@@Vikingr4Jesus5919It has some british colour, too. Maybe i would believe it, if it was presented as a british march. It is due to it's modern style. It is created in 20th century, you can clearly hear. And prussian marches use to be older. I do not know any prussian/german march from 20th century. All the classics are older. But to my ear it sounds like i would imagine a modernized prussian style. However, it is a matter of personal taste, nothing like facts.
Me when I hear the flames in my kitchen ablaze because I left the stove on before going to sleep but don’t care because I’m tired and it’s nap time: 4:09
@@joz.7909 Ja, war er. Er war begeisterungsfähig, jovial... Und ein unermesslich selbstverliebter Popanz der sich mit Anderer Lorbeeren schmückte und ungnädig wurde wenn es nicht lief wie er sich das vorstellte. Göring war definitiv ein schwieriger Mensch.
Goring's train was actually much longer than portrayed in the film, eight to ten cars and very heavy as the cars were armored against attacks from above and below.
Why do all the subtitles mistranslate the weight of bombs Hitler is claiming will be dropped? I noticed it on the English subtitles, too, when I watched this the first time.
it's not entirely suprising. They also stick german soldiers on an american M37 Howitzer carriage early on, probably because they couldn't find any working panzers in good enough shape
@@artlover1477 It isn't all bad, at least hundreds of thousands of them managed to flee the Reds and fell in love with British and American Anglo-Saxon soldiers.
The first passenger coach is a 26.4m passenger coach. These were only produced from the 1950s onwards. The coach behind it is a so-called Schürzenwagen. These were already produced before the war. This means that only the second passenger coach is suitable, but not the first.
All of the Nazi command's special trains were stripped and returned to normal passenger service. It's why they can't be found today. They no longer exist, having been worn out and replaced long ago.
@@stevetheduck1425 That is not right. Some of Göring's carriages still exist. After the Second World War, several carriages continued to be used in the Federal Republic's government trains. The saloon car 10 205 was used by the German Chancellor until 1974 and was then rented out by the Deutsche Bundesbahn for special trips. It has been in the House of History in Bonn since 1990. After the war, the salon dining car 10 241 was assigned as a support car for the Federal President's salon car. When the Queen visited Germany in 1978, the car was part of the Queen's train. After it was presumably decommissioned in 1978, it became part of the Nuremberg Transport Museum, which assigned it to its branch in Koblenz.
Glauben Sie Ihren eigenen Blödsinn eigentlich auch selber? Und wenn Sie schon meinen, Sie müssten sich der englischen Sprache bedienen, dann doch bitte richtig; es gibt Wörterbücher.
German Air Ace Adolf Galland was a consultant for this movie. When he saw this actor and then heard him speak and shout he personally saw to it that he got the role of Herman Goering.
If you mention Luftwaffe Pilot's excuse in the last scene of the movie, Germany's defeat in the Battle of Britain is not just the excellence of Spitfire. It may be because the RAF had many highly intelligent pilots from Oxford and Cambridge, who were aristocrats and had a strong sense of social responsibility. And it should always be kept in mind that the responsibility for the war is not just Hitler's individual, but the German people, who were caught in a collective frenzy as seen in the film, are much more responsible.
One major difference between the RAF and the Luftwaffe, was the tendency of the RAF to rest aircrews, promote them, and give them time instructing, running air fighting schools and even taking up flying instructor positions. This meant the skills learned were often passed on to new pilots. The Luftwaffe tended to to keep pilots on operational duties until severely wounded, invalided out due to burn-out, or because of things like their faces being burnt. The greatest German ace, spent much time out of the line when wounded, and was able to get married, then was wounded shortly before the end of the war, so he survived in a hospital.
i have heard every speech of hitler i can , i have watched every videos that i can find about nazi germany , i have to say the actor hwo has played hitler has actually done a wonderful job in mimicking hitler's voice ,,
Protected by what? Exploding gas cans? The Japanese had among the worst aircraft of the war, lmao The Italians has had better fighters. Educate yourself
@@osakasenri7352 Because the Ki-43-II flew in February 1942 And the Battle of Britain was Aug 1940 The fight to get Britain was long over And much like the Hellcat And Mustang..England also had the Tempest Mk V And other aircraft that would of out classed The Ki-43 Like they did with the German aircraft As for your "Southeast Asia" Burma : The result of the battle of Mk.VIII vs Ki-43 in Burma theatre (without 18-May-1944. Because I don't know which aircraft shot down spitfire that day) is: RAF lost only 9 Spitfire Mk.VIIIs by Oscars, But, IJAAF lost 28 Ki-43s by Spitfires. They had combat loss exchange ratio against Ki-43 of 3.11:1. Total combat loss exchange ratio is 3.18:1, because of VIIIs had shot down 1 Ki-84, 6 Ki-46s.
@@freakyflow Unfortunately, all your points seem to be correct. None of the Japanese fighters were inferior to the British and US fighters. It was not only the fighters that were inferior, but also the skill of the pilots. The A6M was easily shot down by an inexperienced young pilot flying a Curtiss P40 during the attack on Pearl Harbor.
He was, like many of the surviving Nazis, studied closely after capture and after he'd been weaned off the dope and lost some weight. He was probably the most intelligent of them all, but his laziness, drug habit and gross appetite defeated him. He had actually been a physically brave fighter pilot himself, in an earlier war, and held a responsible position as a group commander. Shame he didn't learn anything when he did it. Or actually, fortunately, his ego prevented him learning anything useful, or anything likely to help him survive contact with Nazis, like so many.
Never underestimate the British. The Germans threw everything they had at us, and yet we smashed their airforce 2:1. It was Hitlers first defeat of WW2.
However, bomber command did not learn the lessons from this , that without adequate fighter escort the bombers in daylight raids were extremely vulnerable to fighter attack. Thus they were forced to revert to night attacks to restrict losses. So too did the US Americans with their B17s and 10 man crews, armed to the teeth with defensive machine guns found this out later to their demise.
@@Antonnick RAF bomber command resorted to night attacks from very nearly the start of the war. Thier first missions, that were attacks on German naval units in the North Sea (to avoid causing innocent civilian casualties by stray bombs by attacking ships in port) and were carried out in daylight, to avoid accidentally hitting neutral shipping in the vicinity. The Germans own Freya radar network spotted the RAF bombers coming in and mobilised fighters to intercept which caused grievous losses to the bomber squadrons involved. In May 1940 Fairey Battle ground attack aircraft attacked German Bridges over the River Meuse in May 1940 in daylight and were slaughtered. So Bomber command mostly hit targets in Germany at least mostly at night.
@@walterkronkitesleftshoe6684 Exact. In my very rural part of the world, ca 80km north of Frankfurt there were no strategic targets. Nevertheless, the countryside would be strewn with allied bombers and later escort fighters on their way to the famous Nürnberg raid (for the British) as well as Schweinfurt ( for the US Americans. Some German fighters as well of course. All dead heroes or monsters, depending on whose side you were on. They would not know it, but their sacrifice has led to nearly 80 years of peace in western europe, unprecedented in history.
@@Antonnick Well said Antonnick, and LONG may that continue... but we need to watch our corporate globalist funded "politicians" from leading us into fresh wars. Best wishes to you from the UK.
@@eashpradhan994 he despised himmler and was probably one of the more old guard lenient people in the inner circle but I'm pretty sure he still committed to the racial policy and just wanted the ss gone so he could preside over the geshtapo
All power he did not have, he hated the person who had that power. Goering was the head of the German war economy, and arguably, his total failure to achieve anything useful with it was the greatest factor in the defeat of the Nazis.
He wanted to eat Britain.
- Herman Göring
Always admire the march. It was composed by the movie's music composer, but sounds like a real prussian march, he got it perfectly.
I've had some people tell me it sounds more British than Prussian. What do you think of that?
@@Vikingr4Jesus5919It has some british colour, too. Maybe i would believe it, if it was presented as a british march. It is due to it's modern style. It is created in 20th century, you can clearly hear.
And prussian marches use to be older. I do not know any prussian/german march from 20th century. All the classics are older.
But to my ear it sounds like i would imagine a modernized prussian style.
However, it is a matter of personal taste, nothing like facts.
@@Vikingr4Jesus5919 Yes. I also thought that.
@@Vikingr4Jesus5919 By the way, also the sergeant's shouting is rather British than Prussian.
@@Vikingr4Jesus5919 Incorrect.
Goering's boots on the visit depicted were actually pink, but the film makers did not think the audience would believe an authentic recreation!
His favourite breakfast is Luftwaffles
And lots and lots of them...................
lol 😆
One of the best flying films ever made.
This scene always makes me smile lol
😃
It's why England is Islamic now.
Look at cities in the UK now.
Lily Allen makes me smile.
Everything beautiful ❤❤❤❤
Gut gemacht, authentisch. Die Uniform auch
What's a movie
@@Aldi-mf4ur battle of britain, movie from 1969
Goering at 4.21 was me today when I heard the mk19 Griffin engine at full revs at RAF Conignsby Tally ho!
Brilliant Film!!!!!!!!!!!
Me when I hear the flames in my kitchen ablaze because I left the stove on before going to sleep but don’t care because I’m tired and it’s nap time: 4:09
Mood
love how Jawoll Herr Reichsmarschall translates into vang thua ngai
4:09 Happy Göring 😌
war der mensch wirklich so ?
@@joz.7909 Ja, war er. Er war begeisterungsfähig, jovial... Und ein unermesslich selbstverliebter Popanz der sich mit Anderer Lorbeeren schmückte und ungnädig wurde wenn es nicht lief wie er sich das vorstellte. Göring war definitiv ein schwieriger Mensch.
Göring was a big man. His tunic was huge.
Big man? He was mostly on drugs.
Goering,well he did face the Music,full on!!!
Their unifoms.....
Happiest man in the world (he liked planes)
🙂
For some reason Herman Goering gave his special, personal train the code name “ASIA.” Everyone always called it that name.
And the "Führersonderzug" or "Hitler's special train" was codenamed "Amerika".
I wonder if Himmler's special train was called 'Afrika'?
Goring's train was actually much longer than portrayed in the film, eight to ten cars and very heavy as the cars were armored against attacks from above and below.
tengo una pregunta ¿ como se llama la pelicula??
Name movie please???
Why do all the subtitles mistranslate the weight of bombs Hitler is claiming will be dropped? I noticed it on the English subtitles, too, when I watched this the first time.
Just noticed the Germans got an American AA gun on the train but in guessing they didn't have a german available for the set lol
That is allday in war movies.
Dunno....Maybe Lend-Lease started early....😁
it's not entirely suprising. They also stick german soldiers on an american M37 Howitzer carriage early on, probably because they couldn't find any working panzers in good enough shape
Eric Coates was a brilliant composer!
1:45 best fake marching tune of all time.
It's the main intro to the film composed by Ron Goodwin. The Battle Of Britain March.
It's meant to be a German military march.
Den Göring finde ich besonders nahe am Original 👍
Die Stimme vom Führer gut getroffen..
You gotta love those German girls!
Yeah, in about less than 5 years, the Russian troops were "enjoying" them.
@@artlover1477 you wouldn't be saying that if it was your mother and Sister and daughter the Russians was enjoying would you. 🤨
The white shirted girls are members of the BDM, Bund Deutscher Mädel, female equivalent of the Hitlerjugend.
@@artlover1477 It isn't all bad, at least hundreds of thousands of them managed to flee the Reds and fell in love with British and American Anglo-Saxon soldiers.
Royal India Opéra!
It’s a movie , they have to get the props as good as they can
The only way now you can see Goering's Train On TH-cam!!
The first passenger coach is a 26.4m passenger coach. These were only produced from the 1950s onwards. The coach behind it is a so-called Schürzenwagen. These were already produced before the war. This means that only the second passenger coach is suitable, but not the first.
All of the Nazi command's special trains were stripped and returned to normal passenger service. It's why they can't be found today. They no longer exist, having been worn out and replaced long ago.
@@stevetheduck1425 That is not right. Some of Göring's carriages still exist. After the Second World War, several carriages continued to be used in the Federal Republic's government trains. The saloon car 10 205 was used by the German Chancellor until 1974 and was then rented out by the Deutsche Bundesbahn for special trips. It has been in the House of History in Bonn since 1990.
After the war, the salon dining car 10 241 was assigned as a support car for the Federal President's salon car. When the Queen visited Germany in 1978, the car was part of the Queen's train. After it was presumably decommissioned in 1978, it became part of the Nuremberg Transport Museum, which assigned it to its branch in Koblenz.
What is title of film ?
Battle of Britain
everything that flies belongs to me!!! :)))
No, belongs to the German Luftwaffe. Gossip
which movie?
Battle of Britain...
Name of the film ?
"Battle of Britain"
Battle Of Britain
Thanks !
Battle of Britain (1969)
Jurassic Park
POV: Du kommst von Nerd & Kultur
Movie title?
Battle of Britain / Luftschlacht um England (1969)
Irurzun, y una Mikado de Renfe
Now here in Germany aren't any Germans...only Refuggies here🤦🏼♂️
Glauben Sie Ihren eigenen Blödsinn eigentlich auch selber? Und wenn Sie schon meinen, Sie müssten sich der englischen Sprache bedienen, dann doch bitte richtig; es gibt Wörterbücher.
@@Demoversion01 Wörterbücher? Dazu ist der zu dämlich.
Ein neuen Planeten👽
Movie name
Battle of Britain.
English title but no English subs. 🤷♂️
3:33
And then it all goes wrong!
(Which just to be clear is a very good thing.)
What if they had just gave him Heinz beans? Would that have made him go away?
the actor really looks like goering
German Air Ace Adolf Galland was a consultant for this movie. When he saw this actor and then heard him speak and shout he personally saw to it that he got the role of Herman Goering.
Gerd Froebe war einer der ganz großen der deutschen Charakter Darsteller ,seine Verkörperung von Hermann Göring in diesem Film ist echt episch.
@@drachenfelsen3258 Ich glaube nicht, dass es Gerd Fröbe war sondern Heinz Reiß, oder?
@@Antonnickder hieß Hein Rieß😉
@@drachenfelsen3258das war doch nicht Gerd Fröbe sondern
Hein Rieß
92 km lenge wieviele Bomben werde fallen uber
Zu den Eisbeeren Robben
2:16
*"WANKSTAIN"!!!!!!!!*
Harvey?
Hermann Maier und der Gröfaz...
Zwei ganz starke Typen... 🙄
If you mention Luftwaffe Pilot's excuse in the last scene of the movie, Germany's defeat in the Battle of Britain is not just the excellence of Spitfire. It may be because the RAF had many highly intelligent pilots from Oxford and Cambridge, who were aristocrats and had a strong sense of social responsibility. And it should always be kept in mind that the responsibility for the war is not just Hitler's individual, but the German people, who were caught in a collective frenzy as seen in the film, are much more responsible.
One major difference between the RAF and the Luftwaffe, was the tendency of the RAF to rest aircrews, promote them, and give them time instructing, running air fighting schools and even taking up flying instructor positions.
This meant the skills learned were often passed on to new pilots.
The Luftwaffe tended to to keep pilots on operational duties until severely wounded, invalided out due to burn-out, or because of things like their faces being burnt.
The greatest German ace, spent much time out of the line when wounded, and was able to get married, then was wounded shortly before the end of the war, so he survived in a hospital.
Rubbish. A third of the pilots in the BoB were Sgts 😂.
Ich lass Euch Alle über den Kanal schwimmen! I wonder if there were as fierce british or US sergeants who threatened that to their soldiers, LOL!
Lord Vollkasko
They might win at football but when it really matters well?
Always wondered about this part is it Hitlers real speech played over or is the guy playing Hitler doing it if so he-does a good Hitler
Same!! If it’s not a real speech he made, then whoever played him did an uncannily good impression. Up there within Bruno Ganz in Downfall
actor
I'm not certain if the speech is real word for word, but it is very similar to a real speech Hitler made in late 1940.
Yet never did Germany land troops on the British shores. Could Germany have taken on the full force of Royal Navy, Air???? Maybe before 06/1941......
Sure Goering with blonde hairs 💀
1:57 american anti-aircraft
i have heard every speech of hitler i can , i have watched every videos that i can find about nazi germany , i have to say the actor hwo has played hitler has actually done a wonderful job in mimicking hitler's voice ,,
Having been obsessed by the war, do you have any unique insights?
Hitler is voiced by Rolf Stiefel, not the same guy in the scene. Very, very convincing.
Odd thing to brag about
@@Jonesyb90 Lmao
Luffwafe vs SS in 1944; german civil war
The fact they fell for that monstrous bullshit… 😢
Warum ? Hätte doch fast geklappt!😅
He was a bear of a man wasn't he
Ich war Jagdflieger. Aber Ich war ein Feigling.
In the Battle of Britain, if the Luftwaffe had used Japanese A6Ms, the bombers might have been protected.
Protected by what? Exploding gas cans? The Japanese had among the worst aircraft of the war, lmao
The Italians has had better fighters. Educate yourself
@@jimpeterson2148 How about(Nakajima Ki-43-IIb Hayabusa) OSCAR?
It is poorly armed, but it was able to shoot down Spitfires in Southeast Asia.
@@osakasenri7352 Because the Ki-43-II flew in February 1942 And the Battle of Britain was Aug 1940 The fight to get Britain was long over And much like the Hellcat And Mustang..England also had the Tempest Mk V And other aircraft that would of out classed The Ki-43 Like they did with the German aircraft
As for your "Southeast Asia"
Burma : The result of the battle of Mk.VIII vs Ki-43 in Burma theatre (without 18-May-1944. Because I don't know which aircraft shot down spitfire that day) is:
RAF lost only 9 Spitfire Mk.VIIIs by Oscars, But, IJAAF lost 28 Ki-43s by Spitfires.
They had combat loss exchange ratio against Ki-43 of 3.11:1.
Total combat loss exchange ratio is 3.18:1, because of VIIIs had shot down 1 Ki-84, 6 Ki-46s.
@@freakyflow Unfortunately, all your points seem to be correct. None of the Japanese fighters were inferior to the British and US fighters. It was not only the fighters that were inferior, but also the skill of the pilots. The A6M was easily shot down by an inexperienced young pilot flying a Curtiss P40 during the attack on Pearl Harbor.
If Nazi Germany didn’t invade Poland it would be irrelevant anyway .....
Spitfires😊😂
Somehow, this scene with all this girls remind me on Hand Maid's Tale , don't know why
Those were BDM girls; Bund der Deutschen Maidchen.
Göring was an incredible fool.
😡😡😡
He was, like many of the surviving Nazis, studied closely after capture and after he'd been weaned off the dope and lost some weight.
He was probably the most intelligent of them all, but his laziness, drug habit and gross appetite defeated him.
He had actually been a physically brave fighter pilot himself, in an earlier war, and held a responsible position as a group commander.
Shame he didn't learn anything when he did it.
Or actually, fortunately, his ego prevented him learning anything useful, or anything likely to help him survive contact with Nazis, like so many.
Como se llama la pelicula???
Battle of Britain...
Hitler visited Japan…amazing.
I don't speak German silly.😜😜😜
The RAF rules OK
Abruzzo gegen Lazio❤❤❤
Just like as North Korea
Never underestimate the British. The Germans threw everything they had at us, and yet we smashed their airforce 2:1. It was Hitlers first defeat of WW2.
However, bomber command did not learn the lessons from this , that without adequate fighter escort the bombers in daylight raids were extremely vulnerable to fighter attack. Thus they were forced to revert to night attacks to restrict losses.
So too did the US Americans with their B17s and 10 man crews, armed to the teeth with defensive machine guns found this out later to their demise.
😂😂😂😂
@@Antonnick RAF bomber command resorted to night attacks from very nearly the start of the war. Thier first missions, that were attacks on German naval units in the North Sea (to avoid causing innocent civilian casualties by stray bombs by attacking ships in port) and were carried out in daylight, to avoid accidentally hitting neutral shipping in the vicinity. The Germans own Freya radar network spotted the RAF bombers coming in and mobilised fighters to intercept which caused grievous losses to the bomber squadrons involved. In May 1940 Fairey Battle ground attack aircraft attacked German Bridges over the River Meuse in May 1940 in daylight and were slaughtered. So Bomber command mostly hit targets in Germany at least mostly at night.
@@walterkronkitesleftshoe6684 Exact. In my very rural part of the world, ca 80km north of Frankfurt there were no strategic targets. Nevertheless, the countryside would be strewn with allied bombers and later escort fighters on their way to the famous Nürnberg raid (for the British) as well as Schweinfurt ( for the US Americans. Some German fighters as well of course. All dead heroes or monsters, depending on whose side you were on. They would not know it, but their sacrifice has led to nearly 80 years of peace in western europe, unprecedented in history.
@@Antonnick Well said Antonnick, and LONG may that continue... but we need to watch our corporate globalist funded "politicians" from leading us into fresh wars. Best wishes to you from the UK.
Goering hated the SS
Wrong
@@eashpradhan994 He did
@@eashpradhan994 he despised himmler and was probably one of the more old guard lenient people in the inner circle but I'm pretty sure he still committed to the racial policy and just wanted the ss gone so he could preside over the geshtapo
All power he did not have, he hated the person who had that power.
Goering was the head of the German war economy, and arguably, his total failure to achieve anything useful with it was the greatest factor in the defeat of the Nazis.
Er kommt, er kommt...?
Wer? 🤣☠️👀
Err...... Hitler, of Course.
We should have allied with the Axis against the real threat.
Against the Catholic Church?
@@teambridgebsc691 Communism.
The Catholic Church actively supported the Axis.
Hitler? Nationalism? Belief in a mythical 'golden age'?
@@stevetheduck1425 See who Churchill blamed for Communism in February 1920.
das mit den Spitfires hätte sich ein Offizier nicht zu sagen gewagt
He did , it was adolf galland , in real life he had a big moustache
This is what Putin’s Russia looks like now.
????
@@danhsipo The rally resembles Putin’s rallies and his recent inauguration
@@petelosuaniuuh not even close, Putin will never be as cool as reichsmarschall goering
ゲーリングそっくりだね^^
So ein Schwachsinn schade um das Geld für den Dreh !
🏝️💾Da 🛑Stop Shield