Wednesday, October 22, 2025

NFR Project: George Stevens' World War II footage (1943-1945)

 


NFR Project: George Stevens’ World War II footage

103 min.

George Stevens’ work is already well-represented in the National Film Registry. He started out making comedies, shooting them for Hal Roach. He was the Director of Photography for the Laural and Hardy’s Battle of the Century (1927) and Big Business (1929), as well as Max Davidson’s Pass the Gravy (1928).

He showed his versality by directing such disparate pictures as Swing Time (1936), Gunga Din (1939), and Woman of the Year (1942). When World War II broke out, Stevens enlisted in the Signal Corps, where he was appointed Major. General Eisenhower issued him orders -- it was his mission to assemble a team that would document the war in Europe. A motley crew dubbed “Stevens’ Irregulars” followed closely behind the men in the front lines, shooting a visual history of the war in a way never before achieved. It is a brutal indictment of those who provoked the destruction, death, and anguish that war imposes on the world.

The Special Coverage Unit group assembled 304 minutes of color footage, and 54 minutes of silent black-and-white footage. Stevens shot his own color home-movie 16-millimeter film as well. (You can find much of the footage here.) The intrepid gang of journalists went to North Africa, covered D-Day, the march across France, the liberation of Paris, the advance to reach the Russians at Torgau. The discovery of the concentration camp at Dachau. (This footage was used as evidence in the Nuremburg trials.) They showed us the trench where Hitler's body was incinerated. They ascended to Berchtesgaden.

There is some of the obligatory footage of generals interacting, of troops being reviewed. But they captured the misery and trauma all around them. Soldiers fought, lay wounded, were carted away dead. Civilians fled or suffered. Cities became heaps of brick-and-mortar caves of rubble. Prisoners wearily shuffled their way onto trucks. Concentration camp prisoners stumbled about in shock, or lay dead in heaps. It profoundly affected everyone involved in documenting it.

The filmmakers documented the Allied vision of World War II. It set down a true picture of populations at war, not romanticized, not prettied up. This sobering gathering of facts puts the lie to those who would claim that some of this never happened. Stevens turned to more serious fare upon his return from service, helming classics such as A Place in the Sun (1951), Shane (1953), Giant (1956), and The Diary of Anne Frank (1959).

This collection of film contains moments of tragic beauty, long looks into the faces of the captured, even moments of absurdity -- a deranged man in a top hat swings a dead rabbit at American soldiers. Throughout, there is not the feeling of it being a propaganda project. Here is an impeccable record of humanity at war.

The NFR is one writer’s attempt to review all the films listed in the National Film Registry in chronological order. Next time: Lassie Come Home.

 

 

 

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