don't even bother with the fourth
one of the most half assed attempts at milking an already mediocre franchise
Stallone fakes his death at the beggining of the movie and appears at the very end after the bad guy is defeated just so he could avoid doing any action scenes since he's too old
It's backwards because Bruce Willis is a left-handed shooter and there's a big battery box on the CompM2 that would obscure his vision if it wasn't flipped.
>Commando: Classic, exotic, romanticized. Bring to mind the vision of tough as nails dudes in berets sneaking onto an airbase with Uzis and enough plastic explosives to send New Orleans above sea level. Pure sovl. >Operator: Bureaucratic, clinical, dry. Needs a million dollars worth of night vision, and an iPad strapped to their chest to call in airstrikes on goat farmers with AKs who dared to resist foreign occupation. Soulless dreck.
Green Berets were the first to use the term Special Operators in the late 50s early 60s. Operator was mostly used in manuals and after action reports but not amongst the men. Delta were the first to refer to themselves as operators but jokingly. Many Delta were ex-Green Berets. When a civilian or regular army type asked them where they worked, they'd say the phone company as an operator. SEALs got wind of it and started referring to themselves as operators right away.
Military lingo is full of pointless alternative words whose sole purpose is to give a sense of identity to the user and differentiate them from non military persons. It's exactly the same mentality that causes Cinemaphile to move away from a term once it becomes popular on other sites.
Green Berets were the first to use the term Special Operators in the late 50s early 60s. Operator was mostly used in manuals and after action reports but not amongst the men. Delta were the first to refer to themselves as operators but jokingly. Many Delta were ex-Green Berets. When a civilian or regular army type asked them where they worked, they'd say the phone company as an operator. SEALs got wind of it and started referring to themselves as operators right away.
its all a larp, none of these guys hold a candle to SSB 1SSF or the FsJ who pulled off Gran Sasso.
if you cant switch from light infantry to heavy infantry, youre special, youre just light infantry.
Moral of film: Die and heroically sacrifice yourself in slow mo for brownoids who hate you and will produce haji children who hate you.
holy seethe.
They took a lot of 'brownoids' with them though. Like a 20-1 k/d.
The film took place in africa you moronic Black person
Kino.
Why did it take nearly 10 years for the 4th movie
>4th movie
There's frickin FOUR of them?
Yes, the 4th came out last year
don't even bother with the fourth
one of the most half assed attempts at milking an already mediocre franchise
Stallone fakes his death at the beggining of the movie and appears at the very end after the bad guy is defeated just so he could avoid doing any action scenes since he's too old
clever.
The first couple Expendibles were fantastically entertaining and Im tired of pretending they werent
I like 1, 2, and 3. I haven't seen 4.
boomercore
Best camo pattern.
It really was. That digital shit they switched to looks like ass.
>red dot is mounted backwards
what if the target is behind you?
moron
>frog posters brain is backwards
It's backwards because Bruce Willis is a left-handed shooter and there's a big battery box on the CompM2 that would obscure his vision if it wasn't flipped.
When did people stop calling them specops or mercenaries and start refering to them as operators?
They operate in areas of operation.
I dont think you understand what mercenary means.
>Commando: Classic, exotic, romanticized. Bring to mind the vision of tough as nails dudes in berets sneaking onto an airbase with Uzis and enough plastic explosives to send New Orleans above sea level. Pure sovl.
>Operator: Bureaucratic, clinical, dry. Needs a million dollars worth of night vision, and an iPad strapped to their chest to call in airstrikes on goat farmers with AKs who dared to resist foreign occupation. Soulless dreck.
Call of Duty.
That's quite literally what they're called.
Green Berets were the first to use the term Special Operators in the late 50s early 60s. Operator was mostly used in manuals and after action reports but not amongst the men. Delta were the first to refer to themselves as operators but jokingly. Many Delta were ex-Green Berets. When a civilian or regular army type asked them where they worked, they'd say the phone company as an operator. SEALs got wind of it and started referring to themselves as operators right away.
Military lingo is full of pointless alternative words whose sole purpose is to give a sense of identity to the user and differentiate them from non military persons. It's exactly the same mentality that causes Cinemaphile to move away from a term once it becomes popular on other sites.
its all a larp, none of these guys hold a candle to SSB 1SSF or the FsJ who pulled off Gran Sasso.
if you cant switch from light infantry to heavy infantry, youre special, youre just light infantry.
Defoe kino
>how stripped down do you want your AR-15?
FRICK ALAMY
So this is what inspired by the Warzone people at CoD
I love breaking the M4 down to PDW
>MASON!!!
>What do the numbers mean?!
damn i wish i could be this brain watch to just go on automode without stress or anxiety or ADHD and shit
also
>*get's zapped by Hudson*
>Ed Harris voiced Hudson zaps me
Hot
Almost everything he is in.
The Dogs of War with Christopher walken
That movie's not operator kino.
The last operator shit I watched was... Gray Man I guess. Before that I was watching Strike Back but I dropped it.
Old school operations.
The coat Seagal is wearing is likely lightweight body armor.
He is a fascinating person.
Men of War (1994)
>Dolph and D-Bo.
Damn
Especially the boot camp scene
The Contractor (Chris Pine one) and The Channel are two recent movies that feature a bunch of good gunplay
>The Channel
That was pretty good.
I know it doesn't count, but I always liked the scene in Triple 9 where Casey Affleck leads a sweep through some project housing.
Which is the best operator kino subgenre?