User blog comment:KillaHawke1/Childhood Trauma/@comment-25569708-20160601162444

Many many years ago at my father's friend's cabin (which the friend owned), we all watched an old war movie which for the life of me I can't remember the name of. It involved a lone soldier getting separated from his troop in an Asian country during a war and he had to make his way back to his friends. Eventually his friends fly a plane over to search for him, but it crashes and the enemy combatants approach the plane. One of the enemy soldiers dragged the unconscious pilot out of the plane and held him, while another enemy shot the pilot in the head. I can vividly remember seeing the pilot's head jerking backward, and I could see the very realistic-looking bullet hole and brain matter hanging out of the guy's head.

After that, they force another one of the main character's friends to walk around in a minefield at gunpoint. Eventually the guy steps on a mine and it explodes, severely injuring him. He's laying on the ground, bloody and screaming in pain. The enemies are just looking at him, unsure what to do. After about a minute of this a guy finally sprays him with an AK and the friend is finally dead. The movie ends with the rest of the protagonist's friends bombing the entire island where it all happened, even though the enemy soldiers had dozens of civilians they were using as human shields. I think I was eight or nine when I saw this movie. It was also the first time I ever heard swearing in a movie. I wouldn't say I was "traumatized," but it definitely left some sort of impression on me (hence my ability to recall it after all these years).