The Fighting Lady (1944)
World War 2
•
55m
The film was directed by Edward Steichen with William Wyler as an uncredited co-director. The battle footage is absolutely first-rate, much of it captured by automated cameras directly mounted on the aircraft guns.
The carrier is never named in the film because of wartime restrictions, but was later identified as the Yorktown, whose Captain, (subsequently Admiral) Joseph “Jocko” Clark is seen in the picture.
Mostly shot on the Yorktown (CV-10), a few scenes were made on the Ticonderoga (CV-14) and the Bunker Hill (CV-17), all Essex-class carriers.
The Yorktown was commissioned in April 1943, and was heavily engaged throughout the war in the Pacific. She also operated in the Korea and Vietnam Wars, and was used to recover the Apollo 8 space capsule in December 1968. Decommissioned in 1970 it is now a museum ship at Patriots Point, Mount Pleasant, South Carolina.
Up Next in World War 2
-
Supermarine Spitfire
Supermarine's Spitfire is undoubtedly one of the iconic fighters of WWII, and continues to garner support from warbird enthusiasts worldwide. 22 distinct major versions of the Spitfire were developed to meet the operational demands of the war. Australia's involvement with the Spitfire began in th...
-
Report from the Aleutians (1943)
Report from the Aleutians (1943) is a 46 minute documentary directed
by John Huston, an iconic (and frequently iconoclastic) director of
some 40 feature films, many regarded as classics, over a 45 year
career. During World War II he served in the Army Signal Corps with the rank
of Captain, making... -
Worse Than Omaha Beach - River Assaul...
In late January 1944, during the brutal Italian Campaign of World War II, the U.S. 36th Infantry Division was ordered to launch a night river assault across the Rapido River near Cassino. Intended to support the Allied landings at Anzio and break through the German Gustav Line, the operation woul...