01x05 - Episode 5

Episode transcripts for the TV series, "World w*r II: From the Frontlines". Aired: December 7, 2023.*
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Through vividly enhanced archival footage and voices from all sides of the conflict, this docuseries brings WWII to life like never before.
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01x05 - Episode 5

Post by bunniefuu »

[t*nk engine humming]

[man] I hated the Nazis,

and I did want to do
as much damage to them as I could,


and that meant k*lling them,
and that's all right with me.


You get a good feeling
when you k*ll the enemy.


I always did.

And that may not
sound Christian-like, or whatever,


but I think men do enjoy k*lling
under certain circumstances.


I hate to sound hardened,
but it's either them or me.


[announcer] This is the year 1944.
Great battles lie ahead.


[narrator] As the conflict enters
its fifth year,

the Allied leaders know
that to win the w*r...

they will have to inv*de
n*zi-occupied Europe.

[Franklin Roosevelt]
We will not stop short of our final goal,

into the frontiers of Germany itself.

But h*tler has built a formidable line
of defenses along the French coast.

[Adolf h*tler in German]
Let the w*r last as long as it wants to.

[pounding lectern]
Germany will never capitulate!

[crowd applauding]

Churchill and Roosevelt fear an invasion
could lead to a catastrophic loss of life.

But now they can wait no longer.

A massive invasion force
secretly gathers in southern England.

[Roosevelt]
Almighty God, our sons this day

have set upon a mighty endeavor.

Lead them straight and true.

They will need thy blessings,

for the enemy is strong.

[cheering]

[intense music playing]

[indistinct radio chatter]

[Dan] We were flying out
right over the invasion fleet.


And I was standing in the door.

And that was the most
magnificent sight I think I've ever seen.


It looked like
the whole channel was moving.


I didn't think there was
that many ships in the world.


One hundred thousand Allied soldiers
are crossing the English Channel.

Up ahead, n*zi-occupied France.

[Harold] When we got close
to the French coast,


then we started getting off the ship.

The minute the boats hit the water

we're thrown around like matchsticks.

And I'm Jewish.

I drew a large Star of David
on the back of my field jacket


with "The Bronx, New York."

And that gave me a certain bravado.

Most of the guys expected to die.

[Hans in German]
I looked through my binoculars.

I thought I was seeing things.

There were thousands of ships
that were sailing towards us.


I thought that the whole world
had lined up against us.


[Frank] We started to take
the troops close to shore.


They gave me the job of dropping
the ramp in the front of the boat.


[m*ssile screeches past]

[m*ssile explodes]

When we got close enough to the beach,
my captain says to me, "Drop the ramp."


And I froze for a few seconds.

[b*ll*ts pinging ramp]

I didn't want to die.

I pulled the handle.

[machine g*ns f*ring]

[soldiers shouting]

These poor guys, they had no chance.

[soldier] Go, go, go, go!

[m*ssile screeches past]

[Harold] The water was full of blood.

Some of the guys,
they were yelling, "Help me, Jesus!"


I looked over to my right.

This guy just yelling, "I'm hit! I'm hit!"

The machine g*n cut him in half.

[m*ssile screeches past]

And then a shell went off in front of me.

It blew off my cheek,
and I was losing a lot of blood.


[wind buffeting]

[g*nf*re ceases]

[soldier] Medic! Medic!

Now there are only
two of us alive from my boat team.


[distant shouting and g*nf*re]

The Germans didn't give up.
They were pounding the beach.


So, we were left with options:
stay there and die or fight wounded.


We decided to fight wounded.

[narrator] By the end of D-Day,
the Allies' gamble has paid off.

Harold's unit has helped
to secure the beachhead,

and the Allies are starting
to fight their way inland.

[Harold] We weren't gonna give up.

[newscaster] The Allied armies have made
successful landings in North France


in history's greatest invasion.

Light airborne troops and parachutists
rained down from the sky early today,


while a vast armada of 4,000 ships

disgorged ground troops
on h*tler's fortified shore.


[narrator] The Allies now have
a foothold in n*zi-occupied Europe.

But they know they will have to fight
all the way to the German capital, Berlin.

[Winston Churchill]
There's no moment now to slack,

hard as it may seem
after five long years of w*r,


to bring this slaughter to an end.

[narrator] Meanwhile, in the Pacific,

the US Navy is forcing the Japanese
back towards their homeland,

island by island.

[Roosevelt] We are
on the offensive all over the world,


bringing the att*ck to our enemy.

[narrator] In a series of battles,
much of Japan's fleet is destroyed.

[newscaster] Our pilots scored
the greatest aerial victory


in the history of naval warfare:


And back in Europe, Stalin's Red Army
launches a huge att*ck on h*tler's forces.

[newscaster] Tanks and fighter bombers
on a scale never seen before.


[newscaster 2] Soviet units
are reported nearly a hundred miles


beyond the Polish frontier.

The Soviets now approach Warsaw,

which has been occupied by h*tler's troops

since the start of the w*r.

Encouraged by the Red Army's advance,

the Polish Resistance rises up,
liberating central Warsaw from the Nazis.

The Poles construct makeshift barricades
to keep the Germans out.

They hope they can hold on
until the Red Army arrives.

[contemplative music playing]

[voices inaudible]

[Witold in Polish]
We were all young, poorly armed.

It was a very dangerous situation...

...but we were fighting for freedom.

[expl*si*n]

[scattered g*nf*re]

In a bid to fight back, Witold's unit
mounts a raid on a German command post.

[Witold] We were to seize the post office.

We go up the staircase.

And I can hear German voices.

I see a door...

so I open it.

"Hands up! Everyone, hands up!"

The hands went up.

[soldiers jeering]

We grabbed all of their weapons.

[newscaster in Polish] Home Army units
freed 50 civilian prisoners.


Thirty German soldiers were k*lled.

[Witold] We got a great haul.

It was our first victory!

[engines screeching]

[expl*si*n]

[masonry clattering]

[narrator] But the Germans
still control most of Warsaw.

[rapid g*nf*re]

[glass shatters]

[debris clattering]

[machine g*n f*ring]

Polish Resistance fighter Bolesław Biega
is one of the wounded.

[Bolesław in Polish]
I was taken to a small hospital...

and my fiancée, Lili,
would come and check on me.


Then my commander says,
"Why don't you get married?"


I said, "In these circumstances?"

I said, "We can get
k*lled tomorrow, so why not?"

A messenger was sent to tell Lili,

"Your wedding is tomorrow
at eleven o'clock."


"Please show up!"

[voice muted
under dramatic orchestral music]

[narrator] By chance, a passing film crew

captures Bolesław
and Lili's wedding ceremony.

We used curtain rings as wedding rings.

We threw a reception at the post office.

We had French sardines,

cigarettes and French wine,

all captured from the Germans.

Believing Soviet help is on the way,
the newlyweds celebrate.

But the Red Army isn't coming.

[soldier] Fire!

[narrator] Stalin has decided
he would rather the Nazis and the Poles

fight it out between themselves.

[newscaster] For developments
on the Western Front,


Admiral takes you to Paris.

[soldiers cheering]

[scattered g*nf*re]

[newscaster] The call is this:
"All to the barricades, all to the fight!"


"Parisians, forward."

[narrator]
Having been underground for years,

the French Resistance rise up
to retake the streets of Paris.

[newscaster] The French Resistance
carrying on open warfare


with the Germans,
risking their lives for an ideal.


[cheering]

[George] When we landed,
my regiment turned right


and went down through northern France.

The Germans pulled back,
and we went straight on towards Paris.


[church bells ringing]

[Evelyn] Suddenly, they started
to ring all the bells of the city.


I said, "Ah! What are those tanks?"

"I think they're the Allies."

[bystander] Whoo!

[narrator] Eleven weeks after D-Day,

Allied troops roll into the French capital
to help the Resistance.

[Evelyn] Oh! Everybody came out
and we waved.


We had waited four years.
It was so long.


And we spent our day with the troops.

[Stanley]
I'd landed a few days after D-Day

and ended up in Paris.

Oh, that was great.

You know,
I sort of felt just like Queen Elizabeth.


You know,
I'd ride down waving to the crowd.


Women were kissing and hugging

and giving you wine
and all this kind of stuff.


And I was just a kid.

[Charles de Gaulle] We are here
in Paris, which stood strong


and rose to free itself
of its own determination.


France, the great eternal!

[narrator] For France and the Allies,
it's a day of joy,

but for some, it's a day of reckoning.

[Evelyn] The afternoon of Liberation Day,

we had also prepared some lists
of all the collaborators we knew...


all the girls who had been out
with the Germans, we had all the names.


And we handed them over
to the Resistance immediately.


[Elise in French]
I had a friend who ran a café.

She said, "I'll introduce you to someone."

He was handsome and single.

[voice muted]

He was very decent and helped me
survive the loneliness I had.


He was arrested.

The next day they came to find me.

[crowd jeering]

The crowd was screaming at us.

They asked me, "How many Krauts?"

He said, "Get up or I'll sh**t you."

"We will cut your hair. We'll shave you."

I didn't flinch. I let it happen.

I just glared back at them.

[narrator] After Paris,
the Allies sweep into Belgium,

pushing closer to Germany every day.

[cheering]

[Roosevelt] We shall have to fight
our way across the Rhine.


We may have to fight
every inch of the way to Berlin.


But we will not
stop short of our final goal.


But in the Polish capital, Warsaw,
the Resistance forces are under pressure.

The Red Army has stopped
on the outskirts of the city.

And the Nazis have vowed
to wipe Warsaw from the map.

[radio operator] This is Warsaw calling.

This is Warsaw calling.

Warsaw calling.

Warsaw calling all the free nations.

[narrator] Newlyweds Bolesław
and Lili are in the line of fire.

[Bolesław] Me and my wife, Lili,
we were exhausted and hungry.


Our street was under siege.

There was no escape.

The Russians were
on the other side of the river...


but they didn't come to help.

[newscaster in German] Our fight is with
the bandits who have not yet noticed


that they are being
abandoned by all sides.


[narrator]
After two months of resistance...

the Poles are forced to surrender.

[Mathias in German]
Masses of prisoners went past.

They asked, "What will become of us?"

We couldn't answer them.

The SS came.

Indescribable, cruel g*ng.

And we heard the sh*ts.

[g*ns f*ring]

[narrator] One hundred and 80 thousand
men, women and children

are massacred in the uprising.

Bolesław and Lili
are among the survivors.

They're herded onto a train to Germany.

They will spend
the rest of the w*r in a prison camp.

In the Pacific, the Americans have been
continuing their island-hopping campaign,

with the invasion of Saipan and Peleliu.

If they can take these islands,

they will be within bombing range
of the end goal: Japan itself.

[soldier] Fire!

Fire!

[narrator] Battle begins with an intense
bombardment from the U.S. ships.

[dramatic music swelling]

[expl*si*n]

[muted shouting]

[distant g*nf*re and explosions]

[Chiyoko in Japanese] I always knew
the w*r would come to Saipan.


You could hear the sound
of the b*ll*ts whizzing past.


It was frantic,
with everybody trying to take cover.


[m*ssile screams past, explodes]

My elder brother was k*lled instantly.

My younger brother
was injured in the head.


[newscaster]
It is about 10:23 now, Saturday morning.

Marines have been pushing forward.

[Chiyoko] We were told that the Americans
would take women as prisoners


and would use us for their pleasure.

[soldiers shouting]

We had to avoid
being captured at all costs.


[machine-g*n fire]

[narrator] The Americans
sweep across the island,

flushing out resistance.

[g*nf*re continues]

[Steve] Going in on Saipan,
we just didn't have time to waste.


We had to get up and go.

We moved up to the tip of the island,

towards the cliff.

We were told that there was
women and children holed up there.


Interpreters were
speaking with loudspeakers


and trying to get them
to give up, you know,


and saying,
"We'll give you food and water


and take care of your sick and everybody."

[voice muted
under somber orchestral music]

Then, all of a sudden,
we looked up there and they're jumping.


It was unreal.

There was nothing we could do.

We watched.

[Chiyoko] Those who remained

loyal to the country

would k*ll themselves
if they were discovered.


That was their mentality.

[Steve] I think
most of us felt that, "Well...


you can't get them
to give up, let them jump."


"Let's get this thing over with, already.
Enough is enough."


[narrator] December 1944.

Back in Europe,
Germany is facing the prospect of defeat.

But h*tler is planning
one last throw of the dice.

[h*tler] The world must know
that Germany will never surrender.


I ask you to trust in my leadership...

to fight fanatically
through this difficult battle


for the future of our people.

He gambles everything
on a last-ditch attempt

to split the Allied advance
and drive them back to the coast.

[soldier shouts]

[m*ssile screams past, explodes]

[machine g*ns f*ring]

[m*ssile screams past, explodes]

[Georg in German]
The Americans got their asses kicked.

They weren't ready for us at all.

[soldiers shouting]

They ran away back into Belgium.

The Americans left everything behind them.

They even left us their breakfast.

[newscaster] German tanks,
some of them backed up by infantry,


are striking deeper into Belgium today.

The German offensive still is mounting
and has not yet reached its climax.


[narrator] The Germans advance


[newscaster] This morning,
the German att*ck continues


in undiminished strength.

The situation is still grave.

[narrator] The Americans
rush troops to cut them off.

One of them is


[William] At the time,
I knew I wanted to join the Air Force,


and they told me they didn't
have Blacks in the Air Force,


but they did have a t*nk outfit.

I said, "Okay, that's good by me."
So that was it.


Then the white soldiers cursed us out

and called us all kinds of names,
saying, "You don't belong up here."


I tried to block it out of my mind.

I was just proud that I was part
of one of the first Black t*nk outfits.


[Leonard] It was a tight bond. Very close.

It was family.

We wanted to prove we were
the best t*nk outfit over there.


We wanted to show them how good we were.

[newscaster]
The weather was pretty bad today.

The ground forces need
all the help they can get now,


because this is
a very tough fight they are in.


[wind whistling]

[William] It was snowing.

Tanks sliding all over the road.

But we wasn't gonna chicken and run out.

We were rolling through this open field.

And this German t*nk came out of nowhere.

[thunderous expl*si*n]

[Leonard] We got hit.

And so we had to
get out of the t*nk and run.


It was a su1c1de mission.

[machine g*ns f*ring]

[soldier in German] Fire!

And them Germans sh*t everything
they could throw at us, trying to k*ll us.


We crawled 5,000 yards in the snow.

[William] There was Germans everywhere.

And I said,
"Well, this is it. I've had it."


And Smitty said, "Man, you can't stop now.
You've gotta keep going."


"You gotta get back home."

[m*ssile whistles past]

[machine g*ns f*ring]

And because of him, I kept going.

[soldier] Run! Run! Run!

[narrator] Suddenly, the weather clears.

And Allied bombers
can strike enemy positions at will.

The Germans are forced to retreat.

[William] I saw this SS soldier.
Stuck my p*stol up under his chin.


And I said, "Surrender."

Well, he said,
"I don't surrender to you n*gg*r*s."


Yeah, now, see, if he said, "I don't
surrender to you American soldiers,"

it'd have been fine with me,
I'd have taken his g*n.

But when he said,
"I don't surrender to you n*gg*r*s"

and spoke perfect English,
that's when I slapped him in the mouth.

[newscaster] And the huge roundup
of beaten Nazis left behind continues.


The prisoner count
for Friday alone was almost 20,000.


[narrator] As 1944 comes to a close,

h*tler's armies
are falling back in disarray.

[m*ssile whistling past]

[Roosevelt]
Our enemies still fight fanatically,

but they themselves know that
they and their evil works are doomed.


[newscaster] American troops
are moving in from north, west and south.


[narrator] The road to Berlin is now open.

[newscaster]
Everybody is a little afraid of Berlin,

but everybody wants to go there.

[subdued theme song playing]
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