An important, engrossing, and necessary documentary
Ken Burns' 15 hour PBS miniseries, THE WAR, is stupendous by even his high standards. It gives us a fresh and powerful and poignant portrait of World War Two. We have both the home front and combat in both the Pacific and Europe, battle by battle, mostly from President Roosevelt declaring war in 1941 to V-J Day in 1945. And the home front is viewed through four towns across America: Sacramento, California; the tiny farming town of Luverne, Minnesota; Mobile, Alabama; and Waterbury, Connecticut. As always with Burns (and co-director and co-producer Lynn Novick), we have oral reminiscences, then graphic combat footage to show what is being talked about. In the process, several ordinary people in those four towns emerge as superstar commentators. And the war's horror really comes alive. Libraries are more likely than Blockbuster to stock THE WAR. If you want to buy a copy, Amazon.com is way, way cheaper than PBS directly. The DVD has seven episodes on six disks. Each episode is about two hours in length, with advisories on the front for strong violence. Episode one shows how the attack on Pearl Harbor changed life in the four profiled towns across America for both wives and soldiers. Burns and Novick offer audio commentary, if you have the time to view episode one twice. We go all the way up to December 1942. Episode two gives us 1943 in 24/7 factories across America, battles in north Africa, suicide bombing raids in Europe, and bloody battles in the Pacific. On the same disk, episode three takes place from November 1943 - May 1944. We get Allied forces in Italy and heavy American losses in Tarawa in the Pacific. Meanwhile, on the home front, factories are booming with productivity, leading to ugly racism. On one of these episodes we also see Japanese-Americans rounded up and sent to internment camps, and blacks in their own proud front-line combat unit. D-Day in June 1944 is at the center of episode four, with commentary by Burns and Novick, which I did not play because I wanted to hear the oral witnesses instead. Maybe on a second viewing next year. Episode five is wryly subtitled "FUBAR", which stands for "f----- up beyond all recognition", which tells it like it is in Fall 1944. We are in Holland and Germany, directly fighting the Nazis on their own turf. We also fight one of the most brutal and unnecessary battles in the Pacific. Episode six is set in early 1945. Americans finally get across the Rhine in Germany, after heavy losses in the Ardannes forest, while the Russians are only 50 miles from Berlin in the opposite direction. In the Pacific, we score big with the capture of Iwo Jima and bombing raids on Japan. Finally, episode seven of THE WAR has V-E Day, the battle of Okinawa and the atom bomb droppings on Japan, V-J Day, and a whole world trying to learn to live without war. It is a sobering and poignant finale to a magnificent war miniseries when you have the time for it. Ken Burns and his staff picked the exact right four towns and found the exact right commentators to make the home front and these battles unforgettable. Read more


















