Matrix Games Forums

Forums  Register  Login  Photo Gallery  Member List  Search  Calendars  FAQ 

My Profile  Inbox  Address Book  My Subscription  My Forums  Log Out

Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube

 
View related threads: (in this forum | in all forums)

Logged in as: Guest
Users viewing this topic: none
  Printable Version
All Forums >> [Current Games From Matrix.] >> [World War II] >> Steel Panthers World At War & Mega Campaigns >> Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube Page: [1]
Login
Message << Older Topic   Newer Topic >>
Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/4/2007 3:36:36 AM   
KG Erwin


Posts: 8981
Joined: 7/25/2000
From: Cross Lanes WV USA
Status: offline
Watch the Aussies as they face the Japanese in New Guinea. Some cool stuff, nice shots of a Bren LMG in action. When did this movie come out?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bPJ9y0n2_rw
Post #: 1
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/4/2007 3:57:46 AM   
Alby


Posts: 4855
Joined: 4/29/2000
From: Greenwood, Indiana
Status: offline
Not sure but looks like might be worth checking out...


_____________________________



(in reply to KG Erwin)
Post #: 2
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/4/2007 4:12:01 AM   
KG Erwin


Posts: 8981
Joined: 7/25/2000
From: Cross Lanes WV USA
Status: offline
Also check the final scene. There's a famous photo recreated here, and this sums up my admiration of our Aussie allies in the critical days of 1942.

The real photo is this one:




http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=egdGJ7QLa-0


Attachment (1)

< Message edited by KG Erwin -- 5/4/2007 4:17:50 AM >


_____________________________


(in reply to Alby)
Post #: 3
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/5/2007 12:50:33 AM   
Mac67

 

Posts: 496
Joined: 3/7/2006
From: Essex, England
Status: offline
Cool link Kg! Watched it while drinking a pint of fosters The movie was made in 2006, i definitely want to see this one! The release date for it in the usa is 2007, so hopefully it will be over here soon. The photo bought back memories of the Airfix toy soldiers i used to play with as a kid.



Attachment (1)

_____________________________

"If you are going through hell, keep going" - Winston Churchill

The Rose and Crown, a forum for British Gentlemen

(in reply to KG Erwin)
Post #: 4
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/5/2007 9:32:12 PM   
Steve Wilcox

 

Posts: 103
Joined: 8/17/2001
From: Victoria, BC, Canada
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mac67

Cool link Kg! Watched it while drinking a pint of fosters The movie was made in 2006, i definitely want to see this one! The release date for it in the usa is 2007, so hopefully it will be over here soon. The photo bought back memories of the Airfix toy soldiers i used to play with as a kid.



I had that very same Airfix set! I remember it fondly. Thanks for bringing back the memories.

(in reply to Mac67)
Post #: 5
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/6/2007 3:01:23 AM   
Arctic Blast


Posts: 1168
Joined: 4/4/2007
Status: offline
This looks like a very well done film, and it's always interesting to see something in a historical setting done from a different point of view.

_____________________________

Meditation on inevitable death should be performed daily.

(in reply to Steve Wilcox)
Post #: 6
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/6/2007 7:18:55 AM   
Riun T

 

Posts: 1848
Joined: 7/31/2004
Status: offline
the bayonet thrust to the deserters face was a cool touch!!,would it ever have sucked to have to fight in those type of confined visability harsh conditions!

(in reply to Arctic Blast)
Post #: 7
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/6/2007 9:18:44 PM   
KG Erwin


Posts: 8981
Joined: 7/25/2000
From: Cross Lanes WV USA
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Riun T

the bayonet thrust to the deserters face was a cool touch!!,would it ever have sucked to have to fight in those type of confined visability harsh conditions!


Yeah, that was disturbing. However, having read of the exploits of those early militia battalions (the 39th is featured in the movie), it's easy to see why these guys rate very highly with me. Early on, they didn't even have any mortars. All they had were rifles, SMGs, those magnificent Bren LMGs, and hand grenades. No arty support at all. No one expected them to be so effective in delaying the Japanese advance towards Port Moresby, but by god they did it.

One further note: the average age of this particular unit (excluding officers) was 18. A veritable children's crusade.

(in reply to Riun T)
Post #: 8
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/7/2007 6:11:37 AM   
Korpraali V


Posts: 659
Joined: 7/11/2005
From: Finland
Status: offline
Thanks! Good clips!

_____________________________


(in reply to KG Erwin)
Post #: 9
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/8/2007 7:44:38 AM   
h_h_lightcap


Posts: 113
Joined: 2/17/2004
From: Eureka, CA
Status: offline
KOKODA MANIA!!!!  PLEASE ALL READ "A BASTARD OF A PLACE"  BY PETER BRUNE

_____________________________

"My soul knows my meat is doing bad things, and is embarrassed. But my meat just keeps right on doing bad, dumb things." ----Kurt Vonnegut

(in reply to Korpraali V)
Post #: 10
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/8/2007 6:55:27 PM   
TheDesertRat


Posts: 119
Joined: 9/11/2005
Status: offline
A few points:
AMF = militia.
The men of the 39 th Bn initially only trained with Lewis guns when they were sent to Port Moresby. Most of the time there they were building roads, buildings and unloading ships. Their training was at best equivalent to 1 and a bit days per week.
It was not till the various companies were sent to Buna and Kokoda villages were they really introduced to the Bren LMG

The film depicts the last segment of the withdraw back to Port Moresby.
The 39 th Bn collectively had been fighting the Japanese since July through to September 1942.

On a small point no AMF solider wore green uniforms only the AIF at this point in time. Officers usually had only a revolver and that includes platoon commanders. Some may have had a rifle but that was rare.

When the AIF units did come into the fray the AMF troops, 39 th Bn troops went forward with them. It was their choice not an order. By the end of the Kokoda campaign the 39 th and a couple of other AMF Bns were so decimated that they were disbanded and merged into other units.

The Kokoda campaign was the second time the Japanese had been stopped in their move for control of vital points in PNG. In both cases the AMF troops played a huge part of these victories.

Guadalcanal was still being fought.



_____________________________

Good Bye!!!

(in reply to h_h_lightcap)
Post #: 11
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/8/2007 11:34:05 PM   
Mac67

 

Posts: 496
Joined: 3/7/2006
From: Essex, England
Status: offline
Currently laid at home with a buggered up back, and came across this little gem on the Movies 4 Men channel, "The Last Bullet", starring Jason Donovan and Koji Tamaki. Set on Borneo at the end of WW2, its the story of a pyschological battle between an Australian army recruit and a experienced Japanese sniper, as they play a deadly game of cat of mouse alone in the jungle. Some real tense moments, and a nice touch is that the Japanese are shown as real characters rather than a "banzai" screaming horde. Well worth looking out for.

_____________________________

"If you are going through hell, keep going" - Winston Churchill

The Rose and Crown, a forum for British Gentlemen

(in reply to TheDesertRat)
Post #: 12
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/9/2007 12:49:51 AM   
KG Erwin


Posts: 8981
Joined: 7/25/2000
From: Cross Lanes WV USA
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: TheDesertRat

A few points:
AMF = militia.
The men of the 39 th Bn initially only trained with Lewis guns when they were sent to Port Moresby. Most of the time there they were building roads, buildings and unloading ships. Their training was at best equivalent to 1 and a bit days per week.
It was not till the various companies were sent to Buna and Kokoda villages were they really introduced to the Bren LMG

The film depicts the last segment of the withdraw back to Port Moresby.
The 39 th Bn collectively had been fighting the Japanese since July through to September 1942.

On a small point no AMF solider wore green uniforms only the AIF at this point in time. Officers usually had only a revolver and that includes platoon commanders. Some may have had a rifle but that was rare.

When the AIF units did come into the fray the AMF troops, 39 th Bn troops went forward with them. It was their choice not an order. By the end of the Kokoda campaign the 39 th and a couple of other AMF Bns were so decimated that they were disbanded and merged into other units.

The Kokoda campaign was the second time the Japanese had been stopped in their move for control of vital points in PNG. In both cases the AMF troops played a huge part of these victories.

Guadalcanal was still being fought.




Some other things I noticed. I made it a point to save the 39th Bn's War Diaries onto my HD. In late June 1942 a number of AIF officers were shipped in to replace many previous commanders, and this included the Battalion Commander. Lt Col Conran was sent home, and Lt Col Owen was brought in. This particular battalion was trained intensively, as it was intended to play a pivotal role in the initial defense of Kokoda.

A note to others: Desert Rat and I have privately corresponded about the AMF/AIF, and I've learned much from him.

I've focused upon the 39th because of their combat record and their involvement in those critical months. The battalion formally ceased to exist on July 3, 1943, and the survivors were folded into the 2/2 AIF.

Historical nitpicking aside, I'm gonna get a copy of that movie. What these boys (literally) did happened to coincide with another favorite unit's experiences on Guadalcanal. These Aussies and US Marines, all inexperienced, faced down the Japanese on their last offensive moves in the SWPA, and held them until the Allies gathered the strength to start on the way to pushing to the doorstep of Japan itself.



_____________________________


(in reply to TheDesertRat)
Post #: 13
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/9/2007 3:03:43 PM   
TheDesertRat


Posts: 119
Joined: 9/11/2005
Status: offline
The concept of the screaming banzai charges are a thing of later battles and that funny place called Hollywood.
BUT if you read history as written on the day, or with in months of its occurrence, you will find that the Japanese had different approaches to the concept of the attack. The tactics did include noise and screaming many things. But they were also silent when needed even when amassed before the final charge.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mac67

Currently laid at home with a buggered up back, and came across this little gem on the Movies 4 Men channel, "The Last Bullet", starring Jason Donovan and Koji Tamaki. Set on Borneo at the end of WW2, its the story of a pyschological battle between an Australian army recruit and a experienced Japanese sniper, as they play a deadly game of cat of mouse alone in the jungle. Some real tense moments, and a nice touch is that the Japanese are shown as real characters rather than a "banzai" screaming horde. Well worth looking out for.



_____________________________

Good Bye!!!

(in reply to Mac67)
Post #: 14
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/9/2007 3:06:25 PM   
TheDesertRat


Posts: 119
Joined: 9/11/2005
Status: offline
As an addition the following is the caption for the attached picture:

MELBOURNE, VIC. 1943-06-03. PRESENTATION OF AMERICAN DISTINGUISHED SERVICE CROSSES TO MRS. OWEN, (WIFE OF LIEUTENANT COLONEL W. T. OWEN), AND MRS. WALKER, (MOTHER OF LIEUTENANT I. WALKER), IN THE GROUNDS OF THE 4TH AMERICAN GENERAL HOSPITAL, MELBOURNE. BOTH OFFICERS WERE KILLED CARRYING OUT DEEDS WHICH WON THEM THEIR AWARDS. LIEUTENANT COLONEL W. T. OWEN GAINED THE AWARD FOR EXTRAORDINARY HEROISM IN AN ACTION AT KOKODA ON 1942-07-27, WHILE LIEUTENANT I. WALKER GAINED HIS AWARD FOR EXTRAORDINARY HEROISM IN AN ACTION NEAR BUNA. THE AWARD TO LIEUTENANT COLONEL OWEN WAS THE FIRST AMERICAN AWARD WON BY AN AUSTRALIAN. MAJOR-GENERAL C. W. LEPSCH, U.S. FORCES, (LEFT) IS ESCORTING MRS. OWEN AND MAJOR K. WALKER (EXTREME RIGHT) IS ESCORTING HIS MOTHER, MRS. WALKER, AS THEY WALK UP TO RECEIVE THE POSTHUMOUS AWARDS FROM COLONEL F. L. BURNS, C.O. BASE SECTION 4, U.S. FORCES.





Attachment (1)

_____________________________

Good Bye!!!

(in reply to TheDesertRat)
Post #: 15
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/11/2007 12:14:58 AM   
KG Erwin


Posts: 8981
Joined: 7/25/2000
From: Cross Lanes WV USA
Status: offline
Ok, I checked the customer reviews on Amazon, and they aren't very encouraging. In any case, the DVD has not been released in the US yet. The impression I get is that glorifying war isn't an Australian trait, a point reinforced by another film on an earlier war, which was "Gallipoli". I happened to enjoy that film, though. Great performance by a young Mel Gibson.


(in reply to TheDesertRat)
Post #: 16
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/11/2007 6:55:35 AM   
Arctic Blast


Posts: 1168
Joined: 4/4/2007
Status: offline
I remember watching Gallipolli in high school at one point...can't really remember what class, though, since we don't have a History curriculum up here in Canada...it falls in to the bizarrely named Social Studies course. I do remember enjoying the movie, though.


_____________________________

Meditation on inevitable death should be performed daily.

(in reply to KG Erwin)
Post #: 17
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/17/2007 11:57:58 AM   
Maiq

 

Posts: 13
Joined: 5/17/2007
Status: offline
They sure seemed to be having problems manipulating the bolts on their rifles. Makes for suspense I suppose.

Makes you appreciate the M1

(in reply to Arctic Blast)
Post #: 18
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/18/2007 12:46:47 AM   
Arctic Blast


Posts: 1168
Joined: 4/4/2007
Status: offline
Well, being that young, and suddenly being thrown in to an assault like that...it's probably understandable.


_____________________________

Meditation on inevitable death should be performed daily.

(in reply to Maiq)
Post #: 19
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/18/2007 10:41:43 PM   
Maiq

 

Posts: 13
Joined: 5/17/2007
Status: offline
I suppose the fumbling around with the rifles could have been good acting, ie simulating how untrained troops might act under stress. At one point it looked like one of the actors had accidently removed the bolt from his rifle and was trying to get it back in but wasn't quite sure how to do it.

(in reply to Arctic Blast)
Post #: 20
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/19/2007 12:07:55 AM   
KG Erwin


Posts: 8981
Joined: 7/25/2000
From: Cross Lanes WV USA
Status: offline
I agree with both of you guys -- remember, this is a bunch of teenagers in their first combats. I'd be willing to guess that even when they got off their shots, it's unlikely they scored many hits. That's why the Brens & grenades were so important.

So, yeah, that the director's (and the military consultant's) attention to detail being demonstrated.

(in reply to Maiq)
Post #: 21
RE: Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube - 5/19/2007 12:45:15 AM   
Maiq

 

Posts: 13
Joined: 5/17/2007
Status: offline
Brilliant directing then. Too bad those Aussie kids didn't get the level of training that British soldiers supposedly got. Their proficiency was something on the order of 15-20 rounds a minute aimed fire wasn't it?

I stand by my contention that it makes one appreciate the M1 even more

(in reply to KG Erwin)
Post #: 22
Page:   [1]
All Forums >> [Current Games From Matrix.] >> [World War II] >> Steel Panthers World At War & Mega Campaigns >> Scenes from "Kokoda" On You Tube Page: [1]
Jump to:





New Messages No New Messages
Hot Topic w/ New Messages Hot Topic w/o New Messages
Locked w/ New Messages Locked w/o New Messages
 Post New Thread
 Reply to Message
 Post New Poll
 Submit Vote
 Delete My Own Post
 Delete My Own Thread
 Rate Posts


Forum Software © ASPPlayground.NET Advanced Edition 2.4.5 ANSI

1.283