"The War" The Ghost Front: December 1944 - March 1945 (TV Episode 2007) Poster

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10/10
Outstanding although brutal and terrifyingly cruel
seattle_lady1 October 2007
Warning: Spoilers
My husband who was in this war in the Pacific (at the age of 16 & 17, he was driving landing craft onto the beaches) thought this was excellent. He should know. There are frightening scenes of fighting and killing and the Western Front. German fighters are dropped behind our lines and our men had to get identification from all. The black Americans were the least suspect as it was not known that the Germans had any blacks. Snowstorms and vehicles become almost inoperable. The tanks became one after another blown up. They baled out of the tanks and ran for cover. We spent that night in a big snowstorm. There were tracer bullets all over. Very very scary. Thousands lost toes to frostbite.
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From D-Day Onward, The Allies Nearing Victory
ccthemovieman-124 October 2007
This episode contains a lot of war footage and shows the battles in France as the Americans and their Allies fight the Germans en route to Germany. One of those was in a thick forest area, hence the title "The Ghost Front."

Later, we see the "Battle Of the Bulge" on the German-Belgian border mainly, and the bloody battles that went with it. The "bulge," I believe, referred to the bulge in our advancing lines as the Germans fought back and started driving the Allies back for awhile. The time period is December of 1944, six months after the D-Day invasion and a lot of lives were sacrificed at this time, among bitter cold conditions. Pictures of literally-frozen bodies are difficult to view. How many soldiers had toes frozen off I don't know. It's pretty sad - from our (U.S.) point of view - when you hear about the German soldiers far better dressed to deal with the cold than our guys. Sometimes you wonder how we ever won the war with the poor leadership and planning we had from our military leaders (with a few exceptions, like Patton).

Another continuing human element that has been part of this series is the saga of young Sascha Weinzheimer and the imprisonment of her, her brother, mom and dad at Manila. Her story, not as dramatic as the famous Anne Frank, nonetheless, is compelling and she is still alive today to tell it. Her story really gets dramatic when the Americans come to rescue all the prisoners and then the Japanese bomb the place. In the end, Manila is almost totally wiped out after two days of brutal fighting and bombing. The pictures of many American prisoners literally skin and bones rival the concentration camp pictures in Germany - just terrible sights.

Meanwhile, the war goes on in and we witness the bombing of Dresdan and other German cities, which kills 600,000 people including hundreds of thousands of German women and kids.

At that point, all of this is almost too much to watch, but this a long episode with plenty more to come, like the battle at Iwo Jima, where an unbelievable 6,000 Americans lost their lives on that tiny island, but taking the island cleared the way for a straight line to Japan now. After that, among other things, we see the huge B-29 bombers leveling several Japanese cities with napalm. It has devastating results.

The end of the war is in sight now.
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