#31
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Dye said they need a body for the body bag. So he volunteered so it would be full weight. |
#32
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I just bought a Platoon DVD. It's going to arrive at my house in about 4 or 5 days.
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#33
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Which DVD did you buy? Mine is the $10 special edition listed at Amazon. After I bought it, they come out with the 2-disc collectors edition. Pissed me off. I'm too cheap to buy it again, even though there are more features it seems like.
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#34
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The special edition. For 19,90 reais. Pretty nice for such a famous movie.
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#35
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Here, it was through the engine. Of course, because the production was so low-budget and they didn't want to wreck a real Huey, the crash was depicted by showing the chopper parked in the middle of a paddy with fake smoke emitters, and the pilot shown lying dead nearby.
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#36
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As for an NVA/VC film, I think I'd be interesting. It might dissuade all of the "Red Dawn" fans who think they could wage a guerrilla war against a Soviet-type invading force on American soil. From what I've read, those guys went through utter hell, and yet they still kept fighting. |
#37
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That's what made the North win the war. For some reason the Victor Charlie and PAVN didn't give up. They simply won't give up. We would throw everything at them and they would just fight back or hide. I could never figure out why they didn't give up.
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#38
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Of course, the VC was not quite as good as sometimes thought. One thing that's often overlooked is that they were on the retreat by 1972. |
#39
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That's true. The Charlie didn't actually scare US soldiers though. They inflicted heavy casualties but they weren't some kind of boogeyman to the US personnel. And as the war progressed, the Vietcong got more and more conventional. During the 1960s they were guerrillas but after 1972 the North made them more conventional. Till 1975 they got integrated into the Vietnam Army. That was just after the war thought.
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#40
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Alright, i got the Platoon DVD yesterday. I watched it then i watched the movie with the Oliver Stone commentary on.
It seems most of the stuff Oliver says in the commentary contradicts what most civilians think about the Vietnam War and the United States after they see the movie. Hell, he called some of the American soldiers he meet there "Natural Born Warriors". He never says anything bad about the real Ssgt Barnes. The real Barnes seemed like a nice guy. Got shot in the head and survived, married a japanese women and came back to Vietnam. He never says anything bad about the real Tex while the Tex in the movie looked like someone that would side with movie Barnes in the Village scene. Stone said the real Lt. Wolfe was a nice guy. Something i found funny was how he said the "good ole boys" were good soldiers. Which i found weird because all the rednecks in the movie are assholes with confederate flags in their barracks and commited war crimes. I found all that confusing. His movie shows the platoon being full of war criminals even though Stone seems to talk more about how you can't really blame the soldiers for acting like dicks to the new guys and shooting civilians because they are tired and they felt like shit in the jungle. It's almost like he is apologizing for what the soldiers are doing in the movie. Also, Stone didn't talk about Ace. The only thing he said is that Ace is or was a Radio writer from Texas. I don't know if he was referring to Ace in that particular scene though. Now i'm off to watch the Dale Dye commentary. |
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