• Welcome to SportsJournalists.com, a friendly forum for discussing all things sports and journalism.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register for a free account to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Access to private conversations with other members.
    • Fewer ads.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!

Five Came Back

Neutral Corner

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 17, 2014
Messages
42,983
I just finished watching "Five Came Back" on Netflix. It's a documentary of the five major Hollywood film directors who joined the service during WWII to make training films, documentaries, and outright propaganda films. Frank Capra, George Stephens, John Ford, John Huston and William Wyler were never the same afterward, not in their personal lives or in the films they made.

This is a remarkable piece of work which I would encourage you to watch. It shows an America which is very different from today's U.S.A., both for better and for worse. It made me proud, it made me think, it hurt me. It is well worth your time.
 
I just finished watching "Five Came Back" on Netflix. It's a documentary of the five major Hollywood film directors who joined the service during WWII to make training films, documentaries, and outright propaganda films. Frank Capra, George Stephens, John Ford, John Huston and William Wyler were never the same afterward, not in their personal lives or in the films they made.

This is a remarkable piece of work which I would encourage you to watch. It shows an America which is very different from today's U.S.A., both for better and for worse. It made me proud, it made me think, it hurt me. It is well worth your time.

Want to see that. John Huston is a bad ass.
 
Want to see that. John Huston is a bad ass.

They all were, each in his own way. George Stephens and a film crew followed and filmed the infantry across Europe from D-Day till the day Germany surrendered. What he saw and filmed at Dachau helped convict the Nazis at Nuremberg and scarred him for life. He was known for his touch with light comedies, but never filmed another comedy after the war. William Wyler followed the troops to his family's home town in France only to find that virtually every Jew there including his family had been killed in the death camps. He later lost his hearing due to filming while riding with his ears unprotected in a B-25.

Huston's last film made while still in the Army documents the treatment of a group of shell-shocked soldiers, men who were so devastated by what they had seen and done that they were barely functional. What we now call PTSD and consider a medical condition was largely considered cowardice... remember Patton slapping around a soldier in the Army hospital for it?

The Army brass considered this film so disturbing and powerful that they sat on it for thirty years before Huston was finally able to pry it loose. It is now an honored documentary in the Library of Congress.

Really interesting doc about a little known subject.
 
Last edited:

Latest posts

Back
Top