gtpi
Helluva Engineer
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not a movie.....got final battle. clint bar scene the unforgiven
The final tragic scene in the Mel Gibson movie Gallipoli
FINALLY a real battle scene.
The vast majority of them have been silly dance sequences. Those are not real battles. The two recently posted are.Finally? There have been many battle scenes posted already.
The vast majority of them have been silly dance sequences. Those are not real battles. The two recently posted are.
So, I guess, keeping in mind that they are all merely actors, your OPINION is that a bunch of kids trying to win a dance contest is equivalent to a bunch of kids and men laying their lives on the line for a cause. Sorry, I just don't buy it. I am not the arbiter; facts are, and dance contests don't even compare to war.Oh. It's OK. You're not the arbiter of what constitutes a "real" battle.
You're only stating an opinion.
So, I guess, keeping in mind that they are all merely actors, your OPINION is that a bunch of kids trying to win a dance contest is equivalent to a bunch of kids and men laying their lives on the line for a cause. Sorry, I just don't buy it. I am not the arbiter; facts are, and dance contests don't even compare to war.
Regardless of how the word "battle" may be defined in a dictionary, you ask the man on the street what he considers a battle, and I guarantee you he would say physical combat, whether in war or otherwise. I would imagine that the majority of people who post on TheSwarm had the same impression as to what you meant that I did. A far better choice of words would have been "contest", not "battle". It was a poorly worded name for a thread, and, whether you meant it do do so or not, it's really an insult to people who have participated in physical struggles for victory ... i.e. battles.No. My opinion is that the word "battle" is not exclusively reserved for referring to events associated with war.
As you can see in this link, it's actually a fact that it's not a term exclusively reserved for war. It can refer to events of war, but it doesn't only refer to events of war.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/battle
Finally, don't make the mistake of putting words in my mouth. My OPINION is that some of these scenes from movies represent some great battles... in movies.
Nobody every tried to equate dance contests to the men & women who actually lay down their lives.
Geez, I guess my fight scene from McClintock must not have been appropriate for this thread. I just can't get it right.
Regardless of how the word "battle" may be defined in a dictionary, you ask the man on the street what he considers a battle, and I guarantee you he would say physical combat, whether in war or otherwise. I would imagine that the majority of people who post on TheSwarm had the same impression as to what you meant that I did. A far better choice of words would have been "contest", not "battle". It was a poorly worded name for a thread, and, whether you meant it do do so or not, it's really an insult to people who have participated in physical struggles for victory ... i.e. battles.
I was going to post exactly that point, but I couldn’t find a YouTube video of you and @Supersizethatorder-mutt having at it.One of the definitions of battle, per the Merriam-Webster link is literally "an extended contest, struggle, or controversy".
Our back and forth on the topic could be considered a battle of sorts.
...and Wilson...And just to be philosophical, I submit that movie "Castaway" starring Tom Hanks. What can be a more climatic battle scene than an entire movie where the protagonist battles Mother Nature, and himself, for survival.
I was going to post exactly that point, but I couldn’t find a YouTube video of you and @Supersizethatorder-mutt having at it.
Finally found the footage of you two duking it out:To be fair, if there was a video of us having a confrontation, it would be of Super kicking my ***. If that constitutes a battle though, I'll take it.