SUBSCRIBER BONANZA! The Greatest War Movies Of All Time
Aww yeah! Kyle, Adam, and Travis welcome you to a special subscriber edition of The Babylon Bee Podcast where they talk about their favorite war movies of all time and get thoughts from the subscribers on the subject too! It's also been a while since the gang read through subscriber headlines, so let's dig in! To catch this full episode, become a subscriber to The Babylon Bee at: http://babylonbee.com/plans
Hey everyone, welcome to oh yeah oh yeah Welcome everyone to the very first ever subscriber exclusive podcast called subscriber bonanza or something It's called oh yeah colon the subscriber story Subscriber I wanted you to keep going another colon How many colons can you fit in?
Two colons is not too excessive, but then you got to get some hyphens in there Okay.
Some ellipses Oh, ellipses.
It starts with an ellipses dot dot dot.
Oh yeah colon, a subscriber story, colon brought to you by VSD or whatever the thing we were joking about.
That's a callback to an episode that they might not have seen.
Subscribers see every episode.
I feel like your, it starts with an ellipsis is a good name for like your autobiography or something, and I could see you on the front like it starts with an ellipsis dot dot dot.
Like a Mitch McConnell interview.
It's with an ellipsis.
I feel like there was an earthquake just now or something that was very plane, just landed on the roof.
It was very rumbling.
Earthquakes end with an ellipsis.
You don't know who's live.
Did you see that horrible video where the freaking plane that was doing the gender reveal?
I, I saw.
I saw the story.
I didn't watch the video.
It kind of popped up on my twitter feed like someone reposted.
I'm like oh, I just watched somebody.
Did somebody die?
Oh wow yeah, if you don't realize they died first it's kind of cool, and then you find out they die and you're like oh, I feel terrible.
Yeah, I like watching.
I like watching a horrific crash.
If no one dies, then it's kind of cool to see it cool to see like a Nascar.
You know yeah, I I don't really like Nascar, but when they go crashing, it's amazing.
When they go crashing, get in boys, we're going crashing, that's right.
I draw the line at horrifically mangled.
Yeah, i'm with one I saw a few months ago.
That was like disturbing, but it was one of those things where the video just auto plays and you're like oh, I watched someone die.
There was a guy, I think it was somewhere in Europe, he was swimming and a shark like eats him and you just see his like legs go up and blood in the water.
Oh jeez, and it was and it's.
I was like, oh my gosh, I just watched a guy get eaten by a shark.
It's like so desensitizing yeah, and it was horrible.
So I watched it three more times oops, to make sure.
Well guys, during these little subscriber bananas, I was just kind of replacing the subscriber lounge that used to be at the end of the weekly, which no longer exists.
Um, we are going to do some interactive features where we ask you guys questions in the premium section and then we're going to either read your guys' responses or discuss amongst ourselves and we're going to revisit subscriber headlines which we haven't read in over a month.
So yeah, that'll be a lot of fun.
Now it's time for the greatest war movies of all time.
So today we're going to weigh in on what is the greatest war movie of all time.
Dan watched Hacksaw Ridge recently and he won't shut up about it.
And so he said, I'm gonna talk to the subscribers and appeal to the people.
I don't know what his opinion was on Hacksaw Ridge, even though he won't shut up.
I don't think I haven't seen Hacksaw already.
I talked to him about it.
I think he liked it, right?
Yes.
I love Hacksaw Ridge.
It would have been weird if he was like, oh, I hate this movie.
I can't stop talking about how much I hate it.
But it could still spur him to want to talk about war movies if it's one he really didn't like.
Sure.
Did you guys see Dunkirk?
Yes.
I thought it was slow.
Yeah, I heard you like people.
It's interesting as a film, artistically.
I get why it was nominated for various things.
Oh, I don't get that part.
But as a piece of entertainment, it's kind of very slow.
Dunkirk is interesting, because the second time...
Because it's not interesting.
Well, the second time I watched it, it's like, I got it better.
I was like, oh, I get what you're going for.
Now it makes sense.
But a movie shouldn't be that inaccessible.
I asked because I bought it on Blu-ray the day it came out.
I was very excited.
I didn't see it in the theater, so I was like, I'm going to get out of Blu-ray.
You realize it was from the director of The Dark Knight.
That is correct.
But everybody makes mistakes.
And Christopher Nolan's mistake was The Dark Knight.
This has been a taste of a special episode of the Babylon B podcast.