I read a review from a WWII buff I follow on Twitter and he said aside from a few kit discrepancies and the beach not looking crowded enough at times it was more or less quite accurate.
Teacher_Ag said:
I read a review from a WWII buff I follow on Twitter and he said aside from a few kit descrepancies and the beach not looking crowded enough at times it was more or less quite accurate.
Teacher_Ag said:
Propaganda is art that persuades. What was this film trying to persuade you of? British superiority? Well, in the context of the larger war this battle was the British and French taking an L.
I think Nolan intended for this to be a story about how individuals rise or shrink when it's all on the line. And about how people band together and do extraordinary things to help when it's do or die. He told that story through the events at Dunkirk, but he could have done so with any number of nations/wars/battles involved and it still wouldn't really be a work of propaganda. If he made a story of average German soldiers and civilians desperately trying to survive during the Battle of Berlin would that be Nazi Propaganda? It depends...did he glorify Nazi ideals? Did he attempt to show Nazis as superior or without flaws? Did he dehumanize or demonize the enemy? If not...it isn't meant as propaganda.
I sat in standard on the second row. Because man I dont buy tickets ahead of time.AliasMan02 said:
See it in IMAX.
Trident 88 said:
What did you guys specifically like about it?
I really wanted to like this movie, but I left the theater feeling like I'd wasted my money. I liked the aerial combat, but that might be it.
I can give an answer to this one. Planes that low can't afford to turn around. They loose all their speed and kinetic energy, and crash. I don't think in real life he could have made one 180 turn to shoot that German. If a plane like that loses an engine on takeoff and only gets a few hundred feet like that, then they are supposed to land in a clearing in front of them. Not try to turn around.Quote:
Why didn't Tom Hardy turn the plane around one more time so that he would land where the British were instead of having to surrender to the Germans?
Brian Earl Spilner said:
Literally everything.
The tension. The action. The cinematography. The sound. The music.
There's nothing I disliked about it.
aTmAg said:I can give an answer to this one. Planes that low can't afford to turn around. They loose all their speed and kinetic energy, and crash. I don't think in real life he could have made one 180 turn to shoot that German. If a plane like that loses an engine on takeoff and only gets a few hundred feet like that, then they are supposed to land in a clearing in front of them. Not try to turn around.Quote:
Why didn't Tom Hardy turn the plane around one more time so that he would land where the British were instead of having to surrender to the Germans?
The fact that he turned the first time and shot down the German plane is exactly why I asked why he didn't turn a second time to land in friendly territory. And if that wasn't possible, then turn left and ditch it in the ocean. Hell, try anything else potentially survivable before you turn yourself into the krauts.aTmAg said:I can give an answer to this one. Planes that low can't afford to turn around. They loose all their speed and kinetic energy, and crash. I don't think in real life he could have made one 180 turn to shoot that German. If a plane like that loses an engine on takeoff and only gets a few hundred feet like that, then they are supposed to land in a clearing in front of them. Not try to turn around.Quote:
Why didn't Tom Hardy turn the plane around one more time so that he would land where the British were instead of having to surrender to the Germans?
1. Because they were being shot at, and going above deck before they absolutely had to was suicide. They were in enemy territory. The soldier who drowned was the French soldier who didn't understand what they were saying when they said to abandon ship; he was focused on trying to plug the leaks. At least that's what I think it was. Especially down in the hold of the ship it got confusing of who was who.Trident 88 said:
I'll accept that I just "didn't get it" for some reason. Maybe I expected too much.
A few nitpicky questions about the story:
Why didn't all of the soldiers below deck on the Dutch boat that the Germans were using for target practice manage to get out before they drowned? At least one idiot didn't make it.
Why didn't Tom Hardy turn the plane around one more time so that he would land where the British were instead of having to surrender to the Germans?
Why were the British troops lined up on the beach like sitting ducks for the German aircraft when there were no boats nearby? Made zero tactical sense.
Why wasn't the civilian flotilla that showed up to rescue the troops much larger? It seems like it would have had to be to help save literally hundreds of thousands of troops, and it would have made the scene much more impressive and uplifting. Were there really so few boats making multiple trips instead? If the budget didn't allow for more actual boats to be rented, why not CGI them?
I think this is important and isn't a spoiler, but a point of historic fact that might help people:Trident 88 said:The fact that he turned the first time and shot down the German plane is exactly why I asked why he didn't turn a second time to land in friendly territory. And if that wasn't possible, then turn left and ditch it in the ocean. Hell, try anything else potentially survivable before you turn yourself into the krauts.aTmAg said:I can give an answer to this one. Planes that low can't afford to turn around. They loose all their speed and kinetic energy, and crash. I don't think in real life he could have made one 180 turn to shoot that German. If a plane like that loses an engine on takeoff and only gets a few hundred feet like that, then they are supposed to land in a clearing in front of them. Not try to turn around.Quote:
Why didn't Tom Hardy turn the plane around one more time so that he would land where the British were instead of having to surrender to the Germans?
Landing in water is usually really bad. The better point would be to ask where the hell did all those people go in the 5 minutes it took him too land on the beach.Trident 88 said:The fact that he turned the first time and shot down the German plane is exactly why I asked why he didn't turn a second time to land in friendly territory. And if that wasn't possible, then turn left and ditch it in the ocean. Hell, try anything else potentially survivable before you turn yourself into the krauts.aTmAg said:I can give an answer to this one. Planes that low can't afford to turn around. They loose all their speed and kinetic energy, and crash. I don't think in real life he could have made one 180 turn to shoot that German. If a plane like that loses an engine on takeoff and only gets a few hundred feet like that, then they are supposed to land in a clearing in front of them. Not try to turn around.Quote:
Why didn't Tom Hardy turn the plane around one more time so that he would land where the British were instead of having to surrender to the Germans?