D-Day brings memories and reissues
Geoff Brown basks in the glories of d-day reissues
THERE’S NOTHING LIKE an anniversary to make film copyright holders scour their back catalogues for new promotional angles, and the biggest angle this spring is the 60th anniversary of the D-Day landings in Normandy.
For authentic footage of the events and their aftermath you need the Collector’s Edition of The True Glory (DD Video), the official documentary of the Allied campaign, compiled from footage by some 1,400 cameramen. Four other wartime documentaries covering the European campaign fill out the two-disc set.
There should also be space on the shelf for Warner’s George Stevens: D-Day to Berlin. The DVD may be short (45 minutes) but it still has value for collectors. Here is rare colour footage, filmed as a personal diary by the American director serving with the Special Coverage Unit of the US Expeditionary Forces. There is a poignancy in seeing the war through the rosy glow of home-movie Kodachrome.
During the Second World War, British cinema found a subject matter and a tone of voice that Hollywood could not match. Audiences wanted to see reflections of their own courage, travails and heartbreaks living through the war.
The Way Ahead directed by Carol Reed, and Anthony Asquith’s The Way to the Stars, written by Terence Rattigan, both newly available from Warner on DVD, present lively and sensitive fictional portraits of Army and Air Force officers and recruits coming together in a common cause. Don’t go to these films for Hollywood-style heroics: British understatement rules, and the films seem all the more real and poignant for it.
Maddeningly, the films of Humphrey Jennings, the true poet among wartime documentary makers, are currently available only on video. The Imperial War Museum’s Listening to Britain collects three key titles, including his masterpiece, Listen to Britain.
I Was a Fireman (DD Video) presents the uncut version of Jennings’s only feature, Fires Were Started, a brilliant recreation of the London Blitz. Jennings came from a cosy upper-class background, yet he was able to put the Home Front’s ordinary workers on the screen with an ease never seen in British cinema before.
Making war films during the war was understandable. But why did British cinema expend so much effort fighting the war again in the 1950s and beyond, revisiting old battles and campaigns, condemning Jack Hawkins and company to spend much of their working lives saluting and wearing gold braid? Possibly it was an attempt to bask in past glories, both national and cinematic.
The Battle of Britain drama Angels One Five (DD Video) found quick popularity in 1952, and still wears quite well, though for intelligence and edge-of-the-seat excitement the 1950s British war movie to beat remains The Dam Busters (Warner), with its bouncing bombs aimed at Ruhr dams.
The big daddy of the genre in Hollywood, with one of the longest cast lists as well, is The Longest Day, newly released by Fox in a two-disc edition. But British collectors may be more interested in the new edition of Battle of Britain (MGM).
The film’s merits vary, depending on whether planes are flying or Susannah York is trying to be the forlorn female interest. But it looks great in its widescreen format; the supporting features are interesting, and it gives the option of removing the impoverished Ron Goodwin score and hearing all the William Walton music originally recorded but rejected by the studio.

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