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03-29-2010 09:04 PM
# ADS
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I watched the 3rd segment last night, and it was mostly fornicating. I was shocked, shocked I say!
Jim
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"Me. All the rest are deados!"
67th Company, 5th Marines 1st Sgt. Daniel "Pop" Hunter's response to 1st Lt. Jonas Platt's query "Who is your Commander"?, Torcy side of Hill 142, Belleau Wood, 8:00 am, 6 Jun 1918.
Semper Fidelis!

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I too, watched the 3rd last night, and did not expect that.
In the latest edition of "World War II" mag it says they didn't have enough "time" to put more of the Navy and airmens roles in there.
It also says that there was "...careful attention to historical versimilitude in scenery, costumes, weapons, and materiel." Close, but...
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Legacy Member
Back to THE PACIFIC; I found the use of the wrong Springfields distracting. Also, the Marines did not appear "at home" with the 03A3's... rifles came out of shoulders to do bolt manipulation. There was none of the high-rate-of fire bolt manipulation a trained rifleman is capable of and the Old Corps was famous for. I contrast this with Jude Law's role as Vasily Zeitseff in ENEMY AT THE GATES and even back to old Gary Cooper as SERGEANT YORK. Those actors fired their prop guns like riflemen. The firefight on Alligator Creek focused on the guys moving the '17 watercooled, and the men firing Thompsons. I just felt this was a missed opportunity, but these skills don't come easily and hard to impart to a 2009 25 year-old from central casting, I guess...
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Thank You to Griff Murphey For This Useful Post:
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Hey, in "fighting Seabees" all the Japs have Krags!
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I am glad they made the effort to make the series. Some of the younger chaps have no idea what happened in WWII, and the agony and suffering their grandparents went though. Now if they will just make a WWI series with Belleau Wood as the focus, I will be content.
Tarawa - 20,000 Marines on less than 1 square mile. 4000 dead rotting bodies within 72 hours. It boggles the mind. The stench must have been horrendous.
Jim
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"Me. All the rest are deados!"
67th Company, 5th Marines 1st Sgt. Daniel "Pop" Hunter's response to 1st Lt. Jonas Platt's query "Who is your Commander"?, Torcy side of Hill 142, Belleau Wood, 8:00 am, 6 Jun 1918.
Semper Fidelis!

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Legacy Member
Reising SMG ?
Am I mistaken or did I see a Model 50 Reising SMG mixed in with the A3s.
In one scene I saw a Thompson M1928 and (what I think was) a Reising M50 SMG. I understand that the marines on Guadalcanal initially used the Reising but were both weapons issued concurrently in the same unit?
What's the story on the Reising SMGs? Were they intended to replace the Thompsons and did the M3 "Grease Gun" subsequently replace them?
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The "take" on the Reisings was that they were too finely "machined" to take the kind of abuse found in a combat environment.
People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.
--George Orwell
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Legacy Member
My wifes Grandfather was a Navy corpman attached to the 3rd Marines. He said he was offered the options of carrying a carbine or a Reising. It was common knowledge to him that the Reising was "junk", and he declined both. He said he later bought a 1911 off an airman, $50, and carried that shortly, but sold it for what he had paid. Said he didn't need it anyway and would rather carry more supplies.
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