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Kokoda 39Th Battalion 2006

January 31, 2021

Editorial Reviews Netherlands released, Blu-Ray/Region A/B/C: it WILL NOT play on regular DVD player. You need Blu-Ray DVD player to view this Blu-Ray DVD: LANGUAGES: English ( Dolby Digital 2. 0), English ( DTS-HD Master Audio), Dutch ( Subtitles), WIDESCREEN (1. 85:1), SPECIAL FEATURES: Interactive Menu, Scene Access, Steelbook Edition, SYNOPSIS: New Guinea, 1942. The battle for the track has begun. A decimated platoon of Australian soldiers from the 39th battalion have been set as a forward patrol far outside the perimeter of Isurava, a village on the Kokoda track. After sustained bombing and lethal attacks from the Japanese, the men are cut off from their supply lines and all communications. Isolated in the jungle behind enemy lines, they must make their way back through the most perilous terrain on earth to get to the main body of Australian troops. Allegiances form, strengths and weaknesses emerge, and leadership battles threaten to destroy the group... After three days with no food or sleep, carrying their wounded, and suffering the effects of dysentery and malaria, they emerge from the jungle exhausted to the point of collapse.

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Kokoda 39th battalion 2006 download

However, the remaining men are cut off and surrounded in the dense jungle, with little hope of escaping. The Australians try to remain hidden until nightfall, when Darko ( Travis McMahon) and Jack ( Jack Finsterer) decide to go and find out where Blue is. They stumble across Blue, who is tied up and being tortured by Japanese soldiers. Darko and Jack look on helplessly as the Japanese soldiers bayonet him in the stomach and groin, and finally decapitate him with a sword. They return to their hiding place, shaken by what they have seen. The Japanese ambush the section and they run further into the jungle. Caught behind enemy lines in harsh terrain, Jack, to whom the others (including his brother, Max, have deferred) tries to maintain command of a small group of men. Suffering from malaria and dysentery, the remaining six men decide to make their way to Isurava, where the remainder of the 39th are fighting a desperate battle. One of the soldiers, Sam ( Steve Le Marquand), has been injured in the leg and orders the rest of the section to leave him behind.

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Kokoda 39th battalion 2006 edition

They refuse and he struggles along with a crutch. After a full day of walking, the men are exhausted. The next morning they awake to find Sam gone, having hidden himself in a hollow tree stump to avoid holding them up. The men continue and are ambushed by a Japanese patrol. The Japanese soldiers are all killed, but Max is badly wounded by a gunshot to the stomach and is unable to walk. He is carried by all the men. The section makes it to a village that has been destroyed by the advancing Japanese, and the Australians decide to take refuge. They bury the dead native villagers and an argument arises between Jack and Darko, a tough soldier who carries the section's Bren gun, over Max. Darko wishes to leave him behind as he is slowing the section down and they are needed at Isurava. Jack, however, wants to stay with him. However, Max decides to stay and let the others go and Johnno ( Tom Budge), who has severe dysentery, stays with him. The men agree, and Jack, Darko and Burke ( Luke Ford), Darko's number two, head off to Isurava.

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We have been here for two weeks — waiting. We're told the Australian army will be here to relieve us soon. They are called the AIF [Australian Imperial Force]. We're called chocos — volunteers sent to New Guinea to unload ships and dig roads. Chocolate soldiers. The AIF assumes we will melt in the heat of battle. They are probably right. Untrained, ill-equipped, riddled with dysentery and malaria, we're the only men available to make a stand against the Japanese. They outnumber us 10 to 1 and will attack any day now. We are lambs to the slaughter. " The fight is predictable, as advertised — awful, intense, relentless, miserable. But at first the enemy is invisible. They are chameleons, green and brown, silent and motionless, twigs and leaves and branches stuck to them. Out of nowhere they will strike. They do. Chaos. Confusion. Disorientation. In the heat of battle one choco panics, retreats, flees. He hides in the jungle under a log. He stays put there for a long time, thinking he is safe.

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And I want you to know that you were some of the finest soldiers I have ever seen. You have seen things in this place no man should witness. Some of these things you must forget. History will remember you, and in the years to come others will wish they had your conviction… I am honoured to be your brother. " Message written at the end of the film: "The Japanese, their supply lines stretched to the breaking point, were forced to retreat within sight of Port Moresby, their goal. It was the first time in the Second World War the Japanese army had been stopped. Australia would not be invaded. " Odd to say, perhaps, that a war film can have tremendous heart and compassion, even gentleness. Yet this one does despite the ferocity of the violence it depicts. As expected, the film found no distribution rights in Japan. Instead, the Japanese retain their own view. They have Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo to honour their war dead, a place of almost mystical veneration in the psyches of some, especially the fascist right-wing, still alive and well in modern Japan.

We live in the visceral, tactile, intense moment. Conversation belongs at the dinner table. The wonder is how they did it. Four words perhaps describe their feat. These are chiselled into the stone memorial at Isurava: COURAGE ENDURANCE MATESHIP SACRIFICE The AIF arrive. The chocos are relieved. They fall back to the dressing station. Most are wounded. Not all will survive. Those standing are assembled in the mud outside the dressing station. The colonel of the battalion has come up the track and wants to address the men. He does, his voice trembling with suppressed emotion. It's possible your eyes may not be dry as he speaks: "Now, I don't know a lot of you by name. But I know you. We fought every step of the way here. Now we are relieved and will leave the battle. Every day the enemy's supply line stretches further. He suffers now as you have suffered. This battle to hold the track has just saved your nation. The Brigadier wants you to know that your gallantry, your courage, your fortitude are an inspiration.

The piece made it very clear that not only was Templeton a known P. O. W. but so were numbered another six members of the famed 39thBattalion, these being cited on Templeton's dossier, and having been accounted for by members of 'B' and 'D' Company whom had been present. The compiler made it clear as well what the end fate of these prisoners was to be. In 2010 a media storm erupted over new revelations by Kokoda Trekking operator and researcher, Mr Wayne Wetherall, who had been advised and shown the actual spot where Templeton had been buried by a Japanese veteran member. The details as then aired by Mr Wetherall were based on these firsthand accounts, the ability which this veteran demonstrated in being able to accurately place the spot of burial, and an in depth investigation vide Australian Offical records regards the death of this officer by Mr Wetherall personally. This compiler was after initially being misinformed of the intentions of such research, decided it was time to revisit certain files which he had decided needed not be aired until such a time was befitting, in regards actual Japanese Intelligence to substantiate or otherwise, such claims which by now had caused much debate over the internet, as since viewed by this writer.

This research will as well explain the final fate and whereabouts of Lieutenant Hercules 'Hec' Crawford, whose disappearance has been for decades confused with the mystery of Templeton's loss. Another of the forgotten men, lost in the mystery by academics and historians in their quest for Sam. From the officially records of the I. J. A. and from other members of the same Regiment as Nishimura comes more compelling proof, all primary, indicating the manner in which Templeton faced his death, and well explains in their own words as exactly how much harm this officer had caused his enemies advance towards Port Moresby, in what were some of the darkest days experienced by this young Nation during what is now collectively termed 'The Battles that Saved Australia', and during which, these seven men were to play an extraordinary part in fighting. The story to come, to be compiled by Carl Johnson, Wayne Wetherall & Sarah Well's, will demonstrate that to our national shame, the deeds of Captain Templeton in protecting his new adopted homeland, is better known and celebrated by the Japanese people then it is by the Australian public!