Berlin 1945: Tagebuch einer Großstadt
- Miniserie de TV
- 2020
- 52min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
8.2/10
374
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaLife in Berlin in 1945 before, during and after the battle of Berlin seen through the eyes of those who were there at the time from common Berliners to Allied troops.Life in Berlin in 1945 before, during and after the battle of Berlin seen through the eyes of those who were there at the time from common Berliners to Allied troops.Life in Berlin in 1945 before, during and after the battle of Berlin seen through the eyes of those who were there at the time from common Berliners to Allied troops.
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Opiniones destacadas
While this was an excellent series on an often overlooked aspect of WW2 I wish there had been translations of the many newspaper articles they posted. I also wish there had been translations of various radio speeches etc rather than "Foreign language being spoken". Other than finding that frustrating, it was very informative.
I have been an avid viewer of WW2 documentaries for decades and this series did contain film footage of images I have not seen before. The fact that 2 million people lived in that bombed out town was astounding. Berlin was absolutely obliterated. Interesting to watch in terms of recent geopolitical situations.
I have been an avid viewer of WW2 documentaries for decades and this series did contain film footage of images I have not seen before. The fact that 2 million people lived in that bombed out town was astounding. Berlin was absolutely obliterated. Interesting to watch in terms of recent geopolitical situations.
This is so much different from most war documentaries. Instead of focusing on the psychopathic war criminals who fed their young boys into the meat grinder and managed to get millions of women and children pointlessly killed in the bargain, this series presents the perspective of people who were living in Berlin and the foreign armies who conquered the city.
The narrative is created out of the personal journal entries of Berliners, army vets and others. Read by voice actors. And matched up with some amazing film footage that are, at times, frank and disturbing, but always fascinating.
It's like a ''Rubble Film" shot in real time.
I couldn't recommend this highly enough. I guarantee most people have never seen anything like it.
The narrative is created out of the personal journal entries of Berliners, army vets and others. Read by voice actors. And matched up with some amazing film footage that are, at times, frank and disturbing, but always fascinating.
It's like a ''Rubble Film" shot in real time.
I couldn't recommend this highly enough. I guarantee most people have never seen anything like it.
Shown in the UK as 3 x 1 hour episodes with English dubbing and titles, this mini series contains much footage not previously seen in similar documentaries. This and the style of commentary of characters reading from real diaries brings home what life was like at the end of WW2 in Europe. I found it fascinating. My only minor quibble would be a voiceover by a USAAF American airman over some footage of British RAF Lancaster bombers.
I certainly hope that this 2 part documentary will find a larger audience as it was a simply stunning document in a critical year of a city as told (via voice actors) of first person accounts of what happened in and around Berlin in 1945.
This was not a paint-by-numbers documentary - it could be put up against any of the best historical works in documentary by such notables as Ken Burns.
So glad I had a chance to see this on Germany television (on ARTE) - again this will hopefully receive a wider release as many would undoubtedly enjoy the thoroughness and artistry on display.
This documentary series uses archive footagae coupled with contemporaneous ddiary entries to give us a flavour of life in bombed-out Berlin in 1945. It must have been an extraordinary time to live through, as residents faced with physical and economic ruin, national defeat and the collapse of the ideology that had driven the war. The pictures are amazing; the diary excerpts are all (in the English version) read in uniform flat monotone (I understand the choice not to over-dramatise, but it does flatten the effect). An interesting question is how Berliners were coming to terms with their own involvement with Nazism; mainly, one senses, though denial (few loved Hitler once he had destroyed the country, but this is of course missing the point). Reflections with perspective have their own problems, of course, but they can provide insight that a terse journal can not. The program is still worth watching, however, especially for those of us sufficiently fortnate not to have to have witnessed anything like the scences that it depicts.
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 52min
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 16 : 9
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