1959
@glawnow1959 11 күн бұрын
One of the improvisers can be seen at the river discussing Hot Lips: Carl Gottlieb, who later co-wrote the screenplay for "Jaws."
@matthewstott3493
@matthewstott3493 11 күн бұрын
Not a fishing lure, he's typing flies as in fly fishing. You wrap thread, tie knots, affix feathers and the like to a fishook and wrap it up. Ends up looking like nymph or black fly, etc. The patience and focus on tying flies is similar to surgical stitching and would ensure you maintained your fine motor skills.
@JL-sm6cg
@JL-sm6cg 11 күн бұрын
I would think Ashleigh, being a southerner, would know a little something like that.
@voraciousblackstn
@voraciousblackstn 10 күн бұрын
M*A*S*H is a war protest movie. It was made at the beginning of the Vietnam War. They purposefully used Vietnamese motifs (the wok hats for example as well as the name Ho-Jon when Kim would be more accurate). It may be set during Korea, but it was more about Vietnam. That said, I can understand the 2 star rating. Being a veteran myself, I love the movie. It does capture a lot about the military life. Dark humor, have to jump to work so fast you can't even get your uniform on (like when they were operating in their golf clothes), even the ending where they get orders to go home (you make good friends in the military and when you get orders to go somewhere else you just drop everything and go). It hits different for me, but that is just how it is. Not a movie I want to watch all the time either, but I consider it a must watch.
@toddbuchheim8724
@toddbuchheim8724 10 күн бұрын
The one thing that not a lot of people realize is this movie came out during the Vietnam War and was an Anti-War movie set in Korea.
@kevinhayes1656
@kevinhayes1656 11 күн бұрын
In case you didn’t know, they didn’t have regular milk. They had powdered milk, which means you had to add water to it to reconstitute it.
@mikerhodes8454
@mikerhodes8454 11 күн бұрын
The TV series finale was the only time we convinced a teacher to put off a test by another day, because we said no one would be studying that night, we'd all be watching the MASH finale.
@What_Makes_Climate_Tick
@What_Makes_Climate_Tick 11 күн бұрын
I was preparing for the school musical and had rehearsal. I only saw the last bit of that finale.
@vapoet
@vapoet 11 күн бұрын
During the MASH finale I was washing the dishes and bussing tables at a Dennys. Someone brought in a TV and due to everyone being at home, we had very few interruptions.
@stevenandcarminabeedle9089
@stevenandcarminabeedle9089 11 күн бұрын
Oh that’s a one and done. I’d rather take the test 😭 in hindsight of course.
@vapoet
@vapoet 11 күн бұрын
"Who died?" Oh Ashleigh, it's a war.
@reinrose82
@reinrose82 11 күн бұрын
Jekel and Hyde is a novel. Dr Jekel develops a potion that unleashes his inner, more powerful/aggressive persona called Mr Hyde. The Incredible Hulk is based on it.
@odysseusrex5908
@odysseusrex5908 8 күн бұрын
The book is by Robert Louis Stevenson and is a metaphor for drug addiction.
@monsoon1234567890
@monsoon1234567890 11 күн бұрын
MASH used to often come on after Saturday morning cartoons. As soon as that music started it was the que to shut off the TV play. Then I decided to watch an episode when I was older and ended up watching every episode. MASH has some of the best and funniest writing of any show.
@reesebn38
@reesebn38 11 күн бұрын
I was born in the mid-60s. I was grew up on the show in the 70s didn't see the movie until the 90s. If you were around in the 70s you watched M.A.S.H. Alan Alda and Wayne Rogers will always feel like the real Hawkeye and Trapper.
@Redfern42
@Redfern42 11 күн бұрын
M*A*S*H right after cartoons? Where I lived, it was sports that signaled the end of the cartoon run. Must have been a regional thing. What I personally recall was that CBS, the network that aired the series first run would, during the late 70s, play an additional episode once a week during the 11 PM or midnight hour. I somehow got it in my mind (O was in my mid teens at that time) those were somehow unexpurgated or "uncut" episodes with more adult content. Much later I learned that, nope, just the same content, just an extra airing in an era when "marathon" broadcasts of a specific show were just...well, they just didn't exist!
@qwaurk985
@qwaurk985 11 күн бұрын
IT WAS A BABY!
@hoagsmash4188
@hoagsmash4188 11 күн бұрын
You and I are of similar age my friend! I grew up hating that song for that reason LOL
@JTSDAD67
@JTSDAD67 11 күн бұрын
We always got RAT PATROL after cartoons. I loved that show.
@sergioaccioly5219
@sergioaccioly5219 11 күн бұрын
Just reminding people that viagra was invented around 1998, not the 50s.
@williamdegnan4718
@williamdegnan4718 11 күн бұрын
I'm sure that they had access to other vasodialators, such as nitroglycerin. But the Painless Pole's problems were chiefly between his ears. When he woke up he discovered that he was wrongly self-diagnosed or at least totally cured. Note: this occurred before the invention of the 🍆 emoticon, so I will not use it in this comment.
@glenerickson358
@glenerickson358 11 күн бұрын
"Viagra was invented in 1989 by British Pfizer scientists Peter Dunn and Albert Wood while they were researching a treatment for high blood pressure and chest pain. "
@roboticd
@roboticd 11 күн бұрын
​@@williamdegnan4718 nitroglycerin is the opposite of a vasoconstrictor.
@F1083
@F1083 11 күн бұрын
Spanish fly
@Warlocke000
@Warlocke000 11 күн бұрын
@@F1083 That's just an irritant. I find waking up to a hot nurse to be much more effective... uh, purely theoretically. Call it an informed opinion.
@mem1701movies
@mem1701movies 11 күн бұрын
Trivia: the director’s son wrote the lyrics to the theme in 15 minutes. Even though it’s not heard in the TV SHOW he still gets paid!
@amacampbell
@amacampbell 10 күн бұрын
Add to the trivia: because of the royalties from the song, he made more than his dad did from the movie.
@jweav151
@jweav151 11 күн бұрын
It was a sleeping pill and as they said he was the best equipped dentist in the army. Also, the show and I assume the novel, show more of why Frank and Margaret are disliked. Frank is an incompetent doctor and granted the shower prank was too far, but early on Margaret is very strict with the doctors and her nurses.
@Theomite
@Theomite 11 күн бұрын
42:05 "Who died?!" It was Ho-John. It's what's left of a deleted subplot where Ho-John ends up as a patient by getting shot in battle. The body on the Jeep is his. Robert Altman was a revered late-20th century director; his specialty was naturalistic lighting & photography with overlapping dialogue, most of it improvised. MASH put him on the map, but some of his best stuff is NASHVILLE, SHORT CUTS, and THE PLAYER. Funny note about Sutherland: Altman's style was so radical in 1969 that people thought him incompetent. Both Sutherland and Elliot Gould (Trapper) tried to get him fired behind his back. After the movie became a hit, Gould owned up to it but Sutherland didn't. Gould worked with Altman regularly for the rest of Altman's life. Altman never hired Sutherland again. "The Bickersons" was a very popular radio program with Don Ameche and Francis Langford about a constantly-fighting married couple. If it makes you feel better, real M*A*S*H veterans have said no camp would ever treat their head nurse the way they treat Hot Lips. A head nurse was the second-most important person in the camp next to the supply clerk because she kept everything running smoothly. The whole thing with Hot Lips is that she was a"regular-Army"--she was Establishment, not a draftee, so she was by the book, while everybody else is a civilian trying to get through the day. MASH is an anti-Establishment film so all the heroes are scoundrels and the villains are clean-cut authority figures--so Hot Lips is a "villain" until she lightens up.
@user-gl5dq2dg1j
@user-gl5dq2dg1j 10 күн бұрын
Wouldn't every Head nurse, and all the nurse for that matter be 'regular' army as they had to volunteer? Did the military continue to draft doctors after the Korean War, or had they made the benefits enough that the had enough volunteers, did they draft the doctors because the military had been drastically reduced after the conclusion of the second world war?
@Theomite
@Theomite 9 күн бұрын
@@user-gl5dq2dg1j I think Hot Lips is an anomaly of sorts. She says she thinks of the Army as her home, so she's likely a career woman who never planned to do anything else. Notice how officious and formal she is compared to everybody else--she may be from a military family and never learned how to socialize with regular civilians. When she finally does learn to cut loose, she's awkward and overzealous because she doesn't know how to be a normal person. Keep in mind also that Hawkeye is a captain but he was drafted, so if it happens to doctors, it must have happened to nurses as well. Spearchucker is a neurosurgeon but was going pro football until he was drafted so this keeps happening. As far as after Korea I don't know. I do know that Vietnam was different because by then, the socioeconomics of the US had changed. The White House was worried about losing voting ground to a massive middle-class who didn't want to lose their children in a new war. It's part of the reason Project 100,000 went into effect. I also know that one way people could stay out of the draft was to stay in college and pursue high degrees. Afterward, it may have depended on how necessary you would be and doctors would be very important to the military in wartime.
@user-gl5dq2dg1j
@user-gl5dq2dg1j 9 күн бұрын
@@Theomite Nurses and all other female personnel were all volunteers. The US never drafted women. Also doctors were brought in as captains or higher.
@phillipribbink6903
@phillipribbink6903 11 күн бұрын
So when they're talking about "Painless" being the best equipped dentist in the Korean Theatre of Operations. They're not talking about his dentistry equipment, they're talking about his block and tackle so to speak. Which is why Lieutenant Dish looked so happy, when she was in the helicopter going home. Also I can't recall if you've seen him in anything else. But Frank Burns was played by Robert Duvall (most famous for playing Tom Hagen in The Godfather). Doctor Jekyll and Mister Hyde was originally a book, written by Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson. Who also wrote the book Treasure Island. There have been multiple movie, tv show and even a Broadway Musical adaptions of Doctor Jekyll and Mister Hyde. (There's even been an Abbott and Costello meet Doctor Jekyll and Mister Hyde). Any of the movie versions would make a great reaction for Hallowbeans. Also Ho-Jon wasn't using drugs, at least not in the way you're thinking. Hawkeye and the gang, gave him a drug to increase his heart rate and blood pressure. So he'd fail the medical evaluation and not get drafted into the South Korean Army. The problem is the Army doctor who examined him saw through the ruse. There was a subplot in the original script that involved Ho-Jon showing up at the M.A.S.H. Camp wounded after being drafted and dying on their operating table. But it was cut, the footage was used though and re-dubbed. So that the man they're operating on, is a North Korean P.O.W.
@this.is.a.username
@this.is.a.username 11 күн бұрын
that bit about ho-jon showing up wounded is also not in the book IIRC. it's been awhile since I've read it though.
@phillipribbink6903
@phillipribbink6903 11 күн бұрын
@@this.is.a.username I wouldn't know, since I've never had the opportunity to read the book.
@jaycee330
@jaycee330 10 күн бұрын
@@phillipribbink6903 In the book, Ho-Jon survives and they manage to raise money to send him to the States.
@johnfrick9639
@johnfrick9639 11 күн бұрын
Okay, a LOT to help unpack. As you found out, M*A*S*H stands for Mobile Army Surgical Hospital. The M*A*S*H units were a big experiment during the Korean war. The concept was to have the primary emergency care units as close to the fighting as possible for rapid/immediate care. They were around 3-4 miles from the actual fighting. The front changed positions, THEY changed positions (hence the MOBILE part of the acronym). And, as you found out at the end, Donald Sutherland was the goofy looking scarecrow guy who was on the screen, pretty much, the entire movie. The studio had Donald Sutherland and Elliot Gould signed on BEFORE having a director (went through 13 before finding one crazy enough to take on the task). By the third day of actual filming, the two aforementioned lead actors decided to approach the producers with a request to have said director removed, fearing for the future of their careers. This meeting was PRECEDED by one with the director making a similar request (for different reasons) about the two lead actors. Obviously BOTH requests were heard and ignored and everyone was asked to get along and play nice and just ride it out. Between the "gore", the language, and the (very few) nude shots (mainly "Hot Lips'" ever famous shower scene), The movie VERY NEARLY got an "X" rating from the censors. This movie, remember was made in 1970. These days, a lot of that stuff can be shown on Disney Kids without much fear. Although this movie is set during the Korean war, the director didn't let the word "Korea" be said during the entire movie, other than the written quotes at the very beginning from Douglas MacArthur and Dwight D. Eisenhauer. Due to the time period, this caused a lot of audiences to parallel what they were watching with the Vietnam war that was currently (at the time) raging, and the director WANTED it that way. He got it past the studio by being WAY under budget (if you noticed in the opening credits, about 80% of the cast was "introduced" in this movie) and keeping STRICTLY to the studio's timetable. The shower scene took about 8 takes to actually film. What was supposed to be a complete surprise for "Hot Lips" was in the script; so, every time that tent flap so much as ruffled, Sally Kellerman (the actress) would immediately follow her first gut-instinct - HIDE (as would be normal for ANYONE). The director begged her to try and hold her pose for even a brief second and she just couldn't do it. Finally, Gary Burghoff (Radar) got a brilliant idea. He and the director got up on a hill across from the tent where they could be right in Sally's line of sight when that tent fell. So the scene starts, the tent falls, and the very first thing Sally Kellerman sees is Gary and the director standing across from her on a hill... with their pants down. This caused her to pause JUST ENOUGH to get the shot. No, they didn't give "Painless" Viagra. Nor did they insinuate that anything even resembling it was used. IN FACT they don't mention, one way or the other, WHAT the "Black Pill" was. And, while Viagra DIDN'T exist in the 50's, hormone shots (that could do the same basic thing) DID. Rene Auberjonois (Father Mulcahy) ad-libbed the "blessing of the jeep" at the end before Donald Sutherland and Tom Skerritt puttered away into the sunset. I'm not gonna give you crap about your low rating. I DO get it, I think. A lot of the surgery scenes were a lot to deal with. They were a HELLUVA lot in 1970 (didn't see surgical scenes like that before anywhere). And, really, not everything is great for everybody. My siblings and I were practically raised on the show (one of my dad's all-time faves). I LOVED it (one of the only things my dad and I could bond over), my younger brother was kinda indifferent to it (something to watch before the big football game), and my older sister HATED it. She only watched THIS movie ONCE... less than half-way (I don't think she even made it as far as Frank Burns' departure). At least it looked like you enjoyed yourself for quite a bit of it, though. All good.
@maryrichardson1318
@maryrichardson1318 9 күн бұрын
My husband was a military man for 26 years and has never had a drop of alcohol. He even went through ROTC. Remember, before these men were drafted, they were civilian doctors, living nice lives in the suburbs, with their 2.5 children, a nice set of golf clubs and a well stocked bar in their living room. Of course they enjoy martinis.
@donnarowe8618
@donnarowe8618 11 күн бұрын
TMI Warning My mother was a nurse in a MASH unit in Korea. My dad was a medic attached to his infantry unit, the 15th Infantry Regiment of the U.S. Army. Mom never said how they met, but, since they married at Fort Sam Houston, I'm going to assume it was there. Then again, maybe it was through their duties in Korea. Who knows? Unfortunately, they separated when I was 4, so I didn't get to grow up with my dad.
@NY4Life
@NY4Life 11 күн бұрын
This is before the sitcom and it’s set in the Korean War and the Acronym of M*A*S*H is Mobile Army Surgical Hospital! And god bless Walter Eugene “Radar” O’Reilly
@garethwilliams5809
@garethwilliams5809 11 күн бұрын
Mobile Army Surgical Hospital, allowing them to quickly move to where they were needed. Elliot Gould (McIntyre, with the moustache) was in Friends. Donald Sutherland (Hawkeye, was wearing the metal rimmed glasses). You must watch the TV series.
@JZsBFF
@JZsBFF 11 күн бұрын
Really? For the longest time I thought it meant Mobile American Slaughter House.
@harveylee51
@harveylee51 10 күн бұрын
@NY4Life i saw this after i grew up with the original T.V series so i kept expecting a laugh track at certain scenes lol! 🤣 alright wars not funny i'll work on some new material .
@garethwilliams5809
@garethwilliams5809 10 күн бұрын
@@harveylee51 we didn't have the laughter track here in the UK and having a few of the DVDs it sounds strange with the laughter track
@itgaeta1
@itgaeta1 11 күн бұрын
This is one of those movies that are more powerful in its time. The audiences at the time “got” this movie. It was a huge success,
@jayl1980
@jayl1980 11 күн бұрын
The football games were intense in Korea, mostly because if you got injured during the game you still got points that would get you home, and got out of combat duty until you were healed.
@melissahughes4205
@melissahughes4205 11 күн бұрын
At 18:32, "dilatation and curettage" is a surgical procedure of widening the cervix and scraping out the uterine lining with a sharpened loop (curette). He's making a crass joke that Burns is all up in O'Houlihan's business.
@ladysky2883
@ladysky2883 11 күн бұрын
Before Roe v Wade an abortion was officially known as a D & C. I guess we are back there again. Also the movie is heavy in the chauvinistic behavior of surgeons. Everything that Women's Lib was against. It's just a big satire. You have to know the social norms of the day that they are making fun of.
@louismunos3981
@louismunos3981 11 күн бұрын
RIP Donald Sutherland
@thane9
@thane9 10 күн бұрын
The TV show is an absolute masterpiece. I'm glad I grew up with it and watched the heck out of every episode many times.
@chrisdevine5503
@chrisdevine5503 10 күн бұрын
Interesting fact is that when the series aired in the UK on the BBC, it was played without a laughter track. It was required viewing for millions. I tried to watch an episode on a commercial channel many years later with the laughter track included and turned it off because it just cheapened the whole experience.
@bengilbert7655
@bengilbert7655 11 күн бұрын
Trapper John, the "mustache guy", was played by Elliot Gould who is Barbra Streisand's ex-husband and father of her son Jason Gould.
@reesebn38
@reesebn38 11 күн бұрын
Forget them He is Monica and Ross's Father. A hole generation know him as only that. I was around in the 70s he was a big movie star. He also hosted SNL many times in the 70s with the Classic Cast. My favorite Elliot Gould movie is Capricorn One.
@Irene-ym7bx
@Irene-ym7bx 11 күн бұрын
Ocean's. Ruben who is kitsch in person
@bengilbert7655
@bengilbert7655 11 күн бұрын
@@reesebn38 I was letting Ashleigh know about them. She is a Barbra Streisand fan.
@BondFreek
@BondFreek 11 күн бұрын
This movie has two Star Trek actors in it... Father Mulcahy - René Auberjonois played Odo in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine & Colonel West in Star Trek VI: the Undiscovered country. & Major "Hot Lips" Houlihan.-Sally Kellerman played Dr Elizabeth Dehner in Star Trek (TOS) Where No Man Has Gone Before
@AaronButton
@AaronButton 11 күн бұрын
There’s a third… Painless, played by John Schuck, played the Klingon Ambassador to the Federation in Star Trek’s IV and VI.
@johnnygood4831
@johnnygood4831 11 күн бұрын
Except with Hot Lips, it's Where Every Man Has Gone Before.
@BondFreek
@BondFreek 11 күн бұрын
@@johnnygood4831 not funny... Okay, a little bit funny.
@f0rth3l0v30fchr15t
@f0rth3l0v30fchr15t 11 күн бұрын
Fun fact, Rene Auberjenois is descended from Marshal Murat and Napoleon's sister, Caroline.
@stvdagger8074
@stvdagger8074 11 күн бұрын
@@AaronButton And a 4th - Fred Williams (Dr. "Spearchucker" Jones) was in an episode (The Cloud Minders) of TOS
@ReallyGoodName3000
@ReallyGoodName3000 11 күн бұрын
Actual names I encountered in the military: Lt. Colonel Kurtz Captain Wacker, later promoted to Major Wacker And I swear to god I am not making this up; Seaman Guzzler
@KnightsaysNi
@KnightsaysNi 11 күн бұрын
OMG, I would never be able to address Major Wacker without giggling every time.
@JTSDAD67
@JTSDAD67 11 күн бұрын
There's a character called Major Major in CATCH 22. Another great movie with a similar sense of humor.
@johnrussell6620
@johnrussell6620 9 күн бұрын
Colonel Kurtz from Apocalypse Now?
@blueboy4244
@blueboy4244 8 күн бұрын
@@JTSDAD67 if I'm in..I'm not it, if I'm not it..I'm also not in
@FutureBereaAlumn
@FutureBereaAlumn 11 күн бұрын
Donald Sutherland once said that the dialogue on this film was never the same between takes. Between the wide shot, the medium shot, the close ups… all at least slightly different. He said the editor (I believe) got an academy award, but “probably deserved a Nobel Prize.”
@asterix7842
@asterix7842 11 күн бұрын
MASH=Mobile Army Surgical Hospital. There were a couple episodes of the tv series where they had to “bug out”- pack up the camp quickly and move to a new location. I highly recommend checking out the tv series. The first few seasons were the best.
@chuckhouse5179
@chuckhouse5179 11 күн бұрын
No lie I have seen every episode about 5 times. some many more than that. Still the high water mark for a television comedy.
@tokemeout
@tokemeout 8 күн бұрын
I liked it when potter became c.o.
@tenmark7055
@tenmark7055 11 күн бұрын
Painless was, err... was the best 'equipped' dentist in the army and the others would stare at his junk in shower because it was so big. Also, this is an emergency treatment hospital - fast & dirty "meatball" surgery to save lives before shipping the wounded back to other hospitals to finish up treatment. Big stitches take less time. The goal was to get the wounded on & off the surgical tables as fast as possible. This was one of the mobile hospitals that moved to follow the battle - often only a mile or so from the front lines for quick treatment to save the wounded lives before shipping them elsewhere
@dhaucoin
@dhaucoin 11 күн бұрын
Also- big stitches leave bigger scars. The wounded was an enlisted soldier, and the doctors gave him a big scar so he could show it off later. Presumably to get girls. 'Yeah, just got back from Korea. Wanna see my scar?'
@williamdegnan4718
@williamdegnan4718 11 күн бұрын
He asked if he was an officer or enlisted man. Officers get small stitches. Enlisted men get big stitches. (RHIP)
@ruthsaunders9507
@ruthsaunders9507 11 күн бұрын
My Dad was a Dental Tech in the Navy in the 70's and everyone called him Painless because of this movie.
@chuckhouse5179
@chuckhouse5179 11 күн бұрын
@@ruthsaunders9507 Thats not why lol just kidding.
@tommykoenning9123
@tommykoenning9123 11 күн бұрын
Thank you for doing this movie. Could not find anyone else with it. Been on the fence but now I'm subscribed
@janibeg3247
@janibeg3247 8 күн бұрын
I knew a phycician who was in Korea in a forward aid station. He got the silver star and a letter of reprimand for treating civilian refugees.. He had them mounted side by side on his living room wall.
@neils123
@neils123 12 күн бұрын
Honestly, I do not fault your rating at all. For one thing, I think this movie is very centered in a particular time and place that simply no longer resonates. Released in 1970, at the height of the US's involvement in the Vietnam War, set in the Korean War as a stand-in, this movie and later the show was speaking directly to the futility and senselessness many Americans felt about these wars we'd gotten ourselves embroiled in. For another thing, while the TV show didn't necessarily shy away from calling out that senselessness, it also was much more comedy-oriented than the movie. And the show was on TV for so many years I get the sense that it eclipsed the movie in the popular imagination of what MASH was, so it's thought of as more of a comedy than it actually is. Though, I was VERY young at the time, so take that musing with a grain of salt, as I could be wrong about that. I remember being a big fan of the TV show and then going back and watching the movie later and being frankly disappointed by it. Anyway, I voted for Invasion of the Body Snatchers in the poll, and I do hope you get to it eventually (perhaps, indeed, for Hallowbeans) - it's an excellent film and much more entertaining than this one, IMO.
@itzel1735
@itzel1735 11 күн бұрын
All fair points.
@reesebn38
@reesebn38 11 күн бұрын
The Director has said it was completely about the Vietnam War but was forced by the Studio to not point at the Nam War. The film was groundbreaking at the time. It really is the first R-Rated Raunchy Comedy.
@Redfern42
@Redfern42 11 күн бұрын
Very much the same experience for me. I started watching the TV series in the latter 70s (shortly after my father's death and I move in with my grandmother, when I was in my mid teens). I did not see the movie until it played on HBO (so around 1980 as that was when I got the service). I expected the "comparatively" lighter atmosphere of the series and instead experienced a grim and scathing (though well made) satire. I was not really disappointed, understanding a film could "get away" with a lot more, but it was a "very different animal". Even as a "kid", I noted, "Oh! the song has lyrics! And I can see why they don't play on TV!"
@stevenandcarminabeedle9089
@stevenandcarminabeedle9089 11 күн бұрын
Yeah. Didn’t age well at all lol
@frogofbrass382
@frogofbrass382 11 күн бұрын
This is one of those rare films where the movie is better than the book.
@andyb3430
@andyb3430 11 күн бұрын
and the TV show is better than the movie (see also Buffy TVS)
@DavidHayes56
@DavidHayes56 7 күн бұрын
Alan Alda who played Hawkeye in the TV version said that a big difference between the movie and TV show was that the surgeons were very serious when it came to operating in the TV show. They may have joked while they worked but the patients came first.
@seibervideo
@seibervideo 11 күн бұрын
Home sick from work myself, and super glad to see this posted. Really lifting my spirits today. Also, hoping to see your reaction to Invasion of the Body Snatchers at some point. One of my favorite Donald Sutherland movies!
@richardvinsen2385
@richardvinsen2385 11 күн бұрын
A little trivia: Roger Bowen who played Henry Blake in the film and McLean Stevenson who played him in the TV show died a day apart.
@kevinpogue7294
@kevinpogue7294 11 күн бұрын
I lived about 90 miles west of Detroit, and I remember seeing Rodger Bowen in several Highland Appliance commercials when I was a kid.
@richardvinsen2385
@richardvinsen2385 10 күн бұрын
@@kevinpogue7294 I used to work in advertising. I hired Roger Bowen several times to play humorous characters in radio commercials. He was always a pleasure to work with and quite funny. I also did a multiple hour session with Sally Kellerman (Hot Lips) to do voiceover work for many tv and radio ads. She was very unusual.
@happymethehappyone8300
@happymethehappyone8300 11 күн бұрын
My Favorite & THE BEST ROLE he has ever played,, Donald Sutherland as "Oddball" in "Kelly's Heros" (1970) A MUST SEE Classic Movie. 🔥❤️🔥
@johnrussell6620
@johnrussell6620 9 күн бұрын
He is pretty good in "Max Dugan Returns", "Klute" "The Hunger Games", and about 100 more--How can you determine "The Best!"
@allanvanuga9196
@allanvanuga9196 11 күн бұрын
I appreciate you and thank you for making content.
@WhoIsJohnCleland
@WhoIsJohnCleland 11 күн бұрын
I love that "spearchucker" is such a weird, obscure racial slur that Ashleigh said it without even blinking...
@JoePa133
@JoePa133 7 күн бұрын
Especially since she lives in the South.
@ToNowHereShow
@ToNowHereShow 12 күн бұрын
It is based on true stories of surgeons from Korea. The interesting thing when reading the original novel is understanding that the doctors and nurses were so young - most were under 30. The book has even more obscene pranks. Pulling outrageous pranks and hooking up seem to be necessary life affirming activities surrounded by unrelenting death. Robert Altman intended this movie to be a criticism of the Vietnam War that was currently raging when he filmed. So, actually MASH is the first Vietnam movie and not Apocalypse Now. 20th Century Fox made Altman add the introductory text about Korea because Korea is never mentioned in the film. It is obviously Korea, but the suits were worried that people would think it was about Vietnam.
@bg7893
@bg7893 11 күн бұрын
"So, actually MASH is the first Vietnam movie and not Apocalypse " Actually the Deer Hunter came out a year before Apocalypse. If you want to include less successful/smaller budget movies there were a few. The Green Beret's, though basically pro war propaganda, was technically a Vietnam War movie as well.
@ToNowHereShow
@ToNowHereShow 11 күн бұрын
@@bg7893 Didn't Deer Hunter come out eight years later in 1978?
@bg7893
@bg7893 11 күн бұрын
@@ToNowHereShow Apocalypse Now came out in 1979. The Deer Hunter in 1978. Green Berets in 1968.
@waynezimmerman1950
@waynezimmerman1950 11 күн бұрын
Thus Korea is often called The Forgotten War. Thankfully Dad; USAF Military Analyst and cold warrior, missed going off to Korea because he was ROTC in college and they wanted him to finish his education. He later went to Nam early enough to be able to come home to us; whole in body but disillusioned in spirit. A side affect of that was he would never watch any movie set in Vietnam. He told us that no matter how well made or well intended they were, the filmmakers would still get it wrong. And yet he remained in the Air Force until the mid 70s, but his work as a systems manager in the private sector was often DOD jobs. Go figure. RIP Retired Major Wallace Zimmerman(of beloved memory) And this is a great movie. 😎
@blacbraun
@blacbraun 11 күн бұрын
The book had Trapper John on a cross being flown around in a helicopter.
@Serai3
@Serai3 11 күн бұрын
Fun fact: Almost none of what you see onscreen was in the script. The movie was entirely improvised. (Ring Lardner Jr., the scriptwriter, was super pissed when he saw it.) This became Robert Altman's style, taking a script and letting his actors embroider and improvise on it. It's why his films tend to sound so much like the way people really talk and behave. Another fun fact: The loudspeaker was also not in the script. After shooting the film, Altman had the task of pulling together hundreds of hours of chaotic mayhem into an actual movie. He finally hit on the idea of the loudspeaker as a kind of through-line to keep everything moving. The lines spoken through it are all taken from real announcements made in MASH units. P.S. Dilation and curretage is the technical term for a surgical abortion, which was the only kind available back then. Thus Hawkeye's snarky reference while they were listening to Frank and Hot Lips going at it.
@f0rth3l0v30fchr15t
@f0rth3l0v30fchr15t 11 күн бұрын
2:20 The Bell H-13 Sioux was a pretty neat machine. Weighs under a ton and a half unloaded, cruises at over 80mph, and you can fix about 95% of things that go wrong with it with nothing more than a hammer, socket set and oil.
@MrHws5mp
@MrHws5mp 7 күн бұрын
Don't forget the duct tape and bailing wire...
@totallytomanimation
@totallytomanimation 11 күн бұрын
Based on the the book "MASH: A Novel About Three Army Doctors", which was a bestseller in it's day.
@ianfeuerhake1859
@ianfeuerhake1859 11 күн бұрын
Hope you feel better soon I was in the military for 26 years. Drank as much as I could for the first 16, and then nothing for the last 10. Hangovers get harder to recover from after you turn 30. Keep that in mind
@georginawest3927
@georginawest3927 11 күн бұрын
Seeing Bud Cort in the film made me wonder - what would Ashleigh think of Harold and Maude, which also has a great cameo from Tom Skerrit.
@procopiusaugustus6231
@procopiusaugustus6231 11 күн бұрын
Great movie.
@mrkelso
@mrkelso 11 күн бұрын
I think it'd be worth finding out. She might find it too weird. She might absolutely love it. Let's see.
@jefffinn1105
@jefffinn1105 11 күн бұрын
Good call! But I think she has issues with complicated films like that or MASH that are also of a certain era's values. I've noticed that the millenial reactors need to be judgemental a lot about past eras. Like if I were to watch one of the old Cagney/Bogart gangster flicks & constantly comment how I don't like gun violence, etc.. But Harold & Maude is a good idea.
@procopiusaugustus6231
@procopiusaugustus6231 11 күн бұрын
@@jefffinn1105 My thoughts too. I guess that films like “The Loved One” or Slaughterhouse Five” are right out. 😂
@user-tq6od4fc6v
@user-tq6od4fc6v 11 күн бұрын
@@jefffinn1105 "Consistency is not really a human trait." She might surprise us. And I think she'll love the pitch black humor in it.
@TheWebcrafter
@TheWebcrafter 8 күн бұрын
4:20 - M*A*S*H - The film depicts a unit of medical personnel stationed at a Mobile Army Surgical Hospital (MASH) during the Korean War. I used to wear my fave 'army green' t-shirt to music festivals that spelled out... H*A*S*H.
@John_Lyle
@John_Lyle 3 күн бұрын
My father (Royal Artillery) received treatment for a head injury in a US Military Hospital and said later that M*A*S*H was a pretty accurate reflection of what he remembered it being like. After treatment there he spent two weeks in Tokyo where a couple of American aircrew taught him a card game called "poker" so he bought a Rolex to keep his winnings portable. I gave that watch to one of my sons as a birthday present earlier this year.
@iKvetch558
@iKvetch558 11 күн бұрын
My Dad was such a huge fan of the original book by Richard Hooker, and then he was also MASSIVE Robert Altman fan, so he let me watch this movie when I was TOTALLY too young...like 7 or 8 years old. LOL It took me a long time to truly understand what the nickname "Hot Lips" REALLY referred to. 😜😁
@greygorthegoateedgeek5350
@greygorthegoateedgeek5350 12 күн бұрын
And of course MASH became one of the most successful TV shows in Network history, 11 seasons 256 episodes & winning 14 Emmys with a final episode that attracted over 120 million viewers. It is a comedy set during the Korean War, but that was just really a cover because everyone knew it was representing Vietnam
@goldenageofdinosaurs7192
@goldenageofdinosaurs7192 11 күн бұрын
I can still remember watching that last episode..
@jeffreysmith236
@jeffreysmith236 11 күн бұрын
Well, I was a kid and I didn't know it was about Vietnam, I thought it was about Korea
@Alexandrashepiro
@Alexandrashepiro 11 күн бұрын
not to mention an Atari 2600 Game!
@LadyIarConnacht
@LadyIarConnacht 11 күн бұрын
Frank and Margaret were hilarious in the show - the regular army stiffs.
@travissdallas
@travissdallas 11 күн бұрын
As a Xennial, M*A*S*H and/or Soul Train signified that cartoons or kid's shows were over for the day.
@RunicMike
@RunicMike 8 күн бұрын
MASH should be your next midweek tv show
@thunderchaser2042
@thunderchaser2042 11 күн бұрын
Hawkeye didn't steal the Jeep. He strategically transferred equipment to an alternate location.
@SethBrower
@SethBrower 11 күн бұрын
For anyone who hasn't watched the series, or it has been a long time since you have, I HIGHLY recommend tracking down the DVD sets vs streaming, as you get the original aspect ratio without things cropped out. And MOST importantly you get it with NO laugh track, the creators wanted that for the original airing but the network insisted, they compromised and as aired it kept the laughs out of the OR. For the DVD they added an alternate audio track without.
@stephenolan5539
@stephenolan5539 11 күн бұрын
After reaching the agreement for no laugh tracks in the OR, the writers started writing all episodes in the OR until the laugh track was completely dropped.
@shawnmiller4781
@shawnmiller4781 11 күн бұрын
@@SethBrower I highly recommend it without the laugh track
@shawnmiller4781
@shawnmiller4781 11 күн бұрын
@@SethBrower I highly recommend it without the laugh track
@SethBrower
@SethBrower 11 күн бұрын
@@stephenolan5539 I still find it amusing that if your watching them all without the laughs, and you get to one of the few clipshows ... due to the nature of how it was made the clips have the laughs baked in.
@asterix7842
@asterix7842 11 күн бұрын
The problem with the no-laughtrack version is, they were filmed with a laughtrack in mind so, when it’s removed, you end up with awkward silences after the jokes. Even worse than the laughtrack.
@jzakary1
@jzakary1 11 күн бұрын
Donald Sutherland's best role is in Kelly's Heroes (1970). A fantastic movie.
@YourXavier
@YourXavier 11 күн бұрын
It's a smaller role, but he's also brilliantly creepy in Backdraft (1991).
@juandesalgado
@juandesalgado 11 күн бұрын
I'd say Fellini's "Casanova", but that may be entirely out of place.
@roryotoole3279
@roryotoole3279 11 күн бұрын
Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978) is really good
@DavidDrouant
@DavidDrouant 11 күн бұрын
and Eastwood
@redatlit
@redatlit 11 күн бұрын
I thought his best roles were Invasion of the Body Snatchers and Eye of the Needle.
@terpcj
@terpcj 10 күн бұрын
I think the billboard when it came out, with the iconic hand with legs flashing a peace sign with a helmet on top, proudly advertising: "M*A*S*H Doesn't give a damn!" summed it up pretty well. (Saw that board for at least six months -- it's burned in my brain.)
@scottmcnulty70
@scottmcnulty70 10 күн бұрын
This film was based on a book "MASH: A Novel About Three Army Doctors, was written by Richard Hooker," The author wrote it under a pseudonym. The real authors were H. Richard Hornberger and W. C. Heinz Hornberger was a surgeon at the 8055th Mobile Army Surgical Hospital in Korea during the Korean War. So it's hard to say how much of it is exaggerated in the movie. Meatball surgery gives you all the blood and guts of war with people who became doctors and nurses to help people heal. It's got to be a special kind of hell. Doctors weren't a dime a dozen so they couldn't just be sent back home if they had mental issues developed in the course of their work. They could get away with odd behavior. To some extent.
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