The True Glory (1945)
WWII Training & Propaganda
•
1h 21m
The footage is first-rate, taken by hundreds of battle cameramen and expertly edited into a fast-moving account of an immensely complex and dramatic story. There is some narration, principally by Leslie Banks, but the story is told mostly in the words of ordinary soldiers who were there.
Much of the material has become familiar over the years, reused many times. But at the time it was new, vivid and even shocking. Credit is also given to the many nationalities involved in the struggle — Poles, Czechs, the Maquis, and others. Directed by Garson Kanin and Carol Reed and scored by William Alwyn, it won the Best Documentary Academy Award for 1945.
Up Next in WWII Training & Propaganda
-
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... -
December 7th (1943)
December 7th (made in 1943) is a striking manifestation of its time, a feature-length docudrama about the bombing of Pearl Harbor that is often at cross purposes with itself in the message it means to convey.
Gregg Toland, the brilliant cinematographer fresh off of Citizen Kane, The Little Foxes ...