As a resident of the Olympic Peninsula town in which Joe Rantz was abandoned (Sequim, Washington), I am aware of yet another positive outcome of his story: the Joe Rantz Rotary Youth Fund which will provide the means to build a home for Sequim's homeless teens and give them the tools for finishing school and moving on to a productive life.
I didn't know about Joe Rantz which I was living close by... Knowing the beautiful end of his story and how he is still helping others will gives Sequim an even more tender place in my heart.
I saw the movie tonight, with friends, and we were on the edge of our seats. That was with knowing how it would end. It was a very well done movie, I just ordered the book and I can’t wait to read it.
I watched the movie last night. This movie is something that has challenged me so deeply about my own life. I see these men work hard and build inseperable bonds with each other. It makes me wish i was born in the time before technology made everything so shallow. They overcame so much in each of their lives, and they are heroic figures. Ultimately, this movie makes me want to build connections that are just as strong as these men had.
This interviewer Angie W. is outstanding!!! Her excitement for the story, her intelligent questions, her care for the protagonists and the process, her sensitivity to carry through a conversation that flows and is filled with new content we’re enriched by… WOW what a breath of fresh air in an ocean of subpar journalism content. Truly talented, and I assume so is the rest of the production team. Good job! I FELT and enjoyed more the story in this interview than in the movie!!
READ the book! The movie (and more than most book-into-movie trys) could not possibly capture the rich and sweeping emotional fullness of the book. Of course must by necessity be left out, but VERY Unfortunately, the storyline changes (the soul-pain of Joe's early family, the vital - NOT vapid/ silly - role of his girlfriend, the omitteed not-so-side 'summer jobs' of the boys (on the Grand Coulee Dam!....so much more left out of the movie, that makes the end story, understand where all that grit really came from, how deep the caves the boys each held, that they could go into during that race.
My husband and I just watched this film in our home theater. It is one of the best films I've seen in a while. I got a bit emotional too because my mother went to University of Washington from 1946-50 where she was the editor of the Daily. I could see her in so many of these scenes. Her parents were apple farmers. She just loved UW and it was touching to see a glimpse of what that time was like. She died in 2021. The way the author discovered this story is just amazing. It really shows us how time can fade away truly extraordinary events such as this. They are nearly forgotten. It is so special when they are captured and remembered. I so wish my mom was here to see this film. She would have loved it so. Everything was so first rate: the acting, the setting, the story, the directing, the music, and costumes. Bravo.
I have read the book and listened to the audio version of it several times. I still tear up at certain places particularly those places where Joe Rantz has to face the harsh reality of being left on his own. I have wondered if my own mother knew him: she certainly knew of him and his crewmates as she attended the UW from 1934 thru 1938 and told me many times how she and her friends would go down to the Montlake Cut to watch the class day races. She has been gone 13 years now so I will never know for sure... My own time at the UW gave me opportunity to learn and witness some of the traditions of Husky Crew. My fraternity roommate was a lightweight oarsman, and two other members were coxswains. There was (and still is, I'll bet) a tradition that when a man made the team, they would shave his head. My roomie had the most magnificent 'fro of which he was quite proud. When he told me the upperclassmen had told his year they would have the option of not getting the shave, he said the morning that he would find out if he made the team, that he would not. That afternoon when he came back to the house, he was as bald as a billiard ball.... As an idle question, was your Mom from E. Washington?
When I went to the University of Washington before this book was written, the victory in the 1936 Olympics was well known around the University and the community. As big a part of Huskyville as the B-17 is a part of Boeing.
I read the book and I was so impressed. One of the best books I ever read. I recommend this to my friends and they all love it. Thanks for writing this 9 boys’ story after so many years.
@@peterszilagyi9983 I agree. The movie was not as good as I expected. The book was highlighting well how the team became one , extraordinary one before the finish line to win the gold medal at Olympic. Also I enjoyed the bond between one of the team members and the boat builder. The old man explained how to pick the woods and shape them into boat. It was beautiful
My first reply may not reach you. I agree with you movie was not as good as I expected. The book depicted so well the team became one , extraordinary one before the finish line to win the gold medal at Olympic. Also I enjoyed the bonding between one member and the boat builder. The old man talked how to find the right woods and shape them into a boat. It was beautiful.
It’s unforgivable what Rantz had to through as a child being abandoned by his parents at a very young age but that prepared him to be the champion that he he was fated be. Damn. These boys will be remembered all through generations. ❤
About to watch the film. I'm so excited for this story. Daniel seemed dogged in his pursuit of giving the story justice. That's the mark of a great writer and historian. The way he researched the story, and captured the world at the time, reminded me so much of Seabiscuit. And I just have to acknowledge Angie Weidinger's method of interviewing. She was professional and asked the right questions, and her enthusiasm for the story was infectious. And I swear she could be Linda Carter's younger sister. Such a beautiful young woman. Thanks to Daniel for bringing this story back into the light. Every one should know it, especially now with the Olympics in Paris.
Mr. Brown, hats off to you sir. The Boys In The Boat is hands down one of my best reads ever. Especially all the breathtaking sentences that are like savoring a sweet, smooth candy in your mouth.
This is a great sport for learning 'deferred gratification'. Former crewmate of mine who won M8+ gold in '92 Olympics informed me that they did up to 19 workouts a week (3 a day M-F, 2 a day S-S). They had very little funding. He said that had his parents not been able to support him/pay his rent during that build up he'd have had to pull out.
It's called grit and guts. Let no obstacle or challenge defeat you! That Joe Rantz' parents abandoned him is heart-piercing. I cannot imagine abandoning a child.
@@keltus_warrior6491 during the Depression, a lot of children in the Oxford Orphanage (just outside Clarksville, VA) had parents who chose their children over their own happiness. With no food programs, with no social safety nets, the options were to watch your children starve to death....or give them up to ensure they would survive. It's a horrid choice, and was a huge driver for Roosevelt's Bill of Health Rights he attempted to pass (sadly, he passed away first), and the reason he was able to get so much support for the WWC, CCP, & other social programs.
@@Nothing-h6i It's unthinkable to abandon a child. We can't feed you so goodbye and good luck. Apparently, this was not uncommon during the Depression.
@@Lazy_Fish_Keeper Thank you so much for this information/background. As I read your comment, I reflected on how today it is estimated 3 MILLION children in U.S. go to be hungry every night. So much for "the greatest nation on earth".
Ms. Weidinger, I thoroughly enjoyed this interview and am glad you brought up the story that wasn't in the movie. The adversity that Joe Rantz faced and overcame as a child was my favorite part of the book! The background music was also very moving. Great job!
@@whoelseloveshistory First interview I've watched with author Daniel James Brown. It was engaging because your subject was relaxed, the location ideal, and I'm guessing he picked up quickly how thoroughly you had read his work. You provided space for him to speak and recollect, while probing some material that had particularly captivated or touched you as a reader. Great job 👏
Awesome interview. I read the book when it came out. It’s a nonfiction gem right up there with The Perfect Storm. Ironically they made a great movie of that book starring George Clooney. I hope this movie directed by Clooney is as good an adaptation.
Grew up in Seattle, going to the Montlake Cut to watch UW crew, as well as going to the Dawgs at Husky stadium… what a great tradition, great school, great city.
Best book I have read in a long time! I knew nothing about rowing, but got a great understanding of it from the book. Each of the lives of the boys in the story were well described, and their accomplishments were well written about, so that you got invested in the races. It was also a wonderful history lesson of what Germany was trying to do to hide their evil intent by producing this fabulous propaganda film during the 1936 Olympic games.
If you've seen the movie and enjoyed it, do yourself a favor and read the book. The details of these young mens' lives is great reading. Very little of it made it into the movie.
Anyone who rows or has rowed…and stayed with it…knows who you’re really competing with. You’re overcoming yourself! Your body wants to quit and your mind agrees, but you ignore it. Rowing a single, (coxed/non-coxed) pairs, fours, a quads, an eight, on flat water, is like no other experience. I’ve logged many many miles on my Vespoli comp. BTW…the first Yale/Harvard crews competed in the 1800’s. Those shells were crude “sixes” and not the eights used today.
Read the book as soon as it came out and thought then that it needed to be a movie. Movie was well done but so much more on the rowers in the book...jobs well done😎
The author of the book was handicapped by not rowing ENOUGH himself to learn what “swing” *really means. He mentions it almost as an afterthought, very late in the book. Collegiate rowers sweat for their schools, “recreational” rowers compete for fun and fellowship- but once their boat experiences the unity of swing, they’ll row a full summer for minutes- even seconds- of that feeling! The boat lifts, it almost flies; time suspends, pain means nothing- and it seems to unify those in it forever. Then, as some element or another loses sync and the shell drops, we’re back, smiling…. (eventually cursing the coxswain, again)
Came here to understand the boys in the boat better though I never read the book. I love their success story and so far as I’m watching the movie these boys sacrificed & did everything to make it despite Hitler’s views.
Love this story, but let me say that saying “the physical demands exceed any sport” is just not true. The physical exhaustion of distance swimming (with anaerobic breathing), marathon runners, decathletes, triathletes…. are competitions that bring athletes to a complete state of exhaustion.
Going to disagree a little bit having done all these things you mention as well as having done some crew. The end of a crew race has elements of strain that most of these other sports don't have because of the pressures you are working against with your legs. All these sports hurt bad!!!... but the discomfort of rowing when fatigued is just on another level.
Very good interview. I need to know the real reason Joe was abandoned. It's a whole other story. Even tho it was the Great Depression, it is still abnormal.
Instead of making an immature insult, maybe you could enlighten the viewers as to why my comment is ignorant, or perhaps why you think the sound mix is done properly. You could even tell us what is your experience in the field of sound technology that qualifies your un-substantiated statement? @@michaelfitzgerald434
@Pioneers_Of_Cinema I'm autistic and had no problems following the narrative. The sound of the birds during the interview helped solidify the mood and environment of the location for the interview. The sounds of the footage shown in the background helped concretize what the interview was about. If you have auditory processing issues, perhaps you need a sound system that allows you to exert more control over the voices, so you don't miss any of the conversation without feeling the need to attack the creative license (or sound editing skills) for what you watch?
Add that the college exploited these boys by refusing to pay their tuition! It’s a disgrace they had to work part time and pay full tuition and then countless hours training. Why is this truth not spoken about as exploitation
The movie was terrible. Clooney got it wrong, as he left out Joes story almost entirely. He skimmed over the REASON these boys were so tough! And he focused way too much on Joes girlfriend and the coaches wife. The music was uninspiring too. I left feeling extremely disappointed. Sean Penn would’ve done a much better job! And I am not normally one to criticize anything.
For a Hollywood movie it not very diverse. Where are the African American and the trans guy and the gay man? I am sure they could have slipped a lesbian in the crew . It’s not been made for modern audiences
@@silentnight22z85 Got to agree, the movie honours 11 or men who collectively achieved something really special by overcoming the myriad of obstacles in their path, whether it be Joe whose path is detailed in the book or the boat builder who migrated from England or the crewmates with their individual paths into the gold medal eight that defeated the best other nations had to offer. The story is special, only hope the movie does it credit.
@@tonywimble9161 I suspect leftin74 is showing his own isms... I believe we are seeing "stir the pot" in action. Based on comments on other channels, leftin74 doesn't seem to actually value diversity.....
As a resident of the Olympic Peninsula town in which Joe Rantz was abandoned (Sequim, Washington), I am aware of yet another positive outcome of his story: the Joe Rantz Rotary Youth Fund which will provide the means to build a home for Sequim's homeless teens and give them the tools for finishing school and moving on to a productive life.
I didn't know about Joe Rantz which I was living close by... Knowing the beautiful end of his story and how he is still helping others will gives Sequim an even more tender place in my heart.
Thank you for sharing this, what an amazing man.
I saw the movie tonight, with friends, and we were on the edge of our seats. That was with knowing how it would end. It was a very well done movie, I just ordered the book and I can’t wait to read it.
I couldn't agree with you more. I found myself moving back and forth like I was rowing...between the tears.
Voted best book in our bookclub the year we read it.
Totally agree. I had seen the PBS video. Still I wondered if they could win!
I went to the theater and saw this beautiful movie. I was truly moved by it. I highly recommend it!
I haven't seen the movie yet. The book was outstanding. It sounds like the movie was true to the book.
I watched the movie last night. This movie is something that has challenged me so deeply about my own life. I see these men work hard and build inseperable bonds with each other. It makes me wish i was born in the time before technology made everything so shallow. They overcame so much in each of their lives, and they are heroic figures. Ultimately, this movie makes me want to build connections that are just as strong as these men had.
Going to see it this afternoon! 😄
This interviewer Angie W. is outstanding!!! Her excitement for the story, her intelligent questions, her care for the protagonists and the process, her sensitivity to carry through a conversation that flows and is filled with new content we’re enriched by… WOW what a breath of fresh air in an ocean of subpar journalism content. Truly talented, and I assume so is the rest of the production team. Good job! I FELT and enjoyed more the story in this interview than in the movie!!
READ the book! The movie (and more than most book-into-movie trys) could not possibly capture the rich and sweeping emotional fullness of the book. Of course must by necessity be left out, but VERY Unfortunately, the storyline changes (the soul-pain of Joe's early family, the vital - NOT vapid/ silly - role of his girlfriend, the omitteed not-so-side 'summer jobs' of the boys (on the Grand Coulee Dam!....so much more left out of the movie, that makes the end story, understand where all that grit really came from, how deep the caves the boys each held, that they could go into during that race.
Such a decent man to give full credit to Joe Rantz’s daughter for initiating the development of this book.
My husband and I just watched this film in our home theater. It is one of the best films I've seen in a while. I got a bit emotional too because my mother went to University of Washington from 1946-50 where she was the editor of the Daily. I could see her in so many of these scenes. Her parents were apple farmers. She just loved UW and it was touching to see a glimpse of what that time was like. She died in 2021. The way the author discovered this story is just amazing. It really shows us how time can fade away truly extraordinary events such as this. They are nearly forgotten. It is so special when they are captured and remembered. I so wish my mom was here to see this film. She would have loved it so. Everything was so first rate: the acting, the setting, the story, the directing, the music, and costumes. Bravo.
I have read the book and listened to the audio version of it several times. I still tear up at certain places particularly those places where Joe Rantz has to face the harsh reality of being left on his own. I have wondered if my own mother knew him: she certainly knew of him and his crewmates as she attended the UW from 1934 thru 1938 and told me many times how she and her friends would go down to the Montlake Cut to watch the class day races. She has been gone 13 years now so I will never know for sure...
My own time at the UW gave me opportunity to learn and witness some of the traditions of Husky Crew. My fraternity roommate was a lightweight oarsman, and two other members were coxswains. There was (and still is, I'll bet) a tradition that when a man made the team, they would shave his head. My roomie had the most magnificent 'fro of which he was quite proud. When he told me the upperclassmen had told his year they would have the option of not getting the shave, he said the morning that he would find out if he made the team, that he would not. That afternoon when he came back to the house, he was as bald as a billiard ball....
As an idle question, was your Mom from E. Washington?
When I went to the University of Washington before this book was written, the victory in the 1936 Olympics was well known around the University and the community. As big a part of Huskyville as the B-17 is a part of Boeing.
I read the book and I was so impressed. One of the best books I ever read. I recommend this to my friends and they all love it. Thanks for writing this 9 boys’ story after so many years.
Have you seen the movie? It 's very disappointing compared to the book
@@peterszilagyi9983 I agree. The movie was not as good as I expected. The book was highlighting well how the team became one , extraordinary one before the finish line to win the gold medal at Olympic. Also I enjoyed the bond between one of the team members and the boat builder. The old man explained how to pick the woods and shape them into boat. It was beautiful
My first reply may not reach you. I agree with you movie was not as good as I expected. The book depicted so well the team became one , extraordinary one before the finish line to win the gold medal at Olympic. Also I enjoyed the bonding between one member and the boat builder. The old man talked how to find the right woods and shape them into a boat. It was beautiful.
It’s unforgivable what Rantz had to through as a child being abandoned by his parents at a very young age but that prepared him to be the champion that he he was fated be. Damn. These boys will be remembered all through generations. ❤
Interesting how some people have adversity in their childhoods and use that as an excuse to do bad things, while others push themselves to be better.
Me and my husband just watched the movie. It's so good! I cried during the last scene where victory is claimed. 💖
About to watch the film. I'm so excited for this story. Daniel seemed dogged in his pursuit of giving the story justice. That's the mark of a great writer and historian. The way he researched the story, and captured the world at the time, reminded me so much of Seabiscuit. And I just have to acknowledge Angie Weidinger's method of interviewing. She was professional and asked the right questions, and her enthusiasm for the story was infectious. And I swear she could be Linda Carter's younger sister. Such a beautiful young woman.
Thanks to Daniel for bringing this story back into the light. Every one should know it, especially now with the Olympics in Paris.
Mr. Brown, hats off to you sir. The Boys In The Boat is hands down one of my best reads ever. Especially all the breathtaking sentences that are like savoring a sweet, smooth candy in your mouth.
This is a great sport for learning 'deferred gratification'.
Former crewmate of mine who won M8+ gold in '92 Olympics informed me that they did up to 19 workouts a week (3 a day M-F, 2 a day S-S). They had very little funding. He said that had his parents not been able to support him/pay his rent during that build up he'd have had to pull out.
To the Author, you did an amazing job, I felt like I was on their boat! Thank you, it is one of my favorite books of all time!
God Blessed America with The Boys in the Boat. Great Book and Movie. Even better to know that it's a true story.
It's called grit and guts. Let no obstacle or challenge defeat you! That Joe Rantz' parents abandoned him is heart-piercing. I cannot imagine abandoning a child.
Because they couldn't feed him. How ghastly heartbreaking.
@@Nothing-h6i He was all of 14.
@@keltus_warrior6491 during the Depression, a lot of children in the Oxford Orphanage (just outside Clarksville, VA) had parents who chose their children over their own happiness.
With no food programs, with no social safety nets, the options were to watch your children starve to death....or give them up to ensure they would survive.
It's a horrid choice, and was a huge driver for Roosevelt's Bill of Health Rights he attempted to pass (sadly, he passed away first), and the reason he was able to get so much support for the WWC, CCP, & other social programs.
@@Nothing-h6i It's unthinkable to abandon a child. We can't feed you so goodbye and good luck. Apparently, this was not uncommon during the Depression.
@@Lazy_Fish_Keeper Thank you so much for this information/background. As I read your comment, I reflected on how today it is estimated 3 MILLION children in U.S. go to be hungry every night. So much for "the greatest nation on earth".
I liked the movie, but this book blew it out of the water! I couldn’t put it down.
Its a great movie. Thank you, Mr. Brown - for a wonderful story and piece of our history!
Thank you so much for sharing this great historical story about these great men, we all could learn from!
Ms. Weidinger, I thoroughly enjoyed this interview and am glad you brought up the story that wasn't in the movie. The adversity that Joe Rantz faced and overcame as a child was my favorite part of the book!
The background music was also very moving.
Great job!
Thank you for telling their story.
Best interview I've seen with the author, thank you.
Thank you very much for the compliment. He was very friendly and great to interview.
@@whoelseloveshistory First interview I've watched with author Daniel James Brown. It was engaging because your subject was relaxed, the location ideal, and I'm guessing he picked up quickly how thoroughly you had read his work. You provided space for him to speak and recollect, while probing some material that had particularly captivated or touched you as a reader. Great job 👏
Awesome interview. I read the book when it came out. It’s a nonfiction gem right up there with The Perfect Storm. Ironically they made a great movie of that book starring George Clooney. I hope this movie directed by Clooney is as good an adaptation.
The book and movie are fantastic. If you like inspiring stories or anything related to sports, this is great.
Watched the movie, then read the book, which is a brilliant account of the story. Loved it!
This is one of the best true stories I’ve read.
This was a great story, makes you realize what hard-work and team work can do. Thku
Great work Angie..
Excellent interview😊
Wonderful book, thanks for the interview!
Go Huskies! So proud of the Husky rowers then and today. Both the men’s and women’s UW rowing teams have gone on to win many National Titles.
Grew up in Seattle, going to the Montlake Cut to watch UW crew, as well as going to the Dawgs at Husky stadium… what a great tradition, great school, great city.
Beautiful touching interview I can hardly wait
Best book I have read in a long time! I knew nothing about rowing, but got a great understanding of it from the book. Each of the lives of the boys in the story were well described, and their accomplishments were well written about, so that you got invested in the races. It was also a wonderful history lesson of what Germany was trying to do to hide their evil intent by producing this fabulous propaganda film during the 1936 Olympic games.
Great interview! I cant wait to see the movie 🎥
What a rich a story. I worked at two Olympics. It is that much more meaningful to me.
If you've seen the movie and enjoyed it, do yourself a favor and read the book. The details of these young mens' lives is great reading. Very little of it made it into the movie.
If you liked the movie you’ll love the book
Anyone who rows or has rowed…and stayed with it…knows who you’re really competing with. You’re overcoming yourself! Your body wants to quit and your mind agrees, but you ignore it.
Rowing a single, (coxed/non-coxed) pairs, fours, a quads, an eight, on flat water, is like no other experience. I’ve logged many many miles on my Vespoli comp.
BTW…the first Yale/Harvard crews competed in the 1800’s. Those shells were crude “sixes” and not the eights used today.
I read the book and it was so beautiful so pure a nd very real!
Great interviewer! Great story!
Read the book as soon as it came out and thought then that it needed to be a movie. Movie was well done but so much more on the rowers in the book...jobs well done😎
Great story,very well written book and great movie as well . Just think this story almost was never told .
I can’t wait to see the movie tomorrow
My favorite movie so far, seen it about 50 times !
Great movie. I'll have to read the book.
Awesomeness ❤
fabulous film
Amazingly awesome book, and I'm only on chapter 7!
The author of the book was handicapped by not rowing ENOUGH himself to learn what “swing” *really means. He mentions it almost as an afterthought, very late in the book. Collegiate rowers sweat for their schools, “recreational” rowers compete for fun and fellowship- but once their boat experiences the unity of swing, they’ll row a full summer for minutes- even seconds- of that feeling! The boat lifts, it almost flies; time suspends, pain means nothing- and it seems to unify those in it forever.
Then, as some element or another loses sync and the shell drops, we’re back, smiling…. (eventually cursing the coxswain, again)
Reads like you have experienced that sensation, i think of it as flying, it is a very special feeling.
Agreed. The pursuit of swing is the WHY of rowing
The team works as a well-oiled machine.
It feels like you are 8 times as strong.
Excellent movie!!
Thank You!!!
😢Please USA pay very close attention to this. So many of lessons to be learned. May God bless The United States of America.
They did 🎉🏅
What happened to their reserve rower in the Team?
I just finished the book. The worst part was that it ended.
Came here to understand the boys in the boat better though I never read the book. I love their success story and so far as I’m watching the movie these boys sacrificed & did everything to make it despite Hitler’s views.
Love this story, but let me say that saying “the physical demands exceed any sport” is just not true. The physical exhaustion of distance swimming (with anaerobic breathing), marathon runners, decathletes, triathletes…. are competitions that bring athletes to a complete state of exhaustion.
Going to disagree a little bit having done all these things you mention as well as having done some crew. The end of a crew race has elements of strain that most of these other sports don't have because of the pressures you are working against with your legs. All these sports hurt bad!!!... but the discomfort of rowing when fatigued is just on another level.
It's pretty. The movie is nothing like the book
History should tell its own (factual) story. This book does.
Very good interview. I need to know the real reason Joe was abandoned. It's a whole other story. Even tho it was the Great Depression, it is still abnormal.
Read the book.
You must read the book to feel pathos
Your narration is competing with the Too Loud background music. Please learn how to mix sound properly.
How ignorant of you!
Instead of making an immature insult, maybe you could enlighten the viewers as to why my comment is ignorant, or perhaps why you think the sound mix is done properly. You could even tell us what is your experience in the field of sound technology that qualifies your un-substantiated statement? @@michaelfitzgerald434
@Pioneers_Of_Cinema I'm autistic and had no problems following the narrative.
The sound of the birds during the interview helped solidify the mood and environment of the location for the interview. The sounds of the footage shown in the background helped concretize what the interview was about.
If you have auditory processing issues, perhaps you need a sound system that allows you to exert more control over the voices, so you don't miss any of the conversation without feeling the need to attack the creative license (or sound editing skills) for what you watch?
Actually, I believe 2 of them served in WW2
Add that the college exploited these boys by refusing to pay their tuition! It’s a disgrace they had to work part time and pay full tuition and then countless hours training. Why is this truth not spoken about as exploitation
Interesting thought. They did get a break in tuition if they rowed, But, not food or anything else. Depression era wasn't scholarship time.
Book so much better than the movie
The movie was terrible. Clooney got it wrong, as he left out Joes story almost entirely. He skimmed over the REASON these boys were so tough! And he focused way too much on Joes girlfriend and the coaches wife. The music was uninspiring too. I left feeling extremely disappointed. Sean Penn would’ve done a much better job! And I am not normally one to criticize anything.
I thought the same. I was so disappointed.
The book was the best, the documentary was great too, but the Hollywood version was predictably lacking.
It wasn't a good movie, which surprised me.
Canada is 1937 Germany now.
How can you say such a thing....
Ouch 😢
That may be the us if trump wins
For a Hollywood movie it not very diverse. Where are the African American and the trans guy and the gay man? I am sure they could have slipped a lesbian in the crew . It’s not been made for modern audiences
@@silentnight22z85 Got to agree, the movie honours 11 or men who collectively achieved something really special by overcoming the myriad of obstacles in their path, whether it be Joe whose path is detailed in the book or the boat builder who migrated from England or the crewmates with their individual paths into the gold medal eight that defeated the best other nations had to offer. The story is special, only hope the movie does it credit.
Foolish!
@@tonywimble9161 I suspect leftin74 is showing his own isms...
I believe we are seeing "stir the pot" in action. Based on comments on other channels, leftin74 doesn't seem to actually value diversity.....
@@Lazy_Fish_Keeper He's pretty sure he's clever but he's just pathetic.
This is a true story, why would there be African American and others where there’s none in reality?