sweet.
2 episodes into the Pacific which I have never gotten to finish.
2 episodes into the Pacific which I have never gotten to finish.
If we reverse the order, The Pacific would have been raved about by everyone and then probably eclipsed by BoB. Both are really good but unfortunately, The Pacific is measured against BoB.IJones23 said:
I really like The Pacific. I know people try and compare it to BoB and say it's not as good, but it's a different animal. There's some outstanding acting in The Pacific.
Truly awful, especially because it was compared to Saving Private Ryan. I'm not sure it would even stand up to Stripes or 1941.GoAgs92 said:
This is so much better than the thin red line…man that that movie stunk
IJones23 said:
I really like The Pacific. I know people try and compare it to BoB and say it's not as good, but it's a different animal. There's some outstanding acting in The Pacific.
GoAgs92 said:
This is so much better than the thin red line…man that that movie stunk
GoAgs92 said:
This is so much better than the thin red line…man that that movie stunk
jeffk said:IJones23 said:
I really like The Pacific. I know people try and compare it to BoB and say it's not as good, but it's a different animal. There's some outstanding acting in The Pacific.
I think they're both excellent. I just prefer watching BoB over The Pacific. Just an easier watch for me personally.
Belton Ag said:
There is a massive difference in both theaters of WW2.
The Pacific theater was just so much more visceral than the Western European theater, and by the time of the Normandy breakout and Operation Bagration the Wehrmacht was a shadow of its former self.
In the Pacific, the US was tasked with rooting out a fanatical enemy hellbent on turning every island into a meat grinder and refusing to surrender.
It's interesting how it plays out in both of these series.
IJones23 said:
I really like The Pacific. I know people try and compare it to BoB and say it's not as good, but it's a different animal. There's some outstanding acting in The Pacific.
Yeah, if it is anything like the book or even remotely close to the actual history, it will be brutal.jbanda said:
I read the book a while back. Excellent read and I'm very much looking forward to the show, but it's going to be heartbreaking. If you've read anything at all about the 8th Air Force, that's not a spoiler.
Pahdz said:
Never seen either show but glad it's available on Netflix. Question... does it matter which series I watch first? I'm more interested in the Pacific theater so would like to start there.
Other than WWII, the series share no links. Start with The Pacific since that's where your interest lies.Pahdz said:
Never seen either show but glad it's available on Netflix. Question... does it matter which series I watch first? I'm more interested in the Pacific theater so would like to start there.
One of the things that I never considered until after I read With the Old Breed was how white-washed Band of Brothers might be. Band of Brothers paints everything with very broad strokes in terms of how great everyone in the company was. I don't recall any mentioning of specific guys basically losing their minds and doing horrific things. I remember the discussion about their Lt from Yale that couldn't make a decision about anything and would leave the front and go back to talk it over with other officers. With the Old Breed said everything good and bad about the soldiers out there, it didn't hold back. In retrospect it made me wonder what was left out of Band of Brothers because I thought The Pacific did a much better job of illustrating the hell of war and the toll it took on the soldiers.Belton Ag said:
I also read With the Old Breed, but I read it several years before the Pacific came out.
Two things that really stood out to me from the book were depicted in the series: the incident where the GI pulls the teeth out of the Japanese soldier while he was still alive, and the sound of the pebbles being dropped into the soldier's open skull.
Putting those scenes onto film couldn't even capture what I felt after reading the book. Just horrifying.
Of all the reading and studying I've done of WW2, I've concluded the two worst places to be would have been along the Eastern Front/Stalingrad and Peleliu/Okinawa. For both sides and civilians. I don't know if there were two worst places to be in all of military history.
OldArmy71 said:
What happened to your grandfather?
My uncle (A&M '28) was a Marine captain on Corregidor. He wound up dying in a POW camp in Japan.