Agrega una trama en tu idiomaBased on information derived from formerly classified documents and messages, coupled with interviews with experts, authors and eyewitnesses from all over the world, SECRET OF WAR is the mos... Leer todoBased on information derived from formerly classified documents and messages, coupled with interviews with experts, authors and eyewitnesses from all over the world, SECRET OF WAR is the most comprehensive documentary series ever produced on "secrets of war" throughout the last c... Leer todoBased on information derived from formerly classified documents and messages, coupled with interviews with experts, authors and eyewitnesses from all over the world, SECRET OF WAR is the most comprehensive documentary series ever produced on "secrets of war" throughout the last century. Narrated by Charlton Heston, this acclaimed series features declassified and rare ... Leer todo
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- 2 premios ganados en total
Opiniones destacadas
Unfortunately, the notion promoted by the US military to this day that in Vietnam the Americans scored all those "battlefield victories" goes unchallenged here. In truth the whole idea of what a victory is, even what constitutes a "battle", had to be re-thought in that conflict.
There also are some outright distortions, such as the reason behind Operation Linebackers I and II--the notorious "Christmas Bombing" of Hanoi. It was not Hanoi's intransigence that caused the Paris peace talks to stall. The problem was the administration in Saigon--our own side, that is--that showed a sudden and very ill- timed independence and balked at signing the accords, knowing it had no popular support in the South.
I liked the calm interviews, the old photos used, the old videos used for each relevant interview, the calm setting, the very deep history research. Some have complained about the show being biased in a left-wing direction, but at least in this episode the bias was not significant. It's largely about USSR vs. Britain and USA and most progressives don't love USSR that much so there is not much room for bias in this one story. I guess it shows how one needs to pick the right story and setting to study. It's very great stuff and very much an ideal intro to this spy ring. No matter the bias in other episodes the quality of narration, the history lessons, and the old material hold up to a way above average level which by itself is enjoyable. I would recommend watching this and then also watching something with a neutral/right-wing bias at the same time to get the full picture. For me this episode was pretty much an ideal retelling of the story and very impressive.
Check it out.
However, that said, it's a knowledge of history that can provide from-an-unexpected-perspective both hope and tranquility. Because, a study of history makes clear that none of the "evils" nor issues we face in the present are anything essentially new to humanity, and that, despite history showing that humanity isn't getting qualitatively better, history also shows that humanity is not at all getting qualitatively worse. People and situations have always been "this bad", yet, humanity is still here plodding along.
This series makes clear that people and situations today are no worse than people and situations were fifty and seventy-five years ago. For example, as this series evidences, US politicians, presidents, and military and government leaders served their personal agendas and smiled while blatantly lying to the US citizenry and the world then no less than they do today. US government used whatever technology was available then to spy on its own citizens and on other nations, and did so under the justification, "defending US interests". US corporations interfered in the governments of other nations when they felt their profits threatened. Words and phrases were deliberately crafted and manipulated by government and businesses in order to discredit competitors and malign those who disagreed with policy. The US public lived in fear then too, no less and perhaps moreso than the fear felt today. And yet, after all that and more, neither the US nor the world "ended". Despite it all, humanity manages to keep its head above water and continue on.
This series affirms that "nothing is new under the sun." Its scrutiny of history demonstrates that it's possible for humans to create some shade for ourselves at times. But, more importantly, this series impresses that the glare isn't any worse than ever, and so gives reason not to despair despite that glare being relentless. In spite of ourselves, humanity survives and presses onward.
Perhaps the most interesting episode is on the "Spy Games of World War II" disc, which describes the "battlefield magic" the British used to defeat Gen. Erwin Rommel during the North African campaign.
Military and history buffs will undoubtedly eat up the material. And general audiences will unquestionably reap educational benefits.
Unfortunately, memories of these wars have faded, and young people today have little knowledge or understanding of World War II, why it was fought and its consequences. Clearly, our educational system is at fault.
Ask a high school senior what the Manhattan Project is, and he or she will guess that it's the name of a rock group. What a pity!
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- TriviaThe 65 hour series Sworn to Secrecy: Secrets of War is the largest single body of work in Charlton Heston's esteemed career.
Selecciones populares
- How many seasons does Secrets of War have?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitios oficiales
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- History Exposed
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 53min
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.33 : 1