i see... well it was quite emotional scene.. when Sgt. Malarky saw those uniforms and their names... Blithe story is sad in the movie.. but inspiring the real life. many people said he didn't died bcuz of the wounds.. but some years later somewhere in Korea or so. it was so scary to make us think how the war really was through his eyes.. he was scared.. and in the end he tried to do the right thing.. thank you again for your support!
2021-08-20 08:28:31 +0000 UTC
Some of the laundry was left in England before D-Day. Sgt. Malarky was asked to take the laundry of the men who never returned, or were seriously wounded. Also, this series was based on a book. It was the book’s author that believed Blyth died from his wounds.
Tracy Frazier
2021-08-20 04:36:27 +0000 UTC
awkward to write a script.. produce a movie and then find out about it. but hey good thing we know about it!
2021-08-19 22:03:01 +0000 UTC
They did not lie about Blythe -- they just made a mistake and they thought he was dead but found out afterwards that he was not.
Nanette Davis
2021-08-19 00:39:16 +0000 UTC
wow! why the heck they would lie about Blythe??? that's messed up :( thank you for the heads up and thank you for your support!
2021-08-18 23:55:36 +0000 UTC
The laundry scene was just trying to show how many men died -- the lady did not know and was asking Malarky to help her out and pay for the laundry for the people who didn't pick up their laundry. Malarky knew they were dead but didn't want to tell her and just went ahead and paid her. Also, it was a mistake that the series announced that Blythe died. In real life, Blythe didn't die and went on to stay in the military for a career and won some awards for fighting in the Korean war.