The World at War Comments

  • Kay 2022-09-04 22:33:14

    Most treasured are visits to war participants, including Nazi Germany and Japan. Among the most impressive are the interviews with submarine commanders such as Dönitz in E11. When it comes to the success of the wolf pack tactics at the beginning, the smug look on their faces, you realize the attitude of the invaders towards...

  • Peyton 2022-09-04 21:17:53

    A large number of wartime video materials and the personal accounts of the witnesses of World War II most truly restore the era of war ravages. Too many man-made coincidences have created the inevitability of history. Paying a huge price in exchange for a lesson from the past is worth all living in the present or the future. The world thinks about...

  • Jennie 2022-09-04 14:03:48

    For the first time, I learned about World War II in a comprehensive and intuitive three-dimensional, three-dimensional, full-time, and full-angle manner. I have a deeper understanding of the so-called Allied powers representing justice and the Axis powers representing evil. It was an attempted national revenge incident. The righteous side also started with injustice. Various pursuits and appeasement and watching the fire from the other side, even as ugly as the Soviet Union, actually felt a...

  • Breana 2022-09-04 12:46:24

    The World at War...

  • Kara 2022-09-04 11:51:34

    British documentaries in the 1970s must have a Cold War mentality. For example, the Western Front is full of details, even the British light ban killed a few people, but the Eastern Front has not mentioned the several wars; another example is the market garden action, but it has a large space to talk about the tragic Warsaw Uprising, accusing the Soviet Union. The army is desperate; there are only a few episodes in the Asia-Pacific battlefield, and it takes time to talk about the military...

The World at War

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Language: English,German,French,Japanese Release date: September 14, 1973