# Landing Under Fire

> A shorter, more immediate D-Day sequence built around landing craft, beach obstacles, soldiers advancing, and the pressure of enemy positions.

- Canonical: https://onira.studio/films/landing-under-fire
- Full video: https://media.onira.studio/films/landing-under-fire.mp4
- Poster: https://media.onira.studio/films/posters/landing-under-fire.jpg
- Chapters WebVTT: https://onira.studio/films/landing-under-fire/chapters.vtt
- Duration: 00:55
- Aspect ratio: 16/9
- Genre: History
- Production: Action sequence
- Creator: Onira Studio (first-party proof, not a customer case study)
- Published: 2026-06-15
- Cost basis: Run-specific preflight required

## Production brief

A cinematic historical reenactment of soldiers landing on Omaha Beach during D-Day, with warships, paratroopers, and infantry advancing.

## Film context

This cut compresses the visual language of a war documentary into a high-impact sequence: landing craft ramps, steel hedgehogs, heavy surf, infantry moving under fire, and German bunker perspectives. It is punchier than the longer Omaha Beach film and works well as a scene-level example.

## Visual and editorial highlights

- Landing craft pushing through smoke and surf
- Steel hedgehog obstacles across the beach
- Soldiers advancing from water toward cliffs
- Bunker viewpoints overlooking the shoreline

## Chapter summary

- 00:00 - Approach: Landing craft and smoke place the viewer immediately before the landing.
- 00:13 - Entering the beach: Water, soldiers, and obstacles concentrate the action in the first advance.
- 00:31 - Defensive pressure: Bunkers and elevated viewpoints reinforce the risk facing the soldiers below.
- 00:47 - Advance: The ending sustains movement inland and leaves the action ready to continue.

## Evidence boundary

This is a complete first-party Onira Studio export. It demonstrates a production result, not independent customer acceptance, publication, retention, or revenue. Factual films require creator verification and generated reconstructions must not be presented as archival evidence.

## External review references

- [Eisenhower Presidential Library: D-Day and Normandy](https://www.eisenhowerlibrary.gov/research/online-documents/world-war-ii-d-day-invasion-normandy)
- [The National WWII Museum: D-Day research starter](https://www.nationalww2museum.org/students-teachers/student-resources/research-starters/research-starters-d-day)

## Publication review

- Verify facts, sources, uncertainty, pronunciations, and sensitive claims.
- Review generated people, objects, geography, physics, text, and continuity.
- Clear source material, likeness, trademark, music, archive, and third-party rights.
- Decide whether realistic synthetic scenes require disclosure.
- Watch the exact export completely before uploading.
