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Friday, May 02, 2025

" Victory At Sea " WWII Naval Combat of the Atlantic

VIDEO HERE  (53:22 minutes)

Written by Henry Salomon and Richard Hanser, “Victory at Sea” (1954) is a black-and-white feature-length film adaptation of the television series (NBC, 1952-1953) about naval warfare during World War II. The film, which is narrated by Alexander Scourby, features first-hand archival footage of the battles it references and a famous score by Robert Russel Bennet. This installment of the film is part 1 and depicts the first 50 minutes of the 90-minute documentary and largely focuses on the beginning of WWII and the Western Front with some attention given to the war in the Pacific. 

Film opens, opening credits (0:07). Debris, surviving soldiers in North Atlantic; Remnants/ survivors of submarine warfare (1:02). Montage shots of bombs raining down on Europe, buildings being flattened to the ground across Poland, Norway, Belgium, Russia (Barmaley Fountain, Stalingrad), Holland, France (1:53). Displaced people flee fighting, horse-drawn carts packed to brim with personal belongings; Mass graves (2:08). Londoners shelter in tube station Piccadilly Circus, footage from Battle of Britain (2:38). Attack on Pearl Harbor, Japanese planes take off from aircraft carrier in middle of Pacific; Cuts to scenes of calmness, unsuspecting Honolulu as enemy planes (Aichi D3A Type 99 ‘Val’) lurk overhead, close-up Aloha Tower (3:22). Japanese strategy of dominating South East Asia, footage destruction, chaos across Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia as Japanese carry out conquest (7:30). Hitler stands aboard train, rides across Europe, view from window of packed train platforms filled with Nazi flags and supporters (8:20). Colosseum in Rome, Hitler meets Mussolini (1938), aerial views of military parade in city center (8:37). Hitler visits Nazi naval fleet (9:32). Emperor Hirohito aboard Japanese Imperial Fleet (9:48). Draft in America, Roosevelt signs Selective Service Act, young men report for duty and complete training, American home front rallies behind efforts (10:27). America and the Pacific Theater: American naval fleets patrolling at sea, 1942 America’s first offensive action with Japan on Guadalcanal (Solomon Islands), footage as Marines head to land to begin offensive (13:14). Marines face treacherous conditions in Guadalcanal, camouflage among trees/grasslands, target enemy in jungle; Other missions across the Solomon Islands and New Guinea (15:34). British Royal Navy holding crucial battle line in Mediterranean from Gibraltar to east of Suez Canal; Strategy of Sir Francis Drake, Horatio Nelson (19:38). Italian surface fleet (Regia Marina); Battle of Calabria between Italy and Britain; Fleet of RAF Curtiss Mohawk IVs bombardment from air; Axis armies defeated at sea affecting delivery of supplies to troops stationed across North Africa (21:28). Operation Torch: British, American invasion of French North Africa; Consolidated B-24 liberator (24:38). Axis POWs of North Africa and Stalingrad (25:00). American home front, mass production of weapons, tanks; Aerial view of supplies piled high outside factory, goods loaded onto carrier ships in New York Harbor (25:12). Aerial view of convoys with supplies in vast open sea, aerial cover provided by planes/ blimps, nonetheless North Atlantic deemed “Black Pit” and threat of U-boat attack lurked everywhere, natural threat of fog (26:00). Admiral Karl Dönitz, German commander of submarine warfare, “wolfpack” strategy (28:58). Allies improve means of detection, tide shifts in the Atlantic in favor of Allies, depth charges force U-boats far below surface (32:23). Aerial view Port of Naples, beginning of March on Rome, rubble and ruins across Italy and rounding up of axis soldiers, footage liberation of Rome after Battle of Monte Cassino; Speech Pope Pius XII at Vatican (34:46). Normandy Landings: Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower D-Day Message; Operation Overlord boats crossing English Channel for Europe, Allied assault on German Luftwaffe prior to invasion, landing crafts arrive on beach and assault on Western front commences (37:19-45:33). Pacific Theatre: Montage debris, destroyed jungle and coastline, killed soldiers in the surf; American submarines sinking Japanese merchant ships (45:36). Pearl Harbor base for submarine repairs, relaxation of soldiers between deployments; Waikiki Beach; Hula dancers (47:20). American ships battle against natural threat of typhoons at sea in middle of Pacific (49:31). Film ends (53:14).

14 comments:

  1. My dad a WWII army vet rarely watched docs on the war but we watched these together.

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  2. The music of Richard Rogers is thrilling and unforgettable.

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  3. Robert Russell Bennett's VAS score lit the flame of my love for classical followed by all music...well maybe skip fat ladies singing!

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  4. Not just the Atlantic. There were a number of episodes about the Pacific War.

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  5. They could put this on METV and a lot of people would learn something

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  6. I was enthralled by the documentary when it was broadcast on TV when I was a kid. I have the complete series on DVD and I watch it every couple of years. It's been a while; I think I'll get it out this weekend.

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  7. My dad was a submariner in the south Pacific. He never talked about what he did and saw.
    His only comment was that he'd never been so scared for so long. He did say that he had traded places with another sailor so that sailor would be on a boat with his best friend.
    That boat never came back.

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  8. The complete 26 original episodes are also available on YouTube:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fSCWi0ivx9w&list=PLMOJ05TrdIZA7pNQa5YjrHuPIDPdHPIod

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  9. when my dad was in hospice, the one thing he wanted was to watch and listen to Victory At Sea. we couldn't find it anywhere at any price. I tried for weeks. the best I could do was the 2nd album of a 3 album set of vinyl records..not good enough.

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  10. As kids in the early '50s Victory at Sea was a weekly must watch. It was a great inspiration for many males of my generation to "join up" after high school.

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  11. I watched it on TV in the 50's then bought the soundtrack in ever format except 8-track. I still have the first suite on 45, what's available on CD, and the complete set on LP from Mobile Fidelity. I had the video on VHS and now DVD. I wish someone would record the entire soundtrack with a full symphony orchestra.

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  12. The entire series is on You Tube and is better than the movies which came out later. The highest quality videos are at

    https://www.youtube.com/@VictoryAtSeaOnline/videos

    Las, they are not in order as they are not in a play list.

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  13. I watched it on Sunday nights when it was new. Great documentary.

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