Iron Flame - Top Military Strategy Game
Games and Social Networking
App
Iron Flame is a MMO SLG WAR game. Formed by 2.5 million fields, it will take 4 days for cavalry to...
Blood's Campaign
Book
In the theatre of war there can only be one victor . . . August 25, 1689 The English army has...
The Timekillers
Book
U.S. Intelligence Operatives travel back in time to 1990 to stop the aftermath of a Pacific War. ...
military fiction thriller bookbuzz
The Fall of the Ottomans: The Great War in the Middle East, 1914-1920
Book
SUNDAY TIMES TOP TEN BESTSELLER WINNER OF THE BRITISH ARMY MILITARY BOOK OF THE YEAR 2016 'Truly...
Wings of Gold: Account of Naval Aviation Training in World War II
Robert R. Rea and Wesley Phillips Newton
Book
Wings of Goldmakes a unique contribution to the history of naval aviation. The book sets out the...
Allied Intelligence Handbook to the German Army 1939-45
Book
What did the British or American soldier know about the German Army? Was this knowledge accurate -...
The Aviators: Eddie Rickenbacker, Jimmy Doolittle, Charles Lindbergh, and the Epic Age of Flight
Book
From Winston Groom, the best-selling author of Forrest Gump; Shiloh, 1862; and Vicksburg, 1863,...
Forward with Patton: The World War II Diary of Colonel Robert S. Allen
Robert S. Allen and John Nelson Rickard
Book
Soldier, journalist, and Soviet spy Robert S. Allen (1900 - 1981) was a deeply controversial figure....
Gareth von Kallenbach (980 KP) rated Thank You for Your Service (2017) in Movies
Jul 11, 2019
Thank You For Your Service is able to address an aspect of war that many films overlook; how the men and women who are deployed changed by their experiences. Additionally, it tackles the questions of how their families cope with the changes to them, how they go about living a normal existence, and how people understand how they are harmed by war without any visible injuries?
The film is a testament to the men and women suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). It doesn’t sugar-coat or trivialize their experiences. The emotions are raw. The visual representation of their daily terror is present. With depth, the film shows audiences who may be unfamiliar with veterans or those suffering from PTSD what the world really looks like to them and how they struggle with just existing.
The film takes the statement of “Thank you for your service” and gives it greater meaning in able to connect the problems inherent in the military, healthcare system, and how we as a society view mental health. The film allows for an authentic examination of what servicemembers deal with in their return home from war. It becomes apparent that they themselves may be able to leave the battle, but the battle stays with them, tormenting and haunting them as each day passes. The war they face never ceases. Thank You For Your Service will hopefully help foster substantive discussions about what many men and women deal with in their return from the horrors of war.