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Battle Of San Pietro + Winning The War On Film WWII DVD, Download, USB

Battle Of San Pietro + Winning The War On Film WWII DVD, Download, USB
Battle Of San Pietro + Winning The War On Film WWII DVD, Download, USB
Item# john-huston-wwii-films-battle-of-san-pietro-december-7th-dv7
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US Army Captain And Film Director John Huston's Haunting Second World War Film THE BATTLE OF SAN PIETRO - So Graphic The U.S. Banned It From General Exhibition (Black/White, 1944 (US Army)/1945 (General Audiences), 33 Minutes) Plus Special Bonus Extra: WINNING THE WAR ON FILM, An Episode Of The WHILE SOLDIERS FOUGHT: WAR AND AMERICAN SOCIETY TV Series, That Analyzes Both THE BATTLE OF SAN PIETRO And Frank Capra's ''WHY WE FIGHT'' Film Series (Color, 1986, 28 Minutes), Presented In The Highest DVD Quality MPG Video Format Of 9.1 MBPS As An Archival Quality All Regions Format DVD, MP4 Video Download Or USB Flash Drive! #BattleOfSanPietroInfine #BattleOfSanPietro #WinterLine #ItalianCampaignWorldWarII #ItalianCampaignWWII #BattleForRome #MediterraneanAndMiddleEastTheatreOfWWII #MediterraneanAndMiddleEastTheaterOfWWII #JohnHuston #WarFilms #CombatPhotography #WorldWarII #WWII #WW2 #WorldWarTwo #WorldWar2 #SecondWorldWar #SecondEuropeanWar #EuropeanCivilWar #EuropeanTheatreOfWWII #DVD #VideoDownload #MP4 #USBFlashDrive

The Battle Of San Pietro is a documentary film directed by John Huston about the Battle of San Pietro Infine sixty miles from Naples during World War II. It was shot by Jules Buck. It was released in the U.S. in 1945 but shown to U.S. troops earlier. Huston and his crew - which included the British novelist and screenwriter Eric Ambler - were attached to the U.S. Army's 143rd Regiment of the 36th Division. Unlike many other military documentaries, it was claimed Huston's cameramen filmed alongside the infantrymen as they fought their way up the hills to reach San Pietro. Huston's claim that the film was made during the battle was proven false by the research of Peter Maslowski in his 1993 book, Armed With Cameras. The film is unflinching in its realism. One scene includes close-up views of the faces of dead soldiers as they are being loaded into body bags, a level of realism unheard of in both fictional portrayals as well as newsreel footage of the time. The United States Army delayed its release to the public because it showed dead GIs wrapped in mattress covers; some officers tried to prevent soldiers in training from seeing it, for fear of damaging morale. General George Marshall came to Huston and took the film's defense, stating that because of the film's gritty realism, it would make a good training film. The depiction of death would inspire soldiers to take their training more seriously. Huston quickly became unpopular with the Army, not only for the film but also for his response to the accusation that the film was anti-war. Huston responded that if he ever made a pro-war film, he should be shot. The film was screened to U.S. troops in North Africa in 1944, where John Horne Burns described it in a letter as "almost more than any heart can stand". Huston was no longer considered a pariah; he was decorated and eventually promoted to major. In 1991, The Battle of San Pietro was selected for the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". The film was preserved by the Academy Film Archive in 2005.