SCREENRANT VIDEO OF THE DAY SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT Summary While Masters of the Air gave its own portrayal of June 6, 1944, otherwise known as D-Day, this new depiction was much different from what Band of Brothers offered back in 2001. After their collaboration on the award-winning World War II film, Saving Private Ryan, Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks, along with Gary Goetzman, created one of the most iconic war miniseries of all time, Band of Brothers.
Related Does Masters Of The Air Overlap With Saving Private Ryan? D-Day Crossover Explained Though both Masters of the Air and Saving Private Ryan depict American efforts during World War II’s D-Day, they two portray very different fights. Masters Of The Air Mostly Avoids D-Day Action, Unlike Band Of Brothers Close The most obvious difference between Band of Brother's D-Day and Masters of the Air is the amount of action shown.
Ultimately, the difference comes down to the fact that D-Day was much more important for Easy Company than it was for the 100th Bomb Group. By June 1944, the 100th had already been in service for a year, and for the most part, had seen their most difficult battles. Furthermore, a majority of the 100th's original crew had nothing to do with D-Day. Though Rosenthal flew that day, Major Crosby had more to do with planning and both Major Cleven and Major Egan were POWs.
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