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The War

  • TV Mini Series
  • 2007
  • TV-14
  • 2h 4m
IMDb RATING
9.0/10
5.9K
YOUR RATING
The War (2007)
The War: Pearl Harbor
Play clip3:49
Watch The War: Pearl Harbor
1 Video
39 Photos
History DocumentaryMilitary DocumentaryDocumentaryHistoryWar

A seven-part series focusing on the many ways in which the Second World War impacted the lives of American families.A seven-part series focusing on the many ways in which the Second World War impacted the lives of American families.A seven-part series focusing on the many ways in which the Second World War impacted the lives of American families.

  • Stars
    • Keith David
    • Katharine Phillips
    • Tom Hanks
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    9.0/10
    5.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Keith David
      • Katharine Phillips
      • Tom Hanks
    • 52User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 3 Primetime Emmys
      • 8 wins & 12 nominations total

    Episodes7

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season2007

    Videos1

    The War: Pearl Harbor
    Clip 3:49
    The War: Pearl Harbor

    Photos39

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    Top cast60

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    Keith David
    Keith David
    • Self - Narrator
    • 2007
    Katharine Phillips
    • Self - Resident of Mobile, Alabama
    • 2007
    Tom Hanks
    Tom Hanks
    • Al McIntosh…
    Paul Fussell
    • Self - Infantry
    • 2007
    Quentin Aanenson
    • Self - Resident of Luverne, Minnesota
    • 2007
    Burt Wilson
    • Self - Resident of Sacramento, California…
    • 2007
    Sascha Weinzheimer
    • Self - Resident of Sacramento Valley, California
    • 2007
    Sam Hynes
    • Self - Marine Pilot
    • 2007
    Daniel Inouye
    Daniel Inouye
    • Self - Infantry…
    • 2007
    Rebecca Holtz
    • Reader
    Glenn D. Frazier
    • Self - Prisoner of War…
    • 2007
    Emma Belle Pelcher
    • Self - Resident of Mobile, Alabama
    • 2007
    Olga Ciarlo
    • Self - Resident of Waterbury, Connecticut…
    • 2007
    Maurice Bell
    • Self - Resident of Mobile, Alabama
    • 2007
    Dwain Luce
    • Self - Resident of Mobile, Alabama
    • 2007
    John Gray
    • Self - Resident of Mobile, Alabama
    • 2007
    Sidney Phillips
    • Self - Resident of Mobile, Alabama
    • 2007
    Susumu Satow
    • Self - Resident of Sacramento, California
    • 2007
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews52

    9.05.9K
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    Featured reviews

    10richard-1787

    Remarkable

    I spent the last week reading and then watching this remarkable series, i.e., reading a chapter in Geoffrey C. Ward's 400+ page book and then watching the corresponding episode of the documentary film. While the script of the films, also by Ward, reproduces much of what is in the book, often verbatim though not necessarily in the same order, there is also much that had to be left out to limit this massive undertaking to seven approximately 2-hour film episodes.

    Reading the book is already a very moving and informative experience. It is very well and powerfully written. But watching the seven installments of the movie is yet more powerful, indeed often overwhelming. (I could not handle more than one episode a day.) It is one thing to read the recollections of the witnesses, almost all of whom are master story tellers. It is that much more powerful to hear their voices and see their faces as they recount them. Much interesting detail is lost in the narrative in going from the book to the movie, so the movie is less informative than the book. But in terms of conveying the emotional impact the war had on both those who fought in it and those who lived through it here in the States, which in the end is one of Burns' goals, the movie is far more successful than the already very successful book.

    Some previous reviewers get lost in irrelevant sidetracks. Burns makes it very clear from the start that he cannot tell the whole story of the War, so he is limiting himself to how it affected people in four mid- to small-sized American towns. (He cheats a little on this with witnesses like Glenn Frazier, who wasn't from Mobile, and Sascha Werzheimer, who was from Sacramento but spent the War in the Philippines, but I'm not going to fault him on that.) Complaining that this series does not cover the war in Yougoslavia or other places is therefore irrelevant; no one could cover all of the war in 15 hours of documentary, and Burns tells us from the very beginning what limits he is imposing on his presentation. If you want something else, this is not the place to look for it.

    Others complained about the music. I truly cannot understand why. Burns' team makes masterful use of songs popular during the War, and of a deeply moving score by Winton Marsalis that makes already powerful visual and vocal footage that much more devastating. I wouldn't listen to the sound track by itself, but putting it beneath the rest of what is going on makes it that much more devastating.

    It is clear that Burns and Ward want to make several points, none of which I see as particularly left- or right-wing. They show that some of the American generals in the war had overbearing egos (MacArthur in particular) and some were simply incompetent. They show that war brings out the worst in some human beings, whatever the nationality, reducing them to something subhuman, such as the American GI who extracts teeth from an enemy corpse to get the gold fillings or the Japanese soldiers who emasculate dead GIs. (We actually see brief film footage of what appears to be GIs robbing Japanese soldiers' corpses of their possessions.) But we also hear of incredible courage and stamina, often told by men whose courage and endurance is equaled only by their humility.

    As several of the veterans say, you cannot understand what it was like to live through the worst of the war unless you were there. This movie doesn't challenge that assertion. It does, however, do a remarkable job of giving us some idea not just of the facts of the matter, but of what the war did emotionally to those who lived through it, on the fields of battle and here at home.

    On the last page of the book's text, one of the witnesses, Quentin Aanenson, says that "the dynamics of war are so absolutely intense, the drama of war is so absolutely emotionally spellbinding, that it's hard for you to go on with a normal life without feeling something is missing." It is that absolute intensity that this movie series does an often overwhelmingly good job of conveying.
    10NicolaTesla

    For all future generations

    This beautiful work of art touches the heart and soul. Truly one of the best things ever written and constructed in film. I've seen it five times and still moves me to my core Thank you mr Ward and mr Burns for this most important piece of historic telling for us an all our future generations
    10gentleman-bill

    Some Just Don't Get It

    The music criticisms are from folks who apparently didn't live through the era. Swing songs were what everybody was listening to, dancing to and romancing to during WW II. In my opinion, the music was perfect. Even our GI's listened to it wherever they were. Even I, as a young boy remember nearly every song because I lived during those difficult times. The music picked up our spirits, took our minds off the horrible stories of combat and death occurring all around us. The sad and slow symphonic and odd flute sounds should remind one of the eerie and uncommon circumstances we all had to face during those times. And that death in combat is not a usual experience for most of us. Actually, I think the combat sequences and death scenes should be required viewing for all the kids being raised and educated today. They need to see the horrible sacrifices this nation made to be certain they, we and many other nations remained free from maniacal tyrants and killers like the Jap emperor Hirohito, Tojo, Hitler and all their ilk, and still some who stalk this country as you read this. If everyone watched and listened without criticizing to the message of those who fought this war, the families who remained at home and worried, cried, prayed and mourned their dead, they might just get in tune with why this country is so great. We get to watch films like this because our fighting men and women knew the value of freedom and many, too many, sacrificed, were wounded physically and mentally, and too often paid the ultimate price so we can watch these films and don't have to speak Japanese, German or any other conqueror's language. So, shut up about the music already! Listen to the message! Please.
    8nickenchuggets

    America's view of World War II

    Ken Burns is one of the most prolific filmmakers of our time, and his body of work encompasses a wide array of subjects such as baseball, the prohibition era, national parks, cancer research, and other things. Probably the most critically acclaimed things he makes though are the ones related to war. The documentary he produced on the vietnam war for example is without a doubt one of the most incredible and well put together things ever broadcast, and if you didn't already see it, I'd advise you to do so. Long before he made that, Burns made another documentary on war that also received universal approval, that being on the civil war. In between these two, he created a short tv series on the second world war, but unlike the other two that got an amazing reception from basically everyone, the world war II series is seen as somewhat of a mixed bag, at least by me. Don't get me wrong, it's still very well made and has moments in it that will make you laugh, make you sad, make you scared, etc. And only the very best shows can make the viewer feel all these emotions within only one episode, but my problems with the series arise when you notice that this isn't really an overview of the subject at hand. The civil war series and the vietnam series are both amazing because they cover in impeccable detail the causes of each war, who was fighting who, what were they fighting about, what long term effects the conflict had, and other things. They also include interviews and firsthand accounts from people that were there. The War has all this, but it's not a direct overview of what world war II actually was, so if you're looking for a show that covers the whole thing from start to finish, then you better look elsewhere. The series does not really go into why ww2 started or how, but rather focuses on just the US side of things. It's the story of ww2 from the American perspective. It interviews various people from 5 different US towns and how their citizens experienced the war. It's not an all-encompassing recap of what the war was about. Despite this, I still enjoyed the series, and it has many incredible stories in it that the people tell, but the fact that it's not an overview of the whole war kind of annoys me. Still, the war footage is very engaging, and Keith David's narrating is without a doubt one of the best things about this series (cultured people will recognize his voice as the arbiter from halo 2 and 3). Again, it's not bad by any means. Just not what I was expecting from Ken. I watched the vietnam war first, and that one was so ridiculously good that everything else looks disappointing in comparison. The War is great, but not a worthy competitor to the masterpiece that was vietnam.
    9Koval

    No subs? No problem.

    "Dear God, we need your help real bad. Don't send anyone else but yourself, neither. Not even Jesus. 'Cause this is no place for kids."

    I'm half way through the series and am absorbing it like a sponge. Fantastic story tellers, especially that pilot, Quentin Annensen (sp?). Oscar-winning actors couldn't have done it any better, telling chilling stories that make me realize how lucky I am, as a young man, to not have to experience such things. (...And I thought I had drama in my life.)

    My Grandfather survived the war on various submarines, so I've been a bit disappointed there's been no mention, so far, of sub warfare. But as the series describes, "there were millions of people involved and millions of stories." I'm not too upset.

    To the filmmakers, terrific job. To the vets, I'll always remember you.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Connections
      Featured in Ken Burns: America's Storyteller (2017)
    • Soundtracks
      Passacaglia: The Death of Falstaff
      Written by William Walton

      Performed by the London Philharmonic Orchestra, Leonard Slatkin conducting

      Music originally in Henry V (1944)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 23, 2007 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • PBS (United States)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Война
    • Filming locations
      • Sacramento, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Florentine Films
      • WETA
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 4 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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