Joker speaks in cliches. He mainly just repeats things he heard from Hartman, his drill instructor. [voice-over] "My thoughts drift back to erect nipple wet dreams about Mary Jane Rottencrotch and the Great Homecoming Fuck Fantasy. I am so happy that I am alive, in one piece and short. I'm in a world of shit... yes. But I am alive. And I am not afraid."
Perfect illustration of war. Young men few years removed from adolescence, are thrusted into the horrors of war. It’s the final death of the innocence of childhood
Innocence? Joker's aspiration was to become the first kid on his block to get a confirmed kill. There was no innocence here. It was a journey from boot camp to first kill.
My dad was a CO in Vietnam. He said that the enlisted soldiers would sing this to annoy the officers, it was their protest to what they perceived to be strict or ridiculous protocols of which they had to follow, known as “Mickey Mouse” rules, so it was their way to taunt the officers.
@@princessmarlena1359I didn’t know that. Thank you for sharing. One thing I love about this movie are the subtle things like your story that Kubrick included. Lots of very minor but factual USMC details that I’ve seen others pick up on like you did. Also, there’s lots of call backs from the Vietnam half of the movie to the Parris Island half. Hartman asks “what is this Mickey Mouse shit?!” when he confronts Joker and Pyle in the Head
You know, Mickey Mouse is mentioned a few times in this movie. What’s interesting is how some of the comments that actually do in depth of what the scene represents like the common one being these soldiers are still just boys (which they basically are) and the Mickey Mouse song shows what’s left of the youth within these soldiers. Isn’t it a coincidence that Walt Disney himself also made a WWII short cartoon called Education of Death, which shows a young German boy who’s being taught the Nazi way but is too kindhearted to be indoctrinated, but it was all in vein since hes sent off to his supposed death as we just see him marching away with all the other Nazi soldiers as his turns into a adult and they all turn to tombstones, only to die on the wrong side of the war. It’s a small world after all.
I was thinking today of the helicopter gunner having fun randomly executing farmers. This scene is NOWHERE NEAR GRAPHIC ENOUGH. Took me years to realize what was going on here. Wagner group loves this. th-cam.com/video/S06nIz4scvI/w-d-xo.html
Two Popculture icons are often referenced in that movie: John Wayne an Mickey Mouse. Both American. One standing for rightous violence, one standing for childish innocence. Both fitting for how those young men were thrown into the war. Duality is a very big theme of that movie.
Kubrick was very smart in choosing this song. He could've used any other period approriate kids show song, but he probably realized that that could date the movie very soon. But he could be sure that Mickey Mouse as a symbol would stay around for a long time and ensured this scene would still resonate with audiences decades later.
Whenever me and my brother go to Disney World now, and they play this song over the speakers, we sing along, not because it’s catchy (even through it is) but because of this this scene, it’s funny how it means something entirely different and more bleak and morbid to us, but everyone around us never suspects a thing.
In 1968 there was a short of Mickey Mouse enlisting in the army, going to Vietnam and dying on the battlefield, here (in Full Metal Jacket) Joker was not ready to fight (just like Mickey) but it also represents the death of innocence since in the previous scene Joker kills a Vietnamese woman and gets the "Thousand-yard stare" that's why not only Joker but all the soldiers sing the Mickey Mouse song, because they were all young and probably end up developing post traumatic stress disorder, In addition, they are singing the Mickey Mouse song from 1960, a time when all the soldiers were children, contrasting a memory of a time when everyone was innocent and the present where they march from, in and to hell, thus marking the duality of the man named earlier in the movie
That's a pretty bold statement. A weird and cool ending, but the best? The lines are funny. "My thoughts drift back to erect nipple wet dreams about Mary Jane Rottencrotch and the Great Homecoming Fuck Fantasy. I am so happy that I am alive, in one piece and short. I'm in a world of shit... yes. But I am alive. And I am not afraid."
@@jackbizzell7136 The last character that used the line "I am in a world of shit." Killed the drill sergeant and blew his own brains out. There are times in life we have to take the silver lining. For Joker to use that same line and come on the other side alive is the uplifting part. "The dead know one thing: it is better to be alive."
the concept of duality is brought up in many points in this movie from joker not wanting to hurt Leonard, the peace symbol button with born to kill written on his helmet, as well as his hesitation to kill the female sniper at the end even though she killed his best friend. Throughout the film it can be seen that it’s a constant struggle he fights with of course he wants to be seen as a bad mf or a killer of hooks but internally just like most soldiers he’s fighting with himself about the morality of it all and in the end chooses to do the humane thing of killing the female sniper as opposed to doing the inhumane thing and leaving her to die a slow painful death. The song Mickey Mouse is a symbol for his acceptance that war is hell but in the end he says “ am in a world of shit yes, but I am alive…and I am not afraid.” This is him accepting what he has been fighting with throughout the entire movie and it does a very good job of showing people the constant battle most soldiers face when put into a situation like war. Top tier movie loved r lee ermey in the beginning and Kubrick and his team simply did an excellent job telling a story about the reality of war.
in the original... cut... Animal Mother takes a machete he had been carrying the whole film and beheads the teen sniper girl. Then plays with her head. th-cam.com/video/QAYbgAp7dDo/w-d-xo.html Great insights Peejay.
Addressing the scene where Joker kills the girl, his choice to shoot her is actually Joker embracing his humanity and compassion. She was dead, the others wanted to leave her to rot and die slowly and painfully. Joker gave her the easier way out, and through it, he maintained his humanity while sacrificing his innocence.
We Boomers were brought up in the '50s, where our kid culture was Leave It to Beaver and the Micky Mouse Club. This is who the Vietnam vets were. This scene is brilliant.
They should play this at the Disney Marathon. At Mile 24, when everyone's in a world of ****, but still alive, this would get everyone through those final 2 miles before blowing through EPCOT and the finish.
That line when he says “I’m in a world shit. Yes but I am alive.” That is a powerful line I never enlisted in the military but if I did and I did do a tour in Afghanistan I would say the same thing. That I’m so grateful to be alive in one piece. I am able to talk to my family and my friends.
Perfect moment capturing the Infantry. While technically not "infants" in the modern world, they're still children lost on their path to adulthood and finding themselves in the middle of a war, regressing to some happy memory of childhood and blending it with the horrors of their present in some attempt at gallows humor.
I liked this scene a lot. There a lot of reasons why singing this is messed up, but I would be singing a long too. I would be so terrified everyday, and this song is just funny and would make me feel better.
Kubrick was a genius who put nothing in randomly. Everything he did painstakingly and meticulously and the Mickey Mouse theme song is no exception. Does it symbolize youth, capitalism or even Nazism, I don’t know, but know that it is significant to the movie as a whole.
You know, when it's normally sung, it's so fun and cheerful. When a bunch of bloody sweaty adult men marching, guns loaded, it's just.... Oh my is it maddening. It just shows how much of toll it puts on the mind that you can make a cheerful cash grab song sound like a death hymm or some shit.
Note: yes, they are tough as nails Marines who, like Marines at Belleau Wood & Guadalcanal & Pelelieu & Iwo Jima & Chosin Reservoir, took the best the enemy could throw at them and the prevailed. Yet, they are American teenagers. Not long before they watched Mickey Mouse Club and fascinated about Annette & Darlene.... And pay close attention to the lyrics. Every word is in complete keeping with the standards & traditions of our Corps: "... who's the leader of the club (Corps) that's made for you & me..." ".... we work hard and we play fair and we're in harmony...." ".... Forever let us hold our banner high!"..... ".... who is marching coast to coast and far across the sea...." A MASTERPIECE!!!
Its a lot like what the human brain might do under intense traumatic events. Instead of being able to process the carnage, you may unconciously and unwillingly revert or refer to childhood memories. Its a lot like those scenes of mortally wounded men calling out for their mothers. Instead, here we see dozens of men, boys really, participating in a something of a coping session. They might not even know they're doing it. Stanley, god damn, man.
Mickey and Minnie appear in the background of Da Nang disappearing and reappearing statues) Mickey Mouse appears also in The Shining (released directly before FMJ) on the walls of the Torrance apartment and on Danny's sweater pre-1939 in the abuse scene. Mickey, Minnie, and Goofy all make various appearances (and disappearances) throughout. GySgt Hartman refers to Pyle's gun-toting authoritarian self-erotic military play acting as Mickey Mouse bullshit.
Soldiers who sing any song and can be killed at any second are worthy of respect and honor. I was in the war in 1991-1995 with my unit and we sang in the truck that drove us to the front line. We wanted to defend our country. We demanded that we be called into the army to defend our country. And we defended it with a song and morale that the opponent can only dream of. And we will live forever because the Croatian army lives forever!!
Best line '' I'm in the world of shit, but i'm alive"
I can relate to that line.
Joker speaks in cliches. He mainly just repeats things he heard from Hartman, his drill instructor. [voice-over] "My thoughts drift back to erect nipple wet dreams about Mary Jane Rottencrotch and the Great Homecoming Fuck Fantasy. I am so happy that I am alive, in one piece and short. I'm in a world of shit... yes. But I am alive. And I am not afraid."
Pyle said that while sitting on the toilet.
@@jayfisher3359 he learnt it from Hartman.
these are the words of a broken man
Perfect illustration of war. Young men few years removed from adolescence, are thrusted into the horrors of war. It’s the final death of the innocence of childhood
And unfortunately, nothing has changed.
This is why full metal jacket is regarded as one of the best war movies ever filmed that and the opening with lee erming
and for absolutly no resson
Innocence? Joker's aspiration was to become the first kid on his block to get a confirmed kill. There was no innocence here. It was a journey from boot camp to first kill.
as a Marine here, and speaking even for Nam Marines, we are warriors, not fucking victims. good god. We live for this shit.
Just imagine Gunnery Sergeant Hartman popping up out of the darkness and yelling "what is this mickey mouse shit!!?"
hahahaha
Zombie Hartman, hat still glued to his head
You just made me realize the ultimate foreshadowing of this movie! You win.
May his soul rest in peace.
nah he woulda been proud that his boys were happy and unfraid in this shit scenario they were given.
This is a dissociative coping mechanism for how they've been dehumanized. Plus, it is terrifying.
I mean they did lose whatever innocence they had left
This ending was chilling and terrifying to the core. I was in shock. We were all musketeers.
My dad was a CO in Vietnam. He said that the enlisted soldiers would sing this to annoy the officers, it was their protest to what they perceived to be strict or ridiculous protocols of which they had to follow, known as “Mickey Mouse” rules, so it was their way to taunt the officers.
@@princessmarlena1359I didn’t know that. Thank you for sharing. One thing I love about this movie are the subtle things like your story that Kubrick included. Lots of very minor but factual USMC details that I’ve seen others pick up on like you did. Also, there’s lots of call backs from the Vietnam half of the movie to the Parris Island half. Hartman asks “what is this Mickey Mouse shit?!” when he confronts Joker and Pyle in the Head
@@wta1981 Oh yeah. My dad was in the Army, but I’ve heard that the Marines did this as well. 🤣
And then Paint It Black plays immediately afterwards. The endings in Full Metal Jacket and A Clockwork Orange always give me the chills.
Only the late, great, Stanley Kubrick could write and direct a movie this great. RIP Stan
It wasn't his story. He co-adapted the screenplay with Gustav Harford, from Harford's "The Short-Timers"
@@srujan00 He put it in the credits.
@@srujan00It’s not about the story, it’s about the style of the cinematography, the set design, the casting
@@enflamedhuevos what set design? it's the same one, over and over for the second half of the movie.
@@srujan00What set design? Don’t act like the silly lit, empty bathroom isn’t one of the most eerie shots
You know, Mickey Mouse is mentioned a few times in this movie. What’s interesting is how some of the comments that actually do in depth of what the scene represents like the common one being these soldiers are still just boys (which they basically are) and the Mickey Mouse song shows what’s left of the youth within these soldiers. Isn’t it a coincidence that Walt Disney himself also made a WWII short cartoon called Education of Death, which shows a young German boy who’s being taught the Nazi way but is too kindhearted to be indoctrinated, but it was all in vein since hes sent off to his supposed death as we just see him marching away with all the other Nazi soldiers as his turns into a adult and they all turn to tombstones, only to die on the wrong side of the war. It’s a small world after all.
meanwhile, sgt hartman: *WHAT IS THIS MICKEY MOUSE SHIT*
Do you know anything about Nazism?
I remember watching that short
I was thinking today of the helicopter gunner having fun randomly executing farmers.
This scene is NOWHERE NEAR GRAPHIC ENOUGH.
Took me years to realize what was going on here.
Wagner group loves this.
th-cam.com/video/S06nIz4scvI/w-d-xo.html
@@luketimewalker He was the first choice to play the DI.
Today right 90s and 2000s kids be singing best day ever or the adventure Time theme song into future conflicts
SpongeBob SquarePants theme
That would be perfect after a battle in say a non nuclear ww3 or another Vietnam.Just singing the spongebob theme over and over
The adventure time song fits all too well 😭
@@MrZilla no he’s right I think
Naah itll be Ocean Man cuz of the ending to the spongebob movie
Two Popculture icons are often referenced in that movie: John Wayne an Mickey Mouse. Both American. One standing for rightous violence, one standing for childish innocence.
Both fitting for how those young men were thrown into the war.
Duality is a very big theme of that movie.
Great observation. This movie has so many Easter eggs like that. It’s brilliant. I love rewatching it. Always notice something new
Kubrick was very smart in choosing this song. He could've used any other period approriate kids show song, but he probably realized that that could date the movie very soon. But he could be sure that Mickey Mouse as a symbol would stay around for a long time and ensured this scene would still resonate with audiences decades later.
Imagine being an enemy soldier and hearing an army of soldiers singing about Micky mouse, brown undies
they are Marines, not soldiers.
@@Doctor_ko Bro chill lmao
@@vinnycuozzi1278 Once a Mickey Mouse club member, bro
@@Doctor_ko whats the diferrence?
@@JoaquinaFinix If you don't know it just means you're not current nor ex-military. Not that there's anything wrong with that.
"Are they afraid of us?"
"They're singing the theme song to a children's television show in incredible harmony."
"...shit."
top 10 signs your opponent is blind to humanity.
all 10 of them are hearing children's songs/stories from them
I love this scene it's so sad but cool.
And a bit funny (with or without context)
Whenever me and my brother go to Disney World now, and they play this song over the speakers, we sing along, not because it’s catchy (even through it is) but because of this this scene, it’s funny how it means something entirely different and more bleak and morbid to us, but everyone around us never suspects a thing.
Gotta love Kubrick's dark sense of humour.
Kubrick did the same thing for "Singin' in the Rain" in A Clockwork Orange.
Tarentino did it in Reservoir Dogs with "Stuck in the Middle With You."
you walk through Disney World with M60's? rad
@@SwedishEmpire1700 That is, not what I meant...
This scene was shot at the old Beckton gasworks in London about 200m from the Thames!
dragon8uk I guess the Thames played Perfume River then. XD
Our generation's equivalent would be a platoon of soliders singing the Spongebob Squarepants Opening Theme in a warzone.
Dear God, imagine dying and the last thing you hear is “Who lives in a pineapple under the sea?”
Or the other spongebob song “its the best day ever”
In 1968 there was a short of Mickey Mouse enlisting in the army, going to Vietnam and dying on the battlefield, here (in Full Metal Jacket) Joker was not ready to fight (just like Mickey) but it also represents the death of innocence since in the previous scene Joker kills a Vietnamese woman and gets the "Thousand-yard stare" that's why not only Joker but all the soldiers sing the Mickey Mouse song, because they were all young and probably end up developing post traumatic stress disorder, In addition, they are singing the Mickey Mouse song from 1960, a time when all the soldiers were children, contrasting a memory of a time when everyone was innocent and the present where they march from, in and to hell, thus marking the duality of the man named earlier in the movie
mickey mouse short in vietnam what name before: th-cam.com/video/hAtnOkqO_l0/w-d-xo.html
Amazing and best ending of any war movie.
That's a pretty bold statement. A weird and cool ending, but the best?
The lines are funny.
"My thoughts drift back to erect nipple wet dreams about Mary Jane Rottencrotch and the Great Homecoming Fuck Fantasy. I am so happy that I am alive, in one piece and short. I'm in a world of shit... yes. But I am alive. And I am not afraid."
it's hopeful for Joker's future.
Inglorious basterds…..
Such an amazing ending. I love this movie so much.
I really prefer the original ending
This is actually uplifting at the end.
"I am in a world of ****, but I am alive. And I am not afraid."
It is not. It is reminiscent of the end of The Red Badge of Courage.
Uplifting? Did you even watch the movie?
if that's what you felt then you'd be a suitable pawn
Dude, they're going to hell
@@jackbizzell7136 The last character that used the line "I am in a world of shit." Killed the drill sergeant and blew his own brains out. There are times in life we have to take the silver lining. For Joker to use that same line and come on the other side alive is the uplifting part. "The dead know one thing: it is better to be alive."
This movie has Disney references.
Naminski what js this MICKEY MOUSE SHIT
And it's a Warner bros movie
...
The floor here is made out of floor.
Disney, ya think??
"I'm starting to second guess going to war with these crazies"
"Only a madman sings a war lullaby"
To this day this ending sends chills thru me. The juxtaposition of the song and scene was unnerving. We were all Mouseketeers. Chilling.
We’re going to Disney Land!
Girls: Ew that’s for kids
Boys:
Hearing trained and experienced killers singing Mickey Mouse would scare the shit out of me
Hard to imagine all this from start to finish was filmed in England, Stanley Kubrick was a master film maker the best in my view anyway.
the concept of duality is brought up in many points in this movie from joker not wanting to hurt Leonard, the peace symbol button with born to kill written on his helmet, as well as his hesitation to kill the female sniper at the end even though she killed his best friend. Throughout the film it can be seen that it’s a constant struggle he fights with of course he wants to be seen as a bad mf or a killer of hooks but internally just like most soldiers he’s fighting with himself about the morality of it all and in the end chooses to do the humane thing of killing the female sniper as opposed to doing the inhumane thing and leaving her to die a slow painful death. The song Mickey Mouse is a symbol for his acceptance that war is hell but in the end he says “ am in a world of shit yes, but I am alive…and I am not afraid.” This is him accepting what he has been fighting with throughout the entire movie and it does a very good job of showing people the constant battle most soldiers face when put into a situation like war. Top tier movie loved r lee ermey in the beginning and Kubrick and his team simply did an excellent job telling a story about the reality of war.
Sometimes we have to lose our humanity to get it back. Chilling ending.
in the original... cut... Animal Mother takes a machete he had been carrying the whole film and beheads the teen sniper girl. Then plays with her head.
th-cam.com/video/QAYbgAp7dDo/w-d-xo.html
Great insights Peejay.
@@luketimewalker I think that happened in The Short Timers, which this movie is based on.
@@mkl62 yes... but it was also shot, except it didn't make it into the final cut. check out the link I included above
Addressing the scene where Joker kills the girl, his choice to shoot her is actually Joker embracing his humanity and compassion. She was dead, the others wanted to leave her to rot and die slowly and painfully. Joker gave her the easier way out, and through it, he maintained his humanity while sacrificing his innocence.
A great film and observation of what these soldiers where put through for no reason God bless
How a feel after leaving my shitty job
…and how! Also felt this way after graduating high school.
I feel yeah. I actually listen to the whole movie at work today while scanning in/putting stock away.
This ending is real similar to end of paths of glory. Kubrick was special man
Except, in Paths of Glory the dehumanized soldiers seem to connect to something innocent and beautiful, while here they are dissociating and numb.
It’s so eerie hearing such a cheerful sounding song sung as they’re marching through a flaming warzone
I think the power of this scene is drastically underrated for so many reasons…
This movie was so chilling
I can just imagine my great uncle John who fought in Vietnam for the Marines singing this
My dad is former army, likewise for my mom's brothers. They were all enlisted in the 70's
We all sang the hell out of this in the fifties watching Annette fill out.
"I'm not afriad" quote is inspiring
Beautiful
I love this scene. It's stuck with me for days.
We Boomers were brought up in the '50s, where our kid culture was Leave It to Beaver and the Micky Mouse Club. This is who the Vietnam vets were. This scene is brilliant.
im gen z but leave it to beaver is a great show
Such a great tune goes so well with this film
The war is far from over, but at least Joker is still alive in one piece and he’s no longer afraid to face his upcoming battles.
he's a journalist. Not sure how many battles he'd really be in after Hue was taken back.
@@srujan00 Yeah.
What doesn't kill you makes you stronger.
@@TheTallMan50 Yes.
They should play this at the Disney Marathon. At Mile 24, when everyone's in a world of ****, but still alive, this would get everyone through those final 2 miles before blowing through EPCOT and the finish.
If this movie was set in The War on Terror, they'd be singing the SpongeBob theme song.
That line when he says “I’m in a world shit. Yes but I am alive.” That is a powerful line I never enlisted in the military but if I did and I did do a tour in Afghanistan I would say the same thing. That I’m so grateful to be alive in one piece. I am able to talk to my family and my friends.
One of the best parts of the movie bro 👍🐭
Perfect moment capturing the Infantry. While technically not "infants" in the modern world, they're still children lost on their path to adulthood and finding themselves in the middle of a war, regressing to some happy memory of childhood and blending it with the horrors of their present in some attempt at gallows humor.
I actually saw this movie and it was hella good bro.
I even sung this song at the end.
I can quote this movie word for word😂 literly I love it
In highschool I could too 👍😁
Must be a hit with the Bible study crowd. :D
@@paulrus-keaton439 Or the gender study class lol
They all look like ghost marching through hell.
Bad ass mugs walking thru the burning wreckage and bodies marching on singing Mickey Mouse. 👏🏻
I liked this scene a lot. There a lot of reasons why singing this is messed up, but I would be singing a long too. I would be so terrified everyday, and this song is just funny and would make me feel better.
I love that part
At the end of this movie he finally embraces his destiny and that is to become what he told Sgt. Hartman he wanted to be... a killer.
MIIEKy MOUSE
So beautiful
nothing illustrates the theme of this movie more than this scene
Welp this totally won't be stuck in my head for a while
After hearing stories my grandpa told when he was there, I can tell you the honest truth these guys aren’t alright. Not even a little bit.
Kubrick was a genius who put nothing in randomly.
Everything he did painstakingly and meticulously and the Mickey Mouse theme song is no exception.
Does it symbolize youth, capitalism or even Nazism, I don’t know, but know that it is significant to the movie as a whole.
Nazism? The fuck??
@@Wh1stle_03 he means autocracy
It symbolizes loss of innocence and loss of duality as Joker said he wanted to be a killer, and he got what he wanted
Honestly the Mickey Mouse club song is a perfect embodiment of what the marines want
people seem to overlook this. as usual kubricks meanings are layered and somewhat ambiguous.. and that's why he's considered the master.
“one thing without stain,
unspotted from the world,
in spite of doom mine own.”
~ Rostand
You know, when it's normally sung, it's so fun and cheerful. When a bunch of bloody sweaty adult men marching, guns loaded, it's just.... Oh my is it maddening. It just shows how much of toll it puts on the mind that you can make a cheerful cash grab song sound like a death hymm or some shit.
me and the boys singing the old childhood song:
"What kind of Mickey Mouse shit is this!?"
Solid ending in a war movie🤙🏽
When an army of Disney fans enter Universal Studios
Whenever I see this scene, I always think the army is marching up to someone's home to shoot them down because they used Mickey Mouse in their work.
Note: yes, they are tough as nails Marines who, like Marines at Belleau Wood & Guadalcanal & Pelelieu & Iwo Jima & Chosin Reservoir, took the best the enemy could throw at them and the prevailed.
Yet, they are American teenagers. Not long before they watched Mickey Mouse Club and fascinated about Annette & Darlene....
And pay close attention to the lyrics.
Every word is in complete keeping with the standards & traditions of our Corps:
"... who's the leader of the club (Corps) that's made for you & me..."
".... we work hard and we play fair and we're in harmony...."
".... Forever let us hold our banner high!".....
".... who is marching coast to coast and far across the sea...."
A MASTERPIECE!!!
Soldiers of the Walt Disney Private Military Company burning Central Florida to the ground (c. 2023)
Its a lot like what the human brain might do under intense traumatic events.
Instead of being able to process the carnage, you may unconciously and unwillingly revert or refer to childhood memories.
Its a lot like those scenes of mortally wounded men calling out for their mothers. Instead, here we see dozens of men, boys really, participating in a something of a coping session.
They might not even know they're doing it.
Stanley, god damn, man.
It's a great scene of gallows humor in war.
Mickey and Minnie appear in the background of Da Nang disappearing and reappearing statues) Mickey Mouse appears also in The Shining (released directly before FMJ) on the walls of the Torrance apartment and on Danny's sweater pre-1939 in the abuse scene. Mickey, Minnie, and Goofy all make various appearances (and disappearances) throughout. GySgt Hartman refers to Pyle's gun-toting authoritarian self-erotic military play acting as Mickey Mouse bullshit.
Did anybody else notice that Disney reference?
look outside ur window, i'm still there
It’s ironic for WB to use a Disney song in the ending (since the mascot of WB is Bugs Bunny)
Amazing & profound end scene.
I'm alive and not afraid 🇺🇸💪👉⛑️🙏🙏🙏
"I am so happy that I am alive.
And in one piece.
In short, I am in a world of shit... yes.
But I am alive, and I am not afraid".
My favourite Disney song
Remember who your fighting for boys, for our glorious leader of the magic kingdom
«The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his» Patton
watching it now
I wаtchеd Full Меtаl Jасkеt full mоviе hееееrе twitter.com/9ad908cbe86568824/status/795842077116370944 Full Меtаl Jасkеt Еnd Sсеne Мickеу Mоusе Sоng
Good scene
i always remember this scene and the movie, not the boot camp
库布里克先生的镜头总是那么冷酷,不掺杂一点情感。影视上最让人绝望的镜头之一。人被裹挟于无能为力的战争之中,又扮演什么角色呢?希望world peace。
The dead only know one thing, it is better to be alive.
Soldiers who sing any song and can be killed at any second are worthy of respect and honor. I was in the war in 1991-1995 with my unit and we sang in the truck that drove us to the front line. We wanted to defend our country. We demanded that we be called into the army to defend our country. And we defended it with a song and morale that the opponent can only dream of. And we will live forever because the Croatian army lives forever!!
01:14 i think everyone that eventually finds happiness in life, share of this thought regardless
Little nugget of information most of the film was shot in the docklands in London
Cowboy's death was sad. Joker denied to lose him, but Cowboy had to go.
The ending of Stanley Kubrick’s last film in his lifetime
I imagine Andy’s Bucket O Soldiers singing this As a reference
🐭🐭🐭♣️♣️♣️
Not true. Eyes wide shut.
Full Metal Jacket is the best Vietnam war movie ever.
*change my mind*
Apocalypse now?
Da 5 bloods
Platoon
Deer Hunter, Apocalypse Now and Platoon edge it imo
animal mother was the only cool character
i would have liked it if they made animal mother the protagonist
0:06 somewhere in the ruins there's a smoke detector that needs new batteries
I've been on a perfume River on a charter boat with four Vietnamese lady singing
I was in Nam. This scene haunts me
This was actually filmed after Disney laid waste to dozens of staffers at ESPN studios in Bristol Connecticut.
You know, it’s quite interesting: Hartman’s actor later played Sarge from Disney’s Toy Story.
the great homecoming fuck fantasy
Me and the boys rolling into Shanghai Disney circa 2026.
i think the singing of the mickey mouse song was the marines way of saying we are comming home
This is me when I go to Disney world
Huraah
If your here 2020 your a legend
I am
you're* you're*
I know but it’s 2021 17th May
Semper Fi.
I just got more respect for Mickey Mouse now
This scene is so badass and errie
Good film😊