Orizzonti_di_gloria_1957_hd_-_altadefinizione01

The three soldiers were chosen not by their actions, but by chance and personal grudges:

Shortly after, Dax found his surviving men in a local tavern, rowdy and whistling at a captured German girl forced to sing for them. As she began a simple, mournful folk song, the room fell silent. The soldiers, reminded of their own humanity and the wives and mothers they might never see again, began to hum along, tears streaming down their dirt-caked faces.

To save face and "inspire discipline," Mireau demanded that 100 men be executed for cowardice. After a heated argument with Dax, the number was reduced to three—one from each company. The Farce of Justice Orizzonti_di_gloria_1957_HD_-_Altadefinizione01

, chosen because he witnessed his lieutenant’s cowardice. Private Ferol , labeled a "social undesirable." Private Arnaud , a decorated hero chosen by lot.

When the whistle blew, the attack was a disaster. The French soldiers were mown down by machine-gun fire before they could even clear their own wire. Seeing the retreat, Mireau flew into a rage and ordered his own artillery to fire on his troops to "force" them forward. The battery commander refused the illegal order. The three soldiers were chosen not by their

Dax, horrified by the injustice, stepped in to defend them in a court-martial. He argued with the fire of a man who still believed in truth, but the trial was a sham. The verdict was written before the first word was spoken: The Final Walk

In the morning, under a gray sky, they were marched to the stakes. Dax watched in silent fury as his men were executed for a "cowardice" that actually belonged to the generals in the chateau. A Bitter Song To save face and "inspire discipline," Mireau demanded

The night before the execution, the mood in the camp was haunting. The three men faced their end in a barn, grappling with fear and the absurdity of being killed by their own side.