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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:08,800 --> 00:00:11,178 [Steven Spielberg] Nothing like World War II has ever happened 2 00:00:11,261 --> 00:00:13,388 to give us any idea of why... 3 00:00:15,390 --> 00:00:16,975 there was such solidarity. 4 00:00:18,602 --> 00:00:23,148 I think everybody could see that Western civilization was at stake 5 00:00:23,232 --> 00:00:25,442 and they needed to fight or die. 6 00:00:29,571 --> 00:00:31,365 [Paul Greengrass] When you strip away 7 00:00:31,448 --> 00:00:34,409 all the glitz and the glamour of Hollywood, 8 00:00:36,370 --> 00:00:38,330 what you're left with is: 9 00:00:38,413 --> 00:00:44,544 what is the witness that you're giving to the world that you see out there? 10 00:02:25,896 --> 00:02:29,941 [Lawrence Kasdan] John Ford and George Stevens were chosen by Eisenhower 11 00:02:30,025 --> 00:02:32,986 to land in the invasion on D-Day. 12 00:02:34,529 --> 00:02:36,448 And they gathered around them 13 00:02:36,531 --> 00:02:40,744 a large group of cameramen and soundmen 14 00:02:40,827 --> 00:02:43,038 to make the landing. 15 00:02:44,039 --> 00:02:47,209 That means you know you're going to sacrifice some of those men. 16 00:02:48,085 --> 00:02:53,632 There was no protected place from which to film the invasion of Normandy. 17 00:02:57,386 --> 00:02:59,930 You are about to embark upon the great crusade 18 00:03:00,013 --> 00:03:02,391 toward which we have striven these many months. 19 00:03:04,059 --> 00:03:08,063 In company with our brave allies and brothers in arms on other fronts, 20 00:03:09,189 --> 00:03:11,900 you will bring about the destruction of the German war machine. 21 00:03:13,819 --> 00:03:18,156 I have full confidence in your courage, devotion to duty and skill in battle. 22 00:03:18,907 --> 00:03:21,743 We will accept nothing less than full victory. 23 00:03:23,829 --> 00:03:27,207 [narrator] To capture the largest military operation of the war, 24 00:03:27,290 --> 00:03:32,045 John Ford and George Stevens used hundreds of cameras and dozens of men. 25 00:03:33,422 --> 00:03:35,382 The orders they gave were simple: 26 00:03:35,465 --> 00:03:38,885 don't put yourself in unnecessary danger, 27 00:03:38,969 --> 00:03:40,721 focus on what you see, 28 00:03:40,804 --> 00:03:43,098 and take pictures of everything. 29 00:05:16,608 --> 00:05:19,486 [Greengrass] Nothing, I think, could prepare anyone 30 00:05:20,362 --> 00:05:26,910 for the sheer intensity of the conflict and the violence on the beach. 31 00:05:28,245 --> 00:05:31,498 Ford talked about, in one interview, 32 00:05:31,581 --> 00:05:33,625 about seeing a man drown... 33 00:05:36,753 --> 00:05:38,964 and the bodies littering the beaches. 34 00:05:40,382 --> 00:05:44,010 I mean, it's... it's beyond imagination. 35 00:05:48,265 --> 00:05:53,812 [Kasdan] A lot of the footage that the Allied cameramen got on D-Day, 36 00:05:53,895 --> 00:05:56,565 that is, the people under Ford and Stevens, 37 00:05:56,648 --> 00:05:59,568 could not be shown in newsreels. 38 00:05:59,651 --> 00:06:02,445 It could not be shown as propaganda. 39 00:06:02,529 --> 00:06:06,283 It was just too brutal. There was just too much carnage. 40 00:06:23,925 --> 00:06:25,468 [narrator] Capra was in Washington, 41 00:06:25,552 --> 00:06:28,138 anxiously awaiting delivery of the footage. 42 00:06:30,390 --> 00:06:33,101 His team packaged it into a newsreel 43 00:06:33,184 --> 00:06:35,437 that was distributed to theaters around the country. 44 00:06:37,272 --> 00:06:39,274 [trumpets and drums play] 45 00:06:41,526 --> 00:06:43,403 [male voiceover] Today, just as in these scenes, 46 00:06:43,486 --> 00:06:46,448 the armies of the United Nations have made their first landings 47 00:06:46,531 --> 00:06:49,159 on the soil of Western Europe. 48 00:06:49,242 --> 00:06:53,330 Another of the great, decisive battles of world history has been joined. 49 00:06:53,413 --> 00:06:57,500 This is the day for which free people long have waited. 50 00:06:57,584 --> 00:07:00,337 This is D-Day. 51 00:07:03,506 --> 00:07:06,009 [Greengrass] The sheer human cost of that operation, 52 00:07:06,092 --> 00:07:10,388 the numbers of people that died, was too pitiless. 53 00:07:11,848 --> 00:07:13,600 [narrator] By the end of the first day, 54 00:07:14,351 --> 00:07:17,854 over 4,000 Allied soldiers had been killed. 55 00:07:21,691 --> 00:07:27,155 After it was all over, Ford went on a tremendous drinking bender. 56 00:07:28,490 --> 00:07:31,493 [narrator] Alone, and without telling any of his men, 57 00:07:31,576 --> 00:07:35,997 Ford made his way up the French coast to a house where officers were staying 58 00:07:36,665 --> 00:07:39,542 and drank himself into a three-day stupor. 59 00:07:40,585 --> 00:07:42,796 He was belligerent and incoherent. 60 00:07:43,964 --> 00:07:46,341 Finally, the officers had had enough. 61 00:07:47,050 --> 00:07:50,553 They summoned the men of Ford's unit to come and take him away. 62 00:07:52,180 --> 00:07:55,350 [Greengrass] That journey, that began in the studios of Hollywood 63 00:07:55,433 --> 00:07:56,935 in the late '30s, 64 00:07:57,018 --> 00:08:00,855 recruiting a ragbag army for what became Field Photo... 65 00:08:02,774 --> 00:08:06,152 it ended in the carnage of D-Day. 66 00:08:09,864 --> 00:08:12,784 [narrator] Ford would never supervise Navy men again. 67 00:08:12,867 --> 00:08:17,831 His war service was over. He was sent back to Washington. 68 00:08:20,333 --> 00:08:23,253 [Kasdan]That was the end of Ford's involvement in the war. 69 00:08:24,004 --> 00:08:30,010 But Stevens... it was really the start of his life-changing experience in Europe. 70 00:08:36,516 --> 00:08:40,645 Stevens did not predetermine what he wanted to see. 71 00:08:42,897 --> 00:08:44,941 Just as he does in his movies, 72 00:08:45,900 --> 00:08:49,070 he wanted to observe what was going on. 73 00:08:52,198 --> 00:08:54,909 [narrator] Stevens and his men traveled with the Army 74 00:08:54,993 --> 00:08:58,413 as they liberated small French towns on the drive to Paris. 75 00:09:00,999 --> 00:09:04,919 He didn't shy away from showing all aspects of war, 76 00:09:06,504 --> 00:09:07,922 from the mundane... 77 00:09:11,009 --> 00:09:12,093 to the terrible. 78 00:09:20,018 --> 00:09:24,189 [Kasdan] He had his unit shoot everything that he thought was important, 79 00:09:24,272 --> 00:09:27,108 and that included very cinematic details. 80 00:09:27,192 --> 00:09:29,861 It could be a little boy running after the troops. 81 00:09:29,944 --> 00:09:34,074 It could be a church steeple that is half-destroyed. 82 00:09:38,369 --> 00:09:40,789 They are the texture of war. 83 00:09:45,043 --> 00:09:47,170 [narrator] As they approached Paris, 84 00:09:47,253 --> 00:09:49,631 Stevens got permission to go ahead of the American troops 85 00:09:49,714 --> 00:09:52,300 and enter the city with the Free French Army 86 00:09:52,383 --> 00:09:54,302 to film the liberation. 87 00:09:58,556 --> 00:10:02,143 [Kasdan] The footage he got there is some of the most ecstatic and thrilling 88 00:10:02,227 --> 00:10:05,355 and unique footage ever shot. 89 00:10:13,613 --> 00:10:17,158 Stevens wanted to shoot the surrender of Paris, 90 00:10:18,743 --> 00:10:22,872 and that surrender happened in the Montparnasse train station, 91 00:10:22,956 --> 00:10:26,793 and Stevens went in there with his crew and shot that surrender. 92 00:10:26,876 --> 00:10:30,922 But he became panicked that it was too dark in there 93 00:10:31,005 --> 00:10:35,552 and that he would not get the images of this pivotal moment in history. 94 00:10:36,427 --> 00:10:41,015 And he told them, de Gaulle and the German commander, 95 00:10:41,099 --> 00:10:46,354 that they had to restage it outside the station, in the sunlight, 96 00:10:46,437 --> 00:10:48,648 so that he would be sure to get it. 97 00:10:49,440 --> 00:10:51,734 Now, that is a Hollywood filmmaker. 98 00:10:52,569 --> 00:10:56,781 We all believe getting the shot is more important than anything. 99 00:10:57,448 --> 00:11:01,286 [narrator] It was the last time Stevens staged any footage during the war. 100 00:11:02,579 --> 00:11:04,747 [male voiceover] Paris is free! 101 00:11:05,582 --> 00:11:07,876 While all the world catches its breath at the news, 102 00:11:07,959 --> 00:11:11,629 joyful Allied armies speed in through welcoming crowds. 103 00:11:11,713 --> 00:11:12,964 [music, cheering] 104 00:11:13,047 --> 00:11:17,260 In this hour, Paris, crowned with honor and glory, 105 00:11:17,343 --> 00:11:19,053 does not forget: 106 00:11:19,137 --> 00:11:21,139 the war is still going on, 107 00:11:21,222 --> 00:11:24,517 and will continue for everyone, everywhere, 108 00:11:24,601 --> 00:11:28,605 until the final day of total victory. 109 00:11:32,483 --> 00:11:36,905 [narrator] In Italy, Wyler was struggling to complete a new assignment. 110 00:11:36,988 --> 00:11:39,032 As a follow-up to Memphis Belle, 111 00:11:39,115 --> 00:11:42,619 the Army wanted him to showcase a new plane. 112 00:11:44,621 --> 00:11:48,124 The P-47 Thunderbolt fighter bomber. 113 00:11:50,293 --> 00:11:54,005 Wyler, with Memphis Belle, he had so many places to put cameras. 114 00:11:54,088 --> 00:11:58,885 Suddenly, he sees a single-pilot P-47 Thunderbolt 115 00:11:58,968 --> 00:12:00,929 and how can he get creative with that? 116 00:12:01,012 --> 00:12:02,263 Where could he put his cameras? 117 00:12:03,681 --> 00:12:07,060 He had to figure out places to put the cameras on the plane 118 00:12:07,143 --> 00:12:09,687 and not mess up its aerodynamics. 119 00:12:09,771 --> 00:12:12,690 [male voiceover] Behind the pilot, shooting forward and back. 120 00:12:12,774 --> 00:12:14,108 Under the wing. 121 00:12:15,234 --> 00:12:18,321 In the wing, timed with the guns. 122 00:12:44,305 --> 00:12:46,683 [Spielberg] Wyler felt the mounted cameras on the planes 123 00:12:46,766 --> 00:12:49,769 didn't provide enough footage to tell a complete story, 124 00:12:49,852 --> 00:12:52,730 so he also filmed extensive devastation on the ground. 125 00:13:02,281 --> 00:13:03,866 [narrator] While Wyler was figuring out 126 00:13:03,950 --> 00:13:06,327 the story he wanted to tell with Thunderbolt, 127 00:13:07,328 --> 00:13:11,082 the Army sent him on various assignments across Italy and France. 128 00:13:13,292 --> 00:13:17,588 On June 5, 1944, he filmed the liberation of Rome. 129 00:13:18,881 --> 00:13:21,759 [male voiceover] Citizens of Rome organize welcoming ceremonies. 130 00:13:21,843 --> 00:13:26,347 After more than 20 years of fascism, they are free again. 131 00:13:28,266 --> 00:13:31,728 [narrator] In Paris, Wyler met with Stevens and asked him for help. 132 00:13:33,062 --> 00:13:37,567 Wyler's hometown of Mulhouse had just been liberated by the Allies, 133 00:13:37,650 --> 00:13:39,610 and he was looking for a way to get there. 134 00:13:39,694 --> 00:13:41,779 [newscaster] After the liberation of Mulhouse, 135 00:13:41,863 --> 00:13:44,741 patriotic Frenchmen were able to bring their flags out into the open. 136 00:13:46,743 --> 00:13:49,203 [narrator]Stevens recommended a trusted colleague: 137 00:13:49,871 --> 00:13:51,914 Ernest Hemingway's younger brother Leicester, 138 00:13:51,998 --> 00:13:53,708 who was a driver in the Army. 139 00:13:54,459 --> 00:13:57,045 Wyler wanted to go home, and this was his opportunity. 140 00:13:59,797 --> 00:14:02,216 Wyler and Hemingway left without telling anybody. 141 00:14:02,300 --> 00:14:05,720 But Wyler, of course, brought along a film camera. 142 00:14:30,370 --> 00:14:31,788 Like George Stevens, 143 00:14:31,871 --> 00:14:34,999 William Wyler was a documentarian in the most literal sense. 144 00:14:37,043 --> 00:14:39,670 He wanted to record what he saw, 145 00:14:39,754 --> 00:14:42,298 and he wanted to give not just a sense of what was happening, 146 00:14:42,382 --> 00:14:45,218 but how it looked and how it felt. 147 00:15:24,090 --> 00:15:27,301 [narrator] After days of travel, they finally arrived in Mulhouse. 148 00:15:30,388 --> 00:15:34,267 Wyler was heartened to see his father's old shop still standing. 149 00:15:37,103 --> 00:15:40,440 [Spielberg] When he got back to Mulhouse, there was no one there. 150 00:15:41,399 --> 00:15:43,484 The Holocaust had claimed all of them. 151 00:15:46,362 --> 00:15:50,867 Hitler's Shoah, Hitler's genocide, had been so successful there 152 00:15:50,950 --> 00:15:52,535 that there was no one left. 153 00:16:04,547 --> 00:16:06,674 [narrator] Wyler returned to Air Force headquarters 154 00:16:06,757 --> 00:16:09,260 to find he'd been reported missing in action. 155 00:16:10,011 --> 00:16:11,804 He was ordered to go back to Italy 156 00:16:11,888 --> 00:16:14,348 and complete the long-delayed Thunderbolt. 157 00:16:15,850 --> 00:16:19,937 Wyler felt he needed more images of the devastated Italian coastline, 158 00:16:20,021 --> 00:16:24,150 so he went up in a B-25 bomber to shoot the footage himself. 159 00:16:24,942 --> 00:16:27,487 [Spielberg] My father flew in B-25s in World War II. 160 00:16:27,570 --> 00:16:29,197 He said they were really noisy, 161 00:16:29,280 --> 00:16:31,616 but, of course, he was only comparing it to nothing, 162 00:16:31,699 --> 00:16:33,993 because he had not been on anything but a B-25 163 00:16:34,076 --> 00:16:35,620 when he was fighting in Burma. 164 00:16:35,703 --> 00:16:37,955 My dad told me that you had to wear ear protection 165 00:16:38,039 --> 00:16:42,251 because you couldn't hear yourself think if you didn't have your ear guards on. 166 00:16:43,878 --> 00:16:47,423 With all the time that William Wyler spent in the B-17 167 00:16:47,507 --> 00:16:48,966 making Memphis Belle, 168 00:16:50,343 --> 00:16:52,553 he got on the B-25. 169 00:16:53,930 --> 00:16:56,849 And after one mission, after one flight, 170 00:16:56,933 --> 00:16:59,435 he couldn't hear anything when he got down. 171 00:17:00,645 --> 00:17:04,398 At first, he thought it was temporary and his hearing would come back. 172 00:17:05,358 --> 00:17:09,237 [narrator] The next day, Wyler was examined by an Army doctor in Naples. 173 00:17:09,820 --> 00:17:12,865 The doctor handed him the diagnosis on a piece of paper. 174 00:17:12,949 --> 00:17:16,244 The damage was permanent. Wyler was deaf. 175 00:17:18,204 --> 00:17:20,081 His time in the Army was over. 176 00:17:22,583 --> 00:17:26,087 A day earlier, he had been one of the foremost documentarians 177 00:17:26,170 --> 00:17:27,505 in the Armed Forces. 178 00:17:27,588 --> 00:17:30,800 Now he was a disabled veteran going home. 179 00:17:32,593 --> 00:17:36,847 So much of his cinema was as much about the ear as it was about the eye. 180 00:17:36,931 --> 00:17:40,017 The performances and just the beautiful words 181 00:17:40,101 --> 00:17:43,479 that were written for Wyler to direct actors to speak. 182 00:17:44,855 --> 00:17:46,482 [narrator] Wyler returned to Hollywood, 183 00:17:46,566 --> 00:17:49,819 but he believed that his directing career was over. 184 00:17:53,322 --> 00:17:55,658 [Kasdan] After the liberation of Paris, 185 00:17:56,325 --> 00:18:00,454 Stevens and others thought the war was near ending. 186 00:18:00,538 --> 00:18:03,749 But, in truth, it wasn't nearly done. 187 00:18:06,377 --> 00:18:09,171 And what Stevens found himself on 188 00:18:09,255 --> 00:18:12,967 was a long, cold, hard, brutal, 189 00:18:13,050 --> 00:18:17,221 violent slog to Germany. 190 00:18:18,139 --> 00:18:20,891 [trumpet plays] 191 00:18:23,227 --> 00:18:25,438 [male voiceover] Winter warfare on the Western Front. 192 00:18:25,521 --> 00:18:29,150 The Allies grinding relentlessly ahead through heavy bogs 193 00:18:29,233 --> 00:18:31,861 that slow down both machines and men. 194 00:18:31,944 --> 00:18:35,197 [Kasdan] One night, they woke up and the earth was shaking, 195 00:18:35,281 --> 00:18:38,159 and the Germans had counterattacked. 196 00:18:39,160 --> 00:18:40,828 [narrator] In December, 1944, 197 00:18:40,911 --> 00:18:44,081 the Germans launched a fierce counteroffensive. 198 00:18:45,666 --> 00:18:47,585 Over the next six weeks, 199 00:18:47,668 --> 00:18:50,838 tens of thousands of Allied troops were killed or injured 200 00:18:50,921 --> 00:18:52,548 in the Battle of the Bulge. 201 00:19:01,390 --> 00:19:06,145 Stevens and his men pressed on, filming the devastation and the aftermath. 202 00:19:07,563 --> 00:19:11,275 He had been traveling with the Allies nonstop for seven months now, 203 00:19:11,359 --> 00:19:13,861 sick and sleeping outdoors most of the time. 204 00:19:14,779 --> 00:19:18,074 As winter set in and conditions worsened, 205 00:19:18,157 --> 00:19:20,785 Stevens barely had enough energy to write home. 206 00:19:21,285 --> 00:19:23,579 Instead, he sent back movies. 207 00:19:31,170 --> 00:19:33,798 After a punishing month of being pushed back, 208 00:19:33,881 --> 00:19:38,302 the Allies regained the offensive and began the final advance into Germany. 209 00:19:44,558 --> 00:19:46,769 [newscaster] As the American troops approached Cologne, 210 00:19:46,852 --> 00:19:49,855 they freed countless numbers of Russian and Polish prisoners 211 00:19:49,939 --> 00:19:52,942 who were forced laborers under the German heel. 212 00:19:53,025 --> 00:19:56,779 Imagine your son, your daughter, your husband or your wife, here. 213 00:19:56,862 --> 00:19:58,572 Victory is in our grasp. 214 00:19:58,656 --> 00:20:01,575 We have the opportunity to stamp out evil like this. 215 00:20:02,201 --> 00:20:05,204 [Kasdan] That movement started again after the Battle of the Bulge, 216 00:20:05,287 --> 00:20:07,957 and the end of the war did seem possible. 217 00:20:10,459 --> 00:20:14,463 But they were not prepared for what they were going to find. 218 00:20:15,673 --> 00:20:21,262 And the Allied forces start coming upon these concentration camps, 219 00:20:21,345 --> 00:20:24,181 and Stevens was at Dachau. 220 00:20:25,433 --> 00:20:30,396 He and everyone with him was changed forever by what they saw. 221 00:20:45,369 --> 00:20:48,539 It's very hard for us to imagine now 222 00:20:49,248 --> 00:20:52,752 the shock of what they discovered. 223 00:20:56,338 --> 00:20:58,507 They had heard rumblings, 224 00:20:58,591 --> 00:21:02,720 and a lot of people had tried to keep those rumblings quiet. 225 00:21:02,803 --> 00:21:07,349 They had heard that the Jews had been taken to camps, 226 00:21:07,975 --> 00:21:12,229 but they did not know, no one had seen, the result of that. 227 00:21:14,440 --> 00:21:17,526 And what they thought might be prison camps 228 00:21:17,610 --> 00:21:19,987 turned out to be extermination camps. 229 00:21:20,070 --> 00:21:22,114 They were death factories. 230 00:21:25,993 --> 00:21:28,245 I think the strongest feeling I ever had in my life 231 00:21:28,329 --> 00:21:32,124 was the horror and the revulsion 232 00:21:32,208 --> 00:21:34,293 and the exposure to things 233 00:21:34,376 --> 00:21:40,549 that I couldn't believe was part of human existence, 234 00:21:40,633 --> 00:21:42,343 the violence and wickedness 235 00:21:42,426 --> 00:21:45,679 that took place in those... in those concentration camps. 236 00:21:56,357 --> 00:22:00,694 [narrator] When Stevens entered Dachau, he realized his job had changed. 237 00:22:02,363 --> 00:22:06,242 His task was no longer to make propaganda or even a documentary. 238 00:22:08,160 --> 00:22:10,955 He would now use the camera to gather evidence. 239 00:22:14,917 --> 00:22:19,964 And he was very rigorous about being right at the front himself. 240 00:22:20,047 --> 00:22:21,924 He did not want to send his men 241 00:22:22,007 --> 00:22:25,094 to see things that he was not willing to see. 242 00:22:28,847 --> 00:22:31,058 Then you think, "What kind of a world is this? 243 00:22:31,141 --> 00:22:33,018 You know, what kind of creatures are we? 244 00:22:33,102 --> 00:22:36,897 And how much management we need to keep us from being ourselves?" 245 00:22:39,441 --> 00:22:42,903 [narrator] Some of the men in his crew, overwhelmed by what they saw, 246 00:22:42,987 --> 00:22:46,782 abandoned their cameras to become nurses or ministers. 247 00:22:47,908 --> 00:22:51,120 One cameraman spent the next few days writing letters 248 00:22:51,203 --> 00:22:52,997 to the families of dying prisoners 249 00:22:53,080 --> 00:22:55,124 that they dictated from their beds. 250 00:22:57,084 --> 00:23:00,671 Stevens wrestled with his own repulsion towards the prisoners, 251 00:23:00,754 --> 00:23:04,008 many of whom treated him as just a new captor. 252 00:23:05,009 --> 00:23:10,097 When a poor man, hungered and unseeing because his eyesight is failing, 253 00:23:10,180 --> 00:23:12,141 grabs me and starts begging, 254 00:23:13,142 --> 00:23:15,728 I feel the Nazi in any human being. 255 00:23:15,811 --> 00:23:18,397 I don't care if I'm a Jew or a Gentile or what. 256 00:23:18,480 --> 00:23:19,898 I feel a Nazi. 257 00:23:19,982 --> 00:23:25,029 And that's a fierce thing to discover within yourself 258 00:23:25,112 --> 00:23:27,114 that which you despise the most. 259 00:23:33,621 --> 00:23:34,788 [narrator] Two nights later, 260 00:23:34,872 --> 00:23:37,583 Stevens and his men heard the news on the radio. 261 00:23:37,666 --> 00:23:40,169 The war in Europe was over. 262 00:23:41,462 --> 00:23:46,342 I wish that Franklin D. Roosevelt had lived to see this day. 263 00:23:46,425 --> 00:23:50,846 The forces of Germany have surrendered to the United Nations. 264 00:23:54,683 --> 00:23:58,103 [narrator] Stevens' instinct to document the atrocities at Dachau 265 00:23:58,187 --> 00:23:59,480 proved to be correct. 266 00:24:00,397 --> 00:24:04,443 The surviving Nazi leadership was charged with war crimes, 267 00:24:04,526 --> 00:24:08,781 and he was asked to create two films to be used as evidence against them. 268 00:24:10,032 --> 00:24:12,743 [Kasdan] Stevens stayed in Germany for quite a while, 269 00:24:12,826 --> 00:24:17,706 shooting Dachau and composing these two films, 270 00:24:17,790 --> 00:24:19,958 one about the concentration camp, 271 00:24:20,042 --> 00:24:25,047 one about the overreaching Nazi plan that allowed this to happen. 272 00:24:26,256 --> 00:24:29,134 [male voiceover] These are the locations of the largest concentration 273 00:24:29,218 --> 00:24:32,805 and prison camps maintained throughout Germany and occupied Europe 274 00:24:32,888 --> 00:24:34,473 under the Nazi regime. 275 00:24:40,020 --> 00:24:42,690 Dachau: factory of horrors. 276 00:24:44,274 --> 00:24:48,696 Dachau, near München, one of the oldest of the Nazi prison camps. 277 00:24:50,823 --> 00:24:53,367 Hanging in orderly rows were the clothes of prisoners 278 00:24:53,450 --> 00:24:55,828 who had been suffocated in a lethal gas chamber. 279 00:24:57,621 --> 00:25:00,124 They had been persuaded to remove their clothing 280 00:25:00,207 --> 00:25:05,254 under the pretext of taking a shower, for which towels and soap were provided. 281 00:25:09,007 --> 00:25:12,261 [narrator] The films Stevens made were shown at Nuremberg. 282 00:25:13,345 --> 00:25:15,097 He had omitted nothing. 283 00:25:15,723 --> 00:25:18,142 Journalists from around the world reported 284 00:25:18,225 --> 00:25:20,728 those images were the turning point in the trials. 285 00:25:21,645 --> 00:25:25,774 The wrongs which we seek to condemn and punish... 286 00:25:27,359 --> 00:25:29,027 have been so calculated... 287 00:25:30,237 --> 00:25:32,740 so malignant and so devastating... 288 00:25:34,408 --> 00:25:38,412 that civilization cannot tolerate their being ignored... 289 00:25:39,997 --> 00:25:45,127 because it cannot survive their being repeated. 290 00:25:47,087 --> 00:25:50,507 [Frank Capra] Not until we showed them some of the stuff that we got at Dachau, 291 00:25:50,591 --> 00:25:53,218 that George Stevens photographed with his crew, 292 00:25:54,094 --> 00:25:57,973 did it actually impinge itself on the mind 293 00:25:58,056 --> 00:26:01,685 of the horror... the horror of this whole thing. 294 00:26:03,896 --> 00:26:05,731 [male voiceover] As in the case of other camps, 295 00:26:05,814 --> 00:26:09,902 local townspeople were brought in to view the dead at Dachau. 296 00:26:12,112 --> 00:26:15,365 [Capra] Man, the highest of all the animals, 297 00:26:16,283 --> 00:26:19,995 man... the man who created God... 298 00:26:21,580 --> 00:26:25,542 to end up here in a pile of bones, 299 00:26:25,626 --> 00:26:26,710 burned... 300 00:26:27,795 --> 00:26:31,590 It left me just... speechless, 301 00:26:32,466 --> 00:26:35,052 colorless, bloodless. 302 00:26:36,845 --> 00:26:39,681 I couldn't possibly believe 303 00:26:39,765 --> 00:26:44,186 that there was that kind of savagery in the world, you see. 304 00:26:47,147 --> 00:26:51,693 [Guillermo del Toro] If the propaganda gave you the reason to go into war, 305 00:26:53,362 --> 00:26:57,115 the footage of the liberation of the camps, what these men saw, 306 00:26:57,199 --> 00:27:01,787 proved that the enormity of the task was worth it. 307 00:27:02,788 --> 00:27:05,916 [Spielberg] Well, it was the first Holocaust footage the world had seen, 308 00:27:07,167 --> 00:27:10,087 and it was only after the war that this footage began to come out. 309 00:27:10,170 --> 00:27:13,090 And that's when people began to see the true and terrible impact 310 00:27:13,173 --> 00:27:15,884 of what Hitler had designed to accomplish 311 00:27:15,968 --> 00:27:20,180 and had, in most part, been successful at in Eastern Europe. 312 00:27:20,264 --> 00:27:21,723 [trumpets play] 313 00:27:25,060 --> 00:27:28,146 [newscaster] The demagogue on his way to power and world infamy 314 00:27:28,230 --> 00:27:29,940 as history's arch-war criminal. 315 00:27:30,774 --> 00:27:33,944 In the Nazi downfall, Mussolini has been executed 316 00:27:34,027 --> 00:27:36,196 by patriots of his own country, 317 00:27:36,280 --> 00:27:38,949 and Hitler has come to an end appropriate to a war-maker, 318 00:27:39,032 --> 00:27:43,078 the atrocities of whose Nazi regime have shocked the world. 319 00:27:54,423 --> 00:27:58,302 [narrator] In Washington, Capra petitioned to be released from service. 320 00:27:58,385 --> 00:28:00,596 He had given up his career to volunteer. 321 00:28:01,388 --> 00:28:03,640 Now, he wrote, he would have to go back 322 00:28:03,724 --> 00:28:06,351 and compete with those who weren't so patriotic. 323 00:28:08,103 --> 00:28:12,107 But the Army wouldn't let him go until he had completed the program of war films 324 00:28:12,190 --> 00:28:14,234 he had set out to make four years earlier. 325 00:28:14,902 --> 00:28:18,238 So, he turned his attention back to the war against Japan. 326 00:28:18,989 --> 00:28:20,824 [newscaster] Supplies that were sent to Europe 327 00:28:20,908 --> 00:28:22,868 are now on their way to the Pacific. 328 00:28:26,204 --> 00:28:28,665 [male voiceover] Foot by foot is the bitter and bloody story 329 00:28:28,749 --> 00:28:30,125 of the advance on Iwo Jima. 330 00:28:36,131 --> 00:28:37,215 [gunfire] 331 00:28:37,299 --> 00:28:40,177 [male voiceover] The Japs make a bitter defense on Okinawa. 332 00:28:40,260 --> 00:28:43,180 American troops battling their way forward. 333 00:28:43,263 --> 00:28:45,933 A kamikaze dives into the Ticonderoga. 334 00:28:49,519 --> 00:28:52,272 We still have a dangerous war to fight. 335 00:28:58,487 --> 00:29:00,948 [del Toro] Know Your Enemy - Japan, 336 00:29:01,031 --> 00:29:05,661 another project that Capra struggles with and struggles with and struggles with. 337 00:29:09,373 --> 00:29:10,707 [Francis Ford Coppola] There was a problem 338 00:29:10,791 --> 00:29:13,919 going all the way up to General Marshall, as to how to treat 339 00:29:14,002 --> 00:29:16,797 who we were going to dislike. 340 00:29:16,880 --> 00:29:20,717 [narrator] Know Your Enemy - Japan had been delayed for years 341 00:29:20,801 --> 00:29:22,594 over conflicts within the US government 342 00:29:22,678 --> 00:29:25,013 about where the film should place the blame. 343 00:29:25,973 --> 00:29:29,685 Should it be on the Emperor? On the ruling class? 344 00:29:31,353 --> 00:29:33,480 Or on the Japanese people as a whole? 345 00:29:34,147 --> 00:29:36,608 The script went through countless revisions. 346 00:29:36,692 --> 00:29:39,945 Huston and Capra wrote the final versions themselves. 347 00:29:40,570 --> 00:29:43,699 [male voiceover] First, let's examine a typical Japanese soldier. 348 00:29:43,782 --> 00:29:50,539 And the project, when viewed today, is brutally jingoistic 349 00:29:50,622 --> 00:29:53,417 and horribly racist. 350 00:29:53,500 --> 00:29:56,086 [male voiceover] He and his brother soldiers are as much alike 351 00:29:56,169 --> 00:29:58,130 as photographic prints off the same negative. 352 00:29:59,381 --> 00:30:05,012 [del Toro] This merciless, dehumanizing cartoon view 353 00:30:05,095 --> 00:30:06,388 of the Japanese. 354 00:30:06,972 --> 00:30:09,391 [male voiceover] Defeating this nation is as necessary 355 00:30:09,474 --> 00:30:11,518 as shooting down a mad dog in your neighborhood. 356 00:30:14,730 --> 00:30:19,985 [del Toro] It tragically coincides with the way Japan was dealt with... 357 00:30:20,861 --> 00:30:24,948 with a brutal extermination tool. 358 00:30:25,032 --> 00:30:26,742 [airplane hums loudly] 359 00:30:30,495 --> 00:30:32,039 A short time ago, 360 00:30:32,122 --> 00:30:36,918 an American airplane dropped one bomb on Hiroshima 361 00:30:37,002 --> 00:30:39,671 and destroyed its usefulness to the enemy. 362 00:30:56,688 --> 00:30:59,566 If they do not now accept our terms, 363 00:30:59,649 --> 00:31:02,652 they may expect a rain of ruin from the air, 364 00:31:02,736 --> 00:31:05,447 the like of which has never been seen on this Earth. 365 00:31:09,951 --> 00:31:11,370 [narrator] Already en route, 366 00:31:11,453 --> 00:31:14,873 prints of Know Your Enemy - Japan arrived at the front 367 00:31:14,956 --> 00:31:18,168 three days after the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. 368 00:31:18,877 --> 00:31:21,129 General MacArthur informed Washington 369 00:31:21,213 --> 00:31:23,757 he would not allow soldiers to see it 370 00:31:23,840 --> 00:31:26,676 and recommended it not be shown to the public, either. 371 00:31:28,553 --> 00:31:31,139 [del Toro] I think it was wise of MacArthur to say, 372 00:31:31,223 --> 00:31:32,849 "We don't need this anymore." 373 00:31:32,933 --> 00:31:38,563 Not only from a practical point of view, but from a human point of view. 374 00:31:39,314 --> 00:31:42,692 [narrator] After three days with no sign of surrender from Japan, 375 00:31:42,776 --> 00:31:45,737 a second atomic bomb was dropped on Nagasaki. 376 00:31:47,531 --> 00:31:52,160 [General MacArthur] I now invite the representatives 377 00:31:52,244 --> 00:31:54,788 of the Emperor of Japan 378 00:31:54,871 --> 00:31:58,291 and the Japanese government 379 00:31:58,375 --> 00:32:01,545 and the Japanese Imperial General Headquarters 380 00:32:01,628 --> 00:32:07,259 to sign the instrument of surrender at the places indicated. 381 00:32:09,094 --> 00:32:14,766 Let us pray that peace be now restored to the world 382 00:32:15,600 --> 00:32:20,689 and that God will preserve it always. 383 00:32:27,737 --> 00:32:30,323 [newscaster] The nightmare of war and separation is over. 384 00:32:46,715 --> 00:32:51,219 [male voiceover] The guns are quiet now. The papers of peace have been signed. 385 00:32:51,303 --> 00:32:55,265 And the oceans of the Earth are filled with ships coming home. 386 00:32:55,348 --> 00:32:59,144 In faraway places, men dreamed of this moment. 387 00:32:59,227 --> 00:33:02,731 But for some men, the moment is very different from the dream. 388 00:33:04,149 --> 00:33:09,696 [Coppola] Huston was given the assignment to cover a military hospital, 389 00:33:09,779 --> 00:33:13,909 and they had soldiers who had come back wounded 390 00:33:13,992 --> 00:33:15,785 in other than physical ways. 391 00:33:15,869 --> 00:33:17,078 And they made a film 392 00:33:17,162 --> 00:33:18,747 called Let There Be Light. 393 00:33:19,998 --> 00:33:22,876 [male voiceover] Others show no outward signs. 394 00:33:22,959 --> 00:33:24,711 Yet they, too, are wounded. 395 00:33:27,005 --> 00:33:30,008 [John Huston] Well, I made that film for the Army, for the American Army. 396 00:33:30,091 --> 00:33:33,178 I was in the Army, a soldier at the time. 397 00:33:33,261 --> 00:33:36,223 And it was the last work I did for the Army 398 00:33:36,306 --> 00:33:38,475 before going out of uniform. 399 00:33:41,770 --> 00:33:45,565 Each of these directors, they all went through a lot 400 00:33:45,649 --> 00:33:47,776 and came back with scars. 401 00:33:47,859 --> 00:33:50,654 You can't work on these projects 402 00:33:50,737 --> 00:33:55,367 and be immersed in moments of horror and the despair 403 00:33:55,450 --> 00:33:56,826 and not feel that. 404 00:33:58,578 --> 00:34:03,083 The idea of battle fatigue, or neurosis related to battle, 405 00:34:03,166 --> 00:34:05,919 was not considered at all valid. 406 00:34:07,254 --> 00:34:10,882 [Huston] I followed one group through the hospital. 407 00:34:12,259 --> 00:34:13,969 I followed them from their induction, 408 00:34:14,052 --> 00:34:18,890 from the first time they filed in and sat down in the receiving room 409 00:34:18,974 --> 00:34:22,143 and it was explained to them what the cameras were doing there, 410 00:34:22,227 --> 00:34:27,148 and that the cameras would continue to follow them through their treatment. 411 00:34:27,857 --> 00:34:31,111 There's no need to be alarmed at the presence of these cameras, 412 00:34:31,861 --> 00:34:37,075 as they're making a photographic record of your progress at this hospital 413 00:34:37,158 --> 00:34:40,412 from the date of admission to the date of discharge. 414 00:34:43,206 --> 00:34:48,670 [Huston] They were so deep in their own despair and shock 415 00:34:48,753 --> 00:34:52,090 that the presence of the camera made absolutely no difference to them. 416 00:34:56,386 --> 00:34:59,264 Do you feel conscious? That is, are you aware of the fact 417 00:34:59,347 --> 00:35:02,517 that you're not the same boy that you were went you went over? 418 00:35:02,601 --> 00:35:03,768 Do you feel changed? 419 00:35:05,061 --> 00:35:06,187 Yes, sir. 420 00:35:17,574 --> 00:35:20,076 I'm not doing this deliberately. Please believe me. 421 00:35:20,160 --> 00:35:21,911 I do believe you. 422 00:35:21,995 --> 00:35:27,083 Now, a display of emotion is sometimes very helpful. 423 00:35:27,167 --> 00:35:29,961 -I hope so, sir. -Sure, it gets it off your chest. 424 00:35:33,256 --> 00:35:36,551 And it's in that film that I really get a sense 425 00:35:36,635 --> 00:35:40,805 of Huston's bigness of soul. 426 00:35:40,889 --> 00:35:44,684 Do you remember the explosion now? All right, go on. 427 00:35:46,603 --> 00:35:50,982 [Coppola] The way he treated these young boys coming back, 428 00:35:51,066 --> 00:35:52,942 and the style he used, 429 00:35:53,026 --> 00:35:56,738 and the respect for them that is evident in that film, 430 00:35:56,821 --> 00:36:00,116 and the beauty of some of the sequences, 431 00:36:00,200 --> 00:36:04,788 and how he really expressed that, yes, there are wounds 432 00:36:04,871 --> 00:36:06,956 that are far deeper than flesh wounds, 433 00:36:07,040 --> 00:36:11,836 and maybe more serious and more difficult to ever be able to cure. 434 00:36:13,421 --> 00:36:16,257 [Huston] And there was no pretension, by the way, 435 00:36:16,341 --> 00:36:20,512 that they were curing these patients. 436 00:36:20,595 --> 00:36:22,764 What they were doing was putting a fire out, 437 00:36:22,847 --> 00:36:25,100 in an attempt to restore the men 438 00:36:25,183 --> 00:36:30,689 to more or less the condition they were in when they came into the Army. 439 00:36:31,648 --> 00:36:37,570 In societies where manliness and bravery are so admired, 440 00:36:37,654 --> 00:36:40,865 it was knowledge that we're all different, 441 00:36:40,949 --> 00:36:43,618 and something can happen that just cracks your spirit, 442 00:36:43,702 --> 00:36:46,538 and it happened in every war there's ever been. 443 00:36:46,621 --> 00:36:48,665 But in the case of Let There Be Light, 444 00:36:48,748 --> 00:36:52,419 the Army no doubt wanted to show that these young men 445 00:36:52,502 --> 00:36:54,504 could be helped by the Army. 446 00:36:55,547 --> 00:36:59,384 Well, ultimately, economically, if they can rehabilitate those soldiers, 447 00:36:59,467 --> 00:37:02,804 then everyone wanted to get back on making automobiles 448 00:37:02,887 --> 00:37:05,473 and go back to work and buy houses 449 00:37:05,557 --> 00:37:08,435 and bring about the great American miracle, 450 00:37:08,518 --> 00:37:10,729 which was, ultimately, the baby boom. 451 00:37:13,857 --> 00:37:15,608 There's a lot of love in that film. 452 00:37:15,692 --> 00:37:22,449 There's more love in that film than maybe Huston realized he had in him. 453 00:37:24,367 --> 00:37:29,122 The hope was, then, to create a better understanding, 454 00:37:29,205 --> 00:37:33,793 not sugarcoated, but honest and straightforward. 455 00:37:39,466 --> 00:37:43,219 [narrator] Just before it was to be screened in a documentary film festival 456 00:37:43,303 --> 00:37:45,472 at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, 457 00:37:46,556 --> 00:37:49,559 the film print was seized by military police. 458 00:37:50,477 --> 00:37:55,273 John Huston's film about PTSD, before the term "PTSD" was ever invented, 459 00:37:56,232 --> 00:37:59,402 is a film that had been suppressed by the War Department. 460 00:38:00,612 --> 00:38:05,158 It's no great advertisement for war to see what... 461 00:38:06,868 --> 00:38:11,915 what the experience of combat does to men's souls. 462 00:38:13,541 --> 00:38:16,544 [Spielberg] So much of the horrible truth of the war 463 00:38:16,628 --> 00:38:20,715 was just removed from our culture, 464 00:38:20,799 --> 00:38:25,386 almost in order to give Americans a chance to take a big, deep breath 465 00:38:25,470 --> 00:38:27,639 and look forward into the future. 466 00:38:27,722 --> 00:38:30,934 But I've always been a big believer that you really can't move into the future 467 00:38:31,017 --> 00:38:34,479 unless you have a complete, solid basis of understanding 468 00:38:34,562 --> 00:38:36,022 and empathy about the past. 469 00:38:37,482 --> 00:38:42,904 [Greengrass] Many, many, many millions of men in the US and Europe 470 00:38:42,987 --> 00:38:49,077 returned from war trying to pick up the threads of a civilian life, 471 00:38:49,160 --> 00:38:50,912 of a peacetime life, 472 00:38:50,995 --> 00:38:54,123 forever marked by what they'd seen and been through. 473 00:38:58,503 --> 00:39:00,046 There was a change in Jack. 474 00:39:00,129 --> 00:39:03,842 Because, you know, he liked to play soldier before the war. 475 00:39:03,925 --> 00:39:06,886 But after he'd been out there, then it was a different thing. 476 00:39:07,887 --> 00:39:11,641 [narrator] Ford was still in uniform, but with the Navy's blessing, 477 00:39:11,724 --> 00:39:14,227 he was back in Hollywood, working for MGM. 478 00:39:15,061 --> 00:39:18,356 They Were Expendable would be his first feature in five years. 479 00:39:19,107 --> 00:39:22,360 Since Midway, Ford had wanted to make a film 480 00:39:22,443 --> 00:39:27,198 about the sailors who manned PT boats in the Pacific after Pearl Harbor. 481 00:39:27,866 --> 00:39:32,328 It would be a story not of victory, but of sacrifice. 482 00:39:33,079 --> 00:39:37,333 We lost Mahan and Larsen. A couple of the kids got hurt. 483 00:39:37,417 --> 00:39:40,753 -How'd they get slugged? -Machine gun from a plane. 484 00:39:44,340 --> 00:39:47,385 [Greengrass] The idea of... of expendables, 485 00:39:47,468 --> 00:39:51,723 those that have to sacrifice themselves for the greater good, 486 00:39:51,806 --> 00:39:53,016 he'd seen it. 487 00:39:53,099 --> 00:39:54,309 He'd seen it with his own eyes. 488 00:39:54,392 --> 00:39:55,768 He'd documented it. 489 00:39:57,228 --> 00:40:00,857 And it became profoundly important to him. 490 00:40:05,320 --> 00:40:08,865 The trouble is that most of the actual things that happen to people, 491 00:40:08,948 --> 00:40:10,617 the factual things, 492 00:40:11,451 --> 00:40:14,579 put them on the screen and people say, "That's too sentimental. 493 00:40:15,455 --> 00:40:16,873 Could never happen." 494 00:40:17,749 --> 00:40:20,668 Well, in They Were Expendable, all these things did happen. 495 00:40:22,879 --> 00:40:25,173 [Greengrass] And he chose Robert Montgomery, of course, 496 00:40:25,256 --> 00:40:26,799 who was himself a veteran. 497 00:40:27,592 --> 00:40:31,471 He was a PT boat captain during the war. 498 00:40:33,181 --> 00:40:36,517 When Montgomery went down to Florida, where they were going to shoot, 499 00:40:36,601 --> 00:40:39,437 he found the entire experience... 500 00:40:41,022 --> 00:40:43,399 intensely mentally distressing, 501 00:40:43,483 --> 00:40:47,195 so much so that Ford said to him, "We won't shoot," you know, 502 00:40:47,278 --> 00:40:49,906 "You just get set." 503 00:40:49,989 --> 00:40:53,201 And he kept the whole unit waiting, you know, for some days. 504 00:40:54,243 --> 00:40:55,787 And Ford gave him the time. 505 00:40:55,870 --> 00:40:59,207 Ford gave him the time, and then they started shooting. 506 00:41:01,209 --> 00:41:05,546 That was the caring side of Ford. They were brothers in arms. 507 00:41:05,630 --> 00:41:07,048 They'd both served. 508 00:41:08,967 --> 00:41:15,223 But he also, of course, chose John Wayne, who had not served in the war. 509 00:41:16,641 --> 00:41:20,645 Jack wanted to get me in, and I wanted to get into the service, 510 00:41:20,728 --> 00:41:25,108 but, you know, I'm 40 years old and had four kids, 511 00:41:25,191 --> 00:41:29,028 and I didn't feel that I should go in as a private. 512 00:41:29,112 --> 00:41:32,699 I could do more good going around on tours and things. 513 00:41:33,449 --> 00:41:36,619 Ford berated him and belittled Wayne at every opportunity. 514 00:41:37,620 --> 00:41:40,581 In the scene where they salute... 515 00:41:40,665 --> 00:41:42,750 -Ryan. -Goodbye, sir. 516 00:41:45,336 --> 00:41:47,088 ...Ford made them do take after take 517 00:41:47,171 --> 00:41:50,425 until finally he shouted at Wayne on the set, 518 00:41:50,508 --> 00:41:54,387 "Damn it, can't you salute like someone who's actually been in service?" 519 00:41:56,180 --> 00:42:00,143 Which was tremendously difficult, I think, for Wayne to take. 520 00:42:01,227 --> 00:42:05,732 Ford, I think somewhat tardily, realized what he'd done, 521 00:42:05,815 --> 00:42:07,859 and actually burst into tears. 522 00:42:10,236 --> 00:42:13,948 That film was as much therapy as filmmaking. 523 00:42:14,991 --> 00:42:17,618 It began the long process 524 00:42:17,702 --> 00:42:22,874 of trying to explore what this conflict had meant to America. 525 00:42:24,417 --> 00:42:30,506 How did you make sense of the sacrifices that men, and some women, had made 526 00:42:30,590 --> 00:42:36,512 to ensure that new world could be enjoyed? 527 00:42:39,182 --> 00:42:42,894 None of us were the same after that experience with the war. 528 00:42:44,437 --> 00:42:47,065 [del Toro] Capra comes out in a way 529 00:42:47,148 --> 00:42:51,652 that is as fairy-tale as his fables, almost Pinocchio-like. 530 00:42:52,445 --> 00:42:57,617 He becomes a real boy, a real American. 531 00:42:59,035 --> 00:43:04,749 He embodied the principle of a land that was formed by immigrants. 532 00:43:05,750 --> 00:43:09,962 Capra, viewing the Statue of Liberty as a kid, 533 00:43:10,046 --> 00:43:12,590 and being moved by the possibilities, 534 00:43:12,673 --> 00:43:15,426 the infinite possibilities, of that light. 535 00:43:16,427 --> 00:43:20,014 What it is to be American is to contemplate that light 536 00:43:20,098 --> 00:43:23,017 and feel in your heart that now, 537 00:43:24,268 --> 00:43:28,064 the way you write your history is going to be in your hands. 538 00:43:29,232 --> 00:43:32,777 And I think that Capra rewrites his history, 539 00:43:32,860 --> 00:43:34,779 and the history of the world, 540 00:43:34,862 --> 00:43:37,532 with his labor in World War II. 541 00:43:38,950 --> 00:43:41,077 [uplifting string music plays] 542 00:43:53,798 --> 00:43:57,385 And Capra successfully manages all the obstacles. 543 00:43:58,970 --> 00:44:01,848 He was an incredible leader and a politician, 544 00:44:01,931 --> 00:44:05,935 ultimately capable of gathering the best of everyone. 545 00:44:09,105 --> 00:44:11,607 Ironically, out of this fruitful period 546 00:44:11,691 --> 00:44:14,861 in which he produces seven Why We Fight films, 547 00:44:14,944 --> 00:44:17,613 dozens of instructional shorts, 548 00:44:17,697 --> 00:44:19,991 and commands hundreds of people... 549 00:44:23,202 --> 00:44:26,497 he realizes that, for Hollywood, 550 00:44:26,581 --> 00:44:28,624 he finds himself a forgotten man. 551 00:44:28,708 --> 00:44:33,546 We came back to Hollywood, and we didn't know anybody. 552 00:44:35,381 --> 00:44:38,634 People would introduce me to somebody, and they'd say, "Frank who?" 553 00:44:42,221 --> 00:44:44,223 [Kasdan] When Stevens got back, 554 00:44:44,307 --> 00:44:50,271 it was a difficult reintegration into his life. 555 00:44:51,480 --> 00:44:54,442 He was in no hurry to make movies. 556 00:44:55,776 --> 00:44:57,486 It was my feeling, after World War II, 557 00:44:57,570 --> 00:45:00,990 nobody made any films about the war as it was. 558 00:45:01,741 --> 00:45:04,160 It was happy to be forgotten. 559 00:45:04,994 --> 00:45:10,207 These films that I was seeing then, after the war, in Hollywood, 560 00:45:10,291 --> 00:45:13,794 were not made from life, they were made from other films. 561 00:45:15,671 --> 00:45:19,884 It took him quite a while. It took him quite a while to adjust to it. 562 00:45:19,967 --> 00:45:22,428 He became hard to talk with. 563 00:45:22,511 --> 00:45:24,931 I don't think he wanted to express his horror. 564 00:45:25,014 --> 00:45:29,977 Or maybe he just couldn't express the horror that he'd been through. 565 00:45:30,061 --> 00:45:31,938 But he was a different person. 566 00:45:32,939 --> 00:45:35,608 He was not the same George Stevens that left. 567 00:45:39,028 --> 00:45:41,614 [Spielberg] When you're making movies, 568 00:45:41,697 --> 00:45:44,158 and you walk onto a soundstage, 569 00:45:44,241 --> 00:45:49,413 and you walk past a lot of two-by-fours holding up facades, 570 00:45:49,497 --> 00:45:53,250 sawdust all over the floor, the smell of plaster and wood, 571 00:45:54,251 --> 00:45:59,048 and then you come around the unseemly backside 572 00:45:59,131 --> 00:46:03,386 into a grand palace which is perfectly, authentically decorated, 573 00:46:04,345 --> 00:46:09,141 and you suddenly see the artifice in which you are telling your stories... 574 00:46:10,059 --> 00:46:13,020 Everything seemed fake now. Nothing seemed real. 575 00:46:14,230 --> 00:46:17,733 And being told off by Louis B. Mayer and Harry Cohn 576 00:46:17,817 --> 00:46:19,777 and Jack Warner and Darryl Zanuck... 577 00:46:19,860 --> 00:46:22,488 They weren't gonna stand for that anymore. 578 00:46:22,571 --> 00:46:26,575 They wanted to bring back home with them 579 00:46:26,659 --> 00:46:29,412 the reality of what they had gone through. 580 00:46:31,247 --> 00:46:36,168 [del Toro] Capra takes this moment to restart himself 581 00:46:36,252 --> 00:46:37,586 as one of the first independents. 582 00:46:38,504 --> 00:46:43,676 [Capra] I came up with an idea to make a directors' company, 583 00:46:43,759 --> 00:46:46,512 just directors who made their own pictures. 584 00:46:46,595 --> 00:46:50,433 William Wyler was in it, and when George Stevens got back, 585 00:46:50,516 --> 00:46:53,227 we offered him to come in with us, and he came in with us. 586 00:46:53,310 --> 00:46:56,480 So, the three of us became Liberty Films. 587 00:46:56,564 --> 00:46:59,400 This idea, which has been repeated through history 588 00:46:59,483 --> 00:47:01,861 with United Artists and First Artists... 589 00:47:01,944 --> 00:47:05,448 There's always an urge for filmmakers to take control of their destiny. 590 00:47:05,531 --> 00:47:09,660 They don't want that force above them telling them what they can make 591 00:47:09,744 --> 00:47:11,537 and how it should be cut. 592 00:47:11,620 --> 00:47:14,290 [del Toro] And Capra is the first one out 593 00:47:14,373 --> 00:47:18,127 with what is going to become his most important film. 594 00:47:19,837 --> 00:47:22,339 It's a Wonderful Life is an incredibly genuine, 595 00:47:22,423 --> 00:47:27,386 incredibly brave film for Capra to undertake after World War II, 596 00:47:27,470 --> 00:47:31,807 because he has gone through an incredible experience, 597 00:47:31,891 --> 00:47:37,938 where he has given so much for others in the way he sees his own labor. 598 00:47:38,773 --> 00:47:42,818 And he comes out of it, and it's inconsequential, 599 00:47:42,902 --> 00:47:47,656 in the same quiet, terrible way that George Bailey 600 00:47:47,740 --> 00:47:51,077 postpones his trips, postpones his life... 601 00:47:51,160 --> 00:47:53,829 -Uh-oh. -Please, let's not stop, George. 602 00:47:53,913 --> 00:47:55,122 I'll be back in a minute, Mary. 603 00:47:55,873 --> 00:47:59,418 ...in order to serve a community of people 604 00:47:59,502 --> 00:48:02,379 that render him, in his perception, invisible. 605 00:48:03,756 --> 00:48:08,052 The essence of Capra is always a question of worth, 606 00:48:08,135 --> 00:48:10,387 a question of self-worth. 607 00:48:11,305 --> 00:48:13,099 Dear Father in heaven... 608 00:48:13,182 --> 00:48:16,185 [Capra] I think it was probably the strongest picture I've made. 609 00:48:16,268 --> 00:48:18,354 I think it's my favorite film. 610 00:48:20,231 --> 00:48:23,901 Because it epitomizes everything I tried to say in all the other films 611 00:48:23,984 --> 00:48:25,611 in one package. 612 00:48:26,445 --> 00:48:29,907 I never have run across such a unique story 613 00:48:30,783 --> 00:48:32,952 as a man who thought he was a failure... 614 00:48:36,330 --> 00:48:37,832 [drowning man] Help! 615 00:48:37,915 --> 00:48:40,543 ...being given the opportunity to come back and see the world 616 00:48:40,626 --> 00:48:42,711 as it would've been had he not been born. 617 00:48:42,795 --> 00:48:44,797 A very unique fantasy. 618 00:48:44,880 --> 00:48:48,092 -What'd you say? -I said I wish I'd never been born. 619 00:48:48,175 --> 00:48:51,470 Oh, you mustn't say things like that. 620 00:48:51,554 --> 00:48:56,350 You... Wait a minute. Wait a minute. That's an idea. 621 00:48:57,309 --> 00:49:03,691 [del Toro] It's a true contemplation in which, you know, Capra asks himself, 622 00:49:05,276 --> 00:49:07,611 "What the world would be without me?" 623 00:49:07,695 --> 00:49:10,656 You're driving me crazy, too. I'm seeing things, here. 624 00:49:10,739 --> 00:49:13,576 I'm going home to see my wife and family. You understand that? 625 00:49:13,659 --> 00:49:15,119 And I'm going home alone. 626 00:49:17,496 --> 00:49:22,585 [del Toro] The abandonment of George Bailey is truly existential. 627 00:49:23,502 --> 00:49:26,297 That is as dark as he can get. 628 00:49:26,380 --> 00:49:32,303 I think he really faces the darkest part of the mirror in that film. 629 00:49:35,347 --> 00:49:38,309 Many filmmakers, even if they remain active, 630 00:49:38,392 --> 00:49:44,106 create their testament movie at an earlier point in their career, 631 00:49:44,190 --> 00:49:46,734 and then they go on working, 632 00:49:46,817 --> 00:49:49,778 but not necessarily renovating themselves. 633 00:49:49,862 --> 00:49:54,575 And I think It's a Wonderful Life rephrases Capra. 634 00:49:55,451 --> 00:49:59,872 He truly ventures something that intimate, 635 00:49:59,955 --> 00:50:02,958 truly himself, out there on a limb. 636 00:50:04,210 --> 00:50:08,047 I want to live again. Please, God, let me live again. 637 00:50:09,548 --> 00:50:10,591 [sobs] 638 00:50:12,509 --> 00:50:15,554 [narrator] At the same time Capra was shooting It's a Wonderful Life, 639 00:50:15,638 --> 00:50:19,266 Wyler was making his last film under contract for Sam Goldwyn. 640 00:50:20,726 --> 00:50:24,355 He had regained about 20 percent of his hearing in one ear, 641 00:50:24,438 --> 00:50:29,151 and Gregg Toland, his cinematographer, helped to rig an audio amplifier 642 00:50:29,235 --> 00:50:31,612 that would allow Wyler to hear his actors. 643 00:50:32,905 --> 00:50:35,824 I've made pictures for over 40 years. 644 00:50:35,908 --> 00:50:39,745 There was one that was particularly close to me 645 00:50:39,828 --> 00:50:42,081 because it was done right after the war. 646 00:50:43,332 --> 00:50:47,044 Most of the films are fictional, you know, are fictional stories, 647 00:50:47,127 --> 00:50:51,131 and didn't really involve me. 648 00:50:51,215 --> 00:50:54,426 But since I was in the service during the war, 649 00:50:54,510 --> 00:50:58,639 right after the war, I made a film called The Best Years of Our Lives. 650 00:50:58,722 --> 00:50:59,890 [applause] 651 00:50:59,974 --> 00:51:02,935 That film gave me a great deal of satisfaction 652 00:51:03,018 --> 00:51:07,398 because it contributed something to the social life of the time. 653 00:51:07,481 --> 00:51:10,818 It made people understand veterans better. 654 00:51:12,611 --> 00:51:15,030 [Spielberg] William Wyler came back from the war 655 00:51:15,114 --> 00:51:20,244 and suddenly saw, based on his knowledge of what war does to people. 656 00:51:21,161 --> 00:51:23,497 He went back and he made a movie, 657 00:51:23,580 --> 00:51:26,542 the greatest movie, arguably, of his entire career. 658 00:51:27,293 --> 00:51:29,712 You'll probably have a long ride because she's making a lot of stops, 659 00:51:29,795 --> 00:51:32,006 but you'll get there tomorrow afternoon. That suits you? 660 00:51:32,089 --> 00:51:34,800 -Sure, that's swell. -OK, sign here. 661 00:51:35,551 --> 00:51:37,594 Boy, it sure is great to be going home. 662 00:51:38,762 --> 00:51:40,806 -Here you go, sailor. -Sign on the dotted... 663 00:51:43,767 --> 00:51:45,144 I'll do it for you. 664 00:51:45,227 --> 00:51:47,521 What's the matter, think I can't spell my own name? 665 00:51:47,604 --> 00:51:49,023 No, I... I... 666 00:51:49,106 --> 00:51:51,900 It was about three returning veterans 667 00:51:51,984 --> 00:51:56,238 and the difficulties they had with returning to civilian life, 668 00:51:56,322 --> 00:51:57,990 of whom one was hurt. 669 00:52:00,576 --> 00:52:03,412 And supposedly, the others were not. 670 00:52:06,248 --> 00:52:08,208 -Fourth floor. -Yes, sir. 671 00:52:08,292 --> 00:52:10,085 [Wyler] Because they were physically not hurt, 672 00:52:10,169 --> 00:52:11,879 but they were emotionally hurt. 673 00:52:14,757 --> 00:52:16,508 You're not going to work right away. 674 00:52:16,592 --> 00:52:19,428 You ought to rest a while, take a vacation. 675 00:52:19,511 --> 00:52:21,180 I have to make money. 676 00:52:21,263 --> 00:52:25,017 Last year, it was "kill Japs" and this year, it's "make money." 677 00:52:25,809 --> 00:52:27,561 [Spielberg] In effect, when they come home, 678 00:52:27,644 --> 00:52:30,898 they're still fighting the internal war, 679 00:52:30,981 --> 00:52:33,734 and that internal war is something that haunts them, 680 00:52:33,817 --> 00:52:36,820 it haunts their dreams, it haunts their waking hours, 681 00:52:36,904 --> 00:52:38,405 it haunts the choices they make, 682 00:52:38,489 --> 00:52:44,453 it haunts how they react to conflict in the real world of postwar America. 683 00:52:45,204 --> 00:52:46,955 Can't you get those things out of your system? 684 00:52:47,039 --> 00:52:47,956 Oh, sure. 685 00:52:48,040 --> 00:52:50,667 Maybe that's what's holding you back. You know, the war's over. 686 00:52:50,751 --> 00:52:52,878 You won't get any place until you stop thinking about it. 687 00:52:52,961 --> 00:52:56,090 -Come on, snap out of it. -OK, honey, I'll do that. 688 00:52:56,173 --> 00:52:58,884 [Wyler] Being a veteran, I knew the subject matter. 689 00:52:58,967 --> 00:53:03,222 I didn't have to do much research about these people returning from the war. 690 00:53:03,305 --> 00:53:06,850 I knew how they felt, I knew what they were thinking of. 691 00:53:08,310 --> 00:53:09,853 Because I was one of them. 692 00:53:11,355 --> 00:53:14,108 [Spielberg] You know, he stripped that whole production down 693 00:53:14,191 --> 00:53:16,193 to just its bare essentials. 694 00:53:16,276 --> 00:53:18,112 He didn't want to have fancy dolly shots. 695 00:53:18,195 --> 00:53:20,531 He didn't want a camera to go from room to room. 696 00:53:21,240 --> 00:53:24,868 [narrator] Wyler wanted the movie to be realistic in every detail. 697 00:53:25,869 --> 00:53:28,205 He didn't want the help of a costume designer 698 00:53:28,288 --> 00:53:31,750 for his two lead actresses Myrna Loy and Teresa Wright. 699 00:53:33,043 --> 00:53:37,506 He gave them money to buy their wardrobes off the rack at a department store. 700 00:53:38,298 --> 00:53:41,385 "You're all gonna do this for yourselves. We're not gonna be pampered 701 00:53:41,468 --> 00:53:44,471 and we're not gonna be put on little pedestals." 702 00:53:44,555 --> 00:53:47,307 And they all went along with it, you know, willingly. 703 00:53:48,058 --> 00:53:50,853 I've given you every chance to make something of yourself. 704 00:53:50,936 --> 00:53:54,606 I gave up my own job when you asked me. I gave up the best years of my life, 705 00:53:54,690 --> 00:53:55,732 and what have you done? 706 00:53:55,816 --> 00:53:57,151 You've flopped. 707 00:53:57,234 --> 00:53:59,778 Couldn't even hold that job at the drug store. 708 00:53:59,862 --> 00:54:05,325 He was saving his powder because he wanted to really pack a wallop. 709 00:54:05,409 --> 00:54:08,912 When Fred Derry climbs up into the B-17, 710 00:54:09,872 --> 00:54:13,292 he reveals to us all the pieces of the planes 711 00:54:13,375 --> 00:54:15,794 that were sitting there with their tails in the air. 712 00:54:16,879 --> 00:54:19,131 But Wyler moves the camera for the first time. 713 00:54:19,214 --> 00:54:20,507 He really moves the camera. 714 00:54:22,634 --> 00:54:27,264 And there's countless B-17s in this World War II graveyard. 715 00:54:28,098 --> 00:54:31,226 And then he gets into the plane, and the camera does this amazing shot 716 00:54:31,310 --> 00:54:34,688 where it just moves into Fred. 717 00:54:35,272 --> 00:54:37,524 [dramatic music getting louder] 718 00:54:41,236 --> 00:54:43,197 [man] Hey, bud, what are you doing up there? 719 00:54:46,408 --> 00:54:47,534 Hey, you! 720 00:54:47,618 --> 00:54:48,744 [music is suspended] 721 00:54:49,244 --> 00:54:51,330 What are you doing in that airplane? 722 00:54:52,331 --> 00:54:55,626 I think he backed the whole movie into that moment. 723 00:54:56,585 --> 00:54:58,587 I used to work in one of those. 724 00:54:59,463 --> 00:55:01,256 Reviving old memories, huh? 725 00:55:01,340 --> 00:55:03,550 Yeah, or maybe getting some of them out of my system. 726 00:55:04,801 --> 00:55:07,763 [Spielberg] And I watch The Best Years of Our Lives at least once a year. 727 00:55:07,846 --> 00:55:10,641 I don't think a year has gone by over the last 30 years 728 00:55:10,724 --> 00:55:12,434 that I haven't watched that film once a year, 729 00:55:12,518 --> 00:55:14,895 and try to bring people to see it for the first time, 730 00:55:14,978 --> 00:55:17,147 so I can relive it through their eyes. 731 00:55:18,440 --> 00:55:22,986 [narrator] Wyler's movie was praised as a masterpiece of American social realism. 732 00:55:23,403 --> 00:55:24,905 It won rave reviews 733 00:55:24,988 --> 00:55:27,866 and became the second-highest grossing film in history. 734 00:55:29,535 --> 00:55:31,954 I believe a film should have something to say, 735 00:55:32,871 --> 00:55:35,040 and that, I suppose, is a message. 736 00:55:38,252 --> 00:55:42,214 I think it should make people think and feel, 737 00:55:42,297 --> 00:55:45,467 if possible, long after they've left the theater. 738 00:55:47,636 --> 00:55:51,056 [narrator] The Best Years of Our Lives swept the Oscars that year. 739 00:55:51,598 --> 00:55:52,891 Thank you very much, Shirley. 740 00:55:52,975 --> 00:55:56,103 This is a very proud and a very happy moment. 741 00:55:56,728 --> 00:56:00,566 [narrator] Wyler won his second Academy Award for Best Director 742 00:56:01,191 --> 00:56:02,609 and spent the next 20 years 743 00:56:02,693 --> 00:56:05,946 as one of Hollywood's most successful filmmakers. 744 00:56:07,072 --> 00:56:09,449 When he came back from the war and he had lost his hearing, 745 00:56:09,533 --> 00:56:15,789 his post-World War II movies seemed to become more cinematic. 746 00:56:15,872 --> 00:56:19,126 With the added strength of his visual compositional acuity, 747 00:56:19,209 --> 00:56:22,170 his painterly art became more painterly. 748 00:56:23,171 --> 00:56:27,259 [narrator] In 1960, he won his third Academy Award for Ben-Hur. 749 00:56:28,760 --> 00:56:32,306 He never lost contact with the crew of the Memphis Belle. 750 00:56:38,312 --> 00:56:40,105 [Spielberg] It doesn't make any sense 751 00:56:40,188 --> 00:56:44,526 that It's a Wonderful Life wasn't as big a popular smash 752 00:56:44,610 --> 00:56:46,320 as The Best Years of Our Lives. 753 00:56:47,696 --> 00:56:50,991 Because it wasn't. It was a flop when it came out. 754 00:56:52,826 --> 00:56:56,330 But that, for me, is the best Frank Capra movie ever made. 755 00:56:57,998 --> 00:57:00,959 [del Toro] The tragedy of It's a Wonderful Life to me 756 00:57:01,043 --> 00:57:03,503 is that the film fails, 757 00:57:03,587 --> 00:57:06,924 not only at the box office, but critically. 758 00:57:08,133 --> 00:57:11,511 [Capra] The critics are notoriously unsentimental. 759 00:57:11,595 --> 00:57:13,055 Of course it affects you. 760 00:57:13,138 --> 00:57:14,848 You want people to... 761 00:57:14,931 --> 00:57:17,893 And you... You must understand, 762 00:57:17,976 --> 00:57:20,520 we all have egos, and I have a very big one. 763 00:57:20,604 --> 00:57:23,523 And if somebody doesn't like something I do, 764 00:57:23,607 --> 00:57:25,651 some critic knocks it, I feel it. 765 00:57:25,734 --> 00:57:27,110 I feel it very badly. 766 00:57:27,861 --> 00:57:30,030 [narrator] The failure of It's a Wonderful Life 767 00:57:30,113 --> 00:57:32,449 put Liberty Films out of business. 768 00:57:33,200 --> 00:57:35,577 The company never made another movie. 769 00:57:37,079 --> 00:57:41,041 We sold Liberty Films to Paramount. We also sold our contracts to Paramount. 770 00:57:42,834 --> 00:57:44,544 That kind of soured me on the whole thing, 771 00:57:44,628 --> 00:57:47,130 so I said, "Maybe I should just lay off for a while." 772 00:57:47,214 --> 00:57:51,093 So, I went down to my ranch and said, "I'm just going to quit for a while." 773 00:57:51,927 --> 00:57:56,390 [narrator] Capra directed just a few more pictures before retiring in 1961. 774 00:57:57,224 --> 00:58:00,769 [Coppola] Each of these five directors who went through the war, 775 00:58:00,852 --> 00:58:04,189 some were shot at, Ford was wounded, 776 00:58:04,606 --> 00:58:06,900 Wyler lost his hearing, 777 00:58:06,984 --> 00:58:10,487 and they saw terrible things and participated in terrible things, 778 00:58:10,570 --> 00:58:15,325 and yet, coming out of it, each one made possibly their greatest film. 779 00:58:16,159 --> 00:58:20,288 Huston came out, and the first film he made after his military service 780 00:58:20,372 --> 00:58:23,083 was The Treasure of the Sierra Madre. 781 00:58:23,166 --> 00:58:25,210 You're so dumb, there's nothing to compare you with! 782 00:58:25,293 --> 00:58:27,879 You're dumber than the dumbest jackass! Look at each other. 783 00:58:27,963 --> 00:58:29,923 Ever see anything like yourselves for being dull specimens? 784 00:58:30,007 --> 00:58:33,969 [Coppola] And, of course, this wonderful performance by Walter Huston, 785 00:58:34,052 --> 00:58:36,805 who's the best character in the whole piece. 786 00:58:38,015 --> 00:58:41,184 [narrator] John Huston's work on The Treasure of the Sierra Madre 787 00:58:41,268 --> 00:58:44,771 earned him an Academy Award for both writing and directing, 788 00:58:44,855 --> 00:58:48,358 and won Walter Huston an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor. 789 00:58:49,192 --> 00:58:52,529 [Walter Huston] Many, many years ago, I raised a son, 790 00:58:52,612 --> 00:58:55,949 and I said, "If you ever become a director or a writer, 791 00:58:56,033 --> 00:58:57,951 please find a good part for your old man." 792 00:58:58,035 --> 00:58:58,952 He did all right. 793 00:58:59,036 --> 00:59:00,287 [laughter] 794 00:59:01,455 --> 00:59:04,249 [narrator] Huston went on to have a long and prolific career 795 00:59:04,332 --> 00:59:06,793 as a celebrated director and actor. 796 00:59:06,877 --> 00:59:11,339 In 1981, after 35 years of appeals to the government, 797 00:59:11,423 --> 00:59:15,135 he was finally allowed to show Let There Be Light publicly. 798 00:59:15,886 --> 00:59:18,513 Today, the film is recognized as a milestone 799 00:59:18,597 --> 00:59:22,225 and is part of the Library of Congress' National Film Registry. 800 00:59:23,935 --> 00:59:28,398 Huston and Wyler remained close friends for the rest of their lives. 801 00:59:31,109 --> 00:59:35,113 I'd had three years in the war in Europe, 802 00:59:35,197 --> 00:59:38,241 and that changed my life and my thinking. 803 00:59:39,409 --> 00:59:41,828 Professionally, I knew I wanted to do very different things 804 00:59:41,912 --> 00:59:43,163 than I'd done before. 805 00:59:44,831 --> 00:59:47,793 I was a maker of comedies. 806 00:59:48,710 --> 00:59:52,589 I came back and I tried to make a comedy, and I couldn't do it. 807 00:59:54,299 --> 00:59:57,260 I started to work on one of those things, 808 00:59:57,344 --> 01:00:00,847 to do with a fine star: Ingrid Bergman, 809 01:00:00,931 --> 01:00:03,558 who was the number-one star in America at that time, 810 01:00:03,642 --> 01:00:04,935 and I started on a comedy, 811 01:00:05,018 --> 01:00:07,437 and she was waiting for it, and she says, "Where's our comedy?" 812 01:00:07,521 --> 01:00:10,524 And finally, I said, "It just isn't gonna be funny, 813 01:00:10,607 --> 01:00:12,067 so we'd better forget it." 814 01:00:12,943 --> 01:00:18,156 What he had seen during the war and at Dachau was so impactful for him 815 01:00:18,240 --> 01:00:22,202 that he thought he could never make something frivolous again. 816 01:00:23,829 --> 01:00:27,124 [narrator] True to his word, Stevens never made another comedy. 817 01:00:28,834 --> 01:00:31,878 Instead, in the 1950s, he reemerged 818 01:00:31,962 --> 01:00:35,966 as one of Hollywood's most thoughtful and respected directors of drama. 819 01:00:36,758 --> 01:00:41,555 I hated to see him leave comedy for the other stuff that came later on, 820 01:00:41,638 --> 01:00:44,057 for the more serious stuff, 821 01:00:44,141 --> 01:00:48,979 because nobody could do comedy quite like he was doing it. 822 01:00:51,189 --> 01:00:53,066 [narrator] Stevens had taken all of the footage 823 01:00:53,150 --> 01:00:55,944 he had shot throughout the war and at Dachau 824 01:00:56,027 --> 01:00:58,196 and locked it up in a warehouse. 825 01:00:58,280 --> 01:01:01,491 He retrieved the reels only once, in 1959, 826 01:01:02,159 --> 01:01:05,162 when he was preparing to direct The Diary of Anne Frank. 827 01:01:08,623 --> 01:01:11,918 He went alone to the screening room to watch the footage, 828 01:01:12,711 --> 01:01:14,754 put on the first reel of film, 829 01:01:14,838 --> 01:01:17,424 and after about one minute, turned it off. 830 01:01:20,093 --> 01:01:22,846 He drove it back to the warehouse, locked it up... 831 01:01:23,763 --> 01:01:25,348 and never looked at it again. 832 01:01:27,851 --> 01:01:30,520 [Kasdan] To think that this is a man that had landed at D-Day 833 01:01:30,604 --> 01:01:33,356 and walked through the entire European theater, 834 01:01:33,440 --> 01:01:37,068 for this to be his war film is kind of extraordinary. 835 01:01:37,152 --> 01:01:41,406 And I think it is a reflection of his difficulty, 836 01:01:41,489 --> 01:01:47,495 feeling that any film could capture the feelings that he had had, 837 01:01:47,579 --> 01:01:50,957 his despair about humankind. 838 01:01:51,041 --> 01:01:56,296 And The Diary of Anne Frank tries to find a glimmer of hope. 839 01:01:57,631 --> 01:02:00,091 I think the world may be going through a phase, 840 01:02:00,175 --> 01:02:01,885 the way I was with Mother. 841 01:02:03,178 --> 01:02:04,554 It'll pass. 842 01:02:05,889 --> 01:02:09,726 Maybe not for hundreds of years, but someday. 843 01:02:12,729 --> 01:02:16,650 [Greengrass] We will always go back and back and back to their films, 844 01:02:16,733 --> 01:02:17,859 all of them, 845 01:02:17,943 --> 01:02:20,111 because, whether pre- or postwar, 846 01:02:21,029 --> 01:02:25,700 they speak to the lives that all of our parents and grandparents lived. 847 01:02:25,784 --> 01:02:28,912 They, they... They told the stories. 848 01:02:28,995 --> 01:02:33,959 Ford is the filmmaker with tremendously long vision, 849 01:02:34,042 --> 01:02:37,295 tremendous sense of perspective. 850 01:02:38,463 --> 01:02:44,678 There was an optimism in Ford's films of the '20s and '30s 851 01:02:44,761 --> 01:02:47,681 that's never quite there after that. 852 01:02:47,764 --> 01:02:54,020 You get much more the cinema of myth, the cinema of loss, I think. 853 01:02:56,564 --> 01:03:01,444 It took me many years and fitful maturity 854 01:03:01,528 --> 01:03:05,949 to understand that the questions that Ford was asking 855 01:03:06,032 --> 01:03:08,660 about what is owed to the past 856 01:03:08,743 --> 01:03:10,537 were still important, 857 01:03:10,620 --> 01:03:15,375 and ever more important as the '50s became the '60s and the '70s. 858 01:03:15,458 --> 01:03:18,753 And my generation, who grew up in a consumer society 859 01:03:18,837 --> 01:03:20,380 and postwar affluence, 860 01:03:20,463 --> 01:03:25,885 did we stop to think about the sacrifices that people made for us? 861 01:03:29,681 --> 01:03:32,350 [narrator] Ford never forgot the men of his unit. 862 01:03:32,434 --> 01:03:35,562 Soon after the war, he opened the Field Photo Home, 863 01:03:35,645 --> 01:03:38,940 known by the veterans who used it as "the Farm." 864 01:03:39,566 --> 01:03:43,862 It served as a social club and rehabilitation center for his men. 865 01:03:45,572 --> 01:03:48,700 When Ford died, a tattered flag from The Battle of Midway 866 01:03:48,783 --> 01:03:50,535 was draped over his coffin. 867 01:03:54,664 --> 01:03:56,082 [applause] 868 01:03:56,166 --> 01:03:58,293 [AFI presenter] Mr. Frank Capra. 869 01:04:00,503 --> 01:04:02,088 Believe in yourself. 870 01:04:03,340 --> 01:04:06,343 Because only the valiant can create. 871 01:04:07,969 --> 01:04:10,513 Only the daring should make films, 872 01:04:10,597 --> 01:04:14,934 and only the morally courageous are worthy of speaking to their fellow man 873 01:04:15,018 --> 01:04:17,187 for two hours and in the dark. 874 01:04:17,270 --> 01:04:18,521 [applause] 875 01:04:23,318 --> 01:04:27,364 It's a Wonderful Life was only appreciated on television decades later, 876 01:04:27,447 --> 01:04:28,782 and then it became a perennial. 877 01:04:28,865 --> 01:04:30,492 Merry Christmas! 878 01:04:30,575 --> 01:04:33,995 [del Toro] I think with Capra, his redemption couldn't be more complete. 879 01:04:34,079 --> 01:04:38,416 Merry Christmas, you wonderful old Building & Loan! 880 01:04:39,793 --> 01:04:41,002 Kids! Janie! 881 01:04:41,086 --> 01:04:44,297 [del Toro] It's not only a film that is remembered and loved, 882 01:04:44,381 --> 01:04:48,385 but it's part of a season, it's part of a yearly ritual, 883 01:04:49,260 --> 01:04:51,763 in every family, in every country in the world. 884 01:04:51,846 --> 01:04:54,599 -George! George, darling. -Mary! Mary! 885 01:04:54,682 --> 01:04:57,143 -George, darling! -Mary! 886 01:04:57,227 --> 01:04:59,521 Oh, George! Oh, George! 887 01:04:59,604 --> 01:05:03,691 [Capra] The greatest of all emotions that move us... 888 01:05:05,902 --> 01:05:06,986 is love. 889 01:05:09,864 --> 01:05:11,825 The world is not all evil. 890 01:05:14,285 --> 01:05:17,038 Yes, we do have nightmares, but we also have dreams. 891 01:05:21,084 --> 01:05:22,752 We do have villainy, 892 01:05:23,586 --> 01:05:25,964 but we also have great compassion. 893 01:06:18,433 --> 01:06:20,101 There's good in the world. 894 01:06:25,857 --> 01:06:26,858 And it's wonderful. 85069

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