Home Artists Posts Import Register

Content

This is a Level 5 Patreon Tier Movie Request from Juley!

This was heartbreaking, emotional, terrifying, intense, and truly wild. I had truly no idea what I was getting into :( What an emotional roller coaster.

----------

*Want to download this instead? Copy the YouTube link, go to this site or any YouTube to MP4 website, and download from there!*

NOTE: You follow along with your own copy of the movie; I have a little timer right at the beginning where it counts down and shows the word "play" when I myself start playing the movie. I also have a timer synced throughout the movie so you're also in sync the whole time! If you don't have your own copy, then you'll have pretty much no idea what's happening!

Files

FULL THE IMPOSSIBLE

This is a Level 5 Patreon Tier Movie Request from Juley! This was heartbreaking, emotional, terrifying, intense, and truly wild. I had truly no idea what I was getting into :( What an emotional roller coaster. ---------- *Want to download this instead? Copy the YouTube link, go to this site or any YouTube to MP4 website, and download from there!* NOTE: You follow along with your own copy of the movie; I have a little timer right at the beginning where it counts down and shows the word "play" when I myself start playing the movie. I also have a timer synced throughout the movie so you're also in sync the whole time! If you don't have your own copy, then you'll have pretty much no idea what's happening!

Comments

Juley

I’m sorry to hit you with that one, but thank you so much for doing this reaction. It’s so powerful for so many different reasons. Kudos to Naomi Watts, Tom Holland and Ewan McGregor. I wish more people knew about this film. It’s worth knowing that this happened and it’s amazing to see what people can survive. I was safe here in the U.S., but I remember that day so vividly. A good friend of mine flew to India on Christmas Day, the day before the tsunami. We worked together in a two-woman non-profit start-up. We’d only been up and running less than a year. She went to India to get married. She and her fiancé lived in the U.S., but he was from India. It was very early morning in the U.S. when we were learning about it. This was before smartphones, so there was no information. News services didn’t have the same kind of world coverage back then because they couldn’t rely on internet reports from people. CNN knew so little. They were reporting at least 5,000 dead but they didn’t even know all the countries impacted. But they knew it hit India. I was at my parents’ home for the holidays and we were glued to the TV for hours. But CNN was just learning tiny bits and pieces. I was freaking out. I still don’t know why I thought of it, but I dug out my Mom’s computer manual and called customer service. Sure enough, the wonderful man who answered was in India. He said he was safely inland and so was his family. I told him about my friend and that CNN was now saying 10,000 could be dead. He said the latest count was over 40,000. He spent hours on the phone with me. He got everyone around him working the phones to find out what happened in the coastal town where she was. He would give me news updates as he heard them. CNN would come out with the same info 1-2 hours later. We talked about our families as we waited for information to come. He told me about friends on the coast and the other phone operators who were looking for info on their families. After about 5 hours, he got word that the death toll was low in the town where my friend was. We hung up and I watched the news for the next few days as we truly learned the horror of what happened. It was 5 days before I got word about my friend, but thanks to the efforts of the customer service agent I wasn’t terribly worried. Also, we saw that other countries had been hit far worse. My friend’s hotel was destroyed. They couldn’t hold the wedding in that town so they went inland to a town where her soon-to-be-husband had more relatives. They got married there in a lovely ceremony (videotaped for all of their friends back in the U.S.). My friend’s neck was injured and she was unable to speak. Her sister said her vows. They were home safe and sound a month later. I know my story is so unimportant in comparison to those hit by the tsunami — 230,000 lives lost. I’m still amazed, though, that strangers in a country going through so much upheaval took all of that time to help me find information about one person. This movie reminds me of the generosity of people in a huge natural disaster. Thank you again for reacting to it. I hope it doesn’t give you nightmares. I often forget that many young people don’t even know about the tsunami. I’m sure it’s terrible to learn about it for the first time.

TheOGBojangles

Wow...... All of that is absolutely insane and I can't even imagine a fraction of that. Thank you so much for sharing, it's truly appreciated.

Julian Mark

Man, I'm usually not squeamish, but that tsunami sequence was one of the most terrifying things I've ever seen. I literally choked up and had to pause for a minute – it was just too much. Apparently, they relied almost entirely on practical effects, which really shines through. It's a well-made movie, but I'm not sure I can bring myself to ever watch it again.