How could a political party as fundamentally evil and overtly
racist as the Nazis come to power? Why was Japan, known for its
admirable of POWs in WWI, responsible for such grim
atrocities in the Second World War? This comprehensive collection
not only examines the details of the conflict (the Battle of
Moscow, the campaign against German U-boats, the RAF bomber
offensive), but digs deeper to attempt to answer the questions
that still haunt us. Through startling archive footage and
eyewitness testimony, this 12-disc set offers a unique
perspective and true understanding of what actually happened.
DVD Features:
Documentaries:Battle of the Atlantic includes a 50-minute
documentary on merchant seamenHorror in the East includes a
50-minute documentary on the Indian Army and a 60-minute
documentary on Burma
Featurette:D-Day: Reflections of Courage includes a 20-minute
making-of featurette
Introduction:Award-winning writer, filmmaker and Creative
Director of BBC History Laurence Rees provides introduction and
closing words to collection
Other:D-Day: Reflections of Courage includes 30 minutes of
eyewitness accounts Auschwitz: Inside the Nazi State includes six
follow-up discussions hosted by award-winning journalist Linda
Ellerbee
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With 30 hours of programming in 10 volumes and three full-length
bonus programs, the BBC History of World War II goes beyond even
The World at War ( /exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B0002F6AH0/%24%7B0%7D
) for its depth of , its breadth of analyses, and the high
quality of its production values. This ambitious project by
producer Laurence Rees, which also features a collector's
booklet, is full of startling archival footage and illuminating
eyewitness interviews that bring to life some of the most
monumental events from the most monumental war in human history.
The focus on this set is clearly the war in Europe (only one
disc, Horror in the East, is dedicated to the war with Japan) as
told from an even-handed British perspective: interviews with
German citizens make it understandable how Hitler appealed to a
shattered and defeated nation, for example, and the The Road to
War scrutinizes how a British government was caught unprepared
for a re-armed Germany bent on domination. The collection is
filled with poignantly fascinating moments, such as when an aging
American veteran revisits the Omaha Beach he stormed on D-Day,
and meets the elderly German who, as a teenager, was defending
that section of the beach with his machine , or footage of
Hitler's early political speeches, raging promises of things to
come.
Roughly chronologically arranged, the set starts with The Nazis:
A Warning from History, and works its way through all facets of
the war, including the legacy of the Holocaust. (Some of the
titles were previously released as single DVDs.) The presentation
is particularly impressive. Each series has its own style:
Dunkirk is a drama-documentary structured like a miniseries and
reenactments are deftly interwoven with archival footage in a
convincing motif. In War of the Century: When Hitler Fought
Stalin, German and Russian veterans recall with chilling candor
their particular universe of battle, and rare color combat
footage combined with newly declassified Soviet documents offer
new perspectives on the subject. The collection succeeds
brilliantly in making it clear to a modern-day viewer what it was
really like to live through those times.
For the war buff, the history enthusiast, the educator, or
someone looking for a gift for any of the above, the BBC History
of World War II is a title to consider. Even dedicated viewers of
the History Channel ( /exec/obidos/tg/browse/-/886160/%24%7B0%7D
) will find something new and fascinating here. --Dan Vancini