War in the Air (TV Series 1954– ) Poster

(1954– )

User Reviews

Review this title
2 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
10/10
A Kind of 'World at War' some 20 years before...
flugluftholgate13 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I have only just heard of this series, recently its been offered free by a UK newspaper. It consists of 6 DVD's with 2 (or 3) episodes on each disk. I have only watched a couple of episodes but I enjoyed them immensely. I would say it is very much like the US production 'Victory at Sea' and in fact they compliment each other both in style and feel. 'Victory at Sea' was for sale in the UK for around a £1 for each DVD a few years ago! So, one series for free and the other for a £1 a DVD! You can certainly build up a large library with out going crazy! Back to 'War in the Air'. It been the early days of television, its in black and white (monotone), has loud music and the commentary is still like the newsreels from the war years. Its not all aeroplanes, there's some good footage of warships and tanks and in the episodes I watched some rare footage of German V-2 rockets I have never seen. I am mainly interested in spaceflight and rocketry and found 'Facing New Weapons' on disk 4 fascinating. On disk 6 'The Past and Future' there's some footage of a unmanned B-17 been destroyed by a early surface-to-air missile. It was filmed by Clyde Tombough discoverer of the planet Pluto, he used a telescope and camera of his own design and filmed the interception some 20 miles away! Yes, well worth watching and adding to any film library.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Lengthy Overview of Modern Air Power.
rmax30482314 December 2012
The briefest possible summary: 1. The Fated Sky. Summary of the development of early air with an emphasis on the Luftwaffe.

2. Battle for Britain. Luftwaffe vs. the RAF.

3. Fifty North. Air in Scandinavia.

4. Maximum Effort. The first thousand-bomber raid.

5. Desert Air Force. Tribulations and triumphs in North Africa.

6. Combined Ops. Gliders and paratroops.

7. The Rising Sun. Japan conquers Southeast Asia.

8. Round the Clock. Bomber command and the USAF pound Germany.

9. Wings Over Italy. The slogging match up the boot.

10. Overlord. Paratroops, bombs, and fighter-bombers clear the way.

11. Facing New Weapons. Jets, the V-1 and the V-2.

12. The Cold Dawn. Germany gives up.

13. Eastern Victory. Japan gives up.

14. The Unquiet Peace. The Cold War and Korea.

15. Past and Future. A summing up.

It's not quite like most of the other post-war documentary series. The earlier ones -- "Victory at Sea" and "Crusade in Europe" -- were almost victory laps. "The World at War" introduced a human elements and the adversary's point of view. This one is almost leisurely in its coverage of the war, and it doesn't demonize the enemy quite as much.

There are no talking heads. It's all combat footage, newsreels, and war-time documentaries. Some of the footage -- especially from gun cameras -- is already familiar but what's surprising is that so much of it is not. This was only 1954 -- nine years after the war ended -- and the producers seem to have taken into account that some of the Germans, at least, were human. (The Japanese remain problematic.) I'd never seen the shots of Hitler saluting at a ceremony honoring the dead. And, though many are familiar with Harris's "reap the whirlwind" speech, I'd never seen footage of German civilians huddling in the basement while their cities were destroyed, one of the civilians being a pretty little blond girl. Missing from the gun camera footage, and from almost ALL war documentaries, is to me the most unforgettable. Not the locomotive penetrated by bullets and spurting plumes of steam. Instead, a frantic French farmer in his cart, trotting his horse along a dirt road, before farmer, cart, and horse all disappear together in a cloud of dust, riddled by bullets from a fighter-bomber.

None of the narrators (which include Ralph Richardson if my ear is correct) comments on the foolishness of it all. First, a great big destructive war. Then, before we can even settle down, another smaller one in Korea, a point at which the series ends. Now, of course, we're faced with multiple smaller ones. It seems never to end.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed