Just 2 are left. Upham and Reiben
The cemetery depicted at the end (as well as the beginning) of the movie, is The Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial in France.
I think you mean "FUBAR" : F----d Up Beyond All Recognition. Revealed as the soldiers were preparing for the bridge battle scene at the end.
Dialogue in a film refers to the words that were written down for the actors to say. Example: Tom Hanks at the end of Saving Private Ryan: "Earn this". "Earn this" is the dialogue.
No. Hank's character, Captain John H. Miller, died at the end. His eyes remained open, but one of his soldiers looked down to see his hand had stopped trembling. The soldier reached into Miller's (Hanks') pocket to take his papers for safe keeping.
It was the Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial, near Colleville-sur-Mer in northern France. The site honors American soldiers who died in Europe during World War II. Scenes at the cemetery are shown at the beginning and the end of "Saving Private Ryan" (1998).
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October 5.
This year (2010) it ended on October 31st.
i went to a military boarding school that cost 26,000 dollars a year but higher end boarding private schools can cost 50,000 to 60,000 a year
Do you mean the landing craft on D Day? I have talked with men who landed on that beach and others and from what they tell me it was scary, some of the men were praying, and they knew that many would not see the end of the day alive. Spielberg's movie is the nearest we will get to that experience. He did a good job showing the reality of it.
They must first find Private Ryan which is not easy because there is a war on and he is a paratrooper who has been dropped somewhere behind enemy lines. After they find him, the task remains to keep him alive and deliver him safely to friendly lines. There is another unforeseen problem in saving him which arises toward the end of the movie, but I will not give it away.