A possible concise summary is:
A trauma surgeon who served in the military for 24 years reviews battle wound scenes in movies and rates them based on their realism. He comments on the types of injuries, treatments, equipment, and scenarios depicted in the movies, and compares them to his own experiences in war zones. He praises some movies for their accuracy and criticizes others for their mistakes or exaggerations. He also shares some stories and insights from his career as a trauma surgeon. He gives the highest ratings to Saving Private Ryan, Hacksaw Ridge, and MASH.
Here are the key facts extracted from the text:
1. The text is a transcript of a video where a trauma surgeon named Peter Rhee reviews battle wound scenes in movies and judges how real they are.
2. The movies he reviews are Saving Private Ryan, Hacksaw Ridge, MASH, Black Hawk Down, Platoon, and Wonder Woman.
3. He gives each movie a rating from 1 to 10 based on the realism of the medical care, the wounds, and the setting.
4. He shares his own experience of serving in the military for 24 years and working as a trauma surgeon in Iraq and Afghanistan.
5. He explains some of the medical terms and procedures used in the movies, such as tourniquets, morphine, ketamine, walking blood bank, tension pneumothorax, and evisceration.
6. He also points out some of the mistakes and inaccuracies in the movies, such as spitting blood from torso injuries, using IV bags instead of plasma, and having a helicopter land in a war zone.