D-day to berlin bbc documentary download torrent
However, the next year would see murderous stuggle in the hedgerows of the bocage, exhilaration at the liberation of Paris, tragedy in the ill-fated Operation Market Garden and panic as the Wehrmacht stunned the Allies with full-blooded offensive in the Battle of the Bulge. At a terrible cost, the Allies' path finally cleared, but as Allies armies poured into Germany they began to stumble across the Nazis' darkest secret - the concentration camp.
It took Hilter's suicide to fully bring home to the Allies their momentous achievement - the war in Europe was over. Based on a review of the two programs, the Television Academy concluded that the documentary was ineligible for Emmy consideration per the 'Criteria for Eligibility Rule 9,' which reads - a program that is a foreign acquisition without benefit of a domestic co-production cannot be re-introduced into eligibility in a current awards year, even though it may have been modified with new footage, sound track, musical score, etc.
Because of this determination, the documentary's Emmy nominations and wins have been disqualified. Goofs The narrator describes a pictured Nazi jet fighter, the first of its kind, as the Messerschmitt That aircraft is the Messerschmitt User reviews 8 Review. Top review. Obviously, this is something personal and something historically important. Much of the footage is in color. It does not shy away from the brutality of the war.
It's absolutely important to preserve this witness to history. SnoopyStyle Sep 22, Details Edit. And they had those millimeter small cameras and bigger cameras that you saw in the film. But my father had taken along a millimeter camera that he had used to shoot behind the scenes footage on Gunga Din.
And I think by the time I came onto it, it was kind of much more valuable and intriguing than if it had been something that three years after the war you would have unveiled.
So that was just by way of a little introduction. And I gave it all to the Library of Congress. It is now in the Library of Congress and people are able to use it -- documentarians the world over are always asking for it -- because I really felt it belonged in the public domain. Any idea what happened to the jeep, Taluka. I think it is probably is in the graveyard of the hundreds or thousands or millions of jeeps.
We lived in a little place in North Hollywood called Taluka Lake. And that is the reason for the jeep being called Taluka. And much of it was kind of storyteller memories.
He had a great gift for storytelling. And then…. He was beautifully educated, brilliant young man…. And then he came back to Los Angeles and went to work for my father and worked with him through most of his pictures after the war.
And Ivan was the best man at my wedding. And Ivan, too, would always talk of that day. Watching this…. Every time you watch a film you see new things in it. And I think my father must have been 36 when he went into the service. And he was well beyond draft age and had a son. I mean he was…. And I had these feelings, of course, for all of them, those men we saw in the gliders that were going to parachute over the Rhine, but that these people who spend this time over there and, you know, it occurred to me, look at my father in the mud and the grit and all of that, that you could just sense that he had no wish to be anywhere else.
He could have been on a sound stage making pictures with Irene Dunne. But it was clearly where he wanted to be. And you get a sense of really…. I think of the great adventure that it must have been. You know, when you see them looking at the surrendering Germans. For those of us who are old enough to remember the mood of World War II, the fear that the German Army struck in people, the Panzer divisions.
This was the mightiest army ever put together. And here these sort of American GIs, draftees, have turned the tide. How vivid are your own memories of it? Were you concerned about your father?
Was he constantly writing home? In his collection there are wonderful letters. He sent me emails [sic]. And he kept the letters that I sent him and my mother sent and vice versa. One of the treasured items I have…. When you asked how we felt…. But there was kind of the drunk that ran the Western Union office. And there was that, we had a star in our window.
And there was always that thought, is the Western Union man going to come to your door? And I received a package. It must have been some time shortly after D-Day and unwrapped it. And it was a copy of The Human Comedy. And it is dated June 2, So they both knew they were going to a different place.
And, as you pointed out, in one of those later scenes at the very end, the person having that cognac across the table from my father is Robert Capa. And then, of course, you saw Irwin Shaw. It was quite a collection of irregulars.
You mentioned in the beginning, sending home the packages of colored film. Do you remember them coming in the mail? But they were addressed…. Now that I can look at the boxes, some are addressed to our house, Forman Avenue, North Hollywood. And others were addressed to Lt. Frank Capra, who had his photo unit in Culver City. You imply this at the end. And then, after the war, the belief was, the conventional wisdom was that the war affected him. Do you think that is true?
Is that too simplistic? Did the war affect him that much? Did it affect his art that much? He made one…. He directed one sequence in a picture without credit. The picture was called On Our Merry Way and it was one of those sketch pictures with three or four segments. And he did a piece with Jimmy Stewart and Henry Fonda, which is so funny. I mean he had the ability to do funny stories.
But I think his interests…. He was a different person and his interests were deeper. It was less a loss of humor than enlarged understanding about the world and different things to express. FEENEY: And, in fact, you worked with your father towards the beginning of your career and along towards the end of his. What was that experience like? My first job in life was one summer I had two assignments.
I mean list every scene and sequence and character. And the other was to read books that came from the studio and scripts. And as I look back on it now and raised and nurtured my own sons, I realize now that it was probably a little more of a make-work project than the fact that the thought I was going to have any particular insight into whether these scripts that came from the studio were any good.
Gracias blue y Erde. Mensaje por mute » Sab 26 Nov, am pinchada, gracias Bluegardenia. Mensaje por tunisio » Lun 05 Dic, pm Gracias a la valuosa ayuda de Erdelamoto he llegado a este estupendo enlace y empiezo a descargar todo lo descargable. Muchas Gracias a bluegardenia y a Erdelamoto Saludos. Mensaje por spione » Mar 06 Dic, am mmmm que buena pinta tiene esto, gracias por avisar. Disponibles en este hilo Hasta otra. Mensaje por tunisio » Sab 17 Dic, pm Una preguntilla All episodes of D-Day to Berlin.
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