The Most Disturbing Black & White Movie Ever Made

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Wendigoon

Wendigoon

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 10 000
@Wendigoon
@Wendigoon 2 жыл бұрын
Use this link to save $5 at Magic Spoon today! magicspoon.com/wendigoon Thank you to Magic Spoon for sponsoring the video!
@dreamman5588
@dreamman5588 2 жыл бұрын
Cool seeing you in the internet historian video
@solvimeldal2335
@solvimeldal2335 2 жыл бұрын
Burger
@nicole9volt
@nicole9volt 2 жыл бұрын
Do Threads next plz!!!
@Bruhngus420
@Bruhngus420 2 жыл бұрын
dad please make a video that involves aliens in some way again 🫦
@antjeeismann4684
@antjeeismann4684 2 жыл бұрын
The Version of this movie that was made in '79 was played in front of my class by our history Teacher. It feels weird that my libertarian arse already knows Something about this topic... When i watched your Video about Waco i went into it with zero previous knowledge.
@shurokone2120
@shurokone2120 Жыл бұрын
“One death is a tragedy, six million is a statistic.” I feel like that quote really speaks to how we as a people tend to look back on wars.
@lukecodz
@lukecodz Жыл бұрын
yea, like we think serial killers are scarier because we simply cant comprehend the killing of 6 million people
@aintruder3943
@aintruder3943 Жыл бұрын
Stalin quote
@CaptainAhab117
@CaptainAhab117 Жыл бұрын
Some don't like to admit it but people only have so much empathy to go around. All the people around the world dying in wars right now will never mean as much to you as the loss of a good friend or family member.
@Tsunami5062
@Tsunami5062 Жыл бұрын
It’s always sad to see millions die for no reason but it will never feel the same as a close friend or family member dying ( My original comment had some harsh words that I didn’t mean so i remade it)
@all1swan
@all1swan 11 ай бұрын
@@Tsunami5062this is such a sad and scary way to view another person’s death
@endrankluvsda4loko172
@endrankluvsda4loko172 2 жыл бұрын
The thought of stabbing someone then spending hours with that person while he dies is so haunting and sad. I couldn't imagine anything more horrific or sad.
@rumpled4skin271
@rumpled4skin271 2 жыл бұрын
id just put them out of it at that point, or at least id like to think i would. i dont think id wanna be in the face of someone dying, you either gotta be alive or dead, i wouldnt want to see the halfway stage
@cericat
@cericat 2 жыл бұрын
That scene has a parallel in a later Australian film, The Lighthorsemen, there's a Turkish soldier who is lung shot. Neither are the worst deaths I've seen but it definitely helps show the reasons why Paul and Dave turned against war.
@SteelSquishy
@SteelSquishy 2 жыл бұрын
Never enlist
@doinksinthePM
@doinksinthePM 2 жыл бұрын
What's even worse is that Paul had no idea the guy was naturally mute. It's bad enough to stab someone and then spend 10 hours apologizing for it to them. Let alone to think that they've chosen to die while giving you the silent treatment!
@doinksinthePM
@doinksinthePM 2 жыл бұрын
@@rumpled4skin271 that, I think was very key to the scene, actually. We can see how totally green Paul is to war and death and combat. It's hard to imagine a seasoned soldier doing anything but quickly and humanely ending the French soldier so he doesn't suffer needlessly. But Paul was essentially still a boy until he came out the other side of this experience.
@bigslurpee2078
@bigslurpee2078 2 жыл бұрын
The screaming when Behm is blinded genuinely frightened me. This whole film is insane, especially for the time.
@planimun7407
@planimun7407 2 жыл бұрын
@here is the full clip Nope.
@robertcampbell3019
@robertcampbell3019 2 жыл бұрын
Freaked me tf out
@Geyrider
@Geyrider 2 жыл бұрын
@Nemuri Kayama - Midnight it say its almost more horrifying
@cericat
@cericat 2 жыл бұрын
It's the best piece of anti-war literature ever written and the movie is an above average adaptation of the source, between it, Paths of Glory, and Breaker Morant it's really hard to justify what we do to one another, as all are heavily rooted in real events (though BM is depressingly viewed as in favour of the defendants who were guilty). The novel was actually banned nationally here in Australia because of it being "pacifistic".
@bruhman2089
@bruhman2089 2 жыл бұрын
it actually distressed me too, like there was no blood, but it was brutal
@benjamindriscoll6491
@benjamindriscoll6491 11 ай бұрын
The fact that a nearly 100 year old movie has copyright issues is insane to me
@vinyldash2333
@vinyldash2333 11 ай бұрын
You can thank Disney for that.
@theorangeoof926
@theorangeoof926 11 ай бұрын
@@vinyldash2333Man got so mad that one of his IPs was stolen, that it would never happen again…guess what, it wouldn’t. For the detriment of the world, it wouldn’t.
@TheWolfie234
@TheWolfie234 10 ай бұрын
​@theorangeoof926 I dont even think it was stolen. Mickey was supposed to go into the public domain for free use. He was never stolen. Just disney didn't want to lose their cash cow.
@HarleyQuinnSoldier
@HarleyQuinnSoldier 10 ай бұрын
​@@TheWolfie234so according to Time Magazine: the version of Mickey with his iconic red design, so the one we see today, is still copyrighted but all the versions BEFORE that design are copyright free in most countries
@starmnsixty1209
@starmnsixty1209 10 ай бұрын
​@@vinyldash2333The House of the Rat remember. A loathsome bunch, Disney.
@noregerts8038
@noregerts8038 2 жыл бұрын
Watching a blinded soldier scream in absolute fear of death while Wendigoon chows down on hummus is the most bizarre thing I've seen all week. Great video
@rootsOfMadness15
@rootsOfMadness15 2 жыл бұрын
Time stamp?
@cyberspacedude9588
@cyberspacedude9588 2 жыл бұрын
@@rootsOfMadness15 18:16
@kangtheconqueror9545
@kangtheconqueror9545 2 жыл бұрын
Surrealism at it's finest
@zvisger
@zvisger 2 жыл бұрын
I noticed that too, I was like damn.. he looks like he's stoned and that hummus dip was the best thing ever. Chugging down a monster too. I'm surprised how much commentary he came up with when he had his eyes closed the whole time lmao
@ashikjaman1940
@ashikjaman1940 2 жыл бұрын
If KZbin copyright is good for anything it's for creating that scene
@MayatheAmazon
@MayatheAmazon 2 жыл бұрын
The absolute irony that the audience from so many countries all universally reacted to this film , in the same exact manner that the people in Paul’s town (teachers, students, etc) reacted to him saying “war is not what it’s been made out to be guys.” That in itself is satirical
@samreddig8819
@samreddig8819 2 жыл бұрын
If they reacted the way the message intended then it'd put a major dent in recruiting for future wars. Hide the horror to keep it profitable.
@goosefootjones7196
@goosefootjones7196 2 жыл бұрын
Never a foot was placed on German soil. War is hell
@F34RDSoldier805
@F34RDSoldier805 2 жыл бұрын
The film covers those types with the teacher. No matter what they hear, they will denie it and attack and shun the people who speak the truth. It's not all that Ironic because the film specifically calls those people out.
@ladyofthesith1943
@ladyofthesith1943 2 жыл бұрын
@@goosefootjones7196 You know I see this sometimes from people who really like the Kaiserreich. Perhaps a little too much, though don't take that as a personal attack on you. I've always wondered how much that really mattered when a generation of young Germans were massacred in the war. And how much this would fuel one of the worst regimes in human history.
@k.v.7681
@k.v.7681 2 жыл бұрын
I refer people harping on excitedly about war or "frenchies waving the white flag" to this movie. A thing I noticed is, the closer you get to those former battlefields, the less you tend to encounter those types. And even a simple visit can sometimes make the person "click". Places like Ypres, Verdun, the beaches of Normandy, the death camps of ww2... They carry something. And the people around there, often descendents of those who suffered, have something to them as well. The effects of war, a a certain sense of disillusionment, follows them accross generations.
@bobbydyne
@bobbydyne 2 жыл бұрын
The part of the book that always stuck out to me is when Paul’s squad faces artillery fire while in a graveyard. Not only dirt was kicked up by the explosions, but pieces of wooden caskets and human remains rained down on them too
@muaddoubledips
@muaddoubledips 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah this book has so so many harrowing and memorable moments. Like one where someome told paul not to eat too much because when you get stabbed by bayonet it's harder to treat the wound. That scene stuck with me.
@kriegenjoyer6913
@kriegenjoyer6913 2 жыл бұрын
very accurate, ww1 studyer here
@MLawrence-z9k
@MLawrence-z9k 3 ай бұрын
They actually blew up a real actual cemetery for that scene!!!! Back in the 1930's , they had no laws against killing animals or desecrating bodies in those days plus they used real actual live ammo in certain films that they shot at the actual actors with especially any James Cagney gangster film back then because blank bullets & squibs weren't even invented yet then so being a actor & doing stunts was extremely dangerous & most actors had to do all the dangerous stunts by themselves!!!!!
@Man_Aslume
@Man_Aslume 2 ай бұрын
Imagine being in that situation and a Human skull comes flying at you
@MLawrence-z9k
@MLawrence-z9k 2 ай бұрын
@@Man_Aslume facts , shit was real in cinema back in those days even for Charlie Chaplin 💯🪦❤️
@FlareTheFolf
@FlareTheFolf 10 ай бұрын
the fact that Wendigoon was basically forced to be a reaction youtuber just to put this video out shows how much KZbin caters to reaction channels
@undertowlil
@undertowlil 9 ай бұрын
1 hour long video essay: not transformative :/ eating hummus in the corner: yippies :D
@FlareTheFolf
@FlareTheFolf 9 ай бұрын
@@undertowlil basically
@Revikra
@Revikra 8 ай бұрын
I was hoping for the passive-aggressive consumption of Magic Spoon instead of hummus. Glad the vid got uploaded.
@beyiokuibukun9602
@beyiokuibukun9602 7 ай бұрын
​@@Revikra same
@floopydoopy9410
@floopydoopy9410 3 ай бұрын
Well yea it’s KZbin
@DarkManifesto
@DarkManifesto Жыл бұрын
I like how Wendigoon says "he's so funny" and "this is highly entertaining" with a huge smile and in the clip he just continues to casually munch on hummus with no sight of entertainment on his face
@laughingateverything8867
@laughingateverything8867 Жыл бұрын
This is literally a vibe .
@Downgrenade
@Downgrenade Жыл бұрын
bros HUNGY
@B.McAllister
@B.McAllister Жыл бұрын
Literally embodies the people who type "lol" or "lmao". Who are usually deadpan.
@LightIsAWaveNotAParticle
@LightIsAWaveNotAParticle Жыл бұрын
I think its so it can pass as critisism when he shows the film with audio. Critisism as its so boring he just eats with a bored expression.
@iagreewithyou7486
@iagreewithyou7486 Жыл бұрын
I’m assuming that he wasn’t even watching the clips being shown since he had to edit the face-cam in afterwards
@Smommasboy
@Smommasboy Жыл бұрын
"If it weren't for these uniforms we could have been friends you and I"...dude I'm actually starting to cry. What a powerful line. That whole scene makes me sick to my stomach
@mishy.
@mishy. Жыл бұрын
I cried twice watching this to be honest. First was during that scene, and second time was at the end with Paul's death. This whole movie is so powerful and I wish every person could see it and understand its message.
@karlmarx592
@karlmarx592 Жыл бұрын
@@mishy. I had to stop watching at the first dudes death, my goodness it was gruesome even by my standards and I watch happy tree friends (one of the characters in one episode of happy tree friends got their face shoved into a grill)
@AnimaDweller
@AnimaDweller Жыл бұрын
Sad thing is, its probably truth. Most of the soldiers fighting at WW1 didnt really feel any hatred against the opposing soldiers, they all just wanted to get home. The christmas truce where all of them played soccer and genuinely had a nice time together is so sad to me, because it really shows you that they were just fighting because nonsense, and that they really couldve been friends.
@darkmatter9643
@darkmatter9643 Жыл бұрын
⁠@@AnimaDwellerthis is kinda untrue I mean the Christmas truce only happened in the first year of the war and they only joined in festivities together in the British and German parts of the western front, the Belgians and French who were ya know occupied weren’t as happy to be nice to the Germans, it was stopped by the generals the next year yeah but additionally by the second year they had been exposed to poisonous gas and London had been bombed with zeppelins etc etc. But yeah no one really wanted the war although the Christmas truce is a bad example.
@kyloluma
@kyloluma Жыл бұрын
reminds me a lot of the poem The Man He Killed
@Sebic88
@Sebic88 Жыл бұрын
Having WWI veterans basically recreate something traumatizing from their past was probably really weird. My great great grandfather faught in the trenches and whenever my grandfather asked him about anything related to WWI and the trenches, he’d get scary PTSD attacks and start hyperventilating. If someone’s trauma was triggered by even mentioning, I can’t imagine filming a movie about it.
@fynn2350
@fynn2350 Жыл бұрын
The ways that help individual people cope with their trauma are very different and so was their way of handling trauma in general. I can imagine that the soldiers working on this movie had at least to some capacity managed to work through the worst of it and found it helpful for their own peace of mind to put this horrible knowledge to good use. But it certainly wasn't easy. The film itself was known to give veterans flashbacks precisely because it was so true to detail in so many aspects.
@P2D_x
@P2D_x Жыл бұрын
Watch Goodbye Uncle Tom. That’s so bad.
@fallenflame1940
@fallenflame1940 Жыл бұрын
I think for some people, reliving their trauma could help them process and deal with the impact that it had on them. but im not educated on thd topic so i could be wrong
@khravos
@khravos Жыл бұрын
Some people ain't a bitch
@lespaulguitarist92
@lespaulguitarist92 Жыл бұрын
maybe they were in the trenches but didn't see the worst of it or heavy combat at all?
@elizabethweigle6146
@elizabethweigle6146 Жыл бұрын
49:57 The fact that Paul’s death is offscreen and we only have his hand to show he died is soooo so much better than showing Paul die onscreen. To that sniper, Paul was just another German enemy to take care of. And on top of that, that hand could belong to any soldier (although we know it’s Paul), making him just another faceless casualty in a war he didn’t want. And that applies for all the soldiers; they’re just another casualty, another note to send to another family, another grave to dig, another hospital bed to empty and fill, another tick mark added to the death toll. 😭
@Redd7206
@Redd7206 9 ай бұрын
BRO THE FUCKING EMOJI RUINED IT FOR ME 😂😂
@elizabethweigle6146
@elizabethweigle6146 9 ай бұрын
@@Redd7206 IM SORRY 😂😅
@aleksandretaveau
@aleksandretaveau 8 ай бұрын
I loved the new All Quiet on the Western Front movie overall, but I agree. Paul's death in that one and the last attack thing were my only two problems with it.
@WhatANiceMonth
@WhatANiceMonth 5 ай бұрын
The whole comment: well-read and explained, transformative and additive to the video Also the whole comment: *gets made a joke by an emoji*
@IsThatHitoYT
@IsThatHitoYT 4 ай бұрын
bro the emoji lmao
@scottdotson9078
@scottdotson9078 Жыл бұрын
This left out one of the most horrifying scenes from the book. A ton of horses get hit with artillery and just sit there screaming as they start kicking, getting wrapped in their own intestines, tying themselves in their own guts. That scene in the book has stuck with me for many years
@bassingaminandshootin5
@bassingaminandshootin5 Жыл бұрын
One detail of that is one of the soldiers had/has horses on his farm back home, and the contrast of his horses being safe and happy and the horses being killed causes him stress. They also ended up putting the horses down after the bombardment ended.
@bassingaminandshootin5
@bassingaminandshootin5 Жыл бұрын
Stress is an understatement, but I hope you see the point that his personal connection to horses added another layer to his pain over that situation.
@scottdotson9078
@scottdotson9078 Жыл бұрын
@@bassingaminandshootin5 I do, and the fact that they had to sit and listen to the horses scream for fear that shooting them would give them away added even more. He loved horses and had to sit there and listen to that for I can’t remember how long until someone finally shot them. The book truly is the most horrifying piece of literature I’ve ever read
@theothertonydutch
@theothertonydutch Жыл бұрын
That point is so strong because the amount of horses that were killed during that war just boggles the mind. Let's not forget that horses were still a common sight in the streets during that time too. It's just another notion of how unsparing WW1 (and war in general) is.
@sentientmlem727
@sentientmlem727 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, and they couldn't put the horses down for several minutes because they were taking cover from a bombardment. They had to sit there and listen to their agonizing screams and pray they didn't get bombs dropped on them. My imagination conjured up a very terrible scene in my mind. But the fact that this probably actually happened? That is the true horror.
@alexharvin6095
@alexharvin6095 2 жыл бұрын
Paul has a childhood collection of butterflies and him reaching for the butterfly at the end is really him reaching for the life he had before the horror of war. Really can’t recommend the film or book enough. Thank you for this, Wendigoon.
@victorhugofranciscon7899
@victorhugofranciscon7899 2 жыл бұрын
I saw this video and said to myself: "Well I have some time spare so why not see it", the film was great, after watching it I can see the inspiration from the 1917 film, like I watched the ancestor of 1917.
@truthhurts2879
@truthhurts2879 2 жыл бұрын
This comment has 1.2K likes yet only one comment below it?! Someone's using "comment likes" bot farms lol.
@taken3104
@taken3104 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the additional insight about the butterflies. Appreciate it! : )
@elijahlovesrpg5538
@elijahlovesrpg5538 2 жыл бұрын
@@truthhurts2879 you keep appearing under peoples comments saying this same thing. Wendigoons channel has a lot of people who just like comments and don’t comment. It’s just a quirk of his channel.
@rogue_2k374
@rogue_2k374 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I was bored and thought ‘you know I haven’t watched anything of Wendigoon’s for a bit. Let’s see what he’s got’ and I got traumatized. Fun.
@BacnManYT
@BacnManYT 2 жыл бұрын
The scene where he is asking forgiveness to a corpse is something that struck me in the soul, it is very sad as he begs something that can't answer. Truly a tragedy.
@lazy_lefty
@lazy_lefty 2 жыл бұрын
This scene is also in the new Netflix adaptation of the film and its very sobering and moving. The new adaptation as a whole is extremely good.
@luclin92
@luclin92 2 жыл бұрын
@@lazy_lefty yeah, it's a lot more directly gory, but they really made it a horror movie, especially with how it's shot and the soundtrack. But yeah it's one of the few remakes that I have seen recently that managed to keep the original message and is pretty good
@hillanderson6503
@hillanderson6503 2 жыл бұрын
this scene also shows up as an opener in the Ukranian metal band 1914s "100 Days Offensive." If you want to hear a musical attempt to describe the horror of WW1, try them out. I also recommend their songs "...and a cross now marks his grave" , "A7V" , and their covers of "Something in the way" and "the green fields of France"
@Yltimate_
@Yltimate_ Жыл бұрын
And the mute actor really puts an underlying message to it
@zirconthecrystal1150
@zirconthecrystal1150 Жыл бұрын
There was one account from a French soldier, running up some stairs up a bridge to meet advancing Germans. Met the lead man of thr group who raised his rifle to fire, just a boy, like the French man telling the story at the time. They had an identical expression, excitement and thrill of combat. The french soldier noted that the German soldier looked like he could've been a friend of his from college. The German soldier would never get to fire his gun, as the French soldier impaled him clean through the chest with his bayonet. Twist it, and kick him to the ground, dead. The rest of the column of German soldiers would be decimated by rifle fire. But the French soldier said that seeing the whole line of Germans gunned down was nothing in comparison to that young boy, he was within an arms reach, and their eyes met eachother as he killed him. He said he watched as the boy's expression turned from one of excitement to one of terror as the bayonet peirced his chest, the immense pain and grimace as he twisted it, and finally sadness and anguish, the tears that fell from his eyes, he said it probably hit him at that moment he'd never see his family again as the French soldier tore his life away. He saw vividly all these emotions go through this boy his own age in this 7 second exchange that haunted him the most
@chinita2463
@chinita2463 Жыл бұрын
Reminds me of the time in grade 12 where a woman came to speak to us about joining the military as a means to afford university education. Her daughter was a soldier that died (I don't remember where she died, what war etc). But I was absolutely disgusted by how this woman spoke so highly of war and the military, when it was what took away her daughter. So when we were leaving the auditorium, and other kids asked about signing up, I told her that I was so sorry for her loss. She legitamently looked at me like I had two heads.
@micnorton9487
@micnorton9487 10 ай бұрын
That happens in every war and there's usually nothing overtly said,, just vague ideas about duty to the country and blah blah blah... I recommend the novel "bury him among kings," which deals with World War I and the insidious nature of the politics and propaganda behind wars even on the home front...... At one point the main character,, a junior officer in the British army remarks on seeing a poster in the streets of london, one of those War posters where there was a woman depicted standing on the shore of Britain, sending her son off to France with the exhortation, go lad, it's your duty.... And the character thinks, THIS was the poster the troops hated the worst, the one they never brought back from leave back to the front as a joke because how many mothers were there like this in reality? One would be too many, and another main character who is a professional and accomplished soldier comes to hate the backslapping at home,, his reason being that he was doing what he was ordered and he wasn't there for medals and none of them would be back slapping if they knew what he was doing in the trenches, up to his elbows in death...
@gwyngilkeson4381
@gwyngilkeson4381 9 ай бұрын
This is the reality of some active duty soldiers. Their parents/spouses would glorify their deaths. My mom would have absolutely done that to me and it makes me sick to my stomach to think about.
@shrimpy6519
@shrimpy6519 8 ай бұрын
I feel like it's a coping mechanism to think your child died for a higher purpose as opposed to dying for nothing or for another person's profits. Just easier to deal with it.
@victoroverangels
@victoroverangels 7 ай бұрын
​@@shrimpy6519that's one thing another thing is actively trying to take a part into other children facing the same fate your daughter did
@donutchan8114
@donutchan8114 2 ай бұрын
Meanwhile my us history teacher brought war vets to talk about the horrors of war, much like paul, only with pictures. There was also the known fact (at least in our circles) that green cards were offered to undocumented parents if their children served, only to be deported once their kids died in battle, so most were already weary to military propaganda. As ive gotten older, the cruel saying of "the only good soldier is a dead soldier" just seems more and more blatant, even when people are trying to glorify war while ignoring the trauma and damage done to those that serve. Its so sad...
@jaikee9477
@jaikee9477 2 жыл бұрын
The fact that WW1 veterans appear in the 1930 movie makes it even more incredible. Truly a masterpiece ahead of it's time.
@047Kenny
@047Kenny 2 жыл бұрын
A good 100 years ahead of it’s time. Actually it’s timeless, war never changes this film will always be important :(
@_V.Va_
@_V.Va_ 2 жыл бұрын
Anything halfway good is beyond its time, according to any web dweller.
@rogue_2k374
@rogue_2k374 2 жыл бұрын
The term ‘War never changes’ is wrong. The horrors of war though, does not.
@j_trnlnd1966
@j_trnlnd1966 Жыл бұрын
Most halfway good films set trend and are then ahead of their time so yes you are absolutely right
@kwc0435
@kwc0435 Жыл бұрын
@@rogue_2k374 indeed, tactics and weapons change every day, but the horror doesn't
@rebelworld3150
@rebelworld3150 2 жыл бұрын
So sad to see that this is the last footage of Wendigoon before he got trapped in Sand Cave for 15 days straight, Internet Historian just talked about this tragedy
@betheguy_posts
@betheguy_posts 2 жыл бұрын
Some say he's still trapped in that cave, sitting in total darkness while spitefully eating hummus on a face cam...
@pixiefrogbb
@pixiefrogbb 2 жыл бұрын
hasanabi covered this last night, wendigoon made it :’)
@janedoe1787
@janedoe1787 2 жыл бұрын
😂😂😂😂 couldn’t finish the video. Terrified me.
@wigglewiggle4201
@wigglewiggle4201 2 жыл бұрын
Wait im so sorry if im just slow but what do you mean by “he got trapped in a sand cave for 15 days straight”?????? Is that like something at the end of the video?
@justinthompson2887
@justinthompson2887 2 жыл бұрын
@@wigglewiggle4201 Look up Internet Historian.
@CrimsonFox36
@CrimsonFox36 2 жыл бұрын
The scene when Paul comes home broke me. He peruses his old books and drawings, and the things that once brought him joy and wonder don't anymore, and he breaks down into tears.
@MrFredstt
@MrFredstt 2 жыл бұрын
I've heard of many soldiers experience this. It's one of the things that makes the transition back into civilian life really hard.
@savary5050
@savary5050 2 жыл бұрын
@@MrFredstt why did you use that emoji?
@MrFredstt
@MrFredstt 2 жыл бұрын
@@savary5050 I have no idea. I made my comment on PC and didn't use an emoji but I'll edit it
@dhelix85
@dhelix85 2 жыл бұрын
It's true. I still like the things from before deployment, but doing those things seems trivial\worthless\childish.
@InfernoPhoenix100
@InfernoPhoenix100 2 жыл бұрын
Man thats cruel
@foooxobssesedperson8938
@foooxobssesedperson8938 Жыл бұрын
An absolutely heartbreaking detail I noticed during the scene where Paul reaches out for the butterfly over the trench was back when he was home, you could see pictures of butterflies hung up on the wall of his bedroom. Ngl it made me cry.
@mikoto7693
@mikoto7693 9 ай бұрын
I found myself questioning the French sniper, for killing a man reaching for a butterfly.
@matteocostache
@matteocostache 6 ай бұрын
​@mikoto7693 he was clearly threatening him with a bazooka.
@mayacatton
@mayacatton 6 ай бұрын
@@mikoto7693 me too, but he probably wasnt paying much attention to what paul was doing and was more focusing on getting the shot
@birdontheinternet
@birdontheinternet 3 ай бұрын
@@mikoto7693 We like to think that if we see someone doing something that humanizes them or isn't a threat to us, we could never bring ourselves to harm them, or at the very least, we wouldn't kill them. But I think that's kind of the point in that scene. Paul isn't a threat. Both because we know him, but also because what he is doing is completely innocent and explicitly non-threatening because he is unarmed and vulnerable. And yet, the french soldier kills him with not much expression on his face than concentration. Because the french soldier wasn't looking for a threat or a major player in the war. He was looking for a German soldier. Because that's what a sniper is supposed to do: find an enemy soldier and shoot, then move on to looking for another. A bit of a tangent, but I appreciate how the french soldier isn't depicted as having shadows over his face, or any kind of evil delight or glee or even a sense of accomplishment in this scene. But he's not depicted as completely expressionless either, because that was almost be the same thing. As if he were some kind of psychopath. Instead, he just looks like he's focused on taking aim. He's not regretful nor is he excited at taking another man's life, he's just a soldier doing his job. And yet, he's the one that ends the movie and ends the main character that I'm sure hundreds of the original audience thought would survive the war.
@yvaincallipso84
@yvaincallipso84 Жыл бұрын
I remember a MASH quote about War being worse than Hell because "There are no innocent bystanders in Hell. War is chock full of them - little kids, cripples, old ladies. In fact, except for some of the brass, almost everybody involved is an innocent bystander."
@nextcaesargaming5469
@nextcaesargaming5469 Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite quotes from MASH
@kagekun1198
@kagekun1198 Жыл бұрын
Wars do not determine who is right, only who is left.
@ShwappaJ
@ShwappaJ Жыл бұрын
@@kagekun1198 Fallout 3 reference
@TheSkyGuy77
@TheSkyGuy77 Жыл бұрын
That's always been my opinion. Its worse than hell (if it even exists), because there are no innocent people in hell....
@austinreed7343
@austinreed7343 11 ай бұрын
@@TheSkyGuy77 Depending on the perception of God and how He lets people into hell, there may very much be innocent people in Hell.
@NKiwi2903
@NKiwi2903 2 жыл бұрын
I am German and in 11th grade in school we watched this movie. I still remember that there were often some students quietly talking throughout the movie, as students tend to do. But then, during the scene of the French charge with the oppressive sound ocean and the visuals, the entire class was silent all the way throughout. Then, when the Atrillery obliterated the one French soldier and only left him with his hands hanging, there was a gasp from many students in our class and even I remember feeling my heart somewhat sinking in that moment. I really love that you talked about how impactful this one moment is in the movie, because it is certainly the scene I first think of when thinking about this movie.
@kriegenjoyer6913
@kriegenjoyer6913 2 жыл бұрын
as someone who has hundred hours studying ww1 accurate its terrible terrible terrible
@bnbcraft6666
@bnbcraft6666 2 жыл бұрын
In war too many good sons, fathers, and husband's never come home 😔
@GeorgeWockington01
@GeorgeWockington01 2 жыл бұрын
I swear I have a friend that would be laughing through that and I’m starting to think he is a psychopath 😂
@liviwaslost
@liviwaslost 2 жыл бұрын
@@GeorgeWockington01 what the fuck
@kadenthoreson9915
@kadenthoreson9915 2 жыл бұрын
@@GeorgeWockington01 my entire history class laughed at the D-day scene in Saving Private Ryan. Specifically when one soldier was holding his guts in and screaming "MOMMA!" Don't worry, everyone is a little psychotic lol
@crisptomato9495
@crisptomato9495 Жыл бұрын
My great uncle fought in WW1, and smoking ironically saved his life. He was shot in the leg but the bullet pierced the tin cigarette box in his pocket and it slowed the bullet enough to protect his leg from any serious damage. He survived the war and lived to the ripe old age of 90 but when I think of what my grandparents’ generation went through it’s honestly mind boggling. My grandpa was a farmer by the time WW2 broke out and Canada didn’t draft anyone so thankfully he was exempt from service, but both him and my grandma lost so many for next to nothing. So harrowing to think about.
@Ashley-ub8sj
@Ashley-ub8sj Жыл бұрын
wow! an almost identical thing happened to my great grandfather in WW2. he was shot in the chest right where the pocket he kept his cigarette box in was. knocked him over but he escaped with just a huge bruise. he always talked about how once he was safe all he wanted was a smoke, but the tin was totally melted and his hands were too shaky to hold a cigarette anyway. he ended up dying of lung cancer due to smoking but had he never picked up the habit he wouldn't have even seen 30.
@crisptomato9495
@crisptomato9495 Жыл бұрын
@@Ashley-ub8sj No way, that’s crazy! Now I’m wondering how many soldiers had this same thing happen to them. Thanks for sharing your story and sorry to hear about your great grandfather passing.
@matthewn557
@matthewn557 Жыл бұрын
Something somewhat similar happened to my great grandpa, when he returned to his home state of kentucky for a short time he was given a knit hat by one of the people living there. In battle he wore the hat under his helmet, he was shot in the head, the bullet went through the helmet and was just barely stopped by the hat.
@markiobook8639
@markiobook8639 Жыл бұрын
I had a friend in the Australian Army who was behind an M-113 which was driven poorly, went off the road and flipped- driver decapitated.
@concept5631
@concept5631 Жыл бұрын
@@matthewn557 The person who gave your great grandpa the hat was a real MVP.
@silask93
@silask93 11 ай бұрын
Another thing about cat i appreciate is how he says "it's happened to better men than you, and it's happened to me" Even more to how good a character he was
@micnorton9487
@micnorton9487 10 ай бұрын
Well yeah,, if a guy tells you he DIDN'T either piss his pants or just stood frozen or SOMETHING when an artillery shell lands around you is either lying or completely insane... Like with the soldier general Patton slapped,, it's pointless to have a guy who can't handle artillery at the front so you want them BACK from the front line where he can still do his job...
@ekit254
@ekit254 2 жыл бұрын
Not only do we get a new video, we also get to see how slowly wendigoon is building a mansion out of magic spoon boxes
@thtswutshesaid
@thtswutshesaid 2 жыл бұрын
All hail the magic spoon boxes🙌
@Clown234-k1p
@Clown234-k1p 2 жыл бұрын
@griffy bot
@Clown234-k1p
@Clown234-k1p 2 жыл бұрын
@Newcious bot
@critespranberry8872
@critespranberry8872 2 жыл бұрын
He goes crazy and starts building a giant man creature made out of magic spoon boxes, makes a national park inside of it, and then when the park goes under hide it by building a national monument over it.
@tylercoon1791
@tylercoon1791 2 жыл бұрын
@@critespranberry8872 brother, if that’s crazy, I don’t want to be sane.
@killjoy8372
@killjoy8372 Жыл бұрын
I love the ending of this movie, it's so sudden and anticlimactic and makes the whole thing feel so futile and pointless
@MatessYT
@MatessYT Жыл бұрын
Kat died tho :(
@warlordofbritannia
@warlordofbritannia Жыл бұрын
“He fell in October 1918, on a day that was so quiet and still on the whole front, that the army report confined itself to the single sentence: All quiet on the Western Front. He had fallen forward and lay on the earth as though sleeping. Turning him over one saw that he could not have suffered long; his face had an expression of calm, as though almost glad the end had come.”
@caesthoffe
@caesthoffe Жыл бұрын
just like war
@wayacrazy.
@wayacrazy. Жыл бұрын
Why do i recognize your name?
@killjoy8372
@killjoy8372 Жыл бұрын
@@wayacrazy. idk, are you an mcr fan? It has nothing to do with my name, but they have the true lives of the fabulous killjoys album
@GuardDog42
@GuardDog42 Жыл бұрын
The very final scene of the movie was him reaching out for peace. But he just couldn't reach the butterfly. Even in those who come back from the front lines alive; many of them suffer that same death. Never escaping that strife. In the literal sense it was a departure from the tale of the author himself. But in a symbolic way, on point.
@coachman1532
@coachman1532 Жыл бұрын
What do you even mean by they suffer the same death
@GuardDog42
@GuardDog42 Жыл бұрын
@@coachman1532 The death of their chance for tranqulity in life. They can't catch the butterfly.
@brendanmoran57
@brendanmoran57 Жыл бұрын
I like to think when Paul dies, he dies in a thoughtful moment of peace, as he understands the war has run its course, that he had felt the brunt of the anguish of war so others would see the horrors of what had happened and not allow for it again. Perhaps he dies in peace because he knows the ones who knew him would learn just what he had gone through, teaching his people just how big of a mistake they had made by allowing for war. Paul feels he served a duty to the world as he dies, so the future generations don’t have to suffer like they did in this war.
@EJ_Red
@EJ_Red Жыл бұрын
Those that died arguably received a more merciful end to the war, nothing screams anti-war louder than pictures of soldiers with artillery/bullet wounds and are still alive to look at the camera. I read that for some of these men, even their children screamed at the sight of their own fathers and ran.
@zerovstheworrld
@zerovstheworrld 5 ай бұрын
“it’s dirty and painful to die for your country. when it comes to dying for your country it's better not to die at all!” is by far my favorite quote of the movie and makes me think of behn, the first boy to die in the movie. he died blind and screaming and stumbling, in pain and so so scared. he didn’t die heroically or valiantly, he died horribly and with his friends mourning and feeling guilty over his death.
@Potato_Nuggets1
@Potato_Nuggets1 Ай бұрын
The dead don't feel honor They don't feel that brave They don't feel avenged They're lucky if they got graves-jesse welles
@professionallid
@professionallid 19 күн бұрын
thank you fluttershy for the insight
@bugzy_brain
@bugzy_brain Жыл бұрын
the way pauls death was depicted is so heartbreaking. that simple act of pure innocence and hope and kindness by a young man caused him to be killed in a place that should never have existed and by a man he never should have met.
@hztb9918
@hztb9918 Жыл бұрын
For real. And the fact that it happens so suddenly just shows the futility of it. According to the war, he is just more meat for the grinder, instead of a human being
@jaymesmoynihan6752
@jaymesmoynihan6752 2 жыл бұрын
So many quotable lines from that book too. the one that stuck with me was "We were eighteen and had begun to love life and the world; and we had to shoot it to pieces"
@GooberFace32
@GooberFace32 2 жыл бұрын
I'm very grateful that my World Literature teacher had us read this book. She was an immigrant to the U.S. from Lithuania and escaped WWII. I recall her crying in class as we discussed certain parts of the book.
@private755
@private755 Жыл бұрын
Reading a book for its quotable lines is exactly like not seeing the forest for the trees.
@markiobook8639
@markiobook8639 Жыл бұрын
@@private755 how do you infer his motivation was to quote memorable lines?
@Ajcard07
@Ajcard07 Жыл бұрын
@@private755 he never said he read the book just for quotes, he didn’t imply it either
@existingperson
@existingperson Жыл бұрын
Soldier: *having a mental breakdown* Wendigoon: ☕️🗿
@melodie-allynbenezra8956
@melodie-allynbenezra8956 Жыл бұрын
Wendigoon had to do that, because if he didn't, the KZbin copyright authorities would kick him off again.
@fireking0531
@fireking0531 Жыл бұрын
@melodie-allynbenezra8956 I'm sure he watched the video lol. Even with the context though, it's funny as hell!
@jeffowens9536
@jeffowens9536 Жыл бұрын
no emotion whatsoever
@L4mpy
@L4mpy 9 ай бұрын
@@melodie-allynbenezra8956 its still funny asf lmfao
@CCorvidd
@CCorvidd 11 ай бұрын
the fact that, when i was watching, i was interrupted by an army recruitment ad is... a cosmic level of situational irony. lord have mercy.
@pvzgamer6029
@pvzgamer6029 4 ай бұрын
That is the most Dr. Strangelove thing I’ve heard
@sillyzelda
@sillyzelda 2 жыл бұрын
that scene with Ben genuinely scared me. just hearing his anguished cries about how he cant see, its so haunting.
@adjustedbrass7551
@adjustedbrass7551 2 жыл бұрын
@complete video here you people annoy me
@brittneybrisbin744
@brittneybrisbin744 7 ай бұрын
I agree. That scene made a huge impact on me. I can't imagine enlisting into a war out of reluctance, then being blinded and killed when running the wrong way💔
@alienfriend3840
@alienfriend3840 5 ай бұрын
The gutting feeling it gave me lingered throughout the rest of the video
@SpawnOfJenova
@SpawnOfJenova 2 жыл бұрын
As someone who joined the military for all the reason's listed in that first early scene, after being deployed and seeing combat, this scene brought me to tears the first time seeing it because I knew exactly where that road leads. This film and book needs more coverage, and I thank you for doing just that. Maybe if I had seen it or read the book, I would have made different choices.
@gabusdeux
@gabusdeux 2 жыл бұрын
@Emotional Damage what horrible fucking people/bots
@adelinehouman6818
@adelinehouman6818 2 жыл бұрын
I just wanted to respond to your specific comment because it absolutely shatters my heart. I, at one point, wanted to join the military. After three days of very little sleep and a sudden schedule change, i gave up. I only wanted to join so i could be a mindless zombie. I didn’t want to have to think. Some time down the road, i’d spent a study hall period collecting quotes from people who were in, or family members of people in the military. They were horrific, dehumanizing, and wildly depressing. I wanted to thank you for doing something you thought was right. It’s not my place, but i am so sorry that it turned out to be a flaming shit show. I’m sorry you had to find out the hard way. I don’t know how long you were in there, but you were there long enough to understand. That alone is too long. The military is something I have an extreme distaste for, and it destroys me to know how many people get sucked into it and either don’t come back at all, or come back completely different human beings. The mental illness cocktails they give these people fills me with rage i can barely comprehend. I’m just rambling now, but again, thank you. I wish it wasn’t like this.
@imthatbad
@imthatbad 2 жыл бұрын
@Jerry May mostly same i was a 0311 2008 to 12. Semper fi brother.
@yangwen-li5881
@yangwen-li5881 2 жыл бұрын
imagine joining the military not knowing that you're going to kill innocent civilians. lmao you deserved it
@ilya1488krutoj
@ilya1488krutoj Жыл бұрын
​@ThyPeasantSlayer Сейчас в армии хватает должностей на которых быть на фронте не надо, но так как ты скорее всего из России, я бы не советовал связывать свою жизнь с этим делом. Военный гос комплекс тут ужасный: вне зависимости от чинов и званий, за любую осечку тебя или уволят, или посадят, или все равно кинут на фронт, как пушечное мясо.
@johndeaes22
@johndeaes22 2 жыл бұрын
This is more than just haunting. My great grandfather was born in 1901 and volunteered to serve in the Imperial German Army in 1918, when he was just 16-17 years old. Nobody knows what he had experienced throughout the last months of the war. He never told anyone. It had to be of unspeakable terror, for because of it he developed his smoking habit of smoking about 100 cigarettes a day. He suffocated in 1981, while fully conscious, due to complications with lung cancer. It is important to have more people watch these kinds of movies, thus understanding what all those young men had to go through. Never again!
@slaqualquercoisamemo5117
@slaqualquercoisamemo5117 2 жыл бұрын
What. The. Fuck
@cisarovnajosefina4525
@cisarovnajosefina4525 2 жыл бұрын
Thats tuff
@waltuh2.3bviews3secondsago3
@waltuh2.3bviews3secondsago3 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah my great grandad got a big smoking habit after ypres
@etsequentia6765
@etsequentia6765 2 жыл бұрын
* *Young men.*
@MCKevin289
@MCKevin289 2 жыл бұрын
One relative was the Catholic chaplain who served under August von Mackenson and was the last German POW to be released another was gassed by the Germans while serving in the lost battalion. My grandfather’s uncle spent the rest of his life in and out of mental hospitals. My pop has told me about how he would dive for cover whenever he heard my grandfather shoot a cap gun.
@jedamaral1864
@jedamaral1864 Жыл бұрын
As a legitimate combat vet myself I’d just like to thank you , the respect you show for men that have suffered threw the brutality of war is appreciated.
@beepboppindodobird9148
@beepboppindodobird9148 11 ай бұрын
thank u for your service brother this movie is so heartbreaking i cannot begin believe what thats like
@creativeself7147
@creativeself7147 9 ай бұрын
And to think that the same things happen this very minute; second even.... is truly terrifying. How the USA, Germany, UK, etc. spend thousands of billionds of Euros on Killing-Machines to send to the Ukraine; only to further prolong a war that has no goal and therefore willingly cause thousands of deaths every week, every day, to continue with no end in sight. We should all be out on the streets, demanding the industry-leaders and those who benefit ti seize any operation immidiately of face the wrath of entire populations. If a government is not willing to step back from war, and therefore WILLINGLY acting against the interest and safety of the population, they should immidiately be liable to loss of power and face public justice. But no. That is further from reality as it has ever been. We, as humans, have learned NOTHING from WW1 and WW2. Education has failed and history WILL repeat itself.... albeit probably even worse. I can only hope that those who made great efforts to glorify War (in the USA after WW2 was over; back when the USA staged multiple attacks on US citizens to finally have the necessary legal grounds for armed combat and even today, with the millitary financing a majority of the yearly Call of Duty development and in return ensure that War is depicted as heroic, fun and suuuuper cool in these games; , will still be alive once It's time and they slowly realize that their actions played a large part in his/her grandchildren and further generations to live in a destroyed world without food or uncontaminated water.
@tilltronje1623
@tilltronje1623 4 ай бұрын
​@@beepboppindodobird9148the fact that you thank him for committing this atrocity after praising a movie whose whole message is against that atrocity shows just how brainwashed you are. You didn't understand this movie
@pvzgamer6029
@pvzgamer6029 4 ай бұрын
@@tilltronje1623you don’t understand what you’re saying. He’s congratulating him going through this hell we call war and you’re diminishing his achievement of surviving.
@tilltronje1623
@tilltronje1623 4 ай бұрын
@@pvzgamer6029 I am diminishing him for joining in the first place. War is hell and any who make it happen should not be praised. And doing so under a video about All Quiet is especially idiotic
@AbhNormal
@AbhNormal 2 жыл бұрын
The ending shot haunts me to this very day. The single shot of all the soldiers looking wistfully back at their family overlaid over their inevitable outcome - a mass graveyard littered with crosses over people whose lives were completely shattered so lines on a map could be moved by an inch- is one of the most powerful images in all of cinema.
@xiphactinusaudax1045
@xiphactinusaudax1045 2 жыл бұрын
ew these replies are botted to heck in back I wouldn't call the film the most disturbing (like in the video's title), but it might be one of the most excellent pieces of cinema in history. It's nearly a hundred years old, and still holds up Given it holds up partly because of its age, but still I agree, great shots all over, even today. I can't imagine what it was like for first audiences.
@AbhNormal
@AbhNormal 2 жыл бұрын
@@xiphactinusaudax1045 Well said. I think another aspect that I hadn’t previously considered but adds a whole new morbid layer is the fact that a lot of the extras were actual veterans of the Great War. Imagine the amount of nightmares revisited as they went about filming😢
@xiphactinusaudax1045
@xiphactinusaudax1045 2 жыл бұрын
@@AbhNormal Yeah, extras being PLAYED by veterans actually felt kind of unnecessary to me. I can understand wanting input on the production, but there had to have been extreme shellshock-related difficulties during the filming process Respect goes out to them for not only experiencing war and its horrors, and coming back, and reliving trauma just so they could spread the message
@ThermalLabs
@ThermalLabs Жыл бұрын
I know this is completely off-topic but is that a Half-Life fan I can see?
@ShinePaw101
@ShinePaw101 Жыл бұрын
I imagine for the veterans working on this project it was a way to stop the cycle of war. At the time we know it wasn’t common for people to be taken seriously when they talked about their own experiences. I’d like to think that this was in some was therapeutic to them. Or that is my personal take on why actual ww1 vets may have helped in the project. There have been similar types of projects (people who have actually been in the middle of traumatic events) helping to explain it so that they can be prevented even today. Sorry for a years late comment- it’s my first time seeing the video.
@cathycat4989
@cathycat4989 Жыл бұрын
I've been able to relate to this movie in terms of hunger. The stealing food is something so many say they would never do. I was a child during hurricane Katrina. We ran out of MRE ration packs. All our other food had gone bad or had been eaten or stolen. I was 11, maybe? The stores were closed, the roads flooded, and we were down to eating cat food and dandelions. We were given deer guts by a family that hit a doe and distributed the pieces to our neighborhood. I did steal to eat during that summer. It's hard to describe a summer as cold. But when you lose so much weight because you're constantly bailing out water from a house with a cracked foundation and the rain won't stop, and no matter where you go, you're drenched, you'll know a freezing summer. No electricity, no dryer, no gasoline or even sun to dry your clothes hanging on the fence... I don't know combat, but cold and infection and hunger, I know. I can't imagine being shot at on top of that.
@thehummingbirdbandit9542
@thehummingbirdbandit9542 Жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry for what you went through. Thank you for sharing your experience.
@trenchrunner9333
@trenchrunner9333 Жыл бұрын
Sorry to hear that and i hope you have recovered from any and all sickness and injuries, in desperate times, you can't be blamed for trying to survive. If stealing is how you eat because there's no other way you can't be blamed for living.
@darkerdaemon7794
@darkerdaemon7794 Жыл бұрын
Blame your parents. You should've evacuated.
@cathycat4989
@cathycat4989 Жыл бұрын
@@darkerdaemon7794 no use blaming. I lived and it sucks to have gone through, and I get irrationally angry at food waste, but I am alive. Blame doesn't make it better.
@darkerdaemon7794
@darkerdaemon7794 Жыл бұрын
@@cathycat4989 Anger and other emotions are good, believe it or not. Despite the tendency for people to equate emotions with weakness nowadays, we all get them and have them whether we like to admit it or not. Even the most stone cold psychopathic killer in the world still gets emotions. In fact I'd say it's that high of feeling something that leads most serial repeat offenders into doing it but I digress... Emotions are only bad if you misuse or don't know how to use them. For a lack of understanding them even, as most refuse to even look at them and their causality, preferring to ignore the thing that triggers them instead of addressing it and understanding it. Doing this is the real tragedy and misuse of them. Usually when we are angry we have a right to be even if we don't realize it yet. Even if our right isn't right, there's always a reason for it. And it's only by looking at these reasons that we can determine whether or not it is misplaced or not. This is what makes the difference between a thing being blame and or warranted factual truth. You lived so it might be alright in your eyes now but it doesn't change the fact your parents put you and your entire families lives in danger for little more than selfish main character syndrome.
@darthcactaur
@darthcactaur 2 жыл бұрын
I remember my high school teacher showing the class this movie, I still remember most of the story and some of the scenes to this day. At first the class mocked our teacher and the film for being old and boring, no special effects, and being black and white; in the end it absolutely silenced everyone.
@theblackswordsman5039
@theblackswordsman5039 2 жыл бұрын
It even silenced Paul!
@sh0wp0ny
@sh0wp0ny 2 жыл бұрын
same, watched it in our social studies class. absolutely disturbed
@itsmealex8959
@itsmealex8959 2 жыл бұрын
@@theblackswordsman5039 too soon 😭💀
@someengineermain6803
@someengineermain6803 Жыл бұрын
I legit cried when Paul was trying to help the French soldier and i kept thinking about the scene where he gave him water and i would not stop thinking about it for weeks
@6stringbass460
@6stringbass460 2 жыл бұрын
The first death was really eye opening for me, he probably had the same juvenile excitement and pride about joining the war effort as the main characters, only to die the minute he stepped off the train
@yeetmcgeets
@yeetmcgeets 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly
@imokguysivetoldyoutoomanyt2427
@imokguysivetoldyoutoomanyt2427 2 жыл бұрын
Life is like a game of poker. Some are luckier than others, some are smarter than the other, and sometimes when the cards are drawn, the victors are already decided.
@raccoonwithamullet
@raccoonwithamullet 2 жыл бұрын
in my senior year of high school, my five student german class read this book together. we had no assignments about it. our only goal was to read and understand it. we students, along with our teacher, all cried at the end. im so happy to see you cover this underrated representation of this beautiful yet horrific story
@mrplague456
@mrplague456 2 жыл бұрын
wow, a school that assigned reading and DIDNT make like a million other assignments to go with it? insane
@raccoonwithamullet
@raccoonwithamullet 2 жыл бұрын
@@mrplague456 to be fair our german teacher was the only german teacher so he made the german curriculum lol.
@airplanemaniacgaming7877
@airplanemaniacgaming7877 2 жыл бұрын
@@raccoonwithamullet The best way to make the curriculum.
@aydenstarke5297
@aydenstarke5297 2 жыл бұрын
That's what more of school should be about, maan
@YourBoiBread
@YourBoiBread 2 жыл бұрын
The stories really remind me of my grandfather. He lied about his age to sign up for the navy during WWII, him and his 3 other brothers. When he came home he didn't speak about the war. Or to my mother or his wife later in life, and he got pressures in his head. When I was growing up he began to open up. He wanted to educate me. What always stuck out the most was how he spoke about when he was on an LST at Utah Beach during D-Day. Watching the landing craft open up and his friends being mowed down, the ocean red with the blood of all the bodies. It changed him as an person and I think attributed to his rough and mean demeanor as he became old as well as his alcoholism when my mom was a young girl. Rest in peace grandpa.
@GabbaaGhoul
@GabbaaGhoul 2 жыл бұрын
poor man , sounds like my grandfathers story but from vietnam. good man. horrible trauma reshaped him. he’s at peace too
@toobig7150
@toobig7150 2 жыл бұрын
My grandfather fought in the battle of Kursk and his brother in the battle of stalingrad of all places, he had a similar experience with my mom where he literally did not speak for years and always looked like he was about to cry, he couldnt look at anything related to military (which was hard as a russian) or he would throw up The only time he started to open up was when me and my siblings started to grow up, but he still was clearly not ok. I guess he at least knew that he had to do it, as what the (Nasssis) where planning to do to any slav was already well know. But still, i cannot imagine what a person would have to go thought to have such traumas.
@justinreich3486
@justinreich3486 2 жыл бұрын
All these grizzled old men we see, were young kids who played games and came running in to dinner when mom called. At one time.
@jthen8454
@jthen8454 2 жыл бұрын
My grandpa opened up to me after I joined the army as his dementia was developing. He had a similar story with his family, I just wish these men had more support after everything they went through because I could tell he needed, at the very least, an outlet to talk about the things he did and saw.
@shacuras8201
@shacuras8201 2 жыл бұрын
He was young enough that he had to lie about his age, but he was already married? Did he marry at 17?
@loremasterhendrix
@loremasterhendrix 11 ай бұрын
Something you didn’t mention is how, when the nazis came to power, the author of the book Erich Maria, fled Germany, so the nazi decided to behead his sister because he was “out of their reach,” I think that is the most tragic part about this story. The author simply expressed and relayed how he felt through literature and his sister was murdered for it.
@newturtle3
@newturtle3 11 ай бұрын
Still do that in north korea. They imprison like 3 generations of your family
@childesimp3725
@childesimp3725 11 ай бұрын
That's horrible..
@FaithRox
@FaithRox 11 ай бұрын
This is incorrect. Erich actually explained that she was involved in anti-government activities in 1943. Even quite far post-war, many in Germany considered her a traitor while very few thought that way of Erich.
@tenanaciouz
@tenanaciouz 10 ай бұрын
please stop lying, that isn't what happened she was killed after being found out for anti governement activities. God nazis were bad but this insistence on lying about them needs to fucking stop
@veek.6310
@veek.6310 10 ай бұрын
@@FaithRoxhow the f do people think of someone standing up to the Nazis as a traitor
@hellformichelle
@hellformichelle Жыл бұрын
I learned about the book in German class (which is obviously like English class for native English speakers) and decided to read it. The ending has left its mark on me to this day. The book ends with Paul's death and the sentence 'Im Westen sei nichts Neues zu melden' (nothing new new to report in the west) from a military report, because one soldier dying means nothing to the war, even when it means an entire family will grieve this person for the rest of their lives. Remarque lost his German citizenship under the Nazi regime and the book was part of book burnings due to its horrifying depiction of war and its senselessness. I'm glad to say it's part of most history and/or German class curricula in German speaking countries.
@miglek9613
@miglek9613 Жыл бұрын
Not only german speaking countries. I'm lithuanian and here we either read Nothing new on the western front or Remarque's Three friends (which is not the right book to explain the effects of war on the psyche of a soldier to 15-16 year olds imo) in our lithuanian class depending on either the professor's opinion on which book is better used in exam essays (as that's how our classes end up being structured sadly) or based on the constant changes in the recommended book curriculum
@Assmodean
@Assmodean Жыл бұрын
@@miglek9613 Really interesting! Thanks for sharing
@katiwithoutthee
@katiwithoutthee Жыл бұрын
standard in English speaking countries too - this was 15 years ago but it was part of the curriculum in my high school English honors class in Missouri. we read the book, watched the 1930 movie, and learned a very little bit about the contemporary reactions in both Germany and the US and iirc we had a few assignments that asked us to compare and contrast to modern (or late 2000s, post 9/11 america) antiwar and pro-war media
@everdinestenger1548
@everdinestenger1548 Жыл бұрын
German class was when I first read it and the book stayed with me. Years later I read it again and the impact was the same.
@LightningDeusDax
@LightningDeusDax Жыл бұрын
Never heard anything about the book in my German lessons, or at all as a matter of fact. Was it standard reading lecture before 2010 or is there any other reason why I never heard about it?
@jeromydickey8200
@jeromydickey8200 2 жыл бұрын
One of the most impactful scenes from the book for me that I wish they had put in the movie (though I get why they didn’t) was a scene where Paul was charging a French position and beside him another soldier got his head shot off by something and his body kept running for four or five steps before it realized it was dead and crumpled to the ground. Even almost 10 years later it’s one of the most memorable lines I’ve ever read from any book.
@_xnightwingx_8005
@_xnightwingx_8005 2 жыл бұрын
Jesus that's probably gonna be in the remake
@KoolaidInMyCup
@KoolaidInMyCup 2 жыл бұрын
Back when I was in 5th grade I read a book called “Stones in water”, which was about the holocaust. That book still lives rent free in my head many years later. So messed up
@magosd0minus
@magosd0minus 2 жыл бұрын
Agreed. That line was absolutely hollowing. Another line that stuck with me was when Paul watched a Frenchman fall on barbed wire and had his arms shot off, leaving them in a prayer position.
@West_Coast_Mainline
@West_Coast_Mainline 2 жыл бұрын
The brain is gone but the signals still going
@noahsherwood2445
@noahsherwood2445 2 жыл бұрын
I think there was a moment like that told in Toni Morrison's Sula
@SgtRocko
@SgtRocko Жыл бұрын
As a combat-wounded vet... even though MY circumstances were different, this movie is VERY spot-on. Chilling and true-to-life. Thanks for this, Wendigoon. The Soviet film "Come And See"? That may be one of the most disturbing colour movies ever made (absolutely starkly chilling)
@h0rn3d_h1st0r1an
@h0rn3d_h1st0r1an Жыл бұрын
dear lord, that movie......
@howsad2397
@howsad2397 Жыл бұрын
That movie was absolutely horrifying, i did not need to be reminded of it again
@gr-8166
@gr-8166 Жыл бұрын
Saw it and I must say it is uncomfortable but when I was about 10 I saw the Michael J Fox film Casualties of War and that is just depressing as hell. I didn’t get the gRape scene but I always figured it was just beatings and brutality of a villager. The train tracks scene had scared me for some time. I saw Come and See and yea I can also vividly remember this film but at my age I’ve been desensitized to horrors of war (seen a bunch on the internet) the cow didn’t need to die by gun fire. Waste of good food. :(
@tiffanywyatt5137
@tiffanywyatt5137 11 ай бұрын
Come and see is just propaganda. Soviets did just as much evil acts
@tiffanywyatt5137
@tiffanywyatt5137 11 ай бұрын
@@z0mbie.bl00d people tend to forget
@kaziiqbal7257
@kaziiqbal7257 10 ай бұрын
Something about old movies being all sunshine and daisies makes each scream and cry in this movie so much more terrifying
@eyrenoctis
@eyrenoctis 2 жыл бұрын
I remember in college I read "The Things They Carried" by O' Brien and I did my senior thesis on PTSD and the trauma of war. I have heard about "All Quiet on the Western Front", but never read it and never saw the movie. So this video was great because wow, it's amazing that even in 1930, there were voices saying "War is horrible, why are we doing this to our children?", but the militaries simply silenced them. I do my best to absorb media/books like this because these voices need to be heard and respected: they were there. Ngl, I teared up knowing that they had actual veterans on set and advising on how to make the movie. I hope the Netflix version doesn't shy away from the message.
@clueless_cutie
@clueless_cutie 2 жыл бұрын
The book is totally worth reading. It takes a bit to get into it, but once you're invested in the characters it's like watching a train wreck. Just one shitty thing after the other and you sail through the last 2/3rds of the read.
@JohnBrownsArmory
@JohnBrownsArmory 2 жыл бұрын
It's a true classic.... I hope you get to read it!!!
@jakebarnes3054
@jakebarnes3054 2 жыл бұрын
A lot of the returning soldiers were broken men returning to a broken nation. The anti-war sentiment of veterans plus the questions of precisely WHY the war was waged is what ultimately led to radical politics, particularly fascism in Europe. Those guys really went through it.
@citizenfoffie7605
@citizenfoffie7605 2 жыл бұрын
read Storm of Steel
@justinwatson1510
@justinwatson1510 2 жыл бұрын
We do this to our children because it is very profitable to have colonies. For the ruling class, anyway. Ultimately, that was the source of conflict in the world wars (which might have been more accurately named the imperialist wars, since they were fought between capitalist powers.) Even today, just look at America; Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11, but they had plenty of nationalized industries that western companies could use to "expand." Our government is also owned by corporations, including weapons manufacturers, which is why we invaded and stayed in Afghanistan, and that is why Republicans pissed and shit themselves over withdrawing.
@melasnexperience
@melasnexperience 2 жыл бұрын
Never saw the movie, but in high school, we read the book that was the basis for it. Once you mentioned the boots, everything just came back - that part stuck with me because it really hammered home that these boys were seen as less valuable than their gear, both to their commanders & ultimately to each other even if by accident. It was definitely one of the harder reads at that age.
@AmandaVieiraMamaesouCult
@AmandaVieiraMamaesouCult 2 жыл бұрын
I also read the book and that was one of the things that struck to me the most. And the horses.
@jayeisenhardt1337
@jayeisenhardt1337 2 жыл бұрын
Boots is kinda funny when ya hear about kids killing each other for their shoes. I'd probably be easier to steal some but they saw them right there right now on their side of the street. So they just took them. Two dogs pissing on the same tree scales all the way up to people and nations. We get involved soon as we also think it's our tree.
@mihailmilev9909
@mihailmilev9909 2 жыл бұрын
@@jayeisenhardt1337 damn was that also in the book?
@SgtLogOfWood
@SgtLogOfWood 2 жыл бұрын
A reading wich was even harder for me was Private Peaceful. The tone is dark, sure, but I kept putting myself at the place of the character, and what I thought about what I would think or say in the situation was said or thought 3 lines later. I realised "I am Charlie Peaceful. I would have genuinely been in those trenches. I would have been hated like him for lying to my family. I probably would have died like him." It's a special kind of feeling to read a book and then realise that one of the character is you, word for word, thought for thought. All the complexity of your being is accurately portrayed in those pages. This book gave me a true feeling of emptiness after ( spoilers ahead ) Charlie, the character in question is executed for treason. I knew at that moment that I would have died, and I couldn't have had my dying wish of fully singing "I am a poor wayfairing stranger" one last time and refuse the blindfold.
@mcCafe93
@mcCafe93 2 жыл бұрын
What's the book called?
@Picobits
@Picobits 2 жыл бұрын
Happy to see you finally got past all those copyright claims!
@joelmaxwell06
@joelmaxwell06 2 жыл бұрын
I think they still get all the money but at least the video gets posted
@SirEggo2412
@SirEggo2412 2 жыл бұрын
@Emotional Damage he has been trying to post the video for the past 6 hours
@ChildishGambeaner
@ChildishGambeaner 2 жыл бұрын
@@SirEggo2412 it's a bot genius
@lainiwakura1776
@lainiwakura1776 2 жыл бұрын
@@SirEggo2412 I wish down votes on comments still worked.
@someguyinazoo
@someguyinazoo 2 жыл бұрын
@Emotional Damage of course there are bots
@mjworkley32
@mjworkley32 Жыл бұрын
I recently watched the movie and I think another reason why people back then were so angry at the movie is because this shows that German Soldiers weren’t just caricatures they were living people who did not want to go through this war and were traumatized. It was easy for people to say “it’s ok what happened because they were the enemy” I know when I watched it I was so uncomfortable because I had that mindset of “it’s just the enemy” when yes they are the enemy they’re also people (if this doesn’t make sense my bad)
@ssr8555
@ssr8555 Жыл бұрын
Makes perfect sense and I agree. It’s always been ”germany bad” when most of these people actually going to war are just as innocent as everyone else
@RhomasTotevenaar
@RhomasTotevenaar 10 ай бұрын
The typical us versus them shit people still believe in.
@micnorton9487
@micnorton9487 10 ай бұрын
That's exactly right and many novels deal with the situation from the British point of view,, Bury Him Among Kings is excellent and includes a conscientious objector who resists military service simply because he's not temperamentally suited to the role and doesn't figure he ought to go and die just to please the people around him... And while the whole thing examines widely differing points of view from the different characters there's the sense that the only people who really wanted the war to go on were people whose political objectives were being satisfied and people too dumb to know any better, which unfortunately included a lot of the soldiers who really couldn't tell you one way or another what any of it was about..
@DanimoroZ
@DanimoroZ 5 ай бұрын
Most people mad at it at the time were other Germans.
@KingOfGaymes
@KingOfGaymes Жыл бұрын
The idea that anybody thought fighting in a war would be “fun” is terrifying. Those boys were lied to and tricked into thinking they’d be glorious heroes.. and they lost their lives... It’s so terrible..
@Fascist_Femboy
@Fascist_Femboy Жыл бұрын
"it will be fun they said"
@6Haunted-Days
@6Haunted-Days Жыл бұрын
Ummmm yea like EVERY WAR SINCE TIME BEGAN. Christ you …..can’t think it’s ONLY this one? nowadays they can’t hide it like that BUT somehow IT STILL HAPPENED in the 1st AND 2nd desert storm! So……
@thatkidwiththehoodie
@thatkidwiththehoodie Жыл бұрын
Propaganda is a hell of a drug, man…
@SomnusLucisCaelum
@SomnusLucisCaelum Жыл бұрын
It keeps happening. Look at all those big Hollywood movies using actual army equipment and soldiers as extras. Top Gun remake is a good example of it. Making it look all romanticized, fun, heroic and badass
@juipeltje
@juipeltje Жыл бұрын
Reminds me of what niko bellic says in gta 4: "war is where the young and stupid are tricked by the old and bitter into killing each other"
@jaccocu7213
@jaccocu7213 2 жыл бұрын
I think that when people scream in old films, it’s much more meaningful. When they scream, it is piercingly loud and truly shows the brutality of war
@Topdoggie7
@Topdoggie7 2 жыл бұрын
Seeing Kat die really got me, it just felt like that was his last tie like you said. But knowing that the next scene is him reaching for a butterfly, a creature that symbolizes not only the souls of those who have died but also potential hope just to be gunned down? That is so brutally symbolic and terrifying. That butterfly was his forgotten and fallen friends, and the hope that he might get out of it alive maybe. It was so many things wrapped up in one little bug and then he gets shot. The hopelessness of that scene. You truly have no heart if you don't realize how awful this movie is and how awful war is.
@victorkreig6089
@victorkreig6089 2 жыл бұрын
If that got you yah should go watch the 79 adaptation, Kat gets it good there as well and his character is even more lovable in that one due to being played by Ernest Borgnine
@Topdoggie7
@Topdoggie7 2 жыл бұрын
@@victorkreig6089 As I said in my comment it's more the symbology after that gutted me but Kat didn't deserve that death, even if it was one of the most peaceful he could have got during war.
@glastopasto1203
@glastopasto1203 Жыл бұрын
The audio of ben screaming about not being able to see is so fucking haunting and terrifying which one was a bloody well done performance by the actor but also really sets the tone of the movie and the war
@cacahouete8940
@cacahouete8940 2 жыл бұрын
Ive read the book and I never thought you would cover the movie, the part that struck me the most was a soldier that the writer had come across while heading to the medical ward. He was running in desperation holding his intestines in his arms trying to keep his body together. The man’s will to live was scarily well described. He detailed the way he hobbled, the contortion of his face all in desperation for help. Frightening yet terribly interesting.
@sirllamaiii9708
@sirllamaiii9708 2 жыл бұрын
that sounds nauseating to even imagine
@sylaconnocalys8443
@sylaconnocalys8443 2 жыл бұрын
Man that reminded me of that one soldier in the opening scene of Saving Private Ryan. With soldiers holding body parts and that one kid yelling for his mom while he's holding his intestines in his stomach.
@_hi_pwr
@_hi_pwr 2 жыл бұрын
28:08
@lazy_lefty
@lazy_lefty 2 жыл бұрын
The new Netflix adaptation of this film is extremely well done. It follows the original very closely and the acting is incredible. The scene where Paul kills a French soldier in hand to hand combat with a knife and is so traumatized that he starts to apologize to the dead body after finding a picture of the dead soldiers wife and daughter in his jacket is extremely sobering and sad...
@keilanl1784
@keilanl1784 2 жыл бұрын
In my opinion, it is not. Watched the Netflix adaptation after watching this video and I could barely tell what was going on throughout the movie. No character development, no introspection, and every character felt the same and nothing made them stand out from each other. Sure, the movie looks pretty and it covered some themes like the hubris of "honor", the corruption of leadership, and the horrors of war, but the movie says almost nothing about the bigger picture the source material is trying to convey. Only one short scene at the start about the facade of "honor and patriotism" the media props up to quell the populace during the war. None of the discrimination that the main character endures when they come back a "coward" (other than a throwaway line from one of the German commanders). There's no proper setup for "civilian life" until we're thrown into the trenches literally before the first 20 minutes into the movie. That movie should not have been titled "All Quiet on the Western Front", because it is a poor adaptation of the source material.
@fhralr7552
@fhralr7552 2 жыл бұрын
The character development was intentionally made like that so Paul represents the everyday kid who got swept up by the propaganda and goes to war for the country
@bebus6884
@bebus6884 2 жыл бұрын
@@keilanl1784 Im sorry but you are incorrect
@robsheldon4311
@robsheldon4311 2 жыл бұрын
@@keilanl1784 I also have to dissagree, The main characters development was amazing.. A regular gun hoe innocent kid all hyped for war gets a grim reality check. By the end of the movie he's just a shell of his former self.
@Arthsycz
@Arthsycz Жыл бұрын
@@bebus6884 you can't just say his opinion is outright wrong like it is opinion. Also try to add why you don't agree with him instead you are wrong because i say so.
@mcmann7149
@mcmann7149 2 жыл бұрын
This story broke me. I couldn't put the book down and I was horrified reading it throughout. It's one of those stories that after reading it, you just sit back or lie down and just stay still, letting everything that you just read sink in.
@kyleh3615
@kyleh3615 2 жыл бұрын
One of the first military rifles I bought was a ww1 Gew. 98. It was a cheap purchase from a friend of a friend, I never thought about it much. After I watched All Quiet on the Western Front, I sat down and took apart the Mauser and gave it the cleaning it deserved. Like most of the things I have bought, I will never know the man who used it, but I can hope it took care of him when he needed ot most.
@SquashGuy02134
@SquashGuy02134 2 жыл бұрын
The worst part is, not enough people comprehend it, it will happen again.
@christopherdwiggins528
@christopherdwiggins528 2 жыл бұрын
A book that did that for me was Lucifer principle by Howard Bloom. Almost every chapter makes you want to do that.
@SpartanBrix
@SpartanBrix 2 жыл бұрын
End of Evangelion’s one of those.
@PaRaNiki_
@PaRaNiki_ 2 жыл бұрын
How old were you when you read it? Because my class had to read through it in 7th grade, needless to say it left quite the impression.
@questionable8981
@questionable8981 10 ай бұрын
"They got white bread over there" this phrase shows you how tough war at the front lines really is, what we have nowadays which can be obtained from mindlessly walking to the fridge, people in the frontline during ww1, wish, if not envy just a single bite.
@flickcentergaming680
@flickcentergaming680 2 ай бұрын
By the end of WWI, the Germans had nothing. No food, no clothing, absolutely nothing. When they saw what the Allies were supplied with, they knew they had lost. There are accounts of soldiers saying exactly that.
@matthaft2048
@matthaft2048 2 жыл бұрын
I read this and the sequel “The Road Back” a few years after I got out of the Army. What struck me the most was even though there was almost 100yrs between me and the characters in the book how similar things were. The way they talk to eachother, the morbid humor, that feeling of alienation when you’re on leave or finally come home for good. It was creepy
@eoghanmaloney9561
@eoghanmaloney9561 2 жыл бұрын
As much as it looks like it does, war never changes
@CMTechnica
@CMTechnica 2 жыл бұрын
@@eoghanmaloney9561 technology always changes. The horrors, however, do not
@marcusgarvey9933
@marcusgarvey9933 2 жыл бұрын
Watch "The Greatest Story Never Told!" It tells the truth.
@marcusgarvey9933
@marcusgarvey9933 2 жыл бұрын
"These are the vermin who make their fortunes through war. I have no reason to wage war for material considerations. For us, it is but a sad enterprise: it robs us, the German Volk and the whole community, of so much time and man power. I do not possess any stocks in the armament industry. I do not earn anything in this fight.
@firefox5926
@firefox5926 2 жыл бұрын
@@CMTechnica they're many ways to skin a cat ... but none of them plesant...
@ImSumWhatMad
@ImSumWhatMad 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for continuing to attempt to upload everything Wendigoon! I'm sorry that it was so difficult, but we appreciate all of your hard work. Sorry that KZbin is such a pain with copyright stuff! Shoutouts to hummus and monster for getting you through this.
@werecatassassin8516
@werecatassassin8516 2 жыл бұрын
couldn't say it better fam!
@pershe4231
@pershe4231 Жыл бұрын
War Graveyards are not uncommon in Europe and its the saddest part of any town. I live in a small town in Greece near the Albanian/North Macedonia borders. In a hill there are two cemeteries divided by a wall. On the left its the local cemetery, big white Graves one on top of another, with lit candles, flowers, personal photos and ingraved with information. On the right side it's just row after row of white crosses, it's the British soldier cemetery. Soldiers that lost their lives in ww2 in a foreign country, their bodies forever away from their loved ones, behind a locked gate in a graveyard no one ever visits. I think of those soldiers every time I pass by the cemeteries.
@spirosbotos9967
@spirosbotos9967 Жыл бұрын
I'm from mavroneri filiates
@TihetrisWeathersby
@TihetrisWeathersby Жыл бұрын
It's crazy to believe this movie is nearly 100, There are a lot of great lines and the acting is phenomenal. It's really eye opening about the consequences of war.
@Ishbikes
@Ishbikes Жыл бұрын
Didn’t learn though, was in another war within a decade of the movie.
@evoluxman9935
@evoluxman9935 11 ай бұрын
​@Ishbikes the Nazis actively suppressed the movie because they were exactly what the movie was criticizing. The ones who glorify war. And so they tried again, and failed again to gain glory to their country. All they achieved was a butchery on a scale that dwarfed even the war that was supposed to end all wars.
@Big73Red
@Big73Red 2 жыл бұрын
My AP Modern US history teacher was a Marine who fought in Fallujah and some other major battle in the second Iraq war. Before he showed us this he warned that he may need to step out for a few minutes because the scenes of Paul coming home and sitting in a foxhole with the dead soldier hit close to home for him. After the movie was over he told us about his experiences and that once he came home from his last tour he joined a group called Veterans for Peace and at the time was still active in protesting against involvement in the Middle East. I’ve been graduated from high school for 10 year now, moved across the country. But when I come home and I see Mr. Gardner I thank him for telling his story and keeping me and the others in that class from signing ourselves up to continue the pointless bloodshed and pain.
@GooberFace32
@GooberFace32 2 жыл бұрын
That's really powerful that your AP history teacher showed your class this film even though it was extremely painful for him to do so. What an amazing teacher!
@pershe4231
@pershe4231 Жыл бұрын
My best friend growing up was a child refugee from Iraq. From the stories she had told me, and what I had seen with my own eyes in her and her family. I am glad there are Americans out there that spread the truth about the crimes that happened in the middle east. You had a good teacher
@kittygoesdowntherabbithole4799
@kittygoesdowntherabbithole4799 Жыл бұрын
One of my US history teachers was a veteran as well... We were his first class after being discharged. I'll never forget him, he made sure our rose colored glasses were ripped off and he taught us history that wasn't in our textbooks. It was hard for the students who were like "U.S.A!! U.S.A!!" but by the end we were all profoundly impacted by his class.
@1SpicyMeataball
@1SpicyMeataball Жыл бұрын
@@kittygoesdowntherabbithole4799 It's so cool to hate on the US, isn't it? The thought would give you a big ol' chubby if ya had a d*ck to start with. And every other country is just innocent pwecious wittle babies who never do anything wrong, right? Do you know what happens to women in the middle east? Or gays? Or is that conveniently left out of your new progressive history books?
@locced4185
@locced4185 Жыл бұрын
I'm Iraqi, and my dad who lived through all wars from 1981 up until now, he said that once he went to the gas station and all he heard was sounds of bazookas, he ran home and while a tank was inches behind him, the tank was spraying everywhere, and it hit a guy in the dead center of his head and the bullet ricochet off the pole behind him, but in the mean time he was running away from the tank, he saw a little girl who went out of her home while crying because she can't find her parents, my dad tried to grab her hand while running but failed to do so, he managed to get home safely, but when he peaked out his out of his homes gate, he saw the little girl body, without a head, squashed on the ground, i can't forgive any US soldier in the war against my country, but i respect those who tried to help calm the communities in there.
@margeebechyne8642
@margeebechyne8642 2 жыл бұрын
My dad was born in 1930. He talked about this movie a lot. I had watched a couple of WWII movies (The Longest Day, Midway) and he said I needed to watch All Quiet on the Western Front. It is an awesome movie. Thank you for your presentation. Oh, my dad is going to be 92 on Oct 29th.
@XwX1001
@XwX1001 2 жыл бұрын
Tell him I said happy early birthday!
@margeebechyne8642
@margeebechyne8642 2 жыл бұрын
@@XwX1001 Thank you! He'll appreciate that. He is still living on his own, no nursing home etc needed.
@XwX1001
@XwX1001 2 жыл бұрын
@@margeebechyne8642 Nice! Reminds me of my grandad, actually. He's in his 80's or 90's too, but he's still doing reasonable well and still living in his own house.
@margeebechyne8642
@margeebechyne8642 2 жыл бұрын
@@XwX1001 Awesome!
@eheh3231
@eheh3231 2 жыл бұрын
He must have so many stories to tell at that age, I wish both you and him many good moments together!
@commentry959
@commentry959 Жыл бұрын
I will say, the horror of him screaming his eyes, as he is instantly blinded by explosions vs you eating hummus and drinking monster passive aggressively is absolutely hilarious
@epicdogbattles
@epicdogbattles 11 ай бұрын
this is why wendigoon is hype, man talks about horrors of humanity but in such a real, often juxtaposingly hilarious with the joys of small life.
@redfireeverstar2651
@redfireeverstar2651 11 ай бұрын
Every time WWI is brought up I think of J.R.R Tolkien who served during the war. He chose to finish school before joining in time for the battle of Somme where he caught trench foot and was removed from the war. Naturally after the war he would go on to write the Lord of the Rings. It is debated how much of the war inspired from his experience he himself was also unsure either. There are at least two obvious exceptions to this however. The dead marshes which was an ancient battlefield haunted by the dead, and the most famous quote from the book and arguably cinematography. "You shall not pass" spoken by gandalf to the Balrog as the fellowship flee Moria. It is believed Tolkien heard this quote from French soldiers whom he fought with in the trenches. "ils ne passeront pas!" They shall not pass. Despite the trauma he most of had during and after the war he still wrote a fantastic story about seeking a simple life, and hope no matter how dark the world gets. This why he's one of my greatest heroes and why any soldier Should be viewed as such even if they don't believe it themselves
@erinw.9256
@erinw.9256 8 ай бұрын
Same honestly
@Little_Lepus
@Little_Lepus 2 жыл бұрын
The man that lost his hands... It's weird to think about how he's been immortalized in a way. Not for the person he actually was, not for the things he said or did, not even for the things he sacrificed; no, he's now only known by his hands. Funny how war rips away a person's humanity like that.
@magosd0minus
@magosd0minus 2 жыл бұрын
I had chosen to read this book for my senior year and write an essay on it and I gotta say the book was easily one of my favorite I've ever read. Such a depressing book, and watching Paul break down slowly throughout the book was heartbreaking. I highly recommend everyone to read the book.
@leewooboi
@leewooboi 2 жыл бұрын
I watched this movie when I was 12! The last scene when he’s reaching for the butterfly is so depressing, especially considering the fact that Paul has a collection of pressed butterflies, (although Wendigoon doesn’t mention it.) Also, the scene when he’s in the classroom with his professor, and the professor is asking him to tell the young men in the classroom about how great the military is, and Paul just rants about how awful the war is.
@acjnaihbdj
@acjnaihbdj 6 ай бұрын
I live in Germany and we had a unit on the novel. One thing it taught me is that a love for Kat is almost universal.
@Piscean_
@Piscean_ Жыл бұрын
Every time I was close to crying, I'd look in the corner. Surprisingly effective to look at a man eating hummus to pause a cry
@ivyiouspoison2815
@ivyiouspoison2815 Жыл бұрын
wendigoon enjoying his hummus seemingly nonchalant was really the only thing that stopped me from brawling out a few times
@FlubberFrosch
@FlubberFrosch Жыл бұрын
I wish I could cry more (often) during sad parts. I’m jealous of my big brother in that respect. He cries at easier parts in films that I don’t find so sad yet.
@rockino2562
@rockino2562 Жыл бұрын
⁠@@FlubberFrosch I didn’t know crying was a competition lol
@FlubberFrosch
@FlubberFrosch Жыл бұрын
@@rockino2562 I don‘t need to cry more than he does, I just want to have more tears than I do now. That way the sad parts are more satisfying to experience.
@claranadine1086
@claranadine1086 Жыл бұрын
​@@FlubberFroschI know exactly what you mean. Having a good cry and being able to cry is therapeutic in a way haha
@natalialutes7499
@natalialutes7499 2 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad you covered this movie, because it's a story that doesn't get the recognition it deserves in my opinion. My entire sophmore class read the book while studying WW1, and it was such a surreal experience for all of us. We all went into it with the same naivety as the characters in the movie going off to war, expecting to read this glorified story about an incredible war hero fighting for his country, until one by one we would reach the end and find the devestating reality of Paul's death. We were all horrified by the idea that he didn't die as a hero; he died as a boy whose spirit had been broken by the tradgedies he'd experienced. It put the idea of war into perspective for us so clearly, and it's an idea that's really stuck with me since then.
@DaSwissy
@DaSwissy 2 жыл бұрын
Arent they making a modern adaption now?
@natalialutes7499
@natalialutes7499 2 жыл бұрын
@@DaSwissy I believe so. And I know there was already another adaptation made in 2018, but still so few people know about it.
@leviathan_is_me
@leviathan_is_me 2 жыл бұрын
Clearly you haven't spent time in a British borstal... Joke btw
@orangesilver8
@orangesilver8 2 жыл бұрын
In my high school, we didn't just read the book, we also watched the film. I'm surprised it's being called the most disturbing black and white movie.
@gringusmcbingus
@gringusmcbingus 2 жыл бұрын
Additionally, thanks for retrying so many times on this to bring us a really important topic.
@ZeroToMidnight
@ZeroToMidnight 2 жыл бұрын
As an American soldier who is just shy of his 8 year anniversary this really spoke to me. When I enlisted as an Infantryman all those years ago, I was 18 years old. I was swept up in propaganda and the ideals of being a hero, or for service of the greater good. While I don’t regret the career path that I have chosen sometimes I do wish I could go back and talk to my younger self about the naïveté I was caught up in. War is not a glorious endeavor. War is a glorified endeavor.
@gilly_axolotl
@gilly_axolotl 2 жыл бұрын
Can I ask you questions about being a soldier for the US in modern age?
@Skarry
@Skarry 2 жыл бұрын
I went to military school otherwise I might have joined up. I was a senior during nine eleven. My best friend joined up. When he got back six years later we weren't friends anymore. We tried. We still pretend. He just can't anymore. Instead he sees the world through the bottom of a bottle.
@rc59191
@rc59191 2 жыл бұрын
I was 17 when I became an Airman I never wanted nor cared about the glory and glamour I just wanted to do my part like the rest of my family going back to the American Civil War and get on with my life.
@ZeroToMidnight
@ZeroToMidnight 2 жыл бұрын
@@gilly_axolotl absolutely. Fire away.
@greenhellrecords979
@greenhellrecords979 2 жыл бұрын
That's why we quit, got the honorable and never looked back. Not worth it.
@Shestheman013
@Shestheman013 10 ай бұрын
The end of Paul just reaching out to the butterfly, this symbol of change, hope, immortality, joy, transformation, spirits, angels, and many other things, got me crying in the club. Like the imagery and the symbol of the change in his life, the change in his viewpoints, only to try and see the little glimmer of something hopeful is already horrible enough. But the idea that the butterfly could have been any one of his dead brothers in arms calling out to him, either letting him know they're always there or coaxing him to come and join them to end his own misery, is gut-wrenching to me. And maybe I'm thinking about this too much but the idea of Paul reaching out at a chance to/for change or, one of his friends, or hell, even him reaching out to the last semblance of a life long gone from him, only to be taken away breaks my heart.
@a_w_em3006
@a_w_em3006 2 жыл бұрын
As a german with an italian mother, most of the people in earlier generstions of my family had to fight in WW2. For example my great-grand uncle was one of the few soldiers to actually survive Stalingrad, and I can still remember my father saying a long time ago "when he came back, even his mother didn't recognise him" just made me realise how unimaginable the torment of War must have truly been, as even much later when he was home, he never talked about the war. Another one of my family members was a pilot in Africa, he sank an enemy ship by dropping a bomb onto it. What shook me is that I was told that to the end of his life (he died a couple years ago at an age of 90+), he still had nightmares of seeing the sailors on the ship jumping overboard in a futile attempt to save themselves. Many stories out there are left untold to this day, as the people who would be able to tell them would be over 100 years old now. We are at the end of an era where the great war becomes only a memory of a time long behind us, with nobody left to tell new stories.
@harley4230
@harley4230 2 жыл бұрын
"We are at the end of an era where the great war becomes only a memory of a time long behind us, with nobody left to tell new stories" A tragedy in and of itself. This is why humanity continues to make these same mistakes and always will.
@moosesues8887
@moosesues8887 2 жыл бұрын
@@harley4230 I don’t think we even have the motivation to fight we too busy tik tok dancing
@SpectralLumo
@SpectralLumo 2 жыл бұрын
@@moosesues8887 as scary a thought as tik tok dancing being what potentially stops any future wars is, I'd much rather that than the genocides that war always brings.
@moosesues8887
@moosesues8887 2 жыл бұрын
@@SpectralLumo new gen finna be so soft and I ain’t complaining cus we ain’t getting a ww3 anytime soon
@PPSH-Riley
@PPSH-Riley 2 жыл бұрын
Surviving Stalingrad must've been probably the worst times a human being could experience id imagine
@PolarSealCraft
@PolarSealCraft 2 жыл бұрын
I took a World War One history course at university this last year and we analyzed a number of films and how they interpreted the meaning (or lack thereof) of the War. This movie was definitely one of the more haunting and brutal ones to watch. I recommend watching A Very Long Engagement for anyone that found this film moving.
@victorkreig6089
@victorkreig6089 2 жыл бұрын
Actually a LOT of people sign up when a war breaks out TO kill people. That's just how it works, but there aren't a lot of wars like that
@GrosvnerMcaffrey
@GrosvnerMcaffrey 2 жыл бұрын
After seeing the very long engagement as a late teen I never wanted to hear someone call the french cowards again
@higginswalsan
@higginswalsan 2 жыл бұрын
Okay but did y’all watch paths of glory
@OpossumOnTheMoon
@OpossumOnTheMoon Жыл бұрын
It’s so weird looking back at how young the shoulders were. They were just children. Hell my heart aches for my own grandfather who was 17 when he signed up for Korea. He was just a baby back then wanting to serve like his father did. It’s so jarring actually having to confront how young the “men” were that were sent to die
@tdoran616
@tdoran616 Жыл бұрын
It’s shameful of you to deny what these young men did. You can’t even call them men after what they experienced. These people are men. Don’t deny them that.
@OpossumOnTheMoon
@OpossumOnTheMoon Жыл бұрын
@@tdoran616 they were boys. Minors. Children made to fight. Calling them such isn’t disrespectful, it’s pointing out the cruelty of war and how many nations sent children off to die before they could fully grasp what that meant. These weren’t grown men, they were children fed lies and propaganda.
@serena841
@serena841 Жыл бұрын
@@tdoran616 War does not transform children into men. They either come home as traumatized children or die as traumatized children
@MrAnimason
@MrAnimason Жыл бұрын
@@serena841 War has different effects on everyone. Assigning absolutes to it won't work for anyone, except for maybe the fact that it sucks for everyone involved lol.
@thelvadam7422
@thelvadam7422 Жыл бұрын
​@@tdoran616 Wtf are u talking about? A 17 year old boy in a war is still a child wether you like it or not. It's not disrespectful, is a fact.
@patrickmckenna5812
@patrickmckenna5812 11 ай бұрын
I'm in my sixties and my father was the youngest of ten children, so the age divide between me and my grandfather was vast. He died when I was 15 at a good old age. This is incredible because he volunteered in 1914 at sixteen years of age to go and fight for Britain on the Western front, and despite twice being wounded (he ended up with a permanent limp), he somehow survived 4 years of trench warfare. Needless to say, he was in a very small minority. I can still remember all the stories he told me about his experiences, and when I eventually saw this movie it really hit home. This was more or less how he described it. The big difference was that although the British soldiers were given basic rations, they were never in danger of starving. Apart from that however, it was hell on earth.
@visassess8607
@visassess8607 2 жыл бұрын
I think it's absolutely awesome how heavily involved German veterans were in the making of the film. It's also great how far the director was willing to push the established norms at the time for the film. I think it's even more impactful in hindsight seeing as how WW2 was right around the corner and more young boys had to go through the same thing. I bet even veterans that advised on this movie had to go back as well.
@calebh7902
@calebh7902 Жыл бұрын
World War 2 was so massive I am sure much of the people in this mlvie served and died.
@Ivan_Powrosnik
@Ivan_Powrosnik Жыл бұрын
Indeed they would have, veterans of ww1 in Germany and Austria were often brought back into the military for ww2 as commissioned officers due to the sudden expansion of Germany’s army in the 1930’s from around 100,000 to several millions. My grandfather, for example, fought in the First World War as a volunteer and was drafted in September of 1939 as a captain in the Wehrmacht.
@calebh7902
@calebh7902 Жыл бұрын
@@Ivan_Powrosnik Isnt it crazy? How so much people lived through 2 world wars in one life time, aurciced the trenches in the 1st one just to be killed in the 2nd?
@ladygreydecaf
@ladygreydecaf Жыл бұрын
The Odyssey quote at the beginning is so fitting when you examine the source material, also the Iliad. Odysseus, the titular “hero” (though the meaning was different then) returns a broken shell of a man with PTSD. The story itself can be interpreted as war only causes suffering. It’s not to be aspired to, it’s to be avoided at all costs. It breaks all men and their families, no matter who wins. I truly believe Homer meant it to be anti-war.
@daylonguy9219
@daylonguy9219 Жыл бұрын
I'm very glad you had that perspective too, once I read the Odyssey for my self and how it's about all the horrors he and his comrades face coming BACK from war it made so much sense about it being a metaphor for PTSD.
@watch7966
@watch7966 10 ай бұрын
But the greatest irony of all is that anti-war sentiments acted upon leave a nation most vulnerable to war. And thus the cycle repeats.
@inlpwetrust
@inlpwetrust 2 жыл бұрын
I read a Japanese manga series on world history as a child. The WWI chapters featured a young German soldier as sort of a POV character. One day he crawled out of the trench to pick a flower for his girlfriend back home, and got killed by a sniper. Many years later I watched All Quiet and realized what that part of the manga was based on.
@themanwhowouldbebrick
@themanwhowouldbebrick Жыл бұрын
What’s the series called?
@inlpwetrust
@inlpwetrust Жыл бұрын
@@themanwhowouldbebrick It's just World History. Published by Shueisha Inc in the mid 80s.
@themanwhowouldbebrick
@themanwhowouldbebrick Жыл бұрын
@@inlpwetrust ok thanks
@alexthibodeau979
@alexthibodeau979 Жыл бұрын
Charley's War, a famous WW1 comic strip from the 70's has a similar scene too. A soldier collects flowers for his daughter and he died after being sniped trying to retrieve a single poppy from No Man's Land
@Mate_Antal_Zoltan
@Mate_Antal_Zoltan Жыл бұрын
@@alexthibodeau979 what a fucking idiot, everybody knows that a poppy starts falling apart as soon as you pluck it from the ground
@Bobbyjoe4511
@Bobbyjoe4511 11 ай бұрын
"His scream gets me everytime!" 😂 13:05 - literally emotionless in the corner
@brunobucciaratiswife
@brunobucciaratiswife 2 жыл бұрын
I once met a WW2 veteran who fought in Italy, his name was Bob. He talked often about the men he lost and the women he courted. He was 17 when he enlisted. I don’t have much else to say about him, but it’s nice to remember him.
@Cairo40000
@Cairo40000 2 жыл бұрын
My grandpa was 10 during WW2. He saw the Japanese occupy his home island. He never really talked a whole lot about what it was like other than the fact that they killed his brother.
@RangeGleasry
@RangeGleasry 2 жыл бұрын
I was not prepared for nor was I expecting to attend a masterclass on a war story I never watched or cared about and be moved to tears by a passive aggressively hummus munching KZbinr but here I am, deeply moved and completely invested hanging on your every word, professor.
@invaderzim6904
@invaderzim6904 2 жыл бұрын
I like whenever he shows the scenes of him watching he’s like “I was so moved” and he’s just munching away in the next clip lol
@byewhobayou8868
@byewhobayou8868 2 жыл бұрын
Hahaha
@christianmcbrearty
@christianmcbrearty 2 жыл бұрын
“passively aggressive hummus munching KZbinr” lmaooo 😂
@mihailmilev9909
@mihailmilev9909 2 жыл бұрын
@@invaderzim6904 lol ikr
@mihailmilev9909
@mihailmilev9909 2 жыл бұрын
@Sky L exactly
@dangerousthoughts.1591
@dangerousthoughts.1591 4 ай бұрын
Wow, that scene talking about how home isn’t home anymore kinda hit me. I’ve never been to war but I’ve been in the army for a while now. I remember that right after my training I was sent overseas for a year. I couldn’t wait to come home and go on leave again but it was so underwhelming. The entire time I was on leave all I wanted to was to go back with all the people that became my new family over those 12 months.
@CidsaDragoon
@CidsaDragoon 2 жыл бұрын
One thing this movie really highlights is how much the Hays code set the industry back. Movies like this were really pushing the envelope and then the hammer came down for decades. Definitely a movie worth watching.
@doodlebees
@doodlebees 2 жыл бұрын
yes! i was just reading about the code today and came upon wendigoon again (love his vids but i take breaks and binge watch) and i was like “hey! i’m learning about this in class!”
@snex000
@snex000 2 жыл бұрын
Dangerous History Podcast just did an episode on the Hays Code. Be sure to check it out.
@mihailmilev9909
@mihailmilev9909 2 жыл бұрын
@@doodlebees nice, that must be a nice class. I've never heard of it. Or how is ur class?
@mihailmilev9909
@mihailmilev9909 2 жыл бұрын
@@snex000 thanks for the tip
@mihailmilev9909
@mihailmilev9909 2 жыл бұрын
@@doodlebees where's ur pfp from btw?
@joshiugh5438
@joshiugh5438 Жыл бұрын
I saw this in a Theater in Germany and it was one of the most impactful plays I've seen so far. When Paul is on leave and goes home, he climbs into the audience and stands on an empty seat, looking around. he comes from a stage covered in red and brown sludge and there is no helping the powerful realisation that he comes home almost from a "different world" and truly interacting with each other on even terms is seemingly impossible. To add to that, the first rows are even given plastic coats at the beginning of the play, to shield them from all that is thrown around on stage.... it was horrific while at the same time so beautifully made, using any and all tools of theater to show this traumatic mess
@Glory2Snowstar
@Glory2Snowstar 2 жыл бұрын
Goodness, that butterfly scene was perfect from every symbolic angle. Let’s see: -Monarchs are poisonous. Poison is activated as self-defense but only when you are actively being eaten, evoking that no victory comes without your own costs. -The fact that it’s a monarch specifically adds a layer of wordplay: because of the monarch, this man died in war. Be that a monarch or Kaiser, the point still stands. -Butterflies acquire their wings after spending most of their life preparing for this adult form, although this stage is short-lived and their main goal is to simply find a mate. These children spent their whole childhoods growing up to accomplish long-dormant dreams, and by spreading their wings upon the battlefield their adulthood was short-lived. I think the thing that struck me the most was the whole premise of him being able to stop and enjoy something beautiful… only for that to drop his guard and seal his fate. I think that one moment of witnessing a beautiful creature, that of which he probably saw back at home where the grass was vibrant and the sun was warm… I think that it was impossible for him to resist being distracted by the monarch. For the war itself had distracted him from everybody and everything back at home, and his brain needed a final familiar taste of those times no matter the price.
@jjanggulane
@jjanggulane 2 жыл бұрын
your comment is beautiful 🥲 ty for this
@unibyte5175
@unibyte5175 2 жыл бұрын
I love your description of the hidden meaning of that penultimate scene, but I can't help but feel that Paul knew what would happen when he peeked out of safety for so long, but simply had become disillusioned with life after losing everyone he had held dear, and learning that his home would offer no solace or sympathy if he returned
@Hunne2303
@Hunne2303 2 жыл бұрын
Monarchs are also among the few species, that can convey "live experience" by genetics.
@PokemonFreak6298
@PokemonFreak6298 2 жыл бұрын
In my mind he knew if he tried to grab it he would probably die but just figured fuck it I'm okay with this
@haydenw7981
@haydenw7981 Жыл бұрын
I remember reading this book in middle school. I don't remember much. Paul's talk with the dying Frenchman and Paul carrying the "wounded" Kat without realizing he was dead. Those scenes haunt me to this day
@kathrynparnell4130
@kathrynparnell4130 2 жыл бұрын
Wow, it's so sad to see another KZbinr spiral down such a dark path... I hope wendigoon can get the help he needs for his magic spoon addiction. You're in our thoughts and prayers Wendi!
@hayleywilliams8938
@hayleywilliams8938 2 жыл бұрын
This story is over a century old and there's still so much we can learn from it even today.
@beepbeeplettuce5890
@beepbeeplettuce5890 2 жыл бұрын
wow brilliant observation, any more insightful thoughts? like "war bad" or "bullets hurt"
@augustyn2.0
@augustyn2.0 2 жыл бұрын
@@beepbeeplettuce5890 why are you so pressed lmao
@pondscvm
@pondscvm 2 жыл бұрын
@@beepbeeplettuce5890 yeah, grass green and sky blue. I have more too if you wanna keep being pretentious.
@stephaniexu3576
@stephaniexu3576 2 жыл бұрын
OMG hayley williams im your biggest fan
@_hi_pwr
@_hi_pwr 2 жыл бұрын
@@beepbeeplettuce5890 28:08
@shosho_hrubblefongers9311
@shosho_hrubblefongers9311 Жыл бұрын
2:47 The way he says "It's because I'm at my limit." is so calm yet so firm, and being said by this peaceful and wholesome dude, that it honestly scared me somewhere deep down my soul.
@CityTake
@CityTake Жыл бұрын
For real, brain went to the joker for a sec
@elimgarak8785
@elimgarak8785 Жыл бұрын
Sometimes reasonable men must do unreasonable things
@norbertomoran4575
@norbertomoran4575 Жыл бұрын
22:20 Great breakdown Wendigoon. So well done man. My mother in laws dad went to WWI and suffered from shell shock after. He was never the same. The ripples of war still felt to this day.
@tylertheleper8468
@tylertheleper8468 2 жыл бұрын
I was about 15 to 16 when I bought this movie. I was really getting into classic movies but my reasons for watching this one was just to watch a classic war movie, not realizing how depressing it was. It left a grave impression on me and the fact that I was watching it at the same age as the characters game me an even more dour perspective.
@JavaScrapper
@JavaScrapper 2 жыл бұрын
I watched it recently (btw I’m 13) With my mom Since we’ve been watching like movies about ww1 recently And DEAR GOD THE ENDING IS SO SAD
@Tiago-rz2hr
@Tiago-rz2hr 2 жыл бұрын
Leper pog
@horrorhotel1999
@horrorhotel1999 2 жыл бұрын
I read this book in high school. I never realized there was a movie. I can honestly say, the book is one of the most impactful pieces of media I have ever consumed. In particular the scene where Paul and the french soldier jump into the same crater really got me at the time. Also the entire arc of the teacher and everything he stands for have influenced me a lot throughout life
@clueless_cutie
@clueless_cutie 2 жыл бұрын
Same. I read this and Watership Down in the same summer. Absolute favorites to this day. Granted, I prefer Watership Down's movie just because it cuts out the endless descriptions of clover fields, but both stories really shaped my inner cynic. I think AQOTWF really nailed the visceral descriptions which makes the reader feel just as terrified as they witness the chaos and destruction of war around them.
@oldstinker3239
@oldstinker3239 2 жыл бұрын
Mandatory reading in high school for me.
@defaulted9485
@defaulted9485 2 жыл бұрын
I felt that the teacher is the most antagonistic enemy in all of this film. Sheer ignorance of the value of human lives is nothing but tactics and chess in his eyes, even sending childrens to die, and that is more terrifying because there's no remorse in him unlike the corpses Paul laid pitifully on their last days at the battlefield. If anyone deserves to die, its that teacher regardless of his view. He got it out from the horses mouth, his own students that died in war, and he straight up mocks him for being stupidly misunderstanding. He has a chance to consider, and he just rejects it outright. I never think of the phrase "there are words of the prophets and those who came before you, if they don't consider them - they will neither listen to a resurrected man." from Luke 16:31 because I wasn't understood how people can be like this. But this film showed me painfully realistic event of it. I need to watch Pixar's Incredibles after this for the "Next time you gamble, bet your own life" line.
@Tony_Cardoza
@Tony_Cardoza 2 жыл бұрын
@@defaulted9485 Great verse from Luke!
@Trust_No_001
@Trust_No_001 2 жыл бұрын
We literally watched the remake in school lmao.
@Shatterstar
@Shatterstar Жыл бұрын
I enjoy the comedy of the mailman going "DO YOU WANT TO BE COURT MARSHALED FOR THIS?" and the boys going "Hell yea, I'd love to get out of being shot at!" And yea, I agree Kat is the best character. Good video.
@jacquespoulemer3577
@jacquespoulemer3577 5 ай бұрын
Wendigoon and my fellow goonies. I'm a spry 72 years old and since I was 12 I wanted to know all the best the world had to offer. Lit, food, art, etc etc. I would haunt the Art Cinemas in NYC, mostly Bleeker St and Carnegie Hall. I probably first saw this great film in the 1970s. I enjoyed your commentary and especially the Owen Wilson Poem at the end. I hope you know Benjamin Britten's War Requiem from 1963 which takes the Roman Catholic mass for the dead and intersperses Wilson Poems. (There are many you tube videos of this). Wishing you every success ...Jim Mexico retired
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