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FEATURE DOCUMENTARY

Rémy Cassigneul was 19, Marguerite Cassigneul 17 when, on June 6, 1944, the Allied forces landed in Normandy. They expected to see Americans, their ears theirs soon made it clear that they were Canadians. Of young men barely older than them who, after 4 years of occupation, freed them from occupation German in the Juno Beach area. A bunch of sand of ten kilometers stretching from Courseulles in Saint-Aubin-sur-mer. 75 later, Marguerite and Rémy are part of this family increasingly reduced witnesses to the D-Day landings, those whose eyes say "I was there".

For them, this famous D-Day is not a simple page from a history book, a chapter from a documentary. This is an essential part of their life that they have agreed to share with us, in this documentary, on the occasion
commemorations of the 75th anniversary of Landing. With them we go to the very place where landed the Canadians on June 6, 1944, in the
Bény-sur-mer Canadian military cemetery / Reviers where more than 2,000 soldiers rest, at the very place where the Canadians freed them. We also meet young people from the north coast of New Brunswick, Canada, many of whom have relatives who fought in Normandy, collectors of military vehicles….

But, above all, we give the words to those who can still speak in first person, to those for whom this land liberated by the Canadians is forever a land
emotions. With an additional dimension: December 4, 2019, Rémy Cassigneul passed away at the age of 95. In his eyes, there was the gaze of these soldiers until the end Canadians who marked his life forever.
Arnaud Blin
Arnaud Blin
Arnaud Blin
2022
44 Minutes
France
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