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•the phantom
•we were soldiers
•tears of the sun
•band of brothers
•platoon
•pearl harbor
•black hawk down
•we were soldiers
•tears of the sun
•band of brothers
•platoon
•pearl harbor
•black hawk down
ObedientiaZelum said:I found Hurt Locker to be pretty informative and accurate.
ObedientiaZelum said:I found Hurt Locker to be pretty informative and accurate.
Terminal Lance rules in general!daftandbarmy said:Terminal Lance thinks differently: http://terminallance.com/2010/01/18/the-hurt-locker/
milnews.ca said:Terminal Lance rules in general!
medicineman said::rofl: ... or were you serious?
Notwithstanding the.....downside.....it's always good to see competent leaders at the pointy end leading.milnews.ca said:
Good point.Journeyman said:Notwithstanding the.....downside.....it's always good to see competent leaders at the pointy end leading.
milnews.ca said:Just finished watching "Starship Troopers: Invasion" ....
Done completely in CGI (including shower scenes).
Good movie as is, but don't compare it to 1 & 3 - it's generally the ST story with the same main characters, but on a very different canvas (Asian anime).
Good background.Winter727 said:The group that worked on ST:invasion likes doing military/police CGI sci-fi movies... Appleseed1 & 2, as well as Vexille... besides the point though... only for those who can put up with anime and mediocre dialogue.
Here's the movie's IMDB listing, and here's a bit on YouTube.You may have heard of the Great Escape. You may have seen the 1963 Hollywood movie starring Steve McQueen as a United States Air Force officer named Virgil Hilts – the “Cooler King”. And if you’ve seen the movie, you may think that the story is a British and American story.
But it’s not. It’s a British and Canadian story. There were no Americans in the North Compound at Stalag Luft III near Sagan (now Zagan), Poland, when the mass breakout occurred. Rather, most of the officers in the compound were members of the Royal Air Force (RAF), Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF), Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF), Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF) and the South African Air Force (SAAF). Others hailed from nations such as Greece, Norway, the Netherlands, Czechoslovakia, Greece, Lithuania, Poland, Belgium and France.
On the night of March 24-25, 1944, 76 men managed to get outside the wire through a tunnel code-named “Harry”. In the aftermath of the Great Escape, 50 of the escapers were covertly and illegally murdered by the Gestapo acting on a direct order from Hitler. Six of the dead were Canadians. Only three escapers made a “home run” – getting away and returning to their home countries; the remainder were returned to the prison camp.
And that’s why the commander of the RCAF, Lieutenant-General Yvan Blondin, and other Canadians were at the site of Stalag Luft III on March 24, along with representatives of other allied nations, to mark the 70th anniversary of The Great Escape ....