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16 out of 17 people found the following review useful:
Hanks and Speilberg team up again, their focus "WWII Combat Photographers", 13 December 2000
Author:
Frank-113 from Washington, D.C.
Tom Hanks host and narrates this two-hour documentary on WWII Combat Photographers in Europe and the Pacific theater of war. Rare achieve footage of never release for public viewing films, some scenes breath taking - seeing our war machines in action, others horrific (should not have been shown on network television) showing mangle smash, burn and shot up human bodies Allies and Axis (see Benito Mussolini body and you know what I mean). There's a great behind the scene segment on director John Ford staging his 1942 production of the attack on Pearl Harbor, model ships and planes enter cut with the real footage of that day. Hank walks and narrates through a photo gallery (wearing a long beard-film during the production of `Cast Away') points out the significance of each photo and how all but one reel of the D-Day invasion was lost at sea. Stephen Ambrose narrates the second half of the show at the Normandy grave site. The conclusion have our camera men in Japan showing you in living color the full effects of the Atomic bombs.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Fresh take on World War Two, 28 March 2012
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Author:
Andre Raymond from Canada
One of the best documentaries about World War Two. A fresh way of
looking at the war.
You will never again see a documentary or docudrama on D-Day without
noticing the complete absence of photographic support concerning Omaha
and Utah beaches. Or the sad re-use of the few seconds of footage that
did survive from the second or third waves.
The famous and atrocious footage taken on Okinawa of the mother
throwing her baby and then herself off a cliff, while painful to watch,
is remarkable.
Now that embedding journalists with US servicemen has become standard
operational procedure,now that every soldier walks around with a cell
phone capable of recording and re-transmitting battle footage
instantaneously, it is well worth going back to a time when it was not
so.
This documentary records a time when images of the war were special, be
it recording the horrific images of the holocaust so that it's lessons
will never be forgotten, or the sad and stricken faces of Japanese
civilians suffering through the aftermath of the first Atomic bombs.
This is really the beginning of man's realization of the cost of war.
It soon became impossible for those responsible for sending young men
to war to suppress for their loved ones the photographic truth of the
horrors of war.
Unfortunate that total exposure 24-7-365 has made so jaded that we
barely even look at the images coming back from the many wars in the
world, much less allow those images to move us to act in any meaningful
way to stop further needless conflict.
Combat Photographers Are People., 30 April 2012
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Author:
Robert J. Maxwell (rmax304823@yahoo.com) from Deming, New Mexico, USA
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This television documentary of combat photographers in World War II is
extraordinary in some ways. For one thing, who has paid much attention
to them? Our memories and impressions of combat are of the images they
took, not of the men themselves. We like to see our boys in action --
the Corsairs dropping napalm, the flame throwers cleaning out the caves
in burst of orange, the Focke Wolfes disintegrating under the guns of
our P 51s, the big booming artillery pieces in Italy, the plunging
Kamikaze that skims in fire across the deck. We seldom think of the men
behind the cameras.
Nor do we see everything they've shot. Typically we watch a bull dozer
shovel dozens of dead Japanese into mass graves. We don't ordinarily
see the swollen bodies of American Marines or soldiers bobbing in the
slight surf of Tarawa or Normandy, or the bodies of American airmen,
twisted in the wreckage of their B 17s. The censors spared the
sensitive viewer during the war and in the feature films since then
that have incorporated newsreel footage.
I would estimate that only about ten percent of the footage in this
documentary is familiar to most viewers. The rest of it is strange and
often horrifying. The struggles with the mules in some disregarded area
of the China-Burma-India Theater or the brutality of the battle for
Manilla. There is a lot of slogging on film but the film is rarely
seen, presumably because it lacks drama. Or sometimes the shot may be
dramatic but the camera was too shaky or slightly out of focus.
You'll see in this film the footage that is missing from most
documentaries, and it will fill in the gaps in an informative way. One
of the lessons to be learned from this kind of honesty is that death in
combat tends to be ignoble, no matter which side you're on, and no
matter the circumstances. You've seen Mussolini and his mistress
hanging upside down, have have you seen what remains of the head of
Mussolini's corpse?
It's also surprising to find so many photographers who went on to
Hollywood careers or had their careers momentarily interrupted. John
Ford, of course, who shot some of the Midway battle himself and won two
Oscars for his short subjects. Wounded at Midway, he continued filming
the attacking enemy planes, shouting and waving for them to fly this
way or that.
John Huston's "The Battle of San Pietro" is also covered and it's
revealed for the first time, for me anyway, that Huston had his
photographers stage some of the battle scenes, though the soldiers of
the 36th IR were real enough. But few people think of Richard Brooks
("In Cold Blood") as having filmed battle scenes. Even fewer think of
Russ ("Faster Pussycat, Kill, Kill") Meyer as a combat photographer.
There are interspersed tales told by a dozen or so photographers from
each one of the Armed Forces. Probably the most famous photo to come
out of the war was the raising of the American flag atop Mount
Suribachi on Iwo Jima, which was taken by a civilian AP photographer.
Most of them did more than simply aim their cameras and press a button.
The very presence of a a photographer tended to boost morale. And some
were trained as tank gunners or infantrymen and filled those roles from
time to time.
This isn't an ordinary documentary about the war. It's a far more
honest image of warfare than we're used to. I'd applaud it for that
reason alone. Washington Irving was a little florid but had a point
when he wrote, "Society is like a lawn, where every roughness is
smoothed, every bramble eradicated, and where the eye is delighted by
the smiling verdure of a velvet surface; he, however, who would study
nature in its wildness and variety, must plunge into the forest, must
explore the glen, must stem the torrent, and dare the precipice."
Nature can be pretty ugly, including human nature.
The film is hosted by Tom Hanks and written and directed by Richard
Schickel and it doesn't pull any punches. (The landings on Iwo Jima was
a necessity. The assault on Peleliu, which cost more than a thousand
American lives, wasn't.) I can't help but admire that kind of candor
when it's presented without its usual propellant of anger. A mortally
ill Steven Ambrose makes what's probably his final appearance on the
screen.
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