Ike: Countdown to D-Day (TV Movie 2004)

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Ike: Countdown to D-Day: Directed by Robert Harmon. With Tom Selleck, James Remar, Timothy Bottoms, Ian Mune. A dramatization of the 90 days leading up to Operation Overlord, the Allied invasion of Normandy, and how General Dwight Eisenhower, against all odds, brilliantly orchestrated the most important military maneuver in modern history.

“There must be an unwritten rule in Hollywood that any movie about Eisenhower must demean George Patton. They did it 20+ years ago with the mini-series by the same name, taking a real incident in which Patton, to Ikeu0026#39;s surprise, had a contingency plan for the battle of the Bulge and whipped his troops into a 180-degree turn to come to the rescue of Bastogne. In the movie, Ike coaxed an extremely reluctant Patton into it; in every historical account, Patton practically begged for the chance.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eNow we have a new one in which the always likable Tom Selleck plays Eisenhower (a happy choice of actors, although Selleck really shouldu0026#39;ve dyed his hair) and we get to see anew his struggles with Churchill, Montgomery and other Brits, not to mention the loathsome Chuck deGaulle. But does Patton fare any better? Nope. Not only did this movie manage to combine the Sicilian slapping incident–which had happened a year earlier–in with the u0026quot;Knutsford incident,u0026quot; but it, like some newspapers of the day, manages to misquote Patton again (he really DID mention the Russians, even the Knutsford witnesses say so) in order to throw in a 21st century politically correct diatribe about u0026quot;racialismu0026quot;. And what happens? Blood u0026#39;nu0026#39; Guts Patton trembles at the mighty Ike, promises to be good, and when graciously forgiven, pulls a scene straight from Blazing Saddles (u0026quot;Mongo have deep feelings for Sheriff Bart!u0026quot;) and throws his arms around Ike, hugging him so violently he (Patton) loses his helmet in the process. It made me laugh to hysterics.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe rest of the movie isnu0026#39;t bad. Thankfully, the Summersby romance thing seemed to be ignored or at least irrelevant in this movie, concentrating on the tensions among the leadership. The part where Ike talks to the airborne troops shortly before they depart is very well done.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eBut Eisenhower was a decent enough general and politician to stand up to scrutiny on his own. It isnu0026#39;t necessary to make him look better by making George Patton look worse. Patton was infinitely capable of making himself look bad, and he did plenty of times on his own. Fictionalizing Patton doesnu0026#39;t make Ike look better. It just makes the writers look cheap.”

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