...i have watched this 3 times now. it is in its own right a very fine war film.
then you get the story - which i can not describe very well here. so here is a paragraph from wiki, in summary, the end bit, the fall out of the events in modern day France:
In 2009, the BBC published documentary evidence that showed black colonial soldiers - who together with North African troops made up around two-thirds of Free French forces - were deliberately removed from the units that led the Allied advance to liberate Paris in 1944. General Charles de Gaulle, made it clear that he wanted Free French troops to enter the French capital first. In response Allied Command therefore insisted that all black soldiers should be replaced by white and North African ones from other French units. [4]
..as i have said the film is very fine indeed. the story is excellent, the acting is completely believable. script, top-notch, tight concise, no scene too long or short. nothing is overplayed for effect. the german soldiers look very authentic - organised and fierce. the action scenes are brutal without excessive blood. and then comes the reality of men who fought for an ideal that was finally denied them.
from wiki:
The film then concludes with the credit to say that the servicemen from France's former colonies had their pensions frozen in 1959 shortly before their countries' independence.
a later court ruled that their pensions
must be paid in full. succesive governments - according to the film - have consisdently pushed them back.
it leaves me speechless, the injustice. a sense of powerlesness that probably affects all too many of us.
see the film. its superb. regardless of political/patriotic/religeous beliefs.
heres the wiki link:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Days_of...dern_relevance