MrAnonymous's Replies


I often wondered why Captain Harris did not intervene with Barnes. Surely he must have seen that Barnes was destroying the confidence of a new young officer who might have had some potential had been been saddled with a Platoon Sargent who mentored him a bit. Harris had to have known what was going on in his company, and what a liability that made Barnes into and by extension Wolfe. Why did he not pull Barnes aside and have a word with him about his duties as an NCO, and his job of supporting his platoon leader. Harris and Elias seemed to be the only two not intimidated by Barnes, so he would not be afraid to. Barnes probably would have listened and obeyed, even if grudgingly. He comes across as the kind of guy who will find a way to survive, but at the expense of his troops who he should be leading. Assuming he managed to evade a court martial, he might be able to do a career in the military given his experience. The movie takes place in 68 so he still had a few more years to do more tours before the war ended. After that he would come back and get enough years for a pension. The thing is though, his distain for officers, combined with the fact that he would not be able to evolve well in a changing army means he would have difficulty advancing. He could be like Gunnery Sargent Highway in Heartbreak ridge in that his rank would not be reflective of his age and experience . Presuming he didn't go overboard and get one of his troops killed in some extreme training accident he would still struggle to make his pension without getting kicked out first. His drunken episodes, insubordination, maybe some fights off base would have him spending his last few years in some posting where he can't do much harm as he sits and waits for his pension. Then he becomes one of those guys who practically lives at the legion, drinking with old timers telling wars stories and badmouthing officers. Death due to cirrhosis of the liver. I guess that even the most badass thug would be all polite smiles and "Yes Sir" if questioned by Barnes In "For your Eyes Only" he has a guy who's car is perched perilously at a cliff ledge, who begs him to spare his life and he kicks the car causing it to fall Normal people don't hate any person or country I am probably one of the least politically correct people in the world yet even I think his comments are disgusting. Even if Bruce managed to take an arm that would be fatal. The missing eye could have happened post mortem due to small fish picking at it I never thought of that but it actually makes a lot of sense. I guess it's like when Johnny tells Miguel his version of The Karate Kid. I guess that moment to me was like Anakin when he slaughtered the sandpeople. It was foreshadowing, but I did not see him fully going over there. Subsequent to him killing his commander, he shows concern for his new student Johnny, and is protective of his masters granddaughter. I never interpreted her moans as pleasure, It always seemed to me that the assault was causing her considerable pain. But he put her daughter in a position where he believed that there was a real killer. Regardless of whether or not you personally believed there was a killer, if someone who believed there was a killer used your daughter as bait, would you not be furious at that person? Fired, criminal record, unable to secure another job due to criminal record, yet he still has to take care of his daughter and has a big fine to pay. I don't know anything about prisons, but I would assume he would have been put in some sort of segregation. Absolutely. I stand corrected. I wonder if that was done intentionally so they could keep the option of a sequel open? I guess that's probably the most plausible explaination. It would be great of Clancy Brown had a small role, not as an immortal, but maybe a reporter or cop. Unless he's a relative of Jason Voorhees, I don't see him getting up after all those gunshot wounds.