Yes there's three separate scenes I believe.
Seems I know the movie a bit better than Cityzen.
As I have never watched it right through you should do.
Yes there's three separate scenes I believe.
Seems I know the movie a bit better than Cityzen.
You're the one that replied to me erroneously correcting me. My response even acknowledged it would be easy to blend two together. Sorry for.. Replying?
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Here's the two Russian roulette scenes that I'm aware of, could you post the one I've not seen please?
There was the jungle scene when they were prisoners and then in Saigon after the Americans had withdrawn and where the Christopher Walken character eventually killed himself.
Anyone got a vhs player and a black and white tv I can borrow to watch it on?
Id say castro
But then if you borrowed his tv
He'd be without one
Living rent free again, I see. Which of my TVs would you like to borrow?
Another post you can tell is pathetic by who liked it.
There was the jungle scene when they were prisoners and then in Saigon after the Americans had withdrawn and where the Christopher Walken character eventually killed himself.
Heimeldir detailed it above before your initial interjection.
There's an extended edition. You can go to Wikipedia which has a plot synopsis if you're that interested. As you said though, it's not a movie I particularly liked so can't be bothered researching for you.
Heimeldir mention two, the same as me and you said the Russian roulette scenes were 'a recurring theme' through the film, they weren't.
It seems the only person posting erroneously in this thread is you.

There, Nick is treated at a U.S. military hospital. Once released, Nick, now suffering from PTSD, wanders into a gambling den. French businessman Julien Grinda persuades him to come inside. Upset, Nick interrupts a game of Russian roulette, pulling the trigger on himself. Mike happens to be present as a spectator, but Nick and Julien hurriedly leave.
Mike returns to Vietnam in search of Nick. Wandering around Saigon, which is now in a state of chaos shortly before its fall, Mike finds Julien and persuades him to take him to the gambling den. Mike finds himself facing Nick, who has become a professional in the macabre game and fails to recognize Mike. Mike attempts to bring Nick back to reason by invoking memories of their hunting trips back home, but Nick maintains his indifference. However, during a game of Russian roulette between Mike and Nick, Nick recalls Mike's "one shot" method and smiles before pulling the trigger and killing himself.
Cheers. Never watched it right through, just caught bits now and again when it has been on TV. Apocalypse Now is another widely acclaimed film I have never managed to watch all the way through.
The AN shown on the various channels/streams these days is a different film from the edited one i saw on ITV (?) in the 1980s.. that whole scene with the French colonialists was cut out and a lot of the scenes with Brando. It was always a better and easier watch under the influence of something/anything.
I've never made it all the way through of Easy Rider
Where eagles dare is so good
Crash was amazingYeah Hurt Locker was pretty average.
Crash was one that I hadn't really heard of but I thought was brilliant. Although that may be because I love when films are put together like that with the inter-related plots.
I thought the stag scene was before they shipped out but honestly my memory is very poor so would not be surprised if it was the other way around lol.It covered many topics (maybe too many) in three hours and you take from it what you want. A lot about masculinity, changing blue collar America, young men being expected to sacrifice their lives/be crippled for a country that wouldn't accept their freedom of sexuality, women at the time being trapped in unhappy relationships, the US being a blend of cultures and religions... I thought it was a film showing how ****ed up humankind was and de Niros character let the stag live because he saw the purity in nature in comparison to the mess that he'd seen/caused in Vietnam.
Oh my word Leon, now that was a cracking filmYe, I remember many were disappointed and considered it boring when it came out.. went to see a war film and then had to sit through an hour long wedding scene. I think the studios cut a lot of films to make then more palatable for the audiences at the time - apocalypse now, get carter, Leon etc.
Crash was amazing
Oh my word Leon, now that was a cracking film
My own take on it was that Leon was a father figure looking after someone that was literally down in the gutter. Gary old man was fantastic, I watched him recently giving a eulogy on David Bowie, obviously it was an old piece but he literally spoke for 20 minutes without one prompt, everything from his heart and his own response to Bowie’s passing. Now that is pure artistry and just an amazing human being…Ye, it was... Not aged well for these times, when the hero is having a sexual relationship with a 12 year old, supposedly initiated by her.
Today's audience would reverse it and see Gary Oldman working in the public sector, coping with addiction issues, and executing summary justice on a negligent family and then a *****phile.