FULL METAL JACKET | The Consequences of Conditioning

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Unleash The Ghouls

Unleash The Ghouls

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 365
@fortis3686
@fortis3686 Жыл бұрын
R Lee Ermey himself fought in Vietnam, and was a staff sergeant for a short time during his last years as a Marine. So he was a perfect choice as Drill Sergeant Hartmann.
@ckotcher1
@ckotcher1 Жыл бұрын
No he was an actual Drill Sergeant as well.
@schizoidboy
@schizoidboy Жыл бұрын
He was originally going to be just the advisor to the movie and his name is in the credits as the advisor. The actor who played the door gunner who shouted "get-some" was going to be the drill instructor, but the role ended up going to R Lee Ermey. Fun fact, he improvised most of his lines in the movie, the fact he was a drill instructor probably made it all the more easier. He also played a helicopter pilot in the movie "Apocalypse Now" during the famous helicopter scene.
@kevinkocher9347
@kevinkocher9347 Жыл бұрын
His title gunnery Sargent comes from the day of retirement he is lead to the parade grounds and too his complete surprise after being awarded service medals for his commitment to the corps the master sergeant and the commandant approached he was awarded the rank gunnery sergeant
@ShikataGaNai100
@ShikataGaNai100 Жыл бұрын
His honorary promotion to Gunnery Sergeant was well-deserved. His actual retired rank was E-6, Staff Sergeant.
@williamriley5118
@williamriley5118 Жыл бұрын
He was a Drill Instructor. Drill Sergeants are in the Army.
@RuRtRded
@RuRtRded Ай бұрын
i cried when they beat up pyle. not during the beating but after when he was crying. i was shook up cause he reminded me of a child thay was brutally punished when they cant help it.
@lemieux-z8933
@lemieux-z8933 Ай бұрын
I almost did myself because he is almost a clone to my older brother, his smile before being choked, the way he struggles l, all reminds me of my own brother. I plan to go into the service myself, but this movie made me happy my brother got rejected when he tried to get in... If this was the 1970s tho... He wouldn't be, his birthday is on one draft lottery they did back than.
@corncobbob2326
@corncobbob2326 28 күн бұрын
@@lemieux-z8933 Did he get choked by military people or someone else? I'm so sorry for what's happened. If you do go, I hope the DIs or DSs and recruits/peers don't haze or mess with you too much.
@lemieux-z8933
@lemieux-z8933 27 күн бұрын
@corncobbob2326 I love this country and those who serve, but damn, there's straight up people in the forces that are straight assholes, either for themselves or just... For themselves. Our family has a bit of a history with the military, my late uncle died in Korea in 2007, and the army didn't hold responsibility when in fact they had full responsibility for what happened, my grandpa had to fly all the way there to fly him back when uncle died in his coma because the army wouldn't bring him home. He was a motarman, 101st Airborne. My grandpa was also In the service, he was drafted during Vietnam but with his skills as a mechanic, he stayed home in the states luckily. Anyway, my mother is apprehensive of me going in because of all that. I love my country, even with its darker history, there's still a lot of good. I'm lucky to be born in the United States and I feel like I owe it.
@greatgallade
@greatgallade 26 күн бұрын
We did the same shit to a guy who told us he would laugh if we died and it was on his watch
@RuRtRded
@RuRtRded 25 күн бұрын
@@greatgallade well yea but thats different. leonard was just a child really
@ArchTeryx00
@ArchTeryx00 Жыл бұрын
One comment that R. Lee Ermey made when interviewed about this movie is that stuff like Hartmann did in Full Metal Jacket would *never* fly in actual boot camp. It's harsh, but any sergeant that struck their recruits would very quickly find themselves on the pointy end of a court martial, and would *completely* lose their respect before they got tossed in a military prison. They're also limited in the amount of abuse they can dish out, even for Marine boot camp in a time of war. The way Ermey played Hartmann was deliberately over the top, someone who got into his job too much and became unhinged far, far before Private Pyle did. He'd also pointed out that every single live round was accounted for during gunnery training. You got 6 live rounds, you produced six casings afterward or you'd be held until they were found - for *precisely* the reason that the movie illustrated. Pyle could NEVER have smuggled those live rounds into the barracks had any of the NCOs been doing their job. And even if he had, any Gunnery Sergeant worth their salt would immediately have called out a squad of MPs to take him down. That he thought it appropriate to go after Pyle solo and unarmed, and start out by *insulting him,* showed just how far both of them were gone. That whole boot camp was a cloud of dysfunction, starting with Hartmann. It could only end in one way - death.
@TarawaS2000
@TarawaS2000 Жыл бұрын
I graduated Parris Island in 04. None of our DIs were as rough as Gunny Hartman, but I got roughed up one or twice, and grabbed by the throat when I got into it with another recruit. Before this soft clown world generation, DIs would definitely put their hands on recruits. It was hard training, and we were better for it and so was the Corps.
@ArchTeryx00
@ArchTeryx00 Жыл бұрын
@@TarawaS2000 Far as I know DIs WERE allowed to put their hands on recruits back then - Ermey was saying they weren't allowed to actually STRIKE them. That's what the infamous blanket parties were for in the first place - to get physical in a way the DI wasn't allowed to even back then.
@plasticweapon
@plasticweapon 6 ай бұрын
and countless other marines (as well as an inquiry conducted into marine boot camp training practices in the wake of this film's release) said that it was worse.
@ArchTeryx00
@ArchTeryx00 6 ай бұрын
@@plasticweapon Apparently at least the real boot camps knew enough to track their live rounds, as AFAIK not too many DIs got themselves shot during that period. It was the idiot COs that got fragged instead.
@plasticweapon
@plasticweapon 6 ай бұрын
@@ArchTeryx00and it's absolutely not true that it could "only end in death". i also feel like you overestimate the number of COs who were fragged, and have too fixed an idea about why. marines are not school shooters.
@prometheusstarr5103
@prometheusstarr5103 Жыл бұрын
Finally, someone calls Hartman a Drill Instructor and not a Drill Sergeant.
@jimtaylor294
@jimtaylor294 7 ай бұрын
Yup. A Senior Drill Instructor to boot.
@datguymiller
@datguymiller Ай бұрын
What exactly is the difference?
@prometheusstarr5103
@prometheusstarr5103 Ай бұрын
@datguymiller a drill instructor is in the Marines. A drill Sergeant is in the army.
@datguymiller
@datguymiller Ай бұрын
@@prometheusstarr5103 thank you
@nocturnalrecluse1216
@nocturnalrecluse1216 Ай бұрын
But then he calls Joker a soldier when he's a marine.
@zotanzero
@zotanzero Ай бұрын
Went to Bootcamp in late 2020 and into 2021. Micromanaging, nicknames, group punishment, humiliation during drill, getting hit or thrown when you mess up, platoon fuck-up getting beaten in his rack in the middle of the night, all of it's real. The only crazy part is Pyle getting his hands a rifle AND live ammo. You're strip searched at the end of each day at the range, and weapons are locked up every night and gaurded by firewatch. The only time you sleep with your rifle is during field training. Idk how things were during Vietnam, though. RIP Gunny Ermey
@bertje7113
@bertje7113 Ай бұрын
Genuine question: what does a guy have to do wrong to 'deserve' to get get that group beating? Like, what's the reasoning behind it? Not saying I'm judging or something, I'm genuinely curious
@OliveOilFan
@OliveOilFan Ай бұрын
@@bertje7113 In the military you are a group, not one person, group punishment is meant to teach you that if one member fails, everyone fails
@corncobbob2326
@corncobbob2326 28 күн бұрын
Any examples of micromanaging, humiliation during drill, hits or throws, and nicknames? Could the nicknames be removed instead of immortalized? And how bad would a mess-up be to lead to hits and throws? Were they even warranted or is it just power being abused? Why would a platoon get beaten in his bed/rack and do the attackers get harsher consequences? How bad could the fuck-up be? Does it end after bootcamp or just get less bad or even worse? Is there a way for a recruit to not go through all those harsh things (asking bc I don't expect a recruit that's completely perfect, esp in the beginning such as bootcamp)? Or do "invisible" recruits get messed with in some way and how?
@rage3548
@rage3548 25 күн бұрын
​@@corncobbob2326 Micromanage : a DI taking a interest in one certain recruit and taking full controll of their life's always getting corrected for the slightest things just because they don't like them. Drill humiliation: simply messing a movement to many times can lead you to go run after signs to fire hydrants eventually to just go sit on the side to perform physical activity for how ever long the DI wishes
@junkdogray420
@junkdogray420 25 күн бұрын
My ds ( army) clarified that the reason for such strict restrictions around the weapons was because of this film and privates successful doing it. Though during my training I had several opportunities to get live ammo without a check up.
@draconusfrigidus
@draconusfrigidus Ай бұрын
One unspoken aspect of Hartmann that my cousin (also a marine) voiced: Hartmann appears to be doing the work of three people in the film (we see he has two other DIs standing beside him in his opening scene, but there's no indication they ever actually get involved in the training of the recruits), and also was probably under severe pressure himself to get as many bodies to Vietnam as possible. His brutality towards the recruits, and Pyle in particular, may be a sign he's getting just as much brutality from the higher ups, being overworked due to possible staffing shortages and with the greatest insistence being on "Do whatever you have to to meet your quota!"
@adamjoseph2601
@adamjoseph2601 Жыл бұрын
Its hard for me to appreciate this film as an anti-war film because as a 90s kid who went to highschool in the 2000s it was pretty much the favorite of all the JROTC kids who ended up fighting in Iraq despite the fact we all graduated well after we discovered the war was started on false pretenses and there were no weapons of mass destruction. The message was completely lost.
@RideAcrossTheRiver
@RideAcrossTheRiver 4 ай бұрын
Same as with _Wall Street_ ... everybody thinks Gekko is a hero when he's really a loser.
@stanlee-eq7lu
@stanlee-eq7lu Ай бұрын
What gets me is hearing so many Conservative radio talk show hosts saying it's all the illegal immigrants draining the system of medical benefits and affecting Social Security and Medicare. Most untrue. It's our troops that went into a war we had no business starting and countless soldiers and Marines coming home disabled and requiring benefits. I'm not belittling our Military. But if we didn't have so many troops coming back disabled, the Government benefits would still be plentiful. I blame our Government for our troops permanently scarred for life with physical disabilities as well as PTSD.
@me67galaxylife
@me67galaxylife Ай бұрын
Except there's a stark difference between iraq and vietnam
@teamblue2431
@teamblue2431 Ай бұрын
What’s JROTC?
@Xepent
@Xepent Ай бұрын
​@@teamblue2431junior reserve officers training corps. Simple Google search my dude
@QuantumZer-0
@QuantumZer-0 2 ай бұрын
I just now realized how f***ing scary this movie really is.
@me67galaxylife
@me67galaxylife Ай бұрын
Don't worry it's not exactly realisitc psychology... Besides, even if it somehow was, you're immune now.
@Stand_By_For_Mind_Control
@Stand_By_For_Mind_Control Жыл бұрын
As a former Army Soldier, I always saw Marines as the guys who maybe like the job too much. And for a lot of it, that's true. You don't make E5 in the Marines unless you're gung-ho as fuck. They don't like half-assers like me in their branch at all lol. But the reality past that? There's a lot of guys who find themselves signing up for it and realizing very much that isn't what they want, and the Marines are basically designed as a psy-op to break guys like that down to re-form them out of clay. Which is the unique condition in that branch that the other branches just don't do. So I've always been a little wary of the people who do that job. They feel like there's a little boy on a milk carton somewhere that represents the person a Marine used to be.
@duglife2230
@duglife2230 Жыл бұрын
"They feel like there's a little boy on a milk carton somewhere that represents the person a Marine used to be." Damn, that's deep...
@HughJayness-pd5hn
@HughJayness-pd5hn 7 ай бұрын
@@duglife2230that’s what she said
@MG-wk2eh
@MG-wk2eh 6 ай бұрын
No, a lot of them hate it. That's why the Marine Corps has the lowest re-enlistment rate in the US military. Don't fall for the hype. The USMC has the same issues, worse in some ways, with leadership as the Army. The reason it's harder to make rank in the USMC is because the bottleneck is lower than the Army and the Marine Corps assigns more responsibility at lower ranks (some think that's a bragging point, it's actually being paid less for the same job, while being less experienced and mature).
@Stand_By_For_Mind_Control
@Stand_By_For_Mind_Control 6 ай бұрын
@@MG-wk2eh I went to the Marine recruiter and all I could think is 'and they pay you guys the SAME for this?'. That guy was such an aggressive jerk, too. They definitely don't want empathetic or compassionate people in their ranks. That guy was in that job of recruiter to weed out Jojo Rabbits like me. Not even kidding. The Army can handle people like me because it's about team effort but the Marines needs killers who can operate independently. And I like myself knowing that it's not for me.
@MG-wk2eh
@MG-wk2eh 6 ай бұрын
@@Stand_By_For_Mind_Control Bro, anyone in infantry/combat arms is a killer. Army or Marine Corps. Marine POGs are not killers, no matter how much shit they talk about all Marines being riflemen because they went to shortened and easy version of SOI after boot camp and never drilled again.
@Ironheart73
@Ironheart73 4 ай бұрын
Because Lyndon B Johnson wanted a definitive Military Victory by 1970, the Military was actively drafting soldiers including kids who were barely in their teens. Marin boot camp typically is 12 weeks long. They shortened it to 8 weeks (Joker refers to the Marines as an 8-week college for the Phony tough) so they could rapidly deploy soldiers. To compensate they made these training camps more brutal mentally and physically. As an end result, not only was Uncle Sam sending substandard soldiers, some were already experiencing PTSD already even before they did any fighting just as you see here. Adding insult to the Injury, corrupt politicians and their business partners wanted to profit from the war, they were rush manufacturing weapons and equipment. Many of those M16 rifles would malfunction after a little dust. So in the end, Johnson really ruined a lot of American lives.
@stanlee-eq7lu
@stanlee-eq7lu Ай бұрын
Just to add, that's always why our Military wants young adolescent boys/men to enlist. They have no fear of combat thinking they're invincible. You're not going to get that same mentality with a fourty year old man having his job to support him and his family. Me? I'm 60. I tried to enlist back in 1983 but failed the physical - too nearsighted. Back then I wasn't afraid and would look the devil in the face and laugh. Now? You couldn't pay me enough to enlist and likely fight in a useless war all for the sake of the Military Industrial Complex and big business making unimaginable amounts of money.
@ContentEnjoyer-gm3ky
@ContentEnjoyer-gm3ky Ай бұрын
@stanlee-eq7lu “The industrial complex” it’s much deeper than that fella. It’s a whole ass deep state.
@lxeedye7one662
@lxeedye7one662 Ай бұрын
@hereticalpaintjobs
@hereticalpaintjobs Ай бұрын
Don't forget that Macnamra would have an initiative to bring men with mental disabilities and fight in the war dubbed "MacNamaras idiots"
@Ironheart73
@Ironheart73 Ай бұрын
@@hereticalpaintjobs Yeah I remember that. Mg grandfather said, there were really illiterate people being sent to the field
@31webseries
@31webseries Жыл бұрын
Gotta stick up for some of the war correspondents. It's not always about getting the scoop. It's about documenting history. Recording the ugly truth of what's really happening.
@UnleashTheGhouls
@UnleashTheGhouls Жыл бұрын
Thank you for saying this as it wasn't an angle I'd previously considered!
@sharutamonud7698
@sharutamonud7698 Ай бұрын
Basically spreading propaganda. You really think the U.S of all places gives a shit about recording history like that? Sure, if it doesnt invovle themselves and it benefits their end goals.
@mbryson2899
@mbryson2899 Жыл бұрын
The Mickey Mouse song has often been sung in our household when the kids were on the edge of succumbing to peer pressure. It was always a wonderful "step back and have a frank conversation" moment for the family. Along the way it was definitely played back on us. It also lasted long enough to influence our eldest grandkid, too.
@davidj.thompson
@davidj.thompson Жыл бұрын
I believe it was Emery who said that a Gunnery Sergeant who behaves as sadistically as Hartman, would not get away with his antics, even during wartime.
@javiergilvidal1558
@javiergilvidal1558 21 күн бұрын
I didn´t find Hartmann sadistic, but really caring for his men. He was preparing them for war, not for a pic-nic!
@morganpenn4612
@morganpenn4612 20 күн бұрын
Welcome to life in the Corps
@theldun1
@theldun1 Жыл бұрын
Prvt.Pile was the direct result of McNamara’s Morons. It was a real thing.
@DarthVader-1701
@DarthVader-1701 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the DOD purposely sent. People who were unfit for combat into combat for a quota.
@RideAcrossTheRiver
@RideAcrossTheRiver 4 ай бұрын
Except Leonard becomes the best in his barracks. Animal Mother is another.
@accubond3004
@accubond3004 Жыл бұрын
Can you believe R lee almost didnt get that role he was an advisor and he showed how he would do it and kubrick hired him on the spot
@joshuawilliams7734
@joshuawilliams7734 Жыл бұрын
I think this film is a fascinating study into the demystification of being a soldier, in most war stories war is seen as a brave thing where you will be thanked and given medals and even get to varnish a salute with your coat of gold and honours but full metal shows the cold reality of what its like to have your humanity stripped as instinct of the killing machine of man and the urge to survive takes over. a really powerful film indeed and thank you guys for covering it 👍😊 Also can I request that you look at the film Barefoot Gen at some point it takes place in Japan during the second world war and it focuses on a family after surviving the hiroshima bomb its an anime
@UnleashTheGhouls
@UnleashTheGhouls Жыл бұрын
That's a brilliant outlook Josh!
@greatgallade
@greatgallade 26 күн бұрын
Being a Marine is to give up yourself. We go through a lot so others don't have to go through it
@sugartbube
@sugartbube Жыл бұрын
one of the best war movies ever
@chasehedges6775
@chasehedges6775 Жыл бұрын
💯💯👍👍
@Tables-zm7db
@Tables-zm7db 11 ай бұрын
The
@themistakeisintentional-dn5df
@themistakeisintentional-dn5df 17 күн бұрын
One of the best movies ever period
@schizoidboy
@schizoidboy Жыл бұрын
It's been acknowledged recently that during the Vietnam War there were recruits who were brought into the ranks who normally would not have been taken due to their intelligence or maturity levels. It was the plan of Secretary of Defense McNamara who adopted it from a different program which was actually intended to give jobs and training through the military for such people rather than use them as cannon fodder. However, they became cannon fodder because that was how they were used. They were called "McNamara's Idiots" and like Gomer they often needed assistance doing things and became targets. As in the movie some turned on their superior officers killing them which in Vietnam (maybe other wars as well) was called "Fragging" due to the fact fragmentation grenades were often used. I think now days they might simply discharge someone like Gomer rather than risk him being somewhere where is a threat to himself and other, but from what I hear they still get people who shouldn't be in the service who get in anyways.
@plasticweapon
@plasticweapon 6 ай бұрын
"mcnamara's morons"
@jeffreyconner2937
@jeffreyconner2937 Ай бұрын
They get it because recruiters are under a lot of pressure to meet their quotas.
@iusethisnameformygoogleacc1013
@iusethisnameformygoogleacc1013 24 күн бұрын
Yep - they did the same thing during Iraq, except the Iraqi people ended up in the crosshairs. A ton of American soldiers died in really horrific ways because *other* American soldiers allowed into the service when they lowered standards committed horrific war crimes (most of which the US military decided the Iraqis were responsible for and lying about). You basically required proof beyond a reasonable doubt before they would *investigate* and whistleblowers were generally harrassed, threatened, killed, or scared out of the service after succeeding in those rare cases with any justice. Look up Stephen Green.
@Jartran72
@Jartran72 19 күн бұрын
Gomer? You mean Leonard?
@SUB-IN-SUPER
@SUB-IN-SUPER Жыл бұрын
"From a young man with a clouded mind, to his mind being splattered all over the tiles" Someone should have told him "friendly fire" was on.
@ultrabeanbag8736
@ultrabeanbag8736 Ай бұрын
i read that as he said that lol
@TreeBarkSide
@TreeBarkSide 2 ай бұрын
I bet most people forgot the movie exists after bootcamp.
@drakkon2zshadowsz909
@drakkon2zshadowsz909 2 ай бұрын
The movie is inherently showing the duo/trio of aspects of childhood being worn away by war. Pyle was a naive child turned killing machine, and his awareness of that made him see his life as no longer worth to live. Joker was a happy/fun child turned also into a killing machine, also aware yet embracing the “world of shit”. A third aspect could be argued to be that Vietnamese girl, who is a more literal idea than the first two: that war strips and steals the youth of children and forces them to grow up and die too fast
@ContentEnjoyer-gm3ky
@ContentEnjoyer-gm3ky Ай бұрын
I argue that Pyle was acting a little too young for his age, and I respectfully disagree. Sure, I guess you shouldn’t have to go through hell to become a man, but we live in an era full of infantilized 18 year olds. I argue otherwise.
@soulfoodie1
@soulfoodie1 Жыл бұрын
Great analysis of one of the most searing examinations of war ever
@UnleashTheGhouls
@UnleashTheGhouls Жыл бұрын
Thank you Soul! It's a fascinating film
@thedimensionalpotato1534
@thedimensionalpotato1534 11 күн бұрын
My dad made me watch Full Metal Jacket when I was a kid. That last scene where Pyle became deranged, shot the drill instructor and then himself, that part clinged in my memory for years. Now I finally know what the movie was called and I can watch it again.
@williamriley5118
@williamriley5118 Жыл бұрын
I served in the Marine Corps and I went to Boot Camp at Parris Island, South Carolina. This was a very accurate depiction of what Marine Corps recruits have to deal with. But there were 2 more Drill Instructors or in my case 3 Drill Instructors because I was in 3rd Battalion. I also served in Operation Desert Storm but it was much different that the Vietnam War as depicted in this movie.
@deoncarlton9096
@deoncarlton9096 24 күн бұрын
I was in 3rd battalion kilo company, I had 4 drill instructors and we had a couple of people that was like the recruit !! They got discharge so fast
@hoodieso8858
@hoodieso8858 Күн бұрын
​@@deoncarlton9096yeah, I had a fellow recruit off himself in the rain room with IP scissors while I was on firewatch
@Devil_Dawg2k23
@Devil_Dawg2k23 7 ай бұрын
The only thing inaccurate I notice about this movie is there are multiple DIs training and destroying recruits and making them into Marines instead of just one DI doing all the work
@schneir5
@schneir5 Ай бұрын
I'm pretty sure that the nickname of "Private Pyle" was a reference to the "Gomer Pyle Show", where he was literally a private in the Marine corps, not to his character on the "Andy Griffith Show". It's the same character, played by the same person, but the situation in the later show matches the movie way more.
@sophiaisabelle01
@sophiaisabelle01 Жыл бұрын
Full Metal Jacket was beyond amazing. Great analysis on this topic. We will always support you.
@UnleashTheGhouls
@UnleashTheGhouls Жыл бұрын
Thank you Sophia!
@jules-yi8rn
@jules-yi8rn Жыл бұрын
I went through basic training in 1989 and totally loved the first half of this movie because it's true. The drill instructors' job is to wear down the soldier and then build them up. I guess it went sideways for Pyle and Hartman, but the situation rings true. Damn, you made me want to watch the film again, you Ghoul😂.
@UnleashTheGhouls
@UnleashTheGhouls Жыл бұрын
If you do watch it again, I hope you enjoy it! Unleash The Jules!
@Replicaate
@Replicaate Жыл бұрын
Sometimes I wonder how many times a young Wes Anderson watched this movie, specifically the first half - the square framed shots, the relatively pastel colour schemes, the moments that are so uncomfortable that you kind of laugh about it - it does feel like a psychotic Anderson movie to me at times.
@marceloyoshida5507
@marceloyoshida5507 Ай бұрын
Somewhere I read that Joker was supposed to diin the end of the movie. But the actor and Kubrick talked and decided that living with all those experiences might have been worse than a “peaceful” deathin the war. As he will habe to carry that weight for the rest of his life
@danadane2501
@danadane2501 9 ай бұрын
I had to pause at the 1:52 mark simply to say that's exactly how bootcamp is. At least when I was there in 2000. I was Navy and it wasn't any better. The only thing they don't mention in Full Metal Jacket is the 3 months of sleep deprivation they put us (and me) through. True story. Also not to pick your excellent video to pieces but they were Marines not Soldiers. I say that because any Jarhead I knew would throw a bitch fit if they watched this video.
@WrathOfGrapesN7
@WrathOfGrapesN7 Жыл бұрын
9:19 I met the dead NVA actor's son during my training in the British army.
@KenHeath
@KenHeath 14 күн бұрын
These are Marines, not soldiers. A soldier would never say "I'm an Army", A sailor would never say "I'm a Navy", an airman would never say "I'm an Air Force"... but every Marine is proud to say "I'm a Marine". It's a title that is earned, not a job that is applied for.
@princetchalla2441
@princetchalla2441 10 күн бұрын
Plus they have the best smelling crayons, semper fi
@ares.arctic
@ares.arctic Ай бұрын
We really getting Vietnam experts with a Scottish accent before GTA VI
@Daud-ix4tm
@Daud-ix4tm Ай бұрын
GTA 4? You mean GTA VI
@ares.arctic
@ares.arctic Ай бұрын
Yes dammit 😩 I’m embarrassed that I only noticed just now
@Daud-ix4tm
@Daud-ix4tm Ай бұрын
@@ares.arctic it's alright it was funny though to think even GTA 4 hasn't came out somehow
@spillednoodles7573
@spillednoodles7573 Ай бұрын
8:33 it's literally like those people that can watch someone fall to a train track and just pull out their phone and starts recording
@Jazzfunkmaster
@Jazzfunkmaster Жыл бұрын
You NEED to do a Nightmare Fuel on Requiem For A Dream pls!
@UnleashTheGhouls
@UnleashTheGhouls Жыл бұрын
It's planned in!
@CalamityBaird
@CalamityBaird Ай бұрын
Everyone coming in here like "did you know he was a drill instructor???" LITERALLY EVERYONE KNOWS
@JeffTheHokie
@JeffTheHokie 5 ай бұрын
Vincent D'Onofrio is a great actor. You could see him in 5 different movies and think you were watching 5 different actors. Gary Oldman is the same way.
@TemmieContingenC
@TemmieContingenC 9 ай бұрын
Just found this channel whilst binging Stalingrad (1993). Too tired to write a long comment rn so I’ll just say that I’m glad to have found the channel and your analysis on movies is great
@johnnysilvercloud4470
@johnnysilvercloud4470 Ай бұрын
During the Vietnam era you had a program called McNamara’s Morons which allows low-IQ troops to be there. PVT Pile can very well be a true story as McNamara’s Morons actually happened.
@sewaxe6197
@sewaxe6197 8 ай бұрын
If you read the book, nobody ever gets the sniper. After the snippets eight all and the medic, cowboy comes to help and the sniper wounds cowboy to suck in more of the squad. Joker shoots cowboy to stop anyone else exposing themselves 😳
@boiizboi6525
@boiizboi6525 18 күн бұрын
The peace sign is close to his heart, but the "born to kill" is close to his head. Your brain will always could what your heart may feel, and especially for a situation like Vietnam, the brain took over
@ckotcher1
@ckotcher1 Жыл бұрын
One reason R. Lee Ermy plays such a great Drill Sergeant?…..He was a real Marine Drill Sergeant irl
@williamriley5118
@williamriley5118 Жыл бұрын
He was a Drill Instructor. Drill Sergeants are in the Army.
@ckotcher1
@ckotcher1 Ай бұрын
@@williamriley5118 oh i see.
@ckotcher1
@ckotcher1 Ай бұрын
@@williamriley5118 but the two comments above me also say “drill Sargent” also, in the movie “Jarhead” with Jake Gyllenhaal? All the crew recruits say “yes drill, sergeant!”
@williamriley5118
@williamriley5118 Ай бұрын
@@ckotcher1 I’m a former Marine. This I know.
@ckotcher1
@ckotcher1 Ай бұрын
@@williamriley5118 Well i don’t understand why every Marine movie they say “YES. DRILL. SARG. ANT!” Maybe because “YES. DRILL.INSTRUCTOR”!! doesn’t roll off the tongue lol. Who knows. 🤷🏼‍♀️
@tonyglasner1925
@tonyglasner1925 Жыл бұрын
I can remember the first time I watched this movie when it was released on VHS. My brother and I said these guys have all got a screw loose to join up knowing that they are going to the worst of veitmam, and marines are bad ass.
@jamesmummerfied3044
@jamesmummerfied3044 7 ай бұрын
not all. :)@Eidelmania
@worer850
@worer850 4 ай бұрын
This movie is so deep like all Kubricks best. Master piece after master peice.
@ChristIsGod-Christian
@ChristIsGod-Christian 21 күн бұрын
*From a young man with a clouded mind, to his mind(brain) being splattered all over the tiles.* Men thats a cold ass line
@thefraudulentbrit7516
@thefraudulentbrit7516 Ай бұрын
You know, sergeant Hartman reminds me of someone. I’ll give you a hint….. “It’d be funny if it weren’t so pathetic. Oh, what the heck, I’ll laugh anyway!”
@JnEricsonx
@JnEricsonx 19 күн бұрын
Met him.
@OldMusicFan83
@OldMusicFan83 6 ай бұрын
As an Army veteran, I loved the Boot Camp sequence. The stuff with Gomer Pyle is for film making narrative. The rest of the verbal abuse and intense control of the platoon was SOP in my 1980s Basic Training experience. It was a rite of passage. It starts fierce but eases up as training progresses.
@equusquaggaquagga536
@equusquaggaquagga536 Жыл бұрын
FMJ also portrays soldiers as sociopathic predators who run in packs
@MG-wk2eh
@MG-wk2eh 6 ай бұрын
Some of them are. Especially in the infantry and other combat units. Don't think they are boy scouts.
@plasticweapon
@plasticweapon 6 ай бұрын
no it doesn't, and marines don't like to be called soldiers. "in packs"? as opposed to what, alone?
@n0rth426
@n0rth426 6 ай бұрын
@@plasticweaponmoron, he’s saying they lose their humanity and become like pack like Animals.
@woohoo1551
@woohoo1551 22 күн бұрын
"Man, I hope they're fucking with us. I'm not ready for this shit."
@3ggCat
@3ggCat 11 күн бұрын
"when you hit a already broken rock, it breaks more."
@tylerthetiger2659
@tylerthetiger2659 Жыл бұрын
Nightmare fuel next episode, American History X
@QuantumZer-0
@QuantumZer-0 2 ай бұрын
Yes!
@trpoihgg
@trpoihgg 4 ай бұрын
Man pyle death scene will always haunt me man. Straight up madness
@David-yw2lv
@David-yw2lv Ай бұрын
I thought he should have answered Hartman calling him Pyle in the latrine,"My name is Leonard Lawrence!"I think if there had been a background story on Pyle,it would have been his father was a Marine and twisted his son's arm to join The Peace Corps would have been a better fit for Leonard Lawrence,a.k.a. Gomer Pyle.
@SarcasticPossum
@SarcasticPossum 19 күн бұрын
With all he went through, I'm honestly surprised he didn't take it out on the whole Platoon.
@jimnite4919
@jimnite4919 5 ай бұрын
In my own experience, the drill instructor stood on a bed rail to point down at a taller Pvt. Pyle ish basic military trainee. It would’ve fit right in to this movie.
@hankdetroit2076
@hankdetroit2076 Жыл бұрын
The greatest military movie ever made.
@rc59191
@rc59191 Жыл бұрын
Hope you do one about Casualties of War that there is real nightmare fuel. What those guys did to that woman is unforgivable.
@DCSMedia
@DCSMedia Жыл бұрын
I finally got around to watching this one yesterday, and all I can say is, The Shining was not the only horror film Kubrick made. The first 40 minute section at the boot camp, and the final scene are just bone chilling. It’s a very unique take on an anti war message conveyed through the filmmaking and characterisation, I’ve heard some detractors of the film state the film is unsatisfying, and that is the point, ultimately showing the futility of war.
@Callsign-Cobra
@Callsign-Cobra Жыл бұрын
This is my most favorite movie of all time
@Cjephunneh
@Cjephunneh 3 ай бұрын
I didnt understand the movie when I was young, but I started to understand it 20 years later, then I would not stop watching some of the scenes, specially when Hartmann is killed by Gomer Pyle.
@CorazonDonquiote
@CorazonDonquiote Жыл бұрын
HELL YEAH!!!!!
@cooperthechocolatelab3007
@cooperthechocolatelab3007 4 ай бұрын
Very well done, Thank you.
@andrewhosszu5775
@andrewhosszu5775 Ай бұрын
Lock socking is different and the same. Locks (master combo locks) were put in socks for the same result, however it is done because soap in towels leaves residue and chunky soap bits
@GiveMeYoSammich
@GiveMeYoSammich 26 күн бұрын
Hartmann would've been on the fraggers list
@jasond.7346
@jasond.7346 Ай бұрын
Awesome video! Always loved this movie
@infantry4lyfe252
@infantry4lyfe252 Ай бұрын
1:54 This is the norm in basic training for most combat jobs in the military (particularly the army and marine corps). In order to be an effective killer, you have to be broken dow and rebuilt into one.
@Austrian_Butcher
@Austrian_Butcher Ай бұрын
Personally, i always thought he named him "Pyle" because he viewed him as a Pile of Shit
@thecowfy
@thecowfy Ай бұрын
When Siran Siran says he doesn't remember shooting RFK, I believe that implicitly. It's quite simple. Pavlov knew.
@stevenmcgrath5114
@stevenmcgrath5114 Ай бұрын
It is Stress Innoculation, a nessesary component to survive in combat.
@user-eu3tw7vp9k
@user-eu3tw7vp9k Жыл бұрын
Help our boy out, add a comment and a like!
@UnleashTheGhouls
@UnleashTheGhouls Жыл бұрын
Thank you!!
@merc1171
@merc1171 Ай бұрын
wait until this bloke finds out usmc boot camp is exactly like this
@novitrix9671
@novitrix9671 5 ай бұрын
Quality video! So unfortunate that these aren't fantasy but reality moments and characters from our past and likely future.
@mikitz
@mikitz 7 ай бұрын
The best British Vietnam war film ever.
@CharliRay
@CharliRay Ай бұрын
I seen several boys be conditioned into unhinged killing machines if you allow yourself to be brainwashed you certainly will become a robot . I just followed all instructions and made sure I was pristine at PT and my boot camp was reasonable and even though i rarely made a mistake I got my fair share of screaming in my face DI Thomas was my DI he was a midnight black guy 5”9 155 pound little tyrant and I can still hear his screaming 30 years later in my nightmares 😂 they have a really hard job making boys into soldiers there’s many of the recruits that had no business being in the military let alone the marines my poor nephew was unable to graduate and was sent home after 3 weeks and 2 weeks in a mental health facility they really did a number on him mentall I tried to convince him to join the air force but he insisted on USMC because of me
@ganrimmonim
@ganrimmonim 22 күн бұрын
In the book the sargent congratates pile on becoming a killer because his training had worked.
@mitchelljohnson9548
@mitchelljohnson9548 7 ай бұрын
At 13:29 that soldiers finger is in the wrong place on a idle M-60 pig . movie spoiler LOL
@t0mcat683
@t0mcat683 Жыл бұрын
may i reccoment a move to make one of these videos on, a movie called emancipation set in 1863 louisiana
@UnleashTheGhouls
@UnleashTheGhouls Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the recommendation Tomcat!
@XHU524-OFSET5
@XHU524-OFSET5 14 күн бұрын
pleas make a video on the movie the beast of war, it is servery underrated and not many people know of it but it is really good in my opinion
@DioBrando_Sama
@DioBrando_Sama Ай бұрын
And 9 year old me didn't realise that sh t. Now 10 years later on the other side...
@georgemakrov6174
@georgemakrov6174 18 күн бұрын
Another big theme in the movie is the forced equalization of sexual desire with desire to kill. You can see in the boot camp scenes of how they were being indoctrinated into treating their weapon as their lover, they were made to sing "this is my rifle, this is my gun, this is for fighting, this is for fun" while holding their weapon with one hand and their private parts with the other" . There is probably a few more instances that i cant remember in the first half but these are the ones i remember. This has clear results in the 2nd act, when they talk about killing someone , they say "f$ck him/her" like in the last scene with the nva girl. This is something that was actually used in the past because the military wanted to take advantage of the fact that sexual instinct is a natural desire and indoctrinate the men into equating it with killing. That way they are really made "born to kill"
@KAMiKAZE-T.V.
@KAMiKAZE-T.V. Жыл бұрын
Fucking great video guys👍🏽💪🏽
@UnleashTheGhouls
@UnleashTheGhouls Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@ThePottsy1972
@ThePottsy1972 Жыл бұрын
Great movie but what advisor on set suggested using an AK47 as a sniper's weapon?
@plasticweapon
@plasticweapon 6 ай бұрын
it's a Czech-made Sa vz. 58.
@Leafpaw1
@Leafpaw1 7 күн бұрын
bruh this whole time i thought the main character's name was "jorker" not "joker"
@seanrosenau2088
@seanrosenau2088 Жыл бұрын
Why wasn't the feeble mindedness of Private Pile noticed and shouldn't he therefore have been exempt from any military duty?
@DarthVader-1701
@DarthVader-1701 Жыл бұрын
The DOD and Secretary of Defense McNamara needed their military quota.
@MG-wk2eh
@MG-wk2eh 6 ай бұрын
It was the 1960s, most military men would've had attitudes like the one Hartmann had. That the guy is just being a lazy shitbag and needs more discipline and motivation. General Patton in WW2 slapped soldiers exhibiting signs of PTSD and thought they were just being lazy and malingering.
@ckotcher1
@ckotcher1 Жыл бұрын
“The alive know only one thing: it is better to be dead.”
@stanlee-eq7lu
@stanlee-eq7lu Ай бұрын
As much as I love FMJ, a mistake from the beginning by Kubrick. Pvt. Pyle was among those drafted. However, in the Draft, it pertained only to the Army. The Marines was all volunteer. The only one that seems to have volunteered was Joker because Sgt. Hartman asked Joker why he joined the Marines was to kill. The only other that seems he volunteered was Animal Mother. The rest seem they were thrown into the Corps. Pvt. Pyle was a true representation of what was known as McNamara's Millions (untrained country boys just to meet the quotas). Even the Supervisor at one of my jobs got drafted but he chose the Air Force. They were not really involved with ground combat.
@CaesarCallaway
@CaesarCallaway 23 күн бұрын
You're missing the whole point of the film that it's about the US military industrial complex in the horrors of the Vietnam War. They drafted unfit soldiers and force them to fight. In a war that the US should never have involved with by leaving out this contacts you missed the entire point of the movie
@noctotainlowry9246
@noctotainlowry9246 17 күн бұрын
Dam it is almost like films can say multiple things and have more then one point you fuckin weirdo
@Ishkybibble
@Ishkybibble 10 ай бұрын
Ha, yeah, that’s Marine Corps boot camp
@OldMusicFan83
@OldMusicFan83 6 ай бұрын
Pretty close to the army, too
@bunsofyeezbalayanan96
@bunsofyeezbalayanan96 14 күн бұрын
99%Pstd and suicide the other 1% mickey mouse
@Velikan-y4g
@Velikan-y4g 20 күн бұрын
In real life Hartman would’ve been court martialed
@karied6251
@karied6251 26 күн бұрын
Do military barrack quarter restrooms have partitions?
@marjtierney
@marjtierney Жыл бұрын
Full metal Micky
@Jed-y1c
@Jed-y1c 24 күн бұрын
8 ball is one of the best characters ever.
@penroc3
@penroc3 Ай бұрын
also code reds happen in boot no matter what the military says.
@SurvivenTerry
@SurvivenTerry 4 ай бұрын
Its not conditioning, its training to survive the most crazy stuff your mind will ever see and how to deal with constantly being screwed with. as an us army veteran that went through the last combat engineer unit that was just as hands on and we actually had a pvt pile and we took care of before he went crazy, his name was Walls he was a blefalcon and everyone kept an eye on him. Had to give him a blanket party, forced him to wash out so we didn't have the same problem go down.
@fiszafisz
@fiszafisz 16 күн бұрын
Full metal jacket was hard for me to watch, cause i had no one to cheer on. There were no heros,.only villains that were showing their true side sooner or later. Even Joker was beating Pile with soap.
@homelessalcoholic2716
@homelessalcoholic2716 24 күн бұрын
If this movie made you want to join the marines, you should have been rejected for having a room temperature IQ 😂
@jessicabentley1961
@jessicabentley1961 7 ай бұрын
Realisticly pyle killing hartman and himself is where any other movie would end but fmj keeps it going even longer
@plasticweapon
@plasticweapon 6 ай бұрын
realistically, no feature length movie ends after 40 minutes.
@jessicabentley1961
@jessicabentley1961 6 ай бұрын
@@plasticweapon no not run time wise I was saying toneally like pyle killing hartman and himself is where any other movie would end but the film keeps goi g into the war itself showing that even though this tragedy happened no one was sent hime or given an easy time they still went to fight
@waynemcauliffe-fv5yf
@waynemcauliffe-fv5yf Жыл бұрын
I found the 2nd part better
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