>>14404073Haha, cheers! MASH was based in Korea! Didn't know a motion picture was created; just remembered it as a television program.
>>14404070>If yall wanna watch a really good movie about the korean war, watch The Brotherhood of War (Tai guk gi). It's a korean film, so you'd need subtitles, but its worth it.Was wondering if this motion picture was the one where they had the battle scene in the school and it doesn't seem so. The school was empty of course. If recalling correctly some Korean soldiers fought in the abandoned school similar to an Alamo type scenario.
It's neat looking back at the Korean War and seeing the Korean and Allied soldiers in that war using equipment that was used in WWII. At times it can be quite difficult to tell the scenes and images apart from WWII because much of the weapons and equipment appeared to be similar.
Anyways, just watched a scene for the move you shared and not familiar with it so cheers for sharing!
And as noted here:
>>14404072>entered the countries making war movies propaganda to try and both demoralize their enemy and boost morale for their own troops phase of the road to the warNote that the Chicoms have released a military propaganda motion picture in the midst of growing international tensions.
Unfortunately, too many Chicom "fanboys" in The West consume the Chicom propaganda just as much as the Russian "fanboys" consume the RT stuff.
The West used to make some fantastic propaganda-styled motion pictures, but those seemed to have ended in the '90s early 2000s, which is notable, because "national pride" or "citizenry pride" has also declined within this same timeframe.
Perhaps there's a relationship here.
Also entertainment consumption has changed within this timeframe, so that's worth noting. Back then those major motion pictures almost everyone watched, whereas these days with Netflix/etc., it's unlikely one or two major motion pictures can have a similar impact on the popular mind as they did back then.