The World at War
- For other uses, see World at War (disambiguation)
The World at War | |
---|---|
Created by | Jeremy Isaacs |
No. of series | 1 |
Production | |
Producer | Thames Television |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | ITV |
Release | 31 October, 1973 – 8 May, 1974 |
The World at War was a 1974 26-episode television documentary series on World War II, the events that led up to it, and those that followed in its wake. The series was produced by Jeremy Isaacs for Thames Television (UK). The series was narrated by Sir Laurence Olivier and its score was written by Carl Davis.
The series interviewed leading members of the Allied and Axis campaigns, including eyewitness accounts by civilians, enlisted men, officers, and politicians, among them Albert Speer, Karl Dönitz, Jimmy Stewart, Bill Mauldin, Curtis LeMay, Lord Mountbatten, Alger Hiss, Paul Tibbets, Anthony Eden, Traudl Junge and historian Stephen Ambrose. It is often considered to be the definitive television history of the Second World War, and considered by some the finest example of the documentary form, although much critically important information, such as the systematic breaking of Germany's codes by Britain which allowed Germany's secret communications to be intercepted, remained secret at the time.
In a list of the 100 Greatest British Television Programmes drawn up by the British Film Institute in 2000, voted for by industry professionals, The World at War was placed 19th.
The episodes
The series had 26 episodes. Producer Jeremy Isaacs asked a historian to list fifteen key campaigns of the war and devoted one episode to each. The remaining eleven episodes were devoted to other issues such as home life in Britain and Germany, the experience of occupation in The Netherlands, and the Nazis' use of genocide.
The episodes were:
- A New Germany (1933–1939)
- Distant War (September 1939–May 1940)
- France Falls (May–June 1940)
- Alone: The Battle of Britain (May 1940–May 1941)
- Barbarossa (June–December 1941)
- Banzai: Japan Strikes (1931–1942)
- On our Way: America Enters the War (1939–1942)
- Desert: The War in North Africa (1940–1943)
- Stalingrad (June 1942–February 1943)
- Wolfpack: U-Boats in the North Atlantic (1939–1943)
- Red Star: The Soviet Union (1941–1943)
- Whirlwind: Bombing Germany (September 1939–April 1944)
- Tough Old Gut: Italy
- It's a lovely day tomorrow: Burma (1942–1943)
- Home Fires: Britain (1940–1944)
- Inside the Reich: Germany (1940–1944)
- Morning: Normandy Invasion (June–August 1944)
- Occupation: Holland (1940–1944)
- Pincers (August 1944–March 1945)
- Genocide (1941–1945)
- Nemesis (February–May 1945)
- Japan (1941–1945)
- Pacific - The Island to Island War (February 1942–July 1945)
- The Atomic Bomb (February–September 1945)
- Reckoning (April 1945)
- Remember
The series was originally transmitted on the ITV network in the United Kingdom between 31 October 1973 and 8 May 1974. It has subsequently been shown around the world.
Each episode was 52 minutes excluding commercials; as was customary for ITV documentary series at the time, it was originally screened with only one central break. The Genocide episode was screened uninterrupted.
Later, seven additional episodes, narrated by Eric Porter, were added to the series. These varied in length and were as follows:
- Secretary to Hitler.
- Warrior.
- Hitler's Germany: 1933 - 1939.
- Hitler's Germany: 1939 - 1945.
- The Two Deaths of Hitler.
- The Final Solution: Part 1.
- The Final Solution: Part 2.
=