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After several long visits to the Soviet Union, he decided to do a TV documentary about the Siege of Leningrad during World War II. It ended up being a three-part 1968 series about three cities under siege. In addition to Leningrad, it covered the London Blitz and the destruction of Berlin at the end of World War II. Darlow served as director ...
Year Country Title Director 2010 War Music: David Porteous: 2011 United States We Were There: Jarod O'Flaherty 2011 Netherlands 900 Days: Jessica Gorter 2011 Russia Soviet Storm: World War II in the East: Anna Grazhdan 2012 United States Oliver Stone's Untold History of the United States: Oliver Stone: 2013 United States The Ghost Army: Rick ...
Horror in the East: Japan and the Atrocities of World War II (2000, 2 Episodes, 98 minutes, 4:3 Fullscreen, 1 Disc) Documentary on the Japanese Army's atrocities in the Asia-Pacific war and why the Japanese fought to the death. Supplements on the Indian Army and the Burma War. 7.
He also authored five books on World War II, including Tarawa: The Story of a Battle (1944) and the definitive History of Marine Corps Aviation in World War II (1952). He was an editor of Time during World War II and later he was editor of The Saturday Evening Post, then vice-president of Curtis Publishing Company. He is portrayed by Rob Lowe.
The Cold Blue is a 2018 documentary composed from 90 hours of "lost" footage director William Wyler used for his 1944 documentary The Memphis Belle: A Story of a Flying Fortress. [3] [2] The Memphis Belle documentary was very highly regarded. [3] Unfortunately all existing prints were faded and scratched.
A British Army bulldozer pushes bodies into a mass grave at Belsen, 19 April 1945. The film explores the importance of film as a medium for documenting warfare, focusing on the work of the Allied cameramen who, in 1944 and 1945, filmed the liberation of the prison, labor, and extermination camps run by the Nazis and their allies in Germany and eastern Europe.
Critical reception for How Hitler Lost the War was mostly positive. [2] Entertainment Weekly gave the movie a B− but commented that the film's thesis was "dubious". [3] The Chicago Sun-Times praised the documentary and called it "a fascinating re-examination of the misdirection of one of the greatest war machines the world has ever known". [4]
The War is a seven-part American television documentary miniseries about World War II from the perspective of the United States. The program was directed by American filmmakers Ken Burns and Lynn Novick, written by Geoffrey Ward, and narrated primarily by Keith David. [1] It premiered on September 23, 2007.