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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:18,685 --> 00:00:22,155 The Second World War's violent, disturbing images 2 00:00:22,605 --> 00:00:26,155 have been constantly replayed for decades. 3 00:00:26,234 --> 00:00:28,362 Sometimes it seems there is little 4 00:00:28,445 --> 00:00:31,574 we can see that we haven't seen before. 5 00:00:33,366 --> 00:00:37,667 But buried in archives and tucked away in private collections, 6 00:00:37,745 --> 00:00:41,500 an astonishing set of 3D films and photographs 7 00:00:42,083 --> 00:00:46,088 with the power to erase time and transcend space 8 00:00:46,713 --> 00:00:50,718 will now be seen for the first time in nearly 70 years. 9 00:00:52,218 --> 00:00:56,439 Leading historians of the war put on their 3D glasses 10 00:00:56,514 --> 00:01:00,815 and view the great conflict in a way even they have never seen it. 11 00:01:03,354 --> 00:01:06,233 I'm looking at Hitler, and he's looking at me. 12 00:01:06,316 --> 00:01:09,160 It's fantastic. 13 00:01:11,154 --> 00:01:13,373 I've been looking at images of this conflict my entire life. 14 00:01:13,448 --> 00:01:16,543 Over 30 years of seriously studying this conflict, 15 00:01:16,618 --> 00:01:20,839 and I've not seen images from World War II look like this. 16 00:01:22,123 --> 00:01:24,512 Unknown to most people today, 17 00:01:24,584 --> 00:01:28,805 Adolph Hitler used the clarity and depth of 3D 18 00:01:29,255 --> 00:01:32,054 to glorify his 1,000-year Reich. 19 00:01:35,428 --> 00:01:39,808 And as you will see, in the only known footage of its kind, 20 00:01:39,891 --> 00:01:43,020 restored and shown here for the first time, 21 00:01:43,102 --> 00:01:48,700 the Nazis used 3D to film their soldiers in live action. 22 00:01:50,068 --> 00:01:55,370 The Allies successfully exploited 3D in aerial reconnaissance 23 00:01:55,448 --> 00:01:58,201 to lay the groundwork for D-Day 24 00:01:58,284 --> 00:02:02,630 and ultimately, to lay waste to Germany. 25 00:02:03,831 --> 00:02:08,211 A brave Frenchman, still active today at age 97, 26 00:02:08,294 --> 00:02:11,548 even used 3D to document 27 00:02:11,631 --> 00:02:15,807 one of the most thrilling moments of the 20th century, 28 00:02:15,885 --> 00:02:19,014 the liberation of Paris. 29 00:02:19,973 --> 00:02:23,728 Now, for the first time ever, you are about to experience 30 00:02:23,810 --> 00:02:29,567 the Second World War as it has not been seen by anyone, 31 00:02:29,649 --> 00:02:33,199 except those who actually lived it. 32 00:02:35,131 --> 00:02:42,045 WORLD WAR II in 3D. 33 00:02:45,498 --> 00:02:51,255 Adolph Hitler stands in an open car as troops thunder past. 34 00:02:53,214 --> 00:02:58,721 The photograph seems somehow familiar, yet somehow startlingly new. 35 00:03:00,972 --> 00:03:05,022 Every detail, from the Fuhrer's reflections in the foreground 36 00:03:05,101 --> 00:03:08,731 to his swastika armband and commanding posture, 37 00:03:08,813 --> 00:03:11,817 has been carefully composed in three dimensions 38 00:03:11,899 --> 00:03:15,199 to enhance his God-like stature. 39 00:03:19,991 --> 00:03:22,790 Such images were made at the behest of a man 40 00:03:22,869 --> 00:03:26,373 who, despite his almost unimaginable cruelty, 41 00:03:27,540 --> 00:03:30,134 had a profound understanding of the power 42 00:03:30,209 --> 00:03:33,304 of visual imagery to mold history. 43 00:03:36,215 --> 00:03:39,469 The Nazi ideology that led to World War II 44 00:03:39,552 --> 00:03:43,227 has been called a vast eruption of evil into history. 45 00:03:47,018 --> 00:03:50,363 The author of that evil, Adolph Hitler, 46 00:03:50,438 --> 00:03:53,032 began life as an artist, 47 00:03:53,107 --> 00:03:57,408 and used art, sculpture, symbolism, and photography 48 00:03:57,487 --> 00:03:59,956 to mesmerize his nation. 49 00:04:00,031 --> 00:04:03,410 I remember in school in every classroom, 50 00:04:03,493 --> 00:04:07,873 we had a picture of the Fuhrer and the flags. 51 00:04:07,955 --> 00:04:10,094 You saw his picture everywhere. 52 00:04:13,586 --> 00:04:16,430 Even today at a Munich art museum, 53 00:04:16,923 --> 00:04:21,850 traces of Hitler's eerie symbolism survive. 54 00:04:21,928 --> 00:04:25,432 He consistently involved himself in the process 55 00:04:25,515 --> 00:04:30,942 of developing the artistic look of the National Socialist Third Reich. 56 00:04:31,646 --> 00:04:33,648 I don't think there's ever been 57 00:04:33,731 --> 00:04:35,825 anybody in history that's used mass communications 58 00:04:35,900 --> 00:04:39,325 and propaganda as successfully as Hitler, 59 00:04:39,404 --> 00:04:43,409 and he chose and promoted the most talented people, he thought, 60 00:04:43,491 --> 00:04:46,711 to carry out that propaganda mission. 61 00:04:48,913 --> 00:04:53,589 One of those people was photographer Heinrich Hoffmann. 62 00:04:57,130 --> 00:05:02,182 Here in this Munich square, on the day the First World War broke out in 1914, 63 00:05:03,594 --> 00:05:07,474 Hoffmann photographed a cheering crowd. 64 00:05:07,557 --> 00:05:12,484 In the 1920s, after Hoffman met Hitler and joined the Nazis, 65 00:05:12,562 --> 00:05:16,783 he discovered that a young Hitler himself was in that photograph. 66 00:05:18,693 --> 00:05:21,617 They became fast friends. 67 00:05:22,280 --> 00:05:25,580 He actually introduced Eva Braun to Hitler, 68 00:05:25,658 --> 00:05:29,379 so he was probably about as close as you could get to Hitler. 69 00:05:31,831 --> 00:05:33,879 To further Hitler's propaganda goals, 70 00:05:33,958 --> 00:05:38,930 Hoffmann turned to Germany's leading publisher of 3D photography, 71 00:05:39,005 --> 00:05:41,099 Otto Schdnstein. 72 00:05:41,174 --> 00:05:42,801 He had a publishing company 73 00:05:42,884 --> 00:05:47,264 and they wanted to order books and use his facilities. 74 00:05:48,765 --> 00:05:54,113 Schonstein had begun innocently enough publishing the types of 3D photos 75 00:05:54,187 --> 00:05:57,441 that had been a popular form of entertainment for decades. 76 00:06:01,444 --> 00:06:05,039 But after the Nazis seized power in 1933, 77 00:06:05,114 --> 00:06:09,335 Heinrich Hoffmann took over Otto Schonstein's publishing company, 78 00:06:10,787 --> 00:06:14,633 and together they took the concept of 3D photography 79 00:06:14,707 --> 00:06:16,880 to a sinister new level. 80 00:06:17,293 --> 00:06:19,637 This is a typical Raumbild book 81 00:06:19,712 --> 00:06:22,886 of the type that the Otto Schonstein publishing company 82 00:06:22,965 --> 00:06:25,434 finally came up with for their product, 83 00:06:25,510 --> 00:06:28,559 and inside the very thick covers, 84 00:06:28,638 --> 00:06:33,144 you have a pocket which has a folding 3D viewer, 85 00:06:33,226 --> 00:06:37,231 and each pocket has 25 photographic prints 86 00:06:38,022 --> 00:06:39,820 and they called it the Raumbild, 87 00:06:39,899 --> 00:06:44,245 which is a German word that translates literally as "spatial image." 88 00:06:44,403 --> 00:06:47,373 So it's a space image book, or a 3D book. 89 00:06:50,952 --> 00:06:55,173 Hoffmann and Schonstein launched their new publishing endeavor 90 00:06:55,248 --> 00:06:58,092 with the Berlin Olympics of 1936. 91 00:06:59,919 --> 00:07:05,267 Well, the 1936 Berlin Olympics were the ideal God-given opportunity 92 00:07:05,341 --> 00:07:10,689 to showcase the new Third Reich, and to do so in front of the entire world. 93 00:07:15,935 --> 00:07:19,860 Hitler was enraged when African-American Jesse Owens 94 00:07:19,939 --> 00:07:22,658 emerged as the star of the games. 95 00:07:24,485 --> 00:07:26,874 In a sense, the games backfired, 96 00:07:26,946 --> 00:07:29,119 at that moment at least, in terms of showing that 97 00:07:29,198 --> 00:07:32,327 the white superman wasn't the best athlete in the world. 98 00:07:32,410 --> 00:07:34,788 In fact, it was a black guy from America. 99 00:07:37,456 --> 00:07:41,006 Within months of the Olympics, Schonstein and Hoffmann were 100 00:07:41,085 --> 00:07:45,636 issuing lavish books that glorified the Nazi stranglehold on Germany. 101 00:07:51,095 --> 00:07:54,725 And nothing illustrated that stranglehold more 102 00:07:54,807 --> 00:07:58,027 than the annual events that happened here. 103 00:08:00,813 --> 00:08:04,613 On this weed-strewn field, a parking lot today, 104 00:08:05,484 --> 00:08:10,115 vast spectacles once dazzled Germany and chilled the world. 105 00:08:12,533 --> 00:08:16,332 The Nuremburg Rallies were huge mass rallies 106 00:08:16,412 --> 00:08:19,666 which were organized to celebrate the new Germany, 107 00:08:19,749 --> 00:08:22,548 the Third Reich, and Hitler in particular. 108 00:08:23,127 --> 00:08:25,846 Mass rallies of over 400,000 people, 109 00:08:26,756 --> 00:08:32,513 fantastically elaborate, brilliantly staged mass spectacles. 110 00:08:34,347 --> 00:08:39,069 I saw one news reel with the rally, 111 00:08:39,143 --> 00:08:41,771 with thousands of people, the swastika flags, 112 00:08:41,854 --> 00:08:43,948 and everybody, you can see the faces. 113 00:08:44,982 --> 00:08:48,156 They loved this man. We knew damn well 114 00:08:48,235 --> 00:08:52,490 that something's going to happen very soon. 115 00:08:57,954 --> 00:09:02,425 Today, children play near bleachers where top Nazi anti-Semite 116 00:09:02,500 --> 00:09:06,971 Julius Streicher, on the right, once sat. 117 00:09:07,088 --> 00:09:10,433 Men who murdered millions. 118 00:09:11,133 --> 00:09:15,138 The 3D imagery brings something very powerful to this experience. 119 00:09:15,221 --> 00:09:19,567 Few people alive have seen more imagery from the Second World War 120 00:09:19,642 --> 00:09:22,862 than research historian Martin Morgan. 121 00:09:23,896 --> 00:09:28,151 But even he has never seen the war in 3D until now. 122 00:09:29,402 --> 00:09:31,496 Faces that are in the background of the shot 123 00:09:31,570 --> 00:09:34,244 that I would probably not really pay attention to in 2D, 124 00:09:35,157 --> 00:09:39,913 I lock on to them in 3D. It's not really just faces, either. 125 00:09:40,371 --> 00:09:45,298 World War II historians, we love to inspect photographs for detail, 126 00:09:45,376 --> 00:09:48,300 everything from the airplane in the background 127 00:09:48,379 --> 00:09:53,351 to the details on the uniforms. The details, it tells you so much. 128 00:09:57,471 --> 00:10:01,271 This is clearly the Reichsparteitagsgelande, 129 00:10:01,350 --> 00:10:03,773 or the Nazi party rally grounds in Nuremberg in Germany. 130 00:10:04,687 --> 00:10:07,031 And each day of the Nazi party rally 131 00:10:07,106 --> 00:10:09,700 celebrated a different aspect of German culture, 132 00:10:09,775 --> 00:10:11,777 the worker, the soldier, the youth. 133 00:10:12,194 --> 00:10:14,743 Here we have Adolph Hitler 134 00:10:14,822 --> 00:10:18,201 receiving the salute and about to shake hands 135 00:10:18,284 --> 00:10:21,128 with a representative of the German labor force. 136 00:10:21,203 --> 00:10:24,207 Because if you'll notice, he's not armed aside from his dagger. 137 00:10:24,290 --> 00:10:26,964 Even down to the level of game wardens had a dagger. 138 00:10:27,043 --> 00:10:30,638 Everyone had a dagger, that's who this is. 139 00:10:39,472 --> 00:10:42,442 A rebuilt city today, 140 00:10:42,808 --> 00:10:47,655 Nuremberg was once decked out with the Nazi's triumphant insignia. 141 00:10:51,484 --> 00:10:57,082 In Nuremberg's Market Square, Sunday strollers browse for vegetables. 142 00:10:58,824 --> 00:11:03,546 But the Nazi's 3D cameras captured a starkly different scene. 143 00:11:15,508 --> 00:11:19,888 And if you look, the gentlemen that are in these wheelchairs 144 00:11:19,970 --> 00:11:22,689 that look like bicycles and wheelchairs, 145 00:11:22,765 --> 00:11:25,018 these are World War I veterans, 146 00:11:25,851 --> 00:11:28,775 and that they've been brought to the forefront of this crowd 147 00:11:28,854 --> 00:11:31,607 for Adolph Hitler, who was also a World War I veteran. 148 00:11:33,025 --> 00:11:37,155 In 1938, at the height of his popularity, 149 00:11:37,238 --> 00:11:40,367 Hitler staged an extravagant seven-day visit 150 00:11:40,449 --> 00:11:44,044 to fellow dictator Benito Mussolini in Italy. 151 00:11:46,539 --> 00:11:50,510 With his 3D photographers in tow, Hitler sought to link 152 00:11:50,584 --> 00:11:54,885 the glories of ancient Rome with his own LOGO-year Reich. 153 00:11:56,841 --> 00:12:01,267 This is fascinating, this is Hitler the artist visiting Italy. 154 00:12:01,345 --> 00:12:03,473 And when a tourist goes to Italy, what is it that you do? 155 00:12:03,556 --> 00:12:06,059 You go and you visit the museums 156 00:12:06,142 --> 00:12:10,397 that hold all the fantastic examples of Greek and Roman art. 157 00:12:11,564 --> 00:12:14,488 Hitler was a great admirer of Italian art, 158 00:12:14,567 --> 00:12:18,538 and particularly the Romans and the Roman culture. 159 00:12:18,612 --> 00:12:19,784 And it's simple things like, 160 00:12:19,864 --> 00:12:23,414 for example, the German salute where you raise the right arm. 161 00:12:23,492 --> 00:12:26,291 That was actually taken from the ancient Romans. 162 00:12:30,708 --> 00:12:34,429 Back home, Hitler instructed his artists to craft 163 00:12:34,503 --> 00:12:40,852 a new German art inspired by Rome but glorifying the Aryan ideal. 164 00:12:43,387 --> 00:12:47,267 Here, one of his favorite sculptors, Josef Thorak, 165 00:12:47,349 --> 00:12:50,774 labors on an image of the Nazi superman. 166 00:12:55,024 --> 00:12:58,619 Until 1938, the 3D photography 167 00:12:58,694 --> 00:13:01,538 of Heinrich Hoffmann and Otto Schonstein 168 00:13:01,614 --> 00:13:06,120 had glossed over the dark side of Hitler's meteoric rise. 169 00:13:09,121 --> 00:13:12,000 But the megalomania lurking in these photos 170 00:13:12,082 --> 00:13:14,881 would soon erupt across Europe, 171 00:13:14,960 --> 00:13:19,181 and Nazi 3D photography would go along for the ride. 172 00:13:25,137 --> 00:13:28,732 By 1938, Adolph Hitler's 3D photographers 173 00:13:31,060 --> 00:13:35,156 were celebrating the almost unimaginable success of their Fuhrer. 174 00:13:37,399 --> 00:13:39,743 He was riding a wave of popularity 175 00:13:39,818 --> 00:13:43,322 that could be likened to no one else in German history. 176 00:13:44,114 --> 00:13:46,208 Adolph Hitler had presided over 177 00:13:46,283 --> 00:13:50,163 the rearmament and remilitarization of Germany. 178 00:13:50,246 --> 00:13:52,669 He had reoccupied the Rhineland. 179 00:13:54,959 --> 00:13:58,884 Otto Schonstein and Heinrich Hoffmann's 3D propaganda 180 00:13:58,963 --> 00:14:02,433 had celebrated each of the Fuhrer's triumphs. 181 00:14:04,301 --> 00:14:08,056 But nothing cemented Hitler's hold on Germans more than 182 00:14:08,138 --> 00:14:13,360 the audacious seizure of neighboring Austria, known as the Anschluss. 183 00:14:15,062 --> 00:14:18,157 Everyone thinks that Hitler was German. Hitler actually was Austrian. 184 00:14:20,192 --> 00:14:22,615 It was obviously very important for Hitler 185 00:14:22,695 --> 00:14:26,825 that those Austrian Germans belong to the Third Reich. 186 00:14:27,783 --> 00:14:30,627 Austria had belonged to the Austro-Hungarian Empire, 187 00:14:30,703 --> 00:14:32,751 and after the First World War it was dismembered 188 00:14:32,830 --> 00:14:36,585 and really lost its power and its glory. 189 00:14:36,667 --> 00:14:40,513 Many Austrians yearned for that great past, 190 00:14:40,587 --> 00:14:43,136 and Hitler offered that in terms of the future. 191 00:14:45,509 --> 00:14:48,353 In 1938, Austrians cheered 192 00:14:48,429 --> 00:14:52,059 as Hitler marched unopposed into his native land. 193 00:14:54,351 --> 00:14:57,776 Things like the Nazi salute, greeting people with "Heil" 194 00:14:57,855 --> 00:14:59,857 and signing letters with "Heil Hitler", 195 00:14:59,940 --> 00:15:02,409 it's interesting to see how quickly these things 196 00:15:02,484 --> 00:15:04,703 then were taken over in Austria. 197 00:15:06,655 --> 00:15:11,627 Today, Salzburg in Austria is a quiet cultural center, 198 00:15:11,702 --> 00:15:14,751 home of a famous Mozart festival. 199 00:15:17,416 --> 00:15:20,340 But in this square in 1938, 200 00:15:20,419 --> 00:15:25,016 thousands erupted with delirious joy at Hitler's arrival. 201 00:15:27,176 --> 00:15:30,476 Squares were quickly renamed for the conquering hero, 202 00:15:32,348 --> 00:15:36,478 as Hitler and his henchmen launched a triumphant tour. 203 00:15:40,314 --> 00:15:42,533 At historic cemeteries like this, 204 00:15:43,359 --> 00:15:48,115 joyous Austrians heaped flowers on the graves of the Fuhrer's ancestors. 205 00:15:52,117 --> 00:15:54,461 But not all Austrians cheered. 206 00:15:55,746 --> 00:15:59,717 The homes of Jews and leftists were ransacked. 207 00:16:00,542 --> 00:16:05,423 They met an extremely unhappy experience in the Anschluss in 1938, 208 00:16:05,506 --> 00:16:08,100 and many of them were the first inmates 209 00:16:08,175 --> 00:16:10,223 at the concentration camp at Mauthausen. 210 00:16:13,013 --> 00:16:18,486 Mauthausen, which lies just 12 miles from Hitler's boyhood home of Linz, 211 00:16:18,560 --> 00:16:20,858 was legendary for its cruelty. 212 00:16:22,481 --> 00:16:25,360 It was where people were not gassed in the millions 213 00:16:25,442 --> 00:16:27,911 but where they were worked to death more often, 214 00:16:27,986 --> 00:16:32,207 and there was a famous quarry where mostly Jewish inmates 215 00:16:32,282 --> 00:16:36,378 would have to carry rocks up what were called The Stairs of Death. 216 00:16:38,831 --> 00:16:43,587 In an orgy of sadism, prisoners who could not carry the stones 217 00:16:43,669 --> 00:16:46,593 were hurled to their death from these steps 218 00:16:48,173 --> 00:16:52,349 and from this cliff known as The Parachute Jump. 219 00:16:55,389 --> 00:16:57,437 Hellish sights like Mauthausen 220 00:16:57,516 --> 00:16:59,985 were omitted from Schonstein and Hoffmann's 221 00:17:00,060 --> 00:17:03,860 sanitized 3D celebration of the Anschluss. 222 00:17:05,441 --> 00:17:11,119 But they managed to find room for a sinister photo of an ancient lie. 223 00:17:12,865 --> 00:17:18,588 The notorious Jews' Stone of Rinn depicted the supposed ritual murder 224 00:17:18,662 --> 00:17:23,088 of an Austrian boy by Jews in the Middle Ages. 225 00:17:23,167 --> 00:17:26,546 It became a sight of pilgrimage for the conquering Nazis. 226 00:17:28,922 --> 00:17:32,972 German soldiers and officers would go to visit the village of Rinn 227 00:17:33,051 --> 00:17:37,352 and go and look at the Judenstein, the rock upon which 228 00:17:37,431 --> 00:17:40,275 this 3-year-old child was supposed to have been killed. 229 00:17:47,024 --> 00:17:52,201 By now, Germany had created the most formidable military on Earth. 230 00:17:54,615 --> 00:17:58,586 Nazi propaganda was eager to impress this fact on everyone, 231 00:17:59,119 --> 00:18:02,874 and 3D was a powerful way to do it. 232 00:18:04,082 --> 00:18:06,551 As of 1938, the German army was 233 00:18:06,627 --> 00:18:10,257 one of the most well-equipped and modern armies of the entire world. 234 00:18:12,090 --> 00:18:16,846 Within roughly four years, an army of just over 100,000 men 235 00:18:16,929 --> 00:18:20,024 rose to a standing army of several hundred thousand. 236 00:18:25,521 --> 00:18:29,947 A series of 3D images showed off Germany's military hardware. 237 00:18:34,112 --> 00:18:37,491 This is a Dornier DO-18 float plane. 238 00:18:38,534 --> 00:18:40,662 It's an amazing aircraft. 239 00:18:40,744 --> 00:18:42,997 It could be catapult-launched off of a ship, 240 00:18:43,121 --> 00:18:45,169 and then it could be recovered by winch 241 00:18:45,249 --> 00:18:47,468 and placed back on that catapult. 242 00:18:50,420 --> 00:18:53,173 This is such a great photograph for anybody 243 00:18:53,257 --> 00:18:55,555 that's interested in the technology associated with World War II, 244 00:18:55,634 --> 00:18:59,138 because what you're seeing are Panzerkampfwagen II. 245 00:18:59,221 --> 00:19:02,191 This is an earlier version of the Mark II Panzer. 246 00:19:02,266 --> 00:19:04,564 You can see it looks like white crosses. 247 00:19:04,643 --> 00:19:08,238 The Germans marked their armored vehicles with the Balkenkreuz, 248 00:19:08,313 --> 00:19:11,567 and this is an earlier version of it than what you're used to seeing. 249 00:19:11,650 --> 00:19:13,652 These tanks would appear puny 250 00:19:13,735 --> 00:19:15,829 in comparison to tanks from later in the war. 251 00:19:21,660 --> 00:19:24,209 With this vast arsenal in hand 252 00:19:24,288 --> 00:19:29,340 and having marched into Austria and Czechoslovakia without firing a shot, 253 00:19:29,418 --> 00:19:32,888 Hitler was about to launch his fateful invasion of Poland. 254 00:19:34,965 --> 00:19:38,765 It would lead to initial success in a new kind of war 255 00:19:39,636 --> 00:19:43,607 and give Schonstein and Hoffmann remarkable opportunities 256 00:19:43,682 --> 00:19:48,108 to show the power of 3D as it had never been shown before. 257 00:19:55,235 --> 00:20:01,038 In September 1939, as Hitler invaded Poland 258 00:20:01,116 --> 00:20:04,541 and Europe descended into the Second World War, 259 00:20:06,705 --> 00:20:11,632 Otto Schonstein and Heinrich Hoffmann faced a unique challenge, 260 00:20:11,710 --> 00:20:17,092 documenting the Nazis' rapid onslaught with cumbersome 3D cameras. 261 00:20:17,174 --> 00:20:18,471 It's a little trickier. 262 00:20:18,550 --> 00:20:22,521 On the roll film, you're getting six stereos on one roll, 263 00:20:22,596 --> 00:20:24,644 so you're changing film a lot if you're gonna be using it, 264 00:20:24,723 --> 00:20:27,067 because you only got six stereo pairs on a roll. 265 00:20:28,810 --> 00:20:31,029 They overcame these drawbacks by training 266 00:20:31,104 --> 00:20:35,075 the Wehrmacht propaganda troops to shoot in 3D. 267 00:20:38,695 --> 00:20:42,916 The result is a visceral record of the rape of a nation. 268 00:20:46,203 --> 00:20:48,626 You can clearly tell that this is 1939 Poland. 269 00:20:48,705 --> 00:20:52,676 This is not summer '40 in the low countries. This is Poland in '39. 270 00:20:52,959 --> 00:20:56,930 And what I'm triggering off of is these are German army. 271 00:20:57,005 --> 00:21:01,306 They're wearing what we typically call the jack boots, the high leather boot. 272 00:21:01,593 --> 00:21:04,221 That's an item of footwear that was issued in the German army, 273 00:21:04,304 --> 00:21:07,353 more in the early part of the war than in the late part. 274 00:21:08,225 --> 00:21:10,353 And you can see they've all been allowed 275 00:21:10,435 --> 00:21:13,609 to remove their helmets and put on their soft cap. 276 00:21:15,691 --> 00:21:17,819 The 3D photographers documented 277 00:21:17,901 --> 00:21:23,203 the tragic destruction of the Polish air force and navy 278 00:21:25,367 --> 00:21:30,168 and the ruin of Poland's cities and infrastructure. 279 00:21:31,707 --> 00:21:33,459 It was a case of total war. 280 00:21:33,583 --> 00:21:36,928 No one in history had ever seen such merciless attacks on civilians, 281 00:21:39,256 --> 00:21:43,557 such concentrated bombings, such use of terror. 282 00:21:46,263 --> 00:21:51,235 The Polish military was no match for the world's most mechanized army. 283 00:21:53,895 --> 00:21:59,117 We were powerless against Hitler's mechanized forces, 284 00:21:59,943 --> 00:22:04,790 and Poland had great casualties, especially half of the country was 285 00:22:04,865 --> 00:22:08,870 finally overrun by the Russians who invaded from the east. 286 00:22:09,202 --> 00:22:11,751 So, Poland didn't have any chance. 287 00:22:17,878 --> 00:22:22,179 Hundreds of thousands of prisoners were marched off to oblivion. 288 00:22:25,135 --> 00:22:28,105 This photo is clearly 1939. 289 00:22:28,180 --> 00:22:30,558 You can tell by the German officer's tunic, 290 00:22:30,640 --> 00:22:33,359 and he is interrogating Polish prisoners. 291 00:22:34,227 --> 00:22:38,403 I would imagine that those prisoners on the left side of the photograph 292 00:22:38,482 --> 00:22:42,908 were a little bit concerned about what the future had in store for them. 293 00:22:46,156 --> 00:22:48,830 It was a sad moment. People cried, 294 00:22:48,909 --> 00:22:52,209 and we saw them going to the prison camps. 295 00:22:52,287 --> 00:22:55,257 It was a really horrible thing. 296 00:22:57,709 --> 00:23:00,633 On a wall that still held a mobilization poster 297 00:23:00,712 --> 00:23:04,933 for the Polish army, civilians now peered 298 00:23:05,008 --> 00:23:08,478 at ominous pronouncements from their new masters. 299 00:23:10,722 --> 00:23:15,398 This is the first time Polish resistance veteran Andr� Ulankiewics 300 00:23:15,477 --> 00:23:19,448 has seen 3D photos of a moment burned into his memory. 301 00:23:21,733 --> 00:23:24,828 You could not have a radio, you could not have weapons. 302 00:23:24,903 --> 00:23:30,581 You could not buy illegal food. Everything was punishable by death. 303 00:23:31,576 --> 00:23:36,673 You give refuge for a Jew, you were killed right on the spot. 304 00:23:36,748 --> 00:23:39,752 Not you, the entire family was wiped out. 305 00:23:41,795 --> 00:23:45,015 Hitler staged a triumphal parade in Warsaw, 306 00:23:46,424 --> 00:23:52,102 ecstatic in part because he now held captive three million Polish Jews. 307 00:23:55,767 --> 00:23:59,522 Schonstein and Hoffmann captioned this photo, 308 00:23:59,604 --> 00:24:02,608 "Lice-infected Jewish beds being burned," 309 00:24:03,817 --> 00:24:06,411 a caption fraught with ominous meaning. 310 00:24:07,571 --> 00:24:13,203 In Nazi ideology, the Jew was often compared to some sort of pest. 311 00:24:15,954 --> 00:24:20,960 Another caption sneered, "Jews doing unfamiliar work." 312 00:24:22,878 --> 00:24:25,973 That statement obviously plays with the prejudice 313 00:24:26,047 --> 00:24:28,891 that Jews were not used to manual labor 314 00:24:28,967 --> 00:24:32,471 and that all they did was rip off the population. 315 00:24:34,180 --> 00:24:37,024 Almost as soon as the Germans moved into Poland 316 00:24:37,100 --> 00:24:40,400 and occupied the country, they began to round up Jews. 317 00:24:40,478 --> 00:24:42,572 90% of the Jews in Poland 318 00:24:42,647 --> 00:24:45,036 would end up being killed during the Holocaust. 319 00:24:49,029 --> 00:24:54,752 Then, on May 10th, 1940, German armies and their 3D cameras 320 00:24:55,201 --> 00:25:00,128 swept across the borders of neutral Belgium, Holland, and Luxembourg. 321 00:25:03,335 --> 00:25:07,181 It's problematic terrain because it's criss-crossed by rivers and canals. 322 00:25:08,006 --> 00:25:10,259 It can be extremely difficult for the movement 323 00:25:10,342 --> 00:25:12,891 of a modern, mechanized army. 324 00:25:14,596 --> 00:25:16,940 However, the German military was ready for it. 325 00:25:17,015 --> 00:25:19,063 The leading descriptive word 326 00:25:19,142 --> 00:25:22,487 that characterizes the 1940 campaign, fluidity. 327 00:25:22,562 --> 00:25:25,031 They did that by bringing in engineering units, 328 00:25:25,106 --> 00:25:27,905 by bringing in units that were capable of fording rivers 329 00:25:27,984 --> 00:25:29,952 and building bridges on the fly, 330 00:25:30,028 --> 00:25:32,622 and it allowed the Germans to move swiftly. 331 00:25:35,241 --> 00:25:39,087 Never had a European army moved so fast 332 00:25:39,162 --> 00:25:41,540 and so quickly and with such devastating effect. 333 00:25:43,124 --> 00:25:46,128 After failing to stem the Nazi onslaught, 334 00:25:46,211 --> 00:25:50,136 the British pushed back to the French town of Dunkirk, 335 00:25:50,215 --> 00:25:53,560 which was devastated by German fire. 336 00:25:54,177 --> 00:25:58,148 But despite being surrounded, the Allies were miraculously 337 00:25:58,223 --> 00:26:01,693 ferried back to England on anything that could float. 338 00:26:02,519 --> 00:26:04,772 Three hundred and fifty thousand men 339 00:26:04,854 --> 00:26:08,449 were pulled off at Dunkirk, but they left 340 00:26:08,525 --> 00:26:11,654 all their armament and their machinery and their tanks behind. 341 00:26:13,571 --> 00:26:18,372 This photograph is definitely showing Germans 342 00:26:18,451 --> 00:26:21,204 on the beach at Dunkirk in France. 343 00:26:21,913 --> 00:26:25,338 Look at that. I have to say, as an Englishman, 344 00:26:25,417 --> 00:26:28,637 I love the Union Jack up to the right here, fluttering. 345 00:26:30,380 --> 00:26:33,680 That's fantastic. It's a great picture. 346 00:26:36,094 --> 00:26:40,440 Now, the road to Paris was wide open. 347 00:26:42,017 --> 00:26:44,691 Paris was declared an open city by the French government, 348 00:26:44,769 --> 00:26:48,069 because they didn't want to see the destruction of the capital. 349 00:26:48,523 --> 00:26:52,323 So the Germans actually marched into Paris 350 00:26:52,402 --> 00:26:55,281 without any real resistance by the French forces. 351 00:26:57,490 --> 00:27:00,039 Today, Paris's Arc de Triomphe 352 00:27:00,118 --> 00:27:03,247 and Place de la Concorde hum with traffic. 353 00:27:08,126 --> 00:27:11,050 But on June 14th, 1940, 354 00:27:15,258 --> 00:27:19,013 the only sounds were the echoes of German jack boots. 355 00:27:34,694 --> 00:27:37,163 In nine blood-drenched months, 356 00:27:37,655 --> 00:27:41,535 the Nazis had subjugated the greater part of Europe 357 00:27:42,160 --> 00:27:45,334 and documented their rampage in 3D. 358 00:27:50,168 --> 00:27:54,548 But their interest in 3D would soon reach beyond still photographs. 359 00:27:55,507 --> 00:27:57,760 Newly discovered motion picture footage 360 00:27:57,842 --> 00:27:59,970 not seen since World War II 361 00:28:00,053 --> 00:28:06,186 reveals Nazi soldiers in live action 3D for the very first time. 362 00:28:17,570 --> 00:28:20,915 In 1941, as Germany attacked the Soviet Union 363 00:28:20,990 --> 00:28:24,961 and ramped up its war machine, the Luftwaffe responded 364 00:28:27,956 --> 00:28:30,709 with perhaps the most remarkable 3D imagery 365 00:28:30,792 --> 00:28:33,887 that has survived the fall of the Third Reich. 366 00:28:42,887 --> 00:28:46,232 This film, never before seen by the public, 367 00:28:46,307 --> 00:28:49,436 and newly restored for this program, 368 00:28:49,519 --> 00:28:53,899 is the only known 3D footage showing German soldiers in action. 369 00:28:56,234 --> 00:29:00,080 A hundred thousand meters of such 3D footage was shot. 370 00:29:01,531 --> 00:29:04,080 For safekeeping, it was moved 371 00:29:04,159 --> 00:29:07,914 to a Dresden church in the war's waning days. 372 00:29:08,955 --> 00:29:14,633 When Dresden was firebombed in 1945, most of it was destroyed. 373 00:29:17,672 --> 00:29:21,393 But this unique footage somehow survived. 374 00:29:22,760 --> 00:29:27,061 Filmed outside a German city, it shows how to aim and fire 375 00:29:27,140 --> 00:29:32,772 Germany's most effective flak gun, the dreaded 88 millimeter, 376 00:29:34,772 --> 00:29:39,619 which also doubled as one of its top all-purpose artillery weapons. 377 00:29:52,790 --> 00:29:56,761 This is the legendary and infamous 88 millimeter gun. 378 00:29:56,836 --> 00:30:00,591 This is a weapon that could project a 30-pound projectile 379 00:30:00,673 --> 00:30:04,974 to an altitude of 20,000 feet against bombers flying in formation. 380 00:30:05,303 --> 00:30:09,308 An extremely lethal, and a very, very dangerous anti-aircraft weapon. 381 00:30:11,309 --> 00:30:15,234 A well-trained crew could fire 15 to 20 rounds per minute 382 00:30:18,816 --> 00:30:20,818 with devastating results. 383 00:30:29,619 --> 00:30:32,213 Here, a Luftwaffe artillery lieutenant, 384 00:30:32,288 --> 00:30:37,010 clearly identifiable by his silver wreath and seagull collar tabs, 385 00:30:37,168 --> 00:30:40,138 demonstrates how to aim and fire the 88 386 00:30:41,673 --> 00:30:46,099 against the relentless Allied air fleets decimating Germany. 387 00:30:49,013 --> 00:30:54,361 Height and distance are calculated. Orders are repeated down the line. 388 00:31:01,818 --> 00:31:05,994 When the 88 fires a shell, it explodes 389 00:31:06,072 --> 00:31:10,794 into a lethal cloud of flak in the path of the target aircraft. 390 00:31:16,124 --> 00:31:19,924 This device is actually a stereoscopic range finder. 391 00:31:20,878 --> 00:31:23,802 These soldiers being filmed in 3D 392 00:31:23,881 --> 00:31:28,478 were using 3D technology themselves to track their targets. 393 00:31:30,513 --> 00:31:33,266 Flak crews themselves took heavy casualties. 394 00:31:35,184 --> 00:31:37,812 So a film like this was likely part 395 00:31:37,895 --> 00:31:41,399 of the Luftwaffe's desperate race to train replacements. 396 00:31:45,445 --> 00:31:50,417 The film also shows a soldier learning to aim and fire a Mauser, 397 00:31:50,491 --> 00:31:53,415 the most important rifle in the German arsenal. 398 00:31:58,791 --> 00:32:02,466 Always efficient, Germans even produced a film 399 00:32:02,545 --> 00:32:05,765 showing precisely how to project this footage 400 00:32:05,840 --> 00:32:09,185 and view it with the Nazi's 3D glasses. 401 00:32:12,722 --> 00:32:16,022 The Nazis had used 3D mainly for propaganda. 402 00:32:17,101 --> 00:32:20,480 Now, with the Allies struggling to take the offensive, 403 00:32:20,563 --> 00:32:25,319 the British and Americans would use 3D to fight back. 404 00:32:27,362 --> 00:32:32,334 The key lay in its ability to revolutionize aerial reconnaissance. 405 00:32:33,284 --> 00:32:35,378 Three-dimensional photo reconnaissance images 406 00:32:35,453 --> 00:32:38,297 provide the ability to reveal structures on the ground, 407 00:32:38,373 --> 00:32:41,968 how big they were, how tall they were, and then more importantly, 408 00:32:42,043 --> 00:32:44,466 they were able to reveal topography. 409 00:32:44,545 --> 00:32:48,721 How high a ridge was, or how deep a ravine cut. 410 00:32:51,219 --> 00:32:55,395 Aerial 3D was used to its most devastating effect 411 00:32:55,473 --> 00:32:58,647 on the effort to bring the war home to the German people. 412 00:33:01,604 --> 00:33:03,902 For three or four years, the Allies 413 00:33:03,981 --> 00:33:07,531 could not land troops in occupied Europe. 414 00:33:07,610 --> 00:33:11,990 They had to use war from the air, what was called strategic bombing. 415 00:33:17,370 --> 00:33:19,668 So aerial reconnaissance and photography 416 00:33:19,747 --> 00:33:24,344 was absolutely paramount to the defeat of the Third Reich. 417 00:33:26,754 --> 00:33:32,352 German cities began to be incinerated in the fiercest maelstrom in history. 418 00:33:36,055 --> 00:33:38,228 In June of 1944, 419 00:33:38,307 --> 00:33:42,278 the Allies prepared to storm these beaches in Normandy, 420 00:33:42,353 --> 00:33:47,951 and 3D came into play again, this time in support 421 00:33:48,025 --> 00:33:52,201 of the largest amphibious assault mankind has ever attempted. 422 00:33:53,322 --> 00:33:56,041 We were photographing those beaches a year before we landed on them. 423 00:33:59,662 --> 00:34:05,340 As the sun peeked through the gray dawn of June 6th, 1944, 424 00:34:05,418 --> 00:34:09,468 Germans stared in disbelief from these bunkers 425 00:34:10,131 --> 00:34:13,476 as a quarter of a million men in over 5,000 ships 426 00:34:13,551 --> 00:34:15,929 blanketed the English Channel. 427 00:34:18,514 --> 00:34:23,611 The Allies faced an inferno, especially here at Omaha Beach. 428 00:34:25,771 --> 00:34:29,492 Casualties were extremely high. The Germans were capable of laying 429 00:34:29,567 --> 00:34:32,161 withering fire on the beaches themselves. 430 00:34:38,201 --> 00:34:40,169 After the war, 431 00:34:40,244 --> 00:34:45,250 the American company, View-Master, released a set of 3D images 432 00:34:45,333 --> 00:34:49,258 showing the toll Normandy paid for liberation. 433 00:34:52,465 --> 00:34:56,561 3D photography had given the Allies an important edge 434 00:34:56,636 --> 00:35:01,437 in the bombing campaign over Germany and the victory on D-Day. 435 00:35:04,560 --> 00:35:07,939 Now, as the war raced to its conclusion, 436 00:35:11,359 --> 00:35:14,454 3D would record, in color, 437 00:35:14,529 --> 00:35:18,659 one of the most exhilarating moments of the 20th century 438 00:35:18,950 --> 00:35:23,046 and ultimately preserve a haunting 3D record 439 00:35:23,120 --> 00:35:25,623 of the tragic consequences of war. 440 00:35:30,711 --> 00:35:33,305 As Germany collapsed around him, 441 00:35:33,381 --> 00:35:37,887 Nazi 3D publisher Otto Schonstein stopped publishing 442 00:35:37,969 --> 00:35:41,940 and started racing to save his archive from the bombs. 443 00:35:46,143 --> 00:35:48,316 But as the Allies sped across France, 444 00:35:49,313 --> 00:35:53,693 one dapper young Frenchman was in the right place at the right time 445 00:35:53,776 --> 00:35:57,622 to create a remarkable record of the liberation of Paris, 446 00:35:58,990 --> 00:36:03,666 the only 3D photos in color known to have survived the war. 447 00:36:08,291 --> 00:36:12,171 Today, in an airy house in the Parisian suburb of Boissy, 448 00:36:13,546 --> 00:36:17,596 97-year-old orchid grower Marcel Lecoufle 449 00:36:17,675 --> 00:36:20,975 photographs one of his prize specimens in 3D. 450 00:36:21,887 --> 00:36:25,357 He's been taking such pictures for over 80 years. 451 00:36:29,645 --> 00:36:33,275 I started photographing orchids in 1928. 452 00:36:37,778 --> 00:36:40,782 My family's been involved in cultivating orchids 453 00:36:40,865 --> 00:36:43,618 for five generations. 454 00:36:45,786 --> 00:36:48,414 The German occupation had made his hobby 455 00:36:48,497 --> 00:36:51,671 not only difficult but potentially dangerous. 456 00:36:54,629 --> 00:36:58,475 The Germans totally prohibited any photographs, 457 00:36:58,549 --> 00:37:01,519 but the other problem was finding the film. 458 00:37:01,594 --> 00:37:05,815 There were some stores that had it, but it was difficult to find. 459 00:37:08,893 --> 00:37:13,069 Still, on his daily bike rides to the Paris flower market, 460 00:37:13,147 --> 00:37:16,697 Lecoufle couldn't resist defying the Nazi ban. 461 00:37:18,402 --> 00:37:21,997 His photos portray a deceptively lovely Paris 462 00:37:22,073 --> 00:37:24,826 that hasn't changed much today, 463 00:37:24,909 --> 00:37:28,129 but was groaning under a brutal occupation. 464 00:37:30,915 --> 00:37:37,264 Then, in August 1944, American bombs and even some planes 465 00:37:37,338 --> 00:37:41,013 began crashing around Lecoufle's suburban doorstep. 466 00:37:44,929 --> 00:37:48,650 We heard that the Americans were landing at Normandy on the radio, 467 00:37:48,724 --> 00:37:51,568 on radios that were jammed by the Germans 468 00:37:51,644 --> 00:37:54,944 who didn't want us to find out what might be happening. 469 00:37:56,399 --> 00:38:00,870 With the Germans fleeing and the Allies approaching, 470 00:38:00,945 --> 00:38:04,575 destruction rained from the skies around Boissy. 471 00:38:07,451 --> 00:38:11,877 The photograph of the big fire was taken after a bombing attack, 472 00:38:11,956 --> 00:38:16,006 and that was gasoline burning, so the smoke was horrendous. 473 00:38:19,672 --> 00:38:24,974 Then Boissy erupted with joy as the Yanks poured in. 474 00:38:35,062 --> 00:38:38,657 Locals were curious to see black American soldiers 475 00:38:38,733 --> 00:38:40,906 billeted in the woods nearby. 476 00:38:46,824 --> 00:38:49,703 I have taken this photo in the "Bois de la Grange" 477 00:38:49,785 --> 00:38:53,085 three kilometers from here. 478 00:38:53,164 --> 00:38:55,758 One morning, these Americans were washing up 479 00:38:55,833 --> 00:38:59,133 and I just so happened to take that photo. 480 00:39:02,798 --> 00:39:05,096 But while Boissy rejoiced, 481 00:39:05,676 --> 00:39:11,024 Paris was roiled in a desperate insurrection just a few miles away. 482 00:39:13,601 --> 00:39:18,528 The barricades were up and French partisans struggled 483 00:39:18,606 --> 00:39:22,986 to defend their headquarters here, the police prefecture. 484 00:39:24,820 --> 00:39:28,666 Then, on August 24th, Paris went wild 485 00:39:28,741 --> 00:39:32,791 as French and American troops roared into the city, 486 00:39:32,870 --> 00:39:35,293 and the Germans threw down their arms. 487 00:39:38,250 --> 00:39:40,673 Sam Dimas recalls what has been called 488 00:39:40,753 --> 00:39:43,802 "the greatest party of the 20th century." 489 00:39:46,175 --> 00:39:48,473 When we paraded down the Champs-�lys�es, 490 00:39:48,552 --> 00:39:52,898 you don't go through the opening of the Arc de Triomphe, you go around it. 491 00:39:52,973 --> 00:39:55,567 So we had to double time to go around it. 492 00:39:56,852 --> 00:39:59,822 The French girls were all over their liberators. 493 00:39:59,897 --> 00:40:02,650 I think we had four or five guys that went AWOL. 494 00:40:04,652 --> 00:40:07,405 Determined not to miss the party, 495 00:40:07,488 --> 00:40:12,836 Lecoufle grabbed his 3D camera, jumped on his bike and raced to Paris. 496 00:40:17,957 --> 00:40:20,085 There was general elation, 497 00:40:20,167 --> 00:40:23,091 and the Americans arrived over by the police station, 498 00:40:23,212 --> 00:40:26,466 and someone said there was a tank approaching. 499 00:40:27,633 --> 00:40:32,230 So the Americans put on their helmets, but the people didn't want to leave. 500 00:40:32,304 --> 00:40:35,729 They stayed there, and luckily, the tank turned around. 501 00:40:45,860 --> 00:40:49,831 But amid the joy, Lecoufle also photographed 502 00:40:49,905 --> 00:40:52,658 the deadly cost of liberation. 503 00:40:55,786 --> 00:40:58,255 You have an American truck at the entrance 504 00:40:58,330 --> 00:41:01,174 to the Luxembourg Gardens, and you can see on the wall 505 00:41:01,250 --> 00:41:03,799 all the bullet holes which are white dots. 506 00:41:11,802 --> 00:41:14,601 Marcel Lecoufle shot the last known 507 00:41:14,680 --> 00:41:17,775 3D photographs taken during the war itself. 508 00:41:19,935 --> 00:41:23,985 But they're not the final story of 3D in World War II. 509 00:41:26,025 --> 00:41:29,655 Nine months later, with Germany defeated 510 00:41:29,737 --> 00:41:32,911 and Nazi photo chief Heinrich Hoffmann in prison, 511 00:41:32,990 --> 00:41:36,995 a nearly bankrupt Otto Schonstein found a new subject 512 00:41:37,077 --> 00:41:41,548 for his 3D cameras, the ruins of his country. 513 00:41:45,044 --> 00:41:48,514 Returning to historic sites he had shot before the war, 514 00:41:50,507 --> 00:41:53,181 Schonstein recorded the devastating results 515 00:41:53,260 --> 00:41:56,855 of Germany's blind obedience to Adolph Hitler. 516 00:41:58,849 --> 00:42:03,525 Today, Germans have rebuilt many of their cultural treasures, 517 00:42:05,522 --> 00:42:07,820 like Munich's Residenz Theater, 518 00:42:18,702 --> 00:42:21,205 its Renaissance Antiquarium, 519 00:42:33,258 --> 00:42:35,886 and Nuremberg's Heiden Tower. 520 00:42:39,473 --> 00:42:43,194 But the scars these pictures represent for Europe 521 00:42:43,268 --> 00:42:47,193 and for civilization are not so easily healed. 522 00:42:48,440 --> 00:42:51,410 I spend my life attempting to understand that conflict, 523 00:42:51,485 --> 00:42:54,489 why it was necessary for humankind to go down the road 524 00:42:54,571 --> 00:42:57,541 of being involved in a conflict that ultimately cost, 525 00:42:57,616 --> 00:43:01,086 although people argue about it, I believe it's over 100 million lives. 526 00:43:03,998 --> 00:43:07,969 Otto Schonstein died a broken man in 1958, 527 00:43:09,795 --> 00:43:13,516 leaving behind an eerie, disturbing 3D record 528 00:43:13,590 --> 00:43:16,685 of the darkest days of modern times. 529 00:43:22,808 --> 00:43:26,813 Monsieur Lecoufle still photographs in 3D 530 00:43:26,895 --> 00:43:32,152 and anticipates great days ahead for his hobby of 83 years. 531 00:43:37,114 --> 00:43:41,119 Television would be perfect if it were in three dimensions. 532 00:43:41,201 --> 00:43:44,580 The proof of that is when photography first arrived, 533 00:43:44,663 --> 00:43:49,339 3D was already around, and now it's making a comeback. 534 00:43:56,258 --> 00:43:58,977 That comeback now gives a new dimension 535 00:43:59,053 --> 00:44:04,526 to the villainy of the Nazis, the heroism of their opponents, 536 00:44:05,142 --> 00:44:09,773 and the crucial ways that 3D itself helped to build up 537 00:44:09,855 --> 00:44:14,702 and then tear down the 1,000-year Reich. 47699

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