In episodes 11 and 12, the Allies try to turn victory in North Africa into a direct road toward Nazi Germany, only to discover that Italy will be anything but the “soft underbelly” Winston Churchill imagined. From Sicily to Salerno, Anzio, Monte Cassino and the long road to Rome, the campaign becomes a grinding test of endurance, strategy and sacrifice. What was hoped to be a swift breakthrough into the heart of Hitler’s Reich turns into months of mud, mountains, shattered towns and devastating losses, revealing the brutal cost of forcing open a new front in Europe. The story then rises into the skies, where another deadly battle is being fought above the continent. Allied bomber crews fly from England into the heart of Nazi-occupied Europe, facing freezing altitude, flak, fear and the lethal power of the German Luftwaffe. As B-17s, fighter escorts and air commanders struggle to win control of the air, every mission becomes a gamble between destruction and survival. Together, these episodes show a war closing in on Germany from the ground and from the sky, where courage, technology and human endurance collide on a terrifying scale.
As German forces sweep across North Africa under the command of the legendary General Rommel, a desperate struggle unfolds in the burning deserts of Libya and Egypt. Through intense combat, strategic brilliance, and extraordinary resistance, Allied soldiers face impossible odds during the siege of Tobruk and the decisive battle of El Alamein. Combining both episodes into one complete feature-length experience, this gripping documentary follows the dramatic campaign that helped change the course of the Second World War and transformed the desert into one of history’s most legendary battlefields. Using restored archival footage, detailed battle reconstructions, and powerful historical analysis, the documentary brings viewers directly into the chaos, tension, and human cost of the North African campaign. From relentless tank warfare to the psychological duel between Rommel and the Allied commanders, the story builds toward one of the most important turning points of the war, delivering a compelling and highly immersive experience for anyone fascinated by military history, strategy, and World War II.
Hidden beneath the cold waters of the North Atlantic lies the untold story of one of World War II’s longest and most decisive campaigns. This documentary journeys to the north-west coast of Ireland, where deep-sea divers search for the wrecks of Hitler’s feared U-boat fleet, revealing silent battlefields that still bear the scars of war. Through these submerged remains, the film brings history to life, showing how the struggle for control of the seas shaped the fate of nations. Interwoven with the dives are personal memories from families in Northern Ireland and expert analysis from historians, uncovering the region’s vital role in the Allied fightback. As the wrecks emerge from the darkness, so do the human stories of courage, loss, and survival, transforming a military campaign into a powerful reflection on the true cost of war.
On July 25th, 2020, people all over the world filmed their lives and shared their stories to be part of a documentary film. When all the submissions were tallied, the filmmakers had received over 300,000 videos from 192 countries. The result is a stirring film about love, death, heartbreak, and hope that looks beyond geography and circumstance to explore what connects us as humans.
For the first time, you will see dramatic moments of WWII that were captured in 3D with stereographs and then shuttered away in secret archives and attics, until now. This stunning collection of colour 3D photos includes Allied reconnaissance photos, a trove of images that documents the rise and fall of the Third Reich, and photos secretly taken by a civilian in occupied France. WWII IN 3D also features an actual 3D motion picture film shot by the Nazis in 1943 and creates a fully immersive, three dimensional portrait of history's largest and bloodiest conflict.
The determination of the German forces to keep on fighting in the face of defeat had disastrous consequences. After the Allied landings in the summer of 1944, the Wehrmacht was on the defensive on all fronts. It was clear to the German generals interned at Trent Park that Germany would soon lose the war. In mid-1944, Gerhard Graf von Schwerin chose to use common sense instead of blindly obeying Hitler's orders. He decided to surrender the city of Aachen to the US army to avoid bloodshed. Other commanders such as Field Marshal Ferdinand Schorner kept on pushing their soldiers to give their all. Despite being outnumbered by the Soviet forces, Schorner forced his soldiers to hold out in Sworbe, a 200 square kilometre peninsula on the coast of Estonia. Thousands of soldiers died. Yet Schorner's attitude and the urging by Hitler and Goebbels to hold out were accepted by a large number of young soldiers. By April 1944, the Ruhr pocket was completely surrounded, yet Field Marshal Model refused to surrender, so that 1.2 million German soldiers and a large number of Allied soldiers died between January and May 1945.
The story then rises into the skies, where another deadly battle is being fought above the continent. Allied bomber crews fly from England into the heart of Nazi-occupied Europe, facing freezing altitude, flak, fear and the lethal power of the German Luftwaffe. As B-17s, fighter escorts and air commanders struggle to win control of the air, every mission becomes a gamble between destruction and survival. Together, these episodes show a war closing in on Germany from the ground and from the sky, where courage, technology and human endurance collide on a terrifying scale.