Posted on 12/16/2013 6:30:04 AM PST by OKSooner
Sixty nine years ago, the largest land battle ever fought by the US Army started today. Do you know anyone who was there? Or maybe someone from your family was there and didn't come back, or came back changed in some way?
They both started it when they agreed to carve up Poland.
Use whatever word you want except for the “R” word :) Makes ‘em surly...
It’s a very powerful movie. Some of the casting was scary good.
"How do I feel about being rescued by Patton? Well I'd feel pretty peachy, except for one thing, we didn't f---in' need to be rescued by Patton! Got that?" - Joe Toye (Band of Brothers)
No kidding.
I can’t watch the poisoning scene. Have skipped past it in the past.
I don’t blame you. It’s tough to watch, even if you already knew their fate.
Well, it is a stark reminder that indeed there is unrestrained evil in the world. And that that evil can and is often expressed in political and ideological fanaticism.
And who pays? More often than not it’s children, one way or another.
Amazing that of all the evil people that were in that movie, I came away despising Magda the most.
In 1945, as the Battle of the Bulge was being fought and heavy snows blanketed the Western Front, Col. Vaughan argued for a month that dogs were the only transport that could rescue and return the wounded to the rear of the battle for medical treatment. Finally, General Patton issued the order Send in the dogs.
[I believe Norman said, they were able to use the dog sleds to get much needed food to the troops on the front]
With impressive coordination, Vaughan quickly assembled 17 drivers and 209 dogs to a training camp in Maine, then deployed them to France. Because of administrative delays, the dogs did not arrive before the snows melted and so did not participate in the Battle; however, the operation proved the ease with which dog teams could be assembled and dispersed whenever the need arose. Dogs were used in this way until helicopters realized their full potential in the 1950s and took over those functions. Later, beginning at age 72, he participated in thirteen 1100-mile long Iditarod sled dog races in Alaska, where his last finish was in 1990 at the age of 84.
Norman was well-celebrated accompanying Adm. Byrd on the first Antarctic Expedition (1928-1930)
*Dream big. Dare to fail.*
The mini-series starts with their paratrooper training, something new at the time for the Army, and ends at the end of the war with the men contemplating their disposition at the end of the war in Germany but facing going to the Pacific to fight the Japanese.
The mini-series also includes interviews with the actual soldiers from Easy Company.
It is an 11 hour mini-series presentation available on DVD.
A few images of the Bastogne scenes:
There was another suicide scene in the movie as well with kids. Remember the man sitting at the dinner table with his wife and children, then pulling the pin on his grenade killing the whole family?
Incredible episode.....That’s one for the big screen HD. The audio alone is worth it, closest thing to being there.
Out of a family of eight children, he's the only one still living.
To poison kids because the parents "cannot bear to think about them living without national socialism" surely captures the ultimate sickness of libtardism.
The Germans who produced this film did some genuine research, unlike our a**clowns in Hollywood who weave a little historical background into their fictional story. The Downfall is really the best World War II movie I've seen since Schlinder's List, produced in the previous decade.
Yeah. There were others too. Lots of Nazis did themselves in the final hours.
Also, the kids impressed into service in the final defense of Berlin committed suicide, sort of. Not that they bear most of the blame for that. They were impressionable children.
Thank God for the Bomb.
They were murdered in my book. The roving death squads that killed anyone who didn't fight.
That’s the thing about Downfall, it really isn’t all that much about Hitler. He is just one of the major characters in it. But it really is more from the perspective of his Secretary.
Can’t argue with that. That scene is about as stark a reminder as I can think of.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.