Submitted by pickle_lukas t3_zzbe5x in movies

I have a reactive dog, and the best way to deal with New Year's Eve celebrations is to play a movie LOUD. She doesn't notice most of the bangs outside because it gets lost in the movie.

What would you watch? Preferably a good war movie without many silent parts. Bonus if it's longer than 2 hours.

Last year we watched Lord of the rings which was great, but there are too many silent parts.

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Sparkski t1_j2aot6a wrote

Mad Max Fury Road

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A-non-yme t1_j2befvl wrote

This is everyone’s answer for every question on this sub 💀

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Sparkski t1_j2blqz0 wrote

just trying to help OP find a film for their dog, really doesnt need to be that deep...sorry if the answers not nuance enough for you. jeez.

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MrAbadeer t1_j2clpxe wrote

My dog (named Nux) can confirm this works.

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Mario_daAA t1_j2bfvox wrote

Damn…. I literally instantly thought of the same movie…. You have to be a genius

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captaincarot t1_j2aky15 wrote

Throw on the season of shoresy (on Hulu or go sailing it's easy to find) . 3 hours long, either hockey action, fast paced conversation and an absolutely banging soundtrack.

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AndersonLen t1_j2ao7ll wrote

Have you considered putting the beach landing scene of Saving Private Ryan on a two hour loop?

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pickle_lukas OP t1_j2aoikp wrote

That would do the job :D but we'd like to actually watch it, and by the 6th time it might start to get repetitive

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wastelandho t1_j2aqrou wrote

Just play the downtown robbery scene from Heat over and over for 2 hours...

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Roam_Hylia t1_j2bmbnx wrote

My wife and I always used the John Wick movies for fireworks cover and it seemed to help keep the dogs a bit more calm.

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theshiyal t1_j2cpemg wrote

Well that makes sense. If I was a dog and I knew John Wick was there I’d pry be pretty calm.

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Roam_Hylia t1_j2cphuc wrote

It's true. All dogs know that John Wick has a very low tolerance for people mistreating dogs.

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ZipperJJ t1_j2cbd26 wrote

Since you’re watching a movie I highly suggest making a big bowl of popcorn (unsalted) and feed it to your pupper one piece at a time. Perhaps when there are quiet parts in the movie. It keeps the dog busy and distracted, forgetting about the danger outside!

Good luck! This is what I’m doing with my dogs Saturday night!

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anon42manyreasons t1_j2cjqd5 wrote

Some local radio stations play music that is synchronized with the city fireworks show. Playing that all the way up usually minimizes the booms between notes. Also, sit with her and just love on her. Slow calm pets while being cuddled by her people helps. And maybe a big ol' chew toy or bone.

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pickle_lukas OP t1_j2czyu2 wrote

Interesting, didn't know that! Unfortunately the town where I'll be just has a bunch of homemade ones

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kiwi-66 t1_j2bvyfy wrote

Here are some great pre-CGI (thousands of real extras) war movies (some are not strictly in the war genre, but they all have a large war component):

War and Peace (1966 quadrilogy) - Epic adaptation of the Tolstoy novel. Comes to almost 7 hours, but it's divided into 4 parts so you don't have to watch it all at once. Not strictly in the war genre, but has some of the greatest non-CGI battle sequences.

Waterloo (1970) - Historical epic on Napoleon's final battle and defeat (Chris Plummer plays Wellington while Rod Steiger is Napoleon). Made by the same director as War and Peace, and has similar epic production values (thousands of extras and actual massed cavalry).

Liberation (1970 film series) - Covers the Soviet victories from Kursk to Berlin. Plenty of epic battle shots, with thousands of extras and lots of real tanks.

Battle of Moscow (1984 film series) - Covers the German invasion and immediate aftermath. Same director as Liberation, and similar production values.

Battle of Neretva (1969) - Yugoslav partisan epic about a battle with the Germans, Lots of famous actors like Orson Welles, Yul Brynner, etc. and great non-CGI production values.

Mihai Viteazul/Michael the Brave (1972) - Romanian (communist era) epic on the titular character. Part 1 and Part 2 are on YouTube.

Potop (1974) - Polish film set in the Polish-Lithuanian war against Sweden.

Khan Asparuh (1981) - 3-part Bulgarian nationalist epic on the country's founding. Part 3 has a massive reenactment of the Battle of Ongal.

Link to both films

Lawrence of Arabia (1962) - David Lean's masterpiece on T. E. Lawrence.

Spartacus (1960) - The Kubrick epic starring Kirk Douglas.

El Cid (1961) - A classic Hollywood epic on the medieval Spanish knight, with Charlton Heston and Sophia Loren.

The Longest Day (1962) and A Bridge Too Far (1977) - Hollywood epics on the D-Day Landings (shot far more conventionally than Spielberg's SPR so YMMV) and Operation Market Garden, based on books by Cornelius Ryan. Both movies were filmed in the epic manner and have a lot of stars (literally) like Sean Connery, John Wayne, Anthony Hopkins, Robert Mitchum, and so on.

Dunkirk (1958) - The earlier b&w movie on the subject. Makes a great comparison to Nolan's take on the subject - this one was shot far more conventionally.

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shk13 t1_j2c9grw wrote

Interstellar

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SirJorgeMcPaws t1_j2aqy25 wrote

Heat...You will get right in the moment with the shooting scene.

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Efficient_Order_6014 t1_j2bpbc1 wrote

Any movie that has a lot gunfire in it. Black Hawk Down, The Outpost, Etcetera.

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Somerset76 t1_j2bq4vb wrote

Another option would be cbd dog treats. My over anxious pupper needs these around 4th of July and new years. She get totally chill.

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17FoolsGold17 t1_j2cbedg wrote

Any of the transformer movies, Warcraft, Battleship,and Kong: Skull Island.

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Dayofsloths t1_j2aqx4s wrote

Some people use cotton balls as ear plugs for their dogs.

As for movie ideas, Tron Legacy, Django unchained, flash Gordon

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