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i like u-571 more
Of all the submarine movies, that's simply an afront....ugh
Submarine films - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
why? its such a nice film, and it also won an oscar
MOre U-571 (film) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaThe fictitious plot attracted substantial criticism since, in reality, it was British personnel from HMS Bulldog who first captured a naval Enigma machine (from U-110 in the North Atlantic in May 1941), long before the United States even entered the war. A German U-boat crew is portrayed in a negative light (U-852 story) The anger over the inaccuracies even reached the British Parliament, where Prime Minister Tony Blair stated that the film was an "affront" to British sailors. The real U-571 was never involved in any such events, was not captured, and was in fact sunk in January 1944, off Ireland, by a Short Sunderland flying boat from No. 461 Squadron, Royal Australian Air Force.
Great Movie, and as said above, a must watch for Naval Warfare lovers!!
might also like U-571, In Enemy Hands, K-19 The widow maker, Hunt for Red October, Above us the Sea etc
i watched das boot, and gotta say it a masterpiece(acting, story and score music)
the ending is very sad should have chosen a better ending
Reality of WW2: Germans were defeated. Sad for them, good for many others
what actually saddens me is not the german defeat but the fact that how these guys were risking their lives, serving their country, a long way away from home and their families, alone in the ocean and serving for months in the sea mostly under water and they died like pigs as soon as they completed their mission
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U-boatAdvances in convoy tactics, high frequency direction finding (referred to as "Huff-Duff"), radar, active sonar (called ASDIC in Britain), depth charges, ASW spigot mortars (also known as "hedgehog"), the intermittent cracking of the German Naval Enigma code, the introduction of the Leigh Light, the range of escort aircraft (especially with the use of escort carriers), the use of mystery ships, and the full entry of the U.S. into the war with its enormous shipbuilding capacity, all turned the tide against the U-boats.
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The U-boat fleet suffered extremely heavy casualties, losing 793 U-boats and about 28,000 submariners (a 75% casualty rate, the highest of all German forces during the war).
http://www.uboataces.com/boa-uboat-end.shtmlOf the 1,155 U-boats Germany sent into combat, 725 had been sunk in the longest battle of the war. Lasting nearly six years, over 35,000 German sailors had put to sea, with 28,744 never returning – a death rate of 82 percent, the highest casualty rate of any armed forces of any conflict in the history of modern war. Yet in this appalling casualty rate, there was never any shortage of men to enlist in the U-boat service, and until the very last day, the men of the U-boat service stood ready to put to sea at a moments notice.
BBC - WW2 People's War - TimelineApproximately 185,000 seamen, including 40,000 men of Indian, Chinese and other nationalities, served in the Merchant Navy during the war.
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30,248 merchant seamen lost their lives during World War Two, a death rate that was higher proportionately than in any of the armed forces.
Prisoners of War of the Japanese 1942-1945Figures later published reveal that in all three ‘armed’ services the casualty rate was about 1 in 28. The Merchant Navy, overall, suffered deaths of 1 in 8. British seamen, mostly on Atlantic and Arctic trips, suffered a horrific death rate of close to 1 in 4.