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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:13,346 --> 00:00:16,599 [somber, stately music plays] 2 00:00:40,832 --> 00:00:46,087 [bell tolling] 3 00:00:46,171 --> 00:00:48,590 [intriguing music playing] 4 00:00:52,510 --> 00:00:56,973 [Churchill] I shall attempt to recount the story of the coming upon mankind 5 00:00:58,183 --> 00:01:01,895 of the worst tragedy in its tumultuous history. 6 00:01:02,687 --> 00:01:04,189 [spotlight switch echoes] 7 00:01:04,272 --> 00:01:08,068 [field drum plays, music intensifies] 8 00:01:08,151 --> 00:01:10,070 [airplanes approach] 9 00:01:10,153 --> 00:01:11,696 [machine gun firing] 10 00:01:11,780 --> 00:01:13,782 [explosions echoing] 11 00:01:14,783 --> 00:01:17,660 [explosions and gunfire continue] 12 00:01:18,244 --> 00:01:21,372 [suspenseful music builds] 13 00:01:43,895 --> 00:01:44,895 [man] Prime Minister! 14 00:01:48,817 --> 00:01:50,318 Sir, what are you doing? 15 00:02:05,708 --> 00:02:09,838 - [explosions continue] - [air raid sirens wailing] 16 00:02:10,880 --> 00:02:12,757 [airplanes buzzing] 17 00:02:13,299 --> 00:02:15,135 [electricity crackling] 18 00:02:15,218 --> 00:02:17,178 [Jon Meacham] When the shadows lengthened, 19 00:02:19,013 --> 00:02:21,516 when darkness seemed to be falling, 20 00:02:23,101 --> 00:02:25,145 it was Churchill who said no. 21 00:02:26,980 --> 00:02:28,898 Evil would not prevail. 22 00:02:30,692 --> 00:02:33,862 [Dan Snow] Churchill's one of the dominant figures of the 20th century. 23 00:02:33,945 --> 00:02:37,866 He's a central part in the biggest, bloodiest war in human history. 24 00:02:37,949 --> 00:02:39,159 [plane engines roaring] 25 00:02:39,868 --> 00:02:43,913 When big countries think they can invade and take over smaller countries... 26 00:02:44,747 --> 00:02:50,378 Superpowers with different visions of how they should operate in the world... 27 00:02:51,129 --> 00:02:53,298 [Boris Johnson] Churchill believed in freedom, 28 00:02:53,381 --> 00:02:56,050 free speech, democracy. 29 00:02:56,843 --> 00:03:00,930 Those ideals are not uncontested today, far from it. 30 00:03:01,514 --> 00:03:04,184 {\an8}[Churchill] We are guardians of our country 31 00:03:04,267 --> 00:03:07,103 {\an8}in an age when her life is at stake. 32 00:03:08,229 --> 00:03:09,898 [Doug Douds] He is a warrior first, 33 00:03:10,481 --> 00:03:12,192 but then he's also this poet. 34 00:03:13,359 --> 00:03:16,279 [Johnson] Hitler made you feel that he could do anything. 35 00:03:16,362 --> 00:03:20,783 Churchill made you feel that you were capable of doing anything. 36 00:03:23,828 --> 00:03:27,665 [Churchill] We shall never cease to persevere against them 37 00:03:27,749 --> 00:03:29,834 until they have been taught a lesson 38 00:03:29,918 --> 00:03:32,337 which they and the world will never forget. 39 00:03:33,922 --> 00:03:37,759 Churchill said this is a threat unlike any we've faced in the last thousand years... 40 00:03:37,842 --> 00:03:38,760 [Hitler] Sieg heil! 41 00:03:38,843 --> 00:03:40,136 [all cheering] 42 00:03:40,220 --> 00:03:42,847 [Snow]...and Britain had to do everything it could to destroy it. 43 00:03:43,431 --> 00:03:48,770 [David H. Petraeus] All of our democracy was just hanging by a thread. 44 00:03:48,853 --> 00:03:51,022 He comes to seem as sort of an oracle. 45 00:03:53,733 --> 00:03:58,780 I am here today because he stood up against fascism. 46 00:04:00,073 --> 00:04:02,784 [Johnson] The establishment thought he was a warmonger 47 00:04:03,451 --> 00:04:05,203 and that he gloried in slaughter. 48 00:04:05,828 --> 00:04:09,290 [Churchill] We know it will be hard. We expect it will be long. 49 00:04:09,374 --> 00:04:11,918 We shall strive to resist him. 50 00:04:12,585 --> 00:04:14,345 [Sonia Purnell] There was blood on his hands. 51 00:04:14,420 --> 00:04:20,009 [Johnson] He was dangerous, egotistical, opportunist, brilliant. 52 00:04:20,927 --> 00:04:22,470 [Meacham] Churchill got a lot wrong. 53 00:04:23,096 --> 00:04:24,806 But if you're gonna get one thing right, 54 00:04:25,390 --> 00:04:27,934 the Second World War is pretty high up there. 55 00:04:28,017 --> 00:04:30,853 The world at times is starved for strong leaders. 56 00:04:32,021 --> 00:04:33,481 Churchill was a strong leader. 57 00:04:33,982 --> 00:04:36,526 If Churchill was still around, 58 00:04:36,609 --> 00:04:39,487 he would be like an alarm clock going off again, 59 00:04:39,570 --> 00:04:43,908 saying "Democracy has to be protected." 60 00:04:44,492 --> 00:04:45,492 "Wake up." 61 00:04:47,996 --> 00:04:50,957 [Douds] Every nation expects its leader 62 00:04:51,040 --> 00:04:53,376 should be like Winston Churchill in time of crisis. 63 00:04:54,669 --> 00:04:58,089 And arguably every leader since has fallen slightly short. 64 00:04:58,172 --> 00:04:59,507 [distant explosions] 65 00:04:59,590 --> 00:05:01,968 {\an8}[Churchill] In the high position I shall occupy, 66 00:05:02,593 --> 00:05:08,391 it will fall to me to save the Capital and save the Empire. 67 00:05:09,058 --> 00:05:12,061 - [music peaks and fades] - [distant air raid sirens wail] 68 00:05:22,030 --> 00:05:26,701 {\an8}[man on radio] A state of war once more exists between Great Britain and Germany. 69 00:05:27,410 --> 00:05:31,331 {\an8}[Hitler giving speech in German] 70 00:05:31,414 --> 00:05:32,498 {\an8}[Hitler] Sieg heil! 71 00:05:32,582 --> 00:05:34,709 {\an8}[Nazi crowd] Sieg heil! 72 00:05:36,502 --> 00:05:38,171 [Churchill] I was deeply anxious 73 00:05:38,254 --> 00:05:40,673 about the life of the people of London, 74 00:05:41,883 --> 00:05:45,428 {\an8}the greater part of whom stayed, slept, 75 00:05:46,763 --> 00:05:48,806 {\an8}and took a chance where they were. 76 00:05:50,391 --> 00:05:52,643 How long would it go on? 77 00:05:54,979 --> 00:05:57,732 How much more would they have to bear? 78 00:05:59,734 --> 00:06:01,736 [tense music playing] 79 00:06:01,819 --> 00:06:03,859 [Andrew Roberts] During the worst part of the Blitz, 80 00:06:03,905 --> 00:06:08,785 {\an8}there was 57 days of consecutive bombing every night. 81 00:06:08,868 --> 00:06:10,661 - [rubble clattering] - [man shouting] 82 00:06:10,745 --> 00:06:13,664 Civilian populations were under attack in London. 83 00:06:15,833 --> 00:06:19,045 Hitler wanted the British people to be bombed into submission. 84 00:06:20,296 --> 00:06:22,382 [indistinct crowd chatter] 85 00:06:22,965 --> 00:06:27,387 They're just savage raids designed to reduce British morale. 86 00:06:29,764 --> 00:06:32,934 It was exhausting for people. 87 00:06:33,017 --> 00:06:35,603 They were unable to sleep through the night. 88 00:06:36,396 --> 00:06:39,315 [sirens wailing] 89 00:06:39,399 --> 00:06:44,195 There was a serious danger that there would be demoralization. 90 00:06:45,071 --> 00:06:46,864 [solemn music playing] 91 00:06:47,573 --> 00:06:50,076 [Peri] The British people, they are worried. 92 00:06:51,911 --> 00:06:52,954 They are afraid. 93 00:06:53,871 --> 00:06:55,790 {\an8}They are in pretty dire straits. 94 00:06:58,209 --> 00:07:01,379 [Roberts] I don't think it's appreciated how close we could have come 95 00:07:01,462 --> 00:07:04,841 to the catastrophe of a Nazi-dominated Europe. 96 00:07:04,924 --> 00:07:06,426 [airplanes passing] 97 00:07:12,849 --> 00:07:18,312 [Purnell] And somehow, Winston had to keep a nation going through all of this, 98 00:07:19,188 --> 00:07:24,527 to give a nation belief that victory could be possible, survival even, 99 00:07:24,610 --> 00:07:28,156 {\an8}because you looked out the window and you couldn't imagine it could be. 100 00:07:31,117 --> 00:07:33,119 [siren wails in distance] 101 00:07:33,911 --> 00:07:37,498 {\an8}Churchill helped will a people through a terrible period of time. 102 00:07:39,208 --> 00:07:42,503 [Snow] He wanted to see the people of London. He wanted them to see him. 103 00:07:43,379 --> 00:07:48,468 {\an8}He knew that this was a battle for hearts and minds, and he had a role to play. 104 00:07:51,429 --> 00:07:54,265 [poignant music playing] 105 00:07:59,770 --> 00:08:01,439 [footsteps clattering in debris] 106 00:08:04,192 --> 00:08:07,195 [somber music swells] 107 00:08:11,908 --> 00:08:14,160 [bricks clattering] 108 00:08:20,750 --> 00:08:25,421 There wasn't any anti-aircraft last night. Why aren't we firing back? 109 00:08:25,505 --> 00:08:28,925 We can't shoot at a target in the dark, sir. 110 00:08:30,218 --> 00:08:31,844 It's a waste of ammunition. 111 00:08:33,846 --> 00:08:35,014 I don't care. 112 00:08:35,515 --> 00:08:38,226 I want us to fire back every night, no matter what. 113 00:08:38,309 --> 00:08:39,685 [dramatic music playing] 114 00:08:39,769 --> 00:08:42,188 They have to know we're fighting back. 115 00:08:43,648 --> 00:08:48,110 Throughout the Blitz, Churchill projected the image of calm determination. 116 00:08:49,403 --> 00:08:52,406 He wanted that spirit to define the British war effort. 117 00:08:52,490 --> 00:08:54,450 Drink a cup of tea, get on with it. 118 00:08:55,076 --> 00:08:56,076 [woman grunts] 119 00:08:56,494 --> 00:08:57,328 [woman exclaims] 120 00:08:57,411 --> 00:09:00,957 [Roberts] The overwhelming response of Londoners was to say, 121 00:09:01,040 --> 00:09:02,250 "Give it back to them." 122 00:09:02,333 --> 00:09:03,167 [woman grunts] 123 00:09:03,251 --> 00:09:05,002 And that's what he promised he'd do. 124 00:09:06,087 --> 00:09:07,463 [grunting] 125 00:09:08,548 --> 00:09:11,884 [hopeful, determined music playing] 126 00:09:21,018 --> 00:09:23,104 [inaudible dialogue] 127 00:09:23,187 --> 00:09:26,649 [Petraeus] There was a desire to be the center of attention, if you will, 128 00:09:26,732 --> 00:09:28,442 to be the man in the arena, 129 00:09:28,526 --> 00:09:30,987 {\an8}which is in part why he was so effective. 130 00:09:31,070 --> 00:09:32,572 [cheering and applause] 131 00:09:32,655 --> 00:09:35,116 {\an8}[Churchill] During these last crowded days, 132 00:09:36,325 --> 00:09:38,536 {\an8}my pulse had not quickened at any moment. 133 00:09:40,288 --> 00:09:41,998 {\an8}I took it all as it came. 134 00:09:43,040 --> 00:09:45,751 {\an8}I felt as if I were walking with destiny, 135 00:09:47,461 --> 00:09:51,924 and that all my past life had been but a preparation 136 00:09:53,259 --> 00:09:54,385 for this hour 137 00:09:55,469 --> 00:09:56,887 and for this trial. 138 00:09:59,015 --> 00:10:03,311 [Snow] He was destined for great things. And he was taught that as a young man. 139 00:10:03,811 --> 00:10:06,856 He was convinced from the day he was born that he was put on Earth 140 00:10:06,939 --> 00:10:11,360 as a divine instrument to save Britain, to save the world. 141 00:10:13,279 --> 00:10:17,116 [whimsical music playing] 142 00:10:25,499 --> 00:10:28,294 [Packwood] As a child, he was very conscious 143 00:10:28,377 --> 00:10:30,671 {\an8}that there are expectations upon him 144 00:10:31,422 --> 00:10:36,177 because he was born into the very top of British society. 145 00:10:37,178 --> 00:10:42,600 [Roberts] His father, Randolph Churchill, was an important Victorian politician. 146 00:10:43,643 --> 00:10:49,398 And his mother, Jennie Jerome, was born into a rich American family. 147 00:10:51,067 --> 00:10:53,819 {\an8}[Churchill] She shone for me like the Evening Star. 148 00:10:54,820 --> 00:10:56,614 {\an8}I loved her dearly, 149 00:10:57,740 --> 00:10:59,492 {\an8}but at a distance. 150 00:11:01,243 --> 00:11:04,580 His father never really thought that he would amount to much, 151 00:11:04,664 --> 00:11:07,583 and his mother really took no notice of him at all. 152 00:11:08,292 --> 00:11:10,753 She was pursuing affairs with the Prince of Wales 153 00:11:10,836 --> 00:11:13,089 and the Austrian Ambassador and so on. 154 00:11:14,048 --> 00:11:15,883 [Bush] It had to be lonely. 155 00:11:17,009 --> 00:11:19,762 I think if you have a dysfunctional family, 156 00:11:19,845 --> 00:11:22,139 uh, the pressures have got to be double. 157 00:11:23,724 --> 00:11:28,437 {\an8}[Churchill] It is said that famous men are usually the product of unhappy childhood. 158 00:11:29,563 --> 00:11:35,778 {\an8}The twinges of adversity are needed to evoke that ruthless fixity of purpose, 159 00:11:36,529 --> 00:11:40,783 without which great actions are seldom accomplished. 160 00:11:42,785 --> 00:11:47,206 {\an8}[Millard] Everybody believed Churchill's father would be prime minister one day, 161 00:11:47,289 --> 00:11:50,042 {\an8}but he was extremely arrogant. 162 00:11:50,126 --> 00:11:54,588 {\an8}And when he submitted his first budget and it was rejected, 163 00:11:54,672 --> 00:11:58,092 {\an8}and he wrote a letter to the prime minister, resigning, 164 00:11:58,634 --> 00:12:01,053 {\an8}thinking it would never be accepted, 165 00:12:01,137 --> 00:12:02,137 {\an8}but it was. 166 00:12:03,889 --> 00:12:05,808 [Packwood] He'd thrown it all away, 167 00:12:06,434 --> 00:12:08,227 effectively ending his career. 168 00:12:09,937 --> 00:12:13,399 Here is someone that Churchill had idolized. 169 00:12:14,316 --> 00:12:17,570 And he now watches him deteriorate. 170 00:12:19,572 --> 00:12:23,868 His father's death, when Churchill is just 20 years old, 171 00:12:25,035 --> 00:12:28,247 that has a huge impact on Winston. 172 00:12:30,040 --> 00:12:32,793 {\an8}[Churchill] All my dreams of comradeship with him, 173 00:12:33,502 --> 00:12:40,176 {\an8}of entering Parliament at his side and in his support, were ended. 174 00:12:42,511 --> 00:12:46,182 The death is at one moment this great personal tragedy, 175 00:12:46,265 --> 00:12:48,642 but also a moment of liberation. 176 00:12:50,019 --> 00:12:51,771 [Roberts] His father's death 177 00:12:52,605 --> 00:12:56,108 allowed him to have the space to be a great man himself. 178 00:12:58,527 --> 00:13:00,237 {\an8}[Churchill] There remained for me 179 00:13:00,821 --> 00:13:03,032 {\an8}only to pursue his aims 180 00:13:04,033 --> 00:13:05,785 {\an8}and vindicate his memory. 181 00:13:07,703 --> 00:13:10,915 [Hirsch] He wanted to seek approval. He wanted to be loved and admired. 182 00:13:10,998 --> 00:13:13,959 {\an8}I think that's a powerful psychological driver of behavior. 183 00:13:15,920 --> 00:13:19,465 [Snow] He wants to make his name. He wants to win acclaim. 184 00:13:19,548 --> 00:13:21,842 He wants to do that the way aristocrats always have, 185 00:13:21,926 --> 00:13:23,219 and that's on the battlefield. 186 00:13:23,302 --> 00:13:25,930 - [guns firing] - [soldiers clamoring] 187 00:13:26,013 --> 00:13:27,431 [horse neighing] 188 00:13:33,646 --> 00:13:34,647 [distant explosion] 189 00:13:34,730 --> 00:13:39,151 [Packwood] So Churchill manages to get himself assigned to a cavalry regiment. 190 00:13:41,070 --> 00:13:42,070 [distant explosion] 191 00:13:42,863 --> 00:13:46,534 Good God, Winston, you're riding that gray into battle? 192 00:13:46,617 --> 00:13:47,910 [explosions continue] 193 00:13:47,993 --> 00:13:48,993 As you see. 194 00:13:49,578 --> 00:13:51,705 You might as well paint a target on your chest. 195 00:13:51,789 --> 00:13:53,499 They'll spot you a mile away. 196 00:13:55,042 --> 00:13:56,544 I play for high stakes. 197 00:14:00,047 --> 00:14:03,634 [Roberts] Winston Churchill rode a gray, a white horse, 198 00:14:04,218 --> 00:14:07,179 which was essentially to draw attention to himself. 199 00:14:08,055 --> 00:14:11,350 His fellow soldiers thought it was an insane risk to take. 200 00:14:11,433 --> 00:14:13,018 [horse neighing] 201 00:14:13,894 --> 00:14:14,728 [gunshot] 202 00:14:14,812 --> 00:14:17,273 {\an8}[Churchill] Nothing in life is so exhilarating... 203 00:14:17,356 --> 00:14:18,357 {\an8}[gunshot] 204 00:14:18,440 --> 00:14:21,110 {\an8}...as to be shot at without result. 205 00:14:21,652 --> 00:14:22,652 [gun fires] 206 00:14:27,616 --> 00:14:30,077 [Warren Dockter] Churchill killed a number of men. 207 00:14:30,703 --> 00:14:33,163 You can tell that he's exhilarated by it. 208 00:14:33,247 --> 00:14:35,958 {\an8}But he also has a tremendous respect for it. 209 00:14:36,041 --> 00:14:37,293 [horse whinnies, knickers] 210 00:14:37,376 --> 00:14:38,961 [flies buzzing] 211 00:14:42,464 --> 00:14:45,509 {\an8}[Churchill] It is all chance or destiny. 212 00:14:47,219 --> 00:14:53,517 {\an8}And our wayward footsteps are best planted without too much calculation. 213 00:14:59,982 --> 00:15:02,902 [Millard] Churchill was a journalist while he was a soldier 214 00:15:02,985 --> 00:15:06,238 because he's an extraordinary writer, 215 00:15:06,322 --> 00:15:09,617 and he saw it as his glittering gateway to distinction. 216 00:15:10,701 --> 00:15:12,828 [Petraeus] The idea of having someone 217 00:15:12,912 --> 00:15:16,624 who is in uniform and a journalist simultaneously 218 00:15:16,707 --> 00:15:19,335 just doesn't compute in today's day and age. 219 00:15:21,045 --> 00:15:24,089 {\an8}He is a warrior first, so he understands war. 220 00:15:24,173 --> 00:15:25,507 {\an8}But then he's also this poet 221 00:15:25,591 --> 00:15:28,385 who is able to translate that to the public. 222 00:15:29,011 --> 00:15:32,723 But as a military officer, he would've been incredibly unlikable. 223 00:15:33,349 --> 00:15:35,184 He's going to go to the combat zone 224 00:15:35,267 --> 00:15:38,354 so that he can write about it, make all kinds of money personally, 225 00:15:38,437 --> 00:15:40,105 and become a name in the process. 226 00:15:40,189 --> 00:15:44,360 I think, as a fellow peer, you would hate Winston Churchill. 227 00:15:45,444 --> 00:15:48,530 [Snow] Churchill would have been very comfortable in this world 228 00:15:48,614 --> 00:15:51,325 of mass media, of selling yourself, 229 00:15:51,867 --> 00:15:53,702 of spinning a great yarn, 230 00:15:53,786 --> 00:15:57,957 trying to get likes and subscribers on social media platforms. 231 00:15:59,083 --> 00:16:01,710 [Petraeus] Churchill seemed to have this unique capacity 232 00:16:01,794 --> 00:16:06,507 to go to the right location at the pivotal moment. 233 00:16:07,341 --> 00:16:08,842 {\an8}[Churchill] I was eager for trouble. 234 00:16:09,927 --> 00:16:12,262 {\an8}There was not an instant to lose. 235 00:16:12,763 --> 00:16:15,474 [gunfire echoing] 236 00:16:18,185 --> 00:16:21,397 [Packwood] The Boer War is a fight between the British Empire 237 00:16:21,480 --> 00:16:26,151 and the Dutch Boer republics, which are seeking independence. 238 00:16:26,235 --> 00:16:27,444 [horse whinnies] 239 00:16:27,528 --> 00:16:31,323 Churchill goes looking for a way of further raising his profile, 240 00:16:31,407 --> 00:16:35,327 so he takes an expedition towards the front line in an armored train. 241 00:16:35,411 --> 00:16:37,621 - [train whistle blows] - [train chugging] 242 00:16:37,705 --> 00:16:40,124 And they're ambushed by the Boers. 243 00:16:40,207 --> 00:16:41,458 [dramatic music plays] 244 00:16:41,542 --> 00:16:43,127 The train is derailed. 245 00:16:43,794 --> 00:16:45,504 - [gunfire] - [horses whinnying] 246 00:16:45,587 --> 00:16:47,423 They're coming under heavy fire. 247 00:16:47,506 --> 00:16:49,133 [men shouting] 248 00:16:50,342 --> 00:16:54,430 [Millard] Churchill's 24 years old, and he immediately takes over. 249 00:16:55,347 --> 00:16:57,641 You see that Churchillian will 250 00:16:58,892 --> 00:17:02,688 and that desire to be at the center of things, come to the front. 251 00:17:04,106 --> 00:17:08,110 And the people who survived it credited Churchill with saving their lives. 252 00:17:11,071 --> 00:17:14,575 But Churchill wasn't so lucky. 253 00:17:16,827 --> 00:17:20,998 [Roberts] Churchill was captured and sent to a prisoner-of-war camp in Pretoria. 254 00:17:23,500 --> 00:17:30,215 His whole nature revolted against the idea that somebody as vigorous as him 255 00:17:30,299 --> 00:17:34,928 could be wasting vital weeks and months and possibly years in prison. 256 00:17:35,846 --> 00:17:39,433 And he immediately set about trying to escape. 257 00:17:40,267 --> 00:17:42,728 [intriguing music playing] 258 00:17:42,811 --> 00:17:46,565 [Millard] One night, he realizes that the guards are preoccupied. 259 00:17:47,691 --> 00:17:50,152 And he can quickly scale the fence and get out. 260 00:17:51,153 --> 00:17:54,782 The Boers, they started searching everywhere for him. 261 00:17:54,865 --> 00:17:58,494 And if they found him, they very likely would have killed him. 262 00:17:59,119 --> 00:18:02,164 So he decides to jump on a train, 263 00:18:02,998 --> 00:18:05,834 hoping that it's going in the right direction. 264 00:18:07,252 --> 00:18:10,339 [Packwood] And despite not being able to speak a word of Dutch, 265 00:18:10,422 --> 00:18:15,469 he manages to make his way to safety in what is now Mozambique, 266 00:18:15,552 --> 00:18:18,430 which then allows him to write up his adventures. 267 00:18:18,514 --> 00:18:20,182 - [whip cracks] - [horse neighs, gallops] 268 00:18:20,265 --> 00:18:22,726 And that really goes stratospheric. 269 00:18:22,810 --> 00:18:24,436 [crowd cheering] 270 00:18:24,520 --> 00:18:25,687 [Roberts] He was a hero. 271 00:18:26,730 --> 00:18:31,276 When his boat came in, there were crowds all cheering him. 272 00:18:31,360 --> 00:18:35,114 [triumphant music playing] 273 00:18:35,197 --> 00:18:38,242 He no longer had to worry about making his name. 274 00:18:38,325 --> 00:18:39,326 It had been made. 275 00:18:40,994 --> 00:18:44,998 [Hirsch] The fantastical nature of what he actually accomplished in escaping 276 00:18:45,082 --> 00:18:49,545 really helped solidify him as a brand in Britain. 277 00:18:50,921 --> 00:18:54,007 [Millard] His resourcefulness, his complete confidence, 278 00:18:54,091 --> 00:18:56,343 his courage, his determination, 279 00:18:56,426 --> 00:19:01,849 all those things helped him survive his escape from the Boers 280 00:19:01,932 --> 00:19:06,854 and helped him be the person we needed him to be during World War II. 281 00:19:08,897 --> 00:19:11,525 {\an8}[Churchill] Sometimes what looks like bad luck 282 00:19:12,067 --> 00:19:15,445 {\an8}may turn out to be good luck, and vice versa. 283 00:19:17,030 --> 00:19:20,492 [city street sounds] 284 00:19:22,244 --> 00:19:25,747 [Packwood] Churchill becomes a member of Parliament within the Conservative Party 285 00:19:25,831 --> 00:19:27,332 at the age of 25. 286 00:19:28,208 --> 00:19:31,253 That is far from usual for the time. 287 00:19:31,336 --> 00:19:33,046 [crowd clamoring] 288 00:19:36,091 --> 00:19:40,971 [Meacham] The young Churchill was a brilliant, comet-like force. 289 00:19:41,805 --> 00:19:44,349 {\an8}He inspired immense loyalty, 290 00:19:44,433 --> 00:19:47,269 {\an8}but he also inspired a lot of eye-rolling. 291 00:19:48,979 --> 00:19:52,065 Which is what brilliant young men do. 292 00:19:52,983 --> 00:19:55,110 {\an8}[Churchill] We are all worms, 293 00:19:55,194 --> 00:19:58,947 {\an8}but I do believe that I am glowworm. 294 00:19:59,948 --> 00:20:03,827 [Packwood] And, of course, that puts him at tension right from the beginning, 295 00:20:03,911 --> 00:20:07,873 with certain elements within the Conservative Party. 296 00:20:07,956 --> 00:20:14,755 By 1904, he's prepared to dramatically cross the floor at the House of Commons 297 00:20:15,380 --> 00:20:18,383 and become a member of the Liberal opposition party. 298 00:20:19,218 --> 00:20:20,260 [men jeering] 299 00:20:20,344 --> 00:20:23,013 The Liberal Party aren't yet sure whether they like him. 300 00:20:23,096 --> 00:20:26,016 Many in the Conservative Party regard him as a traitor. 301 00:20:27,559 --> 00:20:30,145 [Andrews] Churchill was a pragmatist as a politician. 302 00:20:30,229 --> 00:20:31,772 He was not afraid to switch parties. 303 00:20:31,855 --> 00:20:34,691 {\an8}"Where is the wind going to take me so that I can be in power?" 304 00:20:34,775 --> 00:20:38,111 - [crowd clamoring] - [car motor running] 305 00:20:38,695 --> 00:20:40,840 [Packwood] Churchill's just becoming a Liberal minister 306 00:20:40,864 --> 00:20:43,158 when he meets with Clementine Hozier. 307 00:20:44,952 --> 00:20:47,871 [Purnell] Clementine was a very striking young woman, 308 00:20:47,955 --> 00:20:49,706 huge blue eyes. 309 00:20:50,749 --> 00:20:53,543 They ended up sitting next to each other at a dinner party. 310 00:20:53,627 --> 00:20:55,629 They went straight into a conversation 311 00:20:55,712 --> 00:20:58,382 about everything that was happening in the House of Commons. 312 00:20:58,465 --> 00:21:00,550 And Churchill couldn't believe he'd finally found 313 00:21:00,634 --> 00:21:02,844 a woman that shared the same interests as he did. 314 00:21:03,512 --> 00:21:05,112 And they got married a few months later. 315 00:21:05,138 --> 00:21:06,390 [romantic music playing] 316 00:21:06,473 --> 00:21:08,273 {\an8}[Churchill] What a comfort and pleasure it was 317 00:21:08,350 --> 00:21:11,937 {\an8}to meet a girl with so much intellectual quality 318 00:21:12,020 --> 00:21:15,357 {\an8}and such strong reserves of noble sentiment. 319 00:21:15,941 --> 00:21:18,461 [Purnell] Clementine couldn't have a career herself in politics. 320 00:21:18,485 --> 00:21:20,320 She was a woman, that wasn't allowed. 321 00:21:20,404 --> 00:21:24,992 But this was a way that she could have a real fulfilling and exciting life. 322 00:21:25,617 --> 00:21:28,954 {\an8}[Churchill] We do not live in a world of small intrigues, 323 00:21:29,037 --> 00:21:32,374 {\an8}but of serious and important affairs. 324 00:21:33,041 --> 00:21:35,585 [Roberts] Clementine was interested in politics 325 00:21:35,669 --> 00:21:38,380 and was very good at giving advice. 326 00:21:39,214 --> 00:21:42,634 He didn't always take it, but she always gave it. 327 00:21:42,718 --> 00:21:43,552 [birds chirping] 328 00:21:43,635 --> 00:21:45,762 {\an8}[Churchill] One of the secrets of a happy marriage... 329 00:21:45,846 --> 00:21:46,680 {\an8}[gun fires] 330 00:21:46,763 --> 00:21:48,181 {\an8}...is to never speak to... 331 00:21:48,265 --> 00:21:50,726 {\an8}[chuckles]...or see the loved one before noon. 332 00:21:52,144 --> 00:21:56,565 [Packwood] In some ways, Winston and Clementine do differ politically. 333 00:21:56,648 --> 00:22:03,030 He's someone who is brought up in that very male-dominated world, 334 00:22:04,114 --> 00:22:07,868 and someone who, I think, is loath to see that world disappear. 335 00:22:08,744 --> 00:22:11,204 [Purnell] Clementine, who's a suffragist, 336 00:22:11,288 --> 00:22:13,957 and Winston was quite an old-fashioned man. 337 00:22:14,041 --> 00:22:15,250 His original views were, 338 00:22:15,334 --> 00:22:18,086 "We don't want women voting, thank you very much." 339 00:22:18,170 --> 00:22:21,006 "We've got enough troubles of our own already." 340 00:22:22,466 --> 00:22:25,302 [Roberts] At that time, he was also Home Secretary. 341 00:22:25,385 --> 00:22:26,865 - [women screaming] - [horse whinnies] 342 00:22:26,928 --> 00:22:27,846 [men shouting] 343 00:22:27,929 --> 00:22:32,351 [Roberts] He had lots and lots of suffragettes arrested and put in prison. 344 00:22:32,434 --> 00:22:33,769 [dramatic music playing] 345 00:22:33,852 --> 00:22:37,856 [Purnell] Clementine was completely loyal to him in public, 346 00:22:37,939 --> 00:22:40,108 but behind closed doors, she would take him on. 347 00:22:41,276 --> 00:22:42,944 She was a sparring partner. 348 00:22:44,071 --> 00:22:47,199 {\an8}Once he found out they'd vote for him, 349 00:22:47,282 --> 00:22:51,036 {\an8}he lowered his resistance to the idea, 350 00:22:51,620 --> 00:22:55,832 which is a very fine example of realpolitik. 351 00:22:57,250 --> 00:23:00,212 {\an8}[Churchill] If we look back on our past life, 352 00:23:00,295 --> 00:23:04,841 {\an8}we shall see that one of its most usual experiences 353 00:23:04,925 --> 00:23:07,969 {\an8}is that we have been helped by our mistakes 354 00:23:08,053 --> 00:23:12,099 {\an8}and injured by our most sagacious decisions. 355 00:23:13,308 --> 00:23:15,727 - [explosion booms] - [soldiers shouting] 356 00:23:16,311 --> 00:23:19,856 [Packwood] In 1914, the beginning of the First World War, 357 00:23:20,816 --> 00:23:22,734 Europe is dragged into conflict. 358 00:23:22,818 --> 00:23:23,818 [gunshot] 359 00:23:24,778 --> 00:23:29,408 - [explosions] - [clamoring] 360 00:23:29,491 --> 00:23:33,161 [Anthony Tucker-Jones] Both sides dug in. It turned into a stalemate very quickly, 361 00:23:33,245 --> 00:23:36,706 {\an8}capturing, you know, meters of ground, not miles. 362 00:23:37,624 --> 00:23:41,294 [Snow] Millions of men living in muddy trenches. 363 00:23:41,878 --> 00:23:44,965 Churchill famously said, "There must be something else we can do 364 00:23:45,048 --> 00:23:49,052 rather than send our young men to chew barbed wire on the Western Front." 365 00:23:49,845 --> 00:23:52,931 [Tucker-Jones] Churchill was the First Lord of the Admiralty, 366 00:23:53,014 --> 00:23:54,182 and he, amongst others, 367 00:23:54,266 --> 00:23:57,727 started to look around for a way of breaking that deadlock. 368 00:23:58,478 --> 00:24:01,064 And one of his ideas was an amphibious operation, 369 00:24:01,815 --> 00:24:04,693 in an effort to knock the Turks out of the war. 370 00:24:04,776 --> 00:24:07,696 In previous wars, the Royal Navy had just sailed up the narrows, 371 00:24:07,779 --> 00:24:08,989 the Dardanelles, 372 00:24:09,072 --> 00:24:10,866 that very thin stretch of water 373 00:24:10,949 --> 00:24:13,994 between Europe and what we call the Middle East today, 374 00:24:14,077 --> 00:24:16,329 and the Turks have to do what you want them to do. 375 00:24:17,080 --> 00:24:19,416 [Tucker-Jones] On paper, it was an ideal operation. 376 00:24:19,499 --> 00:24:22,878 But because the Dardanelles campaign was run by a committee, 377 00:24:22,961 --> 00:24:25,088 it didn't happen very quickly. 378 00:24:25,172 --> 00:24:26,214 [explosion booms] 379 00:24:26,298 --> 00:24:28,467 So they lost all element of surprise. 380 00:24:29,092 --> 00:24:30,385 [cannons firing] 381 00:24:30,469 --> 00:24:31,845 [suspenseful music swells] 382 00:24:31,928 --> 00:24:36,183 The Royal Navy had lost lots of ships. The whole thing was a fiasco. 383 00:24:36,266 --> 00:24:38,310 [Snow] Churchill responds by thinking, 384 00:24:38,393 --> 00:24:42,856 "What we need to do is land a force on the Gallipoli peninsula 385 00:24:42,939 --> 00:24:44,816 that will occupy that peninsula." 386 00:24:44,900 --> 00:24:47,819 "Then the Royal Navy can sail up and capture Istanbul." 387 00:24:48,528 --> 00:24:51,156 [Douds] With poor intelligence, some uninspired leadership, 388 00:24:51,239 --> 00:24:54,493 and poor communication, the whole thing ends up being a dramatic failure. 389 00:24:54,576 --> 00:24:55,577 [somber music plays] 390 00:24:55,660 --> 00:25:00,207 [Roberts] The Allies had lost 147,000, killed or wounded. 391 00:25:03,919 --> 00:25:05,420 [distant explosions] 392 00:25:08,840 --> 00:25:11,051 [Snow] Churchill very much was the scapegoat. 393 00:25:11,551 --> 00:25:13,178 The Press castigated him. 394 00:25:13,929 --> 00:25:14,804 [people yelling] 395 00:25:14,888 --> 00:25:16,723 [Purnell] People yelled at him in the streets 396 00:25:16,806 --> 00:25:18,558 that there was blood on his hands, 397 00:25:19,267 --> 00:25:21,353 the loss of all those lives. 398 00:25:22,229 --> 00:25:26,483 [Johnson] It's clear how much he loathes the loss of life 399 00:25:26,566 --> 00:25:29,736 and the suffering of ordinary people in war. 400 00:25:31,655 --> 00:25:33,657 {\an8}[Churchill] I feel like a wounded man. 401 00:25:34,491 --> 00:25:36,535 {\an8}I know I am hurt, 402 00:25:36,618 --> 00:25:40,330 {\an8}but as yet I cannot tell how badly. 403 00:25:41,540 --> 00:25:46,086 [birds calling and chirping] 404 00:25:51,508 --> 00:25:52,508 [tuts] 405 00:25:53,885 --> 00:25:55,011 [sighs] 406 00:25:56,346 --> 00:25:57,889 They're going to evacuate. 407 00:26:00,684 --> 00:26:02,394 Pull out of the Dardanelles... 408 00:26:04,229 --> 00:26:06,106 tail between their legs. 409 00:26:07,899 --> 00:26:08,900 What will you do? 410 00:26:09,651 --> 00:26:13,321 Well, I refuse to waste away in obscurity, 411 00:26:14,364 --> 00:26:17,784 while my name and reputation are ruined. 412 00:26:20,453 --> 00:26:21,746 [exhales] 413 00:26:29,796 --> 00:26:30,796 [sniffs] 414 00:26:31,172 --> 00:26:32,924 Winston, what is going on? 415 00:26:36,970 --> 00:26:41,266 If I can't serve my country in politics, 416 00:26:43,059 --> 00:26:45,353 then I shall serve her on the battlefield. 417 00:26:48,815 --> 00:26:50,233 Tomorrow I'm resigning... 418 00:26:51,985 --> 00:26:53,528 and rejoining my regiment. 419 00:26:56,114 --> 00:26:58,742 [emotional music playing] 420 00:27:01,369 --> 00:27:02,871 It's what you must do. 421 00:27:06,416 --> 00:27:10,587 But you mustn't get killed, or they'll think you died on purpose. 422 00:27:12,255 --> 00:27:14,049 That's not why I'm going. 423 00:27:16,134 --> 00:27:17,677 But if I do die... 424 00:27:19,679 --> 00:27:22,098 and if there's anywhere else after... 425 00:27:22,182 --> 00:27:24,184 [takes deep breath] 426 00:27:27,270 --> 00:27:29,314 ...I shall be on the lookout for you. 427 00:27:32,359 --> 00:27:33,359 [tuts] 428 00:27:35,779 --> 00:27:39,658 {\an8}[Churchill] I was ruined for the time being in 1915, 429 00:27:40,450 --> 00:27:43,703 {\an8}and a supreme enterprise was cast away, 430 00:27:44,245 --> 00:27:49,376 {\an8}through my trying to carry out a major and cardinal operation of war 431 00:27:49,459 --> 00:27:51,169 {\an8}from a subordinate position. 432 00:27:51,252 --> 00:27:53,088 [somber music playing] 433 00:27:53,171 --> 00:27:56,966 Men are ill-advised to try such ventures. 434 00:28:02,555 --> 00:28:06,434 [man] The First Lord of the Admiralty resigned to become a major in the field, 435 00:28:07,644 --> 00:28:09,688 Major Winston Churchill. 436 00:28:11,523 --> 00:28:16,069 [Snow] Imagine a member of the cabinet leaving their role 437 00:28:16,152 --> 00:28:18,154 and going and fighting on the front line. 438 00:28:18,238 --> 00:28:21,032 That's what Churchill does. He puts his money where his mouth is. 439 00:28:21,116 --> 00:28:24,285 - [soldiers clamoring] - [distant explosions] 440 00:28:26,246 --> 00:28:27,246 [Man] Fire! 441 00:28:28,998 --> 00:28:30,834 [intriguing music playing] 442 00:28:30,917 --> 00:28:33,962 [Tucker-Jones] He famously turned up with a tin bath and his easels 443 00:28:34,045 --> 00:28:36,798 and all the accoutrements that a general needs to go to war, 444 00:28:36,881 --> 00:28:38,258 champagne, whiskey, 445 00:28:38,341 --> 00:28:41,010 you know, as if he actually wasn't going to do anything. 446 00:28:41,720 --> 00:28:44,264 [Roberts] He hadn't been a soldier for some time. 447 00:28:44,347 --> 00:28:47,767 They didn't like the idea of a celebrity, uh, officer. 448 00:28:48,435 --> 00:28:52,188 There was some hostility in his regiment right at the beginning. 449 00:28:52,272 --> 00:28:56,276 But then he took part in some 30 expeditions into no man's land. 450 00:28:56,359 --> 00:28:58,194 [gunfire, shouting] 451 00:28:58,278 --> 00:29:01,364 [Tucker-Jones] Churchill, famously, whenever he came under fire, 452 00:29:01,448 --> 00:29:02,824 would never take cover. 453 00:29:02,907 --> 00:29:05,660 [shouting and gunfire continue] 454 00:29:05,744 --> 00:29:08,224 And one day one of his men said, "Why do you do that?" He said, 455 00:29:08,288 --> 00:29:11,332 'The point is, by the time you hear the crack of the round whiz by you..." 456 00:29:11,416 --> 00:29:12,476 - [gun fires] - "...it's gone. 457 00:29:12,500 --> 00:29:14,660 So there's no point in throwing yourself on the earth." 458 00:29:15,712 --> 00:29:18,631 [Douds] So soon, they see that his words and his deeds match up, 459 00:29:18,715 --> 00:29:21,718 and that he can be trusted, and he's a legitimately good leader. 460 00:29:21,801 --> 00:29:23,094 He wins them over. 461 00:29:23,178 --> 00:29:24,679 [horse hooves clacking] 462 00:29:24,763 --> 00:29:26,431 {\an8}[Churchill] My darling Clemmy... 463 00:29:26,514 --> 00:29:27,807 {\an8}[sentimental music playing] 464 00:29:27,891 --> 00:29:30,101 {\an8}...hold your head very high. 465 00:29:30,810 --> 00:29:34,105 {\an8}Above all, do not worry about me. 466 00:29:35,982 --> 00:29:39,194 If my destiny has not already been accomplished, 467 00:29:40,361 --> 00:29:42,530 I shall be guarded surely. 468 00:29:44,616 --> 00:29:46,034 [Douds] This whole idea of fate, 469 00:29:46,117 --> 00:29:49,662 that every little bit, including the parts that go wrong in his life, 470 00:29:50,538 --> 00:29:53,416 will prepare him to do the job of Prime Minister. 471 00:29:55,460 --> 00:29:59,798 [all cheering] 472 00:29:59,881 --> 00:30:02,717 - [car horns honking] - [cheers and applause] 473 00:30:03,301 --> 00:30:08,223 [Roberts] After the First World War ended, he had an extremely active decade. 474 00:30:09,057 --> 00:30:12,227 [Packwood] He becomes the Secretary of State for the Colonies, 475 00:30:12,310 --> 00:30:14,979 and then Chancellor of the Exchequer. 476 00:30:15,063 --> 00:30:19,526 So he becomes one of the political big beasts. 477 00:30:20,318 --> 00:30:25,365 In 1924, Churchill crosses the floor of the House of Commons, 478 00:30:26,115 --> 00:30:28,618 moving back from the Liberals to the Conservatives. 479 00:30:29,410 --> 00:30:32,163 [Peri] In the context of American politics, 480 00:30:32,247 --> 00:30:35,250 it's a little bit like somebody who's a Democrat 481 00:30:35,750 --> 00:30:37,544 one day raising their hand and saying, 482 00:30:37,627 --> 00:30:40,547 "I'm gonna run as a Republican for the next election in order to win." 483 00:30:41,422 --> 00:30:43,049 And doing that two times. 484 00:30:43,132 --> 00:30:44,509 [whimsical music playing] 485 00:30:44,592 --> 00:30:46,845 He was difficult to deal with, as I understand. 486 00:30:46,928 --> 00:30:48,847 He kind of irritated a lot of people. 487 00:30:49,639 --> 00:30:54,102 He was quite confident of his capacities and didn't mind telling people that. 488 00:30:55,061 --> 00:30:56,688 {\an8}[Churchill] Anyone can rat, 489 00:30:57,188 --> 00:31:01,818 {\an8}but it takes a certain amount of ingenuity to re-rat. 490 00:31:03,278 --> 00:31:04,696 Churchill was someone 491 00:31:04,779 --> 00:31:07,866 who was willing to break with the status quo of his own party, 492 00:31:08,533 --> 00:31:11,452 over things that were incredibly important to him. 493 00:31:12,036 --> 00:31:13,663 {\an8}[horse hooves clacking] 494 00:31:16,332 --> 00:31:20,545 {\an8}[crowd clamoring] 495 00:31:26,843 --> 00:31:30,430 [Tucker-Jones] In the 1930s, India had wanted independence. 496 00:31:31,848 --> 00:31:33,766 They were tired of British rule. 497 00:31:34,767 --> 00:31:36,144 And Churchill never supported it. 498 00:31:37,854 --> 00:31:40,607 [Churchill] I was a child of the Victorian era, 499 00:31:41,232 --> 00:31:44,777 {\an8}when the realization of the greatness of our empire 500 00:31:44,861 --> 00:31:49,407 {\an8}and of our duty to preserve it was ever growing stronger. 501 00:31:51,409 --> 00:31:53,328 [Hirsch] Like many children in the aristocracy, 502 00:31:53,411 --> 00:31:55,538 Churchill was sent to boarding school, 503 00:31:55,622 --> 00:31:58,458 in an institution which was specifically designed 504 00:31:58,541 --> 00:32:03,338 to build young men of the upper classes into imperial officers and leaders, 505 00:32:03,421 --> 00:32:07,675 to give them a sense of their role as civilizing forces, 506 00:32:07,759 --> 00:32:10,595 destined for racial and moral superiority. 507 00:32:11,638 --> 00:32:15,558 [Tucker-Jones] He'd been raised to serve the British Empire, to keep it together. 508 00:32:15,642 --> 00:32:20,188 So he was a great believer in the civilizing influence, if you like, 509 00:32:20,271 --> 00:32:25,109 you know, rightly or wrongly, of Britain and its colonial possessions. 510 00:32:25,693 --> 00:32:27,737 [Churchill] For I feel that the Indian danger 511 00:32:28,237 --> 00:32:32,784 will raise a crisis equal in importance 512 00:32:32,867 --> 00:32:37,580 to the greatest events in the history of Great Britain. 513 00:32:38,998 --> 00:32:41,084 [Peri] He defies his own government. 514 00:32:42,627 --> 00:32:45,588 He does not want to let any part of the empire, 515 00:32:45,672 --> 00:32:47,924 especially the jewel of the crown, India, go. 516 00:32:49,509 --> 00:32:52,720 [Snow] Churchill throughout his career fought to maintain that view of the world, 517 00:32:52,804 --> 00:32:54,430 as it existed when he was a young man. 518 00:32:55,014 --> 00:32:57,058 A world in which Britain was dominant, 519 00:32:57,141 --> 00:33:02,897 in which the Union Flag fluttered over territories all over the world. 520 00:33:04,649 --> 00:33:08,486 Churchill hung on to imperialism as a way to keep England great, 521 00:33:08,569 --> 00:33:10,446 but the world was moving away from that. 522 00:33:12,907 --> 00:33:15,511 [Catherine Grace Katz] I think for some it's difficult to reconcile 523 00:33:15,535 --> 00:33:18,997 Churchill as an advocate for democracy and self-determination 524 00:33:19,580 --> 00:33:22,083 {\an8}because he believed in the British Empire. 525 00:33:23,084 --> 00:33:27,588 That adds, I think, to the problematic nature of his legacy 526 00:33:27,672 --> 00:33:29,257 that we're all sort of contending with. 527 00:33:29,340 --> 00:33:30,675 [dramatic music plays] 528 00:33:30,758 --> 00:33:33,519 [Tucker-Jones] Because Churchill was at loggerheads with his own party 529 00:33:33,553 --> 00:33:34,887 over the future of India, 530 00:33:35,388 --> 00:33:37,181 he did not have a government post. 531 00:33:38,266 --> 00:33:39,517 He had no sway. 532 00:33:40,768 --> 00:33:45,440 [Packwood] These are what famously become known as his "wilderness years." 533 00:33:47,150 --> 00:33:50,403 [Dockter] He's still in Parliament, but he's on the back bench. 534 00:33:51,696 --> 00:33:54,699 [Douds] Nobody really wants to touch him. He's a bit of a poisonous stone. 535 00:33:55,450 --> 00:33:56,534 He's on the outs. 536 00:33:57,744 --> 00:34:00,705 [Johnson] So it's 1932, Churchill's out of office, 537 00:34:00,788 --> 00:34:02,415 he's looking for a cause, 538 00:34:02,498 --> 00:34:05,960 {\an8}and he's interested in what's happening in Germany, 539 00:34:06,044 --> 00:34:07,378 {\an8}and he's actually in Munich. 540 00:34:08,087 --> 00:34:10,381 {\an8}[train passing] 541 00:34:15,344 --> 00:34:18,473 [car horn honking] 542 00:34:19,724 --> 00:34:22,268 So you see, Herr Hanfstaengl, 543 00:34:23,227 --> 00:34:27,482 the French try to form their troops into squares, but... 544 00:34:28,649 --> 00:34:29,817 [exhales] 545 00:34:30,860 --> 00:34:34,072 ...they are devastated by the artillery of the Duke. 546 00:34:34,155 --> 00:34:36,324 Marlborough orders the attack, 547 00:34:36,407 --> 00:34:40,036 and the French center... collapses. 548 00:34:40,536 --> 00:34:43,331 A great victory for the Grand Alliance. 549 00:34:43,873 --> 00:34:48,336 All because John Churchill, the 1st duke of Marlborough, 550 00:34:48,419 --> 00:34:50,254 was not afraid to fight. 551 00:34:51,130 --> 00:34:56,052 Amazing. It must be gratifying to have such blood running through your veins. 552 00:34:56,552 --> 00:35:02,100 Perhaps I have some of those qualities also, eh, Clemmy? 553 00:35:02,683 --> 00:35:05,561 Oh, you've been touched by many qualities, Winston. 554 00:35:05,645 --> 00:35:08,022 [all laughing] 555 00:35:08,606 --> 00:35:10,691 [Packwood] Churchill goes out to Germany, 556 00:35:11,275 --> 00:35:14,237 and that allows him to see at firsthand 557 00:35:14,320 --> 00:35:19,534 the dramatic changes which are taking place in German society at that time. 558 00:35:20,118 --> 00:35:22,703 I've been regaling you with tales of my great hero. 559 00:35:24,080 --> 00:35:25,164 What about yours? 560 00:35:25,248 --> 00:35:27,667 Tell me, Herr Hanfstaengl, 561 00:35:27,750 --> 00:35:33,256 why is your chief, Hitler, so violent about the Jews? 562 00:35:34,423 --> 00:35:38,177 Where's the sense in being against a man simply because of his birth? 563 00:35:38,761 --> 00:35:41,848 - [ominous music plays] - How can any man help how he was born? 564 00:35:41,931 --> 00:35:44,433 - If Herr Hitler was here, he'd tell you... - Yes, where is he? 565 00:35:45,309 --> 00:35:48,855 Randolph said that you would arrange for him to come to dinner this evening. 566 00:35:49,522 --> 00:35:50,522 Oh yes. 567 00:35:50,857 --> 00:35:55,486 He was meant to come tonight, but he's very busy with the election. 568 00:35:56,821 --> 00:35:57,864 Such a pity. 569 00:35:58,364 --> 00:35:59,407 [smacks lips] 570 00:35:59,490 --> 00:36:04,996 It seems Mr. Hitler has missed his chance to meet Winston Churchill. 571 00:36:05,079 --> 00:36:07,665 [distant clamoring and shouting] 572 00:36:22,597 --> 00:36:26,642 [Packwood] In Munich, Churchill was supposed to have a meeting with Hitler. 573 00:36:28,060 --> 00:36:31,189 And it's interesting to speculate what would have happened 574 00:36:31,272 --> 00:36:34,150 if the two of them had been able to meet 575 00:36:34,233 --> 00:36:36,360 and discuss international affairs at that point. 576 00:36:36,444 --> 00:36:39,363 And in the end, Hitler stands Churchill up 577 00:36:40,156 --> 00:36:44,202 because in the 1930s, Churchill is out of office. 578 00:36:44,702 --> 00:36:50,124 Hitler told Hanfstaengl there was no point in him meeting Winston Churchill 579 00:36:50,208 --> 00:36:53,920 because Churchill was a has-been and nobody would ever hear of him again. 580 00:36:54,003 --> 00:36:55,671 - [Hitler] Sieg heil! - [crowd] Sieg heil! 581 00:36:55,755 --> 00:36:59,675 [Meacham] What Churchill saw so clearly and so brilliantly 582 00:36:59,759 --> 00:37:02,762 was that the Third Reich was an existential threat 583 00:37:02,845 --> 00:37:05,181 to human liberty and decency. 584 00:37:05,264 --> 00:37:07,183 - [ominous music swells] - [cigar ember sizzles] 585 00:37:07,266 --> 00:37:10,561 {\an8}[Churchill] After the end of the World War of 1914... 586 00:37:11,395 --> 00:37:12,395 {\an8}[sinister music plays] 587 00:37:12,438 --> 00:37:14,398 {\an8}...emperors having been driven out... 588 00:37:14,482 --> 00:37:15,900 [crowd roars] 589 00:37:15,983 --> 00:37:18,152 ...nonentities were elected. 590 00:37:19,237 --> 00:37:21,530 Beneath this flimsy fabric 591 00:37:22,365 --> 00:37:25,826 raged the passions of the defeated German nation. 592 00:37:27,078 --> 00:37:32,541 A gaping void was opened in the national life of the German people. 593 00:37:33,668 --> 00:37:39,465 And into that void there strode a maniac of ferocious genius, 594 00:37:40,424 --> 00:37:41,259 [Hitler] Sieg heil! 595 00:37:41,342 --> 00:37:45,554 [Churchill]...the repository and expression of the most virulent hatreds 596 00:37:45,638 --> 00:37:49,350 that have ever corroded the human breast... 597 00:37:49,433 --> 00:37:51,852 [sinister music swells] 598 00:37:51,936 --> 00:37:53,354 Corporal Hitler. 599 00:37:53,437 --> 00:37:55,273 [crowd] Sieg heil! 600 00:37:55,356 --> 00:37:58,484 [Snow] Adolf Hitler comes to power by promising the German people 601 00:37:58,567 --> 00:38:00,194 that Germany will be great again. 602 00:38:00,278 --> 00:38:03,406 It'll be rich, it'll be powerful. It'll be feared again as it once was. 603 00:38:03,489 --> 00:38:06,993 {\an8}- [Hitler] Sieg heil! - [crowd] Sieg heil! 604 00:38:07,868 --> 00:38:10,788 {\an8}[crowd chanting indistinctly] 605 00:38:12,164 --> 00:38:17,962 {\an8}[bell tolling] 606 00:38:20,548 --> 00:38:23,217 [people murmuring] 607 00:38:24,260 --> 00:38:29,557 The great dominant fact is that Germany has already begun to rearm. 608 00:38:30,349 --> 00:38:34,729 We see that the philosophy of bloodlust 609 00:38:35,313 --> 00:38:38,274 is being inculcated into their youth 610 00:38:38,357 --> 00:38:42,945 in a manner unparalleled since the days of barbarism. 611 00:38:43,029 --> 00:38:44,739 [all] Heil! 612 00:38:46,032 --> 00:38:49,243 - [In German] You are flesh of our flesh... - [crowd cheers] 613 00:38:49,327 --> 00:38:52,788 - ...and blood of our blood... - [applause] 614 00:38:52,872 --> 00:38:57,793 ...and in your youthful brain burns the same spirit that commands us all. 615 00:38:57,877 --> 00:39:01,547 [disturbing music plays] 616 00:39:01,630 --> 00:39:03,924 [cheering continues] 617 00:39:04,675 --> 00:39:09,764 [Tucker-Jones in English] Churchill views Hitler as an incredibly disruptive force 618 00:39:09,847 --> 00:39:13,142 that is going to bring conflict back to Europe. 619 00:39:14,894 --> 00:39:21,567 Which he sees as a direct challenge to all of the values for which he stands. 620 00:39:21,650 --> 00:39:22,943 [bell tolls] 621 00:39:23,027 --> 00:39:27,782 I do not believe that war is imminent or that war is inevitable. 622 00:39:28,908 --> 00:39:33,037 But if we do not begin forthwith 623 00:39:33,120 --> 00:39:35,623 to put ourselves in a position of security... 624 00:39:35,706 --> 00:39:36,706 [uneasy murmuring] 625 00:39:36,749 --> 00:39:40,211 ...it will soon be beyond our power to do so. 626 00:39:40,711 --> 00:39:43,714 There is not an hour to lose. 627 00:39:44,215 --> 00:39:48,177 - [jeering protests] - [man] Sit down. 628 00:39:48,844 --> 00:39:51,847 [Snow] The lessons Churchill drew from the First World War is that 629 00:39:51,931 --> 00:39:53,557 power matters in the world. 630 00:39:53,641 --> 00:39:55,976 And if you want to stop wars in the future, 631 00:39:56,060 --> 00:39:58,771 you've got to project power, you've got to project deterrence. 632 00:39:58,854 --> 00:39:59,897 [man] Warmonger. 633 00:39:59,980 --> 00:40:01,899 [Roberts] People thought he was a warmonger, 634 00:40:01,982 --> 00:40:05,736 that he was only saying these things in order to try to get back into office. 635 00:40:06,320 --> 00:40:10,199 [Hirsch] Because he'd used such excessively dramatic language 636 00:40:10,282 --> 00:40:13,411 so unnecessarily about independence movements in the Empire, 637 00:40:13,494 --> 00:40:18,374 that when he had a legitimate concern about the rise of Hitler, for example, 638 00:40:18,457 --> 00:40:20,543 it was kind of a case of the boy who cried wolf. 639 00:40:20,626 --> 00:40:22,545 [uneasy music playing] 640 00:40:25,756 --> 00:40:27,883 {\an8}[crowd applauding and cheering] 641 00:40:29,260 --> 00:40:30,761 {\an8}[crowd cheering and shouting] 642 00:40:30,845 --> 00:40:32,763 {\an8}[fire roaring] 643 00:40:34,306 --> 00:40:36,600 [children shouting happily] 644 00:40:37,935 --> 00:40:40,688 [cheering intensifies] 645 00:40:41,480 --> 00:40:42,480 [whistling] 646 00:40:43,149 --> 00:40:46,318 [Douds] Adolf Hitler reoccupied the Rhineland in 1936. 647 00:40:46,402 --> 00:40:50,364 [Tucker-Jones] The Rhineland had been a massive security buffer 648 00:40:50,448 --> 00:40:52,700 - between France and Germany. - [footsteps marching] 649 00:40:52,783 --> 00:40:55,953 [man over PA in German] German troops move back into their peacetime garrisons 650 00:40:56,537 --> 00:40:58,372 in the unprotected zone. 651 00:40:58,456 --> 00:40:59,707 [horses approaching] 652 00:40:59,790 --> 00:41:01,250 [man] Heil Hitler! 653 00:41:01,333 --> 00:41:02,751 [crowd] Heil Hitler! 654 00:41:02,835 --> 00:41:05,129 [Tucker-Jones] When Hitler remilitarized the Rhineland, 655 00:41:06,005 --> 00:41:09,425 Churchill saw that, and it set alarm bells ringing. 656 00:41:10,134 --> 00:41:12,720 But Britain and France didn't do anything. 657 00:41:12,803 --> 00:41:13,971 [ominous music playing] 658 00:41:14,054 --> 00:41:18,726 No one wanted to be told in the 1930s that another war was coming. 659 00:41:20,060 --> 00:41:26,066 {\an8}Remember how profound the pacifism, the anti-war feeling, was at the time, 660 00:41:26,150 --> 00:41:29,195 given the horrors of the First World War. 661 00:41:31,447 --> 00:41:33,908 {\an8}[Douds] For all the leaders, they feel utterly responsible 662 00:41:33,991 --> 00:41:35,826 {\an8}to not let that happen again. 663 00:41:36,410 --> 00:41:39,955 {\an8}[Hirsch] Except Churchill, to his credit, was one of the voices 664 00:41:40,039 --> 00:41:44,126 {\an8}who was really interrogating that perspective and calling it wrong. 665 00:41:44,210 --> 00:41:47,296 [people murmuring] 666 00:41:47,796 --> 00:41:49,673 For five years, 667 00:41:50,424 --> 00:41:53,093 I have talked to the House on these matters. 668 00:41:54,136 --> 00:41:56,055 Not with very great success. 669 00:41:57,765 --> 00:42:01,602 I have watched this famous island 670 00:42:01,685 --> 00:42:05,147 descending incontinently, fecklessly, 671 00:42:06,440 --> 00:42:09,693 the stairway which leads to a dark gulf. 672 00:42:10,611 --> 00:42:14,782 [crowd cheering] 673 00:42:14,865 --> 00:42:16,033 FREEDOM - PEACE 674 00:42:16,116 --> 00:42:17,660 [stressful music playing] 675 00:42:17,743 --> 00:42:19,203 [crowd chants in unison] 676 00:42:19,286 --> 00:42:23,332 [man in German] Adolf Hitler, as Fuhrer and Reich Chancellor. 677 00:42:24,041 --> 00:42:27,753 The guardian of the crown of the realm. 678 00:42:28,462 --> 00:42:29,797 Sieg heil! 679 00:42:29,880 --> 00:42:32,132 [crowd] Sieg heil! 680 00:42:33,175 --> 00:42:36,387 [Douds in English] In 1938, Adolf Hitler will annex Austria. 681 00:42:37,221 --> 00:42:41,016 Hitler kept getting his way. The Brits and French kept backing down. 682 00:42:41,600 --> 00:42:43,435 He thought they'd keep backing down. 683 00:42:45,896 --> 00:42:48,065 [Katz] Many of the British politicians thought 684 00:42:48,148 --> 00:42:50,484 {\an8}that by holding off, they were preserving peace. 685 00:42:51,986 --> 00:42:55,739 [Tucker Jones] Instead, Britain's policy of appeasement signaled to Hitler 686 00:42:55,823 --> 00:42:59,535 that the international community would not oppose his expansionism. 687 00:42:59,618 --> 00:43:00,828 [stressful music swells] 688 00:43:00,911 --> 00:43:01,745 [man] Sieg heil! 689 00:43:01,829 --> 00:43:03,581 [crowd] Sieg heil! 690 00:43:03,664 --> 00:43:08,043 [Packwood] In Britain during that time, you have a nominally national government, 691 00:43:08,127 --> 00:43:10,379 dominated by the Conservative Party, 692 00:43:11,005 --> 00:43:14,508 and led by Neville Chamberlain as Prime Minister. 693 00:43:14,592 --> 00:43:15,801 [people shouting] 694 00:43:15,884 --> 00:43:18,554 [Roberts] Neville Chamberlain had known Churchill, 695 00:43:18,637 --> 00:43:20,431 you know, all their political lives, 696 00:43:20,931 --> 00:43:24,101 but when Churchill was warning about Hitler, 697 00:43:24,727 --> 00:43:26,937 Chamberlain didn't listen to him. 698 00:43:28,147 --> 00:43:30,608 The more you are prepared, 699 00:43:30,691 --> 00:43:33,694 and the better you are known to be prepared, 700 00:43:33,777 --> 00:43:37,281 the greater is the chance of staving off war 701 00:43:38,115 --> 00:43:42,661 and saving Europe from the catastrophe which menaces it. 702 00:43:42,745 --> 00:43:46,999 How much longer must the obvious remedies be denied? 703 00:43:47,625 --> 00:43:50,127 [boos, jeering] 704 00:43:50,669 --> 00:43:52,880 {\an8}[Churchill] I felt a sensation of despair. 705 00:43:52,963 --> 00:43:54,003 {\an8}[dispirited music playing] 706 00:43:54,048 --> 00:43:59,845 {\an8}To be so entirely convinced in a matter of life and death to one's country, 707 00:43:59,928 --> 00:44:03,932 {\an8}and not to be able to make Parliament and the nation heed the warning, 708 00:44:04,016 --> 00:44:06,935 {\an8}or bow to the proof by taking action, 709 00:44:07,561 --> 00:44:10,439 {\an8}was an experience most painful. 710 00:44:12,524 --> 00:44:16,070 [Tucker-Jones] After Britain and France failed to stand up to Hitler, 711 00:44:16,153 --> 00:44:17,321 he just kept going. 712 00:44:17,863 --> 00:44:19,573 And he turned to Czechoslovakia. 713 00:44:19,657 --> 00:44:20,991 [resolute music playing] 714 00:44:21,075 --> 00:44:24,119 [Douds] Czechoslovakia is an ally of England and France. 715 00:44:25,245 --> 00:44:28,916 So the rest of Europe says, "How do we appease this upstart?" 716 00:44:30,334 --> 00:44:32,169 [in German] One people. One realm. 717 00:44:32,252 --> 00:44:33,671 Germany, sieg heil! 718 00:44:33,754 --> 00:44:34,880 [all cheering] 719 00:44:34,963 --> 00:44:37,859 [Tucker-Jones in English] The British prime minister, Neville Chamberlain, 720 00:44:37,883 --> 00:44:40,219 made the decision to negotiate with Hitler, 721 00:44:41,553 --> 00:44:43,972 who promised that the Germans 722 00:44:44,056 --> 00:44:47,601 would be satisfied with Czechoslovakia's western borderlands. 723 00:44:49,728 --> 00:44:53,649 [Roberts] When Neville Chamberlain came back from Munich, 724 00:44:54,233 --> 00:44:56,235 he thought he had made a great deal. 725 00:44:57,277 --> 00:45:00,030 We regard the agreement signed last night 726 00:45:00,114 --> 00:45:03,992 as symbolic of the desire of our two peoples 727 00:45:04,076 --> 00:45:06,412 never to go to war with one another again. 728 00:45:06,495 --> 00:45:09,039 [people cheering] 729 00:45:11,125 --> 00:45:14,420 [Douds] So they go ahead and give him western Czechoslovakia 730 00:45:14,503 --> 00:45:15,921 with the Munich Pact. 731 00:45:16,004 --> 00:45:17,005 [angry shouting] 732 00:45:17,089 --> 00:45:20,175 And with that, they throw Czechoslovakia under the bus. 733 00:45:20,259 --> 00:45:22,136 They give away land that's not even theirs. 734 00:45:24,054 --> 00:45:27,099 [Peri] Churchill gives a speech about this tragedy. 735 00:45:27,599 --> 00:45:31,478 It is 30 minutes of him just eviscerating 736 00:45:31,562 --> 00:45:34,231 the Chamberlain government for allowing this to happen. 737 00:45:34,314 --> 00:45:35,566 [people murmuring] 738 00:45:35,649 --> 00:45:37,901 This is only the beginning of the reckoning. 739 00:45:37,985 --> 00:45:40,404 This is only the first sip, 740 00:45:40,487 --> 00:45:43,532 - the first foretaste of a bitter cup... - [man clears throat] 741 00:45:43,615 --> 00:45:46,410 ...which will be proffered to us year by year 742 00:45:46,493 --> 00:45:51,915 unless... by a supreme recovery of martial vigor, 743 00:45:51,999 --> 00:45:56,628 we arise again and take our stand for freedom 744 00:45:57,504 --> 00:45:58,964 as in the olden time. 745 00:45:59,047 --> 00:46:03,385 [clamoring, jeering, protests] 746 00:46:05,095 --> 00:46:09,224 [Roberts] Hitler takes notice of Churchill's speeches and responded. 747 00:46:09,308 --> 00:46:14,271 [in German] The minute another man rises to power in England, 748 00:46:14,354 --> 00:46:16,523 someone like Mr. Churchill... 749 00:46:16,607 --> 00:46:19,902 That minute we know it would be the ambition of these men 750 00:46:19,985 --> 00:46:22,821 to break loose yet another world war, 751 00:46:22,905 --> 00:46:24,323 and do so immediately. 752 00:46:24,406 --> 00:46:25,908 [crowd yells in protest] 753 00:46:25,991 --> 00:46:27,659 [applause] 754 00:46:27,743 --> 00:46:30,329 [in English] Churchill really got under Hitler's skin. 755 00:46:30,829 --> 00:46:33,290 He's helped by this great sense of humor. 756 00:46:34,583 --> 00:46:37,795 Nazi Germany is so humane. 757 00:46:38,504 --> 00:46:41,715 All they ask for is the right to live 758 00:46:42,841 --> 00:46:46,053 and to be let alone to conquer and kill the weak. 759 00:46:47,221 --> 00:46:50,140 [Meacham] Hitler was a feral kind of creature. 760 00:46:50,224 --> 00:46:52,059 There was an intuition to him. 761 00:46:53,352 --> 00:46:59,775 In Churchill, he sensed a figure who would not roll over. 762 00:47:00,442 --> 00:47:03,320 {\an8}[Tucker-Jones] Churchill understood there was a gathering storm, 763 00:47:03,403 --> 00:47:05,948 {\an8}but at some point Britain would have to commit itself. 764 00:47:06,448 --> 00:47:09,785 {\an8}But Britain still would not declare war on Germany. 765 00:47:09,868 --> 00:47:12,246 [riveting music playing] 766 00:47:12,329 --> 00:47:17,459 {\an8}[Churchill] We seem to be very near the bleak choice between war and shame. 767 00:47:18,085 --> 00:47:21,547 {\an8}My feeling is that we shall choose shame, 768 00:47:21,630 --> 00:47:24,758 {\an8}and then have war thrown in a little later 769 00:47:24,842 --> 00:47:27,886 {\an8}on even more adverse terms than at present. 770 00:47:28,679 --> 00:47:32,808 [marching footsteps] 771 00:47:33,934 --> 00:47:35,310 [Roberts] In 1939, 772 00:47:36,562 --> 00:47:39,690 Hitler broke the promises he'd made at Munich 773 00:47:39,773 --> 00:47:41,942 and marched into the rest of Czechoslovakia. 774 00:47:42,025 --> 00:47:43,235 [serious music playing] 775 00:47:43,318 --> 00:47:45,571 [Tucker-Jones] The Munich Agreement had been a lie. 776 00:47:46,947 --> 00:47:51,243 And Chamberlain had been made a fool of by acquiescing to Hitler. 777 00:47:52,035 --> 00:47:56,582 [Roberts] This created a great groundswell of support for Churchill. 778 00:47:57,708 --> 00:47:59,376 He had been right all along. 779 00:47:59,459 --> 00:48:01,712 [crowd greeting Churchill] 780 00:48:01,795 --> 00:48:06,049 [Lammy] They come to see that those that stood against Churchill were, in fact, 781 00:48:06,633 --> 00:48:09,553 {\an8}weak, lacked courage. 782 00:48:09,636 --> 00:48:10,470 [Nazis chanting] 783 00:48:10,554 --> 00:48:14,892 [Tucker-Jones] Churchill knew that peace with Hitler was a lost cause 784 00:48:14,975 --> 00:48:18,520 and war with Nazi Germany was very real, very imminent. 785 00:48:18,604 --> 00:48:20,606 {\an8}[train whistle blowing] 786 00:48:23,483 --> 00:48:25,736 {\an8}[crowd cheering, whistling] 787 00:48:26,987 --> 00:48:30,574 [tense music playing] 788 00:48:30,657 --> 00:48:33,827 [Douds] 1939, Germany will make a pact with the Soviet Union 789 00:48:33,911 --> 00:48:35,329 for the division of Poland. 790 00:48:36,121 --> 00:48:40,459 It's unimaginable today. It would be like the US and Russia becoming allies 791 00:48:40,542 --> 00:48:45,088 and really collaborating on dismembering a country that sits between them. 792 00:48:45,172 --> 00:48:47,007 - [music swells] - [plan engine roars] 793 00:48:48,884 --> 00:48:50,469 [people yelling and screaming] 794 00:48:52,304 --> 00:48:54,056 [rapid gunfire] 795 00:48:54,139 --> 00:48:55,891 - [explosion] - [crumbling] 796 00:48:55,974 --> 00:48:58,143 [dramatic music plays] 797 00:48:59,144 --> 00:49:03,649 {\an8}[Churchill] Poland was attacked by Germany at dawn on September 1st. 798 00:49:09,071 --> 00:49:12,115 [Tucker-Jones] Poland became the straw that broke the camel's back. 799 00:49:12,199 --> 00:49:13,951 [Ruane] The storm clouds of war 800 00:49:14,034 --> 00:49:17,913 which had been gathering the previous two, three, four, five years, 801 00:49:17,996 --> 00:49:20,832 {\an8}1939 is kickoff for World War II. 802 00:49:20,916 --> 00:49:22,417 [planes roar past] 803 00:49:22,501 --> 00:49:24,878 [explosion echoes] 804 00:49:24,962 --> 00:49:26,254 [bell tolls] 805 00:49:26,338 --> 00:49:28,674 {\an8}[man] The fateful hour of 11:00 has struck. 806 00:49:29,174 --> 00:49:32,928 {\an8}A state of war once more exists between Great Britain and Germany. 807 00:49:34,012 --> 00:49:36,556 [Peri] Hitler was clearly lying all along. 808 00:49:36,640 --> 00:49:39,393 Churchill comes to seem as sort of an oracle. 809 00:49:39,476 --> 00:49:40,912 - [camera clicks] - [people clamoring] 810 00:49:40,936 --> 00:49:45,899 People were finally recognizing that Churchill needed to be recalled. 811 00:49:45,983 --> 00:49:47,317 {\an8}[purposeful music playing] 812 00:49:47,401 --> 00:49:50,988 {\an8}[Churchill] The Prime Minister asked me to visit him at Downing Street. 813 00:49:51,947 --> 00:49:55,909 [Packwood] Chamberlain offers Churchill the job of First Lord of the Admiralty, 814 00:49:56,410 --> 00:50:00,163 which was the same office that he had at the beginning of the First World War. 815 00:50:00,247 --> 00:50:01,373 [Morse code beeping] 816 00:50:01,456 --> 00:50:04,710 This allowed the signal to be sent to the British fleet... 817 00:50:06,211 --> 00:50:07,379 "Winston is back." 818 00:50:07,879 --> 00:50:10,090 Churchill was thrilled by this. 819 00:50:10,841 --> 00:50:15,137 At last he'd been proved right about his warnings about Hitler, 820 00:50:15,220 --> 00:50:18,640 and now he was in a position to do something about it. 821 00:50:18,724 --> 00:50:22,352 - [stern, stately music playing] - [seagulls calling] 822 00:50:22,436 --> 00:50:26,857 {\an8}[Churchill] Each one hopes that if he feeds the crocodile enough, 823 00:50:26,940 --> 00:50:29,109 {\an8}the crocodile will eat him last. 824 00:50:30,527 --> 00:50:35,866 {\an8}All of them hope that the storm will pass before their time comes to be devoured. 825 00:50:37,325 --> 00:50:38,952 But I fear... 826 00:50:39,036 --> 00:50:42,998 I fear greatly, the storm will not pass. 827 00:50:43,957 --> 00:50:46,877 It will rage and it will roar... 828 00:50:48,712 --> 00:50:50,172 ever more loudly... 829 00:50:52,424 --> 00:50:54,134 ever more widely. 830 00:50:54,843 --> 00:50:56,178 {\an8}[speaking in German] 831 00:50:56,261 --> 00:50:57,429 {\an8}[explosions] 832 00:50:59,181 --> 00:51:02,601 {\an8}[people shouting and crying] 833 00:51:04,227 --> 00:51:05,395 [airplanes approaching] 834 00:51:10,859 --> 00:51:14,362 [Roberts] German surprise attacks against Denmark and Norway 835 00:51:14,446 --> 00:51:17,074 caught the British off-guard. 836 00:51:17,866 --> 00:51:19,951 [Tucker-Jones] There's a major naval war, 837 00:51:20,660 --> 00:51:25,540 and Britain and France are unceremoniously expelled from Norway. 838 00:51:27,542 --> 00:51:30,378 {\an8}[Tucker-Jones] At this point, Neville Chamberlain's policy 839 00:51:30,462 --> 00:51:33,423 of appeasement is seen as a complete and utter disaster. 840 00:51:33,507 --> 00:51:36,009 All political confidence in the government's collapsed. 841 00:51:36,093 --> 00:51:37,385 [background chatter] 842 00:51:37,469 --> 00:51:42,015 [Roberts] The public in Britain was angry with Chamberlain. 843 00:51:42,599 --> 00:51:46,853 His closest allies in the Cabinet recognized 844 00:51:46,937 --> 00:51:48,897 that the time was up, and he had to go. 845 00:51:48,980 --> 00:51:49,856 [somber music playing] 846 00:51:49,940 --> 00:51:54,194 [Katz] Neville Chamberlain has to resign and find the next Prime Minister. 847 00:51:55,028 --> 00:51:56,696 [Tucker-Jones] The problem is, of course, 848 00:51:56,780 --> 00:51:59,574 becoming Prime Minister at that point is a poisoned chalice. 849 00:51:59,658 --> 00:52:01,326 You know, who-who would want the job? 850 00:52:01,409 --> 00:52:02,327 [car horns honking] 851 00:52:02,410 --> 00:52:05,539 That narrows it down to a choice 852 00:52:05,622 --> 00:52:09,000 between the Foreign Secretary, Lord Halifax, 853 00:52:09,084 --> 00:52:12,003 a dove who supports appeasement, 854 00:52:12,671 --> 00:52:14,589 and Churchill, the hawk. 855 00:52:16,216 --> 00:52:19,678 So it's whether you're going to have someone within the Commons 856 00:52:19,761 --> 00:52:23,014 still trying to find a negotiated way out of this crisis, 857 00:52:23,849 --> 00:52:27,769 or whether you're going to go with someone who is going to fight. 858 00:52:27,853 --> 00:52:30,313 [people chattering] 859 00:52:31,439 --> 00:52:36,903 [Roberts] On the 9th of May, 1940, four men met at Number 10. 860 00:52:38,363 --> 00:52:41,700 The first was Neville Chamberlain, the outgoing Prime Minister. 861 00:52:42,450 --> 00:52:45,495 Then there was the Chief Whip, David Margesson. 862 00:52:46,246 --> 00:52:47,914 The next was Lord Halifax. 863 00:52:50,167 --> 00:52:52,794 And finally, of course, Winston Churchill himself. 864 00:52:53,837 --> 00:52:56,214 There's been an enormous amount of speculation 865 00:52:56,298 --> 00:52:59,092 about exactly what was said at that meeting. 866 00:53:00,093 --> 00:53:01,511 [bell tolls] 867 00:53:01,595 --> 00:53:04,306 {\an8}[Churchill] I do not recall the actual words used, 868 00:53:04,806 --> 00:53:07,017 {\an8}but this was the implication, 869 00:53:07,976 --> 00:53:11,062 {\an8}that the duty that would fall upon me 870 00:53:11,146 --> 00:53:14,232 {\an8}had, in fact, fallen upon me. 871 00:53:15,817 --> 00:53:19,487 Churchill claimed that after a long silence, 872 00:53:19,571 --> 00:53:22,199 everybody agreed that it had to be Churchill. Um... 873 00:53:22,282 --> 00:53:25,202 What actually happened was the same thing that had happened 874 00:53:25,285 --> 00:53:27,120 all the way through Churchill's life. 875 00:53:27,204 --> 00:53:28,580 He demanded the job. 876 00:53:30,665 --> 00:53:36,213 And on the evening of the 10th of May, Winston Churchill became Prime Minister. 877 00:53:37,547 --> 00:53:40,967 [Snow] Winston Churchill, the man who always believed, 878 00:53:41,051 --> 00:53:42,510 even in his "wilderness years," 879 00:53:42,594 --> 00:53:45,639 that one day he would become Prime Minister, 880 00:53:45,722 --> 00:53:47,641 one day he would lead his country... 881 00:53:47,724 --> 00:53:49,476 He's now been given that opportunity. 882 00:53:49,559 --> 00:53:51,144 [dramatic music playing] 883 00:53:51,228 --> 00:53:53,468 [Douds] The day Winston Churchill becomes Prime Minister, 884 00:53:53,521 --> 00:53:56,524 that's the day that the Germans invade the Low Countries. 885 00:53:56,608 --> 00:53:58,443 [artillery firing] 886 00:53:59,194 --> 00:54:02,489 And to the rest of the world, it's scary. 887 00:54:03,073 --> 00:54:05,158 - [plane droning] - [shell exploding] 888 00:54:05,242 --> 00:54:07,535 [Roberts] The German Blitzkrieg attack, 889 00:54:07,619 --> 00:54:10,538 the "Sickle-Scythe Maneuver" it's called, 890 00:54:10,622 --> 00:54:13,291 just utterly crushed the Allied forces. 891 00:54:14,709 --> 00:54:18,588 [Katz] It's literally 125 years since Britain has actually been threatened 892 00:54:18,672 --> 00:54:21,216 by this prospect of invasion, 893 00:54:21,299 --> 00:54:23,969 and that fact has become impossible to deny. 894 00:54:25,595 --> 00:54:27,222 [Tucker-Jones] The Nazis were coming. 895 00:54:27,847 --> 00:54:30,225 The British public was quite terrified. 896 00:54:31,142 --> 00:54:35,480 The British people need a call to action to inspire people. 897 00:54:36,314 --> 00:54:40,694 [Snow] Churchill is trying to convince politicians and a big chunk of the public 898 00:54:40,777 --> 00:54:42,612 to stay in this war against Hitler. 899 00:54:43,405 --> 00:54:45,657 The fate of Winston Churchill, the fate of Europe, 900 00:54:45,740 --> 00:54:50,495 and possibly the fate of the free world, hang in the balance in May 1940. 901 00:54:51,329 --> 00:54:52,706 [dramatic music dies down] 902 00:54:56,376 --> 00:54:57,877 I would say to the House, 903 00:54:58,378 --> 00:55:01,423 as I've said to those who've joined this government, 904 00:55:02,924 --> 00:55:04,467 I have nothing to offer, 905 00:55:05,844 --> 00:55:06,928 but blood, 906 00:55:07,929 --> 00:55:08,930 toil, 907 00:55:09,431 --> 00:55:10,432 tears, 908 00:55:11,099 --> 00:55:12,267 and sweat. 909 00:55:15,103 --> 00:55:18,940 We have before us an ordeal of the most grievous kind. 910 00:55:20,275 --> 00:55:25,780 We have before us many, many long months of struggle and suffering. 911 00:55:25,864 --> 00:55:27,115 [stirring music playing] 912 00:55:27,198 --> 00:55:29,617 You asked, "What is our policy?" 913 00:55:30,910 --> 00:55:31,911 I will say, 914 00:55:33,371 --> 00:55:34,789 it is to wage war, 915 00:55:36,249 --> 00:55:37,249 by sea, 916 00:55:38,001 --> 00:55:39,001 land, 917 00:55:39,377 --> 00:55:40,377 and air, 918 00:55:41,254 --> 00:55:42,672 with all our might 919 00:55:44,257 --> 00:55:47,010 and with all the strength that God can give us. 920 00:55:49,721 --> 00:55:53,850 To wage war against a monstrous tyranny 921 00:55:55,143 --> 00:56:00,523 never surpassed in the dark and lamentable catalog of human crime. 922 00:56:01,358 --> 00:56:03,026 That is our policy. 923 00:56:04,694 --> 00:56:07,072 You ask, "What is our aim?" 924 00:56:09,282 --> 00:56:10,992 I can answer in one word. 925 00:56:13,078 --> 00:56:14,078 Victory. 926 00:56:16,539 --> 00:56:18,375 Victory at all costs. 927 00:56:19,459 --> 00:56:21,628 Victory in spite of all terror. 928 00:56:23,505 --> 00:56:27,717 Victory, however long and hard the road may be. 929 00:56:28,385 --> 00:56:29,969 For without victory, 930 00:56:31,262 --> 00:56:33,390 there is no survival. 931 00:56:33,473 --> 00:56:35,975 [stirring music swells] 932 00:56:41,314 --> 00:56:45,819 {\an8}[Churchill] All I hope... is that it is not too late. 933 00:56:49,697 --> 00:56:51,699 [stirring music fades] 934 00:56:51,783 --> 00:56:54,994 I'm very much afraid it is. 935 00:56:55,787 --> 00:56:59,416 [thunderous crash echoes] 936 00:56:59,499 --> 00:57:02,335 [dramatic music plays] 937 00:59:27,105 --> 00:59:30,024 [music fades out] 77985

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