Posted on 11/07/2014 5:43:15 PM PST by PJ-Comix
Tom Bombadil
“Spinal Tap” was a pretty accurate representation of the average heavy metal band.
Twelve OClock High
Memphis Belle
The Battle of Midway (John Ford)
Add:
Jim Thorpe, All American
and of course, Knute (with Ronald Reagan)
NOOOOOOO!!!! I actually met the pilot of the Memphis Belle, Robert Morgan, and spoke to him at length because he was signing autographs for his book "The Man Who Flew The Memphis Belle" in a booth next to mine at an air show. He told me he HATED the move because it was horribly inaccurate.
Battle of the Bulge was pretty accurate. Not a great war flick but it was underrated.
That being said, Robert Shaw gave a great performance.
I think Sgt. York was accurate in general but a lot of the details were wrong. For instance in the movie he had a brother and sister but in actuality came from a very large family.
Minor errors I can think of off hand are they had him use a Luger instead of the correct 1911 and a Springfield while he actually used a 1917 Enfield.
I bet there are a lot of other odds and ends that are wrong but in general it is right.
Yes
“I have heard from someone who was there, that We Were Soldiers is fairly accurate.”
I was until the end. The 7th Cav. took a real kicking when they marched out from LZ Xray to LZ Albany.
A buddy of mine said the boot camp parts of Apocalypse Now were pretty much spot on to his time.
“In Cold Blood” ignored the homosexual relationship between the pair of murderers.
thanks.....yup...came across all that in reading about him. I reckon the movie changed in bits which the director knew would translate better on the screen. Glad to know others are aware of Sgt York’s contributions. :)
It didn’t hurt that R. Lee Ermey was a DI in that time period and the director let Ermey ad-lib his lines to make them sound realistic.
CC
From The War Department, Photographed by the 8th US Air Force and Combat Crew members
Conan the Barbarian. The ancient sites they’ve been finding in Turkey make it seem more and more accurate all the time.
Yes, Fargo probably deserves an award as the most audaciously fake movie ever. Sort of have to give them credit for brazenness tho.
It did seem so real especially after they told you it was.
My neighbor agrees
Battle of the Bulge was pretty accurate. Not a great war flick but it was underrated.
That was one of the very worst WW II movies of all time for many reasons.
Maybe you mean The Longest Day.
Definitely Ed Wood. Definitely.
I’ve heard it said that survivors of D day left the opening scene of “saving private ryan” shaking and in a cold sweat due to the level of accuracy.
CC
I WAS a DI at Parris Island, and Ermey was spot-on with his role
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