75 years after D-Day, the successful invasion of Europe has been featured in countless movies, series and computer games. Because we know you don’t have time to watch them all, WarHistoryOnline.com has selected the 5 best ones for you here!

1. The Longest Day

Number one in this top 5 can go to no other movie than The Longest Day, which takes in the entire invasion, all nationalities and battles this is the definitive movie about D-Day, it is also the longest movie!

The Longest Day, the film, is based on The Longest Day, the book, written in 1959 by Cornelius Ryan.

It was originally made in black and wide and was later colored for the 50th anniversary of D-Day, which accounts for the odd uniform in the wrong color. The cast included a large group of stars:  John Wayne, Kenneth More, Irina Demick, Robert Mitchum, Richard Burton, Steve Forrest, Richard Todd, Sean Connery, Henry Fonda, Red Buttons, Peter Lawford, Eddie Albert, Jeffrey Hunter, Stuart Whitman, Tom Tryon, Rod Steiger, Leo Genn, Gert Fröbe,  Bourvil, Curt Jürgens, Robert Wagner, Paul Anka and Arletty.



A lot of these actors played roles that were not much more than cameo appearances. Far more interesting, a number of the cast members saw active service during World War II, this includes Jne Fonda, Leo Genn, Kenneth More and Rod Steiger.  The most remarkable actor was Richard Todd who actually was among the first British officers to land in Normandy on D-Day and he, in fact, took part in the assault on Pegasus Bridge to relieve the Paratroopers.

Another poignant fact is that all German and French characters speak in their own language with English subtitles, very rare for a World War II movies of that time.

2. Saving Private Ryan

Saving Private Ryan is a 1998 film set during the Invasion of Normandy in June 1944. It was directed by Steven Spielberg and stars Tom Hanks and Matt Damon. It won 5 academy awards and a Golden Globe Award for best motion picture. It has been praised for the realistic way in which it filmed the battle scenes. The film magazine Empire described the sequence showing the landing of U.S. forces at Omaha Beach as the ‘best battle scene of all time.’ The scene was named Number One on TV Guide’s ’50 Greatest Movie Moments.’

Omaha Beach was the name given to one of two positions where U.S forces landed in Normandy on D-Day, 6 June 1944.  The action in the opening scene is indeed very close to actual historical events. As shown in the film, many soldiers suffered from sea sickness. Many were shot even before they could reach the shore. Once ashore it was difficult to join up with other units on account of the heavy enemy fire. German machine guns in fortified positions shot at them, and they were continually shelled by artillery.

Spielberg meant to honor those who fought, and so he did not want the battle to look romantic as many World War II war films before had done. He wanted to show the real suffering and intense emotion of the soldiers.

3. Storming Juno

On the number 3 spot, we have Storming Juno, a film based on the remarkable and determined actions of a handful of young Canadian men who stormed Juno Beach.

June 6th, 1944, the Western Allies invaded occupied France in Operation Overlord, and Canada was a major participant. One of the five invasion beaches was Canadian, codenamed Juno Beach. This film depicts the true stories of a number of Canadian soldiers in the invasion from the perspective of different roles in the military; paratroopers, tank crews, and regular infantry.

Braving misfortune and ferocious German resistance, these Canadians fought to bring the fight to the Nazis in Western Europe at last, and they won.

4. IKE Countdown to D-Day

This is not one of the most well-known movies about the Normandy invasion and it’s rather difficult to imagine Tom Selleck as the mustache-less supreme commander of all allied forces, but somehow he manages to pull it off.

There are no action sequences in this movie; it focuses on the inner workings of SHEAF, Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force which led to a successful invasion on French soil.The movie, of course, puts focus on General Eisenhower and the decisions he had to make and the resulting pressure he had to cope with. The relationship with  British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and his Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Walter Bedell Smith, US Army play an important role in the movie.

What sets this movie apart from others is that it portrays General Montgomery as a competent military professional and not only focus on his personality disorders. His egocentricity and quirks are of course not left out of the movie.

Telling the story of the commander behind the invasion and ending on the eve of D-Day, this movie ends up on the number 4 spot.

5. Band of Brothers

The HBO series dramatizes the history of the “Easy” Company (part of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division) from jump training in the U.S. through its participation in major actions in Europe, and up until the war’s end. The events portrayed are based on Ambrose’s research and recorded interviews with Easy Company veterans.

The first 3 episodes focus on the airborne side D-Day invasion, first the preparation and training, then D-Day with the attack on the German gun battery at Brecourt Manor. In the third episode,, the objective is to widen and link up the bridgeheads culminating in the attack on Carentan and the subsequent German counter attack.


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7 COMMENTS

  1. It is hard sometimes to watch and understand the Soviet movies, but if you watch “Come and See”, you’ll get the impressions for all life long. This movie was about natural fascism. Powerful movie of 1985. But i don’t want watch it anymore… Not sure if it is easy to find it with english subtitles, but it has some international cinema awards.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Come_and_See

    • Idi i Smotri, AKA Come And See is one of the best war movies ever made, perhaps THE best, it is certainly the most disturbing and powerfully emotional. Made in Belarus, which, of all the territories of Europe affected by that war, probably suffered the most. It’s not a movie for the faint hearted or the squeamish, but it’s a hell of a lot more accurate than anything made in the west about WW2. I’ve watched it many times over the years, certain scenes, like the child running through the forest while German bombs fall around him, are just so powerful and memorable.

    • I’m very very surprised, Mr.Greenhalgh! The more I learn about you and your knowledge, the more I’m admired by educated and comprehensively developed people. You really pleasantly surprised me! Thanks for the comment and knowledge of the subject.

    • Thankyou, I know it’s unusual for an Englishman to know more than the very basics about Russia, but for some reason I’ve always been fascinated by Russia and in particular, the role she played in the two world wars. I’ve never seen Russia as an enemy or a threat, even as a child back in the days of the Cold War, I didn’t see the USSR as an ‘evil empire’ as Reagan and the US wanted us to believe, in fact, I had far more disdain for the US and it’s overt militarism.

  2. One of the other Veteran actors in “The Longest Day” was Red Buttons. Hard to imagine the little guy actually being there, but it appears he was. Another was Eddie Albert, a long way from Normandy to “Green Acres”.

    • Nawlins, actually Eddie Albert was in the Pacific, at the bloodbath at Tarawa, in the Gilbert Islands. He was a Coast Guard boatswain’s mate, running a landing craft transporting Marine’s ashore.

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