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:hmm2: Mmmmmm, yes. Well that was certainly a spewing up of opinions there, much like her description of the actors in the movie. The thing that gets me though is that some think all women regard Das Boot in that way. I most certainly don't. To me at least, it's one of the most honest war movies ever made.
I recall, when it was first broadcast on TV here in the UK, I sat and watched it with an elderly friend of mine (now sadly passed away) who served as a First Officer on a MTB during the war. He said that persuasive sense of fear that the movie portrayed was very real indeed and as for their behaviour outside of combat, that was a way that fear was managed. Sailors (no matter what flag they served under) behaved in pretty much the same way in how they dealt with the pressures combat put them under, mainly a powerful sense of relief that they survived and sometimes that would encourage such rowdy behaviour. Either that or they would curl up into a ball and try and shut the rest of the world out. In either case, it shows just how fragile human beings really are. This is something the reviewer doesn't understand, luckily for her. :03: |
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I think the reason we're having so much fun with Midge is that her review was so singularly hateful. It really stands out, even among others who didn't like it. |
Well it was pretty one-sided to the point of me thinking she may be a "revier-for-hire" person given that it seems she only reviews movies and a few specific unrelated products and always seems to give them 1 or 5 stars, basiclaly nothing in between.
However I seen her respond to one of the comments in a pretty long and detailed way that no pay-per-review person would ever bother with. Let me quote a part of that: Quote:
Generally my experience with german culture is that you do get a lot more "ass-and-fart" type of humor there than what you see in slavic cultures and I assume the same thing can be said for american 60s and 70s servicemen. In general sailors in Poland, like most servicemen actually, often come from poor urban backgrounds and don't mince words. Humor on board could often be vicious and at times lewd. Still, the amount of bodily-related jokes and especially the gay innuendo references would feel very out of place in the Polish navy of the 80s and 90s. |
Interesting that you should bring that up. I have the five-hour version, and even there the total "debauchery" doesn't add up to fifteen minutes. Even the infamous Nightclub scene only has about five minutes of that. "Two hours of wretched, despicable behavior" is about as far from the truth of that movie as you can get. Most of it is people talking, and not about "Subject number one".
As for "onboard", I guess she was never in the navy. I was one of the Vietnam-era sailors in 1970, and knew many older men who had been in the war. Trust me on this - Das Boot is mild in that department. Any time someone picked up a new dirty joke he didn't just share it with his friends, but with everyone who would listen. For the most part there isn't much else for an off-duty sailor to do. |
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When I said "off-duty" I was referring to "off-duty while at sea" as in "not on watch". Of course we found plenty to do in port, like anything that would get us away from the ship for a few hours. It's funny, though - we would "swear like sailors", as the saying goes, but the unwritten rule was never in front of women or children. Or any civilians, for that matter. It just wasn't done. These days of course the women and children use language that would "make a sailor blush", and often does.
Times change. |
Judging by the reviews of most of the movies she watched she should stick to "Bambi".
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Sudden necro after five months? :-?
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Now we can all talk about what a terrible person she is while listening to The Dark Knight Returns Part II OST :woot: |
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I will say she got some issues. |
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