I believe they're Swedish M1894 Mauser carbines (according to IMFDB). Still incorrect, but they were probably trying to go for K88 carbines which the Germans were issuing to certain troops at the time.
For those curious, it would appear the German troops in this scene were using Gewehr 1888 rifles and carbines, not Enfields, which would be correct for this time period. The Gew 98 rifle was still ramping up in production at this point, priority would have been given to rearming troops in Germany, ahead of those on foreign or colonial service.
@@soontir_fel1816 judging by how the artillery is designed and the placement of the straps on the officers shoulder and belt i think the scene is reveresed
The name of the movie is the wind and the lion. I believe the year is 1905 when Teddy Roosevelt was president and the setting is morocco where there actually was a crisis between Germany versus England and France.
This supposedly is based on the Pedicaris Affair from 1904, which predates Kaiser Wilhelm's arrival in Morocco by about half a year. It was the kidnapping of a Greek-American business man and his British relative. In 1905 the British and French entered into the Entente Cordial, in which they agreed to split North Africa in two spheres of influence. The Kaiser sought to drive a wedge between them by arriving in Tangiers and announcing his intention of holding talks with the Sultan directly.
@@jdrancho1864 What is not well known is Pedicaris claimed he taken Greek citizenship and was later released. He never formally renounced his U.S. citizenship nor had he claimed a Greek passport. The film incorrectly portrays he died previously and his wife and children were taken hostage. It also incorrectly shows U.S. Marines fighting German troops. They were never present in Morocco at the time.
@@AngryMarine-il6ej Yes, a misconception that is wide-spread. I find myself having to correct people about this point nearly every day, every time we have this conversation
One of the later scenes looks like the cannon was using a flechette round at close range against the mounted men. The later scene of two guns dueling at close range was crazy.
@@PsihoKekec I am a Marine gunner from the late Cold War. We only had them for the 105mm howitzer and I never saw one. Flachette rounds were not available for my 155mm M198 howitzer, I think they didn't make them for separate loading ammo. Cannister shot was for muzzle loading cannon, they were used up to the end of the American Civil War, not sure after.
@@PsihoKekec Yeah, but canister spread in a cone, not a line, and that shot was way to close for any kind of spread, especially from shrapnel, which was the nati-personal artillery round of the day was dispersed via a burster charge and time fuse which would have required even more distance.
@@gotarmadillo you can see them struggling with the gun and way more manning Barber it then that Germans and still the Germans were getting more shots off then Barber but Idk since this scene was edited
good effects but the germans would have actually made their positions next to impossible to penetrate with a cav charge, they might have created false openings though but only when expecting this
@@starkiler13 Having only 1,800 soldiers and being unprepared without any assault weapons and the Zulu still lost the exact same number of the British?
Berbers are not Arabs, they're a different group of populations from northern Africa, they're not from the Arabian peninsula. They call themselves "amazigh" and have their own language and culture.
The skinny German officer with the Broomhandle Mauser looks like the officer in ‘A fistful of dynamite.’ He was a French actor called ‘Antoine St. John.’ Is this film called ‘The Wind and the Lion?’ If so, he was part of the cast.
A good Phantasie film, German troops never fight berber, not even fight in North Afrika before 1941. The french were fighting the Sultan, but Americans fighting French would be not p.c.
@@jonathanwilliams1065 yes and no " The Panthersprung nach Agadir, " but it was only an very old small cannonboat, crew ( ~ 130 men) ,sailing to Agadir. The french ( thats why the french would fit in the movie ) were fighting the old Sultan / the berber, to get Marocco, and the german want a small piece of the cake. No Landing, no fighting, from the german side only some Diplomatie scrabble. Simply, the movie Twisted the history for p.c.
@@donald8066 In fact the Kaiser wanted to get the whole of Morocco under his protection and it was solved between France and Germany by an exchange of other African land, I think in Togo or Cameroon.
That's a pretty good scene. The infantry and artillery are basically surprised byt material superiority tells and they kill a lot of horsemen, some of which expectedly manage to get in. I particularly liked the artillery, specially the not so often depicted detail of canister shot, which does exist for modern guns.
@@jonathanwilliams1065 yeah it was funny as hell, they snuck a single guy into the country who had to hoof it miles and miles so that he could 'request help' to defend the 'german interests' in the country represented solely by him. actually i might be mixing up the first moroccan crisis and the agadir crisis, but in any case the agadir crisis was funny as hell
@@anasousa9488 The Maxim Machine gun had been used extensively by colonial armies since being in service in 1886 That being said, this fictional battle did not include them
I believe it was the movie "The Charge of the Light Brigade" that caused the change of how horses were made to fall in scenes like this. It came out that a large number of horses had been killed after breaking their legs on trip wires and such. There was such a public backlash, studios had to come up with humane ways of simulating cavalry charges. This movie came out in 1975. I don't know if this was before or after Light Brigade. Seems to me it was close enough in time that the horses here shared the same fate as the horses there.
The French 7.5cm 1897 gun was firing even faster than the German 7,7cm 1896 gun. Second the gun in the movies used 1 piece ammo like the French 75mm. The Germans used 2-piece ammo for the 7,7cm gun.
I would only change two things in this sequence. 1, the berbers have a few small weak horse-drawn mortars, and 2, the germans use their only maxim briefly during the courtyard charge sequence.
Henry Fonda was in a movie that for Fritz Lang directed, I think it was the return of Frank James. He said that lang insisted on horses galloping up hills, and it actually killed them. He became very angry with the Director.
Worst movie for animal welfare was the original "Charge of the light brigade" which killed more horses with trip wires than any picture ever. I think it was during this film that Flynn beat up a stunt rider for abusing a horse.
@@josephshields2922 Flynn beat up a stunt man for playing pranks on him. But he did complain bitterly about the treatment of the horses in COTLB and even wrote a letter to the SPCA requesting that they do something about it - which they did.
At the risk of being a details loonie, I think those rifles are 1894 Swedish Mauser carbines and I doubt would have been in service with the German army at that time. Maybe some other details fanatic out there might correct me on this?
Well they managed to get Krag Jorgensen rifles and even Colt machine guns for the US Marines, so maybe they just couldn't find enough of the German rifles.
@@Dave-sy3rgif you want to be pedantic, complain rather about the fact the german army never had boots on the ground during the morroco crisis, only ships off-shore. I don't expect films to get every technical detail or small facts right but as long as it isn't marketed as completely fictional the basic historical facts should be correct, at least. Edit: mixed up first and second morocco crisis, the ships off-shore was during the second, during the first morocco crisis the kaiser visited morocco which upset the french, but no combat between german troops and berber tribesmen happened
How does the range of the shells change without any adjustment from the gunners. When there is a charge there come a distance where the artillery is out of range. It called “ under the guns”. If you want see an example check out the charge in the Australian movie “The Lighthorseman”
Usually German officers learn to safeguard prepare their positions when resting. This is a key in the officiers training till today.This is perhaps the first job. before taking food and other more recreative things. They would not put their guns out of the fortified village but in good positions within.
Up until a certain time, horses were often rigged with Trip-Wires, resulting in spectacular falls. And, YES, both men and horses were hurt and killed. Somewhere around the mid-60s, certain Humane Societies took legal action to stop that nonsense. Now, its rare to NOT see a notice in the Credits that "Animals were supervised by Humane Society of the U. S." or "No animals were harmed in this production," and variations on this theme. Oddly enuff, there ARE Stunt horses who do simple falls. One of the most Obvious is in BLAZING SADDLES: When Mongo comes to town, one of the townsmen complains "You can't park there (equivalent). Mongo hauls off and seems to hit the man's horse with a hay-maker Right, and the horse goes down like a sack of rocks. What happens is: the actor pulls back on the right-side Rein, pulling the horse's head around, and that's the signal for Horse to take his fall. Nowadays, there are a lot of Fake horses, robot horses and computer-generated horses--and their Riders; so Nobody gets hurt much.
@@GDI_CrimsoN As long as it's through choices. People should be free to make bad bets so long as they are not negligent with the lives of others--that's the necessary flip side of being free to make bets at all, and life is all bets.
@@GDI_CrimsoN Reality for humans is more than just the tree in front of you (or the grass), it's the ability to know there's a forest and more--that is the key to life for us.
@@Revitalization4241 The Germans in Monte Cassino were defeated by massive Allied air and material superiority, but here too they resisted for a very long time, despite this superiority.
This remains an epic movie albeit is fictional. Even the scene with the marines and navy shore quote sailors attacking the sultan palace is unique in its genre, with the ambassador saluting the the troops with the gun behind the back. And the sultan that says to the Captain: You're a dangerous man!
The movie is based on the Perdicaris Affair, when the US exerted military pressure on Morocco because Ion Perdicaris had been kidnapped by moroccon tribesmen. The rest is phantasy made in Hollywood. Germany was not involved in this affair. Instead of Ion Perdicaris a woman was kidnapped in the movie. The German as baddies and a pretty woman as victim is a better recipe for making a successful movie than historical facts. The German uniforms shown did not exist at that time. The officer with the Mauser pistol is wearing „field grey“. The field grey uniform was introduced in 1907-10.
@@ludwigneigl891 Germany was one thing but the Austria too. Far as i can see those wasnt German Cavalry Uniform it more like Austria Hussar. Their Blue jacker and Shako give away.
@@ludwigneigl891 Yeah that an austrian hussar at best considering there is no way the French is working with the German. Plus the French hussar head gear was not the shako. Only the Austria still using that. Also i can see some what a double eagle head emblem on it
@@HoangNguyen-rw6wfnever say never. it allways depent on situation. in europe the french and german would usually fight each other. not necessarily in other parts of the world. you know the boxer rebellion in china? Also this is a ficitional event in the first place. So every thing is possible.
That non-recoiling artillery thing again. It was the only non-great thing in Barry Lyndon as well. Not like Stan K. to miss a detail. (He had roundshot setting a house on fire too.)
I remember watching this movie, I liked it but I find funny that a movie that has nothing to do with the Germans still make them as the usual "villains".
Im moroccan, but i fucking love Mausers the carbines and the broomhandle c96 are instant classics. The germans got amazing armourment no shot the maghrebian forces were a match, only the sheer bravery and devotion made them tough opponents.
*_These tribes are not ЬегЬег nor amazigh...these events have happened in top north of Morocco , Tangier's zone , this rebellion was leaded by "Moulay Ahmed Raisouni" , These tribes are arab descendants , they called "Jbalah" , they still exist till today in Tangier , Tetuan , Ceuta zоne..they speak only arabic and never amazigh wich is spoken in north east and other areas of Morocco.._*
Lots of small-fry stuff to nitpick here of course, but it all pales in comparison to this: why the hell are there Austrian hussars fighting with the Germans?
Me and an Arab friend of mine have very intense debates about the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict. This is probably what our battles would look like if they were played out in real life.
I really enjoyed this movie, more because of Brian Keith's portrayal of Teddy Roosevelt. Interestingly Milius did make one significant change in the historical facts and it pretty much saved the movie. Perdicarus in the movie is the widow of Ion Perdicaris. Good move...sexual tension, able to put an attractive female (Candace Bergen) and two cute children in the lead. However, in real life, although Perdicarus was married and had a wife (Ellen) and two children, it was the 64 year old husband who was kidnapped along with a male British subject, not his "not widow" or his children. He was later released and did indicate his admiration for his kidnapper. Old bearded man hostage, not as romantic as feisty younger female and children.
Note the surprising number of left-handed Mauser rifles in use. Very open minded of the German Army to be so accommodating to their more "sinister" soldiers... :)
How are they Berbers when they speak Hilali Arabic? If this was in Casablanca they are Arabs, if it was Ifni or Agadir they really messed up on how to portray the Berbers
funny how some of the germans have lee enfields instead of mausers.
Think they tried making them look like Karabiner 88
I believe they're Swedish M1894 Mauser carbines (according to IMFDB). Still incorrect, but they were probably trying to go for K88 carbines which the Germans were issuing to certain troops at the time.
I thought that, too but a freeze-frame and closer look shows that they aren't.
There are Americans playing Germans in Combat, and Germans tanks are actually M-4’s and M-41s. Surprise.
@@tonymanero5544 Such as in movie, The Battle Of The Bulge - American tanks with German crews.
Lean/Lease taken to a whole new level...
For those curious, it would appear the German troops in this scene were using Gewehr 1888 rifles and carbines, not Enfields, which would be correct for this time period. The Gew 98 rifle was still ramping up in production at this point, priority would have been given to rearming troops in Germany, ahead of those on foreign or colonial service.
where did you go to school to learn this?
i wonder why they are actioning the bolt on the left side and not the right side
@@soontir_fel1816 judging by how the artillery is designed and the placement of the straps on the officers shoulder and belt i think the scene is reveresed
Enfields? When did the Germans ever use enfields?
Perfectly true observation.
I also caught the Germans were using carbines of the era.
The name of the movie is the wind and the lion. I believe the year is 1905 when Teddy Roosevelt was president and the setting is morocco where there actually was a crisis between Germany versus England and France.
This supposedly is based on the Pedicaris Affair from 1904, which predates Kaiser Wilhelm's arrival in Morocco by about half a year. It was the kidnapping of a Greek-American business man and his British relative.
In 1905 the British and French entered into the Entente Cordial, in which they agreed to split North Africa in two spheres of influence. The Kaiser sought to drive a wedge between them by arriving in Tangiers and announcing his intention of holding talks with the Sultan directly.
@@jdrancho1864 What is not well known is Pedicaris claimed he taken Greek citizenship and was later released. He never formally renounced his U.S. citizenship nor had he claimed a Greek passport. The film incorrectly portrays he died previously and his wife and children were taken hostage. It also incorrectly shows U.S. Marines fighting German troops. They were never present in Morocco at the time.
@@AngryMarine-il6ej Yes, a misconception that is wide-spread.
I find myself having to correct people about this point nearly every day, every time we have this conversation
You mean Britain and France , England as an independent international entity had ceased to exist at least 200 years prior to this date .
That right , magnificent movie , never forget the role of the great Sean Connery as the rebel *_Al Raisuli.._*
Never see imperial german army vs tribesman movies before
Usually it's the French Foreign Legionnaires against the Berber tribesmen.
Becouse they never fought them.
Its a movie called the wind and the lion,sean connery plays a bberner chief with a scottish accent.
Hollywood 😂
Someone has to play the bad idiots= Germans ( pretty rare in Hollywood movies) 😊
The teacher: (leaves for 1 minute)
The classroom: ...
One of the later scenes looks like the cannon was using a flechette round at close range against the mounted men. The later scene of two guns dueling at close range was crazy.
It's canister round, also considered an artilleryman's life jacket, back in the day of direct fire.
@@PsihoKekec I am a Marine gunner from the late Cold War. We only had them for the 105mm howitzer and I never saw one. Flachette rounds were not available for my 155mm M198 howitzer, I think they didn't make them for separate loading ammo. Cannister shot was for muzzle loading cannon, they were used up to the end of the American Civil War, not sure after.
Yeah, where the Berbers might ever have learned to operate a European cannon is questionable enough let alone both missing each other at that range.
@@PsihoKekec Yeah, but canister spread in a cone, not a line, and that shot was way to close for any kind of spread, especially from shrapnel, which was the nati-personal artillery round of the day was dispersed via a burster charge and time fuse which would have required even more distance.
@@gotarmadillo you can see them struggling with the gun and way more manning Barber it then that Germans and still the Germans were getting more shots off then Barber but Idk since this scene was edited
good effects
but the germans would have actually made their positions next to impossible to penetrate with a cav charge, they might have created false openings though but only when expecting this
*TRIES MAKING OUTDATED WARRIORS POWERFUL IN MOVIES*
D@@AbrahamCasillas-t3oyeah tell that to the british in isandwana
@@starkiler13 What is that?
@@AbrahamCasillas-t3o It's one of the notable battles of the Anglo-Zulu War.
@@starkiler13 Having only 1,800 soldiers and being unprepared without any assault weapons and the Zulu still lost the exact same number of the British?
Good field guns, but Where TF are the Maxims? And how did the arabs suddenly became master gunners?
Hollywood 😂
Berbers are not Arabs, they're a different group of populations from northern Africa, they're not from the Arabian peninsula. They call themselves "amazigh" and have their own language and culture.
@@pedrocacela1885I stand corrected
@@pedrocacela1885 blah, blah, blah, whatever.
Answer the question!
Because good guys need to win somehow... Napoleonic guns used cannister fire but apparently Germans in 1904. never heard of it...
Such a great film. Such a wealth of acting and just all round adventurous fun to watch.
where can I see the movie ?
@@jagfromano hurawatch site
I saw it on theflixer@@jagfromano
One of my favorite John Milius movies
I love the Lion and The Wind. Couldn't make this film today.
The skinny German officer with the Broomhandle Mauser looks like the officer in ‘A fistful of dynamite.’ He was a French actor called ‘Antoine St. John.’ Is this film called ‘The Wind and the Lion?’ If so, he was part of the cast.
Was also in the beyond as the evil necromancer.
Yes Wind And The Lion.
A good Phantasie film, German troops never fight berber, not even fight in North Afrika before 1941.
The french were fighting the Sultan, but Americans fighting French would be not p.c.
That’s not entirely true
The Germans did cause an incident in Morocco just prior to it becoming a French protectorate
@@jonathanwilliams1065 yes and no " The Panthersprung nach Agadir, " but it was only an very old small cannonboat, crew ( ~ 130 men) ,sailing to Agadir.
The french ( thats why the french would fit in the movie ) were fighting the old Sultan / the berber, to get Marocco, and the german want a small piece of the cake.
No Landing, no fighting, from the german side only some Diplomatie scrabble.
Simply, the movie Twisted the history for p.c.
@@donald8066 In fact the Kaiser wanted to get the whole of Morocco under his protection and it was solved between France and Germany by an exchange of other African land, I think in Togo or Cameroon.
@@wolfgangpagel6989 Yes, but there was not a single german Soldier in Marocco at this time, the french fight the Sultan.
@@donald8066 True. And the Spanish too.
That's a pretty good scene. The infantry and artillery are basically surprised byt material superiority tells and they kill a lot of horsemen, some of which expectedly manage to get in. I particularly liked the artillery, specially the not so often depicted detail of canister shot, which does exist for modern guns.
What are Germans doing fighting Berbers? That’s like saying the Persians invaded Greenland to find Bigfoot
The first Moroccan crisis look it up
European countries have been invading Africa for ages now, even Asian countries too
To interfere between French and British influence in North Africa.
If Moroco wasn't in French influence, it was in German influence. An international crisis happened in 1911.
I believe that was plan, before Battle of Salamis happened
Never thought the only movie scene I know of Reichswehr vs Berber would also contain the most insane artillery duel ever
German empire attack Baber tribes but In history Morocco it a French colonies and Germany not invasion of Morocco.
French and spanish
@@DCDVassilitrue
@@DCDVassiliOK. French invasion the south spanish in north
There was a diplomatic crisis in Morocco at this tune involving Germany though
@@jonathanwilliams1065 yeah it was funny as hell, they snuck a single guy into the country who had to hoof it miles and miles so that he could 'request help' to defend the 'german interests' in the country represented solely by him. actually i might be mixing up the first moroccan crisis and the agadir crisis, but in any case the agadir crisis was funny as hell
No machineguns?
I wonder how many horses ended up with broken legs, and how many extras were injured, or worse?
The horses were well trained for that
And in 1904, the machineguns were not widely used...field guns were more fiable and efective
@@anasousa9488 The Maxim Machine gun had been used extensively by colonial armies since being in service in 1886
That being said, this fictional battle did not include them
I believe it was the movie "The Charge of the Light Brigade" that caused the change of how horses were made to fall in scenes like this. It came out that a large number of horses had been killed after breaking their legs on trip wires and such. There was such a public backlash, studios had to come up with humane ways of simulating cavalry charges.
This movie came out in 1975. I don't know if this was before or after Light Brigade. Seems to me it was close enough in time that the horses here shared the same fate as the horses there.
@@jdrancho1864 That is what I was thinking.
That cannon fires so fast must be German engineering.
The French 7.5cm 1897 gun was firing even faster than the German 7,7cm 1896 gun. Second the gun in the movies used 1 piece ammo like the French 75mm. The Germans used 2-piece ammo for the 7,7cm gun.
Where are the Maxims?
This is the best CGI i've seen in a long time..
Done in 1975, before CGI existed.
Odd how some of the film was inverted - bolts on the wrong side of the SMLEs and the numbers on the guns were mirrored…
I would only change two things in this sequence. 1, the berbers have a few small weak horse-drawn mortars, and 2, the germans use their only maxim briefly during the courtyard charge sequence.
This is from The Wind and the Lion with Sean Connery
Henry Fonda was in a movie that for Fritz Lang directed, I think it was the return of Frank James. He said that lang insisted on horses galloping up hills, and it actually killed them. He became very angry with the Director.
Worst movie for animal welfare was the original "Charge of the light brigade" which killed more horses with trip wires than any picture ever. I think it was during this film that Flynn beat up a stunt rider for abusing a horse.
@@josephshields2922 Flynn beat up a stunt man for playing pranks on him. But he did complain bitterly about the treatment of the horses in COTLB and even wrote a letter to the SPCA requesting that they do something about it - which they did.
This movie is a guilty pleasure of mine since childhood.
What makes this movie great is that the director did not deviate from the book much. I recommend the book highly.
Been years since I've seen this. Nice to be reminded what a spectacular movie it was.
It's like a video reminiscent of the battle between Katsuyori Takeda and Nobunaga Oda's gun squad during the Battle of Nagashino.
At the risk of being a details loonie, I think those rifles are 1894 Swedish Mauser carbines and I doubt would have been in service with the German army at that time. Maybe some other details fanatic out there might correct me on this?
Well they managed to get Krag Jorgensen rifles and even Colt machine guns for the US Marines, so maybe they just couldn't find enough of the German rifles.
@@Dave-sy3rgif you want to be pedantic, complain rather about the fact the german army never had boots on the ground during the morroco crisis, only ships off-shore. I don't expect films to get every technical detail or small facts right but as long as it isn't marketed as completely fictional the basic historical facts should be correct, at least. Edit: mixed up first and second morocco crisis, the ships off-shore was during the second, during the first morocco crisis the kaiser visited morocco which upset the french, but no combat between german troops and berber tribesmen happened
@@Dave-sy3rgThey filmed in Spain, so there were *a lot* of German Rifles around
This is a very good movie to watch on a cold rainy day. It called the Wind and the Lion.
Where are Maxim machine guns ?
Probably in Russia.
Whatmovie is that??
The Wind and the Lion
Spiderman vs Germans 😀
What model of artillery is that?
Artillery that can kill
model 1896? I don't know
@@dolsopolar did the 7.7 cm FK 96 n.A have shield protection in 1904?
How does the range of the shells change without any adjustment from the gunners. When there is a charge there come a distance where the artillery is out of range. It called “ under the guns”. If you want see an example check out the charge in the Australian movie “The Lighthorseman”
What is the name of this movie? 😅
The wind and the lion, 1975
Why is everyone with a rifle or pistol shooting left handed?
My thoughts exactly
The scenes are mirrored, hence the mirrored numbers on the field guns.
¿Cuál es el nombre de la pelicula, si podrían decirme?
The wind and the lion. En Español, traduccion literal es El viento y el leon.
Muchas gracias!
Usually German officers learn to safeguard prepare their positions when resting. This is a key in the officiers training till today.This is perhaps the first job. before taking food and other more recreative things. They would not put their guns out of the fortified village but in good positions within.
Depiction of German troops in Hollywood movies is a certain issue....
did they really hurt horses and men so bad back in the old movies, or every man and beast is trained to do that fall?
thanks!
Id say that horse that really went flying by the artillery shell was hurt. Not a real shell obviously, but that horse was thrown badly there.
Up until a certain time, horses were often rigged with Trip-Wires, resulting in spectacular falls. And, YES, both men and horses were hurt and killed. Somewhere around the mid-60s, certain Humane Societies took legal action to stop that nonsense. Now, its rare to NOT see a notice in the Credits that "Animals were supervised by Humane Society of the U. S." or "No animals were harmed in this production," and variations on this theme.
Oddly enuff, there ARE Stunt horses who do simple falls. One of the most Obvious is in BLAZING SADDLES: When Mongo comes to town, one of the townsmen complains "You can't park there (equivalent). Mongo hauls off and seems to hit the man's horse with a hay-maker Right, and the horse goes down like a sack of rocks. What happens is: the actor pulls back on the right-side Rein, pulling the horse's head around, and that's the signal for Horse to take his fall.
Nowadays, there are a lot of Fake horses, robot horses and computer-generated horses--and their Riders; so Nobody gets hurt much.
Everyone was trained, but yes injuries to humans and animals could occur just as in stunt work now.
I wonder how many stunts men got hurt this movie. Falling from the horses and horses falling on top of them. Crazy!!
What a weird protected existence you all lead now. That kind of thing was the norm for film making for most of the 20th century.
@@AndSendMe People not needing to get injured for stunts is a good thing...
@@GDI_CrimsoN As long as it's through choices. People should be free to make bad bets so long as they are not negligent with the lives of others--that's the necessary flip side of being free to make bets at all, and life is all bets.
@@AndSendMe lmao okay. Sounds like you need to touch grass because you're not living in reality.
@@GDI_CrimsoN Reality for humans is more than just the tree in front of you (or the grass), it's the ability to know there's a forest and more--that is the key to life for us.
Where are the machineguns tho?
The Wind and The Lion. A great movie, one of my favorites.
What is this film? Say, please.
The wind and the lion, 1975
What movie is this from please?
The Wind and the Lion- trust me not to read the notes!
Witch one?
Aside from the Enfields, isn't that a French 75. Correct me if I'm wrong.
The French 75mm used 1-piece ammo like in the movie. Thus it is likely.
wie heißt der Film?
The Berber would´t had any chance against Imperial German infantry in reality.
That's what the French also thought
@@maassrddd The French were no match for the German Army too 😄
@@davidk.5343Berber Goumiers defeated the Germans in Monte Cassino
@@Revitalization4241 The Germans in Monte Cassino were defeated by massive Allied air and material superiority, but here too they resisted for a very long time, despite this superiority.
Movie "name ? Thx.
The wind and the lion
This remains an epic movie albeit is fictional. Even the scene with the marines and navy shore quote sailors attacking the sultan palace is unique in its genre, with the ambassador saluting the the troops with the gun behind the back. And the sultan that says to the Captain: You're a dangerous man!
Что за фильм ?
What movie is this, and where can one find it
The Wind and the Lion...
Why TF do these guys always charge in broad daylight?
what movie is this?
It says in the description.
The movie is based on the Perdicaris Affair, when the US exerted military pressure on Morocco because Ion Perdicaris had been kidnapped by moroccon tribesmen. The rest is phantasy made in Hollywood. Germany was not involved in this affair. Instead of Ion Perdicaris a woman was kidnapped in the movie. The German as baddies and a pretty woman as victim is a better recipe for making a successful movie than historical facts. The German uniforms shown did not exist at that time. The officer with the Mauser pistol is wearing „field grey“. The field grey uniform was introduced in 1907-10.
Chi vinse?
Giờ mới biết Morocco là thuộc địa của Đế quốc Đức chứ không phải của Thực dân Pháp hay Đế chế Anh.
What movie ?
The Wind and the Lion.
This is the most convicning artillery i've seen in a movie before
Name of Movie?
The Wind and the Lion.
??? Inverse: the reality: it was french troops, no germans !!!
they are trooper send by kaser to sultan , in this film german fight against rebls , thet befor the french occupation
Ok. Thank you . Sakha.@@mustafaaithamou5938
before 1911, maybe.
The wind and the lion?
Love that movie!
What a fantastic movie...
What movie is that? Nice battle scene
Read the description.
Name of the movie
The wind and the lion, 1975
@@Eragon2679 Thnk u
When was Imperial Germany fighting in North Africa?
its fictional. based on an event that iclude americans and to a lesser degree british, french and spanish but no germans.^^
@@ludwigneigl891 Germany was one thing but the Austria too. Far as i can see those wasnt German Cavalry Uniform it more like Austria Hussar. Their Blue jacker and Shako give away.
@@HoangNguyen-rw6wf Oh wow, you may be right. I thought of them as french. but they do look indeed more like austro-hungarian uhlans or hussars.
@@ludwigneigl891 Yeah that an austrian hussar at best considering there is no way the French is working with the German.
Plus the French hussar head gear was not the shako. Only the Austria still using that. Also i can see some what a double eagle head emblem on it
@@HoangNguyen-rw6wfnever say never. it allways depent on situation. in europe the french and german would usually fight each other. not necessarily in other parts of the world. you know the boxer rebellion in china? Also this is a ficitional event in the first place. So every thing is possible.
Movie name?
The wind and the lion, 1975
Absolute swill of a film where the Germans once again are the bad guys. What a tired, worn-out cliche by now!
Have you heard of something called ‘German history’?
Even then it became worn out
I have teached german history and he is right@@duolingo0552
@@duolingo0552why are the yankees never the bad guys,i mean ...history.
They make most of the movies...@@sergeantsalty1236
2:10 Love that C-93 or whatever that pistol is called.
Aus welchem Film sind die Szenen?
Der Wind und der Löwe, 1975
That non-recoiling artillery thing again. It was the only non-great thing in Barry Lyndon as well. Not like Stan K. to miss a detail. (He had roundshot setting a house on fire too.)
Looks very grounded and realistic whilst still being a spectacle
Many older films are better
I remember watching this movie, I liked it but I find funny that a movie that has nothing to do with the Germans still make them as the usual "villains".
Im moroccan, but i fucking love Mausers the carbines and the broomhandle c96 are instant classics. The germans got amazing armourment no shot the maghrebian forces were a match, only the sheer bravery and devotion made them tough opponents.
Đế quốc Đức từng đánh Morocco hả. Giờ mới biết
حصلت هذا قبل الاستعمار الفرنسي حيث ارسل قيصر المانيا بعض قواته الي المغرب لاثبات استقلاله ، لكن القبائل المتمردة ضد السلطان هاجمت القوات الالمانية
moroco was spanish wasn't it ?
And french.
Everyone appears to be left handed.
2:23 Must be a proto-tank battle
*非常精彩的电影🎦。❤️*
Wow, C-96 with a Dirty Harry sound effect! 2:01
why German soldiers in the French colony ?
Were Germans all left handed then ?
*_These tribes are not ЬегЬег nor amazigh...these events have happened in top north of Morocco , Tangier's zone , this rebellion was leaded by "Moulay Ahmed Raisouni" , These tribes are arab descendants , they called "Jbalah" , they still exist till today in Tangier , Tetuan , Ceuta zоne..they speak only arabic and never amazigh wich is spoken in north east and other areas of Morocco.._*
Jballa is more regional place than ethnics there is amazigh and Andalusien to
What this clip doesn't show are the U.S. Marines inside the town already fighting the Germans. Great film.
Germans with Lee Enfields ?
Absolutely No Horses were injured or killed in the making of this movie....We think..😮😮😮
Lots of small-fry stuff to nitpick here of course, but it all pales in comparison to this: why the hell are there Austrian hussars fighting with the Germans?
They were hanging out casually in the dream fever of an english git who wrote this absymal massacre of history
Me and an Arab friend of mine have very intense debates about the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict. This is probably what our battles would look like if they were played out in real life.
This era of movies was good
🇩🇪💪🏼
Deutschland Uber alles
They lost 😂
@@maassrdddthe french lost, Germany did not fight the peopel of marocco.
@@marius-arnoldpeper9228 they may have campained in Northe africa against western powers but not against other nations yes
@@maassrddd You attack with horses, 😂😂 Very ቴህ ቶክ አስተያየቱን እንዳያነሳ እጠይቃለሁ ምክንያቱም የማ ቴህ ቶ weak
I really enjoyed this movie, more because of Brian Keith's portrayal of Teddy Roosevelt. Interestingly Milius did make one significant change in the historical facts and it pretty much saved the movie. Perdicarus in the movie is the widow of Ion Perdicaris. Good move...sexual tension, able to put an attractive female (Candace Bergen) and two cute children in the lead. However, in real life, although Perdicarus was married and had a wife (Ellen) and two children, it was the 64 year old husband who was kidnapped along with a male British subject, not his "not widow" or his children. He was later released and did indicate his admiration for his kidnapper. Old bearded man hostage, not as romantic as feisty younger female and children.
Note the surprising number of left-handed Mauser rifles in use. Very open minded of the German Army to be so accommodating to their more "sinister" soldiers... :)
One of my favourite movies
What is the name please ?
The wind and the lion
@@rickyj5547 Thank you
How are they Berbers when they speak Hilali Arabic?
If this was in Casablanca they are Arabs, if it was Ifni or Agadir they really messed up on how to portray the Berbers
I'm not even sure who to root for, I'm a muslin but I'm also a kaiserboo
*Muslim
When Americans, Brits and the French aren't sure if they're supposed to be cheering for the Arabs or the Germans? 🤣
No recoil on the field guns…
where german machine gun ?
0:23 Gunter Reza apparition