The BBC has unearthed some amazing film footage shot from an airship in 1919 over the battlefields of World War I. It's going to form part of a program called 'The First World War From Above'. The director of the program reports:
I was approached to direct The First World War From Above earlier this year. Back then, my fantastic production team at the BBC had put together a dazzling array of stories and elements.
These included a piece of extraordinary archive footage, filmed from a camera strapped to a French airship in summer 1919, following the route of the Western Front and capturing the devastation in amazingly graphic detail. There was also the Imperial War Museum's collection of 150,000 First World War aerial photographs, a fascinating set of images giving a birds eye view of the battlefields.
Finally, we had a great selection of personal testimony: From Tommies in the trenches (and pilots up in the air) to the civilians who returned to their shattered towns and villages after the war.
The only challenge now was to turn it all into a film. How can you take such an iconic, enormous conflict such as the First World War and turn those four years of sacrifice into one hour of television?
When we met up with broadcaster and writer Fergal Keane, who was to present the film, we all agreed that, wherever possible, we had to try to reflect the lives and experiences of individuals - the soldiers, the pilots and the civilians who saw that corner of Western Europe utterly torn apart.
As we threw ourselves into the production, new and even more exciting stories started to emerge. Belgian archaeologist Birger Stichelbaut had been digging deep into the aerial images. He found that a photograph taken over Diksmuide in Belgium shows how some German soldiers unwittingly gave away their position to the British - by gardening.
Although the men's barracks were safely camouflaged under trees, the flowerbeds were clearly visible from above to British photographic experts. And once British commanders saw the flowerbeds, they soon directed their big guns onto the barracks.
We also learnt about the British tank stranded between enemy lines and 'rediscovered' it hidden inside an aerial photograph. Now historians have been able to map its precise location in the battlefields of Passchendaele.
We discovered that the huge networks of tunnels dug by both the British and Germans still lie underneath the villages along the Messines Ridge - and met a farmer's wife who fell into one of these tunnels just a few years ago.
And after some meticulous digging by our French researcher, Alice Doyard, we uncovered the incredible story of Jacques Trolley de Prévaux, the pilot who flew the airship above the Western Front and made the film in 1919.
I don't want to spoil the end of the film for anyone but Fergal finishes his journey through Belgium and France with a trip to Paris, where he meets Jacques' daughter - with some emotional and extraordinary results.
There's more at the link.
This is one time I really regret not having cable television! I'd love to see this program. I think I may have to buy the DVD, if the BBC make it available.
There's a preview of the program (including the 1919 footage) on the BBC's Web site. It's well worth the time of history buffs to click over there and view it. Highly recommended. (I don't know how long it will remain available, so watch it while you can!)
Peter
1 comment:
If you do find it on DVD please let everyone know. I would buy this as well if possible. Thanks for the information.
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