The Longest Day/Awesome

"Leading Stoker Robert Dowie, HMS Dunbar: Jerry or not, the best of luck to you. You've got guts."
 * Being based on a historical Moment of Awesome, this film has quite a few. This troper's favorite is Col. Pluskat, spotting the Allied invasion fleet bearing right down on him, shouting on his phone, "You know those five thousand ships you said they don't have? THEY'VE GOT THEM!"
 * The fact that the real Werner Pluskat was actually a military consultant for the film only makes that scene all the more awesome.
 * Dwight D. Eisenhower - against his own cautious nature - gives the order to go. This is so audacious a move for him that the German officer trained to play as Eisenhower for war games didn't think the Allied commander would do it.
 * Not related to the movie but in Real Life, Eisenhower wrote two letters to be read. One to the troops, commending them on taking a risky operation. The second was a letter in case the invasion failed, in which Eisenhower was willing to accept the blame .The second letter was never read because Normandy was successful, and was almost discarded except for a junior officer who found it. The second letter - highlighting the responsibility of leadership - became just as famous as the first letter.
 * Adding to the awesomeness, the version of the second letter quoted in the note is actually a second draft. The original was more passively phrased: "the troops have been withdrawn. The decision to attack...." Then Ike decided to emphasize that he was responsible, and rewrote it.
 * General Roosevelt, upon finding his Utah Beach landing is too far off-course, decides to "Start the war from right here" and guides the rest of his forces to that spot. In Real Life he even reconned the area with minimum cover, risking his life. His decision proved right as the improvised landing site was actually easier to deploy troops than the planned site.
 * He insisted on leading the landing himself - even with his frail health that would kill him a month later.
 * Well, considering who's son he was should we have expected any less?
 * The bagpiper Bill Millin. The Real Life counterpart later met with captured German snipers and found out none of them would shoot at him because they all thought he was too crazy to be marching about playing that thing.
 * The Free French commandos retaking Ouistreham.
 * The D-Day landings as a whole are a CMoA for every Allied soldier - American, Canadian, British, French - who participated. Those who survived and those who didn't.
 * John Howard as his troops holding Pegasus Bridge - "Hold until relieved."
 * A team of engineers - led by Jeffrey Hunter - under constant fire rig up explosives to blow a hole into the Omaha Beach barrier.
 * Luftwaffe Colonel Josef Priller. With his entire air wing having been moved back the day before to airfields out of range of the beaches, the only two German fighter aircraft available on D-Day were his own and his wingman's, Sergeant Heinz Wodarczyk. And so the two of them flew out -- by themselves -- to do an air attack on the entire Allied invasion. The two FW-190s strafed Sword, Juno, and Omaha beaches, while flying through the combined antiaircraft fire of every ship in the invasion fleet, until they ran out of ammo and returned to base unharmed. The comment of one of the British sailors witnessing this;


 * "The Luftwaffe has had its finest moment!"
 * Though not portrayed in the film, they were also both badly hungover at the time.
 * At the first bombardment, one of the locals goes nuts with happiness and starts waving a French flag, even as some of the shells hit his house.