Lyrics & Knowledge Personal Pages Record Shop Auction Links Radio & Media Kids Membership Help
The Mudcat Cafesj

Post to this Thread - Printer Friendly - Home
Page: [1] [2]


BS: D Day + 65years

Keith A of Hertford 31 May 09 - 03:21 PM
mg 31 May 09 - 03:35 PM
wysiwyg 31 May 09 - 03:38 PM
Bonzo3legs 31 May 09 - 04:22 PM
Bonzo3legs 31 May 09 - 04:23 PM
gnu 31 May 09 - 04:37 PM
Ebbie 31 May 09 - 05:49 PM
pdq 31 May 09 - 06:05 PM
McGrath of Harlow 31 May 09 - 06:07 PM
jacqui.c 31 May 09 - 07:16 PM
gnu 31 May 09 - 07:29 PM
Charley Noble 31 May 09 - 08:25 PM
Keith A of Hertford 02 Jun 09 - 03:40 AM
Keith A of Hertford 02 Jun 09 - 08:44 AM
bobad 06 Jun 09 - 10:19 AM
John on the Sunset Coast 06 Jun 09 - 10:28 AM
bobad 06 Jun 09 - 10:37 AM
Rapparee 06 Jun 09 - 10:54 AM
gnu 06 Jun 09 - 10:58 AM
Little Hawk 06 Jun 09 - 11:57 AM
GUEST,beardedbruce 06 Jun 09 - 12:06 PM
WalkaboutsVerse 06 Jun 09 - 12:21 PM
Mrs.Duck 06 Jun 09 - 01:29 PM
Little Hawk 06 Jun 09 - 01:36 PM
Ref 06 Jun 09 - 02:14 PM
Little Hawk 06 Jun 09 - 02:58 PM
GUEST,Lighter 06 Jun 09 - 03:12 PM
Little Hawk 06 Jun 09 - 06:45 PM
Charley Noble 06 Jun 09 - 06:54 PM
Paul Burke 06 Jun 09 - 07:20 PM
Geoff the Duck 06 Jun 09 - 07:55 PM
Janie 06 Jun 09 - 08:50 PM
Little Hawk 06 Jun 09 - 08:53 PM
Lox 06 Jun 09 - 09:13 PM
Ref 06 Jun 09 - 09:34 PM
mg 06 Jun 09 - 11:50 PM
GUEST,seth in Olympia 07 Jun 09 - 02:13 AM
Keith A of Hertford 07 Jun 09 - 04:49 AM
Keith A of Hertford 07 Jun 09 - 04:56 AM
Neil D 07 Jun 09 - 06:35 AM
Little Hawk 07 Jun 09 - 08:17 AM
Keith A of Hertford 07 Jun 09 - 09:47 AM
Little Hawk 07 Jun 09 - 10:07 AM
GUEST,Lighter 07 Jun 09 - 04:40 PM
Lox 07 Jun 09 - 06:06 PM
GUEST,Lighter 07 Jun 09 - 07:24 PM
gnu 07 Jun 09 - 07:54 PM
Joe Offer 07 Jun 09 - 09:53 PM
bubblyrat 08 Jun 09 - 06:01 AM
GUEST,Derby 08 Jun 09 - 11:58 AM

Share Thread
more
Lyrics & Knowledge Search [Advanced]
DT  Forum Child
Sort (Forum) by:relevance date
DT Lyrics:













Subject: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 31 May 09 - 03:21 PM

The event will be marked in Nomandy, and president Obama will be present.
Many veterans from Britain and Commonwealth will be there, many for the last time.
We here sometimes think that our veterans' efforts and the sacrifice of our fallen is being airbrushed from history.
We are used to Hollywood ignoring our part and even portraying our achievements being carried out by Americans.
Our head of state, the Queen, has not been invited.
Sarcosy has stated that it is to be a Franco American occasion.

I am sure most members here know that only two of the 5 beaches were American beaches, and that Americans were outnumbered, by several thousand, by British, Candian and other Commonwealth troops.
I hope this is not forgotten by the next generation.

I do not wish to understate our gratitude to USA for their sacrifice. I was moved to make this post by contributions to the Memorial Day thread.
Many veterans here feel hurt by this slight.
keith.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: mg
Date: 31 May 09 - 03:35 PM

Well, I am sorry that they are not getting the recognition they deserve..I am sure most Americans are not aware of this. Maybe you could write an article for some publication on this.

And never worry too much about the younger generation forgetting too much and getting off easy somehow...we don't know what they will be called upon to do but it could eclipse what other generations have had to do..we just never know...mg


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: wysiwyg
Date: 31 May 09 - 03:38 PM

I hope this is not forgotten by the next generation.

I have a similar hope over what I have learned, late in life, about the racism the USA's history so painfully includes. It's not any older than the D-Day memories the media tried to keep focus on, with "The Greatest Generation" material of recent years.

It's always interesting to me (really, I just mean interesting) how we can feel so strongly that "X is in the past, let's move ON!" while "X just happened, we must remember!!!"-- over things that took place at the same time on the timeline. It's just weirdly human.

~S~


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Bonzo3legs
Date: 31 May 09 - 04:22 PM

When we visited Phoenix Arizona in 1998, it was pointed out to us that all the Latin American folks were stufapprobriumfed at one end of the town - or is it a city? I call that segregation.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Bonzo3legs
Date: 31 May 09 - 04:23 PM

Damned keyboard!

When we visited Phoenix Arizona in 1998, it was pointed out to us that all the Latin American folks were stuffed at one end of the town - or is it a city? I call that segregation.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: gnu
Date: 31 May 09 - 04:37 PM

I have been rather nasty in this forum in a few threads to some people about this subject... even telling them to "read a fucking history book." It makes my blood boil. As far as Herself not being invited, I cannot be nasty enough. Assholes!


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Ebbie
Date: 31 May 09 - 05:49 PM

Bonzo3, it may be segregation in fact but it is not necessarily a mandated thing. What about the various Chinatowns across the ocuntry? What about the Polish sections of a city? People, being people, tend to gravitate toward what is familiar.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: pdq
Date: 31 May 09 - 06:05 PM

"There is deep significance with the Queen not being invited…she is the one world leader who has a personal stake in D-Day.  While serving with the British forces as a driver,  she met the Supreme Allied Commander for the D-Day landings, General Eisenhower, and developed a fondness for him which lasted for decades.  Her affection for Eisenhower, and his contribution to the defeat of Nazi Germany is well known.  Seems that her not being invited by a serving President of the United States sends a message that the United Kingdom just doesn't matter in the big picture anymore.

How in the world can any world leader commemorate D-Day without the presence of the Brits?"


Remember, Obama is the same guy who did a full waiste-up bow to the Saudi Arabian ambassador. As a dipolmat, he is an embarrassment.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 31 May 09 - 06:07 PM

I think many Americans, and indeed others, do not realise that most of the troops taking part in the D-Day landings were not Americans. I suppose that's show business...:

On D-Day, the Allies landed around 156,000 troops in Normandy. The American forces landed numbered 73,000: 23,250 on Utah Beach, 34,250 on Omaha Beach, and 15,500 airborne troops. In the British and Canadian sector, 83,115 troops were landed (61,715 of them British): 24,970 on Gold Beach, 21,400 on Juno Beach, 28,845 on Sword Beach, and 7900 airborne troops. (From The D-Day Museum)


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: jacqui.c
Date: 31 May 09 - 07:16 PM

Much though this may surprise some, the President of the USA is not the person who chooses who will be invited to an event of this type. That duty falls to the leaders of the country in which the event is to be held and, so far, France has not become the 51st state.

This sounds as if it was a total lash up on the part of the French and UK governments. Now Sarcosy is saying that it was up to the UK government to choose who was to attend from the UK. Brown is back-pedalling furiously and saying that any member of the Royal Family is welcome to accompany him to France, rather late in the day. This seems to be just another incidence of the disdain with which the UK government hold the Monarchy and, on this occasion, I think it is insulting as the Queen was actually in the Armed Forces during the war, when both the president of France and Brown weren't even a twinkle in their fathers' eyes.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: gnu
Date: 31 May 09 - 07:29 PM

Herself is the (token) head of the the Allied Forces of 26 commonwealth nations and also allied in NATO and beyond. It is at the very least, a disgraceful affront to millions of loyal military personnel around the globe.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Charley Noble
Date: 31 May 09 - 08:25 PM

Sounds like a bloodbath in the making.

I think I'll just pause and reflect on what I was doing when I was two years old.

Cheerily,
Charley Noble


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 02 Jun 09 - 03:40 AM

President Obama is trying to get an invite for Q.E.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8078294.stm
Sadly, probably too late to make arrangements now.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 02 Jun 09 - 08:44 AM

Prince Charles will represent the Queen.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: BS: D-Day 65 Years Ago Today
From: bobad
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 10:19 AM

A tribute to the D-Day Dodgers of Canada: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jXl_xzqIRgk


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: John on the Sunset Coast
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 10:28 AM

Today is the anniversary of D-Day.

Five years ago, just a month before anniversay 60, Mrs. JotSC and I took a most awesome bus tour from Paris to Normandy. The tour guide, who had written books on D-Day related the saga of events leading to the landings and the battle itself. He wore a night mask while relating the story in detail, as if he were seeing that historic past as he spoke.

We made stops at the Peace Museum in Caan (I believe), and at the American Cemetery for the D-Day fallen. We placed a flower at the grave of one of those heroes.

But standing at the edge of the Omaha Beach cliffs, it astounded me that anyone could actually have scaled cliff and survive to fight, so heavily was the area fortified. German bunkers are still there, as, in the water, are the hulls of landing craft that did make it to the beach.

So, to all the brave allied fighters who took part in the Normandy invasions, thank you for your sacrifice.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D-Day 65 Years Ago Today
From: bobad
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 10:37 AM

Oops, didn't check for prior thread.......my boo boo.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Rapparee
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 10:54 AM

My Father-in-Law landed 21 days after. He said that when he looked at what had had to be done only then did the realization hit him of the magnitude and heroism of that day -- on Utah, Omaha, Gold, Sword, and Juno and from the sky above the night before.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D-Day 65 Years Ago Today
From: gnu
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 10:58 AM

What's with the English accent?


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Little Hawk
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 11:57 AM

My father landed on the 5th day. He encountered heavy fighting almost immediately.

It sounds to me like Obama had nothing to do with the failure to invite the Queen, so why blame him for it?


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: GUEST,beardedbruce
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 12:06 PM

LH,

For the same reason Bush was blamed for anything that happened when he was president. Once precedent is established, the side originating it has little room to complain when it is used against them.


But of course it was ok when it was against someone you did not like.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: WalkaboutsVerse
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 12:21 PM

Poem 212 of 230: REMEMBER THEM?

Back when we became defenders
    (We have plainly been attackers),
Defenders' blood, sweat and years
    Were paid to keep a good home-way -
A way yet to be part stealth-blown,
    As mass immigration gained-sway
And as we slipped as maintainers.

From http://walkaboutsverse.sitegoz.com (e-scroll)
Or http://blogs.myspace.com/walkaboutsverse (e-book)


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Mrs.Duck
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 01:29 PM

My uncle was crewof one of the first landing craft over. My father landed six days later.
We were travelling home from holiday through Normandy on Thursday and saw long convoys of troups and parachutes dropping in ready for todays events.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Little Hawk
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 01:36 PM

It's not okay either way, BB. ;-) You know I defended Reagan over that Bittburg visit, and I will defend anyone on the Right or the Left who is unfairly attacked in a partisan manner.

Sadly, that is not so true of many of my (so-called) "liberal" compadres here. Their righteous moral scruples end abruptly at the party line.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Ref
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 02:14 PM

Hey pdq, where were you when Bush was kissing the Saudis on the lips?

What the dickens does segregation in Phoenix AR have to do with this thread?

Obviously Sarkozy should have invited Her Maj, but it's not President Obama's fault. The REAL screw-up is not inviting representatives of the people of the old Soviet Union, who carried so much more of the weight than any of the Western Alliance. We owe so much, to steal a phrase, to the valor of so many, among the leaders and the boys (that's what they were!) who carried out the plans.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Little Hawk
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 02:58 PM

Stalin was (understandably) pressing hard for an Allied invasion of western Europe much earlier than June '44 in order to take pressure off his own forces in the East. He was hoping the Allies would launch their invasion in 1943. As things stood, however, I think they were wise to wait until June 1944. An invasion in '43 would probably not have succeeded, but would have met a bloody defeat, and that would have prolonged the war.

The Russians are probably not all that interested in the D-Day observances since their forces did not take any part in that invasion...but it would still make sense to invite them to attend.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 03:12 PM

Blaming the President for whatever bad happens may not have begun with Lincoln, but I know it goes back at least that far.

The only difference in recent years is that 24-hour news and talk radio results in more pounds of blame per capita.

Who was "braver" or "did more" on D-Day is a pointless argument. The Brits and Canadians landed more troops, but most of the casualties were Yanks. None of the three countries could have succeeded alone.

I'll grant that most Americans have no inkling that either Britain or Canada had anything to do with D-Day, not to mention the small number of Free French commandos who also landed. (Unless they've seen The Longest Day, made nearly 50 years ago.) But that was in black & white, which KIDS TODAY (a phrase I once never thought I'd use) won't stand for. High-school history courses don't ignore other Allied forces on D-Day, but they're mentioned only in passing, partly because WWII rarely takes up more than an hour or two of class time. So if you were day-dreaming about that hottie, you missed it.

BTW, the movie is sometimes embarrassingly hokey, but it does suggest the size and scope of the event.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Little Hawk
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 06:45 PM

Good post. Yeah, "The Longest Day" is a bit hokey in places, but it's still a fine film overall. That invasion was a real meat-grinder for those who happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. That would be most of all the Americans who hit Omaha Beach and the German soldiers all along the entire perimeter...plus anyone else whose luck didn't turn out to be so good. Great courage was shown by all the participants, if you ask me.

I'd hate to have been in one of those German foxholes or bunkers. I'd hated to have been on the beaches trying to take them. War is a miserable business.

My dad was there, and what he said about the war was mainly this: that he never in his life saw a more tragic waste of men and materials. This in spite of the fact that he despised Hitler's Nazis and wanted very much to help defeat them. He killed some German soldiers, he accepted the surrender of others, he saw many friends killed right in front of him. After the war he had many good friends who were Germans and who had served in the opposing forces. That's war for you. It makes enemies of people who might better have been friends.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Charley Noble
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 06:54 PM

Strange that I can't come up with a single song about D Day,

And "D Day Dodgers" is a fine song but with an entirely different perspective.

Charley Noble


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Paul Burke
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 07:20 PM

Sarkozy is a shit. He'd have been in Vichy if that was where the chances were. And while we've got other "English" filth, in other threads, supporting parties that target Blacks and eastern Europeans, let's remember that soldiers participating in the Normandy landings included troops from Poland, Greece, and Czechoslovakia, as well as many Black Americans.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Geoff the Duck
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 07:55 PM

Didn't see any early news on the BBC because we were on holiday in France. Saw parachutes and jeeps on our way home on Thursday.
Got home and slept Friday.
News on Saturday suggests that the celebrations were intended to be low key, mainly for people who had been there, but about a week ago it became a big thing, too late for the Queen to re-arrange previous arrangements, so Charles stood up to help out.
Lots of respect to the people who fought - let'snot use it s an excuse for starting fights.
Quack!
GtD.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Janie
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 08:50 PM

What Geoff said.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Little Hawk
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 08:53 PM

Way to go, Geoff. Quack!


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Lox
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 09:13 PM

"BTW, the movie is sometimes embarrassingly hokey, but it does suggest the size and scope of the event."

The movie is a pretty acurate rendition of the book.

And hokey or not, the thing to remember about both is that every single detail is 100% accurate and verified and cross referenced by a huge amount of witness testimony.

The guy on the church spire in st maire eglise, the german rifle bolt sounding like a hand held 'cricket bug', the columns of patrolling german and american soldiers walking right past each other whilst looking up at the turmoil in the sky ...

So if its hokey its because the reality was hokey. There is nothing exaggerrated or 'artistic' about it.

The scottish piper on the beach - the general who walked up and down the beach seemingly immune to the bullets shouting orders and pulling people up by the scruff of their neck ...


The book obviously contains a lot more detail and is gripping and eyepoppingly fascinating - I recommend it, not least as it is amazing how cornelius ryan collated all that information and was able to order it in such a coherent readable way.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Ref
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 09:34 PM

It remains a great film. My favorite trivia bit is that Richard Todd, who portrays major John Howard of the British glider troops, was on D-Day a lieutenant who commanded a platoon of paratroopers that fought in support of Howard and his lads at Pegasus Bridge.

I also love the scenes with Piper Bill Millen (portrayed by a man who was pipe major to the Queen Mum) leading the commandos relieving Howard's command. Many of the commando units, ostensibly British, were filled with European Jewish refugees who'd been recruited for their language skills and knowledge of the ground.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: mg
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 11:50 PM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IVpM8OPixds&feature=related


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: GUEST,seth in Olympia
Date: 07 Jun 09 - 02:13 AM

A lot of the American soldiers were barely in their twenties, if that. I'm forever grateful that I didn't have to do that, and that those kids jumped out of their boats and into machine gun fire for all of us, some of of us not born yet.
seth


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 07 Jun 09 - 04:49 AM

Normandy Orchards is about D Day and aftermath.
Obama wanted the Queen to attend.
No one here argued that any national group was nobler than any other in these events, I just observed that some Americans are unaware that they were not alone.
keith.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 07 Jun 09 - 04:56 AM

Normandy Orchards, Keith Marsden
@displaysong.cfm?SongID=8566


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Neil D
Date: 07 Jun 09 - 06:35 AM

I'm one American who has known since childhood that Americans were not alone in the Normandy Invasion when I watched The Longest Day with my Dad (D-Day+4 for him). I also know that European peoples paid a higher price for Hitler's insanity than we did. From the fall of Poland and France, through the Battle For Britain, the siege of Leningrad and the bloodbath at Stalingrad, and not least the Holocaust, many of whose victims were German citizens. As I said in my eulogy for my father: "When Dad was a very young man he won a great war and made the world safe for Democracy. Well sure, some others pitched in to help because thats just how folks were back then." So let us honor EVERYONE who took part in that great undertaking and if you know one who's still here don't waste another second, thank them in person.
                                          Neil Devore


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Little Hawk
Date: 07 Jun 09 - 08:17 AM

On the one hand, the Germans had almost no hope of stopping that invasion. It's been compared to an egg being hit by a sledgehammer in some of the military histories I've read. Their troops were stretched very thin along very long stretches of coastline, they were inadequately foritified, and the Allies had total air and sea supremacy and were able to put thousands of aircraft over the beachhead to support the landings.

On the other hand, that doesn't mean it was easy for the men who landed! It was specially hard at Omaha Beach where the Americans took heavy casualties due to a number of things going wrong.

My father landed on the 5th day with the British forces near Caen and advanced a few miles in from the beach head where his unit came under heavy fire from a German infantry battalion that was entrenched in a line of trees. It was the first time he'd ever been under fire, but the Germans were probably considerably more experienced, and he said they laid down a vicious barrage of machine gun and mortar fire. He spent the next few hours trying to dig a deeper hole in the earth and not get killed and he said he made up his mind right there and then to do two things:

1. survive the war
2. never look back after that, but make something of himself

He had suddenly realized just how fragile and valuable life is.

I can see, looking back, that it was the war which made him a very strong and determined man for the rest of his life. He grew up fast on that first day at Normandy.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 07 Jun 09 - 09:47 AM

Another song.ST AUBIN SUR MER (Keith Marsden)
See current thread.
I can not agree that success was inevitable.
It was a very near thing saved partly by a successful deception plan and mainly by Hitler obstructing the movement of reserves.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Little Hawk
Date: 07 Jun 09 - 10:07 AM

I wouldn't say success was inevitable, Keith, but I would say that the German defenses were woefully inadequate. This was also Rommel's view, and he was the man in command of those defenses. Yes, Hitler made a big contribution to the Allied victory by obstructing the movement of the armoured reserves. He was absolutely sure that Normandy was a feint and that the main Allied invasion was to come at Calais. He had a "gift" for maintaining stubborn and moronic denial in the face of all evidence to the contrary! God knows, if the enormous operation at Normandy had been a mere feint, well, the main invasion would have been unstoppable in any case.....

With Hitler in command, it's amazing the German Army did as well as they did and managed to hold out till the spring of '45.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 07 Jun 09 - 04:40 PM

Lox, the first half hour of Saving Private Ryan is truer to the reality of the Omaha landing than all the Omaha segments of The Longest Day.

SPR is occasionally hokey too but not nearly so much as TLD. As artistic creations they're also artistic statements - they have no choice, it's the price you pay for creating art.

TLD says D-Day was important, complicated, dangerous - and exciting! But not, you know, really stomach-turning. And have you noticed how many of the Germans are basically comic villains? ("Gummipuppen?" "Gummipuppen!")

And some of the dialogue...

"[Innocently:] Where's Johnny? [Pregnant pause] You mean he's *bought* it ??!!"

"Ack-ack. Over Calais. He jumped clear, but his parachute didn't open."

"That leaves just *you* in the squadron, Dave!! I mean, of the old 1940 lot….Poor old Johnny. Bad luck it happening just now."

Also, though TLD is advertised as "true," some of the stuff is fiction. In Ryan's version, Pvt. "Dutch" Schultz clicks his cricket, then hears a machine gun open up. It misses. (The German and American squads passing each other in the dark does seem to be true, though the book doesn't say they were at arm's length.)

SPR, OTOH, says that D-Day was a bloody nightmare. Anyone who's interested in either should see both, TLD first.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Lox
Date: 07 Jun 09 - 06:06 PM

I've read TLD cover to cover on more than one occasion and seen the film more than once also.

The film does not deviate from the book, it just does not include much of the detail about the preparations, as you would expect from the film of any book.

Every claim and every quote in both is taken straight out of the testimony of witnesses, of which there is a huge amount.

The lines that you don't like are not a scriptwriters attempts at humour, they were things that witnesses said they heard said and which other witnesses coroborrated.

You and I are free to see them as humour if we wish, or (as I see them) utterly tragic and indicative of the madness of war.

TLD doesn't tell you how to feel, it just tells you what happened and how some of those involved reacted.

I can't comment on SPR as I haven't seen it.


The lines in The Longest Day are all exactly as recorded in the information gathred by cornelius ryan.

Anyone can check.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 07 Jun 09 - 07:24 PM

Lox, I had the book in front of me as I wrote. I checked.

I don't see the quoted dialogue as humor, unintentional or otherwise. I see it as a screenwriter's failed attempt (there were several screenwriters) to fill in Dave's background, point out the high RAF casualty rate, and to emphasize dangers of combat flyingthat civilian audiences might not have thought of: in this case, a parachute failed. At the same time, the writer is trying to make it all sound like natural conversation. The woodenness of the acting made it worse. IMO.

Now that I'm old I can play the age card. When I saw TLD on the big screen in 1962, I too thought it was magnificent. I hummed the theme song for days.

As the years passed, though, and passed, my appreciation dwindled. The last time I tried to watch the whole thing (about ten years ago), it was too painful. It seemed more like a feel-good movie, with tragedy and laughs thrown in, than like a realistic portrayal.

Stephen Ambrose wrote that he loved the movie because it made him feel proud. One result, decades later, was that he later wrote Band of Brothers. If you haven't seen the HBO miniseries of that, you really should. It's brilliant all the way through, especially, I think, in the final episode. Unlike TLD, it's better than the book.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: gnu
Date: 07 Jun 09 - 07:54 PM

I cannot watch any of them. I cannot watch the services. I cannot watch November 11 ceremonies. The stories my father, mother, aunts and uncles told me flood back, as does my uncontrollable weeping. I just had to wipe my eyes to see the screen typing this.

Lest we forget.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: Joe Offer
Date: 07 Jun 09 - 09:53 PM

I visited Omaha Beach about this time last year, and it was a moving experience. The land is high above the sea there, and the view is spectacular. Anyone landing on the beach would have been an easy target. I walked amidst the crosses and stars of David and remembered those who died.

I'm a pacifist, but even pacifists are moved by what happened on D-Day. I honor the heroism of the Allied troops on D-Day and during the year thereafter, which resulted in the liberation of Europe. I remain a pacifist; but in this case, I do not know of a better way than what was done by our troops.

-Joe-


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: bubblyrat
Date: 08 Jun 09 - 06:01 AM

My next-door-neighbour,Harry,is a 94 year old D-Day veteran,so I have heard all about it from him !! It doesn't sound like it was fun at all. War is terrible ; my father was in the RAF,and his squadron (214) flew Boeing B17s from RAF Oulton, Norfolk.At least two of them were brought down by "friendly fire", "Blue-on-Blue", whatever you want to call it,at around that time (1944-45)---One was shot down by a Lancaster bomber,whose crew did not recognise what it was ( no British bomber had a single ,large tailplane like a B17). Another one was badly damaged by fighters over Germany---it managed to reach safety over Allied-held France,but was then shot down by an AMERICAN anti-aircraft crew !!! A B17 !! But that's war for you.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: D Day + 65years
From: GUEST,Derby
Date: 08 Jun 09 - 11:58 AM

The D in D-Day stands for Derby as far as the Queen is concerned. Do you think she wasn't delighted not to be asked but sent her son so as not to interfere with her racing?


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate


Next Page

 


You must be a member to post in non-music threads. Join here.


You must be a member to post in non-music threads. Join here.



Mudcat time: 27 April 4:40 AM EDT

[ Home ]

All original material is copyright © 2022 by the Mudcat Café Music Foundation. All photos, music, images, etc. are copyright © by their rightful owners. Every effort is taken to attribute appropriate copyright to images, content, music, etc. We are not a copyright resource.