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  • Rundstedt17
    #53427
    azért ezzel vitatkoznék,realitástól elég messze van az a film....

    Act I – The Invasion Landing

    Almost everything is right here

    Act II – The Journey

    With such a thundering opening act, it’s not surprising that things bog down a bit after the beach assault. Here we meet some of the survivors of the landings and follow them on their silly Hollywood mission to find Private Ryan. Governments and militaries are certainly not averse to handing out dumb assignments, that the writers created this one for the film, not for troops in WWII. There are a number of other things that pop up to annoy critical historians in this portion of the film:

    1,The Americans are too pudgy – Unlike these days, most Americans in the 1940’s hailed from rural areas and chubbiness was quite a bit less common, in particular among our armed forces.
    2,The squad talks too much – Far from moving silently through enemy territory, our SPR troops chat about everything while sometimes looking around. Since they’re conversing, they also walk close together – an excellent target!
    3,Moving in the open/in daylight – Our SPR squad looks like it’s on a hike in Ireland (the actors were), not walking in enemy-held Normandy. Most Americans inland of the invasion beaches during those days were very cautious rabbits indeed, travelling in the shadows or even at night to avoid detection. And there was very little Allied-held territory.
    4,Stupid attack – One of the few combat boo-boos in ‘Ryan’ is the goofy daylight sprint at the enemy machine gun post in the middle of the movie. And the Cpt. Miller character was really experienced?

    Act III – The Bridge Battle

    1,Not quite an historical battle – A number of small bridges played a vital role in the Normandy invasion. Our fictional ‘Ryan’ bridge parallels closely the bridge at La Fiere in Normandy, held for the first couple of days after the invasion by members of the American 82nd Airborne Division (the sister division to the 101st of the movie’s Private Ryan). However, the Germans in the La Fiere area were conscripted non-Germans under German officers, not the battle-wise scumbag SS units we apparently see in the film.

    2,Germans too dumb – Gee those Germans do go down in nice clumps, don’t they? Almost hidden in the midst of some great battle scenes are a couple of bonehead clips of Tom Hanks blowing up whole groups of Germans with hand-thrown mortar bombs. Shades of that goofy western-making bastard John Wayne! The Germans generally make nice targets throughout the final battle.

    3,Too many Germans go down – Yes, it’s an American movie, but the German troops depicted (assuming they are supposed to be the SS they are equipped like) were far more experienced than most of the Americans on hand, including the Rangers. They should be hard to kill and quick to find the Americans weaknesses.

    4,Americans are too perfect – With a few notable exceptions, the film’s American troops are a pleasure to watch in action; they do the right thing at the right time.

    5,Stupid tanks – Those German tankers seem determined to die in SPR. They don’t use their machine guns, they don’t back out of trouble and they stick with their infantry. No wonder they earn glorious death by socks.

    6,No German arty – The Germans would almost certainly have been pounding the American positions with artillery within a few minutes of making their attack on the bridge. Oh well. They probably forgot to bring a radio along.

    7,Biggest actors die last and slowest – One other concession to Hollywood: Hanks must not die instantly from a bullet in the head or anywhere else un-photogenic. And he can't bleed. And he has to get out some relevant last words.