Saw it on Netflix last night, wow what a movie; one of many that make war look like the Hell it is. Nominated for Oscar.
Saw it on Netflix last night, wow what a movie; one of many that make war look like the Hell it is. Nominated for Oscar.
If he ever drinks the brew of 10 tanna leaves, he will become a monster the likes of which the world has never seen
The book's even better.
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations,
for nature cannot be fooled."
Richard Feynman
^ I agree, read the book as well.
The movie's very fine. Been a while since I read the book...
If I use the word "God," I sure don't mean an old man in the sky who just loves the occasional goat sacrifice. - Anne Lamott
Was there an earlier movie? Or is this the first from the book?
I've found it interesting to compare/contrast "All Quiet" with the recent "1917." Similar levels of horror, and similar approach of essentially getting that monumental scale horror across by focusing the movie into a "small" drama revolving around a small group of characters.
What my son (of an age to have died in the conflict) observed is how bloody similar the mindset and experience was of the cannon fodder on each side.
If I use the word "God," I sure don't mean an old man in the sky who just loves the occasional goat sacrifice. - Anne Lamott
Thanks for the heads up. I watched the trailers and added it to my list.
Vern
What if (our 'leaders' ) threw a war - and nobody came?
You read accounts of 'cease fires', where opposing teams get together, swap stories/stores etc., 'get along fine' - and when the cease fire ends, return to killing one another. Mindless, the way 'we the people' allow ourselves to be (mis)lead, and to do the dying while those responsible sit safely ensconced, away from all harm.
There's a lot of things they didn't tell me when I signed on with this outfit....
A truly great novel of the horrors of WW1. It’s Vietnam equivalent is “Matterhorn: A Novel Of The VietNam War” by Karl Marlantes.
ITS CHAOS, BE KIND
There's a lot of things they didn't tell me when I signed on with this outfit....
First 20 minutes of Saving Private Ryan was enough for me to understand war is F’n HELL and I never want to go.
This post is temporary and my disappear at the discretion of the managment
'Paths of Glory' is yet another film in this genre... starring Kirk Douglas. It's a very powerful indictment of the stupidity and cruelty of war.
"Reason and facts are sacrificed to opinion and myth. Demonstrable falsehoods are circulated and recycled as fact. Narrow minded opinion refuses to be subjected to thought and analysis. Too many now subject events to a prefabricated set of interpretations, usually provided by a biased media source. The myth is more comfortable than the often difficult search for truth."
I just got finished watching 'Narvik' (at 2am while the tornadoes were blasting through here) and one of my favourite 'war films', 'Regeneration'. I think that this is David Pryce's best work, and it will gut you to think that there was a dedicated staff of doctors whose sole purpose during WWI was to get guys put back together enough to rush them back to the Western Front. I would highly recommend that one to anyone with a constitution strong enough to deal with it.
Mickey Lake
'A disciple of the Norse god of aesthetically pleasing boats, Johan Anker'
Charter Member - - Professional Procrastinators Association of America - - putting things off since 1965 " I'll get around to it tomorrow, .... maybe "
I have seen the 1930 film and I’m not sure that a remake can add anything other than “more realistic” sets and better cameras. The original cast had either taken part in the events or lived through the events as children.
If I go to the theatre I can suspend my disbelief…
IMAGINES VEL NON FUERINT
And I maintain that that is the reason we haven't had a nuclear war, especially since the development of guided missiles. In a nuclear war 'those responsible' and their families, friends and cities would be amongst the first to be impacted. Since then proxy wars on someonelses country, anyone elses country, have been the way to go. Nato and Russia fighting the latest European war in Ukraine is my and Hemlaga's case in point, Ukraine being the buffer state in point.
There is no rational, logical, or physical description of how free will could exist. It therefore makes no sense to praise or condemn anyone on the grounds they are a free willed self that made one choice but could have chosen something else. There is no evidence that such a situation is possible in our Universe. Demonstrate otherwise and I will be thrilled.
Read the book and saw the first film, very good... Then a later remake, also good.
He also wrote a good novel about a relationship between a dying consumptive and a racing driver. Worth a look.
DittoOriginally Posted by Andrew Craig-Bennett
"They have a lot of stupid people that vote in their primaries. They really do. I'm not really supposed to say that but it's an obvious fact. But when stupid people vote, you know who they nominate? Other stupid people." -- James Carville on the plethora of low-quality GQP candidates in the mid-term election.
During the Napoeonic Wars, whole fleets of British warships mutinied.
Somehow, that sort of thing rarely makes it into history classes.
'A disciple of the Norse god of aesthetically pleasing boats, Johan Anker'
I think you may be mistaken.
There have been three large fleet mutinies in the Royal Navy; the Spithead Mutiny of 1797, the Nore Mutiny of the same year, and the Invergordon Mutiny of 1932.
All three are very well known events, with much Press coverage at the time and much interest from historians since.
The fleet mutinies at Spithead and at Invergordon were both basically strikes over pay and conditions. In 1797 inflation caused by the war had eaten into the buying power of wages that had not changed since Pepys’ times. The 1932 mutiny (sometimes cited as one of the causes of the Second World War because it gave Hitler the idea that Britain’s armed forces would not fight) was caused by a pay cut.
The mutiny at the Nore was very different - this was a potential revolution. Parker was a revolutionary, and the Nore anchorage lies at the mouth of the Thames.
I can assure you that these events are in school history textbooks.
Single ship mutinies were either fomented by malcontents (the Bounty) or by excessive punishments (the Hermione) but they are another matter.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spithe..._Nore_mutinies
Last edited by Andrew Craig-Bennett; 01-25-2023 at 08:10 PM.
IMAGINES VEL NON FUERINT
Are they actually taught that at various British secondary schools ?? If so, that is great.
As for the US, I can assure you that the loyalists in 1778 . . 1812 . . and the San Patrisios of 1846 . . . and the refusniks of 20th century wars . .
are almost never taught.
No man's land in (the new) All Quiet and in 1917 are about as graphic as you can get without the smell...or having been there.
without freedom of speech, we wouldn't know who the idiots are.
"Pilkem ridge" just North of Ieper, hell in 1915-1917, it looks quite now.
pilkem ridge.jpg
^^ " If fields could talk " , eh ?
The films we're discussing show exactly that. I'm sure only to the degree that the filmmakers could stomach, but more than we've seen in most other war films. The smell is missing, and the overwhelming fear.
The podcast "The Rest is History" did a 2-part thing on Tolkien last year, and observed that Tolkien had not only served in WW1, but had been an air raid warden in north Oxford during WW2. The hosts said that the Siege of Gondor - surrounded on the ground, but also under attack from the skies by the Nazgul - really could only have been written by someone who had the experience of an aerial war to draw on. Also said that the horns of Rohan blowing at the start of the breaking of the siege would have been understood by British readers of that generation as an echo of the horns sounded by air raid wardens signaling the "all clear" at the end of an enemy bombing raid.
If I use the word "God," I sure don't mean an old man in the sky who just loves the occasional goat sacrifice. - Anne Lamott