Jensen, who doesn't give a rat's ass if all the Germans are killed, says that an order's an order. An outraged Carl says that he promised the boys that they could go go home, but Capt. Rather, they will be sent to a different beach. Jensen tells Carl that, despite what they told the Germans, they will not be going home after clearing the beach.
He has been assigned a squad of fourteen German soldiers, all teenaged boys thanks to Germany's Lowered Recruiting Standards in the latter phase of the war and the fact that Denmark wasn't a combat zone anyway. Carl Rasmussen fought with the British During the War and is back with the Danish army in peace.
The Germans, anticipating the possibility that the Allies might land on the west coast of Denmark, have buried over two million mines along Denmark's entire North Sea coastline. Denmark is now free, but the nation has a serious problem. Untold thousands of German soldiers who were occupying Denmark (Germany held Denmark until the end) have surrendered as prisoners of war. It is set in Denmark in May, 1945, in the immediate aftermath of the German surrender and the end of World War II in Europe. Land of Mine ( Under Sandet, "Under the Sand") is a 2015 film from Denmark directed by Martin Sandvliet.