Der Zweite Weltkrieg hatte Tausende von Schauplätzen, kein Bericht könnte sie alle je erfassen. Wie vier amerikanische Provinzstädte und ihre Einwohner den Zweiten Weltkrieg erlebten, davon berichtet "The War".
Die Zivilbevölkerung der USA war nie ernsthaft in Gefahr. Dennoch betraf der Krieg jede Familie in jeder Straße, in jeder Stadt, in jedem Dorf der USA. Wie sie den Krieg erlebten, das zeigen Ken Burns und Lynn Novick in der 14-stündigen Dokumentation "The War". Mit Hilfe von Einzelschicksalen, die typisch für Tausende von Amerikanern sind, verdeutlicht The WAR das ganze Ausmaß der menschlichen Tragödie des Zweiten Weltkrieges und beweist: Egal ob an der Front oder weit weg vom Kanonendonner - es gab in diesen Jahren nirgends auf der Welt ein normales Leben.
#1 | 05.03.2008Ein Notwendiger Krieg / Eine grauenerregende Zeit (
A Necessary War)
3,8/5 (bei 2 Stimmen)
December 1941 - December 1942: The tranquil lives of the citizens of Mobile, Alabama; Sacramento, California; Waterbury, Connecticut; and Luverne, Minnesota are shattered on December 7, 1941, as they, along with the rest of America, are thrust into the greatest cataclysm in history.
#2 | 05.03.2008Das Schlimmste kommt noch / Hart auf hart (
When Things Get Tough)
3,8/5 (bei 2 Stimmen)
January 1943 - December 1943: Americans mobilize for total war at home and overseas. Factories hum around the clock, while in North Africa and then Italy, inexperienced GIs learn how to fight. Meanwhile, in the skies over Europe, thousands of American airmen gamble their lives against preposterous odds on daylight bombing missions.
#3 | 12.03.2008Ein Scheiß-Krieg / Der tödliche Ruf (
A Deadly Calling)
3,8/5 (bei 2 Stimmen)
November 1943 - June 1944: Americans are shocked by terrible losses on the Pacific atoll of Tarawa, while in Italy Allied forces are stalled for months at Monte Cassino, and a risky landing at Anzio fails utterly. At home, as overcrowded "war towns" boom, economic transformation leads to confrontation and ugly racial violence.
#4 | 12.03.2008Unsere Söhne, Stolz der Nation / Freiwillig (
Pride of Our Nation / A Volunteer Basis)
3,8/5 (bei 2 Stimmen)
June 1944 - August 1944: On June 6, 1944, D-Day, 1.5 million Allied troops take part in the greatest invasion in history, but then bog down in the Norman hedgerows for weeks. Saipan proves the costliest Pacific battle to date, while back home dreaded telegrams from the War Department begin arriving at an inconceivable rate.
#5 | 19.03.2008Voll in der Scheiße! /Leben und Tod (
FUBAR)
3,8/5 (bei 2 Stimmen)
September 1944 - December 1944: Victory in Europe seems imminent, but in Holland, the Vosges Mountains, and the Hurtgen Forest, GIs learn painful lessons as old as war itself - that generals make plans, plans go wrong and soldiers die. Meanwhile, on the island of Peleliu, the Marines fight one of the most brutal and unnecessary battles of the Pacific.
#6 | 19.03.2008Eine Geisterfront / Furchtbare Entscheidungen (
The Ghost Front)
3,8/5 (bei 2 Stimmen)
December 1944 - March 1945: Americans are shocked by Hitler's massive counterattack in the Ardennes forest - but by mid-March, 1945, they are across the Rhine, while the Russians are 50 miles from Berlin. In the Pacific, after weeks of desperate fighting, Iwo Jima is secured, and American bombers begin a full-fledged air assault on Japan.
#7 | 26.03.2008Ein langer, steiniger Weg / Eine Welt ohne Krieg (
A World Without War)
3,8/5 (bei 2 Stimmen)
March 1945 - December 1945: A few weeks after the death of President Roosevelt shocks the country, Germany surrenders. Meanwhile, American sailors, soldiers and Marines endure the worst battle of the Pacific - Okinawa. In August, American planes drop atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the Japanese, too, surrender. Millions return home - to try to learn how to live in a world without war.