Vietnam kino
Vietnam kino
The Thin Red Line
>The Thin Red Line
That's WW2 dickhead
You crossed it with your yumor
They were in a fucking jungle, moron. Not Europe.
SOME FLICKS ARE SHOT
MADE NOT TO BE SEEN
You fuckin mong. WW2 wasn't just in Europe.
>In 1942, Private Witt (Jim Caviezel) is a U.S. Army absconder living peacefully with the locals of a small South Pacific island. Discovered by his commanding officer, Sgt. Welsh (Sean Penn), Witt is forced to resume his active duty training for the Battle of Guadalcanal.
Interesting that the three main characters all have M-16's. In the Australian army at the time, these were only issued to scouts at a rate of two per ten-man section.
So these three guys are either three-quarters of two sections' scout groups, or someone doesn't know their Vietnam-era gear.
The dude on the left is a scout, the guy in centre is the company commander and the dude on the right is a senior nco. In the actual film weapons and equipment are period accurate to the point they got the actual helicopter used to airdrop ammo and hired 200 ex defence personal to play extras.
best representation of Viet-Nam war i've seen, and a battle I personally participated in, is The Battle of Long Dong (2004)
t.former MACSOG Recon
>they got the actual helicopter used to airdrop ammo
Super fucking doubtful.
Looks pretty good. Hopefully it's out on VOD soon
>a battle I personally participated in, is The Battle of Long Dong (2004)
>t.former MACSOG Recon
I want this to be true but in a cess of liars like Yea Forums your ability to believe atrophies fast.
If not trolling, please go back to school
have sex, boomer
>The Battle of Long Dong
Yea i googled long dong and it wasnt anything vietnamese that popped up.
It was absolutely full of tropes but I enjoyed it, It's not like it's anything groundbreaking but Australian vietnam war movies don't exist so it's a nice change.
Oh god, they went heavy on the melodrama didn't they. All the non-US countries do that, it's like they can only get out one war film every 10 years so they unload
on all the cliches.
I see that the guy on the left is ready to shoot at his friend's feet.
This is literally the most historically accurate war film. To the point where the points of impact are correct, for example when Gordon Sharp gets shot in the throat, the machine gunner being hit in the arm, the guy taking out the machine gun rolling up. It is insanely detailed, pretty much exactly the same as Bob Buick's, (Sgt of 11 platoon) account of the battle in his book, 'All Guts and no glory'
It unironically shits all over any American war film in terms of authenticity, it's almost autistic.
I'm not interested in movies telling the story from the perspective of the bad guys.
This was made in 2019, in current year. Someone explain why Americans and Australians have a need to make MUH WAR HERO movies about a war where they killed a fucking rice farmers who were using inferior technology and Americans STILL managed to lose.
Anglos can't live with the fact that they're the most pathetic race when it comes to honest fighting.
>instagram filter on movie poster