WWII in HD | 
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| Directors: Frederic Lumiere, Matthew Ginsburg Actors: Gary Sinise, Justin Bartha, Rob Lowe, Josh Lucas, Steve Zahn Studio: A&E Home Video Category: DVD
List Price: $29.95 Buy New: $13.87 You Save: $16.08 (54%)
New (39) Used (8) from $13.86
Rating: 94 reviews Sales Rank: 1841
Format: Color, DVD, Letterboxed, NTSC Language: English (Original Language) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Region: 1 Discs: 3 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Running Time: 455 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: AAAE209330 UPC: 733961209334 EAN: 0733961209334 ASIN: B002RUNMMO
Release Date: January 26, 2010 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description WWII IN HD
Amazon.com At first glance, the very concept of WWII in HD seems like an oxymoron. After all, isn't the footage from back then nothing more than grainy black-and-white newsreel? And really, how much definition can be added to film that was shot more than 60 years ago? The answers: no, and quite a lot, actually. The quality of much of what is seen in the course of these 10 episodes (each around 45 minutes long) is surprisingly good. Add to that the fact that most of it is in color (not colorized, but originally recorded in that medium, some at the behest of the United States government), and the result is nothing short of astonishing. It's not easy viewing; there are sequences that are shockingly graphic (vivid examples include the carnage on view after major battles and the shots of Japanese civilians on the Pacific island of Saipan hurling themselves off cliffs to avoid capture by American troops). But all of it has been put to good use in what is undoubtedly one of the most compelling accounts of World War II ever produced. Other documentaries have chronicled the same events seen here, from the earliest days of the war (when Hitler was overrunning Europe and the ill-prepared Americans were still years away from becoming involved), through Pearl Harbor, the major confrontations with the Japanese in the Pacific theater (like Guadalcanal, Tarawa, the Battle of the Philippine Sea, and the incomparably bloody Iwo Jima) and with the Germans in Europe and North Africa (the invasion of Tunisia, D-day, the Battle of the Bulge), and straight on to victory in Europe and finally the Japanese surrender after Hiroshima and Nagasaki. But what separates WWII in HD is the filmmakers' decision to view these events through the experiences of a dozen individuals who were actually there, including a couple of war correspondents (one of whom, Richard Tregaskis, was the author of the seminal Guadalcanal Diary); an Austrian immigrant who escaped the Nazis and almost immediately enlisted in the U.S. Army; a nurse with General George Patton's Third Army; an African-American pilot who was one of the famed Tuskegee Airmen; a Japanese-American medic who fought heroically while his family was held in an internment camp; and others from the rank and file. All of them are voiced by such actors as Rob Lowe, Amy Smart, Steve Zahn, Josh Lucas, and LL Cool J; and with Gary Sinise providing voice-over narration, the whole piece comes off as a dramatic film as much as a straight documentary (an effect also enhanced by some brilliantly creative juxtapositions of words, images, and music). Not all of these men and women made it through the war (those still alive also appear in on-camera interviews), but none could ever forget the horrors they witnessed, and while those of us who did not serve will never really comprehend the sacrifices they made, this remarkable program may be as close as we can get. --Sam Graham Stills from WWII in HD (Click for larger image)
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 94
Peak student curiosity August 28, 2010 Roxie L My team showed about 45 minutes of this video to about 150 students in a kick-off event to study World war II. The kids never lost attention because this video has so much information, in a color film format, paced so well. They picked up so much in just one showing, and it really gave them wonderful background to peak their interest and to which they have connected information. This was a really great purchase for teaching.
There was one section with a veteran who used a swear word or two, but we just lowered the volume momentarily. There was a execution in Austria, I believe, of about 30 innocent townsmen by the Nazis when we opted to cover the lens.
A feature for our purposes was that real veterans were recounting their experiences in WWII. Actor voices often took over for the vets, I believe to improve the quality and strength of the voices against war footage. It was transitioned quite seemlessly.
A Great Series; Deserves a Better Name August 17, 2010 Wade H. Rice, Jr. (Alexandria,, Virginia USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
There's not much I can add to the numerous comments, both positive and negative about the series. The important thing is the producers realized that what color footage existed of World War II needed to be located soon and archived in high definition media for future generations to see what one of history's tragedies looked like as close to true life as possible, before it too, became lost to eternity, along with the experiences (and lives) of some of the veterans who fought in this war. The wonderful thing about this series is we now have the recollections of an additional dozen veterans (about half of them still alive) along with those who contributed to earlier WWII television series, such as the British "The World at War" and the PBS Network/Ken Burns' "The War".
I think that this series could probably have benefited from a better name than the one given it. Simply calling it "WWII in HD" doesn't give the series the full scope of the justice it received. Probably something like "WWII as Experienced by Those Who Fought in It" would be better, but that still doesn't quite hit the nail on the head. This series probably goes the furthest of any to document poignantly and as realistically as possible, the experiences of those who were in combat first hand. It dwells on the horrors of war, and doesn't have a political or sociological axe to grind as Ken Burns did in his series. The concluding few minutes of the last episode of the series makes this clear; that WWII was a tragedy for the entire human race, regardless of one's ethnicity or nationality. The concluding comments about WWII in general as made by Tuskegee airman Shelby Westbrook could not have been better put.
This series presupposes some prior knowledge of WWII, and for those who know little about WWII, "WWII in HD" is not the best place to start. The best place to start is probably the British series, "The World at War", providing a good video overview, and is universally recognized as the reference in the visual medium. Other than that, there are innumerable books and multi-volume encyclopedic series on WWII, too numerous to mention here. Ken Burns' "The War" can be viewed as a companion series to "WWII in HD".WWII in HD [Blu-ray]
The best addicting documentary that I've seen August 17, 2010 Hoang M. Nguyen (Baltimore, MD USA) As soon as you pop the disc in your blu ray player you will have probably experienced the best documentary of WW2 in your life.I liked the way the story was told. Just when you think its about to get boring it gets even more insane. None stop action with so much critical information it makes you feel blessed to even live in this time period. One of my friends came over to pick up something he left behind the other day and he literally stayed for the next 4 hours because he got sucked right in. This is a good show for you to watch with friends and family because there is a ton of things to talk about from every aspect of the movie. There are a lot of footage on this show that you will never get to see on T.V or regular WW2 documents. The quality of the picture is amazing because everything is restored and handled delicately. Even the oldest footage looks good.
I highly recommend this to anybody even if they don't like violence and war because if it wasn't for our soldiers and vets we would not have obtain the freedom we have today and watching this lets you understand the arduous lifestyle of the military people and their sacrifice to America.
Blu-Ray will not play on the S-300 August 16, 2010 Jonathan Monaco (Hicksville, NY United States) 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
The first disc on thew Blu-Ray will no play if you have a Sony Blu-Ray player model s-300, it does not matter what firmware you are running. Very disappointing.
Good but... July 29, 2010 Tim Phillips WWII in HD has very good image quality. Unfortunately, it doesn't lay out the war in detail about what happened when and why, but more follows the the lives of a few people who were involved in the war. It tends to focus on the emotions of war and what certain soldiers were thinking and feeling rather than a full description of the war in detail. Also, it shows a lot of graphic images from the battle field, which for the most part is fine and realistic. Although, the images were slightly more graphic than I preferred. Overall, a great presentation of the war, just not what I was looking for.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 94
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