These allied forces fought for Zionism, communism, racial diversity, multiracial societies, interracial marriage, open borders, and tons of Cultural Marxism B.S. Look at what's happening to the world right now.
BOLLOCKS !!!!!!! THAT'S TRAINING EXERCISE FILM OR FOTO SHOPPED OR A MOVIE !!! NO BULLETS !!! NO BOMBS !!! & ALMOST NO LANDING CRAFT !!! HOW COME, THE PHOTOGRAPHER IS ON THE SAND DUNES WHERE THE GERMANS ARE SUPPOSED TO BE !!! AND !!! ONLY 11SECS. WORTH OF FOOTAGE !!!😂😂😂😂😂😮😂😂😂😂😊😊😂😂😂😂😂
Definitely not genuine. If this is the first wave, then how did the cameraman get so far out ahead, and why is he just sitting perfectly still under fire?
Re: Saving Private Ryan I ran the first few minutes of Saving Private Ryan and there definitely is a Sherman tank on the beach. I'd put money on it being the one in this clip (it's a deep wader). Run the scene and put it on half speed. It is in the background as Miller is dragging the half body up the beach. The camera angle changes quickly so you only see it for a second or two but it is there. The Sherman silohette is pretty distinctive. So to those who said there is no tank in 'Ryan, look again at half speed. It's not a DD tank but a deep wading tank (one with the air funnel, or snorkel), so I don't think it would have been on the beach at this point, but soon after. Depending on the time they landed. However, two of the DD tanks did make it to the beach. They were launched early so they could swim ashore but 27 of them didn't make it. I think the wading tanks came soon after. I've found various numbers and timings for this. One source said by 07:00 58 tanks were landed although 14 were soon knocked out. As far as I can make out, the initial wave landed at 06:30 and landings continued until 08:30 (there were multiple waves). If the opening scene of Saving Private Ryan was depicting the first wave then that particular tank shouldn't be there. However if it was a later wave then it could have been. Miller later says there are no tanks landed, that implies they landed before the deep wading tanks got there. But then, the DD tanks might already be there. There's also the probability that Miller would not have had full awareness beyond what was happening on his part of the beach. There's also the fact that it is still a movie. One that bent over backwards to get things right compared to many movies.
Except Captain Millers time in the movie is pretty condensed. Spielberg certainly made sure to be accurate but there was a heck of a lot more armor that landed than most people realize. One of the myths of Omaha is that very few DD-Sherman’s landed at Omaha but that was the 741st Battalion supporting the 1st Division. The 743rd supporting the 29th Division landed 23 out of its 32 DD’s conventionally after its commander realized that amphibiously launching them would be too dangerous considering the weather conditions. The 743rd also had 16 regular Sherman’s and 5 Sherman/dozer variants equipped with deep wading gear that all landed. A lot of this armor arrived in the Dog Green Section. Unfortunately they didn’t contribute as much as hoped for during early hours of the invasion but once the breakout began, they were definitely a big help. The 743rd received a Presidential Unit Citation for their actions at Omaha that day. There’s an excellent video by Paul Woodadge on his WW2TV RUclips channel titled The Disaster of the DD-Tanks on D-Day Omaha Beach. There’s also Joseph Balkoski’s book about Omaha that goes into some details about the armor at Omaha. Again, it’s mentioned how they didn’t contribute as much as what was planned for but the troops did use them for some much needed shelter from MG fire.
OK. I noticed the stamp in the top right hand corner that says "oglaigh na heireann". I punched that into a search engine and got this: "Óglaigh na hÉireann, abbreviated ÓÉ, is an Irish-language idiom that can be translated variously as soldiers of Ireland, warriors of Ireland, volunteers of Ireland or Irish volunteers. In traditional Gaelic script, it is written Óglaıġ na hÉıreann.". Nearly all of Saving Private Ryan was filmed in England and Ireland. The cemetery being the exception. From more searching on 'Ryan locations I got "The nearest match to stage the harrowing landing scenes was found on the southeast coast of the Republic of Ireland, at Balinesker Beach, Curracloe, just north of Wexford, about 70 miles south of Dublin (rail: Wexford).". If you type that into your favourite search engine you will find photos of a beach much like this one. Another search found "At about the 12:40 mark, just after Miller begins to move up the beach dragging a wounded man, there is visible in the background a tank...". I haven't chedk but I think that may be correct. Yet another search found "He (Miller) tells a nearby radioman that no tanks are up the beach.". So we have a conflict in that there's a tank (I haven't checked) and dialogue saying there's no tanks. But movies are full of little errors like that and most of the time no-one notices. The tank in this footage is a wading tank. The big sticking up bit on the back allows the engine to breath in like ten feet of water. They were landed by landing craft or landing ships on or close to the beach so they could wade ashore. They were not in the first waves (because they would be huge unmissible targets until unloaded). I think the tanks Miller would have been referring to are the DD tanks. Those with 'skirts' lifted up to increase displacement so a 30-ton tank could actually float. These were designed to go in with the first waves. But the one in the footage isn't one of these. The skirts, even when lowered, are hard to miss and you wouldn't have the funnel and the skirt on the same tank. DD tanks were used by the British as well as the US, and I'm pretty sure the Canadians too. Whilst on the British (and Canadian) beaches the DD tanks made it ashore, on Omaha most didn't. According to one documentary the reason was they were released too far out and in the wrong place. This meant they had a long way to wade and they had to turn across the wave swells to reposition. It was quite a rough day. This meant they got flooded and sank. They are still on the sea floor. I haven't checked but I seem to recall that after they have taken the beach there's a pan shot over the beach and this tank was in that shot. Which would be historically accurate. So coming back to the footage: we have a connection to Ireland in the footage itself, Ryan was filmed in Ireland. The beach in Ireland looks similar. We have the wrongly facing telegraph poles (in fact, as well as them facing the wrong way, it looks like one of them is facing parallel to the shoreline, so presumably not put in place yet) and other inaccuracies. We have a historically correct tank, but that is in the wrong scene. The wide shot of the troops looks like an older movie (e.g. Longest Day) but I don't think it is. In 'Ryan a lot of close ups were used with a few long shots to show the German machine gunner's perspective. A different style to this footage. Given all this I think it may be an outtake of an early rehearsal or tryout as the movie was being made. Typically with movies you need to play around with the elements to find what works and what doesn't. However well planned a shoot is, you are going to spot things that don't work or could be done better. I suspect this is an outtake, a scene that was dropped, an early try out, or dress rehearsal or something along those lines which was then filtered to black and white. I think it's a scene or rehearsal at a filming location with footage that wasn't in the final cut. Any more clues?
Great job. However, I should point out that one of the myths of Omaha is that very few DD-Sherman’s landed at Omaha but that was the 741st Battalion supporting the 1st Division. The 743rd supporting the 29th Division landed 23 out of its 32 DD’s conventionally after its commander realized that amphibiously launching them would be too dangerous considering the weather conditions. The 743rd also had 16 regular Sherman’s and 5 Sherman/dozer variants equipped with deep wading gear that all landed. A lot of this armor arrived in the Dog Green Section. Unfortunately they didn’t contribute as much as hoped for during early hours of the invasion but once the breakout began, they were definitely a big help. The 743rd received a Presidential Unit Citation for their actions at Omaha that day. There’s an excellent video by Paul Woodadge on his WW2TV RUclips channel titled The Disaster of the DD-Tanks on D-Day Omaha Beach. There’s also Joseph Balkoski’s book about Omaha that goes into some details about the armor at Omaha. Again, it’s mentioned how they didn’t contribute as much as what was planned for but the troops did use them for some much needed shelter from MG fire.
@@sakamura30 the genuine footage from Omaha was recorded by a US army cameraman in the late stages, not in the heat of the initial landing, and it is not a high quality camera (movie quality like this one) and is also not mounted on a tripod out in the open (also like this one) and you can also faintly see some machine gun rounds whizzing through the air, aswell as men dropping, everything you should see in a piece of genuine combat footage, this video lacks all of that
Men? yes, soldiers? no, actors? yes. Read the comments, many have pointed out why it is not real. Also no cameraman is going to be that close to guys coming straight at him. Ask yourself why would a German war correspondent even be there? Because of the weather forecast even Rommel wasn't there and most of the top brass were off doing exercises. Did this 'correspondent' get a tip off from God to be on that particular beach on that particular day early in the morning? Lastly, war correspondents weren't really a thing under the nazis. They had a different take on freedom of the press. They had military camera units, propaganda units and some soldiers carried cameras. I'm not sure they qualify as war correspondents in the normal use of the term. Some have suggested this is from Saving Private Ryan, others have said not. I guess there would be outtakes and rehearsals. From genuine footage attacking troops didn't run a bit, lie down and fire, then get up and run some more. That is movie nonsense. What they did was run like hell to cover. The beaches were being hit by mortar file, artillery, as well as machine gun fire. To stay a second longer in the open than you had to would be attempted suicide.
This is most definitely fake. Most of the wooden ramps face the wrong way, and no, Saving Private Ryan is incorrect in that matter. Two, the beach is much too short, as during low tide (when the first wave landed the beach was 300 yards long from water to seawall. Three, you can see land in the background, making it seem as if it's a bay or even a reenactment on a lake or something like that. Four, there were high bluffs at Omaha, and it almost looks as there only a couple yards above the sand, which was something seen at Utah beach, not Omaha. And finally, it can be seen that almost none of the soldiers have D DAY equipment such as gas mask bags, life belts, or gas brassards. So yes, the men on Omaha were heroes, and this does infect display the true chaos of the beach, yet it is clearly not real footage from the time. (Also I'd like to note that the camera man would most likely have been shot at this point due to how out in the open he is.)
@@kryddsaltet not like this there isnt, some people are just so out of touch with reality that they believe footage like this, this cameraman is out in the open with his movie quality camera mounted on a tripod, the actual D-Day footage is completely different
@@joki3438 Theres no first wave images, just Capa pictures (12) and Sgt. Taylor film exist of Omaha landing, this is part of a film called The Longest Day
The chances of you surviving the first wave would’ve been 30%. The Germans sprayed the entire easy red sector from 6 different positions in a horizontal motion with MG-42s the chances of a bullet hitting someone was very high.
Not one single person got dropped either, not one single artillery/mortar shell landed, no tracer rounds flying, this is either from a movie or it was staged for publicity purposes
@@hardyblues2194 Its not the same set, the sea wall is different, the actual area where the film was shot and staged was much smaller, and their helmets and part of their uniforms are also different.
Don't take everything on the internet at face value. The vast majority is not what it says it is. Read the comments and do a little bit of your own research.
let's pray for the victims and the fighters who fought the fascists
the fact that you can see someone's head decapitated is really chilling
btw this is fake
ppl who think is saving private ryan ur wrong it didnt show any of that in that movie XD
the log ramps are facing the wrong way so even if it’s not spr it’s most likely fake
this is not omaha beach, is it utah beach???
it’s fake footage
That was a fake sherman?
These allied forces fought for Zionism, communism, racial diversity, multiracial societies, interracial marriage, open borders, and tons of Cultural Marxism B.S. Look at what's happening to the world right now.
This is fake, Who is filming 😂. The Germans??
BOLLOCKS !!!!!!! THAT'S TRAINING EXERCISE FILM OR FOTO SHOPPED OR A MOVIE !!! NO BULLETS !!! NO BOMBS !!! & ALMOST NO LANDING CRAFT !!! HOW COME, THE PHOTOGRAPHER IS ON THE SAND DUNES WHERE THE GERMANS ARE SUPPOSED TO BE !!! AND !!! ONLY 11SECS. WORTH OF FOOTAGE !!!😂😂😂😂😂😮😂😂😂😂😊😊😂😂😂😂😂
Definitely not genuine. If this is the first wave, then how did the cameraman get so far out ahead, and why is he just sitting perfectly still under fire?
it’s fake footage
FAKE
lol fake footage
İkk defa gerçek bir görüntü izliyorum Omaha beach te
Way too clear. This is B-roll footage from Saving Private Ryan. Beach obstacles are facing the wrong way like in the movie. 😊
The cameraman 🎥🗿
There were 40 reporters on the beaches during d day u child overused jokes Christ grow up
Time
This is from the movie saving private ryan
This is a training video of the exercises that went before dday, you fucking idiot.
Re: Saving Private Ryan I ran the first few minutes of Saving Private Ryan and there definitely is a Sherman tank on the beach. I'd put money on it being the one in this clip (it's a deep wader). Run the scene and put it on half speed. It is in the background as Miller is dragging the half body up the beach. The camera angle changes quickly so you only see it for a second or two but it is there. The Sherman silohette is pretty distinctive. So to those who said there is no tank in 'Ryan, look again at half speed. It's not a DD tank but a deep wading tank (one with the air funnel, or snorkel), so I don't think it would have been on the beach at this point, but soon after. Depending on the time they landed. However, two of the DD tanks did make it to the beach. They were launched early so they could swim ashore but 27 of them didn't make it. I think the wading tanks came soon after. I've found various numbers and timings for this. One source said by 07:00 58 tanks were landed although 14 were soon knocked out. As far as I can make out, the initial wave landed at 06:30 and landings continued until 08:30 (there were multiple waves). If the opening scene of Saving Private Ryan was depicting the first wave then that particular tank shouldn't be there. However if it was a later wave then it could have been. Miller later says there are no tanks landed, that implies they landed before the deep wading tanks got there. But then, the DD tanks might already be there. There's also the probability that Miller would not have had full awareness beyond what was happening on his part of the beach. There's also the fact that it is still a movie. One that bent over backwards to get things right compared to many movies.
Except Captain Millers time in the movie is pretty condensed. Spielberg certainly made sure to be accurate but there was a heck of a lot more armor that landed than most people realize. One of the myths of Omaha is that very few DD-Sherman’s landed at Omaha but that was the 741st Battalion supporting the 1st Division. The 743rd supporting the 29th Division landed 23 out of its 32 DD’s conventionally after its commander realized that amphibiously launching them would be too dangerous considering the weather conditions. The 743rd also had 16 regular Sherman’s and 5 Sherman/dozer variants equipped with deep wading gear that all landed. A lot of this armor arrived in the Dog Green Section. Unfortunately they didn’t contribute as much as hoped for during early hours of the invasion but once the breakout began, they were definitely a big help. The 743rd received a Presidential Unit Citation for their actions at Omaha that day. There’s an excellent video by Paul Woodadge on his WW2TV RUclips channel titled The Disaster of the DD-Tanks on D-Day Omaha Beach. There’s also Joseph Balkoski’s book about Omaha that goes into some details about the armor at Omaha. Again, it’s mentioned how they didn’t contribute as much as what was planned for but the troops did use them for some much needed shelter from MG fire.
OK. I noticed the stamp in the top right hand corner that says "oglaigh na heireann". I punched that into a search engine and got this: "Óglaigh na hÉireann, abbreviated ÓÉ, is an Irish-language idiom that can be translated variously as soldiers of Ireland, warriors of Ireland, volunteers of Ireland or Irish volunteers. In traditional Gaelic script, it is written Óglaıġ na hÉıreann.". Nearly all of Saving Private Ryan was filmed in England and Ireland. The cemetery being the exception. From more searching on 'Ryan locations I got "The nearest match to stage the harrowing landing scenes was found on the southeast coast of the Republic of Ireland, at Balinesker Beach, Curracloe, just north of Wexford, about 70 miles south of Dublin (rail: Wexford).". If you type that into your favourite search engine you will find photos of a beach much like this one. Another search found "At about the 12:40 mark, just after Miller begins to move up the beach dragging a wounded man, there is visible in the background a tank...". I haven't chedk but I think that may be correct. Yet another search found "He (Miller) tells a nearby radioman that no tanks are up the beach.". So we have a conflict in that there's a tank (I haven't checked) and dialogue saying there's no tanks. But movies are full of little errors like that and most of the time no-one notices. The tank in this footage is a wading tank. The big sticking up bit on the back allows the engine to breath in like ten feet of water. They were landed by landing craft or landing ships on or close to the beach so they could wade ashore. They were not in the first waves (because they would be huge unmissible targets until unloaded). I think the tanks Miller would have been referring to are the DD tanks. Those with 'skirts' lifted up to increase displacement so a 30-ton tank could actually float. These were designed to go in with the first waves. But the one in the footage isn't one of these. The skirts, even when lowered, are hard to miss and you wouldn't have the funnel and the skirt on the same tank. DD tanks were used by the British as well as the US, and I'm pretty sure the Canadians too. Whilst on the British (and Canadian) beaches the DD tanks made it ashore, on Omaha most didn't. According to one documentary the reason was they were released too far out and in the wrong place. This meant they had a long way to wade and they had to turn across the wave swells to reposition. It was quite a rough day. This meant they got flooded and sank. They are still on the sea floor. I haven't checked but I seem to recall that after they have taken the beach there's a pan shot over the beach and this tank was in that shot. Which would be historically accurate. So coming back to the footage: we have a connection to Ireland in the footage itself, Ryan was filmed in Ireland. The beach in Ireland looks similar. We have the wrongly facing telegraph poles (in fact, as well as them facing the wrong way, it looks like one of them is facing parallel to the shoreline, so presumably not put in place yet) and other inaccuracies. We have a historically correct tank, but that is in the wrong scene. The wide shot of the troops looks like an older movie (e.g. Longest Day) but I don't think it is. In 'Ryan a lot of close ups were used with a few long shots to show the German machine gunner's perspective. A different style to this footage. Given all this I think it may be an outtake of an early rehearsal or tryout as the movie was being made. Typically with movies you need to play around with the elements to find what works and what doesn't. However well planned a shoot is, you are going to spot things that don't work or could be done better. I suspect this is an outtake, a scene that was dropped, an early try out, or dress rehearsal or something along those lines which was then filtered to black and white. I think it's a scene or rehearsal at a filming location with footage that wasn't in the final cut. Any more clues?
Great job. However, I should point out that one of the myths of Omaha is that very few DD-Sherman’s landed at Omaha but that was the 741st Battalion supporting the 1st Division. The 743rd supporting the 29th Division landed 23 out of its 32 DD’s conventionally after its commander realized that amphibiously launching them would be too dangerous considering the weather conditions. The 743rd also had 16 regular Sherman’s and 5 Sherman/dozer variants equipped with deep wading gear that all landed. A lot of this armor arrived in the Dog Green Section. Unfortunately they didn’t contribute as much as hoped for during early hours of the invasion but once the breakout began, they were definitely a big help. The 743rd received a Presidential Unit Citation for their actions at Omaha that day. There’s an excellent video by Paul Woodadge on his WW2TV RUclips channel titled The Disaster of the DD-Tanks on D-Day Omaha Beach. There’s also Joseph Balkoski’s book about Omaha that goes into some details about the armor at Omaha. Again, it’s mentioned how they didn’t contribute as much as what was planned for but the troops did use them for some much needed shelter from MG fire.
This is obviously not "First wave filmed by a German war correspondent" as the title describes. Could you be honest and say what it actually is?
they got spawnkilled by the germans 💀 (PLEASE DONT TAKE THIS JOKE SERIOUSLY😭)
Dark humour is dark humour, gotta love it, regardless of the situation
Fake
This is not real footage from the German side...we are not as dumb as you.
The worst part is that the first wave got decimated, nearly all thoses men on this video are dead on this beach
Brother this is not real footage, do you really believe that a cameraman would be standing there recording this?
@@JohnWatts-tm6gn i mean it looks incredible Real, i know there are Real footage of Omaha, so i thought it was one of those rare one
@@sakamura30 the genuine footage from Omaha was recorded by a US army cameraman in the late stages, not in the heat of the initial landing, and it is not a high quality camera (movie quality like this one) and is also not mounted on a tripod out in the open (also like this one) and you can also faintly see some machine gun rounds whizzing through the air, aswell as men dropping, everything you should see in a piece of genuine combat footage, this video lacks all of that
Men? yes, soldiers? no, actors? yes. Read the comments, many have pointed out why it is not real. Also no cameraman is going to be that close to guys coming straight at him. Ask yourself why would a German war correspondent even be there? Because of the weather forecast even Rommel wasn't there and most of the top brass were off doing exercises. Did this 'correspondent' get a tip off from God to be on that particular beach on that particular day early in the morning? Lastly, war correspondents weren't really a thing under the nazis. They had a different take on freedom of the press. They had military camera units, propaganda units and some soldiers carried cameras. I'm not sure they qualify as war correspondents in the normal use of the term. Some have suggested this is from Saving Private Ryan, others have said not. I guess there would be outtakes and rehearsals. From genuine footage attacking troops didn't run a bit, lie down and fire, then get up and run some more. That is movie nonsense. What they did was run like hell to cover. The beaches were being hit by mortar file, artillery, as well as machine gun fire. To stay a second longer in the open than you had to would be attempted suicide.
It isn't real footage .
These are not real footages. The 6th june 44, there was no sun on the beach, only clouds. And the wooden ramps are in the wrong way.
This is most definitely fake. Most of the wooden ramps face the wrong way, and no, Saving Private Ryan is incorrect in that matter. Two, the beach is much too short, as during low tide (when the first wave landed the beach was 300 yards long from water to seawall. Three, you can see land in the background, making it seem as if it's a bay or even a reenactment on a lake or something like that. Four, there were high bluffs at Omaha, and it almost looks as there only a couple yards above the sand, which was something seen at Utah beach, not Omaha. And finally, it can be seen that almost none of the soldiers have D DAY equipment such as gas mask bags, life belts, or gas brassards. So yes, the men on Omaha were heroes, and this does infect display the true chaos of the beach, yet it is clearly not real footage from the time. (Also I'd like to note that the camera man would most likely have been shot at this point due to how out in the open he is.)
Tanks wasn't land with the first wave, and here i can see a tank (Sherman?) in the middle of the beach...
You didn't have to type all of that lol the simple fact that there is a cameraman standing recording this is confirmation that it is indeed fake
@@JohnWatts-tm6gn Although this footage is likely fake, it is not for that reason. There is indeed real footage of the D-Day landings.
@@kryddsaltet not like this there isnt, some people are just so out of touch with reality that they believe footage like this, this cameraman is out in the open with his movie quality camera mounted on a tripod, the actual D-Day footage is completely different
@@JohnWatts-tm6gn Fair enough
I think this is the closest footage ive seen to chaos on the beach. These were the bravest men
This isn’t real lmao
How@@NightReaperSunDestroyerOfGods7
Guess some fker gonna say their grandfather fought in this battle and then got kicked out of the movie set 😂
the log ramps are backwards the boats are too close to the beach there are no Belgium gates the beach is too small.
As you can see, utah beach was more chill than omaha beach during D-DAY
As you can also see, this is fake footage
dont think this is autentic,
Saving private ryan footage
It's real
@@joki3438 No it's not, read my comment lmao. You aren't a historian (I am)
@@connorrubalcava1490 you dont need to be a historian, you just need a brain, clearly fake
Is this actually real? From maybe a German's footage?
No, it’s a movie with a filter. True
@Badass-History no its not
FAKE
How?
@@joki3438 Theres no first wave images, just Capa pictures (12) and Sgt. Taylor film exist of Omaha landing, this is part of a film called The Longest Day
I admire the ignorance of people who cant tell the difference between genuine combat footage and staged footage
@@JohnWatts-tm6gn theres only one film of Omaha filmed for Sgt. tyler xD but people are just dumb
Im not here to insult d day survivors but i want to be there to experience d day myself
The chances of you surviving the first wave would’ve been 30%. The Germans sprayed the entire easy red sector from 6 different positions in a horizontal motion with MG-42s the chances of a bullet hitting someone was very high.
no trust me you don't want to experience anything like this
How can anyone insult them?
How old are you?
Fake the wooden poles were facing the wrong way
No they were pointed towards the water
They were ment to prevent tanks and boats from coming to the beach
Not one single person got dropped either, not one single artillery/mortar shell landed, no tracer rounds flying, this is either from a movie or it was staged for publicity purposes
Also, the cameraman just simply standing there recording the situation is a HUGE red flag hahaha
This is from the movie Saving Private Ryan...
Its not from saving private Ryan but it inst real
@@AidenL-de4hp It is from private ryan dude...look at the log ramps. They are facing the wrong way like in the movie.
@@hardyblues2194 Its not the same set, the sea wall is different, the actual area where the film was shot and staged was much smaller, and their helmets and part of their uniforms are also different.
@@AidenL-de4hp So they made the same mistake in 2 movies? Damn...
@@hardyblues2194 things happen, its in some games too.
As my brother here, the first and only footage of the first wave I've ever found. We need yo watch de horrors of the war.
same
Don't take everything on the internet at face value. The vast majority is not what it says it is. Read the comments and do a little bit of your own research.
It’s fake
@@justanothercreator7273 4 years later I realize. Naive 18yo back then