THIS DAY IN HISTORY – “Saving Private Ryan” opens in theaters – 1998

Via History.com

Saving Private Ryan' Returns To Cinemas To Commemorate 75th Anniversary Of D-Day │U.S. Veterans Magazine

Saving Private Ryan' Returns To Cinemas To Commemorate 75th Anniversary Of D-Day

On July 24, 1998, the director Steven Spielberg’s World War II epic, Saving Private Ryan, is released in theaters across the United States. The film, which starred Tom Hanks and Matt Damon, was praised for its authentic portrayal of war and was nominated for 11 Academy Awards. It took home five Oscars, for Best Director, Best Cinematography, Best Sound, Best Film Editing and Best Sound Effects Editing.

The film’s lengthy opening scene was a bloody re-enactment of American troops landing at Omaha Beach in Normandy, France, on June 6, 1944. Following this violent D-Day scene, Saving Private Ryan centered around the fictional story of Captain John Miller (Hanks), and his band of seven rangers, who are sent on a mission to rescue Private James Francis Ryan (Damon), a paratrooper missing somewhere behind enemy lines. Ryan’s three older brothers have recently been killed in action, so military officials order Miller to find the young soldier and prevent a public-relations disaster. As the men make their way across the battle-scarred French countryside they suffer several casualties before eventually locating Ryan in a bombed-out village, where he is helping to defend a strategically important bridge from the Germans. Ryan refuses to leave his comrades, even after Miller gave him the news of his siblings’ deaths. Miller reluctantly agrees that he and his squad will stay to defend the area. When the Nazis attacked, the captain and many of his men are killed, but Ryan survives.

Private Ryan was a fictional character, but there was a historical basis to his story. Following the deaths of the five Sullivan brothers from Waterloo, Iowa, on the USS Juneau in November 1942, the U.S. War Department established the Sole Survivor Policy to protect remaining family members from combat duty. Saving Private Ryan was partially inspired by the real-life story of the Niland brothers. During World War II, Sergeant Frederick “Fritz” Niland, a member of the 101st Airborne, was accidentally dropped behind enemy lines. He eventually made it back to his unit, where he was informed that two of his brothers had died at Normandy and the third had gone missing in Burma. Niland was sent home to Tonawanda, New York. His family’s tragedy had a somewhat happier ending, however, when the brother who was believed to have died in the Far East was liberated from a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp.

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10 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
July 24, 2022 8:27 am

Bravo

Llpoh
Llpoh
July 24, 2022 8:44 am

This is the article that “quote” supposedly came from: https://www.spiegel.de/politik/moralischer-kompass-a-1bf2406b-0002-0001-0000-000013680795

You will note that that quote does not exist in that article. Nor is any mention of Hitler made in the entire magazine. Go figure.

flash
flash
  Llpoh
July 24, 2022 8:54 am

Please accept my cookies…reeee

Llpoh
Llpoh
  Llpoh
July 24, 2022 9:04 am

Bankers suck. For certain.

flash
flash
July 24, 2022 8:50 am

“Movies are all fake and gay. Read a book.” Thomas Jefferson

Anonymous
Anonymous
  flash
July 24, 2022 9:39 am

I can’t wait for the remake, “Saving Princess Ryan “, where he…she…it is twerking behind enemy lines, but doesn’t need rescue because “they” are gallant warriors.

Captain_Obviuos
Captain_Obviuos
  Anonymous
July 24, 2022 1:14 pm

Harrington Richardson: Gimme Sachwerte!
Harrington Richardson: Gimme Sachwerte!
July 24, 2022 10:53 am

In reality, the story is based on a soldier from the eastern US, was rescued or found by a Catholic Chaplain, and after the war the MIA and presumed KIA brothers were found alive. Either one or none were actually lost. I need to find the article and review that point. More Spielberg BS like the virtue signaling in Schindler that they wouldn’t lower themselves to fight the Nazis. In reality they had hidden 1,100 G43 semi-auto rifles and were planning a breakout.
I love historical films. If only they would make some.

Mushroom Cloud
Mushroom Cloud
July 24, 2022 11:57 am

Tom Hanks did such a good job acting in that one that the Film Actors Guild gave him 4 golden showers and 5 underage kids from some pizza parlour as a reward…

Anonymous
Anonymous
July 24, 2022 4:12 pm

Classic piece of jew propaganda there hahaa like when the jew kid saw the Hitler youth knife after cresting the first embankment and zapping the germans in the trenches he starting crying get the fuck outta here!
Like they knew about the phoney gas chambers already hahaaaa