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* For the 1959 book, go here.

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''The Longest Day'' or ''Longest Day'' may refer to:

!The Longest Day
* For the 1959 book, go here.[[Literature/TheLongestDay here]].



* For the 1980 war game, go here.

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* For the 1980 war game, go here.[[TabletopGame/TheLongestDay here]].



* For the ''Doctor Who'' book, go here.

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!Longest Day
* For the ''Doctor Who'' book, called ''Longest Day'' go here.[[Recap/EighthDoctorAdventuresLongestDay here]].
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[[redirect:Film/TheLongestDay]]

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[[redirect:Film/TheLongestDay]]* For the 1959 book, go here.
* For the 1962 war film based off of the book, go [[Film/TheLongestDay here]].
* For the 1980 war game, go here.
* For the 2006 song, go [[Music/IronMaiden here]].
* For the episode of the show ''Series/LandOfTheLost'', go here.
* For the episode of the show ''Series/{{Revolution}}'', go [[Recap/RevolutionS1E17TheLongestDay here]].
* For the ''Doctor Who'' book, go here.
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[[quoteright:335:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/longest-day-_9884.jpg]]

''The Longest Day'' was the title of a book by Cornelius Ryan describing the events of D-Day through the eyes of as many of the participants - Allied, German and local inhabitants - as he could find and interview.

In 1962, the book was made into a film with an AllStarCast and LoadsAndLoadsOfCharacters. Rather than focussing on one particular group of participants in the manner of ''SavingPrivateRyan'', the work aimed to provide an overview of the events of D-Day as they unfolded. Viewpoint characters include French resistance fighters, German generals and local commanders, Allied generals and commanders as well as members of the Airborne troops, Rangers, infantry, air force and navy components of the landings.

Because the film was made just 20 years after the events it depicts, many of the older actors had fought in WorldWarTwo, and some had even taken part in the landings - Richard Todd even played his own commanding officer from 1944[[hottip:* :Todd had participated in the Pegasus Bridge operation as a young soldier, and is even shown in the film interacting with "himself", although this is never mentioned in the film]].

Another Cornelius Ryan book, ''ABridgeTooFar'', later got a similar all-star-cast big movie treatment.
----
!! Tropes used in this work include:

* TheAce: [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josef_Priller Josef Priller]], a fighter wing commander and one of the two German airmen later seen strafing the beaches on the day as mentioned below in WorthyOpponent (the other being his wingman Heinz Wodarczyk). His ace status is referred to during the phone conversation early on in the film in which he basically asks "where the hell are my planes?"
* AllStarCast - If you were an A-List male actor in Hollywood in 1962, you have at least a bit part in this film.
* AmericaSavesTheDay - Averted. The British and French divisions of the Normandy landings do their part in reaching their objectives. Almost subverted with Omaha Beach, where the Americans were stuck until a HeroicSacrifice opens up the German defenses.
* AnyoneCanDie - This is a war movie about the Normandy landings where thousands of soldiers got killed. Half the cast is bound to die doing [[HeroicSacrifice something heroic]], something foolish, ''or both'', before the credits roll.
* ArtisticLicenseShips - they tried to avert this by only showing the warships in silhouette, but all that did was exaggerate their obviously postwar lattice masts.
* AsHimself - Almost. Actor Richard Todd plays John Howard, the Major whose unit secures Pegasus Bridge. One of the relief units coming to their aid was led by Captain Richard Todd!
** Played straight with Joseph Lowe, one of the cliff climbers at Utah Beach who reprised his efforts for the movie.
** Also played straight by Bill Millin, the bagpiper with Lord Lovat's commandos.
* BattleEpic
* BackedByThePentagon - About 23.000(!) real US, British and French soldiers were used as extras in the movie. They also rented 2 Messerschmitts from the Spanish air force and 4 Spitfires from the Belgian air force.
* BilingualBonus - Although a fairly obvious one. A German runs out of a bunker shouting '"bitte, bitte''. An American Ranger shoots him and says "I wonder what 'bitter, bitter' means.". "Bitte" is the German for "please".
* BloodlessCarnage
* ChromaKey - Quite [[SpecialEffectsFailure obviously]] when Rommel speaks to his generals atop the ''Atlantikwall''; also during the landing-craft scenes.
* DawsonCasting - John Wayne as Lieutenant Colonel Benjamin Vandervoort. The real Benjamin Vandervoort was '''12 years younger''' than Wayne.
** Even worse, Vandervoort was 12 years younger than Wayne when the movie was made. He was actually just 27 during D-Day, when Wayne was '''54''' when the movie was filmed.
* DeadpanSnarker: Loads and loads.
* DeliberatelyMonochrome - to give the film a documentary/newsreel feel, as well as to take advantage of actual footage that survived the landings themselves.
* DistractedByTheSexy: You're driving a hay cart with two Resistance operatives hiding in the hay. You need to get past a German checkpoint. So you arrange for an insanely hot lady Resistance fighter to arrive at the checkpoint at the same time, riding a bike, showing off cleavage with a half-unbuttoned blouse. It works like a charm.
** Later subverted when she tries the same trick to distract a late-night German patrol from discovering the explosives in the railway tracks and nearly gets killed in the process.
* DramaticGunCock - "Two clicks... I heard... two clicks..."
* DyingMomentOfAwesome
* FieldPromotion: When Brigadier General Norman Cota (Robert Mitchum) finds that the highest ranking Army engineer is Sergeant John H. Fuller, he promotes Fuller to lieutenant and puts him in charge of demolishing a concrete barrier.
* FourStarBadass - He didn't have the four stars, but Brigadier General Roosevelt (Fonda) was the highest-ranking officer on the beaches that day. And it was his leadership during the early stages of confusion that kept the Americans on track.
* GeneralFailure - the Germans have to ask Hitler for permission to use the 21st Panzer Division in a counterattack, and no-one dares wake him up.
* HeroicBSOD - That horrified look on paratrooper John Steele's face as he dangles from the St. Mere Eglise church belltower...
* HeyItsThatGuy - Besides the ones mentioned below, there's Red Buttons, John Wayne, Robert Mitchum, Eddie Albert, Paul Anka, Fabian, Robert Wagner, Richard Dawson...
** Also cartoonist and comedian Creator/{{Loriot}} in an uncredited bit part as a German staff officer.
** Two German actors were future Film/{{James Bond}} villains:
*** Gert Fröbe -- best known for playing the title roll in ''Film/{{Goldfinger}}'' -- as the German soldier who rides the donkey to the beach every morning.
*** Curd Jürgens (credited here as Curt Jürgens) -- who played Karl Stromberg in ''Film/TheSpyWhoLovedMe'' -- as Major General Gunther Blumentritt.
*** The first JamesBond himself, Sean Connery, is one of the soldiers landing on the beach.
* HollywoodNuns - At Ouistreham, a group of French nuns walk into the hotel where the French commandos are fighting from to tend to their wounded. This did not happen in real life.
* IronicEcho - the [[LaResistance Resistance]] code phrase, "Wounds my heart with a monotonous languor," gets repeated by Gen. Blumentritt when he realizes none of his superiors will do anything against the Allies landing at Normandy. He knows in that moment Germany will lose the war.
* {{Irony}} - Two characters, Lieutenant Colonel Benjamin Vandervoort ({{John Wayne}}) [Allies] and Major General Gunther Blumentritt (Curd Jürgens) [Germans], wonder aloud "which side God's on" to their respective subordinates.
** General Marcks, a Wehrmacht division commander, plans to assault Normandy while role-playing as General Eisenhower (the Allied commander), in the German war game in Rennes, because such a move is "inconceivable" to his colleagues. When news of the invasion comes to him, he can only look at the map and laugh at himself.
*** When Marcks explains his attack plan to an underling, even he thinks [[DwightDEisenhower Eisenhower]] is too cautious and would never use that plan. Cut to Eisenhower meeting with his Generals to discuss the weather conditions, with Eisenhower deciding "I'm quite positive we must give the order. I don't like it, but there it is. Gentlemen, [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome I don't see how we can possibly do anything... but go."]]
** Also the aforementioned [[spoiler:DramaticGunCock]] moment. A young paratrooper lands in an isolated area, and suddenly hears somebody nearby. He instantly (as he was instructed) unpacks his little communication tool ([[http://www.windsweptpress.com/clicker.htm a.k.a "The Cricket"]]), and gives a signal (one click-clack), and awaits two click-clacks in return, if the other person were another paratrooper. He in fact hears two click clacks right away, and goes to greet the person in relief. Suddenly, [[spoiler:he is shot in the stomach. He manages to mutter, "Two clicks. I heard two clicks!" and dies. It turns out the mysterious person was a patrolling German. The 2 click-clacks the paratrooper heard was in fact the German instinctively loading and cocking his gun upon hearing the awkward click-clack sound. The contraption designed to preserve the paratrooper's life instead caused his death.]]
* ItsRainingMen - Including, unfortunately for those dropping, straight onto a heavily defended town they were supposed to land outside of, then march in to capture.
** And on a more humorous note, straight onto a German general's headquarters.
---> "Terribly sorry, old man. We simply landed here by accident."
* LaResistance
* LargeHam: Priller is normally a DeadpanSnarker, but when addressing his superior, who's just informed him of the latest bureaucratic stupidity as though it were sense, he becomes a very hammy snarker.
-->You were a lousy pilot when we flew into Russia. Now you're flying a desk and you're STILL A LOUSY PILOT!
* LifeImitatesArt - The code names given to some of the unnamed structures (like Pegasus Bridge) and the beaches (Utah, Omaha, Juno, Sword) are now known by those names.
* LoadsAndLoadsOfCharacters
* OfficerAndAGentleman - most of the officer characters are this, on both sides.
* [[OhCrap Oh Scheiße]]: "Pluskat, where are those ships heading?" "STRAIGHT FOR ME!"
* PercussiveMaintenance - Captain Maud fixing a stalled tank on the beach with a baton.
* TheEngineer - naturally, when you're up against a big concrete wall, you call in this guy.
* TheOner - a long overhead tracking shot of the Free French forces taking Ouistreham. It follows the troops running from cover to cover, crossing pedestrian bridges, taking fire, heading upriver toward a target that the camera eventually reveals is a casino building fortified into a massive German bunker. [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fzd1gCc5CO8 View it here]].
* OnlySaneMan - Blumentritt. He's the one German officer who can see this is the critical battle and tries to get his superiors to deploy the tank reserves that could stop the Allies. No one listens to him.
* ParachuteInATree: There's a scene (BasedOnATrueStory) where a paratrooper becomes snagged on a French church spire.
* RealLifeWritesThePlot - Roddy [=McDowall=] asked for a small role to spare his boredom after ''Film/{{Cleopatra}}'' was delayed ... AGAIN.
** SeanConnery, on the other hand, also has a small role because he was eager to get off to Jamaica and begin filming ''Film/DrNo''.
*** [[HilariousInHindsight Yeah, but the funniest thing is, that Sean Connery is quasi fighting two of his future villains from James Bond (Film/{{Goldfinger}} and [[Film/TheSpyWhoLovedMe Stromberg]]) in this movie (Sergeant Kaffeekanne aka Gert Fröbe, and General Blumentritt aka Curt Jürgens) respectively.]]
* RoadSignReversal - A Reversed Road Sign to Ste.-Mère-Eglise briefly confuses invading Allied forces, until an American officer sees through the trick and orders the sign cut down.
* RousingSpeech - several, including the one given by Brigadier General Norman Cota to his men pinned on Omaha Beach: "I don't have to tell you the story. You all know it. Only two kinds of people are gonna stay on this beach: those that are already dead and those that are gonna die. Now get off your butts! You guys are the Fighting 29th!"
* ShellShockedVeteran - RichardBurton's character is a Battle of Britain veteran who is shot down over Normandy on D-Day.
* ThoseWackyNazis - Averted. The German officers who have speaking roles in the movie are professional military men who are focused on carrying out their missions.
** Well, let's say most of them. All of those who didn't run off to play war-games or attending birthday parties.
*** The German officers left for war games that had been scheduled for months. Considering the foul weather they didn't expect [[EvilCannotComprehendGood Eisenhower to give the order]].
** Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt refuses to ask AdolfHitler for permission to release the Wehrmacht's Panzer reserves, declaring that he would not "bow" to "that Bohemian corporal", ''diesen böhmischen Gefreiter?!''
*** Hitler had it set up so that only he could order the reserve Panzer divisions to move. The refusal to wake him on D-Day was costly to put it mildly.
**** Mildly? When Hitler did wake up, ItGotWorse.
***** Though that's only what Blumentritt ''thinks'' to have happened. In reality, when Hitler woke up, he was more cheerful than ever about the invasion, because now he was actually able to reach the allied army for the first time in that war, and crush them... theoretically (Not only he didn't manage that... the Soviets got him first). He was so happy, that he started dancing and fell back into his originial alpine Austrian dialect: ''O'ganga is! (It's on!)''. But why did he not set the Panzer reserves free? Nobody knows for fact. Even the historians wonder. Okay, I'm finished... TheMoreYouKnow... ;)
****** The best the historians can figure is that Hitler was still convinced the Allies would send a ''larger'' invasion force at Calais, ignoring the obvious size of the force at Normandy. There's also the possibility that Hitler believed the Americans to be weak and soft enough that the troops already deployed could handle it, despite all the ass-kicking that had already taken place in Africa and Sicily.
** Actor Curt Jürgens, in his role as the German General Blumentritt, calls the German generals incompetent. Jürgens was actually imprisoned by the Nazis in his youth, so this might be considered a bit of TakeThat.
** The only time the phrase "Sieg Heil!" appears in the movie is graffiti on a bunker wall in Ouistreham.
* ThemeTuneCameo: a slower, slightly mournful version of the main theme is heard played by an RAF man on a piano in an early scene.
* ThrowItIn - While clearing a section of the Normandy beach near Pointe du Hoc, the film crew found a tank used in the invasion.
They cleaned it up and used it for the British Invasion scenes.
* TitleDrop - when Rommel is discussing the need for building up mass defenses along the French shoreline: that Germany needs to repel any landing before the Allies can secure a firm foothold.
-->"Believe me, gentlemen, the first 24 hours of the invasion will be decisive. For the Allies as well as the Germans, it will be the longest day... The longest day."
** TruthInTelevision as Rommel really did say this phrase, although without the dramatic repeat at the end.
* VillainBall[=/=]ThisIsYourBrainOnEvil: Hitler.
* WarIsHell - the paratroopers crashing into St. Mere Eglise. The paratrooper caught on the belltower (John Steele, played by RedButtons) can only dangle and watch in horror as his fellow jumpers get mowed down. [[RealLifeWritesThePlot It really happened that way, too.]]
** Omaha Beach. Just... damn.
*** The memorial on Omaha Beach is actually kind of Real Life Tear Jerker in itself (No matter that you smirk a bit when you have to go through metal detectors and checkout in order to enter it. And the fact that when you compare the giant memorial for US soldiers to memorials of other nation armies, which makes irony almost unbearable) - it is nothing but cemetary. Stand in the middle and you can't see the ends.
** The Utah Beach unit climbing the cliffs to get at the big guns overlooking half the beach-head reach their objectives [[spoiler:only to find the Germans hadn't installed the guns into their bunkers yet. "You mean we climbed all this way... for nothing?"]] In RealLife ItGotWorse when those secured positions were fired on by the warships anchored off-shore.
*** In RealLife it wasn't for nothing. The Germans had moved the guns inland prior to the invasion and the US Rangers found and destroyed them.
*** Between this scene and a scene in which one of the Rangers shoots two German soldiers attempting to surrender, many Ranger veterans were quite upset with their portrayal in this film, as they felt they'd been unfairly singled out to deliver the WarIsHell message.
** "He's dead. I'm crippled. You're lost. Do you suppose it's always like that? I mean war."
* WhatCouldHaveBeen - ChristopherLee, who fought in the War as an intelligence officer with the RAF, auditioned for any role he could get. He was turned down because the producers felt [[{{Irony}} he didn't look like a military officer]].
* WorldWarTwo
* WorthyOpponent: Most German soldiers. Special props to the ''two Luftwaffe pilots available'', whom even a British officer admired.
----

to:

[[quoteright:335:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/longest-day-_9884.jpg]]

''The Longest Day'' was the title of a book by Cornelius Ryan describing the events of D-Day through the eyes of as many of the participants - Allied, German and local inhabitants - as he could find and interview.

In 1962, the book was made into a film with an AllStarCast and LoadsAndLoadsOfCharacters. Rather than focussing on one particular group of participants in the manner of ''SavingPrivateRyan'', the work aimed to provide an overview of the events of D-Day as they unfolded. Viewpoint characters include French resistance fighters, German generals and local commanders, Allied generals and commanders as well as members of the Airborne troops, Rangers, infantry, air force and navy components of the landings.

Because the film was made just 20 years after the events it depicts, many of the older actors had fought in WorldWarTwo, and some had even taken part in the landings - Richard Todd even played his own commanding officer from 1944[[hottip:* :Todd had participated in the Pegasus Bridge operation as a young soldier, and is even shown in the film interacting with "himself", although this is never mentioned in the film]].

Another Cornelius Ryan book, ''ABridgeTooFar'', later got a similar all-star-cast big movie treatment.
----
!! Tropes used in this work include:

* TheAce: [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josef_Priller Josef Priller]], a fighter wing commander and one of the two German airmen later seen strafing the beaches on the day as mentioned below in WorthyOpponent (the other being his wingman Heinz Wodarczyk). His ace status is referred to during the phone conversation early on in the film in which he basically asks "where the hell are my planes?"
* AllStarCast - If you were an A-List male actor in Hollywood in 1962, you have at least a bit part in this film.
* AmericaSavesTheDay - Averted. The British and French divisions of the Normandy landings do their part in reaching their objectives. Almost subverted with Omaha Beach, where the Americans were stuck until a HeroicSacrifice opens up the German defenses.
* AnyoneCanDie - This is a war movie about the Normandy landings where thousands of soldiers got killed. Half the cast is bound to die doing [[HeroicSacrifice something heroic]], something foolish, ''or both'', before the credits roll.
* ArtisticLicenseShips - they tried to avert this by only showing the warships in silhouette, but all that did was exaggerate their obviously postwar lattice masts.
* AsHimself - Almost. Actor Richard Todd plays John Howard, the Major whose unit secures Pegasus Bridge. One of the relief units coming to their aid was led by Captain Richard Todd!
** Played straight with Joseph Lowe, one of the cliff climbers at Utah Beach who reprised his efforts for the movie.
** Also played straight by Bill Millin, the bagpiper with Lord Lovat's commandos.
* BattleEpic
* BackedByThePentagon - About 23.000(!) real US, British and French soldiers were used as extras in the movie. They also rented 2 Messerschmitts from the Spanish air force and 4 Spitfires from the Belgian air force.
* BilingualBonus - Although a fairly obvious one. A German runs out of a bunker shouting '"bitte, bitte''. An American Ranger shoots him and says "I wonder what 'bitter, bitter' means.". "Bitte" is the German for "please".
* BloodlessCarnage
* ChromaKey - Quite [[SpecialEffectsFailure obviously]] when Rommel speaks to his generals atop the ''Atlantikwall''; also during the landing-craft scenes.
* DawsonCasting - John Wayne as Lieutenant Colonel Benjamin Vandervoort. The real Benjamin Vandervoort was '''12 years younger''' than Wayne.
** Even worse, Vandervoort was 12 years younger than Wayne when the movie was made. He was actually just 27 during D-Day, when Wayne was '''54''' when the movie was filmed.
* DeadpanSnarker: Loads and loads.
* DeliberatelyMonochrome - to give the film a documentary/newsreel feel, as well as to take advantage of actual footage that survived the landings themselves.
* DistractedByTheSexy: You're driving a hay cart with two Resistance operatives hiding in the hay. You need to get past a German checkpoint. So you arrange for an insanely hot lady Resistance fighter to arrive at the checkpoint at the same time, riding a bike, showing off cleavage with a half-unbuttoned blouse. It works like a charm.
** Later subverted when she tries the same trick to distract a late-night German patrol from discovering the explosives in the railway tracks and nearly gets killed in the process.
* DramaticGunCock - "Two clicks... I heard... two clicks..."
* DyingMomentOfAwesome
* FieldPromotion: When Brigadier General Norman Cota (Robert Mitchum) finds that the highest ranking Army engineer is Sergeant John H. Fuller, he promotes Fuller to lieutenant and puts him in charge of demolishing a concrete barrier.
* FourStarBadass - He didn't have the four stars, but Brigadier General Roosevelt (Fonda) was the highest-ranking officer on the beaches that day. And it was his leadership during the early stages of confusion that kept the Americans on track.
* GeneralFailure - the Germans have to ask Hitler for permission to use the 21st Panzer Division in a counterattack, and no-one dares wake him up.
* HeroicBSOD - That horrified look on paratrooper John Steele's face as he dangles from the St. Mere Eglise church belltower...
* HeyItsThatGuy - Besides the ones mentioned below, there's Red Buttons, John Wayne, Robert Mitchum, Eddie Albert, Paul Anka, Fabian, Robert Wagner, Richard Dawson...
** Also cartoonist and comedian Creator/{{Loriot}} in an uncredited bit part as a German staff officer.
** Two German actors were future Film/{{James Bond}} villains:
*** Gert Fröbe -- best known for playing the title roll in ''Film/{{Goldfinger}}'' -- as the German soldier who rides the donkey to the beach every morning.
*** Curd Jürgens (credited here as Curt Jürgens) -- who played Karl Stromberg in ''Film/TheSpyWhoLovedMe'' -- as Major General Gunther Blumentritt.
*** The first JamesBond himself, Sean Connery, is one of the soldiers landing on the beach.
* HollywoodNuns - At Ouistreham, a group of French nuns walk into the hotel where the French commandos are fighting from to tend to their wounded. This did not happen in real life.
* IronicEcho - the [[LaResistance Resistance]] code phrase, "Wounds my heart with a monotonous languor," gets repeated by Gen. Blumentritt when he realizes none of his superiors will do anything against the Allies landing at Normandy. He knows in that moment Germany will lose the war.
* {{Irony}} - Two characters, Lieutenant Colonel Benjamin Vandervoort ({{John Wayne}}) [Allies] and Major General Gunther Blumentritt (Curd Jürgens) [Germans], wonder aloud "which side God's on" to their respective subordinates.
** General Marcks, a Wehrmacht division commander, plans to assault Normandy while role-playing as General Eisenhower (the Allied commander), in the German war game in Rennes, because such a move is "inconceivable" to his colleagues. When news of the invasion comes to him, he can only look at the map and laugh at himself.
*** When Marcks explains his attack plan to an underling, even he thinks [[DwightDEisenhower Eisenhower]] is too cautious and would never use that plan. Cut to Eisenhower meeting with his Generals to discuss the weather conditions, with Eisenhower deciding "I'm quite positive we must give the order. I don't like it, but there it is. Gentlemen, [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome I don't see how we can possibly do anything... but go."]]
** Also the aforementioned [[spoiler:DramaticGunCock]] moment. A young paratrooper lands in an isolated area, and suddenly hears somebody nearby. He instantly (as he was instructed) unpacks his little communication tool ([[http://www.windsweptpress.com/clicker.htm a.k.a "The Cricket"]]), and gives a signal (one click-clack), and awaits two click-clacks in return, if the other person were another paratrooper. He in fact hears two click clacks right away, and goes to greet the person in relief. Suddenly, [[spoiler:he is shot in the stomach. He manages to mutter, "Two clicks. I heard two clicks!" and dies. It turns out the mysterious person was a patrolling German. The 2 click-clacks the paratrooper heard was in fact the German instinctively loading and cocking his gun upon hearing the awkward click-clack sound. The contraption designed to preserve the paratrooper's life instead caused his death.]]
* ItsRainingMen - Including, unfortunately for those dropping, straight onto a heavily defended town they were supposed to land outside of, then march in to capture.
** And on a more humorous note, straight onto a German general's headquarters.
---> "Terribly sorry, old man. We simply landed here by accident."
* LaResistance
* LargeHam: Priller is normally a DeadpanSnarker, but when addressing his superior, who's just informed him of the latest bureaucratic stupidity as though it were sense, he becomes a very hammy snarker.
-->You were a lousy pilot when we flew into Russia. Now you're flying a desk and you're STILL A LOUSY PILOT!
* LifeImitatesArt - The code names given to some of the unnamed structures (like Pegasus Bridge) and the beaches (Utah, Omaha, Juno, Sword) are now known by those names.
* LoadsAndLoadsOfCharacters
* OfficerAndAGentleman - most of the officer characters are this, on both sides.
* [[OhCrap Oh Scheiße]]: "Pluskat, where are those ships heading?" "STRAIGHT FOR ME!"
* PercussiveMaintenance - Captain Maud fixing a stalled tank on the beach with a baton.
* TheEngineer - naturally, when you're up against a big concrete wall, you call in this guy.
* TheOner - a long overhead tracking shot of the Free French forces taking Ouistreham. It follows the troops running from cover to cover, crossing pedestrian bridges, taking fire, heading upriver toward a target that the camera eventually reveals is a casino building fortified into a massive German bunker. [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fzd1gCc5CO8 View it here]].
* OnlySaneMan - Blumentritt. He's the one German officer who can see this is the critical battle and tries to get his superiors to deploy the tank reserves that could stop the Allies. No one listens to him.
* ParachuteInATree: There's a scene (BasedOnATrueStory) where a paratrooper becomes snagged on a French church spire.
* RealLifeWritesThePlot - Roddy [=McDowall=] asked for a small role to spare his boredom after ''Film/{{Cleopatra}}'' was delayed ... AGAIN.
** SeanConnery, on the other hand, also has a small role because he was eager to get off to Jamaica and begin filming ''Film/DrNo''.
*** [[HilariousInHindsight Yeah, but the funniest thing is, that Sean Connery is quasi fighting two of his future villains from James Bond (Film/{{Goldfinger}} and [[Film/TheSpyWhoLovedMe Stromberg]]) in this movie (Sergeant Kaffeekanne aka Gert Fröbe, and General Blumentritt aka Curt Jürgens) respectively.]]
* RoadSignReversal - A Reversed Road Sign to Ste.-Mère-Eglise briefly confuses invading Allied forces, until an American officer sees through the trick and orders the sign cut down.
* RousingSpeech - several, including the one given by Brigadier General Norman Cota to his men pinned on Omaha Beach: "I don't have to tell you the story. You all know it. Only two kinds of people are gonna stay on this beach: those that are already dead and those that are gonna die. Now get off your butts! You guys are the Fighting 29th!"
* ShellShockedVeteran - RichardBurton's character is a Battle of Britain veteran who is shot down over Normandy on D-Day.
* ThoseWackyNazis - Averted. The German officers who have speaking roles in the movie are professional military men who are focused on carrying out their missions.
** Well, let's say most of them. All of those who didn't run off to play war-games or attending birthday parties.
*** The German officers left for war games that had been scheduled for months. Considering the foul weather they didn't expect [[EvilCannotComprehendGood Eisenhower to give the order]].
** Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt refuses to ask AdolfHitler for permission to release the Wehrmacht's Panzer reserves, declaring that he would not "bow" to "that Bohemian corporal", ''diesen böhmischen Gefreiter?!''
*** Hitler had it set up so that only he could order the reserve Panzer divisions to move. The refusal to wake him on D-Day was costly to put it mildly.
**** Mildly? When Hitler did wake up, ItGotWorse.
***** Though that's only what Blumentritt ''thinks'' to have happened. In reality, when Hitler woke up, he was more cheerful than ever about the invasion, because now he was actually able to reach the allied army for the first time in that war, and crush them... theoretically (Not only he didn't manage that... the Soviets got him first). He was so happy, that he started dancing and fell back into his originial alpine Austrian dialect: ''O'ganga is! (It's on!)''. But why did he not set the Panzer reserves free? Nobody knows for fact. Even the historians wonder. Okay, I'm finished... TheMoreYouKnow... ;)
****** The best the historians can figure is that Hitler was still convinced the Allies would send a ''larger'' invasion force at Calais, ignoring the obvious size of the force at Normandy. There's also the possibility that Hitler believed the Americans to be weak and soft enough that the troops already deployed could handle it, despite all the ass-kicking that had already taken place in Africa and Sicily.
** Actor Curt Jürgens, in his role as the German General Blumentritt, calls the German generals incompetent. Jürgens was actually imprisoned by the Nazis in his youth, so this might be considered a bit of TakeThat.
** The only time the phrase "Sieg Heil!" appears in the movie is graffiti on a bunker wall in Ouistreham.
* ThemeTuneCameo: a slower, slightly mournful version of the main theme is heard played by an RAF man on a piano in an early scene.
* ThrowItIn - While clearing a section of the Normandy beach near Pointe du Hoc, the film crew found a tank used in the invasion.
They cleaned it up and used it for the British Invasion scenes.
* TitleDrop - when Rommel is discussing the need for building up mass defenses along the French shoreline: that Germany needs to repel any landing before the Allies can secure a firm foothold.
-->"Believe me, gentlemen, the first 24 hours of the invasion will be decisive. For the Allies as well as the Germans, it will be the longest day... The longest day."
** TruthInTelevision as Rommel really did say this phrase, although without the dramatic repeat at the end.
* VillainBall[=/=]ThisIsYourBrainOnEvil: Hitler.
* WarIsHell - the paratroopers crashing into St. Mere Eglise. The paratrooper caught on the belltower (John Steele, played by RedButtons) can only dangle and watch in horror as his fellow jumpers get mowed down. [[RealLifeWritesThePlot It really happened that way, too.]]
** Omaha Beach. Just... damn.
*** The memorial on Omaha Beach is actually kind of Real Life Tear Jerker in itself (No matter that you smirk a bit when you have to go through metal detectors and checkout in order to enter it. And the fact that when you compare the giant memorial for US soldiers to memorials of other nation armies, which makes irony almost unbearable) - it is nothing but cemetary. Stand in the middle and you can't see the ends.
** The Utah Beach unit climbing the cliffs to get at the big guns overlooking half the beach-head reach their objectives [[spoiler:only to find the Germans hadn't installed the guns into their bunkers yet. "You mean we climbed all this way... for nothing?"]] In RealLife ItGotWorse when those secured positions were fired on by the warships anchored off-shore.
*** In RealLife it wasn't for nothing. The Germans had moved the guns inland prior to the invasion and the US Rangers found and destroyed them.
*** Between this scene and a scene in which one of the Rangers shoots two German soldiers attempting to surrender, many Ranger veterans were quite upset with their portrayal in this film, as they felt they'd been unfairly singled out to deliver the WarIsHell message.
** "He's dead. I'm crippled. You're lost. Do you suppose it's always like that? I mean war."
* WhatCouldHaveBeen - ChristopherLee, who fought in the War as an intelligence officer with the RAF, auditioned for any role he could get. He was turned down because the producers felt [[{{Irony}} he didn't look like a military officer]].
* WorldWarTwo
* WorthyOpponent: Most German soldiers. Special props to the ''two Luftwaffe pilots available'', whom even a British officer admired.
----
[[redirect:Film/TheLongestDay]]
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The second most famous cricket in American history, after Jiminy. And real crickets, I guess. But more than that English thing, though.


** Also the aforementioned [[spoiler:DramaticGunCock]] moment. A young paratrooper lands in an isolated area, and suddenly hears somebody nearby. He instantly (as he was instructed) unpacks his little communication tool (a tin click-clack toy), and gives a signal (one click-clack), and awaits two click-clacks in return, if the other person were another paratrooper. He in fact hears two click clacks right away, and goes to greet the person in relief. Suddenly, [[spoiler:he is shot in the stomach. He manages to mutter, "Two clicks. I heard two clicks!" and dies. It turns out the mysterious person was a patrolling German. The 2 click-clacks the paratrooper heard was in fact the German instinctively loading and cocking his gun upon hearing the awkward click-clack sound. The contraption designed to preserve the paratrooper's life instead caused his death.]]

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** Also the aforementioned [[spoiler:DramaticGunCock]] moment. A young paratrooper lands in an isolated area, and suddenly hears somebody nearby. He instantly (as he was instructed) unpacks his little communication tool (a tin click-clack toy), ([[http://www.windsweptpress.com/clicker.htm a.k.a "The Cricket"]]), and gives a signal (one click-clack), and awaits two click-clacks in return, if the other person were another paratrooper. He in fact hears two click clacks right away, and goes to greet the person in relief. Suddenly, [[spoiler:he is shot in the stomach. He manages to mutter, "Two clicks. I heard two clicks!" and dies. It turns out the mysterious person was a patrolling German. The 2 click-clacks the paratrooper heard was in fact the German instinctively loading and cocking his gun upon hearing the awkward click-clack sound. The contraption designed to preserve the paratrooper's life instead caused his death.]]

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Tropes used in this work include:

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!! Tropes used in this work include:



** Also cartoonist and comedian {{Loriot}} in an uncredited bit part as a German staff officer.

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** Also cartoonist and comedian {{Loriot}} Creator/{{Loriot}} in an uncredited bit part as a German staff officer.




<<|{{Film}}|>>

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\n<<|{{Film}}|>>----

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* ThrowItIn - While clearing a section of the Normandy beach near Pointe du Hoc, the film crew found a tank used in the invasion. They cleaned it up and used it for the British Invasion scenes.

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* ThemeTuneCameo: a slower, slightly mournful version of the main theme is heard played by an RAF man on a piano in an early scene.
* ThrowItIn - While clearing a section of the Normandy beach near Pointe du Hoc, the film crew found a tank used in the invasion.
They cleaned it up and used it for the British Invasion scenes.
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You were too damn old, pilgrim.

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**Even worse, Vandervoort was 12 years younger than Wayne when the movie was made. He was actually just 27 during D-Day, when Wayne was '''54''' when the movie was filmed.
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->You were a lousy pilot when we flew into Russia. Now you're flying a desk and you're STILL A LOUSY PILOT!

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->You -->You were a lousy pilot when we flew into Russia. Now you're flying a desk and you're STILL A LOUSY PILOT!

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* DeadpanSnarker: Loads and loads.



* LargeHam: Priller is normally a DeadpanSnarker, but when addressing his superior, who's just informed him of the latest bureaucratic stupidity as though it were sense, he becomes a very hammy snarker.
->You were a lousy pilot when we flew into Russia. Now you're flying a desk and you're STILL A LOUSY PILOT!



* [[OhCrap Oh Scheiße]]: "Pluskat, where are those ships heading?" "STRAIGHT FOR ME!"



* RealLifeWritesThePlot - Roddy [=McDowall=] asked for a small role to spare his boredom after ''Film/{{Cleopatra}}'' was delayed ... AGAIN.

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* RealLifeWritesThePlot - Roddy [=McDowall=] asked for a small role to spare his boredom after ''Film/{{Cleopatra}}'' was delayed ... AGAIN.

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