The Longest Day
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:13:03
And at night...
:13:06
...we'd sleep out under the stars.r
:13:11
Didn't even need a blanket.a
:13:18
June.n
:13:25
Wind and rain. Wind and rain.a
:13:28
Don't it ever stop?d
:13:29
Look, Dad, all I want
to do is get going..

:13:32
Wind or no wind. Even if we land
in Paris on the Eiffel Tower.

:13:37
-Come to think of it--
-Colonel wants us.

:13:40
All of us.
:13:55
All troops will participate
in ground tactics and deployment.

:13:59
In this weather, sir?
:14:02
Of course, Harding, if you can ensure
that we'll land in France...

:14:06
-...in sunshine and dry weather.
-Didn't mean that.

:14:09
-What did you mean?
-It isn't the weather.

:14:12
It's the waiting.
These men are itching to go.b

:14:15
I don't think I have to remind you...w
:14:18
...that this war has been going on
for almost five years.

:14:21
Half of Europe has been
overrun and occupied.a

:14:24
We're comparative newcomers.w
:14:26
England's gone through a blitz with
a knife at her throat since 1 940.u

:14:31
I am quite sure that they too
are impatient and itching to go.

:14:35
Do I make myself clear?
:14:37
Yes, sir. Quite clear.
:14:40
Three million men penned up
on this island.t

:14:43
All over England,
in staging areas like this.

:14:47
We're on the threshold
of the most crucial day of our times.

:14:52
Three million men out there...
:14:54
...keyed up, and waiting for
that big step-off.


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