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Featured review
Misleading Documentary
"Probable Cause" attempts to investigate the Hindenburg Disaster using modern methods. They start out claiming that "new evidence" suggested the original inquiry's conclusions were wrong. They talk a lot about metal fatigue and fuel leaks as possible causes of the disaster, but the documentary does not conclude with a definitive cause, saying it will "probably never be known." The CGI used for the documentary was fairly good, considering it was made in 2001, the textures aren't that realistic. Red Vision went on to do CGI for other Hindenburg documentaries as well such as National Geographic's Seconds from Disaster and Pioneer Production's Hindenburg: The Untold Story/Titanic of the Skies.
One big mistake the documentary makes in the beginning is the supposed colour footage of the Hindenburg. This is not the Hindenburg but the LZ 130 Graf Zeppelin II. It is rather grainy to tell the difference but you can see the engine cars are somewhat larger and "Graf Zeppelin" is vaguely visible on the side. This footage is very good and rare, but it is very misleading for them to say it's the Hindenburg. Moondance Films even stated in their synopsis of this documentary that it was colour footage from a private collection in 1936. It was filmed by Harold G. Dick, as they had stated, but unfortunately he passed away in 1997, so they contacted his family for the footage. This is unfortunate because Dick would have known better about the footage he had.
One big mistake the documentary makes in the beginning is the supposed colour footage of the Hindenburg. This is not the Hindenburg but the LZ 130 Graf Zeppelin II. It is rather grainy to tell the difference but you can see the engine cars are somewhat larger and "Graf Zeppelin" is vaguely visible on the side. This footage is very good and rare, but it is very misleading for them to say it's the Hindenburg. Moondance Films even stated in their synopsis of this documentary that it was colour footage from a private collection in 1936. It was filmed by Harold G. Dick, as they had stated, but unfortunately he passed away in 1997, so they contacted his family for the footage. This is unfortunate because Dick would have known better about the footage he had.
helpful•40
- frank940521
- Jul 1, 2010
Details
- Runtime50 minutes
- Color
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