World War II in Colour was on Netflix for a long time, and it's too bad they took it out of their library. I watched it many, many times and think it is an excellent overview of World War II. It was a springboard for me to learn more about the war.
there’s a couple other WW2 in color documentaries, but they are not as good as the one you speak of. though I do love WW2 in HD I saw footage on that doc I’d never seen before. The Vietnam War by Ken Burns is spectacular as well, I was engrossed. i had a new respect and empathy for the bravery of the common soldier, and what he was forced to endure.
@@kylegoodreau2170 No it's not. Only 6 parts and full of mistakes. I did like the music of the Japanese guy though! Watch WW2 week-by-week here on YT. Just finished couple of months ago and most elaborate and in depth WW2 series ever made and probably ever will be made! Made by a great team! There is a same concept series on WW1 as well! Also awesome!
Sick of UA-cam censoring - we're watching a WAR movie, there are going to be dead things. Stop treating us like children and we'll watch the whole thing, thank you very much.
You can always find a different copy of the documentary. I feel as if this platform only serves to entice those eager to learn to dig deeper and consume the original material
There's a book called Windswept Lies of War, and it talks from censored history and hidden secrets to lost files and classified documents about World War II, it's the real deal.
Whatever I am falling asleep to, when I'm waking u; in the middle of the night or in the morning - this is the type of video playing, or sometimes some long video about cosmology =)
"Operation crusader in 1945",,, It's ironic to note that the Roman crusade took place over the same region of Mediterranean Sea 2000 years ago. Furthermore, Italy was colonizing Libya, Eritrea & Somalia since the 1880s, before invading Abbysinia/Ethiopia in 1940.
Why he rejected mustache mans peace offerings numerous times and instead helped cause the death of tens of millions of people, got most of Britain destroyed, bankrupted it, and caused the end of the British empire and the pound as the world reserve currency and plunged Britain into unimaginable debt to the United States.😂
*ahem* Everybody always gets excited about the Mustang. The P-47 was on scene well before the combat-effective P51-B was, AND the *real* problem was the USAAF "Bomber Mafia" refusing to supply drop tanks to *any* American fighters, '51, '47, or '38, thinking that the Forts' own guns would be sufficient to get them through. Schweinfurt, of course, proved them wrong... and finally somebody got smart and gave Jimmy Doolittle, a genius six ways from Sunday as well as a heck of a pilot in his own right, command of the 8th Air Force. Once Doolittle changed the USAAF's priority from destruction of infrastructure to that of logisitical superiority - first, seek out and destroy the Luftwaffe, and second, on the way back from a raid, hit anything that moved, then things got better. By 6 June the Luftwaffe had very little *left* to throw at the Normandy landings, and that which did show its face were summarily dealt with. Of course, blowing up all that infrastructure meant that the Allies had their own logistical problems to deal with... but at least they weren't usually ducking German air raids to do so. Can't say the same for Fritz himself.
But why? why would Britain, which vastly outnumbered the Japanese on Malaya be overwhelmed? did they lack sufficient artillery? airplanes? were they simply not expecting the Japanese army to be so tenacious? it must’ve been disheartening to the allies to have to fight them knowing this.
In general, British troops were never well supplied with armaments. They were always behind the loop. The troops themselves were incredibly brave, but I don't recall hearing that they commanders were particularly good.
The British relied on their modernised coastal forts using poorly equipped colony troops , Britain along with United States had no respect for the Japanese and considered them savages, the Japanese landed usually very far away from the forts inland and walked on foot Have to remember as well Britain only has one army at the time that was in North Africa getting smashed
I saw an interview of a German soldier, POW from North Africa, he stated that he knew Germany was going to lose the war when they marched him by a couple miles of Allied vehicles, and they were all sitting there, idling with nobody in them,
@@JamesJohnson-gv7tv Yes. But planes and ships can always be manufactured again. Experienced fighter/bomber pilots take a while to replace, if even possible.
It took years to get the Japanese aircraft mechanics up to speed. In fact, you could train a pilot faster. So yes, the loss of mechanics at Midway especially, that early in the war, was a critical but largely ignored hit to the IJN.
@@erikk4555 Japan's main problem there was they didn't have the capacity to manufacture thousands of planes and more ships. They started out hoping for a six month fight. And in Japan, it took years to bring an aircraft mechanic up to speed. The loss of a couple thousand at Midway, that early in the war, helped to cripple the IJN aerial effort for the rest of the war.
AAAAAAND once again Jean Laidlaw, WRNS, and her compatriots get ERASED. Black May (1943) was BEFORE the air gap was closed, and it never would've happened but for these women, and their boss, Captain Gilbert Roberts, who made Max Horton play the war game himself and lose 0-5 to Janet Okell using Laidlaw's tactics. (Also, ASDIC got erased too; this had been around for a couple of decades, and Johnnie Walker his own self put it to decent use... but Laidlaw studied Walker's BUTTERCUP tactics, figured out the fatal assumption - that a sub would attack from outside a convoy rather than sneaking INSIDE at night - and devised RASPBERRY as an initial counter, accounting for the fact that the one way out of the middle of a bunch of hostile ships was *down*, at which point the sub's slower underwater speed would force it aft relative the the convoy centre... and of course, the ladies didn't stop there; they developed several other tactics for use in various conditions. It takes *both* tech *and* brains (and a bit of bloody-mindedness) to win a war... and a willingness to let whoever has good ideas run with them and be the person to teach others. No matter what their gender, or colour, or where they came from.
I recently saw a great British movie about those tactics and while it was a bit dramatic, it was accurate. Those WRNS were smart cookies! They saved Britain as much as any other part of the service at the time.
The USSR would have collapsed without the Lend-Lease Act and help from Britain (intelligence). Loss of food would have sealed the fate of the soviets (unless helped by foreign powers fighting for communism) The soviets got enough food from the USA to feed its soldiers for the rest of the war, 12 million boots , 60 percent aluminum and steel, a lot of tin , 90 percent of railway equipment ( the soviets would never have been able to conduct offensives so fast and transfer their main armies to critical points , 300000 trucks were given , 65 percent of aviation fuel and much more apart from 15 percent tanks ,aircrafts Soviet sympathizers say "only 15 per cent was given to USSR"
Would love to see a video focusing on the carriers in the pacific. One that introduces every new carrier as they entered pacific waters. All we’ve seen so far is the 4 carriers we had when the war started and how at one point we were down to only one. But then it jumps from there to the 20 or so that attacked Okinawa. What about the in-between? When and where did all the others enter the war?
World War II in Colour was on Netflix for a long time, and it's too bad they took it out of their library. I watched it many, many times and think it is an excellent overview of World War II. It was a springboard for me to learn more about the war.
there’s a couple other WW2 in color documentaries, but they are not as good as the one you speak of. though I do love WW2 in HD I saw footage on that doc I’d never seen before. The Vietnam War by Ken Burns is spectacular as well, I was engrossed. i had a new respect and empathy for the bravery of the common soldier, and what he was forced to endure.
apocalypse world war 2 is the best documentary on the war I've ever seen ..its on UA-cam check it out sometime
@@kylegoodreau2170it is very good. If you have a chance the Ken burns the war documentary is in my opinion the best or top three ww2 shows ever made
@@kylegoodreau2170 No it's not. Only 6 parts and full of mistakes. I did like the music of the Japanese guy though!
Watch WW2 week-by-week here on YT. Just finished couple of months ago and most elaborate and in depth WW2 series ever made and probably ever will be made! Made by a great team! There is a same concept series on WW1 as well! Also awesome!
It’s on Amazon now
Love these long videos, always great to sleep to.
I find myself doing the same thing all the time🤣
Sick of UA-cam censoring - we're watching a WAR movie, there are going to be dead things. Stop treating us like children and we'll watch the whole thing, thank you very much.
I more sick of adverts every 2-3 minutes
You can always find a different copy of the documentary. I feel as if this platform only serves to entice those eager to learn to dig deeper and consume the original material
I agree. And I'd add that it's a disservice to not show what war does to people.
There's a book called Windswept Lies of War, and it talks from censored history and hidden secrets to lost files and classified documents about World War II, it's the real deal.
Will look for it. Was raised by a WW2 vet, so the 30's and 40's have always been of interest. 👍
Does it tell the actual truth about mustache man and the tiny hats? Or is it more propaganda written by the victors?
Thank you for sharing these episode.
dissrespecting the history with that kind of censorship! Shame on you yt on what you have become....
And how was history disrespected?
Fugifdufsizfjzy waged yg to get dressed to go gf to get a xd🎉 to come over can you please Eric and 😢Donna dt😮 I have tgt e😢😮😮 be Eric
Goodnight fellas.
Whatever I am falling asleep to, when I'm waking u; in the middle of the night or in the morning - this is the type of video playing, or sometimes some long video about cosmology =)
"Operation crusader in 1945",,, It's ironic to note that the Roman crusade took place over the same region of Mediterranean Sea 2000 years ago.
Furthermore, Italy was colonizing Libya, Eritrea & Somalia since the 1880s, before invading Abbysinia/Ethiopia in 1940.
Goodnight everyone!
for those who are interested, watch the documentary called 'Operation Mincemeat' it's excellent.
I read a book about operation mincemeat many decades ago. I wish I still had that book.
@@nmr6988 it's an excellent documentary but I haven't read the book
WWII 3+ hours are the documentaries of my dreams 😴😴😴
History is so important
I'm so happy we had winston churchill as prime minister back then 😊
Imagine Joe or Don
Or Harris/Pence …
Why he rejected mustache mans peace offerings numerous times and instead helped cause the death of tens of millions of people, got most of Britain destroyed, bankrupted it, and caused the end of the British empire and the pound as the world reserve currency and plunged Britain into unimaginable debt to the United States.😂
True however Churchill was a bit of a war monger
putting into color is entirely important I think. It reminds people how real and how recent these awful events were
I love that intro, so cool.
2:38:41 "Lebensraum" means "land room," or something like "elbow room."
*ahem*
Everybody always gets excited about the Mustang. The P-47 was on scene well before the combat-effective P51-B was, AND the *real* problem was the USAAF "Bomber Mafia" refusing to supply drop tanks to *any* American fighters, '51, '47, or '38, thinking that the Forts' own guns would be sufficient to get them through. Schweinfurt, of course, proved them wrong... and finally somebody got smart and gave Jimmy Doolittle, a genius six ways from Sunday as well as a heck of a pilot in his own right, command of the 8th Air Force.
Once Doolittle changed the USAAF's priority from destruction of infrastructure to that of logisitical superiority - first, seek out and destroy the Luftwaffe, and second, on the way back from a raid, hit anything that moved, then things got better. By 6 June the Luftwaffe had very little *left* to throw at the Normandy landings, and that which did show its face were summarily dealt with. Of course, blowing up all that infrastructure meant that the Allies had their own logistical problems to deal with... but at least they weren't usually ducking German air raids to do so. Can't say the same for Fritz himself.
But why? why would Britain, which vastly outnumbered the Japanese on Malaya be overwhelmed? did they lack sufficient artillery? airplanes? were they simply not expecting the Japanese army to be so tenacious? it must’ve been disheartening to the allies to have to fight them knowing this.
I ALWAYS wondered the same thing
In general, British troops were never well supplied with armaments. They were always behind the loop. The troops themselves were incredibly brave, but I don't recall hearing that they commanders were particularly good.
This is a prime example where air superiority can decide the course of a battle or even war
The British relied on their modernised coastal forts using poorly equipped colony troops , Britain along with United States had no respect for the Japanese and considered them savages, the Japanese landed usually very far away from the forts inland and walked on foot
Have to remember as well Britain only has one army at the time that was in North Africa getting smashed
I saw an interview of a German soldier, POW from North Africa, he stated that he knew Germany was going to lose the war when they marched him by a couple miles of Allied vehicles, and they were all sitting there, idling with nobody in them,
UA-cam has become Google, censorship city that’s why I can’t wait for X to expand the platform and become the new UA-cam
At Midway while the Japanese Naval pilot loses were severe actually the most severe loss was mechanics.
@@JamesJohnson-gv7tv Yes. But planes and ships can always be manufactured again. Experienced fighter/bomber pilots take a while to replace, if even possible.
It took years to get the Japanese aircraft mechanics up to speed. In fact, you could train a pilot faster. So yes, the loss of mechanics at Midway especially, that early in the war, was a critical but largely ignored hit to the IJN.
@@erikk4555 Japan's main problem there was they didn't have the capacity to manufacture thousands of planes and more ships. They started out hoping for a six month fight.
And in Japan, it took years to bring an aircraft mechanic up to speed. The loss of a couple thousand at Midway, that early in the war, helped to cripple the IJN aerial effort for the rest of the war.
Which is that background music during victories
AAAAAAND once again Jean Laidlaw, WRNS, and her compatriots get ERASED. Black May (1943) was BEFORE the air gap was closed, and it never would've happened but for these women, and their boss, Captain Gilbert Roberts, who made Max Horton play the war game himself and lose 0-5 to Janet Okell using Laidlaw's tactics. (Also, ASDIC got erased too; this had been around for a couple of decades, and Johnnie Walker his own self put it to decent use... but Laidlaw studied Walker's BUTTERCUP tactics, figured out the fatal assumption - that a sub would attack from outside a convoy rather than sneaking INSIDE at night - and devised RASPBERRY as an initial counter, accounting for the fact that the one way out of the middle of a bunch of hostile ships was *down*, at which point the sub's slower underwater speed would force it aft relative the the convoy centre... and of course, the ladies didn't stop there; they developed several other tactics for use in various conditions.
It takes *both* tech *and* brains (and a bit of bloody-mindedness) to win a war... and a willingness to let whoever has good ideas run with them and be the person to teach others. No matter what their gender, or colour, or where they came from.
I recently saw a great British movie about those tactics and while it was a bit dramatic, it was accurate. Those WRNS were smart cookies! They saved Britain as much as any other part of the service at the time.
The USSR would have collapsed without the Lend-Lease Act and help from Britain (intelligence).
Loss of food would have sealed the fate of the soviets (unless helped by foreign powers fighting for communism)
The soviets got enough food from the USA to feed its soldiers for the rest of the war,
12 million boots , 60 percent aluminum and steel, a lot of tin , 90 percent of railway equipment ( the soviets would never have been able to conduct offensives so fast and transfer their main armies to critical points , 300000 trucks were given , 65 percent of aviation fuel and much more apart from 15 percent tanks ,aircrafts
Soviet sympathizers say "only 15 per cent was given to USSR"
Russia did lose 20 million people so there’s that
Right....Time for a good kip.
Nighty night all!
Syffidudixghxh
ERVROEEWFG
TJGGEYIZXVCTWHGHgGgFhxsGgxthc
🎖️🏆⭐🙏❤️🩹🛐
Thank you for sharing this
And then US reinforcements arrived!
FYI: Dan Snow is hardly a world renowned historian. Hahahaha. Guy Walters yes.
Would love to see a video focusing on the carriers in the pacific. One that introduces every new carrier as they entered pacific waters. All we’ve seen so far is the 4 carriers we had when the war started and how at one point we were down to only one. But then it jumps from there to the 20 or so that attacked Okinawa. What about the in-between? When and where did all the others enter the war?
samanthas brother
cant see the point of blurring scenes out, ive seen worse on youtube
After cleansing.
2mins in, Domino's Spicy Korean pizza!
I know theyre very much not related but US friends wont know that lol!
Pick your adverts
So people what was your true turning point of WW2 - Stalingrad, D Day or some other battle. Let me know please on your thoughts.
So … TBF the video title says “Turning Points,” plural. So they’d prob say all of the above. Which is fair. War is a twisty thing.
Two critically important turning points:-
1. Battle of Britain
2. Stalingrad.
Hand over the hostages... Stop playing the victim... Who started all of this on that evil day... Gazza that's who
Lmao you'll believe anything 🤣
Shalom rabbi. How many mutilated baby penises did you suck on today?
Ads every 6 mins ... legit ... made me stop after 24 mins
2:02:47 You don't mention that the carpet bombing of Dresden caused a firestorm which caused all of the deaths of civilians.
BIG TECH the new GESTAPO, censored history. Disgraceful
7th's of october*
Ah yes , yet another war started by the tiny hats 😂
Look at the lovely face of the young woman at 2.41.13. A catwalk model in another life.
But it was the War Gamers of the RN that developed tactics that won the U Boat war.
.-' ANTiS DA MATERiA O ATO QUEM MORREU ANTiS CONTA TiNHA LA BANCO QUEiRA Mi QUEiRA MAiS PERTO RETORNO COM RECADO DA LUZ VERDi
Red sun rampant.
We get poor coffee. Brazilians get the best.
gwadakanal
16:27 🇮🇳🇯🇵
.-' A COBRA VAi PARA O BREJO A ELA VAi MESMO JA CHEGOU A COBRA DO BREJO DECHA EU LiGAR O ATOLERO TA MUiTO LiMPO AiNDA
.-' VOSSE NAM PERSSEBi NEM UM GANHO DEPOiS Di MORTO FiCOU MUiTO RiCO EM CAZA AQUiLO E SEU TETO
And by the end 1942, especially the “meat grinder” the South Pacific campaign had turned into almost all the Pearl Habor pilots were dead. 7:36
Counter productive video
.-' 🎊🎋🎍🎎🎏🎐🎑🤫 NiNGUEM QUERiA MESMO O SEU CARGO COMO NAM TRABALHAR CANSSADA UM SECULO DESSi E SEM FUNDO
O povo é burro estamos aqui no Brasil no mesmo caminho.
✨🏴✨😳✨😱✨🤯✨.
✨🏴✨🥰✨👍✨♥️✨🤗✨.
11:07
12:43 12:45
gg
A dragon is just a big flying lizard!