I didn't know they could make movies this bad. So many technical issues the list is too long to bother. Acting was let's just say lacking... that's putting it nicely. I would rather watch a kindergarten Christmas play than have to sit through that turd again. Chuck and randy what are you doing
D-Day: Battle of Omaha Beach
2019
Action / Drama / History / War
D-Day: Battle of Omaha Beach
2019
Action / Drama / History / War
Plot summary
Some people called it a suicide, but for the Rangers of the 2nd Battalion, that's another word for mission. When an elite group of American soldiers are ordered to take out a series of German machine gun nests, they find themselves blindly venturing into hostile territory. Outnumbered and outgunned they must risk life and limb as they cross treacherous terrain, never knowing where the enemy might be hiding.
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T-Day: Battle of Turds
An Inspiring World War II War Movie From Asylum Studios!!!
The most unusual thing about the Asylum Studios' low-budget, World War II movie "D-Day" is its homage to Steven Spielberg's landmark epic "Saving Private Ryan." Mind you, Asylum's generically entitled "D-Day" doesn't depict the horrors of war on the same scale of carnage as Spielberg's memorable masterpiece. Nevertheless, "D-Day" is unlike the typical Asylum Studios home video releases. This somber-minded saga shares similarities with "Ardennes Fury" (2014),an Asylum Studios' knockoff of the big-budget World War combat extravaganza "Fury" (2014) starring Brad Pitt & Shia LaBeouf. For the record, Asylum makes mockbuster movies, like the hopelessly hysterical "Sharknado" franchise. Happily, you don't see any savage six-headed sharks splash through a time warp to interrupt the Nazis as they are blasting away at the Allies storming the Normandy beaches! "Operation Dunkirk" director Nick Lyon and scenarist Terry Mead focus on U.S. Army Commander Lieutenant Colonel James Earl Rudder and his intrepid U.S. Rangers of the 2nd Battalion. At dawn on D-Day, June 6, 1944, they embarked on a suicidal mission to take an enemy artillery post at Pointe du Hoc as part of the greatest amphibious offensive in history. Lyon's ode to gallantry doesn't attempt to be 100 percent authentic reenactment, but it does capture the intrinsic 'mission impossible' glory of this courageous cliffhanger gambit.
Historically, Rudder's Rangers scrambled ashore and ascended Pointe Du Hoc's 100-foot cliffs looming over Utah and Omaha Beaches. According to historian Megan Johnson, in her on-line article at "National Army Museum," Army Brass ranked the guns at "Pointe du Hoc one of the most dangerous German defensive positions on the Norman coast." When German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel designed Hitler's Atlantic Wall, he had erected six 155mm guns atop the strategically situated cliffs. The trajectory of those guns threatened the Allied landings. According to Douglas Brinkley's book "The Boys of Pointe Du Hoc," those guns could lob shells a distance of fourteen miles! Brinkley adds, the German confiscated this World War I era artillery from the French in 1940, and the guns could launch "four rounds per minute with a muzzle velocity of 735 millimeters per second." Ironically, as both authors point out, the Germans never thought that Eisenhower's deploy troops to climb the cliffs. Brinkley revealed that the Rangers suffered "a horrific 70 percent casualty rate. A decade after D-Day, Colonel Rudder revisited Pointe Du Hoc and told Collier Magazine reporter W.C. Heinz: "Anybody would be a fool to do this. It was crazy then and it's crazy now."
Director Nick Lyon begins "D-Day" with the chief protagonist, Lieutenant Colonel Rudder (Nic Cage's son Weston Cage Coppola),reprimanding a fellow officer, Major Cleveland Lytle (Randy Couture 0f "The Expendables"),when he complains that the mission is suicidal. Rudder relieves Lytle of command. Later, he assembles his men and informs them that he will lead them. When they land on the beach, withering German gunfire greets them and takes its toll. Although it isn't quite as graphic as "Saving Private Ryan," the violence surpasses the usual shlock of lightweight Asylum movies. A pusillanimous Army medic, Wiley (Sam Gipson of "Playing with Fire"),experiences his baptism under fire as he rushes to help a mortally wounded G.I. Wiley typifies the kind of guy who is forged in the crucible of combat. Initially, he starts out as an unarmed medic, bandaging wounds and dispensing morphine. Before the day ends, however, he is armed and ready to shoot Germans when he isn't caring for the wounded.
Weston Cage Coppola portrays Colonel Rudder as a gung-ho. Charging up the beach with his men and haling them on despite the Nazi resistance, Rudder exchanges shots with the enemy. Gunfire galore greets Rudder's troops as they stumble up the beach. The Germans atop Pointe du Hoc either drop 'potato masher' hand grenades down on the Americans or poise themselves on the ledge of the promontory and shoot down at the Rangers as if they were fish in a barrel. In truth, a cliff-top ascension was the last thing the Germans expected from the invading Americans. Against incredible odds, the 2nd Battalion Rangers scaled the cliffs valiantly on water-sodden ropes, while their brother-in-arms below aimed upwards and swapped shots with Hitler's henchmen. Eventually, the Rangers took the heights. Rejoining his troops topside, Rudder is hit in the leg, but he refuses to evacuate himself. Instead, he shrugs off his wound as a nuisance and rallies Dog Company inland by his own example of leading from the front. Our guys discover telephone poles rather than artillery pieces where Allied planners had assured them they would find their objective. Later, they surprise several German troops, take them as prisoners of war, and question them for the whereabouts of the artillery. Earlier, the Germans had dismantled the guns to prevent Allied bombers from pulverizing them. Two of Rudder's noncoms--Sergeants Jack Kuhn and Len Lomell-ferret out where the Germans have concealed five artillery pieces. As the movie shows, they sabotaged both the aiming and sighting mechanisms of each artillery piece with thermite grenades.
Lyons may have omitted one death-defying 'Rambo' incident since it must have struck him as utterly unbelievable despite several eyewitness accounts. U.S. Army Staff Sergeant William Stivison perched himself atop an extension fire ladder and raked the plateau of the cliff with bullets. Ironically, the same winds which battered Stivison and spoiled his aim probably enabled him to dodge the fusillade of enemy shells swarming around him! Lieutenant General Omar N. Bradley summarized his sentiments about Rudder's audacious leadership in his memoirs "A Soldier's Story": "No soldier in my command has ever been wished a more difficult task than that which befell the thirty-four-year-old Commander of this Provisional Ranger Force." As World War II movies rank, "D-Day" qualifies as an entertaining, above-average Asylum outing. Like the seriously minded "Ardennes Fury," Lyon's film salutes the battlefield heroism of the 2nd Ranger Battalion and singles out not only Rudder's leadership but also the initiative of Kuhn and Lomell.
Wooooooowwwwww
I didn't know they could make movies this bad. So many technical issues the list is too long to bother. Acting was let's just say lacking... that's putting it nicely. I would rather watch a kindergarten Christmas play than have to sit through that turd again. Chuck and randy what are you doing