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  1. PRIMETIME EMMYS® 3X winner. George Stevens: D-Day to Berlin. This documentary follows American troops from D-Day 1944 to their stand in Berlin 1945. IMDb 7.846min1994. 16+. Documentary · Military and War. Subscribe to Max for $9.99/month. Watch with MaxStart your subscription.

  2. Directed by. George Stevens Jr. United States, United Kingdom, 1994. Documentary, Biography, War, TV Movie. 46. Synopsis. Produced and narrated by George Stevens Jr., this short documentary uses footage taken by his father when he was in the Army Signal Corps and follows American troops from D-Day in June 1944 to the end of the European war.

  3. 5 giu 2019 · The son, also a filmmaker who founded the American Film Institute, used his dad’s footage in the Emmy-winning documentary “George Stevens: D-Day to Berlin.”

    • 4 min
    • Lia Eustachewich
  4. 13 gen 2022 · Plot D-Day to Berlin. Gedramatiseerde oorlogsdocumentaire over de geallieerde vooruitgang, vanaf de landing op D-day in Normandië, helemaal tot en met de val van Berlijn. Zoveel mogelijk komt aan bod: de gevechten en doorbraak op en aan de stranden van Normandië, evenals de Slag om de Ardennen, Operatie Market Garden, tot het uiteindelijke ...

  5. 20 giu 2005 · George Stevens Jr. introduces and discusses D-Day to Berlin, the Emmy Award winning documentary he made using color footage that his father, acclaimed director George Stevens, filmed across Europe at the end of World War II. In 1943, Stevens Sr. was assigned to follow the invasion of Normandy with the 6th Army for the purpose of recording their operations for army archives. With footage ...

  6. Deze DVD bevat een beroemde samenvatting van de persoonlijke filmdagboeken die hij aanlegde tijdens zijn verblijf aan het front. Zijn zoon, George Stevens Jr., is de producer en de verteller van deze verbluffende terugblik op een wereld in oorlog, een documentaire die met drie Emmy’s bekroond werd. Van de stranden van Normandië tot het ...

  7. We follow the American troops from d-day in june `44, until they stand in Berlin in may `45. We see the horrors of the war in a way, which we have never been able to see before. We see dead people lying along the roads, dead people in the concentration-camps, dead Wehrmacht-troops, dead civilians, dead Americans and all the pain, which was present during the war.