

War of the Century
Az évszázad háborúja
One of the most emotionally powerful of all World War II documentaries. It begins with the story of Operation Barbarossa, and Germany's subsequent war against the Soviet Union. Altering the course of World War II, it shaped the borders and attitudes of Europe for the second half of the 20th Century.
It was a catastrophic mistake. Napoleon had tried it and failed. Yet in 1941, Hitler broke the golden rule of warfare, never to fight on opposite fronts, and marched into the Soviet Union. The annihilation of the Soviets would have meant the death of Communism and the Slavs. It would have meant living space for the voracious Third Reich. But Hitler overlooked two things: the withering Soviet winters and the brutality of Stalin's rearguard action. It was the largest and bloodiest military operation in history and by the end of the campaign 30 million had died.
With commentary from leading historians, unique access to newly available documentary and film archives and both Soviet and German eye-witness testimony, this could be the definitive series on a key turning point in history.
Examines why the Germans invaded the Soviet Union in the summer of 1941 and how it was that, by October of the same year, Hitler looked poised to take Moscow. Eyewitness accounts from soldiers on both sides of the battle and new footage. Among the details revealed are Stalin's dismissal of reports of the impending invasion and his attempts to seek a negotiated peace once it had begun.
While the soldiers on both sides fought around Moscow under particularly brutal conditions, they weren't the only people to suffer. Around 13 million Soviet civilians died during Hitler's war against Stalin - more civilians than in any other war. This programme examines why this happened and sets it against the story of the brutal Nazi occupation and Stalin's own brutal partisan war.
1942 was a year of transformation on the Eastern Front. At the start of the year the Germans were near the gates of Moscow. By the end, the mighty 6th army was encircled at Stalingrad.
As the Red Army advanced eastwards, many sought vengeance, not just on Germany, but on their own fellow citizens who had dared to allow themselves to be captured by the enemy.
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Samuel West | Himself - Narrator |
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John Erickson | Himself - Historical consultant |
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Stephen Walsh | Himself - Historical consultant |
Rendező | Laurence Rees |
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Író | Laurence Rees | |
Producer | Martina Balazova, Tom Lasica, Laurence Rees, Detlef Siebert, Alexandra Umminger | |
Fényképezte | Martin Patmore |
Csomagolás | Keep Case |
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Lemezek száma | 1 |
Képernyőarány | Fullscreen (4:3) |
Hangsávok | Dolby Digital Stereo [English] Stereo [English] |
Forgalmazó | BBC Home Video |
Kiadás megjelenése | Júl. 19, 2005 |
Régiók | Region 1 |
Hely | HDD 20 |
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Mennyiség | 1 |
Megtekintve | |
Index | 16422 |
Hozzáadva | Nov. 11, 2016 21:52:47 |
Módosítva | Feb. 18, 2023 12:41:52 |