"Anzacs: The War Down Under" (1988) - Amazing WW1 Australian Feature Film
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 4 พ.ย. 2024
- Following the lives of a dozen Australian soldiers who served in the Australia and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZACs) during World War I -- The expertly crafted, classic 1980s TV Movie follows them from the 1915 battle of Gallipoli, to the brutal trenches of France during the 1916 Somme battles, the 1917 Arias and Vimy Ridge battles to the final 1918 German offensives and the final victory drive as well as the hardships, mid-adventures and the casualties of friends encountered by each one.
Featured in the cast as a military man is Paul Hogan. It was Hogan's new-found international stardom in 1986's "Crocodile Dundee" which sparked the American distribution of this version of "Anzacs," two years after its initial 1985 Australian run. This transfer from a U.S. VHS video release is edited down from the 10-hour Australian miniseries.
"Anzacs: The War Down Under" (1985) - Episode 1:
• "Anzacs: The War Down ...
Produced after the success of "Gallipoli" (1981), and precedes "The Lighthorsemen" (1987). Recurring themes include the Australian identity, such as mateship and larrikinism, the loss of innocence in war, and also the continued coming of age of the Australian nation and its soldiers (the ANZAC spirit). Starring Andrew Clarke, Mark Hembrow, Megan Williams, Paul Hogan, Jon Blake and Christopher Cummins.
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One of the best Australian tv mini series ever made
"Bodyline" possibly is the best depending on what you think about cricket - and what Aussie doesn't! It's about war by another name. ?)
For those of you who haven't seen it yet, it ranks up there with the greatest war movies of all time. Awesome. Well done.
It’s a load of corny rubbish.
If that is how you like your propaganda.
It is crap
Never met an Aussie i didnt like. Good humored or mybe i just found um UM Humorous. Either way i've always enjoyed and clicked with them. 🤝
@englishalan: It’s got Crocodile Dundee in it! How DARE you?
My grandfather lied about his age and joined up at 14 , he went the entire war , shot twice , blown up twice and gassed , he was a sgt at 16 ( they thought he was ,20) . He came home to a land fit for heroes and was shoved straight back down the pits , how he survived i have no idea , I have his full papers . These men were giants , lions , heroes all , we must never forget , ever .
Honestly... They were people too mate. And that we often forget. Especially by the men leading these lions. It's much easier to dehumanize a hero than dehumanize a person.
It's of all times, I see homeless veterans of the Kosovo and African interventions here in the streets too. It's a disgrace, especially in 2023
@@thomasvandevelde8157 I understand that only too well, I am a retired 20 year retired serviceman and have experienced everything you say first hand .
💜
War's a racket a veteran once said, a big racket, and he was right. It's a downright disgrace what I've seen here. Worst of all is, all these people get thrown out of psych wards and homeless shelters because they can't handle their shellshock. You'd expect some training in this regard when you run a psych ward, but no. Files were falisied, claims made up about so-called agression, and this person was sent "home". And my testimony was never taken into acount, neither that of 3 other people who vouched for him. All this because the night-staff decided to encircle him with 4 male nurses in a small corridor because he refused to take his pills. With a close-quarters combat veteran, you can guess what happened next. Oh, he didn't have a home, so I wrote "home" because the street was all he had from there on out. And this is just one of many stories I oversaw personally. I could write a whole book about it. @@SuperWang-k2c
Same thing happened to my two uncles from Melbourne. Shot, blown up and gassed. After a hospital tent rest in Egypt, they went on to the Western front. Again, to survive and come back home.
Thank you So much!! I love the Australians. They don’t get the credit they deserve. This is great.
@@highcountrydelatite Except when they ran away casting away their arms at Singapore.
It is a pile of carbage
I watched it and was not impressed. It neither showed the horrors of war or the real characters of the Anzacs. It was cheesy Hollywood style rubbish that made light of a terrible war. As for the Anzacs being the most feared divisions on the Western Front or Gallipoli I would dispute that and say an Indian division with Gurkha regiments were more feared.
@victorianhighcountry What does having served got anything to do with WW1?. You don't need to serve to study military history. As a matter of fact I was in the Royal East Anglians Royal Artillery, TA not that makes a blind bit of differencell. Serving does not give you any credibility when talking about events that took place before you were born.
@@highcountrydelatite So what battles did you fight in in World War One?
My grandfather fought along side some of these "ANZACS", he was proud to, as he said in his own words that they fought like lions and never backed out of a fight........
The 10hr mini series is worth watching. Its my fave mini series.
Sad and pointless as the war was,this must rate as one of the best portrayals of how Australian men sacrificed their lives towards the British war effort because they felt obliged to the Crown.Many brave men died in the trenches,while gaining a few hundred meters.Good cast and well acted.Thanks for screening.❤
Also shed some light on the ineptness and arrogance of British officers, and their low opinion of any "colonial troops". Making someone an officer based on his social standing is absolutely idiotic
It's called standing with kith and kin similarly with WW2 and some wars after that, and most Aussies of the day were quite keen to get involved. Yes, it was a slaughter alright.
Good movie, I watched it quite a bit in the 80's.
Worthy of note, it was Churchill who organized Gallipoli. On it being a disaster in which he also lost many a personal friend saw him resign his position to volunteer to fight on the western front where he was the c/o of a battalion of the Royal as it's Fusiliers.
Yes the ANZACs did well and deserve to be better represented than they were in this carbage.
What did they forget on Turkish soil to go fight the Turks in their homeland? Who were they serving other than the British imperialists?!!
@@aminhanini609 That's a bit like saying that the Turks were only serving the German imperialists!
I watched the whole series when it was posted here, and except for having to use Closed Captions to understand what they were saying, it was such an impressive series. 10 out of 10. The anniversary movies and series made when Gallipoli hit 100 in Australia and New Zealand were equally as brilliant and great watches.
Ya I would have had a hard time understanding some of what they were saying if I hadn't fought alongside the Australians in Afghanistan and learned some of the slang and all that. Always loved the Ozzie's. Didn't much care for the French Canadians though.
Just great. Full heroic actions. Thanks for loading it!
What a great Australian movie. Shows the true Aussie spirit. ❤❤❤❤
For other good movies, there's Gallipoli, The Lighthorse Men, ANZAC Girls and Canakkale, from the Turkish side...
What a great mini series this was.
Checkout Combat 1963
@@asagoodfriend Seen it, but to much Holywood. Those guys must have fought in Normandy for years....
@@Lassisvulgaris Hermano...Combat is leagues above the entire Hollywood!🌟
@@asagoodfriend Good in it's own way, and above the entire Hollywood. But many countries are far above Hollywood....
It us utter rubbish. No where dies it protray the horror of war or do the real ANZACs credit.
In reality this was senseless slaughter on a grand scale on both sides. Based on faulty knowledge of the terrain, one of Winston Churchill’s major blunders, and look what it cost. Young men at the start of their lives believing in King & Country. I am a Pom who left the UK in ‘68 for a better life ‘down under’, I have never been disappointed-not even for one day. The ANZACS were in a league of their own-I weep with the rest every ANZAC Day. What a terrible waste.
Surely this series is the definitive telling of the Great War experience, from its soldiers and citizens through its communities and country.
Definitive my arse. Any film about WW1 that does not mention the British Army and the French Army not mention the American army and the blockading of German ports by the Royal Navy is by definition rubbish.
That was a bloody good watch I haven't seen it in 30 odd years bravo
Never heard of this. I look forward to watching it.
Yes watched the series many years ago, bloody great show.... Aussie... Aussie... Aussie
I have the full set on dvd. This was the best miniseries produced in Australia.
I’ve never seen so many handsome men in one movie. I cried at the end. Men start wars and men have to stop them. It’s so sad.
Actually coward politicians start wars and MEN have to stop them.
Yes. It's sad. This is a great movie.😮
دوست عزیز حرف شما کاملا متینه درستش اینه که جنگ رو پیر مردها شروع میکنن و جوان ها باید برن کشته بشن..چون تمام رهبران و شاهان کشورها پیرمرد هستن.با تصمیمات اشتباه اونا کلی از مردم الکی کشته میشن..و این جنگ هرگز پایان نخواهد یافت. مثل الان که روسیه به اوکراین حمله کرده و مردم بی گناه چه کشته میشن و آواره کشورهای دیگه.این واقعا ناراحت کننده هست
Old men start them…
@@RaymondGoettler. Its a load of nonsense. The British army is hardly mentioned when Britain had five armies from 1915/16 to the end. Predictable Australian bullshit.
Very good movie. I am from Sarajevo,and I was in one war.
Thanks for editing it down to a feature
I had the pleasure of crossing paths, and serving with. some great soldiers from Down Under in Vietnam. They were still upholding the tradition of being magnificent warriors. The NVA and Viet Cong feared them even more than the ROK Marines.
really? i heard the ROK guys were pretty full on. my great grandfather was a western australian 10th light horseman and grandfather was in north africa as well in WW2. he didnt make it to the pacific after being injured and sent home. they stole a truck and crashed it. members of the 10th LH accidently accepted the surrender of Damascus which is why you dont see any battle for it in the movie "LAWRENCE OF ARABIA". its a pretty funny story.
@@danielponiatowski7368 Probably untrue.
@@anthonyeaton5153 no its quite accurate, they were told not enter the city and wait for lawrence and his band of arabs. a unit was sent to get after the turks and germans who were retreating out the back way. they got lost in the old narrow streets but came out into a plaza or such with large government building. the idea was to get directions when a bunch of officials came out and the officer went inside with them then returned with the surrender document and big grin. he made some statement about going down in history with alexander the great, pharaoh wotshisname and darius i think.
They still wore those kick ass hats in 1972.
Thank you.
I watched this when it first came out last century and must say that I liked it better as a mini-series. In this format, it just flies by too bloody fast.
Great movie, good bless Australia.
Yeah the awful waste still echoes through Australia today I can tell you. We watched this series on TV as kids in the 80s..it was pretty authentic and made on a small budget I imagine.
It is still rubbish. Open your mind to real military history not just Aussie history.
@@anthonyeaton5153 I'm over little mouthpieces like you giving off nasty little comments at people you don't know. Seriously, go away.
Thank you 🙏🏻
Partly filmed near Beverage north of Melbourne. One of the producers - Dixon was a Lt Col in the Aussie Army, CO of one of the most historic regiments in the Army, 4/19 Prince of Wales's Light Horse Regiment. Two films have been made of PWLH ancestor regiments Gallipoli and Lighthorsemen. The company that provided the arms for ANZACs is still in business - Warwick Firearms and still servicing the Film and TV industry. Actress Megan Williams died so young at the age of 43.
OMG! It IS Amazing WW1 Australian Feature Film! 😀
If you like this, then you should watch the actual mini series episodes. There are five, hour and a half long episodes that you can watch on here. They cut a lot of stuff out to fit it in this three hour movie format. It is one hundred percent worth it.
Nice one Hoges. Comedy relief when needed.
If the original VHS set can be located, this has behind the scenes stories on the making of the series including interviews with key figures. Producers were very keen to have Hogan in the series for the comic ocker element.
Great watch,as I did back when it first came out,but full of inaccuracies and stereotypes.British officer ranks were,by that time in the war,full of men who had come up through the ranks via battlefied commisions.The Aussies helped stop the 1918 German offensive,but did not do so on their own.Many British units literally fought to the last man,and French units were heavily involved as well. In the August 1918 counter offensive,it was the British Army that inflicted the hardest blows on the Germans,with the Australians playing their part.
The entertainment industry is full of people who vote and speak for "the people". Thus the constant stereotyping of the upper classes.
Well the Aussies in my opinion did the most out of every country in ww1
@@lachiewardwhat? Laughable comment
@@lachieward
Don't be silly.
You sound like a yank, winning everything all by yourselves.
Proud to be an Aussie.
A rare series that stands the test of time. Others that came after pale in comparison.
Ive watched this series 3 or 4 times....great series
What great movie respect to all Anzacs who fought gave their lives in great war and WW2
The King, The Empire, Australia .. love it. Wish we had that patriotism now
The Gallipoli landing was filmed on Phillip island in Victoria.
I didnt know crocodile Dundee fought i the first world war! That guy is a legend!
The arrogance of the British officer class (no doubt also displayed by other officer corps) showcased in this mini-series is typical in many, if not most movies about the time (WWI) and before. Thankfully their attitudes change a bit in WWII and more-so today. It no doubt caused countless avoidable deaths. May those they sent to die, RIP.
Thanks for uploading this.
Never seen this before.
Much better than most Australian stuff I've seen.
It was very good even if I did smack a bit of... we won the war all by ourselves.
I'm English and and my grandfather was in France, wounded twice
This movie faulty portraits British officer's as upper class twit's.
By this time of the war this was untrue. Many were very experienced and came up through the ranks.
Massive thanks to All those brave men from All countries
Pat is the best character hands down! 😂😂
Movie night tonight boys . Get your popcorn,beer, and weed ready for a chill Friday night
Weed is the most important, I think. Best regards from Brazil.
I had a great uncle that was gassed in the first World War and I would play with his children 😎
How can you remember any of the film after killing all those brain cells?
@@TheRadioAteMyTV with deez nuts foo
The Aussies were crack fighters during WW2 too, refusing to give up in Tobruk, North Africa, a real thorn in Rommel's side. It must have been real hell having to serve under elitist class British officers so daft, you knew they were going to get you killed. This was a great film. Hogan was really fun to watch.
And running away at Singapore casting away their arms then going on the rampage then leaving the Indian and British troops in the front line.
They served under their own officers ffs....
@@anthonyeaton5153 In the campaign in Malaya the Australians made up 13 per cent of the British Empire's ground forces, they suffered 73 per cent of its battle deaths. Some Australian soldiers did act badly when Singapore was going down the drain, but you see the same thing happening on the losing sides in many battles, even in the 2nd World War. Don’t tar every Australian fighting man with the same brush.
@@bryanbird1266 I don’t tar every Australian I get fed up with the constant trumpet blowing. We all know your fought bloody hard and bravely but so did others. You never mention the biggest ground defeat of the Japs was delivered by the British and Indian 14th Army in Burma. At Singapore the Australians were abysmal going on the rampage looting raping and pillaging and being deserted by their commander Gordon Bennett. Shameful. You always talk of the Australian infantry man,but never mention artillery air power and naval power or logistics. Get balance right.
Thanks!
A pity this mini series was re edited in the wrong order.
A veryy good serie.
No words needed. * * * * *
Well done on the edit, champion - however there's quite a few scenes missing from the series.
It was a magnificent series, but has been chopped about, many good bits cut out
Sad fact: Jon Blake, who played Robert Flanagan, was involved in an horrific road accident two years after this series was made, which left him with massive brain damage, from which he never recovered. He died in 2011.
Off to join up, big adventure. I wonder how many would have gone, had they known what awaited them? So, so sad. RIP the millions 😢.
What ageat movie well done Australia.
Classic fantastic!
A remember this on British TV great film I thought it was in 1985 but it was later in 1988
yeah it was originally in 1985 or 1986
Salute from South Africa 🇿🇦🫡
Excellent film
This was a TV series, 10 episodes I think. Editing it down to 2 hours 44 minutes cuts out a lot of the story.
One of the best, but I am afraid ruined by cutting short
Great soldiers. Salute!
“Those heroes that shed their blood and lost their lives …You are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and the Mehmets to us where they lie side by side in this country of ours. You, the mothers, who sent their sons from far away countries, wipe away your tears. Your sons are now lying in our bosom and are in peace. After having lost their lives on this land they have become our sons as well
……good to see Aussie actors’ not seen since the 1980’s. Andrew Clarke, Vincent Ball, Mark Hembrow…………
Everywhere you go in New Zealand too, despite the fact this country was never heavily populated , you'll find war memorials to New Zealanders who fought and died with the Anzac troops in some far flung place. Even the smallest farming community that you drive through in a flash of an eye gave up their young for WW1 and WW2 for the "mother country". I don't feel the affection was ever returned in the same degree or really appreciated. British often felt, maybe still do, some disdain for colonials, as being almost British but not quite up to scratch.
Of course there was a Japanese threat over here in the back of beyond in WW2 but these NZ and Aussie men could have sat it out, studied, worked, played cricket and rugby, married, had children, lived a life of security and peace and need only have defended hearth and home. They flew in the battle of Britain, they fought in Europe, in the Pacific, in the Middle East, in Africa, in Asia, often deployed to places where heavy losses were expected as they were considered more expendable. Our Maori troops had the reputation of being great fighters but with the prevailing racism of the day were also often relegated to latrine digging.
There were so many Anzacs buried in Berlin's WW2 war cemetary in Charlottenburg but they are always overlooked, people think of Britain battling on alone, the huge manpower the USA brought into the war effort, the Russians of course who probably suffered more than any other country did, at least their death toll was the highest. Yet Canadians fought, Indians fought, Africans fought. It was world wide carnage and the fight against a predatory, racist state and its allies was fought by nations seeped in their own prejudice towards each other and racism was everywhere, not just in Nazi Germany. I'm thankful I was not alive for it all.
Está na hora de ser lançado um filme novo Australiano da Grande guerra mundial!
As always, Another Australian glory story.
No, this was not made in 1988, it was made in late 1983. Well, that is how I remember it, cause I worked on it.
THIS "movie version" was edited down for screening in North America... in 1988. Yes, the mini-series was released in October 1985 on Australian TV, but this movie re-edited (shorter) version was released in the U.S. in 1988.
Seeing what is happening to Australia since 2020 it makes me wonder where have the real men gone in that country.
pure class
Very good film.
Only the dead have seen the end of war.
Don’t make them like this now great film 🎥
This series was released in 1985 check your information first please
Stone the crows sport... fair crack of the whip!
I've always thought Gallipoli was a big mistake and a waste of thousands of lives.
Bloody horrible what they did to these young me.
I want to ask a question: What were the Anzacs doing in Gallipoli?
Trying to cut off the Bosporos Strait (Dardanelles) capture Constantinople (Istanbul), and force Turkey od the war.
@@Lassisvulgaris In this case, they will bear the consequences of all this without crying or complaining. You will come to Anatolia from thousands of kilometers away, threaten Istanbul, the capital of the Ottoman Empire, and then show yourself innocent. This can only be laughed at.
@@Netko733 "YOU will come to Anatolia" and "Show YOURSELF innocent"? Who is "you" in this case...?
And yes, that opreation was doomeed from the beginning, but it was the birth of Australia as an independent nation. What happened to the Ottoman Empire...?
Turks do not live only in Anatolia, they are everywhere from the Balkans to the Great Wall of China. As for the Ottoman Empire, yes, it has not existed for 100 years, but instead, Mustafa Kemal ATATÜRK and his friends founded the REPUBLIC OF TURKEY, and it will live forever.
Dying because of British high command incompetence
Not a clear copy😢
why did you cut so much out this was a great mini series that you have butchered
Please read the description. This is the TV movie that was released in the United States and I believe the UK in 1988. This was a cutdown version of the miniseries for television. This was done a lot in the 80s where they would cut a miniseries into a single feature film. The entire miniseries is available on this channel if you take a look at our other videos. This was cut down 30 years ago by the producers in order to sell it as a TV movie standalone.
Promessas de Guerra é ótimo.
Not a bad TV drama, but all that silly larrikinism got a bit much! The Anzac legend has been mythologised to such an extent in Oz culture, that the reality of the deep divisions in Australian attitudes to participation in the Great War has been all but totally suppressed. For example, little to nothing is known about the two conscription referendums, in 1916 and 1917, both of which were defeated and saved tens of thousands of young Australian men from being sent to the killing fields of Europe. A pity no one ever thought to make a TV series about that, which would have been far more interesting.
I could only understand every 3rd or 4th word but I guess it's an ok movie.
Anytime they put a woman in a war movie, the movie usually isn’t very good, and this movie is no exception.
Somme 60,000 in one day gave there lives....... capacity of a modern football stadium.....so sad ...if you get chance go visit there graves.....pay homege....it's an eye opener....🙂↕️
ANZAC stands for Australian New Zealand Service Core...They have fought alongside the Americans in every war since the 1t world war, yes ww2, Korea, Vietnam, the gulf, etc, etc, etc...
"...ANZAC stands for Australian New Zealand Service Core .." Try that one again ....
……try ‘Australia & Bew Zealand Army Corps’…………
……’New’
The word is an acronym , Try that one again .
Looks like stars and writers of soaps made a war movie
Sadly, it really WAS that messed up.
original is 8 hours movie is short version
Original was top notch!
Called ‘Anzacs’ in Australia
A little heavy handed on the "bloody stupid pom officers".
But only a little.
See: The Donkeys. (Book), but keep a sick-bag handy.
Makes me very sad to think those good men fought and died for an Australia that has been sold out by cowards and criminals.
❤❤❤
It was made in 1985 not 1988.
💜
Very gung ho era ...white feathers for cowardice
The empire had strong ties then!
The film title ": The War Down Under" is absolute bullshit . It is only an ANZAC Corp if both New Zealand, and Australian, Military Personal are present . In this film, not one New Zealand Soldier is included . No Kiwi, No Anzacs .
The war too end all wars.....still humans haven't learnt.....so sad...waste of life
Mrs bloody Jessup.. 😉
This was a great mini series, completely ruined by this re editing
war hmm
Do not watch this film edit. Go to the series also available. This edit is terrible.
Made for TV. Your title should read WWI, with the latin I not figure 1. You can't be that ignorant?