Apparently the original script of this said that he walks toward the singing voice and sits among the soldiers because he thinks he’s already dead. Makes the scene carry more weight in my mind
It kind of came across that way. The idea that this incongruous beauty in the midst of all the death and destruction he’s witnessed might be how he crosses over, and his disappointment at not being able to complete his mission (not to mention the heartbreak of leaving his family behind) is tempered by the relief that he’s finally gotten some rest.
That static shot of him leaned against the tree with the soldiers in the foreground, he did look like a dead body with resting men around. It's honestly beautiful.
This scene was so beautiful but what sadden me the most was when the camera panned and you saw that these soldiers were all just a bunch of young lads, practically kids and it reminds you that we lost a whole generation of them to that damn war, just heartbreaking.
@Joseph Mainville mid 1917, there weren't as many suicidal battleplans by then, the Hindenburg line saw to that. I mean the chances of surviving the war were better in 1917 and 1918 than any year previous. Despite the death by artillery, sniper, stupid glory seeking officers and commando raids. Oh and the gas, I forgot about the gas.
Darryl Bowman Nothing. For me of course it mean’s nothing it’s just a throwaway of people’s lives, That’s just the way I look at it, some people might beg to differ, some people might say the same.
One of the heaviest hitting movie scenes .The desperation , the tiredness , the weight of the journey , the pain , the desire to rest but the knowledge that thousands of lives depend on you continuing your quest and the almost ethereal mixture of a well timed song and a silent forest after seeing a loved one die , fighting many foes , so many times almost losing your Life and the wondering if you will have the strength .So much . A cinematic masterpiece .
My grandfather was killed in this war in this same year 1917. I have a photo of him and my grandmother on their wedding day, both young and beautiful, unaware of what was to come. When I was a young boy in the 1960s she told me once she still missed him.
My great grand father was mobilized the 2nd August 1914. By the 1st October 1914, he was dead, leaving his wife (24 years) with two young daughters to rise. In April 1917 his young brother was also killed during Chemin des Dames offensive.
@@mdlamerica2754 but what determines the “end” of the war? Depending on the tide of battle, what seems like the end could be just the beginning. In fact that’s the entire plot of the movie.
When you watch a movie, and come across a scene like this, where you genuinely don’t know how to describe what you feel, it is a rare gem of cinema. Am I happy? Am I sad? Am I hopeful? Am I depressed? I DON’T FREAKING KNOW!!!
It also represents something as the rest of the movie is a Christian allegory. At the start we see our protagonist awakening by the tree of knowledge, given a partner and a mission, and anointed (sarcastically) by the sergeant on duty in the trenches. They then travel the lone and dreary world of no man's land, have a Cain slaying Abel moment with the German pilot, and descend into an ever worse world in the burning village where he meets a virgin caring for a newborn child which he brings gifts for. Then comes the river drowning "baptism" representing death and rebirth from out of the bodies along the shore, into a Sunday service hymn before the battle and a final message that initially wasn't desired (likely "the word of God") by the general, and a rest at the end of his journey by the tree of life after meeting the Healer being the eldest brother in the field hospital lamenting the souls that were lost.
Imo it almost like he died in the river with those dead bodies, washed up on shore and sat amongst with other soldiers to this angelic song only to be wakened from his stupor
I wish they included this performance instead of the studio one because it's so much more raw and the sound of the woods just puts you right back at that spot of peace.
After hearing the angelic lyrics and voice of the sole soldier, immedietly you hear others clapping but is soon shunned by the gathered claking of metal and rifles, and shouting. The war still rages on around them, there is no time in war.
I love how they casted a bunch of actual 18 year old kids to be the soldiers. Hollywood and the like have had us believe that soldiers in the great wars were these buff, gruffy 30 year old dudes, but the reality is that the vast majority of fighting soldiers were teenagers.
This and The Running Scene are my favorite scene from This Great War Classic film of 2020. Very Chilling and Emotional song In this scene 1917 is Bar far the Best film of 2020 so far.
SPACE MONKEY1102 For some odd reason this movie came out in 2020 in most places For 2019 it was only for a few amount of people, it was worth waiting one more month though
Every single scene is a classic. Every little moment is a masterpiece. Thank you Sam Mendes and the whole team; 1917 will always be Best Picture of 2019... at least for me. (I also respect other great films of 2019 as well; no shade or hate. Peace.)
I'm glad to see in this and Dunkirk they are finally casting actual young people for the roles. It really brings everything into perspective when it's teenagers dying like this and not gristled men.
My favorite part about this scene that they don't show is the other soldiers helping him at the end. They didn't call him a coward or harass him. They knew as fellow enlisted men what the hell they lived in could do to a man and they helped him through his shock and carried him forward.
He put the letter into his tobacco tin which I suppose would have protected it just a bit but apparently the tin had more protection than a damn bunker, not even a damp corner in the paper
@@marsbars84 even in the first world war, some food tins had rubber gaskets. I have a few chocolate tins from the 1920s and late 1910s and two have the dried up remains of little rubber gaskets, so it 100% could be submerged
@@anthonydominguez4744 I like your observation. As a hopeless romantic who writes music this scene is gut wrenching because I think about the lives of every young man in this scene, let alone the millions who died with many not even being acknowledged. But Parasite was a masterpiece as well with its own way of story telling, specifically with how it touched on the human phsyce.
Brazilian Kaiser the whole battalion was 1600 men. Thousands didn’t die in the first wave. There are numerous points in this movie that he could have stopped. He kept going despite that.
I went to the Summit Trench and Croisilles Railway Cemeteries last weekend. The youngest soldier in these cemeteries was 17, the oldest 40. Heartbreaking.
Very cool to see this and something I wish war movies showed more. There are literally hundreds of thousands of examples of music in the military. Beautiful.
I was half-baked late at night when I watched this, suddenly this scene pops up and I felt the same amount of relief these young boys probably had before the oncoming storm genuinely beautiful.
This movie was beyond good. But this scene was something else. The singing and all those soldiers having a moment of peace and solitude before going back too the trenches and face possible death.
An amazing and eerie song to ease the men of the probable death they knew was just ahead... to reassure themselves they are passing from a warring world to heaven with their family in a short moment. Such a powerful and intense experience for anyone at that time and for any of us to look back on the fragility of life.
My Great Grandfather survived the last 18 months of that war, serving in the Canadian Army. Its why the Greenfields of France is a song that resonates in my soul. The War to End all Wars, is a testament to the hubris of humanity. I pray my son never has to serve in war, but I suspect he may very well follow in my footsteps, his great grandfather’s and great great grandfathers as well.
Apparently Sam Mendes intended for Schofield to be thinking that he died and that he is among dead soldiers in the woods, he realized he was still alive when he found out where his objective was.
That's very sad and haunting at the same time. World War I soldiers in this scene are just kids and teens. Hardly any of them looked like they were in their 20's or 30's. That's so depressing.
I think the coolest part of the sounds design here is right after he sings, it sounds like people are clapping before you realize that’s actually just the sound of the soldiers standing up with all their gear on. It highlights just how unfair war is because that should have been sung on a stage to an audience who would applaud him, but war has turner the singer and their audience into soldiers.
Sometimes I will sit outside while smoking a cig and just sit there and remember my life while playing this song. I can picture my brothers standing and sitting around my table and non of them say a word. We just sit and listen
At a place similar to this where a huge number of Welsh men died in a small area during ww1 a visitor to the site during day time heard a voice behind him say "we're still here"' turned around there was nobody there....
I'm learning a song on my guitar and I recognized it. I was like wait a minute this sounds like the song from 1917. It's such a mournful song I'm glad to be learning this one in my lessons.
During the American civil war this song was often called the Libby prison hymn after a union soldier wrote these words on the wall of the Libby prison camp right before he died which makes it so much deeper now that you know that a young lad wrote this knowing his life was about to end.
I really like how these soldiers historical accurately look so young in their 20s and teens. Contrast to other movies, saving private ryan for an example, who would portray the soldiers looking like 30 or 40 year olds
My high school history teacher hammered it into us students that many of the soldiers fighting in the Great War were no older than we were. But it wasn’t until I saw this scene that what he said really sank in for me. Just the thought of kids the same age as my oldest nephew killing each other brings a tear to my eye.
Don’t make memes and jokes from the pain and death of millions. Plz, put yourself in they’re shoes for just a second and know try to understand the amount of pain they went through.
when i first watched this idk if the soldiers there were dead, either ghostified, or real but when he finished singing they started clapping and it fr scared me
The year is 1918, the Great War is done. In the tavern, many a man and many a woman, celebrate the victory. Men gather 'round with joy and cheer, and drinks a run, As the women gossip and prattle, most of long story, And children laugh and play out in evening air. The townspeople are joyous and fair and light of heart. But one does not take part in the affair, A young woman, though old for her thirty-three years, sits apart, Silently sitting away in the darkened corner, The woman gazing longingly in a photo, as tears silently strike wood. The loving faces of her husband and three sons stare back at her. Her husband died in the Somme, her youngest at Belleau Wood, The oldest fell in the Siege of Antwerp, and middle fell in the retreat from Le Cateau. So let us mourn the husbands and let us mourn the sons, as they shall celebrate no more.
this scene is very sad , sorry to all those people that didn't make it home. by they way the song hes singing is johnny cash, just thought Id let you know
2:14 I've always imagined there's a version of this movie where it ends here we just have the move in on him and he's actually died and that's just the end of the movie
Apparently the original script of this said that he walks toward the singing voice and sits among the soldiers because he thinks he’s already dead. Makes the scene carry more weight in my mind
It kind of came across that way. The idea that this incongruous beauty in the midst of all the death and destruction he’s witnessed might be how he crosses over, and his disappointment at not being able to complete his mission (not to mention the heartbreak of leaving his family behind) is tempered by the relief that he’s finally gotten some rest.
That static shot of him leaned against the tree with the soldiers in the foreground, he did look like a dead body with resting men around. It's honestly beautiful.
This scene was so beautiful but what sadden me the most was when the camera panned and you saw that these soldiers were all just a bunch of young lads, practically kids and it reminds you that we lost a whole generation of them to that damn war, just heartbreaking.
This comment is so true and sad but when I see your username and profile pic I just can’t take it seriously
And then to another world war 20 years later :(
A Tough Generation! This New Generation needs to be Decimated!
kysike666 just because they were in war doesn’t mean they’re tough, they didn’t choose to be in it
hello future people! perhaps even a hello the future me! how did your short story assessment turn out?
That was beautifully haunting. I saw this in theaters with my dad and we were absolutely entranced by that soldier’s singing.
I also saw this in theaters with my father and let’s just say it was very haunting
My parents watched this on Apple TV I didn’t really see but my mom the saddest part is were lance corporal Blake dies
HG C Yep my mom cried so much!!
Same here man, theater was packed and everyone was dead silent. This movie was absolutely unparalleled in its ability to capture your mind completely.
How could you not be?
It's such a chilling thought knowing that alot of those men's lives were saved that day by the single battered soldier in the back.
He just delay the inevitable.
Just saying stories not true
@Joseph Mainville mid 1917, there weren't as many suicidal battleplans by then, the Hindenburg line saw to that. I mean the chances of surviving the war were better in 1917 and 1918 than any year previous. Despite the death by artillery, sniper, stupid glory seeking officers and commando raids. Oh and the gas, I forgot about the gas.
@@dragonsword7370 You might forget the gas and shells but you'll never forget the Mademoiselle
Only to die 3 days or a week later like the general said.
When I first saw this scene in theaters I wasn’t sure whether the soldiers were real or just ghosts of those who had already perished fighting.
Dude, that's deep
In a way, both are true. Those are the faces of young men before the war. Nothing else about them is truly the same.
I thought it was dead bodies and someone is just singing because he lost his friends
HDimmick13 shutueisksaos
@HDimmick13 Bit slow on the uptake huh?
When Schofield got a break, so did we
I didn't realize I was holding my breath until this scene.
Brandon Wilks i didn’t realize I was holding my pee until this scene
@@kaldenjigme317 didid you now?
What was the meaning to this war again 🤔??
Darryl Bowman Nothing. For me of course it mean’s nothing it’s just a throwaway of people’s lives, That’s just the way I look at it, some people might beg to differ, some people might say the same.
One of the heaviest hitting movie scenes .The desperation , the tiredness , the weight of the journey , the pain , the desire to rest but the knowledge that thousands of lives depend on you continuing your quest and the almost ethereal mixture of a well timed song and a silent forest after seeing a loved one die , fighting many foes , so many times almost losing your Life and the wondering if you will have the strength .So much .
A cinematic masterpiece .
The hardest for me is when he told the brother the news. I didn't cry, but I sure as hell wanted a stiff drink after that.
the last song that many of the men will hear in their lives.
R.I.P
And it was beautiful
when i saw this in theatres, I was whispering this to myself:
"blink...please blink scho...blink please...your almost there"
Same! I really thought he had died and was devastated. So relieved when he blinked.
ikr I straight up thought he had died
Same. It scared me.
One of those moments where you have to keep moving or you'll die right there in the dirt. He came pretty close.
One of the most genuine scenes in the movie
Simon homes
I’m war movies 🎥👍🏾🎥
My grandfather was killed in this war in this same year 1917. I have a photo of him and my grandmother on their wedding day, both young and beautiful, unaware of what was to come. When I was a young boy in the 1960s she told me once she still missed him.
My great grand father was mobilized the 2nd August 1914. By the 1st October 1914, he was dead, leaving his wife (24 years) with two young daughters to rise. In April 1917 his young brother was also killed during Chemin des Dames offensive.
Sure they were
Schofield had the thousand yard stare in this scene
"War is when the young and stupid are tricked by the old and bitter into killing each other."
-Nico Bellic
That might be true for those who start a war, but for those who finish one, I'd rather call that "duty".
@@mdlamerica2754 but what determines the “end” of the war? Depending on the tide of battle, what seems like the end could be just the beginning. In fact that’s the entire plot of the movie.
Stays true.
WWI, WWII, the entire Cold War, and so on.
Tell that to Alexander The Great who conquered most of the known world by the time he was 27.
@@mrmr_zoomie Most of those who started WW2 weren't old, I'm pretty sure Hitler was in his 30s.
When you watch a movie, and come across a scene like this, where you genuinely don’t know how to describe what you feel, it is a rare gem of cinema. Am I happy? Am I sad? Am I hopeful? Am I depressed? I DON’T FREAKING KNOW!!!
i knew how exactly i felt when i watched this scene. i felt relieved that he had finally arrived to his destination
Whats rhe name of the movie please
Dude is such a good actor. He was completely dazed until he heard the song sing to him and took a breath then snapped back to reality
It also represents something as the rest of the movie is a Christian allegory. At the start we see our protagonist awakening by the tree of knowledge, given a partner and a mission, and anointed (sarcastically) by the sergeant on duty in the trenches. They then travel the lone and dreary world of no man's land, have a Cain slaying Abel moment with the German pilot, and descend into an ever worse world in the burning village where he meets a virgin caring for a newborn child which he brings gifts for. Then comes the river drowning "baptism" representing death and rebirth from out of the bodies along the shore, into a Sunday service hymn before the battle and a final message that initially wasn't desired (likely "the word of God") by the general, and a rest at the end of his journey by the tree of life after meeting the Healer being the eldest brother in the field hospital lamenting the souls that were lost.
When I first saw this scene I thought he had died leaning on the tree cause he wasn’t moving or blinking.
Same
@@simonzimmerman166 He's exhausted
He may have.
Imo it almost like he died in the river with those dead bodies, washed up on shore and sat amongst with other soldiers to this angelic song only to be wakened from his stupor
Please what is the name of the .ovie?
I wish this had been included on the soundtrack, what a beautiful performance.
It has
It is actually
I wish they included this performance instead of the studio one because it's so much more raw and the sound of the woods just puts you right back at that spot of peace.
After hearing the angelic lyrics and voice of the sole soldier, immedietly you hear others clapping but is soon shunned by the gathered claking of metal and rifles, and shouting. The war still rages on around them, there is no time in war.
*People who haven't seen 1917* : So, what was your favorite scene?
Me: Yes.
HHAHAHA SAME
I mean with the whole movie being styled as shot in one take you could argue its one scene 🤷
@@wolfofbs1607 technically 2, with the time jump when Schofield gets knocked out 😉
"Even their rats are bigger than ours"
Just wanted to say hello to anyone passing in 5 years
seconded
Greetings wandering stranger
People will be coming back to this movie for the next 50 years, at least.
hi
Just passing through. Be seeing you.
Watching this in theaters was like being hypnotized.
I love how they casted a bunch of actual 18 year old kids to be the soldiers. Hollywood and the like have had us believe that soldiers in the great wars were these buff, gruffy 30 year old dudes, but the reality is that the vast majority of fighting soldiers were teenagers.
This and The Running Scene are my favorite scene from This Great War Classic film of 2020. Very Chilling and Emotional song In this scene 1917 is Bar far the Best film of 2020 so far.
SPACE MONKEY1102
For some odd reason this movie came out in 2020 in most places
For 2019 it was only for a few amount of people, it was worth waiting one more month though
Juno2000 it came out in 2019. But if you have HBO bad education is the best film of the year so far.
@@ballwelder2857 in my country it came out in January 2020 in america it came out in December
Every single scene is a classic. Every little moment is a masterpiece. Thank you Sam Mendes and the whole team; 1917 will always be Best Picture of 2019... at least for me.
(I also respect other great films of 2019 as well; no shade or hate. Peace.)
Yel Yint so two scenes
I think 1917 would’ve been awesome but it had to come out with a bunch of other good movies
This film should have won best picture TBH.
but Joker…
Sam Mendez makes some damn catchy songs too. Good singer!
I actually almost cried when he started hearing the singing. God damn this movie was a rollercoaster. A beautiful rollercoaster.
I'm glad to see in this and Dunkirk they are finally casting actual young people for the roles. It really brings everything into perspective when it's teenagers dying like this and not gristled men.
Young Quints
They look so hypnotized when that soldier is singing.
Man the guy singing is soothing to my ears.
My favorite part about this scene that they don't show is the other soldiers helping him at the end. They didn't call him a coward or harass him. They knew as fellow enlisted men what the hell they lived in could do to a man and they helped him through his shock and carried him forward.
This scene and the night flare scene are so magical, I rewatched it and wow I’m so blown away by how great this movie is 😭
"War is young men dying and old men talking"
- C3PO
"TH-cam is full of idiots."
- Historyman313
Like how that letter despite all the blood on it and him flowing downstream, still was readable after all of that.
He put the letter into his tobacco tin which I suppose would have protected it just a bit but apparently the tin had more protection than a damn bunker, not even a damp corner in the paper
@@marsbars84 even in the first world war, some food tins had rubber gaskets. I have a few chocolate tins from the 1920s and late 1910s and two have the dried up remains of little rubber gaskets, so it 100% could be submerged
As great as Parasite is, I would have picked this movie.
This Movie is better by Far
kysike666 it just appeals to your emotions . It’s only better depending on how sensitive you are
@@anthonydominguez4744 I like your observation. As a hopeless romantic who writes music this scene is gut wrenching because I think about the lives of every young man in this scene, let alone the millions who died with many not even being acknowledged. But Parasite was a masterpiece as well with its own way of story telling, specifically with how it touched on the human phsyce.
Too many white people in the movie for it to win.
@Jesse Bracho prove me wrong
Sitting in the theater, this scene was when I realized I had been holding my breath the whole time.
As soon as No Man's Land was revealed was the moment all breathing stopped.
The sad thing is that, had he not stopped for this and continued running, he could’ve prevented thousands of deaths by stopping the first wave.
Had to take a breather man.
Road_Glider No doubt, anyone would need to rest after that river, it’s just sad that it costed the lives of hundreds of men.
Brazilian Kaiser the whole battalion was 1600 men. Thousands didn’t die in the first wave.
There are numerous points in this movie that he could have stopped. He kept going despite that.
Eae mano
Não entendi nada que vc falou mas o filme e bom
My favorite scene is when schofield is running from the Bombs
I went to the Summit Trench and Croisilles Railway Cemeteries last weekend. The youngest soldier in these cemeteries was 17, the oldest 40. Heartbreaking.
An absolutely great film!
You never thought that in an R rated movie there would be a scene so wholesome
This scene was so peaceful yet absolutely saddening.
This song is incredible, for more than just this movie.
i felt like this was just a reliever for what i’d just watched, and then it got up to the climax
such a great movie
1:19 they are all kids omg
That’s war for you
Which means the cast is realistic.
It's called war, you feel it?
They always scream for their mothers.
Watch They Shall Not Grow Old. Many soldiers enlisted as 14 and 15 year olds.
Very cool to see this and something I wish war movies showed more. There are literally hundreds of thousands of examples of music in the military. Beautiful.
I can watch this scene a million times over. So dreary, yet so peaceful
This movie gave me hope that movies won't suck in the future.
I was half-baked late at night when I watched this, suddenly this scene pops up and I felt the same amount of relief these young boys probably had before the oncoming storm
genuinely beautiful.
Gives me goosbumps this scene. A beautiful balance of eeriness and peaceful assurance. Gifted cinematography.
This movie was beyond good. But this scene was something else. The singing and all those soldiers having a moment of peace and solitude before going back too the trenches and face possible death.
An amazing and eerie song to ease the men of the probable death they knew was just ahead... to reassure themselves they are passing from a warring world to heaven with their family in a short moment. Such a powerful and intense experience for anyone at that time and for any of us to look back on the fragility of life.
My Great Grandfather survived the last 18 months of that war, serving in the Canadian Army. Its why the Greenfields of France is a song that resonates in my soul. The War to End all Wars, is a testament to the hubris of humanity. I pray my son never has to serve in war, but I suspect he may very well follow in my footsteps, his great grandfather’s and great great grandfathers as well.
I’m going theeeeeere to see my fatherrrr 🎶
I'm going thereeeeee to no more roam 🎶
I’m only gooooooing over Jordan....I’m only goooooing over hooome 🎶
I am a pooooor wayfaring stranger 🎵
Saw this as soon as he sings it LOL
A truly beautiful scene. Really wish more movies were like this one.
Apparently Sam Mendes intended for Schofield to be thinking that he died and that he is among dead soldiers in the woods, he realized he was still alive when he found out where his objective was.
When I saw 1917 in theaters I was really impressed and this scene really put it over the edge and I think it’s one of the best war movies/films
Easily one of my favorite moments in cinematic history
Every
One
Of
These
Men
Has
Their
Own
Story
I genuinely thought he died for a second before delivering his message
That's very sad and haunting at the same time. World War I soldiers in this scene are just kids and teens. Hardly any of them looked like they were in their 20's or 30's. That's so depressing.
haven't even seen the movie and this scene still made me cry
No shame in that. You're only human.
Definitely watch it if u haven't already
@@ahahahah9079 I saw it recently. Cried again. Such a powerful scene and what an amazing film
I could feel, in my bones, the collective awe of everyone else around me when this scene came up in the theatre…
This scene before the big potential battle did a great job of making it seem all the more bigger and terrifying if it were to go on
I think the coolest part of the sounds design here is right after he sings, it sounds like people are clapping before you realize that’s actually just the sound of the soldiers standing up with all their gear on. It highlights just how unfair war is because that should have been sung on a stage to an audience who would applaud him, but war has turner the singer and their audience into soldiers.
Sometimes I will sit outside while smoking a cig and just sit there and remember my life while playing this song. I can picture my brothers standing and sitting around my table and non of them say a word. We just sit and listen
At a place similar to this where a huge number of Welsh men died in a small area during ww1 a visitor to the site during day time heard a voice behind him say "we're still here"' turned around there was nobody there....
The power of this scene is unmatched. Beauty and sadness.
I'm learning a song on my guitar and I recognized it. I was like wait a minute this sounds like the song from 1917. It's such a mournful song I'm glad to be learning this one in my lessons.
The most powerful scene in the movie and thats saying something all those lads .
What is really nice, Is that we are shown how everyone was so young and practically children. If Schofield wasn’t there all of them would be dead
This song has to have a story behind it and i want to know it
During the American civil war this song was often called the Libby prison hymn after a union soldier wrote these words on the wall of the Libby prison camp right before he died which makes it so much deeper now that you know that a young lad wrote this knowing his life was about to end.
I really like how these soldiers historical accurately look so young in their 20s and teens. Contrast to other movies, saving private ryan for an example, who would portray the soldiers looking like 30 or 40 year olds
My high school history teacher hammered it into us students that many of the soldiers fighting in the Great War were no older than we were. But it wasn’t until I saw this scene that what he said really sank in for me. Just the thought of kids the same age as my oldest nephew killing each other brings a tear to my eye.
When you get lost on the field trip and some class from another school pick you up
I really love this music im listening to eat all day since i first hear it.
Lowkey made me cry
This scene brought tears to my eyes :(
Everyone in my class is doing ww2 while I’m doing ww1
This is the saddest scene 😭
Reminds you of the last scene in "Paths of Glory".
10 year old me thinking what i look like walking into a assembly at school.
Don’t make memes and jokes from the pain and death of millions. Plz, put yourself in they’re shoes for just a second and know try to understand the amount of pain they went through.
This is forever my favorite movie. Change my mind.
I don’t have to
Stop spamming the same comment in every video fuckface
My Cousin Vinny
Planes, Trains and Automobiles
so pure and beautiful.
Love this part.there facing death and one of the lads is singing to calm them down.
I kinda teared up here
This scene wasn't much of a break for me because I thought he died before he could deliver the message
when i first watched this idk if the soldiers there were dead, either ghostified, or real but when he finished singing they started clapping and it fr scared me
this was such a weird scene, he gets away from the Germans by jumping into a river only to find friendlys just down this stream
Well that's how close enemies were to eachother.
May be one of the best scenes in cinema history
This breaks me
seeing you all in 5 years, until then take care😘
This movie was perfection
This reminds me of the tracker, a solid singer with a wicked song such as this
That was beautifully sung, but it must have been unbearably sad for the men in the audience, who were probably already feeling hopeless.
Pippin! Go back to Middle-Earth! You're supposed to be at Gondor singing while Faramir's getting killed!
The year is 1918, the Great War is done.
In the tavern, many a man and many a woman, celebrate the victory.
Men gather 'round with joy and cheer, and drinks a run,
As the women gossip and prattle, most of long story,
And children laugh and play out in evening air.
The townspeople are joyous and fair and light of heart.
But one does not take part in the affair,
A young woman, though old for her thirty-three years, sits apart,
Silently sitting away in the darkened corner,
The woman gazing longingly in a photo, as tears silently strike wood.
The loving faces of her husband and three sons stare back at her.
Her husband died in the Somme, her youngest at Belleau Wood,
The oldest fell in the Siege of Antwerp, and middle fell in the retreat from Le Cateau.
So let us mourn the husbands and let us mourn the sons, as they shall celebrate no more.
this scene is very sad , sorry to all those people that didn't make it home. by they way the song hes singing is johnny cash, just thought Id let you know
The earliest known year this song was published was in 1858, but no one knows who wrote it.
oh I didn't know. know that I think about it is dose make more sense. I mean how did the know about the song in the first place right.
What a powerful scene
RW:its a relief when you reunite with other familiar faces.😔
hard to imagine that these things happend over a hundred years ago. Crazy to think honestly.
2:14
I've always imagined there's a version of this movie where it ends here
we just have the move in on him and he's actually died and that's just the end of the movie