Saving Private Ryan Wiki
Register
No edit summary
Tag: Visual edit
No edit summary
Line 5: Line 5:
 
|death = Unknown
 
|death = Unknown
 
|weapon = N/A}}
 
|weapon = N/A}}
The '''French Mother''' was a minor character in the film ''[[Saving Private Ryan]]''. She was married to [[Jean]] and was the mother of [[Jaqueline|Jacqueline]] and [[French Boy|a boy]].
+
The '''French Mother''' was a minor character in the film ''[[Saving Private Ryan]]''. She was married to [[Jean]] and was the mother of [[Jaqueline]] and [[French Boy|a boy]].
   
 
She lived under the oppression of the Nazi regime until the Allied forces invaded France on [[Omaha Beach|D-Day]]. During the invasion, her house was bombed and she and her family became caught in between the fighting between the Americans and Germans.
 
She lived under the oppression of the Nazi regime until the Allied forces invaded France on [[Omaha Beach|D-Day]]. During the invasion, her house was bombed and she and her family became caught in between the fighting between the Americans and Germans.

Revision as of 00:51, 28 June 2019

The French Mother was a minor character in the film Saving Private Ryan. She was married to Jean and was the mother of Jaqueline and a boy.

She lived under the oppression of the Nazi regime until the Allied forces invaded France on D-Day. During the invasion, her house was bombed and she and her family became caught in between the fighting between the Americans and Germans.

Shortly after D-Day, her family encountered the American soldiers pushing through the town. Her husband desired that they should take their children, even passing their daughter to Private Caparzo. She disagreed which such, shouting for their children to be taken away to safety as translated by Corporal Upham.

She watched in extreme worry as her daughter became trapped below due to a German sniper firing at the group. When Private Jackson killed the sniper and the soldiers returned her daughter, the French mother seemed distraught when her daughter slapped her father for having to go through that worrying experience.