If you could make a movie about any battle or theatre etc

KC72

Active member
What would it be?

I would like to see a film set in Burma during ww2, it`s a forgotten part of the war and lots of different nationalities fought there, British. Indian and African etc. The jungle fighting was extremely hard for everyone involved and contains lots of stories of heroism and valour.
 
I'd like to see a movie about Leyte and the saga of Taffy 3. US escort carriers and destroyers vs. Japanese battleships, heavy cruisers and more. The charge of the USS Roberts alone swells my heart with pride at the courage and selfsacrifice of those men. It was David against Goliath with the success and safety of the transports and the landing sites at stake.

Halsey's greatest mistake would pain me though. Leaving the invasion area to chase Japanese carriers he had no way of knowing were impotent drew heavy criticism for him. For my part, I love the man. Not because he was such a great war leader but because I wouldn't be here without him. Admiral Halsey made an inspection of the battle site where my father was gravely wounded (not at Leyte). He ordered that the three most seriously wounded Marines be loaded aboard his personal plane (all he could carry). My father was one of those three Marines. He wouldn't have made it otherwise.
 
I would absolutely love to see an entire series devoted to accurately telling the tale of the Eastern Front of World War II. FAR too much happened on that front to hope to fit into a single film. That was the front where Europe was won or lost. Had the USSR been defeated, Nazi Germany may very well have had enough manpower and resources to knock down the rest of the world, bit by bit. Germany vs the USSR, is massively undervalued by most of the world. Many are barely aware of the importance of that front. If the USSR were defeated in 1941/1942, no D-day would have ever been possible and it is unlikely that Continental Europe could have been liberated from German control ... well for a very very long time indeed. Preferably, a non-biased telling from both sides would be great <- That is unlikely since the public always prefers to have a good guy and a bad guy, with the good guy winning out in the end. It's difficult to qualify either head of state (Hitler and Stalin) as being a "good guy" exactly. Truth be told, the lesser of two evils won that conflict.
 
I would like to see a movie based on the North Africa battles from a little before El Alemien to Tunisia...and watch Rommel, Monty, Kesselring, Anderson, and Patton go at it. Along with Lendendal's sucky performance at Kesserine Pass which provided the British with not much hope in American troops.
 
crete, without a doubt.


dispite being a defeat for commonwealth forces there are so many stories of heroism tied up in it.


maori battalion soldiers with no ammo waiting to bayonet german paratroops as they landed...

...the actions of charles upham and the many many kiwis who found themselves cut off an fought on, with the help of the people of crete
 
There were at least a couple of movies about the war in Burma. Objective Burma (1945) with Errol Flynn and Merrill's Marauders (1962) with Jeff Chandler. Of the two I prefer the latter. It showed more fully the harshness of the struggle there.
 
I've seen both of those so I should qualify it I guess. I'd like to see one based around the Chindits and Kachin Rangers ;)
 
godofthunder9010 said:
I would absolutely love to see an entire series devoted to accurately telling the tale of the Eastern Front of World War II. FAR too much happened on that front to hope to fit into a single film. That was the front where Europe was won or lost. Had the USSR been defeated, Nazi Germany may very well have had enough manpower and resources to knock down the rest of the world, bit by bit. Germany vs the USSR, is massively undervalued by most of the world. Many are barely aware of the importance of that front. If the USSR were defeated in 1941/1942, no D-day would have ever been possible and it is unlikely that Continental Europe could have been liberated from German control ... well for a very very long time indeed. Preferably, a non-biased telling from both sides would be great <- That is unlikely since the public always prefers to have a good guy and a bad guy, with the good guy winning out in the end. It's difficult to qualify either head of state (Hitler and Stalin) as being a "good guy" exactly. Truth be told, the lesser of two evils won that conflict.

Hear hear. The greatest conflict in the history of humankind and most people barely know anything about it.

If I had to choose a single battle it would be 'Operation Typhoon', the German final thrust for Moscow. I find it remarkable that in the 12 weeks since Barbarossa had begun, the Red Army suffered more casualties than any other army in all of human history and yet still came back to win in the end. Incredible story of the courage and tenacity of a nation against a battering that IMO would have finished off any other country. A story that deserves to be fully told. If the Russians had been Americans John Wayne, Harrison Ford and Tom Cruise all would have starred in movies about the Eastern Front I'm sure.
 
Yes, I did. In fact, I've visited his grave site. Do you know why he's buried there? Because he died onboard a US airplane and his body was recovered by US graves and registration.

He was a bit of a loony, and certainly a maverick, but he was one of the foremost military minds of his era. It is fitting he's buried in Arlington afterall for he is a grandfather of US Special Forces. Many of the ideas that SF use now came directly from him.
 
I would like to see some more Korean war ones.
One about the Gloucesters and their famous battle, one about the fighting on the HOOK and an Aussie one about the Battle of Kapyong.
For WWII: Dieppe, a lot more about the Eastern front, Crete is a great idea as long as it shows the perspective from all nations involved.
Maybe a Monte Cassino one as well.
More modern ones would be Arab Israeli themed ones, the French in Indo china and some Malaya/ Borneo ones from the SAS perspective.
Hows that????
 
I can't make up my mind, so I have several...

Culloden - as long as it was accurate and not the romanticized nonsense that was Braveheart (which I liked as a movie - just not accurate history...). As a battle it wasn't that much but it did forever change the way of life in Scotland. Not to mention that fact that I had ancestors that died there (MacKinnon).

Antietam - Just don't give it the Pro-Longstreet bias that Shaara showed in Gettysburg (it was based on Shaara's book "The Killer Angels").

Waterloo would be good too
 
If you haven't seen in, Chasing The Deer (1994) has a great battle scene of Culloden.

http://www.rambles.net/chasing_deer94.html

Antietam wouldn't be my choice of Civil War battles for a movie (I'd pick The Wilderness first) but it would still make a good movie.

Yeah, Waterloo could stand a decent version. The 1970 version with Christopher Plummer was a snore.
 
Waterloo would be good too

Waterloo would be fantastic, imagine all the special effects that Hollywood could throw at it, huge army`s , Cavary charge`s, Cannons blasting and earbursting sound effects!

And trafalger would be great as well.
 
proberly operation market garden even though it was largley a failure great courage was shown time and time again paras fought couragously agains tanks and artillery with against crack german troops.
 
ill be damed if i know said:
proberly operation market garden even though it was largley a failure great courage was shown time and time again paras fought couragously agains tanks and artillery with against crack german troops.


Try......"A bridge too far." ;)
 
A Bridge Too Far was a damned good movie. They got the gist of it alright. Robert Redford, Michael Caine, Ryan O'Neil, Gene Hackman, Elliott Gould, Anthony Hopkins, and James Caan were certainly great in it, but Sean Connery as Maj. Gen Urquhart was the best casting though Redford was a close second.

(Ryan O'Neil as General Gavin & Robert Redford as Major Cook)

Brigadier General Gavin: What's the best way to take a bridge?
Maj. Julian Cook: Both ends at once.
Brigadier General Gavin: I'm sending two companies across the river by boat. I need a man with very special qualities to lead.
Maj. Julian Cook: Go on, sir.
Brigadier General Gavin: He's got to be tough enough to do it and he's got to be experienced enough to do it. Plus one more thing. He's got to be dumb enough to do it... Start getting ready.
Junior Officer: what was all that about, Major?
Maj. Julian Cook: Well someone's come up with a real nightmare. Real nightmare.
 
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