They’re not hitting anything, either: the plane would pass over the opening faster than human reaction time. I was really interested in this movie-my dad was a WW2 Merchant Marine veteran-but the concept of this scene is laughable.
This and the U-Boat attack on the surface against a convoy in daylight, makes it look like they never read anything about WW2 - or just didn’t value any realism.
@@stemakwest7165 To hit that JU-88, wouldn't it have to fly in a straight line over the cargo bay and then they would have to shoot ahead of its oncoming direction by 100 meters or so and hope the plane continued to fly straight over it?
@@WilliamHolden-t5g ..yes it would be an almost impossible shot from down there. It’s a farcical position considering it would probably only be in view for a second as it zipped over the hole.
As a Canadian what’s grinds my gears is the dude is looking through binoculars but he’s not wearing gloves! I mean come on, it’s supposed to be freezing out, his hands wouldn’t last 2 minutes
As a Norwegian I can tell you that this film is Norwegian, made by Norwegians, about Norwegians, and we know about cold just as damn well as Canadians. So a goof this is NOT.
Yes and none. Thanks to golfstorm it is relaitvely warmer than on canadian side and we have arctic day portrayed here, so I would guess we are in slight minuses. BUt yeah gloves would be better.
Yep and he's not wearing gloves...... As soon as touches anything he's stuck, if the cold doesn't give him frostbite first. Also having photographed in cold winter conditions, fogging of the occulars would be a big problem.
3 หลายเดือนก่อน +9
and there were no women on the artic convoys also..!
Oh hush it. The female character in this film is literally inspired by a real woman who served on a Norwegian ship in the arctic convoys, her name was Fern Sunde, so how about you read up on history before randomly claiming something that is false? Also, Norwegians are no strangers to cold weather, and the film was made by Norwegians. Just because they are up north doesn't automatically mean it is minus 30 celsius when this scene takes place. Cold? Yes! "Frostbite for those few minutes he needs to focus with the binoculars"? Hardly.
Were they thinking they could hit a plane through the small gap of a hatch cover, at the moment it overflew them? This is why many war movies suck these days; in pursuit of drama, the writers concoct ridiculous situations that people at the time wouldn't have even considered as worthwhile.
Click on the CC (square icon) then on the settings icon, scroll down to English subtitles ( or another language), then click on the language you want to auto translate to.
I thought it was a Swordfish at first, but you're right, it's an Albacore. I too have never seen one in a movie. Nor a Junkers 88, for that matter. Not that I can recall, anyway.
So we don't get to see the satisfying resolution of the first section & the second part (trailer?) is in Norwegian without subtitles. Yeah...great work, lads...
Насмешил! Норвегия воевала с Германией целых 63 дня! А потом она воевала на стороне Гитлера - "Wiking", "Nordland" или "Norge" !!! Такие же нацисты как и вся Европа!
I don't see what they are concerned about at all, except the position reporting. He reported 4 miles, then 3 miles 10 seconds later. That is 360mph speed. That was only achieved in a JU-88 during prototyping in 1938, and while empty. The aircraft in that first scene most likely te JU-88 A1, is therefor empty, and the danger it poses is in the reporting of position and disposition. So, the First Mate is correct. Firing at an empty JU-88 is a mistake.
@@williamanderson6006 Not in WWII, but I have written scripts. I also recall the deer in the John Wayne movie which his son shot while it ran over 200mph, according the the statements in their script.
My Grandfather was on the Russian convoys,, Royal Navy tribal class, ships said it was cold break ice from the ship part off people's duty,, from northern Ireland ☘️☘️☘️☘️,, Rip all the brave men,,
@@tatumergo3931 I'm old and enjoy the fully immersive experience of a theatre with a screen larger than my television. I also like to have people bring me soda and snacks while I sit and watch the stories unfold (Movie Tavern).
I don't know much about this film. However, almost immediately, I could see that whoever made it cared enough about attention to detail to show a more realistic view through binoculars. That's right, it wasn't the typical Hollywood black sideways figure of 8 that we've been subjected to for decades. It seems none of these effects people bother to look through an actual set of binoculars in order to see what it looks like. They just do what everybody else has been doing for ever. At the risk of sounding ..... weird... I've been noting on a scratch pad whenever a movie or TV show gets it right. The list sits at about 20 right now. It includes the work of David Lean (always gets it right) and Vince Gilligan (Breaking Bad, Saul). The Sand Pebbles is on it, as is Narcos, Fauda and others.
@@LupusAries You forgot the fact that the film is made by Norwegians, and if there is one thing we know all too well, it is COLD weather. Trust me, just because you are up north in the winter doesn't automatically mean it is so cold that your skin would stick to exposed metal. The binoculars has been by his side all the time, not standing by themselves out in the cold, they're also kept warm by his hands, and his hands aren't wet like a tongue licking a frozen pole.
@@genehakman9422 Oh you mean the female wireless radio operator in the film, who is inspired by Fern Sunde, the very real female wireless operator who served on a Norwegian merchant ship during WW2? Ooooops!!! ;)
Well, i am German, i am by far to young to have seen that war... but i want to say that: I really like the sound of that language, i understand german (mother language guess what) and english and also a tad of a whif of polish, but i really like the sound of that language (norwegian language i guess?) it is kind of dutch, i hear it and i sometimes think there is some words i understand but it sounds so different to what i know that makes me like a language very much it gives me the urge to learn it...but there is always something else to do so i in the last dont learn it.
taktikbegeistert, Implore may be too strong a word, so i'd ask you to learn it. Then pop over for a weekend of immersion in that language. My Father would read in a language so he could take his time in comprehension as well as talked / listened to children as they spoke slower / clearer w/o contractions. Good luck ! ☆
A nice production. But the CGI people still can’t quite get the aircraft physics and lens perspectives right, so those shots end up looking a bit cartoonish.
seeing this clip like ... "wait ... i know this story" cause i just watched drach's video about this convoy. looks like a good film and appropriate accuracy
@@realoldbeardedguy Is the Arctic Convoy movie a true story? Based on true events, the film follows a cargo ship that is part of the ill-fated Convoy PQ 17 in 1942. Scenes were shot on the 1911 coal ship D/S Hestmanden which served in convoys during WWI and WWII.29 Ιουν 2024. Yes IT IS! Thank you .
The plane that came towards them was not a JU88 (as difficult as it would have been to find one in flying condition - though not in CGI). It seemed to be more like a Lockheed Hudson ( a sort belonging to the allies).
@@petergraves2085 Quite common to show a specific clip followed by a trailer for the movie it was from. The lack of ice in the Hudson scene would also be a clue its a different scene.
@@petergraves2085nope, the scene with the Hudson was while they were in the convey, and it was dropping depth charges for the submarine show just a second before.
@@Kishanth.J Thanks for reading and your feedback. One issue though - a Lockheed Hudson is/was a land-based aircraft - too far away from allied airbases to protect any allied convoy. Some ships did carry Spitfires - that could not re-land and had to ditch in the sea afterwards (the pilot hope he would be picked up). The only planes above the convoys to Russia were German ones - Heinkels and FW Condor long-range planes flying from Germany. This was the point of how dangerous those convoys were - being in range of both German planes and U-boats. PQ-17 was the most notorious of what the German forces could do. Some refelctions.
I’m afraid you are wrong about that. Women in the Merchant Navy stayed aboard and carried out there roles as usual. Some were engineering officers, others radio operators. They served in the US Merchant Navy, the British and quite a few on boats from countries in the Baltic occupied by Germany. Some were killed. An interesting but awful thing was that in many nations merchant marine, the crews pay ended immediately the vessel sank, so if you survived the sinking and were rescued , you didn’t earn any money until you signed on for a new ship.
Yes! My mothers boyfriend in 1941 was captain of the famous Norwegian ship "Mosdale", crossing the Atlantic unescorted because it was fast. In mid 1941 his radio operator went sick when they were on the Canadian side. The only replacement available was a newly qualified young woman, who was determined to help the war effort. He took her on, and she proved to be skilled and very brave. There were six ships of the same class, "Mosdale" was the only one to survive. It did over 90 atlantic crossings, more than any other allied ship, carrying bacon. The captain married his radio operator! Later in the war King Haakon came aboard to give them medals, and they were featured in "Life" magazine. My poor mother had to settle for my father....
I'm so tired of reading this type of comment over and over in here. This film is NORWEGIAN, and Norway had no restrictions prohibiting women from serving on ships in WW2. This film is inspired by real stories, and the woman wireless operator in this film is inspired by Fern Sunde - the very REAL woman wireless operator who served on a Norwegian merchant ship throughout WW2, she was the first woman awarded the Norwegian War Medal (personally by King Haakon VII in 1943). Google 'Fern Sunde'.
What a deeply insulting comment. (Ignoring the fact that the Norwegian government ran Nortraship, the biggest shipping fleet in the world, in service of the Allies throughout WW2, and was an active member of the Allies from 1940 to 1945) Thousands of Norwegian merchant sailors died in the war and lived through Hell on the oceans in the service of the Allies, many at sea for 5 years, suffering the rest of their lives with nightmares and traumas from their experiences and they barely got as much as a thank you - because everyone automatically assumed that the only war heroes were those wearing military uniforms.
@@nerd_in_norway Actually, most of the Norwegian mercantile marine joined the Allied cause in WW2. For example, on 21 November 1940, Nortraship administered 570 ships from London, and had 282 (whaling ships not included), controlled from the (neutral) U.S. in New York.
No. It's Danish and the story sort of looks like PQ 17. The convoy scattered and a few ships survived. One ship - looks like this one - painted itself white, took out every white sheet and used them to break up the outline of the ship, and hid in the ice fields until it got close to Russia.
@@Easy-Eight It's not Danish, it's Norwegian. Norway had the biggest shipping company in the world during WW2, Nortraship, which transported fuel, equipment and supplies for the Allies from 1940 to 1945.
@@johnotoole6765 Thanks for reminding me, and a lot of Norwegians sailed as deckhands when out of work with other convoy ships. My Grandfather was in Convoys in WW1, which is an area little talked about.
@@realoldbeardedguy Allied forces women did die operating range finders and height calculations for HAA batteries, plotting air attacks and other duties on airfields, nurses in field hospitals in Italy and after D Day etc, etc, etc
The film is from Norway, the woman wireless operator in this film is inspired by Fern Sunde - the very REAL woman wireless operator who served on a Norwegian merchant ship throughout WW2. Google Fern Sunde!
@watchhans - are they attacking? Defending? Escaping? Supporting? Transporting a highly trained combat wombat that will assassinate Winston Churchill? Are they avoiding zombies? I can tell they are on a ship, and they think they are about to be attacked, but that is it.
Are you high? Are you actually high? This film is about a Norwegian merchant ship in service of the Allies participating in an Allied convoy headed for Russia. When in this film do you see them on the side of the Germans? Maybe you should watch stuff while sober.
@@nerd_in_norway Dude, read again what I said and use your head. To elaborate: Norwegians were on the German side in ww 2, so I am not buying the accuracy of this movie. It says “INSPIRED” by true events. The only real truth is that Norwegians were helping Germans conquer Europe! And, this makes this movie inaccurate and fabricating history!
@@DzontraVolta-of5pqthat’s a grotesque oversimplification. The Norwegian government capitulated and members served the German cause, but in a vein similar to France’s Vichy government. There was a Norwegian government-in-exile and its forces, Norwegian partisans, and copious Norwegian merchant shipping that served the allies.
@@jeffandjoannbauer9567 The only real true partisans were in Yugoslavia who bravely fought Germans/Italians. French were a disgrace to Europe in ww2. Norwegians were slim to none resistance to Germans.
I can’t imagine firing that AA gun in a cargo hold. No one is hearing anything after the first trigger pull…
Absolutely right about that!!
They’re not hitting anything, either: the plane would pass over the opening faster than human reaction time. I was really interested in this movie-my dad was a WW2 Merchant Marine veteran-but the concept of this scene is laughable.
This and the U-Boat attack on the surface against a convoy in daylight, makes it look like they never read anything about WW2 - or just didn’t value any realism.
@@stemakwest7165 To hit that JU-88, wouldn't it have to fly in a straight line over the cargo bay and then they would have to shoot ahead of its oncoming direction by 100 meters or so and hope the plane continued to fly straight over it?
@@WilliamHolden-t5g ..yes it would be an almost impossible shot from down there. It’s a farcical position considering it would probably only be in view for a second as it zipped over the hole.
As a Canadian what’s grinds my gears is the dude is looking through binoculars but he’s not wearing gloves! I mean come on, it’s supposed to be freezing out, his hands wouldn’t last 2 minutes
Yes, I'm not Canadian but that occurred to me too (I'm Scottish by the way). The folk in the hold did have their hands in their pockets though!
As a Norwegian I can tell you that this film is Norwegian, made by Norwegians, about Norwegians, and we know about cold just as damn well as Canadians. So a goof this is NOT.
@@nerd_in_norway um I live in the land of -40 C, flesh freezes regardless of how tough you think you are
@@TonyBongo869 So do we.
Temperature is not the problem.
Yes and none. Thanks to golfstorm it is relaitvely warmer than on canadian side and we have arctic day portrayed here, so I would guess we are in slight minuses. BUt yeah gloves would be better.
My uncle Albert was on those arctic convoys ,,he said it was that cold the flame on his lighter froze 😅
No-ones breath is steaming. Looks kind of warm!
Yep and he's not wearing gloves......
As soon as touches anything he's stuck, if the cold doesn't give him frostbite first.
Also having photographed in cold winter conditions, fogging of the occulars would be a big problem.
and there were no women on the artic convoys also..!
Oh hush it. The female character in this film is literally inspired by a real woman who served on a Norwegian ship in the arctic convoys, her name was Fern Sunde, so how about you read up on history before randomly claiming something that is false? Also, Norwegians are no strangers to cold weather, and the film was made by Norwegians. Just because they are up north doesn't automatically mean it is minus 30 celsius when this scene takes place. Cold? Yes! "Frostbite for those few minutes he needs to focus with the binoculars"? Hardly.
@@nerd_in_norway Give me a break. We all know 99.99999999999% of the people who fought in WW2 were men.
Were they thinking they could hit a plane through the small gap of a hatch cover, at the moment it overflew them?
This is why many war movies suck these days; in pursuit of drama, the writers concoct ridiculous situations that people at the time wouldn't have even considered as worthwhile.
The shrapnel would've shredded everyone near that gun, lol
I was expecting it to rise like a mech warrior or transformer.
@@dritzzdarkwood4727 Shrapnel from what?? You think it explode the second it leaves the barrel???
If you watch the movie you'll see its a last resort as the main aa gun if frozen.
Just like there would never been woman on those ships
If only there were English titles. Looks like a great movie.....
Click on the CC (square icon) then on the settings icon, scroll down to English subtitles ( or another language), then click on the language you want to auto translate to.
If you ever have the chance. Check out "Krigsseileren" - Warsailor? 🤔 10 times better.
It was nice to see an Albacore even though it was very brief. I've never ever seen one in a movie.
I thought it was a Swordfish at first, but you're right, it's an Albacore. I too have never seen one in a movie. Nor a Junkers 88, for that matter. Not that I can recall, anyway.
@@Markus_Andrew Movie makers seem to think the Germans only used Ju87s or they put German markings on random piston engine aircraft.
@@Markus_Andrew Oh, they had plenty of Ju 88s in Enemy at the Gates. Back in the early days of CGI.
@@GordonDonaldson-v1c Ah yeah, so they did. I forgot about that one.
Albacore (biplane) or albermarle
So we don't get to see the satisfying resolution of the first section & the second part (trailer?) is in Norwegian without subtitles. Yeah...great work, lads...
I'll take a crash course in Norwegian now.
It's like the character Chef from the Muppets TV show!
@@tatumergo3931 No, The Swedish Chef is from Finland
This scene is literally from the third act of the movie, why would they spoil the entire ending on youtube?
Flott film. Ære til de norske heltene som møtte den tyske okkupasjonen!
Насмешил! Норвегия воевала с Германией целых 63 дня! А потом она воевала на стороне Гитлера - "Wiking", "Nordland" или "Norge" !!! Такие же нацисты как и вся Европа!
Realistic gritty true story from Norway. Well acted and produced. Not great or classic but solid and watchable throughout.
I don't see what they are concerned about at all, except the position reporting. He reported 4 miles, then 3 miles 10 seconds later. That is 360mph speed. That was only achieved in a JU-88 during prototyping in 1938, and while empty. The aircraft in that first scene most likely te JU-88 A1, is therefor empty, and the danger it poses is in the reporting of position and disposition. So, the First Mate is correct. Firing at an empty JU-88 is a mistake.
Never been in combat have you
@@williamanderson6006 Not in WWII, but I have written scripts. I also recall the deer in the John Wayne movie which his son shot while it ran over 200mph, according the the statements in their script.
@@MarkH10 yawn
Fairey Albacore at 2:26. Not often you see one in film.
My Grandfather was on the Russian convoys,, Royal Navy tribal class, ships said it was cold break ice from the ship part off people's duty,, from northern Ireland ☘️☘️☘️☘️,, Rip all the brave men,,
Strange idea to install an anti-aircraft gun in the hold of a ship
If this is anywhere near as good as Greyhound I’ll be happy!
В России сняли такую же шляпу "Реквием каравану PQ-17". Двадцать лет назад.
Greyhound sucks
@@marcinstroggThat’s your problem
@@marcinstrogg greyhound ABSOLUTELY sucks lol, dunno why people think its so great, whale noises for a uboat come on now hollyweird
It looks like another great movie that we will never see in any theatre in the United States.
Movie theaters?....... Who goes to movie theaters anymore when you can watch online?
@@tatumergo3931 I'm old and enjoy the fully immersive experience of a theatre with a screen larger than my television. I also like to have people bring me soda and snacks while I sit and watch the stories unfold (Movie Tavern).
@@tatumergo3931 and there we go, huge disgusting corporations like amazon win again. movie theatres are amazing.
Onde posso assistir esse filme?
This is on my list
Damn good movie!
Firing 40mm bofors in cargo hold?
Everyone would bleed from their ears....
00:41 4 miles 01:49 3 miles. So 68 seconds for one mile?!? Plane with only 53 mph?!?
I don't know much about this film. However, almost immediately, I could see that whoever made it cared enough about attention to detail to show a more realistic view through binoculars. That's right, it wasn't the typical Hollywood black sideways figure of 8 that we've been subjected to for decades. It seems none of these effects people bother to look through an actual set of binoculars in order to see what it looks like. They just do what everybody else has been doing for ever. At the risk of sounding ..... weird... I've been noting on a scratch pad whenever a movie or TV show gets it right. The list sits at about 20 right now. It includes the work of David Lean (always gets it right) and Vince Gilligan (Breaking Bad, Saul). The Sand Pebbles is on it, as is Narcos, Fauda and others.
Yes, but I like that figure of 8 in "Where Eagles Dare".
… Except for the inclusion of a strong woman onboard the ship
And the fact that he's not wearing any gloves, which would protect his skin from sticking to any exposed metal or pretty much anything.
@@LupusAries You forgot the fact that the film is made by Norwegians, and if there is one thing we know all too well, it is COLD weather. Trust me, just because you are up north in the winter doesn't automatically mean it is so cold that your skin would stick to exposed metal. The binoculars has been by his side all the time, not standing by themselves out in the cold, they're also kept warm by his hands, and his hands aren't wet like a tongue licking a frozen pole.
@@genehakman9422 Oh you mean the female wireless radio operator in the film, who is inspired by Fern Sunde, the very real female wireless operator who served on a Norwegian merchant ship during WW2? Ooooops!!! ;)
Looks a great film and story.
no,, its a horrible film
Whats it showing on please
Where can I watch this?
Well, i am German, i am by far to young to have seen that war... but i want to say that:
I really like the sound of that language, i understand german (mother language guess what) and english and also a tad of a whif of polish, but i really like the sound of that language (norwegian language i guess?) it is kind of dutch, i hear it and i sometimes think there is some words i understand but it sounds so different to what i know that makes me like a language very much it gives me the urge to learn it...but there is always something else to do so i in the last dont learn it.
taktikbegeistert,
Implore may be too strong a word, so i'd ask you to learn it.
Then pop over for a weekend of immersion in that language.
My Father would read in a language so he could take his time in comprehension as well as talked / listened to children as they spoke slower / clearer w/o contractions. Good luck ! ☆
Subtitles would have been nice
A nice production. But the CGI people still can’t quite get the aircraft physics and lens perspectives right, so those shots end up looking a bit cartoonish.
It would be nice if was in English.
Subtitles please! Looks amazing!
Put in English subtitles and then take my money.
This looks ace!
seeing this clip like ... "wait ... i know this story" cause i just watched drach's video about this convoy. looks like a good film and appropriate accuracy
It’s now on Amazon prime to watch.
Looks great
Does anybody know whether it will be available on streaming or just in theathers?
Just watched it the other day. It’s already out for streaming (rental).
Looks terrific!Those were heroes without a uniform!
Forgotten Hero’s .
. . . And the subtitles in English died after 1 minute.
Does anyone know if it comes with English subtitles?
Yes it will be
Balfour-Declaration ----> Versailles ----> Hitler --->WW2
Should never(and they did not) get stuck in the ice!! Terribly wrong!
Time to learn some Norske!
В заставке на СОЛИДа похож! думал ИРП тестировать будет...
Wait till it gets cancelled for not having black crew members
Ha ha. Your right.
Totally correct 😂
😂😂No dwarves , LGBTQRSTUVWXYZ either……. or are there?
Won't happen not an American film.😂
I’ll pass on it: the Captain isn’t a 350 lb disabled female and I saw no Trans deck hands.
one complete scene? not one,its the lead in ,,quick clip bunch only a sec or 2 each 20 or them and loud music
Its look like ' Convoy PQ 17 ' story !
Different story, google..if you're able!
@@realoldbeardedguy Is the Arctic Convoy movie a true story?
Based on true events, the film follows a cargo ship that is part of the ill-fated Convoy PQ 17 in 1942. Scenes were shot on the 1911 coal ship D/S Hestmanden which served in convoys during WWI and WWII.29 Ιουν 2024. Yes IT IS! Thank you .
In reality: no chance 😅
The plane that came towards them was not a JU88 (as difficult as it would have been to find one in flying condition - though not in CGI). It seemed to be more like a Lockheed Hudson ( a sort belonging to the allies).
2 different planes from 2 different scenes.
@@timothyhouse1622 Oh - the clip clearly relates to that "attack" on that vessel.
@@petergraves2085 Quite common to show a specific clip followed by a trailer for the movie it was from.
The lack of ice in the Hudson scene would also be a clue its a different scene.
@@petergraves2085nope, the scene with the Hudson was while they were in the convey, and it was dropping depth charges for the submarine show just a second before.
@@Kishanth.J Thanks for reading and your feedback. One issue though - a Lockheed Hudson is/was a land-based aircraft - too far away from allied airbases to protect any allied convoy. Some ships did carry Spitfires - that could not re-land and had to ditch in the sea afterwards (the pilot hope he would be picked up).
The only planes above the convoys to Russia were German ones - Heinkels and FW Condor long-range planes flying from Germany. This was the point of how dangerous those convoys were - being in range of both German planes and U-boats. PQ-17 was the most notorious of what the German forces could do. Some refelctions.
Probably not a good idea not to have gloves on. You'd leave skin on pretty much everything you touched.
There were no woman on allied convoys.
I’m afraid you are wrong about that. Women in the Merchant Navy stayed aboard and carried out there roles as usual. Some were engineering officers, others radio operators. They served in the US Merchant Navy, the British and quite a few on boats from countries in the Baltic occupied by Germany. Some were killed.
An interesting but awful thing was that in many nations merchant marine, the crews pay ended immediately the vessel sank, so if you survived the sinking and were rescued , you didn’t earn any money until you signed on for a new ship.
Yes! My mothers boyfriend in 1941 was captain of the famous Norwegian ship "Mosdale", crossing the Atlantic unescorted because it was fast. In mid 1941 his radio operator went sick when they were on the Canadian side. The only replacement available was a newly qualified young woman, who was determined to help the war effort. He took her on, and she proved to be skilled and very brave. There were six ships of the same class, "Mosdale" was the only one to survive. It did over 90 atlantic crossings, more than any other allied ship, carrying bacon. The captain married his radio operator! Later in the war King Haakon came aboard to give them medals, and they were featured in "Life" magazine.
My poor mother had to settle for my father....
@@neilwork5033 And we had to settle for you..
@@PanzerChicken69... and all my historical accuracy
I was wondering
This seemed to jump around a bit.
nice film but there weren't women on these convoys only brave men.. history fact.
women were part of the crew of some Russian ships. also a historical fact.
I'm so tired of reading this type of comment over and over in here. This film is NORWEGIAN, and Norway had no restrictions prohibiting women from serving on ships in WW2. This film is inspired by real stories, and the woman wireless operator in this film is inspired by Fern Sunde - the very REAL woman wireless operator who served on a Norwegian merchant ship throughout WW2, she was the first woman awarded the Norwegian War Medal (personally by King Haakon VII in 1943). Google 'Fern Sunde'.
False. Maybe not on American ships, but there were women on other nations’ vessels.
Best scene from a movie spoilt by really bad acting
❤❤😊
Simply dreadful!
This Film
Is Longer
Than Their Participation
In WW2!
Nevertheless,
It
Seems A Well
Carresed Film!
you think the merchant seamen all ran ashore when Norway fell ?
What a deeply insulting comment. (Ignoring the fact that the Norwegian government ran Nortraship, the biggest shipping fleet in the world, in service of the Allies throughout WW2, and was an active member of the Allies from 1940 to 1945) Thousands of Norwegian merchant sailors died in the war and lived through Hell on the oceans in the service of the Allies, many at sea for 5 years, suffering the rest of their lives with nightmares and traumas from their experiences and they barely got as much as a thank you - because everyone automatically assumed that the only war heroes were those wearing military uniforms.
@@nerd_in_norway Actually, most of the Norwegian mercantile marine joined the Allied cause in WW2. For example, on 21 November 1940, Nortraship administered 570 ships from London, and had 282 (whaling ships not included), controlled from the (neutral) U.S. in New York.
bait and switch. I've unsubscribed everybody.
Capitalism helped Communism.
DEI hire: Check!
At first they speak English, and then they don't?
No. It's Danish and the story sort of looks like PQ 17. The convoy scattered and a few ships survived. One ship - looks like this one - painted itself white, took out every white sheet and used them to break up the outline of the ship, and hid in the ice fields until it got close to Russia.
@@Easy-Eightif I remember correctly, that was the convoy that lost a lot of ships after it scattered because of the Tirpitz.
@@Kishanth.J Yep. We did the exact same thing to Japan in the Battle of Bismarck sea.
@@Easy-Eight It's not Danish, it's Norwegian. Norway had the biggest shipping company in the world during WW2, Nortraship, which transported fuel, equipment and supplies for the Allies from 1940 to 1945.
It does look like a good movie . 😊
Видимо на улице +, пар из рта не идет
Cant understand a damn thing they are saying.
What's with the woman? No fucking way!!
Some argue that this film is racist, too white.
Only one doing that is you. Does it make yourself feel smart?
First😊
In 1942 Norway was under German occupation, so was not running convoys to Russia.
Morway the country wasnt but plenty of 'free' norwegian ships took part in convoys throughout the war
But many Norwegian ships sailed with allied convoys throughout the war
@@johnotoole6765 Thanks for reminding me, and a lot of Norwegians sailed as deckhands when out of work with other convoy ships. My Grandfather was in Convoys in WW1, which is an area little talked about.
Millions of men died , not allied forces women . This is a lie . Russian women were combatant .
Women did serve in the Canadian and British Merchant navy during WW2, but only in small number.
No..This is not a lie. I have sources, what are yours? Troll!
@@realoldbeardedguy Allied forces women did die operating range finders and height calculations for HAA batteries, plotting air attacks and other duties on airfields, nurses in field hospitals in Italy and after D Day etc, etc, etc
The film is from Norway, the woman wireless operator in this film is inspired by Fern Sunde - the very REAL woman wireless operator who served on a Norwegian merchant ship throughout WW2. Google Fern Sunde!
Is that a woman in the crew? This is why I HATE watching movies these days. There MUST be woke messaging in everything
Com LÉSBICA.. passou a ser uma Merda
This clip is useless unless you speak whatever language they are speaking.
They are speaking Danish. I think.
Or Norwegian
TH-cam is global. Get over it.
You do not need to understand what they are talking about. Just look at their faces to understand the horror of war!
@watchhans - are they attacking? Defending? Escaping? Supporting? Transporting a highly trained combat wombat that will assassinate Winston Churchill? Are they avoiding zombies?
I can tell they are on a ship, and they think they are about to be attacked, but that is it.
No historically inaccurate diversity except for one woman on board?
Norwegians who were on German side helping Russians? This doesn’t make sense! Another fairy tale movie….
Are you high? Are you actually high? This film is about a Norwegian merchant ship in service of the Allies participating in an Allied convoy headed for Russia. When in this film do you see them on the side of the Germans? Maybe you should watch stuff while sober.
@@nerd_in_norway Dude, read again what I said and use your head. To elaborate: Norwegians were on the German side in ww 2, so I am not buying the accuracy of this movie. It says “INSPIRED” by true events. The only real truth is that Norwegians were helping Germans conquer Europe! And, this makes this movie inaccurate and fabricating history!
@@DzontraVolta-of5pqthat’s a grotesque oversimplification. The Norwegian government capitulated and members served the German cause, but in a vein similar to France’s Vichy government. There was a Norwegian government-in-exile and its forces, Norwegian partisans, and copious Norwegian merchant shipping that served the allies.
@@jeffandjoannbauer9567 The only real true partisans were in Yugoslavia who bravely fought Germans/Italians. French were a disgrace to Europe in ww2. Norwegians were slim to none resistance to Germans.
dumb movie about cowards