Posted on 06/06/2010 2:04:06 PM PDT by PROCON
Last week, during Memorial Day weekend, we had fun telling of our favorite WWII movies .
On this solemn day, what are you're favorite D-Day movies?
Mine too! :=)
Thank you for your service, too. Welcome Home!
You too, can't believe it's been 40 years!
I too thought the SPR plot was ludicrous. The two big battle scenes, however, at the beginning and end were top notch. TLD was good, but ... a little too long.
Like the scene with Richard Burton, when he pointed out that the dead German soldier there next to him had put his boots on the wrong feet.
The movie was full of scenes like that and that’s probably the most appealing thing about it.
Even little remarks such as Rommel and his wife’s shoes.
The Dirty Dozen. (The raid took place on D-Day)
I know! I’ll be 60 next Feb.
One of the worst World War II movies was “Battle of the Bulge” with Henry Fonda and Robert Ryan.
Agreed, dreadful.
Other than the Military Channel, have not seen much on the left boob tube today re D-Day.
The Longest Day
It was supposed to take place in advance of the D-Day attack to create as much disruption in the German chain of command immediately before the landings.
I always thought so. After they run through the drill for the last time, Lee Marvin says something like “D-Day, and lets hope the invasion hasn’t been a complete disaster.” I watch the end of it tonight.
I think John Wayne’s roll in “The Longest Day” wasn’t up to par for him. I didn’t care for the roll he played in the movie.
Hollywood Films About D-Day: 1. The Longest Day (1962): Darryl F. Zanuck's ambitious and expensive recreation of the D-Day landings on the beaches of Normandy, is one of the best -- if somewhat flawed -- war films ever made. Boasting an all-star cast of 41 "A-List" (for 1962, that is) actors from four countries and filmed in various locations around France (Corsica doubling for most of the five invasion beaches on northern France) and made with the assistance of NATO's armed forces, The Longest Day was, for over 30 years, the most expensive movie ever shot in black and white. It's the only major movie to attempt to convey the scope and drama of the D-Day landings from a multinational viewpoint. 2. Saving Private Ryan (1998): If 1993's Schindler's List was director Steven Spielberg's soul-searching and ultimately redemptive examination of why we fought the war (the movie graphically shows the Third Reich's true nature as an evil regime), then 1998's Saving Private Ryan is the emotional bookend that depicts the sacrifices made by citizen-soldiers who put their lives on hold -- and often lost them -- to save the world from becoming a charnel house ruled by Adolf Hitler and his Axis partners. It is a powerful if viscerally graphic film that has, in retrospect, reawakened our nation's interest in World War II and made us realize, however belatedly, how much we owe to the men and women of the rapidly dwindling "Greatest Generation." Based loosely on the real story of the Niland brothers, Saving Private Ryan tells the tale of an eight-man squad of U.S. Army Rangers detailed to retrieve Pvt. James Ryan from Normandy after the death of his three brothers. Featuring the most intense and realistic cinematic depiction of the D-Day invasion, Spielberg's film is certainly far more violent and bloody than its closest cinematic cousin, Darryl Zanuck's The Longest Day. 3. The Big Red One (1980): Although Sam Fullers semi-autobiographical film covers more of World War II than just the Normandy invasion, The Big Red One does have a D-Day invasion sequence that, made with a smaller budget and showing only a tiny sliver of Omaha Beach, still captures the emotional and physical horrors faced by the young G.I.s of the 1st Infantry Division as they hit the beaches under heavy German fire. Starring Lee Marvin, Mark Hamill, Robert Carradine, and Bobby Di Cicco, this film wasnt a big hit, but it is perhaps one of the most honest war movies ever made. 4. D-Day: The Sixth of June (1956): Robert Taylor, Dana Wynter, and D-Day veteran Richard Todd star in this somewhat melodramatic romance set mostly in pre-D-Day Britain during the build-up to the Normandy invasion. Taylor plays a married U.S. Army colonel whos in love with Valerie Russell (Wynter), whos also involved with Lt. Col. John Wynter (Todd). The film is essentially an extended flashback as the two officers head to the Normandy beaches and exchange tales about the woman they are unwittingly both in love with. 5. The Americanization of Emily (1964): One of the strangest films loosely tied to the Normandy invasion, this dark comedy, written by Paddy Chayefsky and directed by Arthur Hiller, is a combination of bittersweet romance and a satire about war, inter-service rivalry, and public relations in general. Starring James Garner, Julie Andrews, and Melvyn Douglas, its D-Day connection comes from an admirals nutty idea, hatched to upstage the Army, of having the first American fatal casualty on Omaha Beach be a Navy man. 6. Ike: Countdown to D-Day (2004): Tom Selleck stars as Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower in this original made-for-cable movie that dramatizes the Allied Supreme Commanders tension-filled life during the preparations for D-Day. Co-starring Gerald McRaney as Lt. Gen. George S. Patton, Jr., this modestly budgeted film is more of a character study of a man under intense pressure as the fate of the free world rides on his every command decision.
"One click, is to be answered with two clicks..."
Thanks.
Yes, in 1977, I visited France and literally bummed around. Since I could speak reasonably passable French, it wasn’t a problem; however, many Normans made a great effort to try to speak English. I stayed at a small inn run by an elderly couple in Ste. Mere Eglise; they showed me photos and souvenirs and were very appreciative.
At that time, you could still find small pieces of rusty metal or spent shells on the beach. The tides were terrible in late May.
I believe there are several websites that show photos of Normandy then and now; many of the same buildings are still there.
The visit to the American cemetery on a cold, damp afternoon makes for pretty bad photography but it certainly sets the mood for such a large resting place. The older caretakers seemed much more respectful than the younger workers. As I was leaving, a busload of older Americans and their wives had just arrived. The third man noticed me and smiled and I just said, “Hi!” Wish I could have said more.
“One click, is to be answered with two clicks...”
Right. Wayne was not right for that roll. Robert Mitchum as Gen. Cota was great but he and John wayne would have been better switching rolls.
Nah, Mitchum was perfect as Cota.
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