Sam Peckinpah was a genius director when he made this incredible war movie ! As a very young teen watching it then, it was a masterclass.
@themobseat3 жыл бұрын
The amount of work that goes into shooting a historical scene like this is unbelievable.
@behruz88953 жыл бұрын
but it sets to zero when the film itself is a bullshit. It is only a western propaganda
@peterlewerin42133 жыл бұрын
This is not a historical scene. The film is about historical events, but they haven't tried very hard to make it authentic (the details like weapons or uniforms are more or less correct, but often misplaced). The combat is unrealistic, too (illumination rounds? really?; the Soviet infantry, who are supposed to hug the tanks are often going somewhere else; where are the NCOs?). And, on top of it all, it's a Cold War film glorifying the German Army on the eastern front.
@behruz88953 жыл бұрын
@@peterlewerin4213 thanks bro
@andrewchesler20293 жыл бұрын
@@peterlewerin4213 Glorifying ?? What movie did you watch ?
@peterlewerin42133 жыл бұрын
@@andrewchesler2029 one where the whole focus is on the Germans, and the Soviets are a faceless Other. One where the Germans are skilled and principled while the Soviets are a mass of brutes. One where the Germans are brave and loyal towards each other, and humane towards their enemies. A film that subverts its subject matter and refuses to discuss the realities of the war.
@Moneor8 жыл бұрын
Fun fact: the Russians (and some Germans!) are played by members of the Yugoslav People's Army. Care was taken to make the weapons authentic, though this wasn't possible. Hence T-34/85 instead of T-34/76, Yugoslav M-53 machine gun instead of German MG-42 (they're very similar though), Yugoslav uniforms instead of Soviet ones, American airplanes instead of Soviet ones, and finally Yugoslav TAM trucks instead of Soviet GAZ/ZIS.
@erikhalvorseth39506 жыл бұрын
Cannot verify all your claims apart from the MG-42. We still use the Yugoslav M-53 replica in the Norwegian army and when they fire it in the film a trained ear can recognize the sound of it. We call it MG-3 up here. A fantastic weapon. It looks excactly like the MG-42 only the firing rate is cut in half. It fires 17-23 rounds/sec. Double that rate for the MG-42
@boymanalo37306 жыл бұрын
Fpj
@elianlorenzosaenz14136 жыл бұрын
Moneor huh
@Antonio-oo7iw6 жыл бұрын
Ese caballo de Bonanzaaarr
@CZ350tuner6 жыл бұрын
Mg.42 fires at 25 RPM according to several books.
@SHAd0Eheart3 жыл бұрын
It’s like there is a battle and a movie going on separately and they keep getting in each other’s way.
@ДенисЧаругин Жыл бұрын
Я рад. Очень.
@praingmantis1 Жыл бұрын
Yes, it's very confusing. James Coburn playing a German officer.
@arthurvilkas78154 жыл бұрын
The battles on the Eastern front were so unbelievable fierce. It's hard to comprehend something like it
@chuckbuckbobuck3 жыл бұрын
You got that rigjt. All other theaters of was were sideshows. As much as Americans orobably dont want to hear that.
@maximilianodelrio3 жыл бұрын
@@chuckbuckbobuck other theaters could be just as brutal if not more than the eastern front, this isnt a suffering competition
@chuckbuckbobuck3 жыл бұрын
@@maximilianodelrio Sorry Maximiliano you are wrong! 20,000 Russians lost their lives every day of the conflict till the very end. If Americans had such a casualty count the American public would be aghast. Yes, of course, sacrifices and brutal fighting was done in many theaters but for sheer shedding of blood nothing holds a candle to the Eastern front with a possible exception of the Chinese-Japanese war. A half a million Russians and equal amount of Germans in the 8 month battle of Stalingrad. More the total U.S. and British casalties in ALL theaters. You need to study up on your WW II war history my friend.
@maximilianodelrio3 жыл бұрын
@@chuckbuckbobuck i know more people died there, it’s obvious, but what I meant is that the brutality of the fighting could be surpassed in other fronts, most notably on the Pacific with the Japanese and their brutal defence
@tobe12073 жыл бұрын
I think all the theaters were necessary to achieve victory. We were all on the same side
@donnovicki97715 жыл бұрын
I'lltake you where the Iron Crosses grow" one of the best lines in this movie.
@stringpuppet36263 жыл бұрын
thats honestly makes no sense whatsoever though.
@stringpuppet36263 жыл бұрын
@#3_Vacuum_Salesman_of_Marrakesh well i dont understand how you can grow iron crosses firstly, and if its a metaphor of some sort i cant see that either... whats the meaning behind it?
@stringpuppet36263 жыл бұрын
@#3_Vacuum_Salesman_of_Marrakesh ah, thank you very much
@marchellochiovelli72593 жыл бұрын
@@stringpuppet3626 Dead hero's burial grounds.
@tysontuki14103 жыл бұрын
@@stringpuppet3626 Maybe you never will. Best let it go
@Exolesco8 жыл бұрын
I was wondering why there were so many jump-cuts. Then I realized, the director implemented these jump-cuts during battle so as to give the viewer a sense of "what the hell is happening?". In other words, the director wants the viewer to have the same feeling a soldier has, in battle, when so much is happening at once. Also, notice how the jump-cuts go away once the soldiers are no longer in a fight and things are relatively "calm". Then, once another battle begins, the jump-cuts return.
@petergianarakos92036 жыл бұрын
It's called the fog of war. Each soldier only sees what is before him. Confusion reigns/what the hell is happening? Good point Georgie.
@jamesupton49966 жыл бұрын
The answer is probably more prosaic - budget. Set up a big scene like this, all your cameras, and you can't do a retake, not on the budget of that film, so the footage you have at the end has to be used somehow. It would have taken days to film, so there's no going back - closups would have been put in at the end.
It certainly has that effect. But then again, we the audience aren’t supposed to be confused about what is happening. Its effect is indistinguishable from bad directing/editing.
@Destroyer120296 Жыл бұрын
I love how chatoic it is. You can barely tell what is going on but that's a good thing because they could not tell either. Just madness, death chaos and suffering
@SharkHustler11 ай бұрын
By far - even by today's standards - one of the best realistically depicted war movies ever made of the titanic battles on the Eastern Front during WWII ... 'Tough-arse' Sgt. Steiner, played convincingly well and true to the tone of the film's gritty aura by the late (and equally 'tough-arse') star, James Coburn, couldn't have been better-portrayed by any other leading actor - who, in the end, justified and succinctly reflected the character's trials and tribulations to the bitter end from the novel of the same name. A highly recommended viewing for all WWII afficionados of the Russian-German War. Thanks for posting!
@JB-rf8cx6 ай бұрын
Its like Fury ... Not a good film...
@stuartdollar99125 ай бұрын
@@JB-rf8cx Better than Fury. Though Fury isn't a high bar for any film to clear.
@johnmichaelson91735 ай бұрын
And because it's the Eastern Front you don't feel guilty rooting for Steiner & the Germans. 🙂
@ТимурАхмадеев-ф7з2 ай бұрын
оказывается есть любители Русско германской войны, уроды блять.
@planetary1099 жыл бұрын
Seems like the producers had a lot of fun driving that T-34 through the set lol
@taclas19 жыл бұрын
***** ...and those were genuine T-34/85s provided by the Yugoslav army which them in stock to be rented out for movie purposes (Kelly's Heroes was filmed there)...
@RockandRoller20099 жыл бұрын
taclas1 The 1978 film "Force 10 from Navarone" was also filmed there, and used T-34's as German tanks.
@karlhans66789 жыл бұрын
+taclas1 no wonder i couldnt find any sign of a modded tank on them
@ghostjager81909 жыл бұрын
+Matt K it wasn't a impossible thing that happened all Armies used each other's captured equipment at some point
@TiuLaStaka9 жыл бұрын
+GhostJager81 Yes, for example the british used to take MP40s to replace their shitty Sten. Both use 9mm ammo, so perfect.
@peterdebrie Жыл бұрын
I watched this movie decades ago. Still good after all these years.
@mutteringmale3 ай бұрын
Done today, Sargent would be black, his squad would be women, gays, trans, asians and at least one hater who voted for Trump.
@j.griffin3 жыл бұрын
This was filmed entirely with analog equipment and released in 1977. That makes it older than most of the people reading this comment. Lo-Tech? More like No-Tech....
@В.Михайлов3 жыл бұрын
still younger than me
@barriereid92443 жыл бұрын
I like it! The low tech not the reality behind the film.
@peterobrien13183 жыл бұрын
And it's been re-mastered and released on Blu-Ray... so I guess that brings it back up to 'current tech'. :-)
@charlesfoutch11323 жыл бұрын
I was 23 when this fim was made. We went to the moon with worse computers.
@FaithnGod15586 ай бұрын
@@charlesfoutch1132nobody has ever been to the moon! Lol
@sonnywu1009 жыл бұрын
this is actually very very good for a movie in 1977, WOW!
@razorlord29 жыл бұрын
+Sonny Five why? because a lot of people die?
@sonnywu1009 жыл бұрын
not really, but just the sheer quality of the movie, feels more advanced cause the filming quality feels 1980-1990like rather than 1970 razorlord2
@razorlord29 жыл бұрын
+Sonny Five oh you mean it like that..yes then i agree... I watch the movie and beside a lot of people dieing because its war it had not much story... quality is quit good indeed..
@jonathanallard21289 жыл бұрын
Also the fighting is pretty realistic. Especially for an old war movie, which are always so damn cheesy. It isn't perfect, but it's much better than all the other old ones I've seen.
@Ljevid019 жыл бұрын
+Sonny Five The ones who loose the war tend to make more realistic movies about it...
@TonymanCS9 жыл бұрын
Damn good effects for such a old movie. Impressive.
@ferdrewflores30144 жыл бұрын
💪
@ramadama26134 жыл бұрын
Old? Old is "All quiet on the Western front" both films are outstsnding
@GAjjl4 жыл бұрын
Rama Dama This was 1978 I believe and it doesn’t come across as a film made 42 years ago. Excellent warm film.
@hansdampfer75883 жыл бұрын
The trick is, all effects are well done and real. Real explosion, real (yes, T-34/85 to early in war) tanks and so on.
@ramennoodles50073 жыл бұрын
Jesus is lord
@taclas19 жыл бұрын
Fantastic action scene by a master film-maker, Sam Peckinpah...if anybody is wondering why there aren't any Wehrmacht panzerfausts in action, the single-use anti-tank weapon first became available in small numbers in August 1943. This film depicts the Wehrmacht's retreat actions at the Kuban bridgehead on the Taman Peninsula in 1943 (Jan to Oct). Improved versions of the panzerfaust only began to be produced in quantity from September 1943 onwards....
@rcnelson9 жыл бұрын
taclas1 Although the Germans did have what we'd probably now call RPGs, it is surprising that their use wasn't more widespread. They couldn't destroy a tank, but they could certainly immobilize it by blowing the tread off.
@GirlsGamesGunsGuitar9 жыл бұрын
Peckinpah did this? Cripes. Some of the worst editing I've seen in a long time.
@rkitchen19679 жыл бұрын
there was also a German version of the bazooka, the Panzerschrek
@broncosgjn9 жыл бұрын
+Haas Siegen yes correct they were capable of destroying tanks. The American bazooka was limited and could not defeat Tiger or Panther armour but the Panzerschreck and Panzerfaust could do it. You just needed to be a very brave man or boy to use one so close to a tank.
@numkie9 жыл бұрын
+Grahame Nicholson chances of seeing a panzer or tiger was very low
@pietervaness32292 жыл бұрын
I HAVE SEEN THE ENTIRE MOVIE TWICE ...A TRULY GREAT PRODUCTION , AS IS THIS VIDEO
@mrpicnmix3 жыл бұрын
Editor : What kind of editing style do you want to use? Director : Yes
@stochasticwhistles3 жыл бұрын
This is by far the most funny comment in this clip! I though that they both must have been high making this movie.
@buffalopatriot3 жыл бұрын
Definitely frenetic.
@jeremyharris40213 жыл бұрын
@@buffalopatriot Cut up all the clips and throw them in the air
@fede0183 ай бұрын
The director also edited his movies, now that you mentioned it.
@calistudent63353 ай бұрын
You can call it an artistic choice but the schizophrenic editing means there's no sense of geography. Limiting the perspective I can understand but not making it a jumbled mess of random disconnected parts of the battle. It's visually striking and there is great battle footage to be found but cut to sh*t. Frustrating.
@tedrintel32696 жыл бұрын
An extraordinarily good WW2 film that is basically unknown
@pale_saint3 жыл бұрын
The thing is because this film lacks the stupid fake hero Allies it doesn’t devulge into the common bear pits of war film. There was no reason to make either side morally superior or ”good” so it transcendents into the one of the very best war films ever
@jamesgoldring10522 жыл бұрын
@@pale_saint yes no ego stroking
@DmitryiYo2 жыл бұрын
@@pale_saint В этом, ты думаю прав, но эти сцены со стрельбой от бедра, не в пользу достоверности. Выглядит тупо.
@tamaustralia49492 жыл бұрын
💯 Percent agree 👍
@anthonystaines9609 Жыл бұрын
Great film coburn at his best excellent directing
@dcontygr19 жыл бұрын
This is one of the best war movies ever made, if not ,the best!! Great acting, authentic vehicles and equipment and lots of action!! Thanks Sam Peckinpah!!!!
@steffenjonda828310 ай бұрын
100% true
@steveconkey73627 ай бұрын
Except for the use of F4U's in parts the movie. They were never used in Europe, or by the Russian's.
@tracer00175 ай бұрын
I still say this is the best WW2 movie of all time. The battle scenes rock and what a great cast
@martinithechobit5 ай бұрын
Action packed but also not cartoony or glorification of war..
@Печки_Лавочки-э4м3 ай бұрын
"They fought for their homeland" 1975. Bondarchuk's film. There is both war and horror.
@Razzy13129 жыл бұрын
Battle scenes like this are very rare in films today - no quick cuts, no shaky cam. Let the action play out instead of forcing it.
@harrymills27703 жыл бұрын
Quite a few quick cuts, but not the train wreck of quick cuts and shaky cam that passes for action in Hollywood, today.
@panzerwaffel52812 жыл бұрын
But many... many, many cuts... ah this is what makes this movie so chaotic and hard for me to watch, I don't know where the front line is where they really are and even dying this is very vague, for example, Stalingrad 1993 has great battle scenes because they are specific, and this movie builds characters even among the episodic or insignificant. Cross of Iron is frankly terrible at building characters, which makes them forget quickly and you don't even notice that they die. After all, this movie is full of heroic scenes that are stupid. Stalingrad 1993, on the other hand, shows war devoid of heroism, it focuses on the drama of war, it does not hide in showing wounds, severed limbs, screams, suicides.
@sonogamirinne7172 Жыл бұрын
After 7 year a guys complaining about war film too chaotic ,
@soundonly7392 Жыл бұрын
"No quick cuts" first thing I noticed was how sickeningly quick the camera cuts are in between shots. So many it becomes hard to even tell whats going on Gunna be honest, the editing there is genuinely poor
@Lycurgus1982 Жыл бұрын
Lol, three seconds at a time.
@marcoschwarz37638 жыл бұрын
Sam Peckinpah was a great director.
@ferdrewflores30144 жыл бұрын
💪💪
@dexterdog623 жыл бұрын
He’s overrated.
@mutteringmale4 ай бұрын
The Wild Bunch.. Unfortunately it's hard to find an original film that hasn't been cut by the DEI, wokies, cowards, liberals and crybaby pathetic wusses of the last 40 years. Sam made it so that any nattering crybaby would find something politically incorrect, horrible, disturbing and hurt their wittle wittle feeeeelingssss.
Oddly enough even tho its a bit on the rough side the equipment portrayed is quite a bit more authentic than what we see in modern movies. The t-34s, the german mortar and machine gun crews even the 75mm Pak is accurate. The weight of the teller mines when they threw them on the track was great whether they weighed there actual weight or the actors just played as if they were heavy. Well done any way one looks at it
@cliveedwards29583 жыл бұрын
I agree..those mines looked heavy..the dirt and dust on the tanks and soldiers made them look very lived in and real..many times, as you say, more modern films can look too clean..like they've come straight from props and wardrobe department...one of the effects that Saving Private Ryan got very right, was the deadening thud of the guns and not the per-twang sound that you get in older films like this...apart from that this film has done a great job..must watch it again
@virus73793 жыл бұрын
T-34s sounds weird. as if they have gasoline engines like the German ones. the original diesel V12 sounds completely different))
@АлександрСтарыйметаллург3 жыл бұрын
The old film was made by Americans and is absolutely far from reality. Only Russia can make a real film about the war between Germany and Russia 1941-1945. Recent films close to the real battle films "28 PANFILOVTSEV" and "RZHEV".
@cliveedwards29583 жыл бұрын
@@virus7379 I did think they sounded like a Panzer but dont think I'd know the T-34engine sound
@hansgruber64553 жыл бұрын
@@АлександрСтарыйметаллург The Cross of Iron was an Anglo-German production based on the book by Willi Heinrich who served on the Eastern Front. Nothing wrong with the film as it is. I've seen several Soviet war films and they always have a certain element of propaganda in them. No thanks!
@dons1231113 жыл бұрын
Most expensive VHS I ever bought, 35$. I saw this when it came out in theatres in 77, 25 years later made it part of my video collection. It had to be ordered it was so rare, but what a great war movie it is.
@qibraygolospinkin22656 ай бұрын
ЗАКАЖИ КОССЕТУ КОНЦ ЛАГЕРЯ ОСВЕНЦЕВ ! ТОЖЕ РЕДКАЯ КАК ЖИГАЛИ ЛЮДЕЙ !
@шальной-н8м5 ай бұрын
Это не замечательный фильм. Посмотри фильм "Трагедия века" Озерова. Вот там масштаб и накал. А этот фильм дешёвка. Дешёвка со всех сторон.
@mutteringmale4 ай бұрын
I would like to see a remake of this, but directed by a fantastic no-woke director like Clint Eastwood or Mel Gibson. And no child birth scenes, no embedded cigarette and beer commercials, no men on their knees begging to be forgiven and sobbing "I'm sorry" to the wives or any other woman, just a real good honest no DEI new film. Yup, for you liberals, there were no African Americans/Saracens/Nubians in the German army, I know I know, if Netflix got made it the Sargent would be an African lesbian Women in the Wehrmacht..
@Rickwmc11 жыл бұрын
Sam Peckinpah was the best. Cross of Iron - which got only mixed reviews in 1977 - is becoming somewhat of a cult movie today. What battle scenes. What human interest scenes mixed in with them.
@rcnelson9 жыл бұрын
Spartaculus Jones The Wild Bunch returns.
@Rickwmc9 жыл бұрын
R C Nelson Great observation. Thanks.
@Voss21209 жыл бұрын
Spartaculus Jones It was a great movie, a movie that rivals classics like a Bridge to Far and Kelly's Heroes, however the fact the movie is shown from the German point of view was just too taboo at the time.
@ashyclaret6 жыл бұрын
Loved this film when it came out,still do.
@hajimuhamad47946 жыл бұрын
Very
@lkvideos71819 жыл бұрын
"Regimental headquarters, can you hear me .... !?" HQ: *Seen 12;13*
@anyoneanywhere82123 жыл бұрын
I like how the tank didn't explode into a nuclear blast from a grenade (but only if thrown from a shirtless guy with abs). So at least it's more realistic than most.
@hernanbojacav.83963 жыл бұрын
The T-34 was designed to resist any attack or mine land, was the most advanced design for a tank, and easily take punishment for the biggest tank from the Germans The Tiger-Panzer!
@harrymills27703 жыл бұрын
@@hernanbojacav.8396 : It was built for reliability, simple repair and mass production. The Nazis couldn't get out of their own way, so busy were they with changes, that their tank production and readiness in the field were very poor by comparison. Soviets kept it simple. Used the best design for their chassis - which the Americans passed on - and I THINK they just stuck with a diesel engine, and didn't fool around with turbine engines. Basically, a farmer who worked on his tractors could work on a T-34.
@richardcarden41613 жыл бұрын
@@hernanbojacav.8396 The 88mm that the Tiger used was still effective on the T34.
@bazbazi27453 жыл бұрын
@@harrymills2770 т 34 была оригинальная собственная конструкция. приобрели танк кристи - он же бт2, и его наследники бт5, бт7, это танки 30 годов, совершенно другие , во всем двигатель, ходовая, броня, орудие, ничего общего. а дизель выбрали по техническим и экономическим соображениям - в ссср было много дизеля и недостаток бензина, плюс дизель дешевле, и главное - т 34 поставили на поток, на конвейер, который делал танков больше чем вся германия,ссср не плодил модели - как только производство стабилизировали осталось практически две модели - ис и т 34. а немцы использовали бензин потому что добывали его из угля, а дизеля им не хватало - и весь он шел на флот - чистая экономика. The T 34 was an original proprietary design. we bought the Christie tank - aka bt2, and its successors bt5, bt7, these are tanks of the 30s, completely different, in everything the engine, chassis, armor, gun, nothing in common. and diesel was chosen for technical and economic reasons - in the USSR there was a lot of diesel and a lack of gasoline, plus diesel is cheaper, and most importantly-the t 34 was put on the stream, on the conveyor, which made more tanks than the whole of Germany, the USSR did not produce models - as soon as production was stabilized, there were almost two models - is and t 34. and the Germans used gasoline because they extracted it from coal, and they lacked diesel-and all of it went to the fleet-pure economy.
@alexanderchenf13 жыл бұрын
@@hernanbojacav.8396 bs
@snakeenjoyingacanofbeans52193 жыл бұрын
Peckinpaw's constant cuts were the shakeycam of his day.
@snakeenjoyingacanofbeans52193 жыл бұрын
check out Deus Ex videos
@ToeShimmel3 жыл бұрын
Yeah it's pretty much unwatchable xD
@Kalvinbal3 жыл бұрын
I can’t imagine the amount of time the editors had to spend sitting in some room somewhere with scissors cutting and splicing... cutting and splicing...
@khansaheb.7860 Жыл бұрын
I saw this movie many times. Very beautiful picture.
@mikegregory2492 Жыл бұрын
The film ends on rather an odd note, but was originally supposed to include an additional extra scene including an airfield. But the producer pulled the funds. Also based on the book 'The Willing Flesh' by Willi Henrich who fought on the eastern front. The film compacts the book heavily, but does a decent job. The book is most certainly worth a read; at times it's excellent.
@markbirchall822510 ай бұрын
Indeed, I started the book yesterday and can barely put it down, it fleshes out the personalities and inner conflicts of the characters so well. I believe Peckinpah was a raging alcoholic and extremely difficult to deal with and by the time we get to Steiner's "I'll show you where the Iron Crosses grow" speech with Stransky, the production was bankrupt. The entire end scene was apparently filmed in a day and involved a lot of cutting and creative editing. Powerful and very sympathetic film nonetheless. The average German landser knew the war was as nuts as the Allied soldier did, or certainly came to realise it after Stalingrad. This film still hits like a sledgehammer.
@FaithnGod15586 ай бұрын
@@markbirchall8225if you like that book then you you will absolutely love “The Forgotten Soldier,” by Guy Sajer, a 17 year old soldier in the elite unit Gross Deutschland Division for 3 years on the Eastern Front. I’ve had to purchase 4 books now because every time I loan it out for someone to read, something mysteriously happens and it’s never returned. It’s BY FAR the closest to, and most realistically written book describing combat and a soldier’s life during war. I’m a 60 year old former Marine grunt and I’ve never read anything even close to this survivors account of what they saw and endured.
@dirtysniper3434 Жыл бұрын
Hands down best movie from the German perspective. Shows how hellish the eastern front was. Shows an accurate showing of t-34's on the offensive not just endless hoards. A good portrait of the red army in the late War offensives. No stupid endless red charges with no armor protection. Firing online in the prone while talking guns, proper bounding from cover to cover. It's hands down of the best
@jaykilbourne1110 Жыл бұрын
The Soviets fiddled around with large-scale mobile warfare doctrine before the war. Stalin shot all the officers who experimented with it during the Great Purge. Then the Germans taught them everything they knew about their "lighting-war".
@panzerwaffel5281 Жыл бұрын
Watch Stalingrad 1993?
@bryanchong1713 Жыл бұрын
Das Boot?
@dirtysniper3434 Жыл бұрын
@@panzerwaffel5281 read the rest of my comment and that's why stalingrad isn't the greatest. Still good tho
@kkarx Жыл бұрын
It looked like a WW2 western. Not very realistic.
@pex_the_unalivedrunk67856 жыл бұрын
The T-34's biggest advantage wasn't it's sloped armor, it's high mobility, or it's gun(whether 76mm or 85mm)...it was the fact that there were always more...and more...and more of them.
@davidprice71622 жыл бұрын
The same people who told you that want you to pretend making more tanks than the rest of the world combined doesn't matter when they have a coked upped leader in a tight t-shirt like anyone gives a fuck
@DB7422 жыл бұрын
They were like a twisted Doritos ad, kill all you want...we'll make more.
@hansvandijk14872 жыл бұрын
And broad tracks. And fuel that didn’t freeze in winter. And lubricants that didn’t freeze.
@DmitryiYo2 жыл бұрын
Ага, знатоки. Вы всё ещё верите в то что Ваши воздушные асы по 200 самолётов сбивали? Гебельсовская пропаганда, такая тупая, но для вас нормально. Живите дальше тупые бюргеры.
@morrogin59862 жыл бұрын
@@hansvandijk1487 diesel fuel does freeze. and the tracks werent that much of an advantage....it had the same ground pressure as the tiger I, and look what happened to that thing
@manonamountain9 жыл бұрын
The brilliant Sam Peckinpah.How i miss his moviemaking.
@axelibrotherus35263 жыл бұрын
Still better than many other war films these days
@Cheezwizzz Жыл бұрын
13 million fans of Cross of Iron 😮
@culls339 жыл бұрын
one of the best action sequences ever done in a ww2 film-Peckinpah was a master director
@minksnopes55512 жыл бұрын
Most likely Coburn directed while Peckinpah was having DT's. Not hating on Peckinpah, but at this point in his career, Coburn did a lot of the work for him.
@adam4thnj Жыл бұрын
@@minksnopes5551 That was the FINAL battle scene, I thought.
@robertfogelberg7538 Жыл бұрын
Such great movie weeebtheh austrian t 34!they used
@minksnopes5551 Жыл бұрын
@@adam4thnj I checked, and stand corrected. Coburn evidently learned a lot from the master, though.
@chadwedul1787 Жыл бұрын
However, the editing sucked.
@L8bro9 жыл бұрын
Sheesh this is some crazy editing.
@BlackWolf99889 жыл бұрын
+L8bro pew pew pew pew
@timoklap9 жыл бұрын
+L8bro yes, very annoying to watch O.o
@tSp2899 жыл бұрын
+L8bro I was going to say, the cutting makes it really difficult to know what's going on. Great film, but bad editing in this scene.
@geokaplan599 жыл бұрын
+tSp289 My presumption is that Peckinpah and editors Michael Ellis and Tony Lawson wanted to simulate the sheer confusion of war. It's jarring and disorienting, which must be pretty accurate to how the real thing felt. It's the sound that struck me, the constant barrage of ear-splitting crashing decibels. Who can think in such a crazed atmosphere? I find this a disturbingly credible portrait of battle. Smooth, clear editing has its place, and most war movies (certainly those prior to, say, 1995 or so) observe traditional methods of cutting and maintaining continuity. Peckinpah here is creating the same kind of intense chaos as he did in key scenes of "The Wild Bunch." For me, it works.
@seapeoplesdidnothingwrong13079 жыл бұрын
I had a seizure from watching this
@jackharter6606 жыл бұрын
I rode to work for a couple years with a guy that was drafted and drove a tank on the Eastern Front. When he was drunk ' a almost everyday occurrence' sometimes he would talk about the war. He was telling me you never see one t-34 they come in groups. When you see a t-34 you turn around and Drive to the anti-tank guns. Ground troops would go to ground and let the t34 is Passover them. Besides the anti-tank guns they would call in stukas armed with 2 anti-tank cannons one under each wing between the stukas and the anti tank guns most of the time the t-34s or what was left of them would retreat. They then would attack the t 34 s shooting into the back of them. If this doesn't sound right to you it didn't always work and the Germans did lose the war. Paul remembers the beginning of the end was when you would call for stukas and because of Russian air superiority none would come.
@benediktpress2383 Жыл бұрын
My grandfather was at the eastern Front '39 to '45. He told me exactly (!), what your friend said. Combined handgrenades, spezialisiert anti-tank-explosives used by the infantry, air support by stukas or directing them in front of the 8.8 Flak or pak (anti-tank-guns). Benny, germany Greetings from germany
@jackharter660 Жыл бұрын
@@benediktpress2383 Paul has been gone some years now, but I always have been glad that I knew him. Ever the constant reminder that not all Germans were Nazis and evil just young man drafted into the army. These children soldiers had to do what our children soldiers had to do. Politics are always irrelevant to Frontline combat soldiers.
@benediktpress2383 Жыл бұрын
@@jackharter660 i thank you a lot !!! May your friend rest in peace, he definitly had hard times in his life
@elzaelza9148 Жыл бұрын
@@jackharter660 "Politics always has nothing to do with soldiers fighting on the front line." ... But now Europe, which supplied Hitler with weapons, is supplying the Nazi and corrupt regime in Ukraine with weapons, which has been killing people in the Donbas for 9 years, burning people in cities (Odessa, May 2, 2014). Europe and its policies do not change.
@patricksantos-io2op Жыл бұрын
The Germans would sucker the enemy with feints and false retreats ....to hit the flanks...?
@infantryattacks3 жыл бұрын
The chapters in the novel, The Cross of Iron, dealing with the Soviet offensive at Krimskaya provide a more accurate description of the battle than portrayed in the movie. But the screenplay took parts of the book and mixed them up so the scenes don't follow the flow of the novel. The most terrifying parts of the book deal with the fighting outside and inside a massive factory at Novorosiysk on the Black Sea coast. This is where Steiner and his men were betrayed in the novel, quite unlike the scene in the movie. The screenplay also had issues with German ranks and the positions they held in the German Army by late-1943, the period of time that the movie attempted to depict. Thus, LT Meyer in the movie is portrayed as platoon leader when in fact he was a company commander in the novel. Captain Stransky is a company commander in the movie when he was a battalion commander in the book. Hollywood had a mirror-imaging bias. Thus, if American lieutenants were platoon leaders and captains company commanders, then this must have been the case with the Germans too. But reality isn't a perfect mirror image. In the German Army lieutenants normally led companies and captains often led battalions. I like the movie, but the novel is a work of art. If possible, read The Willing Flesh, which is the unabridged version of the Cross of Iron. An English- language version was printed in Great Britain, but copies are hard to find. I lucked out on Ebay. It's about 70 pages longer than the otherwise excellent abridged version and gives more depth to key personalities, particularly Steiner, but also Lieutenant Colonel Brandt, the regimental commander (the movie depicts him as a battalion commander--wrong again.).
@freeiraq288 Жыл бұрын
What is the name of the movie
@Holdit66 Жыл бұрын
I read The Willing Flesh years before Cross of Iron even came out. Perhaps that's why I've never warmed to the movie. That said, the movie's look is good, and Coburn makes a good Steiner, although when I read the novel, the Steiner I visualised looked more like Richard Burton , who oddly enough did end up playing Steinerin the awful "Breakthrough".
@sjonnieplayfull5859 Жыл бұрын
@@freeiraq288"cross of iron"
@FelixstoweFoamForge11 ай бұрын
The book is way way better. All the points you raise are valid, but tbh, I do think the structure of the film maintains narrative tension a bit better. Especially given they only had 90 minutes. Steiner in the book is a much more complex character... (Sometimes I find him almost hateful, if understandable).
@a.f.w.froschkonig29786 жыл бұрын
According to my grandfathers testimony who was watching the film together with me these scenes are realistic
@louiswgr76183 жыл бұрын
Did your grandfather experience that?
@BigBadassR9 жыл бұрын
Im glad I wasn't there.
@BigBadassR9 жыл бұрын
***** Yeah, you made a damn good point. Even though I was referring to the fact that living through battles like that day after day for years would really really REALLY suck.
@shitchops9 жыл бұрын
+╬Reichsritter╬ That sounds pretty good 2 me
@Kuraimizu91529 жыл бұрын
+Big R Tell that to certain italian lady
@horaceball54189 жыл бұрын
+╬Reichsritter╬ wE THOUGHT THERE WAS SOLDIERS ON THAT BRIDGE. I RED ABOUT IT....ON BEHAFL OF THE USA AND PRESIDENT BARRACK HUSSEING OBAMMA, WE APOLOGIZE BUTT DAMMIT YOU DECLARED WAR ON US NOT THE OTHER WAY AROUND
@TTex119 жыл бұрын
+╬Reichsritter╬ Something something Invasion of Poland something something.
@alexprokhorov4075 жыл бұрын
One of the main things that sets the older and the newer movies apart is the hip shooting. Looking at the older ones it seems like every single engagement with automatic weapons involved firing from the hip which is naturally a waste of ammo, unless you're caught by a surprise.
@4FYTfa8EjYHNXjChe8xs7xmC5pNEtz5 жыл бұрын
Another thing in old movies is that guys are constantly being caught by surprise be enemies coming up from behind them or the side and are easily wiped out before they can react. Experienced soldiers are rarely caught by complete surprise like that. They are also usually dug in and have to be gradually pried out of their positions. But that doesn't look as exciting and dramatic on a movie screen.
@alexsokolov3303 жыл бұрын
Режиссёр фильма и консультант в одном лице - Федя Бондарчук!
@АлександрСкирденко-т1я3 жыл бұрын
Вообще-то американский режиссёр Сэм Пекинпа.
@niksheremetov85083 жыл бұрын
@@АлександрСкирденко-т1я да смысл тот же
@ДмитрийКостенко-ч3х3 жыл бұрын
100% танки у него гуляют в чистом поле без пихоты, а птхота носится в здании по центру и толпой!!!
@СеняГорбунков-щ9ц3 жыл бұрын
@@АлександрСкирденко-т1я А какая разница?
@superjustchel39573 жыл бұрын
Как фильм называется?
@Ickie718 жыл бұрын
Would love to spend the afternoon Paintballin! on this set! Wouldn't you?
@angeloc13408 жыл бұрын
Air soft
@terrybham8 жыл бұрын
Children.
@brianwhite21868 жыл бұрын
#evike.com
@Torftrottel9 жыл бұрын
One of the best fight scenes in movie history.
@HugoRauss3 жыл бұрын
Yeap and absolutely realstic!
@pnitsche63 Жыл бұрын
@@HugoRauss agree
@horaceball54189 жыл бұрын
i WORK 11 HOUR DAYS.....AND AM NOW TRYING TO WATCH A KZbin VIDEO, AND MY WIFE IS TELLING ME HER PROBLEMS...
@Mankindatwar9 жыл бұрын
+Horace Ball show dominance
@horaceball54189 жыл бұрын
+Mankind at war Women talk a lot.
@RealwoodAustralia9 жыл бұрын
go for a walk
@HandsomestCrusader9 жыл бұрын
+My life advice Legend says she's still talking to this day.
@horaceball54189 жыл бұрын
+My life advice QIVES CORNER YOU, THEY ARE PROGRAMMED TO TALK....NOT SURE WHAT SHE IS TALKINGA BOUT THOUGH
@S1NG15 Жыл бұрын
Really loved the practical effects in this scene.
@listentofiddlepipes11 жыл бұрын
They need to make more films depicting the eastern front.
@Chromewolf18710 жыл бұрын
try the german movie Stalingrad or Genration War
@activatewindows23059 жыл бұрын
Chromewolf187 Stalingrad was a Russian made movie with financial backing from the Putin regime. Thus why the Russians in that movie are super men who can fend off entire divisions despite being only five guys.
@Chromewolf1879 жыл бұрын
not the russian crap the german movie Stalingrad from 1993
@Marko31239 жыл бұрын
I agree
@planetary1099 жыл бұрын
It's not a bad movie, it's the Russian equivilent of Saving Private Ryan (but I think they got obsessed with slow motion lol)
@Gviking19808 жыл бұрын
this is one of the best WW 2 movies out there
@stevesmith8663 жыл бұрын
I love this movie. I understand it was wildly popular in Germany
@Gviking19803 жыл бұрын
@@stevesmith866 yes It was, we watched it all the time in the 90s
@tallbib3 жыл бұрын
Ну, да, а потом они остановились и начали стрелять. После чего, обогнали пехоту и заглохли в 2 метрах от фрицев. А потом заехали в заводской корпус... Клюква вечна.
@Ripper84Warrior3 жыл бұрын
Редкостный бред, если честно. Танк в здании завода вообще вершина маразма данного видео
@mzalyalov3 жыл бұрын
Не только наши клюкву снимают :)
@СергоМишин3 жыл бұрын
Интересно, как механик водитель ориентировался в здании? ☺️ Бред какой то
@ЕрмуратШаданов3 жыл бұрын
Название фильма , есть русский перевод.
@СергоМишин3 жыл бұрын
@@ЕрмуратШаданов железный крест, перевод есть
@erasereraser79083 жыл бұрын
Dont forget the novel of Willi Heinrich which the movie is based on: Das geduldige Fleisch aka The willing Flesh. I read the book first in 1989 and I am still impressed.
@korgond3 жыл бұрын
German-Russian war is probably the most intense and bloody one in the history
@meanmanturbo3 жыл бұрын
Heh, I had read the book a few year before wathing the movie. I didn't know this movie was based on the book before watching it. About half-way through I started to think, hey, this all feel awfully familliar.
@АлександрСтарыйметаллург3 жыл бұрын
Only Russia can make a real film about the war between Germany and Russia 1941-1945. Recent films close to the real battle films "28 PANFILOVTSEV" and "RZHEV".
@hansgruber64553 жыл бұрын
@@АлександрСтарыйметаллург Hey Igor....go drink bottle of vodka !
@АлександрСтарыйметаллург3 жыл бұрын
@@hansgruber6455 нет. Кальвадос
@jjhays368 жыл бұрын
wow the clarity is so good compared to when I had this on VHS
@Obergfreighter8 жыл бұрын
A legendary amount of jump-cuts.
@doggonemess18 жыл бұрын
Good gawd, yes. I haven't seen this many jump cuts since film school.
@ErikJi8 жыл бұрын
ayy lmao same
@itsnotalwaysblackandwhite86243 жыл бұрын
Have never known War to be in scync. 95% boredom, 5% sheer, gut wrenching chaos and Hell.
@cai-itorgunov67623 жыл бұрын
Ещё одна версия "спасти рядового", только не Райана, а Мюллера...
@daniellastuart31453 жыл бұрын
1 this was made in 1977 so " saving a private" is Another version of THE Cross of Iron 2 it is a much better film than saving a private
@User9416-3 жыл бұрын
Неа, это из фильма "Железный крест". И есть еще продолжение этой мути, второй фильм "Железный крест-2". Там уже война с союзниками. Главный герой - седенький старик в немецкой военной кепи-бергмюце или гансовке по нашему. Герой никак не может получить железный крест. Это основная сюжетная линия фильма, не уживчив с начальством. Он в звании что-то вроде фельдфебеля. Палит танки налево и направо, воюет в общем, а крест не дают. Кое как эту дрянь досмотрел.
@leonid36173 жыл бұрын
по-русски есть?
@alexlapin8443 жыл бұрын
Хрень какая-то...
@leonid36173 жыл бұрын
@Андрей 40 "железный крест.". Есть на русском. Вот сижу смотрю. Фильм как фильм ничего особенного
@sillyone520628 жыл бұрын
Oftentimes in life I ask, "What would Steiner do?"
@seanreillyireland8 жыл бұрын
Its a testament to the natural presence of Coburn. I can't think of many who had this... Mitchum, the middle-aged Burton... but not many.
@christianwolke32248 жыл бұрын
He would lose. Nazi loser.
@svnpt8 жыл бұрын
He would fight like a German, act like a German und woulb be proud of this.
@christianwolke32248 жыл бұрын
svnpt and you are drunken. Nazi loser.
@wsilver588 жыл бұрын
You know what Steiner would do!
@manilajohn01828 жыл бұрын
The most outstanding war / anti- war film ever.
@theirishhammer94513 жыл бұрын
I own this movie, it wasn't supposed to be released in America, and the copys were confiscated, I purchased mine from action time videos, and someone showed up to confiscate it, I already purchased it, about a week later I went in to action time, and the owner said that a private security firm was going around the country collecting up the copys they could find, I have had mine for 36 years, and it's rare in America, and a treasure!
@randolfocarlos13 жыл бұрын
MUITO SHOW
@stochasticwhistles3 жыл бұрын
Seriously? Why?
@duckygaming35363 жыл бұрын
I haven't heard about that, and plus I've watched a vid of an american reviewing the movie and even saying it's not hard to find
@theirishhammer94513 жыл бұрын
@@stochasticwhistles it was something from interpol, that was strange stuff.
@theirishhammer94513 жыл бұрын
@@duckygaming3536 just try and find it, it was something that had legal issues from Interpol.
@scottfoster161 Жыл бұрын
As a former morterman, the first thing I noticed was the high angle of the gun. We called this a 'red mission'. This would be very accurate considering the proximity of the infantry. My hat is off to the military advisor.
@jasondonovan1408 Жыл бұрын
Do you really need a military adviser to know something as simple as how the angle should be if they are close? I don't think so.
@scottfoster161 Жыл бұрын
@@jasondonovan1408 You have no idea what is required of a morter, do you?
@jasondonovan1408 Жыл бұрын
@@scottfoster161 As an ex Army guy, I kinda do. It isn't hard to understand the basics.
@scottfoster161 Жыл бұрын
@@jasondonovan1408 Counting blankets for 4 years doesn't count. POG
@jasondonovan1408 Жыл бұрын
@@scottfoster161 I was actually in a CHB. Drove a 113 for our TOC/TAC when I wasn't in the S-3. To much brains to be a grunt.....but definitely smart enough to understand trajectory basics. So instead of trying to insult another veteran.......why not just admit that it isn't rocket science. At least the basics. It isn't difficult.
@GZA0366 жыл бұрын
I have to say the explosions look pretty realistic... No ridiculous fireballs. They did a good job with the effects... The editing on the other hand. This was edited by an insane person.
@nickmitsialis6 жыл бұрын
It's a Sam Peckinpah movie--Insane Editing is par for the course, along with slo mo deaths.
That was the director's trademark in all his films.
@denisdaly17086 жыл бұрын
This was a truly great anti war film. One of the very best war movies.
@spreadeagled56543 жыл бұрын
Great movie! Love it! It’s one of Sam Peckinpah’s best films and one of James Coburn’s best roles.
@troyimmelmann56218 жыл бұрын
@3:25 it just ran through those dragons teeth like it was nothing lol those were made to stop tanks
@MrMalandrinus20108 жыл бұрын
There are a lot of unrealistic moments in this fragment. First tanks go like they are invincible (crashing those concrete dragon teeth like carton boxes=), next moment they totally explode from a mine on a track. This will sure destroy the track and immobilize the machine, but why the whole tank will explode like it was detonated from inside? And those stupid tactics moments, when a tank advances without an infantry support. Or going inside of a building and trying to blow it up when being inside (facepalm) - that was an epic stupidity.
8 жыл бұрын
this wasn't hollywood...filmed mostly if not entirely in yugoslavia...director ran of of money during production
@StoutProper8 жыл бұрын
grimmsterification yugoslavia...now they had a resistance worth talking about. Took more casulties under occupation than the whole of western europe
@petergianarakos92036 жыл бұрын
Yep, I noticed that too. It's because they were made of paper machet or some special effects stuff made to crumble.
@parteibonza6 жыл бұрын
HAHAHA yeah it did!!! LOL
@jan426 жыл бұрын
I love the magic tunnel in this factory.
@ogarnogin51603 жыл бұрын
100- yards away a WWI landscape They emerge into an untouched pasture
@1899Capone3 жыл бұрын
I was thinking about how they should update the sound effects in older movies like this because the scenery is really nice. It would immensely enhance the quality. Especially the sounds of firing and explosion. They are really out of date.
@goplad1 Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately the sound effects are added in post production from library sound effects that in some cases dated back to the '40s. The most annoying sound effects are those electronic ricochets that were used in war movies and other types of films for decades.
@warthog55622 жыл бұрын
One of the best WW2 movies ever. So under rated and not well known.
@Gunslinger18753 жыл бұрын
This movie is very underrated, the first time I saw this I was 13 years old and parents just got HBO It should me the German perspective of the war. Before that all I had was John Wayne. A life long passion for history followed.
@АлександрСтарыйметаллург3 жыл бұрын
The old film was made by Americans and is absolutely far from reality. Only Russia can make a real film about the war between Germany and Russia 1941-1945. Recent films close to the real battle films "28 PANFILOVTSEV" and "RZHEV".
@MRrealmadridRaul9 жыл бұрын
If this were Russian/American/Chinese movie from the 80s, the grenade at about 6:52 would have landed in the barrel of the tank and blown it up.
@MessiahComing9 жыл бұрын
I was actually expecting someone to run up and slide one down.
@planetary1099 жыл бұрын
lmao yeah, besides would it even do anything? I mean shells are shot through the cannon breach and barrel, would a grenade really do anything?
@MRrealmadridRaul9 жыл бұрын
***** I'm pretty ignorant on the topic so I can't give an opinion based off facts but based off my knowledge, if it was a sabot round that was loaded I don't think it would've done anything at all. Maybe if it was a frag round that was loaded it could potentially detonate it and maybe setting off a chain reaction. If nothing was loaded then nothing would probably happen. But like i said before, i'm so used to seeing movies that blow up tanks in the most unrealistic ways that watching this really surprised me.
@QuickLode9 жыл бұрын
hooker joe Doesn't matter what kind of round was loaded. A grenade would've wounded the barrel's interior and therefore render the tank unable to fire. (unless the tank blows it's own barrel off, resulting in the turret blowing up, which would result in the ammo depot blowing up, and then the tank blowing up.)
@dickysnicky9 жыл бұрын
***** the barrel would be strong in order to withstand the shell, so they would had to have thrown it so hard it went completely into it and into the crew compartment. Otherwise, the barrel might get busted, or, depending on how far in the barrel the grenade landed, could injure (maby) the crew
@etenbrink93683 жыл бұрын
best "old" war movies ever
@Arelak3 жыл бұрын
"Why are we fighting in this god forsaken hell hole?" ... "Because there is a factory." ... "But it is blown to hell sir, its meaningless." ... "Its on the map so HQ says to hold the factory, its useful." ... "How? Its blown up!" ... "Its on the map."
@The772dragon3 жыл бұрын
У немцев советские ППШ-41,но ни одного фаустпатрона или панцершрека не видно. Ни один танк не полезет внутрь здания,где его легко подбить.Тем более,без пехоты.
@alexandralien39413 жыл бұрын
Ну на самом деле они пользовались нашим оружием. Это правда. И по некоторым воспоминаниям, им нравился ППШ.
@The772dragon3 жыл бұрын
@@alexandralien3941 Им очень нравился ППС-43,СВТ-40.Есть архивные кадры.fastpic.ru/fullview/114/2021/0208/_bf6cdd0120586c1098d2c7eb4e15aa65.png.html
@andreyavakov87673 жыл бұрын
И не только ППШ). Обалдел когда узнал, что вовсю и Т-34 с перемалеванными звездами в кресты использовали. А пока Харьковский завод у них в руках был, так еще и ремонтировали и зап. части производили
@ИгорьТамаров-ь6ч3 жыл бұрын
А наши шмаесеромнепользовались?Вы странные.на войне времени нет то что есть то и используют
@alexandralien39413 жыл бұрын
@@ИгорьТамаров-ь6ч Ну сейчас за Хуго накидают! ;-)
@nickcastings15683 жыл бұрын
A brilliant, underrated film!
@blank5574 жыл бұрын
Great movie. I wonder if anyone got killed with all that amazing action. The T-34/85 drivers deserve an award.
@arnoleclerc89412 жыл бұрын
must be the best war film ever, even if apocalypse now is very closed. the battles scenes are amazing, very intense even if we almost don't see blood.... peckinpah was such a genius...
@panzerwaffel52812 жыл бұрын
Watch Stalingrad 1993
@edgarkaltenrieder7045 Жыл бұрын
@@panzerwaffel5281 3
@Александр-м9ю6ю6 жыл бұрын
"Развалинами рейхстага удовлетворён!!!" Маэстро
@barriewright28573 жыл бұрын
Please translate so we can get the Russian view of those dark days when Russians back was aginst the wall.
@fokinDim3 жыл бұрын
online translators тебе в помощь.
@ErmakBrovar3 жыл бұрын
@@barriewright2857 learn Russian. It’s the right time.
@ЕвгенийЕланцев-з6ш3 жыл бұрын
@@barriewright2857 жить захочешь - переведёшь. Это несложно, почти как гитлер - капут...
@ОлександрКоваленко-ы7ы3 жыл бұрын
А я удовлетворен мллион власовцеа триста тьісяч армии Каменского,29,30 русская дивизия СС 120 000 а ешо донские и кубанские казаки.И енто на фоне 18 000 СС гальічина.Которьіе в совке небьіли и предать енто не могли.Во ваши дидьі прославилися.
@ЛехаемМендель3 жыл бұрын
Снимал наверное барон Мюнхаузен ))
@statinskill3 жыл бұрын
Следующий раз ищем наш Lebensraum в западе.
@АлександрСкирденко-т1я3 жыл бұрын
Довольно неплохой американский режиссер Сэм Пекинпа.
@Polpiv4tifish9 жыл бұрын
An epic war movie made with advice from men who actually fought on the Eastern Front.
@vitalisjakubauskas95673 жыл бұрын
this is seen...
@user-sy6kg3 жыл бұрын
@@vitalisjakubauskas9567 ...и тут один седой и строгий отчётливо сказал "говно".
@jeffclark78883 жыл бұрын
Stop saying “actually”.
@ZhuJo993 жыл бұрын
Seems like those dudes were lying or director was an idiot. Seeing Germans running with russian Spagin machine gun is funny.
@KyrreXXL3 жыл бұрын
@@ZhuJo99 The germans used everything they could get their hands on, using enemy weapons was quite common, from handguns to tanks. And the PPSh-41 was definatly one of them as this quote from Wikipedia says "After the German Army captured large numbers of the PPSh-41 during World War II, a program was instituted to convert the weapon to the standard German submachine gun cartridge - 9×19mm Parabellum. The Wehrmacht officially adopted the converted PPSh-41 as the "MP41(r)"; unconverted PPSh-41s were designated "MP717(r)" and supplied with 7.63×25mm Mauser ammunition (which is dimensionally identical to 7.62×25mm Tokarev, but slightly less powerful)" So it is more realistic than funny.
@Matt-ur3dm3 жыл бұрын
If anyone likes this movie then I recommend a Russian film called Zvezda or "The Star". It's from 2002 and is excellent. I have seen its been uploaded to KZbin now so worth watching as a great film
@ftffighter3 жыл бұрын
Is it a Russian bias film or was it pretty historically accurate?
@gotresidual2613 жыл бұрын
Thank you for distinctive. Taste in history of WW2 and cinematography!
@Matt-ur3dm3 жыл бұрын
@@ftffighter I have just checked and it's been uploaded to KZbin as a full movie with subtitles. Check it out. It's got some great scenes in it
@Matt-ur3dm3 жыл бұрын
@@gotresidual261 Thanks. Love from the UK
@lawrencebittke84783 жыл бұрын
I have COME AND SEE. It’s gut wrenching to watch.
@wolfkafitz94616 жыл бұрын
A true Masterpiece of great accuracy. Performed very well in Germany. Impressed audiences and critics across Europe. How cometh? Well, it was an international co-production between British and West German financiers. With an international cast. The director: US-american action-expert Sam Peckinpah. Some assistance from the Army of Yugoslavia. No wonder, we have a German AND an English version. Hey. We are in the film business. There must be some compromising now and then. Whats the problem?
@goldman36113 жыл бұрын
Красиво сняли, приятно смотреть. Как качественную порнушку, вот только как всегда в ней нет настоящей любви))) в сюжете дыры танки прут без пехоты, у немцев довольно скудное вооружение, где фаустпатроны и панцершреки во времена 43-45 годов( когда на вооружении СССР стояли т34-85), их немцы как консервные банки выпускали. Где пулеметы мг-34(или 43) наводящие ужас своей скорострельностью. В общем немцы тоже не дураками были и давали так не хило прикурить и не бегали если что то могли ещё делать, а наши были не такими уж дураками, стратегию наступления знали как Библию...
@ЕвгенийСкрябин-е6о4 ай бұрын
Отлично помню слова наших ветеранов и в живую и в хронике про немцев и американцев.Про немцев всегда говорили как как о грамотных и стойких бойцах в целом. А про америкосах почти снисходительно. Точно так же немецкие ветераны говорили про русских и америкосах. Видимо америкосы снимали по своим представлениям. Да и актёры на немцев не похожи. Правда у них много вообще хороших и достоверных фильмов. Один из них сделан очень правдиво, на основе реальных фактов и археологии, а не в угоду лубочной искажённой истории. Это фильм, конечно немного романтический. История о политике, усобицах и о большой любви Темучина из рода Борджигин и его любимой и жене Бортэ.Действительно там показаны пищали т к народ русов Сибири, Тартарии первые сделали настоящий порох, а не как у китайцев только для шутих. И климат тогда был мягче в долинах Онона и Керулена, да и горы там есть. Да, почти все Борджигины были очень высокого роста, голубоглазы, белокуры, прекрасна по свидетельстсвам папских , франкских послов, Марко Поло была и сама Бортэ. Это предыстория о великих делах Чингис Хана. Респект за честность. А этот фильм как то не дотягивает.
@efarmstrong3 жыл бұрын
Together along with "A Bridge too Far" were the best and most realistic "WWII" movies of the '70s, should be restored and remastered in 4K.
@silafuyang86753 жыл бұрын
Better go watch some Russian movies.
@aleksejssuharevs8663 жыл бұрын
Saw this movie in the 80-s. Even then it amazed me how unrealistic it was! Hordes of red barbarians attacking a handful of arian knights, piling up at their feet... A Bridge Too Far, on the other hand, was pretty realistic and the events were depicted quite accurately.
@hansgruber64553 жыл бұрын
@@silafuyang8675 You mean watch Russian movie where Russian man make love to inner tube ??
@anunakigilgamesz88343 жыл бұрын
Absolutely amazing movie
@kenloftly17216 жыл бұрын
One of my favorite WW2 films
@russellbrown70288 жыл бұрын
Greatly underrated film. Set during WW2 at a time when the Germans were steadily losing the war on the Eastern Front, but they kept fighting anyway as there was simply no alternative.The later encounter between the veteran German unit and the Russian women soldiers is particularly well done. The Germans considered the use of female combatants to be barbaric(as did the Western allies and so too the Japanese) Just depended on to what degree you wanted to carry the concept of "total war". Finally, the deployment of massive fire raids on cities and the atomic bomb made all such considerations irrelevant.
@nemocaptain22448 жыл бұрын
10 Million Soviet women raped by the civilized Germans.
@pentuprager62258 жыл бұрын
+Nemo Captain A million German prisoners of war renamed so the USA government was able to starve and murder them after the war had ended. Even Red Cross and civilian food, medicine and aid was not allowed to be given to the prisoners of war. War crimes are never committed by the USA or its allies that is why the USA brought in The Hague Invasion Act.
@kaverlrokaverlro51018 жыл бұрын
Displine was so harsh in the waffen ss , if a waffen ss got caught of rape , he was put against the wall and shot. The 2 nd ss das reich ukranian & Russian girls in its units , I.e nurses and such. A ss officer that won the knights cross , got drunk and either raped her and killed her or just killed her. We'll his comrades , we're disgusted with him and gave retzenstein the option of a court marshell and getting hanged or committing suicide . He took his own life, that ukranian girl was well like in the dad reich division , most waffen ss units had Ukrainians and Russian helpers , men and women.
@nemocaptain22448 жыл бұрын
In the West, in the East the Herrensvolk were allowed that and more.
@russellbrown70288 жыл бұрын
Proved to be a major error, especially in Ukraine, where there was substantial dislike of, and even resistance to Russian control in general and Soviet tyranny in particular.However, it soon became obvious that the German invasion was not intended to have any component whatsoever of Ukrainian liberation. That had to wait for another 50 years, and the internal decay of the Soviet system, rather than its overthrow by force.
@curtislowe45773 жыл бұрын
I am impressed with the modeling. The realism is very convincing.
@Mark-vq5dz Жыл бұрын
They weren't models 😉
@ninjabiatch1013 жыл бұрын
I wish there were more Russian and German perspective war Movies. Not every German was a die-hard Nazi, if they were Nazis at all. And can you imagine the Horror of being German in Berlin, or Russian in Stalingrad?
@ann_chor993 жыл бұрын
Russian had no fear in Stalingrad. They protected their homeland of Nazi, who come to genocide them so they had only two choices: fight or die. Everyone was fighting for the Motherland, For People, For Stalin.
@richardsimpson37922 жыл бұрын
@@ann_chor99 apart for the many Russians who defected, or got shot 'to encourage the others' by Communist officials.
@sapiens018 жыл бұрын
Смешно! В таких случаях,танки никогда не действовали в отрыве от пехоты.И закладывание мин под брюхо танка,смотрится как вливание воды в воздухозаборник летящего самолёта... =)))
@mekkanik18 жыл бұрын
well said
@nomadghot8 жыл бұрын
Именно, дабы избежать подобных казусов танки пехота и сопровождает. Обзор из него мягко говоря так себе.
@wazzupbruh45788 жыл бұрын
+tylsimys67 Jeez man Don't be a Bitch We can speak any languages even you
@griffinh43968 жыл бұрын
maxobalex
@koctiavolkov21436 жыл бұрын
Вот пропаганда заебла ! Походу Русские не стрелять ни ездить на танках не умеют. А войну так выиграли сидя не хрена не делали )))))) наверно бухали все пять лет. Кто снял такую чушь просто придурок!!!!!?
@ruralmass78 жыл бұрын
When viewing or reading anything about WW2, remember, the victors write the history. Check out the real history of WW2, in books and on the internet, all the stuff they didn't tell you at school.
@Rock196219623 жыл бұрын
One of the best war movies of all time. When this movie came out it was the only movie that tried to show what war really is.
@markscouler25342 жыл бұрын
I say a bridge too far is my favorite ww2 film
@Hamishtarah Жыл бұрын
One of the very rare films not having some ridiculous fighting scenes with a super heroe shooting down German soldiers like flies.
@jl64718 жыл бұрын
as a german thats weird to hear germans speaking english
@colefritts8148 жыл бұрын
As an American it's weird to hear Germans speaking English
@Leshij1238 жыл бұрын
Cole Fritts I figure you've never been in Kansas..
@pentuprager62258 жыл бұрын
+Cole Fritts Normally USA is playing the good guys. Maybe this is a cold war movie showing the evil Soviets against the heroic Germans. All USA movies show the bad guys to be played by whomever is in the USAs Crosshairs. Normal USA public relations / propaganda.
@robertjensen10488 жыл бұрын
As an American it's weird to hear anyone speaking German.
@seniorstorm21508 жыл бұрын
have you ever played Return To Castle: Wolfenstein?
@MajorGeneralVeers8 жыл бұрын
Your typical Company of Heroes 2 match.
@komradetuniska20038 жыл бұрын
German 81mm mortar spam and T-34-85 spam. And of course the glorious Ostruppen Spam.
@Myuutsuu856 жыл бұрын
@@komradetuniska2003 You can count on Osttruppen. No really, you can.
@safatsadman6 жыл бұрын
URAAAA intensifies.
@Kent_Vo6 жыл бұрын
I have a son named Christopher
@lorreslorres46693 жыл бұрын
Ich fühle mich gezwungen,nach all den russischen Kommentaren hier auch mal einen in Deutsch da zulassen 🙌🏼
@timuralekseev10983 жыл бұрын
@Navy Zeal 😂✊
@haxxelspaxxel3 жыл бұрын
Sehr schön!
@wingmasterjimmy67242 күн бұрын
Best action in any WW2 film to date ,who else has made hand to hand scenes like it since? my all time favourite.
@kingoblackabilly9933 жыл бұрын
saw this movie at least 3 times when it first came and I don't remember this scene at all. amazing! makes me want to watch it again for sure
@Gunjboss3 жыл бұрын
Who made this movie, British for Germans, or Germans for the British? Looks like it fantastic movie.
@afifalrasyid73203 жыл бұрын
@@Gunjboss l
@woodychadwick98346 жыл бұрын
Here I sit in a bar, in peaceful times watching this.
@peterrech6154 Жыл бұрын
My Grandfahter fought for the Wehrmacht in this Battles, he made his way back to Austria and was prisoned by the US Army. He never tell us some of his story, i think it was to horrible.
@InsectSpray3 жыл бұрын
Red Orchestra 2 flashbacks when they're fighting in the factory.
@kennys96443 жыл бұрын
Hell yeah. I was thinking the same thing Good times, good fucking times