WW II Spy Novels discussion
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Sands of Iwo Jima
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It's not a war flick unless someone says..
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"How do those armchair-generals expect me to fight-- when all they keep sending me are these green kids!?"
Abraham Lincoln to Ulysses S. Grant:"Each of us has made it possible for the other to do terrible things."
Movie Lincoln 2012
Cliches... I am sure you know some. They're like, sayings-which-everyone-always-says-so-often, that you're-sick-to-death-of-hearing-'em!
If you watch war movies in any quantity there's always these same kinds of dialog in every war film, lines said by the characters which you can almost predict. Spot 'em comin' a mile away.
Like, "boy, its quiet out there..yeah..TOO quiet!"
Or: "Grenade! Hit the dirt!"
Or: "Dive! Dive! Dive!" (submarine movies)
I bet you can come up with one if you give it some thought!
If you watch war movies in any quantity there's always these same kinds of dialog in every war film, lines said by the characters which you can almost predict. Spot 'em comin' a mile away.
Like, "boy, its quiet out there..yeah..TOO quiet!"
Or: "Grenade! Hit the dirt!"
Or: "Dive! Dive! Dive!" (submarine movies)
I bet you can come up with one if you give it some thought!
Karl wrote: "Fire at will!"Goooooooood one was meant for this one....
Seems like I've replied to myself a few times...
"Vee haff vays ...of making-k you ...TALK..
..you vill tell us vhat vee veesh to know..in zee end, efferybody TALKS"
..you vill tell us vhat vee veesh to know..in zee end, efferybody TALKS"
"We knew the odds ...were against us--but we went in anyway. I'm glad...! The Captain made the right decision...!"
(the pilot's name was George Zip)
(the pilot's name was George Zip)
I've always wondered about the phrase: 'Don't shoot until you (can) see the whites of their eyes!' - never heard it in a movie, though. Anybody know where it came from?
Karl wrote: "I've always wondered about the phrase: 'Don't shoot until you (can) see the whites of their eyes!' - never heard it in a movie, though. Anybody know where it came from?"I don't think it clears much up but there is this about Bunker Hill. It mentions the question about half down the article.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_o...
Thank you, I followed the link through to Sir Andrews Agnew, in the battle of Dettingen in 1743. Seems like the french cuirassiers were short of sunglasses, too.
Yes, but this was the era of professional armies, no doubt a phrase like that caugth on - and travelled with soldiers between continents.( And did the term 'American' , as we use it today, exist before the Revolutionary Wars ?)
Heck who knowes some line doggy in China may have said it back in the day when gun powder was in invented.
♕ Suƶie ♘ wrote: "I love that one!"Yep, it's one of my favorites as well, takes me back to the day, on the rifle range, "lock and load one 9 round Magazine"...
"Men, I have a dangerous assignment here. The man who undertakes this mission may not make it back. I'm looking for volunteers.."







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