Why We Fight
Why We Fight
Why We Fight
By Thomas W. Bohn
Free - with major emphasis on the events and reasons leading up to war. The Nazis Strike (1943)
and Divide and Conquer (1943) are battlefield films
with an emphasis on overall Nazi war strategy and
campaign tactics. Taking place in a limited arena of
space and time they focus on specific battles designed to impress upon Americas young troops, the
ruthlessness and battle hardened strength of the
German Army. The remaining three films, The
Battle of Britain (1943), The Battle of Russia (1943) and The Battle of China (1944) were
ally films emphasizing that America was not
fighting the war alone and these countries had
fought longer, suffered direct assault on their people
and lands, and had bought time for the United
States prior to December 7, 1941.
Visually, the films operate on a dual premise - to
communicate information about and to increase understanding of the causes of World War II. There
was an emphasis on proving this by using newsreel, documentary, and battlefield footage. For example, The Battle of Russia contained approximately 7,400 feet of film. Of this total, some 4,500
feet were from Russian feature productions, documentary films, combat footage, and newsreels. As
this was film originally shot for another purpose and,
as such, represents found footage, in order to create meaning and develop a consistent narrative,
Capra and his team used editing as the principal stylistic building block for the Series. Many of the basic
stylistic elements familiar to Capra - shot composition, movement, lighting, set design, acting - were