The "Actual" Greatest War Movie ever
Moderator: MOD_SPWaW
-
- Posts: 3943
- Joined: Fri Dec 29, 2000 10:00 am
Great replies so far.
Goblin gets a star for whacking the moderator for me heheh.
Looks like you guys all picked my fav movies, you guys obviously are either A as old as me or B have at least the same tastes (hope that didn't come out sounding like a put down hehe:) ).
Special effects seem to be the basis for so many films today. I liked Ryan mainly for how it stunned the audiences for the first 30 minutes with horrifyingly graphic violence.
For history nuts... The real Ryan was a limey that obviously went ashore on a British beach.
Great actors don't aaaaaalways make a great war movie, but lousy actors sure make a lousy one. Which is why I have never been overly worried about adding a few modern modern setting movies to my list, had a great plot and action, but I hated the actors to much.
Maybe I well start a thread later for "Crappiest War Movie ever".
Pity is I have seen some grrrrrreat war movies, but did they actually "move me emotionally" is a hard one to achieve. I left a few choices off my own selection process simply because they were only great movies, and not influential movies.
Goblin gets a star for whacking the moderator for me heheh.
Looks like you guys all picked my fav movies, you guys obviously are either A as old as me or B have at least the same tastes (hope that didn't come out sounding like a put down hehe:) ).
Special effects seem to be the basis for so many films today. I liked Ryan mainly for how it stunned the audiences for the first 30 minutes with horrifyingly graphic violence.
For history nuts... The real Ryan was a limey that obviously went ashore on a British beach.
Great actors don't aaaaaalways make a great war movie, but lousy actors sure make a lousy one. Which is why I have never been overly worried about adding a few modern modern setting movies to my list, had a great plot and action, but I hated the actors to much.
Maybe I well start a thread later for "Crappiest War Movie ever".
Pity is I have seen some grrrrrreat war movies, but did they actually "move me emotionally" is a hard one to achieve. I left a few choices off my own selection process simply because they were only great movies, and not influential movies.
I LIKE that my life bothers them,
Why should I be the only one bothered by it eh.
Why should I be the only one bothered by it eh.
- JJKettunen
- Posts: 2289
- Joined: Tue Mar 12, 2002 6:00 pm
- Location: Finland
Wow! Lars, I got exactly the same movies on the top of my list!Originally posted by Lars Remmen
Tough one... Die Brücke or Das Boot?
A handful of kids hopelessly defending a bridge against the US Army or an experienced U-boot crew facing hopeless odds?
Probably Das Boot...but it's a close race...
Regards,
Lars
Jyri Kettunen
The eternal privilege of those who never act themselves: to interrogate, be dissatisfied, find fault.
- A. Solzhenitsyn
The eternal privilege of those who never act themselves: to interrogate, be dissatisfied, find fault.
- A. Solzhenitsyn
-
- Posts: 79
- Joined: Mon Mar 11, 2002 1:18 pm
- Location: Iceland
- JJKettunen
- Posts: 2289
- Joined: Tue Mar 12, 2002 6:00 pm
- Location: Finland
IMO, "Winter War" is kinda clumsy movie, although it has some memorable scenes.Originally posted by mao
It has to be Black Hawk Down... although a close second is the Russian movie "Come and See"
I have heard a numbr of Finns talk about "Winter War" but have never seen it... and I REALLY want to see it
Jyri Kettunen
The eternal privilege of those who never act themselves: to interrogate, be dissatisfied, find fault.
- A. Solzhenitsyn
The eternal privilege of those who never act themselves: to interrogate, be dissatisfied, find fault.
- A. Solzhenitsyn
Ahhh!! Seeing that posted made me remember seeing a bit of that film! (the bridge) If I remember correctly, I saw part of it in a high school history class... too long ago, can't remember clearly (if I've got this problem now, I don't want to know what it's like when I hit 30Originally posted by Lars Remmen
Tough one... Die Brücke or Das Boot?
Lars

Anyhow, not sure if this is absolutely the best, but it's my favorite for non-world war two...
"March or Die"
Course, I've always been somewhat of a closet legion fanatic...

NaKATPase:
Colocalized with coracle in septate junctions.
"I'd love to step out, but I'd have to see the girl first." -- GM
"A lot of frogs are like that when they're young and repulsive." -- TS
Colocalized with coracle in septate junctions.
"I'd love to step out, but I'd have to see the girl first." -- GM
"A lot of frogs are like that when they're young and repulsive." -- TS
-
- Posts: 183
- Joined: Sat Sep 08, 2001 8:00 am
- Location: Portland, Orrygun
- Contact:
Tough Choice
I was thinking along the lines of "A Bridge Too Far"
Then I remembered "Stalingrad" (subtitled version)
Then I remembered "Stalingrad" (subtitled version)
-
- Posts: 197
- Joined: Mon Feb 04, 2002 10:00 am
- Location: Rochester, NY
- Contact:
- JJKettunen
- Posts: 2289
- Joined: Tue Mar 12, 2002 6:00 pm
- Location: Finland
Re: Tough Choice
Ouch! I dont want to offend anybody, but I´d vote German-made Stalingrad as the "Crappiest War Movie ever".Originally posted by Kanon Fodder
Then I remembered "Stalingrad" (subtitled version)
Jyri Kettunen
The eternal privilege of those who never act themselves: to interrogate, be dissatisfied, find fault.
- A. Solzhenitsyn
The eternal privilege of those who never act themselves: to interrogate, be dissatisfied, find fault.
- A. Solzhenitsyn
smells like victory

Saigon. ****! I'm still only in Saigon. Every time I think I'm gonna wake up back in the jungle. When I was home after my first tour, it was worse. I'd wake up and there'd be nothing. I hardly said a word to my wife, until I said 'yes' to a divorce. When I was here, I wanted to be there. When I was there, all I could think of was getting back into the jungle. I'm here a week now. I'm waiting for a mission - getting softer. Every minute I stay in this room, I get weaker. And every minute Charlie squats in the bush, he gets stronger. Each time I looked around, the walls moved in a little tighter.
I watched a snail crawl along the edge of a straight razor. That's my dream, it's my nightmare. Crawling, slipping along the edge of a straight razor and surviving....But we must kill them, we must incinerate them, pig after pig, cow after cow, village after village, army after army, and they call me an assassin. What do you call it when the assassins accuse the assassin? They lie. They lie and we have to be merciful for those who lie, for those nabobs. I hate them. I do hate them.
At first, I thought they handed me the wrong dossier. I couldn't believe they wanted this man dead. Third generation West Point, top of his class. Korea, Airborne. About a thousand decorations. Etcetera, etcetera. I had heard his voice on the tape and it really put the hook in me. But I couldn't connect up that voice with this man. Like they said, he had an impressive career, maybe too impressive, I mean perfect. He was being groomed for one of the top slots in the corporation: General, Chief of Staff, anything. In 1964, he returned from a tour with advisory command in Vietnam and things started to slip. His report to the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Lyndon Johnson was restricted. It seems they didn't dig what he had to tell 'em. During the next few months, he made three requests for transfer to Airborne training, Ft. Benning, Georgia and was finally accepted. Airborne? He was thirty-eight years old. Why the f--k would he do that? 1966: Joined Special Forces, returns Vietnam
Kurtz: What did they tell you?
Willard: They told me that you had gone totally insane and that your methods were unsound. (Kurtz clenches his fist.)
Kurtz: Are my methods unsound?
Willard: I don't see any method at all, sir.
Kurtz: I expected someone like you. What did you expect? Are you an assassin?
Willard: I'm a soldier.
Kurtz: (disdainfully, with his face in full view) You're neither. You're an errand boy, sent by grocery clerks to collect the bill.
Squatting in the bush and marking it on a map.
Lots of great choices here!
...but "The Longest Day" gets my vote. The scene where the French commandos assault the hotel is my personal favorite. One continuous uncut take for several minutes that starts with a birds' eye view and slowly zooms down to street level...amazing cinemaphotogrophy.
...but "The Longest Day" gets my vote. The scene where the French commandos assault the hotel is my personal favorite. One continuous uncut take for several minutes that starts with a birds' eye view and slowly zooms down to street level...amazing cinemaphotogrophy.
"The problem with the future is that it keeps turning into the present" -Hobbes
-
- Posts: 183
- Joined: Sat Sep 08, 2001 8:00 am
- Location: Portland, Orrygun
- Contact:
Re: Re: Tough Choice
To each his own, I suppose ...Originally posted by Keke
Ouch! I dont want to offend anybody, but I´d vote German-made Stalingrad as the "Crappiest War Movie ever".
What is yours, by the way ?
:p
-
- Posts: 87
- Joined: Tue Jan 29, 2002 10:00 am
- Location: Espoo, Finland
- Contact:
I'm shocked...........
I don't think anyone mentioned "The Dirty Dozen"........
My vote goes for.........Bridge over the river Kwai.
Marty
My vote goes for.........Bridge over the river Kwai.
Marty
That scene ROCKS! - I also enjoy the scene where the two lone German fighters make their strafing run along the beach, and you see the soldiers running across the camera to avoid the bullets.Originally posted by Easy8
Lots of great choices here!
...but "The Longest Day" gets my vote. The scene where the French commandos assault the hotel is my personal favorite. One continuous uncut take for several minutes that starts with a birds' eye view and slowly zooms down to street level...amazing cinemaphotogrophy.
"Why do you keep using that word? I do not think it means what you think it means."
- Belisarius
- Posts: 3099
- Joined: Sat May 26, 2001 8:00 am
- Location: Gothenburg, Sweden
- Contact:
OK, so I haven't seen "The Longest Day" yet (but I've read Ryan's book - very very good), so I guess I'll have to get it.
But, until then, and maybe afterwards as well:
STALINGRAD
The final scene wraps it all up, IMO. Masterful!
First time I saw it, it took me one half hour to realize there were no subtitles - and I'm not that good at German...immersive.
But, until then, and maybe afterwards as well:
STALINGRAD
The final scene wraps it all up, IMO. Masterful!
First time I saw it, it took me one half hour to realize there were no subtitles - and I'm not that good at German...immersive.

-
- Posts: 3943
- Joined: Fri Dec 29, 2000 10:00 am